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When Adam Miller received a letter from Creators Syndicate last July, he thought it was nothing more than another form letter.I had gotten other rejection letters, and they all used form letters and I thought thats what this was, said Miller, 27.I was about to stick it in a file and forget about it.But after reading through it carefully a second time, Miller was shocked, and even thought it was a joke.In the letter, the California-based organization offered Miller a syndication contract for his comic strip Bachelor Party, which explores the lives of recent college graduates.When Miller attended MSU, the comic was called Student Ghetto and featured younger versions of the same characters in Bachelor Party. The comic ran for about three semesters in The State News. After graduation in 1999, Miller immediately began sending his material to syndication companies throughout the nation.I got a lot of good response from it at first, but people didnt really want to syndicate it to college kids - they didnt see the college market as strong enough for a national paper, he said.For that reason, Miller changed the name of the comic to Bachelor Party and marketed it toward an older crowd and a bigger market.John Newcombe is the director of development at Creators Syndicate.