In with the new
Festival of Colors
NCAA run ends
Changes coming to Plaster Student Union restaurants
Missouri State students celebrate Hindu festival
Lady Bears season comes to an end in Sweet 16
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M I S S O U R I S TAT E U N I V E R S I T Y
VOLUME 112, ISSUE 25 | THE-STANDARD.ORG The Standard/The Standard Sports
TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 2019
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MSU animation program ranked second in state TINSLEY MERRIMAN Staff Reporter @MerrimanTinsley A recent ranking from Animation Career Review has placed the Missouri State University Art and Design Department as the second best in the state. This makes MSU the highest ranked public university, only beaten by the private university Kansas City Art Institute. The survey was written on Feb. 28, 2019, by the ACR staff. The ACR website reports that the grading system was based on each school’s academic reputation, admissions rate, depth of the program and how valuable it is compared to the tuition of the school. Bryan Jennings, associate professor of animation, electronic and digital arts, discussed how the MSU Art and Design Department has won awards in the past, including from the Broadcast Educators Association of America. Jennings said the MSU Animation Group participating took Best of Show for Original Screenplay/Script and Original Score/Composition during last year’s conference. The event was based off nine categories for students all across the nation. “It’s a big flippin’ deal we won,” Jennings said. Jennings said the MSU Art and Design Department is split into two sections: a bachelor’s of fine arts and a Bachelor of Science. The BFA covers more traditional animation like drawing and painting, while the Bachelor of Science is also called the electronic arts degree. “So, if a student comes to me and says to me ‘I want to study animation,’ they have two options,” Jennings said. “They can study in the BFA in animation, and they take a lot of art studio courses — drawing, painting, sculpture — all these different things, or they can study the electronic arts route which is a non-comprehensive degree. They have to have a minor for it, and it takes a lot of those art studio courses and replaces them with media production courses.” Jennings highlighted the group of senior students who won Best of Show for Original Screenplay/Script the previous year at BEA for their short animated film “Recoiled.” Senior electronic arts animation majors Shalom Simmons and Claire Grim are involved in the project that formed last May. While the script has been written, Simmons discussed how the project’s animation is still being developed. She said the project is also getting help from multiple areas across MSU. “We have people who get our storyboard together, who help get the animatic together, they do like character designs, environment designs,” Simmons said. “There’s also a whole slew of people for audio, and we also plan on using the White String Quartet to play our music.” Grim said the official product will not be released online for another year. “So we’re not posting it online for the general public until like a year later because there’s festival season, where we submit to various film festivals to get awards and everything,” Grim said. Both have put in large amounts of time to the project and have said they plan on showcasing it at the 19th Annual Electronic Art Student Showcase. The event takes place on May 16 from 6:30-9 p.m. in Plaster Student Union. The event consists of six different senior projects from all across the art and design department.
ZOE BROWN/THE STANDARD
Abdillahi Dirie, left, and Ethan Schroeder make up the single ticket for student body president and vice president, respectively, for the 2019-2020 school year.
Lone runners Candidates run unopposed for student body president, vice president on ballot ZOE BROWN Staff Reporter @zoe_zoebrown “Elevate MoState” — this is the ultimate goal and campaign slogan for the sole student body presidential ticket of the 2019-20 school year at Missouri State University. Abdillahi Dirie and Ethan Schroeder are running for student body president and vice president, respectively. The three main platforms of the campaign are campus advancement, student engagement and student wellness. The campaign is advocating for numerous policies and ideas, including renovations to Craig Hall, textbook rentals in the bookstore, an additional counselor to be brought to the Counseling Center and a new Multicultural
Resource Center. The campaign platforms range in size from small projects, like providing water at tailgates, to lengthy projects, such as bringing Bird scooters to campus or establishing flat-rate tuition. Dirie, junior health communication major, has helped with several projects on campus. As an SGA cabinet member, he helped bring hammock racks to campus as well as implement the Bear with Me policy, which allows students to do community service to lessen parking ticket costs. Dirie said that as student body president, advocating for a new building for the Multicultural Resource Center is the campaign idea closest to his heart. Dirie was born in Saudi Arabia and lived in Syria before his family immigrated to the U.S. in 2005. He said it is important for
MSU to focus on diversity and inclusion. “There are a lot of people who would love to be in my position, so I should probably make it as much as I can and be able to be in a position where I can give back in the future,” Dirie said. Dirie said his job as student body president will be to understand the needs of students, serve as a voice for students and represent the student body on various committees. “If a student doesn’t feel that something is being done right, it is my job to speak up on their behalf,” Dirie said. Ethan Schroeder, junior accounting major, is running alongside Dirie as student body vice president. As student body vice president, Schroeder would work as a mentor to SGA u See SGA, page 9
Legacy of late dean honored by concert MICHAELA SATTERFIELD Staff Reporter @mchaela_s The kind of music that evokes distant memories echoed through Ellis Hall on Saturday night, reminding the audience of another sound that once did the same — the unforgettable laughter of a beloved former dean. The commemorative concert was held Saturday, March 30, in honor of David Belcher, former Missouri State University Dean of the College of Arts and Letters. The audience consisted of MSU students who only know David through the retelling of his hilarious stories, along with faculty members who worked closely with him. The
concert featured a variety of performances. Each was significant to David who was an avid music lover. Months of planning went into the event which featured piano, vocal, violin and organ performances, along with remarks by family and friends. MSU Music Composition Coordinator and Graduate Coordinator John Prescott, who worked with David as a department head, said he was the one who approached the current dean last September with the idea of doing something to commemorate David. This was about three months after David died of a glioblastoma brain tumor on Sunday, June 17, 2018. In attendance at the concert, freshman vocal performance major Jack Briggs said it was evident that a lot
of time was put into preparation for the concert. He also said he didn’t personally know David, but could tell that he was a big deal. Many others would agree that was one way to put it. David’s wife of 14 years, Susan Brummell Belcher, spoke at the concert about her late husband. “His sense of humor was one of the things that glued people to him,” Susan said. Aside from that, it is his passion that people remember him for. “He had a gift for being able to transfer the passion that he had for whatever he was doing to the people around him,” Prescott said. There is no doubt that this passion
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David Hays and Minju Choi perform “Melodie” by u See DEAN, page 9 Gluck-Kreisler at the concert on March 30.