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Volume 41, Issue 4
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Morgan Smith and W. Paul Smith Staff Writers At its Sept. 9 meeting, the Student Government Association Senate voted down a bill that aimed to insert acci- dently deleted sections of the election code back into the SGA statutes, specifically into “Title V: The Student Body Election Code.” Twelve senators voted against the bill, and two abstained. This bill would not have affected the upcoming emer- gency election on Sept. 26 (the one-time-only emergency elec- tion code packet), but it would have affected future SGA elec- tions. “We shall suspend using Title V until after the emer- gency elections,” Senate President Dwayne Manuel said. The bill was authored by Manuel and co-sponsored by Academic Chair Ron Ramsey. It was not immediately apparent during the meet- ing why the bill failed to pass, though SGA President Josh Finley did express concerns that the bill was perhaps being rushed through the Senate. The legislation was drafted after an investigation by The Voyager during the spring semester uncovered the acci- dental deletion of 60 percent of the election code from the current SGA statutes. After the holding of the spring SGA election, it is customary for the SGA elec- tion supervisor to make recom- mendations for changes to the existing election code. VOLUME 41 ISSUE 4 SEPT. 14, 2011 The voice of UWF students since 1968 The Voyager Index News . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 2 Opinion. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 3 Life & Entertainment .. .. .. .. .. .. 4-5 Classifieds.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 6 Sports .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 7-8 FREE Life See full story on page 7 See full story on page 3 Opinion Sports VOYAGER IN BRIEF Volleyball Head Coach Melissa Wolter has been the heart of the volleyball team since coming to UWF. She has inspired her players on the way to five GSC championships and three national tournament appearances in addition to fighting off breast cancer. Volleyball coach inspires players SGA election code; post-9/11 world See full story on page 4 End of the Line Cafe offers a variety of vegan dishes and several special events throughout the week. Dean DeBolt, University Archivist, shares his memories of UWF’s beginnings and his outlook for the future. Restaurant caters to vegan appetites The Voyager offers an editorial arguing that the SGA election code contro- versy needs a proper solution before the spring election. Opinions editor W. Paul Smith discusses the effects of the war on terror ten years after 9/11. SGA election reform bill voted down Nicole Yeakos Staff Writer Rick Harper weaved through the chaotic streets, through people crying and pacing, through police cars, ambulances and fire trucks. It was Sept. 11, 2001. Minutes earlier, a plane had hit the north tower of the World Trade Center. Now, Harper searched for a phone to call his family in Pensacola. Harper is executive director of the University of West Florida Office of Economic Development and Engagement. On 9/11, he was in Manhattan for a confer- ence on economics. That morning, he was listening to a presentation in the ballroom of the Marriot hotel between the north and south towers of the Trade Center. When the first plane hit, the glass chandeliers overhead began to shake violently. The crowd fled to the lobby. Through glass doors, Harper saw smoldering chunks of metal crash into the street and crush parked cars. A hotel employee led the group out a different exit, but Harper stayed behind. He wanted to call his family. When he could not find a working phone, he also took to the streets. He found a pay phone and stood in line to call his wife. As he told her he was safe, a second plane came roaring from the south. From the corner of his eye, he saw it slam into the south tower. The sound was deafening. A huge ball of fire launched out the opposite wall, and an umbrella of smoke billowed out. Clasping the phone in shock and disbelief, he cried, “I’ve got to run! I’ve got to run!” “I just dropped the phone and ran,” he said. Harper regrouped with a few colleagues and watched the tragedy unfold from a distance. Every few minutes, they would see someone fly out of the smoke: jumpers from the doomed towers. “Everyone on the ground would scream,” Harper said. “It was such a horrific sight to see.” Then, with a deep roar, a howl of twisting metal and an echo of haunting screams, the south tower collapsed. A wave of soot, smoke and debris coasted down the streets, “just like a wave at the beach rolling back on itself,” he said. Harper thought of what might come. Now aware that these were terrorist attacks, he worried about the pros- pect of war. He worried that his 18-year-old son would be drafted. Consumed in thought, he and the others contin- ued to walk away. Life in the rest of Manhattan was calm. It was still a beautiful fall day, Harper said. People walked in and out of stores and seemed oblivious to “the huge disaster and loss of life that was unfolding just a few dozen blocks to the south.” The group finally found working phones and were able to call their families, who were watching the tragedy on TV. They later learned that no one from the conference was killed in the attacks. The memory of that day lingers for Harper. For years, sounds of construction, shaking or yelling would set him on edge. He has not been to Ground Zero since the attacks, but he said he planned to visit soon. “I would like to go back and walk those same streets,” he said. “What happened there on Sept. 11 changed all of our lives forever.” Photo by Joslyn Rosado The University of West Florida College Republicans placed flags all over the entrance of campus to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. A memorial event was also held on campus. To read the full story about the memorial, visit www.thevoyager.net. n A UWF faculty member reflects upon surviving the World Trade Center attacks TEN YEARS LATER See SGA, page 2
Transcript
Page 1: Voyager 9/14

Morgan Smith andW. Paul SmithStaff Writers

At its Sept. 9 meeting, the Student Government Association Senate voted down a bill that aimed to insert acci-dently deleted sections of the election code back into the SGA statutes, specifically into “Title V: The Student Body Election Code.”

Twelve senators voted against the bill, and two abstained.

This bill would not have affected the upcoming emer-gency election on Sept. 26 (the one-time-only emergency elec-tion code packet), but it would have affected future SGA elec-tions.

“We shall suspend using Title V until after the emer-gency elections,” Senate

President Dwayne Manuel said.The bill was authored by

Manuel and co-sponsored by Academic Chair Ron Ramsey.

It was not immediately apparent during the meet-ing why the bill failed to pass, though SGA President Josh Finley did express concerns that the bill was perhaps being rushed through the Senate.

The legislation was drafted after an investigation by The

Voyager during the spring semester uncovered the acci-dental deletion of 60 percent of the election code from the current SGA statutes.

After the holding of the spring SGA election, it is customary for the SGA elec-tion supervisor to make recom-mendations for changes to the existing election code.

VOLUME 41 ISSUE 4 SEPT. 14, 2011The voice of UWF students since 1968

The Voyager

IndexNews . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..2Opinion . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 3Life & Entertainment .. .. .. .. .. .. 4-5Classifieds.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..6Sports .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .7-8

FREE

Life

See full story on page 7

See full story on page 3

Opinion

SportsVOYAGER IN BRIEF

Volleyball Head Coach Melissa Wolter has been the heart of the volleyball team since coming to UWF. She has inspired her players on the way to five GSC championships and three national tournament appearances in addition to fighting off breast cancer.

Volleyball coach inspires players

SGA election code;post-9/11 world

See full story on page 4

End of the Line Cafe offers a variety of vegan dishes and several special events throughout the week.

Dean DeBolt, University Archivist, shares his memories of UWF’s beginnings and his outlook for the future.

Restaurant caters to vegan appetites

The Voyager offers an editorial arguing that the SGA election code contro-versy needs a proper solution before the spring election.

Opinions editor W. Paul Smith discusses the effects of the war on terror ten years after 9/11.

SGA election reform bill voted down

Nicole YeakosStaff Writer

Rick Harper weaved through the chaotic streets, through people crying and pacing, through police cars, ambulances and fire trucks.

It was Sept. 11, 2001. Minutes earlier, a plane had hit the north tower of the World Trade Center. Now, Harper searched for a phone to call his family in Pensacola.

Harper is executive director of the University of West Florida Office of Economic Development and Engagement. On 9/11, he was in Manhattan for a confer-ence on economics.

That morning, he was listening to a presentation in the ballroom of the Marriot hotel between the north and south towers of the Trade Center. When the first plane hit, the glass chandeliers overhead began to shake violently.

The crowd fled to the lobby. Through glass doors, Harper saw smoldering chunks of metal crash into the street and crush parked cars.

A hotel employee led the group out a different exit, but Harper stayed behind. He wanted to call his family. When he could not find a working phone, he also took to the streets.

He found a pay phone and stood in line to call his wife. As he told her he was safe, a second plane came roaring from the south.

From the corner of his eye, he saw it slam into the south tower. The sound was deafening. A huge ball of fire launched out the opposite wall, and an umbrella of smoke billowed out.

Clasping the phone in shock and disbelief, he cried, “I’ve got to run! I’ve got to run!”

“I just dropped the phone and ran,” he said.Harper regrouped with a few colleagues and watched

the tragedy unfold from a distance. Every few minutes, they would see someone fly out of the smoke: jumpers from the doomed towers.

“Everyone on the ground would scream,” Harper said. “It was such a horrific sight to see.”

Then, with a deep roar, a howl of twisting metal and an echo of haunting screams, the south tower collapsed.

A wave of soot, smoke and debris coasted down the streets, “just like a wave at the beach rolling back on itself,” he said.

Harper thought of what might come. Now aware that these were terrorist attacks, he worried about the pros-pect of war. He worried that his 18-year-old son would be drafted. Consumed in thought, he and the others contin-ued to walk away.

Life in the rest of Manhattan was calm. It was still a beautiful fall day, Harper said. People walked in and out of stores and seemed oblivious to “the huge disaster and loss of life that was unfolding just a few dozen blocks to the south.”

The group finally found working phones and were able to call their families, who were watching the tragedy on TV. They later learned that no one from the conference was killed in the attacks.

The memory of that day lingers for Harper. For years, sounds of construction, shaking or yelling would set him on edge. He has not been to Ground Zero since the attacks, but he said he planned to visit soon.

“I would like to go back and walk those same streets,” he said. “What happened there on Sept. 11 changed all of our lives forever.”

Photo by Joslyn Rosado

The University of West Florida College Republicans placed flags all over the entrance of campus to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. A memorial event was also held on campus. To read the full story about the memorial, visit www.thevoyager.net.

n A UWF faculty member reflects upon surviving the World Trade Center attacks

TEN YEARS LATERSee SGA, page 2

Page 2: Voyager 9/14

2/News Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011 www.thevoyager.net The Voyager

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From Page 1: An election code reform bill was presented to the SGA Senate in the spring of 2010 to do just this, but the bill was written incor-rectly.

Normally when a bill is drafted that makes changes to current statutes, the bill will contain the entire text of the statutes, and the changes will be indicated by striking through only the relevant text.

The election bill in question, however, did not contain the entire text of Title V, but contained only the relevant text that was to be changed.

As a result, when the bill was entered into the statutes as a whole, approximately 60 percent of the election code was accidently deleted.

This current bill was an attempt by Manuel to put these statutes back into the election code.

“In my opinion I could not tell you why this bill failed,” Manuel said. “At this point I guess we’re at a standstill as an organiza-tion as to whether we want to put these statutes back in.”

Senator Jon Sigmon noted that bill was not time sensitive and there was no urgency in passing it now.

S e n a t o r A n d r e w Moorehead said, “The exact reason the bill failed

to pass was due to the fact that it was unnecessary at this point in time.”

“I’m still kind of baffled by it,” Manuel said. “These are things we obviously need in our statutes to conduct a fair election.”

Finley said, “I will go on record admitting that there are gaps in the election code. We’re doing every-thing we can to make sure this doesn’t happen again and to put in there what needs to be in there.”

Finley said that he was under the impression that the executive committee would have had the oppor-tunity to deliberate on the bill and make recom-mendations before it was passed on to the Senate but the opportunity did not come to fruition in time.

Finley said, “Let’s not pass something that isn’t going to be the best that it can be.”

Ramsey said, “SGA is making great strides to make the Title V elections statutes as thorough as possible.”

Manuel said he did not feel like the bill had been rushed, but speculated that perhaps the senators want to wait until after the emergency election to deal with this issue.

Manuel said he wasn’t sure where the issue would go from here.

“I may just keep resub-

mitting the bill until something happens on this,” Manuel said.

Sigmon said, “Many of us in the Senate under-stand the importance of this bill and do not want a repeat of the election debacle in the spring, so we are just executing due diligence in ensuring that a more perfect election code will be created.”

“I can guarantee that whether I’m in the presi-dency or not,” Finley said. “I will make sure that before the next election in the spring that everything that needs to be in the election code to run a fair and honest election will be in there.”

❱❱ RundownSGA Election Dates:

September 17-26 Candidate

campaigning

September 2111:30 a.m. to 1:30

p.m.Campaign Forum in

Argo Galley

September 268:00 a.m. to 8:00

p.m.Emergency election, online & in

the Commons

SGA: New election scheduled

Faculty Senate meeting discusses UWF development

Josh CooperStaff Writer

The University of West Florida will receive roughly $1.5 million to study the effects of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

The funds will come to Professors Richard Snyder and Wade Jeffrey in the Department of Biology. Both profes-sors work in the Center f o r E n v i r o n m e n t a l D i a g n o s t i c s a n d Bioremediation.

Jeffrey teaches an array of biology courses, i n c l u d i n g M a r i n e M i c r o b i o l o g y a n d Biological Oceanography.

Snyder teaches several ecology courses like Tropical Marine Ecology.

Snyder said that BP granted the money for the research but that “they do not control the outcome.”

“Research adds real-ism to my classes. It is important to integrate teaching and research.

“We will hire, and include as volunteers, a small army of undergrads and graduate students, giving them hands-on

experience in oceano-graphic and microbial research,” he said.

Snyder also referred to a press release by the Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative Research Board.

The schools that are doing the research applied to a competitive grants program. The schools were selected because of their experi-ence and the compat-ibility of their research. UWF appl ied and received confirmation of the grant money. Snyder said they are still nego-tiating an exact amount, but it will be approxi-mately $1.5 million.

“The GRI Research Board is an independent body established by BP to administer the company’s 10-year, $500 million commitment to indepen-dent research into the effects of the Deepwater Hor izon inc ident , ” according to a release.

The University of West Florida will be teaming up with Florida State University and the University of South Florida on two separate projects. Florida State

University will be lead-ing a project named “Deep-C: Deep sea to Coast Connectivity in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico.”

USF will be leading a project named “Center for Integrated Modeling and Analysis of the Gulf Ecosystem (C-IMAGE).”

Besides FSU and USF, six other schools will receive funds, including Texas A&M, University of Miami and University of Mississippi.

Overall, $112.5 million will be given in grants to the schools involved in the research.

Snyder said the work “elevates the stature of the university.”

Rita R. Colwell, chair-man of the GRI Research Board, was quoted in the press release as saying, “The results will illumi-nate the consequences of the Deepwater Horizon explosion and spill, and enable appropriate responses should there be future releases not only in the Gulf of Mexico, but anywhere that oil and gas is produced in ocean environments.”

Jade HoyStaff Writer

Even though the sun has been shin-ing and classes are in full swing, students attending the University of West Florida should always be aware of the possibility of a hurricane.

Hurricane season runs from June through November, and the most impor-tant thing you can do to survive one of these natural disaters is be prepared.

Students should take comfort in the fact that the campus is prepared and has been designated a “StormReady” school by the National Weather Service since March 2009.

To qualify as a StormReady university, according to the UWF Office of Emergency Management, the University had to imple-ment a series of operations that were tested by meteorologists from the National Weather Service. Those requirements include but are not limited to: setting up numerous ways to receive and distribute severe weather warnings, creating a system that monitors local severe weather, and promoting public readiness throughout the campus.

“Part of the StormReady opera-tions requires the Office of Emergency Management team to listen in on the Weather Service radar updates as they occur, and they pass down the infor-mation through the ArgoAlert system,” Peter Robinson, director of the Office of Emergency Management, said.

Students can also register to receive text messages from ArgoAlert.

ArgoAlert is UWF’s emergency notifi-cation and warning system, and there are numerous ways students are contacted in case of an emergency, according to the Office of Emergency Management. In the case of a hurricane, sirens or loud speak-ers on campus may issue warnings and, important information will be posted on UWFemergency.org. The Office of Emergency Management recommends that students should listen to WUWF public media, which includes the radio station 88.1 FM and WUWF-TV.

If a hurricane threatens our area, the UWF Department of Housing and Residence Life staff will notify students in the residence halls of the hurricane’s move-ment.

“The resident advisers and residence life staff are trained on how to inform students, through hall meetings and going door-to-door, of the storm and campus status,” Krista Boren, associate director of Housing and Residence Life, said. “Resident advis-ers will inform their residents at the initial community meetings, and when the resi-dents check in, to have a plan in case the campus goes into closure mode because of impending weather.”

If conditions warrant evacuation of resi-dence halls or apartments, the University Commons, Building 22, will be opened as a shelter for campus residents, according to UWFemergency.org.

“The UWF Police go into an emer-gency operations schedule when we have a major hurricane,” John Warren, chief of the UWF Police Department, said.

He said police will be present at the student shelter as long as it is open, and they will control access to the campus based on a list of storm recovery person-nel. Students should try to park their cars on higher ground away from trees if possible.

Once the shelter is open, students can call 1-866-UWF-NEWS (893-6397) for updated informational recordings and to contact a staff member in the shelter, according to UWFemergency.org.

Jesse FarthingStaff Writer

A t t h e F a c u l t y Senate’s f irst meeting of the academic year on Sept. 9, University of West Florida Vice President for Administrative Services Matt Altier shared his excitement about where the university is headed in terms of auxiliary opera-tions and developing other sources of revenue.

Discussing bringing businesses, restaurants and different kinds of hous-ing to the campus, he said,

“We’re already talking with developers locally and nationally, and there is a lot of interest about Pensacola and UWF. Over the next year or two you’re going to see a lot of action, a lot of development.”

President Judy Bense announced student growth and retention statistics and the purposeful growth of the university.

She reported that the University’s official enroll-ment total is now 12,021, up from 11,700 in September 2010, and that retention of freshmen had increased

by 4 percent over the previous academic year to 75 percent.

Faculty Senate President Chris Pomory began the meeting with a briefing concerning what senators

expect, as well as introduc-tions and welcoming new members.

Announcements were made regarding several charity programs about launching collection drives

around the campus, nota-bly a Help Our Heroes Call Home program, Favor House and Hand To Paw.

The Help Our Heroes Call Home program will be collecting discarded cellu-lar phones to sell in order to purchase minutes for deployed soldiers to use for calling home.

Hand to Paw is an animal-assisted therapy program. Donation boxes for these programs will be set up around campus.

New business assigned to Senate sub-commit-tees for future discussion

included possible revisions to the grade appeal process, the GPA policy for majors, general education require-ments and the student grievance process.

The open forum part of the meeting saw questions raised about proctoring fees for students in online courses, possible issues with staff parking near the new residence halls and a need for a system for figur-ing the workload of faculty members teaching online.

No issues were voted on during the meeting.

“Over the next year or two you’re going to see a lot of action, a lot of development.”

-Matt AltierUWF Vice President for Administrative Services

❱❱ RundownIn the event of an emergency,

students are encouraged to bring the following items with them:

•Any medication that may be needed

•Several changes of clothing •Pillows and blankets•Flashlights and batteries•Snacks, although food will be

provided•Entertainment, i.e. books or cards

UWF is ‘StormReady’ for hurricane season

Funds donated to study spill

Page 3: Voyager 9/14

Opinions &

ditorialsE3Opinions Editor,

W. Paul Smith [email protected]

Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011

We at The Voyager feel we should offer our thoughts on the issue of the recent SGA bill regarding the missing election code statutes that failed to pass the SGA Senate last Friday.

The bill, authored by Senate President Dwayne Manuel, aimed to insert several missing statutes from the current SGA statutes, specifically “Title V: The Student Body Election Code,” back into the statu-tory record.

For those unfamiliar, please read the background information detailed in the news story on Page 1.

There has been some debate about whether the term “missing” is appropri-ate for describing this issue with the SGA election code. However, we at The Voyager feel there is no more appropriate term to describe the situation.

The dictionary defines the word “miss-ing” as “lacking, absent, or not found.”

Using the term “missing” does not in any way connote malicious intent or malfeasance. We realize the accidental deletion of these statutes was an honest mistake.

But just because no one caught the mistake does not mean that the mistake did not occur and the statutes aren’t missing.

We feel the mistake must be rectified to protect the integrity and constitutional-ity of our student elections.

To illustrate the gravity of the situa-tion, the following are among the sections missing from the current student body election code:

• Almost the entire section regarding the duties of the elec-tions commission.

• The entire section regard-ing the duties of the Supervisor of Elections.

• The entire section regarding the process of filing for candidacy.

• The entire section regarding what constitutes campaign expenses.

• The entire section regarding regula-tion of campaign posters.

• The entire section regarding the counting of ballots.

• Almost the entire section regard-ing the schedule by which the election commission must conduct the spring election.

• The entire section regarding the

appeal process of disqualified candidates. • The entire section regarding the

installation and assumption of office of elected candidates.

• The entire section regarding special elections and how they are to be handled, includ-ing constitutional amendment refer-endums, referen-dum elections, and recall elections.

• The entire section regard-ing the making of amendments to the

student body election code. At one point during the debate on

Friday, SGA President Josh Finley urged the senators that they shouldn’t buckle from outside pressure or vote to pass the bill simply because The Voyager says they need to do so.

We would like to make it very clear that The Voyager has absolutely no personal interest vested in this issue. Our only interest as an organization is what we think is best for the student body.

While we understand this bill had no bearing on the upcoming emergency elec-

tion, we feel the failure to insert these statutes back in the election code opens up the potential for future elections to be overturned and their legitimacy chal-lenged.

It also leaves the potential for elec-tion irregularities to occur and a rather flimsy legal framework available if such irregularities were challenged in the SGA Supreme Court.

Finley and several senators have assured The Voyager that they under-stand how crucial this issue is and simply wish to make sure the bill will be the best it can be, and we will take them at their word.

We appreciate that many within SGA seem to concur with the importance of this issue, and we feel that many also share the strong desire to see this elec-tion code situation solved.

While we fail to understand what was specifically wrong with this seemingly noncontroversial version of the bill that failed to garner the necessary support from the Senate, we trust that SGA as an organization will remedy this situation sometime before the spring election.

— The Voyager

SGA missing election code controversy needs solution Courtesy of Andy Marlette/[email protected]

W. Paul SmithOpinions Editor

This weekend marked the tenth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror-ist attacks. Rather than just dwell

on the tragedy of the day and the lives lost, I thought it might be interesting to exam-ine what the effects of the war on terror have been ten years later.

I have tried to compile a list of the most important statistics and facts relevant to the post-9/11 decade.

First let’s look at the human toll of the war on terror.

The Eisenhower Study Group of Brown University recently released a compre-hensive study analyzing the human and economic costs of the war on terror.

The study found that over 6,000 U.S. military members have died in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan so far, and at least 137,000 civilians have been killed.

The study also found that millions of civilians have been “displaced indefinitely and are living in grossly inadequate condi-tions” because of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, placing the total number of war refugees and displaced civilians at approximately 7.8 million.

Now let’s look at the state of democracy in Iraq and Afghanistan since 9/11.

In December 2010, the Economist released a report analyzing the status of democracies across the globe, and Iraq ranked 111th out 165 countries on their democracy index scale.

The report labeled Iraq not as a democ-racy but as a “hybrid democracy,” mean-ing it contains some democratic principles but also maintains many authoritarian policies.

Afghanistan ranked 150th and was labeled not as a democracy at all but as an authoritarian regime.

In 2010, Transparency International did a study analyzing corruption around the world and ranked Iraq a 1.5 out of 10 on their corruption scale, making it the most corrupt country in the Middle East according to their metric.

Afghanistan scored a 1.4 and was

ranked the most corrupt country in all of South Asia.

As for the economic costs of the war on terror, according to a recent study by the New York Times, approximately $3.3 tril-lion has been spent when tallying up the economic impact of 9/11, the costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, homeland security, care for veterans, etc.

The Brown University study places that figure as high as $4 trillion and counting, making the total costs equivalent to about one-fourth of the $14.7 trillion national debt.

This leads us into the bureaucratic changes since 9/11.

According to a 2010 investigation by the Washington Post, the counter-terrorism, home-land security and intelligence apparatus since 9/11 has grown to 1,271 government organizations and 1,931 private companies employ-ing an estimated 854,000 people.

These organizations have endless redundancies and waste associated with them (such as 51 federal organizations that track the flow of terrorist funding) and produce some 50,000 intelligence reports each year, many of which go unread.

Now let’s examine the changes to coun-ter-terrorism policy since 9/11 still being used today under the Obama administra-tion.

The Obama administration has contin-ued many of the policies of the Bush administration when it comes to fighting the war on terror.

For example, the use of extraordinary rendition still exists, which is the practice of exporting terror suspects to other coun-tries to be interrogated (often countries with a history of torturing suspects).

The practices of indefinite detention of terror suspects without bringing formal

charges and of trying detainees in military tribunals instead of civilian courts are also still being used.

The detention facility at Guantanamo Bay is still open (despite Obama’s prom-ise to close it) and currently has 172 detainees. Also, Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan has essentially become the new Guantanamo with about 650 detain-ees, many of whom have been imprisoned for years without any formal charges.

The Patriot Act was renewed in May of this year, which still allows many contro-versial practices such as “sneak and peak” search warrants (allowing homes to be

searched without the occupant’s knowledge), roving wiretaps, and secret intelligence surveil-lance of non-US persons who are not affiliated with a foreign organiza-tion, to name a few.

What about the status of the recommendations made by the 9/11 Commission?

According to a recent report by the National Security Preparedness Group (which contained several members of the original 9/11 Commission), 32 of the 41 recommen-dations have been fulfilled or are being implemented in some fashion.

However, the report also found the country still lacked meaningful congres-sional oversight on issues of homeland security, the failure to create a Director of National Intelligence position, substan-dard transportation security screening, and the failure to develop coalition stan-dards for the detention and humane treat-ment of terrorism suspects.

The report concludes, “A decade after 9/11, the nation is not yet prepared for a truly catastrophic disaster.”

In spite of this post-9/11 counter-terrorism apparatus, what is the state of

terrorism in the world?The Heritage Foundation released a

study last week that suggests 40 terrorist plots on U.S. soil have been foiled since 9/11, though it is difficult to ascertain how many of those plots were serious threats and were actually thwarted by counter-terrorism policies.

And while there is no question that al-Qaida as a central terrorist organiza-tion has been weakened since 9/11, many splinter and copycat groups sprung up this past decade, such as al-Qaida in Pakistan, al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, and al-Qaida in Iraq.

In 2001, the U.S. State Department designated 28 terrorist organizations across the globe, and now that list has grown to 48 terrorist organizations.

According to the most recent data from the Institute of Conflict Management, there have been 736 suicide attacks in Afghanistan since 9/11 with 3,755 lives lost.

The ICM data also indicates that Pakistan (which prior to 9/11 had only seen one suicide attack in 1995) has had 289 suicide attacks since 9/11, killing 4,681 people.

The British medical journal Lancet recently released a study that reports Iraq has seen 1,003 suicide attacks since 2003, killing over 12,000 civilians.

This suggests the threat of terrorism still exists and in many respects has only exacerbated since 9/11.

So where does all this leave us? What picture do all these statistics paint for the war on terror in a post-9/11 world?

Have the results been worth the costs?Well, I suppose that’s up to each of us

to decide. Feel free to join the discussion and

offer your thoughts on these issues in the comments section of this piece online at thevoyager.net.

(The online version of this piece contains links to the relevant studies and reports mentioned herein.)

“I have tried to compile a list of

the most important statistics and facts

relevant to the post-9/11 decade.”

Where do we stand a decade after the September 11 attacks?

“Our only interest as an organization is

what we think is best for the student body.”

Courtesy of Andy Marlette/[email protected]

Page 4: Voyager 9/14

Shelby SmitheyStaff Writer

The University of West Florida has a local jazz and blues musician among its students.

Michael Danielson, a junior music education and music performance major, plays bass with his band Reddog and Friends at many venues around Pensacola.

On Sept. 9, Jeff “Reddog” Higgins and the band played at Hopjacks Pizza Kitchen and Taproom, entertain-ing a bustling crowd until 1:30 a.m.

“I play regularly at Hopjacks,” Danielson said. “I also play at Five Sister Blues Café, Pirate’s Cove, the shell on the beach, and others. Every few months or so, our band hosts the Monday night blues jam at the Gutter Lounge. I also play at a number of different churches from time to time.”

Reddog and Friends, which has TJ Jackson on drums, Danielson on bass, and Reddog on guitar and vocals, played a vari-ety of songs, from upbeat bluesy numbers to slower, Southern-infused blues ballads.

With the band dressed in jeans and black t-shirts, Higgins sang soulfully while Danielson stood stoically to his left, with his shiny blue bass guitar hanging high on his neck.

Robbie McCafferty, a sophomore general stud-ies major at Pensacola State College, watched D a n i e l s o n p e r f o r m Friday.

“Reddog and Friends are great,“ he said. “It was good, honest blues music, and it looked like every-one enjoyed themselves.”

In addition to his hectic schedule of classes and

gigs, Danielson teaches bass guitar through the UWF Music Academy, which is a program that allows music majors to teach private one-on-one music lessons to the public.

“It is difficult to juggle classes and perform,” he said. “People don’t real-ize how time-consuming a music major is, until they get in it. But I’m not complaining.”

Danielson has ambi-tious future plans.

“I really just want to play, teach and write music anywhere and as much as I can,“ he said. “It doesn’t matter if it is a blues band or a symphony orchestra to me. I just want to work. I would like to get my

10,000 hours of practice in before I turn 30.”

Phillip Marona, 23, who has known Danielson since high school said, “We both went to West Florida High School, and I remember he played in a music club after school. He’s really talented.”

Danielson not only has talent but also possesses a real passion for music.

“What I like most about performing is probably just doing something that I’m good at doing,“ he said. “When it’s just right, it’s amazing!”

Danielson will perform in the “Showcase of the Arts” at the UWF Mainstage Theatre in the Center for Fine and Performing Arts, on Friday, Sept. 23 at 7:30 p.m.

Jesse FarthingStaff Writer

End of the Line Cafe is tucked behind the Pensacola Civic Center and Interstate-10 on-ramp. Although housed in a tiny, concrete building, the cafe is bursting with great food, atmosphere and culture.

The restaurant began nine years ago this month, when Jen Knight and three of her friends took over an existing coffee shop that

was going in the wrong direction.

Knight’s friends eventu-ally abandoned the proj-ect, but she stayed on and transformed the shop into the vegan restaurant and popular hangout it is today.

“I have been vegan for 15 years.” Knight said. “At the time, there were very few options for vegans. I knew people could open their minds to veganism if it was presented to them in an

interesting way.”The cafe is crammed

almost entirely into one room. The kitchen is curtained off from the dining area only slightly and takes up about a quar-ter of the space. The dining area has a variety of tables, and local art hangs on the painted concrete walls and from the exposed wooden ceiling.

“It can be a lot like cook-ing in bumper cars,” Knight said about the cafe’s tiny kitchen.

During regular business hours, End of the Line has a full-service coffee shop and serves a wide variety of vegan fare, from a tofu fish-wich to a vegan bacon-and-cheese melt. The prices are modest and make it easy to take a chance on something you might not otherwise try.

Th e c a f e s e rve s brunch each Sunday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The menu changes weekly. Brunch costs $12 per person, with $5 bottomless mimosas. Each Thursday, starting at 6 p.m., End of the Line serves a multi-course vegan dinner. The cost is $12 for adults and $6 for children.

A “raw organic-living foods dinner” is served on the last Monday of each month at 7 p.m. It is RSVP only and features a new menu each month. Finally, the cafe hosts vegan cook-ing classes the first and third Monday of each month.

Knight said she had a passion for getting healthy food to people and showing them that “it doesn’t have to be boring or just a salad to be healthy.”

Many of Knight’s customers are cancer survi-vors or others who must change their diet for health reasons.

“They come here for a little guidance,” Knight said.

Food is not the only thing on the menu at End of the Line. In the back room is a record store called Wax on the Tracks. The store offers a modest but eclectic mix of vinyl and is run by a friend of Knight’s. Wax on the Tracks keeps its own erratic hours and is staffed by knowledgeable and talk-ative volunteers.

End of the Line also holds poetry nights every Tuesday at 7 p.m. and open

mic nights on the second Friday of every month.

“Poetry night is always packed,” said Shaun Spencer, a cafe employee. He said the events attract a large and diverse crowd.

End of the Line culti-vates community. There is something for everyone in the little, concrete building, and Knight plans to add more in the future.

End of the Line Cafe is located at 610 E. Wright St. in Pensacola and is open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Sundays 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Life &

ntertainmentE4

Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011

L&E Editor, Rebecca Barnhart

[email protected]

Cafe caters to vegans

Rudd plays loveable,foolish ‘Idiot Brother’

Photo special to The Voyager

Vegan chocolate chip cookies are a dessert item offered at End of the Line Cafe.

Rockin’ the bass

Will IsernStaff Writer

“Our Idiot Brother” is a Paul Rudd movie.

In fact, it’s a distinctly Paul Rudd movie, complete with one dimensional char-acters, recycled jokes and a plot as unbelievable as it is predictable.

Rudd plays the perenni-ally upbeat and fool-hearted Ned who, at the film’s opening, is “entrapped” into selling marijuana to a uniformed police officer.

After a brief stint in prison, Ned is released early for good behavior, and the film’s story begins.

Having fallen out of favor with his girlfriend, Ned is forced to bounce from one sister’s couch to the next as his painfully good natured outlook causes problems for all.

E m i l y M o r t i m e r , Elizabeth Banks and Zooey Deschanel play Ned’s three sisters. Rashida Jones, Adam Scott and Steve Coogan round out what really is a great cast.

Sadly, the writing leaves most of them little to work with.

The movie does not fail entirely as a comedy though, as there are some original laughs to be had,

mostly in the form of situ-ational humor. Rudd’s performance, though, is one we have seen before, as he plays a bumbling version of what his film career would lead the audience to believe is his actual personality.

Ned is Rudd’s go-to char-acter, an average, lovable guy who unwittingly messes up some facet of his life,

multiplied ten fold. Perhaps it’s just the hair and beard, but he seems to be reach-ing for Jeff Bridge’s “The Dude” Lebowski despite lacking the acting chops to be convincing.

Odds are, the movie will do well at the box office with the young male demo-graphic, as Zooey Deschanel and Rashida Jones share a make out scene.

Like much of the rest of the movie, however, the scene lacks any real substance beyond the surface.

It’s there for a cheap thrill, without any of the taboo-breaking quality of, say, the Britney and Madonna kiss at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards.

If you’re a fan of Paul Rudd, there’s no harm in seeing this movie. He is its star and the whole film is catered to making him look good.

You’ll laugh but not too hard and not at anything you already haven’t laughed at before.

Photo special to The Voyager

Paul Rudd and Zooey Deschanel play siblings in “Our Idiot Brother.”

❱❱ Rundownn Located at 610 E. Wright St.n Hours:10 a.m. to 10 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday,11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Sundays.n Vegan cooking class on Sept. 19 at 6 p.m. for $25. Learn to cook roasted garlic aioli topped crostini, chocolate chip blondies and more.n Cash only.

Photo special to The Voyager

Falafel, a deep fried mixture of ground chickpeas and/or fava beans, is on the menu at the restaurant.

Photo special to The Voyager

Michael Danielson plays the bass at a recent show.“There are some original laughs to be had, mostly in the form

of situational humor.”

Page 5: Voyager 9/14

L&E/5The Voyager www.thevoyager.net Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011

For more information on the UWF-sponsored Student Health Insurance Program, visit www.gallagherkoster.com/FloridaUSystem or call 877.540.7407.

Also Available � Dependent Medical Insurance

� Dental Insurance

� Student Personal Property Insurance

Hey UWF Students!Are you covered?

Enroll by September 15Medical Insurance underwritten by UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company.

Library basement holds memoriesCara BloomerContributing Writer

While many are look-ing towards the future of UWF, there is one man who is dedicated to preserving its past.

Dean DeBolt is in his 31st year at UWF. However, many at UWF probably do not know him. In fact, many may not have ever even seen him. That ’s because DeBolt spends most of his time in the basement of the library.

As the university archi-vist, he is in charge of preserving the history not only of not only the school, but also of the entire Florida Panhandle.

“The very first collec-tion we received was from a local woman who gave us her family documents out of her garage,” said DeBolt.

The donation came a full year before the doors to UWF opened in September 1967. However, DeBolt is in charge of more than just keeping records. The UWF archive is home to an extensive rare books collection.

Some of the prize

pieces include a French Bible from the 16th century and an illumi-nated manuscript dating all the way back to 1420.

DeBolt started out as a local archivist back home in Illinois. But after hear-ing about a job opening in

Florida that specialized in university preservation, DeBolt made the move in 1981 and has been at UWF ever since.

After years of work-ing with the school, he has seen the changes first hand, and he remembers when it looked like an entirely different campus.

“It used to be like a small community,” he said. “Everyone got to know

the entire faculty, and the cafeteria was a real gather-ing place for all of us.”

Although the univer-sity may have traded in a smaller atmosphere for larger student and faculty populations, it is a positive change, DeBolt said. People all over the world now have access to the university library files, and every day in the archives is different from the next.

“You never know what is going to happen down here,” he said. “One day, we might have students researching their gradu-ate papers then the next we will have NCIS doing a background check on a local.”

Many people wouldn’t think that the basement of the John C. Pace Library would be so exciting.

It is this search for the unknown and a passion for unraveling the past that has DeBolt hooked.

Although his job may keep him firmly in the past, he is constantly look-ing toward the future of UWF and watching the school, and his archives, grow.

Photo by Joslyn Rosado

Dean DeBolt is on his 31st year working in the Special Collections section of the UWF Library, archiving documents. The UWF archive contains an extensive collection of rare books, including pieces dating back to the 15th century.

“You never know what is going to

happen down here.”—Dean DeBolt

University Archivist

Voyager Briefs

The Hand to Paw committee is looking for volunteers to help raise funds/supplies for the local Humane Society.

Donation collections will begin Sept. 14 and end Oct. 31. There are three events scheduled to promote their efforts: Barktoberfest on Oct. 1, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Seville Square; Dog Daze in Ft. Walton on Oct. 15 (for PAWS); and a campus Hand to Paw Kick-off on Oct. 5 at the Commons Patio from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Volunteer help could include placing collection

boxes around campus to encourage donations of food, money and supplies and helping man the booths at the scheduled events. The UWF Post Offce will pick up and store items until they are delivered to the Humane Society.

Contact Cheryl Phelps, 595-0050, for more infor-mation.

Rhyme for cashCampus Activity Board

presents Rap Battle 2011, Thursday, Sept. 15 at 8:30 p.m.

Come out and show your support at the annual CAB-Center Stage Rap Battle.

Students will showcase their rap talent and have a

chance to win a grand prize. This is a fun way for

students to interact with each other while being entertained provided by their peers. The event is free.Good eats

UWF Dining Services presents All That Jazz in the Nautilus Market Wednesday Sept. 21 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. All That Jazz is a brunch with live entertain-ment by UWF Jazz Combo.

There will be free coffee tasting on Thursday, Sept. 29 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the Starbucks is located in the lobby of the John C. Pace Library.

From staff reports

Help furry friends at Humane Society

Page 6: Voyager 9/14

6 Community &

lassifiedsCThe VoyagerEditor-in-ChiefBrittany [email protected] EditorValerie [email protected] EditorChris [email protected]&E EditorRebecca [email protected] EditorW. Paul [email protected] EditorJon [email protected] EditorJoslyn RosadoCopy EditorsFriedrich LangerfeldKristi NoahJessica HarrisKathryn MiddletonGraphics EditorJarrett MooreDistribution ManagerJohn Strickland

The Voyager is produced weekly by students of the University of West Florida and is partially funded by Student Activities and Services fees with assistance from the Office of Student Affairs. This public document was promulgated by the president of the University at an annual cost of $.275 per copy. Opinions expressed do not necessarily represent the views of UWF, The Voyager or its staff.

Advertiser and advertising agency will indemnify and hold harmless The Voyager and its staff for all contents supplied to publisher, including text, representation and illustrations of advertisements printed and for any claims arising contents including, but not limited to defamation, invasion of privacy, copyright infringement, plagiarism, and in the case of a pre-printed insert, deficient postage.

The Voyager is printed by Freedom Florida Commercial Printing, in accordance with Florida Law. The above information is presented in compliance Section 283.27 of Florida Statutes.

Letters to the EditorLetters to the Editor

must be signed and must include the author’s address and telephone number for verification purposes. Only the author’s name will be printed. Letters are published as space allows and do not necessarily represent the views of The Voyager staff. The editor reserves the right to edit letters or refuse to publish letters. E-mail letters to [email protected] with “letter to the editor” in the subject line, or stop by Bldg. 36 Room 120 to hand-deliver your letter.

CorrectionsIn the Aug. 24 issue:

Patrick Stepina was mis-quoted in the “Opinions mixed on going Greek” story.

Molly Bruno was a con-tributing writer for “Old haunts for new students.”

If you see any errors in our newspaper, please let us know so we can issue a correction in this space.

Send corrections to [email protected], with the subject line “Voyager Correction.” Please also include the issue in which the error occurred.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Communities Editor, Bobby Bone

[email protected]

Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011

SKEWED PERSPECTIVE A comic by Ryan Watson

HOUSING

PERSONALSThe Voyager is now accepting personal ads of 20 words or fewer to [email protected] with a subject line of “classified.”

ANNOUNCINGThe Voyager is now accepting classifieds from faculty, students and staff at no cost.

If you would like to place a classified with more than 20 words, or you are not affiliated with UWF, please contact our Business Manager, Jeff Hagedorn

The deadline for your classified ad is the Thursday before the week you want it to be printed.

Please e-mail your classifieds to [email protected] with “classified” in the subject line.

We at The Voyager are here to help if you are having trouble finding that last roommate.

Give us the details of the residence and whom you might be looking for at [email protected] with “classifieds” in the subject line.

PILED HIGHER DEEPER A comic by Jorge Cham

September 18

Pura Sabrosura will be doing a car wash on the Autozone of Navy Blvd. from 11:00AM to 4:00PM.

CLUBSE-Board Applications are out from September 6th-September 16th! Do not miss out on your opportunity to make Argo Camp 2012 the best.

Argo Camp Executive Board applications can be found in the Dean of Student's Office.

This is a great way to acquire leadership experience as well as make Argo Camp 2012 the best Argo Camp year ever!

If you have any questions or concerns you can always contact us at [email protected].

September 15

Come out and party with the men of KA. They will be hosting a get together around 7:30 p.m. at the KA house where Hooters Girls will be serving Hooters wings.

September 16

There will be a lecture at the Commons Center in honor of Constitution Day from 12:45 p.m. to 1:45 p.m.

UWF joins the rest of the nation in honoring the Constitution of the United States by expressing our appreciation for that remarkable work with a public lecture by a distinguished scholar, Dr. Michael Bailey, Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Government at Berry College, Rome, GA. He will present "American Exceptionalism: Past, Present and Past Again". All members of the UWF community and the public are welcome to attend.

For more info go to: http://uwf.edu/govt/constitution day.cfm.

September 17

Outdoor Adventures will be traveling to the Ocoee River in Copperhill, Tennessee to take on the rapid white waters that flow through the Cherokee National Forest. Departure is at 9:00am Cost is $99 Sign up at the HLS Facility Customer Service Desk.

September 17

The Rugby club will be fund raising by bagging at winndixie on 9th and Creighton. They will be out there from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

September 20

The Campus Activity Board will be hosting a movie night in the Campus Auditorium. Show time will be starting at 6 p.m. and 9 p.m.

Page 7: Voyager 9/14

7Fitness &

portsS

Photos by Tim Keebler

Raymond Picone serves a ball at an intramural volleyball game on Sept. 8. Matches are held in the HLES Building four days a week.

Intramural volleyball season begins

Sports Editor, Chris Elkins [email protected]

Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011

❱❱ Rundown

n Matches are held Monday through Thursday starting at 9 p.m. through Sept. 27.

n Teams may have up to six players. Each team must have at least four players to begin a game.

n Other intramural sports offered in the fall are flag football and a soccer tournament.

n Participation is free for all UWF students.

n Students must sign an injury waiver form to participate.

n Registration for flag football and the soccer tournament will be held Oct. 10 in the lobby of the HLES Building.

n Online registration has already opened for preseason flag football.

n Visit www.IMLeagues.com to register.

Kristine MedinaStaff Writer

There was a spirited atmosphere in the air, with spectators cheering their friends on from sidelines and some teams sport-ing handcrafted uniforms on the second night of the 2011 intramural volleyball season on Sept. 8.

The program is split into three divisions: men’s, women’s and co-ed. A total of 180 students are partici-pating this season.

Jake Marg, the gradu-ate assistant for intramural sports, said, “There are 32 teams total this year: seven men’s, four women’s, and 21 are co-ed. I’d say it’s pretty close to numbers from the last season.”

The Orcas lost to the Great White Buffalos in one match that ended 2-0. The two volleyball teams played at the Health, Leisure, and Exercise Science Building.

The Great White Buffalos wore white T-shirts boast-ing an outline of a buffalo. Other team names ranged from “Notorious D.I.G.” to “Kiss My Pass.”

Danielle Turek, a junior marine biology and envi-ronmental policy major, joined the Orcas because of her desire to have volleyball back in her life. “I used to play in high school, and I missed it,” she said. It’s just more fun to get to play with people at this level because it’s not so competitive and serious all the time.”

In the beginning of the first half, the Orcas domi-nated the Great White Buffalos with the serving of Adam Faircloth, a senior public relations major, producing multiple aces.

Faircloth said it took him three years to perfect his serve.

The Great White Buffalos came back in the second half for the victory.

“Sure, a few of us got bummed about the loss, but it’s all right,” Faircloth said. “Hopefully, we’ll be awesome the next two weeks until the playoffs.”

Each game consists of 25 points for the first two games and 15 points for the third game.

Teams must win by at least two points.

Each team is allowed a 30-second timeout.

Each team plays six regu-lar season matches before the playoffs on Sept. 28.

n Intramural sports allow fun in a less competitive environment

Sandra Starbuck practices serving.

Katherine CorderoStaff Writer

The University of West Florida’s volleyball team has been reach-ing new heights over the past eight seasons thanks to Head Coach Melissa Wolter.

The team won the Gulf South Conference Tournament three times, and went to the national tournament five years in a row since Wolter took over. Background

Wolter is from the southeastern corner of Wisconsin, where she had a sand volleyball pit in her backyard. She became part of an organized volleyball team in the sixth grade.

She continued to play through high school and earned a scholarship to play at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside. While at Wisconsin-Parkside she was a four-year starter and a three-year captain. Her interest in coaching arose in her sophomore year.

“I love working with young female student-athletes because this is a pretty important time in their lives,” Wolter said. “So you end up coaching them on the court and off the court, which is pretty appealing to me, to be able to play that

kind of a role in their lives.” After a couple of

years of work in financial planning and real estate, she returned to her alma mater to be the head coach.

Wolter decided to r e l o c a t e after three years to U W F b e c a u s e o f t h e w e a t h e r .

She said she was not only tired of shoveling snow but also of feeling like a “caged-animal” nine months of the year and having to exer-cise in a gym rather than outside.

“One of the No. 1 things that I noticed about UWF when I came to the campus was so many students were walking around wearing t-shirts that said ‘Argos,’” she said. “I thought it was cool that so many people on campus carry a lot of pride in the University.”Battling adversity

One of Wolter’s proud-est moments was in 2006, the first year she led UWF to the national tournament. She was going through stage-II breast cancer at the time, but she said she “refused to lay down and die.”

During her treatment she attended every practice because she was not going to let the season be about her, knowing there were

seniors on the team who counted on her.

“Even on my sickest of days, I’d still come into the gym, and sometimes I wouldn’t be able to hit balls, but I would still be in the gym,” she said. “We made it into the national tournament that year for for the first time.”USA Volleyball

Wolter’s success does not stop with UWF. She has been given a tenured position working for USA Volleyball.

Although her exper-tise at coaching has taken her all over the world, she remains humble.

“It’s not necessarily about where I’ve been as much as how much they’ve taught me,” she said.

Although she admits there isn’t a whole lot of free time in her life besides volleyball, Wolter said she likes to play golf, bike, do anything active and fish. Success at UWF

Wolter also said she is very grateful of what the UWF program has achieved, but being the competitive spirit she is, she is always striving for more.

“We still have yet to make it to the Elite 8,” she said. “We’ve been very close. I think our players understand that that’s the expectation.

“Winning becomes the byproduct of doing all the

little things right,” she said.Wolter’s coaching staff

and players describe her as a very caring, confi-dent, positive and faithful woman.

Patricia Gandolfo, a former volleyball player, is a student a s s i s t a n t for the volleyball

team.“Melissa Wolter is

amazing,” she said. “She is constantly teaching us not only how to be a better coach but how to be a better person.”

Senior outside hitter Amanda Rhein transferred to UWF to play volleyball because of Wolter.

“She’s an amazing coach because she’s very positive, respectful, and she’s intense and knows how to push the girls, but it’s always in a positive environment and good for the girls,” she said.

“ S h e ’ s a s t r o n g Christian,” Rhein said. “You can tell she has a great char-acter on and off the court, and that’s one of the main reasons why I came here.”

Wolter is pleased with her success but does not take the credit.

“I am really pleased with how our student athletes have responded to me and how we train and the things we teach because I’m noth-ing without them,” she said.

Wolter brings ‘heart’ to volleyball squad

GandolfoWolter

Volleyball falls to 2-6 in Denver

Junior Anna Stoecklien made the

All-Tournament team at the

Colorado Premier

Challenge.

From staff reportsThe University of West

Florida volleyball team split a pair of opening day matches in the Colorado Premier Challenge, defeat-ing Colorado-Colorado Springs 25-20, 25-14, 13-25, 25-13, and losing to No. 4 Washburn 22-25, 14-25, 28-26 in Denver on Friday.

On Saturday, despite numerous tight sets in day two of the tournament, the Argos couldn’t find a win as UWF fell in its final two games, 3-1 to No. 6 Southwest Minnesota State, 20-25, 25-17, 20-25, 16-25 and 3-1 to Florida Southern, 23-25, 17-25, 25-12, 23-25.

In the first match, the Argos picked up key perfor-mances from their outside hitters as they picked up a 3-1 win.

In the second match, despite numerous chances to strike, the Argos couldn’t overcome untimely errors as they lost in straight sets to No. 4 Washburn.

In the third game,UWF couldn’t outmuscle Florida Southern as the Argos went down, 3-1.

In the fourth game,

the Argos kept pace with No. 6 Southwest Minnesota State, but couldn’t hold off a potent Mustang offense as they fell, 3-1.

Junior Anna Stoecklein landed a spot on the C o l o r a d o P r e m i e r Challenge All-Tournament team after a 67 dig perfor-mance in the Argonaut’s four games this past week-end.

Stoecklein earned the third most digs in the tour-nament, finishing just four digs short of the leader. The St. Charles, Mo., native also played in all 15 sets for UWF, averaging 4.47 digs per set.

Sophomore Mol ly Pearce leads the Argos with 227 assists this season, followed by junior Tricia Tirabassi with 99.

Freshman Autumn Duyn leads the Argos with 97 kills.

The Argos, who went just 1-3 for the second consecu-tive tournament, will make their season home debut this Tuesday, Sept. 13, as they face off with Mobile.

For the full UWF volley-ball schedule, visit www.GoArgos.com.

Photo special to The Voyager

Page 8: Voyager 9/14

8/S&F Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011 www.thevoyager.net The Voyager

Cross country teams continue success

Chris ElkinsSports Editor

The University of West Florida women’s cross country team won their second consecutive meet of the 2011 season on Sept. 10.

The Argonauts placed four runners in the top 15 en route to a 43 point score to win the Fleet Feet Invitational hosted by Alabama-Huntsville at Sharon Johnston Park. Delta State was second with 60 points.

“This was a good early meet to compare ourselves with other teams in the Gulf South Conference,” Head Coach John Bergen said in a press release “It was a good chance to see where we stand, and we had a very steady performance.”

The men’s team also performed well in the 10-team field. The Argos placed five runners in the top-15 to score 49 points, but it was not enough to defeat Alabama-Huntsville who placed five in the top-10 for a score of 20.

“We scheduled this meet to give us a chance early on to see where we stand against one of the best teams in the confer-ence in UAH,” Bergen said.

“We ran right with them today, and we

like where we stand.”The women were led by freshman Kelly

Bahn for the second consecutive meet. Bahn placed second with a time of 19:42 for the 5k race.

She was followed by freshman Aimee Marsh and sophomore Renea Porsch who finished fourth and eighth with times of 19:55 and 50:15, respectively.

Sophomore Beatriz Labrada and junior Sabrina Seignemartin rounded out the scor-ing for the Argos, finishing 14th and 15th in times of 20:30 and 20:35, respectivley.

The women rested top returners junior Karyssa Tourelle-Fallon and sophomore

McKenzie Carney for the second consecutive meet.

The men were led by junior Martinique Sykes who finished fourth overall with a time of 27:03 for the 8k race.

He was followed by senior Eddie Pagan and junior Dominique Sykes who finished eighth and tenth

with times of 27:12 and 27:14, respectively. “Dominique, Martinique and Eddie ran

right with the front pack and made it a competitive race,” Bergen said.

Freshmen Chris Roach and senior Jared Black rounded out the scoring for the Argos finishing 12th and 15th in times of 27:14 and 27:37, respectivley.

The men’s and women’s next race is Saturday at the Meet of Champions hosted by Iona College at Van Cortlandt Park in New York.

Photo by Garrett Spencer

The cross country team particpates in an aqua-jogging workout at the Aquatic Center.

n Women’s team remains undefeated, men finish second

Will IsernStaff Writer

Laying full back in her trapeze harness, freshman marine biology major Chelsea McCurry smiled as she glided across Pensacola Bay.

This is Saturday Sailing with the University of West Florida Sailing Club.

“It’s like having a hammock off the side of the boat,” UWF alumnus and sailing assistant Ryan Kirby said.

McMurry said time spent in the British Virgin Islands was her inspira-tion for showing up at the Pensacola Yacht Club at 10 a.m. every Saturday.

She shared this distinc-tion with another shipmate, also a freshman marine biology major, Sophie Brokie.

“I spent three weeks before school started sailing around the B.V.I.’s with a scuba diving group,” Brokie said. “It made me really want to learn to sail.”

Students are taught how to sail and, as they gain proficiency, are allowed to check out a sailboat of their own for a day on the water.

“We think it’s some-thing that should be avail-able for all students to try,” Assistant Director of Outdoor Adventures Shaun Boren said.

In all, there were five students lounging on the trampoline between the two pontoons of the cata-maran. Tacking back and forth on the way from Palafox Pier to the naval base, Kirby pointed out parts of the vessel, explain-ing their purposes and demonstrating how to use them.

Saturday Sailing is avail-

able, weather permitting, every Saturday and is free for students.

The club’s fleet of boats includes six 420’s, four Lasers, one Hobie Cat and one Hunter. Expenses of the club are paid for through fundraisers and an SGA budget allotment.

Commodore Jos ie Trainer said that in the spring semester, nine UWF students participated.

“We think it’s something that should be available for all students to try,” says Assistant Director of Outdoor Adventures Shaun Boren.

Back at the dock, and somewhat more tan than she was when she arrived, McCurry is certain of her plans to return.

“It was awesome, I can’t wait to get back on the trapeze.”

Sailing club teaches students, provides relaxing opportunity

Bergen

Photo by Will Isern

Commodore Jodie Trainer teaches students how to sail on Saturday at the Pensacola Yacht Club.


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