Tuesday, October 29, 2013

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The Appalachian 10.29.13

-38-GET

Appalachian State University’s student news source since 1934

ROCKED-14Vol. 88, No. 16

Justin Perry | The Appalachian

Sophomore wide receiver Simms McElfresh celebrates after scoring a touchdown in the second half of the Black Saturday game against Georgia Southern. The Mountaineers blew past the Eagles for a 38-14 win, securing Appalachian State’s second win of the season.

Satterfield gets first home victory at Siren malfunction cause unknown The Rock, Mountaineers beat Eagles from Staff Reports

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by Nick Joyner Sports Reporter

oth the offense and defense were firing on all cylinders this past Saturday at The Rock as the Mountaineer football team defeated rival Georgia Southern 38-14, ending a four-game losing streak. The defense allowed a season-low 14 points against a Georgia Southern (4-3, 2-3 SoCon) offense that led the SoCon in many statistical categories, including points per game, rushing offense and passing efficiency. The 38 points was also a season-high for App State. “There was something about our kids today,” said head coach Scott Satterfield, who recorded his first victory at Kidd Brewer Stadium. “Our defense played well and got turnovers. Offensively Kam [Bryant] played well, and the receivers made big plays. Overall, it was a great team win.” Redshirt sophomore quarterback Kam Bryant had a career day behind center for an App State (2-6, 2-3) offense that relied on his performance.

He ran for a career-high-tying two touchdowns, while throwing for two more and completing 27 of 33 passes for 381 yards, another career high. Bryant, although acknowledging his career performance, deferred credit to his talented receiving corps. “I’ve been saying it for a couple weeks, it was on my shoulders to get these guys the ball,” he said. “These guys have been running the same routes all year, and it was up to me to get them the ball. [Tony Washington and Andrew Peacock] are our senior leaders and we just had to get the ball in their hands.” The two seniors led the team in receiving as Washington caught five passes for 129 yards and a touchdown, while Peacock recorded 10 catches for a career-high 127 yards. “[As] wide receivers, we pride ourselves on being one of the biggest playmakers on the offense, and we haven’t done that so far this year,” Washington said. “And this week, we felt like

An emergency siren sounded on campus Sunday night at 9:34 p.m. and was muted 10 minutes later, said Hank Foreman, the associate vice chancellor for university communications and cultural affairs. An App State-ALERT message was sent out at 9:53 p.m. explaining that the siren system had malfunctioned

and that there was no emergency on campus, Foreman said. The siren was initiated by an unknown source, Appalachian State Police Chief Gunther Doerr said. The mechanism that university police uses to signal the siren was in the off mode, and there was no reason on campus for it to be activated. Doerr said the police station reacted to the

siren by trying to cancel the alarm, but ended up having to shut off the power source to the siren. However, the alarm had to finish the signal before it shut off. In the three years that the university has had the system, this is the first time a malfunction has occurred, Doerr said. Appalachian’s fire alarm receiver lost SEE SIREN PAGE 2

A call for morality from NC NAACP

The Rev. William Barber II, president of the N.C. NAACP, visited Boone on Monday to speak about the need for what he called a “moral movement in North Carolina.” Barber addressed students at the Schaeffer Center after speaking at a press conference held at the Boone Unitarian Universalist Fellowship.

Kim Reynolds | The Appalachian

SEE FOOTBALL PAGE 6

A&E

SPORTS

ON THE WEB

Nick Gallagher | The Appalachian

Kim Reynolds | The Appalachian

Stick Boy's bread maker isn't just loafing around the bakery. He's bringing his passion for baking to the popular local eatery. SEE BREAD PAGE 3

Aneisy Cardo | The Appalachian

The Appalachian State Mountaineers took on rival Georgia Southern for the annual Black Saturday game. They won 38-14. SEE FOOTBALL PAGE 6

Watch: Discover how students at Appalachian State and other members of the community feel about the long-standing skateboard ban in the town of Boone.

See youtube.com/theapponline


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