SINGLE COPY PAID FOR BY STUDENT PUBLICATION FEE
THE UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL ARKANSAS’ STUDENT NEWSPAPER
WEDNESDAY
MARCH 11, 2015 Volume 108 — Issue 8
ucaecho.net 4 TODAY’S FORECAST CONWAY
Campus Life:
Sports:
Trap Lords:
Basketball:
Women of Ireland bring mix modern, traditional songs 4 page 3
INFRASTRUCTURE
Meeks’ measure
4 THE NEWSDESK
4 page 7
4 page 6
GOVERNMENT
72/54
Women wrap up season with loss, place as seventh conference seed
EDM artists Diplo, Skrillex pair up for Jack Ü album drop
Culture:
Warm & Cloudy
CONTROVERSY
UCA groups discuss law’s consequences
Conway representative brings forward bill
FROM THE EDITOR
UCAPD begins replacing unit cruisers with SUVs UCAPD officially welcomed a Ford Interceptor SUV to its fleet March 3. Sgt. Brad Moore said the Interceptor is “basically a Ford Explorer fitted with a police package” that includes sway bars, a lowered body and a pursuit engine rating. UCAPD plans to eventually replace its five marked and three unmarked Dodge Chargers with more Interceptors in the coming years. After UCAPD purchased the SUV in December 2014, it was sent off and adorned with the No. 9 and UCAPD decals. Car No. 9 features red lights in between the standard blue and white lights.
Goodman selected as good man to represent Hunter Phillips Goodman, UCA Division of Advancement development director, was chosen to be a member of the inaugural class of the Presidential Leadership Scholars. She began the sixmonth leadership development program Feb. 24 at George Washington’s home in Mount Vernon. Goodman and 59 other scholars will participate in approximately 100 hours of informative sessions about leadership theory drawing on presidential archives at four presidential centers. The scholars will visit the William J. Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock this month to study vision and communication through case studies on welfare reform.
Art walk to display new, old artwork on campus The Art History Association (AHA) will host students, faculty, staff and interested onlookers for an art walk around campus, starting at 4:30 p.m. March 16 at the Song of the Earth sculpture in the Irby courtyard. AHA will present the stories about the sculptures and the artists who created them, as well as the construction techniques and UCA’s preservation methods. The walk should last no longer than 30 minutes.
by Austin DuVall Online Editor
Rep. David Meeks (R-Conway) put forth House Bill 1676 on March 5, a measure that would prohibit the “re-homing” of adopted children in the state, in response to a media firestorm surrounding Rep. Justin Harris (R-West Fork). The Arkansas Times published a cover story last week detailing how last year, Eric Cameron Francis, 38, of Bella Vista was arrested for raping a 6-year-old girl who was, according to the initial report, in his temporary care. Francis had previously worked at a West Fork Christian preschool owned by Harris and his wife. He was fired due to poor work attendance, Harris told the Arkansas Times, adding that Francis came in “with
a pristine record.” Francis was sentenced to 40 years in prison in November 2014 on a negotiated plea. However, according to last week’s Arkansas Times article, Harris did not disclose that the girl was the legally adopted daughter of he and his wife, Marsha. The Arkansas Times wrote that for “unknown reasons,” the Harrises sent the girl and her 3-year-old sister — who was also adopted by the couple — to live with Francis six months after they were taken in. All of this was revealed after the magazine recently obtained prosecutor documents. The Democratic Party of Arkansas publicly asked for Harris’ resignation March 6. “Re-homing,” a legal practice
See Measure - page 2
ACADEMICS
Arkatext writes history By Kendra Beattie Opinion Editor
The UCA writing department held its annual Arkatext literary festival March 2 – 6, which included the fifth annual launch of The Toad Suck Review literary journal. The Arkatext literary festival began approximately 10 years ago when College of Fine Arts and Communication Dean and writing professor Terry Wright came up with the idea for the Arkatext festival. He wanted to expose students to different writing styles and to give them an opportunity to learn from experienced authors, editors and publishers. “It was Terry Wright’s dream to have a writing festival in the spring,” associate writing professor John Vanderslice said. “Every fall, a group of [writing] faculty members get together, and we toss around ideas for different Arkansas-based writers to bring in.”
This year, the Arkatext festival also hosted Launchapalooza, the reception for The Toad Suck Review’s newest edition. The literary journal is created by associate professor Mark Spitzer (chief editor) and Vanderslice (associate editor), as well as by several graduate students. Six students working toward master’s degrees in creative writing assisted Spitzer and Vanderslice this year to put together the journal’s fifth edition. “We all edited different pieces…independently and as a group, [and] we got to interview Jericho Brown and transcribe it for the journal,” graduate student Devon Norris said. “It gave us a good understanding of the editing process and the publishing side [to writing]. It was a great experience.” Usually beginning in
See Arkatext - page 2
LECTURE
Author speaks philosophy By Joe Kramer
Flow arts group to host one-year anniversary
Entertainment Editor
Friday Jammings, a flow arts and drum circle community of Conway, will celebrate its first anniversary starting at 6 p.m. Friday, March 13 at the Rogers Plaza on the corner of Oak and Van Ronkle Streets. Five local artists, including The Whole Famn Damily and Bodacious Dingos, will play live music beginning at 7 p.m. Friday Jammings is “a public art project” that aims to engage the Conway community with music, dance, flow arts fire and LED performances. More information about Friday Jammings can be found on the “Friday Jammings First Anniversary” Facebook event page.
4 WHAT’S AHEAD IN OUR NEXT ISSUE
Break-ins at Bear Village trending, anthropology seedlings sprouting, chemistry coursework changing
Award-winning author, former Boston Globe columnist and foreign correspondent for The Associated Press, Maggie Jackson made her way to UCA on March 3 as the first of many nationally renowned speakers in a lecture series hosted by the UCA Schedler Honors College. The lecture primarily focused on the way humans today think in a world ruled by speed. Her lecture, “A Workmanship of Risk: The Craftsmanship of Thought in an Age of Speed,” dove into the different challenges humans face in preserving their intellectual development and creativeness when society prizes the hare in all circumstances over the tortoise, despite the age-old fable. Humans often see slowness as some level of retardation and as a hindrance in society. Jackson pushed the audience to slow down their thinking in order to break the societal stranglehold that forces humans to think faster and, often, sloppier. She highlighted the American workplace, saying,
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Entertainment:
“[Humans] often think first is best,” making fast decisions with little forethought and springing those answers out, despite their shortcomings. Decision-making methods are often developed at the early stages in education. Students are pushed to learn through trial and error and, in turn, make future decisions and methods of success based off past choices. Jackson said this run-and-gun method of thinking gets people in trouble when they try to tackle the more pressing issues found in daily life. “The reality is simple,” Jackson said. “We place much of our spur-of-the-moment decision making on past experience. But experience does not merit superior decision making in almost all cases.” Jackson did not argue that working off past experience is a good rule of thumb in some cases, but argued that ignoring the reason is reckless and leads to the betrayal of self-preservation. “Quick is our familiar tempo,
See Author - page 2
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Phone: 501-499-9UCA (822) E-mail: ucaechoeditor@gmail.com
by Austin DuVall Online Editor
photo by Blake Eiermann
Guards designed to prevent ice buildup hang off the south side of the HPER Center after last week’s wave of winter weather.
Winter hurts HPER
By Laura Landers Associate Editor
As temperatures start to increase and the snow and ice melts away, the HPER Center has experienced some damages to its new and existing buildings. Snow guards, designed to prevent the buildup of ice and snow on roofs by allowing it to slide off gradually, fell off the south side of the newly renovated HPER Center building sometime between March 4 and March 5 during the last bout of winter weather. These long, metal guards can be seen protruding off the roof in the back of the building, with one having fallen from the roof to the ground. Caution tape has been placed to prevent people from entering the area. “It looks a lot worse than it is,” HPER Director David Dennis said. “It looks like the roof is falling apart.” Dennis said UCA has a one-year warranty on the new building, and Cohn Group, the construction company that worked on the project, will contract a company to repair the damages. There is no way to tell, at the current time, whether the damage is due to construction
issues or weather. HPER Center Assistant Director Jarod Matheney said that since the majority of the damages were restricted to the south side of the building, they do not pose any drastic safety threat to students and faculty. “It just gives [people] something to look at,” Matheney said. “Most students didn’t even notice it.” The older gutters on the existing HPER building also suffered a hit. The accumulation of ice and snow has bent them, causing water to steadily drip as temperatures have increased. However, according to Dennis, this damage is unusual. “Those gutters were put in back in 2000,” Dennis said. “We have never had an issue with them before.” Dennis believes it was the immense amount of freezing rain and sleet that made the difference with this round of winter weather. However, the damage is not extensive and should require only minimal repair. A time frame on the repairs to the existing and new buildings has not been given, as the damages are currently not substantial enough to require immediate repair.
SGA
University places safety first By Peyton Olsen Assistant News Editor
UCAPD announced at the March 9 SGA meeting that 81 percent of the problems uncovered during the November 2014 Operation Safe Walk have been remedied. The annual event invites SGA and other students to search for weak spots in UCA’s campus safety net and to suggest changes that would make campus safer. Lighting, landscaping and repairs (LLRs) and suggestions are prioritized into four categories. UCAPD Communications Director Arch Jones said all LLRs listed as first priority would be completed by June 30, 2015. Some of the more notable repairs include leveling out the gravel parking lot east of the Bear Village Apartments and installing lights around the parking lot behind the Sigma Phi Epsilon house. Six SGA senators who attended the Conference
on Student Government Association (COSGA) at Texas A&M Feb. 28 – March 3 presented their experiences to the senate and shared some of the inspirational methodologies they learned there, such as implementing gender-neutral pronouns and encouraging school spirit. Junior Sen. Stephanie Daigle announced that SGA’s Day at the Capitol event would take place March 19 and transportation for up to 119 students would be available. President Ashley Ross also announced the formation of a new committee that would decide how $10,000, which SGA had originally set aside about 10 years ago for an Alumni circle project that never broke ground, would be used. Status updates on the Big Event community outreach program showed SGA had 635 volunteers organized for 35 projects. The Big Event will take place this Saturday, March 14
Social:
Nationwide attention has been focused on Sen. Bart Hester’s (R-Cave Springs) controversial measure, Senate Bill 202, for over a month now. The same feverish attitude, both in support of and against Hester’s bill found in mainstream media, was mirrored here in Conway, especially after Gov. Asa Hutchinson allowed it to pass into law without his signature Feb. 23. SB 202 seeks to prevent city and county governments from writing their own anti-discrimination ordinances based on issues not addressed by state law, though rules can still be created in relation to employees of a county, municipality or other political subdivision.
“SB 202 is, at the core, a flawed piece of legislation, something that has set the entire LGBT community back.”
—- Senior Colby Sansom UCA Young Democrats President Junior and UCA College Republican President Anna Broadaway said she does not consider the new law — now Act 137 — to be discriminatory, but to act as clarification for local governments. “The new law is intended to make the same laws apply statewide, which prevents local governments from having to decide who qualifies as a ‘protected class,’” Broadaway said. “I do not consider the intent of the new law to discriminate, therefore, I consider the addition of the LGBT community to the list of those protected under anti-discrimination laws to be a separate issue.” Broadaway said SB 202 isn’t about making discrimination legal, but to pursue the “greater good.” “There are so many people and so many groups crying for ‘equality’ when what they really want is a legal straightjacket to force businesses and the individuals who run them to show preference to one group or another,” she said, adding that Hutchinson’s actions were in line with his campaign promise of supporting the majority’s opinion to not allow gay marriage in Arkansas. “Hutchinson is doing his duty as governor to uphold the wishes of the people … like it or not, the passage of this law is another [promise kept] by [Hutchinson],” she said. Senior and UCA Young Democrats President Colby Sansom had a different take on the matter. “SB 202 is, at the core, a flawed piece of legislation, something which has set the entire LGBT community back,” Sansom said. “Aimed at keeping state and local laws in step with one another, the law purposely moves to exclude LGBT people. Not only ethically abhorrent, this law is shaky, at best, under federal [examination]. With the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Romer v. Evans in mind, there is major legal precedent for it to be challenged and struck down.”
See Law - page 2
Inside: The skinny on dipping
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We’re all adults here; there is no reason to ban bikini-style swimsuits for women
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