COLLEGIAN THE CA M ERON U N I V ER SIT Y
Monday, September 19, 2005
News
Informing the Cameron Family Since 1926
Volume 79 Issue 4
Foreman: Hard work pays off By Jessica Lane Staff Writer
Damian Barrios finds piloting small planes exciting. PLEASE SEE PAGE 5
A&E
The theatre season opens with an absurd comedy. PLEASE SEE PAGE 7
Sports
At age 20, radio/television sophomore Anthony Foreman already has his own business in which he designs Web sites, print media and commercial/video production. “I don’t have a set genre,” he said. “I don’t shoot for a certain business. I fit for whatever I’m doing.” Foreman has expanded his business since its opening in 1999. “I’ve gotten more into video and the print goods side of it,” he said. “I don’t just do Web sites anymore. I do brochures and pamphlets. I’ve done photographs and advertisements that have been in national magazines.” The range of Foreman’s clients include: a horse breeder, a record company, the Town of Velma, a tire recycling company, the Chisholm Trail Stampede, Don Grantham’s Funeral Home, and more. As to how he created the name for his company, 4Mstudios, Foreman said, “Actually it’s my last name shortened down to a number and a letter. A lot of people I just tell to say my name really fast and they’ll figure it out.” Foreman started learning his trade at the age of 13. He was inspired by the Web sites he visited, and wanted to create his own. “Every bit of it is self-taught,” Foreman said. “I actually taught myself how to do different programming languages. When I began I was writing the HTML code by hand. But with as many projects as I do on a weekly basis, it’s just easier to go in and do the basic stuff with a pre-built template and then go in and do the coding and graphics on my own.” A few of the programs Foreman uses are
A&E Editor
PLEASE SEE PAGE 9
Voices
Doing what he loves: Anthony Foreman hones his skills behind the camera as radio/ television senior Jamie Guy anchors the program in the CUTV studio. Foreman and Guy were participating in the lab portion of the basic televison production class.
Macromedia Studio MX and Adobe Creative Suite. Foreman also taught himself the artistic aspects of his business. When he was younger he would trace pictures and improve upon them. He also used his parent’s video camera to create stop motion animation with action
The average college student cannot go through a day without using something that requires oil in some form. Students use it in their cars to get to class each day, they use it to heat their homes in the winter, and even the paper they write on every day is made with oil. It has been called “crude” “black gold” and “Texas-T.” In the early 1900s, oil created “boom towns” across the fledgling state of Oklahoma and brought droves of people to work on the rigs popping up across the state. While oil may earn fortunes for some, it may also bring misfortune to someone like theatre arts sophomore Holly Hare. Hare lives about fifteen miles outside of Lawton and has classes every day except Wednesday. She drives a 1992 Buick Century
E-mail us at : collegian@cameron.edu First Copy Free - $.25 for each additional copy Contents © The Collegian 2005
Oil makes the world go ‘round: Commuter student fills up a gas tank that will empty all too soon.
By Petulah Olibert Staff Writer
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Please see AAA TIPS, page 4
Photo by Scott Pratt
Aggie the builder
PLEASE SEE PAGE 3
Office: Nance Boyer 2060
Please see FOREMAN, page 2
that can get her to Lawton and back “one and a half times” on a quarter of a tank. That quarter of a tank costs her $20. “I filled my car up for $40 the Monday Katrina hit,” Hare said, “The lady at the gas station in Elgin said it was going to go up 40 cents the next day.” Hare stays home during the weekends and on days she does not go to class because gas has reached such high prices. “I don’t go anywhere other than back and forth to school. I can’t afford to go out on the weekends,” Hare said. With the rising gas prices, students like Hare are pressured to balance expenses with getting to classes on time. Many people use the example, “food or prescriptions” for senior citizens. For many Cameron students it is, “education or bills.”
Copy Editor has a love-hate relationship with technology.
Going Global: Around the world in five days.
figures and Legos. “I always had an interest in motion graphics and a little bit of drawing and coloring,” he said.
Commuting students feel the bite of rising gas prices By Josh Rouse
Check out the upcoming Aggie game schedule.
Photo by Kathy Kelly
Building homes: As part of the Collegiate Challenge, work on this home at 1912 Irwin will be completed over spring break by student volunteers from Marquette University.
Some students have decided to give up their fall break travel or party schedules in search of a more rewarding pastime — construction. These students have volunteered to donate their time and services to Habitat for Humanity’s relief efforts. The Lawton-Fort Sill Habitat for Humanity was founded in 1997. So far, Habitat has built 12 houses in the Lawton area. Two are still in the stages of completion. Cameron University’s volunteer impetus was sparked by several CU students. Biology junior Kim Bratton is one. A volunteer
since high school, Bratton decided to bring her joy for volunteer service to Cameron in a Habitat for Humanity campus chapter. “There used to be a chapter on campus, but it died out,” Bratton said. “We’re trying to bring it back. I thought it would be something interesting for people of all ages to be involved in, and not just for young people. Habitat for Humanity’s activities appeals to adults as well. “Anyone can do it, so I thought that was unique.”
Please see HOMES, page 10