B o ise
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April 14, 2011 Issue no.
57
Volume 23
Ooh la la!
Spring fever!
Football prepares for final spring scrimmage Saturday at Bronco stadium.
Miss Idaho 2011 is also a student at Boise State. Check out her story!
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Boise, Idaho
Sports
Journalist
Haven’t voted yet? Today and tomorrow are fair game. First, head over to http://tinyurl. com/BSUvote and login using your student email as a user name and your student ID number as a
Amy Glass prepares for NCAA National Championships.
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password. After logging in, it’ll give you the office title and the list of people who are running. It will also provide a brief overview of the candidates’ platform. Instead of just voting for one candidate, students will be asked to rank their candidates based on preference (first choice, second choice). It’s called instant-runoff voting,
Opinion Controversy arose when ASBSU candidates’ criminal records were printed. What do you think?
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Culture
English Majors’ Association is under new, bold management.
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attach a light bulb and see how it works,” Gourneau said. Gourneau said her groups’ bike was a bit different from the rest. It was a mini pink Barbie® bike, but she was just satisfied everything was standing vertical. One corner of the Quad was strictly a cutting station. Only CM students were allowed to run it, so no participants did their own cutting. Yellow caution tape was put around the construction area for safety reasons, but students stood all around to watch the groups build their windmills. “People have been stopping by and asking questions. We actually had a mother and daughter come out today … she had taken her out of school early because both had read the book and were interested to see how things were going,” Gourneau said. Gourneau said the whole day was a fun experience not only for the students building the windmills but for those who came to watch the educational experience. Students who didn’t have any experience helped out as well. “I have absolutely no experience … none. No manual was provided so it’s a whole bunch of pieces of wood and I just have to put them together and make it work?” said Brittni Blesse, 19-year-old material science engineering major from Eagle River, Alaska. CMA hasn’t decided what they will do with the completed windmills. They’ve had people ask if they can have them for their own yards or gardens, but nothing has been decided yet. The event wrapped up before 4 p.m. and the windmills were turning. “You feel like you’re back to being five years old again building things. Just now it’s with real hammers and real wood creating a windmill,” Gourneau said.
Edina Macic Hammers, wrenches and a Barbie® bike are all it took for Boise State students to create a windmill. The Construction Management Association (CMA) took on the re-creation of the windmill project Friday, inspired by William Kamkwamba’s book, “The Boy Who Harnessed The Wind”, as this year’s Campus Read. CMA partnered with Engineers Without Borders (EWB), a nonprofit humanitarian organization that takes on sustainable engineering projects, to help with the event. Registration was open for even students without any experience with hammers. The CMA students built one large windmill displayed in the center of the Quad that was looked at as a model for each individual group to recreate. Each team received a tool box and one CMA student was assigned for each group to help those who had no experience. Each tool box consisted of a hammer, wrench, screw drivers, tape measure, safety goggles and hard hats. At the event, Natani Gourneau, construction management (CM) student and member of the CMA said, “Today I’m out here as a project manager for my team. This is a good experience just to get a hands on experience of re-creating Mr. Kamkwamba’s windmill he created for his village (in Africa).” Five groups were hammering away. The process was a long one. “Each team gets a bike which will propel the tire and catch a mechanism called dynamo, which works as a generator, and that will create electricity that the circuit will be attached to. From there, we will be able to
Natalie Davis death remains suspicious Sherry Horton Journalist
Toxicology tests and an autopsy on the body of Natalie Davis, 30, do not pinpoint a cause of death. Davis was found dead and partially burned inside her
March 25, 2011
Boise home near Beacon Street March 5. According to Ada County Coroner Erwin Sonnenberg, Davis’ cause of death is still undetermined. Her death remains suspicious while further studies are done. Davis’ ex-fiance, Lloyd Har-
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din McNeil, was arrested nearly two weeks later in Seattle, Wash. He is in the Ada County Jail on two counts of grand theft for taking Natalie’s ring and her car around the time of her death. Boise Police have not said McNeil is a suspect, but he does remain a person of interest.
AMPUS
RIME
03/25/11: Someone spraypainted graffiti on a wall of the PAAW Building. A report was taken; paint was cleaned off.
03/24/11: Two thefts occurred when someone stole an unattended outdoor workstation from the Administration visitor parking lot, and another individual cut a lock and took a bike from the NORCO Building. A report was taken. 03/21/11: Someone stole a wallet from an unattended backpack at the Multi-Purpose
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or in other words, ranked voting. Basically, when there are three candidates running against each other, in order to take into account the opinion of those who voted for the candidate who ended up in third place, they take their second choice into account. This prevents the need for a second election between the top two candidates and
everyone’s vote counts, even if it counts for their second choice. Though only two of five offices actually have more than two candidates running, students will be asked to rank all offices. As candidates continue to campaign during elections, the election board will be present on both sides of the Quad from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
with laptops that students can use to cast their votes. The new online program, votenet, has been used by many other universities. Boise State purchased a one year contract with the website. ASBSU allotted $3,500 for the program and will also be using it in the fall elections for the student assembly.
Sure, no bikes, but plenty of windmills on Quad Journalist
The Arbiter
First issue free
ASBSU voting open ‘til Friday night Stephanie Casanova
News Sports Opinion Culture
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Classroom building. A report was taken. 03/18/11: A person admitted to smoking marijuana in Keiser Hall and had some in his possession. A report was taken.
03/14/11: A subject reported that they had been raped at an off-campus location. A report was taken.
03/13/11: A drug violation occurred at Chaffee Hall when an individual admitted to smoking marijuana. He
March 11, 2011
had some in his possession. A report was taken and a citation issued. 03/12/11: A suspect broke into a vehicle located near the John B. Barnes Towers and Education building parking lot. A report was taken. 03/11/11: Someone cut a lock and stole a bike from the stairwell of the Morrison Apartments. A report was taken. *If you know anything about the
events in the Crime Log, we’d love to talk. You can remain anonymous. news@arbiteronline.com
CODY FINNEY/THE ARBITER
Two members of the Construction Management Association zip screws in to their windmill Friday in the Quad.
After dying in Idaho, gun bill needs just an initial in Arizona Stephanie Casanova & Suzanne Craig News Journalists
It’s finally come down to the wire for three state legislatures, Idaho one of them, for the bill relating to carrying guns on campus.
Idaho: Bill declared ‘dead’
Though the Idaho House of Representatives passed the notorious firearms on campus bill, H0222, on March 16, the bill has stumbled to a halt in the Senate committee, where it has been declared that this bill (and others like it) will not get another hearing this session. This is not a complete rejection of the bill, but is at the least a delay, and hints that severe rewriting needs to occur in order for the bill to pass if it comes through next session.
Assistant News Editor news@stumedia.boisestate.edu
Texas is notorious for being extremely firearm friendly
A similar bill, SB1467, which allows anyone to carry a gun on the sidewalks or roads of public universities (a permit is needed for 18- to 21-year-olds, 21 and older it doesn’t matter), passed the House on April 7
mct campus
Brad Huffman, right, and Adnan Shahab carry their unloaded handguns into a Peet’s Coffee & Tea store January 2010 in San Ramon, Calif.
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Texas: Surprisingly, bill gets stuck
-- people with permits can skip the metal detectors in the Capitol, after all. But after rallies and massive organizational effort on the part of the universities and students, some of the senators have switched sides, deadlocking the bill on the Senate floor. Arizona’s bill: http://tinyurl. com/AZcampusguns. Texas’ bill: http://tinyurl. com/TXcampusguns.
On the other side of the fence, we have Arizona.
News Editor
news@stumedia.boisestate.edu
while the Senate passed it on April 11, leaving the final decision on Governor Jan Brewer’s shoulders. Interesting to note that she’s signed every bill easing gun restrictions in her two years in office.
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