WOODTOBERFEST PHOTO GALLERY, FLYERNEWS.COM FRIDAY NEWS, FELLOWS START NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH , PAGE 5 OCT. 21, 2011 A&E, STUDENT OFFERS BREAST HEALTH TIPS, PAGE 6 OPINIONS, SOFT CONTRADICTS UD’S CATHOLIC MISSION, PAGE 9 SPORTS, FOOTBALL PREPARES FOR MOREHEAD STATE, PAGE 12 flyernews.com UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON VOL. 59 NO. 12 FLYERS SERVE UP SHUTOUT VICTORY Five-year master’s programs made more affordable KAYLEIGH FLADUNG Asst. News Editor The University of Dayton’s Bachelors-Plus-Master’s program recently announced changes to the five-year program including a tuition discount starting January 2012. BPM allows students to spend a fifth year at UD to earn their mas- ter’s degree in addition to their bachelor’s, according to Paul Van- derburgh, associate provost and dean of graduate, professional, and continuing education. Vanderburgh said the program discount will apply to current un- dergraduate students looking to spend a fifth year at UD. The discount will be equal to half of the undergraduate tuition rate per credit hour for graduate STORY ON PAGE 11 courses, according to Vander- burgh. This means that students Rachel Krabacher, center, a redshirt junior outside hitter for the University of Dayton volleyball team, serves against Wright State University, Tuesday, Oct. 18, at the Frericks Center. The Flyers swept the Raiders 3-0 for the team’s 11th consecutive victory. MICKEY SHUEY/LEAD PHOTOGRAPHER will spend $505 per credit hour in- stead of rates that used to range from $531 to $825, depending on the program. Alumna leaves Wall Street to start barbecue restaurant This results in up to a 39 per- cent reduction in graduate tuition CHRIS CRISANTI ber Lane in Dayton, according to home to her home city of Dayton affinity for barbecue. for students. Staff Writer a Dayton Daily News article pub- later in 2009 to “figure out the next Dayton Daily News reported the Vanderburgh said after the A University of Dayton alumna lished Sept. 16. step” in her life. restaurant’s sales had a 400 per- changes to the BPM, participat- has enjoyed recent success with Richards said she earned a fi- She then returned to her home- cent increase from August 2010 to ing students will pay less for their her barbecue restaurant, which nance degree from UD and then town of Dayton before opening August 2011. fifth year of college than for their she opened after deciding Wall obtained a Wall Street job in New the Pig of the Month catering res- Although Richards said she has fourth. Street wasn’t her thing. York City. But Richards said the taurant in the beginning of 2010. had a lot of ups and downs with “We took an existing program Lea Richards, who graduated Big Apple wasn’t all that it was Richards said the idea to open a her career from New York back to but we added some [office of the] from UD in 2009, later opened a cracked up to be. She said she dis- restaurant came from her father’s barbecue restaurant on 2571 Tim- liked the job and soon returned See Barbecue on p. 5 See BPM on p. 3 TODAY SATURDAY SUNDAY weather 52/36 56/37 61/44 PI BETA PHI SENDS LOVE TO TROOPS (Source: www.nws.noaa.gov) Mostly Mostly Mostly Put away your rainboots and get ready cloudy sunny sunny Page 4 for a sunny weekend! 2 NEWS flyernews.com Flyer News • Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 OCT. FRIDAY OCT. FRIDAY OCT.SATURDAY OCT.MONDAY SLASHER ARTSTREET FRIDAY KARAOKE NIGHT SUSTAINABILITY 21 Check out the UD the- 21 FILM SERIES 22 Students are welcome 24 WEEK MOVIE ater program show at 8 Attend a free showing of to attend a karaoke Beta Beta Beta and the p.m. Friday in Boll The- “Beginners” at 9 p.m. in night from 9 to 11 p.m. Geology Honors So- atre. Tickets are avail- ArtStreet Studio B. The at the ArtStreet Café. ciety are sponsoring a able for $7 for staff and film is about the main The event features thou- showing of “DIRT! The students and $12 for the character’s examina- sands of song choices. Movie” at 6 p.m. Mon- general public. There will tion of the honesty of For more information, day. The screening will also be performances at his relationships after contact ArtStreet at take place in ArtStreet 8 p.m. Saturday and at his 75-year-old father 937-229-5101. Studio B. Snacks will 7 p.m. Sunday. For more announces he is gay. be provided. For more information, contact the For more information, information, contact UD Box Office at 937- contact ArtStreet at ArtStreet at 937-229- 229-2545. 937-229-5101. 5101. Sorority brings joy to troops with kissed postcards NATALIE KIMMEL be food, candy, music, Cosmopoli- sends in the most kissed postcards helping a worthy cause,” Chees- Staff Writer tan and Seventeen magazines and wins $1,000 towards their national man said. Maybelline NY products and cou- philanthropy, according to the This was the UD chapter’s first The University of Dayton Pi pons,” said Caroline Cheesman, a event flier. year of hosting the event. Campus Beta Phi chapter sponsored a senior marketing major and chap- Cosmopolitan requested in late Kisses for Troops was created by Campus Kisses for Troops event ter president, before the event. September that UD’s Pi Beta Phi Cosmopolitan three years ago. Wednesday, Oct. 19, inside and Attendees received a compli- chapter organize the event. The The event gave students a way outside Kennedy Union. mentary lip color application UD group was among a list of 15 to support the troops when it isn’t Follow Us The event was sponsored by from a Maybelline makeup artist, nominated chapters from 135 col- always easy to find a way to do so the magazine Cosmopolitan, Sev- then kissed a postcard and wrote leges in the region to hold the on campus, said Maggie Herman- On Twitter enteen Magazine and the makeup support messages to the troops. event, according to an email sent son, a senior middle childhood company Maybelline New York in For every postcard kissed, Cos- to the UD chapter before the event. education major and chapter vice order to raise money for the Unit- mopolitan and Maybelline plans “Since we only had a month to president of event planning. ed Service Organization, accord- to donate $1 to the USO. All of plan the event, we had to organize She said students from sorori- @FlyerNews ing to an event flier. the postcards will be collected to it quickly,” Cheesman said. “We ties and fraternities, and non- According to the website www. be sent to the troops around New worked really hard in order to do Greek students participated in the & uso.org, the USO attempts to boost Year’s Eve. the event justice.” event. the spirits of America’s armed “Even though the event doesn’t Cosmopolitan gave Pi Beta Phi “It brought everyone together @FlyerNewsSports forces and their families by pro- directly tie in with Pi Phi’s normal the option to do the event exclu- for a common goal,” she said. viding a touch of home to troops philanthropy, fighting illiteracy, sively within its chapter, but it wherever they serve. it is a great way to branch out a wanted to expand the event to all Pi Beta Phi members said the little bit,” Cheesman said. “We’re UD students since so many have event featured contributions from honored our chapter is associated ties to our troops, she said. each of the involved companies. with such a worthy event.” “We hope to promote Pi Phi “The event is free and there will The Pi Beta Phi chapter that in the UD community while also NEWS 3 Flyer News • Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 Crime watch initiative responds to recent assaults SARA DORN places on campus and walked back Chief News Writer to Marycrest bloodied and battered with black eyes, and no one both- Colin McGrath, a junior entre- ered to call.” preneurship and economics major McGrath said that some resi- and neighborhood fellow, said he is dents told him they had seen the encouraging his Lowes Street resi- suspects in the neighborhood be- dents to participate in a grassroots fore the assaults, but never report- movement to improve safety in the ed anything to him or Public Safety. student neighborhood. McGrath said the initiative is He said the efforts are in reac- called Campus Community Watch. tion to recent campus assaults. He said it includes locking doors, Three University of Dayton stu- being aware of one’s surroundings, dents were hospitalized Sept. 4 walking home in pairs and protect- around 1:15 a.m. after three sepa- ing not only yourself, but also your rate assaults on the 400-blocks of neighbors. He said it is something Lowes and Kiefaber streets, accord- he started to address campus crime ing to a Flyer News article pub- among his residents, and not as an lished Sept. 11. official program. Then on Sept. 18, a UD alumnus “I want to emphasize this is was stabbed on the 200-block of nothing novel, it’s nothing official- Lowes Street by a 16-year-old from ly sponsored by Residence Life – it Centerville, Ohio, according to a just puts a name to an action we Flyer News article published Sept. should already be doing,” he said. Imagine yourself in a Volkswagen right 27. Caitlin Cipolla-McCulloch, a se- now. McGrath said he started the nior biology and religious studies neighborhood watch initiative major and neighborhood fellow for hours after the Sept.
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