Accent, October 20, 2009

Page 1

Experience ACC gourmet on page4

www.theAccent.org

October 20, 2008

inside

Volume 1, Issue 3

ACC play “Proof” hits the stage

Students, guests bring math to life Jenessa Hernandez Staff Writer

5 What’s going on

...bailout?

cce n t AAns w er s

6

find out on page

forum

2 good to know

Voter’s Guide

3

see page

The Austin Community College Drama Department presented “Proof,” a Pulitzer Prize-winning play written by David Auburn, and on Oct. 10-12 and 17-19 at the third floor Gallery Theatre. It is a story of a mathematician’s daughter who struggles to accept her inherited talent for mathematics. Shelby Brammer, ACC Arts and Humanities Department Chair, chose and directed the play. “I chose ‘Proof’ because it was something I thought I could cast, and it was a play I thought would appeal to our audiences. Beautifully written and constructed, its story is universal regarding the hopes and fears we all have about what we may have inherited from our parents,” Brammer said. The cast members consist of Emily Robinson (Claire), Hailey Tuck (Catherine), and guest artists Paul Wright (Father) and Dustin Doering (Hal). Even though some of the actors of the play are guest artists, the cast was not unfamiliar with each other. Dustin Doering is an alumnus and Paul Wright is a Math Professor here at ACC. Doering has acted in two films, “Between Floors” and “The Sno Cone Stand Inc.” “We all got along very well.

Teodora Erbes • staff photographer

Scenes from Proof, ACC’s first production of the semester from the drama department. Left to right, ACC drama student Hailey Tuck playing Catherine, Paul Wright, a full time ACC math professor playing Robert and Dustin Doering an ACC drama alumnus

ȩȩ guest continued on page 8

Student Government Association goes to Washington Editor-in-Chief

Representatives from Austin Community College’s Student Government Association (SGA) participated in the 2008 National Student Government Summit in Washington DC on Sept. 24-28. The event, put on by the American Student Government Association, included over 100 post-secondary schools, and over 600 students attended. This year marked the fourth annual National Student Government Summit and gave students the opportunity to attend nearly 50 workshops and 24 hours of training, and take skills learned at the summit back to their college communities to better serve them. Both community colleges and four-year universities were represented at the event. ACC students who attended the summit, 13 in all, made an effort to have a student attend each of the six workshops during each time slot throughout the day. Two Student Life staff and SGA advisors accompanied the students. For many of the students, it was their first time attending the conference. The students met with numerous U.S. congressmen, senators and aides and were taken on a congressional tour of the Capitol as well as a

tour of the House and Senate Galleries. “We actually got to see some bills put on the floor,” said Joshua Bacak, South Austin Campus Senator, referring to a bill presented by a Michigan senator concerning inspecting bridges. When news of the Wall Street bailout proposal looked like it may be coming up in Congress, the ACC team called Sen. John Cornyn’s aide to request a visit to witness the proceedings, but the bill was not presented. Among the seven senators and six executive council members that students met and talked to were Rep. Lloyd Doggett, Rep. Mike Conaway, Rep. Lamar Smith, Senior Legislative Assistant Sarah Beatty, and Cornyn’s aide Michelle Chen. Arnold Perez, 46, a culinary arts student serving his second term in SGA as an Eastview Campus senator, considers talking with Rep. Doggett the most valuable thing from his trip. Perez, who took ACC’s course in sustainable agriculture and wants to start a non-profit organization for the cause, was pleased to find in Doggett a “green” congressman supportive of sustainability. “That was my happiest moment in the whole trip,” said Perez, “because that’s my mission.” Perez felt that someone

Effective October 13 Local bus fare . . . . . . . $0.75 (Will raise to $1.00 in 2010) Express bus fare . . . . . $1.50 Adult 31-day pass . . . . $18.00 for local service Student 31-day pass . . $9.00 (only available to students under 18)

Cap Metro changes cost students more change Trevor W. Goodchild Staff Writer

Photo courtesy of Jose Aaron Hinojosa

Elizabeth Carson

Cap Metro Fares

Congressman Lloyd Doggett takes time to talk to ACC student Joshua Bacak. Joshua is a senator for the South Austin Campus.

in Washington DC heard his concerns and said the Capitol Hill people “treated us like royalty.” During the scheduled time off, SGA Vice President Adam Oliphant visited national sites and went to Arlington Cemetery where he saw the changing of the guard and JFK’s gravesite. “It was a pretty moving experience,” he

said. During round table workshops at the summit, students were able to present problems they face within student government and the group tackled the issues together. They came up with different viewpoints and approaches to addressing the concerns. For instance, when one college said they ȩȩ SGA continued on page 8

The cost of a Capital Metro monthly student bus pass will be $18 for Austin Community College students. Fares have been raised for all of Capital Metro services. In the past, student passes where $5 for a monthly pass. Under the increased fares, students get passes for $9 or half off, but the definition of student has been changed to include only students 18 years of age and under. “We made that change because it was difficult for our operators to determine who was a student. It cuts down on fraud,” Misty Whited, Capital Metro Communications Specialist, said. According to Capital Metro communication manager Adam Shaivitz, the issue of fraudulent student IDs is something they have wanted to fix for a long time, and the fare increase opened up an

opportunity to address it. College students at the University of Texas at Austin can still use their student IDs to ride the bus. The university has a contract with Capital Metro that pays for student, faculty, and staff bus and shuttle services out of the student fees paid into the college. “We haven’t established a contingency plan for ACC students, but that isn’t to say we aren’t open to sitting down and having talks about setting up something similar to what UT students have,” said Barney Sifuentez, Revenue and Fares Manager for Capital Metro. ACC does not currently have a deal with Capital Metro, but the college is “looking for solutions to its parking and transportation needs,” said Brette Lea, Executive Director of Public Information and College Marketing. “It would really be about what is feasible to ask our students to pay in fees.”


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