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THIS WEEK: MAX WEINBERG JAMS WITH THE JAZZ ENSEMBLE MfPAGE 10 FE8 27 MAR. 12 2007 MENS BASEBALL A HISTORY OF «gf SWEEPS MARIST HATE SPEECH * *f* SPOUTS PAGE 11 LIFE PAGE 15 WHERE THEY STAND: S6A CANDIDATES DEBATE THE ISSUES NEWS PAGE 4 FREE THEaronnian THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF UNCG ■ www.carolinianonline.com Students frustrated in Oakland Deck Lines continue to grow for those wishing to exit after classes A. Matthew Deal Staff Writer Parking is not an uncommon issue that faculty and students deal with, but recently students have found themselves waiting 20 or 30 minutes in or-der to leave the Oakland Deck. "I've waited for at least 20 minutes to be able to pay to leave the deck," said Heather Byrd, who uses the Oakland deck frequently. Byrd commented that often there were several people waiting to pay at the pay-on-foot station. "It's a really annoying problem to deal with," said Byrd. Byrd is not the only student who has experi-enced issues with the deck. "I have a deck pass, there are huge back-ups in the afternoon from people having to pay", says Laura-Kathryn Fuqua. "I have to leave earlier for classes too, because it's a problem getting in." Students are not the only ones who have seen a problem with the deck, according to Scott Mil-man, Director of Parking Operations and Campus Access Management. "We have noticed the issue with the Oakland Deck. It's been compounded recently because we lost a person over there," said Milman. According to Milman, having a staff member at the deck helps significantly with assisting people with leaving, and has been the main reason Oak-land Deck has experienced problems lately. "We have recently replaced that person, still, we know that there are crunches during peak times," said Milman. But Parking Operations and Campus Access Management is also looking at ways to improve the situation beyond this. "We don't like to see the long lines either, we are always looking for ways to do things better," com-mented Milman. According to Milman, there are also plans to build an attendant station at Oakland, similar to that in the Walker Parking Deck. The tentative SEE PARKING PAGE TWO JERRY ARNOLD/THE CAROLINIAN Paying to pass through these gates hasn't proved so easy this semester. THINK GREEN Is the new UNCG major what you've been looking for? NEWS PAGE 3 THE CAROLINIAN ESTABLISHED 1919 VOL LXXXVII \ss\ityrzf CONTACT US the corolinian@hotmail.com PHONE: FAX: 336-334-5752 336-334-3518 School of Music graduate student dies Kathryn Kennedy News Editor A memorial service will be held today, Tuesday, in honor of a graduate student who passed away in the School of Music last week. First-year graduate student Tracy Scardino, of Sicklerville, N.J., died Monday, Feb. 19, when she became unconscious and stopped breathing in the School of Music. Emergency Medical Re-sponse technicians were unable to revive her, according to an email from UNCG Chancellor Patricia Sullivan. She was 22-years-old. The campus community is invited to attend the memorial, held at noon today in the atrium area of the School of Music. The funeral was held at 11 a.m., Sat-urday, Feb. 24, at the Sicklerville United Methodist Church in her hometown. Memorial donations can be made to the Delanco Camp, Attn: Financial Secretary, P.O. Box 328, Sewell, N.J., 08081. Expressions of sympathy can be sent to the home of Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Scardino and Family at 26 Avella lane, Sicklerville, N.J., 08081. "Our heartfelt condolences go out to Tracy's family, and al of her friends and teachers at UNCG," Sullivan concluded. "Please keep them in your thoughts and prayers." The Carolinian would like to hearyour memories ofTracyfor an article set to run March 13, after Spring Break. Please email your thoughts and comments to the News Editor at kathryn_w_ken-nedy@ yahoo.com. We look forward to hearingfrom you. Also, feel free to post com-ments, as always, at www.carolinianonline.com ON THE WEI AT: News Classifieds Corrections Opinions A&E Sports Life 2-4,18 2 5 5-7 8-10,19 11-13 14-16 fip Book-arts look He* - r * I
Object Description
Title | The Carolinian [February 27, 2007] |
Date | 2007-02-27 |
Editor/creator | Lowrance, Chris |
Subject headings |
University of North Carolina at Greensboro--Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals-- North Carolina--Greensboro Student publications--North Carolina--Greensboro Student activities--North Carolina--History |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The February 27, 2007, issue of The Carolinian, the student newspaper of The University of North Carolina at Greensboro. |
Type | Text |
Original format | Newspapers |
Original publisher | Greensboro, N.C. : The University of North Carolina at Greensboro |
Language | eng |
Contributing institution | Martha Blakeney Hodges Special Collections and University Archives, UNCG University Libraries |
Publication | The Carolinian |
Rights statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Additional rights information | NO COPYRIGHT - UNITED STATES. This item has been determined to be free of copyright restrictions in the United States. The user is responsible for determining actual copyright status for any reuse of the material. |
Object ID | 2007-02-27-carolinian |
Date digitized | 2011 |
Digital publisher | The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, University Libraries |
Digitized by | Creekside Digital |
Sponsor | Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation |
OCLC number | 871560323 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text | THIS WEEK: MAX WEINBERG JAMS WITH THE JAZZ ENSEMBLE MfPAGE 10 FE8 27 MAR. 12 2007 MENS BASEBALL A HISTORY OF «gf SWEEPS MARIST HATE SPEECH * *f* SPOUTS PAGE 11 LIFE PAGE 15 WHERE THEY STAND: S6A CANDIDATES DEBATE THE ISSUES NEWS PAGE 4 FREE THEaronnian THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF UNCG ■ www.carolinianonline.com Students frustrated in Oakland Deck Lines continue to grow for those wishing to exit after classes A. Matthew Deal Staff Writer Parking is not an uncommon issue that faculty and students deal with, but recently students have found themselves waiting 20 or 30 minutes in or-der to leave the Oakland Deck. "I've waited for at least 20 minutes to be able to pay to leave the deck," said Heather Byrd, who uses the Oakland deck frequently. Byrd commented that often there were several people waiting to pay at the pay-on-foot station. "It's a really annoying problem to deal with," said Byrd. Byrd is not the only student who has experi-enced issues with the deck. "I have a deck pass, there are huge back-ups in the afternoon from people having to pay", says Laura-Kathryn Fuqua. "I have to leave earlier for classes too, because it's a problem getting in." Students are not the only ones who have seen a problem with the deck, according to Scott Mil-man, Director of Parking Operations and Campus Access Management. "We have noticed the issue with the Oakland Deck. It's been compounded recently because we lost a person over there," said Milman. According to Milman, having a staff member at the deck helps significantly with assisting people with leaving, and has been the main reason Oak-land Deck has experienced problems lately. "We have recently replaced that person, still, we know that there are crunches during peak times," said Milman. But Parking Operations and Campus Access Management is also looking at ways to improve the situation beyond this. "We don't like to see the long lines either, we are always looking for ways to do things better," com-mented Milman. According to Milman, there are also plans to build an attendant station at Oakland, similar to that in the Walker Parking Deck. The tentative SEE PARKING PAGE TWO JERRY ARNOLD/THE CAROLINIAN Paying to pass through these gates hasn't proved so easy this semester. THINK GREEN Is the new UNCG major what you've been looking for? NEWS PAGE 3 THE CAROLINIAN ESTABLISHED 1919 VOL LXXXVII \ss\ityrzf CONTACT US the corolinian@hotmail.com PHONE: FAX: 336-334-5752 336-334-3518 School of Music graduate student dies Kathryn Kennedy News Editor A memorial service will be held today, Tuesday, in honor of a graduate student who passed away in the School of Music last week. First-year graduate student Tracy Scardino, of Sicklerville, N.J., died Monday, Feb. 19, when she became unconscious and stopped breathing in the School of Music. Emergency Medical Re-sponse technicians were unable to revive her, according to an email from UNCG Chancellor Patricia Sullivan. She was 22-years-old. The campus community is invited to attend the memorial, held at noon today in the atrium area of the School of Music. The funeral was held at 11 a.m., Sat-urday, Feb. 24, at the Sicklerville United Methodist Church in her hometown. Memorial donations can be made to the Delanco Camp, Attn: Financial Secretary, P.O. Box 328, Sewell, N.J., 08081. Expressions of sympathy can be sent to the home of Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Scardino and Family at 26 Avella lane, Sicklerville, N.J., 08081. "Our heartfelt condolences go out to Tracy's family, and al of her friends and teachers at UNCG," Sullivan concluded. "Please keep them in your thoughts and prayers." The Carolinian would like to hearyour memories ofTracyfor an article set to run March 13, after Spring Break. Please email your thoughts and comments to the News Editor at kathryn_w_ken-nedy@ yahoo.com. We look forward to hearingfrom you. Also, feel free to post com-ments, as always, at www.carolinianonline.com ON THE WEI AT: News Classifieds Corrections Opinions A&E Sports Life 2-4,18 2 5 5-7 8-10,19 11-13 14-16 fip Book-arts look He* - r * I |