COLLEGIAN THE CA M ERON U N I V ER SIT Y
Monday, April 10, 2006
News
Informing the Cameron Family Since 1926
Volume 79 Issue 24
Diversity brings new perspectives By Kathleen Kelly Collegian Staff
Three seconds, and it’s all over. SEE PAGE 2
A&E
Shoot ‘em up gamers reap rewards. SEE PAGE 4
Sports
One million forty-nine thousand five hundred and twenty-six people moved into the United States from July 2004 to July 2005. According to the American Census Bureau, this group included lawful permanent residents, temporary migrants, such as students, refugees and those here illegally. Cameron University shares in the benefits of diversity, with students and faculty from places as far away as Africa and Asia. Eunhee Mazza, mathematics junior, and Eric Cheng, business sophomore, fall into the latter group. Mazza came to the United States from Korea in 2000 on a student visa planning to attend language school at the University of Oklahoma. She said she found the adjustment difficult, so she ended up coming to Lawton where she had a friend. “I came to Lawton because I was so helpless,” she said. “I couldn’t drive. It was so hard to look for apartments by myself – I was not comfortable.” A resident of Seoul, Mazza earned a degree in public administration, but there were few jobs available in that field. She returned to school and earned a teaching degree. She said finding a teaching job, especially as an English teacher, was not difficult. “There are many English institutions in Korea,” she said, “and many available jobs.” When she came to the States, she found a difference between teaching the language in the classroom and speaking it everyday. “I was an English grammar teacher,” she said. “It was just (like) mathematics; subject, verb, object. But the speaking and the writing were so different. I felt like an idiot – like I was deaf and blind.” Eric Cheng came to the States as a child; at age five or six his parents moved from Korea to Lawton, where his grandmother lived. His father was of Chinese ancestry. Cheng does not know much about his grandparents’ life in China. “All I know is that they got away from the
Photo by David Bublitz
Never give up: Students Eric Cheng and Eunhee Mazza reflect the diversity of the Cameron campus. Each has overcome obstacles to get where they are today. Communists,” he said. Cheng said his parents came to Lawton for the sake of his education. In Korea birth does not automatically confer citizenship. Although Cheng’s father was born in Korea, he did not possess Korean citizenship. “I have no hope – no dream – in Korea,” Cheng said. “It’s because my father is Chinese. You get discriminated, segregated, a lot.” “For Southeast Asian people it isn’t easy,” Mazza said. “Korean job opportunities are very narrow.” Cheng said his father never sought citizenship in Korea, but now both his father and mother are naturalized Americans. “After my parents got it, I got it automatically,”
he said. Cheng speaks Mandarin, “not fluently,” he said, and Korean. He said his parents speak Korean exclusively at home, so the first four or five years of school were difficult for him. He associates Korean people with the language, he said. “When I look at Korean people I expect them to speak Korean,” he said, “so I speak Korean to them.” He said reactions vary; not all KoreanAmericans speak Korean, so they are taken by surprise. Both Mazza and Cheng discussed the
See DREAM, page 2
Cameron student coordinates aerobathon By Petulah Olibert Collegian Staff
Men’s basketball team gains head coach. SEE PAGE 6
Voices
Tired of that belly bulge, those grotesque love handles that — contrary to their name — are nowhere near lovable? Yolanda Allen has the answer to that and more. Yolanda, health and physical education sophomore and health coordinator at the YMCA, 5 SW 5th, is avidly into health and fitness. “I got involved in aerobics because my mother passed away from a heart attack at 55,” Allen said. “Since then, I’ve really been into physical fitness.” According to Allen, physical activity is important as a daily regimen because a healthy body means a healthy mind. She recommends an exercise routine and monitored diet. “Physical activity has helped me greatly,” she said. “Physically, I’m in the best shape that I’ve ever been in and it has aided me mentally too. I have a 3.8 grade point average.”
Allen is currently planning and coordinating an aerobathon, a three-hour activity, to be held at the YMCA. “On April 29, for three hours at the YMCA, we will host our annual aerobathon,” Allen said. “Any and everyone is eligible to participate. During the aerobathon, participants will learn step aerobics, pilates, power yoga, kickboxing and several other combinations. They will be privy to everything dealing with the YMCA and its program.” The aerobathon kicks of at 10 a.m. Participants will receive free T-shirts and water bottles and a chance to win door prizes and gifts. According to Allen, the main aim of the aerobathon is to demonstrate the many benefits of physical fitness. “Our members are able to participate in a rewarding physical activity while non-members are able to join the YMCA and see the kind of program that we offer,” she said. “The aerobathon is specially targeted toward those who don’t have an exercise program. We want to show them
Photo by Lisa Snider
Just a little longer: Yolanda Allen keeps an eye on the clock as she leads her class through various levels of intensity on stationary bikes. what we do so they can reap the benefits.” The YMCA provides each member with a health plan and a personal trainer along with the use of its state-of-the-art fitness facility for those who prefer weight training. For others, aerobics classes are held daily, except Sundays. And for Cameron students, there is a special member rate.
‘Health Care in the 21st Century’ with Dr. Elders By Joan Hagy
News Writing Student
Stymied by the proverbial fork in the road. SEE PAGE 3
Office: Nance Boyer 2060 Phone: 580•581•2261 E-mail us at : collegian@cameron.edu First Copy Free - $.25 for each additional copy Contents © The Collegian 2006
Festival VI: CU in Good Health, Cameron’s year-long celebration, will bring to campus Dr. Joycelyn Elders, former United States Surgeon General and Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Arkansas, School of Medicine. Elders’ lecture, “Health Care in the 21st Century,” will be held at 8 p.m. Thursday, in the University Theatre. This event is free and open to the public. A reception will follow the one-hour presentation, and members of the audience will have a chance to meet with Elders. The festival, funded by the McCasland Foundation and supported by the School of Liberal Arts, has focused on wellness and fitness all year long. Elders’ topic, which addresses health care in the United States in the coming decades, will assist in meeting one of the objectives of this year’s festival
by encouraging discussion of health care policy, according to Dr. Sally Soelle, Dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Festival Coordinator. “One of the most important issues we will discuss this year is how health care will be delivered in the future. How should our tax dollars be spent in terms of medical services? What health care programs do we want to see initiated or continued? Where do we hope to be in terms of caring for older citizens, poorer citizens, and children over the coming decades?” Soelle said. “We expect that Dr. Elders’ lecture will help us as we continue this important conversation.” A special panel discussion will be held at 4 p.m. on Wednesday in the Music Building Recital Hall. “A Conversation on Public Health Care Policy’ will be the focus of the discussion. The panel will include Randy Segler, CEO of Comanche County Memorial Hospital; Thomas Rine, CEO of Southwestern Hospital;
Tony Wohlers, Ph.D., professor of political science at Cameron; and Scott Street, CEO of Duncan Regional Hospital. The moderator Dr. Joycelyn Elders for the discussion is Jeff Johnson, Ph.D., professor of political science. The event is free and open to the public. An informal reception will follow the panel discussion.