
Will watch movie for food!
Nov. 14, 2003
KALAMAZOO--The year's most-popular movie, "Finding Nemo,"
will be shown on the big screen in WMU's Miller Auditorium, and
those who bring two cans of nonperishable food to support the
Greater Kalamazoo Area Holiday Food Drive will be admitted free.
With more than $339 million in theater revenue, "Finding
Nemo," is the biggest box office hit of 2003, and recently
became the hottest-selling DVD and video tape of all time. WMU's
Campus Activities Board presents the blockbuster hit movie Thursday,
Nov. 20, at 9 p.m. Admission is $1 with a valid WMU student ID
and $2 without. One person will be admitted free with each two
cans of nonperishable food brought to Miller Auditorium and donated
to the food drive.
Student organizations at Western Michigan University have
teamed up to collect canned foods as part of the annual holiday
food drive. The campus effort continues through Dec. 5, with
campus collection points at the Bernhard Center Candy Counter,
Waldo Library, Faunce Student Services Building and Wesley Foundation.
Members of the Kalamazoo Department of Public Safety and Kalamazoo
County Sheriff's Department--organizers of the annual drive--have
again challenged WMU students to collect more canned food than
the public safety officers do.
"Last year, WMU students collected nearly 8,000 cans.
This year, 30,000 students will do better!" says Ben Lando,
general manager of radio station WIDR, one of several student
organizations supporting the campus food drive effort.
The police-sponsored community food drive began in 1993, when
the Black Police Officers Association collected food for 40 area
families. Last year, the Greater Kalamazoo Area Holiday Food
Drive delivered food baskets to 1,250 area families. This year's
goal is 1,350 families. One week's worth of food will be delivered
the weekend before Christmas to needy families identified by
the Salvation Army, Kalamazoo Family Courts, Family Independence
Agency, and local schools.
By formal resolution, the Western Student Association has
encouraged student participation in this year's drive. In addition
to WSA and WIDR, student organizations that have pledged support
include the Campus Activities Board, Progressive Student Alliance,
WMU NAACP, Interfraternity Council, Western Panhellenic Council
and Social Work Action Alliance.
Fraternities and sororities will have collection boxes in
each of their houses for a special IFC-WPC competition during
the drive.
Also supporting the holiday food drive, a "Stop Hunger
Benefit Concert" is scheduled for Sunday, Nov. 23, at Kraftbrau
Brewery, 402 E. Kalamazoo Ave., Kalamazoo. The concert will include
performances by Red Shift, SpitShine, Longshot and WIDR's Bringham
Young, host of the radio program "Hip-Hop Ethics."
Admission is $5 and $3 with the contribution of a canned good.
Proceeds will be divided among the Greater Kalamazoo Area Holiday
Food Drive, Oxfam Hunger Banquet and Swords Into Plowshares Peace
Center.
Media contacts: Harold West, Kalamazoo Department
of Public Safety, 269 337-8169; Ben Lando, 89.1 FM WIDR, 269
760-5107, widr-gm@groupwise.wmich.edu;
Thom Myers, WMU Office of University Relations, 269 387-8400,
thom.myers@wmich.edu
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