T
E
X
A
W
S
E
S
L
E
Y
A
N
U
N
I
V
E
R
S
I
T
Y
The Rambler
The students’ voice since 1917
Fort Worth, Texas
September 19, 2007
NEWS BRIEFS
You’ve been
Party with Ms. Stella All students are invited to the free Stella Russell Hall balcony party from 9 p.m. to midnight Sept. 20 for the musical stylings of DJ T-Thurm, free food, drinks and a chance to win a PlayStation PSP hand-held entertainment system.
News Briefs
Discount movies Wesleyan movie buffs can get discount tickets to AMC theaters through the student life office. Tickets are $6.50 each and are good for any movie at any time.
Vol. 99, No. 3
served
The Lady Rams volleyball team shows its stuff at the first annual Wesleyan-Hughes volleyball classic, which kicked off the volleyball alumni reunion Sept. 14. Players like Sandra Ayala (left) joined in to support the Becky Hughes endowment. Hughes was an acclaimed Wesleyan coach that served from 1979 to 1991. Photos by Kevin Keathley
You really need a facial... A Coldwater Creek spa package is being raffled off Oct. 23 between games 2 and 3 of the volleyball match. The package is valued at more than $200 and includes a two hour and 30 minute essential facial, Swedish massage and “tempt your toes” foot treatment. Fliers are posted around campus. Tickets are $20, available from any volleyball player or coach. Got paintball? Student Life is looking for students interested in an all-day paintball extravaganza Sept. 21. Sign-up lists are posted around campus and at least 15 people are required. Contact the Student Life office in the SUB for more information. Gay-Straight Alliance The Wesleyan Gay Straight Alliance meets every Friday at 12:15 in room B17 in the Eunice L. West Library basement. All students, faculty and staff that support human rights are encouraged and invited to attend. See you at the chapel Chapel is held at free period every Tuesday in the Chapel of Polytechnic United Methodist Church, followed by a free lunch. The Sept. 25 speaker is Jerry Chism, pastor of Arlington Heights UMC. Baptist Student Ministry TWU’s BSM invites you to come hang out and share a meal with other Wesleyan students. Baptist Student Ministries participates in ministry activities on campus, in the community and around the world. Meetings with free lunch are Wednesdays at noon in the Carter Conference Room, on the second floor of the Sid Richardson Building. Make your mark now The Rambler is now hiring writers and photographers. Get paid and have fun helping produce Wesleyan’s oldest news publication. Regular meetings are at 12:15 p.m. every Thursday in the lobby of Stella Russell Hall.
Wesleyan gets millions for bilingual education SHAWN R. POLING EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Things keep looking up for the education department. Wesleyan was selected to receive a $1.3 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education’s National Professional Development program to benefit the bilingual education program. This grant award comes shortly after receiving a $2 million Title III grant from the Department of Education’s Strengthening Institutions program over the summer. “This is the eighth grant award that Wesleyan has received since the early ’90s to meet the needs of the non-English speaking children of the Metroplex,” said Carlos Martinez, dean of the school of education. “The number of bilingual teachers produced by Wesleyan is so great that is difficult for me to visit a school in the Metroplex and not run into a former student.” The funds will be used by the Wesleyan-Tarrant Country project, whose main goal is to “provide quality training to prepare 175 (about 35 per year)
pre-service and paraprofessionals to increase the number of certified teachers meeting the linguistic, cultural and academic needs of English Language Learners (ELL students) in the 13 partner school districts,” according to a press release issued by Wesleyan. The participating partner school districts include Fort Worth, Arlington, Grand Prairie, Hurst-Euless-Bedford, Lake Worth, White Settlement, EagleMountain Saginaw, Castleberry, Mansfield, Birdville, Everman, Burleson and Irving. The bulk of the award will be used as scholarship funds for Wesleyan bilingual education majors, but some will be used to provide professional development training sessions for teachers, principals and administrators from the partner school districts. Some university faculty will function as presenters of the professional development training sessions, along with state and local experts. “This grant award demonstrates the continued confidence that the U.S. Department of Education and local school districts have with Wesleyan’s ability to produce quality bilingual educators to serve the growing number of non-English speaking students in the Metroplex,” said Martinez.
Summer sun, no island fun Wesleyan student returns from scientific internship in the Bahamas ZAINAH USMAN & SHAWN R. POLING PHOTO EDITOR & EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Although most people go to the Bahamas for fun in the sun, senior liberal studies major Adam Harrison traveled to the legendary islands for a very different reason. “Many people think I was there to party and have fun,” said Harrison. “Even I did at first, but I worked my butt off.” Harrison was one of a few students who won an internship in the Bahamas with the Perry Institute for Marine Science, a non-profit organization committed to protecting the world’s oceans through research and education, according to its Web site. The goal of the internship was to provide real world practical application of the knowledge and techniques he learned in scuba courses at Wesleyan (His minor is recreational dive management). The internship gave Harrison a chance to fill scuba tanks, gas boats, clean loading areas, check compressors, repair docks, paint/operate boats and unload cargo flights, just to name a few of his responsibilities. He ended up making a total of 78 dives. “Lots of extended energy and long, hard days,” he said. “It was enjoyable but tough.” During his three months on Lee Stocking Island, an island in the Bahamas, Harrison was also expected to participate in a variety of tasks and experiments, some not directly related to scuba. “I gained an enormous wealth of knowledge about a wide variety of marine life,” Harrison said. “I learned many of the methods that scientists use to study marine
See Bahamas, page 2
Photo courtesy of Adam Harrison
Adam Harrison and others experimented with black lionfish during his internship on Lee Stocking Island. The pictured lionfish is one that Harrison helped capture. During his stay, a black lionfish attacked one of the scientists Harrison assisted.