Wrestling triumphs
Banzai!
Experience Asia Month continues with a celebration of Japanese culture.
Coach earns his 500th win as he leads the team to their 600th victory. See Sports, page 28
See Features, page 16
tcnjsignal.net
The College of New Jersey Student Newspaper since 1885
November 11, 2009
No. 11.
Vol. CXXXI.
Dorsey tweets @ College Public art installed on campus ʻPixelsʼ both embraced and rejected By Matt Huston Nation & World Editor
Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey learned from his own mistakes, and on Nov. 4, he instructed students of the College to do the same. “The number one thing you can get right in the beginning is being upfront,” said Dorsey during the Kendall Hall event that was hosted by the School of Business. Dorsey created Twitter in March 2006 as a side project of podcasting company Odeo. Within a year, the microblogging site was on the verge of skyrocketing. “We were in the right position at the right time,” he said. According to Dorsey, the company had a crucial advertising break at South by Southwest festival in April 2007. However, the site was soon inundated with new users and system crashes threatened to derail the up-and-coming project. “We were not acting as a cohesive company, we were not talking to each other,” Dorsey explained. “And here we were building a technology that was focused on communication and transparency.” After a rough stretch, Dorsey said, the Twitter heads settled
down and began talking. They used blogs and communicated with users about the internal problems, and developed tools to visualize site traffic, all of which helped smooth the recovery. After a year and a half, the site was running consistently. “Being critical of what weʼre doing constantly helps decide where we need to go,” he said. Today, Twitter is ranked as the 12th most popular Web site in the United States. Still, Dorsey said, there is “a constant evolution, a constant integration, all based see TWITTER page 3
Tim Lee / Photo Editor
The Twitter co-founder advised students to learn from their mistakes.
By Brianna Gunter News Editor and Caitlyn Camacho Correspondent
On the morning of Nov. 2, on the walkway behind Loser Hall, curious faces all gazed at two objects that had mysteriously appeared overnight, identical in every aspect except color. Two more appeared the following morning. “I just want to know what theyʼre there for. They look okay but I donʼt know how well they fit in,” said Kevin Reilly, freshman health and exercise science major. The appearance of four giant spheres near the Art and IMM building, Loser Hall and the Music Building had many students, faculty members and staff questioning their purpose and function. “A lot of people are attracted to the beauty and atmosphere of this school and the balls detract from that,” said Caitlin Dewitt, senior history and secondary education major. “I thought they were giant ornaments that were going to be set up just for the holiday,” said Maria Heininger, senior chemistry and secondary education major. The giant spheres are not orna-
Tim Lee / Photo Editor
Artist Willie Coleʼs ʻPixelsʼ was installed as part of the Collegeʼs public art initiative. ments, but actually a work by artist Willie Cole called “Pixels” according to a campus community e-mail from John Laughton, dean of the school of arts and communication. “Willie Cole was selected from a roster of more than 75 artists with consultation from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, a committee comprised of faculty, staff, and students from Art, IMM, Campus Planning, and the Art Gallery,” Laughton said. “Pixels” is part of a public art initiative by the College and only one
work in a set of many to be unveiled in conjunction with future building projects, said Laughton. The funding for the balls was approved by the Collegeʼs Board of Trustees on Dec. 2, 2008. The minutes for that meeting show $100,000 was allocated to Cole. According to Matt Pemble, sophomore art education major, the funding did not come from student tuition, but was part of the construction budget for the new Art see PIXELS page 19
College Dems did not support Corzine By Katie Brenzel Arts & Entertainment Editor Despite having the support of President Obama and spending millions on his campaign, Gov. Jon Corzine lost his bid for re-election on Nov. 3. His candidacy didnʼt garner much attention on campus partly because the College Democrats decided to divert their previous focus of supporting Corzine in the gubernatorial election to other matters. In an 11—8 vote on Oct. 5, the group voted to shift the focal point of its efforts from the Corzine campaign to other areas of interest according to Sarah Burdick, club secretary and sophmore journalism major. According to Burdick the other issues the group decided to focus on include national issues such as health care and gay marriage. Club members that continued to support Corzine were “still provided with the means to work for the campaign,” she said, adding that she supported Independent candidate, Chris Daggett.
AP photos
Gov. Corzine had the support of President Obama and others but failed to maintain support from the College Democrats. The decision was made shortly after Democratic Lt. Gov. candidate Sen. Loretta Weinberg spoke at the College on Sept. 30. Though Weinberg had scheduled to meet with club leaders prior to the forum, a previously booked event in Bergen County on gang violence prevented her from making it to the College on time according to Brian Block, president
of the College Democrats. Weinberg didnʼt arrive until 45 minutes after the appointed time of the forum. When asked if the Senatorʼs lateness and failure to make the meet-and-greet had any connection with the groupʼs decision, Block said this was not the case. “We commend Sen. Weinberg for taking time out to talk with us and students, and in no way did she insult us or
feel that we were not worth her time … Essentially we do not as a club endorse Corzine, but we are not against him either, just focused on other matters,” Block said. Vice President Alex Berger was the former campus coordinator for the Corzine campaign but rescinded the role due to conflicting beliefs with the campaign on the responsibilities of the position. “We kind of parted on how we wanted to do things on campus. They wanted me to take a more active role in convincing the students and articulate why he was the better candidate, which I would have been fine with, but I felt they had a duty to convince the students by coming on campus,” Berger said. When asked what he felt prompted the vote in the club, Berger identified Corzineʼs declination of the Collegeʼs invitation to host a debate with the candidates as the turning point for many
Smashing Cars Cars destroyed for charity.
100 ways to spend $100.000 Student creates a list of how the public art budget could have been used.
Henry Cho visits Kendall The comedian was a humorous part of Experience Asia week.
See page 17
See page 11
See page 21
see DEMS page 2
INSIDE
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