4.23.13

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Weekend warriors

MSU softball, baseball take on MVC rivals

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Tuesday, April 23, 2013 | Volume 106, Issue 28 | the-standard.org

Briefs

New Missouri State Mobile app released

Missouri State has introduced the new MSU Mobile app — a quick-reference application for iPhone and Android which provides convenient access to several MSU online resources. The app features the latest MSU headlines in a mobilefriendly format, a map of campus buildings, parking lots and shuttles (which includes real-time tracking of Bear Line shuttles), custom wallpapers and ringtones, and iTunes U (for iPhone only). To download the app, visit http://www.missouristate.edu/mo bile.

VP search down to three finalists By Megan Gates The Standard

Three finalists are interviewing for the vice president for student affairs position available at Missouri State University this week and next week. John Saddlemire, Thomas Lane and Dee Siscoe were chosen as finalists for the position last week to replace Earle Doman, who is retiring in May after the

end of the spring semester. Athletic Director Kyle Moats, head of the search committee for the new vice president, said 48 people applied for Moats the position and that the finalists chosen met the criteria the committee was

looking for. “We wanted someone who could identify with students ... that is very student oriented,” Moats said, adding that the vice president for student affairs isn’t responsible for just a select group of students, but has an all-encompassing role as the job holder that oversees all student activities on campus. As part of the interview process, each candidate will

conduct an open forum where students can meet the finalists and ask questions, Moats said. “I really hope that people get involved in the process and engage with the candidates,” he said. Students can share their opinion of each finalist through a survey available at http://studentaffairs.missouristate.edu/finalists.htm, through surveys at each of the open forums and by con-

COAL completes search for dean

Gloria Galanes has been named dean of the College of Arts and Letters, according to an April 19 news release. Galanes has been a faculty member at Missouri State since 1986 and is the current interim dean of COAL. She will take the title of dean on July 1.

Calendar Tuesday, April 23

Academic Life Skills Series: Academic Writing, 12:30-1:30 p.m., Meyer Library 101 Student Activities Council Meeting, 4-5 p.m., PSU 313

Wednesday, April 24 Using Camtasia to Create Training Videos, 9-10:30 a.m., Meyer Library 205

Entertainment Management Association Meeting, 5-6 p.m., Glass Hall 350

Thursday, April 25

CHHS Student Research Symposium, 3:30-5:30 p.m., PSU 300 Master of Health Administration Information Session, 4-5 p.m., Glass Hall 350

Students for a Sustainable Future General Meeting, 4:30-5:30 p.m., Temple Hall 105 Chemistry Recognition Banquet, 6:30-8:30 p.m., PSU 400

Friday, April 26

Last Day to Drop or Withdraw, Declare Pass/Not-Pass and Change to or from Audit for Second Block Classes, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Carrington 320 Chemistry Board of Advisers Meeting, 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m., PSU 314

Agriculture Forum, 6-8:30 p.m., Bond Learning Center 300

Saturday, April 27

Asian Heritage Banquet, 7-9 p.m., Kentwood Hall Ballroom

Monday, April 29

Final Grade Rosters Available, all day STAR Awards Banquet, 5:30-8 p.m., PSU Grand Ballroom

Asian American Pacific Islander Organzation Meeting, 6:30-7:30 p.m., PSU 312

Thomas Lane

A familiar face around campus, Thomas Lane, assistant vice president for student life and director of Plaster Student Union, is the lone internal candidate u See FINALISTS page 12

Good morning, Vietnam Students at The American School of Vietnam earn Missouri State dual credit

MSU named one of top North American institutions for reducing carbon pollution

Johnson Controls, the global leader in delivering solutions that increase buildings’ energy efficiency, named Missouri State a top Earth Day champion in education, according to an April 22 news release. Missouri State was second to the University of Massachusetts Ahmerst in higher education Earth Day Champions, with a carbon reduction of 16,066 metric tons — an equivalent of 13,169 acres of forest. The list of champions highlights higher education institutions and K-12 districts in North America that saved the equivalent of 91,800 acres of forest through energy efficiency and renewable energy projects.

tacting Paige Oxendine, Student Government Association president at Oxendine100@live.missouristate.edu, Moats said.

By Trevor Mitchell The Standard

Evan Henningsen/THE STANDARD

The track and bleachers of Plaster Sports Complex were lined Friday, April 19, with bags containing candles. Each luminaria bag was decorated in memory of someone whose life was lost to cancer, or in support of someone whose fight continues.

‘Growing up without a mom is hard’ Students from MSU, Drury, OTC, Evangel attend Relay For Life events that symbolize relentless, sleepless impact of cancer

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By Taylor Burns The Standard

ennifer Allworth spoke to the crowd of hundreds about losing her mother to cancer to start off the All-Collegiate Relay For Life ceremony on Friday, April 19. Allworth, a junior early childhood education major and member of Missouri State’s Relay For Life committee, lost her mother to brain cancer at 10 years old. Her voice quivered on stage as she told her mother’s story. “My mom was a fighter,” Allworth said. “Despite losing her hair, feeling weak and all of the other side effects cancer causes, she stayed positive.”

After being treated and undergoing surgery to have part of her lung removed, Allworth’s mother was completely cancer-free for more than six months. During what was to be a routine visit, doctors found that the disease had spread to her brain. She died in March 2003. “I promised my mom that I was going to tell every person I met how wonderful she was,” Allworth said. “I will never forget our trips to the mall, Girl Scouts events or blasting Celine Dion or Shania Twain while eating Burger King breakfast ... I will remember forever. “Growing up without a mom is hard,” Allworth said. “Cancer is a horrible disease and

u See RELAY page 12

Some of Missouri State University’s newest students are earning credit hours almost 9,000 miles away from campus thanks to a partnership between MSU and The American School of Vietnam. The program, referred to as an international dual credit program, currently consists of eight Vietnamese high school students taking English 11, while simultaneously receiving three credit hours at MSU for English 110. The partnership between MSU and TAS came about as a complete accident, according to Lee Yoder, head of school at TAS. His nephew, who works in Springfield, has a boss who is good friends with Stephen Robinette, associate vice president of international programs at MSU. Robinette said that he was interested in getting more Vietnamese students enrolled at MSU, and Yoder’s nephew mentioned that his uncle happened to be the head of a school in Vietnam — and as a result of that chance meeting came MSU’s first international dual credit program. Yoder said in an interview that TAS is a Vietnamese school with an American curriculum, and that students studying there often intend to pursue university study outside of Vietnam, usually in the United States. The collaboration with MSU, Yoder said, gives students “an early feel of what it’s all about” before they make the full transition from high school to college. u See VIETNAM page 13

MSU hosts first statewide diversity conference Two-day event designed to share ideas to create diverse academic, professional environments By Briana Simmons The Standard

The first ever statewide Collaborative Diversity Conference was hosted at Missouri State on April 18-19. The two-day event was designed for professionals across the state of Missouri to share ideas about creating the best and most diverse academic and professional environments possible. Kenneth Coopwood, vice president of diversity and inclusion, worked with a team of people to make this event happen. “We planned to have an integrat-

Evan Henningsen/THE STANDARD

Judge Jimmie Edwards, a circuit judge in Division 19 in St. Louis, attends the first statewide Collaborative Diversity Conference. The conference was hosted by Missouri State on April 18-19. ed conference from several different industries and to draw people from all areas of the state of Missouri,” Coopwood said. Some of Coopwood’s help came

from a committee of more than 40 volunteers who worked to reach out to professionals across the state. The committee invited speakers with expertise in four areas of inter-

est for the conference: research, pedagogy, cultural competence and intervention. The presenters included professors and other professionals from the Springfield and St. Louis areas. Latanya Buck, director of Saint Louis University’s Cross Cultural Center, led an interactive discussion about one of their diversity programs. SLU’s program aims to retain black males on college campuses. “Our program targets first-or second-year male students, but we take all,” Buck said. The purpose of an interactive setting was so professionals around the state could compare programs and initiatives in place at their institutions. Buck says she hoped from her presentation everyone was able to realize their role in creating a diversified community. “Everyone has a role in retention and success,” Buck said. “We — women and people of other races — can all be advocates for black male

u See DIVERSITY page 13


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4.23.13 by The Standard at Missouri State University - Issuu