Issue 5

Page 1

SUNDAY SOUP

Community meal helps fund local art projects, fosters community ties

Arts and Entertainment, B4

Lanthorn G r a n d Va l l e y

www.lanth orn. com

TH E S TU DEN T- RU N N EWS PA P ERS AT GRA N D VA LLEY

T H U R S D AY, S E P T E M B E R 8, 2011

“It doesn’t take much; everything can be changed in an instant.”

lanthorn.com

- Robert Franciosi, GVSU professor

GVL / Eric Coulter

Campus Life Night slideshow

REMEMBERING

Women’s tennis

The Lakers look to repeat last year’s success as the 2011 season begins

11

Football video GVSU vs. Western Oregon

GVL / Eric Coulter

Chasing the Sky Lanthorn columnist Kevin VanAntwerpen discusses the ups and downs of playing in a moderately successful indie rock band.

Class commemorates 10th anniversary of terrorist attacks Courtesy Photo / Google Images

Day of terror: The Twin Towers smoke after the impact of the second plane on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001. The country will mark the attacks’ tenth anniversary on Sunday.

Kevin Vanantwerpen GVL Columnist

www.lanthorn.com/blog

What’s Inside

A B

A2 News A4 Opinion A5 Your Space B1 Sports B4 A&E B5 Marketplace

“I think what will

By Anya Zentmeyer

A

GVL News Editor

lmost every college student in the nation could tell you where they were 10 years ago Sunday. With the 10th anniversary of Sept. 11 only days away, students at Grand Valley State University are not just talking about it, they’re taking an entire class on it. HNR 312, or “Remembering 9/11” is a 16-member class in the Honors College that meets the junior seminar requirement. They meet twice a week in Niemeyer and come from all over campus, with majors ranging from account-

be difficult for them to kind of get their heads around is the scale of it.

GVL / Eric Coulter

Commemorative course: Robert Franciosi instructs his HNR 312 class, Remembering 9/11.

ing majors to physician assistants to natural resource management. But despite the differences in their programs, they’re all taking the class for similar reasons.

“I remember clearly the day when it happened, and it’s something that’s changed our lives so much that I think I wanted to just take a class to know more about

-Robert Franciosi Remembering 9/11 professor

it,” said Kristen Hayes, secondary education major. “You know, we were younger then, and we knew what happened, but we

See Remember, A2

Prayer space continues to draw students of faith POLICE BLOTTER By Elizabeth Balboa GVL Staff Writer

Please Recycle

In a world where religious differences constantly spark contention and controversy, Grand Valley State University students share a single place of prayer - and they’re okay with it. Muslims pray to Allah, Jews call on Yahweh, Christians speak to Jesus and Hindus invoke their many gods all in the same carpeted cubicle on the second floor of the Kirkhof Center. The university’s efforts to ensure a common haven for spiritual release have proven students’ religious matu-

rity and ability to coexist in the 11x20foot partitioned space overlooking the LGBT Center. The Prayer Room was erected last fall to accommodate the spiritual needs of the thousands of religious students on campus. The reserved area, which remains empty apart from a small stack of patterned Islamic cloths left behind by students, has no chairs, mats or kneelers. It offers no Koran, Bible nor Torah for reference or rumination. Three gray cubicle walls stand devoid of statues of Buddha, pictures of Abraham, stars of David and other religious emblems. It is non-denominational, and equally lacking in resources for

See Prayer, A2

GVL / Eric Coulter

Rumination room: A student utilizes the Prayer Room, located in the Kirkhof Center. The room has been in place for a year.

The Department of Public Safety is searching for the owner of a piece of recently recovered stolen property. In early August, several cars were broken into in or around campus. Property, including car parts, were stolen from the vehicles. Police have since identified a suspect or suspects in the larcenies, but are still trying to locate the owner of a recovered in-dash radio from one of the cars in order to return the property and/or obtain restitution for the victim. The possible owner of the radio is asked to call DPS at 616-331-3255.


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