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March 28, 2012 Provo, Utah universe.byu.edu
Associated Press
Demonstrators for and against the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act march and chant outside the U.S. Supreme Court Building on Tuesday.
t o y s t o r y
By Kurt Hanson
Technology used in rocket science may soon be used in the treatment of breast cancer, thanks to a UVU professor. Timothy Doyle, an assistant physics professor at UVU, has turned experience from ATK Thiokol into applicable techniques to use in cancer surgery. Currently, surgeons arent able to estimate specifically the amount of tissue to remove in addition to the cancer. They must instead conduct lombectomies, during which they remove the lump and two millimeters around the
he whole idea is so the surgeon can know how much to take out and nothing more.
UVU assistant physics professor
Timothy Doyle
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Associated Press
Associated Press
Melissa Jenkins went missing Sunday night and later was found dead..
A couple speaks in the street where an image hangs of Pope Benedict XVI in Havana, Cuba.
Associated Press
Derya Senol, 16, helps move her familys possessions from their home on Monday. A growing forest re is threatening homes in the area of the foothills 35 miles south of Denver.
YESTERDAY
WEATHER
TODAY
WEDNESDAY
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Yesterday: 0
2012: 4.62
Associated Press
Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich autographs his book as he walks in the streets of Annapolis, Md., on Tuesday.
Gingrich and Santorum have both come under increased pressure from some Republicans in recent weeks to swing behind Romney, who is on track to pick a majority of delegates before the primaries end with the vote in Utah. Gingrich has tried to position himself as an anti-establishment gure in the race for the nomination, and has bristled at the devastating attacks that Romney and a Romneyaligned super political action committee unleashed at him at key moments in the campaign. Yet as a former House speaker, he is also aware of the importance of party unity as the general election campaign comes into view. Romney is the front-runner with 568 delegates, based on a tally by The Associated Press. That is slightly less than half the needed 1,144 delegates, and more than four times as many delegates as Gingrich, who has 135. Gingrich has struggled since his campaign peaked just before the Iowa caucuses kicked off the nominating process in January. He has won just two contests in South Carolina and his Georgia home state. His campaign listed more than $1.5 million in outstanding debt by the end of February, according to Federal Election Commission lings, including legal fees and advertising production costs. At the same time, Gingrich had about $1.5 million cash on hand the lowest of the four GOP candidates. Maryland, where registered Democrats outnumber Republicans by a 2-to-1 margin, has drawn unusual attention from the from the GOP presidential candidates. The state has 37 delegates at stake in its primary next Tuesday.
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Toy story
In touch with inner child
Continued from Page 1 own goofy thinking. Ive always been perceived by friends and family to be a little off center, he said. I find it helpful to be a little askew from the norm. Its also helpful to not be too grown up. While he said it was fun, Tony Morley said there also has to be a balance between those thoughts and how you act as an adult. Its kind of dangerous because I like to keep a sense of
play about me, and if you do that too much, it damages your credibility when you dont want to be compromised, he said. Creativity, he said, has to be controlled. Being able to tap in the child in you is not creative, its just immature, and thats not good, he said. There needs to be a reasonable sense of responsibility and childhood playfulness. Sometimes they go in hand, childlike thinking and creativity but not always. Creativity wasnt something Tony Morley wanted to describe, because he felt it boxed him in. Instead, he borrowed a quote from J. Robert Oppenheimer, father of the atomic bomb. I could solve my most complex problems in physics if I had not given up ways of thinking
common to children at play, Oppenheimer said. Tony Morley said everyone has the potential to create. I think everybody is creative but some of us have forgotten or have become discouraged, he said. While he doesnt know how he continues to come up with new ideas, Tony Morley said he makes a decent living at it. If I knew how to do it better, Id do it, he said. Usually Im almost always unsuccessful, but once in a while it works and keeps us going. He said its fun to see his creations on a shelf in a store, to see people play with them and hear about them, but just making a contribution to the world is also satisfying. Tony Morley talked about his
dreams, including the coolest toy he hasnt yet invented. I want to make an anti-gravity toy, he said. But I have a closet full of toys that will never be manufactured. Emma Morley said her dad sometimes would test out his ideas on her siblings and her. There are lots of things he has conjured up in his brain that I have no idea about, she said. He just sent me a prototype of a game that he wants my roommates and I to test out. Emma Morley said her Dad is always looking for fun things for people to do, like group activities. She said hell ask funny questions when he first meets people to get them to laugh. Hes always trying to find ways to have people laugh and have fun, so I guess that trans-
lates to his job, she said. I think theres definitely a child in there. Hes very wise and mature, but he definitely still has a child inside of him, but he also knows when to harness it. Fat Brain Toy Co. is the company that produced Tobbles. The company develops a broad range of products but focuses on educational building toys. Eric Quam, director of product development, said they were delighted and felt it was a great honor to have one of their toys be nominated as Toy of the Year in the specialty category. Quam said Morley first submitted the idea in 2010, and the company then went through several iterations and designs to fit the companys line of products. After releasing it in 2011, the toy turned out to be such a success
the company released a new version this year called Tobbles Neo. Tobbles is an interesting phenomenon in that executives play it at their desk, he said. It is at home on your mantle piece as much as in your board room or play room. Its a toy that is also a piece of art. Quam said it has been a good experience working with Morley over the past couple of years. He has a great eye for design and aesthetic, and is very much in line with what were doing at Fat Brain Toy Co., he said. Asked if he had any words of advice to students who might want to go into toy design, Tony Morley said it wasnt the best career option. Go ahead and invent toys, but get a real job too, he said.
Blue
BYUs electric car on magazine
Continued from Page 1 on the project. Perry Carter, a retired BYU professor, volunteered to lead the project years ago. BYU owned a car they formerly used in an electric racing series and decided to convert the car to a new project. Interestingly enough, Carter never considered himself much of a car guy. Instead, he said he just wanted to create an opportunity for students. Robbie Petterborg is one student who took advantage of the opportunity. While Petterborg had a background in cars prior to working on the electric vehicle, he never had serious restrictions
to work under. The team working on Electric Blue had a goal to set a world record for a specific weight class. This meant the team would have constraints as it worked with the vehicle. Its not hard to build a very fast car, Petterborg said. Its hard to build a very fast car thats very small and very light. Petterborg spoke of his experience with the electric vehicle as something setting the path for his career. While he said he doesnt have a fantastic grade point average, doors are opening for him in the form of job offers and internships. I can pretty much get whatever job I want, he said. Ive had three job offers already when I have a year to go before graduation. Kelly Hales, an electrical engineering student from Tucson, Ariz., decided to return to school with a goal of working on electric cars. He saw Electric Blue
on Brigham Square and immediately got involved. Hales has been a member of the crew working on the car longer than any of the students currently on the team. Hales was a member of the team when the car flipped while going 180 mph on the salt flats in their previous attempt to break a world record, but stayed around long enough to see the car break a world record. While the car set a record, Hales believes there is more to accomplish. We feel the car has more, and the driver feels the car has more, Hales said. While Hales talked about issues with the car and how its a work in progress, he and the crew took encouragement from the project being featured in Popular Science. Popular Science is pretty mainstream, he said. Its a pretty big thing to be on the cover.
Cancer
ts more like using the ultrasound as an analytical tool to determine what tissue is there.
On doctors knowing within minutes if the cancer is gone
Timothy Doyle
Health
Supreme Court is divided
Continued from Page 1 Verrilli stressed throughout his hour at the lectern that the 40 million uninsured Americans posed what he called an economic problem
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that Congress is empowered to fix. He found some sympathy from at least a few justices, though they did not appear to be a majority of the ninemember court.
molecular study of human tissue. He began development of technology that would map the cancer area and analyze how much tissue has been infected. With help from Dr. Leigh Neumayer, a surgeon at the Huntsman Cancer Center, the theory was translated into application. As opposed to waiting a few days or weeks to know if the cancer is gone, doctors will be able to know within minutes if more tissue needs to be removed. Its more like using the ultrasound as an analytical tool to determine what tissue is there, Doyle said. Whats even more unique about Doyles research is the
participants. Doyle worked with several undergraduate students in the process of this technology. From the publication in a cancer research journal, to patent licensing on the technology, Doyle has had students every step of the way. Matthew Grover, a junior from Roosevelt studying physics at UVU, helped Doyle build mathematical models. These models improve the accuracy of the machines predictions. He said the work he has done with Doyle has been a rare and rewarding opportunity. Without this, I really wouldnt have gained an understanding or knowledge of physics, Grover said. As a result of FDA processes and approvals, these new methods may not be available anywhere between five and 10 years. Doyle said he is excited this new technology will not only be faster but more affordable as well. Without so many return visits, patients will be able to be rid of the cancer quicker and at less of a hit to their wallet. Neumayer said this is also thanks to the level at which the surgeons will be dealing with the cancer.
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Police Beat
SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY
March 22 Four male juveniles were seen climbing over a statue by the Harris Fine Arts Center. The officer identified them and asked them to leave the area. March 23 Two individuals were reported moving a mattress into a building at Heritage Halls. One of them was identified as a student resident by a security camera and a card reader record. The student told the officer he borrowed the mattress from his friend so his brother could sleep on it. He did not have guest approval from the housing office and was told to take the mattress back to his friend. March 25 A male was reported going through trash bins at Heritage Halls. When officers found him, he told them he was finding some newspapers he could use. The officers later found he was previously banned from campus.
THEFT
The BYU Philharmonic Orchestra and BYU Chamber Orchestra performed in Tuesday's assembly at the Marriott Center.
gan playing together. Their rst piece was Jesu, Joy of Mans Desiring, composed by Johann Sebastian Bach. While composed for performance with a choir, the orchestra performed it alone. The song, popular around the Christmas season, has words centered around Christ. After introducing the piece, Katseanes encouraged students to find truth through the message of the song. The second piece the musicians played was the first movement from Mozarts Symphony No. 40., Molto, Allegro. This composition, according to Katseanes, is one of the most well-known pieces of music. Katseanes encour-
March 22 A bike was reported stolen at a bike rack by the Smith Fieldhouse. The owner said the lock was cut and the bike was worth $400. March 23 A teaching assistant at the Talmage Building reported the Oreo cookies on her office desk were missing. She told the officer the door is always locked except for janitors. There were four cookies, worth 50 cents. March 26 A student reported his bike stolen from the bike rack by the WSC. The bike was not locked.
CRIMINAL MISCHIEF
March 22 Graffiti was reported at the JFSB southwest elevator. A custodian told the officer the suspect might have come back in retaliation or to make a statement because another incident that had been reported was printed in the Police Beat in The Daily Universe. March 25 Three male student residents at Heritage Halls were reported for pranking each other with synthetic coyote urine and flour. A BYU police officer directed them to clean up their mess. No charges were filed.
PEDESTRIAN ACCIDENT
March 22 A female pedestrian was hit by a garbage truck on the east side of the WSC. She was crossing the road on a green light while the truck was making a turn. She sprained her wrist but did not receive a critical injury. No citation was issued.
TRESPASSING
March 24 Four students were found in a closed outdoor track by Helaman Halls watching a movie on a laptop computer around midnight. The officer warned them about trespassing and escorted them out of the area.
SEX OFFENSE
March 24 Two males were observed committing crude acts in a mens shower room at the Smith Fieldhouse. When an officer arrived, the two had left the area.
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Associated Press
A Pakistani Christian girl plays with a balloon next to a wall with Biblical paintings at the Christian colony in the center of Islamabad, Pakistan.
Yousaf, in the Punjabi capital of Lahore, said his group was helping Seema Bibi and a number of other Christians who had to leave their villages because of threats from extremists. Some of them were girls who were forcibly converted and others, he said, were falsely accused of acting against Islam for allegedly insulting the Prophet Muhammad or abusing the Quran. There are dozens of cases of minorities being accused of insulting Islam under the countrys controversial blasphemy laws. Often the cases are rooted in disputes with Muslim neighbors or as coercion to convert, and judges often feel intimidated by extremists into convicting accused blasphemers, said Yousaf. They know where you live and where your children go to school, he said. Roughly ve percent of Pakistans 180 million people belong to minority religions, which include Hindu, Christian, Shiite Muslims and Ahmadis, according to the CIA World Factbook. Ahmadis are reviled by mainstream Muslims as heretics. Over recent years, violence against the minorities has increased, as Islamic hard-liners inuence over the country has strengthened. In May 2010 gunmen rampaged through an Ahmadi place of worship in Lahore, killing 93. In February this year, gunmen stopped four buses in northern Pakistan, picked out those with Shiite-sounding names and shot them to death, killing 18. Last year, a provincial governor who criticized the blasphemy laws was killed by his own bodyguard, and the governments only Christian Cabinet minister also an opponent of the laws was gunned down by militants. In Pakistan ones religious faith, or lack of one, has become sufcient to warrant execution and murder, Pervez Hoodbhoy, a physicist and peace activist wrote in a column earlier this month. The killers do their job fearlessly and frequently. The violence has cowed Pakistans liberals and frightens even many Muslims. Extremism is a problem that is not just targeting the minorities. It is now a general problem in our society, said Ijaz Haider, whose Jinnah Institutes website carries an Extremism Watch documenting cases of attacks and intimidation by militants. The liberal mindset has had a severe setback and the government has no strategy. It tries to do damage control, and damage control is to placate these groups. Critics say the government is too afraid and weak to respond or in some cases is even complicit as it panders to extremist groups for votes. A report released last week by Yousafs justice and peace commission laid out a series of grim statistics about minority women in Pakistan. The study surveyed 1,000 women, three-quarters of whom said they had been sexually harassed at the workplace, discriminated against in schools or pressed by teachers to convert to Islam. Yet they rarely complained. They sense security in being silent as disclosing it might bring shame on themselves and their family, the report said. Mohyuddin Ahmad, the information secretary for the Punjab Provincial government, says politicians and police are afraid. If you are killed by a terrorist, no one will come for condolences, he said. Even incremental steps have to be taken slowly and silently so as not to ignite a re storm by extremists, said Ahmad. The provincial government has quietly sought to increase womens participation in the work force, he said. It requires that a third of the members on government corporations and boards be women; all government ofces must have day care centers; 15 percent of all government jobs have to go to women; free land given to the poor is shared 50/50 by husband and wife; and acid throwing on a woman is now a terrorist act. But incessant bickering among political parties, the judiciary, federal government and army have worked in extremists favor of extremists, Ahmad said. The provincial governments and the federal government know they are the scum of the earth but we dont agree on strategy, said Ahmad. We have no unity of command.
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Associated Press
This map, released by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, is contained in a report from a study that analyzed the likely effects from terrorists setting off a 10-kiloton nuclear device a few blocks north of the White House.
Our images of nuclear war are either of Hiroshima or Nagasaki or what we saw in the movies during the Cold War, said Brian Michael Jenkins, a senior adviser to the president of the RAND Corporation. If you are thinking about (a city) being wiped off the face of the earth, thats not what happens. The study, Key Response Planning Factors for the Aftermath of Nuclear Terrorism, was produced in November by the Homeland Security Department and the National Nuclear Security Administration. Even though the government considers it for official use only and never published it online, the study is circulating months later on scientific and government watchdog websites. The White House on Tuesday described the threat of nuclear terrorism as one of the most important issues in recent discussions between President Barack Obama and Pakistans prime minister. Separately, scientists at an international nuclear security summit in South Korea this week promised to cooperate to improve detecting and securing rogue nuclear bombs and components and investigating related threats. For the fictional attack the U.S. government studied, the blast zone would extend just past the south lawn of the White House and as far east as the FBI headquarters. Few, if any, above ground buildings are expected to remain structurally sound or even standing, and few people would survive, it predicted. It described the blast area as a no-go zone for days afterward due to radiation. But the U.S. Capitol, the Supreme Court, the Washington Monument, the Lincoln and Jefferson memorials, and the Pentagon across the Potomac River were all in areas described as light damage, with some broken windows and mostly minor injuries. The government study predicted 323,000 injuries, with more than 45,000 dead. The flash from the explosion would be seen for hundreds of miles, but the mushroom cloud up to five miles tall would only keep its shape for a few minutes. The flash would be so bright it could temporarily blind people up to 12 miles
ee Raymond Raymond E. E. and and Ida Ida Lee Lee Beckham Beckham Lecture Lecture in in Communication Communication Series Series
Associated Press
This photo shows a female Dachshund mix named Beyonce on top of an iPhone. The puppy, named after one of the worlds biggest pop stars, could set the world's record for tiniest dog.
Presented Presented by by Dr. Dr. Clark Clark Callahan Callahan Assistant Assistant Professor Professor for for the the BYU BYU Department Department of of Communications Communications
lark lark Callahan, Callahan, who who received received aa Ph.D. Ph.D. in in communication communication from from the the UniverUniversity sity of of Oklahoma, Oklahoma, teaches teaches courses courses in in intercultural intercultural and and international international communicommunication, cation, theory, theory, and and research research methods. methods. As As aa specialist specialist in in communication communication leadleadership ershipand andorganizational organizationalcommunication, communication,he hehas hasconsulted consultedfor forthe theUnited United States StatesDepartment Departmentof ofDefense, Defense,the theInternal InternalRevenue RevenueService, Service,the thestate stateof of South South Dakota, Dakota, and and multiple multiple regional regional and and local local governmental governmental organizations. organizations. He He has has received received top top research research awards awards through through the the National National Communication Communication Association Association and and the the International International Communication Communication Association. Association.
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Those who wait for a significant other on a mission can complicate all kinds of relationships.
He wasnt dating lightly: he was developing relationships with these girls that he didnt want to pursue, McGreaham said. Almost every girl was hurt in the end, and it seemed he was using them as nothing more than space fillers. Casual dating is different from developing relationships, and he sided with the latter as opposed to the former. Jayme DEwart, from Rock Springs, Wyo., told the story of her roommate who started a relationship that seemed to have possibilities, but, in the end, the man couldnt cut off his missionary relationship. She eventually confronted him about it, and he told her he was in love with the girl on a mission and believed he could never love anyone as much as he had loved that girl, DEwart said. He then proceeded to tell my roommate that sometimes when he was with her and her family, he could see them being together forever, and other times he couldnt. But wait, it gets better he and his missionary had dated for one week before she left for her mission.
irst, the Lord has asked every able young man to prepare for and serve a full-time mission. Anything which makes a young man less likely or able to do both faithfully [prepare and serve] should be avoided.
lessens the chance of success in the waited relationship later, since only one half of that relationship will continue to grow and progress while the other half stagnates. For some, however, it seems to work out. Benjamin Lloyd, 26, studying civil engineering, understood that developing relationships was important to him. Lloyd started dating a young woman six months before she left and decided to wait for her. We werent planning on getting married when she got home or anything like that; we didnt feel that we could make that decision at that time, Lloyd said. But because I loved her and wanted to pick up where we left off upon her return, I decided not to date other girls. I feel that that choice is different for different couples and that both sides have their advantages. The missionary has returned home and she and Lloyd are now dating. Life is good, Lloyd said about the happy couple.
waiting for a missionary but is still willing to date other men, if they will give her a chance. I avoid telling people about my missionary in fear they will judge me and think of me as some scum who is ruining and distracting a guy on his mission, Christensen said. They will tell me what to say, what I am doing wrong, what I should do instead, and make me think I am a failure in supporting him on his mission and I am a menace to society when they have no clue what our relationship was like before or how it is now. In contrast to the people who still try to date while waiting, there are individuals like Rachel Bower who believe they will marry their missionary. In preparation for that, she has decided to not date anyone while her missionary is gone. Im the type of girl that has no desire whatsoever to date anyone but my boy, Bower said. To me it seems if I did want to date, then I dont love my missionary enough to marry him. Peter Hall, from Newhall, Calif., a roommate to Derek Welch, believed he could sum
up the dating-while-waiting situation pretty well. Whoever is on a mission, their priority is not you, Hall said. So if you decide that you are going to wait for that person and suppress whatever feelings you have for people around you, especially as a guy, you shouldnt be asking girls out on dates, because asking girls out on dates are hollow invitations. Some just have a r u le against dating others waiting for missionaries. Jason Facer, 23, from Santa Maria, Calif., wont date girls who are waiting for missionaries. Do I want to waste my money on a girl who has a missionar y? Facer said. Not a chance. For Smith, the aforementioned settled soul-mate, such emotional traps come with the BYU culture. Ultimately, were all just making up this relationship stuff as we go, Smith said. Adding a missionary to the relationship equation may be some weird sort of Mormon X-Factor, but honestly, relationships will insist on being complicated regardless.
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Associated Press
In this March 1 photo, Layne Ragsdale, member of a task force on race relations in Harrison, Ark., discusses the towns reputation of being dangerous for minorities.
residents only recently voted to allow alcohol sales. The towns history of racial conict isnt unique in a state where federal troops had to escort a group of black students known as the Little Rock Nine into Central High School during a historic 1957 clash over desegregation. But Harrison stands out because the town pushed out virtually its entire black population. They chose to run their African-American population off, said John Kirk, a history professor at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock who has written about the states racial past. How do you reconcile with a population thats not there anymore? Before the riots, more than 140 black people lived in the county. Then tensions started brewing as work dried up on the nearby railroad line. In 1905, the white mob that ran off most of the black population burned down homes and shot out windows. Many black people left, and those who stayed ed in 1909 after a black man was convicted of raping a white woman. Only one black woman, known as Aunt Vine, stuck around. The task force on race relations named its scholarship for minority students in her honor. Harrison leaders hope eventually to welcome back descendants of those who ed. And maybe that will show the town isnt so racist anymore. Getting the truth out there
Associated Press
Marisa Hannum, assistant manager at Il Fornaio Restaurant, is seen at the restaurant in Reston, Va. As a married woman, Hannum had her familys well-being on her mind when she backed Republicans in the two most recent presidential elections. Now divorced, Hannum is putting her own interests rst as she weighs whether to back President Barack Obama or his Republican challenger.
Though single women are among the most Democratic groups in the electorate, recent political history gives Republicans hope: In the 2010 elections, Republican House candidates grabbed their highest share of womens votes in decades, at 49 percent. Single women also were hit harder than others by the recession Obama inherited. So in both parties, the race is on to woo single women, register them to vote and inspire them to show up at the polls. There is a group of women
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hese acts aimed at achieving Tibetan independence and separatism through taking peoples lives will never possibly be successful and will be severely condemned by the international community,
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman
Hong Lei
Associated Press
A man is seen walking along the beach near to the field where a Las Vegas-style resort could be placed in Viladecans, near Barcelona, Spain.
against Chinese rule over Tibet and against Chinese President Hu Jintaos visit to India this week. Photos and video of Yeshi in flames were widely circulated across the globe in contrast to previous self-immolations that have happened in Tibetan areas in China that are subject to an intense security crackdown and largely inaccessible to the media. Yeshes cousin and roommate, Sonam Wangyal, said Yeshe was from a farming family in a Tibetan region of Sichuan province and had been unemployed since moving to New Delhi. He was a regular at Tibetan protests but had never talked about burning himself alive, Wangyal said. He was clearly torn about what his cousin did. He is so badly burned, he said, after visiting Yeshe in the burn ward at Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital in New Delhi. But all the Tibetan people are suffering. ... We are fighting for freedom. The world should know this. He described Yeshes condition as Very, very critical, with burns covering 98 percent of his body. Yeshe didnt appear to understand that he was in the hospital, Wangyal said. Activists say India was detaining hundreds of Tibetans who protested Monday. Legally, they can be held for up to a week.
At Burns & McBride, our main goal is to provide Delaware residents with hassle-free, low-cost, dependable trash and recycling services; and luckily for you, were currently hiring our sales team and eld management for this summer. You could realistically earn $25,000 $45,000. Compensation and Skills Needed:
Guaranteed base plus commission. Pre-summer bonuses: $2000 Hiring Bonus ($500 paid at 3/30 interview) Completion of initial training Referral bonus (for referral of other selected team members) Airfare, use of company vehicle, free gas, and upscale furnished housing. Need ability to attain personal goals. Prior successful experience in direct eld sales to residential customers a plus!
Spring/Summer 2012
$115 $264
Free high-speed Internet Free cable TV Evaporative coolers Dishwasher Microwave ovens Laundry facilities Heated pool & spa Lounge with patio Close to bus stop
Info. Session & Interviews on 3/30 in Provo. Call for details: Terry McBride 302-467-4161 terry.mcbride@burnsandmcbride.com
Non Sequiter
Associated Press
Nassau County District Attorney Kathleen Rice, center, is joined by Kathryn Juric, vice president of the College Board for the SAT Program, left, and Jon Erickson, president of ACT Education, right, as she announces a national test security overhaul to prevent cheating on the SAT exams.
Classifieds
Training & Instruction
UTAH COLLEGE OF DENTAL Hygiene in Orem. 20-month Bachelors. Apply now for January 2013 class. 801-426-8234.
Get Fuzzy
Help Wanted
HABILITATION TECHNICIANS Work with the developmentally disabled. Great experience for students in healthcare, education, or social sciences. All shifts avail. $8.75/hr starting. Train & benefits. Contact Summer @ 225-9292 ACCOUNTING STUDENTS Consulting company looking for someone with good analytical skills. PT/FTDatabase Excel experience helpful. Arrange $12-14/hr 801-772-1981 SUMMER PEST control sales mngr. Sacramento CA. Call/Text 916 205 4285. Well make this your best option! STUDENTPAYOUTS.COM Paid Survey Takers needed in Provo. 100% FREE to join. Click on Surveys. Mother's helper. Mid-April-Sept 1.!Possibly longer & live-in. rebemoulton@gmail.com STATISTICS tutors wanted. $11/hr starting. PT. Flex schedules. Call 404.5209 or email resume to jobs@OLOGYutah.com NARRATORS WANTED Imagine Learning, an educational software developer in Provo, is looking for fun and energetic native Spanish-speaking narrators, preferably with a young voice (8-14 years old). We need candidates who have the following accents: Mexican, Cuban, Puerto Rican, and Venezuelan. We prefer personable, focused talent, with a flair for acting and excellent enunciation.!For more information, please contact Laurel Comoletti at laurel.comoletti@imaginelearning.com. COLLEGE ALGEBRA tutors wanted. $11/hr starting. PT. Flex schedules. Call 404.5209 or email resume to jobs@OLOGYutah.com FREE RENT & util. for couple with no kids. Wife to work 8-11am M-F, in Pl. Grove 801-785-9363 Call 10a-6p.
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Insurance Plans
"UTAH'S BEST" HEALTH INSURANCE $48/mo brownhealtinsurance.com 801-377-2111
Dental Special
HALF PRICE Dental Clinic. Free Exam and X-rays. Cleaning $10-25. 801-426-0774
Help Wanted
Mother's Helper to take care of our home, our diabetic 7-year old son & our energetic 1-year old daughter. Duties include childcare, housekeeping, cooking, shopping, etc. About 20 hr/wk. Must start immediately and be available Spring and Summer. Send questions & references to jadenandshea@byu.net. Health and wellness company expanding internationally looking for people with language skills in Japanese and Mandarin. Call 801-318-3583 for more information. NOW HIRING! Recreation Assistants, Lifeguards/Swim Instructors,Seasonal Laborers, and more for the City of Orem.! Apply online at www.orem.org. FEMALE MANDARIN speakers: !Will pay for trip to Shanghai to represent NY-based cosmetics brand at Beauty Expo May 4-6. alewis44@gmail.com PT MEDICAL Assistant 30 hrs/week. M, W and F. Some evenings. Will train. Email resume to apply@utahradiology.com.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012 Volume 65, Issue 131 universe.byu.edu 152 BRMB, BYU, Provo, Utah 84602
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11
Associated Press
FRANKFORT, Ky. Kentuckys General Assembly gave final passage Tuesday to legislation that would exempt the Amish from a long-standing requirement that they affix bright orange safety triangles on their slow-moving buggies. Lawmakers, in a debate watched by other states with sizable Amish populations like Kentucky, were left to weigh religious rights against traffic safety. House legislators, voting 7521, approved a bill that would allow the Amish to use reflective silver or white tape on the backs of their horse-drawn buggies, instead of orange traffic triangles normally required for slow-moving vehicles. The Senate had unanimously passed the bill last month and the measure now goes to Gov.
Associated Press
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers shows a view looking southward of the International Bridge crossing the St. Marys River, connecting Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., right, and Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, left, city of the same name.
Georgian Bay would involve a swirl of technical and political challenges. The stakes are high because variations of mere inches can have big implications for the environment, tourism and shipping. Regardless of what the governments do, rainfall, runoff from winter snowpacks and evaporation will remain the biggest influences over water levels. Theres always expectations that artificial structures can protect you from everything, said Ted Yuzyk, Canadian chairman of the International Upper Great Lakes Study. Its a huge lake system and ... regulation can only take you so far. Its not like turning the tap on and off whenever you want. Still, the system isnt entirely natural. Lake Ontarios levels have been regulated for more than 50 years by the Moses-Saunders Power Dam on the St. Lawrence River. Hydropower turbines and gates at the border town of Sault Ste. Marie control outf lows from Lake Superior, which feeds Lake Huron and eventually the other Great Lakes. Adjusting the f low makes only a slight difference, but I get calls all the time from people wanting us to do something about water levels, said Steve Rose, operations chief for the local Army Corps of Engineers office. People clamoring for relief from low water in sprawling Georgian Bay contend the shortage results largely from dredging by the Army corps to enlarge the shipping channel in the St. Clair River, the outlet at the south end of Lake Huron. So a man-made solution is justified, they say. If somebody has the ability to keep the water at a decent level by putting a dam in the river or doing something else to restrict the flow, I think they should do it, said Ramler, 53, who inherited Twin Bridges Marina from his dad and has worked there from childhood. Lake Huron presently is about a foot below its March average, said Keith Kompoltowicz, an Army corps meteorologist in Detroit. But the situation has long been worse on Georgian Bay, said Bob Duncanson, executive director of a waterfront homeowners group. The bay, largest in the Great Lakes, has shorelines dotted with cottages and marinas, many accessible only by water. One-time bottomlands have turned into mud flats and boats have sustained propeller damage from striking barely submerged boulders. Fish have lost spawning areas. Many people have had to relocate docks and boathouses, Duncanson said. Some of the channels havent been usable for 10 years. The study team says putting sills resembling underwater speed bumps in the river could help raise lake levels, but could cost up to $200 million. Environmental groups say there are cheaper options, such as removing seawalls. But a property owners group on southern Lake Michigan sponsored a letterwriting campaign saying higher Lake Huron water levels would bring erosion and flooding in their area. An attorney threatened legal action.
ville, killing an Amish child and injuring three others. Sen. Ken Winters, R-Murray, said he considered the final passage of the bill a victory for religious liberty. Weve been able to accommodate a major issue in their lives, said Winters, a retired Baptist college president who represents a growing Amish community in his mostly rural western Kentucky district. Rep. Fred Nesler, D-Mayfield, was the most outspoken of a group of rural lawmakers who opposed the measure. He said that while the reflective tape would work well at night by reflecting car headlights, it does nothing to make the buggies visible during daylight hours. My objection to is a safety issue, Nesler said. Winters said tests have proven that the reflective tape makes the buggies visible up to 1,000 feet away.
Brazil Recife
Pres. Mark B. Woodruff (20052008) Fri., Mar. 30, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., Woodruff Home. Come and enjoy refreshments and visiting with dear friends. For more information, contact: Peg Woodruff, 801373-4477, pegwoodruff@gmail.com
Finland
Pres. David Brown (20082011) Fri., Mar. 30, 4 p.m., 1160 E. Vine St., Murray. 4:00 p.m., socializing; 5:00 p.m., message from President Brown; 5:30 p.m., dinner; 6:15 p.m., clean-up. Please bring assigned food items. For more information, contact: Susan Brown, 801-254-9881, susanaebrown@gmail.com
Nicaragua Managua
Pres. All) Fri., Mar. 30, 6:30 p.m., Harbor Ward Building, 600 S. 100 W. American Fork, 84003. Please bring a treat to share with others. Feel free to bring photographs or other memorabilia from your mission. For more information, contact: David, 801-362-3311
California Arcadia
Pres. Oscar Pike (20082011) Fri., Mar. 30, 6 to 9 p.m., Carterville Chapel; 900 W. 2150 N., Provo, 84604. An enjoyable evening of renewing friendships, reminiscing, and refreshments. Bring a treat to share. Well be in the chapel for a short time so Sunday dress please. Group photo at 7:30 p.m. Use map/GPS to find us. We are excited to see you! For more information, contact: Oscar and Stephanie Pike, 801-592-0262 or 801995-9814, pike.stephanie@gmail.com or pike.oscar@gmail.com
Finland Helsinki
Pres. All (19472012) Fri., Mar. 30, 7 p.m., 1160 E. Vine St., Murray. Well hear guest speakers and an update on Finland by Elder Matti Jouttenus. Please bring finger foods for social hour following meeting. Church dress. For more information, contact: Susan Brown, 801-254-9881, susanaebrown@gmail.com
Ohio Columbus
Pres. Jensen (20082011) Fri., Mar. 30, 6-10 p.m., LDS Chapel 9855 S. 2300 E., Sandy, 84092. Come and have a great time renewing friendships with a little dinner. Wed like to have some help with the food this time, so (last name) A - H salads; I - M veggie plate; N - Z finger desserts Thanks so much for your help. See you soon. Please RSVP. For more information, contact: facebook.com/ events/296354330421814/
Chile Antofagasta
Pres. Juan Urra (20072010) Fri., Mar. 30, 7:30 p.m., Edgemont South Stake Center. All missionaries who served in the Chile Antofagasta Mission are welcome. Your friends and anyone who is from Chile are welcome also. The stake center is 1.3 mi north of LaVell Edwards Stadium, on the same street. Address: 2950 N. Canyon Rd. We will have an update on Chile and the mission. Chilean Refreshments and a time to socialize and catch up with companions and friends. Dress: Church clothes. For more information, contact: Matt Shirley, 928.699.5257, mbdshirley@gmail.com
Georgia Macon
Pres. Norman D. Anderson (19992002) Fri., Mar. 30, 7 p.m., 1300 E. 300 S., Provo. For more information, contact: Arnolene Anderson, (801) 373 8696, andersonnorman@comcast.net
Singapore
Pres. Bryan Skelton/Terrence Clark (20042010) Fri., Mar. 30, 6 p.m., Harvest Buffet, 2338 N University Parkway, Provo, 84604. For more information, contact: Ee Chien Chua, 801-836-5899
Idaho Boise
Pres. R. Brent Ririe (20042007) Fri., Mar. 30, 7 p.m., Ririe Residence Reunion Address: 695 E Cherapple Cir Orem, 84097. For more information, contact: Beverly Ririe, (801) 224-0274, beverlyririe@yahoo.com
India Palace
Lunch Buffet All you can eat
Monday Friday 11 a.m. 2:30 p.m. Open: Monday Saturday 1 1a.m. 10 p.m. 98 W Center St, Historical Downtown Provo 801.373.7200 www.RestaurantsInProvo.com
Spain Barcelona
Pres. W. Christopher Waddell (20062009) Fri., Mar. 30, 7 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., 2245 E. 3900 S., Salt Lake City. Google doc to sign up to bring food or to carpool: bit. ly/sbm-apr2012. For more information, contact: Paul Fiske, (603) 761-6444, paularthurfiske@gmail.com
Chile Antofagasta
$5 OFF
any purchase of $30 or more. Dinner hours only.
Expires 4/18/2011. Valid Mon. Thurs. only.
India Palace
Illinois Chicago North Pres. Francis C. Alder (20042007) Pres. Stoddard (20062009) Fri., Mar. 30, 7:30 p.m., Edgemont South Fri., Mar. 30, 6:30-9 p.m., 1915 N Canyon Stake Center. All missionaries who served Rd, Provo. For more information, contact: in the Chile Antofagasta Mission are Sis. Stoddard, 702-328-9834, carolstodwelcome. Your friends and anyone who dard4@gmail.com Taiwan TaiChung is from Chile are welcome also. The stake Pres. President Watterson (20042007) Mexico Cuernavaca center is 1.3 mi north of LaVell Edwards Fri., Mar. 30, 7 p.m., 560 South 1000 Pres. Wayne Gardner (20062009) Stadium, on the same street. Address: The New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation Fri., Mar. 30, 7:00 p.m., 4176 S. Adonis East Logan, 84321. For more information, 2950 N. Canyon Rd. We will have an update 620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018 Dr. (3950 E.), Salt Lake City. Picnic outside, contact: Pres. Watterson, 435-752-9193 on Chile and the mission. Chilean Refresh- For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550 permitting. Casual dress. For ments and a time to socialize and catch up Forweather Release Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Sudoku
8 5 3 4 7 9 1 2 6 4 8 1 5 9 3 6 2 7 2 9 6 5 1 3 8 7 4 5 7 3 2 6 1 4 9 8 4 1 7 8 6 2 9 5 3 2 9 6 4 8 7 5 3 1 9 8 1 2 3 5 4 6 7 1 3 5 6 4 9 7 8 2 3 6 4 7 9 1 2 8 5 9 2 7 8 3 5 1 4 6 5 7 2 6 4 8 3 9 1 6 4 8 1 7 2 9 5 3 1 2 5 3 8 6 7 4 9 3 1 9 7 2 4 8 6 5 7 3 8 9 5 4 6 1 2 8 5 2 9 1 6 3 7 4 6 4 9 1 2 7 5 3 8 7 6 4 3 5 8 2 1 9 5 6 2 9 1 4 7 8 3
9 1 3 5 6 7 2 8 4 3 8 4 9 6 1 2 5 7 7 8 4 1 2 3 6 5 9 7 2 1 5 3 8 9 4 6
No. 0222
9 10 16 19 22 26 11 12 13
8 1 7 2 3 6 4 5 9
2 6 5 4 9 8 7 1 3 6 9 5 7 2 4 3 8 1 6 7 8 9 4 1 3 2 5 8 3 6 4 5 2 7 1 9 5 2 9 3 7 6 1 4 8 1 4 7 6 9 3 8 2 5
3 9 4 5 8 7 1 6 2
3 4 1 8 5 2 9 7 6 2 5 9 8 1 7 6 3 4 8 9 2 6 1 4 5 3 7 5 6 8 2 4 9 1 7 3
6 3 8 1 4 5 9 2 7
1 3 6 7 8 5 4 9 2 9 1 2 3 7 5 4 6 8 4 5 7 2 3 9 8 6 1 4 7 3 1 8 6 5 9 2
9 7 5 3 2 8 6 4 1
8 4 3 5 2 6 1 7 9
2 4 1 6 7 9 8 3 5
6 7 9 4 1 8 3 2 5 2 1 5 7 9 3 6 8 4
7 5 6 8 9 2 3 1 4
9 6 7 8 5 1 2 4 3 4 2 8 6 3 9 5 1 7
1 8 9 4 5 3 2 7 6
5 3 1 2 7 4 9 6 8 1 5 2 3 8 7 4 9 6
4 2 3 7 6 1 5 9 8
3 8 4 9 6 2 7 5 1 7 9 6 1 4 5 8 3 2
Puzzle 1: Easy
Puzzle 2: Moderate
Across 1 Act greedy 5 Newsman Lou 10 Stand taken by a debater 14 Elton John/Tim Rice musical 15 ___ Gay 16 Austen heroine 17 Jeering from the bleachers 18 Broom made of twigs 19 Crazy sort 20 End of some medieval tournament action? 23 Charger 26 Part of the translation of anno Domini 27 Weapons that hit in a medieval tournament? 33 Sum up 34 Holy book 35 Middleton and Moss
38 Estuaries 40 Track figure 42 Flood survivor 43 The Most Happy ___ 45 Imitated a wolf 47 Spanish bear 48 Really boring medieval tournaments? 51 Actress Zadora 52 Unwelcome growth 53 Joking around at a medieval tournament? 60 See 58-Down 61 Noted declarer of bankruptcy in 2001 62 Olympics jump 66 W.W. II battle site 67 Accustom 68 The occupation of the idle man, the distraction of the warrior, the peril of the sovereign, per Napoleon
69 Creature known scientifically as Bufo bufo 70 Heavy reading 71 Donald and Ivana, for instance Down 1 Shoot the breeze 2 Carnival city 3 Fracas 4 Hamper 5 Actress Mazar 6 Fairly uncommon blood type, informally 7 Nonsense 8 Black mark 9 Biblical fellow who was distressed? 10 Back to the Future transport 11 Mine, in Marseille 12 Springsteens ___ Fire 13 Told all to the cops 21 Mont. neighbor 22 Crud 23 Chow down on 24 ___ for (really delicious) 25 Ultimate object 28 Follower of many a dot 29 Some daily papers, informally 30 TV courtroom drama, 1986-94 31 Start or finish of an aphorism regarding justice
1 14 17
5 15 18
20 23 27 33 38 43 48 51 53 60 66 69 54 55 39 24 25
21
28 34 40 44 49
29
30
31 35 41 42 46 50 52
32 36 37
45
47
56 61 67 70
57
58
59 62 68 71 63 64 65
Puzzle 1: Easy
Puzzle 2: Moderate
S T O K E A M S T E L
32 Patsy 36 Made less rigorous 37 Things binge drinkers sometimes do 39 Sloppy 41 Zebra 44 ___ were 46 Blue
49 Accept punishment 50 Entertain 53 Witticism 54 Anne Franks father 55 Kareem AbdulJabbars alma mater, in brief 56 ___ time at all
57 Oil container 58 French artist famous for 60Acrossing 59 Juana ___ de la Cruz, Mexican poet/nun 63 Losing row 64 Brink 65 French article
Puzzle 3: Hard
Wednesday
For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Todays puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
BYUs Ashlee Brawley takes a swing during the first game of a doubleheader Tuesday evening versus UMKC at Gail Miller Field.
BYUs Andie Young hits the ball to her Santa Clara opponents during Tuesday's match.
Assistant coach James Ludlow said the players can be hard on themselves and during matches he gets them to focus on whats going right in the match, instead of what is going wrong. [I] pull them into positive energy instead of letting themselves slip into negative energy, Ludlow said. Then after matches we can go through and talk about good points, bad points and whats going to work next match to improve and become better. Head coach Lauren JonesSpencer said the team needs to be determined and play its game no matter what, and have the fight to win. I think its a matter of keeping momentum going and not changing our game, JonesSpencer said. There are a few specific things we need to work on this week in practice. Were not executing as well as we should. The Cougars play No. 33 St. Marys Friday at noon in their last home match of the season. Admission is free and pizza will be provided for fans.