Friday, Nov. 5, 2010
Utah Statesman The
Campus Voice since 1902
Utah State University • Logan, Utah • www.utahstatesman.com
Bowling coach dies at age 53 By CATHERINE MEIDELL news editor
Craig Lofthouse, USU bowling instructor and bowling club coach, passed away Wednesday between five and 6 p.m. due to surgical complications, said Brian Olsen, USU bowling club president. Lofthouse was 53 years old. Lofthouse was employed with USU for eight years and had been a dedicated bowling coach to youth and college-age students in Cache Valley for 17 years. The precise cause of Lofthouse’s sudden death is unknown, but Olsen said his daughter, Casey Rowley, believes something went wrong during an operation to fix damage done after he was thrown from a horse. He fell off the horse Oct. 22, which caused his pelvis to break. Lofthouse also suffered injuries from being trampled by the horse.
He was quickly transported to Logan Regional Hospital where he was immediately Life Flighted to McKayDee Hospital Center in Ogden, Utah. After doctors performed surgery to mend his broken pelvis, Olsen said. Doctors are looking into whether or not Lofthouse’s death may have been linked to his history of high blood pressure. Olsen said his family members were concerned his blood pressure would heighten during recovery. Lofthouse is survived by his wife of 31 years, Belynne Lofthouse, and his daughters, Casey Rowley and Maddie Lofthouse. A viewing will be held Sunday, Nov. 7 from 6-8 p.m. at the Allen-Hall Mortuary located at 34 E. Center St. Graveside services are scheduled for 11 a.m. Monday, Nov. 8 in the Paradise, Utah cemetery located at 8998 S. 200 E. – catherine.meidell@aggiemail.usu.edu
Election Results Democrat Republican
US House US Senate
187 Seats 53 Seats
239 Seats 46 Seats
UT Governor UT US Senate
Carroon 32% Granato 33%
Herbert 64% Lee 62%
A NEW IPOD APP FOR ASUSU will be released Jan. 1, 2011. ASUSU is funding the new app which is expected to cost $21,000. ARMEN HOVSEPYAN photo illustration
ASUSU iPod app in the works By JESSICA SWEAT staff writer
Utah State University is officially on its way to owning its own unique iPod application. Public Relations Executive Director John Devilbiss said this process started last year when an employee brought the idea to staff members and students. Together the group started began to seek out feedback, and received interest from various departments across campus including University Advancement, ASUSU, and Admissions. Before ASUSU passed a bill requesting $6,000 for application funding, an online survey was distributed to students.The survey inquired about Droid and iPhone usage along with likelihood for downloading the application. It also states that USU is already in the developmental process of creating an application that will facilitate “getting information such as the academic calender, events calender, and sports calender easily onto such smart phones as well as abilities such as being
able to reserve library rooms and etc.” Devilbiss held a meeting Nov. 4 with those involved in creating the application. During that meeting, the first phase of the design was revealed and contributors were able to see the potential for the final design. So far icons have been designed and assembled for nine features included in the application. The features included are access to USU Today, campus maps that include bus routes and parking information, athletics, the USU directory, Youtube or “A” tube, Banner, events and academic calenders, weather and a place for donations. Currently, there is a plan for four phases to take place before the design is complete. Now that the first phase for the application with iPhone compatibility is complete, developers plan to add enhancements and work out glitches and tweaks before sending it to the Apple company to undergo their processes. Following
- See iPHONE, page 4
Garrels: International correspondents a dying breed Senior Foreign Correspondent for National Public Radio (NPR) Anne Garrels visited Utah State this week to speak about her experiences in covering war as a journalist and share some poignant memories. Thursday, Garrels spoke at the Performance Hall in the fourth installment of the university’s Morris Media and Society Lecture Series, sponsored by the journalism department. Garrels has received many awards and high honors for her news coverage of both wars in Iraq, the war in Afghanistan and several other places such as Kosovo and Bosnia, said Utah Public Radio interim director Nora Zambrino, who introduced Garrels. “Garrels has put a human face on conflict, combining experience in the field with a sharp understanding of the policy debates in Washington,” Zambrino said. Taking the stage, Garrels said she was part of a dying breed of journalists, comparing herself to a Neanderthal. Her lament was in reference to the “uncertain future” of journalism, specifically the work of foreign correspondents. “I merely report about the life and death of Americans, I write about the uncertain fate of billions of dollars of your tax money, I report about the
world beyond our borders,” Garrels said. New technology and its influence on the evolution of mass media, has good and bad sides to it, she said. It was a lot easier for police states to control or censor journalists before cellphones and iPods. Now, foreign correspondents are more capable of getting information to the public. She said learning new technology is important for aspiring journalists but it is not everything. “What doesn’t change is the imperative that you ask good questions, that you have something to say and you say it well,” Garrels said. “We do have standards, clear standards, which we try to uphold,” she said. “I fear that the revolt against the media is that many in America, now, don’t like questions and information that make them uncomfortable,” There is a current trend in the media, she said, of information being repeated and used by several people for their own purposes. To uphold journalistic integrity, information found on the Internet must be checked. “Americans are, more and more, seeking outlets that are opinion masquerading as facts,” she said, “outlets that confirm already held biases and beliefs.” Cutbacks in foreign reporting result from a lack of funding for Internet media sites and the decline
Inside This Issue
11/05/10
By DAN SMITH staff writer
Brian Green returns to give USU’s defense 3point threat. Page 8
ANNE GARRELS, NPR CORRESPONDENT visited USU and spoke about her assignments overseas as a journalists covering a variety of wars. She spoke in the Performance Hall on Thursday. CARL R. WILSON photo
of the mainstream media. Garrels said she was lucky to be with NPR for the past 25 years, where there are adequate tools to do her job. Embedding, or “hanging out” with the military in places like Baghdad during wartime, is how foreign correspondents gather information. Garrels said she was able to get information to Americans that the military would have otherwise withheld if she would not have been there. “We need as many experienced witnesses around the globe as pos-
sible, and I use the word experience advisedly,” she said. “I know I’m a much better reporter than when I started … only by being on the ground, can you truly report on events.” Garrels said she stayed in Iraq for six years because simply making phone calls could not have substituted for actually being on the ground, reporting. She said some of her best stories came from talking to people and not knowing where the conversations
B.J. Novak perform comedy routine at USU on Friday. Page 4
would end up. One night, she said, she was embedded with some soldiers and had the opportunity to record them talking about their lives, where they were from and what they were afraid of. The next day, two of the soldiers were killed. I had all of this tape and I was in communication with the families,” Garrels said. “I sent them all this tape of the last night with their sons … I couldn’t possibly give them back their sons, but I gave them their last moments.” After Garrels gave her lecture, the audience was invited to ask questions. One audience member asked if any of her reporting was edited or censored. She said there were certain things she was forbidden from doing, but no information was held back. Another audience member said Garrels would make a great commentator and asked what subject she would address if she was. She said, “Well, I’m not a commentator, I’m not a witty, snappy shouter, I would never make it on Fox News.” Garrel’s response was met with laughter and applause from the audience. Thank you for your interest. I intend to come back and haunt you somehow,” Garrels said. “This is a very, very special place and I really mean it.” – dan.whitney.smith@aggiemail.usu.
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