Professional Documents
Culture Documents
1.29.15 Hillsdale Collegian
1.29.15 Hillsdale Collegian
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Phil DeVoe
Collegian Reporter
Center.
The new venue offers space and amenities the
smaller Phillips Auditorium in the Dow Center
couldnt.
The athletic department, the catering, and the
maintenance, and everyone has been really great,
and made the Bierman Center very nice for us,
Director of Programs for External Affairs Matt Bell
said.
Searle Center when it is completed. He, like the
rest of campus, said he is excited to see the new
building, and is certain that the improvements will
help make CCAs better experiences for the students and the visiting donors and parents who attend the conferences.
host the NCAA regional tournament for Division I. The Missouri University Tigers,
2013 SEC football champions, also chose
to use Qualite lights to make their stadium
more professional.
To prepare the University of Phoenix Stadium for the Super Bowl this year, Qualite
teamed up with Ephesus Lighting, a leader
We were contacted by Ephesus and were
able to partner to do the lighting for the Sufour months to complete, Qualite President
Nick Page said.
The University of Phoenix Stadium is big
enough to seat as many as 72,200 fans and
has a retractable roof, which can provide
challenges with regard to lighting.
Each stadium is unique, Page said.
Indoor stadiums are on catwalk systems
throughout the top and are typically larger
venues. Outdoor venues are mainly pole
mounted lights and those tend to vary more.
In addition to providing high-end lighting
solutions in some of the worlds best ven-
new LED lights used to illuminate the University of Phoenix Stadium expend only
310,000 watts of energy compared to the
1.24 million watts needed to power the previous lighting system in the stadium. The
switch to LED lighting will save the stadium
up to 75 percent in energy costs.
fer a 30-year warranty on its products. Its
control an entire stadium full of lights with a
computer or smartphone, and offers GreenStar technology, which is known as the most
available. Furthermore, most of the manufacturing for Qualite occurs in Hillsdale.
We do the engineering, design, quoting,
prewiring, labeling, and pole assembly all
here in Hillsdale, Page said.
As a staple in the lighting industry and
in the city of Hillsdale for almost three decades, Qualite is continuing to grow. After
supplying the college with lights for the
lighting.
According to the company website, the
Chargers
Nathanael Meadowcroft
Assistant Editor
See Qualite A6
College President
Larry Arnn and talk
radio host, lawyer,
and academic Hugh
Hewitt talked about
national security and
The
scheduled
speaker, Bret Stephens, was forced
to cancel due to bad
The CCA ended yesterday with a faculty
take
a sixpoint lead.
In those
last 59 seconds, the Chargers
needed to score seven
points a task which
had just taken more than
(Anders Kiledal/Collegian)
See Basketball A7
INSIDE
Rockwell Lake Lodge re-opens
With a new chef and new management, the lodge re-opened
this month. A3
gifts. B4
(Anders Kiledal/Collegian)
News........................................A1
Opinions..................................A4
City News................................A6
Sports......................................A7
Arts..........................................B1
Features....................................B3
NEWS
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
A2 29 Jan. 2015
come up against people that have radically different views than you do, and Hillsdale kind of sticks
out like a sore thumb. This means we have to go
Unlike competitive speaking at many other colleges, the main goal for these students is not simply winning.
Our team mantra is Truth and Communicasaid. As Hillsdale College students were learning all of these different things about our foundations as a country and being good leaders. So
instead of treating this like a game, were going
to use it as a chance to sharpen our skills in delivering the truth.
Just because the main goal isnt victory, does
not mean that Hillsdale competitive speaking does
not enjoy its fair share of it. All three teams are
having extremely successful seasons, including a
mock trial team that is in the midst of the most
successful season in Hillsdale history.
Campus Security
makes cuts
Hannah Leitner
Design Editor
Braman said. But John was one of my favorites. He was always dependable and very
professional.
Papciaks student experience and dedication to the program made him a prime candidate when this new position opened up at
the college.
Papciak was working as an executive
team leader for Target after graduation, but
admissions job.
ly isnt any other place like Hillsdale, Papciak said. When I came for my interview I
parked in the visitors parking spot, and it really resonated with me. I wanted to be able to
be a part of this legacy again.
After Papciak was hired, he immediately
began contributing new ideas and setting
goals for the student worker admissions prodent call team and student ambassador positions, as well as working on creating some
new opportunities like junior admissions
counselors, graduate ambassadors, and internships. He also hopes to streamline more
of these opportunities and give students the
Every leaves
BAMCO
Evan Carter
Web Editor
NEWS
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
A3 29 Jan. 2015
Marriage debate
to be held
Chris McCaffery
Collegian Reporter
event, said.
OPINION
29 Jan. 2015 A4
33 E. College St.
Hillsdale, MI 49242
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Online: www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Editor in Chief: Morgan Delp
News Editors: Amanda Tindall | Natalie DeMacedo
City News Editor: Macaela Bennett
Opinions Editor: Jack Butler
Sports Editor: Sam Scorzo
Arts Editor: Micah Meadowcroft
Spotlight Editor: Bailey Pritchett
Web Editor: Evan Carter
Photo Editor: Anders Kiledal
Circulation Manager: Phil DeVoe
Ad Managers: Rachel Fernelius | Alex Eaton | Drew Jenkins | Matt
Melchior
Assistant Editors: Sarah Albers | Andrew Egger |
| Nathanael Meadowcroft | Kate Patrick | Ramona Tausz | Emma
Vinton
Photographers: Joel Calvert | Elena Creed | Anders Kiledal | Gianna Marchese | Hailey Morgan | Ben Strickland | Laura Williamson
Faculty Advisers: John J. Miller | Maria Servold
The editors welcome Letters to the Editor but reserve the right to
edit submissions for clarity, length, and style. Letters should be 450
words or less and include your name and number. Send submissions
to [email protected] before Sunday at 6 p.m.
American Sniper
and killing
the other
Andy Reuss
Special to the Collegian
Valerie Copan
Student Columnist
What gets you up in the
morning, Val? my friend asked
when we were out for coffee this
what do you live for? What gets
you excited for life? my friend
tions. Dont get me wrong, Im
not keen on small talk anyhow
and usually welcome these kinds
of questions. But when one of
my high school friends asks me
this sort of thing, I immediately
The Uses of a
Liberal Arts
Education
by Forester
McClatchey
A5 29 Jan. 2015
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
More Protestants should March for Life Tea Partiers disagree with
moderate Republicans
If abortion truly is
one of the greatest evils
of our time, as I have
heard so many evangelicals claim, then we must
stand with our Catholic brothers and sisters
against it.
and 58 percent of African-American
Protestants believed abortion should
be illegal in all or most cases. Even
the 38 percent of the typically more
liberal mainline Protestants who said
abortion should be illegal in all or
ated Americans who responded the
same way. So, why is the March for
Life so dominated by Catholics? Why
does it seem like there are so few
Protestants?
If we truly hold these moral
convictions about abortion, we must
stand up for them. If abortion truly is
one of the greatest evils of our time,
as I have heard so many evangelicals
claim, then we must stand with our
Catholic brothers and sisters against
it. As a Church, we are not called to
JAFFA IS NO DEITY
Sarah Albers
Assistant Editor
Evan Carter
Web Editor
In his well-crafted and rhetoricallypacked opinion (John Boehner can get
the job done, Jan. 23), Michael Lucchese argued that, among other things,
Tea Partiers and moderate Republicans
have the same goals, the actions of
Tea Party members are obstructive and
unnecessary, and that Tea Partiers are
foolish to believe that there is no difference between moderate Republicans
and Democrats. To quote Lucchese: I
Though moderate Republicans and
Tea Partiers are both broadly understood to be politically right-wing, they
are still in many ways fundamentally
different. Generally speaking, moderate Republicans seek to promote the
more right-of-center side of the status
quo. Tea Partiers are reformers, seeking to return American politics to its
constitutional foundations.
Reducing the size of government is
virtually a consensus position on the
right, the only difference being how
much to reduce government. Further,
most politicians on the right support
the Constitution. The difference is
that moderate Republican support of
the Constitution goes only as far as it
is politically advantageous. Take gun
control. While they are certainly to the
right of Democrats on the issue, some
moderates believe that the Second
Amendment is dangerous.
Some moderate Republicans no
longer believe in principle or platform.
Some dont even believe in Constitutional Republicanism, but have instead
been duped into the progressive idea
that America is a democracy. Their
politics have become largely baseless
and, as a result, more focused on the
perpetuation of political power than
the defense of liberty through prin-
Last week, the Collegian noted the death and honored the life
intellectual hero of Hillsdale College. Mike Sabos piece (Harry
is necessarily borne out within a context. A philosophic project takes place in an intricate web of theoretical give-and-take, an
academic milieu from which it is dangerous to extract an author
and his work. To separate the author from his given surroundings
Jaffas argument for the Founders assertion of an abstract and
ahistorical natural law (and, by extension, a system of universal
natural rights) ran explicitly counter to the conservative intelligentsia of the time. Many of them were strict traditionalist or
paleo-conservatives, emphasizing precedent and custom over
(or to the exclusion of) abstraction or principle. The traditionalists contended that there was a certain violent injustice in the
rhetoric of universals to which Lincoln so often appealed.
And so Jaffa responded, making a strong case for the presence
and intelligibility of a natural law paradigm which remained relevant and viable in modern American politics. (His perception of
CITY NEWS
A6 29 Jan. 2015
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Qualite
From A1
looks to do more work for the
campus.
The process developing
ite has an excellent product and
they have been very good to
work with as we look at potential
projects, Hillsdale College Athletics Director Don Brubacher
said in an email.
We would love to install
some new LED lights for the
-
Qualite president Nick Page. Qualite is a local stadium-lighting company that completed the arena lights for Super Bowl XLIX.
(Anders Kiledal/Collegian)
Heres to you...
Support your favorite team and Hillsdale local businesses by choosing Pub & Grub or Broad Street this Super Bowl
Sunday.
Sarah Albers
Director of Hillsdale Economic Development Mary Wolfram said all closings of business impact communities.
Its unfortunate, Wolfram
said. Its a hard thing for surrounding businesses to have
that empty storefront for them.
Shopping is a critical mass.
People come when theres
something to bring them there.
Eventually, for sure, something
will move in there. The market
works. That can take months
sometimes, maybe even a year.
The city
will lose
some of its
color.
Tea has been a big thing, especially with the college students.
Its a nice mix between antiques
and country dcor a unique
place to shop.
The inspiration for Millers
store derived from her family
members interests and talents.
She became interested in antiques from her grandmother,
Suicide
Prevention
Coalition
meeting
Ramona Tausz
Assistant Editor
When a member
of our community
commits suicide,
the whole
community is
impacted.
Brock Lutz
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
basketball
From A1
SPORTS
A7 29 Jan. 2015
BOX SCORES
Mens Basketball
Womens Basketball
Hillsdale: 67
Michigan Tech: 78
Hillsdale: 57
Michigan Tech: 64
Hillsdale: 59
Northern Mich.:58
Hillsdale: 54
Northern Mich.: 57
Season Leaders
Points Per Game:
Kyle Cooper (20.8)
Stedman Lowry (10.8)
Rebounds Per Game:
Cooper (10.7)
Jason Pretzer (3.3)
Assists Per Game:
Zach Miller (6.2)
Cooper (1.9)
Field Goal Percentage:
Cooper (54.4)
Nick Archer (52.0)
Pretzer (50.7)
Season Leaders
Points Per Game:
Megan Fogt (15.0)
Kadie Lowery (9.2)
Rebounds Per Game:
Fogt (9.1)
Allie Dittmer (5.2)
Assists Per Game:
Ashlyn Landherr (2.5)
Madison Berry (2.2)
Field Goal Percentage:
Fogt (59.6)
Dittmer (48.1)
Kayla Geffert (45.9)
Nathanael Meadowcroft:
Root for
Russell
Womens bball
From A8
when the Chargers allowed the
Wildcats to score 12 points in
eight minutes, while only putting
up one Hillsdale point. This run
with 6:30 left on the clock.
With 1:55 left, the Chargers
had battled back and took a onepoint lead.
At that point you have to
basically know that youre not
going to let them score again,
you have to have that mentality,
Charney said. And I dont think
as individuals yet were there.
Unfortunately for the Chargers, they couldnt hold the
Wildcats and the game continued on in a back-and-forth fashion. With 47 seconds left in the
game, the score was tied thanks
to two free throws by senior Megan Fogt. Those were the last
Charger points of the game.
The Wildcats quickly matched
Fogts two free throw points and
pulled ahead by one point. In the
29 January 2015
(Anders Kiledal/Collegian)
Charger Sports
Jessie Fox:
Jessie Fox
Collegian Reporter
The Hillsdale womens basketball team fell short in two
single-digit losses at home last
weekend against teams from the
Upper Peninsula. The Chargers
lost to Michigan Tech 64-57 on
Thursday and fell to Northern
Michigan University 57-54 on
Saturday.
The Chargers now carry an
overall record of 10-5 and a 6-4
record in the GLIAC.
the Chargers entered intermission with a 5-point lead over nationally ranked Michigan Tech.
The second half began with
momentum as junior Kayla Geffert swished a three-pointer and
sophomore Morgan Blair, the
Chargers leading scorer, followed with her own back-to-back
three-pointers.
But soon after, the Chargers
defense began to slip as the Huskies took off.
There was just a short span
Anytime
you
compete
against a Big 10 school, youre
at really quickly, Hillsdale track
Towne said. We are able to go
to those meets now on a regular
basis with a good chunk of kids
because of how much our program has improved.
The Hillsdale indoor track
at Indiana Universitys Gladstein
Fieldhouse running with Big 10
teams at the 2015 Gladstein Invitational.
Junior Emily Oren placed
fourth in the womens mile at the
meet with a time of 4:55.02, the
fastest time among non-Division
I competitors. She was named
GLIAC womens Indoor Track
Athlete of the Week. Oren is now
ranked 2nd for the mile in the
GLIAC and 4th in NCAA Division II.
Freshman Lane White won
the 400 meter dash with a time of
49.06. Colby Clark, also a fresh-
49.86.
The IU meet was a really
good chance for us to compete
with a lot of bigger schools that
we dont get to run into, Clark
said. We also got to experience what its going to be like
at a championship meet because
they have a similar track. I think
theres a lot of people on the team
who got provisional marks and
a good day. And I personally had
a pretty good race in the 400
didnt PR but got to race with
some good talent so that was a
good time.
Junior Corinne Zehner and
the womens 4x400 meter relay
team won their heat with a time
of 3:52.14, earning them 5th
place.
We didnt run as fast as I
think we wanted to or I think our
coach would hope for, but we got
bumped into the second heat and
that was to our disadvantage because we were out in front we
should have had faster people to
race with, Zehner said. Even
without people to run with it was
a really impressive time in my
Sideline
spotlight
opinion.
Senior Joshua Mirth ran the
these schools, but also that Hilling into a team that can and does
compete with these schools.
Its just a different sport and
mostly its limited by scholarship
limitations, Towne said.
Towne explained that while
in collegiate football theres a
difference of 50 scholarships between Division I teams and Division II teams, both Division I and
Division II track teams are limited to 12.6 scholarships.
Theyre not able to keep all
the good players in Division I,
Towne said. Most of our kids
have been recruited by Big 10
schools, especially our scholarship kids. A lot of them have
been offered money by Big 10
schools.
Two weeks ago Charger innaw Valley Universitys Classic,
getting a feel for the facilities and
track that will host the GLIAC
Championships this year. The
team is on rest this week and
will return with a home meet,
the Hillsdale Wide Track Classic,
on Feb. 6 and 7 in the Margot V.
Biermann Center.
record. I had the 200 breaststroke record. I got it my sophomore year, and it was beaten the
end of my junior year. So this
year is redemption year, hopefully.
What motivates you?
Lots of things, obviously. You
love the sport, you love the
team. You do things for so many
years, you cant really imagine
not doing it. And theres always
a reason to be better. Complacency is not my thing.
B1 29 Jan. 2015
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
( Laura Williamson/Collegian)
Hill was attending the annual Associated Collegiate Press conference in Washington, D.C., when
he mistakenly walked into a leca panel discussion on weekend
magazine supplements for daily
newspapers. Although the Collegian was, then as now, a weekly
paper, Hill nevertheless carried
the idea back to Hillsdale with
him and convinced his coworkers to give it a shot.
er Light, published in January
1955, Hill wrote, It is our claim
Things
To do and see
This week
and stuffy noses have been rampant in the past week I think it
came together well.
2-4 p.m.
Mark Mehaffey presents his
watercolor exhibition.
January 31
Professional Artist Series: CANTUS
Markel Auditorium,
Sage Center for the Arts
8 p.m.
Hailed as the premier mens vocal
ensemble in the United States
(Fanfare) and winner of the
prestigious Margaret Hillis Award
for Choral Excellence from Chorus
America, CANTUS enjoys an active
schedule of national tour dates,
subscription concerts in its home of
Minneapolis/St. Paul, educational
outreach programs and recordings.
CANTUS is acknowledged around the
world for its programmatic
versatility, artistic excellence, and
charismatic personality.
(Ticket reservations required)
(Compiled by Andrew Egger)
ARTS
29 Jan. 2015 B2
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Morgan
Delp
One journalists
attempt to crack
IN FOCUS
creative writing
I expected my playwriting
class to consist mostly of theatre
majors, or at least experienced
thespians. Being neither, I was
nervous when I took my seat in
the class of six would meet twice
a week for the semester. Indeed,
the rest of the class had previous
experience with playwriting and
acting. Most of them casually
referenced plays I had never even
heard of, much less read.
Although Professor Angells
kind and supportive demeanor
of that nights reading that a huge
wave of relief and subsequent
author Jeffrey Sweet began:
After years of teaching dramatic technique, I have strong
ideas about what kinds of people
are most likely to become real,
working playwrights: actors and
journalists.
Maybe playwriting wont be
so hard for this journalist after all.
I had felt underprepared going into the playwriting class because Hillsdales creative writing
department is, well, nonexistent.
Hillsdale, while emphasizing the
great literary works of history,
has little interest in teaching its
tional prose of their own. I have
read The Iliad and The Odyssey and more modern marvels
like Elie Wiesels Night and
Robert K. Massies Nicholas
and Alexandra. But my writing
has consisted of researching and
commenting on these works.
On one hand, I understand
that most college students arent
prepared, in life experience or
education, to pen the next great
American novel. But if there is
one thing I have learned throughout my four years of experience
in the excellent Dow Journalism
Program, it is that if you want to
be a good writer, you must write.
Practice, as clich as it sounds,
truly does make perfect.
So, in order to be a great
on campus, I have written for
the Collegian. I have become an
editor, held a journalism internship, and taken numerous writing courses, including Advanced
Writing. I can whip up a news
story in record time, and ledes
and concise diction have become second nature. But writing
dialogue? Developing characters
from my imagination? No way.
I can record the conversations
to dream up an interchange on
my own is daunting.
When I read that journal-
the power to steal past the watchful dragons of the human heart,
Radford explains on the website.
People like stories because they
like watching relationships unfold and develop.
In high school, Dave Radford
made it into the Top 20 in American Idol. He met Licia, his wife,
while performing as a solo artist
and their relationship blossomed
after they began performing together.
And theyre very good live,
Allen said.
From B1
Chandler Ryd
Collegian Freelancer
thought.
That reminded me of the second piece of wisdom that was
hammered into my mind over the
course of my collegiate journalism classes: Not only to write, but
also to write what you know.
I may not have studied Shakespeare, starred in a Tower Players
production, or penned a novel in
my free time, but I do have experience in human interactions. I
am an aspiring journalist and historian, and I will use that background, and an eagerness to learn
more, to become a playwright.
I wont expect to craft the
next Romeo and Juliet, of course.
Bryan Morey
Actually, I wont even expect a
Special-to-the-Collegian
crappy off-Broadway play or a
decent amateur piece. What I will
expect is to improve throughout
It truly is the end of an era.
the semester, and incorporate This past November, Pink Floyd
journalistic skills and historical
knowledge into a pastime for The Endless River. Pink Floyd
which I have a growing passion. is one of the most iconic bands
in rock history, and they are one
Morgan Delp is a senior from of the greatest progressive rock
Toledo, Ohio, studying history.
She is minoring in journalism countless budding musicians
through the Dow Journalism pro- over the years, and many of their
gram and is the editor-in-chief of album covers are easily recognizthe Collegian.
able pieces of pop culture. To see
such an important band release
Music DepartMent
Recital. The concert begins at 8
p.m.
For this recital in particular, hes included so many other
faculty members from the music
department and from the theater
department, and one student as
well, Holleman said. The repertoire that hes chosen is both
very interesting and very challenging.
McCourrys recital will feature pieces from composers as diverse as Johann Altenburg, Paul
Hindemith, and Frank Zappa.
Other than recitals, some
highlights this semester include
well.
In a sense, The Endless River is a goodbye to keyboardist
Richard Wright, who died from
cancer in 2008. The basis for the
music comes from extra music
made during the recording sessions for 1994s The Division
Bell, Pink Floyds previous album. Over the past few years,
guitarist David Gilmour and
drummer Nick Mason, along
with other musicians and backing
vocalists, returned to the studio to
complete those recordings. Rick
Spotlight
B3 29 Jan. 2015
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
chef
From B4
years old, I was always digging
in her spice cupboard, always
trying to make things better,
Trombly laughed. I did it from
a young age.
Trombly attended Le Cordon
she gained the education in
culinary arts that she always
dreamed of. While there, Trombly also worked at the Winn
and Encore, a Las Vegas resort
where she prepared banquets
for up to 5,000 people. She said
that though she gained a wealth
of foundational techniques at
Le Cordon Bleu, she simultaneexperience at the Winn and Encore, where she had the opportunity to learn from professionals.
Once she even worked with a
Admissions
From B4
Thats a skill which translates
well into sales, public relations,
teaching. I know a lot of alumni
now that work at think tanks, govketing positions.
Similarly, Aaron Tracey, 14,
who studied business marketing,
has found admissions a nice transition.
Whats made it easy is Im
starting with great people, Tracey said. Im not a student anymore, but Im still in the student
environment and working with
people who are also making that
transition. Im able to talk to professors, employees Ive grown a
relationship with. Hillsdale is a
big school in terms of connection.
I want to go into sales, and youre
selling a college education. Thats
something people are learning
intangibly, but its the experience youre selling. I saw this as
a great opportunity to give back.
Previous counselors have furthered their education by attending seminary or graduate school
or solicited a variety of jobs from
teaching to working for a think
tank, according to Lantis.
For Ashleigh Dunham, 07,
who studied marketing management, admissions were a great
start. She moved into event planning and fundraising for nonprofits after two years as a counselor.
Currently she is the director of
corporate development for Forgotten Harvest in Detroit, the
number one food rescue program
in the country.
Dunham became interested in
admissions when her mentor told
her about the skills and connections developed from the job
It was a perfect job to support
her into a job of philanthropy,
Dunham said. Knowing that is
what I wanted to do eventually, I
followed in her footsteps.
Dunhams experience in admissions and learned organizational and people skills would
contribute to obtaining her present position working with corporate donors to secure volunteers
and the communitys charitable
support.
Key skills I learned in admissions was to cultivate relationships, being able to communicate
effectively the ends of an organization, and learning how to plan
my work, Dunham said. The
believed in the mission.
Pursuing a mission in which
she believed also brought Shannon Armbrust, 10, who majored
in Christian Studies and also studied Economics and Spanish, to
admissions and to pursue her education through a fellowship program with Trinity Forum Acad-
twist.
Trombly plans to continue
combining her love of regional
off-cAmpus
From B4
RumleR
From B4
tell it, Mary Jane said.
One day, Jerrys brother Steve,
husband of Mary Jane, accidentally cut the Adirondack chair
Jerry had given him with a saw.
Jerry played furious at the little
dent in the arm of the chair. The
next time Jerry created a piece
for Steve and Mary Jane, he added a dent to the arm so it would
be already ruined.
Apartment Rentals
157 Hillsdale St.
& 81 N Broad St.
Corner of Hillsdale and Fayette
Street. Directly
across from the
ATO house.
Houses groups
of 2 - 5 with
Kitchen and
Living Room
B4 29 Jan. 2015
Spotlight
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Life after
Central Hall
Off-campus
shenanigans:
Part one
Fish and
woodchips
Kate Patrick
Assistant Editor
Breana Noble
Collegian Reporter
Each year, the admissions department holds
tor of admissions Jeff Lantis said. Who better to
articulate the mission than a graduate that studied
and experienced it both inside and outside the
-
Sarah Chavey
Collegian Reporter
get along.
See Admissions, B3
LeAnne said.
LeAnne started going to bed early,
-
baseball bats.
at his alma mater, Michigan State
lege.
all the girls had already planned all this stuff out,
Ramona Tausz
Assistant Editor
Rockwell
chef returns
See Rumler, B3
-
See Off-campus, B3
PEOPLE WOULD
PAY A FORTUNE
FOR THOSE FISH
See Chef, B3
CAMPUSCHIC