volume 99, issue 10

24
!"#$%&’ )&*+,*- !"#$%&’($&#) +%&$,% Recently, the Bicycle In- frastructure Improvement Committee (BIIC) released a survey to poll student, faculty and sta opinions and demographics to deter- mine the organization’s top priorities. “We’ll scope out a little bit [on] what they’ll cost us, so we can try and gure out what resources we’re going to need for the next three to ve years and where we might nd them,” said committee president Jo- hann Weber. e survey goes into minute detail about stu- dents’ personal opinions about which projects, such as remodeling intersections, policy, awareness, educa- tion initiatives and new trac laws, they may be in favor of. Moreover, the survey has an inuence on many initiatives such as the im- provement of intersections to accommodate bicyclists more eciently and reduce their eect on pedestrian trac. e survey results have a denite impact on students. Using their various sources of information, the BIIC improves biking around campus in other ways, including organizing bike week every year at the end of September, organiz- ing a week long commuter competition and submit- ting policy initiatives through the Institute Policy Approval Process to prevent campus bicycle theft. “We hope to make posi- tive incentives and to create an environment that not’s only appealing infrastruc- ture wise, but is also clear that bicycling is really em- braced and that we want to identify it as something of positive value that we want to invest in,” Webser said. .. *&/- BIIC aims to beer biking at Tech #%&0 /11$ !"#$%&’($&#) +%&$,% With the bustle of tests, homework and extracur- riculars, it’s often easy for students to get lost in the “Tech bubble.” On Sep- tember 11, however, several students on campus took a momentary break from their usual school routine to honor the twelfth anni- versary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. e precursor to the memorial event began the day before when almost 3,000 small American ags were placed along Tech Walkway. Represent- ing the 2,977 lives lost as a result of the attacks, these ags were part of the Never Forget Project, a national campaign that encourages students across the coun- try to honor the victims of the attacks through public displays and memorial ser- vices. Tech rst became in- volved in the project ten years ago when two to Tech students, Ruth Mal- hotra and Orit Sklar, no- ticed that the school had nothing planned for the second anniversary of the attacks. Concerned with the lack of remembrance on campus, the two students contacted the Never For- get Project. Since then, Tech has been an active Students honor 9/11 victims !"#$# &’ (#") *+,+)# !"#$%&" (#)*+,-"+.&/ - .$/01)$ 2301. + &3,1 +2#/)0 4+56/.7 8"1 21./9$. #: $"1 &34’491 ./2;1’ <399 "196 ."+61 $"1 =>>?@. A#+9.7 !"" BCBDE>-F$ %&’"() !"#$"%&"’ )*+ )*,-./012%" 33+ 4552" ,*. 6782"96"$ news23 opinions24 life25 entertainment267 sports238 .. %,9& :&#; !<== >&#"- <? 91" *&/ ’&#" @A technique 8#6 F1:$G !"#$# 4#/2$1.’ #: H+41&##,I 8#6 E3A"$G !"#$# &’ -/.$3) H##$1 !"#$%&" (#)*+,-"+.&/ Horror Hotel !"#$%&’" )*+"’) $’, -+./) +0#%- )*#12 3456 Football’s oense 7’+$ +0#%- 8’&*9) #:, :’;)’ +<+.;)- =%>’2 34?@ !"#$# &’ J"# K3$+5/2+ !"#$%&" (#)*+,-"+.&/ .. &*:&":#,*;&*: .. -?1":- .. %,9&

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!"#$%&'()&*+,*-!"#$%&'($&#)*+%&$,%

Recently, the Bicycle In-frastructure Improvement Committee (BIIC) released a survey to poll student, faculty and sta! opinions and demographics to deter-mine the organization’s top priorities.

“We’ll scope out a little bit [on] what they’ll cost us, so we can try and "gure out what resources we’re going to need for the next three to "ve years and where we might "nd them,” said committee president Jo-hann Weber.

#e survey goes into minute detail about stu-dents’ personal opinions about which projects, such as remodeling intersections, policy, awareness, educa-

tion initiatives and new tra$c laws, they may be in favor of.

Moreover, the survey has an in%uence on many initiatives such as the im-provement of intersections to accommodate bicyclists more e$ciently and reduce their e!ect on pedestrian tra$c. #e survey results have a de"nite impact on students.

Using their various sources of information, the BIIC improves biking around campus in other ways, including organizing bike week every year at the end of September, organiz-ing a week long commuter competition and submit-ting policy initiatives through the Institute Policy Approval Process to prevent campus bicycle theft.

“We hope to make posi-tive incentives and to create an environment that not’s only appealing infrastruc-ture wise, but is also clear

that bicycling is really em-braced and that we want to identify it as something of positive value that we want to invest in,” Webser said.

..(*&/-

BIIC aims to be!er biking at Tech

#%&0(/11$!"#$%&'($&#)*+%&$,%

With the bustle of tests, homework and extracur-riculars, it’s often easy for students to get lost in the “Tech bubble.” On Sep-tember 11, however, several students on campus took a momentary break from their usual school routine to honor the twelfth anni-versary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

#e precursor to the memorial event began the day before when almost 3,000 small American %ags were placed along Tech Walkway. Represent-ing the 2,977 lives lost as a result of the attacks, these

%ags were part of the Never Forget Project, a national campaign that encourages students across the coun-try to honor the victims of the attacks through public displays and memorial ser-vices.

Tech "rst became in-volved in the project ten years ago when two to Tech students, Ruth Mal-hotra and Orit Sklar, no-ticed that the school had nothing planned for the second anniversary of the attacks.

Concerned with the lack of remembrance on campus, the two students contacted the Never For-get Project. Since then, Tech has been an active

Students honor 9/11 victims

!"#$#%&'%(#")%*+,+)# !"#$%&"'(#)*+,-"+.&/

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2 .(!"#$"%&"'()*+()*,-.(technique // NEWS

The South’s Liveliest College Newspaper

&$,:1"B,*BCD,&9EIan Bailie

;#*#>,*>(&$,:1"E(Sam Somani

$&-,>*(&$,:1"EBrittany Miles

*&/-(&$,:1"EJoshua Garrick

1?,*,1*-(&$,:1"EArvind Narayan91C<-(&$,:1"EJillian Broaddus

&*:&":#,*;&*:(&$,:1"EJoe Murphy

-?1":-(&$,:1"ENewt Clark

?D1:1(&$,:1"EAlly Stone

%#'1<:(&$,:1"ELisa Xia

/&!($&F&%1?&"ERyan Ashcraft

1<:"&#CD(&$,:1"ETanner Smith

Founded in 1911, the Technique is the student newspaper of the Georgia In-stitute of Technology, and is an o$cial publication of the Georgia Tech Board of Student Publications. #e Technique publishes on Fridays weekly in the fall and spring and biweekly in the summer.#$F&":,-,*>!" Information can be found online at nique.net/ads. #e dead-line for reserving ad space is Friday at 5 p.m. one week before publication. To place a reservation, for billing informa-tion or for any other questions please e-mail us at [email protected]. You may reach us at (404) 894-2830, Monday through

Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

C1F&"#>&( "&G<&-:-E( Requests for coverage and tips should be submitted to the Editor-in-Chief and/or the relevant

section editor.

Copyright © 2013, Ian Bailie, Editor-in-Chief, and the Georgia Tech Board of Student Publications. No part of this paper may be reproduced in any man-ner without written permission from the Editor-in-Chief or from the Board of Student Publications. #e ideas expressed herein are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Board of Student Publications, the students, sta! or faculty of the Georgia Institute of Technology or the University System of Georgia. First copy free—for

additional copies call (404) 894-2830

technique

nique.netsliver

Paper & Clay, paper & clay!Pumpkin spice lattes make me miss Game of #ronesSquirrels make me miss Game of #ronesShampoo makes me miss Game of #ronesAwkward situations make me miss Game of #ronesPencils make me miss Game of #ronesIntegration makes me miss Game of #ronesshoot doh, i aint slivered all weekWhat it do what it do!!Great. #e Freshman Representative is a douchebag. Also, isn’t it against the rules to tear down your opponents posters?Slivers are like job applications, you never hear back from them.Mr. Gelbe has my vote next year. For Court Jester. Here’s hoping he can pass Calc as well as he can be a Colbert Show writer.i hate my Big.If you think the U.S. should intervene in Syria, I suggest you take a look at the Weinberger Doctrine.serious talks in the zebra never fail to ruin everythingTO JOHNSON CITY. TENNESEEEEEEEi’m at gt but idk if i can do thatnoooooo no no no we’re losing our friendship why did i open up to you noooooi’m still down to go all the way to the ‘burbs to get a hedgehogNAE Hillary, thank you for the tasty treat, it was delicious.My name is Harry Potter. Do you know anything about the Chamber of Secrets?

)1-D<#(>#"",C+#,+-*,.&$"%

"&?&#:(199&*$&"On Sept. 6, at approximately

2:33 p.m., a GTPD o$cer got a call from a plainclothes of-"cer who observed a subject who had been previously given a Criminal Trespass Warning. #e suspect was walking north on Hemphill Avenue, N.W. to-wards 10th. St. Another GTPD o$cer also observed the subject by way of the Georgia Tech Camera located in that area and con"rmed the identi"cation of the suspect.

Once the "rst o$cer arrived and found the subject matching the description carrying a black bicycle. After approaching the subject and verifying his iden-tity with Police Communica-tion the subject was placed in handcu!s behind his back and

advised that that he was under arrest for Criminal Trespass and being issued a Criminal Trespass Warning from all of the Georgia Tech Property.

CD&C+?1,*:-(#"&(91"(-#9&:'On Sept. 6, at approximately

2:00 a.m., a GTPD o$cer was working a safety checkpoint on Fowler Street, N.W. at the inter-section of Eighth Street, N.W. At approximately 2:20 a.m., the o$cer made contact with a driver traveling south on Fowler Street. #e o$cer identi"ed himself and asked the driver for his driver’s license which was con"rmed through the GCIC/NCIC system to be valid.

#e o$cer smelled the odor of burnt marijuana coming from the vehicle and asked the driver to pull his vehicle to the curb.

#e o$cer asked the driver if he had marijuana on him or in his vehicle. #e driver stat-ed that he had been at a night club and people were smoking around him and gave the o$cer permission to search his vehicle. No marijuana or paraphernalia was found.

When talking to the driver the o$cer could see that he was very nervous and his eyes were very glassy. When asked if he had been drinking, the driver said he had a Hennessey and coke and a Pina Colada earlier.

#e o$cer requested that the driver volunteer for a "eld sobri-ety evaluations to con"rm that he was safe to drive. #e driver complied.

After the driver was unable to complete the tests, the por-table alcocensor indicated a positive result for alcohol. #e o$cer determined that the driver was under the in%uence and placed him under arrest. Once at the station, the driver agreed to give a breath sample. #e results were .000 and .000 for the two samples. #e o$cer determined there was insu$-cient evidence to persecute him for driving under the in%uence and released the driver from custody, taking him back to his vehicle.

?"1?&":'($#;#>&On Sept. 7, a GTPD o$cer

was dispatched to North Av-enue Apartments in regards to a damage to property report. #e complainant, a Tech student, stated that she noticed a broken window on a door entering the west side of the building on the Centennial Olympic Park side. #e o$cer noticed the broken window which appeared to have been broken by a circular stone which was found inside the building on the %oor. #e im-mediate area was searched but no other signs of forced entry were found.

+&**&:D(;#",*1/--"!&/$,*,.&$"%

#irteen are dead and at least eight injured after a gunman opened "re at the Washington Navy Yard on Monday, causing fear and confusion throughout the nation’s capitol, according to the Washington Post.

#e FBI has identi"ed Aaron Alexis, among the thirteen dead, as the suspected shooter. Alexis was discharged from the Navy Reserve in January 2011 and, ac-cording to one Washington Post source, was working as a military contractor.

Initial reports changed rapidly on both the number of victims and the number of shooters, with D.C. Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier and Mayer Vincent C. Gray giv-ing a series of press conferences as new information was gathered. Some initial reports suspected two shooters, but one of the suspects was cleared and Lanier said she was con"dent that there was only one perpetrator.

According to the Washington Post, the shooting began at ap-proximately 8 a.m. when three shots were "red at building 197, the headquarters of the Naval Sea Systems Command at the naval yard.

Many initially believed the noises heard to be construction before they realized that there was a man "ring.

Rick Mason told the AP that he saw a gunman shooting from a fourth %oor overlook. Terry Dur-ham told the Washington Post that she saw a man shooting at her and several coworkers from across the hall as they %ed the building.

In response to the shooting, several Senate o$ces and ten pub-lic and charter schools were locked down. #e Nationals also can-celled a scheduled game against the Braves, opting to play a double header on Tuesday.

%,*$-#'(?<"C&%%/--&-$/#$*#,+-*,.&$"%

>:(F-(F:(/D,:&(1<:(>#;&Tech’s annual “White Out”

game has been announced to be next #ursday, Sept. 26. dur-ing the Virginia Tech football game.

#e “White Out” game is

a collaboration between the Georgia Tech Athletic Associa-tion (GTAA), Student Govern-ment Association (SGA) and Buzzfunds.

#e three organizations are also providing funding for the T-shirts with GTAA contribut-ing $5,000, SGA contributing $2,200 and Buzzfunds contrib-uting $2,000. Between 2,500 and 3,000 shirts will be printed and distributed on a "rst-come "rst-served basis at the main gates on gameday. #is year’s design is based on the 100th Anniversary of Grant Field T-shirt, which is already available at Barnes and Nobles.

-C?C(#**1<*C&-(C1*C&":#e Student Center Pro-

grams Council (SCPC) an-nounced last week that Dev and Turquoise Jeep will be perform-

ing at the Homecoming con-cert. #e Homecoming concert will be held on Tech Green on Halloween starting that night at 7 p.m. Entrance is free with a valid Buzzcard and each stu-dent is also allowed to bring one guest.

Members of SCPC will be around campus promoting the concert and giving away free-bies in a cardboard jeep in the weeks leading up to homecom-ing and the concert.

Dev is known for singles such as “Bass Down Low,” “In the Dark” and “Fly like a G6” among others. Turquoise Jeep was a YouTube sensation and is recognized in this year’s VH1’s Top 40 Greatest Viral Videos. Together, both Dev and Tur-quoise Jeep are known for their hit single and video, “Lemme Smang It.”

technique .(!"#$"%&"'()*+()*,-. 3// NEWS

WCA works to establish community connections)1-D<#(>#"",C+#,+-*,.&$"%

#e Westside Community Al-liance (WCA) is a communica-tions network developed in 2011 by Tech’s Ivan Allen College of the Liberal Arts (IAC), the Col-lege of Architecture (COA) and the O$ce of Government and Community Relations (GCR) with other partners throughout the community.

“Georgia Tech has such a repu-tation nationally and interna-tionally for problem solving, for engagement and for public works and service...so my question was: we do all of this stu! around the world; what do we do across the street?” said Dean Jacqueline Royster of the Ivan Allen College, who was the driving force behind the creation of this community organization.

In its two years of existence, the WCA has facilitated quarterly meetings, a listserv and a website to serve as a basis for an ongo-ing communication network for connections between Tech, other universities in the area, neighbor-hood associations, businesses, the City of Atlanta, Atlanta Fire Res-cue, Atlanta Public Schools, direct service organizations, non-pro"ts and other organizations.

As a response to Tech’s Stra-tegic Vision and Plan, the WCA encompasses what it means to establish strategic partnerships, especially with those in the im-mediate area of Tech. Working through various schools and de-partments, they have established the Westside GT Taskforce,

which is an internal network of Tech faculty who are teaching rel-evant courses, researchers, student organizations and campus volun-teers, doing engaged research or planning projects on the Westside of Atlanta.

Some of the neighborhoods that WCA works in are Bankhead, where the average unemployment for the 16 and older population is 31 percent, English Avenue, where vancant residential struc-tures make up 52 percent of those in the neighborhood, Washington Park, where 65 percent of average households have an income un-der $35,000 annually, and Vine City where there are about 3,232 food stamp recipients per square mile, according to Neighborhood Nexus.

“Often times people are work-ing within blocks of each other and don’t know each other or they’re working at the same site,” said Sheri Davis-Faulkner, Com-munity Liaison for the Westside Community Alliance. “#ey just come on a di!erent day and they work with a di!erent person, so they don’t know that there are ways that they could simply be working together on a lot of these projects.”

#e Westside GT Taskforce in-cludes programs like the Honors Program’s Semester-In-#e-City course which invites students to explore how urban neighborhoods and schools work and provide opportunities to work in those communities. It also includes the College of Architecture, Project Studio: Northside Drive Corridor,

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BANKHEAD ENGLISH AVENUE

GEORGIAINSTITUTE

OFTECHNOLOGY

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UNIVERSITY

ATLANTAUNIVERSITY

CONSORTIUM

KENNEDYMIDDLESCHOOL

*CLOSING*

BETHUNEELEMENTARY

SCHOOL

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SCHOOL

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HELPING COMMUNITIESACROSS THE STREET

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4 .(!"#$"%&"'()*+()*,-.(technique // NEWS

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Tech is home to two new start-up organizations that focus on student and faculty research as well as entrepreneurial opportuni-ties: GT Starter and the Startup Exchange.

Despite their somewhat similar names, the two organizations are independent of each other.

“[Start Up Exchange is] a movement that is trying to push forward the student entrepreneur community at Georgia Tech,” said Chintan Parikh, second-year CS major and Start Up Exchange leader.

“Georgia Tech Starter is the world’s "rst peer-reviewed, uni-versity-based crowdfunding plat-form for science and engineering projects,” said Allison Jo Mercer, a GTRI research scientist.

Unlike other companies and for-pro"t organizations, GT Starter incorporates a peer-review system, the "rst of its kind in the world. #is is in an e!ort to not only circumvent the process of

obtaining research grants, but to engage the students and faculty.

“We will launch [the site] Oct. 1. #e site is crowdfunding for sci-ence and research-based projects; in addition, project creators are trying to engage with people in-terested in science,” Mercer said.

After the site o$cially launch-es, the public will be able to go in and donate money to the projects of their choice.

#ose that gain the funding needed will then have the oppor-tunity to develop their projects while outsiders will be able to fol-low along with the project’s prog-ress.

“Once the project is success-fully funded, the project is then turned into a blog and can keep funders updated,” Mercer said.

GT Starter gives students a chance to be a part of the projects and learn "rst-hand the impor-tance of science.

Currently, GT Starter has sev-en projects that will begin their pledge for funding early next month, all covering di!erent top-ics. #ere are also a number of other projects in the draft stages.

One project is the Urban Hon-

ey Bee Project, where four to "ve students of di!erent majors run experiments studying the e!ects of living downtown on honeybees.

Another project is the micro-scopic scale, where undergradu-ates and researchers working as a part of the iGEM team are look-ing to create a “BioBot,” capable of being manipulated to perform speci"ed tasks.

Start Up Exchange is also pro-ducing new ideas for projects at Tech, but in a more entrepreneur-ial sense.

“[We want] to have people starting more startups, working at more startups. Really, they should know that startups are an option instead of working at a Fortune 500 company,” Parikh said.

Start Up exchange started in fall 2012 with “StartUp Semes-ter.” From the beginning, they had several successful projects.

“Last year’s startup semester cohort was awesome,” Parikh said. “We had graduating stu-dents go on to win the Georgia Tech Inventure Prize, Interview at YCombinator, which is the most prestigious incubator program in the world, present at Startup Riot and move to LA to take part in another incubator run by the founder of Activision.”

“We [also] created a platform for similar student orgs in other colleges to connect and bounce ideas o! each other, currently sit-ting at over 300 members from 30+ schools. It’s called #e Hack-er League,” Parikh said.

Another Start Up Exchange project was “3 Day Startup” which brought together 50 stu-dents from 8 di!erent schools in the Georgia area.

Despite their similarities, the two organizations, GT Starter and Start Up Exchange, have no plans to work together in the fu-ture.

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Games@GeorgiaTech is a new interdisciplinary initiative started this semester intended to draw to-gether video game researchers at Tech.

#e initiative’s being led by Dr. Celia Pearce, professor of Digital Media, and Dr. Mark Riedl, pro-fessor of Interactive Computing.

“#e overarching goal of the initiative is to become a central structure that hones the skills of talented individuals from across disciplines, and to promote and cultivate an interest in advancing game research,” Pearce said.

#e professors had many moti-vations for starting new initiative.

“One of the external goals of the new website and of the show-case, is to raise awareness in the outside world of games research being conducted here, so that when people think of games they think of Tech,” Riedl said.

Speakers from other schools and disciplines will be hosted at a series of events held this semester to help broaden the horizons of at-tendees.

#e video game research con-ducted at Tech spans several dis-ciplines. #ere are even literary scholars, sociologists and other educators looking into the themes implied by video game stories, changing demographic trends or new ways of engaging modern schoolchildren.

Computer science research is frequently conducted by co-opt-ing video games to study other topics, such as arti"cial intelli-gence. #ese interfaces provide an intuitive method for human subjects to provide input and to compare the arti"cial intelli-gence’s performance to that of a real person.

On Aug. 27, Games@Geor-giaTech held a showcase event in the Tech Square Research Build-ing to foster collaboration be-tween departments.

#e showcase event featured playable demos of several research projects, and was organized to co-incide with the annual occurrence of the Digital Games Research Association Conference. #e event provided an opportunity for academic and industry members of the video game community to meet and hold discussions.

Research advances made in digital games

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Initiatives bring ideas to life

technique .(!"#$"%&"'()*+()*,-. 5// NEWS

Recovery month raises awareness%,*$-#'(?<"C&%%/--&-$/#$*#,+-*,.&$"%

On #ursday, Sept. 12 the Counseling Center organized “Project Purple,” a campus-wide event meant to raise awareness of mental illness and addiction.

“Part of raising that awareness is realizing that these are issues that a!ect students and preven-tion works, treatment works and people do recover,” said Abby My-ers, a licensed psychologist at the Tech Counseling Center.

“Project Purple” was a cam-pus-wide all day event. #ere was a group photo by the Campa-nile. #e Counseling Center also handed out over 700 total purple ribbons and wristbands.

Several Tech departments and organizations were represented at “Project Purple,” including Coun-seling Center sta!, Tech faculty, GTPD and clubs such as Wreck-less and SHS Ambassadors.

“I think [Go Purple] is a great way to bring awareness that it is not a bad thing to get help if you need it and it is also a great way to get other students to support other students who do need that help,” said Jane Puntkattalee, third-year CHEM major.

“Go Purple” was one of the events of Recovery Month, which is a mental health celebra-tion throughout September. #e Counseling Center held other events, including campus-wide events, workshops, informational

meetings and speeches. “We had educational work-

shops every tuesday with topics like ‘I Love Someone Who Has an Addiction’ or ‘Mental Health 101’. So providing some hands-on information for students that they can apply both to themselves and people they care about,” Myers said.

Recovery Month’s largest event, “DUI: A Powerful Lesson by Mark Sterner” will take place on Sept. 24.

Recovery Month has been sup-ported by many members of the Tech community. Earlier, Presi-dent Peterson signed a proclama-tion o$cially making September “Recovery Month” at Tech.

“I think [Recovery Month] go-ing to make people know its okay to get help when you need it and

it is going to help make Tech a friendlier atmosphere,” said Alexis Brankel, a second-year HTS ma-jor.

#e Counseling Center hopes Project Purple and Recovery Month as a whole will encourage students to seek help.

“I don’t measure success in terms of numbers, so just that one student has come up to me makes me very happy,” Myers said.

#e most prevalent mental health problems at Tech are de-pression, stress, relationship prob-lems and drug and alcohol abuse.

“#e important piece is to know that depression, anxiety and stress are real illnesses. #ere is stress and then there is distress...#ere are real treatments and sup-port in place to help students feel better and heal,” Myers said.

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which involved graduate students developing four extensive propos-als to advance Northside Drive as a prominent transit corridor. A "nal example is the CEISMC Mentoring Program, in which all programs operate under similar goals to improve performance and pro"ciency by providing tutors and mentors with schools in the Atlanta area.

Along with many other initia-tives, these focus in on four areas that the WCA has targeted as key issue areas that many partners are actively engaged in. As Davis-

Faulkner explained, these include food and health, education and student engagement, water and the environment as well as devel-opment and transit. #is was a way that they were able to "ll in gaps and continue to do some-thing other umbrella organiza-tions like it weren’t necessarily a part of yet.

According to Rebecca Keane, the Director of Communications in the O$ce of the Dean of IAC, these projects were not generated in response to problems but were underway already and became af-"liated with the Westside Initia-tive to be sustainable.

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Each week, this section of News will include the coverage of different aspects of bills that

passed through Student Government This will include the Undergraduate House of Representatives, Graduate Student Senate and the Executive Branch of both government bodies.

technique!

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If you can’t get rid of the skeleton in your closet, you’d best teach it to dance. — George Bernard Shaw

!"#$#!$%&'(#)!*+ Arvind Narayan

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PARENT WEEKEND BY CASEY TISDEL

Opinions

Write to us: [email protected] something to say? !en let

your voice be heard with the Tech-nique. Sliver at Nique.net, tweet us @the_nique or check us out on Face-book at facebook.com/thenique. We want to hear your opinion and want to make it known to all of campus.

We also welcome your letters in response to Technique content as well as topics relevant to campus. We will print letters on a timely and space-available basis.

Each week we look for letters that

are responses to or commentaries on content found within the pages of the Technique. Along with these letters, we are open to receiving letters that focus on relevant issues that currently a"ect Georgia Tech as a university, in-cluding its campus and student body.

When submitting letters we ask that you include your full name, year (1st, 2nd, etc.) and major. We ask that letters be thought provoking, well written and in good taste. We reserve the right to both reject or edit letters for length and style.

For questions, comments or con-cern, contact the Opinions Editor at [email protected].

Why the world needs Superman

“Superman has become a cultural icon recognized

internationally as a paradigm of lawful good morality.”

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Two young Jewish men were tired of hearing stories. Stories of death. Stories of pain, of misery, of terror, of tyranny, of inhuman-ity. Villains were not concepts but creatures of #esh and blood stand-ing behind podiums like pulpits, preaching the good word of hate. !e worst of men cradled the Earth in their hands and called it their own.

Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster were tired of hearing stories, so they decided to tell one. One last time, they morphed a concept they had been evolving for years. Superman met the world April 18, 1938.

Over the last seventy-odd years Superman has su"ered a myriad of alterations to costume, powers, cast, even origins. His essence re-mains the same.

Writer Grant Morrison penned one of the best Superman stories, All-Star Superman. In an interview on the inspiration for the series, he dismisses superhero deconstruction in a single state-ment. “Somewhere, in our dark-est night, we made up the story of a man who will never let us down and that seemed worth investigat-ing.”

Superman has become a cul-tural icon recognized internation-ally as a paradigm of lawful good morality. However, an argument can be made that Superman is mis-read; that he is, as a charac-ter, representative of the nature of humanity.

A native of another planet, Superman is a literal alien who must save humans because we are naturally an evil race unable to save ourselves. !us Lex Luthor is a metaphor of how the best and brightest human is in fact an ego-tistical maniac, whereas the best person on the planet is not actu-ally human at all.

!e argument is valid but cyn-ical, and it misses the point. Su-

perman’s lack of membership in the human race is merely a mat-ter of biology. Everything Super-man grows up to be is a result not of where he came from, but who raised him. !e Kents, Martha and Jonathan, are farmers who $nd themselves in a unique situa-tion as they discover a child of the stars. !ey wean little Clark Kent on values considered the pinnacle of humanity. Alien by nature, hu-man by nurture.

God walks the streets of Me-tropolis in the guise of a mild-mannered journalist from Small-ville, U.S.A. He passes citizens who have developed the habit of glancing up at the sky every now and then, attempting to glimpse a myth. Someone with great power who uses it for good. Someone who didn’t need to watch his par-ents gunned down in the street, who never indirectly caused the death of a loved one so he could learn that responsibility is shack-led to power. Someone who sim-ply wants to do the right thing, and will die defending complete strangers.

!is is why the world needs Superman.

We are a disbelieving race, one who normally only looks up to curse the rain. Hope is a four-letter word often uttered with sarcasm or derision. Superman is perhaps the only literary creation who acts as our paragon. Someone to look up to, someone to strive to model. Not because he is a boy scout, but because he embodies everything we could be.

He is someone who makes us tell stories. Stories of life. Stories of love, of hope, of kindness, of charity, of courage. Where heroes are not concepts but saviors who #y across the world, helping oth-ers because we as a species have a great capacity for good. Stories that make us stop and turn our faces to the sun.

OUR VIEWS | Consensus Opinion

Connecting students with serviceSuggestions for the Westside Communities Alliance!e Westside Communities Alliance

(WCA), a communications network that connects volunteers with service projects in Atlanta, shows great promise. Started by two west-side neighborhoods and Tech’s Westside Task Force in 2011, the WCA of-fers students an option to get involved in ongoing, long-term projects that directly improve several aspects of life in west At-lanta. !ough the WCA has a wide range of projects, it still needs more funding to be sustainable and has yet to gain a foot-hold in the general Tech community. By improving its campus presence, the WCA could greatly develop as a program.

WCA helps organize the Semester-in-the-City courses, which o"er Tech honors students a chance to explore urban neigh-borhoods and the unique challenges in each locale. !ese programs, though re-warding, would be more e"ective if they were extended and publicized to a wider set of students. Involving more students in

the Semester-in-the-City program would give the participants #rst-hand experience with the issues in urban communities and directly increase membership with WCA.

Taking active measures to ensure a strong campus presence is also necessary. Se$ing up a showcase with community service projects or holding student work-shops would increase student awareness. Additionally, forming a group of student representatives would enable WCA to di-rectly communicate with Tech students. By pushing their name and creating a rep-utation on campus, WCA can accomplish many of its short-term and long-term goals.

Since one of their objectives is to match passionate students with service projects, WCA can further increase their campus presence by taking suggestions for com-munity project ideas. Not only would this gain student approval, but it would also improve the quality of the organization as a whole.

!e Consensus Opinion re"ects the majority opinion of the Editorial Board of the Technique, but not necessarily the opinions of individual editors.

technique !"#$%&#'()*%'&"Ian Bailie '(#)!*1#$12-#'.

Sam Somani 3/$/4#$4&'(#)!*Bri$any Miles ('%#4$&'(#)!*

Joshua Garrick $'5%&'(#)!*Newt Clark %"!*)%&'(#)!*Jillian Broaddus))6#.'&'(#)!*Ally Stone "-!)!4*/"-0&'(#)!*Ryan Ashcra% 5'7&('8'6!"'*

Arvind Narayan !"#$#!$%&'(#)!*Joe Murphy '$)'*)/#$3'$)&'(#)!*Lisa Xia 6/0!9)&'(#)!*Tanner Smith !9)*'/2-&'(#)!*

technique !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.! 7// OPINIONS

Sports Illustrated recently re-leased a !ve-part series on the Oklahoma State University football program. Part two of the series focused on the aca-demics of the football players. "e section be-gins by accusing former Oklaho-ma State coach, and current LSU coach, Les Miles of imply-ing to his players that football was more important than academ-ics. Of course, he denied these claims.

People generally believe that coaches of student-athletes should emphasize how much more important academics are than athletics.

For an average person, I would agree, but it isn’t really fair to criticize Miles for saying what he said to a group of people who all have a chance to one day play professionally.

Many kids grow up dreaming of becoming a professional ath-lete. According to the NCAA, however, only 0.08 percent of high school football players ever get drafted into the NFL, and only 1.7 percent of college foot-ball players get drafted.

"ese !gures show that even the chance of a college football player going pro is slim, which is why Miles is being criticized so much.

Isn’t his job to make them the best football players they can be? Miles is responsible for helping them to excel in foot-ball, not for making the other 98.3 percent the best accoun-tants they can be. "e players should be responsible enough to work hard in the classroom to make sure they can be success-

ful outside of football."ere aren’t many stats on

what the 98.3 percent go on to do, but like college graduates who didn’t play football, I’m

sure some of the football players who graduated are probably do-ing very well in whatever career they chose.

"e athletes who aren’t very successful are really the only reason coaches get criticized for

placing emphasis on athletics.If all athletes went on to do

well, then no one would care what Miles said. For those who aren’t doing well, I would never accept the excuse of, “My foot-ball coach just put too much emphasis on football.”

Again, that is the coach’s job, to help the players excel in foot-ball as much as possible. "ey aren’t hired to be academic ad-visors.

Not being a college athlete, it’s easy for me to put emphasis on academics because I will nev-er sign a million-dollar contract to throw a ball. It’s my respon-sibility to make sure I’m doing my best academically so that I can one day be successful in my career.

"is is what we should ex-pect from athletes as well. "ey should all realize themselves that they may not go pro, and that they should not only focus on becoming a great athlete, but also put work in the classroom.

It isn’t fair to blame a coach for putting too much emphasis on athletics. Instead we should look at it as the player’s respon-sibility to do their best in the classroom, just like we do any other student.

A few months ago, Linkin Park began a T-shirt design contest asking designers to cre-ate original artwork inspired by the new Castle of Glass single. I saw this design contest and was immediately excited. If I won, not only would I earn a $1,000 cash prize, I would also receive a signed copy of the t-shirt, which would then be sold both in the o#cial merchandise store and on tour. "e pre-teen groupie in me couldn’t help but fantasize about the potential recognition I would receive from my favorite rockstars. I immediately made a mental note to set aside some time to produce a kick-butt de-sign for the contest.

However, as life would have it, I never got around to making the design. While I lamented the fact that I had missed the chance of a lifetime to impress Linkin Park with my design prowess, someone somewhere was celebrating one fewer par-ticipant in a design contest.

"at someone is Anti-Spec."e Anti-Spec movement

took the design world by storm when it !rst came about, de-nouncing any design work com-

missioned without the guaran-teed promise of payment and opposing any design contest that featured only one winner. It’s like having multiple chefs each prepare a separate meal, and then only one meal being chosen while the rest of the chefs get turned away, according to the movement’s website.

Proponents of the Anti-Spec movement believe that designers have the right to be paid for the work they do and that specula-tive work takes advantage of the notion that amateur designers are desperate for any design job to help build their portfolios by o$ering lower-than-industry rates. Furthermore, they believe that design contests perpetuate

the idea that anyone can be a designer given proper software, thus lessening the market value of professional designers.

However, while it is easy to see how spec work can seem de-grading and demeaning to de-signers, I think there is actually some value to be found in it.

First of all, participants know that they may not get paid for their work exists when they choose to participate. If they are willing to put in time when knowing the potential consequences, who’s to say they shouldn’t? Ultimately, by par-ticipating in spec work, the de-signer is still practicing and im-proving his or her craft.

Secondly, Anti-Spec disap-

proves of any design contest. However, as with the case of the Linkin Park design contest, the intent of the contest is not to exploit designers. Instead, these contests give people the opportunity to be involved with brands, companies, celebrities, etc., that they are fans of.

Moreover, design contests in-volving issues such as healthcare and the environment can bene!t from several of ideas from di$er-ent designers. "ese design con-tests can motivate many poten-tial solutions as well as inspire new and innovative ideas.

While I agree that the nature of the Anti-Spec movement is heroic and well-intended, Anti-Spec fails to acknowledge the fact that some speculative work is for the public good. "e Anti-Spec movement would be more e$ective if they were to instead focus on informing amateur de-signers about the intricacies of spec work, how to not get taken advantage of and lastly, on send-ing the message to designers, both amateur and professional, to always respect and value themselves and the work they put out.

Anti-Spec must reconsider goals“...Anti-spec fails to

acknowledge the fact that some speculative work is for

the public good.”

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“!ey have to be interesting to me and do things other

than just meet.”

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“I would like the club to be career or passion related.”

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“I look at how the club can help me in the future.”

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“It has to be something that I’m interested in or some-thing that I have time for.”

How do you choose which organizations to

join?

Athletes’ academics are their responsibility

“It isn’t fair to blame a coach for putting too

much emphasis on athletics.”

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As a waitress, I get paid $2.13 an hour. I rely on the rest of my earnings from the “hospital-ity” of customers, which var-ies greatly. "ose nights when I walk out with over $100 in tips make up for the nights when I barely break $20. On an average night, I am not surprised to see some custom-ers draw a per-fect circle with a diagonal line slashed through it on the gratuity line.

On the other hand, that lost tip can be made up for a table that leaves a generous tip over the suggested 20 percent. Don’t get me wrong. I love being a waitress, mainly because of the human interaction. I essentially get to have a meal with complete strangers in which I bring them their food, make small talk and, on the rare occasion, build a friendship with regulars.

But where did this idea of “tipping” come from? "e practice began in 17th century England taverns when drinkers would sneak money to the wait-er in order “to insure prompti-tude” or “tip” for short. Tipping originated in America in the late 1800s after wealthy citizens no-ticed the practice when traveling in Europe.

In North America, and espe-cially the U.S., tipping is essen-tially mandatory. "is is because tips account for nearly 100 per-cent of a server’s take-home pay. However, in most other coun-tries, a service charge is included in the bill. In these countries, servers are given a higher wage with this mandated “service fee,” but in America, tipping has evolved to the notion that cus-

tomers choose what their server earns based on the quality of service given.

"e restaurant I waitress at is in a location that brings in

college students who sometimes claim to be “the poor college kid.” Don’t even get me started on “I’m foreign.”

Since becom-ing a waitress, I do not see any validity in either of these apolo-gies. I am also

a “poor college student” on a budget working as a waitress in my free time. If you plan on go-ing out, plan on leaving a tip or don’t go out at all.

As for point two, when living in or visiting another country, you should be acquainted with foreign customs.

Tipping is a weird custom that is now ingrained in Ameri-can society. It seems to create a hierarchical system between customer and server. I do en-joy being a waitress and would much rather be in the food in-dustry serving people food than folding clothes all day at a steady wage. Knowing that my nightly earnings depend on tips moti-vates me so much more to be at-tentive and charismatic with my customers ensuring that they had the best experience they could during their dinner. "ere is some legitimacy to requiring servers to earn a higher wage. Maybe American restaurants should adopt the European way of including a service charge. Perhaps the restaurants should take more responsibility for the earnings of their wait sta$. "ere would be less confusion from customers and disgruntled servers.

!e tipping point in being a waitress

“Tipping is a weird custom that is now

ingrained in American society.”

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8 !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.!"technique // OPINIONS

Last week, the Technique ran an op-ed titled “Several perspec-tives needed on sexism in video games,” focusing on Anita Sar-keesian’s work combating sexism in video games, and the reaction to that work. Let me be clear, as last week’s op-ed was not: Sar-keesian received death threats for her work.

I would to address two major issues from Kitamura’s op-ed: First, why the video game indus-try is indeed sexist (he says there is no “clear evidence of deliberate sexism”), and second, why his take on Sarkeesian’s work is misguided at best and dangerous at worst.

Sexism in video games takes on two forms: objecti!cation of women and violence against women. I will focus on the !rst. Kitamura mentioned Sarkeesian’s objection to women forever be-ing objects of rescue; that is one facet. If women make up nearly half of the gaming population, why is it so di"cult for us to !nd storylines that do not assume we are helpless? Furthermore, women in video games are almost always drawn and dressed to highlight their sexuality, whereas men are dressed practically in armor or other mission-related gear. While

I would like to believe that all readers would immediately under-stand why this is sexist, I will ex-plain in case it is not already clear.

First of all, it is a clear inequal-ity between male and female characters. Second, it highlights female characters’ sexuality, not their skills. #ird, it is entirely for the bene!t of male gamers. As I al-ready mentioned, women are not a minority but make up almost half of the gaming population, accord-ing to the Entertainment Soft-ware Association. Scantily dressed female characters are therefore clearly not designed for the vast majority of gamers.

According to Kitamura, Sar-keesian is “known for the wrong reasons” and that all she has achieved is a “devious clash” in the gaming community. Most perniciously, Kitamura equates the “hurt” gamers feel at having their games called sexist with the “hurt” women feel when they are the targets of sexism.

Kitamura goes back and forth about how much he agrees with Sarkeesian, but he does acknowl-edge the most important aspect of the debate: Her work is widely ac-cepted as academically sound.

Clearly, her work is not de-

signed to be o$ensive or in%am-matory, but academic. Further, Kitamura argues that she fails to take other issues into account—things such as !nance constraints. I really cannot think of how giving a female character more clothes or more realistic proportions would cost money.

As to Kitamura’s argument that Sarkeesian failed to take other perspectives into account, I would like to know whose he has in mind. If Kitamura is refer-ring to male gamers—as he does later—he ought to realize that not all perspectives are as valuable as others. A woman’s perspective on sexism is more valuable than a man’s, because in the vast ma-jority of cases, sexism is directed at women. Sexism marginalizes and dehumanizes women, and that carries far more weight than a man’s desire to see more skin while he plays video games.

Finally, Kitamura says “it’s possible that they [the gamers] felt just as hurt from the way Sarkees-ian criticized their favorite games as Sarkeesian did from the sex-ism in those video games. So we shouldn’t be shocked….”

#is is dangerous reasoning. If Sarkeesian did indeed feel per-sonally hurt by sexism, that hurt would be far more justi!ed and important than any hurt a gamer might feel at his favorite game be-ing insulted. Furthermore, it is extremely disappointing that “we shouldn’t be shocked” at the reac-tion (death threats) to Sarkeesian’s work.

We should be very shocked, and we should be outraged. A woman’s work to combat sexism should never be met with violence.

All perspectives are not created equal

“A woman’s work to combat sexism should never be met

with violence.”

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OUR VIEWS | HOT OR NOT

Music Midtown#is weekend, Atlanta’s

music festival is back. Con-tinuing to improve since its re-turn from hiatus Music Mid-town starts on Friday, Sept. 20, and goes through Satur-day, Sept. 21. Acts include the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Journey, Imagine Dragons, 2 Chainz, Kendrick Lamar and Arctic Monkeys. Whether it’s rock, rap or even music’s weird cousin dubstep, Music Mid-town has it.

HOT– or –NOT

Stinky SkilesIt’s 9:00 a.m. in the morn-

ing, and students are trudging through Skiles to get to class or, more probably, escape from the zombie horde. Alas, they are not greeted by the warm embrace of an education and the safety of classrooms. In-stead, students and faculty are assaulted by what can only be described as the stench of death. Skiles does vary its smells every few weeks, but none of them are good.

Golf VictoriesTech’s men’s golf team,

which is currently ranked fourth in the U.S., contin-ued its streak of wins with a 20-stroke victory at the Tar Heel Intercollegiate tourna-ment. #is margin of vic-tory was the !fth largest in Tech history, and player Bo Andrews scored a team-best, 4-under-par. #is victory was right after last weekend’s win against UGA, which cemented Tech’s strong reputation.

WebAssign Problems#e only thing worse than

having a 50-question physics homework is having a 50-ques-tion physics homework that goes down more than Cris-tiano Ronaldo at the World Cup. #e frequent problems with the homework website WebAssign have motivated several physics professors to begin pushing back homework deadlines or even to consider alternative methods of assign-ing practice problems.

WE ARE THE INNOVATORS.

Four Lessons from EdisonSarah Miller CaldicottCEOPower Patterns of Innovation

WEDSEP 25430 CoB

IMPACT SPEAKER SERIESILE.GATECH.EDU

[email protected]

technique!

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The fall semester is finally upon us, but just be-cause class is back in session doesn’t mean

students can’t take advantage of everything campus has to o!er. This week, Life highlights a variety of events occurring at Tech: past, present and future.

Life !"#$%$&"'()* Jillian Broaddus+,,",'+-'%!"#$%$&"'()*Anu Sekar

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Sydney Halinski, a fourth-year STAC major specializing in Media, knows how awkward a Skype job interview has the po-tential to be.

“Last spring, I had a Skype interview with ESPN. My !rst piece of advice? You shouldn’t have a picture of yourself and a hamster as your Skype pro!le picture,” Sydney began.

Halinski remembers more about her Skype job interview, in which the computer glitches caused more calamities to take place.

“"ere were tons of awkward pauses where they wouldn’t say anything and of course I couldn’t see them because my screen froze,” Halinski said. “"e en-tire time all they were doing was staring at a picture of me and my hamster because, let’s be realis-tic, who Skypes anymore?”

Needless to say, the forty-minute interview was not her best.

“I have no idea how I didn’t get the job. I clearly deserved it after this performance,” Halin-ski said.

However, Halinski’s experi-ence is one of the hundreds of

millions in the pool of digital job application processes. "rough Skype, online chat and email, employers are now consistently reaching out to potential appli-cants through any- and every-thing but face-to-face contact.

Tech has maintained its po-sition in this realm by hosting its “Virtual Career Fair” once again this fall, in addition to the standard meet-and-greet job fair hosted last week in the Campus Recreation Center.

Fourth-year BA major Juli-enne McKee discussed her expe-rience at the standard 2013 fair last week, which had its posi-tives.

“I do believe I gained some-thing out of the fall fair,” McKee said. “I had a great conversation with the recruiter and it was good preparation for interview-ing as well as coming out of my introverted shell.”

While these skills and the experience prove to be invalu-able, it is not shocking to learn some students felt as though they came up short. A common objective entering the fall Career Fair is to leave with an interview request, or even better, a position o#ering.

However, for the great major-

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Although many students know Tech’s motto in order to win a trivia game or to recite it as a tour guide, “Progress and Service” is integral to the overall atmosphere of the institute.

Whether this pertains to in-dividual feats of volunteerism or some incredible funding by the philanthropic endeavors of various organizations on campus, numerous avenues are available for students to engage with the outside community and give a bit back to the less fortunate around us.

“It’s easy to forget about the intense need for service just out-side the con!nes of the ‘Tech Bubble,’” said Bonnie Gaupp, a third-year INTA major. “Atlanta, as with any major city, has a high rate of homelessness and poverty, which we can sometimes ignore when we only look at the popula-tion of our own campus.”

One e#ort from Tech to bet-ter its own campus, bene!t vari-ous organizations in Atlanta and integrate the entire student body is occurring in a little over one month courtesy of TEAM Buzz.

Malavika Mundkur, a third-year BMED major participated in last year’s Team Buzz event and volunteered at FurKids, Georgia’s largest no-kill animal shelter.

"e chilly October morning began with a Dunkin’ Donuts-sponsored breakfast at the cam-panile, brief group introductions and a round of carpools to the

nearby shelter. After doing a bit of clerical

work, operating the front desk, washing windows and sweeping the foyer, the rest of the allotted time was devoted to giving some tender love and care to the home-less kittens and puppies.

Other students in the group helped restock the kennels, clean up the messes and take out the animals for “play breaks.”

“Team Buzz was the perfect way to earn philanthropy hours with friends and give back to the community with a project that !t my passions,” Malavika said.

In general, TEAM Buzz has been able to coordinate a variety of one-day service projects for many years through various cor-porate sponsorships.

Past projects have included participating in charity races

throughout the city, cleaning up abandoned buildings to prepare for future endeavors and convert-ing a parking garage into a home-less shelter.

Many nearby churches, schools and food kitchens also typically reach out to the Tech community to aid in managerial and physical labor matters that keep their operations running

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On Sept. 20, 1848, the Ameri-can Association for the Advance-ment of Science (AAAS) was formed. "e AAAS is the oldest and largest general science society, and still thrives today through the publication of “Science Maga-zine.”

"e early AAAS meetings were held annually in a di#erent major American city in order to unify the dispersed scienti!c commu-nity. "e newspapers heavily cov-ered the proceedings, reporting on the prestigious scientists of the day. "ese early meetings were es-sential in the promotion of science and policy, and one of their meet-ings was even especially devoted to microscopy.

In 1925, member James McK-een Cattell exempli!ed the im-portance of the society’s goals by declaring their unique mission statement: “"e advancement of science should be the chief con-cern of a nation that would con-serve and increase the welfare of its people.”

Both "omas Edison and Al-exander Graham Bell invested heavily in Science Magazine before it was acquired by the AAAS. It soon found success in dispersing ground-breaking scienti!c re-search and news and is still known to be one of the most widely circu-lated scienti!c academic journals, with an estimated one million readers.

Today, the Association is high-ly active in recognizing signi!cant scienti!c achievement. In fact, this past year, seven Tech faculty members were honored as AAAS Fellows.

"ese Tech faculty included Julia Kubanek and Eberhard O. Voit in the Section on Biological Sciences; Shuming Nie, Arthur K. Ragauskas and Mohan Srini-visarao in the Section on Chem-istry; Andrés José García in the Section on Engineering and Paul M. Goldbart in the Section on Physics.

With the majority of Tech fac-ulty members heavily involved in research initiatives and innovative proposals, more are sure to be rec-ognized in the coming years.

Ultimately, the initial creation of the American Association for the Advancement of Science on this day in Tech history has had a signi!cant impact on science, our nation and our school.

Today inTech

History

TEAM Buzz pushes community focus

Career fair buzz lives on in virtual fair

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10 !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.!"technique // LIFE

Join SAA and attend the program:

Get Ready For the Real World EventTuesday, September 24, 2013 7:00 A.M.

Join us as Walt Ehmer, CEO of Waffle House, discusses the behaviors that make employees promotable.

Visit www.gtsaa.com for more information.

FALL COMMENCEMENT FAIR Wednesday, September 25, Noon – 4 p.m. & Thursday, September 26, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. STUDENT CENTER BALLROOM

DON’T FORGET!

!"Check on degree status

!"RSVP for Commencement

!"Purchase cap and gown,

class ring, and announcements

!"Register for giveaways and

raffle items

!"Film my Commencement Clip

!"Join the Alumni Association

!" "Get picture taken with

friends and BUZZ

www.commencement.gatech.edu

participant. !is year marked Tech’s tenth

anniversary as a participating member.

Beginning at noon on Wednes-day, Sept. 11, students, faculty and sta" members from all over campus convened around the campanile to honor and remem-ber victims, their families and those a"ected by the event.

A mixture of solemn moments, deep silences and expressions of patriotism equally blended to bring tears to the eyes of numer-ous students within the audience throughout the various speeches and singers.

!e event began with a per-formance of the national anthem by a third-year Tech student and Miss Cobb County winner, Mag-gie Bridges.

!e crowd rose to their feet and sang along, creating an atmo-sphere of patriotism that remained strong throughout the event.

Second-year BA major Ashley Wiser followed the opening song with a brief speech regarding the status of the One World Trade Center grand opening in New York.

!e memorial was described as a “beacon of freedom” and is set to open on Ground Zero, with an observational tower also opening later. After much debate over what

to do on the land of Ground Zero, this long-awaited dedication is set to open in the spring of 2014.

Following the excerpt was the event’s keynote speaker, Colonel David Dodd, a veteran of the U.S. Army.

Col. Dodd urged the crowd to “reunite as Americans [and] reex-amine our responsibility and duty to remember the fallen and sup-port the survivors.”

Dodd’s speech focused on liv-ing a life worthy of the sacri#ces the fallen made for the remaining, drawing many parallels between the event and his Christian faith, drawing directly from Bible.

After this theme, Dodd quot-ed John 15:13 within his speech,

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stating, “Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.”

Regardless of religion, all members in the audience could understand what Dodd was tell-ing them; nearly 3,000 men and women gave their lives on that fateful Tuesday so that the rest of the nation could continue on with theirs.

Col. Dodd ended his speech on a powerful note with a challenge for all listeners, asking everyone to go on and “bloom wherever [they] are planted... and live a life worthy of sacri#ces.”

As those standing in the audi-ence re$ected on Dodd’s ending words, Bridges returned to the podium in order to sing a chilling rendition of “God Bless America” as the sun shone across Skiles Walkway and highlighted the beautiful rows of American $ags in the nearby grass.

A few parting words were then said as the event came to an end. Audience members made their way to the bottom of the Campa-nile steps to take “Never Forget” pins and dog tags back with them as daily reminders. !ere was also an opportunity to sign up to spon-sor a soldier currently deployed on active duty.

!e entire project, which was endorsed in large part by the Of-#ce of Student and Diversity Af-fairs, along with the Tech College Republicans group, was the only Sept. 11 memorial event held within the entirety of Midtown.

Although the majority of the population in attendance was comprised of Tech students, the event was actually opened to any

and all that wished to attend. !ough it would seem easy to

forget about the tragedy since so many years have passed and so many students were very young at the time of the attacks, students across campus nevertheless under-stood the importance of taking a moment from their busy weekday to honor, remember and truly re-$ect.

First-year BMED major Clare Botti elaborated on her feelings regarding the memorial, although she would have only been in the #rst grade at the time of the at-tacks.

“It’s our duty as Americans to remember those who have fallen and it’s important to remember those whose lives were changed because someone they knew or loved lost their life defending our country,” Botti said.

!is year’s event coordinator was second-year ME major Ra-chel Witt, who is involved with the Tech College Republicans organization and is particularly passionate about remembering the important moment in our coun-try’s history.

“It’s sad that people seem to be-come more apathetic as the years pass without realizing many fami-lies are still mourning,” Witt re-marked. “Even though many of us were very young during the events, we grew up in the aftermath. We are the 9/11 generation.”

After running strong for 10 years, Tech will likely continue their tradition of memorializing those lost, celebrating our na-tionalism and remembering the signi#cance of 9/11 within our country’s history.

technique !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.! 11// LIFE

DIAVOLOFriday, Sept. 20 8 p.m.

Diavolo takes dance, daring and athletics to the extreme. The dynamic company returns with Fluid Infinities, and with Transit Space, a kinetic new piece inspired by the thrilling movement of skateboarding that uses ramps and half-pipes as set pieces.

Student Tickets $10

404-894-9600

Sponsored by

ferstcenter.gatech.edu

Student Spotlight: Alex Bandes !"#$%%!"#$%&'()%*

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!e "rst round of exams are-for the most part over, applica-tions for clubs are under way and the freshmen are "nally learning their way from the CULC to North Avenue Dining Hall.

As students get a handle on the bustling semester, it seems to be the perfect time to start looking into getting involved.

!e Technique sat down with Junior Class President, Alex Bandes, to discuss his acclimation to Tech and advice for gaining leadership roles on campus.

Technique: First o#, let’s start by you telling us a little bit about yourself.

Bandes: I’m a building con-struction major from Tampa, Fla. I came to Tech knowing absolute-ly no one, eager to branch out and make new friends. I am an active member in the Student Govern-ment Association and a brother in the Sigma Chi Fraternity. I like to discuss current events, read, and cook low-carb meals… when I can "nd the time.

Technique: As part of the leg-islative branch of the student gov-ernment, which funding initia-tives are you most proud of?

Bandes: We are working to design a set of clear-cut steps through which clubs and orga-nizations can receive funding. Hopefully, this simpli"cation will create a more cohesive relationship between SGA and the students we represent

Technique: What’s the area in which SGA could use the most improvement?

Bandes: De"nitely getting campus excited about our initia-

tives and about our organization as a whole. SGA is an organization for the students by the students. !e more passionate people we can get involved, the more we can positively impact campus life.

Technique: What motivated you to get involved with SGA as a freshman?

Bandes: Knowing just a hand-ful of people, running for SGA representative was a great way for me to make new friends and culti-vate a secret love for politics.

Technique: At a few points throughout your SGA career your face was posted throughout cam-pus for campaigns. Did people recognize you?

Bandes: It doesn’t happen as much as you’d think, but meeting new people is always fun! I hope I get stopped more often around campus!

Technique: If you could be fa-mous for anything, what would it be?

Bandes: De"nitely going against the status quo. I’m an en-trepreneur at heart.

Technique: As an entrepre-

neur, what kinds of projects, if any, have you worked on during your time at Tech?

Bandes: I am currently work-ing on a new social media website, froplife.com which allows users to share Greek events with their college. Check it out.

Technique: Where do you see yourself in 10 years?

Bandes: I am not entirely sure what form my career will take, but

I hope to be in a position where I can combine my entrepreneurial spirit with my passion for educa-tion to revolutionize the way we learn.

Technique: If you could give freshmen one piece of advice what would it be?

Bandes: Do not be afraid to fail.

Technique: What do you like most about being a student at Tech?

Bandes: Aside from Buzz bust-ing into my classroom to interrupt my tenured college professors, I love my peers. !e vast range of interests, people and ideas inspires me to grow and expand my per-spective.

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smoothly.As the Team Buzz website

states, “!e concept is simple; pro-vide a service day that will act as a focal point and allow our campus to come together with a single plan and strategy to improve our community.”

“Georgia Tech’s motto is ‘Progress and Service. Initiatives such as TEAM Buzz summon the very best in us, a commitment that makes a positive impact in our community,” said Institute President G.P. “Bud” Peterson. “My hope is that the [Tech] fam-ily will consider volunteerism through TEAM Buzz and Hands on Atlanta, improving the quality of life throughout Atlanta.”

!ousands of students have participated in past years, and the TEAM Buzz planning committee is hoping for a worthwhile turn-out this year as well.

One prominent way that the organization attracts students is via mandatory service hours, whether it be for a GT1000 course, fraternal organization or even a personal goal.

Plus, the day-long service op-portunity allows students to eas-ily accomplish four solid philan-thropy hours in a fun, social and interesting way.

By incorporating a wide vari-ety of philanthropy organizations into the available projects, TEAM Buzz allows students to pick and choose which types of service activities would be best for their abilities and interests.

“I don’t have enough time to volunteer at humane societies throughout the school year, but I wanted to try to give back, if only for a single day,” Malavika contin-ued.

!is year, Team Buzz will oc-cur on Saturday, Oct. 26, begin-ning at 8 a.m.

!e day typically consists of a welcoming breakfast with free t-shirts, brief speeches and break-out sessions as students join a par-ticular project to embark upon.

!ese community service proj-ects generally last for approxi-mately four hours, before students return to the Campanile for food, fun and relaxation, in addition to the satisfactory feeling of a bit of good karma.

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12 !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.!"technique // LIFE

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ity of students unable to achieve this, the Virtual Career Fair o!ers another chance.

"e 2013 Virtual Career Fair will be held on Tuesday, Sept. 24 and Wednesday, Sept. 25. Similar to the fall Career Fair, the Virtual Career Fair is open to all types of majors and degree levels for stu-dents.

A virtual career fair takes place online, where employers and those looking for jobs meet in a virtual environment.

Typically, these meetings oc-cur through chat rooms, but other means of communication exist, including webcasts, teleconfer-ences and email. Employers may have speci#c chat hours, while others may just use the fair as a method to collect resumes.

Ultimately, students seem to have varying opinions on the con-cept.

For some, the Virtual Career Fair stands to be more favorable as far as the meeting between you and the recruiter, in comparison to the regular fall Career Fair.

“I think a lot of college-aged students in today’s world are more comfortable with technological interaction than real-life com-munication,” explained Becca Ra!aele, a second-year IE major currently co-oping with Georgia Power.

In a chat room, the meeting with an employer is direct and to the point. "ere is an immediate exchange of information that the company needs from the candi-date and the information the can-

didate needs from the company. Plus, it is perfectly acceptable

to wear non-business casual attire and comfortably relax in the pri-vacy of one’s own space.

“At a regular in-person career fair, the competition and commo-tion of the other employers and the excessive amount of students can be stressful and distracting,” said Ellen Skelton, a third-year BA major.

In these situations, it is not un-usual for the exchange to simply turn into the exchange of a re-sume for a free water bottle, bottle opener or other form of free com-pany swag.

Yet, pitfalls other than the aforementioned also exist, one possible hindrance in a chat room being the inability to truly project the entirety of one’s personality to potential employers.

Plus, recruiters will be extra at-tentive to everything o!ered with-in the con#nes of a video call, es-pecially items in the background that could potentially raise the interviewer’s eyes. Body gestures, eye-contact and eloquence are all the company has to judge beside a pro#le picture.

It isn’t the #rst time Tech has hosted the new job search con-cept, and it surely doesn’t appear as if it will be the last.

At the very least, however, even to those who have di!ering opinions about the virtual career fair, the additional experience and face-time interviewing cannot be neglected.

More information on the gen-eral schedule of employer hours is available at gatech.careereco.net.

FirstGen seeks to assist first gen students!"#$%&#'()$*

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Transitioning to college can be a tricky point in any student’s life—adjusting to social norms, academic rigor and even family pressures to strive for excellence can make certain parts of fresh-man year stressful.

"ese pressures can be height-ened for students who are the very #rst in their family to attend col-lege, known as “#rst generation” students.

"ere is a large need for pro-viding support to these students, many of whom are very quali#ed for study in highly-ranked col-leges despite family backgrounds.

Tech provides ample resourc-es to help any student who has earned admission into this school receive the best support system they can, for a satisfying and well-rounded college experience.

"is starts from day one. Tech’s mission of “progress and service,” and the growing number of #rst generation students that are ad-mitted here, shows that there is a strong need for creating a concrete organization of students, mentors and professors to cater to them.

Cecili Redi is the founder of FirstGen, an on-campus, student-run organization founded in Oc-tober 2012, that provides a sense of community and fosters pride among the #rst generation stu-dents at Tech.

"e organization provides mentoring programs, information

sessions, shadow days and com-munity service opportunities and gives incoming students a path to get more involved on campus and to obtain information that they need in order to be successful.

“"ere were a lot of things that I wish I was told or informed about that other students who may have had support and re-sources from parents or siblings that have already made the suc-cessful transition to and through college,” Redi said.

“For instance, I remember learning that a considerable amount of money from Tech was transferred into my account by direct deposit,” Redi said. “I was ecstatic, naturally, but also very uncertain of where the money came from.”

It was this and many other experiences that led Redi to cre-ate the small community of #rst generation students, both those who fall in that category and even those who do not identify them-selves as such.

“I wanted there to be a dia-logue about how we can make the process of getting into college easier, the likelihood of staying in college higher and the celebration of achieving such accomplish-ments clearer,” Redi said.

FirstGen’s shadow days are one of the #rst impressions prospec-tive #rst generation students have of Tech. It allows high school stu-dents to meet current students, follow them for a few hours, have lunch and participate in other

programs. Another one-on-one initiative

of the organization is FirstAid, which is a peer mentoring pro-gram that serves as the primary initiative in their freshmen out-reach.

“"is program’s goal is to not stress academic workshops or anything similar, but to ensure that students know the underly-ing work to college, the things the tour guides can’t disclose,” said Michele Washington, the director of Freshmen Involvement.

"e other main facet of First-Gen that was implemented this semester is its cohort GT1000 class for freshmen, which provides an alternative and much more per-sonal approach to the course in an environment with peers who share the same background.

“Building trust and a commu-nity feel in the class is really key,” said Dana Hartley, one of the in-structors of the class. “I know that the TLs’ presence and their stories are what really give the class con-text and the #rst generation fresh-men a sense of community in the class.”

According to Hartley, seven percent of the freshman class this fall identi#ed themselves as #rst-generation students, which amounts to about 200 students total.

FirstGen has received wide praise from organizations across campus and hopes to grow in the upcoming years to accommodate more #rst gen students.

[email protected]

!"#!$#%&"'!"#(!)&#*$+ Joe Murphy%,,&,#%"#(!"#!$#%&"'!"#(!)&#*$+Keith FradyEntertainment

technique!"#$%&'()*

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Fi!h GTA game exceeds expectations of story and scope!"#$%

Grand Theft Auto VCONSOLE: PS3, Xbox 360GENRE: SandboxDEVELOPER: Rockstar NorthRATING: MRELEASED: Sept. 17

OUR TAKE: !!!!!

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It has been 12 years since Rockstar’s Grand !eft Auto III took the entire gaming industry by storm and pushed the series to mainstream media. It was the !rst game ever to present players with a virtual recreation of a metro-politan city and allow them to do whatever they please in the given playground—even !ring guns on streets and driving on the wrong side of the road. Later, to many critics’ surprise, Rockstar success-fully re!ned its highest-grossing franchise with GTA San Andreas. After over a decade, history re-peated itself. Leaving GTA IV ’s return to Liberty City behind, GTA once again takes place on the West Coast, only this time the

playground is bigger and better than ever.

GTA V takes players to Los Santos, a city inspired by Los Angeles, and its surrounding sub-urbs, desert, mountains and un-derwater Paci!c coast. According to Rockstar, Los Santos is bigger than San Andreas, Red Dead Re-demption’s western frontier and GTA IV ’s Liberty City combined, making it perhaps the biggest map in video game history.

Geographic scope is not the only larger thing in GTA. "e game o#ers three protagonists for players to control: a retired bank robber Michael, a street thug Franklin and a psychopathic pilot Trevor. "ey are all criminals for di#erent reasons and motives, but their stories come together and in-terconnect as the game progresses. Each character is di#erent from the others, and this distinction applies to their amount of money, item inventory and abilities as well. Each man also has particular strengths, such as duration of run-ning, gun accuracy and driving skills; customizing these stats are completely up to the player. "ere are also character-speci!c special abilities, such as how Franklin can slow down time while driving whereas Trevor can enter the “rage

tos. Players can choose to indulge

in various mini-games, such as tennis, golf and skydiving or mindlessly drive around the city surrounded by beautiful scenery and well-crafted radio programs, which include more than 240 licensed songs. "e players com-pletely determine how to play the game. Of course, like all the pre-decessors, the game still lets the players to go berserk and rampage through the city with no rewards at the end. With all the side quests and activities, players can easily spend hundreds of hours in Los Santos.

As for the story of GTA V, al-though gamers can choose which protagonist to spend the most

mode.”"e !rst part of the game pri-

marily introduces the players to these new mechanics—a striking reminder of how much the series has evolved. Once the trio is es-tablished, the players can freely switch between characters and proceed with the game.

"ere are 69 single-player mis-sions, and players can expect to log around 30 to 40 hours com-pleting them. Rockstar has never forgotten what makes the series so great: the game does not necessar-ily focus on completing the main missions. Nothing in the game tells the players what needs to be done next, and the game o#ers so much for players to do outside of the main quest to enjoy Los San-

time with, the main narrative seems to center around Michael. Having retired from the life of crime, he meets Franklin and winds up getting his hands dirty once again. Next thing he knows, Michael !nds himself indebted to dangerous people who may be-come a threat to his family. "is debt leads him to reunite with his old friend Trevor, and the gang of three embarks on a series of un-conventional crimes in order to regain peace and get out of their respective ruts. Compared to GTA IV, players may !nd the narrative of GTA V weak. "ere is no un-derground, powerful ma!a boss to go up against or unforeseen twists

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For readers who love the palpable tension of watching scary movies, are huge fans of American Horror Story and complain to their friends on a regular basis that there are not enough suspense shows on television, the fresh new web series Horror Hotel may be the answer to all of those hopes and desires.

Created by Ricky Hess, this anthology series features hor-ri!c thriller tales inspired by !e Twilight Zone and Alfred Hitchcock.

Each episode of Horror Hotel has a completely novel story portrayed by di#erent characters. "e series was shot in Atlanta, and many talented young artists participated in its creation, including Tech stu-dents who worked on some of the episodes.

Debbie Hess, the execu-tive producer of Horror Hotel, spoke with the Technique about the making of this web series and gave some valuable advice.

What exactly does an ex-ecutive producer do, and what is the most challenging part of being an executive producer?

An executive producer typi-cally enables and backs up the making of a !lm project. "ey often handle copyrights, distri-bution and contributing !nan-

cially to the production. Produc-ers remain pretty much behind the scenes and handle primarily business aspects of production, while others become quite active in the entire !lmmaking process. "e later is the case for my role in the Horror Hotel web series. I share the producer role with my son, Ricky Hess, the creator of Horror Hotel and director of three of the episodes, and Al Hess, my husband and writer to-date of all our episodes. In addition, we had a co-producer on our pilot episode, “Houdini’s Hand,” Errol Sadler of Supremacy Films (Curveball the !lm).

I primarily handle securing the crew, casting, auditions, media and PR, location p e r m i s s i o n s , equipment r e n t a l , c o p y -r i g h t s , re lea se s and dis-t r i b u -tion. I have also f u n c -t i o n e d as script super-visor, costuming, scoring several of the episodes and craft services. We all wear a lot of hats on an independent !lm project.

By far the most chal-lenging part of being a producer is sched-uling the crew and seeing

that everyone can and does come to set on time and following up to that end. "ere are a number of key positions that have to be !lled, and people have to be commit-ted to do the project. Inevitably, circumstances arise where people have to drop out, and a replace-ment must be secured quickly to remain on schedule.

A producer must keep the proj-ect on schedule and make adjust-ments when necessary to keep moving forward. In addition, the producers must keep moving the project through post-production, which takes much longer than the actual shooting, and they must wrangle all the artists behind the scenes. After the project has !n-ished shooting, the

producer is still working. How long does it take to

make one episode of Horror Hotel, from writing the script to post production?

We have a set-time formula we use to shoot Horror Hotel that works for us. Minus the writing (which can take any amount of time really) it is pretty straightfor-ward. From the time we announce auditions (generally three weeks beforehand) till the last shoot day, it takes approximately seven weeks to complete each episode.

One weekend is for auditions themselves, the next weekend is for rehearsal and blocking and then we shoot for the next

t w o

weekends. Our episodes run anywhere from 12 to 20 minutes each, but we allow two full weekends to do each shoot. Generally speaking, one page of script amounts to one minute of footage. Dur-ing the three weeks we are scheduling auditions, we are in pre-production for the upcom-ing episode: building props, redecorating the set, securing costumes etc.

Since Horror Hotel is an anthology series, we have to recast for each new episode, which makes for more down-time than if we had a typical serial series. "e post-produc-tion work can vary widely de-pending upon the speed of the

artists working on it. We try to do a lot of the post-!""#BC6DE$#%&'"#(*

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14 !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.!"technique // ENTERTAINMENT

Under the Couch hosts psychedelic show for rock fans!"#$%&'())*##*(+!"#$%&'($&#)*+%&$,%

Located on the second !oor of the Student Center, Under "e Couch is a student-run music venue where members of the Tech community can go check out mu-sic from local bands around At-lanta, and even bands comprised of Tech students. "e venue hosts multiple concerts each month, many of which are free to students with a Buzzcard. "is past Sat-urday, Sept. 14 was punk/hard-core night, with bands Too Late, Deathbed, Malfunction and Take O#ense rocking out on center stage.

Too Late started the show with a bang. By stomping on the stage and throwing microphone stands, they got the crowd excited; this electric energy lasted through the entire concert. "e band did, how-ever, seem slightly inexperienced. "eir lead singer had a great stage presence, but some of the other band members showed signs of nervousness and were static on stage. "ankfully, as their set pro-gressed, Too Late became more comfortable with their audience and gave a great performance.

Next came Deathbed, whose dynamic performance demon-strated a much more con$dent stage presence. In accordance with the general theme of the night, the band’s music was extreme, with every song starting with feedback from the guitar. However, they stood out from the other bands

by having multiple instrumental breaks during their songs. Often, the singer would sing just a few bars then dance to the music with the crowd, e#ectively breaking the barrier between performance and audience.

After Deathbed’s time was up, Malfunction took the stage. Of all the bands, they had some of the most complicated songs. "e rhythm of some of their tracks even changed a couple of times in the middle of the performance, as if they were multiple songs com-bined into one. Although the lead

singer was not as powerful in his vocal range as the other acts, he excelled at engaging the crowd in between songs and keeping them amped up; at one point he even brought someone from the crowd on stage to sing along with him.

At long last the headliner of the night, Take O#ense, took the stage. Bringing in the biggest crowd of all four acts of the night, the band lived up to their headline status and raised the intensity to the roof. With crazy guitar solos and a double bass drum, they had the crowd on their feet and prac-

tically bringing down the house; this exuberant audience response resulted in the speakers almost falling over at one point. "e band also seemed to have the most rec-ognition amongst listeners, with the lead singer frequently pointing the microphone at the crowd for them to $ll in the lyrics. For those who could not make the show, both Take O#ense and Malfunc-tion can be found on iTunes and are currently on tour together.

Overall, it was a crazy concert. Each band gave it their all, leav-ing everything on the stage. "e

crowd did as well, forming mosh pits with people throwing $sts and jumping on each other while others stood in the back, head-banging to the music.

Complementing the intensity of the music was the atmosphere. "e venue was packed with people from wall-to-wall and right up against the stage. Multiple times people would jump up and run across the stage, $ring up the crowd and the bands. Everyone seemed to have a great time, leav-ing the concert exhausted and drenched in sweat.

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technique !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.! 15// ENTERTAINMENT

Arctic Monkeys explore new sounds with latest album

!e next track, “R U Mine?” carries the dark tones of “Do I Wanna Know?” while also hav-ing an aggressive guitar and drum presence that is reminiscent of the sounds of Favourite Worst Night-mare, the band’s second album, while still remaining distinct.

AM ’s fourth song, “Arabella,” is a completely unique song that sounds like nothing Arctic Mon-

keys has ever done before. !e song opens with the deliberate drums and vocals that created the dark tone of the album’s "rst two songs, but the chorus is oddly reminiscent of some classic rock songs, with bright, rapid power chords and slightly modulated voice that would make the track "t in a Guitar Hero game.

!e album’s ninth song,

“Why’d You Only Call Me When You’re High?” is perhaps the greatest example of how the album pursues a hip-hop sound, with a deliberate drum opening that is heavy on the bass, and background vocals that highlight Turner’s singing style and serve as a form of punctuation for the vo-cal lines. !e penultimate song on the album, “Knee Socks,” starts to wrap up the album with an odd combination of AM ’s dark un-dertones and serious lyrics with the well-known Arctic Monkeys guitar sounds and bright ri#s that have always done an excellent job of introducing verses and choruses in the past. !e album closes with “I Wanna Be Yours,” a song that uses a combination of vocals, bass, guitar and drums to make it abundantly obvious what the tone of the album is meant to be.

AM, as a whole, is less imme-diately catchy and likeable than previous Arctic Monkeys albums. !is does not mean that AM is a worse album than what they have released before; on the con-trary, it is perhaps the most ma-ture and developed piece of work that Arctic Monkeys has created. It displays the band’s develop-ment from the catchy garage-rock group they used to be into the world-renowned and unique phe-nomenon they are today. !ose looking for an album that is not bright in tone but is absolutely full of fantastic instrumentation and quality music should de"nitely give AM a listen. Arctic Monkeys will be in Atlanta playing at the Music Midtown Festival on Sept. 21 as part of their AM tour.

that is carried by a slow, modi"ed footstep and hand-clap that mir-rors the bass/hi-hat combination that is common in current pop songs. !e song as a whole has a dark and foreboding style that starkly contrasts the upbeat and quick sound of the band’s previ-ous hits, such as “Brianstorm” and “Fluorescent Adolescent,” and sets the tone for the entire album.

!"#$%&'($)*+*!"#$%&'($&#)*+%&$,%

English Indie band Arctic Monkeys have put out "ve albums since their "rst studio release in 2006, and with each new album their sound has changed signi"-cantly. !eir past three collections have been committed to carrying on the garage-rock style and quick and unique vocals that made their "rst release one of the bestselling albums at the time. Fortunately, the group’s hard work seems to have paid o# as the years have passed; each new album has been a perfect example of how a good band’s music should grow in in-tensity as their talents develop. In accordance with this ideology, AM, the band’s "fth compilation, is a di#erent vein of music than what Arctic Monkeys has made in the past.

AM is, according to Monkeys front man Alex Turner, meant to sound “less like four lads playing in a room” and more like a hip-hop record with an Arctic Mon-keys twist. !e album opens up with “Do I Wanna Know?” a song

!"#$%

AMArctic Monkeys

LABEL: DominoGENRE: Indie RockTRACK PICKS: “Do I Wanna Know?,” “Arabella” and “Why’d You Only Call Me When You’re High”

OUR TAKE: !!!!!

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16 !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.!"technique // ENTERTAINMENT

STARTS FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 27TH IN THEATERS EVERYWHERE!

“AN EROTIC COMEDY WHIRLWIND.”–Peter Travers,

21056 DON JON COLLEGE NEWSPAPERS BW 3.830" x 7" 1/4 PAGE NO BASE 9/9/13

Vending quality varies with locationabout running into a line or a crowd, even during that dreaded 11 a.m. lunch hour. Furthermore, a specialty machine gives students quick access to last minute test supplies. Paper, pens and sharpies are all provided for a small price. Truly convenient, the Student Center vending machines have all you need for your snacking and testing needs.

On the other hand, the CULC has a variety of consumption items. !e CULC has generic chips and candy dispenser next to the soft drink vending machine. However, the CULC also houses a couple of intriguing options. One is the ice cream machine, which holds a variety of di"erent and delicious ice cream bars, ranging from a nice chocolate to a refresh-ing strawberry shortcake #avor. Another machine is the instant co"ee maker on the third #oor of the CULC. !is high-demand machine makes java for less than a dollar in seconds, great in cold

winters. It also appeals to most palates, as it houses hot chocolate for co"ee haters, French vanilla and Butter$nger for the occasion-al sweet-tooth and dark roast for the avid co"ee lovers.

Tech also has its lows on vend-ing machine quality. !e Skiles vending machine sticks out in particular. Having an open walk-way, Skiles’ vending machines are located out in open air. From odd liquids oozing from the bottom to loud rumbling sounds, the drink machines are unappealing to both students and faculty alike. !e snacking machines are located out in unfavorable temperatures and exude odorous smells. Along with the high tra%c throughout Skiles all day long, it might be best to avoid these vendors.

Tech provides many di"erent vending machine options. Stu-dents can keep this in mind while strategizing about where to set up for a long night of homework and studying.

!"#$%&'()*+$!"#$%&'($&#)*+%&$,%

Tech students are in need of food and drinks at all times of the day. Whether it is a full-#edged meal from the dining halls or a beverage from Star-bucks, food and ca"eine are the fuel that allows Techies to function late nights, day in and day out. However, many stu-dents do not consider the value and quality of the ever-present vending machines, and some machines on campus distin-guish themselves as being sig-ni$cantly better than others.

!e Student Center pro-vides a diverse array of vend-ing machines. Ranging from sugar-rush-provoking candy bars to high-octane energy drinks, the second #oor of the Student Center has all students need. With handy BuzzCard access and an isolated location, students rarely have to worry

production work ourselves. We are capable of editing, color-ing, some visual e"ects and some sound work (including scoring the episodes), which is a huge headache-saver, but also a big workload.

What is the secret to keep-ing each episode of the series fresh and unpredictable?

We do several things to keep the series fresh and unpredict-able. First, by the format alone, using an anthology series with a completely di"erent story for each episode, we can pres-ent a story that might be sci-$, horror, mystery or suspense themed. You may not push the like button on a particular epi-sode, but you will most likely $nd a number of them delight-ful due to their diversity.

Secondly, we do bring in some di"erent $lmmakers to help with the project, and they have their own style of storytelling and presentation. Brandon “TwoMill” !axton, of Supremacy Films, directed the pilot episode “Houdini’s Hand” as well as the unusu-al “Guillotine” episode. He de$nitely left his signature on those episodes, and they are amazing! We also brought in recent Tech $lm graduate Kyle Kukshtel to direct the unique “Invader” sci-$ episode. Remi-niscent of an old Ray Bradbury sci-$ movie, the episode uti-lized a miniature motel model

!"#$%&&!"#$%&'()%*+ we built with a special e"ects ex-plosion at the beginning.

Each episode has a very dif-ferent story. How did you come up with those ideas? Are any of the characters based on people you know?

Each episode does have a dif-ferent story and each is complete within itself. People seem to like understandable stories that have a reasonable and unexpected con-clusion. Our writers come up with all sorts of oddball premises, but most of the ideas won’t work with-in our setup. It is usually about 10 to one; 10 ideas yield one $lmable story.

Ideas for the stories abound, but the creator of Horror Hotel, Ricky Hess, has narrow criteria for the stories he selects. Each one needs to take place mostly within the motel. !e stories need to be economical to produce such as us-ing a"ordable special e"ects and a cast of a few. Each story needs to be $lmable in four days. Dialogue and sound need to be $lmed in-side the studio set.

!e characters are loosely based on a conglomeration of real people and fantasy characters. !e camera quickly rolls through a small slice of time, and it is not feasible to develop most characters in great depth. We have to resort to using stereotypical characters that the audience is already famil-iar with in order to move the story along.

Many students at Tech may want to make a web series by themselves one day, but they

probably have no idea where to start. Is there any advice you can give to them?

!e process for making a web series is no di"erent than $lming a feature $lm or a television epi-sode. !erefore, you need to know about $lmmaking in general to produce a web series. If you are a $lm student, you will be equipped with most of the knowledge you need or know people who do. If you are not, I suggest you start working as a production assistant on some projects or as an intern. Learn everything you can about making movies. It takes a lot of people to make a movie. Far more people work behind the lens than in front of it. You need to famil-iarize yourself with directing, writing, operating cameras, light-ing, post production etc. At least acquire a working knowledge of these positions.

You can surround yourself with a group of people who do know di"erent aspects of the pro-cess. But you do need to learn $lmmaking. Web TV is quickly becoming the platform of choice for viewing movies, series, etc. So the future is bright for web series creators!

Harbingers of the future of television, web series such as Hor-ror Hotel are looking to revolu-tionize episodic visual storytell-ing. !e world premiere of Horror Hotel is on Sept. 26, 2013, at the Porter Sanford Performing Arts Center. For more information on this intriguing series, visit the Horror Hotel o%cial website.

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technique !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.! 17// ENTERTAINMENT

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Ma!a comedy !nds strength in cast standouts !"#$%%%%%%%!"#$%&'()%*+

2012’s Silver Linings Playbook. As for Jones, his supporting actor role is typical of past performances within the same genre but does not have the same impact as in movies like Men in Black.

On the other hand, Agron branches far away from her previ-ous role as Glee’s leading cheer-leader, and she shines in this sometimes-dark ma!a !lm. Her character is the most developed, and she executes the role with precision. In one of the few well-executed, action-comedy scenes, Agron’s feminist declaration against a group of immature teen-age boys will get women cheering and guys rethinking the role of

the “fairer sex.”Agron is not the only novice

that steals the show. "is !lm marks D’Leo’s !rst major starring role, and he gives a memorable performance compared to the seasoned stars. "e actor creates a character akin to a little ma!a boss, cunningly running his new school within a few days. Without these two actors, the movie would be a complete bust, but they man-age to make !e Family somewhat entertaining.

Despite the questionable act-ing, all the blame does not fall en-tirely on the performers. "e pro-duction and execution of the basic plot is rough. "e entire movie is

contrived, in particular the tran-sition scenes, which the screen-writers, Luc Besson and Michael Caleo, fail to write in a way that comes o# as smooth.

Besson is the !lm’s director as well, and he obviously could not decide what he wanted out of this movie. Was it supposed to be ac-tion? Comedy? Suspense? It does not fully achieve any of these, in-stead only brushing the surface of them all.

!e Family had the opportu-nity to be a blockbuster hit with a new take on the ma!a story, but is a disappointment instead. "ough at times entertaining, it is ulti-mately not worth the ticket price.

!"#"$%&'()&*!"#$%&'($&#)*+%&$,%

"e family of an ex-ma!a boss is on the run from those who want them dead. Explosions, mutila-tions and a family that just cannot seem to !t into society seems like the perfect set-up for a fast-paced, action-packed comedy. Instead, !e Family starts with a bang and quickly falls into a slow-paced, predictable !lm. Robert De Niro and Michelle Pfei#er star as the parents of the Manzoni family, who have to move every ninety days as per the witness protection program since De Niro ratted out half of the ma!a. Along with their kids, played by Dianna Agron and John D’Leo, and the FBI Agent, played by veteran actor Tommy Lee Jones, the cast is rounded out with star names.

De Niro may be pushing his luck in this !eld. He was bril-liant in Goodfellas, a classic ma!a !lm premiering in 1990, as well as many other action !lms, but it may be time for him to take it slower and stick to movies like

!"#$

The FamilyGENRE: Comedy, DramaSTARRING: Robert De Niro, Michelle Pfeiffer, Dianna AgronDIRECTOR: Luc BessonRATING: RRELEASE DATE: Sept. 13

OUR TAKE: !!!!!

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of events that involve the protago-nist’s hidden past. "e trio’s pre-dicaments are harder to identify with compared to IV protagonist Niko Bellic’s spectacular pursuit of the American Dream. How-ever, the three di#erent perspec-tives of GTA V make up for the narrative’s lack of punch. Since players can only do each mission with one character at a time, the game leaves them curious about other characters’ perspectives. It is a feature that compels players to revisit certain missions because each character tells the same story very di#erently from others. "at is what makes GTA V so thrilling.

Outside the missions, the trio is always present on the map. Sometimes players bump into the characters they are not playing as, and these encounters re$ect the player’s previous choices. If Frank gets a tattoo, the player can see Frank with the same tattoo when playing as Michael. Similarly, if one character injures another, the player will !nd him at the hos-pital, and the perpetrator will be billed the hospital fees. "is sys-tem respects the players’ choices and personalizes the experience.

GTA V is more than just a game disc. Via Rockstar’s Social Club, players can track and compare the progress of the game with their friends. GTA Online is a similar networking service, and will be available on Oct. 1. It is an ambi-tious attempt to bring the multi-player component to Los Santos, launching unique, customizable characters and thousand of co-operative missions. And while it is de!nitely a promising feature, GTA V is already the best in the series without it.

18 !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.!"technique // COMICS

XKCD BY RANDALL MUNROE

HARK! A VAGRANT BY KATE BEATON

SMBC BY ZACH WEINERSMITH

FOXTROT BY BILL AMEND

NEDROID BY ANTHONY CLARK

CLASSIC

I was there, dude.

It IS about physics. It ALL is.

RODNEY, ETC. BY CASEY TISDEL

technique !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.! 19// COMICS

DILBERT ® BY SCOTT ADAMS

CUL DE SAC BY RICHARD THOMPSONCLASSIC

CALVIN & HOBBES BY BILL WATTERSONCLASSIC

BY SUDOKUCOLLECTION.COM

SUDOKU PUZZLE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE BY STEPHEN PASTIS

LIO BY MARK TATULLI

20 !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.!"technique // SPORTS

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!e Tech o"ense was #ring on all cylinders when Tech won last Saturday against the Duke Blue Devils. Sophomore quar-terback Vad Lee passed for four touchdowns and ran in another, accounting for 35 of Tech’s 38 points. Tech spoiled the chance of Duke being 3-0 for the #rst time since 1994 and really beat down a very solid Duke defense.

“!ey came out in new sets, things that we hadn’t practiced against, things we hadn’t seen,” said Duke defensive end Kenny Anunike in the post-game press conference.

Anunike is referring to the new diamond formation which has been the talk of Tech since the weekend. Tech had never run out of the diamond formation until Saturday. !e diamond is basically the same as Tech’s usual $exbone formation, except that the A-backs line up beside the quarterback, who is in shotgun, and the B-back, who is behind the quarterback. !e San-Francisco 49ers have actually run this for-mation recently, and it is a new wrinkle which will make the Tech o"ense even more di%cult to pre-pare for. Just like in the $exbone, Tech can run the dive play and the triple option out of the diamond formation.

Lee became the #rst Tech quarterback under Paul Johnson to pass for four touchdowns and was the #rst since Reggie Ball to achieve that feat. Most college football followers were surprised to see Tech display such an aerial attack, but these numbers are here to stay with Lee at the helm. In the past, Tech has not been able to establish a passing game and, with the state of its rush o"ense, the potential is sky high this year with

a much improved passing game. DeAndre Smelter recorded his

#rst reception as a Yellow Jacket in the game. Smelter, who is a former baseball player, is playing in his #rst season, already scoring two touchdowns against Duke. Smelter has the size, speed and intangibles to be a star at Tech. He is starting to be on the NFL radar and Coach Johnson knows the potential he has.

“I think DeAndre Smelter has a ton of ability,” Johnson said. “!e more he plays football, the better he’s going to be.”

Lee returned to his hometown of Durham for the game, playing in front of more than 70 friends and family.

“Everywhere I looked in stands, I saw people I know,” Lee said.

Lee had 22 carries for 76 yards and a touchdown to go along with 125 passing yards and four touch-downs, completing eight out of 16

passes. “I would say it was probably

the most emotional game because I know a lot of those guys,” Lee said.

!ere is still room for improve-ment in the passing game as a cou-ple of those passing attempts were dropped balls and another couple were overthrown.

“We left some points out there. We can get better and we’ll need to be ready for North Carolina,” Lee said.

However, Lee showed how deadly the Tech o"ense can be when he checks down to his sec-ond target. !e o"ensive line did well in pass protection, not allow-ing any sacks. Countless times, he hit running back Robbie Godhigh on very accurate throws at the sideline.

!e most impressive part of the game was Tech going 74 yards in 1:02 with only 1:44 on the clock before halftime. Even though run-

ning the ball is the major part of the Tech o"ense, the two minute drill was executed perfectly in just #ve plays. Johnson continues to show up the critics who said Tech would never be able to run an ef-fective two-minute drill passing the ball. Even though Tech scored 38 points and won by 24, Johnson was not satis#ed and knows there is room to improve.

“I didn’t feel like we played particularly well on o"ense at Duke,” Johnson said. “I still think we left a lot of points on the #eld and we could have played a lot better in the #rst half. !ere were some plays we had chances to put the game way out of reach and we let them kind of hang around. Against good teams you won’t get second and third chances.”

Lee and junior o"ensive guard Shaquille Mason were both awarded ACC Player of the Week for their positions because of their performance against Duke.

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!"#$%!Golf Takes First!is past weekend, the men’s

golf team won their second tour-nament in as many tries. !e Jackets won the Tar Heel Inter-collegiate Title this past weekend in Chapel Hill. !e #nal stand-ings weren’t even close as Tech #nished 22 strokes under par to beat North Carolina State by 20 strokes. Senior Seth Reeves posted a tournament best eight strokes under par for the weekend, win-ning his fourth career tournament title. Richard Werenski, Ollie Schniederjans and Anders Albert-son #nished the tournament 2-3-T4 in the individual race. !e golf team has not trailed the entire sea-son and play next on Oct. 4.

Shawn Green Re-turns, Hill outJunior defensive tackle Shawn

Green has been cleared to play after recovering from an o"sea-son shoulder surgery. Coaches say he is ready to play and will most likely see the #eld against North Carolina this Saturday. Green will back up Adam Gotsis. Last year, Green played in all 14 games and #nished the season with 22 tack-les and recorded one interception at Clemson.

Starting A-back Deon Hill will sit out for the second straight game this weekend as he is recov-ering from an illness. Hill rushed for a touchdown in his #rst game and will be replaced in the start-ing lineup by B.J. Bostic. Hill is expected to return in the game against Virginia Tech.

technique !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.! 21// SPORTS

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North Carolina enters this Saturday’s game with a 1-1 record. !is is head coach Larry Fe-dora’s second year and he holds a 0-1 record against Tech. !e Tar Heels are coming o" a bye week and have had bye weeks three of the past four years before playing Tech. It is believed that teams have a better chance of winning with a bye week before Tech.

While the numbers are in favor of that state-ment, North Carolina hasn’t beaten Tech since 2008, Paul Johnson’s #rst year as head coach for the Jackets. Tech scored 68 points against the Tar Heels last year, so the extra prepa-ration did North Carolina no good. UNC enters the game with senior quarterback Bryn Renner leading the team. Renner was raved about dur-ing the o"season as being one of the b e s t quarterbacks in college football, but has yet to live up the hype. Although he has a completion percentage of 63.6 and 533 yards, he has only

thrown for two touchdowns to go along with one interception. UNC is one of the most over-hyped teams every year, so not living up to expectations is nothing new in Chapel Hill.

!e Tar Heels had to replace former star and #rst running back selected in the NFL draft, Giovanni Bernard. AJ Blue and Romar Morris are the top backs for the season, but neither have the elusiveness or play making ability of Bernard. Mor-ris has 115 rushing yards on 25 carries this season,

w h i l e

Blue has only 81 yards on 18 carries and zero touchdowns.

Seniors Kareem Martin and Tre Boston lead the Tar Heels on defense. Martin is rated by many scouts as the second best defensive end in the country and he will be a deciding factor in this game. Martin is an excellent pass rusher, but the Jackets have yet to give up a sack this season.

!e Tar Heels have struggled against stopping the run this year, allowing opponents to rush for an average of 193.5 yards per game, which is not

a good sign for them on Saturday when go-ing up against Tech’s run-heavy o"ense. North Carolina always has excellent athletes and many NFL prospects on defense, but the knock for them has al-

ways been that they don’t play great as-signment football or work well as a unit.

Expect Johnson to get in the heads of the Tar Heel defense by running the ball down their throat before taking some deep shots

on play action passes. If he is successful, it could be another long day for the North

Carolina defense.

!e Jackets come into the game with a 2-0 record and will be looking to win their second straight conference game.

Vad Lee made his debut last season in a 68-50 win over the Tar Heels in Chapel Hill, and once again Lee will be the key for the Jackets to beat the Tar Heels. Lee had success against the Tar Heels last season, completing six out of ten passes for 169 yards and a touchdown. North Carolina’s defense has struggled to defend the run this year, allowing opponents to gain 4.9 yards per rush. !e Jackets will most likely try to establish the running game early on. If successful, Lee should have some opportunities to take some deep shots o" of play action.

In order to pass successfully, the Jackets will have to continue to protect the quarterback. After the opener against Elon, Coach Johnson mentioned that the line needed to improve their pass protec-

tion, but the Jack-ets have yet to al-low a single sack this season. UNC only has four sacks on the season, tying them for 73 in the nation, but half of their sacks are coming from Norkeithus Otis, who plays the “bandit” position in the North Carolina defense. If the Jackets can keep Otis from getting to the quarterback, pass protection shouldn’t be an issue.

Fortunately for the Jackets’ defense, running back Giovani Bernard, who had 79 rushing yards

and 92 receiv-ing yards in the game last sea-son, is no longer playing for the Tar Heels. Tech

will be getting defense tackle Shawn

Green back this week, who should help slow down any rushing attack that the Tar Heels have between running back AJ Blue and Romar Morris.

!ough the Heels will certainly miss Bernard in their o"ensive attack, the Jackets will still have to #nd a way to slow down senior quarterback Bryn Renner. Renner went 24-35 through the air in Chapel Hill last season, torching the Jackets for 350 yards and two touchdowns. If Tech lineback-er Jeremiah Attaochu and the rest of the Jackets defense can get pressure on Renner and force the Tar Heels into relying on the running game, Tech should be able to limit the Heels.

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Undergraduate scholarships and graduate fellowships are a top priority for Campaign Georgia Tech, the $1.5 billion effort to enable Georgia Tech to de!ne the technological research university of the twenty-!rst century.

The Class of 1968 is one of four classes to make a reunion gift establishing study abroad scholarships, which provide extraordinary international opportunities for Tech students.

Hometown: Augusta, Georgia

Hobby: Competition shooting

“This internationalscholarshipallowed me tototally immersemyself in a newculture. Notmany people get to do thatin their lifetime — much less before the age of 21.”

Elijah BakerIE 2016Georgia Tech China SummerProgram at Tianjin Universityand Shanghai JiaotongUniversity

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technique !"#$%&$'($)"*+,"*+-.! 23// SPORTS

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second and the third match al-lowed for Tech to reenergize and focus. !e Jackets came out in the tournament "nale and beat the Huskies in straight sets with a score of 3-0 (27-25, 25-18, 25-20).

With Percy’s 12 kills and Ka-leigh Colson’s 28 assists, Tech was able to have higher hitting e#ciencies than Connecticut in each set. Hitting percentage and nine blocks in this match helped to put senior Quinn Evans into the all-tournament team along with Clark-Bibbs who provided much-needed energy during sub-stitutions.

!e ine#ciency of the Husky team could be seen, with only "ve players registering kills during the match. Devon Maugle from Connecticut had a 11 kills which helped to put the Huskies on the board, but the dominance of the Jackets could be seen with more digs and kills from Tech.

Coach Johnson seemed to think that this last match re$ect-ed the true potential of this team.

“It was nice to see us come to-gether and play as a team instead of just people going out there and doing their own thing,” head coach Tonya Johnson said in an interview with ramblinwreck.com. “It was nice to see us put it all together. I think we are ca-pable of being a good team if we can "nd some consistency of with what we do.”

!e Jackets looks to continu-ally improve as they travel to Ten-nessee to take part in the Tennes-see Tournament starting Friday, Sept. 20, hosted by !e University of Tennessee.

!"##$%&!"#$%&'()%*+payers probably do not want their money to go towards paying ama-teur athletes to gain a competitive advantage. And if I were an ath-lete in another sport, I would see every dollar paid to football play-ers as a dollar that my sport will never see.

Finally, football players at other schools with similar “ben-e"ts” should also be concerned. At Oklahoma State, athletes were brought to the school with the sole intention of playing football and did not focus on getting an edu-cation. !is may sit "ne with the players, but only as long as they are still in college and healthy. As soon as they get injured or gradu-ate, they are alone, uneducated and unable to fall back on the football program that took care of everything for them.

If the allegations are true, it will just be the latest scandal in a long line of corruption in college football. Drastic measures may have to be taken before it gets any worse.

!e most severe measure would be to abolish college football en-tirely, but that is a solution that very few people would ever want to see. Another option is to abol-ish the NCAA and establish a new entity that is better at keeping cor-ruption in check. Finally, perhaps the most popular proposal is to just pay the players, though that is a debate that has been covered in a Time Out before and has a myr-iad of rational arguments on both sides (I am personally against it). But until a solution is found, scan-dals like this will continue to stain the sport of college football.

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!is past weekend, the Tech men’s tennis team traveled to Athens to participate in the 46th annual Southern Intercollegiate Championships at the Dan Magill Tennis Complex at the University of Georgia. !e team took a squad of "ve to compete: freshman Car-los Benito from Madrid, Spain; freshman Cole Fiegel from Ala-chua, Fla.; sophomore Casey Kay from Atlanta, Ga.; sophomore Anish Sharma from Alpharetta, Ga. and junior Colin Edwards from Valrico, Fla.

On the "rst day of play, four of Tech’s "ve players advanced in their "rst singles matches.

Benito, in his Yellow Jacket debut, defeated Nathan Debut of Stetson 6-4, 6-3 in Division I. Fiegel, also in his Yellow Jacket debut, defeated Robert Dubuque of Florida Atlantic University 6-0, 1-6, 6-2 in Division II. Kay, in yet another Jackets debut, defeated Ricardo Pabon of East Tennessee University 6-3, 3-6, 6-4 in Divi-sion II. Sharma defeated Franco Echenique of Barry College 7-6, 6-4 in Division II, and Edwards was defeated by Egon Samaai of Liberty 4-6, 2-6 in Division III Singles.

Also on the "rst day of play, both of Tech’s doubles teams were knocked out of the competition. !e pair of Fiegel and Edwards was able to defeat Austin Emmet and Oliver Snaider of Mercer 8-5

in the Division I Round of 64 but fell later in the day to Alejandro Gomez and Panay Jha of Ken-tucky 3-8 in the Round of 32.

!e pair of Benito and Kay was awarded a "rst round bye in but fell to David Biosca and Roger Ordeig of East Tennessee State University 6-8 in the Division I Round of 32.

Later that day in the Division II Round of 32, Kay defeated Charlie Griskey of the College of Charleston 6-3, 6-4, and Fiegel defeated Igancio Hernandez of Armstrong 3-6, 7-5, 6-4. Sharma fell to Jordi Ferrer of Charlotte 5-7, 5-7.

!e following day, Kay defeat-ed Stuart Kenyon of Alabama 3-6,

6-4, 6-2 in the Round of 16, but unfortunately, Fiegel was defeated by Forrest Edwards of Charlotte 1-6, 1-6.

In his "rst round consolation match, Edwards was narrowly de-feated by Rafael Racy of Georgia Southern 4-6, 6-3, 0-1.

In the Division I Round of 32 singles, Benito was defeated by Rhys Johnson of Vanderbilt 5-7, 6-7.

On the third day of play, Kay was narrowly defeated by Suresh Eswaran of Vanderbilt 7-5, 3-6, 6-7 in the Division II Singles.

!e Tech men’s tennis team will next travel to Charlottesville, Va. next weekend to compete in the UVA Ranked+1 Invitational.

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If you are a big college football fan, you must have heard about the allegations made against the Oklahoma State football program by now. !ey range from paying the players and fabricating grades to much more serious, illicit activities. !ese acts po-tentially played a large role in the program’s quick rise to power in the "rst decade of the 2000s, as the team went from perennial loser to Fiesta Bowl champions in about ten years. If the allegations are proven to be true, it will deal a severe blow to the integ-rity of college football.

I choose to believe the allegations, which are detailed in a Sports Illustrated special report, for a number of reasons. First, there is a great incentive to cheat, as the NCAA is very inconsistent in its punishments and there is a relatively short statute of limita-tions on infractions. !is means that the chances of getting caught in time are low, and even if a team is caught, they may just get a slap on the wrist.

!ere is also a great competitive advan-tage to be gained by o#ering “bene"ts” to players, as this is one of the most attractive ways to land star recruits. Or, if many con-temporary schools are doing it, a program must do it as well just to remain competi-tive on the "eld. Finally, the report contains testimonies from over sixty former players and sta#ers who were interviewed inde-pendently, giving the report a plethora of sources.

Others choose to dismiss the claims for di#erent reasons. First, many of the in-terviewed players left the program on bad terms, so they may just be mudslinging for revenge. Second, several of those inter-viewed have since said that they were mis-quoted or taken out of context or have tried to retract their statements entirely. !ird, ESPN has published an article that details a handful of minor inaccuracies present in the report. Finally, some people may not be-lieve it because they refuse to let go of their

idealized view of college football—which they’ve followed religiously since the time they were born—and see the reality of the scandal and corruption that surrounds it.

!e allegations should be troubling to college students, fans, taxpayers and colle-giate athletes of all sports. Students should feel cheated, as the report claims that OSU football players received A’s in classes they never attended while OSU personnel com-pleted the coursework for them. !e foot-ball players just breeze through their aca-demics while other students must struggle with their ever-demanding workloads.

Fans of all teams should feel less trust-ing of their own programs, because who’s to say that their teams are not doing simi-lar things in order to stay competitive, as the report implies? In the eyes of football programs, the risk of getting caught is out-weighed by the success that this type of cheating can bring.

Taxpayers (at least in states such as Geor-gia with competitive football programs) and athletes should both be concerned about the money, but for di#erent reasons. Tax-

Mission AccomplishedVad Lee returned to his hometown

and led the Jackets to a 38-14 victory over Duke.!20

[email protected]

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technique!"#$%&'()*

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Jackets sweep UConn in Courtyard Classic-+$.,&/#"+0

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!is past weekend was loaded with vol-leyball action on campus as Tech hosted the annual Georgia Tech Courtyard Classic at the O’Keefe Gym. With Connecticut, St.

John’s and Troy attending the tournament, the Yellow Jackets looked to improve on their record of 3-3.

!e Jackets had their "rst match on Friday evening against the 5-3 Red Storm in front of an electric home crowd. Both teams had a slow start as points were traded

back and forth with no team gaining mo-mentum. However, after a score of 9-9, St. John’s went on a 9-2 run which was initi-ated by a massive kill from Alexandra Wa-chowicz. At "rst, Tech was unable to recov-er from this surge but was able to win back points with good ball movement until they were only down by two (21-19). A critical timeout by St. John’s helped the Red Storm regain composure and "nish the set strong with a 25-19 set.

!e second set played to St. John’s strengths as they put up multiple kills and confused the Jackets into committing "ve errors. !e Jackets had no real o#ense and could not sustain a surge e#ort as they were able to in the previous set, which led to an-other set for the Red Storm (25-18).

!e third set looked like it would be a repeat of the past two sets with three out of the "rst four points going to St. John’s. However, a little later in the set, the Jackets bench helped to spark to a 6-2 run, mainly from Chanell Clark-Bibbs who had the third highest hitting e$ciency for the Jack-ets with .353.

With Tech’s resurging o#ense and ball movement, plus St. John’s highest num-ber of errors in the match (7), the Jackets cruised through the set with only two er-rors. !e Red Storm’s confusion and mis-communication in the third set could be summed up by the kill that was far from the line and ended the set. !e Jackets went on to win the set 25-16 with the highest point di#erential in the game yet.

Any problems that St. John’s seemed to have had in the previous set vanished; they had 12 kills and only one error in the 4th set to win 25-11. Tech’s inability to keep up was evident; they had only "ve kills, six er-rors and a hitting e$ciency of -.029.

Even though Tech lost the "rst match of the tournament, it was evident that many players on the Tech roster have the ability to

impact the game and contribute. Nine out of the ten players that actively participated in the game played in all four sets while the Red Storm could only the same for eight out of their 11 active players.

Key performances from freshman set-ter Rebecca Martin, who had her "rst ca-reer double-double with 10 digs and 29 as-sists, and senior Jennifer Percy with 10 kills showed that the Jackets have depth and experience.

!e second match was on Saturday morning in front of a crowd split evenly be-tween Troy and Tech. Again, Tech did not seem to have enough to defeat the Trojans as they lost in four sets (3-1: 25-22, 23-25, 25-23, 25-19). As seen by the point di#er-entials in the "rst three sets, the teams were more evenly matched than the set record suggests.

!e Troy o#ense relied heavily on the contribution of Marija Zelenovic and Blair Winston, who had roughly 60 percent of the total kills for the team. However, the Jacket o#ense saw contributions from Per-cy, Clark-Bibbs, Ivona Kolak and freshman London Ackerman, all who were able to post double "gure kills.

On the other hand, the Van Gunst twins saw playing time in this game. Annika had "ve kills while Teegan had six digs, which provided a spark o# the bench. Again, Tech showed that the team has a lot of depth and potential with 11 players rotated to play on the court, putting up encouraging stats.

While each set started o# with teams trading points and had eight lead changes, it was the winning hitting percentage that set the teams apart and set up the Trojans to sustain rallies from the Jackets. Tech only had an e$ciency of .197, whereas Troy’s had a percentage of .259.

It seemed as if the break between the

with Joe Sobchuk

Joe Sobchuk is in his third year at Tech. He has watched sports all his life and takes a critical view of many of the trending topics in the sporting world. To contact Joe with your opinions email him at [email protected].

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