THE STUDENT VOICE OF MIDWESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
THE WICHITAN page 4 Stepping up
Sequel to dance movie proves it has the right moves to top the original.
page 8 ‘Stangs fall short Mens basketball team continues to slump during conference play, dropping both of their last two games.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2008
New housing to be completed by fall 2009 BRITTANY NORMAN EDITOR-IN-CHIEF New student housing will be a reality on campus by fall 2009. The MSU Board of Regents approved the $21 million project at their meeting on Friday. MSU President Dr. Jesse Rogers
said the demand for more housing is very clear and it is “time to get started on more.” University housing is usually full by April, months before the application deadline has passed. Dr. Howard Farrell, vice president for university advancement and student affairs, said housing on campus is continuously at 100 percent
occupancy. Students are placed in off-campus housing each semester, which he considers less than ideal. The new housing will be built where the Mercantile Building currently stands. The cost to raze the site will be $57,000. The funds will be provided by a private gift, according to university officials. The apartment-style residence
hall will be three stories tall and consist of one-bedroom, two-bedroom, and four-bedroom units. Still in the design phases, the costper-bed is 80 percent higher than that of Sunwatcher. Each unit will feature a full sized bed, dresser, walk-in closet, and desk for each student, as well as a full-sized washer and dryer.
In the current plans, the majority of the units featured are two-bedroom, something the architects said would be “appealing” for what students wanted, both today and for the future. Regent Munir Lalani thought otherwise, claiming that the students’ desires are less important than what their parents can afford.
An Art Affair
This is the front view of what the new residence hall will look like when completed. Photo courtesy
“We need to look at it again and make it more affordable,” Lalani said, suggesting that the architects use mostly four-bedroom units rather than two-bedroom units on the project to keep costs lower and to increase the number of students that the facility could accommodate. He also suggested doing away with the small number of one-bedroom units that had been drawn into the plan altogether. “We’re not for-profit business developers,” Lalani said. “Our job is educating our kids affordably. We need to accommodate more kids and give them more affordable rent.” The new project will have its own parking lot as well. The regents also voted to include the $17.3 million cost of purchasing Sunwatcher Apartments, which the university currently leases, into the loan for the new residence hall.
Fountain vandals nabbed, jailed for soapy hijinks CHRIS COLLINS MANAGING EDITOR
Student artists from area high schools competed at MSU last week. Photos by Patrick Johnston, Herschel Self
High school students compete for cash awards, display art in MSU gallery CHRIS COLLINS MANAGING EDITOR The MSU art department held the 16th annual high school art competition Saturday, awarding $2,000 cash to entrants. First place winners in each of the eight categories were given $100, second place won $50, third, $25. Two $500 scholarships weren’t awarded because no one applied for them. Alison Beck, one of 146 entrants in this year’s program, admitted the $100 prize might per-
suade her to attend MSU when she graduates. “I’m not sure where I want to go yet. I want to get out of Wichita Falls,” the Rider sophomore said after being awarded the photography category’s first-place prize. The high school competition, which usually results in three to five scholarships annually, drew no applicants this year, said Gary Goldberg, professor of art. “We do this program to recognize local high schools and to let them know about our program. It’s probably one of our main recruit-
ing tools,” he said. The art department also uses the Visual Arts Scholastic Event to showcase high school art and raise awareness of its own program. MSU submitted eight high school pieces to the UIL-judged VASE this year. The contest is judged on stricter criteria than MSU’s high school competition. VASE hasn’t seen many results at MSU yet, Goldberg said. About 20 art majors are on scholarship this semester. The art department awards scholarships from $500 to $4,000 every year.
that takes 10-12 hours to fix. It’s a pretty involved process.” Every time the fountain is soaped – five to six times a year – Price empties the 10,000-gallon structure to scrub and pressure wash it. More chemicals are added to keep the water clean. Finally, another 10,000 gallons of water is needed to refill the fountain. The painstaking process can cost the university $300 in equip-
ment and labor, according to Kyle Owen, associate director of the physical plant. “It’s a pain. It’s a real headache when it happens.” An informal meeting between Kappa Sigma fraternity and Dean of Students Dan Neely has scheduled Thursday to discuss disciplinary action for the organization. The fraternity faces charges of damage to public property. Arnold and Gibbs couldn’t be reached for comment.
Two Kappa Sigma pledges were arrested and charged with misdemeanor criminal mischief Friday morning after filling Bolin Fountain with soap. MSU police saw a white truck pull into a lot near the fountain at about 1 a.m. Friday. Officers observed Ryan Arnold, 18, and Chance Gibbs, 21, get out of the truck and begin pouring eight pounds of laundry detergent in the fountain. They might not have been caught, hadn’t the truck pulled into the same parking lot as an MSU police vehicle. The driver of the truck fled the scene. Arnold and Gibbs were taken to Wichita County Courthouse and released later that day. There isn’t evidence the students were using alcohol, Police Chief Michael Hagy said, although a report said alcohol involvement was suspected. “It’s minor on a scale of crimes that happen. When people commit minor, inconvenient criminal activity, they don’t realize there’s a substantial cost involved.” Dean Price, superintendent Bolin Fountain stands empty on Tuesday evening. It is in the of the central plant, is person- prcess of being cleaned after a prank Friday morning left it full ally in charge of Bolin foun- of soap. Photo by Patrick Johnston tain’s upkeep. “It’s a problem
MSU emergency alert system to utilize email, text messaging BRITTANY NORMAN EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
In the wake of recent school shooting incidents across the nation, MSU has decided to speed their efforts to get a more effective crisis management plan in place. Part of the new crisis management plan, MSU Alert, is an emergency notification system that gives the university the ability to send emergency information by email and text-message to individuals who sign up for the service.
The service is free and will be availible to all MSU students, faculty, and staff. Campus Police Chief Michael Hagy said they are currently troubleshooting the issues and working out the kinks in the system by testing it with the student senators. The Crisis Management Committee is also reviewing the possibility of installing loudspeaker systems on campus, as well as several other options as they continue to meet on a regular basis.