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The Utah Statesman Students 10-29-2019 The Utah Statesman, October 29, 2019 Utah State University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/newspapers Recom

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The Utah Statesman Students

10-29-2019

The Utah Statesman, October 29, 2019

Utah State University

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/newspapers

Recommended Citation

Utah State University, "The Utah Statesman, October 29, 2019" (2019) The Utah Statesman 747

https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/newspapers/747

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by

the Students at DigitalCommons@USU It has been

accepted for inclusion in The Utah Statesman by an

authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@USU For

more information, please contact

digitalcommons@usu.edu

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Utah State football posts worst offensive outing in over a

decade in loss to Air Force

see PAGE 3

Meet the Getaway Special Team — a group of USU students working with NASA to get a CubeSat into space

The haunted histories of USU’s sorority houses

NEWS | Ghost Stories

STUDENT LIFE | GAS Team

SPORTS | Grounded

see PAGE 4

Week of October 29, 2019 www.usustatesman.com

(435) 797-1742 TSC Room 118 Free single copy

see PAGE 2

VOTING INSIDE

2019

After recording 17 shots and zero goals in

Friday’s 1-0 loss to Air Force Academy, the Utah

State University women’s soccer team was

look-ing to get the bad taste out of its mouth

Sunday’s match against Colorado College

proved to be exactly what the Aggies needed

The team exploded to go 3-0 over the Tigers,

scoring the same amount of goals in 90 minutes

as they had in the past seven matches combined

“You just gotta have faith — and once one falls

they all fall,” head coach Heather Cairns said

According to Cairns, the previous lack of goals

by the team had resulted in a hit to her players’

momentum and confidence

After Air Force scored early in Friday’s match,

the team battled back by outshooting their

op-ponents and having over twice as many corner

kicks But the Aggies still came up short

“You just got to score the first goal of the match

at some point,” Cairns said “That gives you a lot

more spring in your step and you’re not chasing

the game.”

On Sunday, the Aggies were finally able to

come out and get that first goal

The goal came in the 17th minute off the foot

of junior defender Imelda Williams Williams got the ball off a pass from junior midfielder Amber Marshall and knocked it into the lower right corner of the net

Williams’ goal came after a frustrating Friday where she missed several opportunities to score

by mere inches This included a shot on goal in the 58th minute which was barely tipped out by the goalkeeper’s fingertips

“The reason why I keep going is because I just want to keep playing harder for my teammates,”

she said “Instead of just getting down, think-ing I’m going to get the next one.”

Junior midfielder Kami Warner netted the second goal of Sunday’s match just 18 seconds into the second half The midfielder shot the ball from outside the arc of the penalty box and into the top of the net Warner’s goal set a new record for the fastest second half goal in Utah State history

By continuing to feed off that momentum, se-nior forward Alecia Robinson was able to record the final goal of the match in the 50th minute

of play Robinson worked her way through the Tiger’s converging defense and shot the ball past a diving goalkeeper and into the lower left

corner of the net

In total, Utah State had 12 shots with six on frame Colorado College ended the match with

9 shots All six of the Tiger’s shots on goal were saved by freshman goalkeeper Diera Walton

The match was Walton’s fifth clean sheet of the season

The victory also ended the eight-match winless

streak suffered by the team and marks its second conference win of the season

Utah State will return to Chuck and Gloria Bell Field on Friday to take on Boise State in the Ag-gies’ final match of the 2019 season Game time

is scheduled for 3 PM

@SydChap

Women’s soccer explodes offensively to break eight-game winless streak

PHOTO BY Samuel Woubshet

Utah State junior Ashley Cardozo takes a corner kick earlier this season against San Diego State

By Sydney Kidd

SPORTS STAFF WRITER

If the Howl is notorious for confetti, gum

and the occasional condom, why do people

volunteer to clean it up?

The answer is simple: They don’t have to

pay for a ticket They get to go to the Howl

and still experience it They get to be with

friends They also get to be involved on

campus

Some students volunteered because they

didn’t buy a ticket before tickets sold out

Sarah Price, a volunteer, said, “I wanted

to be involved in the Howl, but I was a

lit-tle late buying a ticket So I did it because

a lot of my friends were doing it.”

Others did it because they felt it was

a better experience than attending as a

patron Jenny Patino said, “I have

volun-teered before It’s better than attending I

can tell you that you feel more clean.”

Tiffany Taggart, another volunteer, said,

“I volunteered because I feel it’s a great

way to be involved in campus activities

It’s a good deal because you get your food, your shirt and free admission to the event and still get to experience it all but still get

to help.”

Cy Robinson,USUSA activities director, said, “Without the volunteers, we would not be able to do it.”

Kent Harris, the Utah State University Po-lice Department captain, said, “This event couldn’t happen without them I thank each and every one of them for being here and working these events.”

Though the Howl is perhaps the big-gest event during spooky season, those who volunteered at the Howl focused on making sure everyone was safe and had a good time

Sierra Benson, a lead and part of the USUSA activities committee, said their main objective as leads and volunteers is

to “keep people safe and to have fun.”

“We don’t want anyone to come away with a bad experience of the Howl, which

is one of the things that is hugely stressed,”

Benson said “We just want to have people make positive memories.”

“Crazy things can happen at the Howl, but we’ll make sure to nip it in the butt and make sure everything turns out okay,”

Alexis Needleman said She is also a mem-ber of activities committee

People were expecting to see a slew of different things, including drugs, inap-propriate dance moves and risky clothes, which, according to Howl attendee Tia Goldsberry, is an understatement

Taggart said, “I love to see and feel the excitement everyone has, whether it’s Brigham Young University students who feel like they’re being really rebellious coming or whether it’s just USU students who are just excited to be there with their friends.”

The theme of the Howl was in homage to the 80s, using the Netflix series “Stranger Things” to inspire the event

“I think it’s going to attract a lot of

peo-By Michaella Whitney

NEWS STAFF WRITER

Blood, sweat, and tears - the life of

volunteers cleaning up after the Howl

Like many of her peers, Morgan Homer went to the Howl to have a good time But unlike most, a good time does not mean going anywhere near a dance floor; it means getting airbrush tattoos, eating food or watching comedians perform Unfortu-nately, dancing used to be all students like Homer could do at the Howl, but this year it changed

The Howl, a massive Halloween party hosted by the USUSA for students and community members, was held on Oct 25 with “The Upside Down” as the theme This year, USUSA de-cided to increase the amount of activities available in the TSC, giving students the option to play old-fashioned arcade games,

go through a haunted house or try out virtual reality

“Last year, the main attraction was the dance, and I don’t

real-ly like dances,” Homer said “But this year, they had a bunch of new things and other options for people like me I really liked how interactive the new activities, like the arcade and haunted house, were It was a lot better experience than just watching a hypnotist.”

Cy Robinson, USUSA activities director, said one of the goals for the Activities Committee was to make the experience better holistically for students who may not be fans of the dance, and

to also make it seem like a brand-new Howl experience for students who have attended in the past

“We want to bring people back because they’re like, ‘Oh, what else is going to be new?’” Robinson said “The dance is the dance, and people love it But the TSC has so much

variabili-ty that we want to create a better experience for all students, regardless of whether or not they want to dance, or they want

to just come and watch their friends get hypnotized.”

Even without the addition of new attractions, multiple attend-ees like Jadine Medina and Nate Hoffman, who are USU

alum-ni, and Jessica Medina, an SUU student, said they were eager to attend the Howl for the dance alone

“I just look forward to dancing my butt off,” Jadine Medina said “I think it’s so fun, and I love it.”

Robinson explained that many of the activities were designed

to be based off the “Stranger Things” inspired theme The arcade was a nod to the second season of “Stranger Things,” while the Aggie Ice Cream was a reference to Scoops Ahoy, which was featured in the TV show’s third season

Howl 2019 expands available activities

MORE THAN JUST A DANCE

By Nichole Bresee

STUDENT LIFE STAFF WRITER

PHOTO COURTESY OF Madlyn Petty

Utah State’s premier Halloween party again took over the Taggart Student Center this past weekend

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N E W S

(435)753-2500 capsa.org

If you have been raped or sexually assaulted, it is not your fault and CAPSA can help CAPSA is a community based nonprofit which provides support as you choose your path We believe you and can help you

IS A SCARY WORD, BUT DEVASTATING IF EXPERIENCED

FREE AND CONFIDENTIAL

A 10-centimeter tall cube will soon make its way through the galaxies of time and space An inflatable arm, used to control the satellite, will then be used to carry a payload of food and water up to the Inter-national Space Station

From there an astronaut will send it out into the void of space to start its orbit There, it will gather data that engineers will use as inspiration for future projects

A slight amount of air in lower orbit will hopefully stabilize the arm of the satellite, and like a long tail, will stop it from a con-tinuous spin This stabilization will help the satellite fly like an arrow

“The hope,” said USU Getaway Special Team member and electrical team lead Nik Clark, “is that the arm of the satellite, where the payload is, will become a rigid structure when exposed to UV light.” According to Clark, NASA is interested in knowing if things can be inflated in space, making for a more lightweight and compact structure

“It also means you can pack things into a small size that later expands into a bigger size,” Clark said

But none of this is guaranteed Although Utah State University has been putting engineering experiments into space for four decades, a shift in NASA

program-HOUSES ON HAUNTED HILL

The ghostly myths claimed by two USU sorority houses

Daria Griffith joined the Kappa Delta Sorority

while attending Utah State University She was

excited to move into the sorority house in her

junior year

What she wasn’t anticipating was being

as-signed to live in the former room of the resident

ghost, Patty

Griffith, now an Alumnus member of Kappa

Delta, said Patty was a student at USU in the

1970s who died either by suicide or from a car

accident

Griffith had her very first encounter with Patty

right after she moved into Patty’s old bedroom

“The very first night, I was moving stuff in and

getting things organized,” she said “I would go

back and forth between the bathroom and our

bedroom, just moving things When I was about

to go out of the bedroom and into the bathroom,

I walked over to the door and it just shut It slammed in my face.”

Griffith said she looked around for other people

or an open window to explain the door slam-ming and found nothing

Griffith felt the slamming was a “cue from Patty

to go to bed.”

The door slamming continued throughout the school year Griffith said that first encounter was

“the most significant thing” for her belief in Patty and noted that “none of the other doors in the hallway would do that.”

As she stayed at the Kappa Delta house, Griffith began to feel that Patty was not a vengeful ghost out to torture anyone

“Now she’s kinda the old grandma that tries to

take care of everyone and make sure everyone’s doing their homework,” she said “Something that I noticed was every time someone had an instance where Patty was involved, someone was doing something they weren’t supposed to

That’s what makes me say she’s looking out for us.”

Griffith mentioned other ways Patty showed her presence, including glasses of water falling

to the floor for no reason, doors being locked that shouldn’t have been and pictures of Patty’s name on the wall vanishing from the camera’s

SD card

The Kappa Delta house is not the only sorority house said to be haunted by a ghost

Liz Stillings, a USU student, is a member of Al-pha Chi Omega, and she said the ghost at their house is friendly as well

“The ghost is harmless and just likes to mess with people,” she said “His name is Lester.”

Stillings said Lester was a USU student that dated an Alpha Chi Omega member When the member broke up with him, he hung himself in the boiler room in the basement of the house

“Lester still hangs out in the basement,” Still-ings said “Lots of girls report thStill-ings like decora-tions being knocked over or falling off the walls and sometimes hearing footsteps when no one

is around.”

Stillings said when anyone goes into the boiler room, they get “instant chills” and she has felt Lester walking behind her in the basement

Stillings said everyone in the house feels Lester respects everyone as long as theyrespect him

— karcinharris@gmail.com

By Karcin Harris

NEWS STAFF WRITER

PHOTOS BY Iaian Schields

Alpha Chi Omega Sorority (left) and Kappa Delta Sorority (right) at Utah State University both share stories of ghosts of people who died in their houses haunting the houses

USU may lose access to ride share program

Students at Utah State University may soon

have one less option for transportation

On Dec 15, USU will lose its subscription to

Zimride, a student ridesharing program,

un-less the program coordinators at USU

success-fully raise the remaining $2,500 required for

renewing USU’s subscription for another year

Meg McCarthy and Alexi Lamm, USU

Sus-tainable Transportation Coordinator and USU

Sustainability Coordinator respectively, are

trying to raise these remaining funds On Oct

22, McCarthy and Lamm met with the Utah

State University Student Association Executive

Council to ask for help in raising the

remain-ing amount of money

“We’re here today because we are in danger

of losing [Zimride], and you guys are our last

option,” McCarthy said during the meeting

“We’re coming to you guys to ask if you will

fund this program for half of what it costs.”

According to Lamm, USU has provided access

to Zimride free to students since 2015 Since

2015, a total of 9,030 users have used the service through USU

Traditionally, the $6,000 subscription fee has been paid by the USU sustainability carbon offset fund, which is comprised of donations from USU faculty and staff through an

option-al donation on faculty transportation authori-zation and reimbursement forms

However, McCarthy said the travel forms have recently changed, making it more diffi-cult for fadiffi-culty and staff to contribute as much money as they have in the past to the fund

“We can cover $3,000 of it through the donation fund that is coming through staff or faculty, but we don’t have the other $3,000

to be able to cover the cost of this,” McCarthy said at the meeting

Several days after the meeting with the Ex-ecutive Council, Zimride offered to renew the subscription at a discounted rate for USU, low-ering the yearly subscription price to $5000,

McCarthy said

Lamm said the subscription fee pays for services offered by Zimride, including a fully contained database system, statistics the pro-gram shares with the University, website main-tenance and a program that links students up with other travelers

McCarthy also said using Zimride is a signifi-cantly safer option than services such as Uber

or Lift According to McCarthy, people who use

Zimride through USU have to use a university identification number, or the USU A-Number,

to access the service

“There’s a record of who took the ride, when they took the ride,” McCarthy said “If any-thing bad were to happen, there’s accountabil-ity built into the system.”

McCarthy and Lamm also said Zimride is at a

By Josh Wilkinson

NEWS SENIOR WRITER

see “Zimride” PAGE 5

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PAGE 3 WEEK OF OCTOBER 29, 2019WEEK OF OCTOBER 29, 2019

S T U D E N T L I F E

@JustinFreeves

@USUAggies @USUAdmissions there is no prettier campus in all the land.

@shelby4pres

Today I had brunch with Noelle Cockett and all of my Aggie dreams came true

I feel bad for all the people I saw today on campus in their winter coats, boots and hats Seriously, a bunch of peeps in full out winter gear I mean what are they gonna do when winter actually gets here? They’re gonna be human popsicles @USUAggies #AggiesAllTheWay

@DDeva818

@hi_im_glen

some say that there is a live raccoon

in the field house

A 10-centimeter tall cube will soon make its way through the galaxies of time and space An inflatable arm, used to control the satellite, will then be used to carry a payload of food and water up to the Inter-national Space Station

From there an astronaut will send it out into the void of space to start its orbit

There, it will gather data that engineers will use as inspiration for future projects

A slight amount of air in lower orbit will hopefully stabilize the arm of the satellite, and like a long tail, will stop it from a con-tinuous spin This stabilization will help the satellite fly like an arrow

“The hope,” said USU Getaway Special Team member and electrical team lead Nik Clark, “is that the arm of the satellite, where the payload is, will become a rigid structure when exposed to UV light.”

According to Clark, NASA is interested in knowing if things can be inflated in space, making for a more lightweight and compact structure

“It also means you can pack things into a small size that later expands into a bigger size,” Clark said

But none of this is guaranteed Although Utah State University has been putting engineering experiments into space for four decades, a shift in NASA

program-ming led to a period of scientific stagnation

The NASA program that was known as Getaway Special once allowed university payloads relatively cheap access to orbit

A team at Utah State University, aimed at taking advantage of the program, started small with one payload on one shuttle

The cost was $15,000 and funded by Gil-bert Moore, a former USU faculty member who donated the first payload allotment As

a result, the Getaway Special team, or GAS team, at USU was born

Jan Sojka was there from the beginning

At the time, he was a postdoctoral fellow, interested in creating a three-dimensional model of the Earth’s upper atmosphere, known as the Ionosphere

This model was used to predict the en-vironment where the space shuttle, space station and many satellites circulated the Earth

For his Ph.D research, he launched three-stage sounding rockets into the northern lights

Though emotions ran quite high in those launches, he felt the most rewarding feel-ings came from launching something he built on the space shuttle with students on the USU GAS team

“I sure am pleased to be a rocket scientist,”

Sojka thought as he watched his project come to life in the sky “It was a sense of pride that I was associated with a student payload on board the shuttle My payload.”

At least 11 payloads, with three to six ex-periments on each, were flown during the NASA GAS program

Then, NASA terminated the GAS program

Few projects left Earth’s atmosphere and USU’s GAS team entered stagnation and faded in and out at USU

The stars still wait The future is watching

Now, with a renewed partnership with NASA and 40 years after the initial pay-load, Utah State has another opportunity at orbit, and team members are committed to building a legacy that fellow Aggies will be proud of for years to come

Six years ago, past students submitted a proposal to NASA’s CubeSat Launch Initia-tive The space agency’s approval paved the way for the return of USU’s GAS team, but there was still a long way to go if USU was

to get its experiments back into space

Chaz Cornwall, the GAS team coordina-tor, said, while the team’s primary focus has been to produce something functional that gets to space, the projected end result

is more than that

“We’ve been told this project should be abandoned, but really, a big part of this is to prove those people wrong, and show them that we can do this,” Cornwall said

This past summer, Sojka felt the team was making little progress with its CubeSat, working in a methodical, constructive way

But skepticism and other obstacles weren’t

PHOTO COURTESY OF Jack Danos

Utah State University’s Getaway Special Team is working towards their goal of sending a CubeSat into space while also developing students from all majors

By Kortni Wells

STUDENT LIFE STAFF WRITER

Horror movies are in high demand during Oc-tober, especially on Halloween We all know the

blueprint for what makes a “good” horror movie:

blood, gore, the occult, promiscuous teenagers and a killer with an insatiable bloodlust

No other category of these films captures those elements as well as slasher movies and 1978’s

“Halloween” has been attributed as the pioneer

of the genre

The movie takes place in the fictional town of Haddonfield, Illinois, and begins with a 6-year-old boy, Michael Myers, killing his 6-year-older sister in

1963 After being institutionalized for 15 years, Myers escapes and returns to his hometown to track down his younger sister, Laurie Strode, played by Jamie Lee Curtis What commences is the methodical stalking of Strode and her friends, with the backdrop of Halloween as an

anniversa-ry of Myers killing his other sister

In pursuit of Strode, the Shape, as Myers was referred to in the script, slaughters his sister’s friends Also featured in the movie is Dr Sam Loomis, who was Myers’ psychiatrist while he was in the mental hospital and acts as the uncom-missioned bounty hunter attempting to return his

patient to the institution

His character provides in-sight into Myers’ motives,

or lack thereof, and fills the audience in on how disturbed the masked murderer truly is

To him, Myers is more

of an evil entity than he

is a human being One of the most chilling scenes

in the movie has Loomis describing his first im-pressions of the trou-bled 6-year-old

“I met him 15 years ago,” Loomis says “I was told there was nothing left No reason, no con-science, no understanding in even the most rudi-mentary sense of life or death I met this 6-year-old child with this blank, pale, emotionless face and the blackest eyes The Devil’s eyes.”

The movie’s climax sees Myers track down and chase his sister in the ultimate game of cat and mouse Instead of playing the damsel in distress, Strode holds her own At one point in the film, Strode asks if the man attacking her was “the Boogeyman.” Loomis simply responds with, “As a matter of fact, it was.”

Now, the plot of the film is straightforward and recognizable as a common theme in horror It is the execution of the acting and directing, how-ever, that makes this a classic The movie is rife with long pauses and eerie moments of silence

The audience members are teased with suspense then caught off guard when the action finally takes place

An underrated aspect of “Halloween” is its soundtrack Director John Carpenter composed the score himself, with the title track consisting

of only four notes played on a synthesizer The music acts as a pulse for the film, breaking the long periods of silence with shrieking, unpleasant

sounds that accentuate the jump scares and lead the audience down dark halls of the unknown The minimalist nature of the soundtrack is a re-flection of the overall production of “Halloween.”

On a budget of only $325,000, Carpenter and the rest of his crew had to be creative with what little they had to work with Because the movie was filmed in California during the spring, not Illinois

in the fall, the crew had to spray paint leaves to give the appearance of fall to the warm Southern California neighborhood Even the mask worn

by Michael Myers was just a $1.98 Captain Kirk mask painted white

By Scott Froehlich

STUDENT LIFE CONTRIBUTOR

Movie Review: 1978’s “Halloween”

Getaway Special Team making a comeback

FILE GRAPHIC

see “GAS” PAGE 6

Exploring the final frontier

“The ghost is harmless and just likes to mess with people,” she said “His name is Lester.”

Stillings said Lester was a USU student that dated an Alpha Chi Omega member When the member broke up with him, he hung himself in

the boiler room in the basement of the house

“Lester still hangs out in the basement,” Still-ings said “Lots of girls report thStill-ings like decora-tions being knocked over or falling off the walls

and sometimes hearing footsteps when no one

is around.”

Stillings said when anyone goes into the boiler room, they get “instant chills” and she has felt

Lester walking behind her in the basement

Stillings said everyone in the house feels Lester respects everyone as long as theyrespect him

— karcinharris@gmail.com

PHOTOS BY Iaian Schields

Alpha Chi Omega Sorority (left) and Kappa Delta Sorority (right) at Utah State University both share stories of ghosts of people who died in their houses haunting the houses

Zimride through USU have to use a university identification number, or the USU A-Number,

to access the service

“There’s a record of who took the ride, when they took the ride,” McCarthy said “If

any-thing bad were to happen, there’s accountabil-ity built into the system.”

McCarthy and Lamm also said Zimride is at a

Trang 5

foregone as Air Force ran the ball eight times

to gain each of those 41 yards

The touchdown drive early in the second half put Utah State down 24-7 The response to that situation by the Aggies was a five-play, 15-yard drive In the fourth quarter, the last chance to forge a comeback, USU held the ball for all of 46 seconds prior to the team’s final drive of the game that started with 2:48 left

on the game clock

“To beat these guys…all three phases have got to contribute in a very positive way That didn’t take place,

Andersen said “You’ve got to be in there in the possession battle.”

Andersen added that Saturday’s performance

“is not acceptable for anybody” on the staff or among those on the field But he did place a large amount of blame upon himself and the coaches

“When it doesn’t happen on the field you’ve got to look at us as coaches,” Andersen said

“You can’t blame it on the kids you have to put it right back on us and say we need to be able to do a better job of coaching, better job adjusting to whatever it may be.”

The loss drops Utah State to fourth in the Mountain division of the MW standings Wyo-ming 2, 3-1), Air Force and Boise State

(6-1, 3-0) all stand above the Aggies Next week, USU will host in-state and non-conference rival BYU The Cougars are one bye week removed from beating Boise State at home

Email: jasonswalker94@gmail.com

@thejwalk67

S P O R T S

In a physical sense, Utah State traveled to

Colorado Springs to face Air Force in a clash

of Mountain West division rivals Mentally, the

Aggies did not make an appearance on the

gridiron all night as they lost their first

confer-ence game of the season 31-7

From the opening kick to the final whistle,

the Falcons dominated just about every facet

of the game, a fact attested to by USU head

coach Gary Andersen after the game

“We got beat by the better team, no question

about it,” Andersen said in a postgame

inter-view on 92.3 KBLU Logan LP and 97.5/1280

The Zone “Air Force pretty much dominated

both sides of the football game.”

On offense, AFA (6-2, 4-1) ran for 285 yards

in the first half alone By the end of the night,

the Aggies (4-3, 3-1) allowed 448 rushing

yards, their worst defensive performance in

that category since at least 2000 according to

College Football Reference

“Tonight they just got the best of us,” Aggies

defensive back Shaq Bond said postgame

“They schemed against us very good They did

some things we didn’t see on film a lot They

added in some new stuff we hadn’t seen But

we adjusted well but at the same time, they

got the best of us.”

That complete domination on the ground

allowed Air Force to enjoy a 45:43 to 14:17

advantage in time of possession Utah State

ran just 36 plays to the Falcons’ 84 Being out

on the field for such a long period of time did

few favors for a defense already struggling to

stop the run

“Yea, I could say we started to wear down a

little bit,” Bond said “Not going to say a lot

because we still played until the finish but it

was tough being out there a lot “

Utah State has worst offensive

performance since 2008

PHOTO BY AP Photo/David Zalubowski

Air Force fullback Taven Birdow falls into the end zone to score a touchdown as Utah State cornerback Cameron Haney attempts to make a tackle in the second half of Saturday’s game at the Air Force Academy

By Jason Walker

SENIOR SPORTS WRITER

PHOTO BY AP Photo/David Zalubowski

Utah State head coach Gary Andersen looks on in the first half of the team’s game against Air Force Saturday, Oct 26, 2019, at Air Force Academy,

Colo The Aggies had the wost offensive performance since 2008 against Utah on the night

Predictably, holding on to the ball for a paltry

14 minutes and running 36 plays — the lowest play total in a single game for Utah State since

at least 2000 per College Football Reference — led to, or was a product of, the Aggies’ woeful offensive performance They gained just 128 yards on offense, the fewest since a 58-10 beatdown at the hands of the University of Utah in 2008 (116 on that day)

The offensive ineptitude has been a running theme in Aggieland for several games now

Against Colorado State, LSU and Nevada, the offense consistently failed to string together offensive drives

“We’ve got to find a way to get some things going offensively,” Andersen said “And until

we do that, it’s going to be awfully tough to win football games.”

The passing game has been particularly decrepit during the troubling stretch Jordan Love, began the season on a furious pace, averaging 334.3 yards per game with a 68.2 completion percentage in his first three games

In the four following games, Love has

complet-ed 60 percent of his passes in a game just once (60.8 vs AFA on Saturday) and has thrown for more than 200 yards once (204 vs CSU) All told, Love’s numbers since Sept 22 come out

to 154.3 yards per game, a 50.4 completion percentage and a 4-6 touchdown to intercep-tion ratio

Though Utah State managed just 44 yards

in the first half and went into the break down 17-0, coming out of the locker room, the team showed life The offense took the second-half kickoff and drove 75 yards in nine plays, capped off by a 27-yard TD connection between Jordan Love and Siaosi Mariner

Additionally, the defense held Air Force to its shortest drive of the game, six plays for seven yards, forcing the first Falcons punt of the game

That would be the only bright spot of the game on either side of the ball from then on

Air Force’s punt was downed on the one-yard line of Utah State One three-and-out later and the Aggies had to punt into a heavy wind, handing the ball to the Falcons with just

41 yards of turf between them and the end zone The conclusion to that drive was almost

enough to stop a determined group of engineers from what they had worked so hard to achieve Tests failed Experiments and trials didn’t work GAS had little direct contact with NASA in the

Trang 6

PAGE 5 WEEK OF OCTOBER 29, 2019WEEK OF OCTOBER 29, 2019

foregone as Air Force ran the ball eight times

to gain each of those 41 yards

The touchdown drive early in the second half put Utah State down 24-7 The response to

that situation by the Aggies was a five-play, 15-yard drive In the fourth quarter, the last

chance to forge a comeback, USU held the ball for all of 46 seconds prior to the team’s final

drive of the game that started with 2:48 left

on the game clock

“To beat these guys…all three phases have got to contribute in a very positive way That

didn’t take place, Andersen said “You’ve got to be in there in

the possession battle.”

Andersen added that Saturday’s performance

“is not acceptable for anybody” on the staff or among those on the field But he did place a

large amount of blame upon himself and the coaches

“When it doesn’t happen on the field you’ve got to look at us as coaches,” Andersen said

“You can’t blame it on the kids you have to put it right back on us and say we need to be

able to do a better job of coaching, better job adjusting to whatever it may be.”

The loss drops Utah State to fourth in the Mountain division of the MW standings

Wyoming (6-2, 3-1), Air Force and Boise State (6-1, 3-0) all stand above the Aggies Next

week, USU will host in-state and non-confer-ence rival BYU The Cougars are one bye week

removed from beating Boise State at home

Email: jasonswalker94@gmail.com

@thejwalk67

Utah State has worst offensive

performance since 2008

PHOTO BY AP Photo/David Zalubowski

Air Force fullback Taven Birdow falls into the end zone to score a touchdown as Utah State cornerback Cameron Haney attempts to make a tackle in the second half of Saturday’s game at the Air Force Academy

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enough to stop a determined group of engineers from what they had worked so hard to achieve

Tests failed Experiments and trials didn’t work

GAS had little direct contact with NASA in the

preliminary process, except a visit from Scott Hig-ginbotham, the director for the NASA CubeSat Launch Initiative during the Small Satellite Con-ference held at USU

Sojka said he challenged the team in the 40 hours before Higginbotham arrived to “get their act together.”

“They did an excellent job,” Sojka said “The demonstration worked perfectly, and

Higginboth-am gave the teHigginboth-am a year before he pulls the plug.”

Members like Jack Danos, the mechanical team lead, entered the project at a time of uncertainty

“We had several things that could have basically cancelled our mission,” Danos said “We’re now

at the point where assuming we put in the work we’re going to fly this thing to space.”

Alex Nelson, the chief engineer, said the team has been revived through the passion and deter-mination of its members

“It started out super frustrating because it felt like whenever we met a barrier, people were tell-ing us we shouldn’t be dotell-ing this, but we’ve had

so much success and enthusiasm that we are fi-nally breaking down those barriers,” Nelson said

With their preliminary design review, or PDR, behind them, the team is making strides towards its critical design review, or CDR, where the launch date will be set

Sojka is now confident in the team’s ability to succeed

“I find that the team I have now, I think, will be able to pull it off,” Sojka said

Caleb Smith, the GAS communications team lead, explained that most of the teams before them had space projects that usually fell apart right at the PDR stage

“It’s a really cool project very few people get a chance to do,” Smith said “We’re definitely on the right track We just have to keep pushing.”

GAS is not just about putting things into space, but is focused on providing opportunities for sub-sequent cohorts of students to do the same

“Because of the chances that people before us took, I have this great opportunity, and I’d like to

be able to continue that for future generations,” Nelson said

The team of 20 members is growing slowly but steadily GAS continues to welcome new mem-bers from any major, regardless of their engineer-ing or non-engineerengineer-ing backgrounds

Emma Hind, a communications major, found the GAS team to be one of the most fulfilling things she has participated in while in college

“I’ve learned a lot more practical skills than I have in class,” Hind said “It’s given me a lot of real-life experience because I’m actually doing some of the same things I will be doing in the workforce, not just learning it in the classroom.” With a year left to go and preliminary reviews checked off by NASA, the GAS team has reason

to celebrate Where teams of the past failed to deliver, the current team found success

Assuming the team meets its current goals and deadlines, a CubeSat from USU is headed for space in 2020 or 2021

“No undergraduate-led team has put a CubeSat into space from USU,” Cornwall said “We’re here

to make history.”

—kortni.marie.wells@aggiemail.usu.edu

@kortniwells

PHOTO COURTESY OF Jack Danos

One of the goals of USU’s Getaway Special Team is to determine if objects can be inflated in space

“GAS” FROM PAGE 3

significantly lower cost than similar services like Uber or Lift, as students and faculty would be carpooling with a driver or passenger already headed in the direction they need to go

“It’s different than Uber or Lift because the person driv-ing is somebody who is takdriv-ing

a trip, and they’re willing to share the extra seats in their car,” Lamm said

According to Lamm, prices are determined by the driver

of the vehicle and are usually

in the $10-$15 range, as opposed to the higher costs of other ridesharing services

“Uber or Lift would be like

$100 from Logan to Salt Lake,” McCarthy said “Man, when I was a student, I did not have $100 to spare.”

However, Zimride does have some drawbacks According

to Lamm and McCarthy, des-tinations are determined by where the drivers are headed, not by where the passengers

need to go This means that passengers who need to get to areas outside of the Wasatch front may have a harder time finding transportation

“Because not everybody uses

it, trips that aren’t along the Wasatch front are a little bit trickier,” McCarthy said “But

it does allow a lot of students

a ride when they don’t have it

or a way to justify a trip when maybe they wouldn’t other-wise be able to do it.”

USUSA President Sami Ahmed said during the meet-ing that the executive council would discuss whether or not USUSA would help fund USU’s Zimride subscription USU will have to inform Zim-ride of their decision to renew

or cancel their subscription by Nov 13 If the subscription is canceled, students and faculty can still use Zimride by up until Dec 15

—jshwilki@gmail.com

@jshwilki

“Zimride” FROM PAGE 3

The Activities Committee works together for months to plan and create the Howl The process starts with developing

a theme, which is decided

by compiling a master list of ideas Committee members then vote on their top three

From there, they begin devel-oping decoration ideas and marketing strategies

“We really wanted to nail down the promotion this year because, if you don’t have students attend, you don’t have a party,” Robinson said

“We wanted to make people excited for this event.”

Shay Schwab has never been

to the Howl in her four years

at Utah State, and she said she wishes there was more promotion about the extra non-dance events being held this year

“I’m not a big fan of dances

or crowds of people, but hear-ing about the new activities makes it more appealing,” she said “I had no idea about it until my roommate came back and told me about it, and I wish they just made everyone more aware of what they were doing this year.”

Katie Petersen, an activities committee member,

moni-tored the “Starcourt Mall”

area of the TSC, which mainly consisted of the International Student Lounge arcade and ice cream

“I’m in charge of just making sure everyone is having a fun time, but mostly making sure they’re safe,” she said “If I see something going on, I’m going to be an upstander and help out I don’t want anyone

to get hurt.”

Along with being the largest Halloween party in Utah, the Howl is also one of the most dangerous nights on cam-pus, with record-high sexual assault reports following

it every year Students are encouraged to stay in groups, alcohol and drugs are forbid-den, and multiple campus police officers and Logan City officers are on duty trying to keep students safe

The morning following the Howl, a Timely Warning Notice was sent to students stating that three sexual as-saults were reported the night

of the Howl, and that police were already investigating

Students are encouraged to reach out to the USU Police

if they have any information about these crimes

“We try our best to make the Howl as safe as possible

by having University Police

as well as Logan City Police there, and all of our volun-teers get trained to handle situations and be upstanders,”

Robinson said

Another way they’ve at-tempted to keep the Howl safe is by creating a stricter capacity for the event and the dance, now only selling 5,500 tickets

“We used to cap it at 7,000 tickets and they wouldn’t cap the dance, so there would

be way to many people in the field house and it would get sketchy,” Robinson said

“Since we’ve scaled back the amount of people allowed at the Howl, it’s become a lot safer of an event It allows our volunteers to have a bet-ter way to view the situation and it disperses the people,

so if there’s a situation in the middle of a cluster of people,

we’re more likely to be able to get there.”

The Howl, as the activities committee explained, is held

in hopes of creating a space for students to escape the stressful college environment, have a good time, bond with their friends and meet new people, and they hope they achieved that for as many stu-dents as possible this year

“I hope people leave the Howl saying ‘Wow, that was

so much fun,’” Robinson said

“I want people to say they felt safe, they enjoyed the activ-ities and dance, and that it was a positive experience and worth their time That’s really what I hope for this year, and

I think we can accomplish it.”

—nichole.bresee@aggiemail.

usu.edu @breseenichole

ple I think it’s a popular theme

to have picked, so i think that’s awesome,” Daria Griffith, a volunteer, said

Benson said the process was simple to pick a theme The activities committee went

through about 80 to 90 dif-ferent themes and narrowed

it down until an anonymous majority vote chose “Stranger Things.”

Brynne Shoemaker, a lead, said, “I think it’s really fun I love that it’s a good time to have this theme, too, because season four just came out It’s

not too far gone I like it, too, because it’s kind of eerie and creepy, so it goes along with the theme of Halloween.”

“I’ve always heard that going

to Howl is one experience, and volunteering is a totally dif-ferent experience From what I’ve heard, it’s more fun and better,” Benson said

“Howl” FROM PAGE 1

“Clean Up” FROM PAGE 1

FILE PHOTO

PHOTO COURTESTY OF Madlyn Petty

Activities at the Howl expanded this year to include arcade games, a haunted house, and virtual reality experiences

PHOTO COURTESTY OF Madlyn Petty

Several Howl attendees came in a costume including a live snake

Trang 7

KOCH SCHOLARS PROGRAM

The Koch Scholars Program (KSP) is a semester-long paid reading group designed to engage undergraduate students in meaningful discussions Participants will receive $1,000

• Meetings are held on Tuesdays at 5:00 pm; dinner is provided

• Participants are given 15 books

• Students join discussions online and in person

• Students of any academic background are welcome to apply

Apply online before November 1st

Find out more at www.growthopportunity.org/student/koch-scholars

For the first time in program history, Logan, Utah will be host to

the Mountain West Championships Friday, Nov 1

Coming to Logan will be two of the top 30 men’s programs in the

nation and four of the top 40, including Utah State, who is

cur-rently ranked 22 Boise State is the only team from the Mountain

West ahead of the Aggies in the rankings at 18 The women are

equally as accomplished this season, if not more, with three of the

top 15 teams in the nation hailing from the Mountain West

The Aggies have been one of the most consistent programs in the

conference this season and will be able to show off their talents

in front of the home crowd In addition to being ranked in the top

25, the men’s program has won four of six competitions it’s been

invited to and come second in another The Utah State women have won four competitions as well and have received two Moun-tain West player of the week awards

This past weekend, both the men and women won the Utah Open held in Salt Lake City and had some standout individual performances

“It was good to get the team win for both the men and the wom-en,” said third-year USU head coach Artie Gulden “The women’s race spread out a little bit more than we thought it would early

on, but our ladies did a good job of staying patient and working the latter part of the race We made up a lot of ground the last mile, which was good A lot of our ladies ran tough, and some of them ran by far their best races in Utah State uniforms.”

Utah State sophomore Devin Pancake finished first in the men’s 6k race, while sophomore Leann Larkin finished second in the

women’s 5k Although cross country can be an individual sport, teamwork is one of the biggest ways to succeed and earn a win, and it’s something the Aggies excel at

“For the guys, we packed up well and worked together,” Gulden said “We had a group of five together for probably at least half the race, which was good to see them work together Like the ladies, they worked the latter part of the race and pulled away from Utah Valley.”

Utah State’s men’s and women’s cross country teams will be back in action this weekend, as they host the Mountain West Conference Cross Country Championship on at the Steve and Dona Reeder Cross Country Course The men’s 7-kilometer race will begin at 10 a.m., followed by the women’s 5-kilometer race at 10:45 a.m

USU set to host Mountain West cross country championships

FILE PHOTO Utah State is set to host the MW cross country championships on Saturday, with both the men’s and women’s squads putting together strong seasons and looking to compete for a conference title

By Dalton Renshaw

SPORTS CONTENT MANAGER

Trang 8

PAGE 7 WEEK OF OCTOBER 29, 2019WEEK OF OCTOBER 29, 2019

2020 BALLOT

Select the candidate or write-in who you think is best! Must vote

for a minimum three categories to be counted.

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Trang 9

LOVE HATE

O P I N I O N

1 3 5 9 4

9 8 3 1

9 6 2

1 2 3

4 9 1

6 2 5

8 4 2 9

9 3 7 6 2

TO PLAY: Complete the grid so that every row, column

and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9 There is no guessing or math involved, just use logic to solve

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How does the classic Halloween treat measure

up against the Kit Kats and Reeses of the world?

Letters to the editor

Have an opinion you’d like to share? Email your

letter to opinion@usustatesman.com.

Letters must not contain personal attacks or other inappropriate language and should be limited to 400 words or less Anonymous letters will also not be published; please include your name and a phone number or email address (neither of which will be published).

Letters received by The Utah Statesman will be published online at www.usustatesman.com, as well as in the print issue of the Statesman, depending on space.

Candy corn is an absolute abomination No one eats sev-eral pieces of candy corn and thinks, “That was a pleasant experience.” A worse candy has never graced my palate

It is a depressing and lachry-mose globule of plastic which would be put to better use if it were melted and made into an adhesive to fix the leaky pipe under the kitchen sink Fun fact: when Ron Swanson from Parks and Recreations said,

“An hour ago a giant fireball consumed my entire face and

it was far preferable to spend-ing another second with you,”

he was actually talking about candy corn

I’m sure the creators of this pathetic excuse of candy meant well, but the road to hell is paved with good inten-tions Then again, I’m not sure they ever had good intentions

How else could you set out

to make a candy and end up

creating the culinary equiva-lent of Satan’s feces? Candy corn is a conspiracy, designed solely to rob us of the joy de-rived from actual candy Give

me literally any other candy instead Give me a swift kick

in the mouth Force-feed me a bag of sawdust Just keep your nasty-ass candy corn away from me

Daniel Hansen, managing editor

Candy corn has never — and WILL never — be the pre-ferred candy of Halloween

Unless of course you’re ask-ing your local dentist what he gives away to his patients to ensure your cavity comes with

a little side of unhappiness

USA Today recently released

a poll of the most-favored candies in America, with Reese’s taking 36% of the

vote Somehow, candy corn came in fifth with 6% of the vote, proving that six percent

of Americans had to deal with the horrific experience of candy corn lobbyists breaking into their homes and forcing them at gunpoint to reply to the over-the-phone survey in candy corn’s favor When Jelly Belly was perfecting the Harry Potter themed Bertie Bott’s

jelly beans, the makers were tempted to replace the likes

of earwax, rotten egg, vomit, dirt, earthworm and booger from the flavors with candy corn because it’s essentially the same experience for those unlucky enough to have the taste touch their palates

Dalton Renshaw, sports content manager

While I can’t match the overall

intensity some of my

cowork-ers seem to possess in

alarm-ing quantities *cough, Daniel,

cough.* I feel it is my job as the

opinion manager at the

States-man to push back on the tide

of bitter libel and voice some

much needed support for a

de-lightful, colorful snack that is as

synonymous with Halloween as

Santa is with Christmas And

so, in that festive spirit, I choose

to write in a manner of cheer

and goodwill, rather than angst

and terrible bitterness

If Halloween had a taste, it

would be that of the sweetest ambrosia that is candy corn

So many wonderful childhood memories are associated with that unique taste and singular texture And everytime some-body eats the candy, they are flooded with a sense of grati-tude for the immense privilege

of simply partaking

And not content being

limit-ed to pleasing just one human sense, candy corn is also a vivid mixture of orange, yellow and white, catching and pleasing the eye for all who gaze on its triangular grandeur

Candy corn is not just a treat

It’s an experience, and one I en-joy having each year on October 31

To hate candy corn is to hate your own taste buds, as they’re clearly the things at fault in this eating equation To blame an innocent sweet for your own shortcomings is a tragedy

I hope all those who disagree with me here at the Statesman get the help they need They’ve obviously never experienced true happiness, and I pity them

Daedan Olander, opinion con-tent manager

Candy corn is to candy what

vanilla ice cream is to ice

cream No one thinks "wow,

you know what my life is

miss-ing, vanilla ice cream." But we

gladly eat it when it's offered

We don't talk about it as if it just killed our first born child

So why should candy corn receive the same treatment?

No one is proclaiming candy corn is the best piece of candy

to walk this earth, but how can you say no to a bowl of colored sugar crystals during spooky season?

Alison Berg, news content manager

Despite what my colleagues

say candy corn is not that bad!

Yeah it may be pure sugar, have

a chalky aftertaste, and cause cavities BUT it’s a holiday spe-cific candy! I think we should

all be in more support of it!

Savannah Knapp, Graphic Design Manager

Trang 10

PAGE 9 WEEK OF OCTOBER 29, 2019WEEK OF OCTOBER 29, 2019

HATE

s i n c e 1 9 0 2

STUDENT MEDIA

Student-run newspaper for Utah State University since 1902 Reporting online 24/7 Printed each Tuesday of the school year.

Daniel Hansen managing editor

editor@usustatesman.com 435-797-1742

——————

Alison Berg news manager

news@usustatesman.com

——————

Dalton Renshaw sports manager

sports@usustatesman.com

——————

Shelby Smith student life manager

life@usustatesman.com

——————

Daedan Olander opinion manager

opinion@usustatesman.com

——————

Savannah Knapp design manager

design@usustatesman.com

——————

Chantelle McCall photo manager

photo@usustatesman.com

——————

Klaus VanZanten video manager

video@usustatesman.com

HAVE A STORY TIP OR IDEA?

CONTACT OUR NEWSROOM:

435-797-1775 OR EMAIL: EDITOR@USUSTATESMAN.COM

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1 3 5 9 4

9 8 3 1

9 6 2

1 2 3

4 9 1

6 2 5

8 4 2 9

9 3 7 6 2



        

        

        

        

        

        

        

        

        

TO PLAY: Complete the grid so that every row, column

and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9 There is no guessing or math involved, just use logic to solve

COMIC BY Keith Wilson

C L A S S I F I E D A D S

SOLUTION FOR : 10/22/2019

UtahStatesman

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