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Transcript of 321: Universe Paper
8/12/2019 321: Universe Paper
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/321-universe-paper 1/18
Serving the Brigham Young University Community
universe.byu.eduFebruary 19 – 25, 2013
P A G
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@UniverseMetro, @UniverseCampus
Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah
B y S P E N C E R S H A M O
It is safe to say that col lege life for BYU softball
outfielder Carly Duckworth is built around the
sport she loves. While she attends classes like
any other student, she also practices for four
to five hours each day. This is, after a ll, what
it takes to compete at the college level, and win.
But the hours — and li fe — spent in dedication
to a sport can mean preparation for life beyond
competition doesn’t happen.
A recent study published by Sports Illustrated
in March 2012 showed 78 percent of NFL play-
ers and 60 percent of NBA players go bankrupt
shortly after retirement. Trevor Wilson, directorof the Athletic Advisement Center, is someone
trying to make sure these statistics don’t affect
BYU’s athletes. He believes the scope of his job
goes beyond keeping athletes elig ible to play.
“Our job really doesn’t end until (student-ath-
letes) are securely in a career and self-reliant,”
Wilson said. “It’s more than just college. These
are life skills that also come along with student
athletes that, I feel, we have the responsibility
to teach.”
The process Wilson has designed for athletes
mirrors what he learned from visits with the
Marriott School. Once students have entered
the program, they begin a process of learning
career-finding skills that will land them a job
after graduation.
This year, Wilson began a three-phase pro-
cess that helps prepare athletes for life after
their sport. The phases consist of career work-
shops, labs and fairs. So far the results have been
positive.
“It started slow,” Wilson said. “This (career)
culture wasn’t here. Now we’re starting to get
really good numbers out of these workshops
because there’s momentum.”
Without the necessary tools, most athletes’
focus is naturally on the sport they’ve been prac-
ticing most of their lives. For this reason, the
administration has worked hard to make sure
athletes are prepared to leave the university.
BYU football coach Bronco Mendenhall said
he knows his players have the goal to be in the
NFL, and he said he wants them to be leaders if
they make it there. However, according to Lamar
C. Campbell, who wrote the article, “For retired
NFL players, the most challenging ‘season’ is just begi nni ng,” the avera ge reti rement age of
an NFL player is 28. Mendenhal l wants his play-
ers to know they have 50 years of life afterwards.
“I’ve been really trying to help our players see
that perspective,” Mendenhall said. “I really do
focus a lot on the educational component, just
making sure they know the numbers. … I think
(the NFL) is a great thing if they can be one of
the 30 percent that play three years or longer and
stay away from all the things that are hard and
problematic that many leave the league with.”
He said the new career path of fered by BYU is
a way to educate players about their future lives
and how much life there is to live after football
or any sport. He al so said it helps them afterward
to use skills they’ve learned.
See ATHLETES on Page 3
Complaints of local gymmemberships skyrocket
B y S T E P H A N I E P R O B E R T
The new year is here, and many
students have a resolution to get
in better shape. However, without
proper research, contracts can make
or break a person’s gym experience.
The number of complaints about
gym contracts doubled from 2011to 2012, according to the Utah Bet-
ter Business Bureau. It received 330
complaints dealing with either bro-
ken verbal promises or unknown
clauses in contracts last year.
The Utah Division of Consumer
Protection noted that gyms were one
of the top 10 most-complained-about
industries in the past year.
Brad Coons, an exercise science
major from Alamo, Calif., is one
of many students who found unex-
pected requirements with his gym
contract. When Brad served his mis-
sion he was locked into a two-year
contract with an option to “freeze”
his membership while he was abroad.
Coons paid all of his fees for the
two years up front and expected that
when he got home from his mission
he would be able to sell what would b e
left of his contract. Coons found out,
however, that he did not fully under-
stand all of the stipulations.
His contract had expired upon his
return, leaving him nothing to sell
and forcing him to stay at this par-
ticular gym for a year and a half to
get his money’s worth.
Coons was also promised he could
use all of the gyms nationwide, which
he later found out was limited to 10
visits outside the gym in P rovo.
“It’s been really frustrating
because I can’t get a straight answer
and you can never trust what they
are saying because many gyms work
off commission, so their salespeople
just want to make money,” Coo ns
said.
Coons’ wife, Rachel Coons, is a per-
sonal trainer at another gym in Utah
and says many people choose to work-
out where she works because there is
no contract.
“People come in all the time
and ask if we have contracts. Once
they find out that we don’t, they
are ecstatic and tell me about how
unhappy they have been with recent
contracts they have been in,” RachelCoons said.
Most of the issues that arise come
from members not fully reading
the contracts and not knowing all
the details. This comes from either
being rushed into a decision by a
promotion, having a sales represen-
tative tell the client something differ-
ent than what is in the contract, or
members simply not taking the time
to educate themselves.
Jane Driggs, president of the Utah
Better Business Bureau, says most
of the complaints the BBB receives
on this matter relate to people being
stuck in a contract or their sales rep-
resentative telling them something
other than what was actually writ-
ten. She offers this advice: read the
fine print.
“Complaints made to the Better
Business Bureau used to be that t he
gym was too crowded or unclean;
now they are mainly about contracts.
Probably 80 percent of the complaints
we get could be avoided if people too k
the time to fully read what they are
getting into,” Driggs said.
Along with this advice, she says
to be sure everything promised by a
salesperson is in the contract. If it is
not, she advises to have the salesper-
son write it in and initial it.
“Oftentimes, these people are on
commission, which leads to a lot of
complaints of people getting prom-
ised things that are not actually writ-
ten into the contract,” Driggs said.
See GYMS on Page 3
Designs for the Provo CityCenter Temple released
Highly anticipateddetails answerquestions about
newest LDS structure
B y L A U R E N M Y R I C K
The release of the designs for the
Provo City Center Temple has resi-
dents, students and employees of
Provo and surrounding areas eager
for the completion of the building.
Provo’s Community Development
office received official bid plans for
the temple and surrounding grounds
from The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, and the Church
is going to great lengths to preserve
the historical nature of the old Provo
Tabernacle.
“Upon entering the new temple,
its familiarity to the historic tab-
ernacle will be evident,” said David
Hall, director of Temple Design Ser-
vices in the Church’s Special Projects
Department.
The temple will have four floors and
will be 85,084 square feet. The main
entrance will be located on the south
side of the building with an additional
entrance from the underground park-
ing area, which holds 245 vehicles.
The plans reveal that thi s temple will
have elaborate grounds and less sur-
face parking than most other temples.
When the temple was first
announced, it was estimated that the
Provo City Center Temple would be
available for use in early 2 015, but that
date is not set in st one.
“Excellent progress is being made
on the construction, but given the
complexity of working with a historic
structure, it is still too early in the
process to provide a meaningful date,”
said Scott Trotter, spokesperson for
the LDS Church.
Dixon Holmes, Provo’s deputy
mayor of economic development,
thinks the temple and the grounds
will be a wonderful addition to the
community and will benefit everyone.
“We don’t anticipate the temple
parking to be a problem in downtown.
We are excited about the amount of
new traffic this will bring downtown,
of which temple patrons may choose to
eat or shop while downtown .”
Dan Stubbs, Provo’s chief building
official, agreed, saying, “The new
temple will increase business activity
and add to t he downtown experience.”
Holmes anticipates that the histori-
cal nature of the entire facility will
elevate the quality of the downtown
experience.
“People have a history with this
building,” he said. “They will want to
come see how it fits into downtown.
They will discover that there is so
much to see and do in downtown t hat
they were not previously aware (of).
Not everyone coming to the temple
will be going inside. There will be
wedding parties, visitors and those
who just want a nice, peaceful respite
in a busy urban setting.”
Provo City employees aren’t the
only ones excited for the completion
of the new Provo temple. Students, too,
feel enthusiasm to attend another tem-
ple in Provo.
“It is such a blessing that the temple
is coming to that area of Provo,” said
Emilie Davis, a human development
major from Lehi.
See TEMPLE on Page 3
Photo by Whitnie Soelberg
The designs for the Provo City Temple have 245 underground parking spots.
Athletes prepare for life after BYU
Photo illustration by Chris Bunker
BYU Athletic Advisement Center works to help athletes to prepare for a future outside of sports.
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2 The Universe, February 19 – 25, 2013
WEATHERTUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
UNIVERSE ONLINE
Continue reading these stories and more at universe.byu.edu
Sources: National Weather Service, BYU Astronomy Department
Photo by Winston Behle
A view of Franklin Elementary School, where drug sales involving sixth graders was discovered.
Photo by Sarah Hill
A Harlem Shake dance mob broke out in themiddle of the Wilkinson Student Center completewith unicorns and bunnies.
BYU custodian killed inFrontRunner accident
A man died after being struck by a FrontRun-
ner train Feb. 15 at the intersection of 700 West
and 600 South.
About 7:30 a.m., Douglas Crow, a BYU custo-
dian, was riding his bicycle when he was hit by
the train. Provo Police Lt. Mathew Siufanua said
a woman driving an Escalade hit Crow’s bike and
pushed him in front of the approaching train.
Story continues at unvr.se/VW5oFr
Photo by Chris Bunker
The Tree of Wisdom has been moved to its newlocation near the JSB.
Tree of Wisdom finds anew permanent home
The Tree of Wisdom, originally built in 1975,
recently moved to its third location by the Brim-
hall Building. This will be the new permanent
home of the sculpture.
BYU chose the new location for a vari-
ety of reasons, including opening up the
quad south of the Spencer W. Kimball
Tower to make room for campus activities.
Story continues at unvr.se/ZfSweg
43 41 39
Mostly Cloudy Chance Snow Partly Cloudy
23 16 16
P R E C I P I T A T I O NFebruary 2013: 0.26”
2013: 1.15”
Winter camp brings joyto teen amputees
For teenagers who have had a limb amputated,
the term “disability” doesn’t describe them in the
least.
The Shriners Hospital for Children in Salt L ake
City has organized a youth camp for teen ampu-
tees between the ages of 12 and 18.
The camp, Unlimbited, was created in 2004 as a
support group for youth and their peers to be able
to talk about their experiences.
Story continues at unvr.se/ZfRW0c
Harlem Shake meets BYU
Amanda Childs was taking a break from her
English teaching studies to check emails a nd eat
her lunch in the Wilkinson St udent Center when
she was surrounded by a mob of dancers dressed in
crazy costumes including a bunny outfit, a unicorn
mask and a striped blue onesie. She was caught
in the middle of the BYU Harlem Shake, which
has recently become a viral YouTube sensation.
Story continues at unvr.se/14XcWrQ
Drug ring discoveredin Provo schools
An eighth grader from Centennial Middle
School was arrested for allegedly operating a drug
trafficking ring using sixth graders from Frank-
lin Elementary School.
The 14-year-old suspect would meet the elemen-
tary children in front of Franklin Elementary
School and give them enough money to buy dr ugs
from an unknown location. The children would
then bring the drugs back to the eighth grader.
Story continues at http://unvr.se/14XcDxh
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Public health studentsempathize with impoverished
B y T I M S H A W
Utah Valley University public
health students experienced a
month of poverty as the depart-
ment faculty coordinated with
Community Action Partnership
of Utah to host a poverty simu-
lation on Feb 8.
“The students in our program
learn about health disparities
and issues facing low-incomepopulations in several classes,”
said Sue Smith Jackson, assis-
tant professor of community
health. “We are hoping this sim-
ulation will bring a deeper level
of insight and awareness to
their educational experience.”
According to Community
Action Partnership (CAP),
about 76,000 people in Utah
County, including 20,000 chil-
dren, live in povert y. CAP hosts
poverty simulations in hopes of
raising awareness of poverty in
Utah.
Faculty members and CAP
volunteers act as employers,
social workers, pawnbrokers,
utility bill collectors and oth-
ers whom individuals living inpoverty must confront.
Kelly Casey, a CAP employee,
adds unexpected difficulty for
some participants by rummag-
ing through program packets
left unattended and stealing
imitation Social Security cards
and fake money. As the pro-
gram’s appointed illegal activi-
ties person, her job is “to make
the simulation a little more
real.” She does not wear a badge
like the other role-players.
Participants in the simu-
lation are assigned to family
groups and given certain roles
to play. At each 15-minute inter-
val, family groups end the “day”
meeting in their home and pre-
paring for their next task. The
three hours between 9 a.m. and
noon will take them through
the struggles that families liv-ing in poverty face during a
typical month.
“They will see situations
of other people from a whole
different light,” Karen Hill, a
United Way resource develop-
ment employee, said. Hill’s role
as the utility company repre-
sentative included collecting
past-due bills and shutting off
electricity for some families.
She hopes participants will
understand poverty is “not a
matter of choice, it’s a matter
of situation and unforeseen
circumstances.”
Kaitlan Marsden, volunteer
coordinator for Community
Action Services, said pov-erty does not typically seem
as people expect it. “Poverty
really does exist here; it’s just
more hidden,” Marsden said.
“If things don’t match our ste-
reotypes, we often miss seeing
them.”
Many families living in pov-
erty, according to Marsden, are
two-parent Caucasian families
with at least part-time work.
According to CAP’s research,
13.5 percent of Utah residents
are living below the poverty
line.
While this is UVU public
health department’s first pov-
erty simulation, CAP can read-
ily bring the same program
and materials to organizationsinterested in participating in
their own simulation. Contact
Community Action Partnership
of Utah at 801.433.3025 for more
information.
Nature center renamed for wildlife advocateB y S A M A N T H A G I L B E R T
The Great Salt Lake Nature
Center at Farmington Bay,
home to a variety of wildlife,
was renamed the Robert N.
Hasenyager Great Salt Lake
Nature Center to honor a long-
time wildlife advocate.
Hasenyager is a former Utah
Division of Wildlife Resources
member as well as executive
director of the Utah Wildlife
in Need Foundation. He has
been a key advocate for the
center but was recently diag-
nosed with a terminal illness.This discovery, in addition to
his retirement, allowed him to
slow down on his work and be
recognized for his efforts.
On Saturday, Feb. 9, the
center was officially renamed
as speakers, including Hase-
nyager, were able to share a
few words.
Hasenyager started the Utah
Wildlife in Need Foundation
and put together a temporary
nature center at Farmington
Bay. These efforts allowed
further exploration and
conservation of the general
Utah ecosystem as well as of
the wildlife that inhabit the
area.
Dean Mitchell, Utah Divisionof Wildlife Resources outreach
chair, was a key member in the
decision to rename the center.
“Bob had a vision to help peo-
ple, in general, understand the
Great Salt Lake ecosystem,”
Mitchell said.
Mitchell said the legacy
Hasenyager will leave to his
family and the State of Utah is
immense and that he has done
a lot to deserve this. “It was a
beautiful ceremony,” he said.
Diana Vos, director and the
only full-time employee of the
center, said Hasenyager “was
instrumental in getting the
nature center to become what
it is t oday.”
Vos works with a large num-
ber of volunteers to keep thecenter up and running. The
center takes pride in running
field trips for fourth-grade
students. Hosting scouts of
various ages and providing
the programming they need to
meet various badges is another
key role of the center.
John Preston, a business
finance major from Burley,
Idaho, is an avid bird hunter
and has always been interested
in the center.
“It’s so fun to go out and be
at the center with friends and
family,” Preston said.
There is always room for
visitors, volunteers or other
exhibits of interest to the pub-
lic. Volunteer supply is short,
and the need for willing work-ers is always great. Visit great-
saltlakenaturecenter.org for
more information.
Photo by Dean Mitchell
Robert Hasenyager holds his grandson as he speaks at the renam-
ing of the Great Salt Lake Nature Center, now called the Robert N.Hasenyager Great Salt Lake Nature Center.
“Poverty really does
exist here; it’s justmore hidden.”
Kaitlan MarsdenVolunteer coordinator,
Community Action Services
February 19 –25, 2013 Volume 66, Issue 23 universe.byu.edu152 BRMB, BYU, Provo, Utah 84602
EDITOR
Rebecca Lane SECTION EDITORS
Sara Phelps Natalie Sivertsen
CAMPUS
Kurt Hanson Robin Rodgers
METRO
Stephanie LacyOPINION
Kelly Haight Carlie Ellett
SPORTS
Megan Adams Charles Beacham
LIFE, ETC.
Alex Hoeft Madeleine Brown
DIGITAL
COPY EDITORS
Laura Thomas Cassidy Wadsworth
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Chris BunkerPHOTO CHIEF
Sarah Hill Whitnie Soelberg Elliott Miller
SENIOR REPORTER
Scott Hansen
DESIGNERS
Jenn Cardenas Rebekah Harris Lauren Prochelo
James Gardner Brad Davis David Bowman Brett Bertola
PRODUCTION TEAM
Thomas Busath Macie Bayer
CIRCULATION
Devin Bell Nathan Allen
PROGRAMMERS
Bobby Swingler Eric Bowden
WEB CONTENT
Kristina Smith
P R O F E S S I O NAL S T AF F
DIRECTOR
Steve Fidel
BUSINESS MANAGER
Ellen Hernandez DESIGN MANAGER
Warren Bingham FACULTY ADVISER
Joel Campbell
The Universe is an official publication of
Brigham Young University and is produced asa cooperative enterprise of students and faculty.It is published as a laboratory newspaper by theCollege of Fine Arts and Communications andthe Department of Communications under thedirection of a professional management staff.
The Universe is published weekly except dur-ing vacation and examination periods.
The opinions expressed do not necessarilyreflect the views of the student body, faculty,university administration, Board of Trustees orThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Copyright 2013 Brigham Young University.
For more news, including audio and video, visit
universe.byu.edu
Fax 801-422-017 7
News 801-422-2957
Advertising 801-422-7102 Circulation 801-422-2897
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The Universe, February 19 – 25, 2013 3
GYMS
Avoiding problems
Continued from Page 1
Another complaint Driggs
noted was that people sign
contracts and then cannot
afford the monthly payments.“Once you have signed it
you have a legal responsibil-
ity to hold up your end. If you
can’t afford it, don’t sign up,”
Driggs said.
Mike Tait, a psychology
graduate from Phelan, Calif.,
has been a member of a local
gym since 2007 and is satis-
fied with his gym member-
ship. When he first signed up
he heard many reviews that
his particular gym scams
people, but Tait chose to do
his homework.
“I went into the gym to
sign up, (and) I did something
that I am pretty sure the vas t
majority of people who get
memberships don’t do: I read
the contract,” Tait said.
Tait said he learned many
gyms have an auto-renewal
clause in their contracts.
Unless otherwise stated,
memberships remain active
even after contracts expire.
He made a conscious effort to
remember the dates he agreedupon, finished out his con-
tract, signed off, and has had
no issues.
“I think the moral of the
story here is that you need
to know what you are getting
into when you sign a contract
and how that contract is going
to end, whether it be by your
efforts or automatically. I
understood what the con-
tract said and therefore left
my gym a happy customer,”
Tait said.
The BBB says consumers
should take their time read-
ing any contract. If the deal
seems rushed or is presented
as a limited-time offer, it is
smart to wal k away.
The BBB also advises peo-
ple to research a gym before
signing a contract. Take into
account the budget needed for
the membership and check
out the gym at peak times.
Watch out for salespeople’s
pressure and carefully read
the contract and understandthe policies.
Before consumers sign a
contract, they should under-
stand it can last for months
or years, some gyms require
cancellation fees, and it can
be hard to transfer a member-
ship when moving.
The BBB said it success-
fully resolved 94 percent of
complaints about Utah gyms
last year. However, consum-
ers can avoid most of the con-
fusion and frustration they
face if they do their research
before signing a binding gym
contract.
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T U E S D A Y
T H U R S D A Y
T U E S D A Y
T H U R S D A Y
W E D N E S D A Y
T H U R S D A Y
W E D N E S D A Y
W E D N E S D A Y
T H U R S D A Y
T U E S D A Y
T H U R S D A Y
THE UNIVERSE CALENDAR FEBRUARY 19 – 25
ATHLETES
Planning for lifeoutside of sports
Continued from Page 1
“Football can be, really, a
vehicle to prepare them for
(life),” Mendenhall said. “The
NFL is the same. So our pro-
gram and the NFL can help
them prepare for life, but it’s
not an end-all. It’s just a way
to become someone of true sub-
stance and potential.”
As athletes get closer to theend of their athletic careers,
they come to this realization
and need to understand how
to reach their potential. Ath-
letes can be caught off-guard,
but this program is trying to
prevent that.
“At the beginning of this
year, I was really nervous,”
Duckworth said. “I was com-
ing into my junior year and
I had figured out my major,
but I needed to look past that
to what I am going to do after
college.” To do so, Duckworth
harnessed what the Athletic
Advisement Center offers stu-
dent athletes.
Duckworth explained with
the introduction of the career
path she became excited
because it was exactly what
she needed. She has attended
all the sessions and has found
a path after college that excites
her. She said one thing shelearned was how to leverage
her experience to employers.
“You learn so much through
athletics like teamwork, hard
work, being coachable and
time management,” Duck-
worth said. “All these different
skills that we’ve learned can
translate over to an occupa-
tion. Just helping us to recog-
nize that was really helpful
because I always thought I’d
been at a disadvantage.” And
the opportunities for student-
athletes to learn how to transi-
tion continue to ramp up.
“The Student-Athlete Aca-
demic Center will continue
conducting these workshops
next semester,” associate
thletic Director Janie Penfield
said. ”Some teams have estab-
lished mentor relationships to
assist with the transition from
college to the professional
ranks.”For now, Duckworth contin-
ues her life of morning classes,
afternoon practices and eve-
nings in the Student Athlete
Building. But she feels her
future outside of sports is more
secure now.
TEMPLE
Design plans
revealed for former Provo Tabernacle
Continued from Page 1
“I’m not worried that people
will stop going to the older Provo
Temple,” Davis continued. “The
Provo City Center Temple will
have a sense of coolness because
it’s new, so it will be exciting to go
there. But I can walk to the older
temple, so that is probably where I
will continue to attend.”
Due to the historic nature and
landscaping plans for the new
temple, Stubbs thinks it will be a“great place to hold weddings and
enjoy pictures of the grounds.”
Trotter is excited about the pro-
spective weddings to happen at the
new temple.
“The historical preservation,
interior features and extensive
landscaping of the new temple will
create a beautiful setting for visi-
tors and temple patrons, includ-
ing couples being sealed in the
temple,” he said.
With the addition of the Provo
City Center Temple, Provo City
will be the second city with a pair
of temples. South Jordan beat
Provo to the punch in 2009 withthe Oquirrh Mountain and Jordan
River temples.
“It is inspired to build a temple
out of the ashes of the tabernacle,”Elder Jeffrey R. Holland said at the
new Provo temple’s ground break-
ing. “Having two temples within
miles of each other is a tribute
to you that the brethren would
approve another temple here. That
says very much about you.”
Photo by Whitnie Soelberg
The LDS Church hopes to maintain the historical nature of the old Provo Tabernacle.
Photo by Elliott Miller
BYU student Alyssa Petty works out in a local gym.
8/12/2019 321: Universe Paper
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4 The Universe, February 19 – 25, 2013
Utah House approves billextending 80 mph speed limit
B y S T E P H A N I E P R O B E R T
A bill to increase the num-
ber of 80 mph speed zones was
passed in the Utah House with
a 69-5 vote.
The Utah Department of
Transportation would add more
strips where drivers could go 80
mph along Interstates 15, 80 and84 if approved by the senate.
Current law allows several 80
mph test areas on I-15 in places
such as Nephi and Cedar City for
the past four years. If this bill is
approved it would let drivers go
80 mph from Santaquin to St.
George, which covers nearly 240
miles.
HB83 also proposes 80 mph
zones to be placed on I-15 from
Brigham City to the Idaho state
line, on I-84 between Tremonton
and Idaho, and on I-80 from the
Nevada line to the Tooele-Stans-
bury exit.
There are over 800 students at
BYU who call Nevada home, and
more than 1,700 from Idaho, and
many are excited about the newchanges they could see on their
drives home. TJ Thomas, a com-
puter science major from Las
Vegas, Nev., drives home at least
once a month and sees the poten-
tial changes as a reasonable step.
“I really am excited for this
change. People already drive
that fast anyways, and making
it legal means faster travel times
and fewer problems with police.
I think if the speed limit was
upped to 80, traffic violations
would go down,” Thomas said.
In Thomas’s experience he
feels that the change from 75 to 80
mph in these certain areas will
only be positive for drivers who
regularly use the roads.
“I’ve never seen any traffic oraccidents while driving in the 80
mph test areas. The difference
between 75 and 80 isn’t enough to
make people lose control of their
cars,” Thomas said.
Rep. James Dunnigan, R-Tay-
lorsville, is the sponsor of the
bill and said research proves
this bill is realistic, needed and
necessary. UDOT has conducted
research since 2008 and found
that 85 percent of drivers were
actually driving 82 mph in the
75 mph zone. Therefore, he sup-
ports the bill because of the logic
behind it.“The bottom line is people
were already going that fast and
now they can do it legally. People
have a comfort of how fast they
will go, and it is around 82–84,”
Dunnigan said.
Dunnigan said the increase
in speed limit will only be placed
on roads which qualify and are
deemed safe enough. These parts
of the highway would have to be
straight for a long distance and
have strips that are fairly level,
with no sharp curves or moun-
tainous topography.
Supporters of the bill believe
this change in speed limit will
have little to no negative impact
on the safety of travelers. In the
research Dunnigan and a teamof engineers conducted, they
found when the speed limit was
75 mph the average driver went
82 mph. When they increased it
to 80 mph in the test areas the
average driver went 84 mph.
“We found that drivers only
increased their speed by two
miles per hour. It was almost the
same. The only difference now
is that people can do it legally,”
Dunnigan said.
In their four-year study,
researchers found that when
the speed limit was increased
to 80 mph there was actually a
decrease of accidents by 11 per-
cent in one area and 20 percent
in another, with no fatalities.
Dunnigan jokingly attributesthis to people actually looking
at the road instead of checking
for cops pulling them over.
Ty Sivertsen, a political sci-
ence major from Las Vegas,
agrees with Dunnigan in that
there will be no issue of safety
with an increase in speed.
“Most people go 80 mph
already, so what difference
would it make? In all the times
I’ve driven through the 80 mph
test zones, I have never seen an
accident or problem,” Sivertsen
said.
Sivertsen drives on I-15 a cou-
ple times per semester to visit
home and thinks most regular
travelers will be supportive.
“Really, since everyone isalready going around 80 mph on
I-15 this law change will not have
much impact on the way people
drive on I-15. I think anyone
who drives these (roads) regu-
larly will hope this bill passes,”
Sivertsen said.
Some opposers of the bill have
questioned if the increase in
speed would cause an increase
in air pollution. Dunnigan
said there is nothing to worry
about. The effects on air pollu-
tion would be very little for two
reasons. One, the places UDOT
is proposing the change are in
rural areas, where the pollu-
tion level is relatively low. Two,
UDOT measured the pollutants
in modern cars and found that
there is little to no difference
in the level of pollution with the
increase in mph.
“Modern cars are not like old
cars where the faster you went
the more pollution it created. In
the newer cars, there is hardly
any difference if you are going
65, 75 or 80 mph,” Dunnigan said.
Because Utah is such a large
state with lots of distance to
travel, there was a large need
and desire from travelers to
increase the speed limits. Many
supporters of the bill believe
with the increase will come with
a better rate of compliance from
drivers.
The bill will wait until the sen-
ate makes a final decision.
UNIVERSE.BYU.EDU
News, Sports, Life, Opinion, Police Beat
T h e C l e v e r
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For tickets, visit BYUarts.com or call theBYU Ticket Of fice at (801) 422-4322.
Visit BYUarts.com for a complete performance calendar including free events.
Non-LDS professors at BYUB y K E L S E Y S N O W D E N
The Star of David, Crucifix
and Islamic star and crescent
are a few of the many religious
symbols that are not commonly
seen at BYU.
Though it would be easy to
assume that all students, fac-ulty and staff at BYU are mem-
bers of The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, this
is not the case.
One example is Professor
John Hughes, a Pulitzer Prize
winning journalist, a commu-
nications professor at BYU and
a member of the Christian Sci-
ence Church.
Hughes is a former reporter
for and editor of the Christian
Science Monitor, an inter-
national news organization,
where he was a foreign corre-
spondent and worked in Africa
and Asia. It was during his trav-
els that he first met a member of
the LDS church.
“The first Mormon that I evermet was in Cape Town, South
Africa,” Hughes said. “He was
a very nice fellow and said he
was a Mormon. I didn’t have
any idea what a Mormon was.”
Hughes would learn a great
deal about the Mormons in
the years to come. His career
as a journalist later led him
to become the associate direc-
tor of United States Informa-
tion Agency for the Reagan
Administration.
While working for the Rea-
gan administration, he met his
future wife, who was a BYU
graduate in print and television
journal ism.
“I didn’t know much about
her but that she was a verynice person,” Hughes said. “I
didn’t smoke or drink and nor
did she.”
Through his success as a
jour nal ist, Hughe s later met
President Gordon B. Hinckley,
who asked him to become the
editor of the Desert News in Salt
Lake City, a position he held for
10 years.
“President Gordon B. Hinck-
ley was astoundingly knowl-edgeable about newspapers,”
Hughes said. “He had a great
sense of humor, and I treasured
the time I knew him.”
Professor Eula Ewing Mon-
roe, from the BYU Teacher Edu-
cation Department, is another
faculty member at BYU who
is not a member of the LDS
church.
Monroe, a Southern Baptist,
first came to know BYU when
she attended a national confer-
ence in Salt Lake City in May
of 1990.
On the BYU Religious Studies
Center website, Monroe talks
about her experience to Provo
to visit BYU.
“While at the conference, Irented a car and drove to Provo
to visit Bob Cooter, then a fac-
ulty member in the Depart-
ment of Elementary Education
at BYU and a longtime friend
from graduate school days,”
Monroe says. “In passing and
almost in jest, I chatted with
Bob about potential opportuni-
ties for part-time employment
in mathematics education.”
After leaving Provo, Mon-roe received a call from the
department about a potential
job opportunit y at BYU.
“I was amazed that a South-
ern Baptist would be considered
for a position at BYU, and I had
serious doubts about whether I
would want to work at BYU if
the opportunity arose,” Monroe
said.
When offered the position,
Monroe said she received con-
firmation through the Holy
Spirit that she should accept
the position and has enjoyed her
years at BYU. She is an active
member of her church, First
Baptist in Provo, and is cur-
rently serving as the adviser
for the Baptist School Union(now called CrossSeekers) on
campus.
“I love my work at BYU,”
Monroe said on a BYU Reli-
gious Studies Center website.
“As a Southern Baptist whose
colleagues and students are
almost all of the LDS faith, my
story of finding God is not one
of conversion to Mormonism.
To the contrary, it is the story
of how my own faith has beenstrengthened during my years
on the faculty at BYU.”
Chemistry and Biochem-
istry Professor Juliana Boe-
rio-Goates, is Catholic. While
teaching at BYU her faith as
a Roman Catholic has been
strengthened.
“Teaching at BYU has helped
make me a better Catholic,”
Boerio-Goates said. “I was
better able to study my faith
because of the opportunities
I’ve had to share it with others.”
Boerios-Goates learned more
about the LDS faith through her
husband, Steven Goates, who is
LDS. The couple has taught in
the Chemistry and Biochemis-
try Department since 1982.Boerio-Goates said she is
open to learning more about
the LDS faith and on occasion
will read the Ensign and watch
devotionals. She also has a son
serving a mission.
Being a Roman Catholic at
BYU, Boerio-Goates has had
opportunities where she has
been invited to share her faith
with students. It has given her a
chance to reflect more about her
faith and to help students come
to a better understanding on
what Roman Catholics believe.
Boerio-Goates, who will be
retiring at the end of the year,
said she will always remember
BYU for the kindness she felt
from students and faculty.“BYU is a wonderful place to
teach at and I love how warm
and inviting the campus feels,”
she said.
Photo by Chris Bunker
BYU chemistry professor Julie Boerio-Goates attends Saint Francis of Assissi Catholic Church in Orem.
Photo by Chris Bunker
Parts of I-15, I-80 and I-84 will now have an 80 mph speed limit.
8/12/2019 321: Universe Paper
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The Universe, February 19 – 25, 2013 5
Have you ridden FrontRunner yet? Need an excuse? Howabout taking classes at the BYU Salt Lake Center? Forgetabout traffic and parking, you’ll be on the train fast asleep,or wide awake with your friends, maybe cramming for thatquiz, or playing on the free Wi-Fi. Just make sure you getoff at the North Temple station.
The “Y” in Salt Lake City has never been closer—and it’s never been more fun to get there.
Check us out at slc.byu.edu
!"# %& #'"
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Make friends with a freshman, get a free meal Freshmen are willing to give upperclassmen
a free meal
B y E R Y N N K E R R I G A N
Starving upperclassmen prowl
down the hill to the freshman
dorms and hunt their next victim.
Free lunches at the Cannon
Center with the freshman meal
plans may be their only hope for
surviving the poor college days.
Tyler Wernli, a recent BYU
grad who majored in economics,
learned to apply classroom
principles to real-life situations.
Wernli and a friend used to go
to the Cannon Center, quickly
befriend some freshmen with
meal plans, and get a free lunch.
“My friend and I were
notorious for doing this,” Wernli
said. “We were ruthless on how
we worked the system.”Wernli and his friend had
several basic approaches when
trying to get a free lunch from
a freshman. In the economic
approach, they would go up to
a freshman and offer $3 in cash
in exchange for a meal at the
Cannon Center. The freshman
student would then slide his
card so Wernli would get the
discounted dining dollars rate.
“The card rate was cheaper
than the cash rate,” Wernli said.
The least successful approach
was begging random students,
so Wernli realized that finding
someone he knew from his home
ward or other connections proved
to be the best way for him to get
a free lunch. However, Wernli’saccomplice was set on flirting
with freshmen girls.
Wernli said his friend would
flirt with a girl who had another
girlfriend with her, and the four
made a perfect match. The only
downside to this was that Wernli
felt he had to follow the lead of his
friend.
“I was at their mercy,” Wernli
said. “I was like his pet monkey,
and he would get me in.”
Although he often had to work
for his free food, Wernli described
this sacrifice in just three words:
“All worth it.”
Wernli assured their tactics
were always legal.
“We never would sneak in,”
Wernli said. “We would alwaysfind a way that was legit.”
Matthew Stephens, from
Vacavilla, Calif., often swipes his
card for friends or family when
they are in town.
“I’m going to have extra money
at the end of the semester, so I
might as well spend it on someone
else,” Stephens said.
However, Stephens does not
give to strangers very often.
“I do remember giving lunch to
a stranger once,” Stephens said.
“He asked me if I had a ny money
on my card because he didn’t
have any money for lunch. He
didn’t really introduce himself.
He just asked if I could buy him
lunch.”
Stephens didn’t feel as thoughhe was being taken advantage
of and thought the stranger was
pretty casual.
Caitlin Wright, a history major
from American Fork, said she
would be a little apprehensive
giving a free lunch to a boy who
flirted with her just five minutes
before. Wright said she would
probably think it was a scam and
tell him she was busy.
However, Wright did mention
that if she were friends with an
upperclassman, the scenario
would play out dif ferently.
“If a friend is in need, I’ll help
them,” Wright said.
According to Wernli , however,
getting a free meal is not so much
about helping a friend as it isabout the economics involved.
“A dollar saved is a dollar
earned, so I earned a lot of money
and a lot of free lunches at the
same time,” Wernli said.
He mentioned that his
economics teacher always taught
him that in economics, there’s no
such thing as a free lunch.
“But I disagree,” Wernli said.
Photo illustration by Chris Bunker
Upperclassmen are known to use a variety of tactics to get free meals out of freshmen.
Police BeatSUSPICIOUS PERSON
Jan. 22 Provo Police warned awoman jogging on the Provo RiverTrail that she was being followedby a man on a bicycle. Police re-ported that the woman did notknow the man following her andhad been nervously glancing back
at him. When police apprehendedthe suspicious man, they found aBB gun, a knife and methamphet-amine in his possession.
CRIMINAL MISCHIEF
Feb. 7 Custodians reported dam-age to a wall at Helaman Halls.
Feb. 9 An individual was reportednear the University Press Buildingdriving a four-wheeler over andthrough BYU property, causingsome damage. The individual wascontacted and warned againstcontinuing this activity.
Feb 12 A mailbox door near 400N. 500 West was reported to havebeen glued shut.
BURGLARY
Feb. 7 An engagement ring, wed-ding ring and cell phone werereported stolen from a Wymountapartment.
Feb. 13 Jewelry was stolen frombehind a locked door at 300 S.1600 West.
DISORDERLY CONDUCT
Feb. 8 A person was reported fordisorderly behavior in a SmithFieldhouse restroom. UniversityPolice officers responded until afamily member was able to takeresponsibility for the individual.
THEFT
Feb. 6 A locked bicycle was takenfrom a bicycle rack outside the li-brary.
Feb. 6 A laptop was reported sto-len from the Wilkinson StudentCenter but was found by the ownerduring the investigation.
Feb. 7 A locked bicycle was re-ported taken from a bike rack out-side the Harris Fine Arts Center.
Feb. 12 Tires and wheels were sto-len near 100 South and 400 East.
VEHICLE THEFT
Feb. 13 A green Nissan Altima wasstolen near 2000 North and 600West.
Feb. 13 A silver Dodge Caravan
was stolen near 200 West and Cen-ter Street. The owner had left thekeys in the vehicle.
These events took placeon the BYU campus andin Provo.
Need a pencil?Next time you find yourself pencil-less on your way to the
Testing Center, stop by the newsroom. Give the secretaryyour best excuse for why you don’t have a pencil, and you’ll
be given one of our lucky pencils. (It’s even pre-sharpened!)The newsroom is in 152 BRMB near the south doors of the
Brimhall Building — the one immediately north of the Test-ing Center.
Videos of the best excuses will be featured online; thenyou’ll have a neon pencil and be famous.
Online exclusive: Check out our promo video online to see how it’s done.
8/12/2019 321: Universe Paper
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6 The Universe, February 19 – 25, 2013
Voted Provo’s Best!
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L A RGE!
P R I V A T E ! A F F O RD A BL E!
A P P L Y N
O W
Years of ResearchWhat We Have Learned About the Book of Mormon Text
Professor Royal Skousen
, 26, 2013
“The Original and Printer’s Manuscripts”
, 5, 2013
“The Printed Editions” , 12, 2013
“The Nature of theOriginal Text”
7:00 . ,
Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship Laura F. Willes Center for Book of Mormon Studies
L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library
B y C A M I L L E P E N R O D
Bryan Kubricht from Texas
and Li Ping Su from Taiwan
met and fell in love in Hawaii.
Their marriage was a un ion of
two people and two cultures.
Su and Kubricht have been
married for seven years, andboth are studying marriage
and family therapy at BYU.
They also co-facilitate the
Intercultural Couples Group
offered by the BYU Compre-
hensive Clinic, which is a
group where intercultural cou-
ples can meet and share their
experiences.
Intercultural couples benefit
from the mixing of cultures in
exciting ways but also face a set
of unique challenges.
Su said language barriers
were an early
challenge in
t heir mar -
riage, because
she was raised
speaking Chi-nese and was
still learn-
ing English
when she got
married.
“Sometimes
I will say the
wrong word
and get into an
argument,” Su
said.
Su said
that not all
intercultural couples have a
language barrier, but their
communication styles will
still differ. She said in Chinese
culture, people are direct with
their criticism and in America
most people use what Su callsthe “sandwich technique.”
“They give a compliment,
criticize … and give another
compliment,” Su said.
Su and Kubricht have identi-
fied their different techniques
for communicating so they can
understand each other’s inten-
tions and avoid being offended.
Jennifer Langi , the
Multicultural Student Services
cultural programs coordinator,
was born and raised in Mexico
in an intercultural family;
her father is Mexican, and her
mother is Lumbee Indian. She
has been married to her Ton-
gan husband, Maloni Langi, for
five years. Langi s aid that her
and her husband’s communi-
cation styles differ g reatly, but
she suggests this difference isnot a result of their cultural
backgrounds but because of
their different family cultures.
“We’re all the product of our
family culture,” Langi said.
“(We’re) what our parents
made of us, and we have an
opportunity to meld this new
culture and just make it better
and better.”
Kubricht also explained thatanother aspect of intercultural
marriages is negotiating cul-
tural traditions and holidays
between cou-
ples, which
he said can be
c h a l l e n g i n g
and exciting.
“It is veryapparent that
you have to
negotiate val-
ues and tra-
ditions right
off,” Kubricht
said. “This
is a benefit
because many
couples will
assume they
don’t need to
talk because
they are from the same cul-
ture and differences reveal
themselves later, whereas with
intercultural it is obvious.”
Kubricht said an extra
perk of bringing two cultures
together is the experience ofcelebrating more holidays. He
especially loves celebrating
the Chinese New Year with his
wife.
“I get the benefit of more hol-
idays to celebrate … like Chi-
nese New Year,” Kubricht said.
Victoria Stewart, who is
from Argentina, came to BYU
to study Spanish teaching.
When she arrived, Victoria
was asked out on many dates
but felt like the men ignored
her and were only interested
in her culture. Her dates felt
repetitive as multiple Span-
ish-speaking returned mis-
sionaries took her on dates
and only asked her about life
in Argentina.
Then she met Matt Stewart,
a fellow BYU student.“He treated me as a normal
person because of my person-
ality and not because I’m from
Argentina,” Victoria said. “(It
was) about having fun and get-
ting to know each other.”
Matt Stewart had never pur-
sued an intercultural rela-
tionship and was able to see
Victoria for more than just her
Photo courtesy Ryan Kubricht
Le Ping Su, from Taiwan, and her husband Bryan Kubricht, from Texas, met each other in Hawaii.
“We’re what our
parents made of us, andwe have an opportunity
to meld this new
culture and just make
it better and better.”
Jennifer LangiCoordinator at Multiculture
Student Services
Next week’s theme:Fashion/ Favorite Outfit
geographical background.
“I never thought I was
going to marry someone from
another country,” Matt Stew-
art said. “I was never like, ‘Oh
I’m going to marry a foreign
girl.’”
Su said when couples with
different cultural backgrounds
marry they have the opportu-
nity to form a personalized,
blended family culture. This
blending helps children of
intercultural couples be more
comfortable with diversity and
get more exposure to various
cultures early in life.
“It’s good for children to get
exposed (to other cultures),”
Kubricht said. “(They) become
comfortable in many different
settings.”
However, it is not just chil-
dren that can benefit from
being exposed to multiple cul-
tures. Langi loves the family
values shared between her
culture and her husband’s
and feels that she has become
closer to her husband.
“A neat benefit I’ve found is
a strong emphasis on family
in all three cultures (Lumbee,
Mexican and Tongan),” Langi
said. “It’s been so nice to see us
grow into e ach other.”
Rather than celebrating Valentine’s Day, some
celebrated Singles Awareness Day.
@mattjames474
“It was nice to see so many people on campus have
found a partner for the Zombie Apocalypse.”
Date night at BYU’s Museum of Art.
@brownlimes
“Just looking at some modern art. #datenight
#warhol #andywarhol #byu #ygram #neobaroque
#emma”
Intercultural marriages bring unexpected adventures
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The Universe, February 19 – 25, 2013 7
B y C A R I N D E L O S S A N T O S
When meeting someone new
on campus, asking where they are
from is pretty basic. For the chil-
dren of military service members,
choosing one place as “home” is
difficult.
Alexander White, a sophomore
majoring in Chinese, is a military
brat. White said he has moved 14times, so when he is asked, “Where
are you from?” it takes a minute
to answer.
“Sometimes it’s the place you
are living currently, other times
it’s the place you were born, some-
times I just claim the U.S.,” White
said. “Usually I pick California
because that’s where I was born
and my grandparents still live
there.”
While military children refer to
themselves as military brats, the
term has been used for so long that
few know its roots. The term does
not refer to the children actually
being “brats” but is an acronym.
The military is notorious for its
use of acronyms to shorten lengthy
titles. The term “brat” is an acro-nym that dates back to when Brit-
ish forces sent soldiers to India
and other locations. The soldiers
brought their families, officially
called British Regiment Attached
Travelers, or BRATs, with them
overseas. The term stuck and has
since been used in various coun-
tries to refer to the children of mili-
tary service members.
For White, life as a brat is a
family thing. Both his father and
grandfather were soldiers, as well
as his great-grandfather. As a
cadet in BYU’s Army ROTC, White
is continuing the tradition of mili-
tary service.
“I grew up in over-sized combat
boots and Army fatigues that my
dad had brought home,” Whitesaid. “It’s just something I’ve
always wanted to do, as long as I
can remember. It’s been one of my
life goals — to join the Army.”
The military life can be very
difficult, even traumatic, for brats.
Constant moving makes it difficult
to create long-term friendships.
Kyle Anderson, a senior study-
ing applied physics, is an Air Force
cadet. His father’s Air Force career
kept them on the move. Anderson
says friendships at church helped
with the transition.
“Our first night in Louisiana,
we showed up and they had a youth
night that night,” Anderson said.
“We hadn’t even unpacked. We
just showed up and twenty min-
utes later we go to play softball
with people and meet new friends.
Things like that definitely sped up
acclimating to the place. And you
kind of have a network already you
can talk to or go to.”
Anderson also said that when
his friends know about his back-
ground it helps.
“It explains to them why we
do certain things, why we are
conscious about being on time to
things or getting things done on a
timeline,” Anderson said. “We’re
disciplined like that because we
do have a military family. We
were raised that way. I think it
does give them an insight into why
we do certain things (and) into our
personalities.”
Captain Jeffrey Timmons
is an alumnus of BYU’s Army
ROTC program and recently
returned to the Cougar Battal-
ion as an instructor. Timmons
is also an Army brat.
“You’re not talking about a
poorly behaved child,” Timmons
said. “You’re describing a child
that just has had to deal with all
the dynamics of being offspring of
a military member and all of the
stress that comes with that. It’s not
just moving around.”
Military brats may have differ-
ent experiences, some of which
may seem exotic or traumatic to
others. However, Timmons said
they are still regular people who
do not ask for special treatment.
“I’m not any different than
the next person,” Timmons said.“Yeah, I’ve got some crazy experi-
ences, but everyone has different
and unique experiences.”
The Store With More byubookstore.com 801.422.2400
custom framing locatedon the lower levelof the BYU Bookstore
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Schedule:
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FREE20 oz drink with purchase of an entrée
starting from 6:30 pm to close
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Military brats find a temporary home at BYU
“Sometimes it’s the place you are living
currently, other times it’s the place you were
born, sometimes I just claim the U.S.”
Alexander WhiteSophomore, Chinese major
Photo courtesy Alexander White
Alexander White is a military brat who always dreamed of following in his father’s footsteps by being a soldier.
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8 The Universe, February 19 – 25, 2013
[ VIEWPOINT ]
‘We accept the love we think we deserve’Over Christmas I read the book and
watched the movie “The Perks of Being a
Wallflower.” The most quoted line from the
novel and the tagline for the film is, “Weaccept the love we think we deser ve.”
I’ve found myself thinking
about this often the past month
or so. And after thinking about
it so much, I agree with it, but I
also believe some of us think we
deserve a lot less tha n we do.
We all grow up with different
lives and different experiences
that affect us and shape us into
who we are and shape our outlook
on life. I’ve had highs where I’ve
felt on top of everything in my
life and I’ve had lows that I could
barely pull myself out of. I’ve had
lousy jobs, but I’ve had jobs I love.
I have a loving family, but our
family often knows how to hurt us t he most.
I’ve had great friends who would do anything
for me, but I’ve had friends who have stabbedme in the back and cast me aside. I’ve had
fantastic, loving boyfriends, but I’ve also
been in terrible, tumultuous relationships.
I’ve made extremely good decisions in my
life, but I have also chosen very poorly. And
as I’ve gone through the highs a nd lows, what
I thought I deserved out of life ha s decreased
and increased, back and forth over the years.
Others’ treatment of us often affects what
we think we deserve. I’m not necessarily
pointing this out because I think we should
all go take a hard look in the mirror and
expect better of ourselves and set higher
standards — we do know that . I’m saying we
need to use that knowledge to better serve
others. We need to be the confidant, thefriend that tells ou r loved ones they deserve
so much more than the mediocrity
they are grasping at.
We all watch the people we love
beaten down by jobs they hate. We
watch them go back to toxic friend-
ships. We watch them stay with the
girlfriend or boyfriend who treats
them with no respect and makes
them feel that no one else will ever
love them, that they are nothing.
We watch them try to repair famil-
ial relationships purely by rolling
over and blaming themselves.
Sometimes life breaks us and
we need help to repair ourselves.
No one needs to be reminded that
life is hard, but sometimes they do need to be
reminded they can do hard things. And we
should be that reminder.LDS leaders stress to us that we are chil-
dren of God who should be treated as such;
we have heard it all our lives, but for some
it hasn’t sunk in yet or they have forgotten.
Others who may not believe as we do may not
know either. And sometimes they need some-
one to take them by the hand and tell them.
The people who know our faults and weak-
nesses, but who stay by us and also see our
exceptional strengths and talents — some-
times we need them to tell us we’re shooting
too low. We need to hear it from them that we
deserve to be happy, that we deserve respect
and that love shouldn’t hurt.
I appreciate the times in my life that peo-
ple who really cared about my well-beinghave sat me down and told me I was better
than what I was settling for. Where I’m at
in my life right now I think I have a pretty
good idea of what I deserve out of my educa-
tion, my job, my social life, my family and
my future family. But I’d venture to guess
my loved ones, who see me as more than I
see myself, would say I’m still selling myself
short in some aspects.
I see the bad in the people I love, but I
also see the great i n them, and I consciously
strive to make sure they know how much
they deserve in all aspects of their lives.
I’m definitely not perfect at it , but it is some-
thing I’m aware of, and I think it’s something
important we should all be aware of.
Perhaps the next time we see our best
friend, our roommate, our siblings or sig-
nificant other settling for anything beneath
their capacity, we could tell them theydeserve more and why they deserve it. We
need to give them the love we know they
deserve.
Kelly Haight is a sports editor at The Uni-
verse. This viewpoint represents her opinion
and not necessarily those of BYU, its admin-
istration or The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.
[ ISSUES & IDEAS ]
[ VIEWPOINT ]
‘Home alone’I couldn’t help but feel a sense of anxiety
as I sat across fr om my mission president for
my departing interview. I’d sat in that chair
several times before, but this time was dif-
ferent. This would be the last time I’d meet
with him in this capacity, and we
weren’t exactly parting on the best
of terms — I was leaving my mis-
sion early, and neither of us were
happy about it.
Without going into detail, I was
in a bad place emotionally. In my
mind I retraced every step I’d
taken during the last 19 months
— there were a lot of them — try-
ing to figure out how I had gotten
there. The first year was so fu n. I
had success, and I got along with
most of my companions, but now,for some reason, I was depressed.
So after 19 months of service I
was released honorably and sent home to
get healthy.
As hard as leaving t he mission was, going
home was harder. There’s a stigma in our
culture that those who don’t serve missions
and those who return home early, for what-
ever reason, are somehow less than other
full-time missionaries. Every year several
missionaries return home prematur ely, and
because of this stigma many of them lose
their way.
It’s not easy to face family, friends, ward
members, and mentors — all the people who
were so proud to see you off — and tell them
you failed to meet their expectations. It’s
incredibly difficult to see the looks of pity
in the eyes of people whose respect you hold
dear and to feel like you’re no longer goodenough to be in their midst. So naturally,
some people quit.
When I got to BYU after my mission I
found it so hard to go to church every Sun-
day and listen to people talk about nothing
but the mission. I wanted to be uplifted,
and I wanted to be fed spiritually,
but talking about being a mission-
ary was hard. Often times I would
duck out after sacrament meeting
to avoid having to talk to people. Iknow I wasn’t helping the problem,
but it was the easiest solution. It was
a vicious cycle. I felt like a n outsider
so I didn’t attend my meetings, in
turn making myself an outsider.
The sad part to me is that often
people don’t even know that they
are ostracizing these people who
desperately need help.I’ve experienced it in dating, I’ve
seen it in elder’s quorums, and I’ve
even come across it in religion classes. The
girl you’ve been dating wants a cookie cut-
ter R.M. with no baggage, so she tells you
she understands, but she just wants to be
friends from then on. Every example given
in a priesthood lesson is a mission experi-
ence. To make a point your professor asks all
of those who have served missions to raise
their hands.
While missions are extremely important
and necessary to God’s plan, we have to
remember that they don’t necessarily define
the heart of the man or woman.
I have two gr eat friends who were released
honorably for various reasons, and I know
they have both struggled to find their places
again. One of them had an especially hard
time with his testimony because he’d beentaught his whole life that serving a mission
is the mark of a good LDS guy. After a few
wayward months, my friend found his way
back to the path, but how many early retur-
ing R.M.s never do? How many guys who
never serve missions feel that they aren’t as
good as their friends?
One of my greatest fears was telling my
wife, then girlfriend, that I had come home
early from my mission. Not because of the
emotional issues I had had to work through,
but because I didn’t want her to think I
wasn’t a worthy priesthood holder. Luckily
for me, my wife had taken the time to get to
know me and to learn what kind of man I was
— and still am. She understood that despite
my shortcomings and the circumstances
surrounding my release, I was still a good
guy. She understood the Atonement and that
all God expected of me was to do my best.To this day I find it hard to talk to people
about my mission experience because I don’t
want people to judge me. I love my mission.
I learned a lot from it, and I genuinely loved
the people I served. I just don’t want people
to think of me as different because of when
I came home.
We never know what is going on in another
person’s life. Let’s not be so quick to judge.
Let’s not be so fast to exclude. Let’s all make
more of an effort to understand. Let’s remem-
ber that missions are all about serving peo-
ple and bringing them into the gospel.
Charles Beacham is a life editor at The
Universe. This viewpoint represents his
opinion and not necessarily those of BYU,
its administration or The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints.
KELLY
HAIGHT
CHARLES
BEACHAM
Outside the bubbleHave any of you also strug-
gled with life’s perennial ques-
tion, “What do I wear today?”
as you stare at your overflow-
ing closet.
Or have any of you joined me
in muttering the exaggerated
complaint “There’s no food,”
while staring at full cupboards
and a full refrigerator.
I read a book recently that
slaps me in the face every time
I even think of these phrases.
“Half the Sky” maybe could
be better titled with the famil-
iar catchphrase: “Count your
many blessings.”
We go to a private religious
university, most of us have
laptops and phones, most of us
have enough to eat and a warm
place to stay at night, yet we con-
sider ourselves “poor college
students.” My friends, we are
rich beyond comparison. We
can afford to learn of forgotten
events thousands of years ago,
or of the breakthrough tech-
nologies of the future. Often
when I tell people my major I
hear the usual response of, “Oh
well you aren’t going to be rich
with that.” I won’t be rich?! We
are all infinitely richer than
the majority of the world, and
we don’t even recognize it! In
our morning routines, we are
around more wealth and lux-
ury than most people enjoy in
their entire lifetimes! “Half
the Sky” illustrates the abso-
lute squalor the majority of the
world lives in. Could any of us
survive on less than a dollar
a day? Could we survive the
cutthroat environment where
success is measured not by
grades but the minutes that you
remain alive? Could we survive
without knowing how to read,
or having a warm clean bed,
or access to hot, clean water, a
roof, food, clothing, all at our
fingertips?
The majority the world is
concerned, not with that his-
tory essay due next week, but
with staying alive today. We
have no idea. This isn’t a guilt
trip or a request for an apology
for being born here; we don’t
need to apologize for being
born into such opportunity
because it wasn’t our choice,
but we also desperately need to
recognize that the little boy or
girl halfway around the world
didn’t have a choice where they
were born either.
The problems of the world
are vast beyond imagination
and overwhelming. But I am
not asking you to fix them, I am
merely asking all of us to truly
recognize how blessed and rich
we all are, just by the matter of
where we all live. If you want
to be shocked by how incred-
ibly we good we have it and
how rich we are, read “Half
the Sky.” Next time any of us
catch ourselves thinking “what
should I wear” I hope we can
realize how blessed we are that
we even have options of what to
wear. Next time any of us catch
ourselves thinking, “There
is no food,” I hope we realize
that is a legitimate thought for
hundreds of millions of men,
women, and children every
day. Next time any of us think
we are only “poor college stu-
dents” I hope we take a moment
and think of how wealthy we
are. We have no idea.
Mattehew DeLange
Provo
A B O U T L E T T E R S
The Universe invites students, faculty and BYU staff towrite letters and viewpoints to the editor. Letters should include the author’s name and hometown,as anonymous letters cannot be considered. The topic of the letter should be included in the email sub- ject line. These letters should not exceed 300 words and may not behandwritten.
Letters may be submitted: In person at The Universe newsroom, 152 BRMB. By email to [email protected].
Opinion Editor Stephanie Lacy can be reached at 801.422.2957.
[ Readers’ Forum ]
@NeaBleker
The guy next to me at
devotional just ate four
full-sized blueberry
bagels like it was no big
deal.#BYU
@Drew_Smith13May God bless the kind
souls handing out candy
and valentines outside
of the testing center.
#BYU
@chelseawml
If there was still a rent a
puppy service, I am sure
it would go up about
300% on valentine’s day
due to single females at
#BYU.
@brettbirddotnet
Just got stuck in a
#BYU#harlemshake
#wilkinson #terrace
@EdoParedes
When there is assigned
seating in your class
and a random girl
seats where you seat
#BYU#TheEndIsNear #
FirstWorldProblems
@JohnnyAllenCope
I don’t need to go to an
exotic mission to learn
how to not be a picky
eater. I have the cannon
center #byu
@afald
Someone tell me whythere is a man riding
his unicycle home from
school.. #byu
@IAmElaygant
Invest yourself in the
future. #BYU
@NeaBleker
The snow has melted
and now there are just
all these random carrots
on the ground. #poors-
nowmen #BYU
@stinko_man_
“I’m trying really hard
to creep you all out this
morning!”- my Physical
Science Professor. Man,
I love this class #byu
@MitchelLive
Thank you professor
for assigning a 9pt font
single spaced paper you
have allowed me to pull
my first all nighter in
quite a while. #byu
@AmyTwitchell
Just witnessed the #har-
lemshake in the wilk...
Lol. Just lol. #byu
@ashleyymarx
... I hate my peers. #BYU
#flashmob #embarrass-ing
@ginaplusturtles
S/O to the girl who’s
asleep SNORING in the
middle of the MARB
#byu
@ticoster93
I don’t want to go to
the testing centerrrrr.
#worstplaceever #byu
@cougarfan
Wife & I just played
board game. When we
were sorting pieces
afterwards we arguedabout who had to put
away the red ones
#HolyWar #BYU #Utes
@5Goose
HBLL tunnel of love..
If you make it all the
way through do you
get a husband? NOPE
just a free t-shirt and a
cookie:samething I”M
THERE #BYU
@woopwoopwhitley
There is an entire empty
elevator and you decide
to stand right next to
me..I knew I smelledgood, but not THAT
good! #BYU
@skiiaholicdavid
The amount of make-
outs I run into at BYU
is embarrassing. #sorry
#byu #MOA
@tori_4_short
#IUsedToThink high
school dating was com-
plicated. Then I got to
#BYU. #marriagehun-
gry #RMs
@rachel_jeanne12
We have a calling just to
walk girls home safely
#BYU
@tori_4_short
All chapels should have
built-in desks on the
seats. Not sure how that
would work for benches
though. Haha #LDS
#churchoncampus
#BYU
Leave your comments at universe.byu.edu.
Tweet Beat#BYU
8/12/2019 321: Universe Paper
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& RECREATION
Page 9 @DUSportsDesk
universe.byu.edu/sportsFebruary 19 – 25, 2013 Sports
B y S U G E N E L E E
BYU’s sophomore guard Matt Carlino
steps up in the spotlight as he makes a tur n-
around in the WCC games this season.
Before conference games started, Car-
lino was averaging 7.2 points and 3.8 assists
per game but has spiked to 15.8 points and
4.9 assists since the first conference game
against Loyola Marymount on Jan. 3.
He was named the WCC Player of the Week
(Jan. 31- Feb. 2), making it the fourth time
BYU has had a player honored this season. In
his player of the week performance, Carli no
averaged 20 points, five assists and 2.5 stealsper game. He was also a runner-up in being
named January’s WCC Player of the Month.
Carlino fini shed with 28 points (10–17 FG,
3–6 3FG, 5–5 F T), six assists and two steals
against Santa Clara on Feb. 2 for arguably
his best game of the season.
“Our coaches have spent so much time
with Matt, just helping him with our offense
and with our players,” BYU coach Dave Rose
said following Carlino’s great week. “He’s
become a lot more comfortable with tak-
ing opportunities that are provided for him
instead of trying to force things. The last
couple weeks he’s been terrific. His decision-
making has been good and he shot the ball
well, and when he shoots the ball well, he
has a whole different mindset as far as his
confidence is concerned.”
Since Carlino made his entrance to BYU,
after transferring from UCLA in the mid-
dle of his freshman year, Rose emphasized
Carlino’s development as “a process.” Con-
sistency and efficiency was something that
came from experience, and Carlino needed
time to improve his game.
“Matt is actually showing progress with
the experience, and that’s really importa nt,”
Rose said. “It’s a really tough assig nment to
come in and be the startin g point guard as a
freshman in a program that has pretty high
expectations and has been pretty success-
ful. He’s handled it really well. … He’s in a
nice little spot, and I think our guys have
learned to actual ly play with him and appre-ciate what he does.”
Once Carlino steps onto the court, he
doesn’t fear who he’s guarded by and is never
afraid to take the next big shot. The pressure
doesn’t faze him and only makes him play
harder each night. His struggles earlier
in the season were something to brush off
because what people saw wasn’t really him.
“I just think I was playing dumb,” Carlino
said. “I wasn’t playing like myself. I was try-
ing to do stuff that wasn’t comfortable for me.
I’ve still taken some of it to what I’m doing
now, but it was just a learning experience.
I was playing bad — I don’t think we were
See CARLINO on Page 11
Jackie Beene McBride’s jersey to be retired
B y K I M B E R L I E H A N E R
Former BYU women’s basketball star
Jackie Beene McBride is returning to t he
Marriott Center to see her number 22 jer-
sey hung in the
rafters.
“Jackie was
a contempo-rary of mine at
BYU and one of
the all-time great wom-
en’s athletes in school
history,” BYU Athletic
Director Tom Holmoe
said in a press release.
“We are excited for the
opportunity to honor
her distinguished
career by hanging her
jersey in the M arriott
Center.”
McBride, a six-foot
guard/forward and for-
mer All-American, played
for BYU from 1978 to 1982
and graduated in 1984 with
a degree in family sciences
and child development. Sheis only the second BYU wom-
en’s basketball player to have
her jersey retired. The cere-
mony will take place during
halftime of the final home game
of the season against Gonzaga on
Saturday, Feb. 23.
McBride had a successful four-
year career at BYU but thrived
during her senior year. The
success never fazed McBride,
however. She was not focused
on the records or the awards,
but on working hard and l iv-
ing in the moment.
“You give it your all
like the rest of the yea rs,”
McBride said, referring
to her senior season. “But for
some reason, you know
you’re done after that.
So you cherish each
moment, you cherish
each game.”
McBride will admit
she is proud of scoring more than 2,000
points, a feat rarely achieved by men or
women. She ended her career with a total
of 2,191 points, one of the four BYU wom-
en’s basketball players to score more t han
2,000 points. Only four BYU men’s bas-
ketball players have reached that accom-
plishment. During her senior season,
McBride averaged 21.4 points per game.
“I wasn’t really playing for 2,000
points,” McBride said. “I didn’t go playto get 2,000 points. I just played ball and
had fun doing it, and whatever happened,
happened. … I knew it was close (to
2,000 points). People
told me because I
didn’t know.”
Despite all of her
individual hard
work, McBride is
grateful for her
teammates. Without
them, she could not
have reached such
incredible levels of
success.
“That was awesome
to have (former BYU
president) Elder Hol-
land be the one to
hand me that (game)ball and go over to my
teammates and gather
around and have a
shared moment,” McBride
said. “It’s not an individual
thing. It’s one of those things
that all of t hose people helped
me get. … It just happened to
happen, which, when you’re
surrounded by good coaches
and wonderful teammates,
it’s a possibility.”
One of her past teammates
was Tina Gunn Robison, for-
mer All-American and BYU
all-time leading scorer with
2,759 points. Robison’s jer-
sey was retired in 2004, and
her number 44 is hanging from
the rafters, waiting for its old
teammate to join it.
“That’s incredible to be
able to be next to Tina,”
See JERSEY on Page 11
Photo courtesy BYU AthleticsMcBride had 293 careersteals, the third most inBYU women’s basketballhistory.
Matt Carlino rises to the occasion
Men’s Basketball vs. UtahStatel7-10 p.m., Marriott Center
Men’s Golf at John H. BurnsInvitationalAll day, Turtle Bay ResortKahuku, Hawaii
Softball vs. LSU10 a.m.-12 p.m.,Big League Dreams Complex,Calif.
Women’s Basketball vs.Portland7-9 p.m., Marriott Center
Men’s Golf at John H. BirnsInvitationalAll day, Turtle Bay ResortKahuku, Hawaii
Department of ExerciseSciences Seminar11 a.m.,271 Richards Building
Baseball at LSU6 p.m.-10 p.m.,Alex Box StadiumBaton Rouge, La.
Softball vs. Oklahoma State3:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m.,Big League Dreams Complex,Calif.
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THE SPORTS CALENDAR FEBRUARY 19 – 25
T U E S D A Y
T H U R S D A Y
W E D N E S D A Y
T H U R S D A Y
T H U R S D A Y
T H U R S D A Y
T H U R S D A Y
T H U R S D A Y
F R I D A Y
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F R I D A Y
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F R I D A Y
Men’s Basketball at SaintMary’s9-11 p.m., Listen on KSL 1160AM/102.7 FM or BYU Radio
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T H U R S D A Y
Sisters, to the start line
B y L O R I E H O F F M A N
BYU is used to men coming and
going on missions. Professors, land-
lords and girlfriends all watch them
leave. Coaches are
used to these youngmen giving up their
scholarships and
handing in their uni-
forms for two years
to serve a mission for
The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-
day Saints. But for a
young woman desir-
ing to serve a mis-
sion, the experience
is a little different. A
mission for women is
not an obligation.
When all the
sports coaches in the school were asked
if there were any returned missionary
sisters on their respective teams, only
four names were returned. All four of
these returned missionary sisters are
track athletes.
Deezbaa Whaley, Sharissa Thayer,
Sarah Yingling and Amy Moffat com-
pete on the BYU track team. Whaley,
Thayer and Yingling had the chance to
compete before their missions, while
Moffat felt her mission led her to par-
ticipate in track.
Whaley, Thayer and Yinling decided
to leave the track, their scholarships
and their schooling behind to serve a
mission for 18 months. Each had to walk
into their coach’s
office, someone whohad a plan and expec-
tations for them, and
tell their coach they
did not fit into that
plan for a while.
“They were always
supportive of what
the girls decided,”
Whaley said. “They
understand that if
the girls want to go on
a mission, it’s a step
that will bless our
lives in the future.
They encouraged me
to pray about it and to make sure it was
what I wanted to do.”
All three expressed the immense
amount of support and encouragement
from their coaches.
“I think the most important thing
is having support from the coaches,”
Thayer said. “(There were) several
girls considering missions and having
supportive coaches helped us to leave.”
Each expressed a different way in
how they handled track training —mis-
sionary style. All three made an effort
to stay fit, but not just for track, it is
their way of life.
“My mission president would ask me
in my interviews if I was exercising and
he would allow me an hour (for that),”
Whaley said. “So I would get up an hourearlier, and my companions were so
supportive and they would always get
up with me.”
Moffat felt inspired on her mission to
train for track and field for the first time
since high school.
“I just had to trust that I was doing
the right thing and trust the prompt-
ings I had that track was OK for me,”
Moffat said. “I could prepare for (try-
outs) and it wouldn’t take away from
my mission.”
Their athletic experience helped
them in more ways than one on their
missions.
“So many times on my mission I
was really grateful that I was really
athletic for most of my life,” Yingling
said. “Especially as a distance runner I
had the stamina to walk around al l day.
I was grateful that I had been kind of
trained to do that.”
The lessons they learned on the
See SISTERS on Page 11
Photo courtesy Deezbaa Whaley
BYU track and field athlete Deezbaa Whaley sports BYU apparell during a preparation day on her mission in Arkansas.
“I just had to trust that
I was doing the right
thing and trust the
promptings I had that
track was OK for me.”
Amy MoffatBYU track team
Photo by Sarah Hill
Matt Carlino drives towards the basket in a game at the Marriott Center.
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BYU basketball cruises pastPortland Pilots for win
B y S U G E N E L E E
On the night when BYU legends
Mel Hutchins and Roland Minsonhad their jerseys retired, the men’s
basketball team cruised by the
Portland Pilots for a 86–72 victory.
Although they came off two
losses, the BYU men’s basketball
team (19-8, 9-4 WCC) was anxious
to get back on track against Port-
land (10-18, 3-10 WCC).
“Any time that happens, you
come out focused because you’ve
been sitting around just practic-
ing and you want to play someone
else,” guard Craig Cusick said. “It
was great to be able to come out
with our guys and get a win.”
Cusick, who started in place
of Josh Sharp on Saturday night,
finished with 10 points and seven
assists. Tyler Haws scored a game-
high 28 points and grabbed eightrebounds. Matt Carlino also con-
tributed with 10 points, seven
assists and a block. The Cougars
shared the ball and finished with
26 assists, second highest of the
season, on 34 made field goals.
“I was really pleased with how
we shared the ball on offense,”
BYU coach Dave Rose said. “The
huge emphasis over the last week
was trying to get our guys to com-
pete together as a group on both
ends of the floor.”
Rose was also proud of how his
players contested shots, executed
the game plan and trusted each
other. BYU’s defense in the first
half is what ultimately gave theteam the 46–25 halftime lead as the
Cougars only allowed the Pilots to
shoot 33 percent from the field.
“I thought our defense was
really good in the first half,” Haws
said. “We had some lapses in
the second half, but we’re really
focusing on being a better team
defensively and not give up easy
baskets.”
Brandon Davies, who finished
with 23 points, five assists and
three blocks, passed Kresimir
Cosic and Jonathan Tavernari
on BYU’s all-time scoring list and
now stands 12th overall with 1,529
career points. Davies’ teammates
and coach shared nothing but
praise for Davies as a great team-
mate and player. Rose continuesto have high expectations for his
senior forward.
“When he’s good, he’s really
good,” Rose said. “Consistency
is the key for him. He challenges
himself, coaches challenge him
and teammates encourage him.
We need him to be good every
night — really good every night.”
The Cougars remain positive
and focused as they approach their
last few weeks of conference play.
Haws said there’s still a lot to play
for and that the Cougars are con-tinuing to get better as a team.
“Our players have a lot of fight
in them,” Rose said. “That’s really
positive for our staff. The huge
part of trying to be consistent and
being successful is to compete
and continue to compete together
as a group when you have some
setbacks and you have some dis-
appointments. I’m really pleased
with the week and the results of
this game.”
Cusick is proud of his team’s atti-
tude and the way it has approached
the season.
“Everyone wants to play, but the
thing about this team that makes it
special is that every player on the
team has a good attitude,” Cusick
said. “The guys on the bench thataren’t playing minutes, I’ve been
there, they’re just as important as
the guys on the court. The attitude
and the positivity that everyone
brings is what makes a team spe-
cial, so we need to keep that going.”
BYU welcomes Utah State to the
Marriott Center on Tuesday at 7
p.m MST. The game will be broad-
cast live on BYUtv and KSL radio.
Photo by Sarah Hill
Craig Cusick drives around a Portland player at Saturday night’sgame in the Marriott Center.
BYU softball picks up SLCCstandout Mylee Davis
B y B R I T T A N Y B I V I N G S
The BYU softball team added
a Salt Lake Community College
transfer to its roster this season.
Sophomore catcher Mylee
Davis was added to the 2013 Cou-
gar roster last month in a middle-of-the-year transfer. Davis played
her freshman year at SLCC, but
according to her, that was just a
stepping stone leading up to her
goal of playing Division 1 softball
for BYU.
BYU scouted Davis while she
was in high school and gave her
an offer to play as a freshman,
but she decided to play for SLCC
instead. It was a bold move by
Davis, but one well-played, as
she knew she could receive a
better offer after getting a year
of experience.
BYU was always the end goal
for Davis. She never saw her-
self finishing at SLCC and kept
in contact with BYU, hoping to
be recruited again. BYU calledher just a few months ago and
extended another offer to play
for the team. Davis jumped at
the opportunity to play, thinking
she would start in the 2014 sea-
son. However, the Cougars had
a need for her this season and
made a quick transfer. It was dif-
ficult for Davis to leave her SLCC
team and make the transfer, but
in her heart she knew it was the
right decision for her.
“Playing at SLCC was the best
experience I’ve ever had,” Davis
said. “Coach Amicone (SLCC
coach) holds you to such a high
standard that you have to per-
form (like) a champion all the
time, in all aspects, and so it was
good for softball and to grow asa person.”
Davis recorded impressive
freshman-year stats on a team
that made it all the way to the
NJCAA National Champion-
ship game. She had a .317 batting
average with five home runs and
32 RBIs in her first season and
acted as a wall for the Bruins’
plate.
Davis is still adjusting to the
new school and new curricu-
lum. She is a psychology major
and is surprised at the change
of pace academically at BYU.
She now spends more time
doing homework and working
towards establishing herself.
She believes attending BYU will
give her the “BYU edge” on herrésumé that will help her land
her future career.
“It’s such a wonderful atmo-
sphere and so different from
being at SLCC,” Davis said.
“Academically, I’m learning
so much, and I feel like I’m a
lot more knowledgeable. And
it’s so nice to be around people
the same age and with the same
beliefs as you.”
Davis said college softball
will be the end of her softball
career, but this 19-year-old soph-
omore has some other plans for
her future. She hopes to travel
and is even planning on doing a
service project in Africa.
“I’ve always wanted to help,”
Davis said. “My grandma andcousins were involved in differ-
ent projects like the ones after
the hurricanes in Haiti. I would
love to be assigned to a project
and help in a community as well
as be able to see new places.”
When Davis is not behind
the plate, she enjoys spending
time outdoors doing activities
like hiking and fishing. She
also has a love for musicals and
participated in all of her high
school’s musicals in Syracuse.
She likes to get crafty too and
make things, such as her own
clothes.
Davis played in just two tour-
naments with the Cougars,
the Red Desert Classic and the
Easton Desert Classic, wherefive able catchers are work-
ing hard for the starting spot.
Davis said her teammates have
made the adjustment easy and
have been very welcoming. But
like her, the softball team is
still getting adjusted to work-
ing together as a team, becom-
ing comfortable with each other
and finding its team identity.
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JERSEY McBride’s legacy will live on
Continued from Page 9
McBride said. “To me, I feel hon-
ored to be in the rafters with Tina.
She was an incredible player. We
just worked together and accom-
plished a lot of great things
together.”
M c B r i d e ’ s
old team had
a reunion a
year and a half
ago to catch
up and seeeach other in
person again.
To McBride,
it was as if
no time had
passed. They
picked up right
where they left
off. She mused
about what it
would have been like to play
basketball and be at BYU t oday.
“I laugh because we didn’t
even have spandex back then,”
McBride joked. “They get span-
dex underneath those shorts. We
had to wear t hose short-shorts
and I was like, ‘Can’t we wear
some longer shorts?’ I would’ve
loved to wear those longer shortsthat they have now.”
One aspect of McBride’s
experience at BYU was very
similar to the experiences of
many young women today. She
married her high school sweet-
heart, Brent McBride, after writ-ing him every week while he
was serving an LDS mission in
England. They got married her
sophomore year.
“When he was leaving it was
very difficult for both of us,”
McBride said. “We wrote once
a week for the whole mission, so
you know we were pretty seri-
ous. I did date while he was on
his mission. For me, it was just
comparing and making sure.
Nobody compared to him.”
Since 1982,
McBride’s life
has changed
d r a m a t i -
cally. Origi-
nally from
C l e a r f i e l d ,her family
now resides
in Meridian,
Idaho. She has
three children,
Erin, Michael
and Andi, and
three grand-
c h i l d r e n .
When her chil-
dren were growing up, McBride
encouraged her children to par-
ticipate in whatever activities
they wanted. She wanted them
to do what they actually wanted
to do rather than forcing basket-
ball on them.
“Really everything that I’ve
done so far has been about help-
ing my kids,” McBride said. “Inever forced my children to play
basketball. I don’t want them to
be me; I want them to be them
and find out what they like the
best. I had to balance myself and
say, ‘What do you want to do?’ So
they all found their own path.”The most exciting part about
having her jersey retired is shar-
ing it with her family.
“They just think that it’s the
coolest thing ever,” McBride
said. “They are over the moon
about it. My son keeps saying,
‘Mom, do you know how big this
is? No you don’t, you do not!’ My
daughter is proud of me for other
reasons than my jersey being
retired. They’re good kids.”
Her youngest daughter, Andi,
might not be able to make the
ceremony because she is a mem-
ber of the Weber State University
track team and may have team
commitments, but McBride
understands that commitment
very well.“She was really disap-
pointed,” McBride said. “But
I said, ‘Look, you’ve got to do
your thing. Go win it, do your
best. That’s where you’re sup-
posed to be.’ Of c ourse I’d love to
have her there, there’s no ques-
tion. I missed things when I was
playing ball. I explained that to
her. I missed things because I
was committed. Once you sign
on that line, you’re committed
to that team.”
Today, McBride is helping her
friend assist a high school bas-
ketball team along with work-
ing full-time. She loves lighting
a fire within the girls and using
her talents to help others. She
also loves spending time withher family. Her time at BYU is
a part of her life that she will
always cherish.
“When you play college ball
and you’re a student athlete,
those are times that will never
be forgotten. It was incredible.It was a great, great opportu-
nity, and I feel very privileged
to be a part of BYU in any way.
The neatest thing I think is the
people you meet, the people who
touch your lives for good. You
learn from them, you grow from
them and you’re a better person
for being around them. I really
am grateful.”
“When you play
college ball and you’re
a student althlete,
those are times that will
never be forgotten.”
Jackie Beene McBrideFormer BYU women’s basketball star
CARLINOTransfer basketball player makes an impact on the team
Continued from Page 9
playing that well in the season as
a whole.”
Now that he’s playing more
consistently, Carlino is happy with the Cou-
gars’ chances of winning. Know-
ing his team can go into each game
thinking they will come out with
a victory is what he likes the most
about his personal play.
“I think a lot of times it’s been
a good correlation; when I’ve
played well, we’ve won,” Carlino
said. “That’s a good feeling to have
when you know if you go out and
play well, it’s a good chance your
team is going to win.”
Fans have been discouraging
Carlino from shaving his head
again because of the way he has
been performing after letting his
hair grow out. Since growing out
his hair, Carlino has only been get-
ting better and was asked whether
the positive relationship had some-
thing to do with his turnaround.
“I have been playing better, somaybe,” Carlino joked.
Although he has a ways to go
before reaching his peak, Carlino
continues to work his way up and
watches film on other college and
NBA players rather than watching
himself. He said he has already
picked up a variety of things in a
conference full of great offensive
and defensive players.
As BYU continues to improve
its chances of making the NCAA
tournament with the last several
games, Carlino may be the key
to getting there alongside team-
mates Tyler Haws and Brandon
Davies. When Carlino gets going,
there’s nothing that can deter his
confidence. Haws knows Carlino
found his role on the team as an
effective and influential player
with his performances in confer-
ence games.“Matt’s a guy that can make
guys better,” Haws said. “When
he’s playing fast and pushing the
ball up the floor, he finds Bran-
don on the break, finds me on the
break. He makes guys better, and
I think t hat’s what he’s figured out
lately.”
Photo by Sarah Hill
Matt Carlino is greeted by his teammates as he is subbed out of a game.
Photos courtesy Deezbaa Whaley
(L) Deezbaa Whaley served in the Arkansas Little Rock Mission. (R) Whaley returned to the BYU trackand field team after her mission.
SISTERS Athletes fresh offtheir mission
Continued from Page 9
track translated to valuable les-
sons on their missions and in
their spirituality.
“I was so grateful that I had
that experience and that I hadthe mental discipline to keep
going when things were hard,”
Yingling said. “I think track gave
me the desire to work hard and
to fight for things that seemed
impossible.”
Athletics is more than about
pushing your body, it’s about
mental discipline, desire, hard
work and goal setting and so is
missionary work. All four of these
young women shared their
experiences with God strength-
ening them athletically.
“I think the lessons and the
impact that track had on me to
make me a hard worker and give
me perspective, and goals gave
me what I needed on the mission
to achieve what I needed to as a
missionary.” Whaley said.
After 18 months in a new loca-
tion, immersed in a different life-
style, they returned home from
their missions, an unforgettable
transition.
“The day after I got back I
went to see the coaches. I wasn’t
released yet so I still had to wear
my name tag.” Whaley said. “(My
dad and I) went and met with thecoaches and they said, ‘We are
ready to have you back.’”
Open arms from the coaching
staff were waiting for Yingling
and Thayer as well.
“Three days after I got home,
I called coach and he acted like
I had never left,” Yingling said.
“He said, ‘Come in when you
can and we will talk about your
training.’”
For Moffat, the experience
was a bit different. Try-outs for
the track and field team were to
take place within one month of
her arrival home from her mis-
sion. She prepared and trained,
and followed her impressions to
try out for the team.
“I really didn’t think I would
be able to get on,” Moffat said. “I
was praying so hard; I knew there
was a role in me being there.”
Now all four are immersed in
school and their training, com-
peting in indoor track and fieldand preparing for outdoor track
and field, and they haven’t for-
gotten what their missions have
done for them.
“I’ve been back for a few
months and I feel like I’m already
way better than I was before,”
Thayer said. “The potential I
have now is way better, and I’m
just more focused and dedicated.”
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12 The Universe, February 19 – 25, 2013
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is always on the ice athte Seven
Peaks Ice Arena.
But while local patrons glide
playfully around the rink, a manworks hard behind the scenes to
maintain the quality of the ice.
He is a burly, lumberjack look-
ing fellow with a thick, fire-red
beard and a rainbow-colored
ski hat who knows the ice better
than anyone else in the building.
Meet Patrick Kane, the Zam-
boni driver at Seven Peaks Ice
Arena.
Kane, 27, grew up in Burling-
ton, Vt., where ice hockey was
more popular than other sports.
“If you didn’t go to a football
game, nobody noticed,” Kane
said. “But if you didn’t go to a
hockey game it was like, ‘Hey
man, how come you weren’t at
the game?’”
Although Kane never playedhockey, he described himself as
a “ruthless fan” of the sport in
high school. That love of hockey
landed him a job at his loca l ice
skating rink, where he learned
the basics of rink maintenance.
“Just being around at a
hockey rink, you learn about dif-
ferent programs and how the ice
should look,” Kane said.
Kane learned to drive a Zam-
boni when he moved to Utah.
Zamboni is a brand name ofan ice-resurfacing machine
invented by Frank Zamboni, a
Utah native, in 1949. The vehicle
has become essential to not only
the hockey game, but also to the
culture, and was mentioned in
Martin Zellar’s song, “I Wanna
Drive the Zamboni.”
Zambonis essentially pave
ice over ice arenas. The arenas
are built on concrete bases over
an intricate maze of cooling
pipes. The ice is generally an
inch to one-and-a-half inches
thick, applied in layers by the
Zamboni.
“It takes about 70 laps to get
about an inch of ice,” Kane said.
“It takes a lot of work.”
One “lap” is equal to anentire resurfacing session with
a Zamboni.
Each of the two rinks at Seven
Peaks Ice Arena is resurfaced
from the ground every other
year during the summer, and
the process can take severaldays. The more important ice
maintenance comes between
each skating sessions, when
Kane takes the Zamboni out for
a resurfacing lap to smooth over
the rough ice.
Prior to the invention ofthe Zamboni, ice had to be
resurfaced by hand and the
process often took about 24
hours.
The machine first cuts the
ice with a large razor blade.
Ice shavings are fed througha system of corkscrew augers
to the front container on the
Zamboni. A stream of water
then cleans t he newly shaved ice
to remove any impurities. This
water is collected and filtered
within the vehicle.
The part that spectators
see is the resurfacing water
steaming over the back edge of
the Zamboni, creating a clear
and smooth coat of ice for the
next round of skaters.Kane drives the Zamboni in
a specific pattern to make sure
he doesn’t miss a spot, and he
usually can resurface within
an inch of the boards, letting
the water flow to the edges of the
rink on its own.
At the end of each resurfacing
lap, Kane returns t he Zamboni
to the garage as patrons return
to the ice, carving new paths
over the freshly resurfaced rink.
Kane again works hard behind
the scenes emptying, cleaning
and refilling t he Zamboni for the
next round of resurfacing that
needs to be done.
“(Patrick) does it really well,”
coworker Nicki Santamaria
said of Kane’s resurfacingtechniques. “He takes his time
with it.”
Photo by Sarah Hill
Patrick Kane, zamboni driver at Seven Peaks Arena, clears the ice on Wednesday night.
Men’s tennis defeats UNLV, Denver
B y S P E N C E R W R I G H T
The BYU men’s tennis
remained unbeaten at home
after taking down UNLV and
Denver.
The Cougars are now 9–0
at home this season after
this weekend’s matches. The
Cougars defeated UNLV 5–1 on
Friday and then returned on
Saturday to beat No. 52 Denver
5–1.
The Cougars are on a four-
match winning streak and,
after defeating Denver, have
beaten four ranked opponents
this season.
“It was a great team win,”BYU coach Brad Pearce said.
The 5–1 victory over Denver
was anything but easy for the
Cougars. They were just able to
snag the doubles point and then
were taken to three sets in allbut one match in singles play.
BYU started well with the
doubles team of junior Patrick
Kawka and sophomore Francis
Sargeant defeating Denver’s top
tandem 8–5. However, Denver
came back with a win from
Henry Craig and Jens Vorkefeld
on Court 2.
With the point on the
line, BYU’s
s o p h o m o r e
K e a t o n
C u l l i m o r e
and freshman
John Pearce
fought back
from an
early deficit
to win theirmatch and
the crucial
doubles point
against the
Pioneers’ Alex
Clinkenbeard
and Fabio
Biasion.
“I think
that win was
huge,” John
Pearce said.
“Going into
the singles
now knowing we only had to
win three matches was a great
way to start.”
The Cougars were able to
take control of the match in
singles play. On Court 2, senior
Spencer Smith was the first
Cougar to grab a point with his
victory over Vorkefeld 6–4, 7–6.
No. 74 Kawka followed suit
with his victory over Denver’s
Enej Bonin, who is ranked No.
47 in the country, 6–7, 6–1, 6–0.
It appeared Bonin injured his
hamstring at the beginning of
the second set. He was treated
by the trainer at the beginning
of the third set but was not able
to recover.
With a 3–0 lead, Sargeant
gave the Cougars the vital
fourth point with his win
over Max Krammer in a hotlycontested match.
“I got off to a quick start,”
Sargeant said. “In the third set
it was back and forth when I
finally started to find my range
and managed to close it out. It
was a fun match t o play.”
Sargeant won the first match
handily 6–3 but then lost the
second set 4–6. He came back
strong in the third set to defeat
Krammer 6–2.
Craig picked up Denver’s
only point with his 6–3, 2–6, 7–6
win over Cullimore.
John Pearce won his match
after Biasion retired because
of an injury, and freshman
Andrey Goryachkov didn’t
finish his match because thematch had already been decided
in the Cougars’ favor.
On Friday, the Cougars
defeated UNLV handily 5–0 and
only dropped one set the entire
evening.
“I’m surprised we took care
of UNLV like we did,” Coach
Pearce said. “I’m gaining a lot of
confidence in our team. I think
we’re pretty
good.”
T h e
Cougars won
the doubles
point with
two victories,
and the third
match was
called once thepoint had been
decided in
the Cougars’
favor.
In singles
play, BYU
d e f e a t e d
UNLV in
s t r a i g h t
sets in three
matches with
only Smith
and UNLV’s
Tamas Batyi
going a full three sets. Smith
still came away with the win
though, 6–3, 4–6, 7–5.
John Pearce and Goryachkov
won the first set in their
matches before they were called
because the matches had again
already been decided in BYU’s
favor.
BYU will play rival Utah
on Saturday at 5:30 p.m. at the
Indoor Tennis Courts.
BYU women’s tennis remains undefeated
B y S P E N C E R W R I G H T
The BYU women’s tennis
team remains undefeated
after knocking off regional
rival Boise State 6–1 in a
match lasting over five hours
Saturday afternoon at the
indoor tennis courts in Provo.
The BYU Cougars are theonly undefeated team from the
West Coast Conference with a
4–0 mark. The game was the
first loss of the season for Boise
State, which now sits at 4 –1.
“We always play really well
on our home courts,” BYU
coach Lauren Jones-Spencer
said. “Our team is really good
this year. They stayed tough
and pulled off the win.”
The match was much closer
than the 6–1 scoreline would
indicate though.
BYU picked up the doubles
point for the fourth straight
match. The Cougars have now
won 11 of 12 doubles matches
this season.
After a grueling two-and-
a-half-hour match last week,
BYU junior Desiree Tran was
the first to finish with a 7–5,
6–4 victory over the Broncos’
Marlena Pietzuch. The win
took the Cougars’ lead to 2–0
and put Tran at 4–0 on the
season.
At the No. 1 position,Boise State’s Sandy Vo from
Australia took Cougar
sophomore Morgan Anderson
to three sets before notching
the Broncos’ one and only point
with a 4–6, 6–0, 6–3 win.
The next two matches to
finish also went to three
sets before being decided
in the Cougars’ favor. BYU
sophomore Meghan Sheehan-
Dizon also won her fourth
consecutive match of the
season with a 4–6, 6–1, 6–2
victory over Teal Vosburgh.
“The first set she came out
taking control of the points and
I was being hesitant,” Sheehan-
Dizon said. “The next two sets
I believed in myself, played
smart, played how I play, and
I was able to come away with
the win.”
Freshman Nicolette Tran
picked up the fourth and
decisive point for the Cougarsin another three-set match
against Morgan Basil. After
dropping the first set 3–6, Tran
came back to win the next two
sets 6–1, 6–3.
BYU senior Aubrey Paul
finished off the scoring for
the Cougars with her 7–6,
6–3 victory over Boise State’s
Sammie Watson. Freshman
Mackenna Maddox was
winning her match against
the Broncos Megan LaLone
when a it was called because
the overall match had already
been decided and the BYU
men’s tennis team was about
to begin its match against
Denver.
The Cougars are now 4–0 forthe first time since 2006 and
will travel to Las Vegas this
week for a double-header. They
play UNLV on Friday and Iowa
State on Saturday.
Photo by Sarah Hill
Meghan Sheehan-Dizon hits theball back to her Boise State op-ponents on Saturday.
Photo by Sarah Hill
Francis Sargeant returns the ball to his UNLV opponents on Friday.
“I got off to a quick
start. On the third set it
was back and forth whenI finally started to find
my range and managed
to close it out. It was
a fun match to play.”
Francis SargeantBYU men’s tennis
8/12/2019 321: Universe Paper
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Life, etc.universe.byu.edu/lifeFebruary 19 – 25, 2013
Page 13 @UniverseLife
‘The Suffering of Light’
B y S T E P H A N I E O R A N
Poverty, political uncertainty and
stressful life events can distract and
prevent artists from seeing the hid-
den story in front of them. However,
this doesn’t seem to be a problem for
acclaimed photographer Alex Webb.
Webb is a recognized pioneer ofAmerican color photography whose
images are well known for their intense
color and light.
As part of its “First Fridays at the
MOA” event, the BYU Museum of Art
highlighted Webb’s fascinating thirty-
year career in its latest photography
exhibit, “Alex Webb — The Suffering
of Light: Thirty Years of Photographs.”
The exhibit showcases Webb’s talent
behind the camera th rough forty-five
large print photographs now on display
at the museum. The traveling exhibi-
tion is organized by Aperture Founda-
tion in New York City and will be on
display until May 4, 2013.
Carolyn Haynie, public relations spe-
cialist at the MOA, explained that the
photographs in this particular exhibit
focus on the life and culture of develop-
ing countries.
“The exhibit focuses on a lot of cul-
tures that are on the periphery of West-
ern civilization,” Haynie said. “You
have Turkey and Mexican-border cul-
tures, Haiti and other countries around
the world.”
Regarding Webb’s artwork style,
Haynie described the aspects she found
the most intriguing.
“I think the most beautiful aspect is
his use of color and his ability to capture
emotion — the emotion of capturing
everyday life,” Haynie said. “Human
emotions are universal. Things such asshopping down the street, death, being
happy and being in love are universal
and bonding.”
Regarding the human emotions
Webb’s photographs capture, Haynie
explained that through them one can
feel a bond. Visitors can relate to them
because everybody is human.
Diana Turnbow, curator of photog-
raphy for the museum, also described
what she found unique about Webb’s
work.
“I am struck by Webb’s ability to
give himself to the moment of the pho-
tograph,” Turnbow said. “It’s the lyri-
cism found in the color of the setting or
the gesture of his subjects that deeply
imprints upon the viewer and poten-
tially creates a connection that can lead
to further inquiry, empathy and a mea-
sure of understanding of a particular
place or people.”
See LIGHT on Page 15
Annual Concerto Competition,Regan Theater Orem
International Cinema: ‘MissEvers’ Boys,’Through Friday, 6:45-8:45 p.m.,250 SWKT
BYU’s Got Talent,7 p.m., WSC Varsity Theatre
Dinner and Drama,Through Mar. 2,Covey Center for the Arts, Provo
Old Nauvoo Dance Night,7 p.m.,Education in Zion Gallery
Academy of Ballet:PointeCounterpointe,Through Mar. 31,Covey Center for the Arts, Provo
Broadway Revue,7:30 p.m.,Pardoe Theatre
Opera Scenes,7:30 p.m.,Madsen Recital Hall
Living Legends,7:30 p.m.,de Jong Concert Hall
Downtown Provo Art Stroll,Through Feb. 24,6-9 p.m.,Covey Center for the Arts, Provo
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T U E S D A Y
T U E S D A Y
W E D N E S D A Y
T U E S D A Y
F R I D A Y
T U E S D A Y
F R I D A Y
W E D N E S D A Y
F R I D A Y
W E D N E S D A Y
THE UNIVERSE CALENDAR FEBRUARY 19 – 25
B y S T A C I A W A H L G R E N
Breakfast gets skipped, lunch is
on the run, and dinner consists of
pantry items thrown together last
minute.
Every student faces the difficulty
of a busy schedule coupled with the
challenge of eating right, but mar-
ried students learn how challeng-
ing it can be to eat together. Success
then varies, depending on the situ-
ation and the couple.
Annie Bruner, a newlywed
majoring in nursing, said she tries
to meet up with her husband for
lunch but it doesn’t always happen.
“It does make a difference eatingtogether,” Bruner said. “I think it’s
important to make the effort.”
While many married students
make the effort to eat together,
school, work and homework can
put dinner on the back burner.
Kortney Chamberlain, an exer-
cise science major from Oregon,
said she gets sad when she is unable
to eat with her husband.
“We have those routines that we
like to set up because we want to
be together,” Chamberlain said.
“I think there is a reason in theChurch why they say family din-
ners are so important.”
Chamberlain said she tries to
plan meals that will have enough
for leftovers.
“We try to make as many din-
ners as we can, but it’s hard to keep
it going,” Chamberlain said. “If we
made dinner, we have lunch the
next day. If not, we go out.”
Incorporating healthy food into
two people’s schedules can be a
daunting task, but Chamberlain
said she believes health starts at
the grocery store.
“If you buy the food that is actu-
ally good for you and healthy for
you, you’ll make healthy meals,”
Chamberlain said. “If you buy
snacks, you are going to eatsnacks.”
Lora Brown, associate professor
in the Department of Nutrition,
Dietetics and Food Science, said
married students simply need to
plan ahead.
“Eating healthy actually
requires planning,” Brown said.
“Healthy meals just don’t fall out of
the sky like manna. It’s basic stuff,
but somebody needs to do it.”
See EATING on Page 15
Custom rings becomingan increasing trend
B y B R I T T A N Y C A R L I L E
Date, find a ring, get engaged, get married and live happily
ever after. These tasks often appear to be a simple to-do list,
but what many people don’t take into account is the actual
effort, time and skill that goes into each ring.
Picking out a ring can be a hard task with so many elements
to consider: diamond cut, type of metal, gem size, stone set-
ting, and the list goes on. When someone isn’t satisfied with
options provided at jewelry retailers, there is an option tocustom design the ideal ring.
Gold-smithing is an intensive trade that has been around
for centuries. However, the art has recently evolved with
advances in technology, making custom jewelry a reason-
able option for more people.
Former BYU student Jenni Whitlock decided to go with this
approach when it came time to picking out a ring.
“I saw things that I real ly loved in the stores, but none of them
were perfect,” Whitlock said. “For me, my ring needed to be
just as functional as it was beautiful. I was set on having a euro-
s h a n k ,
which is
not very
common
here, so
my hus-
band and I
decided to
have a ring
c u s t o md e s i g n e d
t h a t
i n c l u d e d
all of the
ideal func-
tions and
design ele-
ments that
I wanted.”
When it
came down
to it, Chase
G r e e n
d e c i d e d
to custom
design a
ring to sur-
prise to his wife.
“I thought there was something more
sentimental about it,” Green said. “It
seemed more personal, and plus, I would have li fetime brag-
ging rights to the fact that I designed it. Also, my wife is a
romantic, so I knew she would love the idea that I designed
it with her in mind.”
Kevin Reid has been in the goldsmith industry for more
than 32 years and has been impressed with the advances the
industry has made, especially with incorporating the latest
technology.
“I started the t rade before my mission, mainly focusing on
minor jewelry repairs,” Reid said. “When I returned home
from my mission, I picked up the art again and used it as a
means to put myself through school. Then I ended up making
a career out of it .”Goldsmiths need to be detail-oriented on various levels to
balance different aspects of the design process.
“It’s a long and tedious process from start to finish,” Reid
said. “In general there are two types of customers. Sometimes
I will get someone with a picture of a ring they like from a jew-
elry store, magazine or Pinterest. Sometimes they want minor
changes like a different metal or an alternate stone. I can cre-
ate something similar, but I don’t like to copy rings because
designers spend a lot of time on them and I respect that.”
The second type of customers that approach Reid are those
who know
what they
don’t like
and try to
c r e a t e
something
from there.
“ T h e s e
are usually
the girlsthat come
to me say-
ing, ‘I want
something
different,’”
Reid said.
“It is then
that we
start gener-
ating lists
of likes
and dis-
likes and
then start
drawing.
See RINGS on Page 15
Married couples struggle to eat healthy, together
Photo by Kevin Reid, RGS Corp
Advances in technology have transformed traditional ring shopping into a digital experience.
Photo illustration by Whitnie Soelberg
Married students find it difficult to have sit-down dinners with their spouses.
Photo courtesy Nathalie Van Empel
Alex Webb’s work is now on display at the MOA’s new exhibit “Alex Webb: Thesuffering of light: Thirty years of Photographs.”
8/12/2019 321: Universe Paper
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14 The Universe, February 19 – 25, 2013
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Restaurant reviews weighin on dining choices
B y S T A C I A W A H L G R E N
Walking into a restaurant
for the first time brings a
variety of smells, emotions and
tastes. Almost immediately,
regret settles in as the thought
races like a broken record; “Ishould have checked reviews
first.”
The cafe was trashy, the food
was gross and the servic e was
awful.
Some students avoid this
situation by looking up
reviews of restaurants; others
take their chances.
Yelp, Urbanspoon, Google
and FourSquare have given
students an opportunity to
check out diners and bistros
without actually going in.
Despite the technology, some
students do not use reviews,
while others won’t go to a
restaurant without looking it
up first.
Lucy Barney, a sophomorefrom Arizona, said the reason
she doesn’t use restaurant
reviews is because she believes
the food is coming from a
professional.
“If it’s a built restaurant, if
it’s established, it’s got to be
at least semi-decent,” Barney
said.
Students rate professors,
products, movies and services,
but some students do not
review food because of how
quick the experience at a
restaurant is.
Harry Williamson, an
international relations major
from Highland, said he doesn’t
review food because he doesn’t
have to deal with the productfor a long time.
“I will have a CD for a long
time; but food, you eat it and
even if it wasn’t that good,
it’s out in a couple of days,”
Williamson said.
Circumstance can often
dictate whether people choose
to look up the restaurant
before they go.
Jordan Oldroyd, a
mechanical engineering
major, said he only uses
restaurant reviews for when
he is out of town. Even then,
Oldroyd said he uses Google
as a way to locate a restaurant.
“I use Google Maps to find
restaurants when I’m out of
town, and if there are reviews,I’ll check them out,” Oldroyd
said. “If I’m not out of town, I
never use reviews.”
While some students do not
use reviews, others find it
extremely helpful.
Alex Theobald, a phi losophy
major from California, said he
uses restaurant reviews to find
restaurants that both he, and
hopefully his date, have never
been to before.
“It puts us both in an
environment where it is a new
experience,” Theobald said.
Theobald said that one of
the reasons he likes taking his
dates to new places is because
he is in search of a hole-in-the-
wall restaurant.“They have better food, and
I like to see if they have a little
bit of style,” he said.
Theobald said he recognizes
that the people who review
restaurants are biased,
and he uses this knowledge
to evaluate whether the
restaurant is a hit.
“They are either really good,
or really bad, so I just take that
with a grain of salt,” Theobald
said.
Katie King, an elementary
education major from Logan,
said she doesn’t use onlineor print reviewers, but she
considers word-of-mouth a
review. Although word-of-
mouth isn’t published, she
said she considers it just as
important, if not more so.
“If people at work tell
me about a restaurant, I’ll
go,” King said. “One of my
co-workers recommended a
Japanese restaurant, and I
loved it.”
Aubin Dubois, a psychology
major from Sandy, said the
reason she uses restaurant
reviews is to avoid bad
restaurants.
“I’m afraid to step out of my
comfort zone; I’m afraid of bad
experiences,” Dubois said.She said the way to find good
restaurants is to figure out
what other people think.
“If someone gives a bad
review, I won’t go there,”
Dubois said. “I went to this
Thai restaurant in California
after looking up a review, and
I definitely didn’t regret that
decision.”
Product placement in movies From National
Geographicto Apple
B y Z H A N N A M O L D A G U L O V A
Many ‘90s kids remember
the scene in the beginning
of “Home Alone” where
the McCallister family sits
around the table having
dinner. “Fuller, go easy on the
Pepsi,” Kevin’s aunt says to her
son knowing about Fuller’s
persistent problem of wetting
the bed. But this phrase is
much more than just a warning
against drinking too much
soda.
Product placement is a form
of advertising that is used in
movies and TV shows where
branded products are placed
in a movie setting. It usually
aims to be inconspicuous and
be part of the scene so th at theaudience will see a product
in the natural environment.
Product placement can add
credibility to a movie. It is
easier to identify with a story
or with movie characters when
they use products familiar to
everyday life. It is also another
venue for advertisers to show
their product without being
obtrusive.
Apple Inc. is an example
of a company that mastered
that skill. According to
Brandchannel.com, a Webby-
award-winning website about
branding, in 2011 Apple had
its products in more than 40
percent of the top films, among
which are “Mission Impossible:Ghost Protocol” and “The
Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn
Part 1.” In fact, one of Apple’s
biggest marketing secrets is
free product placement. The
company whose products can
be seen in so many movies
doesn’t pay a penny for the
brand placement. According
to InvestorPlace, a website that
provides information about
the stock market, in “Mi ssion
Impossible: Ghost Protocol”
Apple received more than
$23 million in free product
placement by providingcomputers, phones and other
devices to the movie.
The technique pays;
while not everyone can
afford a shiny yellow Chevy
Camaro like Bumblebee from
“Transformers,” technical
devices are in general more
affordable.
“I don’t have money
for a car,” said Tarandita
Subiantoro, a BYU student
from Indonesia. “But things
like phones and computers in
the movies definitely influence
my taste, the way I choose
products.”
It started a long time ago
and was present even in silent
movies. Silent movie “Wings”(1927) had Hershey’s chocolate
in it, and famous Christmas
movie “It’s A Wonderful Life”
(1946) shows a young boy
dreaming to be an explorer
with a prominent copy of
National Geographic in his
hands.
Many people are not aware
that product placement
happens, and that is exactly
what advertisers want — to
influence consumers’ choices
without consumers ever
noticing.
Neuroscience major AndrewRay knows about product
placement because of the
marketing classes he takes.
“I think product placement
is an innovative way to
advertise a product,” Ray
said. “When you show the
usefulness of your product by
showing how it makes other
people’s lives easier, you’ve
created an advertisement
that is invaluable.” Douglas
McKinlay, an advertising
professor at BYU, sees product
placement as a necessary
monetary help for a film
industry.
“We have all come to
accept product placement as
a legitimate way to help fundthe movie,” McKinlay said.
“(Product placement can be)
good if the product is written
into the script so that it looks
like part of the landscape.”
Fashion ‘don’ts’ that are actually ‘dos’
The styles today suggest that it isOK to break fashion rules — if you
have the intuition to do it correctly
B y A N D R E A H U D S O N
Recent trends have rewrit-
ten some basic rules of fashion.
Styles that were once known as
fashion faux pas are now widely
accepted in the fashion world.
Some students break these
rules, while others may still be
opposed to this form of rebellion.
So what exactly are the rules
to be broken? Current stylists
are wearing horizontal stripes,
white after Labor Day andblack with brown.
Samantha Jameson, a
sophomore studying art
history, is all for breaking
these rules.
“Wearing black and brown
together is fine,” Jameson
said. “You just have to do it the
right way. You just have to be
intuitive. You have to know
when it looks good and when it
doesn’t.”
Even at stores these new
styles are prominent. Many
students shop at Forever 21 in
the University Mall in Orem.
Assistant store manager Lacey
Ramirez explained how people
are adapting to the new-found
freedoms in fashion.“Forever 21 is very much a
young person’s store,” Ramirez
said. “It says it in the na me, so
we see people come in all the
time who are breaking all sorts
of fashion rules, but that is just
the style.”
Stores targeted toward this
younger audience seem to keep
up a fast pace. Young, trendy
shoppers head for the dressing
rooms with armfuls of clothes
that used to be considered
fashion don’ts.
Students across Utah val ley
are more willing to embrace
new, adventurous styles. The
more original, the better. But
with originality still comes a
limit.
Kiefer Hickman, a junior
studying economics, has some
style don’ts of his own.
“Definitely don’t mix
stripes,” Hickman said. “You
don’t want to mix horizontal
stripes on one article of
clothing with vertical on
another because then it just
looks weird.”
Fashion aside, certain
combinations don’t make
sense to any fashionista. For
instance, Hickman said that
tacky is never OK in fashion.
“I had a pair of jeans that
I put my phone in my pocket
everyday, and it began to wear
through and it looks tacky,”
Hickman said. “Try to avoid
the cell phone patch.”
“They have better
food, and I like to see ifthey have a little bit of
style. They are either
really good, or really
bad, so I just take that
with a grain of salt.”
Alex TheoboldPhilosophy major,
California
“
I think productplacement is an
innovative way to
advertise a product.”
Andrew RayNeuroscience major
Photos by Andrea Hudson
Marie Diamond wears a black and cream horizontal striped dressfrom H&M and a brown corduroy coat.
“Wearing black and
brown together is
fine. You just have to
do it the right way.”
Samantha JamesonArt history major
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The Universe, February 19 – 25, 2013 15
LIGHTS Exhibit shows off
color and light
Continued from Page 13
The exhibit has a comple-
mentary book, “Alex Webb:
The Suffering of Light,”
in which,
along with
his photo-
graphs, Webb
describes his
e x p e r i e n c e
behind the
camera.
“To me it
all is pho-
t o g r a p h y , ”
Webb said.
“You have to
go out and
explore theworld with a camera.”
The exhibit originally
opened on Dec. 14, but the
MOA’s education depa rtment
decided to feature the exhibit
for its first “First Fridays at
the MOA” event of the year.
For those not aware of “First
Fridays,” it is a monthly event
series that integrates MOA
art exhibitions with dance
or live music to enhance
visitors’ experience at the
museum.At this “Firs t Friday,” visi-
tors had the chance to wan-
der around the museum andvisit the “Suffering of Light”
exhibit while listening to
C a r i b b e a n -
style music
p r o v i d e d
by Utah’s
Drum Lab
Steel Band.
V i s i t o r s
also enjoyed
C a r i b b e a n -
t h e m e d
r e f r e s h -
ments.
J e s s i c a
Leblow, a
biology edu-cation major from Kansas,
went to the exhibition on
“First Fridays” and offered a
commentary on the photogra-
phy at the exhibit.
“The photography is great;
it has an interesting social
commentary,” Leblow said.
“The photographs have a nice
use of color. (Webb) is a good
street photographer.”
For those interested in
Webb and his artwork, he will
be giving a lecture co-hostedby the MOA and David M.
Kennedy Center for Interna-
tional Studies in March 2013.
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EATING Healthy meals get put on theback-burner
Continued from Page 13
Depending on the major and
graduation plan, some students
find it easier to eat together
because of how they built their
schedules.
Linny Allsop, an English
major from Arizona, said she
specifically planned her classes
so she could eat lunch with her
husband.
“We both have a class that
gets out at noon, so we just come
over and eat together,” Allsop
said.
Sometimes it can be tempting
to buy really healthy food, butAllsop said she learned from
experience that even though
eating healthy is important, it
doesn’t do any good if you won’t
eat what you buy.
“Stock up on what you eat,”
Allsop said. “I bought some
yogurt that was on sale, and
it sat in the fridge for two
months.”
In terms of what to buy and
where to buy it, students have
endless options. Clark Allsop,
Linny Allsop’s husband, said
even though it’s sometimes
hard financially, he likes to buyin bulk rather than buying only
what his family needs.
“We get necessities at Costco
and conveniences at Smith’s,”
Clark Allsop said.
RINGSUnique rings in demand forengagement rings
Continued from Page 13
Not only do they need to cre-
ate a ring that the customer is
pleased with, but goldsmiths also
have to take into consideration
the actual cost to produce the
ring.
“You wouldn’t think so, but
cost plays a huge role in the
design process,” Reid said. “I
can create any girl’s dream ring,
but it will just cost them 10 to 15
thousand dollars. There have
been times when the client and
I have almost finalized a design
and they realize that it is far outof their budget. When that hap-
pens we have to start over again
from scratch.”
Over the past few years, the
techniques of the trade have
changed from filing and making
wax molds into a more advanced
technique that relies on a certain
level of technological ability and
skill.
“I decided that I have reached
that point where I need to put
my tools down and pick up the
modern tricks of t he trade,” Reid
said. “Of course there are some
projects that require techniquesthat can only be accomplished
with tedious handwork, but in
general, it’s important to stay
up with technology and not get
left behind.”
‘These boots were made for walking’
B y A N D R E A H U D S O N
Ditch the Chucks and strap
on the boots. These boots are no
longer just for trucking around
in the mud.
Boots that were once used
purely for functionality at work
are now considered a fashion
must for men’s footwear.
Not everyone is converted,
and the boot fad still has some
skeptics. However, for many
others, boots are an everyday
accessory.
Houston Tanner, a senior
majoring in microbiology, is an
example of a boot skeptic.
“I think there’s a couple of
reasons to wear boots,” Tanner
said. “First off, you got cowboy
figure boots … and the other
boots are for girls.”
Like many others, Tanner
sticks with sneakers as his
everyday shoe choice. He may
feel that boots are only for cow-
boys working on the farm, but
other men disagree with this
opinion.Kev Nemelka, a senior major-
ing in art history and curato-
rial studies, explained his
personal style.
“If I’m wearing boots, I try
to go Goth or forester/Cabe-
las style, depending on what
I’m wearing,” Nemelka said. “I
don’t like tucking my jeans into
my boots. I usually just peg or
cuff. Dr. Marten boots are my
favorites — they’re the most
utilitarian, and everyone can
pull them off.”
As fashionably acceptable as
these boots may be, they aren’t
the most comfortable to wear.
Some complain that they suffer
for their fashion.
“I also always keep a pairof Birkenstocks in my library
locker so I don’t have to clod
around in boots all day,”
Nemelka said. “It’s rather
obnoxious.”
Nicholas Rust works at the
Macy’s men’s shoe department
in the Provo University Mall
and sees countless numbers of
men purchasing boots.
As far as style goes, Rust
explained that a popular brand
is currently Steve Madden. The
brand offers very trendy lookswith a European inspiration.
Men are becoming more and
more concerned about the style
of their boot.
Danny Gessel, a junior
majoring in physiology and
developmental biology, is an
avid boot wearer.
“There’s a feeling that
accompanies boot wearing,”
Gessel said. “It’s a feeling of
class — yet rugged at the same
time. Boots can be very versa-
tile. I’ll wear them to nice occa-sions and to hike in the woods.
I think the trend of boot wear-
ing is spreading quickly across
campus, and I kind of like it
because men just plain look
good in boots.”
Photo by Andrea Hudson
Danny Gessel wears a pair of desert boots that fair well in the winterweather.
Photo courtesy Alex Webb/Magnum Photos
Alex Webb’s “Bombay 1981” is one of the works on display at the MOA’s “Suffering of light” exhibit.
”I am struck by Webb’s
ability to give himself
to the moment of
the photograph.”
Diana TurnbowCurator of photography for the MOA
8/12/2019 321: Universe Paper
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9 1 4 8 2 5 7 3 6
6 3 8 7 9 1 2 5 4
2 5 7 3 4 6 8 9 1
1 8 2 9 3 4 6 7 5
3 6 9 1 5 7 4 2 8
4 7 5 2 6 8 9 1 3
7 9 6 5 8 3 1 4 2
5 4 1 6 7 2 3 8 9
8 2 3 4 1 9 5 6 7
Puzzle 1: Easy
1 6 2 5 7 9 4 8 3
7 3 4 1 8 6 2 9 5
5 8 9 2 3 4 6 7 1
6 1 3 7 9 2 8 5 4
8 4 5 6 1 3 7 2 9
9 2 7 8 4 5 1 3 6
2 5 8 9 6 1 3 4 7
3 9 1 4 2 7 5 6 8
4 7 6 3 5 8 9 1 2
Puzzle 6: Very Hard
3 9 6 2 5 7 4 8 1
7 8 4 3 9 1 5 2 6
1 2 5 4 6 8 7 9 3
6 4 8 5 2 3 1 7 9
9 5 1 6 7 4 8 3 2
2 7 3 8 1 9 6 4 5
4 6 2 7 3 5 9 1 8
5 1 7 9 8 2 3 6 4
8 3 9 1 4 6 2 5 7
Puzzle 5: Hard
7 9 2 1 3 6 8 4 5
6 3 5 8 4 2 7 9 1
1 4 8 5 7 9 2 3 6
9 6 1 2 8 7 3 5 4
8 2 3 6 5 4 9 1 7
4 5 7 9 1 3 6 2 8
2 7 4 3 6 5 1 8 9
5 8 9 7 2 1 4 6 3
3 1 6 4 9 8 5 7 2
Puzzle 4: Medium/Hard
3 5 2 4 7 9 6 8 1
9 4 1 2 8 6 7 5 3
6 7 8 1 3 5 9 2 4
7 6 9 5 4 2 3 1 8
8 3 5 6 1 7 2 4 9
1 2 4 3 9 8 5 6 7
2 1 3 7 5 4 8 9 6
4 9 6 8 2 3 1 7 5
5 8 7 9 6 1 4 3 2
Puzzle 3: Medium
5 2 4 6 1 9 8 3 7
7 1 6 8 2 3 9 4 5
9 3 8 4 7 5 1 6 2
8 7 5 9 3 6 2 1 4
1 4 9 5 8 2 3 7 6
2 6 3 7 4 1 5 8 9
3 5 2 1 6 4 7 9 8
4 8 1 2 9 7 6 5 3
6 9 7 3 5 8 4 2 1
Puzzle 2: Moderate
l l
Puzzles [ & Comics]Sudoku
i
i
Solutions available at universe.byu.edu/sudoku
Weekly five:Black History
Month A look at African-
Americans who have helped progress civil rights in the U.S.
B y G L E N N R O W L E Y
Every February, Black History Month gives
people all over the country the chance to remem-
ber the contributions of African-Americans to the
history of all aspects of the nation — from civil
rights and politics to music, culture and science.
While many people may first associate Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. with Black History Month, here’s
a look at five other African-Americans who made
significant contributions to civil rights in the U.S.
1. Rosa ParksParks’ decision
in 1955 to refuse
giving up her
seat on a bus to a
white passenger
is often credited
with sparking
the beginning of
the Civil Rights
Movement.
McKay Lind-
say, a member
of BYU’s Divine
Comedy troupe,
sees Parks as an
inspiration not
only to blacks, but to women as well.
“What Rosa Parks did, no matter how menial
it seemed, meant so much to blacks, as well as
women,” Lindsay said. “She’s a hero, and shehas given the rest of us strength and courage as
women.”
2. B.B. KingThe blues musician, widely considered one of
the best guitarists of all time, put such an indel-
ible mark on the modern music that his influ-
ence is still felt even today.
Local musician Mimi Knowles looks to King’s
work regularly for inspiration as a songwriter.
“His style is just electric,” Knowles said.
“Some of my best guitar work can come when
I’m listening to B.B. Ki ng.”
3. George Washington Carver
Born into slavery in 1864, Carver grew up
to become a renowned scientist, botanist and
inventor. His research and work with crop
alternatives to cotton including peanuts, soy-
beans and sweet potatoes led to many scientificdevelopments, including the manufacturing of
peanut butter in America and the practice of
crop rotation.
4. Muhammed AliOriginally born Cassius Clay, the legendary
boxer rose to prominence in the 1960s, eventu-
ally becoming the fi rst and only lineal World
Heavyweight Champion. He is considered one
of the greatest boxers of all time by historians
around the world.
Brent Kamba, vice president of activities for
BYU’s Black Student Union, said he admires
Ali’s strength of character as much as his ath-
letic prowess.
“He was an incredible boxer, and he always
stood up for himself and proved a lot of people
wrong,” said Kamba. “Even though he was a lit-
tle on the extreme side in some of his personal
beliefs, he was always behind the Civil RightsMovement.”
5. Barack ObamaThe nation’s current leader just began his
second term as president and represents the
Civil Rights Movement coming ful l circle into
the 21st century.
Kamba said that, regardless of political ideol-
ogy, Obama’s journey to the White House serves
as motivation for young African Americans
everywhere.
“The idea of going from slavery to having a
two-term black president is pretty incredible,
regardless of whether you like him or not,”
said Kamba. “He really represents that ideal to
black people everywhere, that if you work ha rd
enough you can accomplish anything.”
Cougar Questions If you could relive any moment in
history, what would it be?
“I would like to be there when the Berlin
Wall fell down.”
Morgan ReeseBattleground, Wash.
“I would go see the abolition of slavery
in England.”
Taylor EdwardsKaysville
“I would relive 1969 when man landed on
the moon. I think that would be cool to
experience firsthand.”
Connor DeanRochester, Mich.
“I would go back to the Trojan horse. I
would love to be in it and jump out of it.”
Ashley MillerDraper
“I would love to go back to like the
regency period with Jane Austen, or Old
Hollywood, so like ‘40s.”
Bronte Campbell
Provo
“I would want to be there when Christ
came to the Americas.”
Jen Joslin
Reno, Nev.
”What Rosa Parks
did, no matter how
menial it seemed,
meant so much
to blacks, as well
as women.”
McKay LindsayDivine Comedy Member
16 The Universe, February 19 – 25, 2013
· ·
-- · ..
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P i c k l e s ®
P i c k l e s ®
G a r fi e l d ®
G a r fi e l d ®
D i l b e r t ®
F r a n k &
E r n e s t ®
F r a n k &
E r n e s t ®
Z i t s ®
Z i t s ®
P e a n u t s ®
P e a n u t s ®
N o n S e q u i t e r ®
Z i g g y ®
N o n S e q u i t e r ®
Z i g g y ®
ACROSS
1 Repair billsegment
6 They may bechecked at thedoor
9 Have being
14 Essential ___acid
15 Siesta
16 Big name inrental trucks
17 Plant used asground cover
18 Did or didn’tagree to endthe illustrators’strike?
20 Did or didn’tdilute the prombowlful?
22 Whirling water23 Rumple, as hair
24 Suffix withMarx
26 Like the base-8number system
29 Dean’s domain: Abbr.
30 Apr. workhorse
33 Did or didn’tperform aNew Year’sceremony?
37 Butt out?
38 Org. based inLangley, Va.
39 Fox talentshow, for short
40 Did or didn’tsurpass aD.J.’s mark foraccident-freedays?
45 Set, as a price46 Pal47 Earns the
booby prize48 Part of a terza
rima rhymescheme
49 Corner
Monopolysquare51 Gem for some
Libras54 Did or didn’t
play a goodround of golf?
60 Did or didn’tparticipate inthe Boy Scoutsouting?
62 Dinero63 With 44-Down,
features ofsome Greekarchitecture
64 Pro vote65 Zaps, in the
kitchen66 Ream unit67 Ready for war68 High, pricewise
DOWN
1 Source ofpumice
2 In the thick of 3 Tight spot 4 In a past life 5 Item in a gas
station kiosk 6 Pakistan’s chief
river 7 Works on
socks, say 8 Design detail,
briefly 9 Disco ___
(1970s)10 Woody tissue11 Reply of
confirmation12 E-mail
command13 Long basket, in
hoops lingo19 “This or that?”21 Orange juice
option25 Cow or sow26 Landfill
emanations27 Shepherd’s aid28 Honky-___29 Sirius, e.g.30 Core group31 Moves
laboriously
32 Detergentbrand
34 Lover ofNarcissus
35 Thing with pips36 Head shot
accompaniers,maybe
37 Wall St. hire41 Fall back42 Wreck, as a
hotel room43 Bush 41 and
Bush 43, fortwo
44 See 63-Across
48 DTs sufferer, forshort
49 One of a deckpair
50 Mr. T TV group
51 Singer Redding
52 Milne’s bear
53 Super-duper
55 Casual greeting
56 Ring contest
57 Elbow
58 On thesheltered side
59 Stereotypicalmobster’s voice
61 Insinceredisplay
Puzzle by DAVID BEN-MERRE
For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a creditcard, 1-800-814-5554.Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sundaycrosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS.AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visitnytimes.com/mobilexword for more information.Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 2,000 pastpuzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).
Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay.Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16
17 18 19
20 21 22
23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 32
33 34 35 36
37 38 39
40 41 42 43 44
45 46 47
48 49 50
51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59
60 61 62
63 64 65
66 67 68
B A N E T A C H R E H A B
O W E N E C H O A M A R E
W A R D C L E O T O N G A
L I D O S H U F F L E G E R
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P O P S A T E I T K I S S
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A H L E N D E R A M A R E
W O O D C U T A M E L I E
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nuisance
5 Dashboarddevice, briefly
9 Post-opprogram
14 Writer Wister
15 Say again
16 To love, inMilan
17 Voting district
18 Laine of jazzfame
19 South Pacificisland nation
20 1977 BozScaggs hit
23 Neth. neighbor
24 “Sophie’sChoice” novelist
25 Hoyle of“Hoyle’s Rulesof Games”
27 Source ofground chuck
31 Bird withred-eyed andyellow-throatedvarieties
34 Coal-rich areain Europe
35 Common cottonswab
37 Italiandiminutivesuffix
38 Unsportsmanlike39 Year, in Yucatán40 Film terrier
played bySkippy
42 “Picnic”playwright
43 Volga Rivernative
45 All-in-one offer48 Takes hold49 Skeptic’s
response53 Here, to Henri54 Something
with whichyou might do
the actions atthe ends of20-, 27- and45-Across
58 Hurricane, e.g.60 Fair share,
maybe61 Wild about,
with “over”62 Toy truck
maker
63 Hankering
64 At least once
65 Firebug’soffense
66 Result of asuccessful slapshot
67 Covers, as afootball field
DOWN 1 Big New Year’s
Day events
2 Lie ahead
3 Dweebish
4 Sign, as acheck
5 Dance musicgenre
6 Rights org.since 1920
7 Restaurantfigure
8 What ahorseshoershoes
9 Like “TheExorcist”and “LethalWeapon”
10 Nondancemusic genre
11 Frequent, as aclub
12 One side in theFalklands War
13 Vandyke, e.g.
21 Manhattandistrict with artgalleries
22 Doubting
26 1974 JohnWayne crimedrama
28 Taking drugsregularly
29 Popcorn orderfor two, maybe
30 Passé
31 Going by wayof
32 Lestrade ofSherlockHolmes stories,e.g.
33 E.R. doctorswork them
36 ___ favor
38 Photographer Arbus
41 Some windowinstallations, forshort
43 Baby powdercomponent
44 Whom Gmovies are for
46 Best Actresswinner for “TheHours”
47 ___ Tower
48 Woman with an Afro, maybe
50 “Good job!”
51 Sharp-___
52 Bygone Russianleaders
55 Down in ahurry
56 Corn syrupbrand
57 GymnastKorbut
59 Original “KingKong” studio
Puzzle by ALLAN E. PARRISH
For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a creditcard, 1-800-814-5554.Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sundaycrosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS.AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visitnytimes.com/mobilexword for more information.Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 2,000 pastpuzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).
Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay.Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16
17 18 19
20 21 22 23
24 25 26
27 28 29 30
31 32 33 34 35 36
37 38 39
40 41 42 43 44
45 4 6 47
48 49 50 51 52
53 54 55 56 57
58 59 60 61
62 63 64
65 66 67
W H I M C L A P S F L A W
E U R O N E W L Y L O S E
B R O N Z E S K I N Y O W L
N E A T W A S I K I D
S O F T C P A N E N T R E
O B I H E A R T O F G O L D
S I S I R I D R O C
O T T A W A N S A R A L E E
M O O A T T R E A D
B U N S O F S T E E L A V E
A L O O F U L M A R D E N
A C I D A N A A S I F
B E D E C H R O M E D O M E
A R E A T A G U P G O A D
A S A D S T E T S E T T U
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Edited by Will Shortz No. 0108Crossword
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
A B O D E F L I N T F O X
R U B E S R A D A R A T E
E X A M S A B O L I T I O N
T O M E A P R D C A R E A
E M A N C I P A T I O N
T A K E T O T S A R S
C U B I S M S I M M O O
A B R A H A M L I N C O L N
S E A N A S N E A R L Y
A R T O O R O B I N S
P R O C L A M A T I O N
C A M E B Y A N E L O V E
O F S L A V E R Y Z O W I E
B R R C E L I A S T A N DB O P H Y M A N A S S E S
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The Universe, February 19 – 25, 2013 17
8/12/2019 321: Universe Paper
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