October 20, 2015

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OCTOBER 20, 2015

News

THENORTHERNLIGHT.ORG

UNIVERSITY OF ALASKA ANCHORAGE

Opinion

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Students indecisive between Democratic frontrunners

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The subtle differences between Donald and Bernie

Seawolves cruise to 16th win of season over Simon Fraser Clan By Nolin Ainsworth

sports@thenorthernlight.org

If there was any lingering disappointment in the hearts of UAA’s volleyball team Saturday night following their loss to Western Washington 48 hours earlier – it didn’t show. The Seawolves (16-2, 8-2 GNAC) took care of business Saturday night when they hosted Simon Fraser University (9-9, 5-5 GNAC) - winning 25-15, 25-9, 25-23. The win kept the Seawolves in a three-way stalemate for second place in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference standings with Northwest Nazarene and Central Washington. “The girls responded well,” Seawolf head coach Chris Green said, “I’m very proud of them coming out and getting a good win tonight.” The Seawolves dictated the flow of the game in the first and second sets. Coach Green

complemented his blockers for making life tough on the Clan’s front line, who had no choice but to send the ball in the direction of the freshman libero Taylor Noga. In response, the former East Anchorage Thunderbird had a career-game for herself. Noga finished with a career-high 19 digs in her second straight start at libero. “I think we knew what they were going to do in each rotation, and they didn’t fool us,” coach Green said, “Our block did a really good job of slowing them down and frustrating them.” Following the Clans’ loss in the first set, the squad from British Columbia received a tough break in the second set. With the set tied at 3-3, Clan senior Jessica Young went down with an ankle sprain. The senior outside hitter was visibly shaken-up as

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PHOTO BY RYAN JOHNSON

UAA’s right side hitter, Julia Mackey celebrates as the Seawolves win the third set 25-23 and sweep FSU 3-0 on Saturday, October 17, 2015.

MAC apartments sort out Wi-Fi troubles with GCI

GRAPH COURTESY OF GCI

The 5-minute averages of student bandwidth consumption from just after 11:00 a.m. on October 13 to just after 11:00 a.m. on October 14. Students were most active on the UAA Housing wireless network between 11:30 p.m. and 12:30 a.m on the night of the 13th.

By Nolin Ainsworth

sports@thenorthernlight.org

Wireless Internet has become a necessity for survival in today’s increasingly digital world. Wi-Fi is so commonplace its availability in today’s homes and businesses is often an afterthought, a detail that comes to mind only when unexpectedly absent. This is especially true for college students, who use the Internet on an hourly basis for their homework,

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social life and entertainment. David Weaver, the director of University Housing, Dining, and Conference Services, understood the importance of a sound Internet connection for students when he acquired a new wireless network for the residential campus over the summer. “Doing homework is one thing. But having good Wi-Fi is a quality of life issue.” With a student housing population close to a thousand, the new network

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needed a large enough bandwidth that, when divided among all the residents, could provide reliable service. That is why a total of 450 Mbps (megabits per second) is now “piped” to the residential halls and apartments. Last year, this was the amount of bandwidth shared between the main campus and UAA housing. The UHDCS purchased a service contract along with the new wireless contract. This means GCI is responsible for the maintenance and support of the wire-

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less network instead of UAA’s IT Services. “[UHDCS] felt that it was a better decision to have a service model – meaning a monthly fee for all services including technological refresh, troubleshooting, truck rolls, you know having our folks on site, as well as a 24/7 help desk,” GCI Director of Business Services Jim Kostka said. The move has gone smoothly – for

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