3-3-10 edition

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VIEWS: NEWS: ARTS & LIFE: Perry, White win gubernatorial nominations Page 5 Phone companies to create app options Page 2 Student leads trans-American bike ride Page 3 Positive Outlook Senior tennis player builds reputation for coming back from “Jaws of defeat” Page 4 The Student Newspaper of the University of North Texas ntdaily.com News 1,2 Arts & Life 3 Sports 4 Views 5 Classifieds 6 Games 6 Wednesday, March 3, 2010 Volume 95 | Issue 26 Sunny 60° / 39° BY KRYSTLE CANTU Staff Writer A new BioLife Plasma Services donation center is being built in Denton on the corner of Brinker Road and Quail Creek. This will replace the old center with a larger facility that will accommodate more donors, along with other updates. The center will be finished in November 2010. “It’s too small and starting to get a little outdated,” said Russell Boeckenstedt, a general contractor for the building for site, about the old facility. “So they’re updating it and putting out a bigger unit. It’s about 15,000-square-feet building.” Some students at UNT donate plasma as a source of income. “I’ve been donating for a little over three years. I go twice a week, every week, which brings me about 200 bucks a month income for donating my plasma,” said Benjamin Vail, a political science grad student. “I feel good about helping people. But, the real reason I come every week for years, is that 50 bucks a week.” According to www. biolife.com, plasma is used in a variety of life-saving treatments and therapies, including those for serious disorders such as hemophilia and immune system defi- ciencies. Those donations benefit thousands of people every day. It is a low-risk proce- dure with minimal or no side effects. The procedure usually takes around 45 minutes or longer, depending on the patient. “There’s no side effects,” Vail said. “Really, they’re paying you for your time. It takes about an hour to draw and that’s what they’re paying you for. It’s easy. It doesn’t really hurt, only the initial stick, after that it’s pretty calm.” However, plasma donating might not be for everyone, Vail said. “If you’re nervous about needles, if the sight of blood makes you queasy, it’s not for you,” he said. “When I first came here to donate, what really helped me settle down was I looked around, and the room is full of people sitting in beds with their arms plugged into machines. They’re reading books, they’re listening to their iPods, they’re watching movies, calm as Hindu cows. For everybody who comes here regularly, it’s just routine.” People can only donate twice within a seven-day period, with at least one day between donations. They receive $25 to $50 per dona- tion. A donor can make as much as $50 to $100 per week, depending on the center. All applicants are screened and must pass a medical examination before being eligible to donate. They must also be at least 18 years of age and weigh at least 110 PHOTO BY ALEX SCOTT/PHOTOGRAPHER A new BioLife Plasma Services center is under construction on Brinker Road. Many people, including college students, use plasma donations as an additional source of income. New BioLife Plasma Services center to open in fall pounds. Delmar “Trace” Rogers, a business sophomore, said he was confident going into his first plasma donation. “I’m helping donate plasma so I can help someone else out, and I’m getting paid cash at the same time, so it helps me out too,” he said. “It’s something good that you should be doing. It’s the same thing as donating blood, and I’ve gotten to help out a lot of other people.” BY SHEA YARBOROUGH AND LISA GARZA Senior Staff Writers OKLAHOMA CITY Sleeping bags lined the black metal fence Tuesday morning outside the Chase Tower while students and activ- ists from across the country stood shaking from freezing temperatures, holding signs that read “Dr. Coburn: Please Say Yes.” The Oklahoma Hold Out unfolded Friday at the Chase Tower’s front door and has lasted more than 90 hours so far. The building houses one of Republican Sen. Tom Coburn’s offices. He is the only U.S. senator out of 100 who will not pass the Lord’s Resistance Army Disarmament and Northern Uganda Recovery Act, and the activists aren’t leaving until he does, said Lisa Dougan, director of communications for Resolve Uganda. Joseph Kony and his rebels, call themselves the Lord’s Resistance Army, originally focused on Uganda. However, they have widened their scope, committing horren- dous attacks, massacres and abductions throughout Central Africa, Dougan said. The bill, submitted in May 2009, would mandate that President Barack Obama’s administration seek a solu- tion that would disband the Lord’s Resistance Army and provide money to rehabili- tate the Ugandan children. Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., sponsored the bill. “We believe this bill is the best chance for lasting peace,” Dougan said. On Misti Day, a general studies junior, drove the 204-mile trek from Denton on Friday afternoon to join the protest. The Oklahoma Hold Out began with a two- mile, 75-person march from the state capitol building. It ended at the Chase Tower, where the protesters deliv- ered 150 letters to Coburn, petitioning him to say “yes” to the Uganda bill, according to www.coburnsayyes.com. “It’s about lives,” Day said. Making a statement Since 4 p.m. Friday after- noon, the activists ate, protested and slept at the tower’s front door. Tuesday afternoon marked the fourth day of peaceful protest, with protesters still holding their signs as the temperature warmed from its early morning 27 degrees to 43 degrees. “I’m pretty freakin’ cold,” Activists camp out to speak with U.S. senator PHOTO BY MELISSA BOUGHTON/ASSIGNING EDITOR Liz Gurney, a UNT international studies freshman, participated in the protest outside the Chase Tower in Oklahoma City. PHOTO BY MELISSA BOUGHTON/ASSIGNING EDITOR In a press conference, held at noon on Tuesday at the Chase Tower in Oklahoma City, Mark Nehrenz, an activist and Oklahoma University alumnus, asked that Senator Tom Coburn meet with the protesters to compromise on a plan for the bill. said Liz Gurney, an interna- tional studies freshman. “I was kind of worried for a little bit because I can’t really feel my toes.” Kyle Putman, a social work freshman, gripped his sign tight as he shook violently from a chill in the wind. Putman said enduring the freezing weather was uncom- fortable, but he is determined to stay out there as long as it takes. “A lot of people are misin- formed and we are raising awareness,” he said. “We make a difference in every person we talk to by getting our point across, telling them what we are doing and letting them know that we are not angry, hippy protesters.” One year ago, UNT hosted a screening of “Rough Cut,” an Invisible Children documen- tary telling the story of what’s happening to the Ugandan children. The film addressed kidnappings in the night, children witnessing violent acts and being turned into child soldiers for the Lord’s Resistance Army, Day said. “I got hooked on the story of Uganda,” Day said. “The Ugandans are our brothers and sisters in the global community.” After the screening, Day said she attended an event hosted by Invisible Children and Resolve Uganda called “How It Ends,” held in June in Washington, D.C. But it was meeting Ugandans who had survived the atrocities of the Lord’s Resistance Army that made it most real for Day, she said. “They are real people, and these are real issues,” Day said. Returning to Denton on Monday afternoon, Day said she committed herself to a water-only fast until she can either make it back to Oklahoma City to continue the protest or the until the bill passes. The issues, the bill, the war Don Tatro, Coburn’s press secretary, said he is aware of the Oklahoma City protest, does not oppose the purpose of the bill and wants it to pass soon. The main concern is where the budget cuts will come from to pay for the bill without adding anything more to the national debt because there is no money to spend, Tatro said. By the Numbers $128 million spent in 2008 for Northern Uganda effort If the act is passed, $40 million will be allotted for relief efforts -$30 million for recovery of child soldiers -$10 million for immediate relief aid See ACTIVISTS on page 2 To see multimedia for this story, visit ntdaily. com

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Page 1: 3-3-10 Edition

VIEWS:

NEWS:ARTS & LIFE:

Perry, White win gubernatorial nominationsPage 5

Phone companies to create app optionsPage 2Student leads trans-American bike ridePage 3

Positive OutlookSenior tennis player builds reputation for coming back from “Jaws of defeat”Page 4

The Student Newspaper of the University of North Texasntdaily.com

News 1,2Arts & Life 3Sports 4Views 5Classifieds 6Games 6

Wednesday, March 3, 2010Volume 95 | Issue 26

Sunny60° / 39°

Volume 95 | Issue 26

BY KRYSTLE CANTUStaff Writer

A ne w BioL i fe Pla sma Services donation center is being built in Denton on the corner of Brinker Road and Quail Creek.

This will replace the old center with a larger facility that will accommodate more donors, a long w it h ot her updates. The center will be finished in November 2010.

“It’s too small and starting to get a little outdated,” said Ru s s el l Bo e c ken ste dt , a genera l contractor for the building for site, about the old facility. “So they’re updating it and putting out a bigger unit. It’s about 15,000-square-feet building.”

Some st udents at UN T donate plasma as a source of income.

“I’ve been donating for a little over three years. I go tw ice a week, ever y week, which brings me about 200 bucks a month income for donating my plasma,” said Benjamin Vai l, a polit ica l

science grad student. “I feel good about helping people. But, the real reason I come every week for years, is that 50 bucks a week.”

A c c o r d i n g t o w w w .biolife.com, plasma is used in a variet y of l i fe-sav ing treatments and t herapies, including those for serious disorders such as hemophilia and immune system def i-ciencies.

Those donations benefit thousands of people ever y day. It is a low-risk proce-dure w it h minima l or no side effects. The procedure usua l ly ta kes a rou nd 45 minutes or longer, depending on the patient.

“There’s no side effects,” Va i l sa id. “Rea l ly, t hey’re pay ing you for your t ime. It ta kes about an hour to draw and that’s what they’re paying you for. It’s easy. It doesn’t really hurt, only the init ia l st ick, after that it’s pretty calm.”

However, plasma donating might not be for everyone,

Vail said.“If you’re nervous about

needles, if the sight of blood makes you queasy, it’s not for you,” he said. “W hen I f irst came here to donate, what really helped me settle down was I looked around, a nd t he room is f u l l of people sitting in beds with t hei r a r m s plug ged i nto machines. They’re reading books, they’re l istening to their iPods, they’re watching movies, calm as Hindu cows. For ever ybody who comes here re g u l a r l y, i t ’s ju st routine.”

People can only donate t w ice w it hin a seven-day period, with at least one day bet ween donat ions. T hey receive $25 to $50 per dona-tion. A donor can make as much as $50 to $100 per week, depending on the center.

All applicants are screened a nd must pass a medica l examination before being eligible to donate. They must also be at least 18 years of age and weigh at least 110

PHOTO BY ALEX SCOTT/PHOTOGRAPHER

A new BioLife Plasma Services center is under construction on Brinker Road. Many people, including college students, use plasma donations as an additional source of income.

New BioLife Plasma Services center to open in fall

pounds.Delmar “Trace” Rogers, a

business sophomore, said he was confident going into his first plasma donation.

“I’m helping donate plasma so I can help someone else out, a nd I’m gett ing pa id cash at the same time, so it helps me out too,” he said.

“It’s something good that you should be doing. It’s the same thing as donating blood, and I’ve gotten to help out a lot of other people.”

BY SHEA YARBOROUGH AND LISA GARZASenior Staff Writers

O K L A H O M A C I T Y — Sleeping bags lined the black metal fence Tuesday morning outside t he Chase Tower whi le students and act iv-ists from across the country stood shaking from freezing temperatures, holding signs that read “Dr. Coburn: Please Say Yes.”

The Oklahoma Hold Out unfolded Friday at the Chase Tower’s front door and has lasted more than 90 hours so far. The building houses one of Republican Sen. Tom Coburn’s offices.

He is the only U.S. senator out of 100 who will not pass the Lord’s Resistance Army Disarmament and Northern Uganda Recovery Act, and the activists aren’t leaving until he does, said Lisa Dougan, director of communications for Resolve Uganda.

Joseph Kony and his rebels, ca l l themselves the Lord’s Resistance Army, originally focused on Uganda. However, t hey have w idened t hei r scope, committing horren-dou s at t ack s, ma s sac re s and abductions throughout C e nt r a l A f r ic a , D ou g a n said.

The bill, submitted in May 2009, would mandate that

President Barack Obama’s administration seek a solu-tion that would disband the Lord’s Resistance Army and provide money to rehabili-tate the Ugandan children. Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., sponsored the bill.

“We believe this bill is the best chance for lasting peace,” Dougan said.

On Mist i Day, a genera l st ud ies ju n ior, d rove t he 204-mile trek from Denton on Friday afternoon to join the protest. The Oklahoma Hold Out began with a two-mile, 75-person march from the state capitol building.

It ended at the Chase Tower, where the protesters deliv-ered 150 letters to Coburn, petitioning him to say “yes” to the Uganda bill, according to www.coburnsayyes.com.

“It ’s about l ives,” Day said.

Making a statementSince 4 p.m. Friday after-

noon, t he ac t i v i st s ate, protested and slept at the tower’s front door.

Tuesday afternoon marked the fourth day of peaceful protest, with protesters still holding their signs as the temperature warmed from its early morning 27 degrees to 43 degrees.

“I’m pretty freakin’ cold,”

Activists camp out to speak with U.S. senator

PHOTO BY MELISSA BOUGHTON/ASSIGNING EDITOR

Liz Gurney, a UNT international studies freshman, participated in the protest outside the Chase Tower in Oklahoma City.

PHOTO BY MELISSA BOUGHTON/ASSIGNING EDITOR

In a press conference, held at noon on Tuesday at the Chase Tower in Oklahoma City, Mark Nehrenz, an activist and Oklahoma University alumnus, asked that Senator Tom Coburn meet with the protesters to compromise on a plan for the bill.

said Liz Gurney, an interna-tional studies freshman. “I was kind of worried for a little bit because I can’t really feel my toes.”

Kyle Putman, a social work freshman, gripped his sign t ight as he shook v iolently

f rom a chi l l in t he w ind. Putman said enduring the freezing weather was uncom-fortable, but he is determined to stay out there as long as it takes.

“A lot of people are misin-formed and we are raising awareness,” he said. “We make a difference in every person we talk to by getting our point across, telling them what we are doing and letting them know that we are not angry, hippy protesters.”

One year ago, UNT hosted a screening of “Rough Cut,” an Invisible Children documen-tary telling the story of what’s happening to the Ugandan children. The film addressed k idnappings in t he night, children witnessing violent acts and being turned into child soldiers for the Lord’s Resistance Army, Day said.

“I got hooked on the story of Uganda,” Day said. “The Ugandans are our brothers a nd sisters i n t he g loba l community.”

After the screening, Day said she attended an event hosted by Invisible Children and Resolve Uganda called

“How It Ends,” held in June in Washington, D.C.

B u t i t w a s m e e t i n g Ugandans who had survived the atrocities of the Lord’s Resistance Army that made it most real for Day, she said.

“They are real people, and these are real issues,” Day said.

Returning to Denton on Monday afternoon, Day said she committed hersel f to a water-only fast until she can either make it back to Oklahoma City to continue the protest or the until the bill passes.

The issues, the bill, the warDon Tatro, Coburn’s press

secretary, said he is aware of the Oklahoma City protest, does not oppose the purpose of the bill and wants it to pass soon. The main concern is where the budget cuts will come from to pay for the bill w it hout add i ng a ny t h i ng more to the nationa l debt because there is no money to spend, Tatro said.

By the Numbers$128 million spent in 2008 for Northern • Uganda effort

If the act is passed, $40 million will • be allotted for relief efforts

-$30 million for recovery of child soldiers

-$10 million for immediate relief aid

See ACTIVISTS on page 2

To see multimedia for this story, visit ntdaily.com

Page 2: 3-3-10 Edition

NewsPage 2

Scott McBride, Rebecca Hoeffner & Melissa Boughton, News Editors [email protected]

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

BY KRYSTLE CANTUStaff Writer

AT&T, Sprint and Verizon are among 24 companies planning to take on Apple’s App Store with their own version, which will run on a multitude of smart phones.

The store will be called the Wholesale Applications Community. Its main purpose will be to make it easier for devel-opers to create applications for all smart phones and operating systems by creating a uniform standard for all platforms.

This will mean a broader choice of applications and services avail-able for consumers, AT&T spokes-woman Sarah Andreani said.

“If we make it easy for devel-opers to bring apps into the market, then customers will have more apps available for them,” Adreani said. “We’re trying to come together and make a common set of guidelines for developers to get their applica-tions to users.”

Representatives from the companies met Feb. 15 in Barcelona, Spain, to discuss their plans. Three electronic compa-nies are also in support of this move: LG Electronics, Samsung and Sony Ericsson.

With Apple being the lead seller for the majority of applications

on smart phones, it’s nice to see a rival group in the market, said Ian Parberry, interim chairman for the computer science depart-ment.

“I think it’s great that there is finally competition in that market,” he said. “It’s a huge market and there is a lot of money to be made.”

The Wholesale Applications Community has a lot to compete against with the multitude of Apple applications that are being added to the store every day, Parberry said.

“They have a long way to go before they can match the Apple App Store,” he said.

According to Apple’s Web site, there are now more than 85,000 applications available to customers through the iPhone and iPod Touch as of September of last year.

Mallory Green, a psychology senior and owner of a Palm Centro from Sprint, said she would be thrilled to have appli-cations available for phones such as hers.

She said that with applica-tions being available to a broader variety of phones, instead of purchasing them, students with her phone may be able to send and trade apps for free.

New app store in the making to rival Apple

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION COURTESY OF JOHN BOURDREAU/SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS/MCT

Her phone has the ability to copy applications to and from other phones using a device on the side of the phone called a beam.

“I think it’s awesome, you

can send applications that you bought,” she said. “[The] iPhone doesn’t have that.”

Green said she was never really a fan of the iPhone.

“I think the iPhone is really

overrated,” she said. “I’ve been against it for so long.”

Derrick Dike, a finance senior and owner of a BlackBerry Curve, said that this will finally bring some superiority to the

BlackBerry in making it compat-ible with the iPhone.

“It’s already superior, but it widens the gap now,” he said. “It is adding more to the effect that a BlackBerry is better.”

“For e v e r y dol l a r t he gover nment br ings in, we spend two,” he said.

The activists said that the money is out of the existing state department money for foreign aid and that nothing would be added to the national debt by funding the bill.

“This bill does not directly add a dime to our deficit, and Sen. Coburn knows that,” said Kenneth Transier, a legislative fellow with Resolve Uganda in Washington, D.C.

For Coburn to move the bill forward, money must come f rom t he ex ist ing budget, cutting money from another program, Tatro said, a task he said is not difficult.

“T here is money bei ng wasted, so it’s not hard to find funding,” Tatro said.

Fi nd i ng t he mone y i s t h e u l t i m a t e g o a l , b u t Mark Nehrenz, an act iv ist a nd Ok la homa Un iversit y alumnus, said they are willing to comprom ise i f Cobu r n would meet with them.

“Thirty-nine days after we requested to meet with Sen. Coburn to find a compromise, he still hasn’t found the time,” Nehrenz said.

About t wo mont hs ago, there was an attack in the Congo that was the largest s i ng le at t ac k t he L ord’s Resista nce A r my has ever com m it ted, Douga n sa id. More than 300 people were systematically massacred and more than 100 people were abducted.

Two weeks ago, 30 people

Activists clash with senator

PHOTO BY MELISSA BOUGHTON/ASSIGNING EDITOR

Students and activists are camped outside one of Republican Sen. Tom Coburn’s o� ces in Oklahoma City. The protesters have been there since Friday.

Continued from page 1

were abducted and two were killed in the Central African Republic.

“This rebel army is st i l l

very much alive and moving,” Dougan said. “There is a small window of time at this point to see this violence stop.”

CorrectionIn the March 2 edition of

the Daily, the article “Bataille says goodbye at Emerald Ball” should have read that Phil Diebel will serve as interim president for 90 days, and he will step down when the Board of Regents identifies an academic leader to join UNT as the longer-term president.

This academic interim pres-ident will continue through the

2010-11 academic year, while a full-scale search for a perma-nent president is underway.

Also, in the same article, former President Gretchen Bataille’s tenure did not end on Feb. 25, but rather Feb. 28.

In the March 2 online version of the Daily, the article “A rare treasure on the UNT campus” said that the items

are too fragile to be handled by anyone other than the staff of the department. However, out of the more than 20,000 items housed in the Rare Book and Texana Collections, there are only about ten that are too fragile.

Other than these few items, the remainder of the materials are available and accessible for researchers.

Page 3: 3-3-10 Edition

Attorney James Mallory

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Celebrating 62 Years of Unions on the North Texas Campus

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10Scheduled Events for UNIONFEST 2010:Giant cake, ice cream, live music, balloon artist, face painting, chocolate covered strawberries, giveaways...

ALL FREE!

Arts & Life Page 3

Amber Arnold, Arts & Life Editor [email protected]

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

BY CHRISTINA MLYNSKIStaff Writer

Rising Eyes of Texas started in the spring of 2008 when John Aasp, the visual arts director and curator, wanted to give students a way to bridge the gap between college and the outside world while still having a place to showcase their artwork, he said.

Rockport Center for the Arts will host the third annual Rising Eyes of Texas exhibit for 40 student artists across Texas to showcase their personal themes of life using a creative medium. The exhibit will begin today and run through March 27 with an opening reception from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday.

“Out of all the shows, this one is the most fun out of the year because it’s a breath of fresh air and all the diversity that comes from the art programs,” he said.

“I really wanted to create a state-wide identity.”

The purpose of the show is to present a generation of artists who have established their own voice through their art, according to the Rockport Art Center Web site.

Lauren Hirsch, a printmaking and art history senior, was selected for her piece entitled “Patience Worth.”

“It’s a three-plate intaglio, which is a combination of etching and aquatint, and the second piece is a woman arche-type,” she said. “It’s the idea of women in terms of class and what it means to modern day art and society.”

Irby Pace, a studio art grad-uate student, was also chosen to represent UNT and said he is grateful for the opportunity to be recognized for his art.

His piece is called “You Saved

BY GRACIELA RAZOSenior Staff Writer

When Cassie Holtz was 19 years old and backpacking around Cambodia and Vietnam, she noticed something that would change her life.

As Holtz walked around with only a map in her hands, she saw decrepit houses with walls caving in and knew she had to make a change.

When Holtz returned to the U.S., she saw the same prob-lems.

“When you open your eyes, you see the problems that exist, so I decided to try to make a difference because we really needed it,” Holtz said.

Now the communications junior is leading a group of 28 bicyclists from Jacksonville, Fla., to San Francisco, Calif., to raise money for Bike and Build, an organization that provides affordable housing for low-income families.

From May 27 to Aug. 9, Holtz and the team will bike more than 3,600 miles and stop for 17 build days where they will construct houses from the ground up in cities in Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, New Mexico and California.

Bicyclists will collect spon-sorship money and do all of the building themselves with only five days off during the entire ride.

“There’s no better feeling than working with your hands to build something for someone who otherwise wouldn’t have it,” Holtz said.

She got involved with the Bike and Build organization after working with AmeriCorps last year.

The program interested her, she said, because she gained a passion for affordable housing after working with Habitat for Humanity and because the biking aspect of the trip appealed to her sense of adventure.

“It’ll be a way to really see the United States up close and personal,” Holtz said. “I embrace the crazy.”

Holtz does not have her own bike, so she is preparing herself for the long bike ride by working out on the elliptical machines at the Pohl Recreation Center.

She is also focusing on raising the $4,000 of sponsorships she needs before the trip begins.

It takes a special kind of person to lead bicyclists on these routes to build houses, said Brendan Newman, program director of Bike and Build.

“It’s not just the athletic aspect, but the commitment to service and leading 28 other people in the journey with you,” he said.

About 85 percent of the orga-nization’s participants have never done anything this stren-uous before, but their partici-

BY KATIE GRIVNASenior Staff Writer

W hen marketing senior Jennifer Thomas wakes up Friday morning, she won’t grab her backpack and head to campus as usual.

Instead, Thomas will learn about the executive busi-ness world through the eyes of Jim Keyes, the president of Blockbuster, Inc. as she shadows him for the day as part of the first UNT Executive Apprentice.

“I’m interested in seeing how they run their business model today,” she said.

UNT Executive Apprentice is an event that gives UNT students the chance to win an opportunity to shadow senior-level executives for a day.

The event is hosted by the UNT Professional Leadership Program, which helps students

transition from college to the workforce.

“We just want them to kind of gain an understanding of what it is really like out there and give them a sample of what they could be doing one day,” said Renee Hebert, the program’s director.

For a chance to shadow one of the nine executives, students bought a ticket for $2 or 10 tickets for $15.

The program sold 578 tickets to raise $920, which will pay for the program’s activities.

Members were also chal-lenged to sell 20 raffle tickets.

When Hebert attended the University of Louisiana at Monroe for her undergraduate studies, she said, the univer-sity had a program called the “Big Switch” where students purchased raffle tickets, and

Student bikes across U.S. for affordable housing

pation is vital to the organiza-tion’s members raising its goal of $630,000 for this route, Newman said.

“It’s amazing to see these young people coming out,” he said. “It takes a ton of dedication, and it speaks volumes about her character.”

Vanessa Lewis, a broadcast senior, said she wanted to be Holtz’s first sponsor for her trip.

Lewis contributed $20 to help Holtz meet her sponsor-ship goal.

Taking on a project like this is “typical Cassie” because she

is always looking for something new and exciting to do, Lewis said.

“It takes a special person to want to dedicate their time and strength to do something like that,” Lewis said. “But if anyone could pull this off, it’s Cassie. She strives for the impossible.”

Visit www.bikeand • build.org/rider/4222

E-mail Cassie Holtz at • [email protected]

To Donate:

UNT students compete to shadow executives Friday

if they won, they traded places with professors and administra-tors for the day, even teaching classes.

“I thought we should try something like that here,” she said.

She said she hopes the UNT

Executive Apprentice is some-thing students look forward to every year.

Finley Graves, dean of t he Col lege of Business Administration, is one of the executives participating in the UNT Executive Apprentice.

My Life, but I’ll Never Return the Favor.”

“I’m not putting a generic title on it,” he said. “Possibly someone can relate on a level to something I’ve experienced and see my direction of what’s going on in the theme. They should be able to embrace and feel it.”

Each year a juror is selected to issue three awards to artists who he or she feels have a contem-porary approach.

This year’s juror is Kelly

Klaasmeyer, UNT alumna and editor of the online art journal “Glasstire.”

Klaasmeyer has been an art critic for 10 years and has received multiple journalism and art awards.

“I work as an artist and an art critic, so I’m operating in two worlds,” she said. “When I look at the work, I can understand it from the point of view of an artist as well as evaluate what credit has gone into the work.”

Rising Eyes of Texas is a nonprofit organization that receives money t hroug h memberships, foundation and patron support, and the artist fee paid by competing students. In return, the money is given back as prize winnings.

The free exhibition features artists from 13 universities. The competition is open to entries from all graduate, undergrad-uate and continuing students from Texas.

Student artists compete in state-wide exhibition

“I think it is a great opportu-nity for the students to see how those of us who are in these executive positions do what we do all day long,” he said.

Graves said he is looking forward to getting to know his apprentice.

“Since I’m not teaching anymore, I don’t have as close contact with students,” he said. “So I think for me, it would just be a great opportunity to be in close contact with a student during an entire day.”

D e a n n a B a r n e s , a n accounting junior and member of the program, will shadow Graves.

She said she is really excited to talk to him about his experi-ence as an accountant because she has been debating whether to pursue accounting.

“That will be great to talk to

him about how he decided he wanted to be an accountant,” she said.

Hank Wright, a f inance master’s student and member of the Professional Leadership Program, said many of the companies participating in the UNT Executive Apprentice are companies he was interested in working for.

Wright will shadow a senior vice president at Capitol One Bank and said he is looking forward to gaining a better understanding of the banking industry and what it does on a daily basis.

S t u d e n t s w i l l a l s o shadow execut ives f rom I n t e r s t a t e B a t t e r i e s , PricewaterhouseCoopers, the National Basketball Association Development League Frisco, Raytheon and Toni & Guy.

This summer Cassie Holtz, a communications junior, will ride her bike from Jacksonville, Fla., to San Francisco, Calif., stopping in 15 cities along the way to help build houses as a part of the organization Bike and Build. Holtz will serve as a group leader of her route.

PHOTO BY AUGUSTA LIDDIC/PHOTOGRAPHER

The Professional Leadership Program is sponsoring its inaugural series of UNT Executive Apprentice — an opportunity for UNT students to shadow top execu-tives for a day.

GRAPHIC COURTESY OF TIMOTHY RECK/MCT

Page 4: 3-3-10 Edition

Are you a UNT student who…

…has been told you have dyslexia?

…has a chronic illness?

…has seen a counselor for depression?

…has taken medication for ADD/ADHD?

…had classroom accommodations before?

The Office of Disability Accommodationat UNT could help qualified students. Drop by during our walk-in hours,

Wednesdays from 2-4 pm.

Office of Disability AccommodationUniversity Union, Suite 321

(940) 565-4323www.unt.edu/oda

University of North Texas

Attention

The UNT Office of Disability Accommodation announces walk-inhours for Spring 2010. Drop by with any questions, Wednesdays from2-4 pm. No appointment necessary.

Office of Disability AccommodationUniversity Union, Suite 321(940) 565-4323www.unt.edu/odaUniversity of North Texas

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SportsPage 4 Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Justin Umberson, Sports Editor [email protected]

BY ERIC JOHNSONSenior Staff Writer

Down match point with her back against the wall, in a moment where most players crumble under the pressure, the UNT tennis team’s captain Catalina Cruz thrives.

UNT’s senior leader battled her way to her first Sun Belt Conference Player of the Week after going a perfect 5-0 last week, including registering the Mean Green’s only singles victory against the team’s biggest rival, No. 37 Florida International.

“She is the ultimate warrior,” head coach Sujay Lama said. “We have watched Cat escape from the jaws of defeat so many times. There is no one better down match point than her. She is an inspiration to the rest of her team because of the way she is always fighting.”

The Bogota, Colombia, native started her journey toward success on the court when she was seven years old, after a severe accident ended her father‘s cycling career. She began playing tennis with her father nearly every day, and Cruz felt an immediate connection to the game.

“I loved it from the first time I picked up a racket,” Cruz said. “My dad really got into tennis, and I would play any chance that I got. Even when I was that young I knew that tennis is what I wanted to do.”

For eight-straight years, Cruz was ranked in the top 10 in Columbia, including two years as the country’s No. 1 ranked junior player from 2002-2003.

With her junior’s career coming to a close, Cruz was left with a choice: school or tennis.

Athlete of the Week is ‘ultimate warrior’

Senior and team captain Catalina Cruz was named Sun Belt Conference Player of The Week for her e� ort in three matches last week.PHOTO BY REBEKAH GOMEZ/PHOTOGRAPHER

BY BOBBY LEWISContributing Writer

The UNT track and field team made history at the Sun Belt Conference Indoor Track and Field Championships on Sunday as the men’s team finished second, the highest finish in school history.

The team finished with seven first-place finishes and 16 All-Sun Belt Conference selections.

“This is a very, very competi-tive conference,” head coach Rick Watkins said. “I don’t think you can go into that meet expecting to dominate like we did, especially in the sprint events.”

The team finished with five victories in the sprint events, including two from sophomore

Keyth Talley in the 55-meter and 200-meter dashes.

Talley, who was named the Sun Belt Indoor Track’s most outstanding male track athlete, continued his stellar season, setting two school records and two Sun Belt Championship records. He also set two NCAA provisional marks, all on the first day of the meet.

The cold weather has made it difficult for the team to practice as much as it wants, so Talley was not expecting to have the big meet he had.

“I looked up at the board, and I was actually surprised at what I ran,” he said. “It’s pretty cool to know I can run that fast without

that much practice behind it.”Talley was also a part of the

men’s 4 by 400 relay team, along with Montrell Pyron, Russell Sams and Reggie Hayter, who won the gold Sunday. Going into the relay, all the Mean Green had to do to lock up second place was defeat Louisiana-Lafayette.

The women also captured gold in the 4 by 400 relay as Alysha Adams, Brittani Simmons, Monica Dunn and Roshunda Pierson finished with a time of 3:53.23.

Junior Missy Barnes, fresh off being named Sun Belt Conference Performer of the Week, set a school record in the 55-meter dash, finishing with a time of 6.96

UNT earns best conference finishseconds. Barnes was happy with how her season went.

“I think it went real well compared to how I did last year,” Barnes said. “It was a huge improvement.”

Junior Alysha Adams nearly broke another school record in the 55-hurdles as she finished first in the event with a time of 7.77 seconds. Adams also took home the gold in the 200-meter relay in 24.01 seconds.

Jordan Wehr had another standout performance for the Mean Green, finishing first again in the men’s heptathlon. Wehr won with 5,075 points, 231 points ahead of the nearest competi-tion.

As for NCAA selections, Watkins feels confident that the Mean Green can be well represented at the NCAA Championship.

“We’ll find out for sure next weekend,” Watkins said. “I think Keyth’s obviously got a good shot. We’re going to take a group to Arkansas this weekend for the last chance qualifier meet to see if we can move up and see how many we can get in.”

The NCAA Championship will take place on Mar. 12 and 13 in Fayetteville, Ark. All the athletes who hit provisional marks this season have the chance to make it.

BY LAURA ZAMORAStaff Writer

The UNT women’s golf team teed off on its spring season with a second-place finish at the Islander Classic on Tuesday in Corpus Christi.

The Mean Green led the 11-team tournament after two days of play, three shots ahead of Tulsa and Oral Roberts, but found itself tied for first with Tulsa at Tuesday’s end.

UNT fell short in a playoff with Tulsa, finishing with a 934 (+60) in the three-day tour-nament at the Corpus Christi Country Club.

“We battled back and forth with Tulsa and traded punches with them for three days,” head coach Jeff Mitchell said. “Tulsa has a program with a great deal of history, and they’re 33rd in the nation, but I’m really proud of my team.”

Sophomores Kelsey Kipp and Addison Long finished 13-over par with a 229 for a three-way tie for fifth place. Long led the team Sunday in fourth place individually with a 76 and improved to 73 Monday, placing her in second place individually. She shot an 80 on

UNT loses playoff, finishes in second

the final day. “I hit the ball pretty much the

same as I did the first two days,” Long said. “My confidence shot down a lot as my chipping and putting hurt me. It was bringing down my confidence level, and I had some short putts in there. What it came down to with Tulsa was that we made some mistakes that they didn’t.”

Kipp demonstrated consis-tency throughout the tourna-ment with an opening-day score of 78 for 11th place. She improved to 75 Monday with a three-way tie for eighth place and closed out Tuesday with a 76.

“I just went out and took my game shot by shot and hole by hole,” she said. “I was one under through 13 holes, but I faltered at the end.”

Mitchell said his player did well.

“Kelsey had really good shots,” he said. “I was really proud of the fact that on some of the holes she struggled with, she’d come right back and get herself back in the game on the next hole.”

UNT was behind Oral Roberts (306), UTEP (315) and Tulsa (315) and 28-over par with a 316 score Sunday. Monday’s low score of 299 lifted the Mean Green to first place at 615.

Senior Jordan Rose tied for 10th place with scores of 80 and 74 Sunday and Monday before her final score of 77 (231 total). Senior Maggie Noel shot an 85 Sunday, a 77 Monday and finished the tour-nament with a 76 Tuesday to tie for 23rd at 238.

Senior Janna Golden totaled a 245 after shooting an 82 Sunday, a 79 Monday and an 84 Tuesday. Her scores placed her tied for 42nd.

Junior Chandra Alexander competed independently in the tournament. She tied for 10th with Jordan Rose after shooting an 83 Sunday, a tournament low of 70 on Monday and a 78 Tuesday.

The Mean Green is now preparing for the three-day Dr. Donnis Thompson Invitational from Mar. 14 to 16 in Honolulu.

With no collegiate athletic programs in Colombia, Cruz decided to continue her education and playing career in America. In 2007, Cruz left home and started a new journey at Ouachita Baptist University in Arkansas.

“It was difficult to leave home, but I knew that I wanted to earn a degree and still be able to play tennis,” Cruz said. “You don’t get that kind of opportunity everywhere, and I knew that in Colombia I would have to choose between the two. I have just been

so happy with the experience that I have had and the chance to build a future.”

The 5-foot-4-inch warrior earned Freshman of the Year and Academic All-Gulf South Conference honors in her only season at Ouachita, and she sparked the attention of Lama in the process.

Cruz believed in Lama’s vision and was excited about the oppor-tunity of playing for UNT.

“We connected as soon as we met, and I knew that she was the

kind of person that we could build a program around,” Lama said. “She has this positive attitude and passion that is infectious, and you can tell that she really appre-ciates the gift that she has. She is the kind of player and person that is a role model, and that is what you want on your team.”

During her first season with the Mean Green, Cruz won a combined 18 matches and was named the team’s MVP. The following season, Cruz tallied 24 combined wins while also

shouldering the responsibility of team captain.

In September, Cruz was named team captain for the second season in a row and has provided the team with guidance and lead-ership.

“Cat is someone that we look up to in every aspect,” said junior Madura Ranganathan, Cruz’s teammate and best friend. “She motivates us on the court and is always there for us away from the court.”

The Mean Green’s only

senior embraces the leadership role and has eased the transi-tion for her new doubles partner, freshman Barbora Vykydalova. Cruz welcomed the Šumperk, Czech Republic native, and the two have strengthened the Mean Green doubles lineup with a 6-2 record.

“She made it much easier for me, and I just felt comfortable playing with her,” Vykydalova said. “We really compliment each other well, and she understands what I am going through, coming from another country. Her atti-tude makes her so much fun to play with.”

There is a permanent grin painted on Cruz’s face, and even in the most challenging moments, her teammates look to her to keep them positive.

“She is always smiling, always hyper, always energetic and she just puts everyone in a great mood,” Ranganathan said. “It is so much more fun to play when you know that you are playing with your friends, and that they genu-inely care about you and want to do well for you. Cat is always fighting for us, and it makes us want to do everything for her.”

The 24-year-old business major will earn her bachelor’s degree in May, and she plans to attend graduate school at UNT.

“I want to always be here for my teammates,” Cruz said. “They have been a huge part of my life, and I want to make sure that I am able to help them grow into the people that I know they can be.”

Cruz and the Mean Green face another challenge this weekend, as the team will try to calm the No. 42 Tulsa Golden Hurricane and the Kansas State Wildcats.

Page 5: 3-3-10 Edition

Views Page 5Josh Pherigo, Views Editor [email protected]

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

The Editorial Board includes: Shaina Zucker, Josh Pherigo, Rebecca Hoeffner, T.S. McBride, Melissa Boughton, Amber Arnold, Kip Mooney, Abigail Allen, Sydnie Summers, Brianne Tolj, Clinton Lynch, Justin Umberson, and David Williams.

Want to be heard?The NT Daily does not necessari-ly endorse, promote or agree with the viewpoints of the columnists on this page. The content of the columns is strictly the opinion of the writers and in no way re-flects the belief of the NT Daily.

The NT Daily is proud to present a variety of ideas and opinions from readers in its Views section. As such, we would like to hear from as many NT readers as possible. We invite readers of all creeds and back-grounds to write about whichever issue excites them, whether concerning politics, local issues,

ethical questions, philosophy, sports and, of course, anything exciting or controversial.Take this opportunity to make your voice heard in a widely read publication. To inquire about column ideas, submit columns or letters to the editor, send an e-mail to [email protected]

Note to Our Readers

NT Daily Editorial Board

Perry wins, education system loses

Gas drilling poses more than ‘nuisance’

Editorial

{{{

Campus ChatDo you think Tilikum, the killer

whale that killed a Sea World trainer, should be released in the wild?

“That’s a great idea. Killer whales, dolphins and

any animal larger than a human should not be kept

in captivity.”

“I think it’s a good idea. If it’s attacked before, then it has problems that can’t be

resolved in captivity.”

“I think it’s fine where it’s at. It’s raised in captivity

so it will have a hard time being released back into

the wild.”

Well, he did it. Gov. Rick Perry secured his spot on the fall

Governor’s ballot by defeating Republican competi-tors U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison and business-woman Debra Medina in Tuesday’s primary election. He received more than half the GOP vote, surpassing the amount required to prevent a run-off.

The Editorial Board is disappointed with the result.

Perry, already the longest serving Texas Governor, has strong-armed his way through 10 long years of administrative bullying and crooked politics. His lack of ambition toward pushing effective, lasting policy reform is more than accounted for in his drive to reward personal and political allies with high-powered appointments.

The former Aggie yell leader’s chief failure is his unwillingness to address the state’s crumbling educa-tion system.

Texas is consistently ranked as one of the lowest caliber education systems in the country. Nearly a third of Texas public school students drop out before gradu-ation, and a 2007 study found that less than 30 percent of Texas fourth graders are proficient readers.

Yet under Perry’s leadership, the state’s education system has adopted standards that perpetuate medioc-rity and promote ineffective measurements to disguise the bleak reality.

The state benchmark for schools to achieve a rating of “academically acceptable” allows for more than 55 percent of one minority group to fail the science and math sections of the TAKS test. Given that low bar, officials can make the claim that 97 percent of schools are on par.

The current state administration’s education poli-cies fall drastically short of the level of preparedness needed for Texas students to succeed in college and in the workforce. Annually, 60 percent of first year college students are required to take remedial courses.

Perry simply hasn’t made the education system a priority — that is aside from using university board appointments as a political gift basket for friends and campaign contributors.

Hutchison had a plan to improve education and made it her top priority. However, she was ultimately ineffective in combating Perry’s aggressive campaign that labeled her a detached Washington politician. He capitalized on the growing Texas sentiment of disgust for federal encroachment, and Hutchison was unable to articulate ambitions that held serious promise.

The win for Perry means he will face a November showdown with Democratic nominee Bill White. But in a state that’s as red as ever, Perry’s GOP nomina-tion ostensibly grants the 59-year-old the equivalent of gubernatorial tenure.

Dear Editor,

There’s much more to the “nuisance of drilling” and the “cost of living in the shadow and earshot of the towering, abrasive structures” of the gas drilling rigs.

The editorial writer should talk to the residents of DISH a nd see i f t hey feel t hat “tangible rewards” compen-sate them for the high levels of exposure to benzene and

toluene in the air from the gas drilling in their commu-nity. Benzene and toluene are known carcinogens.

Or ask the residents of Wise County, who can light their well water but not drink it. Talk to the ranchers whose goats and cattle have died from drinking the well water that has been contaminated by the drilling.

Those are some of the real “tangible rewards” of gas-

well drilling.It ’s n o s u r p r i s e t h a t

poisoned prof its a re bad business.

The environmental degra-dation that comes with gas d r i l l i ng is not of fset by “updat i ng i n f ra st r uc t u re a nd bu i ld i ng com mu n it y centers.”

Dr i l l i ng shou ld not be allowed in urban and water-shed areas or in the prox-imity of aquifers until the

technology and regulations exist to protect the air, water and health of the commu-nity.

Please Goog le “gasla nd documentary” and visit www.propublica.org/ (cl ick on “Buried Secrets: Gas Drillings Environmental Threat”).

Ed SophProfessorUNT College of Music940-369-7536

Sam WickizerBiology freshman

Alexa Lopez Psychology freshman

Kayla Spears Merchandising and

hospitality management junior

I generally see the same thing on my way to school every morning.

High school students walk toward their bus stop. Idiotic drivers turn left when they clearly don’t have the right of way. And inevitably, one teen-ager crosses the street while playing his Nintendo DS.

The last one is what really f labbergasts me. This k id looks up for half a second to see if the light is green or red, begins crossing and looks back down at the two tiny screens of his portable gaming device.

Does he rea lize when a usually sane human being gets behind the wheel of a car they lose a lot of common sense? I know many younger people think they are invin-cible, but tons of steel on wheels will win every time.

It’s not just this particular kid, either. I’ve seen many sim i la r incidents happen on campus throughout the years.

Yes, at crosswalks, motor-ists are required by law to give pedestrians the r ight of way. I don’t get agitated when someone at a crosswalk fails to wave to me, thanking me for stopping, because I’m supposed to. No big dea l, despite me being courteous when I’m on foot.

Sometimes, I see people like the teenager I mentioned ea rl ier. They w i l l bl ind ly stroll through a crosswalk because they are texting or

rocking out with their head-phones on.

Then there are the dare-devils and thrill-seekers that walk in front of me after I’ve a l ready st a r ted mov i ng. Mostly, they are jaywalking, but it doesn’t make them any less rude.

While in the middle of the

street, they take the time to slow down, look me in the eye and sneer as if I were at fault.

“I’m going the posted 20 mph and I have the right of way, not you,” I think to myself

as I stare them down. I’m not sure how many

muscles are in my feet and lower legs, and I don’t know how many of them I use to push my foot down on the accelerator peda l, but it wouldn’t take much for me to keep it on the gas and plow into them.

I t ’ s a good thing I’m an alert d r iver on the lookout f o r s u c h precarious situations. Y e a h , I occa sion-a l l y t e x t whi le I’m d r i v i n g , a n d I ’ l l p l a y m y music too loud, but I know when I n e e d t o h a v e m y e y e s peeled for the ballsy p e d e s -trian.

M y roommate se em s to g e t t h e

worst of these instances. He regales me with tales of near misses and his increasing rage. Jok ingly, he says he wants to make an example out of one (several) to start spreading the terror of the

motor vehicle to the rest of them.

H e w o u l d h a v e t h e “Terminator” theme blaring through his speakers as he did this and would yell, “This will teach you to FEAR and RESPECT the car!”

We have a good laugh about it, and I make a mental note of the time and date he says such things so I can accu-rately report it to the police when he finally goes off his rocker. I’m kidding! My room-mate would never do such a thing — plus, he drives too much like an old man to do any damage.

W hat I’m say i ng is be careful when crossing the street. Drivers don’t always pay attention and could acci-dentally mow someone over. I’m wondering what day I won’t see the teenager playing his DS because he wasn’t alert and someone hit him.

Ryan Feuerhelm is a jour-nalism senior. He can be reached at [email protected].

Look while crossing the street

Photo courtesy of Jason h. Whitley/Mct

Page 6: 3-3-10 Edition

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