The Cameron University Colegian: April 16, 2012 edition

Page 1

Monday, April 16, 2012

A&E

Volume 86 Issue 23

www.aggiecentral.com

SGA president elected

Feature

Students choose Colton Kennedy after runoff No 55 - 22% Dojutelegan 176 - 44%

From TV to CU A contestant from NBC’s The Voice performs at Cameron Village. Page 5

No 75 - 25%

Kennedy 220 - 56%

Constitutional Clarity Amendment

CUSGA President Runoff Election

Crossroads

Books to Movies Studios make novels into movies in hopes that their odds are ever in their favor. Page 8

Yes 229 - 75%

Yes 199 - 78%

Online Elections Amendment

Sports

by Elijah Morlett Editor in Chief

Leading the Way One organization funds several charities to help better the community. Page 3

Sports

Tennis As the season gets closer to the end, CU’s Lady Aggies pick up more wins. Page 6

The votes are in and the student body has made their decision. After two close elections, 23-year-old Colton Kennedy has been elected as the 2011-2012 Cameron University Student Government Association President. On Wednesday, April 11, the SGA announced that Kennedy, a senior History and Mathematics major, ended the spring elections with 220 students casting votes for him, leaving Kennedy with 56 percent of the total against his opponent, junior Communication major Teewhy Dojutelegan. “It was a tough race between me and Teewhy,” Kennedy said. “We both campaigned really hard. Overall, it was a good, clean race.” Dojutelegan ended his campaign with 176 votes, or 44 percent of the total. During the first election, three candidates sought the position, yet none of them were able to attain a majority, or 50 percent plus one of the total votes — a long-standing requirement of the student government. The SGA hosted a runoff election for the two candidates who accumulated the most votes, forcing the third candidate, junior Biology major Kevin Steib, out of the race. The runoff made an impact on campus, as more students became involved. Kennedy, for one, was pleased with this outcome.

See RUNOFF Page 2

Baseball The men of Aggie Baseball continue their season with mixed results. Page 7

A&E

Photo by Elijah Morlett

The new leader: Senior Colton Kennedy speaks to the Cameron University Student Government Association during a candidate debate. Kennedy defeated his opponent, junior Teewhy Dojutelegan, by 44 votes in the runoff election for next year’s SGA President.

Campus Talent CU Student Housing hosts the annual talent show at the student union. Page 5

Terrorists behind Sept. 11 to stand trial by Colin DuRant Staff Writer

The Defense Department announced on April 4 that Khalid Sheik Mohammed, accused mastermind of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, will go to trial in a military tribunal. A Defense Department news release states that, according to Military Commissions rules and procedures, Mohammed and four others will be charged within 30 days. “The chief judge of the Military Commissions Trial Judiciary will assign a military judge to the case, and the five accused will be arraigned at Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,” the release stated. According to the Washington Post, the move to a military tribunal comes after the Obama administration’s initial decision to bring the trial away from Guantanamo Bay to a federal district court in Manhattan. After legislation passed in early 2011 that prohibited the movement of prisoners from Guantanamo to the United States, and a public outcry among New Yorkers about conducting the trials so close to the site of the Sept. 11 attacks, the Department of Justice handed the trial back over to military jurisdiction in April 2011. In a press conference on April 4 about the move, Attorney General of the United States Eric Holder said he still believed a federal district court would have been the best option. “After consulting with prosecutors from both the Department of Justice and Department of the Defense, and after fully studying the case, it became clear to me that the best venue for prosecution was in federal court,” Holder said. “...Had this case proceeded in Manhattan or in an alternative venue in the United States as I seriously explored in the last year, I am confident that our justice system could have performed with the same distinction as has been its hallmark in the last 200 years.” However, New York Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer said in a press conference on April 4 that the move back to a military tribunal, particularly in moving the trial away from Manhattan, was an appropriate one. “This means with certainty that the trial will not be in New York,” Schumer said. “While not unexpected, this is the final nail in the coffin of that wrong-headed idea.” During an April 4 press briefing at the White House, Press Secretary Jay Carney said President Obama still

hopes to close Guantanamo Bay, but feels justice must be served to Mohammed and others awaiting trial. “We have to ensure that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and others who are accused of these heinous crimes are brought to justice,” Carney said. “And this procedure is now underway to ensure that happens.” Several groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), have been critical of the moves. ACLU Executive Director Anthony D. Romero said in a press release the military tribunals represent an unconstitutional system. “The Obama Administration is making a terrible

mistake by prosecuting the most important terrorism trails of our time in a second-tier systems of justice,” Romero said. “Whatever verdict comes out of the Guantanamo military commissions will be tainted by an unfair process.” Others have defended the military tribunal process, including Republican Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa in an interview with Fox News.

See TERRORISM Page 2

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed’s terror Alleged major attacks • New York 1993 World Trade Center 2001 World Trade Center • Washington 2001 Pentagon

Alleged major plots

• U.K., London Plans to destroy Heathrow airport, Canary Wharf, Big Ben

• Belgium, Brussels Plot to attack NATO's headquarters

• Kuwait Oct. 2002 attack on U.S. soldiers • Pakistan Plans to assassinate Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf • South Korea Plans to attack U.S. targets, like military bases

Europe U.S.

• Panama Plan to blow up canal Plan for a second wave of attacks on: Library Tower in Los Angeles; Sears Tower in Chicago; Plaza Bank building in Seattle; in New York: Empire State Building, suspension bridges, Stock Exchange © 2007 MCT Source: AP, BBC Graphic: Jutta Scheibe, Eeli Polli

• Israel Plans to destroy buildings; plots to bomb Israeli embassies abroad

Middle East Africa

• Kenya Nov. 2002 suicide bombing of a hotel in Mombasa Nov. 2002 failed attempt to shoot down an Israeli passenger jet in Mombasa with a surface-to-air missile

Asia

• Indonesia Nightclub bombing in Bali Plans to destroy U.S. embassies in Indonesia, Australia, Japan • Philippines Planned assassination attempt against then-U.S. President Bill Clinton during a mid-1990s trip Plot to kill Pope John Paul II while he visited the Philippines


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