University Chronicle

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University

Chronicle

Page 16 - Women’s BBall sweeps

Serving SCSU and the St. Cloud Community WWW.UNIVERSITYCHRONICLE.NET

Monday, February 13, 2012

Volume 88, Number 31

Ron Paul speaks in St. Cloud

Events Calendar Monday Vagina Monologues 6 - 8:30 p.m. This event is $5 for students and $10 for the public. This will take place at the Atwood theater. There will be a speaker and a silent auction. 90% of the funds raised will JMVMÅ\ \PM ;+;= ?WUMV¼[ Center’s Gender Violence Prevention Program.

Brenna Casey BEAT REPORTER

In November 2012, the citizens of the United States will elect its 45th president. As Election Day approaches, candidates prime their voters with enthusiastic speeches and tell-all ads. On Jan. 6, Republican candidate, Ron Paul, held a town-hall meeting and rally for fellow supporters. The event took place at 4 p.m. where veterans, students, and members of the community gathered to support Paul and his campaign for presidency. Former member of the U.S. Air Force and National Guard, Texan Representative Ron Paul has been an active member of the United Stated legislative branch since 1976. After marrying his high school sweetheart, Carol Wells, Paul attended Duke University School of Medicine where he became an Obstetrics and Gynecologist . Throughout his medical career, Paul is said to have delivered more than 4,000 babies. Paul and his wife of more than aMIZ[ PI^M Å^M KPQTLZMV IVL grandchildren themselves. After a failed presidential campaign in 2008, Paul is now reattempting to obtain the Republican presidential nomination. Opening for Paul was SCSU professor and current Republican member of the Minnesota House

Wednesday Budget Advisory Group 11 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. This event is free and open to the public and will take place at Atwood in the Mississippi room. This event is a meeting to look over SCSU’s budget and Steven Ludwig will be speaking.

6HH .)+&/%01&'&!"#$ JUN-KAI TEOH / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Jo McMullen-Boyer hosts KVSC’s 33 1/3 Trivia Long Play’s awards ceremony.

Learned Pigs wins trivia weekend Chelsea Christman BEAT REPORTER

BRENNA CASEY / CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Ron Paul discusses his campaign plans at the River’s Edge Convention Center.

33 1/3 may be just a number, but to KVSC, the university radio station, it symbolizes much more. In honor of the 33rd anniversary of KVSC’s annual Trivia weekend, the number acts as the central theme. Vinyl records spin at 33 1/3 revolutions per minute, and the station still plays records, so the chosen theme corresponds well. Imagine enduring 50 hours of trivia questions, challenging your mind, body, and spirit. At KVSC, 88.1 FM, announcers ask questions to teams listening on the air and online. While some questions are based on the theme, others range from different

subjects, such as pop culture, history, and sports. Jo McMullen-Boyer, station manager of KVSC, has been involved in every step of Trivia since she received her position in 1992. “Trivia weekend takes months of work, and we start narrowing the theme every year in the summer,” McMullen-Boyer said. In August, KVSC announces the theme. In the following months, they move on to the steps of designing the campaign, creating posters, ensuring sponsors, and advertising with media as the date approaches. Writers create the questions all year long, drawing on knowledge from any source, even personal experiences. Points range from 10-500 per Y]M[\QWV LMXMVLQVO WV \PM LQNÅK]T\a

Most questions require more than [QUXTa IV WVTQVM [MIZKP \W ÅVL \PM answers, so all team members must be ready for an information scavenger hunt. Each question is also open for a certain amount of time. Volunteers answer the phone lines, waiting for teams to call in with their responses. A question is “closed” after time expires and the announcer tells the answer on air. “Teams can call in and keep guessing until a question is closed, so it is very interactive,” she said. KVSC keeps teams and listeners updated on scores every hour, except during the last few hours, which

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Student Government opposes tobacco ban John Russett ASST. NEWS EDITOR

Hold on to your butts. The debate on whether to make SCSU a tobacco-free campus is not dead yet. On <P]Z[LIa I TQ^MTa LMJI\M ÅTTML \PM +I[KILM Room in Atwood and ended in Student Government passing a resolution in opposition to the second phase of the tobacco ban. Voting down, twice, to push this resolution to the next meeting, the majority of Student Government members were adamant about making their opposition to the tobacco policy public. While the resolution does not specify any

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News.........1-6 Opinions...........7 Marquee.....8-10 Sports........12-16

[XMKQÅK [\MX[ \W [\ZQSM LW_V \PM KIUX][ OWQVO completely tobacco-free on Aug. 1, 2012, it was seen as a public declaration that Student Government is opposed to the eradication of smoking at SCSU entirely. “It is a public declaration that our student government is evolving,” said Jarrod Wiggins, Minnesota State University Student Association campus coordinator. The resolution clearly stated Student Government was not wholly opposed to the tobacco policy already in place. The issue was \ISMV [XMKQÅKITTa _Q\P \PM [MKWVL XPI[M WN \PM policy. “Sheltered areas provide a solution to the opposition of phase two,” said Nicholas Garland, Student Constitution Review Committee

Wrestling remains undefeated

chair. The question was raised as to whether there had been any student opinion gathered on the tobacco policy since the phase one was put into place on Aug. 1, 2011. “We did get student opinion on whether they wanted a smoking ban, or not,” said Christopher Norton, Student Government vice president. He went on to say there has been no direct effort to gather student opinion on the implementation of the smoking ban and how it is going. Samantha Ivey, Student Government president, said the university did receive a grant for going tobacco-free, which paid for the signage

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Page 16 SCSU wrestling stays undefeated with a huge 19-12 win over Upper Iowa.

Women On Wednesday 12 - 12:15 p.m. This event is free and open to the public and will take place at the Atwood Theater. There will be speakers, an LGBTQ panel. Presenters include Kayla Lubbers, Dao Vang and Treaver Johnson. This event is sponsored by the Women’s Center.

Thursday “What Color Is Your Personality?” 12:30 - 1:45 p.m. This event is free and open to the public and will take place at Atwood in the Cascade room. This session will educate attendees on what the primary and secondary colors of their personality are.

Saturday

Liberian Night 5 - 9:30 p.m. This event is $10 for students and $12 for community members. This night will showcase Liberian history, culture, food and music. The event is sponsored by Multicultural Student Services.

Shakespeare returns to Pioneer

Page 9 The Compleat Wrks of Wllm Shkspr (Abridged) performed at the Pioneer Place.


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