STATE & NATION
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Senate billcallsfor$849billion. pG. 5
Also: Lee sets SU career mark. pG. 7
Twelve projects under way. pG. 9
su bedevils nw state
senate health care battle begins
Filming season heats up in la.
estABLished in 1928
WWW.SOUTHERNDIGEST.COM
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2009
VOL. 54, ISSUE 17
George advises students
Civil Rightsera cases discussed
SU alum and Texas Instruments VP stresses persistence
By darrius harrison digest LAYOUt editOR/egO editOR-iN-CHieF
the outgrowth of regional universities and degree programs. The review panel, often dubbed the Tucker Commission after House Speaker Jim Tucker who sponsored the legislation, is tasked with advising ways to streamline higher education. Gov. Bobby Jindal has asked the commission to recommend how to cut $146 million from college budgets during lean financial times. Wharton’s approved recommendations were to: —Require the state’s higher
Southern University’s Department of History hosted the “Civil Rights Initiative: A Dialogue,” Wednesday, in T.T. Allain, which featured Emmy nominated filmmaker and former Southern student Keith Beauchamp. The turnout for the film screening of the documentary “Wanted Justice: Johnnie Mae Chappell,” which has already aired on The History Channel, was so large, it had to be showed in two separate viewings. “I liked the documentary,” said Dennis Davis, senior marketing major from Varnado. “I thought it was very informative. I learned a lot about the Johnnie Mae Chappell case; I learned some of my history I didn’t know about. I enjoyed it and I hope they crack the case.” In 1989, Beauchamp first realized some of the world’s social injustices when he was threatened for “dancing with a white friend of mine,” he said; before that, he had seen Jets magazine’s cover story on the 1955 murder of Emmett Till. The Beauchamp family used to use Till’s murder as an example of what could happen for treading on the color line. “Don’t let what happened to Emmett Till happen to you,” his family would warn. After leaving Southern to pursue his filmmaking career, the former criminal justice major was set to seek justice using another avenue. Films! He gathered research material in an attempt to formulate a screenplay. Instead, under the guidance of Mamie Till Mobley, Emmett’s mother, Beauchamp decided to make a documentary film instead. “Beauchamp is credited with introducing the evidence that reopened the Till case by the U.S. Department of Justice in 2004; evidence which included
See programS page 3
See civil rigHTS page 3
By Billy washinGton digest stAFF WRiteR
The college of Engineering hosted a discussion and dialogue session on career planning advisement last Friday in the P.B.S Pinchback High Tech room. The guest speaker of he event was Texas Instruments Senior Vice President and Worldwide Manager of High Performance Analog (HPA) business unit, Arthur L. George. George earned his bachelors of science in electrical engineering from Southern in 1983. According to the Texas Instruments’ people page, George received the Southern University’s Outstanding Alumni Engineering Achievement Merit
photo By wil norwood/diGest
Art george has a discussion to southern University students and faculty on how to take over their careers last Friday afternoon, in the Hi-tech Room of the Pinchback engineering Building. george is the senior Vice President and worldwide manager of he texas instrument’s High-Performance Analog business unit.
Award in 2007. He also earned a master’s degree in 1990 from Southern Methodist University. George begins his speech by stating that he will discuss the past, present, and future of his life. “There are three critical questions people often ask about their career?” said George as he opened his speech. “First, I will give you the answers to these questions. The answers
are Yes, Yes, Yes.” He asked the audience if anyone owned an I-pod to describe the transformation of technology from his time to present. “How many of you own an I-pod? I can remember when my I-pod was a boom box on my shoulders, “ George said. He also elaborated on his humble beginnings of life before he came to Southern
University. “I was born and raised in Ethel, Louisiana. I was born into a family with two hard working parents who didn’t have everything but still managed to maintain and they always told us that with education we will have a better life.” There are many questions one may ask about their career See george page 3
State schools may lose some programs BY tHe AssOCiAted PRess
The state’s public colleges may have their academic degree programs scaled back, based on recommendations approved Tuesday by a state higher education review panel. The Louisiana Postsecondary Education Review Commission also voted to propose equal funding for associate degree programs at community colleges and the two-year degrees at universities. Today, universities receive more money because the faculty members are paid more. Commission member and former LSU Chancellor James Wharton pushed three other
recommendations approved Tuesday. “There may be graduate programs that don’t have anything to do with that region of the state,” Wharton said. “Should the state support graduate programs that don’t have anything to do with the region?” Commission member Belle Wheelan, who is the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools president, said some of the bachelor’s degree-focused universities “grew too far.” Commission member Mark Musick, the Southern Regional Education Board president emeritus, said regional universities should focus more
on teaching undergraduates, while LSU must do a better job of attracting and educating graduate students. Wharton has complained, for example, that too many public schools have specialized engineering programs. LSU, Southern University, the University of Louisiana at University, Louisiana Tech University and the University of New Orleans all have multiple engineering degree programs. McNeese State University has a general engineering technology program. Wharton on Monday and Tuesday has mentioned the University of Louisiana at Lafayette when discussing
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