WEDNESDAY
February 3, 2010
Vol. 93 • No. 3 ONLINE:
www.therambler.org
The Rambler The voice of Texas Wesleyan University students since 1917
President’s Honors Concert features 11 top performers. A&E, page 5
Martinez named men’s soccer team head coach. Sports, page 6
President delivers State of the SGA
Conner Howell | Rambler Staff
Student Government Association President Heath Scott delivers the State of the SGA to a crowded chamber. Jonathan Resendez
jlresendez@mail.txwes.edu
The Student Government Association celebrated 90 years of student democracy with its annual State of the SGA report. SGA President Heath Scott delivered the address to a crowded chamber of about 30 students, faculty and
the university president Jan. 19. Citing a successful fall semester, Scott said the student government was strong, vibrant and diverse. “Traditional students, non-traditional students, those who commute, live on campus, foreign nationals, mothers, Greeks, athletes, minorities,” Scott said. “The list is endless.” The first major success Scott ref-
erenced was the SGA’s possession, after long periods of time without, of a meeting chamber and offices for various representatives. “Before we were ready to act on behalf of the student body, we needed to act on behalf of ourselves,” Scott said in reference to criticism the SGA initially faced over the amount of money spent to acquire its rooms.
“Students will once again flock to our banner because we have so graciously and elegantly presented it before them.” Nick Demetre, representative for the school of sciences, said he liked the idea of the SGA speaking directly and publicly to the student body.
SGA, page 4
Numbers top previous spring term enrollment Jonathan Resendez
jlresendez@mail.txwes.edu
With the spring numbers officially in, Wesleyan enrollment is up 3.24 percent over last spring. Including the law school, graduate and doctorate programs, a total of 2,794 students are enrolled at Wesleyan. “The successful fall 2009 enrollment and dilligent work on behalf of the admission team, coaches, staff in new student programs and faculty resulted in an increase in our spring 2010 spring enrollment,” said Pati Alexander, vice president for enrollment and student services, in an e-mail. Undergraduate enrollment is up 5.22 percent over last spring, totalling 1,476 students. This figure includes 95 high school students who are taking college level classes. Wesleyan enrolled 20 new freshmen and 136 new transfer and readmit students for a 3.57 increase in credit hours over last spring, Alexander said. Also, the university retained 91.5 percent of the undergraduate fall class. “The shared efforts of the great faculty and staff here at Texas Wesleyan is why we retained so many students,” said Blair Ensign, coordinator of new student programs and transfer liaison in the academic success center. The law school enrollment numbers showed a slight decrease from 760 students last spring to 720 this semester. The two new doctoral programs in education and nurse anesthesia enrolled 15 and 36 students respectively, Alexander said. Wesleyan’s graduate program accounts for 452 students while the doctorate program has 51.
University College Day makes its way to TWU Melissa Bates
mdbates@mail.txwes.edu
All year long students work in class, do projects and study, but on University College Day students, faculty and staff have the opportunity to break from the norm. UCD is April 13 and the deadline for submissions is Feb. 26. The theme of UCD 2010 is “What does this have to do with me?” “University College Day came out of the idea that college is a forum for sharing ideas. It really is the only opportunity to share what they do publicly,” said Peter Colley, associate professor of art and chair of the UCD 2010 committee. “People may talk with friends about what they did in this or that class, but this is the one day of the year for an ‘intellectual party’ to celebrate your accomplishments. The one day you get to show off.” Colley said the most memorable presentations are the ones with provocative topics, which usually draw the largest crowds. The sessions are held around the campus, with an itinerary showing who presents what and where. Teachers are encouraged to offer their students extra credit or assignment credit for attending UCD. Students do not have to have a full paper or presentation to send in a
“This is the one day of the year for an ‘intellectual party’ to celebrate your accomplishments. The one day you get to show off.
”
Peter Colley
chair of the UCD 2010 committee
submission, just an idea. Acceptable presentation formats include lectures, poster sessions, PowerPoint, photoessays, readings, theatrical and musical performances, panels, debate teams and forum discussions. Students can present individually or collaboratively; subjects can be cross-discipline or cross-platform. Students, faculty and staff who present their scholarly and creative work at UCD may also submit their written work for review by University Scholars, published by the Texas Wesleyan University Press in conjunction with
UCD, page 4
Bryan, Bill and Linda Bleibdrey at the CFO awards banquet.
Office of Communications
Bleibdrey earns CFO award
Jonathan Resendez
jlresendez@mail.txwes.edu
In times of economic duress, a Wesleyan administrator rose above financial expectations. Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration Bill Bleibdrey received a Chief Financial Officer of the Year award from the Fort Worth Business Press in an awards banquet Jan. 28. He was chosen in the education category.
“I’m very honored,” Bliebdrey said. “I really get it on behalf of the university. I have the easy job, and everyone else is doing the hard work and being disciplined by watching their finances.” The honorees for the award are executives who work as a partner with the institution’s president or chief officer in guiding the organization through the various “financial storms and sunny days they will encounter,” according to the Business Press’ Web site.