The Penn 11/07/2014

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The Penn

IUP LOOKS TO CONTINUE DOMINANCE VS. GANNON PAGE 15

TH EP ENN.ORG

IUP’S STUDENT VOICE | EST. 1926

NEWS | PAGE 3 WET INK | PAGE 10 SPORTS | PAGE 15

Bo Burnham makes sold-out Fisher Auditorium laugh during Monday performance PAGE 10

Friday, November 7, 2014

Vol. 105 No.21


The Penn / INDIANA UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

NEWS

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SPORTS

The Penn FA L L 2 0 1 4

EDITORIAL STAFF

STUDENT-RUN FASHION SHOWS RAISED MONEY AND AWARENESS TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY

IUP NORTHPOINTE WAIVES APPLICATION FEE FOR VETERANS PAGE 3

WOMEN’S SOCCER FALLS IN PSAC CHAMPIONSHIPS PAGE 16

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Managing Editor Pete Sirianni

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Photo & New Media Editor Katlynn Resides Graphic Designer Kristin May Lead News Writer Jennifer Bush Lead Wet Ink Writer Andrew Milliken Lead Sports Writer Michael Kiwak

BUSINESS STAFF Batman 1989

In director Tim Burton’s adaptation of the comic book classic, Bruce Wayne starts to make a name for himself as a masked avenger to the criminal set just when the flamboyant Joker takes over as tops in the Mafia.

Batman Returns 1992

Trouble returns to Gotham as Batman battles three new villains plotting to take over the city, including corrupt businessman Max Shreck, the hideous Penguin and the mysterious Catwoman.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie

1990

After exposure to radiation, four turtles retreat to the city sewers to train as crimefighting ninjas in this live-action adventure based on the animated series.

Fading Gigolo 2013

Middle-aged Fioravante and Murray are an unlikely duo in this farce about two cashstrapped friends who turn to the sex trade to make ends meet.

Altman 2014

Documentarian Ron Mann chisels a wellcrafted tribute to the maverick auteur, Robert Altman, whose fertile career encompassed huge hits, big misses and controversy.

Business Manager Bradley Deppen Secretaries Libby Girard Sabrina Simmers Jordan Snowden

ADVERTISING STAFF Advertising Director Lara Zimmerman Advertising Staff Nick Distefano Meghan Donegan Ola Ope Karen Sadaka

PRODUCTION STAFF Production Manager Bridget Walker THE-PENN@IUP.EDU PENN-ADS@IUP.EDU PHONE: 724.357.1306 FAX: 724.357.0127

Cover photo by Sarah Bader


News

News Editor: Kayla Cioffo – K.M.Cioffo@iup.edu Lead News Writer: Jennifer Bush – J.L.Bush@iup.edu

Educational and psychology department professor awarded grant By CASEY KELLY Staff Writer C.E.Kelly2@iup.edu

A grant of $45,461 was awarded to Dr. Timothy Runge, associate professor in the department of educational and school psychology, for his project titled “School-Wide Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports.” The grant, Safe Schools/Healthy Students Grant (SS/HS), was awarded to Runge by the Pennsylvania Training and Technical Assistance Network. According to the SS/HS website, it “has proven to be successful in creating safe and secure schools in individual communities across the country.” The website also lists the five elements of this comprehensive plan: Element 1: Promoting early childhood social and emotional learning and development Element 2: Promoting mental, emo-

tional and behavioral health Element 3: Connecting youth, families, schools and communities Element 4: Preventing and reducing alcohol, tobacco and other drug use Element 5: Preventing youth violence and bullying Runge said that, essentially, the grant intends to improve the quality of mental health services for students in public schools. He is working with Dr. Timothy Knoster, professor of special education at Bloomsburg University, to complete the annual evaluation of the project. Many students who struggle with mental health issues do not have the transportation or parental support to allow them to see professional therapists for their issues. This grant will fund the placement of mental health professionals into the school setting, allowing students easier

access to the services. In addition to this benefit, having mental health professionals in schools will eliminate the gap between patients and therapists. This means that they will be able to more accurately and frequently evaluate a student’s progress. “This grant is allowing [the school districts] to provide high-quality mental

Million Mask March

health services for kids in schools with an aim to reduce risky behaviors that include alcohol and drug use and decrease instances of depression and suicidality,” Runge said. Runge also said that Pennsylvania has historically had a higher-than-average of high school students who engage in risky behaviors. In addition to that, Pennsylvania has a higher-than-typical rate of placing students with significant mental health needs in non-public school settings. One goal of the grant is to allow students with mental health issues to stay in the public school with their peers, rather than having to place them in a non-public school. The program will be piloted in three school districts: Penncrest School District in Crawford County, Northeastern School District in York County and the Carbon Lehigh Intermediate Unit.

Application fee waived for veterans at Northpointe campus By stephanie bachman Staff Writer S.L.Bachman@iup.edu

In honor of Veteran’s Day Tuesday, Indiana University of Pennslyvania at Northpointe is waiving the $50 application fee for any veteran that applies. Northpointe will cover the application fee for interested veterans, regardless of if they are applying as an undergraduate or a graduate student. Among all IUP students currently enrolled, there are 553 students who are also veterans. Of those, 471 students are undergraduates, and 81 of them are graduates. The G.I. Bill is extremely comprehensive and covers a lot of things, including tuition for any veteran who wants to go to college. However, one thing it does not cover is the college’s application fee. This is where the faculty and staff at Northpointe stepped in. They used privately donated money

Anonymous and Pro-democracy protesters wearing Guy Fawkes masks walk in front of the White House for the Million Mask March, Wednesday in Washington, D.C. The Million Mask March is sweeping the globe across Wednesday as demonstrators protest against austerity, mass surveillance and oppression. (MCT)

News

Program success will be evaluated using the Pennsylvania Youth Survey. The survey evaluates the behavior, attitudes and knowledge concerning violence, alcohol, tobacco and other drugs of a percentage of students in the sixth, eighth, 10th and 12th grades. Runge said that he sees a possibility of this type of program affecting higher education as well. At Bloomsburg University, the McDowell Institute shows signs of future changes in the relationship between students and mental health professionals. “They are facilitating better communication amongst faculty, deans’ offices, campus police, counseling centers and even upper administration so that if a faculty member has a concern about a student’s mental health needs, they know who to talk to,” he said. For more information on the grant, visit sshs.samhsa.gov.

November 7, 2014

from the Dean’s Innovation Fund to be able to waive the fee for these potential students. A portion of this money is actually donated to this fund from campus staff. Richard Muth, who works in enrollment at Northpointe, explained why the school felt the need to do this. “This was truly the least we could to do to show our appreciation and say ‘thank you’ for the sacrifices veterans have made for this great nation,” Muth said. “It is a small amount of money,” he said, “but it is a small way of saying ‘thank you’ to our local veterans.” There are a lot of benefits available to veterans, and both Muth and IUP highly recommend that veterans look into them. Some other examples of benefits available are scholarships exclusively for veterans, VA home loans, counseling services, health care, disability and employment benefits.

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November 7, 2014

Police Blotter

Wolf defeats Corbett to become new governor By PETE SIRIANNI Managing Editor P.M.Sirianni@iup.edu

Alcohol Violations

• Kenneth Cunningham, 19, of Carrolltown; Heather Moon, 19, of Cressona, and Haley Delosh, 19, of Elmora, were cited for underage drinking after borough police observed a traffic violation in the 600 block of Philadelphia Street and stopped the vehicle Nov. 1 at 1:25 a.m., according to borough police. Cunningham was driving the vehicle. Moon is not an IUP student. • A male juvenile was taken into custody and charged with DUI, underage drinking, minor prohibited from operating a vehicle with alcohol in system and a traffic offense after he was found driving with alcohol in his system in the 00 block of North Eighth Street Oct. 9 at 7:44 p.m., according to borough police. • Chance Williams, 18, of Bedford, was cited with underage drinking after he was seen staggering through Ruddock Hall intoxicated Nov. 1 at 12:30 a.m., according to university police. • Dillan C. Sollenberger, 20, of Lancaster, was cited for public drunkenness and underage drinking after he was observed staggering and stumbling in the 900 block of Grant Street Nov. 1 at 10:36 a.m., according to university police. Sollenberger was placed in the county jail. • Carling Whitty, 19, of New Wilmington, was arrested and cited for public drunkenness, underage drinking and disorderly conduct in the Hadley Union Building lot Nov. 2 at 1:28 a.m., according to university police. • Nicholas Bell, 21, of Madison Township, was observed to be in a fight behind the Phi Psi fraternity along the 200 block of Rice Avenue Nov. 1 at 12:55 a.m., according to borough police. Bellwas taken into custody and charged with disorderly conduct and public drunkenness, the report said. • Devin Thomas Vanguilder, 18, of North Warren, was taken into custody and cited for underage drinking and public drunkenness after a brief investigation of the third floor of Northern Suites Nov. 1 at 5:11 a.m., according to university police. Vanguilder was then lodged in the county jail. He is not an IUP student. • Kevin George Cleer, 19, of Kane, was taken to the university police station and cited for underage drinking and public drunkenness after he was observed by police to be intoxicated in the Keith Lot Nov. 2 at 1:23 a.m., according to university police. • Luis Alberto Molina, 25, of Punxsutawney, was cited for public drunkenness after an investigation inside Northern Suites Nov. 2 at 12:33 a.m., according to university police. • Kayla Ashlea Williams, 18, of Hershey, was arrested and taken to the university police station where she was cited for underage drinking and public drunkenness after she was found passed out in a women’s restroom inside Putt Hall Nov. 1 at 2:35 a.m., according to university police. • Alayna Kay Holt, 18, of Morrisdale, was cited for underage drinking after she was observed by university police walking along Grant Street near Wallwork Hall Nov. 1 at 1:10 a.m., according to university police.

drug violations

• Borough police and the Indiana Fire Association responded to a residence in the 700 block of Philadelphia Street for the report of a fire alarm Nov. 1 at 4:43 a.m. The fire alarm had been set off from a resident, Vasant Kithcart, 23, of Philadelphia, smoking marijuana. Police observed marijuana and drug paraphernalia in Kithcart’s apartment while speaking with him, according to to borough police. Police attempted to secure the apartment to obtain a search warrant, but Kithcart refused to leave. He was removed and later released. When Kithcart returned to the apartment, he called 911 and reported that he wanted the police arrested for trespassing. Kithcart was arrested, taken to the police station, and charged with possession of a small amount of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, obstruction of administration of law and violation of the Emergency Telephone Act, the report said.

Disorderly Conduct

News

Pennsylvania is going back to being a blue governor state after challenger Tom Wolf defeated incumbent Republican Tom Corbett Tuesday. Wolf, a York County businessman, was able to run on an agenda that included increased education funding, while Corbett’s support from both sides of the aisle had been dwindling. Corbett now owns the distinction of being the first incumbent PA governor to fail to win re-election since incumbents were allowed to run for a second term. Corbett, who promised fiscal responsibility when elected in 2010, saw his approval rating hit 18 percent, according to a Franklin & Marshall College poll, the lowest in the poll’s 18-year history. Wolf ’s promise of a 5 percent severance tax on natural gas extraction may have been the tipping point in victory. Pennsylvania is the largest state with Marcellus Shale deposits that does not

have an extraction tax. The tax would generate about a billion dollars in new revenue, much of which would go into education funding, Wolf said in an interview Oct. 25 with The Penn when he visited the Indiana University of Pennsylvania on a campaign stop. Under Corbett’s administration, education funding in Pennsylvania was cut by $1 billion in 2011, according to

The Pennsylvania State Education Association, though political advertisements from Corbett’s camp say the former governor actually increased funding. Even with the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education’s secondlargest school, Corbett won Indiana County by garnering 12,195 votes, compared to Wolf ’s 10,220. Overall, Wolf won the state with 55 percent of votes.

Tom Wolf, left, is shown with Hillary Clinton at an October rally. Wolf was elected governor Tuesday. (MCT)

Microsoft offers Office free for Apple, Android mobile devices By matt day Seattle Times MCT

Microsoft says it will offer its Office franchise free to some mobile customers, its latest effort to keep customers using its products in a less PC-dependent world. Microsoft broke with longstanding tradition in March, announcing it would make the Office suite of word processing and productivity software available for the first time on Apple’s iPad. Starting Thursday, users of iPhones, iPads can create and edit Office documents without a subscription to Micro-

soft’s paid Office 365 service, the company said. Similar service for Google’s Android tablets is in the works. For decades, Microsoft’s strategy prioritized developing software for its Windows platform, which powered most of the world’s PCs. But with PC sales stagnant, and more customers using mobile devices powered with Google or Apple operating systems rather than Windows, Microsoft is moving to keep users on its Office products rather than ask for a few bucks a month. “It’s incredibly important to us that customers have a consistent experience and the ability to do more – anywhere and everywhere,” the company said in

a blog post. Microsoft isn’t giving away the farm, though. Users who want to create and edit Word, Excel and PowerPoint documents on laptops will still have to pay for access. As will business clients who make up the bulk of Microsoft’s Office revenue. Office 365, which charges users subscription fees for versions of Office they’ve downloaded from the Internet, had about 7 million subscribers at the end of September. Customers can pick from a range of other productivity software, including Apple’s Pages and Google’s free-to-use Docs.

• Nathaniel Harper, 22, of Indiana, was observed to be involved in a fight in the 500 block of Philadelphia Street Nov. 1 at 12:26 a.m., according to a borough police. Harper was cited for disorderly conduct, the report said.

Assault

• Borough police responded to a residence in the 00 block of North Sixth Street after receiving a report of burglary and assault by a known person Nov. 1 at 1:47 a.m. Police determined that the suspect, Matthew Jones, 20, of Homer City, broke into the apartment and assaulted the tenant. Jones was charged with burglary and assault with an arrest warrant issued, according to a borough police report. Jones turned himself in and was lodged in the county jail, the report said. Jones is not an IUP student. • Justin Williams, 18, of Philadelphia, and Diamond Blenman, 18, of Philadelphia, refused to leave the property of Sheetz at 768 Wayne Ave. after being ordered to do so by borough police following an altercation taking place in the parking lot Oct. 31 at 2:52 a.m., according to borough police. Once on scene, it was determined that a Sheetz security officer was assaulted while attempting to stop the altercation. Williams and Blenman pelted the security officer with eggs, injuring the officer and damaging the store. Williams and Blenham have been charged with simple assault, propulsion of a missile onto a roadway, disorderly conduct, harassment, trespass and criminal mischief, the report said.

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November 7, 2014

News

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Former NFL cheerleader charged with rape and sexual contact with minor By Julie Scharper and Jean Marbella MCT

Molly Shattuck, a former Baltimore Ravens cheerleader and estranged wife of multi-millionaire Mayo A. Shattuck III, has been arrested and charged with rape and unlawful sexual contact with a 15-year-old boy, Delaware State Police said Wednesday. The 47-year-old mother of three and prominent philanthropist is accused of giving alcohol to the boy, her son’s classmate, and performing oral sex on him at a Delaware beach house, according to an affidavit for a search warrant filed in Baltimore County District Court. Shattuck was arraigned Wednesday morning in Delaware and released on $84,000 bond. Shattuck, through her attorney, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Shattuck and her husband, the former CEO of Constellation Energy, filed for divorce in September. According to the affidavit, the boy – a student at the McDonogh School in Baltimore – told police that Shattuck began a flirtation with him on the social networking site Instagram in May. The Baltimore Sun does not name alleged victims of sexual crimes. The McDonogh School issued a statement Wednesday saying administrators contacted police in late September as soon as they learned about allegations involving a student and a parent of another student. “The safety and well-being of our students is our greatest priority at all times,” headmaster Charles W. Britton wrote to parents of McDonogh students in an email Wednesday. The letter did not name the parent. Shattuck, a fitness guru who was once the oldest cheerleader in the history of the NFL, began sending provocative messages to the boy in the spring saying, “we would have fun together,” according to the affidavit. The two met in a movie theater and middle school parking lot in Howard County where they kissed and had sexual contact, according to the affidavit. In the summer, she would pick up the boy during his lunch breaks from a class and drive him to a the parking garage of the T. Rowe Price building where they would “get in the back of the car and kiss or ‘make out,’” according to the affidavit. Over Labor Day weekend, the boy accompanied Shattuck and her three children – who range in age from 15 to 11 – and their friends to a Bethany Beach rental home, according to the affidavit. Shattuck assured the boy’s father that “there was no alcohol or drugs at the

residence and she was the only adult,” according to the affidavit. However, she shared wine with the alleged victim while he played “music and games” with the other boys, according to the affidavit. Around 2 a.m., Shattuck left the younger children sleeping in the rental home and took the alleged victim and other teenagers to a liquor store, the affidavit states. There, she purchased Miller Lite and Bud Light for them, according to the affidavit. Back at the house, according to the affidavit, Shattuck then asked the alleged victim to help her walk the dog. Once they got outside, she began kissing him and fondling him, then performed oral sex on him, according to the affidavit. The boy then went up to a rooftop deck, where he, Shattuck, and the other teenagers drank alcohol. Shattuck then “came up and said that [the alleged victim] needs to go to bed,” according to the affidavit. According to the affidavit, the boy then went into Shattuck’s bedroom. She stripped down to her underwear, performed oral sex on him again and told him she would be willing to have intercourse. He decided to leave. The boy’s father picked him up later in the morning, and the boy has not had contact with Shattuck since the incident, according to the affidavit. According to the letter from the headmaster of the McDonogh School, he learned of allegations against a parent on Sept. 24. Headmaster Britton said in the letter that he immediately reported the allegations to Baltimore County Police. “I want you to know that the parent has been prohibited from entering McDonogh’s campus,” he wrote, “and additional security measures have been in place to assure the safety of our students since the incident was reported.” Delaware authorities said in a statement that Baltimore County Police contacted them on Sept. 26 to report that the 15-year-old had said he had an inappropriate relationship with a woman later identified as Shattuck. Delaware State Police searched Shattuck’s Roland Park home on Oct. 1, seizing items they identified as “pertinent to the investigation.” They would not reveal what was taken. Shattuck, who has not returned calls for comment, is in the midst of divorce proceedings. Shattuck grew up in the small manufacturing town of Kittanning, Pa., about 50 miles northeast of Pittsburgh. She was captain of the varsity cheerleading team and voted most popular in

high school. She then graduated from Indiana University of Pennsylvania in 1989, where she majored in marketing. She met her future husband in the mid 1990s when she was working in marketing at Alex. Brown. At the time, Mayo Shattuck was president and chief operating officer of the investment bank. Shattuck and his first wife, Jennifer, with whom he had two children, divorced in 1995. Molly and Mayo were married in 1997. Shattuck became the oldest cheerleader in NFL history when she joined the Ravens squad at age 38 in 2005. Her then-husband had been deeply involved in the sale of a minority ownership position in the team about five years earlier. The couple purchased a sprawling home in North Baltimore, which is where Molly Shattuck still resides. In addition to fundraising work for groups like the United Way of Central Maryland and Baltimore School for the Arts, Shattuck has gotten into the fitness business. In 2011, she launched a website and exercise video called “Molly Shattuck Vibrant Living.” In March 2014 she released her first book, also titled “Molly Shattuck Vibrant Living,” which offers a 21-day plan to “transform your body, burst with energy, and live your life with purpose.” She also appeared, with her mother,

Joan George, in a 2008 episode of the Fox reality show “Secret Millionaire.” Shattuck and George posed as low-wage workers in a Pennsylvania mining town, got to know a few people who were in need, then gave away close to $200,000 to those they had met. In 2005, she told the Sun that she

didn’t have a serious boyfriend in high school and skipped the senior prom to hike in the Grand Canyon. She had seen other girls in her town marry young and never leave the town. “I guess I was focused on other things,” she said in the profile. “I knew I was going to leave. I knew I was going to see the world.”

Former Baltimore Ravens cheerleader Molly A. Shattuck has been arrested and charged with rape and unlawful sexual contact with a 15-year-old boy. (MCT)


November 7, 2014

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Plea deal in works in California prison inmate killing By michael doyle

McClatchy Washington Bureau MCT

A proposed plea deal could spare the life of a former U.S. Penitentiary Atwater prisoner accused of killing his cellmate in 2003. Now, the fate of the prisoner, Samuel R. Stone, is in the hands of Attorney General Eric Holder. This week, attorneys revealed in new court filings that Stone has signed a conditional plea agreement in which he indicated a willingness to admit guilt in exchange for the government agreeing not to seek the death penalty. “The attorney general of the United States will make this final decision,” prosecutors and defense attorneys jointly declared in a court filing dated Wednesday. The Justice Department on Thursday offered no clue concerning Holder’s ultimate decision, which could be guided by the still-secret recommendations of a special committee. The prosecutors who have been preparing to try Stone have also not taken a public position on the defense team’s plea agreement proposal. But Holder’s own sympathies, as well as his political immunity by virtue of his pending resignation, could con-

ceivably weigh in favor of accepting the proposed agreement instead of pursuing a costly and unpredictable capital case involving an inmate victim. “I am not a proponent of the death penalty,” Holder told the Senate Judiciary Committee at his 2003 confirmation hearing, “but I will enforce the law as this Congress gives it to us.” Stone’s Colorado-based attorney, Donald R. Knight, welcomed the proposed plea agreement. “We are hopeful that this latest development is a step in the right direction,” Knight said by email Thursday. “We believe it is in everyone’s best interest to end this case as soon as possible.” Stone’s trial is now set to start next October. The proposed deal would end the legal fallout from events that occurred in the California prison’s crowded Special Housing Unit. Stone, who was then 24, was serving a life sentence when he was one of three convicted murderers placed into a cell designed to hold two. Early on the morning of July 30, 2003, according to court documents, correctional officers responded to an alarm and found inmate Michael Anita on the floor, braided strips of a bed sheet wrapped around his neck.

He had been stabbed, with several improvised weapons still embedded in him. “Prison staff and the FBI recount that Mr. Stone immediately said that he had killed Mr. Anita,” defense attorneys noted in an April 2013 legal filing. Anita had been placed in the prison’s Special Housing Unit because of his involvement in the stabbing of another inmate several months earlier, according to court documents. The plea deal was proposed by Stone’s defense team as a follow-up to what was termed a “lengthy, fact-specific detailed submission” to the Attorney General’s Review Committee on Capital Cases. The submission spanned 70 pages and included some 64 exhibits, including videos. It offered “information that was not available to the parties at the time death was authorized as a penalty in this case,” according to the joint Wednesday filing. Details have not been made public. Stone is now incarcerated at U.S. Penitentiary Lewisburg in Pennsylvania. If Holder accepts the plea deal, the formal hearing to finalize it would be held in nearby Williamsport, Pa., rather than at the federal courthouse in Fresno, Calif., where trial preparations have been taking place.

News

Penn State trustees reject bid to re-open Sandusky investigation By susan snyder The Philadelphia Inquirer MCT

During a raucous special meeting Tuesday, Pennsylvania State University trustees defeated a resolution to reopen the controversial investigation into how school leaders handled the Jerry Sandusky sex-abuse scandal. The proposal, introduced by alumnibacked trustees who for more than a year have been pushing the board to act _ and preferably reject _ the damning findings of former FBI Director Louis Freeh, won the support of only nine of the 26 board members who voted. Opponents said that too much remains unknown about Penn State’s role in Sandusky’s abuse of young boys on and off campus, and that they want to wait for the conclusion of criminal proceedings against former administrators on perjury, conspiracy and other charges. They also cite pending litigation by some Sandusky victims. “I believe patience is the order of the day,” said one trustee, Richard Dandrea, a Pittsburgh-area lawyer. Freeh’s July 2012 report said former Penn State President Graham B. Spanier, Athletic Director Tim Curley and Vice President Gary Schultz had conspired to cover up child-sex abuse allegations against the former assistant football coach to preserve the university’s reputation. Critics of the report have long wanted the board to repudiate it, reopen the investigation and perhaps wipe clean the blemish on the late football coach Joe Paterno’s legacy and the other former administrators. The alumni trustees maintain that there is no credible evidence of a coverup. Their motion would have created a board committee to reinvestigate Freeh’s work and report back to the board. “We need to defend Penn State,” alumni-elected trustee Anthony Lubrano, a Chester County businessman, told board members during the 90-minute meeting at the Nittany Lion Inn, spurring vigorous applause from the audience. “If not now, then when? If not us, then who?” Dandrea argued that the ad hoc

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board committee being advocated by alumni trustees would run into the same roadblocks as Freeh: It would not have access to key witnesses or subpoena powers to get critical information. The debate became heated at times and board chair Keith Masser, a Schuylkill County potato farmer, ejected several audience members for outbursts critical of the majority of trustees. Lubrano and Al Lord, another trustee and the former head of student loan lender Sallie Mae, said they would press to gain access to Freeh’s investigatory files, through the courts if necessary. “I’m going after that information,” Lord said after the meeting. “If they don’t want to do it as a group, so be it.” Masser said after the meeting that the board could look foolish if it were to take a stand only to have evidence incriminating to the university surface at the criminal trials. “There are a lot of issues that could reveal facts one way or the other,” he said. The board majority passed another resolution, promising to monitor the criminal cases against former administrators and other relevant proceedings and take “appropriate action” when they end. Freeh’s report, after an investigation commissioned and paid for by the university, included more than 100 recommendations for improving university governance and operations. But it also included conclusions about the university leadership’s culpability, which trustees who commissioned the report said they never asked Freeh to make. The report remains a point of contention in the university community and especially among the 32 trustees. T he NCAA cited it in handing down sanctions against Penn State, including a bowl ban, scholarship losses, and a $60 million fine. The NCAA has since rolled back the bowl ban and reinstated scholarships. More investigation of Freeh’s findings is needed, the alumni trustees argued. “All we want to do is finish it,” said alumni trustee Robert Jubelirer, a former Pennsylvania state senator. “There is no down side, none at all.”

THE-PENN@IUP.EDU


November 7, 2014

News

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Former FAMU band member guilty of manslaughter in hazing case By stephen hudak Indiana Sentinal MCT

The manslaughter verdict in the fatal hazing of Florida A&M University drum major Robert Champion should send a message as loud and clear as the famous Marching 100 band, State Attorney Jeff Ashton said last Friday. “I hope this scares people enough to stop it and to realize it’s not worth it and just to find better ways to show you belong than hitting people or hurting people or endangering their lives,” Ashton said outside the courtroom where FAMU percussionist Dante Martin was found guilty of manslaughter and three counts of hazing. Martin, who faces up to 22 years in prison, showed no emotion, and Champion’s parents clasped each other’s hands as Circuit Judge Renee Roche read the verdicts, which followed less than two hours of jury deliberations. Sentencing is set for Jan. 9. Martin’s family sobbed outside the courtroom but declined to discuss the verdicts, shooing away reporters.

Defense lawyers Richard Escobar and Dino Michaels said they plan to appeal on behalf of the 27-year-old Martin, accused of organizing the fatal ritual aboard a bus parked outside the Rosen Plaza hotel in Orlando. Martin, 27, was led from court by Orange County deputy sheriffs. He was denied an appeal bond. The late drum major’s father, also named Robert Champion, said he and his wife would pray for Martin and Martin’s family. Pamela Champion said the verdict would be nothing to celebrate unless it leads to the end of hazing on the nation’s college campuses, in high schools and among athletic teams, bands and other youth groups. “We hope that people will get the message that hazing is cruel ... and it needs to stop now,” Champion said. The panel of four women and two men listened to three days of testimony and nearly four hours of arguments last Friday from Ashton and Martin’s defense team. Ashton told jurors that hazing may have been a deeply rooted tradition in

the celebrated marching band, which has performed at presidential inaugurations, the Super Bowl and the Grammys, but that should not excuse those who beat Champion to death while hazing him on the percussion bus. “Tradition didn’t kill Robert Champion. Tradition isn’t to blame for Robert Champion’s death,” the prosecutor said. “You don’t get to break the law because those who came before you did it. That may work when you’re 10, but it doesn’t work when you’re an adult – an adult who has the ability to say, ‘No ... I won’t be part of this barbarous ritual anymore.’” Defense attorney Richard Escobar countered that Champion, a talented musician who had been a FAMU student for seven years, already held leadership positions in the high-energy Marching 100 when he voluntarily par-

ticipated in the ritual known as “crossing bus C” that led to his death Nov. 19, 2011. Champion was struck more than 100 times as he tried to bulldoze his way from the front of the bus to the back through fellow band members. Escobar argued the crossing on the bus was not a hazing but more akin to a toughness competition. He argued the ritual was an exercise that had been in place for generations, created by those who helped make the band great. “Brutal as it was, senseless as it was ... it was a competition,” he said. Martin did not testify during the trial. In addition to manslaughter Champion’s death, Martin was charged with misdemeanors in the alleged hazings of Keon Hollis and Lissette Sanchez of

Orlando, who were not injured during their hazings on the bus. Champion collapsed after the ritual, which occurred inside a bus parked at the Rosen Plaza hotel in Orlando following the Florida Classic game between FAMU and Bethune-Cookman University. An assistant medical examiner testified that he died of “hemorrhagic shock” as a result of the beating. Nine other former band members have received probation and community service sentences for their roles in Champion’s hazing. Another, Jessie Baskin, is serving a year in jail. Three others are awaiting trial. Though Martin faces potentially the longest prison sentence, Ashton said he didn’t view him as a “bad person.”

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November 7, 2014

‘Movember’

Alex Robinson/ The Penn

The Interfraternity Council kicked off it’s flurry of Movember events by inviting members of the IUP greek community to shave off their beards Monday in the HUB Atrium. The group will be sponsoring several more Movemeber-themed events over the next few weeks, including a cornhole tournament, a bowling contest, a wing-eating contest and its Movember Pack the House basketball game all to benefit men’s health charities.

News


Opinion

Cartoon by Kristin May

Penn EDITORIAL

Movember is about more than just facial hair This November, that beard you’ve been thinking about growing will not only keep you warm or make you look cool – it will help bring awareness to important men’s health issues. “Movember” – a term formed from combining the slang term for mustache, “mo,” and “November” – is an annual event that encourages men to grow out their mustaches to raise awareness for common types of male cancers. “Since relatively humble beginnings back in 2003 in Australia, the Movember movement has grown to be a truly global one,” according to the foundation’s website. To date, the Movember Foundation has raised $559 million and funded more than 800 programs in 21 countries, said the site. Because of the money raised through Movember efforts, Queensland University of Technology researchers will be starting a clinical trial within three years for new drugs. The $4.25 million grant will fast-track the drugs that are designed to attack the most agrressive forms of prostate cancer. The American Cancer Society’s estimates about 233,000 new cases of prostate cancer will be diagnosed, and about 29,480 men will die of prostate cancer the United States in 2014. That equals out to about one in 36 men with prostate cancer who will die this year. To put it simply, that’s too many. By supporting Movember, we are also supporting all those who suffer from cancer. And it’s easy, too. For men, participating in the cause requires little effort. In fact, all it takes is to not shave. And if you can’t grow a full mustache – or any mustache at all – don’t worry. Just as every person is different, so is every mustache. While women may not like the thought of hairy-faced men, knowing that upper lip hair could be helping out someone with cancer is worth a little irritation or discomfort. Grow a mustache, and maybe save a life.

Editorial Policy The Penn editorial opinion is determined by the Editorial Board, with the editor-in-chief having final responsibility. Opinions expressed in editorials, columns, letters or cartoons are not necessarily that of The Penn, the university, the Student Cooperative Association or the student body. The Penn is completely independent of the university.

Letter Policy The Penn encourages its readers to comment on issues and events affecting the Indiana University of Pennsylvania community through letters to the editor. Letters must be typed in a sans serif, 12-point font, double-spaced and no more than 350 words long. Letters may not be signed by more than five people, and letters credited to only an organization will not be printed. All writers must provide their signature, university affiliation, address and phone number for verification of the letter. The Penn will not honor requests to withhold names from letters. The Penn reserves the right to limit the number of letters published

Opinion

November 7, 2014

from any one person, from any one organization or about a particular issue. The Penn reserves the right to edit or reject any letters submitted. Submitted materials become the property of The Penn and cannot be returned. Deadlines for letters are Sunday and Wednesday at noon for publication in the next issue. Letters can be sent or personally delivered to: Editor-in-Chief, HUB Room 235 319 Pratt Drive, Indiana, PA 15701 Or emailed to: the-penn@iup.edu Letters not meeting the above requirements will not be published.

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Wet Ink

Bo Burnham makes sold-out Fisher Auditorium laugh during Monday performance By PETE SIRIANNI Managing Editor P.M.Sirianni@iup.edu

THE PENN

Wet Ink Editor: Rachel Clippinger –R.M.Clippinger@iup.edu Lead Wet Ink Writer: Andrew Milliken – A.P.Milliken@iup.edu

Penn Pals Everybody has a story...

In a sold-out Fisher Auditorium, Bo Burnham mixed standup comedy with songs to entertain a crowd of more than 1,400 Monday night at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. With fans arriving at the show shortly before 5 p.m. – a full two hours before the doors opened – the Oak Grove was filled as the line wrapped to Wilson Hall and beyond Sutton Hall. Adam Newman opened the night’s events with a performance that started just after 8 p.m. When the crowd saw a person emerge onstage, naturally, they thought it was Burnham opening his set. “It’s going to be 15 minutes of me, then … Bo,” Newman told the crowd. Newman, who has performed on Comedy Central and on the “Late Show with David Letterman,” joked about everything from Yelp reviews, to having to perform uncomfortable jokes in front of his parents to getting diarrhea in Austin. Once his set was over, Burnham emerged on the stage. As he struggled with a dead microphone for a few moments, the sold-out house cheered while wondering if this stunt was just a bit from the show. Wearing his trademark nondescript shirt and black pants, Burnham opened the show by making fun of the geographically challenged name of IUP, calling it “Indiana University of Pennsylvania in New Mexico.” Burnham also touched on some IUP history, bringing up the school’s deci-

By JESSIE LIST | Staff writer | J.L.List@iup.edu

What do you want to be when you grow up?

“I want to be a speech and language pathologist. I would like to be able to help kids learn to speak so that they can achieve their goals and do what they want to do.”

(Sarah Bader/ The Penn) Comedian Bo Burnham performed to a sold-out crowd in Fisher Auditorium Monday. The event was sponsored by The Entertainment Network and was their largest comedy event to date.

sion to drop the Indians nickname. “Red sounds too [unadventurous], so we went with crimson,” Burnham said, explaining his version of the fictional conversation that occurred when the school was deciding on a new nickname. It was further evident that Burnham did his fair share of homework on IUP when he touched on ‘Crimson Hawks’ formerly being the domain name of a pornography website. In between playing piano while singing his popular songs “White Straight Male” and “Men & Women,” Burnham playfully poked fun at Karl Richter (junior, safety sciences) and LeRon Tooles (junior, marketing), two members of The Entertainment Network who were sta-

- Laura Wolman (junior, speech and language pathology)

tioned at the steps on either side of the stage. While Burnham commented that one of the people responsible for his security had his hand in a cast (Tooles), more jokes were made on Richter’s behalf, which started because Burnham saw that he was wearing a digital watch. Once he found out Richter is the captain of the IUP Sailing Club, the jokes didn’t stop coming. “What happens at sea, stays at sea, Karl,” Burnham said, before eventually bringing Richter onstage for the audience to see. After returning to the stage for an encore, Burnham played his top hit, “Oh Bo.” The show was the largest comedy performance ever put on by TEN.

“I would like to be a financial analyst. I’ve been to my uncle’s company, and I found the work he had to do enjoyable and easy.” - Jason Bryant (sophomore, finance)

Burnham laughs with ‘Karl with a K’ Even with a popular comedian on campus making a sold-out Fisher Auditorium laugh, one of the headlines from the Bo Burnham show was not the comedian. Instead, Karl Richter (junior, safety sciences), a general member with The Entertainment Network since fall 2013, had the unique opportunity of being the butt of many of Bo Burnham’s jokes. Included in those jokes were jabs at Richter’s digital watch and his participation as the captain of

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the IUP sailing club. “Bo had many things to make fun of – the watch wasn’t something I thought he would pick up on,” Richter said in an email interview. “To be honest, I didn’t think I would be the topic of something so funny for the crowd.” Throughout the rest of the show, Burnham continued friendly jabs at Richter, who was seated in the aisle next to the stage stairs. “What I did not expect was the continuation of the jokes, and the

crowd’s support and interest in them. I was somewhat flattered when he brought me onstage. I think that kind of made up for the roasting he gave me during the show.” Richter, and other general and executive board members of TEN, got the chance to take photos with Burnham after his set. “Bo Burnham and Adam Newman were great acts, [and] hopefully we can have them again in the future, and Bo can find another crowd member to have fun with.”

November 7, 2014

“I graduate in December, and I am still not sure about what I want to do. But I do know that I want to work with kids.” - Lindsey Cumberledge (senior, child development and family relations)

Photos by Jessie List/ The Penn

Wet Ink


November 7, 2014

Wet Ink

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Student-run fashion shows raised money and awareness Tuesday and Wednesday By STEPHANIE BACHMAN

RACHEL CLIPPINGER

The Penn Staff the-penn@iup.edu

Months of preparation, long hours and stressful nights suddenly became appreciated for students enrolled in Dr. Eun Hwang’s Fashion Show Production class this semester on Tuesday and Wednesday. Students broke off into two groups of 14 and set out to complete the same project – put on a completely studentrun fashion show. Shows premiered Tuesday and Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. in the Hadley Union Building Ohio Room at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. The students were in charge of every detail: from the funding to selecting models, right down to the lighting shown on the screen. “It is like a full-time job,” said student producer, Adena Bianchi (senior, fashion merchandising and music). “It is challenging, but rewarding. It was a fun process, and I made a lot of friends doing it.” Tuesday’s show was called “Unhinged,” and it was produced in support of raising awareness for the Semicolon Project. This relatively new non-profit started in April 2013 and supports raising awareness and support for victims and prevention of suicide, self-harm and other types of mental illnesses. About 30 models walked in the fashion show, ranging from friends of the designers to students who showed a passion for modeling. They wore clothes sponsored by Macy’s of Greensburg and Maurices of Indiana. The theme of the fashion show

was displayed through the story of Sydney and Malcom, who were two of the models that performed skits throughout the show. The skits portrayed a woman who survived a shocking breakup and went from being devastated to turning her situation around and learning to be the best version of herself. She found her strength after she became unhinged, and she learned from this experience in her most challenging and darkest moments. The clothes, music, accompanying slideshow and the rest of the production all created a dark and somber atmosphere to match Sydney’s story and the story of those who self-harm or consider suicide. The clothes were a refreshing change from the style of clothes most often shown on the runway. Instead, the clothes were darker in colors and more somber. The outfits had more of a punk-rock look to them with edgy accessories, hair and makeup. There was an array of clothing styles – ranging from baggy trousers to leather dresses. All of the outfits could be worn by students during any occasion – going out and staying in. Shorter dresses and skirts were frequent pieces shown in their second runway look as leather made a sassy appearance. The music during the performance was a mix of hip-hop, alternative and rock. During intermission, IUP student musicians Andrew Milliken (senior, music), on keyboard; Justin Mathis, (senior, music) on saxophone; Jess Fasano (senior, music education), on saxophone, and Brandon Kandrack (senior, music education) played a jazz ensemble to break the two runway scenes in style.

Various features of the night all helped pull the theme together, such as the decorations inspired by New York City, the dim lighting and the blackand-white photos displayed on the screen at the top of the runway. Victoria Reimnitz (senior, disability services) said she enjoyed the event. “It was pretty stellar,” Reimnitz said. “There was very cute clothing and the music was fun. The girls put a lot of hard work into it and did a great job.” Although the evening seemed to end as quickly as it started, the audience was able to walk away with both an increased awareness on fashion and suicide and self-harm. The other half of the class premiered their show, “Insanity”, Wednesday night raising money for a brother of Sigma Chi, Keifer Kuhn. “Kuhn, who recently became paralyzed this summer, needs help paying for making his house accessible for him to move around,” said Alaina Bollibon (senior fashion merchandizing), student coordinator of the fashion event. “We are proud to say we raised over $200 for a free fashion show with contributions from friends, family and students of IUP to give to Keifer.” The “Insanity” fashion show included three runway looks: absolute black, absolute white and absolute insanity. Each look was given a statement accessory from Maurices, including earrings, bracelets and necklaces. Outrageous hair was used to embellish the piece with original flare and spunk. “Giving off the statement that ‘accessories can transform an outfit,’” Bollibon said. Both shows brought the crowds to applause and received raving reviews from students, professors, sponsors and family.

SEE MORE PHOTOS ONLINE THEPENN.ORG

(Photos by Rachel Clippinger/ The Penn) Above Left: Lauren Hayden (sophomore, criminology) rocks the runway with black leggings paired with a floral short-sleeve blouse in the Unhinged Fashion Show. Above Right: Fiona Wynne (senior, mathematics education) appeared in maroon leopard print pants and a frayed stringed top Tuesday sufficing to the dark theme.

(Photo by Alex Robinson/ The Penn) Quinshayah Williams (senior, nursing) and Elizabeth Gardner (freshman, college of education and education technology) model styles from Maurice’s in the Insanity Fashion Show.

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November 7, 2014

Wet Ink

Kipp Gallery presents: The Mountain and the Bumblebee The gallery is open from noon to 4 p.m. on weekends By PAUL SHALOKA Staff Writer P.P.Shaloka@iup.edu

(Photo by Daniel Kirby/ The Penn) Kipp Gallery in Sprowls Hall will display The Mountain and the Bumblebee until December 5.

Located on the first floor of Sprowls Hall, the Kipp Gallery is playing host to the traveling art exhibit known only as The Mountain and the Bumblebee until Dec. 5. Open from noon to 4 p.m. on weekends, the gallery provides an opportunity to lose oneself in an ever-changing landscape of visual, written and auditory art. The exhibit got its name from an unlikely historical anecdote. In 1842, John C. Fremont, a surveyor and geologist, wrote about a surprise mountaintop meeting with a bumblebee where he imagined “each of them to be the first of their species ever to brave such geological extremes.” The Mountain and the Bumblebee is a collection of contemporary paintings, photos, sculptures, poems, recordings and set pieces by modern artists. Every piece in the exhibit deals with both broadly and specifically defined landscapes. The gallery attempts to reconcile American interaction with landscapes

and their own natural state, challenging the passerby to question humanity’s mark on the world. In turn, one must question the effect of the landscape on the individual American, from a cultural, physical and psychological perspective. The art also looks cool. A pyramid of poetry behind a clear glass case is the first thing students can see as they pass Kipp Gallery. The pyramid, or perhaps the mountain, of poetry expertly sets the stage for the following works. It captures the austere and natural essence that all the art encompasses, as well as the hints of both challenging and accepting the American Dream. Entering the main gallery, students can pick up a small booklet detailing further works by the artists showcased, as well as a concise but informative map and informational summary of the entire exhibit. Recordings play softly in the background, listing numbers that correspond to different professions – 131,000 smiths, 82,000 miners, etc. The Mountain and the Bumblebee is a study in contradictions, the visual with the auditory, the expansionist and conservationist aspects of the American

psyche, the human with the natural, the majesty and stoicism of the mountain with the humbleness and whimsy of the bumblebee. Within the white-walled enclosure of Kipp lie a melange of different colorful pieces. Photographs of the center points of the United States population – meant to demonstrate the inexorable march westward of Americans and immigrants caused by the power of the American dream – rest across from small woodcuts that show the layered and toxic ramifications of human interaction with the natural world. Looped videos of people walking are played on old-fashioned televisions that rest on the exhibit’s centerpiece, a large hand-carved wooden cart. The exhibits’ last piece is intricately small bumblebees that require a magnifying glass to even see properly. Everything has moved in a circle form: poetic mountain top, through the ever-changing valley of art to mountain top again, and that unexpected encounter with the bumblebee. Merely hearing about the art is not enough – everyone should make the effort to see the gallery in person.

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November 7, 2014

Wet Ink

Hawk Rock’s third annual ‘Dance-A-Thon’ will be held Sunday for 12 hours By PAUL SHALOKA Staff Writer P.P.Shaloka@iup.edu

The student-run organization, Hawk Rock, will be hosting an event extravaganza in order to raise money to combat the unfortunate amount of hunger and homelessness in Indiana County. This is the third Dance-A-Thon, a tradition that has become attached to the Hawk Rock event, which was originally created several years ago by a group of enterprising students working together to make a difference. For every student attending IUP,

there is someone in the Indiana borough who lacks the most basic of human needs – the proper amount of food and the right to a sustainable life. It costs $5 for single admittance and $10 for an all-access pass. All proceeds will go to the Community Kitchen meal program, the Indiana County Community Action Program Food Bank-Pathways Shelter and Family Promise of Indiana County, all which work together to provide temporary housing, counseling and meals to homeless and low-income families. The showcase of the day will be a Dance-A-Thon, in which contestants

will attempt to dance for as long as possible. Students will work in teams to try to keep dancing in a competitive yet friendly competition. The playlist will be varied and will be managed by a professional disc jockey, who will be taking requests playing classic dance party songs. There will also be an hourlong-theme special, the nature of which is being kept secret until the event. Co-president of the Hawk Rock, Emily Downs (sophomore, mathematics) explained her role in the event. Throughout the event, she will be

WA N T TO W R I T E F O R W ET I N K ?

making sure that things are running smoothly, participating in as many activities as possible and getting to know the dancers in hopes that they will join the committee in future years. Emily Waggoner (sophomore, professional studies in education) said she is excited to attend the “Dance-A-Thon” because of the crazy things that happen throughout the night. “I can’t wait to see my friends embarrassing themselves dancing, finding out all the activities there and, of course, eating good food,” Waggoner said.

The Hawk Rock event is being sponsored by food establishments outside of campus, including Wendy’s, The Coney and Sheetz. Last year’s Hawk Rock raised $5,500 for the cause, and organizers of the event hope to raise more this year. All students interested in 12 hours of food, dancing and other activities such as a dodgeball tournament, in a convenient location, all in order to raise money for a good cause, are encouraged to attend. The Hawk Rock Dance-A-Thon will be held at Memorial Field House Sunday from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.

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Sports

THE PENN

Sports Editor: Cody Benjamin – C.J.Benjamin@iup.edu Lead Sports Writer: Michael Kiwak – M.T.Kiwak@iup.edu

IUP looks to continue November dominance vs. Gannon Crimson Hawks are 10-0 in November football games under Cignetti By JOSH HILL Staff Writer J.M.Hill5@iup.edu

The Indiana University of Pennsylvania Crimson Hawks (6-3) will put their perfect 10-0 November record – under Curt Cignetti – on the line as they travel to Erie to face off against the Gannon Golden Knights (7-2) Saturday at noon. This will be only the seventh meeting in series history, with IUP FOOTBALL holding a 4-2 advantage. IUP has won three straight games in the series, which includes an impressive 5520 shellacking at home last season. This game will not be at the friendly confines of George P. Miller Stadium, however. It will take place at Gannon University Field, a location that has been one of the tougher places to play in the conference. Gannon comes into the game after receiving a forfeit victory at the hands of California University of Pennsylvania. It needs a win coupled with a Slippery Rock University loss to clinch a spot in the “State Game.” The Golden Knights have one of the best offenses in the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference, and also possess the football longer than anyone in the conference. Liam Nadler is the man that makes it all go for Gannon. The 6-foot-7 quarterback has thrown 17 touchdowns this season, compared to just four interceptions. Justin Caliste is his top receiver with over 700 yards receiving on the season. Brock Jones is also one of the best running backs in the country, adding 14 total touchdowns. Jones leads the PSAC in rushing and also ranks in the top 10 of Division II with over 150 yards per game. Cignetti had another praise for the

Sports

Golden Knights. “Gannon is a really good football team,” he said. “And they have a really good quarterback.” Gannon’s defense only allows an average of 19 points each game, which is fourth in the PSAC. Linebacker Luke Rankie’s 54 tackles lead Gannon. Matthew Gawlik is a big threat along the defensive line and leads the team in both tackles for loss (7.5) and sacks (4.5). After holding Clarion to negative yardage on the ground, IUP will rely on their defensive line to combat the Golden Knights potent offense. They have a mix of seasoned veterans and young players who have combined to make the Crimson Hawks defensive line one of the best units in the country. The quarterback situation will remain the same, as Cignetti expects both Chase Haslett (graduate, sports management) and Eddie Stockett (freshman, business) to see action. IUP wants to continue holding onto the football, which is something they have done well all year long, ranking second in the conference in time of possession. “That would be nice,” Cignetti said. The Crimson Hawks anticipate a battle against Gannon. “It will be a challenge,” Cignetti said. “But we have something to prove.” OTHER GAME NOTES: FANTASTIC FOUR: IUP averages over 160 yards on the ground each game. That is due in large part to the litany of running backs they have at their disposal. Luigi Lista-Brinza (freshman, kinesiology health and sport science) will start against Gannon, but look for the Crimson Hawks to ride the “hot hand” against the Golden Knights. That could be one of three other running backs on the roster. Chris Temple (freshman, accounting) had 114 yards last week, while sophomores Darian Bradley (kinesiology health and sport science) and Izzy Green (computer science) have had flashes of brilliance this season as well.

Luigi Lista-Brinza (freshman, kinesiology health and sport science) carries the ball for IUP.

“We’ll evaluate it during practice,” Cignetti said. COACHING EXCELLENCE: One of the key elements to IUP’s stellar defensive line play this season has been coaches Bryant Haines and Bernie McQuown. Haines, a former graduate assistant at Ohio State University, is currently in the midst of his first year with the Crimson Hawks. His brother, Tyler, is also on the staff and serves as the offensive coordinator. “Bryant Haines does a really good job coaching the defensive line,” Cignetti said. “He’s a real good technician. He has a good relationship with the kids.” McQuown is one of the most respected coaches in the area and has been coaching at IUP for 28 years. He has announced his retirement, effective at the end of the season. “He’s had a great career,” Cignetti said. We’re really going to miss him. He’s contributed greatly over the years.”

November 7, 2014

(Nick Dampman/ The Penn)

SU PER REGION 1 The Super Region I Rankings were released on Nov. 3. They consist of four PSAC teams (2 from the East, 2 from the West):

1 Bloomsburg

6 American

2 Concord

7

3 West Chester

8 Virginia State

4 Winston-Salem

9 Slippery Rock

5 California, PA

10 Charleston

International Shepherd

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November 7, 2014

Sports

Swimming teams set sail vs. Shippensburg

Left: Ben Adams (junior, criminolgy) competes in the 100-meter butterfly. Both the Crimson Hawks’ men’s and women’s swimming teams topped Shippensburg Nov. 1. Right: An IUP swimmer prepares to dive into the pool during the Crimson Hawks’ matchup with the Red Raiders.

(Photos by Nick Dampman/ The Penn)

Women’s soccer falls in PSAC championships By CASSIE PUTT Staff Writer C.L.Putt@iup.edu

The Crimson Hawks women’s soccer team dropped to 9-7-3 after a 5-0 loss in the first round of the playoffs. Indiana University of Pennsylvania’s shutout loss leaves the team in hopes of earning a selection in the NCAA tournament. “I would love to hear that we made it within the top eight in regional rankings and get to play in the NCAA tournament,” Jessica Printz (sophomore, athletic training) said. IUP came out strong in the first half of the match with three shots in the initial eight minutes. However, the Warriors overtook the game and outshot the Hawks 9-2. Despite the defeat, head coach Adel Heder said he was “extremely proud of the girls and what they have accomplished.”

“Their work ethic is amazing,” he said.” Often, the morale of a team can plummet after a tough loss, especially early on in a championship, but Heder reasons otherwise. “I don’t think the loss will affect the morale of the team because we have a very young team,” Heder said. “We have 24 players,” he said, “and 14 of them are freshman.” East Stroudsburg’s first goal came at the 35-minute mark, and the other four came in the second half. “I have to give credit to East Stroudsburg.” Heder said. “They have a lot of talent and experience.”

READ THE FULL STORY on ThePenn.org


November 7, 2014

Sports

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NOTES, PREDICTIONS AND OPINIONS ON THE WORLD OF SPORTS By MICHAEL KIWAK Lead Sports Writer M.T.Kiwak@iup.edu

Hey, everyone. There are no quips this week. I have something far more meaningful I wish to discuss. So, bear with me while I recount two incredibly heartwarming stories that occurred this week. First, Mount St. Joseph freshman basketball player Lauren Hill scored her team’s first and last baskets in a 66-55 victory over Hiram College on Sunday. It was a dream come true for Hill, whose inoperable brain tumor is expected to claim her life within just a few months. The NCAA assisted her in this goal by allowing Mount St. Joseph, which is Division III, to move their season opener up two weeks so Hill could have her wish. They also had to change the venue to accommodate the massive amount of people wanting to attend the game. Ten thousand people, including professional athletes and celebrities such as LeBron James and legendary college basketball head coach Pat Summitt, crowded Xavier University’s Cintas Center arena. This outstanding show of support was not simply because Hill is dying or because she was playing her one – and perhaps her only – college basketball game. They flocked to Cincinnati because this brave young woman made this game and her fight a platform for something larger: to raise awareness for the rare disease affecting her. Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG), which affects an average of only 100-150 people in the United States per year, typically affects children aged five through seven, so it’s incredibly rare for someone like the 19-year-old Hill to develop it. Little is known about this brain cancer, and people diagnosed currently carry a 0 percent survival rate. At the game, volunteers sold gray products – gray is the color of brain cancer awareness – like wrist bands, buttons and shirts that read “Never Give Up.” Hill’s teammates and coaches surprised her with gray jerseys, made especially for the game. Hiram players even wore gray “Play for 22” warm-up shirts. At the end of the game, the team announced that the event raised $40,000 for TCSN, which raises money to help fund research for DIPG. “To reach and touch this many people is amazing,” Hill said. “Not many

people knew about DIPG before me, and now that they do, we can get research going to cure this cancer. I won’t be around to see that, but it’s going to help so many people. “That’s why the support can’t end with this game.” Now, my other tale is that of Cincinnati Bengals defensive tackle Devon Still, whose daughter, Leah, is combating Stage IV neuroblastoma. After months of treatment that included surgery and chemotherapy, Leah finally got to see her dad play in person for the first time when the Bengals took on the Cleveland Browns on Thursday. Leah finally felt well enough to leave the Philadelphia hospital, where she’s being treated, according to the Associated Press. This comes a little more than a month after undergoing surgery to have a tumor removed from her abdomen on Sept. 25. As it stands, she has a 50 percent chance of survival. When Still learned of the diagnosis, he understandably left the team to be with his daughter full-time. That is, until he learned that Leah’s treatment could cost upwards of $1 million. He returned to the team, but – knowing he could not be a full-time contributor given the circumstances – the Bengals waived him and placed him on the practice squad. That way, Still could keep his insurance and still earn a salary to pay for Leah’s medical expenditures. The kindness of the organization did not stop there, as the Bengals announced that all profits made from the sale of Still’s No. 75 jersey would go directly to the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital to support pediatric cancer research. In total, nearly 15,000 jerseys were sold from when the campaign first started in the beginning of September to Oct. 20, when the Bengals’ donation march ended. Demand has been so great that the jersey has sold out on the team’s website, and it has now made its way to the 11th highest-selling jersey in the NFL over the past seven months. Other figures in the other NFL did their part to support the cause. New Orleans head coach Sean Payton purchased 100 jerseys, therefore contributing $10,000 to the cause. Additionally, the New England Patriots purchased Still jerseys for their cheerleaders, who wore them during the team’s game

against the Bengals a few weeks ago. Afterward, the team’s players signed the jerseys, and they were auctioned off, with proceeds going to the children’s hospital. The weeks of support all culminated on Thursday night, when a check worth more than $1.3 million was presented to Leah Still and other pediatric cancer patients on the field between the first and second quarters. “The whole experience … I have been just stunned,” Still told Peter King of Sports Illustrated. “It has helped so much. I can’t believe that in this sport that has no so-called heart, it’s really so full of heart. “That’s the truth: Football is full of heart.” That quote brings me to the whole point of why I have decided to recount these stories. To put it bluntly, lots of bad things happen in sports. We hear countless stories of fraud, violence, substance abuse and all other forms of controversy surrounding the games we love to spectate. I believe that these depravities, among other aspects, make us lose sight of what

make sports so great. The true beauty of sports is not what is manifested within the parameters of a football field, a basketball court, a baseball field, an ice rink, a tennis court, a golf course or even in a natatorium. Rather, that beauty manifests itself in the hearts of all athletes. It’s through the passion, zeal, perseverance and willingness to work together with others that they express. That is what sports are really about. As tragic as these happenings are, they shine a much-needed bright light on the positive realm of sports. They are a welcome break from the Ray Rices and Alex Rodriguezes of the world that dominate sports news headlines. They embody the primary objective of team sports: coming together as one in support of a greater cause. Additionally, these events are sobering, but they’re also a stark reminder of how frail we all – as human beings – can be. It’s also a reminder of how we can all make life a little better through working together. Through being a team. The Predictions I predict that when the final buzzer

sounds for Lauren and Leah, no matter when that may be, they’ll leave the playing field victoriously and with the respect and adoration of their peers. The Twitter Follow: Devon Still (@Dev_Still71) Give a follow to Still to stay updated on Leah’s fight, and maybe even send him a tweet of encouragement with the hashtag #LEAHSTRONG. If you go through his timeline, you can tell he most definitely appreciates it. The Link I understand extra money isn’t easy to come by. But if you can spare even a small amount, go to one of the following links to support the fight against pediatric cancers. Even something seemingly insignificant, like $5, will go a long way in fighting these horrible diseases that can be devastating. Don’t donate mindlessly, either. I also encourage reading about pediatric cancer to learn about the intricacies of these illnesses. http://org.grouprev.com/layupcampaign https://www.alexslemonade.org/civicrm/contribute/transact?reset=1&id=7


18

November 7, 2014 APARTMENTS

Extra nice newly remodeled 5-bedroom house for Fall 2015, Spring 2016. Two baths, dishwasher, W/D. Utilities included. 724-388-4033. Extra nice furnished apartments for 1 or 2 people for Fall 15/ Spring 16. Parking and utilities included. 724-388-4033. Why pay more? Thomas Hall the only off campus housing on Pratt Drive is now taking applications for single, furnished studio apartments for Fall 2015 Spring 2016. includes all utilities, Wi-Fi/TV. Call 724349-2007. www.thomasrentals.com 2015/16 General Grant One Bedroom Apartments. Tenant pays electric and cable. iupapartments.com, 724-3885481. 2015/16 Wedgefield Apartments. 2 Bedroom $2225/person/semester. 3 Bedroom $2325/person/semester. Tenants pay electric, cable, internet. iupapartments. com, 724-388-5481. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments available fall 2015 spring 2016 $2200 per semester per person utilities included, free parking, washer/dryer 724-464-7399. 1-5 bedrooms apts. and houses available for fall 15/spring 16. Fully furnished, within walking distance to campus. Visit www.iupapartments.net for details on all our properties. Call or text 724-681-8381. Please leave message if answering service is reached. Spacious 4 bedroom, 2 bath $1700 plus utilities, parking included 724-422-4852. 2-4 bedroom apartments $2300 includes parking and utilities 724-422-4852. 10 steps from campus, quality houses and apartments, F’15-S’16 fully furnished excellent accommodations, reasonable rent, utilities included, parking available, only quiet studious non-partying non-smoking student groups of 2,3,4, or 5 please 724-840-3997. Apartments and Houses 2015-16 call or text 724-840-2083.

2015-2016 very clean 2 bedroom large living room, bathroom, kitchen. Steps from campus. Fully furnished. $3,000 utilities included except electric. Call/text 724762-4680. Tired of high rents? WETZEL.MANAGEBUILDING.COM OR 724-349-5312. 1,3 and 4 bedroom apartments. Several locations, ALL MAJOR utilities included. Free wifi. $1900-$2700 per student. One-site laundry, most locations. Only $250 deposit. VERY nice apartments. Facebook: BG Brothers Rentals, go to photo albums, www.bgiup.com. 724-9539477 or 724-549-2059, text. One 2 bedroom and one 3 bedroom for fall 2015/ spring 2016 close to campus laundry parking and utilities included. 724-840-0066 5 bedroom, 2 bath; $2050 includes utilities 724-349-5312. 1 Bedroom $385/month plus electric kitchen appliances, full bath, no pets; 2 Bedrooms $550/month plus electric lease now through May 31st 724-465-8521. 1-5 bedroom apartments. Rent includes utilities. 724-464-9363. Fall ‘15/Spring ‘16. 3 Bedroom apartment. $1800 per person, per semester. 724-840-7190. iuprental.com 1 bedroom unit, located on South Street by The Hub. Ideal location, close to campus. Unit includes water and off street parking in rent and some furnishings. For more information, please call Diane at 814243-0192. 3 bedroom unit available on Locust Street behind Wallwork Hall. Ideal location, close to campus. All units include off-street parking, garbage and some furnishings in rent. For more information, please contact Diane at 814-243-0192. 5 bedroom unit available on Locust Street behind Wallwork Hall. Ideal location, close to campus. All units include off-street parking, garbage and some furnishings in rent. For more information, please contact Diane at 814-243-0192. UPTOWN! 2015-2016. Beautiful Apts. 2,

3, 4 occupants. Many perks. Reduced pricing. 724-354-2360 before 9:00pm. Off Campus 1BR Furnished, Full Kitchen, AC, Nice. Available May 2015 Call 724-464-9252. 2 bedroom apartment near Giant Eagle Express. 724-549-9793. 4-bedroom apartment. Fall 2015-Spring 2016, 4-6 bedroom apartments. Fully furnished. All utilities INCLUDED. DirecTV, Internet & parking included. $2,000 per semester. 724-388-4281 PROCRASTINATE Now, Walk Farther Next Year! Get up and Go Shop @ OakGroveRealty.net. Large three bedroom student apartment. Furnished. All utilities included, free parking. $1950 per semester/per student. Fall 2015 - Spring 2016. Call 724-465-2209. Over 200 apartments. Every One Is Different. OakGroveRealty.net has One for Everyone. 2 Bedroom upscale, well furnished apartments. 2 blocks from campus. Parking, Laundromat, A/C, storage room, 24/7 Maintenance, dishwasher, garbage disposal, microwave. New oak flooring 724-388-5687. New Listing 3 unit available for 2,3, or 4 serious, nonsmoking, non-partying students. All units adjoin campus with parking available. 1 bedroom house with large upstairs loft with 1/2 bath suitable for 2 people. $1700/person plus utilities. One 2bedroom and one 4bedroom apartments, newly remodel. $2600/person includes utilities expect cable. Call for more details. 724-762-4424. Leave clear message with phone number. WWW.PREITERENTALS.COM. FALL 2015 - SPRING 2016. TWO AND THREE BEDROOM APTS. NEWLY REMODELED, FURNISHED, LAUNDRY, FREE PARKING. $1450-1750. 724-388-3388. Townhouse for 3 next to campus 1 1/2 baths. w & d, air, parking/ 724-388-3052 treehouseiup.com Two bedroom apartment Fall ‘15 Spring ‘16. No pets. Furnished. Near

campus. 814-446-5497. One bedroom. Spring 2015. $2000, parking included. 412-309-0379. 2 bedroom. Spring 2015. $1800, parking included. 412-309-0379. One bedroom. Fall 2015 - Spring 2016. $2000, parking included. 412-309-0379. Two bedroom. Fall 2015 - Spring 2016. $1800, parking included. 412-309-0379. SPRING 2015. ONE SEMESTER ONLY! 4 BEDROOM (for 2,3, or 4 occupants), 2 bathroom apartment, uptown. Price reduced. 724-354-2360 before 9:00 PM 2 BED AVAILABLE FOR NEXT YEAR. HUGE, CLEAN, QUIET, APARTMENT 3 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS. FURNISHED, OFF STREET PARKING, LAUNDRY, PRIVATE YARD, PET FRIENDLY AND 3RD BEDROOM FOR STUDY ETC. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED. PERFECT FOR GRAD OR SERIOUS STUDENTS. $2900/SEMESTER/ STUDENT. CALL OR TEXT RUSS - 724801-0100. SPRING SEMESTER (2015) ONLY Apt Available. Clean, Furnished, newly carpeted IUP apt available for (SPRING SEMESTER 2015 ONLY) to 3, 2 or 1 students. Free: PARKING, Gas, Water, Garbage, Sewage. Tenant’s pay Electric and Cable. $2500 + $200 deposit per student. Take advantage of this unique situation to rent for only the SPRING 2015 SEMESTER at reasonable rate. Call or text 724-757-6309. Available Jan 10th, 2015. Email blunieski@yahoo.com FIVE 1 BEDS AVAILABLE NEXT YEAR. HALF A BLOCK FROM CAMPUS, CLEAN, COMFORTABLE, QUIET, AND SAFE. FURNISHED AND ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED. OFF STREET PARKING AVAILABLE. GREAT OPPORTUNITY FOR A GROUP OF FRIENDS WHO WANT TO BE CLOSE BUT ALSO WANT THEIR PRIVACY. $3200/SEMESTER. CALL OR TEXT RUSS 724-801-0100. Nice 3 bedroom apartment Above quiet office, large backyard, offstreet parking, all utilities included except electrical, 2 block walk to campus. Large Bedrooms, approx 16x16, kitchen w/ appliances, living area. Use email or call or txt 724-388-9428 ask

Classifieds for Jake. Email jake@jakedavisinsurance. com 1 Bedroom Apartments. Available Fall 2015/Spring 2016. Furnished All Utilities Included. Free Parking. www. iupoffcampusapartments.com 724-4549860. Email jlbrick212@gmail.com

HOUSES Investment Properties. 6-student home; 4-bedroom family home; duplex with two 3-bedroom apartments, sold together or separate. Excellent income. Well maintained. 724-422-3559 or 724840-2498. Leave message. 5 bedroom house available fall 2015 spring 2016 $2500 per semester per person, utilities included, free parking, washer and dryer 724-464-7399. Great Houses! Close. 2-3 bedrooms. 2015-2016. 724-388-6535. Tree House apartments and houses next to campus, utilities included, furnished, washer-dryer, air-conditioned, parking, townhouse design. 724-388-0352, treehouseiup.com Very low rent 3,4,5 bedroom houses close to campus, furnished, free laundry, free off-street parking. 2015-2016 724465-7602 or e-mail rlfiedler@gmail.com Newly remodeled 4 bedroom house available Spring 2015. very low rent. Close to campus, furnished, free laundry and parking. 724-465-7602 rlfiedler@ gmail.com Three four and five bedroom housing reasonably priced close to campus free parking furnished some utilities included. F2015/S2016 morgantiiuprentals.com 724-388-1277; 412-289-8822. Three and five bedroom houses available now through Sp2015 furnished call for rates morgantiiuprentals.com 412-2892288; 724-388-1277. 3 and 5 bedroom houses. $2000-$2700, ALL MAJOR utilities included. On-site laundry. Only $250 deposit. VERY nice houses. www.bgiup.com. Facebook BG Bothers Rentals, go to photo albums for details. Text: 724-953-9477 or 724-5492059. Fall 2015/ Spring 2016 2 bedroom furnished parking and utilities included $2500 per semester 814-341-5404. 2 and 3 students own bedroom fall’15spring’16 excellent locations W/D Call

724-762-8338 between 2-8pm. CAMPBELL STUDENT HOUSING. LIKE US ON FACEBOOK!! 3-4-5 BEDROOM HOUSES 2015-2016. CLOSE TO CAMPUS. INCLUDES ALL UTILITIES COMPLETELY FURNISHED WASHER/DRYER, PARKING, EXCELLENT LOCATIONS REASONABLE RENT. 724-539-8012. New listing. Fall ‘15-’16: 2,3,4 bedroom houses. Fully furnished, free parking, washer and dryer, dishwasher, close location and newly remodeled. 724-4226757. www.facebook.com/tntrentals One person cottage, unfurnished. $2400 per semester. parking, close to campus. newly remodeled. call for details: 724388-5055. Fall 2015/Spring 2016 and summer available. 4 bedroom for 4 or 5 students. Fall 2015 - Spring 2016. $1600 to $1700 plus utilities included parking. garbage, washer/ dryer. 412 Water Street. 724-840-3370 after 5pm. 4 and 5 Bedroom Houses 1 1/2 Blocks From Campus. Washers and Dryers. Dishwasher. Parking. Snow Removal. Utilities Included. $2,600 per semester. Phone or Text 724-422-0717. Bill McCoy. 3 bdrm house, walk to campus. newly renovated $1,600/month plus water/ elec/gas. free parking/washer/dryer avail June 2015. 702-281-8042. WWW.PREITERENTALS.COM. FALL 2015 - SPRING 2016. FOUR BEDROOM HOUSE. 1130 SCHOOL STREET. NEWLY REMODELED, FURNISHED, LAUNDRY, FREE PARKING. $1800. 724388-3388. House for two next to campus 724-3880352. treehouseiup.com 5 Bedroom. Fall 2015 - Spring 2016. $1800, washer/dryer, parking included. 412-309-0379. 3BR DUPLEX. Spacious,3 bedroom, GREAT LOCATION,close to campus, some free off street parking available. Phone 724-354-2247 or 724-599-5654 2100/ sem/student. Email sharshyne@me.com STUDENT HOUSING AVAILABLE. Three bedroom student house for rent. Walking distance from campus. Available now and 2015-2016 school year. 412-812-0615. Fall2015/Spring2016 House Available. Apt and Houses available Fall 2015-Spring 2016. Clean, Newly Carpeted, Furnished, Back Yard, Deck, Porch. Free Parking, Free Water, Free Heat, Free Garbage. $2500. per student per semester + Electric + Cable. Call or text 724-757-6309 for appointment to see. Email blunieski@yahoo.com

ROOMMATES

BL U E E D G E A P AR TM E N TS

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New ly Ren ova ted Close to John son & Stright 4 Bedroom s forfou rpeople Utilities In clu ded Bea u tifu lly Fu rn ished A pts. www.IUPapartment.com

F a ll 2015 Sp r in g 2016

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Roommate needed for 3 bedroom apartment. $1800. Fall ‘15/Spring ‘16. 2 semester lease. 724-840-7190. iuprental.com

HELP WANTED ServersDay & Evening Shifts AvailableFill out an application at Whitey’s Peetza & Eatery368 1st Street, Coral, PAOnly 10 minutes from Indiana!


19

November 7, 2014

Sports


November 7, 2014

Sports

20

CRIMSON HAWK RENTALS

PIZZA HOUSE VILLAGE NOW LEASING

Large HD TV‛s Utilities Included

10TH ST

D N LA K OA

E AV

Newly Renovated New Furniture Parking Available Directly Across From IUP‛s Oak Grove 1-5 Bedroom Apartments


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