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"How To Lose Weight Even IfYou Sit Down All Day" FREE report. Go to: www.sleepandloseweight.com c • 1- | UJ E D A R 1 R A T E N G 0 _P^ E M 0 . 6 1 7 4 5 9 2 3 8 3 5 8 1 2 6 7 9 4 SIGNPOST POLICY The Signpost does not endorse, promote or encourage the purchase or sale of any product or service advertised in the newspaper. Advertisements are the sole responsibility of the advertiser. The Signpost hereby disclaims all liability for any damage suffered as the result of any advertisement in this newspaper. Tlie Signpost is not responsible for any claims or representations made in advertisements in this newspaper. The Signpost has the sole authority to edit and locate any classified advertisement as deemed appropriate. The Signpost reserves the right to refuse any advertising. 9 4 2 7 8 3 1 5 6 2 3 4 6 7 8 5 1 9 8 7 1 5 9 4 6 2 3 5 9 6 3 1 2 8 4 7 7 6 5 9 4 1 3 8 2 4 2 3 8 6 5 9 7 1 1 8 9 2 3 7 4 6 5 t D l p l l c i r i y continuedfromfront The CDU invites 40 students, faculty and staff to join together on a trip to Delta, Utah, where the Japanese were interned during World War II. For applications, please contact Adrienne Gillespie in Shepherd Union 232 or by phone at 801-626-7243. All costs for this event will be paid for with the support of the WSU Holocaust Commemoration Fund. Brad Roghaar, professor of English and adviser of the Metaphor staff, supported the formation of the new journal. Unlike Metaphor, Epiphany is limited to only literary submissions. "We're strictly the written word," Cox said. Literary works students can submit include poetry, short fiction, nonfiction and flash fiction. Coxsaidshe was concerned that Epiphany wouldn't get many submissions due to the other contests going on, but Apply now... the number of submissions doubled from last semester. "A lot of times they were kind of intimidated to submit to Metaphor and I felt like if we could start something here, then they would feel less intimidated and bring us their work/' Cox said. "And they have, they've come out of the woodwork - people that we never even knew and had never even come into the center before, and they heard about this and they wanted to submit. I was so excited." The cover for the new journal was designed by Brianna Kent, design and copy editor, who founded the publication along with Cox. Students can pick up a copy of the new journal in the Nontraditional Student Center, and several copies will also be available in the Shepherd Union Building and Stewart Library. The library will also keep a copy for students to check out. Cox said the staff is also looking into putting future editions online. Epipliany received 150 submissions this year and published 75. Of those entries, a winning piece was chosen from each category, as well as an overall winning entry. Stumpp's submission won for short fiction. The piece is called "Love In Las Vegas," and is part of a longer work called "The Tourist." The story is about a small-town Utah girl who moves to Las Vegas after hearing of its fame as a party town. She then finds out living: there is nothing like visiting. "It's basically a coming-of- • age story with the element of going down into the under-; world and coming out on the other side a wiser person for: it," Stumpp said. Stumpp did not submit the story only to Epiphany. "I wrote the story and then sent it out to whoever wasi accepting stuff," she said. "Submitting to Epipliany was a cakewalk, though." Stumpp will present her work along with three of the other four winners - Heidi Cutrubus, Dwight Adams and Carissa Hill - at the National Undergraduate literature Conference (NULC) in April. Comment on this story at wsusignpost.com. National Headlines Marine general: Gays would even be necessary. Conway, a known opwould get their own ponent of repealing the law, rooms More than 80 positions available Appointed positions application packet Available in SU 326 ' OPEN UNTIL FILLED TURN IN YOUR APPLICATION TODAY Review of applications begins March 24th WASHINGTON (AP) - The Marine Corps' commandant said he won't force his troops to bunk with gays on base and would give them separate rooms if Congress votes to allow openly gay service. The comment, by Gen. James Conway, is the latest pushback by a small but vocal faction of senior military leaders opposed to a repeal of the 1993 law known as "don't ask, don't tell." President Barack Obama says the ban is unfair, and Defense Secretary Robert Gates has launched a lengthy study to determine how to allow gays to serve openly without hurting military effectiveness. Among the questions to be answered is whether changes to housing oolicies suggested in an interview published Friday by Military. com that he already knows it would be a logistical hurdle. On base, Marines typically bunk two-to-a-room. "I would not ask our Marines to live with someone who is homosexual if we can possibly avoid it," he said. 'And to me that means we have to build BEQs (bachelor enlisted quarters) and have single rooms," he said. Conways remarks foreshadow the rocky political debate ahead. Gates has asked lawmakers to keep troops "out of the political dimension" of the issue, but some uniformed officers are willingly jumping in. Earlier this month, a threestar Army general called on troops and their families to "speak up" against allowing gays to serve openly. |