OCR Text |
Show 2 BULLETIN Wednesday April 18, 2012 18 Wednesday A.M. showers 11; (- 19 64/48 Thursday Mostly sunny DAILY DIAEI LY UTAH CHRONICLE www.dailyutahchronicle.com 20 61/46 Sunny 15 The Daily Utah Chronicle is an independent student newspaper 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 801-581-7041 or visit www.dailyutahchronicle.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. 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. Find us on Facebook: n facebook.com/TheChrony , Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/TheChrony 11110 New pork Eintegl TUESDAY WEDNESDAY Ally Week 16 Various Events 12:15 p.m. The Law School will host a screening of "Bully" 17 2012 World Leader's Lecture Forum with Sen. George Mitchell 10 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. at Libby Gardner Hall 24 29 McFarland Clarifications Sunny 80/52 Sunny Sunday 22 82/56 Forecast from: weathercom MONDAY SUNDAY EDITOR IN CHIEF: Brandon Beifuss b.beifuss@chronicle.utah.edu MANAGING EDITOR: Jessica Blake j.blake@chronicle.utah.edu PRODUCTION MANAGER: Tyler Pratt t.pratt@chronicle.utah.edu ASST. PRODUCTION MANAGER: Megan Corrections and 68/50 Saturday April/May Advertising 801-581-7041 News 801-581-NEWS Fax 801-581-FAXX NEWS EDITOR: Andreas Rivera a.rivera@chronicle.utah.edu ASST. NEWS EDITOR: Emily Andrews OPINION EDITOR: Savannah Turk s.turk@chronicle.utah.edu SPORTS EDITOR: Jake Bullinger j.bullinger@chronicle.utah.edu ASST. SPORTS EDITOR: Ryan McDonald ARTS EDITOR: Elliott Bueler e.bueler@chronicle.utah.edu PHOTO EDITOR: Christopher Reeves c.reeves@chronicle.utah.edu ASST. PHOTO EDITOR: Chad Zavala ONLINE EDITOR: Frank Sasto PAGE DESIGNER: Jenna Morgan COPY EDITORS: Taylor Bell, Niki Harris PROOFREADER: Aaron Lang GENERAL MANAGER: Jake Sorensen j.sorensen@chronicle.utah.edu 21 Friday Free Film Series "The Muppets Movie" 7 p.m. in the Post Theatre Free Classes end THURSDAY FRIDAY 18 Ally of the Year 19 Award Ceremony and Social 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Union Den Free 25 Reading Day SATURDAY National Day of 20 Silence 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. on the Union Patio as part of Ally Week Saturday 21 Service Project 9 a.m. to noon at Bend-in-the-River, 1030 W. Fremont Ave. co 28 26 30 4 Graduating Day 9 Academic Senate Meeting 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Iva 10 V3 14 Close El 2 p.m. Meal service ends with brunch. FINALS WEEK 6 Residence Halls 18 19 20 Campus garden group teaches 2 composting Anne Plummer cult for the gardens to expand. Clayton Andersen, a senior in environmental studies and a cornposting intern with the gardens, presented the four main parts of composting: water, oxygen, carbon sources and nitrogen sources. Carbon sources — or brown material — are things such as leaves, hay, straw and certain types of cardboard. He hopes students recognize the simplicity of creating a pile of compost for their own gardens. "It's not a bad idea to leave a pile of leaves around, even if they're out in the open," Andersen said. "We've also been thinking about using the leftover newspapers for carbon source." Nitrogen sources — or green material — are just as easy to find. Kitchen scraps and leaves cut off of flowers are all considered nitrogen sources. During the past 18 months, the Union has provided between 500 and boo pounds of green material for the gardens. This comes from chefs voluntarily separating usable materials from STAFF WRITER The organizers of the campus gardens taught students about sustainable methods for creating odorless compost in their own backyards. Marriott Library's Green Committee spoke to only two students during the Tuesday event. More than 3o percent of fossil fuels burned by humans are associated with growing food, said Campus Garden Coordinator Alexandra Parvaz. She said the solution is to grow locally. The campus gardens minimize the dependence on fossil fuels. The two gardens, the Sill Garden and Pioneer Garden, work with the farmers market during the summer and sell directly to Chartwells, the company that manages the Union Cafeteria. Although the Edible Campus Gardens Project receives help from various departments, the gardens don't formally exist in the Campus Master Plan. Construction on campus has made it diffi- KIMBERLY ROACH/The Daily Utah Chronicle Alexandra Parvaz, campus garden coordinator, discusses the garden projects going on at the U for a Green Bag Lunch Series in the Gould Auditorium on Tuesday at noon. unusable materials. ecological processes, teach healthy Marriott Library's Green Corn- nutrition and promote the possimittee's mission is to teach stu- bilities of urban sustainable agridents how to grow foods by more culture. sustainable methods, educate the a.plummer@chronicle.utah.edu Horoscopes Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS 48 Farm abode 1 2 3 4 5 film with 49 Sagittarius, with 14 the song "Love Is "the" a Song" 52 Bush cabinet 17 6 Pack (down) member 20 10 Maybe too 57 1863 speech smooth opener 23 14 Starter of a 59 Do like some 25 26 27 28 58-Down birds and bees 15 Many a cut, 60 90° from norte 33 eventually 61 Mop, say 36 16 Page, e.g. 62 Confederate 17 Dagger's partner 40 63 Do some 18 Like some sloths gardening 43 44 20 Legal deadlock 64 Trick-taking card 22 Relatives of game 47 aardwolves 65 Mid-March 49 50 51 23 Pollution celebration ... or watchdog org. a hint to the starts 57 of 18-, 25-, 4424 Bank list and 57-Across 60 25 Bookie's concern 30 Pink-slip 63 DOWN 33 Carnival 1 "Brandenburg attractions Concertos" 12 Word exclaimed 34 Dissolve with composer after "no" or acid, say 2 Censorship"good" 35 Acid neutralizer fighting org. 13 Hospital capacity 36 War, famine, etc. 3 Natural satellite 37 They're crossed by 19 Inspected 4 Egotist's comment bridges 21 DHL competitor 5 Some printers 39 Give a 24 Guinness Book thumbs-up on 6 Feature of some entry Facebook high heels 25 Cherish 40 Nappers catch 7 Hurting 26 Titan, once them 8 Disrupt, say 41 Bobby of the rink 27 Loiterer 9 Gets ready, as an 42 Shaved oven 28 Lake of 43 Goof cryptozoological 10 Bush cabinet interest member 44 Most stand-up comedy acts 11 Symbol on Sri 29 Violate a peace 47 Stroked Lanka's flag treaty, maybe 6 1 Hit 1942 7 No. 0314 8 10 9 15 11 12 13 Today's Birthday: This year you are an emotional pendulum, swinging from moody to introverted and from emotional to dynamic.You act before thinking and are full of energy. Others might wonder who is the real you.Try both sides of your personality this year. If you are single, you attract impulsive and spontaneous people.As a result, your relationships will have an unpredictable tone. CT 19 21 22 24 30 29 34 31 ) Aries (March 21-April 19) How you feel when you wake up and how you feel by noon could be very different. Tonight: Go with whimsy. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Say less and listen more.You cannot help but gain understanding through a conversation.Tonight: Get some extra z's. 32 35 38 39 41 42 45 46 II Gemini (May 21-June 20) Your friendship means a lot to others.You also have a lot of responsibilities. Be realistic — you can only spread yourself so thin. cro Cancer (June 21-July 22) You are on top of your game. Don't lose your focus today, you'll get it done.Tonight:You might decide to go your own way. 48 ... 52 , 53 54 55 56 59 61 62 64 65 PUZZLE BY DAVE SARPOLA 30 31 32 35 37 38 42 44 45 46 47 www.dailyutahchronicle/horoscopes 16 18 37 Full horoscopes available online: Tahrir Square's locale Catawampus Budget priorities Snooze-inducing Kansas City , Negro Leagues team with Satchel Paige, Jackie Robinson and Ernie Banks Utah city Get pumped Is in the hole Declare Highest degree Bit of evidence 49 More than one 50 Levitated 51 Buttonlike? Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) cc?. Detach and you'll seem far more supportive to others, as there is less of a tendency to trigger a reaction. 111) Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Togetherness comes from letting go of your view of what should be.Try to see life from a different perspective. )? I Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Others will jump on the bandwagon with you as they see the wisdom of your ways.Tonight:Take a midweek break. VS Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Sometimes you need to stop and center yourself. Part of the reason that this process seems necessary is that you are changing. _a Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ""/ Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Defer to others for the moment; A", Keep conversations moving. listen to their views.You are You can facilitate a friendship or likely to have an animated agreement just by employing your innate skills. debate. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Be aware of what is happening behind the scenes. Know what you want from a situation. Communication is vital. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Listen to news carefully. Be aware of what is being shared by someone whose financial wisdom you respect. Top tweets @icewolf08 Alex Weisman Dear #uofu, you couldn't have picked a better day for an earthquake drill unless there is an earthquake today. 52 "Nessun dorma," for one 53 Pasta, in product names 54 He wrote "Jupiter from on high laughs at lovers' perjuries" 55 Greek cheese 56 Long shot, in hoops 58 See 14-Across @hopp_jo24 UofU Problems: Sitting on a fault line.. Major future Earthquake.. desks to protect us from falling objects. 17 April No freaking stable @erikaminarjez Erika L Minarjez What I learned from the earthquake drill: I'll probably die... especially if it's raining outside. #UofU #utahfaultlineproblems |