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September 22, 2014 Vol. 27 Issue 11
I n d e p e n d e n t S t u d e n t V o I c e o f B o I S e S t a t e S I n c e 1 9 3 3
Find out what effects program prioritization will have on students, 7
Students get ready for spring break with the Treefort early bird sale, 8
Freshman Hannah Newhouse will race wearing the Boise state blue and orange, 10
Page layout by Ted Atwell
ISSUEIN THIS
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Distributed Mondays & Thurs-days during the academic school year. The Arbiter is the
official independent student newspaper of Boise State University and a designated public forum, where student editors make all content deci-sions and bear responsibil-ity for those decisions. The Arbiter’s budget consists of fees paid by the student body and advertising sales. The first copy is free. Additional cop-ies can be purchased for $1 apiece at The Arbiter offices.
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Contact Us
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFEmily Pehrson
editor@ arbiteronline.com
MANAGING EDITORKatie Meikle
managingeditor@ arbiteronline.com
NEWS EDITORAlx Stickel
news@ arbiteronline.com
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOREryn-Shay Johnson
& Sean Buncenews@
arbiteronline.com
SPORTS EDITORNate Lowery
sports@arbiteronline.com
ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITORBrandon Walton
sports@arbiteronline.com
CULTURE EDITORJustin Kirkham
arts@ arbiteronline.com
ASSISTANT CULTURE EDITORPatty Bowen
arts@ arbiteronline.com
PHOTO EDITORTyler Paget
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COPY EDITORSBrenna BrumfieldBriana Cornwall
design managerJovi Ramirez
GRAPHIC DESIGNERSChristian Spencer
Ted AtwellJared Lewis
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NL News Director Farzan Faramarzi
10
6
8
hannah newhouse: fast and furious
sellout sale for treefort early birds
cobre funds life-saving research
Alx StickelNews Editor
Plans for the new de-grees and courses in the newly-created College of Innovation and Design will soon be presented to the Idaho State Board of Education for approval.
Provost Martin Schimpf will discuss the vision for
the College of Innova-tion and Design with the State Board at their Oct. 16 meeting. Schimpf will present potential degrees, certificates and research plans.
“I think students need, more than ever, a deep un-derstanding in more than one area,” Schimpf said.
The idea for the Col-
lege of Innovation and Design came partly from program prioritization. With students needing to be more multifaceted for today’s workforce, more programs encompassing multiple disciplines need to be offered, according to Schimpf and Boise State President Bob Kustra.
According to Schimpf, many instructors are al-ready teaching transdis-ciplinary courses and projects; having this new college will help provide space to facilitate more collaboration with other faculty and students.
Schimpf said these trans-
disciplinary degrees are in-tended to help break down barriers students face in getting their first job by showing they have more depth and breadth of un-derstanding in multiple disciplines.
Schimpf and Kustra hope in addition to the already-existing transdisci-plinary efforts, the College of Innovation and Design will foster new transdis-ciplinary degrees, courses and research projects for faculty and students.
In his address at the be-ginning of the academic year, Kustra gave the exam-ple of engineering profes-sor Darryl Butt’s work on analyzing a fleck of paint to figure out the identity of the subject the artwork depicts.
“One of the greatest limitations of the tradi-tional college structure is that each discipline is or-ganized in its own depart-ment, an academic frame-work sometimes difficult to overcome, for both stu-dents and faculty,” Kustra said. “But the College of Innovation and Design will be set up to help break and blur those barriers.”
In his address, Kustra announced Andrew Fin-stuen, former dean of the Honor’s College, as the in-terim dean of the College of Innovation and Design. Schimpf said not many new faculty will need to be hired to support the new college. Instructors, particularly ones who are already involved in trans-disciplinary courses, will submit ideas and plans to instruct within the college. Twenty-four curriculum
proposals have been sub-mitted for consideration.
Two leadership posi-tions will be filled to guide the college. After present-
ing to the SBOE, Schimpf hopes to start implement-ing the College of Innova-tion and Design as early as Fall 2015.
09/22/2014 Pg 3
NEWS
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College of Innovation & Design goes before Board of Education
martin Schimpf presents plan.
Mission & Role
College of Innovation & Design
The College of Innovation and Desig� is a universit�-wide hub focused on t�ansfor�ing teaching, lear�ing and research at Boise
State Universit�. Leveraging the speed, collaboration and risk-taking of a star�-up, the college inspires and suppor�s facult�,
st�dents and communit� members from diverse disciplines to create new pathways of lear�ing that anticipate the demands and oppor��nities of our ever-changing world workplace. These teams will generate pioneering deg�ees, badges and cer�ificates as well as
desig� new and innovative approaches to research, communit� engagement effor�s and other initiatives that t�anscend conven-
tional universit� boundaries, st��ct�res or disciplines.
““—Martin Schimpf
I think students need, more than ever, a deep understanding in more
than one area.
Cou
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09/22/2014, Page 4
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NEWS
John A. AllisonPresident & CEO, Cato Institute
Sponsored by
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Boise State University College of Business & Economics
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Jordan BallroomStudent Union Building
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For additional information call 208.426.1125
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2014 – 2015 lECTUrE
“ the PhILOSOPhIC FIGht FOr theFUtUre OF AMerICA”
COBRE grant funds research on fibrosis Sean BunceAsst. News Editor
Kristen Mitchell has been studying the aryl hy-drocarbon receptor for the better part of 20 years, lon-ger than half the students at Boise State have been alive.
Until recently, however, she didn’t know what this protein is used for.
The goal of her research over the past two years has been to establish a role for the AhR in liver fibrosis.
“We used a well-known AhR agonist to show that, when the receptor is ac-
tivated, liver fibrosis is worse,” Mitchell said. “This provides evidence that perhaps this receptor is indeed involved in regu-lating fibrosis.”
Mitchell attributes the work she’s done recently to the $10 million Center of Biomedical Research Ex-cellence (COBRE) grant awarded to Boise State this year, which will help with developments in ma-trix biology, or the extra-cellular structural support for cells.
The grant will go toward faculty development and infrastructure improve-ments, as well as support-ing research in heart dis-ease, cancer and stroke, ligament injury and repair, and liver fibrosis.
The goal of Mitchell’s research now will be to de-termine exactly how this receptor regulates fibro-sis and then identify new molecules that can modu-late receptor function and diminish fibrosis.
“If we can make it worse, we can make it better,” she said.
Fibrosis of the liver is the excessive accumulation of scar tissue that results from ongoing inflammation and liver cell death; It occurs in most types of chronic liver diseases. There is current-ly no FDA-approved drug to treat fibrosis according to Mitchell.
Now, she thinks she may be able to apply for a pat-ent soon.
“If you would have asked me two weeks ago, I would have laughed,” Mitchell said.
The National Institute of Health, through its Institu-tional Development Award
(IDeA) program, provides most of the medical re-search funding around the country for states with tra-ditionally low NIH fund-ing, including Idaho.
According to Julia Ox-ford, director of the Bio-molecular Research Cen-ter, the grant allows for the development of project investigators like Mitch-ell, which is the key role of the COBRE program. These researchers receive $160,000 a year to fund their research projects, which includes the hiring of undergrad and graduate students, any supplies they
may need and additional resources.
Two care facilities were also proposed in this grant, including renova-tions to the Biomolecular Research Center located on the second floor of the Math Building and a vi-varium center, which is an-other name for animal care facility.
“Many of our researchers rely on animal models of human diseases,” Oxford said. “If we can cure the mouse, then we’re a little bit closer to being able to address the problems in the human population.”
COBRE grant is the largest grant ever awarded to BSU.
bio moleCular researCh Center
NEWS
09/22/2014Pg 6
Eryn-Shay JohnsonAsst. News Editor
Boise State’s satellite campuses, Gowen Field, Mountain Home Air Force Base and the Meridian Center will stop offering classes by spring semester.
Thanks to program pri-oritization, these three centers are taking severe cuts or being dissolved al-together.
According to Peter Risse, associate dean of Extended Studies, the cen-ters in Mountain Home and Gowen Field have seen significant drops in enrollment over the last several years.
“A lot of it is the military audience is shifting about quite a lot with deploy-ments and things like that, because of the wars. They have also here more re-cently in the last year real-ly downsized the military force there,” Risse said. “So, our enrollments have dropped to an unsustain-able level, for in-person classes.”
Mountain Home will re-
tain one staff member to run the testing center, but other faculty and budget resources will be reallo-cated to College of West-ern Idaho and College of Southern Idaho, and possi-bly expanding Boise State’s online presence.
Resources for the off-campus centers are being shifted to increase staffing and instruction demand for degree-completion programs at CWI and CSI, as well as fund programs that serve nontraditional students.
According to Risse, the plan to phase out the Me-ridian Center has long been in the works; even when the campus was es-tablished in 2011, it was not meant to be something permanent.
The Meridian Center will cycle out regular cred-it classes in this year.
The center will remain open for some non-credit classes until the lease ex-pires in two years. Merid-ian will move its classes to CWI.
The Gowen Field
campus is too close to the main campus to justify keeping it open for much longer.
“What happens is (Gow-
en Field) ends up taking students that otherwise would be wanting to take classes on the main cam-pus, so we’re going to
move that effort back onto the main campus where students want it and need it,” Risse said.
The military centers will
phase out slowly as in-per-son classes come to a close.
They will remain a point of contact for online classes.
Jillana FinneganAcademic Advising andEnhancement
Note-taking can be chal-lenging, and it’s important to realize that there is not one correct way to take notes. Re-gardless of your technique, we suggest using a three-part process that incorporates the following principles.
Part 1: Before Class• Complete the required
reading. It is important that you complete any assigned reading before class. Take notes as you read to help you notice main ideas. Be sure to also formulate questions as you read. Write them down in your notebook or the mar-gin of your book.
• Warm up. Show up to
class a few minutes early. Spend this time glancing over the reading and looking over your notes from the last class period. Part 2: During Class
• Choose your spot. Be selective on where you sit in class. Avoid distractions like sitting right under an air con-ditioning vent. Also, sit in the T-zone—the first three
rows and middle three col-umns of seats—to increase the likelihood of making eye contact with your professor, which has been shown to aid in learning.
• Find the cues. Listen for key terms from the reading. Also, actively listen and try to pick up on the professor’s cues like:
• Repetition of informa-tion
• Stressing key facts by saying something like, “And
now remember…” or “I can’t stress enough…”
• Voice inflection at the end of a sentence
• Having more active body language
• Focus on major themes. Know what to write! Don’t write everything down, and don’t write nothing down—you want to only write the major themes, main ideas, and necessary supportive information. This takes practice!
Part 3: After Class• Rework your notes. Re-
write or type up your notes. You are both reviewing and making better study guides come test time.
• Fill in the gaps. Look over your notes and fill in gaps by referencing your book or asking questions.
• Summarize. Summarize the information in your own words. This helps you engage and retain the information better.
Thorough notetaking can boost success
Boise State to phase out centers away from main campus
Meridian center will stop offering courses.
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09/22/2014, Page 7
Program prioritization and academic changesEryn-Shay JohnsonAsst. News Editor
Every department at Boi-se State spent the last year analyzing their programs, majors, minors and any-thing else which could af-fect students’ education and graduation rates as part of program prioritization.
For University Advance-ment, program prioritiza-tion has been a process of downsizing, restructuring and examining resources.
“What (program priori-tization) signifies is that we are in this constant state of continual improvement,” said Laura Simic, vice presi-dent for University Ad-vancement. “It is all about providing a better educa-tion for our students. It is about how we do what we do better for our students. Knowing that we can never be stagnant, we have to constantly be improving and constantly be willing to change, to evolve to get
better.”To do this, department
heads and vice presidents were asked to look over the aspects of their departments and decide what to keep and what to get rid of or consoli-date.
Of the 159 minors, alter-native degrees, options and emphases evaluated, 43 are making substantial changes to increase graduation rates and 16 will be consolidated or eliminated. One hundred and thirty-five degree and graduate certificate pro-grams were also evaluated. Twenty-nine are making changes and 22 were marked for low graduate numbers, which means changes will need to be made to increase the number of graduates.
Program prioritization paid a special interest to im-proving the university by fo-cusing on being aligned with student need and workforce economy after graduation. There was an emphasis placed on eliminating pro-
grams that haven’t been used and consolidating pro-grams with similar interests.
For example, the Depart-ment of Kinesiology and the School of Social Work will be incorporated into the College of Health Sciences.
“We looked at all the emphases, the minors, the options and we looked at those and said simply, ‘what is their productivity, how many students are earning (degrees) this year,’” said Provost Martin Schimpf. “If they didn’t meet the thresh-old, they had to come up with a plan and tell us why.”
According to Schimpf, students currently enrolled in these programs shouldn’t worry. Majors and minors will be taught until students graduate or leave Boise State; these programs will just no longer accept new students.
All evaluated programs will be revisited in 2017 to see if growth and productiv-ity increased.
A focus on student successSean BunceAsst. News Editor
As part of program priori-tization, 242 administrative and support programs were evaluated; 222 require ac-tions which will better align them with the overall goal of Boise State.
The programs were as-sessed based on four criteria including relevance, over-all quality of the program, productivity (the number of students who gradu-ate), and efficient use of resources.
Better alignment was ac-
complished by improving existing programs and activ-ities and restructuring them to become more efficient.
To better facilitate stu-dent classroom success, student success dashboards were created.
“The idea is that when appropriate, you reach out to the students at risk (of struggling academically),” said Max Davis-Johnson, associate vice president for Information Technology at Boise State. “We’re still working out intervention strategies.”
According to Davis-John-
son, the program has already been initiated for freshmen. The Student Success Dash-board feeds off of what he calls “indicators,” which can be anything from high school test scores to unmet financial aid. A student or faculty advisor will then be able to see if a student is go-ing to struggle throughout the semester, based on prior analysis.
Although this is only the beginning, Davis-Johnson believes this program will work based on his time spent using it at Arizona State, where retention rates
went up by 7 percent.In November a second set
of dashboards will be avail-able to advisors to include upperclassmen. It will assess information about students based on their overall GPA and use the degree tracker already in place. Based on this information, advisors will be able to make sug-gestions to students about what classes to take or if they should switch majors based on performance in other classes.
“It’s a very valuable tool, if we use it properly,” Davis-Johnson said.
Feature709/22/2014
Dissolved
Severe Cuts
ChangeChange
Ch
ang
e
Change
Ch
ang
e
Change
ChangeChangeChange
Change
Moving
Student Success
5.) �e department of Kinesiology moves to the College of Health
Sciences.
4.) 222 out of 242 support programs need
changes to be more e�cient.
3.) �e College of SSPA will be dissolved and incorpo-
rated into College of Arts & Sciences.
2.) OIT developed Student Success
Dashboard.
1.) 16 minors and emphases will be eliminated.
jared lewis/THe arBiTer
Culture
09/22/2014Pg 8
UNIVERSITY PULSE
Turning Politricks
Airs Sunday
3-5 p.m.
with Christopher Bower, McAlister Mallory,
David McKerracher and Stephen Troxel.
Space Waves
Soul Sessions
Boise Locals Only
Airs Fri
1-2 p.m.
with Alisha Graefe and Paul Bates.
with Michael Prentice.
with Peter Schlesinger.
the Sideline
Sportscast
Airs Monday
11-1 p.m.
Airs Wednesday
6-8 p.m.Airs Wednesday
9-11 a.m.
with Brandon Walton and Rashad Stribling.
Early Treefort pass sales let students plan aheadJustin KirkhamCulture Editor
It might seem a bit early for students to set aside plans for spring break, especially in beginning of the fall semester. But, for those with their sights set on Treefort’s upcoming festivities, five days in March have been reserved solely for concerts, performances and short films.
Spring break is often ex-pensive, but with Treefort’s discounted ticket prices for early buyers, that price is min-imized for those eager to jump into the music festival’s March events.
The fourth annual Tree-fort Music Fest will be held March 25-29 of this next year in downtown Boise. The fes-tival brings hosts of local and traveling talent in the form of music, film, writing and other creative outlets. Early bird tickets to the festival, with the highest discount possible, went on sale on Saturday, but quickly sold out. But, Treefort does offer other levels of dis-counted passes for those that missed out on the initial early bird sale.
Prospective attendees can’t get these extremely discount-ed tickets anymore, but have
the option to purchase other early decision tickets for a significant discount. Normal-priced general admission tick-ets will go on sale when the festival’s first guests are an-nounced.
Treefort staff member Kim-berly Cornelison has worked in varied facets involved with the music festival, including as a volunteer, a member of the press and alongside a musi-cian.
“Getting your passes early is always such a good idea,” Cornelison said. “Each new announcement is like expe-riencing another Christmas, and who doesn’t love more than one Christmas?”
Cornelison explained that having a ticket already in stow as each new announcement is made lets attendees better prepare for each new show-ing and ultimately lets their excitement continually build.
Sophomore string bass performance major Christie Echols is planning on attend-ing the festival this year. She hasn’t been able to attend in the past due to money and planning constraints.
“I think the early bird special is the best thing this festival could have done,” Echols said.
She is aiming to purchase one of the other available dis-counted passes.
Echols enjoys Treefort’s general lineup because it in-cludes so much local talent. She explained that many of the bands in Boise are highly talented and that the city’s residents should continue to support the Boise music scene “so that it continues to stay alive.”
With the option of plan-ning ahead and saving money instead of waiting until the festival is just around the cor-ner and debating costs, Echols felt that more prospective at-tendees would be encouraged to buy passes and support the artists that they enjoy.
Avid Treefort volunteer and attendee Haleigh Gregory works behind the scenes of the festival and is able to see just how much work and ef-fort goes into its entirety.
“The actual cost of a Tree-fort pass is reasonable,” she said
Gregory considers the high costs being put into gathering artists and planning the fes-tivities well worth the general ticket prices.
“If someone can get cheap-er tickets then that’s awe-some,” Gregory said.
Treefort hosts varied performers.
devin Ferrell/THe arBiTer
Culture
09/22/2014 Pg 9
Reading series features translated literaturePatty Bowen Asst. Culture Editor
Many students in any of the 11 language programs offered at Boise State find themselves wondering how they can apply their pas-sion for foreign language outside of the Department of World Languages and traveling abroad.
Debuting this semester is Boise State’s first transla-tion reading series entitled “Found in Translation: A Reading Series”.
The series put on by the English Major Association allows students to hear translations from a pleth-ora of different languages including French, Span-ish, Basque and Catalan. Readings vary and include traditional works of poetry and literature.The Inspiration
Clyde Moneyhun, Eng-lish professor and Writ-ing Center director, was inspired to organize the “Found in Translation” reading series by several events.
“One inspiration is the other readings we have here at BSU—all the fan-tastic poetry and fiction readings. Another inspira-tion is the readings I’ve heard at a conference I at-tend every year, the Amer-ican Literary Translators Association,” Moneyhun said. “Bilingual readings make up about half the conference, and they’re terrific. So I thought: Wouldn’t it be great to hear readings of great literature in translation, right from the people who did the
translating, right here at BSU?”
Starting on Sept. 23, the readings will be presented by several renowned mem-bers of the literary world, including translations of French poetry by Cynthia Hogue and Sylvain Gallais visiting from Arizona State University.The Translation
Their translated piece is called “Fortino Sámano” (the overflowing of the poem), which is a dialogue between “young French poet Virginie Lalucq and the renowned philoso-pher of aesthetics, Jean-Luc Nancy” according to Hogue.
The dialogue revolves around the discussion of what poetry is, starting with Lalucq’s exposure to a photography exhibit by Agustín Victor Casasola during the Mexican Revo-lution.
“It was a photograph of a man who had been alive at the time of the photograph but who was about to be executed,” Hogue said.
The image caused Lalucq to contemplate the true meaning behind the image, and what Casasola was trying to convey.
“In fact, it seems to be conveying life at a mo-ment that is really on the border of life and death, and yet an image is not alive–it just appears to be alive; it’s a representation,” Hogue said.
Hogue also does transla-tions of Swedish and Ice-landic poetry. She started translating foreign works as an undergraduate at
Oberlin College. It was there she was introduced to Ezra Pound’s theory of translations and did word for word translations of it with her fellow under-grads.
“I have read and heard many poets from other countries, sometimes reading them in the origi-nal language so I could appreciate what kind of poet they were in their own language, and some-times … reading them in translation,” Hogue said. “I believe that reading and hearing translated works enriches our own poetic language and enlarges our vista … The translation work took me out of my ‘given,’ my automatic, and sent me in unpredictable directions. All artists need to be able to do this now and then, one way or an-other.”The Future
After the “Found in Translations” reading se-ries in Spring 2015, Mon-eyhun is planning to teach a course focusing on learn-ing undergraduates how to translate prose.
“It’s just such a great experience that I thought undergrads deserved something similar. So
we created English 307, which I hope to teach next year, possibly in the fall,” Moneyhun said. “It’ ll be a creative writing work-shop similar to the poetry and fiction workshops we already have, but will fo-cus on work that students translate.”
According to Money-hun, there are an innumer-able number of reasons why students should show interest in doing their own translations.
He explained that trans-lation is a great way to learn a language without having to monotonously pour over verb charts or use flash cards. Transla-tions give students an eas-ily accessible window into another culture through that culture’s works of prose.
“When you translate, you figure out things about the language as you need them. You teach yourself what you need to know, and you never forget it, because it’s in the context of a piece of creative art that you create yourself,” Moneyhun said. “That’s the best part: The end product, a beautiful thing, which you can be proud of having done.”
SCHEDULE
SEPT 23
Oct21
Cynthia Hogue
Sylvain Gallais
Department of English and School of International
Letters and Cultures Arizona State University
edward test
Department of English
feb16
Zachary
ludington
Lecturer in Literature and Translation
Department of Spanish University of Virginia
NOV18
Nere Lete
Department of World Languages
mar16
clyde moneyhun
Department of English
apr13
MFA
Poets readingA Celebration of
Student Work Department of English
““—Clyde Moneyhun
When you translate, you figure out things about the language as
you need them. You teach yourself what you need to know, and you
never forget it.
CHri
sTia
n s
pen
Cer/
THe
arB
iTer
09/22/2014Pg 10
Sports & Rec
Hannah Newhouse races into history for Boise StateAddie GlickStaff Writer
Boise State’s Hannah New-house, a freshman from Twin Falls, Idaho, will race her way into Boise State this semester as its first collegiate racecar driver.
The university offered Ne-whouse a scholarship and, in return, she will sport the “B” logo on her Chevy Impala SS and uniform as she races throughout the western Unit-ed States.
One of Newhouse’s big-
gest events this season will be the NASCAR K&N West Race in Phoenix where she’ll have the opportunity to race alongside big names in NASCAR.
“This is a make or break opportunity for me in racing,” Newhouse said. “I want to go out and represent not only my-self as a racecar driver, but also my sponsors and Boise State as well.”
Growing up in Twin Falls, Newhouse and her family have always been supporters of Boi-se State.
“Boise State is something I’ve grown up with,” New-house said. “So I’m getting to take it with me when I travel to all these different places and represent something that is not only backing me but is some-thing close to home as well.”
Newhouse first got involved in racing when she was just five years old. Because her father was into racing moto-cross, go-carts and cars, it was easy for her to fall in love with the world of racing at a very young age.
Newhouse claims that her
father is one of her biggest role models.
“He’s been behind me every step of the way,” Newhouse said.
This year Newhouse will be studying marketing and communication. She believes that the racing world depends heavily on marketing, and if for some reason she couldn’t race, she’d still want to market some-one who is.
Newhouse’s advice to aspir-ing drivers is to not give up af-ter a rough night —the sport is filled with them.
“There’s a lot more bad nights than there are good nights in the world of racing,” Newhouse said. “[But] it will all make up for it in the long run. You just have to keep go-ing.”
With this partnership be-tween Newhouse and Boise State she’ll be able to expose the university to the world of racing all while getting a col-lege education.
Newhouse can be seen in the televised NASCAR K&N West Race at Phoenix Interna-tional Raceway Nov. 6-8.
Ajayi puts Broncos on track Brandon WaltonAsst. Sports & Rec Editor
The conductor of the Boise State offense is back in a big way.
Junior running back Jay Ajayi exploded for 150 yards on 27 carries and three touchdowns, his ninth 100- yard rush-ing game which is the 10th most in school history.
This was also his fourth career game and second this season in which he ran for at least three touch-downs.
“It’s the Jay train,” Ajayi said. “Just have to get it
cranking and I am the con-ductor.”
Ajayi was instrumental in Boise State’s 34-9 win over Louisiana-Lafayette on Homecoming night as the Broncos improved to 3-1 on the season.
“I knew he was going to come out and run the ball well and he did,” senior quarterback Grant Hedrick said. “It really gets us going and we like to get him in a rhythm.”
Ajayi got off to a fast start as he scored the games first three touchdowns.
“Getting the Jay train rolling is important,” head coach Bryan Harsin said.
After a down week last week against UConn, Ajayi was looking to rebound this week.
“Last week I felt I didn’t do as much as I could have,” Ajayi said. “This week was just being in the mind-set that I was going to have a great game and I was able to do that.”
It has been no secret this season that the Bron-co offense literally runs through Ajayi.
“He continues to be a workhorse for us,” Harsin said. “He gets our offense started.”
Ajayi as carried the ball 98 times already this sea-son; which is the second most times in the nation behind James Conner of Pittsburgh.
“We believe in the run and it’s very important to get it going,” Harsin said. “You win games by running the ball.”
For the season Ajayi has amassed 494 rushing yards which is the 11th most in the nation with five touch-downs to go along with that.
What makes Ajayi even more dangerous to op-posing teams is his abil-ity to catch the ball out
of the backfield. Ajayi has 23 receptions for 204 yards on the season so far.
Despite the self pro-claimed nickname and the statistics Ajayi’s number one focus is the team.
“Every week I go out and I want to make sure I’m do-
ing what I can to help our team win,” Ajayi said.
Ajayi already has 142 more rushing yards through the first four games then he did last season and could be in for not only his best season but perhaps the best season for a running back in school history.
Ajayi has Broncos Chugging Along.
““—Jay Ajayi
Last week I felt I didn’t do as much as I could have. This week was just being in the mind-set that I was going to have a great game and I was able to do that.
upcoming races
Pikes Peak Inter-national Raceway - Sept. 28
Kern County Race-way Park - Nov. 1
Phoenix Internation-al Raceway - Nov. 6-8
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09/22/2014 Pg 11
Sports & rec
STUDENT MEDIA
WE BRING THEPHOTO BOOTHPHOTO BOOTHCamera-Lights-Props
You just bring
your fabulous selfBronco defense shines against Ragin’ CajunsBrandon WaltonAsst. Sports & Rec Editor
Defense wins champion-ships.
With the way the Broncos defense has been playing a Mountain West champion-ship could soon become a reality.
Boise State once again played lights out defense in their 34-9 victory over Louisiana-Lafayette Satur-day night at Homecoming.
The Broncos only allowed 241 yards of total offense to the Ragin’ Cajuns.
“Those guys fight every single play,” head coach Bry-an Harsin said. “I have been impressed with the way those guys have played.”
The Broncos gave up their fewest amount of points on the season in the victory.
“It feels we are getting better,” junior cornerback Donte Deayon said. “Each week we tell ourselves that
we want to be better than we were last week.”
Boise State was able to do this by once again shutting down the run. The Broncos held the Ragin’ Cajuns to just 67 yards.
“We are playing so much faster and physical,” senior linebacker Blake Renaud said. “Everyone is just do-ing their job.”
The Broncos have not given up 100 yards on the ground yet this season. This is their longest streak since 2006.
“We take pride in it,” Re-naud said. “We really want to show that we can stop the running game.”
It wasn’t just the run de-fense that stepped up for the Broncos as the second-ary once again had another big game.
They held Louisiana-Lafayette to just 174 yards through the air and the Ra-gin’ Cajuns were only able
to complete 53 percent of their passes.
“We just wanted to limit the explosive plays, play tight coverage and make them earn everything they got,” Deayon said.
Perhaps the biggest de-fensive play of the game was the late game interception by Deayon giving him one the past two games.
“It was impressive and it was another big play,” Har-sin said. “That’s two weeks in a row that we have big plays from Donte.”
This defense has been one of the best in recent memory and perhaps the best is yet to come for the Broncos.
“I feel we are starting to get a rhythm and it’s only going to get better from here on out,” Renaud said.
The Broncos will look to continue their defensive streak when visit Air Force next week.
The Defense had another stand out performance.
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09/22/2014, Page 12