AMPUS LIFE2 EATURESë TUDENT ORGANIZATION S ARSITY SPORTS“ OLLEGESì REEKSs ENIORSI i—1 GO 05 v< TJ o> TlcCO £U from dump tcfM< destination point The new Brody Square increases Brody Complex’s popularity Huddled in the northwestern corner of campus once lay the dorms known as the "Brojects.” Butl as any passerby can see, Brody Hall now has something to be proud of. ' ‘ ‘They used to gather all the freshmen here and clump them together,” cafeteria employee Kenzie Fuqua said. ‘‘Now people are coming from all over campus to eat here.” Fuqua is talking about the early success of Brody Square, the revolutionary new cafeteria complex opened in the Brody neighborhood this fall. This area once deemed an isolated island of freshmen is now a destination point for students, "I literally travelled to come here,” freshman Jon Veitengruber said. Others seated at his table said they had also made the trek from various points of campus to experience the new cafeteria. After working in the Brody cafeteria for three years, junior Christopher Kenrick has seen the progress and lived through the turmoil of construction. “Last year was just a joke,” Kenrick said. "It was disorganized; there was no excitement. No one came here, we all left for SnyPhi. Brody wasn’t a place you came to. It was a place you were assigned to.” Executive Chef Dave Brown said he particularly admired the modern, yet comfortable, design of the new cafeteria’s warmly lit interior. ■There are all sorts of nooks and crannies and coves for people to relax in,” Brown said. The transformation is astounding. The $49 million project, started in 2008, now boasts a half- dozen different venues serving freshly made food for students to choose from. "Before, we didn’t make any of the pasta or sauce here,” Brown said. "Now everything is made with fresh ingredients. We are working with fresh herbs, and creating homemade dishes that are healthy and nutritious.” One of these healthy venues is “Veg Out’’; a vegetarian/vegan option that Brown feels is especially significant. "At Veg Out, we use the same principles as we do with meat to create various vegetarian products that make a full meal,” Brown said. "We hope to get the word out to vegetarians.” Students are not the only ones to enjoy this epicurean revolution. Parents and staff members have also headed over to experience the cafeteria for themselves. On freshmen move-in day, Fuqua estimates over a thousand parents from all over campus came in for lunch. "In the past, parents were reluctant to send their kids to school, knowing their options were limited,” Fuqua said. “Seeing that their children can eat at a well-balanced cafeteria gives them hope." 021 >. local 'inspiration Michigan hip-hop scene highlighted at Big Sean concert On Sept. 9, Detroit-native Big Sean brought his local flavor to MSU and served as a motivation for aspiring artists to keep hustling. Fans packed the Auditorium at 7 p.m. to see Big Sean take the stage. He's a great example of an artist that uses his resources and doesn’t rely on the record label to get his name out,” William Ketchum, managing editor of the website michiganhiphop.com, said about the concert put on by the Residence Halls Association. Big Sean, no stranger to MSU, performed with Mike Posner and opened for Kid Cudi in 2009. He even considered attending Michigan State, but an offer from ICanye West to record in 2005 for G.O.O.D Music kept him from becoming a Spartan. His appearance this year was one that Ketchum believes showed the diversity of the hip-hop culture in Michigan. "The lineup of artists shows how multifaceted the state’s hip-hop scene really is,” Ketchum said. Aside from highlighting Big Sean’s debut album "Finally Famous,” the concert showcased local artists including Chip Tha Ripper, FlyUnion, Dom Kennedy and FowL, who is a sophomore at MSU. To maintain the Michigan artist’s presence in East Lansing, Big Sean’s representatives have handed out promotional CDs and T-shirts around campus. These promotions are what attracted junior Patrick Duda, who became a fan after receiving one of the mixtapes. "I would have paid a lot more to come see him,” Duda said. "It’s cool how they can put it on for so cheap.” According to Zeno Jones, a member of the tour working in merchandising, it was an easy decision for Big Sean to perform at MSU. "State’s always been real: big,” Jones said, referring to the growing hip-hop scene in the Lansing area. "It’s kind of a no-brainer. A lot of his friends go here.” To aspiring artists such as Duda, who performs in the mid-Michigan area as part of the hip-hop act "The Spektators,” Big Sean serves as an inspiration. "It’s nice to have performers like Big Ssan toj&ok up to who are also local,” he said. jf| QP And although he’s a signed artist, fame doesn’t stop Big Sean from promoting himself like many 'independent artists do. "He’s an artist who does things on his own,” Ketchum said. "This really shows that.” Chip tha Ripper performs for students at the Auditorium. Other talent included FowL, Dom Kennedy and Fly Union. The spotlight is on Big Sean as he raps for excited fans. Sean has been a musical presence at MSU since he distributed his first mixtape around campus in 2007. C A M P U S L I F E b i g s e a n c o n c e r t h i g g i n s / D E S I G N b r e n d a n p r o s t T Y P E n a t a l i e p a t t e r s o n / P H O T O h i l a r y Students rock out to rap artists at the Big Sean concert. Hip-hop fans were treated to four different artists. Big Sean raps for students and .fans at the Auditorium. The concert, put on by the Residence Halls Association, snowcased local talent like FowL, as well as other big names. < Kaitlyn Billops, a member of Delta Sigma Theta, performs at Spartan Remix on Sept. 9. In its third year, the performance, which is held at the Union, represents over 60 student organizations. Pilipino-American Student Scraiety break dances to ,1 variety of songs at Spartan Remix. The group focuses on academic achievement and cultural awareness. (re)mixing cultures Student organizations gather to celebrate campus diversity at Spartan Remix In the shadow of a stage crowned with an arch of Spartan- green balloons, students of various majors, years and cultural backgrounds flooded the lobby of the MSU Union, eagerly awaiting their fellow students’ moment ® the spotlight despite the lack of sitting-room. Such was the initial scene at.the Spartan Remix, held on Sept. 9 at 7 p.m. The event was opened by speeches from Provost Kim Wilcox, Dr. Paulette Granberry director of the Office for Inclusion and Intercultural Initiatives, and Dr. Lee June, associate provost and vice president of Student Affairs, Following the speakers, six different student groups provided entertainment to a welcoming crowd. Their line-up of performances included slam poetry traditional Mexican and hip-hop dance displays, and a medley of Jackson 5, Maroon 5 and Third Eye Blind covers. Visitors were given a chance after the performances to mingle with over 60 student organizations in order to learn more about what they do as well as how they could get involved with these associations. “It’s a lot more diverse than Sparticipation,” said senior Mas Mizobuchi, vice president of the Asian-Pacific American Student Organization. According to Stephanie Bierlein, Assistant Manager of the UAB, the Spartan Remix is still a relatively new event to MSU. "The core groups used to do their own events. We wanted a welcome reception to celebrate all the groups together,” she said. “This is the third year for this event. It’s great because new students can find out about the groups and returning students can reconnect with friends and promote their organizations.” According to students at the event, the sheer amount of diversity] present that night was the main draw of the Remix itself. "Diversity not only in majors or ethnic backgrounds, but [in] ways of thinking, makes the University a good place," said senior Tom Cast. "It’s what makes MSU, MSU.” Mizobuchi agrees. ■ft [Spartan Remix] brings everybody together to interact with different cultures,” he said. "It’s a great way to unify everyone.” However, according to Bierlein, Spartan Remix isn’t the only event that celebrates diversity at MSU. UAB, she said, hosts] similar events all year long. "We partner up with groups for smaller events,” she said,] "like poetry slams or a salsa night. It’s all up to the students.” Christian Dioso performs a variety of cover songs with the rest of his band from the Asian Pacific American Student Organization. The group holds events throughout the year to bring together students of Asian Pacific American descent. diving .in, for a night out University Activities Board hosts outdoor event for students Though it was only 64 degrees outside, junior Oshan Weerasinghe and sophomore Lauren Lendzion IM West boarded the bus wearing swimsuits. to Weerasinghe andLendzion were on their way to the Dive-In movie event hosted by the University Activities Board. The annual event promises students free candy popcorn, Insomnia Cookies, as well as a movie and a good time. Aside from the freebies, what attracted Weerasinghe was the opportunity to participate in a weekend social event that included everyone. "This sounded way better than drinking and getting wasted,” Weerasinghe said. "It’s good to have some sort of social activity for the people who don’t want to drink to go to.” Although there are typically many activities—parties, events, concerts—to choose from each weekend, the Dive-In caters to students, such as Lendzion, who want to do more than party "We had a big party to go to,” Lendzion said. "We chose this over that.” As a long-standing UAB tradition, the Dive-In allows students-to enjoy their Friday night on campus without spending any money "Our mission is to provide low-cosf late night events for students,” director of marketing Amy Pochodylo "The Dive-In is a way to shake it up a bit outdoors,” said. For students looking for movies and entertainment Thursday through Sunday Pochodylo suggests they check out Wells Hall. The Dive-In was an event similar to Weils movie nights, but with a twist. Although the Dive-In is typically held in the fall while the weather is usually still relatively warm, the temperature is usually not a problem for students, and the event makes a big splash each year. ' 'The student body really seems to like this event,” Pochodylo said. "Even when it’s cold and rainy we still have a great turnout.” s t e i n / D E S l G N j e s s i c a h a l f y a r d T Y P E n a t a l i e p a t t e r s o n / P H O T O e l l i n a J27 Freshmen Nathan Quattrochi and Canlon Bruer decide to check out the teahouse for a.cure to their colds. Wanderer's features remedies for all types of sicknMsl ^Wanderer's Teahouse features 34 kinds of tea. Flowering tea, -a small bundle of tea leaves and flower petals bound together, is a popular item in the store. S*SSaiS*8SSBS smms aassaass ..■ H SM bus ill fill WBmBeM mm.■■ illia ■HP* aw The teahouse sampling center allows students to explore different teas before they purchase. Spano said he lets the students follow their nosesr Wanderer’s cp-owner Michael Spano creates his own tea cghcoction|^^S| teahouse opened for busines||||ept. 1. place MSU alumnus opens specialty tea house on Grand River Avenue Wanderer’s Teahouse and Cafe, owned by married couple Michael Spano and Elizabeth Marazita, opened its doors for business on Sept, lland has since served as a hot spot for tea enthusiasts. Located at 547 E. Grand River Ave., the tea house offers 34 kinds of tea made of 30 common herbslp as well as coffee, pastries, sandwiches and salads with a vegetarian/vegan option. All ingredients are completely organic, Spano said. A variety of signature blends are also offered, which are, among other things, aimed at combating stress, hangovers, insomnia, colds or PMS. But concocting the perfect remedy was not something that happened overnight. Spano worked restaurant management for 12 years before leaving to study Chinese medicine all Bastyr University in Seattle, where he met Marazita. in Marazita, a native of the Lansing area and a graduate of the James Madison College at MSU, worked as an international banker before she studied natural medicine. 'We’ve been wandering for many years,” Spano said. The couple has lived all over the globe including Italy Switzerland and China, ‘‘We have an eight-year-old that we’ve been bouncing around the world, and so we decided to come home,” Marazita said. While visiting East Lansing last February, the couple stumbled upon the vacant location of the future tea house. Since the opening, Spano said weeknights have been packed. Students pour in to drink tea, study and take advantage of the Wi-Fi. “I heard this place was awesome so I came here in the morning, and now I’m back to study” senior Brad Seifert said. ‘‘It’s a' great environment for that.” That’s one of the goals of the tea house, according to Marazita. “I understand stress,” she said. ‘‘I understand stress as an undergrad,, a graduate and as a mother.” And to help students cope with their stress, Marazita began what she calls ‘‘Tea and Tai Chi,” where she offers Tai Chi classes twice a week behind the shop. Eight sessions are $45 dollars, and each class is followed by conversation with Marazita over seasonal teas. The inside of the tea house boasts a comfortable atmosphere as well. Quotes from Marie Curie, Rosa Parks, Albert. Einstein and Jack Kerouac, among others, spice up the walls. There are also a number of donated books to read. ‘‘One thing I’ve noticed is that you’ll tend to see a lot more people sitting around reading instead of on their computers,” Spano said, adding that the shop offers a children’s corner with a high chair and books. think parents are the one group of students wmo are really ignored on this strip. They’re welcome here,” he said. Additionally there is a tea testing center at the front of the shop. “I like to let the customer sniff the tea before they try it,” Spano said. ‘“Follow your nose,’ I always say” In the future, Spano and Marazita hope to open the teahouse to live performances of music, poetry and monologues and host language tables where students can learn foreign languages. “t wanted to create a place that I would like to go to,” Spano said. “We just want to make sure everyone who walks in is happy.” And painted on the back door, in the words of William Shakespeare, is an invitation for these happy customers to come again: “Safe May’st Thou Wander, Safe Return Again.” ÈÊ m o CD m $ en i£î. — n O tu C A M P U S L I F E w a n d e r e r s t e a J29 Ill home made MSlistudents build a house and a stronger community As former field director for the Bolivian branch of International Service, a British non-governmental organization that fights poverty; MSU graduate student Anna Malavisi is no stranger to the effects of destitution. That’s why on the chilly morning of Sept.*17, Malavisi was up at 9 a.m. measuring and cutting wood for the siding of a house being built on MSU's campus through the partnership of Habitat for Humanity Lansing and the Whirlpool Building Blocks program. The catch: the house was Malavisi’s own future home. “My helmet keeps falling off,” she said as she worked side by side with students and other volunteers in a section of Lot 89 turned construction zone, where the outer shell of the llOO square foot house was being erected. “This year they [the Whirlpool Building Blocks program] decided that they wanted to do a blitz build on college campuses,’ ’ Senior Student Services Coordinator Kevin Schwemmin said, explaining that MSU was the first campus chosen for this project, in which a home would be built in just two weeks. ' ‘It turned out even better that it [the project] is helping out an MSU graduate student.” Malavisi and [|er three daughters were living in a two-bedroom home in Lansing when they learned of their qualification for the house. Her previous home, she explained, was too small and expensive, and she was pursuing her doctoral degree in philosophy while working three part-timg jobs and raising her girls. The interest-free mortgage levied at the new house, however, would grant Malavisi more time for both her daughters and her studies. “It was a coincidence that I was chosen; maybe meant to be,” she said, when considering her connection as a student to ,MSU. According to a press release, MSU was one of two schools chosen by Whirlpool for this program due to its commitment to community outreach. IjffAs a land-grant institution, its the core [to why MSU was chosen],” Schwemmin said. “It’s essential to our institution*® “It’s great [to be volunteering], especially because Anna is here and I get to work with her, and just knowing she’s so thankful,” senior Christina Kotevski, a student volunteer, said at the site. "It really helps out her family” student volunteer and junior Amar Jaswa agreed. According to Schwemmin, approximately 345 students signed up online to volunteer for the project, with about! 60 showing up over the weekend of Sept. 11 and varying numbers helping out during the following week. “It’s really good to see students jumping behind this,’’ he said, “it just adds to MSU’s commitment.” ^'Things like this build community spirit and get people who may not have been aware involved,” said Malavisi, a regular volunteer for Habitat for Humanity. As the first project of its kind on campus, awareness of the good it can do for low-income families was crucial. Governor Jennifer Granholm came out to speak on the opening day of construction on Sept. 11, and Malavisi received the keys to her new home at the homecoming football game on Oct. 16 in front of a large portion of the Spartan community For some volunteers such as senior Jeremy Brown, however, just being a part of the process was enough. “The best part about this will be seeing Anna’s smiling face after it’s completed,” Brown said. Student and faculty volunteers work to complete the outer shell ofiM Habitafor Humanity home.;MSU was on'e of only two universities chosen for the Whirlpool Building Blocks program blitz builds. Sophomore Allison LaSota hammers the siding on to the outer shell of the new home. She was one of four other girls who came out to volunteer for the event that day 3- —i to’ Zjj ‘S-mo n in o O ^ m g- cn 2— (D 0"< cu ”0 (0 X fD O to H C A M P U S L I F E h a b i t a t f o r h u m a n i t y unior Alison udson gets some help from volunteer Bill Kiebler. Student volunteers often received guidance from more experienced workers before starting a new task. Ü31 Hi 1 i r* 8 Ken Krill, class of 1988, lights up the grill for his fellow tailgaters before the Northern Colorado game. Besides food, tailgaters shared stories from their college days, as well as a sense of camaraderie. Alumnus Ken Krill, class of '88, di, J ¿|&§ class ring. Spartan alumni frequently come back tMsupport their school through tailgating at sporting events. mr- |p i| wm m ■E % Samantha Smith, daughter of alumnus Tony Smith, class of 2000, retrieves ®ean bags during a game gf cornhole. Many alumni brought their children lf|the tailgate to instill Spartan spirit at a young age. m m - mm Wmm — ;| lH l| ■ ■ I ¡311 m in o 0) ii & . * * * *■ : *i I H W * i«K 1 g HM| II H *> ■ 111 ¡lil 11 ‘ I * I ■ m H m ■ passing the torch MSU alumni bring up the next generation of Spartans tent, Beneath one three generations of Spartans gathered for the football game against Northern Colorado. It’s a typical game morning for this group on Sept. 25: beers are cracked, snacks are laid out and children are running among the . tent posts playing with a football. But for Jon Hirschenberger and Steve Baillie, tailgating is more than a pregame for football. It’s a time to keep the Spartan spirit alive and instill it in their children, Hirschenberger and Baillie, both in the graduating class of 2002, became friends during their time at MSU. Their families frequently attend MSU sporting events and alumni activities, and they enjoy coming out to campus to show the area to the kids: Baillie’s sons Nathan, 6, and Owen, 4, and Hirschenberger’s sons Wyatt, 2, andTy, 5. The future Spartans enjoyed the tailgate and the sunny morning by playing with a football around the tent. “The kids are born and raised green and white,” Hirschenberger said. “We come out,-here to show the kids what life is like in college.” Life at MSU today however, is much different than when Dave McGregor, from the class of Ad, S v jP®!ail iliiBiBM M 1977 and a friend of both families, was here. As the oldest member of the tailgate, he recalled the atmosphere of the area - by the tennis courts where many alumni and students tailgate - back in his day “There were cows standing where we’re standing right now,” McGregor said. “This was Moo U. We would be standing in farmland.” With the cows on the barbecue rather than grazing in a field, the past and tradition of Spartan spirit permeated the tailgate party “I’ve had season tickets since ’94,” Baillie said. “There’s a lot of heritage here. There are a lot of memories.” Coming to the football game is only one way that Hirschenberger and his group continue to support their Alma Mater. Hirschenberger won’t be “We’ll be paying a lot of tuition fees to this place,” he said. “All these kids are going to State,” the ' only one Mipporting future State scholars. McGregor also plans to help turn hislongtime friends’ kids into future Spartans. “The whole familyls here; those kids will be going here,” McGregor said: “And I’m going to pay.” Alumni Steve Baillie and budding Spartans Owen Baillie, Nathan Baillie, 'Pfatt Hirschenberger and Ty Hirschenberger plaMaddefjball before thefeotball game. Steve Baillie came back for the Northern Colorado game to relive his time as a PSiMP! MSU. J33 Seniors Gina Róme and Emily Bradley along with junior Tobi® Roth and sophomore Stefan Weird atténdeci the meeting tappet students^Éother^P-op||The ^'orientationBonsisted of many ice-breaker activities. Junior Molly Griffin checks out llS-its describing life in a ®o-op. Thirteen different ip-operative hous™ are availably tcMrtudents seeking|A^nativSliving arrangements. a ¿■M r one roof Stud^ffiopt for co-operative housing options off campus Mi #i O) S "S' ® X IB O ° ^ a. oo u0) The American Clock focuses ¡In the hvJiMa wealthy family; the Baums, wholj^Kes come crashing down when the stock marlft collapse^The storyline of the play can be related to life today with the recent recession. J37 Freshman Danielle Takacs fills out a registration application for me Nov. 2 midterm elections. YouVote’s main goal this year was to educate voters and increase student voter participation. C A M P U S L I F E y o u v o t e n a g y / D E S I G N b r e n d a n p r o s t T Y P E c o u r t n e y z o t t / P H O T O v e r o n i c a democracy in action YouVote encourages students to vote in the midterm election Midterm elections may not seem important to some, but to YouVote, they are just as important as the presidential campaign. The group, anonpartisanvotinginitiative at MSU, aims to educate students about the importance of casting their ballots at elections. Through their website and other events,YouVote provides information about the candidates and important issues and also helps students to register as voters and participate in the process. On Sept. 30, volunteers for the group set up two tents and tables in the Ann Street Plaza where students could fill out forms to register as voters. With music loud enough to be heard from Grand River Avenue and red, white and blue balloons wafting over the scene, it was hard not to give the event a second look. ■Students should be more worried about this election because it affects them directly” Mike Zaborowskil a graduate student and coordinator of YouVote, said. "The governor hits them more directly than the president.” Since 2000, YouVote has been working to register and educate students for upcoming elections, as well as encouraging piem to vote. The initiative was formed when MSU and East Lansing officials saw that students were confused, or, more often, disinterested in presidential as well as midterm elections, Zaborowski said. “Last gubernatorial election, we had about a 45 percent turnout (in East Lansing), and that was with an incumbent,” East Lansing City Clerk Nicole Evans, who assisted at YouVote’s event, said. “This is the first year without an incumbent, so we’ll see how it turns out.” While some students didn’t know much about the elections, such as freshman Hannah Bodrie, others came to the event with knowledge about the candidates, like freshman Stephanie Takacs. "I just don’t know how to find out,” Bodrie said, when asked why she didn’t try to find more information. “I’m not too thrilled with the candidates,’ ’ Takacs said. “I'm alsolnot a fan of the severe divide between Republicans and Democrats. Until we fix that we can’t do anything in Michigan.” Former Governor Jennifer Granholm served her second and final term in 2010, which opened up the race for two new candidates: Republican Rick Snyder, a former Ann Arbor businessman, and Democrat Virg Bernero, the mayor of Lansing. “I’m speaking for a demographic party I’m no longer a part of, but I think the (midterm) election is as interesting as the candidates make it,” Evans said. “If they (students) don’t think an issue is going to make a difference, they won’t be interested.” "Someone needs to let them know,” she added,“and they need to educate themselves.” “Our main goal this year is education,” Zaborowski said.' We want students to know that YouVote exists and can help them.’ ’ YouVote members created a Facebopk page andlllfitter account to become mol^acessible to the student voter population. Members focused on increasing student participation. YouVote volunteers decked out Ann Street Plaza in red, white and blue and played loud pop music to attract students to their tentsTOSst year, the campaign registered WO students tc^wte. J39 s t e i n / D E S I G N s a r a l e e g o r d o n Joel Medina is a 19-year- old student at Jackson Community College, He came in eighth place overall, running; the 5k Dmo Dash race in 16 minutes and 54 seconds, IMl Sarah Baird and her daughter Sheridan Baird, from Jackson, MI, come back to the event every year with her husband,-, who grew up in East Lansing. The family agreed that it’s the best 5k raJppri which to participate. Beginning and ending in »nt of the MSU Museum, the runners start the 5k Dine Dash race. Twenty-threeiyear-old Brendan Martin finished first®. 15 minutes and 33 seconds.The Dir.o Dash benefits the MSU Museum's education programs. dashing for a cause Students participate in a race to benefit museum WM Anxious, excited, nervous: these feelings seemed to overpower the 1,500 people who gathered on the West Circle Drive sidewalk on Oct, 3 at 10 a.m. and waited for a horn to blow. These people were part of the 25* annual MSU Museum’s Dino Dash 5k run/walk. A run for everyone, it connected members of the East Lansing community with MSU’s campus. Many people, such as senior Kelsi Franckowiak, participated to help support the museum’s educational programs. Franckowiak, who ran with a friend, said the cause made the race meaningful. “The event raises money and awareness for the Michigan State Museum, which is just a good cause within itself. People should want to come out and help,” she said. The race was run by people from all walks of life. Some competed in wheel chairs, and others pushed children in strollers. From toddlers to 79-year-olds, people were more than motivated to begin the race. With a few minutes until race time, contestants lined up behind the starting mark, running in place and mentally preparing themselves for the horn to blow. Once the race began, runners and walkers took off for the three-mile run with determination. Graduate student Danielle Bonoban said she didn’t formally train for the run, but was excited nonetheless. H'l have never done an event like this before,” said graduate student Danielle Bonoban. “I decided to do this race because grad students got in for free, and I just want to show my support because I know it’s for a great cause.” The MSU Federal Credit Union helped the museum with the organization of the event and the registration of participants. Executive Vice President of the credit unioim April Globes, said she hoped the event would raise awareness for the museum. “We are just hoping to make this a great family day and a fun day to support the museum,” she said. This year, the first-place winners were from Jackson and Lansing, but from children to alumni, everyone who participated was considered a winner. Katie Lowden, Snyder Hall director tries on a turn an, tied by the coordinator of the event, junior Ameek Singh Sodhi. He hosted the event to raise awareness about Sikhism. Junior Ameek Singh Sodhi leads a discussion about the Sikh religion. The group discussed issues Sodhi felt were relevant to Sikhs in America, like prejudice and tolerance. £D —I _Q <= T) =3'JZ1. o '75' o K m n tn 2 o ^ o W) o for tolerance MSU student invites peers to explore his religion of Sikhism In hopes of raising awareness and overcoming false knowledge (or lack thereof) of his religion, devout Sikh and junior Ameek Singh Sodhi hosted his second annual Turban Night. Students gathered in the Pillar Room of Phillips Hall on the evening of Tuesday Oct. 5, to learn more about Sikhism and experience what it feels like to wear a turban. “Turbans are unique to Sikhism. They signify two things,” Sodhi said. “First,Ihey remind others of who you are and second, they remind yourself of who you are.” Sodhi explained that his religion, Sikhism, is often mistaken as a sect of Hinduism or Islam, but in fact is its own distinct religion with its own divine scriptures. It was founded by Guru Nanak Dev as an alternative to both Hinduism and Islam, and is a monotheistic religion that believes in an omnipresent deity Its practitioners, known as Sikhs, strongly reject ideas of discrimination by gender, caste or creed. According to the Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund, Sikhism is the fifth largest*5 religion in the world, with an estimated 500,000 Sikhs in the United States alone. As a mentor in Snyder Hall, Sodhi encouraged students living on his floor to come to the event. “We wanted to learn about Ameek’s religion,” sophomore Drew Dzwonkowski, a student on Singh’s floor and visitor at the event, said. Sodhi hosted a short discussion on the importance of the turban, and about the prejudices held towards it. The turban is an important religious signifier for Sikhs, and is worn to remind them of their commitment to their religion’s beliefs and — %--M ■ jg| llii values. Sodhi then gave visitors a chance to try a turban on for themselves. “I was a little nervous to try the turban on,” freshman Elle Ables-Allison said. “But after wearing it I realized that they put it on everyday as a part of their routine and it didn’t seem like that big of a deal or anything to be nervous about. It's just a part of their lives.” Sodhi also showed a film titled “Ocean of Pearls,” which focuses on a Sikh’s struggle with identity in North America. “After 9/11 it definitely got harder for Sikhs to express themselves,” Sodhi said. “Many people mistake Sikhs like me as Muslim, and many associate Muslims with terrorism.” “Most people don’t know that my religion preaches equality of gender and races| of surrendering your ego, and to dedicating yourself to the same God (we call him Waheguru) that Abrahamic religions worship.” Sodhi pointed out that despite prejudices he may receive while wearing the turban, he has lived in America all his life and appreciates everything it stands for. “I bleed red, white and blue,” he said. “Being a James Madison student, I understand the complexity and genius of our founding documents, and appreciate the institutions that have made America an exceptional chapter in world history” “The identity for a Sikh was designed to catch someone’s attention,” he said. “It is to remind me that I get up in the morning, tie my turban, brush my beard, do my prayers, and yes, maybe be called a dirty name in the middle of the day, because I believe, deeply in the tenets of my religion.” A group of students gathered in the Pillar Room of Phillips Hall to watch le film "Ocean of Pear®" The film focuses on a Sikh's struggle to keep and accept his identity in America. JA3 A student reclines outside the Community Resource ^ Management Center, Students interested in getting their first choice of housing had the opportunity to camp out ana be | one of the first in line to sign a lease. Junior Dan Lewandowski and junior Emma Jakobcic giggle wMgreflecting on his future home. Off-campus housing, on average, costs around $600 in rent a month. Community Resource Management Company worker Julie Mullen receives a student;® safety deposit money Students looking for off-campus housing can look tofdeposit between $200 and H $300 when they sign their leaseJ4f§ k o l b / D E S i G N b r e n d a n p r o s t T Y P E n a t a l i e p a t t e r s o n / P H O T O n a t a l i e WM home sweet home Students explore housing options off campus For two nights Juniors Kacey Klem, Tricia Gordon and Austin Brooks have been sleeping in a tent outside the Community Resource Management Company on Grand River Avenue. Although it’s only October, they’re waiting to sign a lease in hopes that a tent doesn’t become their permanent home next fall. “It’s not about second choices,” Brooks said. “That’s why we’re here.’’ . Brooks, Gordon and Klem aren’t the first on the list to sign a lease, but thanks to a few weak-I hearted souls who left the event early they are closer to getting their dream homes. Brooks’ dream house on Beal Street would be the man cave where he and the entire tennis team could hang out and relax. He looks forward to a little privacy while still living with his good friends. "I’m all about the basement. I want a finished basement and a garage,” he said. “My room is 6 x 6 where I live right now. It’ll be nice to have more privacy’® The average dorm room at Michigan State is 11x12 feet. When freshman Sarah Wilsey comes home to her room in Wilson Hall, she doesn’t feel a sense of home. “Mainly I just want where I am hving to feel like my home,” she said: “A dorm room is too small, and we don’t get our own rooms.” Like Wilsey Brooks’ decision for hving off campus comes from experiences gained in the dorms. “I hated the food on campus,” Brooks said. "Living off campus teaches you how to cook for yourself. You also have a lot more privacy” Besides houses, there are a variety of off-1 campus options to choose from, apartments, townhouses and co-ops, to name a few. For students, price is one of the first criterion when F lome's to housing, mostly because for the first time, they will be paying for it themselves. Average rent for an apartment in East Lansing hovers around $600, while houses, depending on the location and amenities, can run as high as $1,035, according to housing review website, ap artmentratings. com. Despite the cost, Wilsey is set on a house. “I feel that a house would feel more like my home than an apartment will,” she said. “The criteria I’m keeping in mind is clean, good location and of course, not too expensive.” Monthly financial responsibilities aside from rent, such as utilities and food, can mount quickly “I know about things like food, utilities and gas money,” Wilsey said. "But -I’m sure there are many more.” Unlike Klem, Gordon and Brooks, Wilsey has never been through the selection and decision process associated with off-campus living. However, she is not without guidance. H|’m not too familiar with the process, but I am sure that my older sister can help me out,” Wilsey said. “She’s a senior at State and she’s been through the procesl three times now. I haven't been looking that much, but I do know it’s a good plan to choose a place sooner than later.” Over on Ann Street lies Klem and Gordon’s perfect home: a dark, woody greenhouse they hope to get by shopping early The house meets the standards that they feel make it the perfect living space. 't|“We want a porch and something where we could have people over. Maybe a few tailgates,” Klem said. ’ ’We wouldn’t look at anything past three blocks from campus. We still want to be close to the bars,” But at the end of the day Klem believes any residence can be a home. ‘ ‘As long as it’s not a dirt floor, I’ll be fine,’ ’ she said. Ryan Frisbie, a member of the University of Michigan’s Triathlon Team, enters the transfer area to getlln his bike after swimming 400 meters. The total race was about 15.75 miles. ready, set, sprint MSU Triathlon Team hosts Spartan Sprint Triathlon For the MSU Triathlon Team this year, it was Tuscaloosa or bust. This Alabama city was the host of the Collegiate Nationals for triathlon teams in April. So while most students were sleeping in on Oct. 10 after a night of celebrating a football victory against the Wolverines, the team was up before 9 am. raising money to fund their trip with the Spartan Sprint Triathlon. “We pay for the expenses of traveling for our other races during the year,” said junior Zach Church, who volunteered instead of competing in the race. ‘‘Nationals is the only one paid for by the team.” The team hosts the Spartan Sprint Triathlon every year with the help of 3 Disciplines Racing, a health and fitness event coordinating company. The race is considered a sprint because the 400-meter swim, 20-kilometer bike and 5-kilometer run are about half of the normal distance in a regular triathlon. Both collegiate athletes and members of the public could compete in the race, which began in the pool behind IM West and continued with bike and running courses throughout the campus. The funds for Nationals came from the registration fees for the race, which the team split with 3 Disciplines, said event coordinator Jennifer Cooke. Raising enough money lowever, was only half of the battle in getting to Tuscaloosa. Sophomore Colin Paulbeck said the team practiced every day during the week to prepare for Nationals. “We have a swim coordinator, bike coordinator and run coordinator,” he said. “We alternate between different workouts every day” Senior Bill Vann, who placed 94th in the nation last year, trains 22 hours a week under the guidance of Team USA triathlon coach Kris Swarthout. *f„‘I train twice, sometimes three times a day six days a week, with one day off until I peak in April for the Collegiate Nation® Race,” he said. “This is what I am really passionate about and I hope to do everything we can to achieve all of our goals.” Last year, the team placed 14th overall in the nation. The men placed 10th in their division while the women placed 23rd. This year, Vann expects significant improvement. “Our team has the greatest abundance of natural talent in the nation and the potential this year for us is through the roof,” Vann said. “We have some high goals set for Nationals as a team and I believe that we can compete for a top-five place in the overall team category if not better.” “The team is really excited and ready to prove what Spartans are made of,” he said. Competitors prepare to swim 400 meters at the Spartan Sprint Triathlon. The swimming part of the race took place in the pool Dehind IM West. Sophomore and member of the MSU Triathlon Team Colin Paul beck crosses the finish line at the Spartan Sprint Triathlon. Paulbeck finished with a time of 1 :®lr25. tgSllegiate ifnale competitors prepare for thefiwimming portion of the Spartan Sprint Triathlon. Mofflf the MSU Triathlon Team did not compete in the am and instead helped Bp at fofe traffics!, watelstations. O O m c t£> n CD =3 "py CD gs i/i rl *< ^ (D ”T3 cr i ft) o HI O ■ WImSmmm At 4 a.m.lcampus seemed desolate as the lights emitting from dorm room windows slowly faded into blackness. But an MSU night^receptionist has company all night long. The job of a night receptionist may seem lonely but students filter in frequently until the wee hours of the morning. “There are drunk people, obviously” junior Caitlin Pingel said. “It’s college.” However, according to Pingel, who has worked in the Red Cedar neighborhood since spring semester 2010, she’s never had to call the police because of student behavior. “Itjaven’t worked in the more troublesome complexes,” she said. Dorm complexes around campus fulfill their reputations through nighttime activity according to junior Samantha Myers, who has worked as a night receptionist since March 2010. HE The craziness depends on the complex,” she said. “Nothing happens in West Circle. I’ve never called the cops in the Red Cedar neighborhoods, but it happens two to three times a week in East and South Complexes, due to size.” Aside from an occasional phone call to the MSU police and scanning student IDs, it’s up to the night receptionists to keep themselves busy “I’ve become a lot better at browsing the internet,” Pingel said. “Night receptionists are often addicted to Facebook and caffeine.” Supervisors make their rounds four to five times a night to check that receptionists are awake and schedule breaks, according to senior Anthony Young. Hi usually play loud music, or sometimes set alarms on my phone if I’m really tired,” Young said. Last year, night receptionists had the option of working a split shift. However, .in effect this fall, workers are obligated to a full nighttime shift, from 11:40 p.m. to 6:55 a.m, in hopes of reducing the number of no-call-no-shows, “I don’t sleep very well,” Myers said. “I sleep during the day But 4:30 to 5:30 is the worst hour because you’re more than half done and you just zone, staring at your computer. It’s a good time to get work done, though.” Sophomore Dana Castle agrees. “Around 5:30, I’m losing it,” she said. “That’s when ’5-hour Energy’ shots come in handy” According to Young, a midnight to 7 a.m. workday doesn’t] work for all types of class schedules. Students, such as Myers, cluster their classes on certain days to accommodate for night shifts. “My earliest class was M2:40 last year,” Myers said. “You try to concentrate your classes on Monday Wednesday Friday or Tuesday Thursday so you can sleep.” While the job of a night receptionist might be easy they serve a very important function, beyond automated ID scanners. ; J'How would people check in guests?” Castle said. “The main worry is that students would just prop the doors and people will get in that aren’t supposed to. It’s a safety thing.” 7T —I O ■< & 5^ m 2^'m (/> ® s' W w min rt- o' 3 qj —; QJ -g Q. O3 QJ QJ cd" Senior Hannah Oldaker takes her MSip.D. from senior Anthony Young after he syhgSit for entry Night receptionists are required to I.D. all residents after midnight. A night receptionist adepts an MSU I.D. through the door of Mason Hall; Only residents are allowed re-entry into their respective halls, while guests must be signed in. A I C O N V E R S A T O N W T H n i g h t I r e c e p t i o n i s t s Passion Pit lead singer Michael Angelakos nits a high note. The five- man electrónica band is known for its upbeat and independent sound. Indie-rock and hip-hop artist K.Flay opens for Passion Pit. K.Flay released her first self-titled EP in October and traveled from Sah Francisco to present her bold, distinctive sound! CD-< "O ¿el S1 o —^ m *2. en cd' CDQJ Z O 7T O'"j in cdo =3D Q_ O)“Ö 3zxz o ~ai •H oO in CD "1 C A M P U S L I F E p a s s i o n p i t c o n c e r t a passionate approach Passion Pit delivers a high-energy performance at the MSU Auditorium You wouldn’t expect Spartans to have a lot to dance about the week before midterms, but on Oct. 18, there they were, crowding the MSU Auditorium, moving to the melodies of East Coast electrónica band Passion Pit, The Boston natives mesmerized the audience with their upbeat pop tunes and dreamy light show, and their catchy sound transported listeners into a state of audio-induced euphoria. The concert, which began at 7 p.m., was organized by the Residence Halls Association. Since they broke into the scene in 2008 with their EP “Chunk of Change,” Passion Pit has been producing fast-paced electronic pop songs, woven together with synthesizers and abstract lyrics. “I like them because they’re techno but easy to listen to. It’s different: it’s not super-mainstream, but it’s still upbeat,” said freshman Jackie Martin, who was looking forward to hearing Passion Pit perform ‘‘Moth’s Wings’’ Fans expected two things aside from their favorite songs: a light show and a dance party in full force. After patiently waiting through two openers, fans rushed the stage, and when lead singer Michael Angelakos’ high-pitched singing broke the air, the crowd couldn’t help but pulsate to the rhythm. “It was so hot in here you could hardly breathe, As the lights hit the room like a kaleidoscope, morphing from blues to greens, and fading into shades of pink, people continued to dance. ‘ ‘This was perfect timing with stressful midterms, to come out and let loose,” senior Kara Erickson, a fan since 2008, said. “It’s a relief.” Halfway through the set, Angelakos encouraged the audience || lift their hands, clap and then go crazy With arms flailing in every direction and crowd surfers floating by the auditorium became a swelling sea of limbs and bobbing heads. Senior Justin Covington, who discovered Passion Pit on the Internet radio site Last.fm, danced along. Passion Pit’s unique and independent sound, he said, made his decision to attend the concert a no-brainer. “I saw the thing in the cafeteria about the show, so I went back to my room to buy tickets. I didn’t go to class that day just to buy tickets,” he said. As the energy continued to amplify the band wrapped up the show with their hit “Sleepyhead.” A satisfied audience filed out of the Auditorium at 10 p.m. With sweat dripping into the creases of their smiles, there were no sleepyheads in sight. Fans such as Parker left the show in awe of Passion Pit’s performance and the atmosphere. “A lot of times at shows there’s a lot of hostility but not here, not at Passion Pit. Everyone was everyone else’s life support,” she said. Fansping and dance along with Passion Pit. Many studentacame out to the Monday night concert looking for an opportunity to let loMse before midterms. Guitarist for opening band, Black J® Lewis & the Honeybears, performs fcjlf the crowd. The Texas-based blue^and soul c£>up also opened up for big-name artists such as Little Richard. J51 Vj rr YT rA vi IHTs, i V| royal honor Three stellar Spartans among MSU’s homecoming court Senior Kevin Fleury waves to the fans in Spartan Stadium during halftime of the homecoming game. Fleury has: been involved with RHA and has been a resident mentir, as weHffll studied abroad in Switzerland. Thahomeconiing §gurt stan® proudly at midfield in Spartan Stadium during halftime.of the homecoming game. The Spartans played the Illinois Fighting niini and wonthe garut eiima stein On a campus that boasts more than- 45,000 students, fit takes a remarkable track record to represent MSU during homecoming week. Among the 2010 homecoming court, Megan Gebhart, Nick Pfost and Brianna Gardner were certainly no exception to this rule. Gebhart founded msuCatalyst.com, a site that shares inspiring stories of extraordinary Spartans, past and present. Pfost is the vice president and secretary of the South Neighborhood Lesbian- Bisexual-Gay-Transgendered Ally Caucus. Gardner is the executive producer of MSU Telecasters and interned on the set of ‘ ‘The Office® last summer. Despite their different backgrounds, all of them share one passion: being a Spartan. "We’re looking for people who embody MSU and the Spartan experience, who have a love for the university and who are good role models for other students, because they’re put in a spot where they become spokespeople for the student body’’ Jodi Hancock, co-advisor to the homecoming court, said. Take Gebhart, for example. A marketing major at the Eli Broad College of Business, she founded the Gumball Group, a gathering of students who meet to bounce entrepreneurial ideas off of one another. She also studied abroad in France, Spain and Belgium. She’s currently in the midst of a new adventure called 52 Cups of Coffee, in which she plans to have a cup of coffee with a new person every week for a year, and is recording her progress on her blog, 52cups. tumblr.com. As lie executive producer of MSUTelecasters, Gardner is in charge of six student-run shows that are broadcast and streamed to MSU and the general public. She interned on the show "The Office” and helped develop the NBC show "Community” She has also studied abroad in Spain and Portugal, and is majoring in Finance; and Media Arts and Technology In addition to the occasional radio spot to promote homecoming, the court is encouraged to attend all of the daily events leading up to the weekend. From Friday to Saturday the court] attended the pep rally at The Rock, the parade, the Green and White brunch, and the homecoming game against Illinois - including being introduced ! at the 50-yard line during halftime. "It has been really crazy especially since it! is homecoming week and National Coming Out Week,’ ’ Pfost, the LBGTA officer and chairpersonj for The Alliance of Queer & Ally Students, said.] "I’ve had to balance my commitments, because] I’ve had to be at something every day” The homecoming court isn’t merely a one-] week deal. During the summer, the court waJ invited to attend the Kedzie Reunion, an event for i MSU alumni who graduated 50 years ago. They] also had the option of attending the Pentwater] Homecoming Days in August, a celebration] located in a village near Lake Michigan that! features a large MSU alumni population. After the homecoming festivities are] over, the court is expected to serve oh the] nomination and paper cut committees, which narrow down the applicants for next year’s homecoming court. Despite the year-long! commitment, these exemplary Spartans revel] in their reign as royalty. “It’s such a huge honor to be representing] 44,000 people at a place I love so much,’! Gardner said. "This is the highest honor I could have at MSU.” Senior Brianna Gardner greets the crowd during halftimllof the homecoming game. Gardner interned on the set of "The Office” and she's the director of MSU TeleipSters. =;■ “D O QJ m 3 in n CD 5 C A M P U S L I F E h o m e c o m i n g c o u r t Seniors Nicholas Pfost and Alice Topping ride through East Lansing as part of the annual homecoming parade. The parade snaked down Abbott Road to Grand River Avenue and through MSU via Farm Lane: , ■Si WÈÊÊBÊÊm u H The homecomina court pose for a picture around rresident Lou Anna K. Simon. Hanging out with President Simon was one of the many perks the court enjoyed. J53 The MSU women’s basketball team rides atop a fire trucM in the homMoming paradl! Thateam began their season later that night at Midnight Madness. A car built by the So.rety a Automotive Engineers races down the road; The College of Engineering was onaof several collegg^to show off their accomplishments in the parade. homeward rand beyond Spartans gather to celebrate MSU during homecoming weekend From Farm Lane down past Hagadorn Road, traffic sat and waited as rockets and spaceships rolled down the road, As the caravan of floats and fans wove its way through campus, students and supporters lined the streets and helped ring in another homecoming weekend at MSU. 1 The theme, Ji'A Spartan Space Odyssey’ ’, reflected on MSU’s dedication to scientific research and the exploration of worlds beyond our own, and inspired parade participants to create otherworldly floats. Aside from featuring different student, Greek, and alumni groups, the parade also showcased local high school bands and community groups in East Lansing. as MSU’s Spectators whooped and cheered various enthusiastically sports teams rode by in the procession, waving at the adoring crowd as they went. Members of the university’s various student organizations joined the convoy on a plethora of vehicles - from automobiles to horses lo go-karts to a speedboat mounted on a truck trailer;/: Children of MSU alumni and East Lansing families, on the other hand, had a field day filling bags with the free candy that rained down on them as each float passed, its passengers scattering sugary confections to the crowd in its wake. tradition unfolded: As night fell on the evening of Oct. for 15, another the second year in a row, the Breslin Center was filled to the brim for Midnight Madness, the heralding in of the basketball season. With blasts of pyrotechnics, Tomilzzo dressed as an astronaut, and special celebrity Spartan Gerard Butler, the night served to boost spectators’ green and white pride, as well as prepare them for the game conducts the cneerteamas they perform in the _1 homecominc homecoming game. The )irit against the University of Illinois. “When you have sports teams like ours that are nationally ranked, it’s easy for everyone to get excited,” junior Tyler Domina, a spectator at the event, said. The excitement continued when the football team took on the fighting Illini to their seventh consecutive win - a feat that hasn’t occurred since 1966. Gerard Butler attended the game as well, and led the famous Spartan battle cry from 300. Musical numbers and spectacles from the band, cheer, and dance teams helped pump the crowd to fever pitch. For Domina, this was the best part. “The way they set up the games makes the students want to go and support their team,” Domina said. “Regardless if they know anything about sports; it’s fun to watcl all the extras. It gets them excited.” Before the game could begin, many of the colleges across campus sponsored tailgates for students past and present, allowing alumni to reconnect with former classmates and professors. Homecoming is as much an event for students as it is for alumni. “Homecoming is a chance for alumni to come back and relive their college lives for a weekend,” Domina said. ■'There are all sorts of events for them to reconnect.” It’s an important time for all Spartan fans; the symbolic factor of ‘coming home’ to the place where their support, pridel and often tuition dollars, lie. Through the series of events - from historical hayridesEo the parade, to the final victory over Illinois, an inspiring burst of Spartan spirit for both academics and athletics left spectators with enough pride in their alma mater to lead them through another year. J55 The ropes and pulleys shown are used to pull the sail inti placfflThe process of switching the sail allows lie wind ti redirect the movement and speed of the sailboli iling through class MSU students travel to Muskegon for an educational sailing experience When’s the last time you drove two hours to ^class, on a weekend? That scenario doesn’t seem likely unless you’ve taken Great Lakes Sailing with Capt. Joe Smith. The one credit Kinesiology 101 class teaches the basics of sailing in the classroom and on board Smith’s sailboat. The actual sailing lessons take place at the Bluffton Bay Marina in Muskegon, located on Muskegon Lake. At least 180 students signed up for lie class. Smith takes groups of them out in three separate, weekend-long sessions before winter hits. The class features 16 hours of instruction on campus, with seminars on safety and the parts of the boat. The other 12 hours are dedicated to an overnight boat trip, in which students drive to Muskegon on a Saturday night to sail, sleep overnight on the boat, and then sail again the next day featuring an all-you-can-eat breakfast Sunday morning. Students are required to complete at least one overnight trip with Smith to receive the pass/fail credit. Smith has been teaching the class since 1986, when he presented the idea to MSU. An MSU alumnus, he taught math and physics at high schools across the country but he wanted to use his love of sailing to teach smdents in a different way “I wanted to do something that involved students more,” he said. “What sailing allows me to do is to bring a student out of the situation of what they call ‘normal learning’ and get involved in a hands-on situation.” After Smith guides the boat out of the marina using the motor, he has the students unfurl the sail themselves. When it comes time to shift direction, they use ropes and pulleys to pull the sail to the opposite side of the mast, a procedure called tacking. However, the class doesn’t get much more strenuous than that. After the sail is in place, Smith explains the next step in proper sailing. He calls it “Position A.” He demonstrates by lying back, folding his hands behind his head and striking a comfortable pose. His point?] Once the sail’s in place, all you have to do is] enjoy the peace of the gentle waves. The class usually has students new to sailing, so beyond learning tacking and safety the trip is mostly spent in “Position A.” Smith does guarantee several benefits that students get from Great Lakes Sailing: They’ll enjoy a proper sailing experience. They’re provided an all-you-can-eat breakfast on Sunday They’re informed of exclusive tips on how to get free boats (asking around at marinas for boats that have been abandoned by owners), and they’re given unlimited opportunities to sail for free with Smith once completing the course. Although some students who join the class may just scrambling for an easy elective, they seem to enjoy Smith’s antics and musings on their weekend excursion away from East Lansing. Smith even suggests that the course is important for later in life. After you get the high paying job and the new boat, Smith asks, will you know how to operate that boat? Great Lakes Sailing could certainly help, he argues. The students agree. “It kind of showed me that it’s something I might want to do in the future when I’m older. You know, have my own money and just need to get away” sophomore Ismail Gregory said. If anything though, the students did take away the most important concept from the class discussion. ' ‘I learned how to relax in 'Position A,’ ’ ’ senior David Parke said. Capi. Joe Smith watches as sophomore Sasha Savage pulls the salì into place, a process called tacking. Students learned by performing the tacking themselves. Capt. Joe Smith takes to the helm as he lectures on the lesiure of sailing. The one credit kinesiology class requires that students sign up with Smith for a two-day overnight trip on Dike Muskegeon, complete with an all-you-can-eat breakfast on Sunday morning. Senior Katie Soule pulls the sail into place, a process called tacking. In addition to learning to sail, students relaxed and enjoyed thé sunny Sunday morning. ?r -H o -< rx TJ O 3 0) a> o > "U c in m to CD CD ,* i ■»i 1 Hi ¡PH Hi. i y<- 1 ■ „ I ¡il| ^ Z ’ H I 1 1 vy y ¡111! ' H |1 1! 1 1$ |Vrf -V Y'-'" - v. -“•M-'W;.#’* v : ! l l i l i l l . - i n : i « -w. * g a r a v a g l i a / D E S I G N s a r a l e e g o r d o n T Y P E m a r i s s a r u s s o / P H O T O j e n n i f e r c TJ " ■ ■ ■ 1 ? mm The Fisheries and Wildlife Club gathers at the end of the clean-up to see what type of items were lying at the bottom of the river. In the past; they have found countleslibikes and even a refrigerator. * _ _ ____ on the banks of the red Students help the Fisheries and Wildlife Club fish out trash in the Red Cedar River cedar On a cold, crisp morning, warm sun peeked through the dried leaves that hung from the trees, creating a tunnel over the Red Cedar River. Oct. 31 was the perfect day for volunteers and members of the Fisheries and Wildlife Club to head out, for the ninth year in a row, to clean out the Red Cedar. Sipping hot chocolate and discussing their Halloween costumes from the night before, 50 volunteers gathered around the Michigan State Bike Shop at 10 a.m. The dedicated students and alumni had curious expressions on their faces, as if wondering what they would find this year. After uncovering old, rusted bikes, shopping carts, a motorcycle and even a refrigerator in the past, an even higher bar had been set for finding odd objects. Junior Genelle Uhrig, a member of the Fisheries and Wildlife Club, participated for the first time this year. H|l heard that they have found ovens, bikes and other major garbage. I am curious to see what I find," Uhrig said before heading out into the 45-mile long river. One common myth about the Red Cedar River, also known to some as the "Red Sewer,” is that it’s uninhabitable.. Many people don’t realize that it has been tested and is said to be safe for swimming. MSU alumni, Matt Freechack, has volunteered for the past five years and says he plans to continue to help clean the Red Cedar. "You get to walk the banks of the river and ride canoes; it’s really rewarding. MSU has a beautiful campus. We want to keep it that way” he said. Handfuls of big, black garbage bags were passed out to each of the volunteers. People eventually slipped into rubber waders as the director of the club divided the river into four sections. Each group was put in charge of making their section spotless. After four and a half hours of pulling out rusted bicycles, shoes and even a table, the volunteers called it a day, pulling their canoes up to shore and stepping back onto dry land. Back outside of the Bike Shop, volunteers rummaged through the overflowing bags to see what had been collected. Several people expressed concern about the amount of garbage thrown into the river. Settling down after the exhausting day, they rewarded themselves with some pizza. Senior and president of the Fisheries and Wildlife Club Marco Sanchez said he feels it’s important for people to show respect for the river. ■‘This is a way to show people the great resources we have on campus. People need to care and should appreciate the river,” Sanchez said. "It is actually really clean and there is life in it.” 1)61 Sophomore Ian Cooley becomes a crazed ana blood thirsty actor on the night of the Haunted Auditorium. Cooley was just one of about 30 theatre majors set up throughout the building to provide a thrilling Halloween scare. Amid an eerie red glow, masters student Emily young plays the par®of a seemingly innocent child playing with her toys. The mSority of the props for the Haunted Auditorium came from the Department of Theatre’s play "Evil Dead: The Musical,” which they performed earlier in the year. stage fright At the Haunted Auditorium, theater majors make nightmares real Amongst superstitious actors, uttering "Macbeth” in a theater is believed to bring about a spiral of unlucky events for the cast and crew of a play But on Halloween weekend at the MSU Auditorium, the taboo title of that Shakespearean play was just the catalyst for far more frightening events that brought new meaning to the term "stage fright.” y:\v'yY.;;/' As anxious groups of students, parents and children began their adventure into the Department of Theatre’s second annual Haunted Auditorium, an actor "mistakenly” uttered the taboo word, placing a curse on the theater itself. . ' O = C A M P U S L I F E h a u n t e d a u d i t o r i u m And that was when an undead horror of a man came at the audience from behind. "You’re fixated on what’s going on in front of you, but somebody’s coming up behind you,” senior Tyler McIntosh said. “That’s when everyone literally jumped,” freshman Nicole Eigner said. Spurred with fear at the sudden appearance of this living abominatiolj a contorted actress directed the audience down a spot-lit path backstage, beginning a nightmarishly thrilling chase through the unfamiliar, claustrophobic hallways of the Auditorium. The Gothic-inspired design of the 70-year-old building, along with the rumors of it being haunted by the spirit of a little boy provided for a truly unnerving experience. i The journey through this living nightmare took about 20 minutes, and the ordeal« _ ended with the terrified audience being chased out the side doors by a man with a chainsaw. "This year we decided to kind of go into actually telling the story of an auditorium and what actually goes on in an auditorium,” senior Brittane Rowe, a production member, said. "There’s all these different scenarios: like a costume designer strangling someone, or an actor who can’t act and goes crazy—just like the extremes of what goes on in a theater,” she said. Indeed, the acting business can seem dramatic and stressful, but the department still found time to haunt the auditorium, and did it in pure theatrical fashion. They recycled props from "Evil Dead: The Musical,” a play which they performed earlier in the year, enlisted their own makeup artists and costume designers, and recruited theatre majors to act as zombies, twisted clowns and other characters. "Our teacher literally went through and was like, ‘What’s your back story?’, 'What happened to you?’, ‘Why are you burned?’,” production member and senior Mikayla Bouchard said. "It's not just ‘Oh, let’s put on a haunted house’, it’s like 'Let’s actually tell a crazy m story’,” Rowe said. Bouchard said the theatre department had an extended budget for the event this year, and was allowed to use the entire Auditorium building. In just the first two days of the event, they topped the amount of people who came for the event in the previous year. All of the money raised at the door will go toward funding the theatre department's second senior BFA showcase in New York in the spring, in which actors and actresses will perform monologues, songs or dances in front of New York acting agents. "It was so believable, they were crazy,” Lansing Community College student Ariella Zanoni said. "They did not hold back at all.” Senior Cara Bosco paints a gruesome burn on freshman Sara Ostrowski’s»ce, helping her get into character for the Haunted Auditorium over Halloween weekend. This year was the second year theilppartmjlit of Theatre put oil the event. J63 Sophomore Peter Matcheck, freshman Julia LaHemand and pophomore Eric Eilersen hide in the bushes on the final night of Humans fl Zombies at Beaumont Tower. As zombies, the group wait® to attack human pSsers-by \ m Junior Bj|§ik I Palling prepaJli pMMMe on zombies before I Beaumonti iring final missjorrlnWHI ? for humans to the week’s Beb '■ i prevent zombies from entering It all started innocently enough as a Facebook event- and then the infestation spread. The walking-dead emerged from their darkened dens, advancing across the grounds of Michigan State University to consume and infect every unwitting man or woman in their path. But the harrowed remnants of the human race fought back, rallying together to combat the undead menace with as much firepower as they could muster. Thus began the campus-wide game of tag known as Humans vs. Zombies. The game ran from Nov. 2 to the 8th, with a final mission at the end of the week in which "humans” were to secure Beaumont Tower from "zombies” from 8 to 11 p.m. in order to win the game. According to sophomore Frank Luchini, humans win the game by starving off zombies, while zombies win by turning all humans into zombies. "Some people have been saying they’ve been changing their schedules, going to class 40 minutes earlier to avoid zombies. Or leave five minutes early Or stay late within the building,” he said. “People will take the most roundabout routes to avoid specific areas of campus.” The rules of the game are quite specific, Luchini said. For example, the game only occurs outdoors between the hours of 7 a.m. to midnight. For identification, zombies are required to wear bandanas around their heads, while humans likewise wear bandanas around their arms. Zombies can "infect” humans by tagging them, while humans can ward them off with Nerf guns and clean sock "grenades.” "The original creators of the gameBought this would just be a fun thing to add on to their daily lives,” Luchini saidj'But really it’s so much fun and people get so into it.” ■ According to Luchini, a group of sophomores decided to bring the game of tag to campus after experiencing it in their hometowns. "It’s played all over the country It’s a massive game of tag, but il doesn’t Save to affect your daily life. It’s something fun to add on as an extra,” he said, "We’re all adults now, so we’re able to run around and play with Nerf guns andpot get yelled at.” Sophomore Nick Stauffer agrees. "I get to fulfill my childhood dream of chasing zombies® he said "I fell in love with the game.” Apparently so did MSU. Though Re game was advertised solely through a Facebook event created by sophomore Jessica Oakes, 500 students decided to "attend” the event, although only 300 of them actually registered in the end. "We probably only would have had about 30 people playing without the help of social networking sites like Facebook, and it would have probably been based around only one part of campus," Oakes said. Oakes hopes to continue the game in future semesters but in a; more organized fashion. She said a website is in the works and that, given the amount of positive feedback she has received from students, she is in the process of making Humans vs. Zombies a registered student organization. "When you’re simply walking down the street, you could see a human running from a zombie,” Stauffer said, "and that’s pretty cool." W li Camp betwe 52. —f ■ ^jj! Cj'fD' cn S2. — O CD a) i i m 3n pi Q) jz: 5" "O X *< o£U —( as Zombies|Mfate a "fire” as they wait to ambush humans on their return to their post at Beaumont Tower. The final mission at Beaumont Tower lasted for three horns. J65 I ■ I it’s sol ■ week of the s living dead ■ I Campus-wide game of tag enacts intense battle between humans and zombies ie said i solely-’ :es, 5001 af them playing: , and it impus,” Dut in a| nd that, I ■dents, jistered i see a y cool.” o > "D c (/) a q u i n o / D E S I G N b e t s y e b e r T Y P E m a n i s s a r u s s o / P H O T O a u d r e y gearing up Volunteers help restore bikes on campus Row upon row of half-repaired bicycles line the basement of the old Demonstration Hall. Once the home of the MSU bike shop, the basement now houses Bike Project, a service in which student volunteers repair bikes. ‘ ‘I love having the privilege to work on my own bike down here. The shop has every tool that I would ever need,” said Jacob Clark, a member of the East Lansing community He brought his BMX bike in for repairs. Every Thursday and Sunday at the bike shop, four stations are set up for volunteers. They’re instructed by volunteer coordinator and sophomore Dan Dokter. Volunteers are asked to fix bikes, some unwanted and some confiscated by MSU Police, and send them back to the Bike Shop to be rented to students and the East Lansing community. While Jon Amcker, a senior and Clark’s older brother, worked on a bike that needed new pedals and a tire replaced, he explained his passion for repairing bikes. ‘‘I like working on bikes with my brother. He wants to be a mechanic one day and I enjoy helping him get a leg up,” Amcker said. Volunteers are expected to replace rusty chains, barely-there tires, and brakes. Many of the volunteers are not bike mechanics, but they are carefully talked through each step. Once the worn-out parts are replaced, Dokter examines the bikes. Freshman Aidan Hunter takes time out of his busy schedule to volunteer at the Bike Shop every Thursday ‘‘There’s over 40,000 people on this campus and it feels great to know I’m one of the few who gives back to the community in a unique way like this,” Hunter said while taking a break from learning how to replace the derailleur on a Schwinn. Dokter, who has been helping the Bike Project since he was in high school, says giving the bikes a new life is a slow process. Nonetheless, he enjoys volunteering because it helps him escape from the routine of classes and homework. ‘‘I really enjoy being in the shop,” Dokter said. "If you take a look around, you can see that it is filled with hidden treasures. You have to be a bike enthusiast to appreciate all of this.” v' SKH Wm rtp«lHB 1 mfw a m -4t <%k. - v- r% jBp. ^ - mkd H m » -43?. *w * Jit ■ «afeg ;- 5 ik ^ Ji1 M. Sr mm M Si , /-# 3S J? g ,2c ^ ¿m 5 ■ ¡«ar “- § \BBB * -¡S I ■fuJIKt* ;%■ ■■ ’.,J£' ■ ’IT u V k JlJp yv:-. '•• " ' . ' eyFAia ' v ■. ■':•■'■'*'■' \'x||l :1'r\ , - '., *< *-^Stf ' '-si ■ 111 HH . »■ ;:! Pp P ■ '*1 is.^ B ■I mm Freshman Aidan Hunter fixes the brakes and tweaks the chains of bikes at the workshop. Volunteers can be found helpind students every Thursday and "Sunday Freshman Aidan Hunter quietly observes as Dan Dokter shows him how to repair a bike. Many \||lunteers Earned how to repl^K pedals, chains and brakes for the first timeltt the Bike Project. lAsl 5S SO unity IB m m J67 Isiah "Karma Vuitton” Tweedillgets ready to take the stage at "So You Think You Can Drag." The theme of the event was "Drag Me to the Circus." c Professional drag performer ^ Cheetah Jameson applies makeup before the show Monday evening. The show included five performers, all from the greater Lansing area. Ryan "Moltyn Decadenc®’1 Webster, an MSU alumnus performs :at the fourth annual “So You Think You Can Drag ” show. All tips given to the performers were donated to the Ruth Ellis Cent® in Detroit. e r i c a t r e a i s / D E S i G N j e s s i c a h a l f y a r d T Y P E j e s s i c a w h i t m i l l / P H O T O v e r o n i c a n a g y , so you think you can drag? mamma PRISM hosts fourth annual drag show for Transgender Awareness Week Spotlights shone down on a catwalk in the Wonders Hall Kiva on the evening of Nov. 15. Four drag queens and one drag king took to the stage in all their booty-popping glory As they sashayed down the runway dressed in lavish costumesl adorned with shimmering makeup, their audience was a seething mass of ecstatic energy- waving dollar bills at performers, clapping and waving all night long. ' ‘I feel like every single drag queen has a different favorite part. For a lot of people it’s the makeup or the hair, but I just love being on stage,” Michael ” Ramp age” Pompey one of the performers that night, said. “This show is one I look forward to all year. We get a great response from the audience.” ‘‘So You Think You Can Drag: Drag Me to the Circus” was just one of the many events held during MSU's observance of Transgender Awareness Week from Nov. 131 21, a nationwide event intended to raise public awareness of issues surrounding transgendered individuals. Organized by People Respecting the Individuality of Students at MSU (PRISM) and the Lesbian Bisexual Gay Transgender Queer (LBGTQ) caucus of south complex, approximately 300 audience members braved the cold that night to come cheer on the performers. ‘‘The drag show was obviously very intense and to put on such an awesome program, we need awesome planning,” PRISM President and junior Justin Love said. ‘‘We approached hall governments and caucuses in south neighborhood for funding and committee members.” This year, all proceeds from the event were donated to the Ruth Ellis Center in Highland Park. The center provides clothes, food and shelter to LBGTQ-identified youth in need of support and also offers long-term help for those who are struggling __________________________________erica treais with their sexual identity Combined with tips for the performers and donations from audience members, Love says the show raised $604 this year. "They’re a great center and do a lot of awesome work, so we wanted to benefit them and show our support,” he said. A little closer to home, LBGTQ caucuses around campus such as PRISM, RING, SPECTRUM, BRIGHT and PRIDE are attempting to do the same. Love said that in light of recent negative events in the mews involving members of the LBGTQ community these outlets are "always necessary” "The caucuses and the resource center provide a safe space for students to go to learn more about themselves, their communities and have a fun time doing it,” he said. Pompey said, however, that pi sense of self- confidence in one’s identity was just as important as the presence of these resources. 1 ‘It’s important for people to know there’s support out there and that it’s okay to be gay or a gay drag queen,” he said. Sophomore Ashley Difonzo, a member of SPECTRUM, said the idea of a community of like- minded students is wha|| prompted her to get involved with the LBGTQ caucuses on campus. "There are a lot of members in the community” she said.'"It’s nice to have somewhere to go, kind of like a safe haven in a way My high school didn’t have a lot of that, but here it’s so easy to join the community” Involving herself in a supportive community such as this one, Difonzo said, was what made her feel at ease when it came to attending events like "So You Think You Can Drag.” “Once you start attending the meetings and get to know everyone, going to events like this is a lot more fun. I’m not timid about it anymore.” Sophomore Bailey Doolittle works the crowd during her first performance in a drag show. She danced to Justin Beiber’s "Somebody to Love" under the stage name Justin Sheber. Michael "Rampagff ’ Pompey performs at the] fourth annual "SoYouThihkYou Can Drag" show, organized by PRISM in Wonders Hall. The Wonders Hall Kiva was maxed out in attendance with 300 attendees. d69 Senior John Gburek mills about after 7 p.m. mass at St. John’s Student Center, awaiting the Deathly Hallows ’ Gburek decided to nate Slytherin Draco Malfoy for the nighf. Fr. Mark Inglot speaks to students at St. John’s Student Center aboutwes&bns of goocfjano evil in Harry Potter. Msiaudience, abou®5 students, carpooleflafter the masgjo see “Harry Pottpr and the Dpathly Hallows,” the seventh moyie in the Harry Potter series. expecto patronunrT! St. John's Student Center incorporates “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” into mass Shuffling feet and the rustle of winter coats being shed muffled anxious whispers of excitement, which traveled across the narrow pews of St. John’s Student Center as students sat for the 7 p.m. mass on Nov 18, However, the anticipation didn’t appear to be centered on Father Mark Inglot’s sermon, but rather on an impending night of witchcraft and wizardry; Bludger-beating and spell­ casting, and broomsticks and portkeys. Put more simply it was for the midnight screening of the first part of “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,’’ the seventh movie installment based on J.K. Rowling’s best-selling series of novels. The church caravanned students over to watch the movie after the mass. But as the distracted congregation fiddled with hymnals and shifted in their seats, wishing perhaps for the use of Hermione’s Time Turner or the ability to apparate to Celebration Cinema in Lansing, Inglot fueled their anxious fire. 1 ‘Are you excited for Harry Potter? ’ ’ he asked with a grin on his face. “Or, are youiust going to go home and read the Book of Revelation now?” he quipped, referring to his reading selection for the mass that night. As students laughed, senior John Gburek sat among them. His slicked blonde hair, Slytherin- thin, crooked wand green clothing and unmistakably branded him as the notoriously disliked, Voldemort-supporter Draco Malfoy So why would he side with evil for the night, especially given the unpopularity of his character among the Potter fandom? “You know, it’s a fun time to be the villain, too,” Gburek said. "In your own life, you can’t really be the villain all the time so, in a way, you get to dress up and live the part," In fact, being able to live the part by dressing up as the Harry Potter characters has become a tradition on the nights the previous movies arrived in theaters. Sporting a stitched-on Ravenclaw patch and a copy of The New York Times turned Quibbler in hand, junior Michelle Leppek impersonated the eccentric, yet likeable Luna Lovegood. “I think she’s crazy and just really cool and a lot of fun,” Leppek said. “She’s not scared of anything.” About 45 students gathered at St. John’s to go to the movie,'stopping by the basement for butterbeer—a mix of ginger ale and butterscotch flavoring— and cauldron cakes, more commonly recognized as the plain donut. Though the Roman Catholic Church and the novels have had a tense relationship in the past, the presence of these students at St. John’s that night exemplified the reconciliation between the Holy See and the Boy Who Lived. in church, “The Catholic its official statements, has said nothing but supportive words about Harry Potter,” Campus Minister Katie Diller said. In fact, Inglot said the idea for the dining hall at Hogwarts came from the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. “One of the most important lessons in Harry Potter is that there is evil in the world! Diller said. ‘ ‘And it has to be fought against and it’s not easy and it takes friends—it takes friendships and relationships to make you strong enough to fight against the darkness and temptation that is in the world.” All of file big paradigms of life—friendship, family, good and evil—are in the Harry Potter series, said Inglot; who is a. fan himself. “There’s this philosophical dualism between good and evil, and what’s going to win out, and the intrigue of that comes out a lot in her [Rowling’s] writing.” ‘They’re going to be classics,” he said— something he also brought up durlg his sermon. “They’ll be up there with Tolkien’s ‘Lord of the Rings.’ ’ ’ -i o d71 CarmiHe Bates, a Ph.D. student, teaches a traditional Filipino dance toft young girl. From dances tllmusic to food, participants from all over the world shared traditions from their home countrflll Senior Toshinori Horii and Junya Sazuka of the Japanese Club teach the art of origami. Many international clubs were represented during the Global Festival. Senior Mariana Rendon spins the wheel of flags on behalf of the International Students Association. Aside from students, many East Lansing community members attended the event. Dance|s from the Persian Student Association perform for audience members at the 2010 Global Festival. Students and community members present If the event were engaged by Bore than 30fiultural performances. ! it's a small ■ world after all Students, community members experience the wonders of the world at Global Festival The MSU Union may as well have been an international airport on Nov. 21. But rather than being transported to exotic destinations by airplane, visitors at the Global Festival experienced the cultures of 31 countries without leaving East Lansing. Once visitors stepped inside, their senses were greeted with wafts of German pork weinerschnitzeF and sounds of South Korean pop music mixed with floating melodies of traditional Middle Eastern tunes. Amid the crowd were performers dressed in everything from patterned headscarves to dresses with intricate embroidery At the entrance to the festival, children were given a passport inviting them to collect information about each country Much of the first floor of the Union was devoted to games and crafts geared toward younger attendees. One of these participants was 9-year-old Jamil Muhammadi, perched on a pile of red embroidered pillows at the Afghanistan booth. “When people come, I tell them about the carpets and costumes,” Muhammadi said. “The girls wear scarves to cover their hair, and their outfits usually have beads and accessories. The rugs are used as couches and can be stuffed with feathers to be softer to sit on.” Tracee Waiee brought. her children Jack and Caroline to the event. Waiee said Jack would receive extra credit for his Japanese class at DeWitt Junior High School, and that both children should have the opportunity to experience different cultures. “It’s nice to come out and get some education for! the young ones,” Waiee said. “They get to see and understand things they wouldn’t see normally” Tracee and Caroline waited in line to receive henna tattoos drawn by Pakistani representatives, an attraction that brought many festival-goers, including a Girl Scout troop from East Lansing High School. The troop frequently attends global events and this is its eighth Global Festival visit. Kayla Moore, an ELHS freshman, has been coming to the event since she was in second grade. W’We mostly just come for funi Moore said. "In our troop, we have so many different people from different places. It’s good to get to know more about them and their culture.” Moore and her friends enjoyed the henna tattoos as well as the gift shop, proceeds from whiclfcwent to funding scholarships for international students at MSU. Arm Merrifield, leader oiMoore’s Girl Scout troop, hopes the girls will use this event to glean some valuable knowledge about the world. ‘ ’These girls are exposed to different cultures every day in school,” Merrifield said. “East Lansing has a lot of diversity Events like this give them an idea of where their friends and classmates come from.” The festival also highlighted the cultures of many MSU students. Senior John Ra, a member of the Korean Student Organization, said he hoped that students attending the event would take a moment to explore the traditions of his birthplace: South Korea. “We want to advertise Korea to non-Koreans,” Ra maid,®’We get a lot of internation® students, but we want to stay connected to the community We wanted to represent everything about South Korea: cultural artifacts, pop culture, information about what to visiS how to use chopsticks.” . Merrifield said the experience gained at an event such as the Global Festival is the reason people of all ages should learn about other cultures. “It’s about acceptance,” Merrifield said, “By attending, we get to see not only our differences from people in other cultures, but also how we’re alike.” iags ion. inity reni. C A M P U S L I F E g l o b a l f e s t i v a l => TJ s. O J73 Westboro Baptist Church picketers brandish their signs behind police officers and fence protection. Among the three was Margie Phelps, an attorney and church member who argued WBC’s free speech case, Snyder v Phelps, in the Supreme Court. Sophomore Gory Hanrahan takes center stage at the r front of the fence facing the Westboro "Baptist Church picketers. Hanrahan later manned the megaphone, hurling protests at the WBC. Counter-protesters line Abbot Road, garnering honks and cheers from traffic. Several community meetings were held before the Westboro Baptist Church picket planning the commumtyijresponse, the main goal being to avoid direct conflict and violence with the WBC picketers. one thousand strong East Lansing, MSU counter-protest Westboro Baptist Church picket On Nov. 18 in East Lansing, snow threatened from the domineering clouds above. Yet, thrust against this backdrop of gray sky a rainbow of hundreds of colorful signs let out a singular cry of unity About 1,000 East Lansing residents, East Lansing High School students,,: and MSU students and alumni gathered outside of ELHS as a counter-presence to Westboro Baptist Church’s protest against the students there . The WBC, based in Topeka, Kan., has gained national media attention in recent years for picketing funerals of AIDS victims and soldiers killed in war overseas. Their website, godhatesfags.com, states that homosexuals "pose a clear and present danger to the survival of America,” and that American soldiers who died in the Middle East were killed by God ‘‘in righteous judgment against an evil nation.” The WBC protesters came in response to an e-mail they received from an ELHS student condemning their practices. Margie Phelps, the daughter of the church’s head pastor and one of the three members present, was also invited to speak at a MSU College of Law panel on First Amendment rights earlier that day The planned protest sparked a community­ wide response, with counter-protest events at the school and two nearby churches along with an organized reaction from the MSU student body Students marched from the Union to All Saints Episcopal Church on Abbot Road, the primary site of the counter-protest. Sophomore Cory Hanrahan and several friends arrived in the empty ELHS parking lot toting rainbow signs about an hour before the WBC members were scheduled to arrive. ‘‘[We’re] trying to be as civil as we can, but with our signs we’re trying to relay our message that intolerance isn't right and we’re not going to stand for it,” Hanrahan said. As the minutes ticked toward the start of the protest, steady streams of counter­ protesters, news reporters and gawkers filled the parking lot at the corner of Burcham Drive and Old Hickory Lane. The area was designated for the event by the East Lansing Police Department with temporary fencing and yellow tape. The side farthest from the school was designated for WBC members. The counter-protest crowd kept growing, eventually overtaking the parking lot and both sides of Burcham Drive. Finally the three church members staked their claim, wielding multi-colored signs with messages such as ‘‘God Hates Fag Enablers” and ' 'America is Doomed.” Their presence was matched by a storm of chants and opposing signs from across the street. There were also plenty of unrelated signs amidst the sea of pro-gay rights and pro-love placards. Freshman Brynne Curtis sat on a friend’s shoulders carrying a sign thaflread “You’re a wizard, Harry” in reference to the premiere of the first installment of the seventh Harry Potter movie that same night. “We’re trying to get the focus away from WBC and just show everyone who’s watching that it’s really not that big a deal,” she said. This approach was prevalent throughout the crowd—from “Paging Doctor Faggot” signs referencing “The Hangover” to a Jesus impersonator, complete with flowing robes and a bushy brown beard. Senior Bryan Reid carried a sign that read “Legalize Dumbledore.” "You can't get angry; you can’t let them make you mad .You’d think more people would be more receptive to our side professing love and humor in the situation instead of people that hate others,” Reid said. MSU students march with their banner to the site of the c -ounter pSest at the All Saints Episcopal Church in East Lansing. MSU students, with the backing of the LBGTA caucuses, organized a march from the Union. S> ^IO XI *< m o a»' m Q £ o- 2 *■ Z O) O- 3 “1 « n> => ® s--- 3 3 "5 = o XI X o a o < rd C A M P U S L I F E w e s t b o r o b a p t i s t c h u r c h , m s u c o u n t e r - p r o t e s t iJ75 Sharmaake Sabrie sits in a dimly lit lounge in Abbot Hill, mulling over jfis schedule for the next few days. Sabrie, a senior majoring in international relations, is preparing to present about the effects of poverty and hunger on third world countries in his honors class tomorrow. He admits he’s a little anxious about the ordeal, smiling sheepishly. The next day doesn’t seem to be much of a sweat, thougi. He’s meeting with a professor to put together a paper on how to negotiate with pirates. After all, he knows a thing or two about them. A native of troubled Somalia, Sabrie is regarded as an unofficial expert on piracy and migration issues. Having worked with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the International Organizatio| for Migration in Geneva, Switzerland, he has a vast network of contacts who depend on him for advice and information. Whether it’s the Detroit Free Press inquiring about current Somali affairs or a Somali man living in Canada seeking advice on how to get into college, Sabrie is a man people want to talk to. In fact, junior Matthew Salim met Sabrie after being compelled to approach him in class. Why? Sabrie looked focused, Salim said, a stark contrast to the other students who surrounded him. Sabrie’s differences from his peers extend far beyond his mannerisms. He was born in war-torn Somalia, which hasn’t had a central government since 1991. He sought refuge in Kenya in 1993 and made it to the U.S. in 200% but not before some of his siblings went missing due to the war in Somalia, a memory that shapes his outlook on life, Sabrie said. “It made me realize the things I don’t have,” Sabrie said, recalling the grim events in a collected tone with a distant look of sadness. “I try to succeed and do the best I can because ¡¡see a lot of people who are in the same circumstances I was in. This is not only happening in Somalia, it’s happening all over the world, and I think I coild be able to help.” Since coming to MSU, Sabrie has worked with the IOM, NATO and the European Union tackling Somali refugee problems in Italy and elsewhere and researching the global impact of Somali piracy He’s used the four languages he knows (Somali, Arabic, Swahili, English) to volunteer at the Refugee Development Center in Lansing. This summer he hopes to work with consulting agency McKinsey & Company to round out his business background before hopefully attending law school,'he said. After that, Sabrie aspires to work with an international organization such as NATO or the EU. As Salim mentioned from the first time they met, Sabrie had a serious aura about him. He carries himself with the wisdom of a man much older than 23 years, which is evidenced by his careful, deliberate speaking. Yet Salim attests that Sabrie boasts a sensitive side and has a sincere passion for improving human rights that goes beyond most people of any age. “He’s a humanitarian, I swear he is. Anything he can do to ||elp someone, he’ll do it,” Salim said. “He loves everybody.. .that’s what makes him a good person.” Of course, when Sabrie talks about his hopes for the world, he desires what any sensible person wants: world peace and a sense of security for all beings. However, what sets Sabrie apart is his genuine drive to wolptoward those goals, part of which originated from the circumstances he grew up in. “The average student lives in a small and sequestered world; they’ve faced very little adversity in their lives,” said communications professor William Donohue, who is collaborating with Sabrie on a piracy negotiation paper. “He's been all over the world, he’s seen all sides of what humanity does to one another, and it’s that extraordinarily rich set of experiences he’s been able to translate into a great deal of insight.” Sabrie’s vision of success also differs from his American student counterparts. As he writes on his Facebook profile, “Success means effectiveness in the world.” “I’m coming from a place where I didn’t have any material aspect. All my life I’ve struggled for safety and security” Sabrie said. “So the idea of becoming rich, what good will that do for you if your fellow human beings aren’t rich as well? It’s something that’s unimaginable. One’s success has a direct impact on others.” A I C O N V E R S A T O N W T H s h a r I m a a k e s a b r i e Senior Sharmaake Sabrie displays NATO paraphernalia. Sabrie has worked with NATO in the past, having interviewed the MATO head commander on conducting a counter-piracy mission off the coast of Africa' Senior Sharmaake Sabrie brushes up on the latest global issues. As a former refug^gfrom Somalia, he’s very interested and informed on the troubl® of migrants that they faj|Sjin countries they flee t< The Futur© of America! c' 11 \ SSi ' MÉfÈli . MiU"M ‘ Kv.iU ■v ’• , Uoibi I"“ 7j I : | ltìlPìlÌM v p II® power Joseph NV® 1 'iSS)tates The Dangers of U S. Militarism WntatnPta« The Rise of Nonstate Actors Mtchæî Ct awford silence in the snow Students gather at The Rock to commemorate World AIDS Day amid wintery weather • The first of December gave way to the first snowy day of the year, and with the snowfall came a breezy chill that marked the harsh beginnings of winter. Although it was darbl and the flurries continued to fly a few flickering lights shone through at The Rock, where a handful of MSU students gathered there to mark World AIDS Day with a candlelight vigil to commemorate AIDS victims. Dec. 1 is World AIDS Day, a worldwide event that spurred a multitude of gatherings, vigils and discussions around the globe about AIDS and HIV Here at MSU, the Olin Sexual Health Advocates organized the vigil and several other events on campus. World AIDS Day started in 1988. According to UNAIDS, the United Nations’ Joint Programme on HIV/AIDS, 33.4 million people across the world were afflicted with HIV as of 2009. In that same year, there were 1.8 million AIDS-related deaths worldwide. Student volunteers signed up to tie 250 ribbons around campus trees, each one symbolizing 2,000 people that have died because of AIDS. These were to commemorate the 500,000 people that have died of AIDS in the United States. The Olin Health Center offered anonymous walk-in HIV testing all day and the In Your Face Theatre Troupe, a registered student organization, put on skits later that night at the Brody Complex to educate students on sexual health. The vigil had a small turnout, mostly made up of the Olin Sexual Health Advocates. Huddled together in a tight circle and clutching their candles, several announced this year’s AIDS Day theme, "Universal Access and Human Rights,” focusing on increasing access to prevention methods and treatment. After a few poems were recited, the group bowed their heads in a moment of silence. To conclude, the Olin Sexual Health Advocates invited comments and stories. Angel Adelaja, a Nigerian-American student, voiced her support for AIDS awareness. ‘ My best friend, her cousin was dropped on their doorstep in Nigeria with HIV and he didn’t believe he Jiad itjj Adelaja, a graduate student, said. “If they don’t have things like this, people won’t know, people won’t want to come out and support.” The Olin SexuJj Health Advocates’ main reason behind organizing MSU’s response to World AIDS Day is to boost student awareness of AIDS and to encourage HIV testing. Part of that campaign is reminding students of the resources they already have on campus. "We always have a great turnout for testing [on World AIDS Day], but we always offer testing, I’m not sure why the draw on this particular day,” Erica Phillipich, a coordinator of the Center for Sexual Health Promotion at Olinlsaid. "More than anything, we just want people to know the resources on campus.” One example of these resources is senior Mandy Hoffman, an HIV counselor at Olin who talks to students and faculty about their anxieties of considering being tested for HIV “They tell me a little bit about their history and what they think their risks are, and then I let them know what I’ve learned through training and through experience what their actual risks are,” she said. Anotherpart ofthe awareness involves eliminating the many stigmas surrounding HIV including how it’s contracted and where it affects people the most. “We’re living in a generation that has never known a world without it, which I think is sometimes why it’s easy to turn a blind eye to it, to think it’s only in Africa,” Phillipich said. “It’s just a gentle reminder that unfortunately it’s still in our communities, it’s still here, in the U.S. and in Michigan.” Members of MSU’s Olin Health Center, join together for a candle light vigil to remember and support all of tlwse who have been a|llt "O c IS) t h i b o d e a u / D E S I G N b e t s y e b e r T Y P E j a c o b k a n c l e r z / P H O T O a n t h o n y collapsed ridge ahead v, ■ State of Michigan tightens regulations on college student use of Bridge Cards Last year, Bridge Cards were hot. Now, they’re not. In the 2009-2010 edition of the Red Cedar Log, we covered the increased popularity of Bridge Cards among MSU students. Issued by the state of Michigan, they act like debit cards for food aid purposes. But as of April 1, 2011, individuals are now unable to apply for a Bridge Card just for being a college student. The Michigan Department of Human Services (DHS) struck down a qualifying clause in the state Food Assistance Program that allowed students who were ''attending college with an approved education plan” to receive Bridge Cards. The DHS said the change was made to bring the program within federal guidelines, because it is funded by the federal government. Christine Fecher, a media relations and online communications representative for the DHS, said the sudden switcMwas part of the efforts of a handful of state legislators and the new DHS director Maura Corrigan to ensure integrity in the Food Assistance Program. Corrigan was appointed by Gov. Rick Snyder earlier that year as part of the new state administration. Bridge Cards award up to $200 a month in food aid to cardholders. But students who didn’t meet the traditional criteria for such assistance (i.e.: Are either caring for children, physically or mentally unable to work, or participating in an on-the-job training program), saw their aid end on April 1. Many students were not even aware of the specific details a few weeks after it was announced. However, many thought it was a good idea to restrict qualifications for Bridge Cards, even those who used them. “I wouldn’t be terribly upset if it happened,” Gus Rutecki, a freshman at Lansing Community College living at Chandler’s Crossing, said. "I think it’s pretty fair, especially for the people that really need it.” Most students pointed to abuse of the money by their collegiate counterparts on trivial goods as a justification for the new restrictions. "I work at CVS and I see people who obviously don’t need that money1 ’ junior Jacob Idoni said.' ‘It’s just ridiculous that you see people come in and buy things specifically to go out drinking with, with their Bridge Card, and you can see they have a ton of money left on it.’ ’ When asked about personal misuse, students weren’t so quick to point fingers,; although freshman Matt Dapra, a roommate of Rutecki’s, admitted to spending Bridge Card money on an occasional candy bar. Besides, with multiple cardholders living under the same roof, the necessity of the full $200 per person came into question. ‘‘I don’t think I would use the full $200 on my own per month,” junior Marla Trzeciak said, stating that she and her roommates only utilize the full amount when they go shopping together. Yet, other students who depended on the Bridge Card like junior Julian Yu weren’t as quick to let it go. Yu said she will have to take out more loans to help pay for rent and tuition because she receives no financial assistance from her parents, ‘‘It’s going to be a lot more difficult to get food,”Yu said. ‘‘There’s still a vast majority of students out there that do pay their own bills that still go to work and go to school.” Nonetheless, there didn’t appear to be much overall opposition from cardholders themselves. Although junior Cathleen Zuzelski, who was interviewed for last year’s Bridge Card story was overly supportive of the program a year ago, she seems fine bidding adieu to the Bridge Card this time around. "I'm not going to starve,” she said. ‘‘I’ll just have to budget more carefully for other things that arentl necessary like going out for dinner or for movies or for fun.” ■KX ■¡WHS ¿# .A ■fc>= '«tees. ■H ft:« fi- 1» |—||||| I ¿,W 1 “ =Z \ % a ¡| I ¡¡gj I ¥,'■ ■ :* : H A» m vS ■H -¿dfejL § W wim Mil - Vi I am | ggs fi I fl i a V* ■PH ■ • : ':-mA (•’ :rft 14“*~r*4 I *^Sr-ii I *"*^41 *^r-* *% »1' mwm m m ■mmm IBKiiliillli 11111 . ■ aiBwWHBBal «MAI | ' s • SSSi ■ a■nii WsMwmSm ■ Freshman Gustav Rutecki looks into the coolers at Meijer for groceries. Meijer is one of several stores in East Lansing that accepts Bridge Cards. - Junior Marla Tirzeciak’s refrigerator is filler! courtesy of her Bridge Card. New restrictions are being placed on Bridge Cards to sort out those who truly feed it. mmmSBmm J93 the nifty fifties Students jive at the Munn Ice Arena for UAB’s Frozen Fifties Festival HlJBln Jjthe '50s'i parties were "bashesH nerds were I “nosebleeds,” and “passion pit” denoted a drive-in movie 9 theatre, not a genre-defying band. It was the decade of 9 conformity—marked by women in pencil skirts, men 9 in gray flannel suits and an aversion by botllto anything 9 deemed too risqué. gl^^mhough we scoff at keeping with convention ^ now, nostalgia for the good ol’ days prevailed at the Æ University Activities Board’s first Frozen Fifties Festival «3 at Munn Ice Arena. ,3 On the night of Feb. 19, about 7 0 students were reminded «3 of old-fashioned wholesomeness as they munched on free 3 popcorn, competed in carnival contests and glided—or stumbled—across the ice rink to the upbeat tunes of Elvis Presley Bobby Day and the movie “Grease.” At a vinyl decorating station on the outskirts of Munn’s concourse, sophomore Amanda Urena feverishly rummaged through stacks of old, black records in search of her favorite singers, crouching to read the small print at their centers. “My grandpa always used to listen to an old ‘50s radio station. I would just walk in and he would greet me and we would listen to that music,” she said, citing artists like Benny Goodman, Frank Sinatra and Johnny Mathis. Finally satisfied with a handful of vinyls tucked under her shoulder, Urena conjured up one word to describe the decade’s music scene: jive. In the meantime,-a jumble of students clad in ’50s fashion dotted the ice below, ready to compete for best costume at the end of the night. “I was thinking typical greaser, you know, ‘50s dude. That’s the picture I had in my head,” sophomore Randy Adams said as he awaited the judges’ verdicts'‘But later, when'I walked in the cafeteria and looked at myself in the mirror,! realized I really looked like Ricky Ricardo from ‘I Love Lucy.’ ” Though Adams placed, second to a comb-sporting Danny Zuko look-a-like, his ego wasn’t too deflated. "I just loved dressing up. I love acting and putting on a different persona,”- he said. “And the cash prize was an incentive as well.” While normally the attire at this event screams Las Vegas glitz and glam for UAB’s annual “Dice and Ice,lthe group decided to switch up the theme this year. “We had a lot of carnival supplies in our store room from past events, so we were kind of just able to pull out some old games and set them up,” sophomore Amy Pochodylo, UAB’s Director of Marketing, said. “It just seemed like we could do a lot more with the '50s theme.” Indeed, a line that trailed up and around the bleachers for skate rental and an empty popcorn booth littered with stray kernels proved that the switch had paid off. While the line slowly dwindled, juniors Cassie Barnes and Jessica Mitkovski plopped themselves down on the bleachers, warily inspecting the ice. Barnes’ black'and red ensemble appeared in stark contrast to Mitkovski’s traditional white sweater and black-rimmed glasses. “We watched “Grease” on Wednesday night, so I’m supposed to be Rizzo and she’s Sandy” Barnes said, “I’m the good girl, she’s the bad girl, can you tell?” Mitkovski asked eagerly For the majority of attendees who didn’t share Mitkovski’s enthusiasm for dressing up, however, free food and ice- skating were the major pull, “I really like the idea of free Insomnia Cookies, and I want to try out skating sooner or later because I’ve never done it before,” freshman John Herzog said, laughing among a group of friends. But, c’mon guys, what about the ‘50s? “I don’t even know, man, it was really easygoing and happy it seemed to me,” sophomore Katherine Logan said. “My parents were born,” Herzog joked. “I just think of ‘Leave it to Beaver,”’ freshman John Swartz laughed. Freshman David Crouse glides across thence at Munn Aréna. He later entered and placed in the fifties costume „-competition with his white tee; glasses and wavy hairdo. * 1 li *«« i. 1 i I ilK L C A M P U S L I F E f r o z e r t f i f t i e s Students and East Lansing residents crowded onto the ice to take part in the Frozen Fifties event. UAB and Munn Ice Arena provided free skates as well as food and other activitites. Sophomore Alice Hu laces up her skates at the Frozen Fifties event. Students gathered to take advantage of the free ice skating and games at Munn Ice Arena. Si»»#*«’ mm OELiCtOUs] .CRISP wamnmm « « HK1 si ui .Ice skates are lined up at Munn Ice Arena during the Frozen Fifties event. Students could rent a pair for free ahd take them out m: £§: spin on fhMice. Junior Alyssa Friday ti® on haiskates^at the Frozen Fifties event. She la|lr won sjpond pl«e in the costume iigntest. *4i ■ yes,they can talk Through synecdoche, The Vagina Monologues benefit MSU Sexual Assault Program Junior Hannah Stoppel is one of few students at MSU who can say she’sffhad a violent orgasm onstage. More precisely she had someone else’s orgasm. Stoppel was one of 28 women cast in the 2011 production of “The Vagina Monologues,” a compilation of nonfiction first-person anecdotes that illustrate female experiences. In fact, vagina is said more than 200 times during the show, addressiig issues like women injured during war, domestic abuse and child birth. Stoppel read a monologue titled “The woman who loved to make vaginas happy” which investigated female moaning during sex. The idea has been planted in her mind since she first saw a taped version of the show at age 10. “Some of the monologues I heard then have influenced my entire life,” Stoppel said. “It’s kind of something I’ve always had in the back of my head.” Nearly sold out performances on Friday Feb. 18, and Saturday ¡Feb 19, capped a noteworthy year for the annual show’s history. Auditions in the fall drew more than 60 women, one of the largest pools yet, co-director Nicole Beard said. This led to one of the most diverse casts of the show’s 12-year run at MSU, displaying an array of nationalities, ages and areas of study, Though most in the cast are MSU students, ages this year ranged from 18-year-olds to women in their 60s. “We have all nationalities, all religions, but we get along so well because we’re all here for the same cause,” Beard said. “When we walk in here! don’t see the difference.” And it’s not just about acting. Beard said when casting the show, she and the other three directors tried to find women who embraced its message. The event is part of a national movement called “V-Day” in which a global network of college and community theaters produce the show near Valentine’s Day as a fundraiser to stop violence against women. At MSU, ticket proceeds benefitted the MSU Sexual Assault program, which provides advocacy and crisis intervention to victims. Some of those involved had firsthand experience with the same issues “V-day” is trying to improve. Beard first auditioned after working for Relief After Violent Encounter, a women’s shelter and domestic abuse help center. Members of senior Megan Threats’ , family were victims of sexual assault, something that compelled her to participate after seeing the show for the past two years. Onstage, she performed a monologue about a child's experience with sexual abuse. “Everyone having the courage to do this has been a really big moral experience for me,” Threats said. Though casts and arrangement of the monologues vary each year, some aspects remain standard. For oneleach actor must carry note cards during her performance, even if she knows her lines. This is to symbolize ’“that the story was an event in a real woman’s life. While some jot down their cues, others ; just leave the cards blank or draw pictures. Stoppel, who has been acting since age three, said the show’s structure provides a unique type of performance foriMe actors f and audience alike. “It’s interesting building a character off oi what she said, instead of having other people to act off of,¡¡she said. “It’s definitely a different! experience.” Junior Elizabeth Battiste , Irene Blanchard and senior Angie Tripi introduce the 2011 Vagina Monologues. This year the MSU Sexual Assault Program was chosen as beneficiary. Junior Whitley Lehto recites her lines at the Pasant Theatre. ■The Vagina Monologues has been published in 45 language® and performed in more over 120 countries^B Performing “Hair” from the Vagina Monologues', junior Krystall Bent JonjSs explains the exploration of having pubic hair. The performance included fifteen monologues ranging from funny to sad and emotionally heart wrenching. n a g y / D E S I G N j e s s i c a h a l f y a r d T Y P E i a n k u l l g r e n / P H O T O v e r o n i c a d97 Competition is a major part of motivating the student telemarketers. Prior to set shifts, student employees can be found getting their teams together in an attempt Bw capture lstplaÆj A standard workspace for telemarketers, each cubicle contains a computer and all the items necSary to successfully fund about $2 million a year of Michigan State’lbosts. A C O N V E R S A T O N W T H a I I t e l e m a r k e t e r O —) Q" O <£. m o’ cn qj CD t Z Z. jpj 3 (/) d u> — CD TJ =r X CD O call more personal so alumni don’t dismiss him right away “I’ll tell the caller how I was disenrolled last year, but scholarships from the University allowed me to come back,” he said. “Basically, I let them know that there are people here at the university who care, who actually need and want the money they donate.” Money telemarketers is given Ho the Student Alumni Foundation, building renovations and campus beautification, scholarships and study abroad programs. Watkins said the calls aren’t always smooth sailing. collected by MSU “I’ve seen graduation dates of 1924 on our call list,” he said. "You have to get ready to face differences because of that generation gap. One man told me he was never giving to MSU again because we support diversity” “You don’t really want to think of Spartans being like that. It was a hard phone call to shake off.” The turnover rate for employees is high, Watkins said, because some student employees just aren’t properly equipped to handle the demands of the job. “Telemarketing is almost like acting,’|jhe said. “You have to be able to listen and respond back and you can’t be afraid to talk.” Fears aside, Watkins said his time at the MSU Telemarketers has enhanced his student days at Michigan State. “If anything, this job is a stress reliever for me,” he said. “You’re basically doing homework, talking to your friends and making calls.” y;‘| really like calling, for the school because people on the call list aren’t random. They’re people who care about their school.” Twice or thrice every week, junior Sean Watkins enters the elevator inside Spartan Stadium on the way to his job, his collared shirt devoid of wrinkles and his sneakers fresh. He greets any co-workers he runs into with cheerful hellos. “ ‘Don’t forget to smile,’ I always say” he quips. Today Watkins enters the Stadium with a plastic bag of Twinkies tied around his wrist for an employee potluck - one of the many things, he said, that sets his job apart from a typical office desk job. Hi don’t like being in a boring place,” he said. Watkins is, in factlan MSU Telemarketer, who makes calls to alumni in hopes of convincing them to donate money to the school. 5fMSU telemarketers have two themed shifts per semester, in which employees bring food to share and also dress up in costume. Past themes have included ‘‘the World Cup” and "the 1980s.” Watkins said employees also elect people every semester to put on a dance. Watkins joined the telemarketers over the summer of 2010 and returned in the spring of 2011 after studying abroad. He typically works four hour shifts, making calls to alumni in hopes of convincing them to donate money to the school. Prior to his time at MSU, Watkins worked as a bill collector at home in New York. “I find I have a little more patience when telemarketers call me after working here,” he said. “But if they kept calling, the New Yorker might come out in me.” “This is easier than bill collecting, because you aren’t soliciting and, plus, you already have something in common with the people you’re calling.” Watkins said he has a strategy of making the Telemarketers prepare for their shift to start. Some employees said in their free time, the student workers are . found competing for the': highest Minesweeper ^ore. o ’ b l a c k / D E S I G N j e s s i c a h a l f y a r d T Y P E a d e l i n a s c h m i d t / P H O T O c h a s e first impressions University Activities Board hosts post-Valentine’s Day Speed Dating event A student body over 40,000 strong makes for an intimidating dating pool, but the University Activities Board brought the number down to a more manageable size. Just over 60 students sat down to speed-da|S on Feb. 24. Dim lighting, a disco ball and pop hits playing in the background set the mood as the clock struck 7:30 p.m. and the speed dating began, filling the Union Ballroom with lively chatter. Dates were seated across from one another at a table, ladies on one side and gentlemen on the other. Each pair had three short minutes to make an impression before time was called on the mini-date, leading gentlemen to slide one seat to their left and start the process all over again. Every participant was given a nametag and a number during registration, along wit® a scorecard to keep track of his or her dates. Upon reaching the end of a date, those looking to continue the conversation could check “yes" next to their partner’s name. Score sheets were turned in to be sorted through by the UAB's Human Resource Committee, the host of the event. Thrown after Valentine’s Day as an opportunity for students to meet new people, Speed Dating was the first event of its kind. “We had extra money in our budget so we wanted to put on one more event, and we’ve never done anything like Speed Dating before. We had no idea what to expect, we were just -looking to come up with something fun, a good idea that people would like," freshman UAB volunteer Frank Liu said. The friendly, casual atmosphere was a draw for some of the speed-daters who weren’t necessarily looking to meet their soul mate. “I’m not really expecting anything; I came out with some friends as a silly thing, like ‘Yeah! Let’s go speed-dating!’ Why not?” freshman Jessica Leacher said. Others, however, were hoping to make a more serious connection. “I’m definitely looking for a girlfriend, or at least an acquaintance. For me, it’s also an opportunity Hopefully this’ll give me the confidence to get out and talk to more people,” senior Michael Montpetit said. Sophomore Donovan Johnson didn’t even come for himself. He came to Speed Dating in support of a friend. “I came for my man Oskar because he’s looking to meet some nice young ladies and I’d like to back him up. And if I happen to meet some people that I can chill with, that’s cool too,” Johnson said. Though students may have been looking for something different, it didn’t stop them from keeping the ballroom alive with laughter and conversation for two hours until the mixer started. The post-dating mixer was a chance for those who sparked a ñame to resume conversations that got cut off. It was also an opportunity to mingle with unfamiliar faces, as noli everyone got paired together. Participants enjoyed punch, and were also placed in a raffle to win two movie tickets. As the evening wound down, students were encouraged to complete their score sheets and turn them into UAB members. In two weeks, speed-daters received a list of matches from dates in which both partners checked “yes.” The list, complete with names and e-mail addresses, allowed speed daters to take their connection beyond 180 seconds. Raffle tickets were offered to speed dating participants. Raffle winners won two movie tickets for an opportunity to follow-up on an interested match. ■ Sixty s theUA post-Vi andfei Speed-daters sit across from their guests at the UAB speed dating event, Participants were alotted 3 minutes per table to make a first impression. Sixty students sit across from potential matches at the UAB speed dating event. The event was held post-Valentine's Day as an opportunity for male and female students to make a connection. Second annual Spartan VEX Robotics Challenge extends learning beyond the classroom Stepping into the IM Circle gymnasium on Saturday Feb. 26, there was a breeze of energy as excited students rushed between adjacent rooms. Seated on bleachers and clad in T-shirts of support, parents cheered, whistled and applauded the competitors as though they were at a soccer match. Yet the event here was no less than a sport. Enthusiasm bubbled through the room like gas in a shaken soda can as students carrying self-constructed robots paced around the gym, conversing with their teammates. The Spartan VEX Robotics Challenge was on. Here, dueling red and blue alliances pit individual robots against each other on two 12’xl2’ fields, in two-minute matches of driver-controlled play The teams strive to get their robots to gather and place as many plastic rings of their alliance’s colors as they can onto small goalposts within the time limit. However, this isn’t! exactly your average mathletes competition or science fair. Participants take pride in their teams, and show their support by donning costumes for the occasion. Shiny jewelry jingled and black capes swept the floor while others donned self-constructed Goggles - attire fit for wagers of cybernetic war. Bob Watson, K-12 outreach and robotics coordinator at MSU, said this was the first time four out of the 25 participating high school teams are being mentored and sponsored. “Even though the university doesn’t sponsor teams, engineering students here [at MSU] volunteer to mentor and assist students with technical difficulties,” junior J.TI Whitman said. "I helped with a lot of coordination and things like overseeing the preparation.” A host of other MSU engineering students like Whitman, many of whom are also part of the university’s robotics team, assisted at the event as referees and score keepers, The titular VEX, a Texas-based educational equipment company manufactures robotic components that students can assemble into fully-functioning mechanisms. And while it may all sound just like science fiction, the roles that these robots play in the education of students is certainly no space-age fantasy. Pontiac High School robotics team coordinator Michael Martus said even students who don’t win are more than happy to participate in the competition because it helps fill in certain practical areas of their education that are not usually met in a classroom setting. _ “Students might learn what a lever is but not know why it works the way it does,” Martus said. “When the mechanism [robot] doesn’t lift its arm, students might question why it doesn’t lift its arm and apply the calculation of the lever to it.” "It [VEX] is makingits way as a STEM [ScienceTechnology Engineering Mathematics] initiative, Its curriculum base helps teachers solve the 'why' for students,” So for those less victorious at this year’s Spartan VEX Robotics Challenge, there is certainly ample opportunity to return to the ring next year with a stronger and better robot competitor - and perhaps even learn a thing or two about them along the way The robots were handmade by those whopartcipated. Students usea remotes to control their robots to lift the different target rings, sometimes scormg for their team, or taking away points from their opponent, . 3 -H -< QJ ia “O ^ m a m ~ QJ o QJ Z cr o" zr fl>0) 13 QJ a. S QJ ■a ^ oS X O -H O < to -Io 3 C A M P U S L I F E s p a r t a n v e x r o b o t i c s c h a l l e n g e The MSU College of Engineering sponsored Spartan VEX Robotics Challenge. Teams raced against each other in two minute rounds. Freshman Eddie Franklin keeps the rankings up-to-date after each match. The event was sponsored by VEX, along with the MSU College of Engineering, which provided the parts needed to create the robots. 103 C A M P U S L I F E a t d f a s h i o n s h o w Gina Murdoch shows off the designs of senior .Anna Motz on the runway The dress, titled “Swatches” was made using found fabrics. Jillian Carol takes to the runway in a design created by sophomore Aubrey Owada. This dress was inspired by and created entirely outj of office materials. Senior Milica Mandie poses in a military- themed dress on the runway during the show. Senior Stephanie Cook designed the army- green piece "Make Fashion Not War" and adorned her model’s back with a peace sign, ■■ushing th allcS nur I ■ ■ D The ATD Fashion Show showcases MSU’s vanguards of design } ! l Tension saturated the stuffy air of the backstage hallway in the Pasant Theatre before the Apparel and Textile Design (ATD) Fashion Show as the colorful blurs of aspirant student designers and models flashed back and forth between tiny dressing rooms. Their frantic pace and chatter was broken only for seconds by Professor Rebecca Shuiling’s stern reminder at their doors to line up behind stage at 6:30 p.m. sharp, a cautionary “or else” implicit in her wake. As the words evaporated away once-frozen mascara brushes rapidly finished their upward strokes while steady eye pencils completed whirling lines of exotic patterns on models’ faces. With a half hour left until show time on the night of Feb. 26, high- heeled models clicked and clacked their way into position, clad in dresses whose sole uniting feature was their outrageousness. Scraps of feathers, glitter and other unidentifiable materials littered the wooden floor in the wake of practiced struts. Beyond the curtains, a sold-out audience buzzed with anticipation for the promised shock inherent in the avant-garde—the show’s purposefully ambiguous theme. Fortunately, they weren’t disappointed. First on the runway j was “Your Birthday Suit,” a short and colorful balloon-covered dress dipped in sprinkles and designed by sophomore Kathryn ! Shearer for her ATD 121 class. . “We were supposed to make a garment out of unconventional items, so nothing like regular fabric,” she said. I However, "unconventional’ ’ may have been an understatement, as even “avant-garde” seemed too modest a theme for some of the ensembles that graced the stage. Yet a combination of both of these themes was the compulsory guideline for the night, laid down in December by a design committee that selected only 54 out of 104 pieces submitted. There was “The Office,” a dress with a bodice of loose-leaf paper and a train of manila folders, “Telegraphy” a dangling array of black and white telephone cords and rotary dials, and ''Naturally Delicious,’’ a tight-fitting costume made predominantly . . | I i from red Doritos bags, to name just a few. “We were really pushing over the top, beautiful, styled, really crazy, just a lot of really ‘wow’ pieces,” senior and student director Leigh Gervasi said. In past years, when the Student Apparel Design Association (SADA) ran the show, anyone could enter, Gervasi said. This year, her fall semester ATD 439 portfolio development class took over and put a greater emphasis on exclusivity; they enlisted a panel of judges, elected a committee to sift through entries and scaled the show down to 600 seats. At the end of the night, four awards were given in the categories of Most Innovative, Judges’ Choice, Best in Show and Best Conceptual Design. The latter was granted to one of Gervasi’s designs, aptly titled “This Book Belongs to.” Hard book covers bound by hinges comprised the stiff top, while pages folded into dizzying pinwheels spiraled towards the bottom. “It’s so amazing to see the dress with hair and makeup on a stage,’ ’ Gervasi said. ‘ ‘It’s just a whole different piece; it's beautiful. It’s like an art piece.” However, the fate of that which breaks with the status quo is appropriately precarious. Put more simply it’s a safe bet to say that most MSU students prefer not to attend parties looking like an art piece. And so as the applause ceased, the destiny of the dresses became a mystery Perhaps they would be taken to another planet? ‘ ‘A lot of people have actually encouraged me to take a shower in the dress,” senior designer Bethany Ginther laughed, scanning her dress comprised entirely of loofahs. “But actually a lot of people have asked if they could wear it for Halloween.’ ’ Other designers said their creations might be displayed around campus if they got lucky but would most likely be delegated to the closet if not. Yet, regardless of their destiny they will remain a testament to the truly bizarre. Till then, here’s to the first year of a fashion show that awoke MSU’s drowsy vanguards of design. ■ shipping up to east lansing St. Patrick’s Day at MSU is an all-day festival of green-tinged fun In the early hours of what appeared to be a regular Thursday students emerged from their slumber to descend upon downtown East Lansing. But on this particular day with the red-orange, green and white flag flying high over Dublin Square on Abbot Road, these students weren’t heading to class right away They were lining up in masses outside the bars, and that could only mean one thing: It’s St, Patrick’s Day at MSU once again. Easily the second biggest social event at MSU after Halloween, St. Patrick’s Day has become a traditional MSU party-fest, While the day itself is intended to commemorate the death of the patron saint of Ireland, it seems more akin to a dawn-to-dusk drinking marathon for many students at MSU. It didn’t really matter that St. Paddy’s fell on a Thursday this year, as thousands of students dropped whatever else they were doing to indulge in an all-day celebration with green beer and green garb. Senior Shawn Cormier started his day at 9 a.m. at The Riv. Later on in the afternoon, he planned on going to Harper’s, then eventually heading back to his place for a more relaxed setting with a barbeque. A veteran of three St. Patrick’s Day celebrations at MSU, Cormier said he knew what it was like to be in for the long haul. March 17 this year felt like the first true day of spring, and as the sun and warm temperatures emerged, so did the denizens of MSU from within their winter confines, with house parties spilling out onto front lawns from Harrison to Hagadorn, Each block had several groupings of gamboling greens - partygoers decked out in MSU gear and St. Patrick’s-themed shirts ("Get Ready to Stumble,’’ read one), along with those plastic leprechaun hats. and Pi Kappa Alpha pledge Kevin Wawa, some sacrifice was required. "I had to wake up at 3 a.m. to wait in line at the bar, to save some spots for some of the actives,” he said. On top of that, he had a quiz at 6 p.m., but planned on partying afterward. Adding to the excitement of the day was the beginning of the second round of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, including MSU’s matchup against the University of California, Los Angeles. That’s what senior Art Nowakowski was looking forward to after his shift as the bouncer at Rick’s American Cafe, Nowakowski wasn’t a part of the big morning rush but figured he would see some unusual sights in his time on the job. "(This job) desensitizes you to things,” he said. "You definitely become more patient.” Though the afternoon atmosphere around East Lansing’s neighborhoods was otherwise fun and carefree, the lucidity of interviewees for this story seemed to deteriorate as the day wore on. When asked about his day so far and what his plans were for the rest of it, senior Kurt Rosenberg replied with "Irish car bombs and Irish car bombs,” respectively The men's basketball Spartans ended up losing after a furious comeback in the second half, meaning a one-and- done exit for the Spartans after two Final Four appearances, However, the festive mood of St. Patrick’s Day wouldn’t give way to drunken, rage-filled riots that followed tournament losses in the past. Besides, senior Oliver Lindsay predicted earlier in the day that he, along with many other of his Spartan brethren, would barely make it to the 9:20 pm. tip-off. "I probably won’t be awake for the MSU game,” he said. The day wasn’t all about leisure, however. For sophomore Only on St. Patrick’s Day at MSU. BSE IMS MMfótmmm ESS ummwmimVÌI»' mmmMU#rara KjssmK99 afiPi ■Sassi paf mmm nisn PMiHifl ¡*4^ mmmmm Sifcs iiiisiaiaMigallili gsu, . SHI MmMMwÉHaBKS .ah8sMI 1 p siili Guests enjoy beers and good friends on the Harper’s Restaurant and Brewpub patio on St. Patrick’s Day Harpers hosted a St. Patrick’s Day Party which included green beer, free breakfast and Irish girls. Ail 1 affSfrlC dBr •-1. «W -viH Seated outside of Theta Delta Chi, friends of the fraternity hold their beers up in response to cars honking at their "you honk we drink" sign. Members visiting the house were invited to sit on the roof or enjoy comfortable seating on the lawn, QJ fO 3 Holding a ‘You Honk, We Drink’ Darnes witn junior ¿acnary iv -ealk and sophomore Holly Johnson on Avalon Cooperative’s front porch. Like several East ...arising residences that day, Avalon nosted a house party orris m St. Patrick’s Day participants mingle on and around 510 Park Avenue late in the afternoon. The house attracted many visitors and offered various drinking games around the outside of the house including beer pong and shot-gunning. Spectator Jared Lee listens intently as senior Meghan Kennedy tunes her bagpipe. Kennedy who has been playing the bagpipes for six years, played her favorite tune “Scotland The Brave." Juniors Brita Olson and Carly St. John pause on the stoop of the Hedrick Cooperative. They linked arms and shared a celebratory St. Patrick's Day chug. 107 This year’s Malaysian Culture Night included throat-slitting, European invasions and a Far East version of angel hair pasta, Taking the stage at MacDonald Middle School on Mar. 19, the Malaysian Cultural Society presented "Merdeka,” a Malay word meaning independence, showcasing the country’s road/ to independence in the most literal way possible. After a pre-dinner of bihun goreng, a fried Malaysian noodle dish, Malaysian men and women of all acres filed into the auditorium, some draped in baju kurung, ifaditional female attire that includes a hijab, an Islamic headdress that covers a woman’s hair and neck. The show that followed was a linear representation of Malaysia’s road to self-government, which was finally achieved in 1957 after centuries of struggle withuoreign occupation, One unique aspect of the country’s history senior Aizat Rahim said, is that Malaysians achieved/ independence without any bloodshed. Though Malaysidns differ vastly in culture and religion, common ground/can be found in their system of government. Rahim likenda Malaysia’s culture to a “mini America’’—a variety of pp'ople and ethnicities congregating in one area to form a new identity The play took the amience back to 1511 when Portuguese soldiers invaded thdPort of Malacca, seizing power from local sultans and beginning the region’s long conflict with outside powers. The set'was nearly non-existent, leaving much up to audience imagination. Drawn-on curly mustaches, top hats and coattails marked the Portuguese, followed by a British generaj/with an aluminum foil pipe. Come World War II, a regiment of elementary school- aged Japanese soldiers wielding rising sun flags invaded, cardboard bolt-action rifles in hand and scuffed Adidas 7 sneakers peeking out from beneath their military uniforms, Each country's occupation was a vehicle for a different kind of performance, Battles with the British brought out intricate stage combat and martial arts—kicking, punching and even stabbing with aluminum foil swords set to tribal drumbeats. Less violent moments were filled with synchronized dances by colorfully costumed women. The show ended as most American ones begin: with a crowd-standing version of the national anthem, Aside from a crescent moon and a star in which the 50 white stars would normally sit, the Malaysian flag is identical to America’s: a 14-striped and colored pattern even those with no connection to Malaysia may recognize as a symbol of freedom, stages Of freedom Malaysian Cultural Society presents historyj&i their home country MSU students, along with local residents/ perform a student-written play entitfed "Merdeka.” The play chronicled the history of Malaysian independence. cn m S T U D E N T I I O R G A N Z A T O N S m a l a y s i a n c u l t u r a l s o c i e t y ‘ One unique aspect of the country's listory is that Malaysians achieved independence without any bloodshed." -Aizat Rahim, senior Sophomore Nazrin Dean entertains his friend's son before the beginning of the play during Malaysian Culture Night 2011. 'l'hcflj night was hosted by the Malaysian Cultural Society the Office for International Students and Scholars and Malaysian Students’ Department, Chicago. Second year grad student Sarifah Syedanuar applies stage makeup to Zahxin Mohtar ffefore the peSormanc.a[ The Malaysian culture was represented through a play entitled “M^geka,1 ’ || Malay word for independenqj. 109 C A M P U S L I F E e d u c a t i o n p r o t e s t o'Q) ki ¿' A Vi/1*’ , a taHe of (reverse robin hooc MSU students join residents in protests at the Capitol Once upon a time (Nov. 2, 2010 to be exact), the Michigan majority elected Rick Snyder for governor, definitively adding the state to a bright, Republican-red swath that blanketed the nation’s midterm victory map. This new color of choice was a product of a nation­ wide dissatisfaction with the economy and President Barack Obama’s lack of promised change; an implication of a loss of faith in the Democratic party and a desperate quest by the masses for an alternative solution at all levels of government. Ultimately being blue just wasn’t cutting it anymore. And so on the heels of these newfound sentiments arrived Mr. Snyder, “one tough nerd’ ’ with an ambitious goal to reinvent Michigan. Three months later, however, a slight mix up occurred regarding just how tougra' ‘tough’ ’ really was. Flash-forward to the week of March 14, and the normally quiet, neatly kept lawn of the Lansing Capitol building was overrun by 3,000 schoolteachers, seniors, students and union members vehemently chanting against a governor many of them had voted for. Their mantras ranged from comedic assertions like “Rick’s a dick!” to vulnerable pleas of “It’s not fair!” and “That’s not right!” If one thing was certain, Snyder’s recent budget proposal for the 2012 fiscatyear wasn’t going to fly “It’s not even about balancing the budge»’ Betty Burgis, a senior from Waterford, said amid the din. “He’s just trying to be Robin Hood in reverse.” Indeed, Snyder’s proposed repeal of tax exemptions for seniors and low-income workers who accompanied a $1.7 billion tax break for businesses earned him notoriety among the protesters. To them, he represented the antagonist in an emerging antithetical representation of this classic English folktale. He called the concept “shared sacrifice,” while they deemed it merely a paradoxical “robbing from the poor and giving to the rich”' ideology “Frankly it’s about time Michigan got pissed off. It really is,” Mount Pleasant resident Rachael Leny said, glancing triumphantly out at the crowd. “I feel like we’re much too quiet with what’s going on, and I’m here because we need to take back control.” Yet such simple expressions of what appeared to be blatant moral injustices had to be taken with a $M4 billion grain of salt. In other words, Michigan’s huge budget deficit could not be ignored. Snyder’s philosophy was that Michigan’s businesses, especially the smaller ones, were the catalyst to rejuvenating the state’s long-depressed economy Giving companies a tax break would provide them with an incentive to expand and create new jobs, while also attracting out-of-state entrepreneurs. However, this meant balancing the budget in unpopular ways. At the Capitol, the cries were specifically against an elimination! of the Earned Income Tax Credit, a tax exemption of up to $1,000 for low-income workers, and a repeal of the tax-free status of private and public pensions for seniors. In addition, protestors denounced a 15 percent cut in higher education appropriations and a decrease of $470 per student in the public education; system. “I have a problem with it because while they’re doing all that, they’re giving the corporations huge, huge tax cuts and they’re taxing the people that can’t afford to be taxed anymore,” senior Jon Vane amp said. On top of it all, another issue that stirred angry packs of union workers, proudly donning their work clothes and citing solidarity with the middle class of Wisconsin, was the Emergency Financial Manager bill. Under the bill, financial managers are given power to override the local elected government and cancel union contracts. “There’s no oversight under the current plan,” U of M Flint student Nick Hale said, “It gives the governor ; an inordinate amount of control over local affairs, and I think that goes against the Federalist ideas of the Constitution.” The tale is far from finished, though. In fact, it has just begun. As the dull thuds of fists faded from the Capitol’s interior walls and five steadfast protesters were taken away in handcuffs, junior Andrew Schireson would only say one thing to Governor Snyder. In the words of Neil Young: .“Keep on rockin’ in the free world.” The final speaker at the Capitol,; Mark Gaffney; Michigan AFL-CIO President tells the people that Governor Snyder and the newly elected Congress are not following the democratic process. He gave a statement, "The final passage of the Emergency Managers legislation package... is an affront to the bedrock principle of a representative democracy that our nation was founded upon.” Numerous protest signs gave life to the crowd of 3, 000 protesters. Signs called for the recall of Governor Synder, the injustice of cutting the education budget and that tax breaks for businesses are injust when taken from seniors and the poor. yggSnyder: jljg frig# Stealing fhe Poor mm S‘vmg in the I I Junior Julian Yu stands in front of the Capitol calling for all peoples to stand together for justice. The protests brought r no segregation of interests, rust an overall calling for the people to let' their voices be heard. passion for fashion VIM magazine releases its second issue When fans pour into the Stadium on a crisp Saturday morning to watch the Spartans take on a rival football team, the Michigan State Fight Song can be heard for blocks. And the energy coursing through the crowd as they yell “Spartan teams are bound to win, they’re fighting on a vim,’’ is exactly what a new fashion and design publication on campus hopes to embody with its telltale name - VIM, “[Vim] means ‘enthusiasm,’ and that is how we wanted our readers to feel about fashion and design,” senior and co-editor-! in-chief Julie Christopherson said. The magazine’s staff took to Farm Lane on Wednesday Mar. 16 to distribute free copies of the magazine with an enthusiasm befitting the spirit of their publication, handing out nearly 2,000 copies of VIM’s second issue at The Rock between 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Copies ofVIM’s debut issue in October 2010 were personally distributed by VIM representatives at locations like the Union, the library and the Starbucks on Grand River Avenue on previous occasions. However, that approach didn’t necessarily stir up enough vim for VIM, leading the staff deciding lo hand out copies at one central locatioflthis time around. "We’d like to be more active,” senior Danielle Lauhoff, advertising director of VIM, said. “We had a lot of leftover copies last time, and hopefully this time we won’t have any” In line withVIM’s goal to do more than just be another fashion magazine, the newest issue continues to expand its repertoire of contenti The fall issue, n addition to the expected fashion and beauty trends, included advice on hosting a dinner party tips on leading a less stressful life, and a top ten list of things to do before graduation. The winter/spring issue aimed for a more local angle, profiling East Lansing clothing slop DEFYE and examining fashion trends around campus. Still, to keep the audience from fashion-overload, VIM supplemented the glamorous photography spreads and make-up tips with other pieces of content, like advice on simple ways to stay happy Though this is only VIM’s second print run since it was founded in Jan. 2010, its staff has been drumming up hype over the internet, using as many outlets as possible to reach the student body Between deadlines, the magazine staff routinely Updates the VIM Facebook and Twitter accounts. Status updates, tweets and wall posts give followers a constant stream of fashion news often supplemented with links to the VIM blog. The blog has new entries on an almost daily basis which include detailed fashion commentary as well as photos, quotes of the day reviews and interviews. But gie staff at VIM aim to do more than reach out to a wider audience. One of the magazine’s main goals is to continue their financial success. While their first issue was sponsored by ASMSU, the campus student government, the second issue was paid for entirely by ad revenue and staff fundraisers. Even without external funding, VIM was able to cover costs and keep the magazine free for readers. As they focus on moving beyond a niche market, VIM hopes to make the world of fashion accessible all students as the definitive source for style at State. And bit by bit, students on campus seem to be warming up to the idea of a style magazine for students by students. “Honestly, I had no idea that State had a fashion magazine.! haven’t seen it around but it seems like a cool idea,” freshman Andrew Salisbury said. Bit’s good that they do more than just style stuff too, I feel like the broader their stories are, the more people they’Mattract.” Spread out for the viewing pleasure of Michigan State students, VIM magazine featured their first and second issues in front of the Auditorium. Over ||,000 copies of the magazine we're distributed to readers on campus. m o > m in 3: Interior design senior and co-editor-in-chief Julie Christopherson works her shift handing out this season’s issue of VIM magazine. VIM’s content covers both men and women’s fashion trends. Freshman VIM PR team member Olivia Mashak gives an issue ofVIM to a student passing by the! auditorium. VIM also uses Twitter and FacebofK fcbomts^toispeak tMir voice. o > “D C to n> t h i b o d e a u / D E S I G N b e t s y e b e r T Y P E k r i t i k a b h a r a d w a j / P H O T O a n t h o n y IE Freshman Caleb Knight receives the last of the nachos that the MSU Telemarketers had to offer. Students from all classes attended Nachofest celebrating the greatness of beer and nachos. Junior Dominic Hense downs his beer after hitting one of the piñatas at Nachofest.Mhe piñatas were filled with numerous gifts for the students attending the event. .Nachofest 6.5 Nachofest celebrates six and a half years at MSU Nothing more speaks of Nachofest than enormous white tents, multiple beer kegs and tables piled with nachos, salsa and steaming cheese sauce. Located in the backyard of 235 Stoddard Ave., Apr. 16 welcomed the 11 ^ Nachofest at MSU. Many groups could be spotted moseying along Grand River Avenue sombreros and brightly colored T-shirts that read ‘Nachofest makes the alcohol flow.’ sporting What originally started as an MSU Telemarketers colleagues and friends reunion in 2005 has morphed into thousands of people coming out to enjoy a day of beer, nachos and the company of friends. “It started as an inside joke where one of our friends would go to all pese festivals. He went to this nacho festival and sausage festival, and so we decided why don’t we have a nacho fest,” Nachofest committee alumnus Brian Keehner said. A little after noon, a huge crowd hovered under a tent and began cheering on the speaker for the day Steve Hill. “Rule one of today: don’t touch my piñatas,’’ Hill said, pointing to the paper decorations as the crowd erupted in laughter. “Rule two: today’s going to be the best day of your lives.” As the brief speech ended, the crowd quickly dispersed, rushing to the long queues for nachos. Others huddled over beer kegs,: anxiously squeezing themselves in to fill their cups. While some purchased the $20 party packages including the event T-shirt and a plastic mug with the Nachofest logo, regular cups were also available for those who wished to be economical. to in cups, individuals had the choice of either wearing Nachofest shirts or to follow the Nachofest 6.5 theme of Power Rangers. the choice Similar ' 'There’s a different theme twice every year,” senior Danielle Wojno said. “Last semester it was Nachtoberfest like the Octoberfest festival. The semester before that the theme was Jersey Shore.” Amid the crackle of nachos, the pitter- patter of raindrops and sips of beer, MSU students were not the only ones present at the event. Several parents like Shelly Hill were there for what wasn’t their first Nachofest. “It is my second Nachofest. Last time,! I would say there were about 800 people here. Also, I see a lot more parents here than last time,” Hill said. Despite 40 kegs worth of beer being consumed by the crowd, junior Marco Salomone said there hasn’t been any trouble with the law. “We really want to make sure that this event is not like Cedar Fest. So we have no music, so there’s no noise violation. We also haven’t had any fires,” he said. Without the risk of legal intervention, drinking is not the only thing Nachofest participants look forward to. The Guac- off unites people for tasting different guacamole brought by visitors. What makes the event even more special than the food and drink is the relationship shared between the committee members. Member Ag Johnson said more out of state MSU graduates are attending. Both committee members Dave Tomke and Brian Keehner have graduated, but make an effort to visit every Nachofest. “I think the real purpose of this event is companionship... and to maintain our Spartan relationship,” Tomke said. And Tomke might be right. Despite wet jackets and mud-stained shoes, excited screams and warm hugs between old friends and new made this year’s Nachofest all that more memorable for those present. Kelley James drummer gets the crowd hype while making up beats for James’s freestyle. James and Mike Posner performed together at the MSU Auditorium. Mike Posner gets personal during the sinqmg of his hit single “Please Don’t SBB Thousands of Michigan State students showed up on Apr. T3 to rock with Posner during nis 2011 Tour. Kelley James Band bassist gets .groovy during their Igiig1‘Stalker’’RhfeMllted to Facebook’s "stalking'’ phenomlf»n.Eelley James and crew have bem touring along Mike Posner for the entire month of AdSI V ?v V^A Vf ^ \I /v —i n. - ^ S. 7T (/) C O ^ z 5O- X 3 o2 HI o o ~9- ncu 3 QJ Cfl fl> T3“IOt/1 o cX C A M P U S L I F E m i k e p o s n e r c o n c e r t homecoming^" Michigan native Mike Posner performs at MSU, displaying his talents to fans and friends The real Mike Posner is just as spring-loaded as his onstage persona. When he first laid eyes on his group of friends packed in a small dressing room backstage at the Auditorium, he sprang into a haphazard run, hugging the first person in the circle and working his way around. Smelling strongly of generic, shaving cream-esque men’s body wash, Posner had just finished a long post­ concert shower—one that he may have needed very badly just minutes before, he had been drenched in sweat, glitter and whatever rubs off a blonde female audience member in a short skirt caressing you onstage. Thousands of students attended the Apr. 13 show—standing, dancing and singing along to Posner’s string of pop-R&B anthems. For most, it was a chance to see a Michigan-raised artist recently turned superstar, But a few were just seeing an old friend. "I’ve known him since sixth gradelwe used to play drums together in high school,” senior Andrew Weickmann said while waiting in the dressing room to see Posner after the show. "We’ve been friends pretty much since.” Freshman Alex Scharg has known Posner since childhood—their families are close friends, spending every Passover and Independence Day together. “It’s weird that Mike’s nationally known, but it’s not weird just to see him in person,” Scharg said. Weickmann said Posner’s generous personality has remained constant despite his success. Last summer he went with Posner and several other friends to the Bonnaroo Music & Arts festival. Weickmann recounted how Posner greeted every fan who waited, even sacrificing his shoes to one, going barefoot the rest of the festival. Though he is now savoring stardom, it wasn’t even a year ago that Posner was an undergraduate at Duke University much like his Spartan friends here. And the collegiate spirit hasn’t left him yet. "I still feel like one of them, man,” Posner said after the show. "I kind of have a job that lets me be a professional college student to a certain extent.” Even though he graduated a Blue Devil, Posner certainly bleeds a little green and white. “I’ve got nothing but love, There’s no place in the world I owe more to than East Lansing,” He said. "I just want to make Michigan proud.” Over anhour earlier, astoic-facedPosner swaggered onto the stage in white Andl high tops, breaking into a wide smile at the first chorus of "Please Don’t Go,” the first track on his debut album "31 Minutes to Takeoff.” He bounced around the stage singing over the roaring bass and synthesizer backup, shamelessly flirting with ecstatic women in the front rows. With fans calling him back to the stage for an encore, Posner performed his popular single "Cooler Than Me”wearing Kalin Lucas’ signature " 1 ” jersey, sending roars through the crowd. Freshman Sara Hess sat poised at her computer the morning tickets went on sale, ready to strike at the 10 o ’ clock release time. "He sounds different from anyone else,” She said. "His songs aren’t like normal mainstream songs.” But it wasn’t just the audience who was pumped up to be there. "It feels good to be home,” Posner told the crowd. "This is the first place in the world that supported my music.” For Posner, playing at MSU had special significance. "I'm speechless, man,” Posner said. "To look into the crowd and look directly at the people that are responsible for me being able to live my dreams is a feeling I can’t explain.” Audience members sing and dance at the Mike Posner concert at the Auditorium Apr, 13. Posner performed with opening act Kelley James, 117 Junior Kammer Offenhauser takes a bite out of his Smokey Dog as he watches students walk past, what Up, Dawg?, a hot dog bar, offers over eight different varieties. stomachs of steel Sales and Marketing Club hosts Coney Dawg Challenge a l l o r e / D E S I G N j e s s i c a h a l f y a r d T Y P E a d e l i n a s c h m i d t / P H O T O c a s s i e ■We wanted something fun and relaxing, and this fundraiser was a great opportunity to partner with a new business. What Up Dawg? just opened and the owner’s an MSU alum, so it was perfect,” senior and club president Rachelle Beazley said. ”We chose 4/20 to host our event because it’s notorious as a day of ‘the munchies,’ so we thought we’d take advantage of that.” . ''We take different trips throughout the year. This year we did three sales blitzes and we took a trip to Germany so the funds are mostly going towards covering transportation costs;’ Beazley added. Sales blitzes, she explained, are learning experiences tailored toward sales and marketing majors. Club members compete with clubs from other colleges in mock sales situations, earning points for their team based on net sales. The blitzes are a club highlight and a major draw for business students looking to polish their skills in sales. Club members also got first hand marketing experience the night of the event, greeting customers the instant they got to the restaurant. "Hey! Have you heard about the Coney Dawg challenge? Five coneys for $10; it’s a discount, and you could win tickets to the Lugnut’s suite! Come on, five really isn’t that many” Beazely told Merfert as he entered the establishment. Hp didn’t know about the competition when I got here, I was just hungry and she [Beazely] sold it to me when I walked inlMerfert said. As the night came to a close, the challenge looked to be about over as most participants fell minutes short of the top time, 1:53, put up around 7 p.m. But by 10:45 pm, senior Chad Peltier stole the competition with a time of 1:43, eating an average of one hot dog every 20 seconds and concluding the challenge with an exciting turn of events. hTV Two guys. 10 coney dogs. One time to beat. The smell of brats and grilled onions hung in the air as sophomores Alex Turner and Michael Merfert sat side by side and tore into their hot dogs, matching each other bite for ravenous bite. Faces red and cheeks bulging, the contestants choked down mouthfuls, not bothering to stop and taste the food. "I feel fine now, but in the middle of it [the competition], that was awful,” Turner said upon finishing the last hot dog of the challenge. "If I could do it differently Id chew more.” Turner wasn’t the only one who stepped up to the plate and fought for the glory of eating five hot dogs smothered in mustard, chili and onions as fast as possible. The ”4/20 Coney Dawg Challenge,” hosted on April 20 by the MSU Sales and Marketing Club and local eatery What Up Dawg?, drew more than 30 challengers vying for the grand prize: two tickets to an all-you-can-eat and drink suite at the Lugnut’s Stadium. The competition went from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. and was open to anyone with an appetite. Volunteers from the club worked shifts at the restaurant, ensuring that interested competitors knew the rules of the challenge and signed a waiver before participating. Club members filled What Up Dawg? with vibrant energy cheering on participants, shouting out times and even sharing strategies, though each contestant had his or her own way of forcing the dogs down. ‘Tve never done any official eating contests before; my only strategy was to eat fast. But towards the end, dipping [the hot dogs] into the cups of water really helped. The buns just dissolve and they’re way easier to eat,” alumni Suporn Teng, a competitor toward the end of the night, said. While contestants perfected their techniques, the Sales and Marketing Club had its own strategy on making the challenge a fundraising success. What Up Dawg offers numerous "signature dawgs" in addition to customizable options. The restaurant is located on M.A.C. in East Lansing. o ’ b l a c k / D E S I G N j e s s i c a h a l f y a r d T Y P E i a n k u l l g r e n / P H O T O c h a s e Lilir most guys, sophomore Allen Price llikes women. He has a girlfriend who goes Ito Central Michigan University so he’s been (learning how to do the whole long distance thing. He’s not a very flashy dresser, more of the casual, laid-back type. Even so, Allen’s hair is styled masterfully: intentional messy spikes in the front, sculpted with a product that preserves the natural dry look. Masses ofsilver rings cling to his lobes, and his sleek, thick- rimmed frames are far too stylish for the rest of his ensemble. Today lie’s wearing a forest green T-shirt displaying a graphic from the Midwest Bisexual Lesbian Gay Transgender Ally College Conference (MBLGATACC). Under it, invisible to onlookers, an entire role of ace bandage and two binders flatten his double “D” cup breasts, constricting the entire upper half of his body But Allen is still a man, at least today Some days he wakes up as Shannon, his female versiongjthe one who matches his body’s God-given biological features. Shannon never knows which gender she will feel like until the morning—it’s essentially a toss-up. Every morning she wakes up and can immediately feel which one she is that day even while alone in her room. She has two separate wardrobes in her closet. One for Shannon and one for Allen. On some male days, she even uses the men’s bathroom. "I wake upland that’s what happens,” she said. “You just kind of know. It’s hard to explain.” Hard to explain, because the average person has never experienced a similar feeling. But there’s an important distinction: she doesn’jgwake up as a different person. Her gender may change, but her personality is unwavering. Shannon isn’t just a member of MSU’s Lesbian Bisexual Gay Transgender (LBGT) community; she may also be the only student here who calls herself bi-gender—a term she uses to describe her identity—or a similar label. Both transgender and gender queer are broad, vague terms because they are meant to be largely self-applied, said Deanna Hurlbert, assistant director and centerfiaison of the MSU LBGT Resource Center. While traditional gender roles are black and white, these terms attempt to break that mold. “One of the things that's cool about queerness is that it’s not another box,” Hurlbert said. “Queer by definition isn’t strictly definable.” in While many transgender students feel uncomfortable their biological skin, Shannon’s case is far more complicated. Her skin changes every day Even attending a university with 47,000 students, she has never met another bi-gender student here. In fact, she has only met one other bi-gender person in her life, and that was at the MBLGTACC conference. Her transgender experience is far from a typical one, if any can be described that way In LBGT forums around campus, she’s the sole attendee who identifies as bi-gender or a comparable term. She has met female-bodied students who also bind (a verb used to describe flattening breasts with Ace bandages and certain clothing), but none who say they are bi-gendered. Naturally she feels alone sometimes. “I can’t just talk to someone about my experience, because they don’t understand,” she said. Hurlbert said she knows of about only eight transgender students at MSU who are out and organized in some way said, noting there is no absolute number, and there may be many more who aren’t out in the open. Hurlbert said she has never encountered a case quite like Shannon’s at MSU. “For most people ... gender is more consistent or fluid,” Hurlbert said. Both Shannon and Allen, female and male, are attracted to women; but gender identity and sexuality are completely separate issues. A whole other can of worms, as Shannon describes it. 'Tm attracted to females, but on my female days I’ll walk into a room and identify with the female gender. They are, to me, alike. On my male days they are other,” Shannon said. Though she didn’t fully accept herself as bi-gender until the end of her freshman year, she has known she liked women for nearly as long as she can remember. ' 'I had crushes on my babysitter when I was little. So yeah, I knewf she said, breaking into a smile and giving a few chuckles, Allen, on the other hand, is a new development, name-wise at least. While she used to shorten Shannonlo Shan, it didn’t celebrate each gender appropriately Now her middle name is legally Allen, which she uses on her male days—one of the boldest actions she’s taken so far in her quest to find her identity In hindsightiShannon’s struggle had been a long one. In third grade her teacher would have boys versus girls games in the classroom, and it would gnaw at her when she wasn’t allowed to be on the boys’ team some days. At her high school in Centerline, she stayed home on prom night. Her school didn’t allow same- sex couples at the dance, nor did they provide any LBGT resources for students. At home, she didn’t exactly get much support from her mother. “She’s accepted my sexuality I think. But my gender identity that’s a whole other can of worms that she’s just not ready to open yet,” Shannon said, explaining that her mother tries to accept it, but doesn’t know how to handle it all quite yet. “She’s madeit clear to me she’s not ready to address that just yet.. .It bothers me a great deal,” Shannon said in a collected, matter-of- fact tone, While Shannon’s mother is still coming around, her friends are overwhelmingly supportive. She struggled with bullying in middle school, and didn’t make many close friends in high school. Among a sea of faces in East Lansing, she has finally forged significant bonds. “I wouldn’t be handling everything as well as I like to think that I do without the support of my friends,’ ’ Shannon said. ‘ ‘ [Before coming to MSU] I’ve never actually had meaningful social connections before.” While college provides many students with an opportunity to chart a course for their career path, Shannon has used it to navigate a far more primary life issue. “I didn’t understand until I got to college that sexual orientation is separate from gender identity” she said. “It’s kind of where I put a word on everything.’ ’ Figuring out how to be a male at the drop of a hat isn’t easy especially with a “very female body” But so far, she at least has a goal. ' 'My goal would be to be able to walk into a public place and be called ‘sir,’” she says with conviction, as if she has adopted the statement as her doctrine. One night, the first time Shannon ever tried binding, she got her wish. After looking up how to do it online, she carefully wrapped her torso In Ace bandage, adorned a baggy hoody and walked to McDonalds on Grand River Avenue. She concentrated on lowering her voice as she approached the counter and ordered. For the first time, a stranger, the cashier at the counter, responded with ‘sir.’ And, for the first time, Shannon truly accepted herself as bi-gender. “I was like ‘okay this male identity is a real thing and very important to me,”’ she said. “I still have the female identity but I need to acknowledge Allen.” Since then she’s been binding on her male days, despite orders otherwise from her doctor. She’s careful about how tight she wraps it, and makes sure not to wear the bindings for too long. Lately though, she's been doing it less for health reasons. And even when she does, it’s not fully satisfying, which has lead her to consider taking an even greater leap: changing her body to physically match Allen. Finding resources on the matter is difficult, but she knows it would involve testosterone doses and likely surgery; at least one to modify her upper half. “I would like to have something a little bit more androgynous, because I feel like it would cause me a lot less anxiety” she said. Even if Shannon decides to physically make herself Aden, Allen would likely be back to square one on Shannon days, “What if I become just stuck in between both genders and I can’t pass as either one?” she said. “On my female days, waking up with a beard might be kind of traumatic, more so than waking up as a guy with breasts.” However, there is her girlfriend to consider. They’ve talked about it briefly and she said she isn’t sure their relationship could survive the transition. Shannon understands—after all, it isn’t a dilemma many significant others have to face. As iastands, her girlfriend has never even seen her on a male day Purely coincidental, she says. There’s also another concern: male pattern baldness runs in her family She does have one bit of reassurance on the matter, however, her father had amazing hair until he died from cancer in 2009, even through the chemotherapy He never knew about her sexuality or gender identity struggle. But his brothers, Shannon’s uncles, have essentially adopted her and are understanding of her situation, even light-hearted about it at times. Though the future is still uncertain, hopefully by the time graduation arrives Shannon will have found a way to use her political science degree as a tool to help youth in the LBGT community specifically reforming sex education in schools to be more inclusive. She wants to have a child, too. Just one though, so neither Shannon nor Allen have to divide their love and energy 1 ‘And that’s probably just a small piece,’ ’ she In the face of further state funding cuts, how will MSU weather the storm? The relative silence of the reception area is unnerving. The busy clacking of the secretary’s keyboard the only sound—a dull, rain-like patter that: .cuts through the weighty air. And then the silence is broken. “President Simon will see you now” The long hallway blurs and morphs into an expansive office, shockingly spacious and tastefully adorned with a subtle theme of green. There is a certain ironic disconnect between the luxuriance of the room and the impending topic of conversation with its occupant: MSU’s financial fate after years of state funding cuts. “Well, we were hopeful that as Michigan began this very slow recovery that universities would be treated better than what we predicted two, three years ago,’ ’ President Lou Anna K. Simon began, seated at a varnished, circular wooden table near the door. The rest of the room is barely visible beyond a nearby set of dark leather couches. A Spartan green blanket bearing MSU’s familiar "S” lies perfectly folded over the back of one, lending the immaculate space a fleeting, personal touch. Just two months earlier, newly elected state governor Rick Snyder proposed a 22 percent decrease in state appropriations to Michigan’s public universities—15 percent if institutions could avoid a tuition increase of more than 7 percent. Though MSU’s largely- prepared financial cadre escaped the embarrassing episode of jaw-dropping that ensued, the cut felt no less “brutal,” as President Simon commonly described it in the weeks after. In fact, Snyder’s tough love proposition was a pivotal point in Michigan’s steady 10-year neglect in support for higher education. For MSU, it would mean a staggering $42 million loss in operational funds for the 2011 -2012 school year—a sum larger than the combined funding reduction for all of the state’s public uiiveisitiesjustayearbefore. ■ The slash was a harsh wake-up call after years of what now seemed like mere proddings—a brutal fiscal reality shoved in the face of an administration rapidly adapting to a life of penny-pinching. You IOCUS on inefficiencies and , as you can cut, because every J . . tuition dollar that goes for salary r rr And almost instantly probing questions or Ior onice operations is into the university’s efficiency arose out money YOU know of the public’s preliminary stupor. Did the school really need vice presidents for every Dean? The largest non-military cafeteria in the nation? The construction of a fancy new art museum? that is coming out 0f these student’s nnrkpfq ’1 Leaning back in her chair??: President Simon addressed these months-long queries. “What you’re seeing in the press is a way that politicians make public their reasons for why they’re going to cut things,” she explained. In essence, perceived extravagances—such as the five- year, 41 percent swell in administrative pay recently reported by The Detroit Free Press—were being amplified at the expense of the underlying pragmatism behind such raises. “Let me ask you a question back,” she said, in reference to that topic. “What do you consider administration? You know, from a student perspective.” Anyone not deemed faculty? ■“Okay what about financial aid officers?” Yes. ' ‘And in terms of our students, adding more financial aid officers— would that be a good or a bad?” Pause. That would be a good. “Okay and academic advisors?” Yes, There are layers to administration, Simon said, unavoidably made thicker by recent increases in research ventures - the new Secchia Center in Grand Rapids and a host of temporary employees hired to implement a $100 million replacement of the university’s old computer system, to name just a few. Besides, Snyder’s funding cut should not presuppose a complete stop-all for investments in the campus’s future. The generation of young adults passing through the university now should not be punished for having to embark on their career paths in a recession, she contended. A noble statement, yet many students across Michigan finally .threw in the towel this year when it came to letting the big dogs go to bat for them. What had appeared to be general apathy in October during ASMSU’s “Higher Education, Higher Priority” rally at the Capitol evolved into a 100-plus strong paroxysm of anger for a stop- i the-cuts protest at the same location in March.: ■ We’re getting priced out of an education, and that’s not how 1 we’re going to reinvent Michigan,” junior Joe Duffy president of the MSU College Democrats, said as cheers from his comrades rose up in spurts around him. MSU’s tuition rose by 5.2 percent in the 2009-2010 school year, followed by another 5 percent the next—an increase of more than 1 10 percent over just two years. ‘ ‘We’re going to be the ones who are fixing the state and bringing 1 the economy back together, so I don’t think making us pay more is a I good thing,’ ’ junior Liz Starke said before a phone bank in Case Hall.J And there were many more, wholly engrossed in the cause and I grasping it by the reins before it could once again return to its pre-1 Snyder evanescence. Yet in the end, when the lexicon of fiscal realities is at last an outdated verbiage, it may be said that we Echo Boomers were merely victims of time—the pawns of indiscriminate coincidence who were unlucky enough to have reached our most promising years in an economic downturn. Born on the brink of the millennium, we have matured just in time to be the youth of the Great Recession, our college days mired by the discourse of funding cuts. And whether we believe the solutions to this untimely slump proposed at the state level are unfairly draconian, morally justified or just plain stupid are judgments best left for discussion at the dinner table. It’s time to think at the margin. ‘ 'Universities are just going to have to take a real look at programs and how their administration is set up, and look at what is essential and see where they can make cuts, too,” senior Andrew Walker said. “At the same time the state has to make cuts, so does the university? And it has to start implementing them quicker than ever. For example, if MSU had kept annual growth of its health care spending i on employees below 5 percent over the last decade, each student’s ] tuition bill today would be $1,000 cheaper, President Simon wrote ] in a letter to faculty members this year. While the cap has now been placed, the loss stands as a reminder that procrastination really does j come back to bite. “Over the course of years, you can’t always necessarily make up what the student would have had if they’d gone to school, say five ^ years ago,” Associate Director of Financial Aid Val Meyers said. “You focus on inefficiencies and you cut as much as you can cut, because every tuition dollar that goes for salary or for office operations is money you know; that is coming out of these student’s pockets.’ ’ Program cuts and phase-outs are, in fact, being established. No | longer can a freshman enlist in American Studies courses. Classical ] Studies has been dealt the same blow and eventually Musical I Therapy too will go missing from the school’s online drop-down menu. The College of Agriculture and j “I’m always : Natural Resources is consolidating from r i t, 13 departments to six, and shedding a j , nopeniL, 1 m an few majors along the way as well. All in optimist, I think if all, 41 programs have been proposed for I (jBontinuation. you look around J . ■ Now, would I like to have some ot t Michigan State you these programs we reduced continue? see a lot of energy Yeah,” Simon says. “They were good i 1 f you see a lot Ot really positive things happening,’1 programs; we didn’t cut bad things.” She rests her hand over her heart, palm down. /WeOTtpro^s that were very good and that people cared about. So mats painful to me as an individual; it’s painful to the institution.” Indeed, it is painful to us students. Is she hopeful, though? "I’m always hopeful. I'm an optimist. I think if you look around Michigan State you see a lot of energy you see a lot of really positive things happening,” she said. “It’s really growing, it has momentum; it’s not dying on the vine because of the budget reductions.” Think about it like an agriculture analogy she says, breaking out into a smile: ‘ ‘Because of that pruning, we have very very strong roots and we’re grounded in the right values, we’re in good soil. And I think we’ve done the trimming in a way that’s more dramatic than what I would like, but j the free that’s Michigan State will continue to grow strong.’ ’ Too bad money doesn’t grow on trees. MSU s undergraduate experiment in Dubai flounders affPRwoyears ■■Mri The university’s efforts to keep Dubai afloat went up to the brink of it closing, which left students shocked when they heard the news at the same time as everyone else in July 2010. »f a desert Tuitiol money: these two words can cause a headache to MSU students. However, as many Spartans know, the money they pay to attend Michigan State is crucial to what the university can and cannot do. In East Lansing, the university has opted to raise tuition on a consistent basis to battle increasing costs. In Dubai, the absence of adequate tuition meant that MSU Dubai had to close in July 2010. In 2007, MSU invested in a full-fledged sister campus in Dubai, located in the United Arab Emirates, after the government of Dubai approached MSU with the offer. The Dubai campus was to be equivalent to the original campus in East Lansing by offering five undergraduate degree programs at the same academic standards as MSU. The Dubai campus not only intended to draw students from the UAE and other countries, but also from Eas|Lansing, targeting students who wanted to do a portion of their education overseas. President Lou Anna K. Simon pushed to expand MSU’s global reach, arguing that MSU needed to establish a connection to the Middle East. As she wrote in her blog on July 9, 2010, “You truly can’t be coraliected globally today unless you are in the Middle East!- still the crossroads of the world’s cultures and, increasingly its economies,” However, the economy was to blame for the shutdown. The Dubai idea was announced in 2007 and the campus opened in 2008, right when the global economy took a turn for the worse. Dubai was plagued by the crisis just as bad as Michigan. “The problems that Dubai had were not unique to Dubai, and a lot of places had the same financial problems,” professor Emeritus Harold Sollenberger, who served as the interim director of Dubai over the summer said, “Unfortunately, two places that hit particularly hard were Dubai and Michigan, and we were at both ends of that continuum.” The decision to end undergraduate programs was announced by Simon in July A single graduate program, in human resources and labor relations, is still offered there, and the institution remains open for research and study abroad operations. Tuition money however,, played the biggest role in' dismantling Dubai. There weren’t enough students to fund the campus. “We anticipated having a much larger student body than we had. The original plans called for several hundred students in the first year or two, and then moving up to five-six hundred students, and we never got to that level,” Sollenberger said. At the closing of the undergraduate programs, just 85 students were enrolled, the highest total Dubai had during its tenure. The low tuition funds made it hard for MSU to hold Dubai to the same academic standards as the main campus, which was a major goal. With that being the case, why didn’t MSU Dubai draw enough students? ‘Early estimates of the potential student body were optimistic. Also, with the financial conditions that changed, many people left Dubai because the jobs disappeared. The student pool we were trying to attract was much smaller than what we anticipated,” Sollenberger said. “Efforts were made to make some changes, but we were still optimistic that we would recruit the number of students.” “My sister read in:the newspaper - I didn’t even get a call from the university - that MSU Dubai was closing down,” freshman Anzar Abbas, a native of Pakistan who had planned on starting this fall, said. “I couldn’t join another university; it was too late. At that point, it was a bad situation. The worst part was that I didn’t even find out from the university It was finding out from my sister who read in the paper that my university closed down.” When asked why the decision was made so late, Sollenberger said that MSU was doing everything it could to save Dubai. “We were trying every conceivable way of restructuring the program, reducing costs ofthe program, tryingto get financial support from our various partners,” he said. “Literally up to days before the announcement was made, I and a couple of colleagues were working on a couple of proposals to try to continue the programs.” Although the university was late on notifying Dubai students, MSU did spend a lot of energy assisting students with applications to other schools. Around 40 students transferred to East Lansing for the fall! semester, with about 10 more joining in spring. The remaining students either found schools to attend in the UAE or elsewhere around the world, from Canada to Australia to England, Sollenberger said. MSU also helped students obtain visas in the short amount of time before fall and Abbas was one of the many students who struggled with getting his on time. After missing his initial flight as a result of not getting his visa in time, he wondered if he would be able to begin classes in the fall of 2010. "I found out that both of the people I had talked to at the Office of Admissions had left the university’’ he said, “f didn’t know who to talk to.- That’s when I got in contact with mathematics professor Richard Hensh. He spoke to the U.S. Embassy about my visa processing and sped up the process. Otherwise, I would’ve had to start in the spring.” Abbas received his visafthe day before his originally scheduled flight to East Lansing in August. Although he had to reschedule it, the university paid for Abbas’ airfare. Plus, Abbas is only being charged the Dubai tuition rate of $660 per credit, lower than the rate charged^ to. out-of-state students. MSU isn’t giving up on the global market just yet. In the same blog post that President Simon wrote about the Dubai closing, she mentioned MSU “seeking new collaborative opportunities in Brazil and India,” and a “successful new office in China.” However, these offices will serve more as outposts for MSU researchers and study abroad programs and won’t offer degree programs. For the time being, MSU isn’t looking to stjirt undergraduate instruction in Dubai or anywhere else, according to Eric Freedman, the associate dean of International Studies and Programs, ‘ ‘I have difficulty envisioning in the foreseeable future that we would be opening an instructional site along the models of Dubai,” Freedman said. ‘ ‘But you can never say never.” Freshman Anzar Abbas reflects on his journey to MSU. Although he wasn't planning on attending MSU right away the Dub|i shutdown forced him to leave his home in Dubai an®move overseas to start his IpHege education. Although hi didn’t like how the Dubai situation was handled §i first, hip still managed to grow acbusiom^d to life in EastfoansiM. lÆB Mm I m b S 70 s t e i n / D E S I G N b e t s y e b e r T Y P E n a t a l i e p a t t e r s o n / P H O T O e l l i n a n m Ü m l What is MSU’s reliance on coal doing for the “greenest” university in the Big Ten? ML . II imp Signs of greerl pride are all over campus. Our fight song lays it out - "fight for the only colors, Green and White." Being "Spartan Green" is a familiar description of someone who not only embodies the spirit of Michigan State, but also takes little steps to help the environment. Yet, there is still one black spot amidst this great green tradition - a sooty stain that comes from the 250,000 tons of coal burned each year to heat and power MSU’s campus. ‘ ‘ Alot ofpeople on campus don’t even know we have a coal plant,” junior Talya Tavor, president of Beyond Coal, said. ‘‘They see smoke stacks and they think ‘Oh, smoke stacks’ Period.” Coal is the primary source of energy on campus because of its low cost - it is much more cost-efficient to burn and easier to transport than petroleum or natural gas. Though the campus is also equipped to run on natural gas should its price fall below the price of coal, the latter rarely the difference happens. Still, substantial. in is emissions the Research United States Energy Information Administration shows that a plant burning natural gases expelj up to 70 percent less greenhouse gases than a coal-burning one. conducted by Greenhouse gases, however, are just one of the many unwanted products expelled from a coal burningplant. Airborne pollutants are also a major issue, and the T.B. Simon Power Plant at MSU expelled a whopping 0,239.84 tons of airborne pollutants in 2007. Nevertheless, the bulk of the refuse comes in the form of combustion waste or coal ash, the likes of which are often dumped near a plant site. Those unfortunate enough to live near a dumping site are not only uninformed of their predicament but may also face health problems. According to the Michigan Sierra Club, an NGO committed to state-wide environmental preservation; there are currently ll coal ash and electric in Michigan. dumping sites The United States, however, does not regulate the dumping of combustion waste, and one suchj site maintained by the Lansing Board of Water and Light’s steam generating plants was classified by the state to have caused high lithium levels in water. Waste is also dumped in rivers like the Saginaw River or special dumpingponds, where itcanleak into groundwater and eventually seep into water sources such as the Great Lakes. ^ “Household is more regulated than coal ash," Tavor said. “If you live within a mile ofa dumping site, your groundwater is worse for you than smoking a pack of cigarettes a day And these people don’t even know it. The law does not require the people who dump [ash] to tell the people who are living there that they’re dumping.” trash The T.B. Simon Power Plant;' like all coal burning plants, must find somewhere to dispose of its coal ash. This was once sent to a cement plant in Southeast Michigan, but once the plant was closed, the ash needed to be disposed of elsewhere, “We send as much of it to beneficial reuse as we can,” Gary Mell, a performance engineer at the Simon power plant,¡¡said. “But what can’t go to centers that can reuse it goes to the Granger Landfill in Lansing.” One option for the Simon power plant is carbon recapture - capturing the plant’s carbon emissions with chemicals and storing it so that it does not enter the atmosphere. But even doing so, according to Anne Woiwode, state director of the Michigan Sierra Club, would not solve the ultimate pollution problem. risky and largely untested," Woiwode said. “It’s a terrible exmrse to keep using coal.” “Recapture is Still, the Relatively low cost of energy production is what keeps the coal plant alive. The cost of powering a university with approximately 46,000 energy­ consuming students, plus faculty and at least a hundred buildings, a K I p ■ Sill is astronomical. For the 2008 -2009 fiscal year, the university spent 34.8 million dollars to power the campus. “Coal is the most economical source of power that we have," Mell said. Michigan State has run on coal power since the 1880s, and since then most buildings on campus have been set up to run on a coal system. 1 We have a centralized heating system here,” Mell said. “All the buildings are connected to one! heat provider. In order to heat the university we have to burn something that generates steam.” David Johnson, a professor in the MSU Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, said that a problem with MSU was that the campus requires the production of a large amount of energy per capita. “The Cyclotron (at -the Dc Cyclotron building) itself uses an enormous amount. Replacing that quantity [of energy] would be difficult,” he said. people to reduce their usage for just an hour; to turn off their computers, their windows closed and turn off anything they’re not using. lights, keep on the environment by reducing energy usage, Johnson of the MSU Department of Fisheries and Wildlife advises a number of simple methods. T|ae TRSimon power plant produces all the energy and heat needed to keep the campus mnning by Lummy oral Coal is the most efficient source of energy the university can afford. While switching to greener energy would be far more economical in the long run, the initial investment is too high for the university to consider without imposing | a possible new “green tax” I on students. I "The question is how many students would be willing to pay for a green environment,” Johnson said. Nonetheless, Mell of the Simon power plant said that the plant indeed administration see the need to reduce energy consumption on campus for the sake of the environment. After all, when less energy is required, does Bless coal is burnt. I "We sponsor 'Campus Dim Downs’’ he said.!‘We encourage a "It makes noticeable difference in usage. If we did that every day we would see huge reductions for the year.” The power plant itself, Mell said, is working on ways to reduce coal dependency by improving buildings on campus in order to keep up with the current emissions regulations. specializing "We have people in our in department upgrading buildings on campus to be more energy efficient,’ ’ he said. ‘ We have one or two buildings on campus that are LEED certified internationally-recognized (an green building certification). EPA regulations for emissions keep coming down every year, so we’re working on staying within the permitted limits.” For students passionate about lowering their negative impact it comes “When to energy, you need to stop and ask yourself: What can I do to reduce my energy? Does my phone need to be plugged in? Does the TV need to be turned on?” he said. H‘A surge protector is only 6 dollars, so you can turn things off when you aren’t using them, but you have to make that initial investment.” Spartans are not the only students fighting for a cleaner, greener college. Four out of the 12 Big Ten schools have pledged to reduce their coal consumption, and eventually go coal free. "I just wonder, why not MSU?” Tavor of Beyond Coal said. 129 Vincent said the changes in student social life were disruptive to faculty but the late 60s and 70s, a period of long­ haired men with beards and women in unlaundered sweatshirts and torn jeans, was an exciting time at MSU. “There were changes in the way people dressed, what they did. They It showed the were; demonstrating. students were interested in what was happening politically,” Vincent said. “I think students are less interesting now than they were then, less daring than they were then,” . -.While this time, period was one full of fast-paced change at MSU. it didn’t last long. “I don't know what happened to all those hippies,” Vincent said. “I think the fact that they aren’t around anymore shows that it was just a mindset associated with the times instead of a strongly felt conviction” One thing that led to the decline of The hippie generation,in the late 70s, Vincent said, was sygise in oil prices, downturn of the ecxnomy and a scare that there were no jobs for college toe us of college graduates. ThY graduates became 'You’ve got to get a; job or you'll starve to death.’ English piotesscr Diane Wakoski has been teaching at MSU for 35 years and said she’s seen a change in the academic drive of her Students since the 70s. “Nowkdays, people.; think college is necessary for you to succeed, and I don’t think that's true/ Wakes V said. “Students are here because they have to be. If all kfÉjp1 of paper; then the process means nothing Because of this, at make- students cynical, makes them impatient, irritable. It’s not their fault.” Vincent said it was easier for students gb to school, and this caused them to value their education more than a typical student does now. - “There were a lot of people then who had to work really hard to go to college. Trowbridge Road on a Friday would be packed with hitchhikers trying to get home because they couldn’t afford a car or bus fare,” he said. While faculty may believe students today are academically complacent, some things haven’t changed all that much. From conservative farm boys of the 1910s to hippies of the 1960s, students choose to attend Michigan State to discover who they are and what they want to do with the rest of their lives. And, as the times change, so will the university. “You don’t really notice the changes until you look back. It’s like when you have a kid and you notice when he doesn’t hold your hand when crossing the street anymore’’Vincent said. “If you knew when the last time was, you’d hold that picture in your mind, but you don’t.” liHMI v Vi — 88BBBB k n 91 The trials of third culture kids both in and beyond MSU America - a nation bursting with ideas, innovation and culture. Yes, culture. For many who overlook it on a daily basis, the nation hosts an enormous blend of nationalities, religions^ and traditions. But as the stew thickens in the melting pot, it often becomes difficult to tell what ingredients are thrown in. While an American citizen may define his or her self as Asian-American, African-American or European-American by broad descent, concepts of ethnicity and cultural traditions are easily overlooked. An environment as detrimental to the flourishing of native cultures as America tends to be often gives rise to a brand new "third culture” among certain inhabitants. A "Third Culture Kid” (TCK) is the term used to describe every second-generation American whose ancestral family moved to the United States from another country First coined by American sociologist Dr. Ruth Hill Useem, this term describes a person who has spent a significant part of his or her developmental years outside their parents’ cffiture. Useem came across the idea while on her travels abroad, suggesting that such individuals adopt aspects from their birth culture [first culture] and their new culture [second culture] to form a unique, third culture. The third culture kid,® Useem claimed, builds relationships to all cultures in his or her heritage, while not having full ownership in any This ends up strengthening his or her sense of cultural displacement, or a sense of not knowing where or how to belong. Although exposure to different cultures, anthropology- professor Adan Quan said, is becoming increasingly common as a result of globalization, the third culture kid is still a rare phenomenon. Quan explained that this was due to the term once being specifically applied to a stratified class of people, such as children of military personnel, missionaries and diplomats. However, with progression in trade and expanding world economies, the presence of third culture kids is gradually becoming more frequent within middle- class families. Senior Christlynn Chelladurai, one such individual, is of East Indian descent but was raised in America, Born in Kuwait, Chelladurai came to America in 1993 when her family fled the Gulf War in search of a better life. Having completed most oilier schooling life in Flint, Chelladurai recalled her first experience with a cultural identity crisis. "I went to Grand Blanc high school. It was a rich, posh school,” she said. "Being a predominantly Caucasian high school, it became a serious identity issue when I was one out of the four Indian students there.” Feeling out of place, Chelladurai turned to her one interest at the time S dance. Her practice of traditional Indian dance helped her stay closer to her native roots in a strange new environment, and made her a new friend as well - mother Indian girl at the school who shared a similar passion for the ancient art. Her second experience with cultural displacement, however, occurred when her parents revealed' her Egyptian heritage to her. ■l wasn’t sure who I was. My father always shunned his Egyptian side and I only recently found out that I am part Egyptian,” she said, explaining that as an individual who was only beginning to establish a strong connection lo her East Indian identity in a foreign country the possibility of a second Egyptian identity was a sudden interruption in her process of self-realization. It was only over the past three years that Chelladurai has begun to understand her place in the world with respect to her cultural identity After arriving at MSU, she became a cultural aide in the dorms. This approach, she said, allowed her to interact with people from around the world, helping Iter to overcome the anxiety ofiving at the nexus of multiple cultures. "After becoming a cultural aide, I have begun to considers myself cosmopolitan, more of a citizen of the world. I try to understand that I’m not the only one because there is no one pure race, knowing how much the world has mixed,” she said. Senior Sneha Grandhi is another third culture individual whose parents are neither military personnel nor diplomats. Grandhi moved to America from India when she was twelve years old, and was raised in a small secluded city in Maryland. This was a result of her own choice, she said. Her father presented the choice of two towns, one more culturally diverse and one less so. She chose the latter. "I wanted to see what it’s like, what American culture was like,” she said, stating that it was partly her decision to move to America in the first place. Grandhi said she also felt the need for a sense of belonging growing up,only her approach to overcoming this issue was different. Rather than befriending people who shared the same culture and heritage as she did, she formed friendships based on mutual interests. Steven Gold, a sociology professor at MSU, said that children from another culture who are raised in America tend to conform to the overarching American culture more strongly than they do to their own. "With regard to United States, most immigration surveys suggest that immigrant children lose the ability to talk in their parents’ language,’ ’ Gold said. The fact that English is the lingua franca, he added, only encourages third culture kids and immigrant children to conform. This phenomenon of cultural dilution, however, is not limited to immigrants who arrive in America during their childhood years. Ruslan Mursalzade, an international student at MSU, arrived in Michigan in his junior year of high school on a student exchange program. Originally from the Republic of Azerbaijani Mursalzade said he was able to later apply to MSU due ¿to the fact that his host family lives in Michigan. "Highl school| was challenging simply because in American schools there tend to be more cliques between people.” Mursalzade said, adding that new high school students are more readily welcomed back in his home country Ruslan eventually overcame the experience when his host sister introduced him to her friends. However, §fie explained, there are always challenges he faces with the dual culture identity crisis. ' ‘ In the U. S., things are a little different. Whenever I go back home, people expect me to behave in a certain way I have to change according to my environment,” he said, stating that he would be expected to follow and maintain societal traditions back in Azerbaijan. Mursalzade said he became a cultural aide here at MSU to overcome the overwhelming feelings of alienation he has since experienced, as far away from home as he has been. "That’s why I became a cultural aide;” he said. "I do feel the difficulties of international students and I want to help them transition better.” The ability to adapt easily to different environments, Quan said, is a common trait among third culture kids and adults who experience similar phenomena. David Pollock and Ruth Van Reken, authors of Third Culture Kids, argue that third culture kids belong everywhere and nowhere. Their unique cultural characteristics • might make it difficult for them to connect with those that haven’t shared the same experience, but they also help them become more independent and cosmopolitan. And yet, this uniqueness is also what makes them so familiar. After all, they like many of us regardless of race, status, religion, or creed, are simply searching for a place to belong. t h i b o d e a u / D E S I G N b r e n d a n p r o s t T Y P E k r i t i k a b h a r a d w a j / P H O T O a n t h o n y IIP ■ m j ÍT??; V G GVT i. in * ‘‘’ S|t#Ää.,*... ®- áj*¡, f ' v>> -v BiH ri :3gr ; ’■; " ¡ yf V5^ : ^ : ? U li i|$ I " > / ■». ip ü 11 \ ft é 1 ~c, n*£2; Bill ■ breakinl oundaries Is MSU ready for gender neutral housing? WKmsmi mm, HI HBi ■ 1 W& 1BISSSS59F'''' y *g g $ Mason Chen came to MSU as a freshman and like many other freshmen, he roomed blind. Chen ended up in Akers, in a quad-style room with three other men he didn’t know. But over time, things started to get just a little bit awkward. “I never really talk to any of my roommates. They never liked me, and eventually I figured that it’s because I’m gay” Chen said. "I don’t really mind because I had high school to adjust, but it’s just kind of awkward and I end up hanging out in my friends’ rooms a lot more than in my own.” As Chen’s case illustrates, sharing a room with others of the same sex may not exactly work out for everyone. But surely there are still fundamental differences between the ways guys and girls live, differences that would cause problems were they to live in the same 12x12 dorm room - or are those differences just blown out of proportion? The concept of gender neutral housing at Michigan State has been a topic of debate for a few years now, but much of the progress towards actually offering such an opportunity on campus has only been made in the past few months of the 2010-2011 school year. On Dec. 8, 2010, the Residence Halls Association unanimously voted to support the creation of Gender Neutral Housing options. This was quickly followed by another unanimous RHA vote on Jan. 26 to adopt Gender Neutral MSU, a student-led group spearheading the gender neutral initiative, as an officially-sponsored university organization. Founded in April 2010, the initial sole purpose of Gender Neutral MSU was to bring gender neutral living options to students on campus. The group worked at this by holding discussions and initiating petitions, particularly an online petition to Dr. Lou Anna K. Simon, President of Michigan State, as well as Dr. Denise Maybank andVennie Gore, Vice President of Student Affairs & Services and Assistant Vice President of Residential & Hospitality Services respectively The petition, which stood 485 signatures strong at the time of this article, briefly outlined the need for gender neutral housing and how it would work, Essentially the petition states that Michigan State should adopt a gender neutral housing policy similar to that in place at the University of Michigan and a plethora of other universities across the country Under this system, gender neutral housing would be an ‘ ‘opt-in’’ option. ‘ 'It would just be another option that some students might feel more comfortable with,” co-chair of Gender Neutral MSU Rachel Skylis said, ‘‘No one would ever be forced into it.” Each freshman is required by university policy to live on-campus, and many students remain in the dorms past their freshman year. These Spartans are the ones affected by gender neutral housing and not just the students labeled as "gay” “transgender,” or “intersex.” The reason for the policy is to accommodate students who are uncomfortable about sharing living space with a roommate of the same sex, regardless of the reason for such discomfort. According to the National Student Gender Blind Campaign, a movement that is currently pushing for gender-blind facilities in universities nationwide, the idea of gender neutral housing is not merely preoccupied with questions of gender or sexuality; it’s a matter of “trust and personal choice.” t ; ’ '> ! , , e: rc o b u; b h C & tl 9 g b 0 S1 P ^ 9 o ^ s' h * ^ k F E A T U R E S g e n d e r n e u t r a l h o u s i n g i f Ideally gender neutral housing will be enacted in existing co-ed dormitories with suite or quad-style rooms to minimize. In terms of budgeting, if the housing option were to be enacted as planned, spending would be limited to advertising the housing change and updating the housing forms. Structurally buildings and bathrooms would remain as-is. Because the initiative to create gender neutral housing on campus has always been student-led, Gender Neutral MSU has appealed to the student body for support. On Feb. 10, the student body solidified their stance on the matter as ASMSU, MSU’s student government, passed a bill supporting the creation of gender-neutral housing options. But while turning to such a large and diverse student« body for support might seem like a difficult task, the opposition to gender neutral housing seems to be surprisingly sparse among students. HE’m all for it! I think that in this day and age, it’s almost primitive not to have gender neutral housing,” freshman Ayo Obayan said. “We’re adults, and having the option of gender neutral housing would really move MSU forward.” Other students around agreed with varying amounts of enthusiasm. "Why not? I don’t see anything bad coming from it. t And I like girls,” fellow freshman Xinye Ji said, offering support in a borderline apathetic manner. When asked if he personally would live in gender neutral housing, and what he’d do to support it, Ji answered, “I guess I would. I don’t think I’d really care that much and I don’t really know how I could do anything to support it.” , Some students, while not necessarily against the idea of gender neutral housing, question it from the ! basis of experience. Senior Gillis McCarter spent one of his school years off--campus living with group of female roommates, and he wasn’t eager to repeat the experience. “I didn’t think it’d be a problem, but would I do it again? Never. I think living with one girl might be okay but there was an awful lot of estrogen in that house,” McCarter said. “And you don’t notice all the things that are different about living with girls versus living with guys until you actually do it,” “Girls have a lot of needs, and those needs happen to be different from mine. Don’t get me wrong, I’m still friends with all the girls I lived with, but for the same token, I live in a fraternity now. With guys,” he continued. "Sure, the common room gets messier, but I can get drunk and not have to worry about what’ll happen. It’s nice.” Ultimately each student has their own needs and personal comfort zone, and this understanding rests at the heart of the gender neutral housing issue. Ironically, much of the debate surrounding gender neutral housing focuses solely on analyzing the relationship between men and women, or questioning how sexuality and attraction might affect living arrangements on-campus. These factors may certainly play a role in the success of gender neutral housing at Michigan State and across the country but a more important question remains: is every student comfortable? Just ask Chen, for instance. Would it be easier for him to room with females given his sexuality? "I'd love to live with girls!” he said. “Or at least somewhere less awkward.” CT "D o m o tu m < ifil CD S z 3 U) -JJ n XCU Q 3- -Htu o ^ tu *< 3£U r+ -I 3" Q- O 3 Senior 6} Demmer speaks on behalf of the MSU College Republicans during the dgbate on education. Also present at the dbbate were the MSU College Democrats and the MSU Libertarians. right, left ana center As a new chapter unfolds in Michigan politics, three student groups meet up to duke it out Less than a week after freshman governor Rick Snyder gave his budget recommendation for 2012, others with budding political careers also had a chance to argue their solutions to re-invent Michigan. The MSU College Democrats, Republicans and Libertarians held a debate on education policy—an especially hotly-contested issue on the MSU campus, as Snyder’s budget proposal called for deep slashes in public education funding. True to the nature of politics, some said the pending budget was a step in the right direction; others, not so much. Yet, as is also true to the nature of politics, the debate raised issues, voices, accusations, jabs and bashes from all sides of the aisle. As they say—two’s company and three was certainly a crowd. In a setup that illustrated the evening’s thrust-and-riposte all too well, the Democrats’ table was set farthest to the left, the Libertarians farthest to the right and the Republicans’ was, well, somewhere in the middle. While the Democrats mostly sported pullover sweaters and bright ties, the Republicans preferred full suits, often with American flag pins secured to the lapel The Democrats cried for federal sta dards, the Republicans for states’ rights and the Libertarians for total free market solutions. Of course, both right-leaning teams snuck in a couple of Obama slams and some pointed jabs at the federal deficit. The Libertarians suggested abolishing student loans, saying universities can jack up costs year after year because they are guaranteed money ‘ ‘The Democrats want to solve the problem with more problems, the Republicans want to tinker with a failed system,” a Libertarian representative said in a rebuttal. The Democrats advocated federal incentives programs in education to raise standards. In a true competition there are winners and losers, and we cant afford to be putting out losers,” a Democrat said, outlining the party’s position. Debates like these were new to campus this year. The three groups, in addition to an MSU student socialist group, held the first debate in the fall near the midterm elections in November. Senior Charles CJ ’ Demmer, who debated for the Republican camp, said debates like these give insight into the future of American politics. While social issues may be important now, he said, they will take a backseat as the current college-aged generation matures. The real debate is going to be on the size of government and the sphere of influence on the economy” Demmer said. Sophomore Kyle Safran, who debated with the Libertarians, said the debates can help both students who participate and attend. ‘‘They help students who are unsure of their political leanings,” he said. But seriousness aside, politics is a game—one that can be fun for those interested, especially when there aren’t yet seats to lose, careers to ruin or media frenzies to please. For junior Dylan Miller, who debated with the Democrats, debating is an adrenaline rush— only with style. Somewhere between 30-40 percent of it is being able to dress up nicely” Miller said. With just a few seconds left during the debate’s intermission, Demmer rolled the sleeves of his oxford shirt past his elbow and stared at Joe Duffy president of the MSU College Democrats, I will decimate you,” he taunted jokingly invoking laughs from other participants and the audience. And as the night drew to a close, Demmer also had a few choice parting words for his opponents. We will meet again,” he said. “Just you wait until gun rights time." Head debate coach Will Repko introduces the MSU College Republicans, MSU College Democrats, and MSU Libertarians. Students reached out to Repko to oversee the debate because he has been a staff representative for several student debates in the past. “They [debates! help students who are unsure of their political leanings." -Kyle Safran, sophomore jSM Sophomore Cody Hibbs argues on behalf of the MSU College Republicans. This was the second debate that Hibbs has participated in on campus. Senior Andrew Walker argues on behalf of the MSU Libertarians during the debate on education. The debate focused on budget cuts for public education in Michigan. i ■ Si «■■■■MB III jumpr Williarn Rosetos and sophomore Julian Gimpuer perform simultaneous fM? of||® wall. /Rosetos and Gimmler were among the more /experienced members of East Lansing Parkour. a leap in the park East Lansing Parkour practices, teaches members urban free-flow on campus It’s a gorgeous Sunday afternoon at MSU durirlg the early fall, Almost weekend afternoons go, the campus is relatively dormant, save for the small group of people scaling walls and doing back flips outside the Geogjdphy Building. TheyYe practicing parkour, a French sport, which translates as “covering distance,” The objective in this spoil is simple: Get to any location as efficiently as possible. As countless YouTube videos of the sport /will show, this process involves anything from rolling, leaping and flipping over walls, ledges and rooftops. However, Christopher Price, the founded of East Lansing Parkour (the group that practices at MSU), said such online displays are sometimes exaggerated. “You get the people that watch the YouTube video and they’re like, ‘Hey I’m going to go jump off this roof,’ ” Price, a senior at MSU, said. “I’ve been training for four years and the only time I’ve jumped between roofs was my first day and quite frankly it was the dumbest thing ever.” Given that parkour requires a lot of training and discipline, Price said a lot of people either stick with ’ it or quit early on. On this particular day there were plenty of newcomers that showed up, and Price took them through basic warm-ups and a few laps around the Geography Building before leading them through a series of.- rolls and scoops (squatting down and moving with hands and feet). These proved difficult for the novices, though a lot of them appreciated the patience shown by the leaders. “It’s pretty cool so far.I like the guys that are leading, how they’re so ready to teach us,” said newcomer and freshman Austin Dunyak, who had previous experience practicing parkour in his hometown of Kalamazoo. Price then led the group over to the garden west of the Kresge Art Center, where he demonstrated running up a wall and sliding across its length as he hung off it. The practical aspect of parkour, he said, was a huge draw for him. ‘Oavid Belle [one of the founders of the sport] was originally a fire fighter, so this [parkour] was to be used to get through a burning building to someone and help that person,” he said. Junior William Rosetos, a regular with the club, said police officers were also learning parkour to help them chase down suspects. He conceded, however, that parkour was much more than just a way of getting around quickly “Parkour originated more as an art of urban free­ flow and how you move with your environment,” Rosetos said. “It’s not forceful, you’re not fighting anything, you’re more in tune with it and you just kind of free-flow through your environment.” Unfortunately it’s a little harder to free-flow through the environment if you run into it. While practicing wall vaults over a small half-wall later on, junior Julian Gimmler’s knee collided with the wall in mid-vault, producing an audible scrape and causing everyone to flinch. His knee started to bleed, but the parkour veteran was only embarrassed that he messedilp on a simple move. Price moved fast, though, and helped make sure Gimmler’s wound was treated. As that incident, along with the first-timers’ struggles demonstrates, parkour isn’t just for anyone that was impressed by aYouTube video. “It’s a very physically demanding activity and so you are very fit and very healthy if you train for any amount of time,” Price said. Maybe if MSU students can survive the training, as well as a few menacing half-walls, they can turn parkour into a weekly fitness routine and learn some cool flips and leaps along the way àiparkour originated more as an art of urban free-flow and how you move with your environment. -William Rosetos, junior m m mmm Hi I IÉII HSUl -‘4M*. 1C Senior Christopher Price demonstrates a wall vault to one of the new members. Price spent most of the day going over basic parkour moves such as rolls and scoops.^ ill l l I ■i m m wmm. mm, mm wm I IH HI . I |i| i - J I HHHI mmmm H Sophomore Julian Gimmler shows off his parkour Battle wound. Gimmler tried to vault over a short wall in front of the Kresie Art Center. Freshman Austin Dunyak practices running up the wail. The jump up the wail requires the right footing and perfect timing to plant it. Sophomore Kelly Whalen reloads her compound bow outside of the Demmer Center. The Archery Club is dominated by females, but the officers axe trying to get the club to appeal t'o more males. Freshman Aaron Kozikowski reloads his compound bow on the outdoor in o ■ sr Archers, many of them newcomers, line up to take their shots inside the Demmer Center. The club always welcomes new members and many of the officers are certified trainers. right on target Archery Club at MSU/^xpands rapidly thanks to Demmer Center Despite the Archery Club’s/iong history of success, which includes a Ibngthy list of All- American athletes and National Championship winners, it certainly didndieel like an actual sports club to junior Cara Easterbrook when she joined in her freshman year/ ‘ 'We were shooting downstairs in the basement of IM West in a hakvray next to a basketball court that had a starrwelkdown at the other end, and hissing pipes in thp/other end,” Easterbrook, now a club instructoiymcalled with firm distaste in her voice. ‘‘It wasjust like shooting in a pit. It was horrible.” “Die problem with our club was that it was only individuals that would practice by themselves. To me, that was so stupid. I wanted practices. I wanted meetings. I wanted community I wanted new people to teach,” she said. « The debut of the $3.5 million Demmer Center in October 2009, however, opened doors to bigger and better things for the organization. Named in honor of alumni John and Marnie Demmer, the complex was designed to house both the Archery Club and the Rifle and Pistol Club, as well as serve as an indoor and outdoor range open to the community beyond MSU. With an appearance at this year’s Sparticipation, as well as Easterbrook’s and junior Jennifer Shelden’s presences as certified instructorsithe club’s popularity is expanding. Despite having their first meeting on a Sunday morning at 8:30 a.m. after the big football win against Notre Dame on Sept. 18, 15 interested people still showed up. That number grew to 24 during the following week’s meeting. Though the Archery Club largely consists of members interested in practicing shooting, they also prepare a competitive team. The MSU Archery Team competes out of the North Region, which sports a sparse population of archery teams, and is the only group in Michigan that competes at a collegiate level. “The northern regions would have Purdue, us and three people from Ohio State, so it’s mainly 20 archers at most,” Easterbrook said, describing the turnout at the annual regional tournament held at Purdue. “Everywhere around the country it would be 100 archers.” Despite MSU's small stature in archery there may still be potential for big talent. The team sent three archers to the U.S. Intercollegiate Archery Championships last year in Texas, where sophomore Eric Easterbrook Beaudry finished in the top 30, and Shelden made All-American status. finished 14th, The goals of the club, however, still remain very basic. Easterbrook and her officers are in the process of recruiting and training as many new people as possible, hoping to improve commitment to the team. Still, beginners won’t just be relegated to the practice squad. With the exception of the USIAC, regular members of the club are welcome to compete at the Regionals at Purdue and the Indoor Nationals held at the Demmer Center. “If they are comfortable shooting, everyone is welcome to participate,” junior Sam Bowles, a regular member and club officer, said. “We don’t have tryouts.” Right now, Easterbrook hopes she can salvage the gold mine of talent available at MSU and restore glory to the archery program. “We took this club, which was nothing, literally underground, and brought it to Demmer,” she said. 44 we took this club, which was nothing, literally underground, and brought it to demmer.’ -Cara Easterbrook, junior 143 ml - m m 44 n mit was intense going into a shootout... it was a really exciting Cjj 3 m 6 m -Alex Gammicchia, sophomore Sophomore Chris Haxnadek takes a breather on the bench during the season openeSagainst CMU. The game was very- fast paced, forcing the players to use strength and teamwork to win. Junior goalie J.J. Griffith and junior Andrew James guard the goal from the Chippewas. Griffith and James played for the A-Team, which defeated CMU. ie hockey team emerges victorious at season opener After a slow first half, it was down to five shots to determine the winner. As both teams set their players up to shoot, a nervous silence fell across the arena. The stadium wasn’t packed with fans, but a surge of excitement shot through the bleachers as the final penalty shot slipped past the goalie and into the net. With three shots into the goal, the Spartans had won their season opener. There weren't any announcers or high profile sponsors, but on the evening of Oct. 1, MSU’s own inline hockey team brought Demonstration Hall to life as they battled the Chippewas of Central Michigan University on home turf and walked away victorious. The team, which consists of 13 men I 4 players with a goaltender at any one time - usually plays out of state. But this time, their first game of the season was played right here in East Lansing. "We like to travel, but it’s better to play here,” junior Gordon Johns, who plays defense for the- Affeam, said. "We have a really slippery rink, so when other teams come they’re sliding all over. It makes us a much better team.” After an intense opening, the team won their game at the season opener with a score of 6-4. "We started strong, but were down three to nothing,” Johns said. "We came back to tie the game, and it went into a five-man shootout.”« The team had only had a few practice sessions before their first standoff with the Chippewas, but were brimming with confidence, thanks to great ' camaraderie and a history of success—including two Midwest Collegiate Roller Hockey League (MCRHL) championship wins under their belts. "This was the first test of our team,” sophomore Alex Gammicchia said. "It was intense going into a shootout, but we played really well. It was a really exciting game.” But this match was only one of many exciting games the team has had in its past. “We got a $900 bid to go to Nationals last year," Johns said. "We usually play regional, but thal game was in California.” Still, even at the lower-profile games, the action can get pretty fast-paced. "Games can actually get pretty competitive," Gammicchia said. "It’s fun to both watch and play” | The season opener at Demonstration Hall may not have been a national competition, but there were certainly a fair number of enthusiasts sitting in the stands. Gammicchia said he hopes to see even more MSU students coming out to support their team in the future. "We get more fans every year,” Gammicchia said. "But the more who know about it and come out, the better.” ! ;.o. sis'"r- y&m x H| mm Senior jSeph Boardman speeds toward the puck to keep it in the tianc.;.; of the Spartans. Boardman and his teammates generally travel put If state to play other teams in the region. Senior Steve Koch guards the goal for the B-team. Only the A-team was victorious over the Chippewas in the season- Ppener at Demonstration Hall. i think that's a great thing, as a student, to have the resources to irgue a case and go up against the university j£ 11 VII v# j nonrJ tn IIWWVJ \ v V ■ ^ -Bryan Beck, junior I3BP **«*¡¡2 Director of Student Defenders and senior James DeMate® researches® case. The Student Defenders are allowed to prepare clients for a judicial board hearing and show up with them at the hearing, but are nil allowed to sdbak on behalf of their client. Andrew Blcip^^^ciate director of the Student Defenders, worksPn a case. The pbpartment usually carriH around six defenders, and mdiftof them draw their experience from their pre-law or James Madison backgrounds. S T U D E N T I I O R G A N Z A T O N S s t u d e n t Senior James D|ptates, director of Student Defendeig prepares for a case. The Student Defenders'meet with their clients to work out thab^®)ssible way to settle a case-, . whetheruhat be a settlement outSraourt or an actual hearing in front of a judicial board. d e f e n d e r s ice for all nt Defenders assist students in hearings despite limited abilities While the Student Defenders’ goal is to help students facing a conflict with the University; the counsel’s activity is restricted in one key area: at the hearing the student has to address the judicial board alone. The Student Defenders, a department in the Associated Students of MSU, is comprised mostly of pre-law students from James Madison who are trained to help students facing a charge from the university. issues These university cases such as academic integrity and grade disputes, among others. The defenders help students through the process, prepare them for the hearing and work on reaching a settlement. involve However, if the case is heard in front of a judicial board, the student is required to speak on his or her own, as the defenders are not allowed to plead the case to the judicial board onbehalf ofthe student, arule made by the Judicial Affairs Office, which oversees the judicial board hearings. Senior James DeMates, director of the Department of Student Defenders, said this can be intimidating for students who aren’t used to the judicial process. DeMates explained that if a student is accused of drinking in a dorm, the hall director would be the one to press charges, meaning that the student goes up against someone who has been through the process before. “They’ve done'this a hundred times; they know exactly what they’re doing,” he said, referring to the example of the hall director. “Who are they against? Two students, maybe like you, who have no interest in public speaking and no real way to defend themselves. It’s putting a seasoned opponent against novices.” Rick Shafer, the associate director of Student Life oversees Judicial Affairs and disagrees that the counsel is limited, arguing that the disciplinary process is meant to teach students to be responsible the Judicial Affairs’ citizens. However, legitimacy behind their mission statement may be questioned due to the way they carry out their hearings. Junior and student defender Bryan Beck said that at individual hearings, the judicial board is usually unfair to students. “I’ve personally had cases where the student would try to go up against the board, especially when it’s a grade dispute, and the teacher ends up being on the board, and that’s a little biased. When that person’s on the board itself, it kind of makes it difficult to sway the board’® opinion,” Beck said. and The Judicial Affairs Office has come under fire for its infractions of student civil rights in the past. In 2008, ASMSU found that Shafer was permitting “unauthorized judicial boards” that “were convening disciplinary hearings students,” according to a press release on the ASMSU website. Shafer attempted to cover up the unauthorized boards by shredding “student judicial files,” but was told to stop after MSU administrators and ASMSU officials opened an investigation. Shafer would not comment on the situation. sanctioning Although’ DeMates said most cases brought to the Student Defenders are usually settled without a hearing, he the believes Student Defenders from doing their jobs, which is to help students. Judicial Affairs prevents “It’s kind of like an attorney being hired for somebody but the attorney can’t do anything, and the person who hired the attorney has to say everything on their own,” Beck said. Despite its limited role, the group works no prepare students for hearings. Beck said the Student Defenders are still the best option for students looking for help. ‘ ‘It’s a great idea for students and people who really don’t know where to go,’ ’ he said. “I think that’s a great thing, as a student, to have the resources to argue a case and go up against fie university if they need to.” 147 as spartans, we're a family, that's why i chose to come lend a hand." students helping students -Courtnie Coppernoll, sophomore The MSU Food Bank helps Teed students living off campus with donations from local vendors The Olin Health Center’s cafeteria can get quite chaotic every other Wednesday. Green plastic bags piled on tables nearly to the height of The students who placed them there. An abundance offresh food and students crowding into the tiny room tbxcollect donated groceries. The scene is, in other words, just another typical evening at the MSU Food Bank. Located inside Olin Health Center, the food bank has been providing students with essential groceries sinceft 993. “A group of students and some of the staff at Olin saw a need for supplemental food support among students,” Nate Smith-Tyge, director of the food bank, said. "The food bank has been student-run since it started. It’s a way for other students who don’t have financial concerns or who live in a residence Sail to help other sfjdents.” Smith-Tyge said that the food bank was initially set up for graduate students with financial issues, but is now being taken advantage of by students of all levels. Approximately 250 students come to the food bank on any of its fortnightly distribution days, he said, to collect an assortment of groceries, including pasta, cereal, fresh produce, bread and nonperishable goods. The operation purchases; most of its food from the Capitol Area Red Cross, but also depends on donations from the greater Lansing and MSU community The MSU Dairy Store provides cheese, the Lansing Garden Project provides fresh produce, while delicatessens Panera Bread Co. and Breadsmith provide grain products. According to Food Bank Operations Manager and senior Samantha Hansen, students simply need to be currently-enrolled and live off campus to qualify for aid from the food bank. She also pointed out that the food bank is completely student-operated. "It’s a win-win with student volunteers,” she said. “The volunteers get a good feeling and they know they’re helping someone else out, and that they could be in their situation.” Students have an opportunity to volunteer at the food bank during the fall and spring semesters, according \to Smith-Tyge. Several student groups, including the Fqod Science Club, the National Society of Collegiate Scholars, the Spartan Civilian Club, the Psychology Club>Lambda Chi Alpha, and the MSU Pompon Team have afrqady volunteered at the food bank, or plan to do so sometime during either semester. "It’s allx^bout building a community amongst students, fronbinternational students to undergrads to grads,” Smith-Tybje said. "We’re all in this together.” First-time voluhteer and sophomore Courtnie Coppernoll held a simfiar viewpoint. "We understand thaNsome aren’t as privileged as others,” she said. "But as Spartans, we’re a family That’s why I chose to come lend a hand.” The main goal of the foockbank, Smith-Tyge said, was to provide supplemental support to help people get by from week-to-week. ‘ ‘I just hope to ease some financial pressures so students don’t have to worry about the basics of lifekhe said. ‘ ’That gives students more time to focus on the primary reasom,. why they’re at MSU: academics,” Indeed, senior Kelly Smith, a regular visitor atdhe food bank, certainly has no complaints about its missiorn "The food bank just really helps me out grocery- wise,” she said. “We’re college students. We’re all poor\ Volunteers hand over green grocery bags to various students inside the Olin Health Center cafeteria. Students of all ages' come to the food bank. S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S f o o d I b a n k ■ — —a mmmmmmmssmm Doctorate student Rami Halloush and senior Fareaffl Jamalifard enjoy the catered food at Aladdin Night. Thej boyllat under, atent set up by the Arab Cultural .Society in Auditorium Field for the party or' ‘haflah’ ’ in Arabic, i feel like when people think of arabic they don’t associate it with parties, but honestly, arabic parties are the best parties i’ve ever been to.” -Joey Khalil, junior Freshmen Navmeet Dhillon and Ashley Wilson sit under the ■tent set up in Auditorium Field for Aladdin Night. The party was the final celebration of the Arab Cultural Society’s nevM educational month this year. S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S a r a b I c u l t u r a l s o c i e t y ■ ess, embracement The Arab Cultural Society turns a week of education into a month of celebration *^-Last year, the Arab Cultural Society or ACS, spent a week in October promoting Arab awareness on campus. This year, the sociebMook the entire month to embrace Arab culture. “You say AIDS awareness or cancer awareness, and we’re not a plague,” senior and chairperson" of the group Shereen Hamed said. “We changed it to Arab Culture Month because that’s what we’re doing, we’re embracing the culture.” To kick off the month’s festivities, the society handed out Arab breakfast food at The Rock and hosted an Arabic language night. ACS also invited filmmaker Jackie Salloum to show her documentary about the Palestinian hip-hop movement. But the grand finale of ACS’s new celebratory month was Aladdin Night, a party or “haflah” in Arabic, under a tent in Auditorium Field on Oct. 22. The party is coined Aladdin Night not because it’s themed after the Disney movie, but because the character is memorable and sticks in student’s heads, said junior and member of the society’s executive board Joey Khalil. This was the fourth year the group put on the party KjTt brings everyone together. It’s not the usual party where everyone’s getting trashed,” senior Emin Yelizarov said, “Music, food and people, what else do you need?” Yelizarov and a friend, senior Manzur Moidunny were amongst a large group of people overflowing out of the party's small, packed tent. Amid a fog of strawberry smoke and scents of tabcXffi, kibbeh and fattoush, a crowded mess of Arab and^ non-Arab students,lalumni and faculty mingled and danced to DJ Dani, a well-known DJ in the Dearborn area. An estimated 120 people came and went throughout the night, said Khalil, who is Lebanese. \I feehlike when people think of Arabic, they donTsassociate it with parties, but honestly, Arabic partiesNare the best parties I’ve ever been to,” Khalil saick “They have these notions in their mind of what it is, and I feeTffke when people actually come to these events and see what we’re about, people will start to see thahwhat you had was a perceived notion was actually nbt the case,” he said. Khalil said Arab culrare actually encompasses a range of religions and nationalities, despite the common conception that Arabs are solely Muslim and from one or two countries. Many people in the group are Christian and cormirom all around the Middle East, he said. And on this night, the Arab community and non-Arabs gathered as one to celebrate ACS’s educational month. “It’s just to create diversity and promote a sense of cultural understanding,” Hamed said. “You know maybe if we can find it for ourselvesy maybe other people and other Arabs on campus can find the same thing.’ ’ Freshman Natalie Yousif, sophomore Lana Raouf and sophomore Farah Dubaybo eat and mingle at Aladdin Night. Though the night wasn’t themed after the Disney movie, it uses the popular character's name in order to be memorable to those who attended. Students and faculty grab some food to celebrate Arab culture on Aladdin Night. The night, hosted by the Arab Cultural Society was in its fourth year running. mm Junior coxswain Meagan Meldrim shouts orders to a men's crew as they slash through the water on Grand River during the team's fall regatta- the Head of the Grand. All of MSH®boa1§' had different name's, such as The Resolute, Blind Faith and Bucephalus. we've stepped right up into contention with every team and i feel like that gives us more hype." -Marc Mens, senior I 1 S T U D E N T I I O R G A N Z A T O N S c r e w c l u b 01 “O =T X oi o James Bosko, sophomore Tyler Sylvester andftarrison Ehrlich slice through Grand River in synchronized fashion with their team. Though the men did not win their annual Head of the Grand Regatta, they placed boats in second and third against top-notch rowing teams like the University of Michigan. Sophomore Bradley Despins warms up on the water with his team before a race. Teamwork is one of the most essential parts of having a synchronized and successful crew. down on port Thé7MSU Crew Club hosts the Head of the Grand Regatta practices are held daily at 6 a.m. and again in the afternoon. ‘ Well, every coach is supposed to say you’re supposed to win, right?” Bailey said. “We just want to take opr prograrjrfrorn where it was, which was a little bit down in the pgÉ few years, with kids not being as successful, to making it to finals.” /" Bailey said that in 2009, the team put four boats into the /finals at the Dad Vail Regatta, the largest intercollegiate rowing event in the country despite having put in just one the previous year. They also put in seven boats, a full squad, at the Club National Rowing Championship that same year. These two races are the biggest events of the year for crew clubs and are the best yardsticks for club improvement, so in terms of competitiveness, Bailey said his team had a great past season. If the team consistently places boats in the finals this year, he said, the wins will start to come. More important than winning, though, is the cooperation that gets a team to the finish line. In a sport where being level, smooth and synchronized are the main goals, crew members said that working together is key “Everyone relies on everyone else—it’s a team thing. If one person gives Up it affects everyone else,” sophomore and novice team member Kaitlyn Beels said. “You spend a lot of time with those same people, because a lot of it is teamwork—you’re all pushing each other—and a lot of it is learning each other’s flow and stroke and learning each other’s balance and tendencies,” Mens said. “All in all, I think our team is a really big family? ’ I S3 Man O’ War’s black hull cut through the flowing waters of Grand River as oars splashed in tandem along its sides. Named after one of the greatest thoroughbred racehorses of all time, the sleek, black shell is one of the MSU Crew Club’s best boats and piloted by the varsity men’s heavyweight crew. On the morning of Oct. 17, the crew launched Man O’ War into the Grand River in Grand River Park for their annual Head of the Grand Regatta, a 4,000 meter race':7 Though the race is normally an initiation for the teams novices—those in their first year of rowing—the University of Michigan, Grand Valley State University Michigan Tech University and Northern Michigan University/came to compete this year, drastically raising the stakes. “Michigan and Grand Valley are usually really high society schools—leaps and bounds ahead of us. But just in the last year we’ve narrowed that gap by a lot,’’ senior Marc Mens said, adding that theirbwn boat beat Grand Valley’s last year. / “So, we’ve stepped right updhto contention with every team and I feel like that givgfr us more hypeihe said. The team has definitely^ improved a great deal since head coach Mike Baileybame in and ‘ ‘turned the program around," Mens said. / Bailey came from a successful crew program at the University of Wi^bonsin, where he was an assistant coach intermittently jUt 20 years. He said he tries to implement the techniques from his old program into the MSU team. I PersonaHwBailey said he puts in almost 7 0 hours a week: team ar - ài ling the vibe Students and organizations get together to share different cultural dances While many students may have tripped over Bieir two left feet, fallen on their friends and occasionally even on their faces, the dance instructors flowed through each step and twist with practiced ease, Such was the scene at The Vibe, a saltatory free-for- all at the old Abbot Cafeteria on Oct. 21, where various student organizations showcased a plethora of dance styles, Attendees included members of the Breakdance Club, Culturas de las Razas Unidas, the MSU Ballroom Dance Club, and the Capoeira Club. Approximately 40 students gathered in the cafeteria to watch the performances, perhaps with hopes of picking up a few new moves for weekend parties. Devin Evans, a cultural aide at the Snyder-Phillips residence halls, however, had some thoughts of his own for the event. “I hope people will start to respect other peoples’ ways and cultures. We wantedjjo represent different cultures at the event and give students a multi-cultural experience,” he said. One of the more fascinating performances that night was Capoeira, a Brazilian dance-martial art hybrid. An art with a uniquely infectious style, Capoeira was created by slaves to help them escape from slavery To disguise what they were really up to, they integrated combat moves into a dance form. "Music is a key component to the Brazilian dance,” Kevin “Forca” Hendrickson, the Capoeira group instructor, said. "You cannot perform a dance by yourself; you need people to dance with, people to play instruments, and people to clap.” Hendrickson also explained to the students that Capoeira is a national sport in Brazil and has since b^en ibraced across continents and cultures. Dance mov§ asèqciated with Capoeira have even translated into manyvof the moves seen in hip-hop dancing. ‘ ‘It’s agreat way to build strength, balance, and grace,’ ’ Hendrickson said. The MSlJBallroom Dance Club showed the crowd how to do the Mamba, Rumba, and Salsa, and coached the crowd with easypteps such as, “Back, side, together.” While some students still tripped up despite the instruction, others glided smoothly across the dance floor with ease and grace. Junior David Clatterbuck, a club member, thought The Vibe was a good waydo learn and connect with fellow classmates on the danceRoor. "Dancing with the Stars is a popular show on TV and people watch it. We thought it wouldbe cool to come out 'here, put on a similar performance, arid teach everyone a few steps,” he said. Evans took over the dance floor towards the end of the night to showcase a few different styles ohhe famous Hustle. As though connecting to something familiar, the crowd perked up again for one last dance, as Evàps putì a twist on the steps by setting it to the John LegencRhit, “Give Me the Green Light ”, Freshman Molly Lester said that she enjoyed! experimenting with different dance styles. "I was pretty good at ballroom dancing because I used to do it when I was little. I kept hitting people in the face when trying to do the Capoeira, and the Hustle was something I already knew,” she said. A member of the Break Dance Club displays some cool and technical moves to the students. The Break Dance Club performed at The Vibe, and although many students are familiar with this form of dance, some say it was the most difficult. i S| m S? S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S b I "it's a great way to build strength, balance, and grace. -Kevin Hendrickson, Capoeira instructor ■■■I m c a p o e i r a c l u b , c u l t u r a s d e l < o ^ (£> ÍÍ! o “ in ÍM m ¡¡¡If. life HI Wmlm Vl^H — H ÍÜ Hi a i i Ml a i flj H While wearing the traditional outfit, one of the cultural aids running the event performs a form of the Salsa called Aquascalientas. TheVibHdisplayed and opened up many different cultural dances to the 40 students who were eager to learn. The Capoeira Club startsjjff their perfbrmanc|§ in a still and stiff stance. They performed at Thll/ibe to help display a cultural-based dance and help students understand the message behind Capoeira. , • I ■ ÉSS junior Jesse 'Wiza DJs for the Impa^ Wiza described her favorite pa®! of working for the Impact as meeting hSU interviewing local musicians, impact media Student radio station provides campus with an alterative to mainstream music here, you have the freedom to pursue your own personal interests and see within yourself your ability:' -Autumn Maison, senior the Winning title of the Michigan Association of Broadcaster’s Number One College Radio Station of the Year 10 years in a row isn’t easy Yet Michigan State’s campus radio station, Impact 89FM, has done just thdt. According to general managèr and telecommunications professor Gary Reid, the Impact has had profound .success due to their motto: “diversity improgramming, professionalism and educational^ in présentation Student radio beg^n at MSU in the 1950s. Reid stepped in as general manager in 1989, and the Impact we know today was born. Today ¡avariety of music and talk shows are ^broadcast to campus and the greater Lansing area. “WeJve always prided ourselves on professionalism. After 10 years, I think it bedomes a culture of success that everyone .tries to uphold,” he said. “We’re not just /kids screwing around.” . The Impact airs 24-hours-a-day sevenS days-a-week, 365-days-a-year, The station has 47 DJs on air and 50 to 60 sadents behind the scenes. However, what’s unique about the station is that it’s completely student .run and organized. “My job is to allow them to do what they want to do. I make sure it’s legal, but I challenge the students to be the best they can,” Reid said. Music director and senior Autumn Maison began at the Impact as a sophomore with a shift from 2-6 a.m. on weeknights. “It was kind of stressful, yes.l was tired' a lot, yes,” she said. “But I stuck with it because I loved it and I knew that this was an opportunity to work with the equipment and people who were passionate about radio.’ ’ Talk radio is featured six nights a week, with a different focus for each day On Tuesday nights, the Impact reflects on MSif events and student issues, including a/ piece called Sexposure. Through a "partnership with .Olin Health Center, the show features an open discussion about sexual health. “The host for every show gets to decide what they want to talk about. They have complete control,” Maison said. “Here, you have the freedom to pursue your own personal interests and see within yourself your ability” Maison, who hosts the show, said Impact’s music is selected with the help of a music review team and the station's listeners on the Sunday night show Sit or Spin, in which a music panel and viewers vote on music to be played. The Impact upholds its motto of diversity with various programs. Asian Invasion,! broadcast on Monday evenings, features popular music from China, Japan and Korea. Other music shows throughout the week focus on blues, folk, electronic, metal, hip- hop, punk, new wave, ska and indie music. “All the music is filtered through a lot of people with different musical tastes,’ ’ DJ and junior Jesse Wiza said. iThen the music is put into a huge digital log that selects the songs to be played that day It’s just like a real radio station.” Local bands are often featured on the station in a special segment called The Basement. Additionally, bands such as Frontier Ruckus, The Hard Lessons and Chris Bathgate have performed live in the Impact studio, according to Maison. Reid hopes that, with a motivated staff, the Impact will be able to survive and conquer through a new age of digital music media. ‘ ‘The biggest issue is remaining relevant,’ ’ he said. “Our desire is to be a trusted friend that provides new music; music that’s going to be the next big thing. We like to think of ourselves as impact media.” Senior DavidYuan works with the soundboard on a Monday night. AH the DJs at the Impact are student volunteers and the Organization is complet||||student run. IQ "T? □ n> m ui m S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S i m p a c t I 8 9 f m sword-wield ers MSU FencinoXlub- a national force to be reckoned with Behold an MSU sports team that finished fonnh in the nation two years ago, lost 10 of its 18 sinners, and yet, improved to third last year. It’s not erne of the big three revenue sports, or any of the ojber varsity sports. The MSU Fencing club team is hie source of this success, and the highly regarded fencing program has only gotten better in the past fewyears. Fencing used to be a varsityhsport at MSU, bdt it was dropped to club statuydn 1997 as parDdf a national movement of universities devoting/more money toward larger sports programs. ftfow the club relies on open tryputs, which bring ihprimarily people who are newto fencing. Accordingto the MSU Fencing website, TjBpercent of the traveling team last year had no expérience before joining the club. Sol how does theiencing team turnmovice fencers into national contenders in the scope of a year? “We’vgoeen blessed with a seriously excellent coachmg staff in the pasbcouple years,” senior Will Bonnér said, the menhffoil squad captain as well as thginen’s overall teapicaptain. ‘‘How many basketball teams lose half thpir roster and improve? So, hats off to our coachinq^taff for helping turn decent fencers into good oneS^’ The fencing club is led by the team captains, one for each/Of the three weapon squads (saber, epee and fojljfor both men and women. The captains lead driUpand dictate practice, but the five coaches give orie-on-one lessons with fencers to further improve gneir skill and simulate fencing bouts. The coaches are current fencers in the United States Fencing Association and all have high marks for each weapon, - as rated by the USFA. Head Coach Dan Bock and his staff began two years ago, leading the club to its fourth place finish at the Club Fencing Championships. MSU was the No. 1 club team in the Midwest Fencing Conference that year, beating varsity teams such as Ohio State and Notre Dame, which sometimes feature Olympic athletes. While MSU Fencing has an impressive history— once coached by Charles Schmitter for 45 years, who was considered the first American master of fencing— the last few years have really seen a jump up for the chxo. ‘‘I would say we sort of modernized the technique wmiere,” Bock said, an MSU College of Law graduate and a former captain of the fencing team at Michigan. "They have really stepped up and done a lot of research to modernize practice.” m Bock said part of this modernization included students competing more outside the club in USFA circuits, which initiated the use of electronic scoring equipment for competitions. The fencers hit the gym in IM West four times a week from 8-10 p.m., but often stay later to hone their craft. After 30 minutes of performing various exercises that leave them sweating, they don the insect-like masks and white-clothed body armor—a traditionl dating back to when a touch on an opponent would be marked by the charcoal smear from the weapon. They practice a series of drills and mini-bouts to help to improve their footwork, which Bock estimates is 95 percent of being a good fencer. "Compared to our other competition, we’re pretty athletic,” Bonner said. “We do a lot of footwork exercises. We win a lot of bouts with people that are more experienced or better than us by trying harder, working harder and getting a little lucky” While Bonner doesn’t want to rule out the inevitable Thought of reaching a national championship this year, he‘s still worried about the improving strength of other clubs and his team’s overall consistency between the different squads. However, in the fencing world, there’s no question that MSU’s club is commanding respect from its peers. "I’d like to think that we’re a respected club team, and maybe a little feared,” Bonner said. Freshman Zach Girouard and sophomore Kendra Siegersma go head-to-head during fencing practice. While most of the practice involvesspecific drills, fencers get the chance to square off, often hooking up to an electronicEcoring system used in competitions. Sophomore Chelsea Champlin warms up the women’s epee squad. Many of the fencers described epee fencing as the marathon of the three weapon categories because the bouts last ||>nger and it’s harder to land hits. Fencing Club warms up with a variety of exercises to The improve conditioning and footwork. The coaches of the club say that footwork is 11 percent of fencing. Td like to think that we’re a respected club team, and maybe a little feared.” -Will Bonner, senior m a The flag of Israel mancl^n a table at Israel pest. Participants were immersed in many aspects ofjewish and Middle Eastern culture. Freshman Mia Gordon and Freshman Danny. Fresh experience the tastes of Israel. Along with food, students were able to learn about Israel’s environmental achievements and snaglbme Dead Sea products. I ?r -h o -< \ m O D m tn ST o ~ z m cr "o S Si CO CD CD Vi a- o CD H O 3 S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S m s u I h i l l e l it’s for everyone to see all tne good parts ofisrael- not just the problems." -Sam Appel, junior Students who attended Israel Fest were offered free music, food, T-shirts and fun. But beyond material goods, they were also given the opportunity to explore a culture much different than that of the United States, as well as to talk with other students who have a passion for sharing the richness of that culture. ■Junior Sam Appel, coordinator of Israel Fest, was one of these students. The goal of this event, he said, was to highlight the many cultural accomplishments of the nation of Israel. "We want to inform the MSU community of all that Israel has to offer,” Appel said, fits culture, its technology its environmental achievements; there are so many great things that people don’t know much about.” "We put on this event so people can enjoy good food, fun times, and maybe even learn a little bit,” he said. The year 2010 marked the sixth annual event put on by the MSU Hillel, a Jewish student organization, and the Associated Students of MSU. For seniors Jared Hocking and Zach Simons, who formerly worked for Hillel and helped to put on the event, Israel Fest’s message was much more than a simple showcase ofjewish culture. "Each booth represents a differenipart of Israeli Hocking said. "Everything from Israel’s environmental accomplishments to free beauty products and food; there’s a lot to experience.” Though Israel’s population is 76 percent Jewish and the event was sponsored by HillelKsrael fest appealed to a broad spectrum of students. One booth offered free Henna tattoos, and another was giving away Dead Sea beauty products. At another booth, students interested in Israel’s green contributions were able to learn more about a study abroad program to Israel in the summer, focusing on creating a sustainable environment and environmental stewardship - a movement pioneered by Israel decades ago. Israel was one of the few countries in the world that entered the 21st century with more trees than they had at the start of the 20* and at one table at the event, students received seed cards to plant in the ground and help mark Israel’s "One Hundred Years of Green.” Aside from helping to plant trees, students were also able to write prayersiwishes, and hopes on note cards to be taken to the Western Wall M Jerusalem, where students traveling there on a Birthright trip will place them althe wall. Birthright gives foreign-born Jews who have never been to Israel the chance to travel there for 10 days in order to strengthen their identity in the Jewish faith and to witness important cultural landmarks, such as the Western Wall, for themselves. "It’s the belief that if you put a note in the wall, what you wish for will come true,” senior Jackie Schwartz, who handed note cards to passing students, said. But one of Hillel’s own wishes is that through this event, students will broaden their understanding of Israel and see other aspects of it, as opposed to solely focusing on its many political issues, “We want to encourage all people, not just Jews, to experience this event,” Schwartz said. "It’s for everyone to see all the good parts of Israel - not just the problems.” Freshman Katie.Bean gets® Hennai tattoo froM sophomore Sarah. Silver. The Henna booth was a popular attractiolllr students to learn about Jewish culture.. culture and kabobs Israel Fest introduces students to Jewish traditions I m _ | 4 4m | i i i i held her hand and i said baby, you can do this, i’ve been living with this for a long time."’ -Kflix Sirls, Detroit Department of Health Erika Gardner, standards ehair for Alpha Kapp^ Alpha, saylla |||| words before introducing the first speaker of the evening. The event was parf of her sorority'sSSkeei^^Rk” that mcludei! ^^pmmunity uplifting prof^Bleàch night. After fading her shpblpaper alcffldMffl audiencjSmerhber shaiesithe blear liquid in hi« epp with another nearbJgThe gameHRiridlbt t&ho^how easily Hfi#an spreafe without prgper precaution;; S 3C HD 5'm O CL) S T U D E N T ■■ Felix and EaulaEirls spe»: to the crowd I^BItheir personal storielof living with HIV Since their diagnoses, thlitwo haye,regularly preslwld iHIV aw:areness^^®fe. After readingia ¡Senario aloud, an audience number transfers the|H)ar liquid in her cup to another’s nearbfl ThaighBnly three people started with with the chemical that would turn pink singaling an “HIV positive’’ in the game, nearly evenyone’s Cup changedHilor after th^B revealing agent was added. CD IQ Z3 ■=, § TJ §■ q 3 jzj c ° 5. ~ n> I O R G A N Z A T O N S a l p h a I k a p p a a l p h a Freshman Ricky Hernandez nervously paced outside Union parlor 2B, waiting for news which could change the rest of his life, ¡finally the door swung open and freshman Max Olivero emerged. The wide grin on his face and a breathy chuckle gave Hernandez the answer he had been hoping for. His partner was HIV-free, but now it was his turn to find out if he was infected. Hernandez returned after less than a minute with an equally elated expression. After two weeks of waiting on HIV test results from the Lansing Area AIDS Network, the couple finally found out they were both clean. “He was so nervous he wouldn’t even hold my hand,” Olivero said, still smiling after receiving the news. The two of them had arrived early to Alpha Kappa Alpha’s “AKAknowledgeYour Status” HIV prevention event to receive their test results. They decided to get tested to make sure neither of them was infected from previous partners. “You never know, people could lie to you,” Hernandez said. Matt Hulbert, a prevention coordinator at LAAN—and the man who gave Hernandez and Olivero the good news—spoke at the event about ways to prevent spreading the virus, primarily through safe sex practices and regular testing. Hulbert cited that black patients comprise 59 percent of all HIV cases. As one of thel'Divine Nine” fraternities and sororities on campus dedicated to advancing the status of black students, the message of prevention was especially pertinent to Alpha Kappa Alpha's mission. “Being aware of your status, per se, is important in any race or organization,” senior Erika Gardner, standards chair for sorority said. The sorority hosts a “Skee-Week” each semester, where they organize community uplifting programs for each night of this specific week. Though “Skee-Week” has addressed other health issues in the past, this is the first year where the sorority has confronted HIV prevention. Felix Sirls, an HIV counselor for the Detroit Department of Health, and his wife Paula spoke at the event about their personal experiences of living with HTY g ‘ We’re here to tell you this is what HIV looks like,’ ’ Felix said. ‘ ‘You can’t tell who has it, who doesn’t.” Felix said HIV prevention efforts are especially important on college campuses because many students, especially younger ones, are adjusting to new responsibilities. “They're away from home, a lot of them are having new experiences,¡¡he said. Both Felix and Paula shared accounts of growing up with the pain of abuse. Felix, a child orphan who was eventually reunited with his father through the court system, was regularly beaten and forced into sexual activity with his 15-year-old babysitter. This led to a misguided promiscuous lifestyle as an adult, during which he contracted HIV Living in San Francisco, he witnessed the pandemic gain momentum first-hand and watched as it eventually spread across the country. Paula was scarred by sexual abuse as a child, later staying with her husband for 20 years while he sold drugs and disappeared every weekend, having affairs with countless women. It wasn’t until she mustered the courage to leave that he told her he was HIV-positive. The crowd was captivated as the couple shared their journey The two regularly speak at awareness events, and Felix has made a career counseling newly-diagnosed HIV patients and setting up support groups. “ [The first time we met] I held her hand and I said ‘Baby you can do this, I’ve been living with this for a long time,’ ’ ’ Felix said. (63 Freshman Michael Nguyen reads over the restrictions and requirements for getting his blood drawn before donating to in the American Red Cross Campus Challpnfjf| Volunteers can give blood no more than every 56 days. freshman Hunter Jejsch completes paperwork at the snack table |ler donatingBlbod. ThougMJSU lost the American Red Cross Camphs: Challenge to Penn State this year, studlnfs donated ^E, pOfeints, a relird amount of blood. saving lives^almpèt beating penn state MSU students bleed more than green for the American Red Cross Campus Challenge One of Kelly Weber’s most vivid memories upon becoming MSU’s donor recruitment representative for the American Red Cross last year was listening to a man speak to the Greek community Amid a crowded blood drive at East Holmes Hall on Nov. 4,^A/eber retold the story while stray students ate free snacks post-donation and listened in. Weber said that when the manis son was born, he immediately needed a blood transfusion to stay alive. He was able to get it with donated blood. Twenty-eight days later, however, his son passec away The man said, though, that even knowing little boy for the short time was better than ndver knowing him at all, Weber recalled. Weber continued to say that when tire man's second son also needed a blood transfusion at birth, he was able to get one. The differempg however, is that he is still alive. “That story stays with me,” she said. “It’s truly one of the amazing stories I’vpfoome across at the Red Cross.” It’s because of storiesHike that that MSU and Pennsylvania State Uniyersity face off annually for two weeks in Novejrfber for the American Red Cross’ Campus Challenge. This year, 34 blood drives were organized across campus in an effort to break MSU’s four-year losing streak, “It’s embarrassing—it really is,” sophomore and memberfot Fiji fraternity Matt Gross said about MSU’s track record. “I mean, fliere’s no reason we shouldn't be beating them in everything.’ ’ Beyond this typical competitiveness that arises between Big Ten schools was the overarching fact that students werezsaving lives by taking an hour of their time to dopate blood. “It feels good to know that you could be saving someone’s/life—it's a gift,” sophomore Abbey Debmaknaid after donating blood. “Ith/absolutely the most important thing you canxfo, other than giving your life,! Sal Wilson, a supervising nurse at one of the blood drives, said. “We’re short, of blood all over the United States and blood is a product that saves lives,” she said. In fact, American Red Cross says three lives can be saved per pint. Blood can be broken down into three different components: platelets, red cells and plasma, according to Wilson. Depending on what a person needs, the three different components could go to three different people. “If you can give blood, you should,” sophomore and volunteer Siman Mand said, “because you < never know when you could save a life with the blood that you donate.” 'While Penn State was announced as the winner of the campus challenge at Beaver Stadium on Nov. 27, with 2,019 pints and MSU close behind with 2,008 pints, the competitiveness was left at the football field. What truly mattered in the Red Cross’ challenge was that together, both universities potentially saved over 12,000 lives. “It’s not one of those things where you necessarily need or want the recognition,” Gross said. “If people know about it, so what, you know, at the end of the day we’re still giving back to the community” Sophomore Cggstnie Coppernoll applies pressure to her right arm after successfully dqMating blJId as nrnse Michelle Brennan packs up. Each unit Sblpoffl donated by students haJf the potential if save three lives? n a g y / D E S I G N s a r a l e e g o r d o n T Y P E c o u r t n e y z o t t / P H O T O v e r o n i c a D CD CL n oUlm “it's absolutely the most important thing you can than giving your life." -Sal Wilson, American Red Cross op other Thegpart® Dischfgps perform ''California Gurls” by Katy Peily-tn stag©: at th^airchild Theatre. Wfrsjfn Shaner, thfscftist fojthe foS j^gptivated the audiehde with his vocal rangejvhile performinm The wfflren’s Glee Club performed at the Fairchild TheatrBsingir|| pi" fegsBi Latin,-English, and African. The group^wenergetijanlf I enthusfas^M^playing hard work in preparation for the perfo k o l b / D E S I G N b e t s y e b e r T Y P E m a r i s s a r u s s o / P H O T O n a t a l i e ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ 1 ilove singing. so anytime i get up on stage and sing in front of a group of people, it s great. -Shelby Smith, freshman noteworthy tunes The MSU Men and Women's Glee Clubs sing the night away Swarms of audiophiles who had come to hear the beautiful voices of the MSU Men and Women’s Glee club milled about the Fairchild Theatre on Nov. 2, packing it almost to full capacity As soon as the red curtains lifted from the stage, the Women’s Glee club organized themselves onto the stage into five rows of 20 girls. Their long, black dresses just barely skimmed the ground and the women stood straight- spined and patient. A hush fell over the theater, and then the music began. The singers started singing in a voice that was just above a whisper and soon came to a crescendo, that echoed off the theatre walls. The first song performed was “Hodie Christus Natus Est.” Latin lyrics escaped the o-shaped mouths of the choir as they harmonized in unison, “On this day Christ the Lord is born,” captivating the attention of the audience with melodic strains, The Women’s Glee Club practices twice a week for an hour and twenty minutes each session, and the fruits of their labor truly showed that night. Shelby Smith, a freshman and member of the club, said that she initially found it difficult to learn the pronunciation of the new languages. ■Bove singing. So anytime I get up on stage and sing in front of a group of people, it’s great. It’s fun to share music,” Smith said. Once the Women’s Glee club finished the last note of “Music Down In My Soul,” the Spartan Dischords came on stage, bringing a more upbeat tone to the proceedings with familiar songs such as "Love the One You’re With” and “California Gurls.” The all-male group received a lot of laughs from the audience members due to the little jokes it incorporated into the songs. Ladies First, a sub-group of the Women’s Glee Club, arrived on stage soon after. They sang lively renditions of modern-day hits like Beyonce and Lady Gaga’s “Telephone” and Aerosmith’s “Dream On,” working up the crowd and getting them to clap and sing along to their energetic routines and soulful voices. After a brief intermission, the Men’s Glee Club started its performance within the midst of the audience itself. They started with no accompanist, but as they worked theiB way through the audience and onto the stage, the instruments started to join in. The Men’s Glee Club sang an array of songs with a somber sense of harmony that night, performing timeless, beautiful melodies from the days of the Civil War, followed by old musical favorites from Jamaica, the Americas, and Africa. They capped off the show by inviting the alumni onto the stage to join them in singing another time-honored tune: the Michigan State Fight Song. “My favorite song was the Jamaican song, ‘Yellow Bird.’ We had a lot of fun performing with the props,(senior and Men’s Glee club member Travis Pechota said. T Y P E i s a a c h e e / P H O T O h i l a r y h i g g i n s / D E S I G N b r e n d a n p r o s t S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S p h i I A hand-crafted brn for delations sits alongside..4ans of food and donated clothing 41 a t»le that the Phi Beta SigmSset up for the event. Though the fraternity only raised around. $200 in proceeds from the event this year, they obtained more donations of clothing than they did m thè previoR year7” Phi Beta Sigma brothers wait alongsi® thBtables thev^et up for the eventran Grand Riw Avenue. The fraternityxiamped But ip the north MSU Union courtyard and slept outfn the cbld Bwithout sleeping bags or blankets if 1hèy were tired. b e t a s i g m a M Phi Beta Sigma brothers sleep out to collect^onations for the homeless The evening of Nov. 5 was the kind of Friday where the bihhg cold pierces straight to the bone, and partygoers and pedestrians stride by scrunched up, trying in vain to hug Uhe chill away. It was also the night that the intrepid men of Phi Beta Sigma slept out on the streets to raise donations and awareness for those who are less fortunate -with, their annual event “Sleep Out for the Homeless.” “You find different ways to keep yourself occupied so you don’t think about the cold,” senior Clyde Martin, a four-year veteran of the sleep-out, grinned. “If you’re standing still though, you’re definitely going to freeze no matter how many layers or gloves yoiive got on.” Behind him, a stereo system started pumping out rap, and a couple of fraternity brothers whooped and ran up to it to keep warm by dancing along, waving and cheering to passers-by On the pavement along Grand River Avenue near the MSU Union courtyard, fraternity brothers took turns approaching visibly chilled passers-by for contributions. Cans of beans and instant pasta sat on a nearby table alongside a cash-filled box with the word “Donations” scrawled oMit in pen. “We have this on the first Friday of every November,” said senior and fraternity president Shaun Whitehead. “We sleep out from 7 p.m. till dawn, and we collect donations— monetary clothing or food, that the Lansing Rescue Mission can go with and use.” ‘ ‘Last year, we raised almost $400 (in proceeds), so hopefully we can get to that range again on top of all the clothes and food that we raise,” he said. Martin said that he felt him and his fraternity brothers got better at raising donations every year. The fraternity only raised approximately $200 in proceeds this year, but gained more donations of clothing than they did previously “I’ve learned that the best way is to just be honest and have fun with it,” he laughed. “When you come out here and tell people about what you’re doing, they often like to give more than they normally want to.” “The best part about this event is the people,” he said. “We get to see so many people go by that we never get to see outside of a classroom. We’ve also met homeless people who come and support the program even though it’s not going directly to them.” Bundled up in six layers of clothing, Whitehead, a three-time veteran of the event, said that the peak period for donations was usually between 10 p.m. to 4 a.m. "Pasl3 or 4 a.m., when the bars let out and everybody’s going to their last, stops for the night— that’s when things start to slow down,” he said, “Some people come early in the morning to drop off stuff, but most of our general stuff comes before 2 a.m.” Waving good-bye to some students who stopped to ask < about the event, senior Steve Bolton, the community service chair of Phi Beta Sigma, said thaSthis program was what first caught his interest in the fraternity and convinced him to join. “I have an opportunity to be blessed and sleep in a bed and a warm room every day” Bolton said with a smile. “I’m more than happy to donate one day out of 365 to a cause like this.” Will he be able to get any sleep tonight out here in freezing- point temperatures? “Last year when! was here, I slept on that bench for about six hours,” he laughed. “So it isn’t a problem for me to fall asleep.” ' ' ‘ f d ■e ¡Il e e e 0 g e .s 's s e s k Cs 5t 1 n r Devin McAfee, an MSU alumus and former Phi Beta Sigma member, shows Sophomore Kristin Rozanski the annual “Sleep Out for the Homeless” cake. The fraternity"sleeps out on the streets for on the first Friday night of November every year to raise donations for the homeless in the Lansing area. i’m more than happy to donate one day out of 365 to a cause like this.” -Steve Bolton, senior Sophomores Kevin Ginnebaugh and Zachary Ryckman chat with a Phi Beta Sigma brother about the goals of the sleep ||§L. Members of the fraternity approached passers-by on Gran||River Avenue all night to solicit donations, which will gq entirely to the Lansing Rescue [ISign. 169 cn jtj o qj" m 13 <= -aE tj u'm o o D o m cr o £ 7T 70 CD o > i|a> r I I O R G A N Z A T O N S s n o w b o a r d c l u b S T U D E N T Nick Malic®’ shops for a lidBoat. The sale §|is a chance for club memb||slto buy new gear before the ■Rub's annual trip out West to Park City Utah. ¡J§ ■ ■ m S3! M »y ■ ; ? , 1 «L Sr T*' >1 AJ »! gearing up, »Trapping in mi 11 ■m MSU Snowboard Club partners with local shop to prepare for upcoming season Just two days after the first snoyk flurries of the year flickered across campus, the MSIXSnowboard Club began gearing up for the approaching/season with an exclusive “After Hours” sale at Modern^urf and Skate in Lansing. For two hours after the^sfore had closed to the public, club members were gjven a 15 percent discount and the privilege of privacy perusing racks of this season’s outerwear, shoes, bpots, snowboard decks and bindings. Sophomore Algx MLynarek didn’t anticipate being a big spender at the sale, but one glance at the Capita Ultrafear FK snowboard ddck was all the persuasion necessary for him to bring cmfhis credit card. Mlynarek said he hadn’t seen the boardim stock anywhere else, as Capita is anl|p-and- coming company boasting innovative deck designs highly sought after by gear-sawy snowboarders, ‘If anyone knew about this it would be gone,” he said. “I less I got lucky” His luck came in more ways than one—the discount lowered the deck’s sticker price from around $450 to just over $380. Mlynarek said he partly bought it in preparation for the club’s annual trip out West, which is to Park City Utah this year. On the night of the sale about 120 people were signed up for the winter break excursion. Senior Chad Sturgis, president of the MSU Snowboarding Club, said the sale was oriented to give members a chance to purchase necessary gear before leaving for Park City which is the club’s only official trip and the high point of their season. Though the club itself usually only puts together one major trip per year, Sturgis said members often use it as a means of meeting others interested in coordinating smaller weekend trips throughout the season. “It’s awesome to go there [out West] with 55 randoms and come back with 55 of your closest friends,” Sturgis said. And there’s certainly plenty of time to bond riding charter buses halfway across the country Sturgis, who has been a member since his freshman year, says that interaction between athletes and local shops is an important part of keeping the culture alive. “There’s so much more personality with them [local shops],” he said, “It’s kind of sad,.because the Internet has taken over.” Senior Lindsay Johnson, a member of the MSU Snowboarding Club and a sales associate at Modern Surf and Skate, said the two entities often partner up for other small events throughout the year. As the club’s only local sponsor, Modern Surf and Skate often lends out snowboarding DVDs for viewing events and recently helped it coordinate with Red Bull to take part in a promotional event in East Lansing. Later in the season the two will team up again for the annual “Railj am,” where veteran riders take on a terrain park built on mounds of snow in downtown Lansing. Sturgis said the biggest benefit of buying Jifstore has to do with tangibility; actually seeing what you’re buying before you purchase it. As Mlynarek knows, this can make all the difference. “It was totally impulse,” he said, walking away from the register holding his new deck, a grin stretched across his face. “Modern is the raddest shop around.” ■ m 1 l i Modern Skate-and Surf empkSge Zach Barry aligns the trucks on anP®. skateboard. The shop carries a variety of skateboarding gear year-round, in addition to snowboard gear during the winter months. Senior Mitchell Hulyk tries on a pair on a new pair of Burton snowboard boots. Snowboard Club members recieved 15 percent off their total purchase that night. "there's so much more personality with them [local shops], it’s kind of sad,because the Internet has taken over.” -Chad Sturgis, senior In the face of a national disaster, the Indonesian Student Association’s Indonesian Night came at what seemed to be tragically fortunate timing. On Nov. 13, the night became both a celebration and a vigil—a coming together of a resilient culture that, though restricted to a stuffy gym in a Lansing Christian Church, echoed happenings on the world stage. A somber recognition of the death toll Indonesia had suffered from recent two-week long volcanic eruptions of Mount Merapi under laid the celebratory cultural dances, bright Indonesian fashion show, good food and smiling faces present throughout the night. “It was really sad to hear, because all of my family lives in Indonesia,” junior Stella Jogisaputra, president of the Indonesian Student Association (PERMIAS), said. “I cannot do anything because they are too far away I keep asking myself, 'Why do these things keep happening?’H| This powerless feeling common with natural disasters was helpfully abated for the night, however, with the small efforts of monetary donations at the doors of the First Christian Church and a humbling, deeply personal performance of “Lilin-Lilin Kecil,” or “Little Candles,” a popular Indonesian song, in English. “I can relate to what they are going through,” MSU graduate Kay Abbas said, recalling the 2003 floods in his home country of Pakistan. “I was almost in tears when the song came on,” In fact, it was a moving moment for many of the approximately 7 0 people present, as the slow song permeated the hearts and minds of those in the small gym. “The singer sang better than, he has ever sung before,” MSU graduate and former president of PERMIAS Putrì Jati, said. “Everyone was silent.” For guitarist YudiWicaksono, images of. his brother ran through his head as he played the piece. “My little brother is a volunteer in the Java arèa,” he said. “They were telling people to stay 20 kilometers (12.4 miles) away from the volcano, and he was only two kilometers away from this area when the volcano erupted again.” “He had to be hospitalized because of the ash,” he said. “But as soon as he got out, he was volunteering again,® almost forgot the chords when I was pljjying, because it was very personal for me.” After the performance, however, the night continued on in , good cheer. Three girls in Indonesian dress performed the “Renggong Manis,” a dance representing the beauty and gaiety of young girls. This was followed by a traditional fashion show and another dance—the “Saman,” or “Thousand Hands” dance, a highly synchronized dance in which thè performers use only their hands. "We want to show everyone about our culture and how rich our culture is,” Jogisaputra said. “Maybe if they know more, they will want to visit Indonesia.” “Our culture is so broad and wide. We have so many diverse people— Muslims, Christians, Buddhists—we are all different.” Indeed, with over 17,000 Indonesian islands to represent, PERMIAS could not fit the vast expanses of tradition and history present in their culture into one night. Instead, the student organization seamlessly combined facets of its renowned cultural diversity within a vast array of traditional performances in ^perfect accordance with the spirit of their nation’s slogan, “Bhinekka TLnggal Ika? (Unity in Diversity). 'T^r some, this will be the first and last impression of Indonesia they will have ifrsfheir mind for their entire life,” graduate student Zubair Shafiq said. “I would likk to see more of this around the world.” In the face of tragedy, Indonesians display the unity of their culture Studentsiii®!sed in traditional Indonesian dlothin^Ierve their native cuisineldihungry guests at Indonesian Night. “Es teh manis” - iced tea and fried bananas were just some ® the dishes. Lansim a celel pnby 1 (PERM the;;,irai Hands UK. WÈm s Ita T> ay m c on m O 3 -?■ (D Z" S T U D E N T I I O R G A N Z A T O N S i n d o n e s i a n s t u d e n t a s s o c i a t i o n Graduai! student Sara Qanir^ poMs for the camera, resplendent] in traditional Indonesian dress. Indonesian students showcased traditional costumes that night t|M an ^pDreciativ^SlÎAfd. "for some, this will be the first and last impression of Indonesia they will have in their mind for their entire life. i ■ r ■ I m ■MS* -Zubair Shaficj, graduate student ^ffiigym of the First ChristiafilChurch in Lansing was packed on Indonesian Night, a celebration of Indonesian culture put on by the IndStfsian Student Ass||iation (PERMIASHMembers of the group performed the traditional Renggongfianisahcl Thousand H«danc*,pular in Indonesia. ^ j /*^ Sophomore NwakusJ Atagbuzia shoots a look on her way offstage. II was part of onefetwo fashion shows that the gala featured, allowing ASU members and other performers togive their best modeling impression. PerfdSiers ]|j|® in sync during one of-.the several dances during the African Student Union gala. Many of the dancbs seamlessly blended current hip-hop %|i.daj|ee with traditional African forms. Ayinde Anandl|a member ■of the group Omowale, plays the djembe. Ananda currently it. ichts Detroit ^E'd.uths MAisha Shule. S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S a f r i c a n I s t u d e n t u n i o n O “so what we learn from here, not just education but also ideas about culture and music, take it back home and benefit the place you came from." a taste^>f africa -Valentine Nsofor, senior African Student Union hosts annual gala to celebrate, promote culture It was a big year for African students at MSU: The African Studies Center^mid the African Student Union turned 50 and 25, Respectively and the continent successfully hosted/its first FIFA World Cup in South Africa, When it came time to hold its annual gala on Nov. 13 at MacDonald Middle School in East Lansing, ASU knew it had to do it up big. And kidded it was big, from the nearly 10-foot tall man on stiltsymo danced emphatically along with drummers to the/African Acrobats International group that dashed bendath flaming poles. The show featured a variety of acts including hip-hop infused African dance routines, fashion shows and solo singing performances. The gala, called “Love and Futboljj followed a loose story of a fictional American-born African character who visits his friends in Africa to learn more about his culture. Learning about African culture was a central theme behind the gala, as well as one of the primary goals of ASU itself. “The gala is very significant because it’s the chance for the community at MSU to experience an authentic African culture,” senior Valentine Nsofor, the president of ASU and a co-writer of the gala, said. “They get a chance to see a positive aspect of the continent. They get a chance to see that this continent is more than just one culture; it’s several diverse cultures’5 The process of organizing'the gala is time-consuming and begins as soon as the new executive board is elected in the spring. ASU and its E-Board spend the summer booking the.Tocation, fundraising and coordinating the performances. The gala was the grand finale of African Culture Week, which ASU puts on with other events, one of which was African food tasting at Owen Hall. Besides boosting awareness and celebrating African culture, ASU has other goals, which include welcoming incoming African students to MSU. Brooke Cutler, an international admissions counselor at MSU, said the adjustment for African students is tough because of the shift from the tight-knit communities in African countries to the individualistic society here. However, ASU is proactive in recreating that community “When students arrive here from Africa, they are usually picked up by an ASU member or advisor and we take them to events and introduce them to other students from Africa,” sophomore Bethel Ayalew, an ASU member who was a part of a skit and other performances during the gala, said. “We have a mentor program, where somebody who is fresh from Africa comes over here, and one of us that’s been in America long enough, we mentor them, we tell what’s going on in school, how school works, how to keep focus,” Chinonye Madu, a senior and vice president of ASU, said. Besides acclimating new students to life at MSU, the student union hopes to prepare student leaders to improve the African continent according to the ASU website. Besides keeping informed on issues and events in Africa, the students try to see how they can apply their knowledge back home. “I plan on going back home to Nigeria and use what I’ve learned here in America. I’m studying engineering, so I plan on going there and either teaching it or utilizing other people around me to build better infrastructures,” Nsofor said. |‘So what we learn from here|not just education but also ideas about culture and music, take it back home and benefit the place you came from.” At the gala, as the final song was performed by a soloist by the name of Lady O, members of the ASU hied on stage and stood behind her, arms around each other as one community during the final chorus. The scene conjured up thoughts of a bright future for Africa, something the ambitious students hope to be a part of as they look forward to the next 25 years and beyond. putting out smoke Spartans Fighting Cancer host public BBQ to raise awareness of lung cancer “The only smoke you should see around here is from the barbeque® members of Spartans Fighting Cancer (SFC) yelled out to the MSU students who passed by The Rock on the afternoon of Nov. 18. The organization’s high energy and blaring music, (not to mention the tantalizing aroma of freshly-grilled chicken deliciously sizzling on a nearby portabk grill), captured the attention of passing students, reeling them in for an interestingly irftorrjfrative lesson on lung cancer. SFC, the student-run MSU chapter of the American Cancer Society’s Colleges Against Cancer nationwide program, promotes cancer- awareness at MSU. Members of/the organization offered free lunches, prizes, ahd information to students who stopped by at thbir event, “The Great American Smoke-out,” thatxiay to raise awareness about lung cancer and pne of the disease’s chief causes—smoking. A real-life “WheeKof Fortune” took place righl before the grill, where students waiting for free chicken gathered around in hopes of winning t-shirts, buttons and pens. Students spun the wheel and landed on one of the threeprizes, where an SFC member would ask contestants questions such as,1 ’If a non-smoker lives in a housgwith a smoker, what are his or her chances of having lung cancer?” TAt first I stopped by for the free chicken, but ^though I have heard most of these smoking facts before, it is refreshing to hear it again and be reminded,” sophomore Eric Foster said, signing a white ribbon to show his support for SFC’s cause. “My grandma died of leukemia so I’m anti-cancer, and I appreciate what they are doing here.H| Bubbledfloated through the crisp afternoon air and mu^ic filled the chill-numbed, reddened ears of students who stopped by out of curiosity Red table clofris were draped over five tables, which contained formative displays on what smokers could be mying with money that they would otherwise spend on cigarettes. One of the displays said that at the cost of smoking a pack and a half of cigarettes every day for a year, you could save up enough money to take an extravagant trip to New York City. “Instead of pulling out a cigarette and smoking, blow bubbles, fit gives you something else to do and something else to focus on,” senior Adeline Culver, the SFC Cancer Education Chair, said. “Not to mention bubbles are inexpensive compared to a pack of cigarettes.” Past the chicken and the bubbles sat a table with “Quit Kits” that also held displays sharing some of cigarettes’ deepest and darkest secrets, such as “V\hiat’s really in a cigarette?” The answer: toilet cleaner, Brocket fuel, sewer gas and rat poison, among other equally-unsavory ingredients. Pictures of smoking’s effects on the lungs at that same table were also effective eye-catchers. The “Quit Kits,” on the other hand, contained information on how to stop smoking as well as helpful aids for those who plan on quitting: a rubber band to snap, a paper clip, a stress ball to keep the quitter busy candy a toothpick and chewing gum to keep idle mouths occupied. “I am hopeful that people will come check out this event and quit smoking,” freshman Fred Jolicoeur said. “Maybe they will realize how much smoking affects not only them but also the people around them.” Sophomcflb Devin ^nezifeagls a queSion about thl negptive effects oj|mokmg to a student. If foe ¡¡»dent answers correctly; they are eligible to walk away with a free , shirt, pin m stick|«court®sy ¿'.Spartans Fighting |l§Er, Spartans FightiSgftancer volunteer,j|3r K^SKnup|ei, maS an adjustment to one qffoe m^Msigns advertising foeßFC^gint held on The event was prormting’iho adverse-effect® ! smoking, and thd¡signs wire (Signed to look like, ci®r||e packs. 8 on t® sidewajkraeär The "instead of pulling out a cigarette and smoking, blow bubbles.” 7T HI O -< CT 2■— m 2 3 -Adeline Culver, senior CD H<= □ O 70 CD > 3IQ nO) 3n fD ScphoVnores Vita Ferranti and Rachel Kunka operate the “Wheel ©¡fi«tune” during the Spartans Fighting^^eer Bbmt on Oct. 18. “The Whe|l|lf Fortunehprqpded a chance for sjgdeny to win. freilswag, as well as insight on the dangers of smoking. ThSsfudent-run SpartaitlFighting Caiicer put on an event opposlilj smoking at The Rock on Nov. i8. Students iindd up tHget free chicken wings, freabubbleshffi free information about lung cancer. Junior AnnaYanke writS in loving mefliory of someone she pst to canclr during cancer awareness mon|^Fj|| ribbon HflBopen f!§ ahSne to sign during the Spartans Fighting Hanheld Ml Nov. 18. there’s so many people with bigger problems that we we coi help." -Samantha Ruiz, junior iser Spartan Competitive ChebpTeam donates money to Sparrow Superstars Sonya Webster s tiny frame was dwarfed by the immense wooden chair m which she sat at the Hannah Community Center on Nov. 17. Between bouts of restless fidgeting spurred by her need to explore hie expansive banquet had,(the 5-year-old member of Sparrow Superstars, a T-bad team for handicapped children, was occupied y tilting her head back and pouring Parmesan cheese packets like Pixy Stix into her mouth. I don t think you U meet anyone who loves Parmesan more than Sonya,” her mom, Samantha Webster said to another T-bad family laughing as she told her daughter ‘that was enough.’ As Sonya reluctantly turned to her unwanted portion of Fazoli’s spaghetti and breadsticks, Ms. Webster explained that her daughter was born with Cerebral Palsy „She has to wear braces on her legs to help her walk,” she said. Yeah, but I m not wearing them tonight! ’ ’ Sonya chimed iflhappdv forgetting about her meal again, Indeed, the night was special for Sonya, but not just because she was walking without her leg braces. The Spartan Ad-Girl Competitive Cheer Team hosted a spaghetti dinner and sdent auction, in part to raise funds for their own team, but also to donate 10 percent of their proceeds to the construction ot the Sparrow Superstars T-bad home field, an entirely handicap- accessible park that wid be caded Miracle Field. The field is being budt in Vadey Farms Park in DeWitt Township through a nonprofit branch of Case Credit Union known as Case \Cares. Chairperson Kathy Devine said it wid be constructed entirely fern a speciady synthesized rubber to make it easier for the T-ball to,11111 or wheel themselves around the bases. I ',T¥re’s so many other people with bigger problems that we moughixwe could help,” junior and vice president of the cheer team SamanthadMz said, while our biggest problem is only money” In BBS *e ad-girls cheer team formed eight years ago, members havehad to pay $2,000 each year for the expenses of traveling to their competitions. This year, the team traveled to Indiana for jamfest National^. Georgia for Cheersport Nationals and Florida for their most important competition, the National Cheerleaders Association, or NCA Nationals. The money from the spaghetti dinner went directly to the-girls on the team who needed it the most president Megan Roberts said. Last year was the first timeSye made it to the NCA finals,” Roberts said.' 'And we placed seventh in thdnation, which is a big deal’for a club sports team. Roberts said she hopeddo place in the top five this year, It was seeing Sonya and another Tball team member who has a muscle weakening disease that gave the cheer team inspiration for their approaching season. I know how much sports have meant to me in my life and helped me get through hard times in my life,” Ruiz said, “and I think it’s inspiring that they go out there and play also.” ^^Kiman Lauren Force andJ|S|«rs of the Spartan Cwipetitive Cheer Team set up the silent auction table. Items up for auction included an MSU hockey jersey signed by >Coach Rick Comley Hijotball signed by the ij&oit Lions and tickets to atPistons’ game. Thirteen-® ar-old Katie Frayer finishes her spaghetti dinner at the rand raiser. The cheer team delated 1 (Lperaentflf its proceeds to the Sparrow Superstars T-bal team. a E OIUv< o o S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S s p a r t a n I c o m p e t i t i v e c h e e r t e a m 181 Spaghetti was «1 main staple of the night at the Spartanfiompetitiye Cheer Team’s fundraiser at the Hannah Community Center. Thfflfonds raised by the girls were put toward their travel expe^fes and uniform ipsts. Five-year-old Sonya Webster plays on the floor after finishing her spaghetti dinner. Welbsterlps CerebrafPalsy butp^Hfor the Sparrow .Superstl||yi T-b.all team for phy:. sally handicapped children. S T U D E N T O R G A N I I Z A T O N S P R S S A We’ll probably aut it on a iristmas card and send it out to everyone because we love our dog,and it's Better her than ourselves." -Amy Godfrey, dog owner Junior Lisa Thompson tries tbifceep her Yellow Labrad^^Sster, in the shot as they p©s with Santa Claus at the Paws with Claus PRSSA fundraiser. Lisa has ||een a part of PRSSA for three years and is a me]pt>er of the esIStive board as the Jfce president of programming. Hpt owners wait®) get their dogs’ photdf taken with Santa Claus at Annabellis Pet Station. PRSSA raised $680, half Iff which will go to the Ingham County Animal Control andj Shelter, while the other half will support PRSSA. Puppy Prince Williams sits patiently in thelmp of senior Amssa Mahrougui. Prince Williams was onSof oyer slj canines that appeared with owners at the PRSSA event. ¡3 z sT INI 0Î x > “ o H Q_ O pBf Z in o fl> qj O) “1 -I O -o — 3 ar < — O) ° 2 T3 3 5 3". (Q o *< 3 CD in 0) Frdm its exterior, Alpha Phi Omega might look like onëoig contradiction: a non-Greek, co-ed, homeless iSternity. But these brothers and sisters aren’t trying to d)e like the rest of the lot. While other fraternities and sororities tend to regard community service as a mere appendage of their purpose, such service is in fact APO’s raison d’être. . Though the fraternity has had a presence on the MSU campus since 1937, APO might now be best known through State Walk, a service where volunteers offer students studying late at the Main Library escorted walks to anywhere on campus. Founded by the East Lansing Police Department 15 years ago, the program was handed over to APO several years ago as a volunteer opportunity "In comparison to last year it [State Walk] has grown drastically and continues to grow by the week,” Junior Britt Hughes, vice president of service for APO, said. While members recall as few as two walk requests in entire semesters past, the number rose to 63 during the Fall 2010 term—a record high. The fraternity boosted its publicity for the program this year, courtesy of the efforts of State Walk’s co-chair, sophomore Lisa Wright. Wright arranged to have the service mentioned on the library’s main website, Facebook and Twitter pages, and also secured advertising spaces on University Activities Board table tents as well as the university television channel. She said her desire to spread the word came from a personal connection with the program’s mission.^ "I’m the type of person who studies a lot at the library’ ’ she said. "Late at night I find it’s a good source for a lot of students.” Sunday through Wednesday nights from 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. (2 a.m. during finals week), a large yellow sign states, "We’ll walk anywhere on campus from the main library” As the semester progresses, more and more students seek out the service, especially near midterm and final exams, volunteers say There was one lone request on a cold Wednesday night near the start of the Spring 201 ^semester- sophomore Hao Chen, a timid Chinese international student, needed to walk to a CATA bus stop on Grand River Ave. Freshman Abagail Gray and Sophomore Laura Damon, also a co-chair for State Walk, bundled up for the trek. "My friend told me another Chinese student got— how do you say the word? Stolen?” Chen asked in a heavy Mandarin accent. "Mugged,” one of the two walkers offered. "Yes, mugged,” Chen said, "Purse stolen and everything.” Most of the girls’ conversation fell within the realms of typical small talk. The days were too short like usual for late January the weather was a little warmer than the preceding week and a new clothing store had just opened on Grand River Avenue (a lot like Urban Outfitters only cheaper, they agreed), Yes, APO members do sometimes escort vivid personalities. Damon once escorted a sixth-year senior who shared details about every class she had ever taken. Wright once got a walk request from a girl so strung out from the side effects of her prescription that Wright made her stay with the library workers, fearing she would attempt to drive her car home. This walk, however, was pretty typical. Arrival at the CATA stop near the corner of Abbot Rd. and Grand River Ave. was met with disappointing news - the bus had stopped running for the night. But the volunteers kept with the promise on the easel,; and walked with Chen as far east as Bogue St., apologizing that they could not continue any farther. "It’s okay walking here is safe,” Chen assured the walkers when the corner was in sight. They parted ways just under the illuminated Michigan State University sign; the first of many walks that will likely occur throughout the semester. Sophomores Amanda Degraaf and Amaric Oppenlander sit and work on homework with junior Katie Gaffney • as they waiter students to walk home. The past semester for the fraternity has proven t«L^SsuccesMwith 6||||idents who used the free service. 185 “it’s expressive. You sort of move rom an internal space outward.” -Kimberly Forte, senior Students participate in the practice of ecstatic dance, based on the five rhythms: flowing, staccato, chaos, lyrical, and stillness. Five Rhythms is a movement meditation practice created by Gabrielle Roth in the 1960s. Before dancing, junior AugustajRirrison and senior Kimberly Forte lead the group in a ume-in. The danglng sessions take plate in the Orchard Street Pump HotmIeII a public space Seated in East Lansing. a different kind of thursday party Gatherings at Orchard Street Pump House bring students together through dance, meditation It’s part dance class and part theater performance, minus the audience. But for members of the Orchard Street Pump House Ecstatic Dance and Movement, the label doesn’t really matter. Their only goal is to experience the five rhythms: flowing, staccato, chaos, lyrical and stillness. The 5 Rhythms movement is practiced across the country at official “Moving Center” schools and private groups. For participants, it's a lot more than dancing: it’s a form of meditation where they get to know themselves and others. from several is derived The movement eastern practices, including shamanism. The experience is highly personalized, as there is no set choreography or definition for each rhythm, making the experience a free dance. The practice was brought to East Lansing three years ago after three MSU students learned it at an eco village in Scotland. Since then, the group has remained self-sufficient, changing venues as needed with different cycles of membership. Senior Kimberly Forte has been a participant since the group’s inception, Hardly ever missing a session. She was hooked right from the beginning. “I totally lost myself in the rhythm,” Forte said. "It’s expressive but it’s also very intrapersonal. You sort of move from an internal space outward.” The combined five rhythms compose the j'Wave”—a word participants use to describe the entire experience. It starts with a “tune-in” where the group sits in a circle holding hands, lights dimmed, taking deep breaths and exhaling with vocal “Ohm” warm-ups. _ After the “tune-in” on this particular Thursday night, each ^individual slowly rose as the music began and started moving at their own pace, some stretching first, others immediately dancing to the aboriginal beat. For the next hour and a half, each person’s movement visibly reflected the tempo of the music. Faster electronic beats yielded faster footsteps and more energetic interaction, from simple hand movements to contorted yoga­ like feats, highlighted by the occasional burst of spontaneous laughter. During meUovwpoints with forest sound effects, some participants produced vocal animal calls of their own. The theatrical elemenl became especially apparent when the audio track broke, ahd participants compensated by making their ownN music. Vocal melodies soared above hand­ clapping drumbeats until one of the members was able to fix the track. The mixtapes are usually created by the group’s own members. Ian Eberhart, a 22-year-old Lansing resident, produced the track that night based on a combination of free samples from the Internet and sound effects ripped from vinyl records he bought from the $1 bin at Hat, Black & Circular on Grand River Avenue. Eberhart said he tries to coordinate the flow of the music with the five rhythms, characterizing it as an emotionally-driven process, “I just think about what those things feel like,” he said. “It’s a very unconscious thing.” After a long history of hopping around to different gyms and yoga studios, the group finally landed at the Orchard Street Pump House this past summer. The quaint, neoclassical brick building with white columns was constructed in 1934 to pump well water to surrounding residents. It is now used as a free space for a variety of neighborhood activities, including a regular concert series. The New England town hall atmosphere of the building is a stark contrast to the group’s bohemian free «form, but it suits their uses well. The best part may be the fact that they no longer have to charge, encouraging more people to experience their art. “It’s a very diverse crowd and it’s so cool,’ ’ junior Augusta Morrison said. Of course, the dynamic depends entirely on the individuals involved. “Every time you come to dance, people bring with them the stuff they’ve been experiencing,” Forte said. S T U D E N T 0 R G A N I Z A T I 0 N S 5 r h y t h m s ¿w [ \j "D O A» k o l b / D E S I G N b r e n d a n p r o s t H j | H | T Y P E n a t a l i e p a t t e r s o n / P H O T O n a t a l i e ¡Up Sophomore Liyanna Aziz practiedS^mpressions on a mannequin. Learning basic CPK was one of the stops on participant’s activity sheets, which needed® be fully] . qlmpleted in order t Junior Trevor Shan^Jr&j^vyeis questi@®sSr sp^tators attending the Norfh/Am^^^m Internapnal Auto Show on Jan. 13 Shane said; car 7lB)ictured here, is the tesws lightM^car becMuse of its carbonBier 1|S^ Car 9 broKa rècord for|H:eleration said Trevor Shanffl C^m9, alo^^with Oars 5 3S|. 71, were »shown at the Nopfi Amerwah International Auto Show at the Cobofftenter in Detroit. Attlees of the North American International! Show ask .junior Trevor Shane qu^Mons abiSthe MSU Formula One Racing Team. Shahe said all of the jars can go 0 to60;MPS|in3.4 spends. S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N m s u I f o r m u l a o n e r a c i n g t e a m k o l b / D E S I G N s a r a l e e g o r d o n T Y P E j e s s i c a w h i t m i l l / P H O T O n a t a l i e pp niorrace to the Formula One Racing Team heads to Detroit for the 2011 North American International Auto Show Engines roar. The smell of burning rubber fills the crisp, May air and fans scream as race cars peel down the track. It’s no NASCAR. It’s Formula racing. | Every May the Michigan State University Formula RacingTeam participates in the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) Collegiate Design Series at the Michigan International Speedway Schools and universities from across the country compete against one another, the goal being to design and develop a formula- style car. And then they race. Team member and junior Trevor Shane said the team creates one car per year, and then "races it for 12 months.” He said the cars are judged on cost, design and business presentation. “You gotta sell it,” Shane said. "The judges are also very interested in seeing what you’ve taken from previous cars. You have to explain why you did what you did in terms of design.” This is the fifth year that the Detroit Auto Dealers Association (DADA) has invited the MSU Formula One Team to the North American International Auto Show, DADA also acts as one of the main sponsors for the team. From Jan. 15-23, the MSU team had three cars on display at the Cobo Center: Car 9, Car 51 and Car 71. Project manager and junior Josh Frontiera said Car 51 came first in design out of 120 cars in 2008; Car 9 broke a record for acceleration; and Car 71 is the team’s fastest car because of its light, carbon fiber frame. Shane added that each car can accelerate from 0 to 60 mph in 3.4 seconds. "People [at the auto show] have open really surprised because we build these carsfrgm the ground up,” Shane said. "It's cool too beisause most of the people that come to the auto snqw are really into cars. People get excited. The] want to know details. I mean||these cars are small, but they’re fast.” According to Frontiera, members put 50-60 hours of work into the cars each week. "We have a joke on the team|j he said. "Normal students have to balance school, work and friends, but on the team, you have school, formula racing and not much else.” Freshman Brennen Hitchcock decided to join the team out of his love for cars, and has found the experience to be a rush, both on the track and off. "When you competeleverything is so fast. When something breaks on the track, you have to fix it right away” he said. "I thought I knew a lot about cars, and then when I j oined my knowledge just exploded. You pick up so much.” Shane agreed, calling it a “truly hands-on engineering process.” "You have to design everything, solve' problems, fabricate it, test it out,” he said!‘We put in so much time for free because we love it.” The team welcomes students of all majors to join the team. No engineering experience is necessary. "You don’t need a really strong background in anything specific,” Frontiera said. "As long as you’re willing to put some time in, you’re going to learn from others on the team as opposed to listening to a professor tell you how to build a racecar.” Freshman Brennen Hitchcock said he decided to join the racing team out Ijf his love for cars. He is one of the youngest members on the team, The MSU Formula One Racing Team displayed three ra^cars at the North American International Auto Show at the Cobo Center in Detroit. The show lasted from Jan, 15-23^ 1 193 OmegaKsi Phi Fraternity, Inc. open the show with a cpspel-inspired stepping performance. Members of the National Pan- Hellenic Council of MSU participated in thS third annual Stomp jif^Yard competition. militi Members of the Sigma Gamma Kho Sorority; Inc. show off their steps in the Stomp the Yard competition". Out of the ninJj organizationsEompetinffl Sigma Gamma Kho Sorority Inc. and Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc. we.fi the competition.;..-: A memberloffthe ZetaKi Betallorority Inc. competes in the third annual Stomp theYaMfiompraition. Th^Srffity was founded in 1 on the'-campus of Howard ■ Univ®s'ity w ’mm m it to a dance competition. They are judged on how well their routine goes, the videos, crowd participation, and preciseness of movements.” -Angela Eaddy, senior =T HI u3' t3 ‘S-m in a ~ S5 3T 55 Z QJ cr ~i 2- a. 48 ? ?s o H0 1 Members of tlie iSa Phi Theta Fratermtyglnc. close out the show with a SWAT team themed performancJgThe fraternity plMcsd second in the competition. On Jan. 21 at the Auditorium, the stomping was in high demand. The third annual Stomp the Yard performance was presented by the National Pan-Hellenic Council, or NPHC, which consists of nine African-American Greek organizations. “This type of entertainment dates back to African rituals and African culture. We're basically putting a modern twist on it, president of Sigma Gamma Rho sorority Dejanea Gray said, describing the high-energy step competition. Fraternity and sorority members waited in anticipation, showing off their brightly colored outfits and jackets adorned with Greek letters. Feeding off the audience’s enthusiasm, MC Josh eagerly yelled out,. “Is MSU in the building?” The once hushed crowd roared in reply forming a mixture of robust calls and high-pitched squeals. “There’s stepping, clapping, chants. They also have little videos, which are usually something funny” senior Angela Eaddy said excitedly The videos range from describing the theme of the performance to a lighthearted comic skit. “You can compare it to a dance competition. They are judged who stomps the yard? National Pari Hellenic Council hosts the third/dnnual step competition S T U D E N T I I O R G A N Z A T O N S n a t i o n a l p a n - h e t t e n i c c o u n c i l on how well their routine goes, the videos, crowd participation, preciseness of movements,” Eaddy added. / Dressed in bright yellow and purple robes, Omega Psi Pp fraternity brothers took the stage as the first performers of the night. Using a preaching approach to inform the audience abouj/fheir history the group coordinated fast-paced claps, and stomp^ while singing soulful, mellow songs. ./ Their performance was followed by the shrill chant/Of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority’s supporters. The sorority psters creepily appeared in tattered, green sweaters from behirp gravestones on stage while attracting immense applause. “Wewill still be the first and the finest!” yelled one of the performermas their routine came to cl closo Echoes and resounding chants contributed to a transcendental energy which only became more elpated as the night went on. While Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity ped various _ stunts to win the crowd’s appreciation, the Delta Sigma Theta sorority sisters created a personal version of ‘ ‘The Wizard/of Oz ” scene in which Dorothy visits Deltaland, “Who wouldn’t wanna go there?” Dorothy said, skipping smilingly on her way to DeJtaLand. Showstoppers like thgrinefr of Kappa Alpha Psi put a comic spin on their performanceybhaking their shoulders. However, the ladies of Sigma Gamma Etio remained stone-faced in their black shirts and military pants as they marched their routine. ' ‘The purpose of this event can be looked at in two different ways. One was to snow the campus what Greek-letter organizations do, with the stepping portion. Also, we get our names out there. To show ourselvehm a positive light,” Gray said. MGJosh frequently gave the audience short, entertaining breaks. Ombne such occasion, he asked the audience, How much swag MSU got?” Almost immediately the crowd rose up like a giant wave /swaying to the wild beats of hip-hop music. Several fraternity and sorority members danced through the cramped rows, excited to demonstrate their pride, loyalty and culture. As the clock struck 10 p.m., the nine groups rushed to the stage to hear the results. Amid the deafening laughs and chatter, MC Josh along with Brionna Blackwell, president of NPHC, announced the results. While Alpha Phi Alpha and Sigma Gamma Rho were winners, in second-place, Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity and Zeta Phi Beta sorority erupted in powerful embraces with each other. “It’s a celebration of your organization. It’s why we do it. It brings all the nine organizations together,” Gray said. Students and faculty in affiliation with the Scholl of SoJSWork p-aticipate in the annual MLK Day march. Thejgharch .startslat the Union, 1 through Adams Field and ends at Beaumont Tower. I think that he would be satisfied with the fact that there is progress, but there’s . always going to be ways to improve, to get us to where we want to be.” -Jarreau Jackson, senior Students, faculty and residents march tdfBeaurr.oni Tower ijom thaMSU Union in honor of ftartin Luthe| King Day'The march was led by members of Alpha Phi Alpha and endej. with a speech by Dr. Lee June and ames Cole of Kentucky! S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N a l p h a I p h i a l p h a what would ar. King think? Alpha Phi Alpha honors the Civil Rights Movement with a march On Feb. 11, 1965, just three years before he was assassinated, Martin Luther King Jr. spoke in the MSU Auditorium to a crowd of more than 4,000 people. He issued three challenges to the students and faculty spilling out of Fairchild Theatre’s closely packed quarters. The first, achieve a world brotherhood perspective. The second, abolish the notion of superior and inferior races. The third, develop massive action programs to rid the world of segregation. Forty-six years later, the extent to which these ideals have come to fruition at MSU and throughout the world remains a topic for debate. Though the term ‘ ‘segregation’ ’ appears to have been delegated to the realm of taboo in the United States, and notions of racial superiority have seemingly diminished in our new political climate, we still ask ourselves: what would Dr. King think? In fact, this speculative question undertoned much of the 31st annual celebrations and honorary events for Martin Luther King Jr. Day at MSU this year. "That kind of question always gets brought up every year,’ ’ senior and Alpha Phi Alpha member Jarreau Jackson said, "and I think that the underlying message through all his [Dr. King’s] preaching is that he wants progress. I think that he would be satisfied with the fact that there is progress, but there’s always going to be ways to improve, to get us to where we want to be.” Jackson and the rest of his Alpha Phi Alpha brothers were an integral part of the MLK celebratory weekend that began on Jan. 15. After a leadership conference and resource fair, a talent show and a concert spanning Saturday and Sunday the men concluded the events by leading a march from the MSU Union to the Beaumont Tower on the afternoon of Jan. 17—a tradition their fraternity began even before MSU officially cancelled classes to honpr Dr. King in 1998, Jackson said. Marching imtself is a symbol of unity but for the brothers, it was a way to commemorate the Selma to Montgomery marches in Alabama of the Civil Rights Movement in which Dr. King took pqrt, And despite the crisp January cold, about 100 studentsUaculty and community members participated with them. X. "Me and my friends wer^jtalking about how this is probably how it felt for the marchers,” freshman Cherisse Woolard said. "And the whole time we just tried to think about how the marchers were feeling when they were actually doing it.” "I get chills knowing that I’m domgxsomething that a lot of people ten, twenty thirty years ago did and the reasons for why they did it, you know wnht I mean?” Jackson said. Indeed, the march injected a dose of history into the weekend, which mainly focused on the modern day phenomena of globalizatiot! and the cross-cultural networking capabilities it has provided for society. ‘ ‘The march is important because our generation hasn’t had to deal with the hardships and the fight for equality that our grandparents and great-grandparents did, so it’s a way to symbolically honor and remember them,” recent alumnus Bryan Cotton said. Though we’re fortunate that history hasn’t repeated itself this time, think back to Feb. 11,1965: would you have pocketed your iPhone or BlackBerry to listen to Dr. King’s challenges? "We’ve come a long way” Cotton said,” butfflthink Dr. King would still say there’s a lot more to do.” The question remains, how much? Dr. Lee June and James Cole of Kentucky recite Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Mave a Dream” speech at the conclusion of the march. Cole and his mother have traveled to Michigan on multiple occassions to attend the march. Formerlfice President of Student Affairs and Services Dr. Lee June speaks of the history of Martin Luther King Day His participation in the. commemorative march dates back to before the university would recognize MLK Day as a university holiday ■»......... ■ ■ I .'y ■ *» i ■H J - I sn ■ '\: p:.'.V t 'ii; :> i __W 1 ■'Spg f cr ■Si la ¡SI III! gw M ESS* M) Hi I gjg '■'■!•“ ■ m » ; \ a.......... i i kiL® nr \ UkyCO 1 '*■ ■ I ■. - 1 , * \ ■ ^Ehb£E ~*as* ■ , 1 -j ■■IB thanks for believing in us Student organization SCOUT BANANA does great things for Africa, thanks to one MSU alumnus SCOUT BANANA/may be an internationally recognized non-profit organization, but it all started right here at MSU thanks to the work of alumnus Alex Hill. Sophomore/and MSU chapter coordinator Jade Nehra said Hill frpsi conceived the idea through an Eagle Scout project, arid expanded on it during his time at MSU. "HN/goal was to provide medical transportation to a health center in Uganda,” she said, stating that Hill raised an astonishing $70,000 worth of donations towards that cause /during his time at MSU. The organization holds events throughout the year that not only help to raise money but also raise awareness about issues faced by peoplePiving in African countries. On this particular Tuesday of Jan. 25, members secured a spot by The Rock to hand out hot chocolate and inform passers-by of their organization. Currently any money SCOUT BANANA (Serving the Children of Uganda Today Because Africa Needs a New Ambulance) raises through campus events goes right to WOCR a South African organization whose acronym translates to "our children’s future,” junior and chapter coordinator Joey Whelan said. ‘‘We give the organization the money we raise directly They know what’s best,” he said, ‘‘Others just throw money at the problems and nothing really gets done.’’ During the fall semester of 20,10, the members of SCOUT BANANA raised $1,500 as a whole to fund after-school programs for kids in South Africa between the ages of 6 to 18. Kids enrolled in the program receive English, math and art classes with meals on the side, and the organization has been involved with this program for three years now. "Usually we switch the projects out every year, but they [the program coordinators] asked us to stick around because we are their main source of funding,’ ’ said Emily Jones, senior and former SCOUT BANANA president. Yet despite the range of projects that the organization focuses on, Jones said the group’s overarching mission is to support grassroots movements in Africa. "There is no requirement that says we have to give X amount of money to one particular cause,” she said. "Our philosophy is that we don’t, live there; we don’t know what’s best.” Jones added that the organization typically trusts their on-scene partners like WOCF to build sustainable solutions to problems faced by the locals. Jones said MSU students in the organization are linked up with South African student pen pals, allowing SCOUT BANANA members to receive indirect updates about the after-school programs while keeping in touch with new friends on foreign shores. 1 ‘My pen pal really wanted me to send a picture of me and my family because she said she didn’t have any photos of her family and wanted to be a part of mine,” Jones said. "She even drew me a family tree® "Other kids make us posters that say ‘Thanks for believing in us.’ Things like that make all the hard work we do throughout the year worth it for me.” S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S s c o u t I Sophomores Grace Kim, Jade Nehra and Emma Baker help to get a new batch of hot chocolate up and running. Kim, Nehra |id Baker are members of SCOUT BANANA, which aims to raise awareness fir the lack basic health care in Africa. The representatives of SCOUT BANANA stan§jtogether, «¿paring for eager students to come to their table to receive free hot chocolate. SCOUT BANANA provides support to projects and organizations working in communities to. effectively reach people in need in Afrig^M b a n a n a "his goal was to provide medical transportation toM a health center in Uganda. ■Jade Nehra, sophomore Junior Ayesha Yalamarthy takes a pit stop in her walk home to grab a cup of hot chocolate in support of SCOUT BANANA. The organization was giving out free hot chocolate in order to promote their organization. Sophomore Grace Kim hands a freshly poured cup of hot chocolate to a supporter of SCOUT BANANA. The organization’s representatives were busy handing out hot chocolate to MSU .students at The Rock. Sterling Raehtz builds a hiding place in the.-roods where members can store their belongings during a mission. During outdoor training the students are divided into two groups to work against each other and BPee who can complete the mission correctly first. flag and waittEor further instructions. Members learn that they must work together in order to succeed. m m Senior Cadets Cody Kubiak and Grant Cleberg work to set up obstacl® and outdoor training chakengJftKubiak tried to decide which weapon would be most useful in the current situation and which, should be left behind. make decisions. What we force you to do is get out of your comfort zone and be able take charge of a group and accomplish a task,” senior Sterling Raehtz, who came/ back to MSU for graduate school and to join ROTC, said. The program exhibits the fruits/of its labor by allowing senior ROTC members like O’Malley and Raehtz to plamtne content for the weekly labs and a variety of other events throughout the year: One of those events includes the annual Military Ball, a part-formal dinner ebent, part-informal dance planned entirely by the seniors. The seniors also are in charge of the various ROTC/extracurricular programs, which allow/for additional training and recreational fun the cadets. The for Endurance Club prepares for the Army’s in 10-piie run event, held annually Washington, D.C. The Ranger Challenge Tehm is a club sport of sorts, which /bompetes against other schools. Ranger One is designated for cadets who are interested in serving actively as infantry combat officers, with the opportunity to train more extensively toward that goal. The camaraderie that results from that common aspiration it the best extracurricular offered by ROTC Schaffer said, a member of Ranger One. is what makes “It’s this one big brotherhood, this whole fraternity of people that frankly would die for any of the others,” he said. "It’s not for the faint of the heart, and more for the career officer.” Whether you’re hell-bent on serving overseas or interested in getting in better shape, the ROTC can benefit just about anybody who joins its ranks. Despite the grueling physical and mental demands, those moving onto a military career are passionate about the program. Freshman and Ranger One member Mackenzie Sims offered his strategy on how to survive ROTC. "You’ve just got to Ranger up and do it,” he said. Chances are most students’ degree program don’t feature a weekly lab involving rappelling lessons or forcing them out of bed at 6 a.m. four times a week to do rigorous physical training. Unless, of course, they signed up to don 'the camouflage with the Army Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC). Known as the Spartan Battalion, the ROTC is MSU’s four-year program that transforms college students into trained U.S. Army officers. With classroom components, plenty of workout time and a slew of groups and organizations within the program, it becomes a way of life for its cadets. ■fl think of it as a job more than an extracurricular,” and battalion senior commander Meghan O’Malley said. That job includes a stipend too, as well as chances for scholarships, but only if you pledge to join the Army afterward. to classes In addition focused on learning leadership development and about the Army cadets participate in weekly hands-on labs for actual field/ training. The program also requires mpst of its members to perform physical trajzimg four days a week. There are a vajfrety of extracurricular programs that /demand additional commitment. Oh, mrd let’s not forget that all of these caplets are also students earning a degree/ ‘Waking up at 4:30 in the morning to go do a ruck march ¿fast-paced marches with full eqnipmenj/and backpack) when you’re tired andy^ou’ve been up since 3 doing homework isn’t the greatest feeling,” freshman Alpc Schaffer said. "But by the end of it, vpu realize the reward.” The reward for those who' choose to contract with the U.S. Army is graduating as ¡/commissioned second lieutenant, the intro-level officer class. For the few who go /through the program and don’t enlist (which is permissible, O’Malley said), there’s still much to take away from ROTC. p'T’ve seen a lot of people come into this program who are intimidated and afraid to w -< < JZl II) Qj IQ o zr. o Q) O" o *" m 3 o o o ■ CD ~0 X/ Q. ©O)/—I ? O' /~o a>' ■j 3 S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S a r I m y r e s e r v e o f f i c e r s ' t r a i n i n g c o r p s ROTC program prepares the Army’s leaders of tomorrow Ranger One s this one big Drotherhood, this whole fraternity of people that frankly, would die for any of the others.” -Alec Schaffer, freshman M l t Freshman Kirk Mason films while the Telecasters actors act out the scene where sophomore Phil McGuigan tells junior Scott Long and sophomore Taylor Cunningham about his eHarmony profile. In the film, McGuigan said he used a picture of Denzel Washington as his profile picture. Holding the boom, freshman Katie Nopar waits for the next scene to start while freshmen Kirk Mason and Jack Burk set up the shot on the camera. The living room was packed with several crew members, studio lights, cameras and wires. "you’re not blonde? get off my porch!" -Phil McGuigan, sophomore Freshman Katie Nopar, junior Noah Gebstadt and sehjor Andy Kozlowski mock and laugh at the others after completion of one oFtheir unsuccessful takes. The Telecasters were filming a short film on a man wjio found’a® potential date on an online dating website. Junior Scott Long and sophomore Taylor Cunningham stop between takes to laugh and discuss how their take just went. The guys were filming inT^ong’^ house, which is nicknamed "Giraffe House." Nestled in a cozy red house, a group of friends lounged about joking and laughing, sharing random videos on YouTube and enjoying each other’s company It looked like a typical Saturday afternoon hang-out, except for the studio lights, cameras and various cords and wires snaking around the home. These particular friends are actually the cast and crew of the:"Giraffe House;1 a mini-sketch comedy written, edited and produced entirely by students for the MSU Telecasters. The crew's association with the Telecasters grants them the necessary equipment to produce T.V programs that are aired locally and on the Internet. Included in the Telecasters ’ lineup is ‘ ‘The Show,’ ’ the longest running college sitcom in the U.S, “SideShow” is MSU s own brand of Saturday Night Live-styled sketch comedy On the other hand, “Giraffe House,” mysteriously describes itself as "One house, four boys, one giraffe, infinite possibilities on the Telecasters’ website. While the show does not feature a giraffe (the name originates from a wooden giraffe that once stood outside the red home where the crew films; it was eventually stolen), it does feature a different spin on comedy in a modern format. While the other shows shoot longer segments geared for T.V, "Giraffe House” tailors its episodes to a YouTube format, often going for a quick, outrageous gag in two minutes or less. On this particular day, the crew is filming a skit poking fun at online dating services. Tall, gangly sophomore Phil McGuigan, one of the four co-stars of the show, attracts an online date by claiming he resembles a young Denzel Washington. His date, however, persists in accepting McGuigan for who he is, saying she’ll “fall in love with his personality” The big day comes, an eager McGuigan opens the door, and stops dead at the sight in front of him before screaming incredulously, "You’re not blonde? Get off my porch!” MSU Telecasters’ short sketch comedy show provides film experience, Tilled with fun The sketch, after it is chiseled down by the editors, might last a minute at most. Yet with take after take of hilarioqs bloopers, the actual filming lasted at least a half hour. Much\ of this is due to improvisations the actors make as they film® as well as tweaks to the dialogue by producers. “The Denzel Washington thing just came up today,” freshman Kirk Mason, a new editor on the crew, said. "In the script it said something like he was a 6’ IQ” body builder, but they didn’t think it worked for Phil, so they changed it.’ ’ Each sketch is initially conceived at the weekly writers’ meetings, where old episodes are critiqued as the writers pull together new ideas. Scripts are then written independently and e-mailed to the rest of the crew. On Saturdays, everyone comes together to shoot the sketch, and after that the editors will trim the episode down to the final product. Shenanigans and inside jokes aside, the crew members enjoy being a part of something that gives them practical experience in film production. "I’m a media arts and tech, major, and as a department, we really don’t get involved with cameras or anything until the end of our sophomore year,” freshman jack Burk said, one of the head editors after just two semesters on the show. “But with Telecasters and ‘Giraffe House,’ I’m getting involved with cameras and editing from the start.” Despite the laid back atmosphere and the crude humor that the actors and crew themselves admit to using, an experience like this can pay off. The show lost a producer from last semester when he got a gig as a videographer on the latest Ozzy Osbourne tour. So while the show’s description of having one house, four boys and a giraffe isn’t entirely accurate (it’s all there, save for the giraffe), the infinite possibilities clause still holds true for its cast and crew. ylllf calling a foul on sexual violence The Coalition Against Sexual Violence protests against MSU Basketball For the Coalition Agaipdt Sexual Violence, the saying “forgive and forget’’ is not a part of their vocabulary^ On Jan. 27, almostiive months after two MSU basketball players allegedly sexually assaulted a girl mWonders Hall, ten members of the coalition thrust their signs into the night ajr outside the Breslin Center before the Spartan men’s basketball team took omtne Wolverines, calling for a “rape free Izzone” and for MSU to “stop ignoring rape.’™ “We hope to raise awareness about this issue and let people know that we’re not just going to stand by and let rape be acceptable,” senior and coalition member Corjney Bouse said. “It’s not acceptable. These guys should have been punished. Something should have happened and it disgusts me that it hasn’t.” / The story however, is far from black and white. Two members of the MSU basketball /team were accused of assaulting a freshman student in their dorm room on the evening of Aug. 29. The three allegedly began a game of miniature basketball in which anyone who missed would have to remove an article of clothing. The victim claimed that when she wouldn’t remove any more clothing, the two men turned off the lights, blocked the door, and assaulted heaH Though the MSU police categorized the case as Criminal Sex Conduct I, Ingham County Prosecutor Stuart Dunnings III decided not to prosecute on the basis of a lack of evidence. Unsatisfied with the way this case was handled, a number of concerned MSU students formed the coalition in September of 2010. The coalition started off protesting at Midnight Madness, the Izzone campout and Dunning’s office in Lansing, but have now progressed to talks with MSU officials regarding ways to eliminate a “rape culture” that they see forming on campus. “It just seems really conspicuous that there hasn’t even been so much as an investigation and it’s been kind of hushed up,” senior Joel Reinstein said with a sign stating “Expel Rape” in hand. Bouse attributed this inaction to the notion of rape by negligence, which places blame on the victim for putting him/herself in a dangerous situation. She said the group has also noticed a climate at MSU that “perpetuates rape myths and victim blaming.” “We have a culture that sort of propagates rape through the media, through the kind of jokes that people tell—you couldn't point to any one thing,” Reinstein said. However, not everyone thought it proper for the group to protest before the game, One woman approached the members to voice her opinion that it was inappropriate, telling them that her best friend had been a victim of rape and didn’t need to be reminded of it, “I can understand that our actions can be triggering,” Blair Walker, who made the trip all ie way from Detroit to protest, said in response. “Obviously this is going to bring up those incidents [of rape], so I understandier perspective. But at the same time, her perspective leads to a cycle in which we don’t talk about things, in which people don't address these issues.” Indeed, some basketball fans there for the game that evening agreed. “I think it’s fine that they’re here,” Lansing resident Norb Kurtz said. “I was shocked when I heard about it [the alleged assault], and I thought those two should be expelled.” Reinstein said it wasn’t about settling the case or bringing justice down upon the alleged assailants—the time for that was longpast. Instead, the Coalition merely wanted the MSU community to be educated, to not forgive and certainly not to forget. Detroit resident Blair Walker, „along with other members of the Coalition Against Sexual Violence, gather outside of the Breslin Center to protest the men's basketball game. The Coalition was protesting throughout the year in regards to allegations of rape! brought against two members of the men’s basketball team. to to" :< =3 n U gf Z N II W T3 ^ Xfi> o sr S T U D E N T I I O R G A N Z A T O N S c o a l i t i o n a g a i n s t s e x u a l v i o l e n c e "we hope to raise awareness about this issue and let §eople know lat we're not going to stand by and let rape be acceptable.” -Cortney Bouse, senior Senior Cortney Bouse protests th(^P§l men’s basketball Sam outside of the Breslin Center. Bouse has attended peveral protests since allegations were brought against members of thefteam back in September. Members of the Coalition Against Sexual Violence create signs to "support their protest efforts. The signs call foia "Rape Free Izzpae’’ and for MSU ¡11 ‘ Call a Foul on Rap^H yiiK S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S p i l i p i n o I a m e r i c a n s t u d e n t s o c i e t y 3 m £.8 O c m d tn =j o>< Z N cr o“J ^ CD 0) -±r E 3 3 ° (/> CQ_“1 CD taking down the big house The Pilipino AmericapStudent Society gets pumped for the Rice Bowl While most agree/ihat MSU’s notorious rivalry between the maize and blue Wo^/erines should be settled by a scoreboard, the Pilipino Americaprotudent Society or PASS, likes to make it a bit more personal/ . Each yearyuie group competes in the Rice Bowl—a hard-fought battle thatrequires strength, agility and most importantly a strong domachd-against the University of Michigan’s Filipino American Student Association. The competition combines athleticism and appetite in events such as football, basketball, volleyball, dodge M and a food-eating contest. ; / “You kind of have"a sense of belonging to your high school. If You can go to football games, cheer on your team and you know the players. But here, when you go to football games there’s so many students and it’s a lot different,” junior and president of PASS Brieanne Mirjah said. “Rice Bowl is so exciting because you know everyone that’s playing and you really feel a sense of belonging to the team, you have a connection to it.” However, before making the journey to enemy territory on Jan. 22 this year, PASS had a few preparations to make. On the night of Jan. 20, the group held its annual Spirit Fest to rally the troops before the events began for the fifth year running. 1 Loud hip-hop music, cases of Powerade, boxes ofWheaties and the shiny, silver Rice Bowl itself set a tone of victory A mixture of about 40 Filipinos and students from other Asian cultures shuffled into the Vincent Chin Memorial Room in the basement of Holden Hall. At the door, sheets were set out for group members to sign up for the Bowl events. Bf’We have yet to win the Rice Bowl at Michigan,|| Mirjah said, “so we want to get everyone pumped up and excited and ready to beat them.” First on the agenda, personal PASS cheers had to be made for the competition, followed by T-shirt decorating and most importantly the painting of the Bowl from U of M’s dark blue to MSU’s bright, Spartan green. Coming off of a close comeback win at home last year, in which an excitingly off-pitch round of karaoke was the deciding factor, most of the PASS competitors were confident that the losing streak at the Big House would be broken. “Of course we are going to win, because, you know, since I’ve been here, we are 1 and 0,” sophomore Christian Dioso said, good- naturedly describing himself as a lucky charm. But does the competition get as intensely hostile as the Spartan and Wolverine football face-off in the fall? “You know, we’ll tease each other and stuff when we play basketball, but at the end of each event we’re all friends,’’■unior Jeremy Timacdog said. “It’s a friendly rivalry.” "you really :eel a sense c Delonging to the team, you have a connection to it.” Brieanne Mirjah, junior PASS members join tigether in the annual ¡Oil Riel Bowl event and sign up for activities like basketball, football and karaoke. PASS member intend to spread aware^Hand appreciation of Pilipino ^Kure on and off campus. 4 4mst because it’s hard doesn’t mean it’s impossible.” -Yu Yin, senior Senior Yu Yin, organizer of the eXue Career Training School, talks withYangcheng Chen about specifics of his resume. The eXue Career Training School Conference aims to advance thejtpfeeis of Chinese students. Xiaoxiangi®Mlepicts the numerous opportuniti® available to students at MSU. Xu attended the eXue Career Training Schwl Conference, which was held the on the last ^^^Rkend of January D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S e x u e I c a r e e r t r a i n i n g s c h o o l Students enjoy a short break. |§iing the eXue Career Training Sch«>l conference! Thfiorganization is aimed ttmdvance the professional careers of Chinese students. building bn ^ Seasoned Spartan entrepreneur trains Chinese students to market themselves The audience shifts nervously in their seats as Yu Yin brings up a chart highlighting the 2009 American unemployment rate by state. With one of the highest unemployment rates in the country Michigan’s position at 15 percent is difficult to miss. “As you can see, finding a job here in Michigan is going to be very hard,” Yu warns in Beijing-accented Mandarin. “There’s going to be a lot of competition.” “But,” she glances around the room with the severity of a schoolteacher, “just because it’s hard doesn’t mean it’s impossible.” Her audience of mostly freshmen and sophomores are students from China. They gave up this particular weekend of Jan. 29 and 30 to learn how to market themselves to American employers here in the Snyder* Philips Complex. This is the eXue Career Training School, a for-profit weekend seminar founded by Yu in spring 2010 to help Chinese students at MSU bridge the cultural divide and get the most out of their American college lives. The enterprising Yu,'* a finance senior, has interned for Honeywell (a Fortune 100 company) and launched two successful business startaips over her years at MSU. Yu said she decided to teach these seminars based on common questions she received from Chinese students about adapting to college life in America. (■'The transition is very hard for Chinese students,” she said. “They’re not sure of all the opportunities around them and they want to do something, but nobody tells them how.” When asked what he felt was his greatest roadblock as a student, freshman and seminar attendee Zhang Yangtao said having to adapt to life in America was a major issue. “The second language, the style of lectures, ■Americans everywhere - I’m still trying to get used to this environment,” he said. Roadblocks like these, Yu said, were what she hoped to overcome through her seminars. “I’m trying to show them [Chinese students] how life could be,” she said. “And how they can do more to reach out.” Throughout the weekend, Yu covered topics such as building effective resumes and cover letters, networking resources, andwaysto stand out to potential employers at career fairs. While she encouraged her audience to work a variety of part-time jobs to build their skill sets, she also warned them not to turn their noses down to unpaid positions. ■‘Employers aren’t going to ask whether you were paid when they consider internships listed on your resume,’ ’ she said. ‘ ‘Don’t avoid those even if they don’t give you any money.” Yu also dedicated time to topics such as dining etiquette, dinner and professional interviews dress codes. She gave pointers for job interviews and detailed how international applicants could present their apparent shortcomings as employable strengths. “Oh, and the most important tip about interviews?” she grins cheekily, “Don’t cry, no matter how nervous you are.” A chuckle ripples through the audience. Sophomore Gu Yu said the seminar inspired her to make more American friends and involve herself in student organizations on campus. “I transferred here recently and I feel I haven’t been communicating enough with others,” she said. “I need to work on that.” But Yu has bigger dreams for these seminars that extend beyond a mere on-campus operation. She plans to export this start-up back to her native China, hoping to fill a void in the market there. “We have a lot of agents in China who help prepare students for SATs and TOEFLs, but they don’t train students to adapt to life in America.” “What I’m doing here is taking care of everything in between and trying to teach them all the skills they need,” she said. “And in teaching them, I myself learn more about where I stand.” ffjj^umor Damelltermandinand sophomore MattheJ ^M)litug|try thjir luck at amateur poker. Though til tournament was geared towards students, poker player! from around East "Lansing also showHI 44 n every other friday, clubs go to the schools and fill backpacks full or food for kids who are on assisted food programs." -Jack Cogswell, senior Juniors BrgckVeenhuis ad Andre^Gardner were among the 450 MSU students who participated in the tournament. The buy-in was free, though students were encouraged to donate non-perishable food items in support of the Mid- Michigan Food Ban® S T U D E N T I I O R G A N Z A T O N S r o t a r a c t c l u b Thé chips wereistacked high during the Hold ’em for Hunger Charity Poker Tournament. The winner of the tournament received a grand prizS of $2,000 from the MSU Federal Credit Union. ih ■H H PP'-'-m HH IP ss fighting hunger, one chip at a time MSU Rotaract Club hosts second annual Hold 'em for Hunger tournament Getting out of bed to trek across campus on a brisk Sunday morning might seem like\ a daunting task, but on Feb. 13. Hundreds of students reported to the Union at 10 a.m. where they were joined by poker enthusiasts from the Greater Lansing area. A warm, welcoming atmosphere filled with relaxed chatter greeted patrons as they filed up the steps to the second floor of the Union, ready to take on the second annual Hold 'em for Hunger Poker Tournament. With no buy-in, Hold 'em for Hunger drew crowds of all ages and experience levels. The winner of thelournament received a $2,000 check, courtesy of the Michigan State University Federal Credit Union. The next 75 placeholders were also eligible for a variety of goods and gift cards donated by local vendors. But there was more at stake than gift cards that weekend. Each participant was encouraged ito donate at least one non- perishable food item in an effort to fight hunger by raising food for the Mid-Michigan Food Bank. The MSU Rotaract Club, a community service group, opted to raise awareness and supplies for the food bank as part of a larger initiative called the Backpack Program. The Backpack Program, a project supported by other off-campus rotary clubs, goes beyond federally funded, free or reduced-price school lunches to meet the needs of hungry children around the clock. "Basically rotary clubs in the area sponsor five different elementary schools. Every other Friday clubs go to the schools and fill backpacks full of food for kids who are on assisted food programs,” senior and Rotaract Club elected board member JadCQogswell said. "They do it when the other kids arpn’t atpund, so it’s subtle. This way the kids have foodior the weekend and after school.” \ Thkmgh the Backpack Program, the RotaracKClub connected with other clubs to fight child hunger and malnutrition close to home by raising non-perishable provisions and awareness about food shortages in Michigan. At the first annual Hold spring, the club raised over 1,000 pounds of food and hoped to mhtoh or surpass the amount this year. 'em for Hiinger tournament last! \ While the poker games\vere held to benefit a worthy cause, the chaftiw aspect of the tournament didn’t stop participants from hitting the cards hard. Tension crepHnto the air as more players were eliminated ahp the prize round approached. Slowly the crowd thinned as the tournament stretched intisp the afternoon and evening hours. Still, even eliminated patrons had no complaints to offer on the tournament set-up and execution as they left. The MSU Rotaract Club worked hard to ensure that Hold 'em for Hunger ran as smoothly and efficiently as possible, and the effort paid off. 1 ‘The tournament was very well-organized, and I had a lot of fun playing. Obviously I wish I had done better, but some of it’s luck,” recent MSU graduate Jason Dargo said. "Really the only difference between a usual tournament and this was the number of rookies and the adjustment from a typical buy-in,’ ’ Dargo added. ‘ ‘Withsmaller amounts, the game goes faster; I just wasn’t used to it, but it’s good for this number of people.” Venice is probably the most romantic place, and a Venetian-themed ball makes you think of love." -Kelechi Edozie-Anyadiegwu, ISA assistant director of public relations Couples Emery Way freshman Catherine Morgan, junior Maxwell McGowan and freshman Kaylee King groove the night away at ISA’s Valentinljs Ball. The frve-ifjpur event provided nonstop entlltainment with the MSU Ballroom Danise^lub and live DJ performances. ISA president slmpr Ruslan Mursalzade condttctsSte segment of the night where couples, or friends could open up and share|a sepret, or a loving thought. The ball was Venetian-themed and guestllwere provided dinner. T Y P E k r i t i k a b h a r a d w a j / P H O T O v e r o n i c a n a g y / D E S I G N b e t s y e b e r , s a r a l e e g o r d o n £ Roses, :candl|s, masks and balldons gap the romantic*'-^ atmosphere to ISA’s Venetian-themed ball. Free masquerade masks were given to those who; attended and didn't bring their own valentines in Venice ISA brings Venetian charm to East Lansing for its annual Valentine's Day Ball Strains of classical music emanated from the brightly lit University Ballroom at the Marriott Hotel. Amid the golden arched walkway and red heart-shaped balloons, streamers shimmered above young men and women dressed in their finest suits and gowns as they walked toward the ballroom. On Feb.fj4, the celebratory day of love and affection between beaus, the International Students Association (ISA), threw its annual Valentine’s Day Ball. Titled this year as ‘ Venetian Nights,” the ball, according to ISA programming board representative Mariana Rendon, is the organization’s biggest event. Kelechi Edozie-Anyadiegwu, ISA assistant director of public relations, said a summer trip to Venice, Italy gave her the idea for the theme. "In Venice I went to a play where they were talking about a Venetian-themed ball,” she said. "Venice is probably the most romantic place, and a Venetian-themed ball makes you think of love.” The masks on party goers’ faces were not the-only indication of the Venetian theme. In a corner of the ballroom, four MSU music students played classical pieces on their violins - a selection from the works of Mozart and Haydn, said performer and graduate student Erin Lawson. The musicians also included musical numbers for a pair of dancers from the MSU Ballroom Dance Club who were asked to perform for the ball, as the two of them waltzed across the wooden dance floor. ’ 'We’re going to start with the waltz because it adds that royal feel.that goes with the theme, and then we’ll switch it up to tango,” club member Prashanth Rajarajan said. "The contrast in light and dark can be seen, as the waltz is a light dance while tango is dark and mysterious.” While international students struck up conversations around the many tables inside, couples could also be seen hblding hands, occasionally sharing a kiss. An houryand a half into the night, however, the mellowNdassical music came to an end and the party^cene kicked in. Old favorites like "Don’t Wanna^Lhss a Thing” and "Sweet Caroline”proved to be ag popular as new songs like "Cupid Shuffle” ang "Carry Out.” The dance floor was packed with shaking hips and swaying shoulders. While many present at the event were single, others professed their love to each other openly. "I love you very much,” Houssem Ben Lazreg announced to his companion Agnes Lusito during the shout-outs in several languages, including German, French and Spanish. 1 We got a wider audience this time. With this event, we’ve been a lot more organized unlike previous years where things just happened on the spot,” ISA student assembly representative Dushyant Barpaga said. ISA treasurer Gaurang Shrikhande agrees. "In our first week, we sold 500 tickets. We didn’t take as much time to sell the tickets [compared to last year], which is our biggest achievement.” The event’s success was evident by the lack of space in the ballroom. Some couples, like Barpaga and his partner, Rendonfjcould be seen gazing lovingly into each other’s eyes. "Baby te amo [I love you],” he declared with a grin on his face. "I joined the e-board on Sept. 27 and we started dating in November,” Rendon, who is from Honduras, said. Singles, .however,, were not left out from the fun. ■Please do mention that I’m single,” senior Ashiq Rahiman joked. Others like sophomore Xia Chen were happy enough just being there. "Iam here just to have fun, know others and make friends,” she said. yJKl Jumd|^Nathari Redner and Freddie Wurster shuck Oysters for the Spartan Enology Society oyster and wine tasting. Shucking an oyster involwhiprying the top and bottom shells apart, and then cutting trie oyster free from its"shell. ' .Junior Nathan Redner stirs up a traditional nriglonette sauce in the Kellogg Center kitchen. Redner volunteers to prepare ftMd for the Spartan Enology Society in order to get hands-on experience for his major. Seniors'Kathryn jsgeks and Kathryn Wahl pass around a tray of ¡outers at the pysteSand wine listing event put on by the Spartan Enology Society Thesevent was held in the Olympus Room at the Kellogg Center and guest speaker:. Erik Liedholm presented information about various^ystprs and the traditional wine that isHerved alongside!them. oysters and wine The Spartan Enology Society gets educated inline dining at the Kellogg Center Members of the Spartan Enology Society certainly don’t drink their wine ^from a box. In fact they don’t drink from anywhere, because it’s a dry club. Administrators keep a watchful eye to make sure no alcohol is consumed, but it doesn’t really hinder their objective. For this group of mainly hospitality business students, wine is more of a science than a social lubricant—one that involves a lot of studying, and occasionally eating fresh seafood. As it turns out, oysters and fine wine aren’t like apples and oranges. Both are common in upscale restaurants and come in a variety of strengths and flavors. It takes a trained palate to pinpoint the differences. “Each oyster has a particular flavor—the salinity if it’s really briny if it’s light in flavor—that’s the same thing with wines,” senior Kathryn Weeks said. Weeks was one of 12 students who attended a societyl sponsored presentation at the Kellogg Center on Jan. 10. As an introduction, several courses of oysters were passed around the stately wood dining table and their differences in taste were discussed, one of the few times when etiguette calls for leaving silverware untouched. Guest speaker Erik Liedholm stood at the front of the room with a gold pin attached to the lapel of his suit—credentials of his trade as a sommelier, a certified wine guru. Following the oyster tasting, he gave an almost sermon-like lecture on the grapes of the Loire Valley region of France. For those learning the ins and outs of all things wine, this is thgjDlace to start, he said. Once you know French wine, the rest combs easy And for those with a budding career in the restaurant opnotel industry such knowledge is necessary If you re/lnto food and beverage, your profit is in wine,” Liedholm said. Ssrdor and co-founder Brian Weber formed the society as an educational opportunity for hospitality business students. It gives studbhts in that field a chance to learn a new skill applicable in a variety of hospitality business careers. ."Asa club we really want to focus on the education,” Weber said. Because in. this industry if you really want to make it you’re going need to sit down with a cup of coffee and read a book.” Weber said the society s ultimate goal is to help students achieve sommelier status, a process that reguires extensive studying and a class to pass a standardized test. Weber is a level one sommelier, the first rung of the wine ladder, and wants to encourage others to pursue the same path. “Eventually the School of Hospitality Business at Michigan State will be known for producing sommeliers,” he said. Junior Tim Wickes, part of the small circle that launched the society said he is confident the experience will make him more marketable in his chosen career path. own my own restaurant someday and I want to pick out the wine list. I want to trust myself to do that,” Wickes said. "It absolutely gives you an edge.” “if you’re into food and beverage, your profit is in wine." -Erik Liedholm, sommelier 7T —| O -< 11m O Qj‘m 3 ■ O c i ft) O) CD S "U 3- 153 O ^ O Ù) D "J Q) °-sr S T U D E N T I I O R G A N Z A T O N S s p a r t a n e n o l o g y s o c i e t y Senior Spence Fogarty shovels oyster meat into his mouth .during the oyster tasting event put on by the Spartan Enology Society. At the event, five varieties of oysters were sampled, including Wianno, Island Creek, Nonesuch Belons, Fanny Bays and Kumamoto.^ Company wine director and proprietor Erik Liedholm presents to: the Spartan Enology Society at the Olympus Room in the Kellogg Center. 1 iedholm’s presentation, “The Loire Valley’1 gealt with oyster and winelShg. Junior StegglTzeng, better known asJ||||Stevj3, p^formsa classical piano piece during the Cultural Vogue pre-show Tzeng started playing classical piano when he was ||years old and began composing music in middle school. g3||lembers of ftigma Be® Rho Fraternity, Inc. perform J traditional .stepping and modern hip-hop dancH during Cultural Vogue. The fraternity aims to prom^Hgaith Asian culture, instill unity and aid the gre Jig? community Senior and one of the MCs for the night, Theresa Tan, along with other members of the Filipino American Student Society (PASS), give a modern performance during- Cultural Vogue. PASS aims to generate a greater awareness of Pilipino American culture at MSU. "while the cultural dances show a sense of roots, the modern dances show our integration in american society.j -Stephanie Raymundo, senior S T U D E N T I O R G A N Z A T O N S a p a s o I Members of the Hmong American Student Association pemorm a cultural dane^Bunded in 1 provide ||ffiport and a communal atmosphère for Chinese students. Members of theV®tnameii Student Association (VSA)®nd the show with a dance in billowy costumes. VSA provides Vietnamese-themed educati Michigan State participates in a some successful defense against Penn State during game three of a three-game series in East Lansing. Michigan Staff went 12-5 at home this season, in business MSU Baseball team seeks success it hasn’t seen in 32 years :he last time the MSU Baseball team made the NCAA ny&ment, Coach Jake Boss Jr, fired the answer back Apparently it’s not a number that sits well with him. o the last year the Spartans won the Big Ten, and they haW’t wonUhe regular season or the Big Ten Tournament since. But after this season, these Spartans found themselves in an unfamiliar spot. Finishing 36-21 and 17-11 in the Big Ten, they captured the Big Ten Championship for the first time in 32 years. This success was justVthe latest burst of progress made by the program since Boss Jr. took over in 2008. He raised the team from 23-31 in 2009 to 34-19 last year, and they’ve been centered on a different set of expectations in the Spartans’ clubhouse ever since. "When I was at Eastern Michigan [coaching] we played Michigan State and I felt like they quit once they got down, and we pounced on that ’ ’ Boss Jr. said. "So we had a little bit of an idea going in that might be a problem, so just the attitude of expecting to win and seeing yourself holding that Big Ten Championship trophy at the end of the year, realizing that it is a possibility” Boss Jr. said the Spartans boast good starting pitching and defense, arguably the most important elements for a championship baseball team on any level. The Spartans rely heavily on starting pitchers senior Kurt Wunderlich and junior Tony Bucciferro. Wunderlich went 10-2 with a 3.19 ERA and Bucciferro went 8-3 with a 3.38 ERA. As for the rest of the defense, the middle of the infield was patrolled well by second baseman sophomore Ryan Jones and junior shortstop Justin Scanlon, who helped turn the bulk of the team’s 51 double plays. Senior Brandon Eckerle hauled in 185 putouts in centerfield, the most on the team among the outfielders. "You gotta go out there and attack the hitters,] and just let the defense do the work,” Wunderlich said. |l think we have the best fielding team in the Big Ten. I trust those guys to make the play behind me and they’ve bailed me out before.” Thanks to that simple formula, the Spartans churned out a series of highlights throughout the season, including wins in both of their showcase games. They captured the Crosstown Showdown against the single-A minor league Lansing Lugnuts on April 5. They also laid claim to winning the first collegiate baseball game ever at Comerica Park on April 20 in Detroit against Central Michigan. More important though were two critical three-game sweeps of Minnesota and Michigan. "The Michigan series was special because it was on the road, and it’s tough to sweep a team regardless of where you’re playing,’ ’ Boss Jr. said. "You look at the Minnesota series, and we just played extremely well against the defending Big Ten champions.” The highlight of the series against the Golden Gophers came in the middle game, when Bucciferro pitched a complete game shutout. However, the last half of the season remained the most critical for the Spartans. MSU still needed to get through Penn State, Purdue and Indiana, all of whom represented the remainder of the top four in the Big Ten standings at the time along with MSU. With the bulk of the schedule at home, the Spartans passed their late season tests with flying colors. MSU swept both Purdue and Penn State in three games each, and the Big Ten-clinching win came with a 10-1 drubbing of Northwestern on May 20. The Spartans weren’t able to claim an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament though, as they lost twice to Illinois in the Big Ten Championship tournament. However, considering how long it took to get to that point—32 years to be exact— the Spartans could still finish the season with a sense of accomplishment. "It’s tough not getting an automatic bid, but there’s so many positives that we can take away from this year,” senior first baseman Jeff Holm said. ‘Til always remember this year. When I’ll look down on my hand and see that (Big Ten Championship) ring, it’s going to make it all worthwhile.” ym JunioSForward Draymond Green is fouled by Bowling Green as be attempts a shotllfcj defeated Bowling Green 74-39. Cgach Tom Izzo "rusbA, toward junior forward Kelyon Roe after he injure:^ his kneeMuring the last momentgp’f the game against Penn State. MSU blit Penn State 7^B7. Scoreboard MinnesotaW, 71-62 NorthwesternW, 65-62 Penn Statg¡|L, 66-62 WisconsinW, 64-61 NorthwesternW, 71-62 IllinoisL, 71-62 Purdue L, 86-76 Michigan L, 61-57 IndianaW, 84-83 Iowa L, 72-52 Wisconsin L, 82-56 Penn StateW, 75-57 Ohio State L, 71-61 Illinois^W, 61-57. MinnesotaW, 53-48 Purdue L, 67-47 ■IowaW, 85-66 Michigan L, 70-63 Roster Keith Appling F Russell Byrd,F F Alex Gauna Draymond GreenJ Anthony Ianni J Mike Kebler S KoriaLucious S Kalin Luc as S Derrick Nix SO Adreian Payne F J Delfin Roe Garrick Sherman SO Durrell Summerss Austin ThortonJ* * 1RS Senior guard Mike Kebler rush® the net against Prairie View A&M. MSU won the game with a final Rore of 90-51. Junior forwäralpraymond gfp^n^^jlts jSlror forward- Ddlyon Roe as ho goes up the shfl against'Penn State.f|||| deMated Penn State 75-^7. flustered, frustrated Men’s basketball team's consistent struggles lead to a season below expectations —Fans must certainly have felt that the tumultuous period that was the-2011 men’s basketball season was like a nightmare that they couldn’t wake up from. A 9-9 Big Ten finish (19-15 overall) and a first round exit in the NCAA Tournament were a heart-wrenching far cry Tram the Spartans’ previous two outings, where they reached the Final Four twice and the National Championship game once. The Spartans just couldn’t get any momentum going after barely surviving a brutal non-conference schedule. MSU had to make its way through eventual national champion Connecticut, last year's winner Duke, perennial powerhouses Syracuse and Texas, and came up short in each of those games. But the Spartans weren’t playing sound basketball by their standards either, going into the Big Ten play hobbled by consistent turnovers, poor shooting and defense. The conference schedule didn’t offer much of a respite for the Spartans, as they continued to snooze through their slump. After their win against Northwestern on Jan. 05, MSU wasn’t able to win more than one game in a row until the Big Ten Tournament. They were swept into their season series against Purdue and, even worse, Michigan. They were blown out by the Iowa Hawkeyes 72-52 on Feb. 2, and an 82-56 loss against Wisconsin four days later only added salt to the wounds in their pride. The Spartans were riddled with off-the-court distractions as well. Coach Tom Izzo served a game suspension in December after the university wrongly employed an individual associated with a potential recruit during a summer camp. Junior Korie Lucious was abruptly dismissed by Izzo in January for conduct detrimental to the team. Two unnamed basketball, players were accused of committing sexual assault on campus in August, a case which Ingham County Prosecutor Stuart DunningsSlII declined to take up because he couldn’t find evidence of coercion, The State News reported. MSU ended up being carried through by senior Kalin Lucas, who was the one consistent bright spot amidst the gloom. Lucas started all 34 games, led the team in scoring at 17 points a game and made the second All-Big Ten team. Delvon Roe was a defensive specialist, often enlisted by Izzo to guard the opposing team’s best players. Roe made the all-defensive team for the Big Ten. Keith Appling and Adreian Payne formed a formidable freshman duo that provided a glimpse of the future of Spartan basketball this year, coming off the bench to provide depth and occasional scoring. However, the Spartans failed to develop consistency and no onAs March crept closer, many hoped Coach Izzo would work his magic and take his team for a deep run into the NCAA Tournament. For a while, that looked possible. Beating Iowa and Purdue with convincing wins in the Big Ten Tournament helped the Spartans crawl into the Big Dance, because they had been on the bubble before, finishing the season 17-13. The Spartans were seeded 10th and slated to play against the University of California - Los Angeles Bruins. However, as in many games that season, MSU fell behind quickly and had to race to catch up. The Spartans were down 42-24 at half and at worst down by 23. However, thanksio missed free throws by the Bruins and persistent three-pointers from the Spartans, MSU stormed back and was within one point with 4.4 seconds left - with the ball in hand, too. However, Lucas traveled trying to escape a triple team, ending the comeback effort. The call put the Spartans’ season to bed. And though the team came close to finally waking up right before the terrible ending this year, they ultimately didn’t stir fast enough. Senior Cetera Washington throws up a shot for two points against; Ohio State, V|Siingtpn plajfSIa total of 19 minutes against the Buckeyes. The seniors of the Spartan women' J Easketball tear® show their resect tirthe Big Ten title trophy while their teammates look onward. The game was the l^phome game the seniors played at the Breslin Center. Scoreboard Illinoisi W, 70-57 WisconsinW, 62-43 Michigan! W, 63-56 • - Iowa! W, 63-60 Ohio StgH1 L, 67-53 IndianaW, 69-50 Minnesota! W, 66-54 Iowa-L, 66-64 WisbonsinW, 73-70 PurduelW, 76-57 Penn State! W, 60-49 MichiganW, 69-56 Northwestern :W, 74-60 IllinoisW, 69-56 Ohio Stateli1 L, 54-53 MinnesotaW, 65-51 Roster Taylor AltonJ Klarissa Bell F Bryonna Davis F Jasmine Holmes S LykendraJohnsonJ Kalisha Keane S so Tracy Nogle Annalie Pickrel F J Porsché Poole Courtney Schiffauer SO Kelsey Smith F Brittney Thomas S Jasmine Thomas 1so Cetera Washingtons Madison Williams F Senior jasmine Holmes cuts the net down as part of the post celebration for winning the Big Ten title. The game was the last time Holmes and fellow senior teammates would play at the Breslin Center. Juniff Taylor Alton surveys thejiourt while an Ohio State Buckeye guards her. The Spartan women's basketball team fell to Ohio State. slam dunk MSU women's basketball team wins Big Ten title DratfainXr serious attention this past season, the .’s basketball team displayed outstanding 1, strategy power andÉteart. While men’s head coach Tom Izzo’s usually acclaimed ggled, scraped and skirted by all season— finalTyfalling to UCLA in a tragic two-point loss in the first round of the NCAA Tournament—Suzy Merchant and the women’s team reached an ultimate high. For five days after the male Spartans fell, the women gallivanted on, claiming some of the headline space that the men let slip away Their numerous historical imprints this season even outshined their loss in the second round of the Tournament—a lukewarm end to a season that, holistically, shined brighter than a freshly polished court. While the team shined throughouttheir season, it closed with individual recognition as well. Senior Kalisha Keane was crowned Big Ten Player of the Year, the first ever at MSU. Junior forward Lykendra Johnson was named the conference’s best defensive player. To accompany it, Merchant now sports the title of best coach. Though the stand-alones shined, in the end it’s always about team synergy And they definitely had a lot of it. The team definitively captured the Big Ten title, a coup-d’état that ended Ohio State University’s half-decade reign. But their biggest triumph may have been at home. On FebM3, for the first time in history a women’s basketball game sold out the Breslin Center, nearly 15,000 fans packing the arena. The team triumphed over the visiting team— University of Michigan—by a 13-point margin, marking a decade span since they last lost to their rival in East Lansing. V A R S I T Y S P O R T S w o m e n ’ s b a s k e t b a l l •< o SMfl MSU cross country teams finish strong after a long season Th^jall 2010 season proved to be successful for both MSU’s men and wpoen cross country teams. J Ranked 16th nationally according to IU.S. nlack and field polls, the women’s team now also holds the best ranking in the Big Ten championships. While cross country assistant coach Lisa Senakiewich described freshmen Sara Kroll and Julia Otwell as part of a talented group who raced fearlessly runner Emily MacLeod has a lot to celebrate with her accomplishments. MacLeod was named Big Ten runner of the week at the Wisconsin Adidas invitational. She was also named Big Ten women’s cross country athlete of the year completing the third-best 6k time in Big Ten Championships history Her success brought a positive outcome to the whole team as it received the Big Ten title for the third time in program history since 2001. "It has been a really great experience. I’ve been working hard since I’ve been here and that’s my main goal!she said. Apart from MacLeod, the other two team leaders, Senakiewich said, are Carlie Green and Rebekah Smeltzer. Green, like MacLeod, is a fourth-year senior with a year’s eligibility within the team. Being a number two runner for the past season, Green believes that group dynamics are the reason for the team’s achievements. "We’re a young team but older athletes into like us have grown oim roles, been more mature and interactive,” she said. Senakiewich agrees. "None of them [athletes] are in it for individual accolades. They are racing for each other while supporting their peers along the way” Though winning the Big Ten, said Green, gave the team Rie experience they never had, the men’s team didn’t fall short of any expectations either. “Where we finished was significant. Even with our best guys down we can still do well,” Senakiewich said. The team's main asset, Patrick Grosskopf, became a runner in the season-ending race for the second consecutive season since 2001 Among other team contributions was freshman Travis Borchard who was named the Big Ten runner of the week along with sophomore Kristen Smith. The men finished the race fifth with a score of 148. The philosophy for both men’s and women’s teams, Senakiewich said, is to continue to compete at our best. And while the men’s team didn’t win a championship this season, both teams have worked tirelessly to reach their respective successes, ' We’ve all been working hard. We’re all in this together and we all turned out well” MacLeod said. Feeding into MacLeod’s positive enegery Senakiewich ends on an encouraging note. "It is moments like these which are a test to the team and the coaches of what we can do. Our philosophy involves how we can get to winning.” Team members such as Green are excited to win once more. To go back, Green said, and make it better is her belief on being one step closer to victory. — Wd s# mm Freshman Veronica Wlsln removes her sho‘|laMr the rac^wilson was the second to crlss the finish line with HI time of 18:51.3 Freshman Sam Aklilu andreophpmore Shaka Dukes lead thl|way in the! Michida Intercollegiate Championships. Aklilu was the second male tcacross the| finish line and Dukes was: the fourth. »Baj -w I IS iiSi J *1 if ■ ■ mm Wm I ■ I iiii I Sophomore Blake Treadwell,,senior Marcus Hyde, sophomore Tyler Hoover and senior Eric Gordon take the •-field after halftime. The Spartans recorded 11 wins of 13 games in thel|pt)-?,011 season. Scoreboard Western MichiganW, 38-14 Florida AtlanticW, 30-11 Notre DameW, 34-31 Northern ColoradoW, 45-Z WisconsinW, 34-24 MichiganW, 34-17 IllinoisW, 26-6 NorthwesternW, 35-27 IowaL, 37-6 MinnesotaW, 31-8 PurdueW, 35-31 Penn StateW, 28-22 Alabama L, 49-7 Sophomore Edwin Bake! runs the ball in for a touchdown in the Nov. 2|| game against Purdue. Baker scored the seconcM touchdown of the game helping Michigan State-beat the» Boilermakers-35-31. ellina stem play big result O 73 -j m x ■< in o 12 O QJ (D ■— X. 1/1 — 7T !£. n OJ Q, O) m O 3 CL O following weekend at the Adams Cup of Newport, and fifth of 10 teams the weekend after at the Rees Jones Intercollegiate Tournament. Traveling west, the Spartans competed in The Prestige at PGA WEST in La Quinta, Calif., putting the MSU program to the test against lop-tier west coast golfers Stanford and California State. MSU finished the first day in 13th place of 15 teams, due in part to the top Spartan of round one, freshman Conor O’Neil, who shot a 2-over par 74 to sit in a tie for 24th. However, day two spelled disaster as the team slipped into 15th place with a three-day 54-hole total of 71-over par 935 (306-315-314). The team took to the tees for the last time against|14 teams in 2010 at the Bridgestone Tournament, struggling to make par as they ended the match in 14th place. However, a new year gave the Spartans a fresh start as2011 brought a season turnaround in the Big Ten Match Play Championships. Day one of the championships, the team faced Purdue and suffered a 5-1 loss. But the Spartans made a comeback, chalking up wins against Penn State and Wisconsin in the next two matches. From that point on, the team placed in the top half of the remaining invitational tournaments. The Spartans took sixth of 16 teams m the Pinehurst Intercollegiate Tournament, eighth of 18 teams in the Spring Break Championship, sixth of 18 teams in the UK Bluegrass Invitational and seventh of 14 teams in the Illini Spring Classic. Working their way up from a mid-season slump, the golfers prepared for the Big Ten Championship, which marks the end of the regular season and the beginning of postseason preparations for NCAA tournaments. Though the team finished 10th of 11 teams in the Big Ten, Mory became the Spartan spotlight of the tournament, tying for second after the first day of play and ending the tournament tied for fifth place individually. the rough MSU Men's Golf faces turbulent year torrents of rain washed over the greens of Forest Akers, the •±\gan State men’s golf team sat atop the first round leaderboard . 11-stroke advantage in their first tournament of the season, rd Annual Fossum Invitational, hosted by MSU on Friday Sept. > suspended on the first day of play due to excessive rainfall, . the fairways and the golfers soaked. The unsuitable conditions wore on and the tournament was rescheduled to start the next morning, leaving the Spartans with a score of B-over par 294 and a four-way tie for first place. Junior Chris Mory and freshman Carson Castellanie were among the golfers tied for the individual lead after the first round, both sitting at 1-over par 73. The battle for first place raged on as the second round of golf resumed on Saturday. Mory was still the tournament frontrunner, but sophomore James Ross came from behind to contest for the title# matching Mory stroke for stroke. With the last holes approaching, the teammates fought to break the tie, but both finished the tournament at 2-over par 146. The Fossum Invitational went into playoffs to determine the champion, as Mory and Ross replayed the course. With nerves and anticipation rising, Ross finally took the upper hand, beating Mory with a par on the 10th hole and taking the individual title, his first collegiate title. As a team, the Spartans finished the second round at 9-over par 297Jtotaling for a score of 15-over par 5931(294-297), leading the golfers to their fourth consecutive Fossum Invitational title and the 11th in MSU history. Opening the season with a tribute to the legacy of Spartan golf, the year grew more difficult for the athletes as they took on stronger programs across the country The team placed 12th of 17 teams the Freshman Gareth Blease tees off during the Fossum Invitational on Sunday; Sept. 12. Blease, whose hometown isflondon, England, finished the season with a best sc©® of 71. y- m ■ yjcw ■ urmg Sept, with a of 71.. veronica nagy A member of the Spartan women’s golf team completes a putt. The team placed third in the annual Fossum Invitational'.. Scoreboard i Mary Fossum Invitational 3rd (896) Tar Heel Invitational 6th (870) The Landfall Tradition 7th (903) Regional Challenge 6th (906) Central District Invitational 5th (888) Bryan National 11th (930) Liz Murphey Invitational 9th (905) Lady Buckeye Invitational 1st (918) Big Ten Championship 1st (1180) NCAA East Regional 11th (894) Roster 1 Michelle Bowles «.SR NatalieBrehm SR* Allyssa Ferrell FR . Maddi Massa JR* Lindsey McPherson FR Christine Meier FR Gaby Muller FR Bea Murray FR Liz Nagel FR* AimeeNeffSR Caroline Powers SO Lindsey SolbergJR MSU women’s golf team celebrates a triumphant season Emteong the final round of the Big Ten tournament on pril-24, the Michigan State women’s golf team held a two-stroke advantage over Purdue, the fourth-ranked and thjrde-time defending Big Ten champions. The Spartans| kept the lead heading into the back nine the following day when the competition tightened, landing MSU in a five-stroke deficit. | With four holes left to play and anticipation in the air, Spartans clawed their way back up the leaderboard, recording four birdies and 12 pars between the four scores that counted out of MSU’s six players. Over the same four holes, Purdue’s Boilermakers shot 4-over par, ending the four round tournament at 33-over with a total score of 1185 (303-296-291292). The Spartan’s finished at 28-over par with 1180 (306-290-295-289), winning the tournament by five strokes and bringing home the ninth women’s golf Big Ten Championship. The title added to a long history of Spartan excellence, marking the third championship win in the last decade and the eighth consecutive year that Michigan State has placed in the top three at the Big Ten tournament. MSU’s team score of 1180 was also the best ever 72-hole score in Big Ten history Ending the regular season on a high note underscored the team’s progression through the eight month season, which opened in September with MSU hosting the Mary Fossum Invitational on Forest Akers, MSU’s on-campus golf course. While the Spartans placed third in the tournament against Kent State and Notre Dame, they continued to take advantage of the Forest Akers course, improving their game throughout the year. Forest Akers, along with the indoor Paul J, Rearick Golf Complex and a host of off-campus facilities, gave the team the opportunity to build its skill, perfecting drives and putts regardless of outdoor conditions. As the team practiced throughout the harsh winter in East Lansing, it also looked south, traveling to North Carolina, Florida and Georgia to compete in invitational tournaments throughout the season. Come Feb.gPt, the team also traveled to Palos Verdes, Calif., for the first tournament of 2011 .TheSpartans golfed against 13 other teams in the Regional Challenge hosted by Ohio State University coming out of the tournameni 'm sixth place. At the three-round tournament, Senior Aimee Neff led MSU with a 10-over 223 (74-74-75), tying for 15th place overall while sophomore Caroline Powers shot a 224 (76-76-72) to tie for 16th. Both golfers were named to the All-Big Ten First Team upon the end of the regular season. The Regional Challenge paved the way for the next three months, as MSU hosted the Central District Invitational the following weekend, taking fifth place behind Iowa State, Louisiana State, Texas A&M and Texas Christian. Working into March, the team played in the Bryan National tournament, taking 11th overall. From there the Spartans finished 10th in the Liz Murphey invitational before making a sweeping comeback at the Lady Buckeye Invitational. By a landslide of 17 strokes, the team won the invitational with Powers leading the way Powers ended the tournament with 10-over 226 (75-72- 79), winning the first tournament of her collegiate career while making a solid contribution to the team victory On the backend of two impressive wins, the Spartan’s look forward to a promising post-season as they await a release from the NCAA listing the regional qualifiers, where golfers may qualify for the NCAA National Championships. Senior Aimee Neff chgcks her lie in the Fffpsum Invitational.lpfeff placed sixth overall and shot a team-best 74 in the final round. Freshman Christine Meier tees off in her first Fossum Invitational! MSU women’s;, golf team placed third in the annual invitational. V A R S I T Y S P O R T S w o m e n ’ s g o l f ^ -< £ mQJ in_ Q_ ro 2. m nco g. Q 3 n> CDO , < g (D o- ^ 1 o(D 3 5 n" T3 tQ 3 I yjc* Scoreboard Green & WhiteNTS Iowa4th, 191.850 Michigan 4th, 191.850 Western Michigan4th, 191.850 West VirginiaL, 194.000-192.575 Pittsburgh L, 192.175-191.175 Minnesota L, 194.450-191.400 Western Michigan L, 194.625-191.825 New Hampshire 2nd, 193.425 Alaska 2nd, 193.425 Brown 2nd, 193.425 OhioI|S8L, 195.200-192.675 IllinoisL, 195.225-195.000 Alaska - AnchorageW, 195.450-190.525 WashingtonL, 195.075-193.075 Oklahoma L, 196.875-194.800 Big Ten Championships 7th, 194.425 NCAA Regionals 3rd, 194.525 Roster Nicole Argiros SR Jackie Berg JR Alyssa Brennan SO* Sarena Bumbarger FR Gillian Carr FR Daneen Haba JR Laura Jollie FR Jessica Leadbetter FR Dani Levy FR Kathryn Mahoney SR Kelsey Mazur FR Kelsey Morley SR Taira Neal FR* Alex PacflFR Selina Rodriguez JR Shanthi Teike SO warn IM iH ThllMSU gymnastics team kicks off the floor routine with a choreographed flip durini|the Minnesota meet. The Spartan team rang in the season with a total sea^n high score of l^g 450. SpartanMgshman Daniellelli^p^oBKie^p! |Sjn the balance beam against ^raAlaska- Anchorage team. pll|§ polished off the season with an all-around career high’ Hicore ff®ll25,. < > 73 CO —I -< cn T3 o 73 —H in< 7T —) O -< a1 T» ^ m O oj rn £- in £. o 5' fl> =r Z 3 "O X O o Concentrating on her bearn;routi||l freshman Alexandra (ace competesgenison Field House during the Minnesota m®t. Pace ended the season with a beam high score, of 9.800 and a floor high score of 9fi|5. in the game MSU Gymnastics experiences trials and triumphs MSU teammates Skype with injured teammate senior Kathryn Mahoney during Senior Night at the Jenison Field House. Teammates mo®d the computer throughout the meet so that Mahoney Sould watch. Mahoney' suffered a C6 vertebra fracture during a practice vault session, but is makmjfa speedy regifery Horizontal and uneven bars, beams and a trampoline fill the third iloor of the Jenison Field House. With the thick smell oFchalk eind sweat in the air a testament to its frequent use, the room is more than a place for the gymnastics team to p1 pr^ctijee; kip home. Day in and day out for nearly three months, the Big Ten Division I gymnasts file into practice and take on another day of training. With pop hits blasting over the loud speaker, warm-up begins. It was at just such a routine practice that senior and four- year team member Kathryn Mahoney suffered a fall on vault. The accident left her paralyzed with a fractured C6 vertebra. The devastating injury occurred at the start of the season. A shocking blow to team morale, the disaster set the stage for a challenging year. “It was, in all of our eyes, the most difficult season we’ve ever had to face, both as athletes and as coaches,” Head Coach Kathie Klages said. The injury of a strong, experienced competitor, as well as a friend and leader, took its toll on the gymnastics program. The team competed in six dual meets throughout January and February losing each one, “We struggled. We’ve had the worst record that I’ve ever had at Michigan State, and we had losses to teams we’ve never lost to before,” Klages added. After Kathryn’s injury three other gymnasts sustained less severe setbacks, adding to the chaos surrounding the season. Despite the seemingly endless misfortune, each athlete contributed to pulling the gymnastic family back on track. With effort and willpower, the team managedmo rekindle its fighting spirit. “Kathryn was my teammate and my best friend. It was a challenge competing this year without her, but it was definitely one of my biggest accomplishments too—coming out, competing for her and in her honor,” senior Nichole Argiros said. Rather than let the accident cast a negative shadow on the year, teammates turned to Mahoney for support and motivation. Before each meet, Mahoney kept in touch with her teammates via Skype, email or text message, offering encouragement and a pep talk. Slowly but surely attention shifted to getting Spartan gymnastics back in the game with a competitive edge. In daily practice, drills focused on fundamentals to eliminate sloppy mistakes. To combat existing injuries and prevent new ones, the team concentrated on staying healthy Coaches stressed that each gymnast reach her full potential. The team also relied on the support of underclassmen, especially freshmen, who took to the stage in place of teammates who were temporarily unable to compete. The team also found support outside the MSU gymnastics family even among other competitors. At the Big Ten Championship, athletes from other teams wore green and white ribbons and tattoos during routines in an effort to support Mahoney The meet also tested how far the gymnasts had come since the beginning of the season ‘ ‘BigTen was great because we realized that our gymnastics are just as good as everyone else’s,” Argiros said. With a total score of 194.425, the team placed 7th at the meet. More importantly they earned a score high enough to advance to NCAARegionals, scheduled for Apr. 2 in Corvallis, Ore. The invitation to compete atRegionals markedthe gymnasts’ triumpl^over a season that pushed them to emotional and physical limits. “They finally started to compete like we knew they were capable of.” Klages said. “The confidence came. The trust in each other came. The team believed in themselves, and that made the difference.” yjev Scoreboard Michigan L, 3-2 Central MichiganW, 4-2 DukeW, 1-0 CaliforniaW, 4-3 PacificW, 10-0 StanfordW, 3-2 ProvidenceW, 1-0 'fames MadisonW, 1-0 Kent State L, 2-0 Boston UniversityW, 6-1 IowaW, 1-0 MichiganL, 2-1 OhioW, 6-4 Penn State L, 4-1 Wake ForrestW, 3-1 Ohio'State :L, 5-1 NorthwesternW, 2-1 IndianaW, 2-0 NorthwesternW, 3-2 NorthwesternW, 3-1 Ohio State L, 2-0 VirginaL, 3-2 Roster Corey Block SO* Sara Burnosky F Molly Cassidy F* Chelsy Coll SO* Camille Dagorns Elizabeth Heiffrich F* Kristen Henn SO Abbey HuckJ Amanda Hucks Katherine Jamieson F Christie Jones SO* Camille Lambeeau F Adelle Lever SO Jessica Linder SO Angela LucikJ* Julie Mackays Meghan Mage®s* Mallory McDonagh F Angela Paguras Holly ShermanJ Jantine Steinmetzs Sabine van de Assems Joelle van Irelands* *|R9 Freshman Katherin^amiesonplaces the ball foaa penalty shot during a game against Wake Forest. The Spartans be^gake Foilst ®. Sophomore Elizabeth Helftrich brings the ball down the open field, bringing MEM to a win. Helffrich was red-shirtod in. the 2009 season and was happy to be back in the game for the 2010 season. new identity MSU Women’s Field Hockey team redefines itself It was overtime—that unforgiving block of minutes When second chances are never so appreciated, but even the team with the strongest heart may not prevail. The women’s field hockey team drew the first penalty corner shot as the clock ticked in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, a game-winning opportunity similar to a free kick in soccer or a technical free throw in basketball. The ball was pushed into play from the back line to senior midfielder Sabine van den Assem, who sent it rolling to senior forward Jantine Steinmetz. Steinmetz gathered strength and hit the ball toward the net, sending with it her teammates’ season-long hopes for a NCAA victory Upon seeing the ball fly past the Virginia Cavalier goalie, Spartan fans rose to their feet and the girls rushed the field in celebration. But two inches would break their hearts. In field hockey if the ball is hit into the goal, as opposed to a flick, scoop or push, it must fall below 460 millimeters before crossing the line. Steinmetz’ hit flew just above that mark. “We would’ve been in the elite eight right there,” assistant coach Molly Maloney said. “Two inches kept us from going further.” “Although we lost, it was exciting to know that nothing was left on the field,” she added. “They gave everything they had to try to win that game.” Their efforts didn’t go entirely unrewarded. With the top scorers having graduated and redshirt freshman Molly Cassidy stepping in to her first year as goalie, the season had been a month-long quest to redefine the team’s style of play Theloss to Virginia was an ironically satisfying culmination of this journey “We came into our own team and our own identity and I think at the beginning of the year we struggled with that a little bit,” sophomore midfielder Kristen Henn said, citing the team’s 3-3 record in the Big Ten conference. “As soon our schedule started getting tough, we started coming to know each other and we had our own definition for our team,” But what has always been uniquely definitive of the field hockey team is the combination of European and North, American styles of play Head coach Rolf van de Kerkhoff is a Holland native, and assistant coach Helen Knull is from Scotland. This made for a diverse recruiting process, with the follidation of the team being women from Kentucky California, Canada and even the Netherlands. “The field hockey culture in the United States isn’t as strong as it is in Europe or Canada,” Maloney said. “They grow up playing field hockey at a much younger age, so they come from a completely different background of experience, But then there’s also the American dynamic of how we perceive the sport, which is much different. Americans in general are more into training and mental toughness, so we have these kind of two different sciools of thought that come together to help really lift the game,” she said. Henn said the European field hockey culture places a stronger emphasis on skills and showmanship, while in America, fundamentals are the key to the game. The mix of the two creates a style of play unique to MSU. And next year’s season may prove to be even more of a defining adventure. With van de Kerkhoff taking a new positioi at the University of Delaware, former assistant coach Helen Knull will step in and take over. “So far it has been a very smooth and fun transition,” she said. “The team is excited and ready to get a new chemistry” g a r a v a g l i a / D E S I G N b e t s y e b e r T Y P E c o u r t n e y z o t t / P H O T O j e n n i f e r jm Scoreboard 1 Western Ontario L, 5-3 Maine T, 4-4 (OT) Main®W, 3-2 Alaska T, 1-1 AlaskaW, 4-1 Alabama-Huntsville T, 4-4 Alabarria-HuntsvilleW, 2-1 Western Michigan L, 4-3 Western Michigan L, 3-1 Ohio State L, 4-3 (OT) Ohid'btateW, 4-0 Notre Dame L, 6-2 Notre Dame L, 4-2 Ferris State L, 3-0 MinnesotaW, 5-2 Wisconsin L, 4-1 Ferris StateW, 3-2 Ferris State L, 1-0 (OT) Michigan L, 5-0 Colorado College L, 5-4 Michigan TechW, 5-3 MichiganW, 4-3 Michigah L, 4-0 Lake Superior State!W, 4-0 Lake Superior StatesT, 2-2 (OT) Miami (Oh)W, Z-4 Miami (Oh) L, 4-0 Ferris Stat L, 2-1 MichiganW, 2-1 Ohio StateW, 2-0 Ohio State L, 4-2 Northern Michigan L, 4-2 Northern Michigan L, 6-5 Alaska L, 4-1 AlaskaW, 6-2 Bowling GreenW, 2-1 Bowling GreenW, 2-0 Alaska L, 3-2 AlaskaL, 4-3 (20T) (— / / i / / p n Zach Golembiewski Roster Tim Buttery JR Dean Chcllos SO Jake-.Chellos FR JR Matt Crandell Chris Forfar SO Dustin GazlgyvSR so Derek Grant SO Matt Grass! SO Anthony Hayes ;so ZachfSsepker |so Torey Krug |so JR Daultan Leveille KyleffiÖMahohJR Mike Merrifield JR Trevor Nill |JR Drew PalmisanoJR JR Brett Perlini Lee Reimer FR Chris Sandmeyer jFR Joey Shean iSR Brock Shelgren JR JR* AJ Sturges Kevin Walrod |SO GregWolf^FR WillYanakeffFR *|RS I «V a newfT dawns Despite a turbulent season, the MSU men’s ice hockey team looks forward to next year as change comes to the rink A rough season ending with a track record of il^wins, 20 losses and 4 ties hasn’t dampened the .odes of the MSU men’s hockey team, who are loc|4ang-| forward to next year with high hopes as their new coach takes them under his wing. “This season was very up and down,” sophomore defenseman and team captain Torey Krug said, adding that it was quite the roller-coaster ride. “It started off on a high note and then things spiraled from there.” The team started off the regular season with two wins and two ties against Alaska and Alabama- Huntsville before falling short before Western Michigan, Ohio State, Notre Dame and Ferris State. At the Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA) showcase over Thanksgiving break, the Spartans emerged with a 5-2 win against Minnesota. In a two- game series with Ferris State, however, MSU won the first match with a score of 3-2 and then subsequently fell 1-0 in overtime. From late December to the end of February the Spartans participated in the Great Lakes Invitational, winning nine games out of 18. Junior forward Trevor Nill said playing Michigan at the Joe Louis Arena in Detroit during the invitational was one of the defining moments of the season for him. The team played a total of four games against Michigan this year, losing twice and winning once before that fateful game gave the Spartans a much-needed turnaround. “It was huge for the team to win that and tie up the series, especially after a 5-0 loss in Ann Arbor just a month prior,” Nill said. And though the team didn’t exactly walk away from this season as triumphant as they would have liked, Krug said he took their performance this year as a learning experience. “Being a young captain, I. fearned a lot about myself and about my team. I learned how to lead a group of guys that are older than me,” he said. “We were finding out who we are.” Nonetheless, the appointment of Tom Anastos as newKiead coach of the hockey team has certainly given the Spartans new hope. A former Spartan himself, Anastos played hockey under former coach Ron Mason from 1981-85, before serving as an assistant to Mason from 1990-92. Previously the commissioner of the CCHA for the last 13 years, he will be the sixth coach in over 7 0 years of MSU hockey after former head coach Rick Comley’s retirement this season. “He used to play hockey for MSU, he’s very passionate about MSU, passionate about winning and has connections all over the hockey world,’ ’ Krug said of Anastos. “I know he’s going to bring a lot of fire to the team and make sure the guys are motivated.” “It brings something new into the program, to play for someone who has been in your shoes, someone you can relate to on another level,” he added. What’s more, athletic directors from Big Ten schools will announce their intention to establish men’s ice hockey as an official conference sport for the 2013-14 academic year to the Big Ten Council of Presidents/Chancellors in June 2011. Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Ohio State, Penn State and Wisconsin are participants in this initiative, and the proposal includes plans for an inaugural Big Ten hockey tournament to be held in March 2014. Exciting times for Spartan hockey indeed. But before they can descend to a rink awash with new possibilities, Nill said the team still needs to take things slow and stead||at this point in time. ' We always want to achieve as much as we possibly can. We have to set the bar high, but take it one game at a time until we get the process right,” he said. Krug added, “I think our first goal is to win the CCHA championship and bring excitement back to MSU hockey to fill more seats at Munn. Sophomore defense Matt algi carries the puck out of the defensive zone. In the loicSll season, Grassi recorded 10- assist and one goalior the Spartans. juniorp>rward Daultan Leveille fights for the puck in front of Alaska's'net. Thei Spartans end||| the game with a 1-1 tie. Sophomore Dean Chelios takes a shot at the net. Ghelios scored eight goals and acriieved six assists m theSo 1IM) 11 iSson. 70 CO H -< CO "D O 33 —I CO so 3 CD cr HI 0) -< e 2 $ 1 cs a 7T m c co p:— U3 O -i rr fl) 1 O < H 2. otn ¡1 Roster Nicki Bade J Stephanie BochenekS pushing MSU Women’s Rowing Team cruises past the competition in the 2011 season C Srbill but mighty; Thatls the team motto that Vmshgd women’s rowing through this season. It’s rathgr intimidating being the smallest competitors— WhiM most rowers are over six feet tall, these women _j^dOhve one person that size on the whole team, andonly two above five feet ten. But they make up for their shortcomings in other ways, like rigging their boats and oars to accent their personal strengths and habits. They’ve also embraced' a new training program this year with new workouts and practice techniques. They even got new shoes this year (the very same ones used by the U.S. Olympic team)l which can be adjusted specifically for each person. “We focus on technical power more than power,” junior rower Jocelyn Smith said. And their tactics have paid off, Going into the Big Ten Championships the Spartans were ranking eight in the nation, in between number seven Washington State and number nine Yale. But like most successes, the road there was an iipriver one. The team struggled in their second matchup of the season against Princeton and Brown, numbers one and six Respectively going into the Big Ton Championships. However, facing such tough opponents early in season may have been beneficial for the ladies in green and white. ''That was a really a learning experience for us,” junior rower Bre Walkowiak said. “It opened our eyes to where we needed to be.”- Three weeks later, the Spartans were on top on the world again after a win against the University of Virginia, which won the national championship the year prior. They also triumphed over University of Southern California, ranked fourth before life Big Ten Championships. The second varsity eight boat won all three races, beating Texas as well, For the women’s rowing team, those victories were somewhat of a dream come true - literally During practice, the team often imagines their selves racing against “ghost boats”—make-believe competitors used for motivational purposes. This year’s phantom crafts were, you guessed it, USC and Virginia. The accolades, however, didn’t stop there, The Spartans went on to finish seventh as a team in the 2011 NCAA Championship Regatta, the highest- finishing of the four Big Ten teams that qualified for the event. MSU’s varsity eight finished sixth in the Grand Final race of the regatta, matching the prowess of the 2006 and 2008 crews, who also finished sixth in their respective seasons - the highest-ever Spartan finish for the varsity eight. Graduating senior rower Laura Cowal was also named Big Ten athlete of the year, in the wake of the MSU varsity eight’s unprecedented fourth consecutive gold medal in the Big Ten Championship. Indeed, the ladies Bi green and white have shown this season that size really doesn't matter. “It’s really been [about] pushing out confidence for usfi and making our race plan suitable Walkowiak said. Brie-Anne BretonSO Michelle CampbellF Monique CarterS Hannah ChampF Abigail ChristiansenJ Amelia ClaryF Laura CowalS Kristina DejcngS Alicia DiMauroSO s Alyse Egner France EvelyF Theresa GeelhoedSO HKLydia Hawthorne J Heather HollidaySO Brianna LakanenJ Kellie LaPointSR Kathleen LeightonJ Anna LudesF Alexandra MaibuschS Amanda McGeachieSO Roberta MolterF Shelby MotoliginSO Michelle NeuderSO Samantha PalmerSO Rose PawlowskiF Camille Press 1J Alex ReininkJ Shelby RockwellSO Je'sl§! Shynal jJ Jocelyn Smith !J Michelle Sosa jJ s Clare Vandelinder Breanne WalkowiakJ Thp 2011 women’s rowing varsity eight- sport their gold mgdMs. for winning the Big Ten Championship. The^Smen’s rowing team has.ibn thelchampionship for four consecutive years, The 2011 women’s rowing varsity eight boat practices technique and power. The varsity 8 finished sixth in the Grand Final rac,i that qualified the team for theff 011 NCAA Championship Regatta. ' The 2011 women's rowing varsity four boat consisted of members Kathleen Leighton, Kristina De Jong, Lydia Hawthorne and Jesse Shynal. ThHwomen’s rowing team finished seventh in the 20 lf| NCAA Championship Regatta. Scoreboard Bradley T, 1-1 DukeWs 1-0 ¿¿^MarylandW, 4-3 GeorgetownI L, 4-0 ProvidenceW, 4-0 NiagaraW, 4-1 MarquetteW, 1-0 Notre DameW, 2-0 DuquesngW, 2-1 NorthwesternW, 2-0 Ohio State L, 2-1 New HampshireW, 2-0 Penn State L, 2-1 Western MichiganW, 5-0 WisconsinW, 3-0 Bowling GreenW, 2-1 IndianaL, 3-0 Michigan L, 3-2 AkronL, 1-0 Milwaukee^T, 1-1 Michigan L, 2-1 OaklandW, 2-0 ButlerW, 1-0 North GaSlina T, 1-1 Roster Garret BackJ* Josh Barens F Demonic Barone: -J Mark BaronqJ Rubin Bega J Matt Cebula J* Jeffemy ClarkJ* 1 Kevin Cope SO Wesley Curtis F Bryce Dobbins SO Jake Fullertons* Colin (Jr.?-:! ;ys s* Joe Gregus Cody Henderson F Nosa Iqoha S Ryan KeeiS F Tim Kreutz F Stephen Lucia nekJ Joe PaiMJ* s* Jeff Ricondo Brent Rosendall J Cyrus SaydeelJ Avery Steiniage S* Ryan Thclen SO Spencer Thompsons Nick Wilsonso * IRS four one season. Forty-three years later, the men's soccer team makes the Sweet 16 lost every sports team defines themselves differently staking claim to \tiVational quote, style of play or triumphant moment and molding it into UDvm mindset. Thife year, the men's soccer team chose four words. mjlwe wanted to be confident against whoever we played,” head TTOacimamon Reusing explained. “Consistent: we wanted to play the same no matter who the opponent was, and still play at a high level. ‘ ‘Relentless: we wanted to have a little edge to us, we wanted to be a driven team. And selfless: we wanted to put the team before the individual.” Chosen preseason by the players themselves, these words became everyday guidelines -as much as they were identifying qualities. More importantly they would spur the Spartans on to the most successful season of men’s soccer since 1968. “We wanted to use those four words to go out every day—practice, game day even an off-day” senior midfielder Jeff Ricondo said. “Just go out every day knowing that that’s what we needed to be.” With such determination burning in their hearts, Ricondo and his teammates made it to the Sweet 16 in the NCAA Tournament this year, a feat unseen within the men’s soccer program for 43 years. “It was probably one of the best memories I’ll have at MSU,” he said. “Obviously coming from a team standpoint it was a great success, but on the individual level, that added right there at the top.” The journey however, began with confidence. A steady rise in reputation earned the team consideration as one of the nation’s top 25 collegiate soccer programs this year, Rensing said. Coupled with an exhilarating overtime win against the 3rd-ranked University of Maryland in the first game of the season, the Spartans’ can-do mentality was soon set in stone. “I don’t think we would have had the season that we did if we didn’t win that game,” senior defenseman Colin Givens said. Confidence was trailed by consistency as the men finished the regular season witffl an 11-7-1 overall record. Assistant coach Kylie Stannard said injuries prevented the team from repeating a Big Ten Championship, but their approach to each game never faltered, eventually earning them a bid to the NCAA Tournament. Here, the men were relentless, After a clear-cut win over Oakland University in the first round, they faced a dreaded second round overtime battle against Butler University But with five minutes left to play Ricondo entered the game and scored the lone winning goal—with a broken collarbone. ■H really didn’t even know how to react,” junior midfielder Brent Rosendall said. ‘ ‘It was kind of meant to be because he had always been the guy behind the scenes doing all the work. It was a funny celebration, because no one could touch him because of his collarbone.” Nonetheless, a goal in the third round of play by the University of North Carolina with three seconds remaining dashed the Spartans’ hopes of advancing to the elite eight. Looking back on their accomplishments, however, the coaches agreed it was the overarching mentality of selflessness that paved the way for an unprecedented and satisfying season. "We talk a lot about team here,” Stannard said, “and I think that bond is what showed through everything.” To top off the team’s successes, Givens and senior midfielder Spencer Thompson were drafted into Major League Soccer teams upon finishing the season, a testament to the program’s rising potential to incubate talent. “It felt like my whole life was leading up to that moment,” Givens said. “I definitely had a few tears of joy It was just the best feeling in the world.” Senior midfielder Spencer ThompJIn dribbl® the ball up the field in their gamejagainst Providence. Thompson recorded two assists during the match, helping the Spartans to ®S0 win. Junior forwardfebin Bega juggles the ball past junior midfielder Daniel Fabian. Bega scored oheflf feur goals for the Spartans. Curtis and Providence forward Marc Cintron run towards the ball at center field. ThefSpartans made it to the Sweet 16 for the first time in 43! years. Scoreboard Western Michigan Eastern Michigan Milwaukee Depaul Loyola Chicago- Northern Illinois Bowling Green Penn State Indiana Purdue. Michigan Oakland. Northwestern Wisconsin MinneS)ta Illinois Iowa llifehio W, 1-0 W, 4-0 L, 3-2 T, 0-0 W, 3-0 W, 7-0 W, 2-0 L, 1-0 W, 2-0 W, 2-0 T, 0-0 W, 2-0 W, 1-0 L, 2-0 T, 1-1 L, 1-0 T, 1-1 L, 1-0 Roster Desiree Aber Paige Burke Katelin Chaklos Courtney Clem Samantha Cook Mikki Dennis Jill Flietstra Cara Freeman Laura Heyboer Karly Kasper Kelsey Ka'slgb Kelly Lindsay . Chelsey Miller Taylor Miller Jordan Mueller Kelsey Mullen Chelsea Peterson Hannah Peterson Megan Pines Kori Reinhart Courtney Shegos Olivia Stander Annie Steinlage Sarah Stern Jennifer Ulmer Elizabeth Watza * IRS Sophomore Olivia Standpi dribbl® - the ball past indiana University freshman, Rebecca Candler. MSU was victorious bill IU with a score of 2-0. The MSU women’s soccer team celebrate their 2-0 victory over Indiana. The-earn ended their season with a 9-4-6 record, RI - mm I iiiii 1 hitting goal posts An average season for MSU women’s soccer has players, staff looking forward to more opportunities next fall Luck, senior Elizabeth Watza said, played a huge rolerlh the track record of the MSU women’s soccer team this year. The team ended the season on Nov. 5 with an overall record of 9-4-6. “We’ve had a bout of bad luck in the past year; a lot of ‘hitting the goal posts,”’ Watza said.EWe also load people fighting throughlinjuries that carried over from last year. People assume that if you’re hurt one season, you’ll be back the next, but that isn’t necessarily the case.” The season started off strong as Spartans defeated most teams close to home, beating Western, Eastern, Bowling Green and Loyola. Shortly after, Spartans beat Oakland University and fellow Big Ten schools with a five-game winning streak, dominating Indiana, Purduei Michigan and NorthwesternW However, despite the winning streak, the team experienced a number of losses. Spartans fell to North Carolina! Milwaukee and Penn State at the beginning of the season, and then Wisconsin, Illinois and Ohio State at the end in what head coach Tom Saxton called a “burn-out! as the girls played five games in 15 days. “Ohio State were Big Ten champs this year,” Watza said.1 'Even though we lost 1-0,1 think it shows that we’re just as good as the rest of the teams in the country It helped us gain a lot of confidence for next year.” During the five-game stretch, Saxton said a 1-1 tie against Minnesota kept the team alive. “The game was televised on the Big Ten Network, and we tied them on their own turf,’ ’ he said. “It definitely kept us going forward.” The team did not qualify for the NCAA Tournament' this year, but has traveled to California and Texas for the tournament in previous seasons. Next year, the women will travel to Nebraska if they qualify after Nebraska ¡joined the Big Ten last summer. Saxton said the team has a strong defense, but a better offense might help them out even more, although the team already has “plenty of talent.” “This team has some of the strongest players in the program’s history” he said. Aside from improving offense, Watza said she hopes the team will continue to work on building chemistry between players once seven incoming freshman join next year. “I think if we focus on being good teammates to each other, the rest will follow.” Junior Paige Burke added, “We are always there for each other, whether it’s school, helping each other study quizzing each other on the bus when we’re on road trips, break ups, family issues.” After associate head coach Tammy Farnum’s daughter was diagnosed with cancer three years ago, the team writes her initials, Alp on their wrists before every game. “Since that diagnosis, we’ve encouraged our team to support Tammy and her family” Saxton said. “We’re praying and thinking about them everyday” "We're all about Spartan family” Watza said.. “Our coaching staff has always implemented chemistry as being the most important thing.” mm IÜÜ Junior Jill Flietstra leaps for a save. Hiestra's save left Indiana scojeles|jp lit thaconclusion of the game. Junior Taylor Miller steals the ball from Loyola Chiffigo freshman Claire: Wiese. MSU beaftl||||fa Chicago 3 73 en -< en "O o 73 cr QJ zi. -< er "O o m S-"' " o O 7T m cu ü! 3 Sï < N ° Om o3*< Scoreboard Illinois L, 6-3 Illinois L, 3-2 WisconsinW, 8-0 Wisconsin L, 10-4 Penn State L, 8-6 Perm Statf!W, Z-6 Iowa L, 5-3 Iowa L, 9-8 NorthwesternW, 13-4 Northwestern L, 4-2 Indiana L, Z-2 Indiana L, 4-2 Minnesota L, 6-3 MinnesotaW, 12-2 Ohio StateW, 12-2 Ohio State IL, 1-0 Purdue iL, 5-0 PurdueW, 3-2 Michigan L, 8-0 Michigan L, 8-0 Roster Melanie Bensema J Sarah Bowling F Jessica Bracamonte S SO Mary Kate DiVirgilio Emma Fernandez F Samantha Findling F Karen Fox S J Ali Grant Lindsey Hansen S SO Kylene Hopkins J ^fiauren Kramer Cassee Layne F SO J Heidi Purtzer S so J Stephanie Sanders F J Brett Williams SO Shelby Wise Hjayme O'Bryant Lori Padilla Jenny Ramsaier Rebecca Rogers Sophomore Mary Kate DiVirgilio swings, at a pit® from the CSitral Michigan Chippewa pitcher. DiVirgilio served as a pinch-hitteB in the game against the Chippewas. The Spartans break after a quick infield meeting. ThnSpartans record stood at 19-19 after they were defeated by the Central Michigan Chippewas. Freshman Cassee Layne windsPlto deliver Jfpitch. Layne had one strikejB;. recorded against the Chippewas,' gftball head coach Jacguie Joseph had some Igeatiohl for her^eam coming into this year. | thought we had a good team, I thought we could, for the [Big Ten] championship, I thought we od chance for making the NCAA tournament,” oseph said. Unfortunately none of that happened. MSU finished 27-||joverall, and at 6-14 they placed ninth in the Big Ten. With no Big Ten tournament in softball, the Spartans’ only hope for postseason play was a bid to the NCAA Tournament, but they fell short of that too. Joseph pointed to two reasons why the team faltered: pitching struggles and losing senior outfielder Jessica Bracamonte to injury The Spartans relied heavily on freshman starter Cassee Layne, who started 34 of 54 games. That wasn’t the original plan though, as Joseph said that MSU’s ace, junior lefthander Lauren Kramer, struggled most of the season. After two seasons starting 20 or more games, Kramer’s 5.08 earned run average this year limitedMer to 12 starts. “I can tell yo|| we tried everything, and she tried everything,” Joseph said about fixing Kramer’s play With Kramer’s slump and Layne’s 3.16 ERA still a bit too high, (Joseph said she usually wants an ERA below two) the team’s downfall was their pitching. Their team ERA of 3.79 was second worst in the Big Ten, and they were also second to last in strikeouts with 226. "It was really touglland there were a lot of games I felt like where that pressure got to me, but I feel like going into next year I’ll know how to deal with that pressure much better,” Layne said on carrying the bulk of the workload this year. However, MSU’s strength was offense. The Spartans batted .275 as a team, good for fifth in the Big ¡ten, but they were best at playing long ball, ranking second in home runs with 53. Most of the offense came courtesy of senior shortstop Lindsey Hansen,: The third team All-American was near the top of nearly every offensive stat category in the Big Ten, most notably leading the conference in home runs with 20. In facji she became MSU’s all time home run leader on March 13, finishing her career with 42. “I could make the case that she would be the best! Spartan to ever play here,” Joseph said, who has 17 seasons of experience coaching at MSU. But the Spartans could’ve been deadlier with a full season from Bracamonte, who tore her ACL and missed 31 games. She was coming offlcareer highs in batting average (.328) and runs batted in (28) in 20®, but now she and HanserMgave graduated. Despite losing a sizable portion of her offense Joseph said the same goals are still in place for the team. ‘O think we’re average, and I think we are looking to be great,’ ’ she said.1 ‘I think this is the stepping off point.. .1 think you can make a case that it’s time to get better.” Part of that transition included the dedication of the softball team’s gjiew Secchia Stadium, which opened this season. The stadium was dedicated during the final lome game against Michigan, with Peter and Joan Secchia in attendance, the prominent MSU alumni for whom the stadium was named. ?d2‘I feel like even this year ifjhad a ifage impact on oMI program,” Layne said. "Our program needed a fresh new start, and the stadium hejped catapult it to that.” HTo play in a multi-million dollar facility after so many years of not, I think the stadium dedication and that gift by Peter Secchia changed our whole program,” Joseph said, ■We’re certainly looking toward bigger things now.” -yak p w> 1 i i# SiBB Sll 1111 :, - bump in the road MSU Softball hoping to improve with better pitching, new stadium they fell short to the Chippewas ®>. Sophomore ShelbyEise winds up t#: : deliABr herpitch to the Central Michigan Chippewa batter. Wise recorded two strikfj-outs against the Chippewas. yjss united we The success of Spartan swimming and diving ('"^^'^immers step up.” ''-iUme of competitors take to the blocks, goggles Uudirfo the expressions in their eyes. ‘Take your mark.’’ ^—The swimmers tense their bodies, ready to spring 'hn-a^plit-second. A shot is fired and cheering erupts. A solid wall of noise explodes in the natatorium: the race begins. Shouts and cheers echo across the water as swimmers leap off the blocks into the air, bodies streamlined, hitting the water with practiced effortlessness. Every day for nearly seven months, the swim team reported to the IM West pool deck for afternoon practice. For hours, the athletes drilled technique and perfected turns while swimming lap after lap to build endurance. The practices kicked off the year in the fall and kept the ieam in shape until the regular season came to a close at the Big Ten meet in February The men’s team swam their opening meet on Oct. 8, and the women’s team swam their first dual meet the next day suffering a loss to the University of Minnesota on Oct. 9. However, both the men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams could look forward to the 55th annual Alumni Meet, a tradition that stands as a testament to the history and commitment of the extended Spartan swimming and diving community "The meet began under Coach McCaffree and the Seibold family and has continued on without pause every homecoming,’mead coach Matt Gianiodis said. "On a scale of 1-10, [the Alumni Meetflwas a solid 9.98. Every year our Alumni Meet gets better and better. By my count, we had more than 70 alumni present and most of them were swimming and diving, too. We had eight decades of Spartan swimming and diving represented,” Gianiodis added. The meet underscored the family atmosphere that played a crucial role in carrying the Spartan swim and dive team through the season, "Despite the fact that swimming and diving are two different sports, and Both the swim and dive teams practice co-ed but compete separately we are still very much a family It’s an individual sport, but everyone still relies on teammates,” diving coach Eric Best said. The melp of the team and the determination of individuals led the swimming and diving team on to a record-breaking season in many different ways. At the Big Ten Championship meets, which were in Bloomington, Ind. for the women and Minneapolis, Min. for the men, there were 24 top ten performances and five new school records between the two swim teams. Both the men’s and women’s team finished ■0th overall. On the diving board, senior and varsity diver Ivan Zalessov broke the records in all three diving events-records that he had set himself the previous year. The season didn't end there as the men’s swim team sent sophomore Jacob Jarzen and senior Kevin Puskaric to the NCAA Championships. "We swam fairly well, all things considered. Kevin did catch a flu bug right at the beginning of the meet and he did his best to fight it off. All in all, a very successful season and something we can build on for next year,” Gianiodis said of the NCAA finish. Outside of the pool entirely Spartan swimming and diving also had an unprecedented number of academic all-stars, with 23 members of the program receiving Academic All-Big-Ten honors. Seniors Brian Rockwell (swimming) and Sarah Mory (diving) received special recognition for maintaining perfect 4.0 GPAs, ending the year on a high-note with much to look forward to next season. Sean Costello Men’s Roster J Brian Akers Jacob Austerman F Jason AustermanJ J Cameron Bertlett Bryce Beyer F J Pat Falconer F Ricky Forrest S Mark GammellSO Josh Geschwendtso Brad GillianF Drew Goins F Jacob JarzenSO Jason Lintifr J Nick McGowan F Kevin Puskaric S Nick Roberts F Brian Rockwell S Mark SchrammJ Sam Schulze F Michael Uggeri F Colby Ward S Brandon Williams F Bryan Williams F Ivan Zalessov S Women’s Roster Lauren BaisdenSO Ashley BorgmanJ KJ Burkland F Sarah ClayJ Cristee Cordes F Lauren Daugherty F Becca Ebner S J ■ Sarah Falconer Stephanie Fishers Lisa FittonJ Samantha HilkJ Abby Immerfall F Mari Isa F Jordan Jackson S Marcella Kupraszewicz F J Laura Leslie Emilee LetarteSO Molly Mason F Maeve McHugh F J Tori Merritt Sarah Mory S Kristin O’ConnorSO Morgan Piaillki J so Alex Pierce .. (Jenny Ruschso Brooke SauchekJ Kelsie Schooleyso Katie Schroeder F Stephanie Seibert F J Kerry Sodonis Summer Strickler F Brooke Telander F Jessica Wellick F Rachael WilsonSO Whitney Woodbridge iF *|RS Members of the MSU swimming and diving team prepare for thejltart of a race during the MSU vs. Iowa meet. The team ended the season with a 10th place finish at theSien and women’s Big Ten Championship. Junior Sean Costello swims the fly against opposing Univer­ sity of Michigan ‘shimmers during a homeiieet. CbsJljfo. . had an individual top time of 51.80 seijpnds, accomplished during the Big Ten men's swimming and diving meet. SsFiV ■; ■ Wm , - J ' ;la W i H & : ”0 7D m en -*i i m sliilB H I?SSM i#®': f%£m *5311 mm wm i fj^m sltssn^ yu'.-'C'r';- I ■ 11 jiggi H Si i. í; *í' 1 ~V¿ h ® 90000? Ifjk;atfegWm | . ‘ ig ■ -C1C ■ tlM *--¡1 MSU and lowajiiwimmas prepare for the^start of the 200- metli medley race at the McCaffree Pool at IM West. Th|£jfc, team celebrated the end of thellealon with ijs annual year- IlHd banquet Ignoring outstanding memb^^ Diving member junior Brian Akei^wmpletes a dive during the MSU vs. Iowa meet. Akers finished the season with an overall score of 312.83 from a total of six dives off the P'-meier diving board. ¿m \ [ Spphomore Christian Roehmer serves during a doubles match against the Dejloit |$eicy Titans. Roehmer and his partner Denis BogatS went oh to win the match. Junior Austin Brooks prepares for ■ a volley during a singles match against the Detroit Mercy Titans.' Brooks,R|ll as the rest of th.9 Spartans, won all of their matches Scoreboard IUPUIW, Z-0 Wright State W, 6-1 Cleveland State W, 6-1 Youngstown State W, Z-0 BradleyW, Z-0 Daytoni W, Z-0 Toledo W, 6-1 Wake Forest W, 6-1 Marquette W, 6-1 Notre Dame L, 5-2 Ball State W, 6-1 Detriot W, Z-0 Valparaiso;W, 6-1 DePáulW, 4-3 Michigan L, 6-1 IndianaL, 6-1 PurdilBL, 4-3 Minnesota L, 4-3 Wisconsin L, 4-3 Western MichiganW, 5-2 Ohio State L, Z-0 Penn State W, 4-3 IowaW, 4-3 IllinoisL, 5-2 Northwestern W, 4-3 Roster Denis Bogatov SO Austin Brooks J Will Davis SO Jason Norville Ronnie Hulewicz J Drew Lied F Mat NelsonJ s* Aaron Pfister F Clark Richardson S Ryan Richmond F Christian Roehmer SO John Stratton s *|RS V A R S I T Y S P O R T S m e n ’ s t e n n i s ^ mnniinj *■< O TJ 3 JH^ CD O tn m t£_ tn o' CD “ 2; < o' 2" CD rt- Ml CD 11 O' ~0 •s nQ) (/)t/J 0)‘ yi.*V Sophomore Christian Ro^nfeWj volle^ffdurmg a home watch against the Detroit Mercy Titans. The i®tfnded in a victorjytfor the Spartans. The MSU mehMennis team won 17 «É5 regular seasoimlatcheaTheir pagatesi-toss was to fphio State. until the end Men’s tennis completes best season on record, still falls short to Ohio State »gitm/b^n State men’s!, tennis coach Gene \0^1andoj was named the Midwest, Coach of thd Year!fclr 2011 by the Intercollegiate Tennis .Association, after Spartans finished the 2010- illWeasbri with a record of 18-9, best in the': program’s History The regular season began on Jan. 15 with a win against IUPUI and Wright State, 7-0 and 6-1, respectively Spartans continued on with wins through Jan. and Feb. before falling to Notre Dame on Feb. 12 (5-2). The season proceeded with a wins against DePaul, Western Michigan, Penn State and Iowa, but Spartans fell short against fellow Big Ten teams like Michigan, Purdue and Ohio State. Spartans qualified for the Big Ten tournament at the end of April, coming out with a win against Northwestern (4-2) and a loss to Ohio State (4-0). "Ohio State was our toughest opponent,” head coach Gene Orlando said. "They have a greaiprogram and have won the conference the last six years. It all comes down to playing within yourself, and playing your own game.” Despite the struggle against Ohio State, Orlando said he remains very hopeful for next season. "We had some great wins and some tohgh losses within the Big Ten, but we’re playing better than we did a year ago at this time,” he said. "We have a good group, a good core that’s coming back. I think the seniors have built a nice framework for the juniors to follow.” Sophomore Nicole Herzog competei in a doubles match: against IPFW MSI defeated IPFW 7-1 ■M fît#! Freshman Katarina Lingl prepares forja serve against IPFW Lingl defeated IPFWl two single! matches 6-3, and 61 mm ¡ill ' * 1 ' Scoreboard IPFW Detroit Akron Bowling Green Eastern Michigan Miami of Ohio Western Michigan Cleveland St^ra Michigan ToledS Missouri William &Mary Dayton Ball State Purdue Indiana' Wisconsin Minnesota Penn State Ohio State Iowa Illinois Northwestern W, 7-0 W, 7-0 L, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 W, 6-1 W, 6-1 W, 5-2 L, 6-1 W, 5-2 L, 5-2 W, 4-3 W, 7-0 W, 7-0 L, 4-3 L, 6-1 L, 4-3 L, 4-3 L, 5-2 L, 4-3 L, 6-1 L, 7-0 Roster Amy Barton j SO Marina Bohrer ; F Olga Chernova F Bana Guentert j SO* Nicole Herzog j SO Emily LeBlanc 1 F MICHELLE LEBLANC ¡' SO Katrina Lingl j F Marion Noe S Valentine Rusakova 1 F Michaela Silesova J SO Ashley Stockwell | J Whitney Wilson S Jennifer Yen o w m n cn tu Q £ V A R S I T Y S P O R T S w o m e n ’ s t e n n i s back MSU Women’s Tennis returns from tough season ------1 \ M^/f/VSmen's Tennis managed to pull ahead/Off a rough season with an overall mfcdrdqf 12-11. \ The women started out strong with wins ovey Bowling Green, Eastern Michigan, Westetrr-Michigan and Cleveland State before falling to Michigan (6-1) and Missouri (5-2). Spartans managed a few more wins later in the season against Dayton, Ball State and Indiana before a seven game streak of losses against Wisconsin, Minnesota, Penn State, Ohio State, Iowa, Illinois and Northwestern. Women’s Tennis was eliminated from the Big Ten Championship by Illinois, 4-0. Despite a rough season, the Big Ten Conference at the year-end banquet honored two sophomores, Amy Barton and Dana Guentert. Guentert received the Big Ten Sportsmanship Award and Barton was named a Second Team All-Big Ten honoree. Head coach Simone Jardim could not be reached for comment. Freshman Katarina Lingl gears up for a point during a singles match against IPFW Lingl also participated in the doubles match alongside sophomore Nicole Herzog to beat IPFW 8-7 ;• yi» 30 C£2 —I -< CD "O O 30 n a g y / D E S I G N b e t s y e b e r T Y P E c o u r t n e y z o t t / P H O T O v e r o n i c a Sqphomo •. Derik Peterman ' ‘pracffies the vault] outside Spartan Stadiunl during'a summer Sactic^ Peterman has'a pole vault] ■' feestMt 4.73 meters. m m Am* Pk Fa -«Sit MB MB Si li(p m Senior Logan Lynch anil Sophomore Codi Mattix pfictice various stretlji^M on tlie outdoor track. The pffe vault^gfocused on high knee runs, stretches and sit ups. Practice laps around the track start off the men’s women’s distance runners’ warm-up. Track and field season runs until of June. he record J^ISU Track and Field sets the bar higher | the time the Big Ten Indoor Championship meet . around this year, the men’s and women’s track ield squads had already broken three school brds, two in the weight throw and one in the distance sy relay Even more, 13 members—six women and -setfen men—found themselves ranked among the top 50 in the nation. Suffice it to say expectations for the remainder of the spring, especially the outdoor season, were high. “When I came in here four years ago, it was more of a rebuilding process,” senior sprinter Yury Ratomski saidl'Now we have people that went to Nationals and have been All-Americans, so we’re starting to get more recognized and respected throughout the years that I've been here.” In fact, after her performance in the NCAA Indoor Championships on March 5, sophomore Beth Rohl became not only the first Spartan female weight-throw All-American—an award given to exceptional athletes by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA)—but the first field athlete in school history. With this promising build-up, the outdoor season began. At the annual Spartan Invitational on April 2, both the women and men started off strong by taking home titles in 10 events each. The Spartans then oacked their baas for the Sun Angel Track Classic at Arizona State University. There, MSU’s record books had to be rewritten once again. Rohl broke her own record in the hammer throw with a 59.94 meter toss and soon after, senior Anthony Agrusa did the same, throwing for 62.25 meters. Throughout ; the season, there was an emphasis on progress at every meet, no matter how miniscule, Ratomski said. In a sport in which every centimeter or second counts, it was all about improving mentally physically or better yet, both. However, there was also an understanding among the team that it wouldbe their BigTen Outdoor Championship and NCAA Outdoor Championship performances that would garner the most merit. Everything up until then was a mini-test of preparedness. rJmOm team has come really far since last year|senior Emily Macleod said.' ‘We’re really coming out and we’ve worked hard to get where we are. “I’d say every year we get better and better. You just have more miles under you,” she said. Indeed, Macleod ran her career best 5,000 meter race this year at the Indiana Invitational on April 161 finishing with a time ofB:03.07. I I Ratomski also surpassed his personal best in the 200 I meter dash at the Jesse Owens Classic on April 24 with I a time of 21.34 seconds. “I’ve been doing this for 10 years and still, every time I get nervous,” he said. “When it comes to the race you just have to forget about everything.’ ’ I Scoreboard Minnesota Penn State Ohio State Oakland W, 3-1 Toledo W, 3-0 L, 0-3 Iowa W, 3-1 L, 0-3 L, 0-3 DlinoHL, 2-3 Si; Wisconsin W, 3-2 Michigan L, 1-3 Northwestern W, 3-0 L, 0-3 Purdue Indiana L, 2-3 Wisconsin L, 0-3 Illinois L, 0-3 OhicffState L, 0-3 L, 1-3 Penn State Iowa W, 3-0 Minnesota L, 2-3 Indiana W, 3-1 Roster KyndraAbronJ Amy Dentlinger Natalie Emro Allyson Karaba MandiKaraba Kristen Kelsay Kelsey Kulpers Alexis Matthews NicolfePete JenilA Rathje Megan Schatzle Carli Weller Becea Zlabis *1RS SO J s so* F F F* S J* s J J The team huddles together during a game against Eastern.' Michigan during the Spartan Invitational ■ ?|tSU lost to Eastern Michigan 2-§l Junior Natalie Emro sets up a shot for junior Jenilee Rathje during the Spartan Invitational. Emro was the top defender at the net with four blocks throughput the game! The womenh>|§lleyball team spikef The bill against Eastern Michigan during the Spartan Invitatiofiat. The girls hail ,aii early lead but log to Eastern Michigan ¡Kv m m h i g g i n s / D E S I G N j e s s i c a h a l f y a r d T Y P E k r i t i k a b h a r a d w a j / P H O T O h i l a r y jim Senior Megan Schatzle and sophomore Mandi Karaba celebrates a point against Eastern Michigan at the Spartan Invitational. Three Spartans recorded double doubles during the game. MSU women’s intercollegiate volleyball team has an ace season , dig, block "dig, block are words common to the MSU , 4yball team. Another term common for the 3am, especially this season, was ‘injury prone.’ Despite top two players sophomore Alexis Mathews an#junior Carli Weiler being injured, the team managed to be consistent in its performance. The season that, started the last week of August produced players like Mathews and Weiler, two of the 36 women selected for the 2011 U.S, National A2 Program. Apart juniors from Mathews and Weiler, Kyndra Abron and Jenilee Rathje also shared outstanding performances. While Abron became the only underclassman ranked in the top 10 in conference-only matches, Rathje became the sixth at MSU who received the All-Mideast Region honorable mention by the Big Ten coaches. Apart from Rathje’s personal achievements, the season highlight was the game in Hawaii. “It [Hawaii] is one of the top teams of the nation. For us to be able to win five games against them was a positive way to go,” she said. Just two games short of making the season, the team won four out of six games, beating currently ranked number 19 University of Michigan on Nov. 24. The night was special with 6,824 spectators present and seniors like Megan Schatzle playing for the last time. “It was really awesome. It was the last time that myself and two other seniors got to play against the Wolverines,” Schatzle said, explaining that despite not making the tournament, the team had the motivation to finish the season strong. The win became even more memorable after the Spartans brought home the “State Pride Flag” for the first time since 2006, a symbol of the volleyball rivalry between the two schools. After the game against the Wolverines, the team ended the season by gaining a 3-2 win over Northwestern University It was at this game that Rathje became the 17th all-time Spartan to collect 1,000 kills in a career. “It’s such a great honor to be recognized to be the best among the Big Ten coaches,” she said. With one more season left to compete, she plans to combine her skills and knowledge in business and sports after graduating in December. With the season coming to a close, Carney discussed the team’s future goals. “Every season is different and unique. The head coach, Cathy has established a program of excellence, hard work in both the gym and academics. First, we should attempt to win the Big Ten and then get into NCAA,” she said. Aiming to win games and excelling in academics are not the team’s only goals. The team recently volunteered with the Lansing Area Volleyball Association to demonstrate the sport skills for the 180 kids in attendance, passionate about the sport. Even though the team was not victorious this season, defeating some of the top teams in the nation took MSU Volleyball one step closer to a championship. Scoreboard i Shippensburg W, 50-0 Harvard W, 31-10 Binghamton W, 19-15 Northern Illinois W, 20-15 ■81 L, 29-10 Lock Haven W, 28-12 Oakland W, 45-0 Eastern Michigan W, 19-15 . West Virginia ; W, 21-18 Ohio State- ? L, 19-16 Central Michigan L, 19-18 Northwestern : L, 22-15 Illinois ! W, 21-15 Penn State! L, 30-9 Indiana L, 22-9 Purdue L, 22-9 Michigan L, 24-15 Wisonsin L, 27-9 Roster Steve Andrus SO* BenBoudro SR David Chelm JR Bryant Craft SO Tyler Dickenson JR Collin Dozier JR Andrew Ermatinger FR Eric Ford FR Ian Hinton JR Nick Humes FR Tyler Humes® FR Curran Jacobs JR Anthony Jones Ja 1 SR LukflPnfs FR Nick Kaczanowski FR* Philip Kho'zein JR Troy Lamson FR Brenan Lyon SO Chris Lyon FR Michael McClure FR* Nick McDiarmid FR Sean McMurray FR Kevin Nash FR Robert Nash FR* Eric Olanowski JR Dan Osterman SO Nick Proctor FR Joe Rizqallah SO John Rizqallah FR Levi Stace FR* Joel Trombly SR Ryan Watts FR Soph^Sjre ®an Osterman, wrestling in the 149||ound weight class, puts imja fight against a Wisconsin ofjiment at the last home meet at the Jenison Field HgSse. ¡Istermari finished his season with a 25-11 record. natalie kolb Competing at the 174-pound weight class, junior Curran Jacobs lifts his opponent, Aaron Hynes over his head. Winning&2 against hisPofM competition boosted Jacobs’ overall record to 22-10. Freshman Sean McMurray wrestles Brandon Zecrip from th*S7=jSund weight class. McMmray1g)n his match 8?2 against his University of Michigan opponent. Sophomore JoMph Rizqallah, a member of the MSU wrestling team, hangsonto the back of a Wisconsin opponent. Rizqallah, in the heavyweight weight division, finished the season v$®22 wins and 14 losses. with adversity MSU wrestlers struggle with injuries, elite Big Ten teams _|JL“__JIM ---PBjWBI-jotball, The Big Easti dominates basketball. So what is the Big Ten’s sport oft choice? It’s wrestling, and MSU’s home conference dominates the rest of the nation. With pearly every team tanked in the top 25, even a small disadvantage could put a team at the back of the pack. That’s why the Spartans, handicapped by injuries this year, fell flat during their Big Ten stretch after a strong start. After winning eight of their first nine duals, the team tumbled during conference play going 1 -7 to finish 9-9 overall. Coach Tom Minkel attributed the team’s poor dual performances to the unusual amount of injuries the team suffered, which made a difference in the ultra-competitive Big Ten. Iv'‘We just simply had some holes in our lineup where we weren’t very competitive, and consequently, from a dual-meet standpoint, we’d win three or four matches, but we couldn’t win enough to put us over the top,” he said (in wrestling duals, the two schools each send out 10 wrestlers who square off in individual matches that add up to the teams’ final scores). Minkel listed off at least six wrestlers who were injured, many of whom were out for the entire season. A loss of depth like that can’t be had in the Big Ten. The Spartans faced Iowa (ranked second in the country), Penn State (fourth), Michigan (11th), Northwestern (14th), Wisconsin (15th), Illinois (19th), and Purdue (23rd). The Spartans’ only win was an impressive one against the Fighting Illini, ranked 14th at the time, Minkel said in the last 20 years, two or more teams have represented the conference in the top five at the NCAA Championships in all but one year. Still, many individual Spartans enjoyed success this season. Most of the starters achieved a winning record for their individual matches, including 20-win seasons for sophomore Dan Osterman, juniors Curran Jacobs and Tyler Dickenson, and redshirt freshmen Michael McClure and Nick Kaczanowksi. Weighing in at 149 pounds, Osterman finished the regular season ranked 20th nationally in his class. Minkel said his wrestlers won at least three matches in every dual they competed in, with many notable wins over ranked individual opponents throughout the season. In spite of their injuries, the Spartan wrestlers showed their resilience and fought to compensate for the loss of their teammates. ‘‘Because all of your players are out, it changes the way your style is, it makes you go more offensive. It’s a different match,” sophomore Joe Rizqallah said. “You don’t want to let this year go and say ‘Oh we have some players out.’You want to make this year the best year you can make it.’ ’ That’s why Minkel and hisSeam are gearing up for the Big Ten and NCAA Championships scheduled for mid-March. The team finished seventh at the Big Ten and 18th at the NCAA last year, and he predicts the Spartans will move up from their current ranking of 52 to a top 25 national finish, with the Spartans sending at least six wrestlers to the NCAA Championship. While MSU isn’t looking past this season just yet, their potential in the years to come is apparent. Next season, they will only lose two seniors in addition to regaining the wrestlers lost to injury this year. Coupled with a fine recruiting class, Minkel said that MSU will feature a pretty darn solid team. Yet, the wrestlers know they need to be that and more to climb to the top of the mighty Big Ten standings. n a g y / D E S I G N s a r a l e e g o r d o n T Y P E j a c o b k a n c l e r z / P H O T O n a t a l i e k o l b , v e r o n i c a S IM ■' IÜI I mS&Sm Exceeding 33,000, Michigan State University’s campus is flooded with undergraduate students. While each share the commonality of Spartanhood, each one of us is an individual among thousands. Providing advancements in knowledge, unification among peers and even sanctuary, our colleges become hubs for the familiar. As each of us moves through our educational journey with determination, we grow within our colleges, our homes away from home. Offering lectures, guest educators, clubs, activities and celebrations, colleges remain an essential layer in the composition of education. Tl O Farm assistant I«chel Beyer arranges items for salllat the stand. All proceeds go toward the funding of the farm's operations, granting members like Beyer handsgm experience in cultivating and selling organic produce. Fresh, succulent vegetables sit on the table^of the MSU Student Organic Farm stand, located outside the Auditorium. The farm's harvesf i^often distributed toll number of MSU's dining halls, as well as the Kellogg Center. When asked to describe a typical college student’s eating habits, the words “organic” and “healthy” don’t usually come to’ mind. Think more along the lines of french fries, chicken fingers and lots of Ramen Noodles. But the MSU Student Organic Farm stand strives to change that. With a plethora of fresh, organic foods such as kale, raspberries and tomatoes, members of the Studerfj Organic Farm run a stand outside of the Auditorium every Thursday from April to November. The students operate the stand entirely on their own, from 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. As part of a nine-month program made up of 15 students from across the country students who work at the stand grow the produce, too. Each week, three or four people take turns running the stand, and profits go to the 10-acre farm, which is located three miles south of campus in Holt, Mich, According to the program’s website, the Student Organic Farm was founded in 1999 with a mission to provide training for small- scale, organic farmers. Revenue from the stand’s sales supports the hands-on training program, which teaches members of the communityOLOW to cultivate fruits, vegetables, flowers and herbs for local markets. Rachel Beyer, an assistant on the farm, began as a student in 2009 and has since enjoyed working with the stand. ‘ ‘I love it. It’s a really cool opportunity to teach people about where food comes from and to share what we’re growing,” she said. Josh Moses, a student in the program since March 2010, agreed with Beyer. After attending a culinary school in Chicago, he came to MSU to further his education in organic farming. He not only prides over the stand and its produce, but also the curriculum as well. “It is very specific and detañed, with how to farm organically!’ Moses said. .“We get to eat lovely produce and see where it comes from. And we do study farms and workshops, which are also amazing.” The members who run the stand are not the only ones who enjoy the produce. Other students, sucllas sophomore Ashley PoweU, who prefers to eat organic, stop by the stand in between classes. PoweU likes to buy tomatoes, and to her the accessibüity of the stand is a bonus. “This about my fourth time buying groceries from the organic farm. I like what the organic farm does and what it stands for,” she said. The stand also works with a program called Community Supported Agriculture. The program allows consumers to pre­ pay for 22 weeks worth of groceries, which includes 12 to 16 items a week. The year-round program has 60 members and a 200-member waiting list. And for students who can’t make it to the stand on Thursdays, a taste of the farm’s healthy produce is offered in cafeterias on campus. With its food served at dining halls including Yakeley Hall, Snyder-PhUlips and the State Room aithe KeUogg Center, the student organic farm stand proves that yolldon’tmave to travel far to find fresh, healthy food. agriculture and natural resources U VU CU U VI MSU students sell organic produce Students participate in a day-long drawing marathon a-j ° (5 ;< o I- ¿Q "0 -■ m i— U 3 a -i m cn m (/>" Û) C/> U) «5 Between the Auditorium and the Kresge Art Center on Oct. 11, you could find art students, with their easels set up in a perfect circle, ready to have a long fun-filled day of drawing. With over 100 student participants, the Drawing Marathon was an opportunity for students to socialize and work with live models. Most of the participants were excited to be drawing on a sunny day where the atmosphere was quiet and peaceful. Students participated as a requirement for their freshman art class. Those walking by saw the creative painting and live models and decided to join, because paper, easels and other materials were supplied. Sophomore Ashley Godziebiewski, who had just recently changed majors, had never participated in the Drawing Marathon before and said, “It’s a great way to get together with other artists and draw, maybe even learn something new. It’s a relaxed environmenHB One perk of the event was the chance for art students to work with live models. The models were dressed in ridiculous costumes and posed for each segment, allowing the students to draw One model wore an old-fashioned white wig and posed in the center of the easels for all students to observe, while others held contorted poses. “We haven't worked with live models before. This is something completely new but it’s a really great learning experience,’ ’ said freshman Rachel Bonneau. Also on display were huge, collaborative pieces of art from each class. , “All the students created a large piece of art together. It looks really cool,” Bonneau said. The collaborative pieces, which began as a blank canvas, were diverse and provided insight to each student’s personality where they were given the freedom to draw whatever they wanted. “It’s an event that is meant to get people together and share art,” said Benjamin Duke, an art and art history teacher who was in charge of the Drawing Marathon. “It’s great for community building, and the students seem to enjoy coming out and drawing.” Students such as freshman Kathryn Reed grasped the concept of the drawing marathoi|B| “It allows us to have a purpose to set aside time to draw Many of can look at this as a great learning experience,” she said. “It also is a great outreach to other students about art.” Steven Stradley a masters student, gund time toPttend the drawing marathon and contribute his own idf|^K> the collaborative piecehf artwork. The pieces were setBp on site between the Auditorium and Kres<© Art Museum, allowing students ¡1. paint on the same pifj® or paper. Senior Ip|ry Hidlay came to the drawing marathon to practice drawing with live models, The marathon provided live models dressed in different costumes who presented different poses to help give the students more dynamic and interesting artwork. y/.V o o o m cn n> 3 D" 13. ud‘ IQcn o ’ b l a c k / D E S I G N b e t s y e b e r T Y P E j a c o b k a n c l e r z / P H O T O c h a s e Senior Matt Ocko raises the roof alongside junior Emily l§/estbrook during a night filled with outrageous dancing. Both Ocko and Westbrook aie pursuing a Fishing and Wildlife major. Decorations dressed every table in the MSU Ballroom along with glasseir of punch meant»'hydrate the thirsty students. The Lyman Briggs Ball was put on by the Lyman Briggs Studio Advisory Council. ' i \ in m at g< W. SC si af cc Cc ai fa ju Bi Bi ac hi b Bi c< n< st i ■ i t u u c y c ^ ++ Lyman Briggs ball strengthens sense of community for residential college WithMts blue streamers in the doorway and the octopi centerpieces adorning the tables inside, the MSU Union Ballroom was supposed to resemble some kind of underwater realm. But save for one dancer who sported water wings, the Lyman Briggs annual ball on Friday April 1 didn’t really give off a bottom-of-the-sea vibe. The students who showed up, however, had no trouble diving past the blue streamer barrier to reach the dance floor inside. Yet, as they recalled, jumping into the ocean of people that is MSU proved a bit more challenging, whicllled them somewhat to choosing the residential college environment of Lyman Briggs. "It kind of eased me into the college experience instead of throwing me into cold water with thousands of people I didn't] know,” junior Abbie Entz said. "I was really nervous about coming to MSU, and my first semester here, all my classes were in Holmes and I had classes with people I lived with.” “If I joined a living-learning community it would be a smaller community to kind of get my feet wet,” freshman Kimberly Schoch said. Lyman Briggs College ELBC) includes students from 38 science-related majors, ranging from astrophysics Bo computational mathematics to zoology The college is based in Holmes Hall, which is home to most of its students, classes] professors and advisers. “It’s a residential program, so you live where your classes are, and everything is there,” Kent Workman, director of student affairs for LBC, said. "It can really build that sense of community” Building that community is one aspect, but the potential for LBC students to become cozy within the bubble can sometimes make branching out to the greater MSU community a jaunt into deeper waters. “I sometimes feel we are a little bit sheltered,” senior Bridgette Ma said. “I didn’t know anything outside of Holmes Hall until sophomore year.” While some students felt that they could see that happening with some of their Briggs friends, a few of them pointed out that getting involved in extra-curricular activities and inevitably taking classes outside of LBC will give them opportunities to expand their social horizons. “I know a few of my friends had a little bit of a struggle expanding their circle of friends,” junior Steve Carnaghi said. “They were kind of sucked into ‘I’m in Lyman Briggs, I should be here all the time, devoting all my time to the university but I don’t think that’s ever stopped them from excelling their academics or really wanting to get involved here on campus.” It certainly didn’t stop Carnaghi, who joined the Sigma Chi fraternity and the Habitat for Humanity Club, among other groups, “In previous semesters, it’s been difficult,” sophomore Alyssa Wethington said about branching out. “I got involved with my major; I got involved with the Fisheries and Wildlife Club. You just have to try a little bit. We have a sense of community but we’re also part of the greater whole.” Still, being in the Lyman Briggs bubble has its own comforting advantages. “It has kind of hindered us in a way but we’ve also created such special bonds within Lyman Briggs that it kind of balances each other out,’ ’ Ma said. ‘ 1 met Abbie (Entz) probably two years ago, and I don’t know if a lot of the other students would have been able to stay friends with people they were with freshman year.” Coming to MSU might feel like diving into an ocean for some, but being a part of Lyman Briggs has assured these students that they’ll still be buoyed by friends. ✓ ? n a g y / D E S I G N v i c a r i v o l l m a r T Y P E c o u r t n e y z o t t / P H O T O v e r o n ■ rr»lil ono nf business For students in the Eli Broad College of Business, it's all about networking The importance of networking is cruelly jammed into our brains almost as soon as we hit puberty when making friends takes more than simply sharing an Oreo at lunch or having a mutual love for playing dress up. By the time we’re packed for college,- we’ve often gotten a taste of the unforgiving synergism between who it is you know and what it is you know, which, so we’ve beenlaught, must be harnessed to have a successful career. And for business students, this lesson becomes almost as sacred~as the law. Corporate America imposes strict consequences on those who ignore the not-so-subtle cause, and effect relationship between good connections and open doors. And in a race to the top, it’s best not to fall behind. At MSU, however, the bridge building isn’t reserved just for the real world professionals. Each year, the Eli Broad Student Senate hosts a spring picnic for fellow Broad college members to mingle solely with one other. Over free pizza and pop on Thursday, April 21, future accountants, stockbrokers and maybe even CEOs had the chance to converse about the thing they know best: business. The get-together was held behind the Business College Complex on Shaw Hall’s basketball courts—a rare and casual atmosphere for students normally accustomed to a professional dress code. ‘ ‘We rarely have such events that get all of the business students together, able to meet different students with different majors and just kind of get outside of the classroom in a nice social environment,” senior Sanat Joshi, the coordinator of the event, said. While the major draw was, admittedly the orange Little Caesar’s truck shoveling out Hot-N-Ready pizzas (the tables were magically full by lunch time), meeting other students who had chosen different paths was certainly a plus, he said. “It primarily helps with networking opportunities and getting to know other people and just having more awareness within the business college,” Joshi said. Indeed, the term business is often thrown around ambiguously is a future career goal—we’ve all had a friend (or three) tell us it’s their calling—but in actuality the Broad college hosts seven undergraduate programs with vastly different ends in mind. “It’s definitely diverse,” senior David Ullrey said. “You get a good mix of majors and different viewpoints in class.” While Ulrey was one of many attendees more interested in the free food than socializing, others did indeed come to broaden their horizons. “I just wanted to meet more people in the business college and get involved a little bit more,” junior Olivia Davis said. “I think it’s important to know how to talk to your peers. I mean, you never know when they might be useful or you might be useful to them, so it’s just good to just be on good terms with everyone.” Seniors Samantha Rigan||and Jillian Emerson purchase t-shirts to support the Msiness College. The college sold t-shirts and other apparel, as well as hanJedplut freejote bags. Junior Hilary Taylor takes interest of the Marketing Asipciation booth. The Spring Picnic was a time for fellow ¿Students to find new jpportunities within their dym major. V^fTArJ t r e a i s / D E S I G N b e t s y e b e r T Y P E j a c o b k a n c l e r z P H O T O e r i c a o o m CD 3 3 c 2. o' 0 3 a> 1 01 Z5 GL if) D. CD*13 nn>c/> rn! i qhq ftf ■ . ■ communications wrts and sciences Senior AlishaiGreen psks M.L. Elrick a question. Elrick spoke for 40, minutes on the histoM Pf journalism and who:- he thinks journalism should go in the future. MSU alumnus M.L. Elrick was the keynote speaker; at the MSU: JPchooL|§Hitenmal. Elrick kept jjlfudents entertained and laughing hemadeWahisfit parking fees! - - Kwame Kilpatrilk and Justin Bieber. Led by Pulitzer-winning alumnus, J-School celebrates its centennial by preparing for future of journalism The MSU School of Journalism (MSU J-School) celebrated its 100th anniversary this year, and as J-School Director Lucinda Davenport put it! “The future is what this celebration is about.” However, it was an old-school investigative reporter who stole the show. Michael L. Elrick, the MSU alumnus who won the Pulitzer Prize in 2009 for breaking the Kwame Kilpatrick text-message-scandal story was the the J-School Centennial keynote speaker featured 40 Celebration. The day-long event speakers, mostly MSU journalism alumni, 20 workshop sessions! and closed with a dinner reception at the East Lansing Marriott. for With his inspiring story and powerful remarks, Elrick was the star of the day He.fiohg with his partner Jim Schaefer, discovered through Kilpatrick’s text messages that Kilpatrick committed perjury and had multiple affairs as mayor of Detroit! The story broke in the Detroit Free Presslteading to Kilpatrick’s resignation and eventual imprisonment. Elrick was edgy and rebellious, traits that go back to when he started a rival publication to the State News during his years at MSU. He complained about his excessive parking tickets at MSU (an ¿obnoxious injustice perpetrated by our fine university”). He burned Kilpatrick ("The difference between me and Kwame is I own a house in Detroit”). He encouraged students to transfer dut of journalism if they were in it for the money ("Get the hell out of here; there aren’t that many jobs anyway”), but sheepishly apologized to Davenport as students and faculty laughed. Elrick described how journalism ^¡served the people through the last century by exposing the truth. He argued that the goal of journalism should remain the same, regardless of the era. "It’s about finding out the truth. It’s about finding out who the bad guys are, and blowing them out. It’s about somebody looking down on you, and feeling like you have no fights, and no entitlement to the truth, and going and getting it, and saying,: ‘Here it is, byatch!’,”‘he said. “If they [elected officials] have gotten so far ahead they’ve forgotten what it is they said they were going to do, I’m right there to remind them. I want them to know I’m on top of them. I want to be so far up their ass, they know what my hair tastes like.” The evolving world of j ournalism was the underlying message of the centennial, with workshops focused on using social media for networking, entrepreneurial j ournalism as the new business model, and presenting information online. Davenport said that the theme of the event was innovative technologies, and how they have changed the public face of journalism over the last century “We have a lot of alumni who were successful, and basically we didn’t have to look far to find some alumni who were involved in cutting-edge journalism,’ ’ she said. Tricia Bobeda and Aaron Olson, recent graduates working at the Detroit News, taught how Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr can create relationships between publications and readers. Steve Patterson, a 2008 graduate working in broadcast, stressed the importance of learning to write, film, edit and produce an entire story on your own. These alumni were just a few of the many that day who have since made a career for themselves. But though Elrick was the centerpiece of these alumni, his speech was founded in basic principles of journalism that he hopes will be renewed. “This stuff is not revolutionary” he said. “As we look forward, I see alot of what we need to do in what we did, and what they did here!00 years ago. We need to go out there and tell the truth.” Not many students—engineers or music aficionados—can say they own a stereo that plays music by producing arcs of purple lightening. What’s more, not many can say they’ve built said stereo. But after all, engineers like So tinker, and audio engineers are no exception. Audio Enthusiasts and Engineers (AEE) is a club where music lover meets designer; one of the few places where producing music is seeioas a technological advancement rather than a spiritual one. The group has been manufacturing synthesized noise for the past five years, establishing themselves through a variety of teams and projects that teach students the nuts and bolts behind sound equipment. While some follow kits, others have been pioneers in the field, building devices never before attempted by other engineers. It all started in 2006, when two students founded the club to fill a curriculum hole in the College of Engineering—there were virtually no opportunities for students tolearn audio design. The club’s beginnings were defined by a project called Revolution Audio, which was truly revolutionary in multiple senses of the word. First, the concept had never been attempted before, not anywhere, by any other engineer. Second, the project was, in fact, about revolving. It consisted of a surround sound system with a touch screen interface, where users could switch which speakers were left and right. Stroke the touch pad and spin the controls in a circle, the sound follows you. Rearrange the living room furniture, touch a screen instead of moving speakers. The inaugural team built everything from scratch, even the touch pad. This mission laid the club’s path for years to follow. Each year, the more advanced members make up the design team, which works all year to create a grand-scale project. This year’s team is constructing what they call a mind synthesizer, which would convert heartbeats and other bodily functions into electronic rhythms and tones. So far, they’ve figured out how to monitor the heartbeat in voltage pulses on the computer. Now, they’re) working on turning those into music. Eventually the club hopes to enter the mind synthesizer in the Guthman Musical Instrument competition in the state of Georgia, a national showcase of musical innovation hosted by the Georgia Tech Center for Music Technology These audio enthusiasts are already well versed in creating off-the-wall ways of generating sound. Previously they constructed a Tesla Coil speaker, which plays music by creating arcs of electricity The device essentially looks like a giant coil of wire that emits purple beams of lightning, which in turn creates an impressively wide range of musical frequencies. And yes, you can even hook your iPod to it. But users beware: there’s a magnetic field around the coil that will fry any electrical device within a certain range. Hit’s fun, just don’t get too close,” AEE presiflent Scott Sprau said. But not all the projects are immensely complicated to build. After aH, ¡¡'Enthusiasts” does come before “Engineers.” And though most members are engineers or computer scientists, students of any major can join. Either way everyone has to start from somewhere. The two most popular teams are the Tube Amp and Guitar Pedal teams, whose projects are far easier than the design team’s excursions. There are also easier mini projects, like custom molded earplugs that donradistort sound for the listener, and headphone amplifiers made of Altoids tins that make frequencies consistent between iPods and headphones, improving sound quality Not surprisingly the one thing almost all members have in common is their mutual love of music. “I’d say a fair number of people are musicians or have music background,” Sprau said. "We get a guitar player crowd, but then we also get a lot of techno electronic people that make beats on the computer.” Audio Enthusiasts and Engineers explore the science of all things amplified ■ rn engineering- lon niA f l Graduate student Steve Zaja^ shows ljp a headphone amplifier in an Altoidsease builtjij|ato studentsrin , : the Audio Enthusiasts. The purpose of thgamplifier is fl interpret the« signal from an ipod in order to lower distortion and improve the quality offfeund. Junior Scott Sprau assists faculty Kdvisc|i GrMforvli^M^ with an audio amplifier. ..Sprau is also the vice-president of Audio Enthusiasts. o o h i g g i n s / D E S I G N v i c a r i v o l l m a r T Y P E i a n k u l l g r e n P H O T O h i l a r y A ¿MA' I D g ti a 1A c ft c s y ti r< n u v 1; v a c l 1< 1 e c 1 I J i t h i b o d e a u / D E S I G N b e t s y e b e r T Y P E j a c o b k a n c l e r z / P H O T O a n t h o n y Freshmen Dorothea Kaiser and Todd Symborski dance the night away at the Honors College masquerade ball. The masquerade ball was held at the MSU Union Ballroom on Saturday; Feb. 12. Sophomores Steve Gerdeman and Josh Mazur dance in the spotlight of the masqueradeffiall. These gentlemen provided the Honors ball with entertainment for the night by showcasing their dance moves for other attende^ Jionors uuueyt: Honors College hosts masquerade ball as a chance to unwind For one Saturday night, Honors College students were able to break away from the books and boogie down with their fellow classmates. At the annual Honors College masquerade ball at the Union Ballroom on Feb. 12, females flaunted their finest dresses and males cleaned up Ha variety of suits for the college’s biggest social event of tffe year. “It’s a good way to unwind and just relax with other people in the Honors College,” sophomore Steve Gerdeman said. “Most of us see each other in the classroom or studying. It’s nice to see each other in a more relaxed setting.” Honors students took it upon themselves to find different ways to unwind. For junior Andrew Trusty that meant pulling out a classy ductlape suit for the occasion. “I’ve been slowly finishing it up over the past couple years, and I put it together for this,” Trusty said of his black and red three-piece, complete with a red tape bowtie. He said he also dabbles in duct tape art, having constructed little penguins, moose and giraffes. His date, junior Elena Karisny, had her own matching duct tape dress. The theme this year was a masquerade ball, as voted by the Honors student body However, most dancers were unmasked, content to dance under no disguise. Others chose to brandish decorative and elaborate masks with glittery sequins and elegant feathers. Inside the ballroom, specks of red, white, yellow and purple waltzed across the walls as the Honors students crowded the dance floor in the center. The wooden square swelled with people the entire night, with only a few of groups spilling off to the side, socializing in various circles. The dancers were treated to a variety of music, dancing nearly in-sync to the “Cupid Shuffle” as well as belting out the namesake chorus of Cee Lo Green’s hit “FuckYou,” something that wouldn’t have flown back in high school. While the Honors College Programming Board, which organized the event, was only allowed to sell 300 tickets due to fire codes, the smaller dance size was still a worthwhile time for Honors students, who are used to a smaller community as part of the program. “It makes MSU a lot smaller, with people who share the same interests,” freshman Greta Sommerfeld said. The college enrolls about 1,000 people, Trusty said. Those students enjoy the benefits of priority enrollment, no prerequisite requirements and separate Honors sections for their classes that provide a more in-depth learning experience, requiring them to both learn and apply their knowledge. Honors students also talked about being able to live on Honors floors, with at least one in every neighborhood on campus. The students enjoy the studious atmosphere promoted on those floors as well as being around more school- oriented people. However, those school-oriented students know when to drop the books and put on their dancing shoes, “They don’t sacrifice having fun for school,” junior Brandon Waterloo said. “They’re still a fun group of people ,’H g a r l f a g U a / D E S I G N b r e n d a n p r o s t T Y F ^ a c o b k a n c l e r z / P H O T O j e n n i f e r Distinguished professor’s career is recognized for 40 years of teaching I When Dr. Philip A. Cusick took to the podium to give his speech, he at first seemed disappointed by the many people who had shown up. ’. "Don’t you guys have something better to do?” he asked mockingly and was answered by the audience’s warm laughter. However, for his colleagues in the College of Education, past and present students and friends, there wasn’t anywhere else to be besides congratulating Cusick for 40 years of service to MSU. I The event, held at Erickson Kiva on Friday Jan. 14, served as an opportunity for Cusick to reflect on 50 years of school reform. It was also a time to celebrate the closing of Cusick’s career with MSU before he retired in the spring. Cusick’s 45-minute address covered the decades of reform that schools, curriculums and classrooms had undergone since the 1960s. He peppered the speech with jokes that had nearly everyone in the room laughing. Despite his quick delivery in his soft, almost whispery voice, he held the audience’s attention. Beyond being a professor of educational administration, Cusick served as the head of the department twice. He held other chair positions at MSU, including the Departments of Counseling and Educational Psychology u, “He’s prepared countless school and district leaders; some of his students are in very high positions,” Don Peurach said, an assistant professor of educational administration. "He’s really been the face of the department, a leader in the field in the state, and a mentor to many students.” Thus, it was clear why so many people came to bid him farewell. “He’s followed my career; he’s been available when Jhad questions. I’ve always been welcome to stop in,” John Graves said, who received his doctorate degree under Cusick in 1979. Graves worked for 30 years as a superintendent, most recently in Jackson, Mich. "He’s always been a part of my administrative career,” Jane Van Steenis saidl who has been a principal and assistant principal at several different schools. HHe’s always been my mentor and he’s always had a strong interest in my career.” When discussing Cusick’s impact, it always came back to one key concept: his ability to ask good, thought-provoking questions of his students and colleagues. With some background in philosophy as well, he’s helped to open his students’ eyes to education and reform. "He is an unbelievably gifted observer. He looks at things equally and carefully” Graves said. "He taught me how to ask good questions.” From the opening introduction to the response given afterward, the portrait of a very talented and caring man was painted. People talked of Cusick’s humility which helped to hide his brilliance. For instance, he played down his own education, saying the only teaching advice he ever got was to "get the kids to sit down, and then teach them something.” "He can take something vast like 50 years of history in American education and boil it down to a very few manageable concepts,” Ryan Goodwin said, a first-year doctoral student studying education policy Cusick, however, dismissed the significance of his lecture, saying he was just rambling away A standing ovation seemed the only natural conclusion to Cusick’s speech. The short, bespectacled professor, who had been sitting on the steps, stood and acknowledged the support from his peers and admirers. With the recognition of his achievements and character that day the same thought was most likely on everyone’s mind. “He’s really going to leave a big hole here. He’ll be greatly missed,” Van Steenis said. w ~ - . Membel®f the College of Education! former colleaguela an<®|d friends, g&tliei in thS| Erickson Kiva. Audience :membe|| shS||| their »appreciation and MpponUor all of.Dr. Philip Cusick’s acffi>mp]ishmei^ the paSf.’^^gars. professor (Educational administraSn, is Dr. Philip ¡¡ptiring this spring after 4C) years m the College of Education. ||||s5j|jc has . erved twic^mchair Educational Administrawn,acting chair «the Departments . -Counseling, Education Psychology and SpeciH J|iucw||n and Assistant Deanppfbff -CampMs Programs. the Department o^| o o m o m up *53" 3 n>tn 3 QJ CL l/l‘O 3 g a r a v a g l i a / D E S I G N b r e n d a n p r o s t T Y P E c o u r t n e y z o t t / P H O T O j e n n i f e r iames madison u u u cyc * Students explore their future at the Law College Fair Thoughlawyer and attorney positions are often glamorized in popular culture, the approximately 600 students who attended MSU’s largest Law College Fair were able to figure out what the future really had in store for them. With 95 law schools from around the country in attendance at Spartan Stadium on Sept. 22, the LSAT, tuition and personal statements were the main focus of discussion, as students’ visions of becoming the next Ally McBeal or Daniel Kaffee diminished. “A lot of people think it (being a lawyer) is like ‘Law and Order’ and shows like that, but those TV shows are not like real life.’wunior Bill Siderits said, adding an “I wish” as he moved forward in the long line of students waiting to speak with representatives from the University of Michigan. • “I’ve known I wanted to be a lawyer since I was 12,” he said. "This gives me the opportunity to find out what I need to do to get into law school.™ At the fair, smdents were able to obtain information on a personal basis by getting one-on-one time with representatives law schools. Pamphlets, business cards and folders were also free for the taking at each school’s personal booth. Boston University, the University of Notre Dame and the University of Miami were just a few of the schools in attendance. from various "This is a great opportunity for students to meet with schools they’re never actually going to see, and a great way to get information that they might not have been able to find by going to a website,’:’ Jaimie Hutchison, a field, career consultant for James Madison students, said. Hutchison also helped coordinate the event. ‘ ‘It’s very important to ask questions and do your research, because law school is expensive,” she said. MSU had two booths set up for the night: one for the regular law school and another for the new public health policy program offered as a dual-degree option, a masters, a graduate certification or as a specialization along with the law college. MSU’s booths were some of the most popular, with a slew of students waiting in line for the majority of the evening. Second-year law student Jason Schmidt was also available to talk about his experiences, something the other colleges in attendance didn’t offer. “MSU’s law college has the highest bar passage rate,” he said when asked about its standing in comparison to other law schools. ‘ ‘You get all of the resources MSU has, coupled with the great faculty and diverse collection of students,” he said. "I still get to go the football and basketball games as a student.” MSU’s current law school actually used to be the Detroit College of Law until 1995, when it partnered with MSU and moved on campus, he said. Schmidt also had some words of encouragement for future law students. "The first year they really try to scare you,” he said. "If you stress out, you’re spending way too much time and you overwhelm yourself. Anyone can do it.” Seniors MarisaMays and Courtney Dimoncmistenl© a lawreMol representative talk about her school. The most common question of the night ^Kr students was how thi^Suld set thems®p||apart from others in their ^^applications. Junior Katie Windt circles lawipkools she wanted to talk to at the fair. Third' wer#95 schools from acllss the ^Bountry in attendant^ Flutist Richard Sherman,yioliris* Dmitri Berlinsky itolistYuri gandelsman and cellist Souren Mgratuni play Mozart's Flute Quartet No. 1 in 6 Majqf. The performance Was dedicated to Mozart's ¿j§5th birthday Professor Marcie Ray shares her expertise with students and fatuity about the history ofWolfgàr.g Amadeus l|lozart8musfc. As a music historian, RayÔigages the Jpadience . thShusfcal Hermanee. o o m o m to 3 -< TJ m a m jr cn OlQ Üm A. 5T “o -J- v< o-1 Q) r rn S I Ck« Cm r\f music College of Music celebrates the birth of a classical music icon i ! West Circle Drive was in near gridlock with Breslin Center traffic on Jan. 27. But inside the Music Building auditorium, it was a whole different scene. Well-mannered older couples and slightly dressed up students listened silently as faculty performed the works of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart—a stark contrast to the masses of rowdy basketball fans and police conducting traffic outside. But West Circle is,,., after all, music territory And it was, after all, Mozart’s 255th birthday At intermission there was even a cake with displaying his face and a spirited round of ' ‘happy birthday’ ’ sung by the audience. The show marked the third installment of the College of Music’s new West Circle Concert Series. Through anew publicity effort to promote the shows, the college has seen attendance numbers soar well above normal levels, often times exceeding the auditorium’s 365-person capacity “The first event we had 580 people; we couldn’t fit them in there. We had chairs on the stage and down the front,’’James Foger, Dean of the College of Music and professor of saxophone, said. The idea was formed to correspond with the 200th birthdays of Frederick Chopin and Robert Schumann, two influential lS^-century composers, which occurred during the fall. The College of Music continued with the idea, adding“ a Beethoven-themed concert in addition to Mozart’s birthday celebration. Music professors attribute the series’ success to the fact that the shows were organized into a common themed advertising campaign, something the college has never attempted before. “I think it’s been extremely successful so far,” Deborah Moriarty professor of piano, said. Moriarty in addition to performing in all four of the concerts, played a principle role in organizing the events. Bp think a themed concert is something people really enjoy I think people love to come to chamber music and it’s been a little bit easier to advertise it because it’s a series.” Senior Brandon LePage, box office manager for the College of Music auditorium, said faculty concerts also have a significant benefit for students. “I think it’s a key part of the training that I’m getting here. My degree is in performance, so if I never see my professor perform it kind of defeats the purpose,” LePage said. “We can sit in private lessons and he can talk to me about what it’s like to perform all the time, but if I never see him do what he’s telling me, how do I know that he knows what he’s doing?” LePage has observed that audience turnout largely depends on the professors performing. Newer professors tend to have a lower turnout, while more seasoned professors have a greater draw. He too observed the West Circle Series garner more interest than the average faculty concert. “This is way more people than usually come to a faculty concert,” he said. The boom may have come just in time. Now more than ever, the College of Music is relying on its own fundraising to fuel the operations budget after funding decreased by about 10 percent over the last two years, Forger said. Operations budget funds are vital because they are the life blood of the college’s regular activities, including small-scale purchases to hefty Wharton Center rental fees, which can rack up to $100,000 a year. Despite fundraising concerns, the college strives to keep ticket prices at a reasonable level to make the concerts accessible and encourage return. This includes free admission for all MSU students. The characteristics of chamber music, specifically its small number of instruments, call for a small setting. While its charm can be lost in larger venues, music professors say the college can provide the ideal experience for students interested in this type of classical music. “When you go into the audience here, you’re right there. If you go to a big hall like the Wharton center, you’re very far away1 ’ Moriarty said, comparing it to the difference between watching an MSU hockey game on television and seeing it live at Munn Ice Arena. “You go to Munn and it’s like Wow, I want to be here. I want to see another one,”’ she said. “Chamber music is a little like that in this kind of a setting. You have a feeling of immediacy and being part of the performance.” yjfü o o r~ m o m co 3 0) c QJ in Q. H 3n fD -< O’ ~0 o m CL 7T o m co Q fd iM •c_ * • 111m o Mary Mundt, the dean of the College of Nursing, displayaAe plans for the new Bott Building. The three story 25,00(Psquare fgdt addition will take 18 months to built, although it hasn’t yijen started. A sign marks where the new Life Sciences extension will be built. With the constitution of the new building^ Mundt envisioMsa *|manent hcfhib for th®§olleSof Nursing. y WmÁ Wlmm wmm |fj|S§ É|®Íl| \\ w '■ .i- i §1 Mm 'üai ' /\t:-- .1 rnllonourtf nursings MSU s College of Nursing looks forward to new building, expanded program M Scattered between the Life Sciences A Building, West Fee Hall and the first floor of the Olin Health Center, such has been the College of Nursing’s unfortunate lot for years. However, it looks like the college is finally sel to unite under one roof, thanks to the construction of the new Bott Building for Nursing Education and Research. The $17.5 million project is funded by grants from the National. Institutes of Health (NIH), private fundraising and donations. The largest contribution was courtesy of Timothy and Bernadette Marquez, whose $7 million donation granted them the naming rights to the building, which is christened after Bernadette’s parents. Increased enrollment has caused the College of Nursing to expand over the past five years. The institution has tried to respond to the national shortage of nurses by increasing the number of students they accept each year and employing greater numbers of faculty The dean of the college, Mary Mundt, argues that the building isn’t just a response to the increased enrollment, but also a way to meet the current needs of the program. “With health care reform, the need for nurses is huge,” Mundt said. "The nursing shortage has gone on for quite a while now. It’s related to the fact that a lot of people are in the post-war baby boom age and are going to be retiring from the work force, and they need to be replaced.” “The other reason is the population is aging pretty significantly, and there’s more chronic illness, so the need for more nurses to serve that population is significant.” Built as an extension to the Life Sciences A Building, where the college is headquartered, the three-story 50,000 square foot Bott Building will have classrooms and student support services on the first floor, with the upper two floors reserved for research and doctoral programs. The official groundbreaking was held on Sept. 24, and construction is expected to be completed by December 2011. With the Bott extension, the college is hoping they can serve their increased enrollment better by creating new programs to match current trends tn?the nursing field. The accelerated second degree program, which allows students with a degree in another field to become a nurse through 14 months of clinical work, was one of the fastest-growing programs in the country and was introduced at the college in 2005. The College of Nursing has also supplemented its programs by bumping up admissions at all educational levels, though increased enrollment doesn’t necessarily mean that the college’s academic standards have deteriorated. “We’ve turned away between 200 and 300 qualified students from the clinical admission every year. There are about 600 pre-nursing students who want to be in the nursing program,” Mundt said. “We’re an accredited program nationally so there are standards you have to meet to continue your accreditation,” The College of Nursing is currently ranked in the top 20 percent for masters programs nationally Mundt, however, hopes to go even further. By increasing focus on research, she hopes to place the college into the list of top 20 nursing programs funded by the NIH. Several faculty members have already received grants for research in areas such as management of cancer symptoms and the possible genetic origins of Alzheimer’s disease. “Our goal is to be, nationally the best that there is,” Mundt said. jm m into T! -■ m ^ o in o D ^ FT! =■ Z N o- 2. 2- C. oT T)v< « £U“I o o o m cn o tn S’ o n 3 m Q. n' fD Semmci^ycar ;student Patrick Pavwoski was one. offll gst^ffiathicl rneckcmcj students whc| ¡rganized and ran the game^S ^^^®fe.gas Night. Gamblefs kept theKapllt able aafensy all night. rn . ■ j I o n o n f osteopathic jnedicine ■ The College of Osteopathic Medicine brings Las Vegas to East Lansing Asking an MSU student if they’ve been to Las Vegas usually elicits a mischievous grin or embarrassed chuckle, followed by a reluctant “yes" and an off-handed recap of the better parts of the night. But despite that “what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas,” the College of Osteopathic Medicine’s Student Government Association brought the glamour, gambling, and games of Sin City to East Lansing for theirftlth annual Las Vegas Night on Jan. 15 at the Eagle Eye Golf Club. There were, however, a few significant differences between the scaled- down event and the notorious City of Lights. For one, a part of the $20 entrance fee and the additional cash spent on gambling chips went to Special Days Camps, a summer and winter getaway in Muskegon, Mich for children with cancer. Instead of freshly turned 21-year-olds or mischievous bachelors running amok, charitable students, faculty alumni, and friends of the College of Osteopathic Medicine filled the room with good-natured spirits. And, of course, partying in the pyramid of the Luxor casino wasn’t really an option. “Oh, you know, I’ve just been there (Las Vegas) once, but this is more fun, I think. More calm,” Sophia Johnson, a sophomore at the college, laughed. The Hollywood-themed night began celebrity-style with a bright red carpet preceding the double-doored entryway to the Grand Garden Room at the club. Men in crisp black suits and girls in long, brightly-colored dresses and flashy high heels were greeted by twelve blackjack tables, a roulette stand, a craps table, a wheel of fortune and, of course, a bar to tempt the more fiscally conservative. “All we kept saying is that it’s going to charity so it doesn’t matter anyways,”: second-year student Evan Coyne said above the din of popular ‘80s music and random cheers from lucky gamblers, highlighting his not-so- successful attempt at blackjack with his friends. In fact, about $5,000 out of the approximate $20,000 raised last year went to charity Student Government Association’s Faculty Advisor Beth Courey said, adding that with a greater turnout than last year, this year’s donation was looking to top that. The rest of the money according to Courey would then be divided between the college’s 31 student organizations depending on their degree of participation in helping set up the Las Vegas scene. “We are privately funded, so this is huge,” Special Days Camps Director Tammy Willis said. “Our budget is about $250,000 annually that we have to come up with, so nights like this really are the only things that let us keep doing camp.” According to Willis, the camp only charges $50-$75 per child, but the real cost of attendance for each child is approximately $250-$300. So, in a display of gratitude, she and a handful of other volunteers from the organization came out to celebrate the night, even offering to man the blackjack tables as dealers. “A lot of us give up two weeks in the summer,” Dearborn resident and camper-turned-volunteer Joey Klein said. “So doing an event like this, it’s fim for us to get together, relax, have a good time, unwind, and still be able to donate to something that we love and cherish in all of our hearts.”« racirlantial rnJIano in arts and humanities a RCAH students shine poetic light on the infamous “rape trail” Scenic though it may be, the path behind Shaw Hail that runs alongside the Red Cedar River doesn’t enjoy a good reputation among MSU students - a fact made apparent by its less-thanS flattering moniker as the “rape trail’’. Students from the Residential College in the Arts and Humanities (RCAH), however, hoped |to combat the trail’s negative reputation by transforming it into a scene of beauty and contemplation through the power of poetry On Wednesday Sept. 8, RCAH students handed out pieces of chalk with poems wrapped around them to students walking along the “rape trail,” and asked if they would be interested in writing the poem on the pavement. Many students didn’t take the offer and kept on going, though a few did join in. Sophomore Patrick McWilliams was one such student who stopped to create art with poetry and chalk. “In high school I did a loiof art, so this kind of thing just always intrigues me,” McWilliams said. “Poetry has always been something that’s kind of important to me just because it can have such an impact with just a few words.” Another artistic volunteer, senior Kerry Hidlay, expressed enthusiasm at the chance to give the “rape trail” a face-lift. “I always thought it was fun to do this - write out poems on the sidewalk and decorate it. It looks really nice for the community” she said. The RCAH students collaborate with the Center for Poetry of Easljjansmg to put on this event twice a year. Although some ©f the students write poetry themselves, they decided not to display their own work at the Chalk Walk, preferring instead to pick excerpts from both their favorite poets and poets whom they felt made a difference in the world. Sophomore Preethi Bandri saw a poster for the Chalk Walk and decided to stop by Impressed by what she saw, she began writing out poems as well. “I think it’s really great that there are so many people here appreciating it, you know, putting it down in chalk,” she said. “And it’ll be here for a couple of days, or until it rains and people can just look at it and admire it. I’m excited to look through it.” 7T —! O -< cx ¡2 \ rn o m Q_ o ro Z OJ Mark Phillips writes ppetSout of his book for the Chalk «Walk event. The event was to beautiS ■the "rape trail" Sophomore Patrick McWilliams uses different colored piece'S bf chalk to IKite a JBe of poetry: ThefChalk Walk everit was to help rem<|®th© negative connotation from the frail behind Shaw Hall. ym, A former membe^of the^clllege ofVctorinary ■|»dicine, St^gSneed ro^ks out QtMjass guitar ast member of tM§ baiid Fatal P||k Fatal Plus.hii been together for 13 Kars. Dr. Fred Dyer on tj|e keyboard Bom the Department ofHoology and Tom;Schmidt||>3the drums S hi the Department of Microbiology and Mole«d|| Genetics perform in the band Fatal Plus at ¡MacDonald Middle School on Jan. Dyer and Schmidt are part of ttffl ten piece band who themsJ^S'anim^Rsk”. i ■ veterinary medicine rni i arm ot ■ ■ ■ II r»f Students and faculty in the College of Veterinary Medicine come together for their annual talent show Adorned in paisley button-ups with instruments in hand, animal rock band Fatal Plus took to the stage at the 2011 College of Veterinary Medicine’s annual “Vet Rap” talent show on Jan. 23 at MacDonald Middle School. Dr. Jon Patterson, a professor of pathobiology and diagnostic investigation, started the band in 1998 with former faculty member Dr. Jim Render, inventing a genre of music that he terms the “animal rock” Patterson described his band asla fun, parody kind of band,” which modifies classic rock songs to veterinary medicine themes. “It [the band] allowed the students to see a different side of us, rather than just the stodgy academics who are their teachers,” Patterson said. “Jim was a drummer, and I was gutsy enough to try to sing, so then it was a matter of rounding up other musicians to join us.’l| Fatal Plus kicked off the event that night by performing four songs to a lively toe-tapping audience: Lady Zenyatta (from The Beatles’ Lady Madonna), Outbreak of Avian Flu (from Robert Palmer’s Bad Case of Lovin’You) and We Are an Old Man Band (from Grand Funk Railroad’s We’re an American Band). They then wrapped things up with a number that Patterson deemed as the band’s greatest hitjlS. Neurona (an infection affecting horses), based off of The Knack’s My Sharona, Patterson said the band has also played two gigs at Potter Park Zoo as a fundraiser for the zoo’s new veterinary hospital. Fatal Plus recorded a CD in 2006, with plans to record a second this summer. Ten other acts took to the stage throughout the evening, • including fourth-year grad student Jennifer Stokes, who sang an original piece about the train that runs on Service Road. Stokes called it her "inspiration to wake up earlier in the morning,” and also performed a Jackson 5 medley on her violin. Other acts included a clarinet solo from second-year grad student Erin Shaw, an improv comedy routine from second- year students Jeff Crafton and Vanessa Kane, as well as trumpet and ukelele solos from Joe and Reuben Stump, the two sons of the college’s assistant dean, Sarah Abood. Jim Crissman, an MSU alumnus from the class of 1977, also read an excerpt from his novel, Root Cause: The Story of a Food Fight Fugitive. The novel, Crissman said, highlights themes of “veterinarians, bikes, family responsibility and where food comes from.” The College ofVeterinary Medicine has been putting on “Vet Rap” for 22 years now, Patterson said. Fourth-year grad student Dana Sweeton explained that a couple of students come together from each class to plan the event every year. The event also features a baking contest where the faculty samples and judges tasty treats made by students themselves. “It’s justia fun event everyone can attend outside of school’ second-year grad student Andrea Babischkin said. “I think this event definitely promotes the closeness of students and professors within the college.” (|§ys§ Fourth-year College of Veterinary Medicine 'student Jennifer Stokes sings an original pi^® aboS hesH motivation to get up in the morning and go to class. Stokes has a released a CD in the past. Tom Schmidt on the drums from the Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics performs a'sia"? part of the band Fatal Plus. TheKand writes parodiespf classic rock songs with veterinary medicine themes. 7T HI O -< 5" "5 ■— m g ®-m in CO U) o 0 ll =2. 3 < ^ ° ^ §" x tu o “» H O 3 o o o m (/)3 3 CD Q. o’ 3*rt> Km Crissman, Mho graduped from MSS| in 1977, reads an ex^rpt from his new bjjok entitled “Root Cause: A Story of a|Mod Fight Fugiti||8 Crissmal said the major themes in the book l|||veterinary medicine, bicycles, family and where food KHmes from. yj:t Benefitting numerous charitie; through their philanthropic endeavors, members of the Greel community at Michigan Stat< University committed time am ard work throughout the academic /ear to saves lives, support cance research and grant wishes SPAGHETTI & MEATBALLS BENEFIT NIGHT PI BETA PHI join us for q fun evening of food, friendship and hcspitoijt y. We'll be featuring our new hearts, classic Spaghetti e. ra eat bans but you'» be able to enjoy anrtwn« on our menu, til. Of proceeds Will help f ;rf,i across the United sia Wednesday, September 8th 4 - 9 pm ÏQ5 Edsl Grand River Siy.33i.4040 IV-..,.,,, tal... Sophomore Kristen Lisickiliolds Pi Beta Phi's fundraising flyer, allowing her to donate: 25 percent of the cost of her meal to First Book. First Book is an organization that provides needy children in the United States and Canada with to books. food, fun and a fundraiser Pi Beta Phi supports literacy and children throughout the nation Noodles and Company on Grand River Avenue was a lot more crowded than usual on Sept. 8, the day of the Pi Beta Phi sorority’s fundraising event for First Book, an organization that provides needy children with new books. The line to order stretched around into the dining area, while students sat packed around tables in their efforts to sit together. Noodles employees rushed to complete orders while customers waited anxiously for their food. ‘ ‘We like to do these things because it brings in business and also helps out the community so it benefits us both,” said Noodles and Company manager Brett Yako. As customers kept arriving, the girls of Pi Beta Phi handed out fliers to those interested in the cause. The fliers allowed for 25 percent of each customer’s order to be donated to First Book. "Our philanthropy is literacy and First Book is an organization that gives children, literally their first book,” said Katie Vallentine, a junior and president of Pi Beta Phi. The sorority puts on other events to promote literacy and support the organization throughout the year, including a spaghetti dinner and a broomball tournament, she said. "We do a lot of stuff with our philanthropy it’s rewarding,” said sophomore and and member of Pi Beta Phi Kristen Lisicki. According to First Book’s website, the organization has donated more than 70 million books to programs for children in the United States and Canada over a span of 20 years:;, The girls of Pi Beta Phi have been a part of this contribution since 2006, Vallentine said. Through their fundraising efforts just last year, the sorority was able to donate 720,000 brand new books to children in low-income families. "It gives us the opportunity to do something a lot of people don’t see as a big deal," said vice president and junior Trade Whelan, who organized the logistics of the event. "A lot of people here don’t realize that some kids don’t even have books.” "I think what they’re doing is awesome,’ ’ said junior and Noodles and Company employee Steve Carnaghi. "I know when I was a kid I struggled with reading, so their philanthropy is a really great idea.” NoodlJl and Clfnpahy, was packedlpn tM day of Pi Beta Phi's fundraiser. |Girls;from ofrieiSscHori- %s^Serleame out to smggort the cause. David Zirstein t«es a shot. «Nick Dambro with a pi<||AJi|put 10 Sigma Phi Elipson brothers volunteered t|| the fundraise» serve as targets Freshm® Derek Wooster and Evan Brazen cover freshman Jeff Mod||| with shawg cream. The proceeds; from the fundraiser benefited the; Grater LansinJSod b||H SophojSre R slams junior ( with a Barbs fundraiser u cream as pie hi wasting food. Christopher Sielaff regains his senses aftdj being hit with his first ¡¡H To maximize profit for charity the greeks also sold event t-shirts. Sigma Phi Elipsòn member Kyle Snarski, along with Pi Beta Phi sopholflres .Natasha Shah and Aubrey Owada share a laugh after being hit with pies. The greeks' partnership was the first year of what they hop^Hbe a iong-standing tradition. phighting hunger Sigma Phi Epsilon, Pi Beta Phi pair up with hopes to start an unusual tradition The Sigma Phi Epsilon house on North Harrison Road is likely the only place in East Lansing—past, present or future—ever to serve Barbasol shaving cream pies. But on Nov. 21, the fraternity brothers had something besides dessert on their minds. In fact, they would have rather seen the unlikely filling put where it belonged. “You can’t feel the air around your face, you’re afraid to open your eyes and you’re afraid to breathe in deep,” junior Kyle Snarski said, bits of white foam still clinging to his hair. Snarski was one of about 10 SigEp brothers who volunteered to be a pie target at the first annual “SigEp/Pi Phi Pie Phight.” The men joined forces with the Pi Beta Phi sorority sisters to sell shaving cream pies as a fundraiser for the Greater Lansing Food Bank. Once purchased at a price of $3 for one or $5 for two, the pie’s fate was in the hands of the buyer. He or she could choose to deface a victim among the lineup of SigEp volunteers or reguest a specific target from either house. Some buyers, especially the more timid Pi Phi sisters, were gentle in their delivery Others were relentless, wielding the dish with as much force as a tennis racket. “It feels awful, [but] I'm just glad to help out,” Snarski said. After the first hour, the living room’s weathered wooden floor was slick with shaving cream and the grand picture window behind the lineup of clairs, which seemed comparable to a shooting gallery was smeared with white streaks. As the mess grew, the pile of aluminum pie trays and original red and green shaving cream cans slowly shrank. “The soothing Aloe is awful. It burns so its unkempt aesthetics, much more,” said junior Michael Moore, theghead of SigEp’s public relations and philanthropy. Despite the fundraiser was the start of a new, somewhat experimental, Greek approach community donation. While other houses typically go solo on philanthropy projects, SigEp and Pi Phi hope that by banding increase enthusiasm together, they will among a wider base of students. for Moore said his fraternity is the only one on campus without a consistent annual charity fundraiser. “Our house used to do things! but never anything that stuck,” he said. “This is something I want to make sure happens yearly from now on.” Moore also hopes that a co-sponsorship will help the two houses to motivate each other in continuing the event. Junior Tracie Whelan, Pi Phi’s vice president of philanthropy said the new format will likely be a recipe for longevity making it easier to increase awareness and student support. In her experience, the key to slccess for philanthropy events is a network of good publicity in the Greek community and getting the word out to on-campus clubs. “We both draw from different groups sometimes, so hopefully it [student turnout]! will be larger overall,” she said, adding that Pi Phi hosts a broomball tournament every spring and a spaghetti dinner each semester to benefit First Book, a charity that promotes child literacy In jumpstarting the new tradition, Moore came up with the solution of using shaving cream instead of real pies to solve an obvious paradox that existed in the original plan— wasting food in order to fight hunger. uà —I m“2 m p m 1 sum Junior Britteny Bratschi paints a frame that will showcase her self-confidence. AOPi held the event in order to spread awareness about positive body image both to sisters and to those around campus. Freshman Shermany Hickman which color to paint her picture frami The frames were filleffl with Sentimental photos and inspirational quotes. ThHpjsters of AOPi discus^B hovy^eylshould^Ecbrate their framesiDifferent mspfreponal cruotes were chosen arid designed with stickers and paint. 3 —I en CD-< —1 ca"0 n U). -i CDo' o 0) JZ CD 3^ tn o'3 CD IX CDu O > z M > T* o z O tn Q)—1 "1 0) Q_o < CD “I o 3 o’ 03 T3 zr CD o 3 o S o 3 13 As snow piled onto windshields and covered the streets of East Lansing in a thin, white blanket, warmth radiated from the Alpha Omicron Pi house. On Dec. 1, old issues of The State News splotched with patches of pink, blue, green and red covered oblong tables. A trail of giggles crept upstairs as girls gathered in the basement to discuss issues of body image and paint picture frames as part of Be Spartan Confident Week, put on by the ladies of AOPi. “Basically the picture frame idea stems from the idea that whenever you’re having a bad day you can look at the picture inside the frame and see the inspirational quote or drawing you painted on the frame, and then it might not seem so bad,” sophomore and AOPi president Samantha Kray said. Junior and co-vice president of communications Becca Stolarsky said the main goal of Be Spartan Confident Week was “to bring everyone together and talk about issues of self-confidence.” 1 'When you stand next to someone it’s human nature to compare yourself to them, and I think a lot of girls have a skewed perception of what they’re 'supposed’ to look like,” she said. Be Spartan Confident Week began on Nov. 29 when AOPi put inspirational quotes around campus. On Wednesday girls gathered at the house for discussion, and on Friday AOPi topped the week off by painting the message “Be Spartan Confident” on The Rock. “We didn’t expect it to blow up and communications like it did,” AOPi co-vice president of junior Sam Artley said about Be Spartan Confident Week. According to Artley AOPi chapters from all across the Midwest have contacted them in hopes of doing a similar thing at their respective universities. Junior Meghan Kanya heard about the Wednesday night workshop through her roommate and decided to attend after taking classes in psychology on body image. “I wish more girls would realize they’re fine just the way they are, because that’s how they were made,” she said. Fall semester marked the first Be Spartan Confident Week at MSU, but AOPi hopes to continue the event for years to come. Artley said the sorority wants to expand the week in the future by adding guest speakers and getting involved with other organizations" like Respecting and Understanding Body Image (RUBI) at MSU, not only to provide support but also to show students outside the Greek community what AOPi values. “There’s a certain stigma that comes with being in a sorority” she said. “People that don’t know 'us assume we’re just like every other sorority They make image seem important. People look at me and are surprised to find out I’m actually in a sorority” Kray agreed. “When people think sororities, they think about looks and social interactions with frats,” she said, “but it’s so much more than that.” a picture is worth a thousand words Students come together for Be Spartan Confident Week A n a g y / D E S Ì G N b r e n d a n p r o s t T Y P E a d e l i n a s c h m i d t / P H O T O v e r o n i c a Freshmenj|phn Creed and Alec Raiemacher fill up on appetize||fbeibre the pizza finale. The Rush Week dinner was heldMt Old Chicago wife® new and o|f members of TriagleBratefnity came together in Sfebration. After numerous roundslef appetizers and drinks, going through second, third and poss^BflOurth helpings,, the men of Tri­ angle'were pleased&ith their Rush Week dinner. MemblM also participated in a small JstSgethir at the house afterwards. Tailing the endjbf the back rub line, sopheptore Conrad Bartke gi^s freshman .NichbSfeurt a massawhile freshman Bradford Wallis watches in appreciation. Dining at ®ld Chicago has been a Rush Weil tradition for the men of Triangle. a complete 180° Becoming a brother of Triangle Fraternity triangle Frat: a word that’s inextricably linked to stereotypical crowds of binge-drinking college “bros” who pop their collars, gel their hair, and major in checking out sorority girls. It’s not a particularly friendly image and that’s exactly why at Triangle Fraternity the term "frat” is more than frowned upon— it’s shunned. “We prefer using the full word: fraternity” junior Calvin Tomaschko, president of the Triangle Fraternity said. He added that Triangle goes beyond the "frat” image to promote "leadership, brotherhood, and a place that you can call home.” The house, which serves as a center for all of Triangle’s operations, stands on the corner of North Harrison Road and Oak Street. Parties, philanthropy tutoring, meetings: it all happens there, Rush Week included. The fraternity powever, puts its own spin on attracting potential pledges by establishing an extremely casual Rush Week atmosphere. “The word ‘rush’ isn’t really recognized here,” Tomaschko said. "Relaxed, un-awkward, social hangout is what we like to call it.” Triangle likes to keep "rushes” comfortable by creating a no-stress, hazing-free environment so that brothers and rushes can get to know one another and form friendships naturally Rather than lecturing the rush class on reasons to join the fraternity brothers joined them in games of poker, euchre and Call of Duty Though Rush Week involved plenty of fun and games, the fraternity also worked hard to impart the importance of academics to the spring rush class. To keep Rush Week from getting in the way of studying, active brothers offered tutoring in math and science courses every weeknight, a major draw to the engineering, architecture and science students to whom the Triangle Fraternity caters. The tutoring served a dual purpose, encouraging the rush class to bond with brothers while working through an endless pile of assignments. "It’s not all about having fun; it’s about getting work done,” freshman and fraternity brother Brad Wallis said. "The fraternity comes second and school comes first because even though the fraternity helps with networking, if you don’t have the grades, you can’t gel the job that you want.” Preparing brothers for a successful future is one of the fraternity’s main objectives, as Triangle pushes both brothers and rush recruits to develop themselves into well-balanced men. These expectations rest heavily on the shoulders of the rush class at the end of the week, as they receive and accept their bids to become full-fledged Triangle pledges. All brothers are expected to manage their time efficiently while conducting themselves with respect in an effort to uphold the Triangle brotherhood and its code of ethics. “We’re looking for someone that is constantly working on themselves, not only in schoollbut socially within the community and professionally” junior Jake Hoppert, pledge educator of Triangle, said. To give brothers the opportunity to become more active in the community the fraternity works with non-profit organizations like Habitat for Humanity Within the house, senior brothers also try to teach young pledges more practical life skills such as cooking and housework. “A lot of guys don’t know this kind of stuff when they come to college, so every Sunday we spend an hour cleaning the house and then we eat together as a fraternity” sophomore Conrad Bartke, a member of the spring rush class, said. "The meal is prepared by our house caterer, Chops [Robert Vogt], who picks a few of us pledges to go shopping with him and then cook the meal. It’s a great way for pledges to interact with brothers and learn at the same time.” In the end, learning is what drives the men of Triangle. Brothers join to learn, not just academically but also about each other and themselves, The fun banquet hall filled th ¿thigh t with laughter and aromas. There were three packed tables, occupied by hungry membersHB Triangle and their dates. / i'l t J»1 ! ARSH SopHcS®^ 79SHj^Calcaterra and freshmen Sydney «SpleLosh and AJyS(|C^caterra make the leap into the pond at the LansMJj|3ar Plunge. The ladies represented Kappa Delta in thei^fe^sto raise money and take the plunge int^tlfasnlri waters. Fred and Wilma Flintstone, Inspector Gadget and 400 others took a daring plunge into freezing waters on Feb. 27. A bone-chilling water temperature of 34 degrees didn’t stop the characters from raising $70,000 for the Michigan Special Olympics. At the seventh annual Lansing Polar Plunge at Eagle Eye Golf Club, courageous participants formed teams of three-to-four and were encouraged to wear costumes to make the event "more festive, fun and add a whole new quirk,” Anne Goudie, Lansing Area Director of Special Olympics, said. Each member was required to raise $50 by collecting pledges to qualify for the event. Teams included groups from local businesses and organizations like Harper’s Restaurant and Brewpub, Woody’s Oasis, Lansing Police, MSU Greeks and groups of friends. Together, teams took the plunge into the pond, holding hands, clenching fists, grinding teeth. "As soon as I jumped in my body just jolted,” Kathleen Loftus, junior and vice president of external,, relations of the Panhellenic Council, said. “I felt like I was convulsing, but it was actually really fun to feel that adrenaline rush. It’s like nothing else.” -- Plungers were only in the water for a few moments, and the police department’s dive team was in the water with the jumpers. The East Lansing Fire Department and paramedics were also on site. This year, MSU Greeks got their first icy taste of the Lansing Polar Plunge as a kick-off event for Greek Week 2011. "I had never done anything like this before,” said Patrick Hunt, senior and vice president of external relations of the Interfraternity Counc^R'Knowing I could do something to raise money personally and participated'myself was great. I was so happy to be a part of that.” MSU’s Greek sororities and fraternities fon 13 groups, each with one large fraternity one small fraternity and one sorority One person from each house was required to attend the Lansing Polar Plunge. Matt Roberts, aqenior in FarmHouse, was dressed as an iPhone with stiff, black cardboard hanging from his neck down to his knees. He said he was happy to take the plunge. ‘ ‘ Sometimes people think that people with challenges can’t participate in athletic activities, but that’s not true,” Roberts said. "Special Olympics provides a recreational outlet for them.” Goudie said MSU students volunteer for the Special Olympics rather often, acting as referees and scorekeepers. The group held a basketball tournament in February and organized hockey and cross country tournaments on campus. “We’re active in and around the MSU community We’re pretty visible on campus and I think that’s why we’ve gotten such great support,” Goudie said. The Special Olympics offers year-round athletic training and competition to 19,000 athletes in the state, in addition to 400 local competitions, regional events and eight state-level competitions, said Kimberly Purdy, public relations director of Special Olympics Michigan. The Lansing Polar Plunge is only one of 24 Polar Plunge events across the state. “The more participants we have for an event like the Polar Plunge, the more money we raise to fund our programs,” Purdy said. “It also helps raise awareness and gives the Greeks an opportunity to get involved.” Hunt said he hopes the Lansing Polar Plunge becomes a tradition the Greek community can carry on. "It’s great to see that students, parents, people from the community and even senators could come together a plunge to raise funds MSU, Lansing community unite to raise money for the Michigan Special Olympics in Greek Week kick-off event The crowd anxiously awaits the next group to plurruhet intty the watlevsy Clevdy finished first in thePk despite the cdSs eounfusions due® a simultaneous 5k me-, ¡ held on campus. Zeta Tau Alpha sorority promoted their event by decorating The Rock in pink cancer ribbons and vibraraB paint. Proceeds from the 5K race «jfi were donated to the Susan G. Korrion foundation. Runners from thePotafau Alpha “Think Pink!” 5k finish the ra® and return to the ra|h|||i>n area. Bottled water, bananas, apples, yogurt and granola bars t^ge provided to th^H event attendees and participant!*; fellow ZTA senior Mary Dosch] did the Greater Lansing Race for the Cure and it was so moving. You’re meeting total strangers and they’re telling you their life stories.” Though the cause was serious, ZTA sisters did their besttokeepparticipants light-hearted and motivated throughout the race. Sisters cheered along the trail, encouraging runners and walkers with shouts and pink ribbon-shaped hand clappers. ZTAmembers also distributed snacks and water bottles to runners as they crossed the finish line, devoting an entire table to bagels, apples, bananas and granola bars for all supporters. As the last walkers crossed the finish line and ZTA sisters began to clean up decorations, the event came to a close, but ZTA’s efforts did not. The sorority plans to continue raising money and awareness about breast cancer by participating in other 5k puns as well as the Yoplait Save Lids to Save Lives campaign. >¿{111 of my close friends’ parents have had cancer. My friend’s dad actually had to go through a 17-hour surgery to have it [a tumor] removed, so I wanted to come out and support.” The run also brought ZTA alumnaTerri Roberts to campus in support of breast cancer education and prevention. ‘ ‘I walked as a ZTA alum. I graduated from the University of Central Florida, so I’m a little out of state, but...we [ZTA] have a long history of supporting the Susan G. Komen Foundation and breast cancer awareness, and I do what I can,'.’ Roberts said. the Beyond sorority’s historic donations of time and effort to the foundation, senior ZTA sister Kara Brockhaus had a more personal tie to breast cancer. "My mom is a breast cancer survivor so that’s why I walked. It’s a great cause; I’m graduating next year but I’ll still come back and walk,” she said. ‘‘Last year we [Brockhaus and The ladies of Delta Gamma, Fijmand Delta Kappa Epsilon perform “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” ¡Is part ofrajourneB through the decades. The theme of MSU Greek week 2,01* was Back to High School, W * ijlif Students of Sigma Delta Tau, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Alpha Kappa Psi collaborated for a high school football-themed performance. As one of numerous fundraising events held throughout the week, Songfest raised mone|i for organizations such as The American Cancer Society; Big Brother, Big Sister, Listening Ear, and MS.U Safe Place. Members of Sigma Delta Tau, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Alpha Kappa Psi joined forces to perform a football-themed dance routine. Songfest raised money for selpral sorority and fraternity sponsored charittffiS dance Greeks come together for final Greek Week event The Sunday afternoon felt like a Saturday night inside the auditorium April 17 as Greeks took the stage for Songfest. The event featured 13 performances from different teams, with two fraternities and one sorority represented in each group. Songfest marked the end of Greek Week 2011, in which numerous events were held lo benefit the American Cancer Society; Big Brother, Big Sister; MSU Safe Place and Listening Ear. Backstage, teams were practicing routines and chanting the names of their fraternities and sororities loud and clear. It was impossible to avoid bumping shojiiders with other students and the general public as they flooded the auditorium lobby Before the first team took the stage, the audience lit up with green glowsticks around their necks, red ones in hand, as the lights in the auditorium dimmed. Delta Gamma, Delta Kappa Epsilon and Phi Gamma Delta set off the show with a dance routine which they described as “an evolution of high school fads.” Flips, synchronized movements,;;; tutus and a piece to N*Sync’s “Bye Bye Bye,” left the audience dancing by their seats. Twelve acts followed, each with their own theme. Delta Chi, Kappa Sigma and Kappa Kappa Gamma, for example, took to the stage in plaid shirts, shorts and short skirts to form “The Brat Pack,” depicting the group of teen actors form the 1980s. They danced to music from Sixteen Candles and The Breakfast Club. k But none of this was easy work. Sophomore Nicole Gomez of Kappa Kappa Gamma said “The Brat Pack” started practicing their songfest routine in February “We aren’t really talented dancers, but we had to practice a lot to make sure our moves were synchronized and entertaining,” she said. Though Gomez claimed she has no dancing talent, there wasn’t a silent moment from the audience in the auditorium that afternoon as she and the rest of “The Brat Pack” strutted their stuff onstage. “It was great to see the Greek community all in one place,” sophomore and Delta Chi member Kyle Vellmure said. “Everyone was supportive and I had a lot of fun getting to know people in other fraternities and sororities.” Junior Colby Lievens of Alpha Gamma Rho said Songfest was the perfect event to bring Greek Week to a close. . “I really got to know so many people in the Greek community through this event,The said. “Instead of having a few representatives from your own fraternity or sorority participating in an event, everyone is involved.” Junior Jessica Salley of Zeta Tau Alpha said Songfest has become suchia staple of Greek Week for this very reason. “We always have a big turnout for this event,” she said. “It’s just fun. Everyone you know is up on stage singing and dancing. It’s hard to not have a smile on your face.” son III! 73 Q 3" —! to ^ ¡5 TJ — ■ JT1 * U\ fl>■'N. in o Si. mo' o {/) Qj 3 ua — - £> o| Members of Delta Gamma, Fiji and Delta.; Kappa Epsilow perform an 80s’ inspiffij Bon Jovi song during SongfgM The overall theme®f their performance was high school through the decades. Members of Kappa Delta, Alpha Gamma Rho and Alpha Tau Omega present^^a detention-aspired jMrformance during Songfest. Songfgjt’s high sehofl!theme: reflected cliques, fads and elicit® from teenhood. 'cd' 5" ^ QJ *< o % 1 “-sr *< •^1 Students of Alpha Phi, Delta Sigma Phi and Phi Kap|f| Psi take the audience back tglhigh school with a Seniif Slip Day performance. The® winners of MSU Greek Week 2.011 were Sigma Kappa, Lambda Chi Alpha p i Pi Kappa Phi. o> a> Memb^s',» thgChi Omc-.fa ^&>rority||ire in a dirty Dodge Ram off Burnham Avenue during the Chi Omega- |^M©arwash. Girls took turns assuming the shift of sign holders on this warm and ^Kunny Thursday "5SSHn Spartans in Phi Gamma Delta and-! Chi Omega scrub the grill« headlights of a newly cleaned Dodge’ Ram. Cars, trucks, vans bikes and mop^H were cleaned at the^H Omega house on Burcham Avenue| wish upon a car Chi Omega and Fiji host a carwash to benefit the Make-A-Wish foundation Five-year-old Carlos had one wish. He wanted to go on a shopping spree to Toys ‘R Us, riding there and back by way of limousine. Last year his wish was granted thanks to the contributions of the women of Chi Omega. Chi Omega’s national partner in philanthropy is the Make-A-Wish foundation, so the M.SU chapter’s fundraising efforts are geared toward raising money to grant the wishes of children with life-threatening medical conditions. Last year, the fundraising paid off as the sorority had garnered enough funds to make Carlos very happy for a day “He got picked up in a limo and was taken to Toys ‘R Us, and just had a fabulous day” senior Megan Carter, former vice president and philanthropy chair for Chi Omega, said.1 ‘We got pictures with him and all of his purchases. It was just nice to see how, on a really personal level, our contributions made a difference in somebody’s life.” With this success in mind, the sorority is working to grant another wish through various fundraising events. One of their latest efforts came in collaborating with the Phi Gamma Delta (Fiji) fraternity to host a car and bike was! April 21, 2011, in the rear parking lot of the Chi Omega house. From noon to 5 p.m. the two Greek organizations washed vehicles of all sizes in exchange for donations for the Make- A-Wish foundation. “The Fiji boys approached us and wanted to do a car wash, so we said ’Why not make it into our philanthropy event for the Make-A-i Wish Foundation?”’ sophomore Laura Donofrio, the co-philanthropy chair for Chi Omega, said. The estimated cost of granting a wish is $5,000. A large portion of those funds come via organizing and hosting a large soccer tournament every year called the Karen King Kickoff, named in honor of a Chi Omega sister’s friend who was murdered in 1997. It’s an open tournament for people to put teams together to play for a giant trophy at Lansing's SoccerZone. All of the proceeds go toward the chapter's own personal wish fund through the Make-A-Wish foundation. Once they reach the amount, they’re set up with a kid in need of a granted wish. Chi Omega’s relationship with the Make-A-Wish foundation has led to some special opportunities to reach ourno those they help.Bast year, they helped put on a holiday party for kids of the Make-A-Wish program, as well as for any parents or siblings who have or have had a child in the program before. “We really enjoyed doing that because we got to meet the kids; we weren’t just giving money” Carter said. “We got to face-paint and do crafts with them, and there was a band, and all the parents were there. It was really nice to meet these kids firsthand.” The men of Phi Gamma Delta are active on the philanthropy scene as well. They partner with the American Red Cross to organize and run a monthly blood drive on campus. Their big event is Hoops for Hunger, wheMthey rent out IM Circle to host a basketball tournament similar to the Karen King Kickoff, with all proceeds donated to local food banks. Phi Gamma Delta is relatively new on campus, revived in 2009 after a ten-year absence. The brothers said that doing cooperative events like the car wash not only helps get their name out in the community but also allows them to work with other Greeks towards similar philanthropic goals. “It’s for the betterment of Greek organizations to reach out,” junior Cameron Dole said, vice president of Phi Gamma Delta. “The more we can do with other fraternities and sororities, the better.™ As cars pulled in and out of the sorority the car washers worked to B.o.B.’s tune “Airplanes,” in which Paramore’s Hayley Williams sings, Mcould really use a wish right now.” It was a fitting reminder for the women of Chi Omega to work towards finding their next Carlos, and give him a day he'll never forget. Junior Cameron Dole and sophomore Sam^Hrian put the finishing touches on a freshly washed Buick.. There was n<| set costfMHthis car wash, onh«fonationsiiwere ^pepBllin support of the'B&SIk-AA/Vish foundaiS^^B Sophomore Kinzer Jennings and .:mhomore Julia Grippe cruise out dltheWlke-A-Wish Carwash on af|feshly cleaned moped. The combined Chi Omega: and Phi Gamma Belt car wash lasted from noon until ®>;m. in the evening oh April 21. jocks, and rock nfnro Fraternities and sororities take a trip back to high school during Greek Week Senior and Kappa Sigma brother Scott Hudda has been playing the violin foil'd 7 years. In high school, he kept at his talent in earnest logging countless hours of practice as the Detroit Youth Philharmonic’s precocious concertmaster.. Now, he’s a packaging major, and playing the instrument is merely a creative release, a buffer against the monotonous drag of his schoolwork and other less artistic obligations. Likewise, his concept of practicing has now reverted to the spontaneous, do-it-when-I-feel-like-it sessions characteristic of a casual musician. And so his gift chugs along largely underused during the year. That is, of course, until Greek Week. For one week in the spring, MSU’s fraternities and sororities team up and compete against one ¿another as a last philanthropic hurrah before the end of the year. This year, money was raised for Special Olympics; Big Brother, Big Sister; Safe Place, an organization dedicated to ending sexual and domestic violence; and Listening Ear, a 24-hour crisis center in Lansing. But when it was once again time for the annual Battle of the Bands competition at the Auditorium on Friday, April 15, the Greek community’s undercover guitarists, singers, dancers, drummers andmusicians revealed themselves on stage, Hudda included. "I love playing here because it gives me a reason to get back into music and just rock out with a bunch of other people,” he said. This year’s theme was high school throughout the decades, and sure enough, the night was chock full of the clichés appointed to the teens of the 20th century There were jocks, iaerds, punks, burnouts, cheerleaders, greasers and rebels performing under subthemes like detention and spring break. Each performance in turn felt like a live parody of "The Breakfast Club” or "Sixteen Candles” set to the tune of mom and dad’s rock and roll. With almost all 2,600 of MSU’s Greeks in attendance® the roar of the Auditorium was deafening. ‘ ‘ I think' apprehension' is the right word,’ ’ Delta Chi senior Mitchell Craig said after belting out "Jessie’s Girl” on stage, clad in a bright blue varsity jacket and sunglasses. "You always get a little nervous.” Moreover, the night was about entertainment and strengthening the camaraderie of the Greek community, he said. ®|For many it was their favorite night of the week. ‘ You don’t expect someone to have musical talent,” Pi Beta Phi junior Lizzie Curcuru said. "It’s especially cool to see someone you know up there.” photos continued on pg. 308 attle of the bands Members of the Greek community perforin a tune at the batielpf the "bands show. Proceeds from th®how!'v\|^®linated to the Special 01ympJ|s;||ig Broiler, Big Sisterjpafe Hhclfand Listening Eapi STARR | A Tom Cruise look-avlike performs on guitar for the Greek Week battle of the bands show. The performance took place April 15 in the Auditorium. A\tV, Members of the Greek iqbrnmunity peMrm a tune at the battle of the bandi| show. Pro^^Ss from the show were donated to the Spe®M Olympics; Big Brother, Big. Sister; Safe Pl»e and Listening Ear. G R E E K S b a t t l e o f t h e b a n d s c o n ' t . Teams S>mposec^gltwo fraternities and on^feroritigfcompete during Greek Week to raise money for their philanthropies. raised from the show were donated to the Special Olympics; Big; Brother, Big Sister; Safe Place and Listening Ear, among others. Dressed in a blue bandana and leather jacket, this brother performMat the high soii»l- themed battle^mhe bands. The performanlllgof one night of several eventsffreating Grbltklteek. Greek members dressed like the 1 'Brat Pack’ ’ pefflorm during the battle of the bands. The night’s theme was 'back to high school.’ r i, “ a r' i if f Enter as freshmen, grow as sophomores, advance as juniors, depart as seniors. Four classes of outstanding students culminate to produce the four layers of Michigan State University's undergraduate student population. Hovering above their freshmen, sophomore and junior peers, seniors are looked upon as our leaders, mentors and friends. Following years devoted to their higher education, our seniors go forth across the world to live MSU’s goal of advancing knowledge and transforming lives, forever remaining the beloved older siblings in our extended Spartan family. 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Raymond Bates Kevin Patrick Bator Steven George Batsikouras Rachel Battaglia Meredith Jane Baumann Brittany Anne Bayagich Lauren Baylerian Rakan Bayouk Lauren Bealore Lashana Elaine Beamon Hunter Alexis Bearse Mark Richard Bearss Kristin Joyce Leery Ashleigh Belisle Samuel Paul Belknap Ana Belmont# Lauren Mullally Beltowski Sean Henry Bender Casey Lynne Benedetti Jill Benkert Kimberly Ann Berens Ingrid Krystin Bergquist Jennifer Marie Berriman Garrett Edward Berry Kara Ann Beson Steven Betel Ryan Bettelon Kritika Bharadwaj S E N I O R S b a r n e s I b r a n d o n Sijie Bi Kristin Bicsak Christopher Todd Biiinski Ashley; Inez Billings Camilla V Billingslea Craig Michael Bisson Danielle Blackman Romeo Joseph Blanchette Nicholas William Blank Anita Janelle Blount Phoenix Blunt Brandon Boatman Antoinette Bode-Higgerson George Bodin Iiii Hannah Virginia Boehm Spencer James Boertman Marie Bohnett Mohamed Ibrahim Bokhamseen Devin William Bone Laura Bonefeld Richelle Renee Bonk Kathryne Bonnivier Michael Borenitsch Rachelle Boudry Dean Thomas Bourdon Natalie Bower Caitlin Bowers Jeremy Bowie KimborrRose Bowman Mitchol Bowman- Sean Bowman Calvin Boyd Erica Brady Madolyn Brand Rachael Brandon Sharde Brandy Tiara Brandy Ashley Braxton Dominique Janae Brewer Daniel Michael Briskie! jarrett Brick l#@free Adam Brooks l^ffiarina B: : )ks HiBilble Kirsten BrootM Jonathan James Brouker Erica Alexandra Brown Jamie Lynne Brown JaqueB Brown Jillian RosM Brown Kourtney Brown Nicholas Robert Brown Steven Edward Brown William R. Brown Ashley Bruckner David Bruhn Andre Oege Bruinsma Nicholas Prank Brusie Krystal Buckler David Buether John Nicholas Buether Scott Anthony Buifa Travis Bukoucik Meliss’a|parie Bunge • Jeriiplurbridge Janae Burch Kristina Burrell Erin Elizabeth Butler jjRlakeisha Butler Ashley Ann Cabadas Kathryn Cabot. I S E N O R S b r a n d y I c h a p m a n Kristffii Rose Cadieux MenjjjjiCai Weiwen Cai Nich'otel Chlderav© ' Bernard Callaway Andrew Glenn Callison Pafi|J Jifitin Gawel Amber Gayden John Raymond Gburek Nathan Paul ^et®, Katelyn Jane Gei||br Steven Gehuardi .Amelia Germajfl . Jessica Eleanor Getsfchman Roxana Gholami NidhalBlblus ¡Ghraib James Michael Gibbons Eriffifeile^ Lizabeth Shannon Giles Garl Dgrrick Gillespie Deborah Ellen Gillett Bethany Rae Ginther Laura Giovanni Grant I. ou. r ;s Gitre Ryan Lee Gladding Daniel Alan Glover Julia Erin Glucksman Erin Ruth. Gnodtke Christopher Dale G04®. Rebecca Naomi Goldberg Gary (: older. Sachin Golhar Ja’Shawnda Ifolson KelseyaG’onzales Juan Camil||Gonzalez Molly Good Marva Ifpiodson Katie Michele Gordon I S E N O R S g a t e w o o d i h a g i s t Saralee Jeanne Gordon Meredith Gossman Kristen Leigh Gotshall Stephanie Nicole Goulet Danielle Grabowski Julie Grech Mshaj|pree®iiül Blarly green Sable Leann Green Anthony David Greenfield David Benjamin Greenfield Amanda Marie Gretka Lauren Ashle|| Grevel NicholH Griep jpgjurtney Griffin Regina !§;riffin-Jones Sandra Vanessa Grigg Jessica Griggs Daniel Paul Grinbefg Carla Renee Chanel Grissom . 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Julie Christine Harris Kelly Harris Alexander Hartman Ashton Harvey Tiwanna Hatcher Andrea Rose Havener Holly Lynn Havens Laura Elizabeth Haw Sharnae Hayes Sharita Haygood I S E N O R S h a k i m I h o d g e s Kristen Hayman Jason Haywood Luye He Qian He Shuting He Christopher Robert Heck Lauren Hedrick Courtney Elizabeth Hegberg Ryan John Hegenauer Philip David Heichel Virginia Heinen Joseph Vincent Helcfiflli Callie Jillane Helms Alexandria Marie Henderson Paul Joseph Henderson Amy Lee Hendrickson Benjamin Oiiver Henry Howard Her Harsa Bhaswara§Sermantoro Dujuan Allen Herrod L'orenzc J. Herron Brians Leigh Hertzberg Gabrielie I Ierzog Lisa Dianne Hettler Edward Alton Hemtsche Nikkia Hicks. Hussein El Abbass Ale Hijazi Chelsea Hill Harold Alonzo Hill Meagan Hill Mary jmdy Hilton Jennifer Hittle Angela Denise Hodges Megan Hodges Meghan Hodges AVM Nichole Joycffl Hoerner Courtney Ann Hoffman Ashley Nicole Holden Jillian Margaret Holdwick William Holland Katelynn Marie Hollerback Elita Holloway Jasmine HolmjjS Katherine Holmes Mark Andrew Holme! i Niafurstia Queen Holmes' Jaeh^M Hong Lauren Ashley Hood Dayna Lee fplfljls Nicholas Byron Hoornstra Toshinori Horii . Kathryn Hosmer MSicong Hou Guinevere Leigh Hovey Keii^flcwland Mary Howlett Yahan Hsu Yang Hu Yuhe Hu Bei Huang Ping Huang Po-Chin Huang Po-Hsiang Huang Brittany Hulings Philecia Niechel Humes Danyale Hunter Robert Hunter Jr. Mlalissa Huntley Cory Robert Hurst Leah Hurvitz Ebrahim Husain Chukwuemeka Igwe Ginga Ikeda Miyoung In Matthew Ryan Inch Keniesha Ingram Jennifer Iott Stacy Marie Isbell Mohammad Badruddin Ishak ChibuzM Isiogu Mimi Suhaila Ismail Katherine Oconnor Ivens Nur Syazanajaafar Sidek Adrianna Jackson Akilia Jackson Brittany Jackson Courtney J aekson Danielle Jackson Elliott Stephen Jackson Shannon Hana Jackson Charles Chester Jackson III Dongkyu Jang Stephen Charles JapowiczB Andrew Roger Jarema Renolcpeanlouis Jennifer Jedlick Andrew Uijun Jeong Chan Sikjcong Andrea Jeter Xiaowei Ji I S E N O R S h o e r n e r I j o h n s AVX Armel Lewis Johnson Ashley Symone Johnson Jamie Lorraine Johnson Karen Johnson Monika Johnson Nathan Johnson Taylor Johnson TrenttnlJohnson Ellis Gray Johnson II Megan Ann Johnston Molly Johnston Dominque Jones» Emily Jones Eric James Jones Kallie Jones Shauna Carlyn Jones Sheree Jones Paris Jordan Jaimie Joseph Kristina Joseph Amyjunewick Eun-Young Jung Kyle Gregory Jung Sun Pii Jung Susie Jung Robert Auston Kaercher Jacqueline Kaltz Aruna Kamara Rachel Kamish Caitlin Michelle Kane Hyun Jeong Kang Miao Kang Minjung Kang Irda Kape Andrew Kappler I S E N O R S j o h n s o n I k i m Lindsay Sue Karn Joseph Paul Karpinsky Nathan Daniel Kast Theodore Michael Kathrein Renee Grace Keefe Conor Keenan Mark Christopher Kehoe Lauren Elizabeth Kelley Daniel Kelly Danielle Sophia Kelso Tyler Tyrell Kendle Shaemus Christopher Kermiet Caroline Keson Mohammed Othman Khushaim Stacy Jean Killian Brian J. Kim Byum Joon Kim Dobeen Kim DongminKim DongsunKim DowanKim Eunjong Kim GuYoun Kim HyelimKim Hyun Kim Hyun Su Kim Ji-InKim Ji Young Kim Kichang Kim Ki Jung Kim Kyung Ha Kim MinjiKim Se-Jun Kim Sooyeol Kim Taekyoon Kim ^K1 Ydojin Kim Youngrae Kim YukyungKim Haruka Kimura Ashley Renee Kincaid Allison Elizabeth King Eric King KimberlyiDamara King La King Shaun Robert Kinney Nicholas Alexander Kipa Stephan Patrick Kirchhoff Brittany Klaus Amanda Dianne Klein Jfshua Eric Kleinhardt Jessica Kleinschmit : Valerie Klemmer Jacey Aliena Kloeckner Kendra Marie Knapp Shantel Knight Kathryn Lee Knowlton Lucas Gordon Knox Min Seob Ko Robert Edward Koke Charlene EHe Kolodziej Claire Nella Kolumban Alexander Kondak Melissa Koroleff Alexandrea Kotch Ashleigh Kotrys Stephanie Ann Kotsiris Marie Koziel Chris Krcmarik Jeffrey Alan Krebs Matthew Carl Kristoff S E N I O R S k î m I l a y e r Adrienne Nicole Krizek Maggie Ruth Kronlein Richard Alan Krul Amanda Kruse Nicholas.Krystyniak Allison Blair Kuch Soumya Kumar Ting-Wei Kuo Yuenming Kwan Karlee Renea Kwiatkowski .ijlüà Seul Kwon Tachyung Kwon Jennifer La Amy Lynn Labadie Jason Daniel Lademan Clint Lafayette Chad Tanner Lafeldt Natasha Janiece Lagrone Carolyn Kuan Lai Furaaan Fanny Lai Andrew Robert 1 .ake Kendall Lalko Kory Christopher Lambarth Olivia Ashley Lambert Claire Elizabeth Lammers Hao Lan Sarah Lanczy 'Krystal Lane Hannah Langley Katherine Elizabeth Langley Carolyn Lapham (Sfpilareom ChingYing Lau Sarahs Michelle Lavis Mark Layer - I Vi Francis Le Kaxylinda Leathern Ashley Lebel Changhyeok Lee Cha’Ris Susette Lee Hangil Le<0 Hyejin Lee Jason Lee Jisang Lee Jong-Wdflk Lee KoEun Leg; Minho Lot Min Ji Lee Sang Hoon Lee Sangmok Lee Shekinah Lee Shinhye Lee SuJfeongLeS Yi-Cheng Lei' ~ YongJinLe® Michael Robert Legard Kayla Dale Lehman Lindsey Nicole Lehman Lillian Marie Leonard Michael Thomas Leonard Brian Lesi#: Gabrielle Beth Levine Katira Lewis Kristin Michelle Lewis Raven Alexandra Lewis RebeckSlI Lewis Jamarr Corey L^wis Whatley Kristin Ann Lewsley Bingyu Li DuanLi S E N I O R S l e I l o v e Hiu-Tan Li Queenie Li Yadong Li YongJingLi 7,hi Li Jingwen Liang Ashley Lichota . Sarah Nicole Liechty Junsik Lim Lorenzo Lim Chun-Hsiang Lin Haohan Lin Mengyan Lin Minjig Lin Raymond Lindsey Laura Genevieye Lipp LingiMu Luxi lau - Mengrong Liu Mingyang Liu Yen-Liang Liu pichen Liu Yi-Peng Zoe Lin Hiiu Zhuojun Liu Robert Lloyd üauren Louise Ribaudo Lograsso Jeffrey Marius Lolkus Rodrigo Lopiz Falco John Joseph Loporto; Marleigha Lossin Michelle Elizabeth Loai Adam Lynwood Lott Courtney Loughman Amanda Jane Love ^KIS Eric Charles Loveland Esiavanica Lovely Lu Amy Lueken Philip Sheku Lukulay Bethany Ann Lumbert Ashley Lun<|y| Gen Lot Tin||Lud Ellen Lutley Christopher Lutz ^■ficholp Lynne I.yke- Jasmine CnMgs Lyons Bingjie Ma Megan Elizabeth Macneill Kyle Maddens Cain Matthew Madeline Brittney MaeshaL- Adetayo Maf^ Emily Anne Maki Jessica Makowski Julia Ellen Malara Alicia Mall Rita Malysheva Mich® Thomas Mamut Jamie'Hyse Maniloff Katherine. Mann Matthew Manning William Joseph Mansour Andrea Mantakounis Rundong Mao Margaret Marciniak Alexander Marcinkowski Ashley Lynn Mardewsft. I S E N O R S l o v e l a n d I m c m a l l Erin Rachel Margolis Kristopher Evan Marin Eric Michael Marselle Brittney' Marshall Denise Nicole Martaus Caroline Martin Clarissa Martin Erin Christine Martin Kristopher Alan Martin Solomon Martin Aleida Martinez Brearme Rachelle Mason Megan MaJa Ame Jo Matuzeski Holly Matzelle Natalie Michele. Maurer llpdric Ma^^MH Chalise Lynne Maybee Colena Mayle Jclleph Alan McAtte^H| EhMyMcBride David McCalki ^ Chelsea Renee Mifjfferd ¡tachary Troy McCullough Allison McDowell Allen Ricky McGee Nathaniel Cy Mclntee-Chmielewski Dominique Cherelle Michelle McIntyre Cameron J ames McKenney Portia McKenzie Kaitlin McKinley Briana Kourtney McKinnon Rapka Mari McKissicK/ - Alexander Michael McMall Shard McNarn : : Susan McPherson Nadiah Hanim Md Nor . Chelsie Ann Mead Darcy Meade Laura Meagher Jenna Mefford '.’FangYu Mèi Melyana Melyana Zhadiu ' .leng Adam Michael Mensinger Allan Richard Mergëj^ffl Douglas MSian AlySa Mepffl XueMi Justin Michlpl Michalefl HalepRoæ Michalsen Casey James Mickelson Gregory Daniel Milel Tatum Miles Amanda MillcH Amelia Mill KelsepLynn Miller YZiftlisJl Miller Renelle Danae Miller Scott Corey Milligan Erin Milne Melissa Lynn Minock Derrick Peter Misiuk Sherika MarielMitchell Erick Jimmie Mobe'ifg1 Julianne Moe Kelly Renee Moffett Norasyikin Mohamadrazali Hasib Mohammed I S E N O R S m c n a m a r a I n e u b a u e r Eric Leslie Mollon Stephen Joeseph Monette Bijan Bo»eatßc Moore. Christina Elise Moore Emory Moore Nakeia Moore Cristina Mörenop^ Alonzo K. Morgan Daniel William Morgan Jayme Morgan Rashida Morris Katherine Franc® Mortensen Darren Remon Morton Lindsay Moskal Steyon Mosley;“ ■ Ashanta Mossi Elizabeth Sandra M .:z Alison Movisi: : Sara Jean Mowry -. ' Norhic : lyu Muhamad Zain Miranda Noelani Mullen D evin Michelle MulvillS Curtis Paul Mumaw Jaclyn Hope Murphy Kathleen Megan Murphy Michael Edward Murphy Aimee Muscdjlph Dilhara Charindi Muthukuda Meghan MydffflH JaeWpokNam YunHyunNam Monisha Narayan Augusta Ndukwe Alireza Nessari Courtney Neubauer Michelle Renee Neurohr Cameron Nêzam KamanNg Kim Thuy Nguyen Linda Nguyen Steffany NiehoH Emily ¿.Nickels Alexandra Samira Nicola Zheng Nie Jing Ning Selorm Norgbey Martha Nowicki Gaukhar Nurseitova Daniel Nutt Shannon Maureen O’Brien PpIlÉtèy O'Brion Alexandra Ochalek Eglanti®|SOgranaj Jun Tack Oh Jeæie Olien Amy Lynn Olffif i Patrick Ryan Omalley Bradley [Scott Oneil Breanne Maxiefp’Jfeill SynYi Sing YeeYi Ong India Jaree Orr Tina (Sbnsetta Ortiz Yu-Kun Ou Manila Ounsombath Cory Andrew Overbeck Gourtney Padlfpck Genevieve Maria Padro Matthew David Pajtas Danielle Marie Palermo I S E N O R S n e u r o h r I p h a n Robert Allan Palma Jr. Brian Palmiter Yue Pang Andrea Lynn Park Hye Ji Park Hye Sung Park Jungsoon Park Kyunghee Park Kyu-Sun Park Danielle Parlapiano Kevin Pastor Chris Paterscfn^il Ashley Patterson l/flsley Louis Patton Kieyawnee Paul Lauren Mariah Paulauskas Kirsta Paulus Parker Pawlusiak Ava Myriam Pearlman Pan Peng Weihua Peng Megan Perecko Diana Carolina Perilla Clare Suzanne Perreault Ashley Perrfiiia t Casey Leigh Perry William Christopher Perry Caitlin Michelle Peterson Erica Anne Peterson Kristopher Don Peterson Tamia Peterson Kenneth Petkus Marina Petrova Petrova Marshawn Demieco Pettes Danny Phan AVk Tiffany Phan Shelby Marie Piechorowski Melissa Nibble Pierce Jenifer Lee Pierik Christopher Thomas Pietak ^«.Madeleine Mae Pilchak Katherine Elizabeth Pilibosian David E Pirochta Je¥sicaifiM)le Pirroh|| Bryan Pitcairn NicctlSl iLamarr Pitts Ja^n Ronald Piwarski Courtney Ann Plamondon Courtn^Kenef Ploehn Uydio Poiarchini Patrick Robert Pellet SftElveqan Polom Adam Rljfrard Porter Jeffrey Scott Postinger - Kandace Powell Mary Katherine Prebish Kyi ; Christopher Pressley Joseph Prichard Greggory Lawrence Proctor Raymond August Prost Shannon Bhgh Zachary Carl Puplis Ajll Puric XiQin AhRa Kariann Radat-z Christopher Radek Ashley Nicole Raetz Pradeep Raj Rajasekaran Michael Allen Raley I S E N O R S p h a n I r o b i n s o n Clark Mitchell Ramsey Lindsay Alaina Randall Cedasha Randolph Wittney Ransome Kelli Rau Jeremy Allen Ravitz j Victoria Ann Rgaurne AnnRgeke'. ■ Kelly Redburr, Ken Patrick Redman Erik Edward fledbute Essence LatricStBgiid MfeoteMawp RefSije Bridg^Caitlin Rejaw-isls Meredith Reynolds Kimberl^ Ril®H| Jessica Maria Riley Jonathan Riley :. I.Rin Joshua Ringbloom MhalpNicole Rippetoe Jeffrey Steven Ritzema Joseph Hailu Robele BlllDvrale Roberts Sarah Beth RobertsoiS Kaleigh Maris Robichaud Amanda Robinson AshleighJfbbinson DanieliiVorthington Robinson Jessica Robinson Mason Andrew Robinson Rachel Robinson Ryan Robinson Tyler WaynfpRobinscn ¡fictor i ijeshaun Robinson Am Lauren Rodammer Elaine Suzanne Rodgerson Ethan Roeder Ashleigh Rogers' Rebecca Marie Rogers Keffi|pfgge Edward Roginski Victoria AshlS RoïîÇp Beth Rijpi Jonathan Charles Rosewood Ben Rosner Garrett Paul Rossï Stefanie Ross Timothy Jam#! Rolfe Larissa Lynn Rossell Joseph Charles Rotellini Kelly ChristineiRoulier Aaron Joshua Rozental Danying Ruan Courtney Lynn Ruhn|| Hillary Jane Ruimveld Christine Anne Russell Jessica Lynn Russell Kimberly Joyce Rustem Stephanie Rustem Brittney Chavon Rutherford Janel Rutzen Danielle Ryan Heeslimg Ryu William Kristopher Sacks Samuel Moore Saitie . Megan Salada Carlos Salgado Christopher Robert Samoray Nicole Sanburn I S E N O R S r o d a m m e r I s c o t t ■Sarah Jane Scott Seangho Seal Bianca Segura Gary Daniel Seidman Stephanie Leigh Senneker Michelle Marie Server HytMIun Seu Younghoon. Seu Jacob Allen Sexton Kristen J. Seymour Kanika Urbi Seyoum Malika Shabazz Kyle Thomas Shack Andlla Lynn Shafea Arnav Atul Shah Asra Nausheen Shaik Danielle Sharp Zachary Hsie James Shaver Joshua I. Shaw Kelly Shaw Elizabeth Shawaryn Gregory Shearrod Kristin Shepard Kristen Hazel Sheppard GeShi Hangyan Shi Young Hwan Shin Igor Shleypak Michael Gordon Showerman II Russell Jordan Shy Nicole Sidge Emily Sieting Brian Joseph Silbernagel Zachary Theodore Silverman Michael Nathan Simbol I S E N O R S s c o t t I s o l i s Maria Fisher Sinicina Amy Marie Simkins Desiree Simmons Ashley Simms Chelsea Renell Simon Stephanie Lynn Simowski gjpurdan Simpson Brendan William Sinclair Rodney K. Singleton Minal Gautham Siyal ^^^pkendzel Kels||r Rose Skodak Tyrell Slappey Eric Slater. Jillian Adele Slingerland Jessica A. Sloan Kristin Elayne Slocum Rona Smart David Edward Smendzuik Andrea Smith Carnell Smith Jennifer Lynn Smith Je’Todd Smith Lindsay Fay Smith Matthew Smith Nichole] Sue Smith Rebecca Kathleen Smith Rochelle Smith Steven Anthony Soave Sara Beth Sobon Noressia Sockwell Ann Sojka Kamelia Sokol Michael Vernon Solak Delicia Solis Am Jihye Son Dongwook Song Yuning Song Kelsey Mae Scpel John Joseph Sparagowski Joel Wayne Sparks Alexandra RosSSpeigel Lance William Spencer Ellen Spendel Tye E. Splan Brittany Sprinkle Ines Srkalovil Richard Paul Srnec Caitlin Stadler Alyssa Lee Stanard Kaitlin Marie Stannard Thurman Stanton, II Alyssa Stasko- Kristin Margaret Steinmetz Matthew Stelzer Brittney Louise Stevenson Jacob Alan Steward Jillian Stewart Torey Mendel Stockwell Sharnise Stokes Cortney Lenee Stout Brett Stowell Anne Johanna Strasko Tyra Strobel Kristine Strouse Yu-Jung Su Sidney Oluwatoyosi Sule Courtney Sullens Yueya Sun Sreehari Sundaram S E N I O R S s o n I t h o m p s o n Kee:Chan Sung Laura Sunisloe Alexander Daniel Suradja Makinson Surin Laurel Sutherland [licolette Sutkowi ‘Nancy Elizabeth Svinicki Hillary Suzanne Swantek Garrett Marshall Sylvester Lisa Marie Szczubialka Adam Szymanski Kristen Marie Szymanski Marisa Anne Frederick Tacoma Samson Tafesse Yi Chiew Tai Takenori Takinami Erika Sherell Talbert Heather Talcott Shoichi Tamura Suyang Tan Dennis Tang Mingz^lTang Tao Tao . Briana Tarrant Jenna Taylor Marchelle Taylor Peter James Taylor Vando Teasley Jay Paul Thaker Alison Elizabeth Theriault Bfchael Thomas Thoel Brandon ThomaljP Sanchez Thomas Simone Elise Thomas Jamie Lynn Thompson Millicent Faustina Thompson Samantha Gene Thompson Mark Jesse Thomson Amanda Thorpe Megan Threats Kayla Thrushman Andrea Thurman Patricia Jean Thurnel' Jo Tic Cecelia Mae Timmis Sara Tischler Madison Todd Christina Marie. Totten Karina Tovar Megan Travis Hrica Victoria Treais Patrick Trisó». Mínela Trnöilll Brittney Troutman Hui-Ju Tsai PP^.drye Jean Tucker Christina Tucfjler Krystal Rachelle Tucket Yen Yun 'Tang Vincent; Chung Twu Derek Wendell Ulch Moria Ulmer Alp® Christopher Urban Kayla Renee Vallosia Ashley Elizabeth Vance Brett Gerard Vandenbussche Ryan Allen Vander Wagen . Nico|§-Van De Velde Brian O wrey Vandeventer Kari Rene Vandrunen I S E N O R S t h o m p s o n I w a r d Veronica Regina Van Hulle Brittany Lauran Vanpelt Abbigail Vansickl JH Sarah Ann Varney KenneMgeirel Vaughn Jonathan Laurenclifecliek • > Veltman Piaget Amanda Ventus ReSbicah Ann Villarreal Emily Marie Vizza Alexis Kay Viahakis Lauren Elizabeth Vocke Hands Z. Vue Visa'Vue Andrea WackerleH1 Abigail Elyse-Davis Wagner QaBKoloert tfagner III Andrew J ameswalker Lauren Danielle Walker Amy HIzabeth Wall Kayleigh Marie Wallace Kyle Andrew Wallace ¡Maranda Lynn Wallace jFoy Katherine Walter And^Bang AnyiWang Chenrui Wang ÇhcnrulWang LtfRfa^Jste u L y • ■ Mengling Wang Yuguang Wang ZhaolinWang Renee Lee Wangler iiawrenJl C. Ward Bipnca Wardlaw Andrew J ames Warnick Emmie Warnstrom Shane William Warren Samantha Linsey Warsh Kyle Andrew Warwick Kristen Watkins Crystal Weekley Cecilia Weems Sarada Nandaka Weerasinghe Samantha Weidendorf Jourdan Weiss Scott Michael Wejrowski Heather Wellman Julia 'Bendzinski Linda Ann Wenzel Elizabeth Victoria Westman Alexander White Lavoughnda White Samantha Lynn Whitehead Rosalind Elizabeth Whitfield Heather Whitney Lila Louise Wiaduck Nicholas Ryan Wieber Rachel Alana Wiedemann Amelia Faye Wiggins Bagus Dharma Wijaya Laura^i.^ Chelsea Louise Wilkins Chante Williams ; ; Eric Williams Kristina Williams Matthew Williams Patricia Williams Samantha Williams I S E N O R S w a r d l a w I y e Shalayla Williams Shavondalyn S. Williams Starla Jacquesa Williams Tastaka Williams Zachary Wilseck Emily Claire ifin James Wilson JazellëÉVilson Kaitlynn Mary Wilson Ryan Wilson Ashleigh Winkelmann Nelson Winkler J asmineKftnton Siong SiangWong Mark Jaillis Woodring Sha’KilalÄids;- ;'p>itte Wobd^^M Michelle Woclfoik Jason Ray Wright Simone Shantel Wright Ying Binami , Brian Reyno Wybrecht Brittany Wyche BenWym| Kan Xie Luc ien Xie Tianyu Xie Qiqn Rong Xion^ Tian Chen xSfe PfeitingtXu Xiaohan Xuan Chffeg JikYang;^ i TianpiinYang Salwan SuiaimanYaqc XuemeiiYe Erica Yelder GuanYiyue Kevin Patrick Yombor Charles Yoon IlsooYoon Jong KeunYoon Matthew York Christina Young Susan Yousif Sincere Yu Yin Yu David J amie Yuan Isaac Dillon Yuan Samantha Marie Zach Ahmad Zuhair Zahid Nor’Azila Zakaria Amber Lynn Zaker Thomas James Zarafonitis Robert Zemelis Jianfez Zeng Lingchi Zeng Cheng Zhan™ ^^Roji^!M'ang i Zhang Wei- Han Zhang Xiao Chen Zhang Yiwen Zhang Yue Zhang Yun Zhang Che Zhao Mengji Zhao Xin Zhao Minyao Zheng Junjie Zhu YingZhl I S E N O R S y e l d e r I z w e m m e r ZhSi Zhuang Robert Jason Zile Andrea Jayne Zimmerman Christina Zinkel YunjiwdZuo Franciscus Petrus Zwgmmer iga isggiHBi B r i eIIB wpysaj IjpfiSa 11 WSm Amidst chaos, journalists limb Kanclerz and Courtney Zott lo@f:.on as photographer Jennifer Garava^M places her photo editor, Erica Treais, in a choke hold. Treais stole Gar||gghaiS|s|rorjM poster. Sitting on dormitory sEp^at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, assistant photo editor Ellina Stein, content ediflr Angie Jackson, photo editor Erica Treais, < litor in-chief Vicari Vollmar, business manager Laura Sunisloe and asssistant content editor IsaaflHlIiyrest from exploration. The editorial stiff visited the Jostens pub|^*g plant Milch 18-19. Sifi Mason Robinson I WÈÈÉ W i t WÈH*; \ Sii X- THE 2011 RED CEDAR LOG YEARBOOK The Red Cedar Logis an award-winning, professional produced publication solely by students- students who have a passion for writing, photography design, business and editing. And by combining their talent and creativity into one staff, these students produced a yearbook that documents the memories of over 13,000 undergraduates, some of whom will cherish their book for a lifetime. Producing a 400 page book is no small feat, and every year brings a new set of challenges. But through the collaborative efforts of 26 dedicated staff members, we rose above the obstacles and successfully created a yearbook focusingKpon the many layers composing Michigan State University In an effort to peel back the layers of our great campus, we hoped to expose and document the lesser-known happenings of MSU and showcase the individuals that make this university unique. Whether those layers be class tiers- freshman, sophomore, junior, senior; or indentity- student, staff, faculty administration; pr perhaps organizational* clubs, sports, Greeks; each layer together contributes to the way we live our lives as Spartans. Though we can’t cover every event or organization on campus throughout the year, we hope that this book, at bare minimum, something touches upon memorable and special for every student, and reminds them of their experience as a member of the Spartan family Content editor Angie Jackson, assistant photo editor Erica Treais, editor-m-cMIf VicariVollmar, assistant llntent editor Isaac Hee :a|H design editor Jessica Halfyard holdjphoto editor Maison Robinson 6n the balcony of the Biltmore Hotel in Providence, RI. Thgeditorial||taff visited for a yearbookiponferen®on Oct. 1-2, 73 m o o m o > 73 o o o o o" T3 zr o ZJ colophon Design: The Red Cedar Log was produced • completely on; Macintosh computers fqrjjageJ- layouts, photo editing and word processing. AH computers were networked tnróùghfaLaCie Œ” Rack NAS Ethernet Disk. Software used included Adobe‘(ÎS3 Master Suite and Microsoft Office 2,004. Type:HHheadlines, folio àfffl-paBBWpas yvere croate Jfffith Din OpënTypelMedium. All Body copjlapd cap^ffiavere created with Rockwell Standard Light. Photography: The photography of the Red Cedar Log, with the ex®pti©»>f senior portraits and -ai&fllmission of women’s varsity is whofly the original work pi the photographers The cameras and’flash urut^feed were from the Canon produdgpre, with «cdrnbination of Canon and Sigma lenses. Some photographers chose tg use their penlpnal e'guivalenti^^pipment.! ■ ■ Advertising: Educational Services, Inc. yyas th^H Red Cedar L®g‘s advertising ccpjpany TlapH, provided fte yearbook with 14 pages of black and white advertisement^^H ;eqii"|ls- ¿¡lout ,$3:,per student, for the publication^ of the ydaba^gALS: students'ireturnedtoiSchodl in aBBS? theterevious^Sris ye'axBook could be picked up,'at varicSfeialKio^Mr^s andfinsbn-c'ampus buildings, For a small fee, Bumni caiman bp ks shippec.-to thcS^H AEexp^^^^^were paid for with funds earned through partnership with Herff Jones Photography and Educational Services, Inc. Content m the yearbwk were determined byi^Bditor-in-Chief, the |||nterit§4anagmg Editor, the Phqigjgraphy Managing Editor and the Design ManacrmpBditor withlBnsiddration of retiSsts from student organizations.tp be featured in the publication free of charge. There were noJ^^Byrdqeiypd; from ftfe university. A totailf lsSBMfte^fthe 400-page, full-cdlbr |§earbook printed from' JcSeajs Inc., costing $13|jSo. Copyrig ht: The Red Cedar Log is copyrighted byWcariWlmar, EditorSpMef. No part of thSS? book?^^fbfip3rodu(Md withouftprior conse^S Acknowledgements: Thank ydu for all your help.. Wefeifdn’t have done this wi®ut you, Finance and Operation: The Rod-Cedar Leg is an entirely student-run publication, designed, < produced arid managed by students. Each . semester,iSslSsU' provided a set amcn||Jgpf revenue-throughiStudent tax dollars, whijc||igsg ■Mike Laiferty Tim Ross, everyone froru the Jostens plant, T Maryalicer^^^® Brian Jefiries Chris Schotterf,* v Matt York, Eric Endlich, Kathy WaliczekMssie Spears and Helen Cannon. ’ rom Herff JonfeSj?'' The Red Cedar Log staff enjoysj an afternoon outdoors as content editor Angie Jackson leads the staff in a 30-minute yogareession. Staff members provided a picnic afterward for their first bonding outting. Mason Robinson Staff members gather in photo editor Erica! Treais’ living room for a final goodbye. Each staff member brought a dish to pass, as well as a homemade gift for their editor-in-chief. Post-stall staff packs ir Services! With often he Studying a proof, journalist Jacob Kanclerg edits his work for errors. All staff members were required to edit proofs before spreads were sent for final submission. In celebration of Halloween, staff members gather H assistanSphoto editor Erica Treais' living room. Costumes included 'Snooki,' ‘Daria,’ 'Basement Cat,’ 'Ms. Frizzle,’ and a MINI Cooper. 1 Designer Brendan Prost smiles for the camera during a weekly staff meeting. The design staff met Monday nights after the staff meeting to conducts critiquespn completed assignments. Erica T®!' Clad in America-themed attire, a portion O the Red Cedar l||g staff gathers during the end-of-the-year party fli a familyiphoM The staff sang;"God Bless America” before . serving dinner. R E D C E D A R L O G s t a f f 2011 RED CEDAR LOG STAFF EDITORIAL Editor-in-Chief | Vicari Vollmar Business Manager l Laura Sunisloe Design Managing Editor I Jessica Halfyard Photography Managing Editor I Erica Treais Assistant Photo Managing Editor I Ellina Stein Content Managing Editor I Angie Jackson Assistant Content Managing Editor | Isaac Hee Copy Editor I Alexandra Ghaly STAFF Journalists I Jacob Kanclerz, Jessica Whitmill, Courtney Zott, Kritika Bharadwaj, Ian Kullgran, Adelina Schmidt Photographers I Hilary Higgins, Natalie Kolb, Veronica Nagy, Cassie Allore, Chase O’Black, Anthony Thibodeau Designers I Betsy Eber, Saralee Gordon, Brendan Prost Distributors I Zachary Albright, Timothy Flis, Brian Morisette SPECIAL THANKS Audrey Aquino, Jennifer Garavaglia, Nitin Jacob, Carly Maniewski, Natalie Patterson, Mason Robinson, Rodneya Ross, Marissa Russo Content editor Angie Jackson, assistant content editor Isaac Hee, editor-in-chiefVicari Vollmar and copy editor Alexandra Ghaly listen intently to another staff member. Ice-breakers were used during each staff meeting for bonding and laughs. Helicopter mot Photo editor Mason Robinson, assistant photo editor Erica Treais and photographer Ellina Stein prepare for a helicopter ride above campus. Selected photographers have the opportunity to shoot aerial photos of MSU each year. Copy editor Alexandra Ghaly smiles for the camera during a weekly staff meeting. Ghaly wasEesponsible for editing copy for AP Style, grammar, spelling and factual errors. AWi Photographer Jennifer,Garavaglia appears from behind curtains in the] home of photoleditor Erica Treais. Treais’ homo was often used for staff gatherings. Designer Saralee Gordon, design editor Jessica Halfyard and designer Betsy Eber work in the designeSfcor-nerMf thlgRed Cedar Log office. A sticky notepcrafted menorah sticks to the wall in celebratigrg of Hannukah. Erica Tteais j n i Photographer Tony Thibodeau grimaces :. at the camera during a weekly staff meeting. Red Cedar Log stiff meetings were held Monday nights at 9 p.m. in 328 Student Services. The. content department salutes America with their editor-in-chief at the Red Cedar Log end-of-the-year gathering. Staff members sported cut-offs, plaidgnd red, which and blue in support of thaU.S. R E D C E D A R L O G s t a f f Grouped together in the Red Cedar Log office, the photography staff huddles for a family portrait. Th|*S phSography department consisted of an editor, assistant editor, three staff photographers and three intern photographers. Af.\ .V. ** Journalist: Jessica WhitmiU goofs off ¡Muring a Red Cedar Log weekly staff meeting. Weekly business, story assignments and critiques were discussed during staff meetings. In preparation for a weekly staff meeting, qditor-in-chiefVicariVollmar plans the agenda at her deslg in 31 IB Student Services. Vollmar’s desk was often littered with lists, sticky notes and food. to my rcl children: In February 2010,1 was hired as your 2010-2011 Red Cedar Log editor-in-chief. After several months of wrapping up my second academic year and finishing yet another volume, I took my post as the sole leader of a 26-person staff with the responsibility of producing a 400-page book documenting the memories of the undergraduate students at Michigan State University- a task as large as the student body itself. My greatest fears were failing to make an impact on each of you and failing to efficiently revive the faultering communication and ineffective work flow of this department. I refused to coast through our nine months together- enjoying the ride, to me, meant sacrificing my time, energy and sometimes my sanity to take my staff and our book to the greatest heights. My expectations were exceeded, but the ultimate result-1 couldn’t have fathomed such success. My editorial staff, all of you exceeding my age, stunned me with your passion for and knowledge of your craft. It was your incredible sense of responsibility for your departments, your dedication to improvement and your drive to excell that stabilized the core of this department. I couldn’t have asked for a more outstanding group of leaders to help maintain order, while aiding the growth of our staff. While most outsiders consider my title as your editor-in-chief as foremost, a glowing mark on my resume, I considered my position as a opportunity to positively influence your lives, teach you something, whether helpful or important, and assist in catapulting your creativity to destinations unseen. I only hope that as a bare minimum, I taught you the importance of placing your heart and your soul and all that you are into the things you care about most. To watch each of you grow, in skill and personality and as a direct result of my leadership, was one of the most amazing accomplishments of my time spent with the Red Cedar Log. Your stories transformed into captivating, original pieces. Your photographs reflected passion, with nothing left to be desired by the viewer, Your designs pushed the boundaries of creativity Although it is our responsibility together, to document the memories of over 33,000 undergraduate students in print, our memories will forever lie within the walls of our cheery green office, the third floor of Student Services and venues of East Lansing. Our unconventional ice-breakers, our Friday afternoons, our celebrations, our conflicts, our devouring food, our laughter, and each one of you will remain forever nestled in my heart. I worked hard, sweat, panicked, cried and fought for each of you. In return, thank you for consistently exceeding my expectations. Thank you for your hard work, your dedication, your own sacrifice of time, energy and sanity Thank you for always supporting me, as both employees and as friends, and for giving me yet another reason to love this life. Wherever you find yourself, I know that with the determination you’ve displayed as my staff, each of you are capable of achieving greatness. Never settle. Always and forever your Momma M vicari vollmar m ¡lili mmJa ' . Iff w fetes! ;-sS gg - er.-i liiiii A DE HH www. deltadentalm i. com is a proud supporter of Michigan State University Congratulations to the Graduating Class of 2011 Payden&Rygel investment management Los Angeles * London • Boston * Frankfurt What you do matters. How you do it can mean everything. Comcast proudly supports Michigan State University. Bringing Labor and Management Together to Promote the Organized Construction Industry I______I B u ilt B e t te r B u ilt S a fe r B u ilt O n-T im e B u ilt O n -B u dget Built UNION! Laborers Local Union 499 3080 Platt Road, Ann Arbor, Ml 48108 734-971-5212 Robert Malcolm, Business Manager - Dan Minton, Secretary Teasurer Congratulations to the 2011 Graduates of Michigan State University! This is why... Sparrow is the best choice. Our quality Sparrow has achieved Magnet status for excellence in nursing services, placing Sparrow Hospital among the top 6% in the nation. Our work environment Associate Satisfaction at Sparrow, and in our Nursing Division, is rated in the top 5% of all hospitals in the United States. Our opportunities Sparrow’s continued growth provides diverse career opportunities for nurses in all specialties. Our commitment Sparrow is committed to providing our nurses with the resources necessary to fulfill their professional goals and to accomplish superior outcomes for our patients. Congratu ations, MSU graduates! Best wishes from all of us at Spectrum Health. For career opportunities, visit spectrum-health.org. SPECTRUM HEALTH Community Health Center of Branch County Best Wishes to the MSU Graduates! Foe career opportunities, please visit our Website at: www.chcbc.com Community Health Center of Branch County MEDICAL EXCELLENCE. COMMUNITY COMMITMENT. 274 East Chicago Street, Coldwater, Ml 49036 I 517.279.5400 I www.chcbc.com MERCY@ HEALTH PARTNERS * Hmkley, Stronger m One, one - One Out standing Healthcare Career As the leading healthcare provider on the lakeshore, we provide nurses with competitive wages, exceptional benefits, shift differentials, and tuition reimbursement. We are One of the TOO Top Hospitals in the nation (Thomson Reuters) and one of West Michigan’s 101 Best and Brightest Companies To Work For, We are in a diverse community on the shores of Lake Michigan. Become part of our award-winning team. Learn more about our career opportunities at mercy-heaithpartners.org. ^ WM CHELSEA COMMUNITY W0 HOSPITAL Saint Joseph Mercy Health System Rewarding Careers Start Here Located on 119 wooded acres in ChelsealMichigan, Chelsea Community Hospital has been providing exceptional health care for nearly 40 years. CCH is consistently ranked in the top five percent of hospitals in the country for inpatient satisfaction,! and is accredited by the Joint Commission. CCH was recently recognized for the second year as one of the “Best Places to Work in Healthcare” by Modern Healthcare Magazine and the Studer Group! To learn more about the opportunities available, please visit our website. sjmercyhealth.org/careers REMARKABLE MEDICINE. REMARKABLE CARE. Extraordinary care. Extraordinary careers. careersatcovenant.com Covenant Healthcare Extraordinary rare for every generation. Growth y \Y(Hk w Opportunity M ichigan State University Congratulations to all Build your career with the future in mind. With an estimated $40 trillion needed in vital energy, water and communications infrastructure over the next 30 years, a career that offers global opportunities to make the world a better place awaits you. Be part of this exciting growth and work with experts from around the world by joining an industry leader. Visit www.bv.com/careers to learn more. We’ re building a world of difference. Together. Graduates| and now, ALUMNI! As “Official” alumni of Michigan State University, you need to dress your best! Shop at the Spartan Bookstore, the “Official” bookstore of Michigan State University for all of your Green & White gear! As you travel and represent MSU, show your Spartan pride! https://www.facebook.com/BVCareers?ref=ts BLACK & VEATCH Building a world of difference." Log on to our website, www.spartanbook.com (517) 355-3450 (877) 267-4700 Consulting * Engineering * Construction Operation www.bv.com Located in the International Center on campus at Michigan State University ..... ■¡■I Wm » Tv d Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan applauds Michigan State University graduates for their academic achievements. As you move on to the next phase of your life, remember that you play a key role in shaping a bright future for Michigan. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan A nonprofit corporation and independent licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association bcbsm.com ■ Wmm mm «*■ m II A wmm ■i m. [SI &utÿ^uxtidatkutô Spontan (pcaduateA No matter where your plans may take you after graduation, MSUFCU is here to provide you with superior service, and everything from low-rate loans, to free checking accounts, to great savings options. Congratulations and best of luck! We look forward to serving you for years to come. 800-678-4968 www.msufcu.org FederallMlnsured by the NCUA , Michigan State University» FEDERAL CREDIT UNION Building Dreams Frito-Lay North America Join a Fortune 100 Company and be a part of a winning team. We offer positions in sales, manufacturing and distribution. With annual sales of more than $13 Billion, Frito-Lay manufactures, sells, and distributes wide variety of high quality snack food products. What vou can expect: •Empower managers through team development and organizational capability programs •Supports local communities through service, volunteers, and minority business development programs •An industry leader in diversity and inclusion initiatives •Extensive on-boarding program, including ongoing leadership and technical training •Challenging assignments with a blend of Leadership and Technical responsibilities •Responsible for managing and impacting results (cost, quality, service and people) through team development •Generous opportunities for career growth •Promotional opportunities based on personal contributions •Competitive compensation package, comprehensive benefits, performance based bonus Program, 401k match and participation in PepsiCo’s stock option plan. Qualifications: •Bachelors Degree in Business, Supply Chain, Engineering, & Management •Demonstrated people and leadership skills •Problem solving and analytical skills •Team based approach to decision making •Ability to gjve/recelve constructive feedback •Effective coaching, facilitation, and team building skills PepsiCo is committed to delivering sustained growth through empowered people acting with responsibility and building trust. Frito-Lay hires leaders who are committed to excellence and feel passionate about embracing the core PepsiCo values. If you are interested in becoming a part of a world-class company, www. Bepsieofobg.cem visit: Frito-Lay, Inc, is proud to be a Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/V/D Michigan Packaging Company MASON PtOtfcd tODiffMt Michigan State University School of Päckagiog Your Farmer Owned, Agri-Business Co-op In Fremont, MI 231-924-3851 In Hart, MI 231-873-2158 M« O • 0 s*union Co Sr ■ % % PLUMBERS & PIPEFITTERS LOCAL 333 Would like to express our gratitude to Michigan State University for its continued support Judd VanCoppenolle Business Manager 5405 S. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Lansing, MI 48911 (517) 393-5480 GRAND TRAVERSE MACHINE PRECISION MACHINED PRODUCTS Your Complete Custom Machining Source le cap to you Grand Traverse Machine is an industry leader in the manufacturing of a wide variety of precision machined components. Our capabilities include complete cylinders, heads, caps, bearings, hardened and ground pistons, flanges and mountings. » CNC Lathe » Production Welding » CNC Mill » Prototypes » ID/OD Grinding » Production Runs ichigan State University tother great year. Over 40 Years of Machining Experience 1247 Boon Street, Traverse City, Michigan 49686 p 231 -946-8006 • f 231 -946-6606 • e info@gtmachine.com ISO 9001:2008 Certified • www.gtmachine.com We're shaping metal food packaging... Proudly supporting the leaders of tomorrow | Congratulations and best wishes to the I Michigan State University class of 2011! Foster Swift attorneys provide innovative legal strategies for businesses, organizations, municipalities, and Individuals. HOW CAN WE ASSIST? P: 517.371.8100 E: info@fosterswift.com You're Shaping your future. Silgan Containers proudly salutes all Michigan State University graduates. www.silgancontainers.com/careers Lansing ¡ Farmington Hills | Grand Rapids | Detroit ¡ Marquette Í? H jl 11 L' I . " í ' CANS: INFINITELY RECYCLABLE" Steel Is the most recycled food package in the United States SILGAN G O N T aB n ERS The power of partnership Atmt Schuf»1111 ■KX1T & Sons Inc. Schupan industrial Recycling Services operates a number of scrap processing yards for ferrous and non-ferrous. Schupan Aluminum Sales is a large modern facility distributing primarily aluminum and plastic mill products. Schupan Recycling is one of the largest volume processors and brokers of used beverage containers in the U.S. tala Horn fa t&e W SU ol 2011! Recruiting Hospitality Business Seniors for our Management Program If you feel confident in your ability to provide effective leadership that allows each associate to excel in a positive working environment, e-mail your resume today to hr@whihotels.com, complete our online resume submission form or fax to (513) 794-2595. *Congratulations Spartan Class of ’11 Schupan & Sons, Inc. 2619 Miller Road, Kalamazoo, Ml 49001 Phone: 269-382-0000, Fax: 269-382-4309 www.schupan.com Quebecor World Full-service web offset printer serving the special interest publications and catalog market. 989-698-1347 Quebecor World Midland www.quebecorworld.com MPI B man Molded Plastic Industries, Inc. has been manufacturing high quality fiberglass composite and vacuum plastic parts for over 30 years. Congratulations to the MSV CCass of 2011! To learn more about us please visit our website at www.moldedplastic.com Molded Plastic Industries, Inc. 2382 Jarco Drive Holt, Ml 48842 Phone:517-694-7434 FAX: 517-694-6620 FABRICATING INCORPORAT E D Terry K. Lanzen President Cong/tatuiafrons to tl16 (jUSQi 2011 Qmdmtod 30980 Groesbeck Hwy. Roseville, MI 48066-1591 www.lanzenfab.com Western Land Services Congratulations Graduates! Offices Locations Throughout the US Oil & Gas Services: Leasing, Regulatory, Title, GIS, Surveying, Permitting, Project Management Service is our Business! Call us at: 877-968-4840 1100 Conrad Industrial Drive • Ludington, MI 49431 WWW.WESTERNLS.COM s/sr-crnsr, ICOT i_a_c iC. mm&m ffu.«.^,^.... — President, Andra Rush W M M w nanH M iM a^nniiM i EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES: • Finance/Accounting • Materials/Logistics • Manufacturing Engineering • Quality Engineering Dakkota Integrated Systems is a joint venture between Rush Group, LLC and Intier Automotive Interiors that efficiently and effectively service Original Equipment Manufacturers by managing the complete assembly and sequencing of integrated automotive interiors. Hearing Loop/^ %#>v 1 Clarity. Concealed. Hearing Loop Systems was established in 2008 by a contracting company with over 30 years of experience in the installation of audio/video systems for churches, schools, airports, convention centers, meeting rooms, sports facilities, and other com­ mercial establishments. As the nations leading provider of “Loop Systems”, we are working together with audiologists, architects, consulting firms, and non-profit organizations across the country to promote and develop “looped communities”. C ongratulations to the 2011 M S V graduatesl Hearing Loop Systems 11952 James St Holland, Ml 49424 voice 1.800.968.2444 fax 1.616.538.4311 www.hearingloopsystems.com Customer Service W S w kM J&L RESTORATION AND CLEANING, INC. Full Service Restoration Experts specializing in: Water Extraction and Drying * Fire Restoration and Cleaning Wind Damage and Reconstruction * Mold Remediation 24 Hour Emergency Response Phone: (517) 322-3000 * Toll Free: 800-889-6156 www.ilrestoration.com “The most comforting call you can make ” Alexander Chemical Corporation 1901 Butterfield Road, Downers Grove, IL 60515 Tel 219-393-5558, 800-348-8827, Fax 219-393-5364 info@alexanderchemical.com www.alexanderchemical.com JLi Since 1988, ManageAbility, Inc. has delivered unparalleled performance and service in multiple areas including workers compensation, auto liability, long-term disability and disease management. For more information please contact: John Bradley Account Executive (800) 472-1622 WWW.MANAGEABILITY.COM ManageAbility Managed Care Services ¡¡northern Lakes ¡Bkfood & Meats m •ialists in Center ot the Piate Proteins 12301 ConantSt. Detroit, Ml 48212 (313) 368-2500 (800) 394-3401 FRESH FISH • SHRIMP « SHELLFISH • SMOKED FISH • LIVE LOBSTERS «LOBSTER TAILS CRAB LEGS & MEAT. BEEF. PORK • LAMB & VEAL. WILD GAME APPETIZERS «PASTRIES & DESSERTS ÆÊm A post-graduate reminder from Country Fresh: * vlV it's Cereal & w I f mm A pflMIUI/ jfil mUm Explore your opportunities in the growing dairy industry. Grand Rapids, Michigan 800-748-0480 Congratulations from: Rives Manufacturing, Inc. Manufacturers of Cold Headed, & CNC Wire Formed Parts Wire Forming at a New Standard Rives Junction, MI www.rivesmfg. com ciisnAs Thomas Boik Branch Manager Cintas Corporation 3524-C S. Canal Road Lansing, MI 48917 «■■■» www.antas.com Office: 517.322.7700 Ext. 12 Fax: 517.322.2070 Cell: 313-647-6097 boikt@cintas.com IVERSIFIED ¡ypÄtifc CongmMates ike Q Chssl Bruce Swift, Chairman & CEO Steve Bay, President & COO Shankar Kiru, CFO 28059 Center Oaks Ct. Wixom, Ml 48393 248-277-4400 Fax: 248-277-4399 EG O LflB Institutional Division Melissa Franklin Area Manager 28550 Cabot Drive Suite 100 Novi, Ml 48377 Bus: 248-697-0202 Fax: 248-697-0230 Venetian Blind Co of Mid Mich, LLC -------------------«$»---------------------- Everything for your Windows Except the View I 441 N, Crafts! Street Ovid Ml 48866 Joan Brown Owner PH: 517/488-8680 FAX: 988/834-2142 moil@venetioftblindlk.com Michigan Medical Products, Inc. Ward jÉÉÈIrson 115 South Ste. 5 Saint Cha^^UMl 48655 Ph: 989-865-8875 • Fax: 989-865-8537 michiganmedical@sbcglobal.net To learn more about us, visit us at: www.michiganmetalproducts.com SALES & SERVICE • STERILIZING & WASHING EQUIPMENT amm, Allen, Jessica Alliance of Queer & Ally Students, The Allido Records Alocilja, Evangelyn Alpha Kappa Alpha Alpha Kappa Delta Phi Alpha Omicron Pi Alpha Phi Alpha Alpha Phi Omega Altizer, Jessie Amcker, Jon American Cancer Society American Clock, The American Counseling Association American Red Cross American Red Cross Campus 52 87 276 80,162,, 163, 195 217 288, 289 196, 197 218 169 36 178 36, 37 189 166, 165 Challenge American Revolution, The American Society of Plastic Surgeons Anabelle's Pet Station Ananda, Ayinde Anastos, Tom Angelakos, Michael Ann Arbor Ann Street Ann Street Plaza APASO Apparel and Textile Design 166 89 189 180, 181 176 262 50, 51 39 65 39 217 Fashion Show Appel, Sam Appling, Keith Arab Cultural Society Arab Culture Month Archery Club Argiros, Nichole Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps 105 161 227 150, 151,220, 221 151 162, 163 239 Artley, Sam Asian Invasion Asian Pacific American Student Organization Askew, Kary Associated Press Associated Students of Michigan State University Atagbuzia, Nwakuso 16,112,167, 161 176 201 288 156 26, 25 171 233 296 Attention Deficit Auditorium Auditorium Field Avalon Ayalew, Bethel Aziz, Liyanna 51,63, 86, 86, 116,17, 197, 266, 267, 399 150,151 35 177 E E E E E I |!E E E E B B B B B B Backpack Program Bagratuni, Souren Bailey Scholars Bailey, Mike Baillie, Nathan Baillie, Owen Baillie, Steve Baird, Sarah Baird, Sheridan Baker Woodlot Baker, Edwin Baker, Emma Balog, Mary Bandri, Preethi Barbasol Barnes, Cassie Barpago, Dushyant Barry, Zach Bartke, Conrad Baseball Basement, The Bastyr University Bates, Adam Bathgate, Chris Battist, Elizabeth Be Spartan Confident Week Beagley, Jonathan Beal Street Bean, Katie Beard, Nicole Beatles, The 211 B 275 B 80 B 153 B 33 I B 33 B 32,33 |,B B 61 61 I B 396 I B 232 IjB 199 liB 169 I B 279 I B 286, 287 I B B 96 213 I B 173 I B 291 B 226, 225 I B 156 IjB 29 I B 233 11B 156 11B 97 ‘b 288 I B 89 I B 65 I B B 161 96 IjB 218 I B 3 Disciplines Racing 31 Minutes to Takeoff 5 Rhythms 5-Hour Energy 52 Cups of Coffee Abbas, Anzar Abbas, Kay Abbot Hall Abbott Cafeteria Abbott Road Abdullah, Amir Albert Avenue Ables-Allison, Elle Abrams Planetarium Acafellas Adams Field Adams, Megan Adams, Randy Adams, Walter Adelaja, Angel Aerosmith African Acrobats International African American Student Mentoring 126 176 76 156 53, 76, 75 296 221 63 80, 91 218, 219 197 82 96 151 78 166 177 Program African Culture Week African Student Union African Studies Center AIDS Aisha Shule AKAKnowledge Your Status Aladdin Night All Member Party All Saints Episcopal Church 80 177 176, 177 177 75,78,79,162,163 176 163 150, 151 35 75 3 Disciplines Racing - Capoeira Club Beaudry, Eric Beaumont Tower Beautiful Bliss Beaver Stadium Beck, Bryan Beels, Kaitlyn Bega, Rubin Behring, Ryan Beiber, Justin Bell, LeVeon Belle, David Belons Bene, Kevin Bent Jones, Krystall Berkey Hall Berkobien, Andrew Berlinsky, Dmitri Bernero, Virg Bessey Hall Beyer, Rachel Beyonce Bhattacharya, Rishi Bierlein, Stephanie Big Dipper, The Big East Big House Big Sean Big Ten Network Bike Project Bike Shop Billings, Ashley Billington, Anne Billops, Kaitlyn Black and Gold Black Joe Lewis & the Honeybears Black Poet Society Black, Sarah Blacklight Planetarium Blackwell, Brionna Blanchard, Irene B ind Faith Block, Andrew Bluffton Bay Marina Bock, Dan Bockstanz, Joseph Bodrie, Hannah B kram, Ronda Bolton, Steve 143 7, 18, 196, 197 87 164 147 153 247 287 69 233 140 215 59 97 18, 396 294 275 39 34 266 166 91 24 91 263 207 22,23,87 248 34, 35 34,61 189 294 24 87 51 84 220 91 195 97 152 146 56 158 83 39 189 168,169 81 21 30 37 28 14 152 276 81,293 75 110 202, 203 248 82 81 55 83 Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival Bonneau, Rachel Bonner, Will Bonoban, Danielle Book of Revelation Bosco, Cara Bosko, James Bott Building Bouchard, Mikayla Bouse, Cortney Bowl Championship Series Boy Who Lived, The Bradford, Josh Bradley, Emily Bratschi, Britteny Brazen, Evan Breadsmith Breakdance Club Bredael, Alexandra Brennan, Michelle Breslin Center Bridge Card BRIGHT Broad, Edythe Broad, Eli Brockhaus, Kara Brody Cafe Brody Complex Brody Hall Brody Square Broken Dreams, New Seeds: 117 267 158 41 71 63 153 277 63 204, 205 233 71 299 34, 35 289 287 148 154 14,15 164 55, 204, 275, 399 92, 93 69 18 18 301 20 20, 78, 300 20, 21 20, 21 Ofrenda for Immigrants Brooks, Austin Brown Pride 170, 171 45 296 Brown, Angela Brown, Dave Brown, Jeremy Brown, Quentin Bruer, Canlon Bubble Island Bucephalus Buck, Greg Buffalo Wild Wings Burcham Drive Burgis, Betty Burk, Jack Burke, Paige Burr, Matthew Burton, Naomi Butler, Gerard Byrnes, Robert Calcaterra, Alysse Calcaterra, Angela California Gurls Call of Duty Capital Green Capital One Bowl Capitol Capitol Area Red Cross Capoeira Club à à The poker tournament was cool, lots of fun and fora good cause so it was nice to support that. I never get to play much poker and I’m not ■ ■ going to go sit at a casino all day. v v -Michael Lilly, senior AW 285 104 87 180 180 241 24 220 48 59 114,151 70, 71 Carnaghi, Steve Carol, Jillian Carver, Jamila Case Cares Case Credit Union Cassidy, Molly Cast, Tom Castillo, Lynn Castle, Dana Catch Me If You Can Cedar Fest Celebration Cinema 279 Center for Poetry Center for Sexual Health Promotion 78 Central Collegiate Hockey Association 242 279 Chalk Walk 159 Champlin, Chelsea 248 Chandler, Rebecca 92 Chandler’s Crossing 97 Chatti, Leila 180 Cheersport Nationals 68 Cheetah Jameson 243 Chelios, Dean 213 Chen, Xia 209 Chen,Yangcheng 82 Chestnut Road 87 Chillin’ 217 Chinese Student Coalition 22 Chip Tha Ripper 275 Chopin, Frederick 14 Christ, Jesus Christmas 16,81 112,113 Christopherson, Julie 51 Chunk of Change 46 Church, Zach 247 Cintron, Marc 59 Circus Bee, The 197 Civil Rights Movement 166 Civil War 34 Clark, Jacob 154 Clatterbuck, David 84 Clay, Kyra Cleberg, Grant 201 300, 301 Clevey, Jordan 41 Clobes, April 158 Club Fencing Championships Club National Rowing College of Law College of Music College of Natural Science College of Nursing College of Osteopathic Medicine Collegiate National Race Collegiate Nationals Comilla, Julie Comley, Rick Community Community Resource Management Company Community Supported Agriculture Community Volunteers for International Programs Coney Dawg Challenge Controlled Substances Act Cook, Stephanie Cooke, Jennifer Cooler Than Me Cooley, Ian Coppernoll, Courtnie Cordero, Bobby Corneal, Chris Corrigan, Maura Cotton, Bryan Courey, Beth Cousins, Kirk Covington, Justin Coyne, Evan CPR Creed, John Cropsey, Evamarie Cross Country Crouse, David Cruz, Taio Cuadrado, Aida Cultural Vogue Culturas de las Razas Unidas Culver, Adeline Cunningham, Taylor Curie, Marie Curtis, Brynne Curtis, Wesley Cusick, Dr. Philip Cutler, Brooke 75 59, 275 276 277 278 46 46 301 181,242 52 44, 45 266 73 118 89 104 46 117 62 148, 164 217 18 92 197 278 233 51 278 188 290 14 230, 231 94 218 296 216, 217 154 179 202, 203 29 75 247 273 177 Championship 153 Club Rush 220, 221 Coalition Against Sexual Violence 204, 205 Cobb Great Hall Cobo Center Cofield, Melissa Cogswell, Jack Cole, James College Against Cancer College of Agriculture and Natural 58, 59 192,193 14 210,211 197 178 Resources College of Arts and Letters College of Education College of Engineering 266 267 273 54,102 Dad Vail Regatta Dairy Store, The Dambro, Nick Dancing With the Stars Dantonio, Mark 153 148 287 154 233 Dapra, Matt Dargo, Jason Davison, Angie Day of the Dead Day, Bobby Dead Sea, The Dean, Nazrin Debniak, Abbey DEFYE DeGood, Gail DeGroot, Ben Deguzman, Xavier DeLosh, Sydney Delta Chi Delta Chi Car Smash Delta Gamma Delta Gamma Anchor Slam Delta Gamma Anchor Splash Delta Gamma Foundation Delta Sigma Theta Delta Tau Lambda Delta Xi Pho DeMartin Soccer Field DeMates, James Demmer Center Demmer, C.J. Demmer, John Demmer, Marnie Demonstration Field Demonstration Hall Dennehy, Claire Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Department of Horticulture Department of Theatre Desarmo, Brent Despins, Bradley Detroit Detroit Auto Dealers Association Detroit Department of Health Detroit Free Press, The Detroit Lions, The Devine, Kathy DeWitt Junior High DeWitt Township Dhillon, Navmeet Dickenson, Tyler Difonzo, Ashley Dig Dug (Shake It) Diller, Katie Dimond, Courtney Dino Dash Dioso, Christian Disney Dive-In Divine Nine DJ Dani Dokter, Dan Domina, Tyler Donohue, William Doolittle, Bailey 34,151 92¡Dc 211 Dr 142 Dr 171 Dr 94 Dr 161¡Dr 109 Dr 164 Di 112 Di 16 Dl 37 Dl 206 Dl 292 Dl 298, 299 Dl 298, 299¡Dl 195, 294, 295 Dl 294 Dy 294 Dz 294 24 296 296 7 146,147 142,143 70 143 Ea 143 Ea 7Ea Ea 199 Ea Ea 128,129 Ea 276 Ea 37, 62, 63 Ea 294 Ea 153 Ea 22 Ea 193 Eb 163 Ed 76 eH 181 Eh 180 Eie 73 Eir 180 El 150 el- 263 Eli 69 87 Eli 71 Ell 274 Em Eri 40,41 25, 206, 207 Eri 151 Es; 27 Est 163 Est 151 Eui 34, 35 Evî 55 Evî 76 Evî 69 Evi ¡Dosch, Mary ¡Dresses, Nicholas 2 1 Drake 2 Drawing Marathon 1 Dream Act 4 Dream On 1 9 Drug Enforcement Agency 4 Dubaybo, Farah 2 Duda, Patrick 6 ¡Duffy, Joe 7 Duke University 6 Duke, Benjamin 2 Dumbledore 9 Dunnings III, Stuart 9 Dunyak, Austin 5 Dutcher, Sofija 4 Dynamite 4 Dzwonkowski, Drew 4 4 6 6 7 7 3 I 3 Eaddy, Angela 3 Eagle Eye Golf Club 7 Earlly Mac 1 Earned Income Tax Credit 7 East Circle Drive East Complex 7East Holmes Hall SEast Lansing Fire Department 3East Lansing High School i East Lansing Parkour 3East Lansing Police Department ? Easterbrook, Cara 3Eberhart.lan 3Edozie-Anyadiegwu, Kelechi ) eHarmony 1Ehrlich, Harrison ) Eigner, Nicole 3Einstein, Albert ) El Dia de los Muertos ) el-Gaddafi, Colonel Muammar 3Eli and Edythe Broad Art ) l Eli Broad College of Business s Ella Campbell Quartet 1Endurance Club Erickson Kiva 1Erickson, Kara Museum Essiambre, Kayleigh \Estrada, Ashley 1Estrada, Maria European Union i Evans, Devin 1Evans, Nicole 1Evans, Stephen 1Evil Dead: The Musical Carnaghi - Gardner Exhibit Hall eXue Career Training School 91 208, 209 Fab Four Fabian, Daniel Facebook Fairchild Theatre Fanny Bays Fant, Calvin Farm House Farm Lane Farnum, Tammy Fat Talk Free Fazoli's Fecher, Christine Fencing Club Ferency Ferranti, Vita Field Hockey FIFA World Cup Fighting lllini Fiji Fillmore, Henry Final Four First Amendment First Book First Christian Church Fisheries and Wildlife Club Flat, Black & Circular Fleury, Kevin Fliestra, Jill Fly Union 294 247 48, 76, 112, 113, 116, 221 166 215 25 292 16, 18, 53, 55, 112, 396 248 189 180 92 158, 159 35 179 242, 243 177 52 164 59 227 75 285 174, 175 60.61 187 52 249 22 Foell, Allison Fogarty, Spencer Food Assistance Program Food Science Club Football Force, Lauren Forger, James Formula One Racing Team Forte, Jamie Forte, Kimberly Foster, Eric FowL Franckowiak, Kelsi Franklin, Eddie Frayer, Katie Freechack, Matt Freedman, Eric Frequency Fresh, Danny Friday, Alyssa Frisbie, Ryan Frontier Ruckus Frontiera, Josh Frozen Fifties Festival Fuqua, Kenzie G.O.O.D. Music Gaertner, CJ Gaffney, Mark Gahagan, Erin Gandelsman, Yuri Gantt, Charlie Gardner, Andrew Gardner, Brianna 301 87 267 171 166 80 89 151 22 70 117 267 75 204, 227 140, 141 80 218, 219 43 194, 195 278, 292 86, 87 110 19 48 164 292 73, 75 140 75 143 187 212, 213 202 153 63 29 171 221 18, 19, 399 52 296 201 273 51 59 293 220 76 154 39 84 62, 63 299 215 92 148 232,233 181 275 193 218 187 178 22, 23, 86 41 102 181 61 126 217 161 95 46 156 192,193 94, 95 21 22 299 111 189 275 233 210 52, 53 AM Gardner, Erika Garner, Jim Gburek, John Gebhart, Megan Gebstadt, Noah Geography Building Gerdeman, Steve Gervasi, Leigh Gimmler, Julian Ginnebaugh, Kevin Ginther, Bethany Giraffe House Girouard, Zach Give Me the Green Light Givens, Colin Glee Club Global Festival Glover, Dana God Godfrey, Amy Godziebiewski, Ashley Goeman, Clark Gonzales, Xavier Gonzalez, Javier Goodman, Benny Goodwin, Ryan Gordon, Eric Gordon, Mia Gordon, Tricia Goudie, Anne Granberry, Dr. Paulette Grand River Grand River Avenue 18,19, 112, Grand River Park Granger Landfill Granger, Hermione Granholm, Governor Jennifer Grassi, Matt Graves, John Gray, DeJanea Grease Great Depression, The Great Lakes Invitational Great Lakes Sailing Greater Lansing Food Bank Greater Lansing Race for the Cure Greek Week Green, Cee Lo Green, Draymond Gregory, Ismail Griffin, Molly Gross, Alfia Gross, Matt Gucci Mane Guinness Gumball Group Guru Nanak Dev Gymnastics 162, 163 89 70, 71 52 203 160 272 105 U0, U1 169 105 203 158 156 266 166 72, 73 218 16, 75 81 267 18 170 170, 171 96 273 233 161 65 292 26 152, 153 28, 29, 39, 53, 116, 168, 187, 285, 396, 399 153 128 71 30, 39 263 273 195 96 37 262 56 286, 287 301 399 272 226 56 36 105 166 86 82 52 63 238, 239 Habitat for Humanity Habitat for Humanity Lansing Hadid, Zaha Hagadorn Road Hale, Nick Halloush, Rami Halloween 31,291 30 18, 19 55 110 150 61,62, 63, 105, 188, 189, 399 298 151,221 16 296 276 52 75 35, 180, 181 151 76, 75 156 91 220, 292 82 16,82 75 71 219 37 170 62, 63 218,219 152,153 261 59 156,155 261 116 126 296 163 96 117 71 288 267, 279 69 198 116 116 63 297 33 Hamad, Sully Hamed, Shereen Hameline, Charles Hamilton-Wray, Jasmine Hancock, Jim Hancock, Jodi Hangover, The Hannah Community Center Hannah, John A. Hanrahan, Cory Hard Lessons, The Harper, Jayne Harper’s Restaurant and Brewpub Harris, Justin Harrison Road Harry Potter Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Hart, David Haskell, Wes Hatfield, Shelby Haunted Auditorium Have A Heart Head of the Grand Regatta Helffrich, Elizabeth Henderson, Joe Hendrickson, Kevin Henn, Kristen Hense, Dominic Hensh, Richard Hernandez, Melissa Hernandez, Ricky Herzog, John Hess, Sara Hibbs, Cody Hickman, Shermany Hidlay, Kerry Highland Park Hill, Alex Hill, Shelly Hill, Steve Hinduism Hip Hop Connxion Hirschenberger, Jon Hirschenberger, Ty Hirschenberger, Wyatt Hitchcock, Brennen Hitchcock, Sam HIV Hmong American Student Association Hocking, Jared Hodie Christus Natus Est Hoffman, Mandy Hold ‘Em for Hunger Holden Hall Hollywood Holy See Homecoming Honeywell Honors College Hoover, Tyler Hoppert, Jake Horii, Toshinori Horvatin, Shane Houghton, Noel How To Build A Planet Howard University Hu, Alice Hulbert, Matt Hulyk, Mitchell Hunt, Patrick Hunter, Aidan Hustle, The Hutchinson, Jaimie Hyde, Marcus Hynes, Aaron # w 1 1 1 : 1 1 1 j Love Lucy ce Hockey doni, Jacob M Circle M West mpact 89FM mpulse Dance Team n Your Face Theatre Troupe ndependence Day ndonesian Night ndonesian Student Association ngham County Animal Control and Shelter nglot, Mark Fr. nsomnia Cookies nterfraternity Council nternational Center 33II 33 193 83 78, 162,163 In In In lo 217 Is 161 Is 166 Is 78 It’ 210,211 lz 207 59 Iz 71 56, 55 208 272 233 291 72 91 218 91 196 95 163 173Ja 292Ja 35Ja 156Ja 276Ja 233Ja 263Ja Ja Ja Ja Ja Ja Ja Ja Ja Je Je 96IJe 260, 261Je 92Jic 80, 102,103Jo Ijoi 151, 158,296Jo 156,157Jo 86■Jo 78Jol 117Jol 176,175Jol 176,175Joi Joi 80,81 Joi 70,71 Jui 27, 96Jui 292Jui 80, 86Jui 8, 26,27,66,163, International Organization for Migration 33 33 93International Program 83 63 International Service International Students Association • Islam Island Creek Israel Fest It’s You (1 Have Loved) 17 lota Phi Theta 61 66 78 11 07 Izzo, Tom 59 Izzone, The 71 55 08 72 33 91 72 91 18 91 94 95 63 73Jackson 5 92Jackson Community College 35Jackson, Hayden 54Jackson, Jarreau 74Jacobs, Curran 33Jakobcic, Emma 63 .Jamalifard, Faread ■i 1 * 1 1 James Madison College James, Kelley Jamfest Nationals Jamieson, Katherine Janski, Craig Jaswa, Amar Jati, Putrì Jazz Octet 1 Jelsch, Hunter Jenison Field House 94Jennings, Dantya 41 Jersey Shore 92Jickling, Kevin 03 Joe Louis Arena ►3, Jogisaputra, Stella 94 Johnson, Arj 57 Johnson, David 84 Lohnson, Donovan 78 Johnson, Lindsay 17 Johnson, Sophia 75 Johnson, Sydney 75 Jones, Emily Jones, Rick 81 Jones, Zeno 71 Judicial Affairs 94 Judicial Affairs Office 92 Judson, Alison 84 June, Dr. Lee 76 151 30 72, 212, 213 25, 195 63 215 161 218 55. 226, 227 206, 205 26 60 293 196, 197 263 66 150 29, 276 116, 117 180 261 287 30 176 59 166 239 296 116 298, 299 262 176 116 128, 129 100 172 278 169 198 293 22 167 167 31 26, 197 Just Dance Justin Sheber K.Flay Kaczanowski, Nick Kahlil, Joey Kahlon, Satpreet Kaiser, Dorothea Kanya, Meghan Kapadia, Binafza Kappa Delta Karana, Alex Karisny, Elena Karma Vuitton Ke$ha Kebler, Mike Kedzie Reunion Kedzie Street Keehner, Brian Kellogg Center, The Kennedy, Dom Kent State University Kerouac, Jack Ketchum, William Khalifa, Wiz Khalil, Joey Kid Cudi Kiebler, Bill Kim, Grace Kim, Seungmin King Jr., Martin Luther King, Kaylee Kirst, Adam Klages, Kathie Klein, Joey Gardner - Lansing Garden Project Klem, Kacey Knight, Caleb Knollenberg, Lauren Knull, Helen Knupfer, Kelly Korean Student Association Korean Student Organization Kotevski, Christina Kowalk, Aaron Kozikowski, Aaron Kozlowski, Andy Krawciw, Josef Kray, Samantha Kresge Kresge Art Museum Krill, Ken Krug, Torey Kubiak, Cody Kumamoto Kunka, Rachel Kurioto Kurtz, Norb 65 116 16, 15 261 178 217 73 30 89 162 203 35 288 160, 161, 267 18 32 262 200, 201 215 178, 179 296 206 1 LaCroix, Brendan Ladies First Lady Gaga Lady 0 Lake Michigan Lamar, Kendrick Lambda Chi Alpha Lane, Elizabeth Lansing Area AIDS Network Lansing Board of Water and Light Lansing Community College Lansing Garden Project 35 166 86,166,218 177 52 86, 87 168 17 163 128 82, 92 168 50 263 221 18 272 288 91 292 299 272 68 218 226 52 83 116, 115 216, 215, 266 22 151 29 22 87 150, 151 22, 87 30, 31 199 206 86, 197 213 88 239 278 I had no idea how it would go and I don’t think there's been anything like it before, but I went speed dating because I thought it would be fun and I didn’t have anything else to do on a Thursday. It was a cool DAB event, and I might check out ■ more of their stuff. r -David Clatterbuck, junior AYJt Lansing Polar Plunge Lansing Rescue Mission Lansing State Journal Las Vega Night LaSota, Allison Latin Xplosion Lattimore, Trent Lauhoff, Danielle Law College Fair Lawson, Erin Lazreg, Houssem Ben LBGTA LBGTQ Le, Quoc Leacher, Jessica Leader Dogs for the Blind Legend,John Lehto, Whitley Lendzion, Lauren Leny, Rachael LePage, Brandon Leppek, Michelle Lesbian-Bisexal-Gay-Transgendered Ally Caucus Lester, Molly Leveille, Daultan Levy, Danielle Lewandowski, Dan Lewis, Robert Liedholm, Erik Life Sciences A Building Lil’ Sibs Weekend Lilin-Lilin Kecil Lisicki, Kristen Little Candles Little Dipper, The Little Richard Liu, Frank Lloyd Loftus, Kathleen Logan, Katherine Long, Scott Lopez, Trinidad Lord of the Rings Love and Futbol Love, Justin Lovegood, Luna Lowden, Katie Lucas, Kalin Lucious, Korie Lugnut Stadium Lullof, Joseph Lumbert, Bethany Lusito, Agnes 292, 293 MacDonald Middle School 169 Madden,John 399 Madu, Chinonye 278 Mahoney-Muno, Dylan 30 Mahoney, Kathryn 296 Mahrougui, Anissa 87 Maison, Autumn 112 Major League Soccer 276 Malavisi, Anna 213 Malaysian Cultural Society 213 Malaysian Culture Night 75 Malfoy, Draco 69 Mallory, Nick 217 Maloney, Molly 100 Mamba 218, 219 Man O’War 156 Mand, Siman 97 Mandie, Milica 27 Mann, Laura 110 Marazita, Elizabeth 275 March, Tom 71 Maroon 5 Marquez, Bernadette 52 Marquez, Timothy 156 Marriot Hotel 263 Martin Luther King Jr. 238 Talent Show 66 Martin, Brendan 80 Martin, Clyde 216, 215 Martin, Jackie 277 Martinez, Janisse 80 Martus, Michael 176 Mashak, Olivia 285 Mason, Kirk 176 Mason, Ron 91 Mathis, Johnny 51 Mays, Marisa 100 Mazur, Josh 86 MC Josh 292 McAfee, Devin 96 McCabe, Kelsey 202, 203 McCaul, Erin 296 McDonald, Chelsea 71 McGowan, Maxwell 177 McGregor, Dave 69 McGuigan, Phil 71 McIntosh, Tyler 62 Mcintyre, Kyle 117, 227 McKay, Krystle 227 McKinsey & Company McMurray, Sean 59 McWilliams, Patrick 17 Medina, Joel 213 Meijer Meldrim, Meagan Mell, Gary Men’s Basketball Men’s Glee Club Men’s Golf Men’s Soccer Men’s Tennis 108, 177 Mens, Marc 59 Merdeka 177 Merrifield, Ann 16 MEXA 239 Michael Pompey 80, 81 Michaelson, Ingrid 156 Michigan 266 Michigan Association of 30 108 Michigan Avenue Broadcasters 108, 109 Michigan Department of Community Health 71 172 Michigan Department of Human Services 261 156 Michigan International Speedway 153 Michigan Medical Marihuana 166 106 Michigan Sierra Club 189 Michigan Special Olympics 29 Michigan State College 16 26 Michigan State Fight Song smokestack Program 153MS 108, 109MS 73MS 171MS 69MS 86MS 22¡MS MS 156MS 82MS MS 89MS MS 93MS 193MS MS 89MS 128MS 292, 293MS MS 7, 600MS 112MS 277 Michigan State University Federal Credit Union 277 213 Michigan Supreme Court Mid-Michigan Food Bank 86, 85 Middle East 61 Midnight Madness 169 Midwest Fencing Conference 51 Military Ball 82 Miller, Dylan 102 Miller, Jennifer 113 Miller, Taylor 82, 202, 203 Mills, Kristen 262 Minkel, Tom 96 Miracle Field 276 Mirjah, Brieanne 272 Mitkovski, Jessica 195 Mizobuchi, Mas 169 Mlynarek, Alex 296 Modern Surf and Skate 217 Mohtar, Zahrin 300 Moidunny, Manzur 213 Moltyn Decadence 33 Montpetit, Michael 202, 203 Moore, Jeff 63 Moore, Kayla 83 Moore, Michael 105 Moore, Shanna 76 Moran, Darcie 263 Moreno, Cristina 279 Morgan, Catherine 60 Moriarty, Deborah 93 Morrison, Augusta 152 Moses, Josh 128, 129 Moth’s Wings 226, 227 Motz, Anna 166 Mount Merapi 236, 235 Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus 266, 267 MSU Archery Team 256, 255 MSU Ballroom Dance Club 211 88Mi 210, 211Mi 75, 126Mi 56, 55, 206Mi 158Mi 201Mi 70Mi 15Mi 269Mi 37Mi 263Mi 180Mi 207Mi 96Mi 26Mi 172Mi 172,173 M) 109 151 68 100 287 73 287 97 218 Hi 170 m 213Nc 275 187 Hi 266 Hi 51 Hi 106 Hi 176 275Nl 163N( 156, 213N< 53MSU Beyond Coal 09MSU Bhangra Team 73MSU College Democrats 71MSU College Republicans 69MSU Crew Club 84MSU Dubai 22jMSU Federal Credit Union MSU Fight Song 56MSU Food Bank 82MSU Hillel MSU Libertarians 89MSU Medical School MSU Museum 93MSU Navigators 93MSU Police MSU Pompon Team 89MSU Sexual Assault Program 28MSU Technologies 93MSU Telecasters MSU Telemarketers 00MSU Triathlon Team 12MSU Union 11 88Mubarak, Hosni 11Muhammadi, Jamil 26Mukkamala, Ramakrishna 04Mulcrone, Lisa 58Mullen, Julie 01Multicultural Xtravaganza 70Mundt, Mary 15Munn Field 49Munn Ice Arena 37Murdoch, Gina 63Murninghan, Jessie 30Murray, Meaghan 37Mursalzade, Ruslan 94Museum of The Rockies 24Music Down in My Soul 72Muskegon Lake 73Myers, Samantha 80 84 70 70 153 126 41 166 148, 149 161 70 300 41, 170, 171 14 34 148 96, 97 276 52, 53 114, 115, 203 46,47 24,73,75,112,151, 163, 168, 196, 197, 211, 272 221 73 276 18 44 296, 297 277 14, 82 94, 95, 275 104 81 80 212 91 166 56 48 New Member Meeting Orientation New York Times, The Nguyen, Michael Nill, Trevor Nobel Prize Nonesuch Noodles and Company Nopar, Katie Normandin, Daniel North American International Auto Show North American Treaty Organization North Harrison Road Northern Colorado Notre Dame Cathedral Nsofor, Valentine Nykamp, Heather 35 71 164 242 18 215 284, 285 202, 203 210 192, 193 76, 77 291 33 71 177 301 O’Malley, Meghan O’Rielly, Katie Oak Street Obama, Barack Ocean of Pearls Octoberfest Office for Inclusion and Intercultural Initiatives Office for International Students 201 82 291 110 43 114 24 and Scholars Office of Admissions Office, The Ohio National Guard Old Hickory Lane Oldaker, Hannah Olin Health Center Olin Sexual Health Advocates Olivero, Max Olympus Room 73, 109 126 52, 53 151 75 49 78, 148, 156, 188, 189, 277 78 163 215 Lansing Polar Plunge -iPhillipich Omega Psi Phi Omowale One Hundred Years of Green Orchard Street Pump House Osterman, Dan Ostrowski, Sara Owada, Aubrey Owen Hall 194, 195 176 161 187 263 63 104, 287 177 Pace, Alexandra Panera Bread Co. Panhellenic Council Paone, Ameera Parayil, Mark Parke, David Parker, Maddie Parks, Rosa Pasant Theatre Passion Pit Passover Paulbeck, Colin Paulk, Ralph Pavwoski, Patrick Paws with Claus Payne, Andreian Pechota, Travis Peltier, Chad Peoples, Jaime PERMIAS Persian Student Association Pescador, Gabrielle Pescador, Javier Peurach, Don Pfost, Nicholas Phelps, Margie Phi Beta Sigma Phillipich, Erica 239 148, 149 292 220,221 217 56 51 29 97,105 50,51, 399 117 46, 47 84, 296 278 182,183 227 166 52 149 174, 175 72 170,171 170,171 273 52, 53 74. 75 168, 169 Association 77 I8Nachofest 70NASCAR I3National Cheerleaders 75 Y!National Coming Out Week >6National Institutes of Health >1National Pan-Hellenic Council )4National Society of Collegiate 74 Scholars 75NBC 13NCAA Tournament I3Nehra, Jade 114, 115 193 180 52 277 194, 195 148 52 227 198, 199 ¿M S Phillipich, Jamie Phillips Hall Phillips, Mark Pi Beta Phi Pilipino American Student Society Pingel, Caitlin Pistons Pixy Stix PKS Hoop Dreams Please Don’t Go Pochodylo, Amy Pontiac High School Posner, Mike Post-its Potter, Harry Powell, Ashley Power Rangers Power, Carole Presley, Elvis Pretty Girls Price, Christopher PRIDE PRISM Pritzker Prize Provost, Amy Psychology Building Psychology Club Public Relations Student Society of 78 Ramen Noodles 43, 396 Ramharack, Randy 279 Rampage 284, 285, 287 Ranger Challenge Team Ranger One 24, 206, 207, 217 Raouf, Lana 48 Ravenclaw 181 Ray, Marcie 180 Raymundo, Stephanie 294 RCAH Theatre 116, 117 RCAHpella 27, 94 Red Bull 102 Red Cedar Neighborhood 22, 116, 117, 399 Red Cedar River 34 Redden, Robert 71 Redner, Nathan 266 Reed, Kathryn 114 Refugee Development Center 218 Reid, Bryan 94 Reid, Gary 87 Reinstein, Joel 140 Relief After Violent Encounter 69 Rendon, Mariana 69 Renggong Manis 18 Rensing, Damon 299 Repko, Joe 396 Reserved Officers’ Training Corps 148 Residence Halls Association 182, 183 Residential College in the Arts 292 and Humanities Resolute, The Respecting and Understanding Body Image 266 Rowing 276 Rowling, J.K. 69 Rozanski, Kristin Ruiz, Samantha 201 Rumba 201 151 Rush Week 71 Russell, Nicole Ryckman, Zachary I 275 Rutecki, Gus 217 Ruth Ellis Center 171 218 172 48 60, 61,279,300 88 214 267 76 75 Sabrie, Sharmaake 156 Safran, Kyle 204 Saginaw River i 96 Salim, Matthew 72,213 Salisburg, Andrew 174,175 Salloum, Jackie 246 Salomone, Marco 71 Salsa Saman Samrah, Rachel 22, 23, 52, 80 Samsky, Michael Sanchez, Marco Saucedo, Megan 171,279 151 f ' 'fBj America Purdy, Kimberly Qanti, Sara Quality Dairy Quattorchi, Nathan Quibbler Quine, Meg Ra, John Rademacher, Alec Raehtz, Sterling Rahim, Aizat Rahiman, Ashiq Railjam Rajarajan, Prashanth Ricardo, Ricky Rice Bowl Ricondo, Jeff Rifle and Pistol Club RING Rizqallah, Joe Roberts, Matt Roberts, Megan Roberts, Terri Robin Hood Robinson, Chris Rochdale Principles of Cooperative 188,189,288 94 207 246 143 69 263 292 180 301 110 37 Living Rock, The Roe, Delvon Rojas, Dominica Roll Out of Bed Roman Catholic Church Rome, Gina Rose Bowl Rosendall, Brent Rosetos, William Rotaract Club Roth, Gabrielle Roth, Tobias Rowe, Brittane 35 78,112,151,178, 199, 288, 300, 301 226, 227 296 189 71 34 233 246 140 210, 211 187 34 63 152 Saunders, Rebecca Savage, Sasha Saxton, Tom Sazuka, Junya Schaffer, Alec Scharg, Alex Schireson, Andrew Schmidt, Barbara Schmidt, Jason Schmidt, Joe Schmitter, Charles Schoolboy Q Schuette, Bill Schuiling, Rebecca Schultz, Makena Schumann, Robert Schwartz-Duval, Aaron Schwartz, Jackie Schwemmin, Kevin Schwinn SCOUT BANANA Seckar-Anderson, Lacey Seifert, Brad Service for Sight Service Road Sexposure Seymour, Kristen Shafer, Rick Shafiq, Zubair Shah, Natasha 175 82 28 71 81 73 290 200, 201 108, 109 213 172 213 244, 245 71 169 180 154 290, 291 188, 189 92, 93 68, 69 169 76, 77 70 128 76 112 151 114 154 174 83 219 61 80 35 57 248 72 201 117 110 151 274 82 158 86 89 105 80 275 14,15 161 30 34 198,199 59 29 294, 295 396 156 218 147 174 287 PhilUpich - Takacs 29 Softball 192, 193 Sollenberger, Emeritus Harold Somenauer, Kyle 166 Somebody to Love 221 105 Sommerfeld, Greta 279 Soule, Katie 105 South Complex 143 South Neighborhood 275 Southeastern Conference 203 Spano, Michael 213 Sparrow Superstars 274 Spartan Battalion 203 Spartan Civilian Club 158 Spartan Competitive 287 Cheer Team 287 Spartan Dischords 216, 217 Spartan Enology Society 194, 195 Spartan Innovation Celebration 296 Spartan Marching Band 286, 287 Spartan Remix Spartan Spectacular 43 Spartan Sprint Triathlon 43 Spartan Stadium 161 151 Spartan VEX Robotics Challenge 53, 126, 276 Spartans Fighting Cancer 161 201 Sparticipation Sparty 94 Sparty’s 162, 163 Special Days Camps 163 SPECTRUM 156 Speed Dating 162, 163 Speedo 91 Spektators, The Spirit Fest St. John’s Student Center St. Patrick’s Day Stalker Stander, Olivia Stanford, Linda Stannard, Kylie Starbucks State News, The State of Fifths State Room, The Steele, Jacquese Steinmetz, Jantine 250, 251 Steplitus, Matthew 126 Stoddard Avenue 69 Stolarsky, Becca Stoll-Alvarez, Crystal Maria 299 272 Stomp the Yard 57 Stoppel, Hannah 48 St rad ley, Steven 52 Strauch, Alex 263 Student Affairs 29 Student Affairs and Services Student Alumni Foundation Student Apparel Design 180, 181 201 148 180, 181 166 Association Student Defenders Student Government Association 214, 215 Student Housing Cooperative 276 Student Life 58, 59 Student Organic Farm 24, 25 Student Services Building 58. 59 Students for Sensible 46,47 8,18,52,400 Drug Policy Sturgis, Chad Summers, Durrell 102, 103 Supreme Court, The 179 Surplus Store 14, 15, 24 Susan G. Komen Foundation 59 Swarthout, Kris 20 Swartz, John 278 Swimming and Diving 69 Syedanaur, Sarifah Sylvester, Tyler 100, 101 14 Symborski, Todd 22 T.B. Simon Power Plant Tai Chi Taj Mahal Takacs, Danielle Shane, Trevor Shaner, Wilson Sharawi, Sarah Shaver, Chrissy 5i Shakespeare, William 1 9 0 U 1 Shaw Hall 9 3 9 9 j Show, The Shearer, Kathryn Sheldon, Jennifer Sherman, Richard Shrikhande, Gaurang Sideritis, Bill SideShow Siegersma, Kendra Sielaff, Christopher SigEp/Pi Phi Pie Phight Sigma Beta Rho Sigma Gamma Rho 7i Sigma Lambda Gamma 0 Sigma Phi Epsilon 8 Sikh American Legal Defense and 6 Education Fund 2 Sikhism 1 Silver, Sarah 4 Simon and Garfunkel 4 Simon, Lou Anna K. 4 Simons, Zach 3i Sims, Mackenzie 9 Sinatra, Frank 1 Sirls, Felix 0 Sirls, Paula 5 Sit or Spin 7 Skee-Week 8 Sky Theater, The Skype Sleep Out for the Homeless Sleepyhead Smalley, Ryan Smela, Tim Smith-Tyge, Nate Smith, Alex Smith, Capt. Joe Smith, Kelly Smith, Samantha Smith, Shelby Smith, Tony Smucker, Alvin Snarski, Kyle Snowboard Club Snyder Hall Snyder v. Phelps Snyder-Phillips 21, 82, 208, rFPI Snyder, Rick 39, 70, 92, So You Think You Can Drag Society for Creative Anachronism Society of Automotive Engineers Sodhi, Ameek Singh 14, 15 54, 193 42,43 IE i |jï||| ■ I ffVMiMlnj 210 114 288 84 195 96 267 115 24 197 80, 99 105 146, 147 278 35 147 266 18, 399 89 172 74 16,17 301 46 94 252, 253 109 153 272 O A\VÊ> 39 87 216 149 128, 129 46 166 242 Vagina Monologues, The v op \ # 1 1# w 300,301 Valentine’s Day 24 Vallentine, Katie 80 Valley Farms Park 246, 247 Van Alstine, John 174, 175 96 van de Kerkhoff, Rolf van den Assem, Sabine 207 Van Steenis, Jane 83 Vancamp, Jon VanDis, Kerry 291 114 Vann, Bill 53 Veenhuis, Brock 170 Veg Out 299 Veitengruber, Jon 258, 259 Verdin, Ruth 69 Vibe, The 233 Vidlund, Jessica Vidlund, Ryleigh 290, 291 97 Vietnam War Vietnamese Student Association 151 272 VIM Magazine 92 Vincent Chin Memorial Room 17 Vincent, Bill 43 Vogt, Robert 46 Voldemort 68 Volleyball 112, 113 216 Wahl, Kathryn 126 Waiee, Tracee Wakoski, Diane 143 Wale 100 Walker, Andrew 61 Walker, Blair 78 Wallis, Brad 14, 15 Walsh, Chris Takacs, Stephanie Tall, Saffal Tan, Theresa Taneja, Vikash Tavor, Talya Team USA Telephone Thanksgiving Think Pink 5k Run/Walk Third Eye Blind Thompson, Lisa Thompson, Spencer Thousand Hands Threats, Megan Timacdog, Jeremy Timms-Fryer, Justin Brodie Tomaschko, Calvin Tomke, Dave Topping, Alice Torrez-Miner, Mexica Toyota Track and Field Transgender Awareness Week Treadwell, Blake Triangle Fraternity Tripi, Angie Trowbridge Road Trusty, Andrew Trzeciak, Marla Tupancy, Laura Turban Night Tuscaloosa, Alabama Tweedie, Isiah Twitter Tzeng, Steve U.S. Embassy U.S. Intercollegiate Archery Championships UAB Human Resource Committee Uhrig, Genelle UNAIDS Underwater Hockey Union Ballroom United Nations United States Fencing Association University Activities 100, 276, 296, 297 Wanderer’s Teahouse and Cafe 78 Washington Post Washington, Denzel 158 Waterloo, Brandon Watkins, Sean Board 8, 24, 27, 84, 94, Watson, Bob 95, 100, 101 Watza, Elizabeth University of Michigan Uno Urena, Amanda V Foundation for Cancer Research 46 Way, Emery 80 Wayne, Forest 94 Weber, Brian 299 Weber, Kelly Webster, Ryan Webster, Samantha Webster, Sonya Weeks, Kathryn Weerasinghe, Oshan Weickmann, Andrew Weigel, Wayne 96, 97 Weihl, Stefan 100, 101, 213 Weintraub, Justin 285 Wells Hall 180 Wendzinski, Julia 396 West Circle 241 West Circle Drive 241 West Fee Hall 273 West Shaw Lane 110 West, Kanye 105 Westboro Baptist Church 46 Western Wall 210 Whalen, Kelly 21 Wharton Center 21 What Up Dawg? 170, 171 Whelan, Joey 154, 155 Whelan, Tracie 81 Whirpoo Building Blocks Program 81 Whirpool 151 Whitehead, Shaun 217 Whitman, J.T. 112, 113 Wianno 207 Wicaksono, Yodi 151 Wickes, Tim 291 Wiese, Claire 71 Wilcox, Kim 260, 261 Williams, Caroline Willis, Tammy Wilsey, Sarah Wilson Hall Wilson, Alex Wilson, Ashley Wilson, Sal Wind Symphony Windt, Katie 214 Wiza, Jesse 73 Wizard of Oz, The 151 Woelmer, Jill 86, 87, 399 Woiwode, Anne 71 Wojno, Danielle 204 Wolverines 291 Women’s Basketball 35 Women’s Epee Squad 28, 29 Women’s Glee Club 87 Women’s Golf 202, 203 Women’s Soccer 272 Women’s Tennis 99 Wonders Hall 102 Woody’s Oasis 248 Woolard, Cherisse 213 Wooster, Derek 88 World AIDS Day 214 World War II 164 Worster, Freddie 69 180 180, 181 214 27 117 297 34 14 27, 151,400 81 48 41 277 82 22 74, 75 161 142 59, 216, 217 198 284, 285, 287 30 30 169 102 215 174 214 249 24 91 278 45 45 17 150 164, 165 59 274 156 195 81 128 114 46 228, 229 159 166 236, 237 248, 249 256, 257 69, 204 292 197 287 78, 79 108 214 Takacs - Zuzelski Wrestling 262, 263 1 Xaioxiang, Xu 209 «■p mm Yahrmatter, Sarah Yakeley Hall Yako, Brett Yalamarthy, Ayes ha Yangtao, Zhang Yanke, Anna Yelizarov, Emin Yellow Bird Yin, Yu Yoplait Save Lids to Save Lives Young, Anthony Young, Emily Young, Katie Young, Neil Your Healthy Choice Clinic Your Love is My Drug Yousif, Natalie YouTube YouVote Yu, Gu Yu, Julian Yu, Julian Yuan, David 157zZaborowski, Mike 82 26*6 285 199 208 179 151 166 208 301 48,69 62 80 110 89 218, 219 151 140, 203 38, 39 208 92 111 39 83 63 151 263 195 296 300, 301 287 94 92 Zak, Chris Zanoni, Ariella Zappa, Frank Zeerip, Brandon Zeta Phi Beta Zeta Sigma Chi Zeta Tau Alpha Zirstein, David Zuko, Danny Zuzelski, Cathleen 44The fountain behind Student Services is especially beautiful when those trees with the white flowers start to bloom. There’s always people lying in the grass. -Brooke Hawkins, sophomore ff 59 30 31 14 n 17 77 34 14 30 31 48 41 77 32 12 75 51 42 I7 78 37 30 30 39 32 15 74 I4 49 34 71 78 45 45 I7 50 35 59 74 79 56 75 31 38 I4 46 39 >9 >6 37 49 17 14 >2 >7 ¡7 '9 18 4 Congratulations to the Michigan State University Class of ¿010. The Red Cedar Log wishes you the best of luck on your future endeavors. You will forever remain a member of this greater C ongratulations onyour graduation from Michigan State University! The investment you have made in your education has come to fruition and you are now officially an MSU alum. A diploma from this university speaks volumes about your dedication to your course work, independent projects, community engagement, and global understanding. This past year, Michigan State has continued to distinguish itself as a university invested in its students, faculty and the world. Together, we have taught and learned, explored pushed and ourselves boundaries resulting of understanding. The contributions of faculty staff, and students continue to expand our legacy as a Land Grant University discovered, and and the Michigan State University has persisted in making its presence felt for the betterment of the world. We have educated and empowered future leaders;;: you are one of 10,860 undergraduate and graduate degree recipients that will leave your footprint on this world. This past year, MSU increased its number of medical school graduates by almost 50 percent, helping ensure that the underserved areas of Michigan will have greater access to quality health care in the near future. As access to affordable oil has been challenged, MSU fast becoming one of the leading research centers for alternative energy Across disciplines, MSU researchers are seeking the best solutions to ensuring a safe, secure, and plentiful supply of water. Biosensors, DNA chips, and more is water-efficient farming are among this year’s advances, as well as major in understanding breakthroughs both matter and energy. Research that effects a positive difference in people’s lives stands among MSU’s top priorities—and in every corner of the planet, MSU’s successes are gaining recognition and improving lives. Michigan State athletes have continued to bring honor to the name “Spartan.” A Big Ten championship in football with Mark Dantonio taking Big Ten Coach of the Year honors kicked off a 2010-11 season that included a Big Ten championship for Women’s Basketball, Women’s Cross Country Women’s Golf, and Men’s Baseball. Outstanding Spartan showings in rowing, crew, track and field, and softball continued the outstanding sports year. As you enter the next stage of your lives, I encourage you to carry your Spartan Spirit with you. Michigan State University has imbued you with a commitment to excellence— for yourselves and the world in which you live. I know you will bring honor to the MSU name as you carry the values that are central to this university to the world. I wish you the best of luck in your continued success. Sincerely Lou Anna K. Simon, Ph.D. President C L A S S O F 2 0 1 1 l e t t e r f r o m t h e p r e s i d e n t 1 ellina stein avk . ■ ; PEEL In the winter 2010, cars speed down Grand River Avenue at night, in front of Berkey Hall. Grand River is one of the busiest, njip frequented streets in East Lansfigji; The sun sets behind Phillips Hall and|if§ Psychology Building on campus. tSjl Funambulist sculpture created by John Alstine sits on the North lawn of Snyder* Phillips fii§ | 1 i ) anthony thibodeau The Baker Woodlot sits on the corner of Service Road and Farm Lane. The tract of land was preserved to demostrate the proper maintanence of woodlands. natalie kolb ISlIllil mm hilary higgins HHited in thejLansing State Journal, illS State! a^providsi instant fan |HenaI for a basketball game at ^■Breslin Center. The MSU men’s ■Iketball team ended the season The Eli andgdythe Broad art museum gonstructiosisite layjpron Grand Jhver&p Avenue next to the Student Services: Building. The art museum is scheduled tcffilen ir^^ppring of 20 chase o’black The Michigan State College smokStpK hovers above Wells Hall next to Spaipp Stadium. Though the smokestack willpf demolished, the white bricks creaf||i the ‘MSC will be salvaged. ‘ : r - " -- ;