The Appalachian, Thursday, Sept. 25, 2014

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Cherub

App State v. Georgia Southern

APPS brings Cherub back to Legends on Friday for a show that sold out in just 24 days. Doors open at 8 p.m.

App State football takes on longtime rival Georgia Southern on the road Thursday night. Check out how they can win on our game day infographic.

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Fashion Your source for the latest styles, product reviews and fashion news on campus and across Boone!

TheAppalachianOnline.com

The Appalachian 09.25.14

Appalachian State University’s student news source since 1934

Vol. 89, No. 10

App State faces Georgia Southern in first Sun Belt match by Bryant Barbery Sports Reporter

T

he Georgia Southern Eagles and the App State Mountaineers meet once again on the gridiron. Except this time, things are different. The game marks the first Sun Belt contest for the Mountaineers and is to be broadcast on national television on ESPNU. The meeting is the 29th between the two rivals dating back to 1934. The Eagles and Mountaineers first started to play on a regular basis when Georgia Southern joined the Southern Conference in 1993. App State holds a 1512-1 advantage in the all-time series and has won eight of the last eleven matchups. Thursday’s game will be the first time the rivalry will be nationally televised. Last season, App State came into the matchup with Georgia Southern at home on Black Saturday with only one win while the Eagles were 4-2. The Mountaineers dismantled the Eagles, winning 38-14 after which things began to click for App State. The Mountaineers would win two more games on the season under then first-year head coach Scott Satterfield. Since then, the Eagles have had success and some changes. At the end of last season, the Eagles defeated the Florida Gators 26-20 on the road in argu-

ably the biggest win in school history. After the season finished, Georgia Southern head coach Jeff Monken left the program to take the head coaching job for Army. The Eagles wasted no time in bringing in a replacement, adding Willie Fritz as their new head coach. Fritz had his share of success at the FCS level leading Sam Houston State to several championship game appearances in recent years. Coming into tonight’s game, the Eagles are 2-2 in their first FBS season with a blowout 83-9 victory at home against Savannah State and a 28-6 conference win at South Alabama. The Eagles two losses came against ACC foes N.C. State and Georgia Tech. In both games Georgia Southern had the lead with only minutes to go in the fourth quarter but could not finish out the game. Quarterback Kevin Ellison starts against the Mountaineers and comes into the matchup with 500 passing yards and three touchdowns helping his offense to be the second-most potent in the Sun Belt. Another standout for the Eagles is sophomore running back Matt Breida, who was just named the Sun Belt’s offensive player of the week after amassing 187 yards and two touchdowns in their win at South Alabama. He is averaging 8.9 yards

Carson Hager

The Appalachian State University football team storms the field before its 66-0 victory over the Campbell University Camels.

per carry which is good for sixth in the FBS. He also has the most touchdowns in the conference with seven in just four games. For the Mountaineers, redshirt-freshman quarterback Taylor Lamb will get his second career start with his first coming in last week’s 21-20 loss at Southern Mississippi. Lamb completed 28 of 40 pass attempts, throwing for 264 yards and two touchdowns. “Lamb has been more consistent with throwing the football,

Maggie Cozens

managing the offense a little better and a little bit more on time with the routes delivering the ball a little quicker,” quarterbacks coach Frank Ponce said. “The coaching staff felt that we needed to make the change last game. We felt good about the decision of starting him last game and how he performed out there.” On the ground, sophomore running back Marcus Cox has 280 rushing yards on the season with four touchdowns. The

other side of the two-pronged ground attack is redshirt-freshman Terrence Upshaw who has 183 rushing yards and one touchdown on the season. In the receiving corps, junior receivers Simms McElfresh and Malachi Jones will provide deep options for Lamb. McElfresh has four touchdowns on the season to Jones’ lone touchdown which came in the loss at Southern Miss. Kickoff is set for 7:30 p.m. Thursday.

Looking Glass Gallery hosts ‘Extinct Art’ exhibit by Kelsey Hamm Intern A&E Reporter

The Looking Glass Gallery in Plemmons Student Union will feature “Extinct Life” Sept. 23 through Oct. 10, an art exhibition and ongoing project collaboration between multidisciplinary undergraduate students working to shed new light on very old secrets. The exhibit consists of 17 laser scanner images, topography prints, macro photography, 3D prints created with Appalachian State University’s 3D printing resources and a video of a 3D reconstruction. The gallery is part of a much larger research project headed by Johnny Waters, a geology professor at Appalachian State Univer-

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Research grant offered to students to create a sustainable society by Nicole Caporaso News Reporter

For the second consecutive year, the Office of Student Research and the Research Institute for the Environment, Energy and Economics are offering students or student groups research grants for initiatives focused on creating a more healthy and sustainable society. The grant makes $500 available for undergraduate students or graduate students and $1,000 for groups. Grace Plummer, the program associate for the Appalachian Energy Center and the Research Institute for the Environment, Energy and Economics, said the purpose of the grant is primarily to support data collection or travel related to data collection, or instruments and materials used for research. Plummer said the research is related to not just environmental sustainability, but also economic and social. According to osr.appstate. edu, examples of possible projects, problems or questions that can be assessed with these grants include, “exploring factors that impact conservation practices on ASU, a city or county or state, projects that examine energy conservation

practices, art forms that convey messages and the interaction of natural and human systems.” John Pine, the Director of the Research Institute for the Environment, Energy, and Economics, said that last year the grant funded 20 students or student groups, but that there is not a limit to the number of grants. Pine said he hopes that the number for grants awarded this year is far greater than the 20 last year. “Appalachian students have a very rare opportunity to be engaged in research efforts with our faculty and student engagement in research is a part of our goal to build a strong research culture at Appalachian,” Pine said. “I believe that faculty can inspire students to be a part of a strong research culture in higher education and these grants are a way to make this possible.” Last year, research projects came from the College of Education, College of Health Sciences, College of Business, College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Fine and Applied Arts. “I think the concept of creating a healthy, just and sustainable society can address many problems our society faces and it is beyond a single discipline,” Pine said. “This is very broad grant and there is lots of room

Carson Hager

Sophomore biology major Tony Lieng in the Office of Student Research last week. The Office of Student Research is offering a grant to students looking into sustainability research.

for students to get some experience and it really prepares them to show employers what they are capable of doing.” Pine said with the grants awarded, students were able to cover a wide variety of topics. He provided the example of a student in the College of Edu-

cation who examined the value in teaching preschoolers the values of gardens. He also said students in the College of Arts and Sciences researched using remote controlled aircraft in data collection. “I am quite proud of the contribution that our students

make in student research, and I believe that our faculty feel the same way,” he said. The deadline to apply for this grant is Nov. 14. Anyone who wishes to apply must have a faculty mentor complete a recommendation form and must also submit a grant application.


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