The Cameron University Collegian: October 8, 2007

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

Informing the Cameron Family Since 1926

Monday, October 8, 2007

News

Volume 81 Issue 6

Passing the torch

Public safety veteran retires after seven years By Joshua Rouse Collegian Staff

T

Professor attends school of pain. SEE PAGE 3

A&E

here’s a new sheriff in town. After more than seven years of service to Cameron University as the Director of the Office of Public Safety, Jim Ronan is trading in his badge for a house in Maine. “I have 30 years of state service, which makes me eligible for retirement,” he said. Ronan came to Cameron after 10 years as a Deputy Sheriff in the Comanche County Sheriff ’s Department and another 10 years as an investigator for the Comanche County District Attorney’s Office. He said Cameron has been therapeutic after his previous experiences. “In law enforcement, you deal with the same two percent of the worst at their worst,” Ronan said. “It’s good to see there are good people out there like you have here at Cameron.” He credits President Cindy Ross for making campus safety her top priority. Whenever Ronan went to Dr. Ross for a suggestion about the campus security, she always listened. The students also play a big role in keeping the campus safe and making Ronan’s job easier.

John DeBoard

Jim Ronan

Diversity Week celebrates cultural beauty.

Photo by Joshua Rouse

Already on the job: John DeBoard, the new Director of the Office of Public Safety, gets adjusted in his new position at the office in North Shepler. DeBoard took over the job in September from Jim Ronan, the retiring director. “The students don’t come here to make trouble, they come here to learn and are serious about education,” he said. “Not only have the students been great, but the faculty and staff have been a big help and that’s what has helped create such a safe community.” Now that Ronan is retiring, he plans to move to Maine and spend more time with his wife at their new home. He said she’s already at the new home preparing for their final arrival. “My wife retired after 20 years with the Lawton Police Department,” Ronan said. “We’re ready to start chapter two in our lives.” Though his retirement isn’t effective until Dec. 31, Ronan is using his remaining days to help transition a new director, John DeBoard. “Now that I’m leaving, it’s good to know that

John will be here, taking my place,” Ronan said. “Cameron is going to be in good hands.” DeBoard comes to Cameron from the Lawton Police Department. He heard about the job from Ronan, whom he’s been friends with for 25 years. “I was interested in the job after I heard about everything that it entailed,” DeBoard said. “Life is all about timing and I had planned on retiring from the Lawton Police Department at the end of the year. I was able to take off two months early and begin my job here.”

See SAFETY Page 4

New insurance plan offers students health care options

SEE PAGE 6

Sports

By Kerry Myers and David L. Bublitz Collegian Staff

Courtesy of Dr. Sally Soelle

Aggie Golf takes ninth in Texas. SEE PAGE 8

Voices

Junk news gets in the way of truth. SEE PAGE 5

A glimpse into the past: This mural depicting Native Americans dancing was painted by Stephen Mopope, a Kiowa Indian, in the 1900s. His artwork is displayed in the Anadarko Community Library and many other locations in the state and throughout the country.

Professor talks Oklahoma art history By Brandi O’Daniel Collegian Staff On Oct. 3, Dr. Sally Soelle, Professor of History and former Dean of the School of Liberal Arts, led a discussion over the Fine Arts programs established during the Roosevelt administration and the murals that came about during that time period. The Roosevelt administration created several New Deal programs during the Great Depression including the Fine Arts project, which helped starving artists find work. Artists throughout the country were hired to paint murals in post offices and courthouses as relief to the growing unemployment. The murals can still be seen and appreciated today. “In Oklahoma, we have such murals in more than 30 locations and they have become

Deal programs, but hoped that part of our cultural identity in the state,” Dr. Soelle said. after her talk, they will know Of the 50 or so murals in just how close they are to the Oklahoma, only seven were programs created years ago. done by Oklahomans, and about a third of them were done by women. See ART Artists that had the best Page 2 murals from the surrounding states were chosen and paid to paint their artwork throughout the state. Dr. Soelle realized that many students Courtesy of Dr. Sally Soelle on campus Life through art: The Bricktown memorial already portrays the cultural diversity of the state. There know a are six murals in downtown Oklahoma City lot about depict the old Bricktown community alongside the New the future of it.

While class assignment deadlines and weekend plans top the to-do lists of most Cameron students, shopping for an adequate health plan probably falls somewhere between buying Scantrons and rotating the tires on their car. Beginning this fall, Cameron University has made it easier for students to get health care with the introduction of the Cameron University 2007-2008 Student Health Insurance Plan. The provider, Academic Health Plans, provides coverage from over 200 doctors within a five-mile radius of the University. At just under $60 a month, the Student Health Insurance Plans is an affordable option for many students. Coverage for children and spouses is also available at an extra premium. Jennifer Holland, Dean of Student Services, recognizes the need for an outside insurance provider to help with annual health costs. “We believe this provider is affordable and provides significant coverage for our students,” she said. “This is a particularly great option for those students who can’t stay on their parent’s insurance anymore or for students who don’t work.” All domestic students enrolled in six hours or more are eligible for coverage. Partnerships between Cameron and three local medical establishments provide students with a familiar path to the doctor’s office. Students covered under the plan are encouraged to go to the nearby AM/PM Clinic or the Southwest Oklahoma Family Medicine Clinic for minor injuries and illnesses. The Comanche County Memorial Hospital emergency room should only be used by students with serious medical emergencies or with minor illnesses or injuries acquired when the clinics are closed.

See INSURANCE Page 2


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