Dec. 4, 2013

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Dec. 4, 2013 | Midwestern State University | thewichitan.com | Your Campus. Your News. | Vol. 78 No. 14

No all-nighters in Moffett during finals week KARIN PIERCE AND MANDI ELROD REPORTERS

A PHOTO BY LAUREN ROBERTS / WICHITAN

David Boller, collision repair instructor at Carrigan Career Center, unloads characters for the scenes at Fantasy of Lights. This is the first time Carrigan has helped to set up the MSUBurns Fantasy of Lights display.

PHOTO BY LAUREN ROBERTS / WICHITAN

Volunteers help set up the displays for the MSU-Burns Fantasy of Lights Dec. 2.

Lights exhibit opens Friday; features new displays COURTNEY BETTS REPORTER

T DECEMBER 6 • 5:30 – 5:55 p.m. Hardin Bell Tower Holiday Jingles (Jim Quashnock) • 6:30 p.m. Southern Hills Elementary School, Wichita Falls ISD (choir) • 7 p.m. Evan’s Fine Arts Studio, Wichita Falls ISD (choir) • 7 p.m.: Band – Akin Auditorium • Free hot chocolate • Santa Claus comes

his Friday, community members and students will gather around the front lawn of the Hardin Administration Building for the MSU Burns Fantasy of Lights opening ceremony which will showcase the first two additions to the display in almost 10 years. “It really comes full circle for me because I’m from this town,” Randy Canivel, coordinator of MSU Burns Fantasy of Lights, said. “It’s an amazing feeling to be able to see it, be a part of it and then run it.” Canivel became the coordinator of the Fantasy of Lights three years ago and in the last year he has raised $20 thousand for the new Nutcracker display. The display features professions in North Texas. “The community was asking for new additions for a while and it became a popular question in 2010 before I took over,” Canivel said. “People like to see new things.” Canivel added, “Depending on budgets and donations, we might be able to have more additions in the future.” A local family built the second addition

Pretty Athletic

pg. 4-5

Is cheerleading a sport or activity? Courts, associations and participants discuss the issue.

titled “A Toy’s Christmas” and donated the display for the Fantasy of Lights. It depicts characters based on the movie Toy Story. “This addition is unique to the display because it features modern characters and children today will be able to relate to it,” Canivel said. It takes 1,100 to 1,300 person-hours to set up the display every year. People come from all over the city and volunteer their time to help prepare for the event. “We try to pay the volRANDY CANIVEL unteers back by providing COORDINATOR them food and that has to come out of the budget as well,” Canivel said. To run the Fantasy of Lights without adding new displays or renovating original ones, it costs anywhere from $40 to $50 thousand. This includes costs for electrical equipment, transportation and security. Holiday displays are typically displayed

Finals Frenzy

“It’s an amazing feeling to be able to see it, be a part of it and then run it.”

see LIGHTS pg. 3

pg. 7

University Programming Board plans a day of activities, Dec. 5.

s the semester comes to a close, students scramble to get in last-minute studying for finals. Some students choose to study in their rooms but the ones who choose the library as their place of study might be surprised to find the library will not be as accommodating to late-night bookworms as it was last year. Students in various sororities and fraternities volunteered to help keep the library open for 24 hours a day last year but did not receive as many volunteers this year. Coupled with the lack of funds from the library, they were unable to offer that service again this year. Despite that, many students still believe they’ll be able to make the grade. “I don’t think it’s going to affect my grades much. I usually study at home,” said clinical science junior Jaisy John. Although the library does stay open until 2 a.m., it restricts students who have a busy day and would prefer to study in the wee hours of the morning. It is especially restricting to students like mathematics senior Cheddi Charles, who find their apartments to be a distraction. “The library is a conducive place to study. If you’re in your apartment, there are too many distractions. In the library, the atmosphere is conducive to studying and sometimes, during the day, you have work to do, so in the night, you have a little time to study and if it’s not open, it’s going to affect my grades. It would take away from my studying time,” Charles said. Even students who don’t necessarily depend on the library realize the need for late hours. Business sophomore Ta’Les Russell said she believes other students will definitely feel the inconvenience coming into finals week. “I do think it’s going to affect other students’ grades because they depend on the library to be open 24 hours and they can cram in last-minute studying that they can’t do now because they don’t have that chance to,” Russell said.

High Jump

pg. 8

Men’s basketball team defeats Oklahoma university 73 to 65.


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