Three time Grammy winning drummer Larnell Lewis talks his lifelong passion for music on pg 8 FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 2017
HUMBERETC.COM
VOLUME 55, ISSUE 12
PATRICK KENNEDY
Leukemia and lymphoma run honours student who battled hard Patrick Kennedy NEWS REPORTER
Hundreds of Humber College students donned shorts and sneakers last week to help wage a war. Their role in the conflict was to run in the 12th Annual Humber 5K Run for Leukemia and Lymphoma at the Arboretum to generate support for cancer research. The event acts as a fundraiser for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society of Canada, which is a voluntary health agency dedicated to blood cancers. The run was hosted by Debra Basch, a Fitness and Health program coordinator at Humber, and also included student speaker Brad Johnson. Johnson gave a rousing speech on his troubles with lymphoma and how he felt when he finally beat it. He said he knew it was going to be a fight, but he was prepared and nothing was going to stop him. However, this year’s run was dedicated to Kyle Hoseman, a 24-year-
old Humber Health and Fitness student. He died of leukemia in January 2016 at Trillium Health Centre after an inspiring battle against the cancer. Hoseman is remembered as a great person in the course, and was known to help those in need. Debbie Bernier, Hoseman’s mother, led the event, carrying a lantern to show her support for her son alongside his aunt and uncle, Bettie and Kim Hoseman. “He absolutely loved Humber,” Bernier said. “He always loved to do fitness but he just loved the whole place. It’s such a friendly place. Everybody helps everybody. He helped out some international students. “He didn’t let the cancer get him down. Every day while in the hospital, he’d exercise in his room,” said Hoseman. Basch always said Hoseman was a wonderful student and his desire to help other students led him to meet his girlfriend, said Bettie. The largest group participating
in the run consisted of students from Humber, including Health and Fitness student Jacob Gublinski. Dressed up in Toronto Maple Leafs gear, shorts, and shades, Gublinski said he was running “to end cancer overall. It felt great donating $5, even though it’s a small amount.” Gublinski said he was also receiving an extra two per cent on his course mark for running. Connor Harrison, a first-year student in the Health and Fitness program, said, “I was running for two reasons. To compete and see how fast I can run five kilometers. The second reason was to fight for those who went through it like me, and countless others.“I was diagnosed with spinal cancer at nine,” said Harrison, “so I understand what cancer can do to not only to the victim, but to those around them. So, I felt it was my duty and the duty of my fellow classmates to try and rise funds and run, just to try and beat cancer anyway we could.”
PATRICK KENNEDY
Bettie Hoseman and Kim Hoseman joined Kyle’s mother Debbie Bernier who carried a lantern though the 5k course in honour of the Fitness student