Matchmaker Med students get news. See Page 3 (3he Daily ®ar Heel www.dailytarheel.com Trustees Give Resounding 'Yes' to Master Plan iui ott*. ™lEgflpP*9| MB JHHF DTH/BRENT CLARK Chancellor James Moeser, Board of Trustees members and community residents listen as the final version of the Master Plan is discussed. Ticket Policy Disclosed Department of Athletics officials reported numbers that differed from previous allegations against the CAA. Bv Greg Steffensen Staff Writer Officials from the Department of Athletics’ Ticket Office rejected claims Thursday that Carolina Athletic Association President Tee Pmitt receives a secret supply of discretionary men’s basketball tickets, saying the dis appearance of so many tickets is logis tically and numerically illogical. Ticket Office Director Clint Gwaltney said recent accusations that Pruitt gets 40 to 60 tickets per basketball game are false. “There’s a lot of things out there that you need to inquire about before you go off half-cocked,” Gwaltney said. “(Pruitt would) have to boldly walk up after the tickets are taken out of the vault, take a stack off the top and tell us, ‘See you later, I’m going outside.’” Fred Hill, vice chairman of the Board of Elections, testified Tuesday before the Student Affairs Committee of Student Congress that Pmitt has offered extra basketball tickets to many individuals both in and out of the CAA. The CAA receives 128 tickets per game, said Kim Jones, the ticket office employee who physically gives the tick ets to CAA Ticket Distribution Director Kerry Slatkoff. Fifty tickets are earmarked for the CAA Cabinet, which had 23 members until five were either fired or resigned in February and March. Two tickets were distributed per member, leaving four per game unaccounted for prior to February. Pruitt said Thursday that he received two tickets as a Cabinet member and also retained control over any excess tickets earmarked for Cabinet. Fifty-four tickets are reserved for the 25 workers in the ticket distribution com mittee, leaving four extra tickets - which Slatkoff said she hands out or keeps. The 14 members of the sports mar keting committee receive 14 tickets, and the 10 members of the External Relations Committee receive seven tick ets, which External Relations Chairwoman Rachel Goodman said are distributed based on merit. Based on the above numbers - ticket totals given by Jones and committee staff breakdowns by Pmitt - eight of the 128 tickets earmarked for CAA members were unaccounted for prior to February. Gwaltney acknowledged that he would not know if members of the tick et distribution committee skimmed tick ets during student distributions. Hill stuck by his claims Thursday that See TICKETS, Page 4 v * gup m Mt ; When a Tree Western N.C. Balances Economic Profit, Natural Beauty By Cliff Nelson Staff Writer The mountains of North Carolina have beckoned hikers, campers and tour ing motorists for generations with the promise of natural beauty unequaled east of the Rockies. In 1999 alone, nearly 20 million sightseers drove the Blue Ridge Parkway, North Carolina’s most-visited tourist attraction and most scenic road. Each year, tourists from out of state decide to make the N.C. mountains their home, and repeat visitors to Boone and Blowing Rock witness impressive mansions growing out of mountainsides that 10 years ago were still untouched. Ironically but predictably, the vistas and clear waters that prove so allur ing to vacationers also result in development - billboards, mountaintop sub divisions, traffic jams, strip malls. “Growth and development is not a story, it’s the story up here, and it bums hotter every day,” said Miles Tager, a reporter for Boone’s Mountain Times. Might the very charm of western North Carolina attract such numbers that the quality of life which entices newcomers could be lost forever? Inevitable and big changes are coming to the N.C. mountains. That much is clear to everyone, conservationist and developer alike. But the nature of that change is the subject of a raging battle fought for decades in court, in the media and in politics across the state’s mountain counties. In places where any resistance to development exists, it often amounts to the efforts of a few individuals or a patchwork of civic coalitions. Almost no N.C. regulations of growth in the mountains are on the books. State leaders have long known that development would someday threaten the touristy ambiance of the N.C. mountains. In 1973, the year the Coastal Area Management Act ushered in state regu lation of growth along the N.C. coast, lawmakers offered a twin proposal, the Mountain Area Management Act for the western part of the state. But it died in the General Assembly when western opposi tion proved too great for state oversight of mountain develop ment to become reality. In 1990, the N.C. Center for Public Policy Research inven toried land-use policies statewide and found little had changed in the mountains. The report stated that, “The mountain region trails the rest of the state in planning for and manag ing growth, despite a clear economic interest in protecting the beauty of the region for tourism.” Mountain voters to this day remain reluctant to endorse zoning and planning laws that might prevent unsighdy sprawl. Only two of North Carolina’s mountain counties zoned coun- tywide 10 years ago, and only three do so today. Fourteen counties in the mountains still have no zoning restrictions at all outside the limits of towns. The debate over what western North Carolina will look like in 20 years defies easy answers when any suggestion of land-use regulation falls prey to a virulent mistrust of government that runs especially deep in the highlands. Fights over development versus preservation are front-page news in moun tain cities, where old traditions of land rights and freedom from government clash with the preservationist values that newcomers bring with them. Buncombe County is today North Carolina’s most populous county with Lower Quad Residents Victims of Recent Break-Ins By Rachel Clarke Staff Writer Olde Campus Lower Quad residents are being advised to lock their doors and watch out for strangers after several recent break-ins. Early Tuesday morning, an unidenti fied person entered several rooms in Lewis Residence Hall and took cash and valuables, said Chris Moody, area direc tor for the quad. Moody declined to comment on the number of rooms that were burglarized. I think that I shall never see a poem lovely as a tree. Joyce Kilmer Ad Critic Controversial ad gets reaction from national newspapers, campus groups. See Page 2 Serving the students and the University community since 1893 After granting unanimous approval, the trustees addressed implementation of the UNC Master Plan. By Brook Corwin Staff Writer The UNC Board of Trustees gave unanimous approval Thursday morning to the University’s Master Plan, launch ing anew era of campus growth. The Master Plan, a 50-year blueprint for campus development, was met with no dissent from trustees and granted swift approval, despite lingering concerns from many town officials and local residents. .^From. Maiiteo, ‘“Murphy A four-part series on some of the major environmental issues facing North Carolina. Today: Expansion But a report filed with University police about one of the incidents stated that $220 in cash was stolen while the room’s residents were present and asleep. The room’s inhabitants had left the door unlocked, reports state. University police spokesman Mark Mclntyre could not be reached for com ment Thursday about the status of the investigation. Moody, who sent out an e-mail to area residents about the break-ins, said residents must be careful and protect themselves. “We do what we can by The rest of the meeting was spent dis cussing the plan’s implementation. The BOT approved committee rec ommendations for contracting firms to begin initial construction projects. Chancellor James Moeser opened the meeting by emphasizing the importance of the board’s vote and praising the merits of the plan. “Future generations are rely ing on your judgment today,” he said. Moeser also linked the Master Plan to the University’s recent record endow ment for research funds from the National Institutes of Health, saying the new facilities the plan will create would further boost research. “The' greatest limitation this University now has (with research) are the physical limitations of our research facilities,” he said. “We WM DTH/CUFF NELSON Although excavation was stopped at this rock quarry near Spruce Pine in 1999, it has left an imprint on the mountainside. out any countywide zoning law. Buncombe Commissioner David Gantt, a pro-zoning Democrat, said just the word “zoning” is radioactive to a majority of mountain voters. “Zoning is like desegregation was in the late 1950 - almost a curse word,” Gantt said. From a manila folder, Gantt pulled newspaper clippings that he said demon strate the fervor of recent zoning debates: a front-page photo of picketers with signs calling Gantt “a communist,” and a letter to the editor that said zoning was a “strategy used by Satan.” “We had to have armed guards. We rode in police cars to get to public meetings,” Gantt said. But anti-zoning forces press a compelling issue - why should retired farmers, counting on the sale of land suddenly worth millions, have that option taken from them by public vote? Jim Morton, whose family owns Grandfather Mountain, has been active in preserving 2,500 acres around the mountain from the bulldozer’s blade. “When you don’t own property, it’s real nice to say you’re against development,” Morton said. “But when you own property and pay the taxes, and a good time comes to develop that property, it’s tough when people complain about it.” Nathan Ramsey, the Republican chairman of the Buncombe County Board of Commissioners, won his post in November on an anti-zoning platform and said restricting landowners’ right to sell or develop their property is unfair because the land is all that some of his constituents have left. “I think the major issue is that our incomes are about half that of the Triangle and the Triad areas. But our cost of living is still high,” Ramsey said. “You can See EXPANSION, Page 4 keeping the (entrance) doors perma nendy locked, and we always have an RA on duty,” he said. But Moody said residents should be careful not to let people they don’t know into the building behind them. Moody said he suspected that was how the per petrator entered the residence hall. As well as watching out for people they don’t know, Moody advised resi dents to keep their doors locked at night and whenever they leave the building. “This could happen just as easily during the day,” he said. “The other thing I’ve have an incredible compression of peo ple to almost inhumane conditions.” Several board members joined Moeser in enthusiastic support of the plan. “This is far better than lever dreamt it would be, and I have very high standards for this University,” said trustee David Pardue. Student Body President Brad Matthews, the only student member on the board, also praised the plan and said he was eager to see it break ground. “It really has addressed a number of stu dent concerns and needs both now and well into the future,” he said. Questions about how construction might affect transportation and parking See BOT, Page 4 been doing is encouraging residents to file police reports.” As of Thursday afternoon, only one report had been filed, but Moody said he had heard of more incidents. Moody said one problem could be the strong sense of community in the area. “That comes at a price sometimes, by them being too careful and letting their guard down,” he said. Several residents expressed concern for the students who were robbed but said they weren’t worried themselves. “Pm not really concerned because we lock our doors,” said Lily Russell, a sophomore liv Sunshine Today: Sunny, 65 Saturday: Sunny, 70 Sunday: Sunny, 53 Friday, March 23, 2001 Residents Express Ire, Pessimism Some residents criticized the trustees for being insensitive toward their Master Plan concerns. By Lee Spears Staff Writer Local residents are critical of the UNC Board of Trustees’ decision Thursday to approve the campus Master Plan, which could threaten neighborhoods near the campus. Certain elements of the Master Plan, UNC’s blueprint for campus growth for the next 50 years, have residents wor ried that their neighborhoods are in danger. Residents who attended the meeting said the trustees were not sensitive to their concerns about losing their homes. Criticism centered around the Master Plan’s proposed construction of anew access road from Fordham Boulevard to South Campus which will cut through the Mason Farm neighbor hood. “More discussion needs to be had with the town,” said Ken Brown, a Mason Farm resident and former mayor of Chapel Hill. Brown also expressed concern about the Master Plan’s encroachment on the Smith Center buffer zone, the area between the Smith Center and neigh borhoods south of campus where budd ing is restricted. Diana Steele, another Mason Farm Road resident who has run a preschool in her home for the past 30 years, said she was never approached by UNC about the Master Han even though the proposed access road will go through her yard. “I don’t think there was any way I could have taken action (against the Master Plan) along the line, besides speaking out at the meetings,” she said. Steele also said her home is sur rounded on three sides by the UNC campus and that she is afraid future development under the Master Plan might further encroach on her property. Elaine Barney, who lives on Westwood Drive just west of campus, said the BOT was hasty in passing the Master Flan before considering the total environmental impact “The information just isn’t there yet,” she said. But most residents didn’t seem sur prised that the Master Plan passed. “We didn’t have great expectations coming in,” Barney said. “It’s what most of us expected.” Residents present at the meeting said they thought the BOT hadn’t paid enough attention to their concerns when considering the Master Plan. Anne Sullivan, who also fives in the Westwood area, said the BOT had lis tened to the concerns of residents but had not done anything to address them. “They include us in their meetings but don’t listen to what we say,” she See VOTE, Page 4 ing in Aycock Residence Hall. Andrew McCullough, a senior living in Stacy Residence Hall, said he thought the people who were robbed lacked basic common sense. “I feel like dumbasses should lock their doors at night,” he said. Chris Duerden, a senior resident of Lewis, agreed that the robberies could have been prevented. “On the whole, everybody just needs to be a little more vigilant." The University Editor can be reached * af udeskQunc.edu.