Friday, March 31, 2006
News 15th Street
Rose State College
6420 SE 15th Street, Midwest City, OK 73110
Vol. XXXV Issue 25
March 31, 2006
File photo
Job search made easy Andrew Knittle News Editor
Students appraise each others’ cars during the 2005 Car Show, an event hosted by the student senate. This event raises money for the American Cancer Society’s on-going research.
Cash for cancer cure collected through campus Car Show Andrew Knittle News Editor
The student senate, in conjunction with the Office of Student Activities, will host the 2006 RSC Car Show April 8 in the north parking lot of the Communications Center. The proceeds will benefit the American Cancer Society and their fight to find a cure for the deadly disease. Registration is $15 and will be held the morning of the event from 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Vice President Yancey Scott, liberal studies major and car enthusiast who hopes to one day own a BMW M3 and turbo-charged Honda S2000, is heading up the event for the senate. Scott hopes the event will draw a wide range of participants, not just RSC students. “Anybody can be in the car show. We’re trying to get the community involved as much as possible to the make the event enjoyable and a success,” Scott said. Scott added that “anything with wheels that rolls” is welcome to compete in the car show. Trophies will be awarded for first through third places in the following categories: • Import/Foreign • Domestic • Under Construction • Classic Cars & Trucks from 1986 down • High and Low Truck
The Greater Oklahoma City Chamber of Commerce will host its first Career Fair April 5 at the Cox Business Services Convention Center in downtown OKC. The event will be held from 12:30 p.m.-4:30 p.m. and feature only Oklahoma-based employers seeking new employees and interns to fill positions all over the state. The goal of the Chamber and its event is to keep promising graduates, as well as serious students still enrolled, from leaving the state to find employment elsewhere. Open exclusively to Oklahoma college students, the event will offer those in attendance a unique opportunity to see and be seen by a wide array of companies from various industries, including energy, media, advertising, legal and manufacturing firms. Roughly 80 companies, including Dell and Chesapeake, have signed up to participate in the career fair, said Event Coordinator Macay Bolay. According to Bolay, the career fair will be more than just companies handing out business cards and brochures to anyone passing by. “Those students who attend need to be sure and be prepared, because these meetings [with the representatives] could very well turn into actual job interviews, done right on the spot,” Bolay said. Bolay added that students who plan to attend should dress in appropriate business attire and bring several copies of their resumes to submit to the representatives of the companies they are interested in joining. Job Placement/Career Ser-
Photo by STACEY McENTIRE
Career Fair brings students, employers together
The Cox Convention Center, located on Reno Avenue in OKC, is a popular site to host events. The Greater Oklahoma City Chamber of Commerce will be offering a Career Fair there April 5.
vices Specialist Sally Cohea said students can use the career fair as an opportunity to network with major Oklahoma companies, even if they are not able to secure a position straight away. “These days, a lot of people use these kinds of opportunities to give companies a chance to look at them, and if they aren’t qualified this year, the company can let the student know what they need to work on to secure employment with them in the future,” Cohea said. Students interested in attending have the option of driving themselves or using the
bus transportation provided by RSC. Those who desire to drive their own vehicles can park free at the Coca Cola/Bricktown Events Center, where a shuttle service will transport the student to and from the event. Students wanting to ride the bus will need to either visit the Student Activities Desk in the Student Center or call 7337376 to reserve a spot. Various prizes, including more than 200 New Orleans/ Oklahoma City Hornets tickets, will be given away during the day’s event. The fair’s cor-
porate sponsors include Cort Furniture, Tropical Plant Leasing and the Oklahoma Redhawks. The Cox Business Services Convention Center is located just off Interstate40, directly across the street from the Ford Center at the corner of Robinson Avenue and Reno Avenue. If students want to find out which companies will be represented at the career fair, they can call the Chamber at 297-8900 or visit their Web site at www.okcchamber.com. aknittle@rose.edu
• Stock
Andrew Knittle News Editor
• Anything not a car or truck • Motorcycle Class Special awards for Loud Stereo, Best of Show, President’s Award and Audience Choice will also be presented during the show. According to Wes Leflore, assistant coordinator of Student Events, two of the three judges are in place as of March 27. “We have two judges, who are local professionals, and Anybody can be are working out the details of securing the third,” Leflore in the car show. said. We’re trying to He added that the judges are not experts in the car in- get the commudustry, but will be accessing nity involved as the vehicles from a layman’s perspective. much as possible The band Bishops Alley, described as “a little bit to the make the country, a little bit rock ‘n’ event enjoyable roll,” will provide entertainment while the cars are on and a success. display. Yancey Scott, Refreshments, including ham- liberal studies major burgers and chopped beef sandwiches, will be sold to those in attendance, with all proceeds routed to the ACS. Those needing further information should contact the Student Activities Desk at 733-7376 to make any inquiries. The car show will be sponsored by local retailer Audio Midwest, who sell a variety of car accessories in addition to other products. aknittle@rose.edu
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The 10th annual Eastern Oklahoma County Relay For Life, an all-night walk to benefit those affected by cancer, will be hosted by RSC at 7 p.m. May 12. Participants can take part any time during the Relay, which will last throughout the early-morning hours of May 13, ending at 7 a.m. The purpose of the event running throughout the night is to illustrate to the community that the fight against cancer is continuous and on-going, not something that ends because the day is over. RSC will have bands and other activities to entertain participants of all ages. Concessions will also be made available, with all proceeds going to benefit support groups and educational programs for cancer victims and survivors. Payroll Clerk Tammy Martin, a Relay team captain for the past five years, says that RSC is expecting 5,00010,000 participants from surrounding areas. Martin also added RSC will have more than five teams
participating, making this year’s contingent for the Relay the largest ever for the college. Teams participating this year include student groups Phi Theta Kappa and the student senate, According to Martin anyone can take part, and she believes everyone should. “We all know someone who has cancer or who has passed away [from cancer] and the relay is an opportunity for all of us to honor the survivors and keep the memories alive of those who have passed away,” Martin said. According to the American Cancer Society’s Web site, www.cancer.org, the Relay For Life can trace its beginnings to May 1985 and a Tacoma, Wash. surgeon named Dr. Gordy Klatt. Klatt, trying to find a creative way to raise money for cancer research, ran and walked around a track at the University of Puget Sound for a full 24 hours, letting friends join him for $25 to raise money for the local ACS’s office. That first year, Klatt was able to round up $27,000, and since then the movement has
Photo provided by the AMERICAN C ANCER SOCIETY
All-night walk benefits survivors
• Race Car Class (not street legal)
spread across the nation. The ACS estimates that cancer, which can develop in any organ in the human body, will cause more than 560,000 deaths among Americans in 2006, making it the secondleading cause of death in the
country after heart disease. Students and faculty wishing to participate in the Relay can call Martin at 7337585 or stop by the Payroll Office to speak with her in person. aknittle@rose.edu
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