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Swimming domination MSU sinks Truman State

Page 6 Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2013 | Volume 106, Issue 16 | the-standard.org

Briefs

Obama sworn in at 57th Presidential Inauguration

President Barack Obama was sworn into his second term before the public Monday, Jan. 21, in Washington, D.C. Central ideas of his inauguration speech included looking back at history and recognizing the need to adapt to changing times, making the “values of life and liberty and the pursuit of happiness real for every American,” and equality for “gay brothers and sisters” under the law. Obama was officially sworn in on Sunday, Jan. 20, but because it was a Sunday, the swearing in ceremony was repeated for the public on Monday.

MSU celebrates MLK Day with multicultural event

As part of Martin Luther King Jr. Day festivities on Monday, Jan. 21, the Multicultural Resource Center hosted the Springfield Multicultural Festival at Juanita K. Hammons Hall for the Performing Arts. According to the Springfield government website, events included performances from the Celtic Fire Irish Dance Company, Grupo Latinoamericano, the MSU Gospel Choir and other groups to help “discover the beauty of diverse cultures in the Ozarks.” For more information on the Multicultural Festival, visit the “Springfield Multicultural Festival” page on Facebook.

MSU Institute for Play Therapy earns designation

The Missouri State Institute for Play Therapy has been designated as an approved center of play therapy education by the Association for Play Therapy. Play Therapy is a type of therapy in which a child is encouraged to reveal feelings and conflicts in play rather than by verbalization, according to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary. “Faculty and staff in the counseling program are very proud to have acquired the designation as an approved center of play therapy education,” Tamara Arthaud, head of the department of counseling, leadership and special education, said in an MSU news release Jan. 15.

Calendar Tuesday, Jan. 29 Student Activities Council Meeting, 4-5 p.m., PSU 313

Wednesday, Jan. 30 Study Away 101 Information Session, 1-2 p.m., PSU 315C

Showcase on Assessment, 1-5 p.m., PSU Entertainment Management Association Meeting, 5-6 p.m., Glass Hall 350

New face leads police substation on campus By Nicolette Martin The Standard

After 18 years and five different endeavors within the Springfield Police Department, recently promoted Sgt. Todd King will be taking on a new opportunity within the SPD system: head of the SPD substation on the Missouri State campus. “With the police department, generally throughout a person’s career, they transfer people and they move people

around to get fresh ideas and fresh people in different places,” King said. “They’re just moving the current sergeant (Sgt. Charles Schwartze) into a new role and they’re bringing me in, so I will just be taking over his current responsibilities in the substation.” King attended Central Missouri State University (now the University of Central Missouri), where he got his degree in criminal justice, after which he was hired by

University provides minimal training to workers, students for shooter scenario By Amber Duran The Standard

When you hear the words “Sandy Hook Elementary,” “Aurora, Colorado” or “Frankstown Township,” what comes to mind? All of these places may ring a bell to you, but possibly for unnerving reasons. These places are just three of the 14 locations where mass shootings have occurred in the U.S. in 2012 alone, according to The Washington Post. They make up 42 of 86 total deaths that occurred in 2012 as a result of mass shootings. Of the 14 shootings last year, four of them took place on a school campus. These facts beg the questions: Could Clark this happen at Missouri State? Am I safe on my university’s campus? Although no shooting has occurred on MSU’s campus before, Don Clark, the director of Safety and Transportation at MSU, says it is not unusual for someone to come on campus with a gun. “It is not unusual for someone to come on campus and not be aware of the weapons policy,” he said. “We also get calls regularly about persons with play guns, like a

Saturday, Feb. 2

By Megan Gates The Standard

Presidential Scholarship Interview Day, all day, PSU

Sunday, Feb. 3

Fraternity and Sorority Life Presidents’ Retreat, all day, PSU

Monday, Feb. 4

Last Day to Submit an Instructor Drop for First Block or Full Semester Classes, all day Refund Deadline - First Block Classes at 50 percent credit/refund, all day

Refund Deadline - Full Semester at 75 percent, all day

drugs and vice-related crimes — where he worked as an investigator at the rank of corporal for five to six years. King then went into the criminal investigation section where he worked property crimes, violent crimes — such as shootings and stabbings — and robberies and homicides. After working robberies and homicides, King supervised back on the street with u See SPD page 2

Moxie raises $110,000 By Katie Lamb The Standard

Photo Illustration by Sarah Hiatt

Nerf gun, or persons bringing weapons for show and tell.” According to MSU’s policies, no unauthorized weapons are allowed on campus. But what happens if a threatening situation were to arise on campus? Are faculty and students equipped with the knowledge of how to react? Deborah Larson, assistant professor in Media, Journalism and Film, says that training for faculty has been practically nonexistent in regards to how to deal with hostile intruders on campus. “As far as on the faculty level, of there being a plan for these types of situations, I know nothing,” she said. “But if there are plans, it may be I am just ignorant, or I missed a meeting, or it just has not trickled down to me. Clark said that training for situations such as a hostile intruder on campus consists of a training video on MSU’s safety and transportation website called “Shots Fired,” emergency response plan information found in MSU’s emergency policies and procedures, and the existence of a Behavioral Intervention Team (BIT), established to take reports from members of the university or the community of students who may be exhibiting behaviors worthy of concern. The problem, Clark says, is getting people to pay

u See SAFETY page 2

The Moxie Cinema has raised approximately $110,000 within six months to keep its screens from going dark, according to the cinema’s director. Mike Stevens, executive director of The Moxie — which is located at 341 S. Jefferson — said the money raised so far is enough to change one of the nonprofit cinema’s two screens to digital, but it still needs to raise $160,000 by early April to complete the transition. “We’ve had a lot of big donors, but not one person in particular that gave a lot,” Stevens said. “About 10 people gave very generously or fundraised for the Moxie and gunned up a lot of support.” Mother’s Brewing Company raised $3,000 for The Moxie early in the fundraising process after a joint screening. There were about 600 donors, whom Stevens declined to identify, of $100 or less who contributed to the goal. Devin and Kelly Cara have been going to The Moxie for about five years and decided they wanted to donate. “My wife and I have been going for so long and we like going so often that it kind of became our thing,” Devin said. The Caras declined to say how much they donated, but Devin said it was the largest donation they have ever made to anything. The Moxie made a big push for donations because some distributors — who sign a contract, deliver movies to theaters and collect the revenue — have already stopped delivering movies in 35mm print film and have made only the digital cinema package available, Stevens said. Stevens said he believes

u See MOXIE page 7

Doman ready for next life adventures

Thursday, Jan. 31

Fraternity and Sorority Life Presidents’ Retreat, all day, PSU

and I always thought, well, maybe I would do a minor or something of that nature. But, once I started actually studying in the criminal justice field, I pretty much just enjoyed it so much that that’s just kind of the direction that my life and career went.” King has worked in several different units in his time at SPD. He said he spent approximately five years in the patrol division before going into special investigations — dealing with gangs,

Is MSU ready?

Although retiring after nearly 25 positive years with MSU, VP will always be a Bear

Students for a Sustainable Future General Meeting, 4:30-5:30 p.m., Temple Hall 105

SPD in 1994. “I think I always had an interest in it (becoming a cop), and I’ll be the first one to say that when I King originally went to college my thoughts were that I was going to do something in the psychology field,” King said. “I always had an interest in the criminal justice side,

In 2004 Emily Behlmann had a seizure and was taken to the hospital for several days. She only informed her family and a few close friends that she was being hospitalized. And then Earle Doman came for a visit to boost the Missouri State junior journalism major’s spirits. “He showed up at the hospital, and talked to me and my mom,” she said. “He told me that my professors had been notified that I was in the hospital and that I didn’t need to worry about missing class.” This commitment of going the extra mile for students is just one of the many traits that makes Doman, MSU’s vice president for Student

Affairs, the administrator “I’ll remember most and the one I felt that most students liked,” Behlmann said. Doman, who has devoted almost 25 years of his life to serving MSU, has announced that he’ll be retiring on May 1, 2013, leaving a void on MSU’s Administrative Council and in the hearts of many at MSU who will be sad to see him go. But for the man who “bleeds maroon” and is committed to serving students above all else, this is only the next chapter in a life devoted to service.

The makings of a man of service

A baby boomer born in 1946 in Ottawa, Kan., Doman grew up in a family devoted to service. His mother was a high school English teacher and his father was a World War II veteran, part of that Greatest Generation who inspired Doman’s work ethic in the years to come. After graduating from high school and meeting his future bride, Dalene, Doman attended Ottawa University

Steph Anderson/THE STANDARD

Vice President for Student Affairs Earle Doman will retire May 1, 2013.

where he played forward on the men’s basketball team. However, a life of professional athletics was not in his future after Doman broke his hand playing basketball and was forced to rethink his future. “It was a wake-up call,” Doman said, resulting in him transferring to Emporia University and completing his undergraduate degree in education. He then moved to Rolla, Mo., to teach, but yet again, his life took another turn when he was drafted into service for Vietnam. Doman never left the U.S. during his years in the military, but after serving he used the G.I. Bill to pursue his master’s and doctorate in counseling at Kansas State University, where he felt a connection to his university that he didn’t experience at Emporia. “I joke with people that if you cut me in one arm, I bleed maroon, but if you cut me in the other, there’s a little purple in there,” he said jokingly, of his love of Kansas State and the

u See DOMAN page 7


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