technician - december 4, 2008

8
technicianonline.com DesignPRINT provides an alternative to WolfPrint Samuel T.O. Branch Senior Staff Writer The College of Design began a new era of printing for design students Monday when the school enabled DesignPRINT. The sys- tem entails a new print accounting software which still uses the same physical printers. Despite the new installation, the software is still working alongside the older program, WolfPrint, Joe McCoy, the coordinator of Net- work and Hardware Services for College of Design Information Technology, said. “[DesignPRINT] is an alterna- tive,” McCoy said. “People have been freaking out, thinking we have changed the print system in the last week of school. WolfPrint is still in place, and students can choose which [system] to use.” But while both options are still available, McCoy said the goal is to move to DesignPRINT perma- nently on the University comput- ers next semester if the next couple weeks run smoothly. “We plan to move the design labs completely over... students will still have the option of using the old system on their personal comput- ers,” McCoy said. There have been problems with WolfPrint for a long time, Mc- Coy said. The size and complexity of design students’ printing jobs slow down the printing process dramatically. “The printers were very incon- sistent,” Logan Sayles, a junior in graphic design, said. “Sometimes you would send [a job] and wait 15 to 20 minutes and have to send the job again.” DesignPRINT has been imple- mented in the downtown design studio for a month, McCoy said. So far, Information Technology has been impressed with the results, but McCoy said the program has much more improvement to come. “We are still in the early stages,” McCoy said. “There are still other things we are planning on do- ing.” The IT staff sent a memo to the students of the College of Design Monday, stating in more detail the future plans. One of the main problems that will be corrected is the print payment quotas. The IT department is manually deducting print jobs from each student’s quota currently, causing a delay before students receive a confirmation of payment. Soon, however, the depart- ment will have a system set up for DesignPRINT that allows students to buy quota online via credit card that will be similar to the current system. Other changes coming in the fu- ture include a way for students to see the print queue and increased compatibility with all Macintosh computers. TECHNICIAN Raleigh, North Carolina NC State Bookstores F i n a l s M a d n e s s S a l e ! Friday, Dec. 5th 12pm to 8pm CASH FOR YOUR BOOKS A list of our “most wanted” along with buyback locations and times are posted at: www.ncsu.edu/bookstore College of Design unveils new, alternative printing system DAVID MABE/TECHNICIAN Lauren Hall, a junior in graphic design, and Marissa Lenzo, a junior in graphic design, use the printers in the design lab in Brooks Hall. “They made a new system that’s supposedly faster ...It’s a bad time to implement it, but I’m excited about the changes we will see in the future,” Hall said. KEY CHANGES STUDENTS HAVE TO MAKE TO USE DESIGNPRINT Install the new printers to personal laptops. Even though the printers are the same physical machinery, printers have been renamed if a student tries to use DesignPRINT MAC users have to log in to DesignPRINT with “WOLFTECH/” in front of the student’s unity ID when prompted by the printer Lab computers using Windows operating systems will install the new printers when a student logs in. Do not cancel the installation, even though error messages will occur. Click OK and let the operation finish. FOR DETAILED INSTRUCTIONS, LOG ON TO HTTP://WWW.DESIGN.NCSU.EDU/IT/ inside technician viewpoint 4 science & tech 5 classieds 7 sports 8 Remembering an event is similar to recalling it. See page 5. Teach-in offers different perspective History professors provide historical context for Free Expression Tunnel incident Derek Medlin Managing Editor The multitude of diversity dis- cussions regarding the threats painted in the Free Expres- sion Tunnel Nov. 5 continued Wednesday night in Withers Hall with a teach-in about the history of racial slurs and their impact. “The Gun, The Flag, and the Noose,” which the history de- partment sponsored, allowed four history professors to present a history of racial slurs and imag- ery to students and faculty. The goal of the teach-in, which featured four separate lectures about specific instances or racial prejudice in American history, was to educate the diversity dis- cussions in a historical context. Blair Kelley, an assistant his- tory professor who presented the section of the discussion about the noose, said she was surprised to see so many students and fac- ulty turn out for the event. “I’m very pleased with the turnout and I’m very honored,” she said. “I know in Dead Week it’s rough stuff. We were thrilled this many people came.” Kelley said the goal of Wednes- day night’s discussion was to ensure students understood how history influences today’s society. “I think sometimes you have to say what happened,” Kelley said of discussing the threats painted in the Free Expression Tunnel. “It was crucial to air it out and talk about it within the histori- cal context. This history marks all of us.” Jay Bettis, a senior in chemis- try, said the teach-in taught him history he did not know while also continuing the discussion of the Free Expression Tunnel incident. “Discussions like this open the door for students to take an issue and put it on their shoulders,” Bettis said. “Just by going to col- lege, we’re lucky. We’re forced to be around different types of people.” As the Campus Culture Task Force Committee begins its ef- forts to make recommendations to Chancellor James Oblinger, Kelley said she hoped actual changes would take place on campus. “I’m really looking forward to what the task force is going to be saying and doing,” she said. “I hope that it’s substantive and it will effect the outcome of what happens here. This doesn’t need to be forgotten.” Kelley also said she believes the University should release the pictures of what was painted on the Free Expression Tunnel so students could see exactly what was said. “I’m hoping that the police will release all the pictures of what was written on the wall to help the process of truth and recon- ciliation,” she said. “We all have to understand what was said in order to address it, move on and educate ourselves.” Bettis said students should be the driving force continuing di- versity efforts on campus. “What I got out of this is that it’s not up to administra- tion,” he said. “Administra- tion is only going to do so much. What you have to do is figure out in yourself that something is bothering you, share it with others that feel the same way and try to make a collective change.” Kelley said in her presenta- tion that it is crucial to under- stand the historical context of the threatening messages to move forward. “History can serve as a script for how we understand contemporary society,” she said. Kelley also said she hopes the University will continue to push educational efforts to make campus more diverse. “I hope that there is some greater educational effort. An effort to put people in a room with one another and talk about history and not wrap it up as quickly as pos- sible,” she said. “It needs to be unwrapped and talked about and thought about.” Evolution of a mascot N .C. State’s mascot has undergone a number of chang- es over the years — from a coyote that cruised the football field, to an iron wolf robot. Also, deputy sports editor Josh Harrell ranks the mascots of the ACC af- ter four and a half years of keen study. See page 8 for N.C. State’s mascot history and the ranking for ACC mascots.

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A wolf by any other name; Google provides best upgrade for e-mail system; College of Design unveils new, alternative printing system; Remembering an event is similar to recalling it

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Page 1: Technician - December 4, 2008

technicianonline.com

DesignPRINT provides an alternative to WolfPrint

Samuel T.O. BranchSenior Staff Writer

The College of Design began a new era of printing for design students Monday when the school enabled DesignPRINT. The sys-tem entails a new print accounting software which still uses the same physical printers.

Despite the new installation, the software is still working alongside the older program, WolfPrint, Joe McCoy, the coordinator of Net-work and Hardware Services for College of Design Information Technology, said.

“[DesignPRINT] is an alterna-tive,” McCoy said. “People have been freaking out, thinking we have changed the print system in the last week of school. WolfPrint is still in place, and students can choose which [system] to use.”

But while both options are still available, McCoy said the goal is to move to DesignPRINT perma-nently on the University comput-ers next semester if the next couple weeks run smoothly.

“We plan to move the design labs completely over... students will still have the option of using the old system on their personal comput-ers,” McCoy said.

There have been problems with WolfPrint for a long time, Mc-Coy said. The size and complexity of design students’ printing jobs slow down the printing process dramatically.

“The printers were very incon-sistent,” Logan Sayles, a junior in graphic design, said. “Sometimes you would send [a job] and wait 15 to 20 minutes and have to send the job again.”

DesignPRINT has been imple-mented in the downtown design studio for a month, McCoy said.

So far, Information Technology has been impressed with the results, but McCoy said the program has much more improvement to come.

“We are still in the early stages,” McCoy said. “There are still other things we are planning on do-ing.”

The IT staff sent a memo to the students of the College of Design Monday, stating in more detail the future plans. One of the main problems that will be corrected is the print payment quotas.

The IT department is manually

deducting print jobs from each student’s quota currently, causing a delay before students receive a confirmation of payment.

Soon, however, the depart-ment will have a system set up for DesignPRINT that allows students to buy quota online via credit card that will be similar to the current system.

Other changes coming in the fu-ture include a way for students to see the print queue and increased compatibility with all Macintosh computers.

TECHNICIANRaleigh, North Carolina

NC State BookstoresFinals Madness Sale!Friday, Dec. 5th

12pm to 8pm

CASH FOR YOUR BOOKSA list of our “most wanted” along with buyback locations

and times are posted at: www.ncsu.edu/bookstore

College of Design unveils new, alternative printing system

DAVID MABE/TECHNICIANLauren Hall, a junior in graphic design, and Marissa Lenzo, a junior in graphic design, use the printers in the design lab in Brooks Hall. “They made a new system that’s supposedly faster ...It’s a bad time to implement it, but I’m excited about the changes we will see in the future,” Hall said.

KEY CHANGES STUDENTS HAVE TO MAKE TO USE DESIGNPRINT

Install the new printers to personal laptops. Even though the printers are the same physical machinery, printers have been renamed if a student tries to use DesignPRINT MAC users have to log in to DesignPRINT with “WOLFTECH/” in front of the student’s unity ID when prompted by the printerLab computers using Windows operating systems will install the new printers when a student logs in. Do not cancel the installation, even though error messages will occur. Click OK and let the operation finish.

FOR DETAILED INSTRUCTIONS, LOG ON TO HTTP://WWW.DESIGN.NCSU.EDU/IT/

insidetechnician

viewpoint 4science & tech 5classi!eds 7sports 8

Remembering an event is similar to recalling it.See page 5.

Teach-in offers different perspectiveHistory professors provide historical context for Free Expression Tunnel incident

Derek MedlinManaging Editor

The multitude of diversity dis-cussions regarding the threats painted in the Free Expres-sion Tunnel Nov. 5 continued Wednesday night in Withers Hall with a teach-in about the history of racial slurs and their impact.

“The Gun, The Flag, and the Noose,” which the history de-partment sponsored, allowed four history professors to present a history of racial slurs and imag-ery to students and faculty.

The goal of the teach-in, which featured four separate lectures about specific instances or racial prejudice in American history, was to educate the diversity dis-cussions in a historical context.

Blair Kelley, an assistant his-tory professor who presented the section of the discussion about the noose, said she was surprised to see so many students and fac-

ulty turn out for the event. “I’m very pleased with the

turnout and I’m very honored,” she said. “I know in Dead Week it’s rough stuff. We were thrilled this many people came.”

Kelley said the goal of Wednes-day night’s discussion was to ensure students understood how history influences today’s society.

“I think sometimes you have to say what happened,” Kelley said of discussing the threats painted in the Free Expression Tunnel. “It was crucial to air it out and talk about it within the histori-cal context. This history marks all of us.”

Jay Bettis, a senior in chemis-try, said the teach-in taught him history he did not know while also continuing the discussion of the Free Expression Tunnel incident.

“Discussions like this open the door for students to take an issue and put it on their shoulders,” Bettis said. “Just by going to col-lege, we’re lucky. We’re forced to be around different types of people.”

As the Campus Culture Task Force Committee begins its ef-forts to make recommendations to Chancellor James Oblinger, Kelley said she hoped actual changes would take place on campus.

“I’m really looking forward to what the task force is going to be saying and doing,” she said. “I hope that it’s substantive and it will effect the outcome of what happens here. This doesn’t need to be forgotten.”

Kelley also said she believes the University should release the pictures of what was painted on the Free Expression Tunnel so students could see exactly what was said.

“I’m hoping that the police will release all the pictures of what was written on the wall to help the process of truth and recon-ciliation,” she said. “We all have to understand what was said in order to address it, move on and educate ourselves.”

Bettis said students should be the driving force continuing di-versity efforts on campus.

“What I got out of this is that

it’s not up to administra-tion,” he said. “Administra-tion is only going to do so much. What you have to do is figure out in yourself that something is bothering you, share it with others that feel the same way and try to make a collective change.”

Kelley said in her presenta-tion that it is crucial to under-stand the historical context of the threatening messages to move forward.

“History can serve as a script for how we understand contemporary society,” she said.

Kelley also said she hopes the University will continue to push educational efforts to make campus more diverse.

“I hope that there is some greater educational effort. An effort to put people in a room with one another and talk about history and not wrap it up as quickly as pos-sible,” she said. “It needs to be unwrapped and talked about and thought about.”

Evolution of a mascot

N.C. State’s mascot has undergone a number of chang-

es over the years — from a coyote that cruised the football field, to an iron wolf robot. Also, deputy sports editor Josh Harrell ranks the mascots of the ACC af-ter four and a half years of keen study.

See page 8 for N.C. State’s mascot history and the ranking for ACC mascots.

Page 2: Technician - December 4, 2008

Page 2 TECHNICIANPAGE 2 • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2008

Mia Monday!

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Steven C. MorrisonAttorney at Law

Tickets, Underage Drinking, Misdemeanors, Felonies

Reasonable Rates919-454-7701

www.ncsu.edu/artsTicket Central: 515.11002nd Floor, Talley Student Center

7pm • Gregg MuseumArtists & Objects Lecture Series:Dr. Kathleen Berkeley

FREE!

7:30pm • Stewart TheatreLadies in Red$

Duplex for Rent

3 blocks from NCSU. 1 1/2 story, fireplace, jacuzzi, W/D, range, refridgerator.

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Call 832-1308

CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS

Send all clarifications and corrections to Editor-in-Chief Saja Hindi at [email protected].

Today:

59/36Partly cloudy with a slim chance

of rain.

WEATHER WISE

Friday:

4530

Cloudy skies with the tem-perature cooling throughout the night.

CAMPUS CALENDAR

TodayELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING SENIOR DESIGN DAYMcKimmon Center, noon to 4 p.m.

PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT COMMITTEE MEETING3214 Jordan Hall, 3:30 to 5 p.m.

TROPIC THUNDERWitherspoon Cinema, 7 to 9 p.m.

LADIES IN REDStewart Theater, 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.

HAMLET 2Witherspoon Cinema, 9:30 to 11:05 p.m.

FridayFINALS MADNESS SALEN.C. State Bookstores, noon to 8 p.m.

HAMLET 2Witherspoon Cinema, 7 to 8:35 p.m.

GRAINS OF TIMEStewart Theate, 8 to 10 p.m.

TROPIC THUNDERWitherspoon Cinema, 9:30 to 11:30 p.m.

TROPIC THUNDERWitherspoon Cinema, 11:55 p.m.

December 2008

Su M T W Th F Sa

1 2 3 4 5 6

7 8 9 10 11 12 13

14 15 16 17 18 19 20

21 22 23 24 25 26 27

28 29 30 31GET INVOLVED IN TECHNICIAN

Technician is always looking for people to write, design, copy edit and take photos. If you’re interested, come to our office on the third floor of Witherspoon (across from the elevators) Monday - Thursday 9 a.m. - midnight and Friday, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m., or e-mail Editor-in-Chief Saja Hindi at [email protected].

THROUGH DANNY’S LENS

Piling on the pancakes

Zach Schmidt, a junior in natural resources, chats with James Cregger Jr., a junior in agriculture, while chowing down on pancakes during Chi Omega’s annual pancake dinner. “We

came out to get some dinner and to see all the girls,” Schmidt said. Chi Omega’s goal was to raise $5,000 for the Make-a-Wish Foundation during Wednesday night’s dinner.

PHOTO BY DANNY BOEMERMANN

POLICE BLOTTERNov. 277:54 A.M. | CHECK PERSONDaniels Hall Officers located non-student in build-ing. Subject had active warrant and previous trespass order. Subject was arrested.

3:58 P.M. | CHECK PERSONCates Ave Steam Plant Officers investigated intoxicated sub-ject on campus. All file checks were negative.

Nov. 289:40 P.M. | CHECK PERSONDunn Avenue Officer spoke with student in the area. Everything OK.

10:38 P.M. | TRAFFIC STOPDan Allen Drive/Sullivan DriveNon-student was issued citation for stop sign violation

Nov. 29ALL DAY | SPECIAL EVENTCarter-Finley Units reported for duty assignments for football game. During this event there were four episodes of fire in the lots, 29 ejections w/ trespasses, seven judicial referrals, five citations and one arrest.

1:26 A.M. | FIELD INTERVIEWPullen Road/Western Blvd. Officer conducted Field Interview with subject in the area. No action taken.

5:41 P.M. | FIRE ALARMNorth Hall Units responded to alarm caused by cooking.

5:49 P.M. | MEDICAL ASSISTDH Hill Bus Stop Units responded to non-student in need of medical assistance.

Nov. 301:37 A.M. | CHECK PERSONTucker Beach Officers spoke with students in the area. Everything OK.

3:15 A.M. | TRAFFIC STOPDan Allen Drive Non-student was arrested for DWI.

8:19 P.M. | SUSPICIOUS VEHICLEMann Hall Officers investigated report of suspi-cious vehicle. Everything OK.

IN THE KNOW Exam Jam to give students break

Campus Recreation will be holding their annual Exam Jam Tuesday Dec. 9 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. The event will let students take a break from exams by par-ticipating in board games, Wii, Dance Dance Revolution, obsta-cle courses, cornhole and more.

The event, which will have free food and prizes for students, will offer free chair massages and a rock wall to climb on. All of the activities will take place in Carmichael Complex on courts 9 to 11.

SOURCE: NCSU.EDU/CAMPUS_REC

Ladies in Red perform tonight

The Ladies in Red will be presenting their fall 2008 per-

formance tomorrow night from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. in Stewart Theater.

The female a cappella en-semble will be performing songs by Sara Bareilles, Lau-ryn Hill, the Doobie Brothers, Ingrid Michaelson and more. Tickets to the event are $10 for the general public, $8 for senior citizens and NCSU fac-ulty and $5 for students.

The Ladies in Red, an of-fical ensemble of the N.C. State music department, was founded in the early 90s and remain a one of the school’s premiere a cappella ensem-bles.

The Ladies in Red plan to record another studio al-bum during the 2008-2009 academic year. The group an-ticipates that the album will be set for release in March 2009.SOURCE: N.C. STATE UNIVERSITY PUBLIC

EVENTS CALENDAR

Sunday:

SOURCE: WWW.WEATHER.COM

4627

Mostly sunny skies with a clear night.

Saturday:

4733

Cool weather going into the weekend.

Page 3: Technician - December 4, 2008

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Page 4: Technician - December 4, 2008

323 Witherspoon Student Center, NCSU Campus Box 7318, Raleigh, NC 27695Editorial ..................................515.2411Advertising ...........................515.2029Fax ..............................................515.5133Online .................................... technicianonline.com

Technician (USPS 455-050) is the official student newspaper of N.C. State University and is published every Monday through Friday throughout the academic year from August through May except during holidays and examination periods. Opinions expressed in the columns, cartoons, photo illustrations and letters that appear on Technician’s pages are the views of the individual writers and cartoonists. As a public forum for student expression, the students determine the content of the publication without prior review. To receive permission for reproduction, please write the editor. Subscription cost is $100 per year. A single copy is free to all students, faculty, staff and visitors to campus. Additional copies are $0.25 each. Printed by The News & Observer, Raleigh, N.C., Copyright 2008 by North Carolina State Student Media. All rights reserved.

Viewpoint

Treat all sta! and faculty equallyIn August of this year, custodians

at the College of Veterinary Medicine were required to leave their badges on campus after their shifts ended. While this may seem like a good poli-cy to help monitor the building after hours, housekeepers are the only

people on campus required to hand in their ID badges.

After being continuously harassed by University security for not having her required ID on campus as she be-gan and ended her job, Nedra Rollins refused to turn in her badge at the end of her shift and was summarily fired. There is no evidence or surveil-lance that proves that NCSU house-keepers are the culprits of building thefts.

Chancellor Oblinger, please explain

how this is a fair and justified policy. All other groups of occupants can come and go as they please while one group is targeted as criminal. Honestly, how would you feel work-ing on N.C. State’s campus if you were demanded to turn over your campus identification card and keys every-day knowing you would face daily harassment leaving and returning to work the next day? In light of the Free Expression Tunnel incident, and given a policy that treats housekeepers

as criminals, I’m thinking you’d feel pretty devalued and unwelcome.

On behalf of the Student-Worker Al-liance, UE 150 Public Service Workers Union, and hundreds of online peti-tion signers, I urge you to reinstate Nedra Rollins, and change this policy that unfairly targets and discriminates against our University’s housekeep-ers.

Tricia McTaguegraduate student, sociology

TECHNICIAN THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2008 • PAGE 4

Editor-in-ChiefSaja Hindi

[email protected]

Managing EditorDerek Medlin

News EditorChris Allred

[email protected]

Deputy News EditorsDaniel Ellis

James Layman

Features EditorAlison Harman

[email protected]

Deputy Features EditorCheyenne Autry

Arts & Entertainment EditorDan Porter

[email protected]

Sports EditorTaylor Auten

[email protected]

Deputy Sports EditorsJosh Harrell

Langdon Morris

Viewpoint EditorPaul McCauley

[email protected]

Photo EditorMatt Moore

[email protected]

Design Co- EditorsLauren Blakely

Susannah [email protected]

Design DirectorHelen Dear

Advertising ManagerDavid Mason

[email protected]

Classifieds ManagerEric Ellis

[email protected]

The Student e-mail Task Force is looking into ways to improve the Webmail

service the University provides to students.

The current system, Cyrus, is outdated and limited in function — according to Marc Hoit, vice chancellor for the Office of Infor-mation Technology. The biggest complaints are a lack of storage space and built-in calendar func-tion. Hoit said the e-mail task force is part of a bigger plan to improve information technology services across campus.

E-mail isn’t a new technology, and the current system is built as if it is.

Students need to give the task force feedback regarding the functions and features they would like to see in the e-mail

service, and the University needs to bring the Webmail system into the twenty-first century. Students should have access to online plan-ners, document sharing tools and research programs that can easily tie into the e-mail system. The Google applications for educa-tion provide a reasonable means of giving students exactly that.

Stan North Martin, director of Outreach, communications and consulting for OIT, said the task force is still gathering data on the various options for University e-mail.

The task force is looking into expansion of the current e-mail system, outsourcing to a third-party service like Google, Mi-

crosoft or Yahoo or eliminating the University’s Webmail service entirely and requiring students to provide an e-mail address.

The task force is contacting vendors and looking to estab-lish pages on Facebook and The Wolf Web for feedback, but its only online feedback site is at its Web site, which is buried in OIT’s Web site.

The task force needs to get these feedback mechanisms up as quickly as possible. While lack of storage space and a built-in calendar are students’ main complaints with the Webmail system, finding other functions students want to see with the University e-mail system is just

as important.Google looks like one of the

most attractive options. It offers large amounts of storage space, provides a useful interface and gives students easy access to a va-riety of useful applications, like the Scholar, Reader, Books and Documents programs.

The service is also free of charge and advertisements for the basic Google Apps Education Edition package. This ties in perfectly with Hoit’s overall strategy for IT at N.C. State, providing more services at a reduced cost.

Still, what should be the final determinant of the University’s e-mail system is the will of the student body.

And we do have to watch out, lest we become part of Google’s plan to take over the world.

The unsigned editorial is the opinion of the members of Technician’s editorial board excluding the news department and is the responsibility of the

editor-in-chief. THE ISSUE:The Student e-mail Task Force is considering cost-cutting, reliable e-mail solutions for students.

OUR OPINION:A third-party service like Google would provide additional space and give students access to a variety of useful applications.

THE SOLUTION:The task force needs to solicit as much student feedback as possible and move the University away from the outdated, dysfunctional e-mail service in place.

Google provides best upgrade for e-mail system{OUR VIEW}

Merry Christmas from the Wolfpack!

Adam Winsor, junior in graphic design

Finally, the University has gone and decided to strip every incoming student

of the hope of ever becoming a well-rounded individual. Way

to go! More specifically, the currently lacking Gen-era l Educa-tion Require-ments have been replaced by a much more deficient

General Education Program. The new program reduces the number of general course hours needed from a minimum of 50 hours to a minimum of 39 hours. Math and natural science classes lose seven hours, humanities and social sciences lose a whopping nine hours and the rest — be-sides the important physical education requirement — is reduced to eight to nine hours of “additional breadth” courses and “interdisciplinary perspec-tives.”

In the old days, university edu-cations meant rigorous study in multiple discipline areas, not just a single semester in a lec-ture hall getting an overview of European history. Granted, so-ciety and technology have pro-gressed to the point where some people should be experts in more specialized areas, but that does not mean that those individu-als should be able to skip out on learned the basic facts and theo-ries of the way the world works.

Every student who holds a four-year degree from this Uni-versity should know how to write a coherent, intelligent paragraph. He or she should be able to speak with head held high and inter-act with other people like a rea-sonable adult. He or she should understand basic mathematics and natural science and politi-cal and economic principles — if there was ever a time to stress the knowledge of economic princi-ples among the public it is now.

These aren’t “extra” areas of “interest” that can be skimmed over. They are necessary. Already, too many people don’t have the

ability to have an education from a school like N.C. State, they may never be adequately exposed to the basics.

Someone may argue that al-lowing students more time in their specializations is more important. With the excep-tion of doctors, lawyers and technical experts, who really did work in their specializa-tion? Most people don’t. I know accounting majors who ended up managing moving com-panies, English majors who became bookkeepers, theater majors who found themselves working in television and radio technology.

Just look at our presidents. Ideally, they should all have PhDs in political science, right? Or not. President-Elect Barack Obama was trained as a lawyer, President George W. Bush has an MBA, President Bill Clin-ton went to law school, Presi-dent George H.W. Bush has an economics degree, President Ronald Reagan majored in sociology and economics and President Jimmy Carter has a B.S. from the Naval Academy.

Now, none of these men ma-jored in political science, and they still became presidents. It wasn’t their majors that made them successful, it was their entire life experience — most of it outside those fields — that made them successful. And, folks, it’s hard to have mean-ingful life experiences when you only know a lot about one thing.

Specialization is good, and should be encouraged, but not at the expense of general un-derstanding. This new General Education Program is leading our University down a danger-ous path. In five years NCSU may be graduating students with no practical knowledge of the world they live in. More general ignorance is not what the world needs. Let’s re-focus on well-roundedness.

Let Taylor know your thoughts at [email protected].

Taylor McCuneSenior Sta! Columnist

Give students a well-rounded education

In the wake of Lehman Brothers, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Gov-

ernment bailout package, ev-eryone seems to be an expert on the economy nowadays.

Most of my friends can converse

extensively on financial deriv-atives and predatory lending — perhaps this is just another sign of the times. But for all the national headlines, what do we know about how our own edu-cation is funded?

Most of us think we already know the answer. Some of us take out loans, others have scholarships, many of us re-ceive help from our families. We pay our tuition, and the university operates. We own this place. Right? No, you ac-tually pay for almost none of “your education.”

Last week I conducted a small survey on campus to see how much of the university budget our faculty and students believe is covered by student tuition and fees.

In my survey, 21 out of 25 randomly selected faculty members and students asked

believe that student tuition and fees covers over 30 percent of the university budget. 12 of those re-spondents thought that tuition and fees covered over 50 percent of the budget. Only one student came within 10 percent of the actual value.

The shocking truth is that only 15 percent of the University bud-get is covered by student tuition and fees. No, your eyes are not deceiving you, 85 percent of your education is funded by someone else.

The state of North Carolina funds approximately 45 percent of our education, an extremely high amount for a state college. For comparison, the University of Virginia receives less than 10 percent of its funding from the state.

The other large wedge in the pie is covered by endowments. Such as research grants from the National Science Foundation, Department of Agriculture and other bodies who we conduct research for.

Tom Levy, senior in history, was just as surprised as I was by the figure. “You’re kidding,” he quipped.

Not surprisingly, this senti-

ment was shared by almost all of the respondents. I cannot count the number of students who said, “Really!” in response to the figure of 15 percent.

Many of us here really do have to sacrifice to come up with tu-ition money each semester. It’s human nature to want to think that our share funds most of our education.

To me at least, this seems like pretty important information. It has totally changed my per-ception of the University. No longer do I feel as though I own this place, I now realize I am nothing more than a squatter on Government land.

Who is to blame for us not knowing? Naturally, I choose to ridicule the source of all evil, the administration. In-stead of fruitless race sensitiv-ity training, how about we give the entire incoming freshman class a Budget 101 seminar? Or would N.C. State prefer to have 96 percent of us walk around oblivious to who funds our education?

Let Russell know your thoughts at [email protected].

Russell WithamSta! Columnist

Who’s really paying for your education?

EDITOR’S NOTELetters to the editor are the individual opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Technician staff or N.C. State Univer-sity. All writers must include their full names and, if applicable, their affilia-tions, including years and majors for students and professional titles for University employees. For verification purposes, the writers must also include their phone numbers, which will not be published.

CAMPUSFORUM{ }

“[A] shorter load time, surely.”

Ken Plunkettfreshman, material science

“More space in it, because I’m at about 70 percent full.”

Medha Surampudyfreshman, political science

BY DAVID MABE

What sort of improvements would you like to see in the

University’s Webmail service?

IN YOUR WORDS{ }

This week’s poll question:

What are you planning to do during Dead Week?

• Study for finals• Finish projects and assignments• As little as possible

Visit www.technicianonline.com to cast your vote.

“It’s pretty great. It’s like a Web site so you can access it from home or wherever you want to. Overall, I don’t see any need for improvements on it.”

Stephen Wynnefreshman, First Year College

“It’s pretty good as it is, actually. I can’t really think of anything.”

Amanda Winnegarfreshman, history

Page 5: Technician - December 4, 2008

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2008 • PAGE 5

Boost your GPA! We’re talking about your Graduation Plan of Attack. Do it with 100% Tuition Assistance, low-cost healthcare, a supplemental paycheck, a

career jump start, and up to a $20,000 bonus for specific jobs. All this as a member of the Air Force Reserve with no prior military experience needed.

AFReserve.com/TalkToUs100% TUITION ASSISTANCE

For some, studying with the help of ca!eine isn’t very harmfulUsing ‘little caffeine’ during late-night study sessions ‘may help’

Jessie HaleStaff Writer

Chugging Red Bulls and lattes and tak-ing handfuls of Vivarin, a “stay awake pill,” can be an exam-time ritual for students waiting until the last minute to study, but while ingesting mass quan-tities of caffeine may help students stay up all night, too much caffeine can cause extra stress on the body.

Caffeine is a central nervous system stimulant that raises alertness and con-centration levels by inhibiting adenosine, a chemical in the brain that slows down activity and has a calming effect.

A cup of coffee has about 90 to 150 mg of caffeine, while a Red Bull has 80 mg of caffeine and a Coca-Cola has 34 mg of caffeine.

A bar of chocolate has about the same

amount of caffeine as a can of Coca Cola, but the recommended dose of Vivarin has 200 mg of caffeine.

While consuming caffeine can keep students from getting drowsy study-ing for a final, Sar-ah Ash, associate professor in food, bioprocessing and nutrition sciences, said caffeine also i ncrea ses hea r t rate, alertness and wakefulness, but evidence is mixed on whether caffeine actually improves learning.

“You might be better off taking a power nap and returning to your studying af-terwards rather than pushing your way through the exhaustion with caffeine,” Ash suggested.

According to Lisa Eberhart, Univer-sity Dining dietician, caffeine can stay in your system for up to six hours, so it

is possible that drinking a caffeinated beverage in the afternoon can cause rest-lessness at night, even during sleep.

Waking up and taking an exam may be more difficult if a student is sleep-

deprived.Irritability, rest-

lessness, anxiety and heart palpita-tions are also pos-sible side effects of caffeine, Eberhart said, but, for most people, the amount of caffeine in two to four cups of coffee

is not harmful.“Caffeine sensitivity, the amount of

caffeine that will produce an effect in someone, varies from person to per-son,” Eberthart said. “A small amount of caffeine may effect you while another person can consume more caffeine with few side effects.”

Caffeine’s effects also depend on a

person’s size and his or her prior use of caffeine, Ash said. “People can develop a tolerance to it, requiring more to get the same effect,” she said.

Students may also experience with-drawal symptoms without caffeine, most notably a headache, if their bodies are ac-customed to ingesting a certain amount daily, Ash said.

Because caffeine is a diuretic — it causes a person to urinate more fre-quently — Eberhart said, and some people believe this may cause dehydra-tion.

“To be safe, it’s probably a good idea to stay away from too much caffeine in hot weather, during long workouts or in other situations where you might sweat a lot,” Eberhart said.

But some studies have shown that caf-feine consumption boosts concentration, Eberhart said.

“So if you need to really focus,” she said, “a little caffeine may help.”

OIT considers various e-mail providers, like Gmail, to replace WebmailBy the beginning of fall 2009 semester, University could start with new service

Alison HarmanFeatures Editor

Stan Martin North has been hearing student complaints about Webmail for long enough to pinpoint the most popular.

There’s not enough space. Webmail has too few applica-

tions.It won’t host HTML. But problems with storage

space and lack of applications could dissolve in fall 2009, when the Office of Informa-tion Technology plans to start testing either an upgrade of the existing Webmail service or pi-loting a switch to a third-party provider.

That’s the goal, at least, ac-cording to Martin, the director of outreach, communications and consulting for OIT.

The office has initiated a Stu-dent E-Mail Task Force, which is courting e-mail providers like Google, Microsoft and Yahoo!.

“We’re doing an investigation of what it is that we need to do with student e-mail in general. One of the things that we’ve been hearing is that there isn’t enough space. That’s one thing we’re getting the message on loud and clear,” Martin said. “One of those options would be to have another company provide e-mail for students.”

Webmail, a service provided by Cyrus, is an open-source provid-er that the University hosts for staff, faculty and students with Unity ID accounts, Martin said. The University has used this pro-vider since the late 90s, he said. But with “relatively new offerings from these third-party vendors

IT LIGHTS UPIn an experiment that was

published in the journal Science in September, the same neurons that fire when someone is experiencing and event and creating a memory from it are the ones that light up when that memory is be-ing recalled. But each time a person recalls a memory, it deteriorates, according to as-sistant professor of psychol-ogy Anne McLaughlin.

“The more you recall a memory, the more you’re de-stroying some of the trueness of the memory,” she said.

Remembering an event is similar to recalling it

Flash forward a few months, when you’re remembering that experience. The cards, the glass, the color of the podium — they all stand out.

But what stands out the most, according to Anne McLaugh-lin, an assistant professor of psychology, is the way you felt.

“There’s a trace when that memory is recalled,” she said. “The thinking is that you’re actually recalling a memory every time you bring it up. When you remember those feel-ings, you’re actually recreating them. There’s no thing in your brain that holds memories, something that you can actually

NANOBYTESJapanese create world’s !rst space beer

Sapporo, a Japanese brewery, has announced that it has created the first space beer.

Sapporo collaborated with Okayama University and the Russian Academy of Science to create Space Barley, the barley used to create the space bear.

Space Barley is free of additives and is grown in the International Space Station. Sapparo have only made 100 liters of the space beer, and has a 5.5 percent alcohol content. Limited amounts will be available for tasting only in Japan.

SOURCE: GIZMODO.COM

Kindle turns 1Amazon’s Kindle reader celebrated

its first birthday last month. Kindle is device used to read books. So far, 250,000 have sold since November 2007.

The electronic book, which weigts 10.3 ounces accounts for 10 percent of Amazon’s book sales, even though the Web site only offers 200,000 titles. Texts for the Kindle are often cheaper than books.

Amazon hopes the Kindle’s sales will after an endorsement with Oprah Winfrey, Nobel laureate Toni Morrison and best-selling author James Pat-terson.

Monster creates head-phone with Dr. Dre

Dr. Dre partnered with Monster cre-ated $150 in-ear headphones. “Beats” headphones feature tangle-free cords by using flat cables.

The headphones also feature a “sound-isolating eartip,” which can-cels out outside noise and isolated the sound coming from the device, a heavier low-end and gold contacts.

One detail that people critics have criticized that the earphones do not feature on-board Microphone for like its predecessor.

SOURCE: CNN.COM/TECHNOLOGY

TECHNICIAN

MEMORY continued page 6 E-MAIL continued page 6

“People can develop a tolerance to it,

requiring more to get the same effect.”

Sarah Ash, associate food professor

FeaturesSCIENCE & TECH

STORY BY ALISON HARMAN | PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY LUIS ZAPATA

Say you’re walk up to a podium in front of a large, cavernous room that seats 2,000 people. You get up to the podium, nod ner-

vously and take out any notes you have, placing them carefully on top of the podium. There’s a glass of water to the left; you notice it because you’ll probably need it later. You actually need it now — your throat has become dry with fear.

THE SAME NEURONS THAT BECOME ACTIVE DURING AN EVENT ALSO LIGHT UP WHEN RECALLING IT

NEU!RONMuch of memory forma-

tion is thought to occur in the hippocampus, a small tissue located deep in the brain.

HIP!PO!CAM!PUSNeurons are cells in the

nervous system that transmit information with the help of chemical signals.

Apple !ghting a lawsuitEMG Technology filed a patent law-

suit against Apple last week because of the way “the iPhone navigates the Internet.” The company, based in Los Angeles, filed the suit a month after the patent was issued.

SOURCE: TECHCRUNCH.COM

Google almost charged with monopoly

Google, a monolith in the Web industry, pulled out of a search ad-vertising contract with Yahoo! just in time -- if the company had waited three more hours to finalize it, the Justice Department would have filed an antitrust lawsuit to halt the deal.

According to a quote from Sandy Litvack, a prosecutor for the Justice Department, the advertising pact would have only furthered Google’s monopoly.

“We were going to file the com-plaint at a certain time during the day,” he told American Law Daily. “We told them we were going to file the complaint at that time of day. Three hours before, they told us they were abandoning the agreement.”

Google has been warned that it is considered a near-monopoly.

SOURCE: TECHCRUNCH.COM

Nokia to release iPhone competitor

Nokia Corp., the company that makes most of the world’s cell phones, is planning to launch a new phone in 2009 that will compete with Apple’s iPhone.

The phone, called the N97, will fea-ture a 3.5-inch touch screen that has a resolution 50 percent better than the iPhone. It will have a slide-out auto-matic keyboard and a camera with a resolution of 5 megapixels.

SOURCE: CNN.COM

Page 6: Technician - December 4, 2008

PAGE 6 • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2008

FinalsMadness

SALE40% off

Friday12pm to 8pm

NC State Bookstores

Just about everything is on sale except: textbooks,

magazines, year books, computers/computer products,

electronics, stamps, gift cards, special orders, class

rings, diploma frames and graduation apparel.

Sale also valid at our satellite stores which will be open regular hours!North Campus Shop - Located in DH Hill Library Annex - 7:30am to 3pmCentury Shop - in Research Bldg. III on Centennial Campus - 8:30am to 4pm

take 40% off all regular and

clearanced priced merchandise!

take out. You’re recreating the experience in the memory in the same way you created it the first time.”

And as exams are peeking around this week’s corner, un-derstanding a memory’s creation could be an important guide to figuring out which studying techniques work, and which don’t.

The idea that recalling a memory is actually recreating an event is not a novice theory. But in a study released in the journal Science in September, scientists used electrodes to track brain cells — in this case, neurons — as they fired off when a memory was being cre-ated. When the scientists asked patients to relive the experience, they knew what memory the pa-tients would recall even before the patient said it.

The same neurons that had fired off when the memory was created were the same ones that fired off upon recalling it.

In the study, American and Israeli scientists threaded elec-trodes through the brains of 13 epilepsy patients who were pre-paring for surgery. Patients then watched multiple 5- to 10-sec-ond video clips of popular sights and television shows. As they were watching, the electrodes recorded the activity of 100 neu-rons, located in or near the hip-pocampus, in each patient.

For certain videos, some neu-rons became highly active; these same neurons were, during other videos, either slightly less active or not active at all.

Scientists then distracted the patients, then asked them to re-call something they had seen.

Neurons that had fired quick-ly during a certain video lit up again with the same frequency, even before patients spoke the

name of the video. This experiment provides evi-

dence for what scientists have been trying for years to prove.

“We know a lot about what will likely become a memory and what will often disappear before becoming a memory,” McLaughlin said. “When you have a memory, it usually means you can retain that information in your brain. But there are many pieces of information that never make it into there — like a phone number, unless you really encod-ed it and commit it to memory. And there’s not some memory cell that represents your grand-mother. There’s not a particular cell that means one thing.”

McLaughlin mentioned a study researchers performed on rats, in which they attempted to halt the rats’ memory as it was forming.

“We don’t really know what really affects memory in the brain, why dome people can have a large part of their brain taken out and it has very little effect on memory,” she said. “The brain is still a very huge mystery to us.”

MEMORYcontinued from page 5

— it’s only been in the last few years that Google and Microsoft have gotten into the business of providing this service for educa-tional institutions,” Martin said no options existed 10 years ago for a free provider with shiny, ap-pealing applications.

Although OIT has customized Webmail to fit with its e-mail vi-sion, applications like collabora-tive calendars and chat features — which other providers include for free — will cost the Univer-sity.

“We’ve set up teleconferences with Google, Microsoft and Zim-bra to find out more about their services, what kind of features they have and how they would interact with our environment,” Martin said. “We’ll compare all of the options that are there with what we’re hearing students and other stakeholders want to do with e-mail.”

Martin said finding the cheap-est provider is the “crux of what we’re trying to do here.”

“That’s all what we’re trying to figure out,” Martin said. “We’re trying to put a dollar figure on what the savings would be if we outsourced it to Microsoft and to Google.”

It might seem to be an issue that has a simple solution. Both Gmail’s college application and Microsoft’s Live at Edu allow students to have access to their servers for free, which means no server maintenance for OIT personnel. Martin said the com-panies are willing to provide free e-mail access so graduates will continue to use their e-mail services, which will host adver-tisements only after the account is no longer associated with an educational institution.

Yahoo!’s Zimbra charges a fee per subscriber; on Webmail’s part, Cyrus charges fees for up-

ping storage space options and adding other features.

The task force is also consider-ing setting up a forwarding op-tion on each student’s account.

“Most students have other ac-counts,” he said. “This basically would be pointing the Unity IDs so that you have your unity.ncsu.edu mail to whatever e-mail ser-vice you use primarily.”

But the solution isn’t simple, Martin said, adding that “in many ways, there will still be other costs. Even though these third-party providers are ‘free,’ there are other costs associated with doing that.”

“There are definitely some pros and cons with all of these things,” Martin said. “There are a lot of different costs associated with providing mail e-mail ser-vices on campus. It’s not just the Webmail tool, it’s all the servers on the back end that process the mail coming in. There’s spam filtering and anti-virus check-ing, which gets rid of more mail than it delivers. There’s more spam out there.”

University servers, he said, pro-cess incoming mail and parcels it out to IMAP servers, or mail servers, that students access to receive their e-mail. Webmail, the mail client, puts students in direct contact with those serv-ers.

And when students send out e-mails, they go through addi-tional servers.

If the task force decides to out-source its e-mail service, person-nel who worked with these serv-ers — which will be used mini-mally because the third-party vendor deals with mail through its servers — will either work on new or existing projects within the OIT office or manage aspects of the new provider.

“We’re paying for the server that we’re storing all the e-mail on, as well as the servers that do run Webmail and the other aspects of the e-mail service on

E-MAILcontinued from page 5

FeaturesSCIENCE & TECH

ZIMBRAPOSSIBLE CHOICES

+ Themes+ Spell check

them,” Martin said. “One of the biggest costs is, frankly, in the personnel to manage this sophis-ticated environment on campus. If we end up saving personnel costs to providing this service, there will be other personnel costs in outsourcing.”

Students using an outsourced e-mail provider might need to log in through the N.C. State Web site or through their cell phones, he said.

“It would end up being a re-purposing of the personnel from one role to another role. It’s not like we would be losing staff if we were to outsource. There are lots of things that we want to do in OIT, it’s not like we would be lay-ing people off or something.”

Some of the cost-cutting could occur in letting personnel who are dedicated to e-mail pursue

other projects they are work-ing on, he said.

As the task force evaluates each of these factors, it is also asking for student input on its Web site. Martin said it will also start groups on social networking sites like Face-book to reach out to more students.

“We want to get students to get some feedback from other students to see how they’re currently using e-mail,” he said.

In a memo from Marc Hoit, vice chancellor for Informa-tion Technology, the task force will need to send in any recommendations by March 1 to initially implement “any improvements be the start of the fall 2009 semester.”

GMAIL+ 7269 MB+ Shared calendars

LIVE AT EDU+ 5 GB inbox+ Shared calendars

MAKING THE MOST OF MEMORY

“The sad fact of it is that when you’re studying, more effort al-most always results in more deep learning,” Anne McLaughlin, assis-tant professor of psychology, said.

The best studying techniques are the ones that require not just re-reading chapters and zooming through flash cards, but rather ones that require an actual under-standing of the text.

“Reading and trying to repeat it or making flash cards and saying repeat, repeat, repeat, it’s harder to encode things in your brain to pull out later,” McLaughlin said.

Instead, she suggests that “after you read a paragraph, write down a question that it made you think of. Rewrite in your own words what that paragraph was telling you. Encode not only what you read, but in your own words.”

Forming images of what you’re reading, she said, can also help.

SOURCE: ANNE MCLAUGHLIN, ASSIS!TANT PROFESSOR OF PSYCHOLOGY

TECHNICIAN

SOURCE: YAHOO.COM, GOOGLE.COM, MICROSOFT.COM

Page 7: Technician - December 4, 2008

Sportscoach at the time, said. “So the choice had better be good in or-der to keep pace with the boys.”

However, an overwhelming majority maintained that the “Wolfpack” was near and dear to them, and the title remained.

“The wolf is a scrappy, tough animal — the spittin’ image of our team,” one writer insisted.

1946 — Ira Helms, a student in mechanical engineering, took it upon himself to create a mas-cot for the cheerleading squad to use during games. After initially abandoning the project due to high production costs, Helms welded, painted and constructed his robot wolf.

“That was the first time we had a real mascot,” said Tim Peeler, a writer for GoPack.com that has written several books on N.C. State athletics.

Helms’ robot was affectionately named “Hell” for its creator, but was also called “The Wolf Mon-ster” and “The Trojan Wolf.” He stood 7 feet tall and was 10 feet across at the chest. Helms climbed inside the contraption and employed another student to operate a fake control box, lead-ing spectators to believe that Hell was an actual robot.

“With a body similar to Fran-kenstein’s monster and the fero-cious head of a wolf, it is expect-ed to create a sensation in the game and spur the team on to another victory,” the Technician proclaimed on Oct. 18, 1946.

The team went 8-2 and made its first bowl game, the 1946 Ga-tor Bowl. After the bowl, N.C. State cheerleaders and the band

retired Hell and held a wake for him.

1947 — The rest of N.C. State’s athletic teams, still called the “Red Terrors,” opted to change their names to the “Wolfpack” as well.

1966 — A four-month old pup — or “Lobo III,” as it was called — was purchased by the student body for $125 to commemorate the opening of Carter Stadium. Lobo III was preceded by two wolf mascots. The first died, and the other escaped under suspi-cious circumstances.

1967 — A zoology professor noticed that “Lobo III” was not a Timberwolf, as the students who bought him had believed; he was a coyote. Students embraced the mistake, rallying around the

“Kool Koyote.” They spray paint-ed the slogan on the free expres-sion tunnel and wrote it in chalk around campus.

1975 — The future Ms. Wuf was unveiled to coincide with the introduction of women’s athletics. The wolf mascots were married on the basketball court in 1981 as part of the season finale festivities. Wake Forest University’s mascot, the Demon Deacon, presided over the faux ceremony.

“They are technically married, although I don’t believe Mrs. Wuf wears her ring these days,” Peeler said.

1983 — According to Peeler, Scott Joseph, the man behind the mask from 1981 to 1984, was instrumental in helping the

Wolfpack mascot “evolve.” He was also the one who coined the title “Mr. Wuf.”

In an interview with The Wolfpacker, Joseph said that he and his mother came up with the now-famous name.

“The only thing that was provided was the head, the rest you had to come up with on your own,” Joseph said. “My mom sewed a suit out of fur and gave me a jersey. So we sat down and decided to call him ‘Mr. Wuf ’ and she sewed that on my jersey.”

2008 — Different costumes have been phased in and out over the last 20 years, with Mr. and Mrs. Wufs’ heads have become less elongated and coyote-esque.

LEVE

L 4

LEVE

L 3

TECHNICIAN THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2008 • PAGE 7

To place a classi!ed ad, call 919.515.2411, fax 919.515.5133 or visit technicianonline.com/classi!eds

ClassifiedsPOLICYThe Technician will not be held responsible for damages or losses due to fraudulent advertisements. However, we make every e!ort to prevent false or misleading advertising from appearing in our publication.

DEADLINESOur business hours are Mon.-Fri., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Line ads must be placed by noon the previous day.

RATESFor students, line ads start at $5 for up to 25 words. For non-students, line ads start at $8 for up to 25 words. For detailed rate information, visit technicianonline.com/classi!eds. All line ads must be prepaid.

THE Daily Crossword FOR RELEASE DECEMBER 4, 2008

ACROSS

DOWN

Level: 1 2 3 4 Level: 1 2 3 4

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answer key?VISIT TECHNICIANONLINE.COM

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Responsible Behavior Initiative

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For details on how to submit your designs go to:

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The Contest runs from

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Duplex for rent 3 blocks from NCSU. 1 1/2 story, #replace, ja-cuzzi, W/D, range, refridgerator. 2 BD 1 1/2 BA. $695 month. 4 Rosemary St. 2nd house behind Reader’s Corner Bookstore. Call 832- 1308

Apartment sublease availablefor Spring 09 semester at Cam-pus Edge apts, close to ncsu (mycampusedge.com). $525/month includes all utilities/fur-niture/own bath/large closet/washer/dryer and more! email: [email protected]

RENTAL SALE Brent Rd. 3BD/2.5BA Duplex. Rent now for sec-ond semes. and get November & December free. 3BD/$850 or 1BD/$325. 919-454-7701.

4 bedroom/2.5 bath town-house/2 car garage near RBC Center o! Trinity Rd. Great loca-tion, beautiful home. No lawn care. Call Bart on 291-1937

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New CPU for Christmas. If the kids don’t want it I’ll #x it for the Blind. Call Kris 325- 0631 for pick up.

BARTENDERS ARE IN DE-MAND! Earn $20-$35 per hour. 1 or 2 week classes & weekend classes. 100% job placement assistance. Raleigh’s bartend-ing school. Have fun! Make money! Meet people! Ask about our Fall tuition rates and student discount. CALL NOW!! 919-676-0774. www.cocktailmixer.com

Gymnastics Instructors Needed. Part time gymnastics instructors needed in North Raleigh. We can work around your schedule. Experience preferred but will train. Call 919-848-7988.v

Park Inc is looking for holiday help. Valet Parking Attendants needed at various Charlotte, NC locations: We o!er very "exible schedules. Full and part time available. A guarantee of 9.00 per hour. Please apply online at www.parkinc.com. 704-377- 1755

Cary neighborhood pool is look-ing for an experienced college swimmer to be the Head Coach of our summer league swim team. Email [email protected] for more details.

FT Veterinary Receptionist/As-sistant needed for one of the best equipped small animal hos-pitals in the state. Practice is 15 miles east of Raleigh. Ideal posi-tion for pre-veterinary student on sabbatical or out-of-state stu-dent trying to establish North Carolina residency. Veterinary School Scholarship available for FT employee working for one year. Call Dr. Mike at 553-4601.

Hab Techs Needed!Maxim Healthcare needs sta! to work w/developmentallydisabled clients in Wake County. Flexible hours in afternoons, evenings, and weekends. $10-$15/hr based on experi-ence. Need own transportation. 676-3118.

Seeking mature individual with pleasant personality to show rental houses to NC State stu-dents. Fun work. 10- 20 hours/week. January through August 09. Excellent salary. O$ce fur-nished. Call 833-7142 for more information.

CONDOS FOR RENT

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DUPLEX FOR RENT

ANNOUNCEMENTS

AROUND CAMPUS

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EMPLOYMENT

REAL ESTATE

ROOM FOR RENT

TOWNHOMES FOR RENT

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HELP WANTED

SERVICES

APARTMENTS FOR RENT

TECHNICIAN ARCHIVE PHOTOA cheerleader holds Lobo III, a coyote, who State used as a mascot before creating Mr. Wuf. Behind the coyote, one of State’s earliest mascot leads the crowd.

MASCOTcontinued from page 8

5. Rameses, North CarolinaOther than leading the band

at basketball games in the Dean Dome (which is always cool), Rameses isn’t very animated. In my book, you better have a lot of personality or none — like the Terrapin. No middle ground for mascots.

6. The Blue Devil, DukeI’m very disappointed in this

year’s Blue Devil mascot change. Duke went from a happy, car-toonish Blue Devil, who surfed at basketball games, to an over-ly dramatic “tougher” looking Devil. Hint for Duke: stick to what works.

7. Chief Osceola and Renegade, Florida State

The live person mascot slams his flaming spear into midfield as an intro, but even that doesn’t get the crowd as hyped as it should. Osceola should take a lesson from Sebastian in keeping a crowd pumped from start to finish.

8. HokieBird, Virginia Tech

Football HokieBird — who bench presses for points in the end zone after scores and leads the Hokey-Pok-ey dance — is great. Basketball HokieBird is lacking. Time for the gobbler to find some original acts, or more personality.

9. Baldwin the Eagle, Boston College

Although Baldwin has the cool cartoon look going for him, he’s a wuss when it comes to mascot interaction. Mr. Wuf ruthlessly pesters Baldwin each time they face each other. Just look at the photo for Baldwin’s Wikipedia entry — there’s no denying it.

10. The Tiger, ClemsonFor an entrance like Clem-

son’s football team, shouldn’t they have a great mascot to run down the hill with? I’m afraid not. While an actual tiger would be amazing, Clemson substitutes that with a guy in orange and black pajamas. Too bad.

11. CavMan, VirginiaNothing sticks out in my mem-

ory of that ACC Tournament more than CavMan. He never seems to know what’s going on in the game and definitely doesn’t know how to handle his sword or take on an opposing mascot.

12. Buzz, Georgia TechSituation: Mr. Wuf walks

up to Buzz, pushes him, agitates him, pesters him, e t c . W h a t does Buzz do? Shake his in-

dex finger back and forth in Mr. Wuf ’s face, turns and waddles away while wagging his stinger. Seriously? You’re a mascot. Live up to it. It’s a disgrace.

RANKINGScontinued from page 8

COMMENT ON TECHNICIANONLINE.COMAgree or disagree with Josh’s rankings? Let him know online at technicianonline.com.

Page 8: Technician - December 4, 2008

SportsTECHNICIANPAGE 8 • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2008

VS.TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 2008

Lower Level tickets as low as $25* / Upper Level tickets as low as $15*To purchase tickets and for more information, skate to: www.carolinahurricanes.com/college *When purchasing through www.carol inahurr icanes.com/col lege

Football grabs four commits in three days

Fresh off its four-game win streak to end the regular season, football coach Tom O’Brien has picked up four verbal commitments this week for the 2009 incoming class. Two of the four commitments, linebacker Hans Rice and defensive tackle Nathan Mageo, are three-star prospects according to the recruiting site Scout.com. The two others, running back Morgan Alexander and defensive end Darryl Cato-Bishop, are two-star prospects. The latest four commitments bring the list to 18 for O’Brien and his staff, who have picked up recruits from Massachussets to Alabama and from Florida to New Mexico with this class.

Swimming starts Husky Invite today

Nine Wolfpack swimmers are head-ing to Washington for the Husky Invitational which starts today. Junior Mason McGee, who holds the top times in the ACC for both 200 and 500 meter freestyle, leads the team. Eight other N.C. State swimmers, five men and three women, will compete in individual competitions. The Pack will return to team competition Jan. 9 when it hosts Michigan State.

WOLFFACTS

ATHLETIC SCHEDULE

TodayMEN’S AND WOMEN’S SWIMMING AND DIVINGHusky Invitational, Day 1, Federal Way, Wa.

FridayMEN’S AND WOMEN’S SWIMMING AND DIVINGHusky Invitational, Day 2, Federal Way, Wa.

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL @ MICHIGANAnn Arbor, Mich., 6:30 p.m.

December 2008

Su M T W Th F Sa

1 2 3 4 5 6

7 8 9 10 11 12 13

14 15 16 17 18 19 20

21 22 23 24 25 26 27

28 29 30 31

MEN’S BASKETBALL STANDINGS

SCHOOL OVERALL RECORD

Clemson 8-0

Duke 8-0

North Carolina 7-0

Florida State 7-0

Wake Forest 6-0

Georgia Tech 4-0

N.C. State 4-0

Boston College 5-2

Maryland 4-2

Miami 4-2

Virginia Tech 4-3

Virginia 3-3

SOURCE: ACC

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“The wolf is a scrappy, tough

animal; the spittin’ image of

our team.”Anonymous writer when the Wolfpack name was chosen

for the school.

DID YOU KNOW?Some of the original names for an N.C. State mascot included Cultivators, Auctioneers, Cardinals and Pine-rooters.

COMING SOONFriday: A feature on the winter sports being away from home for the Holidays.

Mr. Wuf has been down a long road of changing mascots in his search for true identity

Kate ShefteSenior Staff Writer

1921 — The sports teams of North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, N.C. State’s prede-cessor, had been at different times called the “Farm-ers and Mechanics,” the “Red Terrors,” and the “Ag-gies.” In 1920, coach Harry Hartsell’s football team, captained by J.T. “Runt” Faucette and then called the “Techs,” were criticized for their up-and-down play.

Before the season-opening football game on Sept. 25, 1921 against the Randolph-Macon Yellow Jackets, an anonymous fan wrote into the Technician, bemoaning the team’s unstable coaching situation and the off-field antics of some of the players. He compared those play-ers to “a pack of wolves,” and the student body found it hilarious. The football team then became known as the Wolfpack.

1946 — One man who didn’t find it so hilarious was J.W. Harrelson, for whom Harrelson Hall was named. Harrelson served as chancellor from 1945 to 1953, just after World War II. Harrelson objected to the moniker, reminding veterans and civilians on campus that the name “Wolfpack” had been assigned to Nazi U-boats for the formation they kept.

“The only thing lower than a wolf is a snake in the grass,” Harrelson decreed.

Harrelson proposed a contest, with football tickets as the prize, to see who could create a new mascot. Some of the submissions included the Cardinals, Cul-tivators, Cotton-pickers, Auctioneers, Calumets and Pine-rooters, a term related to pigs.

“We’ll field a growling, rep-snorting team no mat-ter what the mascot is,” Beattie Feathers, the football

Coach Carter Jordan hopes freshman Jacob Burge is indicative of where wrestling is headed

Jen HankinStaff Writer

The wrestling team’s top re-cruit last year was 174-pound Jacob Burge, a freshman in First Year College, from Mason, Mich. Burge started wrestling at age 6, following in his father’s footsteps.

Winning his first tourna-ment that same year, he con-tinued to have a strong work ethic and has become not only part of the starting lineup as a freshman, but coach Carter Jordan said he hopes Burge exemplifies the future of the wrestling program.

Jordan summed up Burge’s

character with a smile. “Jake cares about two things:

wrestling and wrestling,” Jordan said. “He’s really driven and he is as hard a worker as there is on the team.”

In elementary school, Burge moved to Mason and began his wrestling career.

“I found this brochure, and I looked at it and thought it might be fun,” Burge said. “I brought it to my dad, and he had had a few years of wrestling experience.”

Burge said he didn’t know what

to expect going to wrestling prac-tice, since he was so young.

“I thought it was going to be like a WWF thing,” Burge said. “But I was totally amazed that it wasn’t and I liked it.”

That same year Burge wrestled in his first tournament and took second place. He has continued to grow as a wrestler over the years and credits his motivation partly to his dad.

Burge’s father also has a career in wrestling, and is a coach in Michigan according to Jordan. Burge also said he feels that his inner drive and focus has helped his success.

“For me, it’s just my personal-ity. I’ve always had the drive, and I feed off other people,” Burge said. “I just have that motivation to do better and come to practice every day and continue to train hard and beat people up.”

Last year, in Burge’s senior year

of high school, his wrestling team traveled to N.C. State’s wrestling camp, where Jordan spotted him and said he was his main focus as well as his top recruit. Burge had scholarship offers to several colleges in Michigan, as well as Northern Illinois, Ohio State and N.C. State.

“I knew where I was going to sign, but I took my visits every-where,” Burge said. “I really like the wrestling program here. It may be young right now, but I know where it’s headed and it’s going in a great direction, and I want to be a part of that.”

While a full ride scholarship at State drew him to State, that was not the deciding factor, accord-ing to Burge.

“I knew if I stayed close to home I was going to be watched by my dad,” Burge said. “I wanted to grow as a person, and I think if I moved far away, it gives me a

chance to explore myself and my personality and make my own mistakes.”

At practice it’s clear that Burge is already emerging as a leader on the team.

“As a freshman, many people knew who I was,” Burge said. “People look up to me because I work really hard on the mat, and [the other wrestlers] see what I’m doing and they realize that this guy’s a freshman and he’s doing all this work.”

According to Jordan, he is an example of what the wrestling team will be recruiting in the future.

“Jake will be the future of our program,” Jordan said. “He ex-emplifies everything that we are looking for, great talent, and tre-mendous work ethic. He wants to be the best he possibly can be and he’s willing to do the work needed to get there.”

Three years ago, I was lucky enough to cover the ACC men’s basketball tourna-ment. On display that year in Greens-boro was not only some of the best col-lege basketball in the nation, but some

of the finest – and some of the worst — mascots in col-lege sports.

Right then and there I decided this column was inevi-table. Now with a week before gradu-ation, it’s time to rank the ACC’s mascots.

Take heart in the fact that this column has been tirelessly researched now for the past three years – from the ACC Tourna-ment, to football games from Charlot-tesville to Tallahassee.

The greatest mascots have the perfect combination of toughness and humor. The best can pump up the entire crowd then play with the school’s youngest fans moments later. I’d love to hear your feedback. Let us know online who your favorite ACC mascot is.

1. Sebastian the Ibis, MiamiSebastian’s swagger perfectly embodies

Miami’s style – probably more so than any other school. And from his Soulja Boy dance to the C-A-N-E-S cheer he leads, the Ibis can get a crowd going.

2. Demon Deacon, Wake ForestThe best mascot intro goes to the Dea-

con, cruising on his motorcycle across the field to “Enter Sandman,” leading the football team out of the gate. Plus, the guy wed Mr. and Ms Wuf. How cool is that?

3. Mr Wuf, N.C. StateI try not to think of myself as biased

here, but Mr. Wuf has to have some of the best dance moves in the nation, es-pecially the Mr. Wuf from three years ago. Plus, you’ll never see him back down from a mascot fight — unlike others on this list (see bottom).

4. Testudo, MarylandI completely respect the Terrapin for his

chill mood. When he visits Carter-Finley, you won’t see him cheering often, instead the Terp stands, arms crossed, watching the game — you have to respect that. And based on his dance moves, it’s a good decision.

A wolf by any other name

ATHLETICS

Coach believes Burge becoming wrestling’s futureWRESTLING

Josh HarellDeputy Sports Editor

Ranking the ACC’s mascots

TECHNICIAN ARCHIVE PHOTOThe Iron Wolf, with a person inside, stands behind the cheerleaders in the 1940s.

TECHNICIAN ARCHIVE PHOTOLOBO III, one of the coyotes that served as mascot be-fore Mr. Wuf, stands guard at a football game.

COMMENTARY

MASCOT continued page 7 RANKING continued page 7

BURGE’S HIGH SCHOOL ACCOMPLISHMENTS

Won back-to-back state championships as a freshman and sophomore.Won the state title in the 171- pound class as a senior.Won the 2007 Brute Adidas Classic and was named Most Outstanding Wrestler.

LINDA BRAFFORD/TECHNICIAN ARCHIVE PHOTOThe Demon Deacon performs the marriage ceremony involving State’s wolf mascosts during halftime at Reyn-olds Coliseum. The photo was originally printed March 2, 1982.

• 18 days until men’s basketball game against Marquette.

• Page 7: The bottom of the ACC’s mascots.