7/27/2019 Daily Universe Sep 17
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Serving the Brigham Young University Community
universe.byu.eduSeptember 17 23, 2013
Brigham Young University
Provo, Utah
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The history of therivalry and why this
year is different
B y K E L B Y J O N E S
After BYU and the University of Utah
left the Mountain West Conference in
2011, it became clear the ongoing rivalry
between the two teams faced an uncer-
tain future.
Many fans wondered if the yearly
contest would continue with the same
intensity and meaning that had devel-oped during 88 years of in-conference
competition. But it is clear the rivalry is
only getting more exciting.
Its like the Super Bowl. Im 03
against them and I want to win. Plain and
simple: I want to beat them, senior line-
backer Kyle Van Noy said. They dont
like us and we dont like them and thats
OK because its going to be a bloodbath.
With the last game for several years
approaching, players are anxious to go
out on top, even going so far as to say Utahis the teams most important opponent on
this years schedule.
I cant speak for former guys or former
players, but I think were here to stay,
Van Noy said. Were not going anywhere
and were making it clear that were
ready to play.
The Holy War rivalry began in
the 1890s. BYU was known as Brigham
Young Acadamy (BYA) at the time and
split a six-game series against Utah, with
both teams winning three games each.The first meeting between the two schools
was an unusual April contest that Utah
won 124.
Following the series, BYA stopped play-
ing football and did not start again for 23
years.
Play between Utah and BYU resumed
again in 1922. Utah picked up an easy win,
dominating BYU 49-0. Utah swept the
series for the next 20 years; BYU would
not pick up another victory against Utah
until 1942 when the Cougars upset the
Utes 127 at Utah. Following a two-year
hiatus due to World War II, the Utes wouldwin or tie the next 12 contests.
By 1972, Utah had beat BYU 41
times in 53 games. The same year BYU
decided to hire Lavell Edwards, and in
his first year as head coach, BYU beat
Utah 167. The win began a 20-year
period of BYU dominance in the
rivalry. From 1972 to 1992, BYU won 19
of 21 games.
See UTAH on Page 3
The then-and-now of BYU comedy
B y P E R R Y S E S S I O N S
Keeping comedy clean and funny
can be difficult, but BYU comedy
groups have known this struggle for 20
years and continue to entertain their
humor-hungry audience.
With a university starving for comic
relief, the first comedy troupe at BYU
to fulfill these cravings was the Gar-
rens Comedy Troupe. Starting as a
club back in 1993, Garrens met their
audiences comedy needs by holding at
least one show every weekend for eight
years straight.
Garrens Troupe attracted the atten-
tion of the new BYU student Daryn
Tufts, who still remembers some of his
first impressions of the group and what
they were providing for BYU.
I was amazed that the Garrens
were there to comment on BYU culture
and thought, This group is for us.
The founder of the Garrens Com-
edy Troupe was a freshman named
Eric Snider. Sniders first thoughts
of comedy at BYU were, BYU doesnt
strike you as a place that would have
a lot of fun with satire and poking
fun. When contemplating why his
group was so successful, Snider said,
I think it caught on because we were
making the same kind of BYU-related
jokes but on public stage.
See COMEDY on page 3
Photo courtesy Daryn Tufts
Some of the first Garrens Comedy Troupe performers, including The SinglesWard cast member Lincoln Hoppe, back right.
#byuday2: A Day in theLife of BYU this Saturday
B y S A R A H S T O D D A R D
The Universes A Day in the Life of
BYU will be held this Saturday, Sept.
21. The project encourages students,
faculty and the BYU community at
large to be a journalist for a day by
sharing their unique stories and points
of view through photography.
Participants can take pictures of
their Cougar spirit at the big Utah
rivalry game, during a weekend road
trip with roommates or their expedi-
tions on study abroad programs. Par-
ticipants can submit their experiences
via Instagram and Twitter using the
hashtag #BYUDAY2 or on The Uni-
verses official Facebook page. The
project will be held from midnight to
midnight MST.
According to Steve Fidel, director of
The Universe, the main objective of the
project is to provide students and fac-
ulty with the chance to be a reporter
for a day and share their story with the
BYU community.
See LIFE on page 3
Photo by Mark Brown
This photo of a stovetop fire is fromlast years Day in the Life project.
RISE AND SHOUT, THE RIVALRY IS OUT
2013University of Utah Brigham Young University
The Holy War lives on
Photos by Chris Bunker
After a close game last year, theCougars and Utes square off againSaturday Sept. 21.
7/27/2019 Daily Universe Sep 17
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EDITOR
Taylor Street
DEPUTY EDITOR
Kurt Hanson
SECTION EDITORS
Alison MooreAubrey Greene
CAMPUS
Lucy SchoutenDaniela Bermea
METRO
Kelly HaightOPINION
Scott Hansen
Ben LockhartSPORTS
Amber GoodfellowStephanie Lacy
LIFE, ETC.
Adam McNevinRobin Rodgers
DIGITAL
EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS
Sara BittermanEmily Hales
GRADUATE ASSISTANTS
Laura ThomasCassidy Wadsworth
SENIOR REPORTER
Amy McDonald
EDITORIAL DESIGNERS
Lauren Prochelo
Elizabeth JenkinsShelby Hintze
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Sarah HillPHOTO CHIEF
Ari DavisSamantha Paskins
Maddi DaytonNatalie Stoker
PRODUCTION
Thomas BusathDavid Taylor
CIRCULATION
Nathan AllenMitchell Marshall
PROGRAMMER
Bobby SwinglerWEB CONTENT
Kristina Smith
GRAPHIC DESIGNERS
James GardnerBrad DavisBrett Bertola
Jennifer Foote
SPECIAL SECTIONS
Britania BusathMiranda Facer
ADVERTISING SALES
Corey NoyesJesse Bringhurst
Taylor LaughlinAaron McReynolds
ACCOUNTING
Steen SargentAron Procuniar
OFFICE ASSISTANT
Ashlie Lewis
P R O F E S S I O NAL S T AF F
DIRECTOR
Steve Fidel
BUSINESS MANAGER
Ellen Hernandez
DESIGN MANAGER
Warren Bingham
FACULTY ADVISER
Quint Randle
The Universe is an official publication of
Brigham Young University and is produced as a
cooperative enterprise of students and faculty.
It is published as a laboratory newspaper bythe College of Fine Arts and Communications
and the Department of Communications under
the direction of a professional management
staff.
The Universe is published weekly except dur-
ing vacation periods.
The opinions expressed do not necessarily
reflect the views of the student body, faculty,
university administration, Board of Trustees or
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Copyright 2013 Brigham Young University.
For more news, including audio and video, visit
universe.byu.edu
News 801-422-2957
Advertising & Circulation 801-422-7102Fax 801-422-0177
September 17 23, 2013 Volume 67, Issue 4 universe.byu.edu152 BRMB, BYU, Provo, Utah 84602
2 The Universe, September 17 23, 2013
Sources: National Weather Service, BYU Physics & Astronomy Department
TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
BRIEFING
The world is our campus
88 74 74
Thunderstorms Sunny Sunny
56 45 48
P R E C I P I T A T I O NSeptember 2013: 1.76
2013: 7.29
WEATHER
Photo courtesy Department of Wildlife Resources
More than 4,000 tiger muskies were stocked inwaters around Utah on Aug. 23.
Changes coming for Utah fishingUtah anglers may soon be affected by the
Department of Wildlife Resources efforts to
modify fishing laws and strengthen the popula-
tion of tiger muskies, potentially changing the
fishing experience throughout the state.
The Department is currently seeking feed-
back on the proposed changes that expand the
Utah possession limit and tweak catch-and-kill
regulations through the state changes that
could give fishermen more options.
Read more at http://unvr.se/1aNMFmy
AP Photo
Flooded streets in Estes Park, Colo. are fed by a steady rain. Clean-up efforts began on Sunday.
Colorado flooding vignettesESTES PARK, Colo. (AP) As people came
down from the flooded foothills of t he Colorado
Rockies, they brought tales of dramatic rescues.
Jezebel the cat jumped on a sleeping Jon
Johnson, batted his face and yowled until he
woke up to find the Big Thompson River spill-
ing into the cottages he and wife Deyn rented to
Estes Park visitors.
They ran from cottage to cottage, shouting
to sleeping occupants, Purse! Keys! Medicine!
Go!
Read more at http://unvr.se/14VZPew
Apple will soon releasenew iPhones and iOS 7
Two new models of the iPhone are launching
simultaneously for the first time in history.
The phones were formally unveiled after
images of them were leaked on the Inter net
prior to their announcement Sept. 10.
The iPhone 5s is the more expensive of
the two models. It features a camera that is
upgraded from the iPhone 5.
Apple claims that this processor makes the
iPhone 5s twice as fast as the iPhone 5
Read more at http://unvr.se/1bmVBP2
German court orders Muslimgirl to join swim class
BERLIN (AP) A court in Germany has
ruled that a Muslim girl cannot be excused from
mixed-sex swimming lessons on the grounds of
religious belief.
The 13-year-old girl from Frankfurt had
argued that the sight of the bare-chested males
breached her religious modesty.
She claimed that accepting the schools offer
that she wear a full-body burkini swimsuit
could lead to peer discrimination.
Read more at http://unvr.se/13XFJOk
Utah State FairThe Utah State Fair recently drew thousands
of Utahns to Salt Lake City for high-flying rides,
unique exhibits and plenty of funnel cake.
The Utah State Fair has been in operation
since 1856 and has long been a c elebration of
local, homegrown foods. Throughout its 158
years,the fairs purpose h as evolved from pro-
moting self-sufficiency to expanding the reach
of Utahs economy. The fai r provides a major
boost to the local economy.
Read more at http://unvr.se/1bn40SC
Photo by Ari Davis
The Utah State Fair drew thousands to Salt LakeCity for shows and homegrown produce.
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Animation students own new shortB y M E G M O N K
BYUs Center for Animation
is made up of students from
two colleges and a variety of
skill sets, yet they are, in a real
sense, a family.
Everyone is super gifted,
said Dan Clark, student
director and co-producer of
the teams current project,
Owned. Its an awesome
group of impressive people, not
only in what they do here, butin their personal lives. Theyre
not here for the fame or rec og-
nition; they really believe in
the project.
Feeding off this energy and
respect for each other, the cen-
ter has made quite a name for
itself, impressing industry
recruiters with its feel-good,
six-minute shorts and con-
sistently racking up awards.
In fact, in the past ten years,
the animation and computer
science students who work
together to produce the films
have won 12 student Emmys,
four student Academy Awards
and several other awards from
various film festivals.
Such a high reputation for
excellence can be intimidat-
ing, but the students work-
ing on Owned are up to t he
challenge.
The semester before produc-
tion, the students gather to
pitch their ideas for the next
short. These ideas are filtered
by the faculty, and the final-ists are brought before the
students. The senior class will
then spend the next year work-
ing on the winning idea.
Next, the student teams are
formed and the student direc-
tors and producers chosen by
the students, with guidance
from the faculty. Wesley Tip-
petts, co-producer of Owned,
is the mastermind behind
the short. Owned is about a
record-holding gamer named
Jeff who, after losing his
title to an unlikely opponent,
changes his outlook on life.
Tippets has worked on five
of the past student films and
works mostly on the creative
side, while Clark handles the
administrative details.
Were not the directors,
said assistant professor Seth
Holladay, were just the men-
tors guiding the project its
about the st udents.
After the student leadership
has been chosen, the rest of the
students find their niche on
the project and begin to workthrough a pipeline that imi-
tates the process of the pro-
fessional industry, including
storyboarding, 3-D rigging,
animation, effects, lighting
and rendering.
Its something the indus-
try is generally very inter-
ested in that they can work
with other people and still get
things done on time, Holla-
day said, who has impressive
industry experience himself,
having been an effects art-
ist for Pixars Ratatouille,
WALL-E and Up and a
technical director for Cars.The project team is made up
of both animation and com-
puter science majors, who
work together to make the
film a success. The animation
students focus more on the
artistic side, rigging anima-
tion and building models,
while the computer science
students focus more on the
programming and technology
facets of the pipeline.
According to Holladay, the
two tracks have always been
partners in the animation
process, but the center has
only been a direct collabora-
tion between the visual arts
and computer programming
departments for about a year.
Holladay explained eachtrack has its own specialties,
but both are crucial to making
the project a success.
We love making beautiful
things, but we also think tech-
nology is fascinating, said
computer graphics supervi-
sor Ethan Estrada, explain-
ing how the two emphases
are able to work together so
harmoniously.
Owned is scheduled to be
finished by the end of October,
at which point the student team
has planned to run the Provo
Halloween Half Marathon in
celebration. The students and
faculty are very proud of this
project, which they consider to
be their best short film yet.We keep pushing students to
push the envelope further the
industry is constantly chang-
ing, Holladay said. Theyre
still, in a sense, inventors.
Photo courtesy BYU Center for Animation
The year-long process to produce one six-minute short involves more than 30 students who r ig,animate, build models and program.
7/27/2019 Daily Universe Sep 17
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The Universe, September 17 23, 2013 3
NEXT: UNIVERSITY FORUM
This devotional will also be broadcast in the JSB Auditorium.
TODAYUNIVERSITY DEVOTIONAL
Tuesday, September 17, 11:05 a.m.
Marriott Center
Elder Lynn G. Robbins was
sustained as a member o the First
Quorum o the Seventy o The
Church o Jesus Christ o Latter-day
Saints in April 2000. He had served
in the Second Quorum o the Seventy
since April 1997.
He previously served as president
o the South America South Area, the
Central America Area, and the North
America West Area. He has also
served in the North America Central
Area.His numerous years o Church
service also include ull-time mission-
ary in the Argentina North Mission
and president o the Uruguay
Montevideo Mission (1994 to 1997).
He received a bachelor o arts
degree rom Utah State University,
and in 1977 he received his MBA in
world business rom the American
Graduate School o International
Management. In his proessional
career Elder Robbins was one o the
ounders o Franklin Quest, which
later became Franklin Covey, pub-
lishers o the Franklin Day Planner.
He fnished his career there when
he was called to preside over the
Uruguay Montevideo Mission in1994.
Elder Robbins and his wie,
Jan Nielson, are the parents o
seven children and have fteen
grandchildren.
Elder Lynn G. Robbins
Member of the First Quorum of the Seventy
Richard Beeman
John Walsh Centennial
Professor of History at the
University of Pennsylvania
Selected speeches available at http://speeches.byu.edu
September 24, 11:05 a.m.
Marriott Center
PLAN NOW TO ATTEND.
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UtahHow the Holy Warhas changed
Continued from Page 1
The hatred between BYU
and Utah is nothing compared
to what it will be, said Wayne
Howard, ormer Utah head
coach, ollowing a loss to BYU
in 1977. It will be a crusade tobeat BYU rom now on.
In 1993, Utah began to nd
success against BYU again.
Over the past 20 seasons, Utah
has beat BYU 13 times, seven o
those coming in Provo.
BYU head coach Bronco
Mendenhall appeared on Jim
Romes national radio show on
Tuesday, Sept. 10, explaining
that the dierence between the
Holy War and other rivalries
is the role religion and politics
play in the
rivalry.
Anytime
that those
two things
are part o
a r ivalry,
there is this
personal ele-
ment that
starts to take
shape, Men-
denhall said.
Not only
is it school-
a g a i n s t -
school, there
is this per-
son-against-
person. Then
it starts to
touch the
hearts and minds o people,
and makes them really do
things they normally wouldnt
do.
With the rst
rivalry hiatus
since World
War II coming
up, and Utah on
a three-game
r i v a l r y w i n
s t r e a k , B Y U
p l a y e r s a n d
coaches both
understand the
importance o
the upcominggame against
Utah.
Its huge,
BYU quarter-
back Taysom
Hill said. I was
obviously part
o the team last
year that lost
and thats something that I
never want to eel again.
ComedyThe progressionof BYU comedy
Continued from Page 1
Seeing BYU culture on
the public stage seemed to be
just what students wer e look-
ing or. Lincoln Hoppe was a
writer, director and perormer
or BYUs rst comedy troupe.
Hoppe is well known or star-
ing in movies such as Singles
Ward and Saints and Sol-
diers: Airborne Creed.
Hoppes perspective o the
success o comedy at BYU is:
Students need to walk away
rom their class at some point.
They not only needed to get
away, they needed to laugh.
The unique BYU comedy or-mula o good clean humor con-
tinues to infuence Hoppe in
his proessional career Doing
so many shows and or so long
and making so many people
laugh created a condence that
comedy can be clean.
Though the Garrens Com-
edy Troupe ended 12 years ago,
its infuence has carried on to
todays BYU comedy groups.
Humor Us ormer president
and current perormer Aaron
Woodall is still aware o the
Garrens and their patriarchy
in BYU c omedy.
I do appreciate that they are
the grandathers o BYU comedy
and the ones that started every-thing. Starting out at BYU has
orced me to write 100 percent
clean comedy, Woodall said.
Woodall sees an extra amount
o enthusiasm and energy rom
his BYU audience compara-
tive to other audiences he has
perormed or. At BYU, people
come and are ready to laugh. I
am really grateul to perorm at
BYU.
Along with Humor U, Divine
Comedy and Studio C are also
continuing this legacy o clean
humor, providing popular comic
relie sources or BYU students.
Its motivating to have a an
base that looks to clean comedy
and holds us to that standard,said Stacey Harkey, a perormer
in both groups.
With history showing clean
comedy as a perect match or
BYU culture, Harkey said, As
more people demand clean com-
edy greater quality will come.
LifeThe Universes Dayin the Life is back
Continued from Page 1
Other objectives include the
promotion o an interactive audi-
ence, the boost o online activity
and the chance to create some-
thing outside the box.
BYUs popular phrase the
world is our campus illustrates
how the work ethic and religious
values learned at BYU should
stay with each student, aculty
or alumni regardless o where in
the world they are. Students are
not restricted to actual campus
boundaries, and Fidel invites peo-
ple with all levels o photography
skills to share what a day in their
lives looks like rom around theglobe.
What is BYU like when you
are not in Provo? Fidel asked.
You dont have to be a proes-
sional photographer to tell us
what your day is like.
The Universes rst Day in the
Lie project took place on Nov. 9,
2012. Last year, 700 participants
submitted photos by email rom
locations ranging rom close to
Provo, and abroad to countries
such as Turkey, Spain and Ire-
land, Fidel said.
Brittany Hendrickson, a BYU
senior studying public rela-
tions rom Kalamazoo, Mich.,
participated in A Day in the Lie
last year with a picture at the
Lamborghini Museum while on
her study abroad in Italy.
I think that its a great way
or students to get involved oncampus and to see what everyone
else is doing, Hendrickson said.
She continues, saying the proj-
ect helps students branch out to
see what other people are doing
to build a better sense o unity
across campus.
In the uture, Fidel hopes that
A Day in the Lie o BYU will
become a representation o sig-
nicant days on campus.
Promotions or The Universes
rst Day in the Lie project gar-
nered the National Newspaper
Associations General Excel-
lence award in the most cur-
rent Better Newspaper Contest.
According to an article regarding
the awards, the judges loved the
idea o inviting the entire campus
community to share their cam-
pus experiences.
What a great idea to see theuniversity through the eyes o
your readers, the judges said.
Katrina Ricks, a senior
graphic design major rom Scars-
dale, N.Y., believes that people
like having an online presence
through social media and shar-
ing what they do with riends and
amily, saying the Day in the Lie
project helps portray the wide
variety o experiences BYU stu-
dents have.
Its just kind o cool to think
that its all on this one cam-
pus and you are just a building
away rom a completely dierent
world, Peterson said.
Photo courtesy L. Tom Perry Special Collections
Brigham Young Academy ootball team took the feld in 1896.
Photo by Vance Lee
This photo o Alex Lyman practicing his cello in a bathroom in theWilkinson Student Center was the most popular photo rom lastyears Day in the Lie project.
Photo courtesy Daryn Tuts
Some o the frst Garrens Comedy Troupe perormers.
The hatred betweenBYU and Utah is
nothing compared to
what it will be. It will
be a crusade to beatBYU rom now on.
Wayne Howard1977 Utah head coach
ater losing to BYU