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If getting into medical school isn’t stressful enough, pre- med students will now have to know more and study harder to meet the new requirements of the revised Medical College Admission Test (MCAT). The new exam will add bio- chemistry, psychology and soci- ology to the current list of sub- jects that include biology, organ- ic chemistry, general chemistry and physics. The length of the test will also stretch from five hours and 10 minutes to seven hours and 30 minutes. Students can take the current version of the MCAT until January. The revised exam, which was announced in February 2012, will replace the existing test in April 2015. “It’s going to be different,” said Allison Distler, a USF junior majoring in molecular biology. “We’re not used to taking cours- es like sociology (and) psychol- ogy.” Distler will be taking the test in 2015, and said her studying What started as a dispute over county regulations has turned into a heated public debate between the Hillsborough County Public Transportation Commission (PTC) and rideshar- ing services Uber and Lyft. The controversy came to a head Wednesday morning at a packed PTC meeting where Uber and Lyft drivers spoke out against what the companies see as overregulation of rideshare services and an anti-competition mindset on the part of the PTC. “They’re anti-competitive and only serve to protect special interests,” said Taylor Bennett, a representative from Uber. “The PTC should listen to its residents and visitors who are demand- ing more choice, and work to improve Tampa’s transportation ecosystem by modernizing regu- lations, rather than stifle innova- tion and progress with antiquat- ed rules.” *** The fight between Uber, Lyft and the PTC started this sum- mer, when the two companies began operating in Hillsborough County. Since then the PTC has remained adamant that both San Francisco-based companies are operating in the county illegally as a taxi service. Both Uber and Lyft market their companies as ridesharing services, where preapproved per- sons can designate themselves as drivers and take others from one destination to another in their personal vehicles. All aspects of Uber and Lyft’s ridesharing services, from hail- ing the cab to paying for the ride, are done through a smartphone app that can give users real-time data on where the closest driver The Oracle www.usforacle.com UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2014 I VOL. 52 NO. 11 Follow The Oracle on Twitter @USFOracle or take a photo of the QR code below with a QR reader app on your smartphone. I NSIDE THIS I SSUE MONTAGE SPORTS USF to lean on defense against N.C. State. BACK LIFESTYLE Veterans transition to campus life. Page 4 Oracle online News ................................................................. 1 Lifestyle ...................................................... 4 Opinion ....................................................... 6 classifieds .............................................. 7 Crossword ......................................... 7 sports ............................................................ 8 The Index Tampa’s rideshare test drive Students study harder to adapt to MCAT changes For the past few months, the ridesharing service Lyft has been negotiations about taxi regulations with county officials. SPECIAL TO THE ORACLE By Roberto Roldan MANAGING EDITOR By Nataly Capote ASST. NEWS EDITOR Fitz and the Tantrums played at the USF Sun Dome on Wednesday night. ORACLE PHOTO / ADAM MATHIEU n Dispute between Lyft, Uber and county officials goes beyond negotiations. Having a Tantrum n See DRIVE on PAGE 2 n See MCAT on PAGE 3

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Page 1: 9-11-14

If getting into medical school isn’t stressful enough, pre-med students will now have to know more and study harder to meet the new requirements of the revised Medical College Admission Test (MCAT).

The new exam will add bio-chemistry, psychology and soci-ology to the current list of sub-jects that include biology, organ-ic chemistry, general chemistry and physics. The length of the test will also stretch from five

hours and 10 minutes to seven hours and 30 minutes.

Students can take the current version of the MCAT until January. The revised exam, which was announced in February 2012, will replace the existing test in April 2015.

“It’s going to be different,” said Allison Distler, a USF junior majoring in molecular biology. “We’re not used to taking cours-es like sociology (and) psychol-ogy.”

Distler will be taking the test in 2015, and said her studying

What started as a dispute over county regulations has turned into a heated public debate between the Hillsborough

County Public Transportation Commission (PTC) and rideshar-ing services Uber and Lyft.

The controversy came to a head Wednesday morning at a packed PTC meeting where Uber and Lyft drivers spoke out against what the companies see as overregulation of rideshare services and an anti-competition mindset on the part of the PTC.

“They’re anti-competitive and only serve to protect special interests,” said Taylor Bennett, a representative from Uber. “The PTC should listen to its residents

and visitors who are demand-ing more choice, and work to improve Tampa’s transportation ecosystem by modernizing regu-lations, rather than stifle innova-tion and progress with antiquat-ed rules.”

***The fight between Uber, Lyft

and the PTC started this sum-mer, when the two companies began operating in Hillsborough County.

Since then the PTC has remained adamant that both San Francisco-based companies are

operating in the county illegally as a taxi service.

Both Uber and Lyft market their companies as ridesharing services, where preapproved per-sons can designate themselves as drivers and take others from one destination to another in their personal vehicles.

All aspects of Uber and Lyft’s ridesharing services, from hail-ing the cab to paying for the ride, are done through a smartphone app that can give users real-time data on where the closest driver

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 , S E P T E M B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 4 I V O L . 5 2 N O . 1 1

Follow The Oracle on Twitter @USFOracle or take a photo of the QR code below with a QR reader app on your smartphone.

InsIde thIs Issue

Montage

SPORTSUSF to lean on defense against N.C. State. BACK

LIFESTYLEVeterans transition to campus life. Page 4

Oracle online

News.................................................................1 Lifestyle......................................................4Opinion.......................................................6

classifieds..............................................7Crossword.........................................7sports............................................................8

The Index

Tampa’s rideshare test drive

Students study harder to adapt to MCAT changes

For the past few months, the ridesharing service Lyft has been negotiations about taxi regulations with county officials. SPECIAL TO THE ORACLE

By Roberto RoldanM A N A G I N G E D I T O R

By Nataly CapoteA S S T . N E W S E D I T O R

Fitz and the Tantrums played at the USF Sun Dome on Wednesday night. ORACLE PHOTO / ADAM MATHIEU

n Dispute between Lyft, Uber and county officials goes beyond negotiations.

Having a Tantrum

n See DRIVE on PAGE 2

n See MCAT on PAGE 3

Page 2: 9-11-14

is located and allow customers to select the cheapest rate.

The frameworks under which Uber and Lyft operate are out-side of most city and county regulations, including the PTC’s regulations, which set cab fares, license drivers and set general regulations on the taxi service market.

This has led to a number of battles between the company and local regulatory agencies throughout the country, jeopar-dizing the future of the mobile app that has gained popularity among college-aged consumers.

Both companies have looked to corner the market for 18- to 25-year-olds through direct mar-keting and tabling at a number of universities and colleges across the U.S. They have become most popular, and generated the most controversy, in large urban cit-ies such as New Orleans, Los Angeles and New York City.

Initially, the PTC issued warn-ings to Uber and Lyft drivers found operating in Hillsborough County.

More recently, the PTC began fining drivers and even pursuing misdemeanor criminal charges in some cases.

Both Lyft and Uber have paid for drivers’ fines.

Victor Crist, the Hillsborough County Commissioner for USF’s district and chairman of the PTC, said about two dozen drivers have been cited for operating an unlicensed taxi service.

“We didn’t drop the hammer on them, we have slowly eased into this,” Crist said. “We have run advertisements in news-papers, we have run advertise-ments on billboards … to tell drivers they may be approached by people to become illegal taxi drivers.”

Uber and Lyft representatives both listed fixed fares as a major issue they have with current reg-ulations.

“Requiring a minimum trip cost and length has nothing to do with benefitting consum-ers, increasing public safety or expanding transportation options. Instead, it removes the flexibility, affordability, and convenience that has attracted both drivers and passengers to ridesharing,” said Lyft Public Policy Communications Manager Chelsea Wilson.

Crist claimed guidelines for fixed rates and wait times only apply to limousine services, which the traditional Lyft and Uber services do not fall under.

According to PTC Guidelines on rates, taxicabs only have a fixed maximum rate, not a mini-mum.

Crist said the biggest prob-lems the PTC has with Uber and Lyft deal with issues of passen-ger safety and insurance.

Uber and Lyft’s background checks are based on driver’s license and social security num-bers.

Crist said the PTC believes both companies’ background checks don’t hold up to PTC standards that require finger-printing.

Background checks currently performed by Uber and Lyft do not return results from outside Florida.

“Any place of security requires a fingerprint background check,” Crist said. “The only way you can tap into the FBI database and get a nation-wide check is with fingerprints.”

PTC regulations also require taxi cab drivers to have compre-hensive liability insurance, which Crist said both companies do not have.

Bennett confirmed Lyft’s cur-rent liability insurance only takes effect when a customer gets into a driver’s vehicle and the ride is continuing to register on the mobile app. Once the ride has been completed and it no longer registers on the app, the driver isn’t covered.

“In between trips you are not covered,” Crist said. “You get into a wreck in between and that liability policy doesn’t work then and that’s not right. You are put-ting people on the street, you’re putting pedestrians and other vehicles at risk.”

According to Crist, the type of umbrella liability insurance policy that Uber and Lyft provide to their drivers also does not pay out medical or personal injury expenses without a lawsuit.

“There’s a lot of unanswered aspects of the insurance that aren’t fully covered under what we require,” he said.

Lisa Montelione, the Tampa City Councilwoman represent-ing USF’s district, has been an outspoken proponent of Uber and Lyft.

Montelione said she believes the PTC’s current approach to Uber and Lyft is too adversarial

and the PTC regulations are not up to speed with changes in cur-rent technology.

Though she has support-ed Uber and Lyft in their fight against the PTC, Montelione said she is concerned Tampa residents who are signing up to become drivers are being used as political pawns.

“The way they are breaking into the market, to me, are using individuals as their test case,” she said. “They should disclose to (drivers) that they are testing this market and the possibility of being fined and or charged with a crime is a real possibility.”

When asked if drivers in Tampa are made aware they may face fines or criminal pen-alties, Bennett and Wilson both declined to comment on behalf of Uber and Lyft.

Montelione, who is also the Vice Chair of the non-profit Metropolitan Planning Organization, said once the PTC and Uber and Lyft resolve the issues currently on the table, she sees ridesharing services playing a role in the future of Tampa’s transportation network.

“Uber and Lyft are certainly not the last evolution of these services,” she said. “We need

to accommodate for all of these products that look to take more vehicles off our road and into our public transit system.”

***While the PTC has been at the

negotiating table with Lyft over the last few months, Crist said Uber has been more difficult to deal with and, at times, unre-sponsive.

“Lyft has been a lot easier to work with and a lot more recep-tive to negotiations,” he said. “Uber’s attitude has been ‘Take it or leave it.’”

While Crist claims the PTC has no animosity toward Uber and Lyft, Uber has recently began an advertisement campaign against Crist and another member of the PTC, Al Higginbotham.

Crist has claimed the adver-tisements are illegal because Uber did not publicly disclose the reason for sending the adver-tisements and how much they’ve paid for the advertisements.

“That’s how Uber does busi-ness,” Crist said. “They just do what they want and when they want to do it. They don’t care.”

Both Crist and Higginbotham are up for re-election in November.

The PTC is currently work-

ing with business leaders in the public transportation industry to find out how they can bring their regulations up to date. Crist said the PTC spent the summer modi-fying its rules and regulatory authority to take new business models such as Uber and Lyft into account.

“With the changing of the millennium has come a new generation of people who are more tech-savvy, more technol-ogy reliant and that demand for more technical interaction in their life,” Crist said. “We’ve got to remain open for cutting edge technology and opportunities.”

Despite what Crist sees as openness for negotiating on part of the PTC, Uber and Lyft said they will continue to operate in Hillsborough County under their current business model.

“All they have to do to be legal is either get a permit for their vehicle or get their drivers licensed,” Crist said. “It’s not that hard.”

The board is now waiting on an insurance regulation report to continue the conversation on ridesharing operations within Hillsborough County. The next PTC meeting is Oct. 8.

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

DRIVEContinued from PAGE 1

Page 3: 9-11-14

A USF professor, along with Thomas Edison, were among six inventors inducted into the Florida Inventors Hall of Fame on Wednesday for the hall’s inaugural ceremony.

USF professor Shyam Mohapatra was inducted for devel-oping nanoparticles that deliver drugs and peptides, regulating the immune response to inflamma-tory diseases. His research also contributed to nanoscale therapy for cancer, traumatic brain injury, asthma and viral infections.

Thomas Edison, who lived in

Fort Myers for almost 50 years, was inducted for inventing the phono-graph, the picture camera and the light bulb. Accepting on his behalf was Chris Pendleton, president and CEO of Edison Ford Winter Estates, Inc.

Other Florida inventors inducted include the inventor of refrigeration and air conditioning, the developer of high-definition digital imaging for NASA, the researcher of liquid crystals used in display screens and the creator of Gatorade.

The Florida Inventors Hall of Fame, located in USF Research Park, is one of only seven inventor halls of fame in the nation. The induction ceremony is scheduled to be an annual event.

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

Florida Inventor Hall of Fame inaugural features USF professorBy Wesley HigginsN E W S E D I T O R

methods are heavily affected by the three additional semesters’ worth of material included in the new exam format.

Owen Farcy, the director of pre-medical partnerships at Kaplan Test Prep, said the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) has been think-ing about updating the MCAT for some time now.

The last major changes to the test took place over 20 years ago.

“This is going to be a drasti-cally different test,” she said. “The practice of medicine as well as the science that underlies medicine has changed dramati-cally (since 1992).”

The 2015 MCAT will focus more on research design, graphi-cal analysis and data interpre-tation, which are areas Farcy said pre-med students aren’t as exposed to.

Saeed Sinan, a freshman majoring in biomedical science, said he thinks the newer version of the test will create well-round-ed medical students.

“It’ll give me more of an idea about psychology, physiology, how a person reacts to some-thing … it’s not just (about) bio-chemistry and physics,” he said. “I’ll learn in depth and it’ll make me believe why I should be a doctor.”

In a survey done by Kaplan

of 78 different medical schools, results showed that 44 percent of the institutions said it made no difference which version of the test students took, 28 per-cent prefer the current version and 27 percent prefer the newer one.

Since students will likely find themselves taking more classes in order to prepare for the 2015 exam, Kaplan and the Princeton Review offer tutoring and cours-es to help students brace them-selves for the changes.

Kaplan will host a monthly series beginning Sept. 22 called The Pulse to help pre-med stu-dents understand and “dissect” the new test.

Additionally, USF Morsani College of Medicine is partner-ing with the Princeton Review to offer a course entitled “Medical Sciences Success Skills” this fall. The three-credit course covers subjects such as physics, general and organic chemistry, biology and verbal reasoning review.

Students can also download an “MCAT 2015 Sneak Peek” digital guide to take a full-length practice test for free.

Despite a more challenging test, Farcy said better students and practitioners would result from the new MCAT.

“It’s going to create better applicants to medical school and better young physicians,” he said. “That’s really the goal here, to select the best students for medical school but ultimately to select the best of the next gen-eration of doctors.”

MCATContinued from PAGE 1

Page 4: 9-11-14

LifestyleU 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, S E P T E M B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 4 ● T H E O R AC L E4

During college, many talk of making plans or chasing dreams, but Sandra Damiron is here to figure out what to do after she has lived her dream.

“In school, they keep asking what my dream is,” she said. “I already lived it; I was a Marine.”

The 24-year-old mother of two’s story is reflective of the approximately 900 veterans enrolled on campus this semester.

“A lot of people think the number one challenge veterans face is PTSD, but it’s not,” said Jennifer Stout, the assistant director for the USF Office of Veterans Services.

“Most people coming to school are past that and are trying to find meaning and purpose in their lives.”

The average student veteran is a little older, Stout said. Many are used to having had a career already, a family and a steady source of income. Relating to the traditional student coming straight from high school can be challenging.

Damiron said she initially found the transition from life in the military to life at school difficult.

While serving as a corporal in the Marine Corps from 2007-2011, she said she had gotten used to taking orders and executing them. She found herself facing culture shock after returning to the classroom.

“Most students’ sense of responsibility differs from mine,” she said. “The lack of respect for teachers was shocking.”

Initially, she found herself snapping at the rest of the students, telling them to be quiet when the teacher was talking because it came as

second nature. During her first semester at USF, she said she was only comfortable speaking up in classes with other veterans.

Some of her fellow veterans who have also returned to school face similar plights. One of her friends posted on Facebook how frustrated he was with all the “little kids” in his class.

At USF, Stout said the Office of Veterans Services offers several programs and initiatives designed to ease the transition, from socials with other veterans to courses designed to help veterans build better connections and relationships with professors and mentors on campus. These courses teach veterans networking skills that can

help them unite the skills and interests already acquired in the military with civilian and campus life.

Damiron said she initially came to USF in Spring 2014 as an anthropology major, but switched to elementary education after speaking with advisers on campus. It’s something she felt would be more practical in supporting her two children.

“It’s not my dream job, but it is what it is,” she said. “It’s a little sad that chapter of my life is closed, but you got to move forward. You got to find purpose and fulfillment in whatever it is you do.”

Veterans transition from military life to university lifeBy Divya KumarC O R R E S P O N D E N T

“In school, they keep asking what

my dream is. I already lived it; I was a Marine.”

Sandra DamironMarine Corps veteran

On last year’s anniversary of 9/11, students placed American flags around campus. ORACLE FILE PHOTO/ DIVYA KUMAR

Page 5: 9-11-14

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

4-2-5 so they have bigger cor-ner backs and bigger safeties than most other schools we’ll face,” said senior tight end Mike McFarland. “They’re also really physical on the back end so we’ll have some work to do.”

So far this season, the Wolfpack defense has given up at least 23 points in both of their games, including Old Dominion scoring 34 points against them Saturday.

The Bulls have had success in creating turnovers so far this season and the players said the defense is looking to con-tinue making an identity for the team.

“(Defensive coordinator Chuck Bresnahan) talked about creating an identity for our-selves and as these past two weeks have went by, I guess our identity has been creat-ing turnovers,” said sophomore linebacker Nigel Harris.

Harris said the defense is pushing for seven turnovers this week so they are making progress from their past game when they forced six. Harris said the key to forcing these turnovers is in the preparation.

“Preparation is key for every-

thing,” Harris said. “When you prepare yourself, you know what you’re doing so you don’t think on the field as much. When you think on the field, you tend to not play as fast as you normally would. Preparing yourself by understanding your opponent allows you to play faster and create more turn-overs.”

The Bulls won’t have to pre-pare for long to be familiar with N.C. State junior quarterback Jacoby Brissett.

Brissett, like the two quar-terbacks the Bulls have already played, will likely throw the ball often. He’s had 69 attempts through two games this season and has thrown only one inter-ception.

McFarland was able to watch Brissett play regularly when the two played together at the University of Florida.

“He’s an athletic quarter-back, like all the other quar-terbacks we have faced and will face,” McFarland said. “He’s smart and he’s grown up some.”

USF will play against North Carolina State at Raymond James Stadium on Saturday at 3:30 p.m. The game will be tele-vised on CBS Sports Network.

TURNOVERSContinued from PAGE 8

Page 6: 9-11-14

Universities need to take more

responsibility in sexual assault cases

C O L U M N I S T

Grace Hoyte

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, S E P T E M B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 4 ● T H E O R AC L E

Opinion6

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]

Opinion Editor: Brandon Shaik .......................... [email protected]

Copy Editors: Grace Hoyte, Grace Korley

Multimedia Editor: Adam Mathieu

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

A Columbia University stu-dent is protesting against the institution, which she feels is improperly handling her rape claim, by carrying a mat-tress with her everywhere she goes until her rapist is removed from campus.

This incident at Columbia does not stand alone; col-leges around the country are being scrutinized for loosely handling reports of sexual assault. The University of Connecticut faced backlash in October last year following a lawsuit filed by four female students claim-ing their reports of sexual violence on campus were not properly handled.

The suit followed two fed-eral complaints by seven UConn students claiming the university failed to take action in regard to their reports of sexual violence. UConn settled out of court in July for $1.28 million, stat-ing they wanted to avoid a lengthy court process.

Many of the questions posed throughout the trial are identical to those asked in most cases of rape: What was she wearing? Was she drinking? These disgusting questions are thinly veiled accusations of the victim. However, these questions bring to mind a serious problem among college-age women and men.

Is it too much to ask that colleges take cases of rape

seriously without victim blaming? Sexual assault is a serious issue, one that cannot be taken lightly and offenders should be punished to the full extent of the law. Colleges should begin to take preven-tative measures such as edu-cating young men about con-sent in order to reduce, if not eliminate, cases of rape.

Tragically, in cases like UConn, many schools do not handle reports of sexual mis-conduct appropriately. The White House has stepped in with a comprehensive report of recommendations for colleges. Though the White House’s recommendation is only that, schools are begin-ning to feel the heat. The University of Connecticut is not the only school that has paid significant figures. In 2013, Yale was forced to pay $165,000 for failing to report instances of sexual assault, and 55 other colleges are under investigation for simi-lar reasons.

Colleges should educate women and men on how to avoid unwanted sexual encounters in an effort to take better responsibility for its students. College is sup-posed to be the best time of a person’s life.

Grace Hoyte is a sophomore majoring in English.

Apple Pay will make transactions more secure

In the same day Home Depot announced a data breach affecting debit and credit card users in U.S. and Canadian stores, Apple boldly unveiled its plan to eliminate the wallet by placing all forms of payment directly on the phone.

The Home Depot breach is the most recent case of security breach in a line of offenses following last year’s Target breach, the second-larg-est in history, and Apple’s own iCloud hack just last week. However, the proposed meth-od of mobile payment, coined Apple Pay, could provide a solution to preventing future attacks.

Despite the questionable stability of electronic security,

Apple has focused on a two-step model that intends to add stability to current mod-els. Present payment systems in the U.S. already have vul-nerabilities, essentially not being secured by anything other than a rarely verified signature according to Keith Rabois, former chief operating officer of Square, a financial services and mobile payment company.

Apple Pay will be avail-able to iPhone 6 users start-ing in October at major retail-ers like McDonald’s, Subway and Whole Foods, with Apple working to expand its acces-sibility in more retailers.

Mobile payment is not a new concept. Apple Pay is following companies such as Square, Google, and PayPal — all of which failed. While the idea is borrowed, the technol-ogy introduced by Apple is new. The iPhone 5S, released in 2013, was the first gen-eration of iPhones to employ Touch ID technology allowing users to bypass the pin pass-code in favor of a fingerprint.

The Apple Pay system will utilize the same Touch ID tech-nology, accompanied by a pin,

to replace signature authoriza-tion and assigns a one-time payment number for each purchase, eliminating the abil-ity to trace a purchase to an account.

Obviously, the primary con-cern with any advancement in payment technology is securi-ty, but Apple has settled those concerns altogether. Apple Pay technology permits only the owner of the device to autho-rize a purchase and if a phone is lost or stolen, a user can remotely lock their device or erase all data.

The shift to mobile payment methods in the coming years could not only eliminate both cash and the need for cash registers, but could also mean a transition to more efficient and secure means of payment.

While it feels good to swipe that piece of plastic, Apple Pay is another necessary step toward protecting one-self in the digital age. Initial skepticism is to be expected, but mobile payment has the potential to become standard in the near future.

Brandon Shaik is a senior majoring in psychology.

C O L U M N I S T

Brandon Shaik

Page 7: 9-11-14

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, S E P T E M B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 4 ● T H E O R AC L E 7

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SportsU 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, S E P T E M B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 4 ● T H E O R AC L E8

Football

Bulls aim for more turnovers against N.C. State

With several starters of the offense suffering from injuries going into Saturday’s game against North Carolina State, the Bulls are hoping the other units on the field will make up for the battered offense.

Sophomore quarterback Mike White may still start this week-end after going through a com-pression fracture to his left fore-arm after the first play against Maryland.

Coach Willie Taggart said White was ecstatic when he learned that his arm had no breaks in the bone.

“He found out before I did,” Taggart said. “Him and (junior quarterback Steven Bench) went to the doctors and he was excit-ed that it wasn’t as bad as it was.”

Two other players whose sta-tus’ are up in the air are senior wide receiver Andre Davis and senior offensive lineman Thor Jozwiak.

Davis bruised his sternum laying out to complete a 44-yard

catch against Western Carolina and Taggart said he has had trouble talking and breathing since then.

Jozwiak injured both his shoulder and toe in the season-opener.

“They’re getting better quick,” Taggart said. “They’re ahead of schedule rehabbing-wise. With the things Thor went through, we thought it would be a long time, but it’s not going to be a long time. I would hope for it to be this week, but I’m not sure.”

The return of Jozwiak will help stabilize an offensive line that has received scrutiny from the coaching staff for getting beat on blocking assignments too often.

“Some young guys on the O-line have struggled at times and that hurt us,” Taggart said.

But regardless of who the starting quarterback is for USF on Saturday, the offense will face an unfamiliar defense in N.C. State.

“Their base defense is a

Men’s Soccer

USF shoots for third straight win

After notching two consecutive wins against Portland and 24th ranked Akron, the Bulls will hope to push their streak to three games when they play Old Dominion on Friday.

The Bulls (2-1) opened the sea-son with a 2-0 loss against Florida Gulf Coast University, but have since been able to edge out their opponents on the foot of senior midfielder Lucas Baldin who has scored three of USF’s four goals in its last two games, including the game-winner against Akron.

Baldin was named AAC Offensive Player of the Week after taking seven shots and scoring

three goals in two games last week.The Bulls look to carry their

momentum into this week whe they travel to play against Old Dominion (1-3-1).

While Old Dominion doesn’t have a high-scoring offense — scoring only three goals through five games — it has locked down other teams so far this season. After allowing six goals in their opening game, the Monarchs have held their opponents to one or fewer goals in each of their past four games.

The Bulls have had success in keeping their opponents off the scoreboard this season, only allowing an average of one goal per game. This is partly because of junior goalkeeper Spasoje

Stefanovic’s ability to defend the net, allowing only three goals on 28 shots.

By allowing only one goal — a penalty kick — as well as accumu-lating four saves, Stefanovic was named the AAC Goalkeeper of the Week. Stefanovic also recorded his first career shutout in a 2-0 win against Portland, giving him a .45 goals against average for the week.

The Bulls will look to continue their trend of shooting early and often in their matchup against Old Dominion. USF has outshot their opponents 25-9 in the first half of games this season.

The Bulls’ matchup against Old Dominion is Friday at 7 p.m. on the road.

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

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

Sophomore linebacker Nigel Harris (right), who leads the nation in forced fumbles, forced two in the fourth quarter against Maryland on Saturday. ORACLE PHOTO/ADAM MATHIEUn See TURNOVERS on PAGE 5

Junior goalkeeper Spasoje Stefanovic has allowed only one goal in the past two games for the Bulls. ORACLE PHOTO/ADAM MATHIEU