Thursday, April 23, 2009

Underage drinking.

Today in the Sate News, a letter to the editor about underage drinking. While I agree that students need to recognize the negative effects of alcohol abuse, I disagree with the writer's (Anupama Sridaran) main points.

Anupama makes the suggestion that the university should have more events that offer alternatives to drinking, but I wonder what else there is to do? We are a Big Ten school with many Big Ten sports games to watch (although some see these as just reason to drink). The University Activities Board (UAB) offers events nearly every weekend. As a frequent attendee of UAb events, I wonder why more students don't take advantage of them. UAB also has Wells Hall movies. The Reisdence Hall Association (RHA) has movie rental offices in all the dorm complexes. MSU has three intramural sports centers. These are all on top of residence hall specific progams and activities. What more activities does MSU need to provide?

The real issue here is that for whatever reason, some students choose to drink their weekends away instead of a doing an alternative activity.

Anupama disagrees with the Amethyst Initiative, claiming that it will result in more violations and negative alcohol-related situations.

Again, I disagree. The most significant early effect of a lowered drinking age would be transparency. We could end the days when dorm residents' door are open Sunday through Wednesday, but are "inexplicably" close and locked Thursday night through Saturday night.


We also must realize the impact of underage drinking on the local economy. Imagine the losses resturants on Grand River would have if underage students stopped stumbling in an attempt to order one chicken nugget. Add to this the loss from underage students not drinking from the copious amounts of alchol sold each week, and we'd likely have an even emptier Grand River storefront than we have now.

Also don't forget court costs from those students th atget caught underage

I'm not advocating that every student get drunk every weekend. What I would like is transparency. A change in culture where it becomes cool to drink a beer while watching a movie instead of drinking ten at a party in an attempt to get the most of your $5. Maybe if we would all just end this minor prohibition and recognise the real issues it causes, we mightbe able to cause a change in culture.



Monday, April 20, 2009

Albers update

When I interviewed Bob Albers on the 3rd floor of the communication arts and sciences building, I saw his personal passions reflected in the contents of his office.

On his door were pictures of different nature landscapes, ranging from ocean to desert. The pictures were clearly treated to emphasize the vastness of the ocean and the desolate desert with its rippled sands.

Photography has been a passion of Albers’ since his undergraduate days at Bellarmie University. It is from photography that his passion for visual storytelling developed.

As an instructor now, he carefully passes this information down to his students.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Rally

Horia Dijmarescu, a second year international relations student at Michigan State University, was the first to arrive at a rally to freeze tuition increases.

Over one thousand people were invited to protest in front of the Hannah Administration building from 2 P.M. to 5:15 P.M.

Less than ten protesters showed up as of 2:30 P.M., but Dijmarescu was hopeful that more would show up.

Dijimarescu co-founded the Michigan State University Accountability and Transparency Initiative, which was formed in reaction to the Associated Students of Michigan Sate University voting down a bill recommending a tuition freeze by a vote of 8-7.

 “That was not a decision representative of the university at large.  Most of us are struggling to pay tuition as it is.” Dijmarescu said.

University administration are set to vote one the increase Friday morning.  If the 8.9 percent tuition increase passes, in-state students will be paying about $913 more per semester, while out-of-state students will be paying $2,289 more per semester.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

A new path

Imagine a bleak future where news articles are compiled not by humans, but by highly-complex algorithms.

This was the bleak future painted by Robin Sloan in his short film "EPIC", which envisioned a future without traditional news

Robin Sloan, a 2002 MSU graduate, exemplifies the type of new thinking required in the rapidly changing field of journalism.

Sloan, the VP of strategy at Current_, a cable news channel aimed at young adults, explained how the future of journalism lies in start-up companies.

Sloan believes small, start-up companies will be most successful at forming the future of journalism.

"It's sorta like the difference between writing in a battleship and trying to turn it compared to driving a speed boat around".

Read more on Sloan and his views in the Friday edition of the LSJ.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

NCAA 2009

The MSU basketball team is on a race towards he final four of the NCAA basketball tournament. This year is special in that the Spartans play all their games in the midwest.

Along with the team's advances comes the administration's guidelines on "celebrating". This comes as a reaction to "riots" that have become synonymous with MSU,much to the administration's dismay.

The funniest thing about cedarfest last year were the flyers sent out in the dorms prior to it. The flyers essentially told us that our first amendment right to assemble (on both public AND private property) was gone. I believe that it like all parties, it would have fizzled out on its own due to a combination of drunken fatigue and hunger. the mere presence of police in riot gear combined with the students' expectations of the police to use that gear made cedarfest a self-fufilling prophecy of students, police, and university officials.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Push to Unionize

“Our working conditions are your learning conditions” said American Federation of Teaches Michigan organizer Jon Curtiss about the push by nontenure-track faculty at Michigan State University to unionize.

The group of about 1000 faculty members is pushing for job security over all else, but also hope to receive increases in base salaries, base raises, and health insurance coverage. These changes would put nontenure-track faculty at MSU on a level similar to that at the University of Michigan, which unionized its non-tenured faculty in 2003.

The push to unionize requires 30% of the affected group to sign union member cards.

At U of M, the unionization of nontenure-track faculty resulted in an increase of base salaries from the high $10,000 to the low-to-mid 20,000 with a potential 7% raise granted they pass a performance review.

Curtiss believes that an increase of salaries and benefits for nontenure-track faculty will not significantly increase costs for students. At U of M, nontenure-track faculty wages account for about 5 percent of the general university budget.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Spring Break

Spring break is about to begin again for students in the midst of a frigid semester. This break is typically used by students to catch up, get ahead, and relax.

Economic troubles have prevented some from going on vacation,but the general spring break trip is still alive among MSU students.

When my ISP class was asked whether or not they were leaving the state for break, the majority raised their hands. This maybe surprising considering the state of the economy.

Despite the poor state of the economy, the economic crisis reduced the price of a barrel of oil, which in turn lowered gas prices across the board. This allowed light relief and incentive to students seeking to escape the Michigan cold

Not all students are so fortunate to leave. Scott Coy, a mechanical engineering sophomore,plans to go home to Cadillac, Mich., for spring break because he has "no money"

"Going home and seeing friends is enough for me. I wish I could go to Cedar Point" said Cory Taylor, a chemistry freshman.