8
NICOLE BALDERAS Senior Staff Writer Ten years ago today, the world had not experienced the Sept. 11 attacks, and in the midst of shock when the attacks happened, UNT administration had to make quick decisions on how to serve the university’s community. “We were shell-shocked,” said Mark Packer, University Union assistant director for programs. “People didn’t know how to react, and we were scared because of the unknown.” Many students and faculty arrived that day to empty class- rooms because the majority of people were in the Union watching live coverage of the tragedy. “The Union staff had put up TVs everywhere,” Packer said. “You were scrambling to try to find a TV to watch so you could get information.” Another Union staff member recalls watching students and faculty pack together in tiny offices to witness the tragedy. “They were all huddled in total silence watching,” said Claire Medina, executive administra- tive assistant for campus life. “Students and faculty crowded together in offices to watch any TV they could find.” There was no school lock- down because the univer- sity had never experienced a tragedy like it before, Packer said. Instead, students were released from school around noon. “The university did make a decision late that morning to close,” Packer said. “There was no Eagle Alerts yet, so the only means we had was email and news networks.” Moving forward University officials came together soon after the tragedy to assess their options to help grieving students. “We tried to find out what kinds of programs we could do to help people process their fears and feelings,” Packer said. “We had a wall where people could write their thoughts, and it remained up for some time.” For the first few weeks it wasn’t quite clear what fueled the Sept. 11 attacks, Packer said. ISAAC WRIGHT Assigning Editor More than 2,000 people from the UNT and Denton community filled the Coliseum Wednesday night to hear former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates discuss how Sept. 11, 2001 changed America. A top intelligence official under eight different presidential admin- istrations, Gates was able to shed light on the events in the decade before 9/11 that allowed the largest terrorist attack in U.S. history to happen. Though the World Trade Center’s bottom level was bombed by terror- ists in 1993, it was one of a handful of small terrorist attacks that trans- pired during the decade. “9/11 made tragically evident the drift and neglect of the previous decade in respect to our govern- ment’s handling of intelligence and homeland security,” Gates said. “The United States had just never been hit hard enough on our own soil to take the threat truly seriously.” Gates was brought to UNT as part of the Distinguished Lecture Series. His speech was one in a week full of events to remember 9/11. Gates met with student media before taking the stage and also responded to prepared questions presented by Student Government Association President and Vice President Blake Windham and Edwin Chavez. Questions ranged from how the Bush and Obama administrations differed in their approach to counter-terrorism to what he thinks about the University of Texas leaving the Big XII confer- ence. Gates addressed current mili- tary spending over the past decade and said the present amount of the federal budget set aside for mili- tary spending is at its lowest ever during wartime. Gates said about 19 percent of the budget is spent on military needs, and 4.5 percent of the GDP is spent by the military. In World War II, 32 percent of the GDP was allocated to the military. “Defending Americans is the one unambiguous role given to the federal government by the Constitution,” Gates said. “There are strategic consequences to [defense budget] cuts. If you’re not considering the strategic conse- quences, then all you’re doing is math.” In a previous story, the North Texas Daily revealed Gates was paid $108,000 for his lecture, $33,500 of which was used for travel expenses. ALEX MACON Senior Staff Writer Adam Edwards, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, was in 9th grade when the attacks were made on Sept. 11. Now, after serving in the reserve from 2005 to 2011 and completing an eight-month tour of duty in Iraq, Edwards studies history as a senior at UNT. “You know, I was 14, and I was madder than any 14-year-old had the right to be,” Edwards said. “I had never heard of al-Qaeda or Osama bin Laden, and I didn’t know the difference between normal Islam and radical Islam. At first I had some revenge issues.” Edwards watched the events of 9/11 and the subsequent wars in Afghanistan and Iraq on tele- vision and wanted justice for the victims of the 9/11 attacks, but he gradually became more motivated by a sense of service and a desire to do good in the world. Most of all, he said, 9/11 gave him a greater sense of pride in his country. “We were just Americans, not concerned with divisiveness,” Edwards said. “Like all adversity, it made us stronger as a nation.” Edwards graduated from high school in 2005 and shortly after enlisted in the Marine Corps Reserve. “It wasn’t like the day after 9/11 it was implanted in my head,” Edwards said. “But it definitely had an effect on my decision to join.” Keenan Cobb, a theatre arts and radio, televi- sion and film senior, was enlisted in the Air Force and stationed at Travis Air Force Base in California on Sept. 11, 2001. Cobb was finishing up an overnight shift at the base when a news report interrupted a Ludacris song on the radio: two airplanes had been flown into the Twin Towers in New York City. Sighting the Target Teeing off Student group teaches firearm safety Arts and Life | Page 4 Men’s golf team starts season in Minnesota Sports | Page 5 The Student Newspaper of the University of North Texas ntdaily.com News 1, 2, 3 Arts & Life 4 Sports 5,6 Views 7 Classifieds 8 Games 8 Thursday, September 8, 2011 Volume 98 | Issue 9 Sunny 87° / 57° What’s Inside NEWS: ARTS & LIFE: SPORTS: VIEWS: SGA passes bill to gain members Page 2 Students write letters to service members Page 4 Mean Green gets ready for Islander Classic Page 6 Editorial: How to draw meaning from a national tragedy Page 7 Defining a Decade of Defense Faculty, staff reflect on initial reactions Gates gives 9/11 perspective Students’ lives changed by war See VETERANS on Page 3 See GATES on Page 3 See SEPTEMBER on Page 3 Top: Former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates lectures Wednesday night in the UNT Coliseum. Gates came to speak for the week of 9/11 in commemoration of its 10-year anniversary. He served as the 22nd defense secretary (2006-2011) and is the only one in U.S. history to be asked to remain in that office by a newly elected president. Above: Audience members listen to former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates during his lecture Wednesday night in the UNT Coliseum. Left: The color guard, representing all branches of the United States military, stand at attention during a noontime ceremony at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Fort Worth, Texas PHOTOS BY JAMES COREAS/SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER PHOTOS BY PAUL MOSELEY/FORT WORTH STAR-T ELEGRAM/MCT “We were just Americans, not concerned with divisiveness.” —Adam Edwards U.S. Marine Corps veteran

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Page 1: NTDaily 9-8-11

NICOLE BALDERASSenior Staff Writer

Ten years ago today, the world had not experienced the Sept. 11 attacks, and in the midst of shock when the attacks happened, UNT administration had to make quick decisions on how to serve the university’s community.

“We were shell-shocked,” said Mark Packer, University Union assistant director for programs. “People didn’t know how to react, and we were scared because of the unknown.”

Many students and faculty

arrived that day to empty class-rooms because the majority of people were in the Union watching live coverage of the tragedy.

“The Union staff had put up TVs everywhere,” Packer said. “You were scrambling to try to find a TV to watch so you could get information.”

Another Union staff member recalls watching students and faculty pack together in tiny offices to witness the tragedy.

“They were all huddled in total silence watching,” said Claire Medina, executive administra-

tive assistant for campus life. “Students and faculty crowded together in offices to watch any TV they could find.”

There was no school lock-down because the univer-sity had never experienced a tragedy like it before, Packer said. Instead, students were released from school around noon.

“The university did make a decision late that morning to close,” Packer said. “There was no Eagle Alerts yet, so the only means we had was email and news networks.”

Moving forwardUniversity officials came

together soon after the tragedy to assess their options to help grieving students.

“We tried to find out what kinds of programs we could do to help people process their fears and feelings,” Packer said. “We had a wall where people could write their thoughts, and it remained up for some time.”

For the first few weeks it wasn’t quite clear what fueled the Sept. 11 attacks, Packer said.

ISAAC WRIGHTAssigning Editor

More than 2,000 people from the UNT and Denton community filled the Coliseum Wednesday night to hear former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates discuss how Sept. 11, 2001 changed America.

A top intelligence official under eight different presidential admin-istrations, Gates was able to shed light on the events in the decade before 9/11 that allowed the largest terrorist attack in U.S. history to happen.

Though the World Trade Center’s bottom level was bombed by terror-ists in 1993, it was one of a handful of small terrorist attacks that trans-pired during the decade.

“9/11 made tragically evident the drift and neglect of the previous decade in respect to our govern-ment’s handling of intelligence and homeland security,” Gates said. “The United States had just never been hit hard enough on our own soil to take the threat truly seriously.”

Gates was brought to UNT as part of the Distinguished Lecture Series. His speech was one in a week full of events to remember 9/11.

Gates met with student media before taking the stage and also responded to prepared questions presented by Student Government Association President and Vice President Blake Windham and Edwin Chavez. Questions ranged from how the Bush and Obama administrations differed in their approach to counter-terrorism to what he thinks about the University of Texas leaving the Big XII confer-ence.

Gates addressed current mili-tary spending over the past decade and said the present amount of the federal budget set aside for mili-tary spending is at its lowest ever during wartime.

Gates said about 19 percent of the budget is spent on military needs, and 4.5 percent of the GDP is spent by the military. In World War II, 32 percent of the GDP was allocated to the military.

“Defending Americans is the one unambiguous role given to the federal government by the Constitution,” Gates said. “There are strategic consequences to [defense budget] cuts. If you’re not considering the strategic conse-quences, then all you’re doing is math.”

In a previous story, the North Texas Daily revealed Gates was paid $108,000 for his lecture, $33,500 of which was used for travel expenses.

ALEX MACONSenior Staff Writer

Adam Edwards, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, was in 9th grade when the attacks were made on Sept. 11.

Now, after serving in the reserve from 2005 to 2011 and completing an eight-month tour of duty in Iraq, Edwards studies history as a senior at UNT.

“You know, I was 14, and I was madder than any 14-year-old had the right to be,” Edwards said. “I had never heard of al-Qaeda or Osama bin Laden, and I didn’t know the difference between normal Islam and radical Islam. At first I had some revenge issues.”

Edwards watched the events of 9/11 and the subsequent wars in Afghanistan and Iraq on tele-vision and wanted justice for the victims of the 9/11 attacks, but he gradually became more motivated by a sense of service and a desire to do good in the world. Most of all, he said, 9/11 gave him a greater sense of pride in his country.

“We were just Americans, not concerned with divisiveness,” Edwards said. “Like all adversity, it made us stronger as a nation.”

Edwards graduated from high school in 2005 and shortly after enlisted in the Marine Corps Reserve.

“It wasn’t like the day after 9/11 it was implanted in my head,” Edwards said. “But it definitely had an effect on my decision to join.”

Keenan Cobb, a theatre arts and radio, televi-sion and film senior, was enlisted in the Air Force and stationed at Travis Air Force Base in California on Sept. 11, 2001.

Cobb was finishing up an overnight shift at the base when a news report interrupted a Ludacris song on the radio: two airplanes had been flown into the Twin Towers in New York City.

Sighting the Target Teeing offStudent group teaches firearm safety

Arts and Life | Page 4 Men’s golf team starts season in Minnesota Sports | Page 5

The Student Newspaper of the University of North Texasntdaily.com

News 1, 2, 3Arts & Life 4Sports 5,6Views 7Classifieds 8Games 8

Thursday, September 8, 2011Volume 98 | Issue 9

Sunny87° / 57°

What’s Inside

NEWS:

ARTS & LIFE:

SPORTS:

VIEWS:

SGA passes bill to gain members Page 2

Students write letters to service members Page 4

Mean Green gets ready for Islander Classic Page 6

Editorial: How to draw meaning from a national tragedy Page 7

De� ning a Decade of Defense

Faculty, sta� re� ect on initial reactions

Gates gives 9/11 perspective

Students’ lives changed by war

See VETERANS on Page 3

See GATES on Page 3

See SEPTEMBER on Page 3

Top: Former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates lectures Wednesday night in the UNT Coliseum. Gates came to speak for the week of 9/11 in commemoration of its 10-year anniversary. He served as the 22nd defense secretary (2006-2011) and is the only one in U.S. history to be asked to remain in that o� ce by a newly elected president. Above: Audience members listen to former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates during his lecture Wednesday night in the UNT Coliseum. Left: The color guard, representing all branches of the United States military, stand at attention during a noontime ceremony at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Fort Worth, Texas

PHOTOS BY JAMES COREAS/SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

PHOTOS BY PAUL MOSELEY/FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM/MCT

“We were just Americans, not concerned with

divisiveness.”—Adam Edwards

U.S. Marine Corps veteran

Page 2: NTDaily 9-8-11

September 10 vs. Houston at 6 pm

NewsPage 2

Amber Arnold and Isaac Wright, News Editors [email protected]

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Editor-in-chief ...............................................Josh PherigoManaging Editor .............................................Amber ArnoldAssigning Editor ............................................Isaac WrightArts and Life Editor ........................................Jesse SidlauskasSports Editor ...................................................Sean GormanViews Editor .................................................Valerie GonzalezVisuals Editor ....................................................Drew GainesPhoto Assigning Editor .................................Cristy AnguloMultimedia Manager ....................................Berenice QuirinoCopy Chief ....................................................Carolyn BrownDesign Editors .............................................Sydnie Summers Stacy Powers

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Student senate loosens eligibility requirements

Romney, Perry square-o� in televised GOP debate

Graduate assistant Sarah Amberson discusses the oppurtunities with the Center for Leadership and Service. Amberson spoke at the SGA senate meeting Wednesday.

Top: Mitt Romney, left, and Texas Gov. Rick Perry trade jabs during the Republican presidential debate at the Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, Wednesday, September 7, 2011.Above: Republican candidates for president debate at the Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, Wednesday, September 7, 2011.

PHOTO BY ANDREW WILLIAMS/INTERN

PHOTO BY LAWRENCE K. HO/LOS ANGELES TIMES/MCT

ANN SMAJSTRLA

Staff WriterIn an effort to gain more

members, UNT’s Student G over n ment A ssociat ion passed a bill Wednesday to change eligibility requirements for transfer students who wish to become student senators.

The bill changes the original requirement of students having to complete at least 12 credit hours at UNT to completing at least 12 credit hours at “an accredited institution of higher education, not including hours earned through dual enroll-ment or AP/IB credit.”

“We are trying to make the senate more accessible for students and trying to drive more interest and trying to attract a broader population,” said Charles Vincent, speaker

of the senate. An amendment to the bill,

submitted by Laura Ulmet, a College of Arts and Sciences senator, was also passed. Ulmet’s amendment made the change of eligibility require-ments apply to both under-graduate and graduate students seeking senate positions.

S p e a k e r p r o -t e m p o r e Morgan Ray said she believes the bill will be beneficial to the SGA and draw new members.

“[The bi l l is meant] to recruit fresh blood and to get new ideas and new opinions so we’re not sitting stale on the ones that we already have,” Ray said.

Every year, the SGA strug-gles to fill even 20 of its 45 seats, said SGA President Blake Windham. As of today, there are

19 senators, and Windham said he hopes the new bill will open up the number eligible so more people can get involved.

Windham attended a speech from former Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Wednesday during the senate meeting and was absent because of the scheduling conflict. The bill will go into effect when Windham signs it.

Another bill passed adopted the senate application, which was not changed from previous years.

To apply for senate member-ship, the student must be in good academic standing and have signatures from at least 10 members of his or her constit-uency, which is made up of students from the college a senator represents.

Be in good academic standing

Have at least 10signatures from members of your constituency

Have at least 12 hours at an accredited institution of higher education, not including hoursearned through dual enrollment or AP/IB credit

New SenateEligibility Standards

WASHINGTON, D.C. (MCT) — Rick Perry and Mitt Romney locked in combat from the first moments of Wednesday’s debate at the Reagan Library, moving the GOP presidential race into a new, more pugilistic phase, one that is likely to be defined by a battle between its two front-runners.

For Perry, the Texas governor, the debate in Simi Valley, Calif., was for all intents and purposes his debut on the national polit-ical stage. And he immediately showed a willingness to slam his chief rival over jobs.

Perry bashed Romney’s job creation record while governor of Massachusetts, saying it failed to match up to his work in the private sector.

“We created more jobs in the last three months in Texas than he created in four years in Massachusetts,” Perry said.

Romney battled back, saying that Perry had taken advantage of a favorable business climate in Texas, including the absence of a state income tax and huge oil

and gas reserves, and couldn’t claim credit for those circum-stances.

“If he tried to say that, why it would be like Al Gore saying he invented the Internet,” Romney said to laughter.

Perry then compared Romney’s jobs record unfavorably to former Massachusetts governor and Democratic presidential candi-date Michael Dukakis. Romney fired back, saying Perry’s record pales in comparison to George

W. Bush’s while he was governor of Texas.

Rapidly, it became evident that Perry, the newest entrant in the race who zoomed to the top of the polls almost instantly, was the prime target of the evening. At one point, he complained that he felt like a “pinata.”

Perry was repeatedly quizzed about his statements, both in a book and on the campaign trail, in which he compared Social Security to a “Ponzi scheme” and called it a “failure.”

“Our nominee has to be someone who isn’t committed

to abolish Social Security, but is committed to saving (it),” Romney said.

For his part, Perry pledged that those currently in line to receive benefits would have nothing to worry about in his adminis-tration. But he repeated a past assertion that the program is a “monstrous lie,” because, he said, the fund will not remain solvent for future generations.

“It is a Ponzi scheme to tell our kids that are 25 or 30 years old today, ‘You’re paying into a program that’s going to be there,’ “ Perry said. “Anybody that’s

for the status quo with Social Security today is involved with a monstrous lie to our kids, and it’s not right.”

Perry was also attacked by former Sen. Rick Santorum and others for a Texas program that vaccinated young girls against the human papillomavirus.

“At the end of the day, I will always err on the side of saving lives,” he said.

He defended his refusal to recognize carbon emissions as the chief cause of climate change, saying that “the science is not settled on this.” Perry’s comments came directly after Jon Huntsman, the former Utah governor, criticized Republicans such as Perry for their position on global warming.

“In order for the Republican Party to win, we can’t run from science. We can’t run from main-stream conservative philosophy,” Huntsman said. “By making comments that don’t reflect the reality of the situation, we turn people off.”

The evening proved difficult at times for other contenders beyond Perry and Romney to

get a word in edgewise, partic-ularly Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, who used the first debate two months ago in New Hampshire to catapult herself into the ranks of serious contenders.

At times, she seemed almost relegated to the sidelines, but late in the debate, she ripped the Obama administration’s involve-ment in the Libyan uprising.

“It was wrong for the president of the United States to go into Libya,” she said.

Huntsman, whose campaign has found little traction, unveiled a more aggressive side, particu-larly in his attacks on Romney and President Barack Obama, but it wasn’t apparent he had landed a punch. And there was little sign that Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, who continues to fare well in some polls, was any closer to breaking out as a mainstream threat.

For them, and for the other candidates on the stage Wednesday, Santorum, Newt Gingrich and Herman Cain, the evening showed that the chal-lenge ahead may be to stay in the conversation.

Page 3: NTDaily 9-8-11

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Thursday, December 2ndRoger Creager/Zach Walther-8:00pm @ Rockin’ RodeoTill They’re Blue or Destroy-7:00pm @ The Hydrant CaféDenton Holiday Lighting Festival-5:45pm @ The Square

Friday, December 3rdNorth American Skull Splitter Tour 2010: Skeletonwitch/Withered/Landmine Marathon/The Spectacle-8:00pm @ Rubber GlovesCrooked Finger-9:00pm @ Public HouseDenton Bach Society-7:00pm @ The Hydrant CaféMillionYoung/Teen Daze/Old Snack/Goldilocks & The Rock-9:00pm @ Hailey’sThe Quebe Sisters/Will Johnson-8:00pm @ Dan’s SilverleafFatty Lumpkin-7:00pm @ The Boiler RoomReindeer Romp-7:30pm @ South Lakes Park

Saturday, December 4thLa Meme Gallery opening: Sally Glass/Oh Lewis!/Murdocks/Jon Vogt-9:00pm @ Rubber GlovesAngel Tree Fundraiser-8:00pm @ Rockin’ RodeoThe Contingency Clause-9:00pm @ The Hydrant CaféA Spune Christmas 2010: Telegraph Canyon/Monahans/Birds & Batteries/Seryn/Dour Burr/Glen Farris-7:30pm @ Hailey’sDisc Golf Winter Open: Amateur Team Tournament-10:00am @ North Lakes Disc Golf Course

Sunday, December 5thSundress/Final Club/Land Mammals/The River Mouth-9:00pm @ Hailey’s

Monday, December 6thTrivia Monday with Norm Amorose -7:30pm @ Public House

Tuesday, December 7thPearl Harbor Memorial Day

Thursday, December 9thJosh Abbott Band/Rob Baird/ William Clark Green-8:00pm @ Rockin’ Rodeo

Friday, December 10thBurial/Wild Tribe/x- unit 21’s first show/Wiccans/Rotundus/Youth Agression-8:00pm @ Rubber GlovesDirty City Band -9:00pm @ Public HouseNew Riders of the Purple Sage/ Violent Squid Day vs. Night Achtone-8:00pm @ Dan’s SilverleafThe Second Shepherds’ Play/ Christmas Pie...A Madrigal Farce & Feaste-7:30pm @ The Campus TheaterSaturday, December 11thDead Week Print Show: Pan Ector/Gutterth Productions/La Meme/ Pants-9:00pm @ Rubber GlovesJessie Frye, with Sam Robertson-8:30pm @ The Hydrant CaféArts & Crafts Show-8:00am @ Danton Civic CenterThe Second Shepherds’ Play/ Christmas Pie...A Madrigal Farce & Feaste-7:30pm @ The Campus Theater

Sunday, December 12thThe Second Shepherds’ Play/ Christmas Pie...A Madrigal Farce & Feaste-2:00pm @ The Campus Theater

Monday, December 13thThe Gay Blades-9:00pm @ Rubber Gloves Trivia Night with Norm Amorose -7:30pm @ Public House

HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS:PART 1 [PG13] 12:00 | 3:20 | 6:30 | 9:40

MEGAMIND 3D [PG] 11:00AM | 1:25 | 3:50 | 6:15 | 9:00

TANGLED 3D [PG] 11:15AM | 1:50 | 4:25 | 7:00 | 9:55

UNSTOPPABLE [PG13] 11:45AM | 2:20 | 4:55 | 7:30 | 10:15

THE WARRIOR’S WAY [R] 11:40am 2:05pm 4:55pm 7:30pm 10:05pm

BURLESQUE [PG13] 1:05pm 4:05pm 7:00pm 9:50pm

DUE DATE [R] 11:45am 2:20pm 4:50pm 7:15pm 9:40pm

FASTER [R] 11:15am 1:45pm 4:30pm 7:05pm 9:35pm

HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS PART 1 [PG13] 1:40pm 5:10pm 6:30pm 8:30pm 9:45pm

HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS PART 1 - DIGITAL [PG13] 11:55am 3:40pm 7:25pm 10:45pm

LOVE AND OTHER DRUGS [R] 11:20am 2:10pm 5:00pm 7:55pm 10:40pm

MEGAMIND [PG] 1:10pm 4:00pm

MEGAMIND - REAL D 3D [PG] 11:50am 2:35pm 5:15pm 7:50pm 10:15pm

MORNING GLORY [PG13] 11:30am 2:25pm 5:05pm 7:45pm 10:30pm

TANGLED [PG] 12:45pm 3:20pm 6:05pm 8:45pm

TANGLED - REAL D 3D [PG] 11:25am 2:00pm 4:40pm 7:20pm 9:55pm

THE NEXT THREE DAYS [PG13] 12:50pm 3:55pm 7:10pm 10:20pm

UNSTOPPABLE [PG13] 11:35am 2:15pm 4:45pm 7:35pm 10:10pm

Arts & Life Page 5

Katie Grivna Arts & Life Editor [email protected]

Thursday, December 2, 2010

BY MARLENE GONZALEZIntern

On Friday, the shops off the Denton Square will stay open later than usual.

Denton will have its monthly First Friday on the Square and Industrial Street area.

Live music, sculptures, stained glass, appetizers and art will be available until 9 p.m. instead of the regular 6 p.m.

For First Friday, art galleries and businesses stay open longer to give shoppers an opportunity to admire and buy art.

Several communities and countries have their own First Friday or First Thursday each

Monthly event promotes art purchases in Denton

month, which is where the idea came from.

Shannon Drawe, a photogra-

pher and UNT alumnus, said he helped start Denton’s First Friday in in February 2010. He and his

wife, Leslie Kregel, thought it would be great to increase awareness of the communi-ty’s artistic talent and culture, Kregel said.

Drawe contacted sources and created the website first-fridaydenton.com to establish the event.

“First Friday has no boss, no president. I’m just in charge of the website and building it into something because I started it,” Drawe said.

Kregel’s business, Cimarrona, sells hats, scarves and warm clothing recycled from old clothes.

“What we hope is [to gain] a

little more visibility and have the public more aware of art culture in Denton that isn’t always recognized,” Kregel said.

Merchants join with artists to help promote art and busi-nesses. For example, an artist looking for a place to display his or her work could contact a coffee shop owner willing to host the artist, Kregel said.

Heath Robinson, a pharmacy junior, thinks the event will bring attention to the creativity the community has to offer.

“I think it’s a good way to increase the exposure of the arts in Denton,” Robinson said.

Robin Huttash owns A

Creative Art STUDIO, one of the businesses that has been a part of First Friday since it started.

Huttash said her main goal is providing music for the event each month.

On Friday, Alex Riegelman, a local guitarist and blues singer, will play in A Creative Art STUDIO.

Keri Zimlich, a journalism junior, said she thinks the event is a great opportunity to have fun.

“It’s not just one shop, but all the shops getting together to rekindle that love of art,” Zimlich said.

PHOTO BY TARYN WALKER/INTERN

Robin Huttash, owner of A Creative Arts STUDIO, will participate in First Friday Denton. The studio will stay open until 9 p.m. on Friday.

PHOTO BY TARYN WALKER/INTERN

Dance students perform “The Itch,” choreographed by dance senior Anna Olvera, at a rehearsal for the New Choreogra-phers Concert.

BY TARYN WALKERIntern

Months of hard work all come down to one night.

Senior dance students will display their original works on Friday for the first time at the New Choreographers Concert. The concert will start at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre in the Radio, Television, Film and Performing Arts Building.

General admission is $5 and tickets can be purchased at the box office, over the phone, at the door and in advance.

Students enrolled in dance professor Shelley Cushman’s senior projects class are required to choreograph or perform in the concert. They also can complete a research study in fieldwork.

“Their work is a culmination to demonstrate the knowledge they have acquired through the course of their study,” Cushman said.

Cushman, the artistic director of the concert, is known for her background in dance. She

earned the 2010 University Dance Educator of the Year from the National Dance Association.

“They have to create a product, which the public is invited to see, and in this process they have to solve all of the problems they are given in order to create this work of art,” she said.

In the class, students learn about dynamics, unity, variety, content, form and theme, Cushman said.

From the 10 choreographed works at the concert, two dance pieces were chosen to represent UNT at the American College Dance Festival, including Amelia Wert’s “The Television is Watching Me Again” and Cassie Farzan Panah’s “Gravity of Deception.”

“I set out with this image of a motel. I was interested in doing something different,” Wert said. “I thought about the idea of why people would want to stay at a motel and wondered what they felt.”

Wert’s modern piece includes

nine dancers accompanied by focused lighting to make it seem as if they are each in their own motel room. Each dancer is isolated from the others and dances with minimalistic move-ment for a strong impact. The themes include love, loss, isola-tion and insomnia, which are overlaid by the glow of a tele-vision.

“It’s a good program. We have some amazing faculty that have really pushed us far,” Wert said.

All 56 dancers were chosen from the dance department by advanced choreography students. Some choreographers also decided to dance. Cushman allowed students to perform if they were up for the challenge.

Rachel Caldwell choreo-graphed “Certain Uncertainty” and is also performing in “Guess Who’s Not Coming to Dinner,” choreog raphed by A nna Womack.

In Caldwell’s choreography, dancers explore the experi-

Seniors to debut their dance works Friday

ence of being blind by wearing blindfolds. In 28 rehearsals, the four dancers adapted to their hearing and touching senses to help them through the modern piece. Caldwell also worked with music student Ryan Pivovar to compose a song of looped cello

harmonies. Caldwell said her piece is about

blindness as an experience, not a handicap.

“I was in my modern class last semester and we would lie on the ground and shut our eyes. I wondered if I could capture a

feeling of dance with touch and sound rather than with sight,” Caldwell said.

The concert will also be held at 8 p.m. Saturday and at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre. For more information, visit www.danceandtheatre.unt.edu.

Thursday, September 8A night of obscure and underground music -9:00pm @ Rubber GlovesDanny Balis/Doug Burr/Glen Farris -9:00pm @ Dan’s SilverleafCory Morrow with Cody Johnson -10:00pm @ Rockin’ Rodeo

Friday, September 9Malcolm Holcombe -9:00pm @ Dan’s SilverleafJordan Martin/Vita Brevis/The Black Racket/Wiretree -9:00pm @ Hailey’sZach Balch -10:00pm @ BanterSoap Box Radio – @ The Denton Garage

Saturday, September 10Sans Soleil/My Education/Terminator 2/A Smile Full of Ale -9:00pm @ Rubber GlovesBugs Henderson -7:00pm @ Dan’s SilverleafBugs Henderson -10:00pm @ Dan’s SilverleafJohann Wagner/Parallel Play -8:00pm @ BanterMatt Ingram – @ The Denton Garage

Sunday, September 11O’Death, Why Are We Building Such a Big Ship -8:00pm @ Rubber GlovesHares on the Mountain -5:00pm @ Dan’s SilverleafEthereal and the Queer Show/Senor Fin/Tony Ferraro/Alien Brew -9:00pm @ Hailey’s

Tuesday, September 13Kappa Sigma Rush Event – @ The Denton Garage

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News Page 3

Amber Arnold and Isaac Wright, News Editors [email protected]

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Veterans September

Gates

Continued fromPage 1 Continued fromPage 1

Continued fromPage 1

Cobb described the initial atmosphere at Travis Air Force Base as being very confused, with service members from New York City worrying about relatives. Security was height-ened, and Cobb said everyone at the base was ready for anything.

“Everyone had their game faces on,” Cobb said. “Like ‘OK guys, this is really it.’”

At Travis Air Force Base seven days after the attacks, the first list with the names of those being deployed to Afghanistan was released. Cobb’s was not on it, but four months later he was deployed to Kurdistan as part of Operation Enduring Freedom. Cobb also did a tour in Iraq as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Cobb left the Air Force in 2005 and came to UNT in 2008. He said the change he had seen in the United States since 2001 had both good and bad aspects.

“Americans have become more aware in a way,” Cobb said. “We live in an isolated atmosphere. That doesn’t mean we’re not affected by what goes on in the Eastern Hemisphere.”

Cobb said he was worried Americans had become too complacent and had, to a degree, forgotten the lessons of 9/11.

“Americans have very short attention spans,” Cobb said. “People are remembering [9/11], but going on our daily lives it’s been put on the back-burner.”

Edwards was deployed to Iraq in September 2007 and came home in April 2008. Four months later, he was enrolled at UNT.

Edwards said he is gradu-ating in December and wants to go on to teach high school history.

“I wa nted to ser ve my country, do my part, and go on to do other things,” Edwards said.

He said in the 10 years after 9/11 he was glad no other major terrorist attack had been made on American soil, but was worried that the passage of time had made Americans forget what united them on Sept. 11, 2001.

“I don’t want time to dilute what happened or belitt le the sacrifices we’ve made,” Edwards said. “I want us to remember.”

Students crowded around TVs at the Syndicate on Sept. 11, 2001 to watch footage of the attacks.

NTDAILY STAFF FILE PHOTO

St udents ex pressed a gamut of feelings, many spouting words of hate.

“It was a lot of raw emotion and incredible sadness that people felt,” Packer said. “A lot of people in these areas where it didn’t happen wanted to help but didn’t necessarily know how.”

O ut of t he s ad ne s s spaw ned rel ief ef for t s consisting of blood dona-tions, messages to troops, monetary donations for the Red Cross and the opening of a Veterans Center in the Union in 2009.

K N T U prov ide d l ive coverage from campus, and counselors stayed longer hours to talk with students, Medina said.

Continued supportTen years after the attacks,

UNT is still finding ways to reach out to the commu-nity in support of those affected.

Some of this week’s events inv ite people to donate blood, reach out to troops by writing a letter, take part in a candlelight vigil memorial service and honor student veterans.

“9/11 started where a lot of the troops are stationed right now,” said Charity Guidry, an English senior and member of Lead League. “It’s impor-tant to give them support regardless of all the debate of whether people think they should be there or not.”

Over the past two days,

students and faculty sat quietly in the One O’ Clock Lounge and wrote letters to troops who are currently serving overseas.

“Some people came and stayed for an hour,” Guidry said. “At least 400 people

came, and most people wrote a minimum of two letters.”

Though the official event is over, students and faculty are encouraged to go Union 420 until Friday if they still wish to write a letter.

Hope Garcia, director of student affairs administra-tion, said the $33,500 was just the maximum allotted toward travel and if Gates only uses part of the amount, the univer-sity will keep the remainder.

Garcia also said ticket sales will offset some of the money

paid to Gates. Former President George W. Bush was paid $100,000 to speak in 2010, but Garcia said about 20 percent of the cost was earned through ticket sales.

“Any speakers that we bring in are going to cost money,” Garcia said. “The point of the

Distinguished Lecture Series is to create an educational oppor-tunity outside the classroom. If you’re not a history or political science major, are you going to hear about these issues in your classrooms?”

Before the event, some students passed out fake programs for the lecture detailing Gates’ history in the CIA and controversies he was

close to. A group of about 15 students

who had f loor seats in the Coliseum disrupted part of Gates’ speech with singing.

They were promptly removed from the building; however, Gates seemed barely fazed by the interruption.

“For a minute there, I thought I was in a congressional hearing,” Gates said.

Page 4: NTDaily 9-8-11

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Arts & LifePage 4 Thursday, September 8, 2011

Jesse Sidlauskas, Arts & Life Editor [email protected]

JESSICA DETIBERIISStaff Writer

As events ramp up this week to commemorate the anniver-sary of 9/11, some students are using the time of reflection to honor American members of the armed forces – men and women still sacrificing nearly a decade after the attacks.

Sponsored by the Center for Leadership and the Center for Student Ser v ices, t he Letter Writing Campaign to the Troops offers students and faculty a chance to write a letter to a soldier, sailor, airman or marine ser ving abroad.

W it h Au g u s t m a r k i ng t he dead l iest mont h for American militar y casual-ties in Afghanistan since the war began, education senior Alicia Wells described what writing the letters means to her.

“I feel l ike i f I w rite to somebody, rega rd less of who they are, it’s good just to know that I’m here thinking of them,” said Wells, whose father served in the Army. “I understand what their fami-lies are going through. Just letting them know that we’re thinking about them, and not

just on Sept. 11.”Wells said her family was

l iv ing at For t Hood, a nd she was a freshman in high school when the 9/11 attacks happened.

“I d id n’t k now a nyone personally from 9/11, but I still feel connected in a way, watching all the soldiers get sent off,” she said.

Communications freshman Jake Dionne volunteered for the letter writing campaign, recr u it i ng ot her st udent participants and writing more than two dozen himself.

After writing a few, Dionne said, he developed the same rhythmic message for each postcard.

“ U n i t e d w e s t a n d , preventing the fall, thank you dear troops, for protecting us all !” he wrote before going on to praise our soldiers for

their bravery.Lisa Campbell, the director

for t he Center of Student Affairs at Discovery Park, led the event at the Discovery Park locat ion. Campbel l’s only nephew is in the mili-tary, and, she said, the event reminds her of her 9/11 expe-rience 10 years ago.

“I worked for a school in

Pennsylvania at the time, and in the Union we had a big TV lounge,” she said. “I walked in when the second plane had just hit. I had a pit in my stomach, and I knew then that it was not an accident.”

Campbel l’s close f r iend was l iv ing in New York at the time. Though he was not at the site, she was worried until she knew he was OK. A friend of his was scheduled to have lunch at one of the Twin Towers that day, but

their plans got changed last minute.

Ca mpbel l sa id she has visited ground zero since the attacks.

Adam Haggerty, a student veteran and music education junior, served in the army for six years. While he said he never received letters, he did receive gift packages around Christmas time and said he thinks it’s great that the students are contributing their time.

“It was nice to know that people were thinking about us. I think it gives [the troops] a sense of pride,” he said.

T h e L e t t e r W r i t i n g Campaign to the Troops is taking place through Sunday. Students ca n w r ite post-cards at various locations, including the One O’Clock Lounge, Discovery Park and UNT on the Square.

The Sept.11 com m ittee is a lso sponsor i ng ot her events throughout the week. Students can donate blood with the Red Cross today at the Golden Eagle Suite from 9 a.m. unti l 3 p.m., and a memorial service will be held from 7-8 p.m. Sunday at the Library Mall.

Students show support to soldiers abroad

PATBOONE

Marina Nishimura, an electrical engineering freshman, writes letters to soldiers at war fronts in the One O’Clock Lounge on Tuesday. As students write letters, a video is shown nearby with interviews of soldiers and families about the war. Nishimura wrote four letters to soldiers.

PHOTO BY AMBER PLUMLEY/ STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

“It was nice to know that people were thinking about us. I think it gives [the troops] a sense of pride.”

—Adam HaggertyEducation junior, Army veteran

Pat Boone returns to share highs, lows of showbiz

Students take aim at safety

HOLLY HARVEY Staff Writer

This Saturday, showbiz veteran and former UNT student Pat Boone will sing the national anthem before the Mean Green’s home football opener at Apogee Stadium. The following day

Boone will perform at an autobio-graphical event at the Murchison Performing Arts Center.

The UNT alumnus and long-time musician has sold millions of albums since his days as a student here in the ‘50s. Throughout his diverse acting and singing career,

Boone has cracked the top 40 on Billboard charts 20 times as well as acting in various television shows and movies.

“I look back and some of the happiest moments in my life were in Denton,” he said.

The 77-year-old performer

reached out to UNT and offered to sing the national anthem and present his show, said UNT President V. Lane Rawlins.

Besides performing the national anthem, Boone’s Sunday night show, An Evening with Pat Boone, will feature a concert along with video clips that trace his career back to his time as an English student in Denton.

Aside from school, Boone was also a fraternity chaplain who preached at a one-room Church of Christ church nestled in a cornfield in Slidell.

Interim Dean of the Mayborn School of Journalism Roy Busby was a student at the same time as Boone and remembers Boone’s music from then.

“There was a Saturday night stage show in the Auditorium Building that students performed at and had a chance to exhibit their talent, and that’s where

Boone first got started,” h e s a i d . Boone also performed at a Wednesday night dance on a cement slab behind the old Union building.

Boone also got a gig as the host of a musical variety show when he was 20, for which, Boone recalls, he was paid $44.50 a week.

Because of his presence at various shows, Boone was well known on campus, said Boone’s friend of 30 years, Lee Gary, UNT alumna and former cheerleader. Gary said Boone was known for more than singing.

“When he would ride by on his bike on campus all the girls in the dorm would run to the window to wave at him because he was just so cute,” she said.

Boone quickly went from performing at local shows to New York City, where he would garner widespread fame.

Sunday night’s show will not only present the highlights of Boone’s career, but also humbling moments, such as bloopers from his acting career, Boone said.

“I figure if you’re going to show them the good ones, you’ve got to show the bad ones too,” he said.

Although Boone attended UNT for a brief period and ended up graduating from Columbia University, he considers UNT his alma mater, President Rawlins said.

“Most institutions have a set of people whose name is known across the world and when those people decide to come back, they are welcomed back in some sense because they’re part of the family,” he said.

MARLENE GONZALEZStaff writer

A group of students and resi-dents with an affinity for guns aims to spread weapons safety awareness one round at a time.

Friends and firearm enthu-siasts Josh Conklin, a criminal justice senior, and Jason Lee Van Dyke, an attorney and certi-fied pistol instructor, started the UNT Texas Marksmen in April and intend to use the group to promote firearm safety by

teaching people proper tech-niques to handle firearms.

“We want to help people get over the fear of guns,” Conklin said. “In case of a real-life scenario, we hope that if you do have to use a gun you don’t freak out.”

Conklin and Van Dyke plan to start a concealed handgun license certification course this fall, in which students are taught basic firearm understanding in a classroom before any student

handles a pistol. Hands-on training would then take place at a local gun range. They said CHL registration costs are about $140.

Conklin said a CHL allows its holder to conceal a firearm, showing or using it only to prevent a crime or for personal protection.

Neva Randel, a business soph-omore and vice president of the group, joined hoping to make friends and learn about firearm safety, knowledge she hopes will one day help lead to a career in the FBI.

“I’ve learned the importance of knowing how to handle a weapon,” Randel said. “I get a sense of adrenaline, you’re handling a loaded weapon. It’s nerve-wracking.”

The organization practices at Quail Creek, a gun range on Interstate Highway 35 West on Saturdays and Sundays at 2 p.m. There are no membership fees; instead, each individual pays $12 to use the range and pitches in $10 for ammo unless people carry their own.

A person needs six hours of class instruction and four hours of time at the shooting range to be CHL certified, Conklin said.

“One of the biggest safety issues is everybody leaves with the same number of holes they came with,” Van Dyke said.

Page 5: NTDaily 9-8-11

Sports Page 5

Sean Gorman, Sports Editor [email protected]

Thursday, September 8 2011

AUSTIN SCHUBERTIntern

The men’s gol f tea m w i l l become t he f i f t h Mean Green team to tee off its schedule when it beg i n s play at t he Gopher Inv itat iona l in Minneapolis, Minn. this Sunday.

After a season in which the team ranked second in the Sun Belt and 41st in the nation, the Mean Green enters the 2011-2012 year with high expectations.

C a r l o s O r t i z a n d Rodolfo Ca zaubon, t he gol fer s w it h t he t w o lowest score averages for U N T la st se a son, r e t u r n a s j u n i o r s after being named to the A l l-Sun Belt Tea m last season.

“I’v e le a r ne d a lot t h roug h my f i r st t wo years,” Ort iz said. “I’m st ronger menta l ly a nd I think I’m ready to go. This year I’m hoping to c omp ete at re g ion a l s and possibly make it to nationals.”

Or t i z won t he i nd i-vidual title at the Sun Belt Conference Tournament last season, posting the lowest st roke aver age (71.25) in recorded history at UNT.

Cazaubon said he hopes to be right up there with Ortiz after placing in the Top 20 in 10 of 11 tourna-ments last season.

He f inished w it h t he s e c o n d-l o w e s t s t r o k e average on the team with a 72.06 average.

“I’d like to win a tour-n a m e n t t h i s y e a r ,” Cazaubon said. “I’ve been practicing every day this summer and hopefully it translates over into the season.”

A long w ith Ortiz and Ca zaubon, f ive ot hers return along with two new recruits.

The recruits, Juan Munoz and Jason Roets, hail from Colombia and South Africa respectively.

“Munoz and Roets are working hard and I think they’l l help push us to become a better team,” head coach Brad Stracke said.

Ort iz, Ca zaubon a nd Stracke each expressed desire to win a Sun Belt Title in 2010.

Men’s golf team to begin its season at Gopher Invitational

Manning out for � rst game with neck injury

“We’re a much deeper tea m t ha n we were la st year,” Stracke said. “With a better putt ing ga me to go along with more depth, I think we can win the confer-ence.”

At the Gopher Invitational, UNT will see some top-f light competition.

“Arkansas, Minnesota and Iowa wil l be our toughest compet it ion t h is tou r na-ment,” Stracke said. “I know Iowa a nd A rka nsas were

r a n k e d i n t h e Top 2 5 i n t he nat ion la st yea r. I t h i n k we ca n ha ng up t here w it h t hose schools, though.”

Ortiz said he has confi-dence in the team as it heads into the first tournament.

“We are good enough to beat anybody,” Ortiz said. “If we just focus on playing our game, I think that we will do fine against the other teams no matter how good they are.”

Junior Carlos Ortiz practices his putting technique Monday while freshman Jason Roets watches from behind at the Championship Circle Golf Course in Fort Worth. Ortiz won the 2011 Sun Belt Conference Championship and was named to the All-Sun Belt team.

Peyton Manning of the Indianapolis Colts will miss his � rst game in 13 years because of a neck injury this Sunday. Kerry Collins came out of retirement to replace Manning for the Colts’ game against Houston.

PHOTO BY MELISSA MAYES/INTERN

PHOTO BY KARL MONDON/CONTRA COSTA TIMES/MCT

INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana (AP)— The numbers tell it all.

Exactly 227 consecutive starts.

Eleven playof f appear-ances.

Eleven double-digit winning seasons.

Two AFC titles.One Super Bowl champion-

ship.Peyton Manning has quar-

terbacked the Indianapolis Colts every Sunday since Sept. 6, 1998.

He won’t this weekend.Manning will be in street

clothes when the team opens the season at Houston, still recovering from neck surgery while Kerry Collins starts in his place.

“It’s going to be a little different without Peyton,” coach Jim Caldwell said. “He’s one of a kind. When you look across our league, most teams have had quarterbacks that have missed time. Ours has just been highly unusual.”

The streak is the second longest in history among NFL quarterbacks behind only Brett Favre, whose 297-game run -- 321 including the postseason -- ended last season just before he called it a career.

Giants quarterback Eli Manning, Peyton’s younger brother, now holds the longest active streak for a quarterback with 110 starts, including post-season play. He said he had not talked to his brother for a few weeks.

“I know he was dealing with a lot,” the younger Manning said. “I don’t know how he is feeling and what’s going on. I know he wants to be out there. He gave his all and he will give his all to be back out there.”

The Colts had hoped the 35-year-old Manning would recover while developing a backup plan. Collins, who was brought out of retirement just two weeks ago to run the Colts’ pass-heavy offense, has been preparing as though he would start.

“I expect to run the offense, bottom line,” he said. “Make plays when they’re there, be smart with the ball, make good reads, good decisions, get us into the right plays when the situa-tion calls for it. I’m going into this week thinking I’m going to run the offense as best I can.”

The Texans don’t expect an easy game because Manning won’t play. They are familiar with Collins, who played for

AFC South rival Tennessee last year.

“I think he’s a hell of a player,” Texans coach Gary Kubiak said of Collins. “He’s been successful against us. My focus right now is on our team. We’ve got to get ourselves ready to play. It doesn’t matter who you play, or whatever, it matters how you play in this business. We’ve got to prepare to get ready to win a game.”

Manning had been listed as doubtful for the game, but losing him for any time is a shock to Indy fans, not to mention his teammates. Not only has the four-time NFL MVP never missed a start, he’s rarely missed practice.

“To say I am disappointed in not being able to play is an understatement,” Manning said in a release from the team. “The best part about football is being out there on the field playing with my teammates. It will be tough not to be out there playing for the organization and our fans. I simply am not healthy enough to play.”

Manning had neck surgery to repair a nerve May 23, but the recovery has taken much longer than the expected 6-8 weeks that would have put him back on the field for the start of training camp.

He did limited work at prac-tice last week, which led to complaints about back pain. The team issued a statement saying that team doctors had re-evaluated Manning and instructed him to stop prac-ticing while he undergoes more tests. No additional surgery has been scheduled.

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Page 6: NTDaily 9-8-11

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SportsPage 6 Thursday, September 8, 2011

Sean Gorman, Sports Editor [email protected]

Brett MedeirosStaff Writer

With eight games in the book, the UNT volleyball team will visit Corpus Christi to compete in the Islander Classic and face a group of both confi-dent and frustrated teams this weekend.

The Mean Green (4-4) starts the tournament with a 2-1 record away from Denton.

“We’ve got our preseason goals set up and we’re working towards those every single game,” freshman outside hitter Eboni Godfrey said. “We feel ready for anything.”

After winning only one of its last four games, the Mean Green will open the Classic against a struggling UT-Pan American team that is riding a six-game losing streak. The Broncos (1-7) have only won one of 19 sets they have played.

In its second game, UNT will face a team at the other end of the spectrum in terms of recent success. The Towson Tigers (9-1) enter their first ever match against the Mean Green on an eight-game winning streak during which they have won 24 of their last 25 sets. The Tigers have only lost five sets all season.

“They are having a pretty good preseason and as far as what to expect, I don’t

UNT prepares to facethree road opponents Alex Young

Staff WriterAs the UNT volleyball

team’s youngest and second-shortest player, it’s possible 17-year-old freshman outside hitter Eboni Godfrey could be overlooked by opponents as they prepare to face the Mean Green.

Mixing a strong jumping ability and developed on-the-court-instincts, the 5-foot-7-inch Godfrey has had no trouble taking competition by surprise in her first colle-giate season.

Before seeing success at UNT, Godfrey’s revival of her high school volleyball program and support from her parents brought her to Denton.

Originally from Round Rock, Texas, Godfrey got into volleyball at a young age.

“I saw my brother’s girl-friend playing when I was in the sixth grade,” Godfrey said. “From then on it was just something I wanted to do; it looked like fun.”

Godfrey said she took up the sport a year later and from then on it became a big part of her life.

At Stony Point High School, Godfrey posted a school record for kills in a season with 639 and owns the school record for career kills with 1,476.

Throughout her teenage years, Godfrey elevated the Tigers volleyball program to new heights, bringing Stony Point to its first ever winning season and playoff berth.

Godfrey’s father Tracy

Godfrey seizes chance

Godfrey said it was apparent early in high school that Eboni Godfrey had a knack for the game.

“We pushed her to succeed,” he said. “Her mother espe-cially, but we told her to go after [volleyball] if it was something she wanted to pursue long-term.”

Since joining the Mean Green, Godfrey has shown the poise and confidence of an upper-

classman, ranking sixth in the Sun Belt in kills per set with 3.22 and starting every game.

Positioned as an outside hitter, Eboni Godfrey said her jumping ability gives her an advantage when she spikes the ball, but she prefers another aspect of the game.

“I love blocking,” she said. “I personally don’t get many blocks, but when I do it is so exhilarating to knock the ball right back at the other team.”

The younger sister of Tracy Jr. and Nathan Godfrey said adjusting to the college game has been a challenge. She said because opponents are taller, she has had to pull more out of her arsenal to compete with them.

Off the court, Godfrey is a hospitality management major

and said she has appreciated her college experience this year.

“[College] has been good so far,” Godfrey said. “Not just for volleyball, for life too. I never got to travel for games before now, so going to places like Beaumont and Corpus Christi are new and exciting.”

In her free time, Godfrey said she spends any possible moment away from a court or a textbook relaxing.

New to Denton since early July, she said she enjoys trips to Buffet King in Denton, citing it as one of her favorite places to eat.

Though focusing on college for now, she said she hopes to play volleyball long after she graduates while using her degree to follow another interest.

“I want to plan events for people,” she said. “Planning things like parties and weddings would be something I’d want to do.”

For now, though, Godfrey is an integral part of the Mean Green, using her drive and enthusiasm to become a key contributor for years to come.

“There are two things that never mix,” said Eboni Godfrey’s mother, Joyce Godfrey. “Those two are Eboni and quit.”

“There are two things that never mix. Those two things

are Eboni and quit.”—Joyce Godfrey

mother of freshman outside setter Eboni Godfrey

Five-foot-6 inch freshman Eboni Godfrey has made the most of her first eight games with the volleyball team, starting every game as an outside setter.

Photo by Amber Plumley/ StAff PhotogrAPher

know,”head coach Ken Murczek said. “They’re a very competi-tive team. Teams like that are always dangerous. I think it’ll be a good match.”

The weekend’s final game will come against tournament host Texas A&M-Corpus Christi, who is 3-4 on the season. Led by their stout defensive play, the Islanders average 18.25 digs per set, the highest average out of

the tournament’s four teams. “Our goal is not about them,

it’s about us,” senior libero Sarah Willey said. “We are going to do what we can do defensively so we can give our hitters options so we can wear them out. If we show up defen-sively, we can come out with some wins this weekend.”

The Mean Green could have its hands full, as it owns a 1-3 record this season when its opponent finishes with more digs.

With 17 players on the team, the Mean Green has the deepest roster out of all teams playing in the Classic.

“We’re still trying to figure out some positions out there,” Murczek said. “It’s a bit of a double-edged sword to have a deep team.”

The Classic begins at 4 p.m. Friday.

“We’ve got our preseason goals set up ... we feel ready for anything.”

-Eboni Godfreyfreshman outside hitter

Volleyball team heads south for Islander Classic

Ashlee Horvath, Hallie McDonald and Eboni Godfrey line up for spot serves dur-ing practice Wednesday. The Mean Green will play in the Islander Classic this weekend against UT-Pan American, Towson and Texas A&M-Corpus Christi.

Photo by Amber Plumley/ StAff PhotogrAPher

Page 7: NTDaily 9-8-11

The Editorial Board includes: Josh Pherigo, Amber Arnold, Isaac Wright, Sean Gorman, Jesse Sidlauskas, Sydnie Summers, Stacy Powers,Carolyn Brown, Valerie Gonzalez, Drew Gaines, Cristy Angulo and Berenice Quirino.

Want to be heard?The NT Daily does not necessari-ly endorse, promote or agree with the viewpoints of the columnists on this page. The content of the columns is strictly the opinion of the writers and in no way re-fl ects the belief of the NT Daily.

The NT Daily is proud to present a variety of ideas and opinions from readers in its Views section. As such, we would like to hear from as many NT readers as possible. We invite readers of all creeds and back-grounds to write about whichever issue excites them, whether concerning politics, local issues,

ethical questions, philosophy, sports and, of course, anything exciting or controversial.Take this opportunity to make your voice heard in a widely read publication. To inquire about column ideas, submit columns or letters to the editor, send an e-mail to [email protected]

Note to Our Readers

NT Daily Editorial Board

What have we learned

since 9/ll?

City council supports Denton cyclists

Remembering Sept. 11, 2001

Editorial

{

{

{Campus Chat Where were you on 9/11 and what do you

remember most?

“I was in fourth grade and my teacher felt the need to explain the story to us even

though we were young. History became my favorite

topic that year. ”

“I was pretty secluded from the news when it happened.

I realized later that those terrorists that ran into the towers were not Muslim. It was harsh finding out how those men killed so many

people in the name of Allah. Allah doesn’t want man to

turn on man.”

“My dad was a pilot. He had to fly later that

week for American and I remember crying when he was gone because I was so

worried for him.”

On the morning of September 11, 2001, American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center. United Airlines Flight 175 flew into the South Tower 18 minutes later. Nearly an hour later, American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the western side of the Pentagon.

Ten years later, everyone can vividly recall watching the terrorist attacks unfold on TV. Some watched in sorrow, others in horror as the Twin Towers fell to the ground. Although no two reactions to the attack will be the same, there is a common factor that lingered then and still lingers now: confusion.

Most college students were too young to know what the attacks meant then, even with news commentators, teachers and parents breaking it down minute-by-minute for us. Now that we’re older and more informed on Al-Qaeda, it still feels like we’re searching for the meaning.

Sure, everyone remembers where they were, but what have we learned?

In the wake of the attacks on Sept. 11, President George W. Bush announced the War on Terror. His declaration propelled our nation into two foreign wars that cost the U.S. more than $1 trillion and the lives of more than 6,000 soldiers and is still costing the U.S. precious lives and borrowed money.

How are we going to choose the way we draw a meaning from these effects?

Instead of immersing ourselves with the destruction of that horrible day, we should take the 10th anniver-sary to celebrate the courage that was demonstrated in the midst of a terribly tragedy.

We should focus on the heroes on United Airlines Flight 93 who sacrificed their lives to protect the nation from another attack. Let’s draw inspiration from the 479 brave rescue workers who died while helping victims escape out of the towers.

With the 10-year mark since 9/11 approaching, the question should no longer be “Where were you on 9/11?” Rather, the question should be “What have we learned since then?”

Nobody from this generation will ever forget where he or she was on 9/11. It has undoubtedly been the defining moment of our generation thus far, but how the definition reads still needs to be written.

I recently had the oppor-tunity to watch the construc-tion of the memorial for the World Trade Center site when I visited New York. There were hundreds of people around, all there to remember and honor these who had lost their lives that terrible day 10 years ago.

I began to remember how I felt that day. I was in the 11th grade and watched the towers fall on Channel One. I’d never been so terrified to witness the extreme lengths people would go to in order to inflict pain.

I could not imagine what it must have felt like to be on your way to work and in a matter of seconds to be surrounded by pandemonium. Even more, I could not imagine being amongst all the turmoil and running toward, instead of running away from, the catas-

trophe so I could help any and every one I could reach.

When I think of Sept. 11, that’s what I think about – the heroic people who unselfishly threw themselves in harm’s way.

This week our country will honor the men and women who lost their lives on Sept. 11. UNT will be honoring victims and survivors with the Unite and Remember Memorial. Events include a blood drive, a letter writing campaign to troops, a Dist i ng u ished Lect u re Series event featuring former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and a Sunday memorial service on the Library Mall.

From Tuesday t hroug h Sunday, two bright skylights illuminate the Library Mall from the top of the University Union in honor of the Twin

Towers. The lights will be visible from any where on the main campus from dusk through dawn.

O n S at u rd a y, a ny one attending our f irst home game against the University of Houston will have the oppor-tunity to acknowledge heroes who bravely serve our commu-nities and country. Sunday, a memorial service will be held on the Library Mall. This service is open to anyone and will give us a chance to reflect on the events of Sept. 11.

F o r m o r e i n f o r m a -tion on all of the Unite and Remember events please go to september11.unt.edu.

There you will be able to get more details on each event and post your own memories of Sept. 11 in writing or as a YouTube video to share with

your fellow students and the rest of the UNT community, just as I have shared my story with you.

Porsche Chiles is a graduate assistant for Campus Life and the Veterans Center. She can be reached at [email protected].

If nothing else, I was simply impressed Tuesday evening at City Hall.

More than 50 Denton resi-dents, including myself, came to comment on the city’s budget for the fiscal year 2011-2012 – more specifically to discuss the $300,000-plus of surplus revenue that could be applied to a wide array of council initiatives.

Those gathered to speak almost unanimously spoke in favor of using these funds for bike-related infrastructure and safety measures. After the public hearing, the council responded with praise for the turnout and unified voicing.

Though no decisions were made before the budget and recently completed bike and pedestrian mobility plans could be ratified, the council members recognized the need for this measure to be put into place and to readily address the safety and

crossing concerns that many resi-dents brought up.

This is fantastic for Denton. It is no secret that there is a

significant bike culture present within our city, whether it is seen at the Tuesday Night Bike Rides that meet outside the Language Building, the Querencia Community Bike Shop adjacent to Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Studios, the pedicabs frequenting Fry Street, or the day-to-day transit of thousands across town.

We are here and pretty much here to stay. The Denton bike community cannot be pegged down to being comprised of 20-something collegiate hipsters. Many of the speakers at the hearing were of the older working age, a few senior citizens and even a couple of kids from elementary school who desperately wanted to get from their homes to school safely on two wheels.

Emily PierceHistory sophomore

Zovin KhanmohammedTexas Academy of Math and

Science student

Erica Connolly Public relations junior

One of the more dramatic indicators of how prevalent this burgeoning bike culture is can be seen in its dissidents, such as the young man who took to Facebook last week, creating a “Denton kill a hipster on their bike day” event in jest.

Even the newly popular @DentonProblems Twitter account retweets tales from cyclists and non-cyclists expressing their humorous distaste over whom they share the road with.

Looking ahead, the future for the bike-friendly in Denton is bright. Police are begin-ning to crack down on drivers disobeying the recent “Safe-Passing” ordinance (that’s 6 feet from a cyclist). Hopefully the Bike and Pedestrian Plan and Street Maintenance Fund will be enacted within the next year so we can see miles of on-road lanes and established trails.

Finally, the value of hopping on two wheels instead of four might be realized.

Out of consequence, I have not cranked up my Honda Element since May of this year. My bike has not minded being its adequate replacement.

Chris Walker is a music composition senior. He can be reached at [email protected].

Views Page 7

Valerie Gonzalez, Views Editor [email protected]

Thursday, September 8, 2011

{

{

{

“I was on a field trip in Germany. Everybody was

having trouble getting back to the military base. They weren’t allowing anyone on or off the buses. They let us on, but the security was heightened the

next day.”

“My mom locked herself in her room and we could hear her crying. When we first turned

on the TV we saw people committing suicide. It was

the first time I felt a personal connection with death.”

“I had a friend whose uncle worked in the Twin owers. She

left school early and flew up to New York when everyone

else was trying to leave. Knowing my friend wasn’t in school because her uncle died

impacted me the most.”

Amir EllisRadio, television and film

sophomore

Jessica Easley English sophomore

Kary SmithEnglish and history junior

Where were you on 9/11 and what do you remember most?

Adrian Hummel I was walking back from raising the flag at the Detla Sig house when someone men-tioned I should fly the flag at half-mast, because of what just happened. I had no idea what was going on then when I got back to Kerr Hall I saw the sec-ond plane hit the tower and was pretty mortified by what I saw.

Terri Guy Cuffie We were living on Long Island. I remember feeling trapped. They closed all the bridges and tunnels in and out of NY and the Long Island Expressway was limited to military use.

Laurie Rankin Schmidt I remember being at work and we were all crowded around a TV in the bosses office. At first, when the second tower was hit, we thought it was an instant replay. Our stomachs were sick when we realized it was another tower. Then we heard about the other planes. We were all trembling. When we got home we all hugged our families and were so thankful.

Raquel (UNT WBB team) was in the 5th grade. They didn’t close school early but the kids did not have school for a few days afterwards. They had grief counselors in the schools to help the kids understand what happened and cope.

Here’s what our Facebook fans had to say about what they remember from 9/11

Page 8: NTDaily 9-8-11

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6 1 9 7 2 4 8 3 54 3 2 9 5 8 7 6 17 5 8 6 3 1 9 2 45 6 3 4 8 7 2 1 99 8 7 5 1 2 6 4 31 2 4 3 6 9 5 8 73 7 1 2 9 6 4 5 88 9 6 1 4 5 3 7 22 4 5 8 7 3 1 9 6

Page 1 of 25www.sudoku.com 24 Jul 05

Sudoku requires no calculation or arithmetic skills. It is essentially a game of placing numbers in squares, using very simple rules of logic and deduction.

The objective of the game is to fill all the blank squares in a game with the correct numbers. There are three very simple constraints to follow. In a 9 by 9 square Sudoku game: • Every row of 9 numbers must in-clude all digits 1 through 9 in any order • Every column of 9 numbers must include all digits 1 through 9 in any order • Every 3 by 3 subsection of the 9 by 9 square must include all digits 1 through 9

Yesterday’s answers

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# 49

V. EASY # 49

7 6 3 82 5 9

5 3 1 9 79 3 2 4 8

1 63 2 7 6 58 9 4 3 2

5 7 14 2 8 6

7 4 9 6 2 3 8 5 16 8 2 5 7 1 3 9 45 3 1 9 8 4 6 2 79 6 5 3 1 2 7 4 84 1 7 8 9 5 2 6 33 2 8 7 4 6 9 1 58 7 6 1 5 9 4 3 22 5 3 4 6 7 1 8 91 9 4 2 3 8 5 7 6

# 50

V. EASY # 50

4 9 2 68 7 3 6 1 2

1 73 2 4 8

4 2 6 3 59 5 4 3

5 91 3 5 2 7 99 3 8 5

4 9 1 7 8 2 5 3 65 8 7 4 3 6 9 1 22 6 3 1 9 5 4 7 83 2 5 9 4 1 8 6 77 4 8 2 6 3 1 5 96 1 9 8 5 7 2 4 38 5 4 6 7 9 3 2 11 3 6 5 2 8 7 9 49 7 2 3 1 4 6 8 5

# 51

V. EASY # 51

4 2 9 3 55 1

6 7 9 1 8 22 8 7 6

5 97 2 4 1

1 5 4 6 9 73 85 7 6 1 2

4 1 2 6 9 3 8 7 58 5 3 2 4 7 9 6 16 7 9 1 8 5 2 4 39 2 8 4 7 1 3 5 61 4 6 5 3 9 7 2 87 3 5 8 2 6 4 1 92 8 1 3 5 4 6 9 73 6 7 9 1 2 5 8 45 9 4 7 6 8 1 3 2

# 52

V. EASY # 52

6 3 53 5 7

6 7 5 2 3 81 6 4 9

6 3 7 15 2 9 6

5 9 1 2 8 74 9 1

1 9 5

8 2 4 6 7 3 5 9 19 3 5 8 4 1 6 7 26 1 7 5 2 9 3 8 41 7 3 2 6 8 4 5 94 9 6 3 5 7 1 2 85 8 2 1 9 4 7 3 63 5 9 4 1 2 8 6 72 4 8 7 3 6 9 1 57 6 1 9 8 5 2 4 3

Page 13 of 25www.sudoku.com 24 Jul 05

# 49

V. EASY # 49

7 6 3 82 5 9

5 3 1 9 79 3 2 4 8

1 63 2 7 6 58 9 4 3 2

5 7 14 2 8 6

7 4 9 6 2 3 8 5 16 8 2 5 7 1 3 9 45 3 1 9 8 4 6 2 79 6 5 3 1 2 7 4 84 1 7 8 9 5 2 6 33 2 8 7 4 6 9 1 58 7 6 1 5 9 4 3 22 5 3 4 6 7 1 8 91 9 4 2 3 8 5 7 6

# 50

V. EASY # 50

4 9 2 68 7 3 6 1 2

1 73 2 4 8

4 2 6 3 59 5 4 3

5 91 3 5 2 7 99 3 8 5

4 9 1 7 8 2 5 3 65 8 7 4 3 6 9 1 22 6 3 1 9 5 4 7 83 2 5 9 4 1 8 6 77 4 8 2 6 3 1 5 96 1 9 8 5 7 2 4 38 5 4 6 7 9 3 2 11 3 6 5 2 8 7 9 49 7 2 3 1 4 6 8 5

# 51

V. EASY # 51

4 2 9 3 55 1

6 7 9 1 8 22 8 7 6

5 97 2 4 1

1 5 4 6 9 73 85 7 6 1 2

4 1 2 6 9 3 8 7 58 5 3 2 4 7 9 6 16 7 9 1 8 5 2 4 39 2 8 4 7 1 3 5 61 4 6 5 3 9 7 2 87 3 5 8 2 6 4 1 92 8 1 3 5 4 6 9 73 6 7 9 1 2 5 8 45 9 4 7 6 8 1 3 2

# 52

V. EASY # 52

6 3 53 5 7

6 7 5 2 3 81 6 4 9

6 3 7 15 2 9 6

5 9 1 2 8 74 9 1

1 9 5

8 2 4 6 7 3 5 9 19 3 5 8 4 1 6 7 26 1 7 5 2 9 3 8 41 7 3 2 6 8 4 5 94 9 6 3 5 7 1 2 85 8 2 1 9 4 7 3 63 5 9 4 1 2 8 6 72 4 8 7 3 6 9 1 57 6 1 9 8 5 2 4 3

Page 13 of 25www.sudoku.com 24 Jul 05

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Are your finances just a bunch of jumbled numbers? Stop the frustration and visit the Student Money Management Center today - Chestnut Hall, Suite 313 - 940.369.7761

Personal consultations ~ Workshops ~ Online resources ~ Loan programs www.unt.edu/moneymanagement

Are your finances just a bunch of jumbled numbers? Stop the frustration and visit the Student Money Management Center today - Chestnut Hall, Suite 313 - 940.369.7761

Personal consultations ~ Workshops ~ Online resources ~ Loan programs www.unt.edu/moneymanagement

Are your finances just a bunch of jumbled numbers? Stop the frustration and visit the Student Money Management Center today - Chestnut Hall, Suite 313 - 940.369.7761

Personal consultations ~ Workshops ~ Online resources ~ Loan programs www.unt.edu/moneymanagement

Are your finances just a bunch of jumbled numbers? Stop the frustration and visit the Student Money Management Center today - Chestnut Hall, Suite 313 - 940.369.7761

Personal consultations ~ Workshops ~ Online resources ~ Loan programs www.unt.edu/moneymanagement

Are your finances just a bunch of jumbled numbers? Stop the frustration and visit the Student Money Management Center today - Chestnut Hall, Suite 313 - 940.369.7761

Personal consultations ~ Workshops ~ Online resources ~ Loan programs www.unt.edu/moneymanagement

Are your finances just a bunch of jumbled numbers? Stop the frustration and visit the Student Money Management Center today - Chestnut Hall, Suite 313 - 940.369.7761

Personal consultations ~ Workshops ~ Online resources ~ Loan programs www.unt.edu/moneymanagement

Are your finances just a bunch of jumbled numbers? Stop the frustration and visit the Student Money Management Center today - Chestnut Hall, Suite 313 - 940.369.7761

Personal consultations ~ Workshops ~ Online resources ~ Loan programs www.unt.edu/moneymanagement

http://moneymanagement.unt.edu

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Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

FOR RELEASE SEPTEMBER 8, 2011

ACROSS1 Leader elected

by monks6 Jazz aficionado9 “__ Astor”:

Sargent portrait13 Rule15 Maker of Good

Grips kitchentools

16 __ of mystery17 Former

quarterback Peete18 Portrayer of the

Elf maiden Arwenin “The Lord ofthe Rings”

20 Hunk’s pride21 The sun, in

Cancún23 Award for books

on tape24 Torchiere, e.g.26 Exist like a mob

informant, say29 Mlle. counterpart33 Nut in a cupule34 Words in a

market report36 Equip with

firepower37 Somersaulting

dive39 Executive position41 Tolkien creature42 “Pink Shoe Laces”

singer Stevens46 Green shade47 Tourney ranking49 Enjoy leisurely51 1988 Radio Hall

of Fame inductee53 Boss, in Swahili56 Beatles title

woman who“made a fool ofeveryone”

57 Bit of work60 Solon62 Santa Catalina’s

only city64 All: Pref.65 Wrap up66 Place for a picture67 Narc’s goal68 Old IBM PCs69 It’s chopped, in a

way, in 18-, 26-,49- and 60-Across

DOWN1 Indian tomb site2 Nincompoop

3 Briefs not seen incourt

4 Sommelier’sprefix

5 Like many a NewEngland street

6 Kid finishing abook, maybe

7 They’re undershoulder joints,anatomically

8 “Mazel __!”9 Bucks shots

10 Seasonal songstarter

11 Eins und zwei12 Easy to

maneuver, at sea14 Versatile synthetic19 Cap with a pom-

pom called atoorie

22 Remote hidingplace?

24 Frond bearer25 Stuck, after “in”26 Old Nigerian

capital27 Words of

compassion28 Walt Disney,

vis-à-vis Mickey Mouse

30 Indira’s successor31 Treasure stash

32 Brew hue35 Unfortunate soul38 Chewy caramel

candy40 Sneaky maneuver43 Buck the majority44 Guts45 Quaint outburst48 “Aw, shucks!”50 “Giant Brain”

unveiled in 194652 It follows April in

Paris

53 Shapeless form54 U.S.’s largest

S&L until its 2008collapse

55 Botanical bristles57 Mtn. statistic58 Where all roads

lead?59 Growl61 Annoy63 “Wheel of

Fortune”purchase

Wednesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Bill Thompson and Anne Thompson Richter 9/8/11

(c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 9/8/11

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