Marshall University Marshall Digital Scholar The aP rthenon University Archives 6-13-2013 The aP rthenon, June 13, 2013 Rebecca Stephens Parthenon@marshall.edu Follow this and additional works at: http://mds.marshall.edu/parthenon Recommended Citation Stephens, Rebecca, "The aP rthenon, June 13, 2013" (2013). The Parthenon. Paper 230. http://mds.marshall.edu/parthenon/230 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the University Archives at Marshall Digital Scholar. It has been accepted for inclusion in The aP rthenon by an authorized administrator of Marshall Digital Scholar. For more information, please contact zhangj@marshall.edu. C M Y K 50 INCH THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2013 | VOL. 116 NO. 134 | MARSHALL UNIVERSITY’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER | marshallparthenon.com MU Red Cross club hosts blood drive, donations low THE PARTHENON way of getting service hours, The Marshall University Red but I just like to help out by get- Cross club may still be relatively ting all the blood drives up here new, but they are not letting on campus.” that stop them from making a Kurtz said due to students 30,000,000 difference in Huntington. going home for summer blood components transferred each year Brian Wong, former club blood drives have lower president, founded the group in turnouts, but the need for COURTESY OF CHARLES BAILEY 2011. The club focuses on pro- donating is higher than ever FROM LEFT: Laura Hatfield, Jessica Patterson, Amanda Reesman, Hunter Morrison, viding Red Cross services to the for summer. Braxton Crisp, Marcus Constantino and Adam Rogers with awards won by WMUL-FM community and students on Mar- “Since it is summer we are 55,000 at the West Virginia Associated Press Broadcasters Association awards June 8. shall’s campus. slow, with a lot of people being blood donations received Current club president, Kyle out of town,” Kurtz said. “We Kurtz, junior business man- are hopefully picking up in the in w.va. from may 1, 2012 agement major, said donating fall. We have a projected goal to april 30, 2013 blood is an important aspect of of 60 donors giving blood, and the club because you can use it WMUL-FM wins big at to save lives. 29.” “For every unit of blood you ourThe first club blood focuses drive on is comAug.- give you can save three lives,” municating with students, and 44,000 Kurtz said. “I have been a part hopes all students will give blood donations needed daily Associated Press awards of Red Cross since I was in blood or spread the word of the grade school. Red Cross is a group’s goals. STATISTICS COURTESY OF AMERICAN RED CROSS By REBECCA STEPHENS EXECUTIVE EDITOR want to show others the more you can Marshall University’s student radio do,myself the asmore journalist,” you can beHatfield rewarded.” said. “I station, WMUL-FM, won 13 awards Adam Rogers, senior broadcast this weekend at the West Virginia journalism major and Best Radio Associated Press Broadcasters Asso- Host recipient, said it’s wonderful for JAZZIN’ IT UP ciation awards. WMUL-FM to be acknowledged against This includes 10 second place awards, professional radio stations within the state. “It’s nice to be able to be recog- Radioand three Broadcast first place Journalist awards. of One the of Year the nized by other institutes across the first place awards was the West Virginia state, and other stations across the year graduate student and WMUL-FM’s state who realize that we’re a great newsaward director. won by Laura Hatfield, second- program,” Rogers said. Rogers said he was surprised by his win, but pleased to be rewarded variousHatfield jobs said such she’s as discworked jockey, at there- for his work. porterradio station and anchor, for five but years this washolding the “It was a great honor, and I’m really glad that the work that I put in for the year of “It’s not that I didn’t think my work 2012 was recognized by the association,” wasfirst good time inshe the entered past, but a thatcontest. it could be Rogers said. Jessica Patterson, junior broadcast journalism major, is the radio sta- morebetter,” involved Hatfield said.at the station as she tion’s contest coordinator. Patterson sawThis the year, award-winning Hatfield said shework became other said her job entails going through the members produced, and she wanted broadcast packages produced by the to prove to herself that she could do station, and choosing quality work to the same. be entered in different contests. Patterson said when choosing con- Best Radio Anchor. test entries, she looks for work that “ItHatfield was analso amazing won thefeeling award to notfor demonstrates the best effort from only represent WMUL, but to show the producer as far as sound and interviews, as well as the way it’s written. PHOTOS BY DWIGHT JORGE | THE PARTHENON yearmyself of what graduate I could school do,” Hatfieldthe expecta said.- tionsHatfield are high, said but going it only into pushes her lasther once we receive the awards it’s LEFT, ABOVE: High school students partipate in Jazz-MU-Tazz, an annual jazz to work harder. worth“It can it,” Pattersonbe difficult said. at times, but camp offered by the School of Music and Theatre. Throughout the week, the “I’m not going to back off at all. I’m Rebecca Stephens can be con- students learn about improvisation and theory, and play in big band ensembles going to put my best foot forward tacted at stephens107@marshall. and jazz combos. The final performance is at 5 p.m. Saturday at Pullman Square. to represent Marshall, WMUL and edu. News Briefs Local students participate in jazz First new student orientation set for June 18 festival at Jomie Jazz Center By REBECCA STEPHENS printed music all the time.” Oklahoma, has worked in various settings EXECUTIVE EDITOR Brayden Saunders, sophomore trum- during his career including public school Seven Marshall programs had perfect APR Tri-State area high school students pet player from Cabell Midland High music teacher, musical director of Six Flags scores in 2011-12, while 12 had rates that ranked enjoy a week of jazz music and hands- School, said he participates in Jazz-MU- in St. Louis, Mo. and staff member with the on experience with the Marshall Tazz because he enjoys the music. esteemed Alessi Seminar for trombonists. at or above the national average in figures that University School of Music and The- “I like playing jazz,” Saunders said. “I Heather Petrie, sophomore trum- atre’s annual Jazz-MU-Tazz festival. was in the jazz band two of the three pet player from Cabell Midland High were released Tuesday by the NCAA. The jazz festival, which started Monday, years in middle school.” School, said this is the second year gives high school students the chance to Many of Marshall’s music students she has participated in the festival, learn about improvisation and music the- are back on campus this week to serve and she is excited to work with Flora. Marshall University biomedical sciences ory, as well as work with Marshall music as counselors for the festival. They will “Every year they bring in a different researcher Dr. Pier Paolo Claudio traveled to students, faculty and a guest conductor in guest artist, and it’s fun to work with big band ensembles and jazz combos. them,” Petrie said. Chicago to present new technology to aid in toalso the perform college in students the final because concert. it gives chemotherapy treatment. performance at 5 p.m. Saturday at Pull- themBingham the opportunity said the camp to keep is practicingbeneficial to the high school students because they manThe Square. festival will conclude with a final once the school year is over. Also, be- getBingham the chance said to interactthe camp with is thebeneficial college Ed Bingham, professor of music and cause many of them are music education students, faculty and the guest conductor, Marshall music alumnus Yuri McCoy to instructor of saxophone, said the festi- majors, they are able to gain experience as well as remain involved with their mu- val allows the high school students to working with high school students. sic and meet other high school students. participate in the Longwood Gardens - This year’s guest conductor is Sim “They’re excited about their instru- ments in a more professional setting. Flora, a jazz trombone player and pro- ments. They’re excited about playing,” International Organ Competition beginning work“It’s withmore theircommon specific in a jazzprofessional instru fessor emeritus of music theory and Bingham said. “We offer them something Tuesday, June 18, and continuing through sense to have a small group do a jazz jazz studies at Ouachita Baptist Univer- that gets them active, and gets them re- combo,” Bingham said. “It allows people a sity in Arkadelphia, Ark. sponsible for their own learning.” Saturday, June 22. Flora, who holds a doctorate in mu- Rebecca Stephens can be contacted at to improvise rather than reading from the sic education from the University of stephens107@marshall.edu. lot more flexibility, and a lot more freedom page designed and edited by REBECCA STEPHENS INSIDE: NEWS, 2 | LIFE!, 3 | OPINION, 4 | SPORTS, 5 stephens107@marshall.edu 265498 BCC CAFE INC, SOUTHERN X-POSUR C M Y K 50 INCH 2 THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2013 | | MARSHALLPARTHENON.COM JOSEPHINE MENDEZ | THE PARTHENON Surveillance programs thwarted ‘dozens of terrorist plots’ By KEN DILANIAN - TRIBUNE WASHINGTON BUREAU so-called business records,- call, but not their contents. deliberate process. We don’t Snowden, disclosed that information technology infra including calling records, The databank allows the get to look at the data.
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