Jan. 19, 2011 e-Mirror

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the mirror uncm i r r o r . c o m s e r v i n g t h e u n i v e r s i t y o f n o r t h e r n c o l o r a d o s i n c e 1 9 19 CAMPUS NEWS. COMMUNITY NEWS. YOUR NEWS. Volume 93, Number 47 Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2011 W W o o m m e e n n s s h h o o o o p p s s g g e e t t s s w w i i n n News Upcoming In Friday’s issue of The Mirror, read about expe- riences had by those who attended the Catalyst Retreat. Dean appointed to state board Eugene Sheehan of the CEBS, has joined the State Leadership Academy. PAGE 7 Arts Students dance Friday night away The University Program Council hosted its second Club UNC for stu- dents Friday. PAGE 5 Online Dance group solicits auditioners Look in The Mir Look in The Mirr or or P P a a g g e e 6 6 Wed: Thur: Sat: Fri: Greeley police officers fly the state and national colors at the front of the Martin Luther King Day parade Monday on Eighth Avenue. ELIAS HAKIM | THE MIRROR SOURCE: WEATHER.COM @ www.uncmirror.com 34 | 24 37 | 10 46 | 25 44 | 21 The Colorado Ice of the Colorado Indoor Football league are hosting auditions soon. Read at uncmirror.com

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This is the electronic version of the Jan. 19, 2011 edition of The Mirror.

Transcript of Jan. 19, 2011 e-Mirror

Page 1: Jan. 19, 2011 e-Mirror

the mirroruncm i r r o r . c o m

s e r v i n g t h e u n i v e r s i t y o f n o r t h e r n c o l o r a d o s i n c e 1 9 19

C A M P U S N E W S . C O M M U N I T Y N E W S . Y O U R N E W S .

Volume 93, Number 47Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2011

WWWWoooommmmeeeennnn ’’’’ ssss hhhhooooooooppppssss ggggeeeettttssss wwwwiiii nnnn

News

UpcomingIn Friday’s issueof The Mirror,read about expe-riences had bythose whoattended theCatalyst Retreat.

Dean appointed to state boardEugene Sheehanof the CEBS, hasjoined the StateLeadershipAcademy.PAGE 7

ArtsStudents dance Friday night away

The UniversityProgram Councilhosted its secondClub UNC for stu-dents Friday.PAGE 5

OnlineDance group solicits auditioners

Look in The MirLook in The MirrrororPPPPaaaaggggeeee 6666

Wed:

Thur:

Sat:

Fri:

Greeley police officers fly the state and national colors at the front of the Martin Luther King Day parade Monday on Eighth Avenue.ELIAS HAKIM | THE MIRROR

SOURCE: WEATHER.COM

@ w w w . u n c m i r r o r . c o m

34 | 24

37 | 10

46 | 25

44 | 21

The Colorado Ice ofthe Colorado IndoorFootball league arehosting auditionssoon. Read atuncmirror.com

Page 2: Jan. 19, 2011 e-Mirror

KRISTEN MARTINn e w s @ u n c m i r r o r . c o m

Students and faculty of UNCand Greeley community mem-bers marched Monday to honorthe life and accomplishments ofthe Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

The march proceeded fromSeventh Avenue to the UnionColony Civic Center. As thegathering took place, music wasplayed, and participants sangalong in tribute to King and theCivil Rights Movement withwhich he was heavily involved.

In the UCCC, local schooldistrict officials gave motiva-tional presentations andspeeches to the attendees.Principal Bryan Wright ofGreeley West High Schoolspoke to students about how

they can be the best at whatthey want to be. Carlos Cruz, aUNC student, showed aninspiring video he createdabout King.

The keynote speaker wasDominique Dawes who was thefirst black woman to win anindividual medal in Olympicgymnastics. Dawes credits theinspiration she received fromher athletic coach for herchoice to utilize her time as amotivational speaker to chil-dren across the United States,building them up to achievetheir dreams.

Dawes said she once visitedthe balcony where King wasassassinated, and it caused herto question how she was mak-ing a difference in the world.With a little bit of love, kindness

and compassion, Dawes saidshe believes people can makethis world a better place and befull of joy, just like King.

“Every day my coach, Kelli Hill,

never allowed me to quit or be dis-couraged about my dreams,”Dawes said. “Love is how we shapethe world around us. It’s amazingwhat a smile can do.”

Greeley Mayor Tom Nortonpresented the Dream Big,Spread Hope, Inspire OthersCommunity Award to the GroveNeighborhood Network. TheGNN provides educational sup-port to youth and adults.

Events such as this celebrationof King’s work helped bring UNCstudents out to explore their sur-rounding human networks.

“A good number of studentsand faculty are here with thecommunity,” said RaulCardenas, UNC dean of stu-dents. “It helps the universityand community to see studentsin a different light.”

Sarah Hanselin, a junioranthropology major, said sheagreed the march was a way toincrease community relations.

“This event is a beautifulway to see the community,”Hanselin said. ”It’s powerful tosee so much life and connec-tion to the people in Greeley.”

As brought to a forefront bythe march and the presenta-tions throughout the day,King’s stated dream was toachieve racial equality and jus-tice in America — a sentimentreiterated by attendees.

“His goals are always goingto be relevant to betteringhumanity, and they are some-thing that should be focused onwithin society,” Hanselin said.

News2 The Mirror Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2011

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Students, community honor life of MLK with march

ELIAS HAKIM | THE MIRROR

Marchers stroll Monday through Lincoln Park in downtown Greeley onthe way to the Union Colony Civic Center to hear a speech delivered byDominique Dawes as part of the Martin Luther King Day festivities.

“This event is a beau-tiful way to see the

community. It’s pow-erful to see so much

life and connection tothe people in

Greeley.—— SSaarraahh HHaannsseelliinn,, aa jjuunniioorraanntthhrrooppoollooggyy mmaajjoorr

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The Mirror3 The Mirror Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2011

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Editor: Eric HeinzWednesday, Jan. 19, 2010 The Mirror 3

Mirror StaffKURT HINKLE | General Manager

[email protected] HEINZ | [email protected]

BENJAMIN WELCH | News [email protected]

PARKER COTTON | Sports [email protected]

RUBY WHITE | Arts [email protected]

MELANIE VASQUEZ | Visual [email protected]

ERIC HIGGINS | AdvertisingManager

[email protected] ANDERSON | Ad Production

[email protected]

2010-2011

MMiissssiioonn SSttaatteemmeennttThe Mirror’s mission is to educate,

inform and entertain the students, staffand faculty of the UNC community,and to educate the staff on the businessof journalism in a college-newspaperenvironment.

AAbboouutt uussThe Mirror is published every

Monday, Wednesday and Friday duringthe academic year by the Student MediaCorp. It is printed by the GreeleyTribune. The first copy is free; addition-al copies are 50 cents each and must bepurchased from The Mirror office.

CCoonnttaacctt UUssFront Desk

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POLL

Mirror Reflections are the opinion of The Mirror’s editorial board: Parker Cotton, Eric Heinz, Melanie Vasquez, Benjamin Welch and Ruby White. Let us know

what you think. E-mail us at [email protected].

A Letter to the Editor By UNC Department of

Africana Studies,

As the nation pauses toremember and honor theReverend Dr. Martin Luther KingJr., we must re-dedicate ourselvesto the meaning of Dr. King’s life.Dr. King fought 1.) for the right toprotest for right, 2.) to speak truthto power, 3.) to call in America’sdebt in the account for social jus-tice, and 4.) to comfort the afflict-ed and to afflict the comfortable.

Though these four principles ani-mated his life, some have tried toreduce him to either a papier-mâchéhero, who gave only one significant

speech (“I have a Dream” August 28,1963) or to a broken caricature whobetrayed his cause. The first tenden-cy is all too common and need notconcern us here. The second ten-dency has seen a local Greeleyschool official reproduce viciouscalumnies against Dr. King in a vainattempt to diminish the man.Neither of these approaches cap-tures Dr. King’s spirit and his mes-sage to America. His words shouldbe our guide — his speeches, ourstarting point.

As the U.S. Supreme Court hasheld in Schenck (1919) andBrandenburg (1969), the right tofree speech does not includeeither the right to yell “Fire,” false-

ly, in a crowded theater, nor theright to incite violence, thus creat-ing a “clear and present danger.”In effect, the only remedy forspeech with which we disagree ismore speech.

In the age of Obama,racism/white supremacy, poverty,war, women’s oppression, homo-phobia, and labor exploitation stillstalk the land. In 2008, 15.4 millionchildren were poor in the UnitedStates. Meanwhile, the Pentagonhas announced plans to spend$100 billion dollars in 2011 on thewar in Afghanistan, with plans tospend about $3.6 billion per month.

For Dr. King, such wildly mis-placed priorities cry out for dis-

sent against imperial war and for aredirection of resources to domes-tic needs. (See the Hills BlogBriefing Room/ Roxana Tiron, Oct14, 2009; Truthdig/Mike Ludwig,Jan. 6, 2011; Children’s DefenseFund Aug. 26, 2008).

Recognizing that our nation’sjourney toward justice has not beencompleted, let us become “drummajors for justice” (Dr. King usesthe phrase in a speech February 4,1968). honoring Dr. King’s legacycan mean nothing less.

Editor’s note: Letters to the editorcan be submitted to [email protected]. The Mirror reserves the rightto edit or refuse to publish letters.

This week’s poll question:Do you plan to attend thespring concert, featuringSammy Adams and Shwayze?

Cast your vote atwwwwww..uunnccmmiirrrroorr..ccoomm

The 25th anniversary of MLK Federal Holiday

Idon’t think I need toaddress the situation sur-rounding Brett Reese.

The Greeley Tribune has alreadyexhausted that. What I do needto address is the ridiculousresponse he’s received.

The word “hate” is nothingmore than an ad homonymnow. When Reese began broad-casting his diatribe critical ofMartin Luther King, peopleautomatically assumed he was ahatemonger despite Reese pub-licly stating he supports the CivilRights Movement and only hadreservations crediting its legacyto one of the movement’s lead-

ers. Reese also encouraged peo-ple to fact-check the letter hewrote for themselves.

But people didn’t like it. Theyagain tried the (more accepted)tactic of pointing out that Reesehad initially cited a supremacistsite in his reading. This, by itself,does not discredit the information.

Just as Democrats put fortheverything bad they could findabout President G.W. Bush, sotoo will a supremacist organiza-tion display mostly negativeinformation. It doesn’t mean theinformation is automaticallyinvalidated.

Fact-checking on my part —through non-supremacistsources — has revealed thatmany things Reese said aboutKing are, indeed, true, and thefounding director of the MartinLuther King, Jr., Research andEducation Institute, Clayborne

Carson, told the Tribune that alot of the facts are valid.

But people have attackedReese, saying he is filled withhate, just like they did last yearwhen he went to a “Speak Truth,Not Ignorance” seminar and putforth the legitimate question ofwhy people tolerate sexualdeviance in the form of homosex-uality but not in other forms likebeastiality, polygamy, etc.

Now, having only heard andread about Reese’s situation sec-ond-hand, I can’t lay judgment onhis method of transaction — howhe spoke at that seminar or how hedelivered the MLK piece — and Ican’t say that Reese’s allegedthreat of a “shootout” (which mostlikely is figurative) with JustinSasso is irreproachable.

What I can say is that individ-uals have full control over howoffended they become, and

responding with “hate” pejora-tives and death threats, whichReese has now filed policereports, not only shows emotion-al instability in the offended butreinforces the political-correct-ness dogma that has permeatedsociety and nearly crippled theFirst Amendment.

I do not blame Reese forwanting to carry his legally con-cealed weapon with him atboard meetings especially inlight of what happened inFlorida. I do, however, find faultin the rest of the board for striv-ing to infringe on Reese’s SecondAmendment rights by holding anemergency board meeting to dis-cuss ways to prevent Reese fromcarrying his weapon.

— Josh Divine is a junior mathmajor and a weekly columnist forThe Mirror.

Reese issue illustrates destructive cannon of political correctnessJosh

DIVINE

[email protected]

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Last week’s poll question:Do you think the new headfootball coach will improve theteam’s record next season?

This poll is nonscientific.

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Page 5: Jan. 19, 2011 e-Mirror

Editor: Ruby WhiteWednesday, Jan. 19, 2011 The Mirror 5

Bears boogie back into swing of thingsAMBER KAZMIERSKI

a r t s @ u n c m i r r o r . c o m

To ease students back intothe swing of academia, Fridaynight in the University CenterBallrooms, the UniversityProgram Council hosted itssecond Club UNC, providingstudents with a refreshingclub-scene event, completewith glow sticks, a light displayand a top DJ spinning popularsongs.

Club UNC had its begin-nings during Fall Semesterwhen 1,500 students attended.The dance mixer will continueto be an event during WelcomeWeek at the beginning of eachsemester.

“Club UNC has a lounge tohang out at, a dance floor, a DJ,mocktails and glow sticks,” saidAshley Yerina, a senior elemen-

tary education major. “It has allthe joys of a real club whileproviding a safe environment.”

A mixture of students from

all different areas of studyfound their way to the neon-litdance floor. Some were dressedcasually while others decked

themselves in chic apparel andhad a style of their own. Mostdawned a glow stick or two,and danced together just thesame.

“There is no specific dresscode, but this Club UNC wasthemed ‘neon,’ so studentswere encouraged to dressaccordingly,” said BrittanyDosdall, a senior businessmanagement major and tradi-tional events coordinator forthe University ProgramCouncil.

Attendees had student IDsscanned, were offered a coatcheck and entered an atmos-phere of euphoria.

“There is good music, andeveryone is really into themusic and dancing,” saidGaylynn Fassler, a sophomorehistory major. “It is entertain-ing and a good Friday night

alternative.”This semester, roughly 1,000

people attended, with a rangeof 300-500 people at the club atany given time. As the upbeatthrived the ballrooms, it was asif the event transgressed into aLos Angeles club scene,engulfed with students enjoy-ing themselves within the mistcreated by fog machines.

“It has been so successfulthis year, I would be surprisedif they didn’t continue it,”Dosdall said.

Club UNC will take placeagain next semester duringWelcome Week. For moreinformation on the other clubsthat are going on at UNC, go towww.unco.edu/clubs or con-tact Katelyn Elliott, director ofstudent organizations at UNC,at 970-351-2582.

New ‘Bad Girls’ season proves embarrassing, again

As many inhabitantsof Girl World know,the sixth season of

“Bad Girls Club” premieredlast week on the Oxygen net-work. I don’t know which ismore shocking: that this shamof a show has somehow man-aged to find funding for morethan four years or that in thosefour years it has broken view-ing record after viewing recordin Oxygen history and doesn’t

appear to be losing any steam.For those of you who are

lucky enough to be unfamiliarwith “Bad Girls Club,” I’ll giveyou the rundown. The showoperates on the loose premiseof piecing together the mostdysfunctional mish mash ofwomen possible and settingthem up in a posh house forfour months with the ultimategoal of “bettering themselves.”Again, this is a loosely fittingdescription of the show’s aim.

It is true that you would behard-pressed to find a group ofwomen with a bigger collec-tion of daddy issues, drinkingproblems and short fuses, butit’s difficult to believe that any

of the women featured on “BadGirls Club” can honestly saythey auditioned with the intentof maturing and changing theirways. The only timeany of the self-pro-claimed “Bad Girls”even mention thisvague goal is whenaffecting a holier-than-thou attitude while trashtalking their roommates.

The actual goal to intimi-date all other housemates,start the most memorable cat-fight and ultimately gather upa paltry 15 minutes of fame ismuch less sanctimonious thanall that.

I admit that I tune in and

watch this show religiously. Itgoes against everything Ibelieve in, yet I can’t help butkeep my eyes glued to the tele-

vision screen any-time it’s on — kindof like a car wreck,you know? It is fas-cinating to watchthese women will-

ingly embarrass themselvesand develop lifelong cases ofalcoholism right before myeyes on cable television. I likeanalyzing a culture entirelydifferent from my own, inwhich sleeping around anddisplaying a generally unpleas-ant attitude at all times areconsidered desirable traits.

It’s scary, though, to knowthat this is what entertainmenthas come to. Millions of view-ers tune in each week to watchgrown women behave like ani-mals, and it is just so…sadden-ing. As long as shows like thisstill dominate television enter-tainment, the fight for genderequality is rendered little morethan pointless. How can weexpect anyone to take womenseriously when so many ofthem confuse trashy celebritystatus with true class andrespect?

— Alexandria Vasquez is asenior journalism major andmember of Pi Lambda Chi.

CASSIE NUCKOLS | THE MIRROR

Students dance while wearing neon glow sticks Friday during theUniversity Program Council’s Club UNC. The event took place inthe University Center Ballrooms.

Alexandria

VASQUEZ

[email protected]

TVReview

Page 6: Jan. 19, 2011 e-Mirror

Editor: Parker Cotton6 The Mirror Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2011

Women’s hoops takes care of EaglesSAMANTHA FOX

s p o r t s @ u n c m i r r o r . c o m

The UNC women’s basket-ball team downed Big Sky foeEastern Washington, 75-68,Saturday at Butler-HancockSports Pavilion.

After a record-setting gameThursday, the University ofNorthern Colorado (8-9, 3-1)continued setting records againstEastern Washington (6-9, 2-1).With the win, the Bears improveto 3-1 in the conference for thefirst time in school history.

In the game, senior guardCourtney Stoermer tied theschool record for steals (189)and moved into second placeall-time on the school’s assistslist (367) against the Eagles, whowere the preseason No. 2 pick inthe Big Sky.

“It doesn’t matter who weplay each night,” Stoermer said.“We just look at it as the sameteam; it’s just another teamcoming in.”

Stoermer had a team-high 17points to go with a game-high

seven assists. Sophomore for-ward Lauren Oosdyke backedStoermer with 15 points, fiverebounds and four steals.Oosdyke averaged 21.5 pointsover the last two games, whichwas good enough for her to gar-ner the Big Sky Player of theWeek honor.

The Eagles took an early 9-6lead in the game, but the Bearssank five of their next six shotsto take a 16-11 advantage. UNCled the rest of the way, buildingits lead to as many as 16.

UNC junior forward KaishaBrown posted her first careerdouble-double with 11 pointsand 10 rebounds in the game.

“If we work as a team andmake that extra pass every timeor as often as we can, we will begood,” Brown said. “If you stickwith all the little things, the bigthings will happen, and thedouble will come.”

Eastern Washington seniorguard Tatjana Sparavalo did notmake UNC’s win an easy one.Sparavalo came off the benchand recorded a game-high 24points, going 4-for-6 on 3-

pointers. The Bears were able totake advantage of EasternWashington’s mistakes, netting24 points off 25 turnovers.

“We knew every play theywere going to run, so we manip-ulated the plays,” UNC headcoach Jaime White said. “Thepreparation up to the game waskey. But also, our girls have gotto be able to execute that.”

UNC freshman forward KimLockridge scored 15 points offthe bench to go with four stealsand four rebounds.

“Kim’s a little bit undersizedto play the five (center), but she’sa really smart player,” White said.

UNC takes the court nextagainst Sacramento State at 7:05p.m. Thursday at Butler-Hancock Sports Pavilion.

Next Game:Sacramento State

7:05 p.m.Thursday

Butler-HancockSports Pavilion

EMILY DAKE | THE MIRROR

UNC junior forward Kaisha Brown, left, prepares to inbound theball against Eastern Washington in the Bears’ win Saturday.Brown had 10 rebounds for the second consecutive game.

Men’s basketball back on the road at HornetsSTAFF REPORT

s p o r t s @ u n c m i r r o r . c o m

The UNC men’s basketball teamwill look to preserve its perfect 5-0

Big Sky recordas it travels totake onSacramentoS t a t eThursday.

T h eUniversity of

Northern Colorado (9-7) has wonfive of the last six games against

the Hornets (3-14, 0-6), who haveaveraged only 61.6 points pergame this season. UNC swept theseason series last year by an aver-age of 13 points per game.

The Bears are off to theirbest start in Big Sky Conferenceplay in school history, whileSacramento State searches forits first conference victory.

UNC senior guard Devon Beitzelhas averaged 19.2 points in five con-ference games so far and has alsohad at least two assists in each ofthose games.

Beitzel had 16 points in the first

meeting with Sacramento State lastseason but had to sit out the secondgame with a foot injury.

UNC senior forward TaylorMontgomery, who had 13 pointsand 9 rebounds in two gamesagainst Sacramento State lastyear, has averaged 8.2 pointsand 9.2 rebounds over the lastfour games.

Senior guard Sultan Toles-Beyand sophomore guard JohnDickson, who average 12.1 and10.2 points per contest, respec-tively, lead the Hornets offensive-ly. The pair combined to score

just 29 points in the two gamesagainst theBears lastseason.

U N C ’ sd e f e n s i v eeffort hasbeen evi-dent in con-ference playthis season,marked pri-marily bysophomoreg u a r dE l l i o t t

Lloyd’s last-second block to pre-serve a win Dec. 31 at EasternWashington.

In addition, the Bears’defense has held opponents tounder 35 percent shooting eachof the last three games, includ-ing just 8-for-52 on 3-pointfield goals. In that same span,UNC has held the opposingteam’s leading scorer to undertheir season points per gameaverage.

The game tips off at 8:05p.m. Thursday in Sacramento,Calif.

Men’s BasketballDevon Beitzel has averaged 19.2points per game infive conferencegames this year.

Basketball team off to best start in Big Sky Conference in school history

Page 7: Jan. 19, 2011 e-Mirror

TESSA BYRNS n e w s @ u n c m i r r o r . c o m

Recently, the ColoradoDepartment of Education chosethe dean of UNC’s College of

E d u c a t i o na n dBehavioralSciences forits StateLeadershipA c a d e m yBoard.

E u g e n eS h e e h a n ,who hasserved as theCollege ofE d u c a t i o na n d

Behavior Sciences dean since2000, has been appointed to theboard to oversee all the academicprograms in the college, as well asall administrative and budgetaryfunctions.

Sheehan has executive deci-sion over many of the importantissues that affect higher educa-tion, such as hiring, personnel

evaluation and budget allocation.He supervises major accredita-tion processes and is responsiblefor overall academic quality. Hisoffice also handles student com-plaints and appeals.

“At a general level, it is goodto be able to have input and toaffect policies that impact educa-tion,” Sheehan said. “It’s part ofmy job to serve on statewidecommittees like this. I’ve alsobeen on the governor’s P-20Council as the chair of the edu-cator subcommittee and also onthe state-wide literacy council.”

Serving a three-year term onthe 14-member committee thatadvises the State Board of

Education, Sheehan will also beat the center of discussionregarding topics such as recruit-ment and professional develop-ment for current and futurepublic schools principals.

“Teachers are very importantin schools, but the principal setsthe tone and culture and there-fore has much influence,”Sheehan said. “I look forward toinfluencing how principals areselected and trained.”

Sheehan was nominated byanother education professorfrom the University ofColorado-Denver and then cho-sen by the members of theboard. His job on the board will

be an important one for manyother educators who want tosee changes made in the field.

The board is voluntary andmeets once a month. Its next meet-ing is 9 a.m. on Jan. 21. According tothe agenda Sheehan provided, theboard will discuss an update onother state work and how it influ-ences education, development ofthe academy program and staffingthe academy. There will be updateson other leadership happenings,

such as state council on educatoreffectiveness and alliance to reformeducation.

Education board approves UNC dean for position

Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2011 The Mirror 7

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Eugene Sheehansaid he looks for-ward to the train-ing and selectionof principals.

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Quote of the dayYou are a product of your environment. So choose the environment that will best developyou toward your objective. Analyze your life in terms of its environment. Are the thingsaround you helping you toward success or are they holding you back?

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