PLAINSMAN PRESS - South Plains College
Transcription
PLAINSMAN PRESS - South Plains College
lidays o H y p an Hap lainsm P e h t from Press! SOUTH PLAINS COLLEGE www.southplainscollege.edu/ppress PLAINSMAN PRESS Levelland, Texas A bi-weekly collegiate publication Vol. 57 • Issue 6 • November 24, 2014 McMeans crowned Miss Caprock at 57th annual scholarship pageant by NICOLE TRUGILLO News Editor and Production Studio in the Creative Arts Building on the Levelland campus. the judges for the night. The judges were Aaron Green, assistant professor of geology, The stage is filled with Stephanie Allen, assistant bright lights, professor of speech profesand young lasor at SPC from 2002-2012, dies are backand Ron Spears, dean of stage getting continuing and distance ready for an education. unforgettable After the introductions night. The auof the judges, the nominees dience is looktook the stage again, modeling up at the ing formal wear. While the stage, ready to young women were modsee who will be eling formal wear, Race crowned Miss told the audience the three Caprock 2015. words each nominee chose This year, to describe themselves. 14 young laWhen the contestants dies were chowere done modeling their sen to compete formal wear, they went for the title of backstage so the judges Miss Caprock, could decide the top five but only 13 acfinalists. tually competDuring the wait, entered at the pagtainment was provided by eant. The 57th Above, Alyssa Gregory, right, who later won first runner-up, answers the Rian Castillo, a commercial pageant was on-stage question at Tom T. Hall on the Levelland campus on Nov. 14. held Nov. 14 Right, Miss Caprock 2014, Molly McMeans, smiles on stage after receiving music student. He played a couple of songs before the in the Tom T. her crown. CHESANIE BRANTLEY/PLAINSMAN PRESS judges announced the five Hall Recording finalists. The top five finalists were: Caprock 2015. She received a Greogry, 19, a freshman Ra$700 scholarship. Alyssa Gregory, daughter diology major from Littleof Bryan and Dana Gregory field, representing the Press of Littlefield was announced Club and Plainsman Press; the runner-up. She received a Kyla Daniel, 18, a freshman Social Work major from Lub$500 scholarship Sharon Race, assistant pro- bock, representing Smallwood hosted a religious dialogue for by DORA SMITH students and members of the fessor of English, served as the Apartments; ReAnna Krapf, Opinion Editor community in the Sundown Mistress of Ceremonies for the 20, a sophomore Nursing Opening conversations Room of the Student Center night. Each young lady went major from Westbrook, repreacross different faiths has the on South Plains College’s to the microphone and an- senting Phi Theta Kappa; Mcpotential to foster understand- Levelland campus on Nov. 4. nounced her contestant num- Means, 19, a freshman Speech ber and name, who her parents Pathology major from Gail, ing and peaceful relations were, where she is from, and representing Baptist Student between communities. SEE “RELIGIOUS” ON PAGE 4 Ministry; and Bonnie Smith, who she represented. Baptist Student Ministries When done, each contestant 19, a freshman Education mawalked the stage in her after-5 jor from Comfort, representing dress, modeling the dress Gillespie Hall. The rest of the nominees while Race went into more depth about the pageant partic- were escorted off stage, while ipants, giving the audience fun the five finalists stayed on stage. The five finalists chose facts about each young lady. While the ladies were get- a question from a bowl and ting ready to model their for- answered it to the best of their mal wear, Race introduced ability. Mollie McMeans, daughter of Bart and Vivian McMeans of Gail, was crowned Miss The finalists were escorted off stage, and Castillo came on stage once again to perform while the judges added up the scores of the finalists, deciding who would be crowned Miss Caprock. “It was so awkward being on stage,” McMeans said. “Because it isn’t natural to stand there and smile. But the judges were so sweet, and everyone was so sweet backstage. So we all kind of felt Center; Maria Nevarez, representing Tubb Hall; Nicole Stewart, representing SPC Band; and Lia Wilson, representing Cosmetology. Lauren Hoskins and Morgan King both represented the Law Enforcement Club. McMeans didn’t know if she was going to win or not, but she was excited. “I was very shocked because, I’ve never [been in a pageant before],”McMeans Dialogue encourages tolerance between Christians, Muslims like a family onstage. It was a said. “So it was definitely really good experience.” surprising.” Other contestants included: All contestants were reAriana Conner, representing quired to have a minimum North and South Sue Hall; grade-point average of 2.5 or Hailee Gonzales Diaz, repre- higher, and must have never senting the Texan Cheerlead- been on academic probation. ers; Anna Hargrove, representing Stroud Hall; Gabriele ntrugillo0806@students. Kirkwood, representing Star southplainscollege.edu Soldiers Matters: Series addressing veterans wraps up Reorganization effects VA at local level by ZACH HOLLINGSWORTH Associate Editor Samer Altabaa, Imam of the Islamic Center of the South Plains, speaks at a Christian-Muslim dialogue in the Sundown Room on the Levelland campus on Nov. 5. ALLISON TERRY/PLAINSMAN PRESS Cover to Cover Opinion... page 8 Feature... page 13 Entertainmentpage 18 Sports... page 22 Spotlight... page 26 The reputation of America’s care for military veterans has become tarnished in the last year. The scandals, which, for a time, seemed to permeate the evening news- Veterans dying while waiting for care on secret patient lists, abuse of power by employees of the Veterans Administration (VA), or the falsifying of records so that dysfunctional VAs could continue to operate- seem to have died down, in part due to the massive demand that these issues be fixed. News Former U.S. Navy fighter pilot speaks of his time being held as a prisoner of war. page 3 Opinion Gamergate raises questions about misogyny and journalism ethics. page 8 Military sexual trauma largely ignored [Editor’s note: These stories are the 10th and 11th parts of a multi-part sees, “Soldiers Matters,” addressing the issues veterans face when reintegrating into civilian life. It begins in Issue 1 and continues through Issue 6.] The popular outrage began when it was revealed, in a report by CNN released in May of this year, that more than 40 veterans had died in the Phoenix, Arizona VA health care system while waiting for care. But this report was merely the beginning, and a cascade of charges, both small and large, were levelled against the VA. SEE “VA” ON PAGE 4 by ALLISON TERRY Editor-in-Chief It’s something no one wants to talk about. But that is a part of the issue for Military Sexual Trauma (MST) victims. These assaults are often ignored in the Armed Forces. In fact, the United States Pentagon estimates about 86 percent of all military assault is not reported. Gabby Saldana, a MST qualified counselor working for the Lubbock Veterans Administration, explains there are two types of MST reports, restrictive and unrestrictive. According to Saldana, in a restrictive claim, the victim only wishes to get medical attention and to not press charges on the attacker(s). An unrestrictive report involves parties going on record about the incident. SEE “SEXUAL” ON PAGE 6 Feature Sports Spotlight Puzzling new Lubbock attraction challenges guests to escape a locked room. page 15 Texans and Lady Texans come up short at national cross country meet. Week-long event encourages renewal of downtown cultural scene. page 22 page 26 2 NEWS Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Regents review audit, discuss student demographics by ALLISON TERRY Editor-in-Chief The South Plains College Board of Regents covered a wide variety of topics during their November meeting. The meeting began with the presentation of the yearly audit from the accounting firm of Pate, Down, and Pinkerton, LLP. “The report we have this year, once again, is an unqualified or unmodified opinion,” said Keith Downs, an accountant of this Levelland firm. “The report itself hasn’t changed much, just a little bit of tweaking here and there.” According to Downs, the bulk of the changes within the report were due to the Governmental Accounting Standards Board statement number 65, which dictated changing the word “deferred” to “unearned” or “unrealized” instead. In the audit, the independent firm provides three opinions. “We give one opinion on financial statements,” said Downs. “We give an opinion or an assessment to a point on internal control, and then we also do compliance to the federal and state project.” Teresa Green, vice president for finance and administration at SPC, and Stephen John, vice president for institutional advancement, worked with this firm in order to ensure financial statements were correct. Green noted these financial statements were reported using the accrual basis of accounting, meaning the college’s revenues are accounted for when earned and expenses are subtracted when created, regardless of when they are paid. “While maintaining the financial health is crucial to the long-term viability to the college,” said Green, “the primary mission of the college is to provide an education and public service. Therefore, net assets are accumulated only as required to ensure that our funds for future operations and implantation of new programs.” The college’s revenues increased from $66.5 million in 2013 to $68.8 million in 2014, while the expenses rose 4.5 percent from $64.3 million to $67.2 million this year, according to Green. The increase in net position can be noted from $55.5 million to $57.2 million. Net position may allow insight into the financial health of SPC, by subtracting liabilities from assets, including monetary gains as well as capital assets, such as land, buildings, and equipment. “The current ratio is basically the ability to pay the current liabilities,” said Green. “And it’s really current assets divided by current liabilities, and you can see it’s been very stable. It was 2.47 in 2012, and it’s 2.47 now.” Regrettably, the school has had to rely on student tuition and fees more heavily, due to a lack of state appropriations, according to Green. “The main thing that probably affects the financial position is enrollment,” explained Green. “I think that we have decided as long as we have between 9,500 and 10,000 students, we can maintain our normal operations.” Fortunately for SPC, enroll- ment this year rose by 1 percent, while most other colleges had a decline in the number of students. After the financial presentations from Green and John, Downs, acting as a spokesperson for his firm, thanked the two vice presidents for their willingness to work with Pate, Downs, and Pinkerton. “Teresa and John gave quite a bit of financial information,” said Downs. “…Basically, what we are saying is what they just said is true; that they didn’t fudge any of the numbers at all… 2013, 2014 was a great year, that’s the bottom line.” Following this presentation of monetary numbers by Downs, Green, and John, a Regent joked, “So, you don’t do this in 30 minutes?” “No, it took 45 this year,” said Downs, with a laugh. Shortly after her initial presentation, Green spoke again of the monthly tax and financial report. “The total collections is $643,353,” said Green. “Total uncollected is $12,145,170… The total income for local is $12,343,647, and the expenditures are $10,643,945. That’s close to where we were last year. Remarking these numbers only reflect one month of collections, income, and expenditures, since October is the beginning of the fiscal year, Green said all other funds are “in the black.” Following the report, the board motioned to approve the re-selling of an Anton property located at 204 Lawrence Avenue to a local businessman, Christopher Waters. Cathy Mitchell, vice president for student affairs, spoke about the changes in the student registration process, mentioning she began working at the college 14 years ago. “My first day on the job was registration day,” said Mitchell. “…Back then, it was, they would line up and they would fill out some, like hundreds, of pages of information again, and they would stand in line, and there were pictures in the A-J of students wrapped around the building, waiting to go.” Mitchell continued, saying changes have been made to the registration process through the years, for the improvement of the system. “We have evolved to the point with online registration,” began Mitchell, “…to the point where in the spring we are not going to have our traditional, on-campus, mass registration, because it has dwindled down to a few hundred students.” Most students register for classes beforehand, or on their own, according to Mitchell. “So, if anybody asks when we are registering students at Levelland,” said Mitchell, “we are now and we will be every day, and come on.” Following these remarks, John stood up again to discuss the semester’s student demographics, asking the Regents and guests in the room to turn to tab nine of the agenda binder. “I’ve provided three data tables for you,” said John. “The first one is what we kind of call an enrollment snapshot. It takes a look at our fall enrollment, and it provides a look at gender ethnicity, age, first time in college, residency, course load, dual credit, and majors. The second one that follows takes that same information, but it breaks it up into what we call college-level students and dual-credit students…The final data is a look at all of this stuff over the last five years.” Significant points of this data include enrollment listing men making up 44 percent of the student body, and women comprising the remaining 56 percent. Race is split between Caucasian and minorities. “I think one thing we can say is our students really do reflect the communities that we serve,” said John, “and we seek to help sustain their economic development.” Mike Box, chairperson of the board, announced that the contract for Dr. Kelvin Sharp, the president of the college, was due to be evaluated. “Each board member spoke with their pencil and turned in their evaluation,” said Box. “We’re all very proud of the job that you do, and I think, with your contract, we can extend it one year, and I think that’s going to be the pleasure of the board.” The Regents then unanimously approved a motion to renew Dr. Sharp’s contact until 2018. “I thank you for the opportunity,” said Dr. Sharp. “… We have a great team here. We have a lot of people that work hard. The results of what you hear in this board meeting are the results of a lot of people’s effort, not my effort. I’ve just had the privilege to lead this group, and I’m completing 10 years.” Upon expressing this sen- a [workshop] in the spring,” recalls Bridges, “but it was only for the STAR Center students. This is the first time we have ever opened it up to all students on campus, so I was really excited.” The workshop not only included a PowerPoint presentation by Bridges, which was also available by email to any student who wanted to receive it, but a free lunch as well. What students learned from this workshop was how to prioritize, use management techniques that are Rhonda Bridges speaks in the Sundown Room on the Levelland suitable for them, and Campus on Nov. 11. identify their goals. Bridges stresses that JOSH HAMILTON/PLAINSMAN PRESS setting goals is the most around in circles because they what you’re trying to manage. important thing to do when it comes to managing don’t have anything to really It’s really important that stuwork toward,” says Bridges. dents write their goals down your time. “When [students] don’t set “If you don’t set your goals, and put them in different time specific goals, they’re running then you don’t really know frames.” The workshop also helped students debunk a few myths about time management, such as, a student should have no limits, and they should meet everyone’s expectations. The PowerPoint that was used during the lecture by Bridges stated a few main ideas that sum up time management, which is basically just stating what your goals are and writing them down, taking action to meet your goals, and knowing how to get what you want. The slideshow also states that “Don’t wait for time to come, make the time. Think of time management as an investment. Spend your most valuable resource the way you choose.” Another useful tip Bridges recommends is using a longterm planner, which helps to keep students organized with timent, the president continued with his monthly report, beginning with motioning to cancel the December Regents meeting in lieu of the annual Christmas dinner and pushing the January meeting back a week, to Jan. 15. Dr. Sharp then listed the upcoming activities of the Christmas Tree Lighting on Dec. 2 at 6 p.m. and the fall retirement reception on Dec. 12. “I’m so glad we take the time to have a reception to honor those employees who have made the election to retire,” said Jim Walker, the vice president for academic affairs. “Generally, we take the numbers, those who retire in the fall and those who retire in the spring, and have a reception. This year, we are going to have one in December and one in the spring as well, and that is because our numbers have increased.” Walker noted that in 2011, SPC had nine retirees. The school had 18 retirees in 2012, and 20 in 2013. “On Dec. 12, at 9:30, we will honor 16 for this fall,” said Walker, “and then in the spring, we will honor those who are retiring then.” Dr. Sharp then noted the college received a bid on the cost of repairs for the Natatorium from Sunbelt Pools in Dallas, totaling $64,420. “We spoke to a gentleman on the phone on Wednesday,” said Dr. Sharp, as the board approved the bid. “I want to recommend this so we…get started as soon as possible.” [email protected] Students learn how to prioritize at time management workshop by MEGAN PEREZ Entertainment Editor After a long, grueling day of classes, all any student wants to do is sit back and relax with only Netflix to keep them company. Unfortunately, the pile of homework on their desk is begging for attention, and like most unmotivated college students do, montonous responsibilities are put off for another day until the night before a deadline. To break this habit of procrastination, South Plains College’s STAR Center hosted a Time Management Workshop to help encourage students to better manage their time while in college and to avoid the stress and frustration that procrastination brings. The workshop was led by Rhonda Bridges, a basic skills specialist at the STAR Center, in the Sundown Room on Nov. 11 on the Levelland campus. “We have actually done PUBLICATION STATEMENT The Plainsman Press is published every two weeks during regular semesters by journalism students at South Plains College in Levelland, Texas. Opinions herein are those of the writer and not necessarily those of the staff, the administration, Board of Regents, advisor or advertisers. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR POLICY The Plainsman Press encourages signed letters to the editor. Published letters are subject to editing. Letters should be brought to CM 130 or sent to: Plainsman Press 1401 S. College Ave. Box 46 Levelland, TX 79336 PHONE: (806) 894-9611 ext. 2435 EMAIL: [email protected] Editorial Staff Charlie Ehrenfeld / Advisor Allison Terry / Editor-in-Chief Zach Hollingsworth / Associate Editor Josh Hamilton / Online Editor Nicole Trugillo / News Editor Dora Smith / Opinion Editor Caitlin Welborn / Feature Editor Megan Perez / Entertainment Editor Brittany Brown / Sports Editor Devin Reyna / Photo Editor Cyndi Sikes / Editorial Assistant Chesanie Brantley / Editorial Assistant Josh Ramirez / Editorial Assistant not only school work, but with personal plans as well. “It’s very important to use a long-term planner,” says Bridges. “With a long-term planner, you can avoid scheduling conflicts. When using the planner, enter dates that extend into the future. You definitely want to create a master assignment list and include non-academic events as well.” The slideshow offers plenty more tips and ideas on how to prioritize and manage time efficiently. For those interested in knowing more about time management skills, contact Bridges at [email protected] for more details. [email protected] Staff Writers & Photographers Alyssa Gregory Tovi Oyervidez Skylar Hernandez Chelsea Yohn 3 NEWS Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Vietnam veteran uses faith to survive life as POW by CAITLIN WELBORN realized that they didn’t have approached me, that was the and into what would be my any airbags. last time that I ever saw him.” first cell.” Feature Editor [Editor’s note: This story is the 12th part of a multi-part series, “Soldiers Matters,” addressing the issues veterans face when reintegrating into civilian life. It begins in Issue 1 and continues through Issue 6.] When soldiers fight in wars, they often come back as different people. But some who know their purpose in their mission can sometimes come back the same. Gerald Coffee, a pilot in the Vietnam War, was a prisoner of war for seven years, after being shot down one day. Al t h o ugh Coff ee was captured and put through various trials, he says that his faith helped him get through those tough years in war. He was recently in Lubbock on Nov. 14 to speak about his time spent as a prisoner of war during the Vietnam War in conjunction with the Vietnam Center and Archive Guest Lecture Series. He recalls the day he was shot down, saying that he was on a flying mission in Vietnam in 1966. That February, he and his team were shot down in the central part of North Vietnam. “We were flying along and I feel the plane buck, and I hear a thump,” recalls Coffee,” and that’s when I realized that we had been hit.” He says that after that as they were falling, all of the hydraulic systems failed. He says that the nose started pointing down and falling about 4,000 feet, when he He told the other operator in the cockpit of the jet to eject. “Eject, Eject! Eject,” says Coffee. “I didn’t hear him eject, so I immediately pulled up under my own seat, which instantly ejected him, ready or not.” Coffee says that after he ejected from the plane, shooting into the air at about 680 miles per hour. “I was knocked unconscious sometime in the air, and I regained consciousness sometime later,” recalls Coffee. “I don’t know how long I was unconscious for, but once I regained consciousness, I had landed in the water half a mile off the coast of Vietnam.” He says that the automatic function of his parachute landed him safely into the water, but he then had to release the parachute so that he wouldn’t be dragged under water with it. “The chute was sinking rapidly into the water, so I had to cut it loose,” says Coffee. He noticed shortly after that, there were about four Vietnamese boats headed his way, with every soldier on the boat keeping guns trained on him. “They were shooting at me, and literally bullets were flying over my head and landing in the water all around me,” says Coffee. He says that he hadn’t noticed when he had first landed in the water that his arm was broken. But as he was being shot at, it became apparent. “Every man in each boat has his weapon trained on me,” recalls Coffee. “I had a glimpse of one of my team members about 500 yards closer to the shore. But as the boats have something to bring back from this experience and He says that they shoved something to tell others about. After being taken onto the “I asked myself, ‘What boat and seeing all of the fighter him inside, and the iron door jets pass over them, Coffee slammed behind him, as they am I going to say?’” Coffee took in his surroundings, clamped a big iron bolt on the says. “How do I condense this experience into 45 minutes and his introduction into North lock outside the door. “I couldn’t believe that this say anything that makes any Vietnam. He would find out later that had happened to me,” recalls difference at all?” He says that he wouldn’t one of his crew members and Coffee. “It’s always supposed good friend would be killed by to happen to the other guy. But know the answer to that never to you.” question the entire time he friendly fire. For the first time in his was in prison. The answer only Coffee happened to be came to him when tak en to a he was released southern part seven years and of Vietnam nine days later. near Bien “That’s when city. He says I looked around that on their and realized that w a y, t h e y some of the ways would stop I survived that frequently, prison experience taking cover were going to serve in the trees. me just as well in C o f f e e my daily life when explains I returned home,” that they Coffee says.“I were taking wanted to survive cover from and return with the patrols honor. That was d u ri n g t h e common of most of day. the POWs there.” “People As he walked would come back and forth in out from the village to see Gerald Coffee speaks about being a POW at the Texas his cell, he says the captured Tech University Lanier Auditorium in Lubbock on Nov. that never in his wildest dreams did U . S . a i r 14. CAITLIN WELBORN/ PLAINSMAN PRESS he think that he pilot,” says Coffee, “as long as they could life, Coffee says that he felt would be a POW for seven take out their anger, and in isolated. He says that his cell years. “I just looked from one day some cases, hatred, out on me was only 7 feet long and 5 feet wide. to the next, or one month to on those days.” “Next to the door was a the next, and from one year to On the 12th day of travel, they reached the city of Hanoi, piece of paper mounted to the the next,” says Coffee. “I kept and at the heart of the city, in wall with prison regulations telling myself that I would be the dawn light, Coffee was and all,” says Coffee. “It was home for the next Christmas brought to the prison he would all there specifically to make or the one after that.” be residing in. it impossible for me to obey He says that he could only “The prison was called by the American code of think that he would see his Wallow, which in Vietnamese conduct.” kids the next year but that the means fiery forge,” explained He explains that due to years kept going by. Coffee’s Coffee. prison regulations he wasn’t youngest son would grow up to “The guards took me out expected to keep his loyalty to be 7 before he would meet his through the arched doorways the United States, or the code father for the first time. and down through corridors of conduct he was sworn into. “My son was born two “My cell just reeked of months after I was captured,” the human misery that had says Coffee, “and when I happened before me,” says returned home and became Coffee. “Decades of human more acclimated to it, we misery.” started to slowly introduce During the first months of ourselves to one another. incarceration, Coffee prayed He told everybody, ‘Uncle a lot. Daddy’s home,’” “I prayed, ‘Lord, let’s get When he came home, this war over with as quickly he realized that he had to as possible, or at least let capitalize on his experience. there be a political settlement “Survival of that experience or a prison exchange,’” says gave me the strength to say Coffee. “Naturally, that was what needed to be said, that my first prayer.” people weren’t willing to say,” But as the months went on, says Coffee. Coffee says that his prayers Coffee admits that before he began to change. was captured he wasn’t a very “Instead of saying ‘why me religious man. But when he Lord?’ I started saying, ‘Show returned from war he realized me Lord,’” says Coffee. “I that his survival was attributed started praying ‘Show me what to his faith. to do with this. What are you “I had to have faith in preparing me for? Help me to myself, as well as God,” says use this curse so that when I Coffee. “Faith in myself to go home, whenever that may simply do what I needed to do be, I will be a stronger, better, to pursue my duty. Because we smarter person in any way that had responsibilities.” I can possibly be.’” Coffee says that he just He prayed to God that he told himself to stay strong and could go home as a better have faith in himself and in his citizen, Christian, father, and country. anything else that he could go “I said to myself that if I home better as. am interrogated that I am only “I wanted Him to help me required to give my name, use this time productively so rank, Social Security number, that I wouldn’t see this time and date of birth,” says Coffee. as a void or a vacuum in my “Yet, I found that I couldn’t life,” says Coffee. stick to those four items, even Coffee says that after that when I intended to.” day and that realization, every He said that he had to find a single day began to have new way to believe that he could be meaning. resourceful and tricky to avoid “Now there was purpose,” giving the Communists any says Coffee. “Every day, there information that they could is a purpose to what I was use against the United States, doing there.” so that he could minimize his He says that throughout value to the enemy. his ordeal, he never doubted “That became my that he would return home. resistance,” says Coffee. He says that when he would “To minimize my value eventually get home he would to the North Vietnamese Communists, because they were trying to exploit us for military information.” He said that he had to believe in himself to pursue his duty to his country. He says that he also had to have faith in others around him (other POWs) to go beyond survival to keep faith in their country. He says to keep faith required communication. “We spent hours upon hours tapping on the walls from cell to cell,” says Coffee. They had created a code, a five-column by five-row chart with each letter of the alphabet. “Like the first column, first row would be A,” says Coffee tapping on the podium once for the column and then again for the row. He demonstrated how to speak in code with a few of the letters for the audience. Coffee says that on top of communicating this way, whenever one of them would get interrogated or tortured, they had sounds they would make to warn whoever was next what they were in for. “We would makes sounds like coughing, sneezing, sniffing, grunting and spitting to warn the next guy what they were in store for,” says Coffee. He says they all used this way to survive their sevenyear experience. Coffee says that on Feb. 12, 1973,when they were being released, he had a peculiar experience. “When I was released and getting turned over to the American solider in front of me, one of the Vietnamese soldiers grabbed my arm and said, ‘You don’t have to go if you don’t want to,’” recalls Coffee. “I was like, ‘Are you Crazy?’ Of course I want to go home.” As he boarded the plane, he sat next to his fellow POWs, and he said that they didn’t believe that they were going home yet. “We didn’t cheer while we sat in our seats waiting for lift off,” says Coffee. “It wasn’t until the pilot came over the intercom and said, ‘Gentlemen, we have just left North Vietnam,” and then we cheered.” Coffee says that when he returned home, he had to reacclimate himself with home life. He says that reintegration was a mostly joyful experience “ My wife was excited for me to come home and take on some responsibility,” says Coffee. “I would make decisions, and then my wife would say that my decision wasn’t the way they had been doing things.” Coffee says that he then thought about it and realized that he would have to reintegrate slowly and with careful thought. Coffee says that after leaving Vietnam he had a stronger faith with God, and because of that he didn’t find that he was having as hard of a time reintegrating back into society. “But for some of my friends, some of them atheist, lost their way and had a hard time coming back home,” says Coffee. “They couldn’t see what being a POW had meant for this country and what their duty had been. But I always knew and never let go of my sense of duty.” cwelborn6538@students. southplainscollege.edu 4 NEWS Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 VA struggles to correct course of ailing aid programs CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 According to a comprehensive report published earlier this year by the office of Senator Tom Coburn from Oklahoma, officials within the VA had a policy of altering the numbers of patients on the waiting lists. The report also alleges that as many as “1,000 veterans may have died as a result of malfeasance.” Amid the fallout from the scandals, Eric Shinseki was forced out of his role as secretary of the VA. A new secretary, Robert McDonald, was eventually appointed by President Barack Obama. Robert McDonald, the former president and CEO of Proctor & Gamble, one of the largest consumer products companies in the world, spoke during a recent meeting of the Institute of Medicine about the new direction which will be taken with the VA. He highlighted the need to streamline the system. To that end, the VA has carried out an extensive self-eval- uation of each of its health care systems, resulting in disciplinary actions against employees and executives who committed these offenses. Even so, some officials argue, the VA is not going far enough in the process of reorganization, or acting as decisively as it could. In a statement released on Nov. 10, Representative Jeff Miller, chairman of the House Committee on Veterans Affairs, said that the new measures won’t really matter until the VA cleans house. “New plans, initiatives and organizational structures are all well and good,” said Miller. “But they will not produce their intended results until VA rids itself of the employees that have shaken veterans’ trust in the system.” Time will tell whether these sweeping changes will, in the end, improve matters. But what does all of this mean for the veterans in the West Texas region, or, more specifically, those who fall under the umbrella of the Amarillo VA system? According to an official from the hospital, it means very little, or at least very little in the way of changes. As Barbara Moore, chief of community and patient relations for the Amarillo VA system, explained, there have been a series of evaluations run in-house by the VA. “We had one review (conducted) by our central office,” explains Moore in a brief interview with the Plainsman Press. “And we Army veteran Paul Morow poses at the Thomas E. Creek VA weren’t chosen for a second Medical Center in Amarillo on Nov. 11. review.” According to Moore, ALLISON TERRY/ PLAINSMAN PRESS this means that the branch and piercing eyes, the veterThe Amarillo VA system in Amarillo has been operating an stressed the fact that the serves not only those veterans efficiently, with few com- veterans he knows believe the around Lubbock and Amarilplaints. The veterans who have medical staff and the treatment lo, but those in the panhandle, been a part of the system in they receive is top quality. eastern New Mexico and Amarillo are, for the most part, The problem, he said, is “all western Oklahoma. In all, satisfied with their experienc- upstairs… it’s a bureaucratic Moore says, the Amarillo es, according to one veteran problem.” He did say, however, VA serves as many as 24,000 who declined to be identified. that out of all the VAs he had veterans. Standing in the lobby of the been too, the hospital in AmaWith that kind of a pophospital, with slick gray hair rillo is by far the best. ulation, the recent scandals Advanced Technology Center (ATC). The ATC is a place where students and working adults can go to take classes to improve on certain areas of their career field. Some subjects that SPC offers help for are business administration, computer technology, machinist trades and automotive technology. The facility, located at the corner of 34th Street and Avenue Q, is supported by the Lubbock Independent School District (LISD) and SPC. It houses high-tech computer classrooms with Internet access for non-traditional students who need some additional training for their jobs. Late last month, during some heavy rain storms, a lot of water damage accumulated and caused a bad leak in the roof above the server room. The server room contains the machinery and equipment that control all the Internet and computers for the South All of the songs performed were the composer’s different versions of “The Star-Spangled Banner,” except for “The Stars and Stripes Forever,” which is the national march. “There was a national celebration back in September at music and create a visual of how they portrayed the songs. The photographs were taken by Kristina Arafat, Mallory Barrera, Taylor Bradley, Suzanne Carrizales, Lorena Posadas, and Donatelli. “Membership ( in the Symphonic Band) is open to anyone who has demonstrated proficiency on an appropriate instrument and participated in high school band,” said Dr. Hudson. Also, most semesters at least half of the band is made up of students who are not music majors, according to Dr. Hudson. There are also scholarships available to band members, regardless of what their major might be. “The band is made up of students from at least 16 different high schools, which translates into 16 different ways of doing band,” said Dr. Hudson. “We have to become a new, cohesive unit in a very short amount of time while learning all of the music for the performance.” Auditions for the band are usually held during the spring or summer for applicants to the college. The students who are selected meet every Tuesday and Thursday from 2:30 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. to practice. The Symphonic Band will be playing traditional Christmas music for the college’s Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony on Dec. 2. They will also become the Sharpshooters band for the Texan and Lady Texan conference basketball games in the spring. have been sure to raise doubts among veterans. But Moore says she doesn’t believe there has been “any negative fallout” from the scandals. “We’ve had a lot of questions, as you can imagine,” explains Moore. “We have tried to answer those questions on an individual basis the best we can… We’ve worked really hard to stay on top of that.” Moore views the scandals from earlier in the year and the fallout on the national level as a learning experience, which has helped the VA take better care of the veterans coming to them. “There’s been a lot of clarification from our central office…about how processes are supposed to work,” says Moore. “We try really hard not to paint anything with a broad brush. (When) a veteran comes in, we try to deal with them and take care of the situation they have.” zhollingswor7184@students. southplainscollege.edu Advanced Technology Center sustains water damage due to heavy rainfall by CHELSEA YOHN Staff Writer Heavy rain storms last month caused part of an already poor and leaky roof at the Bryon Martin Advanced Technology Center in Lubbock to collapse. The roof tiles fell to the ground in the server room, causing the loss of Internet services for an entire day, for students, faculty and staff of South Plains College who attend classes and work at the SPC Symphonic Band plays renditions of national anthem by CHESANIE BRANTLEY Editorial Assistant Delicate sounds of flutes and clarinets, along with the strong thunder of baritones and tubas, can be heard throughout the Helen DeVitt Jones Theatre for the Performing Arts. They performed the Musical Celebration of the Bicentennial of “The Star-Spangled Banner” on the night of Nov. 18. The songs performed include, “The Star-Spangled Banner,” by Francis Scott Key; “The National Emblem,” by E.E. “Bagely; excerpt from “L’Union,” by L.M. Gottschalk; Fort McHenry Suite, “Rockets’ Red Glare,” “Dimly Seen Through the Mists of the Deep” Baritone saxophone players Joe Tackand “When Freemen itt, left, and Tori Palomo perform in Shall Stand,” by Julie Giroux, showcasing the Helen Devitt Jones Theatre on Dr. Dan Nazworth the Levelland campus on Nov. 18. narrator; excerpt from CHESANIE BRANTLEY/PLAINS“Festive Overture,” MAN PRESS by Dudley Buck; “Early Light,” by Carolyn Fort McHenry in Baltimore,” Bremer; and “The Stars and said Dr. Hudson. “I thought Stripes Forever,” by John that it would be appropriate to have our own celebration Phillips Sousa. “The students are working of its’ creation featuring a very hard to continue polish- number of works that are ining the performance up until fluenced by either the poem, the very last moment,” said the melody it was set to, the Dr. Gary Hudson, professor of event that inspired Key to music and director of the SPC compose it, or the symbol of Symphonic Band. “They have the flag itself.” A video presentation was done a great job preparing this created by the Beginning Phoprogram, which includes some tography class taught by provery challenging music. I am very proud of the progress that fessor Kara Donatelli. They cbrantley1714@students. were instructed to listen to the southplainscollege.edu they have made.” Plains College part of the building. SPC’s portion of computers had some Internet problems a few days prior to the major outage. There was a problem with a switch, but it was traded for a new one and fixed. Then the rain came a couple days later, causing an even larger leak which damaged the systems even more. “ We h a d s o m e equipment fail, and that’s when we noticed the leak,” says Shane Sanders, the informa- Water damage causes outages at the tion technologist at the ATC in Lubbock in October. ATC. “When I came in CHELSEA YOHN/PLAINSMAN and turned on my computer, I noticed I didn’t PRESS have Internet.” “We just kinda made due Sanders says that he walked without Internet access for into the server room to find the day,” said Al Sechrist, out what the problem was and chairperson of the Industrial found a wet tile from the roof Technology Department at lying on the ground. SPC. The Internet was out for the day, only on the SPC computers. For some staff and administrators, it was a hindrance, since there was no way to e-mail during the day. But luckily “we have a lot of classes that teach things that do not require Internet,” said Sanders, so there was a way for most instructors to work around the technical difficulty. “By the end of the day, it was up and running,” added Sanders. AT&T came and fixed the problems. “It’s a pretty leaky roof,” said Sanders. “Apparently, it will cost a fortune to replace ,and they are trying to budget for it. But we just don’t have the money.” The roof was supposed to be patched up last Monday to prevent further leaks and damage, according to Sanders. [email protected] 5 NEWS Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Anderson reflects on counseling career at SPC by NICOLE TRUGILLO News Editor Christi Anderson’s career has made a full circle. She started her career at South Plains College, and now she is retiring after 15 years of working on the campus. Anderson, director of guidance and counseling on the Levelland campus, attended SPC for home economics education. After graduating in 1972, in October of the same year, she started working as the secretary in the science and math department, where she remained for about a year. In 1985, Anderson went on to Texas Tech University to pursue her bachelor’s degree in home economics. She later received her master’s degree in educational psychology. “I didn’t go straight to Tech,” Anderson says. “Because I got married after the summer I left SPC, and right when I was about to start at Tech, we moved to Denver City.” Anderson says she adopted two children, Chad and Lacy. Anderson explains she started at Texas Tech when her daughter started kindergarten. While attending Texas Tech, Anderson still pursued her career in home economics, never thinking she would end up being a counselor. “I started working on my bachelor’s at Tech,” Anderson explains. “We started studying child development and a lot of different things that brought in family issues, and that’s when I started thinking I wanted to be a counselor.” After graduating from Texas Tech, Anderson worked at Family Outreach in Levelland for three years. “That was more along the counseling lines,” Anderson explains. After working at Family Outreach, Anderson started working on her master ’s degree in 1990 while teaching home economics at Whitharral High School. “I taught there for three years while I went to school and had two kids,” Anderson explains. “I was cheerleading sponsor and FHA sponsor, and I was working on my master’s degree at the same time. I was very busy.” Ande rson re sig n ed at Whitharral, before returning to Family Outreach. She soon found out about the technical Christi Anderson, director of guidance and counseling, retires after 15 years. JOSH HAMILTON/PLAINSMAN PRESS counselor opening position at SPC. In September 1994, she started working at SPC as a Annual Christmas stocking drive benefits children, teenagers by NICOLE TRUGILLO News Editor and one of the responses we got was Portrait Innovations. They gave us a $100 gift certificate, so anyone can buy a ticket and the money will be used for buying the stockings or the gifts.” The work-study students at the libraries are arranging the stocking drive, with the help of the library staff. “We’re not an official organization,” Pineda says. “But we have always kept it The South Plains College libraries are hosting the fifth annual Christmas Stocking Drive. The stocking drive first started five years ago when a student at the Reese Center campus named Patricia Villanueva was involved in another organization called Operation Homefront. “Patricia was involved in another organization,” explained Tracey Pineda, librarian at the Reese Center campus. “She would give toys to kids in military families. She would have extra donations, and she would bring them to us. We then started having a stocking drive to get the stockings to stuff the leftover donations in the stockings.” T h e donations then would be given to the hospitals in Lubbock. But, through the years, the d o n a t i o n s Photo illustration by JOSH HAMILTON would go to other places such as Women’s Protection going, and we have students Services, Hope House, and My from the past who have done the stocking drive before ask Father’s House. This year, Villanueva isn’t if we can keep it going. If able to help with the stocking they decided not to, well, we drive, so the SPC libraries are wouldn’t push them to do it.” Pineda says Jim Belcher, asking for not only stockings, director of libraries at SPC, but gifts and money as well. Robert Baumle, part-time “At the moment, we are also have a raffle going on,” Pineda librarian at the Plainview explained. “Our students have campus, Gracie Quiñones, been going out and asking for director of the library at the donors around the community, Plainview campus, and Juanita Yanez, library technical assistant at the Reese Center campus, have been great and supportive of the stocking drive. “I’m impressed with our students and how they jumped in,” Pindea explains. “Because they’re working or going to school, and they’re doing this as well. It’s a very heartwarming thing, because you see some of the kids and their families, and you see their face light up when they get a stocking. We w a n t to give them some Christmas cheer.” T h e goal for this year’s stocking drive is to stuff 200 stockings for kids ranging from in age infants to teenagers. The works t u d y students will be donating the stockings d u r i n g finals week. There are three locations if anyone w o u l d like to donate. The locations are: the R e e s e Center campus library (Building 8); the Advanced Technology Center (Room 114); and the Plainview Center lobby or Library (Room 122). For more information on the stocking drive, contact the Reese Center Library at (806) 716-4682. ntrugillo0806@students. southplainscollege.edu transfer counselor until August 2002. “I applied for a job at SPC, prior to finishing my master’s, which I did not get,” Anderson recalls, “While I was working at Family Outreach, we had a conference, and Claudine, who was the director, came up to me asked me if I was still interested in the job at SPC. I told her, “Yes,” and I applied here at SPC and got the job.” After leaving SPC a second time, she worked at Capitol Elementary School in Levelland for four years and at the high school for a year. She also worked at South Plains Education Coop for a year. After working at the public schools, Anderson returned to SPC in July 2008 as the director of guidance and counseling. Anderson says she has a lot of fond memories while working at SPC with the faculty and the students. “I love when a student walks out of my office and they say, ‘Nobody has ever explained that to me before,’” Anderson says. “I had some students come back and they explain to me how I changed their life in some way. It’s a good feeling.” Anderson said that she plans to travel after retiring. She plans to travel to Florida because her son lives there. She would also like to visit some places on the West Coast and take a trip to Mount Rushmore. She also has an interest in visiting the different countries in Europe. “I just want to live without being in a hurry,” Anderson says. nt r ug i l lo0806@students. southplainscollege.edu Annual Christmas Tree Lighting features holiday fun for kids, parents by CYNDI SIKES Editorial Assistant Hot chocolate, Santa, and Christmas music are just a few of the things that make up the annual Christmas Tree Lighting at South Plains College. “ T h e C h r i s t m a s Tr e e Lighting is a communitywide event and something fun for the kids to do,” says Liz Dominguez, administrative assistant to the director of Student Life. T h e C h r i s t m a s Tr e e Lighting will take place Dec. 2 at 6 p.m. at the Student Center on Levelland campus, according to Dominguez. This year, Santa Claus will be arriving in a horse and carriage. During this event, kids will have the opportunity to tell Santa what they want for Christmas, and parents are welcome to take pictures of their kids with Santa. Santa will be located in the Sundown Room in the Student Center. The kids also will get to have a fairytale moment riding on the horse and carriage. The horse and carriage will be located right outside the Student Center, and rides will be free. Along with Santa, and the horse and carriage, the SPC Ball Room Dance Team will put on a couple of performances. The Dance Team will be located right outside the Student Center. To go along will the dancing and getting people in the Christmas spirit, the SPC Symphonic Band will play some Christmas music. The music will either be played in the mall area or in the Sundown Room. “The Tree Lighting will be out in the front of the campus, where all the big trees are,” says Domiguez. Hot chocolate, coffee, and cookies will also be served at this event. The Levelland ABC Kindergarten kids also will be singing some Christmas music. You will not want to miss this great holiday event, and no admission will be charged. csikes8428@students. southplainscollege.eud SPC Choir students sing during their concert in the Helen Devitt Jones Theatre on the Levelland Campus on Nov. 17. CHELSEA YOHN/PLAINSMAN PRESS 6 NEWS Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Religious dialogue event offers opportunity to engage in discussion of faith CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 justice,” says Altabaa. “These mitted crimes in the name of and Altabaa say that the treatgreat principles, they are not God,” says Altabaa. “They try ment of others will ultimately The event sought to enIslamic, or courage dialogue between Christian, members of the Christian and or Jewish. Islamic faiths. Pastor Ryan No, these Price of the Second Baptist are the Church in Lubbock and Imam principles Samer Altabaa of the Islamic of a human Society of the South Plains, being that took to the stage to start the God put in conversation about religion, people.” misconceptions, and the prinThough ciples that bind them regardtheir prinless of barriers. ciples Price have the and Alts a m e abaa first overall met more themes, than four the way years ago that each when the faith goes mosque at about the Islamic practicCenter was ing their vandalized Ryan Price, pastor of the Second Baptist Church in Lubbock, speaks at a religions with offend i f f e r . Christian-Muslim dialogue. ALLISON TERRY/PLAINSMAN PRESS sive grafitAltabaa ti. When took the Price and opportunity to educate the to find something to justify determine whether one has a group of audience about Muslim prac- their actions. There is no re- earned eternity. Price says his church tices and beliefs, including ligion that will tell you that if that this requirement should members the three foundations of Is- another person won’t convert be kept in mind when making offered to lam, the five pillars of Islam, to your religion, then you have assumptions about who will be help with to go out and kill him.” redeemed in the beliefs of the and the six pillars of Iman. repainting, Altabaa says that the acChristian faith. He also noted specific stoa bond was tions taken by ISIS are not “Sometimes we Christians ries on which the Christian Samer Altabaa, Imam of the Islamic Center of the South Plains, speaks at a formed. and Islamic faiths have dif- consistent with the values of forget that when we think that “ W h a t Christian-Muslim dialogue in the Sundown Room on the Levelland campus fering views, such as wheth- quality of the Islamic State maybe we’re going to be the s o m e o n e on Nov. 5. ALLISON TERRY/PLAINSMAN PRESS er the figure of Jesus Christ that the organization claims only ones who are there,” says intended Price. was a human or a divine to relate to. for evil, I “The Islamic State was The event offered the opthink God has intended for people together and encourage tended for humans, regardless being, whether he is dead or built on freedom, justice, portunity for sensitive issues not, and the religious leanings peace and understanding beof denomination. good, because it has built a equality, mercy, love to evto be discussed in an environof Adam, the man believed to tween the two faiths. “We both work for the same bridge, and it has formed a eryone… It was not built on ment free of judgment. Ruthbe the first human being. “This isn’t about politics,” thing: for peace, for love, for friendship,” says Price. After a question from Price, beheadings,” Altabaa says. erford says that she hopes the Altabaa spoke about ISIS and “These people are ignorant event will encourage others to his belief that those involved about the teachings of Islam.” engage in their own personal A question from the audi- interfaith dialogues. are not truly Islamic. “Some violent extremists ence prompted a discussion and criminal people… they about how one gains eternity [email protected] process that she has en- Tackett says that the key to hijacked Islam, and they com- in either religion. Both Price plainscollege.edu by DORA SMITH joyed. seeing more women in the Opinion Editor “We’re learning about how field is to make them aware In a male-dominated field, electricity works, all of the that the IMET field is an option women must be exceptional stuff I didn’t really know at for them, regardless of any to circumvent stereotypes and all,” says Britto. “We’re also misconceptions that people learning how to build robots.” might hold about one gender exceed expectations. In the spring of 2014, Cam- being better suited for the type Bianca Britto and Erica Campos are two women pos attended her first robotics of work. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 years in the military, working sault and command assigned “I think there are some who break the stereotype by competition. With little trainas a military police officer. an investigator to the case. demonstrating their abilities ing at the time, her talent for stereotype issues,” says Tack“With unrestrictive, the The veteran mentions though He asked the victim why she ett. “Most girls options are, ‘Well, now we she personally never expe- originally thought he was her in the field. Britto, d o n ’ t t h i n k get to move you, if that’s what rienced sexual trauma, she husband that evening, and Jane 31, and Campos, t h e y c a n b e you chose,’” says Saldana, of witnessed abuse of this nature responded that her attacker did 35, are both inmechanics or the possibility of relocating a in her unit before finishing her similar things that she and her dustrial manufacwelders, be- MST victim to a different unit, service in 1997. turing and emergspouse had performed in the cause it never but mentioning the officers ing technologies “Unfortunately, it wasn’t bedroom. occurs to them. often made excuses to ignore just a command thing,” says (IMET) majors at “Basically he was performIf we can get cases. “…Commanders want- Wright. “It was the whole ing oral sex,” says Wright, South Plains Colthem to think ed to keep the unit integrity, community…Even the other and with this response, the lege. about it, I think and sometimes they weren’t women would look at it like, administration told her that Of the 70 stuthat’s the first really sure if they believed you ‘Well, Honey, what were you this act was considered soddents in the IMET s t e p … Y o u or not. And maybe you’re 18, doing? Everyone knows you omy and punishable “under the program, three to don’t have to and maybe you were drunk. don’t do this, that and the uniform of military justice. It five are women be a guy. It has Well, now we have the issue other.’ Which doesn’t justify was essentially, ‘We let all of each semester, nothing to do of underage drinking…So they someone hurting another that this go as an unfortunate inciaccording to Bill with gender.” Ta c k e t t , I M E T way.” dent, or we are going to have would do nothing.” A strong will instructor at the Military Sexual Trauma to charge you for sodomy with In order to combat this and determina- attitude, the recent Military usually occurs laterally, with your husband, as well as this Reese Center camtion is required Justice Improvement Act was the aggressor and the victim other guy.” pus, who believes of anyone who created to allow MST and typically being ranked simithat making the From witnessing this inwishes to over- other crimes to be handled by larly, according to Wright. She justice, Wright pointed out program better come stereo- trained, independent profes- also mentions these attacks another long-term aspect of known will help types. Neither sionals outside of a direct com- are more common on deploy- this situation. increase female C a m p o s n o r manders’ reach. Unfortunately, ment, rather than while being enrollment. “Because she’s in the miliBritto says she this proposed legislation was stationed close to home. “Females hatary, because she’s assigned to has ever con- filibustered on the Senate floor. ven’t found out Wright mentions one par- a unit, she has to stay there,” sidered gender about us,” says ticularly horrific incident she explains Wright. “...You have “(The victims) want the poto be a factor lice department to handle the witnessed during her service. to go to work every day and Tackett. “They hain their work. investigation,” says Saldana. ven’t realized that Jane (name changed to work with that guy, and act like Neither seems “They want the court systems protect her identity), another everything’s fine. You can’t they can do this.” likely to let it and civilians to handle the female in her unit, had a party escape.” Both Britto and hold her back issues.” Campos, who have Bianca Britto stands at her worktable in the Elecone evening at her home. After While the veteran admits to families and chil- tronic Service Technology Building on the Levelland in the near fuCurrently, 55 senators con- she and several other members the military’s current incomture either. dren at home, have campus on Nov. 11. JOSH HAMILTON/PLAINStinue to fight to push the Mili- in the unit had been drinking, petence in dealing with MST, “I don’t feel tary Justice Improvement Act Jane announced she was going she says that there is hope for proven themselves MAN PRESS out of place at through approval. with skills to be to retire to bed, says Wright. future action taken within the good technicians, according the subject and her hard work all,” says Britto. “I just think “After she went to bed, Armed Forces. “It totally does not get dealt to Tackett, and by performing allowed her to bring home the that some women feel intimi- with,” explains Army veteran someone came into her room “I think every generation work that could be daunting first-place trophy. According dated by it, because men are Juli Wright, on the subject and proceeded to have sex gets more aware,” says Wright. to Britto, the SPC robotics the ones who usually do it. of sexual assault in the mili- with her,” says Wright, “and “…It’s just one of those things to some. “Some of the stuff is kind team will attend their next I’m just not that type of girl. tary. “Unless somebody got she didn’t realize until he that’s going to take time.” If a man can do it, I can do it.” violently beat and put you in got up and opened the door of intimidating, but if you competition on Dec. 5. If enrollment continues to know what you’re doing,” the hospital...things really got to leave that it wasn’t her increase, Britto and Campos says Campos. husband.” pushed under the rug.” [email protected] Britto, knowing what might have new female team- [email protected] to Wright, Jane Wright, now residing in plainscollege.edu she is doing has been a learn- mates for the next semester. plainscollege.edu Lubbock, spent about nine eventually reported the asThe camaraderie between the pair is an inspiration to Shannon Rutherford, who served as host of the dialogue and director of the BSM at South Plains College. “I appreciate what they model for us,” says Rutherford. “How we communicate, how we learn, and how we share our life and our faith together.” Price explains that the purpose of the dialogue is to bring says Price. “I’m not here to solve the questions of the Middle East, nor am I here to try to figure out how I can convert the Imam to Christianity. This is about friendship. This is about being good neighbors, and this is about peace-making.” Both the pastor and the Imam find common ground on what they encourage their congregations to strive to be, and what they believe God in- Women disregard stereotypes, excel in manufacturing program Sexual assaults on female military personnel neglected NEWS Plainsman Press 7 November 24, 2014 8 November 24, 2014 OPINION Plainsman Press Women encounter resistance in gaming culture Alleged favoritism sparks Misogyny creates dangerous controversy in gaming world environment for female gamers by JOSH HAMILTON Online Editor Journalism should always be objective. It is what mass media is based off of. If a journalist cannot report on something while being objective, then the information is skewed, and the average person can’t trust it. There has been a breach of trust between video game journalists and their readers. “Gamergate,” as the breach is called, has opened up a Pandora’s box. It all started out when indie game developer Zoe Quinn had an ex-boyfriend allege that she had a romantic relationship with a journalist for the video game news website Kotaku. This led some to believe that Quinn had used her connection to obtain favorable reviews for her games that were not objective. The controversy, however, rises from the public outcry. People started to harass Quinn, and from there they went on to insinuate that all female gamers were of a lower class than male gamers. Misogyny aside, the public was right in reacting to the news with distaste. As I have stated before, journalists should be objective. That is hard when you are dating one of the subjects of your articles. Yes, people got out of control. It was bad, but it brings a more important issue to bear. The people who report the news have to be objective. There can be no conflict of interest. The fact that the subject of harassment was a woman is an indicator of society still coddling women. If the developer was male and was using his relationship to get better reviews, there would not have been a gamergate. The people would still have harassed him. It has happened in the past. But would the news organizations have picked up on it like they did? I don’t think they would have. People came to the defense of Quinn, which is admirable. She deserves to have people in her corner. Again, though, if the genders were reversed, there would be different headlines. I am not saying that I agree with what the citizens of the Internet did. Giving out personal information about someone (doxxing) is a terrible thing to do. It makes people fear for their lives, and rightly so. There are some sick and twisted people out there who would relish the opportunity to inflict pain on someone. The basis of gamergate is sound. People who abuse their power, especially in the media, are unforgivable. They take what was once a respected profession and smear it with their bad names. jhamilton4346@students. southplainscollege.edu by DORA SMITH Opinion Editor When confronting and opposing unjust treatment, a woman must be wary and tread lightly to avoid the massive backlash for addressing the issue. Such is the case with the “Gamergate” controversy, anyway. With the expansion of video game culture came a new array of participants. The hardcore gamers became more diverse, widening from an audience with a male majority to one that has included a huge number of women, as well. Females in the gaming community began to rightfully voice their concerns about misogyny in the culture, both in games and in real life. Some of the issues raised include the lack of female protagonists in games, the fetishization and demeaning treatment of the female characters who do happen to make it into games, and the harassment and condescension toward female gamers off the screen. Game developer Zoe Quinn found herself treated to a gradually building snowball of harassment as a result of her ex-boyfriend’s allegations that she had a relationship with a gaming journalist that led to a biased, positive review of her game. A number of female critics, including indie game developer Brianna Wu, as well as feminist media critic Anita Sarkessian, were just a couple of the women who dared to speak publically about their opposition to this treatment. A portion of the gaming community, as it turns out, simply just didn’t like this. Harassment of Quinn’s supporters grew from just awful comments through social media to something much more significant in a relatively short amount of time. Threats of rape and murder were thrown about with no regard for the fact that this was a situation involving actual human beings and not the animated representations that gamers are so accustomed to. The majority of the victims were women, some of whom had personal information about them published online by users of sites such as 4chan and reddit. Actress Felicia Day posted a blog commenting on the controversy, as well as her fear of being personally harassed for doing so. Quick to live up to expectations, the trolls of the Internet were quick to violate her privacy. The harassment of critic Anita Sarkeesian exploded to a whole new level of idiocy and disgusting behavior. Sarkessian was forced to cancel an appearance at a university due to a terrorist threat by someone claiming to be associated with Gamergate. What on earth possesses people to think this type of behavior is acceptable is beyond me. I understand that these gamers are concerned about the integrity of gaming journalism, and are threatened by the fact that both women and men are looking critically at the treatment of females in games, instead of just gawking over or tearing them down with reviews. I understand what they’re afraid of, even if I think it’s quite stupid. But how were these people raised, or what kind of lessons have they learned in adult life, that makes them think that harassment and threats are somehow the answer? I do hope they realize that they are doing a huge favor to those working on criticisms by proving the point that parts of the gaming community are so misogynistic that they would stoop to such a level before admitting that there are problems. These women deserve none of the harassment that they have been victims of at the hands of men who don’t seem to grasp the concept of treating women like people on screen and off. Maybe both sides of the issue need some addressing. The horrid treatment of women, certainly, and maybe for appeasement’s sake we can address this “ethical journalism” concern that the Gamergate supporters have cooked up (which I really think is nothing more than an absurd attempt at justifying their rampant power trip, but whatever). But this behavior has got to stop. These individuals need to grow up, and, by some miracle, gain the power of empathy to make them understand that threats and violations make them the scum of the earth who are under no circumstances to be taken seriously. [email protected] Month without social media highlights value of personal interaction by ALYSSA GREGORY Staff Writer You don’t know what you’ve got until it is gone. Yes, this saying is cliché. But in many aspects of life, it is true. I am a freshman taking classes on the Levelland campus, and I have recently made a decision to do something that most individuals today would not do. I decided to go the entire month of November without social media. Trying to be creative, I have called this act of mine “No Facebook November.” Don’t let the name confuse you. Although it says “no Facebook,” I have made it a point to get off of all social media, and yes, ALL: Facebook, Instagram, Yik Yak, Twitter. You name it, I am not on it currently. One may ask why I would chose to do such a thing. Well, a few months ago, it hit me. It hit me that I could not go more than an hour without consumed with our phones. scrolling through a news feed From the time we ordered our or even constantly checking to food, to the time we received see how many likes I got on a it, neither of us spoke a word. picture or a status. It began to We had just spent the past half become such a bad habit that hour exercising our thumbs as I was OK with shutting out we scrolled through the news the real world. I found myself feed. As I looked up at him, consumed with a little screen with his face lit by a screen, on my phone during very I looked around to find lit up important times of my life: faces everywhere. Another at the dinner table with my couple across the restaurant, as family, at get-togethers with well as many other individuals friends, even in class while sitting at tables and in booths, my instructor spoke about were doing the exact same details that I really needed to thing. pay attention to. Social Media Right then and there, I slowly but surely took over thought to myself, “Wow, we my life. really do live in a different I made the decision that I needed a break from it when I was on a date with my boyfriend. A normal date would be to sit down and talk about our lives, and spend quality time with each other. But no, that’s not exactly how this date was going down. Sitting across from one another, my boyfriend Photo illustration by ALLISON TERRY and I were time, where it is completely normal to shut our loved ones out and become one with technology.” I thought of times when I was just a small child when I would go outside and go on adventures. I would play with rocks and sticks, and my cousin and I would spend hours out in the country pretending to be Pocahontas. We would talk to a tree and imagine that Mother Willow gave us advice. We would go out and get our hands dirty, tear holes in our play clothes. We would wear each pair of shoes out by just going out each day and using our imaginations. In the real world, anyone could find us, but not in a technical world that is full of people’s ignorant statuses and pictures that scream, “Look at me, like my pic.” I realized that back then I was fine without a phone. I didn’t need a screen to keep me entertained. I just needed the world, the real world. I am about two weeks into it, and I would have to say that without these networks, there has definitely been ups and downs. Ups, as in times when I don’t have to worry about the latest drama going on, and I can actually see what is going on in my surroundings. I have seemed to become more observant. But at the same time, I look around and I see lit-up faces of people everywhere that I was just like just a couple of weeks ago. Not getting on these networks on my phone or computer has been something I am just now getting used to. For the first week, I found myself staring at my screen with a blank mind, not knowing what to do. There was no app to go to that would take up my time. After snapping out of it, I realized that there is much more to life than just being inside the world of social media. The only down side I have come to find is that I do not get to see what my family is up to each day. Although I am missing out on the cute pictures being posted of my nephews and the sweet comments my grandmother puts on my pictures and statuses, the ups have definitely out-weighed the downs. Not being able to login to Facebook and see pictures and comments from them just makes it that much sweeter when I actually get to see them in person. So, as the saying goes, “You don’t know what you have until it’s gone.” I am not talking about the absence of my social media sites. I am talking about the loss of my actual life. All this time, I have forgotten what it was like to actually go out and be personal with people. I have learned that not being consumed by a screen makes for a much more observant mind. I did not know what I was missing in the real world, until I made the technical world go away. ag regor y5182@students. southplainscollege.edu 9 OPINION Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Back Alli Review: Some local coffee shops hotter than others experience the shops’ variety and artisan skill. I then grabbed my trusty, black notebook, and set out to judge brews based on criteria such as flavor, aroma, sweetness, body, and aftertaste. The first location I chose to visit was Gatsby’s Coffeehouse, a current infatuation of mine. Yet I promised myself on the drive there repeatedly, “I will not be a biased journalist.” Hidden away in the shopping center of “Cactus Alley,” located on the Marsha Sharp Freeway, just east of Slide Road, Gatsby’s is easy to miss if you are not looking for it. The mini-mall Cactus Alley contains a variety of cute joints, including a clock shop and a couple of retail stores. Yet, once the skin- the timespan I had to embark on structured coffee-drinking, it was a frosty week outside. Upon the barista’s recommendation, I sipped on a hazelnut latte and a dark roast as the first flakes of the season floated down. Sharing the hazelnut latte, topped with decorative latte art of a heart in the cream, with my friend, I wrestled the concoction away from him. by ALLISON TERRY Sweet, but not over the Editor-in-Chief top, this latte was a competent balance. The hazelnut was When I first embarked on mellowed down, to taste other my final mission, to find the notes in the full latte. best coffee shop in Lubbock, Assuming the owner was I learned several important experimenting with a darker lessons. black brew with the changing First off, it is crucial you of the seasons, the plain coffee never drink five or more cups was full-bodied and slightly of coffee in one sitting. I more bitter than usual, but not would be willing to wager the in an entirely negative way. Despite this, it had a sweet aftertaste. Next, a known local favorite for college students, J&B Coffee Co., was my destination. Generally packed with Texas Tech University students because of its proximity to campus on Boston Avenue and 26th Street, I typically avoid the shop for Above, a coffee is served at Gatsby’s Coffeehouse, and below, at J&B’s lack of parking Coffee Co. in Lubbock. ALLISON TERRY/PLAINSMAN PRESS and seating. Ve n t u r i n g out to J&B, I American Heart Association ny cords-clad, thick-rimmed prayed I wouldn’t have to glasses-wearing crowd dis- parallel park on the street would agree. Additionally, though, I covered Gatsby’s, traffic to the after circling around sevhave sampled the best of Tex- coffee shop seems to be the eral times. Fortunately, a spot available at the city as barbeque, tried every burg- focal point of the center. Inside, surrounded by mock of Lubbock was spared er grill in town, and braved escargot for this column. This exposed brick and locally cre- from my crooked parkvenue has been the highlight ated art, it is difficult to tell it ing attempts. Friendly of this three-semester long was an antique and costume lighting greets customers shop just a couple of years who walk in, noticing a food adventure. I also feel it the most dif- ago. Eclectic furniture and statement wall painted ficult task, ranking these res- décor surrounds with wooden in pastel mosaics that idential brews. I love every- floors, interesting rugs, intri- may be reflected onto the thing about coffee: the taste cate lamps and couches with large, open windows at (of course), the alertness it flowery upholstery. Aside from nighttime. The backroom, brings, the aroma of it brew- paintings and photography ing, and especially the culture from Lubbock artists, inter- adorned to appear like a of coffee shops. My enthusi- esting talking pieces, such as quaint town square, lit softly asm for all things coffee made a mug shot poster of prisoners with string lights, is a sanccritiquing locations particular- from Alcatraz, are hanging on tuary for writers, studiers, the brightly painted walls. readers and those who wish ly daunting. Upstairs, “The Loft” holds to quietly reflect with their While I typically prefer simple, black coffee with no musical events, literature read- coffee, away from the chatter frills, my rules for this project ings, and film showings. On of the main center. Carrying my norm of black include absolutely avoiding occasion, the venue holds latte Starbucks, the Wal-Mart of art competitions. The second brew and a s’mores latte, I coffee shops, and simply stick- story also contains another cof- located an empty table on a ing to local venues, as well as fee service area, maximizing marginally raised stage. Surrounding the area, chalk art ordering a regular roast and space and efficiency. Simply a happy accident, displayed a list of upcoming a specialty drink, simply to musical events at J&B’s upon a galactic background. Another panel featured realistic chalk portraits of “Leila & Hamid,” a couple who apparently became window, while it continued to snow. I took solace in the fact that at least her feet should be warm in furry boots, the largest stretch of material on her body. Back Alli’s List: Best Coffee Shops in Lubbock, Texas # 1: Gatsby’s Coffeehouse # 2: J&B’s Coffee Co. # 3: Yellow House Coffee # 4: Ooh La Lattes J&B’s “patrons of the month,” perhaps for their friendly personalities or regularity. Proving to be a sultry, dark roast, the coffee had a stout body, with a mild finish. Contrasting this, the special s’mores latte was sweet and fluffy, perhaps a taste of the holidays. It invites the image of sitting around a campfire on a chilly evening, from chocolate and marshmallow flavors in the creation. Quite reluctantly, I drove to the next venue on my list, Ooh La Lattes. Though I had been procrastinating the drive-thru only shop, I genuinely had no idea how awkward the experience would be. “Baristas” clothed in their The idea of selling sex along with food is not a new idea, as everyone has heard of Hooter’s and Bikini’s, but I do not quite comprehend the sexualization of coffee. Good thing a muscular male “bouncer” loomed menacingly inside. Later, I came to the notion that possibly the drive-thru needs half naked women to sell drinks, when I tested the coffee. It was single-handedly the weakest, blandest cup of coffee I have ever tried. I remain convinced it was an attempt at an innovative coffee-flavored water beverage. The Almond Joy latte, recommended by the barista’s exceedingly friendly pimp, off of a “secret menu,” was underwear serve customers in their vehicles. I fully understand that heterosexual, 20-something women are probably not the intended customer-base the original business model was planning on marketing to, but it was still an uncomfortable experience when a young woman in a barely-there lace bikini served me a coffee and an Almond Joy latte through the less unpleasant than the coffee itself. Tasting pretty similar to the candy, it had chocolate and coconut hints. It was definitely drinkable in comparison to the previous coffee, but a little too sweet for me. Unintentionally mirroring the venue itself, the latte was sickly sweet, and the finish was sugary and cheap. Hopefully marginal perverts enjoy over-sweet drinks. After taking a day to detox from the caffeine overload, I arrived at the last coffee shop, Yellow House Coffee. Located less than a mile away from the former coffee shop and yoga studio, Yoga Bean, on 34th Street, apparently Yellow House Coffee offered too much competition to Yoga Bean, another coffee facility that closed last month. Though it’s a small shop, the owners catch attention from the street with cool, gray paint on the exterior, with pops of yellow. More minimalistic than Gatsby’s, Yellow House utilizes space with friendly lighting and quaint furniture of a long, community bench, with stools and simple wooden tables in the back. A wall of multi-colored squares adds an extremely cheery element to the venue. Industrial strings of lights illuminate the back room, including a brick accent wall. Despite the temptation offered from the exposed French press and crafted sodas, a welcoming and approachable barista served me a cinnamon-infused cappuccino with an adorable wafer from the famous Slaton Bakery. The presentation was gorgeous, with a crisp latte art heart created with cream in a bright red mug. It attested to be flavorful and sugary, with a splash of cinnamon spice. The sweetness was slightly overdone, with barely too much of a sugary taste, and not enough throughout harmony, balancing the flavors. The body of the drink was full and consistent. The aroma was robust, and it had an agreeable finish. Strong, warm, and rich, was the regular roast. Despite perhaps obtaining hypertension and a caffeine addiction, I thoroughly enjoyed all of these coffee shop outings. My final verdict for the best coffee shop in town: Gatsby’s Coffeehouse in first, with J&B’s Coffee Co. next, then Yellow House Coffee, followed by Ooh La Lattes. [email protected] Man on theDo youStreet think human beings are inherently good or evil? “Equal, whatever situation a human is in depends on how they act.” Elvis Hernandez Freshman Conservation Law Enforcement “Good, because people go to other countries and help with aid and other people’s sickness.” Marcus Carpenter Freshman Business Management Denver City “Good, because there is a lot of people doing volunteer work and helping people.” Samantha Rodriguez Freshman Radiology Denver City “I think there is an evil amount, and it’s half-and-half. Whatever you give is what you get. If a person gives in to the evil desires, then the evil wins. But if you follow your good, then it wins.” Cassie Simon Sophomore Animal Science Pettus “Both. It depends on where you come from and who you were raised by.” Jesus Levario Freshman Diesel Engineering Smyer “No one is considered good or evil, because it’s based on personal views.” De’ Andre Thomas Sophomore Commercial Music Amarillo Compiled by Devin Reyna and Skylar Hernandez 10 OPINION Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Victims deserve equal attention in police cases by NICOLE TRUGILLO News Editor America prides itself on providing opportunity for people to be treated equally. It is stated in the opening of the United States Declaration of Independence,”...All men are created equal…” America has had wars based upon this saying, and some are still battling it to this very day. I have seen on the news where a murdered white, wealthy person will get more publicity than a person of color and who may not be wealthy. Many people believe the police will be more involved with the investigation into the murdered white, wealthy person than someone of a different race or status. What qualifications make a person worthy of assigning priority to victims? I have a great answer for that. There aren’t any! Everyone should be treated equally. It says so in the Declaration of Independence. How can America say one thing and practice another? Oh yeah, I forgot, because it’s America. That is another topic for another day. If the country wants to preach about equality, we should start with topics such as police prioritizing victims. We are in America, where everyone should have equal rights. No one, especially the police, should have a say about whose life is worth more. Because the truth of the matter is, we are all the same. Who cares if someone is white or black? Who cares if someone is wealthier than the other? If someone is murdered, putting all race and money aside, I want justice, and I’m sure the families would want justice as well. I never experienced it before, but I have a good friend who has been a victim of police prioritizing. Even though I haven’t been through it personally, I can only imagine the dismissed them and their concerns. The police told them to call every six months to see if they came up with ‘new information.’ I can’t even imagine how through these types of situations. Nobody has the right to assign importance based on somebody’s past, ethnicity, or status. We are all created Travel important to broaden perspectives by JOSH HAMILTON Online Editor Congratulations, you have graduated college. You are shoved into the real world, expected to land on your feet. The real world is huge, much larger than it was when our parents and grandparents were young. Everything has expanded. The economy has become global. People are branching out wider and wider to find careers. Chances are that most people will get a job in the country of their birth, it is vitally important that people see the world in which they reside. It has been said by people more intelligent than myself that travel is the only thing that you buy that pays you. As corny as that saying is, there is a reason it is so popular. You always get more out of travel than the initial monetary value. It has become more popular, in recent times, to leave after college or high school and go backpacking around the world. But it is still a small percentage of the population that does venture beyond their borders. When one travels outside of their comfort zone, he or she finds out more about his or her own life more often than who they are traveling with. This does not mean the “tourist” traveling. This means going out and immersing yourself in the culture of wherever you are. If you go to London, go to a football game (see soccer). If you are in Scotland, go to the highlands, make friends with the locals and eat some haggis. If you go to Australia, get a job on a ranch and learn how they survive in the harsh Outback. The more of the world you explore, the more you will understand how the world works, in general. If you spend some time with people from the United Kingdom, you can find out from citizens how their politics work. I have found out firsthand how the world sees Americans. They automatically believe that we are ignorant, hard headed, and arrogant. We are geographically isolated from most of the world. The easiest way for the rest of the world to find out who we are is through our media and entertainment presence. Do you really want to be represented by the members of the Kardashian coven? I didn’t think so. The opposite is the same for us. Our only knowledge about the world across the pond is what we see on TV. Downton Abby and the Royal family does not accurately represent the population of the U.K. So this is my call to any of you that feel as though travel isn’t important. Break out of your bubble. Don’t let the cost drive you away. It isn’t hard to save, and there are programs designed to help first-time travelers find their bearings. It is important to see the world. It helps you find purpose and find out who you are as a person. Get out there and be personal ambassadors for your country. jhamilton4346@students. southplainscollege.edu Photo illustration by ALLISON TERRY devastation and disappointment. A good friend of mine had an uncle who was murdered by his girlfriend. He was a drug addict, and he was African American who lived on a lower income side of town. My friend and her family told the police, and they basically frustrating that is. The police basically told them, “Hey, because of your uncle’s past and his ethnicity, we are going to blow off this report and let it be. Talk to you every six months.” That is unacceptable. There are many other examples in the news, but I’m sure many people have gone equal. If America wants to preach about it, and if it’s in our Declaration of Independence, I strongly believe you should practice what you preach. ntr ugillo0806@students. southplainscollege.edu Right to vote should be treated with respect by JOSH HAMILTON Online Editor People have been trying to get the younger generation out to the polls for years. I have a different message: Don’t vote. There, I said it. Phew, that is a load off my mind. If you are in the 18-25-yearold range, as most college students are, hopefully you have started to realize that you don’t know everything. Don’t be dismayed, it’s OK. It is why we are here, to learn and grow as humans. What isn’t OK is when you know you are ignorant about something and still act on that ignorance. I haven’t voted. Ever. I am 23 years old. I have lived on my own for the past five years. I have traveled to different countries by myself, and I pay taxes. But I haven’t voted yet. I was of age during the 2008 and 2012 elections. I could have voted during the past three mid-term elections but chose not to. There is a very good reason for this. I didn’t feel near well versed in politics to make an informed vote. I tried to keep up with the politics, maybe to sound smart, or maybe as an attempt to wade into the convoluted cesspool that is the political system in the United States. But every time someone asked me who I would vote for in the upcoming election, I didn’t have an answer. I felt that it was my duty as a U.S. citizen to take my right to vote seriously. This meant that I would abstain until I could make an educated decision about which candidate I thought would do the best job of running our country. Not everyone does this. In my experience, the people who are adamant about voting as soon as they are able seem to be parroting what their parents believe. If you truly believe in something and it happens to coincide with what your family believes, cool. You came to your own conclusions, and due to your upbringing or where you live, it’s the same as your parents, awesome. If you are liberal or conservative and you have never thought of why you believe what you believe, that’s a problem. You are basing an important belief that determines part of your identity without even thinking about it. Find out who you are, and find a vague vision of who you want to be. Then find out which way you lean. I believe that now I am well versed enough to wade into the political waters. In 2016, there will be new candidates who will campaign to win my vote, and after much consideration, I know how I will most likely vote. Voting is an intrinsic right for American citizens. Take it seriously, or it might be taken away from you. jhamilton4346@students. southplainscollege.edu 11 OPINION Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Journalism student reflects on memories, bids college goodbye by CAITLIN WELBORN Feature Editor I live in two worlds. One is a world of books. I have fought crime with Anita Blake, solved mysteries with Sherlock Holmes, looked deep inside the minds of killers in “Helter Skelter,” and entered the wonderful world of magic with Harry Potter. Words are a magical thing and can change lives. My second world is made up of far less eccentric people (well, most of them), but they have impacted my life just the same. These people have taken me on adventures that I will treasure for probably the rest of my life. They have helped shape who I am, and have given me some examples of who I will strive to be in the future. If you had known me three years ago, you would have known two things about me, that I wanted to be a journalist, and that I wasn’t too keen on going to school anywhere near Lubbock. I know that sounds weird, since I’ve been attending South Plains College for the past three years. To be honest, it wasn’t even a backup option for me to attend. I had ruled out SPC before I even gave it a real chance. So when I attended college the first fall after high school, I wasn’t too pleased to be here. But a wise friend told me to give it a chance, keep applying to the college I wanted, and, in the meantime, keep going to school. This was probably the best advice I could have gotten from someone. Because after giving SPC a chance, I realize that this college has done a lot more for me than I ever thought it could. When I came to college, I wasn’t exactly closed minded. But I wasn’t really open minded either. I entered the print journalism program at SPC and I didn’t know what I was in for. Change is what I was in for. The only change that hasn’t happened to me is that I have never changed my mind about what I have wanted to do with my life. I have known since I was probably in fourth grade that I have wanted to be in journalism. I know, that’s a weird career path for a fourth grader to want, but it was what I wanted. That has yet to change. At 21 years old, I am only more excited to go into this field because I know I will never be bored with my job. I will always have exciting opportunities in my field. All I have to do is work hard for the future I have envisioned. Part of my excitement in this field is all of the eccentric and interesting people I will get to meet, and that started my first day in the newsroom at SPC. Being around all of the different characters who I’ve mester, I decided to take on a story that I really felt would impact people in what I hoped would be a positive way. I decided to become homeless for a week, and see what it was like to be in college and not have a home to call my own. I think it initially worried a lot of people for a girl of only 18 to be on the streets (sort of) and try to report on a subject that most brush off. I have to say that piece really was impactful. If not on anyone else, it was impactful on me. It made me think differently and think of others in situations before judging why that she has become one of my best friends. She has shown me that you can’t just hope that a story will fall into your lap. Sometimes you have to hunt for the ones worth telling. She introduced me to some of the best people full of so much personality that you can’t help but love them. Randi has helped me in so many ways that I’m not sure how I’ll ever thank her enough. She introduced me to Alli Terry, or rather introduced Alli to the newsroom. Alli is one of those people who seems funny and so awkward, but she really grew on me and I wanted encountered in the newsroom has changed so much about me, the way I think, how I act, what I like, and what I hope for when it comes to my future in this field. Such eccentric characters who I have encountered, some good, some not so good, but all of them have impacted me. They all know who they are. Some of them have graduated, they are where they are, or act how they act. “ We ’ r e a l most there and nowhere near it. All that matters is we’re going,” – Gilmore Girls. I agree with this quote. Part of life is not the destination, but the journey there and all of the adventures that you have along the way. This newsroom has given me so many adventures with people. It didn’t always matter what we were doing, as long as we were doing it together. I think one of the most impactful people I have ever met on staff in my three years has been Randi Adams. We didn’t really like each other too terribly much when we spent our first semester on staff. She thought that the people I was hanging around and others will still be attending SPC in the spring. My first semester, I felt a part of something bigger than just reporting, I was trying to change and impact people’s lives. So during my first se- in the newsroom were a little childish, including myself, and I thought she was too standoffish. But during our second semester, we really got to know each other and became friends pretty fast. I am proud to say to be her friend. We became fast friends, I think, and after our first TIPA together, we were definitely good friends. She was someone who could always act professional in the newsroom and took on a lot of stories. She is one of a kind, and I was so happy for her when she became editor-in-chief this semester. She makes me jealous with how good of a writer she has become. Then t h e r e ’s what is now referred to as “squad,” Megan Perez, Brittany Brown, Devin Reyna, and Skylar Hernandez. I d i d n ’t k n o w m o s t of the girls, excluding Megan, who became the newsroom sweetheart from day one in the newsroom. They were just people who wrote or took photos for the paper. But this semester, I have gotten closer to all of them. They have given me a laugh when I really needed it, and we have created memories that will last us a long time. I will miss them all so much. Brittany Brown has become one of my new favorite people. She has suffered through TV news with me this semester when we both know it isn’t our forte but have somehow made it to the end with smiles. She is a one-of-a-kind girl. She is strong, confident, determined, and knows what she wants for her life. Devin and Nicole both joined the staff at the same time, and were both very quiet girls when I first met them. But they have helped make all the difference this semester when it comes to keeping my sanity. Skylar, who is quite possibly the sweetest person I know besides Megan, I have watched grow so much this past year, and I will always be there for her like she has been there for me. Megan, who took a trip with me and Alli, to Hobbs, N.M., which then turned into Odessa, (it’s a long story), really bonded with us, and suddenly we were closer than I really thought I would be with them. Then there is the matter of my advisor, Charles Ehrenfeld, who I have had many bickering matches with. We have disagreed on many things when it comes to a story, whether one part of a story is relevant or not. That’s a battle I will, of course ,face when I make it to a newspaper. It’s the old fight of reporter versus editor argument. Although these arguments, along with many others that Charles and I have had, have been infuriating because we don’t always see eye to eye, I imagine that I will miss those small moments when those fights made me realize that journalism is what I was always meant to do with my life. I have had to take constructive criticism from him that has, at times, worn me down. But in the end, I knew it was really for my benefit. He has on staff. He is a guy who has helped me. He took the time to get to know a girl who was seemingly outspoken, but hid a lot of her inner qualities that would make her likeable in the end. He knows when to give me encouragement, and constructive criticism, when I need it. He has gone on adventures with me for the paper and has supported me, because we both want to be the best reporters we can be. He is a character all his own, a MacGyver and someone who knows how to find a story worth telling. He has opened me up and made me soft in a way that most haven’t seen. Who knew that Caitlin Welborn was a marshmallow once you got to know her? Through the semesters, faces have changed and people have decided that maybe print journalism isn’t for them. But those who have stuck it out and have decided that this field is for them, I know that they will make it because they want it bad enough. I know that I do. Between my homeless adventure, meeting Jeanette Walls, the Color Run, Skydiving, Bungee Jumping, attending Austin City Limits, and meeting various veterans, who have told their incredible stories, I can’t imagine what is waiting for me when I get a big-girl job, doing what I love. I have always imagined it like this crazy chase, like in a movie that keeps you on the edge of your seat in the theaters, wondering what’s going to happen next. I know that may not be too realistic, but I want to report on things that matter, such as foreign affairs, and warzones. I want to witness and impact others with the reality of this world, and the issues that most of America helped make me a better writer and editor. He has equipped me with the tools I will need when I continue on to a fouryear university. Dora Smith is a unique individual who I met this semester, but it is like I have known her for so much longer. She reminds me of the girl I once was, and watching how she is now reminds me of who I have always been. The last person I intend to mention is a fellow reporter, and also my boyfriend, who works on staff with me, Josh Hamilton. When I first met this goofy kid, I hated him. He struck a nerve that just got to me. He made jokes he had never been a part of and that were at my expense in the beginning. He took my complete annoyance as flirting. He won out in the end, since we are now a couple. But he is not just a boyfriend who happens to be doesn’t realize are happening. I believe that when I leave this college and move on to bigger and better things, I will keep in mind how much this college and the newsroom have given me. The impact that this place has left on me will stay forever. I went from high school jungle freak, to shiny new mean girl, to part of the breakfast club, to actual human being. In Omnia Paratus- it means ready for anything, and with the memories and the tools I have learned and will take with me when I move on from SPC, I do believe that I will indeed be ready for anything that my career holds for me, and anything that the world can throw at me. c welborn6538@students. southplainscollege.edu 12 OPINION Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Journalism student reflects on time in college, looks forward to future a full-time employee at the college. He’s 76. You have absolutely no idea what you are doing. You pretend you halfway know what you are doing. writing, editing and layout, and photography again. Then, you write about a windmill documentary made in town, eventually climbing to the top of a wind turbine with scraps for a robotics competition. You tell yourself print is not dead. You interview an elderly Levelland author and he asks Sometimes you award them homemade trophies and pumpkin donuts, and you hope they realize you sincerely love them and appreciate their dedication to the paper. How to Be a Print Journalism Student: (a nod to Lorrie Moore) First, of course, you major in something practical. You believe business administration should do it. You truly only really have an interest in photography, but after all, you’ve heard your whole life fine arts is a useless degree. But business, it’s broad, basic, and pleases your parents well enough, as they watch you drive off into the sunset of a new town and an overpriced university. A year goes by, filled with accounting and economic classes. You strongly desire to pull out your hair from business math, a foreign language taught, fittingly, by a Russian professor who cannot comprehend the stupidity of American students. The only lesson you retain from your brief career as a business student is that you can’t afford the university you attend. In between packing your bags to move home, you stumble upon a meeting for the university’s literary magazine while trying to obtain “chapel credits,” dictated by this religious institution. You scan the room and see students similar to yourself, after two semesters of alienation in the business college. They are writing, photographing and designing, and you realize this might be where you should have been. But you ultimately push the thought out of your head. meet your photo quota, or don’t get paid a laughable amount. And you love it. The following semester after your Abilene extravaganza, you enroll at the local community college, without a set plan, since you only know you enjoy taking photos, and say, “It doesn’t hurt to get my basics out of the way.” You’re immersed in a night class of art history, learning about cave paintings and the archaic Greek sculpture, on the Reese Center campus. You enjoy wildly shooting at targets in archery. You listen attentively to your government professor sarcastically lecture about politicians. You spill developer all over another student’s new sweater in the school’s darkroom and make a friend. Eventually, you realize not many of your fellow students appear to have a plan either. Amid classes and seemingly eternal group projects, a particularly persuasive skater on your roller derby team convinces you to try joining the school’s newspaper staff. (Oh yeah, you play roller derby. It’s particularly essential.) You enroll in Publications I. You buy an Associated Press style guide. You genuinely frustrate your business advisor. With unsure steps, you venture into Communications 130, taking in the surroundings of the newsroom, with various student awards spanning the walls, in-progress stories marked on whiteboards, and multi-colored sticky notes with little details covering Macintosh computers. It smells like printer paper, dusty newspapers and leftover pizza from late nights of writing, and it is perfect. You have yet to bear witness to the 4 a.m., 5 a.m., 6 a.m., “nights” of cursing Adobe In-Design, the unending frustration of playing phone tag with sources, or the addicting reward of reading your first Interviewing him in his campus office, he tells you of his time spent as a Marine in the Vietnam War, his career in the CIA, his following occupation of truck-driving, his half-Vietnamese children, and, incredibly, he allows you to tell his stories. You cringe as you hear your voice on your recorder as you begin to transcribe the interview. You stay up all night reading random newspaper articles, trying to grasp the format. Indecisively, you eventually carve out what you believe passes as an article. Following the deadline, you return faithfully to the newsroom to find this story covered in blue ink, from the advisor’s copy editing corrections. You need to separate thoughts into more paragraphs. You need to use better word choices. You your camera strapped securely to your back. You witness the chaos of a local children’s play place, as you hear about time spend abroad being a nanny for a student feature. You interview the hotdoggers of the Oscar-Meyer Wienermobile and steal a wiener whistle for your advisor. You photograph a Martin Luther King Jr. commemorative march, while walking the parade backward, pointing your Canon at yelling and singing marchers. You forge friendships on staff, as they become the only people in your life who can truly comprehend not only what you do, but understand the reasoning behind your caffeinated late evenings and obsession with listing synonyms. You force yourself to attend dry, ritualistic signings and ceremonies, because you After receiving the college experience and trying to not think daily about the college loans that come with it, you apply for the only photography job listed in the paper. You’re sent to smoky bars where local rock bands and Texas country artists perform no earlier than midnight. You article in print, all in this very same room. But you know through stumbling and tripping into the world of journalism, you are finally on the right path. You don’t waste any time, assigned the first day to compose a news article about an instructor who just became especially need to refrain from writing “you” in articles. But at the end, you receive a famed “blue note” from the advisor, encouraging you to pursue writing. Upon the journalism catalog’s instruction, you fill your schedule with Charlie classes such as photography, news know, in the end, these proceedings and meetings are important to the college. You make fun of Jerry Springer while taking notes at a “The Price is Right” traveling show. You argue for the right of euthanasia in an editorial. You take pictures of penguins, and students welding together if you would like to go meet his friend. Sometimes you don’t say no to strange offers, despite quality parenting you received. Later, while interviewing the author’s friend, you discover he fortunately was a 97-year-old founder of your college. You are fairly certain print is not dead. You write a memorial article for a murdered student, as your eyes water while transcribing interviews from friends and coaches. You utilize the zoom on your lens as you capture photos of rattlesnakes. You advocate for awareness of domestic abuse and assault on campus. You shake hands with the leaders of the college at monthly Regents meetings. You drink too much. You begin a food column, initially as an excuse to dine out, but discover you simply enjoy describing pastries and artisan tacos. You schedule a photo shoot with a Clydesdale horse. You take a short road trip to cover a lecture in another state with a best-selling author with your friends on the newspaper staff. You take a wrong turn and end up in Odessa, but opportunely you arrive early to the lecture anyway with New Mexico’s time change. You run close to flames, photographing a massive structure fire. You hide under your desk. Your eyes tear up as you watch your friend win Homecoming queen for the Press Club. You capture images of a Krav Maga class and methamphetamine found in a girls’ restroom. You attend approximately 10,000 music shows to cover. Trusting you acquire carpal tunnel, you write exactly, probably one million headlines. Time passes, and you begin your final semester of community college, this newspaper staff, and to your horror, someone made the mistake of placing you in charge. Consequently, you brainstorm article ideas. You put on a pantsuit and solicit Levelland businesses to buy advertising space for the publication. You interview veteran organizations. Sometimes you get overstressed and allow your frustration to show. You beg staff members to take stories and turn them in by deadline. You slide down the Communications hallway ramp on rolling chairs with your associate editor at midnight after everyone has left the building. Bill said advertisers. You mail the newspaper to every student journalism department in Texas. You distribute issues to racks in all the buildings on campus; you pass out papers to students in the hallways. You guilt your family into reading the publication, cover to cover. Begrudgingly, you quit roller derby for the semester. You redesign the look of the print edition. You make page layouts for “the kids.” You cautiously look over your shoulder for inevitable pranks from the broadcast journalism professor. You laugh at the staff’s repeated phrases and over-the-top dance moves on long evenings of corrections and page design. You cringe at innuendos from the notorious “creep jar.” You lay down old newspaper to give a haircut in the newsroom. You often eat breakfast with Olga, the Communications custodian, and midnight snacks from the vending machine. You try out for the school play, become too nervous and exit the room full of experienced actors in an awkward shuffle. You wake in the middle of the night, thinking about leads. You abuse the coffee maker. You prepare for graduation, you apply for internships, and you enroll into a university. Nostalgically, you wrap up the last issue of your Plainsman Press career, yet you force yourself to look ahead to the possibilities you believe the world still holds for writers and photographers, despite naysayers, the competitive field of journalism, and rising gasoline prices. Though you sacrificed all of your time, and most likely a portion of your sanity, reflecting on the past two years, you would not change one detail of your time spent on the newspaper staff or working toward a career in journalism, because you have truly learned one valuable lesson: you will never have the regular hours of a 9-to-5 job, you will never get rich, but you will always have stories to tell. by ALLISON TERRY Editor-in-Chief [email protected] Plainsman Press FEATURE 13 November 24, 2014 Faris engineers creative haven with Amusement Park Studio by ZACH HOLLINGSWORTH Associate Editor came from a ‘50s carnival. A miniature Boba Fett offers guests cinnamon gum from a bowl, and various pieces of vintage musical equipment are carefully placed around the facility. Toward the back of the studio is a once-blank white in history,” says Faris. “If you look at it, each decade has its unique thing. The ‘30s had it, the ‘40s had it, the ‘50s… you had Buddy Holly, and then you had the Beatles…Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd… then in the ‘80s you had…these killer bands coming out of there. (In) about the modern, independent music that’s pushing into new and exciting territories. But, despite fervent fan bases, those television shows were cancelled due to low viewership. Likewise, the albums by independent artists don’t sell as well as the record companies would like. “To sell multimillions of albums,” Faris says, “you can’t be aimed at someone who has very specific or eclectic tastes. You have to be aimed at a mass market.” With the major labels, whose decisions are based entirely on selling records, in such strict control of the industry, Faris says this is also “a scary time for music.” Faris, in his multi-faceted roll at the studio-he works as a producer, engineer, and occasional cowriter- is fervently doing his part to combat the negative aspects of the modern music industry. The idea for his style of recording studio had its birth in an experience he had as a young studio musician. “When I was a real young man, I went into a studio to record,” recalls Faris, “and I had a really terrible experience. Because the engineer just really didn’t care. I sat there and watched him half A the entire session. I looked at this, and…went, ‘I can do this. And I can do this way better.’ This is not how you should treat people. At that point, I decided to start recording all of my own music.” He did just that. During the next few years, he recorded bands he was playing in at the time, and, eventually, word of the work he was doing spread around town. During this time, Faris, in addition to recording and grips with the fact that I really wanted to record. I wanted to own a studio…I knew I could do a better job than some of my experience had been, and so…I left SPC, which was very bittersweet for me.” He opened his own studio officially in 2008, and, after a few years there, Faris grew tired of the restrictive confines of that studio. It was only 750 square feet, with a modest recording room. It was packed to overflowing with guitar cables, amps, and drums. It was cramped, but even then, it contained the DNA of the Amusement Park. It was colorful and plush, well-designed and comfortable. Instead of Jimi Hendrix watching over the proceedings, the four members of Led Zeppelin stood outside their “airship,” looking stoned and gazing out from a poster placed in the hallway. The inviting atmosphere which was then and now present at Faris’ studio is a very conscious design decision. It is a part of his method in offering musicians and songwriters an environment which fosters their art. “When I was growing up, I played in studios all the time,” recalls Faris. “…A lot of them felt like a hospital, real anemic and sterile… That is not what this place is about. This is about being a womb of creativity for the artists. I designed this with musicians in mind, so that when they came in, they would feel comfortable and able to create.” Faris explains that one must “be able to let go of the rest of the world in order to create.” He says that all of the artists he records take to the setting. Recently, he even had one musician ask if he could live Further down 19 th Street, heading east, is the Depot District, a kind of “cultural” center where students and Lubbock-ites drink at the numerous bars. But the Depot and the area immediately around Tech also host some of the musicians Faris produces, along with an endless number of local musicians and artists. “I think any music scene is always cyclical,” says Faris. “I think there’s some amazing stuff happening in Lubbock right now… We went through a kind of down period for a while, and it seems to be very much on an uphill swing. There’s a tremendous amount of music being made in Lubbock right now, and… some great artists.” Support not only for music, but the arts in general, has been increasing in Lubbock, Faris says he believes. Whereas, when he moved here “years ago,” Lubbock did not have a large (or even good) music scene. But, with the increased size of the population comes more opportunities for the arts and music to flourish. “I think Lubbock is one of the greatest places to learn your craft,” says Faris, “but traditionally has been a hard place to practice your craft. But it has changed dramatically.” Inside the control room of the Amusement Park, Faris looks comfortable, and completely in his element. Later, sometime after the interview, he has the lead singer from the influential Swedish doom metal band Candlemass coming to work on some tracks. Recently, Michael Martin Murphy, the legendary country singersongwriter, recorded banjo and vocal tracks for his new album at Amusement Park. On a blustery Friday morning, Amusement Park Studio is open for business, and is already busy. People come in unannounced, looking to purchase CDs which have recently been produced by the studio. One middle-aged woman, for instance, comes in looking for a recording involving a local middle school band. Another man is looking for an album which features his son. And the day’s packed schedule of recording sessions and multimedia production has yet to begin. Scott Faris, owner and operator of the studio, takes these interruptions in stride. “I have people come in (constantly),” says Faris to the Plainsman Press as he sits down for an interview. He says this without a hint of annoyance, but acknowledges the potential interruption to the proceedings. “As a matter of fact, I’m going to lock the door, because if I don’t, they’ll just continue to come in.” The studio, which has been in operation Scott Faris sits in the recording room of his Lubbock studio on at its current location Nov. 14. ALLISON TERRY/PLAINSMAN PRESS for four years, records a wide variety of artists, from wall which was been signed the ‘90s, you had Pearl Jam, Hip Hop artists, to rock bands, by the numerous acts which and you had Nirvana…But all the way to big band-style have recorded there through right now, because the tools are crooners. This eclectic mix fits the years, wishing Faris well so available to us as musicians, right into the environment, a and thanking him for his work. there is this amazing creativity colorful, comfortable space It is full, from ceiling to floor, happening.” which feels like the kind of these lines. The style of the This “amazing creativity” of place grown-up children studio fits its owner perfectly. can be found mostly in the would have a ball in. Faris, with his long hair underground and independent A button bearing the face and goatee, certainly looks the music scenes, says Faris, of Elvis Presley sits above part of a mad-scientist music perched on a rolling office the plush red couch which producer and guitarist. But chair in front of the studio’s sits in the studio’s expansive what makes him such a special g i a n t m i x i n g b o a r d . I n control room, while a giant person in the music scene between occasional sips poster with the serene face of is his boundless enthusiasm of iced tea from the coffee Jimi Hendrix watches over and passion for his work. shop across the street, he explains that there isn’t much happening in mainstream music. The “major label stuff” is boring, says Faris. He acknowledges that there “is some good pop music being made,” but the main reason it has become so dull is Above, a mat, and left, a piano sit in the Amusement Park Studio. ALLISON TERRY/ that it has become PLAINSMAN PRESS homogenized. “ M o s t o f t h e playing guitar with numerous at the studio. Faris punctuates This unlikely duo serves to p o p u l a r s t u f f , acts, was also a guitar teacher. this story with a peal of illustrate the wide variety of you’ve gotta think, He taught at David Brandon’s laughter, and the obvious joy artists Faris records, and the i s d e s i g n e d f o r guitar studio in Lubbock he takes in relating it points to extent to which his studio has mass consumption,” before joining the faculty at the care he puts into his studio grown. and the time he invests in each Despite his success, his s a y s F a r i s . “ I t ’s South Plains College. like television… “I was the director of guitar individual who records there. main source of satisfaction It is this care, time and these days comes from his T e l e v i s i o n h a s studies, and I was co-director gotten smarter as it of the entertainment business effort he puts in, along with the love of music, and helping decentralized from program,” says Faris. “And I unique nature of Amusement songwriters and musicians t h e s e t h r e e b i g founded AlternaTV… (It was) Park, which has propelled develop their art. “I love producing records,” networks. The average a really, really great tenure out him to the top of the recording business in Lubbock. He says Faris, with real excitement level of intelligence there.” that they were aiming During the time he was records artists from Lubbock, in his voice. “That is one of my a s i t c o m a t , i f I teaching, Faris recalls, he was the Panhandle and New favorite things to do. I view remember correctly, also producing more records. Mexico, as well as from the entire recording studio as was an eighth grade With his busy schedule at Midland/Odessa, Dallas, and an instrument... I get to see education…If we had SPC, he was only able to make one artist out in Los Angeles. people’s dreams come true, “I started out as probably the and I get to facilitate that. just stayed at an eighth two albums a year. With his grade level, we would talent came interest, and with smallest studio in Lubbock,” Any musician who wants to the main recording room. His inspiring presence can never have had ‘Freaks and interest came requests from recalls Faris. “And I am now do this for a living dreams of The walls are painted in enliven a room, and his rapid- Geeks’…we would never have local artists for him to record the biggest studio.” making an album…I get to be different primary colors, and fire musings on the state of had ‘Arrested Development.’” their albums. The Amusement Park sits in there a lot when they open that out in the entrance way sits modern music, the recording Intelligent and cerebral “I started having to say no,” Tech Terrace, across the street first box of CDs. It is a magic an old Galaga arcade machine business and local culture are shows such as these point to a says Faris. “And I didn’t want from the popular hangout moment.” and bits of installation art, remarkably astute. more discerning taste among to do that. So I’d been out J & B’s Coffee, and not all including a giant letter A “I think right now is one of the audience, according to at SPC for about nine years, that far from the venues and zhollingswor7184@students. and P which look like they the most creative time periods Faris. The same can be said and I kind of just came to bars surrounding Texas Tech. southplainscollege.edu 14 FEATURE November 24, 2014 Plainsman Press Dawson finding success as musician in Nashville by CHELSEA YOHN Staff Writer Despite a smalltown upbringing and uncertain college choices, Billy Dawson moved to Nashville to pursue his dream. Dawson’s school experience was a little different than most. Dawson grew up in Sunray, Texas, where he attended and graduated from high school in 2001. But not before he left high school for a short time to join a Christian rock band in 2000. He moved to Kenosha, Wisc., to become guitarist for Skillet. After graduating from high school, Dawson attended several different colleges around the Texas and Oklahoma panhandle until landing at South Plains College to join the commercial music program. “I enjoyed it thoroughly,” says Dawson about his experience at South Plains College. “I got pretty in depth out there in the music department.” Dawson says that SPC was definitely the best college he attended. He has been singing, program, wanting to pursue a with asked him to join them playing music and writing more musical direction. Only on their tour in Portugal. songs for most of his life. a few short months before Dawson says that he called Dawson says that he wrote graduation, Dawson was his parents, who told him, his first song titled “Jumping “Let’s pray about on the Bed” when he was 4 it.” years old. The next day, his Dawson says that he also dad called and said, was chosen to be in the Gifted “Pack your stuff and Talented (GT) program at and come see us his school. He says that he can for a few days, then remember staying up too late move your butt to listening to music and scoring Nashville.” badly on his GT tests, causing “They have him to get into trouble with his always been very teachers. supportive of me,” “I would have rather explains Dawson. listened to music than have “And so has SPC. been in GT,” Dawson said. When I decided While attending Sunray to leave, all the High School, Dawson teachers were super auditioned to be the new guitar supportive of me.” player for Skillet. Within a few After moving to days, he received a call from Nashville, Dawson the band asking him to join has really made his the band and move with them. dreams come true, So Dawson left high school achieving some to tour with Skillet for a little great milestones in while, before returning to his career. A few Sunray to finish high school. of the highlights After going “to a lot of Dawson said that Photo courtesy of Billy Dawson different colleges trying to have been the appease different people,” most eye-opening D a w s o n d e c i d e d t o d o presented with another once- and life-changing have been something for himself and in-a-lifetime opportunity. A winning the 2010 “Get attend SPC for the music band he had toured Europe Discovered” (iHeart Radio/ Clear Channel) National C o mp e ti t io n , an d b ei n g featured on the Jerry Lewis MDA telethon in Las Vegas. “It was the most positive week of my life, “said Dawson. “It was mind blowing being with all those kids with Muscular Dystrophy.” “Looking back now, I wouldn’t change one thing,” Dawson adds. “I’m glad I went through hardships. I’m glad I went through good times. I’m glad I had the parents and support I had…” Dawson said that he was very determined to follow his dreams, even though he did not know what the road ahead was leading toward. “Every experience leads us to the right place,” Dawson says. “If people would just realize that no matter if it’s hard or if it is good, it molds us into what we need to be and makes us better people.” Dawson says that he just wanted to be in a place where he could impact people, not impress them. “Just being a positive light in this world is a good thing,” Dawson says. “If I can be an inspiration to just one person at SPC, or use my songs to impact people and take a gun out of their mouth, or just encourage somebody to love somebody.” Along with singing and performing, Dawson is very involved with mission work, speaking at schools and writing children’s books. He says that he is inspired by helping other people and trying to encourage others to be the best they can be. He also aspires to “get into as many schools as possible and speak to as many children that I can.” Dawson has been asked to be a performer this year during halftime of the Dallas Cowboys vs. Philadelphia Eagles pro football game on Thanksgiving Day. Dawson hopes to be on the road with a bigger artist in the next few years and opening for a full tour. “I think my ultimate goal would be to impact a nation with my songs,” Dawson said. cyohn1234@students. southplainscollege.edu Family history, ROTC program inspire Gregory to pursue military career by CAITLIN WELBORN Feature Editor Families who serve in the military normally pass on the tradition from generation to generation. Shelly Gregory is one of those few who it was passed down to. A recently graduate of Baylor University, Gregory is enlisting in the Air Force. Gregory has a history with the Air Force in her family, as both of her parents, were in the Air Force. Gregory’s mother, Lynn, works for South Plains College as a technical advisor on the Reese Center campus. Her mother was in the military doing social work, and now Gregory is going into the military, following after both of her parents. Although Gregory isn’t going into social work, she will be doing her part when we goes into active duty in less than 20 days. While in college at Baylor, Gregory was a part of the ROTC program, and she says that what made her decide to do it was a sense of home. “I grew up on different bases and moving around until we finally settled in Lubbock,” explains Gregory, “and then when I started looking at colleges, the ROTC programs came up. So when I went to Baylor and joined the program, it gave me a sense of comfort.” For three years of her life, she was stationed in Japan while her parents were on assignment. She says that she doesn’t remember that time but looks forward to a point when she will get the chance to live out of the country. Gregory says that her time in Baylor’s ROTC program was a four-year program that had classes each year that would change. During her freshman year, she took classes in the history of the military, war strategies and how to be an officer. She explains that each branch of the military has their own courses, and that she just decided to take Air Force. “Once you leave ROTC, you become an officer, so that’s why they have that class,” says Gregory. She says there also was a physical training class, and that they would have a physical test. Along with these classes, Photo courtesy of Shelly Gregory Students express passion through fender competition by JOSH HAMILTON Online Editor any discernable damage, there would be points taken off. If the paint wasn’t perfect, points Students in the Automotive were taken off. If the student Collision Repair Technology had to ask the instructors class at South Plains College for help, recently participated in points were its semi-annual fender taken off. If competition. the project Every semester, the took too long, auto body class instructor, points were Robert Hotaling, hands out taken off. car fenders to the students It is a for them to repair. On the process that fender is a dent that has involves a lot been “placed” on it for the of patience, students to fix. according to The competition has two Hotaling. The parts. The first part involves students have how well the students can to be able to fix the body of the fender. keep their The second part involves the cool when refinishing of the fender, and their hard if they can get it to look like work is dented there had never been a dent. repeatedly. “If they [the students] For more handled the procedures Nathan Gonzales, left and James Deme, right, pose in the Auto Tech garage information t h e y w a y t h e y w e r e on the Levelland campus on Nov. 17. about the taught, without having to JOSH HAMILTON/ PLAINSMAN PRESS Automotive ask for help, and when Collision they are finished painting placed first and second in the small dents, and moved on Repair Technology course, and you can’t see the dent body repair. to medium and large dents,” email Hotaling at rhotaling@ we gave them, that’s what It is apparent that all of the said Hotaling. “Finally I took southplainscollege.edu. we are looking for,” said students have a driving passion a three-pound sledge hammer Hotaling, who is the program for their work. and smashed the fender.” coordinator. “It runs in my family,” said The students were judged on jhamilton4346@students. Hotaling gave out awards Gonzales, who is deaf. “My their final product. If there was southplainscollege.edu for both parts. Nathan Gonzales and James Demel placed first and second, respectively, in the refinishing section, and Fred Alcala and Antonio Perez grandfather did it; my dad did it.” The competition ran all semester. “ We s t a r t e d o u t w i t h she explains, they had leadership roles. “You lead the underclassmen when you become an upperclassmen,” says Gregory. Gregory says that joining the Air Force was definitely a lifestyle choice, and she knew that she would be OK with moving around again. “I just decided that this would be a good decision for me,” says Gregory. Gregory is moving to Washington, to the same place her mother was first stationed when she joined the Air Force, in less than a month. Gregory, unlike her mother, had a choice of where she could be stationed and chose one of the places her mother had been. “I think it’s really cool that I’m being stationed where she was first stationed, and I had a little bit of choice in that,” says Gregory. “My mom spoke so highly of where she was first stationed that I wanted to follow in her footsteps. Gregory says that she’s not concerned about the possibility of having to move out of the country for a mission, as she knows that this is going to happen at some point. “I know at some point I will have to move to a place where war is taking place,” says Gregory. She says that the idea may be nerve racking, but she is willing to do it, adding that she wouldn’t mind living in Germany or in England. “I’m definitely adventuresome, like my parents,” says Gregory, “and will look forward to all of the experiences I’ll get to have when that time comes.” Her major in college was political sciences, so her she applied for a job dealing with public affairs. “It’s like being the liaison between the military and civilians, and dealing with social media, and speech writing,” says Gregory. She says that she won’t have to go through basic training, but that she will have to go to her job-specific training, which entails getting a degree in photojournalism. “It’s a three-month crash course in journalism,” says Gregory. But when it comes to her plans for the future, Gregory says that she will probably go back to law school, because she says that she would really like to get her law degree. “It’s like the show “JAG,” says Gregory, “I would love to work in the court rooms on bases dealing with military cases.” Gregory says that the transition of her moving to her job might be a little straining, since she is now in a serious relationship with her boyfriend, who is also in the Air Force and training to be a pilot. “Since we are going to be a part for a while,it will be tough,” says Gregory, “but hopefully we can end up in the same place, and then after we get married, get stationed somewhere together.” Gregory will be leaving for Washington on Dec. 1. “I think part of this job is knowing the sacrifice of it,” says Gregory. “Although we won’t be stationed together for a while, I am proud of the work that we are both doing, and I think it will be worth it in the end.” Gregory says that she is a little scared of the job she will be doing, but she has an idea. “I’m lucky, since I grew up in the lifestyle, and that my parents went through,” says Gregory, “because it gave me an idea of what to expect.” cwelborn6538@students. southplainscollege.edu 15 FEATURE Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Teams work against clock to escape room in Lubbock attraction by ZACH HOLLINGSWORTH Assistant Editor from the early 2000s and speaks softly. Nothing in his disposition would indicate that he is really a kind of mad scientist with a talent for creating challenging, yet enjoyable, escape puzzles. Sitting comfortably in the chair from which he guides the action, he explains how he ended up with the escape room, and also where he got the idea. “Well, I was just looking for a job,” recalls Posey. “I wasn’t really seeing anything I wanted to do… This summer, we did a backpacking thing through Europe, and we kept seeing these room escape games in all of the cities we were going to…We eventually tried one in Prague, and it was the most fun thing we did on our whole trip. So I’ve been brainstorming and thinking, what if I open my own?” After a few months of purchasing props to be used for clues, setting them up, potentially world-ending. hints over a walkie talkie that speakers in the room, alerting affair with creepy photos and Various chemicals, plants, and the group takes in with them if the players to the time which children’s toys strewn about. powders in jars line shelves. they get stuck. Even so, some is passing. There is also an It will be more in the horror A copy of “The Rise and groups don’t make it out at hourglass set on a table in the movie vein than the mad Fall of the Third Reich” rests all, says Posey, while others main room, a reminder to the scientist vibe from the current on a bookshelf room. He is also alongside toying with the idea numerous of having an actor in books on one of the rooms, to c h e m i s t r y. add a little spice to There are the proceedings. But also locked any possible zombie metal boxes. or murderer will What do they have to wait, as he contain? plans on switching Posey has the layout of the put careful rooms “every six thought into months or a year.” his clues, Posey is also and their interested in the placement in parallels some draw the scheme of between his escape A key hangs on the wall at Trapped! Escape the Room in Lubbock on Nov. 10. the puzzles. puzzle and films “ T h i s ALLISON TERRY/PLAINSMAN PRESS such as “SAW,” room,” says which feature Posey, gesturing toward the are particularly adept at the contestants to move a little protagonists trapped in the Lab with a nod, “I was testing game. One group in particular, quicker. There are “clues” same kind of puzzle rooms for a week or two. At first, I Posey recalls, made it out with and objects that lead nowhere, (albeit much more sadistic had to adjust the puzzle… 17 minutes left on the clock. simply there to mislead less ones-thankfully, there are no This one was too hard at first, But the ability of a group to observant detectives. pits of hypodermic needles in escape has little to do with the While searching through Trappped!). numbers of a group, but rather one desk, you might find “I think that’s why people the teamwork which a group a spare AA battery next to like it,” Posey says. “It’s kind puts in to it. a chemistry book open to of like putting yourself into a “They were the masters a section about dangerous horror movie.” of this thing,” says Posey. gases. You hear the sound of Trapped! Escape the Room “…I feel like it depends on an alien invasion coming from costs $20 per person, and the group, not necessarily the the speaker behind you, the offers students a 10-percent group size…It depends on how classic “War of the Worlds” discount. Contact Posey at well you’re communicating, radio broadcast. In this setting, (806) 410-1474 to schedule and how well you’re working the old radio play is eerie and an “appointment” to lock you a s a t e a m , ( a n d ) h o w distracting. in a strange room from which enthusiastic you’re going after This sense of unease is one there is little chance of escape. this puzzle.” which Posey hopes to foster Every 15 minutes, an in the second escape room zhollingswor7184@students. alarm sounds through a set of at Trapped!: A haunted room southplainscollege.edu Sand slips down an hourglass as the sounds of bubbling chemicals fill the air. Behind a false panel, Orson Welles narrates an alien invasion, and a woman looks out wistfully from the photo sitting on a desk bearing documents, documents which may or may not lead to freedom. Clocks rest along the walls and on the desk, all stopped at different times. Are those times clues, or are they there to mislead? Panic sets in as an alarm goes off. 15 minutes left. You and your partner furiously attempt to solve the last puzzle and unlock the door to your freedom. Finally unlocking the door which you think leads out, you are confronted with another dead end, and another mystery. This is not the plot of some horror film (although it is an archetype of the genre). It is real life, and it is available to anyone with $20 and a healthy craving for adventure. “ Tr a p p e d ! Escape the Room,” located at 3621 50 th Street, is a new business in Lubbock owned and operated by B e n P o s e y. P o s e y, w h o A timer sits on a table at Trapped! Escape the Room. hails from San ALLISON TERRY/PLAINSMAN PRESS Marcos and lived in Boston for a time, figuring out the layout for the and this one was too easy, so moved to the Hub City at the room, and a week of testing, I’ve had to get them…evened end of July. Posey was ready to open his out to where it takes people an “My fiancé is now at the creation to the public. hour to get out.” medical school at (Texas) The details in the room are Posey explains that in the Tech,” says Posey, “…so now what make the experience short time Trapped! has been we’re here. I’m just along for special. The props all feel like open, most groups make it out the ride.” they belong in a laboratory with mere minutes to spare, Posey, dressed in a gray of questionable ethics, circa with some even unlocking the sweater and slacks, resembles 1946, just after scientists had exit door with one minute left a record store employee created something awful, and on the clock. He gives people Unique band integrates multiple cultures into music by CHELSEA YOHN Staff Writer first impression one to remember. Each member had a different instrument and sound that was different from every other member of the band. Yet they all sounded so harmonious and a long way for just one single s h o w. T h e p e r f o r m a n c e Funkadesi did at Texas Tech University was the only one they did in the area. They traveled from Chicago to Lubbock just for one show. The members of the band An Indian funk band from Chicago blends multi-cultured musicians into one great captivating performance. Funkadesi, a band composed of 10 members who are from all around the world, performed on Nov. 7 at the Allen Theater on the campus of Texas Tech University in Lubbock. This was the first time that Funkadesi had ever played in Texas. “You guys made us want to stay a couple more days,” said Rahul Sharma, founder of the band and bass guitarist. “We were floored by the crowd reaction and participation we got. It was amazing!” Before going on stage to perform shows, there is a lot of excitement and nervous energy going through the air. Sharma said that it helps to have a band of 10 people to help calm nerves. “You never know how a show is going to go,” Sharma said. “So you want to make sure you do your best.” Sharma said he had a music professor who told him that if he didn’t get nervous he would be scared. “I’m supposed to be A member of Funkadesi plays a djembe as he leads the crowd nervous,” Sharma said. to clap along in the Allen Theatre at Texas Tech on Nov. 7. Without saying one CHELSEA YOHN/PLAINSMAN PRESS word, the band had the crowd’s full attention as each member filed in through catchy when everyone played come from several different backgrounds and bring lots the back door of the theater. together. Each member was carrying Funkadesi has gained of culture to the group, which and passionately playing appreciation, recognition and makes them so unique. They their unusual, unique, and attention from all over the describe their sound as a mix between Indian, Classical, and fascinating instrument. They world. then walked to the stage, “Sometimes we try to tie a Bollywood, with some reggae before forming a line at the few shows together at a time,” funk thrown in. front of the stage to serenade Sharma said. cyohn6768@students. the audience, making their But other times they travel southplainscollege.edu 16 FEATURE November 24, 2014 Plainsman Press Texas wineries partake in annual tasting event One 30-something Hispanic proceedings, the Wine and Vine come from all across the the laughter grew louder, state, explained and a local band set up in gentleman stood at the back of also featured a beer tasting, and Emily Simpson, the operations Wine enthusiasts from m a n a g e r f o r around the South Plains McPherson. recently gathered at a tasting “They’re able event held at McPherson to donate their Cellars in downtown Lubbock. wine for samples, The third annual Wine and and a lot of these Vine Tasting, which was held wineries aren’t on Nov. 8 and Nov. 9, drew distributed (here),” large crowds of up to 1,400 said Simpson. “A people during the course of lot of them get two days. their grapes from The sounds of reggae and the high plains, so laughter issued forth from they come up here the wineries’ courtyard, while to feature their food trucks busily served wine…They also patrons a variety of food near get to sell bottles.” the entrance to the tasting As the afternoon room. The crowds weren’t as progressed, and large the second day, but there the wine samples were still several hundred continued to flow, Guest mill from booth to booth at the annual Wine & Vine Festival at McPherson Cellars on Nov. 9. patrons milling around inside, the bottles were ALLISON TERRY/PLAINSMAN PRESS moving from booth to booth sold by talkative and sampling the wine. y o u n g w o m e n , The wineries’ employees, excitable old hippies, and one McPherson’s lush courtyard the crowd with a wide grin on a chef competition. According volunteers, and representatives special group of volunteers. to set up. Phillip Coggins, a his face, an open bottle of wine to Simpson, the beer tasting of each company explained “The entrance fee proceeds local musician, performed in his left hand, and a wine was a huge success. the strong and weak points of benefit Meals on Wheels,” his brand of reggae, while a glass in his right. The glass “The Home Brewers their respective wines to the explained Simpson. “The first stellar backing band laid down was rapidly emptying. Association…came out,” enthusiastic crowd. I n a d d i t i o n t o t h e s e Simpson recalled. “It was year, we gave some money a funky groove. O n e o f t h r e e l o c a l to the Texas Wine and Grape wineries in the Lubbock area, Foundation. But last year… McPherson actually began life and this year is exclusively as a label of the Llano Estacado Meals on Wheels.” by SKYLAR HERNANDEZ induced coma for 71 days. music career and his amazing Winery since 2000. It has been According to one winery “There were some really dark talent for writing songs. made and sold out of its own employee, the event had Staff Writer days, but they always kept Johnston performs happy storefront since 2008. The raised $21,000 for the charity, Life has a funny way to pushing me. My mother left and upbeat music. winery itself is in the former which helps feed the invalid always take a sudden turn, “Happy country music is Coca-Cola bottling plant, and elderly, on the first day alone. with trials and tribulations. But me encouragement notes and what I love has a groovy, retro feel, with As part of McPherson’s it takes a determined to perform,” courtyards, old equipment partnership with Meals on heart to beat the odds. s a y s mixed in with the new, and an Wheels, several volunteers Ray Johnston, a Johnston, air of sophistication. with the organization handed former member of the who received The numerous winery out samples of wine. Dallas Mavericks, plays a life-saving representatives in attendance As the afternoon progressed, his heart out for the bone marrow Texas country scene transplanting these days, performing 2008. upbeat songs from town He is to town. all about Johnston was drafted making the into the NBA as a free audience agent in 2004. His believe journey with the NBA w h a t ’ s was short lived, though, happening as three months later, on stage. He he was diagnosed with says that one Leukemia and was of his music forced to hang up his inspirations jersey. is “Garth Johnston says that he scriptures everywhere for me.” Brooks, for the way he had a long road ahead of him, Johnston has a favorite performs his music.” but he had all the support he Bible verse that kept him “If an artist is believable Shirley Gentry-Moran pours wine at the Grape Creek needed. motivated throughout his from the first note to the last, Vineyards booth at the annual Wine & Vine Festival. “ My mom and dad kept battle with the disease. it goes a long way,” Johnston ALLISON TERRY/PLAINSMAN PRESS me going,” said Johnston, “Proverbs 17:22,” Johnston adds. who was in a medically- told the Plainsman Press in Johnston and his band by ZACH HOLLINGSWORTH Associate Editor out-of-control crazy, it was supposed to last from 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m., and they were done in about 30 minutes.” Simpson said that the beer tasting will likely become a tradition at future Wine and Vines, as it was more popular than any other event they’ve hosted as part of the event. Sitting in the plush tasting room of the winery in what looked like a comfortable leather chair, with the sounds of merriment coming from the next room over, Simpson said she is happy with the turnout and the event as a whole. “It’s a fun event,” said Simpson. “It’s just a chance to taste wine from all over the state of Texas… People seem to really enjoy it.” [email protected] Country singer overcomes illness, achieves success in music a recent interview. “Faith have a motto for every show has always been the foundation in our family.” A l s o , “Friends,” the TV series, helped a lot, Johnston s a y s , especially being able to watch his T.V. crush, Rachael G r e e n , (Jennifer Aniston). Johnston made a stop Photo courtesy of Brandy Reed in Lubbock on Nov. 13 when he performed his special they play, “G.I.B, Get invited blend of country music at the back,” Johnston says, “which Blue Light. naturally works.” Luckily, Johnston is just Johnston has come a long as talented with a guitar, pen way since starting his music and pencil as he was with a career. He recently released basketball. Johnston said that a new album titled “No Bad music has always been in his Days.” His hit single, “More life, from playing drums in Crown than Coke,” has broke high school to being in a cover the top 20 on Texas music band throughout college. charts. Music veteran Tim Bubois “I’ve had four singles, and artist Kevin Fowler and three have been top 10, noticed Johnston’s talent and and they have had a real fun encouraged him to pursue his melody,” says Johnston, who co-wrote nine of the 11 songs on his new album. He is about to be featured in Country Weekly Magazine and on Billboards The 615. He just filmed his segment on Texas Music Scene TV, hosted by Grammy-winner Ray Benson. The show features artist who are getting a lot of attention. “I’ve been very fortunate in Texas, with all these opportunities,” says Johnston, who grew up in Montgomery, Alabama, and was a walk-on for the University of Alabama men’s basketball team. “Red Dirt Rebel has also been good to me as well.” Hunter Hutchinson opened the Lubbock show, getting the crowd dancing and ready for some more music. “Happy, Happy, Happy,” is something Johnston and his band say every time they are about to perform, and that’s what they brought to the Blue Light stage. Those in attendance could feel the energy and happiness Johnston and his band had on stage. Not only did Johnston perform his new songs from “No Bad Days,” he also sang familiar songs to keep the crowd going, such as, “All My Ex’s Live in Texas,” by the legendary George Straight. He also performed theme songs to TV sitcoms, including, “The Fresh Prince of BelAir.” Johnston has made some loyal fans through the years as an artist. Not only does he bring happiness to the stage, he is also very humble and inspirational to so many people. Johnston has had a long journey and has overcome so many battles throughout his life. But he looks forward to entertaining more fans. Johnston encourages all his fans to follow his Twitter and Instagram @Rayjohnstonband, where he posts pictures and updates on his shows. shernandez2472@students. southplainscollege.edu 17 FEATURE Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Wardlow publishes book based on Facebook Column by DORA SMITH Opinion Editor In a life that has taken him through numerous jobs and states, Jack Wardlow has amassed a collection of experiences that form his strong opinions. In 2010, Wardlow, associate dean of research and reports at South Plains College, started a column on Facebook titled, “It’s Friday, and I Was Thinking.” Each Friday, he discussed, as suggested, what it was Jack Wardlow sits in his office on the Levelland campus on Nov. he had been musing on that week. The subjects 11. DORA SMITH/PLAINSMAN PRESS varied from the funny history at the University of “I had a pretty good knack to the controversial. In September, Wardlow released Science and Arts of Oklahoma. for research…Writing was a He has held a number of chore, especially writing for a book comprised of these jobs, including working as a educational purposes.” opinions, which he describes When Wardlow obtained as coming off the top of his police officer, a truck driver, and a bartender. Wardlow his current position at SPC, head. also owned his own barbeque however, he found enjoyment “I don’t spend a lot of time hut at one time. He moved on in writing both data reports thinking about it, because I want to write while I’m to teach history at both the and small programs called University of Oklahoma and “batch files” that allow people thinking,” says Wardlow. Wardlow, who is married Amarillo College. Wardlow to move through masses of and has seven children, was says that he was not fond of data faster. “I like writing what I found born in Amarillo and grew writing in what he describes as the “publish or perish” world immediately,” he says. “My up in Shamrock, Texas. He of education. favorite part of it is actually initially majored in police “History is a lot of research working on the computer.” science at Amarillo College, For recreational writing, before moving on to study and writing,” says Wardlow. Taylor expresses passion for poetry based on human emotions by NICOLE TRUGILLO News Editor Taylor says. “I always consider myself to be able to understand more about their own emotions more than themselves.” “People don’t take the time to watch themselves, nor take the time to think about it,” adds Taylor. “While they interact with each other, I’m standing there taking mental notes, watching them, learning how they act, how to respond to things. It’s in those times and in those moments they give me the feeling of whether this is true happiness or pure sadness. I observe people.” Taylor says that his writing progressed during high school from a couple of sentences from his observance of people that went into short essays and then ended up with poetry pieces. At the end of his junior year and at the beginning of his senior year of high school, pieces ended up winning, and it got selected to be put in a published book. A few months Being passionate about later, I ordered it, and sure something usually comes with enough, I was in a book itself. achievements and awards if The company also told me it one is willing to work hard was the same way how Taylor for it. Swift started her publication Christian Taylor, a video of poetry.” production major at South The piece that was selected Plains College, has a passion to win is titled “One Morning,” for writing poetry, and it a poem that explains the certainly has paid off. emotion of someone who is Taylor was born in Virginia living in the middle class, Beach, Virginia. He lived in describing his or her morning a lot of places in Texas, but routine. during his high school years, “It goes on explaining he ended up in Sundown, someone who has all these Texas. thoughts running through Taylor explains that he their head the moment they majored in video production wake up, up to the point because he knows he can where they do wake up,” follow through with it. He Taylor explains. “I put in plans on earning his associate’s words, ‘He looked into his degree, but he doesn’t plan on mug to gasp, looking down graduating anytime soon. at the thing what life he has to “I can do writing, but grasp,’ meaning that finding unless you’re the best of out that the cup was the best, you can’t make empty, that what he that a career,” Taylor wanted to be in it was explains. “You would also no longer there.” have to go through a lot of Shortly after college classes, and I’m Taylor had his first just straight up saying, I’m poem published, he not a fan of school.” published a Kindle Ta y l o r t o o k v i d e o book on Amazon production classes in titled “Individual high school, and he was Emotions.” The book also involved in track and has 11 pieces of poetry. football. Ta y l o r ’s m a i n “I actually did a UIL subject for his poetry journalism class my are human emotions. freshman year,” Taylor He strives for basic explained. “It was weird, emotions because he but in different ways. I says that he believes learned some stuff, and it is what people relate that’s probably where I to. started my poetry.” “Some of my pieces Taylor started taking his are sad, and I don’t poetry writing seriously want to say, ‘It makes when he was a freshman Christian Taylor poses in the library on me happy to write year of high school. He about people crying explains that during high the Levelland campus on Nov. 20. or being in pain,’ but school he was a loner. But MEGAN PEREZ/PLAINSMAN PRESS it’s understanding according to him, that was and knowing that this where he received his passion Taylor started submitting his makes you human,” Taylor poetry pieces to a contest called explains. “It makes you for writing poetry. “ W h i l e o t h e r p e o p l e Creative Communications. He understand who you are. The enjoyed going out or involving was looking for scholarships, basic experience is why I go themselves in other people’s and he came across poetry for basic emotion. It’s what business, I would just rather submissions. makes people cling to things.” “I sent in random pieces enjoy watching other people to a point where they can’t to different contests,” Taylor ntrugillo0806@students. see themselves emotionally,” explains. “But one of my southplainscollege.edu Wardlow began the “It’s Friday, and I Was Thinking” column after becoming hooked on Facebook. The range of subjects covered include humor, nostalgia, criticisms, and politics. When it was suggested to him that he compile the columns for publishing, Wardlow agreed. “I always wanted to write a book,” says Wardlow. “I like to write, and I have a huge ego.” Though the nature of the essays varies, Wardlow says that he believes that the book is about appreciating life. “I love life…Life’s a challenge,” he says. “It’s something new every day, and that’s mostly what this book is. It’s a book about living life: the trials and tribulations we all go through, what springs up during the day and how to handle it. It’s sort of a ‘never give up’ type of book.” The book has an appeal t o t h e p e o p l e o f We s t Texas, reflecting Wardlow’s conservative values and religious convictions, as well as his familiarity of and fondness for the Texas climate. However, Wardlow says that there’s something in it for everyone. “If you’re reading it, no matter your age group or demographic, I hope that you get something out of it that tells you that your life’s worthwhile, that all life is worth living,” Wardlow says. “We’re all critical of our fellow man, but we really don’t know what they’re going through.” Wardlow’s experiences by DORA SMITH Opinion Editor However, finding a job was much easier said than done. Wood found that every teaching job he was offered also required him to be a coach as well. “I am the most unathletic person imaginable,” says Wood. Instead of working in education, Wood found himself working in rehabilitation and corrections for eight years in Ohio. Working in the prison system can be a job that leaves a lasting impression, sometimes in a negative way. Wood says that he saw both the best and the worst of those incarcerated. The experience humanized the prisoners for him. with the “salt of the earth” citizens he describes in not only Texas, but Levelland, in particular, keep his belief in people alive and well. He approaches everyone with the same positivity that he has seen in others. “If you’re a pleasant person, a good person, chances are that everybody you run into is going to be pleasant and good, because that’s how you look at life,” Wardlow says. With such strong convictions and a unique outlook on life, Wardlow intends to continue expressing his views through writing, with hopes of publishing a second book soon. dsmith9720@students. southplainscollege.edu Wood uses past experiences to motivate, engage students “I was looking for something that I could use in that job, and I certainly could Regardless of the see a need for it,” says Wood. circumstances, Robert Wood After graduation, however, has the capability to see Wood returned to Texas, where the good in everyone and he found a job with SPC as an everything. access counselor. Wood grew up accustomed “Basically, I helped arrange to what he described as “small, for daycare and assistance for rural towns,” spending his some students, and worked in childhood in Childress and the Counseling Center helping Post. After graduating from to academic advising,” Wood Post High School, he went on explains. to study at both Texas Tech When offered the chance University and Midwestern to teach at the college level, State University in Wichita Wood took the opportunity. Falls. Currently, he teaches sociology While attending college, and social work, subjects that Wood, assistant professor of he is passionate about. sociology and social work “The thing I like about at South Plains College, teaching sociology and social and adjunct work is the opportunity professor at to let people see that Te x a s Te c h there’s a world bigger U n i v e r s i t y, than what they grew up had to develop seeing,” says Wood. a system to be “Not everybody is in able to meet the exact same spot as the costs and they are.” requirements Expanding the of attending minds of his students a university. is something that he For two years, finds rewarding, but Wood worked occasionally difficult. two jobs at a “Sometimes I think time, and then that’s what makes spent the next sociology hard for six months a lot of people,” he w o r k i n g says. “Giving people one job and the opportunity to see attending that there is something school. After different, and maybe that, he would not to be quite so return to judgmental in how we two jobs and approach things.” continue the Wood’s approach cycle. to life is not always so During serious. his time in “I am probably the school, Wood says that he Professor Robert Wood sits in his office in Holden most immature person found himself Hall at Texas Tech University in Lubbock on Nov. that you’ll ever meet,” he admits. “I have the uncertain of 10. DORA SMITH/PLAINSMAN PRESS same hobbies now that his goals and I did when I was 12: I lacked the motivation to figure “It sort of dispels a lot of will put together models, I will it out at first. stereotypes about people who read comic books, and I will “Coming out of high school, I had no idea what I are incarcerated once you’re go to the movies.” Wood teaches an Intro to wanted to do,” says Wood. “I there day in and day out,” Wood says. “They’re not all Sociology class that focuses was not prepared to be a good monsters. A lot of them are on pop culture. He cites this student at that time. It took me being a bad student, and like average, ordinary people.” as his way of incorporating In fact, Wood brings up what he loves into the way he learning some pretty rough one particularly amusing makes a living, advice that he lessons from that, to kind of experience. offers to anyone in any career. figure out what do I want to “I’ve seen an impromptu “I was able to incorporate do.” Though he spent some drag show in a male prison… my passions into making a time studying elementary that was an eye-opener,” he living,,” Wood says, as he education, Wood soon turned recalls, “and that was a darn encourages others to do the same. “Find some way to do his attention to the subject good drag show.” His experiences working what you want. I understand of English, as he wanted to teach high school English with the prison populations, that you have to have a job, classes. With this in mind, he including being moved by but jobs are much better if you graduated with his bachelor’s watching the interactions like them.” degree in English, which during visitations on Father’s Wood says he uses to “speak, Day, inspired him to pursue a dsmith9720@students. degree in social work. southplainscollege.edu and not a lot else.” 18 ENTERTAINMENT Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Alamo Drafthouse serves up simple meals, offers intelligent cinema DINNER... by ALLISON TERRY Editor-in-Chief “The Thing,” “Creepshow,” and “The Shining,” leading up to Halloween. But for the town’s new favorite cinema, the film is only half of the experience. Flipping through the menu located inside of a small table attached to the seat, it’s diffi- ey mustard, or a peanut butter banana shake with a scoop of vanilla ice cream. Just in case you happen to be forgetful, before each show, text splashed across an old photograph of Volkswagens at a drive-in theater reminds patrons of the Drafthouse’s paper provided, then set them upright in an attached railing for the waiter to pick up, read, and deliver the desired dishes. During other times, I’ve attended a showing at the Drafthouse, I have relished this “dinner and a movie” experience. On this particular visit, I Your waiter squats down, bent at the waist in the pitchblack room, illuminated only by the movie screen presenting an array of humorous movie clips and music videos with bedazzled dancers from the ‘80s. Taking a slip of paper from the front of your table, she silently returns with a Cherry Coke, or a chicken pizza, or an ice cream sundae. The Alamo Drafthouse, a Texas chain based out of Austin, has quickly gained popularity in Lubbock after opening earlier this year. While the theater shows the current blockbusters expected to be found at other local theaters, the venue is truly embraced for its showings of cult classics, various films including Above, a BBQ Smokehouse burger, and below, loaded fries are served at Alamo Drafthouse in “Purple Rain,” quoteLubbock on Nov. 9. ALLISON TERRY/PLAINSMAN PRESS alongs for fan favorites such as “Monty Python and the Holy Grail,” and special line-ups, such as last cult to decide between a baked policy: pencil food and bever- arrived early for the movie and month’s horror showings of pretzel with Shiner Bock hon- age orders on the given slips of chose to eat in the bar, prom- ...AND A MOVIE by ZACH HOLLINGSWORTH Associate Editor The theatre was dim when we entered, an empty house. As my companion and I took our seats, a gag reel began on the screen which contained various clips of newscasters goofing up and mispronouncing names, flubbing lines, or cursing when their foot would slip in a hole. There was a movie trailer for the classic film “Network,” which was a vicious, if darkly humorous, attack on television media and the depths to which they sink in the pursuit of the almighty high ratings. Also, there was a goofy bit featuring a young Jake Gyllenhaal in a promo clip for “Sesame Street,” and a surreal music video by the little-known ‘70s disco group, Chilly, admonishing us to “come to LA.” What do these things have in common? At the Alamo Drafthouse, they were linked to the feature film my friend and I had come to see: the striking “Nightcrawler.” “Nightcrawler,” starring Gyllenhaal, Rene Russo, Bill Paxton, and relative newcomer Riz Ahmed, is a morality tale about journalistic ethics wrapped in a bleak dramedy. It shows the almost nonexistent line which exists between violent nightly entertainment ising myself I would order a drink in the theater later. Scanning the scene, a long line of draft beer taps span the wall of the dark bar, seemingly canvased with simple wood, black paint, and imitation exposed brick. Uno, Talisman, and decks of cards were spread throughout the booths and tables for casual drinkers to play. Placed before me fairly soon by a waiter was the BBQ Smokehouse Bacon Burger. With American cheese, cabbage, barbeque sauce, and bacon topping the patty, I took a bite into this creation while looking up at the retro-stylized posters hanging on the walls by booths. Admittedly, it was a little plainer than anticipated, but I can imagine this type of simpler food working excellently while fishing around in the circular dish while sitting in a dark theater. While only slightly disappointing, the cheese added a subtle variation from the meatier bacon-and-barbeque sauce aspect. Surprisingly, the cabbage provided interesting texture that wasn’t entirely unpleasant. Traditional fries were served on the side of the burger, with a ketchup dipping packet for simplicity while performing the multi-tasking activities of stuffing your face while watching Jake Gyllenhaal. As expected, they were slightly crispier on the outside, but almost doughy in the middle, much like cafeteria fries. Fresh. Simple. They were nothing out of the ordinary. My dining companion and I pushed back the board game of Connect Four, as the waiter also delivered an order of loaded fries. (Don’t judge me.) This masterpiece of movie-grazing food was presented as a dish of fries with cilantro, chives, a hot sauce, shredded cheese, and sour cream. The spicy twang from the cilantro and sauce was balanced beautifully with sweetness from the sour cream and cheddar cheese. My dining companion, who is, of course, my associate editor and, conveniently, my best friend, and I digested in the bar, over-full from the Drafthouse’s cuisine. Once I had finished destroying him at classic board games provided by the bar, we paid for our meals and prepared to enjoy the show. becomes more depraved and hollow as the film goes on, even while his success grows. As the film progress, viewers begin to see under his smiling mask. The film ends on an open-ended note, leaving Bloom to his devices and the audience to despair. But don’t let all of this cerebral analysis fool you. “Nightcrawler” is still a highly entertaining film. The brief and brutal car chase which occurs in the film’s climax is one of the best seen on screen in some time, and there’s enough slick visuals and upbeat music (even when the film is at its darkest, the music sounds like it belongs in the “A Beautiful Mind” kind of film genre) to keep the audience entertained. One could watch it as a simple crime flick, enjoying the car wrecks, bleeding bodies, and absolute brilliance of the performances. But therein lies the genius of this film: What we are seeing is morally and ethically empty, so why are we so entertained by it? Where is the appeal in a dead family on the evening news, or a dying man who was out buying medication for his ailing wife? Where is the charm of watching bombs explode in a Middle-Eastern country on a 24-hour loop on cable news? Where indeed? Lou Bloom, for all his moral apathy, is simply giving the audience what they want to see, giving viewers what we want to see. So why are you watching it? and nightly news. Where does one end and the other begin? Increasingly, the distinction is hard see. The film opens with austere shots of Los Angeles at night. The skyscrapers, slums, and freeways are at once beautiful and desolate, bathed in an orange halogen hue. It looks cold, impersonal and supremely slick, which coincides with the characters and plot of the rest of the film. him a blank stare before flatly refusing. Driving on the freeway, Bloom comes across a flaming car wreck, with two police officers struggling to pull a woman out of the wreckage. When a freelance cameraman, played with wormy brilliance by Paxton, comes and films the scene, Bloom discovers his true calling: video for television news. Purchasing a cheap video er to discover, and really, the story of Bloom and his increasingly visible lack of empathy and morals serves as a vehicle to show us the unfortunate state of television “news.” Gyllenhaal’s performance as Bloom is truly impressive. In his talented hands, the character becomes a haunting study of a sociopath. With wide, staring eyes, mechanical movement, and overly-cheerful smiles and speech, Bloom Romina, embodies the same qualities (or lack thereof). She is out for success at all costs. When Bloom brings in graphic footage during sweeps week depicting three murder victims, she quickly pounces on it. Viewing the footage, her eyes light up like a child’s on Christmas morning. Asking the station’s lawyer whether she could air the footage, she impatiently waits for the answer. Standing amid this cold beauty is a rail-thin man cutting a chain link fence with a pair of bolt cutters, collecting scrap to sell. This is Lou Bloom, the film’s protagonist (or perhaps antagonist). Played by Gyllenhaal, Bloom is an enthusiastic scavenger. Aside from an act of violence in the first five minutes (quickly forgotten), he is almost likeable. Attempting to get hired on at the junkyard where he brings his metal scraps, he stresses his interest in hard work and dedication. “If you want to win the lottery, you’ve gotta make the money to buy a ticket,” Bloom says to the foreman, who gives camera and police scanner, Bloom begins his journey. He films car wrecks, broken bodies, and bullet holes in family fridges. He gains the attention of a news producer at a floundering television station, played by Russo, who purchases the raw footage from Bloom before cutting it into dramatic perfection. The station’s ratings steadily rise, propelled by Bloom’s often-violent footage, and he finally finds success. But with that success, comes the darker and antisocial parts of Bloom become more clear. To say any more about the story would give away plot points better left for each view- is a hollow man. As the film progresses, it becomes obvious just how devoid of morality he is. He is not even particularly evil. He is simply an emotionless machine, acting in ways which benefit him and him alone. He is, in many ways, a metaphor for the modern news industry, which operates in much the same way. Both Bloom and the news industry are morally bankrupt, as well as emaciated by their hunger. Bloom’s hunger is for money and success, while TV news is hungry for high ratings. There is nothing happening under the surface for either one of them. Russo, who plays Nina “Legally?” asks the lawyer. “No, morally,” says Romina scathingly. “Yes, legally.” This brief and ugly exchange sums up her character. The dead glint in Bloom’s eye sums him up. As they broadcast the footage, Romina dictates to the anchors what to say, pushing hard for the angle of minority crime creeping into white suburbia (the murders take place in a well-to-do section of LA). The anchors speak in facts when there are none to be had. Bloom and Romina both seem ecstatic. And the ratings steadily rise. Perhaps paralleling the simultaneous descent and rise of the news, Bloom slowly [email protected] zhollingswor7184@students. southplainscollege.edu 19 ENTERTAINMENT November 24, 2014 Plainsman Press Pierce the Veil, Sleeping With Sirens play Lubbock venue on world tour by MEGAN PEREZ Entertainment Editor from Long Beach, Calif., took the stage. Surprisingly, the two-man acoustic band made an impression on the crowd. Playing songs from their selfreleased album of 2012, titled “Heart Flip,” the duo got the fans swaying to their soft, yet powerful songs about love and love lost. The second band to perform was Beartooth, an American hardcore band from Columbus, Ohio. With careful instructions given by front man, Caleb Shomo, Beartooth got the fans in the crowd screaming the lyrics back to him, jumping off their feet, forming mosh pits, and crowd surfing to the front of the stage. The group performed songs off their newest album, “Disgusting,” and literally had overzealous fans climbing and clinging to the rafters. Beartooth hyped up the fans to an extreme as soon as coheadliner Sleeping With Sirens took the stage. Teenage girls screamed at the sight of posthardcore heartthrob, Kellin Quinn, lead vocalist. Kicking off their set with a blast of smoke and their newest single to date, “Kick Me,” Sleeping With Sirens had people pushing and shoving just to get to the front of the crowd, hoping for the chance to touch hands with Quinn. The band’s set featured songs from all three of their previous albums, sending fans into an emotional whirlwind sadness. The band ended their time on stage with, “If I’m one of the few bands on the road 365 days a year. Heartbeats thumping so The postloudly they match the ominous hardcore booming of the bass. Cigarette band is smoke swirling around every currently in corner of the undersized the process venue, and fans wildly dancing of recording and jumping to the hypnotic a new album, beat of the drums. so the band Plenty of post-hardcore performed music lovers were in songs off attendance for the most their album anticipated concert of the local previous music scene. Pierce the Veil albums, and Sleeping With Sirens, two “Selfish of the most compelling and Machines,” influential forces of the postand “Collide hardcore/metalcore scene, With the hit the road together for the S k y. ” T h e co-headlined “The World band played Tour,” sponsored by Rock my personal Star Energy. favorite, It’s been more than a year “Hold On Till since the two bands have shared May.” With a stage, so the announcement powerful of a co-headlining world tour lyrics such was a pleasant surprise to fans as, “If you everywhere. were me, Lubbock was fortunate you’d do the enough to have earned a spot same. And on the tour. The show was held I can’t take at the Lone Star Event Center anymore; in the Pavilion on Nov. 11, I’ll draw and eager fans began arriving the shades Pierce the Veil and Sleeping with Sirens performs at the Lonestar as early as 5 p.m. even though and close the bands wouldn’t go on until t h e d o o r. Pavilion in Lubbock on Nov. 11. 7 p.m. Everything’s SKYLAR HERNANDEZ/PLAINSMAN PRESS After fans had filed into the not alright, venue on a cold November and I would night, This Wild Life, an of feelings, ranging from James Dean, You’re Audrey rather…” The song sent the acoustic pop-punk duo hailing free-spirited anger, love, and Hepburn,” a song all about crowd into chaos, with fans lost love, which caused young jumping so high as if to reach couples in the crowd to hug for the stars, and confetti closer together. cannons blasting everywhere. Heading on stage after After several songs, the Sleeping With Sirens was the band’s set took a softer tone main attraction, the headliners with an acoustic rendition of the tour, the band the crowd of “I’m Low on Gas and had been dying to see live, You Need a Jacket.” Heavy by SKYLAR HERNANDEZ guitarist; Steve Augustine, Ghandi’s Gun, which got the Pierce the Veil. The band lyrics such as, “As I choke, guitarist; and Joel Bruyere, bass crowd jumping and excited. originates from San Diego, tried to wash you down with Staff Writer Righteous Vendetta, was next Calif., and is known for being something strong. Dry but guitarist. Thousand Foot Krutch After spending almost 10 to take the stage and couldn’t recently took a small venue years with Tooth and Nail have been a more perfect band by storm, with their lights, records, the band decided to to perform right before TFK. love for music, and amazing be independent. After making They had the whole room you find on a person every energy. that big change, they released pumped and trying to crowd by CAITLIN WELBORN day. But he seems to adjust A Sunday night, around the stage Feature Editor to it, thinking that these horns with school and to get as close as Everyone has a devil inside that are appearing are only work the next possible. imaginary. But as the days morning, did not A s s o o n a s of them. At least Ig Parrish does. drag on, Ig finds out that stop eager fans TFK hit the stage, If you don’t know who he people are revealing secrets to who were there to they had lots of watch the energetic e n e r g y. T h e i r is or what he has supposedly him, secrets that they normally legendary TFK lights and sound done, just pick up the book wouldn’t share with anyone. perform. were spectacular. “ H o r n s , ” o r g o TFK played at The crowd enjoyed s e e t h e m o v i e Jake’s Sports Bar every minute of a d a p t a t i o n . I t ’s and Backroom on the concert. There worth it, I promise. Horns was Nov. 9 in Lubbock. were people of The crowd waited all ages with their released as a movie in the United patiently all night hands in the air. to hear the band. The band played K i n g d o m m o r e Luckily, the two a total of 13 songs, than a year ago, bands before them including “Fire it and on Halloween pumped up the Up,” “Light up the n i g h t m a d e i t s crowd and got them Sky,” and “Born way to theaters in ready for TFK. this Way.” They the United States, The Canadian ended the night including Premier Christian rock with three encore Cinema in the South band was formed songs, which drove Plains Mall. Based on the in 1995. They the fans crazy with have released six excitement. TFK’s book written by Joe albums, along with set had so much Hill, the movie is one live album and energy and did not a peculiar one that two mix albums. rest once the entire will surprise you At first, he’s not sure how Trevor McNevan, time they were on with how good it turns out to be. to take this. These secrets lead singer of the stage. P a r r i s h ’s g i r l f r i e n d , aren’t ones that he ever wants band, started the Fans were Lead singer Trevor McNevan and his Merin Williams, was brutally to know. group when he dressed from But as the days go on and was 17. The band’s band Thousand Foot Krutch, perform in head to toe with murdered, and he is the prime music and lyrics are Lubbock at Jake’s Backroom on Nov. 9. m e r c h a n d i s e , suspect, although there is more secrets are being spilled, based off of their SKYLAR HERNANDEZ/PLAINSMAN showing the love little evidence to prove that he Ig decides that he wants to see how much information faith and beliefs. they have for the might have done it. PRESS A l m o s t a y e a r l a t e r, he can learn. Now Ig is on a The band is band. known for their heat Lubbock was something strange is in the mission to find out what really happened to Merin the night and energy in their music. a new album titled “The End the tour’s last stop in the works. Parrish, played by Daniel she was killed. They have been featured in is Where we Began.” TFK has United States, and they ended As Ig looks deeper into sports promos, commercials come a long ways since then. with a boom. Fans went home Radcliffe, wakes up one and film trailers, playing on The band is now on their with nothing but smiles, and morning after spending the the people around him, what ESPN, WWE, and during ‘ B o r n T h i s Wa y ” t o u r, their hearts still filled with night before in a drunken haze. he never expected was to be When he awakens, he feels betrayed by the people he NASCAR races. They are promoting their newest album excitement. pressure next to his temples, thought he knew. really big on getting people “OXYGEN:INHALE.” The only to find out that he has The horns growing on top pumped up. band was more than excited horns growing out of the side of Ig’s head are much more In addition to McNevan, the to perform their new songs at of his head. significant than most might band features: Neil Sanderson the event. shernandez2472@students. That’s not something that think. This movie has an o n d r u m s ; Ty D i e t z l e r, T h e s h o w b e g a n w i t h southplainscollege.edu Thousand Foot Krutch performs for eager fans on final tour stop the taste of blood remains (of blood remains). Cold, empty mattresses and falling stars, my, how they start to look the same…Slow conversations with the gun mean more than I’ve ever said to anyone, anyone…” The emotional song brought some fans to tears as they swayed to the hypnotic strums of the song and the clear vocals of lead vocalist/guitarist Vic Fuentes. Before the band ended their set, they called a lucky fan up on stage to sing along to one of their singles, “Bulletproof Love,” sending the crowd into madness. As Pierce the Veil exited the stage, fans in the crowd begged them for an encore, which they gladly received. Upon arriving back on stage, the intro to their song that just recently went gold, “King for a Day,” began to play. And, to no one’s surprise, Quinn came back on stage to lend guest vocals to the band, causing mosh pits to erupt everywhere. Even after the show, the energy of the crowd was still high. Fans who were drenched in sweat raced to the exits to cool off in the cold November air as small girls dismounted the shoulders of their tall friends. Many dedicated fans even tried to stay behind, just hoping that the band would come back out to play one more song. But, unfortunately, the show had come to an end. The performances of all four acts were a success sending home exhausted fans covered in confetti. mperez2143@students. southplainscollege.edu Book adaptation ‘Horns’ creates peculiar storyline, intrigues audiences essence of biblical value that is underlying, yet almost in your face. It is a beautiful concept of true love and injustices made by society. It is a prime example of how sometimes the system tries to just pin a tragedy such as murder on the first suspect to be found, without looking deeper into the truth. This movie has complex characters that will reel you in until you are obsessed. If you see the movie before reading the book, this movie will influence you to read the book. Although there are distinct differences between the movie and the book, that does not mean that they are not both equally good in their own way. But I would say that the movie always does the book justice. Then again, it is written by Hill, and he is Stephen King’s son. So can the movie adaptation really ever do his work justice? That is ultimately up to the viewer. If you like thrillers that keep you thinking, then you will like this movie. This movie is a pretty awesome movie, one worth seeing, that is for sure. This adaptation is much more different from the book than probably most readers would like. But overall, it is a fairly unique concept with lots of actors who meld well together to create a wonderful story. I give this movie 4 out of 5 stars. cwelborn6538@students. southplainscollege.edu 20 ENTERTAINMENT November 24, 2014 Plainsman Press ‘Freakshow’ intrigues audiences with twisted, insidious plot by MEGAN PEREZ Entertainment Editor As a young girl, I used to dream of running away with the circus, joining the freak show as a contortionist and living life in the spotlight. Even now, I still consider it as a career when my major stresses me out. But the circus life isn’t all fun and games, or balloons and cotton candy. FX proudly presented the fourth season of the popular horror anthology, “American Horror Story” on Oct. 8. This season, the setting takes place in Jupiter, Florida, following the story of one of the last remaining freak shows in America and its struggle to stay in business. Only four episodes have currently been released, but all have lived up to the hype and anticipation of this season. The first episode is centered around conjoined twin sisters, Bette and Dot Tattler (Sarah Paulson). A milkman who enters their country home after noticing that several bottles of milk have spoiled on the front porch discovers the twins. He also discovers the body of their mother, who has been brutally murdered. News of the twins’ discovery spreads, leading Elsa Mars (Jessica Lange), a local carnival freak show owner, to visit them in the hospital. She attempts to try to persuade the twins to join her freak show. One twin, Dot, is absolutely appalled by Mars’ offer, while Bette, with eyes sparkling and an eager smile, agrees. After much consideration, both of the twins are on board to join Elsa’s troupe, realizing that without Elsa there will be no one to look after them. When the twins arrive at Elsa’s camp, just on the outskirts of Jupiter, they meet the rest of the freaks, which include Jimmy Darling, played by Evan Peters, a flirtatious young man with syndactyly, who earns some extra money by pleasuring local women with his abnormally long and fused fingers, and his mother, Ethel Darling, the bearded woman, played by Kathy Bates. As the twins begin to settle in to their new home, they can’t escape their past. A detective discovers where the twins have been “hiding” and attempts to apprehend them for the murder of their mother. Jimmy puts a stop to the detective, and in a crime of passion, he murders him. Jimmy claims that he couldn’t let the detective take away the headliners of the show, and the new members of their family. Leading the rest of the troupe out into a clearing, Jimmy leads his “family” into hacking the corpse apart. While the freak show is preparing for their upcoming d e b u t , something sinister is occurring in the town o f J u p i t e r. Twisty (John Carroll Ly n c h ) , a deformed killer clown, has targeted his next victim. After terrorizing a young couple having a picnic and murdering t h e boyfriend, Twisty holds the girl hostage in an abandoned bus in the middle of the woods. Continuing on his silent rampage, the clown massacres a young boy’s parents and keeps their son hostage. Twisty then decides to go lurking around the freak show’s campgrounds, going unnoticed. After preparing and rehearsing, Elsa’s Cabinet of Curiosities puts on their first performance for only two audience members. Gloria Mott (Frances Conroy) and her son, Dandy, (Finn Wittrock) have purchased every seat in the house for that night’s performance. After the show has come to an end, Dandy and his mother bargain with Elsa to buy the newly acquired twins from her for $15,000. The twins refuse, telling the buyers that their home is with Elsa and the rest of the troupe, infuriating Dandy. After the show, Elsa reveals to Ethel that she brought the twins aboard to gain more attention for the show and boost her own fame. It is also revealed during the season that Elsa is an amputee, legless beyond the knees. Soon after the disappearance of the detective, police investigators arrive to look into the case and to inform Elsa of a curfew in place for the town of Jupiter, following the string of mysterious murders. Meanwhile, a new couple arrives at the campgrounds. Strongman, Dell Toledo have come to ask Elsa for a job. She reluctantly agrees, (Michael Chiklis), and his wife Desiree, (Angela Bassett), a three-breasted hermaphrodite, making Dell head of security. She soon realizes her mistake once Dell goes against her orders and schedules a matinee because of the curfew, attacks and beats Jimmy, and frames Meep, a “freak” who can bite the heads off of small animals, for the murder of the missing detective. Meep is apprehended by police before being beaten and murdered by inmates in a prison cell. His small body is dumped back at the freak show, where the troupe gathers around to mourn the death of innocent, little Meep. To everyone’s surprise, Dandy returns to the carnival to ask Jimmy for a job, explaining to him that he has always wanted to perform on stage and be in the spotlight. Jimmy scolds Dandy, telling him to be grateful for the life he has and then sends him on his way, disgusted by the young man. On his way home, Dandy falls into a fit of rage and repeatedly bangs his head against the steering wheel of his car, showing the audience that there is something wrong and twisted with the spoiled young man. Upon arriving home, Dandy discovers that his mother has hired a clown to cheer Dandy up. This clown is none other than Twisty, the serial killer. Dandy is somewhat delighted and takes the clown up to his playroom, where he waits for the clown to entertain him. As Twisty is looking for something to amuse Dandy with, Dandy takes a peek into the clown’s bag, discovering something absurd and vile. Twisty storms off after bludgeoning Dandy and leaving him unconscious. Soon, Dandy comes to and begins to search for Twisty, seemingly interested in the clown’s whereabouts. He follows him back to his bus where Twisty is holding his two captives. One of them escapes and looks to Dandy for help, but the twisted young man scoops up the girl and returns her back to the clown. I definitely won’t spoil the rest of the episodes for anyone who’s hoping to start the season soon, but this season’s miniseries is definitely a promising one, with a quick start and many unsolved mysteries, leaving you begging to know what will happen next. I’m eager to have more of my questions answered and anxious to keep following the story of Elsa Mars’ Cabinet of Curiosities. mperez2143@students. southplainscollege.edu ‘Supernatural’ presents original storyline, relatable characters by CAITLIN WELBORN Feature Editor Saving people. Hunting things. The family business. For those of you who immediately knew what show I was talking about, good for you. For those who didn’t, you’re missing out. “Supernatural” is one of those shows that makes you watch an episode because it was showing a scene that immediately peaked your interest. But you won’t be able to stop at just one episode. I’ve been following this show since it began, and it has become one of those shows that is close to my heart. Now in its 10th season, “Supernatural” hasn’t lost its touch. Although the story has been altered drastically since season one, that is to be expected. Over time, the characters in the show (or any show for that matter) change and grow to sometimes become completely different characters than how they may have started out. The series starts out with Sam Winchester, who is going to college for law school. After taking his LSAT exam, Sam’s older brother, Dean, pops up out of nowhere asking for Sam’s help. Dean tells Sam that their dad hasn’t been home from a hunting trip in a few days, and that Dean wants Sam’s help to find their dad. It’s concerning to Sam and father of two very different sons who are both traumatized from their mother’s early death only six months after Sam was born. John is a hard man who is obsessed with finding the demon that killed his wife. Through the first three seasons, not only does the show display John’s obsession, but it also displayed the obsession that he instilled in his sons. Dean is a simple man who loves hunting monsters and eating pie. Dean, played by Jensen Ackles, is probably one Dean that their dad hasn’t returned, because their dad doesn’t hunt normal game. He has a specific taste to hunt for creatures that most of the world thinks don’t exist. John Winchester is the of the most tortured characters on this show. He deals with a lot. He is a fighter and someone who seems selfish at first. But the more you get to know him, the more you see that he has given everything his all. He is a man who has never felt good enough, in his dad’s eyes. Both boys have never felt good enough, but John has been permanently scarred by the loss of his wife and what is left is a broken man. As the seasons go on, characters are lost and new ones are found. Bobby Singer is probably one of the most loved characters on the show. He is more of a father to Dean and Sam than John ever was to them. Bobby, who never had kids of his own and is a hunter himself, has a jaded look on the world. But he loves both boys more than anyone ever could, including themselves. Bobby is the go-between for everything. He constantly saves the boys. He has spells and remedies for not just the boys, but for everyone who ever asks for his help. Each season has a slightly, if not totally, different theme to it that tends to throw the audience for a loop and pull them back in if they are losing interest in the show, which is almost impossible. This show is amazing and has lasted for 10 seasons so far, with probably a few more to come. The story never seems over. Although certain topics get a little old at times, this show never stops being fresh and keeping the audience interested. With an original idea and complex storyline, this show is like no other. It has a strong male cast with a few even stronger women to keep them company. I give this show 5 out of 5 stars. cwelborn6538@students. southplainscollege.edu 21 ENTERTAINMENT November 24, 2014 Plainsman Press ‘Constantine’ recovers with original storylines after disappointing start by DORA SMITH Opinion Editor Comic books have been influencing other visual media styles heavily in recent years, especially television and film. The heroes and storylines, however, can get overused and start overlapping, becoming so similar that story arches are almost interchangeable. N B C ’s n e w s e r i e s , “Constantine”, is offering up stories that couldn’t be mistaken for anything other than the adventures of this hero (albeit one with questionable morals). Based off of DC Comics’ “Hellblazer,” the series delves into a much darker world of demons and death. The first episode of the series, titled “Non Est Asylum,” manages to avoid the pilot slump of beginning too slowly to keep the attention of viewers. Instead, it moves at a rapid-fire pace, which is definitely not a good thing in this instance. The plot jumps around, moving far too quickly through explanation and introductions, resulting in an episode that is rushed to the point that it is just a jumble of scenes and dialogue that serve no other purpose than to explain things to the confused audience. “Non Est Asylum” opens in a mental institution where John Constantine, who describes himself as a “petty dabbler” in the dark arts, a business involving exorcisms and magic, currently is staying. When another patient in the hospital shows obvious signs of being possessed, Constantine first tries to resist doing anything. But he eventually gives in with a long-suffering annoyance that is quite funny. This attitude is an accurate introduction to Constantine, who is exceedingly sarcastic, inappropriately crass, and is self-described as a man who is “all trench coat and arrogance.” In contradiction, he later describes himself as “a nobody.” He is, without a doubt, a man with conflicting views of himself, evidenced by the guilt that we later find out he suffers from. Also introduced in episode one is a young woman named Liv, who might actually win a competition for the most boring da msel ever portrayed on television, with even worse dialogue. Constantine f e e l s responsible for protecting her for the sake of settling a debt with her late father. He accomplishes this, keeping her safe from a demon who controls the dead. In the end, he offers the woman a chance to accompany him, but she flees. Episode two is better to the point that it almost seems like a different show. The story, involving mines, demons, and a sympathetic abuse victim who raises a dilemma of ethics in the end, is drawn out to a good length and is much more interesting. (Worth noting to those who like their heroes with a strong funny bone is a scene in which Constantine brings a TV dinner, of all things, as an offering at a wake.) The dialogue is less contrived, and the audience is introduced to another young woman named Zed. The character of Zed is teased at the end of episode one, showing her obsessively sketching pictures of Constantine that are later explained as having come to her in visions. up being John’s savior in the episode, rescuing him from a pickup that is being filled with oil under the influence of a demon. This is a far cry from Liv, who needed her hand held constantly to keep calm and not die. When Constantine tries to discourage Zed with his cliché “I work alone” speech, her eye-rolling can almost be heard. She’s not buying it, and she isn’t leaving. The homicidal influence of a decades-old, haunted record is the subject of episode three. When warned against it, a record producer, of course, immediately listens to the record. As expected, this goes She is almost the complete opposite of Liv. Zed is insistent, independent, and refuses to take “no” for an answer. Even when Constantine tries to give her the slip, she follows. She ends remarkably horribly wrong when he begins freezing and ultimately stabs himself. This episode allows for a really disturbing, but horrifically awesome scene involving thrashing corpses in body bags, one of the better scenes I’ve seen in horror television in months. Again, in this episode, Zed comes to Constantine’s rescue, an amusing, cool, role reversal in which it seems Constantine is developing a pattern of being Zed’s damsel. Without spoiling too much, a character named Papa Midnite also is introduced. By the end of the episode, it seems like his sights are set on Constantine, with him being the subject of a bit of voodoo magic. In episode four (which is an adaptation of what is actually the first story in the “Hellblazer” series), Constantine is sought out by an old friend who was with him at the time of a particularly b r u t a l , traumatic incident that is constantly brought up in the series. Constantine initially shows absolutely no sympathy for his drug addict friend, explaining to Zed that his life is a waste, and that there’s no hope for him. Zed, who is quickly becoming a moral balance for Constantine, responds with her assessment that “no one is hopeless.” Though Constantine seems to come around, there is manipulation and conflicting emotions in abundance in this episode, ending with a climax that he was not prepared for. This series could be easily dismissed by its first episode, which was a complete mess apart from beginning to explain Constantine’s nature. As the story has progressed, monumental improvements have been made. There are a few turn-offs, such as Constantine’s occasional belittling of Zed, and his annoying amount of selfloathing (though he does deserve a portion of it), and the sometimes cliché nature of the supernatural. However, the show makes up for it. Zed and Constantine are interesting characters, and Zed especially is a breath of fresh air and a break from the tiring damsel trope that seems to haunt comic book movies/television shows. Constantine’s humor is a huge part of his appeal, though it can be disturbingly sociopathic at times. Some of the stories have been actually frightening, and underneath the circus of the supernatural lies the moral dilemmas and study of the world around us that makes this type of show so appealing. Fans of the supernatural genre, the horror genre, and the various interpretations of comic books might enjoy this show, which seems to grow better with every episode. I give “Constantine” 3 out of 5 stars. dsmith9720@students. southplainscollege.edu Creative storyline, expansive world make ‘Ready Player One’ great read by JOSH HAMILTON Online Editor Everyone enjoys a good trip down nostalgia lane. Earnest Cline’s Sci-Fi adventure book, “Ready Player One,” is that and more. It’s the year 2044, and the world has changed. The economy has been crippled, and the world is in the midst of the biggest energy crisis it has faced. In order to conserve space and energy, the slums of major cities have become ‘stacks,’ modules of trailers that are stacked on top of one another, literally making a highrise trailer park. Unfortunately, this has become the living situation for the majority of the population. There isn’t much hope for a better life. The job market is shot, with a two-year waiting list for fast-food jobs; money is hard to come by. It is in this dire situation that one man brought an escape to the masses: Oasis. Oasis was created by the mad genius, James Halliday. It is an immersive virtual reality machine that uses haptic gloves (gloves that simulate touch) and a high-resolution visor to help people forget their surroundings. Halliday introduced the Oasis 10 years prior to the opening of the book. Unbeknownst to the world Halliday had fallen ill and eventually passed away. This is when Wade Watts is introduced. From his point of view, he regales readers with the story of Halliday and the Oasis. When Halliday died he issued a video will to all the users of Oasis. In Halliday’s will, a set of conditions are laid out. If anyone finds all of the Easter eggs described in the will, then he or she will inherit Halliday’s vast fortune, worth more than $200 billion, and the controlling stake in his billion-dollar company. T h i s invitation is wrought with ‘80s memorabilia and references. The terms are these: there are three keys that open three gates. Whoever finds and opens all the gates wins; a simple p r e m i s e , infinitely more complicated in execution. The keys and gates are hidden inside the vast virtual reality world of the Oasis. The competition spurs the world into a frenzy. The ‘80s are back in style. From fashion to movies, the world is entranced in that bygone era of Molly Ringwald movies, stone wash jeans, feathered hair and leg warmers. Watts, a teen computer wiz, is a resident of the stacks outside of Oklahoma City. He is enthralled by the invitation and quickly becomes an obsessed follower of everything Halliday. Cline dug deep into ‘80s culture to write this book. If you happened to live through the ‘80s, then you will be taken on a whirlwind trip down memory lane as he enthralls his audience with obscure cultural references and wonderfully crafted storylines. The meat of the story happens five years after Halliday dies, and Watts is immersed in the Oasis. He attends school, has all of his meaningful relationships, and basically lives his life inside of the Oasis. In the five intervening years between Halliday’s death and where the story opens up, the world has lost interest in the hunt for the Easter eggs. Except, of course, for the hardcore egg hunters, dubbed “Gunters.” The “Gunters” are obsessed with finding the Easter eggs. They play all the video games that Halliday played, watch all of his favorite movies, and listen to ‘80s music. For all intents and purposes, they live in the ‘80s. Cline crafted such a large story universe that it is nearly impossible to describe it without giving away the story. His dedication to the book and getting his ‘80s trivia correct is apparent on every page. The story moves quickly. It is easy to get lost in the book as you are reading the firstperson account of Watts and his friends, Aech (pronounced “H”) and Art3mis (pronounced Artemis) and their search for the Easter eggs. The main antagonist is personified by Nolan Sorrento, the CEO of Innovative Online Industries, an evil corporation that is in search of the eggs to take over the Oasis. The story spans a huge multi-world universe inside of the Oasis. “Ready Player One” is a story of love, friendship, intrigue, and fierce battles that would make Tolkein proud. If you don’t feel like sitting down to read it, there is an audiobook, narrated by Wil Wheaton of “Star Trek” fame. He does an excellent job of giving life to Cline’s characters. “Ready Player One” is quickly becoming one of my favorite reads. I give it 5 out of 5 stars. jhamilton4346@students. southplainscollege.edu SPORTS 22 November 24, 2014 Plainsman Press Roller Dollz have dominating performance in final bout by ZACH HOLLINGSWORTH Associate Editor For the final time in 2014, the Lubbock Civic Center was filled with fans of the West Texas Roller Dollz. As usual, the crowd consisted of a mixture of drinking fans, cheering families, unsure newcomers and, for the first time, a series of cowbells. Sponsored by a variety of local businesses, with Bikers Against Child Abuse (BACA) in attendance at their own booth, the final bout of the season was anticipated to be a tough matchup. The El Paso TexPistols, of El Paso, Texas, is a team long thought to be comparable to the Dollz, at least as far as jamming is concerned. Indeed, if this bout was anything to go by, the jammers for the TexPistols, in particular Rie “Secret Asian Slam” Romero, and Dolores “Atomic Fireball” Rodriguez, were on equal footing with the Dollz’ Chrystal “Dream E. RaceHer” McCullar, LaKendra “Bam Bam Block Her” White, Angie “Shadow Smith” Smith, Leila “Iron Fist Ghost” Forouhi, Kyleigh “Sour Patch” Knight, and Tristan “ScaryGo-Round” Murphy. It was in the blocking game, however, where the disparity five, she called off the jam. During jam 2, McCullar faced off with the Tex Pistol’s Meghan “Punky Jukester” points. However, when Murphy was also sent to the box, this gave the returning Salcido the chance to power jam for Above and right, West Texas Roller Dollz’ Tristan “Scary Go-Round” Murphy skates against the El Paso TexPistols at a bout at the Lubbock Memorial Civic Center on Nov. 15. Smith As Usual, McCullar broke through, scoring four, while Smith also broke through. However, she only had the chance to score one point, as McCullar called the jam off immediately after her scoring. This set a precedent for the a few precious seconds. She scored four, while, for the first time, the clock on the jam was allowed to run down to time. For the remainder of the first period, the Dollz, thanks to some smooth jamming and a weak El Paso West Texas Roller Dollz’ Chrystal “Dream E. RaceHer” McCullar, right, high-fives her teammates after a WTRD victory. ALLISON TERRY/PLAINSMAN PRESS in skill was clear, as the bout bore out. The TexPistols, however, did not go quietly. The bout began like any other from the rest of the season. The Dollz took their positions, with Murphy being the first jammer. The other Dollztook a “Tornado” formation, or a two-man wall with a backwards blocker in the front, supporting the wall, and an extra blocker whose job it is to tire or knock the opposing teams. Murphy quickly swept through the packs, becoming lead jammer. After scoring rest of the bout, as the Dollz implemented a strategy of “nickel and diming it,” or calling off the jam each time they had lead jammer. This kept the TexPistols from being able to score, and it proved to be an effective strategy. The jams went on in the usual fashion, with the Dollz steadily stacking points. Jam 4 saw two different power jams. Marlene “McLov’n” Salcido, who was jamming for the TexPistols, was called to the penalty box early on, allowing Murphy to rack up nine defense, scored more than 150 points to the TexPistol’s 19. Despite the weakness of the TexPistol’s walls, especially on the inside, there was a lot of heavy hitting going on. Jammers from each team were knocked out, down, and around for the entirety of the first period. Jam 24, immediately before half time, featured the hardest hitting. White and Smith were jamming during this bout. White quickly became lead jammer, while members of her team and the opponent’s were fall- ing all around. Smith struggled to get around the Dollz’ wall, and found nothing but frustration. She was repeatedly knocked to the ground by Murp h y , who was backwards blocking during t h i s bout. A s the bout w e n t into half time, the named on El Paso’s team. As the second period began, it was quickly obvious that this was a bout of domination, at least as far as points go. Interestingly, this was also a fairly evenly matched bout, in the end, based on one factor: the ferocity of each team. This was one of the more violent bouts, with the sounds of skidding skates and players hitting the ground. The bout did come to a stop for one skater early on in the second period, but not from any kind of hit. During jam 7, Salcido fell to the track, and didn’t get up. As the music stopped, the crowd died down, and the skaters of both teams took a knee. The (Dollz: Blocker-Murphy, Jammer-White. TexPistols: Blocker- Salcido, Jammer- Romero), Murphy, who is also the captain for the Dollz, spoke with the Plainsman Press in a brief interview, discussing the bout, the season, and the possibility of a professional roller derby league. “I feel like the game went really well tonight,” said Murphy, holding the MVP “candle” in one hand. “Roller Derby is a sport that is constantly evolving. It is the most strategic sport ever played. If you don’t play with strategy, you’re not going to win…I feel like this year our strategy has been better and more effective than it has ever been.” Murphy acknowledged that, while the Dollz did have a blowout against the TexPistols, she said it felt “much more competitive,” especially to the fans. The amount of hits and the aggression each team displayed was much higher than normal. And those kinds of bouts are just fine by Murphy. “I love the hard-hitting bouts,” said Murphy. “It feels a lot more like old derby, where…you get out there, and you have to be aggressive. You have to constantly be thinking about what’s going on strategically.” For the next seascore was 156-19, with the medical team came out to take son, which begins in March, Dollz having the clear ad- a look. She had not been hit Murphy said that she and the vantage. By this point, it was particularly hard, but was hav- rest of the Dollz will be playobvious that the TexPistols’ ing a hard time with the pace ing a lot of tournaments and defensive wall was weak at of the game, endurance-wise. away bouts, in a bid to increase best. Time and again, the After a few minutes, she was their rankings in the WFTDA jammers from the Dollz back on her skates, and head- (Women’s Flat Track Derby swept past their defense, ing toward her team’s box. Association). usually on the inside. There Derby waits for no woman. There has been some interest shown in transforming roller derby into a professional sport. While, on the surface, this may seem like a good thing, though Murphy said she has “mixed feelings about it.” For now, before any “big wigs” get their hands on derby and turn it into a money-making machine, Murphy wants it to stay s k a t e r- o w n e d and operated. “I think everybody has this dream of playing derby professionally,” said Murphy. “But I think that it would change the culture of the game. I think anytime you doAbove, West Texas Roller Dollz’ Angie “Shadow Smith” Smith, ing something out 13, and Leila “Iron Fist Ghost” Forougi, 99, block El Paso of obligation, even Tex-Pistols’ Rie “Secret Asian Slam” Romero. Left, West Texas if you’re getting Roller Dollz’ Chrystal “Dream E. RaceHer” McCullar, 11, skates paid to do it, you through a hole in El Paso Tex-Pistols’ defensive wall created by tend to lose that teammate LaKendra “Bam Bam BlockHer” White, 143. fire. (It would be) politics rather than was often the appearThe remainder of the sec- who is the most athletically ance that there was in- ond period was similar to the skilled at this game.” deed no wall from El first, with high scoring from Paso, whereas their jam- the Dollz and heavy hits all mers were repeatedly around. The final, official blocked by the wall of score was WTRD 305, Texthe Dollz. There were Pistols 46. only a few instances At the end, after the MVPs zhollingswor7184@students. when a lead jammer was for each team were announced southplainscollege.edu 23 SPORTS Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Texans win two at home, suffer close loss on road against sixth-ranked Indian Hills Nov. 15 in a rematch of last year’s Final 8 game in the National Tournament. SPC got off to a running start in the first half and took a 60-38 lead to the locker room at intermission. However, the Warriors had only lost one left on the clock, slipping past the Texans, 99-98. Once again, six Texans The South Plains College scored in double figures, led men’s basketball team looks by Spight with 22 points. to be starting the season off Also scoring in double figstrong after the opening weeks ures for SPC were Birt with of play. 17, Jones with 16, Neel with The Texans travelled to 13 points, and Omogbo and Ottumwa, Iowa, Deonte Hearns to participate in with 11 points the Bowling RV each. Classic, hosted The Texans by sixth-ranked hosted the TexIndian Hills an Classic and Community dominated both College. opponents they SPC squared faced. The conoff against then test on Nov. 7 3-1 Marshallagainst Coastal town on Nov. Bend College 14. was the first Freshman home game forward Marof the season, lon Jones led and the Texans the Texans in showed exactly the 94-85 victowhy they were ry, with a douranked No. 3 in ble-double of 30 the NJCAA. points and 10 Birt led the rebounds. way for SPC After an with 17 points, evenly-matched as the Texans first half, the cruised to their Te x a n s w e n t second victointo halftime ry of the seatrailing by one. son, defeating Coming out in Coastal Bend, the second half, S P C j u m p e d South Plains College men’s basketball tips off against 69-49. The vicout to an early Wayland Baptist University’s junior varsity team on in tory moved the lead and con- Levelland on Nov. 8. DEVIN REYNA/PLAINSMAN Texans to 2-1 on the season. tributed to batPRESS Both teams tle until coming got off to a slopout on top. home game in the past four py start that included multiple SPC finished the game with six players in double figures. years, so the Texans knew fouls and turnovers by each Sophomore Emmanuel Omog- they weren’t going to lay down team. The Texans led by as many as 11 during the first bo led the way with 15 points. easy. The game came down to half, but the Cougars cut the Also scoring in double figures were Andre Spight with 13, the final 1.8 seconds when lead down to seven before the Brandon Neel with 11, and Pat Indian Hills had the ball out half. SPC headed to the locker of bounds under their basket, room with a 26-19 lead. Birt with 10 points. The Texans came out with The Texans matched up and then scored with no time by BRITTANY BROWN Sports Editor some fire under them to start the second half, quickly going on an 8-2 scoring run, sparked points in the victory. SPC led by as many as 27, but would settle for the 20-point win. South Plains College’s Deonte Hearns slam-dunks against Costal Bend College in Levelland on Nov. 7. DEVIN REYNA/PLAINSMAN PRESS by a three-point play from Andre Horne. The Texans would not look back, as Spight came off the bench to hit four consecutive 3-pointers, finishing the game with 15 points. Pedro Konofino also chipped in 10 SPC returned to the Dome on Nov. 8 and were set to play Mesa College. But after a last-minute cancellation, the Texans faced off against Wayland Baptist University’s junior varsity squad. by JOSH RAMIREZ Editorial Assistant and were the only two Lady Texans to score in double digits. Courtney Randle chipped in nine points in the game. As a team, the Lady Texans The Texans opened the game with the same momentum they ended the game with against Coastal Bend the night before. SPC had five players score in double figures. David Kadiri had a game-high 32 points and 17 rebounds to lead the Texans, while Horne and Neel pitched in 24 and 23 points, respectively. Birt tossed in 11 points, while Lincoln Davis was close behind with 10. The Texans got off to a quick start against WBU, jumping out and going on a 16-2 run in the early minutes of the first half. SPC built up a 49-point lead that they would take into halftime. Not much changed with the start of the second half. The Texans hit their first six shots, including four consecutive 3-pointers from Neel and Horne, and a couple of dunks from Kadiri. With the 125-47 victory, the Texans moved to 3-1 on the season. The Texans were to host the Texans Classic on Nov. 21- Nov. 22. Teams participating in the event were Seward Community College and Collin County. Results were not available at press time. bbrown8223@students. southplainscollege.edu Lady Texans struggle in consecutive games The South Plains College women’s basketball team was looking to string together some victories after a tough start to the season. The Lady Texans traveled to Liberal, Kansas on Nov. 14 to face 20th-ranked Seward County Community College in their first game at the Billy’s/ Days Inn Classic tournament. The Lady Texans fell to Seward County CC 84-56, leaving them with a 1-2 record to begin the season. Victoria Lopez, who played 32 minutes, went 4-for-10 from the field, including three 3-pointers, and Paris Townsend, who played 31 minutes, hit five of her 11 shots from the field, making two 3-point shots. Both women led the team in scoring, finishing the game with 12 points each, shot 35.6 percent from the field, including 9-for-25 shots from beyond the arc. The woes continued as the Lady Texans turned the ball over 27 times, and were only able to get six steals. The Lady Texans had the chance to put a positive spin on the weekend the following day when they played second-ranked Hutchinson Community College. But they dropped a 74-36 decision instead, with their record falling to 1-3 on the season. Regina Scott and Townsend finished with eight points each for SPC. The Lady Texans finished the game with 24.2 percent shooting from the field, and only shot two free throws in the game, failing to capitalize on either. The Lady Te x a n s w e r e back in action Nov. 21-22 when they traveled to Snyder to take on Temple College and Southwest Texas Junior College. Results were not available at press time. jramirez5196@students. southplainscollege.edu Top, Johnesha Major, and above, Courtney Randle, left, and Major practice for upcoming games in the Texan Dome on the Levelland campus on Nov. 19. CYNDI SIKES/PLAINSMAN PRESS 24 SPORTS Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 Cross country teams give strong effort at NJCAA Championship by JOSHUA RAMIREZ Editorial Assistant The South Plains College men’s and women’s cross country teams put their best feet forward with their performances at the NJCAA Cross Country Championship. The championship meet was held on Nov. 8 at the Shadow Hills Golf Course in Lubbock. Antibahs Kibiwott, who had finished first overall in his last three meets, fell short of his usual mark, coming in second overall with a time of 24:25, seven seconds behind Central Arizona’s Harry Mulenga. The next Texan runners to cross the finish line were Jose Martinez and Hassan Abdi, finishing in 25:08 and 25:19, respectively, while placing 10th and 11th. The next SPC runner to finish was Kelvin Keter, who completed the 8,000-meter course in 25:47, finishing 21st. The last runner to score for the Texans was Colton Hollis, who crossed the finish line in 26:04 and came in 27th overall. The Texans, who came into the meet ranked first in the nation, finished third overall as a team, at the NJCAA championship with a final score of 71 points. SPC Texans finished just nine points behind Iowa Central Community College, with two runners placing in the top five and finishing first with a team score of 62 points. Central Arizona lead by Mulenga,placed second with a team score of 68 points, beating the Texans by a slim three-point margin. With a third-place finish, the Texans fell short of their expected mark, but Coach Frank Barker says he couldn’t ask any more from his team. “I told them, if you guys go Photos courtesy of Wes Underwood/College Relations out there and give it all, then I can live with that,” Baker explained, “and if we get third, then that’s great. If you come up and tell me you felt like you had more, I won’t be too happy.” Barker went on to say the men gave everything they had during the championship race. “The kids laid it all out on the line,” he added. “Every one of those guys were collapsed when they came through the line. They just did a fantastic job. They gave everything they had.” The Lady Texans, who came into the NJCAA championship ranked 10 th in the nation, had their best finish of the day come from freshman runner Victoria Salvadores, who traversed the 5,000-meter course with a time of 18:20, giving her 10th place overall. The next runners to finish for SPC were fellow freshmen Kassidi Jones and Lyndi Hanson. With times of 19:03 and 19:06, respectively, they finished 32nd and 35th overall. The final two scorers for the women were J’Cee Holmes, who posted a time of 19:16, and finished 41st overall, and Kaitlyn Henderson, who had a time of 22:08, finishing 212th overall. The women finished ninth at the NJCAA championship meet with a team score of 285. El Paso Community College placed first in the women’s team scoring, with three runners in the top 10 and posting a team score of 64 points. The next closest competitor, Central Arizona, finished behind by a staggering 46 points. Barker says there is no question of how hard his team has worked this season. “Every girl, across the board, had a person- al best for the season,” said Barker. “My sophomores, one of the two of them had a personal best, all time,” Barker said. “I can’t ask for more than that. If a kid goes to a big major meet like that and they have their personal best, you know what they’ve done; they gave it all.” The Texans and Lady Texans will compete in their last meet of the year on Nov. 22 when they travel to Topeka, Kansas, for the NJCAA Half Marathon Championship. With all the teams participating in the Half Marathon, Barker said he knows there will be some strong competition for the men and women. But there are a few teams that will be sure to give the teams trouble. “On the men’s side, I would have to go with Central Arizona as being the one that will press us,” Barker said. “On the women’s side, probably El Paso. Our women have a good chance of winning it, but El Paso, I think, is going to be the team to beat.” In order to prepare for the tough competition at the Half Marathon, Barker says he has his team on a rigid training schedule. “I think what’s happening is I’m not real popular,” Barker said. “ Ye s t e r d a y, we went on a long run, and I knew coming back from the national meet, running as hard as they did, it was going to be hard for them. And it was hard for them.” Although the training has been tough for the men and women leading up to the last race of the season, Barker says he has a method to his madness. “They should have been sore from the meet because of the type of effort they gave,” Barker explained. “Then to come out and give them a day’s rest, then hit a long run, it’s hard on the body. But the other side of that coin is this is going to be our last real hard training day as far as distance goes. We’ll have a couple of hard workouts, then load up on the bus and be ready.” Results of the NJCAA Half Marathon were not available at press time. jramirez5196@students. southplainscollege.edu 25 SPORTS Plainsman Press November 24, 2014 College football stars making final push for Heisman Trophy by JOSHUA RAMIREZ Editorial Assistant It’s that time of year again, the time when football fanatics across the country debate the best football player in the NCAA in an attempt to find out who will be the recipient of the prestigious Heisman Trophy. Everyone seems to have an opinion about who should be named the best football player of the year when November comes around, and I’m no exception. This year’s Heisman race has already come to a head, with three weeks still left in the regular season. Three leaders have proven to be amazing athletes week in and week out, but which one is the best after week 10? Dak Prescott, a junior quarterback for Mississippi State, has had a season to remember without a doubt, throwing for 2,521 yards, 20 TDs, and 10 interceptions up to this point. He also has rushed for 861 yards and 11 TDs, making his presence felt in the Heisman watch this season. On the other end of the spectrum is Oregon’s junior quarterback, Marcus Mariota, who as accounted for 2,780 yards on 277 attempts, with a staggering ratio of 29 TDs to only two interceptions on the season so far Mariota, along with Prescott, has proven to be a duel threat, gaining 524 yards and scoring eight TDs on the ground as well. Another possible candidate for the Heisman trophy this year is Alabama wide receiver Amari Cooper, who has 1,303 yards on 87 receptions with 11TDs this season. With the stats that each athlete has posted, one can’t clearly decide who is the best. So the next logical thing to do is look at individual performances. Prescott struggled in the game against Auburn, throwing two interceptions to a single touchdown, completing only 52 percent of his passes. Roller derby should remain amateur sport by ALLISON TERRY Editor-in-Chief vent the other team’s jammer from escaping the pack as they pull their own jammer free. At first, I was elated at this possibility of roller derby “going pro.” Who wouldn’t want to get paid to skate? Never mind attempting to balance school, work, and practice. If you were funded well enough to play the sport, you wouldn’t need to work, and with this career opportunity, it would be tempting to re-think higher education. With all of this freed up, more time could be allotted to practicing at the rink and training off-skates. Recently, there has been talk of beginning a professional roller derby league. For those who do not know, roller derby is a sport played on skates, where “blockers” and “jammers” compete on a flat track. Segments of game time are divided into two-minute or shorter periods called Photo illustration by ALLISON TERRY “jams.” Within jams, four But then I truly gave it some blockers and one jammer from thought. each team line up on the track. The Lubbock league’s The blockers form a pack and the jammers pose themselves theme is “for the skaters, by to begin behind the pack on the skaters.” This entails the the “jam line.” The jammers’ league running practices, fundgoal is the break through the raisers, promotional events, pack, gaining a point for each and setting up bouts on their opposing blocker passed. In own, for their own benefit. The turn, blockers attempt to pre- Women’s Flat Track Roller Derby Association (WFTDA), the governing body for flat track roller derby, echoes this sentiment in a broader fashion. WFTDA boasts the sport is “real,” “strong,” “athletic,” and “revolutionary.” In their mission statement, they boast, “WFTDA promotes and fosters the sport of women’s flat track roller derby by facilitating the development of athletic ability, sportswomanship, and goodwill among member leagues.” The West Texas Roller Dollz, the roller derby league of Lubbock, are proud members of WFTDA. If professional roller derby existed, where would WFTDA be? This organization would cease to be of any importance, and the hundreds of American and international roller derby leagues that have membership in WFTDA would essentially become little league. Though the revitalization of the sport is still new, with WFTDA being founded in the early 2000s, for the time being, roller derby should remain an amateur sport, with its original grassroots beginning. aterry8911@students. southplainscollege.edu Although Prescott struggled with Auburn, he had a signature game in Mississippi State’s victory against LSU, when he threw for 268 yards and two TDs on 24 attempts finishing with a QBR of 183.8 versus a Tigers team that upset a red hot Ole Miss. Mariota has had what I would say is close to a perfect season. Not once to this point has Mariota had a QBR of less than 150 or completed less than 60 percent of his passes in a game. He showed why he is in the Heisman race in week 10 against a feisty Utah team, throwing for 239 yards and three TDs, with no interceptions in the game. Mariota posted a top performance while dealing with the loss of his starting center, Hroniss Grasu, and starting tight end, Pharaoh Brown. As for Cooper, the only receiver still in the Heisman race, he had a big game against top-ranked Mississippi State, with eight receptions for 88 yards and one TD. Another signature game for Cooper came in Alabama’s 59-0 rout of Texas A&M, ule than Prescott and Mississippi State, facing off with unranked Colorado and Oregon State in the weeks to come. While Prescott, who took a Mariota, hard hit to his Heisman Prescott, campaign with a 25and Coo20 loss to Alabama, per have will still face off had amazing with Ole Miss in seasons, after one of its two last taking in their games of the season. entire body Cooper who was on of work, I the winning side of the give Mississippi State game, will have an easier time against Western Carolina, but will have a tough game to end the season when Auburn comes to town. Prescott and Coothe edge to Mariota over per have tougher remaining schedules, but Mariota has Prescott and Cooper. Prescott has shown amazing more to lose in the last weeks talent this season, but when of the season. If Mariota puts stacked up against Mariota, he up a mediocre performance looks like the first runner-up. against an unranked team, And even though Cooper has and if Prescott and Cooper proven he is worthy of men- can have big games against tion with his performance in big-name opponents, it could big games this year, his stats result in a hard fall to second don’t jump off the page the for Mariota. same way as the Oregon quarterback. Mariota and Oregon have a jramirez5196@students. much easier remaining sched- southplainscollege.edu when he accounted for 140 yards on eight receptions and scored two TDs. Former WNBA star becomes Spurs coach, opens doors retiring in August. She played for the San Antonio Silverstars from 2007-2014 and the New York Liberty from 1999-2006. Women are not incapable of doing what men do. Some just don’t have the motivation or the drive to reach those high points in life. “Nothing in my life has re- by BRITTANY BROWN Sports Editor Most people would say convincing a grown man to play a professional sport under a female coach would be impossible. Some people would laugh at even the thought of that, but not the San Antonio Spurs. The Spurs hired Becky Hammon as an assistant coach in August, making her the first full-time, paid female assistant on an NBA coaching staff. Hammon, a WNBA legend, is paving the way for female athletes and coaches who are involved in a so-called man’s sport. With the Spurs hiring Hammon, I believe other NBA general managers will open their eyes and see that women can do just as good of a job as any man. Hammon’s ally ever been easy,” Hammon told ESPN. “I’ve always been someone who did it uphill.” experience and knowledge of the game and how it should be played makes her a perfect fit for the position. Most on-lookers are impressed by the fact that a NBA team hired a female to be a coach, but what I’m most impressed with is what she did to make it to this point in her career. Hammon ranked seventh in scoring and fourth in assists in the WNBA before Hammon was born in Rapid City, S.D. where she attended Stevens High School. After graduating high school, Hammon went on to play college basketball at Colorado State, earning All-American honors. Hammon, 37, is so much more than the NBA’s first female assistant coach, or the San Antonio Silverstar great. She is an example to young girls and women. With hard work and dedication, one can be anything in a “man’s” world. Last year, when my 10 year-old male cousin told me he wanted to play basketball, I was ecstatic. But with hesitation, I only thought about coaching his team. Because in my mind, I knew there would be fathers who brought their sons to practice, and if they saw me, a female, in the gym introducing myself as the coach, they would have something smart to say. I’m sure not a single person would ask me why I felt I was more than capable of coaching fifth grade boys. Most female athletes aspire to be in the WNBA, coach girls high school sports, or even become trainers because they feel that’s the only way they can continue to be around the sport and be taken seriously. Now that limit has been exceeded. H a m mon’s success thus far has inspired so many others, including myself. I applaud the Spurs for their decision. It will open many opportunities for women who want to be around a sport, but not necessarily play anymore. The Spurs have continued to be successful so far this season, so maybe now more women will be considered for coaching positions at the professional level of all sports. bbrown8223@students. southplainscollege.edu 26 November 24, 2014 SPOTLIGHT Plainsman Press Aesthetic awakening... Urban Stage generates awareness to revitalize downtown Lubbock by CAITLIN WELBORN Feature Editor Live local music, a party in the streets, good food vendors and more color added to the city. Those are ingredients for a glimpse into the future of what the downt o w n area of L u b b o c k could become through revitalization. This w a s demonstrated recently by Urban Stage, a project involving different departments on the Texas Tech University campus. This was a project to raise awareness that maybe Lubbock could use a little more culture. For the first time ever, a six-day event of culture, good food, and live music for the public to enjoy. This event was hosted by Urban Tech, College of Architecture, City of Lubbock, Texas Tech Department of Theater and Dance, Civic Lubbock Inc., and Lubbock National Bank. Each sponsor contributed to the idea and helped host the event to bring awareness to the public that downtown Lubbock needs a more modern touch. To add to it, the community offered to do their part in support of the cause, according to David Driskill. Those organizations that participated were: H u b Theater group, H u b Performing Arts School, Brave Combo, Courier Coffee Bar, and Twist’d Texan. Others included Klemke’s Sausage Haus, Knights of Columbus, Ecowater systems and Cody Malone Landscape maintenance, Tom’s Tree Place and Pharr and Company. One of the most influential parts of the project was Texas Tech’s College of Architecture that hosted most of the events for Urban Stage. Driskill, who is the director of the program at Texas Tech, says that this is a very experimental project that has just started. Depending on how it is received will determine if this event will happen again next year. “Really, what this is all about is getting more cul- ture into Lubbock,” explains Driskill. He approached many of his architecture students about wanting to do this project, and they all agreed to help set it up and build the art that would be dis- played all week at each event. Many of the art pieces included the Pocket Park that was most- ly set up by Lubbock National Bank, which is expected to be kept year round. But in the middle of Avenue J, between Broadway and Main Street, there were places for people to sit and many interesting abstract pieces were scattered about the street. Light fixtures and plastic balls were fused together to create a sculpture. Also, couches and various other unique sculptures of every color and shape were displayed. There were plenty of places to sit for everyone, and mostly free alcohol was served to those over the age of 21. Driskill says that this was just a chance to exhibit what Lubbock could do to bring more culture to Texas Tech and the community overall. He says that it was also a time for everyone to mingle and have a good time. “We have a few local shops open that are hoping to at least stay open through the Christmas holidays, as well as some street food for everyone,” s a y s Driskill. The week started out with B i k e the Art Trail. It is an eightm i l e round trip that started at 5:30 p.m. at the Outdoor Pursuit Center on the Tech campus. From there, it made stops at Urban Tech on Avenue J, and various places in the Depot District. On Oct. 30, Oktoberfest was held. The free event was held on Avenue J, between Broadway and Main Street, where every event was to be held. There was live music by brave Combo and street vendors including Knights of Columbus, and Klemke’s Sausage Haus. On Halloween, Urban Stage held the Monster Dash Fun Run 6k, which started and ended at Urban Stage on Avenue J, between Broadway and Main. It was a 30-minute run, with checkpoints along the way. After the Fun Run, a “Thriller” video and dance was held for those ages 17 and younger, and another dance was held for 17 years of age and older. The next day, there was a Fairytale breakfast featuring performances by fairytale characters. Patrons could enjoy their breakfast and get pictures with their favorite fairytale characters at the Lubbock National Bank Pocket Park that was built in the alley between two buildings on Avenue J, between Broadway and Main. On Nov. 2, there was a Broadway and Gourmet on Avenue J dinner, with a performance by theThe Hub theater group. On the last day of the week-long event was the Benefit the Band, which featured a night of local bands playing on Urban Stage. Along with the live music by various local bands in Lubbock, there were a few local shops that were open every day of Urban Stage. One of the local shops was a unique place that held a lot of art and tried to make the experience as interactive as possible. There were pens taped on all of the walls of the shop, and the owner encouraged all of the patrons entering to write something, anything, on the walls. This shop also sold wine by the cup (at least they did on the last night). Also on the street where Urban Stage was being held was Giorgio’s Pizza, which participated in the event by holding a cabaret night every night of Urban Stage. The show was offered by the Hub theater group, with a different show every night, followed by live music. Giorgio’s sold pizza by the slice and by the whole pie, so that those who wanted to wander the exhibit could do so while enjoying some good local food. Driskill said that each event was made to be family friendly, as well as for college students to enjoy. The project was to create and help support more culture in Lubbock, according to Driskill. cwelborn6538@students. southplainscollege.edu PHOTOS BY ALLISON TERRY/PLAINSMAN PRESS