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OLD GOLD&BLACK W A K E

F O R E S T

U N I V E R S I T Y

T H U R S D AY, J A N U A RY 1 4 , 2 0 1 0

VOL. 93, NO. 16

“Covers the campus like the magnolias”

IS and ZSR ‘bridge’the technology gap

Outside the Bubble...

By Samantha Hoback Staff Writer

Major earthquake causes widespread damage in Haiti An earthquake with a magnitude of 7.0 hit southern Haiti on Jan. 12. This earthquake was the most powerful quake to hit Haiti in over a century. It’s epicenter was about 10 miles southwest of the capital, Port-au-Prince, and could be felt strongly over 200 miles away in eastern Cuba. There was heavy infrastructure damage and a serious loss of life reported. Survivors continue to search desperately for victims trapped beneath the rubble. In the quake sixteen United Nations peacekeepers were killed and at least 140 United Nations workers were missing, including the chief of its mission, Hédi Annabi

Tuberculosis patient flies despite the CDC ban An unidentified patient who was infected with an active case of tuberculosis flew aboard a commercial jet from Philadelphia, Penn., to San Francisco, CAalif., on Jan. 9. The person flew despite being on a donot-board list issued by the Center for Disease Control (CDC). An investigation is currently underway because the government alerted the airline 14 hours before the passenger checked in.

Notorious wanted drug trafficker arrested in Mexico Teodoro “El Teo” Garcia Simental, a notorious drug trafficker, was arrested on Jan. 12 by the Mexican federal police and the U.S Drug Enforcement Administration. Simental worked for two rival drug cartels and was on a list of the top 24 drug traffickers in all of Mexico.

Microsoft software sends texts from the future A glitch with Windows Mobile has resulted in users reporting the dates on their texts saying they were sent in 2016. The problem started on Jan. 1 and is continuing to be reported. Microsoft is aware of the problem and is working on a solution with telephone manufactures and other partners.

New Hampshire Considers Appealing Adultery Laws Legislators in New Hampshire will weigh repealing a 200-year-old state law that considers adultery as a criminal offense. Many find the law unconstitutional. There are laws in about two dozen other states that also criminalise adultery. These laws were written in the past in order to pass laws against fornication, homosexuality and other offenses.

Students and faculty will not have to make the trek out to Carroll Weathers Drive to fix a broken laptop, replace a lost charger or recover class work. The Information Systems Help Desk is now located in ZSR Library, a much more convenient location for the university community. Rick Matthews, the Associate Provost and Chief Information Officer, and Lynn Sutton, the Dean of the Z. Smith Reynolds Library, collaborated on the idea for combining the IS center and the Information Technology Center in the library to make the two services more accessible for students and faculty. “For several years, Information Systems hoped to relocate to a more accessible campus location in order to better serve our students, faculty and staff with their computing related needs,” Matthews and Sutton said. The idea for the combined facility originated in early 2009. After Provost Jill Teifenthaler approved of the proposal, The Bridge began to take shape in ZSR. “A group of ZSR and IS staff and students collaborated during the late spring and summer to

name the new facility,” Matthews and Sutton said. “The group agreed that naming the facility ‘The Bridge’ was ideal because the center will provide a strong connection between our students, faculty and staff and many of the technology resources of the university.” Last August, The Bridge officially opened, offering multimedia services to students, faculty and staff with ZSR staff only. Over the winter break, the IS Service Desk officially moved from its former location on Carroll Weathers Drive to The Bridge on the main floor of ZSR in the former ITC space. “Students, faculty and staff will benefit from The Bridge in a number of ways,” Matthews and Sutton said. “The Bridge is more accessible, offers combined multimedia and information technology services and expanded hours of operation.” Students and faculty still have access to the computer lab equipped with scanners and audio and video capturing stations. Everyone also has access to the screening room, which has a multimedia center with video production equipment.

See Bridge, Page A3

Rachel Cameron /Old Gold & Black

Damian Blanenship receives help from Allen Stanton and Rebekah Warner in the newly established Bridge.

Service for Others By Katie Phillips | Staff writer

The university truly lives up to its motto, pro humanitate, with the abundance of service trips that take place annually around the globe. Two university groups, 21 students total, participated in international service trips in both Brazil and India over holiday break. All university service trips are run through the Volunteer Service Corps. Trips are led by a student leader (who has participated in the same trip previously) and a faculty/ staff leader. Groups meet regularly in order to fully prepare for the trip and get to know one another. Eleven students departed on Dec. 27 for Santarem, Brazil. Staff leader Jessica Czarnowski, a study abroad advisor, accompanied the 11 participants. Students worked through a non-profit organization, Amizade, which translates to friendship in English. Students helped build an after-school community center for neglected children. “The children that we worked with are labeled ‘street children’ in Brazil,” senior Richard Mayer said. According to Mayer, “the children all have homes but are called street children because the school system in Brazil has a four-hour workday.” Photo Courtesy of Leah Beachley Graphic by Bobby O’Connor/Old Gold & Black

See Service, Page A2

Student passes away in car accident over winter break By Sara Olson | Staff Writer

Students and staff mourned the death of Matthew Francis Savoie Jan. 13 at a Catholic Memorial Mass held in his honor at 4 p.m. in Wait Chapel. Savoie, a 19-year-old freshman at the university, passed away on Dec. 28 after being involved in an automobile accident over winter break in his hometown of New Orleans, La. At the service, Savoie was remembered by his fellow classmates as beinging an enthusiastic, kind and funny individual. “It is impossible to put into words how much I loved and admired Matt,”

said freshman Ryan Bourg, who spoke in memory of Savoie. Bourg, Savoie’s freshman roommate fall semester, said, “He was a lot more than my roommate – he was my best friend, my teammate and my brother.” “Matthew was always making jokes and laughing with you,” freshman Tommy Adams, another student who spoke on Savoie’s behalf, said. “He was one of the most passionate and athletic kids I’d ever known,” Adams said. Savoie was known for his talent on the university’s club soccer team. During his senior year of high school, he was named the Most Valuable Play-

er for soccer in the state of Louisiana. He was also awarded MVP for his state championship game preformance, in which he scored the winning goal in overtime. Furthermore, Savoie was nominated to be Gatorade’s Player of the Year in 2008 for soccer. According to his parents, Bobby and Lori Savoie, Savoie had been considering playing Division I soccer at Clemson University but instead chose to come to the university. “But he always said that if he got into Wake Forest, he’d go to Wake Forest,” said Savoie’s dad. “He always wanted to go to school here.”

Life | B5

INSIDE: Brieflies

A2

Top Albums of 2009

Pressbox

B1

Wake Radio counts down the 10 best

Spotlight

B3

albums of the year.

The Hot List

B6

Sudoku

B6

In Other News

• Innocence and Justice Clinic celebrate success | A3 • University buys Solar-Powered Shuttle | A2

Leah McCoy, Savoie’s lower-division advisor, described him as “polite and cooperative.” “He was the ideal advisee,” McCoy said. “He had wide-eyed enthusiasm about everything… His first and deepest love was his family and his home in New Orleans.” “Whether you die at 19 or at 99, you could not have any more love than that child had,” Savoie’s mother said, adding, “And for that I’m very grateful.” Savoie leaves behind an older sister and a younger brother. His family asks students to e-mail their stories about him to memoriesofmatthewsavoie@ gmail.com. Gifts in memory of Savoie

Sports | B1 Overtime Win The men’s basketball team beat the Terps in a last minute layup to win 86-84, bringing their record to 13-2.

should be sent to the Isidore Newman School in New Orleans, La. More than 2,000 mourners attended Savoie’s funeral, which was held on Dec. 31 at the St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church in New Orleans. At his funeral in Louisiana Savoie’s friends, teammates and relatives reflected on the unforgettable impact he had made on their lives in his short 19 years. Counseling and grief support services for students and staff members at the university are available through Campus Ministry and the Counseling Center by calling 336-757-2749 or by visiting the office in Reynolda 118.

Opinion | A4 Tiger’s Failure Wood’s behavior is not unlike that of other celebrities, but he is held to a higher standard


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