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The Argonaut | September 5, 2024

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September 5, 2024

UIARGONAUT.COM

IN THIS ISSUE

Seasonal work: a place for discovery

Idaho falls just short of historic upset against Oregon

LIFE, 4

SPORTS, 6

Does social media belong in presidential campaigns? OPINION, 7

FOR, OF AND BY THE STUDENTS SINCE 1898

Vandal Healing Garden opens

After three months of construction, the garden is completed on schedule Ben DeWitt ARGONAUT

Hundreds of students, faculty and community members gathered at MacLean Field for the official opening of the Vandal Healing Garden on Aug. 21. The speakers and attendees praised the efforts made to construct the garden and highlighted its value for all Vandals, past, present and future. The Healing Garden is a project to memorialize and remember all the Vandals who have passed away while enrolled at the University of Idaho, spurred by the murders of Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle, Kaylee Goncalves and Madison Mogen on Nov. 13, 2022. After three months of construction, the previously empty MacLean Field has branching walkways, a diverse plant garden and a gazebo-type structure in the middle. The structure in the middle houses a sculpture and four plaques with the names of the four vandals who died in November 2022. There are also several spaces in the structure where students can leave letters to students who have passed away. The UI Library will be collecting these letters and archiving them. Above the field is a tall silver beacon on the hill that lights up the garden at night. Blaine Eckles, the Dean of Students and Vice Provost of Student Affairs for UI, spoke during the ceremony. He explained what the purpose of

the Vandal Healing Garden is and why it was built. “It’s about coming together in moments of grief and reflection, to share the burden of sorrow that we all experience, and about taking time to reflect on those we have lost and communicate with them in meaningful ways. That is what the essence of the healing garden is about: to be a bridge to those that are no longer with us,” Eckles said. Eckles also shared that the idea for the healing garden was not a new one. He said that since he started working at UI in 2015, he has known 37 Vandals who have died while enrolled at UI. He named a few Vandals that passed away while enrolled, such as Katy Benoit, Michael Bonar, Hudson Lindow and others. “The thing that unites all of those students and many more is that they were Vandals enrolled here at the University of Idaho,” Eckles said. Eckles also thanked students and community members for their help and support with the garden. He revealed that the 19 students who worked on the garden over the summer were not paid and earned no credits. SEE MEMORIAL GARDEN, PAGE 3

John Keegan | Argonaut

Two people embracing each other at the opening of the Vandal healing Garden and Memorial

Katy Benoit month events scheduled September marks campus safety month Allyssa Dotson ARGONAUT

September is an important month at the University of Idaho as it is a time of remembrance and learning. UI hosts the Katy Benoit Campus Safety Awareness Month every September to provide students and faculty with safety-orientated events. Katy Benoit was a graduate student at the university in 2011 when she was killed by a professor who she had a romantic relationship with previously. The first event of the month is taking place on Wednesday, Sept. 4 at the Campus Safety Resource Fair in the ISUB Plaza. The full list of campus events are listed here: Sept. 4: Campus Safety Resource Fair (11 a.m. - ISUB

AsiaPOP! guest speakers coming soon Discussions of foreign relations, music and television on Sept. 1112 Victoria Kingsmore ARGONAUT

John Keegan | Argonaut

The beacon, a part of the Vandal Healing Garden and Memorial News, 1

Life, 4

Sports, 6

Opinion, 7

Plaza) Sept. 7-8: “Every Brilliant Thing” play for suicide awareness (7 p.m. or 2 p.m. - Forge Theater) Sept. 12: Take Back the Night (7 p.m. - Ag Sci 106) Sept. 13: Campus Safety Crafternoon (12:30 p.m.- Women’s Center Memorial Gym 109) Sept. 17: Responding to Disclosure of Interpersonal Violence (2 p.m.- Register Online) Sept. 20: Disfluency Film Screening- Katy Benoit Campus Safety Forum (7 p.m.- Kenworthy Theater) Sept. 21: Green Dot Bystander Intervention Workshop (9 a.m.- TBA) Sept. 23: Virtual Green Dot for Employees (10:30 a.m.- Register Online) Sept. 27: SASS Go Women’s Self Defense Class (4 p.m.- Register Online)

Presented by the University of Idaho’s Habib Institute for Asian Studies, AsiaPOP! is underway. This year’s theme is “Korean Wave,” highlighting the surge of Korean popular culture that has swept its way abroad. From Sept. 11 to Sept. 12, the guest speaker portion of the event will commence. University of Idaho

On Wednesday, Sept. 11, Mijo Park will be speaking on the past and current state of U.S.-Korean relations. Park is the Deputy Consul General of the Consulate General of the Republic of Korea in Seattle. The discussion will be from 10:30 a.m. to 11:15 a.m. in Admin 204. Shortly afterward at 12:30 p.m. in the Haddock Performance Hall at the Lionel Hampton School of Music, Korean indiepunk band God of Universe will be speaking on the Seoul music scene. SEE ASIAPOP!, PAGE 2 Volume 126, Issue no. 1

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