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Serving the Brigham Young University Community
THURSDAY
June 2, 2011
Provo, Utah
universe.byu.edu
B y M A T T S T E V E N S
Dylan Collie comes from a
family steeped in BYU football
heritage, and his father and
high school football coach say
he may just be the best Collie
yet.
Mechanically, he is further
along now than his older broth-
ers, Austin and Zac, were at
his age, said Scott Collie, who
played at BYU during the late
1970s and early 80s.
Dylan, who verbally commit-
ted to the Cougar football team
last week as a 2012 recruit, is
close to finishing his junior
year at Oak Ridge High School
in El Dorado Hills, Calif. Oak
Ridge football coach Eric Cava-
liere said Dylan is a huge part
of his team.
Dylan is going to do a lot for
us next season, Cavaliere said.
He will probably do a lot more
than Austin did for us. In fact,
the only time he wont be on the
eld is when we kick off.
Oak Ridge has a storied foot-
ball history. Since Cavaliere
joined the coaching staff in
1998, the Trojans have won four
section championships and
produced three NFL players.
Cavaliere helped coach all
three Collie brothers. Oldest
brother Zac played for BYU in
the mid 2000s, finishing his
Cougar career with 37 catches
for 595 yards and four touch-
downs, while Austin played for
the Cougars in 2004 and 2007-
08. He nished his BYU career
with a school-record 3,255 re-
ceiving yards, 215 receptions
and 30 touchdowns. Austin is
now an integral part of the In-
dianapolis Colts team.
You cant coach the work
ethic and determination that
Zac and Austin had; Dylan is
no exception, Cavaliere said.
His route running and ability
to catch the football is amaz-
ing.
Cavaliere said he still ex-
pects a lot from Dylan next
year, and Oak Ridge will be
competing for a section cham-
pionship and should be a strong
team in the playoffs.
Dylan said he is looking for-
ward to his senior season and
is glad to know where he is go-
ing to play in college.
See COLLIE on Page 4
Collies colleagues heaping high praise
Photo courtesy of Greg Ashman/El Dorado Hills Telegraph
Dylan Collie, right, the younger brother of Zac Collie and Austin
Collie, has verbally committed to play for BYU beginning in 2012.
Mechanically, [Dylan Collie] is further along now than
his older brothers, Austin and Zac, were at his age.
Former BYU wide receiver Scott Collie
Father of Collie brothers Dylan, Austin and Zac
B y M E G A N P E A R S O N
While some organizations are
handing out fish, Mentors Interna-
tional is teaching people to fish so
they can feed themselves and their
families and some recent changes
have helped them double their ef-
forts in a quarter of the time.
Mentors International is a non-
profit organization, headquartered
in Draper, whose mission is to give
a hand up, not a handout, to poverty-
stricken people across three conti-
nents. This microfinancing orga-
nization uses a perpetual model of
funding to break the cycle of pover-
ty, in which clients pay back loans
with minimal interest.
Mark Petersen has been the CEO
and president of Mentors Inter-
national since 2007. In the first 17
years Mentors was in operation, it
served approximately 20,000 impov-
erished clients with micro loans. Af-
ter Petersen became the president,
he and his staff were able to double
the amount of clients to 41,500 in
four years, and future projections
suggest Mentors will serve roughly
70,000 clients in the 2011-12 fiscal
year.
See MENTORS on Page 4
Photo courtesy of Mentors International
Mentors International empowers third-world entrepreneurs to rise out of poverty.
A hand up, not a handout
Program helping entrepreneurs rise out of poverty
B y A S H L E Y V A N WA G O N E R
B
YU is recognized for hav-
ing nationally top-ranked
professors, classes and in-
ternships, but these arent
the only thing its known for.
With more than 30,000 students,
BYU has a long and well-known his-
tory of endless dating opportunities.
With hanging out seeming to gain
prominence and traditional dating
seeming to be in decline, some wom-
en are wondering if men arent get-
ting the memo from the recent April
General Conference of The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
McKenzie Bennett, a junior from
North Salt Lake majoring in elemen-
tary education, is single. She de-
nitely isnt sitting around waiting
for life to happen, but she believes
its best to keep things more tradi-
tional especially after listening to
the recent conference talks. After
returning home from the priesthood
session, McKenzies friends told her
President Thomas S. Monson laid the
marriage hammer down, and laid
it down hard.
President Monson told men of his
contemplations on a great number of
young, single women who are limited
in opportunities for marriage since
young men are postponing it. He
tried to understand the young mens
reasoning for the delay, suggesting it
See DATING on Page 4
B y M A D I S O N S M I T H
R
ather than dreaming of love,
commitment and a shared
future, many couples today
consider insurance bills,
student loans and goodbye letters
from single friends as the results of
marriage.
The sparkle of starting a life together
has faded for many young single adults,
according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Its
data demonstrates a continued increase
in rst marriage ages starting in 1950,
when the median rst marriage age for
men was 22.8 and woman was 20.3. Sixty
years later, the ages have risen to 28.2
for men and 26.1 for women.
We have a society thats used to
quick xes, [but] marriage and love is
a process, said Guy Dorius, an asso-
ciate professor of church history and
doctrine. Many of todays youth bail
out rather than sticking with it.
See AGE on Page 4
What
are we
really
shopping for?
Marriage age on the rise because of
bevy of worries for young couples
Dating vs. the dreaded hanging out
Are joys of single life
outweighing dating
opportunities?
1
[ Weather ]
2 The Daily Universe, Thursday, June 2, 2011
WASHINGTON (AP) The western New
York Democrat who captured a surprise vic-
tory in a special election after focusing her
campaign on Republican plans to reshape
Medicare was sworn into ofce in the House
on Wednesday.
Kathy Hochul (HOE-kuhl) was elected last
week in an outcome that buoyed Democrats
still jarred by their loss of House control in
the 2010 elections. The conservative district,
which curls among rural and suburban towns
between Buffalo and Rochester, had long been
represented by Republicans.
In brief remarks to her new colleagues
after she took the oath from House Speaker
John Boehner, R-Ohio, Hochul spoke of
the need for a spirit of bipartisanship and
cooperation, making no specic mention of
Medicare.
Today I enter these chambers condent
that we can tackle the challenges that are pre-
sented to us. We can and must nd common
sense solutions to the problems facing each of
our districts and our country, she said.
BRI EFI NG
The world is our campus
Associated Press
Men walk next to a destroyed tank in Tripoli Street, the center of ghting between forces loyal to
Libyan leader Moammar Gadha and rebels in downtown Misrata, Libya.
Associated Press
SMOKY WANTS TO LEARN
An adult black bear runs through Tualatin Elementary School yard on Wednesday in Tualatin, Ore.
Police in Tualatin, just south of Portland, tracked the bear roaming in a wooded area near the
elementary school. The bear was later caught near the school.
Associated Press
Rep. Kathy Hochul, D-N.Y., takes part in a
ceremonial swearing-in ceremony on Capitol
Hill in Washington on Wednesday following her
ofcial swearing in on the oor of the House.
House puts off vote on Libya resolution
WASHINGTON (AP) The House post-
poned a vote on a resolution demanding an
end to U.S. involvement in Libya amid fears
that Democrats and Republicans would unite
in backing the measure and hand President
Barack Obama an embarrassing foreign
policy defeat.
The GOP leadership had scheduled a vote
Wednesday on the resolution by Rep. Dennis
Kucinich, D-Ohio, that directs the president
to remove United States armed forces from
Libya ... not later than 15 days after the adop-
tion of the measure. The vote was delayed
as the leadership and Obama administration
realized frustrated lawmakers likely would
support it.
Nearly three months after Obama launched
air strikes to back the rebels battling Libyan
leader Moammar Gadha, lawmakers are ex-
asperated with the administrations inability
to spell out a strategy, said one GOP leader-
ship aide, speaking on condition of anonymity
to freely describe the situation.
Forces loyal to Gadha and the rebels re-
main in a standoff as NATO and its partners
said Wednesday they have decided to extend
for another 90 days their military campaign
to protect Libyan civilians.
The House GOP plans to hold a special
meeting Thursday to weigh Congress next
steps, including the possibility of reschedul-
ing a vote on the resolution.
In a statement, Kucinich said the GOP
leadership told him the vote had been delayed
to obtain more information and consult with
the administration.
WENDOVER (AP) Authorities say
four people are dead after a small plane
crash at Wendover Airport in northwest
Utah along the Nevada border.
Tooele County dispatchers say the
plane crashed at about 2:45 p.m. Authori-
ties tell The Salt Lake Tribune it was a
Cessna 172, a popular single-engine plane
that carries up to four passengers.
Tooele County Sheriff Frank Park says
it isnt clear if the wreckage was on the
runway or whether the plane was landing
or taking off from the small airport when
it crashed.
Federal Aviation Administration inves-
tigators were on the way to the scene.
4 people dead in small
plane crash in Wendover
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Public hear-
ings about a state plan to reduce air pol-
lution are scheduled to begin in northern
Utah.
Utah Division of Air Quality director
Bryce Bird says the hearings will help
people understand the proposed steps to
bring air quality along the urban Wasatch
Front into compliance with federal laws.
The hearings are planned for Wednes-
day in Provo and Salt Lake City and
Thursday in Logan.
Bird says the DAQ will unveil a system
that models different pollution reduc-
tion strategies and helps the state control
harmful emissions.
Changes to improve air quality could
include expanded emissions testing pro-
grams or tighter restrictions on things
like wood burning that increase pollu-
tion.
This weeks meetings are the first of 24
that are planned through the rest of this
year.
Air quality hearings set
Hochul sworn into House
TODAY
Partly Cloudy
High 61, low 42
FRIDAY
Sunny
High 64, low 45
YESTERDAY
High 81, low 48, as of 5 p.m.
PRECIPITATION
Yesterday: 0.00
Month to date: 0.00
Year to date: 12.43
Sources: CNN.com, BYU Geography Dept.
For more news,
including audio and video,
visit our award-winning Web site
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Vol. 64, Issue 171
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The Daily Universe, Thursday, June 02, 2011 3 I SSUES I DEAS
A B O U T L E T T E R S
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Letters should include the authors name, home town and phone number, as
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VIEWPOINT
Speak your mind
The blessings of free speech
A
s a journalist, I get the free-
dom of speech spiel all the
time.
We must practice our
free speech, they say. If we
dont, whos going to keep the rest of
the world in check?
I admit, it normally goes in one ear
and out the other but what do you
expect when its Thursday evening
class and my weekend starts at its
end. However, while reading letters
to The Salt Lake Tribune editor, one
caught me by surprise.
Because of copyright laws (another
spiel I get often) I cant
copy it here or tell you the
persons name, but I can
tell you this, they made
me grateful for my liter-
ary freedoms.
They brought up North
Korea, so I did a little
more research. Even
though the government
calls itself the Demo-
cratic Peoples Republic
of North Korea, we all
know there is nothing
democratic, republic or
people-based about them.
In fact, Id be willing to call them
communist.
With this form of government,
their idea of freedom of speech in-
volves letting the people say what-
ever they want in support and praise
of the government, its leaders and
anything else they deem necessary.
Im a relatively supportive person
of our government, but I wouldnt
last a minute in North Korea.
So, just thinking about my ability
to write in this column what I please,
say in a public forum what I please
and think to myself anything I please
made me wonder, what would life be
like without these blessed freedoms?
The book Fahrenheit 451 by Ray
Bradbury comes quickly to mind.
Id be willing to rank this book in
my top ve because it truly depicts
where we would be without our free-
dom of free speech, free thought and
free word.
For those of you who didnt actu-
ally read the books assigned to you
in high school, heres the SparkNotes
version: a reghter, whose job it is
to start res, realizes the books he
burns may contain important and
enlightening information. The entire
novel focuses on this man learning
the importance of the written word,
the freedom to read and the freedom
to discuss.
If you skipped this one in high
school, I recommend picking it up
now its worth it.
If we lost our right to speech, our
right to read and our right to share,
we would be where they were.
We would worship our televisions
more than we already do. We would
ght for our naivetey and scramble
for our childish ideologies. We would
forget the importance of
knowledge and cast aside
our pursuits of religious
enlightenment.
We would be lost.
But we dont live in
this world. We dont live
in a country that limits
us; we live in a country
that frees us. We have the
opportunity as citizens
to make a difference, to
change the world.
Sometimes I think we
forget this vital fact. Few
places still exist in this world where
each citizen knows they can make
a difference. In most countries, the
government limits its people. Here
in the United States the people limit
themselves.
So heres your chance. Break free
of your limitations; break free of
your preconceived failures. Release
yourself from self-oppression and
self-doubt.
You can make a difference.
So, in the words of Dr. Seuss, for I
cant say it better myself:
You have brains in your head.
You have feet in your shoes. You
can steer yourself any direction you
choose. Just never forget to be
dexterous and deft. And never mix
up your right foot with your left.
And will you succeed? Yes! You
will, indeed! (98 and 3/4 percent
guaranteed.)
ALLISON
GOETT
Allison Goett is the opinion editor for
The Daily Universe. This viewpoint
represents her opinion and not neces-
sarily that of The Daily Universe, BYU,
its administration or The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
We can never be sure that the opinion we are endeavoring
to stie is a false opinion; and if we were sure, stiing it
would be an evil still. John Stuart Mill
[ CORNER WISDOM ]
Capitalism and Immigration
In response to the author of the
delightfully compassionate No
supporting illegals (5/26), I would
like to point out the hypocrisy run-
ning across the board on this issue.
Hard-line conservatives want to
enforce the law and deport illegals,
which seems ne on its own, but at
the same time, these most Smith-
sonian of capitalists want the free
market and invisible hand to do
their thing, which nowadays means
employing people illegally to keep
prices articially low. Yes, you
can blame government subsidies
for our articially cheap agricul-
tural products in this country, but
everyone will start crying foul once
they see how much beef, corn and
other staples will cost when the
added price of an honest wage is
worked in.
Id like to note there will be no So-
cial Security because we refuse to
raise taxes to fund it. Thats simple
economics.
The truth is, we love government
programs so long as we dont have
to pay for them.
There is also no proof that most
illegal Mexicans are bringing
drugs, etc. into the country. This is
just stereotyping without any proof.
And what of illegals using up all
of our rights? What does that even
mean? I wasnt aware that rights
were transferable or involved a cer-
tain quantity that could be used up.
Do I run the risk of my well of
Habeas Corpus uses running dry?
If you love capitalism, then either
accept that employing people ille-
gally is necessary for our economy
or be willing to increase your
overall cost of living because of the
inherent higher cost of production
from having everyone be legal.
Also, enjoy the tax hikes that will
be necessary to fund the deporta-
tion of the millions of illegals.
We might have ideals, but ideals
without common sense and realistic
solutions are useless.
GEOFF OPENSHAW
Alexandria, Va.
Polygamy comparison fails
In a recent letter to the editor,
the author of The right vs. the law
(5/26) compared illegal immi-
grants to the early leaders of the
church.
He observed the early church
members violated the law to prac-
tice polygamy and those men were
still doing what was right, therefore
there are cases when it isnt wrong
to break the law.
This is all true. But then he
implies by this same reasoning, il-
legal immigrants may not be doing
something wrong.
This is a false analogy, because
the two situations are not the same
in the relevant way.
What made the church leaders
actions permissible was they were
directly commanded by God to
practice polygamy.
Having to choose between the
law of God and the law of man, they
wisely chose to follow the higher
authority.
However, illegal immigrants are
not commanded by God to sneak
into the United States, therefore
they have no such conict between
commandments.
There may be other grounds for
saying violating immigration laws
is not morally wrong, but the com-
parison to polygamy fails.
COLIN MANN
Hillsboro, Ore.
Fix on Christ, not marriage
Concerning the recent buzz about
marriage among young single
adults, I wish to afrm my position
that YSA wards exist primarily to
help us come unto Christ.
While the sealing ordinance is
an important way we do so, it is
only one of many stepping-stones,
a position afrmed by the new
church handbook (see 16.2). As
Elder M. Russell Ballard recently
stated, we live in a very different
world from the one in which [our
parents] grew up.
We have been inundated with far
more information at an earlier age.
Technology is central rather than
supplemental to our lives.
Even though we afrm xed prin-
ciples, we are the rst generation
for which multiculturalism, relativ-
ism, feminism and postmodernism
permeated our upbringing.
Ideas like the superiority of West-
ern culture or women not playing
sports or nishing college strike
us as bizarre. Divorce and homo-
sexuality are now openly discussed
subjects.
We are also the rst generation
raised by soccer moms, which
increased the perception of achieve-
ment as godliness. At the same
time, we are the rst generation
reared on the importance of both
the Book of Mormon and the family,
which emphases took root only in
the past 30 years.
With far more ambiguity yet far
greater expectations, is it any sur-
prise that many of us linger longer
in adolescence and struggle with
perfectionism, eating disorders and
self-worth; and, regarding marriage,
the stakes in dating have been raised
far beyond our parents experience?
Now, more than ever, we must
transcend the transmission of tired
assumptions.
As Elder Richard G. Scott de-
clared in 2009, For many years its
been possible for members of the
church to follow the examples of
prior generations. The youth that
live in todays world dont have that
privilege for many things. For our
challenges, we must anxiously seek
answers from the Lord through the
Holy Ghost.
If we as wards want marriage,
our paramount focus must rather
be in Christ.
JOSEPH SOWA
Simsbury, Conn.
An international criminal
Its been interesting listening to
politicians and others crow and gloat
about how America got its man,
Osama bin Laden, who was consid-
ered an international criminal.
We were at war with Al Qaeda and
it was an act of war, wasnt it? Even
though 3,000 innocent people died?
Bin Ladens reason for the 9/11 at-
tacks was American support of Israel
and the abuses of the Palestinian
people.
How do you dene an international
criminal? Lets go back 66 years.
America was at war with Japan
and Harry S. Truman signed an order
to nuke two Japanese cities resulting
in the deaths of over 200,000 civilians
men, women and children.
In this day and age, wouldnt Tru-
man be arrested for genocide?
Seems to me if anyone but an
American president were to bomb and
kill 200,000 people today, he would be
taken to the International Court of
Justice and tried for murder.
In bin Ladens case, President
Barack Obama was the judge, jury
and executioner.
And hell get away with it just
like Truman.
MICHAEL KELSEY
Provo
[ Readers Forum ]
If you dont have that opportunity
to express your opinions there are
friendships that couldnt be formed.
M A N O N T H E S T R E E T
Caught on campus, Cougars share their opinions with The Daily Universe
How would your life be different
without freedom of speech?
Ashley Jorgensen
Public Relations
Scottsdale, Ariz.
Junior
I feel like I wouldnt be able to
formulate my own opinions. I think
it would change society a ton.
Jane Colton
Business
Bethesda, Md.
Junior
2
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6
6 The Daily Universe, Thursday, June 2, 2011
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