Vol. 80 No. 29

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PANTHERS OF THE YEAR 7+( 6,*1$/ 35(6(176 back on the rise Students can expect tuition to rise 3.5 percent next fall but, don’t worry, university fees will stay the same. News | Page 3 Despite a marred election, SGA president-elect Ashley Epperson will be the face of the students. Check out her action plan. news | Page 6 Here she comes We’ve got stats and reactions from players and coaches for all Georgia State diamond, court, course and track action this spring. Sports | Page s 9 & 10 Spring recap They’ve broken records, touched lives and made our campus greener. Here’s who left the biggest impact at Georgia State this school year. Creative artists of new Adult Swim show “Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell” take our reporter under the paint for a behind-the-scenes look. A trip to hell A&L | Page 18 Sports 9 Opinions 7 News 3 'DLO\ QHZV DW ZZZJHRUJLDVWDWHVLJQDO FRP Arts & Living 18 Inside APRIL 23 APRIL 30, 2013 VOL. 80 | NO. 29 Pages 12-15

description

Panthers of the year

Transcript of Vol. 80 No. 29

Page 1: Vol. 80 No. 29

PANTHERSOF THE YEAR

7+(

6,*1$/�35(6(176

back on the riseStudents can expect

tuition to rise 3.5 percent

next fall but, don’t worry,

university fees will stay

the same.

News | Page 3

Despite a marred election,

SGA president-elect Ashley

Epperson will be the face of

the students. Check out her

action plan.

news | Page 6

Here she comesWe’ve got stats and

reactions from players and

coaches for all Georgia State

diamond, court, course and

track action this spring.

Sports | Page s 9 & 10

Spring recap

They’ve broken records, touched lives and made our campus greener. Here’s who left the biggest impact at Georgia State this school year.

Creative artists of new Adult

Swim show “Your Pretty Face

is Going to Hell” take our

reporter under the paint for a

behind-the-scenes look.

A trip to hell

A&L | Page 18

Sports 9Opinions 7News 3'DLO\�QHZV�DW�ZZZ�JHRUJLDVWDWHVLJQDO�FRP Arts & Living 18

InsideAPRIL 23 ! APRIL 30, 2013 VOL. 80 | NO. 29

Pages 12-15

Page 2: Vol. 80 No. 29

EORWWHUODVW�ZHHN���TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013 2

LocalPolice o!cials have issued a warrant for the ar-rest of “Love & Hip-Hop: Atlanta” star Lil Scrap-py a"er the rapper submitted a urine sample for his probation that the police believe was tam-pered with. O!cials say urine sample was cold and they refused to accept it. Scrappy refused to provide another sample and denied their allega-tions of him tampering with his #rst sample. $e warrant says that the rapper once again violated his probation by not cooperating. Scrappy’s law-yer, Mawuli Mel Davis, says he plans to appear in court on May 16 to address the issue.

Atlanta Falcons safety William Moore was arrest-ed for simple battery on $ursday a"ernoon a"er police received a dispute call in northwest Atlan-ta. Police arrived in the 600 block of Ninth Street in northwest Atlanta, where Moore and a woman were arguing. According to police, Moore threw her phone and grabbed her shoulder. Moore was granted a signature bond of $2,500 on Friday morning. $e Falcons released a statement say-ing they are “in the process of gathering more in-formation” for Moore’s incident

National A"er the violent shootout with police, killing 26-year-old suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the man-hunt for the second Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19, has come to an

end. A resident found the suspect in a boat in his Watertown yard, weakened by a gunshot wound a"er %eeing the previous night’s shootout with police. $e police tried to persuade him to get out of the boat but the scene turned into another shoot out that resulted in police arresting and es-corting him to the hospital. $e process of #l-ing criminal charges against Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is now underway. $e suspect is likely to face the death penalty, according to prosecutors and cap-ital punishment experts.

GlobalAccording to a cabinet spokesman, Egypt Justice Minister Ahmed Mekky submitted his resigna-tion on Sunday a"er Friday’s violent street clash-es involving supporters of President Mohammed Morsi in order for him to “cleanse the judiciary” of its former supporters and o!ces. In Mekky’s resignation, he says the protests led to his deci-sion to resign from his o!ce and later mentions a new law that could dismiss 3,500 Egyptian judges and lower the retirement age.

Days a"er the start of Canada’s annual seal pups slaughter, Actor Jude Law recently wrote a letter to the World Trade Organization calling for the upholding of the seal fur ban among the Euro-pean Union. $e Canadian government is cur-rently challenging the EU ban as a last e&ort to revive trade. $e #nal hearing on the issue will be in Geneva next week.

April 14University CommonsA student was arrested for alcohol possession while under 21-years-old and a criminal tres-pass warning was issued. Officers responded to a complaint of marijuana odor. No drug was found but a student and a non-Georgia State individual admitted to consuming alcohol. They were ar-rested and released on a copy of charges.

Piedmont AvenueOfficers arrested a stu-dent for disorderly con-duct. A complaint was made of a patron break-ing a picture frame in-side the Waffle House. He was arrested and released on a copy of charges

Sports ArenaA student said his Ap-ple Mac Book was stolen from his book bag after he left it unattended for an hour. This case is be-ing handled by investi-gations.

April 15Student CenterOfficers arrested two non-Georgia State af-filiates for Possession and intent to distribute marijuana and criminal trespass warnings were given. Several baggies of marijuana were found and the individuals were arrested, processed and transported to Fulton County Jail.

M Parking DeckA report was filed for property damage. A stu-dent said he parked his vehicle and when he re-turned, he discovered his door handles had been removed. This case is being handled by in-vestigations.

April 16Edgewood AvenueA student said his food benefit card was miss-ing from his room. He later discovered several fraudulent charges on his card. This case is be-ing handled by investi-gations.

April 17Decatur StreetAn officer observed a suspicious male park a vehicle by S, K and N Deck and leave. The offi-cers conducted a vehicle check on the abandoned car and it confirmed the car was stolen. The sus-picious male was arrest-ed after he attempted to flee from officers on foot when returning to his car.

April 19Greek Housing Officers arrested a stu-dent for fraud, drunk-enness and batter. Of-ficers responded to a physical altercation and once they arrived they saw a student had swell-ing and bruising to his face. The alleged victim said a fellow student at-tacked him. Upon fur-ther investigation it was discovered alcohol was involved and the aggres-sor was issued a criminal trespass warning, arrest-ed, processed and trans-ported to Fulton County Jail.

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Photo of the week

MIKE EDEN | THE SIGNAL Panthers greet eager fans during practice at the Georgia Dome April 20.

Page 3: Vol. 80 No. 29

Students can expect to pay more for courses next se-mester as the Board of Regents voted last Tuesday to increase tuition at Georgia State for the fourth con-

secutive year despite increased funding from the Georgia General Assembly.

Tuition will rise by 3.5 percent to $3,899 per semester compared to last year, which only cost $3,768.

The largest increase by far was the 16-percent increase that was implemented in fall 2010, which raised the tuition to $3,535.

In fall 2011, tuition went up by 3 percent to $3,641 and the next year by 3.5 percent to $3,768.

“In determining tuition rates for the upcoming academ-ic year, affordability was the regents’ primary concern,” said John Brown, vice chancellor for Fiscal Affairs at a Board of Regents meeting in Savannah. “Our ability to maintain a low percentage increase reflects a serious commitment by the Board to minimize the financial impact on our stu-dents.”

Though students may not look forward to paying more for tuition, they can find comfort in knowing they aren’t

facing any fee increases by the university. Last semester when the Mandatory Fee Committee met,

no business was discussed in their first and only meeting of the academic year because it was rumored President Mark Becker would not entertain any new fee increases.

Later at his State of the University address in October of last year, Becker affirmed that he would not raise fees for students due to tough economic times.

“Keeping Georgia State University affordable for stu-dents is a top priority. The university has frozen fees for the past three years, and at the same time has worked with the Board of Regents to keep tuition increases as low as pos-sible. The 3.5% increase that was adopted for next year is essential to maintain the quality of the education, programs and services that Georgia State provides for students.”

While no new fees will be implemented by Georgia State in the upcoming year, the Student Government Association has passed a resolution sending a recommendation to the Mandatory Fee Committee.

The recommendation asks for the MFC to consider cre-ating a green fee from the $14 Library Fee that is scheduled to end this July.

“We discussed it, but we haven’t come to a conclusion. I definitely wouldn’t want the full $14,” current SGA senator and president elect, Ashley Epperson said.

Even if a $14 green fee were passed, the expiring library

fee money would be relocated to satisfy eco-friendly pur-poses, so it would not raise overall fees.

The University of Georgia and Georgia Institute of Tech-nology and will see the largest hikes, with students there paying 5 and 7 percent more in tuition each semester, re-spectively.

Recently ranked as one of the top public universities in the country, tuition at Georgia Tech is approximately $4,129, the largest of any university of college within the University System of Georgia.

Other colleges and universities in the system will receive tuition hikes of 2.5 percent as well.

www.georgiastatesignal.com/news1(:6

tuition on the rise

ANDRES CRUZ!WELLMANNAssociate News Editor

FALL 2010SPRING 2011

FALL 2011SPRING 2012

FALL 2012SPRING 2013

FALL 2013SPRING 2014

$3,535(16% increase)

$3,641(3% increase)

$3,768(3.5% increase)

$3,899(3.5% increase)

Georgia State compared to other universities

Georgia Tech: 7 percentUniversity of Georgia: 5 percentGeorgia State University: 3.5 percentGeorgia Regents University: 3.5 percent27 other University System of Georgia colleges and universities: 2.5 percent

The largest increase by far was the 16-percent increase that was implemented in fall 2010, which raised the tuition to $3,535.

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Page 4: Vol. 80 No. 29

The age of a smartphone and computer-driven society has paved ways for a new form of

aggression: cyberbullying. Georgia State is no exception

to the matter-- some students have pointed out the @GAStateTruths Twitter account, which brought this issue to the university by publishing anonymous tweets from second par-ties.

“[Student’s name] in my theater class is a fake fatt fuckk,” an anony-mous tweet from @GAStateTruths said.

Another tweet from the same ac-count commented on the drag com-munity: “$at stupid little drag queen party in front of the student center? Let’s make sure that never happens again.”

Cyberbullying is bullying by elec-tronic means. $is can include mean messages sent over social media, text messaging, emails or instant messag-ing. Other examples include spread-ing rumors or embarrassing informa-tion about a person over the Internet.

Educating the students

Many Georgia State o!ces began to combat this issue by sponsoring the “Enough is Enough Campaign to Stem Societal Violence” event, which went from April 1 to April 5 and was purposed to educate and promote peace on campus.

Social media violence and cyber-bullying were some of the topics cho-sen for the events of the week.

Kerry Wallaert, coordinator of Residential Leadership and Civic Engagement at Georgia State, was a speaker at the Enough is Enough event. Wallaert said the @GAStateT-ruths account was also brought to her attention by another student.

Wallaert said she saw the Twit-ter account grow from 300 followers to 500 followers in a matter of days. $e #rst tweet on the timeline dates to March 23, 2013.

Wallaert said she receives cases of attacks on social media in the univer-sity housing frequently too.

“Within the past month, there has been probably at least six solid cases I can think of that involve social me-dia,” Wallaert said.

Wallaert said she reports the se-vere cases of cyberbullying to the Dean of Students O!ce under the vi-olation of threatening in the Student

Code of Conduct. She is not aware of any regulation that directly address-es cyberbullying although any com-plaints can fall under threat.

According to the Associate Dean of Students, Lanette Brown, no re-cords are categorized for complaints of online threats.

Cyberbullying is desensitized

According to Enough is Enough’s library of statistics, a part of the prob-lem is that some tend to think the vic-tims were subject to the bullying in the #rst place.

About 58 percent of youths agreed the victim “deserved” to be teased and wanted to “get back” at the person. Twenty-eight percent said they cyber-bully out of entertainment.

“A lot of students will say, ‘$at was just me venting. I didn’t mean re-ally mean it. I don’t see it as a threat,” Wallaert said. “While that may be true, when you post it and it reads like a threat then we have to take it seri-ously … there’s an issue there that we need to address.”

$e O!ce of the Ombudsperson deals with students, sta& and faculty experiencing stress and con%icts on campus. $e ombudsperson remains neutral while resolving con%icts and directing individuals to other resourc-es that may help.

Kelley Alexander, student/sta& ombudsperson, deals with disputes between students. Alexander has had some cases of cyberbullying. She said some students didn’t even know that there was a name for harassing others online.

“What I #nd is that [students] are not educated enough to know what cyberbullying is, so they may not call it that,” Alexander said. “$e anonym-ity [of cyberbullying] is huge … Peo-ple can be really disconnected from the fact that they’re actually hurting someone.”

Cyberbullying reaches a wider audience

$e ombudsperson has seen youths that eventually committed suicide because of bullying and cy-berbullying. However, Alexander be-lieved the impact of cyberbullying is more insidious compared to tradi-tional face-to-face bullying.

In addition, 81 percent of youth

TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013 4 1(:6�

THE MODERN BULLY

ANNA N. YANGSta& Reporter

From stealing your lunch money to attacking you from home

Continued on page 6

YOU DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU

DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU DON’T

DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU DON’T DESERVE

TO LIVE. YOU DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE.

YOU DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU

DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU DON’T

DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU DON’T DESERVE

TO LIVE. YOU DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE. YOU DON’T DESERVE TO LIVE.

Cyberbullying happens in multiple forms.

Cyberbullying takes form by electronic means. That includes text

messaging, instant messaging, email, and social media. Within the

electronic world, a cyberbully might:

ï� send scornful and offensive messages

ï� start rumors via electronic means

ï� PDNH�IDNH�SURĆOHV

ï� fabricate and manipulate photos or videos to embarrass someone

Cyberbullying can and has affected many.

Youths that experience prolonged cyberbullying are more likely to:

use drugs or alcohol have lower self-esteem

have more health problems

*according to StopBullying.gov

*according to Enough is Enough’s library of statistics

have ignored aggressive behavior

Youths on social media...

witnessed others joining the cyberbully

90%

66%

of the 66 percent say they have also joined

21%

DESIGN BY ANNA N. YANG | THE SIGNAL

National

The anonymity [of cyberbullying] is huge … People can be really

disconnected from the fact that they’re actually hurting someone.”

- Kelley Alexander, Student/Staff Ombudsperson“

Page 5: Vol. 80 No. 29

TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013 51(:6�

Chimpanzees know more than just monkey businessresearch

Breaking ground

It seems like every day we learn new evidence showing that chimpanzees, apes, gorillas and

other monkeys are smarter than we previously imagined.

Today is no di&erent.Using Georgia State’s Language

Research Center (LRC), a team of re-searchers from Georgia State and the University at Bu&alo discovered that chimpanzees show “metacognition,” or the ability to think about thinking.

$e research team included Georgia State’s Michael Beran Ph.D, the associate director and senior re-search scientist of the LRC and Be-ran’s postdoctoral fellow, Bonnie Per-due Ph.D.

With the great help of the Uni-versity at Bu&alo’s J. David Smith, the group had its #ndings published in the journal entitled “Psychological Science” of the Association of Psy-chological Science.

In the simplest terms, metacogni-tion refers to “thinking about think-ing” or “knowing what one knows.” Beran and Perdue explain that hu-mans are o"en metacognitive. For example, when asked a question, an individual may respond by thinking, “I know for a fact I know the answer to that!”, or just the opposite.

Okay, so maybe you don’t always respond exactly like that—but that is the process your brain goes through when it knows or does not know the answer to a question.

“$is is a key issue in cognitive science, because we want to under-stand what capacities exist for moni-

toring and controlling how we search for and process information, espe-cially when uncertainty or indecision arise,” the research team said.

$e debate about metacognition in animals has been running on for decades. However, the new research suggests that chimpanzees can, in fact, think about thinking.

Testing, testing, 1..2..3

$e experiment, funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Institutes of Health, was conducted by placing food in a container and showing a Chimpan-zee what kind of food was in the con-tainer about only half of the time.

“When the chimpanzee saw the item, he/she immediately named it by touching an icon on a board,” Perdue said. “A second experimenter would then give the item to the chimpanzee only if the correct name was used.”

In contrast, when the chimpan-zee had not seen the food item inside of the container, he/she would #rst go look inside of the container in the second location before trying to name it for the second experimenter.

$is allowed researchers to assess whether the chimpanzee could think about their own state of mind.

In other words, if a chimp knew they knew the name of the item, he should point to its icon it immediate-ly. If that animal knew they did not know the name of the item, he knew he had look in the container before trying to name it.

A link to human evolution?

Now that we know primates show signs of being metacognitive, this information may allow scientists to

better understand the process of hu-man evolution.

“As our closest living relative, re-search on chimpanzee cognition can certainly reveal a lot about the evolu-tion of humans. $ese #ndings sug-gest that metacognitive abilities are not unique to humans, but that at least rudimentary forms of metacog-nition are present in other primates.” the team of researchers said.

Although this data is enlighten-ing, we still have much to learn from chimpanzees, according to Beran.

“Even now, what we learn from chimpanzees in a laboratory setting teaches us so much about their psy-chology and about our own psychol-ogy, and it is critical that these kinds of studies will continue in the future.” Beran said

A breed of their own

$is is a test that can only be con-ducted at the LRC, because it, “makes use of the language training of these chimpanzees, where they can name things,” Beran said. “Other chimpan-zees cannot do this, and this makes the LRC chimps a special group—one that allows us to ask questions that cannot be asked anywhere else in the world.”

Similar studies have been con-ducted elsewhere with apes, but this experiment marks the #rst study conducted with the LRC’s chimpan-zees.

Beran has worked with almost all primates, but also studied cognition in bears, elephants, and humans of all ages.

He feels that this comparative approach to cognition provides the most rewarding picture of evolution and the extent of cognition among animals.

JAMES HUNTERSta& Reporter

Cambridge University Press #led a brief this month ap-pealing the 2011 e-reserves

lawsuit against Georgia State, con-tinuing a long and arduous copyright battle on how much online content is of fair use.

$e brief, rejecting Judge Orinda Evans decision in favor of Georgia State, may possibly be backed by the U.S. Department of Justice, which has requested some time to #le a separate amicus brief in favor of Cambridge University Press. Academic librar-ians worry that the government will threaten fair use of online education-al materials through sites like Desire-2Learn if it sides with the publishers.

Associate Dean of the University Library, Laura Burtle, said Georgia State will #le a response within the next couple of months.

“I feel good about it,” she said. “We certainly have a strong case… we believe what we are doing is fair

use.”A little less than three years ago

a"er declaring administrators were “copying” and “distributing” online material to students for free, Cam-bridge University Press sued Georgia State University for copyright in-fringement.

President Mark Becker, on behalf of the school, argued that Georgia State could use Cambridge Univer-sity Press copyrighted material under the fair use exemption, which allows copyrighted works to be used strictly for informational and educational purposes.

Moreover, he added that al-though copyright law protects in-

tellectual property and defends au-thors and their expression of ideas, the progress clause under the U.S. Constitution also encourages others to “build freely” upon those ideas within the boundaries of fair use. In other words, although the constitu-tion protects freedom of speech and expression, it allows the idea behind that speech or expression to be used for research and teaching purposes, according to the Fair Use Doctrine in the 1976 Copyright Act.

When claiming exemption un-der the Fair Use Doctrine, the court considers four main principles: the purpose and character of the use, in-cluding whether such use is of a com-

mercial nature or is for nonpro#t ed-ucational purposes, the nature of the copyrighted work, the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole, and the e&ect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.

In her #nal decision, Evans set a limit of ten percent, or one chapter, for the total amount of copyrighted work allowable to students and found 70 out of the 75 copyright cases to have been of fair use. By providing a more detailed description of digital copyright laws and further de#ning their online boundaries, Evans’ 360-page decision set an unprecedented legal standard on how much copy-righted work could be used by an educational institution.

Yet, senior communications ma-jor Daniel Martini thinks this is not enough.

“Ten percent is slim,” he said. “Why keep any amount of creative information away from students?”

Martini added that corporations shouldn’t “sweat the small stu& ” by going a"er educational institutions.

But they are and so is the govern-ment. Now that the department of justice is motioning to take action, Georgia State could potentially be in violation of copyright laws by the closing of the next case.

As more and more printed pub-lished material like books and maga-zines are uploaded onto computers, cell phones, iPads and other techno-logical devices, copyright law will lag behind, forced to wait for new cases in order to amend the law.

But as digital material increases, students will be forced to use more online content for their class work, making copyright law cases more imminent.

$e U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit will hear the case a"er all appeal briefs are #led sometime this year. Considering the courts most recent copyright case was in 2001, Burtle #nds it di!cult to predict how this court will react, especially now that the government is stepping in.

“Georgia State has always been very careful and conscious,” she said. “We will not agree to their [current] standards.”

E-reserves case update: the copyright battle is far from overJESUS DIAZSta& Reporter

university

Cambridge University Press sued Georgia State University for copyright infringement declaring administrators were “copying” and “distributing” material online to students for free.

the research process1. First, a container with

or without food was shown to the chimpanzee, and was then hidden. Experimenters put food in the container half of the time. If the container didn’t have food when the monkey saw, experimenters would put food in.

2. If the Chimpanzee saw a food item, he would immediately name that item to an experimenter. If the chimp was correct, a second experimenter would give him the item.

3. However, if the chimpanzee did not see a food item, he would go look into the second container before naming the item.

4. Essentially, if a chimp “knew they knew” the name of an item, he should point to its icon it immediately. If that animal knew they did not know the name of the item, they knew they had to look in the container before trying to name it.

ILLUSTRATIONS BY WILLIAM MIRACLE | THE SIGNAL

Page 6: Vol. 80 No. 29

Due to the disquali#cation of former presidential candi-date Christian Hill, whose

ticket won the election, his running mate Ashley Epperson has taken over as the new SGA president. !e Signal got a chance to sit down with Epper-son and address some issues such as Panther pride, SGA visibility and sus-tainability. $is is what she had to say.

!e Signal: What are the "rst things that you want to work on once you begin your term as Student Government President?Ashley Epperson: Well, #rst thing is de#nitely Panther Pride. Football is right around the corner so we de#-nitely want to work on that. I’ve been meeting with Marcus Kernizan, who’s been training me a little bit and we want to set up meetings with the Assis-tant Athletics Director Ti&any Daniels and talk about the tailgating environ-ment. We de#nitely have a lot of Greek attendance, which I support, but I’d also like to have a non-Greek friendly environment.

Also working at not just having the students at the tailgates but getting them into the games, more fans in the stands. I think Athletics will de#nitely agree with me on that. So, with Pan-ther Pride I’d like to work directly with Trent Miles, the head coach. he came to a previous SGA meeting and talked about making football players more visible within the school.

$e second thing is visibility of SGA. I want to take advantage of the

mass email system for students. When school starts in August, I want to let them know where the SGA o!ce is, that they can tell us their concerns or just come in and talk to us. I’d like to attach the student feedback surveys to that as well. Also, with that email, I’d like to have a town hall meeting the #rst month of school. I’d like to do that.

TS: Seeing that there was only one town hall meeting this year, do you think that you’d make those town hall meetings a regular thing?AE: I would like to make them more of a regular thing. How o"en, I’m not sure yet. But, I like how many students showed up to the last one

TS: If you do nothing else next year, what do you want your one achievement to be? AE: $is is a very hard question be-cause, like I said, I’ve been meeting with Marcus and I’d love to give you a de#nite answer of what to expect. Speaking with him he’s told me his biggest accomplishment was approv-ing the budget to send our band to President Obama’s inauguration. And, you know, he could have never expect-ed. So, I think that something like that could come along. If I had to give you something speci#c, I’d have to say the visibility of SGA. I think that students need to communicate with SGA more.

TS: As SGA President you would have a seat on the

Mandatory Fee Committee, and this year the SGA passed a recommendation to the MFC to pass a green fee. Where do you stand on that issue?AE: Well, I’m currently a senator and Peter Imho& wrote the resolution which we discussed not to long ago and I did approve of the resolution. So, I still do stand by the green fee. We did student surveys and student forums and the majority do want to see a green fee. It might be coming from the sunsetting library but there wouldn’t be any additional fees.

TS: Currently the Library Fee is $14, do you think that you would use the entirety of that fee or would you lower that to $10, $5 or even $3, like Georgia Southern has?AE: We discussed it, but we haven’t come to a conclusion. I de#nitely

wouldn’t want to the full $14. I can’t re-ally give you number right now, but I do want some sort of fee.

TS: So, what is one piece of legislation that you would like to see passed?AE: I would like to work on the at-tendance policy of SGA. I know that it might not be a huge issue, but I’ve witnessed many members this past year having to resign due to the atten-dance policy because it’s really strict right now. It’s not very %exible and these are poeple who are passionate about this position. $ey had to #ll an application. $ey had to campaign. $ey were elected. $ey were attend-ing these meetings What’s one or two meetings you miss making you resign? I want our senators to concentrate on getting feedback from the students and not solely on their attendance. We are all really busy and we are involved students.

TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013 6 1(:6�

The J. Mack Robinson College of Business faculty has been recently ranked No. 51 among the 100 most productive business schools worldwide and No, 45 among the 100 most productive business schools nationwide by The Naveen Jindal School of Management at the University of Texas at Dallas.

The Players of GSU are performing the Italian comedy, “The Servant of Two Masters” on April 25 through April 27 at 8 p.m. and April 28 at 3 p.m. at the Dahlberg Hall Theatre. Tickets are $10 for students, faculty and staff with ID and $15 for general admission. For reservations, visit www. gsuplayers.com.

Rutgers University Board of Governors Professor of History Dr. Deborah Gray White will present a lecture entitled, “Lost in the USA: Race, Gender, Class and Sexuality on the Eve of the Millennium” at the Speakers Auditorium on April 24. The event is free and open to the public.

School of Music students will perform at a free, lunchtime concert in the Florence Kopleff Recital hall on April 25 at 11 a.m.

The Black Sophomore Society will present Dancing With The Greeks, sponsored by the Student Government Association, on Wednesday at 6 p.m. in the Student Center Ballroom.

Representatives from various schools systems in Georgia and other states will present as the annual Education Career Fair, hosted by the College of Education and Georgia State Career Services, on April 14 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. in University rooms 480 and 485.

Campus Briefs

Meet your presidentStudent government association

Ashley EppersonPRESIDENT ELECT

MAJOR: JOURNALISM | MINOR: MARKETING

Ashley Epperson takes over as SGA President

I want to take advantage of the mass email system for student. When school starts in August, I want to let them know where WKH�6*$�RIĆFH�LV��WKDW�WKH\�FDQ�WHOO�XV�WKHLU�concerns or just come in and talk to us.”

-Ashley Epperson, SGA President Elect

Q100’s The Bert Show May 2011- August 2011

Intern

Phi Mu Women’s Fraternity VP Sisterhood/ Chapter

Development December 2011-Present

GSTV Panther Report On-Camera Reporter January

2011- May 2011

Allied Integrated Marketing August 2011- Present

Paramount Pictures Intern

agree cyberbullying is easier to get away with than traditional bullying, according to Enough is Enough.

Alexander said, “If someone says something about you, it can go out to millions of people via Inter-net whereas traditional bullying is usually confined to a smaller audi-ence.”

The Faculty Ombudsperson, Dr. Valerie Fennell, said in way bystanders could be a part of the problem of cyberbullying too. Some bystanders join the bully and make the problem worse.

Other bystanders try to not get involved in the issue to avoid harm. However, the bully then has freer reign to instill fear in others.

“The more you encourage and give strength to bystanders to ob-

ject to this issue, then the safer ev-erybody is,” Dr. Fennell said.

Things aren’t getting any better

In an email sent by Tahrir Varn-er, coordinator of the Office of the Ombudsperson, the office does not sub-categorize complaints of cy-berbullying either.

“...but this year with the rise of cyberbullying incidents, it may be something we begin,” Varner said in the email..

According to The Cyberbully-ing Research Center, 49 states have bullying laws exclusively, and 16 states have cyberbullying laws.

Georgia does not currently have

a cyberbullying law in place.Sophomore Kelley Henry has

been a victim of cyberbullying, and believed cyberbullying is an issue. However, she didn’t believe govern-ment should regulate the problem.

Henry believed an argument against cyberbullying regulation is free speech.

Henry said, “On Tumblr, [a so-cial media blog], for instance, you can block anonymous messaging

and I think that stops a lot of it be-cause a lot of them are anonymous ‘cause they’re cowards.”

Wallaert, in contrast, believes having regulation regarding cyber-bullying is a double-edged sword.

“People will use the ‘it’s a free-dom of speech’ thing…but then at the same time you are causing psy-chological harm to another indi-vidual and I don’t think anyone has the right to do that,” Wallaert said.

Modern bully (continued from page 4)

The more you encourage and give strength to bystanders to object to this issue, then the safer everybody is.”

-Dr Valerie Fennell, Faculty Ombudsperson“

Page 7: Vol. 80 No. 29

www.georgiastatesignal.com/opinions

From the Editorial Board

Continuing a recent legacy of increasing the stu-dent’s cost of education, the Board of Regents recently approved a tuition hike that will cost

Georgia State attendees an additional $127 each se-mester.

Over the past few years, the average cost of a Georgia university student’s education has been steadily rising. And with the introduction of “special institution fees” and other increases in tuition, now even students with the HOPE scholarship can end up paying thousands of dollars a semester. So who’s to blame?

In a conversation with the Atlanta Journal-Con-stitution, Chancellor of the Board of Regents Hank Huckaby defended the hike in tuition as a re%ection of the market value of an education at Georgia State. According to Huckaby, the cost of an education here at Georgia State is “still a bargain.”

While it may be true that plenty of students do bene#t from state aid to attend universities here in Georgia, it is unfair and misleading to chalk recent tuition hikes up to students being undercharged in the past.

Certainly in the recent economic recession it is expected that the cost of an education would increase, but charging students more money every year is far from just being the cost of doing business.

Without mincing words, the rising cost of an edu-cation for a student is not the result of an increasing market value of a degree—it’s a direct result of spend-ing cuts at the highest level of Georgia government.

Last year, Governor Nathan Deal slashed state spending on education by $108 million, causing the University System of Georgia to cut spending in nu-merous #elds, so increasing tuition was the natural result.

Sta& furloughs and increasing student fees are nothing new here at Georgia State (even if we’ve man-aged to avoid mandatory fee increases in the past two years), as the USG is still struggling to recover from the economic recession.

Maybe the ones that should be taking a hit in their pockets are these administrators who get paid six #g-ures a year, like USG Chancellor Hank Huckaby, who gets nearly $500,000 a year. Why don’t they take a pay cut instead?

In a state like Georgia that leans right and favors small government, students can expect more hits to their already ballooning student loan debt. Cuts to the HOPE scholarship compounded by cuts to USG funding will only hurt students more than it can help, considering that the increasing cost of education is one of the major contributors to the college drop-out rate.

Let’s face it: when the state faces a de#cit, one of the #rst places they’re going to cut is education. One would think that education, the key to a skilled popu-lation and the future of our economy, would be pro-tected from most budget cuts. But hey, going into se-vere debt for education isn’t the state’s problem. We’re the ones who wanted an education, right? Right?

So get used to it, folks. Until Georgia’s lawmakers make clear actions to prioritize education, you can ex-pect tuition to keep increasing (we’ll see if mandatory fees increase next year). Don’t lose HOPE, fellow stu-dents, because as we’re told, an education is an invest-ment, and having a college diploma is increasingly important in today’s job market.

Because you’re going to need a helluva job to pay back those loans.

Tuition hikes? So what’s new?

SGA recently passed a resolution in correspondence to the smoking and tobacco usage ban established on October of 2012. $is resolution will send a letter to

the Atlanta City Council asking for them to pass a city or-dinance banning smoking on GSU campus so that it may be enforced by GSUPD and the Atlanta Police department.

When asked if SGA had an idea or estimate of the number of students that constitute Georgia State’s smoking community while considering Resolution 12.5—since it would only be practical to have knowledge of both the per-tinence of this legislation and how many people it would potentially e&ect—Jason Plemmons, SGA senate member and graduate student of the School of Public Health an-swered, “Not really. $e university doesn’t have any demo-graphic on that.”

When asked how he thought the student body would react to Resolution 12.5 he stated, “People that smoke tend to think they can smoke wherever. I think we’re getting more push back for it because we’re telling people what they can’t do.”

SGA’s inherent reluctance to initially assess the faculty-imposed smoke ban bill in the interest of the student body in a more aggressive and direct manner motivated me to do what they apparently failed to. I conducted a survey of 100 Georgia State students to get an idea of the interests of the student body regarding this subject.

Fi"y-seven percent of students stated that they feel pes-tered or bothered by the second-hand smoke on smokers on campus. Forty-eight percent answered that they worry about the implications of second-hand smoke they en-counter on campus will have on their health.

So it appears, although in my opinion, relatively insig-ni#cant in relevance to the spectrum of issues that SGA can be tackling, there is a strong basis for both the smoking ban and SGA Resolution 12.5.

According to the survey, the majority of students said they were in favor of SGA Resolution 12.5. Only 8 percent of students identi#ed their selves as smokers and 13 per-cent identi#ed themselves as recreational smokers. With this being said the smoker community of Georgia State is not as large as I assumed.

$is legislation would only e&ect a small amount of students and with the majority of students surveyed agree-ing with this legislation, it would seem that the SGA has hit a home run so to speak. $ey instituted legislation that the majority of the student body cared about.

But, there are a few inherent issues with SGA Resolu-tion 12.5 that must be observed.

While it appears virtually harmless and even necessary at #rst glance, there are several implications of its establish-ment that I don’t agree with. Primarily, one must consider the student to o!cer ratio at Georgia State. One must also consider how this will a&ect the budget.

When asked about the potential e&ect Resolution 12.5 will have on the budget Plemmons stated, “$ere is already money allocated to campus facilities. Facilities has a budget for signage“.

Fair enough, “non-smoking facility” or “smoking strongly prohibited” signs will be placed around campus facilities with no additional cost to the student body. But what about actual police and city police enforcement that Resolution 12.5 calls for?

$at certainly will have to include increased labor costs for the current campus police employees with the strong potential of hiring more o!cers to bridge the student to

o!cer gap and indeed actually enforce the smoking ban. In addition to this, although the majority of the students surveyed were in favor of both the smoking ban and Reso-lution 12.5, one must consider the severity of smoking on campus in relevance to more prevalent and serious campus matters such as safety issues like robbery and the" protec-tion and the lack of security around campus facilities.

With more priority focused on prohibiting smoking on campus, less attention will be allocated toward these more signi#cant issues.

Although SGA is doing a good job in ensuring that non-smokers do have designated smoking areas and the majority of students are in favor of this legislation, Resolu-tion 12.5 remains nonetheless unnecessary. Sure it’s nice in theory, but in reality, the substantial ricochet e&ect that will follow the establishment of Resolution 12.5 is not worth its potential reward.

Do students actually want a smoking ban? Short answer: Yes.

Gambling. It’s a pastime that has withstood the test of time. I recently took a trip to Las Vegas where I happily squandered my parking mon-

ey. For centuries now, people across the globe have taken the almighty risk of wagering their money and/or material values in hopes of multiplying on them. From the a'uent equestrian wagers of $e Kentucky Derby to the neophyte-friendly slot machines of the Vegas Strip, gambling is controversially man’s best friend and it may soon prove to be a friend of Georgia State students.

On April 11th, our governor, Nathan Deal, signed House Bill 487 into law. In a nutshell, the controversial bill will allow convenient store gambling machines to award Georgia gamblers with lottery tickets, a prize that was previously prohibited. $e new bill also plac-es the sole responsibility for regulating these machines in the hands of the Georgia Lottery Corporation. So, what does that little machine in the corner convenient store have to do with you? Everything.

Unless you’re living under a rock, you know that the Georgia Lottery is the sole funder of the HOPE scholarship and HB 487 will add much-needed funds to HOPE. In March of 2011, (courtesy of Gov. Deal) the HOPE scholarship payout was decreased, sever-ing payments for books and mandatory fees. Students were distraught (as they should have been). $e gov-

ernor seems to be redeeming himself with this new bill, but it won’t happen without a #ght.

Deal has received a severe backlash from social conservatives and Christian coalitions who feel his “advocacy” of gambling has tarnished our good ol’ Southern morals. $ese “clergymen” fear a wide-spread distribution of slot machines and ultimately the crumbling of our damned souls. But what they fail to see –or rather turn an eye to –are the needs of students.

While these protestors are holding their pitchforks and torches high, they’ve yet to o&er an alternative source of funds for student’s tuition. If lottery tickets won’t pay your tuition, what will? Either you will (out of your pockets) or federal loans will (again, out of your pockets). Yes, there are other scholarships avail-able but the HOPE scholarship is the most inviting scholarship with fewer stipulations. With that being said, why wouldn’t you want to save a dollar on tuition for every time someone hits a Triple 7?

As students, we are the keepers of America’s future and the forecast of this future is contingent upon our education. Our leaders should note that their invest-ment in our education is simultaneously an invest-ment in our country and if they want a grand return on their investment they should consider their stance on this issue.

Having your share of the jackpot

Ami Dudley is a junior English major and one of !e Signal’s premier sta" critics. She was recently published in “!e Underground” literary journal.

Follow her @amidudley

AMI DUDLEYColumnist

23,1,216

JAIRA BURKEColumnist

Follow her @JairaTheIcon

Jaira Burke is is an international economics and modern languages major with a concentration in Spanish. Jaira is also a member of the InterVarsity Campus Ministry as well as the International Justice Mission.

From our Twitter feed

Survey Results*based on 100 students

Are you a regular smoker?8% Yes 92%No

If no, do you consider yourself a recreational smoker? 13% Yes 87% No Are you aware of the Georgia State Smoking Ban? (est. Oct. 18, 2012)58%Yes 42%No

Are you pestered or bothered by the second hand smoke of smokers on campus?56%Yes 1% Undecided 43%No

Do you worry about the implications second hand smoke from on campus will have on your health?48%Yes 8% Undecided 44%No

Do you agree with the smoking ban, which prohibits “smoking and tobacco use on the majority of the university campus to promote health for students, faculty, staff and the public.”?63%Yes 16% Undecided 21%No

How do you feel about SGA Resolution 12.5, which will send a letter to the Atlanta City Council asking for them to pass a city ordinance that will allow GSUPD and City of Atlanta RIĆFHUV�WR�HQIRUFH�WKH�EDQG"51% In favor 20% Undecided 29% Not in favor

Page 8: Vol. 80 No. 29

TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013 8 OPINIONS

The Board of Regents recently raised tuition fees across the state, raising Georgia State’s to $127. Do \RX�WKLQN�WKLV�LQFUHDVH�LV�UHćHFWLYH�RI�WKH�TXDOLW\�RI�the education here at Georgia State, or do you think

this tuition hike is unwarranted?

Name: Eugene RobertsMajor:Marketing and Managerial Science “I feel like its unnecessary, I feel like we pay enough as it is for tuition. For fresh-men and other transfer students to come to the school and know that the rate is al-ready higher, and we don’t have a tradi-tional campus […] I feel like it would work if they were countering it with something else that we all can bene!t from.”

YOUR VOICE���YOUR OPINIONS

Name: Nagiullah Noor Major: Neuroscience

“I don’t think [it] re"ects in any way at all the standard [of education] that we get at this school. I don’t agree […] I don’t see any logical explaination. I don’t think increas-ing the money increases the standard at all. I don’t agree with them.”

Name: Shaquita JohnsonMajor: journalism

“Without any speci!cs it de!nitely seems unwarranted. I applied and wanted to be here so I obviously thought the quality of education that I would be getting would be good enough. […] I feel like college already is a business and were paying so much to not even be guaranteed a job a#er school. As much money as you can save me the better.”

Name: Hannah Basta Major: history and philosophy

“I think that they just need more money and that’s pretty much it. $ey try to B.S. their way into a plausible explanation for why, but its only plausible”

Boston marathon:Pipe bombs are not the same as guns

The Weakly Comic by william miracle

Name: Aria Hariri Major:chemestry

“If they are going to use this money to keep adding incentives to the university, then I agree 100 percent. It’s a good university, in my opinion. As far as I know, I haven’t been to any other universities. I’m a freshman As far as the education it seems pretty on point. I agree, they should increase the tuition. It sucks, they should provide something for students who can’t a%ord the tuition but at the same time […] prices are going to increase.”

“I feel that the price increase does not re"ect the education at all. $e price before the increase was, I feel, a large sum of money already. For them to increase it even more and our education to be the same, there’s no point. A lot of my classmates had a discussion in our English class about where the money goes, and any time anyone calls up to the school and asks where the money goes they say “it’s for fees” but what fees?”

Name: Sandy Nguyen Major:biology

Miles Keenlyside is an Atlanta native and a senior at Georgia State majoring in Journalism. He is cur-rently working as an intern at WSB-TV Channel 2 in Atlanta.

Follow her @mileskeen-lyside

MILES KEENLYSIDEOpinions Editor

I’m sure that Americans will almost unan-imously agree that the bombings that took place in Boston on April 15 were

a national tragedy. The sting of terrorism pained the United States again and I watched as news reporters, police and officials up to the highest levels of government struggled to make sense of the situation.

Chaos is the only appropriate way to de-scribe the events that unfolded in the days following the bombings. News organizations like CNN struggled to break the news as quickly as possible and stumbled over their own feet getting there.

No doubt these events will inspire dia-logue about a countless range of topics. How did this come to be? Why did it hap-pen? Could it have been prevented? How do we deal with terrorists who are living here in America? Do we classify them as civil-ians who require Miranda rights, or are they “combatants”?

Hopefully, all of these questions and more will be addressed through due process, but these questions are not the ones I am try-ing to address.

Here in Georgia, issue of gun control is a popular one, and many of our red-state residents are quick to bemoan gun control laws as the harbinger of nanny-state gov-ernment hegemony. Since the bombings in Boston, I’ve seen some of my fellow Geor-gians endorse memes online with such senti-ments as “BOSTON BOMBINGS: BOMBER BLAMED; SANDY HOOK SHOOTINGS: GUNS BLAMED.”

These kinds of arguments are not only unsound, they are nauseatingly self cen-tered. If you make this sort of argument you are trivializing two separate horrific acts of mass murder in order to further your own political agenda.

The gun control debate following Sandy Hook was sparked by the concern of the mentally disturbed having easy access to

firearms. The reason we aren’t talking about this issue now is because the acts of terror-ism in Boston did not involve firearms, they involved explosives, which already are not easily accessible to the the general public.

I don’t mean to claim that the suspects in the Boston Marathon bombings were men-tally ill, it would be circular reasoning for me to claim that. I only wish to point out to every person who has made the odious com-parison of the Boston Marathon to the San-dy Hook shootings that they don’t sell pipe bombs at Wal-Mart.

“They sell fertilizer though, why not reg-ulate that then?” you might ask to counter my argument. Fertilizer isn’t illegal to own until you make it into a bomb and blow it up in a crowded area, just like a raw hunk of steel isn’t illegal to own until you machine it down into an unlicensed firearm.

There is a time and place for a discus-sion on gun control and regulation, but this is not it. The Boston bombings are not some example to bring up in polite conversation as some sort of “Gotcha!” card you can keep in your pocket until the need arises to weasel your way out of losing a political debate.

Please don’t trivialize the suffering of everyone affected by this tragedy. Don’t use this bombing to be divisive, there are more important issues at hand.

You’ve got the opinion.We’ve got the soapbox.Now hiring

columnistsTo be a guest columnist, send in your thoughts to [email protected]. To be a (paid) staff columnist, Download application from georgiastatesignal.com/employment and turn it in to Dr. Bryce McNeil at 330 Student Center

The Boston bombings are not some example to bring up in polite con-versation as some sort of “Gotcha!” card you can keep in your pocket until the need arises to weasel your way out of losing a political debate.

Page 9: Vol. 80 No. 29

TEAM LEADERS

(2012-2013)MPG- Kendra Long- 32.0PPG- Kendra Long- 10.9RPG- Cody Paulk- 8.3APG- Ashley Watson- 3.2 BPG- Cody Paulk- 2.7

TEAM LEADERS

SPRING RECAPSWrap-ups and a look ahead from the court, diamond, course and track

www.georgiastatesignal.com/news632576

TEAM LEADERS

Contributing writers :

Alec McQuade, Hunter Bishop, Rhett

Lewis, David Norwood II

$e men’s basketball team said farewell to the Colonial Athletic Association this season, compiling a 15-16 record along the way.

Many of the players felt like they really were “playing for nothing” according to ju-nior Manny Atkins, since the team wasn’t allowed to participate in the conference tournament.

$e tournament ban, leveed by the CAA as penalty for Georgia State exiting

Men’s Basketball

$e inaugural season for the Georgia State sand volleyball team got o& to a roaring start.

$e team competed in its #rst invitational, the Ron Jon Surf Shop Beach-n’-Boards Festival in Cocoa Beach, Fla., #nishing with a 2-1 re-cord, and drew a crowd of more than 900 at their #rst home match in the new GSU Sand Volleyball Complex.

$e team currently holds an 8-8 record.

$e most impressive aspect of the season has been the team’s No. 1 pair of Lane Carico and Katie Madewell.

$e pair began their season with a 7-0 record, which includ-ed a string of 14 consecutive set victories.

$eir streak came to an end against Pep-perdine, the American Volleyball Coaches Association’s No. 1 ranked duo, on March 30.

Carico and Madewell’s record is cur-rently 27-5, and they should soon be receiv-ing an invitation to the AVCA Pair’s Cham-pionship in Gulf Shores, Ala. held in May.

$e team’s No. 2 pair, Sara Olivova and Jansen Button, have a record of 11-16, going 9-7 in team matches.

Milani Pickering and Katelyn Rawls have held steady in the No. 3 spot with an overall record of 7-10.

One dual match re-mains in the regular season.

“A lot of discipline and holding each other account-able to [their] goals” will be the mentality closing out the season, Carico said.

$e team will soon look ahead and prepare for next year.

“Next year we’re going to be a completely dif-ferent team, stronger and more experi-enced,” Olivova said.

Carico should be the only member of the team not returning next season. $is young team has gained some valuable ex-perience that will carry over into the future

Sand Volleyball(2012-2013)

PPG: R.J. Hunter: 17.0FG%: Marcus Crider: .517

3PT%: Manny Atkins: .412RPG: Manny Atkins: 6.7

Blocks: James Vincent: 70

the conference, e&ectively ended the Panthers’ quest for postseason play be-fore it began.

A #ve-game losing streak in De-cember smothered the team’s sprit early.

“We hit a low spot. We we’re de-pressed, but we wanted to get that

next win,” freshman Markus Crider said.

$e team is now looking forward to next season, one that Atkins believes should have high expectations.

“We have a goal set to win it all next year,” Atkins said con#dently.Kentucky’s Ryan Harrow announced

in April that he would be transfering to Georgia State next season.

“I am very excited about the addition of Ryan,” head coach Ron Hunter said. “He played and was successful at the highest level, and he was on Kentucky’s team when they won the National Championship last year, so he knows what it takes to win.”

Forward Curtis Washington will also be joining the team next season. Wash-ington transferred form the University of Southern California last year, and had to sit out the 2012-2013 season.

$e entire team, minus graduating se-nior James Vincent, will return next sea-son.

$e team also signed two guards, Jaylen Hinton from Richmond Va. and Isaiah Dennis from McDonough, Ga., in

the spring signing period.$ere has been no rest for the weary

this o&-season, according to Atkins, as the team has been in the weight room everyday.

“By next year, [if] we keep work-ing like we are now, we’re going to be a helluva team,” Atkins said.

Continued on next page

woMen’s Basketball

The softball team sports a record of 32-16 overall and has

compiled a 10-5 record in Colo-nial Athletic Association compe-tition.

The team has seven games remaining this season; a mid-

week clash with the University of Georgia and three games apiece

against Delaware and James Madi-son.

Despite not being able to com-pete in the CAA tournament

this season, which greatly re-duces further postseason pos-sibilities, the team can still

Softball

$e Georgia State baseball team has been giving crowds a show as they near the end of one of the better seasons in school history.

$e team is currently 26-16 and coming o& of a recent eight-game winning streak.

$e o&ense has been the root source for victories, as the team averages nearly eight runs per game.

Eight players are batting over .300, giv-ing the team an average of .326, the second best team average in Division I baseball

“Our o&ense is strong . . . Each hitter takes his own approach to the plate to help the team,” Chad Prain said.

Prain is currently hitting .418 and has one of the highest batting average in Divi-sion I baseball.

$e team cannot participate in the CAA Championship because of Georgia State leaving the conference a"er this sea-son, thus diminishing the probability for a postseason run.

$e team has 14 regular season games le", including eight home games.

“Our focus will be on pitching and defense,” Nick Squeglia said on how the team will close out the season.

“$e way we are playing right now, we are proving that we will be ready for the Sun Belt next sea-

son.”

baseball

$e women’s basketball team took a step in the right direction this season, de-spite #nishing under .500 and not partici-pating in postseason play.

$e team #nished with a 13-16 over-all record and a 5-13 mark in the Colonial Athletic Association.

“Realistically, in the tough CAA, I went in hoping to #nish above .500 a"er coming o& that previous 8-22 season,” head coach Sharon Baldwin-Tener said. “We stayed above .500 until we lost four of the last #ve of the sea-son. So, we de#nitely made prog-ress.”

$e Panthers were 8-3 pri-or to the start of CAA play. A tough conference, with NCAA participant Delaware and WNIT champions Drexel, proved to be too much for them to handle.

$e team said farewell to three seniors, Cody Paulk, Ti&any Anderson and Kyra Crosby.

But, they return several key players next season and have the potential to keep moving in the proper direction.

“We’re excited about moving to the new conference and getting to play in their tournament for the NCAA bid,” sopho-more guard Ashley Watson said. “With so many veterans back and the transfers join-ing us, along with a good recruiting class, our potential is much higher now.”

(2013 SEASON*)BATTING

AVERAGE: Chad Prain: .418

RUNS: Josh Merrigan:

38

HOME RUNS: Chase

5DIĆHOG���

ERA (STARTING PITCHER): Andrew Fessler: 2.76

STRIKEOUTS: Aidan McLaughlin: 36

*-Stats as of April 22

TEAM LEADERS(2012-2013)

AVG- Callie Alford- .363HR- Paige Nowacki- 12

RBI- Callie Alford- 41R- Tiffany Anderson- 37

W- Kaitlin Medlam- 17

ERA- Kaitlyn

Medlam- 2.29

Page 10: Vol. 80 No. 29

STROKE AVERAGES

(2012-2013)Jonathan Grey- 71.90 (30 rounds)

Davin White- 73.93 (27)

Tyler Gruca- 75.06 (30)

Grant Cagle-

75.78 (27)

Damon Stephenson-

76.09 (22)

STROKE AVERAGES(2012-2013)

Laura Sanchez- 76.68 (28

rounds)

Maria Palacios- 76.68 (28)

Melissa Siviter- 78.57 (28)

Julie Lied- 78.89 (28)

PHOTOS USEDSand volleyball- Lane Carico (Rhett Lewis)

Men’s basketball- Markus Crider (Patrick Duffy)

Women’s basketball- Ashley Watson (GSU athletics)

Softball- Kaitlyn Medlam (Rhett Lewis)

%DVHEDOO��&KDVH�5DIĆHOG�(GSU athletics)

Men’s Tennis- Victor Valente (Graham Robson)

Women’s Tennis- Masa Grgan (GSU athletics)

Women’s golf- Maria Palacios (GSU athletics)

Men’s golf- Jonathan Grey (GSU athletics)

Women’s track- Kesean Henderson (GSU athletics)

TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013 10 632576

Spring recaps continued

The Georgia State women’s golf season was a tale of two halves.

In their first five outings of the season, the team aver-aged a paltry 14th place fin-ish. They never finished high-er than ninth place, and in one tournament finished 17th out of 18 teams.

That all changed at the JMU Eagle Landing Invitational. They finished in seventh place and nev-er looked back, averaging a sixth place finish in their final four reg-ular season events.

Individually Maria Palacios, a junior from Spain, shot the low-

woMen’s golf

women’s trackGeorgia State’s women’s

track team has competed well this spring and has had a nice mix of success on the track and in the field events.

Several team members have set new school re-cords and personal bests along the way.

Although majority of the team consists of underclassmen, this will mark the final season at Georgia State for seniors Ke-sean Henderson, Alison Bishop, Gabby Brooks, Sydney Henry and Leah Norman.

Henderson broke the school’s hammer throw record multi-ple times this season, which she now holds at 15.56m.

Katharine Showalter set school records in the indoor mile (4:59.62) and 5,000m (16:51.35).

Sophomore Niamh Kearney (1,500 m), juniors Anna Sinclair (5,000m) and Jennifer Rubel (5,000m), and senior Al-lison Bishop (steeplechase) all set person-al bests at the Florida Relays earlier this month.

The 4x400m relay team, consisting of Tatiana Colbert, Gabby Brooks, Wande Brewer and Talia Colbert, ran their sea-son best time (3:45.76) at the Florida Re-lays as well.

men’s tennisGeorgia State’s men’s tennis team

has had its ups and downs this spring, but is playing their best tennis when it matters most.

$e team had a 6-1 record early in the season, defeated No. 62 North Florida and rose all the way to the No. 60 in the Intercolle-giate Tennis Association rankings.

A"er a loss at No. 74 East Tennessee State, the Panthers went on a minor skid, going 6-9 over the next #"een matches, fall-ing out of the rankings all together.

On April 20, the team defeated Middle Tennessee State in the Sun Belt Conference Championship #nals.

Junior Robert Schultze earned the clinching point in the team’s 4-3 victory. He was also named the championship’s Most Outstanding Performer.

Senior Victor Valente, the #rst male player in school history to be invited to the USTA/ITA National Indoor Collegiate Tournament, currently sports a 28-7 re-cord. He was named to the All-Sun Belt First Team in singles and doubles and #n-ished with a perfect 8-0 singles record in SBC play.

Senior Lucas Santa Ana joined his doubles partner, Valente, on the All-Sun Belt First Team in doubles.

Schulze also earned an All-Sun Belt Second Team honor is singles.

$e NCAA

women’s tennis$is season has been one

to remember for the Geor-gia State women’s tennis team.

$e team competed in the Sun Belt Champion-ship this season and proved they belong, making an ap-

pearance in the confer-ence tournament #nals in their #rst year.

Junior Abigail Tere-Apisah, Geor-

gia State’s top singles player, has been ranked in the Intercollegiate Ten-nis Rankings for most of the season. She is current-

ly ranked No. 41 and has a singles record of 12-5.

She should receive an invitation to compete as an individual in the

NCAA National Tennis Championships later in May.

Tere-Apisah and doubles partner, soph-omore Masa Grgan, received the school’s #rst ever doubles ranking and are currently ranked No. 35. $e pair #nished the season with a 21-4 record and will possible receive an invitation to nationals as well.

$e team features just two seniors, dou-bles partners, Whitney Byrd and Maryna Kozachenko, who also spent a majority of the season in the No. 3 and No. 6 singles slots respectively.

men’s golfThe Georgia State men’s golf team

has had a solid, yet mildly frustrat-ing, season.

“This has been a very interesting season for us,” head coach Joe Inman

said. “We have moved up more than 30 spots in the rankings, which is great,

but we still are not where we want to be. So right now, I would not call it a success, but I also would

definitely not call it a failure.”While freshman Jonathan Grey has

won twice individually, the team hasn’t faired as well. They have yet to record a victory on the season, averaging a sev-enth place finish in ten events.

Grey posted the lowest round of the year, shooting a 5-under-par 67 at the Mason Rudolph Championship, the first of his two individual wins.

While he’s pleased with the wins, Grey recognizes that improvements could be made.

“It has been an interesting for sea-son for me because golf is both a team and individual sport,” Grey said. “For the most part, I am pleased with the way I have played, but as a team, I know we have all left some strokes on the course that could have made us better.”

The Panthers begin the Sun Belt Conference Tournament on Monday, April 22.

Contributing writers :

Alec McQuade, Hunter Bishop,

Rhett Lewis, David Norwood II

For more recaps, please visit www.georgiastatesignal.com

finish the year with a winning record. Several Panthers have itched their

names into the Georgia State record book this season.

Senior third basemen Paige Nowacki tied the school record for career home runs with her 32nd blast on March 26. The home run was her 12th of the sea-son.

Nowacki has battled a wrist injury the last few weeks and is hoping to get back on the diamond soon, where she will try to make the record her own.

Junior Kaitlyn Medlam pitched just the third perfect gam in school history on April 10 against Georgia Southern. It was the first time that a single pitcher achieved the feat.

est round of the year with a 69. Junior Laura Sanchez,

from Colombia, recorded the team’s best individual finish,

a fourth place at the John Kirk Panther Invitational. The Panthers finished in sev-

enth at the Sun Belt Conference Cham-pionship , ending with four-day total of 913, or 49-over-par. Junior Laura San-chez finished in a tie for 12th.

Men’s Tennis Championship in Urbana, Ill. is up next for the Panthers. $e champion-ships are being held May 16 to 27.

Page 11: Vol. 80 No. 29

The Blue-White Spring Scrimmage on Saturday gave Georgia State football fans their first chance to see head

coach Trent Miles prowl the Georgia Dome sidelines.

The scrimmage, which featured first units competing against each other and second units competing against each other, drew a crowd of more than 1,800 fans, according to the Georgia State athletics website.

The quarterback position is one that the Panthers have yet to solve in their first three years of existence.

Ben McLane and Ronnie Bell, who both saw action under center last season, and Clay Chastain, a transfer from Georgia Military College, all saw action in the scrimmage.

Chastain completed four of his nine at-tempts and connected with Desi Banks for a 32-yard touchdown pass.

McLane and Bell completed four of sev-en and four of six passes respectively.

Northeastern Oklahoma A&M transfer, Gerald Howse, carried the ball five times for 25 yards. He, Travis Evans and Duvall Smith should be the primary options to re-place Donald Russell, Georgia State’s lead-ing rusher last season.

Wide receivers Albert Wilson and Dan-ny Williams, the top returnees in the pass game, did not participate in the scrimmage due to injuries sustained this spring.

Defensive tackle Joe Lockley grabbed an interception following a pass deflection by fellow defensive tackle, Nermin Delic.

Sophomore kicker Wil Lutz connected on a pair of field goals during the scrim-

mage as well.The scrimmage game was the Panthers’

first game action since the end of a disap-pointing 2012 season, which ended with a 1-10 record and the retirement of former head coach Bill Curry.

The football team’s first regular season game of the 2013 season is scheduled for Friday, August 30, versus Samford.

This will be Georgia State’s first season in the Sun Belt Conference and the Football Bowl Subdivision.

During a halftime ceremony, the Geor-gia State Marching Band members learned they have been selected to participate in the 2014 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

This will be the second time in as many years that the band will represent Georgia

State on the national stage. Earlier this year the band participated in President Barack Obama’s inauguration in Washington, D.C..

Only 10 marching bands were selected for the parade out of 175 applicants, accord-ing to the Georgia State athletics website.

The parade will be held on Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, Nov. 27, 2014, and will cover a 6-mile route through Manhattan.

TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013 11

Mon-Wed, April 22 - 24MGLF Sun Belt Conference Muscle Shoals, Ala.All Day Tue, April 23 BSB Savannah State GSU Baseball Complex5:00 PM Wed, April 24 SB Georgia Athens, Ga. 6:00 PM Fri-Sat, April 26 - 27 WTF Samford Invite Birmingham, Ala. All Day

Fri-Sat, April 26 - 27MTR Samford Invite Birmingham, Ala. All Day Fri, April 26 BSB Northeastern * Boston, Mass. 3:00 PM Sat, April 27 SB Delaware * Heck Softball Complex12:00 PM Sat, April 27 BSB Northeastern * Boston, Mass. 1:00 PM

Sat, April 27 SVB Louisiana-Monroe (Dual Match) Monroe, La. 2:00 PM Sat, April 27 SB Delaware * Heck Softball Complex 2:00 PM Sun, April 28 SB Delaware * Heck Softball Complex12:00 PM Sun, April 28 BSB Northeastern * Boston, Mass. 12:00 PM

Sports CalendarPlayer of the weekPANTHER Of The Week

GEORGIA STATE ATHLETICS

Robert Schulze came up big when the Georgia State men’s ten-nis team needed him the most.

$e junior from Frankfurt, Germany was named the Most Outstanding Performer of the Sun Belt Conference Championship over the weekend.

On $ursday, Schulze earned points in the No. 4 singles slot and in the No 2 doubles slot with part-ner So#ane Chevallier.

Schulze earned another doubles point, along with Chevallier, on Sat-urday in the team’s 4-0 pasting of the No.2 seed, South Alabama.

His most impressive perfor-mance of the championships came on Saturday versus Middle Tennes-see State in the #nals.

A"er dropping the #rst set, 3-6, Schulze took the #nal two sets, 6-4 and 7-6 (7-1) to clinch Georgia State’s #rst conference champion-ship since the 2007 Colonial Athlet-ic Association championship.

ROBERT SCHULZETENNIS

*CONFERENCE GAMESSun Belt Championship recap

Fans treated to a preview of upcoming season RHETT LEWIS

Sports Editor

Football

MIKE EDEN | THE SIGNALNick Henderson (in white) stops ball carrier, Lynquez Blair, as Lateef Laguda (far right) looks on during the Blue-White Spring Scrimmage on April 20 at the Georgia Dome.

$e men’s and women’s tennis teams made their #rst trips to the Sun Belt Conference Championship in school history over the weekend and returned with some promising results.

$e men captured the SBC title in a tense, #ve-hour marathon #-nal match. It’s their #rst conference crown since capturing the 2007 Colo-nial Athletic Association champion-ship.

Junior Robert Schulze earned the tournament’s Most Outstanding Play-er award and was responsible for the match clinching point versus Middle Tennessee State University in the #-nals.

Schulze dropped the #rst set, 3-6, to MTSU’s Ettore Zito before claim-ing the #nal two sets, 6-4, 7-6 (7-1).

Victor Valente, Lucas Santa Ana and Paul Schuette won their singles matches in the #nals to help Georgia State secure the four precious points needed to earn the seventh confer-ence title in school history.

$e team will be headed to the NCAA Tennis Championships in Ur-bana, Ill. later in May. $eir position in the bracket will be determined on April 30.

$e women’s team defeated Loui-siana-Monroe and MTSU before fall-ing to North Texas in the #nals.

$e team dropped the doubles point to begin the match and wasn’t able to rally in the singles portion, losing by a #nal score of 4-2.

Georgia State’s two points in the #nal came from singles victories by junior Abigail Tere-Apisah and fresh-man Linn Timmermann, who were both named to the All-Sun Belt Con-ference Championship team.

632576

Page 12: Vol. 80 No. 29

During her senior year of high school, while attending a small Christian school near Jonesboro, Grace Lee didn’t think she was cut out for college. The idea of attending a large university was simply terrifying.

“I wasn’t really excited about college, and I was re-ally scared about the peer pressure that I was going

to face,” Lee said. “I have always grown up in a private Christian school, so I felt like I was really sheltered in this little bubble. And you always hear about people in college—them changing—and I was scared that that was going to happen to me because I was so sheltered.”

Later, in her high school senior year, Lee decided to apply to col-lege—but Georgia State was not even a prospect.

WRITTEN BY TERAH BOYDArts & LIving Editor

PERSON OF THEYEAR

HER OWN WAY:Alumnae and former Homecoming queen Grace Lee didn’t have to sacrifice her character to have a good time in college.

MAIN PHOTO BY MIKE EDEN | THE SIGNAL

GRACE LEE

“So I wanted to go to UGA because my best friend was going there,” Lee said.

Only applying to the Uni-versity of Georgia, Lee found major disappointment after receiving her high school di-ploma.

“I got denied (from UGA) after I graduated from high school,” Lee said. “So I was a graduated senior, still didn’t know where I was going.”

Her first visit to Georgia State was during INCEPT, and Lee said it was very ex-citing.

“I really fell in love with Georgia State, it was just

something, I can’t explain it to you, but just the presence and the environment, this is where I want to be,” Lee said. “And I do not regret my deci-sion at all. I’m really thankful that I didn’t get accepted to UGA.”

Although Lee was excit-ed about becoming a Pan-ther, she was still concerned about the challenges her character would face at a big university downtown.

“Before coming to college you have that stereotype or you have this idea that col-lege life is just to be able to be cooler or to be popular,

have a presence on cam-pus, you have to be part of Greek life, you have to be a cheerleader, be part of the football team, you have to fit this mold of what a college student looks like,” Lee said.

Aside from the stereo-types Lee feared, the size of Georgia State was also in-timidating.

“It was scary; I mean I graduated with 72 seniors, going from that to the sec-ond largest school in Geor-gia was overwhelming. I think another thing is I had never lived on campus…I still commute from Jonesboro.”

Lee said that being a commuter student has its challenges, but her family is an important part of her life and support.

“My parents are divorced. I’ve been raised by a single parent, my mom. She’s been my rock since I was like four years old. She has definitely done a lot for me and my sis-ter and sacrificed so much,” she said.

Being a commuter stu-dent had its disadvantages as well. Lee was worried that driving to campus would keep her from having the full college experience. During

Page 13: Vol. 80 No. 29

her freshman year, Lee stayed on cam-pus after class and got involved in pro-grams to try and give her college experi-ence a chance.

“I always made sure to stay on cam-pus to attend events, to get involved with organizations because I didn’t want me living o! campus to hinder me from getting the full college experience,” she said.

Lee started getting involved on cam-pus, joining the SGA and doing tours at the Georgia State welcome center. She decided to apply to the INCEPT pro-gram for incoming students. It was ulti-mately a humbling experience.

“I didn’t get INCEPT,” Lee said. “Ev-eryone was like “Grace, you’re going to be an awesome INCEPT-er”, but I didn’t get it because I wasn’t prepared for the interview.”

Lee said her lack of preparation and poor attitude taught her some valuable lessons.

“I came in with this really high horse attitude like cocky, I’m going to get this, I already have it in the bag,” she said. “That’s why I tell a lot of people doors close for a reason. When one door clos-es another door of opportunity opens. And because I didn’t do INCEPT I was able to go to China.”

Her study abroad trip to Beijing and Shanghai in 2010 taught her a few valu-able lessons as well.

“It was a cultural experience because before going to China, you hear so much about the Chinese society, that they are really closed minded, that they are not open to Americans and they are kind of cold,” she said.

On her last day in Shanghai, Lee was pick pocketed. The thieves made o! with her passport, driver’s license, debit card and cash. Lee credited the gener-osity of the Chinese people with her ex-perience becoming a positive one.

“I had to grow up really quickly in that [situation]. I had to stay in China for ex-tra days without my group…it just taught me that you have to be totally prepared for the unexpected, which I was totally not,” she said. “It was really with the help of a graduate assistant down there and really the college I was staying at that really showed me Southern hospitality to a T, which is so interesting because down south you always think you will experience it here.”

Lee said she would not trade that ex-perience for anything because of what she learned.

She said she also wants to travel to learn more about her own culture. Lee is a first generation American, so con-necting with her Korean heritage is something very important to her.

“I feel like I really haven’t been root-ed into my Korean culture, I can barely speak Korean and I’m not really involved with the Korean community.” she said.

Traveling for study abroad and mis-sions trips is something very impor-tant to Lee that she hopes to continue through out her life. She said a mission trip to Jamaica really changed her per-spective.

“When I went there I really thought I would be helping them out, but they helped me—gave me this life’s perspec-tive,” she said. “We are just in this bubble here in the American society, so con-sumed in our own lives, being selfish with materialistic things. There is much bigger things and much bigger values to care about. It really helped show me that there is much more to life than just me.”

Lee hopes to go to South Africa, South America and Australia for other mission trips.

Lee’s faith is a motivating in her dai-ly life, but said being a good Christian is more than telling others about your faith.

“What I realize is that it is not through words that you can really make an im-pact, but through just your actions and being there for people,” she said. “Be-ing present. That’s the best thing, be-ing available to people. I feel like a lot of people are turned down by religion and faith and so many di!erent things in our society, but I think that everyone is the same and everyone just wants to be loved, just wants to be heard.”

Lee said her not only motivates her to help others, but to be brave in her own pursuits and finding a way to have the whole college experience and be-ing herself at the same time.

“My faith really helped solidify me before hand, where I was so scared of the unknown,” she said. “But my col-lege experience has taught me that you have to face your fears you have to be courageous, because that one thing I was scared of the most is one of the proudest moments: not winning homecoming queen or anything else, it’s being able to stay true to who I am. I’m not here saying I’m a perfect per-son. I’ve failed so many times and made mistakes, but it’s not about that.”

Although Lee continues on at the university working full-time in the Inter-national Student and Scholar Services o"ce, she said that for her journey to continue she needs to step away from college, for now.

“For the longest time, Georgia State has been my passion and my life, but I need to step away from it. I need to be able to figure out some things about me,” she said.

Lee is looking into programs like Fulbright, Peace Corps and mission programs for her to learn more about herself and help others.

“I have my whole life to get my mas-ters,” she said. “That million dollar ques-tion is what are you going to do after graduation. Like there is so much pres-sure for people. Society is telling you that if you don’t have a job than you’re a loser. “

Although starting the next chapter of her life might be as scary as starting col-lege, Lee said she is ready.

“You’re always going to have those fears at the beginning, but I’m so ready to embrace it. I’m so ready to embrace the unknown. That’s why I’m so excited to do Peace Corps and Fulbright…you

have to put yourself out there and not be afraid to go for what you want,” she said.

Looking back, Lee said her journey at Georgia State has been a fantastic one: although there were some unexpected turns, Lee is happy with the lessons she

has learned. “I didn’t think that any of this was

possible,” she said. “I mean, I was really really scared of college. There’s things that you’re not going to expect to hap-pen. But you just take one step at a time. Everything has been a blessing.”

I REALLY FELL IN LOVE WITH GEORGIA STATE, IT

WAS JUST SOMETHING, I CAN’T EXPLAIN IT TO YOU,

BUT JUST THE PRESENCE AND THE ENVIRONMENT,

THIS IS WHERE I WANT TO BE.”

SUBMITTED PHOTOGrace Lee joined other students to participate in Holi, the Hindu festival of colors.

SUBMITTED PHOTOLee, with king Ne!ali Hernandez, a!er being crowned the 2011 Homecoming queen.

Page 14: Vol. 80 No. 29

Showalter finished the event in a shade fewer than 11 minutes at the Yel-low Jacket Invite earlier this spring.

She won the event, yet not for Geor-gia State.

Her allegiance this spring’s outdoor track and field season has been to “un-attached,” an identifier for those runners who compete as individuals and not part of a team.

Showalter, a senior English major who will graduate this May, decided to redshirt this season. She will compete for Georgia State next spring– her last year as a collegiate athlete, her first year as a graduate school student.

Choosing an Athlete of the Year shouldn’t be an easy process. And this year, it wasn’t.

Nationally ranked players and All-Conference performers litter the Geor-gia State campus. There was no short-age of qualified applicants.

But, the homegrown distance run-ner is just on another level.

“Katharine will be remembered as one of the top female athletes ever to compete for Georgia State, and for be-ing our very first Sun Belt Conference champion,” Director of Athletics Cheryl L. Levick said.

That Sun Belt Conference champi-onship capped Showalter’s dominating cross-country campaign, which reads more like a career resume rather than a single season of accomplishments.

Sun Belt Runner of the Year, All-Sun Belt first team, Sun Belt Conference champion, five time Sun Belt Runner of the Week, five individual titles, team best time at all eight events and regis-tered new personal best times in three distances– 4K, 5K, and 6K.

She also became just the fourth fe-male runner in school history to com-pete in the NCAA National Champion-ship.

The indoor track and field record book also had to be reprinted this win-ter as Showalter set new school marks in the mile and 5,000m and was twice named the Sun Belt’s Track Athlete of the Week. She finished in the top six in the three di!erent events at the indoor championship.

It’s easy to see why we selected Showalter as Athlete of the Year.

But that’s not all there is to the re-served runner who loves to read, yet can’t manage to find the time to, and wants to travel, not run, once she’s done with school.

She’s filled trophy cases at her own home and those at the Georgia State Sports Arena and earned nearly every academic award there is.

But, that’s not enough.

She longs to perfect her skating and parkour skills in the near future, as well as become fluent in Spanish.

The Spanish will hopefully land he in Latin America, no country in particular, where she can teach English as a sec-ond language.

Several years ago, Showalter spent her Spring Break in Romania. Not won-dering the halls of the Grigore Antipa National Meusem of Natural History or lounging in Bucharest’s beautiful Her-astrua Park, but working at an orphan-age.

When the athletics department an-nounced that men’s cross-country and track and field teams were being shut-tered to make room for a women’s swimming and diving team, Showalter voiced, and penned, her displeasure.

In a time when many athletes, es-pecially at the collegiate level, are re-luctant to dispute their governors, her loyalty towards her fellow runners, her friends, was, not to be overly dramatic, both refreshing and inspiring.

She also sings in a choir.None of these things seem like a very

big deal to her, at least not outwardly. She only mentioned them in conversa-tion as a means to make other points.

What’s even more odd, is she seems to think she isn’t a big deal. Not in an egotistical way, but in general.

Showalter told a Signal reporter ear-lier this year that she didn’t think she would be a very competitive runner in a di!erent athletic conference and that she was considered a dud her freshmen year at Georgia State.

It’s hard to imagine either one of those statements being true, much less both. Humbleness is probably the cul-prit as far as they are concerned.

Showalter begins her graduate school studies in the fall. She will have one more season with the Panthers; outdoor track and field the following spring.

No matter what the outcome, she has already proven worthy of being named Athlete of the Year and that Georgia State was lucky to ever have her.

She is a great athlete, and an even better person.

One point eight miles. That’s how far, or not far, someone

in the athletics department had to trav-el from campus to discover one of the most decorated athletes in Georgia State history.

Katharine Showalter, who captured the first Sun Belt championship in school history last fall, grew up right around the corner, in historic Grant Park.

And 1.8 miles is nothing to her. That’s about the distance of the 3,000m steeplechase; a

“running event on steroids” as she described it in a report by Georgia State’s Robert Carnes, in which athletes must scale waist high hurdles and a lengthy water pit.

KATHARINE WILL BE

REMEMBERED AS ONE OF

THE TOP FEMALE ATHLETES

EVER TO COMPETE FOR

GEORGIA STATE.

WRITTEN BY RHETT LEWISSports Editor

PHOTOS BY MIKE EDEN | THE SIGNAL

Champion distance runner, graduate school hopeful, Atlanta native-Katharine Showalter sets the pace for Georgia State athletics.

KATHARINE SHOWALTER

ATHLETE OF THE YEAR

Page 15: Vol. 80 No. 29

Black received his bachelor’s in Ecol-ogy and Systematics from Cornell and began his graduate work at Arizona State University before following his ad-viser, Dr. Matthew Grober, to Georgia State, where he received his Master’s and Doctorate’s in Biology.

He is a currently a lecturer in Neuro-science at Georgia State.

Though Black’s work within the classroom is amazing–he teaches two classes as part of a Freshman Learning Community in sustainability on top of other science courses–, he is constantly a part of green organizations on cam-pus and has led the fight for a green fee.

Black proposed a green fee to the Mandatory Fee Committee for four years. Each time he failed to get enough votes.

Last semester he decided to turn to the Student Activity Fee Committee to achieve his goal. Though he knew the money that would come from the SAFC would not be able to be used for infra-structure sustainability projects at Geor-gia State, he still presented his request on behalf of the students to the com-mittee.

After Black presented the idea to the SAFC, and after almost an entire se-mester of discussing the request and gathering feedback from students, the SAFC created the new Sustainability Fee Council which was given $10,000 to al-locate to green student organizations.

Almost immediately, two organiza-tions applied: GSU Bikes and Sustain-ability Energy Tribe, which Black advises.

“I had been working with Sustainable Energy Tribe in the past, and when they were losing their faculty advisor, they asked if I would become their advisor in 2010,” Black said. “They had been try-ing to make inroads with the university towards sustainability. I helped them fig-ure out which approaches might work best, and we started working towards a green fee. A green fee had been pro-posed by students before, but this time we were determined to make it happen, even if it took many years.”

Black also currently advises the Col-legiate Neuroscience Society (CNS), ONE Campus Challenge and Atlanta Herpetology Club.

In 2008 a committed group of fac-ulty and sta! “started the group called Greening Georgia State. We met to discuss strategies to move the cam-pus towards sustainability and started a Green Bag Lunch (now the Sustainabil-ity Forum) to bring interested university members together to hear from outside organizations and institutions what they do and learn more details about the is-sues that a!ect metro Atlanta and the state of Georgia. We had no budget and still have no budget, but our hard work and speakers’ generosity has allowed us to be successful in bringing a number of high profile speakers to campus,” Black said.

Greening Georgia State has brought in 22 speakers since 2008, most with little to no cost.

Black also recently won the coveted George M. Sparks Award. This award has been around for 28 years in honor of the former Georgia State president and is awarded to those within the uni-versity that display an extreme amount of dedication to the university and most importantly to the community they are a part of.

“I see Dr. Black as the go-to-guy for sustainability at GSU. He’s definitely a leader when it comes to facilitating green projects and championing the kind of projects that we already have going. Michael is a leader in terms of networking people for sustainability on campus and for leading organizations,” Assistant Professor of Communications, Dr. Carrie Freeman said in a video pre-sentation during the Special Recogni-tion Ceremony where Black received his award.

WRITTEN BY ANDRES CRUZ!WELLMANN

Associate News Editor

SUBMITTED PHOTOS

DR. MICHAEL BLACK

FACULTY OF THE YEAR

Dr. Michael Black, a lecturer at Georgia State, is constantly balancing his work and family. With a wife, 2 year old and 4 year old he still manages to spearhead the green movement at Georgia State and has been named The Signal’s faculty

member of the year.

DR. BLACK’S SPEAKERS BROUGHT IN BY GREENING GSU (SINCE 2008)US EPA Region 4 Administrator Gwendolyn Keyes Fleming, GreenLaw Director Stephanie Stuckey Benfield, US Forest Service Air Quality Program Manager Chuck Sams, US Forest Service Endangered Species Specialist Dennis Krusac, Rashid Nuri of Truly Living Well Urban Organic Farms, founding director of Upper Chattahoochee Riverkeeper Sally Bethea, Southface Sustainable Communities Design Director Robert Reed, Advanced Manufacturing Director at Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce Matthew Patterson, Suniva Senior Director Anthony Coker, State Representative Kathy Ashe, Sandra Neuse from the Board of Regents, Agnes Scott’s Sustainability Director Susan Kidd, Associate Director of the Center for Quality Growth, and Regional Development (CQGRD) at Georgia Tech Michael Elliott, Georgia Perimeter College Director of Sustainable Living and Environmental Studies Dr. Joanne Chu, Kennesaw State’s Sustainability Director Dr. R.C. Paul, Holly Elmore of Zero Waste Zone - Downtown Atlanta and Founder and Executive Director of the Green Foodservice Alliance, Sierra Club Conservation Organizer for the Beyond Coal Campaign Seth Gunning, Executive Director of Atlanta Bicycle Coalition Rebecca Serna, Crystal Clark of Downtown Transportation Management Association, Wayne Robertson of Energy Ace, Assistant Chief of Watershed Protection Branch in Georgia Environmental Protection Division Tim Cash, Sierra Club Lobbyist Neill Herring, and Executive Director at Georgia Watch Elena Parent.

After 12 years at Georgia State, Dr. Michael Black continues his push for a more sustainable campus. And he’s not giving up any time soon.

A GREEN FEE HAD BEEN PROPOSED BY STUDENTS BEFORE,

BUT THIS TIME WE WERE DETERMINED TO MAKE IT

HAPPEN, EVEN IF IT TOOK MANY YEARS.”“

Page 16: Vol. 80 No. 29

GSU BOOKSTOREUNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE, LIBRARY PLAZA, ADERHOLD AND UNIVERSITY COMMONS LOBBY

Visit gsubookstore.com for buyback hours and locations

CHECK-IN YOUR RENTAL BOOKSnow through

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Text 0570 to TEXTBK (839825) and take the FUN’D Your Summer Quiz for your chance to WIN.**Promotion valid 4/15/13 - 5/30/13. Open to U.S. residents 17 years of age or older. You can opt out of SMS messages from bookstore at any time by texting STOP to TEXTBK (839825). Text HELP for help. Msg&Data Rates May Apply. Up to 4 msgs/week. Supported Carriers: Alltel, AT&T, Boost Mobile, Cellcom, Cellular South, Cincinnati Bell, Nextel, nTelos, Sprint, T-Mobile, U.S. Cellular, and Verizon Wireless.

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Page 17: Vol. 80 No. 29

to Redeem bring a valid college ID to the Philips Arena box office

GAME 3: Saturday, April 27 7:00PM GAME 4: Monday, April 29 TBDGAME 6: Friday, May 3 TBD

hawks.com/playoffs /hawks /ATLHawks

TICKETSTICKETS

$16$16special offer forga state students!

Page 18: Vol. 80 No. 29

Rotting corpses, bloody bones and walls of heads greeted me at the door of Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse, a veritable hell of

chaos. My eyes skirted around a huge, dimly-lit room plastered from %oor to ceiling in horror movie posters and monster costumes. My #rst thought: Was I ready to become one of them?

I was here to interview Shane Morton and Chris Brown, the creative minds behind Adult Swim’s newest show: “Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell,” an o!ce comedy where degenerates go to work with Satan as their boss ($ursdays at midnight). But soon a"er entering this kooky warehouse #lled with paraphernalia of the weird, I knew this experience was going to be more than what I had imagined.

Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse, held every October, is housed here, and the grounds span over 40,000 feet to accommodate the hellish manslaughter of zombie assault.

“$ere are piles of dead bodies back here…” Morton said, as he led us around a huge room that was part studio, part storage room.

Remnants of set designs from Pretty Face laid about the room, including the backdrop in Satan’s o!ce: a painted mural of Satan smacking a nude woman’s behind, looking devious as…well, Lucifer himself. Morton showed us the “Ed Wood graveyard” – based on the early low-budget horror #lmmaker’s work - complete with smoke machine. A creepy pseudo-bathroom stood in the center of a room, reminiscent of a torture chamber worthy of “Saw”. A wall of melting heads stood alone, gummy faces frozen screams of eternal pain.

Morton and Brown make sets like those for a living. $eir newest work appears in Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell, where Morton was art director and Brown was co-designer, and both did special FX makeup for actors on the show.

“Every time we did some crazy gag on Pretty Face where like, someone is getting their face blown o&, or an infected leg spurting out tapioca pudding, everybody would just get this kind of gleeful ‘oh, this is so good’,” Morton said. “$at #rst day we had the spurting leg…lots of pus. It was like the Neapolitan of wounds. It started with blood and then the blood turned black and then pus started shooting out and we put air bubbles in it so it would like, fart out this nasty stu& – it was just so gross. But while you’re doing that stu& it’s not really gross, it’s funny. You know, we’re all laughing and stu&.”

Tapioca pudding? $e team even uses corn syrup for blood. As it turns out, food products are a regular staple in the world of SPFX. Blood is ketchup, pudding is guts, poop is…chocolate brownies. Morton squeezed his #sts together to make “colons.”

“I teach classes out here and I tell people all the time that silicone is like the industry standard now, but gelatin is kind of like that. And you can just buy it at Kroger and mix it right up and make seamless wounds,” Morton said.

Morton showed us to a table with props from the show. Each actor had their own special set of horns that was created to #t their personality. $ere were also cell phones, “soul contracts” and computers that looked as if they were made from actual skin. I asked Morton how long it took to make a computer out of “skin”.

$ey bring lots of prosthetic pieces on set. Sometimes the creative duo has to come up with things on the spot and just make it work. $e computers they made, which doubled as puppets, were completed in two hours, made with prosthetic pieces and hot glue, and then airbrush painted.

“I paint this [a mask] with a couple di&erent things, #rst I’ll dry brush it here and then I’ll come through and airbrush it,” Morton said. “So this thing gets pretty much painted how we’re going to paint you.”

Without further ado, it was time for me to suit up and begin my transformation into a demon. Morton handed me a long, shiny red robe that I slipped over my head. As soon as I sat down, Brown and Morton were already trying to #t horns onto my head…

Morton explained how the makeup he and Brown were using on me was water-based, so it would remove easily. $ey picked some small horns for my “tiny” forehead and got out the spirit gum, an “easy-o&” glue that has been used since the twenties.

On the set of Pretty Face, the team used Prozade, a very strong adhesive that is more resistant than spirit gum to actors’ sweat and several hours of screen time.

Morton and Brown applied spirit gum to the horns and blow dried them onto my forehead to make them stick in a process that took several minutes to complete.

While they worked on my face, the duo described their projects. Morton has worked with Rob Zombie, designed themed restaurants and haunted houses, and acts in self-produced horror shows like Silver Screen Spook Show. Brown built characters for companies like Disney-Pixar, was the head puppet-builder at the Center for

www.gsusignal.com/artsandliving$576��/,9,1*

My pretty little face went to

Hell

by: Samantha Reardon

This is something you’d have to get used to if you were one of our charac-ters. You constantly have people prodding and touching you and looking at you.”

-Chris Brown

continued on page next page

Makeup artists take Signal staff writer Samantha Reardonunder the paint to show how monsters are made

JOSHUA YU | THE SIGNAL"eir #nal product: Shane Morton (le!) and Chris Brown (right) pose with Samantha Reardon, our Signal sta$ writer.

JOSHUA YU | THE SIGNALShane Morton, horror makeup artist, turns Signal editor Samantha Reardon into a demon.

Page 19: Vol. 80 No. 29

In addition to all their accomplishments, the two currently produce material and design for Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse, a yearly Atlanta phenomenon that is not your average haunted house. Former arts and living Signal editor CC Stovall “survived” last year’s apocalypse, saving both her own ass and a few zombie-killing tricks.

“I have been into this stu& since I was like 3 years old,” said Shane of his work. “My parents took me to see King Kong and it like really warped me. So I’ve been messing around with makeup since I was really small.”

An obsession with the creation of horror resulted, and Morton learned how to make a career in the business.

“When I was in art school in Savannah, I ended up getting a job in the art department on Return of Swamp $ing,” Morton continued. “I was only like 19. It was really awesome, but I saw how much waste went on. And it wasn’t even a big budget movie, but it kind of freaked me out.”

Morton and Brown are the self-proclaimed “kings of upcycling.”

“To me, low-budget is always better,” Morton said. “If you don’t have money, you have to think and be creative.”

Brown said that anything could happen on set. Costume and makeup malfunctions are a regular occurrence.

“You have to prepare for everything,” Brown said. “Basically you have to bring your shop with you. If you’re lucky, you’ll just need what you’ve got. But it’s very likely that you’re going to get surprised. Can you pull this out of your ass at the last moment?”

Time crunches and bizarre locations are among the challenges the creative team faces on set. Morton explained that there were 60 di&erent locations on Pretty Face, one of which was a mountain. All the equipment had to be taken down into a ravine.

“We had to do makeup changes on the side of the mountain. Power was tough, and it was really hot, and there were copperheads everywhere and poison ivy. We came out unscathed, and everybody had a good time, but you’re looking out for all these guys who are in this uncomfortable makeup,” Morton said.

Most other sets on the show are standard. Morton said that most of the footage for hell was shot with a green screen. Sometimes he and Brown only have to build parts of a set, and the rest of the work is handled by a visual FX team.

“$ere was so much stu& that they were able to do with the VFX that you could never do practically,” Morton said. “Hell really looks hot. When you’re in there, there are heat lines coming o& of stu&.”

O!ce equipment on the show looks like it’s melting. $e e&ect was achieved by blasting

everything with a %ame-thrower. VFX then added “#re” to the props to make them look like they are still burning.

A"er several minutes of blow dryer-forehead action, my horns were securely applied. $en it was time for paint. Shane began with my face. He airbrushed my entire face, neck and hands with red makeup.

Shane said I lucked out with the makeup they were using. For the characters of Pretty Face, including lead character Gary (played by Henry Zebrowski), Shane and Chris used 99 percent alcohol makeup. $is makeup tends to make people sweat much more than usual. Chris explained that the body tries to shed the makeup in an attempt to cool down.

With actors sweating, there were constant touch-ups between takes.

“$is is something you’d have to get used to if you were one of our characters,” Chris said. “You constantly have people prodding and touching you and looking at you.”

I was almost demonized. I outstretched my hands as Morton painted the tops of them. For added emphasis, and because makeup lines form as I squinted my eyes, the team #lled in any gaps with a grease pencil.

I rose up from my chair. Everyone in the room looked giddy, holding a secret I wasn’t yet privy to.

“You’re ready for the Black Sabbath reunion,” Morton said.

I walked over to the mirror. A cocktail of emotions took over me: excitement, astonishment and horror rushed in as I saw my re%ection. From head-to-toe, I was no longer Samantha, a reporter here for an interview. Rather, I had undergone a Ka(a-esque transformation: I didn’t just look like a demon – I felt like a demon. I felt evil. And in those few moments, maybe I was.

TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013 19$576��/,9,1*

With music being her first love but her second job, Andrea Rogers tries to

find a balance between teaching as an English Professor, singing in a band and working on her poetry Ph.D.

Rogers is quite the professor. Just talking to her on the street, people would never know that she is a professor, musician and student.

Her unique sense of humor would set a person off, but then so would her outfit choices. Students are used to seeing professors dressed in slacks and typical work clothes. However, Rogers spices it up with pleated skirts and interesting tops. Her thick-framed square glasses definitely complete her look.

Rogers keeps both her music and teaching world separate because she feels as if the two worlds should not meet.

“I think the truth is I don’t feel compelled to tell my students about it,” Rogers said. “In a way, it’s my private life, and the two don’t really overlap. I’ve also never been the kind of person who feels comfortable asking people to come to shows or anything like that, so I think telling students that I was in a band might make them feel like I’m trying to market a product to them in a way.”

Ever since high school Rogers has been in a band with partner Colby Wright. The two of them have had several bands together, but their most recent band, Night Driving in Small Towns, has been around since 2004.

Coming up with a band name is hard, especially getting a name to stick in people’s heads. Luckily, the name came about when Rogers was literally driving down a dirt road in her hometown.

“You know when you are

driving along in a small town and you’re the only person on the road? I don’t know, it’s this intense feeling and you’re just listening to music and you kind of connect to it. That’s what I wanted our music to do,” Rogers said.

Her passion for her music comes out when she talks about it and the goals she hopes to accomplish, one of them being song writing. This is something her and Wright have taken up. They not only write all of their own songs, but songs for other bands too.

“In my wildest dreams I would really like for something that we wrote to take off. That’s really where the money is, but it’s kind of behind the scenes,” Rogers said.

Rogers and Wright share mutual respect for each other and work very well together because they initially know how they both work.

“A lot of bands deal with competition among its members. Thankfully that’s never really been an issue for us because she’s great at all of the things I’m horrible at. I trust her and that goes a long way toward keeping a partnership, friendship, etc. moving forward,” Wright said.

Given a copy of their album “Closure,” it is the type of music that one would listen to on a bad day. Put it on track one and instantly a smile will go across someone’s face. The songs mainly talk about love, but in a funky, fun way.

Every Sunday, Rogers meets Wright at his house, in the middle of nowhere. If something goes wrong with the scheduling that week, it messes Rogers up and her other work that she needs to accomplish.

Music does not fall short when it comes to her love life. Her boyfriend Heath McNease is a musician as well.

Although it can be hard with both of their busy schedules, they find the time to make it work.

“He tours full-time, so our

schedules almost never line up, but we make it work,” Rogers said. “We have to plan ahead sometimes, so there are no spontaneous dinner dates or trips out of town, but that’s fine by me - I don’t really like surprises.”

When Christmas comes around, the couple will send off videos to their loved ones. This is really the only time when the couple can work together. The videos consist of McNease playing the guitar and Rogers singing a Christmas melody.

With her warm, sweet spirit, Rogers makes sure that these Christmas videos arrive in the mail on Christmas Eve, that way if she cannot be with her family that year, in a unique way they are all together.

“While multi-tasking is exhausting, I’m a big believer in the notion that you make your own path, and I’m equally certain that working hard and being nice pays off in the long run,” Rogers said.

Professor Rogers

KAYLYN HINZSta& Reporter

Living the best of both worlds

CANDRA UMUNNA | THE SIGNALProfessor Rogers and her keyboard.

How to make horns and/or masks:1. Do a preliminary sculpt in clay.

2. Make a plaster mold of the sculpted piece.

3. Color rubber with a base FRORU�DQG�ĆOO�WKH�SODVWHU�PROG�with it.

4. Pull the rubber out of the mold

5. Add detail to the pieces with paint.

6. For horns, the team used SRO\�IRDP�WR�ĆOO�WKHP�VR�WKH\�would not collapse.

My pretty little face went to Hell

continued from page 18

CANDRA UMUNNA | THE SIGNALAndrea Rogers balances life as a musician, professor and student at Georgia State.

Page 20: Vol. 80 No. 29

Class of Collegiate Rockstars

TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013 $576��/,9,1*

Loraine is an instrumental post-rock band fronted by Georgia State students Eric Anderson and Justin Young. $ey

have been active in the Atlanta music scene since early 2012 and are seeking to expand the tiny niche of instrumental bands in Atlanta. Young describes their unique sound as “instrumental music characterized by long dynamic builds and %owy melodies.” Loraine has managed to make good use of the little time they have been together for and have played at prominent venues such as $e Drunken Unicorn and $e Masquerade. $ey both face numerous challenges switching between the lives of students and active musicians.

“It’s hard. I go to school, work and play in

this band. Pretty much every

spare moment I have is devoted to Loraine,” Anderson said. Anderson is a political science major in his junior year and views his burgeoning career in music as his main focus. “School is a back-up plan for me, for sure. Music is my purpose,” Anderson said. Young, an English major in his junior year, is currently taking a hiatus from school in order to devote his full attention to Loraine. “I don’t manage school time and music time. I stopped doing school for the music, for now. I’ll come back once something happens or nothing happens,” Young said. For now, Loraine is continuing to further the scope of their music by #nishing a full-length album, getting signed to a label and embarking on a summer tour. Hear Loraine’s debut EP “An Autumn Evening” at loraine.bandcamp.com.

Loraine

Twin Studies is a #ve piece group that calls on the hazy 80s aesthetics of New Order, Joy Division and My Bloody

Valentine.“We started in September of 2012. We are

a little bit dream poppy, but also post-punk and I guess shoegaze as well,” guitarist Jay Stanley said.

Stanley is new to Georgia State and is currently taking a break from school a"er completing his freshman year.

“I didn’t go to school for a little while a"er high school just so I could play music. If I was in school I wouldn’t have as much time to do this stu&,” Stanley said.

$ough he plans to return in the fall, Stanley does not consider his music career as his #rst priority.

“$e whole thing about being a rock star and making a lot of money o& of music is really hard and almost unobtainable. It would probably be better if I #nd a real career and play music as a hobby,” Stanley said.

Even though the rockstar life seems unrealistic, Stanley still views music as something inseparable from his life, even taking precedence over work.

“I like music too much to give up playing it. Maybe I’ll give up hours at work to get by once school starts again,” Stanley said.

Despite being less then a year old, Twin Studies has managed to play at most of

Atlanta’s hot beds for raw talent, including $e Earl, $e Drunken Unicorn and Star Bar.

Listen to Twin Studies debut material at https://soundcloud.com/twinstudies

Twin Studies

Sneaky Hand is a six-piece band otorious among Atlanta’s dive bars and house parties for their blistering dance grooves

and on-stage antics.$eir sound bleeds through numerous

genres, so they decided to create their own.“Post-punk funk against the machine,

that’s the term I’ve been using -- I’m the against the machine,” said lead singer Matt Maher.

When Maher isn’t crowd sur#ng and

passing around tambourines to a sea of sweaty bodies, he can be found in Georgia State’s studio art program.

“I just found out I was a senior. I’m getting a BA in Studio Art, and next year I will apply to be a sculpture major. I really love being at school but, because I’m making things, I don’t have tests or papers so it’s easier for me to manage time,” Maher said.

While schoolwork and music can be a con%icting relationship for most, Maher #nds the two to be symbiotic.

“I actually came to school with the band in me knowing that I was going do work in and around Sneaky Hand. When I was in printmaking class, I made little posters and cards and %iers and etchings that revolved around the band. $e two always serve themselves,” Maher said.

Guitarist and fellow Georgia State Russel Kirn #nds a similar musical inspiration in his studies.

“I have a physics teacher here who is extremely awesome and she talks about the movement of electrons, and I think about planets as electrons around the sun as if the sun were this super hot massive dense nucleus. So my ri&s are like this hot ball of nuclei,” Kirn said.

However, time management is still an issue as Kirn navigates between musical and scholarly devotion.

“I take my school very seriously so I don’t sleep at all, but I spend a lot more time worrying about Sneaky Hand,” Kirn said.

Keep up with the adventures of Sneaky Hand at their website, http://www.sneakyhand.com.

Sneaky Hand

Georgia State student Kelly Stroup has been immersed in

the Atlanta hardcore punk scene since 2006, most recently playing guitar for hardcore acts Ralph and Manic.

Ralph was formed four and a half years ago and has since maintained a strong presence among the small yet thriving Atlanta punk circuit.

Manic is a more recent project for Stroup and features a much harsher and caustic sound than Ralph.

“Manic is newer, about a year and a half old. Manic is a heavier band, a little more screamy a little more distorted and the ri&s are darker. Ralph is more of a mix between adolescent 80s hardcore in an American hardcore vein,” Stroup said.

He is currently a #lm major #nishing up his senior year and is preparing to graduate. Even though he is on the cusp of his degree, music and #lm occupy his time equally.

“Music is my favorite thing to do, #lm making is really fun but there’s way more of a pressure when I comes to school and doing creative studies like that. I have to get both done, it’s not which one is more important, it’s

how do I split my time evenly.” Stroup said.Both careers are intensely time consuming

in separate ways and Stroup is o"en forced to make compromises between the two.

“I’ve not studied for school to do a show and I’ve de#nitely skipped shows to study. It’s pretty equal,” Stroup said.

A"er graduation, Stroup plans to create his own cassette tape label, release a full-length album and continue performing around Atlanta with Ralph and Manic.

Check out Scavenger of Death Records to hear releases from Ralph and Manic at http://scavengerofdeathrecords.bandcamp.com.

Ralph

PAUL DEMERRITTSta& Reporter

Post-punk funk against the machine, that’s the term I’ve been using -- I’m the against the ma-chine,”

-Matt Maher“

20

Page 21: Vol. 80 No. 29

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Page 22: Vol. 80 No. 29

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Campus Events

Downtown Events

Smashing PumpkinsFriday, April 267:30 pmChastain Park AmpitheatreTickets available on http://www.chastainseries.com/

Tim McGraw with Brantley Gilbert, Love and TheftSunday, May 127 pmAaron’s Ampitheatre at LakewoodTickets are $40 - $85+ on Livenation.

Concerts/Shows

TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013

Jazz Guitar & Bass Ensembles Thursda, April 256 p.m.Fulton County Central LibraryJoin GSU School of Music guitar and bass students in this per-formance featuring jazz standards, contemporary and Latin jazz works. $is event is free and open to the public. Get more info on www.music.gsu.edu

After EffectsThursday, April 183 - 4:30 pm403 Classroom SouthAdobe A"er E&ects is primarily used for creating motion graphics and visual e&ects. A"er E&ects allows users to animate, alter and composite media in 2D and 3D space with various built-in tools and third party plug-ins, as well as individual attention to variables like parallax and user-adjustable angle of observation.

Atlanta Chamber WindsMonday, April 228 pmFlorence Kople& Recital HallCome see Robert J Ambrose, artistic director, and the Atlanta Chamber Winds perform. $is event is free and open to the public.

Education Career Fair 2013Wednesday, April 244 - 7 pmUniversity Center$e annual Education Career Fair is scheduled for Wednesday, April 24, 2013, from 4-7 p.m. in University Center. For more in-formation, contact University Career Services at http://www.gsu.edu/career/index.html.

Players of GSU: “The Servant of Two Mas-ters” Thursday, April 18 to Saturday, April 27 at midnight $e Players of GSU present the Italian comedy, “$e Servant of Two Masters.” $e play will be performed April 18-20 and 25-27 at 8 p.m. and April 21 and 28 at 3 p.m. at Dahlberg Hall $eatre. Tickets are $10 for students, faculty, and sta& with proper ID and $15 for general admission. For reservations go to www.gsuplayers.com and for questions call 404-413-5693.

Tiempo Libre Salsa AutenticaSaturday, April 278 pmRialtoClassically trained at Cuba’s premiere conservatories, Miami-based three-time GRAMMY-nominated Tiempo Libre performs the incendiary sounds of timba, a high-energy, danceable blend of Latin jazz and son rhythms. Tiempo Libre’s seven musicians came together to realize a common vision: to create the #rst au-thentic all-Cuban timba band in the United States. $eir passion for the music of their heritage led them together between an array

of other projects to forge this exciting new group, hence the name Tiempo Libre, which means “free time.”

Philosophy Colloquium: Robin KarTuesday, April 30th12 - 1:30 pm���3HDFKWUHH�6WUHHW�%XLOGLQJ����WK�ćRRU�FRQIHUHQFH�URRP�Robin Kar of the University of Illinois Law School will be giving a talk.

Prospectus Presentation for Jessica W. TrussellTuesday, April 30th1 pmAnnouncement of Prospectus Presentation entitled, “E&ects of a Direct Instruction Morphographic Curriculum on the Morpho-graphic Knowledge of Late Elementary Deaf and Hard of Hearing Students,” by Jessica W. Trussell.

FREE Resume Review @ GSU Alpharetta CenterThursday, May 2nd5 - 7 pmAlpharetta Center (Brookside Pkwy)$e Georgia State Alumni Association is hosting another FREE Resume Review on $ursday, May 2 from 5:00-7:00 p.m. We will have HR professionals available to meet with you one-on-one to review your resume. You must have an appointment. Call 404-413-2190 to schedule an appointment.

Inman Park Spring FestivalSaturday, April 27 - April 2810 amInman ParkCome tour Atlanta’s most prestigious collection of Victorian and Cra"sman homes. Enjoy our famous artists market and street fair, nonstop entertainment, and Atlanta’s wackiest parade. See more details and pictures on our website. 90,000 attendees expected.

The Great Atlanta Pot Festival Saturday, May 4th11:30 am - 7 pmFreedom Park (Moreland Ave.) $e Great Atlanta Pot Festival is held in conjunction w the Global Cannabis March on Saturday May 4th - 11am to 7pm. $e march begins in Freedom Park @ L5P. $is A Free Event! Bands and Speakers on our Freedom! Culture (from Jamaica), Copious Jones, Ghost Riders Car Club, Hair of the Dog & the Stone Posse Band. More info @ www.potfestival.com or phone 404-462-7959

Fiesta AtlantaSunday, May 5th10 amCentennial Olympic ParkFiesta Atlanta is Atlanta’s premier Hispanic outdoor festival and the largest Cinco de Mayo party in the southeast. $e party will feature a daylong celebration of Latino culture and heritage, fea-turing continuous live musical performances on two di&erent stages by international and national recording artists. $ere will be mariachi music, Mexican folk dancing, a 5k race, youth soc-cer clinics and sponsor displays with free product samples as well as arts and cra"s and authentic foods. Visit #estaatlanta.com for more information!

Make Time 4 LoveSaturday, May 11th 7 pmStrand Theatre (Marietta) Come see CBS Atlanta’s Markina Brown in the spectacular stage

play! “Sierra McIntosh has it all: Beauty, brains and business. At least, that’s what she tells herself. Just when Sierra thinks she has it all #gured out, she meets Eric and he reminds her that a life without love is really no life at all.” Find out if Sierra will lose love, #nd love or make time for it! Call (404) 919-1814 for information on how to get tickets.

2013 Komen Atlanta Race for the CureSaturday, May 116:45 am - 10:30 amAtlantic Station$e 23rd annual Komen Atlanta Race for the Cure 5K run/walk and 1 mile family walk will take place Saturday, May 11, at Atlan-tic Station. $is year, an expected 15,000 Atlantans will help raise $1.5 million to help run breast cancer out of town. Register online individually or with a team at www.komenatlanta.org. It’s $30 to participate and you can get more information on their website or by calling (404) 459-8700.

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Styles Spacing Lists

Campus Events

CAMPUS EVENTSwww.gsu.edu/studentevents

CAMPUS EVENTS AND SPOTLIGHT PROGRAMS BOARD IN LIBRARY PLAZA

Thursday, April 25, Noon-1 p.m.Come out for our last plaza of the school year.

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For more information, contact Campus Events at

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DISCOUNT TICKETS NOW AVAILABLE!

Discount tickets for Six Flags Over Georgia

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COMING SOON Georgia Renaissance Festival tickets

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Cinefest Film Theatre

April 22-28 � Sanjuro0RQGD\�)ULGD\�����D�P��� 3 p.m., 7 p.m.

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April 22-28 � Youth of the Beast0RQGD\�)ULGD\����S�P��� 5 p.m., 9 p.m.

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April 29-May 5 � Killer of Sheep0RQGD\�)ULGD\�����D�P�����S�P���� 3 p.m., 5 p.m., 7 p.m.

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Spotlight

SPOTLIGHT PROGRAMS BOARDwww.gsu.edu/spotlight

SPOTLIGHT PROGRAMS BOARD AND CAMPUS EVENTS IN LIBRARY PLAZA

Thursday, April 25, Noon-1 p.m.Come out for our last plaza of the school year.

/HW·V�HQG�WKH�VFKRRO�\HDU�ULJKW�PANTHER PROWL: DEFYING GRAVITY

Friday, April 26, 8 p.m.-2 a.m.Student Center Ballroom

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FINALS BREAK: SALSA IN THE CITYMonday, April 29, 7-10 p.m.

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