THE DAILY ATHENAEUM
“Little good is accomplished without controversy, and no civic evil is ever defeated without publicity.”
da
Monday December 7, 2015
Volume 128, Issue 70
www.THEDAONLINE.com
HEADIN’ OUT WEST
WWW.AZSNAKEPIT.COM
West Virginia picked to face Arizona State in Cactus Bowl BY DAVID STATMAN
ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR @DJSTATMAN77
After dropping the final game of the regular season, the West Virginia University football team has been dealt another major challenge: a bowl matchup in hostile territory. West Virginia will travel to Phoenix, Arizona on Jan. 2 to face off with the Arizona State Sun Devils (6-6) in the Cactus Bowl, which was announced Sunday. Not only will it be West Virginia’s longest trip of the 2015 season, the Mountaineers will have to play what essentially amounts to
a road game, just 10 miles from the Sun Devils’ hometown of Tempe, Arizona. “It’s definitely going to be a road game,” said Mountaineer head coach Dana Holgorsen. “We’re going to get on an airplane, go fly somewhere and get ready to play the game, but it’ll be a lot different. We’re used to playing on the road in hostile environments, and we’re sure Mountaineer Nation will bring some fans.” It’ll be quite a long trip for both the Mountaineers and their fans: approximately 2,078 miles, to be exact. In past years, the Cactus Bowl has been
played on Arizona State’s home field in Tempe but with Sun Devil Stadium undergoing renovations, this year’s game will be played at Chase Field, the home of Major League Baseball’s Arizona Diamondbacks. It will still be a homefield environment for the Sun Devils, but Holgorsen is confident his 7-5 squad will be able to deal with not only the time change – the game is set to be played at 10:15 eastern time – and the opposing crowd. “You’re going to be out there for four or five days, and you’re going to get used to the environment
Local police now permitted to administer naloxone when responding to overdose calls By Jake Jarvis Staff Writer @NewsroomJake
When local authorities respond to a call and find someone overdosing on opioids, they will now be able to provide potentially life-saving help. Local authorities launched a county-wide naloxone program Friday through a partnership with West Virginia University. Soon, officers with University Police Department, Morgantown Police Department and the Monongalia County Sheriff ’s Department will be trained to administer naloxone. Leaders announced the move as a new age in the community’s drug epidemic. “Together, we can do a lot of good things,” said University Police Chief Bob Roberts. “Separated, we don’t get much accomplished.” Naloxone is a non-controlled substance that, when sprayed into the nose of a person, reverses the effects of opioids, like heroin, methadone and oxycodone. If naloxone is mistakenly administered to someone not overdosing on opioids, there will be no adverse effects, according to MPD Chief Ed Preston. “This has already been standard procedure for many years,” Preston said. “What we’re looking at is different ways to get it into the field faster.” Police in Kanawha
INSIDE
Downtown Culinary Crawl coverage A&E PAGE 4
News: 1, 2 Opinion: 3 A&E: 4, 5, 6 Sports: 9, 10, 11 Campus Calendar: 8 Puzzles: 8 Classifieds: 7
one, the conference’s second-leading tackler. Arizona State finished ninth in the Pac-12 in scoring defense, allowing 32.7 points per game. This will be the first time West Virginia and Arizona State have ever faced off. West Virginia has participated in the Cactus Bowl once in 1998, when the game was known as the Insight.com Bowl – on that night at Arizona Stadium in Tucson, Don Nehlen’s Mountaineers fell 34-31 to Missouri despite over 400 passing yards from Marc Bulger. djstatman@mail.wvu.edu
Askar Salikhov/The Daily Athenaeum Students and faculty members at West Virginia University take part in multiple activities around campus as the holiday season rolls in. Above: A couple shares a moment inside a life-sized snow globe in front of Woodburn Hall. Below: The “Erickson Gingerbread Alumni Center.”
see police on PAGE 2
FANTASTIC FOOD
the regular season finale) as the Sun Devils lost four of their last six games. The Sun Devils got a productive senior season out of quarterback Mike Bercovici, who finished third in the Pac-12 with 3,443 passing yards, to go with 26 touchdowns and 9 interceptions. Meanwhile, sophomore running back Demario Richard was one of six Pac-12 rushers to reach the 1,000-yard mark, forming a productive tandem with 6-foot-3 sledgehammer Kalen Ballage. Arizona State’s defense boasts Pac-12 sack leader Antonio Longino and defensive back Jordan Sim-
‘TIS THE SEASON
County became the first in West Virginia to put naloxone to use after the state legislature passed a bill earlier in the year, allowing police, firefighters and friends and family to administer the substance. Prior to that, only paramedics and other licensed medical professionals could administer the substance. Through other programs like the safe communities project, MPD has tried to combat drug abuse for a few years. Naloxone is just another tool to add to an officer’s toolbox. From body cameras and naloxone treatments to tasers and batons, Preston said police are increasingly expected to do more and more. As of Friday afternoon, no MPD officer had administered naloxone to a person overdosing. But how often will naloxone actually be used? For MPD, at least, it is a hard number to predict. Preston said it could be a couple of times a day or a couple of times a month. “When you look at WVU Police, we’re throughout the city of Morgantown,” Roberts said. “It’s not just our residence halls. But (an overdose) could happen in our residence halls. It could happen anywhere.” Roberts said most of the overdoses UPD sees stem from prescription drugs and in some cases,
50°/36°
MOSTLY CLOUDY
and the time change,” Holgorsen said. “We’ll probably practice later in the day than we’re used to doing, just because we’re going to be playing later at night, but our kids are resilient and they’ll be able to adjust to anything.” Once a member of Rich Rodriguez’s coaching staff at West Virginia, Arizona State head coach Todd Graham and his squad finished 6-6 this season with a 4-5 mark in the Pac-12 Conference. A S U ’s conference schedule saw them drop high-scoring shootouts to Oregon (61-55 in triple overtime) and Cal (48-46 in
THE DA’s HIRING WRITERS
Inquire about paid positions at The Daily Athenaeum at DA-editor@mail.wvu.edu or pick up an application at our office at 284 Prospect St.
CONTACT US Newsroom 304-293-5092 or DAnewsroom@mail.wvu.edu Advertising 304-293-4141 or DA-Ads@mail.wvu.edu Classifieds 304-293-4141 or DA-Classifieds@mail.wvu.edu Fax 304-293-6857
MOZART Listening to classical music while studying may improve knowledge retention OPINION PAGE 3
LOW NOTE WVU ends regular season with loss at K-State SPORTS PAGE 9