May 1, 2012 College Heights Herald

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WKUHERALD.COM

Photo page on Outdoor Leadership Program page 2B

TUESDAY MAY 1, 2012 • College Heights Herald • Vol. 87, No. 41 • Western Kentucky Un University

John Carpenter coming to WKU film festival By CHRIS RUTLEDGE news@wkuherald.com

MICHAEL RIVERA/HERALD

Kalizya Nseluka a freshmen nursing major from Lusaka, Zambia, participated in Relay for life with "Team Global Domination," which dressed as characters from the movie Avatar. Nseluka's team was made up mostly of international students who participated on behalf of their student coordinator, Jakie Bratz, who overcame cancer.

Cancer never sleeps WKU community raises more than $20,000 for cancer research By MICHAEL MCKAY news@wkuherald.com

Friday night marked the seventh Relay for Life event for Denise Mozal and her first on a college campus. Mozal, a resident of Chesterfield, Mich., was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2009. Seeing others dealing with cancer when she went to her first Relay had a big effect on her, Mozal said. “I saw little ones, like two and a half years old, walking around, and I thought, ‘This is crazy — this is not how it should be,’” she said. She decided then to walk a Relay in every state, to start a blog for others to share their cancer stories and to encourage people to become their own cancer advocates. Mozal said she hopes her blog encourages people to get screened for cancer to catch it early. Relay for Life is an overnight event hosted across the county by the American Cancer Society. Teams set up around the perimeter of the event, with at least one person from a team walking around the track at all times to represent the idea that “cancer never sleeps,” according to the

organization website. WKU’s relay lasted from 7 p.m. Friday night to 7 a.m. Saturday morning, with events like a tug o’ war tournament and dance competitions happening every hour. Angie Geron, the community representative for the American Cancer Society, said at the end of the night that more than $20,000 was raised. She said she was very happy with how the event ran. “Great event, great turn-out and great team involvement,” Geron said. Colby Osborne, chair of WKU’s Relay for Life Committee, said early in the night that the event was a “huge success” in his book. Osborne said he thought the event was larger than last year’s Relay because of word of mouth. “Most people don’t want to turn you down for an awesome cause like finding a cure for cancer,” Osborne said. Bedford junior Amanda Combs, a resident assistant in Poland Hall, was able to convince the people in her dorm to set up their own Relay team for the first time. SEE CANCER, PAGE 3A

WKU students will have the opportunity to work with the director responsible for “Halloween” and “The Thing” when WKU alumnus John Carpenter comes to Bowling Green Thursday. Carpenter will be in town as part of the Western Kentucky Film Festival. The festival will be held in the Mass Media Technology Center auditorium Wednesday-Friday. Adjunct instructor Travis Newton, one of four faculty advisers for the festival, said Carpenter will give a question-and-answer session Thursday at 7 p.m. but, rather than a conventional screening Carpenter, will do something a little bit different. The director will be in Bowling Green Thursday morning to shoot a movie made out of a student’s script with an all-student crew. “The idea got pitched to him to actually work with the students, and he definitely latched on to that,” Newton said. SEE FILM PAGE 2A

Less research, more teaching track offered By CAMERON KOCH news@wkuherald.com

Faculty looking to join WKU now have another option, thanks to Board of Regents approval of the pedagogical faculty track Friday. The pedagogical faculty track allows professors joining the university to focus more on instruction and teaching than on scholarly research. Those hired under the new track will be expected to have a higher teaching load than those faculty members who do research and will not have expectations of completing research. President Gary Ransdell said he believes the new option for faculty is a step in the right direction for the university. “It’s a remarkable step forward, and it’s not a common step forward on most college campuses,” Ransdell said. “It’s a progressive step, it’s an important step, and it allows faculty to focus on that which they choose to do best and in areas which they excel and be evaluated accordingly.” SEE FACULTY, PAGE 3A

Best

Buddies

By SHELBY MACK | photo@wkuherald.com On Sunday, April 22, WKU students and their best buddies gathered at Basil Griffin Park in Bowling Green for the Best Buddies picnic. This is the first year that they have had the picnic, but the WKU chapter of the national nonprofit Best Buddies has been around for three years. Best Buddies pairs up college students with people who have intellectual or developmental disabilities. The students commit to one year of continued contact with their buddy in order to develop a genuine friendship. “You haven’t lived until you’ve done karaoke with this bunch,” said Leisa Hutchinson, the faculty advisor for Best Buddies at WKU. The students and their buddies as a group take part in activities like karaoke nights and picnics throughout the year, but they also spend time on a one-to-one basis in order to build their friendships. Hutchinson says that the organization has typically been made up of students from the Communication Disorders department, but the program is open to all WKU students. They’re currently trying to find more volunteers to be paired up with buddies.

TUES. 85˚/ 66˚

WED. 91˚/ 65˚

CONTACT: NEWS 270.745.6011

SHELBY MACK/HERALD

Kate Tichenor feeds the ducks at Basil Griffin Park during the Best Buddies picnic April 22. The WKU chapter of Best Buddies began three years ago and creates friendships between students and people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

THUR. 88˚/ 65˚

FRI. 88˚/ 66˚

SAT. 94˚/ 64˚

SUN. 90˚/ 64˚

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May 1, 2012 College Heights Herald by College Heights Herald - Issuu