WT jazz bands attend festival

From April 19 to 21, WTAMU jazz band students attended the 42nd annual Greeley Jazz Festival hosted by the University of Northern Colorado and sponsored by Jamey Aebersold.

“This guy is probably credited to be the biggest jazz educator ever, releasing at least 25 books of jazz for students,” Nathan Hoover, sophomore Music Education major, said.

Each student was a part of one of the WT ensembles, which included Jazz I, Jazz II and Jazz combo.

“It is a great event that allows us to get the West Texas name out there playing great music,” Shannon Gray, Mass Communication major, said. “I look forward to Greeley every spring semester. The music we play is fun and entertaining. This festival gives us, as students, a chance to see amazing musicians and how they perform that we wouldn’t get to see otherwise. “

None of the WT groups competed, but they performed for judges in order to get critiqued and hear ideas about how to improve.

Hoover said the judge for his group chose to miss his lunch break in order to work with the students.

“He was very insightful and knowledgeable of what we were doing and how it could be better,” he said.  Continue reading

Music Department prepares for Spring Concert

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The WTAMU Department of Music is getting ready for their final concert of the spring on May 2. All three bands from WT (Symphonic, Concert, and University) will perform as well as a special guest artist.

John Stacy, a French horn player, said they are anticipating a high turnout.

“Attendance for these concerts is usually pretty positive,” he said. “The student body is quite supportive of what we do here. I would encourage as many people to attend, as all three groups performing are top notch. Some really fine musicians are performing, and the music we are performing is also interesting and quite exciting.”

Stacy, who plays in the University band, also said the concert gives him and others the opportunity to play more music.

“I wanted more playing experience,” he said. “I was already in the Symphonic band, but wanting to play more, I auditioned for University and Concert bands just to play more. More music is more fun, or at least to me it is.” Continue reading

Hispanic leaders lecture series motivate students

The Department of English, Philosophy and Modern Languages wrapped up the spring semester with a final guest speaker that ended their semester-long Panhandle Hispanic Culture and Leadership Lecture Series.

Three guest speakers – whose Hispanic heritage helped shape who they are as leaders – visited the WTAMU campus to discuss with students the importance of hard work, self-confidence and heritage.

“I think it’s wonderful for students and I think it’s great for the community,” Dr. Bonnie MacDonald, department head of EPML, said.  “As a department, as a college and as a university, we seek every opportunity we can find to create outreach opportunities.”

The first guest speaker of the semester was Evelina Solis, a motivational speaker from Dallas whose academic and coaching resource, Sol2Soul, has inspired other faculty and college students around the region.

“She’s Hispanic and she travels around to regional universities to motivate or talk about student leadership,” Assistant Professor of Spanish and Spanish Program Director Dr. Andrew Reynolds said. Continue reading

Panhandle Storytelling returns to WT for festival

2012 Storytelling Festival Poster. Photo courtesy of Panhandle Storytelling Guild Facebook page.

2012 Storytelling Festival Poster. Photo courtesy of Panhandle Storytelling Guild Facebook page.

Since 1991, the Panhandle Storytelling Guild has held festivals for the WTAMU family and surrounding community.

On May 4, they will hold their annual festival with this year’s theme being ‘Lives and Legends’ with guest artist Barbra McBride-Smith.

“I’ve never met McBride-Smith in person, but we’ve watched her [story]telling in class throughout the semester,” Jere Ellison, Vice President of the Guild, said. “Her mix of familiar Greek tales with a ‘southwest’ twist should be appealing to all who attend.”

Dr. Trudy Hanson, head of the Department of Communication, said the festival will follow its normal format, with a few changes.

“We’re following the same formula for the festival,” Hanson said. “But this year, we will have three international students and they’ve chosen stories in their interests.”

Hanson said there will be two children’s concerts in the morning, a workshop with McBride-Smith at 1:30 p.m. in the Fine Arts Complex room 185 and a performance at 7 p.m. with McBride-Smith and WT graduate students in the Branding Iron Theater.

Continue reading

Step team hosts competition

WTAMU steppers entertain the audience. Photo by Brittany Castillo.

WTAMU steppers entertain the audience. Photo by Brittany Castillo.


Web Editor’s Note: For more photos of Step, click here!

The Texas Panhandle’s first step competition took place at WTAMU on April 27.

Men of E.X. Clusive and Lady E.X. Clusive, WT’s own step teams, hosted the event in Mary Moody Northen Hall at 7 p.m.

Local step teams, including the Amarillo Venom dance team, the Texas Tech step team, Greater Love Temple youth step team and Tascosa High School’s soloist, Joel Miller, participated in the contest. Continue reading

Dr. Ballard lectures about Titanic and other discoveries

Dr. Robert Ballard lectured at Mary Moody Northen Hall on April 23 as part of the WTAMU Distinguished Lecture Series. Ballard is known for his deep-sea exploration and, more specifically, his discovery of the remains of the E.M.S Titanic. His lecture focused on where his love of sea exploration came from and the discoveries and accomplishments he has made since then.

“It wasn’t quite what I expected, but I really liked it,” Lacey Hamilton, sophomore Accounting major, said. “I thought it was kind of better than what I expected.”

Ballard was born in Wichita Falls, Kansas and became interested in sea exploration after reading 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne. When his parents asked him what he wanted to be, he would say Captain Nemo.  Ballard said he became fixated with the fact that the ocean had a bottom because he had always just thought of it as a big bucket of water. Later, he would also realize that ocean has the largest mountain ranges on the planet.

“I think of the earth as a creature, a living organism,” Ballard said. “We are lucky to live here.”

Continue reading

Listen Up! Former President Bill Clinton Speaks at WT

Poster for the Distinguished Lecture Series, featuring Former President Bill Clinton.

Poster for the Distinguished Lecture Series, featuring Former President Bill Clinton.

Get your headphones on and listen up to our latest episode. This one is about Former President Bill Clinton’s speech at WTAMU. The transcript for this episode can be found below.

Transcript

Maria: On April 24, former President Bill Clinton spoke at West Texas A&M University, an event that captured the attention of students, faculty and community members.

Brandy Roberts, student body president says the Distinguished Lecture Series donated $100,000 to the Flight 93 memorial on behalf of WTAMU.

Roberts: This donation will aid in finishing the memorial and once completed the West Texas A&M University student body will be honored with a plaque on the memorial visitor’s center. In response to this generous donation Bill Clinton has volunteered his time to be with us today.

Maria: Dr. James Calvi, chair of the Distinguished Lecture Committee introduced Clinton and explained his initiative to raise money for the Flight 93 memorial.

Calvi: Last year along with former president George W.  Bush and current speaker of the house John Boehner, President Clinton teamed up to raise money for a memorial for the heroes of United flight 93 which crashed in Shanksville Pennsylvania on Sept 11. 2001.

Maria: Clinton compared what happened in Flight 93, to the Alamo and the battle for Texas independence.

Clinton: It was one of those relatively rare examples in human history when the people that gave you the state that you now treasure made a deliberate collective decision to give their lives for a larger objective. Everybody that goes to battle risks their life, but they knew in advance they were going to perish.

Maria: Flight 93 was targeted to hit the Capitol, which Clinton says is the symbol of the United States freedom and history. He says the difference between the battle for Texas Independence and Flight 93 is that the people on Flight 93 were just ordinary men and women that didn’t sign on for battle.

Clinton: They didn’t know in advance that on that day it might be their last day. And they had to decide in an instant whether they were going to derail that plane knowing that the chances were more than 90 percent that the plane will crash and they will be killed.

Maria: However, he says these people made the same decisions than the Texans in the Alamo.

Clinton: They weren’t professional soldiers and they didn’t have any time to think about it. They instinctively knew this is what they had to do. I don’t know about you, but I think that deserves a National Memorial.

Maria: During his speech, Clinton announced the National Park Foundation matched the $100,000 dollars donated by WTAMU. Clinton also spoke about the current issues the U.S. is facing.

Clinton: I personally think we also are on an unsustainable development track because of the way we produce and consume energy and local resources cannot be sustained.

Maria: He says climate change is real and unavoidable and that the U. S needs to change the way it consumes energy.

Clinton:  For 15 years I have been saying this is the best way to create a good economy and create new jobs if you do it in a smart way.

Maria: He says Texas has been a leader in wind energy development, an area that needs further exploration.

Clinton: Number one is free once you pay for the windmill, and number two it is clean. Oh and there is the matter of the third: For every billion dollars you spend on a coal fire plant you get 870 jobs, for every billion dollars you spend on wind energy, if the windmills and the blades are made in America you get 3,300 jobs.

Maria: Clinton says the U.S is a rich country with huge assets.

Clinton: Don’t let people tell you America’s best days are behind. Every single challenge we have is fixable, but requires reform.

Maria: For The Prairie, I am Maria Molina.

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