Spiking the competition

Freshman Iris Anderson bumps the ball at the Rose Hulman Invitational on Sept. 7.
Freshman Iris Anderson bumps the ball at the Rose Hulman Invitational on Sept. 7.

A new crop of freshmen, along with a new head coach,  has launched Ohio Wesleyan’s volleyball team to an impressive 10-2 start to their season.

Formerly a Xavier University assistant coach, OWU volleyball’s new head coach, Kirsta Cobb, has brought her laid back approach of coaching to the program.

“I’m looking to teach, I’m not a big yeller and screamer,”  Cobb said.

Cobb said she likes to give her players a chance to be involved and to create a classroom feel at practice.

“I want my players to feel like they’re part of the process and to ask questions.”

The team’s roster includes six sophomores and nine freshman, which means there are only three upperclassman on the team.

“We’re young, it’s exciting.”  Cobb said.

“I think we’re talented and we’re just going to get better and better.”

Iris Anderson and Brianna La Croix are two standout freshman who have gotten a lot of playing time during the beginning of this season.

“They’re outside hitters, they both play big roles,” Cobb said.

“They have to pass, play defense, hit. Anderson averages four points per set, and La Croix averages three.”

The team won all four of their matches last weekend at the Manchester Invitational, only dropping one set throughout the whole tournament.

The Bishops open up NCAC play against Allegheny this Saturday, Sept. 20 in Branch Rickey Arena.

When women get to lead, we can all succeed

New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand. Photo: gillibrand.senate.gov.
New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand. Photo: gillibrand.senate.gov.

Growing up, I loved airplanes and the history of flight, and my heroes were the early pioneers – including groundbreaker Amelia Earhart, who challenged both flight records and gender norms but is now known for her disappearance.

I was reminded of this watching “The Daily Show” last week, which featured an extra-long interview with New York senator Kirsten Gillibrand on her new book “Off the Sidelines.”

Gillibrand’s book, which was released on Sept. 9, focuses on her own experiences as a woman, a lawyer and a politician, as well as the struggles of other women. I haven’t had time to read it, but from seeing her interview and knowing about her past legislative work I’d highly recommend it.

In a largely progressive college atmosphere like Ohio Wesleyan, where women are the majority and have a strong hold in leadership positions among the students, it can be easy to forget how revolutionary Gillibrand’s success is and just how recently it would have been impossible.

This is especially important to remember as signs point to a coming golden age of women’s political leadership in the United States.

Hillary Clinton, the former Secretary of State and senator (not just wife of Bill Clinton), is the expected 2016 Democratic candidate for president, and if she doesn’t run several other women have been discussed as possible candidates.

As with the black community, though, the fact that women may soon have a representative in the highest office doesn’t mean there’s equality in general society, or politics as a whole. Just look at some of Gillibrand’s experiences with sexism in the halls of power, which she details in “Off the Sidelines.”

Gillibrand, without naming her colleagues who she still has to work with, described being judged for her body, not her political work. She details comments like “You’re even pretty when you’re fat,” and “Don’t lose too much weight now, I like my girls chubby,” after post-pregnancy weight loss.

While she responds to these experiences with understandable outrage in her autobiography, she said in an interview with People Magazine that she won’t let it stop her. She wants women to gather together on issues and improving their representation, especially as the midterms approach.

“If we do, women will sit at every table of power making decisions,” she said in her book. And there’s no reason why we as men should fear this. Because really, what would we lose?

Men – specifically straight white men – have had every seat at the table for centuries, and while opening the table will mean we lose some privileges they’re not things we should have had in the first place.

Take the casual sexism Gillibrand’s experienced, or the more egregious example of Ray Rice – sure, there was a time when all this was accepted before women had strong political and social power, but should it have ever been?

Ultimately, though, change is coming no matter what – to use a fitting metaphor, women don’t need us to move a seat at the table out for them, they’re going to take it themselves.

In political terms, it may be in the midterms; it may be in 2016, but with women gathering their power and equal pay, reproductive rights and sexual violence in the military and colleges all on the national conversation, it’s happening. Unlike other marginalized groups, women have an equal to higher percentage of the population, giving them the voting power on their own.

But while they can have the power to do it alone, they shouldn’t have to. We can all play a role, not by leading but by supporting with our votes, donations and our talents, whatever they are.

Sophomore shows dedication to sport

Sophomore Jillian Bell. Photo: battlingbishops.com
Sophomore Jillian Bell. Photo: battlingbishops.com

A Q&A with Jillian Bell

The Ohio Wesleyan women’s golf team hosted their annual Ohio Wesleyan Invitational on Sept. 13 and 14 at Safiari Golf Club in Powell OH. Wittenberg Univerity won the competiton, while  the College of Charelston came in 2nd, and OWU in third. Sophomore Jillian Bell finished in fifth place with a 161, carding rounds of 77-84. 

The Transcript: How important is the Invitational since its OWU’s event?

Jillian Bell:  The OWU invitational is such an exciting event every year. It’s super important since it’s our home tournament. Our fall invitational is always at Safari Golf Course which I’ve been playing on since I was little so it really means a lot to me. We focus all week leading up to the tournament on the course and how to manage all the holes, which were unable to do for any other tournament since they’re so far away. Home “field” advantage really helps lower our scores.

T: How critical is golf in your life?

JB: I use to absolutely hate golf, but after playing for so long I truly love the game. It sucks having to miss so many other amazing opportunities since it is such a time consuming game, but I know that if I missed a tournament I was be so upset with myself. Therefore, golf plays a huge role in my everyday life and is very important to me.

New voices of a cappella

Juniors Emily Slee and Maeve Nash of Pitch Black sings at the Aug. 27 Club Fair. Photo by Spenser Hickey
Juniors Emily Slee and Maeve Nash of Pitch Black sings at the Aug. 27 Club Fair. Photo by Spenser Hickey

The Owtsiders, Jaywalkers and Pitch Black, all three of Ohio Wesleyan’s a cappella groups, welcomed new members this week.

Junior Abby Hanson, treasurer of women’s group Pitch Black, said that they are planning to compete for a fourth time in the International Championship of Collegiate a Capella (ICCA) in the spring. They placed third in the regional ICCA competition last year.

Junior Julia Stone, president of the all-gender group Owtsiders, said her group plans to sing “a mix of oldies, indie and pop.”

Stone added that, while the Owtsiders do not have any official events planned, they plan to sing as soon as their new members are able.

For the men’s group Jaywalkers, this year is a record in membership – they have 25 vocalists.

“We had so many guys come and we couldn’t accept them all, which was really uncool,” said senior president Gabe Incarnato.

Junior Abi Care Horvat was one of 10 students recently chosen to be a part of Pitch Black.

“After I auditioned, I got a call back, and, a few days after that, I found out that I had been accepted,” she said.

Horvat said Pitch Black came to sing to her to inform her that she had been accepted into the club.

Pitch Black and the Jaywalkers will compete in a riff-off, like the one in 2012 film “Pitch Perfect” in Hamilton-Williams Campus Center on October 1.

Student Led Art Movement returns

The new student art organization, SLAM, met for their first official event of the year on Friday, Sept. 5 on the lawn between Thomson and Welch. Photo by Mara Mariotti (submitted)
The new student art organization, SLAM, met for their first official event of the year on Friday, Sept. 5 on the lawn between Thomson and Welch. Photo by Mara Mariotti (submitted)

The Student Led Art Movement (SLAM), back after a hiatus of several years, serves as a place for creative minds to make and appreciate art according to its founder, junior Catie Beach.

The idea to restart the club came when Beach and junior Jordana McCallen, both studio art majors, began talking about potentially reviving the Creative Arts House, a former Small Living Unit, on campus. After finding out about the SLU renovation project, Beach said that idea “went out the window.”

“We have a lot of friends in the SLU community and we found out that none of the SLUs satisfied our needs in the creative department,” Beach said. “We thought that by doing SLAM we could reestablish a good art community at school.”

McCallen said they wanted to integrate art into every student’s college experience.

The club had its first event of the year, Sun Prints and Socializing, on Friday, Sept. 5 on the lawn between Thomson and Welch. Beach wrote on the event’s Facebook page that sun prints are officially known as cyanotype printing and were discovered in 1842 by the scientist John Herschel.

“At the time, it was used primarily to reproduce engineering and architectural drawings,” Beach wrote. “When the botanist Anna Atkins learned of the process, she used it to document plant life from her collection, and is credited with bringing the process to the world of photography.”

“It’s a photo process where you lay down blue cyanotype paper and you press plants on it,” Beach said. “It makes a silhouette of the plant.”

She said everyone who attended the event seemed comfortable and that some people stayed even after the event officially ended.

Beach said SLAM is project-based and does not currently hold weekly meetings.

“We’re trying to meet when it’s relevant for projects,” Beach said. “We want to execute things and do workshops when we meet.”

McCallen said SLAM is collaborating with other clubs and programs, including Amnesty International and the Citizens of the World House, on events related to the visual arts, such as museum trips, workshops and installing art on campus.

Their next project is a trip to Indiana University on Sept. 19 for a “print-making bonanza,” McCallen said.

Group members will meet established print makers, attend their lectures and visit the Indiana University Art Museum.

“It’s an opportunity for us to meet artists who are in grad school,” Beach said. “We are hoping to bring back the print-making we learn there to campus.”

SLAM is currently looking for new members and is not making the group exclusive to art majors. Anyone interested in “creativity, making art, and appreciating art,” is welcome to join, Beach said.

“I think the great thing about SLAM is that art is universal,” McCallen said. “It can bring other clubs together. I think art does that.”

Students gather to Stuy up

Photos by Spenser Hickey and Jane Suttmeier

The photo booth was one of many activities that attracted students to the event last Friday night.
The photo booth was one of many activities that attracted students to the event last Friday night.
A group of freshmen enjoy an exciting game of Jenga during the third annual Stuyin’ Up All Night event hosted by Residential Life.
A group of freshmen enjoy an exciting game of Jenga during the third annual Stuyin’ Up All Night event hosted by Residential Life.
Bill Boaz, Campus Programming Board president, puts on a magic performance for a crowd of eager onlookers.
Bill Boaz, Campus Programming Board president, puts on a magic performance for a crowd of eager onlookers.

Taking the good with the bad on Yik Yak

Yik Yak can't be used within a certain radius of middle and high schools.
Yik Yak can’t be used within a certain radius of middle and high schools.

Does OWU’s new social media infatuation bring students together or rip them apart?

By Ellin Youse and Miranda Anthony
Editor-in-Chief and Transcript Reporter

If it’s happening at Ohio Wesleyan, chances are it’s being talked about on Yik Yak.

The app is the newest craze in social media as well as the latest trend in anonymous OWU forums, following the likes of OWU Confessions Facebook Page and the OWU Crushes and OWU Creeper Twitter pages.

“Share your thoughts, keep your privacy,” Yik Yak boasts on its homepage. The app allows users to “yak” a post up to 200 characters long anonymously. Users can “upvote” or “downvote” other yaks, and because of the constant posting and downvoting of other yaks, the posts usually don’t stay up for long. If a yak gets -5 downvotes, Yik Yak automatically removes it.

Launched in January 2014, the app has gained national recognition as one of the fastest growing social me- dia companies in the United States and is now being used by over 25,000 people on over 250 U.S. college campuses.

The anonymity of Yik Yak makes the app stand out in a world where any post on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram can haunt the author even after a post is taken off its respected site. Users of social media are conditioned to believe that anything they post can follow them forever with a single screenshot, but Yik Yak solves that problem. By allowing authors complete privacy, people can say what- ever they want about what- ever or whomever they want, without repercussion.

The app’s anonymity feature comes with some controversy. The app blocks users from posting if they are near middle and high schools in an effort to avoid cyber bullying. One of Yik Yak’s co-founders, who refuses to reveal his or her identity to the public, said in a press release this March that the app is designed with college campuses in mind.

“We created Yik Yak to give college students a private platform for communicating with their entire campus,” said the unnamed Yik Yak cofounder. “Yakkers have used the app to find a place to crash, report lost and found items and alert other students about deals at nearby bars.”

Campus controversy

While it may be a great resource for lost freshmen and bored seniors, the app has caused serious issues for many schools, college campuses included.

At Emory & Henry college in Virginia, for example, school administrators responded seriously to a death threat against freshmen posted on Yik Yak. In Mobile, Ala. a 14-year-old and a 16-year-old were arrested for threatening posts on the site, and according to the Los Angeles Times, at least four Chicago-area high schools warned parents about Yik Yak, urging them to delete the app from their children’s phones.

OWU Yaks

OWU has been climbing the ranks of the Yik Yak universe in the past weeks, making it to the site’s “peek” page, which allows users from all over the nation to read the yaks happening on OWU’s campus.

“My opinion of Yik Yak, initially, was that it was funny and that I kind of learned about the campus, but then I started seeing all of these negative comments: mean things about fraternities and about things freshmen do,” freshman Mac Willard said. “People were saying some pretty rude stuff, so I deleted it.”

OWU Greek life has been implicated as well, with posts frequently mentioning the Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternities and the Delta Gamma and Delta Delta Delta sororities.

Students have spoken out about the app via yaks, posting about the positives the app brings to the student community. In one yak, a student contemplating suicide was encouraged by classmates to seek counseling. Many posts are also about where students can go to find parties, and even more are jokes.

“Most of Yik Yak is really stupid, like 75 percent,” said sophomore Aletta Doran. “Most of what you read just doesn’t make a lot of sense, but there are some good things about it. There have been several instances where people have said ‘I want to commit suicide, I need help,’ and everybody dropped all the bullshit and supported each other.”

For senior Ibrahim Saeed, the app provides campus with a “collective consciousness.” While Saeed said he thinks there have been dark moments for OWU’s Yik Yak, he said the app will improve with time.

“I feel that the more people adopt Yik Yak, the better it will represent Ohio Wesleyan,” he said. “…(T)he OWU based Yik Yak users have been pretty good about down-voting things that shouldn’t be there, which removes it forever. I think the goal of the app is to let people feel a part of the greater community and it does accomplish that to an extent.”

But it’s not all warm and fuzzy. Jokes at the expense of minority racial communities on campus have been frequenting the app, with yaks saying things like, “Black people are poor,” “HBC (the House of Black Culture) looking like a crack house,” and “All Asians flock together.”

Senior Khristina Gardner, moderator of the House of Black Culture, said she would “much rather sit back and keep an eye on the things that are being said from afar” than address the problem directly on the app.

“When I read the comments on Yik Yak that were geared towards the House of Black Culture as well as to black people in general, it really had me thinking – especially when I woke up the next morning,” she said. “I became uneasy all of a sudden because of the fact that Yik Yak is anonymous and that it could have been anyone at OWU. I could walk past them everyday on campus and not even know that it was them that posted such hateful things.”

Gardner added that the comments on Yik Yak about her home and comments on race in general say “a lot more about them (the posts’ authors) than they do about me.”

“There is way too much ignorance being practiced on OWU’s campus and it is not my job to necessarily correct it, especially when there are more than enough opportunities on and off campus to get educated about the things that make us different from one another,” she said.

Departments use drones for dollars

A drone flies over Ohio Wesleyan during Day on the JAY. Photo by Spenser Hickey
A drone flies over Ohio Wesleyan during Day on the JAY. Photo by Spenser Hickey

By Ellin Youse and Jamell Brown-Smith
Editor-in-Chief and Transcript Reporter

Departments at Ohio Wesleyan University are using small, pilotless aircrafts, or drones, to cheaply produce content that would otherwise cost thousands of extra dollars.

Drone is a term that is often applied to robotic devices in general, but in OWU’s case, the drone is a small flying device and is controlled by a pilot on ground and used to record video and collect data or footage for athletics.

The OWU drones are DJI Phantoms, the most popular “quadcopter” model available. A quadcopter is a small, multirotator helicopter with four blades and can attach a small camera to record information from a bird’s eye view. At a starting price of $479.99 for the older model of the Phantom One, the unit is a more stable and sophisticated version of a remote-controlled helicopter.

While The Phantom does not possess many of the features that make drones the platform of choice for overhead imaging, like the ability to plot a course remotely and send the craft on its way without a need for pilot input, its durability, in-flight stability and relatively cheap price tag made it a solid choice for campus drones.

Aircraft on Campus

OWU’s geography-geology and athletics departments have each adopted a drone, and for very different reasons. At a starting price of $479.99 for the older model of the Phantom One, the unit is essentially a more stable and sophisticated version of the remote-controlled helicopters most are familiar with.

While The Phantom does not possess many of the features that make drones the platform of choice for overhead imaging, like the ability to plot a course remotely and send the craft on its way without a need for pilot input, its durability, in-flight stability and relatively cheap price tag have made it the platform of choice on campus.

For artistic or scientific purposes, drones are doing work that would have been reserved for planes and helicopters before modern technology became so widely available.

Geography/ Geology professor and Geographic Information Systems expert for the university, John Krygier, has been working with senior Christian Gehrke as a part of the Student Assistantship Program (StAP) to use this technology to produce extensive, up-to-date remote sensing data on local vegetation. A modified GoPro camera is helping the pair monitor the health of vegetation in the Delaware area.

“We had an issue in that everyone straps a GoPro to it (drone), but we wanted to work with more than visual light reactions,” Krygier said. “Infrared (IR) is useful for many things, in particular for getting information about vegetation. Healthy vegetation will appear red on our camera. Farmers will use this to see what parts of their fields are stressed or for detecting pest infestations.”

The IR sensor Krygier and Gehrke took some ingenuity to adapt to the GoPro, but the pair are making progress.

After a year of trial and error efforts, they are able to use the drone to take overhead images of an area and stitch them together into usable, geotagged maps of those regions.

Once the process has been streamlined, Krygier said he would like open up the platform and data produced for use by students and teachers.

While Krygier and Gehrke have made a lot of progress, their current work presents only a proof of concept. The pair hopes to upgrade to a more sophisticated drone capable of maintaining constant altitude or flying a predetermined path without the guesswork of their current system.

In the athletics department, the football team has been working with video producer Bill Reynolds to gather new perspectives for their videos.

“I used it to get overhead shots of the team and the scoreboard when they came out to start the game, just a different angle to shoot from,” Reynolds said. “I use a pole to get similar footage, the drone is just one more tool to that end.”

The Phantom that Reynolds uses is equipped with a gimbal that keeps the camera steadier while in flight, enabling smooth, continuous shots even while the drone is in motion. Reynolds and the athletic department are still formulating new ways to use images captured by the drone.

In another instance of drones making an appearance on Selby Field, the Ohio Machine men’s lacrosse team also used drones to record footage of games. President and general manager of the Machine, John Algie, said the team worked with the local company, Infinite Impact, to provide in-game drone services.

“This was a great partnership for us because it created really unique perspectives for our fans,” Algie said. “One of our most popular uses of the drone was for our ‘Infinite Impact Drone Fan Cam’ which panned over the crowd while simultaneously broadcasting the footage onto the Selby Stadium video board. Our fans really got excited for it. We were also able to incorporate some of the drone photography into promotional videos, which serves as a real attention-grabber.”

After his use with drones, Algie said he could understand why universities would be interested in using drones more frequently.

“Drone cams can be great for showcasing a product or service,” he said.

“I can see a university such as Ohio Wesleyan, which has such a beautiful campus, using drone photography to create really special admissions recruiting videos that showcase what it looks like to attend OWU.”

Solar Saloon shines new light on bar scene

Senior Maria Urbina tends bar at the new Solar Saloon, located at 2 1/2 N. Sandusky St.
Senior Maria Urbina tends bar at the new Solar Saloon, located at 2 1/2 N. Sandusky St. Photo by Ellin Youse.

Spirits and solar power is the concept behind Solar Saloon, a new bar in downtown Delaware.

Solar Saloon operates completely on solar power, and the bar also sells solar panels in addition to it’s drinks.

The “Solar” in Solar Saloon is more than just an attempt to attract a different crowd. Besides selling solar panels and other objects powered by solar energy, the bar itself is completely run by solar panels.

“We have a big display in the back (with the solar energy items),” said Patty Donovan the manager of the Saloon.

“We run our speakers, TVs, the lights with it. Everything, it’s so different.”

Located above Something Sweet Coffee & Bakery, the Solar Saloon is impossible to miss. The Saloon demands attention with bright green LED lights and flat screens lining the walls, especially when the sun begins to set.

“Everybody comes in and loves it. [It’s] so different than being downstairs on the street level, just something about it,” Donovan said.

With high chairs and a bar along the window, the Solar Saloon capitalizes on its unique location.

According to Donovan, they have been so busy since their opening two and half weeks ago, they haven’t had time for a grand opening.

“We have had soft openings after soft openings,” she said. “We get people of all ages, all walks of life, a lot of college students… That’s what makes it fun.”

Senior Maria Urbina is another one of the bartenders at the Solar Saloon. She started last Wednesday and said she “loves working there.”

“Patty [Donovan] is really great, and it’s a new bar which is always exciting for students,” Urbina said.

“I think it brings something fun and unique to the Delaware bar scene.”

When asked why people should consider including the Solar Saloon in their Delaware nightlife itinerary, Urbina emphasized the bar environment.

“It’s a really nice atmosphere… It’s cleaner than other places and I think it’s a nice change of scenery.”

Owner Don Temple has owned other bars in the past and is a partial owner of the solar panel company Goal Zero, which supplies the Solar Saloon with its clean energy.

Donovan said that Temple has “traveled around the country selling solar supplies” and also has “always wanted to combine a bar with his solar business.”

It seems like Temple has finally succeeded. The Solar Saloon is open 3 p.m. to 12 a.m. on Mondays and Tuesdays, and 12 p.m. to 2 a.m. Wednesday through Sunday.

Global Grab: Obama’s ISIL strategy and Scotland’s independence vote

 

The White House unveiled plans this week to take on ISIL in Iraq. Photo: Wikimedia
The White House unveiled plans this week to take on ISIL.  Photo: Wikimedia

The Issue: ISIL

The situation in the Middle East has been worsening during this past week. On Wednesday, Sept. 10, President Barack Obama made a speech to the nation, stating his intention to go after ISIL by building an international coalition. The role of the U.S. military will escalate, and Obama will be sending 475 military advisers to Iraq, making the total about 1,700, according to CNN.

CNN also reports that Obama shifted $25 million in military aid to Iraqi forces, including “Kurdish fighters in the north combating the ISIS extremists. The aid could include ammunition, small arms and vehicles, as well as military education and training.”

During the speech, Obama said, “Our objective is clear: We will degrade, and ultimately destroy, ISIL through a comprehensive and sustained counterterrorism strategy.”

On Sunday, several Arab countries offered to carry out airstrikes against ISIL militants, the New York Times reports. According to Reuters, Australia said they would send troops, but Britain has yet to commit.

ISIL released a video of another beheading on Saturday. This time, the victim was British aid worker David Cawthorne Haines. According to the Washington Post, Haines was abducted in March 2013 near a refugee camp along the Turkish border in Syria. British Prime Minister David Cameron said Britain would support the United States, plus assist the Iraqi government and continue to aid the Kurdish regional government, the New York Times reports. However, they have not taken an active military role.

The Issue: Scotland

Many Scots will be heading to the polls on Thursday to vote on whether they want to be their own independent nation, or stick with their British identity. This vote has major implications in the United Kingdom, as the New York Times says, “…shaking the British government of Prime Minister David Cameron, undermining the electoral future of the British Labour Party and making it more likely that Britain will have a referendum on its own continued membership in the European Union.”

Polls as recent as Sunday are still extremely close, Reuters reports. “Out of four new polls, three showed those in favour of maintaining the union with a lead of 2 and 8 percentage points,” according to Reuters But other polls have shown that supporters of independence in the lead with 54 percent to the opposition’s 46 percent. An expected four million people will be voting on this referendum.

On Sunday, Reuters reported, Queen Elizabeth told a crowd she hoped Scots would “think very carefully about the future.”