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Students light up to celebrate 4/20

April 20 has long been notorious as a marijuana counterculture holiday, and about 100 U. Minnesota students celebrated the occasion Tuesday with a public smoke session on Northrop Mall.

The students gathered on the mall, and at exactly 4:20 p.m., dozens lit and shared marijuana cigarettes and hookah tobacco, and played instrumental music.

No police intervention was present. University police Chief Greg Hestness said he wasn’t aware of the day’s significance.

“I think that flew under our radar here [at the University police department],” he said. “I don’t know exactly what we’d do about it anyway, unless it was a public event.”

When told that the event was in fact public, Hestness said University police did not respond because the department received no calls of complaint.

The University’s gathering paled in comparison to the annual celebration at the University of Colorado at Boulder, where 10,000 people met on campus to smoke marijuana on April 20, 2009.

The University of California Santa Cruz is also notorious for its gathering: Campus police restrict visitor and vehicle access during the smoke-out.

As for the University, Hestness said the UMPD will not alter its actions for April 20, 2011.

The staff does not have the sufficient staff to “set up a sting” or surveillance detail in anticipation.

Environmental and ecological engineering junior Zach Tauer, president of Students for Sensible Drug Policy, said most students came to the smoke-out between 4 p.m. and 5 p.m.

Tauer said he smoked hookah and cigarettes Tuesday but not marijuana.

Attendees played various instruments and chatted, while passers-by gawked at smokers’ boldness.

For many marijuana smokers, 4/20 is believed to be a police code for smoking the drug.

However, Steve Hager, former editor of High Times, a New York-based magazine that covers marijuana, has a different story for the origin of 4/20.

He says the ritual is connected to a group of California teenagers who smoked marijuana every day at 4:20 p.m. in the 1970s. The story about the teenagers eventually spread and turned into an annual event in places around the country.

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Unexpectedly expecting

Editor’s note: About 3 million women experience unexpected pregnancies in the United States each year, and most are between the ages of 15 and 24. At an age when life’s opportunities start to present themselves and a picture of the future is coming into view, these women are faced with a difficult choice they aren’t ready to make: abort the pregnancy or have a baby. Although most people approach abortion as a philosophical and moral issue, these women approach their decisions from the most intimate and life-changing perspective. These are the stories of four U. Kansas women, including two KU students, confronted with a pregnancy they weren’t prepared for and a choice they have to live with for the rest of their lives. Two asked that their real names not be used to protect their privacy.

Five months pregnant and Taé had never felt the baby kick until today, while waiting in a room at Planned Parenthood.

It kicks again. She smiles, places her hand on her slightly distended belly to feel where the kick came from. The baby kicks again. And again. And again.

She yells for a nurse.

“Something’s wrong. The baby. It’s going crazy.”

“Oh,” the nurse says from the door. “That’s probably the baby dying.”

The words crash over Taé, punching into her like the positive pregnancy test had five months ago.

Her baby was dying.

She hears the “Yes, yes, yes” she heard from family, friends, the baby’s father about getting an abortion. She remembers the “Never” she told herself.

Her baby is dying and it is her choice. Her choice to go to the clinic. Her choice to abort the pregnancy. Her choice.

She cries the tears she’s been holding back since she walked through the front doors with her dad two hours earlier. She cries for the decision she was backed into, the one she never thought she’d have to make.

She cries, alone.

Taé was alone in the waiting room, but she wasn’t alone in her decision. Every year in the United States, about 1 million of the 6 million pregnancies end in abortion. In 2008, physicians performed 10,642 abortions in Kansas – more than half to women ages 15 to 24, according to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.

Although nearly half of all pregnancies in the U.S. are unplanned, no two stories are the same.

Taé was conflicted about her decision to abort, but Katie did what she felt she had to do to keep an abusive ex-boyfriend from marring her entire life. Two years later, pregnant by another man at age 20, Katie had the baby but gave up her son for adoption.

Erin, at age 16, decided to keep a child conceived in rape.

Vanessa aborted five weeks into her unwanted pregnancy so she could provide a better childhood for her future children than she had.

These women all say they made the right decision for them at the time – a responsibility, they say, every woman must carry.

Taé’s story

The unborn child’s heartbeat sounds so fast and so loud coming from the speaker in the doctor’s office.

Aside from the image coming in and out of focus on the sonogram, you can’t tell she’s pregnant. She’s 16, 100 pounds and one hell of a first baseman ­— her stomach as flat as ever.

Taé smiles at her mother standing beside her bed.

In that moment, everything is OK.

It doesn’t matter that her ex-boyfriend, the baby’s father, had left her for someone else before she knew they were over.

It doesn’t matter that she has just finished her sophomore year in high school and is four months pregnant because, contrary to what her boyfriend said, pulling out doesn’t stop you from getting pregnant.

It doesn’t matter that her own father wants her to have an abortion.

“This is a pointless visit,” her dad booms from the other side of the room, where he’s standing, gritting his teeth against the sound of the fluttering heartbeat.

It’s an anti-abortion, Christian hospital, the nurse tells them. No help for them here, at least not if abortion is what they’re looking for.

“The Kleenex are beside you to wipe off your stomach. We’re all done here.” The nurse gives one more meaningful look at Taé and walks out.

Taé, her mother and her father have barely crossed through the sliding glass doors before her dad pulls out his cell phone, dials Planned Parenthood and schedules an appointment for an abortion the following week.


When they arrive at Kansas City’s Planned Parenthood, they walk past a pair of women holding anti-abortion signs on the sidewalk.

Taé fidgets in the waiting room, upset and confused by her father’s behavior.

A woman calls her name and she walks back for her appointment, alone.

Taé learns from the nurse that she’s too far along for the abortion pill. She has to have a procedure. A pill will induce contractions. Expanders will help her dilate enough for the extraction. All told, it will take about four days.

The nurse schedules the abortion for next week and is about to leave to get the pill when she hesitates.

“Is this what you want to do?”

A door opens in Taé’s mind. She shakes her head no.

The nurse puts down her pencil and looks Taé sternly in the eyes.

“It doesn’t matter what your dad wants. It’s your body.”

The nurse tells Taé she has to leave, that they can’t perform an abortion on an unwilling patient, no matter how young.

Taé walks out into the lobby, unable to hide her smile.

“She said it was my choice. And I don’t want to have an abortion,” she tells her father.

Her dad’s face turns a dark shade of red. He storms out ahead of her.


During the next few weeks, her dad brings in the cavalry. Her godsister’s mother. Her mom’s brother’s ex-wife. Anyone and everyone her dad can think of to dissuade her from keeping the child.

Her dad even takes her back to Planned Parenthood a second time. And for a second time, she leaves making the same choice.

Only her mother says she’ll support Taé’s decision, whatever it is.

After the second visit and a fresh round of pro-abortion lectures from family friends, Taé decides to give John, the baby’s father, one more call.

She puts him on speakerphone, her mother standing silently in the corner.

“What is it, Taé? I’m with my girl.”

“John, we need to talk about this baby. I need to know what you think. I mean, do you care? It’s part yours. You do have a say.”

Silence. Then…

“Fuck it.”

He says it so suddenly, so forcefully that Taé’s mom sucks in a breath through her teeth.

“Kill it. I don’t care,” he says.

This is new; he’s not denying it’s his this time.

“Fuck you. Don’t call me with this bullshit anymore. Just get it over with.”

Click.

Her mom steps toward her, but Taé dashes upstairs. She locks her door before she collapses onto her bed, heaving sobs so deep she can hardly breathe.

Her dad doesn’t want the baby.

Fine.

The baby’s dad doesn’t want it either.

Fine.

The decision is hers, but among those she loves, she’s the only one who wants to keep the baby.

Fine.

But if she’s going to abort, she wants it her way. She wants the fetus to remain whole.


On June 30, Taé returns to Planned Parenthood for a third time.

She walks back to the nurses’ offices, alone, goes through the same questions and gives the same answers.

All except one.

“Is this what you want to do?”

Yes.

The nurse silently leaves the room, returning just a few minutes later with another nurse, an IV and a plastic cup.

They start the IV to sedate her. Taé takes the pill.

In 20 minutes, the doctor comes in, and Taé puts her legs into the stirrups so he can have a better look.

She can’t feel a thing while the doctor inserts the expanders into her vagina – double the normal amount so the fetus can come out unscathed.

He’s done in five minutes, but he says it will be four days until it’s time to extract the fetus.

The nurses walk her into a waiting room, where she sits, alone, while the sedation subsides.

That’s when she feels the baby kicking and the nurse tells her it is a death spasm.

Taé is doubled over in grief, her tears creating a growing dark spot on her jeans, when her dad comes back to get her.


At 2:30 in the morning on June 2, Taé wakes up screaming.

Pain like she’s never felt before sears across her abdomen.

I am going to die, she thinks.

Minutes later, her mom helps her into the back seat of her dad’s Chevy truck. Her mom’s boyfriend rides shotgun. She slides in next to Taé and puts her daughter’s head on her lap.

Taé is still screaming.

Planned Parenthood is a half-hour drive from their home.

Speed.

It’s the only word Taé can manage.

She rushes into a back room; the doctor and his team of nurses are waiting for her in their green scrubs.

They connect her to another IV — probably Fentanyl for the pain — and place her legs in the stirrups again.

The doctor numbs her cervix and the pain subsides.

She can’t feel anything, but she sees the doctor’s arm, scooping. She hears the suck of a vacuum.

It’s all over in five minutes.

“Was it a boy or a girl?”

“Looks like a girl,” the doctor tells her.

Taé passes out.

Her vagina is sore for the next two weeks, but it’s summer. No school. She stays home playing Skipbo and Rummy with her mom.

She has to take tiny white pills so her muscles can tighten and get back to normal. The pills make her legs and arms cramp up and spasm.

Throughout the summer, Taé thinks of that moment in the hospital, right before she passed out.

A girl. I would have named her Taé — the pseudonym she asked be used to protect her identity in this story.


Today, she has a 3.98 GPA as a KU sophomore with plans to attend law school after she graduates in 2012.

She spends her days juggling a 15-hour class load and her nights watching The Food Network with her boyfriend of four years. He doesn’t know about her decision, even though they started dating only a year after the abortion.

She doesn’t think about the pink lines or the waiting room or the pain very often. And when she does, she feels gratitude toward her father.

“If it weren’t for him I wouldn’t have done it, and I’m really glad I did,” she said. “I wouldn’t have a successful life.”

Five years after the abortion, Taé has just one regret.

“The only reason I feel guilty is because I don’t feel guilty about it,” she said. “You shouldn’t regret anything you do in life.”

Katie’s story

First, a hairbrush strikes her square in the arm. Then he hurls a full can of baked beans – it hits her in the ass.

Running around the basement of his aunt’s house, Katie tries to dodge the onslaught of canned goods and blunt objects Drake throws at her.

Drake wants Katie to go out with him, score some crack, beg for money. Katie just wants a night off.

He picks up a butter knife and uses it to slice open her forefinger.

He grabs a jalapeño and takes a bite. He holds Katie down so he can squeeze the juice into her eyes.

It burns worse when she cries.

She’s trying to wipe the jalapeño juice from her eyes when he punches her in the jaw. Then the arms. Then the chest. He hits her everywhere, until Katie is a sobbing lump on the floor. He shuts the door quietly on the way out so as not to wake his aunt.

So ends another scene of abuse in the three-month barrage that has become Katie’s relationship with Drake.

In that time, he’s stripped her down and gagged her in search of hidden crack. He’s thrown a rock at her head, leaving a gaping gash in her forehead. He’s kicked her in the chest, sending her flying across the room and gasping for breath.

No matter what, she can’t pass out. He said he’d leave her there, wherever she fell, if she did.

She tells herself she can’t leave. He knows her phone number. He knows where she lives. He knows her adoptive father works nights — the perfect time for him to hunt her down and kill her should she abandon him.

She lasts three months in his aunt’s house. Forcibly prevented from taking birth control, Katie stops having a period within the first month.

One night, while working her way toward the house, begging people for money as she has at Drake’s insistence since August, she stops. In the middle of Kansas Avenue in Kansas City, Kan., during a frigid, early-November twilight, she stops. And she turns around.

Katie enters a nearby café and asks the waitress for a telephone. A customer sitting nearby lends her a cell phone. She calls her adoptive mom. She wants to come home.

In her childhood home, away from Drake, Katie can finally put the crack pipe down without fear of an attack.

Drake calls Katie two days after she escaped his abuse, his addiction and his rage. He declares his love for her, his regret for his actions and his promises for a better future.

Katie hangs up the phone.

She has an appointment at Planned Parenthood that day with her mom. She knows she’s pregnant and wants to see about getting an abortion.

She had decided long ago to have an abortion if Drake ever got her pregnant.

She would not bring a baby into an abusive relationship. It wouldn’t be fair to the child.

And she would not let herself be tied to Drake the rest of her life. It wouldn’t be fair to herself.

Katie and her mom walk into the clinic and wait 10 minutes before the assistant calls them to the back.

The doctor at Planned Parenthood is the man who facilitated Katie’s adoption into her new family as an infant. He administers a urine test. It’s positive.

As a favor to the family, he agrees to do the abortion right then and there, something that would become illegal two years later. Kansas now requires a 24-hour wait period before a woman can have an abortion.

Katie sits on the exam table and waits while the doctor sets up.

A few minutes later, she feels a small pinch in her stomach — the doctor tells her she’s feeling the vacuum sucking the fetus out through a tube. That’s all she remembers from an abortion that lasted only five minutes.

Her mom writes a $400 check while Katie waits in the lobby.


Katie doesn’t hear from Drake for seven months, until June 2006.

He calls, claiming that he is a changed man. He’s been to anger management and addiction counseling, and he wants her back.

Katie believes him. She moves in with him two days later.

He starts beating her within a week.

In the two months she stays with him this time, he puts a cigarette out on her left arm, tries hanging her with his T-shirt and punches her in the mouth so hard, one of her bottom teeth punctures her lip and breaks open his knuckles.

One day he takes her out by the railroad tracks. He thinks she gave head to a crack dealer for a score. He bangs her head, repeatedly, on the side of an old brick wall. He grabs a rusty rod iron and hits her over the head with it. He grabs a piece of glass from a broken beer bottle and places it at her throat, threatening to kill her.

It would be the last time Drake touched her.

The next day, campus police stop Katie for loitering and suspicious activity outside KU Hospital.

Her birth mother takes her to her birth father’s house.

It’s working alongside her father at a woodshop that she meets James. The two-month relationship leads to another pregnancy, a tumultuous break up and another choice she would make alone.


She’s been dreading this moment since she missed her period two weeks ago.

A trip to Planned Parenthood and two pink lines prevent Katie from denying it anymore. She has to tell him she’s pregnant.

James finally agrees to see her, despite their angry break up two weeks earlier.

They’re standing on his back stoop. She hasn’t seen him since the fight. She doesn’t miss the drugs or the pressure to do them, but she misses him, him and his wide, brown eyes. She catches herself staring and shakes her head to snap out of the memories.

“I’m pregnant.”

She holds out the pregnancy test and handouts from Planned Parenthood.

He takes them from her, slowly, in disbelief.

“What are we going to do?” Katie asks.

“Abortion?”

“Hell no,” Katie says.

“Well, what about adoption?”

It’s an option, but not the one Katie wants. She leaves, telling James to think about it.

James calls two hours later — he wants to keep the baby.

Katie is ecstatic. She loves kids. She still loves James. Maybe this time, being pregnant doesn’t have to be a bad thing.

But her phone rings the following day. It’s James, and he’s changed his mind.

“I can’t take care of a kid, man. I don’t have money for myself.”

The next day, he calls again.

“I want this baby. I want to be a daddy.”

He changes his mind several more times in the next four months.

Finally, realizing James wasn’t going to be the reliable partner she and the baby need, Katie makes the executive decision.

Four months into her pregnancy, Katie approaches American Adoptions to give her child the family she couldn’t provide.

As an adopted child, Katie knows the risks of relinquishing her baby to adoption.

Her mom, pregnant and unmarried at 21, gave her up for adoption to a couple that couldn’t have children of their own.

Five years later, Katie’s adoptive parents conceived, and Katie learned how to take the backseat to her younger sister — most recently when her parents opted to fund Ashley’s way through Washburn University. For Katie, they paid for only one semester’s tuition at Johnson County Community College.

Lacking money and motivation after meeting Drake, Katie dropped out after only a year. She was studying to be a high school teacher.

But Katie isn’t worried about her child taking second place with the couple she chose from St. Louis. They are young, in love and already devoted to the baby growing inside her.


Keaton Michael was born via C-section at 12:20 p.m. on Sept. 17, 2007. He weighed 7 pounds, 4 ½ ounces.

Four days later, the couple comes to get the baby boy, whom they rename Benjamin, from Katie’s arms.

Before they leave, they take Katie to dinner and give her a gold, oval locket with handprints and footprints on one side, a picture of Ben on the other.

It is only then that Katie breaks down and cries.

Although the couple agreed to an open adoption, promising to send pictures and letters and accept and save presents from Katie, this would be one of the last times she would hold Ben in her arms until — or if — he came looking for her.

She sees him again that Christmas, her last chance to say goodbye before Ben is old enough to remember.


Ben is 2 ½ years old now and, judging from the pictures and letters, he’s doing great in his St. Louis home.

He has big, blue eyes and plump, white cheeks. He looks a lot like Katie. A good thing, she says.

There are times, looking at the pictures on her Blackberry and on birthdays and holidays, that Katie regrets her decision to give him up. But the regret doesn’t last long.

“I think I did a great thing for him,” she said. “I couldn’t have given him the life he deserves.”

Now, with Ben in good hands, Katie is trying to get her life back on track.

After a three-year hiatus, Katie returned to JCCC last fall. But she could afford only one semester. Now she’s taking a break from school, working two jobs so she can move out of her adoptive parents’ home soon.

Katie rarely hears from James these days – just an occasional text message asking for photos of Ben. She’s sent him two and says that may be all he gets.

Drake is out of the picture as well. He tried to call in December, after his latest stint in jail for drug possession, but Katie ignored his calls.

Katie doesn’t think about the abortion much anymore. Now it’s only when she sees a picture of Ben that she wonders what could have been.

Distanced from the pain, Katie speaks freely about her experiences.

“For me, it’s kind of like closure,” she said. “The more I talk about it, the more I can put it behind me and not have to think about it as often.”


Erin’s story

It’s the middle of the night and it’s 95 degrees outside.

The Harmony House doesn’t have air conditioning — just windows that let in the muggy, Jamaican air that smothers the missionaries inside. The acrid scent of jackfruit trees fills the air.

Erin shifts on her mattress, trying to block out the smell, the heat and the growing discomfort in her stomach.

It’s got to be gas bubbles, the way her stomach is gurgling, churning and turning.

She looks down at her bare, flat stomach — she’s wearing a sports bra and shorts, sweating, the idea of a blanket laughable in the sweltering humidity.

And then she sees it.

A bump pushes out the right side of her abdomen and crosses to the other side.

No.

She feels a pitter patter across her belly.

I can’t be.

She sees another bump.

You can’t get pregnant when you’re raped.

It happened in February.

He had said he was 22 years old, this friend of a friend. But he wasn’t. He was 36. She went to his house to confront him, and he raped her. He raped her right there on his bed.

And now, 17 years old in a foreign country with her church group, Erin is five months pregnant.

She doesn’t sleep that night. When the sun rises, Erin rubs her eyes like everyone else and prepares for one last day of work.

She’s there with Olathe Bible Church to build two houses in the slum of Harmon, Jamaica.

She tries to take it easy, scared she could hurt the baby already growing inside her, but it’s the last push to finish building. She spends the day pouring cement and hauling bags of sand up and down the hill where the houses stand.

The next day, she’s snorkeling with her friends in the Caribbean. The missionaries are there one more day.

She doesn’t want to board the plane — she remembers reading about how you’re not supposed to fly when you’re too far along. But she can’t explain her fears. Not to them. She buckles her seatbelt and prays.


It’s Aug. 5, 2008, and she can’t fit into her 1940s-style red dress for the jazz concert that night.

“Erin, how can you not fit into this? I just bought it last month.”

Erin looks to the floor for refuge from her mother’s prying eyes.

Her mom lifts her chin. They make eye contact. Erin sees the worry, the knowing. The floodgates holding back her secret break, and the tears she hasn’t cried flow down her cheeks.

Her father is in Colorado with her older brother. And it’s a good thing, too. He wants to kill someone, preferably his daughter’s rapist. Her younger sister is hysterical.

For Erin, the next three months are the hardest: It doesn’t take long for word of her pregnancy to spread around her Christian high school.

The kids are fine, even excited. It’s the parents who treat her differently, reluctant to look her in the eyes or even speak to her.

She wonders why. She didn’t do anything wrong.

She stays home for most of that semester, making it to one football game, her stomach already growing.

By that time, she’s already decided to keep the baby. Erin’s birth mother has told her what it was like to give her up, and Erin knows she isn’t strong enough to do that.

She worries the baby will look like the father, that she’ll be haunted by her attacker’s face her entire life.

She wonders about the life she had planned for herself — the college degree from the University of Kansas she’s been dreaming of, a career in music therapy. All will be put on hold to take care of a child she hadn’t planned for.

In the end, it’s her baby. Her baby. And she wants to keep it that way.

Erin applies for Women, Infants and Children, a social welfare program designed to help low-income mothers. She’s already worked out a deal with her parents to let her live there for free room and board — if she cleans the house.

She considers herself lucky.


Erin wants a natural birth — no medication, no pills.

When her water doesn’t break Nov. 16, the due date she’s been anxiously awaiting, she reads up on some labor-inducing tricks online.

She eats cantalope, watermelon and kiwi.

She starts walking everywhere to get the baby to drop.

But her baby doesn’t come.

She goes to the hospital with her family at 7:30 a.m. Nov. 21, a troupe of loyal girlfriends on the way to hole up in the waiting room until it’s over.

She’s connected to an IV of Pitocin to induce labor, which begins an hour later.

By 3 p.m., Erin loses her will to resist relief from the pain. She asks for an epidural.

Thirty minutes later, it’s finally time to push.

One. Two. Three. That’s all it takes — three pushes — and Erin’s baby boy screams his presence to the world.

Erin fills out the birth certificate.

Name: Isaiah Timothy Hettrick. Mother: Erin Marie Hettrick. Father: Unknown.


That was two and a half years ago. In that time, Erin has graduated high school, attended a semester of college and, as of April 15, become a certified nursing assistant.

She’s seen all but about 10 friends move on or away, although they were already distanced by the gap of their experiences — hers as a mom, theirs as young singles.

Her ideas of fun have changed from sleepovers, movies and the mall to knocking down empty boxes of Pampers and Huggies with Isaiah, scavenging for baby clothes and toys at garage sales with her mother and catching precious moments alone with her boyfriend, Claude.

Her money, which once went toward makeup, earrings and beads, now goes to diapers and baby toys.

She’s gone from being a left-midfielder in soccer and a football cheerleader to “momma” and a qualified professional. And her wake-up call starts at 7 now, with a muffled cry from Isaiah sleeping near her, not the usual 10 to noon mornings of her 19-year-old peers.

’Saiah, her dimpled, milk-chocolate skinned, hazel-eyed, curly-haired son, is ready for action early.

He’s trying to talk now — “Gaga” being the operative word in most conversations. He can sign, too: thank you, milk, music, please.

It’s only when Isaiah is lying down and Erin can see the roundness of his face that she thinks of her attacker.

Erin tries to forget the day she was raped, but she hasn’t forgotten that humid night in Jamaica when, after the shock of her pregnancy, she considered abortion.

“I hate to say that, but I did,” she said. “Because when you say, ‘I would never have an abortion. That’s terrible,’ that’s because you’re not really pregnant. Kind of in the back of your head you’re like, ‘I’m never going to be in that situation.’”

For that reason, she refuses to judge women who make that choice.

Some days, when she lets her mind wander while Isaiah is napping upstairs, Erin wonders how different her life would be if she had made a different decision.

Try as she might, she simply can’t picture her life without Isaiah.

And she doesn’t want to.


Vanessa’s story

The pink lines come 10 seconds after she pees on the strip. It’s supposed to take at least 60 seconds.

The same thing happens on the second test. She doesn’t bother with a third.

Those two lines tell Vanessa the weird feeling in her stomach isn’t from a bad burrito. She is pregnant.

How is this possible?

Every night at 9, like clockwork, Vanessa takes a little blue pill to prevent this very thing from happening.

She’s been on birth control for five years now – since 8th grade, when she and her fiancé, Cameron, first got together. She’s never missed a cycle. Until now, when she realizes birth control isn’t always dependable.

What are we going to do?

At first, Cameron is excited. He’s loved Vanessa since he first saw her in the halls of their middle school near Manhattan. And he’s marrying her in three months anyway. He knows they’ll have kids. It’s all right with him if they start early.

Vanessa, on the other end of a long-distance phone call, brings him back to Earth.

He’s a full-ride football player at a university up north with three years left to finish his degree in criminal law. She’s a 20-year-old KU freshman with five years of pharmacy school in front of her and will remain deployable with the Army for the next year.

The two take four weeks to decide, going back and forth from abortion to school transfers and night classes.

It isn’t until the last Thursday in January that Vanessa goes to Kansas City’s Planned Parenthood to carry out their final decision — a decision influenced by her own childhood.

Vanessa’s mother deserted her husband and two children while Vanessa was still learning how to walk.

Initially planning to abort Vanessa, her mother carried her to term as a junior in high school at the father’s insistence. She married Vanessa’s father and had a second child, a boy, by him before she packed up her things and left. Motherhood overwhelmed her.

So Vanessa grew up under the awkward but well-meaning love of her devoted father.

When Vanessa wanted pigtails, he tried his hardest to make that part straight. But it never was, and her pigtails never matched up.

When she wanted to go clothes shopping for six hours at a time, her father waited patiently outside the dressing room, holding her purse.

When it came time for Vanessa to get her first bra, he went with her.

Vanessa grew up wondering what she had done to make her mom run away.

Once she was old enough to understand, Vanessa vowed to never put her children through that, that she would be a better mother than hers.

So at age 20, facing the prospect of having a child, forgoing school and working full time to support it, Vanessa remembers that vow and decides not to continue her pregnancy.

Cameron, who grew up watching his parents struggle to make ends meet, comes to the same conclusion. He wants to earn enough money to provide for his wife and children — something he can’t do as a college student.


Vanessa waits in the lobby of Planned Parenthood with her two best friends, wondering why Cameron isn’t there.

Yes, he’s got football practice. Yes, he can’t afford a plane ticket and still afford to feed himself the rest of the month. Yes, she told him it was OK.

But sitting there, amidst other scared faces, she notices how few men are there with their women.

Damn. Why isn’t he here? He doesn’t have to deal with the pain. Nothing’s growing inside of him. Why isn’t he here?

The aide calls her name and Vanessa leaves her friends behind in the lobby.

Lying on the table, Vanessa waits as the nurse hooks up the equipment for a vaginal ultrasound — the embryo inside her is too small to be seen otherwise.

Vanessa looks to the screen and sees a tiny, gray dot just a bit larger than the other moving blurs that surround it. That dot is the five-week-and one-day old embryo.

She’s relieved: It’s still early enough to take the abortion pill. She doesn’t know if she could have gone through with an actual procedure if she were further along, despite reaching the decision she knows is right for her, for Cameron and for their family.

The nurse gives her a bottle containing four pills in exchange for $650, which Vanessa charges to her Visa card.

Back in her dorm, she reads the back of the box:

Put all four pills in your mouth at the same time, two on each side, between your gum and cheek.

They taste disgusting.

Wait 30 minutes for the pills to dissolve.

Instead of dissolving, they feel more like Winterfresh gum that’s been chewed too long.

Drink a glass of water to swallow the remainder of the pills.

Finally.

Ten minutes later, Vanessa is on all fours, experiencing a cramping pain in her stomach she has never known.

Her three roommates, unaware of what’s happening, rush to her side.

“Vanessa! Vanessa! What’s wrong?”

“Are you OK?”

“Do you need anything?”

“No! Just leave me the fuck alone!”

They obey.

She can’t walk, let alone stand. For the next 30 minutes, she’s writhing on the floor, unable to think of anything but the searing pain in her abdomen.

The pain subsides. She starts to bleed.

She grabs one of the thick, extra large, front-to-back menstrual pads she hasn’t worn since she was 14 and afraid of tampons. The nurse had said the only way to be sure everything comes out is to avoid tampons.

She barely makes it back to her bed, she’s so tired. She sleeps soundly through the night.

In the morning, her pad is already soaked with blood, something she’ll have to get used to in the next four weeks.

But she feels fine — until she looks to her desk and sees the 4.5×6 inch black and white sonogram and the dot of the five-week-old embryo it shows.

In the aftermath, she drifts away from Cameron and cries daily.

She starts second-guessing herself and asking questions she’ll never know the answer to.

Would it have had its daddy’s smile? My almond-shaped eyes?

Would it have been a boy or a girl?

It takes her a few months, but she works through her depression, never once thinking to tell her father — she knows he wouldn’t approve. She never considers seeking a psychologist for help.

“I don’t think a psychologist will be able to help you with that,” she said. “It’s something you have to do on your own, something you kind of have to come to terms with.”

Vanessa returns to Planned Parenthood for a check-up on March 11 — the pill worked as it was supposed to.

The news comes just in time: Vanessa and Cameron are married in Lawrence a week later.

Vanessa says she doesn’t regret her decision, although before she got pregnant, she was against abortion.

“I was like ‘No one has the right to do that,’” she said. “‘If you’re woman enough to open your legs and do it, then you should be woman enough to take care of it.’”

But when she was confronted with her own unplanned pregnancy as a 20-year-old freshman, she gained a new perspective.

“You can’t judge. I judged before experiencing it. You can’t do that,” she said. “It’s not black and white. Everyone has their own reasons. Everyone has their own hopes for their children. Everyone has their own hopes for themselves. So you can’t draw a fine line. I used to think you could, but you can’t.”

Every night before bed, Vanessa walks downstairs to the kitchen and pours herself a bowl of Frosted Mini-Wheats for a bedtime snack.

Before the first spoonful, like clockwork, she takes a little blue pill and thinks about the mother she will wait to become.

Posted in Health, News, PoliticsComments Off on Unexpectedly expecting

Civil rights legend leaves behind lasting legacy

A woman of many hats, literally and figuratively, Dr. Dorothy Irene Height died early yesterday morning at Howard U. Hospital. Having been admitted in mid-March, Dr. Height is thought to have died of natural causes.

Those who knew her simply as “Soror” gathered yesterday on the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. plot, holding single red roses to pay their respects to the educator, activist and author. Dr. Lawanda Peace of the College of Engineering, Architecture and Computer Science was present to show her love and pay tribute.

“Dr. Height was a pillar of the Civil Rights Movement, especially for women…I don’t think anyone could replace her.” When the tribute ended, the women released white balloons into the air, symbolic of a freed spirit.

An adviser to every president since Dwight D. Eisenhower, Dr. Height was able to help propel the forward movement of women and minorities in this country.

“She has always said her life is a life characterized by service,” Alexis M. Herman, Height’s confidante and former U.S. Secretary of Labor, told the Howard University News Service. “She is the ultimate statement of what it means to be a public servant. She’s given back; she’s always given herself to worthy causes, always.”

Known as the “Godmother of Civil Rights,” Dr. Height was one of the most influential figures, male or female, to fight for the rights of, not only Black people but all minorities. Perhaps her most widely recognizable work is serving as the president of the National Council of Negro Women from 1957 to 2007.

Spanning over 50 years, Dr. Height was the longest-serving president of the organization, and made substantial contributions, including the institution of the National Black Family Reunion. She also served as the president of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. for eleven years and remained an active member throughout the entirety of her life.
On behalf of the Alpha Chapter, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., president Victoria Phifer said, “We respect the work and service of Soror Height. Members of our chapter had a chance to interact with her personally and she was always so peaceful and reassuring.

Something that we will never forget is the fact that she takes the time to interact with people personally and learn about each person. She rose to the occasion when no one else would, and when it was not the popular thing to do. And even at 98 years old, she remained as zealous for her cause as she was on day one and for that we thank her.”

Dr. Height’s extensive career in public service is precisely why, in 1993, she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and in 2004 the Congressional Medal of Honor; the highest American honors bestowed upon civilians.

Those who knew Dr. Height knew her for her tenacity and sharpness, a quality that she maintained until her death. Dr. Lorraine  Fleming, a civil engineering professor recalled meeting Dr. Height at a Founder’s Day celebration.

“She told us that she wasn’t feeling well, but she said that she knew coming out with her Sorors would make her feel better…She was truly a great woman.”

Dr. Height was one of the remaining Civil Rights figures, and the loss means a significant amount to the Black community. Peace referred to Dr. Height’s passing as a call to service saying that “no one person will ever be able to replace a woman as sharp and witty as Dr. Height. It will take all of us to come together to keep fighting for her cause.”

Having gone on record many times by saying that she was dedicated to and passionate about service, Dr. Height was influential in the lives of millions through her work for not just civil, but human rights. Many hope that her vision can live on in the lives of those for whom she worked and fought so hard.

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Annual film festival kicks off with another round of Ebert’s picks

From Cannes to Sundance Film Festival, veteran movie critic Roger Ebert may attend dozens of movie festivals every year, but for the U. Illinois alumnus, nothing beats the vibe at his own movie festival.

“We aren’t selling anything, the sponsors are mostly local, the volunteers all are,” the Pulitzer Prize winning author said. “It’s all about the films, and thanking their makers.”

As the 12th annual Eberfest kicks-off today, movie critics, actors, directors, writers, producers and audience from all over the world will be making their way to Champaign’s Virginia Theatre to watch films personally selected by Mr. Ebert. This year, 13 films will be shown over the course of five days, with the sold-out festival concluding on Sunday.

Formerly known as “Roger Ebert’s Overlooked Film Festival,” the movie festival started when the University asked Ebert to host the screening of “2001: A Space Odyssey” in 1997 during Cyberfest, a birthday celebration of the HAL computer featured in the film.

“It was such a tremendous success that we started talking about starting hosting a festival at Virginia Theatre in Champaign,” said Dr. Nate Kohn, one of the organizers of the Cyberfest.

According to Dr. Kohn, the festival director of Eberfest since its inauguration in 1999 and U of I alumnus, much of the festival’s theme and philosophy has not changed over the years.

“Roger wants to get the very mix of films”,” Dr. Kohn said. “We can bring in as many guests as we can for each film.”

According to Ebert, the most overlooked films this year, not only within the film industry but also among the public, are the documentaries. Documentaries shown this year include “Vincent: A Life in Color,” a film about a man who has been performing in colored suits on the bridges of Chicago for years, and “Song Sung Blue,” which chronicles a love story of two singers through good and bad times.

Dr. Kohn admits, however, that this year they’re doing something a little differently.

“This year we’re doing something we’ve never done before,” Dr. Kohn said. “Roger, through blogs, has developed relations with young critics from all over the world.”

Joining in the panelists and guests speakers from across the nation are 10 film critics from around the world, including South Korea, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia and Turkey

“It brings international voices into the festival — that’s very much a good thing,” Dr. Kohn said. “It also brings a whole new generation of film-goers to the festival.”

For Dr. Kohn, a media professor at the University of Georgia, much of the planning of the film festival takes place over the Internet.

“Roger and I discuss possible films by e-mail,” Dr. Kohn said. “And then I invite the guests, locate the films and supervise the work that goes on to fill up to festival.”

Dr. Kohn said the planning for each year’s festival begins as soon as the previous one finishes. However, for him and Ebert, narrowing down the films to a dozen or so is the hardest part.

“We never finalize the list until after the Sundance Film Festival, which is in last week in January,” Dr. Kohn said. “This year we didn’t finalize the list until sometime in March.”

For Ebert himself, timing wasn’t the issue.

“I wish we had 20 slots!” Ebert said.

For audience members coming from local areas and abroad, the event is not only a gathering of avid movie fans, but a chance to gain a better appreciation of movies.

“When I first started coming, I loved Roger’s interviews after each film, even if I didn’t like the film,” said Ginny Boyd, a festival attendee from California. “I love to hear from the filmmakers.”

Boyd particularly recalls watching “The Weatherman” during the festival in 2005.

“I had rented it before and didn’t like it much,” Boyd said. “But, after seeing it on the big screen with a full audience and hearing the discussion after the showing, I got more out of it and understood it better.”

For University employee and local native Elizabeth Cook, the festival is not only a celebration of film, “but of the human spirit and our very primal need to share our stories.”

Having attended Eberbest since its beginnings in 1999, Cook can still remember vividly attending the first festival with her mother.

“About halfway through the first film that I viewed during that festival, I looked around at the silhouettes of other audience members who were completely captivated by the film and it gave me goose bumps,” Cook said. “It was obvious that something very, very special was taking place.”

For Ebert himself, he remembers watching “many, many movies” at the Virgina Theatre while growing up in Urbana. In fact, he can still recall the first performance he ever caught at the theatre.

“I remember seeing ‘Look Homeward, Angel’ on the stage, starring Miriam Hopkins,” Ebert said.

But for Ebert, the best of both worlds came together at the 2003 Ebertfest, when upon the showing of “Singin’ in the Rain,” actor Donald O’Connor, who played Cosmo, the piano player in the movie, said, “I danced in vaudeville on this stage.”

“It was his last public appearance,” Ebert said. “Anyone reading this who hasn’t seen the greatest of all Hollywood musicals: What are you waiting for?”

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Author to write biography on Tebow

Ellis Amburn has spent his career working with celebrities: He published Jack Kerouac, ghost wrote for Priscilla Presley and authored a biography on Jack Nicholson.

Now the 74-year-old is adding a local celebrity to his A-List career.

Amburn is writing a biography on former Gators quarterback Tim Tebow. He hasn’t written anything in six years, but he was inspired to write about Tebow because of the football star’s spiritual commitment.

“At the Gator games, I started seeing God’s will in action,” he said.

Amburn wasn’t spiritual until 2002, when he was diagnosed with third-stage cancer in his neck and head.

He received radiation therapy at Shands at UF, and dedicated his last biography, “Jack: The Great Seducer,” to Dr. William M. Mendenhall, whom he credits with saving his life.

But with his health back, Amburn wasn’t sure if he still wanted to write.

“I didn’t know if I’d ever write again,” he said. “I didn’t need to do anything but get to know Ellis in Act 3 of my life.”

Amburn had been writing since he worked for his college paper at Texas Christian University. In 1954, at age 20, he moved to New York to work for Newsweek.

Six years later, he entered the publishing industry, where after scoring a bestseller, he worked with famous beat author Jack Kerouac.

“I was a young editor on my way up, and he was a great author on his way down,” Amburn said.

He encouraged Kerouac to write a book about murder, war and football, and when “Vanity of Duluoz” was published, the author dedicated it to him.

But since recovering from cancer, Amburn has come to appreciate his newfound spirituality.

He doesn’t subscribe to any specific religion; instead, he believes he can best connect to his creator by helping others.

He volunteers and is a mentor to UF and Santa Fe College students.

As he writes about Tebow, Amburn will still focus on spirituality.

For research, Amburn needs help from students who have stories about Tebow.

Those who shared a class or were friends with Tebow while he attended UF are encouraged to e-mail Amburn at ellis.amburn@gmail.com.

Posted in Football, News, SportsComments Off on Author to write biography on Tebow

College towns rank as home of the world’s fastest internet

In addition to the best public education in the world, U. California-Berkeley now affords the city of Berkeley another distinction: the fastest Internet.

A report released last week by Akamai, a web hosting technology company whose clients include Hulu and Apple, ranked Berkeley’s broadband connection as the fastest in the world for the fourth quarter of 2009.

In the United States, Berkeley is followed by Chapel Hill, N.C., Stanford, Calif. and Durham, N.C.-all college towns, which the report states are some of the best connected in the nation.

College towns likely enjoy these higher measured speeds due to the high bandwidth connections available at the universities, said David Belson, director of market intelligence at Akamai, in an e-mail.

The high ranking is likely more representative of the campus, the report states, “as opposed to particularly high-speed consumer broadband services available to local residents.”

Jennifer Donovan, senior public relations manager for Akamai, said the company has 61,000 servers around the globe. The servers track about 20 percent of all Internet traffic every day by recording requests and determining how long files take to download.

UC Berkeley connects to the CalREN network, which is used for statewide research and education, according to Shelton Waggener, associate vice chancellor for information technology. He said in an e-mail that “high capacity is provided via multiple high bandwidth connections” to the network.

Waggener said the campus ensures the reliability of its Internet access by using two independent sets of connections. One set provides a total of 13 gigabits per second and another provides a total of 10 gigabits per second.

Should one of them fail, the other is capable of meeting campus demand on its own, Waggener said.

“Researchers, educators and students demand high-quality, high-speed network service for their research- and education-related activities,” Waggener said in the e-mail.

The report also states that college towns may have higher broadband speeds because “the speed of local consumer broadband offerings is potentially higher than average.”

UC Berkeley senior Jose Roberto Gonzalez Molina said he routinely uses the campus network due to his poor connection at home.

“I use AirBears all the time on campus,” he said. “I think it’s very, very reliable.”

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Professor looks to help baseball star break record

An attempt to break the world record for farthest batted ball was foiled last week after Philadelphia Phillies star Jimmy Rollins injured his calf, but one Washington State U. professor has not given up yet.

Lloyd Smith, director of the WSU sports science laboratory, has been searching for the perfect combination of bat and ball to help Rollins knock one out of the park.

“If we could have Jimmy in good shape, have the bat perform like we think it should and have a good tailwind, then there is a chance that we could break it,” he said. “If any of those things don’t work to our advantage, then it will be pretty hard to get that distance.” Red Bull, the event’s sponsor, is planning to reschedule the event for sometime in June. The current record holder, Babe Ruth, set the record at 576 feet in the 1920s. That ball was reportedly carried along by a strong tailwind, but Rollins will have technology on his side.

The Guinness World Record allows for the use of any bat and any ball, so Rollins has been given a rare opportunity to cheat. For this task, Red Bull originally recruited professor Al Nathan of U. Illinois.

“We consult with organizations such as the NCAA, the amateur softball association and things like that to regulate the performance of bats,” he said. “Here, we are being asked to do the opposite.” Nathan later contacted Smith because his lab was the perfect facility to test and make modifications to the bats. Once they had found the right composite bat, they hollowed it out and softened the barrel to improve its performance, Smith said.

The bat was also weighted so it would feel like the wooden bat that Rollins normally uses, but even with these modifications, Nathan is unsure whether Rollins will be able to break Babe Ruth’s record.

“With a standard baseball and a standard bat, it’s simply not possible for a human being to hit the ball that far without being somehow aided by the wind,” he said. “For that particular home run, I think the wind may have been blowing out at about 20 or 30 mph, which is huge.” Unlike Babe Ruth, Rollins will also get to choose his ball. A harder ball will fly much faster than a soft ball, so it was originally decided that he would use an NCAA ball rather than an MLB one.

Jeff Kensrud, a graduate student in the school of mechanical engineering who was also working on the project, reversed that decision after comparing their aerodynamics.

“The main differences are the stitches,” he said. “The stitches on the NCAA ball are four times the height of the MLB ball.” Those stitches create so much additional drag that it was actually better to use the MLB ball. The difference comes out to around 75 feet, and that would make or break the record, he said.

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U. Virginia student killed in bicycle accident

U. Virginia graduate student Matthew Steven King was killed yesterday in a cycling accident in Charlottesville, Va. at about 9:05 a.m. A Charlottesville utility truck collided with King, who then was transported to the University Medical Center where he was pronounced dead at 9:31 a.m. because of injuries sustained from the accident, UVA spokesperson Carol Wood said.

Both King and the truck were traveling in the same direction in front of the West Main Restaurant — the bike was on the right side of the truck, and when the truck attempted to make a right turn, the two forces collided.

“The City of Charlottesville expresses its deepest sympathy to the victim’s family and is providing support to the City employee who is dealing with this tragedy,” City Director of Communications Ric Barrick said in a press release.

A first-year graduate student in the mathematics department, King was a “bright student with a very positive personality,” said Peter Abramenko, assistant chair of the graduate department. Abramenko, a member on graduate student selection committee, remembers King — who had decided to concentrate in algebra — as one of the committee’s top-ranked candidates. He said committee members initially were doubtful King would accept their offer but were very pleased when he did.

“It is a tragedy and a loss for our department — first of all on a personal level — but we anticipated that he would be one of our top students,” Abramenko said.

Assoc. Dean of Students Aaron Laushway and counselors from Counseling and Psychological Services spoke to members of the department yesterday afternoon after the tragedy.

“They immediately offered their help and first brought the news to our first-year grad students,” Abramenko said. “They are a community and all know each other … They help each other with teaching and exchange advice and tips. These students were all shocked and knew Matt, and it’s a shock for all of us. He will be thoroughly missed.”

The loss of the King will affect the University community as a whole.

“I think we’ve lost an enormously promising member of our community, and this loss touches so many people in the University community, but particularly the students and faculty in the department and Matt’s other friends,” Wood said. “The Dean of Students Office is encouraging anybody who needs to talk to somebody after hearing this heartbreaking news to take advantage of all the assistance the University offers.”

The incident has raised concerns about the safety of cyclists in Charlottesville. Although several of the city’s roads have bike lanes, cyclists still are sharing space with much larger vehicles.

“That stretch is really dangerous,” fourth-year Engineering student Sharif Morad said about Charlottesville bike lanes. “You have to act like a car.”

Craig Griffin, organizer of Bike Charlottesville, emphasized that raising awareness for drivers about individuals on bikes and pedestrians is a key to making the roads safer.

Griffin said the community is organizing a ride-in from Grounds to a vigil for King. The vigil will take place Friday at 5 p.m. in front of the West Main Restaurant.

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Column: Smart phone elitism is rather foolish

In American Psycho, ruthless Wall Street businessmen flash their version of ivory-crusted pistols: business cards. The small pieces of paper wielding their name and profession in different shades of off-white, with slight font variations, makes a difference in caliber — in quality.

In today’s business world, the weapon that distinguishes individuals from one another is instead the cell phone.

Be it the hip iPhone, businesslike Blackberry or the media-driven Droid, the model of your phone and whether or not it has “smart” capabilities, including access to the Internet, e-mail and applications, can be considered the burgeoning determinant of an individual’s net worth.

This trend has thus created a strange and obnoxious cellular caste system that has created a fleet of people pathetically tethered to their mobile device, which carries with them an often costly data plan.

The fascination starts young, too ­— countless college students have fancy phones in tow, sometimes not realizing that it costs around $30 a month for them to stealthily update their Facebook profiles during class. That adds up to $360 a year. It’s a pretty uniform rate too, among basic data plans for Verizon, T-Mobile and AT&T.

As they advance their careers, they’ll get used to having music, GPS and Facebook instantly, and both their peers and employers will assume they have that capability as well.

Even college professors have all but assumed that anyone who’s worth anything has e-mail and Google on their person at all times. Employers expect those who work for them to answer urgent e-mail queries right away. Eyebrows raise in shock when someone has been in class for more than two hours and not responded to an e-mail.

Whipping out a clam phone circa 2005 will solicit guffaws from board members, ridicule from classmates and not meet the demands of an increasingly competitive workplace.

Marketers have sniffed a youth market in which many have grown accustomed to handheld smart phones. Windows unveiled the new Kin One and Kin Two phones this month, smart phones meant for the 15 to 25 demographic.

It’s what Wired magazine’s gadget blog is calling “social-media-centric” and has Twitter and Facebook feeds as its central feature on its egg-like interface.

Based on Windows 7 technology, the Kin’s distinguishing characteristic is that it automatically puts all of a user’s information, such as texts, e-mails and instant messages, onto an exclusive website accessible on more than one platform.

As young adults, do you really need a standing account of all of your tweets and posts — and to pay more than $300 a year to keep them?

And it wouldn’t hurt to gain relevant information, say, from a computer. Or, God forbid, a book.

The practice of selling both expensive phones and expensive services (data plans) is simply unfair. Yes, the practice of selling a product in demand at inflated prices is a common practice of good old capitalism, but one must question the product itself.

Sure, there is no way to make every American buy a smart phone (the tiny processors can cost upward of $250 or more), but the data plans should not significantly add a lump to a cell phone bill or be a way of weeding out viable social or professional contacts.

The Internet is filled with useless drivel — videos of chubby babies, mindless Facebook poke wars and silly games. That kind of instant access to information that could make or break professional and social interactions is the kind of gold everyone should be privy to, such as the dictionary, GPS and e-mail.

The pressure to be able to extract information and directly communicate with one another at the touch of a button is appalling. There is simply nothing wrong with responding to an e-mail later than within the hour.

This culture reinforces our young generation with a total instant gratification problem. What will happen if they don’t get or can’t find something within the next five keystrokes? Being out of the loop of current information on a constant basis puts those with slimmer wallets at a distinct disadvantage in the workplace. And though money has always had an influence on success, the silly obstacle of not having an iPhone has nothing to do with work ethic or skill set, but rather the size, model and speed of a handheld device.

Perpetuating a culture that classifies its population by looking at what’s at its ear, however, is just a petty exercise in what is electronic elitism.

Clare Sayas is a U. Southern California junior majoring in public relations.

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Ohio State equestrian team goes for its 10th national championship

In the 25 years since the Ohio State U. equestrian team formed, the team has won nine national championships. It is now hoping to clinch its 10th title at this year’s Intercollegiate Horse Show Association National Championship.

The road to the national championship is much like March Madness, coach Ollie Griffith said. The top teams from each region advance to semi-finals, then the top three teams at each semi-final competition advance to the national championship. Nine teams are then left to compete for the national title.

OSU won the semi-finals that were held March 27-28 at Cal Poly Pamona and will compete at nationals on May 6-9 in Lexington, Ky.

“Nationals is the highlight of the year for the team. Everyone looks forward to it,” alumnus Keith Ceddia said. “Not many students get the opportunity to represent their university at a collegiate national championship.”

Competition is separated into beginner, intermediate, novice, advanced, open reining and open horsemanship divisions.

“There is an opportunity for anyone that wants to learn to show horses,” Griffith said. “If you’ve never ridden a horse, you could come be a part of this team.”

All OSU students are encouraged to join the team despite their level of experience with horses.

Griffith said part of his task as coach is finding the students who have experience.

Some members find that being part of the equestrian team enhances their time as a student.

“It’s given me a community within the school that I can identify with,” team member Lauren Smanik said. “It just makes the experience that much better.”

The team has also helped members form lasting friendships.
“The friendships that you make don’t last only four years,” team president Danielle Nichter said. “The connections last for a lifetime – that’s a pretty cool thing to say.”

With nine national titles under its belt in only 25 years, the equestrian team is considered one of the most successful sports team at OSU. Ollie and Debbie Griffith own Autumn Rose Farm in Dublin, Ohio, and have coached the team since it formed.

“Ollie is a huge Ohio State fan and a great supporter of our team,” team member Melissa Vannest said. “I don’t think the team would have the same amount of enthusiasm if it weren’t for Ollie’s passion rubbing off on us.”

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