Monday, April 23, 2012
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Commencement
A&E
Volume 86 Issue 24
Sports
Toney Stricklin to give graduation speech
Film Previews Summer films are ready to hit the silverscreen and we cannot wait. Page 5
Softball Lady Aggies emerge victorious over rival MSU in final home game. Page 6
Crossroads
A&E
Photo courtesy of CU Public Affairs
Curefighters Lawtonians walk around McMahon Softball Complex for Cystic Fibrosis. Page 8
Sports
Baseball Aggie men split a home series with ACU after rain delays. Page 7
Congratulations grads: Three Cameron University grads pose for a photo at graduation. Photo 2011. by Matthew Berberea Cameron University had 999 students eligible to receive a diploma during spring
by Colin DuRant Staff Writer
Cameron University will hold its commencement ceremony for the class of 2012 at 7:30 p.m. on May 4 at Cameron Stadium. According the Office of the Registrar, approximately 1,030 graduates will be eligible to walk the stage as part of this year’s ceremony. The commencement speaker for this year will be Oklahoma State Regent for Higher Education Toney Stricklin, a Cameron alumni from the class of 1975 and retired Major General from the United States Army. State Regent Stricklin received the Distinguished Service Award from Cameron University in 2000, as well as being named a Distinguished Alumni by the Cameron University Alumni Association in 2008. In a press release, CU President Cindy Ross said the university was honored to feature State Regent Stricklin at commencement. “His exemplary leadership and service will encourage our graduates, while his extraordinary accomplishments will inspire them,” President
Ross said. The ceremony will feature a precommencement concert at 7 p.m. by the Cameron University Pan Express, conducted by Dr. James Lambert, Chair of the Department of Music. Commencement will conclude, as per Cameron tradition, with a fireworks display ending at approximately 9 p.m. Provost John McArthur said commencement is one of his favorite academic events. “It allows our campus community an opportunity to celebrate successes and accomplishments of our students with their families and our community,” Provost McArthur said. “I look forward to congratulating another wonderful class of Cameron Aggies.” Candidates for graduation participating in commencement should report to the east end zone of Cameron Stadium no later than 7 p.m. on May 4 with their card received in their “Graduation Times” mailer.
See Commencement Page 2
Greek Week After a week of grueling competition greek week comes to a close. Page 5
Sports
Groundbreaking CU holds a ceremony for new softball field and multipurpose facility. Page
Romney campaign strengthened with Santorum drop by Colin DuRant Staff Writer
With Rick Santorum’s April 10 announcement suspending his campaigning for the Republican presidential nomination, former Governor Mitt Romney seems to be the choice to run against incumbent Democratic President Barack Obama in the 2012 election. According to the Associated Press, Romney currently holds 666 of the 1,149 delegates required to officially secure the nomination, but with Santorum — his closest competitor — dropping out, and both Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul trailing far behind in delegate count, Romney’s nomination seems all but guaranteed. The next round of primaries will take place on April 24 with five states voting: Connecticut, Delaware, New York, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. In one of the first interviews following his withdrawal, Santorum told Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, that the decision to drop out was mostly a financial one. “When money goes away, you have to go out and compete with those staff and resources and media, and you simply don’t have the ability to do it,” Santorum said. “...We pushed this envelope as far as could.” The Washington Post reported that Santorum called Romney before his official withdrawal announcement to inform him of his decision. In a press release through his campaign, Romney acknowledged Santorum’s role in shaping the primaries. “Senator Santorum is an able and worthy competitor, and I congratulate him on the campaign he ran,” Romney said. “He has proven himself to be an important voice in our party and nation.” In a press release, former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich said Santorum waged a remarkable campaign, and despite being 530 delegates behind, Gingrich will stay in the race. “I am committed to staying in this race all the way to Tampa so that the conservative movement has a real choice,” Gingrich said. However, during an interview on April 8 on Fox News Sunday, Gingrich confirmed that his campaign was close to $4.5 million in debt. “We owe much more than we wanted to,” Gingrich said. “Florida got to be a real brawl. And I think — unfortunately — our guys tried to match Romney. It turned out we didn’t have anything like his capacity to
Photo courtesy of the Associated Press
Romney on the rise: Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, speaks at the closed National Gypsum drywall factory in Lorain, Ohio, on Thursday, April 19, 2012. Romney has made multiple stops across the United States with his “Obama Isn’t Working” campaign. raise money.” In a press briefing on April 11, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said President Obama did not have a specific or notable reaction to the fact that he now has a clear Republican challenger in Mitt Romney. “His position is the one that I’ve been expressing here; that the process in the other party will take care of itself,” Carney said. “We are essentially observers of that process from here, and when the time comes for him to engage with an opponent, then he will.” However, President Obama is not taking the reelection campaign lightly, and, as CBS news reported, the President held his first campaign events back in April 2011. In an April 10 campaign event at a private residence in Golden Beach, Florida, President Obama noted the divisive nature of this year’s election. “You’re probably going to have as big a contrast in this election as we’ve seen in a very long time,”
President Obama said. “And that means that we may have to work even harder than we did in 2008.” Speculation continues about who Romney will choose as a running mate for this year’s election with Politico, a Washington DC based political blog, guessing junior Senator from Ohio Rob Portman, junior Senator from Florida Marco Rubio, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and Representative Paul Ryan from Wisconsin, among others. In a piece for the Washington Post, Ralph Reed, founder and chairman of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, said Romney would do well among more conservative voters to pick a vice-president farther to the right. “Romney would be wise to select a well-qualified running mate who can energize evangelicals, faithful Roman Catholics and conservatives, while also appealing to women and independents,” Reed said. “His choice will be subjected to an all-out assault.”