VOLUME 112, ISSUE 44 Jablonski picked to run student affairs FORMER DEAN AT BROWN NAMED VICE CHANCELLOR BY JENN KAWKA STAFF WRITER UNC ended its seven-month search for anew vice chancellor for student affairs May 27 with the appointment of Margaret Jablonski. “I’m very excited about joining the team at Carolina and very impressed by the faculty, staff and BOTOKs Morrison changes BY BRIAN HUDSON UNIVERSITY EDITOR The UNC Board of Trustees decided May 27 to allocate several million dollars to the renovation and restoration of the University’s two South Campus high-rise residence halls. The first step of the approved renovation the nearly S2O million renovation of Morrison Residence Hall would include the installation of fire safety equipment, indoor air quality and air conditioning equipment and the restoration of rooms and bath rooms. Included in the 2-year Morrison renovation will be an “enhanced suite” project, where in about one third of suites —one room will be transformed into a common space. The renovations will begin next sum mer, with the renovation of Hinton James Residence Hall set to commence sometime after their completion. Trustees decided against a $5.4 million option to restore the brick exterior of Morrison. BOT members said they did not want to devote money to a building that could face demolition in the next couple of decades. “If it’s this board’s thought to say keep them, I value them. My concern is if they’re obsolete,” said Trustee Bob Winston during the meeting. “I would n’t spend extra dollars to put lipstick on the pig.” Dean Bresciani, interim vice chancellor for student affairs, said the decision was in students’ best interests. “We have been considering what we wanted to do with Morrison... for a number of years now, and it was a pretty steadied decision that we wanted to ren ovate Morrison,” he said. “They basically approved all the important aspects (of renovation).” The fate of the South Campus residence halls has been discussed by the trustees during their last sev eral meetings, but they had not been able to come to a consensus until now. BOT Chairman Richard “Stick” Williams said dur ing last week’s meeting that in the interest of timeli ness, a decision was necessary as soon as possible. “We’re going to have to make some kind of deci sion,” he said. “So we’re not faced with Odum Village.” During the renovation of Morrison, students will be relocated to the Odum Village, the married and family housing complex south of Manning Drive, which is scheduled for demolition in 2009 to make way for other residential facilities. That project’s schedule also influenced the trustees choice to only renovate Morrison and Hinton James, as the other plans would have delayed the Odum Village project between 2 and 5 years. SEE MORRISON, PAGE 5 Street name to come to vote Committee nixes dedication idea BY JOSEPH R. SCHWARTZ CITY EDITOR Much to the distaste of more than 700 citizens who signed a petition to save Airport Road, it appears that its days are numbered. After a Chapel Hill Town Council meeting last week that saw a plethora of dissenters and supporters of the proposal to rename Airport Road in honor of Martin Luther King Jr., the coun cil committee in charge of the plan is unwavering in their recommen dation to change the road. Those opposing the change had a.glimmer of hope after Council rriember Edith Wiggins, who heads the renaming committee, brought forward an idea to dedi cate the road instead of renaming it, but it was quickly dashed after a brief 35-minute meeting. Council member Sally Greene, {ONLINE * Gomez botches magnum opus * Secret Machines turn it up to 11 * Look for more stories online Serving the students and the University community since 1893 ®hr Satin (Bar Merl students,” Jablonski said. Jablonski, dean for campus life at Brown University since 2001, will begin her new role with the University Aug. 19- “I’m absolutely delighted,” said Steve Matson, chairman of the VCSA search committee. “She was an outstanding candidate for the position, and I’m thrilled she mfll s| IB ill p || |p ' B|BBiJflHf j§g 111 I ii) —fra a**' ■:::- -r&l ' t:'.-'* ** . , ‘ f_ k j .... . .. * Taking advantage of the clear, balmy Memorial Day weather, a submerged Stephen Quinlen (left) watches on as Mitchell Ford prepares to make a sizeable splash at the Meadowmont Swim Club in Chapel Hill. This year’s Memorial Day festivities were the third annual to be held at the 3 l/2-year-old DTH/GILLIAN BOLSOVER Town Council menbers Sally Greene (right) and Edith Wiggins consider the proposal to rename Airport Road at a committee meeting Tuesday. who serves on the committee, pro vided compelling evidence that a dedication would go unnoticed. “The (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) has heard the option of dedication and feels strongly that dedication is not powerful WEEKLY SUMMER ISSUE www.dailytarheel •Com accepted (it).” As senior student affairs leader and head of the division of student affairs, Jablonski will oversee pro grams for student learning and student services. Programs in the division include the Campus Y, leadership develop ment, Student Union, Greek affairs, new student programs, dean of students and career servic es, among others. “She brings a range of different experiences from the world of stu dent affairs to UNC... experience enough,” she said. “Over time a name means something, and a dedication can lose its meaning.” The 10 citizens who encircled the committee members saw the group draft four separate resolu- SEE COMPROMISE, PAGE 5 TOP NEWS RACE TO SAVE A SYMBOL A campus landmark continues to search for renovation funds. PAGE 3 NewVCSA Margaret Jablonksi was the dean for campus life at Brown University. in public and private schools and schools of stellar reputations,” Matson said. Prior to working at Brown, Jablonski served as associate vice chancellor for student affairs at the MEMORIAL DAY mixed-use development. Meadowmont Swim Club’s manager, Jennifer Wichowski, said approximately 425 people attended Monday afternoon’s event, which included a live band and a cookout. It was similar to many other gather ings in the area celebrating the memory of American troops who died in the nation’s service. Task force endorses ads at sports venues High scholarship costs drive choice BY BRIAN HUDSON UNIVERSITY EDITOR The University’s Task Force on Signage in Athletic Facilities endorsed the idea of corporate advertising in UNC sports ven ues during their final meeting May 27. The recommendation will now go before Chancellor James Moeser and the UNC Board of Trustees. If approved, it could result in the formation of anoth er committee to determine how the revenue would be distrib uted. In response to the “substantial need for the Department of Athletics to meet rising scholar ship costs, facility demands and sport-by-sport operating budget requirements,” the resolution recommends that the University INSIDE THE ICE MOVIE COMETH The climate gets killer 'Tomorrow/ with mammoth problems. PAGE 9 University of Connecticut and associate dean for undergraduate education and student affairs at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She has also worked in various student leadership development positions at Worchester Polytechnic Institute, Boston University and the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. Jablonski has an excellent record of integrating student affairs with academic affairs and including the role of students and faculty in that DTH/MIKE GIBSON “explore signage and other relat ed partnerships, for athletic ven ues.” The task force also included several guidelines for signage to ensure it had a limited and taste ful effect on UNC athletics. “Signage or partnerships should only be introduced in a limited and tasteful way, with a small number of companies that have strong integrity and nation al impact,” the resolution stated. The task force also recom mended that the signage have “significant financial impact within the athletic department; and the partnerships protect ... the environment and tradition of the institution.” UNC Athletics Director Dick SEE SIGNAGE, PAGE 5 WEATHER TODAY Sunny, High 84, Low 62 /, FRIDAY Isolated T-Storms, High 81, Low 60 SATURDAY Isolated T-Storms, High 84, Low 65 THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 2004 integration, Matson said. “She will be able to mend some riffs between academic affairs and student affairs,” he said. Sue Kitchen vacated the posi tion in the spring of 2002, and Dean Bresciani has been serving as interim vice chancellor since that time. Bresciani will become the vice president for student affairs at Texas A&M University June 28. “I think they made an excellent recommendation,” Bresciani said. SEE VCSA, PAGE 5 House delays budget rollout University likely to see fewer cuts BY CHRIS COLETTA STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR The N.C. House again delayed the unfolding of its spending plans Tuesday, but the chamber’s leaders said the UNC system will be spared the brunt of extra budget cuts outlined in the bill’s first draft. Originally, the House was scheduled to consider the budget at the end of last week. That plan included $44 million in cuts to UNC-system schools on top of reductions called for in Gov. Mike Easley’s spending proposal. But an outcry of concern from state officials and rank-and-file lawmakers in both the House and Senate pushed back the budget’s release, first to Tuesday and now to the beginning of next week —and universities will be among the ben eficiaries of the delay. “We’re going to be restoring some cuts that we made on the first pass,” said House Co-speaker Jim Black, D-Mecklenburg. “(Budget writers) needed more time, and so do we.” Both Black and Co-speaker Richard Morgan, R-Moore, would not say exactly how much money they planned to restore to the state’s 16 public universities or where the cash for the increases would come from. Numbers, however, were in place Tuesday, given to budget writers behind closed doors. Rep. Jim Crawford, a Granville County Democrat who serves as co-chair man of the House Appropriations Committee, said after the meeting that the figures would be available later in the week. “Budgets are always a work in progress,” Morgan said in explaining the delay. But any news was likely good news for system officials, whose schools have been hit hard by cuts in recent years. UNC-Chapel Hill Provost Robert Shelton told The Daily Tar Heel last week that if the gover nor’s proposed cuts of 1.7 percent were implemented, the University might be forced to cut teaching assistant and faculty positions. Also last week, UNC-system President Molly Broad circulated a memo asking campus leaders to petition budget writers to give the system as much money as possible. “It is imperative that House budget leaders hear from you now,” the memo states. Broad’s actions came in the shadow of the House’s original proposal, which among other things specified a cut of $5 mil lion earmarked specifically toward increasing class sizes and cuts of S2O million that would be determined by universities. Such cuts would run counter to the goals of campus-based tuition SEE BUDGET CUTS, PAGE 5