January 13, 2014

Page 1

Monday, Januar y 13, 20 14

NO DRINKING GAMES

Volume L X X V III, Number 2 7

w w w.mus t angne w s .com

NO HARD ALCOHOL

COMPLETE GUEST LISTS

ZACH MAHER | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

GREEK SHUTDOWN Brooke Sperbeck

@BrookeSperbeck7

Handle pulls, vodka shots and beer pong — these would no longer be frat party staples under a recently proposed greek event registration policy. The policy could be passed this week, but fraternity and sorority presidents are hung up on other details in the document. For now, greek organizations are sitting indefinitely on social probation. As negotiations continue over a proposed party registration policy for Cal Poly greek life, fraternities and sororities are now in a balancing act between rescheduling events and working to reach a compromise on the policy with administrators. “Until an agreement is reached, all Interfraternity Council (IFC), Panhellenic Council, and United Soror-

ity and Fraternity Council (USFC) chapters are on social probation,” Coordinator of Fraternity and Sorority Life Kathryn O’Hagan wrote in an email to IFC, Panhellenic, and USFC council presidents on Friday. According to the email, an organization on social probation is not allowed to conduct any social activities within its own chapter, nor with any

other student organization. “The chapter may conduct any other activity that is not defined as social (i.e. brotherhood/ sisterhood, community service, philanthropy, meetings, alumni events, etc.) Alcohol will not be allowed at nonsocial events or activities,” O’Hagan’s email explained. Four fraternity events were cancelled this past weekend because of the pro-

bation, IFC President and business administration junior Domenic Hjerpe said. One event affected by the probation was a “formal party,” scheduled for Friday by Delta Sigma Phi, Chapter President and nutrition senior Gear McMillan said. “We were going to have something on Friday, and now we cut it and we’ve already rescheduled it for next

week, but if that doesn’t work out, we’ll just keep pushing it back, and then it might just end up getting X’d out all together,” McMillan said. Panhellenic President and business administration junior Danielle Durante said she wasn’t aware of any sorority events that had been postponed or cancelled this weekend, because most sororities had events planned later in the

month or in early February. Biological sciences sophomore and Gamma Phi Beta member Molly Fraser said her sorority did not have to cancel or postpone any events yet, and that everyone has been “OK” with the probation so far. >>

see SHUTDOWN, pg 2.

CATCH ME IF YOU CAN Big business, not university, tracks piracy on campus

Brenna Swanston @Brenna_Swanston

Shaun Kaumann Special to Mustang News

PREVIEW

PREVIEW

IAN BILLINGS| STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

DOUBLE-DIP: Men’s and women’s

hoops defeat Santa Barbara Stephan Teodosescu and Evan Morter @steodosescu and @CPMustangSports

DAVID JANG | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Electronic music DJ Marcel Everett (XXYYXX) took the the main gym of the Recreation Center by storm this past Friday for a free concert. The 18-year-old one-man show’s performance was slated to begin at 9 p.m. to a gym full of community members. >>

see XXYYXX, pg 4.

PREVIEW Both the Cal Poly men’s and women’s basketball teams took down rival UC Santa Barbara on Saturday night. The men’s squad used a career-high 17 points from walk-on Anthony Silvestri to take down the Gauchos in Goleta for the first time since 2007. The women’s team pulled away from UC Santa Barbara in the second half of their game at home as senior center Molly Schlemer scored a career-high 37 points and senior guard Jonae Ervin became the program’s all-time leader in assists at the 10:54 mark of the first half. >>

see MEN’S, pg 10. and see WOMEN’S, pg 9.

JOSEPH PACK| STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Every student hears it from resident advisors and the administration: If you use Cal Poly’s network resources for file sharing, they will catch you. The reality is that committing intellectual property theft on campus is nearly as easy, and risky, as doing it from home. Housed within the Higher Education Opportunity Act — a 2008 reauthorization of a 1965 bill designed to improve financial aid eligibility — exists a provision that requires universities to develop policies against online theft. At Cal Poly, every student is required to agree to the university’s information technology responsible use policy upon enrollment. But do you know how Cal Poly tracks you online? >>

see PIRACY, pg 3.

News... 1-3 | Arts... 4-6 | Opinion... 7 | Classifieds... 8 | Sports... 9-10


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