the vanderbilt hustler 03-12-14

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MASON RY vanderbilt hustler WWW.INSIDEVANDY.COM WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 2014 VOL. 126, ISS. 9 PAGE 8 CAMPUS LIFE SAE eliminates pledging process Uber vs. Lyft vs. the rest Vanderbilt chapter will comply with changes implemented by national organization The Hustler breaks down the pros and cons of Nashville’s newest ways to get around town PAGE 20 PAGE 6 — Continued on PAGE 14 Eyes on each other Columnist Kenny Tan discusses the Orwellian vibe of the posters in residence halls warning against marijuana distribution OPINION A ll around the Commo- dore practice field, Derek Mason’s new players dance to his commanding tune. Near one sideline, receivers jump back and forth, high-stepping in and out of a laid-down ladder. On the other, two redshirt freshmen tear ceaselessly at opposite ends of a tire, tugging each other to the ground. Channeled energy churns up black rubber pellets from the turf, kicking recycled bits of old tires up into the damp February air. A few steps out of bounds, at the 35-yard line, another redshirt bends at the waist, unleashes a groan, and depos- its his lunch onto the artificial grass. Mason notices at once. “You didn’t think it was going to be easy!” the new Vanderbilt coach barks in a breathless baritone. “Nine wins, 10 wins, 11 wins, 12 wins. If you want it, it’s going to hurt.” Two months earlier, Mason stood on the sideline during the 100th Rose Bowl, choreographing Stanford’s top- ranked defense on a national stage. Now, weeks into his first-ever head coaching job at Vanderbilt, he has wasted no time in setting a bar few believe he can jump over. At his introductory press confer- ence in January, Mason spoke about winning the SEC East title. On Na- tional Signing Day last month, Mason addressed a crowd of Vanderbilt fans for the first time, and his rhetoric esca- lated. “I’m not blowing smoke at you,” he said then, flanked by inflatable gold stars and other bright balloons. “We will win championships, just so you know.” The response was affirmative — all stood, all clapped — but also hesi- tant, the type of applause a politician might receive when making procla- mations his audience isn’t quite sure will be fulfilled. “I guess you didn’t hear me,” Ma- son retorted, trying to invigorate the crowd. “We will win championships.” This sort of prediction might not seem so grand at Alabama, or Texas, or even at Stanford, whose football history, until a few years ago, was as unremarkable as Vanderbilt’s. In Nashville, however, at a school that has played in as many bowl games in the past three years as it had the previous 50, accepting Mason’s gran- diose proclamations seems a matter of faith. One of the nation’s top young coaches believes he can build a title winner at Vanderbilt. Do you? By Jesse Golomb, sports writer BOSLEY JARRETT / THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER

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Page 1: The Vanderbilt Hustler 03-12-14

MASONRYMASONvanderbilthustler

WWW.INSIDEVANDY.COM WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 2014 VOL. 126, ISS. 9

PAGE 8

CAMPUS

LIFE

SAE eliminates pledging process

Uber vs. Lyft vs. the rest

Vanderbilt chapter will comply with changesimplemented by national organization

The Hustler breaks down the pros and cons of Nashville’s newest ways to get around town

PAGE 20

PAGE 6

— Continued on PAGE 14

Eyes on each otherColumnist Kenny Tan discusses the Orwellian vibe of the posters in residence halls warning against marijuana distribution

OPINION

All around the Commo-dore practice fi eld, Derek Mason’s new players dance to his commanding

tune. Near one sideline, receivers jump back and forth, high-stepping in and out of a laid-down ladder. On the other, two redshirt freshmen tear ceaselessly at opposite ends of a tire, tugging each other to the ground. Channeled energy churns up black rubber pellets from the turf, kicking recycled bits of old tires up

into the damp February air. A few steps out of bounds, at the

35-yard line, another redshirt bends

at the

waist, unleashes a groan, and depos-its his lunch onto the artifi cial grass. Mason notices at once.

“You didn’t think it was going to be easy!” the new Vanderbilt coach barks in a breathless baritone. “Nine wins, 10 wins, 11 wins, 12 wins. If you want it, it’s going to hurt.”

Two months earlier, Mason stood on the sideline during the 100th Rose Bowl, choreographing Stanford’s top-ranked defense on a national stage. Now, weeks into his fi rst-ever head coaching job at Vanderbilt, he has wasted no time in setting a bar few believe he can jump over.

At his introductory press confer-ence in January, Mason spoke about winning the SEC East title. On Na-

tional Signing Day last month, Mason addressed a

crowd of Vanderbilt fans for the fi rst

time, and his rhetoric esca-lated.

“I’m not blowing smoke at you,” he said then, fl anked by infl atable gold stars and other bright balloons. “We will win championships, just so you know.”

The response was affi rmative — all stood, all clapped — but also hesi-tant, the type of applause a politician might receive when making procla-mations his audience isn’t quite sure will be fulfi lled.

“I guess you didn’t hear me,” Ma-son retorted, trying to invigorate the crowd. “We will win championships.”

This sort of prediction might not seem so grand at Alabama, or Texas, or even at Stanford, whose football history, until a few years ago, was as unremarkable as Vanderbilt’s. In Nashville, however, at a school that has played in as many bowl games in the past three years as it had the previous 50, accepting Mason’s gran-diose proclamations seems a matter of faith.

One of the nation’s top young coaches believes he can build a title winner at Vanderbilt. Do you? By Jesse Golomb, sports writer

BOSLEY JARRETT / THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER

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campus QUOTE OF THE DAY

“This is a historic change for Sigma Alpha Epsilon and one that I am confi dentthat our chapter will handle effectively.”

KRISTIN SHORTER, DIRECTOR OF GREEK LIFE

2 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 2014 THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER u WWW.INSIDEVANDY.COM

VANDER

BITSVSG candidate debate to be held March 12 in New Rand

vanderbilthustlerSTAFF

ANDRÉ ROUILLARD EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

ALEX DAI — CHIEF COPY EDITOR

ALEXIS BANKSKATY CESAROTTI WESLEY LIN

BRITTANY SHAARKARA SHERRER SOPHIE TO

COPY EDITORS

HANNAH SILLS — NEWS EDITORKELLY HALOM — LIFE EDITOR ERIC LYONS — OPINION EDITORALLISON MAST — SPORTS EDITOR

BOSLEY JARRETT — PHOTO EDITOR

DIANA ZHU — DESIGN DIRECTOR JENNA WENGLER — ASST. DESIGN DIRECTOR

SENIOR DESIGNERS

ZACH BERKOWITZKAREN CHANZOË SHANCERKATHY ZHOU

DESIGNERS ALEXA BRAHME HAN DEWAN HOLLY GLASS

In anticipation of next week’s presidential election, Vanderbilt Student Government will be hosting a debate for the candidates today, Wednesday, March 12, at 6 p.m. in New Rand Lounge. The debate will feature the two tickets that declared their candidacy on Feb. 24. The debate will be an hour long and will be broken into segments for opening statements, a presidential debate and a vice-presidential debate. The Vanderbilt Hustler and Vanderbilt Television will be cohosting the event.

Tanner Owen, a junior in the College of Arts and Science running for VSG president, will square o� for 35 minutes against Arts and Science junior Ryan McKenney, also running for president. Their vice-presidential running mates, School of Engineering junior Fletcher Young and Arts and Science junior Hannah Gacke, respectively, will debate afterward in a 15-minute segment. The last 10 minutes of the debate will open the fl oor to questions from the audience.

The candidates will touch on a range of issues during the debate, including campus culture, policy, student issues, VSG’s shortcomings and student government’s role in students’ lives. Last year, a portion of the debate focused on student government’s role in regulating drug and alcohol culture. The debate will provide an opportunity for the tickets to introduce their platforms and to distinguish themselves from the competition before election voting on March 18-19. The debate will be moderated by a representative from The Hustler.

By ANDRÉ ROUILLARD Editor-in-chief--------------------

YOUNG ALUMNI

TRUSTEE candidates announced

Each year, the junior and senior classes, as well as alumni who graduated the previous year, vote among three candidates to select a Young Alumni Trustee who will serve on Vander-bilt’s Board of Trust for a four-year term as a representative for young alumni and current students. Voting for this year’s Young Alumni Trustee will take place March 17-21

As a member of VSG, Julie has served as Peabody Council president and chair of the academic affairs committee and currently serves as VSG’s fi rst director of human resources in the Cabinet. Julie has placed a strong emphasis on class unity, refl ected in her four years as president of the Class of 2014 Student Alumni Board. The overall chair of the Senior Class Fund, Julie is working with a dedicated SCF board to reach a record-setting 80 percent participation from the graduat-ing class. Additionally, Julie has enjoyed her experiences as a Relay for Life board member, Susan Gray School volunteer and Kappa Delta sorority member. A writer for the Vanderbilt Political Review, Julie’s passion for government and foreign affairs has translated to her academic focuses — HOD, Spanish and philoso-phy — augmented by a semester-long internship at the U.S. embassy in London and an honors thesis discussing interrela-tions of health and education in Africa. After graduation, Julie will join Deloitte as a consultant.

A student in the honors program for cognitive studies, Maysa is currently completing her thesis, a longitudi-nal study on childhood depression and bullying in schools. An Ingram Scholar, she is a member of the Vi-sioning Committee, which develops the annual theme and plans weekly class sessions for the group of fi fty Scholars. Maysa’s leadership activities include serving as head resident of North House, president of the Middle Eastern Student Association and com-munity service chair of the American Red Cross Club. She also serves as an intern with Associated Psychiatrists of Nashville and co-facilitates weekly child and adolescent clinical therapy groups for youth with behavioral, emotional and social skills diffi culties. In the future, Maysa plans to earn her doctorate in clinical psychology.

As president of Vanderbilt’s In-terfaith Council, Sid has helped coordinate multiple campus-wide events promoting interfaith dialogue, including a candlelight vigil on Martin Luther King Jr. Day and a service to honor victims of the 2013 Boston Mar-athon bombings. A student studying political science and economics, he has also maintained a strong commit-ment to promoting informed politi-cal debate on Vanderbilt’s campus as president of the Vanderbilt Political Review, the university’s premier non-partisan political affairs publication. In addition, Sid has been a resident adviser on Highland and Kissam Quadrangles, participated in some of Vanderbilt’s largest multicultural stu-dent productions and helped allocate more than $1.7 million in funding to student organizations through VSG’s AcFee Committee. Sid will join Bain & Company after graduation.

Julie Babbage Maysa Kaskas Sid Sapru

Candidates

PHOTO COURTESY OF JULIE BABBAGE PHOTO COURTESY OF MAYSA KASKAS PHOTO COURTESY OF SID SAPRU

PHOTO COURTESY OF VANDERBILT STUDENT GOVERNMENT

Tanner Owen (left) and Ryan McKenney (right) are running for the position of Vanderbilt Student Government President in the elections to be held March 18-19.

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THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER u WWW.INSIDEVANDY.COM WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 2014 3

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While some students will be spending the weekend celebrat-ing St. Patrick’s Day, junior and electrical engineering major Tate Travaglini will be 3 miles away from campus at the Nashville Entrepreneur Center racing in a three-day sprint to design his own business.

Travaglini is one of 25 Vander-bilt students accepted as a participant in Nashville’s fi rst 3 Day Startup (3DS) event, hosted by the Vanderbilt Innovation and Entrepreneurial Society (VINES). 3DS, a corporate non-profi t, challenges 45 budding entrepre-neurs to take a tech startup from the idea phase to a prototype in just 49 hours at events hosted around the world. The Nash-ville event will take place from 5 p.m. Friday evening to 6 p.m. on Sunday. In addition to the 25 Vanderbilt students, the remain-ing participants are primarily local business professionals.

VINES founder and Vanderbilt senior Ben Draffi n had the idea to bring a weekend accelera-tor to campus after attending numerous “Hackathons” on campus, in the Nashville com-munity and in Palo Alto, Calif. Hackathons are events where techies work in teams to develop new technology, such as a piece of hardware or a new phone application. Draffi n saw the en-ergized, innovative environment as a perfect setting for students whose time and attention is often occupied with schoolwork and campus extracurricular activities.

“It’s such an engaging envi-ronment that you don’t have to commit a lot of time to,” Draffi n said. “W hat we wanted to do is give that opportunity for people who have business ideas.”

After an earlier attempt at

putting on a weekend accelera-tor fell through, VINES contacted 3DS. The organization then sent in a team to help set up an event website, design application forms and garner sponsors for the event.

Draffi n said event participants will benefi t from the experience and connections the 3DS team has to offer.

“Anyone who participates and generates a real idea, (3DS) works with them to get legal ad-vice and connections to existing industry people,” Draffi n said. “3DS has a big network that, if you really take something from the event and want to run with it, they’ll help you.”

Participants mostly come from technical backgrounds — com-puter science, engineering and economics majors who often have some level of professional or internship experience — and while their credentials vary, all 3DS participants, including Travaglini, share a strong pas-sion for entrepreneurship.

“I could be classifi ed as a highly interested bystander,” Travaglini said. He attended a few meetings for VINES and made a practice of following startup news around campus, but schoolwork was a longtime barrier to his involvement in the entrepreneurial community. Travaglini says 3DS is a way for him to wet his feet in the fi eld of business development.

“I got tired of standing on the sidelines and just watching oth-ers start game-changing compa-nies,” Travaglini said. “This will provide 49 hours of ‘real world’ experience in the realm of build-ing a startup. To me, that sounds like a great opportunity to get away from the sidelines and start making things happen.”

The participants will spend Friday afternoon brainstorming business concepts. They then form teams of approximately

four people each based off of which ideas they gravitate to-wards. Each team then has until Sunday afternoon to work and design a prototype to present in a 10-minute fi nal pitch.

The time crunch poses a chal-lenge to competitors. Though not unfamiliar to Vanderbilt students, sleep deprivation is common in 3DS contests. Par-ticipants at other 3DS challenges have been known to eschew their dorms and homes in favor of sleeping at the event site, although the Nashville venue will be closing at midnight each night of the contest.

According to Traviglini, the tight window for the competi-tion could result in a less-than-polished fi nal prototype.

“It also runs the risk of devel-oping a product that is not quite fully fl eshed out yet,” Traviglini said, although he personally is looking forward to the intense atmosphere of 3DS more than he fears it. Traviglini says the pressure cooker environment suits Vanderbilt students who are used to performing in a bind.

“We typically have multiple large assignments due each week, so we’re used to being pressed for time,” he explained.

Although only 25 Vanderbilt students are participating in the contest, Draffi n says the event will help bring current techno-logical innovations — as well as a glimpse of the direction in which those innovations are heading — to the forefront of campus consciousness.

“It helps everyone on campus because it starts the conversa-tion of ‘What is the future going to be like?’” Draffi n said.

Final pitches for the competi-tion are open to the public and will be held in Featheringill’s Ja-cobs Believed in Me Auditorium at 5 p.m. on Sunday, March 16.

4 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 2014 THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER u WWW.INSIDEVANDY.COMCAMPUS

By JR MAHUNGNews reporter--------------------

25 Vandy students will vie to launch a new company at the 3 Day Startup event, beginning Friday, March 14

READY, SET,

STARTUP

3 Day Startup was originally founded in 2008 by a group of

University of Texas at Austin students. They were impressed

by the keen business sense their peers showed in

conversations about potential startups, but underwhelmed

at the lack of follow-through on those ideas. The

students designed 3DS as an opportunity for peers to learn

about startups through hands-on experience and, by the end

of the weekend, to design their own businesses.

Since the fi rst 3DS event,

the student group has incorporated into a 501(c)(3)

non-profi t that has helped run 3DS events both in the U.S. at a variety of colleges and

universities, such as Harvard, Rice and Georgia Tech, and at cities abroad like Doha, Qatar

and Bangkok, Thailand.

3DS events have helped launch more than 71 diff erent

tech companies.

HISTORY OF 3 DAY STARTUP

Cabstr is a website that allows students to create cab routes, pay for rides ahead of time and split the costs with friends and via crowdsharing.

Hoot.me is a Facebook application that connects students in a class via video chat, doodles and screen sharing sessions to collaborate on homework or projects.

Moodfi sh is a search service that allows users to fi nd music, movies, books or even restaurants based on their current mood.

Famigo is a service that rates apps for parents and their children based on their suitability for family use using factors like educational value and age appropriateness.

COMPANIES FOUNDED BY 3DS ALUMNI

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THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER u WWW.INSIDEVANDY.COM WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 2014 5CAMPUS

AROUND CAMPUS

VSG election campaign posters

The campaign pro-cess for this year’s VSG presidential

election officially began at 8 a.m. on Monday, March 10. Ryan McKen-ney and Hannah Gacke will be squaring off against Tanner Owen and Fletcher Young in the contest. The annual debate between can-didates will be held on Wednesday, March 12 at 6 p.m. in New Rand Lounge. Voting will take place March 18-19.

JAMES TATUM / THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER

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6 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 2014 THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER u WWW.INSIDEVANDY.COMCAMPUS

SAE to end ‘pledging’ period, per national governing bodyNew members will now be initiated within 96 hours of receiving a bid from the fraternity

The national headquarters of Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) announced that, as of March 9, the fraternity will no longer have a “pledging” period for new members. Instead, within 96 hours of receiving their bids, new members will be initiated as fully-fledged brothers into the fraternity.

“Our Supreme Council decided to enact this change between conventions in order to protect Sigma Alpha Epsilon’s future and to eliminate a class structure between our new members and our active members,” said the fraternity’s national organization in the announcement of the change.

The desire to eliminate instances of hazing was also mentioned as one of the motivations behind the new policy. In December 2013, Bloomberg reported that more people “have died in events related to SAE” than any other fraternity, earning them the nickname of the “deadliest frat.” SAE acknowledged “a number of incidents and deaths,” as well as “a painful number of chapter closings as a result of hazing” in their announcement of the policy change, but also stated that “the attack on our

image is not the sole motivating factor behind the changes.”

In the announcement, the fraternity noted that the pledging process was not intrinsic to its organization, which was founded in 1856, but rather developed after World War II.

Under the new system, brothers of SAE will “learn about the Fraternity’s values, mission, creed and history and develop personally over the course of their col-legiate tenure,” rather than in a new mem-ber ewducation period.

“We are excited to work with Vander-bilt’s Office of Greek Life and SAE nation-als to implement these changes and are proud to be associated with a national organization that continues to be a leader among Greek organizations,” said Vander-bilt SAE President Patrick McGee in a statement to The Hustler. “We are also continually thankful for the hard work and support that Kristin (Shorter) and the rest of the Office of Greek Life dedicate to our chapter on a day-to-day basis.”

“This is historic change for Sigma Alpha Epsilon and one that I am confident that our chapter will handle effectively,” said Director of Greek Life Kristin Shorter. “Given that we do not issue membership invitations until January, the men in our

chapter have sufficient time to ensure that the men they are giving bids to meet the membership criteria and will be an asset to the chapter.”

While the change in policy is a first for

SAE, they are not the only Interfraternity Council group to eliminate the pledging period. Zeta Beta Tau, which returned to campus this semester, eliminated pledg-ing practices nationally in 1989.

By HANNAH SILLSNews editor

--------------------

MHS program adding track options for majors6 new concentration areas will be available for students to choose from, including ‘global health’ and ‘critical health studies’

The medicine, health and society (MHS) department is reshaping the cur-riculum of its popular interdisciplinary major to include an area of concentra-tion and a disciplinary requirement.

The new curriculum will consist of one three-hour core course, 21 hours of MHS-approved electives, 12 hours within a student’s selected concentra-tion area, and a “disciplinary require-ment.”

The six possible concentration areas are global health; health behaviors and health sciences; health policies and economies; race, inequality and health; medicine, humanities and the arts; and critical health studies.

According to Jonathan Metzl, director of the Center for Medicine, Health and Society, the new curriculum should make the process of majoring in MHS easier for students.

“We’re hopeful that focusing on a concentration in the major, which again

is only 12 hours of the major … will help students as they go to interview for jobs, or apply to medical school, or apply to graduate school,” Metzl said. “What we feel is that … the students will be even more competitive for jobs and for get-ting into graduate school because they’ll be able to tell employers or schools specifically what skills they’re learning in MHS.”

The changes are also part of an effort to take advantage of faculty expertise.

“We’ve hired now nine world-class faculty, and we have this tremendous network of secondary faculty, and so we really want to emphasize the strength of the people we’re hiring,” Metzl said.

Although current students should easily be able to make the switch be-cause the requirements do not change drastically, current and future students will be able to choose between the old and new curricula.

“I want to reassure all current and fu-ture students in MHS that these changes won’t in any way change the experience of what it feels like to get an MHS ma-jor,” Metzl said. “The MHS major is still

going to be incredibly flexible, and we very much encourage people to … make their own pathway toward their career.”

Created approximately five years ago with the goal of addressing health topics beyond basic biology, the medicine, health and society major has grown from around 20 to more than 300 stu-dents.

According to Metzl, about 65-70 percent of MHS majors apply to medical school, while others go into health or hospital administration, attend gradu-ate school in public health or health policy, or even move into the humani-ties, music or business fields.

The Center for Medicine, Health and Society has also begun a new BA/MA (4+1) program this academic year for Vanderbilt undergraduates wishing to earn both their bachelor’s and master’s degree in the “Social Foundations of Health”— a term taken from the new 2015 MCAT exam.

Interested students can attend an open house event in Calhoun 300 on Wednesday, March 19 to learn more about new curriculum.

By CHARLOTTE GILLSenior news reporter

--------------------

BOSLEY JARRETT / THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER

SAE’s house on campus is currently undergoing rennovations; in the mean time, the fraternity is oc-cupying the house formerly belonging to Zeta Beta Tau. ZBT plans to move back into their house in the fall of 2014.

JAMES TATUM / THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER

The MHS major at Vanderbilt was created approximately five years ago, but already has more than 300 students.

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THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER u WWW.INSIDEVANDY.COM WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 2014 7CAMPUS

Page 8: The Vanderbilt Hustler 03-12-14

THE

RANTSomething got you peeved? Irked? Honked o� ? The Rant is your place to anonymously vent your spleen on any issue you want. To get your rant on, visit the InsideVandy.com Opinion page.

Check out this week’s Rant on our Twitter account @InsideVandy.

Why in the hell does the Alumni estro-gym close at 10pm? The gym isn’t even sta� ed. It wouldn’t hurt anyone to keep it open all the time.

I fi nd it obnoxious that students use People Finder to look up the values of other students’ houses. But I’m not surprised.

It seems gira� es have it better o� because at least they can get leaves whenever they want. How can Leaf run out of leaves???!!!

We really need a second tray return near CJ and Pi/Leaf.

Why is the froyo machine at Last Drop always broken?

Dude. Dinner at Food For Thought left me thinking of all the food I could have gotten at a di� erent campus eatery. #regrets

Can the Red Vandy Van get its GPS trans-mitter fi xed? It annoys the shit out of me when I want to know how far away it is but can’t fi nd out because “arrival times cannot be predicted at this time.”

Towers bathrooms are in a constant state of disrepair. Every week one stall is closed, and one door’s latch has been broken all year. Two showers didn’t even have curtains until I got back after break!

8 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 2014 THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER ◆ WWW.INSIDEVANDY.COM

Administration catches ‘reefer madness’The Dean of Students’ posters ask for Orwellian betrayals of our peers

vanderbilthustlerEDITORIAL BOARD

ANDRÉ ROUILLARD EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

[email protected]

HANNAH SILLSNEWS EDITOR

[email protected]

ERIC LYONSOPINION EDITOR

[email protected]

TYLER BISHOPINSIDEVANDY DIRECTOR

[email protected]

KELLY HALOMLIFE EDITOR

[email protected]

ALLISON MAST SPORTS EDITOR

[email protected]

The Vanderbilt Hustler Opinion page aims to stimulate discussion in the Vanderbilt community. In that spirit, columnists, guest columnists and authors of letters to the editor are expected to provide logical argument to back their views. Unreasonable arguments, arguments in bad faith or arguments in vain between columnists have no place in The Hustler and will not be published. The Hustler welcomes reader viewpoints and o� ers three methods of expression: letters to the editor, guest columns and feedback on InsideVandy.com.

The views expressed in lead editorials refl ect the majority of opinion among The Hustler’s editorial board and are not necessarily representative of any individual member.

Letters must be submitted either in person by the author to the Hustler o� ce or via email to [email protected]. Letters via email should come from a Vanderbilt email address where the identity of the sender is clear. With rare exception, all letters must be received by 1 p.m. on Tuesday. The editor reserves the right to edit and condense submissions for length as well as clarity.

Lengthy letters that focus on an issue a� ecting students may be considered for a guest column at the editor’s discretion.

All submissions become the property of The Hustler and must conform to the legal standards of Vanderbilt Student Communications, of which The Hustler is a division.

The Vanderbilt Hustler (ISSN 0042-2517), the student newspaper of Vanderbilt University, is published every Wednesday during the academic year except during exam periods and vacations. The paper is not printed during summer break.

The Vanderbilt Hustler allocates one issue of the newspaper to each student and is available at various points on campus for free. Additional copies are $.50 each.

The Vanderbilt Hustler is a division of Vanderbilt Student Communications, Inc. Copyright © 2014 Vanderbilt Student Communications.

Posters that have recently ap-peared in residence halls pro-mote a dangerous and immoral university policy with unintend-

ed consequences.The posters, courtesy of the Offi ce of

the Dean of Students and the Offi ce of Wellness Programs & Alcohol Education, feature a map of the contiguous United States and ask in all caps “In which of these states is marijuana legal?” Colorado and Washington are highlighted in green with a marijuana leaf superimposed over them. In contrast, Tennessee is highlighted in red and accompanied by a marijuana leaf behind a red “no” symbol. A yellow arrow points to Tennessee with the all caps text “you are here.” Additional text in all caps reads:

The distribution of drugs (by sharing or in exchange for money) is a violation of the Vanderbilt University policy. Please anonymously report any such distribution or related activity by calling and leaving a message at 615-343-STOP (7867).

The message communicated by this poster is reminiscent of George Orwell’s “Nineteen Eighty-Four.” Everyone is now an agent of Big Brother and has a duty to spy on and inform on suspected drug activity. As a result, students are now less willing to have an honest conversation with their peers about drug use for fear they will be betrayed and turned in to the thought police.

In an email sent on Jan. 23 of last year, Dean of Students Mark Bandas wrote, “The sale and consumption of illegal drugs is a high risk activity. It undermines learning and personal development, endangers the health and safety of the user and other students and is potentially life-threatening.” The exact same state-ment could be made about alcohol.

In fact, the consumption of marijuana and most other popular illegal substanc-es is no more risky than the consumption of alcohol. In 2010, the British peer-reviewed journal “Lancet” published a study which ranked 20 drugs, from alco-hol to marijuana to mushrooms, by over-all harm. The study analyzed both harm to users (e.g. dependence, mortality and impairment of mental functioning) and harm to others (e.g. crime, environmen-tal damage and loss of relationships). Ranked at the top was alcohol at 72 out of 100, with powder cocaine at 27 out of 100, marijuana at 20 out 100 and MDMA (ec-stasy) at 9 out of 100. If marijuana is really so dangerous that the university must wage a war on it, then it might as well shut down all alcohol-serving fraternity parties. Moreover, the university should stop being complicit in the distribution of alcohol at the Pub.

One wonders what will occur if an anonymous report is made through the hotline. Anonymous reports are inher-ently unreliable. Any number of innocent victims could be the subject of an anony-mous report ranging from the professor who gave you a bad grade to the frater-nity brother who broke your heart. Will a report prompt an offi cial investigation of the accused by campus authorities? It seems quite possible considering the following incident.

Last year, the Vanderbilt University Police Department investigated two Vanderbilt students who were later ar-rested and charged with felony posses-sion with intent to distribute marijuana, cocaine and MDMA. Under Tennessee law, the penalty for possession of as little as a single gram of marijuana is up to a year in prison and a mandatory fi ne of between $250 and $2,500.

The war on drugs is wasting too much money and ruining too many lives. According to the Drug Policy Alliance, more than $51 billions is spent annu-ally in the U.S. on the war on drugs. As a result of the drug war, the U.S. has the highest incarceration rate in the world, with approximately 1 in every 99 adults in federal, state and local prisons and jails.

One also questions the morality of the university’s active support of prohibition. The laws which criminalize drugs in the United States were written with racist motivations and continue to be enforced with a bias. A report by ACLU found that in Tennessee, the black-to-white arrest ratio for marijuana was 4-to-1, while rates of marijuana use among blacks and whites are approximately the same.

Furthermore, the distribution of drugs to consenting adults and the voluntary consumption of drugs are victimless crimes. Individuals ought to be permitted to consume, smoke or drink any sub-stance as long as they do not cause harm to others. What consensual activities individuals decide to engage in within the privacy of their own residence should be none of our business.

While marijuana is currently illegal in Tennessee, a recent MTSU poll found 75 percent of Tennesseans support legaliz-ing medical marijuana. A bill in the state legislature to legalize medical marijuana is expected to be voted upon this week. Though marijuana will not be fully legal-ized in Tennessee this year, legalization is the inevitable conclusion to the long failed war on drugs. What remains to be seen is whether Vanderbilt will stop try-ing to punish non-violent entrepreneur-ial individuals just trying to earn some money when prohibition ends.

KENNY TANis a senior in the College of Arts and Science and founder of the Young Americans for Liberty chapter at Vanderbilt. He can be reached at [email protected].

opinion

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Shame with a side of spinachRigid college meal plans have consequences beyond the ‘freshman 15’

I have a confession to make: I am a girl, and I love to eat a lot. There, I said it. The only problem: Vanderbilt is more than a little obsessed with appearance. College Prowler, obviously a repu-

table source, ranked Vanderbilt at No. 5 on its list of colleges where students are both hot and smart, if that tells you anything. And Vanderbilt isn’t the only college like this: Many students are concerned with how they look, and student orgs all over the country (such as the campus chapter of Go Figure) are trying to promote positive body image in response.

This image obsession comes bundled with a host of other issues, especially regarding eating habits. In fact, according to the National Association of An-orexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders, 91 percent of women on college campuses have tried to control their weight at one time or another through dieting, and 22 percent dieted “often” or “always.”

Obviously, food shame, dieting and eating disor-ders not at all limited to college campuses. However, they do take very specifi c and often bizarre forms in a university environment. Rather than thinking of the food we eat in terms of our metabolisms, we college students are often forced to consider it in terms of an administrative, top-down meal plan that artifi cially emphasizes the volume of food consumed. For ex-ample, depending on their year, Vanderbilt students get a set number of meals each week, as well as a set number of entrees and sides at each dining location. This makes it very easy to compare what you’re eating

to what other people are eating, and a quick glance down the lunch line makes it clear who’s trying to get the most food for their meal plan and who’s not.

Multiple times, I have overheard girls at Vanderbilt trying to top each other with how little food they need from their meal plans. I distinctly remember one such conversation that took place between sev-eral of my good girl friends. “I only need, like, a sand-wich, not the whole meal plan!” one claimed. “And I usually only get an apple!” the other countered. I kept quiet the entire time, thinking ashamedly, ‘Well, I need my whole meal plan.’”

Part of this need is due to the fact that I have a high metabolism and work out pretty intensely fi ve or six days a week. I also walk miles every day to class

and work, since I live in Blakemore (aka as far away from campus as possible without offi cially being off campus). Burning more calories equals needing more calories, and even though I stick to a limited diet for a college student, that doesn’t change that fact that I still need to eat more food than my two friends to keep from getting hungry. Nor does it stop strangers from eying my tray in the Vanderbilt dining room, silently food shaming my large portions and scraped-clean plates.

Not all stomachs are created equal, but the meal plan makes it seem like they are least comparable, and college students, particularly girls, are acting on these cues to contribute to a culture of food shame. However, in the world beyond the campus gates, you can cook what you want to eat and eat as much of it as you want. Have a high metabolism? You’re free to chow down. Not that hungry? Eat only that apple (and you don’t have to worry about wasting the rest of your meal plan).

Granted, food shame doesn’t disappear once you step foot off campus, and the idea that girls should eat as little as possible in order to stay thin and attractive is prevalent in many different communi-ties. But out in the “real” world, food shame can’t be quantifi ed in entrees and sides, and that’s what makes its infl uence on college students so potent — and that’s why college communities should become more aware of what their meal plans affect beyond just waistlines.

KARA SHERRERis a sophomore in the College of Arts and Science and social media director for Vanderbilt Student Communications. She can be reached at [email protected].

Not all stomachs are created equal, but the meal plan makes it seem like they are least com-parable, and college students, particularly girls, are acting on these cues to contribute to a culture of food shame. ’

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DAVID SHUCKis a sophomore in the College of Arts and Science and a member of the Vanderbilt debate team. He can be reached at [email protected].

‘If only ...’Human rights abuses in North Korea remind us not to repeat past mistakes

OPINION

T his Monday was an exciting one for the citizens of North Korea. Once every fi ve or so years the country holds a high-

ly democratic election for its people to approve the new roster of government offi cials. In a landslide victory, Kim Jong Un won the race for his leadership post with a stunning 100 percent of the vote. As North Korea’s state-operated news station reported, this unanimous decision expresses the North Korean “people’s absolute support and pro-found trust in supreme leader Kim Jong Un as they single-mindedly remain loyal to him.” How pleasant.

Of course, Kim Jong Un ran unop-posed. In fact, so did every single elect-ed offi cial; these are not coincidences. The boxes that can be checked are not names, but “Yes” or “No” beneath a single candidate’s name — spoiler, near everyone votes “Yes.” Complete faith is quite easy to manufacture when speak-ing out gets you sent to a labor camp.

Recently the U.N. released a detailed report on the ongoing atrocities perpe-trated by and in North Korea. During a news conference, the chairman of the

independent Commission of Inquiry made the point that the human rights abuses happening right now as you, the reader, read these lines are nearly as grave and appalling as those we remember from the horrors of the Ho-locaust. A spokesman at the conference refl ected, “At the end of the Second World War so many people said ‘if only we had known … if only we had known the wrongs that were done in the coun-tries of the hostile forces,’” intimating that just maybe they would have done something sooner to stop the most terrifying crimes against humanity this earth has seen.

Looking to today, it seems that people do know what’s happening in another such criminal state. The report details that there is: “An almost complete denial of the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion”; discrimination against women is “pervasive in all aspects of society”; the state “has used food as a means of control over the population” and deliberately blocked aid for ideological and power-hungry reasons, causing the deaths of “hundreds of thousands”

of people; “hundreds of thousands of political prisoners” have died in “un-speakable atrocities” in prison camps in the past 50 years; and security forces “systematically employ violence and punishments that amount to gross hu-man rights violations in order to create a climate of fear.”

So here we are; it’s terribly easy to say “if only” about the past once it’s too late to raise a fi nger. “If only,” however, hardly works if we knew and never raised one. North Korea as an inter-national threat can seem impotent:

Most military exercises seem to be mere saber-rattling, and if past missile launches are any indication of techno-logical ability there’s not too much to worry about on that front. Regardless, the country remains an undoubtedly terrifying threat to its citizens. If the modern world would like to believe that if it had indeed known about the horrors of the Holocaust it would have intervened, at the risk of hypocrisy it is obligated to intervene in this echo.

I do not intend here to use such a weighty comparison lightly; rather, I intend to show that there are commit-ments countries like America would like to hold that require validation. If a country in the contemporary world is able to get away with such horrors as North Korea is trying to, countries that swear they would never allow for past outrages must either act or come to terms with their own performance.

No, America does not have to in-tervene in the moral wasteland that is North Korea. But if it does not, I hope to never again hear it speak the delu-sion that if it could intervene, it would.

It’s terribly easy to say ‘if only’ about the past once it’s too late to raise a fi nger. ‘If only,’ however, hardly works if we knew and never raised one. ’

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THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER u WWW.INSIDEVANDY.COM WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 2014 11OPINION

AROUND NASHVILLE

ALEC MYSZKA / THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER

Hailing from Southern California, Young the Giant performed at the Ryman Auditorium on Tuesday, March 11. Their current tour comes on the heels of their sophomore album, “Mind over Matter,” which peaked at No. 7 on the Billboard 200 charts. Lead singer Sameer Gadiha utilizes two microphones as he switches between two separate effects to liven the performance.

Young the Giant at the Ryman

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sports THE BIG STATTotal number of appearances by the Commodores in the SEC tournament.

This year’s will be the team’s first trip as the 11th seed. 53

25 min. after first game, SEC TV AND ESPN325 min. after first game, SEC TV AND ESPN3

SOUTH CAROLINA

AUBURN12

13

12

13

VANDERBILT

MISSISSIPPI STATE

11

14

12

13

11

14

7 ARKANSAS5

1314

OLE MISS6

12

13

11

14 TEXAS A&M

MISSOURI

9

8

12

13

11

14 ALABAMA10

7 LSU

6 p.m., SEC TV AND ESPN3

Noon, SEC TV AND ESPN3

25 min. after first game, SEC TV AND ESPN36 p.m., SEC TV AND ESPN3

FIRST ROUNDMARCH 12

SECOND ROUNDMARCH 13

25 min. after first game, SEC TV AND ESPN3

12

13

11

14

7

FLORIDA1

12

13

11

14

7

1 TENNESSEE4

11

14

75 KENTUCKY2

12

13

11

14

7562 GEORGIA3

6 p.m., SEC TV AND ESPN3

Noon, SEC TV AND ESPN3

25 min. after first game, SEC TV AND ESPN3

THIRD ROUNDMARCH 14The

march to madness

The Vanderbilt men’s basketball team has a history of performing well under the bright lights of the SEC tournament. After taking home the trophy as the third seed in 2012, the 10th-seeded Commodores pulled off two upsets, including a 64-48 stunner over Kentucky, before falling to eventual tourna-ment champion Ole Miss in the semifinals of the 2013 tournament. With mediocrity serving as the theme of SEC basketball this season, the Georgia Dome could very well host a drama starring the 11th-seeded Com-modores.

Vanderbilt hits the court Wednesday for a first-round matchup against Mississippi State, the No. 14 seed. The Bulldogs are on a 13-game losing streak that extends back to Jan. 25, and the Commodores won their only meeting this season, a scrappy 55-49 victory at home. Second team All-SEC forward Rod Odom led the Commodores in scoring with 18 points, while All-SEC freshman center

Damian Jones added 13 points during his 27 minutes on the court.

If the Commodores can outmuscle the Bulldogs, they’ll move on to face the sixth-seeded Ole Miss Rebels. The Commodores dropped both games to the Rebels this season, once by a score of 63-52 and again in the final game of the season 65-62. Despite the unfavorable outcomes, Vanderbilt has been able to contain SEC villain and sharp-shooter Marshall Henderson, holding him to 5-of-19 from the field on his Senior Day. The success of the Commodores will depend on their ability to prevent Henderson from getting open looks beyond the 3-point arc. If they can do that, the No. 3-seeded Georgia Bulldogs will await them in the quarterfinals.

Vanderbilt defeated Georgia on the road on Jan. 29 to snap a Bulldog eight-game win streak. In addition to a strong 16-point, 12-rebound performance by Odom and clutch free throws down the stretch by the entire team, the Commodore defense held Georgia to a 27.3 field goal percentage. Should they get by the Bulldogs, Vanderbilt will yet again find itself in the semifinals.

Commodores look for hot SEC tournament start against Bulldogs

By ALLISON MASTSports editor--------------------

KEVIN BARNETT / THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER

JAMES TATUM / THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER

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25 min. after first game, SEC TV AND ESPN3

FLORIDA

TENNESSEE

KENTUCKY

GEORGIA

6 p.m., SEC TV AND ESPN3

Noon, SEC TV AND ESPN3

25 min. after first game, SEC TV AND ESPN3

THIRD ROUNDMARCH 14

1314

12117562

12

13

11

14

7562

Noon, ABC

25 min. after first semifinal, ABC

SEMIFINALSMARCH 15

CHAMPIONSHIP GAMEMARCH 16

2:15 P.M., ESPN

Getting hot in Atlanta: The SEC tournament bracket

*all times CST

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“Everyone else will get on the bus if it’s moving where we want it to go,” he says now. “You’ve just got to give them something to believe in.”

Derek Mason stands just 5-foot-8. Still, hard facial features give way to a stout frame — the

musculature of a former athlete — and when he speaks, boom-ing with the voice of a 300-pound lineman, Mason appears much larger than his actual sum.

Today, the coach sits at a glass-and-mahogany desk in his new office, in Vanderbilt’s newly reno-vated athletic facility.

“Vanderbilt’s going to be there,” he says, staring over a massive computer screen he sometimes uses to watch game film. “I’ve seen that. I’ve slept on it. I’ve dreamt it.”

An only child, the 44-year-old grew up knocking around on playgrounds and backyards with friends and cousins in Phoenix, Ariz., sticking his chest out and jumping on his toes to appear taller. “That’s where the chip on my shoulder came from,” he says. “Growing up as a smaller kid in the neighborhood, you always had to compete, on the field or the basketball court. That chip never really left. I always like to challenge, and I always like to be challenged.”

Two weeks after this year’s Rose Bowl, Mason flew to Atlanta, where Vanderbilt Athletic Direc-tor David Williams, Chancellor

Nicholas Zeppos and a few other members of Vanderbilt’s inner circle had gathered to interview candidates for the school’s open head coaching position.

“I knew then — I knew going in,” Mason said. “I packed a black suit and a gold tie, with a full in-tention of trying to get the job.”

Eight candidates received interviews for the Vanderbilt job. Mason was the last one to check in.

During the interview, Mason laid out his plan to hoist Vander-bilt to a higher plateau. He would compile a coaching staff that combined NFL and college experi-ence. He would emphasize player development, not just recruiting, and implement a roster-building philosophy that trickled all the way down to the walk-ons. He would work to minimize injuries and maximize Vanderbilt’s op-portunities on the football field through scheduling.

“The enthusiasm was clear,” Williams said. “And coming from Stanford, he had a great idea of what we were trying to do here.”

Williams added: “Not just from a performance perspective, he

talked about how he saw Vander-bilt, from a football point of view, where Stanford was — when their head coach had left, and David Shaw took over. He knew we had some kids who were prob-ably hurting because the previ-ous coach and staff had left. He remembered when that happened at Stanford, and what they did to take care of the players.”

Fifteen minutes into Mason’s in-terview, Williams said, they knew they had their man.

Afterward, Williams asked Ma-son to stay in Atlanta. “We didn’t want him to fly home,” he said. “We didn’t want to let him go. We loved that he was talking about the long term. We had just been here three years ago, talking to coaches, and we didn’t want to be here three years from now.”

On Jan. 18, Ethel Manuel was at home, in Phoe-nix, watching college basketball on ESPNU.

Her eyes flickered to the bottom of the screen. A name she recognized was scrawling across.

“I found out on TV!” Mason’s mother exclaims. “It said he had been hired by Vanderbilt, and I had no idea.”

At home in Phoenix, Manuel raised Mason with high athletic expectations. His grandfather played baseball. His father and several uncles played football in college. One uncle even made it to the NFL. “Sports were always a part of our house,” she said.

Mason played running back and defensive back, then. By high school, he was playing only de-fense and taking a double shift on the basketball team. At Camelback High, he played all four years for both squads, but when it was time to go to college, it was clear Mason would choose football.

“I had my own ideas about where I wanted to go,” he said. “My mom had a sure idea of where I was going.”

Manuel said, “Derek needed to

‘I always like to challenge, and I always like to be challenged’— Continued from PAGE 1

PHOTOS BY BOSLEY JARRETT / THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER

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be close to home.” At Division I-AA Northern Ari-

zona, Mason played cornerback under an all-star cohort of future NFL coaches including Andy Reid, Brad Childress, Marty Mornhin-whig and Bill Callahan. At prac-tice, he lined up across from four future NFL receivers. In four years, Mason had four different position coaches. No matter what impact he made on the football field, he was forced to prove himself to a new power each spring.

“Iron sharpening iron” is how Mason describes that environ-ment now. “It never allowed me the opportunity to feel comfort-able,” he says. “Because I was a smaller DB, I needed to make sure that they knew who I was.”

“You could tell then that Derek had a fiery personality,” said Chil-dress, a former head coach of the Minnesota Vikings and now an as-sistant for the Kansas City Chiefs.

After college, Mason jumped into coaching. Before he was defensive coordinator at Stanford, Mason circled the fringes of Divi-sion I. He led wide receivers at We-ber State, running backs at Idaho State, defensive backs at Bucknell and special teams at Utah. He was a co-defensive coordinator at St. Mary’s before coaching receivers at New Mexico State and Ohio.

Then, when Childress was hired as head coach of the Vikings in 2006, he created a position for Mason on his staff as an assistant secondary coach.

“Derek just has an incredible amount of enthusiasm for the profession, a vision, an energy that makes him stand out,” Childress said. “Guys like him are hard to come by. A team starts to take on their personality, and that’s valu-able.”

Mason stayed with Minnesota through the 2009 season. Coach-ing in the NFC championship game, he watched from the side-line as Vikings quarterback Brett Favre tossed a game-sealing inter-ception, a trip to the biggest game barely eluding his team’s grasp.

A few weeks later, Stanford head coach Jim Harbaugh called. A new opportunity awaited: coaching defensive backs for the Cardinal.

Four years later, on the cor-ner of West End and 28th Avenues in Nashville, artist Michael Cooper

grabs a paintbrush, dips it in red and begins a day’s work. From 9 in the morning to 5 at night, he sets another coaching transition in brick.

For 22 years, Cooper has maintained a prominent mural of Commodore head coaches splashed across the outer wall of a Verizon store, just a few blocks away from Vanderbilt Stadium.

He started with Gerry DiNardo, whose Vanderbilt teams went 9-22 in SEC play. Then came Rod Dowhower (1-15 in the SEC) and Woody Widenhofer (4-36). Over the years, Cooper added coaches from the baseball team and the men’s and women’s basketball teams. He has been here 15 times in total. Each time, more people show up to watch him add an-other face to the wall.

Today, he buries James Frank-lin’s likeness beneath Mason’s. A new grin reflects over West End.

It is no secret the Commodores hope to take the next step to join the Southeastern Conference elite, to weave a culture of pow-erhouse football into a campus more renowned for its academic heritage, medical research and

its large, varied assortment of trees. Certainly, 18 wins over the last two seasons is nothing to scoff at. But progress in college football is not linear. A significant gap lies between failure and suc-cess. The void separating success and a national title, though, is cavernous.

Mason knows the stakes, the obstacles. He knows he coaches in a conference that has sent nine teams to the BCS Champi-onship Game in eight years. He knows Vanderbilt just won one of its biggest games in recent school history — at the BBVA Compass Bowl. He knows his new school still has a long way to go if it is to reach the towering goal he has set.

“You can try to climb Mount Everest,” Mason said. “You can get to stage 16, but if you have two more stages to go, those last two stages are tough. Those are the hardest ones.”

He continued: “You have to take your players to a dark place, a place that they’ve never been. Because they’ve been to 9-4. They know what that looks like. But you’ve got to take them to a dark place. You’ve got to close the door, turn off the lights and say, ‘Boo.’ You make them experience adversity. And then, in the game,

they flip on the lights and they say, ‘Aha. I know what this is. I recognize where I’m at, and I can thrive in the moment.’”

After descending from the stage on National Signing Day, Mason lingered for a few minutes, signing autographs and snapping photos with fans. Dozens encircled his figure.

A few minutes later, an el-derly man in a tweed flat cap and glasses cut through the crowd and approached the new coach. “I tried to run after a bus once,” the man said, hunching over Ma-son, grinning. “Someone shouted at me, ‘What are you doing?’ I stopped, and I said that I needed to get somewhere, that I needed to catch the bus. Well, then that person gave me some very good advice. He said: ‘I need to win the lottery, but that doesn’t mean I’ve got the ticket.’”

The old man laughs. The creases around his eyes deepen. Mason angles his shoulders away. He turns his head back toward this skeptic and strains to smile.

“I take a different approach,” the coach says. “If you believe, everyone else around you even-tually will, too.”

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Spring break sports roundup:

BOWLINGBowling went 7-3 to fi nish second in the

Greater Ozark Invitational with junior Rebecca Reguero earning all-tournament honors. The team won the Music City Classic with its 300th perfect game.

MEN'S GOLFNo. 17 men’s golf was in Los

Cabos, Mexico over the break and tied for fi fth in the Querencia Cabo Intercollegiate.

WOMEN'S BASKETBALLWomen’s basketball was the

No. 8 seed for the SEC tourna-ment but fell 53-43 to the No. 9 seed, Georgia. Now 18-12 overall, the team waits for the NCAA bracket to be revealed Monday, March 17.

MEN'S BASKETBALLMen’s basketball dropped its last home game

57-51 to LSU and lost at Ole Miss 65-62 in the fi nal game of the regular season. Now 15-15 overall, 7-11 in conference play, the team is the No. 11 seed in the SEC tournament and faces Mississippi State Wednesday, March 12.

WOMEN'SGOLFWomen’s golf fi nished second

at the Darius Rucker Intercol-legiate, scoring 872 (293-290-289) in a fi eld with 14 of the top 30 teams in the country. Freshman Simin Feng tied for third overall, shooting 212 (74-69-69) over the weekend, one under par.

BOSLEY JARRETT / THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER

By KATIE WALDENSports writer--------------------

It’s the freakin’ weekend (rotation)Starting pitchers Tyler Beede, Jared Miller and

Tyler Ferguson each picked up wins to lead the Commodores to their fourth weekend series sweep this season in as many tries, combining to strike out 23 Winthrop hitters in 20 2/3 total innings. The three allowed just two runs all weekend and now have a cumulative record of 11-0 this year at the end of nonconference play.

X fi nds his spotAfter going hitless the previous series against

Stanford, third baseman Xavier Turner bounced back in a big way by going 4-for-5 on Friday with two RBIs and fi nished the series with a 6-for-11 mark. The preseason All-American has also been carrying his weight in the fi eld, having made more than a handful of spectacular plays with the glove to this point.

Freshman phenomFirst-year outfi elder Bryan Reynolds has made

his presence felt in the Commodore batting order, having seized an everyday spot in the lineup batting second and playing all three outfi eld positions. Reynolds went 7-for-14 in the three games against Winthrop, driving in four runs and scoring four more. The switch hitter has given coach Tim Corbin an extra table setter at the top of his lineup alongside leado� hitter Dansby Swanson, giving Zander Wiel and Turner ample opportunities to bring in runs.

3 UPBy MAX HERZ

Sports writer--------------------

BASEBALLThe No. 8 Commodore baseball team swept

Stanford and Winthrop and won midweek games at home against Tennessee Tech and away at Middle Tennessee State. Now 16-2 and undefeated in weekend games, the team is rid- ing an eight-game win streak to open confer-ence play against LSU on Friday, March 14.

SPORTS

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THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER ◆ WWW.INSIDEVANDY.COM WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 2014 17

Men’s tennis, currently ranked 18th, took down LSU 4-1 on the road and returned to campus to defeat Ball State 6-1 for Coach Ian Duvenhage’s 100th career win. The team fell 4-0 to No. 8 Texas A&M over the weekend.

MEN'S TENNIS

LACROSSEWomen’s lacrosse pulled off an upset 16-15 victory

over No. 13 Stanford in overtime on March 2. Team captain Abby Wheeler scored a career-high 7 goals and was named ALC offensive player of the week. The team fell 10-8 to No. 18 Denver in a midweek game and opens conference play March 15 at home against Penn State.

WOMEN'S TENNISThe No. 7 women’s tennis team started spring break

with a sweep of No. 41 LSU 7-0, going 1, 3, 2 in doubles and 5, 4, 3 in singles. The team carried its momentum to Missouri and won 7-0 for coach Geoff Macdonald’s 500th career win. The Commodores fell to No. 10 Texas A&M 5-2 over the weekend in College Station, moving to 10-4 overall, 3-1 in SEC play.

While most students had the week o� , the Commodores were still in the heart of their spring seasons Ro’s cold bat

As far as his bat is concerned, freshman speedster Ro Coleman has yet to make a major impact on a ball game this season. Although he has consistently been given chances to start games, the 5-5 outfi elder is hitting just .172 in 13 games played at the end of nonconference play. Coleman’s chances to start may become less frequent as SEC games loom, and he may be relegated to a situational bunting or pinch-running role for the rest of the season.

Nobody homeDespite announcements of well over 2,000

tickets sold, the stands at Hawkins Field have been sparsely fi lled to this point, most notably the weekend series against Winthrop as some beautiful baseball weather overtook Nashville. As conference play begins, more season ticket holders and students will likely show to claim their seats and give this ball club the support it deserves.

SenioritisSenior pitcher and noted stretching circle

leader Steven Rice has only seen time on the fi eld in between innings this season as he recovers from an o� season shoulder injury. Corbin hinted that Rice could have returned against Winthrop, but the senior did not make an appearance in the series.

3 DOWN

Note: All statistics are for the Winthrop series, played March 7-9.

BOSLEY JARRETT / THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER

SPORTS

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GO DO

THIS Interfaith Panel 2014: Does Religion Do More Harm Than Good? This year’s annual Interfaith Panel will discuss how di� erent faiths can occasionally produce bad results in

the name of God. The panel will include a member from the Atheist, Christian, Hindu, Jewish and Muslim communities to share their opinions regarding the social and political benefi ts and dangers of religion. The event will be in the Ben Schulman Center (Grins) at 8 p.m. and include a free catered dinner.

The United States prison population is the largest prison population in the world, with nearly 1 in 100 citizens locked behind bars. But as prisons are often located in isolated places, many do not see the implications of mass incarcera-tion in their daily lives.

The Vanderbilt Prison Project, a student organization committed to fi ghting the injustices of the criminal justice system, hopes to engage the Vanderbilt community in the experiences of those affected by the nation’s prison system.

Founded in the 1970s, VPP originally intended to explore the connection between inmates reentering society and stu-dents graduating from college, as both are expected to leave a bubble to enter the “real world.” Though the organization began four decades ago, it has seen a resurgence of activ-ity in the past year, with increased programming and even a class for members to attend inside Riverbend Maximum Security Institution in Nashville.

VPP President Erica Johnson said the class at Riverbend was created after the board met with inmates and discovered they had a lot to offer students. Many of the inmates felt that service organizations often only gave to convicts, while so much was left for visitors to take away from those on the inside. After the conversation, the VPP board worked with inmates to create a Tuesday night class for students to take inside Riverbend. Inmates teach the class, which teaches students about the justice system and what it means to expe-rience incarceration.

“It is such an honor to hear their stories and be their stu-dents,” Johnson said. “It is so inspiring and encouraging to see people stand up in the midst of a system that is meant to tear them down.”

Though VPP believes it is within its mission to reach out to inmates and serve them, Johnson said prison guards some-times criticize the organization’s efforts.

“They (the guards) say, ‘Well, why do you come here? You can’t help these people. If you want to help people, you should go to the juveniles,’” Johnson said.

But Johnson feels this act of service is valuable, even if many of the men are scheduled to be detained for the rest of their lives.

“These men matter. These men are still human beings. There are people who love them,” she said. “I so fi rmly believe that no matter what you do, you deserve to have your humanity restored, at least on a basic level of having some-

one hear your story.”While VPP actively tries to serve those within the system,

it also works with organizations on the outside. The orga-nization works with Reading Buddies, reading to children whose mothers have been incarcerated, and with grassroots organization Gideon’s Army, which works to dismantle the school-to-prison pipeline.

Even if students do not have time to actively be involved in VPP, Johnson said being informed is the fi rst step. Under-standing the prison system and the legislation surrounding it, as well as voting for politicians approaching the issue in a just way, is what matters most. She also advocates getting educated on the country’s prison system and being sensitive to how it is addressed within U.S. culture.

“Just be conscious,” Johnson said. “There have been a lot of parties recently on campus that have been prison-themed, and my desire is for us to be more sensitive, to not trivialize people’s experiences, and to also realize that we are all affected in various ways.”

Johnson notes that incarceration affects many people, not just those currently behind bars.

“There are people who are victims of crimes, and prison parties can be insensitive to that. There are people who work at Vanderbilt who are on work release, and you never know who they are, but they are here and they are amongst us; there are people who have relatives and friends in prison,” Johnson said. “We should be mindful of the things that we say and mindful of the fact that there are structural issues within our system — it’s not just committing a crime.”

Besides the service work VPP does for those affected by incarceration, the organization also tries to educate the Vanderbilt community on issues relating to incarceration. Its most recent event on Monday hosted former Juvenile Court Magistrate Shelia Calloway, who discussed the path of a juvenile case through the court system, highlighting how young people can be funneled through the prison pipeline.

“I just really believe in reconciliation, and I believe in second chances, and I think that so much of our system is set up so that we fail, and then once we fail there’s no grace. There’s no way out,” Johnson said.

“I believe that should bother us. It should convict us, and it should change us and cause us to change things.”

Those interested in getting involved in VPP or classes on Tuesday (6-8 p.m.) can email Erica Johnson at [email protected].

— Poulumi Banerjee contributed to this report.

By KELLY HALOMLife editor

--------------------

BEHIND THE BARS

Vanderbilt Prison Project fi ghts injustice within the prison system

American adults are behind bars.

in 104

1

of the world’s inmates are in a U.S. prison or jail. *

1 in 4

1 in 14

state general fund dollars are spent on corrections.

* Data provided by the Pew Center on the States, 2012

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ALLIEDCAB

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NEED A RIDE?

• NashvilleCabsarealwayshangingaroundcampusonweekends.

• TheCommodoreCardisanacceptedformofpay-mentifyouhaveCommodoreCashinyouraccount.

• NashvilleCabscanaccommodatemorepeople.

Nashville Allied Cab Uber

Lyft

Nashville Cab, which includes the companies Allied Cab and Nashville Cab, is one of the many taxi services in Nashville. Nashville Cab has partnered with Vanderbilt, so students can pay for rides with their Commodore Cards.

Lyft was founded in 2012 with the tagline “your friend with a car.” Lyft’s primary goal is to provide affordable,

safe and friendly transportation.PROS

CONS

• NashvilleCabsoftenhavefarlongerwaittimesthantheothertwooptions.

• NashvilleCabsoftenhavepoorcustomerservice.

COSTS

ThebasefareforanyNashvilleCab,aswellasformostotherNashvillecabservices,is$3.Foreachadditionalmilethereisachargeof$2andwitheachadditionalpersona$1feeisadded.Theflatratetotheairportisonly$25.Thereisnominimumfeeorcancellationfee.

HOW TO GET A RIDE

Toschedulearide,simplycallthiseasy-to-remembernum-ber:615-333-3333.

• ThoughcabsandUbergothroughtheirownsafetyregu-lations,Lyftdriversgothroughextensivescreenings,backgroundchecks,in-personinterviewsandvehicleinspections,withzerotoleranceofdrugandalcoholuse.

• Lyftisdirectlyconnectedtoyourcreditcardthroughyourphone,sothereisnoneedtoworryabouthavingcashoracreditcardhandy.

PROS

CONS

• LyfthasthesameconsasUber,withtheadditionofbeingmoreexpensive.

COSTSRatesforLyftaresimilartothoseofbothcabsandUber,comingslightlybetweenthetwo.Thereisabasefeeof$2.50witheachadditionalmileat$1.90andthecostperminuteat$0.40.Thereisaminimumfeeof$6anda$5cancellationfee.

HOW TO GET A RIDETouseLyft,justdownloadthephoneappandcreateanaccountwithyouremailandpreferredcreditcard.Throughtheapp,youcanschedulearidetoanydestination.

Uber was founded in 2009 as a luxury-style

transportation company that has now ventured into the “ridesharing” business. Though luxury car services are offered, most vehicles used in ridesharing services are more modest, though still clean and comfortable.

PROS

• JustlikewithLyft,thephoneisconnectedtoacreditcardforeasypayment.

• Driversarefriendlybecausetheyareratedafterridesandarethusincentivizedtobeparticularlynicetotheirriders.

• Uberischeaperthancabservices,withnotipstaken.

CONS

• Itisnotonthecard.• Uberislessaccessiblewithoutasmartphone.

COSTS

Thebasefarestartsat$2.10witheitheranadditional$0.20perminute,ifthecaristravelingabove11mph,or$1.22permilefee.Thereisaminimumof$4.80andacancellationfeeof$10.AdistinctivedifferencebetweenUberandotherservic-esisthatyoucanearnfreeridesafterusingtheserviceacer-tainnumberoftimes.UberhasalsobeenknowntoprovideriderswithspecialgiftssuchasflowersonValentine’sDay.

HOW TO GET A RIDE

AswithLyft,downloadtheappandcreateanaccounttostarttravellingthroughoutthecity.

If you are looking to get around Nashville, but don’t have a car on campus, you’re in luck. Here is a breakdown of some popular transportation options for car-less Vandy students, By Michelle Phan

LIFE

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By MAGGIE KNOXLife reporter--------------------

For college musicians, promoting their music may seem an impossible task. Once they leave the studio, musicians often must rely on social media and current fans to promote their work. In the midst of this di-lemma, Vanderbilt graduates Andrew King and Branden Sanders saw an opportunity to create a central location for college music. So, Mellodi was born.

King and Sanders were brought together through their shared love of music, leading them to start Studio CRB in the Curb Center. Studio CRB was Vanderbilt’s first student-run recording studio. The duo hoped that Studio CRB would provide students with the opportu-nity to produce their own music, but they soon noticed a problem facing many collegiate musicians.

“No matter how good the music was, it sort of trick-led into nowhere once we left the studio,” Sanders said. “We wanted to give that music a context and find a way to share it with colleges across the country.”

After identifying the problem of promotion for young

students, the two created Mellodi, a site where student artists across the country can add their music for free. Any student with a valid .edu email address can register and upload their songs. King and Sanders work with students to curate the music by school, making it easy for students to search for music uploaded by their own classmates.

The site has a clean, iTunes-esque appearance, with features such as top songs, campus picks and new releases Anyone, whether they’re in college or not, can stream music for free. Through leveraging school communities, Mellodi helps artists gain new listen-ers — from classmates and alumni to local music fans and fellow musicians. Currently, there are 22 Vanderbilt artists on Mellodi — as the site has proven to provide a valuable outlet for student musicians on campus.

“It really brings the music community together,” Sanders said.

Since Mellodi’s launch last December, more than 100 artists from 10 different schools have signed up. There are more than 300 tracks on the site, and Mellodi had more than 18,000 views in its first month of existence. King and Sanders hope to expand Mellodi to more cam-puses in the coming months. King attributes the site’s success to the connection it creates between musicians and listeners.

“These people are relatable,” King said. “You can listen to top 40 and be like, yeah, they’re pop stars, but these are people that you have common ground with.”

By going to http://themellodi.com/vanderbilt, students can directly access a list of Vanderbilt artists. Some of the artists currently topping the Vanderbilt charts include Eli Teplin, the most popular artist on Mellodi to date, as well as The Two Friends, Nick Wells and Emma Grager. To explore the site further, visit http://themellodi.com.

Mellodi brings college music to campus

VANDERBILT ALBUMS

LIFE

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After the long cold winter, it’s hard to stay inside for long with the sun now shining. So instead of eating your meals inside, go to one of Nashville’s many eateries with outside seating. From coffee shops to southern favorites, Nashville’s got you covered for enjoying great food, warm weather and good company.

Crema: Sit outdoors at this downtown coffee shop and enjoy one of the best views around. Its quintessential Southern porch lets you take in the many sights of the city, including LP Field, the AT&T Building and the Cumberland River, while you sip on Crema’s signature Cuban coffee. All of Crema’s coffees are ethically sourced and meticulously roasted so you can feel good about enjoying that perfect cup of jo. The menu also includes coffee shop favorites like quiches and chocolate bars. With a relaxed atmosphere and professional service, Crema is the perfect place for coffee connoisseurs and novices alike. Where: 15 Hermitage Ave.; Price range: under $10

Edley’s Bar-B-Que: A delicious combina-tion of barbecue and traditional Nashville meat and three, Edley’s is the place to go for

a truly Southern experience. From sand-wiches to ribs to mac-n-cheese, Edley’s menu includes everyone’s homestyle favorites. The meats are roasted to flavor-ful perfection, and the Southern-style sides are cooked from scratch daily. The best part about Edley’s, however, has to be the restaurant’s extensive outdoor patio. Hang-ing lights set the tone while long tables make sure there’s room for everyone. Between the delicious barbecue and family-style seating, Edley’s is a favorite for enjoying time with friends and family.Where: 2706 12th Ave. S; Price range: $10-20

Tavern: A popular place for weekend brunch, Tavern in midtown is also a prime location to sit outdoors. Featuring a bi-level patio with the same sleek design as the inside, Tavern is great for outdoor eating any time of day. The award-winning brunch menu includes everything from red velvet waffles to a Singapore stir-fry. Lunch and dinner is also fantastic, offering dishes such as chicken masala and fish tacos. An exten-sive drink menu completes the experience at one of Nashville’s favorite dining options.Where: 1904 Broadway; Price range: $10-30

Rosepepper Cantina: Enjoy some of the best Mexican food East Nashville has to offer in the warm spring weather. Rosepepper Cantina’s large, outdoor patio includes lights

and colorful artwork that create a festive atmosphere both day and night. With a wide range of unique and traditional dishes, from the delicious buffalo white cheese dip to the vegan burrito, Rosepepper promises to be a fun and delicious experience. The menu also features Nashville’s most extensive tequila bar to compliment every dish. When all is said and done, you might just feel as though you are in Cabo.Where: 1907 Eastland Ave.; Price range: $10-30

Warm weather eatsBy ALISON VON DEYLEN

Life reporter--------------------

BOSLEY JARRETT / THE VANDERBILT HUSTLER

Edley’s Barbecue serves up southern favorites in the 12 South area. The outdoor patio is the perfect dining spot to celebrate the beginning of spring.

LIFE

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Answers to Feb. 26th’s puzzle

Answers to Feb. 26th’s puzzle