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Volume 56, Issue 60 | WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 2022 | ndsmcobserver.com
Tickets run in Holy Cross student election
Laskowiecki-Todora By ISABELLE KAUSE News Writer
Juniors Joe Laskow iecki and Collin Todora, running respectively for Holy Cross Student Government Association (SGA) president and v ice president, desire to strengthen the Holy Cross’s communit y as well as its connection to the tri-campus communit y. Laskow iecki said that one of the things that make the ticket unique is their diverse backgrounds. They feel because of that, they can
contribute something to ever y department from an academic and social standpoint. Laskow iecki, born and raised in Chicago, is a business major w ith minors in communications and marketing. He ser ved as a resident assistant for Anselm Hall this year and is also the head of intramural sports at Holy Cross. Todora is from Port A rthur, Texas and is a biolog y major w ith minors in math and computer science. He’s see LASKOWIECKI PAGE 3
MAGGIE KLAERS | The Observer
Imamovic-Lulgjuraj By LIAM PRICE Associate News Editor
Muris Imamov ic and Matthew Lulgjuraj said they hope to apply the communit y-building skills they used as resident assistants at Holy Cross to their positions as president and v ice president if elected. “We have ver y good communit ybuilding w ith our guys. We got to know our guys and we know what makes them tick,” Imamov ic said. Imamov ic, who is running for
president of Holy Cross Student Government Association (SGA), is a junior elementar y education major from Mishawaka and ser ved as a resident assistant (RA) in Basil Hall this year and as a peer mentor in his sophomore year. A lso a junior elementar y education major, Lulgjuraj is from Sterling Heights, Michigan, and is running for v ice president. He ser ved as an RA in South Hall see IMAMOVIC PAGE 3
Students empower adults to share life stories When John Wilford was first introduced to the Sunshine Clubhouse in South Bend, he heard the clubhouse was looking to start a newsletter. A former director of biotechnology equipment production, Wilford saw a row of nonfunctioning computers
and went to work. He managed to get a few of the computers up and running and helped Sunshine Clubhouse begin publishing its newsletter. Later, Wilford realized the significance of his seemingly minor contribution. “I wasn’t thinking about it at the time, but when I stepped back from it
I thought, ‘Gee, maybe I still do have something to offer,’” Wilford said. Wilford, who was involved with the Sunshine Clubhouse for five years and its current successor, Clubhouse of St. Joseph County, for another five years, suffers from severe mental illness. The Clubhouse of St. Joseph County seeks to empower adults like Wilford who suffer from
mental illness by providing them with work and social opportunities. o“Clubhouse works,” Wilford, now a grandfather, said. “It really integrates people from the outside back into the community. It gets people back in and feeling like they’re worth something and they can contribute.” Opened in 2015, Clubhouse of St. Joseph County is one of more than
300 Clubhouses around the world. All Clubhouses follow the same model. Members — those suffering from mental illness — adhere to a workordered day. Each day they choose tasks and chores to complete around the Clubhouse to keep it functioning. “It’s been said that the ideal
NEWS PAGE 4
VIEWPOINT PAGE 7
SCENE PAGE 10
BENGAL BOUTS PAGE 16
BASEBALL PAGE 16
By RYAN PETERS Notre Dame News Editor
see BOOK PAGE 5