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Printed Work from Central Michigan Life

Artist in Residence will discuss work tonight

By: Jackie Smith

Issue date: 2/25/08 Section: News
Andrea Myers has seen growth in her art in the last few years.

She will speak about the chronology of her work in a presentation tonight.

Myers will speak at 5 p.m. in Wightman 142. Admission is free.

As this year's Artist in Residence with Central Michigan University, Myers has produced some distinctive pieces recently, in addition to the previous work she plans to share with students and faculty at the event.

"They're very organic looking," said Cindy Keefe, director of the Main and West University galleries. "They have a very clean and serene feel about them."

The Artist in Residence program brings outside artists to CMU's campus through the Art Department every semester or academic year.

Art Department Chairman Al Wildey said Myers was selected specifically because of her interest in combining two-dimensional and three-dimensional materials in a non-traditional manner.

"This is an important program," he said. "It allows us the opportunity to expose our students to artists active in the field."

The presentation is targeted to a general student and faculty audience, Myers said. She also anticipates discussing the evolution of her art and manner of execution.

"A lot of it is from within the last six years," she said.

Work discussed during Myers' lecture might even include art from her later college years, as she graduated from the Art Institute of Chicago, which she said will provide a nice contrast to current pieces, which are inspired by where she is currently housed in rural mid-Michigan.

Myers lives in a riverside home provided by the university where she has been inspired by the natural scenery.

"A lot of my work comes from layering," she said. "It's kind of like how landscapes are created."

Examples of her work are on display at the West University Gallery, where a few sculpture and wall-hung pieces are shown.

With a very individual way of creating her art, Myers concentrates on the construction and deconstruction she finds in nature.

"It's actually a digging process," Keefe said. "You can see it's done by hand."

news@cm-life.com
 

Board approves stipends

By: Jackie Smith and Tim Ottusch

Issue date: 2/15/08 Section: News
Midland Graduate Student Michael Hoerger spoke to the Board of Trustees on Thursday afternoon in the President's Conference Room of the Bovee University Center about receiving more funding for graduate students.
Midland Graduate Student Michael Hoerger spoke to the Board of Trustees on Thursday afternoon in the President's Conference Room of the Bovee University Center about receiving more funding for graduate students.
Michael Hoerger is looking for an increase in stipends for graduate assistants and a guarantee that they will get that money.

The Midland graduate student got half his wish Thursday during the Board of Trustees meeting, where the board approved the recommended raise in stipends for graduate assistants.

"It's not getting our cause anywhere," Hoerger said. "Usually people working full time are at the bottom of this recommendation."

Graduate assistants who have fewer than 30 credits beyond their baccalaureate degrees will receive a raise in the stipends from $9,475 to $14,400 and students with more than 30 credits from $10,550 to $18,550.

David Burdette, vice president of finance and administrative services, said the increase in stipends goes into effect July 1.

Despite the raise, there is no guarantee graduate assistants will receive the full amount because each department is responsible for paying them individually.

"We just recommend the stipend amount," said Interim Dean of Graduate Studies Roger Coles. "Each department does it differently."

The initial problem, Hoerger said was some graduate assistants working full-time were only receiving half of their supposed yearly income.

"I think we've been reasonable in what we're asking for," he said.

The lack of stipends, which has left a few students resorting to food stamps and the inability to seek medical care, is the biggest target among the objectives sought by the newly-formed Central Michigan University Graduate Student Union.

Other goals include an increase in tuition reimbursement, health care access and overall improvement in CMU's graduate program.

The group, which has received increasing support from their student union awareness Web site, has been in the works nearly a year and a half.
 
"We're looking for more people to help," Hoerger said. "They can raise these issues."

In order to reach a solution, Hoerger would like to sit with any CMU official capable of dealing with the issue.

University President Michael Rao addressed the situation after Thursday's Board of Trustees meeting.

"I think we just need better communication," he said. "I believe that's important for us to understand that the diversity of opinions and of the situations with our graduate students is very, very broad."

Graduate students can apply to get up to 20 credits for tuition reimbursement, but some programs call for students to take four to 10 more credits than that.

Hoerger, a clinical psychology major, said he had to take 30 credits during his second year, resulting in $4,500 worth of tuition.

"I think that's a concern that the psychology department is aware of because they have several Ph. D. programs," Rao said. "What they're trying to do is take the resources that they get for graduate assistantships and tuition reimbursement and spread that among the students that they have as best they can."

If the university spends more money on graduate students, it would help the university, Hoerger said.

"If they invest more in us we're able to attract more students. We'll get more money from the state," he said. "The state really gives a lot of funding to programs that are involved in graduate schools that are involved in research. ...So ultimately all of these changes are great for CMU's long term viability."

news@cm-life.com