The Oracle THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2014 I VOL. 52 NO. 46
Inside this Issue
N E W S
“Christmas creep” turns off shoppers. Page 4
Montage
S P ORTS Cousins looks to step out of brother’s shadow at USF. BACK
Opinion.......................................................4 Classifieds..............................................8
Crossword.......................................8 sports.........................................................12
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA
Student brings the metal to St. Pete Staff union, USF find common ground
By Wesley Higgins
O P I NIO N
www.usforacle.com
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E D I T O R
It’s not often that metalheads use the power of metal for charity, but one USF student is summoning bands from all over Florida to St. Petersburg on Saturday in support of epilepsy research. USF student Lucille Volpe, a production assistant at State Theatre, put together Destroyer Fest to satisfy the demand for metal music. “Every band at the festival is producing something that is organic and raw,” she said. “They’re not using freaking autotune or a synthesizer. They’re using beefy Orange amps, heavy guitars and big drums that create a huge live experience.” The proceeds from the event will go to the Epilepsy Services Foundation in honor of epilepsy awareness month. “It’s a disease that needs a bit more awareness,” Volpe
said. “I want my festival to be a nonprofit festival that gives back to the community.” The prospect of a mosh pit or a blown eardrum is unfavorable to some newcomers, but Volpe said it’s a shared experience everyone needs to try once. “People look out for each other. If you fall on the floor, someone is going to pick you right back up,” she said. “Everyone is there to have a good time, not beat the crap of each other.” The rush of head banging while throwing up devil horns was lost to ages with bands such as Black Sabbath, but Volpe said that feeling is coming back to a new generation of metalheads. “It’s addicting and intoxicating,” she said. “I just wanted more of it and it’s why I decided to work in music. I wanted to help build that community.” Volpe said bringing talented bands might help proliferate the metal scene in the Tampa
area, which used to be considered the death metal capital of the world. “I don’t know what happened,” she said. “For some reason, it just diminished it over the years. Instead indie music and electronica became more popular.” Though the live metal scene in Florida has been slow to resurrect, it’s gained traction in other parts of the country since the 1990s. “Right now, huge bands are getting booked everywhere but Florida,” Volpe said. “I want to bring them down here and show them that Florida is worth their time.” Some metal subgenres, with bands such as Electric Wizard and Sleep, feature a laid-back groove and lower pitch than early metal bands, such as Iron Maiden or Megadeth. “I love metal and I love sludge metal, doom metal and stoner metal,” Volpe said. “When there’s a metal
n See METAL on PAGE 2
Yik Yak engages colleges with anonymity The growing app that all the kids are using these days.
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By Alex Rosenthal E D I T O R
I N
C H I E F
“We should have our squirrels fight the squirrels from other universities to prove we are the best,” one Yik Yak post from Virginia Tech said. “I think I did better on my midterms than the democratic party …,” posted another student at the College of William & Mary. “You know what makes your 4 year degree useless? A neck tattoo,” said another post from Michigan State.
If a USF student were to use the Yik Yak app on campus, they’d likely see jokes about the value of a UCF degree, a reference to a quirky professor or something weird someone saw in the dining hall on campus. Yik Yak has become one of the latest trends in social media wherein people can anonymously post to users around them. According to Cam Mullen, lead community developer at Yik Yak, people are posting to the app every 60 seconds and an estimated 11 to 15 percent of students at USF use it. “We call it a local, anonymous Twitter,” Mullen said. “We show you the 100 most recent posts within a few mile radius, and you don’t have to friend or follow each other. It’s
an open network – like a bulletin board in your area.” What makes Yik Yak unique among smartphone apps, Mullen said, was the “intersection of location and anonymity.” In the early days of apps and smartphones, he said there was a lot of anonymous activity and people began to feel sketched out and thus shifted to requiring usernames to show identities. While the location aspect of the app allows users to only see what’s posted in a two-mile radius and feel a sense of community, Mullen said there is a trend for apps to cycle back to more anonymity. “I find it cool because everything is anonymous,” said Taylre Loyster, a junior major-
n See YIK YAK on PAGE 3
By Wesley Higgins N E W S
E D I T O R
Collective bargaining for the 2014-15 contract came to a close between university and staff union officials who represent 700 custodians, maintenance and non-administrative staff on campus. Though negotiations began with a rough start in September, both sides reconciled many issues and left Wednesday’s bargaining meeting grinning and shaking hands. “You met us midway on some stuff, we met you midway on stuff,” University Chief Negotiator John Dickinson said. “This is our best proposal of the year.” Once the contract is ratified, all university staff will receive a 3 percent increase to base salary starting in 2015. This settlement followed a series of counter proposals. The staff union originally demanded a 5 percent base salary increase, while the university proposed an acrossthe-board 2 percent increase with a bonus for merit. “Our board is extremely adamant in their position that performance should be a critical factor in how we pay people at this university,” Dickinson said. “For purposes of getting an agreement … at least this first year, we will retreat from that notion.” Hector Ramos, chief negotiator for the staff union, said a base salary increase was needed to compensate for reces-
n See UNION on PAGE 2