MAJOR DECISIONS
Slideshow: GVSU vs. SVSU
GVSU hosts Majors Fair
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DOWN & OUT
BoTV fundraising falls short to SVSU By Sarah Hillenbrand GVL Staff Writer
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ROBERT MATHEWS | GVL
Too little too late: Sophomore DeVonte’ Jones (21) takes down Saginaw Valley quarterback Jonathon Jennings during Saturday’s action.
GVSU loses 55-52 to SVSU READ THE STORY ON B1
or the past four years, Saginaw Valley State University has triumphed in the Battle of the Valleys fundraising competition, and this year, the Cardinals tacked yet another victory to their record. While Grand Valley State University raised about $1,100 for the Mental Health Foundation of West Michigan, SVSU raised over $30,000 for its charity, Great Lakes Bay Miracle League. Despite the defeat, the GVSU Student Senate is still proud to have supported its charity. “Raising money for a charity is a wonderful thing, and to be able to give back to a charity that gives so much, is a wonderful feeling,” said Jennie Hlady, who is part of the Grand Valley State University Student Senate’s political affairs committee. GVSU’s charity this year is an organization that helps families who have been affected by a mental illness or disease. It also aims to educate people about mental diseases. Its tagline, “Stomp Out Stigma,” was also on the Battle of the Valleys shirts that were sold at GVSU last week. “In my personal opinion, it is important for students to care about Battle of the Valleys for multiple reasons,” said Lindsay Viviano, vice president of public relations. “First off, we as Laker nation should care to raise the most money for a local charity. After all, that’s what the whole week is about.” The main fundraising events were the Run with Love 5K, Pie a Senator, and t-shirt sales, which Vivano said was the most successful fundraiser. “Next year more people should get involved with Battle of the Valleys,” Hlady said. “It’s a great week, and it all goes to a great cause.” shillenbrand@lanthorn.com
SVO, GVSU Cheer team up for Veterans
JESSICA HOLLENBECK | GVL
Here to help: Staff members Anthony Clemons and Deva Hull speak in the LGBTQ resource center. The center is one addition that helped Grand Valley State receive a five-star LGBT-friendly rating.
GV recieves five-star rating for LGBT-friendly campus
By Derek Wolff
By Lizzy Balboa
GVL Staff Writer
GVL News Editor
Grand Valley State University joined 39 other colleges around the U.S. to receive a fivestar rating - the highest rating possible - on the LGBT-Friendly Campus Climate Index. Colette Seguin Beighley, director of the LGBT Resource Center at GVSU, wrote in an announcement that the rating reflects GVSU’s commitment to and value of inclusion. Seguin Beighley added that the efforts of the university’s Gender Expression and Equity Committee strongly
contributed to the move from 4.5 to five stars. “For nearly two years, the committee has examined policies across campus as they pertain to accommodating transgender students, faculty and staff members,” Seguin Beighley wrote. “Though the committee is completing its final recommendations, which will be presented to the Senior Management Team, many of the departments or units across campus have already complied with these recommendations after learning the changes that needed to be made.” The director also attributed
the accomplishment to the addition of gender-neutral housing as well as the LGBTQ minor, which she said is planned to be available to students in the fall 2013 semester. “This recognition is the result of across-campus collaborations, reflecting an institutional commitment to the values of equality and justice for our LGBT communities,” Seguin Beighley wrote. The university met all qualifications in the areas of LGBT Academic Life, LGBT Student Life, LGBT Campus SEE RATING, A2
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STEVE BROWN | COURTESY
Bringing good cheer: Grand Valley State University’s cheer team brought their routines to the Grand Rapids Home for the Veterans to help cheer up residents and staff.
The Grand Valley State University Cheer Team and the Student Veterans Organization have joined forces to bring smiles - and cheers - to local veterans. Both organizations met up with veterans at the Grand Rapids Home for Veterans in late October, and members from both the all-girl and co-ed cheer teams performed a cheer routine for the veterans. The home provides a place for veterans of the recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to live, along with those from World War II and the Korean and Vietnam wars. Despite the home having a low ceiling and a hard floor surface, the team performed a normal routine that de-
lighted the veterans, who could watch from their rooms or in person, as a camera streamed the show for viewing comfort. Steven Brown, president of SVO, approached the Cheer Team with the idea a few weeks beforehand in conjunction with an ongoing series of events coordinated by the SVO leading up to Veterans Day. Freshman cheerleader Torence Witherspoon was more than happy to comply. “It’s really important as athletes that we go out and do stuff like this in our community,” Witherspoon said. “Before we’re athletes, we’re students and secondly, we’re role models. I think it’s important that
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