Chillin' Franklin closes for fair. See Page 3 (She lathi ®ar Heel www.dailytarheel.com Moeser Urges Faculty, Students to Fight Proposed Budget Cut Friday's Faculty Council meeting also addressed a report concerning grading policies and grade inflation By Ann Had Staff Writer Rousing applause echoed through the halls of Wilson Library on Friday as fac ulty members lauded Chancellor James Moeser’s powerful argument against the possible budget cuts from the UNO sys tem. Moeser rallied those attending the 'Greek Freaks' Step to Raise Money The step show, hosted by Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity Inc., featured eight teams. By Jenny McLendon Staff Writer Hours of planning and organization proved the recipe for success for the Mu Zeta chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity Inc., bringing a spicy blend of music, dance and cultural pride to the UNC campus again this year. Greek Freak 2001 drew an audience of nearly 8,000 as well as eight step teams from regional universities Friday night, making Carmichael Auditorium the venue for what organizers call the largest step show on the East Coast Stepping, which originates from a form of worship in African culture, incorporates both traditional and modem dance elements to express cultural pride. For the 14th year in a row, Greek Freak succeeded in showcasing this sense of unity. As Alpha Phi Alpha’s primary philanthropic project, the annual show generates funds for the Sonja H. Stone Black Cultural Center, the Inter-Faith Council homeless shelter and academic scholarships. The 2000 competition raised more than $6,000, but organizers would not disclose how much money this year’s event garnered. BET television personality Hits From the Street was the emcee the event, infusing the crowd with ener gy and not missing the opportunity to poke fun at some audience mem bers, bringing many to their feet with his trademark comedy. Senior Charles Campbell, Greek Freak’s coordinator for the second year, said months of planning went into Friday’s step-off. “This is our biggest event and one of the most well- Hooker's Vision, Moeser's Direction Merge to Shape UNC By Brook Corwin Staff Writer James Moeser didn’t step into the office of UNC chancellor with a clean slate. The University’s top administrative official inherited an ambitious plan to give every student Internet access, a blueprint for 50 years of campus growth and a lofty goal of making UNC the best public university in the nation. They all came from the unfinished agenda of the late Michael Hooker, who died of cancer in June 1999. Board of Trustees members and fac ulty who worked with Hooker said the late chancellor was a man driven by his goals and ideas. “I would characterize Michael Hooker as a visionary,” said Billy Armfield, who served as BOT chairman during Hooker’s tenure. “He saw things in terms of being the number one pub lic university that others had not seen nor articulated nor endeavored to do.” Every moment is a golden one for him who has the vision to recognize it as such. Henry Miller ASG Asks State To Find Budget Cuts Elsewhere See Page 3 Faculty Council meeting to sup port him in his stand against the 7 percent budget cut from the UNC system -a total of $125 million - that the state legislature’sjoint Appropriations Subcommittee on Education formally requested last week. If enacted, the University’s share of the cuts would total close to $25 million. “He came out, both barrels blasting,” said Faculty Council Chairwoman Sue Estroff. Moeser asked faculty members to fight to protect the integrity and quality DTH/BRENT CLARK Hampton University student Didi Wells steps with other members of Delta Sigma Theta sorority Inc. at Greek Freak 2001 on Friday night. Celebrity host Hits From the Street (below) keeps the crowd laughing. known step shows on the East Coast” Eight teams representing seven of the nine National Pan Hellenic Council groups vied for the two $1,500 first-place prizes and two SSOO second-place prizes. The money was awarded to each of the two top fraternity and sorority teams. Kevin McDowell, a senior from South Carolina State College, said his team started rehearsing nine months in advance. “We’ve worked really hard, and we came to win,” he said. “(To us), this is a sort of fund-raiser to help keep our chapter going." In the end, McDowell’s group, That vision now lies on Moeser’s desk. But while Moeser said he has main tained the direction of sever al programs implemented under Hooker’s reign, he also said aspirations to become the best public university in the nation have been rede fined under his lead. “I’ve changed the rhetoric a little bit from Chancellor Hooker,” he said. “I think he was really focusing on the U.S. News & World Report (rankings), and I’ve tried to pull us away from that. I think that’s a trap.” Moeser said he hopes the University’s greatness will be seen in its students’ and fac ulty members’ commitment to service, development of intellectual capacity and Qielm A five-part series examining Chancellor James Moeser's vision for the University and how he will see it to fruition. Today: Inheriting a Legacy Tuesday: Activism's Impact Wednesday: A World Focus Thursday: Money Matters Friday: Funding Priorities demonstration of leadership. Such qualities, Moeser says, will not be Courage Under Fire Professional women's soccer team loses opening game against Boston Breakers. See Page 3 Serving the students and the University community since 1893 of UNC. He also emphasized that the tuition money intended for faculty salary increases would not be used to offset the budget cuts. Estroff followed with a call to “join together to form an embrace for the common cause.” “We will not sell North Carolinians short,” she said. “We will not undermine their confi dence (in the University).” Moeser’s speech at the meeting was part of an effort to spark a grassroots campaign by UNC faculty, students and parents to put pressure on state law makers. He sent an e-mail to the University the Eta Alpha chapter of Phi Beta Sigma fraternity Inc., walked away with second place, edged out for first by the Beta Zeta chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity Inc. Ending with Eve’s “Who’s That Girl?,” the Gamma lota chapter of Delta Sigma Theta sorority Inc. told the audience exacdy who they were, taking home SSOO for second place. But the Rho Alpha chapter of Zeta Phi Beta sorority Inc. left with first prize, dedicating part of their routine to unity between competing groups. See GREEK FREAK, Page 2 reflected in national rankings but in the personal standards held by the University community. “We don’t hear people at Harvard (University) talking about whether they are the best uni versity in America or not,” he said. “They just know they’re good. “My sense of being the best public university is that we get to the point where we have so much confidence in ourselves that we don’t real ly talk about it.” Moeser also said he sees UNC’s fundamental goals as different from those of other large public universities, which he feels are too great for UNC’s tastes. “I think maintaining the balance between being a great research university and a university that prides itself on teaching is an important community Thursday informing it of the possible cuts. The meeting also addressed a report of the Committee on Grading Standards, which was formed last year to investigate University grading policies and suspected grade inflation. Committee Chairwoman Beverly Long presented the report and answered questions from concerned faculty. The report served to raise faculty members’ consciousness about grading standards, and it attributed rising student grade point averages, which have been increasing at UNC and at colleges around the country, to a variety of causes. ! jf • Pan M £B|^|PT|| \h MM? * 1 part” he said. “I don’t think (the University of) Michigan or (the University of California at) Berkeley defines them selves that way at all or ever has.” An aspect of Hooker’s definition of a great public university was providing Internet access and up-to-date technolo gy for every student and faculty mem ber. These goals led to the January 1998 creation of Carolina Computing Initiative, which required all freshmen to own laptop computers by fall 2000 and promised to help students who could not afford the purchase. The program made its official debut this year but has yet to fully incorporate the new technology into the classroom. Moeser said such development has proceeded smoothly without an active role on his part. “(CCI) was a well-devel oped plan ready to be implemented,” he said. “I could walk in and basically bless a process that was already well under way and would have happened without me because the leadership was in place.” CJc- It offered recommendations to the council on how to address the University’s grading policies. The report proposed an annual review of grades and a general summa ry of grading patterns by each depart ment. It also supplied specific definitions of letter grades. Some faculty members questioned the frequent review of grades. One professor said it was “too intru sive.” Another said the authority of pro fessors was “being eaten away.” Others questioned the semantics of the definitions and called for anew grad ing system altogether. The differing viewpoints and grading Education Funding Cuts Likely, Legislators Say Other state agencies such as law enforcement, social services and public schools also are facing budget cuts. By Cuff Nelson Staff Writer Gov. Mike Easley continues insisting that legislators avoid dipping into the state’s education funding, even as the state budget deficit grows. But state legislators, struggling to. draw the balanced budget required by the state constitution, said it is unlikely that a financial alternative to education cuts will be found. Lawmakers on the Joint Appropriations Subcommittee on Education recently asked education offi cials to present a plan for cutting $290 million from the education budget - $125 million from the UNC-system budget. UNC-Chapel Hill would lose about $25 million under this proposal. The budget deficit has reached near ly SBOO million, but some analysts are predicting that the deficit will continue growing. Fred Hartman, Easley’s press secre tary, said making students suffer is the Wrong approach to deficit reduction. “The governor has made his position clear," Hartman said. “Easley believes we can cut government and still make progress in education. That’s why (the cuts he proposed) were in state agencies, not classrooms.” Hartman said the $125 million cut to the UNC system would harm recent efforts to bring the schools in line with their peer institutions. “It’s hard to imag ine how we could cut that much and remain competitive,” he said. But both Democratic and Republican But Marian Moore, vice chancellor for information technology services, said simply having Moeser’s full support was essential for CCI to move forward into licensing new computers to professional schools’ faculty members and students. “If the leadership at the top doesn’t sup port this, it’s not going to happen," she said. “We’ve been very fortunate to have a chancellor who’s behind the program.” Moore said that it has not been Moeser’s responsibility to undertake direct involvement in CCI but that the program is proceeding as planned under his authority. “I think Michael would be really proud,” she said. But CCI wasn’t the only long-term program ignited by Hooker’s vision for the University. The UNC Master Plan, a 50-year blueprint for campus growth, was placed under the guidance of anew architectural firm during Hooker’s tenure to redesign the plan, which was approved last month by the BOT. Jonathan Howes, the director of the Summer Yet? Today: Sunny, 87 Tuesday: Sunny, 84 Wednesday: Sunny, 70 Monday, April 23, 2001 issues raised by the report will be revis ited in the fall when the Faculty Council votes on grading resolutions. There was also dissent regarding the proposal to change the academic sched ule and shorten the current 150-day requirement The faculty postponed voting on the resolution to raise die issue at the facul ty assembly of the UNC system after lengthy debate of the pros and cons. Among other items discussed at the meeting, the council re-elected Secretary Joseph Ferrell to his position. The University Editor can be reached at udesk@unc.edu. legislators said something has to give to compensate for the state budget deficit Rep. Eugene Rogers, D-Martin, was one of the legislators who asked UNC system President Molly Broad to present a plan for making the budget cuts. Rogers, chairman of the appropria tions subcommittee, said other state pro grams also are facing possible budget reductions. “The public schools and community colleges took a big hit too -and other state agencies as well,” he said. “The budget deficit isn’t getting any better. We don’t have any alternative." Republican legislators said one of the few things that will preserve the educa tion budget is an increase in state rev enues - which is highly unlikely. Rep. George Holmes, R-Wilkes, who sits with Rogers on the subcommittee, said state officials still have no definite idea on how high the budget deficit might ballon. “It could be even worse than currendy projected because it is still rising,” Holmes said. Rep. W. B. Teague Jr., R-Alamance, another member of the appropriations subcommittee, also said that the pro jected shortfall continues to grow. “Everybody in the state is taking hits - law enforcement, social services, coun ties and cities,” Teague said. “Some local ities might have to raise property taxes, and you know how controversial that is.” Teague said he still is surprised at the state’s rapidly growing budget deficit, which caught many officials off-guard. State budget analysts were predicting a budget surplus of about SSOO million last year. “I don’t know how we got into this mess so suddenly,” Teague said. “The merchants tell me if there’s a recession going on, it isn’t a bad one as far as they See LEGISLATORS, Page 2 Master Plan, said it was Hooker’s idea to hire Ayers Saint Gross, a Baltimore based firm, to redevelop the plan and improve the aesthetic beauty of campus. Moeser said some of his most impor tant work as chancellor has been provid ing input on revisions made to the plan, although he said his influence on the final product was only minimal. “I was only one voice among many, which was scores of people,” Moeser said. “I saw my role as one of asking hard questions.” Moeser said his primary focus when making suggestions to the plan has been keeping campus traffic to a minimum and preserving UNC’s ambiance, prior ities he suggested came from his back ground as a doctorate in musical arts. “I may have a heightened sensitivity to aes thetic issues,” he said. “I have a great concern that the construction we do and the landscapes we make are a heavy, heavy responsibility.” See STANDARD, Page 2