04-03-2014

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“Little good is accomplished without controversy, and no civic evil is ever defeated without publicity.” THE DAILY ATHENAEUM THURSDAY APRIL 3, 2014 VOLUME 126, ISSUE 222 www.THEDAONLINE.com da After 36 years, WVU and wrestling head coach Craig Turnbull are parting ways. SPORTS PAGE 14 65° / 58° T-STORMS INSIDE News: 1, 2, 3, 6 Opinion: 4 A&E: 7, 8, 9, 10 Sports: 11, 12, 13, 14 Campus Connection: 5 Puzzles: 5 Classifieds: 15 CONTACT US Newsroom 304-293-5092 or [email protected] Advertising 304-293-4141 or [email protected] Classifieds 304-293-4141 or DA-Classifi[email protected] Leading into the Gold- Blue Spring Game, the battle for the top running back is heating up. SPORTS PAGE 11 RUNNING THE COMPETITION ON THE INSIDE The WVU canopy tour opens this weekend for the summer season. A&E PAGE 7 UP IN THE TREES COLLEGEPARK.WVU.EDU APPLY ONLINE TODAY opening fall 2014 NEW ON-CAMPUS STUDENT HOUSING Exit loan session required for grads BY CAROLINE PETERS STAFF WRITER @DAILYATHENAEUM West Virginia University student loan borrowers who will not be returning in the fall are now required to take exit loan counseling. is includes students from WVU’s regional campuses, Potomac State College and WVU Tech. Students gradu- ating, transferring or drop- ping below half-time status must complete the coun- seling before leaving. “We’re following federal government regulations. However, it truly is a bene- fit for the students to com- plete exit loan counsel- ing. is will give students a better understanding of the amounts they have to pay back and who they’re paying to,” said Candi Fra- zier, the associate director of the WVU Financial Aid in the Health Sciences Center office. “is is also a great time for students to estab- lish a long-term relation- ship with the people that they’ll be associating with throughout the payment process, because it will take a significant amount of time for them to pay off their loans.” is month, Educational Computer Systems, Inc. will send an email to the MIX account of every exit- ing student. Students will be able to complete the on- line counseling in a matter of minutes. “e overall counseling is a 10-15 minute process. e first part of the counsel- ing is letting students know how much they owe and who they owe the money to,” Frazier said. “e sec- ond part is simply getting the names and addresses of all the people who will know where the student will be at all times, in case the borrower moved and still needed to make loan payments.” e counseling can be done online and is open 24/7 once students receive the email. Frazier said some students might not be aware of how much money they’ll owe the federal gov- ernment after leaving the University. “Believe it or not, some students are unaware they they’ve even taken out loans. For many students, freshman year is the year they sign a master prom- issory note,” Frazier said. “It’s a simplified process. We know that for many stu- dents entering college, ac- ademics is their first con- cern. However, we do advise that some borrowers con- sider loan counseling every year.” Borrowers who fail to complete the counseling will receive a hold on their WVU records. e hold will prevent students from re- ceiving their transcripts or registering for classes at any of the University’s campuses. Students who are per- manently transferring from WVU, WVU Tech or Potomac State College can contact the WVU Of- fice of Student Accounts at http://studentaccounts. wvu.edu or contact Heather Forquer at Heather. [email protected] to complete their exit loan counseling. Anyone interested in get- ting further financial plan- ning can stop into the WVU Financial Aid Office or schedule an appointment by calling 304-293-5242. Students can also see how much money they have borrowed by logging onto http://nslds.ed.gov. [email protected] Three WVU students awarded Critical Language Scholarship SGA appoints Scott to 2014-15 Vice Chair BY TAYLOR MCSORLEY STAFF WRITER @DAILYATHENAEUM To celebrate Autism Awareness Month, various groups in Mor- gantown have put together cam- paigns aimed toward spreading lo- cal awareness. There will be an Autism Aware- ness walk April 13 to raise money to benefit the Autism Society of Pittsburgh. There will also be a run from Pittsburgh to Morgan- town in the fall. “Autism Awareness Month is a time dedicated to educating the public about autism spectrum disorders, treatments for the dis- order and problems within the autism community,” said Lind- say Gallegly, a junior multidisci- plinary studies student and presi- dent of Alpha Phi Omega. “One in 68 kids are affected by autism, yet it is used as a joke on a daily basis. “Having this time period to spread awareness about the se- riousness of the problem and the impact it has on families can change peoples’ lives.” Panera Bread will partner with the local Intensive Autism Ser- vice Delivery Clinic to raise funds by selling puzzle piece-shaped cookies, the emblem for autism awareness. “The money raised by Alpha Phi Omega is donated to The Autism Society of Pittsburgh annually af- ter the Run from Pittsburgh. The Pittsburgh location benefits the tri-state area and is the closest of- fice to Morgantown,” Gallegly said. Samantha Haines, Alpha Phi Omega membership vice pres- ident, said she has been volun- teering in special education class- rooms since high school and has seen the disorder firsthand. “In high school, I volunteered in the special education classes and had a lot of hands-on expe- rience with children with autism, but it wasn’t until my younger cousin was diagnosed with an au- tism spectrum disorder that I re- ally started being involved in rais- ing awareness,” she said. Haines currently volunteers at the Intensive Autism Service De- livery Clinic in Morgantown. “I tell everyone about my work at the clinic,” she said. “I tell them about how much my life has changed from working with kids on the autism spectrum.” People who cannot participate in any of the Autism Awareness events can still help the cause. Haines said learning about the disorder is something anyone can do. The walk will be April 13from 11 a.m.–3 p.m. at the Ruby Com- munity Center at Mylan Park. CULTURE TALK Community to recognize Autism Awareness BY MEAGAN CARPENTER STAFF WRITER @DAILYATHENAEUM Three West Virginia University students have been chosen as recipients of the Critical Language Scholarship through the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. This pro- gram targets rare and crit- ical languages in which the government is interested. Nicholas Amos, Holly McCleery and Emily Mor- gan will travel this sum- mer to different countries to live and learn about the cultures and to advance their skills in their chosen language. Amos, McCleery and Morgan were selected out of more than 5,500 applica- tions from more than 650 colleges and universities. WVU has had nine Crit- ical Language Scholars since 2010, and this is the second time the Univer- sity has had three in a sin- gle year. Each student worked closely with the ASPIRE office at WVU to ensure their applications and es- says met the application requirements. All scholarship winners will leave for Washington, D.C., in June and will re- turn from their countries in early August. Amos will focus on Ar- abic and travel to Oman, a country south of Saudi Arabia in the Arabian Gulf. McCleery will travel to Guangzhou, China, and Morgan will travel to Su- zhou, China. The CLS covers all ex- penses for the students’ travel, which includes the flight to D.C. for training, the flight to the country see LANGUAGE on PAGE 2 see SGA on PAGE 2 KYLE MONROE/THE DAILY ATHENAEUM Diane Glancy , an award-winning novelist and poet, read her short story ‘The Reason for Crow’ Wednesday. Native American writer talks heritage, writing BY ALEXIS RANDOLPH STAFF WRITER @DAILYATHENAEUM West Virginia University’s Native American Stud- ies Program in cooperation with the Department of English hosted a reading by Native American writer Diane Glancy Wednesday evening. Glancy has published more than 50 nonfiction books, novels, short stories and poetry. She is com- pleting a professorship at Azusa Pacific University and about to complete her second full-length in- dependent film. She was named the WVU 2014 Elder-in-Resi- dence and has spent time this week with members of the University. Ellesa High, associate professor of English and NAS faculty, said she attended one of Glancy’s past lectures and was thrilled when she found out she was visiting WVU. “As someone who teaches literature, I would say it is great work, but that is only one part of who this person is,” High said. “I also feel she has a tremen- dous heart, and I thought it would be lucky if she was able to come to WVU at some point.” Glancy read several pieces from her works, in- cluding “The Dream of a Broken Field,” “Stories of the Driven World” and “Basket Maker.” BY SAM BOSSERMAN STAFF WRITER @DAILYATHENAEUM e West Virginia Uni- versity Student Govern- ment Association held its first official meeting under the leadership of President- elect Christopher Nyden Wednesday evening. The meeting was short, with lit- tle to discuss aside from a proclamation in support of the WVU women’s basket- ball team. e proclamation, which passed unanimously, was presented by Athletic Councilor Ashley Mor- gan, who congratulated the team on its many ac- complishments during the 2013-14 season. “We’re very proud of everything they accom- plished, like being able to earn the top-five ranking in the country and earning a No. 2-seed in the NCAA tournament,” Morgan said. According to Morgan, an SGA proclamation shows the student body supports the hard work put in by the team. She said the women’s team does not always re- ceive the attention it should and issuing the proclama- tion is a good way to show support. “We want to show that we do recognize them at the University, and just be- cause they’re not a main- stream sport doesn’t mean we haven’t seen all the work they’ve done,” Mor- gan said. “It’s about show- ing students support them, even if they don’t feel that support sometimes.” The meeting was pre- sided by Board of Gover- nors Vice Chair Stephen Scott in Vice President Ja- cob Evans’s absence. Vice Chair Scott was se- lected for his position by a vote of his peers on the BOG and said he hopes to use it to ensure SGA runs smoothly. “e vice chair is really supposed to be the role model of the board, and I hope to be that by show- ing I care and showing I can take on all the required work,” Scott said. “I will be having monthly meetings with each board member to ensure the progress of they’re platforms and to see how their doing in general.” Scott said the board has a lot of potential to help students and sees his see GLANCY on PAGE 2 see AUTISM on PAGE 2 FOLLOW US ON TWITTER Follow @dailyathenaeum on Twitter for news, sports, A&E and opinion updates from the DA staff.

description

The April 3 edition of the Daily Athenaeum

Transcript of 04-03-2014

“Little good is accomplished without controversy, and no civic evil is ever defeated without publicity.”THE DAILY ATHENAEUM

Thursday April 3, 2014 Volume 126, issue 222www.ThEdaONLINE.comda

After 36 years, WVU and wrestling head coach Craig Turnbull are parting ways. SPORTS PAGE 14

65° / 58° T-STORMS

INSIDENews: 1, 2, 3, 6Opinion: 4A&E: 7, 8, 9, 10Sports: 11, 12, 13, 14

Campus Connection: 5Puzzles: 5Classifieds: 15

CONTACT USNewsroom 304-293-5092 or [email protected] 304-293-4141 or [email protected] 304-293-4141 or [email protected]

Leading into the Gold-Blue Spring Game, the battle for the top running back is heating up. SPORTS PAGE 11

RUNNING THE COMPETITION

ON THE INSIDE

The WVU canopy tour opens this weekend for the summer season. A&E PAGE 7

UP IN THE TREES

CO L L EG E PARK .WVU . E DU

A P P L Y O N L I N E T O D A Y

opening fall 2014

NEW ON-CAMPUSSTUDENT HOUSING

Exit loan session required for gradsby caroline peters

staff writer @dailyathenaeum

West Virginia University student loan borrowers who will not be returning in the fall are now required to take exit loan counseling. This includes students from WVU’s regional campuses, Potomac State College and WVU Tech. Students gradu-ating, transferring or drop-ping below half-time status must complete the coun-seling before leaving.

“We’re following federal government regulations. However, it truly is a bene-

fit for the students to com-plete exit loan counsel-ing. This will give students a better understanding of the amounts they have to pay back and who they’re paying to,” said Candi Fra-zier, the associate director of the WVU Financial Aid in the Health Sciences Center office. “This is also a great time for students to estab-lish a long-term relation-ship with the people that they’ll be associating with throughout the payment process, because it will take a significant amount of time for them to pay off their loans.”

This month, Educational Computer Systems, Inc. will send an email to the MIX account of every exit-ing student. Students will be able to complete the on-line counseling in a matter of minutes.

“The overall counseling is a 10-15 minute process. The first part of the counsel-ing is letting students know how much they owe and who they owe the money to,” Frazier said. “The sec-ond part is simply getting the names and addresses of all the people who will know where the student will be at all times, in case

the borrower moved and still needed to make loan payments.”

The counseling can be done online and is open 24/7 once students receive the email. Frazier said some students might not be aware of how much money they’ll owe the federal gov-ernment after leaving the University.

“Believe it or not, some students are unaware they they’ve even taken out loans. For many students, freshman year is the year they sign a master prom-issory note,” Frazier said. “It’s a simplified process.

We know that for many stu-dents entering college, ac-ademics is their first con-cern. However, we do advise that some borrowers con-sider loan counseling every year.”

Borrowers who fail to complete the counseling will receive a hold on their WVU records. The hold will prevent students from re-ceiving their transcripts or registering for classes at any of the University’s campuses.

Students who are per-manently transferring from WVU, WVU Tech or Potomac State College

can contact the WVU Of-fice of Student Accounts at http://studentaccounts.wvu.edu or contact Heather Forquer at [email protected] to complete their exit loan counseling.

Anyone interested in get-ting further financial plan-ning can stop into the WVU Financial Aid Office or schedule an appointment by calling 304-293-5242. Students can also see how much money they have borrowed by logging onto http://nslds.ed.gov.

[email protected]

Three WVU students awarded Critical Language Scholarship

SGA appoints Scott to 2014-15 Vice Chair

by taylor mcsorleystaff writer

@dailyathenaeum

To celebrate Autism Awareness Month, various groups in Mor-gantown have put together cam-paigns aimed toward spreading lo-cal awareness.

There will be an Autism Aware-ness walk April 13 to raise money to benefit the Autism Society of Pittsburgh. There will also be a run from Pittsburgh to Morgan-town in the fall.

“Autism Awareness Month is a time dedicated to educating the public about autism spectrum disorders, treatments for the dis-order and problems within the autism community,” said Lind-say Gallegly, a junior multidisci-plinary studies student and presi-dent of Alpha Phi Omega. “One in 68 kids are affected by autism, yet it is used as a joke on a daily basis.

“Having this time period to spread awareness about the se-riousness of the problem and the impact it has on families can change peoples’ lives.”

Panera Bread will partner with the local Intensive Autism Ser-vice Delivery Clinic to raise funds by selling puzzle piece-shaped cookies, the emblem for autism awareness.

“The money raised by Alpha Phi Omega is donated to The Autism Society of Pittsburgh annually af-ter the Run from Pittsburgh. The Pittsburgh location benefits the tri-state area and is the closest of-fice to Morgantown,” Gallegly said.

Samantha Haines, Alpha Phi Omega membership vice pres-ident, said she has been volun-teering in special education class-rooms since high school and has seen the disorder firsthand.

“In high school, I volunteered in the special education classes

and had a lot of hands-on expe-rience with children with autism, but it wasn’t until my younger cousin was diagnosed with an au-tism spectrum disorder that I re-ally started being involved in rais-ing awareness,” she said.

Haines currently volunteers at the Intensive Autism Service De-livery Clinic in Morgantown.

“I tell everyone about my work at the clinic,” she said. “I tell them about how much my life has changed from working with kids on the autism spectrum.”

People who cannot participate in any of the Autism Awareness events can still help the cause. Haines said learning about the disorder is something anyone can do.

The walk will be April 13from 11 a.m.–3 p.m. at the Ruby Com-munity Center at Mylan Park.

cUltUre talK

Community to recognize Autism Awareness

by meagan carpenterstaff writer

@dailyathenaeum

Three West Virginia University students have been chosen as recipients of the Critical Language Scholarship through the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. This pro-gram targets rare and crit-ical languages in which the government is interested.

Nicholas Amos, Holly McCleery and Emily Mor-gan will travel this sum-mer to different countries to live and learn about the cultures and to advance their skills in their chosen language.

Amos, McCleery and Morgan were selected out of more than 5,500 applica-tions from more than 650 colleges and universities.

WVU has had nine Crit-ical Language Scholars

since 2010, and this is the second time the Univer-sity has had three in a sin-gle year.

Each student worked closely with the ASPIRE office at WVU to ensure their applications and es-says met the application requirements.

All scholarship winners will leave for Washington, D.C., in June and will re-turn from their countries in early August.

Amos will focus on Ar-abic and travel to Oman, a country south of Saudi Arabia in the Arabian Gulf. McCleery will travel to Guangzhou, China, and Morgan will travel to Su-zhou, China.

The CLS covers all ex-penses for the students’ travel, which includes the flight to D.C. for training, the flight to the country

see Language on PAGE 2

see sga on PAGE 2

Kyle monroe/THe DAily ATHenAeumDiane Glancy , an award-winning novelist and poet, read her short story ‘The Reason for Crow’ Wednesday.

Native American writer talks heritage, writingby alexis randolph

staff writer @dailyathenaeum

West Virginia University’s Native American Stud-ies Program in cooperation with the Department of English hosted a reading by Native American writer Diane Glancy Wednesday evening.

Glancy has published more than 50 nonfiction books, novels, short stories and poetry. She is com-pleting a professorship at Azusa Pacific University and about to complete her second full-length in-dependent film.

She was named the WVU 2014 Elder-in-Resi-dence and has spent time this week with members

of the University.Ellesa High, associate professor of English and

NAS faculty, said she attended one of Glancy’s past lectures and was thrilled when she found out she was visiting WVU.

“As someone who teaches literature, I would say it is great work, but that is only one part of who this person is,” High said. “I also feel she has a tremen-dous heart, and I thought it would be lucky if she was able to come to WVU at some point.”

Glancy read several pieces from her works, in-cluding “The Dream of a Broken Field,” “Stories of the Driven World” and “Basket Maker.”

by sam bossermanstaff writer

@dailyathenaeum

The West Virginia Uni-versity Student Govern-ment Association held its first official meeting under the leadership of President-elect Christopher Nyden Wednesday evening. The meeting was short, with lit-tle to discuss aside from a proclamation in support of the WVU women’s basket-ball team.

The proclamation, which passed unanimously, was presented by Athletic Councilor Ashley Mor-gan, who congratulated the team on its many ac-complishments during the 2013-14 season.

“We’re very proud of everything they accom-plished, like being able to earn the top-five ranking in the country and earning a No. 2-seed in the NCAA tournament,” Morgan said.

According to Morgan, an SGA proclamation shows the student body supports the hard work put in by the team. She said the women’s team does not always re-ceive the attention it should and issuing the proclama-tion is a good way to show

support. “We want to show that

we do recognize them at the University, and just be-cause they’re not a main-stream sport doesn’t mean we haven’t seen all the work they’ve done,” Mor-gan said. “It’s about show-ing students support them, even if they don’t feel that support sometimes.”

The meeting was pre-sided by Board of Gover-nors Vice Chair Stephen Scott in Vice President Ja-cob Evans’s absence.

Vice Chair Scott was se-lected for his position by a vote of his peers on the BOG and said he hopes to use it to ensure SGA runs smoothly.

“The vice chair is really supposed to be the role model of the board, and I hope to be that by show-ing I care and showing I can take on all the required work,” Scott said. “I will be having monthly meetings with each board member to ensure the progress of they’re platforms and to see how their doing in general.”

Scott said the board has a lot of potential to help students and sees his

see gLancy on PAGE 2

see autism on PAGE 2

FOLLOW US ON TWITTERFollow @dailyathenaeum on Twitter for news, sports, A&E and opinion updates from the DA staff.

THE DAILY ATHENAEUM THURSDAy ApRil 3, 20142 | NEWS

they will be studying in for two months, all room and board costs, and weekend excursions that the host country will plan.

Amos, a second-year graduate student teaching English as a second lan-guage, said he is excited about being able to travel around the country.

“For the two months, I will be in language train-ing for six hours a day

Sunday-Thursday, be-cause their weekends are Friday and Saturday,” he said. “We will be going on weekend excursions to learn more about the culture.”

Amos said he has a lot of Arab friends, which is why he became interested in language and is most look-ing forward to experienc-ing the culture.

“I’m really sensitive to the environment when I travel, and I’m really in-terested in what I’m going to experience in the at-mosphere of that region,”

he said. “I can’t wait to be immersed in the reality of what the Arab culture looks like.”

McCleery, a senior in-ternational studies and Chinese studies student, lived in China for three years with her family, and when she moved back to the United States, she said she regretted not learning more of the language and made a promise to return to China.

“This is my last oppor-tunity to be completely immersed in the Chinese culture 24/7 and not have

to worry about my classes or other school work,” Mc-Cleery said.

Morgan, a junior bi-ology and Chinese stud-ies student, has traveled to China twice before and said she wants to take every opportunity given while she is in China this summer and explore.

“In the past when I have been in China, I never went on the excursions that were planned to leave the city,” Morgan said.

“This year, I want to get out and eat all the food and see all the

sights.”Morgan, like the other

scholarship winners, said she encourages every stu-dent who is interested to apply for the program.

“It takes a lot of time to contact people for the ap-plication, so start early,” she said. “I encourage stu-dents to make sure to draw on personal experience and make your applica-tion as unique as possible.”

To learn more infor-mation about CLS, visit http://clscholarship.org.

[email protected]

langUageContinued from PAGE 1

role as a way to facilitate opportunities. Scott said the fact that although board is split between tickets, this does not mean there will be any issues in working toward a common goal of supporting students.

Attending his first meet-

ing as the top executive, President-elect Nyden said he was happy with what he has seen so far.

“We’re really starting to think about how we are going to work toward com-mon goals,” Nyden said. “It’s similar to what Pres-ident Gee has brought to the University administra-tion in saying that we’re one University and we all need to work toward a sim-

ilar cause in supporting students.”

Nyden said he thought BOG members were not holding on to election grudges.

“I’ve liked what I’ve seen so far, and I think people do understand that now is the time to put aside any differ-ences and work together,” he said.

Nyden said his admin-istration is currently in the

process of finding execu-tives and encourages all those interested in being student leaders to apply. He said SGA has already received about 20 applica-tions and will continue to interview candidates until April 15.

Nyden said one of the biggest tasks currently in front of him is formulating next fiscal year’s budget.

“Right now, I’m work-

ing with the prior CFO and treasurer on a framework, as well as looking at the prior administration’s bud-get,” he said.

“Obviously we have a lot of work to do, and a lot of it will get done over the next few weeks.”

SGA holds regular meet-ings in Hatfields B Wednes-days at 7:30 p.m.

[email protected]

sgaContinued from PAGE 1

Participants can register on the day of the event.

For more information on the Autism Awareness month, email [email protected] or [email protected]. Donations are also being accepted all year for Alpha Phi Omega’s fun-draising efforts.

[email protected]

aUtismContinued from PAGE 1

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“When I write, I try to slow down my voice until I hear the inner voice until it comes through all of the noise in the world,” Glancy said. “I am very much a loner, and I sit in my room, and I begin writing. I think to the past and my ancestors who I should be carrying.”

Glancy focuses on Na-tive American issues and telling the stories of the people. She said she thinks about her native heritage and the native women she writes about

who came before her. “I think of my grand-

mother, who didn’t have a chance to do what I am doing and to express herself and know her voice,” Glancy said. “I think about all of the na-tive women who I write about.”

She read pieces of f i r s t - p e r s o n n a r r a -tive, poetry and nonfic-tion works. Glancy said she finds picking only a few things to read to be difficult.

“I think these chapters are like my own grandchil-dren, each of them want-ing to speak,” she said.

“It is interesting to see

people write about the things we are studying now,” said Connor Galla-gher, a senior criminol-ogy student. “I like that she related everything to modern time and re-lated it back to tradi-tional lifestyles of Native Americans.”

Gallagher said he at-tended the event as a part of a class but enjoyed the different elements Glancy tied into her writing and the reading.

For more informa-tion about Glancy and her works, visit http://di-aneglancy.com.

[email protected]

glancyContinued from PAGE 1

Kyle monroe/THe DAily ATHenAeumMembers of the ONAI (Organization for Native American Interests) singers perform a welcoming song Wednesday evening.

officials: 4 dead at Fort hood, including gunman

FOrT hOOd, Texas (aP) — A gunman opened fire Wednesday at the Fort Hood military base in an attack that left four peo-ple dead, including the shooter, at the same post where more than a dozen people were killed in a 2009 mass shooting, law enforcement officials said.

One of the officials, cit-ing internal U.S. Justice Department updates, said 14 others were hurt. The officials spoke on condi-tion of anonymity because they were not authorized to release information by name.

A U.S. law enforcement official said the shooter died of what appeared to be a self-inflicted wound. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing.

The injured were taken to Darnall Army Commu-nity Hospital at Fort Hood and other local hospitals. Dr. Glen Couchman, chief medical officer at Scott and White Hospital in Tem-ple, said the first four peo-ple admitted there had gunshots to chest, abdo-men, neck and extremities

and that their conditions range from stable to “quite critical.”

Thirteen people were killed and more than 30 wounded in the 2009 as-sault, which was the dead-liest attack on a domestic military installation in U.S. history.

The military offered few details. After the shooting began, the Army’s official Twitter feed said the post had been locked down. Hours later, all-clear sirens sounded.

On Wednesday evening, a fatigue-clad soldier and a military police officer stood about a quarter-mile from the main gate waving away traffic. Other lanes were blocked by a police car and van.

Meanwhile, relatives of soldiers waited for news about their loved ones.

Tayra DeHart, 33, said she had last heard from her husband, a soldier at the post, that he was safe, but that was hours earlier.

“The last two hours have been the most nerve-rack-ing I’ve ever felt. I know God is here protecting me and all the soldiers, but I have my phone in my hand

just hoping it will ring and it will be my husband,” De-Hart said.

Brooke Conover, whose husband was on base at the time of the shooting, said she found out about it while checking Facebook. She said she called her husband, Staff Sgt. Sean Conover, immediately to make sure he was OK, but he could not even tell her exactly what was going on, only that the base was locked down.

“I’m still hearing con-flicting stories about what happened and where the shooting was exactly,” Conover said in a tele-phone interview, explain-ing that she still did not know how close the inci-dent was to her husband.

“I just want him to come home,” said Conover, who moved to Fort Hood with her husband and three daughters two years ago.

President Barack Obama vowed that investigators would get to the bottom of the shooting.

In a hastily arranged statement in Chicago, Obama said he was follow-ing the situation closely but that details about what

happened at the sprawl-ing Army post were still fluid. He said the shoot-ing brought back pain-ful memories of the 2009 attack.

Obama reflected on the sacrifices that troops sta-tioned at Fort Hood have made – including enduring multiple tours to Iraq and Afghanistan.

“They serve with valor. They serve with distinc-tion, and when they’re at their home base, they need to feel safe,” Obama said. “We don’t yet know what happened tonight, but ob-viously that sense of safety has been broken once again.”

The president spoke without notes or prepared remarks in the same room of a steakhouse where he had just met with about 25 donors at a previously scheduled fundraiser for the Democratic National Committee. White House officials quickly pushed ta-bles to the side of the room to make room for Obama to speak to the nation.

The November 2009 at-tack happened inside a crowded building where soldiers were waiting to get

vaccines and routine pa-perwork after recently re-turning from deployments or preparing to go to Af-ghanistan and Iraq.

Army psychiatrist Nidal Hasan was convicted and sentenced to death last year in that mass shooting. He said he acted to protect Islamic insurgents abroad from American aggression.

According to testimony during Hasan’s trial last August, Hasan walked in-side carrying two weapons and several loaded maga-zines, shouted “Allahu Ak-bar!” – Arabic for “God is great!” – and opened fire with a handgun.

Witnesses said he tar-geted soldiers as he walked through the building, leav-ing pools of blood, spent casings and dying soldiers on the floor. Photos of the scene were shown to the 13 officers on the military jury.

The rampage ended when Hasan was shot in the back by Fort Hood po-lice officers outside the building. He was para-lyzed from the waist down and is now on death row at the military prison at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas.

After that shooting, the military tightened security at bases nationwide. Those measures included issuing security personnel long-barreled weapons, add-ing an insider-attack sce-nario to their training and strengthening ties to local law enforcement, accord-ing to Peter Daly, a vice ad-miral who retired from the Navy in 2011. The military also joined an FBI intel-ligence-sharing program aimed at identifying terror threats.

In September, a for-mer Navy man opened fire at the Washington Navy Yard, leaving 13 people dead, including the gun-man. After that shooting, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel ordered the Penta-gon to review security at all U.S. defense installa-tions worldwide and exam-ine the granting of security clearances that allow ac-cess to them.

Asked Wednesday about security improvements in the wake of other shoot-ings at U.S. military bases, Hagel said, “Obviously when we have these kinds of tragedies on our bases, something’s not working.”

ApLucy Hamlin and her husband, Spc. Timothy Hamlin, wait for permission to re-enter the Fort Hood military base, where they live, following a shooting on the base, Wednesday, April 2, 2014, in Fort Hood, Texas.

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Texas appeals halt of executions over drug secrecyHOUSTON (AP) — A fed-

eral judge on Wednesday halted two executions in Texas, declaring that the state’s prison system must disclose to defense attor-neys more information about the supplier of a new batch of lethal-injection drugs.

U.S. District Judge Van-essa Gilmore issued a tem-porary injunction halting the executions of Tommy Lynn Sells, a convicted se-rial killer who was set to die Thursday, and Ramiro Her-nandez-Llanas, another in-mate scheduled to be put to death next week.

Texas officials have in-sisted the identity of the drug supplier must be kept secret to protect the com-pany from threats of vio-lence and that the stock of the sedative pentobarbital falls within the acceptable ranges of potency.

Defense attorneys say they must have the name of the supplier so they can verify the quality of the drug and spare condemned

inmates from unconstitu-tional pain and suffering.

Gilmore ordered the Texas Department of Crim-inal Justice to provide de-fense attorneys with details about the supplier and how the drug was tested.

Lawyers for the state ap-pealed to the 5th U.S. Cir-cuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, saying the arguments from the in-mates’ attorneys “are noth-ing more than a calculated attempt to postpone their executions.”

Last month, the U.S. Su-preme Court rejected simi-lar arguments about execu-tion secrecy in a Missouri case, and the condemned prisoner was put to death.

Gilmore’s ruling “honors the importance of transpar-ency in the execution pro-cess,” said Maurie Levin, an attorney for the inmates. “And the order makes it clear this last-minute litiga-tion and stays of execution would not be necessary if (the prison agency) had not ignored the rule of law and

tried to shield this informa-tion from the public and the light of day.”

Texas prisons spokes-man Robert Hurst said the agency had no comment because the matter was still in court.

Since obtaining a new supply of pentobarbital two weeks ago, the Department of Criminal Justice had cited unspecified security concerns in refusing to dis-close the source and other details about the drug.

“As a result, the state’s se-crecy regarding the product to be used for lethal injec-tion has precluded (the in-mates and their attorneys) from evaluating or chal-lenging the constitution-ality of the method of exe-cution,” Gilmore wrote in a five-page opinion.

Questions about the source of drugs have arisen in several states in re-cent months as numerous drugmakers – particularly in Europe, where opposi-tion to capital punishment is strongest – have refused

to sell their products if they will be used in executions.

That has led several state prison systems to com-pounding pharmacies, which are not as heav-ily regulated by the Food and Drug Administra-tion as more conventional pharmacies.

A batch of pentobarbi-tal Texas purchased from a compounding pharmacy in suburban Houston expired at the end of March.

The pharmacy refused to sell the state any more drugs, citing threats it re-ceived after its name was made public. That led Texas to its new, undisclosed suppler.

The inmates “are enti-tled to discover how the state plans to put them to death,” said Levin and Jona-than Ross, another attorney in the case.

Levin filed an open-re-cords request on March 11 seeking the name of the supplier from the Depart-ment of Criminal Justice.

Last week, defense at-

torneys won an order from a state court that directed prison officials to identify the new provider of pento-barbital, but only to them. The Texas Supreme Court put that order on hold on Friday and set a deadline for briefs to arrive after Sells and Hernandez-Lla-nas’ scheduled execution dates.

The defense turned next to the federal courts, which resulted in Wednesday’s ruling.

Deborah Denno, a Ford-ham University law profes-sor, said Gilmore’s decision showed courts “are skepti-cal of explanations” offered by prison agencies.

“I think Texas always draws attention,” Denno said, explaining that the state accounts for a third of all executions and has typi-cally resisted oversight of its execution methods.

Texas appeared to be at-tempting to match efforts of other states to keep execu-tion details secret, she said.

“They don’t seem to be

operating in a vacuum,” she said.

In three previous opin-ions, the attorney gener-al’s office has directed the Texas prison agency to re-lease records about its le-thal injection drugs.

Lauren Bean, a spokes-woman for Attorney Gen-eral Greg Abbott, said the of-fice had 45 business days to reply.

Sells, 49, was convicted of killing a 13-year-old South Texas girl asleep at her home in 1999. Kaylene Harris was stabbed nearly two dozen times and had her throat slashed.

A 10-year-old friend also was attacked but survived. Sells confessed to the slay-ing and has been tied to more than 20 others around the nation. He has claimed responsibility for as many as 70 murders.

Hernandez-Llanas, 44, a Mexican national, was con-victed of killing a Kerrville-area rancher, Glen Lich, 48, who had employed him.

DC mayoral nominee can’t breeze to victoryWASHINGTON (AP) —

Muriel Bowser’s decisive victory in the District of Columbia’s Democratic mayoral primary makes her the presumptive fa-vorite to become the city’s eighth mayor, but she can’t expect to breeze through the general elec-tion like Democratic nom-inees have in four decades of mayoral elections.

Bowser, a D.C. council-member, defeated incum-bent Mayor Vincent Gray in Tuesday’s primary, ap-pealing to voters weary of the scandals surround-ing Gray’s 2010 campaign, which is under federal investigation.

Bowser, who is black, now looks ahead to the general election in No-vember and faces inde-pendent Councilmember David Catania. He is white, openly gay and a former Republican – all of which would be firsts for a mayor of Washington.

Still, it could be the city’s closest general elec-tion race since 1994, when Marion Barry won a fourth term following a stint in federal prison after he was caught smoking crack cocaine.

Bowser lined up support Wednesday from local and national Democrats. Vice President Joe Biden called to congratulate her, and

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Presi-dent Barack Obama was hopeful she would prevail.

“We take no voters for granted. We have an elec-tion in November. We’re going to be ready for it,” Bowser said.

Bowser, 41, is a protege of former mayor Adrian Fenty, who lost to Gray in 2010 after a single, hard-charging term during which he overhauled the school system but alien-ated many African-Amer-ican residents. Five people involved with Gray’s cam-paign have pleaded guilty to felonies, and while the mayor has not been charged, prosecutors said he knew about an illegal slush fund that helped him get elected.

Before her election to Fenty’s old council seat in 2007, Bowser worked for the local government in suburban Montgom-ery County, Md., and as an elected neighborhood commissioner.

Her most significant legislative accomplish-ment is the creation of an ethics board with the power to punish elected officials. The board has since found wrongdoing by three members of the 13-person council.

Critics say Bowser’s leg-islative record is thin, and

she has a reputation as a cautious lawmaker who doesn’t take positions on contentious bills until it’s clear they have majority support. One recent ex-ample was a bill decrimi-nalizing marijuana, which she ultimately voted for.

“For a lot of people, they don’t really know that, if she were the mayor and had to make hard choices, what those choices would be,” said David Alpert, ed-itor-in-chief of Greater Greater Washington, a lib-eral blog.

Catania, 46, says his record stacks up favor-ably against hers. He has championed progres-sive causes since leaving the GOP in 2004, includ-ing gay marriage, medical marijuana and universal health coverage.

But veteran political watchers say Bowser will be tough to beat.

“Catania would have to show his ability to at-tract Democrats and Af-rican-American voters in significant numbers to be competitive,” said Ron Faucheux of Clarus Re-search Group, a longtime Washington-based poll-ster. “I haven’t seen evi-dence of that.”

The district is 50 percent black, down from 66 per-cent in 1990, but longtime black residents maintain

significant political power. White residents tend to be younger and less rooted in the city.

Turnout for the may-oral primary was among the lowest in the city’s his-tory. With absentee and provisional ballots yet to be counted, Bowser re-ceived 35,899 votes, which translates to support from 11 percent of Democrats and 8 percent of registered voters.

As Catania sees it, that leaves more than enough votes for him.

“I don’t think the po-litical establishment in this city has ever really offered the residents a chance for a substantive dialogue,” he said. “Who-ever wins in the primary, everybody jumps on the bandwagon.”

The city has 337,000 reg-istered Democrats – three out of four registered vot-

ers. Independents are the second-largest voting bloc at 76,000.

Tara Wang, a stay-at-home mother and a reg-istered independent, said she felt alienated because she couldn’t vote in the decisive 2010 primary. She plans to vote this year and is undecided.

“I’m much more inter-ested in this than usual,” she said. “It’s kind of exciting.”

APWashington Democratic Mayoral nominee Muriel Bowser smiles as she discusses her primary victory during a news confer-ence at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., Wednesday. Councilmember Bowser defeated Mayor Vincent Gray in Tuesday’s Democratic mayoral primary, leaving Gray to serve nine months as a lame duck with potential criminal charges hanging over his head. 

Big donors may give even more under court’s rulingWASHINGTON (AP) —

The Supreme Court ruling Wednesday erasing a long-standing limit on campaign donations will allow a small number of very wealthy do-nors to give even more than is currently the case, according to students of the complex campaign finance system, and could strengthen the es-tablishment in both parties.

While Republicans cheered the ruling on philo-sophical grounds and Dem-ocrats criticized it, there was a general agreement that the decision itself was unlikely to benefit one party over another.

“This is not a decision that advantages one party over the other. It advantages wealthy people over every-body else,” said Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

On a 5-4 ruling, the court struck down a limitation on the amount any donor may give to candidates, commit-tees and political action com-mittees combined.

Only 646 out of millions of donors in the election cycle of 2011-2012 gave the now-defunct legal maximum, ac-cording to the Center for Re-sponsive Politics. For the current election cycle, the

limit is $123,200, broken down as $48,600 to all candi-dates combined and $74,600 to all party committees and political action committees in total.

The ruling will “mean there will be much greater emphasis by the campaigns and the parties on those do-nors with the biggest check-books who can make those very large contributions,” said Bob Biersack, who works for the CRP and is a 30-year vet-eran of the Federal Election Commission.

“Whether that’s good or bad depends on your per-spective on how this whole system should work, but it absolutely means that the small number of people who can give at those levels” will be asked to give more, he added.

The ruling leaves un-changed a parallel system in which individuals donate un-limited amounts, sometimes undisclosed, to certain out-side groups. Biersack said the same small group of 646 donors gave a total of about $93.4 million in the last cam-paign. Their largesse will still be avidly sought, as Republi-can presidential hopefuls re-cently demonstrated by trav-

elling to Las Vegas to meet with casino magnate and conservative donor Sheldon Adelson.

In the realm of limited do-nations, Cleta Mitchell, an election lawyer for Repub-licans, said the court’s rul-ing means that various party committees and candidates no longer will have to vie for money from the same con-tributors. The law permits a donor to contribute $5,200 for the primary and general election combined to any candidate, and if they did so, could donate only to nine of-fice-seekers before reaching the $48,600 limit to all federal office-seekers.

Similarly, while Repub-licans and Democrats in Washington each maintain a national party committee, a Senate campaign committee and a House campaign com-mittee, a donor could give the maximum allowable amount to only two of the three with-out violating the overall limi-tation the court discarded.

Now, Mitchell said, “the donors get to choose obvi-ously, but the committees don’t have to feel like they’re pinching another party’s donors.”

In all, she described the

ruling as “a positive for the parties.”

The court’s ruling also means that donors will be able to give $10,000 a year to as many state party commit-tees as they want, so-called joint committees, in which a lawmaker can now solicit funds simultaneously for their own campaign, their own political action com-mittee, their party and for an unlimited number of other candidates without donors exceeding the old limits.

Biersack cited House Speaker John Boehner’s fun-draising efforts as an exam-ple, said he would now be able to use a joint fundrais-ing committee for hundreds of Republican House candi-dates simultaneously, greatly expanding their ability to re-ceive funds.

In theory, this ability could once more allow parties and their leaders to assert more discipline over rank-and-file lawmakers, who have be-come increasingly beholden to outside groups in recent years.

Ryan Call, chairman of the Colorado Republican Party and a campaign finance at-torney, said the court’s ruling will be a boon to state parties,

which he said have been ne-glected previously because donors hit the overall spend-ing limit before they could distribute funds lower on the political food chain. “We have lots of optimism that this new decision would enable peo-ple who want to support us to do so,” he said.

Under the court’s ruling, a donor could donate the max-imum $10,000 a year to each of their party’s 50 state com-mittees, or a total of $1 mil-lion – and still donate to can-didates as well as national party committees and politi-cal action committees.

Matt Canter, a spokesman for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, called the ruling a “win for national party committees” and said it will “greatly enhance our ability to raise resources to support our voter contact and field program ... in states across the country.” He re-ferred to a new field project to boost turnout in certain states with key Senate races this year.

While there was general agreement about the short-term impact of the ruling, there was a strong divergence of opinion on the wisdom of the court’s conservative ma-

jority. The case was the latest in which the justices found that many limits on contribu-tions violate the givers’ con-stitutional free-speech rights.

Republicans who backed the suit challenging the over-all limits cheered the ruling.

Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., who filed a brief in support of the challenge, said the court “has once again re-minded Congress that Amer-icans have a constitutional First Amendment right to speak and associate with po-litical candidates and parties of their choice.”

He added that court’s rul-ing makes it clear that it is the “right of the individual, and not the prerogative of Congress, to determine how many candidates and parties to support.”

Democrats said the ruling must be viewed in the con-text of earlier ones that they said strengthened the power of the wealthy.

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., a former state attor-ney general, criticized the court’s majority in unusu-ally sharp terms, saying the majority seems interested in “aligning political power in this country with political wealthy.”

OPINION4CONTACT US 304-293-5092 ext. 4 | [email protected] April 3, 2014

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Letters to the Editor can be sent 284 Prospect St. or emailed to [email protected]. Letters should include name, title and be no more than 300 words. Letters and columns, excluding the editorial, are not necessarily representative of The Daily Athenaeum’s opinion. Letters may be faxed to 304-293-6857 or delivered to The Daily Athenaeum.EDITORIAL STAFF: CELESTE LANTZ, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF • CARLEE LAMMERS, MANAGING EDITOR • CHARLES YOUNG, OPINION EDITOR • SUMMER RATCLIFF, CITY EDITOR • MADISON FLECK, ASSOCIATE CITY EDITOR • AMIT BATRA, SPORTS EDITOR • CONNOR MURRAY, ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR • LACEY PALMER, A&E EDITOR • SHAWNEE MORAN , ASSOCIATE A&E EDITOR • KYLE MONROE, ART DIRECTOR • MADONNA NOBEL, COPY DESK CHIEF • NIKKI MARINI, SOCIAL MEDIA DIRECTOR • ASHLEY DENARDO, WEB EDITOR • JOHN TERRY, CAMPUS CONNECTION EDITOR • ALAN WATERS, GENERAL MANAGER

Eight years ago at my high school, I saw perfor-mance-enhancing drugs for the first time. I saw the vial fall to the locker room floor before baseball prac-tice one day. It landed on its owner’s backpack which sat at his feet. I didn’t see the name of the substance and I will not reveal the owner’s name, but if you told me that I was the only one to see it, I wouldn’t be surprised. However, there is no way I was the only one who knew he was a user.

He picked up the vial and nonchalantly placed it back in his locker and that was that. As far as I know, he was never approached about his sudden improvement on the field or his physi-cal transformation from a chubby freshman to a gar-gantuan senior.

Today, the picture of what it was to grow up as an ath-lete in the steroid era is be-coming clear. The “steroid era” is the name given to the period from the early 1990s to the mid-2000s when steroids and other PEDs were widely used in Ma-jor League Baseball (MLB).PEDs include steroids as well as any other substance that increases performance, including but not limited to human-growth hormone and creatine.

Although baseball led the way in usage, other sports were far from innocent by-standers. Younger and younger athletes began tak-ing these substances to gain an advantage on the field and to keep up with others that were doing the same.

“PEDs have been pop-ping up in almost ev-ery sport, even ones you wouldn’t expect: golf, ten-nis, you name it,” said Tufts University Director of Sports Medicine Nick Mitropolous.

Although Mitropolous re-called that Tufts hasn’t had an illegal substance case in quite a while, he insists it’s because users are getting smarter about which, when, and how much they use, not because they have stopped.

Even though college and high school athletes are not currently making “a lot of money,” taking illegal sub-stances is “a risk they’re will-ing to take” because it gives them an edge over their competitors, makes them better players, and gains the attention of scouts at the next level. This “risk,” however, may not be all that risky. According to many prior and current sports administration person-nel (including Mitropolous himself ), testing for illegal substances is not a serious threat to users.

“Have you ever heard of someone getting caught us-ing steroids in high school sports?” said Kevin*, a 25-year-old former high school and college baseball pitcher who used PEDs in college.

“College sports even? Neither had I. It’s an easy and naive rationaliza-tion but apparently a good enough one for some kids.”

Most colleges are re-quired to test their players only if they qualify for NCAA

tournaments and when col-legiate athletes are tested, they are often told well in advance the date it will hap-pen. This gives them ample time to “flush” their body by drinking large amounts of water or by using other methods of cleansing.

“As soon as I started prac-tices and workouts [at col-lege] the older guys on the team were asking us new guys if they needed ste-roids,” recalled Chris*, a 22-year-old former college infielder.

“I was pretty shocked at how easily they could be ac-quired. I knew seven guys on my team who used for sure, but being an NAIA [Na-tional Association of Inter-collegiate Athletics] school, the drug testing consisted of two not-so-random drugs tests per year. The date of the test was always announced and not once was a known user tested.”

At his college, 21-year-old offensive lineman Patrick* learned that budget cuts would prevent his school from running any more drug tests for that semester, so he said “Why not?”

Patrick is no longer a user, however.

“I stopped during the summer between my soph-omore and junior year be-cause I started to feel in-tense pain in my abdomen and it was obviously from the stuff I was taking,” Pat-rick said. “If it weren’t for the pain, I would probably still be doing them.”

At Tufts, Mitropolous made it clear that tests are only run if there is ample suspicion of use. Unless there is a telling injury or a witness comes forward, testing on the athletes is not done regularly.

It seems, then, that the only real deterrent is the negative side-effects on health and the unfair advan-tage over non-users. And let’s face it: if you are consid-ering PEDs, the latter is not going to stop you. As a mat-ter of fact, that is the main reason to do them in the first place. But for a young athlete, the former should give pause. Shouldn’t it?

“Perhaps the only area where there is no doubt or controversy is when it comes to young people: these drugs, especially an-abolic steroids, are unani-mously considered harmful to the young,” wrote Caro-line K. Hatton, Ph. D, the former Associate Director of the UCLA Olympic Analyti-cal Laboratory, in her 2008 book Night Team.

Sadly, statements such as Dr. Hatton’s fall on the deaf ears of thousands of young athletes who have seen their heroes ascend to legends with PEDs as their catalyst.

2012 MLB All-Star Game Most Valuable Player Melky Cabrera was suspended for the remainder of the San Francisco Giants’ World Series-winning year when he tested positive halfway through the season. Cyclist Lance Armstrong was im-plicated in leading a PED ring and was consequently stripped of his seven Tour de France wins. And it was no surprise to haters and fans alike when New York Yankees’ third baseman Alex Rodriguez’s name came up on a known sup-plier’s clientele list. There is

no hiding that stardom has a profound effect on the deci-sions of young people, espe-cially when those decisions have to be made in the en-vironment of anticipated success.

“I was considering PEDs because I could’ve easily gotten away with it,” Kevin said. “It would’ve helped my lifelong dream of play-ing professionally.”

For all of us growing up in the height of the “ste-roid era,” it was a decision we had to make: to dabble or not to dabble. The choice was always within arm’s reach, but the hand it was reaching for comes in many shapes and sizes. While Kevin approached one of his high school coaches dur-ing his senior year of high school about PEDs, Rogers was being approached by upperclassmen at his col-lege. Patrick, however, told me he got all the informa-tion he needed to start, as well as the drugs them-selves, online.

“I literally just went on the internet and Googled ‘legal steroids’ and sure enough there was a website called legalsteroids.com run by a company out of Lake Worth, Florida called SDI-Labs,” Patrick said. “They had discrete shipping so I just told my mom I was or-dering some protein pow-der. They’re not hard to come by.”

The PED phenomenon is not new by any means, but the movement toward synthetic performance-en-hancers is a generational concern. Because there is such immense pressure on these young athletes and the substances are easily attainable, their widespread use should not come as a surprise.

Just a couple years ago, a Wisconsin high school re-ported that ten players on its football team had ingested a banned substance and were

subsequently suspended for the first three games of the 2012 season. The substance, called Synephrine, was con-tained in an over-the-coun-ter Creatine Nitrate prod-uct called C4 Extreme. The athletes claimed ignorance, but Eric Holden, a contribu-tor for Yahoo! Sports, hit the nail on the head:

“Any athlete who grew up in the 1990s and early-2000s knows the word “cre-atine” is synonymous with former St. Louis Cardinals slugger Mark McGuire, who used a combo of cre-atine and andro to bulk up into a home run slugger. That may be the first tip-off that C4 Extreme was a performance-enhancer.”

Granted, a certain amount of hard work still has to go into day-to-day ac-tivities and getting big in the weight room does not guar-antee success on the playing field, but as Patrick pointed out, “If nothing else, I cer-tainly felt like I had an ad-vantage over the other guys out there.”

The problem of PEDs is a many-faceted issue. Some talk of legalizing PEDs in sports and such a proposal raises many controversial questions about competi-tion, health, and even mor-als. Such a world leaves the door open to change sport from a competitive event between athletes into a pharmaceutical rat race. Who can produce the cheapest drug with the most potent effect? The health consequences alone would shorten the lives of any ath-lete who submerged them-selves wholeheartedly. It would spell the end of sport as we know it.

If the “steroid era” has taught us anything, it is that penalties must be enforced and potential consumers need as much incentive as possible not to partake in the craze. I call it a craze be-cause we live in a world ob-

sessed with immediate grat-ification and excess. If there is a quicker way to elevate your performance, you’ll take that opportunity head on.

“If you take anyone who has a talent and you tell them you can enhance that talent to make a lot of money, more often than not, that’s a risk they’re willing to take,” Mitropolous said. “It’s never going away.”

This is not to say every athlete, and especially those who are successful, have taken PEDs. There are a number of players from the “steroid era” who managed to stay clean and perform well. There is even more hope in our youth than sta-tistics or writers like myself may have you believe.

I never took steroids. That’s not to say I was never around it ... as early as that moment my freshman year in the locker room and as late as when I conducted in-terviews for this piece.

Patrick gave me the rest of his pills after we talked.

The two bottles were still about half-full when he handed them to me. Ac-cording to their website, the 60-capsule bottle of D-bol is the “most powerful mass building oral on the market!” and the Winni-V pills will “add quality mus-cle mass and increase stam-ina!” Together they will set you back $159.90 plus shipping.

I wasn’t expecting to ever hold steroids. Yes, they are perfectly legal for the com-mon man, but for those of us who saw nothing but their tainted image on SportsCenter and the sports pages of newspapers, they might as well have been her-oin capsules.

I took them home and cu-riously opened the bottle. I made a joke to my dad that we should take them, and, within the same breath, threw them in the garbage

can.My generation was on

the cusp, just when the shit was hitting the fan in Major League Baseball. We saw McGuire and Sammy Sosa go at it, Roger Clemens pitch into his 40s and acts of sheer strength. We also witnessed the downfall of these mo-ments: when it came out that our favorite players, those we looked up to, were cheaters.

Our sources have shown that it was common for PEDs to be introduced at the high school level, but our sources are now gradu-ating college. There is a new wave of youth athletes who are faced with this question.

This generation plays in the wake of it all.

My cousin Anthony is part of this generation. He is in high school. He tells me there are really no talks circling around his base-ball team’s locker room re-garding steroids. Maybe we are seeing a change in the winds. After all, at this point we are beyond the pe-riod where athletes can take them innocently. They know the history and know they cannot live outside of it. I feel confident the youth of today understand not only the moral implications of using, but also the very real health concerns at stake.

Where we have taken sports is not a good direc-tion. The pressure is unre-lenting on the youth ath-letes. The multimillion dollar salaries we throw at players only furthers to keep this problem alive. Steroids were a shortcut for players to improve faster and per-form better, but it was also a way to ensure they were not kicked to the curb. It’s the fear of failure. This is why Mitropolous believes they will never go away. Be-cause we have seen they are so easy to get, it is truly up to the individual which road to take .

GreGory John VitaleTUFFS UNIVERSITY

WWW.BLOGGINGMETS.COM

Growing up in the steroid era: testimonies from youth athletes on PEDs

EDITORIAL

The Supreme Court handed down its most sig-nificant ruling on cam-paign finance Wednesday since it first ruled on Citi-zens United v. Federal Elec-tion Commission in 2010.

In the 5-4 ruling on Mc-Cutcheon v. FEC, the court effectively eliminated re-strictions on overall limits on campaign contributions.

The limit of $5,200 from an individual to any one candidate is still in place, but the ruling removes the limit of $123,200 which any one person is permitted to give in total.

Although the majority of Americans aren’t wealthy enough to be personally af-fected by the Court’s deci-sion, it contains grave im-plications for every citizen.

This latest development in campaign finance “reg-ulation” is yet another way for the wealthiest peo-ple in the country to influ-ence elections, choose our leaders and disenfranchise voters.

The court’s ruling in Cit-izens United established an elaborate series of loop-holes through which the wealthy individuals who

control corporations could funnel unlimited money into elections. Wednesday’s ruling goes even further – essentially cutting out the middleman and creating a more direct way for the wealthiest American’s to exert influence over the po-litical process.

Our political system – and subsequently our de-mocracy – is being eroded one ruling at a time by a Court which clearly values the rights of the few over the needs of the many.

Justice Stephen Breyer, in his dissenting opinion, said

the ruling will cause “huge loopholes in the law; and that undermines, perhaps devastates, what remains of campaign finance reform.”

Originally, the United States was a republic. Each person, on the merit of his or her citizenship, was en-sured an equal vote, an equal voice.

Sadly, this is no longer the case. With its most re-cent ruling, the Supreme Court effectively hammered the last nail in the coffin of American democracy.

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Latest Supreme Court ruling another blow to democracy

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THE DAILY ATHENAEUM THURSDAY APRIL 3, 20145 | CAMPUS CONNECTION

Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) con-tains every digit, 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.su-doku.org.uk.

WEDNESDAY’S PUZZLE SOLVED

DIFFICULTY LEVEL MEDIUM

ACROSS1 Lab has lots of them7 Many a chalet13 Nielsen of “Airplane!”14 Purple Label designer15 Open, as a fern frond16 Relieving17 Olfactory detection18 Rumor starter22 Spanish pronoun23 Vintage auto24 Ballerina’s asset26 Dress nattily, with “up”27 Wrinkle-resistant synthetic29 Alternative to gravel, perhaps30 Humiliate32 With 37-Across, what the circled words

(shown in the appropriate direction) are capable of doing

35 Poker variety36 Golfer Isao37 See 32-Across39 Part of a process42 “Bartender, make __ double!”43 Tie the knot on the sly47 LBJ’s antipoverty agcy.48 Sierra __51 “Papa-__-Mow-Mow”: 1962 novelty hit52 Suffix with school54 Former “The View” co-host55 Conglomeration56 ‘30s-’50s British Labour Party leader58 25-Down div.60 One on a ladder, to a kitten up a tree61 Property recipient, in law62 Join up63 Garden sides

DOWN1 Prefix with scope2 Shark, maybe3 Comparable to a cucumber4 Hurtful remark5 Cocktail with cassis6 Baseball commissioner under whom inter-

league play became a reality7 Wake-up call, say8 Pilot-licensing org.9 Red herring

10 __ Nashville: country record label11 “Stay Fresh” candy12 Mesh, as gears19 Tee off20 Joie de vivre21 Carrier with a Maple Leaf Lounge24 “Here’s what happened next ...”25 Ones getting lots of Bronx cheers28 Hops driers31 Speakeasy employee33 Saturn SUV34 Physics class topic38 Bryce Canyon state39 Cider press leftovers40 Patricia of “Everybody Loves Raymond”41 Of a blood line44 “Va-va-voom!”45 Self-assured46 Gushes on a set49 His last blog post ended, “I’ll see you at the

movies”50 Most Iraqis

53 Mid-11th century year55 Eye, at the Louvre57 Some RPI alums59 Mike Trout’s team, on scoreboards

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BORN TODAY This year you will open up to better communication. You will touch base with various peo-ple to confront their need for con-trol. As a result, you will learn how to deal with people like this. If you are single, you will meet someone out and about while socializing. In fact, you will be presented with several potential suitors. Follow your heart. If you are attached, understand that the two of you won’t always agree.

ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19) HHHH You might have decided to stay mum about a certain subject, but today you might completely re-verse your decision. Pressure is likely to build. An adjustment needs to be made, especially if the situation in-

volves a work-related matter. Tonight: Hang with your friends.

TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20) HHH You’ll want to manage your finances a certain way, but a loved one seems to have a very different idea about what is acceptable. You could find yourself in a very difficult situation. Others un-intentionally might add to the confu-sion. Tonight: Have an important talk.

GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20) HHHH You are all smiles when dealing with a difficult partner. Realize that you could be making the situation even more difficult. Understand your lim-its when it comes to handling this person. The only way to win a control game is not to play. Tonight: Start the weekend early.

CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22) HH Play

it low-key, and don’t accept any more responsibility than you need to. If someone wants to take on more re-sponsibility, let him or her do it! Oth-erwise, if you can, do some delegat-ing. You need some free time for yourself. Tonight: Take a long-over-due nap.

LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22) HH You might want to try a different ap-proach to the same end. Brainstorm with a friend before deciding. Lis-ten to your sixth sense with a per-sonal matter. Think positively. Know what you want to strive for with this bond. Tonight: Whatever knocks your socks off.

VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22) HHH You could feel pressured to change pace and do something in a totally unique way. You have an unusual

amount of imagination. When you mix that with your practical side, it is a winning combination. Remain open to others’ ideas. Tonight: Out till the wee hours.

LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22) HHH You might want to think before you leap into action. There are so many op-tions in front of you, so you should check out which destination or goal intrigues you the most. A family member could try to push you in a certain direction. The choice is yours. Tonight: Opt for togetherness.

SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21) HHH Little goes on that you aren’t aware of, and you also are able to read be-tween the lines. However, you might decide not to allow someone else to know just how aware you are. Hold-ing back will let you see what this

person will reveal naturally. Tonight: Visit with a friend.

SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21) HHH You use your ingenuity a lot, as this ability is one of the foundations of your success. Reach into your bag of tricks, but know that there could be a backfire. The costs might be high. Hold out, if you can, and you might see an-other path. Tonight: Your treat.

CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19) HHH Be careful with how much you protest verbally or through your actions. Inadvertently, you could corner yourself into a decision that you do not want to make. Work on being more laissez faire. In the long run, it could add to your success. To-night: Add spice to your day.

AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18) HH You have a way about you that at-

tracts many different people and opinions. Choose to take a step back and spend some time alone to assess the possibilities. Find-ing your center, rather than being so driven, might be a more pow-erful course for you. Tonight: Out and about.

PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20) HHH You often speak your mind and open up discussions. Unfortunately, this approach could have others closing down right now. You might find that saying little will spark a brainstorm-ing session and bring the most diverse ideas forward. Tonight: Order in.

BORN TODAY Comedian Eddie

Murphy (1961), actor Marlon Brando (1924), astronaut Gus Grissom (1926)

NELLIE GUZMAN, A POLITICAL SCIENCE STUDENT, AND EMILY RINMANN, AN OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY STUDENT, SELL BAKED GOODS TO RAISE MONEY FOR AUTISM SPEAKS IN HONOR OF WORLD AUTISM MONTH | PHOTO BY ERIN IRWIN

THE DAILY ATHENAEUM THURSDAY APRIL 3, 20146 | NEWS

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Syrians adjust to life without limbs

JIB JANINE, Lebanon (AP) — Grimacing, Mustafa Ah-mad slid the scarred stump just below his right knee into his new prosthetic leg. Ex-tending his arms for balance, he slowly rose and hobbled across the packed dirt floor toward the door of his ram-shackle tent.

Wild-haired children peered through a gap in the plastic sheet that serves as the wall of his tent, trying to catch a glimpse of the proce-dure that finally fitted Ahmad with a prosthesis, more than

two years after losing his leg during a bombing raid on his hometown in northern Syria.

“I feel like I want to take a long walk, to go see my friends and neighbors,” he said later, his forehead glis-tening with perspiration. “I feel like my leg is back. I feel normal, like I’m back the way I was.”

Syria’s civil war, which entered its fourth year last month, has killed more than 150,000 people, but an often overlooked figure is the num-ber of wounded: more than

500,000, according to the In-ternational Committee of the Red Cross. An untold number of those – there’s no reliable estimate – suffered traumatic injuries that have left them physically handicapped.

Syria’s conflict is not unique in this regard. All wars maim and kill. What varies is the weapon associated with the carnage. In Cambodia, it was land mines. In Iraq, roadside bombs and suicide bombings. In Syria’s case, the culprit is largely artillery and airstrikes.

It was shrapnel from a gov-ernment airstrike in Novem-ber 2011 on the town of Deif Hafer in Aleppo province that tore off part of Ahmad’s leg.

“When I first woke up in the hospital, I felt pain and I knew my leg was gone,” said the shy 19-year-old with a mop of dark hair. “I felt that I was done. I could no lon-ger walk or work or go out. It was me and my bed. I lost all hope.”

With few options in Syria, Ahmad initially relied on crutches to get around. He and his father later cobbled together a homemade pros-thesis out of plastic and socks. He used it for six months be-fore tossing it aside.

“It wasn’t very comfort-able,” he said. “It hurt my leg, and it was short so I limped when I walked.”

As violence ravaged north-ern Syria in early 2013, Ah-mad, his parents and 11 siblings left Deir Hafer for Lebanon. They now live at the edge of a plowed field in a cluster of flimsy shelters hammered together out of wood, nails and plastic sheet-ing outside the town of Jib Ja-nine in the Bekaa Valley.

He received his new pros-thetic leg from Handicap In-ternational, a non-govern-mental organization that, among other things, helps Syrian refugees in Lebanon and Jordan who have lost limbs in the war.

“The hardest thing in the past two years was feeling that I didn’t have anyone. It was over for me, I felt that I was done. I was thinking I’d

never get a leg and would never be able to walk again,” he said. “Now that I got the leg, I can get a job, go and come as I please, see my friends.”

Once outside the tent, Ah-mad slowly limped down a dirt path running along a small ditch. Old men and women observed quietly from their tents. Children scampered across the dusty earth to catch his every move.

The amount of time needed to adjust to a new limb varies, said Henri Bon-nin, a field director for Hand-icap International.

Older adults generally struggle more than young people, as do amputees who lose their leg above the knee. Another determining factor is the quality of the original surgery, which varies widely in a conflict like Syria’s where many amputations take place in a field hospital or make-shift clinic.

“These are emergency am-putations, so it’s not an or-thopedic surgeon, it’s a gen-eral surgeon or a dentist who is performing this,” Bonnin said. “It’s done in a severe emergency to save a patient’s life.”

Under such conditions, many doctors cut the bone straight across, not at an an-gle as they should to create a better stump, he said. If the stump is flat instead of cylin-drical, patients need a sec-ond or third surgery – a pain-ful procedure – to correct the problem and allow for a prosthesis.

The physical toll is gruel-

ing and apparent to all. But just as difficult for many Syr-ians is the psychological side of losing a limb.

That has been the case for 34-year-old Reem Diab. On Oct. 25, 2012, a shell slammed into her house in the town of Khan Sheikoun in central Syria, killing her husband, Mustafa, and her 15-year-old daughter, Batoul.

For months afterward, Diab was an emotional wreck. Her hair was fall-ing out. Simple tasks proved overwhelming.

But what also haunted her, she said, was the fear that her surviving daughter and two sons would be terrified of their mother and the stump that ended just below her right hip. She refused to see them, and sent them to live with their uncle and grand-mother instead.

“Psychologically, I was not welcoming of anyone, not even my children,” Diab said. “I did not want them to see me in this situation and not be able to cope with it.”

She came to Lebanon two months after her amputa-tion, and was fitted with a prosthetic leg in April 2013. A physiotherapist and psycho-social worker from Handi-cap International visited her for more than a dozen ses-sions to help with her phys-ical and mental rehabilita-tion. She slowly adjusted to the prosthesis, although it’s been difficult.

“It’s not like your actual leg,” she said. “It feels like a strange object. There’s no balance.”

APMustafa Ahmad, left, a 19-year-old who lost his leg in his hometown of Deir Hafer in Aleppo province in November 2011 when government warplanes bombed his neighborhood, is fitted with a prosthetic leg by a Lebanese prosthetic limb maker, right, at the Syrian refugee camp in Jib Janine, in the Bekaa valley, Lebanon. Syria’s civil war, which entered its fourth year last month, has killed more than 150,000 people. An often overlooked figure is the number of wounded more than 500,000, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross. An untold number of those, there’s no reliable estimate even, have suffered traumatic injuries that have left them physically handicapped.

A&E7CONTACT US 304-293-5092 ext. 3 | DAA&[email protected] April 3, 2014

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10:00 amMountainlair Ballrooms

Zip canopy tour opens for season

wvutoday.wvu.eduFormer Mountaineer mascot Jon Kimble ziplines at the grand opening of the tour last year.

BY NICOLE CURTINA&E WRITER

@DAILYATHENAEUM

The West Virginia Uni-versity Outdoor Educa-tion Center is opening its zip canopy tour this week-end. Tours are conducted throughout the Coopers Rock State Forest and are open to WVU and the Mor-gantown community.

Coy Belknap, the pro-gram’s coordinator, said they have had great suc-cess since the opening of the zip canopy tour last year.

“Since our opening last April, we’ve had over 1,100 people participate in our zip canopy tour,” Belknap said. “Whether it’s going across our sky bridge, zip-

ping at over 25 miles per hour, rappelling down a 40-foot tree or simply re-ceiving information about the area, participants re-ally seem receptive to the experience.”

The canopy tours are operated through the Ad-venture West Virginia Out-door Education Center and were built in collabo-ration with the WVU Divi-sion of Forestry and Natu-ral Resources.

Adventure WV operates the zip tours as an educa-tional tool for the area, as they are used to train prac-titioners, host researchers and provide fun for the WVU community.

Belknap said this canopy tour is one of many in the state, and the numbers are

growing.“Zip canopy tours are

becoming a very popular activity within the region,” Belknap said. “In addition to our operation, zip can-opy tours can be found in southern West Virginia, the Eastern and Northern pan-handles and the surround-ing states. There are prob-ably 15 or more operations within a 3-5 hour drive from Morgantown.”

Belknap also said each canopy tour has a differ-ent theme, and the one in Coopers Rock State Forest is geared towards fun and education as the tour goes through the WVU Research Forest.

The tours are set up to accommodate groups, and Belknap said participants

can expect a good time soaring through the forest.

“People can anticipate a fun, safe and accessi-ble activity this weekend,” Belknap said. “Everyone is encouraged to bring a friend. We provide some-thing different and excit-ing for the WVU commu-nity – something that can’t be found downtown.

“It’s not everyday peo-ple are given the opportu-nity to zip between trees at over 25 miles per hour with their friends.”

Adding on to the educa-tion, Belknap said a phys-ics aspect has been added to the tours. Ryan Stocking, the instructional coordina-tor for the WVU Research Corporation, developed “Science Behind the Sport,”

which is a way for zip-lin-ers to get their knowledge on while zipping.

“Stocking has helped de-velop a physics curriculum that allows participants to calculate their maximum speed before they zip,” Belknap said. “This initia-tive allows participants to learn the physics behind zip-lining and what factors (into) their speed.”

Zip-liners will be given a GPS to see how close they are to their pre-zip calculations.

“The mission of Adven-ture West Virginia is to pro-vide recreational activities for students that help fa-cilitate community and learning,” Belknap said. “We’re dedicated to our student-centered learning

approach and want people to have fun.

“The zip canopy tour al-lows our program to pro-vide another resource for students that promotes a healthy sense of commu-nity and fun.”

To learn more about the tour or reserve a time slot, visit http://adventurechal-lenge.wvu.edu/canopy-tour. Private and individ-ual tours can be booked in advance.

Multiple tour times are available each weekend, and students receive a 40 percent discount when they register. Students are $30, faculty and staff are $40, and the general pub-lic is $50 per person.

daa&[email protected]

Roseland Ballroom in NYC closes doors, plans final shows

The historic Roseland Ballroom in New York City is finally closing its doors after 95 years of serving the local music scene.

Founded in 1917 in Phil-adelphia, Roseland ulti-mately found its home in NYC in 1919. The move was to avoid blue laws ac-tive at the time that pre-vented the sale of alcohol on Sunday.

Louis Brecker, the-founder and operator of Roseland, took a simple carriage factory on Broad-way and 51st Street and turned it into a world-re-nowned music venue.

Roseland remained at that address for 37 years, but the building was de-molished and moved to West 52nd Street in 1956. Becker continued to man-age Roseland until 1977 when his daughter, Nancy Brecker Leeds, took over after his passing.

The modern Roseland we all know and love really came about in 1981 when Brecker Leeds sold it to Al-bert Ginsberg. It was dur-ing this era the nightclub scene breathed a new life into the 3,200-person ca-pacity club.

In the early days, the likes of Louis Armstrong and Ella Fitzgerald found their home here. In most recent years, the venue has been used for a wide host of events, not just for musicians.

Hillary Clinton cele-brated her 53rd birthday at Roseland. The venue was rented out for gay cir-cuit parties, charity events and of course, the best and brightest of today’s pop stars.

Roseland was also the home of many controver-sies. Madonna, known for her outrageous concerts and tours, invited fans for a one-time-only, non-tick-eted concert at Roseland.

Fans were reportedly in line for days outside of the venue. They were enraged to know they wasted so much time for a show that only lasted 30 minutes.

For many, Roseland is the heart and lifeblood of the NYC music scene.

“It’s going to be a sad day, that’s for sure,” said Lisa Pinney-Keusch, Rose-land’s special events direc-tor from 1995-2004 to the Columbia Spectator. “The venue is one of the last of a dying breed. It’s too bad. It’s just an incredible place with so much history.”

But have no fear, mu-sic lovers. Roseland is go-ing out with style. Lady Gaga was invited in Octo-ber to be the closing act for a residency of seven performances.

Lady Gaga, just having released her third official single “G.U.Y.” from “ART-POP,” definitely made a smart move in accepting the invitation to perform. Tickets for her Roseland show are $326.15, accord-ing to Forbes. Lorde, who just recently performed at Roseland, had an average ticket price of $222.59.

For many little mon-sters, Lady Gaga’s Roseland residency is a chance to

hopefully get a sneak peek at the singer’s upcoming tour, “Lady Gaga’s artRave: The ARTPOP Ball.”

The tour, kicking off May 4 in Sunrise, Fla., is sure to be a good time. Unfor-tunately, some celebrity bloggers have been try-ing to declare Lady Gaga as being on the decline on her career – and for many diehard fans, this is a real fear.

“Seeing her perform, all those fears are laid to rest,” said Jordan Runtagh in a review of her perfor-mance for VH1.com. “The energy that radiates out of her has not diminished in the least.”

On Monday, we say goodbye to Roseland Ball-room. The love of music from the audience and a musician come together to make a sacred space. Though this space is com-ing to an end, the memo-ries and relationships built upon this foundation will never be lost.

And there is hope. As of now, there are no definite plans for what the location will be used for – possibly a Roseland Ballroom 2.0? We’ll see.

daa&[email protected]

rollingstone.comThe Roseland Ballroom, pictured above, has been a popular venue in New York City since 1919.

JakE JaRvIsA&E WRITER @DAILYATHENAEUM

THE DAILY ATHENAEUM Thursday April 3, 20148 | ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Gabriel Brother’s to open renovated store in Morgantown

facebook.comThe local Gabriel Brother’s will reopen as Gabe’s Saturday.

BY STEPHANIE MESSINGERA&E WRITER

@DAILYATHENAEUM

What college students aren’t looking for the lat-est trends in fashion with affordable prices? With Gabriel Brothers’ newly renovated store in Mor-gantown, you’ll find ex-actly what you need af-ter cleaning out those dorm room closets and get ready to step into some new clothes for the summer.

Gabe’s, will be welcom-ing customers with their bright new color scheme, restrooms and much big-ger layout to hold an even wider selection. The faster checkout will also be ideal for those who are in need of a quick shop-ping spree and don’t have time to be waiting in line at the checkout counter.

The store will hold its grand opening Saturday at 8 a.m. The event will begin with a ribbon cut-ting ceremony and free breakfast while supplies last.

The first 200 custom-ers will also receive a free Gabe’s T-shirt, and there will be a live DJ for the celebration.

Gabriel Brothers is a privately owned company

and is headquartered in Morgantown.

T h e i r r e n o v a t i o n s aren’t the only thing new about the store, though. Loyal shoppers have per-sonally renamed the store Gabe’s, which both hon-ors and respects the his-tory of the chain.

“The customers have called us Gabe’s for a long time,” said Shari Rudolph, vice president and chief marketing di-rector of Gabe’s. “Loyal customers have paid re-spect with this new name by honoring history and heritage but also indicat-ing an exciting future in progress.”

“We have a wide vari-ety of shoppers, includ-ing anyone who is looking for excellent value and a comprehensive assort-ment of products,” Ru-dolph said.

“We have a unique re-lationship with our ven-dors that showcases what shoppers will discover with great brands from day to day.”

Their products are also perfect for Morgantown’s college students, who are waiting to discover a treasure chest of af-fordable yet fashionable clothing.

daa&[email protected]

AP

NEW YORK (AP) — Booze may be an oft-mentioned topic when Kathie Lee Gif-ford and Hoda Kotb are hosting the fourth hour of the “Today” show, but one alcoholic bever-age they won’t be talking about is Gifford’s new wine line.

In an interview Tues-day, Gifford said NBC has asked her not to plug her new Gifft chardon-nay and red blend on the show.

“They let me announce it and then they’ve asked us to please not discuss it right now,” Gifford said. “We’re in the middle of the big takeover of a major cor-poration. I think they just want to be - and rightfully so - very careful. Every-body wants to dot i’s and cross t’s and you notice the wine is still sitting there but they’ve just asked me to be a little careful while they’re under great scru-tiny and I’m happy to do

that.”A representative for

“Today” said, “We love and support Kathie Lee and as always, we let her comments speak for themselves.”

NBC’s owner, Comcast Corp., says it wants to buy Time Warner Cable Inc. If the deal is approved it would combine the na-tion’s two top cable compa-nies and create a dominant force in both creating and delivering entertainment.

Gifford and Kotb talked about the wines on “Today” last month, but on Mon-day’s show, Gifford men-tioned she would be mak-ing a number of personal appearances but said she couldn’t say what they were for.

Gifford says her deal with the Scheid Family Wines of Monterey, Calif., to pro-duce the wines “seems like a natural” fit given her love for wine and the presence of alcohol on the show -

even though she says no-body really drinks that much.

“That’s been outra-geously satirized - the amount,” she says. “It sits there.”

Gifford also says she was “stunned along with every-body else” about the news that Josh Elliott was leav-ing ABC’s “Good Morning America” for a job at NBC Sports, the second “GMA” personnel defection in four months.

Restoring “Today” to its former top spot in the mornings has been an NBC priority since “GMA” bested “Today” in the rat-ings two years ago. While Gifford and Kotb’s fourth hour continues to have strong ratings, Gifford ac-knowledged the ratings slide in the earlier “To-day” hours, noting the show has been “making in-roads” and adding: “Maybe we can reverse the trend now.”

NBC asks Kathie Lee Gifford not to plug her wine on the “Today” show

www.today.com

Willie Nelson’s stuffed armadillo returned after kidnapping

NEW YORK (AP) — Sen. Ted Cruz, the Texas Re-publican often mentioned as a possible presidential candidate, is working on a project considered stan-dard for national contend-ers: a book.

Cruz’s literary agent, Keith Urbahn, said Wednes-day that the tea party favor-ite had agreed to terms with HarperCollins. Urbahn de-clined to confirm a report in the Washington Exam-iner that the deal was worth $1.5 million. But he says the number is “close.”

Cruz, 43, is expected to officially sign with Harp-erCollins over the next few weeks.

“I’m looking forward to the opportunity to share my story and to tell the truth about what’s happening in Washington,” Cruz told The Associated Press after giving a speech Wednes-day at Liberty University in

Lynchburg, Va.“We’re having a national

debate right now about the direction our country should go, and I am eager to participate in that de-bate through any medium possible. And a book can serve as an effective vehicle for conveying the positive hopeful optimistic vision for America that I believe together can turn this na-tion around.”

Elected in 2012, Cruz quickly established himself as one of the most polariz-ing and talked-about sen-ators, and several publish-ers bid for his book. Some other possible 2016 candi-dates have books sched-uled for this year, including former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Rep. Paul Ryan, while Sen. Marco Rubio and Sen. Rand Paul are among those who already have books out.

Senator Ted Cruz begins work on new book regarding his personal life, ‘truth’ in Washington

HENDERSON, Nev. (AP) — A stuffed armadillo that serves as an on-stage mascot for country mu-sic legend Willie Nel-son has been returned after being kidnapped from a Las Vegas-area show.

Officials at the Wes-tin Lake Las Vegas resort in Henderson say the crit-ter, named Ol’ Dillo, van-ished while audience mem-bers were greeting Nelson after a Monday night concert.

Westin marketing direc-

tor Matt Boland says Nel-son’s crew called in the middle of the night from the road, asking the resort to scour surveillance foot-age after the mascot went missing.

Boland says he was out-side the hotel Tuesday morning when an apolo-getic man drove up and handed him a shoebox and instructions to return it to Nelson.

Boland says the arma-dillo was inside and has been sent to the singer in California.salon.com

pollstar.com

THE DAILY ATHENAEUM ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT | 9Thursday April 3, 2014

April 5...........................................................................................................Cherry Blossom Festival

April 27.....................................................................................St. Michaels Food & Wine Festival & Cruise

May 23..............................................................................................”Moses” @ Sight & Sound

May 25......................................................................................”Peter & the Starcatcher” @ the Benedum

May 26-28......................................................................................................Atlantic City/Resort Casino

June 28...........................................................................................”Play Ball!” Pirate Baseball game

June 28-29..............................................................................................”Moses” @ Sight & Sound

July 4................................................................................................Celebration on the Gateway Clipper

July 12........................................................................................................Baltimore Inner Harbor

August 9....................................................................................................Shake Woods Festival

August 18-19......................................................................................Seneca Niagara Hotel & Casino

September 13................................”Oh Say Can You See...” A Star Spangled Celebration in Baltimore. MD

October 4......................................................................................”I’ll Take the Scenic Route”/WMRR

October 18............................................................ 35th Anniversary of Bridge Day/New River Gorge Bridge

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‘Frozen’ becomes highest-grossing animated film

wordpress.com

Disney’s “Frozen” re-cently became the highest-grossing animated film of all time and one of the top 10 highest-grossing films ever, beating out “Toy Story 3” and “The Lion King” af-ter earning over $1 billion.

The film is just unstop-pable in the box office and popular among nearly all ages, but why? What about a Disney movie about two sisters has made it the top-grossing animated film of all time?

In an industry that gen-erates so much product not suitable for younger eyes, “Frozen” excelled because of its purity. It was a throw-back to the classic Disney movies and captured the true Disney spirit. It tells an old-fashioned story, and although it bears little resemblance to the Hans Christian Andersen story it was originally based on, it appeals to the feelings that everyone has: love, loss and friendship.

With the No.1 album on the Billboard chart, “Fro-zen” has captivated audi-ence members even out-side the theater. The songs are witty and catchy, and they have the star power vocalists to back them up.

With an Oscar to her name, Idina Menzel pro-vided the song that the movie is most known for. “Let It Go” has become one of the most popular Disney songs of all time. The whole soundtrack is full of Broad-way-ready songs, giving a good head start to the stage musical that is in the works.

What also makes “Fro-

zen” so popular is its use of unconventional characters. It does not have the typical villain or sidekick. Structur-ally, the person that should be the villain is not the vil-lain at all, but turns out to be a heroine. Elsa, who in the original fairy tale is an evil witch, is portrayed ini-tially as closed off, but she overcomes her own set-backs with the help of her sister.

Another important char-acter in the film is Olaf. Witty, wise cracking side-kicks are basically a re-

quirement for kids’ mov-ies nowadays. Instead of being the typical embar-rassing sidekick to halt the storyline at some point, Olaf, voiced by Josh Gad, ultimately makes the movie heartwarming and charming.

“Frozen” is both famil-iar and distant today. It speaks great lengths to the real life relationships peo-ple have with each other, but what helps set it apart from other Disney movies are its heroines.

It is the first Disney

movie to have two prin-cesses, and other than “Tangled” and “Brave,” is one of the only animated movies to address the com-plicated issues women have to face.

Ultimately, “Frozen” is a tale of growing up and taking responsibility. It is at the top because it is real and approachable to fans of all ages. It is both inno-vative and old, and it will likely stay in its place for a long time.

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A&E Countdown

The top five best covers of ‘Frozen’s’ ‘Let It Go’

Audiences loved Dis-ney’s latest animated movie “Frozen,” but more than the movie, hun-dreds of amateur artists have covered the mov-ie’s popular song “Let It Go.”

Idina Menzel, known for her work on Broadway as Elphaba in “Wicked” and Maureen Johnson in “RENT,” was the voice be-hind lead character Elsa. Tired of hiding her mag-ical ice-creating powers, Elsa sings of the high she feels from letting loose her true self.

Like many other songs, people around the world have covered it, adding their own flavor to the original work composed by Kristen Anderson-Lo-pez and Robert Lopez. I’ve searched high and low on YouTube for the five best covers, and here they are:

Coming in at No. 5 is a surprisingly great mash-up between Antonio Viv-aldi’s “The Four Seasons” and “Let It Go.” Known for their powerful acous-tic versions of modern pop songs, ThePiano-Guys give a breathtaking performance.

Personally, I love find-ing a good karaoke ver-sion of songs to sing along with. With “Let It Go,” however, it’s sometimes hard to find a good ver-sion like this. They’re of-ten poorly produced and include less than satisfy-ing back-up vocals.

If you’re looking for a version of the song to belt out, this is your version.

The Piano GuysNext at No. 4 is a cover

by Derek Govin, cover-ing Demi Lovato’s ver-sion of the song. This song, though great for women, can be difficult to pull off for many men with lower voices. Govin does an exceptional job of blending together his lower register with a fal-setto that pops in at the perfect times.

The video, posted in mid-December, was the first for Govin’s YouTube channel.

Derek GovinFor lovers of close-knit

harmonies like those in FOX’s “Glee,” No. 3 might be more your style.

David ChoiDavid Choi delivers a

one-man, eight-part har-mony performance. His video splices together

shots of his singing and playing the guitar. Choi has gathered a consider-able following – so much so that he has released his own app in the iOS and Android App store.

The “David Choi App” consists of mp3 copies of all the songs he has cov-ered after the day you download, which for some users is more than 194 songs, and origi-nal voice messages he doesn’t post anywhere else.

No. 2 is just as visually stunning as it is beautiful to our ears.

Alex BoyeThis cover is set in an

ice castle of sorts com-plete with one-of-a-kind costumes for the chil-dren’s choir. Does any-one else want to have that girl’s hair, or is it just me?

Alex Boye teamed up with One Voice Children’s Choir to give audiences an “Africanized” version of the song. Lexi Walker stars as the lead vocalist with Boye. Though she is 11 years old in the video, she belted stronger and commanded the spotlight better than some veteran performers I’ve seen.

If you liked Boye’s re-mix of this song, look for his upcoming album “AFRICANIZED” in the iTunes store. Included on the album is a stel-lar “Africanized” remix of Lorde’s “Royals.”

Rising to the No. 1 spot as the best cover of “Let It Go” is performed by The Nightingales Choir.

D a r y l C h r i s t i a n Reynes

The 15-person choir, made up of men and women, sound more like 150 performers. Dressed in all black with splashes of red, The Nightingales Choir shows us a pro-fessional version of the song.

My only complaint for The Nightingales Choir is the quality of their video. The acous-tics of their concert hall sound great, and yet the quality of the record-ing equipment does not match the quality of their voices.

I chose this version for the maturity of their voices. They blend to-gether perfectly. The so-loist also has a strong voice that reminds me a lot of Menzel herself.

No matter what ver-sion you love the most, “Let It Go” is here to stay.

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AP

Amazon unveils Fire TV streaming device, offers low price

BUSINESSINSIDER.COMAn Amazon representative reveals the new Fire TV.

NEW YORK (AP) — Ama-zon is making a bid to enter living rooms with Amazon Fire TV, a new streaming device that delivers online video, music and other con-tent to televisions.

The company says the $99 device has better speed, performance and search functions than other streaming boxes such as Ap-ple TV and Google Chrome-cast. But Amazon is coming late to the streaming device game, and it remains to be seen whether the company is offering enough new and better services to lure cus-tomers away from their cur-rent streaming methods.

Amazon created buzz about the device last week when it sent an invitation to the media hinting about an update to its video ser-vice. It debuted the box at Milk Studios in New York to about 200 media members, offering movie snacks like popcorn and Milk Duds.

The device, about the size of a CD case, runs Google’s Android operating system and offers Netflix, Hulu and other streaming channels in addition to Amazon Prime instant video. It comes with a Bluetooth remote,

which lets users search for video by talking to the re-mote. Customers will get a free 30-day trial subscrip-tion to Netflix and Amazon Prime when they buy a Fire TV.

Amazon vice president Peter Larsen said the re-tailer sells millions of streaming media devices each year, and its own box is an effort to address three complaints it commonly hears from customers: search is too clunky, there is not an open ecosystem that allows people to use several different streaming systems and performance isn’t good enough.

Fire TV also offers a range of other services, including channels like YouTube and Pandora and “Free Time,” a customizable interface for children.

The box, which starts shipping today, will also feature thousands of free and paid games like Mine-craft and Disney Pixar’s Monsters University start-ing next month. Games can be played using the remote. An optional Fire game con-troller will be available for $39.99.

One analyst called the

offering “underwhelming,” however.

Wedbush Securities an-alyst Michael Pachter said the device is too expen-sive, considering that it doesn’t offer notably more than similarly priced de-vices. Apple TV is $99 and the top tier Roku is also $99, although it makes cheaper versions. Google’s Chrome-cast is $35.

He also said Amazon missed a chance to lure more Prime customers by offering six-months free of the service to Fire TV owners.

“I don’t really get it,” he said. “There’s no real mean-ingful advantage to buying the box.”

CRT Inc. analyst Neil Doshi was more positive.

“While we believe that Amazon may be overstating consumer frustration with competing products, Fire TV appears to offer a signif-icant step forward in terms of content search, hardware performance and open-ness,” he wrote in a note to investors. “We expect that FireTV should sell well and further bolster Amazon Prime’s ecosystem.”

Amazon’s announce-

ment comes as the online retailer faces increasing pressure to boost its bot-tom line after years of furi-ous growth. As more Amer-icans shop online, Amazon has spent heavily to expand its business into new areas – from movie streaming to e-readers and groceries –often at the expense of its profit.

Meanwhile, Amazon.com Inc. has invested heav-

ily on making TV shows and movies available to cus-tomers who pay $99 a year for Amazon Prime. It cur-rently offers 200,000 TV shows and movies for rent or purchase. Amazon re-cently boosted the annual fee to $99 from $79 annu-ally. Members benefit from two-day shipping of cer-tain items and access to videos including original series like “Betas” and “Al-

pha House.”Currently, the service re-

lies on third-party devices like the Roku box to stream its programs to TVs. Ama-zon Fire TV will be sold on Amazon’s site, Best Buy, Staples and other retailers coming soon.

Amazon shares fell $1.03 to $341.96 in Tuesday’s trading. The stock is down 14 percent since the begin-ning of the year.

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — For Anthony Mackie, landing the role of the Fal-con in “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” meant more than inking his dream deal with Marvel.

“When I heard I got the role I broke down in tears,” said Mackie in a recent in-terview. “I realized two years from that date some little brown boy was going to be at my door in a Fal-con costume on Halloween. When I was a kid I didn’t have that. It wasn’t like I could get asked, ‘Who do you want to be for Hallow-een?’ and say Shaft. Being the Falcon is monumental.”

Working with Marvel has been a longtime goal for Mackie, though he imag-ined playing a villain, not a superhero. “I wanted to be like the Joker and get my Heath Ledger on,” he said. “I would send Marvel an email, like every four to five months. I was calling say-ing, ‘I’ll work for free.’ About two years ago they sent me a letter saying, ‘Don’t call us, we’ll call you.’ I was like ‘Damn – Marvel mad at me.’”

Roughly six months be-fore filming began on “The Winter Soldier” in April 2013, directors Anthony and Joe Russo offered Mackie a role in the comic-book adaptation.

“It was epic,” recalls Mackie, who admits he didn’t know much about the character Sam Wilson, who becomes the Falcon, one of the first African-Ameri-can superheroes in a main-stream comic.

“I read up on him and im-mediately got into the gym,” he added with a laugh. “I thought if I am wearing that much spandex I have to be in shape.”

When “The Winter Sol-dier” hits theaters Friday, it will likely become the role for which the 35-year-old Mackie is most known. But it was his portrayal of a bomb disposal team ser-

geant in Kathryn Bigelow’s Oscar-winning war thriller “The Hurt Locker” that paved the way for main-stream success.

“Both his roles in ‘Half Nelson’ and ‘The Hurt Locker’ showed him to be an actor of real weight,” said “Winter Soldier” exec-utive producer Nate Moore. “When we were looking to cast the role of Sam Wilson, we knew we wanted an ac-tor who would feel like an equal to Steve Rogers (Chris Evans). We’d kicked some names back and forth, but none of the names ever rose above the first we discussed - Anthony Mackie. Once we met Anthony in person, we were sold. He charmed us.”

Growing up in New Or-leans, acting was the last thing on Mackie’s mind. The self-professed trou-blemaker said he probably would have been on Ritalin in today’s world. “But I had this great teacher who intro-duced me to Shakespeare, which opened my eyes to a different idea of who I could be.”

He suffered a blow at 15, when his mother died. Mackie’s inheritance af-ter his mother’s estate was split among him and his five siblings was $550. He used $542 to travel to New York to audition for Juilliard – and got in.

“It confirmed to me that I had the ability to do this and make a living at it,” he recalled.

It also offered him the chance to turn his anger into positive energy after her death.

“The greatest blessing that she could have given me was letting me become my own man,” he said. “Once I got into school ev-erything took off.”

While at Juilliard, he was cast in Eminem hit biopic “8 Mile.” Since then, he’s ap-peared in over 30 movies, from indie flicks to big bud-get, all-star films.

He’s one of a select group

of African-American ac-tors who are consistently cast in major films. Mackie is well aware of the bur-den faced by minorities in Hollywood, but he de-scribes it as another hur-dle in life that has to be navigated.

“In this business spe-cifically, race plays such a daunting role in our life because so many of my friends, who are 10 times more talented than I am, they aren’t working. There aren’t enough roles for them. It is simply because they are black, Latino or Asian actors. I think that’s slowly changing and evolv-ing,” he said.

“I think as we support more our opportunities grow. Look at the cover of Vanity Fair. Look at the Os-cars. Michael B. Jordan is treading those waters eas-ily right now. I think a lot of

that has to do with the ac-tors who came before him and busted their heads against the wall over and over again.”

Mackie hopes to tell the story of another pioneer who helped break down barriers for African-Amer-icans, though not in act-ing – that of Olympic gold medalist Jesse Owens. It’s a passion project that he hopes to complete in the near future.

“The great thing about the Falcon is, it’s put me in a po-sition to where people are willing to have those con-versations about Jesse Ow-ens,” he said. “I feel like it’s a story that has to be told.”

Like his perseverance with Marvel, Mackie attests that if given an opportu-nity, he’ll flourish. “That has been my motto in life,” he added. “If you let me in the door, then I’m there to stay.”

NPR.ORG

‘Captain America’ superhero role ‘epic’ for actor Anthony MackieDarius Rucker, Chris Daughtry to sing anthem at Final Four

NCAGR.COM

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Award-winning coun-try singer-songwriter Dar-ius Rucker and multi-plat-inum recording artist Chris Daughtry will perform the national anthem at the NCAA Final Four.

Rucker will sing the an-them before Monday’s championship game, when he will be accompanied by the Jazz Singers vocal en-semble from Booker T. Washington High School for the Performance and Visual Arts in Dallas.

Daughtry will perform

before Saturday’s games. He will be backed by the Fort McHenry drum and fife corps in celebra-tion of the 200th anniver-sary of “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

Rucker first broke into the mainstream music scene in the mid-1990s as the frontman of the band Hootie & The Blowfish. He released his third country album last year.

Daughtry and his band have had four No. 1 hits, selling over 8 million al-bums worldwide.

NEW YORK (AP) — NBC says 80-year-old Willard Scott has tied the knot with his longtime girlfriend.

The veteran “Today” show personality and Paris Keena were wed Tuesday in Fort Myers, Fla. They have been together for about 11 years, “Today” host Matt Lauer said in sharing the news on Wednesday morn-ing’s telecast.

The jovial Scott has been

a part of “Today” since 1980.

Lauer framed the an-nouncement as “another surprise wedding” in the “Today” family.

Last month, co-anchor Savannah Guthrie made an on-the-air announcement of her marriage to commu-nications strategist Mike Feldman two days earlier. She also told viewers she was four months pregnant.

‘Today’ show’s Willard scott, 80, weds girlfriend

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NEW YORK (AP) — Jon Cryer, an actor who knows a thing or two about Charlie Sheen and Demi Moore among others, is working on a “candid” memoir.

The Emmy-winning star of “Two and a Half Men” has a deal with New American Library, an im-print of Penguin Random House.

The publisher an-nounced Wednesday that the book, currently unti-tled, is scheduled to be re-leased next spring.

According to the New American Library, Cryer will share “can-did” and “fascinating” stories about his 30-year career.

He debuted on film opposite Moore in “No

Small Affair” and be-came known to millions as “Duckie,” Molly Ring-wald’s pal in “Pretty in Pink.”

In a statement released Wednesday, Cryer joked that he would write about stamp collecting, mon-etary policy and maybe even Sheen, his former “Two and a Half Men” co-star.

‘Two and a Half Men’s’ Jon Cryer begins work on ‘candid’ memoir

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WVU basketball

in a state of instability

Following the news that sophomore guard Eron Harris will transfer, I strongly questioned the stability of the West Vir-ginia men’s basketball program.

I understand these things happen, but the amount of transfers in re-cent years has to be alarm-ing for head coach Bob Huggins and staff. Think about it for a second.

The 2014-15 season was supposed to be the year back to relevance for West Virginia. After failing to make the NCAA tourna-ment two years in a row, everyone was expected to be back for next year’s campaign. Without Har-ris, the journey back to be-ing a competitive program once again is in question.

West Virginia losing its second-leading scorer is troubling for the program. Yes, the team may be los-ing a player who didn’t have the best defensive skills, but the spark in of-fense was a completely different story. Harris had the ability to get hot and fast, and his production will surely be missed.

There’s also the chance Harris would improve his defensive ways. WVU con-tinues to lose players on its roster, and there needs to be a clear answer as to why this is happening.

Should some of the blame fall on Huggins? It’s hard to say what the actual problem is, but a clear so-lution as to what is hap-pening to this program is needed.

The stability is just not there. It seems like ev-eryone isn’t on the same page. It wasn’t too long ago West Virginia made that Final Four run and won the Big East Con-ference. Now, it is strug-gling to win an NIT game to a Georgetown team that hasn’t produced the best basketball this season af-ter a promising start.

It’s really hard to imag-ine where this program is going. Since the 2012-13 season ended, multi-ple players who started their collegiate careers in Morgantown will finish it elsewhere.

I’m not saying WVU can’t turn things around and still have a promising 2014-15 campaign. But as the team tries to get back to relevance, there is al-ways something making this team take a step or two back.

We don’t know what the future will hold in terms of how committed other guys are to this program and competing with the best teams of the Big 12 Con-ference. I feel like guys are tired of excuses and sim-ply want to win and make NCAA tournaments.

With Staten staying for one more season, it’s clear he sees something brew-ing within the program. I’m going by what I’ve seen on the court, however.

Ultimately, results are what matter. That’s the na-ture of any business. If you want to keep your job, you need to perform and do it consistently. It is becom-ing a common theme to accept average results for certain programs over the last few years.

Something needs to give. It’s unclear what is happening to the West Virginia men’s basketball program, but at this time, I just don’t see a stable program.

I guess it took the loss of the team’s second-lead-ing scorer to finally figure that out.

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EARN YOUR SPOT

By doug wAlpSPORTS wRITER

@DOugwAlP

With just a few days re-maining before West Vir-ginia’s annual Gold-Blue Spring Game, most of the battles over positions are still in full-swing, includ-ing the particularly heated competition in the Moun-taineers’ crowded but tal-ented backfield.

“It’s a huge competi-tion,” said senior running back Dreamius Smith at WVU’s open practice in Morgantown. “I knew coming in this year that everyone is fighting for a spot. You just have to be the person to work the hardest.

“We’re just going to keep working hard every practice, executing plays and doing everything we can.”

Smith rushed 103 times for 494 yards and five touchdowns in 2013, sec-ond in all team catego-ries to only the likely NFL-bound Charles Sims. But despite Smith’s notable production last season, coupled with the depar-ture of Sims, it’s still a bit premature to make any as-sumptions about how the depth chart for the Moun-taineers’ backfield is going to shake out in 2014.

That’s because although Sims may be gone, the ad-ditions of sophomore Pitt-transfer Rushel Shell and redshirt junior Andrew Buie bring new dynamics to this season’s tailback competition.

Not only are both Shell and Buie fairly proven

rushers at the collegiate level, but they’re also both likely coming into 2014 with chips on their respective shoulders af-ter dealing with their own separate sets of personal issues throughout the past season.

Shell redshirted last sea-son at WVU to fulfill NCAA transfer requirements af-ter transferring from the Panthers in the summer following a true freshman campaign, during which he rushed for 641 yards and four touchdowns.

He is reportedly taking a little bit longer to learn the system compared to his counterparts, who for the most part have all played at least one complete year in head coach Dana Hol-gorsen and offensive coor-dinator Shannon Dawson’s overall offensive scheme.

“All in all (Shell) has shown signs of being a re-ally good player,” Daw-son said. “He just needs to learn the system. He’s a little bit hesitant at times, because he’s not under-standing everything.

“The communication is not there, which is frus-trating, but the only way to curb that is for him to grow and get those reps.”

Buie, meanwhile, also took a redshirt in 2013 and even withdrew from classes at WVU in fall 2013 after leading all West Vir-ginia rushers with 851 yards and seven touch-downs in 2012.

Buie maintains that the leave of absence was mainly for personal rea-sons and self-improve-ment, but WVU running

backs coach JaJuan Seider has made comments since insinuating that at least part of the reason Buie re-turned home to Florida last August was because the junior tailback hadn’t even made the depth chart coming out of fall camp.

In addition to Smith, Shell and Buie, true soph-omore back Wendell Smallwood, who rushed 39 times for 221 yards and one score last season, also appears to be an in-creasingly growing factor in this tailback competi-tion. In fact, according to his offensive coordina-tor, Smallwood may ac-tually be having the best spring of any of the Moun-taineers’ running backs, to the point where WVU’s coaches are exploring even more potential ways and sets just in order to get Smallwood’s hands on the football more often.

“He’s versatile,” Dawson said. “We’re finding a lot of ways to get him the ball. That kid’s skilled.

“Through nine practices he’s got the mental capac-ity to handle a lot of differ-ent things, so we’re really trying to push the limits with what we can do with that kid. And right now, we’re just seeing what he can do.”

Ultimately, the soph-omore’s versatility could even end up clearing some space in the crowded yet talented Mountaineers’ backfield, if Smallwood does indeed end up seeing more snaps from say an in-side receiver position.

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MEL MORAES/THE DAILY ATHENAEUMRunning back Dreamius Smith celebrates scoring a touchdown against Oklahoma in the 2013 season.

Battle for top running back spot heating up leading up to Gold-Blue Spring game

FILE PHOTOWendell Smallwood dives for the end zone against Iowa State last season.

THE DAILY ATHENAEUM THURSDAY APRIL 3, 201412 | SPORTS

AP

Kinsler’s hit lifts Tigers over Royals in extra inningsDETROIT (AP) — Ian

Kinsler homered and drove in the winning run with a single in the 10th inning to lift the Detroit Tigers over the Kansas City Royals 2-1 on Wednesday.

Max Scherzer pitched eight scoreless innings for the Tigers, but Joe Nathan blew his first save chance since signing with Detroit in the offseason.

Acquired from Texas for Prince Fielder in a Novem-ber blockbuster trade, Kin-sler homered in the fourth and won the game with a line drive to left-center field off Tim Collins (0-1).

Detroit benefited from two replay overturns at first base. The second enabled Al Alburquerque (1-0) to get out of the top of the 10th.

The Tigers also beat Kan-sas City in their last at-bat in Monday’s opener, winning 4-3 on Alex Gonzalez’s RBI single in the ninth.

Scherzer allowed four hits and a walk with eight

strikeouts, but Nathan blew a save at Comerica Park for the first time. He was 19 for 19 at the ballpark as a vis-iting player before sign-ing with Detroit before this season.

Alex Gordon’s bases-loaded sacrifice fly in the ninth tied it, and Nathan then balked the runners ahead when he pulled up in the middle of his mo-tion. Manager Brad Aus-mus and trainer Kevin Rand came scurrying out to the mound to see if something was wrong, but Nathan kept pitching.

In the 10th, Kansas City’s Norichika Aoki was called safe at first, and it looked like the Royals would have first and third with two outs and the game tied. But upon further review, the throw barely beat Aoki. He was called out to end the threat.

There was another replay overturn in the sixth when Detroit’s Tyler Collins was

initially called out at first, giving Kansas City a 4-6-3 double play. The play was reviewed and Collins was ruled safe, although Detroit didn’t score that inning.

In the Detroit 10th, Aus-tin Jackson and Nick Cas-tellanos both walked before Kinsler’s two-out hit won it.

Scherzer can become a free agent after this season, and if he keeps pitching like this he’ll be in line for quite a payday.

With men on first and third and one out in the first, Billy Butler grounded into a double play on a 3-0 pitch.

That turned out to be the best chance Kansas City would have against Scher-zer. He wasn’t in trou-ble again until the eighth, when Salvador Perez dou-bled leading off.

Scherzer rebounded to strike out Mike Moustakas and Lorenzo Cain. Ausmus then visited the mound, but he left Scherzer in. Alcides

Escobar followed with a fly-out on Scherzer’s 110th and final pitch.

Jason Vargas, who signed a $32 million, four-year contract in the offseason, was sharp in his first start for Kansas City. He allowed a run and five hits in seven innings, walking one and striking out six.

Kinsler’s homer in the fourth was Detroit’s first hit.

NOTES: The Royals announced OF Carlos Peguero was sent outright to Triple-A Omaha after clearing waivers. He was designated for assignment March 25. ... Collins made his first major league start in LF. His debut came in Monday’s opener, when he scored the winning run as a pinch-runner. On Wednes-day, he made a nice catch in the second while slid-ing on his stomach. ... Kan-sas City rookie Yordano Ventura takes the mound Thursday against Detroit’s Anibal Sanchez.

APIan Kinsler, right, celebrates with teammate Nick Castellanos Wednesday.

Harang, Braves win pitchers’ duel over BrewersMILWAUKEE (AP) —

Atlanta pitcher Aaron Ha-rang and the Milwaukee Brewers’ Matt Garza had no-hit bids until Chris Johnson homered with two outs in the seventh inning, sending the Braves to a 1-0 victory Wednesday.

Harang (1-0) didn’t al-low a hit until Logan Scha-fer grounded a single lead-ing off the bottom of the seventh.

Making his Braves’ de-but, Harang gave up two hits in 6 2-3 innings, struck out three and walked one, throwing 63 of 97 pitches for strikes. He had spent most of spring training with Cleveland on a mi-nor league contract, then signed with the Braves on March 24 after a series of injuries to Atlanta pitchers.

Relievers Luis Avilan, David Carpenter and Craig Kimbrel were hitless, with Kimbrel getting three outs

for his second save.Garza (0-1) made his

Milwaukee debut af-ter signing a $50 million, four-year contract as a free agent. He allowed one run and two hits in eight in-nings, struck out seven and walked none, throwing 65 of 90 pitches for strikes.

Garza had struggled during spring training, go-ing 1-3 with an 8.80 ERA in five outings. But he was sharp against the Brewers, retiring 11 in a row before walking Freddie Freeman.

This marked the first time both starting pitchers in a big league game had not allowed a hit through six innings since June 13, 2010, when Ted Lilly of the Cubs and Gavin Floyd of the White Sox accom-plished the feat, according to STATS. Alfonso Soriano doubled with two outs in the bottom of the seventh and scored on Chad Tra-

cy’s single, and Lilly didn’t allow a hit until pinch-hitter Juan Pierre’s lead-off single in the ninth. The Cubs won 1-0.

Harang retired his first seven batters before walk-ing Lyle Overbay, then re-tired 10 in a row before Schafer’s single.

Garza hit a dribbler in front of the plate in the sixth that Harang fielded cleanly and threw to first for the out. Gomez fol-lowed with a drive down the left-field line that hooked foul, then struck out.

Jason Heyward’s diving catch of a Ryan Braun liner to right in the fourth kept Harang’s no-hit bid intact.

NOTES: The Brewers start a six-game trip Friday to Boston and Philadel-phia. ... The Braves have Thursday off, then are at Washington on Friday in the Nationals’ opener.

APMatt Garza delivers a pitch Wednesday.

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FURNISHEDAPARTMENTS

2 and 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS.All utilities paid. Downtown / South Park. 304-292-9600kingdomrentals.com

2 BEDROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT.8 min. walk to Lair. Quality furniture, D/W, Microwave, heat and water included. Lighted Off Street Parking. Laundry facility. NO PETS. Year lease. 304-296-7476 or www.perilliapartments.com

2 ROOM/1 BATH APARTMENT. Perfect for grad student. All utilities for one person. No smoking/pets. References please. Leave message 304-296-4007

1,2 BR CLOSE CAMPUS. Parking In-cluded. Most Utilities Included. $500-630/mo. 304-241-1781

2BR. $620/MO+ELECTRIC. Includeswater & garbage. No Pets. Near downtown. Available May 15. 304-296-7764.

AFFORDABLE, CLEAN 1,2,3BR. Off-street parking. W/D. All utilities in-cluded. 370 Falling Run Road. NO PETS. 5/minute walk Mountainlair. Lease/dep re-quired. 304-594-2045 after 4pm.

APARTMENTS NEAR DOWNTOWN CAM-PUS. 1 & 2BR from $375/per month and up. Off street parking, NO PETS. 304-292-6921

ATTRACTIVE 1 & 2/BR APARTMENTS. Near Ruby and on Mileground. Plenty of parking. 292-1605

Renting for May 2014

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JUST LISTED! 1 & 2BR. 480 Dallas Street. W/D, parking. $455 - $495. Allutilities included. 304-288-1572 or 304-288-9662 or jewelmanllc.com

LARGE 2BR. D/W, W/D, office, dining room, back porch with grill. Off street park-ing. $840 includes utilities . 304-282-5772

SUNNYSIDE. NICE 2BR. 1/BA. WD. C/AC-HEAT $770/mo+ utilities. Small yard. Porch. NO PETS. Available 5/16/14. Lease/dep. 296-1848. Leave message.

SUNNYSIDE. NICE 4/BRS. 2/BA. WD. C/AC-HEAT. $1540/mo+ utilities. Small yard. Porch. NO PETS. Available 5/16/14. Lease/dep. 296-1848. Leave message.

THE DAILY ATHENAEUM Thursday April 3, 201414 | SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

wrestling

After 36 years, WVU and Turnbull part waysby jon fehrens

sports writer @dailyathenaeum

Craig Turnbull, the for-mer West Virginia Univer-sity wrestling coach, was fired Friday after 36 years of service. The four-time East-ern Wrestling League Coach of the Year was informed by WVU Athletic Director Ol-iver Luck that his contract would not be renewed. Turnbull guided the Moun-taineers to a 287-214-9 ca-reer record.

After a two-win season in 2013 and sending only one wrestler to compete in the NCAA Championships, Luck met with Turnbull in the offseason to discuss the future of West Virginia wres-tling. In that meeting, Turn-bull said Luck asked to de-fend his involvement in the program.

During that same dis-cussion, Turnbull said Luck brought up his age, 61, and questioned whether he has been involved in the pro-gram for too long.

Turnbull defended himself.

“That was like saying a sports writer couldn’t do his job at 22 because he was too young and didn’t know any-thing and couldn’t do it at 60 because he was too old,” Turnbull said to Bob Hertzel of the Times West Virginian.

At the conclusion of the meeting, Turnbull said ex-pectations have always been high for West Virginia wrestling and will con-tinue to stay that way. He also informed Luck that he was leaning toward retire-ment at the end of the 2015 season.

In January, Turnbull was elected to the Pennsylvania Wrestling Hall of Fame and several coaches were there to congratulate him. After the ceremony, a few of the coaches inquired if he was retiring. Not knowing how to respond, he asked why and the coaches informed Turnbull that Luck already contacted three coaches and interviewed two candi-dates for his position.

This prompted a second meeting between the two.

In the second meeting, Luck did not deny he con-tacted people but said he had not conducted any in-terviews. During that meet-ing, Turnbull discussed the potential of this season’s wrestling team and said they could become a Top-15 or Top-20 program.

The 2014 campaign has been far better than the 2013 one. The wrestling team currently holds an 11-7 record but is 0-3 in the Big 12 Conference.

The winless conference record may have spurred the

third and final interview be-tween the former wrestling coach and the athletic di-rector. When Turnbull was summoned to Luck’s office, he was greeted by Associ-ate Athletic Director Terrie Howes and a representative from the legal department at WVU along with Luck.

This is when Turnbull was informed his contract would not be renewed and he would not be allowed back to the wrestling fa-cilities. Luck released this statement after the meeting.

“Craig (Turnbull) has spent the last 36 years as the head of the Mountain-eer wrestling program, and we appreciate his many years of service to West Vir-ginia University. He took over at the helm of the WVU wrestling program in 1979 after serving as an assis-tant coach here under Fred Liechti, coaching hundreds of Mountaineer wrestlers along the way. We wish him the best.”

A nationwide search for a new wrestling coach has al-ready begun, but no favor-ites for the position have emerged.

Meanwhile, Turnbull is still deciding whether or not take legal action against the University with his attorney Paul E. Lewis.

[email protected]

kyle monroe/the daily athenaeumFormer WVU wrestling head coach Craig Turnbull questions a referee in a home match against Pitt.

women’s basketball

bussie, holmes earn honors after strong seasonsby keVin hooker

sports writer @dailyathenaeum

Senior Asya Bussie and sophomore Bria Holmes were each named to the Associated Press All-Amer-ican Honorable Mention list Tuesday.

The award is the first for each player and the fourth and fifth time a Mountain-eer has been named to the Honorable Mention list. Guards Yolanda Paige and Meg Bulger earned the honor in 2005 and 2006, respectively, and center Olayinka Sanni received recognition in 2008.

The Holmes/Bussie duo led the West Virginia wom-en’s basketball team to one of its most successful sea-sons in program history with the most wins in a season (30), a share of the

Big 12 Conference regu-lar season title, and a fifth straight appearance in the NCAA Tournament.

As the leading and sec-ond-leading scorers, re-spectively, Holmes and Bussie helped WVU score a total of 2,581 points this season, the most by a team in single season program history. The Mountain-eers had the No. 3 scoring offense (73.7 points per game) in the Big 12 this season and had a scoring margin of +14.8.

As a freshman, Holmes saw action in 30 games, shooting 32.7 percent from the floor with 6.0 points per game in 13.2 minutes. But she saw a bigger role as a sophomore, as her minutes per game (26.9) doubled from the previous season.

Holmes, a consensus All-Big 12 First Team se-

lection, scored 516 points this season while averag-ing 15.2 points and 3.5 re-bounds. She became just the sixth sophomore in Mountaineer women’s basketball history to score at least 500 points in a sea-son and 14th overall. The 6-foot-1 guard had a team-leading 25 games of at least 10 points, including nine 20-point outings.

A team co-captain, Bus-sie joined Holmes on the All-Big 12 First Team and earned additional recogni-tion on the Big 12 All-De-fensive Team and Big 12 All-Tournament Team. She closed out her five-year career with 1,497 points, 11th-most for a WVU wom-en’s basketball player. The Randallstown, Md., native is also No. 2 in WVU’s ca-reer record books with 270 blocked shots and 382 of-

fense rebounds and had a program-best and nation-leading 138 consecutive career games played and started.

After eliminating TCU and Texas in the Big 12 championship, the WVU women earned their high-est AP ranking in program history (No. 5) and were re-warded with a No. 2 seed in the Louisville bracket. Tournament expectations fell short, as WVU shot just 30 percent from the floor en route to a second round exit by No. 7-seed LSU.

Mike Carey is now 274-146 since joining WVU in 2001 but has never made it past the round of 32 in the NCAA Tournament.

“We definitely didn’t want to lose like this. We were planning on going a lot further (in the tour-nament),” Bussie said fol-

lowing her last game in a Mountaineer uniform. “Regardless, I’m really proud of this team and everything we’ve accom-plished this year.”

After sitting out in the 2013 season, the 6-foot-4 center returned with ven-geance in her final sea-son, averaging 12.9 points and 7.8 rebounds. Her 2.03 blocks per game (71 total) put her at No. 3 in conference.

Baylor’s Odyssey Sims earned AP All-America First Team for the second straight season and was the lone Big 12 player to repre-sent any of the three teams. She averaged 28.5 points per game and scored a ca-reer-high 48 points (6-10 from 3-point range) in a win over WVU in January.

[email protected]

Football

holgorsen will implement new defensive schemeby dillon dUrsT

sports writer @dailyathenaeum

With up-tempo, no-huddle offenses becom-ing more and more preva-lent in the college football world, coaching staffs across the nation are scrambling to invent new ways to stop – or at least slow down – the attack.

In implementing a mul-tischeme defense, WVU head coach Dana Hol-gorsen believes the Moun-taineers have finally found a solution to the offensive onslaught the defense has been subject to for the last two seasons.

“It’s what I’ve wanted to do since I’ve been here,” Holgorsen said in an in-terview with WVUsports.com. “I have to look at what gives us problems, because a lot of teams in the Big 12 (Conference) have similar defenses. The thing that gives us the most trouble is an odd defense, so that’s what we’re going to do.”

In 2014, the Mountain-eers will show an odd three-man front as they have in previous years but will shift around the line-backers and defensive backs to produce different looks.

“Being multiple on de-

fense is very important,” said junior linebacker Nick Kwiatkoski. “Everyone can run a certain defense, but if you can come out with different things and differ-ent formations, you will be fine. It’s a very big thing in the Big 12 because you see so many different offenses. You have teams with fast quarterbacks, run games and fast games.”

With most offenses in the Big 12 attempting to rattle off as many plays as possible in a game, it’s al-ways an uphill battle for defenses to properly line up before the snap. Hol-gorsen said the defense is making major strides this

spring in lining up quickly before the snap.

“I’ve been really im-pressed with how quickly they line up,” he said. “We face so many high-tempo offenses that we need to be able to do that. I think they’re doing an excellent job with that right now.”

Tony Gibson, West Vir-ginia’s first-year defen-sive coordinator, has been keeping the defense sim-ple up to this point. Gibson said he wants his players to have a firm understand-ing of the fundamentals of his defense before moving onto anything else.

“Right now, we’ve got a couple blitzes and base

coverage plays,” he said. “I want them to master that first to see what they can do. When you do a lot of things but you can’t mas-ter them, that’s when you see problems.”

The WVU coaching staff hopes to have all the kinks ironed out by the spring game set for April 12 at Mi-lan Puskar Stadium.

“As long as we’re play-ing hard, seeing the right stuff and playing the right guys, it’s going to be hard for them to get past us,” Gibson said. “We just want to get really good at what we’re doing.”

[email protected]

baseball

Confidence riding high for WVU after Pitt winby joe miTChin

sports writer @dailyathenaeum

There’s a good feeling going around the West Virginia dugout right now. It’s a team that is sweating, bleeding and oozing confidence. The current aura around the program is well deserved as the Mountaineers ride high on a current four-game winning streak.

“I like where we’re at right now,” said WVU head coach Randy Mazey. “We can’t just start drink-ing the Kool-Aid just yet. There’s a lot of work yet to do. It can go away as fast as it came.”

Th e Mou nt a i n e e rs completed a season sweep of Pitt Tuesday in a 6-4 victory over the Pan-thers. Defeating a rival

is always a good feeling, but the addition of Pitt coming off back-to-back sweeps inside the ultra-tough ACC is an added bonus.

WVU, 16-8 on the 2014 season, has crawled up to No. 13 in the nation’s RPI rankings. For a team that has set a goal to earn the school’s first postsea-son berth since 1996, the Mountaineers have no plans on stopping there.

Many thought the dom-inant pitching staff would be the money-maker for the club this season. To its credit, starters Harri-son Musgrave, Sean Car-ley and John Means all have ERAs under 2.50 en-tering into April.

However, the explosion of the team’s offense has proven to be a real differ-ence maker. Junior out-

fielder Bobby Boyd hits a talented group of hit-ters with a .375 average, including a team-high 39 hits. Second baseman Billy Fleming, first base-man Ryan McBroom and shortstop Taylor Munden all join Boyd with a .300 average or better.

“Confidence is every-thing to a hitter,” Mazey said. “It doesn’t matter what part of the lineup we’re in, I have confi-dence in our guys that we can extend innings. Things can happen ... if you’ve got a good offen-sive team.”

The Mountaineers are exactly where they want to be as conference play in the Big 12 comes in full force. Mazey, sec-ond-year head coach of the Mountaineers, said the team’s first 20 games

of the season are impor-tant in dictating how the year would go.

Despite the early suc-cess of the team, Mazey and the rest of the team have remained even-keeled and now chalked up and covered up the team’s newly found swag-ger to things outside the lines.

“Our guys are used to adversity and not being comfortable,” Mazey said. “When you do throw a lit-tle comfort our way, our guys respond pretty well.”

While the momentum has built for the Moun-taineers, the road that lies ahead remains diffi-cult. WVU will travel for its first conference road series this weekend when the team heads to TCU before returning to Mor-gantown the following

weekend to host Okla-homa State. Throw in a sprinkling of Big 10 play April 8 and April 15 dates against Penn State and Ohio State, respectively, and the daunting sched-ule becomes a reality.

If anything has shown in the first month and a half of the season, though, it’s how these Mountaineers are ready for anything that stands in their way. The confi-dence is up, so is their win total.

[email protected]

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3/BR. 2/BA. Available 5/16/14. WD. DW. Yard. Parking. Walk to stadium/downtown. $1250/mo plus utilities. Lease/dep. NO PETS. Call 502-370-5182 or 304-288-7525

4/BR HOUSE FOR RENT on Charles Ave.$1500/mo ($375 per person) + utilities. No pets. Available May 30th. Call 304-692-7587.

AVAILABLE AUGUST 1ST. 4BR house, close to downtown/campus. W/D, large front porch. $1500/month. 304-685-7835

WHY PAY SUMMER RENT? 9 month lease available. 3BR/1.5BA. $1,425/month includes utilities. W/D, offstreet parking, near Mountainlair, 604 Cayton St. Call 304-319-1243

ROOMMATESNICE 4/BR HOUSE. Private bathroom. 2 min. from College. $500/month, includes all utilities. 740-381-0361

AUTOMOBILESFOR SALE

CASH PAID!! WE BUY CARS and trucks.Any make! Any model! Any condition! 304-282-2560

HELP WANTED

HELP OUR SON who is facing uncommon challenges, including mobility, intellectual, vision and hearing impairment. This is an employment opportunity for students inter-ested in teaching or providing care for indi-viduals with disabilities on holidays and in summer. Employment is through REM. Ad-ditional information from his family: 304-598-3839.

RELIABLE YARD HELPER. Mid April thru Oct. Need vehicle. 5 mins from UHS. $8/hr. Apply at: [email protected]

FURNISHEDAPARTMENTS

THE DAILY ATHENAEUM CLASSIFIEDS | 15THURSDAY APRIL 3, 2014

THE DAILY ATHENAEUM THURSDAY APRIL 3, 201416 | SPORTS

WELCOME BACK! We hope you had an awesome spring break! We’re kicking off some spring deals at Vandalia Hall next week that you won’t want to miss.

Starting Monday, March 24th you can Skip the Security Deposit (a $400 value) when you sign

your lease to live at Vandalia Hall 2014 – 2015! You heard us right. Sign your lease for 2014 – 2015

between Monday, March 24 - Friday, April 4 and your security deposit fee will be waived!

VANDALIA HALLAPARTMENTS

So what’s stopping you?Live at Vandalia Hall Apartments!

SKIP THE

SECURITY

DEPOSIT!

LEASINGSPECIALS

Stop by our leasing offi ce at49 Falling Run Road

Call our leasing team at 304.293.0543

[email protected]

WELCOME BACK! We hope you had an awesome spring break! We’re kicking off some spring deals at College Park next week that you

won’t want to miss.

Starting Monday, March 24th you can Skip the Security Deposit (a $400 value) when you sign your lease to live at College Park 2014 – 2015! You heard us right. Sign your lease for 2014 – 2015 between Monday, March 24 - Friday, April 4 and your security deposit fee will be waived!

So what’s stopping you?Live at the Top - Live at College Park!

Stop by our leasing table in theMountainlair Commons area or the ERC leasing table (next to the dining hall)

for more information!

Call our leasing team at 304.293.5840collegepark.wvu.edu

CKKK!!! WWWe hhhope you hhhaddd an

LEASINGSPECIALS

COLLEGE PARK APARTMENTS SKIP THESECURITYDEPOSIT!

AP

Bagered: Wisconsin tightens D in NCAA run, ready for Kentucky

APWisconsin’s Josh Gasser, center, answers questions from members of the media during a news conference at the NCAA tournament March 28.

MADISON, Wis. (AP) —Wisconsin has been bad-gering opponents during its run to the Final Four.

The talk at the start of the season was all about the new emphasis on rules to prevent college basketball from turning into virtual hand-to-hand combat. The goals: Limit the pushing, grabbing and arm-barring. Improve scoring, shooting percentages and the over-all flow of the game.

One team, at least, didn’t have to adjust much, if at all.

Advantage, Wisconsin.

Changing defense was one less thing the Badgers (30-7) had to worry about during an already memo-rable season that has Wis-consin facing Kentucky (28-10) in the Final Four on Saturday.

“The thing about valu-ing the basketball, playing good position defense, try-ing not to give up easy bas-kets, doing all the things that we’re trying to do ... I just think that our guys have shown that they’ve been pretty consistent with the basics,” coach Bo Ryan said.

There are more offensive options on the floor than the typical Badgers team, which has helped com-pensate for a defense that at times didn’t measure up to the program’s high stan-dards. This year, Wiscon-sin is 37th in the NCAA in allowing 63.7 points per game - pretty good, but still out of the top 10 for the first time since 2005-6.

But the Badgers have tightened up in the tourna-ment, allowing 56.8 points per game, eight less than in games played before March Madness began. The spread

is similar in field-goal de-fense with foes shooting 37 percent in the tourney compared to 43 percent before the NCAAs. Oppo-nents’ 3-point shooting in the tourney is 31 percent, down from 34 percent.

It helps to have 7-foot center Frank Kaminsky protecting the rim. Against Baylor in the regional semi-finals, Kaminsky had six blocks.

Wisconsin’s style of play under Ryan “is so unique,” said Patrick Chambers, coach at Big Ten rival Penn State. “He does such a good

job of playing hard without fouling, funnel you into Kaminsky.”

Like any good coach still in the hunt, Ryan will just as easily point to things to improve. The new rules emphasis, though, proba-bly wasn’t on high on the list.

“We haven’t been a ‘handsy’ team in the past, so we just need to keep working on our position-ing and our footwork,” Ryan said in December. Back then, defense was a work in progress, but more for those reasons outlined by

Ryan than for the rules.“You’ve just got to learn

from it. You’ve got to kind of figure out how things are being called throughout the game,” said Josh Gas-ser, one of the Big Ten’s top defensive players. “As the season’s gone on, you don’t really think about it at all. It’s just kind of part of the game.”

But opponents were ad-justing their games, too, on top of dealing with the rules emphasis. Chambers said that high mid-major teams, especially, had to adjust.