2/22/2016

Page 1

BATTLE FOR PRIVACY

Road Trip

Taking sides in the Apple, FBI stand off Opinions, page 12

DePaulia

The

Plan a spring break trip that will make you and your wallet happy Focus, page 14

Pinnacle award winner, No. 1 College Weekly Newspaper

Volume #100 | Issue #15 | Feb. 22, 2016 | depauliaonline.com

Enrollment down for fifth straight year

23,000 students 13,000 devices at any moment 1,500 access points Three days of downtime

DEPAUL’S WI-FI Students frustrated with internet speeds, connections By Piper Schad Contributing Writer

I

n the middle of an online exam, freshman Vereshia Noble was cut off. Her computer had disconnected from DePaul’s Wi-Fi, which she relies up on as a campus resident. But this wasn’t the first time. “At a school where a large percentage of coursework is done online, I expected a much more stable, secure and fast connection to the internet,” Noble said. “It is a service that we, as a community, are paying for and when that service fails to work, it hinders our ability to academically perform at our very best.” A mass connection outage earlier this month highlights two of the most common technical grievances DePaul students have: Internet connection and cell phone coverage on campus.

From the evening of Feb. 6 to the evening of Feb. 9, the majority of the DePaul community was unable to connect to the “depaulsecure” network. Information Services (IS) Director of Infrastructure Josh Luttig called it “the most widespread wireless outage that I’m aware of in recent history.” The reason for this outage was an expired security certificate. The issue was revised and an email was sent out to the community, stating that users may need to re-connect and accept the new SSL certificate. Luttig encourages students to use this network instead of “depaulwireless” whenever possible. While this mass outage was recognized and taken care of as quickly as possible, many students experience on-going struggles with Wi-Fi connection around campus. Freshman Frank Kreutzer often has difficulties with Internet connection at Corcoran Hall where he lives.

See WI-FI, page 8

By Brenden Moore News Editor

A fall enrollment summary conducted by the office of Enrollment Management and Marketing revealed a continual, but less-than-expected decline in the student population amid an environment that reflects national trends. The report also touted record racial diversity, a key part of the department’s enrollment strategy. Overall, university enrollment was 23,539 during fall quarter, a slight drop from last year and the fifth consecutive year of enrollment decline. Nearly 2,000 less students are enrolled now than were in 2011, when enrollment reached a peak. Yet university officials said they are encouraged as numbers in every category (undergraduate, graduate and law) exceeded budgeted expectations and a record haul of tuition revenue was still collected in spite of the overall declines. In an interview with the DePaulia last month, Executive Vice President Jeff Bethke said that the university tries to budget conservatively, which may partially be responsible for the betterthan-expected numbers. “Generally as a philosophy within the budgeting process, you try to budget conservatively,” said Executive Vice President Jeff Bethke. “So, in the ideal world, you wouldn’t have variances either way, but the real world doesn’t work that way. Generally, you want to build a budget that is more likely to have a positive variance than a negative variance.” “I think we’ve been remarkably successful in a very challenging, competitive and volatile environment,” said David Kalsbeek, the university’s

See ENROLLMENT, page 4

SLICE RIGHT: Student uses Tinder, lies about identity for free pizza By Mariah Woelfel Multimedia Editor

Ian Gaetz doesn’t get toppings on his pizzas. Toppings complicate things. “You’ve got to make it easy for them. Get them in and out. Cheese pizza, gluten free crust, that’s it,” he said. “Them” isn’t the delivery drivers, the pizza makers or the employees taking orders at the pizza place. They are the guys on Tinder who Gaetz has convinced on seven different occasions to buy him dinner. But it isn’t his shaggy brown hair, thick framed glasses or boyish figure that

has guys calling in a deep dish Lou or $19 large cheese from Homeslice. It’s the long brown hair, borderline flirtatious words and promise of naked pictures from Laura Lovelace, a woman who doesn’t exist. “I made her a fake Facebook page and had her join a class of DePaul group, and then added a bunch of DePaul students to make her look reputable,” Gaetz said of the fake profile he created on Facebook and then on Tinder, using the real photos of a friend to depict a “Pizza lover” psychology major with “Daddy issues.” Gaetz is among many participating in what is trending as “The Tinder Games,”

See TINDER page 19

MARIAH WOELFEL | THE DEPAULIA

DePaul sophomore Ian Gaetz holds his pizza boxes as a badge of honor. Gaetz created a fake profile on Tinder as a woman, seducing men to order him free pizza.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.