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Insider Twitter account blasts new media Miley Cyrus twerks at Houston audience Bearkat basketball still alive for postseason

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TOMORROW’S FORECAST

HI: LOW:

LUMBERJACKS OUST KATS IN CHAMPIONSHIP

69o 47o

Associated Press

Chance of Rain:

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20%

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Volume 125/ Issue 16

Facebook.com/ TheHoustonian Tuesday, March 18, 2014

COE dean search down to two CAMPUS

KASSIDY TURNPAUGH Assistant News Editor

After months of deliberation, Sam Houston State University’s College of Education has narrowed down its dean search to the final two candidates. In January, a committee made up of several high ranking college officials began the search for a new dean with hopes of narrowing the results down to three finalists by

the start of February. Although the committee, led by Vice Provost Richard Eglsaer, Ph.D., did not reach its immediate goal of an early end to the search, it has come down to the two final candidates. Eglsaer didn’t reveal the identities of the two candidates. “This week the final two candidates will be on campus,” Eglsaer said. “There were four finalists.” According to Eglsaer, the

final two candidates have been reviewed and will presented before President Dana Gibson and Provost Jamie Hebert for a final selection. Before any decisions are made, the committee has been sure to test the way the candidates interact with the SHSU community and their prospective colleagues, students and staff, Eglsaer said. “Each candidate has met with faculty, staff, undergraduate and graduate students, superintendents

CONSTRUCTION

and administrators,” he said. Each group of these SHSU community members were asked to submit their opinions on the way each candidate interacted with them. These comments will subsequently be taken into consideration in the decision of hiring. According to Eglsaer, the decision will not be made by the search committee, unlike all decision and continuations

leading up to this point, but instead will be handled by the dean and provost. “The search committee will not rank the candidates for the provost, rather they will try to summarize the feedback from the various groups and highlight the strengths and challenges of each candidate,” Eglsaer said. The final decision should be made soon, Eglsaer said.

WORLD

All eyes on Crimea, MH370 JAY R. JORDAN Associate Editor

Jay R. Jordan | The Houstonian

PROGRESS. (Above) Construction moves forward on Lake Road west of campus. After Huntsville City Council passed a motion to construct sidewalks along Lake Road for students, contractors began work on the project Feb. 3. (Left) Construction continues on the new Student Health Center. This crane was brought in to aid workers in the construction of the building, which is planned to be open fall 2014. (Below) Junior biology major Anthony Williams utilizes the city’s new sidewalks on Avenue J.

The international community is on its toes after multiple developments in events unfolded over the weekend. UKRAINIAN TEARS The United States increased sanctions on Russia and its officials, President Barack Obama announced Monday in a press conference. The sanctions came after a Crimean referendum where 98 percent of its voters said yes to independence. “If Russia continues to interfere in Ukraine, we stand ready to impose further sanctions,” Obama said. “The international community will continue to stand together to oppose any violations of Ukrainian sovereignty and territorial integrity, and continued Russian military intervention in Ukraine will only deepen Russia’s diplomatic isolation and exact a greater toll on the Russian economy.” Vice President Joe Biden is currently in Europe consulting with NATO leaders, and Obama is doing the same next week. “Our message will be clear,” Obama said. “As NATO allies, we have a solemn commitment to our collective defense, and we will uphold this commitment.” Ukraine’s interim president Oleksandr Turchynov said Monday his country won’t recognize Crimea’s sovereignty. Secretary of State John Kerry said Sunday the U.S. will not recognize Crimea as an independent country. “Neither we, nor the international community, will recognize the results of [the] referendum,” Kerry said in a

press conference. “Under the constitution of Ukraine, the Ukrainian Legislature in Kiev would have to vote to legitimize a secession effort by any state.” SEARCH CONTINUES FOR FLIGHT 370 Search parties and investigators are looking into the crew and passengers of Malaysian Airlines Flight 370 in hopes of finding answers. While more than 20 countries are now searching for the missing plane, investigators have searched through the two pilots’ homes and each passenger’s history. One anonymous senior police official told CNN the search has turned up “nothing conclusive yet.” However, Malaysian police found a flight simulator inside flight captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah’s home during their search, but officials are uncertain about what it was used for. Another person of interest is Mohd Khairul, 29, a flight engineer who was on board the missing plane. According to The Daily Mail, Khairul has worked for a private jet firm as an aviation engineer. There is no certainty as to where the plane wound up, but Malaysian officials have said it was purposefully diverted off its flight path and flew for hours after someone on board severed communication. The last words from the flight, spoken by copilot Fariq Abdul Hamid after the plane’s tracking systems were disabled, were “All right, good night.”

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NATIONAL

Breweries boycott St. Patty parades HANNAH ZEDAKER Senior Reporter

Three major beer companies withdrew sponsorship for St. Patrick’s Day parades on Sunday and Monday claiming the events prohibited members of the LGBT community from marching openly. The companies that make Heineken, Samuel Adams and Guinness refused to provide funding for the annual celebrations in New York City and Boston, both of which have fallen under strong criticism for their prohibitions. “Guinness has a strong history of supporting diversity and being an advocate for equality for all,”

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a spokesman for the brewery’s parent company Diageo said in a statement. “We were hopeful that the policy of exclusion would be reversed for this year’s parade. As this has not come to pass, Guinness has withdrawn its participation.” Coordinators of the parades decided to exclude gay groups from openly participating in the events because they believed allowing them to do so would be going against Ireland’s historically Roman Catholic roots, they said. In addition to the breweries, Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York City also refused to march in the city’s 253rd parade due to its exclusionary principle. Likewise, Mayor Marty Walsh of Boston, the city’s first Irish-American mayor

in two decades, was also absent from Boston’s parade on Sunday in protest. Prior to the last-minute decision made by Guinness on Sunday, Stonewall Inn, known as the birthplace of the modern gay civil rights movement, had threatened to stop selling the brewery’s product had they continued to support the discriminatory celebration. However, after the withdrawal of sponsorship took place, the boycott was cancelled. Stonewall Inn was not the only entity pleased with the decision, the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation had approached the sponsors on Friday in an attempt to help expand equality for the LGBT community.

“Today, Guinness sent a strong message to its customers and employees: Discrimination should never be celebrated,” GLAAD CEO and president Sarah Kate Ellis said in a statement. According to Sam Houston State University senior adaptive kinesiology major Andy Lada, the breweries made the right decision. “I say good for the beer groups,” Lada said. “It shows what America’s all about. People have their own beliefs and if people want to be gay let them be gay— this is America so it shouldn’t matter.” Criminal justice doctoral student Jessica Wells said she agrees with Lada and hopes for a brighter future in the expansion of civil rights for all people.

“Variety is what we love about Sam Adams beer; variety is what we love about the human race,” Wells said. “We as consumers, Catholics and non-Catholics alike, have come to support Sam Adams because they provide us richness in diversity and it is sorrowful that such communities cannot support diversity among their citizens.” According to the brewery spokesperson, Guinness will continue to push for future citywide celebrations that are welcoming toward all groups of people. “We will continue to work with community leaders to ensure that future parades have an inclusionary policy,” a spokesperson for Guinness said.

Be sure to check out the Houstonian Orientation Guide located around campus and the City of Huntsville! Can’t find one? Let us know and we’ll get you a copy.


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