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No-shows lose ticket privilege 1,200 fail to cancel football tickets, still able to appeal
Wednesday
VOL. 104, NO. 18
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2010
Josh Dawsey NEWS EDITOR
More than 1,200 students are now ineligible for student tickets this season after no-showing Thursday night’s season-opener wit hout cancelling their claimed tickets online. 9,400 tickets were distributed to students leading up to Thursday’s game. Only 8,188 were scanned at the gates of Williams-Brice
Stadium. Also, a large number of students were getting their tickets scanned and leaving upon having scanned in, said Patrick Donovan, USC’s coordinator for student tickets. The trend meant large patches of the student section were empty during the ESPN-televised USC win. With almost 2,000 students outside the gates without tickets due to the high demand, it was disappointing to see a section nowhere near capacit y, said Jeremy Long, Student Government’s Secretary of Athletics. However, students who didn’t get tickets last week, will have a much higher chance of getting
tickets for the Georgia game and for other contests in the future. “You think about how many students wanted to go to the game and couldn’t, and you’re sad for them,” Long said. “Football is a big sport around here, and you only get seven games a year. We could have had a capacity student section, but we didn’t.” It was a disappointing opening night for the stricter student ticketing policy. In the past, student ticketing privileges were lost for the TICKETS ● 4
Company makes use of Innovista
USC shuts out Tigers
SysEDA uses grant to research Naval technology
The USC men’s soccer team defeated Clemson for the four th straight year on Friday night.
Josh Dawsey NEWS EDITOR
See page 9 Scott Fowler / TH E DA ILY GA MECO
5 Artists You’re Missing From STAY to The Icarus Ac c o u nt, S t af f Wr i te r Chloe Gould picks several rising, diverse musical acts you can’t afford to keep off your iPod.
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Wanna Fanta? When you compare America’s justice system to ones around the world, Michelle it doesn’t seem quite Fantone Fourth-year as unfair. political science
See page 5
and sociology student
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For college students, studying has bec ome a lost time was between 1961 pastime. and 1981 — a time before computers. Study hours per week dro According to a study released by two pped from 24 economics to only 16 during that professors, Phi lip Babcock at the time frame. Un Haskin still finds the California Santa Barbara and Mindy iversity of Marks at the she does school-relat time to study and said that ed work for 20 hours University of California Riverside, coll ege students “W hen I have read ing, I highlight a week. stud ied an average of 24 hou rs a and make week in 1961 notes as I go alon g and reread sect ions that are compared to just 14 in recent years. less clear to me, This change was seen I make note ” Haskin said. “Studying for tests, cards and keep going through them across the board. unt il I know each backwa rds and 1961: College forwards. For “It’s not just lim ited essays, as long as I don’t have writer’s block, I make students spend to bad schools,” Babcock some note s on how I want to organize my essay an average of 24 and told the Boston Globe. try to get it all written in one sitting, the day that hours per week “We’re seeing it at liberal get the assi I gnment.” arts college s, doc tora l studying Haskin is r e s e a r c h c o l l e g e s , yea r eng part of the minorit y, however. Secondine masters colleges. Every that he stud erin g student Cole Thornto n said Present: Average diff ere nt t y pe, eve r y second-year ies for eight to 10 hours per week and business student Eric Bouchard only hours spent diff ere nt size . It’s just hits the books for six hours a week. studying dropped across the spectrum. It’s “I never really studied in high scho ol, and was very robust. This is just never taug to 14 per week ht any study skills,” Thornton said. a huge cha nge in every Walter Edgar, who has been a mem ber categor y.” hist ory department at USC since 197 of the The question then becomes: Why? students are often not prepared enough 2, thin ks “Students are smarter,” said Don Fow for ler, who “Students can not write,” Edgar said college. is ent ering his 47t h yea r as a pol . “We are itic professor at the Un iver sity of Sou al science inherit ing what we get . Kid s are ver y brig ht, th Carolina. the y score, the y’re ver y cur iou s, but the y have “St udents are materia lly bet ter, and the better and I just almost never run acro y write not from fifth or sixt h grade on [been] made to ss where a student doesn’t attempt it. And an exam write vigorou sly. The y don’t real ly know how I know the to research. Making SAT scores have risen over the year a certain score on the SAT s. You’re just verbal doesn’t mean that you can write a sentence getting a better quality of student.” or a paragraph.” Sec ond -ye ar Eng lish and pre -law stu den t But what seems to contradict this is McK inley Haskin blames technology. that across the nation, college students are earn “Advances in technology cause decreas ing better and ed study better grades. time. The fact that human beings are becoming Acc ord ing to ww w.g rad ein f lation. more and more dependent on oth com , the er people and ave rag e GPA of all A me rica n col leg es and resources — we’re pretty much gett ing more and uni ver sitie s dur ing the 1991-19 92 school yea r more lazy,” Haskin said. was 2.93, compared to an average of The theory makes sense, except Bab 3.11 in 2006cock and Ma rks fou nd that the biggest dec rease in study STUDY ● 2
Tin Roof to bring relaxing atmosphere New location in Vista offers music, food casual, fun experience Chloe Gould
STAFF WRITER
PEPSI REFRESH Help Dance Marathon win $25,000 by texting 10 13 47 t o 7 3 7 74 . The organization is competing in the Pepsi Refresh project.
Re st au ra nt , ba r a nd live-music hot spot Tin Roof is open i ng t hei r new locat ion i n T he Vista today, of fering a laid-back lunchtime and late-night hang out and an outlet of opportunities for Columbia’s local artists. Tin Roof Colu mbia, sit t i ng r ight of f of A ssembly on Senate, will be the fifth of “The Roof” family, joining the Nashville, Knoxville, Cool Springs and Lexington locations to present a new kind of venue to local and
Keri Goff / THE DAILY GAMECOCK
The fifth of the “The Roof” series of restaurant/bars opens its doors today in The Vista. touring musicians. “We hope to provide a very casual and fun place that adds to the character
of t he Vista a nd g ives people a good place with live music, and a place t o h a n g l at e -n ig ht a s
well,” said co-owner Bob Franklin. W it h a f u l l- s er v ic e TIN ROOF ● 3
A small tech nolog y compa ny is usi ng t he Un iversit y of Sout h Carolina’s Innovista campus to develop virtual test beds for electronic transportation vehicles, bringing some life to USC’s oft-criticized research project. Sy s E DA , a s t a r t u p through USC’s Business Incubator, received a $2.4 m ill ion g ra nt f rom t he Office of Naval Research to develop t he h ightechnology, cutting-edge products for the Navy. The test beds were created by USC students under the supervision of USC electrical engineering professor Roger Dougal and were licensed by the USC Research Foundation. “I’m guessing we’ve had 50 students involved in the software development over the years,” Dougal said. I t ’s q u i n t e s s e n t i a l Innovista, Director Don Herriot said. Te c h n o l o g y f o r t h e project was developed by USC students under the guidance of Dougal. The company’s employees are products of the University and it s CEO, Kelly Tr uesdale, is a product of t he Moore School of Business. “USC research is t he fountainhead of Innovista,” Herriot said. “These are high-technology jobs, South Carolina entrepreneurship and this aligns perfectly with Innovista.” Herriot called the project a “single” for Innovista, which has been oft-criticzed by Gov. Mark Sanford and ot hers as a f lou ndering failure for the University. It s st r uggles were ver y publ ic as it s leadersh ip changed after reports from The Free Times and other media outlets surfaced in 2009, revealing the project’s pr ivate developer K a le Roscoe to be a criminal, convicted of tax evasion and scamming previous contract holders. But now the project is getting a “reset button,” so to speak, Herriot said. “One of t he st rateg ic thrusts of Innovista will be starting up companies like SysEDA,” Herriot said. “There’s hopefully a long list of companies that will come out of USC research.” Comments on this story? E-mail gamecocknews@sc.edu