THENORTHERNLIGHT DECEMBER 4, 2012
Staff nominate student leaders for contributions
UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA ANCHORAGE
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New scholarship named after professor Celebration held in honor of Vara Allen-Jones for 21 years of contributions to school
Nominees invited to attend 19th Martin Luther King Student Appreciation Luncheon in January By Nita Mauigoa
Assistant Features Editor
Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his speech “I Have a Dream” almost 50 years ago. He is still revered today as an icon for civil rights. If he were alive, how would he feel when he saw hundreds of thousands of people striving to fulfill his dream? As part of UAA’s commemoration of Martin Luther King Jr., students will be recognized at the upcoming 19th annual Martin Luther King Student Appreciation Luncheon at the beginning of next semester, Jan. 25. All UAA faculty and staff have been invited to recommend up to three UAA students who each make a positive difference. “It’s a great honor. That means that somebody at the university has noticed the student has contributed to class, school, family and the community to the extent that they’ve been noticed,” Mike McCormick, assistant director of Student Activities, said. The luncheon is considered an integral see MLK page 10
Chancellor Tom Case congratulates Vara Allen-Jones, UAA assistant professor of counseling, on 21 years of success at the institution during a celebration where she was presented with a scholarship named after her.
PHOTO BY NITA MAUIGOA
see SCHOLARSHIP on page 11
Shootout Photos ‘Birds in Art’ awes and educates By Heather Hamilton A&E Editor
PHOTO BY MACKENZIE MASON
Freshman guard Jalen Little goes up for a basket during the Seawolve’s game against Loyola Marymount Lions Nov. 24 at the Great Alaska Shootout. The Seawolves placed fourth in the tournament.
Birds have been used in art for thousands of years. But artists have come a long way from the cave drawings of old. “Birds in Art” is an art exhibit that garners thousands of submissions a year from around the world. The show, run by the Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum in Wausau, WI, since its opening in 1976, focuses on presenting two and three dimensional works of birds. Paintings, sculptures, photographs and other mediums are all eligible for submission. Of the thousands of entries, roughly 100-120 pieces are chosen by a jury to go on display in the museum each year. “It was an exhibition they’d only planned to run once, but because it was so popular ... we turned it into an annual event,” Andy McGivern, the curator of exhibitions for the Woodson Art Museum, said. “It always opens the week after Labor Day.” In November, 60 of those works are then selected to take part in the traveling “Birds in Art” exhibit, which has run both nationally and abroad. The body of work is comprised of roughly 50 two-dimensional works and 10 three-dimensional ones, McGivern said. This year marks the first time the travelling show has made it to Alaska. “It’s student-driven, everything we do in the art gallery, so the student gallery team considered the idea and decided that they’d like to do this,” Mike McCormick, assistant director of Student Activities, said.
PHOTO BY MOSHEH ADAMU
Students attend the opening reception for “Birds in Art” Nov. 29.
The exhibit is currently open in the Student Union Gallery. It wasn’t easy for the students on the gallery team to prepare for. “One reason we thought it’d be a good idea is that we use the gallery as a laboratory for students to learn,” McCormick said. “The students on the gallery team are learning a lot about mounting an exhibit to a higher degree and a higher level than ever before because this is a professional exhibit.” McCormick also said members of the team met with members of the Anchorage Museum to help prepare for see BIRDS page 6
photos continued on page 12
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The Northern Light will return tuesday January 17, 2013. Have a happy new year and a great break.