Вы находитесь на странице: 1из 21

Serving the Brigham Young University Community

universe.byu.edu
January 15 21, 2013
@UniverseMetro, @UniverseCampus
Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah
P
A
G
E
1
5
M
o
v
i
e

R
a
t
i
n
g
s
W
h
a
t

i
t

t
a
k
e
s

t
o

g
e
t

t
h
e

r
a
t
e
P
A
G
E
1
0
B
a
s
k
e
t
b
a
l
l

P
A
G
E
9
P
a
y
-
f
o
r
-
P
l
a
y
B
e
h
i
n
d

c
o
l
l
e
g
e

g
a
m
e

s
c
h
e
d
u
l
e
s
P
A
G
E
7
P
r
o
v
o

R
e
c

C
e
n
t
e
r
S
p
r
i
n
g

t
o

b
r
i
n
g

o
p
e
n
i
n
g

o
f

c
e
n
t
e
r
P
A
G
E
2
M
i
s
s
i
o
n
a
r
y

e
n
r
o
l
l
m
e
n
t

A
g
e

c
h
a
n
g
e

e
f
f
e
c
t
s

L
D
S

c
o
l
l
e
g
e
s
2013 Ernst & Young LLP. All Rights Reserved.
Real challenges. Unreal rewards.
To learn more about internships at Ernst & Young, visit ey.com/internships.
See More | Possibilities
Photo illustration by Whitnie Soelberg
Is the technology age a benefit or a hinderance for relationships?
B y B R O O K E W E E N I G
Text me, lets Skype, shoot me
an email, Facebook me, Tweet me
are among the common phrases one
hears after trudging through the halls
of a high school or university campus.
These simple phrases are becoming
common as the millennial generation
and others have started to rely on new
technology to express themselves and
develop relationships with those also
connected through the virtual world.
Some see technology as the means
to easier and faster communication,
while others see its detrimental effects
on relationships. Technology is a dou-
ble-edged sword that can enhance,
maintain and build relationships or
contribute to more complacent commu-
nication. At BYU, technology has had
a profound effect on dating and family
connections.
Effects of technology on dating
After meeting on LDS Planet, an online
dating site, and maintaining a long-dis-
tance relationship through Skype and
email, Josh Weber nally married the
girl of his dreams. Weber, an English
major at BYU, became a member on LDS
Planet even though he originally swore
he would never participate in online dat-
ing sites.
I never wanted to make the Internet
the basis of my relationship, Weber said.
But I found out that I could use it to nd
more options.
Weber said the dating site was a way
for him to avoid hurtful rejection. Weber
said because there is no obligation to say
yes to a date online, members actually get
to interact with people that are interested
in building a relationship.
It was a way to do something differ-
ent, Weber said. The way I was dating
wasnt working. I was trapped into people
that didnt want to be dating. I was con-
tinually spending money and not getting
anywhere.
Within a week of exploring and nd-
ing those with similar interests on
LDS Planet, Weber connected with his
wife-to-be.
The two maintained a long-distance
relationship throughout the summer
through transparent technology like
email and Skype. A week after being
home from his summer job, the two were
engaged.
See TECHNOLOGY Page 3
Technology & relationships
BYU students deal
with divorce
B y S T E P H A N I E G R A F F
After less than a year of marriage,
Sally Jones (name changed) joined the
ranks of a vastly silent group on campus
divorced BYU students.
Once you label yourself as divorced,
sometimes Im afraid thats all that peo-
ple can see, Jones said. Divorce is just
something that happened to me, its not
who I am. When I would speak with peo-
ple, the divorce would be at the front of my
mind and I would wonder if somehow they
knew, as if I looked different because of the
divorce.
When these students rejoin their
single peers, some adjustment is usually
necessary to make the transition from
having a spouse to being a single student
again. Divorced students must learn
to readjust to young single adult life,
including dating and hanging out with
singles again.
After Mark Johnsons (name changed)
divorce, it took a while before he felt like
he could again relate with his single peers.
It took a little while before I started
attending the singles ward, Johnson said.
In the Church, there is such a stigma
attached to (divorce), and it was easier to
talk to people who didnt already know.
It can also often be difcult for divorced
students to overcome their own self-con-
sciousness in order to fully engage with
their single peers again.
Mary Smith (name changed) faced this
problem when she was becoming inte-
grated into single life again.
Its hard to feel condent in yourself
and start attending activities again,
Smith said. Its completely different when
youre married because you always have
someone with you, but it took me a while to
feel condent enough to participate again
and start attending things alone.
Divorced students can be faced with a
myriad of reactions in their YSA wards.
Professor Mark Ogletree, a practicing
marriage and family therapist and profes-
sor in the BYU Department of Religion,
says that the majority of reactions he has
seen in BYU wards toward these students
has been positive.
See DIVORCE Page 3
Photo illustration by Elliott Miller
BYU students who have to jump back into the dating world after early divorce sometimes nd reconnecting awkward.
2 The Universe, January 15 21, 2013
WEATHER
TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
UNIVERSE ONLINE
Continue reading these stories and more at universe.byu.edu
Sources: National Weather Service, BYU Astronomy Department
16 23 23
Partly Cloudy Fog and Haze Fog and Haze
5 5 6
P R E C I P I T A T I O N
January 2013: 0.15
2013: 0.15
BYU to present The
Phantom of the Opera
Andrew Lloyd Webbers The Phantom of the
Opera will be performed at Brigham Young
University from Jan. 16 to Feb. 2.
The production will take place in the de Jong
Concert Hall in the Harris Fine Arts Center.
Ticket prices range from $15 to $25 depending on
the time of the performance.
The musical tells the tale of a mysterious
opera-haunting phantom who grows infatuated
with a beautiful singer, and the chaos he creates
in pursuing her.
Story continues at unvr.se/VYsXb8
London Tube celebrates 150 years
Londoners are celebrating 150 years since the
inception of the Tube by looking back on a cen-
tury and a half of London Underground history.
Much like the city of London itself, the Lon-
don underground railway combines a rich his-
torical past with modern innovation.
According to the Transport for London and
London Transport Museum websites, the Lon-
don Tube ran for the rst time on Jan. 9, 1863
with a single line between Paddington Station
and Farringdon Street.
Story continues at unvr.se/W43tJt
Associated Press
Baker Street station is part of the 150-year-
old London Underground.
Mass mission calls effect housing
Missionary applications have increased 471
percent since October 6, church spokesman
Michael Purdy stated, leaving BYU dorms and
apartments bare.
After President Thomas S. Monson
announced that young women could now serve
at age 19 and young men at 18, the Church has
seen 4,000 applications per week as opposed to
the usual 700. The Lord is hastening this work,
and He needs more...missionaries, stated Elder
Jeffery R. Holland in an online church article.
Story continues at unvr.se/11vd7LW
Photo by Whitnie Soelberg
Since the missionary age change, housing
contracts have become harder to sell.
Desert Star Playhouse opens
new season with new comedy
Fantasy meets pop culture in a new, original
and culture-appropriate comedy opening at Des-
ert Star Playhouse in Murray.
Killing the Hobbit: Bored of the Rings
introduces Walter, a collector of action gures
and The Lord of the Rings movies. When
Walters ance returns her ring and ends their
engagement by claiming he spends too much
time living in a fantasy world, he must prove
his love on an unexpected journey through
Middle-Earth.
Story continues at unvr.se/UWmqTq
Obama picks Lew for Treasury
as scal issues loom
WASHINGTON (AP) For 30 years, Jack Lew
has had a hand in some of the biggest economic
deals negotiated in Washington. What awaits
him if hes conrmed as treasury secretary
could far exceed any challenge of the past a
triple-decked potential crisis that will test his
experience the moment he opens his ofce door
on the third oor of the Treasury Building
Lew, nominated for the job Thursday by Presi-
dent Barack Obama, has honed his skills in the
trenches of scal policy.
Story continues at unvr.se/ZDIdMb
Associated Press
President Barack Obama shakes hands with current White House Chief of Staff Jack Lew. This
week he announced that he will nominate Lew as the next Secretary of the Treasury.
GOING ON
A MISSION?
Come in for a FREE
pre-mission exam
and get 10% OFF
any needed service!
ninth
east
dental
ninth
Short walk from campus
Across from BYU Creamery
and next to Subway
1234 N 900 E Provo
NinthEastDental.com
801
-
921
-
4332
Sealings and Mercies:
THE LAURA F. WI LLES CENTER BOOK OF MORMON LECTURE FOR 2012-13
Moronis Final Exhortation in Moroni 10
Professor
James Faulconer
Tuesday, 15 January 2013 7 pm
To be held in the
Gordon B. Hinckley Center
on the BYU campus
Universities with LDS populations weigh in on the effect of the LDS mission age on enrollment
B y L I N D S E Y W I L L I A M S
When Heejin Yi heard the
news of the lowered mission ages
for The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, her mind
turned not only to the prospect of
serving a mission but also to the
effect it would have on the college
she would attend next year.
In the October 2012 General
Conference, President Thomas S.
Monson announced that young
women could serve at age 19
instead of 21 and young men could
serve at age 18 after graduating
high school.
Yi, a high school senior in
Colorado Springs, Colo., said she
knows the age change will affect
the college she attends next year.
She is looking at attending an LDS
school.
There are going to be no fresh-
man boys, Yi said. All the fresh-
man classes are going to be all
girls now. It is going to be so dif-
ferent not to see all of these guys
because the missionary age has
changed.
While many of the effects of
the LDS mission age change are
still undecided, colleges with LDS
populations have considered the
effect of the change on their
schools.
BYU-Idaho
Marc Stevens, the university
spokesman at BYUIdaho, said in
an email the student population
at BYUIdaho will likely decrease
over the next two years.
The change in enrollment
will begin Winter semester 2013,
Stevens said. Decreased enroll-
ments will likely extend through
the middle of 2014. Enrollment
numbers are expected to increase
in the Fall of 2014.
BYUIdaho currently has an
enrollment cap set at 15,000 full-
time equivalent (FTE). In Fall
2012, the FTE was 14,300. The
enrollment cap is set by the Board
of Trustees.
The Board recently approved
a new enrollment cap of 18,000
FTE students, which takes effect
in 2014, Stevens said.
No changes in the admission
process have occurred because
of the age change.
We encourage potential stu-
dents to apply and be admitted
prior to their missions, Stevens
said. Once they receive their
calls, we encourage them to sub-
mit a missionary deferment to
secure their place at the univer-
sity and hold any scholarships
they have received.
BYU-Hawaii
BYUHawaii also has not made
any changes to the admission pro-
cess because of the age change
according to Michael Johansen,
director of communications at
BYUHawaii.
Were doing a lot of analysis
just like all of the schools, and
were looking at it from a bunch of
different angles, Johansen said.
We actually anticipate there will
be more female students who are
choosing to go on missions early.
Johansen said there will not
be long-lasting changes in enroll-
ment but there will be a slight
decrease as the initial group,
especially females, leaves to go
on missions.
After one cycle, there shouldnt
be any change, Johansen said.
Johansen said the next applica-
tion cycle may have more female
applicants than male applicants,
but this change may not hap-
pen because of the large major-
ity of international students at
BYUHawaii.
The overwhelming majority
of our students who are interna-
tional are already returned mis-
sionaries, Johansen said. We
are the only CES school that has
a specic target area for interna-
tional students. That roughly 50
percent ratio actually categorizes
us as the most international uni-
versity in the United States.
LDS Business College
LDS Business College also
expects some changes in enroll-
ment. According to Renae Rich-
ards, director of enrollment
management at LDS Business
College, the school is seeing more
students defer enrollment for
missions.
In past semesters, few stu-
dents deferred enrollment for
missions, Richards said in an
email. Most did so because they
received a scholarship. Space was
available and it was an easy pro-
cess to reapply and be readmit-
ted. Deferrals were not required.
With the new announcement we
are seeing an increase in defer-
rals including from students who
do not have scholarship awards.
Southern Virginia University
Though not operated or owned
by the LDS Church, Southern Vir-
ginia University, with a 92 per-
cent LDS population, is making
changes due to the LDS mission-
age change.
On Nov. 20, 2012, SVU
announced the creation of a
block program beginning in
January 2013 in hopes of accom-
modating future missionaries
who do not have time to attend a
full semester before entering the
eld. The eight-week block allows
future missionaries to attend
more schooling before a mission.
In addition, the second block at
the end of the semester allows
returning missionaries to enroll
in classes during the middle of a
semester.
Burke Olsen, vice president of
communications and marketing
at SVU, said there will be an ini-
tial drop in enrollment because of
the mission age change.
We anticipate a small shift
initially, but once missionaries
start coming back from the eld,
we expect to be where we are right
now or higher, Olsen said.
Currently, SVU can accommo-
date between 850900 students but
has plans of growing to 1,200. In
August, the university launched
a capital campaign to raise funds
for the university to increase its
maximum enrollment capacity.
SVU does not anticipate any
changes to the admission process
and plans to admit the same num-
ber of students admitted in previ-
ous years.
We will encourage students to
apply to the university for a spe-
cic semester and then announce
their deferment afterwards,
Olsen said.
Olsen said SVU will con-
tinue to have a focus on recruit-
ing returned missionaries. The
university currently offers a
$2,000 annual grant to returned
missionaries.
Photo courtesy Autumn Lewis
Southern Virginia University student Autumn Lewis holds the envelope with her mission call to the
Oregon Eugene Mission.
The Universe, January 15 21, 2013 3
NEXT: UNI VERSI TY FORUM
This devotional will also be broadcast in the JSB Auditorium.
TODAY
UNIVERSITY DEVOTIONAL
Tuesday, January 15, 11:05 a.m.,
Marriott Center
Elaine S. Dalton
Young Women General President
Michael Wesch
Associate Professor,
Cultural Anthropology
Kansas State University
Selected speeches available at http://speeches.byu.edu
January 22, 11:05 a.m.
Marriott Center
PLAN NOW TO ATTEND.
Prior to her calling as the
Young Women general presi-
dent, Elaine S. Dalton served as
both frst and second counselor
in the Young Women general
presidency. Prior to this service
she served on the Young Women
General Board for fve years.
Sister Dalton has served in all
the auxiliaries of the Church on
both ward and stake levels.
Sister Dalton was born and
raised in Ogden, Utah, and she
received her bachelors degree
in English from Brigham Young
University.
Sister Dalton enjoys running
and hiking with her family and
dancing with her granddaugh-
ters. She loves to read, especially
the scriptures, and she loves the
Lord.
Her favorite scripture and
lifes motto is found in Proverbs
3:56: Trust in the Lord with
all thine heart; and lean not unto
thine own understanding. In all
thy ways acknowledge him and
he shall direct thy paths.
Sister Dalton is married to
Stephen E. Dalton, and they are
the parents of six children.
Devotional: Elaine S. Dalton
11:05 a.m.,
Marriott Center
Grand Pianos Live
7 p.m.
Wilkinson Student Center
East Ballroom
Internet Marketing Bootcamp
9 a.m.-4 p.m., Jan. 20, 2013 to
Feb. 16
Thanksgiving Point, Lehi
OU Capmus Basics Training
11 a.m.-12 p.m.,
Utah Valley University, Orem
Connective Circle Workshop:
Tax Tips, Tricks, and Advice
7 p.m.-9 p.m.,
Traverse Mountain
Community Center, Lehi
Wacky Wednesday Storytime
10 a.m.,
Barnes & Noble, Orem
Mystery Dinner Date Night
6 p.m., through Saturday
BYUs Museum of Peoples and
Cultures (700 N. 100 E. in Provo)
SLC/SEM 2013 Kickoff Event
with Duane Forrestor of Bing
Webmaster Tools
6 p.m.-9 p.m., Adobe Building,
Lehi
Willes Book of Mormon Lecture
Professor James E. Faulconer
7 p.m., Hinckley Center
Startup Grind Utah Hosts Ryan
Smith (CEO & Co-Founder @
Qualtrics)
6 p.m.,
Adobe, Lehi
Free unvr.se/QYwFOB
Free unvr.se/Wv3XqQ
$997 unvr.se/VJ4jhy Free unvr.se/UHrLKm
$8-$55 unvr.se/13klbym
Free unvr.se/ZDMkfV
$24/couple unvr.se/UUtg97
$20 unvr.se/TJpFLh Free unvr.se13gFuM6
Free unvr.se/XSQvnI
T
U
E
S
D
A
Y
W
E
D
N
E
S
D
A
Y
T
U
E
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
F
R
I
D
A
Y
W
E
D
N
E
S
D
A
Y
T
U
E
S
D
A
Y
T
H
U
R
S
D
A
Y
THE UNIVERSE CALENDAR JANUARY 15 21
TECHNOLOGY
The world of
cyber-dating
Continued from Page 1
I never felt like we were play-
ing games with each other,
Weber said.
We both wanted to be honest
and upfront because we wanted
to be in it for the long run.
Larry Nelson, family life pro-
fessor at BYU, said when it comes
to technology in dating relation-
ships, there is no black and
white; rather, it is all depen-
dent on how people use it.
Dating provides the opportu-
nity to learn to commit, Nelson
said. But the attitude today is
that I am going to commit to you
for the next two hours, and yet
I refer to it as telephone indel-
ity. Telephone indelity is when
you are with one person, but the
whole night you are texting other
people. This really harms a per-
sons ability to commit if they are
so connected to their phone that
they cant devote themselves to
one person for a couple of hours.
Guy Dorius, who holds a doc-
torate in family studies, said he
knows of four marriages that
ended or were in critical condi-
tion because of re-connection
through avenues such as Face-
book. Dorius said he believes that
the use of technology, if not used
wisely, disconnects daters from
the people that are right in front
of them.
Sometimes I will see cou-
ples on their cell phones when
they are together, Dorius said.
I think that it distracts you
from the one that you are with,
because you are with so many
at the same time. There is an old
song called, Love the One You
are With, and technology makes
it hard to love the one that you
are with.
Effects of technology on
families and children
Moms use technology to stay
in touch with missionaries,
kids at college and old friends.
For Teri Bench, a mother from
Orem, technology has kept her
connected with her children all
throughout the country.
For my kids that are mar-
ried, how I know what is going
on in their lives is by Facebook,
Bench said. Looking back,
I would have called my mom
whenever there were updates
in my life, but my daughter just
updates her blog and I can check
in whenever I am interested and
at my own convenience.
Bench said she uses technol-
ogy multiple times a day to
stay in touch with both her chil-
dren at home as well as those who
are married. Overall, Bench said
technology is not good or bad
for her familial relationships.
There are so many variables
when it comes to relationships
with your kids, Bench said.
It is more than technology
its background, experiences
and personalities. I dont blame
technology for having a good or
bad relationship with my kids, I
blame myself.
Jorden Mortensen, a student at
BYU studying exercise science,
said his mom uses technology to
maintain their relationship by
sending him texts on a daily basis
and emails once a week with
Moms Sunday Devotional.
Mortensen said he likes tech-
nology to stay in contact with
his mom because it is more con-
venient and less time consum-
ing. As a busy college student,
Mortensen said things like email
and texting keep him connected
to his mom easily.
Technology is unique with
mothers because they always
tend to give more than they
receive, Mortensen said. Tech-
nology has helped me to give back
to my mom where I can.
Nelson said technology in
family relationships can be
detrimental, but he also said it
can be enhancing for those who
use it wisely. When it comes to
children and families, Nelson
called the connection between
relationships and technology
bidirectional.
The use of technology in rela-
tionships will make it worse for
those who are already lacking in
social skills, and therefore that is
why they are using it as much as
they do, Nelson said. Technol-
ogy robs many children from set-
tings in which they can overcome
fears or develop skills.
Dorius said he gets emails
from students at 3 a.m. With the
invention of smartphones and
other technology, Dorius said the
fathers ability to create a rela-
tionship with his family is much
more difcult, as fathers never
actually leave work. Dorius
said he is unsure if the facilita-
tion offered through technology
is outweighed by the lack of civil-
ity often demonstrated by those
who use it.
You never leave anything
behind, because you have every-
thing at your ngertips, Dorius
said.
DIVORCE
Previously
married students
now return to the
dating game
Continued from Page 1
Most every divorced stu-
dent I have seen has been met
with open arms by the students
around them, Ogletree said.
The vast majority have
been very accepting and
gracious.
However, Garrett Barfoot
said that after his divorce,
others in his YSA wards
often jumped to incorrect
conclusions.
Peoples reaction is often
to instantly assume that you
did something wrong or failed
in some way, Barfood said.
I mean, (being divorced) is
the last thing that you want to
have to tell somebody.
A major part of the single
life that takes adjustment for
divorced students is dating.
Ogletree says that a divorced
students experience dat-
ing greatly depends on their
personality.
Dating after divorce usu-
ally goes one of two ways,
Ogletree said. Either the per-
son is very cautious and takes
a while to get back to dating,
or they are very eager because
they already believe they know
what they want. Although, as
always, it is completely driven
by personality, circumstances
and family support.
Jones was one of the former
types of divorcees. Although it
took her a long time to begin
dating, she was eventually able
to nd happiness in her dating
life after her divorce.
Dating was hard at rst,
but you get used to it and
then there comes a day when
it becomes the norm, Jones
said.
Jones said that while dating
was personally difcult for her
following her divorce, the men
that she dated in her singles
wards were understanding of
her situation. She is now hap-
pily engaged.
Johnson found greater con-
fidence in dating after his
divorce than he did before his
marriage.
I liked dating better, John-
son said. I know a lot more
about what I want in a person.
Once I tell someone Im dating
about the divorce, it might be
weird for a minute or two, but
then its ne.
Despite periods of adjust-
ment, most of these students
have been able to nd peace
with their situation and have
found that they have grown in
unexpected ways.
Jones says she is a better
person now because of what
she has been through.
I think the important thing
is that I made a decision to stay
positive, to trust in the Lord
and to keep moving forward,
Jones said. I wish it hadnt
happened, that I hadnt had to
endure all the pain, but at the
same time, I am a completely
different person because of the
divorce. Im a better person.
And I may not have met my
wonderful anc if I hadnt
gone through the divorce.
Who knows what would have
happened? Im just grateful
Heavenly Father has a plan. A
perfect plan.
Photo by Elliott Miller
After divorce, BYU students
learn to reassimilate into single
life.
F
R
I
D
A
Y
Model Train Show: Ophir-Tintic
& Western Model Railroad Club
Friday 3-9 p.m. Saturday 10
a.m.-6 p.m.
Thanksgiving Point
$6 unvr.se/13lQ98g
4 The Universe, January 15 21, 2013
Make a DIFFERENCE!
Be a CAMP COUNSELOR!
Friendly Pines Camp, in the cool mountains of Prescott, Ariz.,
is hiring for the 2013 season, May 26th July 29th.
Apply at friendlypines.com
or call 1-888-281-CAMP.
Finding your niche at BYU
B y K a r i C h r i s T e n s e n
Leaving home and going to
college is a scary experience
for some students. Finding
a place at a huge university
can be extremely difficult, but
through clubs, BYU provides a
way for each and every student
to find a place for themselves.
Ryan Montgomery, a fresh-
man from Pendleton, Ore.,
didnt know what to expect
when he first came to BYU. He
was fresh out of high school
and didnt know if hed be able
to find his niche at such a
large campus.
I remember when I first
came here to BYU, I was a little
scared and didnt know what
to expect, Montgomery said.
Id never been on a university
campus before and didnt know
how Id adjust. But when I came
here, I had a very welcoming
experience with my professors
and the activities and clubs
here on campus. Those things
really enabled me to find my
group and find friends and
be able to be part of the BYU
community.
With more than 200 clubs on
the BYU campus, all sponsored
by BYUSA, there is bound to
be a club that fits the interests
of most BYU students. And if
theres not the specific club
that students are looking for,
they have the opportunity to
work with BYUSA to start that
club.
Jenny Gordon from Elk
Grove, Calif., and the vice pres-
ident of clubs for BYUSA, over-
sees all of the clubs on campus
and is directly involved in
helping students start and
maintain their clubs.
Each club is very different,
and all of the students are very
passionate about their club,
Gordon said. Its really cool
to see students connect with
other students that share a
similar interest. Theyre able
to find friends and make con-
nections and enjoy their col-
lege experience. If a student
comes to BYU and they are
really good at something and
theres not a club for that, then
we want them to start it and
we want to help them with that
process.
Every Tuesday night at 7 in
the Wilkinson Student Cen-
ter, Clubs Night is hosted
by BYUSA. This is an oppor-
tunity for any club on campus
to meet together at a desig-
nated time and place. Its also
a great opportunity for stu-
dents to come and explore their
options in the different clubs
available and see if theres one
that fits their personality and
interests.
Alba Fonesca, a Middle East-
ern studies and Arabic major
from Salt Lake and a member
of the salsa club, talked about
her experience with clubs.
I think that one of the best
things about clubs is the fact
that they are able to reach
the people on the outskirts of
BYU and the people that arent
always involved, Fonesca
said. Clubs are so specific,
so people that maybe dont fit
other places can find friends in
a place where they fit. My expe-
rience with salsa club has been
awesome and really positive.
Alexander Zaitzef f, an
applied and computational
mathematics student, was
able to take skills and talents
that he acquired before college
and use them in a club at BYU.
Zaitzeff got involved in chess
clubs in middle school and
high school, volunteered in
elementary schools teaching
chess and eventually became
a private chess instructor.
Chess has always been a
bigger thing for me, Zaitzeff
said. When I came to BYU, I
used BYUSAs club website and
found out more about the chess
club and started attending as a
freshman. I really enjoy it. Its
a place where people can get
together, and it really doesnt
matter what background
youre from. Its something
that breaks down barriers. I
think clubs are an excellent
way to find friends and also
try new things without having
additional pressure.
Today, Zaitzeff is serving as
the vice president of the chess
club, which is another great
opportunity that BYU provides
students with opportunities
to serve and be in leadership
positions.
Trevor Carver, an executive
director over all of the BYU
clubs, talked about the oppor-
tunities that they provide stu-
dents with.
I get to work with a lot of
the club presidents, and I get to
hear their stories and see the
passion that they have about
what they do, Carver said.
Its fantastic because they get
to have leadership opportuni-
ties in clubs on top of doing
everything that they love. Its
just neat that students have the
chance to do that in the college
atmosphere.
Brandon Leslie, from Gig
Harbor, Wash., is a member
of the hip-hop club and talked
about how it gives him oppor-
tunities that he never had
before he came to BYU.
I was never involved in this
kind of stuff before school, it
was all new to me, Leslie said.
And thats one of the reasons I
love it. There wasnt the oppor-
tunity for it in high school.
Theres even clubs for your
major here. I think everyone
should be involved in at least
one club because of the diver-
sity that they offer. Theres
something for everyone here.
Ryan Montgomery was able
to find his place at BYU, and
so have many others just like
him. For more information on
joining or starting a club, visit
clubs.byu.edu.
BYU students fight human trafficking
B y a m y h a r r i s o n
California native Stephanie
Larsen is the frst woman in
four generations of her family
to be free from the horrors of sex
slavery.
Larsens great-great grand-
mother, great grandmother,
grandmother and mother were
all trafficked and sexually
abused for money. Larsen said it
is because of the courage of her
mother, who escaped the cycle,
that she is protected today. How-
ever, Larsen said not all children
are so lucky. According to the
Polaris Project, an anti-human
traffcking organization, 100,000
children are estimated to be in
the U.S. sex trade per year.
Human traffcking is found in
all countries of the world, despite
the fact that it is illegal every-
where. A group of passionate BYU
students joined together in 2009
to fght this issue and have been
working with nonproft groups to
raise both awareness about the
issue and funds to fght it.
When most people think of sex
slavery or human traffcking,
they think of people in countries
outside the United States. How-
ever, the issue is prevalent in the
United States and even affects
Utah. In 2011, a Utah mother tried
selling her daughters virginity
to a man for $10,000, according to
a report by ABC News.
Sex traffcking is not the only
type of human slavery. Many
companies operate and produce
using slave labor. Kyle Durfee,
president of the BYU Anti-Human
Traffcking Club, said that slav-
ery affects BYU students more
than they know.
Were eating it. Were wear-
ing it. Were living it every single
day, Durfee said. If we ignore it,
it wont get better.
Durfee said human traffcking
is a hard issue to fght because
many people do not know about
it. He also said many people do
not know what to do when they
fnd out about it. Durfee said he
became interested in the issue
when his favorite band, Switch-
foot, got involved through its
Freedom project initiative.
I wondered how I could go 18
years of my life not hearing that
slavery still existed, Durfee said.
It blew my mind.
Durfee decided to start the
Anti-Human Traffcking Club
with some of his friends his fresh-
man year. He said the focus of the
club is to help non-governmental
organizations that are fghting
the issue through fundraising
as well as giving their time and
talents. Durfee said there is some-
thing every BYU student can do
to fght the issue.
Try to fnd your strengths
and then fnd ways to plug your
strengths into it, Durfee said.
In the club, we all work to help in
the ways that we are strongest.
Jeremy Sookho, a senior from
Modesto, Calif., sought out the
club after he learned about the
traffcking issue on his mission
and from a friend.
I served my mission in South
India, Sookho said. Its an
issue there to some extent. When
I got back, I had a friend writing
a paper on it for her capstone
project, so she told me about the
issue. (The club) has put me in
touch with like-minded people
(and) other people who are pas-
sionate about stopping (human
traffcking).
Sookho said that BYU students
may not personally be victims of
human traffcking, but it is still
an issue they should do some-
thing about.
People at BYU have served
missions or have roots (in) other
places outside of Utah, where its
a huge problem, Sookho said.
My brother saw it frst-hand
in his mission on a daily basis.
Because we care about our fel-
low man, purity is something
so important to us, and we have
exposure to other parts of the
world. The issue has a natural
appeal to a lot of students here at
BYU.
Soohko said that students
can be involved in other ways
besides joining the Anti-Human
Traffcking club. He said it is
important for students to be per-
sonally aware of the issue and to
be able to spot signs of those who
are being abused. He also said it
is important for students to be
involved politically.
Its not uncommon that states
will put in propositions that stu-
dents can vote on, Soohko said.
Being active in the political pro-
cess and voting, and even going
to the next step to write senators
and members of the House of Rep-
resentatives, is something BYU
students can do.
Professor Mathew Mason
teaches American History and
researches slavery and aboli-
tionism in the 19th century. He is
the faculty adviser for the Anti-
Human Trafficking Club and
says the greatest way the club
helps fght the issue is to connect
students to larger organizations.
The way to make a difference
as a student organization is to
make connections with non-gov-
ernmental organizations that are
doing something, Mason said.
We can connect to activists who
are doing this every day to make
a difference in a practical way.
They can use the funds; they can
use our time.
Mason said one focus of his
research deals with what inspired
people to fnally act against slav-
ery. He found that it happened
when people felt personally con-
nected to the issue. He also said
that the history of slavery and its
abolishment in the U.S. gives a
great example for the pattern of
fghting modern slavery.
We sometimes think, when we
think about history, it took one
person who just made it happen,
Mason said. In fact, its a big
long movement that stretched for
decades involving a whole variety
of people doing a whole variety of
different things that they were
good at doing.
Mason said the issue is one that
people must confront and take
action against.
Its one thing to say, I wish
slavery didnt exist, and Im anti-
slavery in principal, Mason
said. But its another thing to
actually do something about it.
Photo illustration by Logan havens
Whether you like surfng, chess or ping-pong, there is a club for everyone at ByU.

I think that one of the


best things about clubs
is the fact that they are
able to reach the people
on the outskirts of ByU
and the people that
arent always involved.
Alba Fonesca
middle eastern studies
and arabic major
Photo by Whitnie soelberg
ByU students started a club to combat the human traffcking issue.
The Universe, January 15 21, 2013 5
Earn cold hard cash
without the cold calls.
Come to work for Burns & McBride at our new office just a short stroll from
campus, and you wont be talking to strangers. Youll be calling our existing,
happy and warm customers to offer them even more services to help them
manage and enjoy their homes. Youll earn a guaranteed $10/hour base
pay with an on-plan average of a cool $17/hour. And youll be working
with a company thats been in business for over 60 years. If all this doesnt
make you feel warm and fuzzy, we dont know what will. Call now.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT TERRY McBRIDE
302-467-4161 or Terry.McBride@BurnsAndMcBride.com
Family owned and operated for over 60 years, Burns & McBride is committed to treating all its
employees and customers like family. Our calling: to help homeowners be safer, more comfortable
and greener. Wont you call us?
Coca-Cola will be calling the BYU Creamery
on Ninth at random times, to give away
prizes to customers in the store.
PRIZES
INCLUDE
groceries, t-shirts,
hats, electronics
and Coca-Cola
products
January 14March 15, 2013 AT THE BYU CREAMERY
The Coca-Cola. Coke and the Contour Bottle are trademarks of the Coca-Cola Company.
COCA-COLA
IS CALLING!
BYU students lead longest-running and most extensive exit poll in Utah
B y R O B B I E J E N K I N S
Janene Paulson stood in
the hall of the American Fork
Library, surprised by the long
line of early voters but thankful
she arrived in time.
I made it there two minutes
before the polls closed, she
said, because I was trying to
make it back after I nished a
test.
Because this was her rst
time voting, Janene received
two I voted stickers, one of
which she wore and the other
which she put in her journal.
For Janene, a junior from
American Fork studying
exercise and wellness, her
experience with the recent
presidential election began
with early voting, several days
before Election Day, Nov. 6. For
other BYU students, the elec-
tion started weeks earlier as
they exercised their right to
vote through absentee ballots.
For a handful of political sci-
ence students, however, this
years election began at the
start of the semester.
Every election cycle, or every
two years, students from BYUs
Department of Political Science
have the opportunity to conduct
the only state-wide exit poll in
Utah, the Utah Colleges Exit
Poll. An exit poll is a survey of
voters after they have voted,
and in this way vary from opin-
ion polls, which can be con-
ducted at any point during an
election.
In addition to being the only
state-wide exit poll, the poll is
also the longest student-run poll
in Utah.
The exit poll began in 1982
when producers at KBYU called
David Magleby, Ph.D., a pro-
fessor of political science who
had come to BYU from the Uni-
versity of Virginia just a year
earlier.
Out of the blue one day, I got a
call from KBYU saying that the
folks who had been doing their
election analysis on election
night were not going to be able
to do so, Magleby said, describ-
ing this important moment
from 30 years ago. They won-
dered if Id be interested in
doing it. I said, well, tell me
more, and they explained that
I would come on after the polls
closed at 8 oclock as the results
came in and do some analysis.
Though he was interested,
Dr. Magleby explained to the
producers at KBYU there would
be no signicant or outstanding
information to discuss until
well into the evening. An exit
poll, however, would provide
them with more information,
and if they would be willing to
support a state-wide exit poll,
he would look into making it
possible.
I had done a similar project
at the University of Virginia in
the 1980 election, Dr. Magleby
said, where the students in my
public opinion and voting class
had designed a state-wide sur-
vey. That was panel survey in
which we interviewed a random
sample of Virginians before
the rst presidential debate
and then we re-interviewed
them right after the election
and wanted to see what had
changed.
As a state-wide exit poll, how-
ever, this project would be a
much larger undertaking. An
exit poll is much more com-
plicated, Magleby explained.
You cant just do it from one
location. You have to do it from
scores of locations where the
voters are, and to my knowledge
no one had ever done this in an
academic way.
Knowing he would need
the help of people all over the
state, Magleby began contact-
ing associates he knew from
other colleges and universities
in Utah. While he needed their
support, what he really needed
was a strong force of student
volunteers.
I am a big believer in the
utility of learning by doing,
and whenever that works in
a course, I try to work it in,
Magleby said.
Needless to say, Magleby
proved successful in organiz-
ing the rst exit poll, and since
1982, the exit poll has seen the
participation of numerous Utah
schools and students. This past
election, more than 600 students
from six colleges and universi-
ties helped conduct the state-
wide exit poll. These schools
included BYU, Utah Valley Uni-
versity, Utah State University-
Price, Weber State University,
Southern Utah University and
Westminster College.
According to Magleby, these
schools usually participate,
although he did point out that in
all 30 years of the exit poll, the
one school that has not partici-
pated is the University of Utah.
Over the years, Magleby and
the Department of Political
Science have also relied on stu-
dents and professors from other
colleges within BYU, namely
the departments of communi-
cations and statistics, and this
year was no different. Commu-
nications students provided
media outlets for broadcast-
ing the exit poll, and statis-
tics students provided random
samples to use on Election Day
while conducting the exit poll.
Even an emeritus professor of
statistics, Howard Christensen,
who recently returned from his
second mission with his wife,
returned to help with the poll.
As Magleby described it, Chris-
tensen had been with the proj-
ect from the beginning, and
came back this year because it
had gotten in his blood.
Despite this support from
other institutions in Utah and
colleges within BYU, a large
portion of the responsibility
fell on the political science stu-
dents. They were responsible
for organizing the efforts of all
involved, as well as generating
surveys, preparing for the live
election night television broad-
cast, experimenting with ways
to poll absentee voters and early
voters (something they had
never done before according
to Magleby) and training stu-
dent volunteers from the other
schools in Utah.
We told them in the rst
month that were going to
teach you how to do surveys,
at warp speed, Magleby said,
referring to these students,
because in a month youre
going to be going out and teach-
ing college sophomores and
freshmen yourselves. So pay
attention, because you become
the teachers.
As they prepared for the exit
poll, students were broken up
into three committees: the PR
committee; the interviewer,
recruitment and training com-
mittee; and the questionnaire
committee.
Andy Gonzalez, a senior from
Los Angeles, majoring in politi-
cal science, was part of the PR
committee.
My role was with the pub-
lic relations committee, Andy
said, doing press releases that
were sent to different newspa-
pers across the state, trying to
do interviews and just trying to
basically spread the word not
only around BYU and the Utah
county area but throughout the
state.
He also described how the
commit tees col l aborated
together and helped each other
out, whether by assisting in the
training of student volunteers
at other campuses or by work-
ing in crisis management teams
on Election Day, driving around
to different locations where
students were polling voters to
make sure everything was run-
ning smoothly.
While he was able to assist
in training student volunteers
at Southern Utah University,
Andys experience on Election
Day was unique. I was able
to be a regional analyst, he
said. I was one of the six ana-
lysts who were in the broadcast
building on Election Day doing
the live show.
The live show involved dis-
cussions and analyses based on
the exit poll results, and these
results were made available to
radio and television stations
state-wide according to Mark
Phillips, a producer with BYU
Broadcasting.
Elevens Election Night
programming started at 6 p.m.
and went until midnight. From
7 p.m. to 8 p.m. and from 11:30
p.m. to midnight we were show-
ing PBS Newshour coverage.
The remainder of the evening
was originating from the BYU
Broadcasting building, he said
in an email.
Although he was not able to
share audience data, such as
ratings, Phillips did point out
that the KBYU Utah Colleges
Exit Poll was the only Election
Day poll sponsored by a Utah
media outlet.
As part of the Vote Utah 2012
partnership with KUED, KUEN
and participating public radio
stations, we decided to make
our coverage widely available
for stations to use in their own
election coverage as a public
service, Phillips said.
Photo illustration by Whitnie Soelberg
Exit polls showed that, on average, BYU students were more involved
in this previous election than other college students.

I am a big believer in
the utility of learning
by doing, and whenever
that works in a course,
I try to work it in.
David Magleby
Political science professor
6 The Universe, January 15 21, 2013
DANCEWORKS
3228 North University Avenue, Provo
at the Courtyard at Jamestown
375-4622
Step into a dancers paradise
without tripping over your budget.
ballet ballroom tap clogging
Ask about our Student Discount One of the largest selections in Utah
Mens, Womens & Childrens Dancewear Supadance Freeds of London Ballroom Shoes
Pointe Shoes Ballet Slippers Tap Shoes Jazz Shoes Yoga & Pilates Apparel Clogging Shoes
International students learn more at BYU
B y N A T A L I E S I V E R T S E N
It was a distance of more than
5,000 miles from her home coun-
try of Portugal, and everything
here in the United States seemed
strangely bigger the roads, the
cars, the campus. After a frantic
search for her rst class in the
oversized buildings, she walked
into her classroom a minute late
only to hear the professor say,
Youre standing up, you can
(give) the prayer.
For someone who was still
learning to speak English, had
never been to BYU and had spent
practically her entire life not
knowing what a Mormon was, she
was shocked. Such was the story
of Cludia Aparcio, a foreign
exchange student from Lisbon,
Portugal.
Aparcio is one of 2,200 stu-
dents from 120 countries around
the world who come to BYU and
are surprised by its unique cul-
ture. The students all have their
own stories and will leave BYU
with experiences they will never
forget.
British-born and Australian-
raised Aaron McReynolds has
been at BYU for about three years
but is still adjusting to the high-
strung lifestyle.
So many people work
too hard, McReynolds, an
advertising major, said. Ill be
in the ofce three hours and get
stuff done when others are in the
ofce for eight because they feel
they just need to look busy. I feel
like theres a reason why Utah is
one of the highest rates of anti-
depression pill (users) because
everyones in each others
business and more competitive.
He also shared that students in
Australia would never compare
their grades on tests or assign-
ments because there wasnt a need
to compare themselves to others
to feel they were doing well.
McReynolds has still beneted
from this cultural phenomenon
despite its stresses.
Its pushed me up a gear
because people tend to coast a lot
in Australia to get by, McReyn-
olds said.
Grace Choi came from an
entirely different background
from her home town of Gwangju,
South Korea. Through middle
and high school, Choi would study
from 7:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. each
week and occasionally on Satur-
days and Sundays as well.
Ironically, Choi feels she has
learned more responsibility while
here at BYU.
I think its just because (in
Korea) the teachers tell us what
to do, Choi said. At this hour, at
this time you need to study this
(or) go do that, and (afterwards)
sometimes we hire a private
instructor, and we pay them
like $50 per hour and they tell
you exactly what to do. So youre
busier, but your schedule is just
laid out for you.
Choi was surprised that there
were so many students here who
pay for school themselves, since
the norm in South Korea is for
parents to pay for school. How-
ever, Choi is getting a taste of this
American phenomenon.
My parents want me to pay
for everything, so Im not like
a typical Korean, Choi said. I
have two jobs right now, and I go
to school.
Despite her busy schedule, Choi
says she feels more relaxed here
because she doesnt have to worry
about Koreas standardized tests.
Im here to learn, not for a
good grade or a good score, Choi
said.
Just a few countries away from
Choi came TaiChen Lin, an MBA
student from Taipei, Taiwan.
American food has been a sig-
nicant change for Lin.
I have involuntarily, and
unconsciously taken (in) a lot
more high calories than I used
to, and therefore I have gained
some weight since (being) here,
Lin said.
Lin also remarked on the Tai-
wanese tendency to be out during
the night, but people in Provo tend
to do more activities like sports
during the day.
Language is a barrier for
almost all foreign students but
was especially a problem for Rus-
sel Ochoa, an advertising major
from Monterey, Mexico.
I didnt want to speak because
I would make a lot of mistakes
and had a very thick accent,
Ochoa said about the beginning
of his time in the United States.
Ochoa said he still has
difficulty fully expressing
himself in English, which he
says has been a great trial for
him. For this reason, Ochoa
hopes to marry a girl uent in
Spanish so that he
can fully express himself, but his
search has made him realize that
dating in Provo is different than
dating in Monterey.
Over there you only go on
a date with a girl that youre
really interested in, Ochoa said.
Once you go on that date, its
very serious. It was weird for me
to see that everyone was dating
everyone and every weekend
was a different date. If someone
did that in Mexico, it would be
really bad, they would have
a really bad reputation.
Like many exchange
students, Apar-
cios time
at BYU is coming to a close, and
she will soon return to Portugal,
but there are things she will miss
about the culture here.
Here all the people are so kind
and they want to help and they
are willing to show you wherever
you need to go, Aparcio said.
The only opportunities for
charity that she knew of in
Portugal were to donate food to
small charity boxes in grocery
stores. She says that BYU has
inspired her to do more than that.
I think it opened my eyes to
(knowing) there are people out-
side who need my help,
Aparcio said.
Chronic homelessness drops as general homelessness spikes
B y K U R T H A N S O N
A common misconception of
homelessness is a line of peo-
ple with tattered clothes, open
hands and empty stomachs
standing outside a run-down
shelter. However, the plague of
homelessness and poverty usu-
ally goes unseen.
A recent study conducted by
the Utah State Community Ser-
vices Office says chronic home-
lessness in Utah has dropped
from nine percent to three per-
cent in the previous four years.
But Utahs homeless popula-
tion has jumped from 14,351 to
16,522 in only a year. Almost
45 percent of homeless people
come with their families. Of
those families, 70 percent are
led by a single mom.
The average age of a home-
less adult is 38, and the average
homeless child is only seven
years old. Children comprise 30
percent of the homeless popula-
tion. Only .11 percent of Utahs
population is homeless, which
is lower than most states.
Tony Milner sees people
daily who have fallen on hard
times.
Most (of ) the families are
working, the kids are all in
school, Milner said.
Milner is the executive
director of Family Promise
of Salt Lake, an organization
that works with nearby reli-
gious organizations to take in
three to four homeless families
per night. These families then
rotate through churches every
so often. Milner said this works
better than a typical shelter.
Family Promise can tap into
the resources and charity
these religious organizations
are so willing to give. He said
this is why Utah does so well
in comparison to the national
average of homelessness and
why chronic homelessness is
dropping.
This improvement greatly
increases because of that natu-
ral support, Milner said.
Temporary housing, like
that which Family Promise
provides, shows a greater suc-
cess rate at ending homeless-
ness than do shelters. Celest
Eggert, development director
at the Road Home of Salt Lake
,said 86 percent of the people
they see stay in temporary
housing for an average of 30
days, and then they thankfully
never see them again.
Were more than just a
shelter; were all about hous-
ing, Eggert said.
Utah County has signifi-
cantly fewer homeless people.
Seven hundred and seventy-
two people in Utah County are
homeless, compared to 11,187
people in Salt Lake County.
Both of these numbers jumped
since the last year. Milner
said scams such as for profit
schools and low credit, no
credit car dealerships are
taking advantage and target-
ing the poor.
We have such a ridiculous
system in place, Milner said.
Milner said he was disap-
pointed people can get away
with such scams. Although
Milner said he could not point
to one specific reason tempo-
rary homelessness has jumped,
he credits this as a central
reason.
This is the result of years
of undercutting and putting up
institutions against poor folk,
Milner said.
While temporary homeless-
ness soars, those in Salt Lake
County have several places to
seek out while they get back on
their feet. Utah County doesnt
have the same luxury; the main
point of contact is the Food and
Care Coalition.
The mission of the Food and
Care Coalition is to feed the
hungry and help the home-
less find housing in addition
to simply providing housing.
Ten years ago, Utah began an
End Chronic Homelessness
campaign. Part of this plan was
to implement a strategy to help
people find housing.
But the spike in temporary
housing has caused them to
expand their services. Brent
Crane, executive director of
the Food and Care Coalition,
said it was interesting when
they expanded their temporary
housing.
2011 was a bittersweet year
as the coalition was able to
complete 38 transitional hous-
ing units, Crane said.
Eggert said its better to have
transitional housing like this
than shelters. Chronically
homeless people use one bed
and living space at the Road
Home for an extended period of
time, a year on average. Dur-
ing that year, they can also use
the same bed and space for 15
other people. Eggert said the
economy of the state improves
when families can be quickly
transitioned in and out of hous-
ing. And lately, this is what
shes experiencing.
Chronic homelessness is on
the decline and even though
homelessness has spiked, Utah
is prepared to help people turn
around quickly to find housing.
We exist because of the
generosity of our community,
Eggert said. Were so lucky.

This is the result of


years of undercutting
and putting up
institutions against
poor folk.
Tony Milner
Family Promise of Salt Lake
executive director
Photo by Elliott Miller
Aaron McReynolds, who lived in Australia for several years, poses in front of a BYU welcome sign.
The Universe, January 15 21, 2013 7
The Phantom of the Opera
Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber
Lyrics by Charles Hart
Additional lyrics by Richard Stilgoe
Book by Richard Stilgoe
and Andrew Lloyd Webber
Originally directed in Broadway
by Harold Prince
Original Broadway production by
Cameron Mackintosh and
The Really Useful Group
Based on the novel Le Fantome
de lOpera by Gaston Leroux
Orchestrations by David Cullen
and Andrew Lloyd Webber
Winter Choirfest
BYU Singers, Concert Choir, Mens Chorus,
and Womens Chorus
Wed/Feb 6, 7:30pm
$6-10, de Jong Concert Hall
Young Ambassadors
Harmony: The Music of Life
Randy Boothe, artistic director
Feb 13-16, 7:30pm
Sat Matinee, Feb 16, 2:00pm
$8-12, Pardoe Theatre

Henry V
By William Shakespeare
BYU Young Company
Directed by Megan Sanborn Jones
Highly theatrical staging of
Shakespeares most famous
play of war.
Feb 6-8, 13-15, 7:00pm
Sat Matinees Feb 9 &16,
11:00am & 2:00pm
ASL interpreted Thurs, Feb 7
$4-6, Nelke Theatre
Dance in Concert
The Thing About Love
Michelle Nielsen, artistic director
Thurs-Sat/Jan 31-Feb 2, 7:30pm
Sat Matinee, Feb 2, 2:00pm
$10-12, Pardoe Theatre
Aulos Ensemble
Preeminent presenters of European
Baroque music traditions.
Fri/Feb 8, 7:30pm
$10-17. Madsen Recital Hall
w
BYU Theatre Production
Previews Jan 16-17, 7:30pm
Jan 18-19, 22-26, 29-Feb 2, 7:30pm
Sat Matinees, Jan 19 & 26,
Feb 2, 2:00pm
ASL interpreted
Thurs, Jan 24
$15-25, de Jong Concert Hall
For tickets, visit BYUarts.com or call the
BYU Ticket Offce at (801) 422-4322.
Visit BYUarts.com for a complete performance calendar including free events.
R
O
BERT BURNS suppe
r
R
O
BERT BURNS suppe
r
Scottish Cuisine
Saturday, January 19, 2013
3220 WSC
Gathering and Silent Auction 6:30 pm.
Piper 6:45 pm Dinner at 7:00 pm
Scottish Cuisine
Reserve online by January 15, 2013 at utahscots.org
or for assistance call BYU Catering at 801-422-5001
Proceeds Support the BYU Scottish Parliament Internship Program
English
2
4
3
0
0
E
B
3
New Provo recreation center to open in April
New recreation
center for the
community is a
long time coming
B y H a l e y B i s s e g g e r
The doors to a brand new rec-
reation center in Provo are set to
open in Spring 2013 after years of
planning.
The project has been in the
works for more than 10 years, and
construction began in September
2011. The new facility includes
tennis, racquetball and basket-
ball courts, an indoor pool as well
as an open access skate park. The
city expects to receive the building
from the construction company
in March and open the doors in
April.
According to Scott Henderson,
the recreation division director,
the new recreation center was
funded by a $39 million bond voted
on by Provo residents in Novem-
ber 2010.
Weve done two feasibility
studiesone in 2000, and then we
came back eight years later and
did another one. Both showed that
citizens were in favor of the new
rec center, Henderson said.
The new recreation center will
replace the current one located
behind Provo High School and
will include a brand new senior
center.
With six pools, four gymnasi-
ums and many more amenities,
the facility will offer the com-
munity a large array of activities
and programs that are currently
unavailable.
Were operating now out of
facilities that were built in the
1970s, and those are some of our
newer ones. So this is going to
open up a whole new world of pro-
grams, Henderson said.
Cathy Smits is the director of
the current recreation center and
will be over aquatics in the new
one. Smits is looking forward to
offering better programs to the
people of Provo.
Its going to have activities,
programs, classes and amenities
for all community members of all
ages and abilities, Smits said.
It will be able to serve a lot more
community than the current rec
center can.
Henderson said the new facility
was designed with Provo families
in mind. With 18 family changing
rooms, indoor and outdoor play-
grounds, and a child watch cen-
ter, the center hopes to encourage
family visits.
We really want kids to go home
and say, Hey, Mom and Dad, you
guys going to work out tonight?
I want to go to the child watch,
Henderson said.
The aquatic center includes a
lap pool, warm water program
pool, tree house-themed play pool,
aquatic climbing wall and two
water slides as well as a hot tub.
This indoor aquatic center
is unmatched in
Utah, Henderson
said. We had a
national consul-
tant doing a master
plan for our depart-
ment. Hes seen just
about every rec
center there is
to see. He said
this one will
rank in the top
2 percent when
its done.
With no
added cost, the
center will also
have an outdoor
pool as well.
Veterans Pool is
located right next to the build-
ing and will become a part of
the new recreation center.
As well as considering the
Provo family, Henderson and
others working on the project
sought to make the new facility
more sustainable and environ-
mentally friendly.
Because of the large number
of windows, the center will largely
be run without lighting during the
day and lights will slowly turn on
as it gets darker.
The windows and glass walls
are also intended to bring a more
open and connected feeling to the
center. A 1/6 mile indoor track
that circles the recreation portion
of the center also brings a sense of
unity to the
facility.
W h e n
youre doing
a building
this big, it
can start
to look like
Wal-Mart if
you dont pay
at t ent i on.
Thats why
we wanted
to relate
everything
t oget her,
Henderson
said.
Two casu-
alties of the
new facility are The Center, a
youth program building, and the
Eldred Senior Center, which will
be torn down in February for
parking lots.
The east wing of the new recre-
ation center will be dedicated to
senior programs during the day
and open up to more community
activities in the evenings.
The idea of the sequestered
senior center is kind of over.
Seniors now want to do a lot of the
same activities as everyone else,
Henderson said of the decision to
include the senior center in the
new building.
Alicia Christensen is the recre-
ation coordinator over the Eldred
Senior Center. Christensen is
excited about the future ability to
offer more ftness and active life-
style programs to seniors.
Were really trying to update
our programs, and it will hope-
fully bring a lot of new people in,
Christensen said.
Some seniors are hesitant about
the move, but most are pleased
with the plans for the new center.
Its time, and a lot of the com-
munity feels that way, Gene
Warner, a local senior, said.
Mamie Rubio is one of the
seniors with some hesitations.
He said, I like the new one, but it
hurts me to think that they would
be tearing down (The Eldred Cen-
ter) because I know it costs a lot of
money.
Citizen response to the cen-
ter has been largely positive.
The local government is hoping
the new recreation center will
enhance the Provo community.
Mayor John Curtis hopes the
new facility will bring the people
of Provo together. The primary
goal is a community gathering
place, Curtis said.
Membership prices are still
being discussed and are scheduled
to be set in early 2013, including a
discounted price for students.

The idea of the


sequestered senior
center is kind of
over. seniors now
want to do a lot of
the same activities
as everyone else.
Scott Henderson
recreation division director
Photo by elliott Miller
laborers work on Provos new recreation center.
Photo by elliott Miller
Construction workers make progress on Provos new recreation
center.
Police Beat
AnimAl Problem
Jan. 5 a deer got caught in a
metal fence at the Deseret Tow-
ers Fields, resulting in compound
fractures in both hind legs. a Uni-
versity police officer shot the deer
with his sidearm.
CriminAl miSCHief
Dec. 9 Mirrors in a Helaman Halls
mens restroom were egged and
shower curtains were stuffed into
the toilets. Custodians were called
for clean-up.
Dec. 13 sand was poured into toi-
lets in a Helaman Halls restroom.
ByU Housing was notified.
Jan. 09 a custodian reported dam-
age to ceiling tiles at Helaman Halls.
TreSPASSing
Jan. 12 University Police re-
sponded when it was reported
that an individual refused to leave
a Heritage Halls apartment upon
request.
Prowler
Dec. 12 an individual was report-
ed looking in windows at Wymount
Terrace. University Police respond-
ed but did not locate the suspect.
Nighttime patrols in the area have
been increased.
TrAffiC offenSe
Dec. 28 a vehicle was reported
spinning donuts in a snow cov-
ered parking lot. The driver was
given a warning.
VeHiCulAr burglAry
Dec. 20 a purse was taken from
a vehicle parked in lot 43. Fraudu-
lent charges were made on a cred-
it card taken from the purse.
Jan. 10 Vehicle in lot 52 was en-
tered and money taken. The owner
is unsure if the vehicle was locked
at the time.
THefT
Jan. 1 a hamper was taken from a
laundry facility.
8 The Universe, January 15 21, 2013
Columbine. Virginia Tech. Arvada. Gabby
Giffords. Newtown. Taft High School.
The mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementa-
ry School has brought back painful memories
of monsters taking innocent lives from across
the country.
I grew up near Columbine High School, and
my family currently lives close to the movie the-
ater in Arvada, which means that I have a local
connection to two of the worst mass shootings
in U.S. history.
I remember sending get-well cards to Colum-
bine High School with the other students in my
elementary school, and visiting the memorial
that was built at a park nearby the school. There
are still lingering effects from the event, an
event that sparked changes in gun legislature
in the state of Colorado.
The shooting in Connecticut has
ignited the gun control debate across
the nation once again, as politicians
seek to limit future incidents by pass-
ing sweeping gun control regulations.
The right to bear arms is a debate
based upon the Second Amendment
in the Bill of Rights. The amendment
reads as follows: A well regulated
Militia, being necessary to the se-
curity of a free State, the right of the
people to keep and bear Arms, shall
not be infringed.
The amendment was included in
the Bill of Rights for the security of a free State.
Gun rights supporters often talk about how
the Founding Fathers want them to have weap-
ons in their house. It is diffcult for me to imag-
ine that they meant semi-automatic weapons
with high-capacity magazines. I do understand
why citizens believe they have a constitutional
right to own arms that may be referred to as
assault weapons.
James Madison wrote the following in The
Federalist No. 46 in early 1788 on the subject of
the right to bear arms:
Let us not insult the free and gallant citizens
of America with the suspicion, that they would
be less able to defend the rights of which they
would be in actual possession, than the debased
subjects of arbitrary power would be to rescue
theirs from the hands of their oppressors.
This isnt to say that citizens should have
rocket launchers as a means to defend them-
selves from big government. But, James Madi-
son believed that the citizens of the United
States should be able to defend themselves
against the government. When politicians and
pundits say that the only group that should have
guns is the government, I become wary of their
motives.
Banning people from having guns reminds
me of prohibition a government ban that pro-
duced Al Capone, one of the greatest criminals
in the history of our nation.
The worst massacres in recent U.S. history
were brought via the vehicle of airplanes and
explosives, not guns. Now travelers have to take
off their belt and shoes and empty their water
bottles at a security checkpoint in order to pro-
tect everyone. Is it annoying? Sure. Does it keep
us safe? I like to think so.
I do think, however, that changes need to be
made.It should be nearly impossible for a teen-
ager to walk into his place of residence, grab a
handgun and a few bullets and walk into school
with a fnger on a live weapon.
After the September 11 attacks, security was
increased nationwide on fights. Schools in
Colorado have full-time, active-duty police of-
fcers on campus throughout the day.
This decision means that there are
guns in school, but the weapons are
being used by trained professionals.
I believe that the schools are safer
now than they were without police
presence.
There are safety precautions that
every single gun owner can take that
do not infringe on their right to own
a weapon. In my experience, having
a gun in the house means that I have
a dangerous weapon that needs to be
treated carefully. As such, I attended
hunters safety courses and took other
gun safety classes to learn how to properly use
a tool that could potentially be very dangerous.
My parents kept the ammunition separate from
the guns, and used a lock on the gun to prevent
loading and fring.
The changes that need to take place in society
to make all of us safer are not easy changes. Al-
bus Dumbledore cannot show up and magically
make all the guns disappear with a wave of his
wand. The 113th Congress cannot sign legisla-
tion and magically prevent shootings. President
Obama and Robert Mueller cannot mobilize
government workers to confiscate firearms
across the country.
What can we do right now? Use both hands
and get to work on improving the situation the
best way we can. Dont wait for someone else to
come in and solve the problem when there are
solutions available around you.
Viewpoint
Gun control: Use both hands
DANIEL
LEWIS
@theemilyrigby
A stranger just scraped all the ice and
snow off my car so he could have my
parking spot ha ha that is so awesome
#byu
@rinnybird
WHY IS THERE NO INTERNET IN
106 JSB?!?!?! #byu
@jtantley
Medieval history professor just mixed
up Harry Potter and Lord of the
Rings. Instant outrage from medieval
club members. #BYU
@ashleya_curtis
It makes my day that much better
when people spontaneously start play-
ing jazz piano in the wilk #loveit #byu
@Zoobieprobs
only at #BYU do we spray paint our
lawns green in the spring but never
clear the snow in the winter.
@danlefevre89
I thought it was a thing of leg-
ends but yes...I just saw a man in
uggz#noshame #byu
@jtantley
Snowflake went up nose while walk-
ing to campus, thought it was a cold
bug and had a public freakout. #BYU
@baileygleason
Didnt realize my linguistics class was
really a religion class. #BYU

@MatsonTanner
Im pretty sure I smell like bacon.
#4thfloor #tannerbuilding #BYU
#bluelinedeli
@chelseawml
I wonder how many car accidents will
happen today because #BYUdidnt
cancel class. #freshsnownonroads
#nobueno #likeimmad
@myleedavis
Started my homework at seven.. Just
finished. Its 1:30. PS its only the first
week of school. #BYU
@scottkendal
Only at a #BYU athletic event will you
hear the pep band playing Adele...
@lauraclthomas
Sometimes wearing sweats and get-
ting under your covers is the best
thing ever. Oh wait, thats not just
sometimes. #byu#snowstorm
@ticoster93
The most intimidating part of writing
papers. #blank and #whitescreen on
#microsoft #word. #byu #goaway
@sugenelee
People in my class just spelled Gang-
nam style, GangHam style... --; #BYU
@whatTheH_ck
Just saw kid on campus wear-
ing a green scout shirt, I won-
der if he got his hipster merit
badge yet? #hipster #BYU
@ATurn126
Kid who carries boom box around
on Fridays: thanks for play-
ing @Imaginedragons #BYU
@Everg33n
So excited, it went from -2
degrees up to 1 degree #ex-
cited #freezing #byu
Daniel Lewis is a sports 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.
Submit your political cartoons to The Universe and you could be featured on our Issues & Ideas page.
Send original, black and white cartoons to universe.ideas@gmail.com.
Artists will not receive compensation for their work. Please contact The Universe for more information.
Are you a cartoonist?
[TweetingCougars ]
Leaveyourcommentsatuniverse.byu.edu.
I was 19 years old when I went through my
frst real heartbreak. The boy I dated was lovely.
He was funny, smart, adorable, etc. But a diff-
cult and taxing situation caused some complica-
tions for us and we decided to break up because
of that situation, and I was devastated.
I went home for a few weeks right after we
broke up. Unfortunately my mom hadnt had
time to spread the word that the relationship
had ended, so I was bombarded with questions
about my boyfriend from many well-intentioned
friends. When I told them we had broken up,
they would look uncomfortable and then say
something like, Just give it time, or, my per-
sonal favorite, Time will heal your wound.
Internally I cringed and wanted to tell them
to keep their trite phrases to themselves. But
I didnt.
They meant well. And I knew em-
pirically that time would help the
pain of my young wounded heart. But
I just couldnt imagine it. How could
weeks or months possibly make me
feel better? I cant number the times
I cried into my best friends lap over
the next months feeling worse than I
could have imagined.
That experience changed me. Bro-
ken hearts will do that. It took months
to move on, and I was only really able
to do so when I was ready not be-
cause I felt like it was time (what-
ever that means) or because someone else came
along, but because I was really ready to move on
and to allow myself to be changed.
I couldnt give myself a deadline for getting
over it. I expected to get over it quickly though,
and I pushed myself too much through the pro-
cess. That helped nothing. I could only change
and move forward when I was ready to.
For the past several years I have struggled
with unexplained health problems. I went to
several doctors over the years to try and fgure
out what was going on with my body. But any
test came back negative, leaving me more and
more frustrated.
Things came to a head last year. I tried one
last specialist, and this one was fnally able to
help me fgure out what was causing all of my
problems: I am intolerant of wheat, eggs and
milk. While this news was completely over-
whelming at frst, I was determined to stick to
this restricting diet so I could start feeling bet-
ter.
The summer was fairly successful, although
I spent a good amount of time hungry as I tried
to fgure out how to avoid eating those foods. I
started to feel better, and my body came into bet-
ter balance.
Then I went back to school and it all fell apart.
Spending all of my time on campus complicat-
ed my eating habits. But more than anything
else, I just didnt have the time to fnd food that
wouldnt make me sick.
I felt constantly guilty last semester about not
sticking to my diet. Anytime I ate a donut, I was
riddled with remorse. I tried to get back on the
wagon, but it was simply beyond my capacity to
handle with the other stresses I had in my life.
While I know that my life would be healthier
and that I would feel infnitely better if I kept to
my diet, at this point Im not ready to handle it. I
know I will have the capacity at some point, but
that point is not right now.
I dont ever make New Years resolutions. I
have no problem with them, and Im sure they
can be helpful, but I just dont see the point. Why
would I choose some arbitrary time of the year
to change my life? I know I will never
keep that resolution unless I want to
change and am ready to make that
change.
For a long time I felt guilty about
being so goal-setting averse. But if I
want something to be different in my
life, I will change. For people who
like setting goals and resolutions, the
same principle holds true: you will
not keep your goals if you dont actu-
ally want to and if you arent ready
to. You will take the strides you need
and even get help, if necessary, if you
are ready to change. (I should clarify
that I am not referring to changes as serious as
addiction, self-harming or mental health issues,
which often require an impetus for change.)
So often we force things. I know I do. I cant
bear to be still and not move forward. But some-
times being still is the best thing we can do.
Some things take time to work out. Sometimes
you just need to wallow in your pain. Sometimes
you need the experiences that time brings to
broaden your perspective. Sometimes you need
to get your priorities straight. These things take
time to work through. Allow yourself the time
you need to be ready to change.
Viewpoint
On being ready
LAURA
THOMAS
Laura Thomas is a copy editor at The Universe.
This viewpoint represents her opinion and not
necessarily those of BYU, its administration or
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Sports
universe.byu.edu/sports
January 15 21, 2013
Page 9
@DUSportsDesk
& RECREATI ON
B y S H A W N F I E L D I N G
The BYU football team prepares to
turn the page on the level of opponents
it will be facing as the 2012 concludes.
During its rst two years of inde-
pendence, BYUs football teams
record has had the benet of at least
four games against teams from the
WAC. In those games, BYU has out-
scored its opponents 276-107. BYU has
beat schools like New Mexico State,
Idaho and Idaho State. These games
have helped BYU maintain a winning
record through inconsistencies on the
offense.
BYU is not the only team scheduling
weaker opponents for the sake of help-
ing their record. Two of the nations
top programs, Oklahoma State and
Florida State, both faced off against a
rebuilding Savannah State team and
beat it by a combined score of 139-
0. Florida State also played Murray
State and beat it 69-3. The defending
national champion team, the Alabama
Crimson Tide, beat both Western Ken-
tucky and Western Carolina by a com-
bined score of 84-0.
With little to no expectation of win-
ning, fans often wonder why these
small programs play such tough oppo-
nents. Not every program is going to
do what Appalachian State did when
it went to Ann Arbor, Michigan, and
defeated the Wolverines 34-32 in Sep-
tember 2007.
Although all small programs hope
to beat big-time programs like Michi-
gan or Alabama, the majority of these
programs are playing for a paycheck.
See PAY-FOR-PLAY on Page 14
Theyve got the heart
Students deal with
medical issues
as they play
B y N I C O L E H I L L S T E A D
In November 2007, Ryan Shay col-
lapsed after only 5 1/2 miles of the US
Olympic marathon trials. July 2012,
former Stanford University basket-
ball player
Pete Sauer
c o l -
l aps e d
wh i l e
playing a friendly game in his adult
recreational league. In October 2012,
the BYU swim team went up against
the University of Hawaii when
Hawaii swimmer Peter Frank Chi
was found unresponsive in his dorm
room post-meet. Chi was a rare case
who knew about his heart condition
and took precautions but still died as
a result of his heart condition.
Each of these young adults suf-
fered from sudden
cardiac distur-
bances which led
to their death.
The fact that
such young, ath-
letic, healthy peo-
ple can suddenly
fall to their death
without warning is
becoming a
g r e a t e r
concern and
higher frequency
among at hletes
today.
(The most com-
mon) is an enlarged
heart, called hyper-
trophic cardiomy-
opathy, clinical
nursing supervisor
and USA Track and
Field Coach Mau-
r e e n
Ba r t -
l e y
s a i d ,
which is an abnormal thickening
of the heart wall that can lead to
rhythm disturbances.
An enlarged heart is hard to rec-
ognize since it is an organ thats hid-
den from view and shows no outward
symptoms.
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
comes from genetics, BYU Professor
J. Ty Hopkins, of the exercise science
department, said. Most people that
get it have a predisposition to this
abnormality.
The best test to discover this kind
of heart problem is an echocardio-
gram, but a test like that can cost
anywhere from $800 to $1,400.
An echocardiogram shows the
make-up and the size of each indi-
vidual chamber within the heart,
Hopkins said.
A question is whether high schools
and colleges address this issue, and
whether they should be required to
worry about it or leave discovery
responsibility to the athletes.
We do physicals on our athletes
every year, director of BYU sports
medicine Carolyn Bilings said.
Basically, we check blood pressure
and listen to their heart sounds.
While this alone may not detect
many of the heart issues that can
result in an athletes sudden death,
its a start to finding anything that
may lead them to consult a physician.
Because an echocardiogram is not
a plausible way of testing the over 250
athletes at BYU, the sports medicine
department has had to come up with
other ways of keeping their athletes
safe.
The athletic trainer monitors
them, Bilings said. So as soon as
we notice that there are problems or
concerns if they have complaints
of being dizzy, not feeling well, their
blood pressure has changed or they
are passing out we would get them
to the doctor.
The majority of athletes who have
died from sudden cardiac arrest have
been fairly young, generally in their
20s and 30s.
(With hypertrophic cardiomyop-
athy) you dont exhibit symptoms,
Bartley said. The heart condition
can be totally independent of how
you look on the outside. You can be
a very fit individual, and theres no
telling if and when it could become
a problem.
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is
an underlying condition that can be
brought to the surface through cer-
tain habits and activities the person
chooses to do. A person may not know
they have this heart condition until
it is too late.
Because athletes exert them-
selves to maximum effort, pushing
hard, pushing beyond normal to that
red line, doctors feel like that may
contribute to the problem because
they do it so often, Bartley said. Its
an underlying condition that people
dont know they have, and their ath-
letic efforts actually then bring it to
the surface.
The only real knowledge on pre-
ventive care as far as these heart con-
ditions go are to check family history
records.
See HEART on Page 14
Spinning Class,
5:30 a.m.-12 a.m.,
Jan 8 to Mar 331,
Epic Biking, Saratoga Springs
Mens Tennis vs. Utah State,
12-4 p.m.,
Indoor Tennis Court
Im Losin It,
HCG Group Weight Loss Class,
7 p.m.-9 p.m., Jan 9 to Feb 27,
Utah Valley Wellness Center,
Orem
Gymnastics vs. Utah State,
1 p.m.,
Smith Fieldhouse
Mens Basketball vs.
Pepperdine,
7 p.m.,
Marriott Center
Mens Tennis vs. Weber State,
5:30 p.m.,
Indoor Tennis Courts
Mens Volleyball vs. Lewis
University,
7 p.m.,
Smith Fieldhouse
Mens Volleyball vs. Lewis
University,
7 p.m.,
Smith Fieldhouse
Track & Field BYU Indoor
Invitational,
2 p.m. through Sat. at 1 p.m.,
Smith Fieldhouse
Womens Basketball vs.
Pepperdine,
2 p.m.,
Marriott Center
$6 unvr.se/Wv9rID
free unvr.se/Wr8M51
$99 unvr.se/UUw1al
$5 unvr.se/SNLmaU
unvr.se/ZmmqIA
Free unvr.se/XhJKYG
$5 unvr.se/Wr8o6m
$5 unvr.se/TFVm8
Free unvr.se/VExv7J
$5 unvr.se/UGVN0J
T
U
E
S
D
A
Y
S
A
T
U
R
D
A
Y
T
U
E
S
D
A
Y
S
A
T
U
R
D
A
Y
T
H
U
R
S
D
A
Y
S
A
T
U
R
D
A
Y
F
R
I
D
A
Y
S
A
T
U
R
D
A
Y
T
H
U
R
S
D
A
Y
S
A
T
U
R
D
A
Y
SPORTS CALENDAR JANUARY 15 21
A tradition of
excellence
B y M A R C U S E L L I S O N
Since coming to BYU, womens soc-
cer Coach Jennifer Rockwood has trans-
formed the program into a powerhouse,
storming onto the national stage with a
solid reputation and a recent Elite Eight
appearance.
Winning is the tradition, athletic
trainer Carolyn Billings said. But more
than anything I would say Jenn is a per-
son of extreme integrity. So its winning
and doing it right. Classy is the way Id
describe her tradition; girls that repre-
sent the standard of the church and the
university off the eld.
Since her rst year in 1995, Rock-
wood has led the team to nine conference
championships, 13 top-25 nishes, four
top-10 nishes, a record of 294-87-33 and
two Elite Eight appearances. Rockwood
ranks No. 6 among active coaches in win-
ning percentage, No. 7 in all-time winning
percentage and No. 24 in all-time victories.
She has been named coach of the year
three times and has coached a number of
All-Americans.
In college sports, where coaches play
such a large role in recruiting and gen-
eral operations, there is no question that
a great program is a by-product of a great
coach. The secret lies in the methods that
transform a program from the hunter to
the hunted.
One of the many things Rockwood has
done to build the program is to be com-
pletely dedicated to the BYU womens
soccer program.
Every little detail shes aware of, she
takes care of and has made sure that it
has been done the right way and the best
way, Assistant Coach Chris Watkins
said. Shes willing to put in the time and
effort to make sure its whats best for our
program and takes care of the girls and
heres the key gives us no excuses to
lose.
See TRADITION on Page 14
Photo illustration courtesy Esbjorn Jorsater
Runners are susceptible to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
iStock photo
With the difference in size, speed and sheer girth, many top BCS programs are guratively lining up against children. Smaller schools often agree to play larger schools
for payment, but the real cost is absorbed by the players.
Pay-for-play scheduling leads to lopsided wins

The heart condition


can be totally
independent on how you
look on the outside.
Maureen Bartley
USA track and eld coach
10 The Universe, January 15 21, 2013
Sunbelt Asst.
Granola
Cereal
2for
$
5
Keebler Asst.
Mothers
Cookies
2for
$
6
Prices Efectve January 16-22, 2013
Meat
Snacks
Bakery
Dairy
Access information on Creamery specials at dining.byu.edu/creamery
C.O.N.E. Store Hours
Mon.-Thurs. 7:00 am - 11:00 pm
Fri.-Sat. 7:00 am - 12:00 am
Wyview Store Hours
Monday - Saturday
7:30 am - 11:00 pm
CREAMERY ON 9TH
Produce
Grocery Y Buys
Bakery Fresh
Brownies
5for
$
2
16 oz.
Strawberries
$
2
99
12 or 24 ct.
Selected Varieties
Angel Soft
Bath Tissue
$
6
99
Chicken
Cordon
Bleu ...................
$
3
99
lb.
24 oz. Asst.
Hunts
Pasta Sauce
99

Dannon 5.3 oz. Asst.


Oikos Greek Yogurt
10
for
$
10
9-11 oz. Classic Romaine
or Just Lettuce
Dole Salad ..........
$
1
59
ea.
4x5
Tomatoes .............
$
1
29
lb.
Red or Green
Bell Peppers ........2for
$
1
24 oz. White or Wheat
Grandma
Sycamores Bread
2for
$
5
Beef
Top Sirloin
Steaks ................
$
4
99
lb.
10.3-16.3 oz.
Selected Varieties
Kashi Cereal
2for
$
6
Selected Varieties
Crystal Light
Drink Mix ...........2for
$
5
27.7 oz. Selected Varieties
Western Family
Hot Cocoa Mix .....
$
2
99
22 oz. Asst.
Birds Eye Viola
Frozen Meals ........2for
$
7
6.5-6.7 oz. Selected Varieties
Quaker
Granola Bars ......
$
2
49
Asst.
Airborne Tablets
or Chewables ......
$
5
99
7.5 oz. Selected Varieties
Soft Soap
Pumps .................99

4.3-5.6 oz. Asst.


Lipton Rice
or Noodles Sauce ..99

Dozen
Western Family
Large Eggs ............4for
$
5
Beef
Ground Round
$
2
99
lb.
Asst.
Doritos
Tortilla Chips
2for
$
6
e lowest diamond prices guaranteed!
Lifetime+
Warranty
1344 South 800 East, Orem
Southeast of University Mall
801-226-6006
Other locations in:
Sandy
Murray
Free 401 Diamond Educaion
Free TimniumMens Band
uiJ Mens Purchae
($300 Minimum)
40Op Mens Band uiJ Center
Diamond &Ring Purchae
23 OJer Free Ser:ices
Ialued Up to $2000
A
N
N
:
v
v
n
s
n
n
v

S
n
t
v
1
0
%
-
6
0
%
o


s
e
le
c
t
e
d
it
e
m
s
S
a
le
E
n
d
s
D
e
c
2
4
, 2
0
0
6
www.sierrawestjewelers.com
www.sierrawest.blogspot.com
34 Years of Brillianceand counting.
Special Oer
With a purchase over $1,500
youll receive VIP pricing
and three, 2-night hotel
stays. With any purchase
over $2,500 youll also
receive a 50 inch pearl
strand and bracelet and
50% o any mens band.
No prior sales apply.
Oer expires 12/15/2012.
Only Gephardt approved jeweler in Utah
We Price Match!
Cougar football trio to return for 2013 season
B y S p e n c e r W r i g h T
Former BYU offensive coor-
dinator Robert Anae, receiver
Cody Hoffman and linebacker
Kyle Van Noy will be returning
to the BYU football team for the
2013 season.
Robert Anae returns as offen-
sive coordinator for BYU, the job
he held from 2005 until his res-
ignation in 2010. Anae left BYU
to be an offensive line coach and
running game coordinator for
Mike Stoops at the University of
Arizona. Anae returns to a Cou-
gar team that has struggled on
offense the past two seasons. Cou-
gar Head Coach Bronco Menden-
hall feels that his new colleague
is an ideal ft for the 2013 BYU
offense.
I am excited to announce
Robert Anae as BYUs offensive
coordinator, Menhenhall said in
a press release on Jan. 4. Robert
is the ideal person to oversee our
offense, and Im thrilled he will
be returning to BYU.
Anae was key in mentoring
BYU quarterbacks John Beck
and Max Hall. He helped the
Cougar offense to place in the
top 10 in pass offense in 2005, 2006
and 2008. The Native Hawaiian
also helped produce BYUs top
receiver in yards, receptions and
touchdowns in Austin Collie, top
receiving tight end Dennis Pitta,
and the winningest quarterback
of all time Max Hall.
The former Arizona coach is
also excited about being back at
his alma mater.
Id like to thank Tom Holmoe,
Bronco Mendenhall and the BYU
administration for the opportu-
nity to return to BYU, Anae said
in a press release. My family
and I look forward to an outstand-
ing experience in a very familiar
place.
Along with Anaes return, the
BYU offense will also be bringing
back its leading wide receiver,
Cody Hoffman. Hoffman was a
2012 All-American honorable
mention and was named MVP of
the 2012 Poinsettia Bowl. Along
with the personal honors, Hoff-
man also had over one-third of
BYUs receptions and yards,
along with 11 of BYUs 25 receiv-
ing touchdowns in 2012.
The leading target for the Cou-
gar quarterbacks in 2012 was
expected by many to go to the
NFL, despite making it clear that
he wasnt sure whether he would
go or not.
Hoffman said he was 50-50
on whether he would return to
BYU or go to the NFL during an
interview with the Salt Lake Tri-
bune at the beginning of Decem-
ber. On Dec. 28, the wide receiver
from California announced, how-
ever, that he would be staying
with BYU.
Im proud to announce Ill be
returning to BYU for my senior
year, Hoffman said.
The final member of the
returning trio is All-American
linebacker Kyle Van Noy. Van
Noy will look to improve upon
his award-flled 2012 season with
even more success in his 2013
senior season.
Ive decided to stay and com-
plete my senior season at BYU,
Van Noy said in a press release. I
plan to fnish what I started and
feel like Ive still got some unfn-
ished business.
The outside linebacker from
Reno, Nev., will look to lead the
Cougar defense during its dif-
ficult campaign in 2013 that
includes Virginia, Texas, Utah,
Utah State, Boise State, Wiscon-
sin and Notre Dame.
During 2012 Van Noy received
the 2012 CFPA Linebacker Tro-
phy, second team All-American
honors from CBSSports.com
and third team honors from the
Associated Press. He was a key
fgure on the No. 3 ranked Cougar
defense. Van Noy led the Cougars
in sacks and tackles for loss and
forced a school record six fum-
bles in 2012. Van Noy also led the
Cougars with two touchdowns in
BYUs 236 Poinsettia Bowl win
over SDSU.
BYU basketball beats Broncos on the road
B y S U g e n e L e e
BYU mens basketball team
dealt the Santa Clara Broncos
their third loss in a row on Sat-
urday with a 8264 victory.
Tyler Haws scored a game-
high 24 points, on 1014 shoot-
ing, to go along with five
rebounds and three steals.
Brock Zylstra contributed 15
points of his own, going three
for four beyond the arc, and
Matt Carlino continued his
strong conference play with 13
points, three steals and a team-
high eight assists.
Coming out of the gate with
intensity was a point of empha-
sis for the Cougars and on Sat-
urday BYU showed a consistent
effort for 40 minutes, just like
BYU head coach Dave Rose
wanted.
Theres no question the
key to this win was the teams
effort, Rose said. It was the
best Ive seen for a full 40 min-
utes all season. Our coaching
staff did a great job preparing
the guys for this Santa Clara
team, and our guys were able
to execute the way we prepared
them to execute.
The players also had a solid
understanding of the game
plan against Santa Clara.
We knew theyd come out
strong at the start of the game
so we just had to be patient
until we got a run of our own,
Haws said. Everyone really
stepped up.
Anson Winders defense was
big for the Cougars in guard-
ing the Broncos guards. He
fnished with a season-high
10 points and four rebounds
off the bench and kept Bronco
guard Kevin Foster, who went
scoreless the last 13 minutes of
the game, in check.
BYU played with great
energy on the defensive end,
which led to easy scoring out
in transition. SCU fnished
the game shooting only 38.5
percent from the feld. BYU
fnished on 53.6 percent shoot-
ing, including a second half
180 run that left SCU score-
less for seven minutes.
Foster got off to a slow start,
but still scored 22 points and
became the WCC all-time
three-point leader with his frst
three-pointer halfway through
the frst half. After Saturdays
game, he has a total of 366 made
three-pointers.
Broncos forward Marc Tra-
solinis double-double effort,
17 points and 14 rebounds, was
also spoiled by the Cougars.
Five Cougars scored in
double fgures, and the team
remains undefeated in con-
ference play with a 40 record
and a 144 overall record. Rose
could not be happier with the
direction his team is moving
in.
I have confdence in all of
our players fve of them play,
eight of them practice but
want to play, Rose said. Its
hard to decide who to put in but
Im confdent now in our guys
that I can put in any of them
and theyll step up when I need
them to. Im really happy with
how this team is turning out.
The Cougars welcome the
Saint Marys Gaels to the Mar-
riott Center Wednesday at 9:00
p.m. MST and San Diego Tore-
ros Saturday at 7:00 p.m.
BYU
gymnastics
outscores
Utah State
at home
B y B r o o k e A r r i n g T o n
BYU womens gymnastics
outscored Utah State Univer-
sity 194.075189.425, with the
Aggies team losing a player
due to an injury in the first
home meet of the season.
BYU led Utah State by .650
at the end of the first set, each
team displaying great talent
on the vault and bar. Eliane
Kulczyk, a freshman from Que-
bec, Canada, opened the meet
strong with 9.750 on bars for
BYU. Utah States Paige Jones
quickly matched Kulczyks
score. BYUs Madeline Nils-
son also scored a 9.750 on bars
for BYU. Megan Bain scored
a 9.85 for BYU on the uneven
bars, leading Utah States top
scorer by .050.
In the next set, Michelle
Yasukochi of Utah State could
not land the first element of
her f loor routine, leaving the
meet immediately. She had
competed the first two events
with a taped ankle.
The routine of the night was
performed by Bain, scoring a
startling 9.90 on the beam.
I always do arm sets, Bain
said, when asked about her
beam routine. Thats what
really prepares me and gets
me mentally ready. We were
expecting to have a really good
meet this week; we had a really
strong start last week.
BYU coach Brad Cattermole
stated in a press release this
meets goal was to score above
a 195. The Cougars fell just
short, scoring 194.075, but it
was enough to put the Aggies
away.
We did okay. You never
like to count a fall, Catter-
mole said. The ones who fell
were freshman, they have to
experience it a few times to
get used to it. I was happy with
the ones who scored really
well. I thought on vault we
competed a lot better than we
scored. We are moving in the
right direction. They are get-
ting out there, working hard.
Everyone is fighting through
it, and Im really proud of their
attitudes.
The gymnastics team will
compete in the Texas Womens
Quad Meet on Jan. 19 in Den-
ton, Texas.
BYU photo/Mark philbrick
BYU wide receiver cody hoffman runs for a touchdown against new
Mexico State during the 2012 season.
photo by elliott Miller
BYU forward Brandon Davies dunks during a game earlier in the
season. The cougars play two games this week.

We are moving in the


right direction. They
are getting out there,
working hard. everyone
is fghting through it,
and im really proud
of their attitudes.
Brad Catermole
BYU gymastics coach
The Universe, January 15 21, 2013 11
Broadcast
Schedule:
Airs 7 pm at
2
4
3
2
2
A
J
3
Dave
Rose
Radio Show
Come
attend
the
FREE
20 oz drink
with purchase of an entre
starting from 6:30 pm to close
1/15 (Tuesday)
1/22 (Tuesday)
1/29 (Tuesday)
2/5 (Tuesday)
2/12 (Tuesday)
2/19 (Tuesday)
2/26 (Tuesday)
3/5 (Tuesday)
January 18
th
is the deadline to
update your personal information
(residentialaddress, etc.) on
myBYU for Winter Semester.
Failure to update can result in fees
and freezing registration. Thaw out
your keyboards and update your info now.
A warm reminder from the BYU Off-Campus Housing Offce
Mens volleyball splits back-to-back matches against Lewis
B y T r e n T C h r i s T i a n s e n
The BYU mens volleyball
team split the weekends matches
against Lewis University, losing
on Friday but coming back strong
for the win on Saturday.
Saturday, Taylor Sander and the
BYU Cougars swept the Lewis Uni-
versity Flyers in dominant fashion
after losing the night before in fve,
hard-fought sets.
Flyers outside hitter, Geoff
Powell, had a phenomenal perfor-
mance in Friday nights match,
recording 24 kills with a .767 attack
percentage and with three kills in
the ffth set. Senior outside hitter
Jay Petty put the fnishing touches
on the Cougars, providing the ser-
vice as the Flyers turned a 78 def-
cit into a 138 lead, and ultimately
a 159 victory.
BYU made sure Powell didnt
torch it again Saturday night.
We just wanted to make a
little adjustment blocking, and
defnitely serve short to try to get
(Powell) out of the back row hit-
ting, Sander said. I think we got
good spots on him and made him a
little bit uncomfortable and forced
him into some hitting errors.
BYU setter Ryan Boyce led the
way in Saturdays victory with 44
assists, while Sander and fresh-
man Ben Patch chipped in 12 kills
apiece for BYU. The Cougars fn-
ished off the Flyers 2514 in the
third and fnal set, improving to
31 on the season with the win.
Ryan (Boyce) did an amazing
job setting tonight, and I think
that was the biggest difference,
Sander said. The confdence we
had out there was far beyond what
we had last night.
Fridays loss most likely means
the Cougars will drop from their
number two ranking, but that
didnt bother BYU Head Coach
Chris McGown. He saw the loss as
a learning experience.
We understand that the season
is a long process, and to be hon-
est, I think a loss like this is edu-
cational, McGown said. Were
going to learn some things. Were
going to try to be better as a result,
and try to hammer some points
home. As far as ranking goes,
were not concerned. This season
for us will be about conference
matches.
In the defeat, Patch led the team
with 16 kills, including seven in
the frst set. Sander fnished with
14 kills and four service aces.
Sander also tied the BYU record
for most aces in a career at 91 on
Friday night. He recorded three
in the frst set, and his teammates
had nothing but praise for the out-
side hitter.
Everything that Taylor
(Sander) does is legendary, Patch
said. I think that all of us look up
to him, and thats something that
we want to (do) ourselves. We want
to get aces too.
His coach chimed in on the
praise too.
For sure (Taylor]) will be one
of the best ever, theres no ques-
tion about that, McGown said. I
think the book is yet to be written
about him. This (record) is just
one milestone. I think he will have
many.
Sander shrugged off the praise.
I didnt know (I tied the record),
but thats awesome, Sander said.
I just want to be a better server, so
Im going to work harder and see if
I can set that number high, but its
all about the team frst.
BYU stays home this week and
faces No. 1 UC Irvine this weekend.
Photo by Chris Bunker
The BYU mens volleyball team goes through its pre-game huddle
before saturdays game against Lewis in the smith Fieldhouse.
The Universe, January 15 21, 2013 13 12 The Universe, January 15 21, 2013
A Day in the Life of BYU
Editors picks: Chosen by The Universe staff
Most popular photo
Campus favorites: Chosen by the student body
3
4
2
5
6
7
8
9
1
2
1
3
4
5
1
Alex Lyman
practices the
cello in a Wilk
bathroom. Photo
by Vance Lee.
1. Mike Carpenter
holds Scott
Walkers X-ray
outside the
hospital. Scott
broke his arm
playing ultimate
frisbee. Photo by
Mark Carpenter.
2. Adam Soloman
proposing to
Sarah Adams at
dinner. She said
yes. Photo by
Sarah Adams.
3. Emily Swenson
happy to see
the snow falling
outside Helaman
Halls. Photo by
Kaitlin Porter.
4. Students masked
as presidential
candidates at the
BYU basketball
season home
opener. Photo
by Jeff Allred.
5. A campus
scene at the
onset of a winter
storm. Photo by
Katie Corbitt.
1. Cougar cheerleaders perform during the basketball
season opener in Provo. BYU beat Tennessee State
8166 in their rst game. Photo by Jeff Allred.
2. A lego motorcycle miniature parked among the big
bikes. Photo by Alex Lyman.
3. An unidentied person peers off the roof of an old
Heritage dorm building. Photo by Preston Tiegs.
4. A rubber band ball the size of a cantaloupe. Photo by
Natalie Zollinger.
5. A student reaches for a copy of The Universe. Earlier
this year The Daily Universe switched to a weekly
Photo by Sam Gale.
6. President Samuelson and President Dieter F.
Uchtdorf talk before a campus ROTC ceremony. Photo
by Sarah Hill.
7. A stovetop re depicts the challenges of college
cooking. Photo by Mark Brown.
8.A snowy day meme illustrates BYU students
excitement over the weather. Photo by Tasha Singer.
9. Jessie Livingston working her puppetry magic in the
snow. Photo by Mark Brown.
Favorites chosen from
among A Day in the
Life of BYU photos
BYUs interactive
project on Nov. 9
allows students to be
a photojournalist
for a day
B y U N I V E R S E S T A F F
More than 700 photos were con-
tributed to The Universes A Day in
the Life of BYU project, and calling
out some favorites from that massive
photo gallery only seemed fitting.
So Universe editors distilled their
favorites into a list of their top 10 and
then announced a contest, inviting
students, faculty and staff to have a
little fun by picking their top-10 favor-
ites as well. The Universe offered $50
gift cards as prizes in each of several
categories as part of the contest.
Kennedy Noel, a sophomore psy-
chology major from Bountiful, takes
the prize for matching the editors
picks the closest. David Taylor, a pre-
communications junior from Chino,
Calif., and Philip Pare, a computer
science graduate student from Cam-
bridge, Mass., tied in the contest to
see whose top-10 picks most closely
matched the favorites of others enter-
ing the contest. Freshman Vance Lee
claims the final prize for taking the
picture voted the overall favorite
an unusual shot of Alex Lyman prac-
ticing the cello in a bathroom stall in
the Wilkinson Student Center.
The A Day in the Life of BYU
project was launched to give the
entire BYU community an opportu-
nity to interact with The Universe
by being a photojournalist for a day:
midnight to midnight on Nov. 9. Cam-
pus was a busy place that day, and a
massive winter storm made things
all the more interesting. The photos
that were sent in chronicled events
many on campus were a part of
like a mens basketball game against
Tennessee State and a campus visit
by Pres. Dieter F. Uchtdorf, second
counselor in the First Presidency of
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-
day Saints.
The project also shed some light
on the myriad of little-known activi-
ties that day, like a students trip to
the emergency room to mend an arm
broken playing Ultimate Frisbee, an
engagement and, of course, Lymans
unusual choice of places to practice
the cello.
Pictures were also sent in by BYU
students on study abroad and intern-
ships far from campus: Ireland, Spain,
Italy and Jordan, to name a few.
Projects like A Day in the Life are
not a new concept, but The Universes
approach of hosting the project is
unique, in that it allowed people not
on its staff to participate. All BYU stu-
dents, faculty and staff were invited
to participate.
The photo project is still on display
at The Universes news website, uni-
verse.byu.edu. Universe editors are
planning how and when the next A
Day in the Life project will be.
14 The Universe, January 15 21, 2013
TAKE SOME FREE THROWS
COME WIN FRONT ROW FANATIC BASKETBALL TICKETS
Sponsored by
Sink some free throws to score
front row tickets to any one
of the following events
Mens Basketball vs. Saint Marys
Mens Volleyball vs. UC Irvine
Mens Volleyball vs. UC San Diego
Mens Basketball vs. San Diego
Current BYU students only
Tuesday, January 15
Wilkinson Center Terrace
12:15 p.m.
Pay-for-Play
Students at small
schools going up
against big teams
pay the price
Continued from Page 9
The Savannah Morning News
reported that for the two losses,
Savannah State earned $860,000
or a little over $6,000 per point
scored against it.
Following his teams loss
to Oklahoma State, Savannah
State Head Coach Steve Daven-
port expressed his dislike for
these games.
Were going to have to read-
dress that, Davenport said.
You get paid for certain things,
but I dont know if some things
are worth the payments you get.
The money Savannah State
earns from these two games will
go to support the schools ath-
letic budget. Many of the coun-
trys smaller programs use their
money earned from these games
in the same way because they
lack the boosters and alumni
that major college football pro-
grams have.
Not even BYU is immune
from paying smaller football
programs to fll out its sched-
ule. Last year the Provo Daily
Herald reported that BYU payed
Idaho State close to a half mil-
lion dollars to come lose to BYU
56-3. The Cougars played Weber
State, a Division II opponent
(FCS), and won 45-13. The Salt
Lake Tribune reported that
BYU paid Weber State $400,000
to come to Provo for the in-state
match up. BYU used the game
against Weber State to evaluate
some players farther down the
depth chart, while Weber State
was excited for the chance to
play a quality opponent outside
the FCS.
These tough early games
help us get some toughness,
said Weber State Head Coach
Jody Sears. I think weve got
some guys that arent afraid to
be tough and get into these tough
environments.
BYU is also not immune to
receiving a check to go play a
larger, more historic program.
In early November, the Cou-
gars announced that they had
reached an agreement to play
Michigan, in Ann Arbor, during
the 2015 season. In an interview
after the game with local media,
Michigans athletic director
revealed that BYU would be
paid about $1.3 million to play
the game in Ann Arbor.
Despite the payouts that come
from games like OSU vs. Savan-
nah State, these games also come
with great risk to the athletes or
the schools they represent. For a
school like Idaho State, the play-
ers health is at risk. Schools like
Alabama, OSU, Florida State and
BYU recruit many of the nations
top athletes. These football play-
ers often run faster, throw far-
ther and hit harder than athletes
playing at a lower level.
These larger programs are not
immune from risk themselves.
Larger programs run the risk of
unneeded injuries and ruined
reputations. When Michigan lost
to Appalachian State in 2007, it
fell out of the AP poll after hav-
ing been ranked No. 5 to start the
season. Many believe this game
led to Michigan Head Coach
Lloyd Carr being fred.
Playing smaller programs
can also have a negative impact
in the fnal rankings. The Bowl
Championship Series (BCS)
computers take into account the
strength of a schools schedule
when deciding which teams play
for the national championship
and other major bowls. If a team
has played too many weaker
teams, the schools schedule will
be seen as soft in comparison to
a school that has played a lot of
quality opponents from diffcult
conferences.
In the coming years BYU will
take on more of an underdog role
as it faces tougher schedules that
feature opponents like Texas,
Wisconsin, Nebraska and Vir-
ginia. The Cougars will be paid
for the chance to play in these
historic locations, but they do
so with risk to the schools repu-
tation and to the players health.
Will it be worth it? Only time
and the Cougars play on the feld
can answer that.
TradiTion
Winning is
tradition for
soccer coach
Continued from Page 9
Rockwood has also built the
Cougars home feld into one
of the top soccer venues in the
country.
Theres a thousand differ-
ent things that she has done
and been a part of to build
the crowd,
but mostly
its started
one- on- one
with a kid
in camp, or
wit h our
girls up pro-
moting the
team in the
Wi l ki nson
Center for
four hours
a day, Wat-
kins said.
Those kind
of things gradually build a fan
base.
With ambition and talent on
the teams side, the environ-
ment of the Cougars South
Field has even contributed
to the growth in prestige and
nationwide popularity of the
program.
She is able to attract great
programs to come and play
in Provo because they know
it will be an incredible atmo-
sphere and a very competitive
match, Nix said. In fact, in
the past year some very presti-
gious programs have reached
out to her asking to play at
South Field because it is an
experience unlike any other
venue in college soccer.
Another key component of
the Cougars development has
been Rockwoods ability to
recruit. Great players are the
foundation of a great program,
but fnding the right players
has been the key to changing
the program.
A lot of it
has to do with
c h e mi s t r y ,
and weve just
found through-
out the years
that in recruit-
ing its not just
important to
bring in good
players, but its
important to
bring the right
players, Rock-
wood said. Our
focus right now
is to bring in the best kids that
want to help the team and come
to BYU because its BYU.
With a top-rated coach, a
great home field and good
recruiting, the Cougars have
developed a tradition of excel-
lence. But former player Jennie
Smith said there is one more
aspect that has made this a
special program.
Wearing a BYU jersey
means more than just play-
ing soccer, Smith said. Jenn
helps her players develop as
people and encourages them
to do well in school and to
grow spiritually. She provides
numerous opportunities to do
service and do fresides for
youth across the country. Jenn
has created a program where
people respect each other and
want to work hard for each
other.
HearT
Students have the
heart but not the
health to compete
Contined from Page 9
It tends to be genetic, Hop-
kins said. People have a pre-
disposition to this abnormality.
People that are at higher risk
are those that have a condition
called marfans; theyre taller,
lanky and have long fngers.
If an echocardiogram is too
expensive and there are no
other outward signs or symp-
toms of having this heart defect
the question remains for ath-
letes on how to detect it.
The only thing I can think of
is that this is a hereditary con-
dition most of the time, Bart-
ley said. So if (athletes) have a
family history of heart disease
or death from heart problems at
a young age, they should prob-
ably consider getting tests done
and pay attention to how they
feel.
Being alert to the bodys
responses to physical exertion
is key to preventing health
problems and is becoming more
and more required of athletes
of a younger age. This general
concern has hit home at the col-
lege level but has not been as
prevalent for high school ath-
letes yet.
That hasnt been something,
thankfully, that weve run into,
Timpview Highschool Athletic
Director Al Poland said. The
big thing right now in terms of
injuries in kids is concussions.
As far as the college athlete
is concerned, Bilings suggested
athletes do as much as they can
to be aware of whats going on
in their body.
Be diligent about when you
dont feel well and to not just
assume its going to go away,
Bilings said.
Even when athletes do know,
as in the case of Chi, and prac-
tice diligence in staying as
healthy as possible, the risk of
death does not disappear.
Photo by Whitnie Soelberg
BYU Head Coach Jennifer Rockwood coaches from the sidelines at
South Field during one of BYUs games. Rockwood has helped turn
the womens soccer program into a powerhouse since becoming
head coach in 1995.

Our focus right now


is to bring in the best
kids that want to help
the team and come to
BYU because its BYU.
Jennifer Rockwood
BYU soccer coach
Life, etc.
universe.byu.edu/life
January 15 21, 2013
Page 15
@UniverseLife
Movie ratings here, internationally and tomorrow
B y J A C O B R O B E R T S
Movie ratings are a helpful tool in
choosing which movies to watch and
which movies to avoid, but occasion-
ally their conclusions can be rather
intriguing.
The new movie Anna Karenina,
based on the Tolstoy novel, has been
rated R for some sexuality and vio-
lence, according to the Motion Pic-
ture Association of America. Some
say it didnt deserve an R rating.
Teresa Arroyo, a recent Spanish
graduate, has read the novel and said
she would rate the book at a PG-13
level.
Its a really long book with a lot
of details; however, the details arent
the kind that would make it rated R,
Arroyo said. My guess is that the
movie visualized some of the things
the book insinuated.
While the movie does visualize
some of the books racy storyline,
the Parents Guide on IMDB says
the movie doesnt actually have any
revealing nudity or exceptionally
explicit language. It also adds that
the movies two violent scenes are on
about the same level as something a
viewer would see on the TV show
The Walking Dead.
The movie received a much lower
rating in many countries around the
world, according to IMDB. Ireland
rated it the same as the Twilight
films and Skyfall. Canada rated
it the same as The Dark Knight
Rises, and Hong Kong rated it the
same as The Hunger Games. There
is quite a disparity when one consid-
ers the content of the other films.
Stephanie Svanevik, a psychology
major from Norway, said this is
partly because America is much
more strict with film ratings than
are European countries.
People dont watch rated R mov-
ies here in Utah really, but in Nor-
way its just normal, Svanevik said.
Even Mormons would see a lot more
rated R movies.
Svanevik said the reason for a
lower concern for movie content in
Norway is Norways different cul-
ture. She said Norwegians are more
open and liberal about sexuality, lan-
guage and alcohol. Things that arent
allowed on TV here are just normal
there.
Perhaps then, as America becomes
less traditional and conservative in
values, more adult content will be
allowed in TV and PG-13 movies.
Part of the slide in ratings, of
course, just ref lects increasing per-
missiveness in society as a whole,
Cody Clark, a film writer for the
Daily Herald, said. People in gen-
eral are not as offended by certain
kinds of content as they used to be,
and the MPAAs Classification and
Ratings Administration (CARA)
ref lects that.
Clark said that the use of language
See RATINGS on Page 17
Phantom of the Opera 2 p.m. or
7:30 p.m., de Jong Concert Hall
We Could Be Heroes: The
Mythology of Monsters and
Heroes in Contemporary
Art BYU Museum of Art
Young Artists of Voice
7:30 p.m., Madsen Recital Hall
Yotam: Sundance Film
Festival 8 p.m., Park City
Dancesport Registration
information online
Yoga Kirtan 7 p.m., Salt
Lake City Krishna Temple
(965 E. 3370 S)
Lend me a Tenor
7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m., Hale
Center Theatre, Orem
Aspen Winds: Wind
ensemble 7 p.m., The Covey
Center for the Arts
Rebel without a Cause:
Courtesy of The Andy
Warhol Foundation through
Feb. 18, BYU Museum of Art
Ballet Auditions Registration
information online
Speak For Yourself:
Poetry Night All day,
Muse Music Cafe, Provo
$19-$25 unvr.se/SgmiNu
Free unvr.se/WKsoRn
Free unvr.se/ZDmDYb
Free unvr.se/WKu79d
$120 unvr.se/13oiOK6
Register unvr.se/10mLJAk
$16-$20 unvr.se/UoDDET
$5 unvr.se/OGXLgI
Free unvr.se/Pcte97 $20 unvr.se/ZR31V7
Free unvr.se/OH0iau
T
U
E
S
D
A
Y
W
E
D
N
E
S
D
A
Y
T
U
E
S
D
A
Y
T
H
U
R
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
T
U
E
S
D
A
Y
T
H
U
R
S
D
A
Y
LIFE CALENDAR JANUARY 15 21
B y E E C H I E N C H U A
T
he development of Provos downtown over the
next few years is moving with the times, shaping
up into more than just a commercial space. The Utah
Valley Convention Center, which was completed in May
2012, will soon be followed by the completion of Nu Skins
164,000-sq.-foot Innovation Center next summer. The
Provo City Center Temple is scheduled to be completed
sometime in 2015.
This sort of inux of funds and construction being
poured into the downtown area is what is allowing the
city, along with its food culture, to develop, says Victor
Sandoval.
Four and a half months ago, Sandoval received a call
from a business partner, who asked him to take a look at a
restaurant concept they were looking to open up in Utah.
Two weeks later, Sandoval gave up his home in sunny
southern California to take the helm as head chef of Old
Towne Grill in downtown Provo.
Over the past three years, 15 restaurants have opened
along Center Street and University Avenue, a 39 percent
increase to a current number of 53 independently owned
and operated restaurants. The inux of restaurants in
the area has also changed the dynamic for older restau-
rants in the area.
Wild Ginger, which has been open for nearly a year
now, was a Chinese buffet that catered mostly to lower-
income households. Today, the restaurant also features
a sushi bar and an ala-carte Chinese menu that attracts
college students and middle-class households. Along
with that, Gurus, a local health cafe, recently expanded
to open Enliten, a new bakery concept.
The evolving food culture
Kat Mason, co-owner of Black Sheep Cafe, said Provo
has potential, and its time for the city to evolve.
This is a great place to grow, especially for us, she
said. We needed somewhere that we could grow with.
Provo is helping us grow as we are helping them grow.
At Glorias Little Italy, it is kind of hard to keep up
with such a classic feel in a college town, said Chris King,
assistant manager at the restaurant. Sometimes, he said,
college kids dont want to sit down and experience ne
dining.
See FOOD on Page 17
Provos food culture
The faces
behind the
Expo markers
B y C A S E Y R H O T O N
One might expect to find fine pieces
of art in a library, but what comes as
a surprise is that at the Harold B. Lee
Library, instead of oil paints and can-
vas, the medium is Expo markers and
whiteboards.
Students, some artists and some
skilled doodlers, are to thank for the
images that brighten up the library.
Current library artists share how
they found their positions, their inspi-
ration for the sketches and how they
hope their art impacts the library.
Emily Ryan, a senior from Wash-
ington, is one of the whiteboard
artists.
Ryan said since she was a freshman
she thought drawing on the white-
boards would be a fun job. A couple
years later she had her turn as she got
a job at a library desk and the person
who was previously in charge of the
whiteboards left.
See WHITEBOARDS on Page 17
Photo courtesy Focus Features
The Focus Features release Anna Karenina, staring Jude Law (left) as Alexei
Karenin and Keira Knightley (right) as Anna, has been disputed as having re-
ceived an unfair rating in America.
Photo by Sarah Hill
Entrance to Communal, a downtown eatery that uses fresh farm ingredients from around the area.
Photo by Sarah Hill
Customers eat at Communal.
Photo by Sarah Hill
A rustic sign at Old Towne Grill.
Cherie Call: Stay-at-home
Songwriter 8 p.m.-9:30 p.m., BYU
$10 unvr.se/11nFImf
F
R
I
D
A
Y
16 The Universe, January 15 21, 2013
Write, right now.
frst $1,200
second $1,000
third $700
David O. McKay Essay Contest
Te highest-paying personal essay contest in the country
additional prizes may be awarded
Write, right now.
Winning essays are published Undergraduate and Graduate divisions
Flyers are available in 370 JSB Deadline: January 31, 2012
frst $1,200
second $1,000
third $700
David O. McKay Essay Contest
Te highest-paying personal essay contest in the country
additional prizes may be awarded
January 31, 2013
Stay current on campus, regional and
breaking national news throughout the
day with social media, web and email
updates from The Universe newsroom.
Read and participate with us:
Subscribe to our mid-day news email
Follow us on Twitter
Join the conversation on Facebook
View and add to the daily events calendar
Follow and re-pin via Pinterest
Visit universe.byu.edu to sign up
Dont Wait,
Get the News Now
Sundance Film Festival begins Jan. 17
B y S c o T T H a n S e n
The excitement for movies is
at its annual peak during the
early parts of the year, from
Oscar nominations gearing up
for the 85th Academy Awards
Ceremony to other ceremonies
that honor flm all over the
country.
The Sundance Film Festival
is one of the largest commemo-
rations of flm in the United
States, with more than 45,000
attendees last year. The festival
honors independent flms, many
of which have gone on to have
success outside of the festival.
The festival takes place in four
different Utah cities throughout
a week in the middle of January,
with main presentations in Park
City, as well as other events in
Salt Lake City, Ogden and the
festivals namesake the Sun-
dance Resort.
Submissions for the Sundance
Film Festival have been steadily
increasing over the years, reach-
ing an unprecedented 12,000
independent flms in 2012. John
Cooper, the director of the fes-
tival, believes the amount of
quality submissions shows the
growth of the independent flm
industry.
It says that independent
flm is thriving, Cooper said
in a news release. Its certainly
exciting for us to receive 12,000
submissions this year for the
frst time ever, but more than
that, we were really pleased by
the overall quality of the flms
submitted to us. Each year the
quality of independent film
seems to rise, and were chalk-
ing that up to this idea of a vital
independent flm community.
The quality of some of the
films have reached Oscar-
worthy attention over the past
several years, including 13
flms for the upcoming Academy
Awards. One such flm, Beasts
of the Southern Wild, has
received a nomination for
Best Motion Picture at the
upcoming Academy Awards as
well as other awards. This and
other flms have increased the
prestige of the festival.
The recent history with
those flms having success at the
Festival and beyond makes us
very happy, Trevor Groth, the
director of programming for the
festival, said in a news release.
Each flm is selected on its own
merit, regardless of whether its
been supported by our labs or
other programs.
The success of this and other
independent flms has shown to
Cooper and Groth the demand
for innovative types of film
among the U.S. moviegoers.
We feel that theres great
potential for this years flms to
connect with audiences at the
festival and long after, Cooper
said. Audiences for indepen-
dent flm are expanding and
becoming more adventurous.
Beasts of the Southern Wild
showed that theres an audience
out there thats up for more of a
challenge.
The festival offcially begins
on Thursday, Jan. 17, and con-
cludes on Monday, Jan. 28,
with the Best of Fest screen-
ings, showing the best flms of
the festival. Well-known actor
Joseph Gordon-Levitt, star of the
recent flms Premium Rush
and Looper, will be hosting
the awards ceremony for the
festival. And just like in recent
years, it can be expected that
several of the flms will have a
future beyond Sundance.
Tickets for the festival are
still available on the sundance.
org/festival, and start at $15 per
ticket.
Winter depression
B y L a U r e n M o r a n
Winter isnt always a wonder-
land. Final exams, breakups,
blizzards and other stressful
end-of-the-year events may be
the cause of depression.
Seasonal affective disorder,
commonly referred to as winter
depression, affects some of the
BYU student population.
WebMDs Depression Health
Center says seasonal affective
disorder is a form of depres-
sion that occurs the same time
every year for someone. For
instance, if people notice a sig-
nifcant decrease in their mood
around winter, yet their mood
is stable during the spring and
summer season, they may suf-
fer from the winter blues.
Aaron Larson, associate
director of BYU Health Ser-
vices, suggested that students
who feel dissatisfed or low
about life visit the student
health center.
Most of our general prac-
titioners here, including our
mental health practitioners
are all well versed in treatment
of depression, Larson said. It
is one of the top things we see
students for often, especially
during the winter months.
Larson said he did not
know whether the heightened
amount of health visits during
the winter season correlated to
seasonal affective disorder, or
if other factors contributed to
the increased amount of patient
visits. Larson said students
who are having depression-
like symptoms should stop in
to make sure things are well.
It is better to make sure
everything is all right than
to wonder and suffer through
things you are not supposed to,
or you dont have to, he said.
Aubrey Beck, an 18-year-old
freshman from Omaha, Neb.,
said she believes her mood is
affected by the change in sea-
son. She said her schedule is
comprised of mainly evening
classes, and
the lack of
sun duri ng
t he wi nter
months lowers
her productiv-
ity level. She
said her mood
adjusts as win-
ter continues.
In the win-
ter you dont
real ly want
to go out and
walk around or do anything,
you just want to sit in your
house, which probably has a
large impact on (depression),
Beck said.
Aaron Price, a freshman
from Burley, Idaho, majoring
in life science,
said his mood
is also affected
by the onset of
winter. He said
Burley has a
tendency to
get windy, and
his distaste for
windy condi-
tions transfers
to a distaste
for winter.
When win-
ter hits, it is kind of depressing
because I dont get to be out in
the sun that much, Price said.
It brings on weather that I
am not comfortable with, and
I have to wear so much more
clothing.
Photo by Whitnie Soelberg
a long, cold winter weighs down on many BYU students.

When winter hits, it is


kind of depressing ... .
Aaron Price
Freshman
The Universe, January 15 21, 2013 17
Dining Dollars
$500 per semester
Visit our website for more info: dining.byu.edu/mealplans
Remember to spend your meal plan money before 4/27/13!
Use your meal plan for purchases at:
The Commons at the Cannon Center
All BYU Creamery Locations
Campus Vending Machines
Cougareat Food Court
Jamba Juice
The Blue Line Deli
Legends Grille
MOA Caf
The Skyroom
Campus Floral
$330 for 50 meals
$168.75 for 25 meals
OPTION 1
OPTION 2
F
i
n
d

u
s
o
n

F
a
c
e
b
o
o
k
E
a
t Lu
n
c
h

w
ith
F
rie
n
d
s!
Monday thru Saturday
any meal at the Commons
at the Cannon Center
May be purchased at any Creamery
or at the Cannon Commons.
for off-campus students
NEW MEAL OPTIONS FOR OFF CAMPUS STUDENTS!
Most gadget (iPod, iPad & iPhone) repairs can be done in a
hour or less. Game Consoles are ready the same or next day.
iPhone
248 East University Parkway, Orem (801) 899-1303
(Just west of Barnes & Noble inside the Game Changerz video game store)
www.PrecisionGadgetsRepair.com www.facebook.com/pgrrepair
iPad/iPod
Gaming
$10 OFF
Any service or Repair
Valid with coupon only.
May not be combined with any other oer.
See store for details, some restrictions may apply.
Expires 3/31/13 HTV
iPod, iPhone and iPad are registered trademarks of Apple Corporation. We are not a liated with the Apple Corporation.
Know before you go
Proud to be a BBB
Accredited Business
Local iPod, iPhone, iPad, XBOX 360, PLAYSTATION 3,
Wii, PSP, and DS Repair Experts Since 2006
NOW OPEN
IN PROVO/OREM
just west of Barnes & Noble
on University Parkway
We Fix it Right. Now!
Choose your favorite
Color iPod Screen
Same Low Price
Whiteboards
Each whiteboard
artist has a different
aim and goal in
their drawing
Continued from Page 15
I was like, Finally, this is
my opportunity to do my dream
job of drawing on the white-
board, Ryan said. I asked
my co-worker what his favor-
ite cartoon character was; he
said Wally. So I took a very long
time and drew a very detailed
drawing of Wally on this piece
of white paper then handed it
to my boss and said, This is my
application to be the whiteboard
drawer.
Ryan said she draws mostly
cartoon characters, and each
drawing takes about six hours,
but it can vary depending on
the detail of the picture and
how many colors are used. She
said the hardest part isnt draw-
ing the fgure, it is thinking up
clever and relevant words to put
with the picture that point stu-
dents to the reference desk.
The hardest part for me is
fguring out what to write,
Ryan said, The words on the
drawing need to be relevant to
the cartoon character and rel-
evant to the reference desk Its a
challenge to make it both clever
and funny.
Madeline McNeil, the resi-
dent artist at the humanities
desk, said she like to replicate
famous pieces of art to make it
relevant to her desk. She said
she hopes her drawings help
students know they are there
to help.
I would hope that it helps
people understand what we
have on the foor because we
are here to help with research,
she said. Our foor has much
more than just art history, but
I hope it brings attention to our
desk that we are here to help and
that we can help the people who
are trying to fnd books, or do
research.
David Layton, former library
employee, said along with being
informative, the whiteboards are
meant to just make people smile.
I thought they were just
something that would make peo-
ple smile, but it was also a way I
could promote our services in a
rather fun way and a cost-effec-
tive way.
Food
Development in
Downtown Provo
brings restaurateurs
to town
Continued from Page 15
The downside is that some-
times kids want something a
little more casual than what
we offer, he said. Our wait-
ers are all in dress shirts and
ties. Sometimes I think they
(students) want to have a party
when they eat. Its happening,
theres music, theres a live
band. (They want) something
d i f f e r e n t ,
s o me t h i n g
new, some-
thing funky
and fresh. We
dont offer a
whole lot of
the funky and
fresh. We offer
a lot of quality;
we offer a lot of
good service.
Wit h t he
inf lux of res-
t a u r a n t s ,
King said that
though there
might be more
competition, it is actually help-
ing business because more
people are coming downtown
to try out the different places.
King said the dining experi-
ence is getting lost in a fast
food, instant-gratifcation kind
of mentality.
Theres time in this spot,
especially (with) the atmo-
sphere we have, King said.
Its very charming, its very
intimate and I think it gives
people the opportunity to con-
verse and to just enjoy the din-
ing process.
Glorias Little Italy has lunch
combos and date deals too.
Development of Downtown
Provo
With the infux of various
developments and restaurants,
Downtown Provo Inc., which
manages the development of
downtown, is helping restau-
rants with marketing and pro-
motion, said Jared Morgan,
executive director of Historic
Downtown Provo. He said Provo
is growing into its own, espe-
cially with the feel of the area.
Downtown has a unique
and historic feel to it; the archi-
tecture and eclectic nature
of downtown
Provo has
drawn some
great cul i-
nary options,
Morgan said.
Downt own
Provo has been
focusing on
residential and
c omme r c i a l
developments
that bring pop-
ulation density
to our geog-
raphy. Down-
town Provo
is headed in a
fantastic direction, the quality
of life continues to increase.
Mason said the reason she
thinks so many restaurants
are opening is because people
saw restaurants and thought it
might be a great idea. With some
succeeding and others changing
location or shutting down, the
landscape of downtown Provo
is changing.
As a community, people saw
that things needed to be done,
and people followed that, and
thats how its gotten done, she
said.
Chris Neidiger, manager of
Communal, elaborated on his
designation of Provo as a desti-
nation spot.
There are so many suburbs
around here that downtown
Provo is becoming a destination
for the locals, which has been
something, he said. It is hard
in a suburban area to establish
this little thing that downtown
Provo has going on.
To learn more about Down-
town Provo restaurants, visit
universe.byu.edu.
Photo by Sarah Hill
The simplicity of the Communal restaurant is apparent in its classy table setting.
ratings
Movie ratings
vary around
the world and
continue to
change within
the United States
Continued from Page 15
is the easiest form of content
to see changing in movies.
He said PG-13 movies used
to only be allowed one use
of the F-word, but in the last
few years there have been a
number of films that use
it twice. However, he still
thinks it will be a while
before more pervasive use of
the word is allowed in PG-13
movies.
Id guess that nudity
and sexual content will be
least affected by chang-
ing cultural mores, Clark
said. Im sure there will be
some slippage, but Ameri-
can attitudes regarding sex
and nudity in entertain-
ment are actually pretty
entrenched.
Since it has been shown
that movie ratings arent
always equally consistent
and everyone has different
views on what is or isnt
offensive or obscene, the
best way to judge if a movie
is watchable or not is by
reading a content review
on websites such as IMDB,
commonsensemedia.org or
kids-in-mind.com.

Its very charming,


its very intimate and
I think it gives people
the opportunity to
converse and just enjoy
the dining process.
Chris King
Glorias Little Italy assistant manager
Photo by Chris Bunker
Emily Ryan spends approximately six hours on each of her whiteboard drawings as part of her job as an HBLL whiteboard artist.
18 The Universe, January 15 21, 2013
BYU Gentlemen find help from Twitter
B y L i n d s e y W i L L i a m s
Kendra Goff could not help but
be surprised when her boyfriend
showed up at her door with fow-
ers just because he was thinking
about her.
The new @ByuGentlemen Twit-
ter account offers advice for men
seeking to be gentlemen such as
the advice to bring a woman fow-
ers for no reason.
Goff, a junior majoring in sociol-
ogy, has been dating Adam Soren-
son, the voice behind the Twitter
account, for the past fve months.
He defnitely practices what he
preaches, Goff said. Lots of guys
can be considered gentlemen, but
he treats everyone like that. Its not
just you because hes dating you.
Its the lady trying to open the door
with the stroller and the old lady
walking into the restaurant.
The account launched in early
October. Sorenson, 22, majoring in
English, created it. Sorenson grew
up in Wilson, N.C., and his mom
emphasized Southern manners.
According to him, being a gentle-
men in the South was normal, but
at BYU it is not.
I automatically assumed that
because everyones Mormon,
everyone will have these qualities
that my mom put into me, Soren-
son said. When I got here, it was
almost a letdown.
Sorensons female friends would
return from dates where the date
would not walk them to the door
or the man would spend the date
sending text messages. After hear-
ing these stories from his friends,
Sorenson decided to tweet advice
for men who want to be gentlemen.
He added elements of BYU culture
into the Tweets.
Dont keep calling her your
FHE sister if you are trying to date
her, one Tweet read.
Another Tweet discussed the
Provo cliche, DTR, an acro-
nym that stands for defning the
relationship.
If you have to set an appoint-
ment to go on a walk and DTR
then you already have some com-
munication problems. Just be open
all the time.
The account has approximately
600 followers. Sorenson noticed his
Twitter account grew to have more
female followers than male.
It became less advice for guys
and more what a girl should expect
in a guy, Sorenson said. A girl
should not have to lower her expec-
tations in a guy.
Sorenson offered a piece of
advice to those who want to be
gentlemen.
You have to kiss a lot of toads
before you fnd the prince, so be
that prince, Sorenson said. Its
really simple to be a gentleman.
Carson Monson, a junior
majoring in European studies,
heard of the Twitter account from
Sorenson.
I thought it was a good idea,
Monson said. Adam is pretty
clever with that kind of stuff.
Monson also recommends the
account to other males.
I think its not only good advice
but also kind of a funny spin on
BYU culture, Monson said.
Unify your team or club
with
1200 Towne Centre Blvd. #2066 Provo Towne Mall 801-318-0008
thebigtees@hotmail.com
Discounts
for m
ultiple
shirts
W
ell help
you design your shirts
Join in the conversation on
current issues and ideas.
Stay on top of what the BYU
com
m
unity is thinking.
Find out what is happening
in the Universe.
universe.byu.edu
Follow us on Twitter
@DailyUniverse; @UniverseLife; @UniverseMetro;
@DUSportsDesk; @UniverseCampus; @UniverseOpinion
Habit Burger Grill gives back
B y s T a c i a Wa h L g r e n
A California- and Arizona-
based burger joint opened its
doors in Utah this week by giv-
ing back to local nonprofts.
Preceding the grand open-
ing on Jan 10, the Habit Burger
grill opened a new location
at 2121 McClelland St #101
in Salt Lake City with three
charity events the proceeds
of which went to the YMCA of
Northern Utah, the Boys and
Girls Clubs and the YWCA of
Salt Lake City.
Adrienne Shaw Smith, the
marketing and events coordi-
nator at the YMCA, was appre-
ciative of the event.
The money raised from this
charity event really makes an
impact to our organization,
Smith said. The funds will be
used in a fnancial aid package
for our youth.
The event highlighted the
kind of service customers can
expect at the Habit.
It was a really exciting day.
You could tell that the employ-
ees were invested in the com-
pany, Smith said. They were
passionate and knowledgeable
about the menu. They really
wanted to make customers feel
comfortable. Because it was a
cold day, there were even base
heaters outside.
Tom Hartman, manag-
ing partner of the Habit,
expressed the success of the
events.
We were very wel l
received, Hartman said.
There was a line out the door
and down the sidewalk.
He attributed much of the
success to Habits philosophy
of not being the biggest, but
the best.
Hartman also said that they
plan to open two more loca-
tions in Utah this year.
Mike Mirkil, the Habits
vice president of marketing,
discussed reasons for not
choosing a location in Provo.
Finding the right loca-
tions for our restaurants is
a challenge, he said. We
look for sites that have both
large residential and daytime
business populations and are
highly vis-
able, which
arent always
easy to fnd.
Mirkil also
stressed the
i mpor t ance
of being the
best.
We foster
a culture of
hospitality,
he said. The
people who
work there really enjoy it.
Consistency and quality
are part of the Habit experi-
ence shown through their
employee motto One Habit,
One Sound.
The charburger that you
get in California will be the
same charburger that you get
here, Mirkil said.
The Habits quality of
food is what
excites Aus-
tin Simmons,
a UVU sopho-
more study-
ing English
education. In
addition to
great food, he
said the Habit
offers reason-
able prices.
The great
thing about
the Habit is its not too expen-
sive, Simmons said. I would
go to the Habit once a week
on my mission. My favorite
thing is the mushroom swiss
burger. Im already looking up
directions.
Photo courtesy adam sorenson
a new Twitter account gives tips to ByU students who want to be gentlemen.
Photo by sarah Lyman
edgar rangel, general manager of the habits frst Utah location,
shakes hands with managing partner Tom hartman.

We foster a culture
of hospitality.
Mike Mirkil
habit, president of marketing
The Universe, January 15 21, 2013 19
Work and Play in Alaska! Work and Play in Alaska! Work and Play in Alaska!
Check out our table in the Student Center near the book store and dining hall.
Apply online: www.alaskatourjobs.com Apply online: www.alaskatourjobs.com Apply online: www.alaskatourjobs.com



for 2013 for 2013 for 2013
Now Hiring Now Hiring Now Hiring
Driver Driver Driver-- -Guides Guides Guides
January 16 January 16 January 16 17 in the 17 in the 17 in the
Wilk Wilk Wilk
Tips and myths of a good interview
Prepare yourself
for a successful
and confident
interview
B y C A S E Y R H O T O N
Nate Dennis walks into a
room with only a long wooden
table polished to the point it
reflects the light above, leather-
lined chairs and two nicely
dressed men with scribbled-on
note pads and fancy pens. Once
inside, he reaches across the
table, firmly grasps each of the
outstretched hands, then takes
his place directly across from
the men. Dennis knows the
minute he walks into the room
the minds of the men across
from him are humming with
judgments, and now it is his
time to shine.
Interviewing is a process that
haunts some and excites others.
Either way, many BYU students
find themselves in the hot seat
during their college careers
when job or internship hunting.
Interviewing professionals
and recent interviewees share
their secrets and dispel some
of the long-held myths about
interviewing.
Dennis, an information sys-
tems major from Alpine, is
a BYU student who recently
had his turn in the interview
chair. From his experiences
interviewing, Dennis said he
learned it was OK to not have
the answer to every question.
Admitting you dont know
something is perfectly fine,
Dennis said. They would much
rather you say you dont know
something but you are willing
to learn it than trying to make
something up and lying trying
to cover up your mistakes,
Dennis said.
Dennis also recommends
applying to many positions,
even if they seem like a long
shot. He was able to secure a
competitive internship, and he
contributes his success to prep-
aration before the interview.
Preparation
Troy Nielson, professor
in the Marriott School, said
practice and preparation are
indispensable for a successful
interview. Looking for a job is a
full-time job and requires a lot
of work, specifically practicing
stories that illustrate accom-
plishments and personality.
A lot of it is about good
storytelling, to be honest, he
said. You want to differentiate
yourself between other very
talented people.
Recruiters who come to
campus have said a common
blunder made by BYU students
when interviewing is they
dont talk enough about their
accomplishments. They tend
to undermine themselves
by being what they think is
humble.
BYU students tend to be
humble, and we should be, but
in interviews you should talk
about your accomplishments,
he said. Sometimes students
unnecessarily short cut their
accomplishments or minimize
their accomplishments and
wont talk about them in as
glowing terms as they probably
deserve.
Interviewing myths
A recent concern about inter-
viewing skills is that technol-
ogy is hurting interviewing
and communication skills. Bill
Brady, director of career ser-
vices for the school of accoun-
tancy, said although it is a
valid concern, the workplace is
adapting to technology trends.
That (technology) was an
initial concern, now we are
seeing technology media open-
ing up, Brady said. Will you
ever be able to just text reports
to your clients? Probably not.
But it also depends on who
your client is. As those clients
adopt, and as those clients hire
more of you who are very tech
savvy and very tech oriented,
you will change the employer.
As the baby boomer gen-
eration retires, more technol-
ogy-oriented people are being
hired, and the marketplace is
changing slowly but surely,
according to Brady.
Another myth set straight by
Brady is that networking may
not be all it is cracked up to be.
Networking, the way it is
taught in school, is very gen-
eral, meaning the job secured
through networking will be a
general job.
Networking is for middle-
range jobs; if you want a high-
level job, or a specialized job,
your networking doesnt do
that, Brady said. Generic
networking gets you a generic
position, Brady said. If you
want that specialty job, you
have got to interview and be
that person, and so focused so
they understand what you want
and what you are about.
What employers want
Jeff Klakring, salesman
and interviewer at Qualtrics,
said a good interview is a
conversation, rather than a
one-sided question and answer.
A really good interview is
driven by the applicant when
they ask good questions and
want to know about the culture
of the company, Klakring said.
When the interviewee does
research about the company
and asks meaningful ques-
tions, it shows they care about
the company instead of just
securing a job.
It (no preparation) says, I
want a job. I dont care what it
is. And thats not very impres-
sive in an interview, said
Klakring.
Klakring also recommends
that the interviewee come
with a 30 to 60 second pitch
about who they are. Too often
students are unprepared for
that question and end up telling
boring facts, making them
sound the same as the last guy,
he said.
A good answer is going to
tell about some accomplish-
ments, personality, things
we cant see on the rsum,
Klakring said.
Learning from the visual arts
Who to pay attention to in art history
class Discovering ancient artworks can
be a culturally fulfilling experience
B y K A T E L Y N J O H N S
A painting hangs quietly on
the wall. Some people walk by
quickly, not pausing to even
glance at the colors on the
canvas. Others peek at the
patterns and note the lines but
continue on. One man stops
and takes a breath, soaking in
the swirls and serene shapes of
the painting on the wall.
For many people, visual art
is something to pass by, but
for others, it
is a vital part
of life and
learning.
M a r k
M a g l e b y ,
director of
the Museum
of Art (MOA)
and profes-
sor at BYU,
explained the
importance of
the visual arts
in a students
education.
The visual
worl d i s
s o me t h i n g
t hat t he
digital age has
made more
accessible to
us, he said.
Visual art
is just as
i mp o r t a n t
as literary
h e r i t a g e
in past cultures and past
civilizations. The visual arts
give you a clue as to the very
nature of previous civilizations
as you look at their priorities
what were they depicting,
what were they not depicting.
It becomes a hierarchy of their
values.
Students study Roman civ-
ilization by studying their
sculptures and architecture,
the Egyptians by their stone-
work and paintings and Native
Americans by their bead work
and cloth. Studying the visual
arts can help students under-
stand not only past civiliza-
tions, but present cultures as
well.
Cultures have depicted
themselves as they want to be
seen by them-
selves and by
out si ders,
M a g l e b y
said. Visual
art is often
the best thing
a culture can
produce.
I n t e r -
preting and
studying art
can seem
like a tedious
process, but
people can
study art on
many differ-
ent levels.
M a r i a n
Wardle, cura-
tor of Ameri-
can art for
the MOA,
e x p l a i n e d
that on one
level, people
can analyze
s t r u c t u r e
and pattern, while on another,
they can connect with the art
and feel what the artist felt.
The artist is a member
of a particular community
and society at a particular
time, Wardle said. As such,
his or her work reects that
particular historical or social
moment. A work of art is an
experience that happened in
the past and continues to live
in the present. Just like good
literature, it can speak to your
art and it can speak to your
mind.
Wardle said students dont
have to enjoy only the tradi-
tional arts, but rather, they
can explore other forms of
visual art like quilts and vin-
tage posters.
Martha Peacock, art
historian and professor at
BYU, studies specifically
17th-century Dutch domestic
imagery, which depicts Dutch
women in various settings.
She said studying women in
Dutch art helped students
understand both historic and
present domestic roles.
It gives them a kind of new
respect for their gender and
see the kind of impact they can
make historically, Peacock
said.
James Swensen, professor of
art history at BYU, loved the
time he spent with students
abroad studying the visual
arts in Europe. He explained
why all students should make
the visual arts a part of their
education.
More people are not
seeing things and exposing
t hemselves to real ly
remarkabl e pai nt i ng,
sculpture and ideas during
their college career, Swensen
said. Those are things that
will benet your life. Anything
we can do to increase our
understanding of (the) visual
arts will benefit every part of
us.
Photo illustration by Chris Bunker
Interviewing experts stress being prepared to say something about yourself in an interview. Interviewees should prepare a 30 to 60 second pitch to share at their interview.

A good answer is going to tell about


some accomplishments, personality,
things we cant see on the rsum.
Jeff Klakring
Qualtrics
Salesman and interviewer
Martin Luther King Jr. Day
B y D A N I E L L A S U B I E T A
As Martin Luther King Jr. Day
approaches, BYU and the sur-
rounding community prepare
to honor it with marches, perfor-
mances and speeches.
BYU will commemorate the
50th anniversary of the March
on Washington with a candle-
light walk on Jan. 21 at 5:30 p.m.
Immediately after, Cathy Stokes
will speak in the Wilkinson Stu-
dent Center ballroom from 6 p.m.
to 7 p.m.
At UVU, Dr. Clarence B. Jones,
the speech writer for I Have A
Dream, will speak at 10 a.m. at
UVU in the Sorensen Student
Centers Grande Ballroom on
Jan. 24. Parking and admission
are free. Other commemorative
events at UVU run January 2225.
The University of Utah will
also hold a series of events start-
ing Jan. 19 with the MLK Day
of Service. There will be a light
breakfast at 8:30 a.m. in the Low-
ell Bennion Community Service
Center, followed by community
service projects until noon.
The U of U will hold its fth
Annual MLK Celebration Rally
at 2 p.m. and marade (march/
parade) at 3 p.m. on Jan. 21.
Jesse L. Jackson, a well-known
civil rights activist and personal
acquaintance of Martin Luther
King, Jr., will speak at U of Us
sold-out keynote lecture on Jan. 24.
Also in Salt Lake City, the
NAACP will host an MLK memo-
rial luncheon at noon on Jan. 21
in Little America Hotel. Tickets
can be reserved by calling (801)-
250-5088 or emailing jdwnaacp@
att.net
The Salt Lake Community
College will hold a lecture called
Conversations on Social Issues:
The New Racism on Jan. 23, from
12 p.m. to 1 p.m. at the Taylorsville
Redwood Campus. Refreshments
will be served.
Included in Salt Lake Commu-
nity Colleges list of events is a
public reading of The Meeting,
a panel discussion and reception
on Jan 25 at 7:30 p.m. at Fist Uni-
tarian Church, 569 S. 1300 East,
SLC, UT.

Visual art is just as


important as literary
heritage in past cultures
and past civilizations.
The visual arts give
you a clue as to the
very nature of previous
civilizations as you look
at their priorities.
Mark Magleby
Museum of Art
director
2 8 5 1 7 9 3 4 6
7 1 6 5 4 3 9 2 8
3 9 4 6 8 2 1 5 7
4 2 7 3 6 1 5 8 9
5 3 8 2 9 7 4 6 1
1 6 9 4 5 8 7 3 2
6 4 2 7 1 5 8 9 3
8 5 1 9 3 6 2 7 4
9 7 3 8 2 4 6 1 5
Puzzle 1: Easy
6 1 9 5 8 3 7 2 4
5 7 2 9 4 6 1 3 8
3 4 8 7 1 2 5 6 9
1 8 6 2 9 4 3 7 5
7 2 4 8 3 5 9 1 6
9 5 3 1 6 7 4 8 2
8 9 7 6 5 1 2 4 3
2 3 5 4 7 8 6 9 1
4 6 1 3 2 9 8 5 7
Puzzle 6: Very Hard
8 3 5 1 9 6 2 4 7
1 7 2 3 8 4 5 9 6
9 4 6 5 7 2 8 1 3
2 5 9 8 1 3 7 6 4
3 8 4 2 6 7 9 5 1
6 1 7 9 4 5 3 8 2
7 9 1 4 2 8 6 3 5
4 2 3 6 5 9 1 7 8
5 6 8 7 3 1 4 2 9
Puzzle 5: Hard
3 9 5 1 4 6 8 2 7
2 8 1 5 7 3 6 9 4
4 6 7 8 2 9 5 1 3
5 7 9 6 8 4 1 3 2
6 1 3 2 5 7 4 8 9
8 2 4 9 3 1 7 5 6
7 4 8 3 9 5 2 6 1
9 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 8
1 3 2 4 6 8 9 7 5
Puzzle 4: Medium/Hard
4 5 9 8 7 6 3 2 1
6 7 1 3 5 2 4 8 9
8 2 3 9 1 4 5 6 7
9 8 5 1 3 7 2 4 6
2 3 7 4 6 5 9 1 8
1 4 6 2 8 9 7 3 5
3 6 4 7 9 1 8 5 2
5 9 8 6 2 3 1 7 4
7 1 2 5 4 8 6 9 3
Puzzle 3: Medium
8 4 6 5 1 9 3 2 7
9 3 7 2 4 8 1 5 6
5 2 1 3 6 7 4 8 9
6 1 2 8 5 3 9 7 4
3 5 9 6 7 4 2 1 8
4 7 8 9 2 1 5 6 3
7 8 4 1 9 2 6 3 5
1 6 3 4 8 5 7 9 2
2 9 5 7 3 6 8 4 1
Puzzle 2: Moderate
8 The Daily Universe, Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Puzzles
[ & Comics ]
Sudoku
Continued from Page 7
Dr. Syed Nabi, a doctor at the
Sleep Institute of Utah in Ogden,
treats individuals who have or
may have a sleep disorder.
You have to figure out where
[the symptoms] are coming
from, Nabi said. Its like a head-
ache.
Similar to a headache, the
symptoms could come from a
number of different stressors in
the persons life.
Dr. Nabi meets with his pa-
tients and asks them questions
about their symptoms. If he sus-
pects an issue with the patients
sleep, he will order a sleep study.
This study evaluates the person
while he or she is sleeping and
measures brain activity.
Jared Facer, a senior major-
ing in international studies at
BYU-Hawaii, has the most severe
form of sleep insomnia. Facer, of
San Clemente Calif., served as a
missionary in Colorado Springs,
Colo., where he received his diag-
nosis. According to doctors, his
insomnia was triggered by high
elevation. After staying awake
for seven days, he was honorably
released from his mission. Five
years later, doctors are still un-
able to help him sleep.
I sleep maybe six hours a
week, he said. My body func-
tions on about two hours of sleep
[a night]. Ive been on every type
of medication, but nothing will
work.
Since the time most people
spend sleeping is time Facer can
use to his advantage, he said he
tries to be productive.
I work a lot, he said. I do a
lot of pondering and scripture
reading. Isaiah is not as boring
as people told me it was.
Sara Michael, a junior major-
ing in public relations, also be-
lieves she has a sleep disorder,
though she has not been diag-
nosed.
A lot of times when Im sleep-
ing, I wake up and think my
dream is still happening, she
said. My dreams are really
crazy.
At times, she dreams a family
member is in danger or someone
dangerous is in her room. She
wakes up and acts how she would
if the event was happening, at
times creating a comical situation.
Michael said her vivid dreams
can affect her sleep because she
still thinks about them, even af-
ter she is awake and knows it was
a dream.
Sometimes [when I am dream-
ing] I want to stop the dream, but
I cant, she said.
To fall back asleep, she listens
to music or lies in bed quietly.
Michael believes her active
dreams could be caused by stress
because they often occur when
she is in a new environment or
with new people.
While these two students have
rather severe cases of sleep dis-
orders, many Americans have
problems sleeping, including
BYU students. Those experienc-
ing symptoms can receive help
on campus from Biofeedback
Services in the Wilkinson Stu-
dent Center.
Barbara Morrell is a clinical
professor at the Counseling and
Career Center and coordinator
of Stress Management and Bio-
feedback Services.
We use biofeedback to help
people become aware of stress in
the body and where theyre hold-
ing the stress and tension and
then to learn to relax it, she said.
While Biofeedback Services
does not treat diagnosed medical
conditions, it is designed to help
relieve stress and tension, often
alleviating common sleep disor-
der symptoms.
One of the ways that stress
impacts sleep is that our brain
waves are different speeds, de-
pending on what were doing,
Morrell said. Our brains are
fast for thinking and doing and
very slow for sleeping. If we are
stressed and our mind is racing,
it is very tough for our minds to
slow down enough to sleep.
Biofeedback Services focuses
on relaxation training. Anyone
seeking help with relaxation
techniques can either schedule
an appointment with Biofeed-
back Services or visit the web-
site, caps.byu.edu/biofeedback-
and-stress-management, where
downloadable relaxation re-
cordings are available as well
as information on ways to sleep
better.
sleep
Lack of sleep
can be harmful
B y S A r A h S h e p h e r D
What started as an idea for a
simple Christmas gift, turned
into something Harry Potter
fans around the world could
enjoy year round.
In 2008, with Christmas just
around the corner, Sara Anst-
ed, a BYU graduate, was strug-
gling to think of a present for
her sisters. Knowing their love
for Harry Potter, Ansted went
online to find affordable, au-
thentic looking wands, but was
disappointed to find the wands
cost more than $70.
Ansted decided to try her
hand at whittling and made her
own Harry Potter wands.
I got some wooden dowels
from the BYU Bookstore and
said to myself, Ok lets see what
happens, she said.
Two years after Ansted made
her first wands she decided to
sell them online. She made
a store on Etsy.com and was
pleasantly surprised to see
people all over the world want-
ed to buy her wands. The wands
cost up to $18 and have been
purchased by people in Brazil,
Spain, England, Australia, Po-
land, Canada and Italy.
Stacy Julin, Ansteds co-
worker in the circulation de-
partment at the Provo City Li-
brary, purchased The wands as
birthday presents for her three
sons. She was impressed by the
workmanship and price.
Each wand is unique and re-
ally authentic looking, Julin
said. Ive seen other wands for
sale at craft sales and farmers
markets, but they are priced
much higher, and I like Saras
Wands better. My kids just de-
scribe them as awesome.
Ansteds wands can be found
online by visiting Etsy.com
and searching Embershad-
eDragon.
B y J e f f f i n l e y
Students with Provo in their
rearview mirror are missing out
during spring term.
The well-kept secret of spring
term is full of warm weather ac-
tivities, like river rafting and re-
cord-setting water balloon fghts,
that would be simply miserable in
the middle of December.
The worlds largest water bal-
loon fght in Summer 2010 was
hosted by BYUSA, BYUs student
service association, with almost
4,000 students and more than
120,000 water balloons.
While campus activities are
scaled down during spring term,
there is still plenty to do. Clubs
and other student groups, such as
the popular Laugh Out Loud com-
edy troupe, also hold activities. Be
sure to check the events calendar
on The Universe website for up-
dates and more information.
For those seeking a spiritual
boost, devotionals and forums
also continue during spring term.
Students who have purchased
an All Sport Pass and want to
watch a good sporting event can
enjoy baseball and softball games,
as well as tennis matches and
track and feld competitions.
Steven Leyland, a pre-business
major, said campus is less crowd-
ed during spring term, which is a
potential beneft.
Campus is more freed up, Ley-
land said. There isnt all the foot
traffc where you cant get to class
on time because youre bumping
into people.
In a poll done by The Universe,
71 percent of students who partici-
pated said they do not take classes
during spring or summer terms.
Milanne Carpenter, a nursing
major, said even though classes
are hard, studying for fnals is
easier because the course takes
place over a shorter period.
Although it was intense, a lot of
the teachers are pretty laid back,
Carpenter said. And I like that I
only have to remember material
from two months ago instead of
four months ago.
Another beneft of being on cam-
pus during the summer months
is the weather. With warm spring
temperatures, many students en-
joy being outside to throw a fris-
bee around or just to take a break
between classes.
When youre coming out of
classes you can go sit on a bench
and it isnt cold, Leyland said.
David Bracero, a geography
major, summed up his favorite
things about spring term in one
sentence.
Smaller class sizes, not as
many credits, better parking and
good weather, Bracero said.
B y K r i S T A r o y
There is a tarp tucked under the
bed, with a sleeping bag stacked on
top, seeming anxious and ready to
go.
Their owner, Kim Stevens, a se-
nior from Colorado Springs study-
ing mechanical engineering, puts
them to good use. Last summer she
set a goal to never spend Friday
night in her bed.
I was thinking of things I want-
ed to do that summer and realized
there was no reason I shouldnt be
camping every Friday night, she
said.
Stevens camping streak lasted
from the start of summer into
the Fridays of fall, and she even
camped during winter semester.
In January, my roommates and
I went to Goblin Valley thinking
we would get warm weather, but
it got down to three degrees Fahr-
enheit, Stevens said. We didnt
sleep much, but it was still fun.
Scott Jackson, a junior from Ev-
erett, Wash. studying mechanical
engineering, found inspiration in
Stevens weekend hobby.
Our group just went out and did
something no one else was doing,
and it didnt need to be planned,
he said.
Stevens agrees and said this
hobby teaches her to live off the
bare necessities.
I bring a tarp, sleeping bag,
sometimes a hammock and run-
ning shoes, Stevens said. Theres
nothing better than rolling out of
a sleeping bag and running in the
Saturday air when everyone else
in Provo is still sleeping in their
beds.
Stevens and her outdoorsy atti-
tude will keep her out of her bed
again every Friday night this sum-
mer.
Life is too short to spend it
sleeping in your bed, she said.
Camping keeps
Friday nights fun
Spring is in the air
Handmade wands
make unique gifts
photo by Chris Bunker
Tulips blooming all across ByU campus are colorful signs of spring.
photo by Krista roy
Kim Stevens, Krista roy, Mackenzie Gregerson and Jenny Stevens hunker
down in sleeping bags during a friday night camping trip.
photo by Sarah Shepherd
Sara Anstead whittles harry potter-inspired wands to sell on etsy.
5 1 2 6 4 8 3 7 9
9 7 4 3 1 2 6 8 5
3 8 6 7 5 9 1 2 4
6 5 8 4 3 1 7 9 2
7 9 1 5 2 6 8 4 3
2 4 3 8 9 7 5 6 1
1 3 7 9 6 4 2 5 8
4 6 5 2 8 3 9 1 7
8 2 9 1 7 5 4 3 6
Puzzle 1: Easy
5 8 3 4 9 6 1 2 7
4 6 1 8 7 2 3 9 5
9 2 7 1 3 5 8 4 6
7 1 6 5 2 8 9 3 4
3 4 9 6 1 7 2 5 8
8 5 2 9 4 3 6 7 1
2 7 8 3 5 1 4 6 9
6 3 4 7 8 9 5 1 2
1 9 5 2 6 4 7 8 3
Puzzle 6: Very Hard
7 2 8 5 3 1 6 9 4
3 9 1 4 7 6 8 5 2
4 5 6 8 9 2 3 1 7
5 7 2 9 6 3 4 8 1
8 6 4 1 2 5 7 3 9
9 1 3 7 4 8 2 6 5
1 3 5 2 8 4 9 7 6
6 4 7 3 5 9 1 2 8
2 8 9 6 1 7 5 4 3
Puzzle 5: Hard
1 5 7 3 2 4 8 6 9
8 3 4 7 9 6 1 2 5
6 9 2 5 8 1 3 4 7
2 7 1 4 3 8 9 5 6
3 4 6 1 5 9 7 8 2
5 8 9 2 6 7 4 1 3
9 1 5 6 4 3 2 7 8
4 6 3 8 7 2 5 9 1
7 2 8 9 1 5 6 3 4
Puzzle 4: Medium/Hard
6 1 8 9 7 3 5 2 4
4 7 9 2 5 1 6 8 3
3 5 2 4 8 6 7 9 1
1 9 4 7 6 5 8 3 2
5 2 3 1 4 8 9 6 7
7 8 6 3 2 9 4 1 5
2 6 1 5 9 4 3 7 8
8 4 7 6 3 2 1 5 9
9 3 5 8 1 7 2 4 6
Puzzle 3: Medium
6 3 1 7 9 2 4 8 5
2 7 8 3 4 5 6 1 9
4 5 9 6 8 1 7 2 3
7 6 5 1 2 3 9 4 8
8 9 2 5 6 4 1 3 7
1 4 3 8 7 9 2 5 6
3 8 4 9 1 7 5 6 2
5 1 7 2 3 6 8 9 4
9 2 6 4 5 8 3 7 1
Puzzle 2: Moderate
Sudoku
Solutions available at universe.byu.edu/sudoku
10
20 The Universe, January 15 21, 2013
Cool Winter Coupons
FREE ADMISSION
(with purchase of a paid admission)
16yrs old and over
Valid on Disco Night Only & After 9PMat the Orem location ONLY
Saturday nights thru Jan. 31st, 2013. Not valid with other oers.
CLASSIC FUN CENTER OREM
250 SOUTH STATE STREET
801-224-4197
Limited Time Offer. Any delivery charge is not a tip paid to your driver. Our drivers carry
less than $20. You must ask for this limited time offer. Minimum purchase required for
delivery. Prices, participation, delivery area and charges may vary. Returned checks,
along with the states maximum allowable returned check fee, may be electronically
presented to your bank. 2012 Dominos IP Holder LLC. Dominos, Dominos Pizza
and the modular logo are registered trademarks of Dominos IP Holder LLC.
$
5
99
9193
EACH
801-418-1100
156 West 1230 North, Provo
MIX-N-MATCH
Choose Any 2
(or more) of the following for
$5.99 each
Medium2-Topping Pizza
Oven Baked Sandwich
Stuffed Cheesy Bread
Pasta in a Tin
8-Piece Boneless Chicken
or Wings
Minimum2 ItemPurchase. Pan
&Specialty Pizzas May Be Extra.


Study Break
Brighams Landing
& Provo Towne Center
FIRST 4 oz. FREE
Any Medium Ice Cream
(Limit 2)
Like us on Facebook for special deals.
fb.com/subzeroicecream
Must present coupon at time of purchase. Limit 1 coupon
per person per visit. Expires 1/22/13. Not valid with other oers
or discounts. Redeemable only at above location.
Better Science=Better Ice Cream
= Fresh Ice Cream
$5.99
Large 1-Topping Pan Pizza
Carry Out Special
Terzis Pizzeria
801-373-9575
46 E. Bulldog Blvd. Provo
Right next to FatCats
Taste the Difference
WE
DELIVER!
100%
real deal
4925 North Edgewood Dr. (Back of Riverwoods)
(801) 764-9345
*Special Shows not included and 3D surcharge still applies

January 15 21, 2013 Volume 66, Issue 18 universe.byu.edu


152 BRMB, BYU, Provo, Utah 84602
EDITOR
Rebecca Lane
SECTION EDITORS
Carlie Ellett
Sara Phelps
CAMPUS
Kurt Hanson
Robin Rodgers
METRO
Stephanie Lacy
OPINION
Kelly Haight
Daniel Lewis
SPORTS
Megan Adams
Charles Beacham
LIFE, ETC.
Alex Hoeft
Madeleine Brown
DIGITAL
COPY EDITORS
Laura Thomas
Cassidy Wadsworth

PHOTOGRAPHERS
Chris Bunker
PHOTO 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

PROF ESS I ONAL STAF F
DIRECTOR
Steve Fidel
BUSINESS MANAGER
Ellen Hernandez
DESIGN MANAGER
Warren Bingham
FACULTY ADVISER
Joel Campbell
T
he Universe is an official publication of
Brigham Young University and is produced as
a cooperative enterprise of students and faculty.
It is published as a laboratory newspaper by the
College of Fine Arts and Communications and
the Department of Communications under the
direction of a professional management staff.
The Universe is published weekly except dur-
ing vacation and examination periods.
The opinions expressed do not necessarily
reflect the views of the student body, faculty,
university administration, Board of Trustees or
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Copyright 2013 Brigham Young University.
For more news, including audio and video, visit
universe.byu.edu

letters@byu.edu
Fax 801-422-0177
News 801-422-2957
Advertising 801-422-7102
Circulation 801-422-2897
Cougar Questions
What do you look forward to the most and
the least this semester, and why?
Weekly five:
Films to look
for at Sundance
Film Festival
B y B R I T T A N Y C A R L I L E
With the start of the new year comes the ever-
anticipated Sundance Film Festival. Celebrities
and tourists nationwide gather in Park City to
preview and participate in the 10-day event. With
a large assortment of lms ranging from docu-
mentaries to indie lms, here are ve lms not
to miss.
1. Austenland
Written and directed by BYU lm graduate
Jerusha Hess, Austenland tells the story of
Jane, a woman in her mid-thirties, who cannot
shake her obsession with Mr. Darcy, or anything
Jane Austen for that matter. Ready to surround
herself in all things Austen, Jane heads to
Austenland for a fully immersed vacation.
When funds come up short, her trip takes an
unexpected turn and she is swept into an adven-
ture beyond her romantic imagination. This is
Hess second lm to premiere at Sundance; the
rst was Napoleon Dynamite in 2004, which she
co-wrote with her husband, Jared Hess.
Junior Calli Nielsen from Las Vegas said,
Every year Sundance has so much to offer. This
year I am especially looking forward to the pre-
miere of Austenland. I cant wait to see it!
2. jOBS
Starring Ashton Kutcher, jOBS tells the
story of the late Steve Jobs road to success. Col-
lege drop-out Steve Jobs, along with best friend
Steve Wozniac, unleashed the Apple 1 out of his
parents garage, producing and shipping 200
units by hand. As a result, the world will never
be the same. jOBS retells the story of this tech-
nology legend and portrays not only the impact
jOBS had on the industry,but the role he played
in changing culture as well.
3. The Way, Way Back
The Way, Way Back follows 14-year-old Dun-
can throughout his humorous, awkward and
even painful experiences over summer vaca-
tion with his mother and her overbearing boy-
friend. When Duncan has a hard time tting in,
he gets a job at a local water park, where he meets
a carefree, middle-aged employee who becomes
an unlikely friend and mentor who guides Dun-
can through his lifes trials.
4. The Crash Reel
This movie follows the story of U.S. champion
snowboarding legend Kevin Pearce to illustrate
the appeal, excitement and risks of participat-
ing in extreme sports. While training to com-
pete against his rival Shaun White in the 2010
Olympics, Pearce suffered severe brain damage
from an accident in Park City. Despite the objec-
tion from his family and warnings from his doc-
tors, Pearce insisted on returning to the sport he
loved, even though a minor blow to the head could
instantly kill him.
5. Coral: Rekindling Venus
This unique documentary, created by Austra-
lian media artist Lynette Wallworth, immerses
viewers in a deep-sea adventure to capture the
beauty and mystery of the endangered coral reefs
in Australia, Papua New Guinea and Indonesia.
This lm will play in full-dome planetariums
to provide a visual experience never attempted
before at Sundance.
According to Wallworth in a news release, My
intent is to leave the audience with a sense of
wonder for the complexity and beauty of coral
reefs and a stronger understanding of our con-
nection to it.
In addition to daily screenings at the Sundance
Film Festival, Coral: Rekindling Venus will
screen Jan. 19th, 22nd and 26th at Clark Plane-
tarium in Salt Lake.
The most: I really just want
to pass my classes. As long as I
pass my classes, Ill be alright.
The least: The weather. Its too
cold.
Emmanuel Oryang
Biology, Freshman
The most: Im doing my rst work
in high schools for my major, and Im
super excited to see what its like.
The least: All the papers I will
have to write and the stairs; the hor-
rible stairs. Climbing the stairs every
morning.
Katie Francom
English teaching, Junior
The most: What do I look forward
to the most this semester? The end
of the semester and going into sum-
mer. Does that count as an answer?
The least: What I look for-
ward to the least is tests.
Chanoah Ulibarri
Accounting, Freshman
The most: My grades. Im pretty
condent about them.
The least: Dating. Its a roller-
coaster.
Aaron Meldrun
Biochemistry, Sophomore
P
i
c
k
l
e
s

P
i
c
k
l
e
s

G
a
r
f
e
l
d

G
a
r
f
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 Needle holder
5 Substances
high on the
49-Across
10 Ring
14 Federal
watchdog agcy.
15 Complete
16 Swear
17 Half an Asian
capital?
18 Cache
19 End of a
haircut?
20 ___-engine
21 Stick (to)
22 Vixen feature
24 Leaned in one
direction
26 Typee sequel
27 Verbalized
28 Won
32 Delivery person
34 Programs
35 Nigerian native
36 House starter
or ender
37 Substance in
the middle of
the 49-Across
38 Program
39 Actress Long
40 Avid
41 Lifts
42 Contemporary
of Aeschylus
44 N.L. East team,
informally
45 Place for cargo
46 Fictional
captive in
carbonite
49 Theme of this
puzzle
52 Mich. neighbor
53 Destructive
pest
54 ___-Tass news
agency
55 Foolable
57 DVR system
58 Pop
59 Hold off
60 Six-Day War
leader Weizman
61 Some map
lines: Abbr.
62 Substances
low on the
49-Across
63 Capitol V.I.P.s:
Abbr.
DOWN
1 Bit of attire for
Mr. Monopoly
2 The Mary Tyler
Moore Show
co-star
3 Arrange
4 Deli choice
5 Whole lot
6 Chipped in
7 Cargo vessel
8 E.E.C. part:
Abbr.
9 More erotic
10 Unreal
11 Elliptical
12 Fat chance!
13 Pitcher
23 Entre ___
25 Lieutenant
___ of Forrest
Gump
26 Command
28 Lugs
29 Speculate
superficially
30 PayPal
purchaser
31 Gets into
32 Dominates
33 Charles in
Charge star
34 Imprisoned
37 Big name in
flying
38 Beats
40 Subj. for a
forest ranger
41 Recycling ___
43 Scarletts kin
44 Futuristic
weapons
46 Gathered, as
bees
47 Energize
48 Olfactory
ticklers
49 Do some online
skulduggery
50 Place, as cargo
51 Womens
rights pioneer
Elizabeth ___
Stanton
52 Surcharge item
in many hotels
56 Federal agcy. of
1946-75
Puzzle by JILL DENNY AND JEFF CHEN
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.
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
C L A D U N C U T S F P D
Y U L E P I A N O C R U E
S A L T S P R I N G R O L L
T U D O R S A T R A Z E S
A X I S M E T I M E
S T Y F E D E R A L N B C
P A S S F A I L G L O B A L
O P U S P A C N A T O
R E C E S S P U N G E N C Y
T S K C U L P R I T A H S
E N A M E L B O O N
S O R E R N E E S N A F U
T W I N E N G I N E T I E R
E L I E S T I C K A I L S
P S I S C H I L E P I T A
The New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation
620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018
For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550
For Release Thursday, January 10, 2013
Edited by Will Shortz No. 1206
Crossword
ACROSS
1 Decked out
5 Like the DVD
version of a
movie, maybe
10 Bay Area force:
Abbr.
14 Time for
eggnog
15 Challenge for
movers
16 Rocks Mtley
___
17 Deice, in a way
18 Chinese
appetizer
20 Henry VIIIs
house
22 Did some
modeling
23 Opposite of
raises
24 Line of
symmetry
26 R and R all by
oneself
28 Slop trough
locale
30 F.D.I.C. part
32 Americas Got
Talent network
35 Grade option
that doesnt
affect ones
grade point
average
37 Worldwide
39 Big work
40 Campaign
season org.
42 Grp. joined by
Albania and
Croatia in 2009
43 When
dodgeball may
be played
46 Limburger
cheese quality
49 Shame!
50 Guilty one
52 Satisfied sighs
53 Canine coating
55 Blessing
57 More in need of
liniment
59 Bridal bio word
61 Major bollix
64 Having dual
props
67 Arena section
68 Saab or Tahari
of fashion
69 Feature of this
puzzles three
long Down
answers
70 Has the bug,
say
71 Fraternity
letters
72 2010 mining
disaster locale
73 Bread with
tabouli
DOWN
1 Dermatologists
concern
2 Party with
a roast pig,
perhaps
3 Treat on a
69-Across
4 Betty Ford
Center
program, for
short
5 Co. with a
brown logo
6 Sips from flasks
7 Treat on a
69-Across
8 George W.
Bush, self-
descriptively
9 Quantity of
bricks
10 Take a hike!
11 Treat on a
69-Across
12 Act the crybaby
13 Singers
Shannon and
Reeves
19 Barbecue
21 Jazz line
25 Privateers
domain
27 Cause of a
baseball out
28 Hurling or
curling
29 Nixons undoing
in Watergate
31 Dance move
33 Cookie bakers
yield
34 Becomes
tiresome
36 Vane dir.
38 Start of a long-
distance call
41 Junkyard dog
44 Near miss,
perhaps
45 Bottom line
47 Penpoint
48 Classic muscle
cars
51 120 yards, for
a football field
54 Spanish babies
56 Like some beer
at a bar
57 Dance move
58 Messengers at
Hogwarts
60 S.A.S.E., e.g.:
Abbr.
62 Sharpie tip
material
63 Celestial beast
65 Iran-contra org.
66 Barely make,
with out
Puzzle by JIM HILGER
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.
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 69 70
71 72 73
P E R M P S S T R A W L S
I M A M H O N E E V I C T
M I N I D O N U T Q A N D A
P R O V I N G G R O U N D
S S N A E S R I T U A L
U N I A D Z E P I A
P L A N E G E O M E T R Y
S H E A D H L T O S S
P E A N U T G A L L E R Y
A R C G R E S I L E
M A H A L O U N E H M M
P R I N C E S S G R A C E
B O I S E H E R E Y O U G O
O R E O S E R D E A N E W
W A S N T R O A D R T E S
The New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation
620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018
For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550
For Release Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Edited by Will Shortz No. 1205
Crossword
ACROSS
1 See 5-Across
5 With 1-Across,
hybrid teas
ancestor
10 Noxious
compounds,
briefly
14 Wir leben
Autos sloganeer
15 Kind of cortex
16 Detrained, e.g.
17 Turn me on,
dead man,
supposedly, in
the Beatles
Revolution 9
20 Go off
21 Next-to-last word
in the Lords
Prayer
22 Like sherpas
23 Nicks producing
cuts?
25 Early
psychoanalyst
Coriat
28 Coastal diver
29 Flirt, maybe
32 Morsel for a
ladybug
34 There ___
spoon (The
Matrix line)
35 Apology start
36 Subject of a
2007 YouTube
sensation
40 Many a
beneficiary
41 Longtime
Headlines
reader
42 Helpers after
crashes
43 One way to
watch movies
46 Olin of Havana
47 On the schedule
48 Bundled, say
51 Enlightened
Buddhist
53 Need to keep
ones place?
55 Mauna ___
56 Go nowhere
60 Become clumped
61 Ivys support,
maybe
62 How a ship might
turn
63 Olympic vehicle
64 Like rats nests
65 Intrigue, once,
informally
DOWN
1 Bench attire
2 Some deceptive
designs
3 Order
confirmation?
4 Rotarian relative
5 Chickenhearted
6 On hand
7 Little by little
8 Many vets recall
it
9 Bitter, e.g.
10 Relay
11 Missouris first
elected female
senator
12 N.Y.C. racetrack
moniker
13 Antique gun
18 Eccentric
19 Actress
Thompson
24 Course through
the body?
26 Panasonic
subsidiary
27 Yours, in Paris
30 Hot dog!
31 Hot dogs, say
32 Tail of a dog?
33 Zero-spin particle
34 The L Word
producer Chaiken
37 Realty reference
38 Big blasts from
the past, briefly
39 Actress Rowlands
44 Opposite of down
45 ___ Hari
46 Hall-of-Fame
football coach
Tom
49 Sniggled
50 Accounts
51 Nuts and bolts
52 Not fantastic
54 1961 space
chimp
57 Friend of Frodo
58 Cinque minus
due
59 Way overseas
Puzzle by GARY CEE
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.
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
B O L A S C A R T E P I E
E P O C H A G U E S I N N
S E C R E T P A N E L N C R
E N A L A R I A T A B O O
A L L A B A N T H E B O M B
T A R S P A Y E E
E T A T B L O U S E
D E G R E E O F F R E E D O M
T A T T O O D I V A
A S P I C O N E K
S U R E H A N D E D M E R E
S T I R R A I S E D T R I
A U D D O N T S W E A T I T
I R E E M O T E P R E P S
L E S M A S O N P A S E O
The New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation
620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018
For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550
For Release Friday, January 4, 2013
Edited by Will Shortz No. 1130
Crossword
ACROSS
1 Whirled
weapons
6 Brasserie list
11 Buster Keaton
missile
14 Notable time
span
15 Malaria may
cause these
16 The Fair Maid
of the ___
(Renaissance
comedy)
17 The library in
an old mansion
may have one
19 Initials seen
at a checkout
counter
20 Doe in a Disney
film
21 One thrown
from a horse?
22 Peek-___
23 Penne ___
vodka
25 60s protest
sign
27 Besmirches
28 Check
information
29 State of France
30 Top of a
wardrobe
35 Extent to which
you may do as
you please
41 Dragon in a
2008 best
seller
42 Demanding sort
43 Certain jelly
47 Brief race
distance, briefly
48 Having firm
control
54 Simple
55 Direction in a
bartender guide
56 Like Braille
characters
58 Numerical
prefix
59 C.P.A., at times:
Abbr.
60 Reassuring
words or
a hint to 17-,
25-, 35- and
48-Across
62 It may make
the face turn
red
63 Not act subtly
64 Readies
65 Louis Malles
___ Amants
66 Foundation
layer
67 Sporty 1990s
Toyota
DOWN
1 Take your
chairs
2 Like many a
restaurant
drive-thru
3 Small-
town paper,
informally
4 Unlike this
clue: Abbr.
5 Silverstein of
kid-lit
6 State of the
Union director,
1948
7 Lets take it
from the top
8 Charge
9 Where crowns
go
10 Night school
subj.
11 Old-time
bowling alley
worker
12 1040 figure
13 Get dressed
18 Q neighbor
22 Law school-
sanctioning org.
24 Sci. major
26 ___ du combat
30 Actress
Benaderet
31 Place for
parking
32 Many a time
33 Amateur film
subject, maybe
34 Sign of success
36 Prepare
a plaque,
perhaps
37 Ancient land
around todays
Jordan
38 Some furniture
sets
39 Like a mushy
banana, say
40 Catchphrase of
Jean-Luc Picard
on Star Trek:
T.N.G.
43 Attack
44 Stitch up
45 Safari sightings
46 Suffix with
bombard
49 It might whet
your appetite
50 Some iPods
51 Ill second
that
52 Steel city of
Germany
53 Drops on the
field?
57 Co-star of
DiCaprio in
Whats Eating
Gilbert Grape
60 J.F.K. or F.D.R.
61 Constellation
next to
Scorpius
Puzzle by SHARON DELORME
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.
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
B A G E L U R S A O T I S
I R A Q I N O E L A H M E
X P L U S Y I S S I X T E E N
A L E A T E E G A S
T R I T E S T E N D O R S E
S O M E Y E A T S N A Y S
O U I T O S S E T D
X M I N U S Y I S F O U R
P O T E T A T A O L
D A R T M E T A L S T D S
I D E A M E N S A U T E E D
O M S R A R E R N A
X I S T E N A N D Y I S S I X
I R E D E G O S T I E T O
N E D S R E S T E S S E X
The New York Times Syndication Sales Corporation
620 Eighth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10018
For Information Call: 1-800-972-3550
For Release Thursday, January 3, 2013
Edited by Will Shortz No. 1129
Crossword
The Universe, January 15 21, 2013 21
22 The Universe, January 15 21, 2013

Вам также может понравиться