May 2015 - nwacc - Northwest Arkansas Community College

Transcription

May 2015 - nwacc - Northwest Arkansas Community College
May 2015
News Briefs
Graduation Ceremony
Volunteers Needed
Graduation is a day our students
all look forward to. We need
volunteers to help make this an
extra special day for our graduates.
There are several times and duties
still remaining.
Please sign up and commit a
couple of hours to helping our students celebrate their achievements.
We have the following needs:
• Set up at 6:15 a.m. and continue until finished.
• Alumni table attendants for 9
a.m., noon and 3 p.m. ceremonies.
•Photo card holder for the noon
ceremony.
• Ushers for 3 p.m. ceremony
• Robing room attendant for 9
a.m., noon and 3 p.m. ceremonies
• Tear down and clean up beginning immediately following 3 p.m.
ceremony.
Please contact Becky Hudson at
[email protected] or 479-9866682 to volunteer.
Recycle for Sight
Millions of people all over the
world lack access to basic eye care
services. During the month of May,
the NWACC Disability Resource
Center will be participating in Recycle for Sight month through the
Lion’s Club International. We will
be collecting eyeglasses, reading
glasses, frames, and sunglasses
to help those in developing nations
who do not have the resources to
buy them. Please help by donating
your unused glasses!
A collection box will be in the
Disability Resource Center (Student
Center, 114) through June 1.
DREAMers Scholarship
Available
Are you a DREAMer? You may
be eligible for a scholarship at attend NWACC in Fall 2015!
Eligible applicants must be
willing to participate in volunteer
opportunities with the DREAMers
of NWACC Club. Full eligibility
requirements and instructions on
how to apply are detailed on the
scholarship application located
HERE. . Deadline to apply is 4 p.m.
on June 4, 2015. For questions,
please contact scholarships@
nwacc.edu.
College Supports
Nepalese Students
Nepal recently was devastated
by a 7.8 magnitude earthquake.
There is a significant loss of life and
many displaced families.
The college has 5 Nepalese
students in our NWACC family
who have been affected by this
catastrophic event.
The Global and International
Programs office has identified a
non-profit organization named
Health Foundation Nepal (www.
healthfoundationnepal.org), which
was formed by a team of Nepalese
medical doctors residing in United
States. The organization is very
trustworthy.
Please consider them if you want
to help Nepal. Here is their link:
http://www.healthfoundationnepal.
org/earthquake-relief-fund.html
NorthWest Arkansas Community College’s Student-Run Newspaper Since 2007
Vol. 10, No. 9
College Welcomes Film Festival
Tanya Castella
Staff Writer
Geena Davis is teaming
up with ARC Entertainment
to launch the Bentonville
Film Festival with the aim of
championing women and diversity in all aspects of film.
The festival is set for May
5 - 9 in the northwest area,
with panels and screenings
happening on the NorthWest
Arkansas Community College campus. Dr. Megan
Bolinder was a key player in
ensuring some festival events
took place at NWACC. She
is also one of the screeners
and one of the jurors for the
festival. Though she couldn’t
share anything about the
films themselves, she shared
a few details of the events
happening on campus and
how NWACC became a host
for the festival.
“I do know we have four
Photo courtesy of Bentonville Film Festival
slots on our campus where
we are either going to host
screenings of the films, or
panel discussions where people come in and talk about issues related to gender in the
media,” Bolinder said. “Or,
we may even have one of our
spots be sort of like a green
room, where the people who
are connected to the festival
like actors, actresses, anyone
who might be on the panel can
sort of hang out in between
the viewings.” These events
will take place in White Auditorium at Burns Hall, or the
Walmart Auditorium at the
Shewmaker Center.
It took an early breakfast
and a lot of phone calls for
NWACC to become a host.
When asked about how our
campus got chosen for the
festival Dr. Bolinder said, “A
student in my Gender Studies
class, Peggy Hick, got wind
that there was this thing that
might happen someday in
Bentonville and she said that
it was about what we have
been talking about in class,
and that she hoped to someday be able to connect me
with the people talking about
these ideas.” It wasn’t until January that Dr. Bolinder
heard back from Peggy who
asked her to meet with Trevor
Drinkwater, the director of
the festival.
During their meeting,
Tinker Talks Freedom of Speech
Vanessa Brown
Staff Writer
Free speech activist Mary
Beth Tinker gave a lecture
April 7, at NorthWest Arkansas Community College to
a full and attentive room of
NWACC and University of
Arkansas students, teachers
and members of the Northwest Arkansas public.
Tinker is famous for her
part in the 1969 Tinker v. Des
Moines, Iowa, court case in
which the Supreme Court determined that students do not
lose their constitutional right
to freedom of speech when
they enter their classrooms.
Tinker spoke about being
raised by parents who stood
up for what they believed in
and encouraged their children
to do the same. Her father, a
Methodist preacher, lost his
position in two churches because of his advocacy for African Americans’ civil rights.
Her mother couldn’t stand
civil injustice either; she once
picketed a drug store in Des
Moines that refused to serve
African Americans.
So it was no surprise when
a 13-year-old girl who witnessed activism her whole
life decided to make a statement herself. After hearing
death tolls and seeing images
NEWS
Photo by Hillary Hollis
From left: Caleb Cannon, Mary Beth Tinker, Danny Cannon, and Alex
Cannon.
of the Vietnam War, Tinker,
three of her siblings, and a
few schoolmates planned
to wear black armbands to
school in support of a Christmastime truce.
Their principal learned of
their plan and banned the
wearing of the armbands.
A story about the ban ran in
their local paper. Some children decided they weren’t
going to wear their armbands
on the planned day, but Tinker didn’t get the memo and
wore hers. She was asked to
remove it at school and she
immediately complied. Over
the course of a few days Tinker, her siblings, John, Hope,
and Paul, and another child,
Christ Eckhardt, were all suspended in relation to the armband protest.
The American Civil Liberties Union caught wind of
FEATURES
For More
Event schedules and ticket
information can be found
at
www.bentonvillefilm
festival.com
Bolinder said Drinkwater
told her that the BFF team
had tried to have part of the
festival hosted by NWACC,
but due to some miscommunication they got the message
that the campus was not interested. In that moment, Dr.
Bolinder told Drinkwater that
NWACC would be delighted
to have the festival held on
campus. “I was on my way
back to school before eight
o’clock in the morning calling everyone I could, like my
department head, Jim Laughton.” Between seven and nine
a.m., NWACC became a host
for the festival, Bolinder said.
See Festival, page 2
Waving
the Red
Flag
the suspensions and wanted
to help the students take it
to court. Tinker’s side lost
in both the district and appeals courts, but in 1969 it
was picked up by the Supreme Court. The Supreme
Court determined children
and teachers do not lose their
civil liberties when they are
in school, and this includes
their right to free speech. The
Court also determined that
schools cannot encroach on
that right unless the speech
is substantially disruptive to
school or impinges on the
rights of others. Tinker said
she didn’t even know how
important her case was until
she was older and getting her
nursing school degree and
saw her case in her textbook.
Today Tinker uses her fame
to advocate for freedom of
speech. She says she firmly
believes that children need to
know about this case because
“kids have great ideas” and
are “the great hope for Democracy.” So, Tinker created
The Tinker Tour, a program
where she travels to schools
and juvenile detention centers around the country to
teach kids about the importance of their first amendment rights and speaking up
for the things that are important to them.
April is noted as Sexual
Assault Awareness Month.
Throughout the month, the
Red Flag Campaign at NorthWest Arkansas Community
College has hosted many presentations on raising awareness and prevention of sexual
violence and rape.
The Red Flag Campaign
launched last September.
In conversation with Teresa
Williamson, head of the Red
Flag Campaign on NWACC’s
campus, gave some updates
on what the members of the
campaign have been working
on.
Williamson said the campaign is strong, “We are
moving around campus strategically. One day you might
drive into an area and see
flags and it’s just pulling your
attention. We did another
bathroom stall series. What
we find is more and more reporting of domestic violence,
dating violence and stalking,
and we haven’t had the influx
of sexual violence.”
Williamson said, as a society,
See Tinker, page 2
See Waving, page 2
Hayden Higgins
Sr. Staff Writer
NEWS
Woodward Speaks at U of A April Golden Eagle Winner
Mother’s Day
Check out Vanessa Brown’s coverage of award
winning journalist, Bob Woodward, and his lecture
at the U of A.
Aya Yassine covers the April Golden Eagle Award
recipient, Veronica Garcia-Carvajal.
Check out the Books, Bands, and Beyond, to see
what Crystal Bridges has planned for Mother’s Day.
PAGE 9
PAGE 5
PAGE 10
News
2 • The Eagle View
College Offers
New Math Class
In Fall
Foundations of Mathematical
Reasoning Reects
Real-Life Situations
Kevin Cathcart
Managing Editor
Starting in the Fall, 2015,
NWACC will be offering a totally new math course as part
of the Guided Pathways program, Foundations of Mathematical Reasoning (MATH
0064). The curriculum will
involve real-life careercentered mathematics, short
projects, multi-disciplinary
perspectives, and writing
across the curriculum.
The new class goal is to increase the number of students
passing classes and going on
to graduation and/or transfer.
NWACC Math Professor,
Barbara Rademacher, said,
“I am certain that the Foundations of Math Reasoning
will increase student graduation rates, because the course
connects math topics to reality and to each other.”
The first real life project
that the students will encounter consists of studying the
sad case of a child who died
in a hospital, as a result of a
medical error. For approximately four weeks, students
will learn the math required
to understand the mistake
that caused the child’s death.
They will also study the tragedy from many different perspectives: legal, sociological,
psychological, physiological,
medical, historical, etc.
Once all of the information is gathered, in assigned
groups students will present
their background research to
the problem, and the mathematics showing the reasoning behind the medical error.
Students will include their
project work in their portfolios, which will also include
their opinions, conjectures,
and math homework. Students’ semester grades will
be determined by homework
and test scores as well as by
personal journals and portfolios.
Students will be presented
with two additional projects
during the semester. The first
is exploring methods for creating baseball magic numbers
for a division in the American
League or National League.
The last project the students will discover through
research, the publishing costs
of electronic books vs. hardcover books. They will compare both e-book prices that
are available on Kindle and
Nook, while also comparing
those prices to the true costs
that are involved with print
publication.
The mathematical topics
studied will permit students
to have a sufficient knowledge base to take Math for
AAS (MATH 1003), or Intermediate Algebra (MATH
0103) and then College Algebra (MATH 1204) for science and business majors,
or Quantitative Literacy
(MATH 1313) for non-science majors.
Barbara Rademacher will
teach the first Foundations
class in the Fall. The multidisciplinary textbook, Math
Lit by Almy and Foes, will be
used as will the MyMathLab
computer program for homework, quizzes, and tests.
May 2015
SEMINAR
Continued from page 1
She was even able to arrange
for the festival’s team to take
a tour around campus.
“They came to see the space
before they literally flew out
of the airport and they loved
it.”
The NWACC student body
and faculty are getting further
involved by being a part of
the college’s volunteer team.
Justin Stewart, Communication and Arts Administrative
Assistant and Lead Volunteer
Coordinator for the NWACC
team, said, “It’s great that this
is going on and that we are
having it here on campus, but
it is also finals week,” which
makes the student and faculty
availability limited for volunteering at the festival.
“Student and faculty volunteers are going to be hit
or miss with the schedules
they are asking for, because
they told me that they are
requiring that everyone does
at least three shifts, but each
shift is going to be six hours
long,” Stewart said. “Volunteers needed to be very clear
about what their schedule is
going to be for that week,
they can cut their shift to go
take an exam and then come
back.”
Apparently,
NWACC’s
new BFF is here to stay. The
plan is for the festival to become an annual event, and
according to the festival’s
website, “Create a national
calendar of events to promote
women and minority; filmmakers, talent and financiers.
The festival will provide ongoing turnkey mass distribution opportunities for women
and minority owned production companies, independent
filmmakers and distributors.
The festival celebrates the
town of Bentonville and all
it has to offer, including cultural and outdoor activities.”
Bolinder said that next fall
her Gender Studies class will
“start some of the research for
Geena Davis’s foundation,
looking at the prevalence, or
not, of minorities in film, and
what that means for Arkansas
and for the country. It is going to be one of the focuses
for the class,” as a concerted
effort to keep NWACC connected to the festival.
it was clear Tinker had inspired many in the audience
because several waited up to
40 minutes for just a minute
to speak with her, shake her
hand, thank her, or share a
story. Tinker appeared happy
to stay. She signed replica
armbands and exchanged
email addresses with many
of the people she spoke to.
Two children, Caleb and
Alex Cannon, attended with
their mother and father and
waited to speak to Tinker
after the lecture. Tinker
asked Caleb, a third grader,
and Alex, a second grader,
what they would change if
they could change anything.
Caleb said “no world wars”
and “no more slavery,” and
Alex said “no more people
like Hitler.” Alex added that,
“They teach you not to fight,
but they fight. I don’t get it.
They do exactly the opposite.”
Tinker made sure to pay
special attention to the boys,
supporting her claim that she
thinks it’s important that her
message reach children.
The boys’ father, Danny
Cannon, is an NWACC student. When asked why he
thought it was important for
his children to attend lectures
by speakers like Tinker and
learn about issues like freedom of speech he said, “Because tolerance means letting
other people have a point of
view even if you don’t agree
with them. It doesn’t mean
you have the right to shut
them up. I want them to learn
at an early age that it’s okay
to stand up for what you believe in, but you have to do it
the right way.”
For more information on
Tinker Tour USA visit TinkerTourUSA.org.
TINKER
Continued from page 1
Tinker said she doesn’t limit
her tolerance of free speech
only to free speech she agrees
with. She told a story about
meeting a boy who was told
by his teacher that he wasn’t
allowed to speak against gay
rights.
Despite being an openly
gay person, Tinker told the
boy that he had the right to
speak his mind, even though
it spoke directly against her
lifestyle. She stressed advocation for freedom of expression of all ideas, not just the
popular ones.
After the lecture ended,
WAVING
Continued from page 1
it’s understood that it’s harder
to report sexual violence than
domestic violence. as Williamson said, “The victims
are accused. They are re-victimized over and over again
through the process. Even
when you come into counseling, it’s disclosed.”
Williamson said she wants
students to be aware that
NWACC has confidential
counseling and that there is a
way for students to have support and someone to talk to.
A project that Williamson
and the Red Flag Campaign
have developed for the sumEditors Note: For more mer is establishing the reinformation, contact Barbara sources they have and letting
Rademacher at brademac@ students know what they have
nwacc.edu or Larry Lord at available for them. “There is
[email protected].
a difference in reporting to
us and reporting to the outside criminal justice system,”
Williamson said. “We have a
conduct system that can assist someone if they are being violated on campus, or if
their violators are in the same
classroom with them. But
more importantly, that the
people reporting the abuse
Hillary Hollis — Editor-In-Chief
know they are supported and
they have help.”
([email protected])
The bystander role will
Kevin Cathcart — Managing Editor
be another focal point as the
campaign moves forward,
([email protected])
along with issues of being
the victim of such abuse,
Business Manager
Hayden Higgins how to prevent it, or help a
Sandy Bobbitt
John Matar friend who may be the vicVanessa Derrickson tim of such abuse. As an
Copy Editors
Jose Hernandez example, Williamson said,
“When [you are] with your
Heather Holland
Aya Yassine friends and someone uses the
Ryan Holland
Tanya Castella word ‘slut.’ how do we define
that? Why is that person being called that? How do we
Photographers
change our language? BeAlan Baker
Newspaper Lab Supervisor
cause that is where we begin
Henry King
Mattie Watson to create agents of change.”
One of the events Red
[email protected]
Flag
hosted this month was
Staff Writers
Newspaper Adviser
a Stalking Presentation by
Debbie Baker
Denise Nemec Kim Bertschy. Bertschy reLy Mai Crane
[email protected] ceived her B.S.E and M.S. at
the University of Arkansas.
Elyssa Henry
She is a candidate for a M.S.
MISSION
The Eagle View
in cyber security from Utica
STATEMENT
One College Drive
College, Utica, NY. In adBurns Hall, Room 1459
dition to teaching, Bertschy
The NorthWest Arkansas
Bentonville, AR 72712
Community College
479-986-4016
participates with the campus
Eagle View
[email protected]
Red Flag Campaign and colstudent newspaper shall
Print Advertising:
laborates with community
provide students with a public
479-986-4016
organizations to provide outforum for responsible news
Visit us online:
reporting and commentary
www.nwacc.edu/web/stunewspaper/
reach in the areas of domestic
and shall reflect commitment
index.php
violence, Internet safety and
to integrity, truth
www.facebook.com/
cyber security. Prior to teachand excellence.
NWACCEagleView
ing, Bertschy was a police investigator for the University
Editorial content in the Eagle View is prepared by the students of Arkansas Police Departof NorthWest Arkansas Community College and does not
ment. During her nine years
necessarily reflect the views of NWACC.
with UAPD, she received
computer forensic training
© NorthWest Arkansas Community College Eagle View, 2015 from the United States Secret
Service and served on a joint
task force with the FBI.
In
her
presentation,
Bertschy gave statistics about
stalking in America. “75 million people in America are
stalked, with the primary age
range falling between 18-24
years old. Stalking is illegal
in all fifty states.” She went
through a variety of points on
stalking, such as what stalking is and what the behaviors
are of stalking, then segued
into cyber stalking and the
behaviors of those. Stalking,
by its definition, is “willful,
malicious and repeated pattern of behaviors that would
cause someone to be under
emotional stress and fear.”
Some behaviors of stalkers that Bertschy listed were
gathering information on
their subject, repeated nonviolent communication, to
waiting by the subject’s car or
sitting at the subject’s work
or home. Bertschy said, “Reports don’t normally come
out until the behaviors have
escalated to more threating
ways. Only about 20 percent
increase to physical violence,
mostly from a previous relationship. The perception of
stalking is of someone you
don’t know, when really [it
is or could be] someone you
know or met.”
Bertschy
then
talked
about cyber harassment. She
summed up the definition as
repeated attempts to distress
the victim that take place
over time. She said, “The
Photo by Hillary Hollis
definition of all of these are
similar; it depends on the patterns of behaviors.” Some
behaviors of cyber stalking
were sending inappropriate
or unwanted correspondence,
sending malware, using spyware, and hacking. Bertschy
explained some ways people
may protect themselves from
being cyber stalkedare to
“Google yourself often and
you can have those accounts
[about you] removed – it’s
like monitoring your credit,
it’s monitoring yourself.
Learn the privacy settings of
different social media sites,
don’t accept requests from
people you don’t know, use a
strong password, use an antivirus program.”
Bertschy stressed the importance of everyone’s safety. She said, “We want the
students to report to us. They,
victims, want it to stop, but
once you say stop or ‘I’ll call
the police,’ you have to follow through. Stop all communication with the predator.
If you send them a message
or don’t call the police, it
gives the stalker hope.” As
a final tip, Bertschy gave this
advice: “Log all communications the predator has with
you. Save all messages, voice
mails, emails, record their
behaviors. Every time harassment happens, report every
time. Document every report
given to the police to show
the pattern of behaviors.”
Williamson
confirmed
that this is a long fight for
everyone involved, but the
resources that are available
on campus are readily available to anyone who needs
them. Through the Red Flag
Campaign, a strong support
system is there to listen to
the stories of students who
are struggling with this. Williamson said in an email that
this “embodies what we are
trying to do, which is get the
word out across campus that
we are here and can connect
students with resources. No
one is alone in this fight.”
“See Something, Say Something”
The Red Flag Campaign Mission Statement:
“The Red Flag Campaign is a Bystander Intervention program
designed to connect the NWACC Community through education
and empowerment. We want to create awareness and provide
outreach for issues surrounding domestic violence, dating
violence, stalking and sexual assault. We want to have a
community where everyone is encouraged to speak up and
speak out against violence and harassment. Students are
encouraged to self-report by going through to our Department
of Public Safety, the Director of Student Support and/or the
Dean of Students Office. Employees are encouraged to report to
our Department of Public Safety and/or Human Resources.
If you see a red flag in your friend or coworkers relationship,
SAY SOMETHING!”
For more information email the Dean of Students, Dale Montgomery, at [email protected] or redfl[email protected].
Teresa Willaimson’s ‘Red Flag Campaign’
Telephone: (479) 619-4315
News
May 2015
The Eagle View • 3
Challenges of Student Parents Varied, But Worth It
Hillary Hollis &
Tiffany Rea
Sr. Staff Writer
Earlier this semester, Eagle
View put out a survey for students at NorthWest Arkansas
Community College who are
parents with children at home.
The purpose of the survey was
to try and gain an understanding of the challenges faced by
parents attending college.
From the 99 responses
to the survey, 72 were full
time students and 27 were
part time students. The most
common challenges were
balancing school and other
responsibilities, scheduling
classes around their children’s
schedules, finding childcare,
and getting enough sleep.
Responses show an impact
on studies in regards to less
time to spend on homework.
However, also notable among
the survey responses was the
desire to set a good example
for their children by being a
good student and extra drive
to do well to provide for their
children.
Out of the 99 answers on
the survey, 41 suggested on
campus childcare as the one
implementation that would
most help parents succeed in
college.
Jerry Vervack, dean of social and behavior sciences,
said that in the past the college had constructed rooms
intended to serve as a training
room for the Early Childhood
Education classes to “get a
feeling for what it was like to
have a daycare center. And
at one time I talked about
actually using it as a daycare
center.”
However, they were never
used for that purpose, Vervack said. NWACC’s Early
Childhood Education classes
dealing with daycares were
moved to West Campus in
Fayetteville, an alternative
vocational school. NWACC
no longer has that location.
Early Childhood education
has been move to the Child
Protection Training Center on
the Bentonville main campus,
which was built in 2013.
Vervack said there are several factors pertaining to the
possibility of a childcare center on campus, such as liability insurance, cost, logistics,
and space.
Ethan Beckcom, executive director of institutional
policy, risk management, and
compliance at NWACC, said
that there have been conversations in past years to review
the possibility and feasibility
of a childcare center on campus for students “and perhaps
our staff.” Beckcom said, in
regards to the weight of risk
and liability, “Certainly that’s
a hurdle, and one that we realize, but that’s all it is, just a
hurdle. It wouldn’t necessarily be the only driver of that
decision to say yes or no.”
There is the accommodation
of a lactation room currently
in place at the college. It is
located in Burns Hall, across
the hall from the administrative services offices located in
room 1128. Wendi Cadel, in
administrative services, said
that mothers who have a need
to use it can sign up in room
1128. There is a one person at
a time policy, users are given
the key to the room while they
use it, and turn the key in after
they are done.
Barb Gordon, in administrative services, said the lactation room has been there since
2011 and was installed as part
of the affordable care act.
Cadel said, “Our focus is on
employees, this just happens
to serve students [as well].”
Another suggestion gained
from the survey was a club for
students who are parents.
Jared Bradshaw, case management officer in Career
Pathways, said he and May
Beth Haas, who now teaches
graphic design at the college
full time, attempted to start
such a club in 2012, when
Haas was in the learning services department. Bradshaw
and Haas were going to be
the advisors for the club and
the idea was to form a support
group of fellow students who
are parents. However, Bradshaw said, “We met once,
and nobody showed up. But
there’s nothing saying it can’t
be done now.”
One question on the survey
asked students how they over-
Photos courtesy of Tiffany Rea Photography
NWACC student Amanda Dwyer (center) with her sons Ethan Dwyer,
age 8 (left) and Nathan Dwyer, age 2, in the field by the Health Professions building on the Bentonville campus.
(At top) NWACC student Melissa Aroum with daughters Sinai Aroum,
age three, and Abbey Aroum, age nine. (In center) NWACC student
Richard DeCamp,center, with his daughters Brianna DeCamp, age
14, left, and Christina DeCamp, age 11. (At bottom) NWACC student
Steely Mays with her daughter Roselyn Mays, age three.
come the challenges of being
a college student while being
parent. The answered varied, but converged on a few
themes: planning ahead to
manage time, learning a selfsacrificing disciple, appreciating the important things and
not getting caught up on the
small stuff.
Friday, Aug.
Saturday,
Aug.29
29
Starting
Starting at
at 99 a.m.
a.m.
Ends at 3 p.m.
Burns
Hall 1459
Burns Hall 1459
Breakfast
and
Lunch
Lunch and
Snacks
Provided
Provided
Eagle View Staff Members Win at ACMA
Special to the Eagle View
Members of the NorthWest
Arkansas Community College Eagle View newspaper
staff received 10 awards
April 17 during the Arkansas
College Media Association
Convention at John Brown
University in Siloam Springs.
Editor-In-Chief
Hillary
Hollis received a first-place
award in newspaper feature
page layout for an October
2014 entertainment section,
a first place in newspaper indepth news for a story headlined, “Living Lab Home to
Rare Species,” and a second
place in newspaper personality profile for the story
headlined, “Fight, Flight
and Freedom: An American
Story.”
Former
Editor-in-Chief
Kristin (Webb) Sumpter received a first-place award
in newspaper editorial page
layout for a page design from
May 2014. Syndi Yeakley
won a first-place award in
newspaper editorial cartoon
for a cartoon titled, “How
Can You Tell the Good from
the Bad?”
In photography categories, Mark Stewart won first
place in newspaper spot news
photo for an image from the
ALS Ice Bucket Challenge,
and Elyssa Henry received a
second place in spot news for
a photo from the Fall Festival
of “Zombie” Sarah Smith.
Justin Hall received a second place in newspaper advertising for “March Mayhem Contest,” and Hayden
Higgins won a third place
in meetings/speech coverage
writing for “Board Discusses
Safety, Expansion Plans.”
The editorial staff received a
third-place award in editorial
writing for “Our View: The
Hunt is Over.”
Denise Nemec, English
and journalism professor, is
Nursing Program Sees Changes
Elyssa Henry
Sr. Staff Writer
Beginning in the 20152016 academic year, the
NorthWest Arkansas Community College Nursing department will no longer offer
the LPN to RN program via
Track 1. The Bridge to RN
program is still open for students who have current unencumbered licenses for LPN
(Licensed practical nurse),
Respiratory Therapy, Paramedics, Physical Therapy
Assistants, and persons with
Bachelor’s degrees in some
health-related fields with
hands on clinical experience.
Applicants are accepted
Feb. 1 though March 1 and
students start the following
August. The Bridge to RN
program is offered evenings
and weekends via Track 3.
Classes will meet in the evening and the clinical are on
the weekend. The classes are
hybrid and taught both online
and in class.
the newspaper’s adviser, and
Mattie Bailey is the newspaper lab supervisor.
We heart
transfers.
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Hannah Bradford
Transfer Counselor
John Brown University
[email protected]
479-524-7166
jbu.edu
News
4 • The Eagle View
May 2015
Fish-Powered Farming Featured in New Aquaponics Class
Henry King
Sr. Staff Writer
Students in a new eightweek, one-credit-hour class
will learn about self-sustaining aquaponics systems for
growing fish and vegetables.
Intro to Aquaponics is an
eight-week course taught by
Brian Benedict. He said the
course will teach what aquaponics is, how to care for an
aquaponics system and how
to build a home system.
Set up as a special topics
course through the Environmental Science Department,
the class is worth one-credit
hour and is transferable. The
course will also cover water
quality management, recirculating water systems, sustainability, soilless gardening, aquaculture and many
other topics about managing
a system.
Aquaponics is about combining both hydroponics and
aquaculture. Benedict said,
“If you raise fish for human
consumption, that’s aquaculture, and if you raise produce
in a soilless environment,
Photo by Henry King
Jennifer Burton, Ginger Roberts and Eleanor Kabala plant seedlings in the Aquaponics system.
that’s hydroponics. So this
live bio-filter is how these
two types of agriculture are
married together in a symbiotic relationship.”
The bio-filter, Benedict
said, is where the plants are
grown and fish waste is converted. Worms and bacteria
are introduced that eat the
fish waste and ammonia, providing nutrients and nitrates
for the plants to grow and
cleaning the water for the
fish. “Also you can add more
plants in because they are all
super saturated with the nitrates,” Benedict said. “So in
a smaller amount of space,
you can grow a tremendous
amount of produce. This is
also the only form of agriculture where you can grow
a complete meal.” In addition to the produce, Benedict
said the fish provide protein
and fatty acids.
Aquaponics, he said, uses
water very efficiently. Benedict said only 10% of the water put into the system is lost
to the plants and evaporation, which is useful in places where water is scarce like
deserts or during droughts.
As far as commercial use
and the job outlook, Benedict said, “There are a lot
of commercial aquaponics
farms and more are being
opened throughout the US
and different parts of the
world. It is the latest technology in farming, and it is
kind of a booming industry
in farming. “
“Aquaponics is an exciting topic. This is a fun form
of gardening to learn about
for easier and more prolific
gardening. And for anyone
who has ever desired having a fishpond, aquaponics
makes that dream a reality
through a small-scaled sized
fishpond.”
Community College Wins Stanley Grant
Doug Roscher
Staff Writer
Photo by Henry King
(From left) Marcus A. Farris, Steven Jones (in the back), and Blake k.
Mills explain their design of a water filter product for Alex Stratigakis’s
class. It is designed for individual houses to have their own water
filtration system. The water filter collects gutter water, which flows
through six individual filter layers. There are two holding chambers,
one for clean water and one for overflow.
Engineering Students
Present Product
Design Prototypes
Hillary Hollis
Editor
Students in the Intro to Engineering classes taught by
Alex Stratigakis and Khalil
Sharif at NorthWest Arkansas Community College presented the products they have
built throughout the semester
to their classmates during the
two weeks before finals.
Stratigakis said the engineering students usually showcase the products they have
designed in an engineering
fair at the college at the end of
the semester, but this semester
the class had to forego having
the fair because of class time
lost to snow days.
The course is structured so
that students form teams that
operate as a startup company,
Stratigakis explained. The
students choose their team
members and come up with
a design together. To help
decide who may work well
together, the students take a
survey to determine their own
operating styles.
“Each team has to study the
market and product features
and compare competition and
pricing strategies,” Stratigakis
said.
Students take the design
from “inception, to preliminary design, and then to detailed design,” Stratigakis
said. Next, an “evaluation
matrix” is used to fine tune
the design. Then, the students
must build a prototype. Each
team receives $100 dollars
from the dean of the department to build their prototype,
the money amount is always
the same, Stratigakis said. Finally, they pitch their product
to the class just as they would
pitch it to a company. The presentations are recorded and
uploaded on the EMPACTS
lab webpage.
Bo Darde, the multimedia
specialist at NWACC’s library, recorded Stratigakis’s
students’ presentations this
semester.
“I really like that it’s a semester long project and they
learn how to work together,”
Darde said. “Even if they
fail, they make a presentation about why it failed and
the whole learning process is
good.”
Sharif said that the students
may demonstrate their prototypes at local high schools and
talk to high school students
about engineering. The prototypes built for the class are
taken to the physics lab and
stored at the college for about
a year.
Most of the students in Intro
to Engineering this semester
are going into engineering as
their major.
“They all work hard, they
really do,” Stratigakis said.
He said he would like to have
an entrepreneur conference
where students would bring
their products to conference
and be able to showcase them
to representatives from industries.
The engineering presentation videos will be uploaded
to the EMPACTS lab webpage on the college’s website
at www.nwacc.edu/web/empacts/index.
NorthWest Arkansas Community College will be the recipient of a STANLEY Grant
consisting of $50,000 worth
of Stanley Security products
and service. The recipients of
the grants were determined
by a voting contest among
schools, grants were awarded
to schools whose student and
faculty voted the most.
Steven Hinds, executive
director of public relations
and marketing for NWACC,
said he expects to receive the
award during the summer.
He said a team at the college
has been meeting to determine the best products and
how they would be most beneficial to the students, faculty
and staff.
The grant is part of the
Together for Safer Schools
Grant Program. STANLEY
security pledged $600,000 to
And the Winners Are:
Tier 1 (fewer than 8,000 students):Kilgore College Grand Prize
$100,000 and Aquinas College Runner up, $25,000.
Tier 2 (8,000 to 19,999 students): University of West Georgia $150,000,
and Northwest Arkansas Community College runner up, $50,000.
Tier 3 (20,000 or more students): University of North Texas Grand Prize
$200,000 and The University of Texas at Arlington runner up $75,000.
the program, the winners are
given consultative security
services, access to STANLEY Security’s Software Solutions group and seminars
for school officials on security threat assessment and advanced Clery Act training offered by STANLEY Security
partner and campus security
experts. Winners of the grant
can receive any STANLEY
Security products or solution, including access control
solutions, video surveillance
systems, fire systems, intrusion systems, mechanical
and electro-mechanical door
hardware, mass notification
systems and other security
technologies.
Northwest Arkansas Community College was awarded
the Tier 2 Runner-up prize of
$50,000.
According to its website,
S Convergent Security Solutions, Inc. is a part of Stanley
Black & Decker, the second
largest electronic security
JOUR 1053, TR, DP-1:5 a.m.
JOUR 1061, TR, Noon-1 p.m.
JOUR 1023, TR, 1:30-2:45 p.m.
JOUR 2163, F, 9-11:45 a.m.
*Prerequisites: JOUR 1023 & JOUR 1053
JOUR 2061, W, 5:30-9:15 p.m.
*
company in the United States
and a “leading global manufacturer and integrator of
comprehensive security solutions.”
TAKE A SMALL STEP
TO GET HEALTHY
www.smallstep.gov
News
May 2015
The Eagle View • 5
Student Earns April Golden Eagle Award
Aya Yassine
Sr. Staff Writer
Veronica Garcia-Carvajal
Veronica Garcia-Carvajal
is the NorthWest Arkansas
Community College April
Golden Eagle Award recipient.
Carvajal, who is 14 years
old, said she “was surprised
and super excited to have
been given such an honor.”
She said she was even more
grateful when she found out
her Honors English profes-
sor, Dr. James Laughton,
nominated her.
“She’s been very active in
the classroom and around the
campus and I thought that
was something that should
be acknowledged,” Laughton said of Garcia-Carajal.
“She’s been very active in the
community; she’s a part of
this musical group that goes
around retirement homes,
performing for elderly people. She is a genuinely deserving person.”
Since enrolling at NWACC,
Garcia-Carvajal said she has
had an enjoyable experience.
“I was surprised how comfortable I felt among college
students twice my age,” she
said. “The big difference at
NWACC is that I am able to
work with many other people
with similar goals.” She expressed how grateful she was
for the opportunity NWACC
has given her to pursue her
ambitions.
Garcia-Carvajal is a homeschooled student who has yet
to graduate from high school,
but she has already accomplished quite a few things.
She explained that she is an
active member of the honor
society Phi Theta Kappa, the
English honor society Sigma
Kappa Delta, and has been
recently elected treasurer of
Student Government Association at NWACC for 201516.
In the process of being involved in different activities,
she said she has had a “delightful time” learning different leadership skills as well
as organizing fundraisers.
Garcia-Carvajal said she has
also made new friends ever
since she has been welcomed
to NWACC.
Although she is young,
Garcia-Carvajal hopes to
achieve a doctorate degree
in whatever field of study
she chooses. She said she has
her choices “narrowed down
to medicine or international
business.”
When it comes to giving
advice to other students, Garcia-Carvajal said, “It is important to keep working hard
even if you don’t think you
are seeing results. Everything
pays off in the end.”
New, Outgoing Senate Members Share Benets of SGA
Jose Hernandez
Sr. Staff Writer
The students of NorthWest
Arkansas Community College have elected their new
Student Government Association senate for the 20152016 academic year. The
elected members terms last
for two semesters. Elected
members are limited to two
terms.
The SGA senate is made
up of 14 members: nine
Senators, a Director of Communications, Secretary, Treasurer, Vice President, and
President. For their service
and participation, SGA members receive a tuition waiver.
Senators receive $400 and
officers receive $900. The
Division of Learner Support
Services applies the tuition
waivers at the beginning of
each semester.
Leticia Zark De Campos
has been elected as the President of SGA. She has a 3.5
GPA and prior experience in
student government. She is
also part of the International
Student Club where she holds
the position of Vice President. Leticia is from Brazil
and moved to Arkansas to
join the business program at
the University of Arkansas.
Campos said she hopes to
bring a lot of energy to SGA
and bring her group together
to listen to the voice of the
students. “I’m very competitive; I really want to be the
best in everything I do, and I
want my team to want to be
the best, too,” said Campos.
“I want people to see that
SGA is going to grow a lot
next year; I plan to make the
strongest team this school has
ever seen.”
Yohannes Seifu is the new
Vice President for the coming
academic year. Seifu is from
Ethiopia and is planning to
earn his degree in accounting. His said his career goal
is to follow his father’s footsteps and become an accountant for the African Union in
the United Nations. Seifu is
also the President of the International Student Club.
Seifu said he wants to help
students who are struggling
in college, either financially
or socially.
“I would like to help open
scholarship programs for
students,” Seifu said. “Many
people tell me there should
be a scholarship program,
and that we should start
something like that. I want to
put the voice there and talk to
the higher authorities about
it.” Seifu said he would also
like to start a sports program
for students,“I don’t see any
sports programs around; if
there were sports programs
such as the big universities
have, people would be more
interested.”
A returning member of
SGA is Arianna Meza. She
has served one semester
as a Senator, this year she
will serving as Director of
Communications. She said
she wants to earn a bachelor’s degree in childhood
education at Missouri South-
ern State University after
graduating from NWACC.
With her degree she plans
on becoming an elementary
school teacher.
As Director of Communications, Meza will be in
charge of advertising SGA’s
events on social media.
“If you look around, the
students involved are the
same for every event,” Meza
said. “I think the school
needs to work on getting
more students involved, or
letting them know about the
different clubs and resources
we have on campus.”
Meza said SGA has helped
past members become more
professional but also helps
students grow personally.
She used herself as an example: “I have learned how
to work with people from
different backgrounds. It’s
interesting to see the different backgrounds or different
points of view because of the
different cultures that each
person grew up in. I used to
be very shy, SGA has definitely helped me reach out
to different people and get
to know different people and
get out of my comfort zone.
Getting out of your comfort
zone is where things happen,
better things for you. SGA
has also helped me on how
to become more responsible.
Everybody has a different
role they need to play and different jobs they each need to
do, and if they don’t do what
they need to do it can mess
other people up.”
Priscilla Kirk will be the
SGA’s Secretary for the year.
She said she wants to earn
her degree in nursing. She is
working on it at NWACC and
plans to join the Bridge to
Nursing program at the University of Arkansas. Kirk received her Certified Nursing
Assistant certification at age
17 and is currently working
at a psychiatric hospital. She
said she wants to continue
her career in nursing and become a Registered Nurse.
Kirk said she is focused on
helping her fellow students,
from students who are half
time to students who are full
time and working full time as
well.
“Right now I am a full time
student and have a full time
job and it’s hard,” Kirk said.
“But it’s possible, and I know
I’m not the only one. So I
wanted to see if there was a
way to help students like me.
[SGA is] the connection from
students to major staff and I
wanted to be in the middle of
that, trying to connect people.”
When asked what the
most important skill she has
learned is Kirk said, “Leadership, I want to evolve as
a leader. Right now where I
work is a hospital setting, in a
psychiatric hospital, and you
need somebody that has the
coping skills and the social
skills to lead.”
Departing members of the
SGA also expressed that they
had learned much during
their terms.
Frank Tchameni’s term
ends this semester, and he
plans to transfer to the Uni-
versity of Arkansas to earn a
master’s degree in accounting. Tchameni was a part of
SGA for one term.
Tchameni said, “Something challenging was to face
and deal with the cultural
diversity. As a foreigner, it
is not easy all the time, but
as a leader I have learned to
deal with and serve students
first. SGA helped me to improve my leadership skills
and to put other people’s interests and well-being ahead
of mine.”
Wendy Echeverria is the
departing president of SGA.
She first started with SGA
as a senator in 2013-14, and
became president for the
2014-15 academic year. She
has one more semester to
complete at NorthWest Arkansas Community College
and plans to transfer to a four
year institution and earn a degree in broadcast journalism.
During her presidential
term, Echeverria and the
SGA members were able to
start a program called Syllabus Bank, which she said she
thinks help students further
succeed in their studies. With
Syllabus Bank, students will
be able to look at the syllabi
of specific teachers’ courses
before they sign up for them,
to see what the instructor expects of them.
“I am proud of Syllabus
Bank, our Induction, Constitution Day, and I am very
proud of the elections,”
Echeverria said. “Becoming
president has matured me a
lot, and now I can take criticism and improve with it. I
am not the same as I was before!”
Photo by Jose Hernandez
From left to right: Leticia Zark De Campos, Yohannes Seifu, Veronica Garcia Carvajal, Priscilla Kirk, and
Ariana Meza being sworn in at the Student Government Association Induction on April 13.
Photo by Jose Hernadez
From left to right: Marcus Williams, Moses Agare, Wendy Echeverria, and Christy Reynolds.
Echeverria said she feels
“great” about the SGA members for this year. Echeverria
said, “They were amazing. I
have seen so much change
in them. I’ve seen so many
people open up. I felt really
good about it. I felt like in a
way I pushed them to do that,
which I love to see! I am sad
to leave, but I am very excited for the next team.”
–
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s
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Make th
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Get
at Pitt State!
• More than 450 courses
to choose from
• More online courses
than ever before
• In-state tuition available
ENROLL NOW:
pittstate.edu/summer
Must attend orientation to enroll for fall.
NWACC Graduates
6 • The Eagle View
May 2015
College Names December 2014, May 2015 Graduates
Honors Graduates
Students notes as Summa
Cum Laude are anticipated
to have earned a cumulative
grade point average of 4.0
Those designated as Magna
Cum Laude are expected
to have a cumulative grade
point average of 3.5 to 3.9.
Certificate Programs also
offer special recognitions
for achieving outstanding
grades. Those earning their
Technical Certificates and
Certificates of Proficiency
with a cumulative grade point
average of 4.0 receive the
designation of “With Special
Distinction” and those earning a cumulative grade point
average of 3.5 to 3.9 receive
“With Distinction” recognition.
Business Associate
of Science
Computer Information
Systems Associate
of Science
Tyler Steven Buchanan **
Timothy B. Talley
Lucas Miles Vo
Candida Renae
Xoumphonephackdy
Business Management
Associate
of Applied Science
Accounting Technology
Ronald Matthew Barnett
Beverly J. Burr
Herlinda Camacho
Christi Lynn Charles
Patricia Ann Cranford **
Michaella Hogan
Anthony Gerard Lance ~
Leonidas Alfonso Lopez **
Jessica Jeanette Moss **
Melissa Diane Reed **
Lourdes Valladares
Wanna Zhang
Banking and Finance
Lindsey Danielle Herriage **
Alyssa Dawn Webster **
Entrepreneurship
Leesha Ann Farris ~
Adam Keith Jackson
General Business
Caren Renee Carrothers **
Lynda Karol Green **
Corine Marie Hinrichs **
Yesenia Hernandez **
Yolimar Hinojosa **
Brittany Diane Hudson
Diane Marie Kallick
Tammy J. Knowles **
Matthew Kelly Lee **
Victor Manuel Lopez
Catherine Annette McCall **
Michelle Louise McKeever **
Shannon Nicole Olson **
Maria Vazquez
ter
gis !
e
R ow
N
Logistics
Management
Anthony Gerard Lance ~
Barbara Walts Lance **
Randy L. Skaggs **
Retail Management
Yolimar Hinojosa **
Derek Steven Hubert **
Victor Manuel Lopez
Leonidas Alfonso Lopez **
Kerri Lynn Mugley
Rana Christin Weidman
Accounting Technology
Technical Certificate
Rebecca Lynn Hilliard W
Frank Gatien Tchameni W
Computer Aided Drafting
and Design
Associate of Applied
Science
Architectural Design
Aaron Daniel Agnoli **
Santiago F. Gonzales
Derek Kyle Hileman **
Colby David Powe **
Veronica U. Pulido
Mechanical Design
Simon Cheng **
Harold Austin Hammons **
Jennifer Dawn Hart **
Johnson Van Nguyen
Veronica U. Pulido
Edwin D. Smith ~
Taylor Christian Thompson
Mechanical Design
Technical Certificate
Johnson Van Nguyen
Computer Information
Associate
of Applied Science
Computer Information
Systems
George R. Bush
Jacob Philip Leinen
Amber Louise Montoya ~
Houa Moua
Sarah Mae Wetherbee
Computer Networking
Jason Chanthalangsy
Melissa Kay Gibson **
Kevin Scott Guthrie **
Adam Daniel Jackson
Yia Lor
Jose C. Ortega Gachuzo **
Thomas Twyford
Benjamin James Wallace
Nathan E. Whisenant
Computer Programming
Jessica Campos
Juan Carlos Delgado **
Lindsay C. Eldridge **
Adriana Juarez Zavala
Kristopher Wayne Parks **
Geoffrey Allen Shook
Rebecca (Becca) D.Thursby ~
Fadi Tommalieh
Jeffrey Van Sickler ~
Robert Marshall Voss
Cher Vue **
Networking Technical
Certificate
Culinary Arts Associate
of Applied Science
Baking & Pastry
Shannon M. Cox
Chelsea Marie Everts **
Victoria Ann Guevara **
Ashley Larissa Henderson
Marina Careeve Hoofard
Casey D. Sequichie Lyon **
Megan Nicole Templeton
Mallorie R. Treece
Raynaldo M. Yamas ~
Culinary Arts
Francelina Elaine Aguiar **
Matthew Joseph Boles
Victoria Ann Guevara **
Marina Careeve Hoofard
Roman Landero
Jonathan Phillip Schulke **
Alejandra Natalie Serna **
Megan Nicole Templeton
Raynaldo M. Yamas ~
Hospitality Management
Courtney Taylor Beggs
Teresa Ann Carter **
Elizabeth Kristine Godfrey **
Victoria Ann Guevara **
Marina Careeve Hoofard
Jason R. Padilla **
Megan Nicole Templeton
Raynaldo M. Yamas ~
Culinary Arts
Certificate of Proficiencies
Baking Arts
Regina Elizabeth
Bowman WSD
Victoria Ann Guevara WD
Marina Careeve Hoofard
Dustin Michael Swigart
Raynaldo M. Yamas WSD
Culinary Arts
Robert B. Eubanks
Victoria Ann GuevaraWD
Marina Careeve Hoofard
Gregory Thomas Odle
Dustin Michael Swigart
Raynaldo M. Yamas WSD
Hospitaity Management
Elizabeth Kristine
Godfre WD
Victoria Ann Guevara WD
Marina Careeve Hoofard
Raynaldo M. Yamas WSD
Culinary Arts
Technical Certificates
Baking Arts
Victoria Ann Guevara WD
Marina Careeve Hoofard
Mallorie R. Treece
Raynaldo M. Yamas WSD
Culinary Arts
Francelina Elaine
Aguiar WD
Regina Elizabeth
Bowman WSD
Victoria Ann Guevara WD
Marina Careeve Hoofard
Raynaldo M. Yamas WSD
Hospitality Management
Elizabeth Kristine
Godfrey WD
Victoria Ann Guevara WD
Marina Careeve Hoofard
~ .........Summa Cum Laude
**........Magna Cum Laude
WSD...With Special Distinction
WD .....With Distinction
HP.......Honors Program Graduate
Raynaldo M. Yamas WSD
Communication and Arts
Associate of Arts
Yusra Khaled Abboud ~
Trinidad Aguilera **
Ashley Nicole Akins
Andrea Albarran
Michael O’Neal Alexander
Lyosi Alvarado
Jessica Summer Anson **
Desiree Lynn Baker
Stephanie Rose Baker **
Maria Del Pilar
Christina Victoria Bannan
James Terry Barley
Janett Barrera
Barbara Cristina
Barroso-Perez
Brittney Carollyn Barthel **
Molly S. Bauerly
Mandi Amber-Rae Beavers ~
Lynzey Renea Best
Michael Eric Blackston
Richard Allen Block **
Andrew Scott Blume
Hannah Gabrielle Bond
Aubrye E. Branscum
Macey Paige Brooks
Sarah Pauline Brown
Michael Orion Bryant
Shuyler Stone Joseph
Bugher
Hope Suzanne Burkhart ~
Allison Brooke Burton
Jennifer Lynn Bushnell
Jeremiah Ray Austin Capps
Brooke Christine Carder **
Liam Amos Carey
Dyana Michelle Carlton **
Jason Lindell Carter
Haley Anne Chambliss
Jenny May Chandler
Lissette Chavez
Lilah Susann Virginia
Chesne-Williams
Elizabeth Elyse Chesnut
Jose Nestor Cierra
Tiffany Sheree Clark
Stormy Layne Clary
Barbara Joella Clements ~
Lacie A. Collins **
Emily Jo Colston **
Ricky Eugene Combs ~
William Lewis Coones
Lisa Michelle Cousins **
Gregory Cole Creamer
Sherri Lynn Cruz
Catherine Vanessa Cruz **
Morgan Lee Cyphers
Emilie Ninon Czarnikow **
Brooke Ashley Delucci **
Gerrit Parke Den Herder **
Mikaela Marie Denham
Angelia Kay
Springston-Detring
Melanie Dawn Dilly ~
Mary Elizabeth Dockins ~
Amber Michelle Donahou
Wendy Renae Emery ~
Otis Glenn English **
John David Ernst **
Steven W. Ertle
Leo Paolo Estorninos
Kyla Forrest Fairbanks
Elizabeth Faulkenbury ~
Breezie Juane Faulkner **
Amanda Nicole Felkamp
Juanita Rena Ferguson **
Arika G. Fite ~
Felicia Angelic Fleming
Bobby Fletcher **
Jeremy Paul Fortune **
Kimberly Galicia
Jessica Garcia
Alex Michael Gildehaus
Claudia Rosina Gochi
Seth Paul Goff
Robin Marie Grear
Jacob Wayne Green **
James A. Green
Elizabeth Marie Gregory
Paige Elizabeth Griffith **
Richard L. Griffith
Albert Al Guod
Austin David Guss
Gloria E. Guzman
Jennifer Joy Hackler **
Kimberly A. Hammond
Heather White Hammons **
Jamie Lee Harris ~
Jenna Leigh Harvey
Lillian Victoria Hay
Kayla Reanne Head **
Keith Alan Helman
Garrett Shane Helmick
Anabel Hernandez-Madrigal
Kassandra Sanra Hernandez ~
April Marie Hersom
Hayden Adele Higgins
Colton Hunter Hill
Michael Cleveland Hittson
Jadon Scott Howard **
Julie Anne Hruza **
Laura Ann Hunt **
Ashleigh Catherine Ibos
Adrienne Nicole Ingram
Savannah Christine Ivins **
Stefanie Kaye Jackson
Melissa M. Jackson
Jordan Christian Johnson
Natalie R. Jones
Katherine Margarita Juarez
Amy Gabrielle Kappen ~
Jerah Ruth Kern **
Katisha Kay Kinion
Hannah Rose Kisor
Rebecca L. Krein
Michael Gregory Larson
Robert Elvin Lee Lawler
Troy Marinoni Lawrence
Christina Nicole Listoe
Sierra Nicole Logan **
Bani Abigail Lopez
Danielle Grace Love
Samantha Dawn
Malmo ** HP
Shana D. Martin **
Grace Kathryn Martin **
Edlin Martinez
Mariela Martinez
Dorcas M. Masila **
Jessica Lynn McCabe
Meri Shanon Mccall
Maria Ann MacLean
Lauren Lea Brooke McClure
Shana Diane McGarrah **
Rachylle Michelle McGee
Travis Ryan McKenna **
Tamara Leigh McNelly
See Graduates, page 7
Thomas James DePew W
Stephen A. Sites W
Let’s Get
Creative!
SUMMER’S COMING!
Newspaper Layout & Design
Rosanna Aguilar **
Yael Aguilar
Trixy Albarran
Saleh Abdullah Alsodmi
Karen Janette Alvarez
Astrid Carolina Aquino
Rivas
Kendall Cord Ashworth ~
Carol Marie Baserman **
Sonia Rubi Beltran **
Hannah Joy Bennett ~
Jacob Gerald Berthold
Alma Leslie Betancourt **
Andrew J. Bladow **
Jeffrey A. Brown
Colton Blaise Cappetta
Christian Alfredo Caraveo
Wen Chen
Kristopher Dale Christians
Joshua Jordan Cleveland
Benjamin Guy Cody
Mandi Michelle Cooper **
Kathy Lizabeth Cooper
LaRanda L. Crabb
Ever E. Cuellar **
Misty Dawn Davis **
Stephanie B. Dillon
Eric J Doherty
Jessica Lynn Ernst
Corey M. Evans
Steven Valentino Ferreira
Richard Leo Flowers
Shannon Elizabeth Flowers
Jason Michael Fraka
Elizabeth Faye Frank ~
Geoffory John Fruik
Erodia Antonia Garcia
Rosa Garcia
Miranda Mae Gregory
Alicia Gutierrez
Joshua E. Harrell
Nathan Alan Harvey
Alexander K. Henrich **
Veronica Hernandez **
Carlos Hernandez
Kay Hernandez
Eduardo Alex Herrera
Michael P. Houser
Sara Hurtado
Jared Bailey Ivie
Ali M. Jaber
Gunnar Parks Kemp
Dongkyu Kim **
Tyler Sutton King
Rachel Caitland Lafferty
Kou Lee
Mackenzie Carl Leichner
Alexus Naly Lor
Melissa Lozano
Dennis Omar Marin
Kristen Nicole Mead
Joshua Lee Mellott
Danely Mendez
Amberly Dawn Miles **
Bonnie Mitchum
Matthew Ryan Moore
Heidi Lynn Mosley
Blake Michael Neil
Megan Christine Nichols
Delmy Carolina Osorio
Jesse Lynn Parmain
Stephen Corley Pendleton
Martin Perez
Jacquetta Maria Pianalto
Deirdre Noel Piercy **
Emily I. Portillo
Maria Cruz Raygoza-Vidales
Kayla Ashlie Red
Timothy K. Richards
Jacob Matthew Robbins
Lessli Sarai Rodriguez
Diana Roman
Matthew Coty Rook
Erik Alexander Rowe
Kendall Glenn Rush **
Janet Salas
Heather Nicole Schriner **
Jayna Morgan Smith
Victor A. Soriano
Nathan O’Neal Spears **
Seth Jaubert St Pierre
Michelle Renee Tate **
Ernesto David Terrazas
Steven Blake Tourville **
Chris Michael Tribble
Conquisia D. Tyler
Terah Michelle Van Sickler ~
Mai Der Vang
Michelle Vazquez
Cesar Vazquez
Lyndsey R. Vernnon
Benjamin Andrew
Warrington ~
Wendy J. Widener **
James Andrew Williamson
Michelle Renee Wingard
Ziqi Xing **
Candida Renae
Xoumphonephackdy
Billy Ray Yocum **
Nichole Mae Young
Mohammad Amin Zabarah
++#
+*'&&*+),+')
0DWWLH%DLOH\,QVWUXFWRU
The list of candidates for
Spring 2015 graduation (including Fall 204 graduates)
at NorthWest Arkansas Community College has been released.
Graduation
ceremonies
will take place at 9 a.m.,
noon and 3 p.m. May 9 at the
Arends Art Center in Bentonville. It will include both fall
and spring graduates. The list
below includes students who
were on track to graduate this
spring pending satisfactory
completion of current course
work.
&
#+',)',)*
One)
Credit
Hour Course
Meets
+*&$-
**#'&*"#*()#&!
only 4 Sessions
in Fall 2015!
(%'&
& *-*
5:30 - 9:15 p.m. on Wednesdays
&&
'XULQJ¿UVW:HHNVH[DFWGDWHV7%$
Get your tank on.
Starting at $21.99
with a full color print
NWACC Graduates
May 2015
Continued from page 6
Ada Mariel Mejia **
John Monroe Metcalf **
Ariana Magali Meza **
Michaela Robison Milam **
Jessica Minez
Krystine R. Moore
Iaong Moua
Lynde Pajci Moua
David Wayne Neff
Alex Paul Newsom **
Lena My-Huyen Nguyen **
Melissa Rae Nicodemus
Veronica Nieto
Jason D. Norman
Drew Alexander Norris **
Rhonda Rachelle Oswald
Savannah Gail Packnett
Robert Lawrence Parsons
Gilberto Pena Jr.
Yochabel Perales
Rachael Michelle Perez
Adriana Perez
Yanh Phetsomphou
Diana Pompa
Karla Vanessa Prado
Corona **
Nancy Katherine Rapley
Elizabeth Ballesteros Reyes
Nicole Danielle Ricker
Maria Concepion Rivera
Daniel Roach
Haley Kaye Robinson
Hector Adolfo Rodriguez
Patricia C. Rodriguez
Tawny Jewell Rogers
Brandy Kaye Rollins **
Alejandra Rubio
Tiffany Ruth **
Marta Alicia Sanchez
Morgan L. Satterfield **
Sarah L Savner
Charles Bradley Schmitt
Jamie Renee Schneider
Kale Alan Schuenemann
Fernando Serna
Christopher Ryan Sherman
Erin Marie Sisco **
Tasha Smith
Zachary Steven Smith
Jessica Marie Smith
Lucretia Ann Snyder
Jennetta Souvatdy
Tracy Michelle Sprowl
Meagan Ashley Sputo
Shaunna Leigh Stevens
Michelle Strauch
Cayla Bethany Sunderman
Melanie Lynn Taylor
Max Lincoln Taylor
Brenda Marie Tenan
Leonard Tibon
Hailey Raye Tresner
Samuel Parker Triplett
Shadrach Ezekiel Tucker
Sandra Leigh Turner
Baokou Vang
Trey Utah Villines
Kayla Marie Vincent
Jenny Lizette
Violantes-Marroquin **
Hayley Nicole von Bose **
Brett Kyle Wagoner **
Ariel Eureka Walker **
Jennifer Melissa Walker **
Rachel Erin Wallace
Jesse Rey Warren
Sarah Naomi Watkins ~
Robert A. Watson II
Jordan Jo White
Maria Lynnett White **
Jennifer Ayrea Wilkerson
Amy L. Williams **
Kayla Beth Williams **
John Evan Williams**
Mary Helen Williams
Tracey Lee Ann Williams
Jaydon Craig Wilson **
Shelly Jean Wisecarver **
Roxanne Marie Wood
Sarah Beth Wright **
Tou Meng Xiong
Katrina Marie Yoos **
Shannon Renee Youmans
Ashley Anne Zebley **
Amilcar Anibal Zelaya
Cinematic Studies
Certificate of Proficiency
Terri Lynn Isbell W
Tracey Lee Ann Williams
Graphic Design
Associate of
Applied Science
Emily Blair Auxier
Jennifer Ann Barnes-Rivers
Carmen Lorena Carcamo
Randy Franco
Eric David Fussell **
Montserrat Leslie Garduno
Rachel Leah Goodman **
Ana Ceci Herrera **
Terri Lynn Isbell **
Bryce Andrew Lorey
Lyssa Lynn Lumpkin
Maranda J. Moore
Marcella DeAnne Shuey **
Srichan Singthui **
Graphic Design
Certificate of Proficency
Carmen Lorena Carcamo
Sharon Kay ClarK-Will WD
Eric David Fussell WD
Terri Lynn Isbell WD
Veronica Jones
Bryce Andrew Lorey
Srichan Singthui WD
Graphic Design
Technical Certificate
Carmen Lorena Carcamo
Eric David Fussell **
Terri Lynn Isbell WD
Veronica Jones
Rebecca L. Krein
Bryce Andrew Lorey
Mary Rose Waller
Health Professions
Dental Assisting
Technical Certificate
Brooke Aaron Boller WD
Roxanne Renae Curtis WSD
Amy Katherine Frank
Flor Isabel Gutierrez
Kathryn Marie Hanks
Bobbie Nicole Holman WD
Meagan Kathleen King
Lydia Richelle Lewis WSD
Alba Damaris Martinez
Brianna Nikole
McCutcheon WD
Kyllie McMullen WD
Lacy Kay Murray
Jasmine Jeanette Perez
Maria D. Rodriguez
Ashlee Jean Wilson WD
Kayli Star Wright
Fire Science
Administration and
Technology Associate
of Applied Science
Jeremey Seth Criner **
Robert Gary Eichler
Blake Tyler Finley **
Jonathan Ruhl Koucky II
Jonathan M. Ponthieux
Santiago Rosales
Health Information
Management Associate
of Applied Science
Sherri Lynn Bowerman
Tammy Carter Bronson ~
Marsha G. Brown ~
Tina Louise Jasper
Caroline Antoinette Kanable
Jennifer Jane Lunsford **
Shannon Kelly
McLaughlin **
Tia Shyanne Napier ~
Tricia Rose Stills
Health Information
Management Technical
Certificate
Sherri Lynn Bowerman
Tammy Carter Bronson WSD
Marsha G. Brown WSD
Bruce Claire Grubb WSD
Tina Louise Jasper
Caroline Antionnette
Kanable
Jennifer Jane Lunsford WD
Shannon Kelly
McLaughlin WD
Tia Shyanne Napier WSD
Donna Rivers Ramey
Tricia Rose Stills
Nursing Associate
of Applied Science
Jenna Lyn Acorn **
Destini Marie Ahrens
Tina Anne Alderson
Tracy LeAlana Alexander
Teresa Ellen Ashworth **
Kendell K. Barlow
Amy L. Bokolas
Paul Michael Bratcher
Carly Breanne Burbank
Michael Lee Carlton **
Jose M. Castro
Kimberly Renee Clardy **
Jason Daniel Clayton
Ruth A. Coonce
Amanda Lynn Copeland
Joni Diane Corp
Jerri L. Dalrymple **
Steven D. DeBord
Traci Lynn Dollarhide **
Cindy Yanira Estrada
Sarah Kay Evans **
Lonnie T. Finney
Meigan E. Fletcher **
Hope Marie Flores
Maranda Gail Foster
Victoria Lynn Fox
Katherine Lynn Freeman **
Jeremy John Gray
Maggie Ann Gray **
Duane Anthony Hamm
Kristi Dawn Hammons
Brandi Thomas-Harrington
Greta Hight
Cynthia Ann Hoskison **
Nichole Dannette
Hudsonpillar
Karen Taylor Hyatt
Amanda Jo Ison
Mike Paul Jackson
Stephanie L. Jackson
Lacey Dawn James **
David Andru Kapustinski
Melanie Renee Kelley **
Kristy Gale King
Daniel Adam Kington **
Scott Edward Koscheski
Shayne Austin Kremers
Kellye Louise Lamb
Kelly Lynn Laws
Diana Lozano
Kevin Charles Marple
Sarah Ann McHale
Mary Christine Merrell
Tammy L. Miller ~
Katheryn Renee Milligan
Lisa D. Moseley **
LaVena Marie Narvaiz
Cassandra Rochelle
Parker **
Vanessa Lynn Patterson
Tabitha Michelle
Patterson **
Sarai Perea
Bethany Nicole Pinkley
Ashley Elizabeth Reid
Shawnee Reynoso **
Robyn Nicole Roach
Kristi D. Rogers **
Emily Nicole Ruehr
Jessica Marie Sainsbury
Sarah Marie Saintignon
Jessica Denise Schneider
Toshia Marie Scott
Melissa J. Sipes
Angela Denise Spicer
Iwana Lou Stephenson
Amber N. Stewart **
Tabitha Corrine Summers
Serena Raven Tullos
Erin Marie Watkins
Melanie Ann Wiggins **
Yolanda S. Yeager
Catherine J. Zaman **
Elizabeth Merces Zimbrunes
Nursing Assistant
Certificate of
Proficiency
Savannah R. Adams
Michelle Cashman
Pisciotta WSD
Amber Michelle Robinson
Tricia Rose Stills
Paramedic Science
Associate of Applied
Science
Catherine Jewel Fate ~
Stephen Sebastian
Gilstrap **
Charles W. Lawson
Jason Daniel Norman **
Wendell Eric Smith
Justin Ross Wallis
Sarena Dawn Wyers
EMT Paramedic
Technical Certificate
Nathan Alan Atkinson
Antony J. Bland
Cash Anthony Olen
Cawthon
Matthew William Dennis
Amanda Lynn Ingram
Al L. Jones
Seth Isaac Mann
Nathan Clint Warrell
EMT Basic
Certificate of Proficiency
Austin Gabriel Barnett
Cody Bennett
Kyle Anthony Berry
Conor B. Bolton
Amanda P.Chandler
Tyler Gage Cox
Benjamin F. Dickey
Thomas McNeill Dudley
Sammi Michelle Eddie **
Blake Tyler Finley
Benjamin Fiser
Tim D. Franklin
Dylan K. Gayer
Steven Joseph Gerleve
Mark G. Hall
Melissa A. Hill
Karyn S. Jentzsch
Logan H. Jostad
Jeffery S. Kadri
Jonathan Koucky
Christopher A. Linn
John W. Lopardo
Jeoffrey A. Mccalla
Kyle Douglas Moore
Blake Neil
Bradley Nathan Nubbie
Zachary Scott Oldebeken
Devin Pearson
Alyssa Reed
Aaron M. Satterfield
Joshua Shaddox
Andrew H. Smith
Donald C. Werner II
Darrell Allen Whitlow
Chad L. Wilson
Keith J. Zardin
Physical Therapist
Assistant
Associate of Applied
Science
Brandon C. Atkins **
Stephen David Barthel **
Ashley Marie Bell **
Lindsey Kay Curry **
Tonya M. Holt
Scott Alan Johnson **
Leo Bernard H. Koch **
Pao Choua Lee **
Brian Lee Lewis
Henry David Lopez **
Jamileh Mahmoodi
Moznabi **
Rachael Dawn McKeethen
Lauren Rae Wall
Respiratory Therapy
Associate of Applied
Science
LaDonna Celeste Ayres
Alexandra Noel Barksdale
Brian Reginald Barrett **
Rexanne Coleman Graves
William S. Henry
Angela Jean Hickman **
Mylasia Breana Lawson
Andrew Rafael Perez **
Nicholas Ryan Ross
Meloni Dianne Smith
Katherine Denise Steele **
Pre-Health Sciences
Certificate of Proficiency
Juan M. Acosta
Frankie L. Ahmed
Destini Marie Ahrens
Ashley Nicole Akins
Tina Anne Alderson
Stephen Alexander
Teresa Ellen Ashworth WD
Emily Dawn Atchison
Shelly Marie Atchison
Brandon C. Atkins WD
Erica V. Avila
LaDonna Celeste Ayres
Windy Baird
Austin Gabriel Barnett
Andre D. Barrows
Stephen David Barthel WD
Ashley Marie Bell WD
Tonya Jean Bibrowicz
Kelly L. Biondolillo
Mary Lue Bjornstad
Sara Rose Bradley
Maricris Brown
Genna Grace Bryars
Dimitri Buckley
Adela Carranza
Jose M. Castro
Gretchen Bodemann
Cellers WD
Kaylee Clouse
Jennifer M. Coker
Madison L. Conklin
Dane C. Connell WD
Amanda Lynn Copeland
Lauren Cordrey
Calea Dawn Corzatt
Benita E. Creager
Lindsey Kay Curry WD
Jamie S. Daniels WD
Rhonda Davis
Stephanie J. Dishman
Stacey Rochelle Donnell
Jody R. Edmondson
Cindy Yanira Estrada
Julie Elizabeth Evans
Lonnie T. Finney
Brian John Fino
Maranda Gail Foster
Raquel Garcia
Huajie Geng
Maria A. Gibbs
Claudia Verenice Gopar
Tonia M. Graves
Jeremy John Gray
Gena M. Gregerson
Elizabeth Hope Hankins
Madison Harper
Christine Ann Hatten
Carley Christine Hollett
Tonya M. Holt
Cynthia Ann Hoskison WD
Michelle M. House
Nichole Dannette
Hudsonpillar
LaCresha Cherrell Huff
Morgan E. Hull
Victoria Brooke Jackson
Scott Alan Johnson WD
Brittany P. Johnston
Robert Junior
Sarah Kalagias
David Andru Kapustinski
Haley Meagan Keener
Monica Katherine Keller
Kelsey K.E. King
Leo Bernard H. Koch WD
Scott Edward Koscheski
Madison Paige Laird
Karen E. Lankford
Joshua R. Latham
The Eagle View • 7
Ashley M. Lattin
Nkaujkia Adora Lee
Pao Choua Lee WD
Sarah Blaise Leslie
Brian Lee Lewis
Merrin Kay Locke WD
Henry David Lopez WD
Diana Lozano
Dylan Thomas Lueck
Jamileh Mahmoodi
Moznabi WD
Nathan John Marcy
Heather A. Martin
Lindsey Austin McCollough
Rachael Dawn
McKeethen WD
Lauren Ashley McKenna
Davalene Irene McKinzie
Tammy L. Miller WSD
Alyssa L. Myers
Carolyn A. Nall
LaVena Marie Narvaiz
Brandy Nash
Martin M. Ndungu
Camille Lucia Newell
Penny Lee Nowlin
Melissa A. O’Brien
Andrew O’Grady
Maria Guadalupe
Olvera-Rojas
Alba Orellana
Elizabeth Pacheco
Jaime Mechele Padilla
Cassandra Rochelle Parker
Edward W. Parker
Lisa E. Pena
Sabrina L. Perry
Amanda C. Phillips
Katie Marie Pianalto
Elizabeth D. Quinlan
Tyranny D. Ray
Ashley Elizabeth Reid
Kimberly Michelle Reynolds
Shawnee Reynoso
Megan Nicole Rice
Brooklyn Desiree Riley
Morgan Renee Rosebeary
Shannon L. Rudder
Melinda Sue Schilling
Stacy D. Schraub
Alma Schulke
Toshia Marie Scott
Scott Edward Shufelt
Sean Slack
Jenny Rae Small
Kaitlin Grace Smith WD
Stephanie Smith
Meloni Dianne Smith WD
Ashley Elizabeth
Smithson WD
Richard Lee Smothers
Samantha C. Snow WD
Angela Denise Spicer
Katherine Denise Steele WD
Cole Thomas Stevinson
Tricia Rose Stills
David Morris Street
Samantha Erin Swenson
Jeannette Leann Taglauer
Pa C. Thao
Cassidy Nicole Thompson
Natasha M. Trotter
Shelbie Trozzi
Serena Raven Tullos
Astrid Johanna Valle
Pamela N. Vargas
Elizabeth Louise Vestal
Erica D. Wade
Lauren Rae Wall
Stephanie D. West
Lacey Elizabeth Word
Kurt Howard Zen-Ruffinen
Elizabeth Merces Zimbrunes
Science and
Mathematics
Associate of Science
Atika Uzair Ahsan **
Ashley Nicole Akins
Trixy Albarran
Mezie Chelsea Anyanwu
Iris Citlaly Aquino Pineda
Habiba Idris Nourain
Mirna Barrera
Janett Barrera
Casandra Marie Barron
Corinne Michelle Bashaw
Lorelei J. Becker
Michael Lee Begneaud
Heather Frances Beisley **
Carlos Isaac Belnap **
Kimberly Lynn Bennett ~
Kyle Anthony Berry
John Steven Suyman Betts
Corrine Jean Bisbee **
Sarah Lynette Black **
Barry D. Blood
Heather Lynne Borchardt
Christian James Borr
Ryan Scott Bouma **
Sonya Pouy Bounkhong
Mark Tyler Bradbury
Sara Rose Bradley
Karendeep K. Braich **
Eric Daniel Brewer
Sean David Brigman
Gwenna R. Brooks **
Damian Don Brooks
Jennifer Nicole Bruner
Stephanie Briana Buchanan
Genesis Mauren Camargo
Michael Jon Campbell
Matthew Liam Campbell **
Danielle Lyn Canerday
Jessika Kaedlyn Carl
Chuin Jonathan Chan
Diana Elaine Chapman
Eva Chavez
Nina Chen ~
Trenton Blake Clinton
Jarod M. Cole
Lacie A. Collins **
Kelsey Lorraine Cook
William Lewis Coones
Mandi Michelle Cooper **
Carrie Allison Corlett
Leticia Cortez
Taylor C. Cotter
Lynn Marie Dawn Coury
Joshua Shawn Crawley
Matthew Paul Cross
Christopher Daniel Crovella
Joshua Arthur Daniels
Jamie S. Daniels **
Kelsey Justine Davis
Donley Quinn Deason **
Taylor D. Deer
Christopher Keith Doke
Sarah N Donahue
Colton Stephen Doyle
Durenda Ann Driskell
Angelica Duran
William Anthony Eason **
Dustin Lee Elsea
John David Ernst **
Jorge E. Escobar
Brandi Nicole Fenton
Kelcey D. Finn
Darrell Wayne Fleener
Alfonso Flores
Jessica Marie Fondren
Kylie Lovay Foster **
Ryan Tyler Freeman **
Ruth Joanna Galindo
Manuel Efren Gamboa **
Jessica Garcia
Deana Gail George **
Zurisadai Gervacio Moncada
Wendy Lynn Gill
Sherri Dawn Grandidier
Tonia Marcelina Graves
Jeremy John Gray
Elizabeth Marie Gregory
Angela M. Griffis
Sara Nicole Grissom
Katelyn Rachel Hackmann
Patrick Alan Hagle
Kimberly A. Hammond
Jennifer Michelle Hardaway
Kelsey Jo Harlan
Brandi Harrington **
Haley Alexandria Harris **
Rachael Diane Hicks
Kristen Nicole Hill
Scott David Hoffman
Allison Atha Huskey
Brandon Jenkins **
Connor Allen Johnson
Jordan Nicole Jones
Katherine Nicole Jordan
Mileah Lynn Joyner **
Martin Kalama
Alexandra Kerr
Sheng Khang
Rebecca L. Krein **
Darby Ashton Laird ~
Kellye Louise Lamb
Ashley Marie Lattin
Benjamin Tua Lee
Lori Lechelle Leonard **
Brittany Corrin Loos
Elizabeth Celina Lopez
Jacqueline Amy Lopez
Jessica M. Lowe
Alicia Ann Marshall
Christina Diane Martin **
Nicketa F. Mathena
Rachel Frances Mauldin
Mauricio Pulido
Christine Mbianda **
Christina Marie McArdle **
Andrea Leigh McCann ~
Chad Jim McCord
Abigail Medina McCratic
Dustin Cole McDonald
Rachylle Michelle McGee
Jennifer Allison McGriff
Davalene Irene McKinzie
Tamara Leigh McNelly
Spencer Howard Miller
Courtnie Jean Miller
Nicole Milmon
Alejandro Beltran
Montoya **
Karina Mota **
Jeffrey Allen Neal
Alex Paul Newsom **
Jason D. Norman
Jocee Ann Norton
Lionel Vanelli
Nouketcheussi
Martin Chimuanya Orji
Beatriz Orozco
Michael David Palmer
Desiree Parker
Cassandra Rochelle Parker **
Alfredo Pedroza **
Daniel Anthony Pelfrey
Aaron Zach Pense
Anthony Perea
Tania Perez
Neil Reece Pettinger
Erin Elizabeth Phillips
See Graduates, page 8
News/NWACC Graduates
8 • The Eagle View
May 2015
Academic Awards Ceremony
Courtesy photo
Courtesy photo
NWACC President Dr. Evelyn E. Jorgenson, left, and Board of Trustee member Ric Clifford, right honored
student Leticia Cortez, center, at the Academic Awards Ceremony.
Honors Program Director Sabrina Chesne, center, recognizes students Samantha Malmo, left, and Derek
Richard, right, as Honors Program graduates at the Academic Awards Ceremony.
Photo by Elyssa Henry
Vice President of Learning Dr. Ricky Tompkins, left, and Tim Cornelius, J.D., Vice President for Corporate Learning, right, presented certificates to students Samantha Malmo, second from left, Matthew
Campbell and Ellie Franke, second from right.
Photo by Elyssa Henry
From left, Leticia Cortez, Joshan Cortez, Jeffery Moore, Alejandro Corbian, Avery Goode and Veronica
Garcia-Carvajal are the Golden Eagle Award recipents for this school year.
GRADUATES
Continued from page 7
Benjamin Matthew
Phillips **
Bethany Nicole Pinkley
Patrick Eugene Poynor
Veronica U. Pulido
Maricsa Ramirez
Luis Angel Ramirez
Zamacona
Josephine Cecilia Reed **
Melissa Diane Reed **
James Nathan Reeves **
Ashley Elizabeth Reid
Manuel Humberto Reyes
Derek Michael
Richard ** HP
Cambre Lea Ricker
Shelly Rae Riley
Tammy Lynne Rizzio **
Robyn Nicole Roach
Dion Roane Roccasalva
John Zakary Evan Romine
Charles Cameron Rose
Karen Linnette Ruiz
Margaret Elizabeth
Rutherford **
Gabriela Sanchez
Ciomara Lizet Sandoval
Charles Bradley Schmitt
Heather Nicole Schriner **
Tyler Mark Scovill
Holly Dawn Searcy
Mabel Serrano
Chandler Kristene Shaw
Taylor Gleanna Shelton **
Jean-Marie Lucas Shifflett
Ashley Nicole Shook
Brandon James Sleeth **
Tasha Smith
Yvonne Carole Spencer **
Clinton Robert Staggs **
Chad Everett Stanley
Bryan L. Steakley
Kaitlin Danielle Stensrud
Timothy Charles Stoll
Morgan Brooke Story **
Lyndsay Nicole Stuckey
Pedro Tarin
Natasha Marie Taylor **
Helena Nkeumen
Tchoungang ~
Jacob Alexander Teletor
Steven Dang Thao **
Brittney Leigh Thomas
Seth A. Thomas **
Shadrach Ezekiel Tucker
Nathan Micah Turner **
Shawna L. Tyner
Lindsey Ann Upton **
Kevin Jay VanderHaak
Yuepheng Vang
Trey Utah Villines
Erica Wade
Brett Kyle Wagoner **
Jesse James Walker
Jessica Lynn Walthall
Brittany Ann Ward
Seanna Shere’e Webb
Kassondra Marie Weeks
Damian Wells
Jessica Marie Wheeler
Victoria Leigh White
Ashley Frances Wildes
Victoria Carol Wilkins
Corey Dashawn Williams
Mary Helen Williams
Raquel O’Crete Willis
Candida Renae
Xoumphonephackdy
Joshua Brian Yarbrough**
Abdulrahman Amin Zabarah
Elizabeth Merces Zimbrunes
Agriculture, Food & Life
Sciences
Associate of Science
Brynna Briann Bush
Alana Joelle Goulet
Sara Nicole Grissom
Carl Perkins Newbill
Brett Kyle Wagoner **
John David Walker
Electronics Technology
Associate of
Applied Science
James Lowell Graham
Environmental &
Regulatory Science
Associate of
Applied Science
Environmental
Management
Michaele Ann Buell **
Megan Elizabeth Jensen
Laurie Ann Scott-Morris **
Michael Wharton **
Safety, Health &
Hazardous Material
Lauren Rae Johnson
Elisabeth Ann Lafayette
Chad Jim McCord
David W. Smith ~
Melissa Ann Weston
Environmental
Management
GIS Technical Certificate
of Proficiency
Chad J. McCord
Aulston Allen Minnie
John David Walker
Environmental &
Regulatory Science
Technical Certficate
Brandy Lynne Jacobs
Safety and Health
Certificate of Proficiency
Safety and Health
Certificate of Proficiency
Elisabeth Ann Lafayette
Chad Jim McCord
Chris B. Traxson WD
Melissa Ann Weston
Social and Behavioral
Sciences and Education
Associate in General
Studies
Mohammed Saleh
Al-sarhan **
Austin Gabriel Barnett
Corrine Jean Bisbee
Stephanie Briana Buchanan
Jennifer Clelland ~
Lacie A. Collins **
Kayla Alexis Condon
Tina Lee Constantin **
Taylor D. Deer
Ryan P. DeVaney
William Anthony Eason **
Ashley Sarah-Jane Ellis
Brian John Fino
Tylr DsShae Gottsponer **
Megan Nicole Greenfield **
Jessie Danielle Hamilton
James Kelly Haskins **
Ana Ceci Herrera **
Erin M. Hollingsworth
Laura Ann Hunt **
Rebecca L. Krein
Davalene Irene McKinzie
Jocee Ann Norton
Jacquetta Maria Pianalto
Cambre Lea Ricker
Patricia C. Rodriguez
Shiona K. Rountree **
Sara Rebekah Schader
Heather Nicole Schriner **
Marium Seidel
CydNee Michelle Sloan
Zachary Clayton
Austin Smith
Tammie LaDone Terry
Scott K Vargas
Emily A. Warren **
Jennifer Thompson Young
General Studies
Certificate of Proficiency
Teresa Ellen Ashworth WD
Teresa M. Ballard
Amy L. Bokolas
Jazmin Stephanie Carabantes
Ashley B. Carson
Melani Lea Conkling WSD
Amanda Lynn Copeland
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Carissa Michele
Cummings WD
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Courtney A. Glaser
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Brandi Harrington WD
Ana Ceci Herrera WD
Nichole Dannette
Hudsonpillar
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Veronica Jones
Scott Edward Koscheski
Faith E. Lopez
Diana Lozano
LaVena Marie Narvaiz
Mitchell Ryan Nelson
Cassandra Rochelle Parker
Brooklyn Desiree Riley
Patricia C. Rodriguez
Emily Nichole Schriver
Avery Sharp
Jessica Marie Smith
Terry L. Thurman
Anh Thi Phuong Vu WD
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Mary Helen Williams
Danielle K. Williamson
Ger Vang Xiong
Elizabeth Merces Zimbrunes
Teaching
Associate of Arts
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Kimberly Lynn Carter
Veronica Chavez **
Leona Kaye Crowe
Emilie Ninon Czarnikow **
Micaela Dorothea Dail **
Jackie Raye Dye **
Jeremiah J. Emmett
Kyla Dawn Foster
Marina Elise Cobb
Fountain **
Phillip Anthony Glenn **
Felicia Marie Harris
Amber Nicole Hutson
Alyson Nicole Johnson
Diana R. Jones **
Tessa Danielle Smith
Early Childhood
Education
Associate of Applied
Science
Stephanie Tatiana
Hernandez **
Amber Michelle Langley
Jennifer Rico
Jenifer Nichole Thornton **
Mary Faith Whitehead **
Betty Joy Szekely **
Child Development
Associate Certificate
of Proficiency
Luz A. Basurto WD
Jessie Danielle Hamilton
Shermika Rashan York WD
Betty Jo Szekely WD
Child Advocacy Studies
Certificate of Proficiency
Jessica Fabiola Arias WD
Jennifer Lynn Bushnell
Samantha Lynn Geer
Ursula Maria Peternell **
Cieara Alexis Rochette
Child Advocacy Studies
Technical Certificate
Samantha Lynn Geer
Criminal Justice
Associate of Applied
Science
Terri Rae Allen **
Renee Lynnette Anderson
Devin Levi Asbill
David Allen Belue
Tyler Dale Bradley
Samual Calvillo
Katherine Margarita Juarez
Ursula Maria Peternell **
William Ashton Rea III **
Tiffany Kathryn Rea **
Garrett Wayne Rex
Yaovi Michael Soedjede
Jennifer Diane Solorzano
Austin Tyler Sutton **
Nicole L. Thordsen **
Alcides Santiago Villatoro
Jennifer L. Wynn
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Certificate of Proficiency
Criminal Justice
Devin Levi Asbill
Clela Renee Eggebrecht
Christina M. Flores
Katherine Margarita Juarez
Jessica Munoz
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Edward Armando Reygadas
Chris B. Traxson WD
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& Corrections
Christina M. Flores
Chris B. Traxson WD
Alcides Santiago Villatoro
Christina M. Flores
William Ashton Rea III WD
Tiffany Kathryn Rea WD
Yaovi Michael Soedjede
Chris B. Traxson WD
Alcides Santiago Villatoro
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Technical Certificate
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News
May 2015
The Eagle View • 9
Woodward Speaks at U of A
Vanessa Brown
Staff Writer
American journalist and
award-winning author Bob
Woodward gave a lecture
Thursday, April 9, at the University of Arkansas. Woodward’s appearance was part
of the 60th Anniversary of
Journalism Days, a week of
events sponsored by the Walter J. Lemke Department of
Journalism.
Woodward is most famous
for breaking the Watergate
Scandal with his partner, Carl
Bernstein, in their investigative reports for the Washington Post in 1972. His work on
Watergate and the September
11 terrorist attacks have won
Pulitzer Prizes. He has also
written 17 nonfiction nationally-bestselling books. He is
now the associate editor of
the Washington Post.
Woodward opened his
lecture with an assessment
of former President Richard Nixon’s presidency. He
named Nixon an “outright
criminal.” When determining
what went wrong with the
Nixon presidency, he said it
came down to no one asking,
“What would be good for the
country?” He said Nixon’s
term was all about Nixon and
fulfilling his own political
ambitions. Woodward went
on to describe how Nixon
was obsessed over finding
out secret Democratic Party
information. According to
Woodward, in a 1971 recording from the Oval Office,
Nixon said he wanted to go
in “on a thievery basis. God
damn it. Get in and get those
files. Blow the safe and get
it.” Woodward commented,
“Who talks like that?” and the
audience erupted in laughter.
Woodward went on to say,
“The presidency is the most
powerful position in the
world,” and that the job of
the president is to “find the
next stage of good for the
whole country.” He named
fixing the economy, winning
the war, providing health
care, and addressing climate
change as possible “stages
of good.” He reiterated that
the president needs to define
what is good for the country
not by any interest group or
party standards, but by what
is necessary for the betterment of the entire United
States population.
Next, Woodward used this
standard for the presidency
to assess former President
Bill Clinton’s time in office. Woodward interviewed
Clinton himself in 1974
and described him as an intensely charismatic person
who, “knows how to slow
time down to create intimacy
between himself and the reporter,” and that the effect
of this is a sense that Clinton
has given the reporter more
information than he actually
has. He made jokes claiming
Clinton achieves this by never blinking and maintaining
constant eye contact, each
crack receiving answers of
laughter from the audience.
Overall, Woodward said he
felt Clinton’s presidency had
peace and prosperity, no war,
and an economic plan that
cut the national deficit and
deserved “high marks, especially for peace.”
Woodward moved on to
assess President Barack
Obama’s time in office. He
began with, “What the hell
is going on in Washington?”
Then he described how, in
1978, a peace treaty was
achieved between the Israeli
Photo courtesy of jday.uark.org
Prime Minister and the Egyptian President when President
Jimmy Carter invited them
to Camp David and stayed
there with them for two
weeks until they reached the
agreement. Then he accused
Obama of “hopscotching
around” making appearances. He said there is no sense
that Obama is trying to take
hold of the country’s biggest
problem and spend time with
that problem at Camp David.
Woodward said it is imperative that the president put
time in with a problem to create a quality solution.
Woodward said former
President George W. Bush
understood the power of the
presidency. He quoted Bush
as saying, “I can spend 90
seconds with an individual or
a small group of people and
the impact on them is way beyond what I thought was possible.” Woodward also said
President Obama does not
understand the power of the
presidency. He said Obama
has his arrogant side, but that
he is also humble and holds
back when he should be using his power as president to
accomplish things.
Woodward claimed Democrats feel Obama doesn’t like
them, and that these feelings
cause a disconnect in Washington. He said there isn’t
enough human interaction
between Obama and Washington and gave an example
of Obama calling a senator
only twice in five years.
Woodward moved on to
discussing Obama’s struggles with the new Republican
Congress. He said Speaker
of the House, John Boehner,
threatened global economic
meltdown in response to
disagreement with President
Obama over the debt ceiling
issue. Woodward said the
President should have disciplined this kind of blackmail
behavior because he holds
the power to do so.
He said threats are no way
to conduct negotiations.
Woodward said that to negotiate, the parties must be willing to listen, to not attempt
to blackmail one another, to
spend as much time as it takes
focusing on the problem, and
they must be willing to incorporate the traditional “one for
you, one for me” method of
negotiation. Woodward said
he believes if politicians do
this, they will successfully
reach an agreement.
Woodward discussed Hillary Clinton next. He began by
asking the audience to raise
their hands if they would or
wouldn’t vote for Clinton.
Woodward said Clinton had
to convince her husband, former president Bill Clinton,
that it was “his time” to run
for the presidency. Woodward said Clinton will have
to convince voters that it is
her time if she’s going to run
in the 2016 election.
Woodward ended by taking
a few questions. In response
to being asked, “What do you
know now... that you wish
you knew when you started
out?” Woodward told the audience that as a reporter “you
think you know what happened” and that sometimes
“you have to make judgements and sometimes you’re
wrong.” In example, Woodward said he assumed former
President Gerald Ford, who
took office after Nixon resigned, pardoned Nixon be-
cause the system was corrupt.
But, in an interview with
Ford, Woodward discovered
Ford pardoned Nixon to get
the country’s focus off of the
Watergate scandal and back
on to more important issues.
Another audience member
asked if Woodward thought
it would have been easier if
he had never been famous.
Woodward said he doesn’t
take his fame seriously, but
admitted it has its advantages
and disadvantages. He said it
doesn’t matter who you are
if you’re not prepared when
you go into an interview. He
told the audience to “take the
news as seriously as you take
yourself,” and insists reporters must know their source
and do their research prior to
conducting an interview.
The event ended with a
question about Hillary Clinton’s strengths and weaknesses as the potential first
woman president. Woodward
described Clinton’s time as
First Lady as “president’s
school” and said that she has
gained political experience
as a senator and Secretary
of State. He said most of her
weaknesses are due to being
burned by the media. Woodward said Clinton will have
to find a way to communicate
to the public that she wants to
be president for the people,
not for herself.
After the event, Northwest Arkansas resident Melissa Juchau said she really
enjoyed the lecture and she
found Woodward’s insight
into the political arena refreshing. “He takes an unbiased approach to politics. He
assesses politicians based on
their actions and effectiveness, not their persuasive
way with words or the depth
of their pockets.”
SAAB Shows Appreciation
Avery Goode presents Alaian Stroud with the Most
Cheerful Staff Member award.
Lou Lo presents Lynde Moua the Outstanding
Club Member for the Hmong Culture Club.
Grace Woodson presents Paul
Stratton the Outstanding Club Member
for the Young Democrats of NWACC.
Elias Montoya presents Mary Machira with the
Most Supportive Staff Member Award.
Leticia Cortez and Abi Martinez present Kathryn
Birkhead with the Outstanding Club Advisor award.
The members of the Student Abassadors and Activities Board, from left to right and back row
to front row, Alex Montoya, Elias Campuzano, Abi Martinez, Brayan Allan Garcia, Avery Goode,
Joshan Cortez, advisor Becky Hudson, Leticia Cortez, Luis Ramirez, Kim Moua, and Melissa
Hang. SAAB hosted an appreciation luncheon to recognize outstanding club, acutly and staff
members.
From left to right, Wendy Echeverria, Mindy Fowler, John Hicks, Cheri Kahle, and Steve
Tosh sit at tables decorated for the Student Abassadors and Activities Board Appreciation
Luncheon April 23 in Student Center room 108. The luncheon was organized by SAAB and
the food was donated by Acambaro mexican grill.
Sabrina Chesne presents Laura Ortega the
Outstanding Club Member for Sigma Kappa
Delta.
Christopher Friend recives a Most Helpful
Staff Member award, presented by Melissa
Hang of SAAB.
Leticia Cortez presents Laurie Scott with the Outstanding
Club Member award for Gamma Beta Phi. Scott was nominated by club advisor Marvin Galloway.
Photos by Hillary Hollis
News
10• The Eagle View
B
ooks,
ands &
eyond
Compiled by
Kristin Webb
Kevin Cathcart
Editor-In-Chief
Managing Editor
May 2015
NWACC
MUSIC RECITAL
Vangie Bacon – Vangie Bacon, piano, performing “They Can’t Take
That Away From Me” by George Gershwin.
The Walmart AMP Welcomes
Third Eye Blind Along with
Dashboard Confessional
The Walmart AMP welcomes Third Eye Blind on June 2. The
bands members include, Stephan Jenkins (vocals, guitar), Brad
Hargreaves (drums), Kryz Reid (guitar), Alex Kopp (keyboards)
and Alex LeCavalier (bass guitar). Stephan Jenkins coined the
name Third Eye Blind in 1993 in reference to the metaphysical concept of a mind’s eye. In 1996, Third Eye Blind signed
their first major label recording contract with Elektra records
that was later reported as the largest publishing deal ever for
an unsigned artist. Their debut album Third Eye Blind was
released in the spring of 1997 and included the hit single
“Semi-Charmed Life,” which reached #1 on Billboard’s modern
rock chart. Third Eye Blind has been on three world tours since
then, opening for acts like the Rolling Stones and U2.
Dashboard Confessional (often referred to as Dashboard) is
an American band from Florida, led by singer-songwriter Chris
Carrabba (guitar/piano) along with John Lefler (guitar/vocals),
Scott Schoenbeck (bass) and Mike Marsh (percussion). The
band’s style is considered emo with its blend of indie and
acoustic rock.
Music Recital – From left to right: Brandon Ferguson, Mary Bartell, Chandler Franklin, Reid Evans, Vangie Bacon, and Matt Mozzoni
Celebrate Mother’s Day
at Crystal Bridges
On Friday, May 8, join us for a special cocktail reception and
lecture with Amy Stewart, author of The Drunken Botanist, a
New York Times Bestseller! Director of Culinary Case Dighero
will kick off the evening with specially made herbal drinks from
Stewart’s book.
On Saturday, May 9, come out to Crystal Bridges’ trails to celebrate National Public Garden Day featuring fun-filled outdoor
activities for the whole family, including a Chalk Festival, live
music, and an illustrated talk by award-winning garden writer
Amy Stewart on her popular book Wicked Plants, followed by a
demonstration of shrub-drink-making!
Matt Mozzoni, guitar, performing
“There Will Never Be Another You.”
Brandon Ferguson – Brandon
Ferguson, baritone, performing
“Mister Cellophane” by Fred Ebb
during the student music recital.
Timber! Presented by Cirque Alfonse
It’s all about stunts and acrobatics in this toe-tapping musical
by French Canadian circus company Cirque Alfonse. Taking inspiration from the woods surrounding their own real-life
family farm, Cirque Alfonse’s talented tumblers and musicians
create a crazily unique acrobatic experience set in the world of
loggers and traditional Canadian farm life. There are balancing acts on tree stumps, banjo sounds and men with bushy
beards performing synchronized axe juggling. Not only does
Cirque Alfonse represent three generations from one family, it
also features professional acrobats from the École Nationale
de Cirque de Montréal, as well as a professional dancer, an
ex-skiing champion and three talented and versatile musicians.
“Scarily thrilling,” says The Guardian. “It’s a show that seems to
imply that Monty Python was right in believing all lumberjacks
are in a permanent state of delirious happiness.”
Reid Evans – Reid Evans, baritone, performing “Pieta, Signore!” by
Alessandro Stadella.
Entertainment
11• The Eagle View
May 2015
What Do the Eaglets Say?
What was
your
childhood
dream
job?
Meng Lee
Dream Job: Be Jackie Chan
Major: Business
By Elyssa Henry
Kaitlyn Webber
Dream Job: Veterinarian
Major: Paramedic
Jessica Garcia
Dream Job: Artist
Major: Art Studio
Relief from Finals Stress
Photos by Hillary Hollis
Photo by Hillary Hollis
Student Government Association Senator Adam Reynold, left, directs students to the free goodies during
the Finals Stress Relief Carnival.
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NWACC-Public
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Students, above, are happy to take free snacks and beverages to fuel up for the studying they have to do
for final exams. The Finals Stress Relief Carnival was held April 28 and 29 in the hallway of Burns Hall
and was sponsored by the Student Ambassador and Activities Board. Also part of the relieving of stress
was free chair massages, shown below, provided by Sharon A. Cochran of Shar’n the Dream massage.
Advertisement
May 2015
DA$H IN to
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The Eagle View • 12
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500 710
Crossover/Near Mission
495 615
I-49/MLK-Next to U of A
485 795
Hwy 112 Exit off Althea
480 610
Wedington Exit/Near I-49
475 625
Wedington Exit/Near I-49
475 645
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420 520
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415 515
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405 520
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395 435
Hwy 112 Exit on Garland
380 435
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380 460
U of A/Ramey Jr. High
380 460
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375 435
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375 435
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370 435
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365 445
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751-3492
756-1312
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485 710
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395 485
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385 450
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385 450
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385 450
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370 475
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475 590
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621-9399
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Off I-540, Promenade Exit
575 825
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425 505
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390 465
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385 430
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380 400
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380 435
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380 425
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380 650
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370 425
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271-0205
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I-49, Exit 85 - Approx 3 miles W
570 820
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565 815
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480 615
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450 505
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