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Show I Sports v Leisure & Parsons Finish Best Season With Individual And Team Honors by Christopher Thomas Forum staff writer named to the National Soccer Coaches Association (NSCA) All-FWest Team and received an honorable mention on the Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Soccer Leagues (RMISL) Team. Its an honor receiving the various awards from last season but right now I am more concerned with staying in shape for next year, said Gunderson. Senior Mike Polich was also named to the NSCA All-FWest Team and RMISL Squad. Rhodes Scholar a Polich, nominee, was named to the NAIA Academic and received honors on the NAIA Academic All District team. Polich is West All-Americ- an ar Westminsters NAIA District VII champion soccer team celebrated the most prolific season in the schools history. The Parsons went claimed the schools firstdistrict titleand advanced to the Southin early ern California Area semi-finaNovember. In. addition, individual team members have recently won several awards and honors. Midfielder Ian Gunderson, who led the team in scoring with 16 goals and six assists, received an honorable mention on the NAIA Mens Soccer Team. Gunderson, a sophomore, was also 10-4-- 5, ls All-Americ- an All-Americ- an ar ce -- minsters 10th Academic GPA or better, Dorich said. Polich, a Colorado native, said being recognized for both scholastic and academic ability was an honor. He also said he hopes future employers will feel the same. Joining Polich on the the NAIA Acateam are teammates Sean demic Angeletti, David Litvac, Steve Melgar and Bill Sedgewick. Seniors Ab Rees and John Sandberg were named to the RMISL Team as honorable mentions. All of the players had to work hard to get these awards and deserve the credit Every member of the team should be commended for improving the teams quality, Dorich said. in All-Americ- an the last eight years. is Sporting Academic getting to be a tradition for Westminsters ' soccer team. It shows that there is national recognition for Westminsters student athletes who are maintaining a high standard for academic and athletic excellence, said Coach Chris Dorich. To be considered for the Academic award, a studentmustbea junior or senior with two years of soccer experience and demonstrate high scholastic achievement. The academic awards are individual work by the players. To be considered for the national honor they have to uphold a 3.5 All-Americ- All-Distri- All-Americ- an ct ce Deseret News Environmental Reporter Skirts Journalistic Edge by Bill Kilpack Forum editor work in environment, which has its share of unexploded bombs in Utah), said Joe Bauman, Deseret News and columnist when he spoke ' to advanced journalism students in COMM 323 on Jan. 10, 1992. You can always tell when a reporter started in journalism if you look at the topics the writers cover, according to Bauman. He began in small weekly publications in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when environmental issues first started becoming prominent nationally. Bauman began working for the Deseret News in 1971, picked up the environment beat in 1974 and began writing his Friday environmental column in 1977. Writing a column is more difficult because I have to say what I feel about some issues, then interview people (as an objective reporter) who he opposed in one of his columns. Almost everyone working at a newspaper has a beat where they go for their stories every day, he said. Beats are chosen because the writer has some expertise in the area, or simply has some interest. None of us are experts, Bauman said. If we were, wed go out and get real jobs, rather than simply reporting whats going on. Were not experts, and we dont pretend to be. A new beat Bauman is trying to develop for the Deseret News is science and tech- I environ-mentreport- er ATTENTION STUDENTS and FACULTY: Typingword processing papers, reports, manuscripts, resumes, cassette transcriptions, etc. WP 5.1, Laser printer. Call Helen at 484-- 1 100 or 278 3123. nology, which has been absent from the publication for some time. Right now, Im just starting to develop ideas on how to cover science and technology, he said. Its an area where Ive got to be very careful, especially since the cold fusion furor at the University of Utah. He said there was a lot of questionable reporting done in the ordeal. Im glad I wasnt one of them involved. By announcing the discovery of cold fusion process, the U of U scientists jumped the gun, Bauman said. Even people connected with the U say they spoke too soon. I think theyve learned a lesson, and thats one of the reasons theyve got a new president. The U of U scientists were way out line when they had. their press conference announcing cold fusion, as well as their secret contribution of a million-plu- s dollars in support of the project, he said. The money was actually taken from U of U funds set aside for scientific research, but the way it was handled with the public was misleading, according to Bauman. I guess thats the job of a reporter learning from big mistakes, he said. Frequently, U of U scientists work with labs in France, checking and double-checkin- g experiments. Bauman often receives copies of reports made for science magazines and journals before they even go to pnnt. In addition to his newspaper work, Bauman wrote a book in 1987, Stone HouseLands: The San Rafael Reef, where he outlined the natural history and gave offered some humanistic insights into the San Rafael landscape just west of the Colorado border running through 56 miles of south-centrUtah. In the book, he argues for preserving it as a natural park. His interest in the area came from several years of covering news stories in the area for the DeseretNews. By 1983,hehad decided it was time to write the book, where the personal experience is the heart of the work. Bauman attended college first at the University of Utah, then later at the of Maryland. , Another reason for starling up the sci- ence and technology beat again is thatUtah is a mini Silicon Valley, he said, with great developments in computers and soft- ware. The coming and going of newspaper beats is a normal occurrence, Bauman said, al more emphasis being given to areas of greater concern than others. Current topics of great interest are business and the military. B usiness reporters are tough and smart because they have to deal with the public-relatiopeople at businesses, who have a lot of money and power, although many business reporters end up working for the businesses they cover, he said. ns Uni-versi- ty Tto 1992 BSN STUDENTS. . Enter the Air Force immediately after graduation without waiting for the results of your State Boards. You can earn great benefits as an Air Force nurse officer. And if selected during your senior year, you may qualify for a internship at a major Air Force medical facility. To apply, youll need an overall 2.50 GPA. 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