Volume XIV, Number ^ The Student Newspaper of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte Charlotte, North Carolina October 3, 1978 Autumn set in upon the UNCC campus this past meek. The sun is setting earlier, but that means the parties begin earlier. Above is a scene from our campus of a typical fall sunrise. It comes as no surprise to our early risers that the campus dot’s in fact Have a beautiful view of nature's good features. UNCC requests funds By Nancy Davis UNCC can't keep growing without money and that was the reason the N.C. Advisory Budget Commision met on campus Friday, Sept. 29. UNCC officials have a long shopping list for new additions for the Univer sity, but the money must first be ap proved by the N.C. General Assembly. Millions of dollars were requested by UNCC, with the largest being $6.8 million for a new physical science building. The Kennedy Building presently houses the chemistry and physics classes and labs.The facilities are cramped as this building is one of the oldest on campus. The second largest request was $5.8 million for an architecture building. The Architecture Department, tuck ed away in a part of the bookstore building, can only accept one out of five qualified applicants. It is now overflowing with 200 students. UNCC has grown in number and size, but the structures haven't been able to keep up with the enrollment. With a waiting list of over 500 students trying to get in the dorms, the university is also asking for $5.2 million for student housing and $1.5 million for a dormitory cafeteria and amphitheater. Included in the budget allocation is an additional $6.4 million to cover urgent needs. They asked $1.3 million for more faculty, $1.1 million to pay administrators, presently being paid out of faculty allotments, $572,568 for library materials and $96,150 to use in aiding minority students. A suprise request was for $170,501 to help WFAE, the campus radio sta tion. Last year, $26,000 was allocated to the FM radio station out of student fees and presently, the station is waiting to hear from a probable $180,000 HEW grant. To use in removing architectural barriers to the handicapped and im proving campus safety features, UNCC asked for $643,000. The Budget Advisory Committee has been traveling throughout the state preparing budget recommenda tions for all state institutions. The budgets will come before the General Assembly in January. - Netos commentary Student legislators receive salary for what? By Nancy Davis Ladies and gentlemen...please focus ’our attention to ring one where we lave a student body president being tripped of his powers bit by bit. And Il ring two we have a panel of justices unsure of which Judicial Act to get started under. And in the Renter ring, some of the world's big gest clowns, climbing up the power adder, busily knocking each other ill...presenting one of the biggest arces on this campus, the UNCC 1 Stu- lent Legislature. Is a three ring circus an unfair malogy to use for student govern ment? Perhaps it is the only analogy lie UNCC student body can relate to dien trying to understand student government. When it comes right town to it, however, there is ealistically no reason why student (overnment, in particular Student legislature, should be paid any atten- ion. There are reasons for this and lerlectly logical explanations. Unfor- unately, the truth hurts and while Hany student government officials now the answers to straighten up hat place, there are just as many who ^nT give a flip. rhe Student Legislature, a suppos- d 41 member governing body, l^cled by the students, meeting every Tuesday at 12:30 p.m., and responsible for allocating money to clubs and organizations is in the center ring because they are the ones largely responsible for the mess stu dent government is in right now. Presently, the Student Legislature is ox er three weeks late in budget alloca “Giving themselves (Legislature) a salary would be an incentive which would be insincere.” —Wanda Nelson, Western Carolina tions. hasn't been able to get to new business in at least two meetings, is meeting with almost half the representatives because some have terms ended without an election being held to fill the vacancies and several resignations, and (now, get this) are actually paying themselves $10 a month to meet. According to Jack Summerlin, chairperson of the Student Legislature, because the legislative budget has not been approved, no one has been paid yet. And even though there was talk about giving themselves a raise, the budget with only the $10 a month salary didn't pass before the Finance Committee. Legislators have been getting paid for several years (since 1976) for atten ding weekly meetings and committee meetings. If they attend, they get paid. Four legislature meetings and four committee meetings a month breaks down into $1.25 per meeting. Looking at that it doesn’t sound so bad, but thinking about why they're getting paid is what hurts. It started out, Summerlin said, to simply encourage “regular atten dance'' of the legislative members. 'Phis $10 incentive, so to speak, has nothing to do with performance, merit or accomplishment. Elected of ficials by the student body, with the potential to be a powerful student voice, meeting weekly to better the student s life at UNCC, serving as a direct line of communication to the administration are getting paid $10 a month if all they do is show up. They don't have to be prepared, they don't have to know how to use parliamen tary procedure, they don't even have to vote. All they have to do is sit there, say “here" when roll is taken and a $10 check is handed them at the end of each month. No other university in the Universi ty of North Carolina system pays their legislators. From Cullowhee to Wilmington, I talked to an official in every student government organiza tion and they were just as surprised to find a school paid their legislators as I was to learn we were the only one. The reasons varied, but the two main reasons were because there wasn't enough money in the budgets and because they didn't know what they could base the salary on. Most agreed to use a salary to encourage atten dance just didn't sound good. However, student body officer Charles Powell from Appalachian State University, says he'd like to be able to pay his student senators (equivalent to UNCC's student legislators). The committee chairper sons are paid anywhere from $15()-$30() a year, but are appointees of the student body president, not senate members. (UNCC pays legislative chairpersons $10 a month, plus the $10 for being a legislator. In the recent budget, still unapproved by the Finance Committee, that figure went up from $20 a month to $37.50 a month.) “1 think," Powell said, “that without some sort of (continued on page 15)