State News The
Alumnus and former Sparty Kris Hulliberger, left, and alumna and former drum major Mary Hulliberger pose for a portrait on Feb. 6 at the Michigan 4-H Children’s Garden. PHOTO: SUNDEEP DHANJAL
First comes Green, Then comes White,
Then comes Love — PAGES 4 AND 5
L OV E
F O OT B A L L
Happy Valentine’s Day, Spartans! Feel and share the love with our Spartan Valentine’s Day cards — PAGE 6 T HU R S DAY, F E B R UA RY 11, 2 016
@THESNEWS
“I’m playing at the highest level of high school football there is and it proved in my mind I could play at the Division I level at a power five conference school.” Jordan Kitna, recruit whose father is NFL veteran quarterback Jon Kitna — PAGE 9 STAT ENEWS .COM
GROUPS
Spartan Hackers host workshops
Every Tuesday, the group helps students learn computer science skills outside of the classroom — PAGE 2
RELIGIOUS GUIDE Look for this directory in the paper every Thursday and online at: www.statenews.com/religious Ascension Lutheran Church 2780 Haslett Rd., E. Lansing Between Hagadorn & Park Lake Rds. (517) 337-9703 Sunday Worship: 10am Adult Bible Study: 9am ascensioneastlansing.org Chabad House of MSU Your Jewish home, away from home 540 Elizabeth St. East Lansing, MI 48823 (517) 214-0525 chabadmsu.com Friday evenings: 20 minutes after sunset followed by Shabbat dinner Saturday: 11am, Torah reading at 12pm Faith Fellowship Baptist Church 1001 Dakin St. Lansing, MI 48912 (517) 853-9897 Sunday Morning Worship: 11am Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study: 6:30pm Van service available to church Campus Bible Study: Thursday at 7:30pm in Chemistry Bldg. www.ffbc.us
Little Flock Christian Fellowship A Non-DenominationalEvagelical Church MSU Alumni Chapel (Basement Hall) Sunday Worship Service: 10am-12 Noon. Fellowship Lunch after the service Weekly Bibly Studies & Students’ Meetings. littleflock.msu@gmail.com www.littleflock.org Martin Luther Chapel 444 Abbot Rd. East Lansing, MI 48823 (517) 332-0778 martinlutherchapel.org Sunday: 9:30am & 7:00pm Wednesday Worship: 9pm Mini-bus pick-up on campus (Fall/Spring) Peoples Church 200 W. Grand River Ave. East Lansing, MI 48823 (517) 332-6074 www.peoples-evolution.org Sunday Worship: 8:30am, 9:30am Tuesday: Love Life: 7-9pm Wednesday: Dinner at 5:30pm, Journey at 6:30
First Baptist Church of Okemos 4684 Marsh Rd. Okemos, MI 48864 (517) 349-2830 www.fbcokemos.org/worship Sunday worship: 10:45am
River Terrace Church 1509 River Terrace Dr. East Lansing, MI 48823 (517) 351-9059 www.riverterrace.org Service times: 9 & 11:15am
Greater Lansing Church of Christ 310 N. Hagadorn Rd. East Lansing, MI (Meeting at the University Christian Church building) (517) 898-3600 Students welcome! Sunday Worship: 8:45am Sunday Bible class: 10am Wednesday: 7pm - praise and worship Students please feel free to call for rides http://www.greaterlansingcoc.org
St. John Catholic Church and Student Center 327 M.A.C. Ave. East Lansing, MI 48823 (517) 337-9778 stjohnmsu.org Sunday: 8am, 10am, Noon, 5pm, 7pm Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 12:15pm Tuesday & Thursday: 9:15pm
The Pentecostals of East Lansing 16262 Chandler Rd. Hillel Jewish Student Center East Lansing, MI 48823 (517) 337-7635 360 Charles St., E. Lansing www.pentecostalel.org (517) 332-1916 Like us on Facebook! Friday Night Sunday worship: 11am Services: 6pm, Dinner: 7pm Thursday Bible study: 7pm September - April Thursday young adult group: 8:30pm Lansing Church of Wednesday campus Bible God in Christ study: 8pm at MSU library 5304 Wise Rd., Lansing, MI 48911 The Islamic Society of http://lansingcogic.org/ Greater Lansing Worship hours 940 S. Harrison Rd., East Sunday: 10:30am, 5:00pm Lansing, MI 48823 Monday Family Prayer: For prayer times visit 6:00pm www.lansingislam.com/
Trinity Church 3355 Dunckel Rd. Lansing, MI 48911 (517) 272-3820 Saturday: 6pm Sunday: 9:15am, 11am trinitywired.com Unity Spiritual Renaissance 230 S. Holmes St. Lansing, MI 48912 (517) 484-2360 or (517) 505-1261 Sunday: 10:30am Wednesday: 6:30pm meditation
News
Meagan Beck Student Issues editor campus@statenews.com @thesnews
Spartan Hackers work to enhance computer skills
University Baptist Church 4608 South Hagadorn Rd East Lansing, MI 48823 (517) 351-4144 www.ubcel.org 10 AM Worship Service 11:15 Coffee Hour 11:30 Sunday School University Christian Church 310 N. Hagadorn Rd. East Lansing, MI 48823 (517) 332-5193 universitychristianwired.com Sunday: 11:15 am Sunday Bible Study: 10:15 am University Lutheran Church (ELCA) One Community: Lutheran/ Episcopal Campus Ministry 1020 South Harrison Rd. East Lansing, MI 48823 (517) 332-2559 www.facebook.com/onecommunitymsu Sunday Worship 10:45am University United Methodist Church MSU Wesley 1120 S. Harrison Rd. East Lansing, MI 48823 (517) 351-7030 universitychurchhome.org msuwesley.org Sunday: 10:30am 9:00am Garden Service in the summer TGIT: 8:00pm Thursdays Sept. - April WELS Lutheran Campus Ministry 704 Abbot Road East Lansing, MI 48823 (517) 580-3744 www.msu.edu/~weisluth 6:00pm Saturday
Religious Organizations: Don’t be left out of the Religious Directory! Call 517-432-3000 today to speak with an Account Executive
Computer science freshman Matt Wojno works on a code during a Spartan Hackers meeting on Feb. 9 at the Engineering Building. The club meets weekly to discuss and learn various computer science skills. PHOTO: ALICE KOLE BY JOSH BENDER JBENDER@STATENEWS.COM
In the working world, it’s often not the skills learned in the classroom, but outside of it, that help people to be successful in their field. For computer science students, a group known as the Spartan Hackers meets every Tuesday for workshops to learn these skills. “The purpose of the workshops is to supplement what students learn in the classroom, which are ordinarily very coldly mathematical and logical,” Spartan Hackers vice president and computer science junior Steven Kneiser said. The workshops allow students to flex their creative muscles and expand on what they have already learned or are learning in the classroom. “These workshops get students actually using their hands to sit down and really make something,” Kneiser said. “School might teach you individual skills, but the workshops help you put those skills together.” The topics covered vary widely, ranging from digital security to data visualization and beyond. “We’re doing one on machine learning soon,” Spartan Hackers workshop chair and computer science sophomore Josh Miles said. “Basically, it’s teaching a computer how to teach itself. For example, it can begin to recognize images like dogs or flowers without being told what they are.” The workshops are primarily stu2
dent-led but occasionally companies and computer science faculty members will come in to speak. “We have a lot of companies speak to us about presenting to students on the kinds of skills they want their employees to know— last semester Microsoft gave a presentation,” Spartan Hackers community chair and computer science sophomore Morgan Muyskens said. The meetings are meant to build the computer science community in addition to providing an educational opportunity. Out of that community, ideas can grow and develop. “Innovation is another skill we try to teach, building upon the work of others is a big part of computer science,” Muyskens said. “Our group is planning on getting together for some events where we just hang out and program, a night to bounce ideas off each other and make some friends. Spartan Innovations provides us with pizza and it’s just a good time.” The group also actively participates in hackathon events and will be putting on its own hackathon called SpartaHack on Feb. 26. “Hacking is usually associated with some glasses-wearing guy typing away in the dark trying to find out government secrets,” Muyskens said. “Hacking, in our sense and the ‘hackathon’ sense, is utilizing tools to create a personal project.” Workshops are held every Tuesday at the Engineering Building, room 1345 at 7 p.m.
T H E STAT E NE WS
“These workshops get students actually using their hands to sit down and really make something. School might teach you individual skills, but the workshops help you put those skills together.” Steven Kneiser, Spartan Hackers vice president
T H U R S DAY, FE B R UA RY 1 1 , 2 01 6
Contents MSU issues warning about South American Zika virus, met with little concern from some international students
INSIDE
Student activist strives to make a difference in the presidential election
What you need to know for the upcoming March primaries
Assistant professor dedicates time to stroke research
PAGE 11
PAGE 10
PAGE 12
BY T H E N U M B E R S
60 Senior guard Bryn Forbes’ 3-point shooting percentage in the past four games. See page 7
“One of the good things about medicine is whoever walks in the door you can take care of, and we are lucky to be able to take care of mostly athletes, especially MSU.”
Dr. Andrew Schorfhaar on treating the MSU hockey team injuries See page 8
BY IAN WENDROW IWENDROW@STATENEWS.COM
Reports of the Zika virus’ spread across Latin America have been met with urgent warnings from the World Health Organization, or WHO, and other global health institutions. Confirmed cases of Zika virus have been found in Texas, in the state of Georgia and Spain, galvanizing concern about the effects of the virus on pregnant women and driving support for further research. For international students from Latin America, where the outbreak originated, the response has been less panicked. “No one really cared much about it, especially since less than two years ago we had an outbreak of a similar virus called chikungunya, which is a lot more aggressive,” Dominican Republic native and international relations senior Gabriela Arias said. While not diminishing the concern surrounding Zika, Arias feels the WHO’s warnings are somewhat over exaggerated. “There’s worse things to worry about in the third world,” she said. Political science and supply chain management sophomore Arturo Fordsosa, originally from Panama, shares Arias’ sense of calm. “I’m not particularly worried,” Fordsosa said.
“The media worldwide tends to blow things significantly out of proportion. ... While having Zika is painful, deaths resulting from it are extremely rare.” The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, backs up that claim. Spread by a genus of mosquito known as Aedes aegypti, the CDC reported that about one in five people infected with the Zika virus will actually get sick from a Zika infection. Symptoms of a Zika infection typically include fever, rash, joint pain or pink eye. According to the CDC website, “people usually don’t get sick enough to go to the hospital, and they very rarely die of Zika.” Fordsosa and Arias still both acknowledge that growing up in tropical countries carries risks of mosquito-born diseases. Whereas Arias and Fordsosa feel the concern is overstated by international media, fisheries and wildlife sophomore and Puerto Rico native Waldemar Ortiz was not as quick to minimize the unique threat Zika possesses for Latin American residents. “Personally, I am very concerned with the virus,” Ortiz said. “It is something that is basically unknown and in these moments it is crucial for the medical community to work in unison to better provide for the victims of these circumstances.” Read more online at statenews.com
Applied engineering sciences senior Hanish Mehta helps guide a drone in the air on Feb. 10 outside of the Engineering Building. For the past six months, Mehta has been working alongside an electrical engineering graduate student to create a drone that can fly successfully without assistance. PHOTO FOR THE STATE NEWS: NIC ANTAYA
VOL . 106 | NO. 38
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EDITORIAL STAFF (517) 295-1680 EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Olivia Dimmer MANAGING EDITOR Julia Nagy PUBLIC CONCERNS EDITOR Cameron Macko STUDENT ISSUES EDITOR Meagan Beck SPORTS EDITOR Ryan Kryska FEATURES EDITOR Jake Allen PHOTO EDITOR Alice Kole DESIGN EDITOR Katie Winkler COPY CHIEF Casey Holland Copyright © 2016 State News Inc., East Lansing, Mich. T H U RS DAY, F E B RUARY 1 1 , 2 01 6
TH E STATE N E WS
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Spotlight
Julia Nagy Managing editor feedback@statenews.com @thesnews
Love: Sparty and the drum major
BY ALEXIS SARGENT ASARGENT@STATENEWS.COM
Who is this idiot on my field? That was the thought alumna Mary Houhanisin had when she met the love of her life. Mary, the first female drum major for the Spartan Marching Band, was directing a rehearsal like any other day. Kris Hulliberger, who was the Sparty mascot at the time, interrupted the rehearsal and confronted Mary. “The feeling when both of us left was, ‘wow, what a bossy jerk,’” Kris said. “We were both there in our elements — I was there with my guys, she was there with the band.” Despite a rocky start, Kris and Mary’s relationship would eventually lead to courtship, a proposal and marriage most Spartan couples can only dream of. LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT
After their first run-in, Mary and Kris did not meet again until the Aloha Bowl of 1997. After the football game, Mary heard commotion at the back of the marching band bus, where Sparty had taken his head off. “From there, it was kind of like a slow movie — the lights dimmed and the spotlight fell on Kris, and I had to meet him,” Mary said. “As cheesy as that sounds, that is exactly what happened.” DeAnn Schwarz was Mary’s good friend and a fellow member of the Spartan Marching Band at the time. “In Hawaii for the bowl trip, Mary and I ended up hanging out with Kris quite a bit,” Schwarz said. “They seemed to have a connection.” Sparty ended up visiting with Mary and the Spartan Marching Band for the remainder of the trip.
Alumnus Kris Hulliberger, left, and alumna Mary Hulliberger pose for a picture after their wedding on June 10, 2000 at the 4-H Children’s Garden. Kris proposed to Mary with the stone pictured. PHOTO COURTESY OF MARY AND KRIS HULLIBERGER
“After that, we were kind of inseparable,” Kris said. “Back at MSU, we started hanging out, and would you believe it, nine months later we were engaged. And then a year and a half later, we got married.” A BIG TEN COURTSHIP
Back in East Lansing, Kris and Mary spent most of their free time with each other. Schwarz was also Mary’s roommate during
Showtimes for Feb.11 – Feb.14
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Miss You Already Fri, Sat & Sun 117B Wells Hall 7:00 & 9:00 p.m.
Danish Girl Thurs 115B Wells Hall 8:30 p.m. Fri, Sat & Sun 115B Wells Hall 7:10 & 9:15 p.m.
Sleeping With Other People Thurs 119B Wells Hall 8:45 p.m. Fri, Sat & Sun 119B Wells Hall 7:15 & 9:20 p.m.
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www.rha.msu.edu ccc@rha.msu.edu 517-355-8285
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1 1 , 2 01 6
the time Kris and Mary were dating. “Mary really liked Kris and she thought she saw something special with him,” Schwarz said. “I think they were meant to be.” Sparty soon became a regular at Spartan Marching Band rehearsals. Kris and Mary often had lunch together at the Union and walked around campus together, particularly through the Michigan 4-H Children’s Garden.
Because of Mary and Kris’ positions, they were able to travel to many MSU events. The couple traveled to the basketball Big Ten Tournament in Chicago, ESPN headquarters, and the first and second rounds of NCAA Tournaments. “Dating someone in that environment is pretty wonderful,” Kris said. “You’re getting a trip and you get to go somewhere. Getting to do that with your girlfriend, and then doing it with someone that you would share the rest of your life with, is even more wonderful.” Once they started dating, Mary signed up to be a Sparty escort with the MSU Student Alumni Foundation. Sparty escorts travel with Sparty to help him with events. For the next summer, the pair traveled across lower Michigan for a multitude of Sparty events. “We have had some wonderful adventures being a part of Michigan State University,” Mary said. “If there were ever two people who enjoyed every single moment of being there, it was the two of us. It was just so much fun.” ENGAGEMENT
In the fall of 1998, Kris purchased a brick at the Michigan 4-H Children’s Garden, a place Kris and Mary would often visit during their class breaks. When the brick came in on a Saturday morning, Kris told Mary that Sparty had an event at the garden. Kris brought Mary to the pavilion area of the garden. A bouquet of roses lay on top of the brick, which read, “Mary, Will You Marry Me? Love Kris.” She said yes. The special moment was photographed by Kris’ friend and fellow Sparty mascot, Regis Buckley. “It was a special moment,” Buckley said. “Of course, it was a surprise for Mary.
“From there, it was kind of like a slow movie — the lights dimmed and the spotlight fell on Kris, and I had to meet him.” - MARY HULLBERGER, FIRST FEMALE DRUM MAJOR
“These are going to be pictures that you’re going to take that will last forever, for future grandkids and down the road. With the brick, it was one of those things that will live through the end of time.” On June 10, 2000, MSU’s first female drum major and Sparty were officially married. Mary and Kris held their wedding at a small Lutheran church in Lansing. The wedding included a custom-made drum major and Sparty cake topper. In addition to being their engagement photographer, Buckley was also the best man in Kris and Mary’s wedding. “They’re truly in love,” Buckley said. “Kris and Mary are such great people, and it was great to be able to share such a special moment with them.” The wedding reception fittingly took place on MSU’s campus at the Kellogg Center’s Big Ten Room. And of course, Sparty himself was in attendance. The wedding party visited several MSU attractions, including their engagement brick and the Sparty statue. “There is a great picture of all of us on top of Sparty,” Mary said. “Kris picked me up in my dress and we were standing on Sparty together. That was a lot of fun.” A FAMILY BLEEDING GREEN AND WHITE
Fast forward 15 years, and Kris and Mary are now the HulFrom left to right, Hannah Hulliberger, 9, alumnus Kris Hulliberger, alumna Mary Hulliberger and Kyle Hulliberger, 6, pose for a portrait on Feb. 6, 2016 at the Michigan 4-H Children’s Garden.
liberger family. The couple has a 9-year-old daughter named Hannah and a 6-year-old son named Kyle, who they are forging into young Spartan fans. “Our kids are growing up in a Spartan environment and they enjoy going to the games and being a part of our team,” Mary said. “One of the first songs they could both sing when they were little was the Michigan State fight song.” The Hulliberger youngsters, not surprisingly, also have an affinity for the Spartan Marching Band. Mary and Kris take an annual trip to see the band for their preseason show and at Adams Field before kickoff. Hannah has aspirations of being the drum major and Kyle wishes to be Sparty one day, their parents said. “They very much bleed green and white already,” Mary said. “I don’t know what we would do if they decided to go to the other school.” Hannah and Kyle love being a part of the MSU atmosphere on campus. They take great pride in knowing their father was Sparty and their mother was the first female drum major, they said. These smaller Hullibergers have inherited Kris and Mary’s love for MSU. They love telling the “My dad was Sparty, my mom was the first female drum major” story as much as their parents do. “It’s cool because I go to school and we’re talking about, ‘do you like Michigan or State?’ and I get wrapped up into the whole Sparty and drum major story,” Hannah said. “It’s my favorite story to tell.”
PHOTO: SUNDEEP DHANJAL
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T H U RS DAY, F E B RUARY 1 1 , 2 01 6
TH E STATE N E WS
5
You’re the Izzone-ly one for me
You and I are the perfect combo
TO: FROM:
You’re hotter than Cedar Village couches after a Big Ten win TO: FROM:
TO: FROM : COMBO-X-CHANGE
You give me butterflies in my ‘‘Tum Tum’’ TO:
Your tuition isn’t the only thing going up tonight TO: FROM: 6
THE STATE N E WS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1 1 , 2 01 6
FROM:
MICHIGAN STATE 3-POINT SHOOTING CHART, PAST FOUR GAMES
O
x x
220 OF 521
x
58 OF 108
42.2% from 3-point range this season
x
17 OF 32
14 OF 22
16 OF 26
11 OF 28
vs. RUTGERS
vs. NORTHWESTERN
x O
O
O xO Ox x
x
53.7% from 3-point range past four games
xO x x x x
ILLUSTRATION:KATIE WINKLER
O
vs. U-M
vs. PURDUE
O O
x
O
O O O O
x O xO
MISSED SHOTS MADE SHOTS
O
x
O
O
x
x x x
O x O x O OO x O OxO x x x x xx O x O O Ox OO O O xO O O x O O O O O xO x x x O O x O xO x xO O O O x O x xx O O x x x O O O
SPARTANS
INDIVIDUAL THREE-POINT SUCCESS DENZEL VALENTINE, SENIOR GUARD
71 of 162
or 43.8% on the season
5/7
vs. NORTHWESTERN
ERON HARRIS, JUNIOR GUARD
19 of 34
or 56% in past four games
6/11
vs. RUTGERS
3/4
vs. U-M
5/12
vs. PURDUE
BRYN FORBES, SENIOR GUARD
76 of 156
or 48.7% on the season
3/3
vs. NORTHWESTERN
6/10
18 of 30 8/10 vs. U-M
29 of 73
or 39.7% on the season
2/6
vs. NORTHWESTERN
7 of 18
or 39% in past four games
3/7
vs. RUTGERS
1/3
vs. U-M
1/2
vs. PURDUE
MATT MCQUAID, FRESHMAN GUARD
or 60% in past four games
vs. RUTGERS
STATE NEWS FILE PHOTOS
1/7
vs. PURDUE
22 of 51
or 43.1% on the season
5/8
9 of 15
or 60% in past four games
1/1
vs. NORTHWESTERN vs. RUTGERS
T H U RS DAY, F E B RUARY 1 1 , 2 01 6
1/2
vs. U-M
TH E STATE N E WS
2/4
vs. PURDUE
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Crossword
L.A. Times Daily Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
Sports
Ryan Kryska Sports editor Sports@statenews.com @thesnews_sports
The doctor who heals MSU hockey
ACROSS
1 Quibble 4 Like the NCAA basketball three-point line 9 Phantom’s place? 14 Toothpaste tube letters 15 Chevy SUV 16 Honeydew, for one 17 Drop the original strategy 19 Printing heavyweight 20 Aspersion 21 Nickname for Basketball Hall of Famer Maravich 23 Euler’s forte 25 Commencement opening? 26 Online reminders 28 Dilapidated digs 33 Attribute to, as blame 34 Fish order 35 “What __ care?” 36 One always looking up 40 Zeta follower 41 Soccer followers? 42 Causes of many Alaskan road accidents 43 High-end neckwear 46 Declines to raise 47 Bard’s bedtime 48 Machu Picchu denizen 49 Shield bearers 55 Leave out 58 Hot
59 Novel surprise ... and a hint to what’s hidden in 17-, 21-, 36and 49-Across 61 Cardinal, e.g. 62 “Friend Like Me” singer in “Aladdin” 63 Author Talese 64 Fire sign 65 Gladiator’s milieu 66 Olive shaped like a stick
DOWN
1 Complainers 2 “People” person 3 She beat out Madeline Kahn, with whom she shared the screen, for Best Supporting Actress 4 Org. that publishes weekly player rankings 5 Lauren et al. 6 Tazo choice 7 Long spans 8 Collector’s target 9 Filled, folded fare 10 Sneeze cause 11 Ultimatum word 12 Jícama or ginger 13 Actress Hathaway 18 Stumper? 22 Rowing crew, perhaps
24 St. formed from the Southwest Territory 26 Duel tools 27 “The Untouchables” gangster 28 Hotel reservations 29 View from Lake Geneva 30 Chihuahua “Ciao!” 31 Oater group 32 Locations 34 Sour fruit 37 Acid type 38 Bowie’s bride 39 __ Mule: vodka cocktail in a copper mug 44 Hot whistler 45 Plains homes 46 Tart container 49 Cosby of “Inside Edition” 50 Place for a pupil 51 Pledge 52 Rolex Player of the Year-awarding org. 53 “The Sopranos” actor Robert 54 Gelato holder 56 Words to Holmes 57 Texter’s toodle-oo 60 Dim sum beverage
Get the solutions at statenews.com/puzzles Level: 1
2
3
4
Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku.org.uk SOLUTION TO WEDNESDAY’S PUZZLE
Get the solutions at statenews.com/ puzzles
2/11/16
8
© 2016 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. All rights reserved.
THE STATE N E WS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1 1 , 2 01 6
Orthopedic surgeon and team physician for MSU hockey Dr. Andrew Schorfhaar poses for a portrait on Jan. 21 at the MSU Sports Medicine facility. PHOTO: EMILY ELCONIN BY NATHANIEL BOTT NBOTT@STATENEWS.COM
This is part four in a series of six stories profiling the MSU Sports Medicine faculty. The risk of lacerations from skates and falling onto the ice at high speeds makes hockey one of the most susceptible sports to a high rate of injury. But for MSU’s hockey program, the healing process for players is in good hands with Dr. Andrew Schorfhaar of the MSU Sports Medicine team.
“(Schorfhaar is) very approachable, and that’s very important from an athletic trainer’s point of view— being able to talk to your doctors and reach them seven days a week.” Dave Carrier MSU hockey’s trainer
Schorfhaar is entering his ninth year with MSU Sports Medicine. He received his medical school degree from MSU’s College of Osteopathic Medicine and before that he completed his undergraduate degree at Western Michigan University. While attending Western Michigan, Schorfhaar made an important contact in Dr. Jeffrey Kovan, who has evolved from a football trainer for Western Michigan to the director of MSU’s entire sports medicine program. “Once I came through medical school and did my residency in the Detroit area, I went to Minnesota to do my sports fellowship working with all the professional teams in Minnesota: the Timberwolves, Twins, Vikings and Wild,” Schorfhaar said. “So I just called him (Kovan) on my way out to do that, to let him know where I was at in my career. He said, ‘Before you accept an offer anywhere let me talk to you,’ so I did, and they asked me to come back, so I did.” Schorfhaar, the team physician for MSU hockey, as well as the team physician for MSU swimming, Lansing Catholic Central High School and the Lansing Lugnuts, works closely with MSU’s hockey trainer, Dave Carrier. Carrier, in his 32nd season with MSU hockey, appreciates Schorfhaar’s cooperation with the team. “What we like about (Schorfhaar) is he has very good surgical skills, very up-to-date surgical skills,” Carrier said. “Very approachable, and that’s very important from an athletic trainer’s point of view — being able to talk to your
doctors and reach them seven days a week.” Alongside Carrier is Dr. Robert Norris, who shares an office with Schorfhaar at the MSU Sports Medicine facility. Norris is the primary care doctor for MSU hockey and sits on the bench for games. In his 16th year at MSU Sports Medicine, Norris also has a strong working relationship with Schorfhaar. “I’ve really enjoyed having Andrew come help and be involved, and from the orthopedic perspective, he does a very nice job augmenting what we can’t do when surgery needs to be done,” Norris said. “He has a good relationship with the boys as well. He’s not necessarily there on a dayto-day basis, but from a standpoint of when he is needed he has always been willing to come in off hours to help out.” After a residency in Minnesota working for all four professional teams in Minneapolis, there is not much the man hasn’t encountered. Schorfhaar explained the unpredictability of medicine, while recounting his most intense surgical memory. “We see all kinds of interesting stuff, and sometimes it’s pretty straightforward, sometimes it’s pretty gruesome,” Schorfhaar said. “I had someone who was dying of flesh-eating bacteria and I had to cut off their arm, but they lived, so it’s not often you see working in sports someone like that. We see a lot of stuff — there’s not much you can throw at us that we haven’t seen before.” That gruesome example of the complex cases Schorfhaar handled is just one of many. These MSU surgeons see patients of all types across Michigan. It doesn’t bother Schorfhaar — that’s why he went into medicine in the first place. “One of the good things about medicine is whoever walks in the door you can take care of,” Schorfhaar said. “And we are lucky to be able to take care of mostly athletes, especially MSU, but we all cover high schools and people from up north and different areas. You take care of a couple people and they start sending people down to you. I think we have a broad reach around the state to bring people into our clinic and that’s what is fun about it.” Schorfhaar does have a lighter side. Both Carrier and Norris testified to golfing in the summertime with Schorfhaar. However, because both Carrier and Norris have seen what he can do with a knife in the operating room, they declined to comment on his short range game. Good golfer or not, Schorfhaar enjoys the time he spends with his colleagues and attributes this chemistry to the department’s success. “Working with Dave and with Bob has been the best part of that, and the hockey players are a lot of fun to deal with,” Schorfhaar said. “But the collaboration I have with Dave and Bob is the best part of doing that.”
Sports
Jordan Kitna, son of 16-year NFL veteran QB, will walk on at MSU BY RYAN SQUANDA RSQUANDA@STATENEWS.COM
It’s been an interesting few years in the recruitment process for Jordan Kitna, son of former 16-year NFL veteran quarterback Jon Kitna. But on national signing day on Feb. 3, it all came to an end, as the senior quarterback from Waxahachie, Texas chose to go the preferred walk-on route at MSU. Jordan Kitna didn’t receive a ton of recruiting attention in high school. Even after a junior year of throwing for 3,722 yards and 55 touchdowns and leading his team to an 11-1 record at Lincoln High School in Tacoma, Wash. — where his father was the head football coach and a part-time math teacher — colleges were too fixated on size.
“I’d really love to earn a scholarship. That’s one of my goals. ... It’s going to be a long road and it’s going to be a lot of hard work but I’m up to it.”
Jordan Kitna, Fall 2016 MSU walk-on quarterback
By the end of his junior season, Kitna stood just 6 feet tall, weighed about 200 pounds and had yet to receive a Division I offer. In January 2015, Jon Kitna accepted an offer to be the head coach at Waxahachie High School in Texas, meaning the Kitna family would move to Texas for Jordan’s senior year. The following fall, Kitna fought through injury to throw for 2,100 yards and 21 touchdowns in seven games, helping Waxahachie High School to a 6-4 record. Parts of the move were tough, he’ll admit, but by playing in the football-crazed state of Texas, Jordan Kitna was able to prove to himself and college coaches that he could play at a high level. “It’s definitely been a benefit more than a burden,” Jordan Kitna said. “The recruiting is way better down here than up there and it’s a bigger spotlight down here. … I’m playing at the highest level of high school football there is and it proved in my mind I could play at the Division I level at a Power Five conference school.” Still, even though his recruitment began to pick up his senior year, besides a lone Division I offer
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from Connecticut, the offers didn’t come. “They just kind of felt he was caught in this weird environment of where he was at developmentally,” Jon Kitna said. “He’s a late bloomer, just like I was. … Also, moving from Washington, he got kind of caught in a recruiting no man’s land.” Jon Kitna said while there were a lot of schools recruiting his son, in watching tapes of Jordan, a lot of the smaller schools told Jon they’d love to have him, but told the Kitnas he was a Power Five quarterback, and didn’t want to waste their time recruiting him. This only further confirmed to the Kitnas that Jordan belonged at a big-time school. At some point in the recruiting process, Jordan Kitna came into contact with the coaching staff at MSU, and credits the relationships he was able to build with those coaches to why he chose to walk on at MSU, even though they didn’t have a scholarship available for him. “I really love the coaches and the players and the environment there,” Jordan Kitna said. “It’s like a family environment where they’re more concerned about the player and how he develops as a person than the progress on the field. I think that kind of helps mentally, when the players and coaches care about each other. They want to have a relationship with the players throughout their whole life. That’s part of their philosophy and that’s something that’s important to me.” Jordan Kitna’s story as an underrated and unheralded recruit is a familiar one for his family. His father was a seldom heard of recruit in the early 1990s and eventually played college football for Central Washington University, an NAIA school in Ellensburg, Wash. After going undrafted in the 1996 NFL Draft and spending a season with the Barcelona Dragons in NFL Europe, Jon Kitna went on to a 16-year NFL career with the Seattle Seahawks, Cincinnati Bengals, Detroit Lions and Dallas Cowboys. It’s because of his own journey Jon Kitna reiterates to his son that everyone’s path is different. Jon Kitna also said there is a part of him that wishes he would have taken a shot at walking on at a larger program out of college, and he is happy his son is taking that shot. “God’s got a specific journey and path for him, and his job is to be obedient in the path,” Jon Kitna said. “My journey is rare, obviously, and the one thing that we kept coming back to with him
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was, we’re going to support you whatever decision you make.” In the meantime, Jordan Kitna is looking forward to charting his own path in college. “Whether that’s being on the scout team or starting at MSU or whatever, I just want to be able to help the team,” Jordan Kitna said. “Whatever my
role is, I respect the coaches a lot. I understand that I could come in and never play a down of football in a game, but that’s ultimately where I want to go to school. … I’d really love to earn a scholarship. That’s one of my goals. ... It’s going to be a long road and it’s going to be a lot of hard work, but I’m up to it.”
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Meagan Beck Student Issues editor campus@statenews.com @thesnews
Here is a guide to voting in the 2016 primary elections on March 8 Do you know your East Lansing polling location? W. LAKE LANSING RD
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If you are registered to vote in East Lansing, there are 17 precincts with specific polling locations: Precinct 1: Brody Hall, MSU Precinct 2: Martin Luther Chapel, 444 Abbot Road Precinct 3: East Lansing Hannah Community Center, 819 Abbot Road Precinct 4: Capital City Vineyard Church, 1635 Coolidge Road Precinct 5: Shaarey Zedek Congregation, 1924 Coolidge Road Precinct 6: Eastminster Presbyterian Church, 1315 Abbot Road Precinct 7: St. Paul Luther an
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Precinct 8: University Reformed Church, 841 Timberlane St. Precinct 9: Edgewood United Church, 469 N. Hagadorn Road Precinct 10: Edgewood United Church, 469 N. Hagadorn Road Precinct 11: Burcham Hills Retirement Community, 2700 Burcham Drive. Precinct 12: Union, MSU Precinct 13: IM Sports-East, MSU Precinct 14: IM Sports-East, MSU Precinct 15: IM Sports-West, MSU Precinct 16: Wesley Foundation, 1118 S. Harrison Road Precinct 17: Shaarey Zedek Congregation, 1924 Coolidge Road
ILLUSTRATION: KATIE WINKLER
To register to vote, you must be: A U.S. citizen 18 years old by election day Resident of your state Resident of your city or township Unsure if you are registered to vote? Go to www.Michigan.gov/vote to find out. The deadline to register for the primary elections has passed. However, to vote in the presidential election, you must fill out your registration application at least 30 days before election day. 10
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More to know about the upcoming elections The primary elections indicate who will be appointed the delegates of the Democrat and Republican parties for the upcoming presidential election. Michigan’s primary election will take place on March 8. The polls will open at 7 a.m. and close at 8 p.m.
card the clerk’s office sent you in your wallet or in a place you will remember. If this is your first election and you mail your application in, you must appear in person to vote on Election Day. Make sure you send a photocopy of your ID and proof of residency with your mailed-in application.
WHAT TO DO BEFORE THE PRIMARY ELECTION:
VOTING IN THE PRIMARY ELECTION.
Make sure you are eligible to vote in the United States. The deadline to register for the primary elections has passed. However, to vote in the presidential election, you must fill out your registration application at least 30 days before election day. Make sure you write in the same address as is on your driver’s license.
Be sure to bring a photo ID with you. A driver’s license or passport are both acceptable forms of identification. You will also need your voter registration card. This tells you where your precinct, or polling location, is. You can also visit michigan.gov/vote to find your polling location. Students are also eligible to request an absentee ballot if they are not able to travel back to the town in which they are registered to vote. A request form can also be found on the michigan.gov website. The application must be mailed to the person’s local clerk’s office no later than 2 p.m. the Saturday before the election.
WHAT IS THE PRIMARY ELECTION?
SUBMIT YOUR APPLICATION.
You can turn in your application to register to vote at your local city or township clerk’s office. The application can also be hand delivered or mailed in. Once your registration is processed, keep the registration
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1 1 , 2 01 6
-AKSHITA VERMA
Features Activist aims to make a difference BY RILEY MURDOCK RMURDOCK@STATENEWS.COM
When they found out presidential candidate Donald Trump would be holding a rally in Grand Rapids on Dec. 21, social relations and policy junior Daniel Eggerding and political science freshman James Commee knew they were going.
“I would say (my activism) means something to me, but the great thing about it is that it’s something bigger than me.” Daniel Eggerding, MSU College Democrats communications director
What the pair didn’t know was when they jokingly talked about disrupting the event, they actually would do just that. The pair arrived at the rally as soon as doors opened and stood near the front, surrounded on all sides by Trump supporters. Hours ticked by while they awaited the candidate’s arrival. Eggerding and Commee had both attended political rallies before, and both said they felt an air among the crowd that disturbed them. “There was so much anger and pain in the room,” Eggerding said. “You could
tell that everyone was really upset, and there was so much tension, it honestly felt like a TV show.” A short while after Trump began speaking, the two decided they’d heard enough. Eggerding got up on Commee’s shoulders and began screaming at the top of his lungs, “Donald Trump, you are racist. You are a bigot. You don’t represent me.” Upon realizing what just happened, the crowd grew into an uproar. Commee said they were screaming, yelling, punching and kicking as Eggerding was escorted out by secret service. They said Trump smiled, dismissively waving toward the doors as Eggerding was removed, his repeated shouts of “you don’t represent America” slowly drowned out by thousands chanting “USA, USA” with fervor. “Bye bye,” Trump said. The incident made local news, with broadcast video of the rally capturing the protest. Eggerding took a cellphone video of the demonstration, which has been viewed just less than 40,000 times on his Facebook page. “I don’t believe that type of rhetoric that he stands for is what America truly is,” Eggerding said. “I believe that a nation of immigrants, a nation of all types of diversity, makes America great. America already is great, let’s make it even greater.” The Trump rally is only the tip of the iceberg as far as political activism for
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Social relations and policy junior Dan Eggerding holds up a political themed Valentine’s Day card while a friend takes his picture at an MSU College Democrats meeting on Feb. 8 at Case Hall. Eggerding is the communications director for the MSU College Democrats. PHOTO: CARLY GERACI
Eggerding. He’s protested at the Capitol for action in Flint. He’s stood arm-inarm with LiberateMSU and in solidarity with Black Lives Matter. For
Eggerding, who is also MSU College Democrats communications director, politics and activism are a way of life. Eggerding began his courtship with politics during the 2008 presidential
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election. Initially he supported Hillary Clinton’s bid, but as the campaign moved forward he turned to future President Barack Obama. For more go to statenews.com
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Features
Jake Allen Features editor features@statenews.com @thesnews
MSU professor aims to help rehabilitation of stroke patients
Kinesiology senior Julie Pieciaki awaits testing inside the biomechanics lab on Feb. 4, 2016 at IM Sports-Circle. The lab uses technology to understand motor development. PHOTO: EMILY ELCONIN
BY CONNOR CLARK CCLARK@STATENEWS.COM
While assistant professor in the Department of Kinesiology Rajiv Ranganathan was attending University of Madras in India, his grandfather suffered a stroke, leaving him debilitated. After seeing the struggle of his grandfather’s rehabilitation, Ranganathan dedicated himself to finding better ways of helping to rehabilitate stroke victims. Now Ranganathan uses modern forms of technology, such as motion capture cameras, to collect data for analysis. With collecting this data, he hopes doctors can see a more in-depth prognosis of the debilitating effects of a stroke, and will be able to better assess a rehabilitation program. With how technology has evolved through the past 20 years, it can be used to better understand people’s motor behavior, Ranganathan said. “Now the time has come where we don’t have to say range of motion is on a scale of one to five, we can say range of motion is 120 degrees,” Ranganathan said. “That gives us a much better way of tracking progress.” Using an eight motion capture system, participants’ three-dimensional movements can be recorded and analyzed for real-time feedback. “With the help of the computer system, we can build a virtual environment and it will let us learn more about human movement,” doctoral student Tzu-Hsiang Lin said.
A simple experiment used by Ranganathan involves a box filled with blocks. In one minute, participants have to transfer blocks on one side of the box, over a partition, and into the other side and the total number is recorded. While performing this, motion capture can map out upper body joint functions, and force plates in the floor can measure posture control. If participants have limited arm movements and need to use their core or other forms of compensation, that data can be recorded. “Now is the era of data, so with these kinds of devices, we can collect multiple joints at the same time,” Lin said. This collection of quantitative data will provide doctors a way to track patient progress. Since doctors only see patients ever so often, using technology to mark patient progress will help doctors better understand how effective their treatment is, an idea that 10 to 15 years ago might have not been feasible, Ranganathan said. Another use of technology Ranganathan uses in the lab is a bimanual robot combined with a virtual reality system. Using this, a spring-like force can be applied to help determine the amount of force being used. “I think independence is huge for everyone. No one wants to be dependent on anyone,” kinesiology senior and lab assistant Julie Pieciak said. “If I can help someone reach the baseline where they were before or better, that is something I would like to do.”
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