WHY WAIT TILL THURSDAY? READ MYTJNOW.COM.
Editors compile “hate list:” all things worthy of hate. See Opinion, page 7
International professors sail to WU in exchange program. See Culture, page 12
THURSDAY March 1, 2012
WINTHROP UNIVERSITY
SPORTS
Men’s tennis serving out practices minus two players. See Sports, page 15
Issue 20
NEWS
Alumnus gives back to Uganda
SCIENCE & TECH.
Internet aids nominations
Fearless Free Falling
FRANCES PARRISH parrishf@mytjnow.com
Americans Elect, a nonprofit, non-partisan organization, is taking advantage of the Internet and bringing politics to the general public by challenging the two-party system. By allowing individuals to nominate a 3rd candidate online, they are taking on a bigger role in deciding the President of the United States. “Americans Elect is just giving the people another choice on the ballot,” said Brian Findlay, politician director for Americans Elect. Findlay participated in a panel discussion led by moderator Kambrell
DAVID THACKHAM thackhamd@mytjnow.com
Success isn’t always measured in goals, assists and saves. For Henry Kalungi, it’s measured in heart. At the age Henry Kalungi where most of his 2009 Alumnus American peers were napping through high school, Kalungi (Winthrop alumnus 2009) was working out with his native Ugandan youth national team. When he flew over 7,000 miles to Winthrop to play on scholarship in 2006, he not only helped the squad to back-to-back Big South Championships, but also shined with two premier national developmental teams before graduating. After leaving Winthrop, the stout 6’2” defender decided his resume still wasn’t full enough. On his off seasons with the United Soccer League team, the Richmond (Va.) Kickers, Kalungi works with his own nonprofit organization, the Ugandan Soccer Youth Academy, which helps develop talent in children from all ages who love the game. “All I have to do is worry about today and try to do all the right things I can,” he said, “and then God will help me achieve my goals the next day.” A lights-out career with head coach Rich Posipanko’s Eagles only supplemented effective play with
See ELECT page 8 NEWS
Subway reopens Strapped to an instructor, Courtney Amos falls 13,500 feet during her job at Skydive Carolina. Photo courtesy of Courtney Amos SHAMIRA MCCRAY mccrays@mytjnow.com
After working nearly 10 hours on your first day of a new job, the last thing you expect your general manager to ask you is to jump out of an airplane. Esepecially not an ariplane flying 13,500 feet above the ground. This question came as a surprise for senior Courtney Amos as she neared the end of her first workday at Skydive Caro-
See UGANDA page 13
lina. After quick deliberation and a trip to her car for sneakers, Amos underwent training, and within an hour she was on an airplane and ready to jump. Since Amos was not a licensed jumper she participated in a tandem skydive, which included an instructor attached behind her. When the plane reached the desired altitude, Amos stood at the open doorway with her arms crossed over her chest as instructed. By the count of three
See JUMP page 3
NEWS
CATHERINE ZENDE & JONATHAN MCFADDEN zendec@mytjnow.com mcfaddenj@mytjnow.com
Samantha Gamble had 50 minutes until her next class, an appetite to fill and a spot in the back of the line. Nearly one hour after the grand opening of Subway, Gamble, a junior psychology major, stood book in hand as she watched the 20 or
See SUBS page 2
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Campus trespassers A Fractured Sanctum JONATHAN MCFADDEN mcfaddenj@mytjnow.com
A pistol-wielding student from nearby Clinton Junior College, a dumpster-ducking 30-year-old woman and a heavily intoxicated man cycling under the influence make up the more than 50 individuals trespassed from Winthrop’s campus in 2011. Fifty of those individuals have been trespassed since June 2011, said Chief of Campus Police Frank Zebedis. For the past two years, Campus Police have updated and
Theodore Gordon Jr., 49, was banned from Winthrop for a year. His trespass ends this year on April 10.
monitored a database cataloging every individual unaffiliated with campus who creates some kind of disruption or disturbance on campus, Zebedis said. That, or they’re “arrested” on campus, he said. One such person was Averyeon Quick, a Clinton Junior College student police charged with unlawfully carrying a pistol and possessing a firearm on school property, according to an official police report. Back in September, a Campus Police officer saw Quick improperly turn at Oakland Avenue and Eden Terrace, and then turn into the Alumni parking lot. After stopping the vehicle, the officer found that there were five young men in the car. When he asked the driver for his license, he noticed the front passenger holding a fully loaded shotgun between his legs. The officer backed away from the car and called for backup, after which he and two other officers made all the occupants get out of the car. Quick told police that he was told he was allowed to hold the gun, even though the report says
Two years of hard work, writing, rehearsals finally debuts MONICA KREBER kreberm@mytjnow.com
Preface When he was a freshman, dance performance major Everett Johnson was in a theatre production called “Love Moves.” Inspired by the experience, Johnson got an idea. “I wanted to do something like that,” he said. “I wanted to propose a play one day. By the time he was a sophomore, Johnson had a lot going on his life and decided to work through them by writing. He found support through his friend, theatre major Norman Burt (also a sophomore at that time). “A lot of things were happening, so I thought I could just write and work through some things,” Johnson said. “[Burt] also contributed a lot because we both have the same kind of family.” Johnson and Burt began talking and writing together. They started writing a family-focused play. “We both sat down and worked out every scene,” Burt said, “like the
See TRESPASS page 5
Questions? Contact us at editors@mytjnow.com Serving Winthrop since 1923
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See DANCE page 11 I N D E X
CAMPUS NEWS
2-5
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
OPINION
6-7
CULTURE
SCIENCE & TECH
8-9
SPORTS
10-11 12 13-15