I n d ep en d e nt
September 2011
S t u de nt
V o i c e
o f
B o is e
S tat e
Sin c e
12
Boise, Idaho
1933
Issue no.
10
Volume 24
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First issue free
Tales, triumphs,
tragedies, of a difficult
decade
John Garretson
Online Sports Editor Sept. 11, 2001. 8:15 a.m. The day seemed almost too perfect. A cloudless, bright blue sky composed with the breezy autumn weather that swept into my small hometown of Cranford, N.J. But something was off. My teacher broke down in tears in the middle of class when the school’s secretary whispered in her ear. That moment in time still resonates in my head. The World Trade Center Twin Towers were hit this morning, we were told. “How could that be possible?” I thought to myself. Every time I went to “Take Your Child to Work Day,” I would gaze at the two monumental structures from my dad’s 60th floor office across the street. Built with steel that looked like it touched the sky, it was the centerpiece of New York City, the roots holding it down in its concrete jungle. The national travesty did not sink in until later that day, when television stations controlled the channels with instant coverage of the rubble and wreckage, the debris-filled smoke plaguing every street corner in a 20 block radius, victims laying helplessly in the streets waiting for the next available paramedic. Thankfully, my dad had entered our front door without a scratch but there was this draining sense of anguish in him that no father wants his son to see. I needed a distraction, something to take my eyes off the devastating attacks. There had to be a baseball or football game on ESPN, there’s always some sporting event on. Continuing to flip through the channels, there was no sight of jerseys, referees or fans, just continuing coverage of the hijacked planes and the victims they took with them. There had never been a day without sports, at least from what I could remember. That was the day our coun-
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try became vulnerable -- the day the earth stood still. Not to detract from the emotional loss of the collapse of the World Trade Center or the understated effort put in by New York City’s finest to preserve their city and help those in dire need, but sports is the unofficial glue of this country. When times get tough, you always have your team to rely on. Being down for the count was not an option. A ninth inning rally of patriotism, support and unity flooded the gateways that paved the way, even against the odds. America needed its sports back. And it came back more passionate than ever. Before the Sept. 23 game against the New England Patriots and New York Jets (a longtime rivalry) both sides were holding hands during the iconic Star Spangled Banner, a site that may never be seen again. Watching Mike Piazza of the New York Mets donned in NYPD logos slam a game-winning home run in the eighth that Friday night gave even Yankees fans a reason to cheer. Moments of silence were practiced at events across the country. It was an era of a rekindled identity forever unmatched. A decade later, the daily work days continue to pass as we go about our business. We still acknowledge and support the war efforts abroad and the work of our local heroes. But there’s something in this 10 year span that sports offered to our nation: a stadium to mourn our losses, a place to commend the bold and a venue to believe in a brighter future.
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NEWS BRIEFS
September 12, 2011
Bani Walid negotiations fail BANI WALID, LIBYA --- Negotiations failed as the Saturday deadline for a peaceful surrender of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi’s loyal town, Bani Walid, passed with no word from the town elders. Shots were fired the day before, pushing the assault timetable up. Forces from the National Transitional Council had been preparing to attack the town for the past weeks but citizens of Bani Walid have so far been able to hold them off. Fighting erupted on Saturday and was recently suspended. It is believed that important
members of Gaddafi’s regime, including his two sons, might be in the town. Two major sticking points in the negotiations were demands that the rebels (NTC fighters) enter the town unarmed and not search houses, as well as a blanket pardon for all loyalists. The NTC wants to prosecute loyalists responsible for bloodshed. Bani Walid is one of three major towns that remain loyal to Gaddafi. The other two are Sirte and Sabha. While the Bani Walid assault was put on hold, NTC troops advanced on Sirte.
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World
Assad agrees to some reform DAMASCUS, SYRIA --- Bashir al-Assad, president of Syria, has agreed to a series of measures that will ideally reform the political system in Syria. These measures will be introduced to the Arab-League at their meeting on Sept. 13 in Cairo. That same day, at least 18 more citizens were killed in protests. According to Bloomberg news, activists will stage further protests after burying a protestor killed yesterday.
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National Transitional Council forces patrol no-man’s-land around Sirte, Libya.
National
Firefighters in Texas make progress
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The storm has closed roads all over Pennsylvania.
Tropical Storm Lee dissipates PENNSYLVANIA --- Tropical Storm Lee, the latest of this year’s hurricane season, is expected to continue to dissipate over the Ohio River Valley. Operations that were put on hold becausse of the storms, including closed roads and evacuated oil rigs, are expected to open today. Saturday more than 50,000 residents were allowed back to their homes in Pennsylvania in order to assess the damage. It is estimated that the damages are in the tens of millions of dollars
Looks Like you’LL need
a new category
range for the most effected county, but levees along the Susquehanna River held and kept damages below the worst case scenario of more than $3 billion in damages. Residents further north, mainly in New York and Maryland, are still waiting to be allowed back to their homes. Officials are still inspecting flood damage. The rain from Lee also managed to ease worries of Alabama’s usual wildfire season with the rain taking the edge off a drought in what is usually the hottest part of the year.
Local
on your resume.
Kayaker thanks rescuers BOISE --- Herbert Gunderson publicly thanked the Idaho Army National Guard and the Elmore County search and rescue crews who rescued him on Sept. 2, the Idaho Statesman reported. He went kayaking on Aug. 31 and after hitting a log, was knocked out of his kayak and washed up on the North Fork of the Boise River, surrounded
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BANSTROP, TEXAS --- Officials announced that fires near the Banstrop area north of Houston were 40 percent contained but homeowners are still not allowed into the area to see what is left of their homes. Tensions are high as the city enters another week of evacuation. Many are already looking for apartments to begin renting as hundreds of homes in the area have been destroyed. Fire crews will not allow the homeowners to come back until they have cleared some remaining hotspots around main residential area.
AZ brothel shut down PHOENIX, ARIZONA --- A religious operation was recently shut down for prostitution. The Phoenix Goddess Temple employed around 20 men and women as educators in “Egyptian tantric arts of sacred sensuality” according to the International Business News. The business has been operating since 2009 but came under suspicion almost immediately due to neighbor’s complaints of illicit activity.
W TF
Drunken moose found in apple tree
by water and cliffs. Gunderson was bruised and had gone a day and a half without his heart medication -- he had a heart transplant 12 years ago. His wife reported him missing after he failed to make a rendezvous and the Idaho Wake up in the morning and Army National Guard and El- head out for the paper, then hear a more County search and rescue roar from the neighbor’s yard. found him Friday Sept. 2. Look over the fence and what’s there? A moose, stuck in an apple tree. Per Johansson saw just that Thursday morning in Sweden, acApril the accusation of his lying cording to the Associated Press. With the help of police and resduring the trial was published, cue services, he was able to saw the according to KTVB. Internal investigations cred- animal free but the moose stagited additional facts that were gered a bit and seemed dazed. For unavailable to the justices and a few days she simply hung around the fact that Rice was allowed the yard recovering. It is likely she to present his own side of the was intoxicated by eating fermented apples. story to his being cleared.
ISP officer exonerated MERIDIAN --- Master Corporal Fred Rice of the Idaho State Police was proven not guilty of allegations by the Idaho Supreme Court that he lied during a testimony in an Ellington 2006 road rage case. He was placed on administrative leave earlier this year, when in
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Different parts of U.S. remember 9/11 Stephanie Casanova Journalist
Where the twin towers stood ten years ago, victims’ families are now able to honor loved ones by seeing, inscribed in bronze, the names of those who lost their lives in the memorable attack. The 9/11 Memorial opened to victims’ families on the 10th anniversary of the attacks and opened to the public today. Maritza Rios, 21 year-old senior communication major from Burley, Idaho visited the site while it was under construction and saw a smaller scale memorial there. “There were these little tower things and they had pictures of kids and families and pictures of that day, of firemen…and it had stories and names,” Rios said. “There was (a picture of) this little girl with a teddy bear … she
just looked so lost … she probably looked about 4 years old … just so much fear in her eyes.” Nearly 3,000 lives were lost on 9/11. The names of these almost 3,000 men, women and children, along with those whose lives were lost the Feb. 23, 1993 attacks, have been inscribed in bronze on the walls that support two memorial pools. The two pools are set where the towers stood, with waterfalls cascading down all four sides of the pool. Surrounding the memorial pools will be a plaza with oak trees and a Callery pear known as the Survivor Tree, which was nursed back to health after the attacks. “Just the silence in itself says a lot there,” Rios said. “The sound of the water is just going to be very, very peaceful in recognizing all the innocent people that were killed on that day.” Across the United States, other
memorials have been erected in honor of 9/11. Liberty Park in Jersey City dedicated a memorial called “Empty Sky” on Saturday. The 208-foot walls have 746 names of victims from New Jersey inscribed on the inner faces. The reflective steelplated walls are directly across the Hudson River from where the towers once stood. Other towns around New York have smaller memorials, such as the one in Wayne, N.J. “(The memorial is) in a circle and in the middle is a replica of the twin towers made out of cement and around are pillars with the people that died on them from our town and a little story about them,” Arrielle Dreher, 21 year-old junior construction management major from Wayne, New Jersey, said. During school-year breaks, Dreher lives about 30 minutes from Manhattan.
“It’s weird, because definitely when you look at the New York skyline, from the Jersey side, you can see the gap where the World Trade Center used to be,” Dreher said. “It’s just really weird because I worked at a summer camp, trying to explain to the kids what 9/11 was because they weren’t alive (in 2001),” Dreher said. On Sunday at 1 p.m. a ceremony was held at the Sept. 11 Memorial and Fallen Heroes Plaza in Coeur d’Alene allowing northern Idahoans to pay their respects. The memorial was built in 2009 and dedicated that same year on the 9/11 anniversary. In Boise, a number of memorial events were held throughout the day in honor of the 10th anniversary of the attacks. From the Idaho Fallen Firefighter Memorial in Riverside Park at 8 a.m. to a tribute at the statehouse steps at 4 p.m., our community was sure to honor not only the lives lost
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The footprint of the North Tower of the World Trade Center is part of the 9/11 Memorial. on Sept. 11, 2001, but also the heroes who’ve risked everything in the ten years since the event that changed American’s lives forever. In 2012, a museum will open at
Ground Zero to educate people on what happened that fateful day in 2001, why it happened and how the event has impacted the future of the United States.
Opinion
Ten years later, some retrospect
ROTC-Nursing
Ben Mack
Opinion Editor Sept. 11 is the watershed moment of our generation. It’s the moment that will, in all likelihood, define the first half of the 21st century, an event unparallelled in scope affecting us like nothing since World War II. The weeks and months after the 9/11 attacks were a time of shock, apprehension and fear. Anthrax attacks in the mail. War in Afghanistan. Sudden evacuations of public places. Suspicion all around. Gradually, fears receded and now, emerging from a decade-long tunnel, we should acknowledge that much has gone right. Few would have predicted that there wouldn’t be any further major attacks on American soil. The occasional patdown aside, most people have adapted well to living with greater precaution. There have been significant victories against al-Qaida. Osama bin Laden is dead, and so are most of his closest advisers. Afghanistan is free. But the national sense of security remains fragile. Terrorism is now just one of many threats that can destabilize life in the United States. Super-viruses, hurricanes, climate change, political deadlock, economic recession and sovereign debt defaults are all legitimate threats to our security and way of life. The fear of terrorism may have receded, but fear itself remains, although in different forms. But there is one aspect of that tragic day in 2001 that is absent today. After 9/11, Americans unified like almost never before. That collective spirit -- that sense of pride, patriotism and concern for one another’s well-being -- no longer seems to strike the same chord among us. The war in Iraq, which began just a year and a half after the destruction of the World Trade Center and bombing of the Pentagon, divided opinion and set off a draining debate about the reasons for war and the lessons
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Maj. Blaine Wales (L), professor of military science and Ltc. Howard Trujillo (R), recruiting operations officer, crafted a guarantee that will be signed at noon today. It will secure two cadets per semester a place in the school of nursing.
Patriot Day Erin Kruitbosch Journalist
Sept. 11, 2011 marks the ten year anniversary of what is known as the deadliest terrorist attacks ever launched against the United States. It is now a day dedicated to the memory of those whose lives were lost on the same day in 2001, through the introduction
of Patriot Day. This symbolic day of remembrance means that the United States’ president issues a directive for flags to be flown at half-mast and activities such as memorials or other tributes are encouraged. On Oct. 25, 2001 Vito Fossella, a republican from New York, presented a bill to the U.S. House of Representatives to make 9/11 a holiday of re-
Politicians create holiday to honor lives lost and heroes of a new generation
membrance. Joint House Resolution 71 was co-sponsored by 22 other representatives from New York, Virginia, Pennsylvania and Illinois and passed by a vote of 407-0. This is not listed as a federal holiday. Consequently when it falls on a weekday, school is still in session and all government buildings are still open. A moment of silence is directed to be observed on this day, gen-
erally at 8:46 a.m. EST. This marks the exact time the first airplane hit the World Trade Center. Because Sept. 11 fell on a Sunday this year, some institutions, such as schools, will observe the memorial today instead. Some have expressed that for an event of this magnitude, this level of tribute isn’t enough. “This is an extremely rel-
evant holiday to our generation and I believe that we should observe it as a federal holiday to truly remember the lives that were lost,” Kimberly Cox, a senior human resource management and general business major, said. But John Freemuth, Ph.D., professor of political science explained, “There has been an undercurrent of ‘no more holidays’ if it affects the workday,
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we learned from 9/11. With President Obama’s withdrawal of troops the debate has petered out, but the war’s controversial legacy remains. It divided us in ways eerily reminiscent of the Vietnam War. National crises are supposed to bring out the best in people. Through almost five decades of the Cold War, Americans endured periods of extreme fear and profound disagreement. But they remained aligned for their own system of government, one of freedom and tolerance. We wanted to be seen as a clearly visible alternative to the Soviet Union, then ruling much of Europe and Asia with an iron fist of brutal repression. For a while, it seemed that terrorism would do the same. America’s commitment to freedom and openness would be the foil to al-Qaida’s violent extremism. Just as the Cold War sparked a renewal of our core values, Americans of the post9/11 years would go forth in a spirit of unity and appreciation for all the things they shared. But it hasn’t happened that way. As the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan wind down, and people wake up to the real cost of political stasis at home (see: economic crisis), there remains within us a shared memory of grief and commitment. National unity isn’t defined merely by the absence of our disputes. Just because we’re unified doesn’t mean we’ll ever agree on taxes, Medicare or the border. Unity is not a virtue that can be claimed by just one group or individual. It’s something that’s felt in all of us. It’s a sense of identity. It’s a reservoir of our strength. What national unity brings is the confidence that, at the very end of the day and all the debate and bickering, we all remain bound to one another by a commonality of shared purpose and goodwill towards others. Right now, we need more of that kind of unity.
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so we use it as a day of remembrance, but symbolically only.” Boise State University did not officially observe the memorial.
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T O C ONTACT T HE A RBITER Local Section [Tasha Adams: news@arbiteonline.com Suzanne Craig: suzannecraig@stumedia.boisestate.edu Lindsey Hileman: culture@stumedia.boisestate.edu ] Opinion Section [ Ben Mack:letters@stumedia.boisestate.edu ] Sports Section [ Wyatt Martin: sports@stumedia.boisestate.edu ] www.arbiteronline.com 1910 University Dr Boise, ID 83725 Phone: 208.426.6300 Fax: 888.388.7554
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September 12, 2011
Veterans find support in campus organizations Natalie Craig Journalist
Every year it is hard to remember Sept. 11 and the tragedy America felt. Every day, young adults are joining the military and coming home from war. Veterans are given a G.I. bill which pays for a post secondary education if they choose to go. Still, a lot of veterans don’t go back to school. But now, with the outreach and help of Wyakin Warriors and Veterans Upward Bound, veterans are finding it easier to go back to school. Veterans Upward Bound (VUB) is a TRiO organization that works within the center of Multicultural and Educational Opportunities on campus to
provide veterans with help and support to further their eduction. This organization offers classes and special workshops. Mark Heilman, project director, explained that not only does VUB help Boise State students, but it also reaches out to students at College of Western Idaho and other local colleges. For the 2010 - 2011 school year, over 64 veterans completed their VUB education plan and 26 other veterans are continuing in the VUB program for this year. Helping approximately 120 first generation veterans a year, VUB reaches out to veteran students to become involved and go further with their college education. The Wyakin Warrior foundation is another organization
that helps veterans succeed in college. This foundation is a nonprofit organization that provides training packages for wounded and injured veterans. “It is one of the most comprehensive education, training, mentoring and job placement programs for wounded veterans in the country,” Jeffery Bacon, founder of Wyakin Warriors, said. “Many programs for wounded warriors offer a specific service. Ours takes the best of many and puts them together in one comprehensive package.” Veterans are receiving help from these organizations and are making strides toward graduating from college. “We are working with many of the wounded warrior programs in Idaho and around the coun-
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try to identify veterans who are ready to take the next step in life,” Bacon said. “We are also trying to increase awareness so that other severely wounded or injured veterans can learn about it and apply.” Services and courses offered by these organizations cater to veterans’ needs and are very
accommodating with tutoring and small class sizes. Almost all veterans who become involved in either the Wyakin Warriors and Veterans Upward Bound organizations finish college and earn a degree. “It is humbling to work with young veterans who have
already sacrificed for their country and inspiring to watch them as they work to improve themselves,” Bacon said. For more information on Wyakin Warriors visit WyakinWarriors.org. Veterans Upward Bound can also be found on the web at education.boisestate.edu/vub.
CODY FINNEY/THE ARBITER
Wyakin Warriors and Veterans Upward Bound support patriots who’ve served.
Professor comments on affects of bin Laden’s death Suzanne C raig
Breaking News Editor On May 2, Americans were greeted by the news of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden’s death during a covert operation in Pakistan. Only a few months before the ten-year anniversary of the Sept. 11 attack, which he was notorious for planning, the figurehead of the terrorist organization was dead -- but was his death really the most important outcome that day? “His death is of particular symbolic and psychological importance ... but I think perhaps even more important is the capture of all the documents and files ... that has undoubtedly provided an enourmous amount of intelligence,” professor Gregory Raymond, Ph.D., and member of the department of political science, said. Since bin Laden’s death there have been a number of top al-Qaida operational leaders that have been removed. In conjunction with the drone strikes, one of which recently killed al-Qaida’s second in command, it becomes apparent that the top echelons of the organization have been seriously weakened. “All of this has to be thought of as part of an interrelated set of events rather than just his death as a single event,” Raymond said. “But we don’t know for sure because we don’t know what all is contained in those documents ... I have no doubt that there is much we are doing that we as citizens will learn about further down the road, but we won’t learn about immediately.” The effects of the Navy SEAL raid and bin Laden’s subsequent death included added tension in relations with Pakistan’s government and intelligence organizations, as they were unaware the raid was taking place due to operational
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Gregory Raymond, Ph.D., political science professor, discusses repercussions of bin Laden’s death. security. This has been exasperated by continued drone strikes. “It was prudent to conduct the raid the way we did. My intuition tells me that had we informed very many people that that housing complex would have been empty when we arrived ... I think it was handled very well,” Raymond said. When asked about the affects of bin Laden’s death on the War on Terror, Raymond first wanted to clarify that calling it ‘the War on Terror’ was something of a misnomer. “Part of the problem is that although we call it the War on Terror, terrorism is a tactic and there’s some difficulty with declaring war on a tactic. You can declare war on an entity like al-Qaida or you can declare a war on a country ... The tactic of terrorism will probably be around for a very, very long
time, since it’s been around since antiquity,” he explained. Though terrorism may be an option for any group that considers itself marginalized, specific organizations like alQaida will come and go. “I think what this (bin Laden’s death) does do is give us a lot more leverage against al-Qaida than we had before, in the targeting of al-Qaida,” Raymond said.
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Horoscopes Today’s Birthday (09/12/11). Your thinking is sharp. Be prepared. The Full Moon in Pisces highlights your close relationships, so balance your needs with theirs to keep the peace. The year ahead is great for starting new projects, but don’t stress about it now. It’s a fantastic night for a party. To get the advantage, check the day’s rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is an 8 -- What seems doubtful and distressing this morning gets resolved by afternoon, and then there’s no stopping you. Plug a financial leak, and maintain momentum. Taurus (April 20-May 20)Today is a 7 -- If you change your mind and direction, let everyone involved know. Follow intuition and a friend’s advice regarding a
By Nancy Black
conflict between home and career. Your heart knows the way. Gemini (May 21-June 21) Today is a 9 -- Love and truth get you past any rough spots. Avoid needlessly antagonizing someone. More money’s coming in, so take swift action when needed. It’s a good time to ask for a raise. Cancer ( June 22-July 22) Today is an 8 -- Stick to the schedule, and profit arrives with new responsibilities. Harvest what you can. When in doubt, look for inspiration in the little things. Keep your word, and things get easy. Leo ( July 23-Aug. 22)Today is a 7 -- Pay special attention to the details now. The rumors might not match the facts. Avoid useless distractions and unnecessary expenditures. Stick to your priorities.
FOR RELEASE SEPTEMBER 12, 2011 Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
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38 Août’s season 39 “__ the World” 40 Fella 41 James and Owens 42 “Psst!” from above 43 Political columnist Peggy 44 Alaskan native 45 Gator’s cousin 49 __ and ends
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is an 8 -- Be prepared, so you can move quickly when necessary. Stay objective. Consider the circumstances from a different perspective. Friends are available. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is an 8 -- Today could very well be busier than usual. Get straight about your priorities. Excessive focus on work could dampen personal relationships. Go for balance. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a 7 -- Break some barriers. Take a trip. Today may be the exception to the rule: You’re lucky in love and games, but not necessarily with money. Don’t gamble. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is an 8 -- Today may be a good day to listen to Paul Simon: “Slow down, you move too fast.
Monday 11/12Wednesday 11/14
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
4 Just might pull it off 5 “Bah,” in Bavaria 6 Hollywood Walk of Fame feature 7 Sound from a snout 8 A smaller amount 9 Salem is its cap. 10 “Scrubs,” for one 11 Get ready for production 12 White wading birds 15 African language group 17 Hat-tipping address 18 Yuletide carols 23 Stovetop item 24 Federal IDs 25 One of the fam 26 Shelley tribute 27 Wrestler’s objective 28 Windy City airport 29 Pricey timepiece 30 Wash away slowly 34 Injure 35 Cockpit reading 36 __ polloi 37 Dallas NBAer
9/12/11 You gotta make the morning last.” Feel the love coming your way. Enjoy quiet time at home.
For more information contact MIGUEL VARELA miguelvarela@u.boisestate.edu
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is an 8 -- Expect differences of opinion. Respectfully make your own choices. Competition has you pick up the pace. You have the skills required, so turn up the steam. Aquarius ( Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is a 9 -- Watch out for conflicts between your work and your personal life. Don’t think you’ve got more than you have. Profit comes from your imaginative creativity. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 9 -- Make changes with confidence. Take advantage of renewed energy. Your optimism helps you stay motivated and in action. Delegate and direct traffic. Others appreciate your leadership.
Email Matthew Summers at BSUEnt@gmail.com
Calendar
Crossword ACROSS 1 Hawaiian greeting 6 Recital highlight 10 Fr. religious figure 13 Fragrant purple flower 14 Stadium level 15 Bookstore sect. 16 Newcomer to Capitol Hill 19 Long story 20 Vessels like Noah’s 21 Frère du père 22 Massage facility 24 Begin a trip 25 Promising rookies’ doses of reality 31 Nitwit 32 They may be locked in battle 33 Flexed 34 Heavenly head covers 35 “Whatever shall I do?” 39 Writer Diamond or actor Leto 40 Overfill 41 Young company supervisor 46 Amerigo Vespucci, vis-àvis America 47 Score-raising stat 48 Whoop 49 Home of the Buckeyes 52 VCR insert 56 Breaks for AARP members 59 Quod __ demonstrandum 60 “The Razor’s __”: Maugham novel 61 Make sense, to a detective 62 China’s Sun Yat__ 63 Arthur of tennis 64 Varnish component
Contact classifieds@stumedia.boisestate.edu to place your club’s ad
9/12/11
50 A bit tipsy 51 “Makes sense to me” 53 Common conjunctions 54 Seed-spitter’s sound 55 “Baseball Tonight” channel 57 Stephen of “V for Vendetta” 58 Rowing need
(All Day) Phi Eta Sigma Book Drive For Invisible Children Description: Phi Eta Sigma and Invisible Children have teamed up with Better World Books to run a book drive! It will kick off at the beginning of the semester, and we are open to collecting books throughout the whole semester. College textbooks are priority, however all books in re-sellable condition will be accepted and appreciated! Look for collection bins around campus and the community. Stay up to date on idahobookdrive.com. Presented by: Phi Eta Sigma Location: Boise State University Contact: Mary Hogan Tuesday 11/13
provided Presented by: ISS and ISA Location: The Student Diversity Center Cost: Free Contact: Merrilou Burris 7:00 PM Michael Greve Speaker for American Founding Institute Presented by: BSU College of Social Sciences & Public Affairs Location: Student Ballroom, Jordan Ballroom B&C Cost: No Charge Contact: Scott Yenor
Wednesday 11/14
3:30 PM - 5:00 PM Coffee and Conversation Description: Beverages and light snacks will be
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6
Sports
September 12, 2011
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Golfers ready for tee time
Ladies’ golf team heads to Coeur d’Alene for opener Lucio Prado Journalist
photo courtesy bronco sports
Junior Taeksoo Kim holds his follow-through as he stares down his iron shot.
Bronco men prep to start season in Pullman, Wash. Lucio Prado Journalist
The men’s golf team will be traveling to Palouse Valley to tee off for the first time during the 2011-12 season at the Cougar Classic today and tomorrow at the Palouse Ridge Golf Course in Pullman, Wash. The 54-hole, two round tournament begins today and ends tomorrow. The Palouse Ridge will play a par 71, for each round. The Broncos will also be hosting their first invitational tournament in six years, the Boise State Dash Thomas Memorial Golf Tournament. The tournament will be held at BanBury Golf Club in Eagle, Idaho and will have 16 division I college golf teams competing at the two-day event starting Monday Sept. 26 and going through Tuesday Sept. 27. The BSU Dash Thomas Memorial Tournament will host teams from all over the country and fans are encouraged to go and support the Broncos. “I’m pretty excited, this is
my seventh year coaching,” men’s head coach Kevin Burton said. “This is probably the best team I have ever had, we have had some great players in the past but this probably is the deepest and that is what it takes for at team to succeed and do well. In college golf, we travel five players and every round you count four, so a lot of times those fourth and fifth players are going to play as big of an impact as the one and two because we have to count one of their scores, and this year out of the nine guys that I got I could easily place any one of them in that order and feel pretty comfortable that we are going to have a pretty solid round.” The men’s golf NCAA tournament works like the men’s basketball tournament, taking 64 teams based on rankings. “I researched it pretty hard and I believe that the Mountain West in golf is probably the second toughest conference in the nation,” Burton said. “They year in year out send four to five teams to the
NCAA and you just don’t see that in many conferences. San Diego State University, UNLV and Colorado State are always in the top 20 in the country and several others fit in that next category, so it will be a tough conference.” Burton takes pride in his program and believes that his success comes from the amount of hard work the team puts in. And he believes it is dedication to the sport that allows his teams to excel. With a diverse group of nine players the Broncos are excited and ready to make a run at a conference championship. Tee times for the Cougar Classic, hosted by the Washington State Cougars, begin at 8:30 a.m. today and 7:15 a.m. Tuesday. The University of Idaho and North Idaho College are also featured in the 14-team field. Boise State will send Taeksoo Kim, Scott Spiewak, Jordan Skyles, Clayton Kosanocvic, and Charlie Marusiak to Pullman.
The women’s golf team is set to start off the season, teeing off for the first time at the Circling Raven Collegiate Invitational today and tomorrow at the Circling Raven Golf Course in Worley, Idaho. Consisting of 36 holes today and 18 holes on Tuesday, the three-round event will start at 8 a.m. with a shotgun start for both days. Nicole Harris is in her fourth season as the head coach of the women’s golf team. She has successfully guided the Broncos to their first tournament title since the 1999-2000 season winning the 2008 Bronco Fall Invitational. She has also improved the program’s stroke per round average and has had two top-five tournament team finishes. Harris has high expectations for the upcoming season. “I expect for us to place in the top half of every field and to have two top five finishes
this fall,” Harris said. “We don’t have any freshmen ... I feel like we have a lot of experience going and I feel like everybody’s been playing very well during qualifying so they’re ready.” However, she knows that the competition is harder this year with the change to the Mountain West Conference. “The biggest challenge is that golf is a lot better in the Mountain West,” Harris said. “There is three or four schools ranked in the top 50 whereas the WAC didn’t have any so we’re going to have to play a lot better, shoot a lot lower scores in order to be contending for the Mountain West. I’m nervous to play TCU, the head coach there is still my best friend and so it will be fun to play with them but we do a lot of the same things because she is the one who taught me, so it will be interesting.” The players are also aware of the expectations for the upcoming season. “I think they are the highest they have ever been,” Junior Lori Harper said. “We have a
really deep team and I think we’re looking to win an event this year and make a good rookie showing in the Mountain West. We have really versatile players on our team, we have players that hit fairways and greens players that can get out of any situation, everyone has a strength.” Attitude reflects leadership and these women believe they can win because they have a great leader as their coach that has high standards for them. “She’s literally the most universal coach I have seen around here she helps on the course, off the course, with personal stuff, with anything you can think of, you can call her and she would know,” Harper said about Harris. With the move to the Mountain West and a deep team, these women are hoping to make some noise. Michelle Gooding, Hayley Young, Lori Harper, Maria Santisteban and Katie Somers will represent the Broncos in the Circling Raven Invitational.
photo courtesy Bronco Sports
Hayley Young, junior golf athlete, says she hopes to continue her success with the Broncos. The women’s golf team competes in Worley, Idaho today and tomorrow.
stitches allergies sprains flu fevers
unexpected discoveries nausea coughs and more
The Student Union proudly displays its newest print portfolio acquisition, Northwest Narratives, donated by recent alumni, Benjamin Love. The Northwest Narratives print exchange portfolio contains the work of twenty northwest artists, and demonstrates a variety of visual narrations utilizing diverse subject matter and a range of processes. The 20 invited artists represent four northwestern states: Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and Montana.
THE ARTISTS
James Bailey, Michael Baum, Mare Blocker, Matt Bodett, Angela Katona-Batchelor, Kerry Corcoran, Karri A. Dieken, Elizabeth Dove, Rachael Eastman, Eleanor H Erskine, April Hoff, Sarah Horowitz, Matthew Letzelter, Benjamin Love, Amy Nack, Thomas A. Prochaska, Benjamin Sandness, Harold Schlotzhauer, James G. Todd, Christy Wyckoff
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
The Arbiter
For sports-related crashes, rashes, sprains and breaks, there’s a Primary Health location right around the corner.
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