LUMBERJACK The
NorthernArizonaNews.com
NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY’S STUDENT
INSIDE News: Extended Campuses wins award, p 8 Sports: Soccer loses three games in a row, p 30 Arts: Q&A with Yellowcard’s Ryan Key, p 37
VOICE SINCE 1914 • VOL 99 • ISSUE 2 • AUG. 30, 2012 - SEPT. 5, 2012
(Photo by Sean Ryan)
Cross country aims high
T Construction workers attempt to finish the final touches on The Grove apartment complex, even though students are already moved in. (Photo by Sean Ryan)
‘GROVE’ STUNTED
Construction delays move-in a day, still in process
T
BY JOSHUA COOMBS
his past Friday, the wait for many NAU students to move into The Grove apartment complex was extended for up to a day due to construction delays. The Grove, an apartment complex developed by Campus Crest Communities, is intended to house a total of 562 students. According to information found on Campus Crest’s website, the expenditure for the development in its entirety is projected at approximately $33.1 million. Despite this lofty budget, construction equipment, unfinished courtyards and a com-
bination of dirt and mud are amid the admirable new apartment buildings, as a result of delays in construction. Tenants were originally scheduled to move in at 8 a.m. on Friday morning, but were turned away until at least 10 a.m. as building inspections by the city were completed and Certificates of Occupancy were delivered. Of its 10 total buildings, only buildings one through nine were given clearance for residents to move in on the first day. Building 10’s opening was delayed until 8 a.m. on Saturday morning — a full 24 hours after the initial move-in time. Mark Landsiedel, community develop-
ment director for the City of Flagstaff, stated The Grove “certainly had delays in development toward the end [of summer] because of the rain.” Representatives of The Grove did not comment concerning the story. From the fourth floor of building five, sophomore Alicia Hurley, a resident of The Grove, recalled the events of this past Friday as she looked out across the limited scenery through missing panes of glass in the building’s stairwell. “I left my house at about 4 a.m. so that I see GROVE page 4
BY TRAVIS GUY
he expectations put on a team going into its season can make or break the squad’s upcoming campaign. This remains true with the NAU cross country team. “I’d say we’re looking like a, if you had to grade us right now, we’d be at a ‘B,’ high ‘B,’” said director of cross country Eric Heins. “I mean, they look really good for this early in the season and the neat thing is how deep both squads are.” For the NAU men’s and women’s cross-country squads, the expectations are lofty. The Big Sky Conference preseason coaches’ poll was released and the men were voted to finish atop the BSC again and claim their sixth-consecutive championship, while the ladies were picked to finish second, one spot better than where they finished in the 2011 Big Sky Championships. see CROSS COUNTRY page 28
(Photo courtesy of University of Arizona)
New biomedical campus opens in Phoenix, NAU partners with UA, page 6
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