The Forum Sept. 5, 2012

Page 1

Where does the junk go?

Grill passes taste test

Page 6

Trojan players visit Canada

Page 8

Page 11

Visit us Online

ualr.edu/forum

Volume LXXXV Number II

News in a

FLASH

The University of Arkansas at Little Rock’s Student Newspaper

‘Pikes’ soon to call $1.5 mil house home

Police Chief Steps Down

Amin Akhnoukh, assistant professor of construction management and civil and construction engineering, was recently appointed as regional coordinator to the International Road Federation's Fellows Alumni Association.

Cheyenne Banner

Social Media coordinator

The UALR William H. Bowen School of Law was recently recognized as one of the nation's most innovative law schools in the 2012 "Back to School" edition of PreLaw magazine, a partner of National Jurist. Bowen, which was one of 20 law schools featured, was selected for its innovative legal skills program. Carolyn Larson Harman, the daughter of the founder and first president of Little Rock Junior College, which was UALR's predecessor, died Aug. 23 at age 85. Harman attended LRJC while her father, John Larson, served as the college's president from 1927 to 1949. Adjoa A. Aiyetoro will be leaving her position as inaugural director of UALR's Institute on Race and Ethnicity at the end of 2012 and return to the UALR William H. Bowen School of Law. Upon her return in January, Aiyetoro will become the director of Bowen's Racial Disparities in the Arkansas Criminal Justice System project. June Nordman Mashburn, the last surviving member of Little Rock Junior College's first graduating class in 1929, died Thursday, Aug. 23 at age 103. Mashburn graduated from UALR's predecessor institution two years after LRJC was founded in 1927. Send tips and information for news in a flash to editor@ualr.edu. To keep up with news and happenings at UALR, visit ualr.edu/forum!

Index Opinions News Campus Life Features Entertainment Sports

2 3-4 5 6-7 8-9 10-11

Get

UALR NEWS anytime

at

ualr.edu/forum Scan the code with your smartphone!

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Chief Brad King resigned from UALR’s Department of Public Safety to take a position at the Arkansas Commission on Law Enforcement Standards and Training. Photo by Jennifer Ellis

Construction will soon begin on a house for UALR’s Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity more than four years after an electrical fire claimed the first one. The UALR Greek Life organization, also known as the Pikes, plan to begin the project after a groundbreaking ceremony scheduled for 10 a.m. Sept. 8 at the property directly across from East Hall Dormitory on Fair Park Boulevard. The “Pike house” is slated for completion by the 2013 Fall academic semester according to organization officials Pi Kappa Alpha has been working to raise funds to build a new fraternity house for three years since they lost their former lodge in January 2008, to an electrical fire that started the attic. The Housing Corporation examined the situation voted they decided to take responsibility in bringing together a team to build a new Pike house. The organization has grown tremendously since then. Just three years ago the fraternity consisted of only eight mem-

bers, but now the number sits at 42, according to organization officials. In stark contrast to their old single-story house, with the new facility is planned to be a 9,200-square-foot, two-story house set up with like apartments. The house will cost in excess of $1 million and contain six two-bedroom apartments, housing a total of 12 members. Each resident will also have a covered parking space. “This is going to be our first residential house we'll have. The first residential house UALR has ever seen; more of a boast to the campus life” said Trey Gibeault, president of the fraternity. The Pikes made their first step toward building the new house by demolishing the two houses that once stood across the street from East Hall on Fair Park Boulevard. The land freed up by the demolition provided ample space for the start construction. “We are clearly in good hands," said former Pike President Ryan McConihay in a 2011 interview with The Forum.

See PIKES, page 3

Foreign language major faces threat of elimination Jennifer Ellis

Executive Editor

Students who are interested in a foreign language major may have one less option after the 2012-13 academic year, according to a university administrator. The German studies major is in jeopardy of being eliminated following the spring semester due to lack of demand and too few students graduating from the program, said Sandra Robertson, interim provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs. Currently there are 23 students currently enrolled in the major. “Those students will be allowed to finish their degrees in German, but we won’t be accepting any new ones, if this decision is finalized,” Robertson said. “Right now we’re not sure what we are going to do.” Annually the vice chancellor of academic affairs is charged with examining the viability of the majors the university offers according to standards set forth by the Department of Higher Education Coordinating Board, which requires a minimum of three graduates from the major per academic year to be considered viable. “We do this with majors all the time, if there is not enough demand, then we have to, we have to,” Robertson said.

See GERMAN, page 3

Construction equipment can be seen near the corner of UALR Campus Drive and 28th Street as preparation for phase two of the Coleman Creek Greenway project begins. Photo by Cameron Moix

Greenway project nears completion Liz Fox

Entertainment Editor

The Coleman Creek Greenway, a UALR environmental effort created six years ago, is showing progress as construction efforts continue on the second section of the trail. To coincide with the Campus Master Plan established in 2005, recovery of the 47-acre trail was conceived by Chancellor Joel Anderson and David Millay, associate vice chancellor of facility management. Since then, a committee of individuals from private firms as well as the city's public service departments have been assembled to ensure the

project’s stability and success. “It is indeed our desire to identify and preserve the ways in which Coleman Creek has contributed to both the social and educational experience of our University classes and students, as well as those who live nearby,” Chancellor Anderson said in a press release. Phase two of the project, which started late last month, is currently taking place at the north end of campus, stretching from the portion of Coleman Creek from 28th Street to the tennis courts near the Communications Building. Pulaski County road workers, in conjunction

with Redstone Construction Group, will continue to work throughout the next month to complete the section. Barring possible weather delays, phase two is expected to be completed on Oct. 5. “Of course I would like to see the trail progressing much faster, but on the other hand it is encouraging to see the progress we are currently making,” Millay said. “Again, we are creating a significant amenity for the campus and surrounding community without consuming taxpayer dollars or student tuition and fees.”

See GREENWAY, page 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.