BSU 1-27-16

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TWO CATS OPENS FRIDAY

DN WEDNESDAY, JAN. 27, 2016

MELLENCAMP BRINGS TOUR HOME

Village restaurant to provide “trendy food concepts”

Indiana native and classic rock singer comes to Emens on April 12

SEE PAGE 6

SEE PAGE 3

THE DAILY NEWS

BALLSTATEDAILY.COM

BODY FOOTAGE PUBLIC

Ferguson could earn $516,400 after leave

CAMERA

President ensured payment due to severance agreement KARA BERG NEWS EDITOR | news@bsudailynews.com President Paul W. Ferguson could make more than half a million dollars even after his resignation, according to his severance agreement released today. While the big question of “Why?” about Ferguson’s resignation has not been answered by the university, the severance agreement cleared up some other questions.

NOT FOR

HOW MUCH MONEY IS HE GETTING?

During his two-month leave, Ferguson will be paid two months of his $450,000 yearly salary — about $75,000, paid out on normally scheduled paydays. He won’t be actively working as the president of the university during this time and is not authorized to act on behalf of the university. Provost Terry King will be taking over as acting president. The university will also pay Ferguson for his unused vacation days — $21,635 — and any other wages earned through March 25.

VIEWING

See SEVERANCE, page 6

Proposed bill could allow police to withhold recorded videos from citizens

A

CASEY SMITH CRIME REPORTER

bill proposed under Indiana legislature would make video recorded from police body cameras not subject to public record. Under House Bill 1019, police departments would have almost complete power to not release videos recorded by officers, even if requested by the Freedom of Information Act. The bill would give police departments the option of withholding video footage from body cameras or dashboards, and the public would have a right to view video only if they themselves were videotaped, if a

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casmith11@bsu.edu

deceased relative was captured on video or if their property was visible in the video. And even in those situations, the video could only be viewed twice, and police departments won’t be required to provide a hard copy of the video. In all other cases, it would be at the discretion of each department to decide which videos it wants to release. For the Muncie Police Department, which started using body cameras a year ago, the bill might not impact much — but it still could if a case comes up.

DN FILE PHOTO KORINA VALENZUELA

The Ball State women’s basketball team is currently undefeated at home this season, at 9-0. The team’s four losses have come from away games.

Cardinals hold perfect STUDENT BECOMES UNLIKELY ‘MATCH’ home record Alayna Troha donates bone marrow through Be the Match chapter

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ALEXANDRA SMITH GENERAL REPORTER ajsmith9@bsu.edu

When a person registers to donate bone marrow, they have a 1 in 540 chance of being matched, according to Be the Match, an organization that matches donors with patients. For Alayna Troha, the odds were in her favor. Troha, a sophomore studying social work and interpersonal relations, registered with Be the Match when the Ball State chapter gave a presentation to her sorority. “The video was touching,”

Troha said. “I registered thinking I wouldn’t be [matched].” Registration involves filling out a packet and getting a swab of cells from the person’s cheek. In June, less than a month after she registered, Troha received word from Be the Match, telling her she was a possible match. “They find a lot of people who could possibly match with a single patient. They have to do blood work before knowing who will be the best match. There’s a lot of factors that go into [being a match],” she said. Factors that determine a match include ethnicity, race, age and human leukocyte antigen tissue type (HLA tissue includes a certain protein marker used to determine if those on the registry can be matched with patients).

See MATCH, page 3

See CAMERAS, page 6

Undefeated at Worthen, Ball State sits at 14-4 overall CHASE AKINS GENERAL REPORTER | @akins27_akins

The Ball State women’s basketball team undefeated at home this season, sitting at perfect 9-0. Ball State’s women’s basketball is 14-4, its best start after 18 games since the 2006-07 season, when it started 16-2. While head coach Brady Sallee is happy with his teams strong start, he never expected to start the season this well. “Our goal was never to be 9-0,” Sallee said. “We talked about being at our best in March, that’s our goal.” The Mid-American Conference Tournament begins on March 7, and the team will play six of its remaining 11 games on the road. That’s where the teams four losses have come from. After the team’s win over Western Michigan Saturday, Ball State sits at 5-4 away from Worthen Arena. THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

PHOTO PROVIDED BY ALAYNA TROHA

Alayna Troha, a sophomore social work and interpersonal relations major, registered to be a bone marrow donor after Be the Match presented to her sorority. She was a confirmed match in October and donated bone marrow on Jan. 13.

See BASKETBALL, page 4 THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

VOL. 95, ISSUE 49

MUNCIE, INDIANA

HAPPY NATIONAL CHOCOLATE CAKE DAY!

CONTACT US

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Editor: 285-8249 Classified: 285-8247 Fax: 285-8248

TWEET US

Receive news updates on your phone for free by following @bsudailynews on Twitter. 1. CLOUDY

FORECAST TODAY

Partly cloudy

High: 31 Low: 25 2. MOSTLY CLOUDY

3. PARTLY CLOUDY

Today there will be a high of 31 with mostly cloudy skies. Temperatures will drop to the mid 20s tonight with mostly clear skies. -Chelsea Smith, WCRD weather forecaster 4. MOSTLY SUNNY

5. SUNNY

THE PULSE OF BALL STATE


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