MIDWESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY | September, 15, 2004

NEWS

Circle K works to attract Members during Blitz Week
Shinice Curry | Staff Reporter

 Blitz Week kicked off with snow cones, capture the flag and a dunking booth to attract potential members to CKI.
“The root beer floats were SWEET!” said Mindy Briones, a prospective member of Circle K International.
Briones is talking about CKI Blitz Week. CKI is a college-level Kiwanis Club. The club’s purpose is to participate in community service activities just because it feels good to help someone.
The MSU CKI was one of the first clubs in the area to do Blitz Week. Each day of the week offered a different activity to entice students to join CKI.
Tuesday, the first day of Blitz Week, all students were encouraged to join in the festivities. Snow cones cooled participants off and a dunk tank filled with three nursing professors and a math professor was available for entertainment.
“My favorite part was making snow cones because it was really fun talking to all of the different people,” said Stephanie Strike, a returning member.
Along with the dunking booth and snow cones, students were also given the chance to throw cream pies.
On Wednesday, members engaged in an intense game of capture the flag. To spice it up, members broke into two classic teams, women versus men. Instead of tagging the person of the opposite team, the members used water guns that ended up being fired at random. The women’s team won both games.
“The fact that the boys put their flag high in a tree so it was impossible to reach made winning ten times better,” said Selina Lovett, a prospective member.
After the game of capture the flag came to a victorious end for the women, the members settled down to have the root beer floats.
Members conducted a food and clothes drive on the third day of Blitz Week to give to the community.
“There were more items brought by CKI members than any other organization. There will be more drives later on, but after all, we’re CKI and that’s what we do,” said Joy Altamero, a returning member.
Love, action and comedy is what the members of CKI engaged in on Friday, the last day of Blitz week. Actually, they did watched “The Princess Bride.”
“We all just have a really great time,” said Carl Thomas, president of CKI.
Anyone interested in joining can attend any CKI meeting in the College of Liberal Arts Hall in room 200 every Monday at 7 p.m.


Artist Lecture Series begins with Phillips, Grier and Flinner
Camron Rushin | Editor-in-Chief


The Artist Lecture Series will begin its 40th season Thursday at 7 p.m. in Akin Auditorium with an acoustic performance by the musical trio Philips, Grier and Flinner.
All three instrumentalists are highly acclaimed with bassist Philips owning two Grammys, guitarist Grier being a three-time International Bluegrass Music Association Guitar Player of the Year and mandolin player Flinner being a two-time Winfield National Champion.
The trio plays a wide range of music from bluegrass hits to rock classics like the Beatles’ “I Want You” and Jimi Hendrix’s “Little Wing.”
Artist Lecture Series teamed up this year with Acoustic Art Productions of Wichita Falls to bring more performing arts to this year’s series.
“In the past, we’ve always done about six shows, three to four lectures and two or three performing arts,” ALS advisor Keith Lamb said.
This year the series will feature four performing arts and four lectures.
“It’s a win-win situation.” Lamb said. “We’re able to have a wider range and higher quality music production than we could find on our own.”
“Teaming up with a production company costs us less money so additional money can be available for higher quality lectures.”
Artist Lectures Series events are chosen by a 12-student committee in the spring semester. Senior Havey Riddle is the chair of this year’s committee. Students can pick up and application to join the committee in the Student Affairs office.
Other musical performances by the Artist Lectures Series are the Kruger Brothers, Sept. 29; The Brubeck Brothers Quartet, Nov. 17; and John Johns, Nov. 20. Featured Lecturers are Salman Rushdie, Oct. 6; Ben Stein, Jan. 24; Derrick Ashong, Feb. 21; and Helen Thomas, April 4. All Artist Lecture Series events will take place at 7 p.m. in Akin Auditorium.  
For ticket information contact the Clark Student Center information desk 397 – 4520.


Honors College Names New Director
Carolyn Knothe | Staff Reporter

A different kind of formula will be applied to the daily runnings of the Honors Program with a mathematics professor as the new director.
“Gibb’s Phenomena says that whenever you make a big change in something, there is a sequence of amplitude oscillations that decay over time,” said Mark Farris, the new director.
For all non-mathematics majors, Farris translated the phenomena to mean that simple changes can have huge effects that no one would have anticipated.
“I don’t plan on making any major changes in the program,” he said, applying the theory to the Honors College.
Farris said that after the previous director left this past December, Provost Friederike Weidemann sent an advertisement to the faculty about the open position.
“I was interviewed by the Honors Committee and got chosen,” he said.
“There needs to be an honors director who knows the students, can interact with the students and plan activities for the students,” said Weidemann. “I am very happy that Dr. Farris has agreed to do it.”
Farris started on Aug. 23 and is now getting settled into his new role. Eventually, he plans to focus on the amount and type of honors classes that are offered at MSU.
“We are trying to get a collection of a dozen courses that will be offered as honors on a constant basis,” he said.
This consistency will allow honors students to plan their schedules ahead of time, since they are required to take eight Honors classes during their career at MSU.
“We want input from students about what classes they want,” Farris added.


Fake IDs must-haves for hundreds of underage college students
For the Wichitan

FORT WORTH, Texas On a busy weeknight, Travis the bouncer stood protectively at the doorway of The Library, a popular bar in downtown Fort Worth, Texas.
His job sounds simple enough: Keep underage drinkers out.
But it's not always easy. On a busy night, about 10 fake IDs pass through his hands. In the last 2 years, he estimates he has seen about 1,000.
Twenty years after states began changing the legal drinking age to 21, the demand for fake IDs has swelled. Scores of underage college students depend on pieces of laminated paper as a ticket to drinking and socializing.
"Fake IDs are everywhere," said Travis, a bouncer at a popular bar in downtown Fort Worth. He did not want his last name used because he said he fears disgruntled patrons may threaten him.
"Anyone who wants one can get one, and they're almost perfect," he said.
It is difficult to determine exactly how widespread the problem is, mostly because authorities rarely arrest or cite minors for having fake IDs.
But bar employees, teenagers and law enforcement officials say fakes are popular among underage drinkers.
Technology-savvy teens have turned their backs on the old-fashioned cutting and pasting, and instead adopted more professional means of crafting IDs.
Armed with high-quality computers, printers and digital cameras, they can create IDs that even a trained eye can have trouble detecting. Anyone with Internet access and $50 to $150 can buy an ID.
Novelty IDs sell at flea markets for just a few dollars, but a few states have begun cracking down on sales of those cards, saying they look too similar to real licenses.
Underage drinkers often use fakes from other states, hoping bouncers will not be familiar with them, said Ron Faurot, owner of Bronco's Sports Bar and Grill in Hurst, Texas.

That's why many bars keep a book with examples of IDs from every state.
Some bars also use portable scanners that verify whether the ID is real. Others, including The Library where Travis works, have begun employing off-duty police officers to help check IDs.
The Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission, which regulates bars, offers training for bartenders, servers and bouncers on identifying fake IDs, Sgt. Terry Parsons said.
"It affects their livelihood," he said. "They're in this business to make a living, and they know having kids in there buying alcohol will cost them."

The maximum punishment for getting caught with a fake ID is $500 in Texas, but the cases are rarely prosecuted.
A bar, however, can face permit suspensions and hefty fines ranging from $100 to thousands of dollars for serving minors.
That does not stop many teens from using fakes.
Erin Preston, 19, a Texas Tech student from Flower Mound, Texas, said many of her friends have them.
"A couple months ago, everybody was getting them," she said. "Then some people get busted and it dies down for a while and then starts right back up."

The industry worries law enforcement officials.
Amid growing concerns of national security and identity theft, fake IDs are gaining public scrutiny, said Tela Mange, spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Public Safety, which issues driver's licenses.
"In the past it was considered more benign," she said. "Now there's a more sinister side to fake IDs."
As states make it more difficult to counterfeit licenses by using features such as holograms and encoding, teenagers only work harder to copy.

In 2001, Texas began issuing vertical licenses for drivers under 21. The change was designed to give bartenders and store clerks the ability to spot an underage drinker at a glance.
Colorado has adopted a facial-recognition program that compares selected license applicants photos with a database of millions of other photos on file to identify possible duplicates.

"It's an arms race between law enforcement and these people that are determined to make fake IDs," Mange said.
Although fake IDs are nothing new, officials said they became more prevalent after 1984, when President Ronald Reagan signed the National Minimum Drinking Age law.

The law withheld federal highway funds from states that did not raise the drinking age within two years.
Supporters point to a steady decline in fatal crashes involving underage drunken drivers as proof of the law's success.
In 2002, the last year for which statistics are available, about 1,370 drunken drivers ages 16 to 20 were involved in fatal crashes, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
That represents a 50 percent decline since 1985.
Critics of the 21 drinking age say it leads to binge drinking and more fake IDs.
In June, Colorado Republican Senate candidate Pete Coors, the former CEO of the Coors Brewing Co., criticized the drinking age and said, "We're criminalizing our young people."
The National Youth Rights Association, a youth advocacy group, has lobbied for five years to lower the drinking age to 18.
"That would absolutely diminish the prevalence of fake IDs," said Alex Koroknay-Palicz, the group's executive director. "People wouldn't have any reason for them."
Travis the bouncer, who has worked at bars for 13 years, said it gets easier to spot fake IDs with experience.
They often feel different or have a slightly different coloration than legitimate IDs. He and other bouncers have also learned a few tricks.
At Gilligan's in Arlington, Texas, general manager Tommy Blodgett usually asks the patron's address, birthday and zodiac sign.
"If they pause or stumble, you know it's not real," he said. "Everybody knows their sign."

 

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