BAD DAY? FIND OUT WHERE TO CRY ON CAMPUS
WKU THEATRE TO OPEN FALL SEASON
OPINION, PAGE A4
LIFE, PAGE B1
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 > WESTERN KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY > VOLUME 90, ISSUE 10
Regents committees to meet on Friday BY TREY CRUMBIE NEWS@WKUHERALD.COM The Board of Regents committee meetings will convene Friday at noon in the Cornelius A. Martin Regents Room in Mass Media and Technology Hall. The approval for the Doctor of Psychology in Applied Psychology and the approval of a Revised WKU Statement of Purpose are on the agenda. Student Regent Nicki Seay said the doctorate degree is very important for WKU’s academic profile. “It’s just another opportunity for WKU to continue to establish itself as a research institution,” she said. “While working toward getting more and more doctorate programs…” Several information items will also be discussed, including an enrollment report by Brian Meredith, chief enrollment and graduation officer, and a Graves Gilbert Clinic at WKU update by Ann Mead, senior vice president for Finance and Administration. If passed, the items will go up for full board approval in October.
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against all odds Professor recalls near-death experience BY TYLER PROCHAZKA NEWS@WKUHERALD.COM
O
ne minute he was gathering snow. The next he was falling 70 feet down a crevasse facing almost certain
death. During a research trip to Nepal in May, John All, an associate professor of geography, not only beat the odds and survived the fall, he also captured it all on video. All traveled to Nepal with his team to research climate change, specifically how fast glaciers are melting. From the beginning, All’s research had setbacks. His team originally planned to do research on Mount Everest, but an avalanche in April killed 16 people, including a good friend of All’s. SEE ALL PAGE A2
CLINTON LEWIS/WKU
John All, an associate professor of geography, collects snow samples from the summit of Maparaju (5,326m / 17,473ft.) with fellow expedition member Pei-Lin Yew, of Perth, Australia, during an American Climber Science Program expedition in June 2013 to Peru. Other expedition members were Michelle Hoffman, of Golden, Colorado (far left) and Chandra Johnson, of Bellingham, Washington.
TOP: John All, an associate professor of geography, sits among the rock at the top of the Hill on Wednesday. All was on a research expedition in Nepal, in May, when he suffered a 70-foot fall into a crevasse and broke 11 bones. TYLER ESSARY/HERALD
Campus improvement drives SGA meeting SGA discusses
LGBTQ issues
BY LASHANA HARNEY NEWS@WKUHERALD.COM
Campus improvements were a focal point in Tuesday’s Student Government Association meeting. Bill 4-14-F, Funding for the Campus Improvements Committee’s Dot Survey Event, was passed. The idea behind the bill is to assess ways in which the student body would like to see the campus improved via survey. The bill allocated about $39 to the Campus Improvements Committee for materials that will be used in the surveying process to determine student suggestions for campus improvements. Henderson graduate student Elizabeth McGrew, the bill’s author, said she doesn’t feel like there’s a good understanding of what students want to improve on campus. The money allocated will come from the legislative discretionary
SEE SGA PAGE A3
BY LASHANA HARNEY NEWS@WKUHERALD.COM
WILLIAM KOLB/HERALD
Executive Vice President Nolan Miles addresses attendees at the Student Government Association meeting in the newly constructed SGA senate chambers in the Downing Student Union on Tuesday. Prior to this year, SGA meetings were held in Cravens Library.
From petitions for gender-neutral bathrooms to safe zones, LGBTQ issues have been a growing topic on WKU’s campus. The Student Government Association’s Tuesday meeting concentrated on these issues. One bill, Bill 5-14-F, Funding for “Bridegroom” LGBTQ Program, sparked the most debate in the meeting. The bill originally allocated $750 from legislative discretionary funds to aid in the costs of an event that includes a screening of the movie, “Bridegroom,” a documentary about Shane Bitney Crone, whose partner, Tom Bridegroom, died before they could get married. His partner’s family didn’t want him to attend the funeral. The screening will be followed by a question-and-answer session with Crone.
SEE LGBTQ PAGE A3