3/28/2019 Issue

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INSIDE

Campus landmark to find new home... Page 9 Texas A&M University-Kingsville

The South Texan

Volume 93, Issue 21

thesouthtexan.com

Farewell Seale Hall Building demolished 84 years after first built

BRITTANY GONZALEZ Contributing Writer Seale Hall (1935-2019) served as the first male dormitory on campus and was named after Dr. Edward Wynn Seale who served as the second President of Texas College of Arts & Industries (now Texas A&M University-Kingsville). The demolition of the 84-year-old building began earlier this month and has sparked many emotions. “At first, my jaw dropped, I knew it was going to happen eventually, but I guess I just wasn’t prepared to actually see it. It was surreal. So many

hours spent in the building that at that time housed the Alumni Association, my first job,” said Kimberly Whitley, TAMUK alumnus. The University Police Department was also located in Seale Hall on Santa Gertrudis before relocating to Lewis Hall on University Boulevard. Lieutenant Todd Burris of the Texas A&M University- Kingsville Police Department recalls pros and cons about the move closer to campus. “Everyone knew where we were located [at Seale Hall]. It was easily accessible as far as parking for anyone who needed to come see us. Now it’s a little more difficult to park,” Burris said. Burris said Seale Hall had to undergo plenty of maintenance to keep up with different building codes. The move to Lewis Hall was favorable, having more interaction with students on campus and not worrying about equipment being damaged with the flooding that affects the Kingsville area. Although many students were hopeful for a new parking lot, the area

Thursday, March 28, 2019

Photo by Matias Perez

The gradual demolition of Seale Hall. will remain vacant until the approval for construction of a new building next year. “We already have a design for the new building which will include areas like Development and Alumni Affairs, Career Services and University Po-

lice,” said Dr. Teresa Riley, VP of student affairs Texas A&M University- Kingsville loses a piece of its original history but many memories will live on in those who shared experiences with Seale Hall. Gone, but never forgotten.

University website prepares for upgrades Marketing and Communications Department hopes to reinvigorate www.tamuk.edu DYLAN DOZIER Reporter On April 1, online visitors, students, faculty members, and content creators across campus will be introduced to an updated website. The Marketing and Communications department plans on providing content creators with a more user-friendly design.

Web and information designer and leader of the web services team James Pollock anticipates a simpler future regarding campus information sharing. “We are looking for an easy-to-use intuitive design, not only for the average user that comes across the website but also for the content creators across campus,” Pollock said. The current and soon to be old website design requires content creators to possess some knowledge of HTML. HTML is a cornerstone programming language of the World Wide Web. For more than 20 years, it has been a top choice for creating web pages and applications, but with the advent of more open source-management systems, a working knowledge of coding languages is less necessary for sharing information. The MARCOM team hopes to limit the amount of coding done by website users.

“The templates that we had in the past require the user to know more about HTML. The templates we are using now are more like a WordPress,” Pollock said. “They just fill in form fields. The end result is more appealing.” Currently, the web services team is in the process of designing templates that will be available to content creators campus-wide. The new templates will expedite webpage construction and simplify the creative process. They will also provide the university website with a uniformity that is currently absent. “In the old system, content creators designed their own pages and they weren’t always uniform across the website,” Pollock said. Content creators aren’t the only ones who will benefit from the update. Visitors will find that the new website is easy to navigate. No longer will they have to read

through paragraphs of information to find links to get them to their desired location. Excess information is being tossed out so that users can navigate the website with expediency. Engineering students Kevin Carrillo and Joseph Coulaf look forward to the update. “I feel that updating the website would be of good use,” Carrillo said. “I run into minor problems such as it crashing on me every now and then.” Coulaf hopes the new design will take on a new look that does away with wordy links. “I’d like the links to not be complete words. More pictures would make it look nice,” Coulaf said. “It needs to look more official.” Though the website update rolls out in April, the MARCOM team will continue to update the website so that they can continually meet and surpass user expectations. “We are always going to continue to make it better,” Pollock said.


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