Vol 93 issue 3

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ARKATECH THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER SINCE 1923

THE

A R K A N S A S T E C H U N I V E R S I T Y / / T H U R S D A Y, S E P T. 2 2 , 2 0 1 6 • V O L . 9 3 N O . 0 3

FOOD REVIEW - PAGE 6

RYAN HARMON/THE ARKA TECH Dr. Lowell Lybarger, music librarian, works the high quality equipment and software in the new Tech Audio Lab on the second floor of the library. He uses what he calls mood lighting, where multi-colored lighting comes on behind the computer to give a cool vibe while working.

Library opens recording studio

RYAN HARMON

Entertainment Writer The second floor of the campus library is already home to the music Lab, which provides students with the tools to experiment with digital music technology. It also houses a large collection of recorded music. Now, the music lab is offering the Tech community a new resource - a free recording studio. Lowell Lybarger, music librarian, said there was a demand for a studio on campus since the music lab is not setup for recording. “The music lab is technically a quiet lab where people compose music and edit sound, but we don’t actually record sound,” Lybarger said. “When the opportunity came to build a small audio recording room, I just jumped at it.”

The studio is equipped with high quality microphones, monitors and a keyboard. Recording software is also available. “If the basic stuff starts to get too easy for you, we have more complicated stuff, all the way up to Logic Pro.” Student workers will also be available at all times to help users with their individual needs. Lybarger said Library Director, Brent Etzel, helped make this possible. “The audio lab is just one of many changes that he’s made that have helped serve our community much better than in previous years. He’s very excited about this process.” To reserve a four hour time slot in the audio lab, email Dr. Lybarger at llybarger@atu.edu.

Increase in fees are explained SAM HOISINGTON

Online Editor

Changes in tuition and fees will cost undergraduate students enrolled in 15 hours an extra $270 this semester. For graduate students taking a course load of nine hours, that cost is $171. Undergraduate tuition was raised to $219 per credit-hour at the May 19 Board of Trustees meeting; up from $215 last year. Graduate tuition was raised from $269 per credit hour to $274 per credit hour. An additional $10 is being charged per credit hour for a new athletic student fee. Bernadette Hinkle, vice president for administration and finance, said that doesn’t indicate an increase in athletic funding. “What has happened in the past is those dollars have always gone to athletics; they’ve always been a

transfer out of our tuition revenue that the students have paid and moved over to athletics,” Hinke said. “To be more transparent, to be more accurate in how we budget that fee, that ten-dollar fee, was put in place by the board to supplement the athletic budget and in lieu of that, reduce the transfer they would usually do.” Hinkle said $15 per credit hour used to be transferred from the general tuition revenue to athletics. Now that the new fee is being assessed, only $5.50 per credit hour will be allotted from general tuition revenue. The health and wellness fee doubled from 3 per credit hour to 6 per credit hour. Hinkle said the situation is similar to the changes in athletic funding, where less money is being transferred from general

tuition revenue and is instead being paid for by the fee increase. “We were trying to make their program and what they do to serve the students self-sufficient so that’s the increase in the fee,” Hinkle said. Also included in fee changes was a change of the transcript fee from $1 per credit hour to $2 per credit hour. Hinkle said the administration tries to avoid increasing fees and tuition, but that state funding formulas dictate what will ultimately happen. “We had a 1.83 percent tuition increase this past year, and that is to offset all of the cost of the campus. We had flat funding from the state so our state appropriation remained the same. To offset the cost of running the university we had to increase tuition, which is typical in a university setting,” Hinkle said.

More than 40 trees are to be replaced

SIERRA MURPHY

Managing Editor

More than 40 trees have been removed from O Street and behind Chambers Cafeteria to make room for the latest batch of donated trees. Trees on North Glenwood Avenue are also set to be removed. “Ultimately we’ll have a net gain of trees,” said Brian Lasey, Facilities Mainte-

(TREES page 4)

OSCAR GARCIA/THE ARKA TECH

VIDEO PHONES- PAGE 3

News in brief TECH ANNOUNCES 2016 KRUEGER LECTURE Sam Strasner University Relations Dr. Paul Andrew Hutton, professor of history at the University of New Mexico, will be the guest speaker for the sixth annual David W. Krueger Lecture at Arkansas Tech University. Hutton will offer a lecture entitled “Davy Crockett and the Creation of an American Legend” at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 18, in the Doc Bryan Student Services Center Lecture Hall. A reception will follow. An alumnus of Indiana University, Hutton has written, produced or appeared in more than 150 television documentaries on such networks as CBS, NBC, PBS, Discovery, Disney Channel, TBS, A&E and the History Channel.

The lecture, which is sponsored by the College of Arts and Humanities, the Department of History and Political Science and the Arkansas Tech University Foundation, will be free and open to the public. The David W. Krueger Lecture Series is underwritten by a donation by Dr. M. Diane Gleason to the Arkansas Tech University Foundation. The namesake of the series served on the Arkansas Tech history faculty from 1960-2010. Krueger received the title professor emeritus of history from the Arkansas Tech Board of Trustees in March 2015 and he was inducted into the Arkansas Tech Hall of Distinction in May 2016. For more information about the lecture, call (479) 968-0265.

CEPEDA SCULPTURES ON EXHIBIT Sam Strasner University Relations A bronze sculpture exhibit entitled “Illusions” by Enrique Cepeda will be on display at the Arkansas Tech University Museum until mid-October as part of the 2016 Hispanic Heritage Month celebration on campus. The exhibit is presented with assistance from the Mexican Consulate in Little Rock and the Galeria de Arte Ikal in Saltillo, Mexico. Cepeda specializes in lost wax casting, a process that allows for the creation of duplicate metal sculptures as a result of casting them from the original. Among those in attendance at an exhibit open-

ing reception on Sept. 16, were Rodolfo Quilantan Arenas, head of post for the Mexican Consulate in Little Rock, and Dr. Juan Jose Mendez, owner of the “Illusions” collection and the Galeria de Arte Ikal. The Arkansas Tech Museum is open weekdays from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. in the Techionery, which is located at 1502 N. El Paso Ave. Terry Johnson, museum director at Arkansas Tech, said there will be an additional opportunity for guests to view the “Illusions” exhibit during Family Day on Saturday, Oct. 1, when the museum will be open from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Call (479) 964-0826 for more information about the Tech Museum.

Department of Art offers BA in game, interactive media design Elexis Harper

Contributing Writer Web development is one of the fastest growing fields in the United States, and labor trends in recent years have shown that Arkansas has invested more heavily in producing a workforce to satisfy the demand. That change was seen on campus; Tech’s Department

of Art now offers a Bachelor of Arts in game and interactive media design. Students enrolled in this course will be taught the skills required to pursue a career in the video game, entertainment and programming industries. Dawn Ward, head of the art department, reported in a summer press release that there is a new computer lab for

the program in Norman Hall. The computers feature highend graphics cards, the latest software and the lab hosts a three-dimensional printer. The press release also stated that the course could prepare graduates for a career in animation, simulation programming, web design and interactive visualization construction. Students who choose this

course will take 57 credit hours past the general education curriculum. Thirty hours of the course consist of preexisting programming and graphic design classes offered at Tech. The other 27 are new courses, added to the department to cover game development, three-dimensional design, game theory and interactive media history, according to the course

matrix released by the school. The course comes to a close after a two-part senior project in which the students create a fully developed game or interactive media project. Over the course of the degree, students will also accumulate a portfolio to aid them in seeking employment. Students seeking further information should visit www.atu. edu/art or call 479-968-0244.


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