Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

16
This weekend Swaner Preserve and Ecocenter, along with new partner Utah State University, will host their first joint fund- raising event called “Back in the Saddle.” The intent for Back in the Saddle is to restore the old Rhinestone Cowboy event while show- casing the new partnership that has begun to form. The evening will also stand as an opportunity for both parties to get to know each other. Guests will be welcomed Sept. 4 at the Gray Barron Ranch in Park City, Utah for an evening packed with activities. A Meet ’n Mix n’ Mingle will take place at 5:30 p.m. Dinner by Culinary Crafts will be served followed by danc- ing to music from The Joe Muscolino Band. Vocalists Nicole Madison, of Park City, and Gabe Redondo will also entertain. However, the main event will be the equine- orchestral performance of a piece entitled “A Symphony of Movement and Life.” Donnette Hicks from Sage Creek Equestrian in Heber created a show in which horses will move to live music provided by The American Festival Orchestra. Well-known trainer Jim Hicks brings two of his own stallions, Rembrandt and I’m the Student meal plans are now more flexible, so students in a rush can grab a pizza pocket in The Quickstop and student look- ing for a relaxing, sit-down mean can enjoy a buffet in The Skyroom. The expansion of choices accompanying meal plans has been a relief to the lunchtime rush in The Marketplace and Junction, said Alan Andersen, dining services director, because the number of students with meal plans has increased. “Housing is as full as it’s been in many years. Demands on the Marketplace and Junction have been greater than ever,” he said. Currently 1,400-1,500 students are actively using their traditional meal plans, which give each student a set number of meals to use every week. Meals that are not used within the week are not transferable to the next. This type of meal plan now allows students to eat in The Skyroom restaurant located on the third floor of the Taggart Student Center, said Amy Rasmussen, catering sales associate. “My biggest concern in using The Skyroom is tak- ing care of the waitresses up Seventh North, the main road running east-west through campus, will be closed starting at 11 a.m. Sept. 4 for the Red Jumpsuit Apparatus concert starting at eight that night. The road will be blocked off from the Blue Premium park- ing lot on 700 North to the Fine Arts Building. There will be full access to the Big Blue parking terrace and Blue lots as well as the Fine Arts parking. Tom Atwood, ASUSU pro- gramming vice president, said it was about an eight-week process to get permission to shut down the road. The Logan mayor and police, Cache Valley Transit District (CVTD), and Logan City Events Licensing all had to approve the plan before it was permitted. Since the road is going to be closed all day Saturday, CVTD had to redirect one of their bus routes. However, CVTD Director of Marketing and Personal Relations Lisa Peterson said that they were happy to make changes so the university can have their activi- ties. “We changed the route enough to still be able to ser- vice the same area,” Peterson said, “and since that route was mainly for students, we hope they will be more understand- ing because it is a university activity.” Peterson said closing down the road for the day didn’t cause any big issues but they appre- ciated the fact they were told about it in advance. “We appreciated the chance they gave us to give them our input but we are always happy to work with the university,” Peterson said. The Admissions office is one of the sponsors for the event and was in favor of holding the concert because they felt it was a good way to welcome incom- ing freshmen to Utah State. “The Admissions office has been partnering with offices like ASUSU to sponsor activities the week before school starts as well as the first week of classes in an effort to create a friendly and smooth transition for our new students,” Jen Putnam, director of admissions said. She said the Admissions office spends all year working with prospective students and “assuring them of the unique atmosphere and experience that is found at Utah State.” “When they actually arrive Utah Friday, Sept. 3, 2010 Utah State University • Logan, Utah • www.utahstatesman.com The Campus Voice since 1902 Road closed for concert By MEGAN BAINUM assistant news editor New dining options Swaner Preserve has fund-raiser By JESSICA SWEAT staff writer S tatesman - See 700 NORTH, page 4 Sean Michael, department head of landscape architecture and environmental planning, was injured Wednesday after colliding with a car on 800 East. Michael was descending 800 East on his bicycle when the vehicle he was following turned left to enter the under- ground parking for Kampus Korner. According to witnesses at the scene, Michael attempt- ed to pass the vehicle on its left side, striking it in the area of the driver’s side window and breaking through the glass with his head and shoulder. Scott Egbert, a junior in economics, witnessed the acci- dent from his apartment in Kampus Korner and said that to his knowledge, Michaels appeared to be traveling at an approximate rate of 25 mph. “The biker t-boned the jeep,” Egbert said. Inside the vehicle were two female students; the driver, who wished to remain unnamed, and Dani Jensen, who was in the passenger seat. “I was texting and didn’t know what was going on,” Jensen said. “I heard (the driv- er) scream and looked up and there was glass flying at me.” Jensen said that after the accident, Michael was bleed- ing from around the area of his ear and shoulder, but was responsive and able to walk. After officers of the Logan City Police Department arrived, Michael was picked up by his wife and presumably trans- ported to the hospital. A source within the univer- sity said Michael is in Salt Lake City being treated for a broken neck but The Utah Statesman was unable to confirm his cur- rent condition. Both female passengers received cuts on their legs from the broken glass. The LCPD could not be reached for comment on this story. Additional reporting by Alison Ostler. [email protected] By CATHERINE MEIDELL news editor Department head injured after colliding with car By BENJAMIN WOOD editor in chief - See QUICKSTOP, page 4 - See ECOCENTER, page 4 STUDENTS RUN TO catch the bus on 700 North, which will be closed Saturday for the last Week of Welcome event. CARL R. WILSON SEAN MICHAEL, CYCLIST and LAEP department head was injured in an accident Sept. 2 on 800 East. Female driver looks on as Michael’s injuries are evaluated at the scene ALLISON OSTLER photo Inside This Issue 9/02/09 Former student revamps art theater to include comedy, music and independent film. Page 5 WAC woes take back burner to season opener vs. Oklahoma. Page 9 www.utahstatesman.com Official Student Newspaper of Utah State University • “It’s All The News You Need!” Check out Big Blue’s Best Calendar, the best master cal- endar on campus. Send some- thing in.. let people know what you are up to.

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complete issue

Transcript of Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

Page 1: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

This weekend Swaner Preserve and Ecocenter, along with new partner Utah State University, will host their f irst joint fund-raising event called “Back in the Saddle.” The intent for Back in the Saddle is to restore the old Rhinestone Cowboy event while show-casing the new partnership that has begun to form. The evening will also stand as an opportunity for both parties to get to know each other. Guests will be welcomed Sept. 4 at the Gray Barron Ranch in Park City, Utah for an evening packed with activities. A Meet ’n Mix n’ Mingle will take

place at 5:30 p.m. Dinner by Culinary Crafts will be served followed by danc-ing to music from The Joe Muscolino Band. Vocalists Nicole Madison, of Park City, and Gabe Redondo will also entertain. However, the main event will be the equine-orchestral performance of a piece entitled “A Symphony of Movement and Life.” Donnette Hicks from Sage Creek Equestrian in Heber created a show in which horses will move to live music provided by The American Festival Orchestra. Well-known trainer Jim Hicks brings two of his own stallions, Rembrandt and I’m the

Student meal plans are now more f lexible, so students in a rush can grab a pizza pocket in The Quickstop and student look-ing for a relaxing, sit-down mean can enjoy a buffet in The Skyroom. The expansion of choices accompanying meal plans has been a relief to the lunchtime rush in The Marketplace and Junction, said Alan Andersen, dining services director, because the number of students with meal plans has increased. “Housing is as full as it’s been in many years. Demands on the

Marketplace and Junction have been greater than ever,” he said. Currently 1,400-1,500 students are actively using their traditional meal plans, which give each student a set number of meals to use every week. Meals that are not used within the week are not transferable to the next. This type of meal plan now allows students to eat in The Skyroom restaurant located on the third f loor of the Taggart Student Center, said Amy Rasmussen, catering sales associate. “My biggest concern in using The Skyroom is tak-ing care of the waitresses up

Seventh North, the main road running east-west through campus, will be closed starting at 11 a.m. Sept. 4 for the Red Jumpsuit Apparatus concert starting at eight that night. The road will be blocked off from the Blue Premium park-ing lot on 700 North to the Fine Arts Building. There will be full access to the Big Blue parking terrace and Blue lots as well as the Fine Arts parking. Tom Atwood, ASUSU pro-gramming vice president, said it was about an eight-week process

to get permission to shut down the road. The Logan mayor and police, Cache Valley Transit District (CVTD), and Logan City Events Licensing all had to approve the plan before it was permitted. Since the road is going to be closed all day Saturday, CVTD had to redirect one of their bus routes. However, CVTD Director of Marketing and Personal Relations Lisa Peterson said that they were happy to make changes so the university can have their activi-ties. “We changed the route enough to still be able to ser-vice the same area,” Peterson

said, “and since that route was mainly for students, we hope they will be more understand-ing because it is a university activity.” Peterson said closing down the road for the day didn’t cause any big issues but they appre-ciated the fact they were told about it in advance. “We appreciated the chance they gave us to give them our input but we are always happy to work with the university,” Peterson said. The Admissions office is one of the sponsors for the event and was in favor of holding the concert because they felt it was a good way to welcome incom-

ing freshmen to Utah State. “The Admissions office has been partnering with offices like ASUSU to sponsor activities the week before school starts as well as the first week of classes in an effort to create a friendly and smooth transition for our new students,” Jen Putnam, director of admissions said. She said the Admissions office spends all year working with prospective students and “assuring them of the unique atmosphere and experience that is found at Utah State.” “When they actually arrive

Utah

Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

Utah State University • Logan, Utah • www.utahstatesman.com

The

Campus Voice since 1902

Road closed for concertBy MEGAN BAINUMassistant news editor

New dining options

Swaner Preserve has fund-raiserBy JESSICA SWEATstaff writer

Statesman

-See 700 NORTH, page 4

Sean Michael, department head of landscape architecture and environmental planning, was injured Wednesday after colliding with a car on 800 East. Michael was descending 800 East on his bicycle when the vehicle he was following turned left to enter the under-ground parking for Kampus Korner. According to witnesses at the scene, Michael attempt-ed to pass the vehicle on its left side, striking it in the area of the driver’s side window and breaking through the glass with his head and shoulder. Scott Egbert, a junior in economics, witnessed the acci-dent from his apartment in Kampus Korner and said that to his knowledge, Michaels appeared to be traveling at an approximate rate of 25 mph. “The biker t-boned the jeep,” Egbert said. Inside the vehicle were two female students; the

driver, who wished to remain unnamed, and Dani Jensen, who was in the passenger seat. “I was texting and didn’t know what was going on,” Jensen said. “I heard (the driv-er) scream and looked up and there was glass flying at me.” Jensen said that after the accident, Michael was bleed-ing from around the area of his ear and shoulder, but was responsive and able to walk. After officers of the Logan City Police Department arrived, Michael was picked up by his wife and presumably trans-ported to the hospital. A source within the univer-sity said Michael is in Salt Lake City being treated for a broken neck but The Utah Statesman was unable to confirm his cur-rent condition. Both female passengers received cuts on their legs from the broken glass. The LCPD could not be reached for comment on this story. Additional reporting by Alison Ostler.– [email protected]

By CATHERINE MEIDELLnews editor

Department head injured after colliding with carBy BENJAMIN WOODeditor in chief

-See QUICKSTOP, page 4

-See ECOCENTER, page 4

STUDENTS RUN TO catch the bus on 700 North, which will be closed Saturday for the last Week of Welcome event. CARL R. WILSON

SEAN MICHAEL, CYCLIST and LAEP department head was injured in an accident Sept. 2 on 800 East. Female driver looks on as Michael’s injuries are evaluated at the scene ALLISON OSTLER photo

Inside This Issue 9/02/09

Former student revamps art theater to include comedy, music and independent film.

Page 5

WAC woes take back burner to season opener vs. Oklahoma.

Page 9

www.utahstatesman.com

Official Student Newspaper of Utah State University • “It’s

All The News You Need!”

Check out Big Blue’s Best Calendar, the best master cal-endar on campus. Send some-thing in.. let people know what you are up to.

1111

Page 2: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

Utah State University • Logan, Utah • www.aggietownsquare.com

Friday, Sept. 3, 2010Page 2

World&Nation

Mormon church, Jewish

leaders tackle proxy baptism SALT LAKE CITY (AP) –The Mormon church says it has changed its genealogical database to better prevent the names of Jews killed in Nazi concentration camps from being submitted for posthumous baptism by proxy. In a joint statement issued Wednesday, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and a coalition of Jewish leaders said a new computer system and policy changes related to the practice should resolve a yearslong disagree-ment over the baptisms. Mormons believe posthumous baptism by proxy provides an opportunity for deceased persons to receive the Gospel in the after-life. Baptisms are performed in Mormon temples with members immersing themselves in a baptis-mal pool as proxies for others.

Magistrate recommends

dismissing states’ gun suit

A story in the Sept. 1 issue of The Utah Statesman incorrectly stated that Utah Representative Sheryl Allen is running against Peter Corroon in the upcoming Utah Governer’s elec-tion. Corroon selected Allen to be his running mate in the gubernatorial campaign.

ClarifyCorrect

Nat’lBriefs

LateNiteHumorDavid Letterman, Sept. 1, 2010-Top Ten Signs Your Monkey Has A Drinking Problem

10. He slurs his grunting.9. Was just asked to be on the next season of “Monkey Rehab.”8. Been hanging out with Paris Hilton.7. Doesn’t care for bananas unless they’re in a daiquiri.6. Been hanging out with Lindsay Lohan.5. Came home without his tail and has no memory of where he lost it.4. Been hanging out with David Hasselhoff (video of Hasselfhoff eat-ing a cheeseburger on the ground).3. You smell liquor on his breath while he’s picking the nits out of your hair.2. Been hanging out with Mel Gibson.1. Can’t stop sneezing.

HELENA, Mont. (AP) – A group of states seeking freedom from federal gun laws were dealt a blow Wednesday when a federal mag-istrate recommended dismissal of a lawsuit launched by gun rights advocates who argue Congress has overstepped its bounds with gun control. The magistrate sided with the U.S. Department of Justice, which says courts have already decided that Congress can set standards on such items as guns through its power to regulate interstate commerce. The recommendation now goes to the federal judge in Missoula hearing the case – and even gun rights advocates recog-nized it is likely he will side with the magistrate.

WASHINGTON (AP) – In an early sign of prom-ise, Israeli and Palestinian leaders pledged Thursday in a cordial first round of talks to keep meeting at regular intervals, aiming to nail down a framework for overcoming deep disputes and achieving lasting peace within a year. As their facilitator-in-chief, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to rise above the suspi-cion and skepticism that has blocked peace efforts for decades. “By being here today, you each have taken an important step toward freeing your peoples from the shackles of a history we cannot change,” she said. The eventual aim is the creation of a sovereign Palestinian state beside a secure Israel. Thursday’s results, in the first face-to-face peace talks between Israelis and Palestinians in nearly two years, were modest – and acknowledged as such by all sides. There was no detailed negotiation on any substantive issue, according to George Mitchell, the administration’s special envoy for Mideast peace, who held months of preparatory talks and was a par-ticipant in most of the day’s discussions. Netanyahu and Abbas will meet again on Sept. 14 and 15 in the Middle East, probably at the Egyptian Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheik, with Clinton and Mitchell attending. The two also agreed to meet roughly every two weeks after that – sometimes with U.S. officials present, other times not. Mitchell offered no timeline for agreeing on the initial framework, which he said was to be “less than a full-f ledged treaty” but more detailed than a state-ment of principles. A major obstacle is looming: Israel’s moratorium on Jewish settlement construction in the disputed West Bank is due to expire Sept. 26. The Palestinians have said that unless the freeze is extended, the f ledgling peace talks will collapse in short order. In his public remarks Thursday, Netanyahu made no reference to an extension; Abbas called for an end

to settlement expansion, but he raised the matter in the context of both sides living up to commitments, including a Palestinian pledge to end all incitement of violence against Israelis. That’s not entirely under Abbas’ control. Gunmen from the militant Palestinian Hamas movement killed four Israeli residents of a West Bank settlement on Tuesday. And, on Wednesday, hours before the leaders had dinner with President Barack Obama and Clinton at the White House, Hamas gunmen wounded two Israelis as they drove in another part of the West Bank. Hamas rejected the talks and stepped up its rheto-ric as the ceremony in Washington began. “These talks are not legitimate because the

Palestinian people did not give any mandate to Mahmoud Abbas and his team to negotiate on behalf of our people,” said Sami Abu Zuhri, a spokes-man. “Therefore, any result and outcome of these talks does not commit us and does not commit our people, it only commits Abbas himself.” In Washington, the atmosphere was mostly upbeat. In his opening remarks, Netanyahu at one point turned to Abbas and said, “I see in you a partner for peace. Together, we can lead our people to a historic future that can put an end to claims and to conflict.” Abbas struck an optimistic tone, too. “We’re not starting from scratch,” he said, noting that all the central issues in dispute are well known.

More talks for Israel and Palestine

SECRETARY OF STATE HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON speaks with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas looks on as she hosted the re-launch of direct negotiations, Thursday, Sept. 2, at the State Department in Washington. AP photo

HAWIJA, Iraq (AP) – Even as President Barack Obama was announc-ing the end of combat in Iraq, American soldiers were sealing off a northern village early Wednesday as their Iraqi partners raided houses and arrested dozens of suspected insur-gents. While the Obama administration has dramatically reduced the number of troops and rebranded the mission, the operation in Hawija was a reminder that U.S. forces are still engaged in hunting down and killing al-Qaida militants – and could still have to defend themselves against attacks. That reality was front and center at

a change-of-command ceremony in one of Saddam Hussein’s former palaces outside Baghdad that the American military now uses as its headquarters. Officials warned of a tough road ahead as the U.S. moves into the final phase of the 7 1/2-year war. Of paramount concern is Iraqi lead-ers’ continued bickering, six months after parliamentary elections, over forming a new government – a political impasse that could further endanger stability and fuel a diminished but still dangerous insurgency. “Iraq still faces a hostile enemy who is determined to hinder progress,” Gen. Lloyd Austin, the newly installed

commander of the just under 50,000 U.S. troops still in Iraq, told the swell-ing crowd that was clad in military fatigues and political suits. “Make no mistake, our military forces here and those of the Iraqi nation remain com-mitted to ensuring that our friends in Iraq succeed.” Vice President Joe Biden presided over the gathering at al-Faw palace, Saddam’s gaudy former hunting lodge replete with fake marble walls and a huge chandelier made of recycled plas-tic. The remaining U.S. forces in Iraq would be “as combat ready, if need be, as any in our military,” Biden said, f lanked by Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen for the 75-minute ceremony, which also changed the U.S. mission’s name from “Operation Iraqi Freedom” to “Operation New Dawn.” Three years ago, about 170,000 U.S. troops were in Iraq. Of those who remain, fewer than 10 percent – or 4,500 – are special forces who will regularly go on raids and capture ter-rorists, albeit alongside Iraqi troops. Obama ordered the end of combat missions by Aug. 31 in a step toward a full withdrawal of American forces by the end of next year that was mandated in a U.S.-Iraqi security agreement. Violence also has declined dra-matically since early 2007, when the Pentagon poured tens of thousands more troops into Iraq over a matter of months to quell a Sunni insurgency that had lured the country to the brink

of civil war. Additionally, a Sunni revolt against al-Qaida in Iraq and a Shiite militia cease-fire have helped tamp down attacks, although bombings and shootings across Iraq continue on a near-daily basis. But Iraqi forces are heavily depen-dent on U.S. firepower, along with heli-copters, spy data and other key tools for combating terrorists that they won’t be able to supply on their own for years to come. “Every soldier I have knows that fighting is not over because there are groups here that still want to hurt us,” Maj. Gen. Tony Cucolo, commander of U.S. troops in Iraq’s volatile north, told The Associated Press recently. “But clearly combat operations is not in our mission statement.” In Hawija, once a hub for Sunni mil-itants and Saddam’s disaffected allies located 150 miles north of Baghdad, roughly 80 U.S. soldiers teamed up with more than 1,000 Iraqis to arrest about 60 terror suspects in the early morning raid Wednesday. From checkpoints and command centers to helicopters hovering over-head, the Americans were on hand at the request of Iraqi police. But it was the Iraqis who went into houses and arrested suspected insurgents – includ-ing two considered high-value targets – while the U.S. watched the operation from afar. Hours before the raids, Lt. Col. Andy Ulrich gave his soldiers a pep talk to counter concerns they weren’t on a worthwhile mission.

U.S. forces still in fight at end of combat mission

US ARMY LT. COL ANDY ULRICH walks with an Iraqi police general and an Iraqi Army colonel, center, after an operation by Iraqi forces supported by US troops on the first day after America ended its combat role, Wednesday, Sept. 1, in Hawija, north of Baghdad, Iraq. AP photo

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Craig Law, long-time USU photog-raphy professor, gave a lecture Sept. 2 in the Merrill-Cazier Library. His work is being featured in a Utah Arts Council traveling exhibit, “Ancient Painters on the Colorado Plateau.” The exhibit displays never-before-seen photos from Law’s work with a documentation and preservation project, the Barrier Canyon Style (BCS) Project. Law opened his lecture by explaining one of his inspirations, G.E. Anderson. As a graduate stu-dent at USU, old negatives from Anderson’s work were found and displayed in Law’s hometown of Garland, Utah. These negatives, Law explained, lit a “photographic f lame.” Law began photographing what he described as everyday life in Garland, specifically the local church community. To show examples of the approach he took to this first well-known project, Law displayed pictures he’d taken of a family picnic and young girls raking leaves. These early pho-tos ended up in the Smithsonian Institute. Following this first project, Law began photographing Utah waterways. He said this was the project that transitioned into his work with the Barrier Canyon Style Project.

Law began documenting sites for the BCS Project in 1991. As of March, Law and his colleague David Sucec have photographed 352 rock-art sites in Utah. Rose Milovich, exhibit program director and part of the committee that chose to feature Law, said the project is about more than the visual elements of the rock art. “Part of the project is to docu-ment many sites, to bring awareness to the art form and then preserve it,” she said. Chris Terry, head of the art department, echoed Milovich, saying there is more to the work done in the BCS Project than what is seen. “It’s not just an aesthetic experi-ence but also a learning experience,” he said.“They discover them and photograph them, but it doesn’t tell where they are. He’s trying to preserve and bring awareness to them.” The rock art featured, referred to as Barrier Canyon Style, refers to the location where a large amount of rock art was found. Now known as the “great gallery,” this collection was found in what is now called Horseshoe Canyon and gave a way to describe many of the figures found in southern Utah. The figures, Law explained in his lecture, typically have similar characteristics: elon-gated bodies, figures leading animals and, occasionally, figures with “bulg-ing” eyes. Since many of the paintings are

several thousand years old, some dat-ing back between 4000 and 3000 BC, many of the paintings have faded or been damaged from natural weather-ing and environmental pollutants. The BCS Project website states, “an individual can, in less that fif-teen minutes, do more damage to a rock art panel than three or four thousand years of natural weather-ing.”Law relayed stories of pictures that had been shot at by modern camp-ers, saying it “breaks your heart to see that.” Milovich said the exhibit also ties into Utah culture. She said part of the reason Law’s photos were chosen is the tie to the library’s collection of Utah and western region materials. “This kind of imagery really reso-nates with people,” Milovich said. “It’s important to acknowledge these sites, their history and importance for our state.” Holding both a B.A. and M.F.A. in photography from USU, Law has taught at his alma mater for over 30 years, longer than any current staff member in the art department, according to Terry. Terry said he has always admired Law’s work, even admitting to hanging some on his walls. Law has brought students into the field with him, Terry said, and has taken two groups of students to Scotland for a study-abroad experi-ence. Law’s work has been featured in 19 solo exhibits, aside from Ancient

Painters on the Colorado Plateau, since the mid-1970s. Law was also given the Oliver Award in 2008 by the American Rock Art Research Association for his work with the BCS Project. Several permanent col-lections house Law’s photography, including the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the LDS Museum of Church History and Art in Salt Lake City, UT, the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, CA and the Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art at USU. Most recently, Law’s work with the BCS was selected by the Utah Arts Council to be used as one of their traveling exhibits. The purpose of these traveling exhibits, according to artsandmuseums.utah.gov, is to “provide access to an array of visual arts, nurture the understanding of diverse art forms and cultures, promote creativity and encourage cultural activities in local communi-ties.” Law expressed his belief that this exhibit, along with bringing awareness, has had a big influence on the preservation of Utah’s rock art. “It’s been a lovely part of this proj-ect to be a stimulus for these restora-tions,” he said. The BCS Project website states it’s goal to have the photographic work completed in 2014. After that, inven-tory and interpretation of the pic-tures will commence and is expected to be finished in 2016.

[email protected]

BriefsCampus & Community

Friday, Sept. 3, 2010 Page 3StatesmanCampus News

-Compiled from staff and media reports

Aggie Culture Day will be a day for USU students and the larger Cache Valley community to connect with USU and learn more about the history and traditions of the University. Event highlights include: Aggie symbols/traditions; the his-tory of USU, including landscape and architecture; USU student demographics; the culture of Aggie sports; and various student services offered at USU. Aggie Culture Day is Saturday from 10-4 p.m. in the Anthropology Museum, Old Main room 245.

“Crazy for You” showing tonight Pickleville Playhouse will be fea-turing the Broadway musical “Crazy for You” tonight at their Garden City location. The musical was originally presented in 1992 and won a Tony Award for Best Musical. There will be two showings with the first at 5-6:30 and then another showing at 8-9:30. The Pickleville Playhouse is located at 2049 S Bear Lake Blvd in Garden City. You can purchase tickets for show only, dinner only, or dinner and show. For reservations and more information call 435-946-2918.

Aggie Traditions

SWAP MEET HELD SUNDAYS

The Cache Valley Swap Meet is being held Sunday from 9am-4pm at the Cache County Fairgrounds, 450 South 500 West. Clothes, jew-elry, toys, handmade items, and more are sold. Admission is free to buyers. For more information call (435) 764-6106.

Couples Retreat with keynote speaker The Couples Retreat at the Ropes Course is being held on Saturday 3-7 p.m. These retreats have been specif ically designed for married couples. So whether you’ve been together for a few months or many years, you’ll improve your communication skills, your trust in each other, and re-connect as a couple. The night also includes dinner for two and a keynote speaker. Directions to the Ropes Course from Logan’s Main Street: * Go East on Center Street (toward the nearest mountains); * Continue on Center Street through the stop light at 100 East, and down the small hill; * At the bottom of the hill, turn left onto Canyon Road;* Continue East on Canyon Road; go through the four-way stop; * From the four-way stop, go 1.1 miles and you will see the Ropes Course sign on your left; * Take the gravel road on your left; * Follow this gravel road past the “No Trespassing” sign and past the house;* The road will take you to the Ropes Course parking area. Check web site for pricing.

Assorted items found at Swap Meet

By KASEY VAN DYKEstaff writer

Exhibit displays professor’s work

there. So far it hasn’t been a problem,” Andersen said. Rasmussen said traditional meal plans are also allowed one transferable meal per day worth $4.50. These meals may be pur-chased in The Hub, Quadside Cafe and The Quickstop, Andersen said. Though The Quickstop is stocked with candy, ice cream other delicious treats, only foods with “sub-stance” are accepted with a meal transfer, said Liz Bowerbank, a junior in elementary education and employee of The Quickstop. “No mother in the world wants their child’s meal plan spent on M&M’s,” Andersen said. Approved food items are labeled as such and include hot dogs, corn dogs, frozen burri-tos, soups, packaged sandwiches and salads and an assortment of other things. When students attempt to ring up candy with their transferred meal, the cash register will decline, Bowerbank said. She said many students are satisf ied with the ability to use The Quickstop for meals because it doesn’t require as much time waiting in line. Though students are pleased with the change, Bowerbank said it would be less stressful for all those involved without the restrictions on acceptable meal plan items. The decision to open

both The Skyroom and The Quickstop began when USU housing decided to allow only summer conferences access to the Living and Learning Center, which decreased busi-ness for USU dining services. In response, dining services shut The Marketplace down and opened up The Skyroom to accommodate block meal plan holders. By making these chang-es, USU dining services totalled one hundred and f ifty thousand dollars in savings. Upon seeing the number of students purchasing meal plans this semester, dining services kept both accessible. Like the traditional meal plan, anyone with a block meal plan has the opportunity to eat in The Skyroom, however, block meal plans do not accept meals in The Quickstop, Hub or Quadside Cafe. Anderson said this type of meal plan is ideal when taking guests to lunch and also ideal for those who do not want unused meals to go to waste at the end of the week. Meal plans are up in price slightly this year, however, Allen said USU Meal Plans are one hundred dollars to f ive hun-dred dollars cheaper per person than University of Utah, BYU and Colorado State University.

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Quickstop: Meal transfers accepted -continued from page 1

DUSTIN PENMAN, A JUNIOR majoring in Spanish and Social Work, prepares a Scotsman Dog which is now an item included in student meal plans. CATHERINE MEIDELL

USU PROFESSOR CRAIG LAW currently has an exhibit in the atrium of the Merrill-Cazier Library. Law spoke to students and faculty in the library on Sept. 2. BENJAMIN WOOD photo

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StatesmanCampus News Friday, Sept. 3, 2010Page 4

to start their freshman year, we feel an expecta-tion to do whatever we can to guarantee that the initial impression of Aggie life is a positive one.” Putnam said. Atwood and Putnam said this will be a great opportunity for new students to meet other new and current students, and get a “jump start” on creating a community of their own in college. “Our staff believes that the students are the best highlight we have here at USU,” Putnam said. “We hope they take advantage of every opportunity to meet other students and be involved on campus.” Atwood said ASUSU is excited about this concert because it is going to be something that no student here at Utah State has experienced before. He said it will be a great way to start off

the year and help Aggies realize that fun things are going to be happening throughout the semester. Senior math major Lacy Christensen said she loves the idea of having an outdoor concert. “I have never been to a concert on the street,” Christensen said. “Everyone can come enjoy themselves during one of the few nice weeks of Logan weather. I think it is a great idea.” Putnam hopes this concert will be the first of many fun memories made here at USU and is happy to help sponsor the event. “Anything we can do to help facilitate the affinity our students have for this university, we’ll do it,” she said.

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700 North: “Students are USU’s best highlight” -continued from page 1 WOW High Stakes Bingo

STUDENTS COMPETE FOr prizes at High Stakes Bingo on Thursday, part of Week of Welcome. ANI AGHABABYAN photo

Ecocenter: Private gift for Utah State -continued from page 1

Lions Share. Utah State faculty and students will participate

in the event in a variety of ways. According to USU’s website, Dr. Craig Jessop,

dean of the Caine College of the Arts, will serve as impre-sario and master of ceremo-

nies. Jessop also worked with Hicks and composer Kurt Bester to create scores for the piece. The American Festival Orchestra will also be con-ducted by Jessop. USU student musicians will provide a string quartet, saxophone quartet, and jazz trio during welcoming events. Other USU students in atten-dance will be providing infor-mation about programs and activities that take place at the center. In January, USU formally announced on their website their largest private gift of ownership in history, valued at more than $30 million, as well as oversight of the ecocenter. The ecocenter cur-rently possesses a 1,200 acre land trust in the Snyderville Basin and a 10,000 square-foot building dedicated to environmental education. Executive Director of Swaner Preserve and Ecocenter Annette Herman Harder said the center’s board of directors has been thrilled with the activity so far. She also said that USU has been “very active and benefi-cial” since the announcement of the partnership. Proceeds from the “Back in the Saddle” event will go straight to the Swaner Preserve and Ecocenter. More than 300 guests are expected to attend. Tickets are still available for $200 and can be purchased by contacting Teri Rasmussen at 888-653-6246 or E-mail [email protected].

[email protected]

4444

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Page 5: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

Utah State University • Logan, Utah • www.utahstatesman.com

A&EDiversions Friday, Sept. 3, 2010Page 5

55

The Logan Arthouse and Cinema has come a long way from the frigid and poorly-lit theater it was six months ago. Using a projector from Michigan and hun-dreds of hours of concentrated brute force, a building with malfunctioning heat ducts, carpet-ed restrooms, and pink cement was transformed into a cultural paradise. When Jonathan Ribera was a student at USU four years ago, he and a friend mused one day about purchasing the old Westates Theaters and creating their own independent film sanctuary. At the time it was one of several far-fetched pipe dreams the likes of heliskiing in Switzerland. Jonathan has yet to drop from a helicopter and ski the Swiss Alps. He is, however, the current owner of the Logan Arthouse and Cinema. “When my brothers and I thought about it, we actually made it work,” Jonathan said. The pipe dream was made reality. James, Joe and Jonathan Ribera grew up as self-described army brats, moving from one base to the next. Throughout a diverse childhood, they found a thread of consistency in artistic expres-sion. “We all have a passion for art and music and movies,” James said. “From a young age, that was our bond.” Jonathan is an artist and teaches at Edith Bowen. Ruling out professions in construction

and office work, he always felt as though punch-ing a daily time-card would not be a significant part of his future. “People said I wasn’t going to make a living as an artist, yet I have for the last twelve years,” Jonathan said. That same determination fueled the hope for the success of the theater. “Everybody says it’s going to fail, and there’s potential that it could. Our idea is that at some point in Logan and Cache Valley, this has to work.” Opening the theater was more than a risky, yet a potentially genius business plan. Once the Westates Theatre went out of business in October, the brothers began rifling through the details of ownership. The theater was officially theirs in March, albeit in extreme disrepair. Due to a barely existent budget, most of the renovation was conducted by the three brothers and gener-ously charitable friends. “It was a $100,000 job and we did it for a lot less than that,” James said. Not without difficulty, however. Dealing with foreign concepts like city codes and permits, James described the experi-ence as having a “very, very steep learning curve.” Keeping the theater in business in the slow Logan summer was inevitably hard, but now that students are back for the school year, the reward seems to be outweighing the risk. The sold out improvisation show last weekend starring popu-lar local group The Antics is proof. Shayna Patton, a junior in human movement

A breath of southern air is coming to Logan Sept. 7-8. Sweet Honey in the Rock will perform at the Ellen Eccles Theater, show-ing off their internationally acclaimed and award-winning songs. The sextet, based in Washington D.C., was invited by the Cache Valley Center for the Arts (CVCA). Amanda Castillo, Marketing Director for the CVCA, said the group’s trip to Logan was a long-time goal. “We’ve been watching them for about 10 years, but could never afford it.,” Castillo said. “We’re thrilled to have them come to our the-ater. It’s wonderful to have people open their minds to this kind of show.” Castillo went on to say one of the main reasons for inviting the group to Logan is their innovative and unique style. “We try to bring in the best of the best,” she said. “They’ve been all over the world, and to have a group like this come to Logan is great.” Founded by Bernice Johnson Reagon in 1973, the group released their first album, B’lieve I’ll Run On…, in 1978. Since then, the group has performed all over the world, including Japan, Russia, Australia, South America, Africa and Europe. Aside from inter-national travels, the group has made appear-ances across the country, even being invited by First Lady Michelle Obama to perform at the White House for the celebration of African-American History month. Sweet Honey also made an appearance on the red carpet at the 2008 Grammy awards, where their latest release, Experience...101, was nominated. According to www.sweethoney.com, the group took their name from Psalm 81:16,

where there is a “promise to a people of being fed by honey out of the rock. Honey – an ancient substance, sweet and nurturing. Rock – an elemental strength, enduring the winds of time.” With the original members’ experi-ence during the civil rights movement, they felt a personal connection to the metephor. Reagon writes on the group’s website how the experiences of the members contribute to the voice of their music. “We have worked very hard in many ways during this past year to create the way ahead for Sweet Honey, to create her voice as our communal voice for justice and truth in the world,” she writes. Wally Bloss, executive director for the CVCA, said Sweet Honey has “played an important role as artists and activists. This a capella sextet delivers a cohesive performance that fuses personality, power, and passion.” With over three decades of history and members who have seen the evolution of the country, Sweet Honey brings a sound usually unseen in Logan, Castillo said. “They do everything from rap and hip hop to reggae and jazz and gospel blues,” she said.“Not always will it sell out or be someone’s favorite, but we want it to appeal to everyone. We’re always trying to build our mix.” The members of Sweet Honey have been involved with music most of their lives, includ-ing many Broadway and off-Broadway perfor-mances. Ysaye Barnwell, a Sweet Honey singer since 1979, has also invested time in her edu-cation, receiving a Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh and teaching in the College of Dentistry for over a decade. Barnwell also studied the violin for 15 years and has written two children’s books. Sweet Honey member Shirley Childress Saxton, a professional sign language inter-

preter, has spent much of her life interpreting for people of all ages and stations, even having the opportunity to sign at a reading by Maya Angelou. Aside from her musical and interpre-tive careers, Saxton also founded the organiza-tion BRIDGES, which focuses on the African-American deaf community and interpreters. Nitanju Bolade Casel, who joined the group in 1985, is also co-founder ofArtistes Des Echanges Africaines, also heads her own publishing company, Clear Ice Music. Casel

was a finalist in both the 2006 and 2007 International Songwriter’s Competition and was nominated for a Grammy in 2008 for pro-ducing Sweet Honey’s Experience...101. Apart from working with her sister, Casel, as co-director of First World Productions, Aisha Kahil has performed in several produc-tions, including the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra’s rendition of “Porgy and Bess.”

5

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A capella group sweetens up Logan

Cinema reopens to culture Cache Valley

MEMBERS OF SWEET HONEY IN THE ROCK are coming to Logan Sept. 7-8. Sweet Honey aims to be a communal voice for peace and equality. Photo courtesy of SWEET HONEY IN THE ROCK

By KASEY VAN DYKEstaff writer

-See MUSIC, page 8

OWNERS JAMES AND JONATHAN RIBERA stand in front of their business, the Logan Art Cinema. The two became the official owners of the building in March 2010. The theater brings a wide variety of different genres to the Logan community. ALISON OSTLER photo

By NOELLE JOHANSENstaff writer

-See THEATER, page 6

Page 6: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

For a man who’s so stone-faced on the screen, Danny Trejo sure has a lot to say. Standing up at a banquette inside the classic Hollywood restaurant Musso & Frank on a recent afternoon, Trejo tells an elderly man hovering uncertainly in the doorway to “come on in,” imitates director Robert Rodriguez’s text-happy fingers, gestures to the waiter for a refill of his cranberry and 7-Up (“Manny, another one!”) and turns to a reporter to decry the flaws in the California prison system before offering some culinary advice (“You’ve never had the eggs Benedict here? You gotta have them!”). Then, he follows said reporter into the restroom, where the business at hand does little to stop Trejo’s riff about the time his then-9-year-old-son greeted Robert De Niro with a “Taxi Driver” imitation. (“I said ‘Mi hijo, how do you know that movie?’”) Welcome to the world of Hollywood’s toughest bad guy –or possibly its biggest social butterfly? For more than two decades, audiences have watched Trejo play a litany of men you wouldn’t want to meet in a dark alley, characters such as El Jefe, Jumpy and Hoodlum No. 2. But when he’s not starring as the requisite roughneck, Trejo cultivates a different image.

The former San Quentin inmate is, after a fashion, a political activist, a neighborhood guy, a mainstay of old-school Hollywood (he eats at Musso & Frank once or twice a week), a 12-step poster-child and motivational speaker, and last but undoubtedly not least, a man Mexican rock bands write songs about. “I was doing radio interviews and all of them were asking me about my song,” he says, referencing a track about him from Monterrey rock band Plastilina Mosh. “I’m like, ‘Come on. I’ve gone from ex-con to icon.’” Trejo adds a more substantial notch to his film resume this weekend with “Machete,” Robert Rodriguez’s immi-grant satire-cum-exploitation film. Here, for a change, the actor plays the title character and the hero, the Latino legend of the over-enunciated title (“Mach” as in “Macho,” then the airless Spanish ‘T,’ then an “ete” that rhymes with “sensei”). A mythic, abstract force as much as full-blown character, Machete can pulverize baddies with little more than the flick of his wrist while making hotties like Michelle Rodriguez and Jessica Alba fall into bed with him with barely a head nod. In a Texas racked by immigrant fears, Machete is framed for attempting to assassinate a political leader (De Niro), and then must exact revenge on those who set him up, all while his outlaw reputation provides hope to the embattled

Danny Trejo brings a career’s worth of bad-guy swagger to a good-guy role

StaffGuy XXXX“Machete”Grade: A-

LA Times

Reel Review

-See REVIEW, page 8

66

So, something on your mind? You can always write a letter to the editor. Time

to shine. Go to www.utahstatesman.com

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RedDead Redemption is a video game for all gamers! Red Dead was released this past sum-mer, giving me ample time to explore all the dif-ferent incredible aspects of the game. Rockstar, who also developed Grand Theft Auto, is the developer of Red Dead. Rockstar did not skip a beat when they decided to switch scenes from modern-era to the old Wild West. When you first begin to play Red Dead Redemption you get a sense of the Grand Theft Auto series influence on everything in the game. Rockstar holds true to developing a free-roaming world in Red Dead Redemption were you can go wher-ever, whenever and do whatever you want. You are free to ride your horse for hours on end, play poker, fool around with a harlot, save a damsel in distress, pick flowers, hunt animals, and pretty much anything you ever imag-ined doing in the wild west. In Red Dead Redemption you play John Marston, a former leader of an outlaw gang that has gone straight. Marston has been sent out by the feder-al government to round up some of his old gang members causing problems across the wild west. While trying to find and capture his old gang members, Marston has to complete a bunch of side missions from a cast of very colorful and entertaining characters. You help out these side characters so that they will provide you with materials, shelter, and information

on the old gang. In the game you will have personal decisions to make in situations that will cause you to question your morality and ethics. You are free to take the high or low road in most situations. You have an honor bar that shows whether you are a decent, help-ful human being or a

crusty, mean man that likes to get into trouble; the choice is all yours. As you push to one side or the other, people in the game will start to react differently toward you. If you are mean, people will stay out of your way, but if you are on the other side people will approach you and ask for your help. In conjunction with the honor bar, there is a “Fame” bar that shows how famous you are becoming. You will become famous because you are bad or famous because you’re honorable. The environment and graphics are unreal! The game is set along the United States and Mexico border, and you get a sense of that atmosphere. Rockstar does an incredible job of making the environment come to life around you while you’re playing. Birds may come out of the bushes as your horse thunders by. Trains whistle while storms come blowing in to fill area with fresh puddles.Around the next bend there may be a carriage being robbed by bandits and civilians crying out for help. There may be a cougar or bear about to attack you and your horse. The graphics are exceptional from the mountains and deserts to the plains

and plants. The in-game dialogue vid-eos show close-ups of characters that have scars and bruises, each with a story to tell. Rockstar got realistic voice actors for the characters who do an amazing job. The fight scenes in the game are incredibly fun to play, but I would say they are not very difficult. In the game you have an action called Dead Eye which turns you into a top-notch gun-slinger ready to shoot down a whole army of enemies. Dead Eye allows you to slow the game down, select a num-ber of enemies, and Marston will shoot them down at full game speed. “Dead Eye” is extremely effective while riding on a carriage or horse. There is also a cover button that allows Marston to slide into or jump behind cover, but I did not use this very often since the gunfights were not too difficult. Read Dead Redemption is a must-buy game that you will fall in love with. If you stick to the main story line you could probably complete it in about 20 hours, but with the side missions and exploring, it could take closer to 100 hours to complete. The game has a gripping storyline and a lead that you will mold into your own personal character. Rockstar gives the video gamer freedom to do what-ever he or she would like. Positives: Great storyline, great graphics, fun characters, open-play and fun gunfights. Negatives: Once you start, you will not want to do anything besides play this game.

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AggieDiversions Friday, Sept. 3, 2010Page 6

‘Red Dead Redemption’ alive and kickingStaff

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Page 7: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

Is your instrument gathering dust?...Then bring it and yourself to the first meeting of the

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<www.usu.edu/music/ensembles/band> <www.usu.edu/music/ensembles/band>AggieDiversionsFriday, Sept. 3, 2010 Page 7

science, visited the venue last Saturday night for an improv show by Out Of the Blue Entertainment. She said she was a fan of the retro décor and would likely visit again. “If there was a show there that I wanted to see, I would totally go because it’s cheap and it’s a cool atmosphere,” Patton said. Other upcoming events at the Logan Arthouse and Cinema include showings of “Ghost Bird,” a documentary on a wood-pecker that was believed to be extinct, and “Restrepo,” a Sundance Grand Jury winner. Classic movie nights are being arranged, as are Wednesday open-mic nights. October promises to be a big month for the cinema, with audience interactive show-ings of cult films such as the Rocky Horror Picture Show and a zombie parade near Halloween. Students and members of the commu-nity are especially important to the cinema,

not only for filling seats but for spreading creativity and contributing ideas. The cin-ema owners enjoy interaction with guests at events and encourage feedback in per-son and through the Logan Arthouse and Cinema website, www.loganarthouse.com. The Logan Arthouse and Cinema is not simply another money-pit of a venue, but rather a melting pot for all underground musical groups, documentaries and com-edy. No genre is excluded, and the Ribera brothers have yet to say no to an idea. “String quartet, harmonica quartet, if somebody is just going to play their silver-ware, I’ll totally do it,” Jonathan said. If seats are filled, anything goes. For Jonathan, his cinema is much more than expanding his entrepreneurship background. He is a sort of visionary in his expectations for the future fans of the cin-ema. “I used to read stories about C.S. Lewis

and J. R. R. Tolkien, who would sit at a bar or a pub together and throw out ideas, talk philosophy, talk literature,” Jonathan said. “That’s kind of my dream.” Calling the theater a “safe haven for the creative”, he strongly believes the cinema can artistically bridge the gap between cul-tural differences. He imagines Atheists and Christians sitting in the lobby’s café, dis-cussing their favorite foreign films instead of dwelling on theological differences. His ideal crowd is “a weird spectrum of people where everybody feels comfortable.” The ultimate plan is to create a well-known and comfortable atmosphere, simi-lar to gathering at a friend’s house to watch a favorite film. “Just drop us a couple bucks so we can keep the lights on,” Jonathan said.

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THE INSIDE OF THE Logan Arthouse and Cinema, which was gutted and remolded beginning in March. ALISON OSTLER photo

Theater: New owners make several changes

-continued from page 5

Page 8: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

Review: “Machete” pleases -continued from page 6

Latino population. “It’s an honor to be the first Latino superhero,” says Trejo about a character Rodriguez conceived of more than 15 years ago and who began on-screen life as a fake trailer in “Grindhouse,” the director’s 2007 love letter to exploitation movies that he helmed with Quentin Tarantino. “And I didn’t have to wear tights, and I didn’t have a Daddy-hates-me complex,” Trejo adds, bursting into laugh-ter.The 66-year-old’s legend off screen is almost as rich as his new role. As a teenager and early twentysomething, he shuttled between prison and Southern California barrios. After he was blamed for a prison riot, he was sent to soli-tary, a period that inspired a dedication to boxing and to an alcohol- and drug-free life.“I remember 10 or 15 years ago everyone talking about the millennium and being all worried. And I would say ‘The mil-lennium? I wasn’t supposed to get out of the ‘60s.’” In 1985, Trejo’s life was working as a substance-abuse counselor spiritually far from Hollywood when he ended up getting counseling work on the set of Andrei Konchalovsky’s “Runaway Train.” Konchalovsky spotted him, liked his leath-ery face, and gave him a role. A quarter of a century later, the actor has starred in seem-ingly every third Hollywood action movie including “Heat,” “Con Air” and numerous Robert Rodriguez films (in which his character is almost always named for a weapon).

88

Written in the most inno-vative novel format I’ve seen since reading “House of Leaves” five years ago, “Ella Minnow Pea” is meant for adults and youth alike. Author Mark Dunn writes in a progres-sively mini-malistic style t h r o ug h o u t the novel, but it isn’t just a writing style, it’s the integral component of the plot. Eighteen-year old Ella Minnow Pea lives on an Island called Nollop, named for the inventor of the famous sen-tence: The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. I’m

sure we all typed it hundreds of types in grade-school computer classes, as it uses

all 26 letters of the alpha-bet. The small island com-munity is gov-erned by a council, but doesn’t need much by the way of gov-ernance- the town was

formed in celebration of the spoken word, and their pri-mary tenets are using prop-er grammar and extensive vocabularies. However, the statue immortalizing the sentence the townspeople so adore loses a letter one day, and the council takes the mishap as a sign from the late Nevin Nollop that this letter should no longer be used. Ever. As letters continue to fall inexplicably to the pavement of the town square, so does each letter disappear from the text making up the book itself. Luckily for readers, there is more than one “e” in the sentence, but unfortu-nately for the townspeople, the council imposes harsh, strictly enforced punish-ments on those who use a word containing a banned

letter. This includes written and spoken communication, and Dunn holds nothing back in making his point about totali-tarian rule and the seemingly arbitrary restrictions upon which these regimes often rally. Neighbors turn on each other, families are broken apart, and individuals fall prey to old vices in desper-ate circumstances as Ella Minnow Pea and a select few others try to find a way to get their language back and persuade the council that an omniscient Nevin Nollop is not the cause of the decimated statue. Dunn magically disguises a social and political commen-tary into a subtle sub-layer of the text, making the book a delightfully, fast-paced and clever adventure for any reader to breeze through. The roughly 200 pages can also be a thoughtful, excit-ing tale for a more careful reader, so even if you’re just a little bit curious about the novelty of this kind of book, I’d recommend picking it up. It’s a great choice for a book group, as well, offering plen-ty to laugh about, decipher and discuss.

[email protected]

88

AggieDiversions Friday, Sept. 3, 2010Page 8

Music: Aiming to educate -continued from page 5

Kahil was also voted best soloist by the Contemporary A Capella Society and was a winner in the International Songwriting Competition in 2005. Louise Robinson, a founding member of Sweet Honey, worked with Carol Maillard and Smokey Ronald Stevens in producing the performance series, “A Sho Nuff Variety Revue,” featuring New York artists. Robinson also helped form another singing ensemble, the Bay-area quintet, Street Sounds, which has been performing for 14 years. Maillard, born and raised in Philidelphia, has performed in on- and off-Broadway productions and has made appear-ances on Law and Order, as well as the PBS movie “Hallelujah.” She majored in theater at the Catholic University of America after switching from violin perfor-mance. Maillard explained that the core sound of the group comes from African-American songs and culture. Since all the members have distinct voices, styles and musical tastes, Maillard said the group evolves with every new member. “We like to sing music that has a message in whatever form we find it,” she said. “We like for our music to touch, educate and inspire. I think we do a pretty good job of doing that.” Maillard went on to say how much the African-American culture has played into the lives of the members of Sweet Honey. “Because of them, we are here and thriving and looking ahead to a bright future for our children,” Maillard said. “We have to hold that vision in our hearts and souls because when we look at how far we’ve come, we know it’s important to hold on to everything we’ve been given.” Maillard said Sweet Honey looks forward to more travel and more performing. “We’re not a Top 40 group,” she said, “so we don’t take any opportunities we have to travel and ‘edu-tain’ for granted.” For more information about tickets and show times, call 435-752-0026 or visit www.CacheValleyCenterForTheArts.org.

[email protected]

“Ella Minnow Pea” is

short read but worth it

StaffGuy XXXX

“Ella Minnow Pea”

Grade: A-

Chelsey Gensel

Book Review

“We like for our music to touch, educate and inspire. I think we do a pretty good job of doing that.”

Carol Maillard, Member of Sweet

Honey in the Rock

Page 9: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

99

Utah State University • Logan, Utah • www.utahstatesman.com

FridaySportsFriday, Sept. 3, 2010Page 9

99

It’s no secret that fans and media members tend to focus on the skill posi-tions when previewing college football games. It’s also no secret that when it comes to Utah State’s opener against the Oklahoma Sooners, many Aggie fans are weary of the Sooners’ three-headed monster on offense. Quarterback Landry Jones, running back DeMarco Murray, and receiver Ryan Broyles are all legiti-mate all-American candidates at their respective positions, and all three figure to bring an explosive presence to a game which some are speculating could get out of hand very quickly. But when it comes to stopping the OU offense or moving the ball effec-tively against the Sooner defense, USU’s coaches and players will be the first to tell you that the game’s peripheral match-ups aren’t where victory or defeat will be forged. The game, they say, will be decided by what happens up front on the offensive and defensive lines. “Ninety-five percent of the time, up front is where you’ll win the game,” said USU defensive coordinator Bill Busch. “Every now and then you can trick some-

one for maybe a game or something, but overall, and through a season, the whole things depends on the guys up front.” It’s not exactly a rosy prognosis for Utah State fans going “by the book” in their analysis. Oklahoma is not only physical in their style of smash-mouth, run-first football, but the Sooners have an offensive line that looks and fits the bill. OU’s five offensive line starters average in at just over 6’5’’and 300 pounds per man, with the mas-sive Tyler Evans leading the way at right guard. Throw in the one-two punch of a pair of stud running backs in Murray and sophomore Jermie Calhoun, and OU should have every ability to run roughshod over USU’s undersized defensive line. Should being the operative word, because according to Busch, a smaller defensive line like USU’s can compensate for its lack of bulk with aggressive play and sound fundamentals. It all starts with leverage, and it’s a facet of the game

Busch feels confident about going into Saturday. “You’ve got to have some physical movement up front,” Busch said after practice on Wednesday. “You’ve got to

be able to move on them, and then you’ve got to get underneath their pads.” Playing with good leverage is something USU will have to do if the Aggies are to have any chance at stopping DeMarco Murray and the Sooner run game. Murray, who rushed for 705 yards and 8 touch-downs last year despite being hampered by a ham-string injury, is among the best backs in the country, according to Aggie lineman Sean Enesi. “We’ve watched his

film ever since the offseason started,” said Enesi, who at 5’11’’ is among the shortest offensive linemen in the coun-try. “He’s a great athlete,” added the USU tackle. Enesi and his USU teammates know just how much of a challenge going up

against OU’s front will be, but they are confident in their ability to meet it. Echoing his head coach, Enesi said that the key for USU will be to play relentless up front and to stay low while engaging Oklahoma’s offensive line. “We are undersized, but our advan-tage is that we’re going to be lower than them,” he said. “We know we have great hands and have been working on our technique during the offseason and during camp. That’s what we’re going to use. We’re going to use our speed off the edges, and we are going to stay low.” USU struggled mightily in stopping the run last season. The USU defense ranked 110 out of 120 Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) teams in yards allowed, giving up over 200 rushing yards per game. Enesi said that stopping OU’s run game will be crucial, and that he and his fellow defensive lineman will have to absorb the brunt of the Sooner line in order to allow USU’s fast but undersized linebackers to come up and make plays against Murray. “We’re going to take on the double teams and all the triple teams and every-

Holding the Line: What you need to know before Utah State takes on Oklahoma in Saturday’s season opener.

Setting the Stage: The Sooners come into the year ranked 7th in the AP Poll. That’s bad news for USU, which hasn’t defeated a ranked opponent since 1991, losing 26 straight against ranked teams since then. The Aggies last played OU in 2007, losing 54-3. When OU has the ball: Expect the Sooners to imple-ment a balanced but physical game plan that heavily fea-tures running backs DeMarco Murray and Jermie Calhoun. Murray, who rushed for over a 1,000 yards in 2008 but has been hampered by injury since, is back to 100 percent going into this year. Also look for OU quarterback Landry Jones to try to work the ball to big-play receiver Ryan Broyles as much as possible. Broyles was a second-team, all-Big 12 pick last year, and will give Aggie cornerback Chris Randle plenty to focus on during the game. When USU has the ball: Look for a diverse offensive game plan. USU coordinator Dave Baldwin said running the ball against OU’s physical, yet fast, defense is going to be essential, but the Aggies have to be creative in how they get their playmakers in space. Quarterback Diondre Borel will have to play effi-cient and turnover-free if USU is to have any chance at keeping pace with the OU offense, while USU’s offensive line will have to find a way to hold up against OU’s front four. X-factor: Borel’s legs. For as much improvement as he made in the offseason in accuracy and his ability to stand in the pocket, Borel will have to ad lib against the OU defense if the Aggies are to be successful. There is no way USU will be able to protect Borel if he doesn’t improvise in the pocket, but his ability to take off and run could give the OU defense pause. If USU is to pull the upset, it will be because Borel puts the game on both his arm and legs. Crunching Numbers: ESPN.com Scouts Inc., a statistical service which projects games, predicts an overwhelming OU victory based off of data compiled from a sample of 75 games played since the 2003-2004 season that share many of the same factors that this game features. According to Scouts Inc., in those 75 match-ups, the team like Utah State lost 73 of 75 similar historical games. Aggie fans might want to borrow a line from Han Solo when looking at this one: “Never tell me the odds.” Statesman Prediction: This is a much better USU team than the one which lost to OU in 2007, but the Aggies are still nowhere near OU in terms of talent and depth. USU has the potential for the upset, but in order to do it the Aggies will have to play a turnover-free game and get a few lucky breaks against the Sooners. Those are a lot of “ifs,” and when push comes to shove, Landry Jones and the OU offense should be too strong for the USU defense. This one looks nastier on the scoreboard than it will on the field, but OU ultimately pre-vails 48-24.– [email protected]

WAC, USU look to save conference

“We are going to run the ball at them, but we’re going to run it at them in every formation and motion possible in America.””

Dave Baldwin, USU offensive coordi-

nator

Quick HitsUtah State (0-0) at Oklahoma

(0-0)7:00 PM ET, September 4, 2010USU offensive, defensive lines key if Aggies are to upset Oklahoma

UTAH STATE’S OFFENSIVE LINE, including gaurd Philip Gapelu (68) will have their work cut out for them when going up against the Oklahoma defensive front on Saturday. The Sooners are fast and athletic up front, and are led by former third team all-American Jeremy Beal. Statesman file photo

By ADAM NETTINAsports editor

Less than two hours after Western Athletic Commissioner Karl Benson held a teleconference to address the future of the WAC, Utah State athletic director Scott Barnes spoke to members of the local media Sept. 1, saying that USU was committed to the idea of expanding the WAC while also stressing the importance of keep-ing USU’s athletic options open. “We will keep our options open,” said Barnes, who spoke in response to the official announcement that BYU will join the West Coast Conference in all sports except football. The Cougars announced on Wednesday that they would go independent in football, effective June 30, 2011. Barnes continued, saying, “The best decision we can make for our student athletes is to make sure we evaluate whatever options are available, and cur-rently we will proceed in that

way.” The two press conferences came on the heels of a nearly three week odyssey which has seen the WAC go from an eight team conference with the pos-sibility of adding a ninth pro-gram (BYU) in all sports except football, to a six team conference without its two strongest foot-ball members (Fresno State and Nevada.) Nevada and Fresno State accepted invitations to join the Mountain West Conference (MWC) two weeks ago, while USU declined an offer to join the MWC while believing BYU would join the WAC. Boise State left the conference for the MWC in early June. Currently, Fresno State and Nevada are contractually obli-gated to play in the WAC through the next two seasons, although both schools have expressed their desire to leave prior to the 2011-2012 school year. According to Barnes, it’s essential that the

By ADAM NETTINAsports editor

-See USU PREVIEW, page 12

-See WAC, page 12WAC COMMISIONER KARL BENSON, seen here during the WAC media day conference in July, said that the WAC will explore all options when looking for new members. CARL R. WILSON photo

vs.

Page 10: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

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Friday, Sept. 3, 2010Page 10 StatesmanSports

An Oklahoma student journal-ist gives his perspective on the Sooners headed into this week-end’s opener with Utah State.

It’s not uncommon for Oklahoma Sooner fans to refer to the football team as “re-loading” when it comes to beginning a new season. This year is no exception. Between the successful offseason recruiting by the coaching staff and the infec-tious injury bug that ended 13 players’ seasons early in 2009, the 2010 version of the Sooners looks to waste little time correcting the minor problems that hamper the team. This is great news for Oklahoma fans, who watched a potential championship run become a dismal 8-5 cam-paign marred by the sidelin-

ing of 2008 Heisman winning quarterback Sam Bradford, All-American tight end Jermaine Gresham and many other nationally recognized players. Rookie mistakes, a com-mon theme for OU in 2009, will be corrected by the learn-ing experience of last season. Young players, who normally would not have seen playing time, ended up drudging through nearly the whole season, carrying the burden of the expectations from the older, more experienced players with them. Add into the mix the number of true and redshirt freshmen from the offseason, and this year’s team should excite some fans looking to redeem the awful season of 2009. In the home opener this Saturday, the Sooners face the Utah State Aggies. Unfortunately for the Aggies, they’ll find that OU fans will already harbor resentment for the fact that the team’s week one opponent comes from the same state as the BYU Cougars. BYU upset the Sooners during the first week of the 2009 season, and, more importantly, injured quarter-back Sam Bradford. The loss to the Cougars and the loss of Bradford literally changed the entire direction of the season for OU, ending any hope of a national title run. Bradford may have gradu-ated and gone on to the NFL, but Sooner fans have no shortage of optimism head-ing into 2010, despite a more youthful team. This year’s projected starting defense will feature several new faces, including four sophomores and one redshirt freshman. The offense, will play three sophomores and one fresh-man, although the three sophomores come in with experience on the field in 2009. The newer players deserv-ing of fans’ attention include

the wide receiving corps and the defensive backfield. Freshman Kenny Stills turned heads at OU’s Red-White scrimmage and is currently first on the depth chart. Receivers have been less than stellar the past few seasons, which is odd for a program that consistently generates yard-munching offenses and talented quarterbacks. OU coach Bob Stoops said in his preseason presser that he’s very impressed with the receivers this year, and will count on junior Ryan Broyles (89 catches,1,120 yards in 2009) to lead several other talented up-and comers. On the other side of the ball, defensive backs Dominique Franks and Brian Jackson share the bulk of the defensive backfield’s experience between them. The Sooners must find two replacements due to gradua-tion and the lure of the NFL. Seniors Quinton Carter and Jonathan Nelson are currently leading the depth chart. Losing the loved-by-students, hated-by-offensive lineman Gerald McCoy will also leave big shoes up front, but if senior tackle Adrian Taylor recovers from his gruesome Sun Bowl injury, or sopho-more Jamarkus McFarland begins playing like his high school highlights show he can, the position will be in good hands for the season. There’s a reason Oklahoma has lost only two games at home under Stoops, and fans are expecting blood this year in the home opener. The team has been fortunate in getting a number of talented recruits these past few seasons, and combined with the talent and the tradition of excellence, OU fans have no reason to think this year’s Sooner team will be sleepwalking when the Aggies come to town.

Luke Atkinson is the editor of OU’s Inside The Huddle.

By LUKE ATKINSONThe Oklahoma Daily

SEVENTH RANKED OKLAHOMA comes into the 2010 season with what figures to be one of the best defenses in the entire country. The Sooners went 8-5 last year and beat Stanford in the Sun Bowl. Photo courtesy of the Oklahoma Daily

OU set to return strong after dismal 2009 season

NEW YORK (AP) – One woman’s exit from the U.S. Open was jarring and sudden. Another’s came off as sad and not all that surprising. Victoria Azarenka and Melanie Oudin said goodbye to Flushing Meadows in starkly different manners Wednesday – Azarenka, a concussion victim collapsing on the overheated court and Oudin a straight-set loser to a player who cared little about the 18-year-old’s dreams of a fairy tale repeat. All part of an anticlimatic day that ended with the loss of the highest-ranked American man, No. 9 Andy Roddick, who carried on a running argument with a lineswoman over a third-set foot fault, but couldn’t find the fire to overcome 44th-ranked Janko Tipsarevic. Tipsarevic used his big groundstrokes and 66 winners to

quiet the crowd of nearly 23,000 at Arthur Ashe Stadium in a 3-6, 7-5, 6-3, 7-6 (4) win. “He played very high-risk and executed for four sets,” Roddick said. “I kept telling myself, ‘You know, this has to have an expira-tion date on it.’ Unfortunately, I needed another set for that.” The Roddick loss was the big news of the evening session. To start the day, 10th-seeded Azarenka, an up-and-coming 21-year-old from Belarus, went down while trailing 5-1 to Gisela Dulko on the Grandstand court, where the temperature had reached 90 degrees by 11:30 a.m. After stopping suddenly while chasing a ball on the baseline, Azarenka stopped and crumpled to the ground. “I was scared,” Dulko said of her reaction to

Oudin, Roddick lose and Azarenka falls at US Open

-See TENNIS, page 11

Page 11: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

The first week of school is in the books, and the roller coaster of fall semester is only getting start-ed. Already you’ve had enough of boring professors and waitlist frustrations, bookstore angst and dining-hall chicken fingers. But it hasn’t been all bad. You’ve scored some free Aggie ice cream and rocked out to some killer bands, scored some free trinkets on the quad and even found that “special someone” (although, I hate to break it to you, chances are you’ll never see him or her again after next week). Heck, you’ve even got your Aggie game-day shirt, and have roamed the TSC humming “The Scotsman”. Yes, sir, September has arrived, and with it, the college football season. There’s only one problem: But, before you write off the three-month marathon of col-lege football which I affectionately refer to as “pure, unadulterated awesomeness,” know that you can enjoy all the highs of this fall rite of pas-sage without leaving the comfort of your dorm room bean bag chair. Not that I endorse such weekend lethargy, of course, but coming from the East Coast, I can appreciate the interest you may have in other universities’ teams. Fortunately, this season figures to offer plenty of excitement for fans with interests as diverse as a multicultural expo. For the college football enthusiast like me, the season we’re about to embark upon isn’t just a nice distraction from verb conjugations and statistical equations, it’s a holiday. Like Christmas, you could say, except without the eggnog and that crazy uncle. So, without further ado, I present to you my A-Z viewers guide for the 2010 college football sea-son. Sit back, relax, and enjoy the ride. A is for Aggies. But not just the USU Aggies. Did you know that there are two other Aggie teams in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS)? Watch out for the Texas A&M Aggies, who field one of the nation’s best quarterbacks in Jerrod Johnson, and could knock Texas off its perch in the Big 12 south. B is for Brigham Young University, which will play its final year in the Mountain West Conference (MWC) this season. The Cougars will travel to play USU before a nationally tele-vised audience on ESPN Oct. 1. C is for conference expansion, and the hope that it’ll hit the back burner once the season kicks off. Watching dudes tackle each other is so much more exciting than talking about which conference dudes might be tackling each other two to three years down the road. D is for Dobbs, as in Ricky Dobbs. The Navy quarterback broke Tim Tebow’s single-season record for rushing touchdowns by a quarter-back last season (27), and returns for his senior season to lead the best Navy team in decades. He’s not just a Heisman trophy dark horse; he’s an aspiring politician who wants to be President someday. E is for ESPN3.com, which I will be glued to for the next three days. The website, which is free to view on campus computers, allows you to watch just about every game televised throughout the country. You have no idea how many dates I’ve turned down to devote my Friday night to watch-ing Villanova vs. Temple.

F is for the Florida Gators, who’ll enter a brave, post- Tim Tebow, new world this season. Can QB John Brantley lead the 4th-ranked Gators to an SEC title? We’ll find out Oct. 2 when coach Urban Meyer’s squad takes on defending champ Alabama. G is for Georgia Tech and the great job Paul Johnson has done in making the ACC school relevant again. As a no-nonsense offensive inno-vator, Johnson’s flexbone, triple-option offense won two national titles at Georgia Southern. Is this the year he proves it can do the same at the FBS level? H is for hot seat, and the coaches who’ll have to come up with winning seasons this year to save their jobs. Dan Hawkins’ chair is burning up in Colorado, while Maryland could part ways with Ralph Friedgen if the Terps can’t come up with a bowl berth this season. I is for idiot, a term you’ll likely be using many times throughout the season. Most often this will come in references to players, coaches, and officials. Eventually you’ll even use it to describe yourself, especially after you’ve invested an entire day of watching football only to see your favorite team go down worse than the French in World War II. J is for Joker Phillips, the first-year head coach at Kentucky. Don’t look now, but he’s already injected an infectious enthusiasm into the mid-dle-of-the-road program, which could sneak up on SEC heavyweights this year. K is for Kellen Moore, who might just be the best quarterback in the country, regardless of conference. Moore, who threw for 3,536 yards and 39 touchdowns with just three interceptions in 2009, will be the key for Boise State when they take on Virginia Tech on Monday in an opener with national title implications. You can catch the game at 6 p.m. on ESPN. L is for Leach, the mad-man of west Texas. Mike Leach, aside from being a pirate enthusiast and all-around weirdo, was the coach of Texas Tech before being fired last season, but will take his off-the-cuff and dry sense of humor to the airwaves for CBS College Sports. M is for Montana, a Football Bowl Championship school and perennial national title contender. The Griz open the year as the sec-ond-ranked Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) team, and are led by senior running back Chase Reynolds. N is for Nebraska, a team many people feel should easily win the Big 12 north and could even make a run at a national title. The Cornhuskers will play their final year in the Big 12 this year before moving to the Big 10 in 2011. Head coach Bo Pelini is a defensive mastermind, but the team will have to replace one of the most dominant defenders in its history with the loss of Ndamukong Suh. O is for Ohio State, or as they like to say in Columbus, THE Ohio State University. The Buckeyes enter the year second in both the AP and Coaches poll, but they’ll have to get by strong-looking Iowa and Wisconsin teams in order to win the Big 10 and have a shot at a national title. P is for procrastination. I consider this an essential skill for a college student who wishes to enjoy the weekend’s gridiron action, and despite whatever your professors may tell you, Shakespeare is quite OK with you spark-noting his masterful plays if it means having the chance to watch your favorite team pull the upset of the

century. Q is for Quizz Rogers, whose real name is Jazquizz. The 5’7’’ Oregon State running back might be small in stature, but he’s one of the most electrifying playmakers in the country. He ran for over 1,400 yards and 21 touchdowns as a sophomore in 2009, and gives the Beavers their first legitimate Heisman trophy candidate in years. R is for rankings, and the obsession we all have with them. Whether it be the AP poll, the Coaches poll, or the all-important BCS Rankings, the votes cast and formulas derived from them will determine who plays for a national title come January. S is for strong safeties, and the talented crop of players at the position in 2010. Iowa’s Tyler Sash is known for his big play ability and ball-hawking skills, while Buffalo’s Davonte Shannon has the tendency to launch his body at people with all the fury of a cruise missile. And don’t forget about Boise State’s Jeron Johnson, whose bone-shattering hits give pause to any WAC receiver who dares to go over the middle. T is for tough schedules. According to Phil Steele magazine, Iowa State will play the tough-est schedule in 2010, facing teams with a com-bined winning percentage of 63.4% from 2009. According to Steele, USU will play the nation’s 65th toughest schedule this season. U is for underdogs. We always pull for them. Except, of course, when they’re named Utah or Boise State. V is for Verne Lundquist, the classic voice of play-by-play for SEC conference games on CBS. Quite simply, Lundquist is one of the best broad-casters to ever take to the airwaves. W is for Wannstache, or the mustache sport-ed by Pittsburgh coach Dave Wannstedt. Reason enough to watch the Big East preseason favor-ites, if you ask me. X is for Xavier, a Catholic university in Cincinnati and member of the Big East confer-ence. Xavier does not have a football team, but you try thinking of a word in the college football lexicon which starts with “x”. Y is for youth movement. Among the many things to watch from USU this year will be how the team’s redshirt freshmen and sophomores do. Because of injuries, the Aggies will need a number of young players to step up, including sophomore running back Kerwynn Williams Z is for Zach Collaros, the exciting junior quarterback from the University of Cincinnati. He came off the bench to lead the Bearcats to a win over South Florida after starter Tony Pike got hurt last year, and never looked back. He led the team to four wins while throwing for 10 touch-downs and only two picks, but can he build on a strong sophomore campaign without former coach Brian Kelly at the helm? We’ll find out on Saturday, when Cincinnati travels to play Fresno State. Well, there you have it. And just in case any-one is wondering, I did in fact have to sing the ABCs to myself several times while coming up with this list. And in case you’re also wondering, I’m not exactly sold on Temple and Villanova, so any ladies out there feel free to drop me a line.

Adam Nettina is a senior majoring in his-tory, and member of the Football Writers

Association of America. He can be reached at [email protected].

1111

An ABC guide to the 2010 college football season

Adam nettina

Five wide: A football

column

Friday, Sept. 3, 2010 Page 11StatesmanSports

seeing her opponent hit the con-crete. Azarenka was treated like a victim of heat exhaustion – covered by a towel, sheltered by an umbrella, rolled off in a wheelchair, ice pack on her neck and a doctor checking her pulse. Several hours later, she revealed that she had fallen and hit her head during pre-match warmups. She was taken to the hospital and diagnosed with a mild concus-sion. “I was checked by the medical team before I went on court and they were courtside for monitor-ing,” Azarenka said in a state-ment. “I felt worse as the match went on, having a headache and feeling dizzy. I also started hav-ing trouble seeing and felt weak before I fell.” Though she said her injury wasn’t heat related, this was, nonetheless, another day when the weather was on almost every-one’s mind. Temperatures on the courts reached into the 100s, and for the second straight day, tournament officials put their extreme-weather policy in effect, giving women the option of tak-ing a 10-minute break if they split sets. Heat didn’t have as much of an impact on Oudin as did nerves during her late-afternoon match in Armstrong Stadium, which by that time was covered in shad-ows. Last year, she took the city by storm, showing all that heart and grit en route to a surprising trip to the quarterfinals that made her as big a star at Times Square as she was on the stadium court. Since then, she has endured a more even-keeled year of learning – ranked 43rd in the world and with only one victory in the first three Grand Slam tournaments of 2010. She came back to New York wondering if something about this city and this tourna-ment might inspire another run. She left with a disheartening 6-2, 7-5 loss to No. 29 Alona Bondarenko and the sinking real-ization that even in the Big Apple, encores can be hard to come by. “I guess I’m a little tiny bit relieved now,” Oudin said. “I can kind of start over from all the expectations from last year. And now I can just go out and hope-fully do really well the rest of the year and keep working hard.” Her loss and Roddick’s took out two of America’s favorites. Another – 18th-seeded John Isner of 70-68 fifth-set Wimbledon fame – moved on with a 6-4, 6-3, 6-4 victory over Frederico Gil. “For my second-round match,” Isner said, “I should be a little bit fresher than I was at Wimbledon.” Other American winners included No. 20 Sam Querrey and 18-year-old qualifier Ryan Harrison, who beat No. 15 Ivan Ljubicic 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-3, 6-4. And, of course, there was No. 3 Venus Williams, who dispatched Canada’s Rebecca Marino 7-6 (3), 6-3 in a match that went practically unnoticed amid all the strangeness of Wednesday. No. 7-seeded Tomas Berdych was the highest seed to lose, though Roddick’s setback figured to generate more buzz in New York. He got into it with a lines-woman in the third set after she called a foot fault and said it was his right foot that touched the line. Replays showed it was his left, something Roddick knew had to be true. He challenged her repeatedly and she stuck to her story, even though she was wrong. “It was the fact that I couldn’t get her to admit that it wasn’t the right foot that just infuriated me,” Roddick said. “The lack of common sense involved in that was unbelievable to me.” Earlier in Ashe Stadium, a much nicer story. No. 2 Kim Clijsters steam-rolled 19-year-old Aussie quali-fier Sally Peers 6-2, 6-1 – though Peers left with a smile on her face. “This is probably a dream come true,” Peers said. “When I was 10, if you’d told me I was going to play Kim Clijsters at Arthur Ashe Stadium, I’d have not believed you. To do that, it’s really, like, ‘Wow.’”

Tennis: U.S. open -continued from page 10

Page 12: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

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Friday, Sept. 3, 2010Page 12 StatesmanSports

thing. It frees up our lineback-ers and makes it easy for our back-end guys to make plays, which is what we really want.” As for Murray’s preseason Heisman hype, Enesi and his fellow lineman are hoping to deepen it in week one. “We’ve

got something for him, and our defense is really focused and set to just stop the run first and play the pass from there,” Enesi said. The game will also come down to how USU’s offensive line is able to perform against the Sooner defensive front, which routinely ranks amongst the top units in all of college football. While the Sooners suffered a major hit after last season when lineman Gerald McCoy was drafted third overall in the NFL draft, Oklahoma still figures to be stout and physical up front. Third-team all-American defensive end Jeremy Beal anchors the unit, while 300-pounder Casey Walker steps in at the nose. According to USU offensive lineman Spencer Johnson, it’s OU’s combination of size on the interior and speed on the edges which gives the Sooners such a potent attack on the defensive line. “I think they are unique because they are physical and because they are really, really fast,” Johnson said. The challenge of protecting USU quarterback Diondre Borel isn’t lost on Johnson, but he said the Aggies can benefit from past match-ups with conference foes Boise State and Nevada when it comes to matching up against OU’s defensive front. “When you look at teams like Nevada and Boise state, they are real fast and they’re real disciplined,” Johnson said. “You see that a lot with the bigger schools. They have more speed. If we can play and study film on (Boise) and (Nevada) and learn stuff from them, then when we play bigger teams it is easier for us to see it and to understand things.” Understanding how the Oklahoma defense will line up and attack USU’s spread offense is a point of particular emphasis for both Aggie head coach Gary Andersen and USU offensive coordinator Dave Baldwin. After practice on Wednesday, Andersen addressed the team on the importance of watching film in preparing for the match-up. According to Baldwin, it’s watching film and paying attention to the intricacies of a defense like Oklahoma’s which will help the Aggies even with the discrepancy in size and speed up front. “As a player, if you know the technique of the opponents you’re against – or if you know

the situation you are in and what their defense is going to be in – the more you know about it and will be able to execute against it,” Baldwin said. He said while Oklahoma’s defensive front is fast and physi-cal, his offense is disciplined and innovative. He knows USU can’t play smash football against OSU, but as long as quarterback Diondre Borel and the line can execute the gameplan, then USU stands a fighting chance. “We’ve got to look at our-selves,” Baldwin said. “Are we going to play smash-mouth foot-ball with them? No – but no one did with them last year. We are going to run the ball at them, but we’re going to run it at them in every formation and motion possible in America.” Baldwin, who coached at Michigan State 2003-2006, doesn’t buy the hoopla that teams like Oklahoma have a dramatic personnel advantage against non-BCS teams like those in the Western Athletic Conference. He pointed to simi-lar situations the Aggies have been in during past games, and said that if his team goes down on Saturday, it will bee because of lack of execution on USU’s part. “Look at the last four years,” Baldwin said. “Boise State beat (Oklahoma). BYU beat them. That’s what we go by. We’ com-peted against Boise. We compet-ed against BYU. Why can’t we compete against (Oklahoma)?” “It’s never the opponent who beats you, it’s always yourself,” added Baldwin. “If we limit our mistakes than we’ve got a shot.” You can say all you want about five-star high school recruits and the overwhelming talent discrepancy that exists between the two teams, but when it comes to winning and losing on Saturday, USU’s play-ers and coaches now that their ability to hold strong on the offensive and defensive lines will be the deciding factor. While over-matched on paper, Aggie players are determined not to be out-prepared, and promise Oklahoma a fight in the trenches come Saturday. “I’ve been a lineman all my life, so it’s going to come down to our defensive line and our offensive line and how we’re going to progress during these last days of preparation,” said Enesi. “Come game day we are going to show up.”– [email protected]

USU Preview: Aggies prepared for Sooners -continued from page 9

WAC enforce the bylaw which will keep the two schools in the conference, if for no other reason than to stabilize the WAC’s deli-cate existence until replacement schools can be brought in. “What is really important to us, the WAC, is that we continue to have Nevada and Fresno in our conference through 2012,” said Barnes. “That gives us this year to see what happens on a national landscape.” The WAC will operate as a nine team conference this season, and ideally will operate as an eight team conference in 2011-

2012. As for the WAC’s next move, Benson said on Wednesday that a committee has been formed to study future membership mod-els, and the process of search-ing for replacement schools – whether they currently play in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) or Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) – will begin immediately. “I’m confident that there are teams that will add value to the WAC in the future,” said Benson. “History has shown that teams that have joined the WAC have provided immediate benefits to the league, and have themselves, become better programs in a short time.” Conference proponents fear a six- team WAC – which will occur if replacement schools cannot be found by 2012 – will be unable to hold together in the long-term, especially amidst rumors that Louisiana Tech could be explor-ing options with Conference-USA. Barnes is confident that the WAC can fill the open spots, but said that bringing in a cur-rent FCS or non-football school would not be his first preference. Instead, Barnes would like to see the committee target FBS schools from other conferences for expansion. “I believe right now our focus should be on evaluating the land-scape and seeing what options we have or could have in the future with FBS schools,” Barnes said.

“I hope that our focus is – and I know mine is – on FBS possibili-ties moving forward.” Barnes said that USU was committed to the WAC for the time being, but did not rule out any option for USU in the future. He said that talks with the MWC were not a “dead issue,” although said that there has “not been any live dialogue lately.” Likewise, Barnes believes that as long as Nevada and Fresno State remain in the WAC through the 2011-2012 school year, USU won’t be too adversely affected in the ability to recruit student athletes and field a full 12-game football schedule. “With this year, and what we have to sell and knowing where our programs are, we’ve got a whole list of things to sell. In the shorter term (recruiting) is not going to be a major issue,” Barnes said. On scheduling, he said“is not something we have great concern about right now. If it becomes an issue we’ll take further steps, particularly in football.” Barnes scheduling outlook is, however, subject to revision. Noting that future WAC schools would have lower profiles than the three current WAC schools which will leave the WAC within the next two years, Barnes hinted that USU might need to schedule more challenging out-of-confer-ence games. Regardless of how future schedules might look, the USU athletic director was ada-

mant in establishing a six-game home schedule that includes either BYU or Utah each season. “We endeavor to play six home games every year,” Barnes said. “We endeavor to keep the Utah and/or BYU series going. We may change that, and we may talk about playing both of them as we move forward. Would we pick up another high profile game? It’s interesting how things change.” Barnes understands that the situation regarding USU’s athletic future remains fluid. He knows Aggie fans have been through a wild ride this summer, and he understands they have questions. And while he can’t offer any con-crete solutions for the time being, he continues to urge patience as the school and the conference search for answers amidst an ever-changing college landscape. “The next question is ‘now what?’ and certainly that ques-tion is important,” Barnes said. “I continue to answer that question this way: the one thing we can’t afford to do is to make decisions that will affect us for the next decade and to make hasty deci-sions now if we don’t have to.” He continued, saying, “I believe what we saw in confer-ence movement this summer - could be the tip of the iceberg to what we may see this next year. If that is the case we need to be patient, and we can afford to be patient.”

[email protected]

WAC: Barnes, Benson look to rebound strong

-continued from page 9

QUARTERBACK DIONDRE BOREL eludes a Boise State defender during USU’s final home game a year ago. Borel and the rest of the Aggies open the 2010 season on the road at No. 7 ranked Oklahoma Saturday. Statesman file photo

Page 13: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

Friday, Sept. 3, 2010 Page 13World&Nation

NEW YORK (AP) – The developers planning to build a $100 million Islamic center near the World Trade Center site still have financial hur-dles to clear: They haven’t finished buying all the property they want for the project and are nearly a quarter-million dollars behind on real estate taxes and late fees. How serious those problems might be depends on who is backing the project – and that’s still a big unknown. The real estate partnership that controls the site of the planned cultural center, health club and mosque insists it has the financial where-withal to put the project together, and that its failure to pay its first two quarterly property tax payments this year is not evidence of fiscal ill health. The entity that owns the building, 45 Park Place Partners LLC, has an interest-fattened $236,327 tax bill looming on Oct. 1, according to city records. The Manhattan real estate firm that put together the building purchase, Soho Properties, issued a statement through a spokesman that waved off concerns over the missed payments and said it’s not in financial distress. The lack of payment resulted from an ongoing dispute with the city over the assessed value of the building, the company said. In such disputes, it is

not unusual for building owners to temporarily suspend payments, the company said. “This matter will be resolved shortly,” the statement said. An Associated Press review of city tax and property databases found that hundreds of thou-sands of dollars in taxes due on other buildings controlled by Soho Properties and its managing partner, Sharif El-Gamal, have been paid on time this year, although in a few instances the pay-ments were slightly less than the total owed. El-Gamal, a Brooklyn-born Manhattan real estate investor, has put together a modest real estate portfolio over the past four years, and leads the investment group that bought the site of the planned Islamic center last summer for $4.5 mil-lion. He has declined to identify other investors in the project, saying only that the group includes Christians, Muslims and Jews. Soho Properties says it owns or manages about $200 million worth of real estate in Manhattan. Its holdings include a commercial building in midtown Manhattan, luxury condominiums, and a few well-worn apartment buildings with a long history of housing code violations, many of which predated the company’s purchase of the proper-ties but have either worsened or have yet to be corrected.

Builders of NYC mosque face financial hurdles

THE WINDOWS ON THE TOP STORY of the Liberty Street building where Russell Simmons lives are seen Wednesday, Aug. 25, in New York. Simmons is making his support for a proposed mosque near ground zero crystal clear through the windows of his apartment overlooking the World Trade Center site. The first six windows use the symbols of world religions to spell out “coexist,” starting with an Islamic star and crescent for the “C” and finishing with a Christian cross for the “T.” AP photo

LOS ANGELES (AP) – Linda Bruno called her Pennsylvania cat rescue the land of milk and tuna. It thrived for years as people sent pets they couldn’t care for from hundreds of miles away – unaware it was a death camp for cats. Investigators who raided the place two years ago found killing rooms, mass graves so thick they couldn’t take a step without walking on cat bones and a stunning statistic: Bruno had taken in over 7,000 cats in the previous 14 months, but only found homes for 23. In doing so, she had become a statistic herself, one of an increasing number of self-proclaimed rescuers who have become animal hoarders running legal and often nonprofit charities. Rescues and shelters now make up a quar-ter of the estimated 6,000 new hoarding cases reported in the U.S. each year, said Dr. Randall Lockwood, ASPCA’s senior vice president of forensic sciences and anticruelty projects. “When I first started looking into this 20 years ago, fewer than 5 percent would have fit that description,” Lockwood said. Hoarding itself is not a crime in most states, but cruelty is and both can start around the same time – when one more animal becomes one too many. Rescuers take in rejected, aban-doned, abused or stray pets. Some come from municipal shelters as they are about to be eutha-nized. It remains a mystery how someone goes from trying to rescue animals to stockpiling them in inhumane conditions without food, water or basic care. No single trigger has been found, but dementia, addiction, attachment disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder and other psy-

chological problems are often blamed. “The root of it is really nothing to do with animals. It’s to do with people’s heads and how they work,” said Gregory Castle, co-founder and chief executive officer of Best Friends Animal Society in Kanab, Utah. The focus on hoarding of all kindS has intensified in recent years due to widely publi-cized cases and television shows about it. The Hoarding of Animals Research Consortium at Tufts University is urging the American Psychiatric Association to include animal hoard-ing in its next update to its diagnostic bible. Some hoarders develop a “messiah complex,” seeing themselves as saviors even as animals die. One hoarder told Lockwood: “I wouldn’t give one of my dogs to Jesus Christ if he came in the door.” Bruno was seen as a cat saint of sorts and she surrounded herself with volunteers who enabled her and rallied around her when the 29-acre Tiger Ranch Cat Sanctuary in Tarentum, Pa., was shut down. Some 700 people signed a peti-tion seeking dismissal of the case. Cats were found in nearly every filthy, stinky building on the 29-acre property. Many were too sick, starved or weak to get to the little food or water available. The Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals recovered 391 live cats and 106 dead ones. Thousands were believed to be dead and buried. Bruno, 47, was sentenced to two years of house arrest and 27 years probation. She was ordered to pay $200,000 in restitution and $21 a day in electronic monitoring fees. Several agencies received reports of hoard-ing at Bruno’s ranch, but it took months to document. Typically, the accused offer myriad excuses. They claim they are victims of religious and political persecution or contend people are lying or planting evidence. It’s hard to believe the excuses after seeing inches-thick feces, urine stained walls, cages stacked high with starving animals, dead and rotting carcasses, trash, f leas, maggots and diseases, said John Welsh, spokesman for the Riverside Department of Animal Services. A whistleblower tipped off Welsh’s depart-ment in 2007 that a nurse, Sylvia Gyimesi, was euthanizing sick animals with a homemade cocktail of vodka and sleeping pills at the Best Buddies Rescue she ran out of her Aguanga home. In a pair of mobile homes on Gyimesi’s property, investigators found close to 150 Chihuahuas, dachshunds and poodle mixes, along with some large breed dogs. Welsh said the stench and squalor were so bad, he had to leave almost immediately. They found graves in the back yard and a paw coming up from the

Experts say quarter of animal hoarding cases were rescues

The Riverside County Animal Services officers and employees attend to some of the seized dogs from the Best Buddies Rescue in Aguanga, Calif., in June 2007. AP photo

NEW ORLEANS (AP) – An oil platform exploded and burned off the Louisiana coast Thursday, the second such disaster in the Gulf of Mexico in less than five months. This time, the Coast Guard said there was no leak, and no one was killed. The Coast Guard initially reported that an oil sheen a mile long and 100 feet wide had begun to spread from the site of the blast, about 200 miles west of the source of BP’s massive spill. But hours later, Coast Guard Cmdr. Cheri Ben-Iesau said crews were unable to find any spill. The company that owns the platform, Houston-based Mariner Energy, did not know what caused the explosion. Mariner officials said there were seven active production wells on the platform, and they were shut down shortly before the fire broke out. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said the company told him the fire began in 100 barrels of light oil condensate, but officials did not know yet what sparked the f lames. The Coast Guard said Mariner Energy reported the oil sheen. In a public statement, the company said an initial f ly-over did not show any oil.

Photos from the scene showed at least five ships f loating near the platform. Three of them were shooting great plumes of water onto the machinery. Light smoke could be seen drift-ing across the deep blue waters of the gulf. By late afternoon, the fire on the platform was out. The platform is in about 340 feet of water and about 100 miles south of Louisiana’s Vermilion Bay. Its location is con-sidered shallow water, much less than the approximately 5,000 feet where BP’s well spewed oil and gas for three months after the April rig explosion that killed 11 workers. Responding to any oil spill in shallow water would be much easier than in deep water, where crews depend on remote-oper-ated vehicles to access equipment on the sea f loor. A Homeland Security update obtained by The Associated Press said the platform was producing 58,800 gallons of oil and 900,000 cubic feet of gas per day. The platform can store 4,200 gallons of oil. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said the admin-istration has “response assets ready for deployment should we receive reports of pollution in the water.” All 13 of the platform’s crew members were rescued from

the water. They were found huddled together in insulated sur-vival outfits called “Gumby suits” for their resemblance to the cartoon character. “These guys had the presence of mind, used their training to get into those Gumby suits before they entered the water,” Coast Guard spokesman Chief Petty Officer John Edwards said. The captain of the boat that rescued the platform crew said his vessel was 25 miles away when it received a distress call Thursday morning from the platform. The Crystal Clear, a 110-foot boat, was in the Gulf doing routine maintenance work on oil rigs and platforms. When Capt. Dan Shaw arrived at the scene of the blast, the workers were holding hands in the water, where they had been for two hours. They were thirsty and tired. “We gave them soda and water, anything they wanted to drink,” Shaw said. “They were just glad to be on board with us.” Shaw said the blast was so sudden that the crew did not have time to get into lifeboats. They did not mention what might have caused the blast.

Crew rescued after coastal La. oil platform explodes

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SpecialFeaturesPage 14 Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

Page 15: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

Announcements

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An

swers

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.ust

ah

-st

ate

sma

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Breaking the Mold • [email protected]

Bound & Gagged • Dana Summers

Rhymes with Orange • Hilary Price

Pearls Before Swine • Steve Pastis

Dilbert • Scott Adams

TimeOutA collection of student-produced & syndicated comics, puzzles, fun stuff ... and classified ads!.

Friday, Sept. 3, 2010 Page 15

Loose Parts • Dave BlazekFriends by Default • [email protected]

Summer in Maine

Males and FemalesMeet new friends! Travel!

Teach your favorite activity.*Tennis

*Canoe

*Water Ski

*Gymnastics

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June to August. Residential.Enjoy our website.

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TRIPP LAKE CAMP for GIRLS

1-800-997-4347www.tripplake-

camp.com

Are you a self-motivated decision-maker? Are you com-munity-oriented and want a highly satisfying career?

THE CACHE COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICEis a value-based office that believes in respect, fairness, empathy, responsibility, trustworthiness, and profes-

sionalism.

If interested, check us out at the USU Career Fair on March 3, 2010, or visit our website @ www.cachesheriff.

com.

Are you a Decision Maker?

Are you a self-motivated decision-maker? Are you community-oriented and want a

highly satisfying career?

THE CACHE COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICEis a value-based office that believes in

respect, fairness, empathy, responsibility, trustworthiness, and professionalism.

If interested, check us out at the USU Career Fair on March 3, 2010, or visit our

website @ www.cachesheriff.com.

It’s no PUZZLE where the new PLACE TO BE is for Exciting

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The address is 1466 N. Main St., In between Cafe Rio and Jimmy Johns.

Answers? Check at www.utahstatesman.com

2297 North Main, Logan 753-6444

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Hillcrest Elementary.4 Bedrooms 2 BathroomsNew CarpetFenced in backyardNewly stained deckPerfect for 3 roommates OR a small family.

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Page 16: Friday, Sept. 3, 2010

1616

FREE Employee Massage: USU Employee Wellness is offering a FREE t-shirt and FREE 15 min. chair massage when employees sign up for their FREE fitness assessment. Call 797-8519 for more info. Limited to first 70.

Ecology Center 2010-11 Seminar Series presents Dr. Carlos Martinez del Rio from the Department of Zoology & Physiology at the University of Wyoming on Sept. 15 at 6 p.m. in NR 105. Admission is free and open to the public.

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16

www.utahstatesman.com

The Registrar’s office would like everyone to be aware of the fol-lowing dates: Sept. 3 is the last day to add without an instruc-tor’s signature and a Tuition and Fee Payment Deadline. On Sept. 4 all wait lists are discontinued and registration purge will take place Sept. 4-6. Labor day is on Sept. 6, there are no classes.

SI begins for selected General Ed classes. Students attending 6 or more times earn 1/2 grade or better for their final course grade.

NEW section of American Sign Language I: ComD 2910-004 (CRN 51707) has been opened. Class is scheduled MWF 1:30 - 2:20 in Lillywhite 006.

Please consider helping an awe-some school that is going to be the first and only school for refu-gees in America. Go to their web-site fugeesfamily.org, and vote for their school, Fugees Academy. They can get $500,000 if they get enough votes.

Important dates

SI sessions

ASL section

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Employee Massage

StatesmanBack BurnerFriday, Sept. 3, 2010

More Calendar and FYI listings, Interactive Calendar

and Comics at

FridaySept. 3

SaturdaySept. 4

MondaySept. 6

Page 16

Strange Brew • Peter Deering

Flight Deck • Peter Waldner

Ecology seminar

You need to know....

- Blood Battle, TSC Lounges, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.- Women’s Volleyball at San Diego State, 11 a.m. -Greek Recruitment Orientation, TSC Auditorium, 12:30 p.m.- “Crazy for You,” Pickleville Playhouse, 5 p.m.- Men’s Soccer vs. Westminster, HPER Field, 5 p.m.- Women’s Soccer at Long Beach State, 6 p.m.- 80s Dance, Quad, 9 p.m.- Antics Comedy Improv, Logan Arthouse, 10:30 p.m.

- No Registration Permitted, Registration Purge- Labor Day Holiday, No Classes Held

- Registration Purge, No Registration Permitted- All Wait Lists Discontinued-Cross Country, Logan, All Day-Men’s Soccer vs. SLCC, HPER Field, 11 a.m.- Women’s Volleyball at Arizona State, 2 p.m.- Football at Oklahoma, Broadcast at Nelson Fieldhouse, 5 p.m.- Red Jumpsuit Apparatus, Campus 700 North, 8:30 p.m.

Today’s Issue

Today is Friday, Sept. 3, 2010. Today’s issue of The Utah Statesman is published especially for DeBryn Saunders, a freshman majoring in Art from Salem, Utah.

Weather

High: 88° Low: 50°Skies: Sunny

Today in History: In 1783, the American Revolution officially comes to an end when representatives of the United States, Great Britain, Spain and France sign the Treaty of Paris. The signing signified America’s status as a free nation, as Britain formally rec-ognized the indepen-dence of its 13 former American colonies.

Almanac

The Major Fair will be held on Oct. 1 in the TSC International Lounge from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Come learn about the variety of majors, minors, and degree programs avail-able at USU. Enter the drawing for great prizes! This event is desig-nated as an Aggie Passport opportu-nity. More info available in TSC 304. The Movement towards well-ness in the workplace: Office Ergonomics will be held Sept. 9 at 12 p.m. in Eccles 205. RSVP at www.valueaddedworkplace.usu.edu. Study Abroad Fair and U.S. Passport Fair will be held on Sept. 15 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the TSC International Lounge. LSAT and GRE Prep Courses are available! Tuesday’s and Thursdays from Sept. 14 to Oct. 21. LSAT is 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. and GRE is 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. For more info visit conference.usu.edu/lsat or call 797-0423. HUGE Big Band Show & Dance! The popular Celebrate America Show takes you back-in-time to 1942, to Hollywood’s famous Coconut Grove, where celeb-rities in the audience take the stage to entertain and support the USA through promoting War Bonds. USU Ballroom. Must have current Student ID for Student Price. Public welcome!! Tickets sold at the door, TSC ticket office, or online www.celebrateamericashow.com. Utah State University’s Merrill-Cazier Library sponsors “Ancient Painters on the Colorado Plateau,” a Utah Arts Council Traveling Exhibit that featrues the photographs of USU professor Craig Law. The exhi-bition can be seen in the library’s atrium Aug. 13 through Sept. 15. Announcing a Specialty Clinic for the Treatment of Anxiety and Anxiety related disorders from the department of Psychology. Call 797-3401 for more information. Stokes Nature Center invites toddlers, ages 2-3, to join them for Parent Tot from 10 - 11 a.m. on Sept. 3. Todlers must have a parent present to participate.