20
Observer the volume xlvi, issue 4 News A&E Opinion Sports friday, 9/12/2014 pg. 3 Do let the bed bugs bite? pg. 10 Squashing the Mantis pg. 15 Old age, new beginnings pg. 18 Women’s soccer: Narrow victories Remembering facilities worker Chris Malloy Andrew Hodowanec/Observer to Malloy | 2 Case Western Reserve University Spartan football defeated arch rival Carnegie Mellon by a score of 30-0 to hoist the 29th annual Academic Bowl last Friday. A loss to the CWRU community Mission Accomplished Anne Nickoloff Arts & Entertainment Editor Late facilities worker Chris Malloy seemed like the happiest worker at Case Western Reserve University. He couldn’t stop smiling, and it was contagious. “He was always smiling,” said Matt Dvorak, the Graduate Resident Mentor for House 7 of the Village at 115th who worked with Malloy at the North Area Office. “He was on the balls of his feet half the time; he’d just spring into the office.” Dvorak, who has worked at the North Area Office for the past five summers, saw Malloy, the Housing facilities HVAC technician on an almost daily basis during his time at CWRU. They even bonded outside the of- fice too, when Dvorak’s apartment’s air-conditioning malfunctioned. Malloy used to stop by every day to tell Dvorak that “we didn’t forget about you. We’re working on it.” He took pride in helping his friends. *** While Malloy’s work moved him all over campus, staff at the North Area Office, located in Wade Commons, saw Malloy when he stopped by to get keys or discuss facilities work orders. “He’d always say, ‘I’m looking out for you, I’ve got you,’” said department assistant Beth Emmelhainz. She smiled pg. 19

Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Issue 4 of The Observer, the weekly student publication of Case Western Reserve University.

Citation preview

Page 1: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

Observerthe volume xlvi, issue 4

News A&E Opinion Sports

friday, 9/12/2014

pg. 3Do let the bed

bugs bite?

pg. 10Squashing the

Mantis

pg. 15 Old age,

new beginnings

pg. 18 Women’s soccer: Narrow victories

Remembering facilities worker Chris Malloy

Andrew Hodowanec/Observer

to Malloy | 2

Case Western Reserve University

Spartan football defeated arch rival Carnegie Mellon by a score of 30-0 to hoist the 29th annual Academic Bowl last Friday.

A loss to the CWRU community

Mission Accomplished

Anne NickoloffArts & Entertainment Editor

Late facilities worker Chris Malloy seemed like the happiest worker at Case Western Reserve University.

He couldn’t stop smiling, and it was contagious.

“He was always smiling,” said Matt

Dvorak, the Graduate Resident Mentor for House 7 of the Village at 115th who worked with Malloy at the North Area Office. “He was on the balls of his feet half the time; he’d just spring into the office.”

Dvorak, who has worked at the North Area Office for the past five summers, saw Malloy, the Housing facilities HVAC technician on an almost daily

basis during his time at CWRU. They even bonded outside the of-

fice too, when Dvorak’s apartment’s air-conditioning malfunctioned.

Malloy used to stop by every day to tell Dvorak that “we didn’t forget about you. We’re working on it.”

He took pride in helping his friends.

***

While Malloy’s work moved him all over campus, staff at the North Area Office, located in Wade Commons, saw Malloy when he stopped by to get keys or discuss facilities work orders.

“He’d always say, ‘I’m looking out for you, I’ve got you,’” said department assistant Beth Emmelhainz. She smiled

pg. 19

Page 2: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

news

Anastazia VaniskoStaff Reporter

On Sept. 4, dozens of home care pro-viders gathered outside the St. Clair Av-enue McDonald’s at 7:00 a.m. to protest for a $15 minimum wage. Inspired by a protest outside of a New York City Mc-Donald’s started just after Thanksgiving 2012, the Fight for $15 has become an international movement, finding success in some markets, including Seattle, who voted to raise the minimum wage to $15 last June.

Home care providers take care of the elderly and disabled, providing services including bathing, dressing and cooking meals. Local home care providers, who have no union in Cleveland, approached Service Employees International Union District 1199 (SEIU1199), a health care and social service union, with the hopes of working together to improve the wages and conditions of their work.

According to Anthony Caldwell, com-munications coordinator for SEIU1199, it

was clear that there was a systematic prob-lem, and as workers gathered, they saw that collective action was their best option.

The new movement, the Health Work-ers Rising Campaign, is trying to raise awareness and gather people to its cause. Caldwell says the goal is to, “organize [workers] and give them a real voice on the job when it comes to setting their hours and wages.”

For many, raising the minimum wage is a necessity. The Bureau of Labor Sta-tistics reports that home care providers in Ohio make an average $8.39 an hour, barely above a living wage. Caldwell says that the highest he has heard of is $9.50 an hour.

In addition to the low wages, home care providers have no benefits. Their health care, vacation time and sick days are all taken out of their own pockets. Some-times, they have to run errands, pick up medications or bring patients to appoint-ments with little or no reimbursement.

Jasmine Almodovar, a Cleveland home care provider, says that she is reimbursed

$0.40 per mile for these trips, but she doesn’t cash the checks because having to pay taxes on them ultimately hurts her in the long run.

This struggle is nothing new to Almo-dovar, who has been a home care provider for 11 years, and hasn’t had a raise in four. For her, a higher minimum wage is the difference between scraping by and liv-ing comfortably. It’s a difference that de-termines how often she sees her son and if she can afford to go to school.

After the protest, Almodovar is opti-mistic about the chances of raising the minimum wage.

“Even some guys turned up,” she said, a rarity considering how underrepresent-ed males are in the home care industry.

Almodovar said that the more people who come to the events, the more likely it is that change will occur. A minimum wage increase, she said, would mean that she wouldn’t have to spend her days taking care of people only to go home and struggle to make ends meet for her own family.

Fight for $15 comes to ClevelandHome care workers protest for minimum wage increase

Protesters gathered at a McDonald’s to fight for a minimum wage increase to $15 per hour.

Courtesy Workers Rising

from Malloy | Front

Courtesy Charlsie Anderson

when she talked about him. “He al-ways made it a priority, especially if he knew who it was for, to come back right away and tell you what he did to help.”

Malloy was a bit of a jokester. That’s part of how customer service coordinator Erica Harrison earned her personal nickname.

“He always called me Diva,” she said. “He’d yell out ‘Diva!’ and I knew it was him. That’s one thing I’ll never forget about Chris.”

“He was a really good guy,” she added. “I just wish that he knew how good he was. He always smiled.”

Malloy is remembered for his smile, and people can’t help but smile when they remember him.

“He had an infectious smile,” said housing facilities plumber Charlsie Anderson. “A good laugh. A bubbly type of personality. He was my best friend.”

Anderson’s relationship with Mal-loy went beyond just work. She is an aunt to Malloy’s son, Chris Jr.

“I’ve known Chris for over 25 years,” said Anderson. “I helped get him the job at Case, recommended him, 15 years ago.”

Well, almost 15 years ago.Malloy, who held a number of po-

sitions in facilities, would have cel-

ebrated his 15-year anniversary of working for CWRU tomorrow, Sept. 13.

On Sunday, Aug. 31, Malloy died as a result of suicide.

The news came as a shock to the CWRU community; Malloy was a seemingly happy soul lost too early.

***

Harrison returned the nickname he gave her with one for his most prized possession: his new Harley-Davidson motorcycle complete with fire-paint-ed sides.

“He probably thought I was crazy, but when we walked back [to see it], I thought, you gotta name it,” said Harrison. “When I met the bike, I thought, this bike is ‘Flame.’”

Malloy planned adventures with Flame, bragging about his motorcycle to many of his co-workers.

“He would come in and tell me about the trips he was going to take with it,” said Emmelhainz.

Malloy’s supervisor Sam Arlia said that he and Malloy planned to take a day trip together to Port Clin-

ton and the Lake Erie islands. Ar-lia, a mechanical coordinator, is also a biking en-thusiast.

Arlia remem-bered his last c o n v e r s a t i o n

with Malloy crisply. “Chris said, ‘Are we still doing

that ride in September?’ and I said, ‘Yes, we’re going to make a run of it.’ And he said, ‘Man, I’m really looking forward to that.’”

Though Arlia was never able to take that ride with Chris, he still wanted to honor their plan. After speaking at Malloy’s funeral, he rode the 50-mile trip to the burial on his motorcycle.

“I was with him for his last ride to rest,” said Arlia. “I got to keep my promise to Chris. We got that ride in September.”

***

Around thirty other CWRU work-ers also attended Malloy’s funeral. There, friends and family remem-bered Chris’ hard work, kindness and smile.

“There was probably one of the

best representations of a community there,” said Arlia.

Such a large turnout from the CWRU community proved to Arlia, and others there, that the university’s community is bigger than just the students.

“We really need to look and real-ize that the Case community is big, and there are a lot of people in it, and any loss is a tragic loss,” said Dvorak. “There are people who won’t know what he did, but then there are people who know all that he did.”

Anderson focused on Malloy’s kind and gentle spirit.

“He would give you the shirt off his back if you needed something,” she said.

Emmelhainz remembered Malloy’s giving nature, too.

“You wanted to help him just as much as he helped you,” she said.

For the people who really knew Malloy, it was easy to see that he wasn’t just working for a paycheck.

They knew how hard he worked, and how hard he worked to make it look easy.

They knew the sound of his laugh-ter after every joke, and the catch-phrases that he shouted from across the street.

They knew him like family, and they remember his smile.

CWRU mourns death of well-loved worker

Pictured above: Chris Malloy

Page 3: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

3newsobserver.case.edu

Mark PattesonStaff Reporter

Editor’s Choice

Posted around campus are dozens of fliers, for everything from University Program Board’s Spot Night to advertise-ments for classes to information about student group events. Most of them blend together into an easily ignorable blob of information. One, though, stands out.

“Healthy adults are needed to allow bed bugs to feed on them and then provide blood and saliva samples. Compensation provid-ed,” reads the nondescript, white poster.

Dr. Johnathan Sheele, assistant pro-fessor and director of research for the Department of Emergency Medicine, hopes that this posting will help him get participants for a study on the immune response that develops after being bit-ten by bed bugs.

Sheele first became interested in bed bugs when he found a way to kill them. Sheele, assistant professor and director of research for the Department of Emergen-cy Medicine, found that the antiparasitic drug ivermectin killed bed bugs, a dis-covery that landed him in the New York Times and the Huffington Post.

After that, “I was set on course,” he said.Sheele again encountered bed bugs

when he started work at Case Western Re-serve University. He noticed them arriving on patients in the emergency department, an issue that often forced them to close treatment rooms and call an exterminator.

“It has gotten to be a big problem,”

Sheele said. Though bed bugs usually only cause

minor rashes, and, in rare cases, more serious problems like social isolation, depression or severe anaphylaxis, they present a serious problem because of how expensive they are to exterminate. Sheele estimates that bed bugs cost his depart-ment about half a million dollars in direct and indirect costs per year.

Bed bugs have had a huge resurgence since the 1990’s for unknown reasons, though the reduction of pesticide usage and new travel patterns may have contributed. Ohio is one of the states most affected, with Columbus, Cincinnati, Dayton and the Cleveland area all listed among the top 10 worst infested cities.

According to Sheele, little is known about the clinical effects of bed bugs, and almost nothing is known about the human immune response to bed bug saliva. Sheele hopes to fill this gap in knowledge through his study, which he is doing in collaboration with Dr. Tom McCormick from the Depart-ment of Dermatology.

“An interesting thing about bed bugs is that they do not transmit any disease to humans,” said Sheele. “But they do cause a huge amount of fear.”

When dealing with patients who have bed bugs, Sheele is frustrated by the inabil-ity of medical providers to properly address the bed bug problem.

“Physicians ultimately have to discharge their patients back home to be re-bitten,” he said. Sheele hopes that his current study, combined with his previous work with iver-

mectin, will give physicians new options to diagnose and treat bed bugs.

“When a bed bug feeds, it injects all kinds of things into your body, including proteins,” Sheele said. In response, the hu-man body creates antibodies against the bed bug proteins. In his current study, Sheele hopes to identify the antibodies against bed bug saliva in order to develop a diagnostic test to determine if a person has been bitten by a bed bug.

“We expect that we will identify which

antibodies humans make in response to bed bug bites,” he said.

Sheele said they have “only just begun feeding bed bugs on study subjects,” and the two year study is still in its early stag-es. While the squeamish might wonder who would even allow a bed bug near them, Sheele has received a number of bites on his advertisements for research subjects.

“I am impressed at how many people have contacted me to participate in this study,” he said.

Dr. Johnathan Sheele and Katirina Coppolino, lead research assistant, study the immune response to bed bugs.

Andrew Hodowanec/Observer

When bed bugs biteNew study launched to determine immune response to bed bug bites

Aquene KimmelContributing Reporter

The Intellectual Property Center at the School of Law will be able to expand and increase its programs after a recent $3 million grant from the Spangenberg Family Foundation (SFF).

SFF, a philanthropic organization based in Dallas, was founded by Case Western Reserve University Law School alumnus Erich Spangenberg, his son Christian and his wife Audrey.

The IP Center is part of the School of Law’s Center for Law, Technology and the Arts, which encompasses about 30 courses in intellectual property and a number of full-time and adjunct faculty. With this donation, the center will in-crease its opportunities for both students and faculty researchers in intellectual property law.

“I think that the sustainabilities and expansion of existing programs is what’s really important,” said Craig Nard, the director of the center. “It gives the pro-

gram a sense of security moving forward and the ability to enhance our offerings and accommodate more students who want to get into this space.”

The grant will allow for the expan-sion of FUSION, an interdisciplinary graduate program that aims to teach skills necessary for commercializing new inventions and technology. Follow-ing FUSION, students can participate in the IP Venture Clinic, where they use this interdisciplinary training to work with real businesses and entrepreneurs to monetize technologies, with the help of a faculty supervisor.

SFF has made multiple other dona-tions to the School of Law, including a $2 million donation in 2011 to establish the Spangenberg Family Foundation Chair in Law and the Arts.

According to Nard, the IP Center fit the SFF’s interests because its combi-nation of business and law closely fits the goals of the IP Navigation Group, a business founded and chaired by Span-genberg.

School of Law’s Intellectual Property Center receives $3 million grant

The Intellectual Property Center hopes to use their new grant to expand on already existing programs for students.

Rohan Ramkhumar/Observer

cwruobserver [email protected]

Observerthe

Page 4: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

4 news 9/12/14

Observerthe

Interested in working for us?

We’re hiring!For more information see

observer.case.edu/job-opportunities/

Sruthi MekaContributing Reporter

Medical student develops app promoting positive mental health

Jeff Clark, a medical student at the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine at Case Western Reserve Uni-versity, recently developed a free mobile app called CBT Keeper that teaches us-ers techniques to combat depression and anxiety.

The app, currently available for download on Android devices, explains the basic principles of cognitive-behav-ioral therapy, and shows users how to categorize their thoughts and address other behavioral health issues.

The app is designed to function as a game, which motivates users to reach goals and remain consistent in their dai-ly practice of healthy behaviors. The goal is to teach users how to recognize and fight the negative thoughts that con-tribute to depression and anxiety.

CBT Keeper provides constructive goals that promote healthy mindsets about coping mechanisms, allowing us-ers to maintain a more positive outlook.

Clark, a self proclaimed “behavioral health advocate and amateur develop-er,” first came up with the idea for CBT Keeper in 2013 while finishing a medical research project on child and adolescent psychiatry, sponsored by the National Institute of Mental Health. During the last month of his research fellowship, Clark was inspired to find a way to make a positive impact while still in medical

school, and the idea for CBT Keeper was born.

Clark wrote, designed and coded the app, spending over 400 hours on the project while teaching himself the basics of software design. The app was official-ly launched in late August, but it has al-ready garnered nearly 200 reviews and ratings and over 5,000 downloads.

CBT Keeper features include quick access to the National Suicide Helpline, complete control and privacy over ev-erything written, and daily reminders that prompt users to practice. Users can also track their depression and anxiety using the same scales that are used by professionals in the medical field.

“There’s a big stigma attached to go-ing to therapy,” said Clark. He hopes to make mental healthcare more accessible for people by creating more software products that help manage behavior-al health problems and educate people about mental health issues.

Clark is currently working on fixing bugs in the Android app, but he hopes to eventually develop CBT Keeper for iOS, the Apple product operating system. Af-ter graduating this year, Clark wants to pursue a residency in psychiatry to fur-ther his current interests in behavioral health.

“It’s really exciting,” said Clark. “I’m going to be a doctor soon and I probably won’t see 9,000 patients in my career. It’s really interesting to see how one lit-tle app can make an impact.”

Sue B. Workman named new Chief Information Officer and

Vice President of ITS

Sue B. Workman has been named the new chief information officer and vice pres-ident of Information Technology Services at Case Western Reserve University. Workman previously worked at Indiana University, where she was the Associate Vice President for IT Client Services and Support.

The position at CWRU opened up in the summer of 2013, when former CIO Lev Gon-ick left the university to lead an initiative to make high-speed broadband Internet more available in Cleveland and Northeast Ohio.

Workman, who takes over the position from interim CIO Brian Voss on Sept. 29, will be responsible for managing the deployment of IT services, working with campus custom-ers and overseeing the overhaul of the infra-structure, security and web services CWRU provides for its students and faculty.

Before getting her job at Indiana Univer-sity, Workman worked at Hewlett-Packard,

where she worked to network computers from different manufacturers, and a small software company where she oversaw re-search, development and business practices.

According to Cyrus Taylor, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, who led the search committee for the position, Workman’s business experience was among the qualities that made her the strongest candidate.

Workman began with an entry level posi-tion at Indiana University, but quickly worked her way up the ranks of IT administration.

“Many people see IT as a utility,” Work-man said. “But today, IT at a university is in every aspect of people’s lives.”

She said that she chose to take a position at CWRU because she considers it to be a top tier university with a focus on teaching, learning and research.

Workman said she is most looking for-ward to “building the relationships and part-nerships with various schools, deans and fac-ulty to help them use IT resources to be most productive in their work at CWRU.”

Courtesy Indiana University IT Communications OfficeWorkman comes to CWRU from Indiana University, where she served as the Asso-ciate Vice President for IT Client Services and Support.

Alexander WheatonContributing Reporter

cwruobserver [email protected]

Page 5: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

5newsobserver.case.edu

cwruobserver [email protected]

Observerthe

Spotlight on research

Researcher identifies gene that causes rare brain disease

It’s rare to find a complete explana-tion for what causes a disease, but, in some fortunate cases, researchers can identify a gene that contributes to the progression of the disease. Chair of the Department of Genetics and Genome Sciences Dr. Anthony Wynshaw-Boris was the co-principal investigator in a study that pinpointed three genes whose absence can promote hydrocephalus.

Hydrocephalus is a condition caused by the build-up of cerebrospinal fluid in parts of the brain. It can harm a person’s motor skills, senses and reading abilities.

Normally, the brain floats in a liq-uid that protects, regulates and removes waste. In obstructive hydrocephalus, though, the excess fluid squeezes the

brain, resulting in a number of problems. Wynshaw-Boris found that the lack

of three developmental genes, called the Dishevelled genes (DvI genes), changed the way cerebrospinal fluid moved in the brain by affecting the location of hair-like extensions on cells called cilia. When displaced, the cilia don’t move the fluid properly, resulting in build-up.

Wynshaw-Boris graduated from CW-RU’s medical school with a medical and doctorate degree in 1987. He began work on this project while in California, where he found that, if the DvI genes in mice were removed before birth, the embryos would die.

He found that the absence of DvI genes changed cilia formation in gastrulation, a part of the mouse’s early development where cells begin moving to properly po-sition themselves.

Normally, cilia form near the edge of the cell, where they can properly move the fluid. Instead, Wynshaw-Boris found that they were forming in parts of the cell where they couldn’t function properly.

He describes the misplaced genes as oars that aren’t properly positioned in water-- they don’t move the water, or the boat.

He found that if one or two of the genes were allowed to remain intact, the mice were able to develop, but with ab-normalities. This proved that each gene alone could impact cilia formation.

Wynshaw-Boris then decided to expand his research to see if the DvI gene’s effect on cilia was responsi-ble for hydrocephalus. He used mice who had a few DvI genes left, who had grown into seemingly normal adults. However, through the study, he found

that that was not the case.“The fluid is outside the brain, but also

inside the brain in areas called ventri-cles,” he said. “When we looked, we saw that the ventricles were enlarged.”

Wynshaw-Boris hopes to continue to study hydrocephalus to try to find a treat-ment for the rare disease. Using data from previous cases, he’s helped to diagnose hydrocephalus. He sequences blood sam-ples and compares it to the patient’s par-ents, or uses stem cells from the patient’s skin to study abnormalities in the cell that could be altered by current drugs.

“Let’s say we sequence, we make [stem cells], we do the drug screening, if we have any success in any one of those areas it’s good for the patients,” he said. “Mostly if we find the gene and tell them this is causing your problem, that’s im-portant.”

Kushagra GuptaStaff Reporter

Brian ShermanStaff Reporter

Fifty hours after the start of Blackstone LaunchPad’s StartUp Weekend, student startup Trendenza emerged victorious. After a hectic competition where they had just one weekend to create an entire business idea and strategy, the four CWRU students pre-sented their idea, called Moda, in front of a panel of judges who eventually chose them for the grand prize.

Moda is a program designed to assist clothing stores in finding clothing matches for their customers.

Trendenza, which is made up of global MBA student Aditi Murarka, senior math-ematics and economics major Hayley Teng, senior finance and economics major Michael Martinez and sophomore mathematics and economics major Marcus Gutierrez, compet-ed with a total of eight teams for the grand prize. The team was advised by Chris Wentz, a CWRU alumnus and CEO of Everykey.

“I like to shop for clothes, but waiting in lines in a department store is a problem,” said Murarka, Trendenza’s CEO. “The store expe-rience is becoming less and less attractive.”

To prepare for the pitch, the team con-firmed this hypothesis by surveying 56 shop-pers in Beachwood Mall, Tower City and other shopping centers around Cleveland. They found that 58 percent of those shoppers admitted to having trouble finding matching clothes, and 68 percent would consider an-other opinion when shopping for clothes.

With this in mind, Trendenza, a name derived from the French word for trends,

decided to design a product to help stores match their clothing options for their cus-tomers. Moda is designed to be a small ki-osk where customers can scan the barcode of their clothing item, and then get recom-mendations for other articles of clothing that match well with it.

“This is also made to help those used to the online experience, as this type of match-ing is available online, but not in-store,” said Murarka. “The system would be easy and cheap to set up, and can feature matches made by designers and other people knowl-edgeable about fashion.”

When it came time to present their idea, the team was ready to go.

“Being there, the judges seemed a little intimidating,” said Martinez.

“But we had rehearsed it a lot,” added Gutierrez. “We wanted to be super concise and enthusiastic about our idea.”

Trendenza took home the first place prize, while Noteworthy, an app that allows students to share notes from class, and 10:04 ink, a web comic portal and hosting site, took second and third places, respectively.

“When the judges announced we were the winners, we all thought, this is too good to be true,” said Murarka.

Going forward, Trendenza plans to seek additional funding through the Innovation Fund from Lorain Community College, a fund designed to assist northeast Ohio start-ups with manufacturing. Based on a positive response from informal interview with lo-cal store managers, the team hopes to inte-grate Moda into stores throughout the area and eventually branch out to other regions throughout Ohio and the U.S.

Fashion forward business wins top prize at StartUp Weekend

Harsha Chandupatla/ObserverTrendenza took home the grand prize at Blackstone LaunchPad’s start-up weekend with Moda, an app that helps users find matches for their clothes in-store. Three of the team members pose above.

Page 6: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

6 news 9/12/14

Professor Richard Boyatzis and as-sociate professor Anthony Jack recently began a Kickstarter campaign to raise funds for their research on effective leadership.

Boyatzis and Jack’s research focuses on the neural correlates of effective lead-ership. They look at two opposing neu-ral networks, the Task Positive Network (TPN) and the Default Mode Network (DMN). The TPN is more analytical and focused, while the DMN is creative and focuses more on morality.

Both networks are critical for ef-fective leadership, but, because they oppose each other, it is hard for many leaders to find the right balance be-tween the two. Boyatzis and Jack hope to show that effective leaders utilize both networks, and are able to cycle through them quickly and efficiently to adapt to different situations.

After some difficulty accumulating funding through traditional methods, such as grants from the National Insti-tute of Health, they decided to turn to Kickstarter, a more unconventional method.

The goal of the Kickstarter campaign is to find new ways of getting donors. Boyatzis and Jack want to find a large number of people who can donate small

amounts to the research, which they hope will be easier than finding large donors.

Boyatzis, who teaches a Massive Open Online Course called Inspiring Leadership through Emotional Intelli-gence, promoted the campaign to mem-bers of his course. The purpose was to get the 10,000 people who took the course to donate at least $10 each, for a total of $100,000.

The total goal of the campaign is to raise $112,500, and so far, they have raised $13,245.

“The thousands of people we had hoped would materialize with a small donation each has not occurred,” Boyatzis said. “If we hadn’t set the bar so high and made the goal to be about $60,000, it probably would have been more successful.”

“It is still a viable option to raise mon-ey with a few changes to it,” he added.

The deadline for the campaign is Sept. 23. If they don’t reach the goal, they will have to consider other options for funding their research.

“We will continue to go out to foun-dations who announce topics that are close to this,” said Boyatzis. “Tony will take a lead to develop a National Science Foundation application. I am trying to work with the development people from Weatherhead. For people in leadership, it is a topic that they would like to sup-port.”

Professors start Kickstarter campaign to

study effective leadership Adithi IyengarStaff Reporter

Sept. 2: Robbery—Student pepper sprayed and robbed by two white female suspects, Mayfield/E. 117th.

Sept. 2: Criminal trespass—Two males stopped and cited, Bingham Building.

Sept. 3: Bicycle theft—Unsecured bike taken from bike room, Clarke Tower.

Sept. 5: Motor vehicle theft—Parked automobile stolen between Aug. 31 and Sept. 5.

Sept. 7: Burglary—Items gone missing from occupied apartment between Sept. 5 and Sept. 7, Triangle Tower #2.

On the Beat can be contacted at [email protected].

CWRU Police Blotter, Sept. 2 to Sept. 9

theObserver

@CWRUObserver

observer.case.eduThe Observer

Page 7: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

7newsobserver.case.edu

On the beat: Welcome backThe Case Western Reserve Universi-

ty Police Department would like to wel-come back all our returning students and faculty. While the summer abun-dance of parking spaces and short lines at Starbucks are always nice perks for the students and staff who remain, we’re glad you’re back. So let’s get started—as they say, “This is Sparta!” Or at least a midwestern university with a Spartan mascot—almost the same thing, right?

The start of the academic year is a busy time for everyone, especially for our freshmen students. The first six weeks of college are sometimes called

the Red Zone, as university students experience higher levels of crime and other issues during this period. Here are some tips to help you settle in.

CWRU PD is a resource for you to try and make your time here as safe as possible, so call us when you need us. Have our 24/7 dispatch number, 216-368-3333, programmed into your phone, and download the CWRU Shield safety app on your iPhone or Android device.

Call us if you need help or if you see suspicious activity or dangerous condi-tions on campus. There are thousands of students here, and we could use your

help. You are now part of the larger CWRU community, so let’s look out for each other and the university. If you see something, say something.

Many issues at the start of the year involved alcohol. Remember that hard liquors like rum are not meant to be drunk like milkshakes, and you will pay for it if you do.

If you are turning to alcohol because you miss home, you’re stressed out or you f lunked your first quiz, there is also a counseling center here where you can find someone to talk to. University Counseling Services can be reached at

216-368-5872. They are a resource that is here to support you, so use them if you need them.

When moving around the University Circle area late at night, use the shuttle bus system, the Safe Ride vans or walk with friends.

On the Beat is a weekly safety column written by Sergeant Jeffrey Daberko & Officer Mark (The Crossing Guard) Chavis of CWRU PD. We welcome ques-tions, suggestions and gripes/groans/moans/complaints about campus life at [email protected].

Foundation donates $2 million for creation of new EECS chair

The Parker Hannifin Foundation has endowed $2 million to Case Western Re-serve University’s Electrical Engineering and Computer Science department at the Case School of Engineering to create the Arthur L. Parker Endowed Chair. Kenneth Loparo, the current chair of the EECS de-partment, will be the first person to hold the position.

The Parker Hannifin Foundation, one of the world’s leading manufacturing companies for motion and control tech-nologies, typically sees annual global sales of more than $13 billion.

The chair is named for the compa-ny’s founder, Art Parker, who graduated from the Case Institute of Technology in 1907 before going on to create the Cleve-land-grown company. At just 33, he in-vented an air-filled braking system for buses and trucks.

Parker has sponsored multiple univer-

sity events for CWRU, and continues to donate to scholarships and innovation in a variety of fields. The company’s current chairman, Don Washkewicz, believes that working with students inspires more ideas and advances in the engineering field.

“This endowed chair reinforces our company’s connection to Case Western Reserve and furthers our goal to support education in the communities where we do business,” he said in an interview with The Daily.

Endowed professorships are key in at-tracting more distinguished faculty.

“The endowment provides not only salary support, but discretionary funds to kick-start special initiatives and op-portunities, support graduate student travel to student conferences and more,” said Loparo.

Loparo joined the university’s engi-neering faculty in 1979, and became the chair of EECS in 2013. He is also a fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electron-ics Engineers.

Gabrielle BuffingtonStaff Reporter

The family of Abraham Pishevar, one of the four students killed in the Aug. 25 plane crash, is considering suing the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity and the flying club that rented the plane to the students, according to court documents filed on Tuesday.

Afshin Pishevar, Abraham Pishevar’s father, believes that the flight may have been part of ZBT recruitment, according to the court document, which named both the local and national chapters of the fra-ternity. Afshin is looking to receive any communication about and financial re-ceipts for ZBT’s rush activities.

“Our family is seeking the truth about the circumstances of their f light and their participation in recruitment and rush activities of the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity at Case Western Reserve University,” said Afshin in a statement. According to Afshin, there are discrep-ancies between the official statements from the fraternity and the text mes-sages and Snapchats that Pishevar sent to friends the night of the crash, which made references to rushing.

“If there is a connection to rush, then we want to help implement strong safe-

guards to help prevent this tragedy from happening to any other family again,” Afshin added.

Representatives from ZBT said that there was no record of the flight being a part of rush activities.

“The four men killed in the plane crash on Aug. 25th were friends outside of the fact that two of the four men were brothers of ZBT and three of the four were mem-bers of the University’s wrestling team,” said Laurence Bolotin, executive director for the national ZBT fraternity.

“We have heard from family members and friends of some of the men killed in the plane crash that the rush to sensation-alize and litigate this tragedy is painful to them,” added Bolotin.

Representatives from the local ZBT chapter could not be contacted in time for publication.

Afshin has also filed for information from the T&G Flight Club and its own-er, Laurence Rohl. He wants records of the pilot, flight instructors, and safety inspectors.

A representatives from T&G Flight Club did not want to comment at this time.

The court document is merely a petition for information, but in the future, Afshin may choose to file a civil lawsuit.

Family of plane crash victim files court document

requesting information about circumstances of crash

Julia BiancoNews Editor

CWRU honors fallen classmates at memorial

Courtesy Chenghao Peng

“Unfortunately there is one question that we can’t answer. And that is why. Why does this happen to our friends and our teammates? Why does this have to happen to such great people?”

“At the height of Sparta’s power, it was said that one Spartan was worth several men of any other state. I think we can see the work of these men by the amount of people they affected and how everyone continues to ask ‘why?’.”

-CWRU wrestling coach Mark Hawald (left). Lucas Marcelli, Abe Pishevar and John Hill were all members of the wrestling team.

“I understand that some of you guys are still mourning, I understand that, it’s a tragic loss. There is no way we can describe the things that we have lost in the past two weeks. Some of my best friends’ name are on the [memorial] board besides John. But I want to use his memory to do something. I want to use his memory to propel me to do great things. And I want to use his memory to do what he did for other people, just make people happier day to day.”

-Freshman Travis Alexander (right), John Hill’s roommate.

Members of the CWRU community gathered together in the Tinkham Veale University Center’s new ballroom on Friday, Sept 5. to honor the memories of the four students killed in the Aug. 26 plane crash: sophomore Michael Felten, sophomore Lucas Marcelli, freshman John Hill and freshman Abe Pishevar.

Courtesy Chenghao Peng

Page 8: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

9/5/14 8 | fun page

fun

Crossword PuzzleAcross1. Backside5. A loose coverall10. Vipers14. Bears’ hands15. Dining room furniture16. Fellow17. Alteration19. Scrabble piece20. Ear of corn21. Humorous22. Bounded along23. Trap25. Shade of white27. Autonomic nervous system28. Backpack31. Bit of parsley34. Indications35. Caviar36. Part of a foot37. Rejects38. Countercurrent39. Buffoon40. Answer41. S S S S42. Overtures44. American Dental Associ-ation

45. Part of a stair46. Sharp-cornered50. Not those52. A sudden forceful flow54. Former boxing champ55. Habit56. Magazine58. A single time59. Lazybones60. Mend (archaic)61. Observed62. Electrical pioneer63. Poems

Down1. Quickly2. A radioactive gaseous element3. Mops4. Clairvoyant’s gift5. Steps6. Not glossy7. Death notice8. In an overly sweet manner9. Barbie’s beau10. They play roles11. Drydocks12. Wan

13. Hurried18. Exaggerated nasality in speech22. Cuts off24. Found on a finger26. Campers28. Slays29. Cypher30. Lock openers31. Store32. Sweet gritty-textured fruit33. Cite34. Preempt37. Formally surrender38. Brother of Jacob40. Ploy41. Nosed (out)43. Be attentive to44. Domestic breed of rabbit46. Disney mermaid47. Twined48. Winged49. Angers50. 2 2 2 251. Sharpen53. Website addresses56. A sizeable hole57. Nigerian tribesman

AriesAs week three comes to a close, so will your hopes and dreams

for free time.

TaurusOpen your mind, take it easy, take a deep breath and consider watching

that show your friend recommended.Gemini

You will see a cloud in the sky that vaguely resembles Steve Buscemi.

CancerBeware the ides of September. And

midterms, especially midterms.

LeoIf you don’t attend at least one

sporting event this week you will fail your next exam.

VirgoForgive your roommate for drinking all your milk. It’s a lot easier to live with someone when you’re talking.

LibraCongratulations on making it through week three. It’s probably best if you

don’t count how many are left.

ScorpioRemember that thing you thought

you’d regret doing? Well good news, it’s going to turn out totally fine.

SagittariusYou’re the special. The prophecy

states that you are the most important, interesting person in the

universe. That’s you, right?

CapricornWatch out for the Healthline. It ain’t stoppin’ for anyone or

anything today.

AquariusDon’t let Cleveland’s heavy rains

wash you away! Never leave without an umbrella.

PiscesPlease stop it with the rain dances.

Now.

Horoscopes

Ivo

ry T

ow

erK

evin

Yo

ng

Page 9: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

observer.case.edu ad | 9

xkcd

TEAM GUIDELINESJuniors and Seniors are eligible. 2-3 person teams.

SPACE IS LIMITED, SIGN UP TODAY!For more information and to submit your team, emailMatthew Keen (Case Western ‘13) at [email protected].

IMPORTANT DATESTopic Release: September 8

Registration Deadline: September 28

First Round of Presentations at CWRU: October 10

Final Round of Presentations in DDR Board Room: October 29

For more information about DDR’s College Relations Programs, please visit ddr.com/collegerelations.

DDR Corp. is hosting its second annual undergraduate case competition. Case Western Reserve Universityhas been chosen to participate with the �rst-place teams from three other universities advancing to present

to DDR’s executive team in the board room at the Company’s headquarters in an all-expense-paid trip.

Real Estate Real Estate CASE COMPETITONCASE COMPETITON

ENTER FOR A CHANCE TO WINA CASH PRIZE OF $5,000 AND AN

OPPORTUNITY TO INTERVIEW WITH DDR.

$5,000$5,000CASH PRIZECASH PRIZE

Page 10: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

arts & entertainmentarts &

entertainment

“Squashing the Mantis”Cedar Point reconsidering rider comfort with rollercoaster changes

Alex ClarkeContributing Reporter

Sunny KalidindiContributing Reporter

Anything goes at Studio-a-Rama

Courtesy Will Hollingsworth

Harsha Chandupatla/Observer

Early last week, amusement park Cedar Point released a cryptic, overdramatic video featuring a lot fake crying and the sounds of an old film reel, with lines that read “Good-bye is never easy / But in this case, it is.”

Then after a grim reaper (scythe and all) makes it way up the stairs to the roller coaster train station, the screen fades to black with the words: “Take one last stand.” Cutting to pictures of the roller coaster in black and white, the logo for the Mantis ride comes up on the screen and says “The Mantis gets squashed Oct. 19.”

So they’re closing and dismantling the ride? That’s some of the speculation, but Cedar Point worker Will Hollingsworth doesn’t think so.

Hollingsworth has worked at Cedar Point for one and a half years, and throughout his time there, rumors of the Mantis closing have circled the park. He said “A lot of the people in the park didn’t see it as a big surprise.”

From talking to people in the park and “higher-ups” he said the big speculation is that the ride will transform into a sit-down roller coaster, where riders’ feet will dangle

over the track. “I don’t think you will see the ride being taken down. The ride is only 18 years old,” said Hollingsworth.

The stand up roller coaster was a big, unique attraction in the ‘80s and ‘90s. When the Mantis opened in 1996, it set several stand-up roller coaster records for height (145 feet), speed (60mph) and steepness.

But since then, the stand-up roller coasters have become very rough, and the CEO of Ce-dar Fair, who joined the company two years ago, seems to want to redo the rides that have become uncomfortable for the riders. Cedar Fair’s theme park in Canada, Canada’s Won-derland, announced in the beginning of Au-gust that they will be taking down the stand-up roller coaster there.

Asking around for theme park fanatics at Case Western Reserve University, stu-dents have noticed the ride’s discomfort. Michael David, senior at CWRU, said, “[My friend mentioned] how glad he is to see it go. Apparently, the ride never sat well with his stomach.”

Some riders said that Mantis created headaches. Others noticed that the ride made their legs sore (there is a center bar between your legs, but it moves a little bit more than it should. This makes riders rely on leg muscles

to keep stand-up straight).Yeah, no wonder they’re re-doing

this ride.The Mantis, built by the same company

who built Raptor and Gatekeeper, will be converted with new trains and rebuilt sec-tions of track. Hollingsworth said it seems that Cedar Point is going to market the Man-tis as a new ride without actually making it a new ride: new paint, name, etc.

When asked about the “King James” rumor (Cedar Point tweeted that if Lebron James came back to Cleveland, they would rename a roller coaster “King James”), Hol-lingsworth said that he didn’t think (and hoped they wouldn’t) name the ride King James. The park takes out trademarks on the names for their roller coasters.

One of the names they do have a trade-mark for, but no ride with the name, is the French name for werewolf: rougarou (pro-nounced roog-a-roo).

Maybe it would make sense with the old-fashioned horror theme of the video Cedar Point released. Or maybe it’ll just add to Cedar Point’s ever-growing thrills. Regard-less of Mantis’ new name, many Ohio roller coaster lovers will warmly welcome its an-ticipated changes.

Were you terrified by the loud scream-ing coming from Mather Quad on Satur-day, Sept. 6?

If you said yes, chances are you’re prob-ably not alone. No, it wasn’t a bizarre ritual, and no, it was not some weird initiation event. It was WRUW’s semi-annual music festival, Studio-A-Rama.

This year’s co-headliners were punk rock band Bleached and the eclectic pop-punk, palindromic group, Tacocat. Al-though the headliners are national acts, the rest of the bands were from the Cleve-land area, giving the festival a unique and local feel.

One such act brought a whole new mean-ing to the “you scream, I scream, we all scream for ice cream” phrase. Punk band Cruelster delighted and confused the crowd with a spirited performance that involved the lead singer screaming into the micro-phone while rubbing ice cream all over himself. Case Western Reserve University alum Ben Witoff thought the stunt was in the same vein as what he expected from the festival and enthused that “it was great!”

Before Cruelster’s ice cream extrava-ganza, fresh-faced brothers Emmett and Cullen O’Connor (13 and 16 years old re-spectively) took the stage as Archie and the Bunkers. The band was influenced by the group The Screamers which shows in their punk rock sound but also main-tained a jazz feel with their inclusion of organ music. They were excited to per-form at Studio-A-Rama after going to the festival last year and hope to come again.

For first timers on the other side of the stage, it was also a night to remember. Fresh-man Paige Yepko noted, “It seems like a great eclectic group and it’s something that you

don’t normally see on CWRU’s campus.”Fellow CWRU student Sonya Mehta

agreed and added that although they had not come to see a particular band, they were excited to see what the festival had to of-fer. The uniqueness of the concert was also the reason that Witoff keeps coming back. He summed it up perfectly by saying, “It’s a musical experience that you can’t find any-where else.”

For WRUW members, it was finally a chance to see their hard work pay off. For Connor Swingle, co-host of “Video Kills,” it was all about the local bands. “It’s great to some Cleveland bands with the headliners,” he said. In contrast, Tessa Greene, who co-hosts “Girls Club,” was looking forward to catching the headliners. “My radio show is all female led bands or bands with a focus on women. So the fact that we have two headliners that are mostly comprised of women is really exciting.”

The headliners, in turn, did not disap-point. With a thick group of students, kids, adults and some dogs, Tacocat and Bleached took the stage and rocked the crowd. Taco-cat won crowd favor with quirky character, catchy songs and fun dancing.

Keeping with the anything-goes theme of the concert, the band performed songs of various topics including urinary tract infections and contraception. In fact, lead singer Emily Nokes, introduced one song by saying, “This song is about periods. So if you’re on your period or know someone who’s on their period, this song is for you.”

Bleached, however, was a little less eccen-tric, and had a nostalgic vibe to their music. Their song, “Love Spells” stood out for its throwback punk sound.

This meeting point of different yet similar bands showcased the strength of Studio-A-Rama. It has a rare ability to bring together different people together for one cause: music.

Mantis will be revamped for Cedar Point’s next season.

Studio A’s day of music rocked Mather Memorial Courtyard.

Page 11: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

11a&eobserver.case.edu

Style spotlight

Allison DuchinContributing Reporter

Maria FazalStaff Reporter

Oksana Pelts, a current MBA student at the Weatherhead School of Management, is bringing a new voice to fashion in Cleve-land and to Case Western Reserve Uni-versity by association. Approximately six months ago Pelts started her blog “Style Moment” as a creative outlet, but since its creation Pelts may have bigger plans for the future of her blog and love of fashion.

As the blog and range of network ex-pands, Pelts is utilizing the masters pro-gram to “marry the business side with the arts side” in order to be in a field that is more creative.

After graduating from Ohio Wesleyan University with her Art History degree, Pelts wanted to move to New York to pursue a career that would allow her creative side to blossom. Due to certain circumstances however, Pelts has remained in Cleveland and now says she appreciates the Cleveland style she sees every day.

It is this “Cleveland street style,” as well as her Ukrainian heritage, that best describes Pelts’ own personal style. Pelts said she be-lieves the essence of Cleveland’s street style is simplistically trending looks, but with an effortless feel.

Granted, Pelts said she spends most of her time outside of the CWRU sphere be-cause she is working on her masters part-time and doesn’t see the swarm of students in sweats on a daily basis. However, she be-lieves the essence of Cleveland street fash-ion exists in nearby areas of Cleveland such as Tremont, Little Italy and downtown.

Fashion icons have also helped shape how Pelts views her sense of fashion, which could be described as “understat-ed elegance” or as subtly stylish. These icons include women who Pelts believes embody this kind of style: Grace Kelly, Audrey Hepburn and Kate Middleton. A style trait that Pelts attributed to all of these women was that they always had a sense of looking put together, but with a sense of ease.

It’s no wonder these women inspire Pelts’ sense of style, considering her devo-tion to the “one bold piece” rule. The rule suggests having one stand-out piece that is somewhat different and using the other gar-ments in an outfit to complement the stand-out piece instead of competing with it. One of her examples is a floral dress.

In trying to promote her own style throughout and beyond the Cleveland social sphere, Pelts also made a point to mention other style havens that have an influence on the Cleveland fashion scene,

Sept. 15 marks the start of the 26th annual Hispanic Heritage Month. Originally Hispan-ic Heritage Week, it was extended by Ronald Reagan in 1988, and since then, it has covered a 30-day period: Sept. 15 to Oct. 15.

The commencement of the national event is also the independence day of Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua, and the month also contains the independence days of Mexico, Chile and Belize. Additionally, Columbus Day also serves as Día de la Raza, literally “Day of the Race,” for Latin Americans.

Although Hispanic culture is rich and includes several different African, Euro-pean, Asian and Indigenous influences, the common underlying factor is the close rela-tion to Spanish—and by some definitions, general Iberian—culture.

In the United States, Hispanics com-prise the largest and fastest growing minor-ity group, so naturally Hispanic Heritage Month is celebrated nationwide. These cel-ebrations often include festivals, gatherings and educational activities.

Cleveland is not excluded from the fes-tivities, and throughout the month there will be several events celebrating and hon-oring Latin culture.

The Ohio Hispanic Heritage Coalition kicks off the month early, with their third An-nual Lorain Hispanic Heritage Parade & Mi Familia Picnic on Sept. 13 at noon.

Additionally, the Cleveland Public Li-brary will be celebrating Cleveland’s His-panic culture throughout the month with music, crafts, dance and more.

Hispanic artists are also enjoying the spotlight this month. The Beck Center for the Arts and Hispanic Cultural Center is presenting their Hispanic Heritage Exhibit from Sept. 5 to Oct. 5. Artists included in the show are of Hispanic background and have strong connections to Northeast Ohio.

There was an opportunity to meet with

Cleveland bustling with Hispanic Heritage Month activities

like The Wandering Wardrobe.This hidden gem is not only an ingenious

retail shop, but altogether a fantastic busi-ness model. The store looks almost like a food truck and allows shoppers to walk in-side and then see a beautiful retail store.

Pelts highly recommends this outlet to anyone looking for a good deal on amaz-ing fashion finds from L.A. and New York. Pelts elaborated that not only does the owner get top quality trends from the two largest fashion hubs in the country, but also that she admired the owner’s business intuition that has allowed her to eliminate large portions of overhead costs by driving her store around.

Pelts has no interest in halting her cre-ative path. If nothing else her blog has spurred her forward to create more business opportunities. She specifically mentioned that she loves designing patterns and hopes that one day she can sell the prints or design small accessories and supplies such as paper or even phone cases.

Pelts credits a lot of her fashion iden-tity to her Ukrainian heritage (she moved to the states when she was 15) because she says there is a different culture in rela-tion to one’s appearance between Europe and the United States. She mentioned that in Europe, appearance is taken more seri-ously and is something more commonly addressed throughout a country rather than just in metropolises.

Pelts says she likes to honor her heritage by adding in elements of traditional Ukrai-nian fashion to her wardrobe. Luckily for her, the beautiful embroidery and loose bo-hemian peasant tops that are trending now are iconic pieces of Ukrainian fashion, and she exemplifies this with her favorite white embroidered blouses.

Her advice is to not buy clothing that is cheap just because it is affordable. If you are just going to have to replace it, then you should value the slightly more expensive goods (especially classics) for the quality it will hold, as it lasts longer.

Dressing well provides Pelts with a little bit of savings and a daily boost of positive energy. It also provides others around her with a positive impression of what she thinks of herself, her work aes-thetic and ethic. The one key piece of ad-vice Pelts gives to undergraduates is that people don’t understand how important clothing is.

“A person forms their opinion of you within a split second, and you want to give yourself the best chance. I think it’s very im-portant for students, because you’re build-ing your network and your career while you’re in college,” Pelts said.

MBA blogger brings fashion and business together the artists on Sept. 11 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. in a special reception. The Collaboration Corridor in the Beck Center Main Build-ing will also be displaying work by young artists who participated in the Esperanza summer program, which was instructed by professionals from American Greetings.

Not shying away from embracing cul-ture, Case Western Reserve University will also be partaking in Hispanic Heritage Month. The university is hosting an art show, which opens with an artists’ recep-tion on Sept. 12 from 5 to 8 p.m. It will be held at the Kelvin Smith Library.

The featured local artists are Puerto Ri-can, Cuban, Guatemalan and Mexican. The artists include Puerto Ricans Linda Ayala and Bruno Casiano; Cuban Augusto Bordelois; Guatemalan Teresa Martinez; Ecuadorian Rafael Valdivieso; and Dante Rodriguez, who will represent both Puerto Rico and Mexico.

The artists’ talents are diverse and in-triguing. The show will include an array of paintings, puppetry and photography. It will also be the first campus Hispanic art exhibition in recent memory to present lo-cal artists, according to research assistant and Alianza Latina/Latin Alliance member Edna Fuentes-Casiano.

Fuentes-Casiano also remarked, “It is an excellent way to start the Hispanic Heritage Celebration by displaying the richness of our many Hispanic cultures for all to enjoy. It also serves as a way to reach out to the Hispanic community in Cleveland and to our CWRU community.”

Fuentes-Casiano is one of the organizers of the art show, along with CWRU Assistant Professor in Modern Languages and Litera-ture Damaris Punales-Alpizar. The show’s sponsors are Alianza Latina/Latin Alliance, La Alianza and the Office for Inclusion, Di-versity and Equal Opportunity.

Photo identification is needed to enter KSL, but the reception and art show are both free. The art will remain displayed throughout the month during normal li-brary hours and will end on Oct. 22.

Courtesy Oksana Pelts

11454 Uptown Ave Cleveland, Ohio 44106 (216) 229-9920

$5 wraps for the month of September

11454 Uptown AveCleveland, Ohio 44106

(216) 229-9920

expires: Sept. 30

Oksana Pelts’ unique style features bold clothing.

Page 12: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

12 a&e 9/12/14

Harsha Chandupatla/Observer

Timothy Kuo/Observer

J & L Country Market

Ellie RamboStaff Reporter

Warm sunbeams fall on the potted flow-ers decorating the front of a small open air market on the side of Euclid Avenue. Behind the streets filled with traffic, customers enter through the old, paint-chipped door. Despite its rough exterior, the inside of J&L Country Market hides a selection of vibrant (and local) fruits and vegetables, as well as a section for various common student needs.

Playlist of the Week: Sept. 12, 2014

“Nowhere/Dead Alive” — Nowhere

Nowhere is not only one of Cleveland’s hardest working bands, having just announced the release of their new album “Diamonds” this week, but they are also one of the best psych-pop bands currently playing in the United States. The warm synth blurs, galvanizing bass and distorted guitars that permeate these tracks are so good that Tame Impala should be jealous. This pick is a two parter by necessity; “No-where” and “Dead Alive” are perfect compliments, flowing seamlessly into each other. Nowhere will be playing at the Grog Shop’s upcoming free 22nd an-niversary concert on Sept. 13.

Teddy EisenbergStaff Reporter

“Call Me in the Day” — La Luz

Working its way into a relaxed groove of doo-wops and reverb-heavy guitar, “Call Me in the Day” is a shimmering and steamy pop tune. La Luz, Seattle Washington’s premier surf rock band, will also be playing in Cleve-land this upcoming week; they’re headlining a show at the Beachland Tavern on Sept. 17. Also on the bill are local favorites The Insur-ance Salesmen and The Village Bicycle. Tick-ets are $8, and doors open at 7:30 p.m.

“Anywhere” — Interpol Worthy successors to the moody guitar

work and solemn lyrics of Joy Division, In-terpol are back with their latest album “El Pintor,” released Sept. 9 on Matador Records. “Anywhere” is a short tune that boasts a sin-gle-worthy hook, driven by a lethargic and beautiful wall of guitar. Above all, this track shows why many crowned Interpol the new kings of post-punk revival back when they debuted in 2002. As evidenced by the regal tone of “Anywhere,” they won’t abdicate the throne anytime soon.“Needle and a Knife” —

Tennis“Needle and a Knife” is a groovy piece of pasto-ral poetry from Tennis’ latest album, “Ritual in Repeat,” released on Communion Records Sept. 9. The layered vocals of Alaina Moore melt beauti-fully into the organic piano and acoustic guitar work of bandmate and husband Patrick Riley, bask-ing this track in musical sunshine. This album is a must-listen for fans of indie music; you’re not likely to hear a better work of dream-pop this year.

“Never Catch Me” — Flying Lotus Featuring Kendrick Lamar“Step inside my mind and you’ll find curiosity, animosity, high philosophy…” promises Kendrick Lamar on Flying Lotus’ latest single “Never Catch Me.” Based on the game-changing track records of these two titans of West Coast hip-hop, we shouldn’t doubt it. Flying Lotus’ new album, “You’re Dead!” is set to come out Oct. 7 and this song is a tanta-lizing preview that melds Flying Lotus’ immacu-late jazz production with spitfire verses that evoke Lamar’s stellar debut album “Section.80.” Anyone convinced hip-hop is dead need just listen to this track. They couldn’t be more wrong.

Courtesy gigslutz.co.uk, amazon.com, pitchfork.com, hiphop-n-more.com & soundstation.dk

Retro Pick of the Week:“Introduction”—Chicago Transit Authority Chicago Chicago Transit Authority (later renamed Chicago due to legal action from the actual CTA) put out their self-titled debut album in April of 1969, forever changing the sound of rock music. “Introduc-tion” is a monumental piece of jazz-rock fusion that combines the brass attack of a marching band horn section with virtuosic soloing from the mighty guitar of Terry Kath. As far as debut albums go, few possess such an eclectic songwriting approach or adventur-ous track listing, as the group samples excerpts from the 1968 Democratic National Convention and lifts lyrics from the Beatles without missing a beat. Put on a pair of headphones and enjoy the wildest public transportation of your life.

Teddy Eisenberg is a third year programmer at WRUW-FM 91.1 Cleveland. He hosts The ’59 Sound, an exploration of rock music, every Thursday morning from 8 a.m.-10 a.m. and co-hosts the variety talk show Max and Teddy in the Morning at Night (Sometimes) on Mondays from 5 p.m.-6 p.m. The crackle of vinyl warms him on cold Cleveland nights.

J&L Country Market and Garden Center opened over 50 years ago. It started as a fam-ily business, and remains one to this day. The two owners, brothers Joseph and Anthony Londrico, can usually be seen standing in front of the store to meet-and-greet custom-ers, and the chances are that if you go, you will see at least one, if not both of them.

Standing right across the street from Con-

stantino’s, J&L offers food for cheaper prices, but it also has more limited hours. The mar-ket stays open from the last week of April all the way until Halloween, and its selection of produce changes seasonally. According to J. Londrico, the fall season is when they get most of their locally grown food. While the selection of fruit may not be as big as a super market, the fruits and vegetables are consis-tently fresh.

The inside of the store is mostly lit with natural light. Dull fluorescent lights hover

above the fruit laid out on tables in the middle of the store. Opaque white walls surround the store, trapping inside the cool air that keeps the food fresh. The produce is scattered around, which can make it hard to navigate at first. However, an assortment of basic fruits and vegetables line the back walls.

J&L makes some effort to cater to the stu-dents and faculty of Case Western Reserve University. J. Londrico describes the store as “open to student suggestions for new items to sell in the store.”

Since enacting this policy, he has picked up new student-driven items like ramen and snacks. Since they do sell locally grown food, prices may be slightly more than grocery stores, but that doesn’t say much for Cleveland’s fresh produce prices. But the Londrico brothers always consider the college student budget, and in an effort to compensate for slightly higher costs, they

offer a 10 percent student discount on all purchases of $10 or more.

While the outside of the store may not seem friendly, the inside is quaint. The staff circulates the inside and outside of the store, in an effort to converse with you and show you around. Since the store is small and fam-ily owned, J. Londrico said that being friendly with customers is something they value very highly. If you are craving something more lo-cally grown than what you can find at a gro-cery store, try J&L for a fresh start to the new academic year.

J&L Country Market offers fresh produce to the campus community.

Page 13: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

13a&eobserver.case.edu

Lily KorteStaff Reporter

Music’s Beginnings

Anyone who has ever watched a si-lent film or an old cartoon knows that the soundtrack is a vital component of the story. A few bars of a melody could indicate any-thing from where the action was occurring to a character’s physical or emotional state, with the tune itself frequently serving as a punchline. While this might seem harmless enough if the joke being made was that a character had fallen in love or was a bit tipsy, what happens when the musical snippets are being used to reference or mock a particu-lar ethnic group, as was often the case in the early 20th century? This was the key issue addressed by Associate Professor of Music Daniel Goldmark in a lecture delivered last Friday afternoon.

The lecture, entitled “Musical Stereotyp-ing: American Jewry in Early 20th Century Mass Media,” was part of a colloquium se-ries presented by the English Department, and addressed the role of music in creating or perpetuating Jewish stereotypes from the 1890s through the 1930s by focusing on top-ics both specific—how a seven-note musical phrase became the media’s go-to musical indicator of Jewishness—and broad—the development of Tin Pan Alley as an indus-try, and the pop cultural depiction of various other ethnic groups in music, either alone or in relation to one another.

In the modern era, where copyright en-forcement is rampant, sheet music sales are non-existent and accusations of racism usu-ally destroy a performer’s career, it becomes all the more fascinating to study the infancy of the music industry. One of the highlights of Dr. Goldmark’s multimedia lecture was seeing the sheet music covers and lyrics to many of the songs he discussed, as well as hearing recordings of some of them (Who could’ve guessed there were so many songs written about Jewish cowboys?). The lectur-er himself even gave a vocal-and-banjolele performance of a song at one point.

During that era, there were multifari-ous songs published on assorted stereotypi-cal themes as music publishers desperately searched for a new hit, for if one publisher had found success with a song about, say, an Irish-Jewish wedding, the rest were con-tent to piggyback on its success by coming out with suspiciously similar substitutes. Even composers and lyricists who are well-regarded today did their share of ethnic joke songs.

One interesting revelation of the lecture was that Irving Berlin, of “White Christ-mas” fame, wrote a wide variety of songs on every nationality imaginable in his ear-lier days in the business; the fact that he was Jewish himself didn’t stop him from penning a ditty entitled “Cohen Owes Me 97 Dol-

Farm Harvest FestivalSaturday September 20th1 p.m. - 6 p.m.

S’mores

Eat Mitchell’s

Hike

Frisbee

Corn hole

Hayride

at the University Farm

GSSAlumni Association

Human ResourcesO�ce of International A�airs

come check out the Student Sustainability Council and the University Farm’s

buses leave Thwing every 30 minutes starting at 12:30 p.m.

Food is free for alumni, faculty, sta�, students, and children under 12. Others will be asked to pay $5 to eat.

for more info: bit.ly/fhf2014

freefresh foodwith Case ID

Sponsors:

You need Ed, but he don’t need youJeniece Montellano Staff Reporter

to Ed | 14

to Music | 14

One man plus one loop pedal plus three guitars plus 14 LED screens multiplied by thousands of screaming fans equals one amazing concert experience. Last Thursday, Sept. 3, Ed Sheeran rocked the Wolstein Center on his X (pronounced multiply) al-bum tour and filled the stadium with sound, light and color—all as a one-man band.

Upon entering, the two different five-people-thick lines looped around the whole stadium, blocking the way. Everyone was in line to buy the $35 t-shirts, $55 sweat-shirts and $20 posters. Some chose to wear homemade X and + shirts, matching with their friends. Others opted to wear more typical concert clothing, rocking the crop tops and lace dresses.

Opening for Ed Sheeran was Rudimen-tal. A fun, upbeat electronic band from Eng-land, composed of what appeared to be eight members. They combined rapping and elec-tronic sounds with trumpet and with pow-erful singers of both genders. The drummer stood throughout the entire set, banging out a sick beat as the bass guitarist bounced riffs off of the keyboardist. Rudimental’s high energy was contagious, and managed to get the majority of the stadium singing along with parts of their songs.

Although it seemed like a lot of the audi-ence had no idea who Rudimental was, the entire floor section was standing for their set, a rare occurrence for unknown openers. The act was pretty hit-or-miss, though, with

some songs falling flat and forcing the audi-ence to awkwardly stand still, while others pumped up the crowd, as evidenced by the bobbing heads and waving hands in the air.

Once Sheeran came on the stage, the

Jeniece Montellano /Observer

screams of thousands of fan-girls immedi-ately erupted. He kicked off the show with “I’m a Mess.” He started off using only four of the LED screens, each one showing dif-ferent angles of him playing. The back-up

track helped build up the song, but Sheeran had pre-recorded the majority of the instru-ments playing in the background, really em-

Ed Sheeren’s one man show wowed the crowd at Wolstein.

Music professor discusses music in terms of Jewish stereotypes

Page 14: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

14 a&e 9/12/14

GE is in the business of powering big things… your career could be one of them.Come learn how GE’s prestigious leadership programs and internship/co-op assignments can do big things for the globe…and your career. Kickstart your career in an environment where ideas become infrastructures, and where individual talents combine to build, power, cure and move the world. Find out how at ge.com/university.

GE offers a great work environment, professional development, challenging careers, and competitive compensation. GE is an equal opportunity employer. Employment decisions are made without regard to race, color, religion, national or ethnic origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, age, disability, protected veteran status or other characteristics protected by law.

Come visit us on September 17, 2014 at Case Quad (Rain site Hovorka Atrium) for the GE Day on the Quad from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.

Bring a resume and join the GE recruiting team for food and prizes. All majors, intern/co-op, full-time.

from Ed | 13

bodying the one-man band.He then stopped to talk to the crowd,

encouraging everyone to sing along if they knew the words—even to make up the words if they didn’t know the actual lyrics. “There’s only one of me up here—I’ll need all the help I can get,” joked Sheeran. Natu-rally, the crowd exploded into cheers, in-fatuated with the British singer-songwriter.

The concert took a slower start, with “Lego House” from his first album “+.” The crowd sang along, with all 14 LED screens playing an animation of Lego pieces. He then immediately sprang into “Don’t,” a bitingly harsh song with the f-bomb multiple times in the chorus, and from there the concert took a faster pace. All the LED screens stayed out, flashing bright colors and animation.

The crowd was predominantly female, with the age ranging from as young as 11 to as old as 50. Daughters brought friends while mothers chaperoned, but everyone knew the words to at least one song, regard-less of age. Couples cuddled cutely to Ed Sheeran’s more lovey-dovey songs, and rocked out together to his fast-paced songs.

When Sheeran sang “Take it Back,” he showed off his rapping, which was well-received, especially when he rapped “I’m a singer that you don’t want to see shirtless.” Thousands of girls screamed at that line, protesting and insisting that they would love to see him without a shirt.

“One” brought the concert down to a mel-low state. Sheeran asked everyone to turn the flashlights on their phones and wave it in the air throughout the song, and the whole sta-dium was instantly filled with light. The LED screens played an animation of a cartoon couple falling in love, adding to the sweet-ness of the performance. Even with the im-

pressive sound system, you could still hear all the voices singing along, and all the lights revealed the outlines of couples embracing and swaying along with the music.

Sheeran then started playing “Blood-stream,” a song that showed off the effec-tiveness of the loop pedal he had. He record-ed and played back the different parts of the song in real time, building the end of the song into a huge jumble of overlayed sound, riffing for longer than the studio version. The crowd swayed and jumped around, bathed in the red and blue lights from the LED screens.

He slowed down the concert with anoth-er ballad, “Tenerife Sea,” and then brought back his more pop-inspired sound with “Runaway.” However, Sheeran also showed his emotional side with “Afire Love,” a touching song about the love between his grandfather and grandmother, detailing his grandmother’s battle with Alzheimer’s and subsequent death.

Before “Afire Love,” he stopped to talk to the crowd, asking everyone to please remain quiet and to not sing along for the next song. He waited for everyone to stop screaming, while some very insistent fan-girls continued to randomly scream, exas-perating the rest of the audience as a chorus of “SHUT UP!” followed every outburst.

After telling the crowd to ignore the screamers and riffing the same chord for a few minutes, the arena finally fell silent. Sheeran then started singing, with very simple white lighting and only four LED screens on, showing different angles of the singer and his guitar. The light from the cell phone screens recording his performance added to the ambiance, and nearly everyone remained quiet throughout the entire song, watching Sheeran sing. He kept his eyes closed, even when a few people couldn’t

control themselves and started screaming again.

Next up was another romantic song, “Thinking Out Loud.” He followed with “Give Me Love,” a song off of his first al-bum, “+.” He started off playing the guitar, then used the loop pedal to continue the sound, setting his guitar down as he started vocally freestyling the bridge, repeating “give me love now, love now.” The screens focused on him before showing the audi-ence as he continued with his repetitions.

He ended the concert with “I See Fire,” a song that he wrote for “The Hobbit.” When he left, incessant screaming followed him out until he came back out for his encore. As soon as Sheeran came back onto the stage, the screams intensified as he spoke: “I’ve got an encore for you all now.”

Sheeran started with “You Need Me, I Don’t Need You,” and while the studio ver-sion is only a little under four minutes long,

he sang the chorus a few more times at the end and even bust into some freestyle rap-ping. Sheeran then taught the crowd a few different harmonies to sing back to him before going back to the freestyle rapping. All 14 LED screens displayed bright red patterns and an animation of a hand em-phasizing the chorus—it may sound weird in writing, but Sheeran made it work. The song easily reached eight minutes in dura-tion, with the crowd echoing the chorus at one point and Sheeran leading a chant of “O-H-I-O!”

The end of the encore brought “A Team” and “Sing,” his most popular songs. When he reached the end of “Sing,” he had every-one sing the famous “oh’s” in the chorus, and said to keep singing those oh’s well af-ter the concert, and to wake up singing them the next day. He then ended the song and ran off the stage, with the audience still singing the “oh” melody long after he was gone.

Jeniece Montellano /Observer

lars.” More alarming still was the revelation that Berlin may have unintentionally plagia-rized the melody to “God Bless America” from an older song called “When Mose With His Nose Leads the Band.”

While the larger cultural context was helpful to keep in mind, it was in the exami-nation of minutiae where Goldmark most clearly demonstrated how stereotypes could grow so pervasive as to be mistaken for au-thentic representation. Thanks to the nearly non-existent copyright laws at the turn of the last century, songs from Europe could be published in the United States without au-thorization from their creators.

One such song, entitled “Khosn, Kale Mazl Tov,” had been a wedding song from a Yiddish theatrical production in the 1890s. Upon reaching America a few years later, it was widely reproduced and became popular enough that it began to be incorporated into other songs, or used in musical scores for si-lent films with Jewish themes. The original context of the composition was soon lost as its popularity skyrocketed and it became as-sociated with Judaism in the culture at large. Even in recent years, this musical cliché still had enough cultural ubiquity about it to be billed as a “traditional Hebrew wedding song” in songbooks, despite being barely over a century old. It’s a phenomenon per-haps comparable to the musical link that the “snake charmer song” has to the middle or far east in popular culture; that melody dates to the 1890s as well.

The original songwriter wouldn’t have made a penny from the tune’s proliferation, and yet, in America, many Jewish songwrit-ers and others appeared to feel few qualms about exploiting it and similar musical ste-reotypes. It is admittedly a rather complex situation, but it was clearly and engagingly explained by the lecturer, and it certainly left a lot of food for thought long after the discus-sion had ended.

from Music | 13

Page 15: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

opinion

The Observer is the weekly undergraduate student newspaper of Case Western Reserve University. Established in 1969, The Observer exists

to report news affecting and/or involving students and to provide an editorial forum for the university community. Unsigned editorials are the majority

opinion of the senior editorial staff. For advertising information, contact The Observer at (216) 368-2914 or e-mail [email protected].

The Observer is a proud member of the CWRU Media Board.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR should be e-mailed to [email protected] or submitted on our website at observer.case.edu. Letters can be mailed

to 10900 Euclid Avenue, Suite A09, Cleveland, OH 44106. For policy and guidelines related to the submission of Letters to the Editor, refer to

observer.case.edu/submit-a-letter. sports editor JP O’HAGAN

the observerestablished in 1969 by the undergradute students of case western reserve university

executive editor & publisher KATHLEEN WIESERdirector of design MEREDITH DYKEHOUSE

director of web & multimedia MARY KATE MACEDONIA

news editor JULIA BIANCOa&e editor ANNE NICKOLOFF

multimedia editor HARSHA CHANDUPATLA

copy editors JENIECE MONTELLANO,ELLIE RAMBO

advisor BERNIE JIM

account manager JAMES VELETTE

opinion editor JACOB MARTIN

digital publicity & communications manager JESSICA YANG

advertising & marketing manager COLE MORRIS

director of print MIKE MCKENNA

During these past few weeks, Case Western Reserve University has seen an outpouring of community.

Support in the wake of the plane crash tragedy was given with out-stretched arms. Individuals came together, and university officials re-sponded, quickly informing students that help was available and that they were not suffering alone.

It was a tall task for CWRU’s Mar-keting and Communications Depart-ment, one that they worked through with taste, tact and compassion. But in the midst of their trial, they failed to cover another tragedy—the death of long-time facilities worker Chris Mal-loy.

The HVAC technician died as a re-sult of suicide on Aug. 31.

Malloy had worked on campus for nearly 15 years, touching colleagues and co-workers with his bright person-ality. Needless to say, his death came as a shock to those who worked direct-ly with him, or even just saw him come into various offices on a daily basis.

And that news was delivered in the worst of ways. The university never alerted the campus community to what happened, and many of those who knew him found out via posts on the anonymous gossip app Yik-Yak or 100-word blurbs on Cleveland.com.

As of press time, no note from the president was sent to student inboxes, no university statement was released, no article in The Daily was posted, no mes-sage about services was distributed, no memorial was set up and the availability of counseling services was never men-tioned. Many students, including cus-tomer service assistants who worked with Malloy, were left frustrated with the uni-versity’s response. Over 10 days passed

New university center: Not all it’s cracked up to be

Two weeks after President Barbara R. Snyder dedicated the Tin-kham Veale University Center, the glitz and glamour have worn off.

We are hoping our first impression will prove misleading, but un-fortunately, “the Tink” appears to prioritize aesthetics over function-ality. The university center is a beautiful building, surely an exclama-tion point made for brochures, but we remain unconvinced it will have a strong impact on fostering the university community, which is what it’s meant to do.

The problems begin with lunch. The setup of the university center has made the simple meal a source of division among students, in-stead of a community building opportunity.

Despite boasting a strong lineup which includes Melt University, a smaller version of the Cleveland-based grilled cheese restaurants; Naan, a modern infusion of classic Indian food; 8twenty6, a vegetar-ian option; Pinzas, a pizza option; and Cool Beanz, a coffee and re-freshment station, most of the campus won’t be eating at the Tink since none of the eateries accept meal swipes, a frustrating fact con-sidering Bon Appétit, the campus dining management company, runs each station.

The problems continue with the politics of space and its availabil-ity. The ballroom remains closed during the day when not being used for an event. Additionally, students are required to pay a $75 per hour rate to use the otherwise wasted space. Students should not be priced out of using campus resources.

And what is the purpose of the super expensive Xbox Kinect screen? It’s a fun toy, but how does the university benefit? Surely the novelty will wear off in the coming weeks. Donation money could have been better spent somewhere else. It’s for nothing more than for show.

Furthermore, at first blush, it seems that more needed space for student organizations was added to campus through the Tink, but this is not necessarily true. Considering a number of meeting spaces in Thwing have become classrooms, there wasn’t much of a net gain in room for student groups, if any. Sure the Tink is a cool place to hang out, but we hope the university finds ways to use the space to strengthen our community.

The Tink is an impressive structure. Students have more room to study and come together, but choices regarding building usage, equip-ment, pricing and meal swipes have made the space unwelcoming. The Tink would become an infinitely better building if the campus officials had put a sharper focus on the entire campus community. Offering meal swipe options and sponsoring more all-campus events would fulfill the mission its name implies, rendering it a center of university happenings. Currently, the setup does little to foster com-munity, and it doesn’t earn its title of a “university center.”

opinion layout AQUENE KIMMEL

news layout CHRISTINA CHENGa&e layout VICTOR LOPEZ

sports layout ROBERT BROWN

A tragedy the university missed

web editor JOE SATTERFIELD

Editorial

Mike McKennaDirector of Print

Staff commentary

director of business operations TAYLOR MORAN

without a word from the university.To put it simply—CWRU’s Market-

ing and Communications Department screwed up.

Big time.The first step to fixing a problem is

admitting one exists; at least the depart-ment has done this.

“We did not respond how we should have,” Vice President for Marketing and Communications Chris Sheridan noted. “It’s something we deeply regret for his loved ones and the Case Western community.”

Sheridan explained that typically before the campus is notified of an em-ployee death, the university likes to wait for services to be scheduled so they can send out that information in their uni-versity release.

Services for Malloy took longer than expected to schedule, she said, and her office did not check in adequately with the situation. Malloy’s funeral was held on Wednesday, Aug. 10.

Nothing was sent out regarding this either; university officials were not aware the services had occurred.

“We, being my office and others, just totally dropped the ball,” Sheridan said. “There is absolutely no excuse, we should have [responded better].”

According to Sheridan, after hearing about the student’s concerns, the univer-sity would release a message soon.

“We always planned on doing this, but we kept waiting, and we shouldn’t have,” she said.

Sheridan says she hopes a mistake like this will never happen again.

I hope so too. If we’re going to build a strong community, campus officials can’t forget about any member of the university.

Mike McKenna is The Observer’s director of print. A junior biology and psychology major, he has served in pri-or years in multiple capacities for the paper, including the news editor.

Recent staff member’s death not acknowledged by university officials

Page 16: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

16 opinion 9/12/14

Grey menWhen I ask my fellow students—an

odd and much appreciated relation-ship and as I am fifty years older than most—why they are here at Case West-ern Reserve University, almost always the answer is: “To get a great job.”

I respect that. Given the cost of a col-lege degree, it is absolutely necessary to validate the time and expense of the in-vestment with an extraordinary return. (Whether the cost of higher education is justified is well-discussed in the Sep-tember issue of “The Atlantic.”) When I went to undergraduate college, I and most of my classmates would have an-swered: “To learn what kind of life is worth living.”

The two answers are quite compat-ible. It is not an either/or situation. In my situation, the issue of getting a great job was predetermined the day I arrived on campus. And the cost was affordable. With a good summer job, a good part-time job during the school year, some penny-pinching and shared housing, I was able to pay my way through Cor-nell, the most expensive of the Ivies at

the time. That option is not available to-day, so getting a great job on graduation is a worthy goal.

However, fellow classmates, there is some humor in your angst. CWRU is one of the great universities in the USA and the world: Graduates are consid-ered premium hires. Companies flock to CWRU every year to hire grads. From my perspective, and my experience as a recruiter, every CWRU grad will get a great job, some will have multiple of-fers and others may be hired even be-fore they graduate. All that is necessary is to graduate, preferably in the allotted four years. It was predetermined for you the day you arrived on campus that you would also get a great job.

Now it may be that the zeal to get a great job contributes a great deal to the result. So I am not suggesting that any-one lighten up on the academics. The better your performance, the better the offers. What I am suggesting is that you look a bit beyond “great job” in prepar-ing for the day after graduation.

Looking back on my career, particu-larly the 25 years I spent in the execu-tive search domain, I encountered many, many people 10 or 15 years into their post-graduation employment, who were

1) still in that great job, 2) wretchedly miserable, living lives of quiet despera-tion, trapped in a stultifying employ-ment prison and who were now 3) not promotable. They would look around themselves and see younger people be-ing promoted; they would see a younger boss, and a younger boss’s boss. And they would ask me: “What happened?” They were legion in number.

There is a phenomenon in indus-try, especially in the larger companies, called “the grey man,” which now ap-plies equally to women. Such a person is in his early forties; he has a spouse who has either a significant job or sig-nificant attachments to the local com-munity; he has several children who are established in local schools; he has two cars, a mortgage, a cat and a dog etc. On the surface he is living the American dream. But mostly what he has is the same job he started at, with minor title changes, a few early raises, a lot more work and no future. He is trapped. The company knows that he cannot up and leave. They know they have him for the duration. They know there is no reason to offer him any sense of a future. At age fortyish his hair is starting to turn grey, hence the moniker “grey man.”

What happened?Maybe he was seduced by an above

average starting salary. Maybe he bought into the perquisites offered to new hires. Maybe after he arrived he paid too much attention to winning con-tests, to pleasing his immediate boss. Maybe he spent too much energy learn-ing how to do some job and not enough energy in learning how to take control of his career. Maybe he got so good at his job that the company simply left him there, rather than turn the work over to a new hire. So now the company just loads him up with work and enjoys the bargain he has become.

What happened is he bought the boo-by-prize of employment. He took the great job without looking past that job toward what would constitute a great career.

Ted Howard is retired from a career in Executive Search. He is a husband, a father, a dancer, a pilot, a golfer, a gar-dener and a student of Latin and Greek and their respective cultures at CWRU. He majored in English (BA) at Cornell and took an MBA at Clark. A good day includes a morning of Latin, an after-noon of golf and an evening of Tango.

Ted HowardLooking back, and forward

It feels like November

It feels like November. Not neces-sarily in temperature or temperament of students, but I feel like I’ve been on campus for three months rather than three weeks.

I must admit, I feel old. I see the 1200-something freshmen running around, the embodiment of frantic an-ticipatory reverie in a daydream I once had. I see the sophomores with slightly more laid-back demeanors with their thirst for life and curiosity still intact. I see juniors living the college dream, not quite seniors ready to embark on the journey of life, but in possession of enough experience to be happily situated upperclassmen. I see seniors stratified: a third in a harried frenzy of worry about the future, a third with plans all set, a third under a spell of confused apathy.

I remember the carefree attitude I once had. Everything in college was planned for me, I knew my next step. As the years pass, that security passes too. In fact, the wise student realizes what

he or she had wasn’t security at all, it was illusion.

I remember being a freshman. I can recall a number of memories in my dorm (Storrs), in classes with upper-classmen, the first “A” I received on a college paper and even the first time I saw my name in print under an article in this paper. I have a vivid recollection of many memories Case Western Reserve University has afforded me the luxury to make.

But the real world is an anarchic place ruled by chaos and disorder. Sci-entists call it entropy, philosophers call it human nature. Pick up any good piece of literature and this is inevitably a ma-jor motif. Character starts in world with some semblance of order; something causes disorder; character tries to re-store order and either succeeds or fails; character is left in world despite efforts; futility tortures or fulfilment satisfies.

In “As I Lay Dying,” William Faulkner’s character Darl says, “How often have I lain beneath rain on a strange roof, thinking of home.” As I begin my final approach to graduation in May, I’ve found myself thinking a lot about home.

But where is home? And what is the purpose of nostalgia, what does it achieve?

Personally, I’ve never liked indulg-ing in nostalgia. The etymology comes from the Greek nostos, “a return home,” and algos, “pain, suffering.” The word literally means homesickness and im-plies a longing for something in absen-tia. More simply, it always leaves me feeling empty.

I consider CWRU to be one of my homes. Lately though, CWRU doesn’t feel the way it used to: I feel like I’m lying beneath a solitary rain cloud that has opened up above the roof I’m lying on, only the roof is my own.

But maybe that’s the purpose of nos-talgia, to remind us that things change. CWRU has changed since my arrival in 2010, and I have changed with it. I am not the same person I was as a freshman, yet I desire to hang on to the novelty and wonder of that previous time.

We become aware of memories like we become aware of a leaky faucet. When we’re constantly moving about making noise, we don’t hear the drip-ping. When we take a moment to bask in the solace of silence, the droplet of

water becomes audible as it lands in the tiny puddle around the drain.

This is the essence of life, the pas-sage of time. But the fact of the matter is not important. What’s important is how we spend that time.

On Hessler Street there are a couple of benches adorned with art. One of them has an unattributed Lewis Carroll quote written inside a heart: “Begin at the beginning and go on till you come to the end: then stop.” Each time I walk by that bench I smirk and chuckle at its absurdity. I think to myself, “Sure, you begin at the beginning and go on till you come to the end. Naturally you stop at the end. What then?”

The end of my CWRU beginning ap-pears nearer than May for me, and I have begun a search for a new one. However, change is not inherently bad, it’s merely inevitable. Until I find my new begin-ning to sustain this year, I may submit to silence and resolve to hear the ceaseless drip—drip—drip—drip…

“Though I know I’ll never lose af-fection for people and things that went before, I know I’ll often stop and think about them in my life.” —The Beatles

Jacob MartinOpinion Editor

The meaning of Spartan life

the

Observercwruobserver f

@CWRUObserverobserver.case.eduthe

Page 17: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

17opinionobserver.case.edu

Just do you (sometimes)

I always hated taking other people’s ad-vice growing up. I’m hardheaded, and I have already convinced myself that I am stubborn from womb to tomb.

Part of me is sure that this is because I was always this Type-A kid who always knew what he was doing. There probably is a good chunk of people at CWRU who just cruised along until they got here. Of course, that’s when the people who are always sure of themselves start to ques-tion themselves and everything.

While I do not believe that yelling should be used to get a point across, I do it anyway when uttering my favorite phrase: You do you. Usually that expression is fol-lowed by a sassy, “girl,” “boy,” “honey,” “dawg,” etc. when in all actuality I am be-ing very serious. But sometimes, just doing you is not helpful whatsoever.

To anyone who may have read my work from last year, I wrote many articles talk-ing about the importance of staying true to yourself and doing what is best for you, not others. It became such a staple of my work that I could go door-to-door selling leather-bound journals with “Just Do You” engraved in them. But let’s be real for a moment here. Sometimes listening to just yourself is a bad idea. Half of the ratchet things I did freshman year were from my a) lack of sleep and b) lack of seeing the repercussions down the road.

Occasionally someone will know better than you. Whether it is your RA, your ad-visor, or even your mother. They have the tough job of making sure your life does not end up in complete shambles. With their training and experience, you can assume that they actually know what they’re talk-ing about. Still, there is this fine line that we students must walk. Yes, our own judgment is good to go by. Yes, professional guidance

is also very good to go by. How do we know when it’s proper to turn a blind eye to an advisor or when to follow our hearts?

That question is probably why I avoided speaking to advisors my entire freshman year. If I messed up in any situation, I would take full responsibility for all my mistakes.

I never liked doing what others told me to do because it all turned into this huge blame game. It’s so easy to blame some-one else for your troubles if it was his or her advice that got you in a crappy situa-tion. You always hear those horror stories about that one senior who got crud advice, followed through with it, and is now the only college senior in a high school sex ed course. I am honestly kidding about the latter part of that scenario, but you do from time to time hear Greek tragedy about The Senior Who Got Crap Advice.

That does nothing but make me panic. I start asking myself if it’s all too late. Because I didn’t take statistics freshman year, does that mean I’ll be a hobo? Does not taking anatomy mean I’ll never understand human physiology and therefore die? The shoulda, coulda, woulda’s will always haunt you.

Maybe sometimes all you can do is blame yourself when a mistake is made. You chose to listen to him instead of yourself. Or some-times you chose to listen to yourself rather than your advisor. Maybe walking the fine line between complete dependence on oth-ers and independence is more of a waddle. A waddle that has one foot in independence and the other in dependence. That awkward shuffle between the two may even elimi-nate this “blame game.” In fact, the blame could easily be eliminated because frankly, shit just happens. If shit does happen, then maybe all we can do is make the best of it.

Stephen Kolison is a sophomore psychol-ogy major and pre-unemployment student. He is a jack of all trades and master of none in training, a member of IMPROVment and knits while watching Downton Abbey. He hopes to be a talk show host.

Stephen KolisonSophomore slump

It’s never too late

This one goes out to the seniors.Earlier this week, I had the plea-

sure of discussing summer experiences with several friends. We shared stories of working in offices, the promises of careers in our respective fields, and the realization that what we did this sum-mer is probably not the work we will be doing after graduation in May.

Yes, graduation. Most seniors balk at mention of the g-word. Some are excit-ed; they cannot wait to move into better and more “adult” parts of their lives. It seems some have even started adult life early. Students are accepting and some-times working in full-time jobs already, others have gotten engaged or married, a few already have children. It’s incred-ible what a few minutes perusing Face-book will tell you.

This is not to say that any of these are the only indicators of adulthood. They are just some of the obvious ones. The incredible and perhaps startling realiza-tion is that as seniors we are preparing to enter this part of our lives. It might seem like it is too early to talk about these issues—graduation, of course, is more than eight months away. But it is time to start thinking now.

Two weeks ago, Case Western Re-serve University experienced a shock

that made students begin to realize the sort of gravitas I am proposing. A tragic accident took the lives of four CWRU students on Aug. 25, 2014. In response to that event, Stephen Kolison, anoth-er writer here at The Observer wrote a piece about the dark humor in grow-ing up. He wrote, “Life needs to hap-pen because it makes us stronger. Life needs to happen because it makes us hu-man.” This was, of course, in response to a tragedy that awoke the deepest and most empathetic parts of our communi-ty. I joined in Kolison’s sentiment, and posited that such a tragic event could be used as an impetus for community building on our campus.

However, there’s even more than that. Kolison’s statement echoes a larg-er theme in growing up and moving on. In May, college, let alone formalized education, will end for much of the CWRU Class of 2015. Of course some will move on to further education in graduate, medical or law school. Some will decide in 10 years that they want to come back and pursue further educa-tion. Even more will make that decision sooner or later. But does graduation, the symbolic act of growing up, make us more human?

On Tuesday, David Brooks pub-lished a piece in the New York Times on this same issue. In a pseudo-review of William Deresiewicz’s “Excellent Sheep: The Miseducation of the Ameri-can Elite and the Way to a Meaningful

Life,” Brooks suggests that the book’s portrayal of college as a growth expe-rience is overplayed. College is not the Aristotelian Lyceum that Deresiewicz expects. Brooks explains this, citing the work of Harvard scholar Steven Pinker. “Perhaps I am emblematic of every-thing that is wrong with elite American education, but I have no idea how to get my students to build a self or become a soul.” Brooks concludes that Pinker and Deresiewicz are not arguing mutu-ally exclusive phenomena. Deresiewicz is positing what college education was. Pinker is simply saying what it is.

What if college education were nei-ther though? What if, instead of being about building the better human, or be-ing the commercial enterprise which Pinker bemoans it to be, college was another rite of passage along the way to becoming human. We actually ex-perience humanity with the choices we make upon graduation?

College is not about making us ready to do a job or launch a career. Even en-gineers will explain the long hours of on-the-job training and orienting they go through after getting hired. In other disciplines they are less spurious with their “real skills” education. Some, in-cluding my own degrees, don’t prom-ise real skills but instead the ability to think, read and speak critically on sub-jects.

In this way then, college is not the commercial enterprise or the modern

Lyceum. Students attend class in order to gain a knowledge base that is hard-ly useful while still enrolled, and that will only benefit them marginally upon graduation. This is, of course, depen-dent on your career. The future college professors in the graduating class will disagree with me.

The humanity of growing up—the self-explorative part of becoming an adult—has largely become the goal of post-graduation activities, jobs, training and lifestyle. Some seniors, myself in-cluded, worry about the looming spec-tre of the mortarboard. A common line among students is “I’m not ready to grow up.” In fact though, we are. Every-thing you’ve done the last four years has led to growing up. We attended college not to grow up but to prepare for it.

Maybe this is why it seems strange that our classmates are approaching adulthood so readily. My first reaction to a classmate’s wedding is not “con-gratulations” but instead an introspec-tive and silent rendition HAL’s oft-quot-ed line from “2001: A Space Odyssey,” “Just what do you think you’re doing, Dave?” Growing up, becoming human, is an after-college adventure. Right now we are simply getting dealt the cards. Maybe we should wait to play them.

Andrew Breland is the Observer’s senior opinion columnist. Contact him at [email protected].

Andrew BrelandThe elephant in the room

Yickety-yak, stop talking back

Kassie StewartAcross the CWRUniverse

If you have been anywhere on Case Western Reserve University’s campus the past few weeks, I’m sure you’ve read the news. Bad news though: It’s not news at all. It’s gossip (mostly es-poused by people who don’t know what they’re talking about). We are apparent-ly cool enough to have our own thread on the new app “Yik Yak.”

What is primarily an anonymous Twitter has taken the CWRUniverse by storm and everyone is spending their precious study time scrolling through 160 characters of mysterious rude comments instead. Though I must ad-mit that some have been clever, most of what I have seen has just been degrad-ing, belittling and outright immature. Many have been using the app to spread rumors through the CWRU community and attempt to damage reputations in the process.

The free app, which has caught the attention of higher organizations on campus, has been the cause of much dismay around the university. The use of this application was even brought up in Panhellenic Council this week and has been discussed in numerous stu-dent meetings around our university. But it’s not just a topic of discussion here at CWRU. Throughout the coun-try Yik Yak has been making waves with backlash about the culture of bul-lying anonymously that has been em-braced with open arms.

Let’s be real here: CWRU is not a typical school. We have some of the best classes in the world, and we are all

super smart, but we aren’t the schools you see on TV. Our football game tick-ets are not hundreds of dollars a game, and we do not throw raging parties on the quad.

But this is not a bad thing. In fact, we often pride ourselves on the amaz-ing community CWRU is.

It’s nice to know that the girl who lived across the hall from you your freshman year will stop and chat when you see her at Denny’s. Or that a pro-fessor whose class you dropped last se-mester will still smile and wave to you on the quad. Embrace that we have the opportunity to experience this amazing institution instead of attempting to pass out stereotypes.

The app is just that: an app. It is not a gateway to self-expression or a chance to change the world. It’s not go-ing away but we can change the nega-tive effect it has had thus far. Stop us-ing it. Delete it from your phone. Stop wasting your time scrolling and revert back to the days of tweeting with an @ sign and posting on walls.

This community does not need to be treated as if it is in some bad teen movie. This is not the college version of Mean Girls. So get off your phones and talk to some real people. Yik Yak is an anonymous domain full of those who have no other outlet to speak, so go talk to them. Make a new connec-tion in real life instead of trashing the beautiful community we live in.

Kassie Stewart is a junior political science major. Self described as Amy Poehler and Joe Walsh’s love child, her mantra is “no day but today.” She enjoys napping, sarcasm and peanut butter.

Page 18: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

18 sports 9/12/14

The Jolly Scholar

MTWRFSat.Sun.

11a - 12a11a - 2a12p - 2a

12p - 12a

216.368.0090

jolly.scholar

@JollyScholar

[email protected]

Swing by for food and fun…

Monday: Legendary Bingo & Bourbon starting at 8pm

Tuesday: Trivia Night at 8pm

Wednesday: Lady-Like

Friday: Jolly Late Nightsfrom 10pm to 2am

Wednesday Nights at 9pm

Saturday: Jolly CharityLate Nights from 10 to 2

Thursday: Graduate Happy Hour from 5 to 9 & Late

Night Karaoke from 9 to 2

Sunday: Browns’ Headquarters for All You Can Eat Wings & Friesfor $9.95 (it’s famous!)

Coupon! $1 off for special events

Case Western Reserve University co-hosted the 2014 Marcia French Memorial Volleyball Invitational at Horsburgh Gym-nasium with Baldwin Wallace University last Friday, Sept. 5, and Saturday, Sept. 6. The Spartans decimated the opposition go-ing 4-0 in the tournament.

On Friday, Case won 25-21, 25-15 and 25-17 against the University of Pittsburgh at Bradford. After losing the first set against Muskingum University 25-19, they rallied for wins of 25-12, 25-15 and 25-13. On Sat-urday, the Spartans swept both Westminster College and Capital University 25-11, 25-23 and 25-22 against the former and 26-24, 25-16 and 25-20 in the latter match.

Friday’s highlights were impressive in each match. In the Pitt-Bradford contest, junior Robyn Marks led setters offensively with 16 assists, while sophomore libero Kristen Mitchell led defensively with 19 digs. In the Muskingum bout, sophomore hitters Marian Barton and Kayla Plaff spearheaded the Spartans’ performance with nine kills and five block assists each, while Marks recorded 17 digs.

Saturday’s highlights were just as im-pressive. Against Westminster, juniors Ka-

tie Best and Marks led offense with 10 kills and 15 sets respectively. Junior middle hit-ter Haley Kauffman led the attack with 12 kills, while Mitchell again led defense with 14 digs.

Despite going undefeated, nearby John Carroll University also went undefeated but maintained a perfect 12-0 in sets to win the tournament. But Best earned an all-tourna-ment nod with a total of 27 kills and 31 digs.

It was the fourth consecutive season Case and Baldwin Wallace have sponsored the Invitational together, and the Spartan volleyball team arrived with power and grace. While their undefeated performance was just short of total victory, they estab-lished an early record of 6-2.

Wednesday’s contest against No. 8 Mount Union was a harsh return to the loss column as the Spartans dropped three straight matches by scores of 25-17, 25-15 and 25-15. Plaff lead the offense with four kills but four other Spartans had three kills apiece. Defensively Mitchell slowed the bleeding with an outstanding 21 digs.

The Spartans will return to the court on Friday, Sept. 12 against Kenyon College as part of the John Carroll Invitational and then play Mount St. Joseph University in the second game of the tournament on Sat-urday afternoon.

Jacob MartinOpinion Editor

Spartan women shine in home tournament

After splitting their opening weekend, the women’s soccer team advanced to 3-1 on the season and won two hard fought games over the week.

On Saturday, the Spartans edged out Wit-tenberg University for a 1-0 at DiSanto Field as the opening game of the doubleheader of Spartan sports on Saturday with the football opener. Sophomore forward Alexa Williams delivered Case Western Reserve University from the hands of overtime by being the only player on either team to finally find the back of the net.

The game was close through 88 minutes of scoreless play as both teams battled for any real lengthy possession. The teams trad-ed a total of 18 shot attempts but only the fi-nal one found its mark. Senior forward Chris-tine Straka collected a loose ball on the right sideline and crossed the ball to Williams, who fired a shot past the Wittenburg keeper for the deciding and only goal of the match.

Senior goalkeeper Abbey Smith needed just one save to earn her second shutout and second win of the season.

In Wednesday night’s game, the Spartans battled back from an early deficit to best SUNY Buffalo State. The Spartans were led

by senior captain Jessie Sabers who scored both of Case’s goals.

Saber’s heroics came on the heels of the early goal by Buffalo State’s Brenna Knight, who took advantage of a penalty kick at the 6:22 mark and beat Smith. The Spartans were left fighting from behind for the rest of the half and were unable to tie the game until midway through the second half.

In the 73rd minute, sophomore midfield-er Amy Lindberg forwarded a beautiful pass to Sabers who sent a solid shot from the cor-ner in between the posts for her first goal of the 2014 campaign.

Her second goal of the season came just a little while later after the teams headed into overtime to break the 1-1 tie at the end of regulation. Sabers captured the game for the Spartans in the second minute of over-time as she dribbled past the Buffalo State defenders and drilled her shot into the back of the net.

The pair of goals increases Sabers’ career goals total to 18 and moves the captain into a tie for third in program history for most goals and her second goal was her ninth game winning shot, which is a Case record.

The Spartans return home for a pair of home matches beginning with a Sunday, Sept. 14 against Center College at 1:00 in the afternoon.

Spartans steal close contests

JP O’HaganSports Editor

theObserver

Women’s soccer wins back to back games by one goal

[email protected]

f

Volleyball goes 4-1 in strong second week of season

Editor’s Choice

Page 19: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

19sportsobserver.case.edu

Carnegie Mellon no match for mighty Spartans

After expecting a close game, the Spartans were simply far superior to archrival Carnegie Mellon University last Saturday.

The kickoff for the 2014 football sea-son had a lot of promise to be an excellent game, but the Tartans seem to have lost their game plan somewhere on the drive from Pittsburgh to Cleveland. The Observer’s 24-21 prediction was far off from the 30-0 outcome, but we were not expecting such a poor showing from Carnegie Mellon in the 29th Annual Academic Bowl.

However, we realized that the Tartans had basically given up after the Spartans had that amazing blocked field goal, so the Spartans

decided to add the 21 points expected to go to CMU to their own score and simply ran out of time. The Spartans have a bye week this weekend and so we will run our predictions for their next game next week after we tweak our methodology.

The Spartans were led offensively against senior quarterback Billy Beecher, who passed for a career-high 301 yards and two touch-downs both to junior wide out Ethan Albers. Beecher also ran the ball into the end zone himself to account for three of Case’s four touchdowns. Sophomore running back An-thony Bianco rushed in the fourth touchdown late in the game to cap the Spartans’ scoring.

Beecher completed 24-of-37 passes, leading the offense for their 498 yards while the defense held the Tartans to a mere 184 yards. The defense looked strong, much improved over last season and added four sacks and a forced fumble to their strong stat line. Junior linebackers Everett Dishong and KJ Pederson each set career high tackle count with 13 and 12 tackles respectfully, and Pederson forcing the fumble.

The Spartans received the opening kick-off but were unable to do much and punted the ball to the Tartans, who found themselves on the edge of the red zone be-fore turning the ball over on downs. Case then took over and marched 75 yards on 11 plays to get themselves onto the scoreboard. Beecher hit Albers for his first of two touch-downs, a nine-yard strike and place kicked Nick Bavaro tacked on the extra point and the Spartans had a 7-0 lead with just over

four minutes to play in the first half.The Spartans added to their point total

late in the second when Beecher ran the ball in himself on a well executed QB draw that would put the Spartans up 14-0.

Carnegie Mellon threatened to score at the end of the half, and was very much still in the game, but their 19-yard field goal attempt as time expired was blocked by Spartan junior linebacker Gavin Sandidge and freshman safety Cody Calhoun scooped up the loose ball and made it to the opposite 29-yard line before being dragged down to end the half.

The Spartans opened the second half with a spectacular drive into the Tartan half which was marked by big passes from Beecher to Albers and sophomore tight end Zech Medved for 22 and 23 yards respectfully. The drive set up Bavaro to hit a 33-yard field goal to make the game 17-0 with just over 10 minutes to play in the third quarter.

The Spartans wouldn’t add to the score-board until the fourth quarter, when Beecher found Albers in the endzone again and con-nected for a seven-yard touchdown pass at the 12:19 minute mark. Bianco punched in his first career score five minutes of play later to punch the Tartans’ ticket back to Pittsburgh, bringing the final score to 30-0.

The win marks the 13th opening week-end victory for the Spartans in a row as well as its eighth straight win against Carnegie Mellon, and we at The Observer have heard rumors that the Tartans consider Emory their biggest rival. This rumor, while disre-spectful to us, the victors, is likely true due

to Carnegie Mellon’s ability to easily beat Emory’s football team, considering Emory doesn’t actually have a football team.

After such a satisfying win the Spartans will have a bye week this week before play-ing a PAC conference game at St. Vincent College on Sunday Sept. 20.

JP O’HaganSports Editor

Wide recievers Luke DiFrancesco (right) and Ethan Albers celebrate their opening game victory against Carnegie Mellon University.

Tight end George Darany returns to line after big play.

Andrew Hodowanec/ObserverThe Spartan’s offensive line prepares for the snap.

Andrew Hodowanec/Observer

Andrew Hodowanec/Observer

Page 20: Volume XLVI, Issue 4 September 12, 2014

arts & entertainmentsports

thecwruobserver

@CWRUObserverobserver.case.edu

fObserverthe

After struggling in opening weekend of games last week, the men’s soccer team turned around and won both of their games at the Fred Meyers Adidas Invitational hosted by Ohio Wesleyan, and then pulled off a wet victory in their home opener on Wednesday night. The Spartans now stand at 3-1-1 on the season.

Four different Spartans sent shots between the posts in the opening game of the Fred Meyer tournament last Friday night against Guilford College. Their combined efforts lift-ed the Spartans to their first victory of season.

The Spartans opened up the floodgates early, taking advantage of their corner kick opportunity in the ninth minute. Sophomore Joshua Prosser sent in the high ball, which midfielder Chris Cvecko directed into the box with a strong head-er and freshman forward Michael Balog

buried into the back of the net to put the Spartans up 1-0.

Less than 14 minutes later, the Spartans added another as Matthew Zembas beat the keeper for his second goal of the season with the help of Balog, who connected with Zem-bas with a strong cross from the goal line.

The Spartans were largely subdued in the opening of the second half but then found space between the posts to bury insurance goals within mere minutes of each other. Prosser blasted in a goal of his own from the middle of the box with 75:37 on the clock off an assist from Logan Glosser, and mid-fielder Slater Jameson put the final nail in the Guilford College in the 77th when he added an unassisted goal of his own. The Spartans dominated offensively holding a 21-11 shot advantage and took nine more corner kicks over the course of the match.

Defensively, sophomore Thomas Nolan made three strong saves to earn the win in his first career match. Nolan was helped on the backline by Ryan Meyer who put in the first

of two stellar performances over the weekend.In the second game of the weekend, the

Spartans bested the University of Mary Wash-ington with a 2-0 final. Case was again offen-sively lead by Balog, who netted his second goal of the season, as well as senior defender Taylor Fletcher who found the back of the net for the second time in his collegiate career.

Neither side could get past the opposing defense through the entire first half and the draw continued until the 52nd minute of play, when Fletcher broke the tie by collecting and burying the deflection of the Mary Washing-ton keeper following a corner kick taken by Prosser. Balog expanded the Spartans’ lead with an insurance goal in the 77th minute, giv-ing the Spartans a 2-0 lead and the eventual second win in as many days.

Freshman keeper Calvin Boyle worked the shutout in his first career start and stopped both shots on goal by Mary Washington, again with the defensive help of Meyer, whose stellar play earned him the Dick Gauthier Award as tournament MVP. Balog, Cvecko and senior

midfielder Bairdy Hansen were also named to the all-tournament team.

Cvecko lead the Spartans in the the wet game that played out on DiSanto Field Wednesday night against cross-town rival Baldwin Wallace University. Through a scoreless first half, the teams battled both the other team and the weather as a storm brewed over Cleveland.

After a tough battle on both sides, the Spar-tans were finally able to take advantage of the slippery playing surface as Cvecko received a well placed cross from junior Zembas and fired a shot through the hands of the Yellow Jackets goalkeeper.

The Spartans were able to hold off the other Baldwin Wallace advances and Boyle worked his second consecutive shutout with three spectacular saves in the tough condi-tions.

The Spartans will stay at home this week-end and look to continue on the winning streak by facing off against Capital at DiSanto Field at 3:30 p.m. on Sunday afternoon.

JP O’HaganSports Editor

Spartans rebound for three wins

Charlotte Palmer/ObserverChris Cvecko, the hero of Wednesday’s game, takes the ball up field in this photo from last season.

Become a sports reporter for the Observer.

Want press-level access to CWRU games and events?