May 29, 2012

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THENORTHERNLIGHT

MAY 29, 2012

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UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA ANCHORAGE

Food Quest #1 place to get pad thai in Anchorage

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Renasissance Fair Three Barons celebrates 20th anniversary

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WWW.THENORTHERNLIGHT.ORG

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Student loan legislation stalls in senate, interest hike imminent

Without Congressional agreement on how to fund legislation, interest rates will double on July 1 By Evan Dodd

How to stay safe this summer

Astronomy organization holds meeting in Anchorage The American Astronomical Society holds its second gathering in Alaska after a 49-year gap

Staff Reporter

A recent decision by the U.S. Senate may spell bad news for struggling college students. On May 9 the Senate failed to pass the “Stop the Student Loan Interest Rate Hike of 2012 Act,” an act that would have maintained the current interest rate on subsidized Stafford student loans at 3.4 percent. As it stands, the rates will double to 6.8 percent after July 1 if a solution is not enacted. The legislation was supported by the Obama administration as well as Alaskan Senator Mark Begich. Following the failure of the bill, Begich expressed his concern for Alaskan students affected by the failed legislation. “As the economy continues to recover, now is not the time to burden students who rely on these loans to finance their education with an additional 1,000 dollars in payments,” explained Begich in a recent press release. The Senator isn’t the only one concerned with the looming interest rate hike. Eric Pedersen, UAA’s Associate Vice Chancellor of Enrollment Management, has also voiced his opinion about the decision. “No one in Student Affairs is in favor of the interest hike,” said Pedersen. “Students should be very worried about this issue.” To illustrate the impact of the decision, Pedersen explained that a student that borrowed the maximum over a four-year period would pay an additional 5,200 dollars in interest on a ten-year repayment period. “You may not feel that cost today, but you’ll feel it after you graduate,” Pedersen said grimly. The student loan legislation has failed primarily due to a

Sports

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PHOTO COURTESY OF BRIAN R. PAGE

By Heather Hamilton A&E Editor

Senator Begich expresses his support for the student loan legislation.

deadlock between the Democratic and Republican parties. Though each party has agreed to avoid an interest rate increase, the two sides disagree on how to fund it. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated the cost of

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE OFFICE OF SENATOR BEGICH

maintaining the current rates for an additional year to be nearly six billion dollars. Republicans seek to cover this expense by eliminating funding toward the Prevention and Public Health Fund of the new healthcare act,

while Democrats plan to fund the move by abolishing a tax loophole for small businesses. With the July 1 deadline looming ever closer, Pedersen remains hopeful that a solution will be found to avoid the hike. See LOANS PAGE 2

Landscaping and maintenance: UAA’s horticulture heroes By Kierra Hammons Copy Editor

Munkh-Erdene Tsend-Ochir and Tumenkhishig Goolio preparing snapdragon flowers for transplanting.

PHOTO BY VICENTE CAPALA

Summer is in the air, and the current view of UAA’s outdoor campus looks a lot like a beehive. The Landscape and Maintenance department workers are busy throughout the day with all sorts of groundskeeping jobs, and among those workers is a group of people specifically dedicated to landscape horticulture — that is, the specialty of growing flowers, trees and other plants. Landscape horticulture supervisor Catherine Shank, along with student worker Steffany Willhauck and nine

other employees put in hours all throughout the week in order to keep the campus beautiful. As each new year begins, the landscape workers have what seems like a simple job, but it turns out to be no walk in the park as the month progress. Every January, workers begin to plant seeds in the greenhouse until mid-May. Then the hard work picks up in order to prepare the campus’ 36 annual flowerbeds for transplanting by Rototilling the dirt and adding manure. “You get really buff during it. ... It’s so hard at first! The machine will just take off, and you’re, like, See HORTICULTURE PAGE 3

Anchorage is receiving a rare visit the week of Saturday, June 9 through Thursday, June 14: over 1,000 astronomers from around the country will be congregating in the city for the 220th meeting of the American Astronomical Society, the organization for professional astronomers in the U.S. Founded in 1899, the society’s mission is to archive and circulate the results of astronomical research through the publications of its scientific journals, to support and mentor the next generation of astronomers, organize meetings to support and strengthen its members’ interactions with one another, help its members develop skills within their respective areas of expertise and work with other scientific organizations to promote the advancement of science. The organization’s journals include “The Astronomical Journal,” “Astronomy Education Review” and “The Astrophysical Journal.” The AAS also puts out the “BAAS” (Bulletin of the AAS). There are several qualifications that must be met for AAS membership. It is possible to become a member if one is still a student, however. “You can become a member as a student — either as an undergrad or graduate student — as a junior member, which has lower rates than a regular member,” said Rick Fienberg, AAS’s Press Officer. “Basically, as long as you can demonstrate that you are studying astronomy or astrophysics and can get a faculty member at you school to endorse your application, you can become a member of the society. See ASTRONOMY PAGE 3


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