Vol. 128, No.12 Thursday, Aug.23, 2018

Page 1

Vol. 128, No. 13 Thursday, August 23, 2018

OPINION

SPORTS

ARTS & CULTURE

Letters: Conservatives, find your group

Preseason defensive overhaul

Thousands to attend FoCo Comic-Con

page 10

page 16

page 21

Former CSU professor Christina Boucher’s lawsuit against the University began on Monday and will continue into next week. PHOTO BY FORREST CZARNECKI COLLEGIAN

CSU professor testifies in sexual harassment trial By Emma Iannacone & Julia Trowbridge @CSUCollegian

A Colorado State University computer science professor denied he sexually harassed a former assistant professor in court Wednesday. Asa Ben-Hur testified that he had no idea his behavior made former assistant professor Christina Boucher uncom-

fortable until Computer Science Department Chair Darrell Whitley told him Boucher had complained. In a lawsuit filed against the University June 15, 2017, Boucher claimed she was denied tenure and forced to resign following her complaints of sexual harassment and suffered from emotional trauma. According to the Coloradoan, Boucher’s psychiatrist Patricia

Tahan testified that Boucher had developed acute stress disorder due to her allegation and the retaliation. Boucher said the harassment began summer 2012 before she was hired. Boucher claimed in the lawsuit that Ben-Hur stared at her chest and backside during a dinner attended by other professors and once she started working at the University.

During testimony, Ben-Hur repeatedly denied the allegations. “I don’t think I ever looked at Dr. Boucher’s breasts consciously,” Ben-Hur said. Ben-Hur sat on Boucher’s hiring committee, and he said he took Boucher on a driving tour to Horsetooth Reservoir and downtown Fort Collins, as he had done for each potential assistant professor.

While Ben-Hur said he received positive feedback from other candidates, Boucher said she felt uncomfortable when driving to the reservoir. “She asked him to take her back to her hotel, but he refused, telling her to ‘relax, because she looked tense,” said Sam Cannon, Boucher’s attorney, during opening statement Tuesday.

see LAWSUIT on page 8 >>


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Thursday, August 23, 2018

Collegian.com

FORT COLLINS FOCUS

Eva Holbrook, the lead singer and mandolin player of SHEL, smiles for the crowd at New West Fest on Aug. 11. SEE PHOTO GALLERY ON PAGE 22. PHOTO BY SARA GRAYDON COLLEGIAN

overheard on the plaza

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News | Thursday, August 23, 2018

CAMPUS

CSU professor dies in biking accident By Austin Fleskes & Matt Bailey @CSUCollegian

A Colorado State University professor of music has been confirmed dead by the Larimer County Coroner’s Office after a biking accident. On Monday the LCCO responded to the intersection of Berthoud Parkway and Bunyan Avenue in investigation to a traffic fatality. Music professor Gary Moody, who had been cycling, was involved in a collision with a tanker truck while southbound on Berthoud Parkway. An autopsy was performed on Tuesday and the cause of death was multiple blunt force injuries and the manner of death was ruled an accident. Moody joined CSU in 1997 as an Assistant Professor of Double Reeds and Theory. According to a email from Benjamin Withers, dean of the College of Liberal Arts, Moody was promoted to the rank of professor in 2010 after being praised for his “outstanding teaching” and performances on both the oboe and bassoon. “He leaves behind a rich legacy in the memories of his col-

leagues and students, especially those in Music,” Withers wrote. Following the accident, the CSU Public Relations team also issued a response in an email to The Collegian. “Our faculty, staff and students who knew Dr. Moody are deeply feeling this loss. The university extends its sincere condolences to Dr. Moody’s family and friends, and to his CSU family as well,” CSU PR wrote. Nicky Tisdall, a senior human development and family studies major, said she had taken Moody’s woodwind techniques class, a class offered to music education students. “He was a fantastic professor. He always pushed his students in the process,” Tisdall wrote in an email to The Collegian. “As a musician, Dr. Moody was about as good as they come. He was so talented and knowledgeable — it was inspiring to see him play.” Tisdall added that she thinks she will remember Moody most for his love of music. “When he taught, you could just see how passionate he was about the subject,” Tisdall wrote. “He impacted so many

Gary Moody, a professor of bassoon at the University was killed in a bicycle accident earlier this week. PHOTO COURTESY OF COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY

lives and generations of students through his time at CSU and I’m thankful I got to be one of them.” Olivia Martin, a senior music education major, said she came to know Moody when substitute when professors were out. “Professor Moody was a really knowledgeable person and he was a fantastic musician and

an even better educator,” Martin said. “He gave a lot of time to his students.” Martin added that Moody was good at helping people improve weaknesses that they had in order to become better musicians. She also expressed that one of the lessons she learned from him was the thought that everything is connected.

“His idea was that through your life you create this map of knowledge and this huge web of things, and that’s definitely what I feel like Dr. Moody did with his students,” Martin said. “He gave us a piece of his knowledge.” Austin Fleskes and Matt Bailey can be reached at news@ collegian.com.


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News | Wednesday, August 23, 2018

NATIONAL

Surveillance video from Parkland shows bedlam outside school By Paula McMahon, Stephen Hobbs & Lisa J. Huriash Sun Sentinel

Newly released surveillance video shows the chaos that erupted outside the Parkland school where a gunman prowled the hallways on Valentine’s Day. The footage shows glimpses of the police response, but it does not answer many of the remaining questions about how law enforcement, school security and paramedics responded when Nikolas Cruz killed 17 staff and students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. It shows deputies, police officers and school staff running toward the area of the shooting and directing students and staff to flee. The video also shows deputies and officers _ with their guns drawn _ scanning the grounds, apparently still looking for the shooter minutes after he had abandoned his AR-15 rifle inside and escaped. Officers were uncertain where he was because some were watching delayed security footage they initially thought was playing in real time. The shooter had blended in with other students and ran to a nearby store, before he was arrested a short time later. Also shown is at least one

police officer, who is taking cover behind the engine area of a car, methodically moving his aimed gun back and forth. A law enforcement officer who watched the video said it’s recommended practice for some officers to take cover and use their guns to protect students and staff running out when the location of the shooter is not known. Parts of the video are blurred to protect the identities of the students, including at least one victim who was rushed from the school on a golf cart less than three minutes after officers first went inside. The Florida Supreme Court cleared the way for the Broward Sheriff ’s Office to release two hours and 10 minutes of video from five different cameras on Wednesday. Media outlets, including the South Florida Sun Sentinel, requested the video to shed light on law enforcement’s response. The media did not ask for video depicting the inside of the school, Cruz or any of the victims. The response of some Broward sheriff ’s deputies and school security workers to the mass shooting has drawn national scrutiny, some of it critical. Coral Springs police officers said they saw some deputies taking cover outside instead of running into the 1200 building

to try to save lives. Segments of video that were released earlier this year showed the school resource officer, Deputy Scot Peterson, taking cover next to a building. He retired from the agency when he was informed that he was under investigation for his action _ or inaction _ that day. The newly released footage shows approximately 10 more minutes from the camera angle that confirms Peterson did not enter the building during the shooting and immediate aftermath. Not all of his movements are captured in the video that has been made public so far. Broward County Commissioner Michael Udine, the former mayor of Parkland, said he had not yet viewed the footage but hopes the community will get full answers soon: “I want all the information to come out as quickly and thoroughly as possible so that everyone can make informed decisions moving forward. I believe in full transparency and complete information _ anything besides that is a disservice to the community.” The Florida Department of Law Enforcement, at the direction of Gov. Rick Scott, is investigating the law enforcement response to the shooting. A separate state commission, set up by Scott and the Legislature, is reviewing how the entire case was handled.

Broward Sheriff Scott Israel has declined to comment on the details of the incident in recent months, saying that he’s awaiting FDLE’s findings. He previously said that his agency was investigating statements from Coral Springs officers who said that some deputies did not promptly enter the building. “The independent and impartial investigations being conducted by FDLE and the MSD Public Safety Commission will provide a factual account of the response from law enforcement that day,” according to an emailed statement released Wednesday by the Sheriff ’s Office. Broward Circuit Judge Jeffrey R. Levenson authorized the release of the footage in April, a decision that was upheld by the 4th District Court of Appeal last month. “It’s a sad commentary on our times that there must be a full and open public discussion about the type of security system that is appropriate for a large public high school and the appropriate law enforcement response to an active shooter on a high school campus,” Judge Robert Gross wrote in the opinion. “Parents have such a high stake in the ultimate decisions that they must have access to camera video footage here at issue,” he added, “and not blindly rely on school board experts to

make decisions for them.” The Broward School Board, concerned that the video’s release would expose weak spots in surveillance systems at several high schools, appealed to the Supreme Court. The board was joined by the Broward State Attorney’s Office, which argued that the video should remain secret because it is part of an “active criminal investigation,” making it exempt from Florida’s public records laws. The Supreme Court declined to accept jurisdiction Wednesday and indicated “no motion for a rehearing will be entertained.” Sun Sentinel Attorney Dana McElroy said the decision “reaffirms our state’s historically strong commitment to open government and transparency, which was recognized by the courts at all levels in this case.” The news organizations had argued that the public is entitled to the video to adequately review the law enforcement response to the shooting as it unfolded and for some time afterward. In previous hearings, attorneys representing the Sheriff ’s Office said they did not object to releasing the video but would do so only under court order. Content pulled from Tribune News Service.

NATIONAL

UC Berkeley professor suspended 3 years for sexual harassment By Rick Hurd The Mercury News

A prominent University of California, Berkeley professor investigated by the school after a sexual harassment complaint in 2016 won’t be paid for the next three years. Nezar AlSayyad, a professor of city and regional planning and architecture, has been suspended for three years without pay following an investigation that he sexually harassed a graduate student. The university confirmed the suspension in a statement released by campus spokeswoman Janet Gilmore. Chancellor Carol Christ im-

posed the suspension after the Office for the Prevention of Harassment and Discrimination _ the university’s Title IX office _ investigated, and a committee on the Berkeley Division of the Academic Senate held evidence hearings. “The harassment of students by faculty carries the potential for enormous harm,” Christ said in the statement. “It is wholly unacceptable, and we will not tolerate such behavior on this campus.” The university said its investigation found that AlSayyad “engaged in a pattern of unwelcome, manipulative and divisive behavior toward the graduate student and toward his faculty colleagues” from

High quality, affordably produced video

2012-14. That pattern “created a hostile environment.” AlSayyad may not teach or supervise new graduate students during his suspension, and he’s barred from serving as the principal investigator on any grants administered through university. He will not have the same access to the campus granted to a professor and instead will have only the same access available to the public, the university said. The decision came down Aug. 13. The investigation stemmed from a report in the San Francisco Chronicle in 2016 that AlSayyad placed his hand on the upper thigh

of a graduate student and proposed that they become “close friends.” AlSayyad was barred from teaching the next semester. Attempts to contact AlSayyad on Monday afternoon were unsuccessful. He denied the claims when they first came to the public’s attention in 2016 in an interview the Chronicle. Shortly after the Chronicle’s original report, the university let his students switch to new instructors with just weeks left in the semester. At that time, Larry Kamer, a crisis management consultant representing AlSayyad, said the actions violated his due process. Kamer said by email Monday that he has

svp@collegian.com

not represented AlSayyad for more than a year. In a university profile, AlSayyad philosophized “that history is neither the knowledge of things that have occurred in the past, nor the memory of these past events, but rather it is the convergence of these events with certain individuals or communities and in specific places as interpreted by others who are usually removed from the time and place of these events.” AlSayyad’s profile was up to date Monday afternoon, with a disclaimer above it that says he will be “away until fall 2021.” Content pulled from Tribune News Service.

video.collegian.com

970.491.0536


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News | Thursday, August 23, 2018

CITY

Salmonella confirmed at La Luz Mexican Grill By Ravyn Cullor @RCullor99

An outbreak of salmonella at La Luz Mexican Restaurant in Fort Collins is under investigation by the Larimer County Department of Health and Environment, according to a press release from the LCDHE. The LCDHE has confirmed six cases of Salmonella and is investigating other possible cases. Some of the confirmed infected people have been hospitalized. “La Luz has been proactive in collaborating with the Health Department to try and identify the source of the outbreak,” LCDHE Public Information Officer Katie O’Donnell said in the release. “La Luz is primarily concerned with the safety of its customers and integrity of its food supply and wants to prevent any further illness as best they can.” O’Donnell said La Luz has been non-resistant to unannounced health inspections and receptive to changes requested by the LCDHE including disposing of food and updating refrigeration. La Luz Mexican Restaurant, located at 200 Walnut Street,

has closed until further notice out of concern for the safety of employees and customers. The restaurant is cooperating with the Health Department investigation. “(The LCDHE) can’t tell the restaurant to close,” said O’Donnell. “They chose to do that, and it costs the restaurant money.”

SALMONELLA ■ Samonella is a bacterial infec-

tion which is usually found in raw meat, eggs and produce.

Salmonella is a bacterial infection which is usually found in raw meat, eggs and produce. The illness attacks the intestines, urinary tract, bloodstream or other body tissues, according to the release. Symptoms may include, diarrhea, fever, abdominal cramps, vomiting and bloody stool and typically appear six to 72 hours after consuming contaminated food. According to the release, symptoms can last four to seven days. Symptoms may be longer and result in hos-

La Luz Mexican Grill is closed until further notice due to a salmonella outbreak. PHOTO BY BROOKE BUCHAN COLLEGIAN

pitalization if the case of Salmonella is serious. The length of the investigation is difficult to determine when the source of the Salmonella is still unknown, but O’Donnell said the LCDHE is

working to find the source and help La Luz correct procedures and policies so they can reopen as soon as possible. Concerns or illness can be reported at larimer.org/sick and

information about Salmonella can be found at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention website. Ravyn Cullor can be reached at news@collegian.com.


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News | Thursday, August 23, 2018

CAMPUS

Community Welcome promotes engagement with neighborhoods By Charlotte Lang @ChartrickWrites

Colorado State University and the City of Fort Collins hosted their 18th annual Community Welcome on the evening of Aug. 22. Hosted by Off-Campus Life, this event focused on communication and engagement within the community.

“We’re not talking about long-term residents or students; we’re talking about people who, for a moment in time, share this community and call it home.” TONY FRANK CSU PRESIDENT

Roughly 200 volunteers filled Ballroom C of the Lory Student Center at 5:00 p.m. to prepare for an evening of visiting approximately 2,000 homes. Volunteers were made up of CSU administration, students, Fort Collins residents, city representatives and council members. They also included members of the Associated Students of Colorado State University, as well as the CSU Police Department and the City of Fort Collins Police Department. In teams, these volunteers targeted local neighborhoods of student and non-student residents of Fort Collins. Notable attendees included Mayor Wade Troxell as well as Tony Frank, president and chancellor of CSU. Troxell took the stage first, reminding volunteers of why Community Welcome is one of his favorite days of the year. “This is where we engage with our community in a way that’s positive for our community,” Troxell said. He went on to describe the community’s overall goal to let every student know they’re important residents. He hopes to encourage students and other long-term

Local police officers and students participate in a community outreach event on Aug. 22 to welcome and educate new neighbors on student life and engagement. During the event, they met one another and participated in a neighborhood walk to hand out flyers, give out surveys and engaged in conversation. PHOTO BY COLIN SHEPARD COLLEGIAN

residents to get out and meet each other because, as he said, the strength of the community rests on everyone within it. Frank echoed this feeling and focused his speech on communication. “When people start to communicate, we can start to build understandings. We can start to build trust and we can start to understand commonalities that unite us despite differences,” Frank said. “We’re not talking about long-term residents or students; we’re talking about people who, for a moment in time, share this community and

call it home.” Marketing manager for Off-Campus Life Kiaran Stewart explained the event as a chance for students and non-students, along with Fort Collins police officers and those who work for the city, to meet the community. The goal, according to Stewart, was to educate the community about ordinances and programs available to them. “It will end up being really cool to see how this impacts the people we reach out to,” Stewart said. “Having all these different groups come together to reach out to the community will real-

ly help education. Overall, I’m just really excited to see what it turns into.” After receiving instructions and check-ins from Lindsay Mason, assistant director of off-campus life, the teams of volunteers traveled to assigned neighborhoods and locations. Each team was supplied with a bag of handouts based on speaking points emphasizing the importance of being a neighbor. For two hours, the volunteer teams visited approximately 2,000 homes in order to welcome and inform neighbors within the community.

Director of Off-Campus Life Jeannie Ortega said she had been part of Community Welcome since the beginning and spoke of the event’s start. “We were seeing students concentrated in certain areas and certain issues happening in those areas,” Ortega said. “The idea came about that ‘let’s address those.’ And what’s an effective way of addressing these issues? Having conversations. One on one. Making connections and opening the line of communication is what’s key.” Collegian reporter Charlotte Lang can be reached at news@ collegian.com.


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News | Thursday, August 23, 2018

NATIONAL

Verizon throttled firefighters’ data deployed to Mendocino fire By Seung Lee The Mercury News

Verizon throttled one Bay Area fire department’s data plans as its firefighters helped battle the largest wildfire in state history and even demanded the department should pay nearly three times more to remove it, according to its fire chief. Santa Clara County Fire Department Chief Tony Bowden wrote to the U.S. District Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on Monday, saying the throttling “had a significant impact on our ability to provide emergency services” for firefighters dispatched to help battle the wildfire. Bowden said Verizon knew the throttling affected the firefighters’ crisis response and essential emergency services, but did nothing; he provided email correspondence as evidence. In the emails, Verizon accounts manager Silas Buss initially told Bowden’s staff that they needed to upgrade from a $37.99-per-month unlimited data plan to a $39.99-per-month plan in early July before the Mendocino Complex Fire “to get the data speeds restored on this device.” On July 30, when the fire was raging, Buss raised the price to $99.99 per month to remove throttling. Buss did not respond to requests for comment from this news organization. Verizon spokeswoman Heidi Flato told this news organization that the Santa Clara County Fire Department was subscribed to an unlimited data plan for government agencies that reduces speeds after a certain allotment of data has been used, and that the data restrictions should have been lifted at the fire department’s request. “Regardless of the plan emergency responders choose, we have a practice to remove data speed restrictions when contacted in emergency situations,” she said. “We have done that many times, including for emergency personnel responding to these tragic fires. In this situation, we should have lifted the speed restriction when

our customer reached out to us. This was a customer support mistake. We are reviewing the situation and will fix any issues going forward.” Firefighters deployed to the Mendocino Complex Fire – two separate fires nearby that have burned 400,000 acres total so far – experienced internet speeds reduced to {00 that of previous speeds. Firefighters who battle wildfires rely on live document-based apps such as Google Docs to update information, and the speed reduction made the communication nearly impossible, said Bill Murphy, a public information officer with the Santa Clara County Fire Department. He noted that it is unclear whether Verizon’s throttling actually jeopardized the lives or safety of any firefighters. He also added the department no longer gets throttled as it has upgraded to a different, unspecified plan. “The Fire Department’s concern is more of that the throttling may impact the public in times of emergency and disaster,” Murphy said. “We as a society rely so much on our ability to communicate through the internet. Our bigger concern is the throttling will impact people accessing evacuation notices, maps and public warnings.” Bowden submitted the addendum as part of a larger brief by 22 state attorneys general and other government agencies seeking to overturn the recent repeal of net neutrality rules by the Federal Communications Commission. “County Fire believes it is likely that Verizon will continue to use the exigent nature of public safety emergencies and catastrophic events to coerce public agencies into higher cost plans ultimately paying significantly more for mission critical service, even if that means risking harm to public safety during negotiations,” he wrote. Flato countered: “This situation has nothing to do with net neutrality or the current proceeding in court.” Content pulled from Tribune News Service.

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News | Thursday, August 23, 2018

NATIONAL

What happens now that Trump is accused in court of helping commit a crime? By Matt Pearce Los Angeles Times

President Donald Trump’s future is in peril like never before _ and it doesn’t seem to have anything to do with Russia. On Tuesday, Trump’s former personal attorney, Michael Cohen, pleaded guilty to breaking federal campaign finance law by paying hush money to two women who said they’d had affairs with Trump. Cohen failed to report the payments as de facto political contributions in support of Trump’s campaign. The allegations that Trump had extramarital affairs weren’t the news. The bombshell came when Cohen, after taking a plea deal from prosecutors, testified under oath that he broke the law “at the direction” of Trump “for the principal purpose of influencing the election.” To sum it up bluntly: Cohen was calling the president of the United States a crook who told him to commit a felony and a cover-up to help get him into the Oval Office. If Trump were a congressman instead of the president, he might be under indictment right now, said Jessica Levinson, a professor at Loyola Law School. Yet Trump, who has denied any wrongdoing, probably won’t be facing any criminal charges, at least while he’s still president. Here are answers to some of the legal and political questions surrounding Trump’s predicament. Question: Can the president be indicted? Answer: That’s up for debate. “The question has been posed, but never in a court,” said Neil Kinkopf, a professor of law at Georgia State University. The issue has roiled legal observers since at least the 1970s, when President (Richard M.) Nixon came under fire for his role in the Watergate scandal. It arose again in the 1990s in the investiga-

Lawsuit >> from page 1 Ben-Hur testified that he didn’t recall being asked to return to her hotel and would have taken her back if he had known. Boucher notified Whitley of the incident, which she said then affected her ability to receive tenure. In a previous statement to The Collegian, Boucher claimed Ben-Hur was allowed to continue to evaluate her after she filed

tion of President (Bill) Clinton for various alleged improprieties. Now the question is back as special counsel Robert S. Mueller III examines whether Trump’s campaign colluded with Russia in its hacking and other attempts to interfere with the 2016 election. Mueller’s mandate allows him to pursue other criminal activity he discovers in the course of his investigation. The Department of Justice’s longstanding guidance to its prosecutors has held that presidents shouldn’t be indicted while in office, an opinion it first formed in 1973 amid Watergate. Some legal experts, including Trump’s latest Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, have argued that a president should not be burdened by criminal charges or lawsuits while in office due to the extraordinary demands of the presidency. Others have argued that having unelected prosecutors or jurors undertake a criminal case that could effectively remove a president from office would steal an important power that the Constitution entrusts to Congress _ impeachment. Yet these are just theories. They haven’t been tested. “There’s nothing in the Constitution that says you can’t indict the president,” Levinson said. Kinkopf added that whether a president can be indicted while in office, and whether a president can be prosecuted while in office, are actually separate questions that might have separate answers. He suggested that a grand jury, after being presented with evidence that a president committed a crime, could file an indictment, but that prosecutors would hold off until the president leaves office. The problem with making a grand jury wait for a president to leave office before filing an indictment is that the statute of limitations might run out before the president’s four-year presidential term the harassment report, which contributed to her loss of tenure, Boucher said. During testimony, Ben-Hur said that Boucher’s promotional and tenure meeting was going well for her until he brought up his concerns with her behavior. Ben-Hur, who co-advised graduate students with Boucher, testified that he felt uncomfortable with Boucher as an adviser to graduate students because he alleged she was making false claims about a graduate student. “I felt it was very important the committee discuss this issue because graduate students are very important to the suc-

President Donald Trump departs the White House in Washington, D.C., on July 20, 2018. PHOTO BY OLIVIER DOULIER ABACA PRESS/TNS

ends, Kinkopf said. In that situation, he said, “The president escapes any kind of criminal liability, and the president in that way is in some sense above the law.” Q: Can the president be impeached for something that happened before he took office? A: Yes. Impeachment is the process laid out in the Constitution under which a majority of House of Representatives members can vote to investigate a president, after which a trial is held in the Senate, where a two-thirds majority vote can result in the president’s removal from office. Congress’ impeachment powers are broad because the Constitution’s definition of impeachable offenses includes “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.” What are “high crimes and misdemeanors”? It’s not defined in the Constitution. Or, as Levinson put it: “Impeachment is, like, whatever Congress decides it is.” However, Kinkopf said, the “primary check” on the justness of impeachment is the two-thirds apcess of the program,” Ben-Hur said. Ben-Hur claims this incident is what caused a rift between him and his former colleague, Boucher. “It was more than uncomfortable. It made me not want to be around Dr. Boucher,” BenHur said. “It was an experience that stayed with me for a long time afterwards.” This trial is set to continue into next week, with the verdict planned to be released on Wednesday, Aug. 29. Emma Iannacone and Julia Trowbridge can be reached at news@collegian.com.

proval requirement of the Senate, rather than a strict legal definition. Q: Could Trump pardon Cohen and Manafort if they turn against him and cooperate with prosecutors? A: Yes. “As long as Donald Trump is president, he can issue Manafort or Cohen a pardon for federal crimes, period, full stop, for any reason,” Kinkopf said. “He could announce to the nation that Paul Manafort paid him for a pardon and then issue that pardon. The pardon would still be effective.” Doing so could have dire political consequences, including impeachment, Kinkopf said. But “there is no mechanism by which that pardon can be rendered invalid,” he said. Trump’s pardon power is limited to federal charges. Cohen and Manafort “could be facing state crimes, and he has no pardon authority for state crimes,” Levinson said. Q: What’s at stake with this year’s midterm election? A: Possibly Trump’s future. Trump’s executive powers aren’t infinite, even if a president might

not be indictable while in office. Congressional Republicans _ who hold majorities in both the Senate and the House _ have largely stuck behind Trump through the stormy days of his presidency and have expressed little interest in his removal. But if Democrats were to take control of the House, they could launch impeachment proceedings with a majority vote. Cohen’s claims against Trump “directly implicate the election and the validity of the election, and so I do think those could be impeachable offenses,” Levinson said. Getting two-thirds of the Senate to approve removing Trump from office, however, would likely require Republicans to support Trump’s removal, Levinson said. “I think it’s really depressing that we’re having to talk about this along party lines,” Levinson said. “If the president is really guilty of violating federal law in at least one area or more, it should haven’t to do with whether you have a D or an R next to your name _ but of course it does.” Content pulled from Tribune News Service.

TRIAL KEY POINTS ■ Boucher filed a lawsuit on June

15, 2017, claiming she faced retaliation after reporting BenHur sexually harassed her. ■ The harassment is said to have started during summer 2012 before Boucher started working at CSU, during her initial interview. ■ On Oct. 28, 2014, Boucher reported to Whitley that Ben-Hur would stare at her chest and backside in a sexual manner. ■ On June 25, Larimer County District Court Judge Stephen Jouard denied CSU’s request for summary judgment.

■ Boucher alleged that her tenure

was affected after she reported the harassment. According to court documents, she received a negative evaluation from the tenure and promotions committee, which Ben-Hur sat on. ■ CSU disputed Boucher’s claims and asked a judge to rule that the case has no merit May 28, 2018. ■ Boucher’s lawyers filed a response on June 11, claiming that there is a pattern of sexual harassment at the University.


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9


10 |

Opinion | Thursday, August 23, 2018

GUEST COLUMNIST

Conservatives, find your group By Guest Author @CSUCollegian

Editor’s Note: All opinion section content reflects the views of the individual author only and does not represent a stance taken by the Collegian or its editorial board. Letters to the Editor reflect the view of a member of the campus community and are submitted to the publication for approval. As this year’s state elections approach, the political scene on Colorado State University’s campus is expected to get confrontational due to backlash from the 2016 presidential election results. For first-year college students, this may be an overwhelming shift from being around apathetic high-schoolers to hearing cavalier graduate students spewing leftist propaganda on the Plaza. As a conservative student, I remember my first year of college and the shock I felt from being surrounded by so many self-proclaimed socialists. The day President Donald Trump was elected, I repeatedly had fellow students approach me in hopes of sympathizing over how “distressing” and “horrific” the results of the presidential election had been.

It felt as though the default attitude on campus was to hate our president, and that showing support or excitement about the election results was comparable to Nazism itself — an erroneous claim.

COLLEGE REPUBLICANS ■ Facebook

College Republicans at CSU ■ Email collegerepublicanrams@gmail. com ■ First Meeting Sept. 13 at 6 p.m., Ramskeller ■ Welcoming 2nd Congressional District Candidate Peter Yu, Sept. 20, Lory Student Center room 372 at 6 p.m. During my first year at CSU, I felt very isolated by my ideology, which was a mistake. I have one piece of advice for my fellow conservative-minded classmates: do not be fooled. There is a strong conservative presence on CSU’s campus. There are many outspoken student organizations that help keep the presence of conservative ideas alive in our college

environment. There is the College Republicans at CSU, Young Americans for Liberty, Turning Point USA, the National Rifle Association Collegiate Coalition, and the Conservative Interest Group. I currently serve as the president of College Republicans, vice president of the NRACC, and am a proud member of YAL and TPUSA. If you are a student that wants to expand upon your knowledge of politics, debate the issues or get involved in elections, then come to a meeting for one of these groups and get started. Trust me, you don’t want to go through all of college feeling isolated in your beliefs, and these organizations are a great way to meet like-minded students and expand your knowledge. Remember, you’re not alone as a conservative, wear your Make America Great Again and NRA hat proudly, and find your group of conservatives. Veronica Morin Junior Business Major President of College Republicans at CSU, Vice-President of NRACC To submit a letter to the editor, email letters@collegian.com. Please follow the guidelines.

Students from Turning Point USA, Young Americans for Liberty, the Conservative Interest Group, the International Conservative Coalition and College Republicans discuss candidates for the presidential and Speaker of the Senate elections for the Associated Students of Colorado State University during the spring 2018 semester. PHOTO BY DAVIS BONNER COLLEGIAN


| 11

Opinion | Thursday, August 23, 2018

GUEST COLUMN

Practice sportsmanship on and off the field By Guest Columnist @CSUCollegian

Editor’s Note: All opinion section content reflects the views of the individual author only and does not represent a stance taken by the Collegian or its editorial board. Letters to the Editor reflect the view of a member of the campus community and are submitted to the publication for approval. Dear fellow Colorado State University students: The Mountain West Student-Athlete Advisory Committee believes the most important aspects of sports are good ethics and positive sportsmanship. We are very pleased the Mountain West Conference

continues its initiative to enhance this philosophy. We need your assistance to make this effort a success. The SAAC believes that, in order for an institution to convey a message of good ethics and positive sportsmanship, it must have the involvement and participation of everyone involved with athletics on campus. This includes, but is not limited to, the president, athletics administrators, coaches, student-athletes and you – the students and fans. It is our behavior that will shape the perception of our institutions and teams by the public, the media and our opponents. Good ethics and positive sportsmanship are philoso-

phies that must be displayed both on and off the playing field. We must take a leadership role to compete at the highest levels, always endeavoring to win, but doing so with grace, class, dignity and respect. Please join us in supporting the Conference’s Sportsmanship Initiative. Such an effort will help make the Mountain West one of the premier athletic conferences in the country, and represent our institutions well. Cordially, The Mountain West 20182019 Student-Athlete Advisory Committee To submit a letter to the editor, email letters@collegian.com. Please follow the guidelines.

NOPE

&

DOPE

Putting too much hot sauce on your food.

Fresh fruit in the morning.

Forgetting your sunglasses.

Getting to know your new roommate.

Back-to-school sales working retail.

Taking classes you’re actually interested in.

Name calling.

When your new roommate has a dog.

Driving on campus.

Finding out you’re graduating on time.

Students occupy the student section at Canvas Stadium during the CSU Football game on Aug. 26, 2017 against the Oregon Beavers. PHOTO BY ELLIOTT JERGE COLLEGIAN

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14 |

Sports | Thursday, August 23, 2018

NATIONAL

Keenum is finally ‘the guy’ at quarterback for a team By Sam Farmer Los Angeles Times

Victory was in the cards for Case Keenum – but the play he wanted wasn’t. He couldn’t find the play card for the hook and ladder, one of a handful of strategies at the end of a playoff game against New Orleans last season. Ultimately, he ran a different play – a pristine throw to Stefon Diggs – and the “Minnesota Miracle” was born. Keenum, now quarterback of the Denver Broncos, relives the Minnesota Vikings moment in vivid detail in “Playing for More,” his autobiography to be released Sept. 4. “I’m flipping through the playbook with my receivers, (Adam) Thielen and Stefon Diggs, looking at our special end-of-game options,” Keenum writes. “There’s a set of plays at the back of the book that we practice every three weeks or so. But I can’t find the one I’m looking for. ‘Where is that hook-and-lateral? I know it’s in here. I just saw it!’ We’re all trying to come up with something, but there’s no perfect play for driving the length of the field in 25 seconds with only one timeout ... “ Now we know: There was a perfect play, one forever etched in the minds of millions of fans who witnessed it. With 10 seconds remaining and the Vikings trailing by a point, Keenum threw a 27-yard strike to a leaping Diggs. The receiver dodged a diving defender, spun upfield and ran untouched for a 61yard touchdown. It marked the first time in NFL history that a playoff game was decided by a touchdown on the final play of regulation. Football players famously avoid looking too far forward or back – they live in the moment – but this was a monumental occasion that redefined Keenum’s career. Although he has changed teams five times in five years, including two stints with the Rams, he forever has a home in Minnesota sports history. “People ask me about it all the time,” Keenum said recently after Broncos practice. “It’s a cool story I get to tell about what happened, and it’s a cool testament to 11 guys just doing their job, and when an opportunity happens, just taking ahold of it.” The Vikings’ quest for their first Lombardi Trophy was derailed a week later, however, when they lost at Philadelphia in the NFC championship game. “That whole day, that whole week was nuts,” said Keenum, who wrote his book with Andrew Perloff. “I don’t know if a lot of those guys still got over

Minnesota Vikings quarterback Case Keenum waves to fans in the stands after a 23-10 win against the Chicago Bears on December 31, 2017, at US Bank Stadium in Minneapolis.

PHOTO COURTESY OF JEFF WHEELER MINNEAPOLIS STAR TRIBUNE

that play. I think there was some emotional hangover from that play. You can’t explain it. We tried to write it in the book, and I still don’t know if we got it all.” The co-authors certainly covered a lot of ground. The book tells the story of Keenum’s winding odyssey from a small town in West Texas to the University of Houston to an unlikely rise through the pro ranks. “Case is a laid-back guy, but when it comes to telling his story, the quarterback comes out in him and he meticulously pays attention to every last detail,” said Perloff, an on-air personality who goes by McLovin on the “Dan Patrick Show.” A new chapter for Keenum begins where the last one ended. The Broncos open the exhibition season Saturday by playing host to the Vikings, now led by $84-million quarterback

Kirk Cousins. It’s not as if fans will get much of a look at either quarterback; the exhibition season is mostly about the reserves. Still, it’s a noteworthy twist that Keenum will be across the field from the club he led to an 11-3 record in his 14 starts. Keenum said he harbors no ill will against his (latest) former team. “No,” he said. “I love all those guys. ... No hard feelings.” It helps that Keenum finally has a team that’s made him the unquestioned leader. In March, the Broncos signed him to a two-year deal worth $36 million, resting their franchise on the shoulders of an undersized overachiever who got one college offer out of high school, and – despite a record-shattering career at Houston – went undrafted. “Everyone kind of underes-

timates him because he’s 6-1,” said John Elway, the Broncos’ president of football operations. “He doesn’t have the prototypical build when it comes to an NFL quarterback, but he’s got everything else. He’s very efficient at everything.” For the first time, Keenum isn’t simply keeping the starting job warm for someone else. “That’s what’s fun about being the guy,” he said. “I can go over to a receiver and say, ‘This is what I’m thinking. What are you thinking?’ That’s instead of saying, ‘Hey, Sam (Bradford) was thinking about this.’ Or Matt Schaub, whoever I’m backing up. It’s awesome. It feels right.” Content pulled from Tribune News Service.


| 15

Sports | Thursday, August 23, 2018

NATIONAL

NATIONAL

Alumna hired as first When it comes to a new stadium, Hawaii female assistant coach can take a lesson from Colorado State for Oakland Raiders By Ferd Lewis

The Honolulu Star-Advertiser

By Ashley Potts @ashleypotts09

Editor’s note: This article was originally published online Aug. 8, 2018 The Oakland Raider’s have hired Colorado State University alumna Kelsey Martinez as the first female assistant coach in the team’s history. Martinez, a native of Pueblo, attended CSU from 2014-2015, earning a degree in health and exercise science. She will serve as an assistant strength and conditioning coach for the Raider’s this season. Martinez has been working with Tom Shaw, the team’s strength and conditioning coordinator, for four years and specialized in high-performance training before being named as-

sistant coach. Martinez joins a group of CSU alumnae who have been employed in professional sports. Notable graduates include Becky Hammon, who was hired as the first full-time female assistant coach in the NBA in 2014; Jenny Cavnar, who recently became the third female to call a play-by-play for a Major League Baseball broadcast; and Amy Van Dyken, who—after an illustrious swimming career—has co-hosted a sports radio show and has reported on the sidelines for the NFL. Martinez is not the only female assistant coach in the NFL: The Buffalo Bills and the San Fransisco 49ers also have fulltime female assistant coaches on staff. Ashley Potts can be reached at sports@collegian.com.

There figures to be plenty learned from the University of Hawaii football team’s season opener Saturday at Colorado State and, if we’re smart, maybe not all of it from what’s on the field. Hopefully something from the stadium itself. In its first visit to the Rams’ year-old Canvas Stadium, UH will see a 36,500-seat (41,000 capacity) facility that is just about everything the Rainbow Warriors could wish for in a modern home, including some sections of green seats. Except, of course, it isn’t at “home” in Halawa or Manoa. It is on the southern edge of campus in Fort Collins, Colo., across the street from CSU’s Art Department and some dorms. So close to campus life, linebacker Josh Watson says, “students ride their bikes and skateboards to the stadium,” which helped attract an average of 32,062 per game in its inaugural season. But what has made the stadium truly remarkable -- and instructive for others, such as our state, considering future investment in stadiums -- is that it was completed on time, on budget, without university, state or student funds, and it turned an operational profit its first year. According to a report presented to CSU’s Board of Governors this month and furnished to the

Star-Advertiser, revenue exceeded operational costs by approximately $4.6 million. That allowed the athletic department to set aside $3 million for stadium reserve funding and return $500,000 to the school for academic purposes. It also made available $1.1 million to the athletic department budget for help in hiring a men’s basketball coach and buying out his predecessor. Faced with a $30 million tab in deferred maintenance and other issues on Hughes Stadium, a facility nearing the half-century mark, CSU came up with and has, so far, successfully executed a bold vision. The $220 million price tag for construction of the football portion of the stadium (an additional $18 million for classrooms and alumni center, etc. is paid by the university) has been underwritten by bonds “backed by private donations and paid annually by expected stadium revenue sources,” a CSU spokesman said. Revenue sources that include a $37.7 million, 15-year agreement with the Canvas Credit Union for stadium naming rights and a $20 million gift commitment to designate the playing surface “Sonny Lubick Field,” honoring the Rams’ coach from 1993 to 2007. In addition, there is a deal said to be valued at $5 million with area craft brewer New Belgian for a beer “porch” and a field club sponsored by Orthopaedic &Spine Center of the Rockies. A major reason for replacing

Hughes Stadium, CSU athletic director Joe Parker said, was the opportunity to open a campus portal to alumni and fans. “We try to think a lot about how to engage stakeholders, and the stadium serves as the university’s primary engagement asset. That’s what it was designed to do,” Parker said in an email. “We’ve seen it, over the last year, do just that with the games we’ve hosted in football, with the FORTitude 10K, with all of the event activities that are going on throughout the week, yearround.” Unlike, Hughes Stadium, 4 miles out of town in the foothills, Canvas Stadium has been a magnet to bring people back to campus. Parker said, “We think a lot about Denver. We have 60,000 alumni in the seven counties that represent the Denver metro area. ...” Parker said, “Those who have attended games in the past would often drive from Denver to Hughes Stadium and return to Denver without having set foot on campus. Now they are spending the day on campus and re-engaging with the university.” As our state ponders the future of the rusting relic that is 44-yearold Aloha Stadium and the financial sieve it has become, you hope officials here will take note of what CSU, one of UH’s peers, has so far been able to accomplish. Content pulled from Tribune News Service.

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16 |

Sports | Thursday, August 23, 2018

FOOTBALL

CSU is checking the boxes off their offseason to-do list on defense By Eddie Herz @eddieherz

“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” goes the old saying in its traditional form. The Colorado State defense, however, needed to turn that saying upside down. If it is broke, fix it. The defense was broken in 2017, so it needed to be fixed in 2018. After all, the Rams allowed 431.6 yards per game last season, ranking 97th out of 129 FBS programs. CSU’s opponents converted on 44.1 percent of third downs last season as well, the 21st worst mark in the country. Passing wise, CSU allowed 244.5 yards per game through the air in 2017, which ranked 96th. The Rams’ rushing defense ranked only 89th in the FBS. If it is broke, fix it. Not with glue and duct tape. An entire overhaul is taking place. For starters, the defensive coaching staff has a brand new look. CSU has brought in John Jancek to be its new defensive coordinator. Jancek and Bobo worked on Georgia’s coaching staff together from 2005 to 2009. Other changes in the defensive coaching staff include the addition of Chase Gibson, who is in charge of special teams and the linebackers. Keith Gilmore was also brought in to coach the defensive line with Eric Lewis as the Rams’ new cornerbacks coach. Change the coaching staff. Check. But the overhaul did not stop there. Scheme Change Jancek is implementing a 4-3 defense, replacing last season’s 3-4 scheme. Linebacker Josh Watson, CSU’s leading tackler last season, says that he is “really excited” to operate in the 4-3 Similar to Watson, enthusiasm about the new defensive formation is felt from the rest of the linebacker unit. “I think we have a better scheme that allows the linebackers to attack more and just go make plays,” Tre Thomas said. “We have a defense to where the linebackers can do more.” Colorado State LB Tre Thomas takes part in drills during the 11th Spring Practice on April 11, 2017. (Elliott Jerge | Collegian) It’s not just the linebacking unit that should benefit from the switch to the 4-3 either. “The D-line is going to do what they are going to do which is going to make our job (in the secondary) easier,” safety Jordan Fogal said. “We have so much talent and depth down there. Especially with the new 4-3 that kind of lets them do what they need to do. It makes our job easier in that sense.” Change the scheme. Check. The overhaul did not stop there either.

Talent Base Bobo hit the recruiting trail hard with 14 of the 23 players signed in CSU’s 2018 freshman class listed as defenders. Some of these freshmen have already made a splash during fall camp as well. The first name that comes to mind is three-star cornerback Rashad Ajayi. “He’s got great mechanics,” cornerback Anthony Hawkins said. “I feel like he can help us early this year. He has developed really fast. He plays the game really smart and is locked in at all times.” Based on what has been seen from Ajayi throughout fall camp, he should be able to immediately provide a spark to the secondary. Ajayi has seen plenty of snaps and has been an impact player in each of CSU’s two preseason scrimmages. Bobo is also extremely high on freshman safety Quinn Brinnon. Brinnon’s teammates have praised his high football IQ as a player who can instantly help the secondary. “Quinn (Brinnon) is one of those guys that came in confident and as soon as he got in the system his confidence just grew,” Fogal said. “He’s a really good player and uses his instincts really well.” For the defense to be successful, the returning players needed to be incorporated with the previous talent present as well. The key though is for these returning defenders to have a new outlook. These players might otherwise find it difficult to be confident in their defense, given that they have been apart of a problematic defense at CSU. The coaching staff did not sugarcoat last season’s results. Instead, they challenged and constantly reminded the returning defenders of how they performed in 2017 throughout the offseason. “They posted the stuff (defensive stats) all over the locker room, all over our lockers, the meeting room, saying we haven’t been a top 80 defense in over 10 years,” Fogal said. “That kind of struck us hard. We know we are a lot better than that.” Mindset Change So far, the returners are positive in terms of the new mindset. “The defensive guys on this football team that are returning want to be the difference in this season,” Bobo said. “They want to be the side of the ball that helps us win football games. Ultimately, it’s a team ball game. But, it’s good that they are taking ownership. You want the defense to want the other team to have the ball. We are getting to that mindset on the defensive side of the ball.” Part of the new mindset is an attention to detail. Jancek’s passion and fiery coaching definitely have something to do with

Colorado State Quarterback Collin Hill takes part in drills during Spring Practice on March 30. PHOTO BY ELLIOTT JERGE COLLEGIAN

it. The defenders have fed off of this. They are paying attention to things they did not before. The little things are important, and now the Rams are tapped in on those. Defensive Coordinator John Jancek yells during a drill at practice on August 2. (Ashley Potts | Collegian) “We are really focused on the little things on and off the field,” safety Jamal Hicks said. “Lining up correctly, disguising well, things that you really don’t think about. The little technique things are really what are going to help us later.” The ideal endpoint for the Rams from these renovations is a vastly improved, successful defense. Well, veteran defenders have no doubt in that being the case. “We have the talent, we’ve always known that, but having those new voices and a different type of energy has really rejuvenated our defense,” Fogal said. “I think it’s going to be a good year.” CSU’s final preseason scrimmage displayed how much the defense has grown. The defense manhandled CSU’s offense in the game. Ajayi broke up a pass to Warren Jackson to win the game. Fogal stopped the offensive momentum dead in its tracks by picking K.J. Carta-Samuels off during a productive drive. The aforementioned mentality shift was obvious when looking at the defense as well according to Bobo. “They had the mindset,” Bobo said. “Just listening to them over there, it was constant energy, constant positivity.” Though Jancek deserves a lot of credit, so do his players. It seems every veteran that was forced to step into a larger role

Defensive Coordinator John Jancek yells during a drill at practice on August 2. PHOTO BY ASHLEY POTTS COLLEGIAN

has embraced the situation from opening day. They want to be the ones that change the tradition and expectation of Colorado State’s defense. “We are trying to build the culture here,” Fogal said.” So everything that was in the past is more in the past. We are trying to just build a new attitude about our defense. With the new coaching staff, it’s a different type of energy, it’s a different type of feel.”

Change virtually everything on defense during the offseason. Check. Change is in the air for a defense that is making its presence felt in practices, flexing its muscles and growing with confidence. Now there is just one more change to be made. Change the results in actual games. Eddie Herz can be reached at sports@collegian.com.


The Rocky Mountain Collegian | Thursday, August 23, 2018

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18 |

Arts & Culture | Thursday, August 23, 2018

NATIONAL

When adopting a military dog, consider these precautions By Adam Tschorn Los Angeles Times

If the movie “Megan Leavey” made you consider giving a forever home to a four-legged hero, the good news is that there are programs to make that happen. But when it comes to military working dogs, the adoption process is, well, a whole different animal from simply popping by the pound and picking one up. So much so, in fact, that the information packet provided by the U.S. military’s adoption program includes a reality checklist to be completed as part of the application process. But before we get to the requirements for and the realities of adopting a tail-wagging warrior, it’s worth understanding the differences and similarities between military and contract working dogs. A military working dog is a canine – popular breeds include Belgian Malinois, German shepherd and Labrador retriever – owned and trained by the Department of Defense to detect things like explosives, narcotics or currency. A contract working dog performs many of the same jobs but is owned by a private company that supplies canines to the Defense Department on a contract basis. Military dogs are usually retired when they’re 10 to 12 (earlier in cases of injury or medical condition), while contract dogs retire a few years earlier. The distinction is important, because adoptions of the former are arranged through a program at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas, with the process beginning with an email to mwd.adoptions@us.af.mil (military bases with retiring dogs may also be contacted directly); adoptions of the latter are not centralized but, rather, done through the contracting companies themselves or third-party rescue and rehabilitation groups. One such group, the Houston-based nonprofit Mission K9 Rescue (which has satellite offices in San Antonio and Los Angeles), has reunited 60 retired dogs with their K-9 handlers over the last four years and has found forever homes for 169 retired dogs, efforts that earned it Petco’s 2017 Helping Heroes Award earlier this year. According to Jerry Britt, dispositions coordinator for military working dogs at Lackland, qualified candidates (more on that below) can expect to wait 18 to 24 months for an adoptable dog. He says the program currently has 1,200 applications on file and 14 dogs up for adoption. Bob Bryant, the Newbury Parkbased co-founder of Mission K9 Rescue, which currently has 200 applications for adoption and a 20-dog kennel of waiting

Mission K9 Rescue co-founder Bob Bryant kneels next to Oreo, right, a Military Working Dog (MWD) and Anubis, a Contract Working Dog (CWD), at his home in Newbury Park on Aug. 9, 2017. Oreo, a member of the USMC and specialized in explosives detection, served in Iraq during Enduring Freedom. Anubis is a 10 year old dog that worked for a private contractor in Kuwait. He was left abandoned after his service and was rescued by Mission K9. Both dogs, who are now retired, live with Bryant. PHOTO COURTESY OF GENARO MOLINA LOS ANGELES TIMES

adoptees, says wait times can be much shorter when home conditions are ideal. “We’ve also adopted as fast as one week,” he added. (Both programs give a dog’s handler first priority, in which case the wait times don’t necessarily apply.) KIDS, COSTS AND CONTRACTS But for prospective pet parents trying to determine whether they’d be a good fit, those distinctions are meaningless; retired working dogs are often high-energy, some have behavioral issues (“Most every dog that we get in has some sort of PTSD,” Bryant says), some need to be socialized or housebroken and still others have suffered injuries or require specialized diets. “We’ve spent over $11,000 getting a dog adoptable because he was crate-reactive – you’d get close to his crate and he’d eat you alive,” Bryant said. “People say, ‘Oh, you should just put the dog down,’ but these dogs gave something. They did some-

thing they didn’t agree to, they worked their (whole) lives, and they deserve a nice retirement.” One major consideration is whether or not young children are in the mix. “We normally won’t adopt high-drive dogs to anybody with kids under 10,” Bryant said. “You’ve seen kids run up and just grab a dog by the face – bad idea.” The military working dog application sets the bar at half that, stipulating that “all individuals residing at the primary residence where the dog will be kept must be at least 5 years old.” (These age minimums are offered by way of example only, each program – and there are many – sets its own guidelines.) Another is cost. In addition to veterinary care, toys, food, grooming and occasional boarding (which the military dog adoption checklist estimates at $500 to $700 annually), a retired working dog could require something more – in terms of both time and money. “When they were working, they

were scaling walls and leaping off shipping containers, so most of the military dogs that retire will have hip issues or back issues,” Bryant says. “(Adopters) need to be able to provide enough social interaction so that the dog can learn how to become a dog again.” Another important – but not immediately obvious – upfront expense involves traveling to pick up the adoptee at the end of the process. In the case of the aforementioned programs, that means traveling to Texas – a visit to Lackland Air Force Base in the case of direct-from-military adoptions, and Magnolia (near Houston) for adoptions through Mission K9 Rescue. Providing adequate veterinary care and an appropriate environment aren’t just suggestions, either – they’re part of the legally binding adoption contract. Other stipulations include not using the dog for work purposes – guard or drug-detection dogs, for example – and agreeing to have the animal

spayed or neutered. If you’ve gotten this far only to realize that having a toddler, a hectic work schedule or a tiny studio apartment would make adopting one of these canine heroes a nonstarter, you can still help these dogs have a happy, stress-free retirement by donating to a group like Mission K9 Rescue, which, according to Bryant, is hoping to notch close to $1 million in donations this year. He says funds raised go to provide veterinary care, transportation (often to bring retired working dogs back from overseas) and boarding. “If we had a $2-million annual budget, we’d really be able to take things to the next level,” he said. “And we’d be able to provide veterinary healthcare insurance for every dog that we send out, and that would relieve that burden from our adopters.” Content pulled from Tribune News Serrvice.


The Rocky Mountain Collegian | Thursday, August 23, 2018

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Arts & Culture | Thursday, August 23, 2018

NATIONAL

Aretha Franklin: Five must-own albums By Mikael Wood Los Angeles Times

As prolific as she was influential, Aretha Franklin released dozens of albums in a career that lasted longer than half a century. Here are five of her most important: “Laughing on the Outside,” 1963 With a seemingly arbitrary mix of pop, jazz and R&B tunes, Franklin’s early-’60s output on Columbia Records left audiences unsure about what kind of singer they were hearing. But nobody could doubt that a singer was what she was. Seek out this gem to behold the purity of her tone in “Skylark” and to marvel at the way she dismantles, then cleverly reassembles, the melody of “Make Someone Happy.” “I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You,” 1967

Franklin’s artistic breakthrough — and a landmark in American music as a whole. Recorded in part at Fame Studios in Muscle Shoals, Ala., this was the album that introduced the Queen of Soul in all her glorious complexity: a voice of passion and reason, heart and mind, impatience and understanding. “What you want,” she assured us, “baby, I got it.” “Amazing Grace,” 1972 Even when she was singing about earthly love, Franklin maintained a strong connection to the church music with which she grew up. Still, few were prepared for the righteous fire of this live album recorded at the New Temple Missionary Baptist Church in Los Angeles. Listen to “How I Got Over” to hear a pop star still invested in looking beyond herself. “Who’s Zoomin’ Who?,” 1985 The ‘80s were rough going for many singers from Frank-

lin’s generation _ especially those determined to stay on the charts. But Franklin sounds reenergized, not desperate, amid the glossy synths and mechanized drums of this big commercial hit. “How’d you get your pants so tight?” she asks some dreamboat in the ebullient “Freeway of Love,” which is reason enough to ride with her. “Sings the Great Diva Classics,” 2014 Franklin was famously competitive with other singers, and that drive hardly diminished as she got older. Here she stakes a claim on material made famous by Barbra Streisand (“People”), Gladys Knight (“Midnight Train to Georgia”), Alicia Keys (“No One”) and Adele, whose “Rolling in the Deep” she belts so hard you fear the thing might fall apart. Content pulled from Tribune News Service.

NATIONAL

The difference between class ratings on hiking trails By Spencer McKee The Gazette, Colorado Springs

Every hiking and climbing route has a difficulty rating associated with it. It’s crucial to understand what these ratings mean in order to be safe on the trail and plan accordingly for your adventure. In this article, the key focus will apply to Colorado’s fourteeners, though the information holds true for most trails. Each route to the top of a peak falls into a specific class and each class will require a different level of expertise. Note that the ‘class’ of a route is not the only thing to factor into difficulty. While the trail to the summit of Pikes Peak is a ‘Class 1’ route, which is the easiest of 5 classes, the trail is also a whooping 26 miles round trip. Know what you’re getting into before embarking on a trip and be familiar with your own ability level. Here’s a breakdown of the different classes: Class One: Class One is considered easy hiking. It might be a long trail and it might be a steep trail, but there will typically be a recognizable and easy-to-follow trail with this class. — Class One 14ers: Grays, Quandary, Elbert, Pikes Peak, San Luis Peak, Handies Peak Class Two: Class Two hiking is when

the trail starts to blur. Expect a trail during portions of the route, but it might grow faint in certain sections. During Class Two routes, especially those at high altitude, expect to encounter some scrambling between rocks. The risk for injury goes up with Class Two, particularly with how uneven terrain can impact your knees and ankles. Be ready to use your hands from time to time on more difficult Class Two routes. — Class Two 14ers: Sherman, Bross, Cameron, Lincoln, Bierstadt, Democrat, Torreys, Huron, Culebra, Princeton, Evans, Redcloud, Belford, Uncompahgre, Shavano, Humboldt, Columbia, Yale, La Plata, Sunshine, Missouri, Massive, Oxford, Tabeguache, Antero, Harvard, Holy Cross — Difficult Class Two 14ers: Conundrum, Castle, Challenger, Windom, Ellingwood, Blanca Class Three: Class Three is when things start to get intense. During this class, you’ll often encounter a combination of difficult terrain and steep sections. The use of a helmet is often recommended for Class Three climbs, as terrain of this grade can result in loose rocks. Expect to use your hands on a regular basis while navigating a Class Three climb. — ‘Easy’ Class Three 14ers: Sneffels, Lindsey, Kit Carson — Class Three 14ers: Wetter-

horn, Longs, Wilson, North Eolus, Eolus, El Diente, Crestone, Maroon Peak, Crestone Needle, Snowmass Class Four: With Class Four routes, you’ll be climbing —w and many falls can be fatal. A lot of hikers and climbers prefer to use ropes and other safety measure while they’re tackling a Class Four route. You’ll be relying on both handholds and footholds for progress on the route and you’ll need to be able to determine which handholds and footholds are safe to use. Always wear a helmet when on a Class Four route. — Class Four 14ers: North Maroon Peak, Pyramid, Wilson, Sunlight, Little Bear, Capitol Class Five: This is technical climbing. Unless you’re Alex Honnold, you’ll want to be utilizing rock climbing equipment on these routs. If you’ve been climbing before, you’re probably familiar with the rating scale as seen as 5.7, 5.9, 5.12, etc. This is where that 5 comes from. If you’re planning on embarking on a route with a Class Five climb, use a harness system and a helmet for safety. — Class Five 14ers: No standard routes. Content pulled from Tribune News Service.

Daily Horoscope Nancy Black

TODAY’S BIRTHDAY

(8/23/18). Profit through creative communication this year. Practice doing what you love. Study, travel, and solve mysteries. Your team wins this summer, despite health or fitness challenges, leading to insight and inspiration. Winter brings romance and passion. Nurture your dear ones. To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. ARIES (March 21-April 19) —

8 — ogether, you’re a powerful force. Take time to adapt to changes. Celebrate team accomplishments. Consider your moves before making them. Wait and rest. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — 8 — Unexpected news could stir up things at work. Avoid giving in to automatic reactions. Keep it professional. Consider options, and look for hidden opportunities. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — 7 — Travel may tempt, but stick to reliable routes or risk unexpected surprises. Explore your own backyard. Discover something new about somewhere familiar. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — 8 — Pay bills, and manage financial obligations. Leave a cushion for the unexpected. Adapt to changes as they fall. Back up intuition with data. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — 9 — Coordinate with a partner through changing circumstances. Don’t react blindly; breathe deeply, and consider the best moves. Mistakes could get expensive.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — 8 — Slow the pace to navigate uncertain terrain. Focus on your moves, and watch your steps. Profit from meticulous service. Keeping your cool gets contagious. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — 8 — Get into relaxation mode. Enjoy time with family, friends and your sweetheart. Serve something delicious. Sidestep distractions or surprises. Wait and think. Prioritize love. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — 7 — Home and family have your attention. Someone presents a surprise, and adaptation is required. Consider long-term plans. Resolve a domestic issue. Make repairs. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — 8 — You’re especially clever with words. Anticipate changes. Surprising news requires adaptation. Craft statements to smooth things over. Edit, post and publish.CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — 8 — Stay in action and keep raking in profits. Get terms and deals in writing. New tricks don’t always work. Market changes redefine options. Monitor and adapt. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — 9 — You’ve got confidence and energy on your side. Stay flexible to sidestep sudden changes or surprises. Don’t worry about money, but don’t spend much either. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — 7 — Make plans to realize a dream. Craft backup options, anticipating unexpected changes with extra time in the schedule. Rest and consider. Process current events.


| 21

Arts & Culture | Thursday, August 23, 2018

EVENTS

Fort Collins Comic-Con promises exciting weekend of science By Claire Oliver @claire_oliver21

Fandoms from Trekkies to Whovians, can look forward to Fort Collins Comic-Con, opening this weekend with science-based panels and local cosplay. The annual Fort Collins Comic-Con opens its doors August 25-26 with 100 percent of badge sales going to benefit Poudre Canyon Libraries. The entire Con is family-friendly and is a way for the community to come together and share an interest in popular culture. Shows like “Star Trek,” “Firefly,” and “Doctor Who” as well as superheroes from Marvel and DC will be represented. “If you are interested in learning how to cosplay, there’s going to be introduction cosplaying and crafting,” said Nick Armstrong, the lead organizer for the Con. “There’s even a creation of a leather bookmark which can get you into leather armor leatherworking with just a really simple introduction. We have a slew of really cool artists putting on really cool panels about getting into the industry and what they found and how things came together.” This year’s Con will focus largely on science. There will be several guest lecture panels hosted by local engineers,

award-winning science writers and physicists. Dr. Erin MacDonald, who hosts the YouTube series “Dr. Erin Explains the Universe,” will be hosting a panel about the truth behind scientific logic in science fiction. “She’s a great person that if you have a question about something on ‘Star Trek’ like ‘Could that really happen?’” said Paula Watson-Lakamp, the communication manager for Poudre Canyon Libraries. “She can explain why or why not it would work.” In addition to the professional scientists, the Con will be hosting panels for local cosplayers including Personify Cosplay, Sloth Goth and Geek Girls Brunch who will be hosting panels and events during the Con. “There will be cosplay galore,” Armstrong said. “Both days from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. there is a cosplay catwalk where people can show off their cosplay skills.” Along with the numerous panels taking place throughout the weekend, the Con offers an outlet for local artists to showcase their designs. There will be original sci-fi paintings and drawings as well as fan art and comic books for sale as part of the event. “We sit right up front and

get to watch everyone walk in the front door so that’s really great,” Watson-Lakamp said. “It’s especially fun because you see the little kids come in and their eyes get big and it’s just so much fun.” The people who work the Con are all volunteers and, according to Armstrong, the events have a 100 percent retention rate for volunteers. “I think just with our team of volunteers we kind of gain more and more every year and so many different people because they come one year, and love it and then come back and then they are staff,” Watson-Lakamp said. The Con plans to raise $100,000 in donations this year, topping the $75,000 from last year. Armstrong says he is positive they will reach their goal because of the increasing amount of event goers. The event will have food trucks, superhero and “Ghostbuster” training camps and much more. “Our Con is small enough that it creates that sense of camaraderie,” Armstrong said. “And large enough that you can find somebody that you’ve never seen in Fort Collins but who shares your fandom which is amazing.” Claire Oliver can be reached at entertainment@collegian.

An attendee visits one of the many booths selling artwork at Fort Collins Comic Con in 2017. PHOTO BY CASSIE ALFARO COLLEGIAN

EVERTHING

10-50% OFF


22 |

Arts & Culture | Thursday, August 23, 2018

PHOTO GALLERY

Family band SHEL performs at New West Fest

Sarah Holbrook, violinist of SHEL, sings and plays the violin at New West Fest on Aug. 11. PHOTO BY SARA GRAYDON COLLEGIAN

Liza Holbrook, drummer and beatboxer of SHEL, drums and sings at New West Fest on Aug. 11. PHOTO BY SARA GRAYDON COLLEGIAN

Eva Holbrook, lead singer and mandolin player of SHEL, performs at New West Fest on Aug. 11. PHOTO BY SARA GRAYDON COLLEGIAN


Thursday, August 23, 2018

Sudoku

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Across 1 Massage therapists’ workplaces 5 “Fiddlesticks!” 10 Used room service 15 Largest city on Hawaii’s largest island 16 Terminix target 17 Piquant 18 Takes on a new responsibility, as of leadership 21 Indigenous New Zealanders 22 Kind of artery 23 Key in a PC reboot combo 24 Evenly matched 26 Mosquito repellent 28 “Guys and Dolls” showstopper 34 Sporty ‘60s Pontiac 35 __ out a win 36 Biopic about Charles 37 “So that’s it” 38 Threw a fit 40 Capital of Oman 42 Muscle 43 Superficially highbrow 44 To and __ 45 “So that’s it!” 47 Orchestrated 48 Shelf for trophies, maybe 52 Cruising, say 53 Stealthy warrior 54 Movie SFX

19 Roamed (around) 20 At a frenetic pace 25 Saw-toothed range 27 Kuwaiti ruler 28 Big name in games 29 Animal behavior specialist 30 New __: MLB baseball cap supplier 31 Deli choice 32 Staircase pillar 33 Work the bar 34 Five-time US Open champ Rocky Mt. Collegian 8/22/18 Sudoku 39 Checks out 41 Org. with a five-ring logo 42 Stringed instruments 44 Swing wildly To solve the Sudoku puzzle, each row, column and 46 Airport box must contain theparking numbersfacilities 1 to 9. 49 Piano trio 50 Protective coating Sampled 9 51 4 6 54 “Get real!” __4pool8 255 7 57 Thickening agent 358 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame songwriter Laura 60 Stable 1 stud 8 61 Clickable image 62 “Hey, you!” 56 Prince Harry’s mother 6 9 64 Abe Lincoln’s youngest son 59 Word on the street 3 65 Dundee 5 denial 4 1 63 Complex reasoning that occurs literally at the end of three long 4Yesterday’s solution 7 1 answers 66 “Inside the NBA” analyst 1 67 In the back 68 Love god 5 3 8 69 Dweebs 70 “Same Time, Next Year” has Copyright ©2018 PuzzleJunction.com only two 71 Not a good impression Down 1 Pretense 2 Tuscany town 3 Furthermore 4 Lake Itasca, for the Mississippi 5 Laundry cycle 6 Three-letter product with two periods 7 Animosity 8 Feel yesterday’s yoga class, maybe 9 “Stop pouring” 10 Spring bloomer 11 Yellow bill in classic Monopoly 12 Event that may feature family heirlooms 13 “__ turn up” 14 Dmitry’s denial

FABER ILLUSTRATED MEGHAN MAHONEY

THE FOGDOGS RYAN GREENE

|23

To solve the Sudoku puzzle, each Collegian.com row, column and box must contain the numbers 1 to 9.

4

1 7 6

3PuzzleJunction.com 8

6

9 7 4 9 5 1 6 6 9 2 5 8

9 5 8 9 1 3 5 4 Copyright ©2018 PuzzleJunction.com

Sudoku Solution Sudoku Solution

Yesterday’s solution

9 5 7 6 4 3 8 2 1

1 2 3 7 8 9 4 6 5

8 4 6 1 2 5 3 9 7

4 8 1 3 7 6 9 5 2

3 9 5 2 1 4 7 8 6

7 6 2 9 5 8 1 4 3

5 1 9 8 6 7 2 3 4

6 7 8 4 3 2 5 1 9

2 3 4 5 9 1 6 7 8

4 7 8 3 5 6 9 2 1

9 3 6 2 8 1 4 5 7

1 2 5 7 4 9 6 8 3

7 5 3 4 1 8 2 9 6

2 4 1 9 6 3 8 7 5

8 6 9 5 7 2 1 3 4

6 9 7 8 3 4 5 1 2

5 8 4 1 2 7 3 6 9

3 1 2 6 9 5 7 4 8

KCSU IS OUT OF THIS WORLD


24 Thursday, August 23, 2018 | The Rocky Mountain Collegian

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