BSU 10-21-15

Page 1

DN WEDNESDAY, OCT. 21, 2015

PROTESTING FOR

A CAUSE

THE DAILY NEWS

MICHELLE KAUFMAN GENERAL REPORTER

BALLSTATEDAILY.COM

Student group works to give full story on abortion A pro-life, anti-abortion group has come to campus in the past to raise awareness about abortion, but this was the first year a student group came to counter its protest. Feminists for Action assembled with hand-written posters proclaiming their prochoice beliefs at the Scramble Light Tuesday to ensure students were getting the full message about abortion. “People get fed propaganda with what they hand out,” said Alyssa VanSkyock, a senior history and women

DN PHOTO BREANNA DAUGHERTY

Feminists for Action were at the Scramble Light on Tuesday with posters expressing their pro-choice beliefs so that students could see both sides of the abortion argument.

|

mekaufman@bsu.edu

studies major. “I feel like they have the right to say what they feel, but they’re only giving one side of the story.” Feminists for Action want to make sure people are getting the full story. When VanSkyock and others saw Facebook posts about the pro-life group, they decided to stand in silence with prochoice signs to express their disagreement. “We’ve got our signs, and we’ll stand here and say, ‘Hey, we don’t agree with this, this isn’t what we want,’” VanSkyock said. “We feel [women] deserve more of a say in our body and to have our rights, if not acknowledged then respected.”

See ABORTION, page4

Sale from TV station could earn millions

DANIELLE GRADY FEATURES EDITOR

|

University considers auction to sell WIPB broadcast rights

features@bsudailynews.com

Alumna overcomes, speaks out about breast cancer

I

|

JACQUI SCHLABACH ADMINISTRATION REPORTER jtschlabach@bsu.edu

t wasn’t Sarah Stockton’s first time speaking in front of a crowd of people. She had been a public communications major and member of the debate team at Ball State, after all. This time, however, she wasn’t arguing a point or giving a class presentation. Her words would reach complete strangers. They would have real impact.

She stepped in front of her audience: a crowd of people gathered at Indianapolis’s Canal Walk. They were there, in part, to listen to Stockton’s testimony: the story of how a 21-year-old learned she had breast cancer, underwent treatment, completed an internship and graduated from college — all in less than one year. No other cancer survivors talked at the Oct. 2 Pinking of the Canal, the Indianapolis Colts’ kick-off event for breast cancer awareness month. The Stockton who assuredly addressed a sea of pink wasn’t the same one who received a cancer

diagnosis. During that time, Stockton admitted her preferred method of communication was none. Stockton’s cancer battle began with a missed call on Nov. 6. Well, several calls — one from her doctor, her mother and her father. She received them during Spanish class. This might not have concerned Stockton, but she had recently undergone testing after discovering a lump on her breast. The following Monday, she found herself at the Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center. It would be the first of many visits. “I remember when I got home that

day, I was just mad. I didn’t want to talk about it,” Stockton said. Instead, she turned to her parents and cracked a sarcastic joke. They didn’t laugh. Jordan Tojo would’ve. Tojo, who is a senior public communications major, met Stockton when they both rushed Kappa Delta five years ago. They initially bonded over their shared faith, but Tojo said from there it was “anything and everything” that strengthened their friendship. Stockton and Tojo were living together when Stockton was diagnosed.

See STOCKTON, page 3

Tennis pair finishes 2nd in regionals Doubles team wins 5 straight before losing to Indiana

|

ROBBY GENERAL SPORTS EDITOR sports@bsudailynews.com

A five-match win streak proved to be just one short for a pair of junior men’s tennis players who were one match away from reaching the Indoor Intercollegiate Championships. Ball State men’s tennis doubles team of Lucas Andersen and Andrew Stutz made it to the title match of the Intercollegiate Tennis Association Ohio Valley Regional Monday before losing to Indiana.

ANDREW STUTZ

Junior doubles player

LUCAS ANDERSEN

Junior doubles player

Stutz and Andersen knocked off duos from Texas Tech (8-2), Morehead State (8-3), Vanderbilt (8-5), Xavier (8-5) and tournament host school Tennessee (7-5, 1-6, 10-4) before dropping the championship in two sets. “It’s a tremendous accom-

MUNCIE, INDIANA

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, KIM KARDASHIAN.

CONTACT US

News desk: 285-8245 Sports desk: 285-8245 Features desk: 285-8245

plishment to finish second out of the 64 teams in the tournament,” head coach Bill Richards said. “[Stutz] and [Andersen] took advantage of the opportunity and ended up having a great tournament for themselves.” The Hoosier pair of Sam Monette and Daniel Bednarczyk dominated their competition on the way to the championship. They then made quick work of Ball State in two sets (6-1, 6-2) in a best-of-three series. Monette also went on to go undefeated in the singles tournament as well, wrapping up each of his six matches in two sets. He will be traveling to New York in November as both an individual and a pair. If the Cardinal pair were able

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

TWEET US

to knock off Indiana, they would have secured a spot in the ITA National Indoor Intercollegiate Championships in New York. Coach Richards is pleased with the newly-formed duo’s success, even with the final loss. But he understands how close they came to qualifying for nationals. “You know, it’s still a little bittersweet when you had a chance to take it one step further and take it into that national indoor tournament,” he said. The two have just recently begun playing with each other. They weren’t teammates last year, and prior to the ITA regionals, they played in just two previous invites as a couple this fall. See TENNIS, page 5

FORECAST

Receive news updates on your TODAY Mostly sunny phone for free by following High: 723. PARTLY Low: 54 @bsudailynews on Twitter. 1. CLOUDY 2. MOSTLY CLOUDY CLOUDY

4. MOSTLY SUNNY

11. SNOW FLURRIES

7. PERIODS OF RAIN

12. SCATTERED FLURRIES

9. SCATTERED SHOWERS

See WIPB, page 4

Back to the future or reality? THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

Find out what has or hasn’t happed in 2015 THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

SEE PAGE 6

The warm weather continues with mostly sunny skies in your forecast and highs to make their way into the Lower 70s. - Cody Blevins, WCRD weather forecaster 5. SUNNY

s e m i t s u Get b ! e m i t l a in re 6. RAIN

Ball State could make up to $277 million by selling its broadcast rights to air WIPB, the university’s PBS-member television station. That number — more than 20 times the $13 million the school lost from a widely publicized fraud case in 2008 — is also equivalent to 80 percent of the university’s $342 million budget from the 2014-15 school year. However, if the Board of Trustees approves the sale, that number could be far lower because of the way the government’s “reverse auction” works. WIPB’s license is held by the Board of Trustees, which authorized President Paul W. Ferguson last month to look into participating in the auction. Phil Repp, now the interim dean of the College of Architecture and Planning, spoke with the trustees in his previous position as vice president of information technology. “Full participation in the auction is only on the condition that it is in the best interest of the university,” Repp said in a university news release. The university said it would examine a possible sale “to determine whether Ball State can fulfill its commitment to quality participation in Indiana public broadcasting and whether the university can fully achieve its academic mission, should the auction be completed.”

THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

VOL. 95, ISSUE 23

THE PULSE OF BALL STATE

10. DRIZZLE

13. SNOW SHOWERS

DOWNLOAD THE MITS ONTIME APP! 15. HEAVY SNOW

19. RAIN/SNOW MIX

16. SLEET

17. FREEZING RAIN

18. WINTRY MIX


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.