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Missouri State Remembers September 11

View the video of the events at the-standard.org

Tuesday • September 13, 2011 • Vol. 105 Issue 4

Briefs Green Bike Program kicks off this week

The Green Bike Program will offer bike rentals for the Fall 2011 semester on September 14 and 15, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Bear Paw. The Green Bike Program allows students to rent bikes to get around Springfield and reduce their carbon footprint. The average cost per bike is $10 to $15 per semester. The program currently has 31 bikes. The Residence Hall Association and the Student Government Association’s Sustainability Commission launched the Green Bike Program in the spring of 2011. The program allows only on-campus residents to rent bikes.

KSMU reporter recognized for legal journalism excellence

The Missouri Bar recognized Jennifer Moore, senior news producer for KSMU Radio, for a fivepart radio series about the public defender system in Missouri. The Missouri Bar will honor Moore with the Excellence in Legal Journalism Award at its annual meeting in Kansas City on Sept. 23. “The Missouri Public Defender System in Crisis” series aired on KSMU in December 2010. The series explored why the state of Missouri was failing to appoint attorneys for impoverished men and women accused of a crime.

Research finds breakthrough for grape and wine industry

Researchers at the Vitus Gene Discovery Program at the Center for Grapevine Biotechnology in MSU’s School of Agriculture announced two research results. The first discovery was the raw DNA sequence of the Norton grape. The second discovery was the first DNA virus ever discovered in grapes. Both discoveries will better help grape crops in the future with more research. These research breakthroughs are a result of years of effort by graduate students, postdoctoral research associates and research faculty.

Kelsey Habighorst /THE STANDARD

The festival offered down-to-earth Ozark music from bands like Blackberry Winter Band, known for their music in “Winter’s Bone.”

Ozarks Fest storms campus Celebration attracts more than 15,000 By Nick Simpson The Standard

Of the many events Missouri State caters to the community each year, certainly the one most characteristic of the culture of this region is the Ozarks Celebration Festival. This year marked the 14th festival hosted by Missouri State, which started on Friday and wraps up Tuesday. The festival is a massive conglomeration of

the talents of regional craftsmen, musicians, authors and other entertainers tied together by Barbara Jones, MSU College of Arts and Letters events coordinator. Jones said she has been hosting the Ozarks Celebration Festival for nine years and that it originated as a topic of discussion between the dean at the time, David Belcher, and Vice President Jim Baker. “We were talking about all the different students that we have and how many different countries they came from,” she said. “They come to the Ozarks and know nothing about this community’s background. So they thought about starting a festival to introduce them to Ozarks’ history and culture.” Jones said the first year drew around 20 craftsmen and other exhibitors to the MSU campus. This year they had 67. “Every exhibitor is hand-picked,” she said. “You can’t just come and say, ‘I want to be in your festival.’ There’s a really stringent applica-

tion process. Once you’re picked we ask you each year because your craft is the highest quality, and you can trace your craft back to the Ozarks’ history or culture. And for many of the exhibitors, their craft is handed down from generation to generation.” Paige Prosperi, a junior double majoring in art education and ceramics, was found demoing her work and the work of her peers at the clayworks booth on Saturday. “We’ve made a bunch of extra clay and gathered some student work to sell,” she said. “We’re exhibiting really what clay-works is. Kids in the BFA program have their own mindset and make their own work, but generally they are regular assignments just like any other class. “We get credit for it. It’s really exciting there are all these people around. You get to hang out all day and make clay and talk to other Ozarks craft people. It’s a really fun medium to work See FESTIVAL, page 10

LabPaqs replace traditional chemistry labs Calendar September 13 to September 19

Tuesday

Public Affairs Week, All week Student Government Association meeting, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. or 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at Plaster Student Union 313 University Recreation Center Job Fair, 6 to 8 p.m. at Plaster Student Union 308

Wednesday

Study Away Fair, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Plaster Student Union Atrium Shayfeen.com: We’re Watching You, noon to 1:30 p.m., Plaster Student Union 315

Thursday

Long Distance Relationships, 4 to 5 p.m. at Plaster Student Union 317

Friday

Grammar Fridays at the Writing Center, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Meyer Library Bear CLAW Chemistry Labs Open House, 3 to 5 p.m. at Temple Hall 435 and 440

Monday

Last day to drop full semester classes at 50 percent refund, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at authorized registration sites A Voice for Those Silenced by Child Abuse, 4 to 5 p.m. at Hill Hall 302

By Brittany Forell The Standard

Students are being asked to buy $200 “do-it-yourself” lab kits and conduct lab experiments at home or in their dorms this semester due to limited space and resources at Missouri State. “I believe the Chemistry department did this for a few reasons,” said Melissa Hayes, teaching assistant for the Department of Chemistry. “First of all, the department is going through a change switching from one large lab to two smaller labs. Because of this change we have lost lab space. So switching one lab to a take-home lab helps with the space issue. Also, Internet courses have become much more popular over the years due to the convenience that allows students to complete the labs on their own time and complete their school work around their other responsibilities.”

The lab kits are called LabPaqs. These LabPaqs contain comprehensive hands-on laboratory experiments that academically mirror the labs performed on campus. Chemistry LabPaqs allow professors to teach chemistry completely online if necessary. These kits include common laboratory equipment and supplies, such as beakers, graduated cylinders, test tubes and all required chemicals. They also come with a lab manual and CD. The students must complete their experiments at home, and if they need any clarification or explanation of a procedure they must meet with the lab coordinator during his or her office hours. The students are provided direction from the lab coordinator throughout the course via Blackboard. “The students have one week to complete one lab and submit it via a PDF file on Blackboard,” Hayes said. “They also have to complete a

Evan Henningsen/THE STANDARD

Justin Hinojosa works on an experiment with his chemistry LabPaq.

pre-lab Blackboard quiz and postKathy Shade, the lab coordinator lab reflection where they discuss for the Chemistry for the Citizen thoughts, concerns and issues with the lab.” See LABPAQS, page 10

Criminology department honors professor’s life Damien M. DiPlacido The Standard

Engaging, outgoing and hard working, but most of all, dedicated to his students and his work. Those are just several ways the late Don Ivie is described by his peers in Missouri State’s Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice. Over the summer, Ivie, a corporal in Missouri’s Highway Patrol and an instructor at Missouri State, died in a tragic mountain climbing accident at Grand Teton National

Park in Wyoming. The criminology department is currently working on a scholarship in honor of Ivie, Department Head Craig Hemmons said. “We created the Don Ivie Memorial Scholarship right after the tragedy happened,” Hemmons said. “We’ve already gotten some folks who contributed to it, and we hope to make an award from those funds for next year.” There is also a non-monetary award in the works for criminology graduate students called the Don

Ivie Academic Excellence award, Hemmons said. “We give out scholarships in the spring of one year for the following year,” he said. “We hope to have money available for the 2012-2013 academic year.” The Don Ivie Scholarship will be based on a student’s overall academic performance, and will be selected by a vote of the entire criminology faculty, Hemmons said. “The reason we’re doing it based on academic excellence is because

he was such a good student,” he said. “He was from all accounts one of our top performers at the undergraduate and graduate level. We thought having the criteria based on that just made sense.” Brett Garland, an MSU criminology professor, co-authored an article with Ivie for an academic publication called “Policing: An International Journal of Police Strategies.” Ivie was also the first criminology student at Missouri See IVIE, page 10


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