Nov. 12, 2014

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LIFE CENTRAL MICHIGAN

SHOOTING FOR THE STANDS

WEDNESday, NOV. 12, 2014 | MOUNT PLEASANT, MICH. | ISSUE NO. 35 VOL. 96

Life in brief UNIVERSITY Ross to interview at UN next week Central Michigan University President George Ross will be the first of four finalist candidates vying for the president position at the University of Nebraska and will visit there next week. Ross is scheduled to arrive in Nebraska on Monday and attend a private dinner before beginning a tour of four NU campuses Tuesday at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. At each stop, Lincoln, Omaha, Kearney and Curtis, Ross will participate in forums before interviewing with the board of regents in an open session. The visit also will include meetings with agricultural leaders, university donors and community leaders. The UNO forum is scheduled to begin at 8:30 a.m. Nov. 18 in the Milo Bail Student Center. At 11:30 a.m., Ross will host a forum on the third floor of the Michael F. Sorrell Center at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, before flying to the University of Nebraska at Kearney campus for a 4 p.m. forum at the Nebraskan Student Union. On Nov. 19, Ross will host a forum at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. The NU Board of Regents will interview Ross at 8:30 a.m. on Nov. 20. Ross’s wife, Elizabeth, will accompany him on the trip to Nebraska. On Nov. 3, a search committee named four finalists: Ross; Hank Bounds, commissioner of higher education for Mississippi Institutions of Higher Learning; Michael Martin, chancellor of the Colorado State University System; and Sally Rockey, deputy director for extramural research at the National Institutes of Health.

T-shirt gun team helps create festive home game atmostphere »PAGE 3

CMED dean candidates scrutinized University, search committee will bring finalists to campus next month, hire in January By Zahra Ahmad News Editor

Six months after the resignation of founding dean Ernest Yoder, Central Michigan University’s College of Medicine is poised to name his successor by the end of January. The College of Medicine sought applications, and nominations, for the position earlier in the year after Yoder resigned in June. Yoder stepped down after leading the college for four

years. He made the decision after a self assessment was done by Yoder in consideration of what he could provide CMED in the future. Yoder said it was time for a leadership change as the college enters its new stages of development. CMED is using a search firm to help identify and recruit candidates who meet the qualifications set by the search committee. Chair of the search committee, and dean of the College of Science and Technology, Ian Davison,

said the committee’s role is to recommend suitable candidates. The 20-person search committee is made up people who hold positions within the College of Medicine, including hospital partners, physicians, students and research representatives. ¨The process that is in mid-November, based on the input from the consultants, is where the committee will recommend a list of candidates to attend an airport interview in Detroit in early December,” Davison said. “(The

candidates) will meet with the search committee, provost and president.¨ The university does not plan to make public the names of those candidates who will meet with search committee members in Detroit. Davison said candidates are being given consideration in case they don’t notify their employers about being a part of the CMED search. ¨The process is confidential up to w CMED | 2

a day of honor

Malachi Barrett News Editor

POLICE Police identify man who shot himself The 28-year-old man who died by suicide near the railroad tracks at the end of Hopkins Court on Saturday morning has been identified as Comstock Park native Grant Daniel Holtholf. According to a press release sent by Steve Smith, Central Michigan University director of public relations, Monday afternoon, Holtholf was in Mount Pleasant visiting an acquaintance. The weapon involved was a handgun registered to him. Officers arrived on-scene after receiving a 911 call Saturday and confirmed he sustained a fatal gunshot wound to the chest. CMU Police Department Chief Bill Yeagley said a subsequent investigation indicated the wound was self-inflicted, and any indication of foul play has not been found. Malachi Barrett News Editor

LIFE INSIDE EDITORIAL: Don’t get high over success of marijuana proposals      »PAGE 4

Claire Abendroth | Staff Photographer

Members of the ROTC Queen’s Guard listen to a speaker during the Veteran’s Day Ceremony on Tuesday in Plachta Auditorium.

CMU celebration pays tribute to veterans Veterans Day ended Tuesday, but Central Michigan University is hosting a week of events to honor the men and women in America’s Armed Services. Plachta Auditorium hosted a formal ceremony Tuesday led by master of ceremonies Marq Hicks and Keynote Speaker Barton Buechner, a retired Navy Captain. According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, there are roughly 22 million veterans in America and 653,469 living in Michigan. Of these, 289,484 are age 24 or younger.

Claire Abendroth | Staff Photographer Members of the ROTC Queen’s Guard enter Plachta Auditorium before a Veterans Day ceremony, which included President George Ross as a speaker, on Tuesday.

Community members fight for the homeless By Kevin Andrews Staff Reporter

As the cold temperatures of winter loom, community programs begin efforts to assist homeless people in Mount Pleasant and Isabella County. The Isabella County Restoration House is a collaborative community effort now in its second year. The ICRH was open for 12 weeks last year, but starting this week will serve the community until March 28. Its purpose is to address the need

credits

that transfer

quality

of those without consistent housing in Isabella County. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the home ownership rate in Isabella Country from 2008-12 is 58.9 percent, compared to 72.8 percent in Michigan. The county has 32 percent of its residents living below the poverty level, about double the state rate. Even those who have homes are worse off. The median household income is $13,000 less than the rest of the state. “After looking at different possibili-

ties of how to help members of our community that had no place to stay in the winter, the most logical option was the rotating shelter, which is the model that we went with,” said Julia Keepper, a member of the ICRH Board and co-chair of the Rotating Shelter Committee. The site of the shelter changes each week among churches willing to open their doors and provide volunteers. “What we do is provide the bedding, mattresses, supplies and training on policies and procedures,” Keepper

said. Every day at 4:30 p.m., guests check in at the intake center at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, on 319 S. University Ave. From there, they are moved to the host site by the Isabella County Transportation Commission’s iRide service and Chippewa Cab and Limo In the morning, guests are taken to the Isabella County Soup Kitchen, 620 S. Adams St. w HOMELESS | 2


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