No. 90
LIFE Central Michigan
S E P T. 1 4 , 2 0 1 5
|
Vol. 96
M O U N T P L E A S A N T , M I
Nuisance Neighborhood
After complaints, Mount Pleasant officials crack down on student behavior
Page 6
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y aug. 27, 2015
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LIFE
Contents
Central Michigan
Staff Editorial Editor-in-Chief Malachi Barrett EDITOR@CM-LIFE.COM
Advertising Manager Alex Gonzales
Manager Jason Gilbey
Design editor Michael Farris
business development manager Angela Carollo
News editor Kate Carlson NEWS@CM-LIFE.COM
Public relations
Sports editor Taylor DesOrmeau SPORTS@CM-LIFE.COM Photo Editor Kaiti Chritz PHOTO@CM-LIFE.COM Page designer Rob Letosky Page designer Austin Scogg Page designer Connor Byrne
affected relationships between students
cover story and residents north of campus Cover illustration by Kaiti Chritz| Photo Editor
4
news
13
10
Opinion
sports
15
lifestyle
WEEK TWO WIN: CMU football
Manager Jasmine Mims
Managing editor Sydney SMith NEWS@CM-LIFE.COM
News editor Jordyn Hermani NEWS@CM-LIFE.COM
Complaints and zoning changes have
6
collected their first win of the season against Monmouth. How will this momentum carry to next week?
w See Page | 16
GAMEDAY: Staff photographers documentedthe action on and off at Kelly/Shorts Stadium this
Street squad manager bridget timbrook
weekend. Check out our photo page.
public relations manager Elise pelletier
w See Page | 15
Professional Staff LEGALIZE IT: Students Advocates
Director of Student publications Dave clark
for the Medical and Responsible use of Cannabis are collecting
Advertising director Kathy Simon Advertising assistant Dawn Paine
more than 200,000 signatures for a statewide ballot initiative that END OF THE WORLD: Residents recall the peak of student
would legalize Marijuana.
partying at Central Michigan University, and caution against its escalation today.
e Media g e l l o C MBAM
w See Page | 11
w See Page | 9
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SEPT. 14, 2015 y Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com
$425,000 Wightman renovation completed soon By Deshia Dunn Staff Reporter @daedae_dunn | news@cm-life.com
After almost two years of planning, construction began on a Visual Merchandising Lab in Wightman Hall during the summer. Construction for the lab was budgeted at $425,000, which included renovations and the addition of technology and furnishings. The space is not finished yet, but is expected to be completed within the next few weeks, said Megan Goodwin, Chairwoman of The Department of Human Environmental Studies. “We have two classes scheduled in the Visual Merchandising Lab, but that will likely increase as faculty have a chance to work in the space, review coursework and develop new courses to make use of the capabilities of the space,” Goodwin said. Michael Mamp, professor in the Fashion Merchandising and Design program, played a crucial role in renovation. “It began with a conversation with the dean of our college as I was thinking about coming to the university,” Mamp said. “I thought if I ever came here as professor, I felt there would really be an opportunity for us to be a leader in merchandising, to update our facility, and to offer students the opportunity to put the theory of merchandising into practice.” Mamp said overall there has been positive feedback from students. “It will really benefit every single student in our program,” said Portage junior Zachary Stoner. Grand Rapids junior Shardae Jefferson said the lab would offer a perspective of what her future job might be like. “It gives more of a feel of what it would be like to work as an employee in visual merchandising as opposed to feeling like a student,” she said. Efforts behind the renovation started in December of 2013.
“The students are extremely excited about the lab,” Mamp said. “I’ve taught there a couple times so far this semester and I think these are the types of spaces that rethink the way we teach.” Mamp said beginning visual merchandising courses will be among the first to use the labs. “To start, we’ll be teaching our beginning visual merchandising course, which is FMD 356,” Mamp said. “I also utilize the space to meet with my students who are in my 3D printing and fashion course, which is another exciting development in our program. We have acquired 25 3D printers from Makerbot.” An apparel presentation technology course will also be taught in the lab, Mamp said. The space will be used to place products as if they are in a store, where they will also be photographed before being put into a merchandising directive document, he said. Detroit senior Ashley Robinson said she thought the new lab would make people aware of how fashion is important in today’s society. “I’ve taken a peek in there and it looks pretty cool,” Robinson said. “I think the lab has made Wightman feel more like a home for the fashion students; more comfortable and at ease.” She said the investment was valuable in creating more opportunities for students. “As long as the money is being used for something students will gain experience and knowledge from, I think it’s worthwhile. I think seeing the lab could influence a student’s decision to study fashion at CMU.” Mamp said the lab would help people understand what it means to study fashion merchandising. “Students and their parents come to visit and maybe they’re interested in pursuing merchandising,” Mamp said. “Parents ask, ‘Well, what does fashion merchandising mean?’ This lab is an opportunity to show a physical example of what they could expect for their son or daughter to be doing in the classroom.”
Monica Bradburn | Staff Photographer Construction for the Visual Merchandising Lab located on the second floor of Wightman Hall was budgeted at $425,000.
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Monica Bradburn | Staff Photographer Wightman Hall undergoes construction on the second floor on Sept 8. The Visual Merchandising Lab will be used by fashion students.
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Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com y SEPT. 14, 2015
news
New director of Veterans Resource Center aims to involve more students By Nick Green Staff Reporter @nickgreenCMLife | news@cm-life.com
The Veterans Resource Center at Central Michigan University started off the 2015 school year under new command. The VRC serves veterans, active military and spouses or dependents of active military and veterans. Services provided include creating social networks, transitioning from active duty to student life and assisting with benefits at CMU. U.S. Army 1st Sgt. Duane Kleinhardt assumed the position of Veterans Resource Center Director last week. Kleinhardt has been deployed twice, first to Guantanamo Bay in 2004 and then to Kuwait and Iraq in 2010. “The only thing right off the bat that we want to change is to get more student veterans at CMU and involved in Student
The only thing right off the bat that we want to change is to get more student veterans at CMU and involved in Student Veterans of America. Sgt. Duane Kleinhardt, Veterans Resource Center director
Veterans of America,” Kleinhardt said. Steve Rellinger, former director for the VRC, said he has full confidence in Kleinhardt’s ability to progress the center. “The minute the (veterans) walk in that office, they are going to meet another veteran,” Rellinger said. “That speaks volumes
to their comfort with that environment. Here is somebody who has been there, done that, and gets it.” Nick Badgero, a senior who served four active years in the Marines, is the peer adviser lead for the Peer Advisors for Veteran Education program. Badgero said he would like to see several changes made to the VRC which include developing a better system to reach female veterans, updating their website and remodeling the VRC office or moving to a larger one. “The VRC has three chairs and is about seven and a half feet at its widest point in the room,” Badgero said. “When more then four veterans come in, or one whole family, we usually have no space for them.” The VRC is located in Warriner Hall, room 114. Their hours of operation are Monday-Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and also by appointment.
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U.S. Army 1st Sgt., Duane Kleinhardt, the new Veterans Resource Center Director, stands in front of the seal on Sept. 4, 2015.
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6
Cover story SEPT. 14, 2015
Nuisance neighborhood Mount Pleasant residents, city government become more concerned with student behavior By Sydney Smith Managing Editor @SydneyS_mith | news@cm-life.com
In a perfect world, no one would be able to tell the difference between student dwellings and the homes of Mount Pleasant residents. Both groups would coexist without conflict and City Manager Nancy Ridley wouldn’t receive any complaints about trash or a party that continues late into the night. Unfortunately for Ridley, she heard plenty from Mount Pleasant residents this summer. While most of Central Michigan University’s student population returned home or left Mount Pleasant for internship opportunities, complaints about numerous nuisance violations — like citations for parking, litter and noise — were made by residents at city commission meetings. Because the party atmosphere near the downtown has intensified in recent years, City Commissioner Kathy Ling said students have become a frequent concern of constituents. “It hasn’t always been a topic of conversation, but it has been a very intense topic in the last couple of years,” Ling said. “A solution needs to be mutually agreed upon. I think it’s unfortunate that all this was happening when the students weren’t here, because I think they’re a key part of the problem.” During those meetings big changes were approved by the city commission that will affect students — including hiring an additional code enforcement officer to police a student-populated area
(Student behavior) hasn’t always been a topic of conversation, but it has been a very intense topic in the last couple of years. A solution needs to be mutually agreed upon. Kathy Ling, City Commissioner
known as the M-2 district. The code enforcement officer inspects properties in the neighborhood, looking for code violations, including trash, parking issues and indoor furniture placed outside. The officer will post a notice on residents’ doors with a time the issue needs to be corrected. If it’s not fixed by that time, the city will issue a fine. On the first offense, each resident is charged $50. These fines can go up to $250. Those decisions were reached during the summer when most students weren’t able to participate in those discussions, while city officials also lamented not having an effective way to communicate with CMU’s off-campus population. Among other changes, the Mount Pleasant City Commission made amendments to its solid waste program and added a neighborhood recycling program. The town and gown relationship in Mount Pleasant has had its ups and downs, but student behavior, unfortunately, has always been a concern.
Growth & Change Almost 30 years before most of this year’s freshmen class was born,
the legal drinking age had just been restored to 21. This change in state law helped usher student partying out of bars and onto the streets north of campus. Students organized “End of the World” parties, which usually were scheduled the weekend after final exams. In the 1980s, one of these parties caused $7,800 of damage to the city and resulted in 55 arrests. “There was a period of time where there were massive numbers of students in the streets, with heavy drinking and lots of other problems,” Ling said. “There was a very significant (police) response to that. That did bring it under control for a period of time.” At the same time, student housing expanded in that area. “Central and Mount Pleasant grew up together,” Ling said. “That was the point where there also started to be a fair amount of conversion from residential homes to student rentals on Washington and Main (streets). The area really began to change.” Today, Mount Pleasant is made up of almost two-thirds rental properties. There are no longer “End of the World” parties, but many city officials fear
Samantha Madar | Staff Photographer Senior Kayla Homes walks an American flag down Main Street after the football game. Students left trash scattered on streets after tailgating on Saturday, Sept. 12.
student activity could return to that level when CMU was cited nationally as a “party school.” This lead to the proposal of amendments that could drastically change the M-2 district. Since 2009, the city commission has discussed redeveloping the area, creating a “buffer zone”
between student and residential housing. After a public hearing on Sept. 28, redevelopment could become a reality. Ling divided the changes into two goals: Get partying under control and have a transitional area between the M-2 and singlefamily zone R-3.
“The immediate issue is making sure people are safe,” she said. “The transitional zone is part of the solution.” A change in ordinance would make it so a M-2 lot could not have a common line with or be located across the street or alley from any lot in R. Lots that share a
Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com y SEPT. 14, 2015
7
Is your house up to code? With the addition of a code enforcement officer specifically in the M-2 district, residents may see more code violations, which result in fines. Here is a list of common and easily avoidable violations.
1.
2.
No indoor furniture is allowed outside in the M-2 district, including on porches.
Grass must be shorter than 12 inches during growing season.
NOTICE Your residence is not complying with the
Eordinance laws NOTICE NOTIC nce is reside ing Your ply not comh the wit laws nce ordina
3. 4.
No trash is allowed in yards or on sidewalks in front of houses.
Trash bins can be set on the curb after 5 p.m. the day before collection. They must be removed from the curb by midnight collection day.
Your resid ence not complyin is g with the ordinance laws
4. 1.
2. 3. Illustration by Michael Farris | Design Editor
property line would not be allowed to have more than four occupants. The only way a Greek house could be near a home in the R district is if the two homes are across a major street from each other. Preserving the look and feel of the area is also a goal of the commission. Improving aesthetics, functions for trash pickup and decreasing front yard parking were also highly discussed throughout the summer. Creating a transitional zone would separate students and residents, putting less-populated dwellings in between them. “There are just things that
don’t go well together,” she said. “That doesn’t mean there’s one good and one bad. There are some people that wouldn’t want to live in that transitional area because they wouldn’t want to be that close to the partying and the noise, but young faculty or graduate students may find it less of a problem.”
Party problems Because there is an abundance of rental properties, the area north of campus is where many students reside. As more and more students move into that area, residents are pushed farther north if they can’t
deal with the atmosphere. Some students have heard complaints from their neighbors about the level of noise into early hours of the morning. Novi sophomore Michael Halversen said he understands their frustration, but also believes residents should have realistic expectations of their young neighbors. “When you live somewhere like this, there’s going to be noise and there’s going to be trash,” Halversen said. Discussions on student partying often follow the calendar year, Ling said. In the past few years, out-ofcontrol parties late in the spring
semester have become more of an issue for city officials and neighbors in the months that follow. “The increase in the number of fires, for example, is really a new phenomenon in the last few years,” she said. In April 2014, the city commission passed an emergency fire ordinance after several fires were started in dumpsters by students. Ling said she has received many phone calls about the volume level, continuing until 2 or 3 a.m. some nights. Students urinating on lawns, wandering into local resident’s houses and littering were some
of the complaints Ling said she received from constituents. As more residential homes were converted into student-rentals, Ling said the neighborhood’s atmosphere shifted. She recalled the story of a friend who raised his family in a house on South Main Street, until his student neighbors became too much to live with. “He sold his house 10 or 15 years after I moved here in 1971, because that’s when the neighborhood changed,” she said. “It just reached a point where you couldn’t live there anymore. That’s why some of
those people who are in the surrounding areas — who want to continue to live there — are concerned about the boundaries. “How are we going to make sure that all of us can live together?”
Open communication? CMU and the city work together to address destructive student behavior while also trying to create an atmosphere where students and residents can coexist. Bad behavior off campus can impact a student’s life on campus. When a criminal case involving w town | 6-9
8
w town | 6-9
The M-2 district consists of neighborhoods starting at Bellows Street, just north of campus. High St.
High St.
Franklin St.
Main St.
Washington St.
May St.
Bellows St.
Bellows St.
Franklin St.
Washington St.
students is making its way through Isabella County courts, Director of Student Affairs Shaun Holtgreive explained that the university is notified and the student is referred to the Office of Student Conduct. “If it’s a severe situation, the university will also charge that student. They may be removed from Central,” Holtgrieve said. “Once (court cases) are completed, we’ll get a list and if there are students with severe infractions, there will be follow-up with student conduct. People who live in that area know that.” More and more students are finding themselves referred to the Office of Student Conduct for disciplinary action by police, said Mount Pleasant Police Department Officer Jeff Browne.
Student and resident neighborhoods
Douglas St.
continued from 7
“We refer individual reports to the university — and it’s more than ever before,” Browne said. “For example, there was an arson last year involving six CMU students, so we turned (those) reports over. We do this for serious ones, ones that pose a threat to the university community.” Twice a year, city and university staff walk through student neighborhoods, informing them of expectations, including law enforcement and code violations. Oxford senior Arin Bisaro received one of these visits at the beginning of this semester. He said the city should try to do this more often, especially since big changes were made during the summer. “It’s good to inform students over the summer, but then the other 19,000 come back and don’t know about the changes,” he said.
Dr. ampus West C
Town |
SEPT. 14, 2015 y Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com
Preston St.
U-district (university)
M-2 district (multi-family)
R-3 district (single-family)
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Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com y SEPT. 14, 2015
Residents fear ‘End of the World’ party culture returning to neighborhoods By Ben Solis Staff Reporter @bensolis1 | news@cm-life.com
For decades, longtime Mount Pleasant residents have watched with skepticism as Central Michigan University and city officials attempt to tame student partying. Some view city and university approaches to stopping wild parties before they start as “half measures,” without the force necessary to set a clear standard of behavior. Peter Koper, a retired CMU English professor, is one of those residents. “The university has to get to work (quelling student behavior) in a serious way or it is going to get worse,” said Koper, who has lived in Mount Pleasant since the 1970s. “They keep trying half measures. Things go in cycles, and no one is out burning cars, but the cycle is pronounced and it’s building again.” Koper’s description is a reference to a series of outof-control parties that beset the CMU community between the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Town | continued from 8
“I know there are really tight restrictions on (trash). It would be really helpful if they put notices on our doors to tell us about the changes, or send an email out to our landlords. It was good when the police walked around before Welcome Weekend and told us what to expect. They should do that with the other changes. No one wants to get a citation.”
The “End of the World” parties began at 1 p.m. on the last day of spring semester exams. Mount Pleasant Police Officer Jeff Browne said the city sees the “End of the World” mentality slowly creeping back in, so staff wants to control it before it becomes more than Mount Pleasant can handle. “None of us want to go back to that,” he said. “(That was) a time when couches were burned, people were flipping cars and the streets were blocked off. We know what it looks like when it’s out of control because we’ve seen it. This last year, we started getting on the cusp of it.” For many years, Koper said CMU didn’t know how to deal with the parties. One year brought on a 50-person melee in the streets; another party shut down six blocks on Main Street. “It became so bad that any student with the bare minimum of competence knew their behavior was diminishing the reputation of the university and the reputation of their degrees,” Koper said.”It was real bad, and on CNN. It got national attention.”
At some point, Koper recalled, University President Leonard Plachta had enough. His response: an overwhelming build up of state police force on CMU property and in downtown neighborhoods. “He had the state police set up a post behind Finch Fieldhouse,” Koper said. “He arranged nearly 40 of them. By 6 p.m., police vehicles snaked through the neighborhoods. It was calm after that intervention for many years.” Indeed, things did change. Rose Forton and her nowdeceased husband have owned the same house on Franklin Street since 1951. In the ‘80s, Forton said students would routinely host nusiance parties and “run up and down the street” at all hours of the night. In the last few decades, Forton said that has all but stopped on her side of town. “I don’t hear them as closely to my house as I did then,” Forton said. “If I do hear them, they’re over (on Main Street).” With memories of crazed gatherings, Forton is hopeful the “End of the World” men-
Ridley said the city communicates with students using the same methods it uses to communicate with homeowners. City officials send quarterly newsletters in the mail and post a monthly electronic newsletter on Mount Pleasant’s website. “Traditionally, we haven’t had a targeted communication for just students,” she said. “We have been working with CMU more on that. Sometimes they will report some of our messages in the emails
they send out to students.”
Making your voice heard “Students are here for basically eight months of the year. We try to think of students as members of our community — They’re just part-time members is all,” Ridley said. “Most of us were students at one time. We value that relationship, but there’s always going to be tension.” Ridley wants to hear more from students. In the early ‘90s,
Courtesy photo | Clarke Historical Library Police officers wearing riot gear march into a fraternity house during an “End of the World” party that occurred in the ‘80s.
tality won’t return to CMU. Koper is far less optimistic. Until the university is willing to enact bold steps, he said, the cycle will continue. “These decisions (to act
poorly) are an accurate reflection of the type of educational experience they’re receiving at CMU,” he said. “If their intellectual candles were lit, they wouldn’t be out rioting.
“With a bit of moral imagination and authority, the university could show force and stop it without violence. Shows of force do work. Plachta understood that.”
a city/CMU student liaison committee was created, then met less and less. City commissioners are working on revitalizing that, having the group meet more frequently to maintain an open dialogue between students, university staff, residents, law enforcement and city staff. However, applications for the committee closed on Aug. 31, just after most students returned to Mount Pleasant. Of paramount concern is that students behave as responsible
members of the city, said Holtgrieve, who serves as a member of the liaison committee between the city and CMU. He also served on the Mount Pleasant Planning Commission for nine years. This includes students taking advantage of volunteer opportunities and participating in governmental decisions by attending city commission meetings or taking their concerns about the recent code enforcement changes and receiving excessive citations to City Hall.
“Democracy only works when people participate. That’s a process where there’s public input sought in stages. Unfortunately, the input doesn’t always come when it’s most effective,” Holtgreive said. “We have discussions when emotions are involved, instead of having a very level conversation. “The people in the neighborhood are involved, but students aren’t involved as much as they could be. It’s important for students to hear how much they affect people that live there.”
opinions
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SEPT. 14, 2015 y Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com
let’s talk, not argue
T
his summer, city commissioners took action to address common complaints
made by residents who share neighborhoods with students north of campus. They did so while most of Central Michigan University’s student population left Mount Pleasant, demonstrating a lack of communication that has fostered contempt between residents and students for decades.
Communication between city officials, residents and CMU students needs to improve if we are all to coexist peacefully. During those meetings, the city commission approved several changes that will directly affect students – including hiring an additional code enforcement officer to police a student-populated zone known as the M-2 district. Decisions were reached during a time of the year when few students were able participate in public discussions at open meetings. This is unfair to students who have the right to a forum to represent themselves. Democracy only works when the people are allowed be a part of the decisionmaking process. Public input on the summer decisions was mostly solicited from residents, often those whose only interactions with students had been negative. There have been channels of communication in the past, but meaningful discussion between the two groups has been rare. City officials created a student liaison committee in the 90s, but slowly the idea
editorial died, leaving the city without an effective way to communicate with CMU’s off-campus population. It is encouraging to hear city commissioners are working to have the group meet more frequently. Additionally, city and university staff walk through student neighborhoods at the beginning of the academic year and before Finals Week to inform them of city ordinances and expectations. We are happy to see an effort to create open dialogue beginning between students, residents, law enforcement and the university, but it is not enough. As the city creates opportunities for students to make their voices heard, the responsibility falls on us to take it. If student want the city’s perception of us to change, we need to meet them halfway. For some residents, their only contact with students has been destructive partying. On
Sydney Smith | Managing Editor
Code enforcement officer Jeff Pickler tells a group of students about changes made to the M-2 district during one of the city’s neighborhood walkarounds. Pickler will enforce this district until a new officer is hired.
the other side, residents are often seen as cold, unfriendly and prone to calling the police on students who are just trying to blow off some steam. This conversation has frequently played out on Central Michigan Life’s Facebook page,
where commenters fiercely argued over the necessity of increased police presence on Welcome Weekend. We urge residents not to take stereotypes of students at face value. We urge students not to encourage negative
Editorial Board EDITOR-IN-CHIEF | Malachi Barrett MANAGING EDITOR | Sydney Smith NEWS EDITOR | Kate Carlson NEWS EDITOR | Jordyn Hermani SPORTS EDITOR | Taylor DesOrmeau DESIGN EDITOR | Michael Farris
Central Michigan Life, the independent voice of Central Michigan University, is edited and published by students of Central Michigan University every Monday and Thursday during the fall and spring semesters. The newspaper’s online edition, cm-life.com, contains all of the material published in print, and is updated on an as-needed basis. Central Michigan Life serves the CMU and Mount Pleasant communities, and is under the jurisdiction of the independent Student Media Board of Directors. Dave Clark serves as Director of Student Media at CMU and is the adviser to the newspaper. Articles and opinions do
perceptions by being good neighbors. Take advantage of volunteer opportunities and participate in governmental decisions by attending city commission meetings when changes may impact you. Take your
concerns about the recent code enforcement changes and increasing police presence to City Hall where it counts We all want to enjoy this city Students and residents need to work together to make it a place worth living in.
All letters to the editor or guest columns must include a name, address, affiliation (if any) and phone number for verification. Anonymous letters will not be printed, except under extraordinary circumstances. CM Life reserves the right to edit all letters and columns for style, length, libel, redundancy, clarity, civility and accuracy. Letters should be no more than 450 words in length. Longer, guest columns may be submitted but must remain under 750 words. Published versions may be shorter than the original submission. CM Life reserves the right to print any original content as a letter or guest column. Please allow up to five days for a staff response, which will include an expected date of publication. Submission does not guarantee publication. not necessarily reflect the position or opinions of Central Michigan University. Central Michigan Life is a member of the Associated Press, the Michigan Press Association, the Michigan Collegiate Press Association, the Associated Collegiate Press, College Newspaper Business & Advertising Managers Association, the Mount Pleasant Area Chamber of Commerce, Central Michigan Home Builders Association, Mount Pleasant Housing Association and the Mount Pleasant Downtown Business Association. The newspaper’s online provider is SN Works. Central Michigan Life is distributed throughout the campus and at
numerous locations throughout Mount Pleasant. Non-university subscriptions are $75 per academic year. Back copies are available at 50 cents per copy, or $1 if mailed. Photocopies of stories are 25 cents each. Digital copies of photographs published in Central Michigan Life are available upon request at specified costs. Central Michigan Life’s editorial and business offices are located at 436 Moore Hall, Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, MI 48859, telephone 774-3493 or 774-LIFE.
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Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com y SEPT. 14, 2015
Students petition for total legalization of marijuana in Michigan By Johnathan Hogan Staff Reporter @jr_Hogan1 | news@cm-life.com
Student Advocates for the Medical and Responsible Use of Cannabis are collecting signatures for a proposal that would legalize marijuana for recreational purposes in Michigan. To appear on the ballot in November 2016 the petition requires more than 200,000 signatures. The proposal, known as the Michigan Marihuana Legalization, Regulation and Economic Stimulus Act, would allow adults aged 21 and above to possess 2.5 ounces of marijuana and privately grow 12 marijuana plants, while giving state and local governments flexibility on regulation. Taxes collected from the sale of marijuana would go to the Department of Transportation, the School Aid Fund, and to the city government in which the substance is sold. “The stigma is fading, and we want to wipe it out,” said Dan Cavins, president of SAMRC. At the first group meeting of the semester on Sept. 9, Cavins cited the increase in incarceration rates and the medical needs of patients as reasons marijuana should be legalized. “We do this for the parents who lost custody of their children, for the prisoners who don’t have a voice (and) for the kids who die because they can’t get their medicine,” the junior said.
Director of the Office of Student Conduct, Tom Idema, said if the proposal was successful, CMU’s marijuana policy would not change. “Since CMU receives federal funding, we follow federal guidelines (The Drug-Free Schools and Communities Act) when it comes to controlled substances like marijuana,” he said. “It really does not matter what the State of Michigan does. As long as we are complying with federal regulations our current policies will not change. “ The efforts of SAMRC are part of a larger effort to collect signatures supported by the Michigan Comprehensive Cannabis Law Reform Committee, responsible for drafting the proposal and funding the campaign. Cavins said the group has collected about 150 signatures in its first week and the response from students has been positive. The group plans to collect signatures throughout the year by sending volunteers around campus, to residence halls, football tailgates and other events. SAMRC will have tables set up throughout the semester, alternating weekly between Monday and Tuesday appearances from 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The organization also is encouraging students to register to vote, providing forms for them to fill out. At the group meeting, Cavins argued that millennials have not participated in the voting process in large enough numbers to have
Abbie Robinson | Staff Photographer Chelsea senior Sarah Wolpoff applauds after the first meeting for Student Advocates for the Medical and Responsible use of Cannabis in Moore Hall on Sept. 9.
an impact in elections. Last year, SAMRC worked with local activists to successfully decriminalize marijuana use in Mount Pleasant, allowing adults of age 21 and older to possess the substance. Marijuana is still restricted within the city, however, due to state laws that the current proposal would override. Cavins noted that many of the supporters were motivated by medical needs. Sophomore Mitchell Brown, secretary of SAMRC, has a prescription for marijuana to treat pain caused by migraines and irritable bowel syndrome. He began using about a year ago, just before his freshman year. Although medical marijuana is legal in Michigan, CMU does not
allow students to possess or use the substance anywhere on campus, even with a prescription. Brown said his resident assistant
questioned him about the smell in his residence hall room and told him he could not use the substance on campus. Brown began
storing his prescribed marijuana at a friend’s house. Within a month he decided to move off campus into an apartment. “It was a bunch of hassle for just trying to feel normal,” he said. Other students differed in their opinions about legalizing marijuana. Freshman Zack Kujat said he was unsure which side of the debate he favored. “I think it should be legalized so the cops don’t have to crack down on it, but at the same time it’s dangerous so I feel that people shouldn’t be allowed to use it.” Sophomore Mikayla Lemery said she opposes legalization due to her family’s experience with drug addiction. “I have an uncle and a cousin who are drug addicts, and I do not think it should be legalized because it is a gateway drug,” she said.
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SEPT. 14, 2015 y Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com
Building credit in college By Paige Sheffield Staff Reporter @paige_sheff | news@cm-life.com
Establishing a good credit score can help students achieve financial milestones after graduation. The average student has poor credit in college, said Charles Hoff. Hoff, Dort Federal Credit Union Financial’s Member Education Counselor, said 30 percent of a person’s credit score is based on the balance they have in relation to the total credit available, also referred to as the credit utilization ratio. The more credit a person has available, the better their score. “When lenders trust you and you haven’t broken that trust by maxing out a credit card, your score is going to respond in a positive way,” Hoff said. Joe Garrison, Associate Director of Financial Planning and Budgets and Finance 201 professor, said students can build their credit by being added to a parent’s account as a cardholder, or looking at credit cards that are specifically for students. Students should pay attention to interest rates, annual fees and reward points when choosing a credit card, Garrison said. In addition to utilization, payment history and derogatory marks have significant impact on credit score. Garrison also said student loan debt is a type of credit source, but it’s not treated the same way as revolving credit. He said
Kate Carlson
| News Editor
Financial aid advisers are located at the Student Service Court on the lower level of Bovee University Center.
students can build credit by being responsible with student loans and paying them off. “Only take what you really need to pay your bills,” he said. Hoff said student loans can negatively impact a credit score as well. Student loan debt is closed end loan debt; the balance should begin to fall, but it doesn’t when students defer interest payments on their student loans, seriously impacting their credit scores, Hoff said. “When a student takes out a loan for $20,000 for school, (credit scoring firms) expect the balance to be falling for the next several years,” he said. “But what most students do is have the interest added to the loan. That hurts their efforts to raise their score.” Hoff said a mistake students make is looking at student loans as something they don’t need to pay off until later in life. “(Students) need to look at
student loan debt as something that needs to be retired and paid off,” he said. Garrison suggested limiting credit card usage and being mindful of available funds. “(Students who don’t make interest payments while in school) are going to have a low credit score because the balance is higher than the original loan amount taken out,” Hoff said. To ensure debt doesn’t accumulate, Hoff recommended students set a target date for when they want to have the debt paid off. “The earlier you can start to build (credit), the better, but don’t build it by just obtaining cards and accumulating debt,” Garrison said. Financial aid advisers are available on weekdays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays at the Student Service Court on the lower level of Bovee University Center.
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SPORTS Monica Bradburn | Staff Photographer
Senior tight end Ben McCord escapes the last defender on his 83-yard touchdown grab. The Chippewas beat Monmouth 31-10.
show of strength Young secondary ready to prove themselves
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Bonamego earns first win; Syracuse on deck
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SEPT. 14, 2015 y Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com
Making the secondary a primary position By Evan Sasiela Staff reporter @SalsaEvan | sports@cm-life.com
Defensive backs deliver punishing blows on the field during the season. During the offseason, the Central Michigan secondary was on the receiving end of a huge hit. After the dismissal of senior cornerback Brandon Greer due to a kidnapping investigation and the graduation of cornerback Jason Wilson, a young and inexperienced group remains at the cornerback position for the Central Michigan University football team. The secondary will aim to work collectively in an effort to replace the two starters from last season. “We’ve got a lot to prove,” said senior safety Kavon Frazier. “We’ve got some veterans in the secondary. We have to replace some people on the perimeters.” Unlike the cornerbacks, the safety position returns a pair of starters with Frazier and fellow safety Tony Annese, a junior. In 2014, Annese ranked second on the team in tackles with 74, while Frazier was fourth with 58. Through two games this season, the Chippewas have started sophomore Amari Coleman at one cornerback spot and have rotated both senior Stefon Armstead and sophomore Josh Cox on the other side. The trio has combined for 24 tackles in matchups with Oklahoma State and Monmouth. “We have a lot of great talent (with) young guys that are ready to play,” Armstead said. “We’re eager to get on the field and show everybody what we can do.” The secondary’s next challenge will be to limit Syracuse wide receiver Brisly Estime and company when CMU takes on the Orange at 12:30 p.m. Saturday at the Carrier Dome. Cox is tied for second on the team in tackles this season with 12 after two games. Last season, the sophomore recorded 19 tackles in 12 games. Armstead has tallied four tackles this season after making only one in 2014. Despite taking a bigger role in the defense, Cox has no fear of covering some of the top wideouts in the Mid-American Conference, including Western Michigan University’s Corey Davis. “I love being matched up with the best guy on the field,” Cox said. Cox described himself as a “technician” who can play multiple roles, while Armstead said he
is a quick thinker with good anticipation, who also studies a lot of film. Armstead is someone Cox called a “great role model on, and off, the field.” Former Chippewas Jahleel Addae, Wilson and Greer influenced Armstead, who said he will “try and set an example” for the younger cornerbacks. “I got to sit behind them and learn some things from them,” Armstead said. “I picked up some of their tactics on how to be a leader and how to instill them into the young corners we have now.” As a new leader in the secondary, Annese plans to help out Armstead in directing the group. “The corners are learning quickly,” Annese said. “It’s a little different because we had some veteran guys last year at corner, so they kind of helped us, helped me a little bit at safety. Now I’m becoming more of a leader because we’ve got some young guys playing corner.” Frazier recorded a career-high 13 tackles against Oklahoma State and leads the team with 20 total. He hopes his experience and early performance will carry over to the cornerbacks, a group Frazier says improves consistently. “When (the cornerbacks) came into camp, they came in ready and have given it all they got,” Frazier said. “Most of them already have experience. We just kept it moving.” Armstead and Frazier have both donned the No. 21 Derrick Nash legacy jersey this season. Nash, a cornerback on the team, passed away in June after a long battle with cancer. CMU is passing his jersey to a different team member each week of the season to honor him. Armstead got the nod in week one, while Frazier’s performance against the Cowboys earned him the jersey against Monmouth. Head Coach John Bonamego has high expectations for his young corners, and said the group will improve with each game. “You always have concern any time you are playing young players, but old players don’t just show up,” Bonamego said. “I think the guys we have rotating in all have talent.” Bonamego credited Defensive Backs Coach Archie Collins and Safeties Coach Mike Dietzel for their role in the development of the defensive backs. The position coaches also received praise from Armstead. “The whole defensive coaching staff does a good job of getting us ready for games,” Armstead said. “We’re very excited about the
Samantha Madar | Staff Photographer A trio of cornerbacks, senior Stefon Armstead, sophomore Josh Cox and sophomore Amari Coleman will have to step up in leadership roles this season.
season. They’re a great coaching staff.” Coleman has started at cornerback in the first two games and has seen time as a punt and kick returner along with freshman Emmitt Thomas. Coleman made only seven tackles last season, but has already tallied eight in 2015. Armstead can already see big things for the sophomore this year. “Amari can be as great as he wants to be,” Armstead said. “Amari has great talent. He is a great guy with a great attitude. He comes out
here and works hard just like all the rest of us.” Replacing Greer was somewhat unexpected, as he was supposed to lead the group before being kicked off the team in July. He tallied 47 tackles and three interceptions last season. Despite Greer’s troubled offseason, Cox will remember him as a mentor and team leader. “One thing I’ll take away from (Greer) is to always keep a cool head, play fast and (know) there’s always something you can improve on,” Cox said.
Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com y SEPT. 14, 2015
Snapshots from Saturday’s game
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sports
Thanks to an explosive first half, Central Michigan University football defeated Monmouth 31-10 Saturday at home. It was the Chippewas’ first victory of the season and John Bonamego’s first gatorade bath as CMU’s head coach.
Abbie Robinson | Staff Photographer Students supported the Chippewas during their game against Monmouth Sept. 12 at Kelly/Shorts Stadium.
Monica Bradburn | Staff Photographer
Ypsilanti sophomore Tyree Waller attempts to tackle a Monmouth player Saturday at Kelly/Shorts Stadium.
Kaiti Chritz | Photo Editor Anthony Rice catches the ball against Monmouth Sept. 12 at Kelly/Shorts Stadium.
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SEPT. 14, 2015 y Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com
Monica Bradburn| Staff Photographer
Head Coach John Bonamego swings his hat around before leading the marching band in the fight song after his first win at Central Michigan University against Monmouth at Kelly/Shorts Stadium on Sept. 12.
the game with 328 yards, was 25-for-36 passing and had three touchdowns and one interception. Rush’s top target on Saturday was sophomore wide receiver Mark Chapman, who caught six passes for 61 yards.
Chapman showed his versatility to the CMU coaching staff during the first quarter when he took a handoff from Rush and ran the ball 11 yards in for a score, capping a 14-play, 73-yard opening drive to give the Chippewas a 7-0 lead.
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Total yards CMU: 336
First half
A dominating victory against Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) opponent Monmouth was what most fans expected. CMU handled MU 31-10 on Saturday, and the team sits at 1-1 on the season as it prepares for its first road trip of the year. A more than 500-mile flight awaits the team, as it heads to Syracuse for a 12:30 p.m. showdown on Saturday at the Carrier Dome. For Bonamego, Saturday’s victory was his first coaching at his alma mater. “It feels like a win,” he said. “It’s great, I love the feeling,” A sustained and methodic first-half passing attack helped the Chippewas cruise to victory, led by junior quarterback Cooper Rush. The third-year starter finished
The Chippewas jumped out to a 31-3 lead in the first half, led by a strong performance from junior quarterback Cooper Rush. The second half was a different story. Monmouth outgained CMU and slowed the streaking Chippewa offense.
MONM: 27 CMU: 66
Second half
sports@cm-life.com | @DomMastrangelo1
The biggest play of the day came on an 83-yard connection from Rush to tight end Ben McCord, who had one of the best games of his CMU football career. His two receptions added up to 100 yards. CMU’s run game remains the biggest area of concern. Chippewa rushers combined for only 158 yards on the ground on 62 carries in the first two games. CMU running backs have yet to reach the end zone this season. Rush and Chapman have the team’s only rushing scores. “About the only thing we didn’t do was run the football,” Bonamego said. “It was a little bit better; we showed some spurts, but overall we still need to be able to run the ball better.” The closest Monmouth came to scoring in the first half was on a trick play flee-flicker on their second drive, but quarterback Cody Williams’ pass fell incomplete. “I think we lucked out that it was a bad throw,” defensive lineman Shafer Johnson chuckled after the game. “He was open.” Senior defensive end Blake Serpa saw limited action while recovering from a hamstring injury, but was involved in a CMU defensive effort that held the Hawks to less than 30 yards of offense during the first half. Junior defensive end Joe Ostman left the game with a leg injury. Bonamego said x-rays did not show broken bones, but Ostman will be re-evaluated this week to see if he will have to miss any playing time. The Chippewa defense will have a week to prepare for a Syracuse (2-0) offense that gave their defense major trouble last year. “We owe them from last year,” said senior linebacker Tim Hamilton after Saturday’s win. Rush echoed Hamilton’s claim. “(That game) still stings from last year,” Rush added. “We didn’t think they were that much better than us, but they kicked our butts. “We want that one back.”
MONM: 154
Time of possession
34+66+y 56+44+y First half
Second half
CMU: 19:53
CMU: 13:22
MONM: 10:07
MONM: 16:38
Total passing yards First half
By Dominick Mastrangelo Staff Reporter
Tale of two halves
Second half
Bonamego earns first win
FINAL SCORE
CMU: 301 MONM: 30 CMU: 27 MONM: 84 CMU
MONM
31 10
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Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com y SEPT. 14, 2015
NCAA roundup: Enos’ Razorbacks fall, Spartans top Ducks By Taylor DesOrmeau Sports Editor @TDesOrmeau | Sports@cm-life.com
It was an eventful Saturday in the NCAA, with a pair of Top 10 teams going head-to-head. Here are six games that will have a special interest among Chippewa fans:
Toledo 16, No. 18 Arkansas 12 Dan Enos went 0-5 against Toledo during his tenure as Central Michigan University football’s head coach. He didn’t have any better luck as No. 18 Arkansas’ offensive coordinator Saturday. While his offense outgained the Rockets 515-318, the Razorbacks only managed 12 points. It was the fewest points Arkansas had scored in a game since Nov. 1, 2014 when it lost 17-10 to No. 1 Mississippi State. In Arkansas’ five trips to the red zone, they managed just three
points. The Razorbacks had a chance on the final play of the game, lining up on the Toledo 16yard line, but threw an incomplete pass in the back of the end zone. Eight of their final 10 games will be against ranked opponents.
made a stop in Oregon’s final drive to clinch the victory in front of 76,526 fans in East Lansing. The Spartans host Air Force next week before the Chippewas take the hour drive down US-127 to take on MSU Sept. 26.
Syracuse 30, Wake Forest 17
Kent State 45, Delaware State 13
Freshman quarterback Eric Dungey only had 35 first-half yards, but finished the day 8-for-13 with 221 passing yards, two touchdowns and no picks in his first game starting for the Orange. Senior Terrel Hunt tore his Achilles last week, sidelining him for the season. The Orange are 2-0 after finishing 2014 3-9. They will host the Chippewas on Saturday at 12:30 p.m. at the Carrier Dome. Syracuse has averaged 28,391 fans at its first two home games in the 49,262-person stadium. Syracuse beat CMU 40-3 at
Kent State senior kicker April Goss made history Saturday, becoming the second woman to score a point in NCAA Division I history and the first since 2003. Goss put through an extra point in the second quarter of the Golden Flashes blowout victory. The four-year member of the team was surrounded by teammates and congratulated by coaches and the university president after converting the kick. Delaware State had -33 total yards in the game, scoring twice off KSU turnovers.
File Photo | Meagan Dullack Senior running back Saylor Lavallii dives as he is pulled down by the Syracuse defense at Kelly/Shorts Stadium in Fall 2014.
Kelly/Shorts Stadium last season. It was Syracuse’s biggest win and CMU’s biggest loss of the season.
No. 5 Michigan State 31, No. 7 Oregon 28 The Spartans had a 10-point lead midway through the fourth quarter, but an Oregon surge
nearly gave the Ducks the lead in the final minutes of the game. Down three points, senior quarterback Vernon Adams Jr. missed a wide open receiver streaking toward the end zone with less than two minutes to play. Despite losing the yardage battle 432-389, MSU
Soccer falls to No. 24 DePaul By Joe Judd Staff Reporter @josecan_yousee | Sports@cm-life.com
For the second time this season, an own goal cost Central Michigan University soccer the game in a 1-0 contest. On Sunday, it was against No. 24 DePaul. Bennett Field opened to fans for the first time this regular season Sunday afternoon as the Chippewas hosted the Blue Demons. DePaul was given a corner kick in the 71st minute, which led to the goal. It was discovered after the game, when looking at the replay, that the ball deflected off a Chippewa freshman defender Mary Carlson — and not a Blue Demon — and into the goal. “As I told the team, I think the challenge on a day like today is you always want to deserve more,” said Head Coach Peter McGahey. “We put a good performance out against a team in the Top 25.
The hard part is, at the end of the day, we didn’t quite do enough,” McGahey said. Coming within a goal against a top team gives CMU confidence as the Mid-American Conference schedule approaches. “The thing that I’m excited about as we continue to move forward is this team has continued to respond in a really positive way in some big games,” he said. “It was another positive response.” CMU tallied seven shots compared to nine from DePaul. DePaul had five saves while freshman Zoie Reed made two saves. “I’m upset about the game but I’m not disappointed,” said junior defender Taylor Potts. “We played really well overall collectively. We moved together as a unit.”
Where they stand With the home loss, the Chippewas are 1-4-1. Despite coming up short in
efficiency, CMU allowed one less goal than rival Western Michigan University, who fell 2-0 to DePaul on Friday evening in Chicago. They are close to the bottom of the conference as far as non-conference play is concerned, along with Northern Illinois (1-6-0), Toledo (2-5-0) and Ohio (1-5-0).
Looking ahead CMU’s next contest comes Sunday, where they will host Missouri Valley member Illinois State in its last non-conference match of the season. A 1 p.m. game, the match against the Red Birds will be the final game at Bennett Field before they move into the new soccer and lacrosse complex. The team will play at the new stadium starting Oct. 2 against the Miami Redhawks. MAC season will start the weekend of Friday, Sept. 25 when CMU will go to WMU and NIU.
The Golden Flashes host CMU on Nov. 18 at 8 p.m. in the secondto-last game of the regular season.
Georgia Southern 43, Western Michigan 17 After keeping within two touchdowns of No. 5 Michigan State last weekend, Western Michigan struggled mightily Saturday against Georgia Southern. The Eagles lost in Week 1 to West Virginia 44-0. Bronco Head Coach P.J. Fleck said it was a “royal whooping,” on the Bronco Radio Network after the game. Georgia Southern completed just one pass for seven yards all day, but it was the rushing attack that finished the Broncos. The Eagles carried the ball 52 times for 413 yards and five touchdowns. WMU hosts Murray State next weekend before going on the road against No. 1 Ohio State Sept. 26.
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OPEN UP TO THE POSSIBILITY of finding your next home in the classifieds Central Michigan Life CLASSIFIEDS, Call 989-774-5433, or find us online at: www.cm-life.com
GENTLY USED FURNITURE less than 1.5 yrs old. black desk $50, black tea table $30, black wooden drawers $50, air sofa/bed w/pump $30, three plastic drawers with wheels $7 each or $20 total, black folding chair $10, HP printer $50, shoe rack $5, electric mixer $12. To see pictures or to purchase, contact through WhatsApp, text or call (616)-443-8743, email khodh1ry@cmich.edu
DEERFIELD VILLAGE 2-3-4 Person Like New Cable, Internet, Water Paid 773-9999
1, 2, 3,4 BED APTS Pets OK Furniture Available Short/Long Term Lease 772-2222
3, 4, or 5 PERSON House and Duplex. Immediate Occupancy. Clean, convenient and affordable! Locally owned & managed. www.qualityapts.com (989) 772-3894
LOOKING TO SUB-LEASE apartment through December at Jamestown Apartments. $385/month plus utilities. One female roommate with a small, friendly dog. If interested, please call (517)402-4419.
1/2 BLOCK FROM NORTH CAMPUS 2 Person House & Apartments 9 Month Leases, W/Ds, No Pets (616)980-6156 CM Life Classifieds www.cm-life.com
WHIRLPOOL REFRIGERATOR 10CU ft., 3 yrs. old. $200. (989)866-2759
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CROSSWORD
SUDOKU 49. Finger end Across 50. Purge 1. Clobber 52. Well-balanced, perhaps 6. Unprejudiced one’s 55. Like some toothpicks quality 56. Directory 14. Vampiress 57. Cyber-send to the I.R.S. 15. In better condition 58. Jiffies 17. French states 18. Like rainy-day provisions 59. Like carrots in a frozen dinner 19. Roughly 7257.5 kilograms Down 21. Fanatical 1. Glossed over 22. Pew feature 2. Afternoon show 23. Musical passage 3. Descriptive language 25. Always, to a bard 4. Parishioner’s donation 26. Immersed in 5. Oscar de la Hoya’s 28. ____ Dangerfield birthplace 29. She played Laurie 6. Largest tributary of the Partridge Mississippi, by 30. Conjures up volume 32. “My lips ___ sealed” 7. Actor Sean 33. Recluse 8. Ewer handles 34. Outburst of surprise 9. Phillies’ div. 37. In a straight line 38. Only even prime number 10. Rushmore and Rainier: Abbr. 41. Suggest subtly 11. “It has come to my 43. Barely read attention...” 45. German pronoun 12. State of bliss 46. Like a sauna room 13. One who makes a plan 47. ___ Boys
16. All-night flight 20. Boldness 23. Made pleasing, with “up” 24. Nylons 27. Rounded roofs 31. Payoffs 33. Dutch cheese 34. Response to a great retort 35. Zenith rival 36. Long-range golf club 38. April 1912 newsmaker 39. Shape with a knife 40. Like two jacks 42. Griffin’s grippers 44. Hurt badly 48. Arthur C. Clarke’s genre 50. English school for princes 51. Big melee 53. Wager 54. Atty.’s org.
SODOKU GUIDELINES:
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19
Central Michigan Life 14,publishing 2015 y Cm-life.com y sept. Reach more than 32,000 readers each day!
Central Michigan life
CLASSIFIEDS c m - l i f e . co m / c l a ss i f i e d s
436 moore hall, cmu, mount pleasant, mi 48859 P: 989-774-LIFE f: 989-774-7805
1-2 issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ issues: $7.00 per issue
15 word minimum per classified ad bold, italic and centered type are available along with other special features like ad attractors.
MISC. SERVICES
HELP WANTED
MALE STUDENTS DESIRING ACADEMIC MENTORING from male CMU M.A. Graduate. Contact (989)560-8037. Limited openings
EARN CASH; JUST GO TO CLASS Do you take GREAT notes? StudySoup will pay you $300-500 per course to be an Elite Notetaker. We have only a few open positions left for this semester so apply soon (applications close in a week) ===> Studysoup.com/apply
MATH, STATISTICS, PHYSICS PROFESSIONAL TUTOR Classes not enough? Get the personal attention you need for success: doodle.com/cmichtutor cmichtutor@gmail.com (989) 317-5031 ARE YOU A UNIQUE? If you have a special talent or creative service, spread the word in the Classifieds. Call (989) 774-LIFE.
POST YOUR JOB OPENING in the CMLife Classifieds. (989) 774-LIFE.
Drivers: CO & O/Op!s: Earn great money Running Dedicated! Great Hometime and Benefits. Monthly Bonuses. Drive Newer Equipment! (855)582-2265
Every day you will find the most extensive listing of homes, apartments, condos and townhouses in our community. Readers from all around the area have found their homes in the CM Life Classifieds. 989•774•5433 www.cm-life.com
Go ahead and chill...
• • • •
STEPHEN CHASE, M.D. Ear, Nose & Throat • Surgery & Allergy
• Board Certified • University of Michigan Medical School • Cleveland Clinic Fellowship • Serving the area since 1986
FA OF M MIL ID Y Visit MI., PC FOO o wwwur webs (989)TCA .fam ite for 775- RE 850 help ily
Aries (March 21-April 19) -- Today is an 8 -- Crazy dreams seem possible. The next two days bring lots of career movement. Make an important connection. Plan your moves. Allow for miracles. Abandon old fears. You’re being tested. Angels guide your actions. Taurus (April 20-May 20) -- Today is an 8 -- The way is blocked, so sit still for a while. Plan a trip over the next few days. Research the route, destination and possible fun to be had. Review options. There’s no need to decide yet. Gemini (May 21-June 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Manage finances today and tomorrow. Work together to resolve priorities. Discuss what you each love and want. Use money to make money. Opposites attract even more so now. Keep your sense of humor. Cancer (June 21-July 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Negotiate to refine the plan. Work with a partner for the next few days. A conflict between love and money could arise. Work it out. Don’t be afraid if you don’t know how. Get promises in writing. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Focus on your work over the next few days. Gather support for your project. Ask for
assistance and get it. Don’t fund a fantasy. A positive attitude plus persistent efforts add up to some serious cash.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- Today is a 9 -- Finish what you said you’d do before starting a new project. Romance is a growing possibility over the next few days. It’s getting fun. Use your connections. Work with what you have. Practical, inventive design delivers. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Cleaning house leads to the discovery of buried treasure. Begin a practical domestic phase. Make changes. Reinforce infrastructure. Home and family take priority today and tomorrow. Get together and draw up your fantasies. Realize a shared dream. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is a 9 -- Accept a challenging assignment and learn new tricks. Resist the temptation to spend on shiny stuff you don’t need. Get what you do. Write, perform and express yourself. You’re especially clever today and tomorrow. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is a 9 -- You can
Get Comfortable
KEEP IT SIMPLE WITH ONE BILL!
1401 E. Bellows St. • Suite E7, • Mt. Pleasant • (989) 772-4032 • parkplacecmu@pmapts.com
Phone: (989) 621-3442 bobmooradiancounseling.com bobrmooradian@gmail.com
make lots of money today and tomorrow. Work interferes with play. Take the cash, and ask a loved one for patience. Satisfy the customer, and celebrate after the job is done. New opportunities merit attention. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Today is a 7 -- Enjoy a two-day self-confident phase. Increase your leadership. Take responsibility for a project, and provide results. Attend meetings and participate. Work with friends. Count your blessings. It’s an excellent time to travel, or just go out. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Today is an 8 -- Get into thoughtful planning mode. Don’t worry ineffectively. Send someone else ahead. Contemplate your next move carefully over the next few days. Meditate in seclusion. Study the situation. Imagine different solutions and consequences. Listen to your heart.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) -- Today is an 8 -- Set up gatherings. Confer with allies today and tomorrow. Work out who will do what. Invest in efficiency. Step up what you’re willing to be responsible for. Others get inspired for the same. Collaborate for a shared possibility.
You’re Home. • Intercom System •Basketball Courts • Fireplaces & Cathedral Ceilings* • Newly Renovated
• Open •Convenient Floorplans Location * Select floor plans only •Heat Included*
1, 2 & 3 BEDROOm ApARTmENTS AVAILABLE • Pets Welcome • Indoor Heated pool • On-Site Laundry • Electric, Gas, Heat, A/C, Trash,water and sewer included • FREE Parking • 24-Hour Maintenance
(989) 772-1954 1517 Canterbury Trail Mount Pleasant, MI 48858 Visit: MHMLTD.com
StaRtinG at
300 pER mONTH
3300 E. Deerfield Road, Mt. Pleasant • timbercreek@pmapts.com • (989) 773-3300
600 E. Broadway Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858
• 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments • 24/7 Fitness Center • Sparkling Pool & Sundeck • Pet Friendly • Laundry Facilities
Park ParkPlace Place Apartments Apartments
$
M.A. LMSW LPC
By Linda Black
Electricity, Heat, A/C, Water & Sewer
LIVE WITH YOUR BEST FRIEND
BOB MOORADIAN COUNSELING
BobMooradianMightyMiniBTSFall2015.indd 8/26/15 112:05 PM
• All Utilities inClUDeD!
we pay the utility bill!
foot ful h 0 care ints! .biz
989-773-0028
HOROSCOPE
Spacious 2 BR Apartments Walking Distance to Campus Laundry in Every Building Dishwasher
We Save SOLES!
Professionally managed by Millennia Housing Management, LTD.
20
SEPT. 14, 2015 y Central Michigan Life y Cm-life.com
2015 HOMECOMING CONCERT
THIRD EYE BLIND
McGuirk Arena FRIDAY OCTOBER 2ND Support Act
HOODIE ALLEN CENTRAL MICHIG AN UNIVERSITY
ON SALE TUES 9/1
GENERAL PUBLIC
ON SALE WED 9/2
TICKETS ON SALE AT CMICH.EDU/TICKETCENTRAL
DOORS OPEN AT
7:00PM
TICKETS START AT
$25