Sept. 16, 2013

Page 1

Since 1966

Vol. 38, Iss. 3

Monday, September 16, 2013

News Dueling Film Film students at UCCS may be confused by two different fi lm departments on campus 3

UCCSScribe.com University of Colorado Colorado Springs

Floods across Colorado impact many

P. 2

Science & Business element 115 The existence of an element discovered in 2004 has now been confi rmed 4 New faculty Chemistry professor and lab coordinator 4

Culture Baja Club Engineering students at UCCS build their own car 5 youTuber A student on campus develops his online video prescence 6

Opinion Al-Jazeera The American media landscape is about to be changed 9 Note-taking Professors should allow students to use technology 9

LEFT, BOTTOM RIGHT: JAMES SIBERT | THe SCRiBe

Two southern Colorado Largest population to state senators out after date impacts campus historic recall in different ways Dezarae Yoder

dyoder@uccs.edu

Recall voters in Colorado’s 11th Congressional District delivered a message to state Senate President John Morse (D-Colorado Springs) last week, establishing him as the fi rst senator to be recalled in Colorado history. Conceding soon after 9 p.m. Sept.10, Morse stated, “The highest rank in a democracy is citizen, not senate president.” Morse went on to say he had “no regrets” over passing the legislation that helped spur the recall. Morse lost by a little more than 2 percentage points while

neighboring Sen. Angela Giron of Pueblo (D), who was also recalled, lost by a margin of 12. Each recall campaign was originally initiated by grassroots individuals disturbed by what they perceived as a lack of listening to constituents by their legislatures. “Their constituents were saying, ‘No, don’t run this legislation through the senate,’” said Nev Haynes, recruiting director of the College Republicans at UCCS. “They fl agrantly ignored their constituency.” “People we elect into offi ce … They work for us,” added Continued on page 3 . . .

Sports Tennis player Student balances academics, lifting and tennis 11 Christian athletes Support available on campus 11

TOP RIGHT: NATHAN BRUZDZINSKI | CU iNDePeNDeNT

DEZARAE YODER | THe SCRiBe

Sens. Morse and Giron were recalled Sept. 10.

April Wefler

awefler@uccs.edu

With its largest population to date, UCCS currently has 10,500 enrolled students, not including those enrolled in extended studies. The infl ux has affected multiple organizations on campus, but the administration maintains UCCS is prepared to meet the challenge. Jeff Davis, executive director of the University Center, said the bookstore did have some books that went out of stock, but “that happens no matter how many students there are.” “With an increase in online orders, the lines in the bookstore haven’t been too long for the workers to handle,” Davis said. “I think that helped expedite the process of getting students moving in and out effectively.” “I think that as we’ve had the increase in students, that’s impacting everything from classroom availability, to parking, to books, to getting through food service. The campus is doing everything we can to mitigate those circumstances,” he added. As reported in the Sept. 2

issue, a 1,227-stall parking garage will be completed in March. While construction is ongoing, parking has been strained with 5,195 parking spaces on campus and 1,600 freshmen. Jim Spice, executive director of Parking and Transportation, estimated about 100 parking spaces at the upcoming Lane Center have been lost because of construction. An additional 100-150 spaces have also been lost south of the Lane Center, also for construction-related reasons. Lot 15, a new parking lot north of the Four Diamonds Complex, added 440 spaces to help offset the loss. Russell Saunkeah, Sodexo general manager, wrote in an email that The Lodge expanded the dining facility to accommodate 80 more seats. In addition, Sodexo repurposed tables and chairs from the old Overlook Café for the new facility and changed the Lodge dining format to serve from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays and 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Fridays. Sodexo has also had to increase pizza production and the amount of Continued on page 3 . . .


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