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UNIVERSITYPRESSFAU’S FINEST NEWS SOURCEOCTOBER 15, 2013 | VOL. 15 # 9
READ US - UPRESSONLINE.COM LIKE US - FACEBOOK.COM/UNIVERSITYPRESS FOLLOW US - @UPRESSONLINEFIRST ISSUE IS FREE; EACH ADDITIONAL COPY IS 50 CENTS AND AVAILABLE IN THE UP NEWSROOM.
Free Pizza, Free Palestine
Student protesters organize on campus while on probation
By Sarah Suwak P. 16
777 Glades RoadStudent Union, room 214
Boca Raton, FL 33431561.297.2960
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PUBLISHERFAU Student Government
The opinions expressed by the UP are not necessarily those of the student body, Student Government or
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October 15, 2013TUESDAY
The Staff
Some Owls fans react positively to the new changes at The Burrow — the court, not the restaurant.
By Wesley Wright
In this week’s science column, the UP’s resident biology nerd tells you how scientists know dinosaurs had feathers and why it’s important.By Chris Hamann
FAU’s student-run record label is relasing its largest album yet.
By Jamie Vaughn
When is freedom of speech permitted on campus? When administrators think it isn’t intimidating.
By Sarah Suwak
A delve into life as an FAU quidditch player.
By Aimee Baret
Page 22 Page 30
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EDITOR-IN-CHIEF - Dylan Bouscher
MANAGING EDITOR - Austen Erblat
CREATIVE DIRECTOR - Michelle Friswell
ASSISTANT CREATIVE DIRECTOR - Breanndolyn Lies
BUSINESS MANAGER - Lulu Ramadan
NEWS EDITORS - Sarah Suwak, Kathryn Wohlpart
FEATURES EDITOR - Emily Bloch
SPORTS EDITOR - Zack Kelberman
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WEB EDITOR - Christopher Massana
COPY DESK CHIEF - Chris Hamann
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ADVISERS
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COVER - Max Jackson
News
10
Features
Page 6
Students support a new state law banning texting while driving.
By Chris Massana
3OCT. 15, 2013 UPRESSONLINE.COM
Web Exclusives
Our full recap of the FAU football game against Marshall.
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UP movie guru Maddy Mesa tells you if director Ron Howard’s new movie “Rush” lives up to the Oscar season buzz it’s generating.
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Students were visibly upset at the last second 24-23 loss to Marshall on Saturday, Oct. 12. Photo by Michelle Friswell
4 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
By Chris HamannCopy Desk Chief
Imagine a velociraptor — you know, the dinosaur from “Jurassic Park” that can open doors: 6-feet-tall, bipedal, huge curving claw
on each foot, lizard-like head and covered in scales. There’s just one problem with that image: when the 6-foot-tall eviscerating death machine sneaks up on you while its buddy distracts you, it’s going to be covered in more feathers than a burlesque dancer with a tickling fetish.
You may or may not have heard about it, but over the past few decades scientists have been finding increasing amounts of evidence that certain species of dinosaurs had feathers. This is crazy-cool stuff: it helps to validate the Theory of Evolution by providing proof that birds are actually the evolutionary descendants of dinosaurs. That, in turn, is important because valid science is still being attacked in state courts, with the latest being a Sept. 26 Kansas lawsuit filed against the Next Generation Science Standards
— new standards for Kansas that reflect the mainstream scientific viewpoint that evolution is well-established — alleging the NGSS “will have the effect of causing Kansas public schools to establish and endorse a non-theistic religious worldview ... in violation of the Establishment, Free Exercise, and Speech Clauses of the First Amendment, and the Equal Protection Clauses of the 14th Amendment.” Joshua Rosenau, the programs and policy director for the National Center for Science Education calls the lawsuit silly. “They’re trying to say anything that’s not promoting their religion is promoting some other religion,” Rosenau said.
But what dinosaurs had feathers, and how can we tell? You can find out a lot more about an animal from fossils than just what the bones look like. Here’s what we know:
DINOSAURSAnd Other
Flightless BirdsThere’s a mountain of evidence that shows birds have evolved from dinosaurs. How can a few feathers make a difference?
The evidence is there but some still disagree. Write to us us at [email protected] and explain why you agree or disagree for a chance to be featured in an upcoming issue.
1. Some fossils (mostly from the Liaoning province in China) that were buried in volcanic ash show incredibly fine detail, to the point that feather imprints are found in the surrounding stone. Scientists originally thought this was just a coincidence — if you’ve ever seen Hawaii’s lava fields, you’ll know rock can look surprisingly organic — but when they compared the dino fossils to bird fossils from a later geological period in the area, the two fossils had the same type of feather imprints. Likewise, evidence for scales and hair is found on other fossils of
supposed reptile and mammal ancestors. Feathers are also made out of very specific stuff (the protein beta-keratin), like how bones have calcium that makes them hard where as your skin is all soft and stretchy: the scientists found evidence that the dinosaur fossils contained beta-keratin, suggesting that they had feathers.
2. Since 2011, 11 amber samples dating between 75 and 80 million years of age were found to contain feathers. Scientists are currently
trying to figure out how to study them in-depth
without destroying the samples.
3. Large quill knobs — the point where a feather is anchored into bone on bird skeletons — have been found on the arm bones of Velociraptor mongoliensis, according to the scientific journal Science Magazine. This not only points to feathers, but well-developed secondary feathers, which are more than just downy feathers that cover the body. Secondary feathers can be used for display, water protection or for flight.
4. There is a specific structure in bird spines called the pygostyle; it’s a section of bone fused on bird tails used to support large
feathers. Since 2000, scientists have found dinosaur fossils with pygostyles. There’s a family of dinosaurs called ovoraptorasaurs: they’re kind of like a wuss version of a velociraptor. They were smaller, didn’t have a pointy death-claw and some had beaks instead of scary, toothy mouths. They also had the aforementioned pygostyles and were suspected to have tail feathers. In 2010, the scientific journal Nature published an article that confirmed new fossils of an ovoraptorasaur with a pygostyle actually showed physical evidence of tail feathers.
6 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
SCIENCEFEATURES
7
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Human Rights InThe Middle East
CIVIL RIGHTS
Egypt Minimal N O N O 5
Iran N O N O N O 6
Iraq N O N O N O 7
Jordan Limited Limited Limited 4
Lebanon Limited N O Limited 5
Libya N O N O N O 7
Palestinian N O N O Limited 6Authority
Saudi Arabia N O N O N O 7
Sudan N O N O N O 7
Syria N O N O N O 7
USA YES YES YES 1
United Kingdom YES YES YES 2
Israel YES YES YES 2
CountryFree Speech
and AssemblyFair and
Open Trials
ReligiousFreedomProtected
FreedomHouse Rating*
Scale 1-7
For more information, see www.knesset.gov.il, www.cbs.co.il,www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/mideast/israel.htm, www.state.gov/g/drl/hr/c1470.htm
Facts about Arabs living in Israel• 1.2 million Arab-Israelis live within Israel.• Arab-Israelis make up 18-20% of the total population.• Arabic is an official language and on equal footing with Hebrew.• Arabs hold 12 of 120 seats in the Israeli parliament.• There are 5 official Arab parties.• All Arab municipalities receive government funding for education and infrastructure.
POLITICAL RIGHTS
Egypt Minimal Minimal N O 6
Iran N O Minimal N O 6
Iraq N O N O N O 7
Jordan Limited Limited Limited 4
Lebanon N O Limited Limited 6
Libya N O N O N O 7
Palestinian N O Minimal N O 5Authority
Saudi Arabia N O N O N O 7
Sudan N O N O N O 7
Syria N O N O N O 7
Israel YES YES YES 1
* Freedom House, founded in 1940, is a non-partisan, broad-based non-profit organization thatmonitors and evaluates democracy and freedom around the world. It ranks nations on a scale of 1 to 7
1 is an open democratic society with fair and free political life6 is an autocratic regime with minimal political rights7 is an autocrat regime with severe oppression
See the 1999-2000 Freedom House Annual Report at www.freedomhouse.org/ratings.
CountryFree &
Fair ElectionsOpposition
Parties LegalMinority
Participation
FreedomHouse Rating*
Scale 1-7
For more facts about the Middle East: www.StandWithUsCampus.com
BEFORE YOU FORM AN OPINION ABOUT THE MIDDLE EAST
KNOW THE FACTS
Winner of 13 International Awards
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* These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.†Celsius alone does not produce weight loss in the absence of a healthy diet and moderate exercise. Make Celsius Your Ultimate Fitness Partner.® Visit www.Celsius.com to read the clinical studies that show the benefits of drinking Celsius.
103 West Palmetto Park Rd.,Boca Raton 33432
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Sponsor of∆T∆
> BURNS BODY FAT†*
> INCREASES METABOLISM†*
> CLEAN LASTING ENERGY†*
> VITAMIN ENRICHED> TASTES GREAT!
Consumer: Limit one coupon per specified item(s) purchased. Consumer pays tax and/or deposit charge. This coupon is good only on product sizes and varieties indicated and at participating retailers. Coupons void if altered, copied, sold, purchased, transferred, exchanged or where prohibited or restricted by law. Any other use constitutes fraud. Retailer: Celsius, Inc. will reimburse you for the value plus 8 cents handling. Consumer must pay sales tax. Good only in USA. Coupon void if altered, copied, sold, purchased, exchanged or where prohibited or restricted by law. Send Coupon To: Cels/Universal, P.O. Box 407, MPSBox 407, MPS Dept No. 705, Cinnaminson, NJ 08077. Failure to produce on request invoices proving purchase of stock covering coupons may void all coupons submitted. Cash value 1/100 cents.Redeemable at retail only. Not to be combined with other offers. Celsius® is a registered trademark of Celsius, Inc.
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Consumer: Limit one coupon per specified item(s) purchased. Consumer pays tax and/or deposit charge. This coupon is good only on product sizes and varieties indicated and at participating retailers. Coupons void if altered, copied, sold, purchased, transferred, exchanged or where prohibited or restricted by law. Any other use constitutes fraud. Retailer: Celsius, Inc. will reimburse you for the value plus 8 cents handling. Consumer must pay sales tax. Good only in USA. Coupon void if altered, copied, sold, purchased, exchanged or where prohibited or restricted by law. Send Coupon To: Cels/Universal, P.O. Box 407, MPSBox 407, MPS Dept No. 705, Cinnaminson, NJ 08077. Failure to produce on request invoices proving purchase of stock covering coupons may void all coupons submitted. Cash value 1/100 cents.Redeemable at retail only. Not to be combined with other offers. Celsius® is a registered trademark of Celsius, Inc.
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Human Rights InThe Middle East
CIVIL RIGHTS
Egypt Minimal N O N O 5
Iran N O N O N O 6
Iraq N O N O N O 7
Jordan Limited Limited Limited 4
Lebanon Limited N O Limited 5
Libya N O N O N O 7
Palestinian N O N O Limited 6Authority
Saudi Arabia N O N O N O 7
Sudan N O N O N O 7
Syria N O N O N O 7
USA YES YES YES 1
United Kingdom YES YES YES 2
Israel YES YES YES 2
CountryFree Speech
and AssemblyFair and
Open Trials
ReligiousFreedomProtected
FreedomHouse Rating*
Scale 1-7
For more information, see www.knesset.gov.il, www.cbs.co.il,www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/mideast/israel.htm, www.state.gov/g/drl/hr/c1470.htm
Facts about Arabs living in Israel• 1.2 million Arab-Israelis live within Israel.• Arab-Israelis make up 18-20% of the total population.• Arabic is an official language and on equal footing with Hebrew.• Arabs hold 12 of 120 seats in the Israeli parliament.• There are 5 official Arab parties.• All Arab municipalities receive government funding for education and infrastructure.
POLITICAL RIGHTS
Egypt Minimal Minimal N O 6
Iran N O Minimal N O 6
Iraq N O N O N O 7
Jordan Limited Limited Limited 4
Lebanon N O Limited Limited 6
Libya N O N O N O 7
Palestinian N O Minimal N O 5Authority
Saudi Arabia N O N O N O 7
Sudan N O N O N O 7
Syria N O N O N O 7
Israel YES YES YES 1
* Freedom House, founded in 1940, is a non-partisan, broad-based non-profit organization thatmonitors and evaluates democracy and freedom around the world. It ranks nations on a scale of 1 to 7
1 is an open democratic society with fair and free political life6 is an autocratic regime with minimal political rights7 is an autocrat regime with severe oppression
See the 1999-2000 Freedom House Annual Report at www.freedomhouse.org/ratings.
CountryFree &
Fair ElectionsOpposition
Parties LegalMinority
Participation
FreedomHouse Rating*
Scale 1-7
For more facts about the Middle East: www.StandWithUsCampus.com
BEFORE YOU FORM AN OPINION ABOUT THE MIDDLE EAST
KNOW THE FACTS
Story by Jamie VaughnContributor
Photo courtesy of Hoot/Wisdom Recordings10 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
MUSICFEATURES
FAU’s little-known student run record label, Hoot/Wisdom Recordings, is releasing “CompOWLation Vol. 3,” their largest project yet
The heart of FAU’s underground music scene lies behind the door to room 110 in the Arts and Humanities building. It’s a hubbub
of activity for FAU students and faculty dedicated to gaining hands-on experience in the music industry.
Hoot/Wisdom Recordings, located behind that door, is the largest state university record label in Fla., with over 100 members. Its main mission is to provide all FAU students with the opportunity to record their music, according to both Associate Professor of Music Alejandro Sanchez, the faculty adviser, and Matt Smith, president of Hoot/Wisdom and commercial music major. They are only two of the many minds behind this growing student-run organization.
“I came to FAU because of the record label,” Smith said. “I would have gone somewhere else… but I thought it was the coolest thing ever.” With plans to release four albums this semester, his love for Hoot/Wisdom Recordings is clear from the amount of time dedicated to getting new albums released and recruiting new members.
The label’s latest project — “CompOWLation Vol. 3” — took over a year to complete and is the largest release in Hoot/Wisdom’s 11-year history. It features 20 artists, all of whom are current or former FAU students, of various musical genres. The compilation is a two-disc set: the Red Album features rock, pop and reggae artists, while the Blue Album contains hip-hop, rap, R&B and electronic dance music.
Alex Kinsey, former FAU student and
current competitor on “The X Factor”, is one of the artists on a previous Hoot/Wisdom release Kinsey joined Hoot/Wisdom after Smith overheard him singing in a Glades Park Towers laundry room on campus. Smith convinced Kinsey to get involved with the label, and according to Smith, that time with Hoot/Wisdom Recordings helped prepare Kinsey for “The X Factor” stage.
“When I met him, he never really had concrete confidence that he could [perform] for a living,” Smith said. “He gained a lot of confidence… after that, it was full speed ahead.”
Hoot/Wisdom makes FAU evident in everything it does, including the choice to name and design the double album based on the school mascot and colors. Label adviser Sanchez feels that students need to have more pride in the university.
“Students here believe that nothing good can come from FAU and we want to prove them wrong,” he said.
The album was funded by loans from the FAU Commercial Music Program and Sanchez is adamant that the proceeds from it will go right back to the students involved in both the program and Hoot/Wisdom.
“I want the students to see that if they put the effort into it, they can reap some of the benefits in return,” he said. The money raised from “CompOWLation Vol. 2” contributed to 10 scholarships amounting to $2,500. This year, the record label is hoping to raise at least twice as much, according to Smith.
Though Hoot/Wisdom isn’t the most prominent organization on campus, that isn’t stopping the label from working towards increasing its popularity.
“I didn’t even know we had a record label on campus until I went to the event they held at The Burrow,” multimedia studies major Alexander Adams said. “But, after hearing some of the acts, I’m excited to listen to their new album.” Hoot/Wisdom hosted a free promotional concert on Sept. 26 in the newly named Burrow Bar and Grill that showcased the talent of five of the artists featured on “CompOWLation Vol. 3”: Anthony Vincent, Chris Aiello, Grace Kimmel and Erica Morgan as well as former member Alex Kinsey, who sang with his girlfriend Sierra Deaton.
“A lot of students are not aware of Hoot/Wisdom, but with the amazing quality of the album and the right promotion, it will be well-known around campus,” Erica Morgan, communications major and Hoot/Wisdom artist, said. “Everyone did an amazing job on the songs. It is the best one yet.”
“CompOWLation Vol. 3” is made up entirely of people affiliated with the university, some of whom had no idea about the record label until they were discovered by the staff of Hoot/Wisdom. Because of this, Smith describes the album as the “soundtrack of FAU.” Hoot/Wisdom is one of only three university record labels in Fla., alongside University of Miami’s Cane Records and Florida State University’s Renegade State Records.
In 2012, Cane Records released its second compilation CD, “Breaking the Surface Vol. 2: Miami Artists on the Rise,” and was nominated for an Independent Music Award — one of the largest music award programs in the world, who have awarded artists like Asking Alexandria and Fun. — for Best Compilation Album of 2012, while Renegade State Records’
Photo courtesy of Hoot/Wisdom Recordings 11UPRESSONLINE.COMOCT. 15, 2013CONTINUED ON PAGE 12
FAU MBA - SPORT MANAGEMENTFALL INFORMATION SESSIONS
Learn about exciting opportunities available in the FAU MBA SPORT MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
Program benefits include a wide variety of industry related internships including but not limited to:
Current students as well as the MBA Sport Director, Dr. Jim Riordan, will be available
to talk about their experiences in the program
Hockey, Football, Baseball, Basketball, Motorsports,
Inter-collegiate athletics, Tennis, and Stadium/
Arena/Convention Center Management.
Dates: October 25th and November 15th
TIME: 7:00 - 9:00 PM
Where: FAU College of Business, Boca raton Campus, Room BU. 307
band “After the Smoke,” was the Southeast finalist for the Billboard Music Awards’ “Battle of the Bands” competition of that same year. Though Hoot/Wisdom hasn’t gotten such national recognition, they still manage to dominate social media websites like Facebook and Twitter, based on all three school’s follower/like counts.
Last year, the Sun-Sentinel wrote an article about “CompOWLation Vol. 2” stating that Hoot/Wisdom had sold over 1,000 copies of the album in one week in an effort to earn a spot on Billboard
Music’s “Heatseekers” chart, only to find out later that compilation albums are not eligible for that category. The UP reached out to representatives from the other two Fla. university record labels via email and phone to compare figures of their recent projects but received no response as of press time.
But, according to Smith, his ultimate goal as president of the Hoot/Wisdom Recordings is to eventually “be the best thing to come out of FAU since NFL player Alfred Morris.”
WANT MORE? Visit office in AH 110 or attend general meetings on Fridays 3p.m.-5p.m. in PA 101
Hoot/Wisdom Recordings Website
Hoot/Wisdom Recordings YouTube Page
Alejardro Sanchez-Samper, the Associate Professor of music and Assistant Director of Commerical Music and Josh Frasca, a sixth year commercial music major, work on a student project in the studio. Photo by Max Jackson
CONTINUED ON PAGE 14
12 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
FEATURES MUSIC
FAU MBA - SPORT MANAGEMENTFALL INFORMATION SESSIONS
Learn about exciting opportunities available in the FAU MBA SPORT MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
Program benefits include a wide variety of industry related internships including but not limited to:
Current students as well as the MBA Sport Director, Dr. Jim Riordan, will be available
to talk about their experiences in the program
Hockey, Football, Baseball, Basketball, Motorsports,
Inter-collegiate athletics, Tennis, and Stadium/
Arena/Convention Center Management.
Dates: October 25th and November 15th
TIME: 7:00 - 9:00 PM
Where: FAU College of Business, Boca raton Campus, Room BU. 307
FEATURES
14 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
MUSIC
“CompOWLation Vol. 3” official release date: Oct. 25
Pre-order digital copies at www.compowlation.com Use discount code “FAU” for 50 percent off the $10 price
Bring your Owl Card and digital download receipt to the Commercial Music office (AH 111) to get a free physical copy
You can also buy Hoot/Wisdom artist Phantomime’s EP “The Heist” on iTunes for $2.99
Important details about Hoot/Wisdom Recordings’ upcoming projects:
Album art for Volume 3 of Hoot/Wisdom Recordings’ CompOWLation. Courtesy of Hoot/Wisdom Recordings
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“Do the authorities know you’re here?” a concerned professor said.
“They’re right behind you,” Nadine Aly, junior political science major and president of Students for Justice in Palestine said while pointing to three FAU police officers who stand 20 feet from the professor.
SJP is a human rights organization on college campuses that aims to raise awareness about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Over the last two weeks, the FAU chapter of SJP organized three demonstrations, including a mock Israeli West Bank barrier and a mock graveyard for Palestinian children who’ve died in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, all to highlight how the conflict affects students on campus and taxpayers around the country.
Minutes passed by on Oct. 1 as students gingerly began approaching six pieces of plywood arranged in a straight line covered with statements and taped-on posters. “Zionism is a demographic threat!” and “Palestine Will Be Free!” are
painted in black, red and green on the 10- foot gray plywood.
“This isn’t a religious issue. It’s a human rights issue,” Aly said about the current Israeli settlements in the West Bank.
On the second day of the protests, SJP created a mock soldier checkpoint, having students approach SJP members dressed in soldier uniforms. If willing, the student, along with other SJP volunteers, were then patted down and a piece of tape was placed on their mouth. Arab, Hispanic, Jewish or other heritage affiliations were written on the tape and the actors kneeled down in front of the wall with their hands behind their backs. Pizza was given to students passing by.
“It’s a conflict nobody knows about,” freshman computer engineering major Jordan D. said.
Jordan was a volunteer Israeli soldier for a year and a half and chose not to share his last name. He spoke of his experiences at one of the various checkpoints throughout the West Bank, as well as the threat of terrorist organizations.
“We found a 15-year-old with a butcher
Story by Sarah Suwak News Editor
Pro-Palestinian student group continued controversial protests last week, despite FAU putting its leaders on probation
We Can’t Stop, We Won’t Stop
Hand-crafted tombstones symbolize the 352 children killed in Operation Cast Lead, according to SJP.
Photos by Max Jackson Contributor
16 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
STUDENT PROTESTSNEWS
We Can’t Stop, We Won’t Stop knife. He had intent to do something, but we couldn’t keep him because he was 15,” Jordan said. “They live in fear over there.”
Owls for Israel Co-President Rayna Exelbierd — a junior international business major — feels that referring to SJP’s demonstration as an apartheid wall is both disrespectful and false.
“The wall is put up between Israel and Judea and Samaria for the purposes of security,” Exelbierd wrote in an email interview with the UP. “Unfortunately, in the early 2000s suicide bombings were a very popular thing so the Israeli government had to respond to protect all the citizens of Israel, which includes the Jews, Christians, and Muslims.”
Another student feels that SJP’s presence at FAU is beneficial for igniting conversations.
“I just hope the people that make up their minds don’t make up their minds on this wall,” senior political science major Nadav Alkoby said. “I hope it raises awareness for the issue but doesn’t really dictate what direction someone will think.”
As students speak with one another on the free speech lawn, in front of the Social Sciences building, one identifies a possible solution for peace in Israel.
“They must see each other as humans, not as Arabs, not as Israelis,” Deniz Dolun, a junior political science major, said.
This task can be a difficult one, as junior biology major Giovanni Fillichio points out.
“Religion clouds viewpoints,”
Fillichio said. “I’ve had people say, ‘Oh, I saw you at the wall last year, I look at you different now.’”
An unknown student walks by shortly after and decides to spit on the concrete ground ten feet from the wall, yelling “some people have a different view on history” as he continues to walk swiftly away from the free speech lawn. “Probably a Zionist,” Aly said.
A day after the protests, the UP received both a letter from the Zionist Organization of America and a response by SJP.
“Members of this group seem to think they have the unrestricted right to do and say whatever they please under the First Amendment,” Susan B. Tuchman, director of Center for Law and Justice at the Zionist Organization of America, wrote.
Aly sent a letter to the editor in response, explaining SJP’s stance on the apartheid wall and overall Israeli military actions.
“[T]o raise awareness about the discrimination, segregation and dehumanization of the Palestinian people who are forcefully subjected to Israeli military control within their own territories,” Aly wrote.
In April 2012, SJP placed 200 mock eviction notices in FAU dorms, eliciting harmful responses including death threats to SJP’s former president Noor Fawzy, who has graduated since then.
The FAU chapter is one of many SJP chapters that placed mock eviction notices on dorm doors, another being Yale University’s chapter.
Hala Shehadeh, an english secondary education senior, kneels in silent protest at the free speech lawn.
OCT. 15, 2013 UPRESSONLINE.COM 17CONTINUED ON PAGE 18
Nezar Hamze, the south Florida chapter’s executive director of the Council on American Islamic Relations was quoted in local station WPBF coverage of this event, stating that “[o]ur concern is their first amendment rights are being violated because, first of all, the students got permission.”
SJP claimed they got housing permission, as well as a housing official to escort them into the dorms to put up the eviction notices.
In August 2012, according to the Assistant Director of Housing and Residential Life Adam Schwarz, the university adopted a
different protocol for handling flyers. “The intent of the new policy was to have
more checks and balances to ensure all university guidelines are being followed with club and department postings,” Schwarz said.
SJP took a more visual approach in February 2013 when the group stuffed 22 plastic bags with Styrofoam and crumpled paper, splattered them with red paint and placed them in the free speech lawn. What students often refer to as the dead babies demonstration was meant to represent the children killed in the Gaza Strip during
Israeli-led missions in 2008, 2009 and 2012. Neither the mock eviction notices nor the
body bags resulted in any disciplinary action from FAU against SJP.
However, in April 2013, members of SJP were put on probation after the group decided to protest a speech given by Israeli Colonel Bentzi Grubel at FAU.
Vice President of Student Affairs Charles Brown released a statement following the group’s activities.
“[W]hile groups on campus have a First Amendment right to free expression, that right does not allow groups to harass,
CONTINUED ON PAGE 20
NEWS STUDENT PROTESTS
18 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
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threaten or intimidate others. Any evidence of that type of behavior is, and will continue to be, addressed through FAU’s Student Code of Conduct and the university’s discrimination and anti-harassment policies.”
SJP’s current de facto President Aly and Vice President Renata Glebocki were unable to hold leadership positions within a student organization and had to take a diversity class.
Administrators like Interim President Dennis Crudele have spoken out about SJP’s previous activities.
“The group’s criticisms of Israel often fail to appreciate that Israel is a robust democracy — unique in its part of the world — that nourishes an astonishingly broad array of public opinion and expression, even to the extent that this group’s own protest activities would be permitted to take place in Israel,” Crudele
said on Sept. 30, the day before SJP’s recent mock apartheid wall and soldier checkpoint.
Professor Eric Hanne, who specializes in Medieval Islamic History, is SJP’s adviser. He questions if SJP is on an even playing field with other groups, given SJP members’ student conduct hearings in April and Crudele’s recent statement.
“Students should be able to express themselves regardless of their views on issues as long as they do so respectfully and not in a negative fashion,” Hanne said. “But yet, they don’t appear to be permitted here at FAU because they were basically kangaroo courted into giving up their positions or face a harsher sanction.”
Glebocki, who is a junior political science major, viewed Crudele’s statement as unsupportive to SJP members in her letter to the UP on Oct. 8.
“[The blog post] talking up how
much FAU cares about Jewish students and Israel while saying nothing about support for Palestinian, Arab and Muslim students and their allies gives the distinct impression of favoring one group over another.”
SJP’s graveyard event on Oct. 7, Oct. 8 and Oct. 9 received little to no backlash. Around 80 mock tombstones made out of paper and cardboard were placed in the grass of the free speech lawn to symbolize the 352 children killed in Operation Cast Lead, a three-week conflict in the Gaza Strip between Israel and Palestinian militants in 2008 and 2009.
A female student approached one of SJP’s hand-painted tombstones, picked it up out of the grass and threw it on the ground. Then an FAU police officer followed her. As of publication time, FAU Police could not be reached for comment on what consequences the student faced.
The SJP graveyard event took place from Oct.7 - 9.
NEWS STUDENT PROTESTS
20 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
Texting — or just using a cellphone in general — is a staple of modern life:
a staple that, thanks to a Fla. law that took effect Oct. 1, is now illegal to do while driving.
According to the Pew Research Center, 79 percent of people within the traditional college age group of 18 to 24-years-old own a smartphone. Despite this, smartphone-owning students like junior ocean engineering major David Straton support the new law.
“It makes the road conditions significantly safer. I think it’s a great thing, to be honest,” Straton said. “I don’t think that anyone should be goofing off on their phones while they’re supposed to be paying attention to what’s going on on the road.”
The new “Florida Ban on Texting While Driving Law,” as it is officially known, makes texting — or similar activities like emailing — while driving a non-criminal offense, punishable by a non-moving violation charge.
“I have an injury that I have to carry for the rest of my life because some guy was texting on his phone,” Straton said. “He went straight into me at a red light. I was stopped at a red light and he just plowed into me because he was busy texting. I was watching him text in my rearview mirror… [I’ll] have back pain and neck pain for the rest of my existence, because someone just didn’t care.”
The law makes texting while driving a secondary offense, meaning that the act is not itself
enough to warrant being pulled over; however anyone caught texting while driving in addition to another driving infraction may be charged with both. For instance, according to the law, “unlawful speed” (speeding) and “unlawful use of a wireless communications device” that result in a crash are equivalent charges, both amounting to four points towards a license penalty. Straton believes that the secondary offense status of texting while driving is not severe enough.
It can wait
Florida enacts a new distracted driving ban — but you can’t get pulled over for doing it
Story by Christopher Massana Photo Illustration by Max JacksonContributorWeb Editor
22 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
TEXTING BANNEWSAfter Oct. 1, use of a cell phone like this one is prohibited while driving a car.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 24
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After Oct. 1, use of a cell phone like this one is prohibited while driving a car.
“From what I’ve seen up north… the Canadians,” Straton said, “they don’t allow texting on the road at all, they don’t allow talking on your phone on the road. Most provinces don’t allow it. I’ve noticed that people have a much higher rate of attentive awareness when it comes to what they’re doing on the road.”
Other students, such as freshman engineering major Julian Graves, aren’t as critical of the penalty.
“I feel that [the law is] pretty good,” Graves said, “people will drive safer now, I don’t have a problem with texting and driving, but it usually causes some accidents, so I guess it’s pretty good that they have it… [The
secondary offense condition] makes sense. If they’re not really driving recklessly while they’re doing it, there’s no cause to pull them over.”
Student support of the law is centered around a desire for safety, but it also seems to be a matter of convenience. According to an online poll from the Independent Florida Alligator, the University of Florida’s student newspaper, more than half of UF students who responded don’t text while driving.
“We are not kids anymore,” junior civil engineering major Tianfa Wu, who claims he’s never texted while driving, said. “Most people aren’t going against it when we are not supposed to
be on the phone and texting while we’re driving. It’s really dangerous.”
Even if they might have been guilty of texting while driving in the past, students still support the ban, even going so far as to criticize the light penalty.
“I sometimes do text and drive,” senior health administration major Marie Dezine said. “Even if you take your eyes off the road for one second, anything can happen. It’s me putting my life in jeopardy. Not only me [but] I’m putting other people’s lives in jeopardy. I think it is a good law, but I honestly think that they gave us a slap on the wrist.”
Dezine does have doubts about the law’s effectiveness, however,
citing personal experience.“People are gonna do it
regardless… I have a friend, not going to say her name; sometimes while we’re driving, she texts. If somebody calls her, she’s like ‘I’m driving’, but if it’s a text, she’ll take her eyes off the road,” Dezine said. “I don’t know how to approach that, I have my seatbelt on at all times, but my life is in your hands!”
This sentiment was echoed by freshman business major Grant Wise.
“They implemented it for the right reasons, but I don’t think it’s going to stop anyone from doing it,” Wise said. “Everyone is well-addicted to their cellular devices.”
TEXTING BAN
24 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
NEWS
Explore FAU’s Boca campus during evenings and you’re likely to stumble upon a series of events that you never thought could exist on a random patch of grass.
Masses of people hooting and hollering, hitting each other with blunt objects. Balls flying every which way. Guys smashing girls into the ground with reckless abandon. Broomsticks.
This is quidditch, and it’s all real.“It is an awesome melting pot of athleticism and nerdiness,” FAU
freshman Natalia Cereceda, who plays as a beater–– or defender — said.Cereceda is one of 20 people in the FAU quidditch club, playing a
sport that was born from the mind of J.K. Rowling, author of the famed “Harry Potter” series.
Quidditch, a semi-contact sport, is played with brooms or plastic pipes in hand, which beaters generally use to keep their territory guarded from opponents –– wizards and witches –– who are trying to score goals.
“It is a lot harder than football and rugby because there is a constant threat of getting hurt,” Owls beater Paige Dekiel, a senior, said.
Dekiel is one of a handful of girls who take part in FAU’s quidditch club. As she notes, other sports teams play with protective gear. Rugby does not, but it’s not a co-ed sport, either.
In quidditch, a 200-pound guy can tackle a puny 90-pound girl and it’s totally acceptable.
But the dangers of the sport go well beyond gender.
Wizarding world of
quidditchQuidditch is not the most popular sport at FAU, but
it could be among the toughest to playStory by Aimee Baret Photos by Ryan Murphy
Contributor Photo Editor
QUIDDITCHSPORTS
CONTINUED ON PAGE 2826 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
A dufflebag of plastic pipe “brooms” lay on the ground near Heritage Park Towers during quidditch practice.
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At FAU, the Quidditch team practices in open fields behind the Heritage Park Towers and Glades Park Towers dorms on campus. The fields offer no lighting and are left unprotected. When it rains, the team continues on in dangerous conditions and often times the players risk broken bones or other injuries.
David “Stix” Sager knows that all too well.Sager, a beater for FAU, previously played for the Ithaca Community
Hex team during the fifth Quidditch World Cup. In the championship match, he was tackled and thrown to the ground
and had his shoulder dislocated. He continued to play for 20 minutes before subbing out and — instead of going to the hospital — his shoulder was popped into place on the sidelines.
FAU’s Quidditch team braves the risk of danger with fierce determination and unrelenting devotion.
“When you get war wounds it shows how hard you went on the pitch,” chaser Hannah Feldman, whose responsibility is to score goals for the team, said.
FAU’s quidditch club welcomes any new members with open arms, accepting those with even the most minimal athletic backgrounds, but to play the sport one must know all of the rules and intricacies.
The aforementioned brooms or plastic pipes, which the FAU players often bring from home or purchase themselves, are used with three balls –– a quaffle (a volleyball or soccerball) which is used for scoring and two
bludgers (dodge balls) that eliminate opponents from the game.The game is highlighted by the snitch, a person in bright yellow pants
who runs around the pitch trying not to be caught.Other than the snitch, there are seven players on the field for the
team –– the keeper, who guards three hoop-like goals from the front and the back; three chasers, who score goals through three hoops with the quaffle; two beaters, who act as defense and one seeker, whose only objective is to catch the snitch.
Throwing a quaffle through one of the three hoops counts for 10 points. Catching the snitch ends the game and adds 50 points to whichever team caught it.
Game times vary and are often determined by the seekers’ ability.
Despite the physical dangers of quidditch, competitors have the utmost respect for each other on and off the field.
The close bond between players means they maintain a close friendship, even after getting bludgeoned by a beater or suffering defeat — it means tackling someone to the ground, but then sharing drinks that night.
“It’s 5 o’clock somewhere,” Sager quipped.Sophomore beater Bobby Hardy described his team as his second
family –– one that he gets to whoop with sticks on a regular basis.Although not all members are great athletes, they are encouraged even
if they are all just crazy folks running around in the night.
Pitch: The field the team plays on.
Quaffle: A volleyball or soccer ball used for scoring goals during games.
Bludgers: Dodge balls that eliminate opponents from the game.
Snitch: A player who runs around field and, if caught, ends the game.
Beater: Two players who protect the rest of the team by hitting the opponent with plastic pipes.
Chaser: Three players who score goals for the team.
Seeker: One player who tries to catch the Snitch and end the game.
KEY QUIDDITCH TERMS
Source: Quidditch Through the Ages 28 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
QUIDDITCHSPORTS
28 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
FAU chaser Liam Scharovsky, a freshman multimedia studies major, practices near Heritage Park Towers.
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FAU basketball season is right around the corner and soon you will be watching the men’s and women’s teams compete on a new court.
Sort of.This past offseason, renovations to FAU’s
basketball arena took place, months before the team begins its first season of Conference USA play in November. The facilities where the Owls train remain unchanged, but the hardwood they play on has undergone a minor facelift.
Gone is the old Sun Belt Conference logo underneath the free throw line. The red areas near the three-point arc have been replaced with a deep blue that lines the perimeter of the court.
What remains at center court is the recognizable spread-winged Owls logo, reminding everyone that this is indeed The Burrow.
The changes aren’t significant –– nothing near what rival FIU recently did with their court, overhauling it to depict a beach with water and palm trees –– but they resonated with the student fans.
“The Burrow last year was a marvelous arena that was precisely designed for [Owl players and supporters],” management information systems major Vickson Carvil said. “I enjoyed every home game. Now that there are new renovations, I can’t wait to see how [The Burrow] was made better.”
Carvil, a sophomore, attended all but one home basketball game last season and believes the changes will enhance the ambience of the Owls’ home arena.
Ditto for sophomore criminal justice major Franklin Bryant, who wouldn’t have minded his tuition costs going toward the renovations.
“That’s where I would hope [the money] would go,” Bryant said.
FAU men’s basketball Head Coach Mike Jarvis believed the university was just keeping up with the times, new conference and all.
Jarvis did, however, explain that further alterations like these could be a recruiting tool.
“[The extent to which facilities can attract recruits] depends on to what extent the renovations are done,” Jarvis said.
Tweaks to FAU athletic facilities have been a common occurrence in 2013.
Two months after the new court was revealed, FAU Athletic Director Pat Chun tweeted a picture of the football locker room while it was still in the process of being upgraded.
The “refreshed” locker room was ready for the start of the team’s training camp in early August.
With its new “Making Waves” slogan, FAU is doing its best to ramp up fan support, creating the new Hootigans fan group and introducing The Cove at FAU Stadium –– a pool and lounging section.
Some Owls fans hope ideas like those help bring people together, whether it’s for basketball at The Burrow or football on the
stadium’s field.“The games where everyone was
involved and rooting on our team [during athletic events] have been some of my best college moments thus far,” Franklin Bryant said.
Fixing upThe Burrow
Story by Wesley Wright Photos by Veshaal DialContributor Contributor
When FAU updated its basketball court, the changes were well received by fans
The new Conference USA logo near the free throw line at FAU’s basketball arena.
FAU’s basketball arena was branded with Conference USA logos when it was renovated.
30 OCT. 15, 2013UPRESSONLINE.COM
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