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Show 2 BULLETIN Thursday, April 14, 2011 14 Thursday Partly cloudy • • 15 _ Performing Dance Company: • Dance Jazz Big Bands: 7:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. @ Libby Gardner Concert Hall • 5:30 p.m. @ Marriott Center for 16 Friday Mostly cloudy 34°/44° www.dailyutahchronicle.corn 36°/53° Mostly cloudy/rain Jon Schmidt Benefit Concert: 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. @ Libby Gardner Concert Hall LGBT Break the Silence Rally: Noon to 3 p.m. @ Union Lawn • • 17 Saturday • • 42°/55° Mostly cloudy Spring Bulb Show & Competition: 9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. • @ Red Butte Garden • Lily Tomlin: 7:30 p.m. @ Kingsbury Hall 18 Sunday Mostly cloudy/rain 43°/57° • The Smithson Effect: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. @ UMFA Dianne Gulezian Art Exhibit— Earth and Sky: 9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. @ Red Butte Garden Coming up on campus Monday 46°/54° Crimson Film Fest-Rec Your Life: 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. @ SLC Main Library Auditorium Einar Nielsen Field House Blood Drive: 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. @ Einar Nielsen Field House • Weather from the department of atmospheric sciences: http://forecast utah.edu Kappa Sigma opens new Online today: house by donating to vets www.dailyutahchronicle.com Doug Jennings bands the Black Hounds, Mason Jones and the Get Togethers, One Four You, and jazz group The Hot Club of Zion. Kappa Sigma nationally partners with the Fisher House for all of its philanthropic events, Jones said. Fisher House is a nonprofit organization that provides financial assistance for military families, according to the group's website. All concert proceeds will go to Fisher House, as well as sales from T-shirts the fraternity has sold on campus this past week, Jones said. Funds can provide financial assistance for families to visit wounded veterans. Sometimes soldiers will be wounded but not yet be able to visit their families, Jones said. Fisher House provides STAFF WRITER The Kappa Sigma fraternity is hosting a fundraising concert to support military families. Tonight at 6 p.m. the doors will open at the new Kappa Sigma fraternity house, where attendees can listen to live music—played by students—and chow down on some barbecue, which will include vegetarian options. Another highlight of the event will be a date auction, which will auction off some of the fraternity members for dates, with all proceeds going to charity, said Mason Jones, a member of Kappa Sigma and organizer of the event. The Military Hero Benefit Concert will include music by local ' Multimedia: Check out a photo gallery of the football team's practice at www.dailyutahchronicle.com/sports. If you go: When: Today, 6 p.m. Where: Kappa Sigma house, 41 S. University St. How much: $5 the funds for the family to make the trip to visit once the soldier is safely back in the United States. "No matter what your political views are, it's important to support each other as Americans," Jones said. "These soldiers put out life and limb for us and become injured in line of duty. It's important to show our support." d.jennings@chronicle.utah.edu Global, national & local news Stories and photo from The Associated Press I imp( U.S. Protesters see victory as Egypt's Mubarak detained CAIRO—Ousted President Hosni Mubarak and his two sons were detained Wednesday for investigation of corruption, abuse of power and killings of protesters, bringing cheers of victory from activists who hoped it marked a turning point in Egypt's turbulent transition to democracy. The 82-year-old Mubarak was under detention in a hospital, a step prosecutors depicted as a precaution to monitor his health while under questioning. His sons Gamal, once seen as Mubarak's successor, and Alaa, a wealthy businessman, were jailed in Cairo's Torah prison, where a string of former top regime figures—including Mubarak's prime minister, ruling party chief and chief of staff— are already languishing, facing similar corruption investigations. Obama: Cut spending, raise taxes on the wealthy WASHINGTON President Barack Obama coupled a call for $4 trillion in long-term deficit reductions with a blistering attack on Republican plans for taxes, Medicare and Medicaid on Wednesday, laying down markers for a roiling debate in Congress and the 2012 presidential campaign to come. Obama said spending cuts and higher taxes alike must be part of any deficit-reduction plan, including an end to Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy. He proposed an unspecified "debt failsafe" that would go into effect if Congress failed to make sure the national debt would be falling by 2014 relative to the size of the overall economy. "We have to live within our means, reduce our deficit and get back on a path that will allow us to pay down our debt," the president said in a speech at George Washington University a few blocks from the White House. — Calif. students protest higher ed budget cuts REED SAXON Pounding on the temporarily dosed gates of the student administrative center, college students, faculty and staff of the California State University system protest state budget cuts to higher education that could lead to higher tuition, larger class sizes and lower enrollment, on the campus at California State University Long Beach. DAILY UTAH CHRONICLE Advertising 801-581-7041 News 801-581-NEWS Fax 801-581-FAXX OPINION EDITOR: Brandon Beifuss b.beifuss@chronicle.utah.edu SPORTS EDITOR: Bryan Chouinard b.chouinard@ chronicle.utah.edu ASST. SPORTS EDITOR: Jake Hibbard ARTS EDITOR: Mohammad Allam m.allam@chronicle.utah.edu PHOTO EDITOR: Richard Payson EDITOR IN CHIEF: Sara Copeland s.copeland@chronicle.utah.edu MANAGING EDITOR: Blair Johnson b.johnson@chronicle.utah.edu PRODUCTION MANAGER: Tyler Pratt t.pratt@chronicle.utah.edu ASST. PRODUCTION MANAGER: Megan McFarland NEWS EDITOR: Katie Pratt r.payson@chronicle.utah.edu ASST. PHOTO EDITOR: Taner UTAH Study: Utah inmate recidivism rates drop SALT LAKE CITY—More than 5o percent of Utah ex-convicts commit crimes within three years of their release and end up back behind bars, but the most recent figures represent a drop compared to data from the late iggos, according to a report released Wednesday. From 1999 to 2002, 65.8 percent of prisoners ended up back behind bars at some point, but the numbers dropped from 2004 to 2007, to 53.7 percent, according to the report by the Pew Center on the States. Jean Nielsen, director of Salt Lake County's Department of Human Services, credits an increase in substance abuse programs and resourc- es that help the mentally ill. "Instead of putting the mentally ill in jail, we have teams of social workers and psychiatrists that help them," Nielsen said. Salt Lake City banning electronic billboards SALT LAKE CITY—Salt Lake City officials are temporarily banning new electronic billboards and may permanently ban the roadside advertisements. The Salt Lake City Council late Tuesday approved a ninemonth moratorium on the installation of new signs or the conversion of existing signs. Councilwoman Jill Remington Love says the moratorium will give city officials time to study safety concerns and aesthetic challenges with the billboards. r.payson@chronicle.utah.edu PAGE DESIGNERS: Ariosto Ferro, Jenna Morgan COPY EDITORS: Jessica Blake, Abby Thurman, Lauren Cousin k.pratt@chronicle.utah.edu PROOFREADER: Aaron Lang ASST. NEWS EDITOR:Josh Bennett GENERAL MANAGER: Jake Sorensen j.sorensen@chronicle.utah.edu ACROSS Corrections and Clarifications The policy of The Daily Utah Chronicle is to correct any error made as soon as possible. If you find something you would like clarified or find unfair, please contact the editor at 801-581-8317. 8 Frequent flooding site 18 Jacket material, for short? 19 1973 nonfiction best seller about a woman with multiple personalities 21 "Me, too" 24 Line published daily Monday through Friday during Fall and Spring Semesters (excluding test weeks and holidays). Chronicle editors and staff are solely responsible for the newspaper's content. Funding comes from advertising revenues and a dedicated student fee administered by the Publications Council. To respond with questions, comments or complaints, call 8o1-58I-7o41 or visit wwwdailyutahchronicle.com. The Chronicle is distributed free of charge, limit one copy per reader. Additional copies of the paper may be made available upon request. No person, without expressed permission of The Chronicle, may take more than one copy of any Chronicle issue. 27 30 32 "The Thin Man" actress Beach, Calif. Plunder Big name in circuses Figures on the ceiling of la Cappella Sistina 41 Impersonated at a costume party 43 Spoils Edited by Will Shortz 2 3 27 58 See 16-Across 62 "I'm done after this" 63 "Somehow everything gets done" 64 Does nothing 65 *Like Seattle vis-a-vis Phoenix 28 11 12 13 30 33 34 36 40 41 42 47 4 49 52 44 45 46 50 54 58 3 37 39 51 55 56 59 57 60 62 • 61 163 64 65 PUZZLE BY MATT GINSBERC to Furnish 29 Pharmaceutical oils DOWN 31 *Shine 45 French department in the Pyrenees Seafood lover's hangout 33 Old World eagle 46 Less lively 34 Burglar in detective stories 49 Opportune 12 Flower that shares its name with a tentacled sea creature 2 Nancy Drew's aunt 13 They might depart 3 One way to travel at midnight or study Pop 5 Connections 17 Japanese band Like Elgar's Symphony No. 1 Prefix with paganism 38 Many signatures Cloaks 39 Noodle dish 42 Lots and lots of Cheese 22 *Not fixed 7 Player of golf 23 36 See 16-Across 8 Clink 38 Say "B-A-D-G-E," e.g. 9 25 William who played Uncle Charley on "My Three Sons" 37 6 Prey of wild dogs and crocodiles 36 15 Huff B, A, D, G and E, e.g. 35 29 32 38 10 24 22 11 Neighborhood 4 9 19 Gillette offering Actress Vardalos No. 0310 7 17 51 Piece of the action 57 6 IS 18 48 Doughnuts, but not danishes 54 Bette's "Divine" stage persona 5 16 21 52 4 14 47 Nutritional amt. no Lady of the knight? 26 The Daily Utah Chronicle is an independent student newspaper 40 1 *Poet's performance Feds to consider tars sands, shale 14 Country with which the U.S. projects goes to war in SALT LAKE CITY—The federal "Wag the Dog" government says it will take a fresh look at commercial oil shale and tar 15 Who "saved my life tonight" in a sands plans in the West. 1975 Elton John The Bureau of Land Management hit said Wednesday it would soon begin performing environmental 16 With 36- and 58-Across, what studies for potential projects on the answers to the federal land in Colorado, Utah, and starred clues are Wyoming. Pasamehmetoglu ONLINE EDITOR: Richard Payson New §ork Einttgi 28 "What's the ?" 44 Battle cry so "Whatever it don't care!" 53 Drones, maybe 55 Excitement 56 Bear 59 Inner ear? 60 Medieval French love poem 61 What a keeper may keep |