Sunday,  Nov. 17, 2013 • Vol. 16--No. 124 • 18 of 29

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Glenn said. "He can make those throws, he does make those throws. We've gotta make those plays."
• SDSU took a 7-0 lead on a 34-yard pass to Schneider and a PAT kick by Justin Syrovatka with 1:09 left in the first quarter.
• The Coyotes answered with a 21-yard field goal by Miles Bergner early in the second quarter and it stayed that way until the Jackrabbits went 47 yards on six plays late in the half. Zenner capped the drive with a 1-yard run on a direct snap, but the PAT failed.
• Bergner's 25-yard field goal with 30 seconds left in the half closed the deficit to 13-6.
• The Coyotes pulled within one on Earl's 13-yard TD pass to Terrance Terry, but Bergner's PAT hit the upright, leaving USD down a point. Terry had nine catches for 115 yards.
• The Jackrabbits scored the next 14 points to put the game away. Schneider's second TD came on the first play of the fourth quarter, and Winston Wright returned an interception 85 yards with 2:36 to play.
• USD had recovered a Zenner fumble one play earlier on the SDSU 30.
• "That's a recurring nightmare for us. We're not finishing. Throughout the game we had chances. You just got to make those plays, that's all," Glenn said.
• Jordan Roberts led USD in rushing with 31 yards on eight carries.

Native pride at heart of 'Rock Your Mocs' campaign
SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN, Associated Press

• ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico (AP) -- Elementary school students in western New Mexico are wearing their moccasins. So are students at Northern Arizona University, Purdue and the University of Michigan.
• On the Cherokee Nation, there's a waiting list for Friday's moccasin-making class. And on a military base in Afghanistan, a soldier ties a beaded cross around her boot to symbolize her moccasins.
• Friday was "Rock Your Mocs" Day.
• Coinciding with Native American Heritage Month in the U.S., the social media campaign started by New Mexico student Jessica "Jaylyn" Atsye has gone global.
• The 21-year-old Laguna Pueblo member says the idea was simple -- to set aside one day each year to wear moccasins to celebrate the cultures of Native Americans and other indigenous people.
• "When someone asks you, 'What do your shoes represent?' or 'What's the story behind your moccasins?' there can be endless descriptions," she said. "They show

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