The SpringHillian

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sprINGHILLIAN tHe

September 17, 2009 Volume 89, Number 2 Mobile’s 1st Collegiate Newspaper

arOund CaMpuS

Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam

Academic center for students opens this semester in Burke

Wonder why being green is trendy - it’s easy, that’s why. pg. 8.

Center for Academic Excellence opened this semester to help students with their course work.

Eichold Gallery hosts art from local artists. pg. 12

PAIGE MALONE News Editor

Greek life and campus programming board host annual pig roast pg. 9

OpiniOnS & eDItorIALs

Read two students differing opinions on the power of the Internet. pg. 5.

Keith Neicase / SHC Photographer

Jim Love writes about the holy grail of horse racing. pg. 6 Wondering about clubs in Mobile? Check out Kendrick’s column. pg. 6

DOUG BRUCE / Photography Editor

Eight years after Sept. 11, a nation remembers loved ones. See Remembering page 2.

Obama makes education speech life & to school children across the U.S.

CULtUre

Lambda Chi Alpha holds watermelon bash. pg. 9 Wondering where to eat off campus? Read Anna Plovanich’s idea. pg. 10

sports Check out Devin Golden’s football predictions for this season. pg. 17 Former Editor Evan Parrott talks about fantasy football. pg. 13 Greenberry Taylor focuses on Badger sports. pg. 13 & 16

President Obama makes a speech from Arlington, Va. As a result, a controversy sparks. PAIGE MALONE News Editor

As students around the country began their lessons after a relaxing summer break, they received a warm welcome from President Obama. Obama addressed the young students of America last Tuesday, Sept. 8 from Wakefield High School in Arlington, Va. This motivational speech was viewed in classrooms nationwide and became an unexpected controversy for the Obama administration. When word of the president’s educational address was out, the oppositions were endless. Many Americans voiced concerns

for the young minds that could possibly be swayed toward a specific political view. Teachers and school administrators debated as parents protested whether or not to allow the students to tune into the president’s address. Obama, however, did not appear to have a political agenda. As the president welcomed the students back to school, making jokes referencing his educational background, he made light of the adjustment from a laid-back summer to the structure and demands of school. From the beginning to the end of his address, it was clear he was speaking to the See Obama’s page 4.

The Center for Academic Excellence has opened its doors at Spring Hill College. As the year progresses, they expect to have a very busy semester. The Center for Academic Excellence is chaired by Tracy Childs, Academic Student Advocate. As you enter the Center, located in the Agnes Williams Suite in the Burke Memorial Library in room 107, you feel at ease with the open layout and flowing floor plan. The tutoring stations are round tables where student and tutor are equal. Before even entering a session with one of the peer tutors, you are immediately comfortable and open to the help you are about to receive. That is the goal of the Center for Academic Excellence. It is a place where students can go for assistance in writing and math and feel comfortable regardless of their circumstances. When the center is open, Marcelene Llamas Trianosky, Director for Writing

at the Center and instructor in the English department, welcomes students to “come hang out and have an intellectual community that is fun as well as interesting.” The need for increased attention in the areas of math and science brought the Center for Academic Excellence to life. Prior to its opening, the students relied on tutor lists and did not have the convenience of just walking in. Dr. George Sims, Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, saw the need to offer a program to those who may struggle at times with math and writing, specifically a way that would be effective and fully focused on their needs. Trianosky expressed that separating tutoring from academic services gives the students a faculty member who is knowledgeable in the subjects to guide the success and focus of the tutors. The peer-on-peer setting is highly beneficial to the success of the students. Trianosky explains See Center page 4.

DOUG BRUCE / Photography Editor

Mike Courtney and Marcy Trianosky discuss various approaches to mathematics for visiting students.


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