Serving James Madison University Since 1922 BreezeJMU.org
Vol. 94, No. 13
Monday, October 12, 2015
breezejmu.org
t n o h e m u m e s oo u n ‘M
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Google competition to g s r e t et hi r en o s s art s e f o in s pr s pac t Ar e
Students take action Organization confronts JMU about supporting fossil fuels
By JULIA NELSON | The Breeze buddies, Carnegie Mellon design professor Mark Baskinger, asking him if he wanted to have his art go to the moon. “I got two sentences in before he said, ‘Yeah,’” Baskinger said. Baskinger is one of the directors of the project. The team working on Moon Arts Ark wanted to incorporate culture and art in its rover, and Baskinger knew that Rooker’s work with metals had always been inspired by space. “They’re having me work on the structures that run up the core of it,” Rooker, said. “That’s the heart of what I’m doing.” The Google Lunar XPRIZE focuses on the rover and lander, but the team of artists is piggybacking on the Moon Arts Ark by attaching a small chamber full of miniature
CONNOR WOISARD / THE BREEZE
Divest JMU protested university investments Friday. By CHRIS KENT AND MORGAN LYNCH The Breeze
see MOON, page 9
Twenty JMU students crowded a hallway in the Festival Student and Conference Center on Friday to protest JMU’s investment into fossil fuels before the start of the Board of Visitors meeting. The sit-in was orchestrated by Divest JMU, an organization which advocates for removing the university’s investment money from fossil fuels. It’s part of a larger movement called Fossil Free and its motive is to freeze all investments into the fossil fuel industry. According to Fossil Free, it has divested $2.6 trillion away from fossil fuels. The protest at JMU was scheduled in response to President Jon Alger, who asked C.J. Hartman, the executive director of the JMU Institute for see DIVEST, page 3
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ark Rooker loves art to the moon and back. But this time his art is could stay. He’s working on Moon Arts Ark, Carnegie Mellon University’s rover for the Google Lunar XPRIZE competition. The prize is $30 million to any privately funded group that can get its robot to the moon, travel 500 meters and send imaging back to Earth. The rover is scheduled to leave Earth at the beginning of 2017. “I got hooked on science fiction as a teenager,” Rooker a JMU art, metals and jewelry professor, said. “It’s still the thing that sticks in my head more than anything else does. In graduate school, I was trying to figure out what I was going to make art about, and everyone tends to do what they know best.” About two years ago, Rooker got a call from one of his graduate school
TH EB REE ZE
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Dukes top the Tigers
Looking to the future Leaders discuss changes throughout university
Led by Lee’s five touchdown passes, JMU remains undefeated after 51-30 win
CONNOR WOISARD / THE BREEZE
President Jon Alger at Friday’s Board of Visitors meeting in the Festival Board Room. By MORGAN LYNCH The Breeze
ERIN WILLIAMS / THE BREEZE
Redshirt senior quarterback Vad Lee weaves through Towson’s defense on Saturday afternoon. Lee was 24 for 32 passing, totalling 278 yards.
JMU VS. TOWSON
By PETER CAGNO The Breeze
When Vad Lee officially left Georgia Tech in 2014 to come play for JMU (6-0, 3-0 Colonial Athletic Association), he wanted to make a name for himself in Harrisonburg. Now with a year and a half under his belt at the helm of the offense, the redshirt senior quarterback has done just that. After throwing five touchdown passes in Saturday’s 51-30 win over Towson University (2-3, 0-2 CAA), Lee now holds sole possession of see FOOTBALL, page 11
TEAM UP &
win
final score
Vad Lee Passing TDs Single-game career high
Charles Tutt
First JMU kickoff return touchdown since Oct. 2013
Total Offense yards passing rushing
JMU All-time TD Completions 1. Justin Rascati 2. Vad Lee 3. Mike Cawley JMU Scoring points per game
An announcement on JMU police technology and the approval of a change to the industrial design program were among the takeaways as JMU’s Board of Visitors convened in the Festival Board Room Friday. The JMU police force will start wearing body cameras this Tuesday and will also continue to participate in a four-day training every year on how to respond to active shooter situations. The Board of Visitors approved a change in the industrial design emphasis in the studio art program. The program previously allowed for students to obtain a Bachelor of Science in studio art with an emphasis in industrial design. Now an industrial design major will also be offered in the School of Art, Design and Art History. An update on fundraising for a new Convocation Center was shared too. “The project to build the new Convocation Center has reached $1.8 million toward its goal of $12 million,” Warren Coleman, chair of the Advancement Committee, said. Mark Warner, senior vice president of student affairs and university planning, spoke about increasing JMU’s enrollment projections to 23,033 by the year 2021. Currently JMU has about 21,000 students enrolled.
KELSEY HARDING / THE BREEZE
A “HART-FELT” CONTRIBUTION
ALL TIED UP
Family gives naming gift to program
Goals from two CAA leaders result in a draw
NEWS | 3
SPORTS | 10
see MEETING, page 4
TODAY WILL BE Sunny 74° / 54° Chance of rain: 0%
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