Nov. 26, 2018

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NO. 55 | VOL. 97

STUDENT KILLED IN CAR CRASH

Molly Sheehan, a 21-year-old junior from Iron River, died in a traffic accident

CENTRAL MICHIGAN CENTRAL MICHIGAN

LIFE LIFE

GAME OVER Bonamego coaches last game as ‘dream job,’ ends with 22-29 overall record N O V. 2 6 , 2 0 1 8   |   M O U N T P L E A S A N T, M I


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NOV. 26, 2018  |  CENTRAL MICHIGAN LIFE  |  CM-LIFE.COM

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CENTRAL MICHIGAN LIFE  | CM-LIFE.COM  | NOV. 26, 2018

CM-LIFE

LIFE IN BRIEF

NEWS

CMU STUDENT DIES IN MONTCALM COUNTY CAR CRASH OVER THANKSGIVING BREAK A 21-year-old Central Michigan University student died in a fatal car crash Friday evening in Montcalm County. The driver has been identified as Molly Sheehan of Iron River by friends and family on social media. An obituary has been published by Bjork & Zhulkie Funeral Home. Michigan State Police officers responded to the crash at about 3:45 p.m. Nov. 23 on North M-66 near North County Line Road. According to MLive, Sheehan’s vehicle was heading north on M-66 when it crossed the center

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line, striking an oncoming vehicle driven by a 65-yearold Barryton man. The other driver was taken to Kelsey Hospital in Lakeview with noncritical injuries,

state police said. This story will be updated as more information is made available.

04 White nationalist literature found on campus Material from the Patroit Front, a Texas-based white nationalist group, was posted in academic halls across CMU’s campus last week

06 Farewell Bono Hours after the Chippewas’ loss to the Toledo, it was announced head coach John Bonamego was fired

EDITORIAL 05 ‘Meet Here’ brand doesn’t represent Mount Pleasant The new city brand was recently announced — but it doesn’t do much to sell you on the community

-Mitchell Kukulka, Investigative Editor

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NOV. 26, 2018  | CENTRAL MICHIGAN LIFE  | CM-LIFE.COM

White nationalist literature found on bulletin boards, in classroom By Sara Kellner University Editor news@cm-life.com

Sterling Heights senior Sarah Merrifield walked into Dow 135 for her fashion class when she noticed some red, white and blue cards on the tables in the classroom. “Some of the students saw them, but didn’t realize what they were,” she said. “We looked it up and realized it was a Nazi thing and then we all started freaking out.” The posters included links to patriotfront.us and bloodandsoil. org. Both web addresses bring users to the Patriot Front website. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, a group “dedicated to fighting hate and bigotry and to seeking justice for the most vulnerable members of our society,” Patriot Front is a Texas-based white nationalist group, founded in 2017 by Thomas Rousseau. Merrifield said her professor, human environmental studies faculty member Ian Mull, took the flyers

Cody Scanlan | Staff Photographer Cards showcasing white supremacist propaganda from the Texas-based group Patriot Front left in CMU academic buildings on Nov. 19 in Dow Hall room 135.

after class and planned to report them to the university. Mull said after class, he took the flyers with him and showed them to human environmental studies chair Tanya Domina. He and Domina contacted the Office of Civil Rights

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same posters on bulletin boards along the first floor. She was clocking in for her shift as an anatomy teaching assistant when she saw one of the posters on the bulletin board by the clock-in station. “Then I back-tracked and realized they were on another bulletin board,” she said. In total, she found eight posters on the first floor of the Health Professions building and took them all to the Center for Diversity and Inclusion. Appelgren said she also found a “blood and soil” poster last spring in the North Art Studio. Assistant Director of University Communications Ari Harris said it appears the distribution of the flyers was done by an outside organization, one not affiliated with CMU. “Their stances are not aligned with the values of Central Michigan University, including integrity, respect, compassion, inclusiveness and social responsibility,” Harris said. The presidential cabinet dis-

cussed the matter during a meeting this morning and agreed to dispose of the literature. Lt. Cameron Wassman from the CMU Police Department said the first report of these cards was on Nov. 17. Staff from Charles V. Park Library called to report finding them tucked in books in the library. Other locations that have been reported to CMU Police include the Dow Science Building, the Engineering and Technology Building, and several residence halls, Wassman said. “Nothing rises to the level of being a crime,” Wassman said. Journalism department chair Tim Boudreau, who teaches a journalism class about first amendment and free speech, said the literature doesn’t appear to be criminal. “There were no threats made, no illegal ideas distributed,” he said. “No laws appear to have been broken.” He said the first amendment protects a lot of speech, even if it’s offensive.

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CENTRAL MICHIGAN LIFE  | CM-LIFE.COM  | NOV. 26, 2018

STAFF EDITORIAL EDITOR-IN-CHIEF EMMA DALE UNIVERSITY SARA KELLNER COMMUNITY ASHLEY SCHAFER FEATURES QUINN KIRBY OPINION EMILLY DAVIS SPORTS DYLAN GOETZ INVESTIGATIVE MITCHELL KUKULKA PHOTO CHELSEA GROBELNY DESIGN CONNOR BYRNE MULTIMEDIA NATALIE MCCORVIE PODCAST BRENT GUNN

ADVERTISING

‘Meet here’ brand campaign doesn't reflect Mount Pleasant

M

ount Pleasant revealed its new brand, “Meet Here,” on Nov. 13. The branding experts hired to direct this project explained that the goal of the phrase “meet here” is to say anything and everything comes together in Mount Pleasant. “Branding” is often misunderstood or confused with advertising. Branding is the marketing practice of creating a name, symbol or design that identifies and differentiates a product from other products, as explained by Entrepreneur magazine. Branding should convey to customers what they can expect from you – who you are, who you want to be and who people perceive you to be. “Meet Here,” is an openended phrase that community members and businesses can “add to.” Adding words in front of “meet here” can be done to convey a specific message. A few examples provided at the event included: “Mom and pops. Meet here.” “Messy hands. Meet here.” “Many backgrounds. Meet here.” Do you get it? No, we don’t get it either.

EDITORIAL Creating a brand campaign for Mount Pleasant started seven years ago. In April, city leaders hired the “center for social impact,” Pittsburghbased company Darwin, to create the brand campaign for $35,000 and travel expenses. Darwin conducted interviews and surveys to gather data about how people define Mount Pleasant and what makes the community unique. “One of the goals was to identify how Mount Pleasant is different from Grand Rapids or Lansing or anywhere else,” said creative strategist Kathleen Monin. “We also wanted to make a fantastic reputation for the community while staying true to who we are.” That’s a great idea. But “meet here” is so generic the phrase could be used in any context, for any town. Mount Pleasant has an identity crisis. It seems to be a college town that doesn’t want to be a college town. It’s home to one of the largest casinos in the state (not technically in the city, we know) yet seems to also resent that. It’s also a place where small businesses are struggling and chain restaurants and big box stores dominate the landscape.

It can be argued that a lot of people do meet in Mount Pleasant. Any Central Michigan University student can probably tell you about meeting a best friend – or the love of their life – after coming to school in Mount Pleasant. Our brand, like other cities that are home to public universities, should have an overarching theme that connects both. Cities like East Lansing and Ann Arbor have a distinctive, college town atmosphere when you visit them. Although the University of Michigan and Michigan State are much larger universities than CMU, those schools are intertwined in the culture of those cities – you cannot separate one from the other. The same is true of Mount Pleasant. When you visit those cities, you get the idea that the city and university coexist as one. Mount Pleasant shouldn’t try to distance itself from the major attraction it is known for: CMU. If the university and city connected this and promoted it more, both brands will grow. Besides being a college town, Mount Pleasant is much more than a city in the middle of the state where people meet. It is a unique place that is home to a mix of very different groups of people. CMU students, alumni who

stay in town after graduation, the Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe, young families with children and older people who’ve always lived here — all of these groups of people define Mount Pleasant. Some of them might never cross paths with other groups, but each of them contribute to the culture of the city. No matter who you are, you can find people you connect with in Mount Pleasant. During the one of Darwin’s interview sessions, the idea of Mount Pleasant being a “cultural crossroads” was discussed. That’s a great story to tell — maybe that should be our brand. We don’t need a “center for social impact” to tell us who we are. They didn’t really “get us.” Mount Pleasant is a college town that brings many diverse people together, a Michigan town that provides excellent shopping and dining options, a Saginaw Chippewa town that celebrates culture and history and a progressive community that supports each other through its schools, employment opportunities, social programs and local government. You can do more than just “meet here.”

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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 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 (989) 774-3493 or 774-LIFE.


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NOV. 26, 2018  | CENTRAL MI

“There isn’t a person that’s more disappoin

NIGH W

hen John Bo leading the “Words ca Bonamego d end my head coaching care After two brawls on the fie to an abrupt end for the ma Athletic Director Micha Bonamego was fired, CM extended in 2017. He with Bonamego’s rep The Chippewas fin During his four17 mark in confe

Even though Boname bowl games in his first plug on the 55-year-ol “Making a leadersh cially when you know Alford said. “After co program, it was clea to compete for and From his first to returning friend, be in the community a his firing.

FROM LOVED TO Bonamego quick gram – and a figur his first three seaso At his inaugural message to fans, alu “If you’re a Chipp He was the first a since Bill Kelly from and tears flowed dow head coach just four s “This is not just ano press conference. “To m how much I love this pl One of CMU’s greates


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ICHIGAN LIFE  | CM-LIFE.COM

DREAM JOB, HTMARE SEASON

n on the planet nted than I am.”

onamego was hired as Central Michigan’s head coach on Feb. 9, 2015, he said Chippewas was his dream job. annot express how much I love this place and what this day means to me,” said during a press conference that introduced him as head coach. “I plan to start and er here.” eld, three player ejections and a 51-13 loss to Toledo on Nov. 23, that dream came an Chippewa football fans came to know as Bono. ael Alford announced the firing of Bonamego hours after the loss to Toledo. Because MU is left with a $1.125 million buyout under the terms of the contract which Alford could receive the full $1.125 million buyout, but CMU has been in negotiations presentatives about a settlement lower than what is outlined in his contract. nished the 2018 season 1-11 overall and 0-8 in the Mid-American Conference. -year tenure as CMU’s head coach Bonamego owned a 22-29 record and 15erence games.

ego took the Chippewas to three-straight t three seasons, Alford decided to pull the ld coach’s time at CMU. hip change is a difficult decision, espew that coach has given his all to CMU,” onducting a 360-degree evaluation of the ar that a change is needed if we are going win championships.” fourth year, Bonamego started as a ecoming a beloved figure on campus and and eventually had some fans calling for

O LOST kly became the face of the football prorehead for the university – throughout ons. press conference, Bonamego made his umni and players understandable. pewa, I’m your coach,” he said. alumnus to serve as CMU’s head coach m 1951-1966. Bonamego’s voice quivered wn his face during his introduction as short years ago. other job,” Bonamego said at his first me, this is the job. Words cannot express lace and what this day means to me.” st quarterbacks, Dan LeFevour, was

behind former Athletic Director Dave Heeke’s hiring of Bonamego. “I knew him as a family man, but I hadn’t seen him first-hand as a coach,” LeFevour said. “It was great to see that passion. I knew he wanted to be a head coach here.” He played for CMU in the mid1980s as a walk-on wide receiver and quarterback. Bonamego said coaching the Chippewas was always his dream. “Since I left CMU in 1987, my dream job was to be the head coach of the Central Michigan football program. Today, that dream came true,” Bonamego said. Taking over for Dan Enos, Bonamego was in his first collegiate coaching job since working as an assistant for Army from 1993-98. He worked in the National Football League for a variety of teams from 1999-2014. Bonamego was loved by many, but he eventually became a casualty of CMU’s worst season in program history – ending his coaching career with the Chippewas which started back in 2015.

SURVIVING CANCER On June 18, 2015, the energetic, enthusiastic head coach was diagnosed with tonsil cancer. Bonamego’s cancer diagnosis was part of a 2015 offseason which

By Evan Petzold Staff Reporter


8

GAME OVER | CONTINUED FROM 7

fought through those things and we stayed together. We hung tough. It made us stronger and galvanized us.”

saw the death of cornerback Derrick Nash, the dismissal of two-year starting cornerback Brandon Greer for kidnapping charges and the death of its lead team physician. For the first five weeks of an eight-week radiation treatment plan, Bonamego and his wife, Paulette Bonamego, drove to Ann Arbor at 4:30 a.m. to receive treatment and return to Mount Pleasant. He completed radiation treatment at the University of Michigan Cancer Center more than a month later, on Aug. 21. He led the Chippewas to a 7-6 overall and 6-2 conference record as a first-year coach. Playing in the Quick Lane Bowl, CMU lost 21-14 to Minnesota of the Big Ten Conference at Ford Field. “We were under adversity, not just individually but as a program,” Bonamego previously told CM Life. “We

OKLAHOMA STATE UPSET In Bonamego’s second season, CMU finished 6-7 overall and 3-5 in conference play for a fifth-place finish in the MAC West Division – one season after tying for first. The Chippewas won threestraight games to start the season, including a 30-27 upset win over No. 22 Oklahoma State in front of 52,523 fans at Boone Pickens Stadium in Stillwater, Oklahoma. Oklahoma State attempted to run out the lock by throwing the ball away on fourth down, but intentional grounding handed the football to the Chippewas. The game should have ended with the penalty because the referee called the score final, but the officiating crew put time back on the clock to gave CMU a chance on offense. Article 3b of the NCAA

NOV. 26, 2018  | CENTRAL MICHIGAN LIFE  | CM-LIFE.COM

“We were under adversity, not just individually but as a program. We fought through those things and we stayed together. We hung tough. It made us stronger and galvanized us.” John Bonamego Former Football Head Coach rulebook states: When the referee declares that the game is ended, the score is final. Jesse Kroll caught a pass from senior quarterback Cooper Rush just inside the 10-yard line as time expired. Kroll, before being tackled, pitched the football backward to fellow receiver Corey Willis, who scampered and dove into the end zone while being bombarded by defenders. Willis’ score gave the Chippewas a 30-27 upset victory over an AP Top 25 opponent.

“It’s an improbable finish, but it’s a situation that we practiced and rehearsed,” Bonamego said. “We were able to execute and pull out the win.” CMU lost six of its last nine games of the regular season, but the team secured bowl eligibility. “(I’m) pretty disappointed (with how season finished),” Bonamego said after the Eastern Michigan loss. “I don’t see how you answer that question any other way. I’m proud of the team, but I’m disappointed in

the outcome.” Bonamego’s group was blown out in the Miami Beach Bowl against Tulsa, 55-10, on Dec. 19, 2016.

NABBING SHANE MORRIS Bonamego was faced with a new task before entering a tough 2017 schedule – find a quarterback. The Chippewas received a commitment from University of Michigan graduate transfer Shane Morris on Jan. 21, 2017. Tony Poljan and Tommy Lazzaro were just young signal callers at the time. Following four seasons for the Wolverines – only playing in 11 games – Morris joined the Chippewas and led the team to an 8-5 overall and 6-2 conference record, tying CMU for second in the MAC West Division. Morris completed 249-of446 passes for 3,237 yards, 27 touchdowns and 17 interceptions. He added a standout 35-28 comeback victory against in-state rival Western Michigan. Down 21-7

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at halftime, the left-handed quarterback launched a 77yard strike to Willis with 2:37 remaining for the win. Paulette, after the road defeat of WMU, posted a picture of Bonamego sleeping with the Victory Cannon trophy on Twitter. “Wasn’t much room in our bed last night,” Paulette said in a tweet. One week later, Morris threw three touchdowns to give CMU a 42-30 triumph against Eastern Michigan for the sole possession of the Michigan MAC Trophy. Rallying from a 17-0 deficit at halftime, Morris provided CMU’s fifth-straight victory in comeback fashion over Northern Illinois. The game-winning score was a 29yard pass to Willis on fourth down with 1:32 until the final whistle sounded. Like the previous two seasons, Bonamego took CMU to another bowl game. At the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, Morris was responsible for seven of CMU’s eight turnovers as Wyoming earned


9

CENTRAL MICHIGAN LIFE  | CM-LIFE.COM  | NOV. 26, 2018 a 37-14 win. “As a program, we have to continue to push forward,” Bonamego said at the end of the season. “We wouldn’t be satisfied with eight wins. We’re not satisfied with nine wins. Our goal each year is to win our conference, win the MAC West, win the MAC championship. That’s what the standard is. That’s what we want to measure up to. “That’s what we’re going to work towards each day.”

DETRIMENTAL DOWNFALL The 2018 season saw Bonamego making due with his youngest roster and worst offense since joining CMU. He lost Morris, tight end Tyler Conklin, wide receivers Willis and Mark Chapman and many other veterans. Offensive inefficiencies were the main reason for CMU’s struggles this campaign. Offensive coordinator Chris Ostrowsky struggled to find the right mix of perfor-

mance and plays and never produced a solution to put points on the board. “Terrible offensive performance,” Bonamego said after losing to Toledo. “It was pretty much a loss overall. All the way across the board. This one wasn’t (winnable). We got run out of the stadium.” The Chippewas struggled through four quarterbacks in 2018 – redshirt freshman Tony Poljan, junior Tommy Lazzaro, redshirt freshman Austin Hergott and true freshman George Pearson. In the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), Bonamego’s group ranked No. 128 of 129 total teams in offense. After dropping five of its first six games to start the season, Paulette got into an altercation with CMU play-by-play broadcaster Don Chiodo in the press box at Kelly/Shorts Stadium. She was banned from the stadium. Only a few weeks before the end of the Toledo game, Alford said he had faith in

Bonamego. “I’m sure John has us on the right path,” Alford said. The Chippewas finished 1-11 on the season and 0-8 in MAC play. It was CMU’s worst record in history, dating back to the program’s first season in 1896. The Chippewas lost three in-state games against Michigan State (31-20), Western Michigan (35-10) and Eastern Michigan (17-7). As a season of empty stands and increasing fan criticism came to an end, Bonamego addressed questions about his future with stark optimism. Following Bonamego’s final game as head coach for the Chippewas, he reflected on the season. “I’d like to have a chance to finish what I started,” Bonamego said. “We’ve got a lot of young players, but clearly the season was not good enough. “There isn’t a person on the planet that’s more disappointed than I am.”

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NOV. 26, 2018   |  CENTRAL MICHIGAN LIFE  |  CM-LIFE.COM

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MATTRESSES Adjustable Bed Brand New with Imcomfort gel memory foam mattress. Retail Cost $3,995.00, sacrifice for $575.00. Call for showing or delivery: 989-615-2951. _______________________________

The perfect place for you could be just one click away. Check out our classified listings online at www.cm-life.com


11

CENTRAL MICHIGAN LIFE  | CM-LIFE.COM  | NOV. 26, 2018

CENTRAL MICHIGAN LIFE

CLASSIFIEDS

CROSSWORD

C M - L I F E . CO M /C LA 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: $8.50 PER ISSUE 3-4 ISSUES: $8.00 PER ISSUE 5-8 ISSUES: $7.75 PER ISSUE 9+ ISSUES: $7.50 PER ISSUE

15 WORD MINIMUM PER CLASSIFIED AD BOLD, ITALIC AND CENTERED TYPE ARE AVAILABLE ALONG WITH OTHER SPECIAL FEATURES LIKE AD ATTRACTORS.

MEDICAL

SERVICES

TV & INTERNET

VIAGRA & CIALIS Alternative, 60 pills for $99. 100 pills for $150 FREE shipping. Money back guaranteed! Save Now! Call Today 1-800-610-4820 _______________________________

METAL ROOFING & SIDING The last roof you’ll ever need! 1/2 OFF Special Colors. Also, Complete Tree Service. Removal, trimming, mulching, etc. Call 517-575-3695. _______________________________

DISH Network. 190+ Channels. FREE Install. FREE Hopper HDDVR. $49.99/month (24 months) Add High Speed Internet - $14.95 (where avail.) CALL Today & SAVE 25%! 1-866-950-6757 _______________________________

OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 855-970-1066 _______________________________

VIAGRA and CIALIS USERS! 100 Generic Pills SPECIAL $99.00 FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. 24/7 CALL NOW! 888-835-7273 Hablamos Espanol _______________________________ Suffering from an ADDICTION to Alcohol, Opiates, Prescription PainKillers or other DRUGS? There is hope! Call Today to speak with someone who cares. Call NOW 1-866-887-0799 _______________________________

Start Saving BIG On Medications! Up To 90% Savings from 90DAYMEDS! Over 3500 Medications Available! Prescriptions Req’d. Pharmacy Checker Approved. CALL Today for Your FREE Quote. 855-398-4002 _______________________________

SERVICES MobileHelp, America’s Premier Mobile Medical Alert System. Whether You’re Home or Away. For Safety and Peace of Mind. No Long Term Contracts! Free Brochure! Call Today! 1-866-983-2939 _______________________________ Meet singles right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 855-247-5909 _______________________________

Call Empire Today® to schedule a FREE in-home estimate on Carpeting & Flooring. Call Today! 1-855-404-3569 _______________________________

PIONEER POLE BUILDINGS Free Estimates Licensed and Insured. 2x6 Trusses. 45 Year Warranty Galvalume Steel-19 Colors. Since 1976 #1 in Michigan Call Today 1-800-292-0679 _______________________________ A PLACE FOR MOM has helped over a million families find senior living. Our trusted local advisors help solutions to your unique needs at NO COST TO YOU! Call 866-760-7235. _______________________________

CELLULAR SERVICES AT&T Unlimited Talk and Text. Get a new device every year with AT&T NEXT! Call us today 1-888-654-1709 _______________________________

TV & INTERNET DIRECTV CHOICE All-Included Package. Over 185 Channels! ONLY $45/month (for 24 mos.) Call Now -Get NFL Sunday Ticket FREE! CALL 1-888-351-0154 Ask Us How To Bundle & Save! _______________________________ Earthlink High Speed Internet. As Low As $14.95/month (for the first 3 months.) Reliable High Speed Fiber Optic Technology. Stream Videos, Music and More! Call Earthlink Today 1-844-275-3510 _______________________________

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Explore all the possibilities in the Classified Pages of Central Michigan Life. In print, and online at cm-life.com. _______________________________ DIRECTV NOW. No Satellite Needed. $40/month. 65 Channels. Stream Breaking News, Live Events, Sports & On Demand Titles. No Annual Contract. No Commitment. CALL 1-844-279-7390 _______________________________

FOR SALE BUILT BEST BARNS Michigan’s Largest Pole Barn Company Best Quality, Best Service, FALL SALE GOING ON NOW! Call for Special Pricing! 24’x24’x8’ 24’x32’x8 24’x40’x10’ 30’x40’x10’ 30’x40’x12’ 32’x48’x12’ Completely Built, (Concrete Floor Optional) License/ Insured 1-877-802-9591 (Office) 989-205-2534 (Cell) _______________________________

MISCELLANEOUS DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY. Receive maximum value of write off for your taxes. Running or not! All conditions accepted. Free pickup. Call for details. 855-413-9672 _______________________________

Brain Teaser RIDDLE How do you get 24 from 9, 6, 11 and 3, using addition, subtraction, multiplication or division?

Across

1. Prefix meaning “half” 5. Work out the knots 10. Film shorts? 14. Pizzazz 15. Dixie, with “The” 16. Parisian possessive 17. Thumbs a ride 19. Avoid 20. Principal dishes 21. ____ manual 22. Ruckus 26. East ___ (certain Londoner) 30. Central processing unit 34. Skedaddle 35. St. ___’s fire 36. Plains preceder 37. They may be grasped at 39. Sports competition with skateboarding events 42. Ovine female 43. Dustin’s “Tootsie” costar 47. Powerful dog from Japan 48. Ploy 51. Courageous 52. Container for leftovers, at a restaurant 54. Sinatra hit 57. Arctic chunk 62. Highly excited

63. Outlawing 66. Sushi bar sheet 67. Rockies resort 68. Conception 69. “...____ not. There is no try” (Yoda wisdom) 70. Chinese menu declaration 71. Bungee, for one

Down

1. Sounds of mirth 2. Tiger married her 3. Damon or Dillon 4. Augment (abbr.) 5. “The Fall of the House of ______” 6. Harmful 7. When doubled, a three-wheeled taxi 8. Israel suffix 9. Interjections of surprise 10. Poughkeepsie college 11. “Why am ____ bad guy here?” 12. Dispirited 13. Sloth and pride, for two 18. Arabic cousin 21. Broadcasting band, briefly 23. Carrier since 1931: Abbr. 24. Not her

25. Strong as ____ 26. Someone ___ (not yours or mine) 27. Food-box abbr. 28. Adventurous one 29. Sculptor Hesse 31. Allow in 32. Gathers 33. Prose piece 38. Kind of party 40. Tied around the mouth 41. Half of a Heyerdahl title 44. Poultry product 45. Actor Fernando 46. Drinks 49. Slow symphonic movement 50. Miniature 53. Serving perfectly, in tennis 54. ____ War (noted racehorse) 55. Lugosi role in “Son of Frankenstein” 56. Sentence part 58. Bank abbreviation 59. Mediterranean vacation destination 60. Dilly 61. Old-fashioned oath 63. Bladed rotator 64. Bear, in Barcelona 65. LP measure SOURCE: www.printable-puzzles.com

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A: (6–3) x 11 – 9 = 24


12

NOV. 26, 2018  | CENTRAL MICHIGAN LIFE  | CM-LIFE.COM

T ’ N O D E Z E E FR

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(989) 772-9441 • www.ictcbus.com/shuttle-map

Commuter shuttle Every half an hour Monday through Friday from 7am to 7pm


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