- Campaign: Geology professor starts scholarship
- WCU shoreline program opens coastal station at USC Beaufort
- Concert/jam session series to kick off Nov. 6 at Mountain Heritage Center
- WCU Students present at N.C. Campus Compact Conference Nov. 8
- WCU to offer Stained Glass Workshop Nov. 6-Dec.18
- Starnes appointed to N.C. Historical Commission
- WCU's Rash wins Wolfe Award for short story collection 'Chemistry'
- Smothers Brothers coming to WCU for REACH benefit show Nov. 19
- WCU co-sponsors summit for instructional leaders
- Broadway's Adam Pascal to perform Nov. 13 at WCU

Above: Western Carolina Chancellor John Bardo addresses the campus community.
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Western Carolina University Chancellor John W. Bardo apologized to the campus and community for what he called the “inappropriate behavior” and “poor judgment” of seven students who admitted to leaving the body of a dead bear beneath a statue on the WCU campus.
Those actions, which occurred Monday, Oct. 20, do not represent the beliefs of the entire university community, Bardo said during a noontime “conversation with the campus” Wednesday, Oct. 22.
Bardo called the open meeting in the center of campus to help dispel rumors and misinformation surrounding an incident that some people, both on and off the campus, have suggested was politically motivated because the bear was discovered with two Obama campaign posters stuck on its head.
An investigation by campus police and federal officials has found no political or racial motives behind the student action. Law enforcement officers are in consultation with the District Attorney’s Office to determine whether charges would be appropriate.
“This was a very inappropriate action taken by seven members of the university community,” Bardo told a crowd of more than 100 students, faculty and staff assembled on the lawn of A.K. Hinds University Center. “I don’t know, and we may never know, what their real motives were. I cannot look into their hearts.”
Regardless of why they did what they did, the students “should have been able to understand the consequences of their actions for themselves as individuals, for their families and for this university community,” he said.
“Unequivocally, what they did was wrong. Regardless of motivation, it was wrong,” Bardo said. “What also is very real is that seven members of this university community did something that was wrong. Nine thousand members of this university community did not do that. We are not going to allow seven people to define who you are. You are better than that. You are Western Carolina University.”
Bardo reminded the crowd that the university has a code of conduct and a creed centered on core values of respect for others, and the desire and ability to debate and discuss differences in a civil and meaningful way.
Visit this link for a video of Bardo’s remarks.
Maintained by the Office of Public Relations
Last Modified: Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2008







