LEXI BROWNING | THE PARTHENON
SUPER MOON RISES MORE ON LIFE!
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2014 | VOL. 118 NO. 14 | MARSHALL UNIVERSITY’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER | marshallparthenon.com
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The Healing Field, a memorial and tribute to the 3,000 people who died Sept. 11, the 75 members of the 1970 Marshall plane crash and veterans of the armed forces features 2,600 American flags in Spring Hill Cemetery in Huntington. LEXI BROWNING | THE PARTHENON
CCC feeds students for a buck By AUNDREA HORSLEY
THE PARTHENON The Marshall University Campus Christian Center served its first Lunch For a Buck Tuesday from noon to 1:30 p.m. Students and faculty who purchased a meal received a sandwich, a bag of chips, a cookie and a drink for $1. The CCC formed a committee of one person from each of the Presbyterian, Baptist, Methodist and Episcopalian denominations within the center. Each committee member reached out to local churches for help with the event. A church from each denomination is scheduled to provide food of its choice on its scheduled event date. Jean McClelland, a committee member, said she likes the chance to connect with the students who come to the CCC for lunch. “It is enjoyable to be able to interact with the students and give the churches an opportunity to invite them to take part in their activities,” McClelland said. “It is a way for the church to get to know the students and connect with them.” Tuesday’s Lunch For a Buck was provided by members from the First Presbyterian Church. Patty Anderson, a member of the First Presbyterian Church, helped serve food during the event. “It’s always nostalgic for me to be at the Campus Christian Center because I was married here almost 51 years ago,” Anderson said. “It is just enjoyable to be here and get to interact with the students. It is also important for the students to realize that the Christian community cares about them as students.” Travie Ross, office manager at the Campus Christian Center, has worked with the center since 2011. She said the purpose is to both feed the students and allow local churches to contact students they might normally not be able to contact. “The event is communal,” Ross said. “Several denominations come together for one purpose.” The Campus Christian Center will continue to have the Lunch For a Buck event every other Tuesday for the semester. Aundrea Horsley can be contacted at horsley9@marshall.edu.
Annual remembrance walk to honor victims of 9/11 tragedy
POPULAR WEBSITES ADVOCATE FREE INTERNET By ANTHONY DAVIS
THE PARTHENON Popular websites are demonstrating what saying goodbye to net neutrality could mean for the average Internet user by displaying an infinitely spinning loading symbol to illustrate what surfing the web might be like without net neutrality. Popular tech companies such as
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By HANNAH SAYRE
THE PARTHENON Students of Marshall University and members of the Huntington community will honor those who died in the tragic events of Sept. 11, 2001. Students will gather at the Rec Center Thursday at 5:30 p.m. to prepare to walk to Spring Hill Cemetery for the Patriot Day national service and remembrance ceremony. Participants will walk to the cemetery at 6 p.m.
American flags will be distributed and participants will carry them to the resting place of Huntington native and Marshall Medical School graduate Dr. Paul W. Ambrose, who died aboard American Airlines Flight 77, and in honor of the others who died and the families they left behind. Cody Jones, Student Government Association diversity and veterans liaison, said he is privileged to be chosen to coordinate this event for Marshall.
Reddit, Etsy, Meetup and Imgur will team up Wednesday to show Internet users how they will be affected if net neutrality is taken away in what they are calling Go Slow Day. According to Fight for the Future, an open Internet advocacy group, popular websites will not actually run slower on Go Slow Day, however, they will display decorative messages that explain the importance of net neutrality. Preston McNair, a freshman computer forensics major, described what net neutrality means to him. “The Internet should be accessible to everybody, despite your economic status,” McNair said. “Whether you’re a student or how avid you are with the Internet, it just makes sense to make it all equal. No organizations or companies like Comcast own the Internet, so why should companies attempt to manage it and create their own structure around it?” Net neutrality, according to many websites, is threatened by Internet service providers that wish to charge more for services with greater bandwidth, such as Netflix and YouTube.
According to battleforthenet.com, this would allow big service providers to move certain websites into the slow lane — literally slowing down Internet service for popular websites like Netflix. So what is at stake if net neutrality is taken away? According to the FCC, The Open Internet laws adopted in 2010 allow the Internet to be free, publicly available and free flowing, so all information is accessible at the same speed, regardless of how much is paid. Free Internet also makes it possible for anyone with access to easily communicate, create, participate, do business and revolutionize the Internet as people have since its inception. Among the enemies of net neutrality are Comcast, AT&T, Verizon and Time Warner Cable, according to battleforthenet.com. Though Comcast is listed as one of the enemies, the company states otherwise. “A free and open internet stimulates competition, promotes innovation, fosters job creation and drives business,” according to the Comcast website. “Comcast is the only Internet service
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“This march will unite people from many different paths of life to stand and walk together as brothers and sisters in honor of those who perished because of the acts of hatred that comprised Sept. 11,” Jones said. SGA asks those who are attending the event to wear green in honor of Dr. Ambrose. Hannah Sayre can be contacted at sayre81@marshall.edu.
“No organizations or companies like Comcast own the internet, so why should companies attempt to manage it and create their own structure around it?” - PRESTON MCNAIR, FRESHMAN COMPUTER FORENSICS MAJOR provider in America bound by full net neutrality rules, ensuring an open Internet and protecting customers.” Jody Perry, executive director of technology services at Marshall University, expressed his thoughts on the Comcast quote. He said actions speak louder than words and people should investigate how much money Comcast has spent on FCC lobbying. Go Slow Day lasts from midnight to 11:59 p.m. Wednesday. Anthony Davis can be contacted at davis669@marshall.edu.
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