Issue 20

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Lanthorn G r a n d Va l l e y

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T H E S T U D E N T - R U N N E W S PA P E R S AT G R A N D VA L L E Y

M O N D AY, O C TO B E R 31, 2011

Halloween + Homecoming

The Lanthorn covers all the thrills and chills // Weekend pulse OPINION | A4 // Game SPORTS | B1 // Events and entertainment LAKER LIFE | B4

LANTHORN ONLINE lanthorn.com Football

Video and slideshow

2011 HOMECOMING WEEKEND SPECIAL REPORT

GVPD doles out 23 MIPs

MEN’S Rugby

Slideshow

www.lanthorn.com/multimedia

GRADING THE LAKERS

Under the influence?: GVPD Officer Jeff Stoll administers a preliminary breath test during a Saturday patrol. Twenty-three Allendale minors were cited for alcohol possession.

BRADY FREDRICKSEN

Lanthorn editor rides along with Officer Stoll to observe YAE in action

Analyzing Saturday’s game.

GVL / Anya Zentmeyer

GVL SPORTS EDITOR

Back to School An over-40 poet reflects on school, life. Edward holman

GVL Columnist

www.lanthorn.com/blog

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

A B

A2 News A4 Opinion A5 Your Space A6 Downtown B1 Sports B4 Laker Life B5 Marketplace

By Anya Zentmeyer

W

GVL News Editor

ith the heightened activity of students on and off campus this Homecoming/Halloween weekend comes the heightened activity of the Grand Valley Police Department, which activated the $13,000 Youth Alcohol Enforcement grant from the Office of

Highway Safety and Planning to increase personnel on Friday and Saturday night. Officer Jeff Stoll agreed to let me sit on his 10 p.m. to 4 a.m. road patrol on Saturday night, and for five glorious hours I got to watch the brows of others furrow in worry as we passed during what may very well be the only time I will ever get to ride in a cop car while still feeling completely at ease. We pulled out on the road a little after 10 p.m., making a few uneventful probation check-ins at off-campus apartment complexes. Stoll is manager of the probation list, which fluctuates at around

driver consented to a search and admitted that she had smoked in the last couple of days but was not under the influence at the time. Stoll issued a few sobriety tests and said the driver did not exhibit any physical signs of someone who was under the influence of marijuana. The driver and passengers were released without any charges. “Especially if we don’t find anything, we send them on their way as soon as possible,” Stoll said. 12:02 a.m. — Stoll responded to a call from Officer Leah

See Police, A2

Departments unite on behavioral team

Interdisciplinary collaboration identifies, assists students exhibiting at-risk behaviors By Chelsea Lane GVL Staff Writer

Please Recycle

100 people at any given time. The nature and severity of the probation varies from person to person, but as a rule, those with an active probation violation are prohibited from the use or consumption of both alcohol and narcotics and are subject to random check-ins. Only one of the students was actually home when we knocked, but he passed his sobriety test and we went on our way. 10:39 p.m. — Stoll assisted officers Zoulek and Dornbos on a traffic stop and possible operations driving while intoxicated case on West Campus Drive near Meadows Golf Course. After smelling marijuana in the car, the

With an ever-growing population, it can be increasingly difficult for university faculty and staff to ensure the mental and emotional health of the student body and the safety of the university community as a whole. But Grand Valley State University’s behavioral team, founded in 2003, is designed to identify and assist those students who exhibit disruptive, harmful and at-risk behaviors. The team meets every Monday to discuss students who have been identified as having behavioral problems, suspected alcohol abuse, suicidal ideation and/or disruptive behavior in living centers or classrooms. It consists of representatives from the Dean of Students office, Housing, Pew Campus Security, the Grand Valley Police Department and the Counseling Center. “GVSU’s behavioral team is often referred to as a model nationally for that type of team,” said

Capt. Brandon DeHaan, assistant director of the GVPD. “… As a team, this group identifies appropriate action to assist a referred student and when necessary, identify actions to protect the university community. We work under a spirit of collaboration and cooperation because each unit has an area where they have expertise.” Students brought to the attention of the behavioral team can be referred by faculty, staff, other students or even members of the departments that comprise the behavioral team itself who have encountered these students as part of their everyday work. Dean of Students and behavioral team member Bart Merkle said team members’ roles can range from merely discussing worrying actions and behaviors with students to making a wellness plan with students and their families, to intervening when they feel a student poses an immediate danger to themselves or others. Merkle added that in some instances, the team decides

See Behavorial, A2

GVL Archive

Safety first: Capt. Brandon DeHaan (pictured), assistant director of the GVPD, is one member of the behavioral team, which also includes representatives from GVSU Housing, the Dean of Students, the Counseling Center and Pew Campus Security.


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