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It’s not often that metal- heads use the power of metal for charity, but one USF stu- dent is summoning bands from all over Florida to St. Petersburg on Saturday in support of epilepsy research. USF student Lucille Volpe, a production assistant at State Theatre, put together Destroyer Fest to satisfy the demand for metal music. “Every band at the festi- val is producing something that is organic and raw,” she said. “They’re not using freak- ing autotune or a synthesizer. They’re using beefy Orange amps, heavy guitars and big drums that create a huge live experience.” The proceeds from the event will go to the Epilepsy Services Foundation in honor of epi- lepsy awareness month. “It’s a disease that needs a bit more awareness,” Volpe said. “I want my festival to be a nonprofit festival that gives back to the community.” The prospect of a mosh pit or a blown eardrum is unfa- vorable to some newcomers, but Volpe said it’s a shared experience everyone needs to try once. “People look out for each other. If you fall on the floor, someone is going to pick you right back up,” she said. “Everyone is there to have a good time, not beat the crap of each other.” The rush of head banging while throwing up devil horns was lost to ages with bands such as Black Sabbath, but Volpe said that feeling is com- ing back to a new generation of metalheads. “It’s addicting and intoxicat- ing,” she said. “I just wanted more of it and it’s why I decid- ed to work in music. I wanted to help build that community.” Volpe said bringing talented bands might help proliferate the metal scene in the Tampa area, which used to be consid- ered the death metal capital of the world. “I don’t know what hap- pened,” she said. “For some reason, it just diminished it over the years. Instead indie music and electronica became more popular.” Though the live metal scene in Florida has been slow to resurrect, it’s gained traction in other parts of the country since the 1990s. “Right now, huge bands are getting booked everywhere but Florida,” Volpe said. “I want to bring them down here and show them that Florida is worth their time.” Some metal subgenres, with bands such as Electric Wizard and Sleep, feature a laid-back groove and lower pitch than early metal bands, such as Iron Maiden or Megadeth. “I love metal and I love sludge metal, doom metal and stoner metal,” Volpe said. “When there’s a metal The Oracle www.usforacle.com UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2014 I VOL. 52 NO. 46 I NSIDE THIS I SSUE MONTAGE SPORTS Cousins looks to step out of brother’s shadow at USF. BACK OPINION “Christmas creep” turns off shoppers. Page 4 Opinion ....................................................... 4 Classifieds .............................................. 8 Crossword ....................................... 8 sports ......................................................... 12 The Index Staff union, USF find common ground Yik Yak engages colleges with anonymity Collective bargaining for the 2014-15 contract came to a close between university and staff union officials who rep- resent 700 custodians, mainte- nance and non-administrative staff on campus. Though negotiations began with a rough start in September, both sides reconciled many issues and left Wednesday’s bargaining meeting grinning and shaking hands. “You met us midway on some stuff, we met you mid- way on stuff,” University Chief Negotiator John Dickinson said. “This is our best proposal of the year.” Once the contract is ratified, all university staff will receive a 3 percent increase to base salary starting in 2015. This settlement followed a series of counter propos- als. The staff union originally demanded a 5 percent base salary increase, while the uni- versity proposed an across- the-board 2 percent increase with a bonus for merit. “Our board is extremely adamant in their position that performance should be a criti- cal factor in how we pay people at this university,” Dickinson said. “For purposes of getting an agreement … at least this first year, we will retreat from that notion.” Hector Ramos, chief nego- tiator for the staff union, said a base salary increase was need- ed to compensate for reces- By Wesley Higgins NEWS EDITOR n See UNION on PAGE 2 “We should have our squir- rels fight the squirrels from other universities to prove we are the best,” one Yik Yak post from Virginia Tech said. “I think I did better on my midterms than the democratic party …,” posted another stu- dent at the College of William & Mary. “You know what makes your 4 year degree useless? A neck tattoo,” said another post from Michigan State. If a USF student were to use the Yik Yak app on campus, they’d likely see jokes about the value of a UCF degree, a reference to a quirky profes- sor or something weird some- one saw in the dining hall on campus. Yik Yak has become one of the latest trends in social media wherein people can anonymously post to users around them. According to Cam Mullen, lead community developer at Yik Yak, people are posting to the app every 60 seconds and an estimated 11 to 15 percent of students at USF use it. “We call it a local, anony- mous Twitter,” Mullen said. “We show you the 100 most recent posts within a few mile radius, and you don’t have to friend or follow each other. It’s an open network – like a bul- letin board in your area.” What makes Yik Yak unique among smartphone apps, Mullen said, was the “intersec- tion of location and anonym- ity.” In the early days of apps and smartphones, he said there was a lot of anonymous activity and people began to feel sketched out and thus shifted to requiring usernames to show identities. While the location aspect of the app allows users to only see what’s posted in a two-mile radius and feel a sense of community, Mullen said there is a trend for apps to cycle back to more anonymity. “I find it cool because every- thing is anonymous,” said Taylre Loyster, a junior major- By Alex Rosenthal EDITOR IN CHIEF n See YIK YAK on PAGE 3 Student brings the metal to St. Pete By Wesley Higgins NEWS EDITOR n See METAL on PAGE 2 n The growing app that all the kids are using these days.
Transcript
Page 1: 11-13-14

It’s not often that metal-heads use the power of metal for charity, but one USF stu-dent is summoning bands from all over Florida to St. Petersburg on Saturday in support of epilepsy research.

USF student Lucille Volpe, a production assistant at State Theatre, put together Destroyer Fest to satisfy the demand for metal music.

“Every band at the festi-val is producing something that is organic and raw,” she said. “They’re not using freak-ing autotune or a synthesizer. They’re using beefy Orange amps, heavy guitars and big drums that create a huge live experience.”

The proceeds from the event will go to the Epilepsy Services Foundation in honor of epi-lepsy awareness month.

“It’s a disease that needs a bit more awareness,” Volpe

said. “I want my festival to be a nonprofit festival that gives back to the community.”

The prospect of a mosh pit or a blown eardrum is unfa-vorable to some newcomers, but Volpe said it’s a shared experience everyone needs to try once.

“People look out for each other. If you fall on the floor, someone is going to pick you right back up,” she said. “Everyone is there to have a good time, not beat the crap of each other.”

The rush of head banging while throwing up devil horns was lost to ages with bands such as Black Sabbath, but Volpe said that feeling is com-ing back to a new generation of metalheads.

“It’s addicting and intoxicat-ing,” she said. “I just wanted more of it and it’s why I decid-ed to work in music. I wanted to help build that community.”

Volpe said bringing talented bands might help proliferate the metal scene in the Tampa

area, which used to be consid-ered the death metal capital of the world.

“I don’t know what hap-pened,” she said. “For some reason, it just diminished it over the years. Instead indie music and electronica became more popular.”

Though the live metal scene in Florida has been slow to resurrect, it’s gained traction in other parts of the country since the 1990s.

“Right now, huge bands are getting booked everywhere but Florida,” Volpe said. “I want to bring them down here and show them that Florida is worth their time.”

Some metal subgenres, with bands such as Electric Wizard and Sleep, feature a laid-back groove and lower pitch than early metal bands, such as Iron Maiden or Megadeth.

“I love metal and I love sludge metal, doom metal and stoner metal,” Volpe said. “When there’s a metal

The Oraclew w w . u s f o r a c l e . c o m U N I V E R S I T Y O F S O U T H F L O R I D AT H U R S D A Y , N O V E M B E R 1 3 , 2 0 1 4 I V O L . 5 2 N O . 4 6

InsIde thIs Issue

Montage

SPORTSCousins looks to step out of brother’s shadow at USF. BACK

OPINION“Christmas creep” turns off shoppers. Page 4

Opinion.......................................................4 Classifieds..............................................8

Crossword.......................................8sports.........................................................12

The Index

Staff union, USF find common ground

Yik Yak engages colleges with anonymity

Collective bargaining for the 2014-15 contract came to a close between university and staff union officials who rep-resent 700 custodians, mainte-nance and non-administrative staff on campus.

Though negotiations began with a rough start in September, both sides reconciled many issues and left Wednesday’s bargaining meeting grinning and shaking hands.

“You met us midway on some stuff, we met you mid-way on stuff,” University Chief Negotiator John Dickinson said. “This is our best proposal of the year.”

Once the contract is ratified, all university staff will receive a 3 percent increase to base salary starting in 2015.

This settlement followed a series of counter propos-als. The staff union originally demanded a 5 percent base salary increase, while the uni-versity proposed an across-the-board 2 percent increase with a bonus for merit.

“Our board is extremely adamant in their position that performance should be a criti-cal factor in how we pay people at this university,” Dickinson said. “For purposes of getting an agreement … at least this first year, we will retreat from that notion.”

Hector Ramos, chief nego-tiator for the staff union, said a base salary increase was need-ed to compensate for reces-

By Wesley HigginsN E W S E D I T O R

n See UNION on PAGE 2

“We should have our squir-rels fight the squirrels from other universities to prove we are the best,” one Yik Yak post from Virginia Tech said.

“I think I did better on my midterms than the democratic party …,” posted another stu-dent at the College of William & Mary.

“You know what makes your 4 year degree useless? A neck tattoo,” said another post from Michigan State.

If a USF student were to use the Yik Yak app on campus, they’d likely see jokes about the value of a UCF degree, a reference to a quirky profes-sor or something weird some-one saw in the dining hall on campus.

Yik Yak has become one of the latest trends in social media wherein people can anonymously post to users around them. According to Cam Mullen, lead community developer at Yik Yak, people are posting to the app every 60 seconds and an estimated 11 to 15 percent of students at USF use it.

“We call it a local, anony-mous Twitter,” Mullen said. “We show you the 100 most recent posts within a few mile radius, and you don’t have to friend or follow each other. It’s

an open network – like a bul-letin board in your area.”

What makes Yik Yak unique among smartphone apps, Mullen said, was the “intersec-tion of location and anonym-ity.”

In the early days of apps and smartphones, he said there was a lot of anonymous activity and people began to feel sketched out and thus shifted to requiring usernames to show identities. While the location aspect of the app allows users to only see what’s posted in a two-mile radius and feel a sense of community, Mullen said there is a trend for apps to cycle back to more anonymity.

“I find it cool because every-thing is anonymous,” said Taylre Loyster, a junior major-

By Alex RosenthalE D I T O R I N C H I E F

n See YIK YAK on PAGE 3

Student brings the metal to St. PeteBy Wesley HigginsN E W S E D I T O R

n See METAL on PAGE 2

n The growing app that all the kids are using these days.

Page 2: 11-13-14

T H U R S DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 3 , 2 0 1 4 ● T H E O R AC L E 2

show, everybody comes out. It doesn’t matter who it is or what kind of metal it is, people just love it.”

Destroyer Fest will feature the slower, heavier kind of metal with fuzzy guitar riffs and bonesaw bass lines. Ten Florida bands, such as Ulcer and Orbweaver, will open for Weedeater.

Formed in 1998 in North Carolina, Weedeater is a household name in the stoner metal scene. They’ve released four albums and toured the world with sold-out shows.

“For Weedeater to put their faith in some new kid on the block, that’s a pretty reward-ing feeling,” Volpe said.

After getting permission from her boss at State Theatre almost a year ago, Volpe said she called every metal band she could think of to convince them to play.

“I contacted big time agents who had been agents for Black

Sabbath and Metallica,” she said. ““After Weedeater signed on, it all went from there.”

Volpe said she got the idea for using metal to raise dona-tions after raising $3,000 at a smaller concert in New Port Richey three years ago.

“That was just from local bands and a few donations,” she said. “Now I want to use my resources to do something bigger … and I was tired of indie festivals all the time while the metal bands were left out.”

Volpe said State Theatre would give the opening acts a chance to play a bigger venue than they normally could. After the festival, there will also be an after-party across the street at The Local 662, which will have free entry and Jagermeister with festival tick-ets.

“The after-party will high-light some up-and-coming metal that are on the cusp of hitting it big,” she said.

The festival is all-ages and doors open at 3 p.m. Saturday. Tickets are $15 advance and $18 at the box-office.

METALContinued from PAGE 1

sion years in which the staff received little or no increase.

“We don’t blame the univer-sity for that,” he said. “We’re trying to make up some of that lost ground.”

The university also agreed to provide the staff union a list of newly hired staff, including their names, job titles, depart-ments and on-campus mailing addresses.

This arrangement satisfies the union’s demand to increase its access to staff employees and their awareness of the union’s existence.

Ramos originally proposed the university hand out a letter from the union president and a copy of their contract to new staff hires.

Outlining the extent and definition of practical disci-pline was central to the final discussions as well.

Ramos asked the univer-sity in previous meetings to explicitly express how supervi-sors may handle reprimanding

employees. The contract will now state

that supervisors must disci-pline respectfully and in a pri-vate manner to avoid embar-rassment.

In earlier negotiations, Ramos said the staff union received reports of unjust treatment. Dickinson said Wednesday that the univer-sity would remind managers and supervisors to treat their employees fairly.

“It’s not just because (the staff union) proposed it,” Dickinson said. “It’s because it’s the right thing to do.”

Dickinson further said pub-lic disciplinary actions, such as yelling at an employee whose mistake creates an imminent danger, would be reviewed by Human Resources and resolved internally.

For reprimanded employ-ees, the university agreed to define progressive discipline as a process for dealing with job-related behavior that doesn’t meet the university’s performance standards.

“It’s the notion of the employee being given the

chance to improve their behav-ior before immediate termina-tion,” Dickinson said.

The university also signed off on a new grievance pro-cedure. If a staff employee’s grievance got to the point of arbitration, each party would split the cost of the arbitrator.

Before this, the cost of arbi-tration fell to the party that lost in court, which was a jeop-ardy Ramos had complained the faculty union didn’t have to risk, unlike the staff union.

The university also agreed to revise the contract’s layoff policy to better protect perma-nent status staff employees. If layoffs would be necessary, nonpermanent employees in comparable positions will be laid off instead.

Though the staff union mem-bers at Wednesday’s meetings said they approved of the uni-versity’s final proposal, they would nonetheless meet with union members Nov. 21 before ratifying the contract.

“Thank you, for what I con-sider a very fruitful negotia-tion,” Ramos said.

UNIONContinued from PAGE 1

Page 3: 11-13-14

T H U R S DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 3 , 2 0 1 4 ● T H E O R AC L E 3

SigDelt hosts benefit to prevent child abuse

The Gamma Eta chapter of the Sigma Delta Tau sorority is hosting its annual Putting on the Hits philanthropy event to benefit Prevent Child Abuse America, a nonprofit organiza-tion.

Putting on the Hits, an event that has been hosted by SigDelt for the last 24 years, is a lip-syncing and dancing competition in which differ-ent Greek organizations on campus compete against each other.

All of the money raised from admission to the event goes to Prevent Child Abuse America, and the event has given over $100,000 to the organization over the last five years, accord-ing to the sorority. This year SigDelt aims to raise $50,000 for the organization through the event.

Prevent Child Abuse America, founded in 1972, works with 600 families across all 50 states to promote healthy

childhood development and advocate for a national frame-work to prevent instances of abuse and neglect.

SigDelt works with the orga-nization on a national level and each chapter is respon-sible for a philanthropy event to raise funds.

According to the SigDelt national website, the sorority as a whole raised $254,925 for Prevent Child Abuse America, and the USF Gamma Eta chap-ter raised a total of $45,000 during the 2013-2014 academ-ic year.

Leading up to the event, SigDelt completed several ser-vice projects to raise aware-ness for the organization and the event itself included a donation car wash, which was held on Veteran’s Day.

The 25th Annual Putting on the Hits event will take place in the Marshall Student Center Ballroom at 6:30 p.m. this eve-ning. Ballroom seats are $10 each and are first come, first serve. The event will also be screened in the Oval Theater for $7 each.

By Brandon Shaik A S S T . N E W S E D I T O R

ing in integrated animal biol-ogy. “When I use it, I usually am on the sixth floor of the Library, calling out people that are being loud.”

When the app was launched in November 2013 at Furman University, Mullen said the creators saw the growing popularity of certain Twitter accounts.

“They saw a bunch of these anonymous Twitter accounts on campus that I’m sure you have at USF, like maybe ‘USF Confessions’ or ‘Overheard at USF,’ and they had tons of fol-lowers on campus, but (the accounts were run) by only a few anonymous people … so they wanted to give this ability to post to everyone,” Mullen said.

Anonymity proved prob-lematic for the app earlier this year when numerous arti-cles criticized it for allowing cyberbullying at high schools

and middle schools across the country, according to arti-cles by Forbes and Business Insider.

Mullen said the app has since been reworked so that users cannot post on the property of high schools or middle schools because “they weren’t mature enough” and has been geared more toward the college-age demographic. To him, the location and ano-nymity can level the playing field between, for example, someone familiar with cam-pus and a freshman on cam-pus in the first few days. Posts from both kinds of users would theoretically be treated the same in the same loca-tion.

“(The anonymity) lets you talk about conversations you might not otherwise be able to have … so you’re more comfortable because you won’t feel judged,” he said.

The hazards of anonymity are countered in various ways, Mullen said.

“Anonymity in general can sometimes breed not the best

behavior online, and at Yik Yak, we err on the side of take stuff down as quickly as pos-sible,” Mullen said.

He said the first obstacle for negative content is the voting process on the app, with which users can pro-mote, or “up vote,” liked con-tent and “down vote” poor content. Once any particular post reaches a score of nega-tive five, the post is removed automatically.

Mullen also said the app has a feature in which users can report posts, and the app has a team of moderators who look at posts for specific names, phone numbers and anything else like cyberbul-lying, racist or homophobic slurs, and other inappropriate content.

Within the last year, the app has grown worldwide and is now used on over 1,000 col-lege campuses.

— Additional reporting by Sebastian Contento

YIK YAKContinued from PAGE 1

Page 4: 11-13-14

U N I V E R S I T Y O F S O U T H F L O R I D A ● T H U R S D A Y, N O V E M B E R 1 3 , 2 0 1 4 ● T H E O R AC L E

Opinion4

Editor in Chief: Alex Rosenthal ............................ [email protected]

Managing Editor: Roberto Roldan .................. [email protected]

News Editor: Wesley Higgins ......................... [email protected]

Sports Editor: Vinnie Portell ........................ [email protected]

Lifestyle Editor: Courtney Combs .......... [email protected]

Copy Editor: Grace Hoyte

Multimedia Editor: Adam Mathieu

Copy Editor: Sebastian Contento, Jacob Hoag, Brandon Shaik

Graphic Arts Manager: Chelsea Stulen

the Oracle the University of South Florida’s student newspaper since 1966

The Oracle is published Monday through Thursday during the fall and spring semesters, and twice weekly, Monday and Thursday, during the summer.

The Oracle allocates one free issue to each student. Additional copies are $.50 each and available at the Oracle office (SVC 0002).

CORRECTIONSThe Oracle will correct or clarify factual errors. Contact Editor in Chief Alex Rosenthal at 974-5190.

Website: usforacle.comFacebook: facebook.com/usforacleTwitter: @USFOracle

Main . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 974-6242Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 974-5190News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 974-1888Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 974-2842Lifestyle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 974-2398Advertising . . . . . . . . . . . . 974-2620Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 974-6242

BY PHONE

‘Christmas creep’ pushes consumers away from stores

“For every Christmas tree lit before thanksgiving, an elf drowns a baby reindeer,” tweet-ed comedian Zach Galifianakis.

While his message is brash, it’s serious: Christmas is hap-pening far too soon and it’s everywhere. What was once carols playing softly in the department store and a lit tree here and there is now a holiday movie on every TV channel, garland and lights on anything without a pulse, and let’s not forget the psychopathy that is gift shopping.

The premature arrival of the holidays in retail stores, coined the “Christmas creep,” seems to start earlier every year.

Beginning in the early 2000s,

retailers Walmart, Target and J.C. Penney followed the lead of Sam’s Club and Costco by offer-ing Christmas products such as ornaments, giftwrap and cards to shoppers as early as September.

Kmart took a cheeky approach to starting Christmas in September with a recent commercial that danced around the subject of starting shopping early, advertising a hypotheti-cal “merry” celebration in late December. Santa hats, nutcrack-ers and strings of lights were shelved next to scary masks, fake pumpkins and oversized bags of candy.

William Cody, managing director of the Baker Retailing Initiative at the University of Pennsylvania, said he believes retailers begin selling holiday merchandise early to avoid selling anything on a promo-tion, increasing the number of full-price sales.

Not every customer is buy-ing in to the Christmas creep, though. In a survey of 1,000 people, 71 percent felt “annoyed” or “very annoyed” to see holi-day products in stores before Halloween and 42 percent said

they were deterred from buying from them as a result, accord-ing to RichRelevance, a soft-ware retailer.

It wouldn’t be Christmas in the U.S. unless everyone went into debt, prompting retailers to open stores earlier for post-Thanksgiving deals. Business Insider reported sales of $12.3 billion in bricks-and-mortar store sales last Black Friday, a 2.3 percent increase from the previous year.

Consumers can expect Thanksgiving openings to be the new normal at shopping malls, with some opening as early as 8 p.m., according to CNNMoney. And who cares if workers have to cut their holi-day short, because retail slaves don’t have families, right?

If the obsession with finding deals on TVs and iPads doesn’t kill Halloween and Thanksgiving in the coming years, all of the tinsel, fake snow and Michael Buble playing on every single speaker in the nation will surely put these holidays in a merry grave.

Brandon Shaik is a senior majoring in psychology.

C O L U M N I S T

Brandon Shaik

What you said Assistant multimedia editor Sebastian Contento asked stu-

dents if they use the Yik Yak app, and their opinions on what they have posted or seen in the app.

“I think the app isn’t that popular anymore;

it’s just irrelevant now, and honestly, I just don’t have

time to use it.”

— Jessica Lombao, a senior majoring in

communications

“I don’t use it – I think it’s very negative – and the fact that it’s anonymous makes it even worse. People hide behind their phones and

lack accountability for what they say or think.”

— Tedi Raphael, a freshman majoring

in theater

“I like the app because sometimes people are afraid

to post their views, but posting anonymously

encourages this. Unfortunately, I have seen very insulting comments

toward students and even teachers.”

— Maharshi Shah, a freshman majoring in computer engineering

“I really don’t use it, and wouldn’t use it. I just don’t have the time. But I

do think people are free to say what they want.”

— Peter Lennox, a junior majoring

in biomedical sciences

Page 5: 11-13-14

T H U R S DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 3 , 2 0 1 4 ● T H E O R AC L E 5

The USF men’s basketball team has only played one exhibition game together thus far.

The only returning players to see time on court last season are sophomore forward Chris Perry, senior guard Corey Allen Jr. and junior guard Anthony Collins.

Coaching a young team that has seven new players can pres-ent challenges, but coach Orlando Antigua said the team showed promise in its win against IUP.

“I thought we competed well, moved the ball well,” Antigua said. “I think one of the things that was key for us is we got a lead in the second half and then IUP made a nice little run. I wanted to see how we responded and how we dealt with adversity.”

The Bulls’ first run in with adversity will be Friday, when USF hosts Flagler for the first regular season game.

Antigua said even though he is worried about how the team will deal with rough stretches, they’re

ready to compete.“(Adversity) is always a con-

cern, but the only way you get experience is by going through it,” Antigua said. “You try to prepare them as much as possible and then you brace yourself and you start going through the games and dealing with the adversity and you teach them how to walk through some of that stuff. A lot of it is sticking to your principles, com-municating, helping one another and sacrificing.”

While this game will be the first of many tests for the Bulls and Antigua, Collins is excited just to have another chance to play again.

“It’s like a fresh start,” Collins said. “I like that the new guys just want to listen and go play hard, so that’s exciting.”

The Saints finished 11-15 last season and haven’t had a winning season since 2007-08.

This season, Flagler begins its schedule with exhibition games against UCF and the Bulls. The Saints were defeated 96-70 on Nov. 4. by the Knights.

The game doesn’t count for the

regular season totals for Flagler, but it will count for the Bulls because USF is in Division I while Flagler is only Division II.

Despite the Saints’ previous los-ing records, Antigua said the Bulls will have to watch out for their guards.

“Flagler runs really well; they’re aggressive,” Antigua said. “They’ve got two really good guards who play free-spirited. They put up a lot of shots. We’re going to have to do a really good job in transi-tion defense, getting back, locating shooters and making them move the ball around to play against our set defense.”

Perry, who sat out USF’s exhibi-tion game with a sore right knee, has been active in practice all week and is expected to play with no limitations Friday.

“Chris has been doing great, he’s been practicing the last couple days and he’ll practice (Wednesday), so I anticipate him being ready to go for Friday,” Antigua said.

Perry’s return will allow Antigua to have more size on the court

compared to the small lineups he ran against IUP.

Antigua said the small lineups he employed had success, but it’s not plan A for the first-year coach.

“I think it gave us a little some-thing different, being able to switch everything,” Antigua said. “It makes it a lot more difficult for teams to score when you’re doing that. When you have everyone that’s about the same size and are playing the same way, with the same kind of intensity and energy, that’s something we may look at for the future. But would I prefer

that? Probably not. We’d like to have the full roster available if we could.”

The Bulls are facing one of the weakest opponents on their schedule Friday when they host Flagler in the Sun Dome at 7 p.m., but Collins isn’t taking the Saints lightly.

“I think every game is impor-tant for us since we’re so young,” Collins said. “We have (seven) new guys and this is our first time play-ing together, so every game counts for us.”

Junior guard Anthony Collins is the only Bull left from the team’s NCAA Tournament run in 2012 and hopes to provide leadership for the young team. ORACLE FILE PHOTO/ADAM MATHIEU

Bulls ready to get season rollingMen’s Basketball

By Vinnie PortellS P O R T S E D I T O R

Page 6: 11-13-14

After a narrow defeat 3-2 in penalty kicks in the AAC championship by UConn, USF women’s soccer was selected to play a home match against Illinois State in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

The Bulls (13-6-2) controlled most of the game against UConn, taking 14 shots on goal, but failed to score.

USF will need to score early as Illinois’ defense has had eight shutouts so far this

season.The Redbirds (15-5-0) have

also out-shot their opponents 55-24 so far this season.

Their leading scorer, Rachel Tejada, has scored 17 goals this season, averaging 2.32 goals per game.

USF was able to shadow UConn leading scorer Rachel Hill during the conference championship game, keeping her from getting many chanc-es on goal.

The Bulls will host the Redbirds at Corbett Stadium on Saturday at 7 p.m.

T H U R S DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 3 , 2 0 1 4 ● T H E O R AC L E 6

Bulls to play UConn in AAC semifinals

USF’s men’s soccer’s 4-2 victory over Memphis on Saturday has propelled them to the AAC semifinals.

The Bulls will travel to Storrs, Connecticut to play UConn for the third time this season. The teams have split the contests so far.

Last season, USF (10-7-1, 4-3-1) defeated UConn in the AAC championship game to

win the conference in its inau-gural season.

In their most recent match-up Nov. 1, UConn (10-6-2, 6-1-1) shutout USF for the 1-0 win at Corbett Stadium.

If the Bulls can beat the Huskies, they will play in the AAC championship Sunday, for the second consecutive season.

USF will play UConn for the right to advance Saturday at 8 p.m. The game will be broadcast on the American Digital Network.

By Vinnie PortellS P O R T S E D I T O R

Women’s soccer plays Illinois State in first roundBy Jacob HoagA S S T . S P O R T S E D I T O R

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USF gets NLI from 3-starMen’s Basketball

USF received a National Letter of Intent on Wednesday from Jahmal McMurray, a 6-foot, 175-pound guard from Sunrise Christian Academy in Wichita, Kansas.

McMurray hasn’t been at Sunrise long, having spent three years at Highland Park High School where he earned three all-state selections.

“He’s a high-level shooter with pretty much unlimited range,” Sunrise coach Luke Barnwell said in a press release. “He is dangerous beyond the three-point line and he can get by you, too. He’s a blur to guard in ball screens. He makes us go. When he goes, we’re going.”

McMurray scored 17 points with six rebounds, four assists and three steals in his last game during which Sunrise defeated No. 19 State Fair Community College on Oct. 31.

“He has the ability to score the ball really well. He did it a lot in high school, and now in prep school he’s refining

his position to become more of a point guard,” USF coach Orlando Antigua said. “He is someone we can depend on to learn from Anthony Collins and be able to step into those roles over the next few years. He will have the ability to open up the court due to his shooting ability.”

Coach Orlando Antigua added another shooter in Jahmal McMurray on Wednesday. ORACLE FILE PHOTO/ADAM MATHIEU

By Jacob HoagA S S T . S P O R T S E D I T O R

to any other player.“I’m not the type of person to

really idolize people that I’m prob-ably never going to meet or know, so I’d probably say my brother is who I look up to because we came up through the same situa-tions,” he said.

As kids, Cousins said the duo lacked a strong father figure in their lives. Their mom was the one who kept them going strong and kept their minds set on suc-ceeding in the sport.

“My mother was my role model because I never really had that father figure, but she was always pushing me the same way my brother did,” Cousins said. “I used to complain about things being hard, but she would just keep pushing and say, ‘At the end of the day, it’s going to work out.’”

Cousins knew his dad and stepdad growing up, but said neither stepped up to be a person he could rely on.

“He didn’t really fit the role, so I kind of saw what a father shouldn’t be,” he said. “I look at my mom as my father because she was there through everything. I had nobody I could just run to in the father role, but I had my mom.”

To make ends meet, Monique Cousins, a mother of six, had to work up to three jobs at a time, cutting into her time to spend

with her kids. This led Cousins to step up and help raise his three little sisters.

He enjoyed being closer to his sisters and knew the experience would help him down the road.

“It made me closer to my fam-ily,” he said. “I saw people work-ing hard to get what they wanted and saw certain people not fit for the role of being a parent; it just taught me how to be a better father for when I have my kids.”

When his brother was drafted fifth overall in the 2010 NBA draft to the Sacramento Kings, Cousins said he was beyond proud of his big brother.

The two still keep in touch whenever they can. In the offsea-son, the brothers meet up in L.A. to work with trainers and other NBA players in the area to better their game.

Cousins said they work on shooting and ball-handling drills, but also go to Impact Fitness and do circuit training to build endur-ance and get in better shape.

During the season, Cousins said it’s harder to find the time to talk, but he tries to call whenever he has the chance.

“(My brother and I) talk on the phone every so often, but every time we talk it’s like no time has passed; that’s the relationship we have, nothing’s ever going to change,” Cousins said.

When Antigua was hired in March, Cousins knew he wanted to make the trip to Florida to play

under the coaches who made his brother what he is today.

“I’m very family oriented,” Cousins said. “Like I said, I don’t trust many people, so me con-sidering (Antigua) and (coach Strickland) and everybody as family, it made me more com-fortable coming here. I knew that he would be sincere working with me and not just be using me to get closer to my brother because he doesn’t need that.”

Cousins made a quick transi-tion to the new environment. Veteran players like sophomore forward Chris Perry said his goofy and joking attitude fit right in with the team. His dominant play in practice made the transition even easier.

“He brings an inside pres-ence along with me, but his is on another level because he’s 6-foot-11 and I’m only 6-foot-6,” Perry said. “(When he first came in), he just had this look on his face like you don’t want to mess with him.”

Cousins said his brother isn’t always there to help him prog-ress, but he knows his brother is watching out for him one way or another.

“We don’t talk as much because of both of our schedules, but just from me watching him and seeing some things that he does, he’s basically showing me if you work hard like I’m telling you, you can have all of this that I have and more,” he said.

COUSINSContinued from PAGE 12

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Flowers’ potential and what he can add to the offense.

“He’s definitely a great quar-terback – he’s electric,” Davis said. “He can make plays with his feet and has a strong arm. He’s everything you look for in a football player.”

Davis said he has been staying late to ensure that he is getting in work with all of the quarterbacks because he doesn’t know who will be starting any given Saturday, so he’s already comfortable play-ing with Flowers.

“These past five or six weeks, I’ve been having all the quarterbacks after prac-tice and just throwing with them,” Davis said. “We’ve been going through go routes, deep balls, everything, just in case because from week to week, we don’t know who’s going to be there.”

In previous weeks, Taggart said Flowers wasn’t ready for more snaps because of his inexperience with the play-book, but Sanchez said he thinks Flowers has gotten a firm grasp of the offense.

“You can just see his growth throughout this season,” Sanchez said. “He’s more com-fortable in our offense, he’s quiet, he’s shy, but he also has this swagger about him-self. He’s confident and he always thinks he can get the job done.”

SMU is ranked last in the NCAA for total defense and its offense ranks 123rd out of 125 schools. But despite the Mustangs’ statistical shortcom-ings, the Bulls are wary.

With a new quarterback and playing the Bulls during pri-metime for their homecoming game, the Mustangs will be playing with nothing to lose.

“Records don’t mean any-thing right now,” Sanchez said. “They just put that new quar-terback in, so they’re definitely feeling like his next game he’ll have more confidence and get the job done. And they’re look-ing at us as a W, so you can’t take them lightly at all.”

USF (3-6, 2-3) will play SMU at 8 p.m. at Gerald J. Ford Stadium. The game will be broadcast on CBS Sports Network.

PLAYOFFSContinued from PAGE 12

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USF (3-6, 2-3) at SMU (0-8, 0-4)When: Saturday, 8 p.m.Where: Gerald J. Ford StadiumTV/Radio: CBS Sports Network IMG/USF Radio Network

TheRundown

Outside USF

Undefeated Florida State dropped to No. 3 in national rankings behind No. 1 Mississippi State and No. 2 Oregon after Oregon defeated No. 17 Utah on Saturday.

Quick Facts

What to watch for

Cincinnati (5-3, 3-1) hosts East Carolina (6-2, 3-1) on Thursday at 7 p.m. in a matchup of two teams tied for second place in the AAC. The game will be broadcast on ESPN2.

Tulane (3-6, 2-3) will attempt to upset AAC-best Memphis (6-3, 4-1) on Saturday at 3:30 p.m. The game will be broadcast on ESPNU.FOOTBALL

• Freshman Quinton Flowers is the fifth starter of coach Willie Taggart’s career at USF.

• USF women’s soccer is one win shy of tying the program record, which was set in 2010.

• USF added five recruits on early signing day, including two softball players, two volleyball players and one men’s basketball player.

Men’s Basketball

Same name, different player

USF junior center Jaleel Cousins and his brother Demarcus grew up together, but now that his brother has become a star in the NBA, Cousins is trying to create his own identity at USF without forgetting who made him the player he is today.

Cousins played two seasons at Navarro College before transfer-ring to USF to play under coach Orlando Antigua, who recruited his brother to play at Kentucky and said he can see the similarities.

“Obviously, one is the physical similarity,” Antigua said. “They are just two big human beings and really good kids. A big difference is that Demarcus had more experi-ence on the court, whereas Jaleel is just scratching the surface of what he can be.”

The Alabama native comes in filling the void left by freshman John Egbunu, who transferred to UF following Stan Heath’s depar-ture from USF. Antigua sees it as an opportunity to be successful rather than filling anyone’s shoes.

“You can’t look at it as who he’s replacing,” Antigua said. “He has the opportunity to step in a role of a big that has size, skill and some experience. We’re going to need his rebounding and his physical presence. He’s a big boy and we’re going to be playing up against some big teams.”

Starting out, Cousins said he didn’t take anything too seriously, but once he saw the success his brother was having, he knew he had to change.

“As he progressed in basketball, he was like, ‘Hey look, growing up our bodies are the same and you can do some of the same things, but you have to take it as serious

as I am and work harder,’” Cousins said. “That’s what he still tells me to this day.”

His brother has remained a prominent adviser because he knows he can trust what his broth-er tells him.

“I really don’t trust too many people because I’ve dealt with a lot of coaches telling me stuff that never really happens,” Cousins said. “So, I just know coming from (my brother) it’s sincere. He tells me all the time I need to sit down and actually use my strength to move people instead of standing straight up. It stays with me.”

Having an NBA player for a brother seems like a kid’s dream, but for Cousins, it’s had its share of obstacles.

When Cousins began pursuing basketball as more than just recre-ation during his junior year of high school, he found that people saw his brother and expected him to have the same talent. Sometimes, he said, he was just thrown into the fire without being prepared for what he would experience, which led to poor play on the court.

“It (puts a chip on my shoulder) because of how people write it up,” Cousins said. “They saw that I wasn’t that good, but in reality, I was never worked with. They

looked at (my brother) and expect-ed the same out of me so they just threw me out there not knowing that I wasn’t quite prepared.”

Cousins said once people start-ed to work with him, they saw the difference in his play.

“Coming to (USF), coach (Antigua) tells me every day that I’m doing good, doing a lot better and just keep working hard,” he said. “I didn’t start basketball the same time my brother did. I really didn’t start playing until about my 11th grade year, so I’ve just been trying to catch up.”

With both brothers measuring in at 6-feet-11, the comparisons are inevitable, but as much as he looks up to his brother, Cousins said he wants to escape the shadow and become his own play-er.

“It’s hard at times because a lot of people compare us, but we’re two different people,” he said. “He’s more of a big guard where I’m just a straightforward post player. It’s hard being compared to him all the time, but that’s just a part of it.”

Even with trying to break away from his brother as a player, Cousins said he recognizes his tal-ent and wouldn’t want to look up

Football

Bulls turn to Flowers to begin ‘playoffs’

Jaleel Cousins will officially debut for USF on Friday when the Bulls host Flagler College in the season opener. ORACLE FILE PHOTO/ADAM MATHIEU

By Jacob HoagA S S T . S P O R T S E D I T O R

USF has lost its past two games by a combined 41 points and is looking to not only get back on track with a win against SMU, but also start a three-game winning streak that would qualify the Bulls for a bowl game.

“Coach (Willie Taggart) put it as a three-game playoff,” senior receiver Andre Davis said. “First game of the play-offs is beating SMU and that’s how we’re looking at it.”

But beating a winless SMU (0-8, 0-4) team may not be as easy as the record suggests.

The Mustangs have replaced former starting quarterback Garrett Krstich with sopho-more Matt Davis. In his first start Saturday against Tulsa, the sophomore threw for 212 yards and ran for 181 more, leading the Mustangs to a sea-son-high 28 points in the loss.

USF redshirt freshman Auggie Sanchez said despite the lack of wins, the Mustangs can’t be taken lightly because of their new quarterback.

“That kid is a dual-threat quarterback,” Sanchez said. “He can run, he can pass and he definitely adds another dimension to the game that you have to defend. From a defensive standpoint, it does make it harder to defend.”

But the struggling Mustangs aren’t the only team to turn to a young, versatile quarterback to give the team a spark.

Taggart announced Monday that freshman Quinton Flowers will start against SMU. Andre Davis said he is excited about

By Vinnie PortellS P O R T S E D I T O R

n See COUSINS on PAGE 9 n See PLAYOFFS on PAGE 11

n Center Jaleel Cousins is ready to prove he’s more than Demarcus’ little brother.


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