The Cameron University Collegian: September 8, 2014

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Collegian T he Cameron University

www.aggiecentral.com

Monday, September 8, 2014

Volume 91 Issue 1

Understanding

SAFAC Charlene Belew Managing Editor @cbelew15

Organizations across campus have felt the effects of a campus-wide budget cut from the Student Activity Fee Allocation Committee (SAFAC) funds for fiscal year 2015. According to Vice President of Finance and Business Glen Pinkston, SAFAC had $14,000 dollars less to disperse this year as compared to last year. The SAFAC committee, which was comprised of 13 members and one attendee met four times during the spring semester to discuss and allocate SAFAC funds based on proposals submitted by organizations on March 7. Pinkston said SAFAC funds come from student activity fees. Upon enrollment, students pay $10 per credit hour. SAFAC predetermines funds based on projected enrollment hours. For the FY15, SAFAC received an estimate of 117,600 budgeted credit hours before their first meeting on March 25. Pinkston stated that real numbers don’t come into play until almost the end of the spring semester. “They [SAFAC committee] work with that estimate,” he said. “We don’t really make a decision for the final hours we are going to use

until April or May. Sometimes it is after school, so their work is done by then. “This year’s recommendation came by Vice President Holland to the President on April 23. So even after April 23, when the committee has met, deliberated, made the recommendations, the number of hours budgeted could still go up or down.” Pinkston said the SAFAC committee has difficulty allocating funds for a few reasons. Along with the number of credit hours shifting, the committee must also take into consideration all the proposals that are submitted. In this year’s case, Pinkston said there were two new proposals. According to a SAFAC Budget Allocation table provided by Pinkston, new proposals came from the Department of Agriculture and the School of Business. When SAFAC receives new funding proposals the next step is to find what Pinkston calls “new money.” “New money: that’s one of the things the committee has to deal with,” Pinkston said. “There’s less money, so you’re going to have to take money away from somebody to fund new proposals.”

What’s inside The Center for Academic Success opens its doors

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When Hollywood meets reality

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PAC hosts giant gameboard night

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Another issue that Pinkston brought to light was the amount of money allocated to the athletics department. “The university model for funding athletic scholarships and some of their operating expenses have always been to use SAFAC fees,” Pinkston said. “Some schools do that, other schools have a student athletic fee. “In FY12, we capped the amount of SAFAC money that we would take for athletics. It hasn’t gone up since. Actually, in [2015] it went down a little bit. Since [2012] any increases in tuition and fees or operating expenses, the university is starting to fund. If you read the minutes, they really struggle with funding athletics.” Committee members, according to Pinkston, made it clear that scholarships take no priority over other funding requests. Pinkston explained that what determines the amount awarded to organizations is how many people benefit from their funding. “This year it was very clear in reading the minutes that the committee did not really want to fund a lot of scholarships. They basically thought that departments ought to seek

alternative funding sources for scholarships. They were particularly rigorous in looking at scholarships when they knew the organization requesting it might have the ability to either raise money or find an alternative source,” Pinkston said. “How many people are benefited by giving music scholarships? You could look at it that some number of students benefit, but you could also look at it that those scholarships go to students who in turn perform. How many people are benefited by the performance?” For a full set of minutes during the SAFAC committee meetings, visit http://www.cameron. edu/student_services/archives/2013-2014.

Committee members included: Dr. Ai Soylu, Dr. Ramona Hall, Dr. Chao Zhao, Colton Rancourt, Hannah Smart, Kevin Stieb, Waheed Gbadamosi, Nikki Kirk, Rose Welch, Zeak Naifeh, Jennifer Holland, Dominique Bahr, Sidney McCormack

For a complete look at the SAFAC allocations and what the editor thinks, see Voices page 4

Legalization: a controversy Jacob Jardel

Assistant Managing Editor @JJardel_Writing

For one group of Communication students, the question of the summer was “To Be or Not to Be?” The students enrolled in the “Producing the Documentary” summer course asked this question about marijuana legalization in Oklahoma in their film “To Be or Not To Be: Marijuana in Oklahoma,” which premiered at 7 p.m. on July 22 in the Cameron Theatre. Dr. Matt Jenkins, Professor of Communication and Executive Producer for the film, said that the theatre was filled to capacity with a number of people from both sides of the issue. “For me,” Jenkins said, “one of the greatest things was it got people in the same room that probably wouldn’t even look at each other on the street because they were so polar opposites on the subject. “To have them sit in

Courtesy of Matt Jenkins

the same room and listen to each other was a huge accomplishment for the students in this class.” Producer Komantcia Jones, a communication major, expressed her elation

for the night, saying that opened; Jenkins disappeared the feeling of senators and unexpectedly, leaving Jones other important people in flustered until he made attendance congratulating See MARIJUANA them all was surreal. But the best feeling for her page 2 came right before the movie

VP Holland says goodbye to CU Charlene Belew

Justin Jang placed 2nd at Firecracker Open

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both of us,” she said. “This is where we met. This is where we started dating. It’s just bittersweet to think about Managing Editor starting a new chapter in our lives.” @cbelew15 Starting a new chapter in their lives does not mean A member of Cameron University for 18 years, former that they will be stripping themselves of their Aggie pride. Vice President Jennifer Holland announced in mid-July that Holland, a CU alumna, has promised that the black and she was resigning from her position over Student Services. gold will run in her veins forever. While the announcement came as a shock to most during “I definitely will still be a proud wearer of black and the summer holiday, it was clear to the campus that when gold,” she said. “I know that I’m going to keep up with what Todd Holland, former CU baseball coach, announced his Cameron does, where Cameron goes and what happens on new job in Ft. Smith, Ark., that his wife, VP Holland, campus. would be following. “This is our home and this place has meant so much to

See GOODBYE page 2


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