The Cameron University Collegian: November 3, 2008.

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COLLEGIAN THE CA M ERON U N I V ER SIT Y

Monday, November 3, 2008

News

Informing the Cameron Family Since 1926

Election 2008 2008: Live from Election Night Coverage On Tuesday, for the first time in CU history students from CUTV and the Collegian, will be producing and broadcasting live coverage of the presidential election.

Start Time: 6 p.m.

Cameron takes big stride toward a truly traditional campus.

Viewers will be able to access the site for election night by going to http:// cunews.wetpaint.com Once there, they can click on the live election night page and will be brought to the events home page. The coverage will include political analysis, debates, blogs and an interactive electoral map.

SEE PAGE 2

A&E

CU Percussion Ensemble to put on an election theamed performance. MCT Campus

SEE PAGE 5

Sports

Collegian Staff

SEE PAGE 5

Voices

By Joshua Rouse Collegian Staff All eyes are on Tuesday’s general election, and Cameron University students want to bring the coverage home. Members from both CUTV and the Cameron Collegian are teaming up to provide live up to the minute updates on the nationwide general election. Kyle Luetters, the producer and one of the co-anchors for the live coverage, said the idea was originally proposed earlier this year on a return trip from a broadcasting conference in Oklahoma City. The idea became a reality soon after with an assortment of preparations in advance of the election. “Work has intensified and we’ve had to coordinate both areas of concentration to come together and work,” Luetters, an R/TV sophomore, said. “And I think we will have great synergy when it’s all said and done.” Election coverage will begin at 6 p.m. Tuesday with a live television break-in. Regular updates will continue hourly from 7 p.m. until a winner can be declared. Luetters said a conclusion to the coverage hasn’t been determined yet. If the election is too close to call, he said coverage could end around 11 p.m., but it’s too early to tell. During the 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. break-ins, a student and faculty debate will be held with Luetters and Cecilio Ramirez, the other coanchor, taking turns as moderator. The coverage will also extend to the Internet with wikis and blogs updated by Dr. Matt Jenkins, Luetters and others. “Dr. Jenkins and I are signed up to do blogs with additional support coming on,” Luetters said. “Dr. Walton, who teaches Political Communication Analysis, will come in at 9 p.m. and 10 p.m. to provide analysis with the help of an interactive map.”

See ELECTION Page 3

MCT Campus

Students have right to display political signs By John Robertson

Senior volleyball player wraps up final season.

Volume 83 Issue 9

With a massive free speech issue on its hands, on Oct. 9 the University of Texas decided to reverse its policy regarding dorm window decoration. The situation arose when two students adorned their dorm window with posters endorsing presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama. Citing a desire to keep the campus aesthetically clean and to avoid the notion that the university sides with any candidate during the political process, UT’s long standing policy had put a blanket ban on all window signs in student dorms. The two students, who are also cousins, Connor and Blake Kincaid, quickly found themselves facing an administrative hearing in which they refused to remove the poster. Afterwards, the pair discovered that they had been locked out of registration for the spring semester. However, university Democrats and Republicans pooled their resources and campaigned to get the policy overturned and the Kincaids cleared of all wrongdoing. With media and free speech advocates focusing on the campus, University President Bill Powers announced that he was suspending the ban on signs in dorm windows and gathering a committee to examine the policy’s constitutionality. Dr. Melody Huckaby, an Assistant Professor and

the Pre-Law Adviser for the Cameron History and Government Department, said that the policy itself was almost surely unconstitutional. “I think it would be unlikely that such an overbroad ban that specifically targets expression would be held constitutional, even by the most conservative Supreme Court,” Dr. Huckaby said. Huckaby, who holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Oklahoma and teaches classes on constitutional law and the judicial process, said that the policy infringed upon free expression. From her personal experience teaching in Kyrgyzstan for the United States Information Agency, such heavyhanded enforcement of policy can lead to problems with student performance. Huckaby said that while in Kyrgyzstan, she taught a class of students that came from different backgrounds. Some of the students had been taught in an environment that promoted analytical thinking and the freedom to be expressive, while the other students had been reared in an environment of memorization and adherence to strict policy guidelines. When the time came for the first exam, Huckaby said the difference between the two populations was extreme.

See SIGNS Page 3

Photo by Jim Horinek

Showing support: Political signs can be seen in the windows of several dorms rooms and apartments on campus. According to Cameron, CU students have every right to display their political preferenences.

SGA addresses mock legislation, online registration By Megan Mefford Newswriting Student

Which way do we go? SEE PAGE 4

Following a new piece of Student Government Association legislation, Cameron University students would be prohibited from wearing open-toed shoes. Fortunately for flip-flop lovers, this was only a piece of mock legislation that the SGA used for practicing parliamentary procedure. The first few SGA meetings

devoted much of their time to familiarizing new members and reminding seasoned members of how the system works. Mock legislation is used to help the SGA members understand and learn how the legislative process works. Tobias Kuhn, SGA Vice President and co-author of the mock legislation, said that the process helps students go through the parliamentary procedure in a fun and enjoyable environment where they are able

to ask questions and gain insight in a casual atmosphere. “Mock legislation is important so freshman members can get a little bit of an insight of how other experienced members work. They can see, first of all, the procedure and how it works, and they also can try it out for themselves,” Kuhn said.

See SGA Page 3


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