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Boise State University ScholarWorks Student Newspapers (UP 4.15) University Documents 2-28-2002 Arbiter, February 28 Students of Boise State University Although this file was scanned from the highest-quality microfilm held by Boise State University, it reveals the limitations of the source microfilm. It is possible to perform a text search of much of this material; however, there are sections where the source microfilm was too faint or unreadable to allow for text scanning. For assistance with this collection of student newspapers, please contact Special Collections and Archives at [email protected].

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Page 1: Arbiter, February 28

Boise State UniversityScholarWorks

Student Newspapers (UP 4.15) University Documents

2-28-2002

Arbiter, February 28Students of Boise State University

Although this file was scanned from the highest-quality microfilm held by Boise State University, itreveals the limitations of the source microfilm. It is possible to perform a text search of much of thismaterial; however, there are sections where the source microfilm was too faint or unreadable to allowfor text scanning. For assistance with this collection of student newspapers, please contact SpecialCollections and Archives at [email protected].

Page 2: Arbiter, February 28

iter> \~gi~~~tateUniversity:February 28. 2002

Vol. 15 Issue 43 First Copy Free

ASBSUfundsCampusGrusadefor-ChrislASBSU shouldn't have decidedwhether a student organizationreceives funding."ASBSU shouldn't be making

normative judgments on studentorganization missions," Petersonsaid.Peterson also said that he

believed all student clubs shouldbe funded."Myself and Imran,,[Ali]

researched this issue and spokewith religious organizations thispast summer," Peterson said. "Ibelieve student organizations arepredicated on their membershipand management. Any studentorg should be funded.'The funds will come from stu-

dent fees rather then state appro-priated funds, but the Idaho StateConstitution prohibits slate orga-nizations from providing anyfinancial support to religiousorganizations.However, Peterson cited a

United States Supreme Courtdecision involving the Universityof Wisconsin as a possible prece-dent for funding the group.The case ruled on a constitu-

tional challenge to mandatorystudent fees, but also addressedthe issue of student organizationfunding."We conclude that the

Decision mayviolate stateconstitution

Board chair informed the clubthat they were the first religiousorganization to be funded byASBSU.Ali also encouraged the group

to inform other rellgious..cJ.ubs,including non-Christian groups,funding was now available."If there aren't 20 other [reli-

gious] organizations here nexttime, I'm really going to be madat you guys," Ali said.However, he did note that

funding was contingent uponlegal counsel and encouraged thegroup to mount a legal challengeif funding was denied.Student Union and Activities

Director Leah Barrett expressedconcern about the board's deci-sion to fund the Christian organi-zation.As part of her position, Barrett

said she has fiduciary responsi-bility for ASBSU. ."I understand where student

government is coming from, butit's my responsibility to interpretand uphold the policies based onthe Constitution of the state ofIdaho," Barrett said. "My under-standing is at this time we cannotfund religious organizations."Nate Peterson, ASBSU

President expressed support forthe board's decision and said

By Andy BensQnTile Arbiter

The Finance Advisory Board,the ASBSU board responsible fordoling out funds to student orga-nizations, voted to fund theCampus Crusade for Christ orga-nization during a controversial~eetinglast1'hursday.. The vote marks the first timeBoise State has funded a religiousswdent organization and mayput the university in violation ofthe Idaho State Constitution..: The decision was reachedafter students from the Christianorganization provided testimonyas to why they deserved equaltreatment despite their.religiousaffiliation.The Board agn:ed, and voted

7 to 1 to provide the group with$700 for fiscal year 2003.The decision now sets up a

possible legal challenge regard-ing the separation of church andstate.Imran Ali, ASBSU chief of

staff and Finance Advisory

J '.:. .

~\W

Photo by Jeremy Branllod, The ArtlIter.

Rick Shell (right) reflects on a passage In the Bible In the Student UnlQn MQnday. Shell advises theCampus Crusade for Christ Qrganlzatlon.

University of Wisconsin maysustain the extracurriculardimensions of its programs byusing mandatory student 'feeswith viewpoint neutrality as the

soryboard."We'll be taking a look at it to

S(..'C what the university shoulddo," Horton said.

operational principle," thecourt's decision read.Amanda Horton, university

counsel, was unwilling to discussthe decision by the financial advi-

Local advocatessponsor"'Wotnen's rightsdocutnentaryWomen's History Month featureevent outlines undergroundabortion servicepy Matt NeznansklTile Arbiter

force.The grour was shaken by

. the arrest 0 seven of its keymembers in 1972, but contin-ued to discretely provide ser-vices until the U.S. SupremeCourt upheld Roe v. Wade in1973.In the decision, the court

ruled a state's interest in poten-tial life is not "compelling"until viability, the point inpregnancy at which there is areasonable possibility for thesustained survival of the fetusoutside the womb.The ruling made it unconsti-

tutional for states to pass legis-lation outlawing a woman'sright to choose whet!ter or notto become a parent.When licensed medical

practitioners began providingabortion services, Jane dwin-dled."Jane: An Abortion Service"

is the winner of the 1996 Best ofFestival Award at the AtlantaFilm &Video Festival, and win-ner of the 1996 Silver AppleAward from the NationalEducational MediaFoundation.Crump said the film typical-

ly shows once or twice amonth.It has also been a featured

screening at the Sundance FilmFestival, the 1995 UnitedNations Fourth WorldConference on Women inBeijing, China, and the HumanRights Watch InternationalFilm Festival in Calgary,Canada."I think this is the first time

it has been in Idaho," Crumpsaid.He said in Idaho's political

climate, this type of presenta-. tion is not actively soughtonthe college lecture circuit. ....Presentation of "Jane"'and

the following lecture is,eo·see JANE Pa98

On the streets of Chicago, amobile service known as Janebegan offering safe but illegalabortions and health educationbeginning in 1969.Co-producers Kate Kirtz

and Nell Lundy tell the story ofthe service's workers andclients in their film "Jane: AnAbortion Service," showing inthe BSU Special Events Centeron March 4.The presentation is a feature

event of the 2002 Women'sHistory Month celebration pro-moted by the BSU Women'sCenter."It's pretty impressive when

you think about how difficult itis for women to get an abortiontoday even though it's a law,"said Melissa Wintrow, BSUWomen's Center coordinator.A lecture by Kirtz will fol-

low the screening.Michael Crump, SPB lec-

tures coordinator said one ofthe directors speak at everyshowing of their film."They usually speak about

the content of the film andreproductive rights," he said.The film, produced in 1995,

is an hour-long oral historycontaining archival footage,personal documents and inter-views.Jane began as a referral ser-

vice for women seeking abor-tion providers and grew into amobile clinic in which trainedmembers performed abortions.The women dealt with

obtaining medical supplies andcounseling as well as arrangingplaces to give Pap smears andeducate women about sexuali-ty and their bodies.By 1970, the Service provid-

ed over 300 abortions a monthto women referred by friends,advertisements and membersof Chicago's clergy .and police

~.

"'.' r/·r,.'

, '.',,:

>

PholobyTed Harmon, The Ar1>Iler.

this Is the last week to browse .Mark Hardy's photQgraphy. His exhibit, "Secondary Attractions," In the Student Union Galleryruns until March 1.The malorlty Qf the Images were taken en tQurlst and family outings with cameras ranging from 30 to 50

years old ..

Donated modular buildingmoved, awaits remodel

remodeling a modular building to be used for Union and Activities, bookstore, food service,administrative office space. student housing, and the Health andThe approXimately 4,OOO-square-foot Wellness Center, will be among the first occu-

modular, donated by 51. Luke's Regional pants of the building.Medical Center last £all, will house over- Currently, department coworkers are scat-crowded and displaced university depart- tered in buildings throughout campus,ments. including offices in the Administration and''We have enough space requests to more Student Union buildings. .

than fill up the building," said Dean Gunderson said the department logged itsGunderson, facilities planner for Boise State's first request for needed space two years ago.Facilities Administration. "They're really dispersed," he said.The university Auxiliary Services depart- Larry Blake, executive director of Facilities

Boise State University administrators plan men!, the administrative body for the Student Administration, said space needs continueto spend an estimated $148,000relocating and throughout the university.,....:;...-. --------------------------... He said converting the modular,:::,:i;0~t";t,q is a low-cost solution to the prob-

lem.. r.·.'·:.··· IfWe1re going through budget

cuts, but that doesn't mean the uni-versity stands still," he said. "Asprograms grow, we have to pro-vide the space somewhere."Blake said the financing came

see MODULARpage 3

Suicide PreventionHotline andAuxiliary Services getnew home

By Erin WillisTIle Arbiter

Page 3: Arbiter, February 28

BSU sponsors free event forwomen in trade and technologycareers

career with help from anAAlTWscholarship from the organiza-tion's Boisechapter. .Contact either the Boise state

financial aid office or BoiseAAUW scholarship chair andBoise State nursing professorNancy Qtterness for an applica-tion. To request an application bymail, send a self addressed,stamped envelope to: AAUWBoise Branch Scholarship, 4650Seymour Drive, Boise,ID 83704.'The completed application

must be postnlarked by Aprill.

Branch of AAUW offers scholar-ship for female student

A $SOO scholarship is availablefor the 2002-03academic year to anIdaho woman who willbe a seniorat Boise State.'The Inez Robb Memorial

Scholarship will be awarded to aworthy applicant by the Boisechapter of the AmericanAssociation of University Women(AAUW).The scholarship is basedon a bequest from the late Robb, apioneer journalist who began her

.Congratulationsto:

Black StudentAlliance

the student organization for the month ofFebruary, 2002

sponsored by: S d U' & A ..,tu ent ruon ctlVltleSAlumni AssociationASBSU

Boise State's college of businessand economics reaccredited

The Selland CollegeofAppliedTechnology's Center for NewDirections will sponsor a freepanel disc:l.ls$i.onto share informa-tion about opportunities forwomen in trade and technologycareers. The eventwill be held onTuesday, March 19, from 9-11:30am, in the Hatch P Ballroom ofthe Student Union on the BoiseState campus.

Employers, career coun-selors, students and alumni oftechnical training programs willshare personal experiences,information about. training,career paths and workplaceexperiences. The Center forNewDirections invites the generalpublic to attend, including dis-placed homemakers, unem-ployed workers. employers, per-sonnel directors, agency repre-sentatives and caseworkers. 'Theevent is open to the public. Freeparking is available in the lot onthe east side of the StudentUnion.For more infonnation contact

Ranelle Nabring at 426-4026 [email protected].

h\NOrth~(387intheU.s;;--Events~-~O~ ~_~ 2002 ~te speakers and w~rk.seven in. Canada and two in toBoiseState students, fa~ty ana----shops-will-beprovided-JO-.high~--Mexiro~ eight in Europe, .three in staff; $3 for ~ admission. light modern trends and tech-Asia, one in Central America, one The poWerful one-hour docu- niques for protecting workers, thein fue Middle _East and two in mentary, co-produced by Kate public and the environment.South. America. To achieve the I<irtz and Nell Lundy, focuseS on Attendees from across the inter-accreditation, business programs the hisiory of a group of wo~en mountain region:rre ~.must satisfy the expectations of a who collaborated to proVide 'The sympoSium begins on,wide range of quality standards health care services. resulting in .Monday, April 15, and continuesrelating to curriculum, faculty 12,000 safe illegal abortions through nlursday, April 18, atresources, admissions, degree between 1969 and 19'73. "Jane:An Boise State's Student Unionrequirements, library and eomput- Abortion Service" speaks to the Building. Two to three hundreder facilities,financialresources and need for women to exchange participants are expected to attendintellectualclimate that all are mis- information, the importance of courses on occupational safety,sion-linked. developing our faith in political industrial hygiene, environmental"Attending an AACSB accred- activismand the power of creating law, and community safety and

ited program assures the student and disseminating radical histo- health issues. Representatives ofof an excellent academic curricula ries," said director, Kate I<irtz. over 50 safety,health and environ-tied to real-life business experi- Jane's founder, Heather Booth, mental supply distributors are alsoenoes," said Boise State President was a civil rights activist who saw expected in the vendor show por-Otarles Ruch. the right to abortion as an exten- tion of the symposium."Boise State Uriiversity is sion of the right to self-detennina- Keynote speakers for the sym-

proud to continue to receive this tionrather than as a feminist issue. posium include Governorrecognition." By 1968her effortshad resulted in Kempthorne'S representative andCollege of Business and a sophisti,?ted system ofwomen's Boise State president Charles

EconomicsDean BillLathen cred- outreach programs, eventually Ruch. This symposium is beingited both the faculty and eommu- servicing more than 300 women a held with Governornity for the college's success. "I month. In 1972, 10 months before Kempthorne's support andthank the faculty, staff, students, the passage of Roe v,Wade, seven . endorsement.alumni, business professionals key members of the group were "This symposium has beenand administration who did so arrested.' designed with the Safety andmuch to help us maintain this top In-depth interviews, archival Health professional in mind, asquality recognition, which we footage and personal documents well as providing an educationalhave held continually sinceW79," collectively capture tile reality of opportunity for interested com-he said. During the accreditation the Qlicago-based mobile clinic munity members and Boise Stateprocess, BoiseState was evaluated tIlat provided abortion services, students and faculty," saidby business school deans who are counseling and education for Michelle Steeler, a conferenceleaders in the fieldofmanagement thousands of women. planning committee co-chair.education, applying AACSB- 'The event is being sponsored "Smallbusiness owners and thoseInternational accreditation stan- by Boise State Student Programs individuals responsible for thedards that are widely accepted Board, Boise State Women's safety and health of individualsand adopted by the educational Center, American Civil Liberties who want to improve their perfor-and business communities. Union of Idaho and Planned mance in safety are welrome and

Parenthood of Idaho, For more encouraged to attend."information, please call 4264636. While attendees can register at

the door, pre-registration is avail-Idaho hosts symposium on safe. able by calling Janelle Bogan atty, health and the environment 463-1343 or by email at mjbo-

[email protected]. Messages orrequests for infonnation can alsobe left at 396-2300. A fee of $150rovers all four days of the confer-ence.

Boise State's College ofBusiness and Economics' under-graduate and graduate businessadministration programs havebeen reaccredited by theAssociation to AdvanceCollegiate Schools of Business.AACSB-International is the pre-mier agency for business schoolaccreditation.Only 32 percent of the busi-

ness programs in tile UnitedStateshave obtained tills accred-itation.

As ofIan, 2002, there were411 accredited members - 3%

Documentary focuses on repro-ductive. rights and women'shealth

As part of Women's HistoryMonth, Boise State UniversityStudent Programs Board will pre-sent the short documentary 'lane:AnAbortion Service,"followedbya lecture. 'The film begins at 7 pm.Monday, March 4 at the Special

'The 2002 Idaho Governor'sSafety and Health Conference andBoise State's Safety AwarenessDay have combined to provide theIdaho Joint Safety Symposium2002 at Boise State April 15-18,

lIckets avalIabIe at al ~ andSeIed .. seat outlets, Includlng MbWons Of phone

1-800.965-4827, 1·866-46&7624, 426-1494 ~442·3232-.. and online atm.llcketweb.com.

Page 4: Arbiter, February 28

�February 28, 2002

MODULARfrompegel

of the modular."It was mndt too small." he

said. '1t was also in pretty roughcondition,"The completed remodel of the

modular will provide approxi-mately 20 new workstations andoffices, including spare for crisisworkers of the Idaho SuicidePrevention and Hotline Service,directed by BSU rommunicationprofessor Peter Wolllieim.

Janis M<.Curry, assistant to theexecutive director of AuxiliaryServices, said she eagerly antici-pates the department's expectedspring move."We can't wait to get all inone

unit," she said. "It will certainlymake things a lot more effective.

p~y from salary savings, early Febroary to its current loea-whidl are the savings generated tion southeast of campus onfroI!' ..vacant staff ana faculty Grant Street, displacing approxi-positions. mately 25 parking spaces in aHe also said using the donat- nearby unimproved Parking lot

ed building was substantially Thosespaces willbe offSet bycheaper than purchasing a new the addition of an equa1-sizedunit general pennit parking lot locat-St Luke's used the unit for ed one block west on Euclid

overflow during the remodel of Avenue.its downtown campus. In late January, workersDave COOper, manager of demolished a rundown universi-

BSU's Architecture and ty-owned dwelling at the site of• _Engineering Services said before the new lot.\ it could be made available to "It was a structure that was; Boise State programs, the modu- unoccupied for the last few years; lar had to wait for zoning activi- and was becoming a liability,"{ ties. said Cooper.\ It rested on a Myrtle Street lot Cooper said the house, for-: ownedbyWincofortwomonths .. merlyusedbytheCollege of; while the zoning was approved. Applied Tedii:l.ology,- ·was .not\ The modular was moved in suitable for office spare in place,; JANE~ from page 1i: sponsored by Planned:' Parenthood of Idaho and the.. American Civil Liberties Unionof Idaho.Both groups will host infer-

rnation tables before and afterthe presentation.

Free parking is available inthe Student Union Building vis-itor lot.For more information call

the BSU Student ProgramsBoard at 426-1223.

Admission for the event isfree to Boise State students, fac-ulty, and staff. General admis-sion is $3 at the door ..Crump said he hopes to

have 150 people attend theevent.

State Volunteer ServicesBoard. Free. Call 426-4240.

MARCH 2-3Music Department Opera,

Mozart's "Abduction Promthe Seraglio" (sung inEnglish) ..Special Events Center. 7:30

. p.m. March 2, 3 p.m. March 3.Presented by Boise Statemusic and theatre arts depart-ments. Tickets: $5 for generaL$3 for seniors' and free to allstudents and Boise State facul-ty and staff at Select-a-Seat,426-1110 or www.idahotick-ets.com.

"Alice in Wonderland"and "Silk and Steel," •Morrison Center Main Hall. 2p.m. and 8 p.m.Presented by Ballet Idaho.

Tickets at Select-a-Seat, 426-1766, orwww.idahotickets.com.

Jazz Saturday with DeidreRodman, Morrison CenterRecital Hall. 1-3 p.m. EveningConcert 7:30p.m. Free.Presented by Boise State-music department. Call 426-3980.

MARCH 1-2"Dialogues of the

Carmelites," Special EventsCenter. Time: 7:30 p.m.Presented by Boise State the-atre arts department. Tickets: '$3-$5. Call 426-3980. CAN-CELLED

MARCH 1Leadership Quest, Student

Union and Activities ..Workshops for nominatedstudent leaders.Presented by Student

Union and Activities. Free.Call 426-1223. Graduate student recital,

Janet Polster, organ,Hemingway Center. 7:30 p.m.Presented by Boise Statemusic department. Free. Call426-3980. CANCELED

Bronco wrestling, PAC 10championships, Corvallis;are. TENTATIVE.MARCH 4"All That Jazz," Chuck

Smith, Esther SimplotPerforming Arts Academy,516 S. 9th St. 6:30- 8:30 p.m.Renaissance Institute seminarseries. $40 for four-sessionseries plus membership fee.Call426-1709.

I.)\

1.1I

1

IIt,III\II,I~.

Sawtooth Film Festival,Special Events Center. 7:30p.m. Presented by Boise StateOutdoor Center. Tickets: $5 atthe door. Doors open at 7 p.m.Call 426-1946 for information. Bronco men's basketball

vs, Southern Methodist, ThePavilion. 7:30 p.m. Call 426-4737.

-MARCH 3-4

MARCH 1-22Art . Department [urled

Student Exhibition, Gallery 1,Liberal Arts Building. Open10 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays and12-5 p.m Sat. Opening recep-tion 6:30-8:30 March 1. Call426-3994.

MARCH 2

Bronco women's basket-ball at Hawaii.

Beautify Boise's Foothills,meet at Student Union GipsonRoom. Presented by Boise

•'"".~~:l'_s-;....o.k.,'

".-" ..'.e',"•co ,~·-;'..i'•·•n:·"·.n ,It','

"·.•"1\ •

•..r.·...u ..."'t· .·~r.··.Lt

""p'., 'if.~."I.,r.-,,'" -,,;rr ~," .I.:r'~.;O.n'It. ...:

OPEN 24 HOURS

~--------------------------.r 2 FREE TACOS ~~ With the purchase of any Value Meal II From 11 pm and 4 am . II Present coupon before ordering. Limit one per customer. Not to be used With II other coupons or offers. Good only at 1121 Broadway Ave, Boise. E.plres 12/02. I~--------------------------~.......

'A.ii.',~... .-./"'~-:.,.:

STUDENTS! REMINDER!

ASBSU (426~1440)

Provides FREEATTORNEYCONSULTATIONSwith a local private lawyer for most legal'problems you may have, including divorce,landlord problems,child custody and childsupport, collection and debt problems,

DUI/criminal, and insurance!injury questions.

TAKEADVANTAGEI

The Arbiter • Pagtf3.. . /"'

Dietdrug use up atAubum U.as spring break approaches .Dy KrIsten DglleyThe Auburn Plainsman(Auburn U.) .

(U-WIRE) AUBURN, Ala._With only one month untilspring break, sales of dietpills, an attractive solutionto dropping excess pounds,are picking up."There is an increase in

sales around spring break,"said Jason Bates, a salesper-son at GNC near AuburnUniversity. _"We ..seILabout10 to 15 bottles a day. On aheavy day., that could actu-ally double or triple."Xenadrine and

Hydroxycut are two of thebest-selling diet drugs onthe market. These productsare herbal and come with amoney-back guarantee.Xenadrine claims to be clin-ically proven to increase fatloss 38.6 times more thanexercise and diet alone.These pills can be taken

up to three times a day.They curb appetite andincrease energy. Xenadrinecontains ephedrine, a com-ponent of adrenaline."Hydroxycut and

Xenadrine are our best-sell-ers," Bates said. "Theresults vary from person toperson. They work with anexercise program and aredefinitely not miracle pills."Another popular option

is the Hollywood 48 HourMiracle Diet. This is a liquiddiet that claims to rid the

Another problem associ-ated with diet pills is theeffects of alcohol mixedwith the pills. Consumingalcohol while taking thepills can increase the risk ofdehydration.Many people think there

are no risks associated wit~certain over-the-counterand herbal diet pills.However, herbal drugscome from many of thesame sources as otherdrugs, Jones said."This- .__ increases __ the

chance of over consump-tion," Jones said. "Manypeople think that if one isgood, two will be even bet-ter. This is definitely not thecase.""These pills have been

available in other countriesfor years," Moates said. "Aproblem in the UnitedStates, though, is that manypeople are abusing them.""Be sure to check with

your physician before tak-ing any weight-loss drugs,"Jones said. "This way youwill make sure that you areable to take them."For students looking to

shape up before springbreak, the best option iscombining a healthy dietwith exercise.

body of toxins while caus-ing a 10-pound weight lossin two days.The diet lequires drink-

ing a bottle of liquid for twodays, while eating no food.The ad for the prodUctclaims that it is a "miraclejuice.""This diet would be basi-

cally the same as drinkingwater," Bates said. "As soonas you start eating again,you will put the weightback on.".. AHhoughmany diet pillsguarantee weight loss in ashort period of time, manyhealth risks are often associ-ated with them."The warnings are on the

label," said William Moates,a salesperson at NutritionFirst. "I will always tell peo-ple, but nobody makesyou." •"College students are at

an extra risk," said ReginaldJones, an Auburn pharmacygraduate. "Sometimes theydon't realize that medica-tions such as anti-depres-sants and cold medicine canreact to the diet pills."Diet pills should not be

taken by people with highblood pressure, heart prob-lems or thyroid disease."Drugs like Xenadrine

make your heart race andincrease blood pressure,"Jones said. "Many youngerpeople do not even knowthat they have heart prob-lems."

--------~----.--.+-III.J..II;~,r? rD- +...AIR NATIONAL GUARD

Up to $3,000.00 Per Semester forFull-TimeStudents III* Montgomery GI Bill * Montgomery GI Bill Kicker

* State Tuition Assistancp * Cash Bonuses* Student Loan Repayment Program

for More infonnatlon contact:TSgt Rod Elson422-5597 or (800) 621-3909

Page 5: Arbiter, February 28

....Block history month ends, problems continue-_ .. -._----------~~._------ _ ...

Anti-Tobacco campaign is insensitive and misguided

I

I\

Today is officially the end of Black tion of past errors on the part of ourHistory Month. Unofficially, black his- "corrections" system. But these blatanttory marches on, right through March acts of racism aren't the most danger-and April and beyond. ous feature of the new landscape. FarReal black history is a powerful trib- more insidious are the quieter forms of

ute to the collective will and struggle of racism, expressed in angry diatribesa people despite years of past-and against affirmative action and slaverypresent-oppression. Black History the reparations. For in these angry pro-Month, is a pithy ,-- --. nouncements we ascertain the costattempt to make-up for0 of sanitized history-that is, contin-the past, to liberate . ued injustice, and subtler, deeperthrough acknowledg- . racism.ment decades of histori- .'.~....I.. . -_ The greatest danger of our tokencal exclusion. _ _., ..'tP Black History Month lies in its de-The activities high- politicization of the powerful and

lighting the month ring moving voices of those we claim towith a hollow celebrato- celebrate. The people who actuallyry tone. An elegy is . ~~eated black historymore fitting. For in the don't fit into our con-process of attempting to gratulatory schedule,recognize the excluded, so we erase them. Inwe have also sanitized so doing, we lose thethem. We have trans- important, . largerformed their history 0 message that thoseforced slavery, segregation, and violent individuals risked their lives proclaim-abuse at the hands of white people and ing.white police, as well as their brave Our new convoluted history givesstruggle against that oppression, into a birth to a perverse morality, one thatsingle charming phrase, not even the rejects responsibility for the past.whole speech, simply "1 have a dream." Randall Robinson calls this new atti-Some of us go farther, criticizing in tude - "contemporaneousness."

angry letters to the editor the recogni- Essentially, it claims "If the wrong did

Ever seen the commercial depicting their no-nonsense, edgy approach tothe "Demon Awards" ceremony in hell tobacco use prevention. Some findwith a tobacco executive accepting an these statistics hard to swallow, includ-award for "Most Deaths in a Year" ing myself.with Adolf Hitler, Stalin, and other late Not only is it difficult to measuremembers of notorious reputations? tobacco use among an age group asOr the one showing "Frances the skewed as 13-19-year-olds, but groups

Lonely Lab Monkey" ,-- ~ ..., who come up with theseforced to smoke cigarettes number never divulgewhile tobacco researchers into how they got theirsnickered? Or one of the numbers-not to mentionmany chiding ads alleg- the fact that their researching the use of odd sub- _, is biased. What perturbsstances such as urea in me is why anti-tobaccocigarette tobacco? There canlpaigns focus so muchisn't a day that goes by on teenagers.that I don't see some Health advocatesannoying anti-tobacco ad ave argued thaton television or else- ~,. The .."; . .... -~: .: tel1ing kidswhere. (Banana: ....," they're too youngMil\ions of dollars, f IlYt~~;;<Republic';iI).k to smoke, without

money which comes frorr "h"":f~'\J!o,~"",~",;,'~i'!l'''''; explaining Why'the millions in big tobaco idults shouldn tsettlements, are being alk- ""Ioke onlycated to gross out certain age groups enhances the general appeal of ciga-from smoking-not to mention the fact rettes and other tobacco products.that they aim to scare the hel1 out of There are no ads from anti-tobaccochildren in order to discourage them campaigns which try to persuade col-from getting hooked. lege students' and those older to stopExperts were astonished to find the smoking-the ones that do exist are

number of teens who start smoking advertisements for gum or other meth-had plummeted by one-third from ods for the cessation of smoking.1997 to 1999 after a 35 percent increase How effective these campaigns are,from 1991 to 1997. Several anti-tobacco no one really knows. If a commercialcampaigns believed the reason to be does have the power to make a high

not just occur, then it did not occur in away that would render the livingresponsible." Robinson argues againstthis distorted assertion stating, "whenliving blacks suffer real and currentconsequences as a result of wrongscommittedby a youngerAm~~ca"thencontemporary America must shoUlderresponsibility for those wrongs untilsuch wrongs have been adequatelyrighted. The life and responsibilities of anation are not limited to the life spans ofits mortal constituents. Federal andstate governments were active partici-pants not only in slavery but also in theexclusion and dehumanization ofblacks that continued legally up untilthe passage of key civil rights legisla-tion in the sixties.'Such admonitions are entirely for-

eign in the party-like atmosphere oftoday's Black History celebrations.TIle most prominent casualty of this

gloss-over approach to black history isDr. Martin Luther King Jr. himself. Atrue revolutionary, Dr. King has beenreduced to a palatable sound bite for aself-righteous America. His steadfastcommitment to non-violence, includinghis statement that his own government"was the greatest purveyor of violencein the world today"; his powerful use of

school student think twice about smok-ing-how long does that impressionlast? Does a television commercial,something that we all hate, really havethe ability to alter teenage cognition?Can it reinforce a child to not smoke

even when they are subjugated by bla-tant peer pressure? Furthermore, itseems that such campaigns are meantto attack big tobacco executives withthe futile notion of putting them out ofbusiness. _Corky Newton of Brown &

Williamson stated, "If [our adversarleslwere really concentrating on youthsmoking, and not trying to put tobaccocompanies out of business, we mightbe able to get at the real issues, like self-esteem, risk-taking; and parentalinvolvement."West Virginia's Attorney General

Darrell Me Graw said, "A lot of thoseprograms impress me as being naive.and ineffective." Senator Bill Ratliffstated, "We don't know for sure thatkids can be convinced."Even the Center for Disease Control

(CDC) says states must do more thanhire glitzy advertising agencies. Notonly are such advertisements question-ably effective but they are blatantlyoffensive to many people. Manythought that the "Demon Awards"commercial trivialized the holocaustand nonprofit child guidance groups

Marriage and parenthoodgiven bad rap in the Arbiter

mayeven work with rival room-

mates, too):1- Hold some type of "Family

Home Evening" (PS. "morning" isfine, too) once a week. Spend some'quality time' together (that meansno TV, no last-minute cramming, nophone calls, just your family).

2- Have a set-in-stone "DateNight" where you remember WHYyou got married, because youLOVE each other. This will helpyou to get away from the dishes andthe homework for a while (oh yah,depending on your situation, thismay NOT be a good idea for room-mates :)

3- Take your relationship to anew level by attending a weeklychurch service. The Church of JesusChrist has issued a "Proclamation tothe World" which states that mar-riage is ordained of God. It is impor-tant to have a strong spiritual base,the wider the base, the higher you'llgo.The Institute building on the cor-

ner ofJuanita/University is home toa marrieds-only congregation thatmeets Sunday mornings at 9 a.m. 1recommend it.Brother Hayes ("1 propose a

moratorium on breeding," by SeanG. Hayes) (considering your article,

By Sam Hm:n:uu:Spcdal to tiu: Arbiter1just love that the Arbiter staff is

so OPTIMISTIC (didn't catch it?That's called "sarcasm").Brother Newbold (aren't we all

related to Adam? or at least Noah,unless your ancestors were GREATswimmers), thank you for yourthoughts on marriage and family("Statistics defy myth of maritalbliss," by Taylor Newbold). It isalways good to see both sides ofeverything - after all, the Arbiter isfamous for that.You mentioned that marrying at

age 19 was the most stupid thingthat anyone could ever do. Well, mybest friend got hitched at age 19 andhas the strongest marriage that I'veever seen! She's a wonderful wifeand really keeps her house a 'home,'I'm w glad that 1married her.Marriage is GREAT! By the looks

of our non-traditional campus, I'mobviously not the only one whoagrees. Taylor is right, MOST mar-riages fail, but so do most Olympichopefuls, most putts, and mostattempts to get ASBSU to worktogether with administration.My point is that there ARE ways

to have a successful marriage. Hereare some suggestions (some of these

Editorial BoardBrandon Fialao~3«5-82lK x 105

. '; ... '

).;:,:~;;"!:/.~_',;.:;._).:."_ ..' .; 'co '" .' . .-,.>:'''''' ·i.;c,,',,:l\:,7,,"":: .

you should be glad that your ances-tors didn't have the same attitudeabout bearing children!), our littlebaby, Daisy was born just sevenweeks ago.If you could feel the joy and

peace that comes from your ownbaby girl, you would change yourmind about having children. 1can'twait for the day that she can say'daddy.' The fact is, parenting getsa bad rap. There aren't as many dia-pers as some unhappy parentsclaim and you get plenty of sleep(we've got singles living upstairsand we KNOW that they're up waymore than we are).1even get better grades now that

I'm a dad, maybe it's the responsi-bility of knowing that everythingthis child will learn will come frommy example - excuse me, OURexample.Sara and 1 are working hard at

keeping our marriage strong, andwe're going to do our best to raiselittle Daisy to be the most wonder-ful young lady in Boise.Taylor, I'd like you to send me an

invitation when you meet thatincredible girl, and who knows,Sean, maybe our daughters willgrow up to be best friends someday.

Febrwuy 28.2o()~

::'1.~:%:I~~I;ft~.:.~",";.::";~ti~toz~t~~":f.~iare rendered mute in today's de-politi- History Month is an example of such :cized version of Black History. revision. Conversely, affirmative ~In his 1967 book Where Do We Go action, reparations, and other similar:

From Here: Chaos or Community? Dr. policies represent a real step in aban- ;King wrote, "A society that has done doning our mischaracteriza

tionof:

something special against the Negro for Black History, and choosing instead to ,hundreds of years must now do some- embrace reality, boldly transforming it :thing special for him, to equip him to in the process. Our decisions on these !

compete on a just and equal basis." He policies also reflect our collective com- :also expressed his support for billions mitment to justice. Will we move,of dollars in direct aid to black America beyond mouthing the words "1 have a :in a 1965 interview stating, "For two dream" and act to fulfill it? 'centuries the Negro was enslaved and Or, will we continue to say to Black :robbed of any wages: potential accrued Americans "get over it"; arrogantly,wealth which would have been the suggesting that the only thing keeping:legacy of his descendants. All of them from middle-class utopia is a lack ,America's wealth could not adequately of ?:rsonal fortitude and/ or character;compensate its Negroes for his cen- on their part? Material steps towards,turies of exploitation and humiliation." equality are not acts of charity-they're :Matching these words with deeds, justly owed dues. While it's true that,

Dr. King co-led "Operation these actions aren't a panacea, they are:Breadbasket," a movement that threat- a damn good litmus test of our commit- ,ened to boycott private employers who ment to Dr. King's "dream." History, :didn't hire blacks in approximate pro- black and white, is comprised of heroic I

portion to their presence in the larger action and cowardly inaction-it's up'community. All of these things repre- to us which route we'll choose. :sent what Dr. King had in mind forachieving his "dream"; yet all of themare notably absent from America's san-itized MLK legacy.

affirmed that' a commercial depictingteen smokers in "Loserville" mightcause loss of self-esteem.According to doctors at the Hopital

Pitie-Salpetriere in Paris, a past historyof major depression is more frequent infemale smokers. It was also found thatsmokers with a past history of depres-sion may have more intense withdraw-al s)'I!1ptoms at some time after cessa-tion thus making it all the more diffi-cult to quit smoking for good. An arti-cle published by several graduate stu-dents and faculty at the Universities ofCalifornia, San Francisco and Hawaiistudied the correlation betweendepression and stages of change forsmoking cessation.One example they gave was a ran-

dom U.S. sample of young adults, peo-'pie with nicotine dependence andhigher rates of major depressive disor-der (MOD) and anxiety disorders.Among heavy smokers, dysphoricmood and a history of MOD were pos-itively correlated with returning tosmoking after a quit attempt.According to Prochaska andDiClemente in their article in theJournal of Consulting and ClinicalPsychology, there are five stages ofchange which lead the way towardsmoking cessation. 1)Precontemplation-a person has noimmediate plan to stop smoking. 2)

Contemplation-a person is thinkingabout quitting in the next 6 months. 3);Preparation-a person is consideringto stop smoking in the next month and:has made at least one quit attempt inthe past year. 4) Action-a person ha~quit smoking for under their six:months and 5) Maintenanee-a person:has quit for at least six months. 'Given al1 the evidence [Ointing

toward the ineffectiveness an skewedgoal of anti-tobacco, they continue to.poke fun at big tobacco and attempt toscare smokers into quitting. Just how'does telling a smoker that he/she isstupid and will die and/ or suffer horri-bly supposed to lift them up and con-vince them to start the process of srnok-ing cessation? 'Anti-tobacco focuses too much on:

prevention when they should focus 00those already addicted. They shoulduse all that dough they get from settle-ments to pay for hotlines and clinlcalcounseling services all over the coun-try. They should be pouring funds intotechnology to find better ways to curvenicotine cravings. They need to bemore compassionate and smart abouteducating people about tobacco insteadof mocking those who are hopelesslyaddicted and attempting to preventwhat sometimes seems to be theinevitable result of many humanbehaviors.

rlIt,\

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Awards·o First placeEditorial- Idaho Press Oubo First placeWatchdog/Investigative -IdahoPresaOubo F11'Bt PlaceGraphicDesign - Idaho Press Oubo.Best design full color display advmlslng (2years nmning)· College Newspaper Businessand Advertising Managers, Inc.o Best design promotional campaign_College Newspaper Business andAdvertising Managers, Inc.o Best ad campaign - RockyMountainCoIleglate Media Aseodation

o Best ~Y - RockyMountainCoIleglate MedIa AssociatiOn

lUdwd CortabitarteDarrin Shindle oBum- MaI>IF• Spar1J Editor 3«5-82lK x U73l5-82llt x 103

Stephanie PittamoPt<iDollOn DIroctor3«5-82lK

Ad RepsJessica Harms~x333

Ian Roth3&8204 x 331

Ad DesignMelissa BinghamJoseph ThckerAaron Williams345-8204 x 111

J.Patrick KellyoDlvmlcn1ldll>:lr3G82Olx104

Brad Arendt.oGenerll ManaAer3G82Olx1Df

Repor1ers ColumnistsAndy Benson Taylor NewboldAmy Wegner Jerel ThomasErin Willis Nate WilliamsSteve GowansMary Mararget Rice Phot09rGphersM k

Ritz Jeremy Branstadar Dan Wolf

Off1ceManager Keny DayMelissa L.Uanes ..BIOwn}ee

Bannister Brownleeo=x'~'Il!cI HarmonoHloto EdIlot'~x301

Dr. Dan MorrisoAMla!rN5-82DlxtO'l

i _'';'.

Page 6: Arbiter, February 28

·_Fe_bru--.. =ary""-=-28:::..-=-2.::.:00::::.:2:..-...,;.- __ ------------·-Op.:JJin!.!.!i~o~n'------------------......::;.:::..:.=.:::=~~~

~, ~¥.:~>~:.,t·ten··~,··.·.~'IdahO·.~·:...m· ..: •. ·•···.•..~ ..·.:.'- .. ·.~.'=.··...·,.·':....~.IeI..·.."'..'.....·.iIt... .'.',.' .'._..-Jerel because.the ~:lidcS.cP'>-"';;":<:i··~ _va;

ProfesBotBrlgbt,Jerel ThOlNSis good ~. and ~~:/:,;.'r~'~ toiead ~'1anasshole-.By conlinuingto. plJbli'l1;lJetef!J'-thereitr~'. . ".' ' .. _'. ..'- tin'ile>to. ,..il1'latd\i:tDe ..,'t~' .•·.;';J""-.."myponlifi<>- .:;:e~:~c~...r=~J:\t=~~~;.·.,.~~.~li1Ix,I~; ..

tionofhisasa "debate" srnells like Arbiter shares ~ty iri Nate \\IilUamSwas entild.y incor- .~, Sun. Feb•.24,~. ~~.Local. ~ ~.'.S.~."._, ,.." .'.., ' ~.self~tulatioritome. . this deplorable situation, On the red In 8ilymg-thatthe~ gap To darify someWormation In sectiOl\.)attheproposed$50cut.ing~·;c <, ~, •l""" column ~ a c,Isgrace to bright .... Ibm< thOt .... _ <wmm""'BlS ........ "- ~ tho"""'" 200.1_ . '\1>oI',Sll» ..... .....m..... . Now t.ooJn1l%r, .*"'!!""i'

... ""''''''''Y, aa it defies Iogk, wDIbe.buII-_-' 7.......... tho doIItt>fl8w" "JFAC - ,...,... od>oIoi- _(0<-- ~ """"'"""ii!'!.good ~ academic rigor, yourIQreadles50,myadviadsto "tefe!;$ to men'.8andw~8 shipby$SO:" MeanwhilehereatBoiseState- .: '., ...... '~j;,~and _ -..-....... sell, . ~ "" ......... job. __ are _..-.... Md>""....n-.""'... ~ . """"""" il<'l¥ . . ..~,~=~r:: lL<""'" ~w:.~ ~~~ :::.=..~ ""'===~~""'" "" """"""'" ., AIrl.... ...._ ....... """".1bio~ GPA Idoho _........... - hundred P""""'" jOuiMI. tho _.""" ..._""",10 who were Idd- WbaI .... - ..... .,... """"""'" ..,..,..... n.. ..... ....-., 001- Md>"".....m. N _jol> .. ·~-"'PpOO ond )nought ., tho Md>"'.!"""""'Y' ~ """"""Y"OolhlDg..... <1wleo Rmh ~ .......... oay- . -~- '" ~"""'!1~_ _ tho """"'"' of .'""-,, B' ~ "'.my 1doho .... .,thoJFAC""""""'- .tho_~~c- ,,,, ~"""" ,-..-,_ ."'. WlIHamo <""""" politi- """'" ..., tho........ hA""",- ..... Md>• '2lY "" "I""', ...... hmkof """"" ty CJl.(). om ... - """"" ..""" """' ........ "'" P'" ..... "''''''' .. ''''''''''''...,....,. _of -' .... ..., ""_,,,C.T. thaI ... t<re Y"'" huril< of Idaho ond" _"".tho.bmlnod '"""'" who ""P'ohome by N'" W>lliamo) • You ....... """"'" mythlng more than ""'Tha!" pretty Tha!" mnooy .• <_,.7S<I1. P: I) Cal<gO<y

8- """"" ~

upon """Y """"" of ihlo rom- tha' an ~ ... """"""" ..m" ~_.... U82e1lglb1e IaIIJreoh. Hed ..... un ..... - _....,..,...hoof'lI..., ..munily wiih m. '"'" """"'"" of "'" thaI an """"""'" pro- _, "" whou .... "'"' .... ....- w. an ....".,..l... b"'" 05· l"..............."""""..JUn CroM>m. .. well .. m. lifea- whou pro- ..... daIa un ~..... 'Ca.....,. B' PROMISE ....... "" ...... "'OI"go. SuuthomIdahu.".hamoful..",;aiofwhi ..... "..... ...... kwe right.,.......... wad<, 1l3.2"" SCHQLAllSHIP "" , _ Hey.howmme Rmh

..... 8) "' .......... A\bUdOUnbllity "" ... gouocide of Nalh>e ""...,..." "'" ... _., ... $1 • man """'" Pot ... 24 ., o>d> ........ _.. ",;,n'" bad aR01 """"" ofldoho," .""""""",' . ... tlw",.,,"''''' .... ~ ....... "..... wag< gap .. full"'" Idoho. Tho Idaho LogIoIature "- CSImatd<d............. q"'.Bowro .. Idoho .....Dr. Baker's taxpayer- subsi- important in a given situation? 1 work. it does'yarr rather signifi- appropriated $250 per qualifying Ouillenge. University, or .

,,",,,,, romp"'" """"" "" "" dare Y'" ., be'"P""'" haW>g ....,. by ..-... """"""'" -...."" o>d> _. n"" How.,... ... Rmh """""'" Contino<> tho ..... "ENRONthan Jerel's student-subsidized to make these decisions and not and state, though it is true that a to continue for both semesters of isn't. quite so bad· in Caldwell, EXCUSES.fonun where he can heap unwar- gain some scrutiny nomatter what wage gap does. exist nonetheless your' sophomore year - if your where fonner BSU Businessranted abuse upon members of the you do. at'd it's obviously an issue that grade~taveragewaskeptup. College professor, Dr. KevinBSUcommunity who are far more Your argument is base and people should have some concem Eadl Idaho college or university Leamed saw to it that all incoming.erudite than he (erudite is under lacks any logic.What does the pro- about. was supposed to match the 'cha1., ...----------------------''E' in the dictionary, in case you life movement haVe to do with However, people should stop lenge.'need to look it up). economic choices? Shouldn't making so many IIS5Wllptions and . Under the leadership of the, Having corebeliefs fromwhich politicians put their claims with regards to the wage Boise StateCE.O., it didn'the does not waver, Jerel denies religious/moralistic beliefs aside gap statistic that are uninformed, Have our freshmen been,himself the opportunity for true when making economic/ policy or taken out of perspective or con- "ROOKEDf'leamiIl& and by doing so cheap- decisions?Or should all politicians text. The statistic by itself doesn't At the College of Southernens the benefit of education for blend the two by discussing explain a whole lot of anything. Idaho in Twin Falls, each IdahoeVeIY0neat BSU.His reference to important policies that affect peo- For a complete set of lnfonnation freshman received $250 plus a,the ''hammer and sickle" is simply pie's lives while receiving a blow on· this subject, the Bureau of match from the college for anoth-ridiculous McCarthyist red-bait- job underneath their desks? Labor Statistics web site is veIY er $250.

GlennMUesBSUalumnus

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Page 7: Arbiter, February 28

Bronco Hoops close out regular seasonBroncos look to avengelast year's loss at Louisiana

FebruWV 28. 2002

Bronco ",omen stay onroad for final ",,0 games

After the WinterOlympics, winnersvie .for cash

By Phil DalleyThe Arbiter

After winning two games in arow, Boise State (11-15, 5-11)men's basketball team will try tofinish the regular season on aroll. Tonight the Broncos take onLouisiana Tech (18-8, 12-4) at thePavilion and look to avenge oneof the worst loses in school histo-ry. Back on Dec. 30 the Broncostraveled to Ruston, La. only to besent home with the worst offen-sive performances in school his-tory. La Tech held the Broncos torecord low 36 points.La Tech comes to Boise as the

third place team in the WesternAthletic Conference. Averaging72.1 points a game the Bulldogsare led by last week's WAC play-er of the week, GerrodHenderson. Henderson is fifth inWAC in scoring at 16.5 points agame. La Tech has won six of itslast seven games and will try tomake a season sweep of BSU.- The home stand for theBroncos doesn't get any easier asSouthern Methodist (14-12, 9-7)pays a visit on Saturday. TheMustangs beat the Broncos inDallas back on Dec. 28 by a scoreof 80-67. SMU is ranked third inthe WAC averaging 73.4 points agame. The Mustangs are led bytwo of the league leaders in scor-ing; Damon Hancock ranks sec-ond in the league with 21.7points a game while QuintonRoss is fourth at 17.4. PatrickSimpson who is fourth in theWAC in rebounds with 7.1 agame will also help out theMustangs.With the final two games of

the regular season at thePavilion, the Broncos shouldhave an advantage. Boise Statehas been led all year long by Abe

The Boise State women's bas-ketball team will look to keeptheir winning streak alive on theroad this weekend when it travelsto San Jose State and Hawaii toend their regular season.The Broncos have a shot to

move up into sixth place in the

ArbllorftlopholobyTedHannon or op 00

BSU'sBooker Nabors outruns the Vandals during tnelr match-up BSU'sCamille Woodfield looks for an opening.

this season. By parrl" ShindleTI,e Arbiter

WAC with two wins and twoNevada losses over the weekend.Just two weeks ago the

Broncos were looking at havingto play in the first round of thetournament to sec who gets toplay Louisiana Tech in the secondround, but with their first three-game winning streak of the sea-son the Broncos are looking at apossible bye. In order to have a

Saturday against SMU.Boise State needs all the help

they can get heading into theWAC tournament next week inTulsa. Witming a couple moregames and entering the WACtournament with a winningstreak could help the Broncostremendously.

Jackson who not only leads theleague in three pointers with 83,but also is third in the WAC inscoring with 19 points a game.Boise State is also led by BookerNabers and Bryan Defares eachadding ten points a night. TheBroncos need an all around teameffort to continue success tonightagainst La Tech and again on

By Rlchgrd AimTIle Dallas Mamillg News

DALLAS - Salt Lake Cityextinguished its Olympic flameSunday, so it's time to move on tothe next phase of athletic glory -figuring out which athletes willcash in,Most eyes focus first on the 16-

year-old girl who jumped into thespotlight by beating out MichelleKwan and other more heraldedrivals for the gold medal inwomen's figure skating.In the snowboarding halfpipe

competition, American KellyOark won the women's gold andRoss Powers led a men's medalsweep for the United States."They have a marketability for

companies that are trying to tar-get a specific age group," saidRobert Tuchman, president ofNew York-based TSE Sports andEntertainment, a marketing com-pany.Others likely to turn Olympics

gold into cash include speedskaters Japanese-AmericanApolo Anton Ohno and Mexican-American Derek Parra, both win-ners of gold and silver medals.And there's men's skeleton goldmedallist Jim Shea [r,a third-gen-eration Olympian.Out-of-nowhere winners, like

Hughes, were U.s. women's bob-sledders Jill Bakken and VonettaFlowers, the latter the first person

shot at the bye the Broncos willhave to avenge two losses earlierin the season to San Jose State andHawaii.Tonight the Broncos will fare

San Jose State (15-10, 1~), whocomes into the game with theBroncos on their own winningstreak at four games. The last timethe two teams met at the Pavilionthe Broncos lost a hear-breaker inovertime 85-74. Crista petersonled the Broncos with 24 pointswhile Atari Parker led theSpartans with 26.The Spartans are second in the

WAC in scoring offense at 67.6points per game. They are led byCricket Williams who is the lead-ing scorer in the WAC at 18.1points per game and Elea A'Gizaat 13.2 points per game.On Saturday the Broncos head

to Hawaii to take on the thirdplace team in the WAC. NatasjaAllen and Janka Gabrielova, whoare averaging 11.2 and 10.6pointsper game respeC!!vely, leadHawaii (19-6, 12-4).The RainbowWalline are currently third in theWAC in scoring offense at 65.4points per game and second inscoring defense at 57.8 points pergame.In the last meeting between

the two teams Hawaii beat theBroncos 61-48. Peterson again ledthe Broncos in scoring with 24points but it wasn't enough.The Broncos are led by

Peterson who is averaging 13.6points per game but is just com-ing back from a knee injury andher minutes are limited. MandyWelch is second on the team with10.1 points ~r game while AbbyVaughan is third at 7.8.After the game at Hawaii the

Broncos will be £lying straight toTulsa for the WAC tournamentthat starts on March 5th and goesto March 9th.

of African descent to win a goldmedal in the Winter Olympics.The Olympians received a

blizzard of exposure as NBC esti-mated that 180 million uniqueviewers tuned in. They will alsobenefit from a patriotic mood in anation recovering from the Sept.11 terrorist attacks.Outside of figure skating and

maybe a few breakthrough stars; -most athletes will earn less than:$100,000 from a winter Games-gold medal, they say. :"There are not going to be.

many massive endorsement:deals," said Merrill Squires, pres-:ident of Dallas-based SquiresSports Group, a consultant. -Americans aren't big fans of

winter sports, a fact that hurtsOlympians' marketing power. .What's more, most Olympic

sports won't get regular ~in the United States after the endof the Winter Games."You've got to take the deals'

now," Tuchman of TSE said. "Insix months or 12 months, people'will forget about you. The ones'with staying power are the ones-that have a good story to tell:' -An exception was skier Picabo /

Street, a winner in Nagano,'Japan, in 1998.She proved to be a'durable endorser.This time, there may be too:

many winners for a star to'emerge.

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Page 8: Arbiter, February 28

�~e=b;.;ru;,;;;ary:.L..::2:=.:8.-=2~OO~2:.-.---.:.. SRQrtsThe Arbiter· Page 7 .

BOISE STATE UNIVERSITYNOTICE OF HEARING ON REQUESTS FORSTUDENT FEE AND RATE INCREASES

March 6, 200~-Notlce is hereby given that a proposal has been presented to increase General Education fees. The proposal calls for increasing the Matriculation Fee by$184.75, and reducing the Facilities Fee by $25.00 (which would be redirected to the Matriculation Fee), for a total fee increase of $159.75 per semester forfull-fee-paying undergraduate students. This amounts to a 12% total fee increase. Fees for part-time students and others would increase proportionally.

The current fees, proposed increases, and amount of revenue such increases would provide follow:

"

Annual Full-Time Fees and Part-Time Credit Hour Fees

..

Suspend FY2003 Fees

Redirect Per Initial Est New Revenue

Student Fees: FY02 fees SUB/Fee Notice HC/SCH Gen Educ

'.Full-time Fees:

'-,- Matriculation Fee '1,492.00 1,861.50 10,237 3,782,57250.00

'.Technology Fee 82.50 82.50

Facilities Fees 556.00 (50.00) 506.00

Student Activity Fees 534.00 534.00

Total Full-time Fees 2,664.50 0.00 2,984.00 3,782,572

Part-time Credit Hour Fees:

Education Fee

Technology Fee

Facilities Fees

Student Activity Fees

Total Part-time Cr Hr Fees:

551,08686.15 2.50 102.40 33,913

4.40 4.40

26.40 (2.50) 23.90

18.30 18.30

135.25 0.00 149.00 551,086

Summer Credit Hour Fees:(Note A}

Education Fee

Technology Fee

Facilities Fees

Student Activity Fees

. Total Summer Cr Hr Fees:

310,03486.15 2.50 102.40 19,079

4.40 4.40

26.40 (2.50) 23.90

18.30 18.30

135.25 0.00 149.00 310,034

Other Student Fees:

Graduate Fees:

Full-time Grad/Prof

Part-time Graduate/Hour

Summer Grad/Hour (Note A)

Nonresident Tuition:

Nonres Tuition

Professional Fees:

None

,Other Fees:Western Undergrad Exchge

In-service Fees/

Cr Hr - Undergrad

In-service Fees/Cr Hr - Grad

Course Overload Fee/Hour

Total Other Student Fees

'.598.00 646.00 319 15,312

32.00 35.00 10,600 31,800

32.00 35.00 2,000 6,000

6,200.00 6,400.00 250 50,000

1,310.00 1,492.00 225 40,950

49.50 6,200 27,900

61.00 N/A 0

149.00 0 0

171,962

4,815,654

4,499,620

45.00

55.75

135.25

Total Additional Student Fee RevenueLess Summer Equals Available for General Education in FY2003

• Note A: Summer fee increases effective for Summer 2003 Session.

Summer revenue not available until FY2004.

-Notlce is hereby given that a proposal has been presented to increase residence hall room and boardrates and apartment (ental rates by 8%.

Proposals regarding these fee and rate Increases are available for. inspection during regular business hours at the Office of the VicePresidentfor Student Affairs, Room 210 of the Administration Building.

HEARINGS ON THE PROPOSED INCREASES WILL BE HELD WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 2002, Bt;GINNINGAT 1:00 P.M. IN THE BISHOP BARNWELL"ROOM OF THE BSU STUDENT UNiON.

All Interested persons may submit oral testimony at the hearings or written testimony before the March 6th date. Anyone wishing to testifyin person may sign up at the hearings or in advance at the Office of the Vice President for Student Affairs -. Persons presenting oral testimony

are asked to provide a written .copy of their testimony to the hearing officer.

Page 9: Arbiter, February 28

�Poison'to be publicly delivered···tv Mark Hltz

he Arbiter

: Poi-son: n, Any substance~hat causes injury or death,esp. by chemical means. -v.To have a harmful influencec;>n;corrupt or ruin..: Starting Feb. 27 we'll get~o see this definition put towork on Stage II of theMorrison Center through\ive theater, which, accord-ingto Lisa Hyslop-thedirector of "Poison" -is an~unparalleled eXI?p.rience.". Consider it. Live theater.the characters are there inthe room with you, livingthe most terrible or chal-tenging or hilarious{itoments of their lives.~nlike a cinematic experi-ence, there is no comfortableseparation between the\l'ttion and thejil!dj~nce.lnstead of patterns of pro-jected light and sound, thereate people standing in frontof you. It's like lifting thewalls and ceiling from$pmeone's apartment andHulling up a chair withoutthem Knowing. Only theyate not just brushing theirt~eth and watching televi-sion-they are creating alltorms of interpersonal vio-Wnce, and there is nothingyou can do about it.,;. In the case of "Poison,"We're lifting the roof off abar. A man has returned tohis old hangout. BothWends and possible ene-mies traffic here. This is theplace where trouble comes..::. '''Poison' is about the~yolution of desperation,"Hyslop said.~.:"I was drawn into thisplay at first by how mucheach of these charactersrelies on, desperately needs,a:nd painfully rejects the oth-~rs. The intncacy of the rela-tionships is what most

PIIoto by Kelly Day. 111eArbiter

The cast of "Polson" rehearses a scene from the play.

Every drop of "Poison" islocally produced. Writer,director, cast and crew areall BSU graduates or stu-dents. Hyslop is especiallyproud of the set design."This production is a

chance for these youngdesigners to really stretch,and they have done incredi-ble work."

draws me in."Jason Haskins, a BSU

graduate, wrote the play."When I realized that

Stage II was going to be dark(without a show) for the firstpart of the semester, I des-perately wanted to put up ashow. When I was lookmgfor rna terial I asked Jason if Imight read some of hisunfinished stuff. I read thefirst 20 pages of "Poison"and stopped looking."

If you go...

Got a hankering for live happenings? Go. check"Poison" out. Itruns Feb. 27 through March 3 and startsat 7:30p.m. on Stage II in the Morrison Center. The finalperformance will be on March 3 at 2 p.m. $5 at the door.

Hhempty net ~ high dtddno

:~A I ' tt'~~r :;1f1ttdt"~ ~r:~TIi.:;

117.S 0+ f '". 00 ==f2- 1· S 0(Regularly)

i~· 1{0.00 + f(l~~== f10.00(with Student ID)

Offer only valid for. 3/6/02.

:-.;:-.",

Februaor '28. "20021•

Seattle band at Grainey'$Starling ....~hursd3:y

ni~ht,. Torn Gramev's· JS'bnnging Seaule's·. AoneyTongue back .totow,nforthree nights of sultry rock& roll: .Honey TongUe's .lead

vocalist, [en Ayers,. hasbeen described as fusionof .Fiona Apple and The Black .Crowes with a wee bitofShirley Manson tossed intothe salad bowl. TheSeattl~based band is wellknown for their high-octane sets, and thisweek~end should be no excep-tion. .Tickets for theirThursday,. Friday' . and~:~~~:s~n~:~:~~The shows start at 9:30p.m. For more informationcall Grainey's at 345-2505.

Damian Marley at BigEasy ....Damian Marley, son of

reggae icon Bob Marley, iscorning to The BigEasy fora .rasta-good time onFriday night.Marley and his band,

Ghetto Youth Crew; are onthe road promoting theirlatest studio release "TheHalfway Tree." This showis a must see for seriousreggae fans. Tickets can bepurchased at allTicketWeb locations or bycalling 1-800-965-4827.

It

Ggggoocaal

;T~

Page 10: Arbiter, February 28

~~~~February'28,-£~-,--~ ". •_ wVVw OJYerstel1s,,,~--~~--

Sawtooth Film FestivalBy Aaron BeckSpecial to The Arbiter

Sick turns on vir~n peaks, unicycling down Mexicanvolcanoes, waterfalls In exotic Southeast Asia and originalsoundtra~ks that rip. Expect all of these things and morew~en BOIse Sate University Outdoor Center presents thethird annual Sawtooth Film Festival this Friday night inthe Special Events Center.

Geoff Harrison of the Outdoor Center said this year'sfilms are among the best adventure documentaries he haset;er seen. Th~ c.ollection differs from the traditional extremeVIdeo by avoldmg mindless non-stop action backed up byloud dance music .

. "They emphasize tile people behind tile sports," HarrisonsaId

"[Providing] more insigllt into wllo the people are andwhy they do tile tllings they do. "

. Tile Sawtooth Film Festival is a traveling collection ofhlgll-energy extreme sport orientated documentaries, pro-d!!ced by ~he Seattle-based production company SawtoothFIlms, willch was started by KAVU, an outdoor clothingcompany.

For the past four years tile festival debuted in Ketcnum,Idaho before traveling to university campuses tllroughoutth.e c~untry, ~n~ was or!ginally aftmdrmser Jor local orga- ,/lIzatlOns. This IS tile third year tile Outdoor Center is pre-sentin$ tile series. All proceeds benefit Outdoor Center.

This year's presentation is a compilation of eigllt shortfilms, sllowcasing I!wide range of extreme sports.

Boat Trip

This is not a kayak flick asthe title implies. The film doc-uments three of the most radi-cal skiers in the world as theycruise the inlets of the BritishColumbia coast aboard a 110-foot yacht. An A-StarHelicopter shuttles SethMorrison, Dean, "Cu,m,,min"g,s,'and Shane McKonkey frOIDthe.plush living quarters aboardthe yacht to virgin coastalpeaks for plenty of unbridledaction.

1st B.A.S.E.

This film is a biography thatattempts to get inside the mindof a BASE jumper. A heart-pumping soundtrack keeps thepace moving as this adrenalinejunkie finds things to jump offall around the world.

Beyond Gravity

UNIZABA

Southeast Asia, capturing thesteepest creekn' and mostexotic first descents everrecorded on film. Check outBoise native David Norrell ashe pushes the limits of pad-dling with the big boys.

Gandwana

Pro surfer Pancho Sullivantakes us on an eye-popping~ __16mm adventure. Wave riderssuch as Sullivan, SunnyGarcia, Andy Irons and manyothers rip the classic breaks ofNorth Shore in Hawaii and theMavericks ' in northernCalifornia. Plus, they take us totheir private stashes in Tahitiand Indonesia. Wyoming-based Teton Gravity Researchbrings a new perspective to thesport by utilizing athlete-camshooting.

Beyond Limits

Liz Arlin is a professionalboogie boarder who has risento the top of her sport by notallowing her physical handi-cap to limit her potential. Thisinspiring mini-documentarygives some insight into whatdrives Arlin to spend her lifesurfing big Waves.

Ifyou,gq ... 'Doors open at 6:30 p.m~and the 'show starts at'7:30; Tickets are $5 at the'door. For more infOl1Ila~tion call the" Outdoor'Center at ~6-1946.

The Arbiter • Page.Q,, ,

This film is for those of youwho think rock climbing fea-tures are slow and boring.Think again. Check out"Beyond Gravity," featuringthe hottest names on the NorthAmerican climbing scene.Greg Child, acclaimed climberand writer, narrates this shortfilm. Climbers Peter Croft, FasterLynn Hill, Barry Blanchardand Nancy Feagin scale big This film proves that sled-faces to an original blood- ding is anJ,thing but a relaxingPP:~r.iEj5_~,~.~d~ack... ,, __ ,_,,_,Sfi':l!!~aly.lI.·t~T~!.1.3~·$i.mll1P,I()r.S..., " . rant awn. raster WI Ileave

the crowd in fits of laughter asthe sport of sledding is taken

Unicycling is the latest buzz to the extreme.in the world of extreme sports. Also, look for a short filmNo kidding. And Kris Holm ' by a group of Boise State stu-and Nathan Hoover are the dents who ditched classes lastcutting-edge leaders. The' cam-' fall and kayaked the steepera follows Holm and Hoover creeks and big water of Nepal.as they unicycle across the,rooftops of Mexico City, along Film source material cour-

~:k:~~e~~:St~d~:~e~to;n:L . ~e:itiy~:'_the _~~~t~oth FilmPico de Orizaba, NorthAmerica's third highest moun- ,tain. Action and philosophymix as Holm and Hooveruncover the commonaltiesbetween all adventure sports.Still Twitchin'The crew of Erik Link

Productions' kayaks and trav-els throughout the USA,British Columbia and

HelpWanted:The Arbiter is seeking short fiction,poetry and prose for the Diversionssection. Humorous material a plus.

Email [email protected]

Diversions is looking for a part-time reportertocover music department happenings, MorrisonCenter beat and local music scene. Lots of perks.Bi-weekly co~pensation.

Writing sampl'espreferred.

CASHFORCLOTHESI.:You are invited!

'.'1.

Part-time, Tempora!y~~-Se~$onal, and Internship.

"

'j ..

Page 11: Arbiter, February 28

,,,",4;'

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~-0Fl:5aleMATTRESS-Queen OrthopeqicSet, Brand new In~kg Value $550,Sacrifice $133.866-7476

nnouncements

Get free help withyour writing at theBSU WritinKCenter LA-lOO,426-3585

ASOK, I'f"\ PUTTING tiYOU ON OUR SPECIAL iSELF-f"\ENTORINGo I

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IF 'fOU HAVE AN'fQUESTIONS WHAT-SOEVER, FEEL FREETO TALK TO 'fOUR-SELF.

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BED-QueenPillowtop MattressSet. New-still inplastic, ~ith war-ranty. value $699,Sell $176. Candeliver 866-7476

Summer Work inAlaska!Send name returnaddress and $15 toKLD Marketing117 FarmviewDrive, SaintHelens, OR 97051for a dlrectory tocontact Alaskaseafood processingfacilities for sum-mer employment.

STUDENTS:Internet UsersWanted!$20/hour possiblesurfing the inter-net. New! Easy,instant onlinesignup ath~tp:!7dmx.g!ode-signz.coml ~Startnow!!

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CrosswordACROSS

1 __ Park, CO6-Second Beatles'movie

10 Fencing sword14 Monarch's loyal

subject15 Inter _ (among

other things)16 Cooking fat17 Sinfulness19 Soft cheese20 Pinnacle21 London hrs.22 Sinatra's

hometown24 Main course26 Underneath27 Caste member29 Type of cat or

goat33 Office note36 Lodgings in

London38 Misconception39 LSD, for short40 Head skin42 Compass point43 Faint trace45 Skiers'ride46 Pub quaffs47 Part of USSR49 Double-reed

instruments51 Obnoxious one53 Gas-station in

the sky?57 Chandler'S

private eye60 Can material61 Seth's mother62 Domain63 Supplementary66 Glance over67 Mob violence68 Queeg's ship69 Grip70 Tijuana snack71 Dadaist Max

UleeklyH 0rosco peBy Linda C. BlackTribune Media Services

Today's Birthday (Feb. 28). New evidence or strong criticism causes you to rethink a pet pro-ject. No point hanging onto it if it won't work. Besides, once you let go, you'll come up with a betteridea _more than just one, actually. If you give your imagination more room, you'll be delighted with

the results.To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.Aries (March 21-April19) - Today is a 6 - You're almost past the worst part. Tomorrow will be

much easier. It might even be fun. This weekend certainly will be. Make a date with your favoritepartner, then get back to work. The more you can get done today, the belter.

Taurus (April 20.May 20) - Today is a 6 - Your financial worries may soon be over. Somebodyis willing to pay for a service you can provide. This might be through a regular job, but maybe not.If you help somebody make their dream come true, yours might come true, too.

Gemini (May 21.June 21) - Today is a 5 - It'll be hard to concentrate on one task long enoughto get it done. Do what the boss wants first. Then, clean up your place. You'll want to entertain a

special person soon.Cancer (June 22.July 22) - Today is a 6 - You're slowing down a bit, taking care of the details.You don't want to miss anything. If you're careful the first time, you won't have to do the job over.

Leo (July 23.Aug. 22) - Today is a 6 - If anybody owes you money, call and bug them. It'll beeasier to get it now than later. Packages you send will encounter fewer delays, and ads placed willhave quicker results. Don't wait until tomorrow. Do it now.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Today is a 7 - You're known for the excellent service you provide,not for shrewd manipulations, but you can hold out for what you want. If you hold out, all thatworkyou've done will gain you more than just respect.

Libra (Sept. 23-oct 22) - Today is a 7 - Evaluate your work objectively. You may have to get ridof something you really like to bring the whole thing into balance. Trust your own intuition.

Scorpio (Oct. 23.Nov. 21) - Today is a 6 - Better hold off on a trip you're contemplating, at leastfor a few more days. If you must go now, be extra careful about details. The odds of forgetting some-thing at home are much greater than usual..; Sagittarius (Nov. 22.Dec. 21) - Today is a 7 - Are you being harassed by a nitpicker? Someonewho insil>ts that every detail be perfect? Don't complain to your friends; just do it. You'll benefit from

the experience. ~ -.: Capricorn (Dec. 22.Jan. 19)· Today is a 6 - The worst is over, and you've somehow managed.Now there's a. report to be made. If you let higher-ups know what you've discovered, you'll be

rewarded.. AquariUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) - Today is a 6 - Resist more assaults on your wallet. Pay bills, butsave some for yourself. You may want to take a friend out to dinner or a movie, or to Paris for the

weekend.Pisces (Feb, 19-March 20) - Today is an 8· The elaborate plans you make now with your mateor partner can come true. Invest in something you can share, something that you've thought about(or ages. You can find the money. LadytLuck is smiling on youl

(c) 2002, TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES INC.

02128102© :1002Tribune Media services, IncAll righis reserved.

Solutions8 Gracefullyslender

9 Kickback cash10 Strenuous effort11 Baseball facility12 New York canal13 Idyllic place18 Reparations23 Skeleton piece25 New England

state26 Persistent

problem28 Part of OED30 Report type31 Pinkish wine32 Humanistic

disciplines33 N.E. state34 Canyon reply35 Kind of ICBM37 Hefty slice41 Earnings44 Art style of the

'20s and '30s48 Frustrate50 One Kennedy52 Communication

DOWN1 Upper crust2 Singer Carly3 Entice4 Self·importance5 Prokofiev, orRachmaninoff

6 Stopl7 Inventor Whitney

58 Shell rival59 Genuine60 Bandleader

Puente64 One of Disney'sdwarfs . -~..,65 Boat propeller

services54 Bolshevik leader55 Linda or Dale56 Find a new

tenant for a flat-57 Col. Potter's

command

"., -'t..,

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