day : 01/05/2023 14 results

How we can combat human trafficking

By Chris Karenbauer Human trafficking is the force, fraud or coercion of people to work for little to no pay or provide sexual favors for others. To be considered human trafficking, “force, fraud or coercion” need to be present, except in the case of minors. Human trafficking is involuntary service, often includes some kind of blackmail, and traffickers target vulnerable individuals. Sex trafficking is more well known than labor trafficking. Sex trafficking is when a trafficker ...

Human trafficking: America’s multibillion dollar business

By Chris Karenbauer In the early 1990’s, Elijah Muhammed’s parents joined a religious organization, giving the organization their time, money and children. In 2002, Muhammed’s mother sent him and his brother on a pilgrimage to Kansas City. Instead of a religious pilgrimage, Muhammed and his brother were labor trafficked. Muhammed’s parents had no idea what would happen to their children. “We were immediately put to work, dictated on how to dress, how to speak, how to walk, what ...

Lake testimonies: Three men’s encounters with the Great Lakes

By Heidie (Raine) Senseman The lakes as recreation Summer 2002. The water is warm, so the salmon are biting. Jeff Billeter is drinking Miller Lite with Pfizer pharmaceutical representative Adam Dach, six other medical industry professionals, the captain and his first mate aboard a Lake Michigan sportfishing charter.  Charter fishing, a major Great Lakes industry, differs from typical recreational fishing. Groups pay a captain to take them out on the water in his boat and lend ...

Overtaken waters: A primer on the zebra mussel’s invasion of the Great Lakes

By Heidie (Raine) Senseman The zebra mussel. Dreissena polymorpha. Rounded triangle shells, banded with dark brown stripes that mimic the mammal for which they’re named. The size of a pistachio or fingernail. Often clustered together on top of rocks, buoys, crustaceans or water intake pipes. Glossy. Inedible. Sharp enough to slice your feet. In its natural habitats — Black Sea lagoons and Caspian Sea drainage basins — the zebra mussel is a fitting creature. Its high capacity for ...

Salvation on the Shoreline: How Lake Michigan Weathered Chicago Through the Great Fire of 1871

By Heidie Senseman October 9, 1871 — Chicago is on fire. “The fire in the west division is now raging with unabated fury,” writes The New York Tribune, and “the city of Chicago in ashes,” writes The (Washington D.C.) Evening Star, and “fiery clouds, with flames leaping!” writes The Chicago Tribune, and “doomed city,” writes The Charleston (SC) Daily News. Eyewitnesses confirm the reports. John Chapin draws sketches of the fire. He says the flames are like towers. The ...

‘Hope’ Highlights Growth and Healing

By Esther Fultz Personal growth is something we all experience over time. Artists have both the blessing and curse of being able to showcase it publicly.  In 2015, Nate Feuerstein, professionally known as NF, released his first major-label album, “Mansion.”  Since then, his success has skyrocketed with five other album releases, including his most recent on April 7, 2023 - “Hope.”  Unlike many other fans, I didn’t discover NF until after his release of “Clouds ...

‘Suzume’ stuns as an animated adventure

By Ben Konuch Very few names have advanced the genres of anime and animation in recent times like Makoto Shinkai. The creator and director of 2016’s anime phenomenon “Your Name” and its followup in 2019, “Weathering with You,” Shinkai has prioritized a sharp and clear art style that paints even the mundane of everyday life with beauty and style. His stories typically center on love, loss and a touch of something magical that breaks through the normal realities of day-to-day life ...

Inmates and students encourage each other through jail ministry part 2

by Esther Fultz While Cedarville University’s Jail Ministry org is the main way students on campus can get involved in ministering to inmates, students also have the option to minister at the juvenile detention center. Last year, current junior Molecular Biology major Josh Halsey and current junior Social Work major Sarah Hougtentogler volunteered at the Clark County Juvenile Detention Center after the detention center director spoke in one of Hougentogler’s classes.  At the ...

Affirming physical and spiritual life at the Pregnancy Resource Clinic

by Noah Tang This semester, I began to volunteer at the Pregnancy Resource Clinic (PRC) in Springfield, Ohio. It is a short drive of approximately fifteen minutes north on State Route 72. My internship involves sundry responsibilities, but mainly ministers to the men who accompany their partners for pregnancy tests. The PRC is piloting a new male mentorship program as part of a wider fatherhood initiative being undertaken by its parent organization CareNet, which includes over a thousand ...

Why ‘The Bad Batch’ is my Star Wars show

By Janie Walenda Every Star Wars fan can pinpoint which piece of Star Wars media is “theirs.” For a lot of people who grew up in the last 2000s, it’s “The Clone Wars.” For a more recent generation, it might be “Rebels.” Going further back, you have fans who have defended the prequel trilogy since day one, or those who grew up on the Old Republic video games. That’s the magic of Star Wars. There is an era, a character and a storyline for everyone. For me, my Star Wars is ...