april 2, 2010

11
baseball takes game-by-game approach, 1b Softball pitcher overcomes surgery, 6B [cm-life.com] Mount Pleasant, Mich. Central Michigan Life Central Michigan Life Central Michigan Life Central Michigan Life Central Michigan Life Central Michigan Life Central Michigan Life Central Michigan Life Central Michigan Life Central Michigan Life Central Michigan Life Central Michigan Life Central Michigan Life Friday, April 2, 2010 easter | CM Life’s next edition will release Wednesday. See cm-life.com for breaking news! Backstitching through life Photos by sean Proctor/Staff photographer Mount Pleasant resident Maxine Tanner, 81, sits on the porch of her S. Lansing St. house on Wednesday afternoon at the advice of her horoscope, which told her to go outside and enjoy the weather. Tanner retired as the Central Michigan University Football team seamstress four years ago after 25 years. “I have lived life for 80 years.” Tanner said, “We’re all working to be people.” 81-year-old Maxine Tanner reminisces while she looks through old papers on Saturday at her home on S. Lansing St. Tanner worked in the Air Force as a radio technician for a short time, and also as the CMU athletics seamstress until she retired. matthew stePhens/Senior photographer Graduate Student Union Vice President Matt Igleski, along with other graduate students and faculty, demonstrate outside Charles V. Park Library on Thursday for health care for graduate assistants. “We compete with other state colleges in football and basketball. You think the university would want to be competitive on the academic side, too,” he said. @CMLIFE @CMLifeSports Follow us for the latest news and sports updates! on Facebook on twitter on Video facebook.com/cmlife TALK WITH US: Do you plan on voting in the SGA elections? Why or why not? See a video from the Threads Thrift sale Thursday. ALSO: See recaps from this week’s SGA livestreams. cm-life.com What’s on the Web A look at what you can find off the printed pages Tanner’s life leading up to retirement was filled with multiple jobs, including seamstressing for the Central Michigan University football team. She also served in the U.S. Air Force and was a book- keeper for Beard Oil Co. A young stArt After serving a brief two months and 21 days as a ra- dio mechanic for the Air Force at age 21, Tanner married a southern gentleman and was forced to leave the Air Force. “When you were married, you had to get out,” she said. Tanner had three children and was married for 15 years. One of her sons, Andy Wil- liams, said his father left Tan- ner when he was five or six years old. She returned to school and took a job working at Mont- gomery Ward for a short time before she transitioned to record-keeping for Beard Oil Co. Jane Ward-Sundberg, cur- rently an office clerk for Mount Pleasant City Hall, worked with Tanner at Beard Oil. “She had a great sense of humor. She loved to laugh,” Ward-Sundberg said. Sometime during her em- ployment at Beard Oil Co., Tanner remarried in the early ‘70s. time to sew After losing her position with Beard Oil Co., Tanner found herself in a predica- ment leading to the opening of her sewing business, Stitch and Stuff, formerly at 925 S. Mission. “I lost my job and I was 51 years old, and nobody else would hire me,” she said. “I was too old so, being out of work for a year, I just decid- ed, ‘What can I do to earn a living?’ I had always liked to Former CMU football seamstress ponders Mount Pleasant memories By Randi Shaffer| Staff Reporter M axine Tanner slid a pair of glasses up the ridge of her nose and over her misty eyes. Glancing at her lap and the contents of a black envelope titled “Portfolio of Important Papers,” she sighed as she struggled to turn back the pages of time. “Life is very interesting,” the 81-year-old Mount Pleasant resident said. “I will have to admit that. Every day was exciting.” A TANNER | 2A By Tony Wittkowski Staff Reporter Polls open Monday to elect the next Student Govern- ment Association president. The new president will be sworn in the day before SGA’s next meeting. “We will know (the winner) by Sunday (April 11) after the polls close,” said Sean How- ard, co-chairman of the Elec- tions Committee. The candidates will know ahead of time after the Elec- tions Com- mittee learns of the results, the Marysville senior said. Troy junior Evan Agnello, a presidential candidate, said he hopes a lot of voters visit the Web site. “I feel the students know the truth,” Agnello said. “I’m more excited to see how many stu- dents come out to vote.” Garden City senior Brit- tany Mou- zourakis, also a presidental candidate, said she is excited to see the results. “(VP Candidate) Dave and I have done a great job cam- paigning,” Mouzourakis said. “I think we have a really good chance.” Featured on the online ballot will be the presidential and vice presidential candi- dates, along with the treasur- er and 11 senators qualified to run. Howard said students can vote for every senator. “There are more than 11 seats, but there are not enough people,” Howard said. There will be a computer in the Bovee University Cen- ter on the first floor solely for voting, Howard said. He said a press conference will be held at 6 p.m. April 12 announcing the winner. Voting ends at noon April 11. Students will be asked to type in their global identifi- cation when voting online at vote.cmich.edu. [email protected] Brittany Mouzourakis Evan Agnello Student Government candidates upbeat as voting begins Monday Use your voice Student Government Association election w Log in: vote.cmich.edu w Voting ends: Noon April 11 cm-life.com See the recap of the candidates’ livestream interviews. By Amelia Eramya Senior Reporter About 60 members of the Graduate Student Union ral- lied Thursday outside Charles V. Park Library to spread the word about their cause. Supporters from the Fac- ulty Association, The Union of Teaching Faculty and United Auto Workers joined in, advo- cating for economic proposals including health care, tuition and salary wages. “The point of the rally was to show the administration what matters,” said GSU President and Ferndale graduate student Alyssa Warshay. “We wanted to focus the rally on health care,” said Sarah La- nius, organizer with the Ameri- can Federation of Teachers of Michigan. “It’s a big issue.” Warshay said GSU also wants a tuition waiver for graduate students. She said it is difficult to take classes and work at the same time, especially when it is costing a lot of money. Warshay said graduate stu- dents pay $400 to $500 per cred- it hour and the average salary for graduate students at Central Michigan University is $14,000. CMU waives the tuition for Graduate union rallies supporters Other contracts in bargaining stage at university Expiration dates for union contracts w Broadcasting: June 30 w Supervisory/Technical: June 30 w Office Professionals: June 30 w Police Union: June 30, 2011 w Maintenance and Custodial Service: June 30, 2011 w Faculty Association: June 30, 2011 A UNION | 2A By Carisa Seltz Staff Reporter Brandon McQueen filed as a medical marijuana service pro- vider on his tax returns because it is his job. But the Mount Pleasant ju- nior and president of the Mount Pleasant Compassion Club said he is “maybe only one in 10” caregivers who actually claim the revenue made off cultivating their patients’ medical marijua- na on their taxes. McQueen is teaming with MPCC Treasurer Matt Taylor to establish a medical marijuana collective in Mount Pleasant. The duo hopes to combat the lost revenue for the state and provide a central location in which member-only patients can obtain medical marijuana. McQueen and Taylor said the collective would be a local orga- nization working out of a des- ignated “storefront” and would provide medical marijuana to patients who are members. They would not, however, cul- tivate the medical marijuana on site; rather, they would merely store and distribute it to mem- ber-patients. “The way we see it, medical marijuana is not for recreational use,” Taylor said. “We’re here to facilitate patients getting their medicine.” McQueen said there are three ways a patient can obtain medi- cal marijuana: grow it, sign a caregiver up to grow it or buy it off the street. “We would like to make that third option a legitimate op- tion,” McQueen said. He said the collective’s ideal role is to be a place where pa- tients can go to get quality-con- trolled, regulated medicine at an affordable rate as determined by free-market principles. Pair seeks medical marijuana collective A MARIJUANA | 6A

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Page 1: April 2, 2010

baseball takes game-by-game approach, 1b

Softballpitcher overcomessurgery, 6B

[cm-life.com]

Mount Pleasant, Mich.Central Michigan LifeCentral Michigan LifeCentral Michigan LifeCentral Michigan LifeCentral Michigan LifeCentral Michigan LifeCentral Michigan LifeCentral Michigan LifeCentral Michigan LifeCentral Michigan LifeCentral Michigan LifeCentral Michigan LifeCentral Michigan LifeFriday, April 2, 2010

easter | CM Life’s next edition will release Wednesday. See cm-life.com for breaking news!

Backstitching through life

Photos by sean Proctor/Staff photographerMount Pleasant resident Maxine Tanner, 81, sits on the porch of her S. Lansing St. house on Wednesday afternoon at the advice of her horoscope, which told her to go outside and enjoy the weather. Tanner retired as the Central Michigan University Football team seamstress four years ago after 25 years. “I have lived life for 80 years.” Tanner said, “We’re all working to be people.”

81-year-old Maxine Tanner reminisces while she looks through old papers on Saturday at her home on S. Lansing St. Tanner worked in the Air Force as a radio technician for a short time, and also as the CMU athletics seamstress until she retired.

matthew stePhens/Senior photographerGraduate Student Union Vice President Matt Igleski, along with other graduate students and faculty, demonstrate outside Charles V. Park Library on Thursday for health care for graduate assistants. “We compete with other state colleges in football and basketball. You think the university would want to be competitive on the academic side, too,” he said.

@CMLIFE @CMLifeSports

Follow us for the latest news and sports updates!

onFacebook

ontwitter

onVideo

facebook.com/cmlife

TALK WITH US: Do you plan on voting in the SGA

elections? Why or why not?

See a video from the Threads Thrift sale Thursday.

ALSO: See recaps fromthis week’s SGA livestreams.

cm-life.com

What’s on

the WebA look at whatyou can find offthe printed pages

Tanner’s life leading up to retirement was filled with multiple jobs, including seamstressing for the Central Michigan University football team.

She also served in the U.S. Air Force and was a book-keeper for Beard Oil Co.

A young stArtAfter serving a brief two

months and 21 days as a ra-dio mechanic for the Air Force at age 21, Tanner married a

southern gentleman and was forced to leave the Air Force.

“When you were married, you had to get out,” she said.

Tanner had three children and was married for 15 years.

One of her sons, Andy Wil-liams, said his father left Tan-ner when he was five or six years old.

She returned to school and took a job working at Mont-gomery Ward for a short time before she transitioned to record-keeping for Beard Oil

Co.Jane Ward-Sundberg, cur-

rently an office clerk for Mount Pleasant City Hall, worked with Tanner at Beard Oil.

“She had a great sense of humor. She loved to laugh,” Ward-Sundberg said.

Sometime during her em-ployment at Beard Oil Co., Tanner remarried in the early ‘70s.

time to sewAfter losing her position

with Beard Oil Co., Tanner found herself in a predica-ment leading to the opening of her sewing business, Stitch and Stuff, formerly at 925 S. Mission.

“I lost my job and I was 51 years old, and nobody else would hire me,” she said. “I was too old so, being out of work for a year, I just decid-ed, ‘What can I do to earn a living?’ I had always liked to

Former CMU football seamstress ponders Mount Pleasant memories

By Randi Shaffer| Staff Reporter

Maxine Tanner slid a pair of glasses up the ridge of her nose and over her misty eyes.

Glancing at her lap and the contents of a black envelope titled “Portfolio of Important Papers,” she sighed as she struggled to turn back the pages of time.

“Life is very interesting,” the 81-year-old Mount Pleasant resident said. “I will have to admit that. Every day was exciting.”

A tanner | 2A

By Tony WittkowskiStaff Reporter

Polls open Monday to elect the next Student Govern-ment Association president.

The new president will be sworn in the day before SGA’s next meeting.

“We will know (the winner) by Sunday (April 11) after the polls close,” said Sean How-ard, co-chairman of the Elec-tions Committee.

The candidates will know

ahead of time after the Elec-tions Com-mittee learns of the results, the Marysville senior said.

Troy junior Evan Agnello, a presidential candidate, said he hopes a lot of voters visit the Web site.

“I feel the students know the truth,” Agnello said. “I’m more excited to see how

many stu-dents come out to vote.”

Garden City senior Brit-tany Mou-zourakis, also a presidental c a n d i d a t e , said she is excited to see

the results.“(VP Candidate) Dave and

I have done a great job cam-paigning,” Mouzourakis said.

“I think we have a really good chance.”

Featured on the online ballot will be the presidential and vice presidential candi-dates, along with the treasur-er and 11 senators qualified to run.

Howard said students can

vote for every senator. “There are more than

11 seats, but there are not enough people,” Howard said.

There will be a computer in the Bovee University Cen-ter on the first floor solely for voting, Howard said.

He said a press conference will be held at 6 p.m. April 12 announcing the winner.

Voting ends at noon April 11.

Students will be asked to

type in their global identifi-cation when voting online at vote.cmich.edu.

[email protected]

Brittany Mouzourakis

Evan Agnello

Student Government candidates upbeat as voting begins MondayUse your voice

Student Government Association election

w Log in: vote.cmich.eduw Voting ends: Noon April 11

cm-life.comSee the recap of thecandidates’ livestreaminterviews.

By Amelia EramyaSenior Reporter

About 60 members of the Graduate Student Union ral-lied Thursday outside Charles V. Park Library to spread the word about their cause.

Supporters from the Fac-ulty Association, The Union of Teaching Faculty and United Auto Workers joined in, advo-cating for economic proposals including health care, tuition and salary wages.

“The point of the rally was to show the administration what matters,” said GSU President and Ferndale graduate student Alyssa Warshay.

“We wanted to focus the rally on health care,” said Sarah La-nius, organizer with the Ameri-can Federation of Teachers of Michigan. “It’s a big issue.”

Warshay said GSU also wants a tuition waiver for graduate students. She said it is difficult to take classes and work at the same time, especially when it is costing a lot of money.

Warshay said graduate stu-dents pay $400 to $500 per cred-it hour and the average salary for graduate students at Central Michigan University is $14,000.

CMU waives the tuition for

Graduate unionrallies supportersOther contracts in bargaining stageat university

Expiration dates for union contracts

w Broadcasting: June 30w Supervisory/Technical: June 30w Office Professionals: June 30w Police Union: June 30, 2011w Maintenance and Custodial Service: June 30, 2011w Faculty Association: June 30, 2011

A Union | 2A

By Carisa SeltzStaff Reporter

Brandon McQueen filed as a medical marijuana service pro-vider on his tax returns because it is his job.

But the Mount Pleasant ju-nior and president of the Mount Pleasant Compassion Club said he is “maybe only one in 10” caregivers who actually claim the revenue made off cultivating their patients’ medical marijua-na on their taxes.

McQueen is teaming with MPCC Treasurer Matt Taylor to establish a medical marijuana collective in Mount Pleasant.

The duo hopes to combat the lost revenue for the state and provide a central location in which member-only patients can obtain medical marijuana.

McQueen and Taylor said the collective would be a local orga-nization working out of a des-ignated “storefront” and would

provide medical marijuana to patients who are members.

They would not, however, cul-tivate the medical marijuana on site; rather, they would merely store and distribute it to mem-ber-patients.

“The way we see it, medical marijuana is not for recreational use,” Taylor said. “We’re here to facilitate patients getting their medicine.”

McQueen said there are three ways a patient can obtain medi-cal marijuana: grow it, sign a caregiver up to grow it or buy it off the street.

“We would like to make that third option a legitimate op-tion,” McQueen said.

He said the collective’s ideal role is to be a place where pa-tients can go to get quality-con-trolled, regulated medicine at an affordable rate as determined by free-market principles.

Pair seeks medical marijuana collective

A MarijUana | 6A

Page 2: April 2, 2010

2A || friday, april 2, 2010 || central michigan Life cm-life.com

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VOTE AGAIN ONLINE AT cm-life.com

1. Apartment

2. Attorney

3. Auto Body Shop

4. Bank

5. Barbershop

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7. Ice Cream Store

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9. Free Event

10 Breakfast Place

11. New Car Dealer

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23. CMU Fraternity

24. Best Body Piercing Business

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mondAy

w the Pi sigma Alpha Political science fraternity hosts a recruitment event from 8 to 9 p.m. in the Bovee University Center’s Down Under Food Court. Free food will be offered to potential members.

w “talk sex with safer sex Patrol,” takes place from 8 to 9 p.m. in the Bovee University Center Auditorium. The event will feature professionals who will talk to students about sex, sexual aggression and relationships.

tuesdAy

w the Volunteer Center hosts an Alternative summer Breaks fundraiser from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday outside the Bovee University Center. Students will be popping balloons to raise money for Alternative Summer Breaks.

w the Alpha Kappa delta, an international sociology honorary society, hosts a free screening of ”in sickness and in wealth” from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in Anspach Hall 165. The 56-minute film is part of a documentary series produced by California Newsreel.

wednesdAy

w students will walk in high heels to raise awareness about sexual violence from 5 to 9 p.m. throughout downtown Mount Pleasant. If it rains, the event will be moved to April 21.

Corrections

© Central Michigan Life 2010Volume 91, Number 73

Central Michigan Life has a long-standing commitment to fair and accurate reporting. It is our policy to correct factual errors. Please e-mail [email protected].

EVENTS CALENDAR

PHOTO OF THE DAY

jake may/Staff photographerSix-year-old Santana Rogers, left, sways the swing toward her sister Jasmine, 9, on a swing set Thursday afternoon at Island Park, 331 N. Main St. “It’s fun to go high and then low. The best part though is swinging side to side because you can try to and bump into each other,” Santana Rogers said.

sew.”Tanner began her business

working out of her house, until the fabric and thread took over her home.

Tanner first began mend-ing and repairing uniforms for CMU’s football team when she was approached in her popu-lar Mission Street shop by Dan Bookey, former Central Michi-gan athletics equipment coor-dinator.

“And that’s it,” she said. “From then on, he kept me do-ing football jerseys, all of the football pads, and I was doing all of the various sundry things that go with college. I know it doesn’t sound like much, but it’s a year-round job.”

Williams remembers the sight of her business.

“It was pretty cool that she

did all those uniforms,” he said. “I kept looking at all those football players.”

Tanner maintained her busi-ness until she became ill and had to close.

“I guess I just ran out of steam,” she said.

Williams remembers when she had heart bypass surgery three years ago.

“The whole football team signed the card,” he said.

Since retiring, Tanner has lost the ability to drive. She relies on Williams and his wife to drive her to the store and to her doctor appointments.

But that has not stopped Tanner from enjoying life.

“She’s a strong person,” Wil-liams said. “A lot of people might’ve crumbled. She pulled herself up by the bootstraps.”

[email protected]

tanner |continued from 1A

a certain amount of credits de-pending on the status of enroll-ment, but GSU wants the uni-versity to waive them all.

CMU is requesting 10 per-cent of the tuition waived to be paid for by the graduate student.

Warhsay said though CMU waives a certain amount of credits — such as 10 credits for students enrolled half-time — the student is required to pay for additional courses, on top of working as a teaching assistant.

Graduate students began to form a union in Fall 2008 and contacted the American Fed-eration of Teachers — Michigan. There are 350 members in the union.

GSU has been in contract ne-gotiations with CMU’s adminis-tration since August.

Lanius said GSU hopes to have the contract settled by the end of this month.

unionsThere are seven unions on

campus. Five of these — Police, Main-

tenance and Custodial Service, Broadcasting, Supervisory/Technical and Office Profession-als — are staff unions.

The Faculty Association and GSU are handled by Faculty Per-sonnel, said Kevin Smart, direc-tor of employee relations and technology.

Robert Martin, associate vice provost of Faculty and Person-nel Services, did not return calls from Central Michigan Life on Thursday.

Smart said there are three contracts in the bargaining stages — Broadcasting, Supervi-sory/Technical and Office Pro-fessionals.

Smart said the contract for Supervisory/Technical expires June 30.

“We’re currently engaged in negotiations,” said Mark Black-mer, president and negotia-tions chair of the Supervisory/Technical union and a mainte-nance and repair technician for the School of Engineering and Technology.

Blacmer said terms of the contract are not open for public discussion, per an agreement between the union and the Michigan Education Associa-tion.

“When both negotiating teams reach an agreement, then (we) have to take a vote,” Black-mer said.

At the minimum, he said, ef-fective dates of the contract may vary.

Blackmer said the union on campus is happy with the con-

tract and the working relationship between MEA and CMU that has developed.

“Contracts are always subject to change when bargaining comes up,” Smart said.

Linda Dielman, presi-dent of the Broadcasting Union and program-ming outreach manager for public broadcasting, works with the National Association of Broad-cast Employees and Technicians — Michi-gan.

Dielman said the con-tract and negotiations can not be discussed until both parties, the union and CMU, come to an agreement.

“Until we exchange proposals at the table,” Dielman said, “It can’t be discussed.”

She said negotiation with the university and the union has always been a positive experience, and both parties are usually content with the contracts.

Dielman said the university will present the budget cuts in their proposals during negotia-tion and explain how it impacts CMU.

She said it is all part of the bar-gaining cycle.

“The union has the oppor-tunity to respond to that,” Diel-man said.

Blackmer said he is unsure of budget issues within the con-

tract.“It’s up in the air,” he said.

[email protected]

Union |continued from 1A

Page 3: April 2, 2010

By Connor SheridanSenior Reporter

A man lay dead near the door and 50 people were locked in with him.

Those gathered, sporting fe-doras and long pearl necklaces, were all suspects in a simulated, tangled web of murder, decep-tion and greed.

It was not most people’s idea of a great Thursday night party. But the Murder Mystery Dinner in the Fresh Food Company’s club room Thursday night was certainly a new experience for many.

“The only thing they have to find out is who did it,” said Ra-chelle Kent, a Freeport junior and Woldt Hall residence ad-viser.

Woldt Residence Hall direc-tor Dave Davis organized the whodunit, open to residents of Woldt, Emmons and Fabiano halls.

The first 50 guests to RSVP were assigned a character and their own role to play at the seedy 1920s Chicago speakeasy, The Four Deuces.

Jazz filled the air as Henry Hooch worked the blackjack table.

Hooch was played by Okemos freshman Becky Holland, who stood up with a fat wallet — not a bad metaphor for his flourish-ing career as a bootlegger.

“He is an up and coming entrepreneur trying to ‘supply’ during the prohibition,” Hol-land said.

She wore a cream suit, mas-

cara imitating stubble on her face and long hair tucked into a black fedora. Holland said the toughest part of getting into character was figuring out how to tie a tie.

She and the other guests gathered and tried to ferret out clues to the identity of Big Jim Ravioli’s killer. Ravioli was played by Flint senior D.J. Palo-mares.

He relished the opportunity to play a boisterous mobster.

“I was just walking through the hallway and (Davis) asked ‘Do you want to be Big Jim Ravioli?,’” Palomares said. “You didn’t have to say anything oth-er than ravioli.”

Six Lakes sophomore Laura Fuller played Chicago Sun-Times reporter Scoop Jennings.

Her character, a woman imi-

tating a man to circumvent the glass ceiling, knew that break-ing the news of the killer’s iden-tity would make her career.

Fuller was not sure of her in-vestigative prowess.

“The journalism course I took back in high school isn’t really paying off,” she said.

Lauren Anderson, a Livonia junior, played the killer: Big Jim’s daughter Rebecca Ravioli.

Her cold-blooded act of ho-micide was committed to es-cape an arranged marriage. The evidence was carefully hidden, but the culprit still could not help feeling hunted.

“It’s a lot of fun, it’s just scary,” Anderson said. “People really get into their characters and they just grill you!”

[email protected]

Interview Practice “Open House”

Central Michigan University Career Services is offering a three-hour period of “walk-in” mock interviews from 3 to 6 p.m. Monday in the Bovee University Center Maroon and Gold Room. Students must be profession-ally dressed and bring a resume. The interviews will last about 30 minutes. For more information, contact Jana Lewis at Career Services at [email protected] or at 774-3068.

Holocaust author speaks Tuesday

Robert Melson, a professor of Jewish studies at Purdue Uni-versity, will speak from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Bovee Uni-versity Center Auditorium. Mason is the author of “Revolution and Genocide: On the Origins of the Armenian Genocide and the Ho-locaust.” The event is part of the Dr. Harold Abel Endowed Lecture Series. For more information, call 774-1788.

Les Liaisons Dangereuses

“Les Liaisons Dangereuses,” a play about seduction and re-venge, will play at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday at Moore Hall’s Bush Theatre. The play is directed by Keeley Stanley-Bohn, associ-ate professor of communication and dramatic arts, and written by Christopher Hampton. The story is set in 18th-century France. Tickets are available online at centralboxoffice.cmich.edu or by phone at 774-3000.

Extreme cuisine food eating contest

A cuisine eating contest takes place at 8 p.m. Monday in the Trout Residence Hall terrace rooms. The event is based on the NBC television show “Fear Fac-tor” and will include a variety of strange dishes. A $50 reward will be offered. The Asian Cultural Organization, Trout Hall and Resi-dence Hall Assembly are sponsor-ing the event.

Barefoot for a dayStudents are preparing to

walk through campus barefoot from 2 to 4 p.m. Thursday for Tom’s Shoes. They will meet at the Bovee University Center Up-per Level Lobby. The event is de-signed to promote understanding of the importance of shoes. Tom’s Shoes is a footwear company that sells and designs shoes and, with every pair purchased, donates a pair to a child in need.

Alpha Sigma Phi Week

Alpha Sigma Phi will host a series of events Monday through Saturday including an ice cream social from 6 to 9 p.m. Monday at the fraternity’s 605 S. Main St. house. Tickets are $3 from a member and $4 at the door. The fraternity will support the Hu-mane Animal Treatment Society by bringing dogs on campus from 3 to 5 p.m. Wednesday outside the Charles V. Park Library. They will collect donations for HATS.

Sufi Islam with Talat Halman

Talat Halman, an associate pro-fessor of Philosophy and Religion, will lecture on Rumi, the founder of the Sufi Islam tradition, at 6:30 a.m. Tuesday in Anspach 167. Rumi’s poetry about love will be discussed.

‘Au Revoir les enfants’

A free screening of the 1987 film “Au Revoir les enfants” takes place at 5:30 p.m. Monday in Pearce 327. The movie is based on a true story of three Jewish children harbored at a Roman Catholic boarding school by their headmaster.

If you have an interesting item for Life in Brief,

let us know by e-mailing [email protected].

Heidi Fenton, Managing Editor | [email protected] | 989.774.4344

inside life3AFriday, April 2, 2010

Central Michigan life

[LiFe in brieF]

Libby March /staff photographerMount Pleasant resident Archie MacGillivray examines a chocolate bunny Thursday at Elliott Greenhouse, 800 West Broadway St., while looking for Easter candy for his children. See cm-life.com for the full story.

EASTER | Business soars for holiday

Big Jim’s wife, Carrie Crooner Ravioli, played by Augsta junior Veronica Sheppard, and daughter, played by Livonia junior Lauren Anderson, gasp as Don ‘Big Jim’ Ravioli, a Chicago Boss, was murdered in a simulation Thursday evening in the Fresh Food Company.

Scoop Jennings, a reporter for the Chicago Sun-Times played by Six Lakes sophomore Laura Fuller, investigates the simulated murder of Don ‘Big Jim’ Ravioli. The murder mystery dinner was made up of 50 characters from Woldt, Emmons and Fabiano residential halls.

Photos byNathaN KostEgiaN/ staff photographer

W h o d u n i T ?

By Sarah SchuchSenior Reporter

Central Michigan University Alumnus Pete Engardio hopes to use his story to inspire spring graduates for future success.

Engardio, an experienced journalist and foreign core-spondent, was named this week the spring commence-ment speak-er. The cer-emony will begin at 2 p.m. May 8 at Kelly/Shorts Stadium.

“I think, mainly, what I would talk about is that if you set your target really high for what you want to do with your life and career and are determined, you can reach it,” Engardio said.

It does not matter that stu-dents graduate from CMU or a more prestigious school — they can be just as highly trained through the programs at CMU, he said.

Engardio graduated in 1980 and worked for Central Michi-gan Life his first three years at CMU.

He has more than 25 years of writing experience and spent time as a senior writer and Asian edition editor of Busi-nessWeek in New York from 1985 to last December.

Currently, Engardio is work-ing on a book about the future of United States manufactur-ing.

He is a writer and an analyst focusing on the revolution of the global economy.

“He has gone on and been very, very successful,” said Steve Smith, director of Public Relations. “He’s a home-grown product that has gone on to the top of his field.”

Smith said he expects En-gardio’s speech will interest

Foreign correspondent seeks to inspire gradsEngardio slated to speak at May commencement

A speaker | 5A

By Ryan CzachorskiSenior Reporter

The stretch of US-127 running south of Ithaca to St. John’s is notorious for the discomfort it creates for many drivers, being a 55-miles-per-hour speed zone.

On Monday, that will largely subside when a 16-mile portion of the high-way changes to a 65-mph speed zone.

The Michigan Depart-ment of Transportation could start changing the speed limit signs today.

MDOT reviews speed limits frequently to make sure they are still the most effective.

“Basically, the speed lim-it along any roadway is de-termined by the Michigan State Police and MDOT,” said Anita Richardson, communications represen-tative for the Bay Region office of MDOT. “In this case, there was a multi-year review.”

After further reviewOfficials arrived at the

change using what they called the 85th-percentile rule.

Richardson said MDOT surveys multiple factors

and then rules on a speed limit that would not be exceeded by 85 percent of drivers.

Officials also looked at other aspects that could affect efficient traffic flow, such as crash data, traffic volume on the road, envi-ronmental concerns and the proximity of homes and businesses to the road.

The part of US-127 cit-ed for change does have homes and businesses closer to the road than the average highway.

“There’s a lot of residen-tial areas right there, but they can bump it up to 65 with no problem,” said Swartz Creek sophomore Mitchell Billbrough.

MDOT hopes the change will make traveling the stretch of road easier for drivers.

“(It was made) in order to achieve a smoother ride and achieve an efficient traffic flow in the area,” Richardson said.

The road runs from Mount Pleasant through major cities including Jack-son and Lansing, making it a road students common-ly use to arrive in Mount Pleasant.

[email protected]

Us-127 speed zone bumping to 65 MpH

Speakeasy secretsStudents spend evening figuring out ‘murder mystery’

By David VeselenakOnline Editor

The Mount Pleasant Planning Commission voted unanimous-ly to deny a special use permit at 121 N. Lansing St. to an OS-1 site for a proposed men’s home-less shelter.

The proposal, which would have allowed the Christian Uni-ty Restoration Group to open a homeless shelter for up to about 19 people, was rejected Thurs-day after about 12 people spoke out against the proposed shelter near downtown.

The shelter would have al-lowed men to stay in the house for up to 30 days, as long as they did not have a criminal back-ground. The men would at-

tend church weekly and remain substance-free throughout their stay.

If residents did not comply with the rules, they would be kicked out, said Linda Oates, Christian Unity Restoration Group Board of Directors chair-woman.

Alice Gardner, a Mount Pleas-ant resident, said a homeless shelter is a good move for the city, but not near the residences near downtown.

She said she was worried the screening process for alcohol and drugs would be inadequate.

“These people who are going to be there ... I feel its going to be very difficult to know if some-one is on drugs or if they’ve been drinking,” she said.

The property, currently zoned as an office-use property, also could have been zoned as an M-2, a multiple family resi-dence.

But Oates requested the prop-

erty remain an OS-1 with a spe-cial-use permit for the shelter.

Commissioner Minde Lux said if she lived in the area near the proposed site with children, she “would be scared.”

“I just don’t think this will be the greatest location for a shel-ter,” Lux said.

Oates said the shelter would have checked with the Michigan State Police Web site for convic-tions of possible residents and mischief would not be allowed.

“We will not be a home for perverts. We are not a home for convicts,” she said. “Christian unity describes who we are.”

But Commissioner Tim Brockman was skeptical.

“I’m not sure that the plan is really all that well-conceived,” he said. “To ask us to change zoning ordinances with proof that we have a problem ... I think it’s asking an awful lot.”

[email protected]

Homeless shelter rezoning shot downSpecial use permit rejected by PlanningCommision

Pete Engardio

Page 4: April 2, 2010

voices[cm-life.com/category/opinion]

4A

central Michigan Life

Friday, April 2, 2010

Students are encouraged to get involved and cast their vote for SGA president. Go to vote.cmich.edu and let the university know which candi-date you want to represent you in the next academic year. Voting takes place Monday to April 11.

SGA is comprised entirely of students, working for the interests of students. Members meet with administrators and the Board of Trustees to ensure student voices are a

part of policies created on campus. SGA should strive to be an influential organization at CMU.

The editorial board brought the can-didates in to interview on live stream and, overall, was impressed with both platforms. We feel Brittany Mouzoura-kis and Evan Agnello, despite differing ideas, are truly concerned with making CMU a better place for students.

In the end, our vote goes to Mou-zourakis and vice presidential candi-

date Dave Breed. We feel Mouzourakis has the experience in SGA and the track record to show she is capable of bringing change to campus.

Last year, she and current SGA presi-dent Jason Nichol worked with the administration to change some of the restrictions placed on tailgating during the football season — the increase in attendance from hundreds (Sept. 27, 2009 vs. Akron) to thousands (Oct. 10 at Homecoming) is proof of that.

The duo also increased the Cam-pus Programming Fund by $26,000, a significant move given the economic climate in the state.

Mouzourakis and Breed have a couple of innovative ideas that, if put into effect, could really help students out for years to come. One such idea is a pro bono clinic where students could get legal advice on everything from MIPs to speeding tickets. The two also pledge to work on tailgating issues next fall and protect the general fund, which contributes to many areas of campus.

That’s not to say Agnello is a weak candidate. He has brought light to interesting issues and thinks differently than most SGA candidates. He pointed out how the SGA election committee coordinates the debate between candi-dates, creating a conflict of interest between those involved in SGA and those not.

The debates should be monitored by a third party. This would eliminate fa-voritism and encourage all candidates to comfortably participate.

One thing working against Agnello was his running mate, Jessica Richard, who has not yet made a single public appearance. Agnello said she had a family emergency to attend to, which is understandable — however, it still hurts his campaign when virtually nobody knows what kind of person the vice presidential candidate is.

Whoever is voted the next SGA president, we hope they fight hard to make sure students are heard and have an influence on policy at CMU.

Students need to make sure they vote next week in the Student Government Association election. With budget cuts, new Board of Trustees

members and George Ross’ first year as university president — student representation on campus poli-cies is needed more than ever.

EDITORIAL | SGA presidential election needs student involvement

Making the vote

E-mail | [email protected] | 436 Moore Hall

Mount Pleasant, MI 48859Fax | 989.774.7805

Central Michigan Life welcomes let-ters to the editor and commentary submissions. Only correspondence that includes a signature (e-mail excluded), address and phone number will be considered. Do not include attached documents via e-mail. Letters should be no longer than 300 words and commentary should not exceed 500 words. All submissions are subject to editing and may be published in print or on www.cm-life.com in the order they are received.

[letters to the editor]

RenewedspiritsEaster a time

for new beginnings, warmer weather

WAYNE STAYSKAL [CARTOON]

[our readers’ voice]

Choosing their battles

Author and education reform activist Jonathan Kozol once said, “Pick battles big enough to matter, small enough to win.”

Some members of the Republican Party would do well to heed Mr. Ko-zol’s words of wisdom. There is noth-ing inherently wrong with Republi-cans opposing some of the policies of President Barack Obama — in fact, “loyal opposition” is a healthy part of our American government.

But when the minority party moves from loyal opposition to stubborn opposition simply for the sake of opposing the other party, the political system fails.

The political system in America is flirting with that line. While it is currently Republicans in the minor-ity, Republicans and Democrats are guilty of increasing the partisan divide this nation is facing.

On Saturday, Obama made 15 recess appointments, meaning the Senate did not have to approve 15 nominees they would normally be required to approve. As expected, Republicans in the Senate criticized Obama’s move and expressed out-rage that they were being left out of the process.

This is to be expected — it’s par-tisan politics. It’s the way it always has been and always will be. Even George Washington appointed someone during a Senate recess, and every recent President has ap-pointed at least 100 people during Senate recesses.

If Americans are not careful, we will see an exponential explosion of partisanship. We have already seen it happen with the filibuster, something that both parties have used increasingly more since the 1960s and, while the Republicans are using it now, I can guarantee the Democrats will not stop using it when they are in the minority.

So I pose these questions to the Senate Republicans: Is this really that big of a deal? Aren’t there bigger fights to fight? Take the high road.

If you are going to oppose Obama’s actions, do it based on policy, not insignificant political reasons.

central Michigan Life

“I will not be voting.”

Michael France, Woodland

senior

C M Y O u | Who are you going to vote for in the SGA president election?

Paige Calamari/staff photographer

“Brittany, because she

has a vision and I trust that she

can move it forward.” Sara Kirkland,

Detrioit senior

“Brittany, because she

got her name out there.”

Brooke Pippin, Dearborn

sophomore

“I’m too busy trying to

graduate to keep up.”

Bryan White, Detroit senior

Brian Manzullo, Editor in ChiEf | Will Axford, VoiCEs Editor | Heidi Fenton Managing Editor | Eric Dresden, UniVErsity Editor | Jackie Smith, MEtro Editor

EdiTORiAL Brian Manzullo, Editor in Chief Heidi Fenton, Managing Editor

Joe Borlik, Student Life EditorJackie Smith, Metro Editor

Eric dresden, University EditorAndrew Stover, Sports Editor Ashley Miller, Photo EditorWill Axford, Voices Editor

david Veselenak, Online EditorChelsea Kleven, Lead Designer

AdVERTiSiNg

Lindsey Reed, Katie SidellAdvertising Managers

Carly Schafer, Shawn WrightMulti-Media Marketing Coordinators

PROFESSiONAL STAFF Rox Ann Petoskey,

Production Leader Kathy Simon,

Assistant Director of Student Media

Neil C. Hopp,Adviser to Central Michigan Life

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the

free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”

– The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Springtime is awesome. The sun warms the earth and

triggers an abundance of new life across the landscape. Plus, there is Easter.

I know this world is very diverse and not all people believe in what I believe. Some fellow Christians would shun me because of my views of the world.

But it’s not about that. It’s about my own personal struggle to understand who I am and where I am going.

Easter reminds me of my escape from a deathly past.

Back then, if someone was at-tempting to do what I am doing right now, telling you this story of what Easter means to them personally, I would have laughed at them.

Life was a game to me, and I was out to win. I wanted the most, the best, and I wanted it now. I didn’t care who I hurt or what I had to do to get where I was going. It was about me and only me.

That was until six years ago. I was about to start college in Grand Rapids, and I had everything I wanted.

It is the only way I can say it. I can’t explain it, so don’t ask me to. I can only share what it means to me.

My life changed. It wasn’t with some magic wand, where roses bloomed, birds chirped and I had a fairy tale ending living happily ever after. It was something inside of me. I felt different and I felt loved for who I was.

It was weird and wonderful at the same time. For the past six years, I have questioned every-thing, including my faith. I am not perfect, but I am different today.

I am not a holy roller and I don’t believe voting for a Democrat or supporting the women’s right to choose will send you to hell. I be-lieve in this message of hope, love, peace, grace and forgiveness.

There are consequences for my actions. I am free to do what I want, though not everything I do is good for me.

But at my core is repentance. I’m saying sorry for what I have done. It’s something I say daily.

I struggle every day. I struggle loving people who call themselves Republicans. I find myself some-times praying for the destruction of all of them who hate liberals, gays and the new health care reform. I am sorry for that.

We Christians have really screwed up the message of Jesus. I want to say sorry to all those who have been hurt by Christians. It isn’t supposed to be this way.

God is not like that. God is in the business of redeeming and restoration. This is what Easter and my faith mean to me.

It means a struggle with loving myself. I know there is renewal in my life.

Whether you believe or don’t believe this Easter, we are still people and we all are the same. I know love will always win.

Lonnie Allen Columnist

There are times in life when you wish someone would have advised you before the damage was done.

Your article on “Hookah Smoke Ris-ing” on Monday March 24, 2010 gave the impression that it is a safer, cleaner alternative to other ways to smoke. Indeed, hookah promoters have been using the logic that as smoke passes through water it sheds most of its harmful properties.

What the hookah promoters don’t tell you is that the charcoal that is burning on top of the tobacco releases far more carbon monoxide (CO) than if you smoked a dozen cigars one after another. CO does not dissolve in water that easily, but is passed on to the smoker, where it bonds hundreds of times more easily than oxygen to the smoker’s red blood cells, destroying them and reducing oxygen to all vital organs causing more brain cells to die.

Those who think hookah is cleaner

and more “hip”should talk to some older people in countries like Turkey, Greece and some Middle East coun-tries and they will tell you how their relatives who used hookah, even for less than 10 years, seriously damaged their lung capacities.

Manu YektafardWeidman Resident

Travis Faber said: I should probably add that this was

a well written article about an event at Central Michigan University. As far as people not liking that fact that CM Life talked to Eric Baerren, he had every right to be there and every right to talk to the reporter about Bernero.

It’s called freedom of speech and it’s a public event in a public area, so anyone could come and say what they wanted to. The reporter spoke to me,

so you really can’t say she was bias. She got viewpoints from both sides and wrote a well rounded news report.

Scott said:It was so great to see Virg Bernero

here! He made a very compelling case that he should be governor - more compelling than most politicians would make.

In terms of economics, I’m not sure I’ve ever (or at least lately) heard any-one in politics sound so wonk-ish and nerdy as Virg Bernero.

Virg is a genius! And yet he comes off like a regular guy. He’s someone smart and easy going enough to relate to people and understand what our state needs.

I disagree with Travis Faber of the College Republicans, about the idea of a state bank.

It would be a great way to loosen up the credit crunch and pave the way for business growth.

North Dakota has a similar program, and you don’t hear people there calling it “extremely stupid.”

Bernero is a great candidate. Refreshingly honest, a true liberal,

and a humble public servant who goes to bat for ordinary people!

Comments from cm-life.com on Bernero’s visit

Central Michigan Life is the independent voice of Central Michigan University and is ed-ited and published by students of Central Michigan University every Monday, Wednesday and Friday during the fall and spring semesters, and every Wednesday during the summer. The online edition (www.cm-life.com) contains all of the material published in print.

Central Michigan Life is is under the jurisdiction of the independent Student Media Board of Directors. Articles and opinions do not necessarily reflect the position or opinions

of CMU or its employees.Central Michigan Life is a member of the Michigan Press Association, the Michigan

Collegiate Press Association, the Associated Collegiate Press and the College Newspaper Business & Advertising Managers Association.

Central Michigan Life’s operations are totally funded from revenues through advertising sales. Editions are distributed free throughout the community and individuals are entitled

to one copy. Each copy has an implied value of 75 cents.Non-university subscriptions are $1 per mailed edition. Copies of photographs published

in Central Michigan Life or its online edition (www.cm-life.com) are available for purchase at http://reprints.cm-life.com

Central Michigan Life’s editorial and business offices are located at 436 Moore Hall, Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant, MI 48859, telephone 774-3493.

Hookah smoke dangerous for your health

Nathan inksColumnist

Page 5: April 2, 2010

www.cm-life.com[NewS]

central Michigan Life || friday, april 2, 2010 || 5A

Photos by MatthEw stEPhENs/senior photographerSpring Lake freshman Emily Rosencrants competes in a Slurpee-eating contest Wednesday night in the Saxe/Herring/Celani lobby. Ten teams competed in a game of Fear Factor, which involved eating hot sauce packets, chugging a Slurpee, putting on a frozen shirt and other competitions.

By Heather HillmanStaff Reporter

Vickie Baldyga wondered what she had gotten herself into enter-ing the first round of Fear Factor Live on Wednesday in the lobby of Saxe/Herrig/Celani Hall.

The Dearborn Heights fresh-man knew for her team to win, she and her three future room-mates would have to have strong stomachs and dedication and show no fear.

“We saw the flier hanging in the hall and thought we’d try it,” Baldyga said. “I can eat any-thing, but no bugs!”

About 60 people packed the lobby to watch the six teams of four and one team of two endure eight stomach-turning chal-lenges. One person represented each team during a round.

Challenges included smelling four-week-old milk for as long as possible, eating a “mystery pie” filled with whipped cream and coleslaw sauce and drinking a not-so-smooth smoothie made with syrup, pineapples, cherries, root beer and tomato juice.

Contestants also had to finish as many hot sauce packets as possible, put on a frozen shirt, drink as much of a Slurpee as they could in three minutes and

eat as many marshmallows a dry mouth could handle in 45 seconds.

While vomit is usually a sur-prising and unwelcome occur-rence at an event, Traverse City freshman Jay Morse and the rest of SHC’s executive board were well prepared to handle just that.

“We wanted to bring people together and just have fun,” said Morse, SGA representative for the board.

CAre for some mAyo?The toughest and, in Morse’s

opinion, grossest challenge the contestants faced came during the final round.

Spoon in hand, players had to finish a “sundae” which was nothing more than a bowl full of mayonnaise with a little bit of chocolate syrup and a cherry on top.

While many people gagged and even threw up in the at-tempt, Jessica Frick shoveled it down like it was a real ice cream sundae.

It was this win that made the Davisburg sophomore and the rest of her team champions at the event.

“As soon as I got to the cherry, I knew I could do it,” Frick said. “It didn’t taste horrible until I had finished.”

First-, second- and third-place teams all received an as-

sortment of prizes, including basketballs, DVDs, beach towels and bubbles.

Baldyga and her team lost the third-place spot during a marshmallow-eating tiebreaker. All the girls said they had a great time despite the loss.

“We were the only all-girl team, so I thought we pulled our weight,” Baldyga said. “But, man, that mayonnaise was nasty.”

[email protected]

Fear Factor challenges studentsCompetition a testof will, stomachs

Wayne fresh-man Renaldo Powell finished first in eating the mystery pie Wednesday night during the “Fear Factor” competition. “I think it was coleslaw sauce and I don’t know. It was nasty and sour, but I wanted to win,” Powell said.

By Rachel MaterStaff Reporter

The skirt Jolie Masters pur-chased did not fit — but the Kentwood sophomore did not show any signs of worry.

“I’m just going to sew it or safety-pin it,” she said.

Masters said she enjoyed the many purchases she made this week at a thrift sale fundraiser for the Threads Fashion Show, which will take place April 10 in Finch Fieldhouse. The exhi-bition is at 6 p.m. and the show begins at 7 p.m.

“The exhibition is all exhibits and works from classes of peo-

ple who wanted to display what they’ve done,” said Kandis Con-tos, a Davison senior.

The Threads Fashion Show this year is themed “Autobiogra-phy” and is about designers ex-pressing themselves and telling their stories.

First-time designer Kaitlyn Munro, a Maryland junior, said she is excited for the show.

“I’m very nervous because this is my first show — it’s my first real time showing my de-signing abilities and what it can do,” Munro said.

She said she felt it was im-portant to volunteer at the sale, put on by students in AMD 357:

Fashion Production and Promo-tion.

“As a designer, I feel it’s good to help out with the fundraiser and see what it takes to get to the end result,” she said.

The thrift sale profits will go to the show to help offset costs.

“Last year, I think they made $600; we’ve already hit our goal as far as fundraising. Now we’re just looking to sell what we have and get as much as possible,” Contos said.

For more information on the Threads Fashion Show, visit e h s . c m i c h . e d u / a m d /Threads2010_Site/Homepage.html.

Thrift sale benefits Threads

By Annie HarrisonStaff Reporter

Col. Elaine Edwards be-lieves the ROTC program is “the greatest leadership pro-gram in America.”

Edwards talked to a group of 100 students Wednesday in the Engineering and Tech-nology Building in a presen-tation titled “Marketing Army Officership.”

She said people who go through the ROTC program experience long-term suc-cess because they are given a lot of responsibility.

“They have been given op-portunities for leadership early in their careers,” she said.

The presentation was part of Central Michigan Uni-versity’s Lead Week and was sponsored by the Col. Wil-liam B. Nolde Lecture Series.

Edwards, the director of marketing of U.S. Army Ca-det Command, is a CMU alumna. She graduated in 1981 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and has since earned a master’s degree in international relations from the University of Southern California and a master’s de-gree in strategic studies from the U.S. Army War College.

Edwards said the ROTC program has grown and im-

proved since she attended CMU, but it adheres to the same fundamental princi-ples. She has visited several campuses and said the pro-gram at CMU is “top notch.”

She said the skills people learn in the ROTC program are useful in military careers and civilian life.

“You’re going to take that set of values with you throughout your life,” she said. “I wanted to reach out to the cadets here and make a positive impression.”

The presentation ended with an overview of market-ing strategies and the current “Army Strong” advertisement campaign, which promotes the message of officership in the military.

Greenville senior Roger Craig said he was interested in seeing the advertising techniques that brought him into the ROTC program.

“I’m used to seeing the combat arms side of the military,” he said. “I’m not used to seeing the marketing side.”

Zac Nelson, the executive officer of the ROTC Chippe-wa Battalion, said he thought Edwards’ presentation was one of the best programs they have had in the series.

“I liked how she told us about her experiences when she was in our shoes and related it to her career,” the Freeland senior said. “I just found that impressive.”

[email protected]

Colonel speaks highly of rOTCAlumna shares experiences with 100 students

““You’re going to take that set of values with you throughout your life. i wanted to reach out to the cadets here and make a positive

impression.” Col. Elaine Edwards, director of marketing of U.s. army

Cadet Command

Page 6: April 2, 2010

6A || friday, april 2, 2010 || central Michigan Life www.cm-life.com[NewS]

By Melissa TorokStaff Reporter

Nick Stepaniak managed to scarf down five pancakes in 47 seconds.

The Hubbard Lake junior’s quick speed won him first place at the Delta Zeta sorority’s an-nual pancake eating contest Wednesday night at its 810 S. Main St. house.

The contest helped raise more than $500 for Central Michigan University’s Speech and Hearing Clinic, which is part of the soror-ity’s philanthropy, the Starkey Hearing Foundation.

“I broke the pancakes in half, then sipped some water,” Stepa-niak said of his technique. “At first, I was kind of nervous, but then I had fun.”

Once the contest started, eight contestants anxiously sat at Delta Zeta’s kitchen table.

Stepaniak’s plate was cleared before many even finished their first pancake.

He will be able to enjoy many more to come — his prize was a gift certificate to the Interna-tional House of Pancakes.

Each participant was given syrup, water and five plain pan-cakes for the contest.

Stepaniak and his Alpha Sig-ma Phi brothers spent the rest of the evening enjoying the food.

Delta Zeta prepared for the contest by purchasing 10 boxes of pancake batter.

“We had to make three big bowls of pancake batter,” said Midland freshman Christina Sessoms. “I run pancakes

back and forth; it is kind of hectic.”

Sessoms helped make choco-late chip, cinnamon and plain pancakes for the event. Unlike previous years, sausage and scrambled eggs also were on the menu.

“It used to be Sunday morn-ings but, last semester, we changed it to night, and it was packed,” said New Baltimore junior Samantha Duncan, Delta Zeta president.

More than 250 people at-tended the event. The sorority hosts a pancake breakfast every semester.

Beverly Hills junior Em-ily Reynolds enjoyed eating chocolate chip pancakes with friends.

“It’s eating pancakes for a good cause,” Reynolds said. “It’s good to support each other, it makes us closer.”

[email protected]

Face full of pancakesJunior wins Delta Zeta eating contest in 47 seconds

JEff sMith/staff photographerHubbard Lake sophomore Nick Stepaniak raises his hands and opens his mouth to show that he finished his stack of pancakes during an eating contest Wednesday at the Delta Zeta pancake breakfast fundraiser, 810 S. Main St. Stepaniak finished his stack of five pancakes in 47 seconds and was awarded a $10 I-HOP gift card.

By Maryellen TigheSenior Reporter

Central Michigan Life was named an Associate Collegiate Press Online Pacemaker Finalist for the first time in its history.

Fifty university newspaper Web sites were selected from 242 entrants. Central Michigan Life was one of 22 large-school finalists announced Monday.

Other large school finalists (schools with 10,000 or more students) include The Harvard Crimson from Harvard Univer-sity, Massachusetts; The Daily Targum from Rutgers Univer-sity, New Jersey; and The Daily Trojan from the University of Southern California.

The most successful sites displayed excellence in mul-timedia storytelling, writing and editing, site design, in-depth and complete coverage,

interactivity, and graphics and photography, according to a release for the Associate Col-legiate Press.

“Three years ago, we set out to transform cm-life.com into one of the best multimedia plat-forms in collegiate journalism,” said Director of Student Media Neil Hopp. “The ACP recogni-tion validates our progress.”

Central Michigan Life has entered the contest for the last several years, Hopp said. The paper was recognized again last year by the Michigan Press Association as the best online newspaper in Michigan.

One of the key changes Cen-tral Michigan Life has made is to update online content fre-quently, said Editor in Chief Brian Manzullo. Previously, an online editor would post a ma-jority of the stories and photos on each production night; now, the entire editing staff works to update the Web site frequently every day of the week, the Sag-inaw senior said.

The site underwent a rede-sign in August 2009, allowing

Central Michigan Life to have full control of its content.

“In this new way of journal-ism, it’s not about waiting until the next publication,” he said. “We’ve made great strides to-ward the 24-hour news day.”

Central Michigan Life also aims for an increased use of multimedia. One of the projects that involved multimedia, pho-tos and stories was “24 hours in Mount Pleasant,” a collection of stories about something hap-pening each hour of Oct. 10, 2009, in Mount Pleasant, Man-zullo said.

The newspaper also began airing live streams this year, in-cluding interviews with Student Government Association presi-dential and vice presidential candidates that took place this week.

The Web site, cm-life.com, was submitted in February and judged sometime in March, Manzullo said. Winners of the Pacemaker will be named in October.

university@cm-life,com

CM life a pacemaker finalistNewspaper’s Web site one of 50 to earn national award

students and both inspire and motivate them.

‘set your sights high’Sharon Russell, commence-

ment coordinator, said stu-dents can relate to someone who attended CMU and was part of the same community.

“Mr. Engardio was a good choice to speak because he is a distinguished CMU alum-nus, and he has had many life experiences,” Russell said. “We’re hopeful he can share

with the graduates his expe-riences at CMU and how he succeeded in the highly com-petitive national and global media industry.”

Engardio encourages stu-dents to learn as much as they can from talented people.

Once students get a job and excel at it, they will find they are able to compete with ev-erybody, Engardio said.

Engardio said students and graduates should seek out new challenges.

“If you really want to aspire high, set your sights high,” En-gardio said.

He had the opportunity to intern in South Korea through

his graduate program at the University of Missouri, a main reason why he choose the pro-gram.

Engardio said he knew he wanted to be a foreign corre-spondent.

“I was able to just shoot over,” Engardio said. “Here’s what I want to do, and I went and did it.”

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SpEAkER |continued from 3A

“(The collective) should bring down prices and bring up quality,” McQueen said.

Taylor and McQueen are trying to find a commercial location in Mount Pleasant or Union Township to set up their collective.

They also need to contact caregivers and patients, write a body of procedure and es-tablish themselves as a lim-ited liability company.

Taylor said they would halt their plans to establish a col-lective if local law enforce-ment and community mem-bers voiced concern and requested them to stop.

“We turned in a copy of our plan to the sheriff and to the city manager,” Taylor said. “We told the sheriff we would like to work with (him) ... we don’t want (the medical marijuana) to be resold illegally.”

Taylor and McQueen said their collective would help police enforce Michigan’s medical marijuana law.

The police would know where the medical mari-juana is being sold and, because their collective would give member-care-givers a customer base to facilitate trade, they would not be tempted to sell their extra product illegally on the street.

Are ColleCtives okAy?Celeste Clarkson, com-

pliance section manager with the state Bureau of Health Professions, which oversees the Medical Mari-

juana Registry Program, said the medical marijuana law does not address collectives. But just because they are not in the act does not mean they cannot be established, she said.

“We are aware of the fact that they are out there, but it’s up to the local jurisdiction and law enforcement as to how they will accept them or treat them,” Clarkson said.

“The act does speak to the fact that a patient or a care-giver can only possess two-and-a-half ounces of usable marijuana for each patient ... so if a caregiver has access to more than their allowable

amount of usable marijuana for their patents, then does that mean they’re in violation of the law? I don’t know. It’s tricky.”

McQueen and Taylor said operating the collective is le-gal under section 4(i) of the Medical Marijuana Act, which defines medical use and a person’s right to administer medical marijuana to help registered patients.

Clarkson said a lot of juris-dictions are mute on the point whereas others are setting up strict zoning ordinances.

She said the Department of Community Health does not have any enforcement au-thority on the issue.

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mARijuAnA |continued from 1A

Page 7: April 2, 2010

www.cm-life.com[NewS]

central Michigan Life || friday, april 2, 2010 || 7A

By Carisa SeltzStaff Reporter

Virg Bernero stood waiting for five seconds for an an-swer to his question, and not a single person obliged.

The gubernatorial candi-date asked the roughly 75 people that attended the College Democrats’ 2010 Election Kickoff Series on Wednesday if they were con-fident they would find jobs in their field of study after graduation.

Nobody raised a hand.Bernero took a seat in the

Charles V. Park Library Au-ditorium and said he antici-pated such a response be-cause the American way of life is eroding, especially in Michigan.

“The American Dream is under siege,” said Bernero, currently mayor of Lansing. “I’m running for governor

because we have to put that American Dream back into place.”

But he said it will not be easy.

Bernero said the U-Haul moving company confirmed Michigan is No. 1 in the country in one-way trips out of the state.

“That’s unacceptable to me,” he said. “It doesn’t have to be one way.”

He said making Michigan an economic contender in the world market is going to be “the fight of our lives” and is “a real job ahead of us.”

“We have to bring produc-tion back to Michigan or we’re sunk,” he said.

“My plan is to do every-thing we can in Michigan to restore and rebuild, but I in-tend to be brutally honest … I don’t have a magic wand.”

Among Bernero’s initia-tives to get Michigan back

on its feet is to start a state bank modeled after the one in North Dakota.

Bernero said people can-not get loans in Michigan because the banks have shut down lending and are de-manding the loans they have allocated be repaid in full.

He said his state bank pro-posal is not an initiative to wipe out banks, but to help start the growth of small business through govern-ment-loan lending.

“This could spur the bank-ing industry into action,” he said, noting that the Bankers Association in North Dakota supports that state’s bank.

Bernero also advocated fair trade practices, invest-ing in Michigan’s workers, students and infrastructure, reforming the budget pro-cess and protecting Michi-gan’s environment.

He said the Michigan

Promise Scholarship needs to be reinstated.

“Education is economic development,” Bernero said.

College Democrats Presi-dent Brad O’Donnell said the CMU College Democrats endorse Bernero.

“We’re the first College Democrats organization to do so,” the Clinton Township junior said.

Grand Rapids senior Dan Morse said he supports Bernero as Lansing’s mayor.

“I think he’s going to be a good advocate for the work-ing people of Michigan,” Morse said.

He said Bernero supports workers’ rights over those of big corporations.

“I’m afraid Republicans want to cut services, espe-cially education,” he said.

Mount Pleasant resident Eric Baerren said Bernero’s strength is his history as a

municipal leader.Baerren said Bernero un-

derstands the political games in Lansing and knows how policies implemented affect cities outside of Lansing.

“The government needs to do things that are beyond just Lansing,” Baerren said. “He’s the only one who’s been talking so far about that.”

Battle Creek senior Travis Faber said he thinks Berne-ro’s idea to start a govern-ment-funded state bank is “extremely stupid” and would be an unneeded state influence.

“I don’t particularly like him so far,” Faber said.

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Bernero: ‘The American Dream is under siege’2010 Michigan gubernatorial candi-date Virg Bernero answers questions from the audience Wednesday in the Charles V. Park Auditorium. “We have to bring the American dream back (to Michigan)” Bernero said.

JEff sMith/staff photographer

Page 8: April 2, 2010

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2B

Central Michigan Life CM-Life.com

Friday, April 2, 2010 | Section B

Central Michigan Life

BASeBALL preview

One step at a timeTeam takes game-by-game approach, looks to flourish with lowered expectations

By Aaron McMann | Staff Reporter

Bobcats at Theunissen this weekend

By Aaron McMannStaff Reporter

The CMU baseball team has emphasized the importance of winning at home.

For the first time in more than two weeks, the C h i p p e w a s return home to Theunissen Stadium at 3 p.m. today to begin a three-game series against Mid-American Con-ference oppo-nent Ohio.

“We think it’s nice that we’re able to come home,” said coach Steve Jaksa. “We’ve tried to em-phasize to the guys the impor-tance of protecting our home turf. Everybody loves coming to play in our venue — they under-

stand our tradition and history.”CMU (11-10, 2-1 MAC) will

start senior right-hander Jesse Hernandez (3-1, 4.45 ERA) in Game 1. Hernandez allowed two runs, zero earned, in sev-en innings pitched in CMU’s 5-2 win against Miami (OH) last Friday.

Sophomore Rick Dodridge and junior Jake Sabol are slated to start Saturday and Sunday, re-spectively.

Ohio (3-18, 1-2 MAC) comes in having lost 10 of its last 11 games. The Bobcats rank ninth in the conference in team bat-ting average (.267) and ERA (7.08).

“They’re going to play well and we have to be ready to go,” Jaksa said. “I look at it as the conference just started and maybe they went through their struggles early. Our job is to make sure that we go out there and get after them early to make sure they don’t gain any confi-dence or get any traction during the period of time they’re here.”

OU took two out of three games in the past two sea-

son series. “(OU coach) Joe Carbone has

been there for a long time and has been here a lot of times,” Jaksa said. “He understands and will have his guys ready to go. We have to understand that just because we’re playing at home doesn’t mean they put more runs on the board (for us).”

loss at MsUDespite getting 10 runs off

14 hits, CMU allowed Michi-gan State to score seven runs in the third inning in a 13-10 loss Wednesday at Cooley Stadium in Lansing.

A close play at second base, infield errors, a bunt and bloop single down the left-field line al-lowed the Spartans to prolong the inning and build a lead CMU could not combat.

Hernandez starts Game 1 of firstMAC home series

P i t c h i n g P r e v i e w, 2 B

photos by matthew stephens/senior photographerSenior starter Jesse Hernandez (left), coach Steve Jaksa and senior center fielder Billy Anderson represent the pitching, braintrust and batting of CMU baseball. Hernandez is the ace, Anderson bats leadoff and Jaksa enters his eighth season at the helm of the program.

Sophomore Rick Dodridge (left), junior Jake Sabol and senior Jesse Hernandez are CMU’s top three starters. Most weekends, Hernandez will start the first game, followed by Dodridge and Sabol.

Steve Jaksa

A ohio | 2B

A wood plaque hangs next to Steve Jaksa’s desk in his office display-ing a quote from former U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy.

It reads: “There are those who look at things the way they are and ask why ... I dream of things that never were and ask why not?”

The CMU baseball coach, now in his eighth year at the helm of the pro-gram, always tries to stay positive when it comes to baseball. He subscribes to the philosophy that you must take one step before proceeding to the next.

And for his team this season, that means walking before running. “It’s like anything else in life — you do it a game at a time,” Jaksa said.

“And then a game becomes a weekend and, after that weekend, you reflect on that series and where that leaves you. Our goals are similar — at the end of the road, (we) want to win the MAC championship.”

After winning its first Mid-American Conference Tournament game in four years last season despite a 28-30 overall record, CMU returns six se-niors and nine juniors to the lineup this season. Comparatively, the team

Batting order:

1. Senior Billy Anderson — CF2. Junior Brenden Emmett — DH3. Senior James Teas — 3B4. Senior Dale Cornstubble — C5. Sophomore Nate Theunissen — 1B6. Senior Tyler Kipke — lF7. Junior Matt Faiman — RF8. Freshman Jordan Dean — 2B9. Junior Robbie Harman — ss

Rotation:

1. Senior Jesse Hernandez2. Sophomore Rick Dodridge3. Junior Jake Sabol4. Junior Matt Faiman

Key bullpen arms:

Sophomore Trent Howard (Cl)Junior Mike NixonJunior Bryce Morrow

A StepS | 3B

softBall season Preview | Seddon leads team in turnaround, 6B

cm-life.comLineup begins to take shape as MAC play begins.

Page 9: April 2, 2010

By John EvansStaff Reporter

The CMU baseball team has the task of replacing two of the Mid-American Conference’s top pitchers this season.

Dan Taylor and Steve Teno ranked No. 1 and No. 2, respec-tively, in the MAC’s most innings pitched and total strikeouts. Taylor totaled 80 strikeouts, while Teno struck out 79. Both averaged more than eight per game.

A year later, senior right-hander Jesse Hernandez has become the pitching staff’s ace, leading a relatively experienced starting staff and a first-year closer in Trent Howard.

Hernandez (3-1) leads the team with three wins in five starts. Although he has an earned run average of 4.45, Hernandez leads the team in innings pitched and has struck out 28 batters, an average of 5.6 per game.

“We are at a very good place right now — guys are really coming into their roles and I think everyone is doing what they have to do taking it pitch-by-pitch,” Hernandez said. “I’m just happy with how I’m focused and just taking things one in-ning at a time.”

Many of CMU’s crucial week-end series start with Hernandez, who likely will get the nod on Fridays. The Chippewas hope Hernandez can set the tone for the rest of the weekend.

Sophomore left-hander Rick Dodridge (2-1), who leads the team with a 1.64 ERA, and junior right-hander Jake Sabol (2-3) will usually follow Hernandez.

“He (Hernandez) is calm and relaxed out there and setting the tone,” Sabol said. “The goal is to

get that Friday win because if he wins on Friday, then if one of us gets a win in the next two games, we take the se-ries. For him to set the tone on Friday really gives Rick and I an advantage for the rest of the weekend.”

At the back end of the rotation is Bryce Morrow, who earned his first win of the season earlier this week against Valparaiso.

Also being mixed into the ro-tation is junior outfielder/left-hander Matt Faiman. Faiman has made two appearances this year and has a 2.57 ERA.

Morrow and Faiman will be counted on throughout the sea-son to start mid-week games. Faiman also will take turns at the plate and defensively in the outfield.

“We feel pretty good where we are as we speak today,” said coach Steve Jaksa. “When you are playing five games in six days, you have to be ready to go. No matter who you are, it’s going to be a battle out there.”

tHe BUllpenThe coaching staff recently

moved sophomore Trent How-ard into the closer’s role. So far, Howard has two saves and 29 strikeouts in 22 innings pitched.

Sophomore Harvey Martin was the closer last year, but is re-habbing his shoulder after sur-gery last summer. Jaksa said he is not sure if Martin will return by the end of the season.

“I think Trent Howard has been really consistent,” Jaksa said. “When you get into the Mid-American Conference and you get those tight games, you have got to make sure you have someone that can finish a game.”

Leading the way out of the bullpen are freshman Dietrich Enns and junior Mike Nixon.

Enns has a 1.84 ERA and has 16 strikeouts in 14 innings pitched, while Nixon has a 1.93 ERA. Both have allowed a com-bined six earned runs in 18 total appearances.

“When you come out of the bullpen, there’s not much mar-gin for error,” Jaksa said. “You’re coming in with people in scoring position and we have got to have guys that are throwing strikes. They have to throw quality pitch-es and those guys have to be pretty good every time out.”

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2B || Friday, april 2, 2010 || Central michigan Life cm-life.com/category/sports[SportS]

File photo by sean proCtorSophomore right hander Zach Cooper has a 2.79 earned run average in eight appearances out of the bullpen.

Baseballsolidifiesstarters,bullpenHoward starts year in rotation, finds role as closer

Bryce Morrow

“Those were four big plays right in a row and all went against us and led to a big in-ning,” Jaksa said. “Any one of those plays would’ve cut that inning in half, which would’ve been a significant decrease.”

Sophomore Sam Russell led the Chippewas offensively, go-

ing 3-for-5 with three runs bat-ted in and three runs scored.

“They did a good job of get-ting ahead of counts and lay-ing off off-speed pitches and getting fast balls up in the zone that they could drive,” Russell said. “They kept coming at us and never let up.”

Junior left-hander Matt Faiman took the loss, allowing four runs in two innings.

CMU made a late-game rally, scoring four runs in the last two

innings, but it was not enough to overcome MSU’s early lead.

“It’s good to get back into MAC play, coming off last weekend when we took two out of three,” Russell said. “We want to do the same thing — come out strong and play as hard as we can. Every MAC game is crucial, whether it’s at the beginning of the season or the end.”

[email protected]

ohio | continued from 1B

sophomores on the roster. One of the biggest young contributors will be sopho-more shortstop Molly Cold-ren.

Coldren leads the team in batting average (.379), runs batted in (21) and home runs (5).

“I just want to be a pres-ence out there,” she said. “I want my team to feel com-fortable in knowing that I can bring leadership to the team, and they can have confidence in me.”

The team has batted .281 this season, an improve-ment from last year’s .235, which ranked eighth in the MAC.

Coldren leads every hit-ting category, but several other players have emerged as threats at the plate.

Freshman Summer Knoop and juniors Amanda Patrick and Brittini Merchant have batting averages above .300.

sHaRpeR DeFenseJonker said the defense

has been a lot sharper this season, but she is worried that her team sometimes trying to make the big play instead of the easiest.

“We need to be a litter sharper on defense,” she said. “We need to go back to basics.”

She said if her team does the little things right, ev-erything else will work itself out.

CMU (13-8) enters MAC play against Bowling Green today in Bowling Green, Ohio. Jonker said she wants to everyone to know this is not the same team as last year.

“We want to start out strong,” she said. “We want to send a message to the conference that we’re back.”

[email protected]

change | continued from 6B

That meant Seddon would not be able to throw a soft-ball until December 2009, ruling out the possibility of playing in the 2009 season.

ReleaRning soFtBallHaving pitched since she

was five, staying away from softball until December was not easy on Seddon.

“I basically had a new el-bow,” she said. “I had to get my motion, extension and just had to teach myself to play the game of softball again.”

She went from a first-team All-MAC selection to hold-ing a stat book and helping her teammates from the dugout.

Seddon could only do so much as the team went 12-31 and 4-17 in the MAC. She admitted it was tough to accept.

Seddon was not used to feeling helpless for her teammates from the circle

or the plate.She continued to work

with train-ers and, al-though the success rate is not high for play-ers coming back from T o m m y John sur-gery, coach Margo Jonker said she had confidence in Seddon’s abil-ity to make the comeback.

Jonker said it came down to her competitiveness and athletic prowess because she would not let herself stay outside the circle this season.

So when Seddon was fi-nally able to take the circle for Central this season, it was a relief.

on tHe way BaCkSeddon said she is only at

around 90 percent health-wise, and she still feels some pain in her elbow, but it is more the result of not being used to pitching than the injury.

Jonker said Seddon has learned to pitch again and, because of that, she is learn-ing how to throw all her pitches again.

“Since the surgery, her shoulder and elbow feel dif-ferent for certain pitches than it did before, so she has to figure out how it is supposed to feel with how the elbow is now,” she said.

After Seddon started the year batting as well as pitching, Jonker decided it is more important to have her in the circle after Sed-don felt some elbow pain.

But Jonker said she knows what MAC competition is like and what having a pitcher such as Seddon in the circle can do to make a difference for the Chippe-was this year.

“The Mid-American Con-ference has excellent pitch-ing, and Kari is in that elite group,” she said. “Obvious-ly, after having the year off, it is a challenge to get into the pitching form that she had before.”

[email protected]

seddon | continued from 6B

Kari Seddon

Page 10: April 2, 2010

cm-life.com/category/sports[SportS]

Central michigan Life || Friday, april 2, 2010 || 3B

matthew stephens/senior photographerSophomore shortstop Molly Coldren tries to get the force-out at second base during Wednes-day’s doubleheader against Oakland. Coldren switched from third base to shortstop this year.

had three seniors and sev-en juniors on the roster in 2009.

“Everybody talks about experience. Experience only helps if you learn something from the experience you had,” Jaksa said. “You have got to be able to make that change. Generally, baseball is more of a mental change than anything else because of the ability to put the last at-bat behind you and be fresh the next one.”

Batting anD FielDingSenior center fielder Billy

Anderson is one of those returning seniors, poised to lead CMU to its goal of a conference championship.

Anderson is batting .356 through 21 games at the leadoff position, with a team-best on-base percent-age of .451.

“Because of guys being dinged up, the lineup has been in a bit of fluctua-tion,” Jaksa said. “But we do have some consistency. We think we’re pretty solid with Billy as the leadoff guy — he seems like he’s honed in to that and has done a nice job of getting on base.”

Anderson said players have to come into their own — not try to be a type of player they are not.

“We have guys kind of figuring out who they are as a player,” Anderson said. “The biggest thing is that

we just have got to get e v e r y o n e to realize what kind of player they are and just become that. As long as everyone knows their

own identity, I think we’ll be all right.”

While beginning to work his way back, injuries to se-nior James Teas a few weeks ago resulted in shuffling the infield. Senior catcher James Cornstubble, bat-ting third in the lineup with a .351 average and team-leading 18 runs batted in,

has played third base in recent games. As a result, sophomore William Arnold and freshman Jordan Ad-ams have gotten some work at the catcher position.

Jaksa called Arnold valu-able and said he can be used at mul-tiple posi-tions on the infield.

With the return of ju-nior short-stop Robbie Harman, who missed the first 10 games of the season while finish-ing up the basketball sea-son, senior Ricky Clark and freshman Jordan Dean have shared duties at second base.

Said Jaksa: “We think our approach is getting more and more solid. The lineup is kind of solidified (now) ... We got a couple guys who aren’t hitting really well numbers-wise, but we felt they’ve had some good bats lately and hope some of those hits start falling.”

In addition to holding down first base, sopho-more Nate Theunissen also got off to a good start with the bat, leading the team with a .385 average and three home runs in the clean-up spot.

pitCHingSenior Jesse Hernan-

dez (3-1, 4.45 ERA) leads a pitching staff that includes sophomore Rick Dodridge (2-1, 1.64 ERA) and junior Jake Sabol (2-3, 4.91 ERA). Junior Matt Faiman and junior Bryce Morrow have filled in when needed in the spot.

“I’m just happy with the way I’ve stayed focus,” Hernandez said. “I’m just taking everything one in-ning at a time and not let-ting that one big inning that hurt us get to me. I go out there with the same at-titude every inning, know-ing that I have to throw strikes, get my ground balls, and things have been working out.”

Juniors Mike Nixon and Morrow and fresh-man Dietrich Enns have stepped up and received

the most innings as reliev-ers early on. Sophomores Zach Cooper, Matt Looms and Reid Rooney, redshirt freshman Brock Guetzke and freshmen Scott Mari-ner and Josh Cok round out the bullpen.

“The biggest thing is consistency,” Jaksa said. “If they stub their toe, we just got to make sure we have another guy ready to go. If we can throw strikes out the pen, and we think they can and they think we can, then we’ll develop that consis-tency.”

A former starter, sopho-more Trent Howard (1-2, 4.76 ERA) has been moved to the closer role after a couple of rough starts ear-ly on. Howard is 2-for-2 in save opportunities since being moved, allowing no runs in 3 2/3 innings.

Helping eaCH otHeRWithout looking too far

ahead, Jaksa said the team’s goal, first and foremost, is working toward a division title.

“You have a club that’s been through it a little bit,” he said. “They understand the intensity, they under-stand how the games are going to be, but they also know that if they can just stay in the moment and have the good at-bat, if they don’t worry about the situ-ation, we have an opportu-nity to do good things.”

Players have bought into Jaksa’s mindset of tak-ing one at-bat, inning and game at a time.

In fact, Anderson said the team can thrive as it gar-ners little respect to start the year.

“We’re not picked to win anything, so nothing’s ex-pected of us and I love that,” Anderson said.

[email protected]

stePs | continued from 1B

William Arnold

Infielders adjusting to position switchBy Justin HicksStaff Reporter

The CMU softball team made some defensive changes this season to limit mistakes on the field.

And it has already benefited from the moves this season.

The two key changes to the defense are junior Brittini Merchant’s move from short-stop to second base and soph-omore Molly Coldren’s switch from third base back to short-stop, her preferred position.

Before coming to Central, Coldren played shortstop for four years at Notre Dame High School in West Bloomfield.

“I’ve played short since I can remember and I feel more confident there,” she said. “At shortstop, your presence is more known and it’s more of a leadership position.”

Third basemen only see plays to one side, but have to react faster because they are positioned closer to the plate. Shortstops, on the other hand, have to make plays on both sides, as well as in the gap be-tween the infield and outfield.

Merchant’s position switch was a little more difficult as she moved to a position she had not had experience at. She played shortstop the past two years at CMU, and was moved after Kim Cozat finished her

last year of eligibility.“It was hard at the begin-

ning, picking up on the differ-ent angles the ball takes, but the coaches and I put in a lot of practice,” Merchant said.

CMU coach Margo Jonker said she is impressed by the way Merchant has handled the defensive changes.

“Second base is a very dif-ficult mental position that re-quires players to be at a lot of places at the same time,” Jonk-er said. “She has the skill set to be a great second baseman.”

Said Merchant: “It’s more of a challenge, but I’m getting used to it and, now that I’ve played second, I wish I would have my whole life.”

Central’s defensive changes seem to have paid off, and the team has held its opponents to three or fewer runs in 12 of the team’s 13 wins, shutting out its opponents in four games.

The team’s 20 errors this season rank third in the MAC, behind Western Michigan (18) and Ball State (19). Col-dren has six of those errors and Merchant has four, total-ing half of the team’s errors as they work to master their new positions.

CMU finished the 2009 sea-son with 60 errors, seventh in the MAC.

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Dale Cornstubble

track teams compete at western Michigan invite

By John ManzoStaff Reporter

While most of the CMU men’s and women’s track teams will head to Kala-mazoo on Saturday for the Western Michigan Invita-tional, two big contributors for the women will rest.

Seniors Erika Schroll and Tanisha Johnson will miss the first scored outdoor meet of the season as they competed in Austin, Texas, Wednesday and Thursday at the Texas Relays.

Coach Willie Randolph said the team has looked strong leading up to the weekend, and he also noted an athlete on the men’s side who caught his eye: senior Kirkston Edwards, a former football player.

“Kirkston Edwards has been doing a nice job,” he

said. “This is the first week his body has been fully rested and he ran a good 40-time. He’s looking really good in prac-tice.”

As for the rest of the team, cooperating weather has al-lowed it to work outdoors and improve on fundamen-tals.

“We’ve been working on some technical things, which is the most important part,” said junior Shanaye Carr. “The technical things will shave off time, especial-ly with the hurdles and with the handoffs.”

pillingSenior thrower Greg Pill-

ing, who was not feeling well at the Raleigh Relays, should be near full health this weekend.

Randolph said Pilling per-formed well last weekend in Raleigh, N.C., but expecta-

tions will rise.“It wasn’t a surprise that he

opened up so well,” he said. “On the same note, without the sickness, we know he could have competed even better.”

FUtUReWith the Sun Angel/Mesa

Classic coming up on April 9-10, the coaching staff said it will rest some of its ath-letes Saturday in Kalama-zoo.

That includes Schroll and Johnson. Schroll jumped a height of 5-9 3/4, finish-ing in a three-way tied for second. Johnson jumped a height of 5-6.

For precautionary mea-sures, Schroll was removed from competition earlier than usual because of a fall. The staff, along with Schroll, did not want an injury to oc-cur.

Randolph said recovery is important because he wants his athletes ready for upcoming meets, and also the Mid-Amer-ican Conference tournament

and potentially nationals. “The recovery is the most

important thing because we have a big meet next week-end in Arizona,” he said.

Once the Chippewas attend the Lenny Lyles/Clarkwoods Invitational in Louisville, Ky., the schedule gets grueling all the way until the MAC tour-nament, Randolph said.

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Schroll, Johnson high-jump in Texasduring week

Greg Pilling

Up next:Saturday: Western Michigan Invitational

Resting:Seniors Erika Schroll and Tanisha Johnson participated in the Texas Relays on Wednesday and Thursday in Austin, Texas. Schroll tied for second (5-9 3/4) and Johnson jumped a height of 5-6.

What’s on tap

Page 11: April 2, 2010

By Josh BerenterStaff Reporter

It took 21 games for the CMU softball team to eclipse last year’s win total.

With 2008 first-team All-Mid-American Conference pitcher Kari Seddon back from injury, a key position switch in the infield and young talent stepping up, CMU has turned the page of a disastrous 2009 season, where it went 12-31.

In fact, coach Margo Jonker will not address last year’s struggles. She said she would not address the past even if the team had been successful.

Instead, Jonker likes to focus on the present, and the return of her ace is part of it.

“Kari Seddon is a gamer,” she said. “She’s just a competitor.”

Seddon missed the entire 2009 season recovering from Tommy John surgery.

She is joined this season by freshman pitcher Kara Dornbos.

The two have combined for a 12-5 record with an earned-run average of 2.04 and 104 strikeouts. Jonker said she is excited about the mix of youth and veteran leadership on the team.

Last season, Ali Pettit took the brunt of Seddon’s injury, appearing in 35 games. She compiled a 9-22 record, and the team ERA was 3.11.

But this season, the pitching will not be left to one person.

eaRly onCMU began the season losing six

of its first eight games in the Tiger Invitational at Auburn and the USF Tournament at South Florida. But the Chippewas rebounded to win 11 of their last 13 games, including a five-game winning streak that was snapped Wednesday.

The team has 11 freshmen and

Friday, April 2, 2010 | 6B

Central Michigan Life

SoFtBALL preview

Andrew Stover, sports editor | [email protected] | 989.774.3169

photos by matthew stephens/senior photographerSophomore Molly Coldren, left, leads the team in every hitting category in 2010. Junior pitcher Kari Seddon is pitching for the first time since 2008 after undergoing Tommy John surgery and missing 2009. Seddon had 24 starts in 2008, going 10-9.

Getting back to

ForMK

ari Seddon dominated Mid-American Conference play two seasons ago, going 8-1 with a 1.60 earned run average.

What the statistics do not show is how much time the junior pitcher was spending in the trainer’s room.

Seddon started feeling pain in the right elbow during the sea-son, but said she knew she had to finish the season for her team.

“My trainer became my best friend that year,” she said. “I did a lot of work just getting ready for the next game because I was in pain, but we were in the middle of the season and I had to go.”

After the season came to an end, Seddon was forced into a decision. Her ulnar collateral ligament was torn and she could either elect to get Tommy John surgery or rehab the elbow.

Seddon said it came down to what her doctor believed was best for her ability to continue playing afterwards. Surgery was the answer.

By Matthew Valinski | Staff Reporter

Seddon stands front and center in turnaround

Seddon struck out 10 and allowed four runs, one earned in Wednesday’s Game 1 loss to Oakland University. Seddon (6-4) leads CMU with 61 strikeouts.

Junior catcher Amanda Klosterman went 0-1 in Game 1 of Wednesday’s doubleheader. Klosterman is 1-for-8 on the year with three runs.

Chippewas look to put ‘09 behind themA Seddon | 2B

Team exceeds lastseason’s win total just 21 games into schedule

Up next:Today: doubleheader vs. BGSU

Who’s hot:w The Chippewas are 11-2 in their past 13 games. The team won just 12 all season in 2009.

w Pitchers Kari Seddon and Kara Dornbos are a combined 12-5 through 21 games this season. Dornbos has an ERA of 1.81, while Seddon’s is 2.27.

What’s on tap

13-82010 season to date:

2009 season:

12-31

By Matthew ValinskiStaff Reporter

The CMU softball team opens Mid-American Conference play this weekend with four road games in Ohio.

Central (13-8) plays a double-header Friday against Bowl-ing Green (4-10) and Saturday against Toledo (6-21).

The Chippewas open MAC play as one of two MAC teams with a winning record with Ball State (20-6) the only other school.

The Chippewas are led in the pitching circle by junior Kari Seddon and freshman Kara Dornbos. The two have com-bined to start 18 of the 21 games so far.

Coach Margo Jonker said the key for her pitchers this weekend is sim-ply to make the batters “mis-hit” the ball. She said she is not focused on her pitchers getting strikeouts, but getting outs any

way they can.“None of our pitchers are ex-

tremely overpowering, but they all have enough speed to be good,” she said. “There aren’t very many pitchers in the coun-try that can blow the ball by hit-ters. We have to be smarter than the hitters.”

Bowling Green has struggled offensively and in the circle early on. The Falcons rank last in the MAC in team batting aver-age (.198) and earned-run aver-age (7.76), and are tied for last in fielding percentage at .938.

Although the team is strug-gling, fresh-men Paige Berger and Hannah Fulk are hitting better than .300.

Toledo has gotten its of-

fense going early in the season, leading the MAC in hits with 188 and is on pace to score more than 200 runs for just the third time since 2000.

Freshman Erinn Wright leads the team with a .349 average, and sophomore Brooke Gates leads the team and is tied for second in the MAC with seven doubles on the season.

Senior Hannah Rockhold al-ready has 23 appearances for the Rockets with a 3.81 ERA.

split vs. oaklanDCMU split a doubleheader

W e d n e s d a y against Oakland, losing 4-2 in the opener and win-ning 6-3 in the second game.

Seddon took the loss in the opener and said she made too much of the

game before she got out to the circle.

“I was very tight when I came out,” she said. “I think I put too much pressure on myself com-ing into the game.”

In the second game, junior Brittini Merchant and sopho-more Molly Coldren added two RBIs each to help pace the Chippewas offensively.

And after being held hitless in four at-bats in the opener, senior Christina Novak went 3-for-4, scoring two runs.

Dornbos got the win, bring-ing her record to 6-1.

Jonker said there was a stark contrast from Game 1 to Game 2.

“We didn’t do the little things right (in the first game),” she said. “We tried to make the big play when we should have just made the routine play.”

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Team playsfour gamesin two daysDoubleheaderson consecutive daysclutter schedule

w e e e k e n d

Margo Jonker

Brittini Merchant

poSitionchAngew Coldren, Merchant swap infield positions, 3B

A ChAnge | 2B