Feb. 17, 2016

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Feb. 17, 2016 | Midwestern State University | thewichitan.com | Your Campus. Your News. | Vol. 80 No. 18

NAACP Meeting

pg. 4

An NAACP meeting, hosted by the MSU chapter of the NAACP, was held on Feb. 11. The movie “Selma” will be shown in Wichitan I and II at 7 p.m. as part of Black History Month.

Faculty, staff, and the Board of Regents, meeting on Feb. 12. to discuss and building concepts on campus.

PHOTOS BY KAYLA WHITE | THE WICHITAN

Board authorizes plan

At two-day retreat regents give go ahead to create strategic vision KARA MCINTYRE MANAGING EDITOR

SGA Meeting

A

pg. 5

Student Government passes motion to fix student election bylaws in Feb. 16 meeting.

Early Voting

First day of early voting in the Texas primaries was yesterday, Feb. 16. VoteTexas.gov

t a two-day Board of Regents meeting and retreat on Feb. 11-12, University President Suzanne Shipley presented a concept for a strategic plan to get feedback coordinated by a committee of yet-to-be-determined members. “We want to start the committee with 20 priorities, give it to the campus and say, ‘Tell us what fits into those priorities for the next five years.’ That’s where people can put their hands up and say what they want to change,” Shipley said. “We’ll come up with objectives and Shawn Hessing, chairmen of the Board, complans for the university long term from those ments on the future concept plans of the campus responses.” at the Board of Regents meeting on Feb. 12. The committee will be made up of about 12 members, including both undergraduate times we get them from the Senate, sometimes and graduate students, faculty, and staff. Bet- we get them from other areas, and other times ty Stewart, provost, will head the committee we ask for volunteers,” Shipley said. “We’ll along with another academic, according to be putting that together within the next few weeks.” Shipley. Each of the 20 priorities falls under one of “Usually, we [Stewart and Shipley] go to Keith Lamb and ask him to help us select stu- four rubrics: serving students, serving faculty dents for these kinds of committees. Some- and staff, serving the region, and serving academic programming. Shipley said that while

$5.5 mil approved by the Board for a mass communication extension

there are many options for change, funding these options determines their priority. “We saw a lot of options for the next five years, which may or may not happen based on funding,” Shipley said. “We could suddenly skip a step and go a different direction because somebody says, ‘I want to donate $40 million to do this.’ But you’ve got to have it in a plan before anybody knows how to fund it.” Changes in directional vision from the previous campus plan caused controversy on campus because many believed the plans were set in stone. “What’s irritating to me about rumors is that no one is talking to the right people. There’s so much guesswork associated with these projects at early stages,” Shawn Hessing, Board of Regents chairman, said. “As projects come into the horizon, that’s when you’ll see the actual formal votes.” Five projects have been voted on and approved by the Board, including the new 224-space parking lot, new recreational playing fields, the mass communication building

see REGENTS pg. 5

$4.56 mil $700,000 approved by the Board for the athletics, intramural, and free-play facilities

approved by the Board for an additional parking lot


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