12
fright night | event marks start of basketball, 3a [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 Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009 | local ghosts Myths, legends of Mount Pleasant haunt community, 1b touchable art | Students showcase interactive pieces in Wightman Hall, 3a [INSIDE] CM-LIFE.CoM w Check for stories on local, campus hauntings. NEWS w CMU considering upgrading to Windows 7, 3A SportS w Field hockey hosts Michigan today, 6A WEathEr w Rain showers High 57/ Low 43 chris bacarella/staff photographer Mission Street between Broomfield Street and Appian Way was ranked the sixth riskiest street in Michigan by The Detroit Free Press with 51 accidents in 2008. Mission Street has had 31 accidents in 2009. F ew people have had the opportunity to learn from a monk who trav- els countrywide to teach his religion. Bhakta Mike, a Vaishnavist monk, came to Central Michi- gan University in the van he lives in Tuesday to meditate and teach others about Vaish- navism, also known as the Hare Krishna movement. Vaishnavism is a part of Hin- duism, which worships God under the name of Vishnu, the one who is all-pervading. South Lyon senior James Scott said it was not what he is used to seeing on campus. “It was pretty cool,” Scott said. “It was a breath of fresh air to see something different.” a new perspective Monk from Tennessee teaches Hindu beliefs on campus Tuesday By Kelli Ameling | Staff Reporter photos by libby march/staff photographer Bahkta Mike, a Vaishnavist monk, meets and speaks with Jackson freshman Chance McBride while offering free literature to students Tuesday outside of Brooks Hall. Vaishnavism believers use Bhakti yoga to help practice their religion. It helps the body prep for meditation and gives satis- faction to the soul, Mike said. “Yoga means to link or connect with the Absolute or God,” he said. Soul SatiSfaction Vaishnavism, which originated in In- dia, is 5,000 years old, making it one of the oldest religions. It was not introduced to America until 1965, Mike said. Mike is from Knoxville, Tenn., and started traveling to schools to talk to students about a year ago. He targets big schools across the United States and Ontario, Canada. “I am part of The International Society for Krishna Consciousness,” Mike said. He said he started going to campuses because it is part of the Yoga practice and it satisfies his soul. “Bhagavad Gita” is a book Mike handed to students to help understand his reli- gion. He said the book contains everything a person would need for self-realization. “Bhagavad Gita” also references to the yoga and meditation the Vaishnavism re- ligion uses. Mike said he came to campus to enlight- en society. All problems in society come from people misidentifying with their bod- ies with problems such as violence, he said. “We are not the body. We are spiritual beings,” Mike said. By realizing people are spiritual beings, it will give people the opportunity to have unlimited satisfaction instead of tempo- rary satisfaction of the body, Mike said. He said the main reaction he receives from students he talks to is bewilderment. [email protected] Vaishnavist monk Bahkta Mike offers free literature to students Tuesday near Brooks Hall. “This was actually one of Ghandi’s favorite books,” said Mike. “We’re just trying to enlighten the world.” By Jake Bolitho Senior Reporter The Central Michigan University Board of Trustees approved a pro- posal Tuesday to submit an offer to purchase WFUM TV in Flint for $1 million. The television station, owned and operated by the University of Michi- gan, broadcasts from Bay City to the metro Detroit area. CMU received a $750,000 grant from the United States Department of Agriculture, which will be used to equip a mobile production truck with high-definition digital produc- tion equipment, said Ed Grant, gen- eral manager of CMU Public Broad- casting. The truck and equipment was originally intended for use at CMU stations in the rural areas of central and northern Michigan, where the digital transmission is slower. How- ever, CMU now plans to use the truck in Flint after the station is purchased, Grant said. The Board met in special session Tuesday in the President’s Confer- ence Room in the Bovee University Center to discuss the television sta- tion. Interim University President Kathy Wilbur said the Board viewed the station as an opportunity to signifi- cantly expand the university’s cover- age into critical areas such as south- east Michigan. “It allows us to expand academic programs on the behalf of CMU, es- pecially through ProfEd,” she said. “We’re so focused on our enrollment question and retention question, this gives us another avenue in which to pursue that.” Public Broadcasting will draft a pur- chase agreement and interim man- agement agreement for CMU to take over the station as soon as possible. “This is very common in the broadcast world because of the nor- mal delays in getting approval for a change in ownership through the FCC,” Grant said. Under the interim management agreement, the university could control the station’s program- ming despite not being the of- ficial owner. Broadcasting could begin by the end of November, Grant said. CMU seeks to use purchase to expand academic programs Trustees authorize $1 million offer for Flint TV station A BOARD OF TRUSTEES | 2A By Jake Bolitho Senior Reporter Local police are preparing for a law that would grant amnesty to underage drinkers brought to the hospital for overconsumption of alcohol. The state House of Representa- tives overwhelmingly approved the medical amnesty bill last week, and it now is on the Senate floor. Under the law, minors would be exempt from liquor violations if they turn themselves or a friend into the hos- pital. The Mount Pleasant Police De- partment has issued minor-in-pos- session citations to minors being treated in the emergency room after consuming too much alcohol and underage individuals who brought them in or called 9-1-1, said Public Information Officer Dave Sabuda. “As a police department, we will adjust to any legislation passed,” Sabuda said. State Rep. Mark Meadows, D-East Lansing, is sponsoring the medical amnesty bill and has spoken out against the current policy present at law enforcement agencies state- wide. “It is a common sense issue,” the House Judiciary Committee chair- man said. “What we would learn is that students would not call (9-1-1) because they were worried about getting a ticket.” Only seven of 110 state House members voted against the bill, and Meadows said he hopes to see simi- lar results in the Senate. DecreaSe the likelihooD Sabuda said he does not know Minors could call hospital without getting MIP charges underage drinking Amnesty bill being sent to state Senate A UNDERAGE DRINKING | 2A By Ryan Czachorski Staff Reporter Mount Pleasant residents should not be surprised to hear south Mission Street is among the busiest and riski- est roads in the city. It also is among the riskiest in the state. The stretch of south Mis- sion Street between Broom- field Street and Appian Way ranked tied for sixth on a recent list of Michigan’s riski- est roads published by the Detroit Free Press, with 51 accidents in 2008. Mount Pleasant Police De- partment Public Information Officer Dave Sabuda said the number provided to the Free Press was low, with police re- cords indicating 78 accidents on the stretch of road last year. The Mount Pleasant post of the Michigan State Police does not keep track of accidents on south Mission, said State Trooper Chris Pietrantonio. “There are consistently ac- cidents down through there,” Sabuda said. “It’s just the na- ture of the traffic. You have cross-traffic and high vol- umes of traffic.” Most accidents on that stretch are rear-end acci- dents. The tendency of traf- fic to back up at stoplights, combined with the fast pace, causes people to be a bit reckless, Sabuda said. Mission Street among Michigan’s 10 riskiest roads Meeting with MDOT next week to address concerns cm-life.com Check for a map of the top 10 riskiest streets in Michigan. A MISSION | 2A CaMpuS vIbE w Students investigate local hauntings, 3B

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fright night | event marks start of basketball, 3a

[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 LifeWednesday, Oct. 28, 2009

| local ghostsMyths, legends of Mount Pleasant haunt community, 1b

touchable art| Students showcase

interactive pieces in Wightman Hall, 3a

[inside]

CM-LIFE.CoMw Check for stories on local, campus hauntings.

NEWSw CMU considering upgrading to Windows 7, 3A

SportSw Field hockey hosts Michigan today, 6A

WEathErw Rain showersHigh 57/ Low 43

chris bacarella/staff photographerMission Street between Broomfield Street and Appian Way was ranked the sixth riskiest street in Michigan by The Detroit Free Press with 51 accidents in 2008. Mission Street has had 31 accidents in 2009.

Few people have had the opportunity to learn from a monk who trav-

els countrywide to teach his religion.

Bhakta Mike, a Vaishnavist monk, came to Central Michi-gan University in the van he lives in Tuesday to meditate and teach others about Vaish-navism, also known as the Hare Krishna movement.

Vaishnavism is a part of Hin-duism, which worships God under the name of Vishnu, the one who is all-pervading.

South Lyon senior James Scott said it was not what he is used to seeing on campus.

“It was pretty cool,” Scott said. “It was a breath of fresh air to see something different.”

a new perspectiveMonk from Tennessee teaches Hindu beliefs on campus Tuesday

By Kelli Ameling | Staff Reporter

photos by libby march/staff photographerBahkta Mike, a Vaishnavist monk, meets and speaks with Jackson freshman Chance McBride while offering free literature to students Tuesday outside of Brooks Hall.

Vaishnavism believers use Bhakti yoga to help practice their religion. It helps the body prep for meditation and gives satis-faction to the soul, Mike said.

“Yoga means to link or connect with the Absolute or God,” he said.

Soul SatiSfactionVaishnavism, which originated in In-

dia, is 5,000 years old, making it one of the oldest religions. It was not introduced to America until 1965, Mike said.

Mike is from Knoxville, Tenn., and started traveling to schools to talk to students about a year ago. He targets big schools across the United States and Ontario, Canada.

“I am part of The International Society for Krishna Consciousness,” Mike said.

He said he started going to campuses because it is part of the Yoga practice and it satisfies his soul.

“Bhagavad Gita” is a book Mike handed to students to help understand his reli-gion. He said the book contains everything a person would need for self-realization. “Bhagavad Gita” also references to the yoga and meditation the Vaishnavism re-ligion uses.

Mike said he came to campus to enlight-en society. All problems in society come from people misidentifying with their bod-ies with problems such as violence, he said.

“We are not the body. We are spiritual beings,” Mike said.

By realizing people are spiritual beings, it will give people the opportunity to have unlimited satisfaction instead of tempo-rary satisfaction of the body, Mike said.

He said the main reaction he receives from students he talks to is bewilderment.

[email protected]

Vaishnavist monk Bahkta Mike offers free literature to students Tuesday near Brooks Hall. “This was actually one of Ghandi’s favorite books,” said Mike. “We’re just trying to enlighten the world.”

By Jake BolithoSenior Reporter

The Central Michigan University Board of Trustees approved a pro-posal Tuesday to submit an offer to purchase WFUM TV in Flint for $1 million.

The television station, owned and operated by the University of Michi-gan, broadcasts from Bay City to the metro Detroit area.

CMU received a $750,000 grant from the United States Department of Agriculture, which will be used to equip a mobile production truck with high-definition digital produc-tion equipment, said Ed Grant, gen-eral manager of CMU Public Broad-casting.

The truck and equipment was originally intended for use at CMU

stations in the rural areas of central and northern Michigan, where the digital transmission is slower. How-ever, CMU now plans to use the truck in Flint after the station is purchased, Grant said.

The Board met in special session Tuesday in the President’s Confer-ence Room in the Bovee University Center to discuss the television sta-tion.

Interim University President Kathy Wilbur said the Board viewed the station as an opportunity to signifi-

cantly expand the university’s cover-age into critical areas such as south-east Michigan.

“It allows us to expand academic programs on the behalf of CMU, es-pecially through ProfEd,” she said. “We’re so focused on our enrollment question and retention question, this gives us another avenue in which to pursue that.”

Public Broadcasting will draft a pur-chase agreement and interim man-agement agreement for CMU to take over the station as soon as possible.

“This is very common in the broadcast world because of the nor-mal delays in getting approval for a change in ownership through the FCC,” Grant said.

Under the interim management agreement, the university could control the station’s program-ming despite not being the of-ficial owner. Broadcasting could begin by the end of November, Grant said.

CMU seeks to use purchase to expand academic programs

Trustees authorize $1 million offer for Flint TV station

A board of trustees | 2a

By Jake BolithoSenior Reporter

Local police are preparing for a law that would grant amnesty to underage drinkers brought to the hospital for overconsumption of alcohol.

The state House of Representa-tives overwhelmingly approved the medical amnesty bill last week, and it now is on the Senate floor. Under the law, minors would be exempt from liquor violations if they turn themselves or a friend into the hos-pital.

The Mount Pleasant Police De-partment has issued minor-in-pos-session citations to minors being treated in the emergency room after consuming too much alcohol and underage individuals who brought them in or called 9-1-1, said Public Information Officer Dave Sabuda.

“As a police department, we will adjust to any legislation passed,” Sabuda said.

State Rep. Mark Meadows, D-East Lansing, is sponsoring the medical amnesty bill and has spoken out against the current policy present at law enforcement agencies state-wide.

“It is a common sense issue,” the House Judiciary Committee chair-man said. “What we would learn is that students would not call (9-1-1) because they were worried about getting a ticket.”

Only seven of 110 state House members voted against the bill, and Meadows said he hopes to see simi-lar results in the Senate.

DecreaSe the likelihooDSabuda said he does not know

Minors could callhospital without getting MIP charges

u n d e r a g ed r i n k i n g

Amnesty bill being sent to state Senate

A underage drinking | 2a

By Ryan CzachorskiStaff Reporter

Mount Pleasant residents should not be surprised to hear south Mission Street is among the busiest and riski-est roads in the city.

It also is among the riskiest in the state.

The stretch of south Mis-sion Street between Broom-field Street and Appian Way

ranked tied for sixth on a recent list of Michigan’s riski-est roads published by the Detroit Free Press, with 51 accidents in 2008.

Mount Pleasant Police De-partment Public Information Officer Dave Sabuda said the number provided to the Free Press was low, with police re-cords indicating 78 accidents on the stretch of road last year. The Mount Pleasant post of the Michigan State Police does not keep track of accidents on south Mission, said State Trooper Chris Pietrantonio.

“There are consistently ac-cidents down through there,”

Sabuda said. “It’s just the na-ture of the traffic. You have cross-traffic and high vol-umes of traffic.”

Most accidents on that stretch are rear-end acci-dents. The tendency of traf-fic to back up at stoplights, combined with the fast pace, causes people to be a bit reckless, Sabuda said.

Mission street among Michigan’s 10 riskiest roadsMeeting with MDOT next week to address concerns

cm-life.comCheck for a map of the top 10 riskiest streets in Michigan.

A Mission | 2a

CaMpuS vIbEw Students investigate local hauntings, 3B

Page 2: Oct. 28, 2009

‘not a front-enD payment’Public Broadcasting first

took interest in the station after U-M said it would sell it in April. U-M employees at WFUM were notified that most of their positions would be eliminated, Grant said. At the same time, CMU Public Broadcasting will likely create new posi-tions.

The university also plans to change the call letters of the station.

Funding for the $1 mil-lion purchase will come from university reserves, and Public Broadcast-ing will reimburse CMU. CMU will make a series of scheduled payments to U-M.

“We’re very careful about making sure it’s not a front-end pay-ment,” said David Bur-dette, vice president for Finance and Administra-tive Services.

CMU Public Broadcast-ing reaches out to a poten-tial 2.4 million viewers in mid- and northern-Mich-igan. The addition of the Flint and metro Detroit areas would mean an in-crease to about 8 million potential viewers.

overlap market?However, possible prob-

lems include an overlap market.

Other public broadcast-ing stations have a presence in the area and would see competition when it comes to fundraising, Grant said. The FCC could choose to deny the change in owner-ship because of it.

“There is a great potential for partnering,” Wilbur said. “I think that public broad-casting needs to consider much more collaborative

efforts in order to survive in an ever-changing media market.”

During the meeting, the Board approved a proposal to pay back $619,489 to the National Science Founda-tion. The money was origi-nally given to CMU as part of a research project grant, but the project was stopped after it was determined it could not be completed successfully.

[email protected]

toDayw Save for tomorrow workshop will take place from noon to 1 p.m. in the Bovee Uni-versity Center’s Isabella Room.

w Soup & Substance: isabella county human rights committee will take place from noon to 1 p.m. in the Bovee University Center Terrance rooms A, B, C and D.

w edge hill university: england information Session will take place from 2 to 3 p.m. in the Bovee University Center Terrace Room A.

w the tombstone project — Domestic violence in michi-gan will take place from 7 to 8 p.m. in Anspach Hall Room 156.

w the legacy of abraham lincoln will take place from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Charles V. Park Library Auditorium.

w comedian Josh Sneed is performing from 9 to 10 p.m. in Carey Hall’s Real Food on Campus.

thurSDay

w harley newman “Bizzarrist” is performing from 8 to 10:30 p.m. in Warriner Hall’s Plachta Auditorium.

w ”alien” will play from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the Wesley Foundation.

w Saw movie marathon: Day 1 will take place from 6 to 9:30 p.m. in the Bovee University Center Auditorium.

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2A || Wednesday, oct. 28, 2009 || central michigan life www.cm-life.com[News]

WEATHER FORECAST

Corrections

© Central Michigan Life 2009Volume 91, Number 29

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 30 percent chance

of precipitation

10 percent chance of precipitation

70 percent chance of precipitation

toDay High 57/Low 43 Rain showers

thurSDayHigh 62/Low 49 Partly cloudy

friDayHigh 60/Low 42Rain showers

CM-LIFE.COM

PHOTO OF THE DAY

online meDia

fan us onfacebook!

videoCheck the Web site for a video of Legends of the Dark.

Lily Monahan, 8, holds up a sketch of her doll Maria she drew while

taking a break from raking the front lawn

of her Chippewa Street house. “Maria is my doll. She is Italian,” she said. “And she’s

beautiful.”

jake may/staff photographer

board of trustees|continued from 1A

of any instances in the past where students were reluc-tant to call an ambulance because of an overly-in-toxicated friend. However, he said he believes the bill makes sense if it means it would decrease the likeli-hood of it happening.

Central Michigan Com-munity Hospital, 1221 South Dr., has occasionally seen instances of drunk mi-nors brought to the emer-gency room in the past, said Darcie Van Dop, CMCH community relations spe-cialist.

Van Dop said the hospi-tal does not want to get into the legalities of the matter, and will work with whatever happens.

She said there is no spe-cific data to suggest that minors have been less like-

ly in the past to call for an ambulance if they or their friend is in need of medical attention. However, she be-lieves this should never be the case, regardless of the law.

“They need medical treat-ment, and we need them to come in,” Van Dop said.

While the bill has enjoyed support from the college population across the state, not all students support it.

Maple City senior Ben Tompkins said he has dealt with heavy fines and other penalties stemming from an Operating While Im-paired offense in the past. He believes those who drink illegally should be held ac-countable as well.

“I don’t think (the bill) is a good idea,” he said. “I be-lieve in consequences.”

[email protected]

underage drinking|continued from 1A

There have been 31 acci-dents on the stretch in 2009.

“Anticipate the traffic be-ing backed up further than Broomfield and Mission,” Sabuda said. “People will look away for a second to switch lanes. You can anticipate a lot of cross-traffic, with people trying to exit businesses.”

‘area of concern’The Mount Pleasant City

Commission rejected a pro-posal from the Michigan De-partment of Transportation to place medians and force driv-ers to make Michigan lefts on Mission Street. The commis-sion is meeting with MDOT next week, said Director of Public Works Duane Ellis.

“We do know that Mis-sion is an area of concern,” he said. “We’re continuing to work with MDOT. It’s still in our plans and interests.”

The traffic helps local busi-

nesses on Mission, but it also can hinder their operations.

Lil’ Chef General Manager Jamie Martin said the turn lane backs up to the front of the restaurant at 1720 S. Mission St., making entering and leaving the lot an issue.

“It hurts us when traffic can’t make a left turn,” Mar-tin said. “It’s hard to turn left anywhere in this area. It’s just a hassle sometimes.”

Eight of the 10 riskiest roads are in metro Detroit. The other is in Kent County. Four other Mount Pleasant roads were among the top 100: south Mission Street be-tween west Preston Road and east Bellows Street with 40 ac-cidents; south Mission Street between east Campus Drive and east Broomfield Road with 38 accidents; south Mis-sion Street between Fairfield Drive and east Preston Road with 34 accidents; and east Broomfield Road between south Mission Street and Ev-ans Street with 32 accidents.

[email protected]

mission|continued from 1A

Page 3: Oct. 28, 2009

By Maryellen TigheStaff Reporter

While panelists at Tues-day’s Griffin Policy Forum agreed changes in state poli-cy are needed, they provided a variety of perspectives.

The forum “Michigan’s Economic Future: Is There a Light at the End of the As-sembly Line?” also discussed how to make Michigan a more welcoming job envi-ronment.

It was facilitated by Craig Ruff, senior policy fellow from Public Sector Consul-tants and former Griffin En-dowed Chair, and planned

by Maxine Berman, Griffin Endowed chair and director of special projects for Gov. Jennifer Granholm.

“Businesses create jobs. That’s the challenge we’ve all

Cold weather safety

In order to stay safe as the winter months hit, Michigan’s Secretary of State office offers several suggestions to students: Make sure to check car batteries, especially if the car is more than three years old, because car bat-teries can lose half their power in colder weather. Pay attention to car tire pressure, as cold weather causes a drop in air pressure and snowy conditions can reduce tire traction. The office also recom-mends drivers keep an emer-gency kit in the car that includes a flashlight, first-aid supplies, jumper cables, a blanket and warm clothing, a snow shovel and a tool box.

Domestic violence awareness

“The Tombstone Project,” an event highlighting the destruction of domestic violence in Michigan, will take place at 7 p.m. today in Anspach Hall Room 156. Panelists include speakers from the Wom-en’s Aid Service and CMU. The event is sponsored by the Center for Research on Poverty and is a part of Domestic Violence Aware-ness Month. Admission is free.

Discussions on Abraham Lincoln

The Clarke Historical Library will host speaker William Ander-son, a chairman of the Michigan Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Committee, to present the legacy of Lincoln at 7 p.m. today. A re-ception to this event will follow. For more information, call the library at 774-3352 or e-mail [email protected].

Standing in the Gap

Campus Christian group Stand-ing in the Gap is holding a meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in Pearce Hall Room 127. There will be music, a video, a discussion and a Bible teaching, and plans to socialize after the meeting. For more in-formation, contact Brian Mackie at [email protected].

‘Ask the CPAs’CMU Public Television will air

a segment called “Ask the CPA’s” at 8 p.m. Thursday. Residents are asked to call in to ask questions during the live show. Represen-tatives from Mount Pleasant and Midland tax companies will be in the studio to answer received questions. The number to call into the station is (800) 727-9268. Questions can be submitted prior to the show to Brian Baker at [email protected].

Haunted yardThe Haunted Yard, 814 N. Lan-

sing St., will take place from 7 to 8 p.m. today and Thursday. The yard features Sammy’s Cemetery, the Cave of Fear and many other attractions. This event is free and will continue into the weekend as well.

Human rightsA Soup & Substance will take

place at noon Thursday at the Bo-vee University Center’s Terrace rooms, discussing the Isabella County Human Rights Committee. The presentation is sponsored by the ADAC, the Multicultural Education Center and the Isabella County Human Rights Committee. Soup and beverages will be pro-vided.

Cyberspace Security Awareness

Central Michigan University’s Information Technology depart-ment and the Public Relations Student Society of America cre-ated a campaign to raise student awareness of online dangers throughout October. Dearborn Heights junior Jackie Heiss, a member of the PRSSA commit-tee, said the campaign included posters with weekly themes such as Invasion of the password snatchers. “Phishing is the use of bogus e-mails purporting to be something they’re not to get your personal information, even-tually resulting in identity theft,” said IT Communications Manager Duane Kleinhardt. For a complete story, visit cm-life.com.

If you have an interesting item for Life in Brief,

let us know by e-mailing [email protected]

David Veselenak, Managing Editor | [email protected] | 989.774.4343

inside life3AWednesday, Oct. 28, 2009

Central Michigan life

[Life in brief]i t b l e n d s i n

photos by jEff sMith/staff photographerSt. Johns senior Seth Sutton listens as his ART: 297A class critiques an art project Tuesday on a wall in Wightman Hall. The project, a part of the Space Invaders class, is one of many displays throughout Wightman Hall and the North Art Studio.

Mount Pleasant junior Meghan Borland looks down at her art project of pennies leaking from a water fountain Tuesday in Wightman Hall. The project, part of the ART 297A “Space Invaders” class, shows how wasted water is wasted money.

By Alex WashingtonStaff Reporter

A night of ghouls and dribbles comes to Central Michigan University as it kicks off the basketball season.

The third annual Fright Night Halloween Bash takes place at 7:15 p.m. to-day in Rose Arena.

“Fright Night is CMU’s version of what other schools call ‘Midnight Madness,’” said Mike Dabbs, director of Mar-keting and Community Relations for the Athletics Department.

Fright Night allows students and the Mount Pleasant residents to meet the basketball team and participate in games and giveaways. There also will be a costume contest for children.

“It’s a chance for stu-dents and community (to) interact with the team and have fun,” said Mike Boseak, assistant direc-tor of Sports Information. “There will be free food, contests, giveaways and haunted hallways. It’s a family event.”

The CMU Bookstore is one of the vendors for the event, and the athletics department will give away T-shirts.

Before Fright Night events begin, students will have the opportunity to learn basketball cheers and traditions before the season begins.

“We’re doing training for our student section, Rose Rowdie, which is to help teach students the cheers and chants for the games,” Dabbs said.

Women’s basketball senior forward Kaihla Szunko said she thinks students should come not only to have fun, but to meet the players and show support.

“Students should come because it lets them get to know the players person-ally and help show support for CMU,” Szunko said.

[email protected]

Fun, gamestoday in Rose Fright Nightmarks start of basketball season

InsIDew Media day coverage for men’s, women’s basketball, 7A

By Connor SheridanStaff Reporter

The PCs serving students and faculty across campus in labs, classrooms and li-braries may get a Windows 7 facelift.

The newest version of the Microsoft Windows operat-ing system is under review by Central Michigan Univer-sity to determine whether the upgrade will be helpful to the university and to make sure it does not cause any problems.

“We have a group that’s evaluating Windows 7 for is-

sues,” said Roger Rehm, vice president for Information Technology and chief infor-mation officer. “We haven’t really found any problems so far.”

The Beta Subcommittee, a standing committee within the Distributed Comput-ing Steering Committee, is a group which seats represen-tatives from every tech unit on campus.

The group meets to test commonly used programs in beta stages, if possible, to check for any problems before they are integrated across campus.

The Beta Subcommittee is planning to convene Nov. 11 to give its official recommen-dation to the university on whether to make the upgrade.

Windows 7 may come to campus computersSubcommittee has not found problems, VP says

A WindoWs 7 | 8A

By Maryellen TigheStaff Reporter

New art exhibits around Wightman Hall beg to be touched by their au-diences.

A variety of art projects from Department of Art faculty member Amy Reckley’s ART 297A: Space Invaders class can be seen pull-ing away from the walls of Wightman Hall.

“We are experimenting with materials and how art moves off the wall and the pedestal where it usually is and how it interacts with viewers,” she said.

Interactive artStudents create original projects on walls of Wightman Hall

Two of the exhibits are a collection of crashing paper airplanes and a series of pen-nies glued to the wall. The projects were created as part of an assignment requiring the students to use multiples and cliché, and to look for il-lusion in materials and per-spectives.

Mount Pleasant junior Meghan Borland glued pen-nies to the wall to demon-strate the cliché of heads-up pennies being lucky and that a large number of pennies can become valuable.

“I’ve gotten jars and coffee containers full of pennies. They’re still money,” she said. “Once people see a lot of pennies on the wall, they start questioning how much it is worth.”

Borland enjoyed stepping out of her traditional two-dimensional artist role to

think outside the box and the nontraditional presenta-tion method.

“I didn’t ask anyone if I could hot glue pennies to the wall, but no one’s asked me to take it down,” she said.

Borland has expanded her penny project to appear in a puddle under a drinking fountain, making it look like the fountain is leaking pen-nies. The project will not be permanent because of the level of maintenance re-quired.

Other projects will go on display this week throughout Wightman Hall.

“They’re just putting things up where they want to,” Reckley said.

New iNspiratioNWaterford junior Liz Du-

naj, the creator of the paper planes exhibit, likes that

her project will not be there permanently. The collection of planes on many different strings crashing into the wall has symbolic meaning for Dunaj.

“It’s about the economy and how there’s a lot of pay cuts going on and a lot of people are struggling,” she said. “Each individual air-plane was a person and how it affected them.”

Dunaj chose to make

newspaper airplanes be-cause many people read the newspaper and know how to make paper airplanes.

Dunaj and Borland said they started to look to their surroundings for inspiration more during this class.

“It’s definitely made me open up my eyes and think of everything as art,” Dunaj said.

[email protected]

“I’ve gotten jars and coffee containers full of pennies. they’re still money,” she said. “once people see a lot of pennies on the wall, they start questioning how much it is worth.”Meghan Borland, Mount pleasant junior

sihang zhang/staff photographerCindy Douglas, Vice President of Business Development and Attraction of Michigan Economic Development Corporation, talks about Michigan’s economy at the Griffin Policy Forum Tuesday evening in Plachta Auditorium.

Jobs creation top challengefacing state

Griffin forum discusses policy changem i c h i g a n ’ s e c o n o m y

A Griffin foruM | 8A

Page 4: Oct. 28, 2009

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

4A

central Michigan Life

Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009

To send the university sugges-tions on what to cut, visitors can log in to https://ssl.cmich.edu/ssbag using their global identification. From there, students and faculty can click on “share your thoughts” and leave suggestions on cost-saving measures, enhancing operational

efficiencies, generating alternative revenue and and anything else they would like to tell the Senior Budget Advisory Group.

The Web site also has a link to Michigan’s Economic Outlook, a PDF compiled by the Senate Fiscal Agency. The PDF documents Michigan’s econ-

omy from the late ’80s to the present, allowing viewers to formulate some sense of where the economy is head-ing. The last link on the Web site is the home page of the Office of Financial Planning and Budgets, exposing view-ers to the people that will make the final decisions in the budget cuts.

The Web site will be up until Friday, the last day students and faculty can send their ideas for budget cuts.

CMU’s Director of Public Relations Steve Smith summed the situation up best: “Forecasts indicate state aid for higher education will con-tinue to decline over the next several years. It is important that everyone have a voice in the decision-making process.”

Smith is right, and everyone should make the effort to have their voice heard. The university has made the process as easy as possible, al-lowing ample time for students to do research and seriously consider what

is worth cutting out of the university budget. Students are encouraged to explore both links on the Web site so they have the most knowledge pos-sible when sending their suggestions.

This is a pivotol moment for CMU. As Smith said, colleges around the state will receive less money from the state in years to come. What students suggest today will shape CMU’s goals and actions for the next decade, maybe even longer.

What students choose now will make their alumni experiences great or terrible, such the current tailgating rules that soured Homecoming for many. Upperclassmen also should take into account future students and what they would like to experi-ence at CMU.

Students will always be linked to CMU, even long after they graduate. They should take the time to make sure CMU’s future will stay bright by taking a few minutes out of their day.

I t is no secret Michigan is facing tough economic times. To keep up, CMU is going to have to make sig-

nificant cuts in the 2010-11 budget. The adminis-tration is reaching out to students and faculty for suggestions. These students and faculty should take advantage of this opportunity to pitch in with ideas.

EDITORIAL | students, faculty should tell university what needs to be cut from budget

Making the cut

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]

Public battles

President Obama fighting the media sparks good debate

ROSS KITTREDGE [CARTOON]

[our readers’ voice]

Different partyI wanted to attend the Speak

Up, Speak Out forum concerning political identities as a Democrat or Republican.

But, unfortunately, I couldn’t due to class conflicts. With that said, the Central Michigan Life story cover-ing the event pretty much told me what I expected: Many Republi-cans can’t differentiate themselves from the Democrats.

The GOP Web site makes a slew of claims contradictory within themselves to those whose best known members pretty much kicked out the door.

For example, the site claims people know how to handle their money better than government.

I, too, believe that individu-als can manage money better than Uncle Sam, but how do the Republicans act in practical ap-plication?

They gave us a $700 billion bail-out leveraged on our kids’ future earnings signed by a Republican president.

When you have a Republican president claiming he “abandoned free market principles to save the free market system,” what is there to differentiate themselves from the Democrats?

It should not be any surprise why the Republicans lost back in November, and it is not because they didn’t go for the moderate vote.

Rather, it is because the small-L libertarians couldn’t find the dif-ferentiation between a candidate who sponsored legislation assault-ing free speech (McCain-Feingold) and a candidate who made hollow promises of “hope and change” and socialized medicine.

Bob Barr got their votes.Don’t get me wrong, there are

those with the Republican label that actually stand for limited government and free markets — Ron Paul and Jack Hoogendyk are two that come to mind — but, unfortunately, a majority of the Republicans out there bear no real differentiation from the leftists.

If the party wants to win, it needs to get back to the principles of limited government instead of trying to appease the leftists.

central Michigan Life

“Considering most ash trays

are closer than 25 feet,

it’s contradicting its own rule.”Jordan Hufty,

Southgate sophomore

C M Y O u |What do you think of the smoking policy on campus?

jeff smith/Staff photographer

“the smoke bothers me.

I think it should be 50 or 75 feet.

You get used to it.”

Lena Scarpace, Walled Lake freshman

“as an ra in Sweeney, I remind

smokers that they’re too close

maybe once a week. It’s not

very often.”Elizabeth Zelinski,

Watersmeet senior

“Smoking closer than 25 feet annoys me.

It’s a problem and should be enforced.”

Jessica Montgomery, Detroit

sophomore

Brian Manzullo, Editor in ChiEf | Will Axford, VoiCEs Editor | Matthew Stephens, PrEsEntation Editor | Lindsay Knake, MEtro Editor | David Veselenak, Managing Editor

EDITORIAL Brian Manzullo, Editor in Chief

David Veselenak, Managing Editor

Matthew Stephens, Presentation EditorEric Dresden, Student Life Editor

Lindsay Knake, Metro Editor

Sarah Schuch, University EditorAndrew Stover, Sports Editor

Tim Ottusch, Assistant Sports EditorAshley Miller, Photo EditorWill Axford, Voices Editor

Caitlin Wixted, Lead Designer

ADVERTISING Lindsey Reed, Katie Sidell

Advertising 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

Every relationship — personal, professional or otherwise — should have tension.

The relationship between the press and the Obama Administra-tion should be no different.

In recent weeks, we have seen the tension rise between the White House and some members of the media, primarily those employed by the Fox News Channel. But according to the article “This Obama-Fox War Ain’t Nothin’” by Jack Shafer in Slate, Barack Obama is not the first president to directly attack members of the media.

Shafer draws the conclusion that the fight between Obama and Fox News “would barely count as basketball-court trash talk, let alone words of war.” He suggests if we want to see a real battle be-tween a president and the media, we will have to hop in our DeLo-rean and set the date sometime between 1932 and 1939.

The war between Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the media was not only more intense, but far more serious, Shafer claims.

Fox News was singled out by the Obama Administration because, according to David Axelrod, “they’re not really a news station.” It pales in comparison to what FDR and his administration dealt with.

Shafer cites an incident where FDR’s Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes debated Frank Gannett, founder of Gannett Media, in front of an audience of 2,000. Sec. Ickes believed the press was being controlled by its advertisers while Gannett claimed the FDR Administration was at-tempting to “censor or prosecute newspapers that resisted the administration.”

Fox News, like Gannett, claimed the president is not only trying to discredit the media but also attempting to legislate himself a dictatorship.

Interaction between the media and the Obama Administration is healthy; there should be an intui-tive discourse about the issues at hand. But it is futile to single out one news network as the “bad guy.” President Obama should take a look at FDR’s struggle with the media.

He also should heed the debate between Gannett and Sec. Ickes and create an open discussion by encouraging general debate about the issues. During his campaign for president last year, Obama said he wanted to be held accountable for the decisions he makes while in office. Fox News commentators are doing just that — dissent-ing against what they believe is wrong.

How many times have we heard Keith Olbermann make outra-geous claims about George W. Bush? Too many to count.

But this is the right of news commentators. And though I don’t agree with most of the things that Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity and Bill O’Reilly say, it is their right to say it.

It is up to us, the American peo-ple, to decide what is actually news and what is news commentary.

Scott says:Absolutely. Get the station. The cost is well worth the expo-

sure that the station provides for the university.

Moreover, it is a great tool for introducing children and adults to educational, recreational, and informative programming.

I went to CMU after growing up with CMU Public Television.

Get it and expand the program.

John says:Cogratulations to CMU for

understanding the value of educational broadcasting and its importance to the educational mission of the university and to the surrounding communities.

U of M apparently never really understood this.

U of M’s loss will be CMU’s gain.Dave says:

Why do we need a PBS station in Flint!

It is overlaped by Three other PBS stations.

Total Goverment WASTE, WFUM should be shut down to make PBS more efficient.

Waste Waste Waste Your Tax dollars down the Tubes!!!!

Only Reason CMU wants it for is to siphen money out of Oakland county and take away from the other three PBS stations serving that area.

Give me a break.

Isabel says:Stop the medical school non-

sense! The proposed medical school was introduced to accom-plish two things:

1) increase former president Michael Rao’s prestige.

2) make CMU more competitive for state funds vis-a-vis other MI universities.

Well, Mike Rao’s gone and the state is out of money and likely to remain so for a long time.

Keeping the plan for a medical school rolling in the current eco-nomic environment is idiocy.

CMU will be pulling money from other established programs to keep this thing alive.

Struggling MI undergrads will be forced to cough up more in tuition dollars to keep this monu-ment to Rao’s ego afloat.

Please, please, stop it now!

niceoneGOP says:Why don’t they eliminate the

Student secretaries. there has to be at least 100 of those.

At $8 bucks an hour x 40 hours a week x 16 weeks.

About $512,000 Wow there is a big place to cut money.

Vince’88 says:Let’s start by eliminating the

Medical School. That will save tons of money.

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.

Jason Gillman Jr. Columnist

Michael L. HoffmanColumnist

Comments on what to cut from the budget:

Comments from the Web site on the TV station:

Page 5: Oct. 28, 2009

By Elizabeth GbadamosiStaff Reporter

Those that attended Olym-pic gold medalist Sheila Taormina’s speech Monday earned the chance to hold her 1996 Olympic gold medal.

“I’m actually excited we have a small group,” Taormina said. “Because now, I can do things I couldn’t have done with a larger group.”

A small crowd gathered Monday before Taormina in Warriner Hall’s Plachta Au-ditorium to hear her stories about the Olympic journey through training, competing and life after the Olympics.

Because of the smaller group, she also passed around the four-time Olympian’s memorabilia from the 2008 Beijing Olympics pentathlon. The crowd marveled at her la-ser-bathing suit, an unloaded air pistol and a modern épée, a sword used in fencing.

Taormina, a Livonia native, was brought by Program Board and former Phi Sigma Epsilon members called the Phi Sigs of the ’50s. She is a 1996 gold medalist for the United States 4x200m freestyle relay team. In 2000 and 2004, she compet-ed as a triathlete and, in 2008, she placed 19th in the modern pentathlon.

Sponsors told Taormina she was too old to compete in 2008 and, also, since she had no experience in three out of five sports, she probably would not even qualify for the team.

She said she would get anxi-ety before and during compe-tition. The anxiety caused her entire body to shake, and she could not focus on her target during the pistol shooting event.

“When doing anything un-der pressure, the mind does amazingly horrible things,” Toarmina said.

‘InspIrIng’Program Board Lecture

Chairwoman and Farmington Hills junior Nikki Burnstein said it was a good crowd, but she hoped for a little more.

“I thought Sheila was a very good speaker,” Burnstein said. “She did a great job involving her audience.”

Arizona senior Heather Warczinsky said she really en-joyed seeing the Michigan na-tive speak.

“It was inspiring,” Warczin-sky said.

Warczinsky originally in-tended only to accompany her sister, New Baltimore se-nior Heidi Warczinsky, who had to write a paper for class about the event. Heather said she left very enthused.

“My favorite part was when she told the story of how her sister inspired her during her fencing competition,” Heath-er said. “I sometimes do the same for Heidi.”

[email protected]

www.cm-life.com[NEws]

Central Michigan Life || Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009 || 5A

Gold medalist shares stories of competition in 1996 OlympicsTaormina passes around 1996 gold medal to audience

paige CaLaMari/staff phOtOgrapherOlympic gold medalist Sheila Taormina explains the sport of air pistol shooting Monday night in Warriner Hall’s Plachta Auditorium. After taking only three years to learn three new sports, Taormina overcame numerous obstacles to earn 19th place in the modern pentathlon during the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

By Hilary FarrellSenior Reporter

Mount Pleasant is looking to Central Michigan Uni-versity’s Public Relations Student Society of America to help achieve an accurate 2010 census.

The City Commission hired John Bailey and Associ-ates to aid the city the popu-lation count at its meeting Monday. The Lansing-based marketing firm hired PRSSA to assist with the count in the spring.

PRSSA president and Al-len Park senior Angela Her-nandez said the group hopes to change misinformation about the census.

“There are a lot of (stu-dent) misconceptions about the U.S. census. We’re aiming to help try change that,” Her-nandez said. “This is great because it’s an opportunity for our group to get expe-rience in public relations, but also because we are doing something to help benefit our city.”

Census surveys will be sent to all resident house-holds and CMU residence halls in February and March, said Julie Swidwinski, Mount Pleasant community infor-mation coordinator.

It is important for stu-dents to participate be-

cause this will be the first time many students will be counted, she said.

“Because students live in Mount Pleasant more than six months (per year), they are residents of the city,” she said.

As not all students are Mount Pleasant residents, Union Township also will collect student census data.

FundIng dependent on data

Vice Mayor Bruce Kilmer said many city functions de-pend on census data.

“The more accurate our count and people that are registered will mean a lot of

different factors, (as well as) aid from state and federal services,” he said.

Street development, hospi-tal and housing placements and city zoning procedures are among projects affected.

The City Commission approved $60,000 for the appointment of a Census Count Committee at its July 13 meeting. A $19,000 census promotional campaign is in-cluded in the figure.

The city’s 2000 census showed a city population of 25,946, increasing city fund-ing from the state by approx-imately $700,000 annually.

[email protected]

PRSSA counting data in the spring

Students to aid Mount Pleasant get accurate 2010 census count

c i t y c o m m i s s i o n

“this is great because it’s an opportunity for our group to get experience in public relations, but also because we are doing something to help benefit our city.”Angela Hernandez, prssa president, allen park senior

Page 6: Oct. 28, 2009

sports

Andrew Stover, Sports Editor | [email protected] | 989.774.4338

6AWednesday, Oct. 28, 2009

Central Michigan Life

senior sacrifice

file photos by matthEw StEphEnS and aShlEy millErSenior Amanda Waugh, above right, was a first-team All-MAC selection and has two goals and seven points this season. Senior Stephanie Martin, below, is a three-time first-team All-MAC selection and 2006 MAC Freshman of the Year. She has five points this season.

Martin, Waugh come off bench in final seasons

A different perspective

Chippewas one game away from perfection

By Matthew Valinski | Staff Reporter

f i e l d h o c k e y

Central hosts Big Tenopponent Michigan

V o l l e y b a l l

team awaits rival EMU

Seniors Amanda Waugh and Stephanie Martin finished first and second on the soccer team in goals and points the past two years.

Combined, they have four first-team All-Mid-American Conference selections.

However, with the play of the rest of the team (14-3-1 overall, 10-0-1 MAC), Waugh and Martin have been coming off the bench since Martin returned from injury Sept. 18 against Detroit.

Coach Tom Anagnost said the current starters have played so well, it has allowed him to bring Waugh and Martin off the bench.

“Especially recently, Chelsi (Abbott) has been brilliant,” he said. “(Laura) Twidle has always been dangerous on the field. Molly (Gerst) is the second-leading scorer and Autumn (Hawkins) has been very dangerous.”

Bench BenefitsFor Martin, the idea

of coming off the bench brings back her freshman year, when she was named MAC Freshman of the Year and led the team with nine goals.

As a freshman, Martin played in all 19 games, but started four of them.

“I did it a lot my freshman year,” she said. “I almost feel a little more comfort-able with it because I gain a mental edge over the per-son I am playing against.”

Martin showed that men-tal edge Friday against Bowling Green. Within four minutes of entering the game, Martin found sopho-

more Chelsi Abbott near the six-yard box to give CMU the one goal they needed for the 1-0 win.

Martin said 15 or 20 min-utes on the sideline gives her the knowledge of exactly who she is going against on the field and where she can take advantage.

“I get to see the game more instead of getting in there and dealing with the frantic things that go on at the beginning and adjust-ing,” she said. “I get to see the game played out and see what the strengths and weaknesses of the girls I am going to go against are.”

Waugh said she sees the time on the bench as a way

for her to see what her team needs out on the field in-stead of wondering about the other team.

“For me, it is nice to see the game from an overall perspective for the first 15 or 20 minutes and see how the game is going and what the team needs,” she said. “Then, I can come out as a leader and settle people down if things are a bit cra-zy or be that spark that they need if people aren’t really into it.”

Waugh has gone from one assist in 10 games, when she started, to two goals and two assists coming off the bench in eight games.

However, Waugh said she

looks to herself for more then just goals and assists. Instead, she wants to give the team more of an iden-tity on the field.

“When they see me taking people on and being aggres-sive, then it makes them do it more often,” Waugh said.

Anagnost said both play-ers bring different ways of attacking the defense, and that causes the opposition’s defense to be constantly under pressure.

“They bring us leader-ship, composure and differ-ent elements in the attack that other teams have to deal with,” he said.

[email protected]

By Jacob LougheedStaff Reporter

Rebounding after a winless weekend for the field hockey team is easier when its next op-ponent is Michigan, said sopho-more Paulina Lee.

The Wolverines and the Chip-pewas will take the field at 3 p.m. today at the CMU Field Hockey Complex.

“I feel like anytime we are playing against a Big Ten con-tender, we always play really well,” Lee said. “These types of games tend to bring out the best in our team. I think it is going to be a very competitive game and

I hope we can play really well against them.”

The Wol-verines will be the third Big Ten opponent the Chippe-was have faced this season, and the team

has developed a track record of matching up against such teams.

CMU traveled Sept. 20 to Co-lumbus, Ohio, and lost 1-0 to No. 20 Ohio State. On Oct. 11, the Chippewas traveled to East Lansing and lost to No. 8 Michi-gan State 2-0.

The Wolverines are solid across the field and have a tough offensive and defensive attack, said coach Cristy Freese.

“What I think about Michigan in terms of a team is that they are a good well-rounded team,” Freese said. “They have strong defenders in the backfield, and they have got people up front that can score, so they are pretty well-rounded. They are very well-coached and they played Michigan State really tough this

weekend and lost 2-1. They will be a challenge for us.”

Playing defenseThe defense allowed just 14

goals in nine games, while the offense scored 12 goals. How-ever, last weekend, the team allowed 10 goals in two games and the offense contributed with two goals in the same two-game span.

“I think our defense needs to get back and sort of close down the passing lanes for Michigan,” Freese said. “We also need to try to generate some offense off of fast breaks or penalty corners.”

Last weekend, CMU’s defense was missing senior Lizl Gericke on Sunday against Ohio, and the team allowed five goals for the third time this season.

“One of the problems this past Sunday against OU was that we had a senior defender down due to injury,” Freese said. “We are hoping that if we can get her back for the Michigan game or hopefully for the games this weekend, that will settle our de-fense down.”

Lee said she thinks the non-conference game against the Wolverines could serve as a sol-id start to the final week of the season.

“This is our last week of regu-lar competition and then we go to the MAC Tournament. We just need to focus and get things done that we need to get done,” she said.

[email protected]

Paulina Lee

Gameday

CMU v. Michiganw When: 3 p.m. todayw Where: CMU field hockey complex

LeFevour named o’Brien semifinalist

N at i o N a l awa r d

By Matthew ValinskiStaff Reporter

The soccer team will at-tempt to make Mid-Ameri-can Conference history when it plays Eastern Michigan at 3 p.m. Thursday at Scicluna Field in Ypsilanti.

Central (14-3-1, 9-0-1) is still without a loss in MAC play and would become the first MAC team to go through conference play unbeaten.

Five teams have gone through MAC play with one loss, most recently Ball State, who finished 9-1-1 in 2007.

Eastern Michigan knocked CMU out of the MAC tour-nament last year, 2-0, in the semifinals.

Junior goalkeeper Shay

Mannino said that loss is motivating the team to get ready for the game Thurs-day.

“I just want to come out there and beat them,” she said. “We want to show we are better than last year and we have a lot to prove to them.”

Eastern Michigan is in sec-ond place in the MAC, but only one point ahead of third-place Ohio and two points ahead of Akron.

Ohio and Akron play each other Thursday, so only one team could jump Eastern to take second place.

While Central leads the nation with 15 shutouts and has now gone 1,227 minutes and 26 seconds without al-lowing a goal (the team has yet to allow a goal against a MAC opponent), its defense could be tested by an Eagles offense that ranks third in the MAC in goals during

MAC play.

eagles offenseThe Eagles are led offen-

sively by senior Ashley Ro-drigues, who scored against Bowling Green on Sunday to overtake CMU’s Laura Twidle for first place in the MAC in both points and goals.

The former first-team All-MAC selection is leading the MAC with five game-winning

goals.Helping Rodrigues out of-

fensively is sophomore Chel-sea Detrick. After leading the MAC with 11 goals last year and being named to the MAC All-Freshmen team, Detrick has continued to make her mark on the score sheet with four goals and two assists this year. Three of her four goals have been game-winners.

While EMU has been shut-out in four games this year, three of those games were conference games.

Defensively, the Eagles are strong as well, holding MAC opponents to .5 goals per game, second-best in the MAC behind CMU.

Shay Mannino

A soCCEr | 7A

By D.J PalomaresSenior Reporter

The volleyball team can sweep the season series against Eastern Michigan at 8 p.m. Thursday in Rose Arena.

The Chippewas defeated their in-state rivals in the team’s first meeting of the season in a five-set match Sept. 25 in Ypsilanti.

“We have gotten a lot better since the last time we played them,” said coach Erik Olson. “We struggled with our decision making and we struggled with our attack, but we have really come into our own now.”

CMU has not lost a match at home this season (4-0). The team is on a three-match win streak.

Junior outside hitter Lauren Krupsky hit for 26 kills in the last two home matches. The team won both in straight sets.

Central’s defense outdug its

last two op-ponents 82-56. Its last two op-ponents also failed to reach an attack per-centage higher than .100.

Since play-ing EMU the first time, freshman middle blocker Danielle Gotham has moved from the middle to the right side. The move has made her more of a force on offense.

“I have played both positions before, but I feel like I have been clicking in practice better since moving,” Gotham said. “I’m really excited to get another chance to play Eastern.”

eMU strUgglesEastern Michigan (3-22, 2-8

Mid-American Conference) is

A voLLEyBaLL | 7A

Danielle Gotham

By Dave JonesSenior Reporter

Senior quarterback Dan LeFe-vour was named a semifinalist Monday for the Davey O’Brien Award, given to the nation’s top quarterback this season.

“I think sometimes, statis-tics are overrated. It’s what you do for your football team, your football program and your win-loss record,” said coach Butch Jones. “You look at what (LeFe-vour’s) been able to accomplish in his four years here, and I think it speaks for itself.”

LeFevour joins 14 other quar-terbacks around the nation who also were named Monday — notables include USC freshman Matt Berkley, Penn State senior Daryll Clark, Notre Dame junior Jimmy Clausen, Florida senior Tim Tebow and Texas senior

Colt McCoy.“It’s nice

to be recog-nized,” LeFe-vour said. “O bv i o u s l y, that speaks to the team suc-cess we’ve had so far this year (and) the kind of things we’ve been able to do the past few years.”

Three finalists will be cho-sen Nov. 23 after a fan vote, and the award will be given out at the Home Depot ES-PNU College Football Awards Show on Dec. 10.

Voting takes place at vo-teobrien.org. It will run through 1 p.m. Nov. 21, the day before the three finalists

Dan LeFevour

A o’BriEn | 7A

[cm-life.com/category/sports]

Seniors Stephanie Martin and Amanda Waugh have been startersfor CMU since arriving. But this year, they are coming off the bench in a showing of ...

Page 7: Oct. 28, 2009

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Central michigan life || Wednesday, oct. 28, 2009 || 7A

By tim ottuschAssistant Sports Editor

CMU men’s basketball coach Ernie Zeigler could not express how happy he is to start the season with a full, healthy roster at Tues-day’s Media Day.

Last season, CMU started its season with several play-ers out due to injury and in-eligibility. The team failed to develop a solid nucleus.

Later, the Chippewas lost senior forward Chris Keller-mann to injury just seven games in, further shortening the team’s depth at forward. Junior Marko Spica was al-ready out with an injury.

But this season, Zeigler said he has a full, healthy roster heading into his fourth season.

“When you come to prac-tice and everyone’s on the floor, you realize it’s not a

luxury, it’s a blessing,” he said.

The team r e t u r n s Kellermann and fellow seniors Jor-dan Bitzer, Robbie Har-man and Brandon Ford, juniors Antonio Weary and Marko Spica and sophomore Nick Jordan. Redshirt fresh-man Zach Saylor returns as well, following a medical redshirt in 2008-09.

Spica and Kellermann re-turn after medical redshirts last season. Zeigler said the versatility they bring will go a long way in helping the team.

“Both of them bring abil-ity to score the basketball,” Zeigler said.

newcoMersAfter an offseason that

had two players graduate, four leave on mutual terms, an assistant coach leave and one player released from the team, CMU adds

seven new players and a new coach to the program.

Incoming freshmen in-clude Joe Estrada, Finis Craddock, Tyler Brown and Sean Day. Juniors Amir Rashid and Jalin Thomas are in their first season at CMU after transferring from junior colleges.

Thomas said the group of incoming players have fit in well with the existing roster.

“We’re all gelling really well,” he said.

CMU’s first exhibition game is against Marygrove at 4:30 p.m. Sunday in Rose Arena.

The team starts the sea-son with five straight home games, the first two being exhibition. CMU’s home opener is against Princeton at noon Nov. 14 in Rose Arena.

“Opening the season at home, I think, is going to be key for us, hoping to cata-pult ourselves into having a good start,” Zeigler said.

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m e N ’ s b a s k e t b a l l

roster intact as season set to begin

Ernie Zeigler

Zeigler looking forward to returningSpica, Kellermann

Coach Tom Anagnost said part of what makes Eastern such a good team is the pa-tience it shows on the field.

“They are very patient,” he said. “They are an excel-lent defensive team and out-standing offensive team, and obviously they are in the spot

where they are because of their great coaches.”

The Eagles rotate their two junior goalkeepers, Maggie Manville and Monique Bu-dani. Manville and Budani are respectively second and third in the MAC in goals-against average and save percentage.

Eastern also is riding a five-game unbeaten streak.

[email protected]

soccer |continued from 6a

Central looks to end MAC title drought

By Aaron McMannStaff Reporter

The banner for the 1983-84 Mid-American Conference championship hanging in the rafters of Rose Arena haunts women’s basketball coach Sue Guevara.

The team has not won a con-ference title since then.

“We have a tough climb in the MAC ... expectations are high, but we’re ready,” Guevara said in a press conference Tues-day during CMU basketball media day.

The open-to-competition starting point guard position was one of the major topics ad-dressed. The spot was left va-cant following a season-ending injury to MAC Freshman of the Year Brandie Baker.

“It’s difficult for her to watch,” Guevara said.

Angel Chan, the team’s start-ing guard last season, gradu-ated in the spring.

Seniors Kendra Holman and Heidi Warczinsky, junior Ca-mille Ramsey and freshman Jalisa Olive are battling for the position.

“I’ve been working hard, playing hard and trying to min-imize my mistakes so I can get some playing time,” Olive said.

While not officially naming an early frontrunner for the spot quite yet, Guevara said she really likes Holman.

“Right now, it’s a day-to-day basis,” she said.

issUes addressedIssues that plagued CMU last

season, defense and rebound-ing, also were addressed.

“These are two areas we’re working on,” Guevara said. “(It’s) something that has been stressed every day in practice.”

Despite averaging 78.3 points per game during the 2008-09 season, fourth in the nation, the team held opponents to 75 points per game. The Chippe-was also were outrebounded 42 to 38.6 per game last season.

“It’s no surprise that we’re a

scoring team from last year’s stats,” said senior forward Brit-ni Houghton. “We’re just work-ing on emphasizing defense.”

Guevara, in her third year as head coach at CMU, stressed a strong non-conference sched-ule to help get the team ready for MAC play.

CMU travels to DePaul and Illinois, hosts Georgetown and Louisville, and will participate in the Miami Holiday Tourna-ment (with Texas as one of its opponents) before beginning conference play Jan. 6 at East-ern Michigan.

The game against George-town, the annual “Recess in Rose” game that attracts more than 4,000 elementary and middle school students, on Nov. 25 is already sold out. The game last season against Val-paraiso drew a women’s basket-ball record crowd of 4,478 fans to Rose Arena.

The women’s team will play an exhibition game at 2 p.m. Sunday against Saginaw Valley State at Rose Arena.

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w o m e N ’ s b a s k e t b a l l

on a seven-game losing streak and is in last place in the West Division.

The Eagles are 0-5 in five-set matches this season. The team also is 0-11 in road matches.

The Chippewas have beaten the Eagles in four of the last five matches between the two teams.

Central’s 6-4 MAC record has it in a tie for second in the West

Division. It is two games behind Western Michigan.

“We want to put ourselves in good position to catch Western and win a division title,” Olson said. “But for now, we want to make sure we put ourselves in a good seed for the tournament.”

CMU has a one-day break af-ter the match against EMU be-fore playing Kent State in Rose Arena.

The match against Kent State begins at 7 p.m. Saturday.

[email protected]

riValry | continued from 6a

Team seeks first championshipsince 1983-84

file photoCoach Sue Guevara led the women to an 18-14 record last season.

will be announced.LeFevour, through eight

games this season, has thrown for 1,696 yards and has complet-ed 70 percent of his passes (156-of-223) with 16 touchdowns and four interceptions to lead the Mid-American Conference in passer efficiency (153.9). He also has rushed for 522 yards on 112 attempts with nine touchdowns, leading Central Michigan to sev-en consecutive wins — 7-1 over-all and 5-0 in the MAC.

Over his four seasons as the Chippewas’ starter, LeFevour has gained 13,920 yards, which puts him fifth all-time on the Football Bowl Subdivision ca-reer list. He has thrown for 90 touchdowns, rushed for 41 and caught a touchdown pass in his career.

Oklahoma’s Sam Bradford won the award — which has been handed out since 1981 — last season, and past winners in-clude Steve Young, Troy Aikman, Peyton Manning, Vince Young and Tebow.

“I’m just very, very excited for him,” Jones said. “(I’m) very proud for him and his family, and (proud) to see all his hard work and all of his dedication

and his efforts coming into play right now.”

[email protected]

o’brieN | continued from 6a

Page 8: Oct. 28, 2009

ww

Get the skinny on the latest

housing information!

MONDAYNovember 2nd

THEHOUSING

FAIR Presented byCentral Michigan Life

8A || Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009 || Central Michigan Life www.cm-life.com[NEws]

By Emily GroveStaff Reporter

Phi Sigma Pi hopes to make the consequences of drunk driving seem real to students Thursday.

A panel discussion, “Learn the Facts and Stay Sober in Oc-tober,” will take place at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Charles V. Park Library Auditorium to raise awareness about the issue.

“We want to make drunk driv-ing a reality. A lot of people blow it off and don’t get the real effect unless they hear personal testi-mony,” said Walled Lake senior Rachel Pelto, president of Phi Sigma Pi.

The panel consists of a police officer, a paramedic, four people with personal testimonies, a representative

from Mothers Against Drunk Driving and a representa-tive from Students Against Destructive Decisions. The panelists will share informa-tion about how drunk driv-ing has affected their lives and why they are passionate about preventing it.

“For our fraternity every semester, we have to do a risk management program, and we thought this would be a great event because it corresponds with Sober in October,” said Kimball senior Tiffany Makowski, member of Phi Sigma Pi.

Pelto is hopeful it will have an impact on anyone who at-tends. Some of the testimony will come from people who lost siblings and children to drunk driving, she said.

Jeffrey Ballard, Central Michigan University commu-nity police officer, is on the panel to discuss the negative legal consequences of drunk driving, as well as his personal

experience being on scene for drunk driving accidents.

sadd startIng?Brooklyn junior Sam Br-

zozowski wants to start a S.A.D.D. chapter at Central Michigan University and will discuss sign-up for any-one interested.

“I’m really adamant about starting this up. My goal is to start S.A.D.D. up as a (reg-istered student organiza-tion),” Brzozowski said.

For more information on the panel, contact Brzozowski at [email protected].

[email protected]

Brooklyn junior looking to start S.A.D.D. chapter

Honors fraternity seeks to shed light on drunk driving Thursday

A similar group was formed to deliberate on the upgrade from XP to Windows Vista.

“Like many other businesses, we chose not to go with Vista,” Rehm said.

no extra costRehm said the Windows 7 li-

cense would not cost the school any more than the current con-tract for XP.

“The license is about $300,000 a year,” he said.

The license covers OS up-grades, Office suites, the Portal and other Microsoft products and services.

Tim Gramza, the College of Humanities and Social and Be-havioral Sciences manager of technology, is the head of the Beta Subcommittee. The group is comprised of Gramza and ap-proximately six other technol-ogy experts on campus.

“So far, (Windows 7 is) great. We haven’t run into too many red flags,” Gramza said.

While all current signs point to a recommendation in favor of making the switch, it is unlikely all PCs on campus will

convert as soon as possible.“I don’t anticipate a campus-

wide rollout of Windows 7. Each individual tech manager is probably going to decide,” Gramza said.

Many programs are already starting to make the switch.

While some computers on campus cannot support Win-dows 7 and some departments may want to stick with XP for a while, Gramza is confident it will eventually become the standard.

“If there were going to be any larger rollouts, it would prob-ably be next fall,” he said.

The Beta Subcommittee also is forming a group to inves-tigate Apple’s Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard as an option for widescale upgrades for Macs on campus.

He said the Mac incremental upgrade scheme tends to make it easier to test and rec-ommend than the larger and less common Win-dows upgrades.

“I think there will be less delib-eration,” Gramza said.

[email protected]

windows 7|continued from 3A

been talking about,” said Cin-dy Douglas, vice president of business development and attraction for the Michigan Economic Development Corporation. “If there aren’t business to create jobs to employee you and me, we don’t have a tax base.”

Stanley Pruss, director of the Michigan Department of Energy, Labor and Economic Growth, felt the key upcom-ing jobs would be in energy, life sciences and homeland security.

However, the panelists did not agree new jobs would be the only thing the state needs to improve its economic state.

“There are a small, but growing, number of employ-ers that would say we are suffering from self-inflicted wounds,” said Rich Studley, president and CEO of the Michigan Chamber of Com-merce.

tax problemsStudley said one of the

self-inflicted wounds is the Michigan Business Tax, an-other is spending more on corrections than higher edu-cation.

“There’s only four states ... spending more on cor-rections than higher educa-tion,” said Michael Boulus, executive director of the

President’s Council of State Universities of Michigan. “We lead the country in dis-investing in higher educa-tion.”

Several panelists said the movement of people out of Michigan because of a lack of jobs is creating a crunch in tax dollar investment.

“I like what (Boulus) said about how we cannot have both a low tax and high in-vestment in higher educa-tion,” said Niles junior Grace Volrath.

Pruss said Michigan resi-dents are going to be forced to make difficult decisions on the state’s future economy.

“What do you ultimately value? There is no easy solu-tion here,” Pruss said.

[email protected]

griffin forum|continued from 3A

By Kelli AmelingStaff Reporter

A Buick Regal caught on fire Tuesday night in Lot 28 near Foust Hall.

The first call came to authori-ties at 7:49 p.m., said Central Michigan University Police Sgt. Christopher Pryor.

The fire was put out as soon as the fire department arrived.

“I saw flames shooting out of the front of the car,” said Fran-kenmuth junior Kraig Hauben-stricker.

Haubenstricker said he noticed the smoke from the Music Building and was curi-ous. When he got to the car, he called 9-1-1.

The accident closed down Preston Street from the Charles V. Park Library to Mission Street and opened up after the car had been towed by a local company,

Pryor said.Sgt. Michael Dunham of the

Mount Pleasant Fire Department said when they arrived, the car was engulfed in flames. They were able to put out the fire quickly, but there was a lot of smoke damage, which ruined the inside of the car, Dunham said.

“This particular car is com-pletely destroyed,” he said.

The fire started and stayed mainly under the hood, Dun-ham said.

He does not know what caused the fire because there was too much damage done to the car.

No one was hurt during the accident, but there was damage done to a car directly adjacent to it, Dunham said.

“Things can be replaced, but people cannot,” Dunham said.

Grand Rapids junior Hilary Kavanaugh, the owner of the car, said she could not prevent the fire.

[email protected]

No one injured in Lot 28

Matthew StephenS/presentatiOn editOrGrand Rapids junior Hilary Kavanaugh stands in Lot 28 near Foust Hall Tuesday night as firefighters extinguish a small engine fire that damaged her car.

Car’s engine catches fire Tuesday night

VidEoCheck cm-life.com for a video on the car fire.

Page 9: Oct. 28, 2009

Hauntings

CAMPUS VIBE[cm-life.com/category/vibe]

Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009

ghost hunters | Student group formed to seek strange activity in area, 3B

Central Michigan Life

B

Legend has it a young woman was killed in Warriner Hall many years after her head was crushed by an elevator.

The legends claim the girl’s ghost haunts Warriner Hall and, in one of the windows, lights can be seen flickering and her silhouette can be seen.

Is this just an urban legend?

For more haunted stories from Mount Pleasant, check cm-life.com

w Mill Pond Parkw Cobb Hall fourth floorw The Mount Pleasant Centerw Riverside Cemetary w The Carlin Alumni House

By Randi ShafferStaff Reporter

For students willing to put a few extra miles on their cars and leave Mount Pleasant, houses of terror and imagina-tion await in the mid-Michi-gan area:

AshleyTerror on 27 is the clos-

est haunted house to Mount Pleasant. Located a few miles south on US-127 at 8691 S. Bagley Road, Terror on 27 is home to two different haunts.

The first haunt offered is a traditional walk through a house with special effects. The second is a haunted, fog-gy maze.

Ross Fowler, co-producer of Terror on 27, said the attrac-tion offers high startles and low gore.

“We have some pretty spe-cial effects and a very large, talented staff,” he said.

Terror on 27 is open from dark until midnight Friday and Saturday, and from dark until 10 p.m Sunday.

BAy CityEast of Mount Pleasant,

Bay City is home to two fea-tured haunted houses: the Haunted Temple at 700 N. Madison Ave and the Red Barn of Terror at 1055 S. Pine Road.

Joy Butler, executive direc-tor of the Bay Arts Council, produces the Haunted Tem-ple and said visitors to the attraction would have the op-portunity to wander through

a masonic temple, getting a chance to see history and a glimpse into the past as it would have been.

“It’s really an interactive event, not a typical haunted house,” Butler said. “I call it a thinking-person’s haunted house.”

The Haunted Temple is open from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday nights until Halloween weekend.

Also in Bay City is the Red Barn of Terror, 1055 S. Pine Road. The two-story barn features different rooms with between 45 and 60 monsters working inside. The house takes between 20 and 30 min-utes to venture through.

“It’s a pretty intense haunt,” said Red Barn of Terror repre-sentative Nancy Meyer.

The Red Barn of Terror is open Fridays and Saturdays.

By Joe BorlikSenior Reporter

EDITOR’S NOTE: CM Life talked with several commu-nity members and students about different myths with local hauntings.

CArlin Alumni houseKim Walrath has worked

in the Carlin Alumni House for almost 12 years and can recall four separate in-stances of unexplainable behavior in the building.

Walrath works as a se-nior specialist clerk for annual giving and does work with Phone-A-Thon to raise money.

She came in one Satur-day by herself about three years ago to work on a project. During off-hours, the alarm is set and will go off within 30 seconds of a person entering. There-fore, whoever enters the building must shut the alarm off manually within 30 seconds of coming in.

Walrath said she had just entered the building and

was preparing to shut off the alarm when she heard a faint conversation between and man and a woman.

“The exact second I shut off the alarm, the conversation immediately stopped,” she said. “The alarm wouldn’t have been set if someone was here.”

Walrath said she checked all over the building and nobody was there. She said the conversation may have ended because the ghosts knew someone was in the building.

Walrath said about eight years ago, two Phone-A-Thon supervisors saw a “floating white thing” drift through the air in the back of the building during off-hours.

“They got out of there as quick as they could,” she said.

Mount Pleasant home to some eerie sites

photo illustration by jake may/staff photographerCampus is filled with stories of haunted buildings, one of which is the oldest standing building at Central Michigan University — Warriner Hall. A 19-year-old cafeteria employee, Theresa Schumacher, was killed at 10:30 a.m. May 29, 1937, when her head was trapped within a small window in the door leading to the elevator shaft. It was determined to be death by strangulation. Legend has it, Schumacher still haunts the building, and many people have verified sightings of her ghost.

Warriner Hall ghost ‘keeps an eye’ on historic building

Area haunted houses offer scares, spooks

According to a June 2, 1937, edition of Central State Life (the predecessor of Cen-tral Michigan Life), Theresa Elizabeth Schumacher, a 19-year-old cafeteria worker from Nottawa Township, was killed May 29 after her head was trapped within a small window in a door leading to an elevator shaft. She died from strangulation.

It remains unclear as to why her head was in the door. There were no wit-nesses to the incident.

Cindy Smith worked as a custodian in Warriner Hall throughout the ’90s and said she has encountered the ghost many times.

She said the elevator would open and close by itself.

“There was one time, I was in the elevator and the

door flew open,” she said. “The ghost came on and went down to the basement with me.”

Smith said she saw the ghost flash across the stage in Plachta Auditorium and her vacuum would occasion-ally turn on and off by itself.

Smith eventually got used to the ghost and would even be friendly with her.

“I would ask if she want-ed to help me clean and would give it a rag to help,” she said.

is it reAl?Keith Voeks, assistant di-

rector of University Events, had a similar experience while working with director Bob Ebner.

Mid-Michigan Haunts

w Darkside Tours — Saginaw

w Haunted Library — Hubbardston

w Sundance HauntedHouse and Hayride — Grand Ledge

w Phantasmagoria Haunted House — Okemos

w The Haunted Jail — Big Rapids

l o o k i n g t o g e t s c a r e d ?

By Chris AllenStaff Reporter

The traditions of Halloween may change as a person be-comes older.

But watching scary movies sticks with every age group.

People cannot get enough of the feeling of fear. Countless re-makes of classic movies hit the box offices every year and, de-spite having the same villains, there are some key aspects that have changed in comparison to the originals.

In the past, American horror movies did not really have any gory scenes. Gore was more popular with Italian horror filmmakers, said Hillsdale se-nior Cooper Vaughn.

Since then, a lot has changed, such as censorship changes and advances with technol-ogy. In the 1960s, the concept of censorship had changed, allowing filmmakers to show more than what they used to be able to show, said Ken Jurk-iewicz, associate professor of broadcast and cinematic arts.

The censorship code and technology together allows for directors to show the goriest and most sexual/revealing scenes, he said. Technology also has helped increase the gory scenes.

A ChAnging villAin The idea of villains has always

been a key concept to horror films, but there have been some subtle changes concerning hor-ror villains. In the past, the vil-lains, such as Frankenstein’s monster or Dracula, come from outside. Frankenstein is built in

a lab and haunts a surrounding village. Dracula is from Tran-sylvania and lurks through the darkness on outsiders.

Gore, sex prevalentHorror movies have evolved over time

h a l l o w e e n f i l m s

Top-grossing horror/thriller films

before/in 1990

w Jaws —$260 million

w Ghostbusters — $238,632,124

w Ghost — $217,631,306

w The Exorcist — $204,632,868

w Fatal Attraction — $156,645,693

Top-grossing horror/thriller

films after 1990

w Jurassic Park — $357,067,947

w The Sixth Sense — $293,506,292

w I Am Legend — $256,386,216

w The Lost World: Jurassic Park — $229,086,679

w Signs — $227,965

A VILLAInS | 4B

Local

A HAUnTED HOUSES | 2B

A HAUnTED ArEAS In TOwn | 3BA wArrInEr | 3B

This week’s Campus VIBE shares several haunted stories around Mount Pleasant. Have a good story to tell about a ghost or other strange paranormal activity you’ve witnessed? Fan us on Facebook and share it!

S H A R E YO U R G H OST STO R I ES !

cm-life.comCheck the Web site for a video of Legends of the Dark.

By Joe Borlik | Senior Reporter

Page 10: Oct. 28, 2009

Rose Rowdie Fright Night

TONIGHT!October 28

ROSE ARENA

7:15pm ROSE ROWDIE TRAINING

8:00pm FRIGHT NIGHT

GET A FIRST LOOK AT CMU BASKETBALL

MEET THE 2009-10 MEN’S & WOMEN’S BASKETBALL TEAMS

Talks From...COACH GUEVARA & COACH ZEIGLER

SPECIAL ROSE ROWDIE TRAINING SESSIONBEGINS @ 7:15PM IN ROSE ARENA

Learn how to be a 2009-2010 Rowdie, Chalk talk with the team, and eat with the Men’s and Women’s Basketball teams, Coach Ziegler, & Coach Guevara

GET A FREE ADIDAS T-SHIRT AND PIZZA!

EVENT SPONSORED BY:

Central Michigan AthleticsCMU Bookstore

TM

TOP FIVES

gOOgLE ADDS SOCIAL-nETWOrkrESULTS TO WEb SEArCHES

TweeTs of The week

Follow @CMLIFE on Twitter.com

nEW STUFFDvDs

1. “ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs”

2. “orphan"3. “Whatever Works”

CDs

1. “she Wolf” Shakira

2. “live at olympia” R.E.M.

3. “strict Joy” The Swell Season

viDeo gAmes1. “ratchet and Clank

Future: A Crack in time” PS3

2. “DJ hero” PS3, X360, Wii 3. “tekken 6” PS3, X360

EnTErTAInMEnT nEWS rAnT

Brad CanzeSenior Reporter

“SAW VI” HAS LEgS CUT OFF

bEAT WrITEr PICkSmusic

Ben frost’s newest album

Having a hard time picking out a good album to scare away the neighborhood trick-or-treaters? Look no further than ben Frost’s newest album, by The Throat. The album attacks with the same ferocity and thirst-for-blood that drives the pack of wolves that adorn the album’s cover. Com-prised of an array of electronic and acoustic instruments, Frost’s album is not only uncompro-misingly brutal and terrifying, but also brilliantly composed and tastefully executed. Don’t listen to this in a dark room; it’s enough to send even the bravest neighborhood brat running home with wet pants!

-ben Weissenborn

video games

Dragon Age origins (PC, X360, Ps3)

Who didn’t like knights of the Old republic and Mass Effect?

but as you might be aware, their developer bioWare got their start making top-down rPgs based off of Dungeons and Dragons settings including the popular baldur’s gate and neverwinter nights series. They returned to their own “origins” with the experience they’ve gotten from their recent blockbusters in an original gritty swords and sorcery game, which allows deep and mean-ingful character choices. If you’ve got a hankering for some hack and slash goodness in a lovingly crafted bioWare epic, look no further than Dragon Age Origins. The Dragon will come on nov. 3.

-Connor Sheridan

Box oFFiCe1. “Paranormal Activity”

$21.1 million

2. “saw vi” $14.1 million

3. “Where the Wild things Are” $14 million

4. “law Abiding Citizen” $12.4 million

5. “Couples retreat” $10.6 million

singles1. “Down”

Jay Sean ft. Lil’ Wayne

2. “Whatcha say” Jason DeRulo

3. “Party in the u.s.A.” Miley Cyrus

4. “run this town” Jay-Z, Rihanna & Kanye West

5. “3” Britney Spears

AlBums1. ‘Crazy love”Michael Buble

2. “twilight: new moon” Various Artists

3. “the Blueprint 3” Jay-Z

4. “love is the Answer” Barbra Streisand

5. “the time of our lives” (EP) Miley Cyrus

2B || Wednesday, oct. 28, 2009 || Central michigan life[CAmpuS CollAge]

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Google launched a new product Monday that will allow users to find recent-ly updated public online postings by a person’s net-work of friends, colleagues or media sources.

The goal of “Social Search,” which came Mon-day afternoon at google.com/experimental, is to find relevant postings on Twitter, in blogs or other public Web content pub-lished by a user’s circle of online colleagues.

Social Search would highlight content posted by those people every time a user does a Google search.

“We want to return a lot more relevant results to us-ers, results that are either offered or linked by their social circle,” said Google Fellow Amit Singhal.

A Social Search query for “Bridge School Benefit,” Neil Young’s annual acous-

tic fundraiser in Mountain View, Calif., wouldn’t just produce the home page for the concert. It would also highlight any tweets, blog postings or newspaper re-views produced by a user’s designated network of friends or media sources.

Google considers today’s launch an experiment and is asking users for feedback. But the company says the results it had using Social Search internally were “ex-citing” because they allow web users to save time by finding content posted by the people or sources they are most interested in.

Marissa Mayer, Google’s vice president for search products and user experi-ence, demonstrated a ver-sion of Social Search at the Web 2.0 summit in San Francisco last week.

“I think it demonstrates our commitment to inno-vating in search,” Mayer said last week.

CorunnAEmma Drive in Corunna

offers McCurdy’s Revenge: a university-themed haunted house, complete with class-rooms and labs.

McCurdy’s Revenge serves as a fundraiser for the cre-ative problem solving or-ganization Odyssey of the Mind.

Organizer Dan Flynn said guests come to experience the thrill of the attraction and the mind tricks that ensue.

“Our characters do a lot of interacting with people in the haunted house,” Flynn said.

McCurdy’s Revenge is open from 7 to 11:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and 7 to 9 p.m. Sundays through October.

[email protected]

haunted houses|continued from 1B

The age of “Saw” in the horror movie world is

over.“Saw VI,” with a weekend

gross of $14 million, is the first “Saw” to take less than $30 million in its opening weekend at the box-office since the original film, ac-cording to Boxofficemojo.com.

That film was considered a hit in the longterm, gain-ing steam through press and word of mouth, which is now the case with “Paranormal Activity.”

“Paranormal” saw a wide release this weekend after only playing in a handful of cities, and took the number one spot with $21 million.

The lackluster “Saw” only beat out last week’s “Where The Wild Things Are,” by about $100 thousand.

After being thoroughly trounced by a $15,000 movie, perhaps Jigsaw will finally stay dead.

Page 11: Oct. 28, 2009

Two other supervisors said they were getting ready to leave a night shift and were turning on the alarm when they heard a man’s voice chuckling right next to them, Walrath said.

Walrath also remembers a Saturday morning years ago when she came in to work on a project by herself and heard a toi-let flush loudly from the basement.

She ran up the stairs, looked around, made several phone calls and can only conclude she was alone. She asked maintenance workers if the toilet could flush by itself and they said it was unlikely.

Walrath said she be-lieves paranormal activ-ity can exist and that it would be interesting to bring a psychic to the Carlin Alumni House and see what they have to say about it.

“I think the toilet is the only possible thing that could be debunked,” she said.

RiveRside CemeteRyThe Central Michi-

gan Paranormal Society investigated Riverside Cemetery, 714 W. Broad-way St., over Labor Day and was shocked with the results.

Often skeptical dur-ing their investigations, the group initially was not expecting much. But what they saw is some-thing they will never for-get.

Grosse Ile sophomore Kara Taylor said the group arrived at the cem-etery at about 11:30 p.m. She said they saw what appeared to be a man crouching over one of the gravestones, leaning against it.

Taylor said the man then took a few steps to-ward them and started running the other direc-tion.

The man’s color start-ed changing, Taylor said.

“He was black then he turned white,” she said. “We could see right through him.”

Taylor said she was shocked to have seen what may have been a real ghost.

“I remember thinking, ‘This can’t be real,’” Taylor said.

She said she felt a sad

and distressed presence in the man and it felt like they were invading his privacy.

“I could feel my heart beating in my arms,” said Grosse Ile sophomore Lisa Semetko, president of the Central Michigan Paranor-mal Society.

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cm-life.com/category/vibe[campus VIBE]

Central Michigan Life || Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009 || 3B

By Joe BorlikSenior Reporter

One student group at Central Michi-

gan University wants to discover the truth about paranormal activity.

Grosse Ile sophomore Lisa Semetko formed the group “The Central Michigan Paranormal Society” over the sum-mer because she could not find any similar groups at CMU.

The organization ini-tially started as a Face-book group and, within the first day, Semetko said about 50 people joined.

“I was expecting like 12,” she said. “The inter-est in it was spectacu-lar.”

They have completed three official investiga-tions at Mill Pond Park, 607 S. Adams St., to mixed results.

They also visited Riverside Cemetery, 714 W. Broadway St., over Labor Day, which resulted in the find-ing of what may have been a ghost.

During investigations, the group uses electro-magnetic field detec-tors, electric thermom-eters and digital voice recorders to detect the presence of paranormal activity.

Semetko said she has always had an interest in this type of thing. When she was 16, she went ghost-hunting at a bird sanctuary in her hometown. When she arrived home, she got sick and thought she saw a shadow lurking in her room.

“I was really freaked out,” she said.

moRe Hauntings Group member Kara Taylor,

a Gross Ile sophomore, also experienced what may have been paranormal activity.

Taylor and Semetko would ghost hunt at local cemeteries together in high school, but it goes further than that.

Taylor’s great-aunt died in her house and she said since then, she has heard footsteps, random whispering and even the weight of someone sitting at the edge of her bed.

On two separate occasions, someone has called her name into her ear, she said.

“It was like someone just said ‘Kara’ right in my ear,” she said. “I got freaked out, called my brother and we searched my room.”

Although Taylor and Se-metko believe in the possi-bility of paranormal activity, they do remain skeptical and said the group mostly focus-es on debunking myths.

Researching the urban leg-ends, such as asking people involved in the stories and reading old newspaper ar-ticles, is Semetko’s favorite part.

She said they hope to do future investigations at Sloan, Warriner and Grawn halls, along with the Mount Pleas-ant Center, 1400 W. Pickard St.

Group member Benjamin Brodie, a Lakeville freshman, remains skeptical on the sub-ject of ghosts.

“I’ve seen some weird things, but they can always be explained,” he said. “I would love to be proven wrong.”

The group meets at 8 p.m. Mondays at Kaya Coffee and Tea Co., 1029 S. University Ave. It has yet to reach of-ficial status as a registered student organization.

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Ghost hunters

pa r a n o r m a l s o c i e t y

Photos by Libby MarCh/staff phOtOgrapherMembers of the Paranormal Society make their way into the dark in a search for ghostly activity Saturday at Mill Pond Park.

Student group formed to seek strange activity in Mount Pleasant

Clockwise, from left: Grosse Ile sophomore Kara Taylor, Lakeview freshman Benjamin Brodie, Grosse Ile sophomore Mark Kazmierski, Sterling Heights junior Veronica Rohr, and Grosse Ile sophomore Lisa Semetko of the Paranormal Society discuss their ghost hunting adventures after an investigation of Mill Pond Park Saturday night at Cranker’s Coney Island on Pickard Street.

haunted areas in town|continued from 1B

“I’ve seen some weird things, but they can always be explained. I would

love to be proven wrong.”Benjamin Brodie, member of the Central Michigan

paranormal society and Lakeville freshman

Page 12: Oct. 28, 2009

4B || Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009 || Central Michigan Life cm-life.com/category/vibe[campus VIBE]

One night in 1982, they were taking down a show set on the stage of Warriner Hall’s Plachta Auditorium.

It was late at night and they were by themselves. The doors had already been locked. Then, out of nowhere, a shadow-like apparition ran across the stage.

“We saw a shadow move across the stage and we were out of there in no less than 30 seconds,” Voeks said.

He said in the 1980s, the stage had a fire curtain, which worked as

a wall that would come down over the stage and protect the audience from a fire if one broke out.

Voeks said the fire curtain would malfunction by falling and crushing things.

“We would constantly find broken chairs and music stands,” he said.

One night, Voeks said he saw the fire curtain right on top of the piano.

But the piano remained un-harmed with only a layer of dust on the surface from the speed of the fire curtain.

“Theresa was playing with us,” Voeks said. “At the very least the piano lid would have been broken.”

Keeping an eye outVoeks said he has received

many reports of seeing lights from the sixth set of windows on Warriner Hall.

But that cannot be possible, he said. The sixth set of lights is an empty space of only about five feet between the fifth floor and the roof.

No lights were ever installed.He said it is not beyond the

realm of possibility that Schu-macher spirit could revisit the place of her death.

“I do believe Theresa is a spirit that keeps an eye on Warriner,” Voeks said.

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continued from 1B

warriner|

By Lonnie allenStaff Reporter

Larzelere Residential Hall Director Andrea Purrenhage cannot bring herself to en-ter her students’ creation of mind-bending shock.

It is Larzelere’s theme ar-eas in the students’ haunted maze in the hall’s terrace that will keep Purrenhage out, she said.

There is a room dedicated to clowns, the “Saw” movie and other rooms that will twist reality to psychotic screams.

The maze is the brainchild of Warren freshman Shelley Croud and Caledonia sopho-more Kevin Terpstra. They said they have the mojo and the volunteers to top last year’s blood-curdling cries.

“It will be psychologically disturbing,” Terpstra said. “We are definitely hoping to up the ante from last year.”

The maze is open from 7 p.m. to midnight Thursday and from 7 to 11 p.m. Friday. This is the seventh year of La-zelere’s haunted maze in the terrace.

BeHind tHe sCaResCroud cannot wait for the

opening of the haunted maze, she said. She just woke up one day with the idea to add to the maze. She and the group talk-ed over the twisted theme and are now working on bringing it to life.

“This one you will have to wait and see for yourself,” Croud said. “It is kind of sick, but that is what people like to see nowadays.”

The admission is $2 for stu-dents and adults. It will be free for children, but Croud warns the maze is not child-friendly. Children can come through the PG version set up in the beginning of the maze, she said.

Children will be diverted be-fore they enter the real intense parts of the maze, Croud said.

Croud and her volunteers began construction Sun-

day and will be ready for the opening, she said. Terpstra hopes by using the whole ter-race this year more people will come out.

Last year, more than 100 people went through the maze, Terpstra said. This year, they hope moving the days to Thursday and Friday instead of Halloween will have a bet-ter turnout.

“We do not want to com-pete with Halloween or Main Street,” Terpstra said.

Besides coming for a real good scare, people also can help a good cause, Croud said. All proceeds will go to the phi-lanthropy the hall supports called Smile Train, which rais-es money for cleft lip and pal-ate treatment.

“A surgery to repair a cleft is $250,” Purrenhage said. “These children are hidden away in third-world countries because of a cleft. Some of those countries believe a cleft is a curse from God so they are hidden away. So a repair changes their lives.”

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North campus hall raising money for Smile Train

Larzelere haunted maze not for the young, easily scared “There was a major shift in

the 60’s though,” Jurkiewicz said. “The monsters, the villains, no longer came from the outside. They came from within now.”

The most successful horror films came during the country’s lowest times, such as the Great Depression and Vietnam War, he said.

“The fears that people had about life during that time were exaggerated into these horror films,” Jurkiewicz said.

The villains in these films,

such as Jason Voorhees and Michael Myers, never seem to die. Even when it seems like the villain will finally die, sure enough, something crazy happens, and the legacy will somehow continue with an-other film.

“Every single movie from the 1960s and 1970s has been remade because a lot of the country’s same fears have resur-faced,” Jurkiewicz said.

Jeffrey Weinstock, associate professor of English language and literature, said some films are neverending.

“I find it tiresome. Directors go out on money-making ven-tures with the sequels, and (the

movies) are being spread too thin,” he said.

It seems as if every Halloween, there is some new continuation of a classic coming out.

The Saw series is one of the more recent films of this genre being dragged on and on. Since 2004, a Saw movie has been released around this spooky time. On its sixth installment, released Saturday, these movies have been long overdue for an ending.

“The first one was great and original. Since then, (the writers) have had to add a lot of things to twist the plot,” Vaughn said.

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villains|continued from 1B