JUNE 24, 2014
A&E
THENORTHERNLIGHT.ORG
UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA ANCHORAGE
A&E
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‘Zelda’: The case for a female Link
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July movies: “Hercules,” “Boyhood” and more!
UAA backstage at Road to Vans Warped Tour
3OH!3 fans flash the band’s iconic hand symbol at Road to Vans Warped Tour on June 11.
By Kelly Ireland
arts@thenorthernlight.org
photos by kelly ireland
Sean Foreman from 3OH!3 waves to fans in audience.
Sound engineers run about with sound equipment as roadies carry instruments on and off the stage. Band members, local and big-time alike, mingle with fans with all-access and VIP passes while waiting for their time to go on stage. Warped Tour itself is quite the experience, but there’s nothing quite like being backstage at the event. Many UAA students found this out for themselves on June 11, getting the chance to go backstage at Anchorage’s Road to Vans Warped Tour event. There was a multitude of reasons that UAA students were in the midst of the backstage organized chaos. UAA student Jordan Duplessis, who is pursuing a bachelor’s degree in legal studies, said, “My
friend was in the security team, and so he let me go backstage as long as we were respectful and not annoying. ... Money really could not buy my experience for Warped Tour.” Duplessis wasn’t the only UAA student backstage who also had a priceless experience. “I was able to go backstage with my friend, Josh, who sings in the band The Harlequin State. He’s really talented and a unique guy. Being backstage and meeting all the bands was utterly amazing! We were even able to come onstage with Yellowcard. Staring out into the crowd was indescribable,” said business marketing major Heather Holmquist. “Warped Tour was a blast. ... My favorite experience was definitely seeing Josh and The Harlequin State kill it up there. Equally as exciting
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UAA employee salaries now included in state records
By Evan Erickson
eerickson@thenorthernlight.org
The salaries of public employees are a matter of public record — but that doesn’t always mean these records are accessible to the average person. Juneau’s public radio and television station, KTOO, is spearheading an effort to create a searchable database containing the records of a variety of state agencies, including the sprawling University of Alaska system. For the UA system, though, this isn’t the first time this type of project has been undertaken. In May 2011, Heather Bryant began as editor-in-chief of UAF’s Sun Star newspaper, and brought with her an ambitious plan to cull together systemwide salary info — making the database available on the newspaper’s website. Through a series of editorials, Bryant explained the rationale for the project in response to criticism from staff and faculty. “Personnel accounts for approximately 60 percent of the university’s budget. It’s important to know how that money is spent,” Bryant wrote.
Some were outraged over the project, claiming their privacy had somehow been violated. “Publicizing my salary information is invasive, and is a cheap way to ‘target’ individuals. Doing so is indicative of a totalitarian democratic ideology. Shame on you!” Jonathan B. Horen commented on the website. One commenter suggested that it would be more fair if the Sun Star’s database included other state agencies in addition to UA employees — but the UA database would prove to be unwieldy and time-consuming for a student-run newspaper with a high turnaround. As of January 2014 the database has been temporarily removed from the website, though the Sun Star says they plan to make an updated database available soon. These days, Bryant works as the digital services editor at KTOO, applying her previous public record-wrangling experience to the job at hand — a database hosted by KTOO including state government, the Department of Public Safety, Department of Motor Vehicles and the Alaska Public Defender Agency.
According to an email from UAA Human Resource Services, the KTOO database will include UA employees’ gross salaries, healthcare and retirement benefit numbers, and employment status (full-time, part-time, permanent/temp or student employee). For UAA, the comprehensive database could be eye-opening, especially in the wake of the soon-to-be released findings of program prioritization. Incoming Faculty Senate President Diane Hirshberg, speaking from her own perspective, welcomes the steps toward transparency. “My hope is that some people take a critical look at how we spend, the amount of resources that are spent on high-level administrators statewide. ... We have a top-heavy university, and it’s been told to us by outside experts,” Hirshberg said. Bryant, speaking from Juneau, still believes the essence of the project has to do with “transparency in government spending and accountability in government spending.” KTOO hopes to have the public records database up and running sometime this fall.
UAA alumni place in Midnight Sun Marathon
photo by Valerie hudson
The welcome sign outside of the historic Ted Stevens International Airport is one of the first sights visitors see after landing in Anchorage.
You know you grew up in Anchorage when…
A grassroots approach to history By Valerie Hudson
features2@thenorthernlight.org
Education, Facebook and community are three things that rarely come together in a harmonious way. But on the Facebook page called “You know you grew up in Anchorage when…” that is exactly what one will find. While the title of the page conjures images of the common stereotypes those who have grown up in Alaska have become accustomed to, this page also offers a detailed account of Anchorage’s rich history recalled by the residents who have seen it evolve. Betty Tunnell, administrator and creator of the “You know you grew up in Anchorage when…” Facebook page came to Alaska after her father had been stationed across the state four different times. He fell in love
with the state and eventually left the family to live in Alaska during the early 1960s. When Tunnell became an adult she discovered that she was fascinated with talking to people who remembered old Anchorage, although they were few and far between. It wasn’t until 2011 that Tunnell made her fascination public by creating a page called “You know you grew up in Anchorage when…” on Facebook. She started by sending out a few hundred invites for people to join the page. Since then, the number has risen to the 11,889 members it has today. On any given day post can feature a variety of topics from memories of the good old days, before Anchorage had paved
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NEWS BRIEF
Denali Alaskan ATMs on the way out of UAA
photo by adam eberhardt
Participants in the Youth Cup make their way down Ninth Avenue last Saturday morning.
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After selecting another competitor on a contract put up for bid, Denali Alaskan Federal Credit Union will be withdrawing five ATMs from UAA’s main campus as of July 1. The contract, which called for nine machines, including three in the newly built Alaska Airlines Center, has been awarded to Alaska ATM Service. According to the AAS website, the new ATMs will process “a surcharge on all ATM surchargeable withdrawals regardless of the cardholder’s bank or credit card.” Denali Alaskan claims to offer the largest Alaska ATM Alliance nosurcharge network of ATMs in the state. Brief by Evan Erickson
thenorthernlight.org
youtube.com/tnlnews