MARCH 29, 2011
FEATURES
05
In Her Shoes:
UAA raises awareness of rape
UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA ANCHORAGE
OPINION
08
Second Amendment:
Gun reduction doesn’t reduce violence
WWW.THENORTHERNLIGHT.ORG
A&E
13
Phantom of the Opera:
Broadway versus Hollywood critique
Two top ski Avalanches bury unprepared thrill seekers coaches set to resign By Megan Edge The Northern Light
After seven years as head ski coach, Trond Flagstad is ending his coaching career with the University of Alaska Anchorage. He isn’t the only memorable ski coach at UAA resigning however. Assistant ski coach Mandy Kaempf will also be leaving after five seasons with the team. Kaempf, who graduates with a masters degree in the spring, is leaving to pursue her career. Kaempf will not only be leaving behind her coaching legacy, but her own Seawolf athletic career. Kaempf is questionably the most decorated athlete in UAA history, with two NCAA titles and five All-American honors in skiing, and a conference title and All-American honors in track and field as well. “I figured this was going to be a good time to switch career fields.” Kaempf said. Flagstad, of Hamar Norway, is leaving for a different reason. “I am going to be a stay at home dad for at least a year,” Flagstad said happily. “I want to spend more time with my family. It’s a job that is a 24/7 job all year round. We aren’t racing in the summer but we still have to work behind the scenes because we are recruiting in the summer and you never have a weekend off and we travel a lot so its gotten to the point that I definitely want to spend more time with my wife and family. I have two little sons.” Flagstad is also planning to put on his tool belt and finish building his house,
PATRICK MCCORMICK/TNL
Clear spring skies and ideal snow conditions draws people into the mountains, such as this trio in Chugach State Park. Before you go you should be aware of avalanche hazards and how to avoid them.
By Patrick McCormick The Northern Light
It was a gorgeous 40-degree April day, with clear skies and not a breath of wind. Sweat dripped down my face slowly evaporating leaving behind white salt on my cheeks. It was a perfect day in the Chugach. We were cruising up a giant peak, skis strapped to our backs, smiles plastered on our faces. My partner was in the lead, punching holes in the snow as we ascended
the ridgeline. “OH S---” is all he said. I looked up and watched a giant half-mile crack rip across the face of the mountain. The snow, so solid before, was now turned into a deadly torrent ripping down the mountain. I began to swim and slammed my poles into the mountain staying upright soon enough to watch my friend, on his back sliding away in the dragon. Long spring days, fat storms and clear
skies make the mountains in the spring almost magnetic, but before you answer their call and go, step back and think, so that you don’t become a statistic. Here are a few statistics: Since 1951 there have been 129 avalanche fatalities in Alaska, the most per capita in the United States. 42 percent of U.S. avalanche fatalities from fall of 1999 to spring of 2010 were snowmobilers, 38 percent were skiers or snowboarders. Since
SEE AVALANCHE PAGE 17
Pot culture in Alaska reaches new high By Sean Talbot The Northern Light
PATRICK MCCORMICK/TNL
Flagstad and Kaempft have been a unstopable coaching duo for the last five seasons, when Kaempft joined the coaching staff.
as well as planning to make time to see family that lives on the east coast and in Norway. Flagstad leaves behind the legacy of creating 30 All-American athletes as head coach and 57 since he joined the program as the assistant coach in 2001. In 2009 the coaching duo led the team to a fourth place NCAA finish. “That was very special, one of the best moments,” Kaempf said. Flagstad described that finish, along with Kaempf’s 2005 NCAA titles, as extremely memorable. The depature of these two coaches
SEE COACH PAGE 17
Pot culture in Alaska is taking on a whole new dimension. Now that the synthetic alternative, Spice, has proven to be far more harmful than the plant itself (See “Senate Bill 17 would ban synthetic marijuana,” in The Northern Light, March 1st), marijuana has returned to the forefront of smoker’s minds. Marijuana has long been a symbol of peace, love and togetherness. From Bob Marley, to modern entertainers like Seth Rogen and Lady Gaga openly admitting to toking up, it is not as if American society sweeps marijuana under the proverbial rug. “I don’t know anyone who thinks pot is evil,” said Ajolla, an international business major who declined to give her full name. “I haven’t heard anyone saying ‘we need to get this stuff out of our community,’ Tipper Gore-style. It’s not like pot is an abortion issue.” It’s more of a social issue, says Miles Scott, a music performance student in his first year.
SEE POT PAGE 7
DANIEL JACKSON/TNL
Much like coffee, marijuana has its own special place in Alaska culture. "In the Lower 48, laws are harsher than they are here. What works there may not work here,” stated University Police officer John Chu.