ARKATECH THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1923
THE
ARKANSAS TECH UNIVERSITY // THURSDAY, FEB. 9, 2017 • VOL. 93 NO. 13
Music fellowships cut
Department hopes to restore funding for fall
SAM HOISINGTON
Online Editor
A large number of students recently received word that they would see their music fellowship funding decrease by at least 20 percent for the spring semester. The cuts were made across the board and affected the funding that many students receive for participating in choir and band. Music department leadership said the department needed to make the cuts in order to stay within their fellowship budget following an over-commitment of funds to incoming freshmen. The department normally offers 10-15% more in fellowships to entering freshmen than what it can actually afford, Cynthia Hukill, department head and associate professor of music, said. The department has done so every year since the fellowship system was put in place in 2011 and has nev-
er had a situation like this one before, Hukill said. The offers, Hukill said, are made under the assumption that not all of them will be accepted. “Normally, we award over the budget, and we come out just fine, but this time we had a combination of an usually large freshmen class, a large continuing sophomore/junior/ senior class and then none of those freshmen left and, normally, they do,” Hukill said. Hukill said she could tell that there could be a problem with the fellowship funding by early fall, but by then, the funding was already committed. The funding is guaranteed only for the first semester of the offer and is re-awarded every semester based on ability of funds, Hukill said. Music majors had their funding cut by 20 percent, while non-music majors, who often receive some funding for their participation in the university’s band and choir programs,
saw their fellowships cut by “a little more,” Hukill said. The final decision to cut funding was announced Jan. 24, which was the day after the university’s cutoff date for adding or dropping courses. Hukill said the add-drop date and the date of the announcement were not coordinated and that the department was just trying to make the smallest cuts possible. “We did that because we needed to be a little bit in the semester to find out who was coming back and who was not, and the later we waited the more money we had for all the students and we were trying to make that percentage that we had to cut less,” Hukill said. Hukill said she has been counseling students on a one-on-one basis to ensure that they won’t have to drop any classes. At her disposal are funds
(MUSIC page 4)
PROFESSORS EXPRESS
GOLDENS SUNS 2ND IN GAC - PAGE 7
BOOK REVIEW: THOUGH READ BUT WORTH THE KNOWLEDGE - PAGE 6
News briefs THURSDAY
BRIANNA DAVIS/THE ARKA TECH Dr. Micah Dean Hicks read an excerpt from his novel Electricity and Other Dreams on January 27 at Dog Ear Books during the Triple Threat Author Reading.
Plans for Roush Hall to be demolished SAM HOISINGTON
Online Editor
University officials have shared that they plan to demolish Roush Hall, a residence hall that was closed in August following the discovery of mold while students were moving in. The University is holding off on demolishing the facility until they have exhausted all of the possibilities related to receiving an insurance payment on the building. “As soon as we get that cleared up the plan is then to ask permission from the Board of Trustees to raze that building and take it down,” Amy Pennington, interim vice president for Student Services and dean of students said. Pennington said she expected the insurance negotiations to take at least one more month. After the insurance matter is decided, university administration will have to ask the Board of Trustees to approve the demolition. Mold was discovered within the drawers of the some of the built-in cabinetry in Roush Hall rooms while students were moving into the facility. A university press release credited the mold as being the result of a “historically wet and humid August.” University officials deemed the building unsafe
SAM HOISINGTON/THE ARKA TECH Roush Hall has sat vacant since mold was discovered in the building in August. and moved students to space at Lake Point and South Hall. Pennington said student safety was the university’s “number one concern” when deciding to close down Roush Hall. Even though the mold was only present in a “few” rooms, the facility was closed because the university
(ROUSH page 4)
Financial Life After Graduate School - Need financial advice in the real world? Come to Baz Tech 203 at 3 p.m. to learn more. Mastering the Art of Organization and Time Management - Learn how to organize and manage your time in Baz Tech 202 at 4 p.m. The Golden Suns and Wonder Boys will be playing against Southern Arkansas at Tucker Coliseum at 5:30 and 7:30 p.m., respectively. Watch the theatre production of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at the Techionery Theatre at 8 p.m.
FRIDAY
Lunch with a Leader Laura Harkreader Sink, administrator at Arkansas Pediatric Facility in North Little Rock, will be hosting Lunch with a Leader at noon in Williamson Dining Hall. Watch the theatre production of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at the Techionery Theatre at 8 p.m.
SATURDAY
Watch the theatre production of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at the Techionery Theatre at 8 p.m.
SUNDAY
Watch the matinee show-
ing of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at the Techionery Theatre at 2 p.m.
MONDAY
Sex in the Dark - Ask all of your sexual health questions in a confidential setting at 3 p.m. in Doc Bryan 242. The Golden Suns and Wonder Boys will be playing against Harding at Tucker Coliseum at 5:30 and 7:30 p.m., respectively. The ATU Jazz Ensemble will be holding a concert at 7:30 p.m. in Witherspoon Auditorium.
TUESDAY
Be Your Own Valentine Valentine or not, embrace the idea of loving yourself before others at Chambers Cafeteria from 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Webinar Cybersecurity for Small Business Learn how to protect your small business at 10 a.m. in Rothwell Hall. Admission is free, but registration is required. QPR Suicide Gatekeeper Training - Learn how to help those with thoughts of suicide from 2-3:30 p.m. in Doc Bryan 242. Gold Medal Event Planning - Learn how to plan events well in Baz Tech 202 at 4 p.m. Sexual Health for the 21st Century - Learn more about STDs, STIs and more in Doc Bryan 242 at 7 p.m.
El Paso plans will be moving forward for fall of 2017 AMBER QUAID
Managing Editor
Arkansas Tech University has plans to make El Paso great again. In the last 14 years, Tech has purchased properties along El Paso Street, but nothing has really happened to help change Tech or Russellville. All that is about to change. The Pop Up El Paso event last fall, which
showed the Russellville community the possibilities of cultural and economic growth along El Paso Avenue, was “to help activate the public’s awareness of El Paso,” according to Jeff Mott, chief of staff at Tech. This awareness will continue with food trucks and other special events during football season. As for right now, El Paso Street is on hold. According to Mott, there are
some rezoning matters that need to be attended to with the city, and once they are addressed, the city council has to approve them. “We haven’t had any real conversations in a little while mostly because the campus master plan process,” Mott said. The Master Plan was submitted to the city council in August last year and “should complement the existing
campuses in Russellville and Ozark while addressing the complexities of a growing educational program, increased student population, spatial study, campus life, on-campus housing and recreation, Lake Point Conference Center, traffic circulation, access, utility distribution, parking and other university properties. This plan will provide a guide for future campus development and ex-
pansion during the next twenty years.” “I look forward to the development on El Paso to strengthen our community and to bridge our campus to downtown in a meaningful way,” Bernadette Hinkle, vice president for administration and finance, said. El Paso is still in the works but has to work in parallel to the Master Plan for the funds allocated to each to be used
in an effective and campus oriented way. “We don’t want to get out ahead of it and start doing something on El Paso and it’s not consistent with the campus Master Plan; we want to make sure they are working together,” Mott said. El Paso is still on track and, though the paperwork has slowed down the physical work to be done, the plans are still a go for the fall of this year.