Cool New Digs MSU dedicates its new Lester Morris Hillel student center. , 12,•">0 'OM A••A• \~ 4' c¢uotb"rc .agNiang7M * ” 3&4:'' •AW iSt047 woos • The Lester J. Morris Hillel Jewish Student Center sits on Charles Street, in the heart of East Lansing. The facility offers "a Jewish home away from home" to Michigan State University students. KAREN SCHWARTZ Special to the Jewish News Bloomfield Hills resident Susie Pappas chats with Jewell Morris during the post-ceremony reception Oct. 13. The new Lester J. Morris Hillel Jewish Student Center in East Lansing was named for Morris' late husband. 10/25 2002 110 ocated in an historic district in East Lansing, 3060 Charles Street could easily be mistaken for just another house on the block. But to the hundreds of students who par- ticipate in Hillel programming and the 100 students who gather there weekly to cele- brate Shabbat, the Lester J. Morris Hillel Jewish Student Center at Michigan State University, dedicated Oct. 13, is a home. And that's exactly what was intended, said MSU Hillel Capital Campaign Chair David Bittker. "We didn't want a commercial facili- ty. We wanted a warm, inviting home and that's how it turned out," he said. The building is modeled after Indiana University's Hillel and designed by the same architect, Frank Adams. Indiana's Hillel caught Bittker's eye and interested others during an International Hillel Board of Directors meeting held four years ago in Bloomington. "We were just thinking about doing some- thing in East Lansing then," Bittker said. "I said we ought to take this building and put it in East Lansing, and we did. We tore down what was here and built this place ... it's everything and then some. I'm very proud of how it came out." Working with the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, a campaign to fund the new Hillel on the site of the old raised $3.1 million by June 2001. A groundbreak- ing ceremony was held in September 2001. A year later, the building is in use by the students. MSU Jewish Student Union President - Jennifer Stotter spoke at the dedication cere- mony about positive attitudes, "positive vibes" and people looking toward the future of MSU's Hillel. "I can't believe it's finally here. It's bring- ing everything together, all the hard work everyone's put in, all the time everyone's waited, all the excitement bubbling in the building — it's finally culminating into this beautiful dedication," she said. The 20-year-old senior from Kalamazoo is excited about the impact the new building is having on campus and looks forward to what it means for the future as far as prospective students recognizing a strong Jewish presence on campus. There are approximately 2,500 Jewish students at MSU and Stotter said she's seeing lots of new faces. She hopes students will stop by to study, relax and celebrate Shabbat in the new building. "This new building and all of the pro- gramming we can have within it is creating an attractiveness students are looking for. I think it'll help bring more Jewish students — who are searching for the right campus where they fit in, with the right Jewish com- munity for them — to Michigan State." MSU President M. Peter McPherson attended the event to congratulate the peo- ple who put together the program and fund- raising and to show his support for Jewish students on campus. "We welcome the growing number of Jewish students here," he said. "We welcome the deeper involvement of the Jewish corn-