SEPTEMBER 3 - SEPTEMBER 9, 2019
FEATURES
UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA ANCHORAGE
A&E
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The story behind Oppenheim’s sculpture is one of controversy.
THENORTHERNLIGHT.ORG
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Explore UAA’s new Esports Lounge in the Student Union.
Howls unheard: Town hall meeting showcases the many voices of UAA By Jason Herr layout@thenorthernlight.org
On Aug. 29, several members of the University of Alaska Anchorage community gathered at Anchorage’s ZJ Loussac Library for an Anchorage Assembly Town Hall meeting to discuss the future of UAA under decisions by UA President Jim Johnsen and the UA Board of Regents. The gathering was opened by Anchorage Assembly member Felix Rivera, who clarified the need for the meeting. “The potential impacts from what the Board of Regents have started, and what President Johnsen has started, they could have a lot of negative economic ramifications for our city,” Rivera said. “And, as the assembly members that represent midtown, and thus represent both of the universities on the Anchorage assembly, it was important to us to have a community dialogue.” The meeting was sponsored by both Rivera and Meg Zaletel, another Anchorage Assembly member, and tied to the Save the Seawolf advocacy group. Both Rivera and Zaletel’s districts are in midtown Anchorage, where UAA is located. Save the Seawolf is an Anchorage-based advocacy entity that is working toward finding a solution for UA and UAA outside of the UA Board of Regents’ consolidation plan. Through resources and outreach events, the
PHOTO BY JASON HERR
A recent Anchorage Assembly Town Hall meeting united the many voices of the UAA and Anchorage communities.
group works to actively involve the UAA community with efforts to speak up and to protect UAA from becoming lost in the single-university plan. “President Johnsen’s plans to consolidate UAF, UAA, and UAS into a single accredited university makes the Seawolf an endangered species,” according to the Save the Seawolf website. Rivera was contacted by a UAA organizing committee to help make the collaborative dialogue possible, combining the voices of UAA, university supporters and the Anchorage community in a public forum at the
municipal library. Students, staff, faculty, alumni and more were represented on the panel, each giving their perspective on the possibility of the consolidation of the UA system and their thoughts on its future. The gathered public was a mix of students, Anchorage community members, local officials and citizens with connections to the university. Both the panel and the crowd shared their past and present connections with UAA, as applause and exclamations accented points that were agreed upon. One common concern shared
among the speakers was the lack of involvement by the UA Board of Regents in the decision-making for the future of UAA and the UA system. Students were represented on the panel by two members of the Union of Students of the University of Alaska Anchorage, or USUAA. Both Alex Jorgenson, speaker of the assembly, and Clare Baldwin, president, spoke to their experiences and thoughts of the decision to consolidate UA into a single university. UA decisions had been made and discussed over the summer,
Your friendly neighborhood Sony-Man: Sony and Disney at an impasse over film rights By Anna Berry arts2@thenorthernlight.org
“He’s not defined by his [physical] power, he’s defined by power and responsibility… he’s defined by balancing his life between being a high school or college student and being a superhero,” Drew Cochran, a music performance major at UAA, said. At the moment, Sony and Disney are similarly involved in an elaborate balancing act, one that could mark the fate of the successful franchise. thenorthernlight.org
Back in 2015, Sony Pictures, the owner of the film rights to Spider-Man, and the Disneybought Marvel Studios, the owner of the comic book rights to Spider-Man, made a deal that Disney producer Kevin Feige would head-up two of Sony’s Spider-Man films. In exchange for the fame this would bring to Sony, Sony would give Disney merchandising rights for a yearly royalty payment, and would also allow Disney to use Spider-Man in its own Marvel Cinematic Universe, or MCU, according to The Hollywood Reporter. facebook.com/tnlupdates
a time when many students were away from campus and could not participate as easily in advocating for the university in a time of fundamental changes, Jorgensen said. “Everything has gone on while students haven’t been around. They’ve been out hiking, biking, working, to save up for college,” Jorgensen said. “We’re not here, not being students, so we can be students in the fall, so a majority of this entire conversation has gone on when students are not even around.” Jorgensen explained that students’ voices were absent from the decision making. “We were never consulted,” Jorgensen said. “We were never asked ‘hey, would you like to send a few students to these conversations about how we are fundamentally changing the academic structure of statewide in all of our universities?’ We weren’t [asked].” USUAA looked to the University of Alaska Fairbanks student government, or USUAF, to find out what their peer student government group was doing and discovered the USUAF had not been invited to the discussions either. The UAF student president had been told by the Board of Regents that students could observe the discussions but not participate, according to
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PHOTO COURTESY OF ALEXANDRA CRAIG
However, this agreement came to an end this year. When the time for renewal rolled around, Disney requested additional proceeds from the next Spider-Man movies. When turned down, Disney proposed less involvement from Feige. Sony turned this offer down, according to The Guardian. “Spider-Man has always been a key member in a lot of universes… if they were to cut
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UAA student Alexandra Craig maintains a collection of Spider-Man comic books with her husband Hugh Hutchinson.
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