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www.dailyutahchronicle.com Vol. 119 | No. 103 | ©2010 Monday, April 5, 2010 Regents OK tuition hike MIKE MANGUM/The Daily Utah Chronicle Five-year-old Petey Joseph of Sugar House plays with the life-size puppet of a newly discovered ceratopsian dinosaur Friday morning at the Utah Museum of Natural History. 9.5% increase given final approval Bill takes banks out of college loan equation As graduation looms, unemployment rises Man to go to trial for guard’s murder at U HIV medicines help treat other diseases RICHARD PAYSON/The Daily Utah Chronicle Gage Edvalson, a seasonal employee at the University Campus Store, helps 2010 graduating students pick out their materials for the graduation ceremonies. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Curtis Allgier appears in court for a hearing July 13, 2007, in Salt Lake City. Allgier is charged with murder in the death of a corrections ocer. RESEARCH AT THE U See TUITION Page 3 See LOANS Page 3 See JOBS Page 2 See ALLGIER Page 2 See RETROVIRUS Page 3 LEAVING A LEGACY : Utah loses 31 years of experience with Elliott’s decision to take a year o» 6 GREEN GRADS Alicia Williams says eco-friendly graduation gowns would help students leave their mark of sustainability » 5
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Page 1: 2010-04-05

www.dailyutahchronicle.com Vol. 119 | No. 103 | ©2010

Monday, April 5, 2010

Regents OK tuition hike

MIKE MANGUM/The Daily Utah Chronicle

Five-year-old Petey Joseph of Sugar House plays with the life-size puppet of a newly discovered ceratopsian dinosaur Friday morning at the Utah Museum of Natural History.

9.5% increase given final approval

Bill takes banks out of college loan equation As graduation looms,

unemployment rises

Man to go to trial for guard’s murder at U HIV medicines help treat other diseases

RICHARD PAYSON/The Daily Utah Chronicle

Gage Edvalson, a seasonal employee at the University Campus Store, helps 2010 graduating students pick out their materials for the graduation ceremonies.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Curtis Allgier appears in court for a hearing July 13, 2007, in Salt Lake City. Allgier is charged with murder in the death of a corrections o!cer.

RESEARCH A T T H E U

See TUITION Page 3

See LOANS Page 3 See JOBS Page 2

See ALLGIER Page 2 See RETROVIRUS Page 3

LEAVING A LEGACY: Utah loses 31 years of experience with Elliott’s decision to take a year o! » 6

GREEN GRADSAlicia Williams says eco-friendly graduation gowns would help students leave their mark of sustainability » 5

Page 2: 2010-04-05

ACROSS 1 1996 candidate

Dole

4 “10 ___ or less” (checkout line sign that grates on grammarians)

9 The real ___

14 When a plane is due in, for short

15 Nerve

16 [Crossing my fingers]

17 ___ center (community facility)

18 Unrealized gain on an investment

20 Suffix with cyclo- or Jumbo

22 Braga a k a the Brazilian Bombshell

23 “Bah, humbug!”

24 Merely suggest

26 SSW!s opposite

28 Letters on an ambulance

29 Detective, in slang

32 Give up, as rights

34 Evergreen

36 Fancy

40 “That!s ___ haven!t heard!”

42 “Jaws” menace

43 Wished

44 Good luck charms

47 Charles Dickens pseudonym

48 Kuwaiti leader

49 Kettledrum

51 Buddy

53 Mesh

55 Facet

58 Guthrie with a guitar

60 Pat of “Wheel of Fortune”

63 Mountain lift

64 They measure the tonnage of trucks

67 Singer Yoko

68 W.W. II bomber ___ Gay

69 Outdo

70 Giant great Mel

71 Copenhageners, e.g.

72 Tending to ooze

73 Flattens in the ring, for short

DOWN 1 Train sleeping

spot

2 Former “S.N.L.” comic Cheri

3 1676 Virginia uprising

4 Little devil

5 Woman presiding at a banquet

6 Giant fair

7 Appearance

8 Small finch

9 Former Russian space station

10 Take an ax to

11 Photo-filled reading matter in the living room

12 Poppy product

13 Reported Himalayan sightings

19 Cosmetic applied with a damp sponge

21 To the ___ degree

25 What to say to a doctor with a tongue depressor

27 Snakelike fish

30 Terse critiques

31 Path down to a mine

33 Talk over?

34 In favor of

35 Once ___ blue moon

37 Costing nothing, in Cologne

38 Wedding vow

39 ___ Percé tribe

41 Company called “Big Blue”

45 “Am ___ your way?”

46 Atlanta-based sta.

50 Well-put

51 Manhandled

52 Indoor game site

54 Tex-Mex sandwiches

56 Poetic chapter for Ezra Pound

57 Gaits between walks and canters

59 Look at amorously

61 Tarzan!s woman

62 On the sheltered side

65 Contains

66 Word repeated in Mad magazine!s “___ vs. ___”

PUZZLE BY BRENDAN EMMETT QUIGLEY

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

14 15 16

17 18 19

20 21 22 23

24 25 26 27 28

29 30 31 32 33

34 35 36 37 38 39

40 41 42 43

44 45 46 47

48 49 50

51 52 53 54 55 56 57

58 59 60 61 62 63

64 65 66 67

68 69 70

71 72 73

Edited by Will Shortz No. 0301Crossword

INTRODUCING A NEW ACADEMIC PROGRAM IN DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS!

The Division of Nutrition is proud to offer a new minor and

graduate degree academic program in dietary supplements

starting Fall 2010!

The Regulation & Evaluation of Dietary Supplements

(REDS) Program offers a comprehensive education in the

regulation, use, safety, and efficacy of dietary supplements.

The dietary supplement industry is the third largest industry in

the State of Utah, and the REDS Program offers internship

opportunities within local dietary supplement manufacturers.

Stop by and visit us in HPR-N, Room 214 or visit our website: www.health.utah.edu/nutrition

Advertising 801-581-7041 News 801-581-NEWS Fax 801-581-FAXX

EDITOR IN CHIEF: Rachel Hanson

MANAGING EDITOR: Sara Copeland

PRODUCTION MANAGER: Alyssa Whitney

ASST. PRODUCTION MANAGER: Becca IsbellNEWS EDITOR: Michael McFall

ASST. NEWS EDITOR: Trent LoweOPINION EDITOR: Craig Blake

SPORTS EDITOR: Paige Fieldsted

ASST. SPORTS EDITOR: Bryan ChouinardARTS EDITOR: Joseph Peterson

PHOTO EDITOR: Tyler Cobb

ASST. PHOTO EDITOR: Mike MangumONLINE EDITOR: Richard Payson

PAGE DESIGNER: Tyler PrattCOPY EDITORS: Jessica Blake, Joseph PetersonPROOFREADER: Beverly JacksonADVISER: Jim FisherGENERAL MANAGER: Jake Sorensen

ADV. DESIGNER: Karissa Greene

Millions in California, Mexico feel 7.2 quake

www.dailyutahchronicle.com

2Monday,

April 5, 2010

Phun With Physics at the Utah Museum of Natural History: 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. @ Utah Museum of Natural History

Abravanel Visiting Composer Series: 7:30 p.m. @ Douglas Gardner HallLaw in the 21st Century: Noon to 1 p.m. @ Hinckley Caucus Room, OSH Room 255

Weather from the department of atmospheric sciences: http://forecast.utah.edu

Rain/snow 47°/39°

WORLD

U.S.

UTAH

CRASH AND COLOR DOG CAUSES FENDER-BENDER

A patient who was evacuated from the sixth floor of Tijuana’s General Hospital, sits next to the hospital’s parking lot after a 7.2 earthquake hit the area in Tijuana, Mexico, on Sunday. According to the US Geological Survey, the epicenter was registered in the Mexican state of Baja California.

UTA cracks down on fare dodgers

JOBScontinued from Page 1

ALLGIERcontinued from Page 1

Page 3: 2010-04-05

The Department of Ballet proudly presents

Artistic Director: Conrad Ludlow

April 9, 10, 22, 23 7:30 p.m.

April 102:00 p.m.

THRU THE LEADED GLASSChoreographed by Bruce Caldwell

REMEMBRANCEChoreographed by Sharee Lane

SLEEPING BEAUTY: GRAND PAS DE DEUX AND PAS DE TROIS

Restaged by Maggie Wright Tesch

MAKESHIFT STAGESChoreographed by Stevan Novakovich

This performance made possible in part by Fine Arts Fees support

Photo by: Luke Isley

Honoring Associate Professor Conrad Ludlow

MARRIOTT CENTER FOR DANCETickets may be purchased at the door or visit www.kingtix.com or call 801.581.7100

70 YEARS LATER: REMEMBERING THE GERMAN INVASION OF POLAND

WORKSHOP Wednesday, April 7, 2:00-6:00 pmUofU Carolyn Tanner Irish Humanities BuildingAuditorium room 109

History 3910/5910 This is a workshop with lecture, discussion and film clips on the Holocaust taught by Ronald M. Smelser, Professor of History. The workshop may be taken for one credit by registering through Academic Outreach and Continuing Education (801-581-8969)

CANDLELIGHT VIGILThursday, April 8, 6:00 pm2 North Medical Drive

A candlight vigil will be held at the Price Family Holocaust Memorial Garden of the Jewish Community Center. Rabbi Frederick L. Wenger will preside. Refreshments will be served.

KEYNOTE ADDRESSThursday, April 8, 7:00 pmMarriot Center for Dance in the Hayes/Christensen Theater

Dr. Charles Sydnor, former president of Emery & Henry College and of the Commonwealth Public Broadcasting in Richmond, Virginia and a scholar of Nazi Germany will speak on the theme: “Reinhard Heydrich: a Holocaust Perpetrator in Historical Perspective”.

Heydrich was a senior SS officer, who played a major role in the planning and execution of the Holocaust.

FEATURE BALLET PERFORMANCE“Remembrance”Friday, April 9 at 7:30 pm and Saturday, April 10 at 2:00 and 7:30 pmMarriott Center for Dance in the Hayes/Christensen Theater.

The University of Utah’s residential ballet company, Utah Ballet, presents “Remembrance”, a new work based on women in the Holocaust. Choreographed by Professor Sharee Lane, it puts the Holocaust in the context of choreography symbolic of the value of human life and the fragile nature of our freedom. It is a tribute to the Jewish people and their miraculous story of survival and rebirth.

REMEMBRANCE STARS AND POSTERSAvailable from the Office of the Associate Vice President for Diversity, 204 Park Building, 201 S. Presidents Circle (801-581-7569)

On campus yellow cloth stars will be distributed to students, faculty and staff as well as available to community members to commemorate the identity badges that have been imposed on Jews throughout history. In Nazi-occupied Denmark, the underground produced replicas of the Nazi-imposed badge, which read “Jews and non-Jews stand united in their struggle”.

The cloth stars distributed on campus carry a similar message.

All 2010 Days of remembrance events (except the workshop taken for credit) are free and open to the public. For more information, call 801-581-7569 or visit http://www.diversity.utah.edu

The commemoration will feature youth readings, introduction of survivors, witnesses, partisans and World War Two veterans, the Governor’s Proclamation as well as words from a survivor, Ruth Hartz and historian Dr. Charles Sydnor. The focus will be on the lives of children during the Holocaust and serves as an introduction to an Ann Frank exhibit at the library. Rabbi Benny Zippel will preside.

HOLOCAUST COMMEMORATIONSunday, April 11, 2:00 pmSalt Lake City Library Main Library Auditorium 210 East 400 South

S T A T E O B S E R V A T I O N O F H O L O C A U S T R E M E M B R A N C E D A Y

MASTERPIECE CLASSIC “The Diary of Ann Frank”!Sunday, April 11, 8:00-10:00 pm on KUED

Monday, April 5, 2010 3

New certificate to help study of global health

See GLOBAL Page 4

LOANScontinued from Page 1

TUITIONcontinued from Page 1

RETROVIRUScontinued from Page 1

Follow us on

Twitter!

Page 4: 2010-04-05

Fashion Plaza 152 East Winchester, Murray 801.266.4747The Gateway 157 South Rio Grande, Salt Lake City 801.456.4747

www.jbrooksjewelers.com

!"#$%&'(&!)#*+,""-

!"#$%&%!'(%&%)*#$

!"#$%"#&'()&%'*&+#&"#%*,&

-("&."%*/%0#&123((4&0#101&

+,-.%/%$(*$%0'(0%123456%

03%0&51&$"(6#'&0(&#--#2056#4,&

"%51#&,(/"&0#10&12("#17)))72('05'/#7/0%37#*/8$"#$

!&.)#!,)#/0%*!#*!)1

test preparation®

u t a h u t e s . c o m

2 0 1 0 U T A H G Y M N A S T I C S2009!10 NCAA WOMEN’S SPORT ATTENDANCE CHAMPIONThank you to the Muss, Students, Faculty and Sta! for all your support!

Monday, April 5, 20104

Lecture to examine Third World health care

GLOBALcontinued from Page 3

Page 5: 2010-04-05

www.dailyutahchronicle.com

5Monday,

April 5, 2010

“Matheson decries partisanship in Hinckley forum”(Michael McFall, March 29, 2010) News

Anonymousposted 3.30.10 @ 12:25 P.M. Yeah, Jimmy, let’s just smooth it all over and make people forget you act like a Republican even though you claim to be a Democrat. Your failure to back health insurance reform will not be forgotten.

www.dailyutahchronicle.comStudents need eco-friendly choices for graduation gowns

Genuineposted 3.30.10 @ 12:47 P.M. After sending my comments and feel-ings regarding the debate of Healthcare Reform to Congressman Matheson, I did not even receive acknowledgement from his office regarding my letter. Disap-pointing when those who are to repre-sent your voice can’t even acknowldge you. Politics as usual?

Kikiposted 3.30.10 @ 1:21 P.M. I did receive a letter from Matheson’s office in response to my email of disap-pointment in how he voted for health care reform. It was a very “republican” answer. Disgusting. He should be re-minded of his father’s leadership. He’s married to a physician; I’d be surprised if she supports his position.

Mr. Anonymousposted 3.31.10 @ 9:11 A.M. The main objection to the information being collected by the census is the con-cept that the government can demand you provide it, and if you don’t, they can put you in jail. There is no legal founda-tion for that law. And if there is... well... there shouldn’t be. If they want to get a head count of all the people... that’s fine. If they want to figure out the demograph-ics of the country... also fine. But getting into your personal life and demanding answers at the point of a gun... not fine. Or didn’t that ever occur to you?

mcposted 3.31.10 @ 12:53 P.M. What everyone is forgetting is that you’re not providing any information to the Census Bureau that the federal gov-ernment doesn’t already have in some way! Sheesh! A lot of that information IS publicly known, too. Just search for yourself on the online white pages...

Johnposted 4.1.10 @ 4:54 P.M. While I’m going to have to agree that all the people who are distraught over the questions asked in the census are being utter and completely absurd it is true that census data in the past has been used to round up people of certain eth-nic backgrounds (the best and perhaps only example is the interment of Japa-nese american’s following the attack on Pearl Harbor, as well as some of Ger-man and Itilian descent following entry into WWII).That being said. If you have a facebook page, blog, flickr account or any num-ber of other internet profiles, pay taxes, work, have applied to admittance to a state university this information is all cur-rently available to the US government if they choose to collect and compile it in some other fashion.Its funny, and perhaps it was just be-cause I was younger and didn’t pay as much attention at the time but I don’t recall some much right wing resistance to the last census even though it too was conducted under a Democratic presidency....

“Census paranoia is unfounded”(Chris Wade, March 31, 2010) Opinion

Group’s award proves grassroots ability

Gene patents wouldn’t impede research

Students for Sensible Drug Policy brings important social issues to light

Page 6: 2010-04-05

www.dailyutahchronicle.com

6Monday,

April 5, 2010

Men’s GolfUniversity of Wyoming Cowboy ClassicAll Day Scottsdale, Ariz.

BaseballSouthern Utah @ Utah6 p.m. Spring Mobile Ballpark

SoftballUtah @ Boise State1 p.m. Boise, Idaho

UPCOMING SPORTS EVENTS

TODAY:

TUESDAY:

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

Elliott’s decision to leave ‘shocked’ young team

FULL ARTICLE ONLINE » www.dailyutahchronicle.com

THIEN SOK/The Daily Utah Chronicle

Elaine Elliott announces that she will take a year’s leave of absence while she considers retirement from coaching. Anthony Levrets, who just completed his third year as an assistant on the coaching sta!, will serve as the interim coach.

BASEBALL

Utes clinch crucial wins in sweep

TANER PASAMEHMETOGLU/The Daily Utah Chronicle

Freshman pitcher Tyler Wagner pitches the ball at a home meet. The Utes beat Air Force in the past three games and play Southern Utah tomorrow at 6 p.m. in Spring Mobile Ballpark. See BASEBALL Page 7

RUGBY

Rugby to advance to national tourney

THIEN SOK/The Daily Utah Chronicle

The Ute rugby team earned the fourth-place seed in the Pacific Coast Conference, scheduled to begin April 16.

SOFTBALL

Stellar pitching, hitting pays off in doubleheader

See RUGBY Page 7

UTES IN BRIEF

Utes to travel for Cowboy Classic

GOLF

TRACK & FIELD

TOP 6 FINISHES

High Jump:1 - 5’ 9.25” Langley Iverson (sophmore)Hammer Throw:1 - 188’ 3.75” Sarah Grim (senior)6 - 169’ 8.25” Anneli Stahl (freshman)Shotput:2 - 45-7.75 Nikkie Rudder (freshman)100m Hurdles:2 - 14.24 s Angela Kaplar (freshman)400m Hurdles:4 - 1 min 02.18 s Chelsey Kaplar (senior)200 Meter Dash:4 - 25.17 s Whitney Wellington (senior)400 Meter Run:3 - 56.71 s Alyssa Johnson (freshman)4 - 57.08 s Natalie Young (freshman)

NEXT MEET - Utah Open, April 10 @ Tally Stevens Track Stadium (East High)

Track Stats - BYU Cougar Invite

Bryan Chouinard reflects on MLB’s opening day. READ THE ARTICLE ONILNE »

www.dailyutahchronicle.com/sports

Page 7: 2010-04-05

Monday, April 5, 2010 7

B O B I T E M S M C C O Y

E T A M O X I E I H O P E

R E C P A P E R P R O F I T

T R O N S O N I A P F U I

H I N T A T N N E E M S

S H A M U S C E D E

F I R H I G H F A L U T I N

O N E I S H A R K B A D E

R A B B I T S F E E T B O Z

E M I R T I M B A L

P A L N E T A S P E C T

A R L O S A J A K T B A R

W E I G H S C A L E S O N O

E N O L A O N E U P O T T

D A N E S S E E P Y K O S

Overheard at

the U

Overheard at

What have you heard?

Email us at [email protected]

BYU

In Comparative Phyisiology Lab:

If I go to the bath-room will it throw off

my digestion?

Girl on phone: “And then they dumped a bucket of crickets on the lobby floor, and the boys thought they

were SOOOO funny!”

“Have you ever tried to herd pigs? And I don’t

mean the George Cloo-ney kind” -Anthropology

Prof

Religion Profes-sor: “Put that in

your religious pipe and smoke it...”

BASEBALLcontinued from Page 6

RUGBYcontinued from Page 6

Page 8: 2010-04-05

Salt Lake City-based EnergySolutions LLC—a for profi t company—is obsessed with cramming its Tooele County

landfi ll with foreign radioactive waste and dangerous depleted uranium. And now, the company wants to

dilute hotter, more hazardous radioactive waste with “less hot” waste and dispose of it in their Tooele facility.

If they are allowed to go through with their plans, the repercussions will be disastrous to the state of Utah.

Put a stop to this madness Call the Division of Radiation Control at 800.458.0145 or 801.536.4123;

or visit www.radiationcontrol.utah.gov.www.radiationcontrol.utah.gov.www.radiationcontrol.utah.gov

STRIKE 1: Importing Foreign Waste

STRIKE 2: Disposing of Depleted Uranium

STRIKE 3: Diluting Radioactive Waste

Let’s keep this stuff OUT!

EnergySolutions

DailyUtahChronicle_03-10.indd 1 3/30/10 11:19 AM

Monday, April 5, 20108