BUS HARASSMENT
GRAND VALLEY’S STUDENT-RUN NEWSPAPER
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Rapid driver removed
INSIDE SPORTS:
Women’s soccer wins GLIAC title
Rapid bus driver Stan Gay reassigned from Route 50 after making ‘inappropriate’ comment to student passenger By Samantha Butcher GVL Senior Reporter
B1 ONLINE Restaurant Week Nov. 4 - 13
More than 50 restaurants will offer a special price-fixed menu, allowing patrons to sample food at an affordable price.
The Haunt
Lanthorn editor reviews ultimate Halloween experience with confusing mazes, creepy clowns, elaborate scenery, rattling chainsaws and fear-inducing freaks around every corner.
UPDATES Laker Life:
Apply for Alternative Breaks’ winter sessions by Nov. 5, and spring break sessions by Nov. 19. Each trip costs $275. For more information on Alternative Breaks, visit the website at www. gvsualternativebreaks. com.
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NEWS: Blackboard GVSU spent $402,192 on Blackboard in 2009 for the licenses and host servers, said Sue Korzinek, director of Academic Computing and Educational Technology. GVSU will bring the data to its own servers next summer, though the cost will remain the same.
Earlier this month, a Rapid bus driver was removed from Grand Valley State University routes after a student complained he made suggestive remarks to her while she was riding the Campus Connector. Karissa Dyda, a GVSU junior, complained to the Rapid on Oct. 6 after driver Stan Gay made a comment to her that she felt was “inappropriate.” Dyda, who was wearing flip-flops when the incident occurred, said Gay made the comment when she first boarded the bus. “I was getting on the bus, and I’d had this bus driver many times before,” she explained. “I was the first one to step on the bus, and he points to my feet and goes, ‘Who’s the lucky guy who gets to kiss and suck on those things? I wish I was him.’ I didn’t even know what to say.” Dyda filed a complaint with the Rapid because she was afraid Gay might harass other students. “I was nervous to say something, but I thought it could happen to other people too so I wanted to take care of it before it happened to somebody else,” she said. Dyda said she asked the Rapid to assign the driver to a different
GVL / Andrew Mills
Disturbing driver: Three Rapid buses wait for passengers outside the Kirkhof Center on Grand Valley State University’s Allendale Campus. Rapid driver Stan Gay was recently removed from Route 50, the Campus Connector, after making inappropriate remarks to a GVSU student.
route. The Rapid opened an investigation into the incident, but Jennifer Kalczuk, external relations manager for the Rapid, said she could not comment on what that investigation process entailed. “We don’t discuss our internal procedures,” she said. “We investigate complaints and based on the
News Downtown Opinion
By Anya Zentmeyer GVL Assistant News Editor
At the fourth meeting in 2010 of the Grand Valley State University Board of Trustees, the board resolved a newly-proposed Student Recreation Fields Project at an established budget of $8.3 million drawn from bonds sold from the recently completed housing project and university capital
development accounts. James Moyer, assistant vice president for Facilities Planning, said the Student Recreation Fields Project will reconstruct the area west of an existing soccer field into a 400-meter, ninelane competition track, a competition throws area, a lacrosse field and two softball fields. The softball fields will be changeable for three other playing fields. “This project proposes
the construction of a new student recreation fields,” Moyer said. “With this new space, student recreation, club sports and athletics will be afforded space necessary to support the needs of growing student recreation and intramural programs, student club sport programs, men and women’s track and field and women’s varsity lacrosse.” The proposed project
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Sports Laker Life Marketplace
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The Meadows Maintenance Building
Children’s Center
West Fields softball sign
Soccer (existing)
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East Fields rugby
Track
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GVL Archive
Rewards: Former nursing students review for a lab session. Physician assistant studies majors can apply for a $22,000 scholarship next fall.
Grants expand PAS program By Hope Cronkright GVL Staff Writer
rain garden
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previous complaints filed against Gay. Lisa Haynes, assistant vice president of operations on Pew Campus, said the issue was dealt with according to university policy. “If a student complains to us,
Athletics, Seidman to begin work on new facilities in 2011
flag football soccer
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determination, whatever seems appropriate from there happens.” The next week, Dyda saw the driver again and took her complaint to President Thomas J. Haas. Within days, Gay was taken off of Route 50. Kalczuk said she could not disclose whether there were any
24 November 2009
240' © 2009 Integrated Architecture All rights reserved No part of this document may be used or reproduced in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of Integrated Architecture
Courtesy Graphic / GVSU Facilities Planning
Upgrade in progress: The plans for renovation of the fields west of the soccer field include the construction of a 400-meter, nine-lane track. The project is estimated to total around $8.3 million.
Grand Valley State University officials recently announced that a new scholarship will enter the picture next fall for physician assistant studies majors going into primary care. Students who are accepted into the 18-month program have the opportunity to apply for the scholarship, which, if received, would pay for $22,000 of their education costs for two years. It covers tuition and awards a small stipend for other expenses. The scholarship was
created after GVSU received two grants totaling more than $1.7 million. GVSU is one of the 28 universities that received the funding in the U.S. Nationwide, 149 college and universities applied for the grant. The funding will allow the PAS program to expand its limited enrollment by three students each year, increasing from 35 to 48 by 2014. The grants were designed to increase the number of individuals majoring in physician assistant studies and specializing in primary care. “Medical students and P.A. students are
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