A&E
Movie directed by Baylor
Editorial: Scotland’s Vote
Sports #7 Baylor hopes to
unity will serve them well.”
learn from first game
“The Scots are a people that thrive on unity, and that
alumnus to premiere next Friday
4
on the road.
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The Baylor Lariat baylorlariat com
WE’RE THERE WHEN YOU CAN’T BE
Thursday | September 18, 2014
A Lecture on Liberty Starr discusses religious freedom in honor of Constitution Day By Rebecca Flannery Staff Writer
The mane event
Carlye Thornton | Lariat Photo Editor
Coppell freshman Courtney Quirk strokes Billy while Baylor Riding Club recruits Wednesday on Fountain Mall for the 2014-2015 school year. The Baylor Riding Club requires no experience to join, just a smile and a love of horses.
On the day dedicated to the U.S. Constitution, President and Chancellor Ken Starr chose to speak about religious freedom protected in the First Amendment. The federal government requires universities receiving national funding to hold educational discussion about the U.S. Constitution on Constitution Day. Hundreds of students and several faculty attended Wednesday’s discussion in Bennett Auditorium. “The words to the First Amendment are quite simple, like the preamble’s words, they’re quite majestic, ‘Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,’” Starr said. “As students of the text, we focus not only on the words but we also look at the structure. Those free-
doms come structurally before freedom of speech or freedom of the press.” Starr gave examples of times in history when freedom of religion was upheld and times when it was not. Court cases discussed included Burwell v. Hobby Lobby dealing with contraceptives and Sherbert v. Verner, where a worker was let go because of her inability to work Starr on a religious day. Starr also talked about the Religious Freedom Restoration Act as it was integrated within each of the religion-based cases he mentioned. SEE
STARR, page 4
Emotions mount on final day of Scottish campaign By Jill Lawless Associated Press
EDINBURGH, Scotland — For Scots, Wednesday was a day of excitement, apprehension, and a flood of final appeals before a big decision. In a matter of hours, they will determine whether Scotland leaves the United Kingdom and becomes an independent state. A full 97 percent of those eligible have registered to vote — including, for the first time, 16- and 17-year-olds — in a referendum that polls suggest is too close to call. A phone poll of 1,373 people by
Ipsos MORI, released Wednesday, put opposition to independence at 51 percent and support at 49 percent, with 5 percent of voters undecided. That means neither side can feel confident, given the margin of error of about plus or minus three percentage points. Former Prime Minister Gordon Brown, himself a Scot, told a No campaign rally that the quiet majority of pro-Union Scots “will be silent no more,” while pro-independence leader Alex Salmond urged voters to seize a democratic opportunity 307 years in the making.
In its final hours, the battle for Scotland had all the trappings of a normal election campaign: “Yes Scotland” and “No, Thanks” posters in windows, buttons on jackets, leaflets on street corners and megaphone-topped campaign cars cruising the streets blasting out Scottish songs and “Children of the Revolution.” But it is, both sides acknowledge, a once-in-a-generation — maybe once-in-a-lifetime — choice that could redraw the map of the United Kingdom. The gravity of the imminent SEE
SCOTLAND, page 4
Associated Press
NO supporters, those who are against Scotland becoming independent, in Glasgow, Scotland, on Wednesday wave the Union flag with the Royal Standard of Scotland, ahead of the Scottish independence referendum that takes place today.
Baylor Box program slow to catch on By Viola Zhou Reporter
Baylor Box has yet to gain popularity on campus despite new features released this summer, including one that allows multiple users to collaborate on one document at the same time. The cloud-based filing hosting service launched at Baylor in January made a transition to its new version, Box Notes, before the fall semester began. “There are a lot of advantages in Box Notes over the old version,” said Mark Mastin, director of systems support at Baylor’s Information Technology Services. “Multiple people can look at the same document at the same time, and even edit the same document at the same time.” Vol.116 No. 11
Mastin said about 4,100 Box accounts for Baylor have been opened. The number includes students, faculty and staff, and it’s not clear how many of them are active users. Baylor paid a setup fee of $5,000 to have Box on campus and pays an annual subscription fee of $65,000. He said Box has advantages over similar services. It has a free storage space of 50 GB, which is more than Google Docs’ 15 GB and Dropbox’s 2 GB, and students can log in with their Baylor ID without memorizing another username and password. “I also had a Dropbox account before we started implementing Box,” Mastin said. “My impression is Box is a lot easier to use than SEE
BOX, page 4
Racial tension, Ferguson talk over panel of faculty, students By Jon Platt Reporter
Kevin Freeman | Lariat Photographer
Baylor Box offers more storage than Google Drive, which offers 15 GB, and Dropbox, which hold two GB.
First copy free. Additional copies 25 cents each.
Baylor students and faculty gathered Wednesday evening to discuss racial tension in light of the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. “This is a topic that has been on everyone’s minds, maybe since Trayvon [Martin], maybe before,” said Ramona Curtis, director for civic engagement and educational development. “We need to talk about it. To no longer be separate, that’s our goal.” Curtis served as the moderator of the panel. At the end of her introductory remarks, Curtis recalled a quote from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. SEE
PANEL, page 4
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