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Show Busted Aggies break Illinois State bracket with home win virus strain flu' shot effectiveness UtahStatesitian Th e Utah State University • Logan, Utah STUDENT ADVOCATE CANDIDATE Joey Burt has integrated music into his campaign process, above. Diversity VP candidate Adam Addley has built a unique sign with a platform to set himself apart, right. DELAYNE LOCKE photo Prez candidates debate smoking BY LIS STEWART staff writer The five candidates running for ASUSU president — the largest number of candidates for the office in years — debated Monday in the Hub on how to best keep students involved, responsible money management and whether USU should become a non-smoking campus. In regards to USU's status on smoking, the candidates were split on the issue. Candidate Luke Ensign said though he has opinions of his own, it comes down to the students. "I think it would actually be good," Ensign said, "but it all comes down to number one — what the students think about that. What do the majority say?" Candidates Hayden Smith, Chaise Warr and Doug Fiefia also said it was an issue for students to decide. Candidate Josue Carias said he was for a campus-wide smoking ban. "If you've ever had a whiff of somebody else's smoke coming through while you're walking to class, they are infringing on your rights," Carias said. "They can smoke off campus — that's totally fine, they can live their lives, but they are infringing on someone else's rights when they smoke and that gets all up in your face." In addition to prepared questions, Abigail Kingsford, debate moderator and ASUSU public relations director, asked the candidates questions submitted via Twitter. The first came from ASUSU President Christian Thrapp on how to help international students feel like they belong at USU. "I think they are not understood as students, and I think if we could throw events for them and have ASUSU promote them, I think we can appreciate their culture and invite them and make them feel at home at USU," Fiefia said. International students tend to stay within their own "niche" when they get to USU, Smith said. Promoting campus-wide events where a wide variety of people can come learn about the cultures at USU is something he said he wants to do. Questions were also taken from the audience in the Hub. Jake Johnson, a sophomore in political science, asked about specific ways the candidates plan to hold ASUSU accountable to the students. "I've noticed in my time here ►See ASUSU, Page 2 Engineering event caters to community BY ANDY PIERUCCI staff writer ENGINEERING STUDENTS MINGLE with the community Thursday for Engineering Week. Students built spaghetti bridges and presented their ideas about the Steel Bulls Steel Bridge Team. JESSICA FIFE photo Blake Lance, a mechanical engineering PhD student, stood next to the display on nuclear energy during the College of Engineering's annual Community Expo on Thursday. Lance explained to visitors the importance of nuclear energy and the skills a USU mechanical engineering student can gain in the field. "People don't realize how much a mechanical engineer can do with their training," Lance said. "A student can leave USU and have the skills necessary to work at a nuclear power plant." Lance said the great thing about the Community Expo, which was held in the Engineering building, is students and Cache Valley residents of all ages can come out and see how awesome engineering is because they are the future generation of engineers. In the week leading up to the event, students from the college went to local schools in the valley advertising the Community Expo. Taylor Bybee of the USU Engineering Council said he saw more people at the event than in years past. "We did a lot more adver- tising this year, including visiting local schools and buying ads on the buses. It looks like it's paying off," Bybee said. The event showcased student projects involving all of the different engineering labs. There was also a beauty pageant and a display with USU's spider goats. "This is a great event," Bybee said. "We are excited that so many people from the valley are coming out to learn more about engineering." Members of the community and students from USU visited the different displays and tables, which ►See EXPO, Page 3 CNN reporter to speak with aspiring writers BY DANIELLE MANLEY staff writer CNN enterprise reporter Jessica Ravitz will be on campus Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. in the Agricultural Science Building as part of the Morris Media and Society Lecture series. Ravitz is well known for her coverage of the mutilated Afghan teen Aesha that adorned the cover of TIME magazine in 2010. Shortly after her magazine debut, Aesha's story was covered in-depth by Ravitz and published in CNN's digital magazine. More locally, Ravitz is known as a former Salt Lake Tribune reporter who primarily covered religion. Her experience reporting religion in Utah will be the foundation for her lecture on reporting with patience, persistence and compassion. Ravitz said she did various things to gain the trust of her interviewees, including participating in a trek with Mormon teenagers and hanging out with a Muslim Girl Scout group. "It's such a great entree into getting into people's worlds and getting them to open up," Ravitz said. "People so desperately want them to understand what they believe and why they believe it, and if someone will sit down and talk and listen to them, they'll talk." Fellow former Salt Lake Tribune reporter and USU journalism professor Matthew LaPlante experienced Ravitz's reporting when he co-wrote a story with her in 2005. The piece, entitled "Worlds Apart," focused on the daily tasks of a soldier in Iraq, where LaPlante was embedded with a military unit. Ravitz observed and reported the same 24 hours with the soldier's family in Utah. The difficulty of making the lives of the soldier's family seem interesting compared to his job in Iraq seemed apparent to LaPlante. "It's easy to make things interesting when you're getting shot at or potentially shot at or chasing down trucks with insurgents," LaPlante said. "It's like a James Bond movie," To contrast, Ravitz spent close, intimate time with the soldier's wife and two sons. "She had a harder task," LaPlante said. "She had to gain the family's trust in a time that was very vulnerable. The kids sometimes threw fits. The mother would get frustrated. There was a relationship thing where one of the sons clearly had a bet- ►See RAVITZ, Page 3 Jessica Ravitz CNN WRITER/PRODUCER ENTERPRISE REPORTER JESSICA Ravitz writes for CNN's online digital magazine, but sometimes is brought as a correspondent on TV. Photo courtesy Jessica Ravitz |