June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

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SEE PAGE 12 FOR THE SCOOP Thursday, June 27, 2013 Vol. 120, No. 38 | Athens, Georgia redandblack.com BY ALEC SHIRKEY @AShirkey Kentavious Caldwell-Pope’s dreams will finally come true this week. Known affectionately as “KCP” among the Bulldog faithful, Caldwell-Pope is expected to hear his name called early during the 2013 NBA Draft on Thursday night, which should come as no surprise to anyone that followed his sensational sophomore season. Caldwell-Pope was Georgia’s leading scor- er in 29 of 32 games during the 2012-13 season and its leading rebound man in half of those contests. He averaged 18.5 points, 7.1 rebounds and two steals per game in that span, and his performance was enough to make him the first Bulldog to win SEC Player of the Year since Dominique Wilkins in 1981. Caldwell-Pope was so productive, in fact, that he left the Bulldogs to pursue his goal of playing professional, a tough blow for Georgia head coach Mark Fox and the team. But despite losing his best player follow- ing a disappointing season, Fox was nothing but proud of the young man who was so key to what little success Georgia found on the court last year. He also thinks Caldwell-Pope won’t have to wait long before a team drafts him. “Kentavious will be a guy selected high in the first round. He’ll have a great night on Thursday. It’s a terrific night for Kentavious,” Georgia head coach Mark Fox said. “He will be right in that window [of No. 9-15 overall] and it does not surprise me. I felt like from day one that he was going to be an NBA guy.” Fox is not alone in those beliefs, either. As a 6-foot-5 shooting guard with impressive col- lege production, Caldwell-Pope presents NBA teams with a talented player that could still possess untapped potential. I am not aware of any other way this can happen now. No one seems to be able to willing to make things like this happen. This is a missed opportunity for the University of Georgia. JANET FRICK, former chair of Human Resources for the University Council I'm very disappointed by this news. BY BRAD MANNION @madbrannion As America sat in anticipa- tion for the Supreme Court rul- ing of two pivotal cases for gay- rights, Janet Frick stood in awe over the University of Georgia Foundation’s decision not to provide health benefits to domestic partners of the school’s employees. “I’m very disappointed by this news,” said Frick, former chair of the University Council’s Human Resources Committee. “This is a missed opportunity for the University of Georgia.” The foundation announced on June 21 that its funds will not be used to provide “health insur- ance benefits for domestic part- ners for UGA employees,” said Tom Jackson, vice president for public affairs. “Their reasoning was...they don’t consider that to be in their mission, and second, they do not believe they are sufficiently sep- arate from the state to meet the requirements of being separate because the foundation is sup- ported by state-paid employ- ees,” he said. Frick said she is curious as to where this law, one that would not affect the “private funds” used for the coverage, is stated. “They say that…Georgia law and policy prevent them from using state funds for benefits for someone who is not defined as a dependent, so they are claiming that their hands are tied by state law,” Frick said. “I have not seen that state law.” KCP TO NBA See BENEFITS, Page 7 NEWS, 2 VIEWS, 4 VARIETY, 8 SPORTS, 13 An independent student newspaper serving the University of Georgia and Athens Communities Established 1893, Independent 1980 Graphic and Photos by Taylor Craig Sutton See KCP, Page 20 JONES Hawks, 1999 WILKINS Jazz, 1982 HAYES Wizards, 2003 DAWGS DRAFTED IN THE FIRST ROUND VERN FLEMING Pacers, 1984 WILLIE ANDERSON Spurs, 1988 ALEC KESSLER Rockets, 1990 KENTAVIOUS CALDWELL-POPE Find out at 7 p.m. on ESPN ON THE MOVE Streets Café takes global eats mobile Hendershot's Coffee is moving to a brand- new location in the Bottleworks, while Farm 25 will close its doors for good on July 19. See STREETS, Page 12 BY CHELSEA ABERCROMIE @comma_freak Local chef Ryan Morgan may have come to Athens to open up a Hooter’s, but he ended up using his extensive experience in the restaurant industry for a slightly less salacious goal. “I started in restaurants when I was 13 with my mom’s restaurant, Strutters, in Atlanta. It was a fried chicken place,” Morgan said. “I worked there through mid- dle school and high school. I’ve been in and out of restaurants kind of across the board as far as high-end and low-end goes, for over 20 years.” Morgan’s food truck, Streets Café, is currently the only legitimate, non-restau- rant-affiliated food truck in Athens. Streets Café’s menu is currently Korean- influenced, featuring hot dogs, French fries, tacos and sliders that are all Asian-inspired, but Streets Café is really focused on “street food” that’s international. “I’m definitely more about leaning towards Asian flavors and stuff in my own home-cooking, but the truck is about just food from around the world. Big, bold, fresh flavors,” Morgan said. “I like Indian and Caribbean-style food, Latin American-style food. Anything you would consider street food is on the table.”

description

June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

Transcript of June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

Page 1: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

SEE PAGE 12 FOR THE SCOOP

Thursday, June 27, 2013Vol. 120, No. 38 | Athens, Georgia

redandblack.com

BY ALEC SHIRKEY@AShirkey

Kentavious Caldwell-Pope’s dreams will finally come true this week.

Known affectionately as “KCP” among the Bulldog faithful, Caldwell-Pope is expected to hear his name called early during the 2013 NBA Draft on Thursday night, which should come as no surprise to anyone that followed his sensational sophomore season.

Caldwell-Pope was Georgia’s leading scor-er in 29 of 32 games during the 2012-13 season and its leading rebound man in half of those contests. He averaged 18.5 points, 7.1 rebounds and two steals per game in that span, and his performance was enough to make him the first Bulldog to win SEC Player of the Year since Dominique Wilkins in 1981.

Caldwell-Pope was so productive, in fact, that he left the Bulldogs to pursue his goal of playing professional, a tough blow for Georgia head coach Mark Fox and the team.

But despite losing his best player follow-ing a disappointing season, Fox was nothing but proud of the young man who was so key to what little success Georgia found on the court last year. He also thinks Caldwell-Pope won’t have to wait long before a team drafts him.

“Kentavious will be a guy selected high in the first round. He’ll have a great night on Thursday. It’s a terrific night for Kentavious,” Georgia head coach Mark Fox said. “He will be right in that window [of No. 9-15 overall] and it does not surprise me. I felt like from day one that he was going to be an NBA guy.”

Fox is not alone in those beliefs, either. As a 6-foot-5 shooting guard with impressive col-lege production, Caldwell-Pope presents NBA teams with a talented player that could still possess untapped potential.

I am not aware of any other way this can happen now. No one seems to be able to willing to make things like this happen.“

”This is a missed opportunity for the University of Georgia.

— Janet Frick, former chair of Human Resources for the University Council

I'm very disappointed by this news.

BY BRAD MANNION@madbrannion

As America sat in anticipa-tion for the Supreme Court rul-ing of two pivotal cases for gay-rights, Janet Frick stood in awe over the University of Georgia Foundation’s decision not to provide health benefits to domestic partners of the school’s employees.

“I’m very disappointed by this news,” said Frick, former chair of the University Council’s Human Resources Committee. “This is a missed opportunity for the University of Georgia.”

The foundation announced on June 21 that its funds will not be used to provide “health insur-ance benefits for domestic part-ners for UGA employees,” said

Tom Jackson, vice president for public affairs.

“Their reasoning was...they don’t consider that to be in their mission, and second, they do not believe they are sufficiently sep-arate from the state to meet the requirements of being separate because the foundation is sup-ported by state-paid employ-ees,” he said.

Frick said she is curious as to where this law, one that would not affect the “private funds” used for the coverage, is stated.

“They say that…Georgia law and policy prevent them from using state funds for benefits for someone who is not defined as a dependent, so they are claiming that their hands are tied by state law,” Frick said. “I have not seen that state law.”

KCP to NBA

See BENEFITS, Page 7

NEWS, 2 • VIEWS, 4 • VARIETY, 8 • SPORTS, 13

An independent student newspaper serving the University of Georgia and Athens Communities Established 1893, Independent 1980

Graphic and Photos

by Taylor Craig Sutton

See KCP, Page 20

JONESHawks, 1999

WILKINSJazz, 1982

HAYESWizards, 2003

DAWGS DRAFTEDin the First round

VERN FLEMINGPacers, 1984

WILLIE ANDERSONSpurs, 1988

ALEC KESSLERRockets, 1990

KENTAVIOuS CALDWELL-POPEFind out at 7 p.m. on ESPN

ON The mOve

Streets Café takes global eats mobile

Hendershot's Coffee is moving to a brand-new location in the Bottleworks, while Farm 25 will close its doors for good on July 19.

See STREETS, Page 12

BY CHELSEA ABERCROMIE@comma_freak

Local chef Ryan Morgan may have come to Athens to open up a Hooter’s, but he ended up using his extensive experience in the restaurant industry for a slightly less salacious goal.

“I started in restaurants when I was 13 with my mom’s restaurant, Strutters, in Atlanta. It was a fried chicken place,” Morgan said. “I worked there through mid-dle school and high school. I’ve been in and out of restaurants kind of across the board as far as high-end and low-end goes, for over 20 years.”

Morgan’s food truck, Streets Café, is currently the only legitimate, non-restau-rant-affiliated food truck in Athens.

Streets Café’s menu is currently Korean-influenced, featuring hot dogs, French fries, tacos and sliders that are all Asian-inspired, but Streets Café is really focused on “street food” that’s international.

“I’m definitely more about leaning towards Asian flavors and stuff in my own home-cooking, but the truck is about just food from around the world. Big, bold, fresh flavors,” Morgan said. “I like Indian and Caribbean-style food, Latin American-style food. Anything you would consider street food is on the table.”

Page 2: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

2 News Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

Crime Notebook

In the early morning of June 25, a University of Georgia police offi-cer noticed two individuals near “Gate 6 at Sanford Stadium,” accord-ing to the report. Approaching the entrance to the stadium, the officer determined the gate was locked and that the two individuals “gained entry illegally,” as stated in the report.

One of the offenders told offi-cers, Maddison Knick, she wanted to “see the stadi-um” with her friend, a male visit-ing the school. The two individuals were barred from entering the stadi-um for 90 days, according to the report.

—Brad Mannion

Report of rape on June 21

The Athens-Clarke County police responded to a reported rape at approximately 10:56 p.m. on June 21. The college-aged victim told officers the inci-dent happened between 2 p.m. and 10:24 p.m. of the same day. According to the report, only one suspect was named, a college-aged male.

—Brad Mannion

Student, visitor barred from Sanford

Returning home from staying at a friend’s resi-dence the night before, the victim found “the rear was door pried open and the bed-rooms were ran-sacked,” according to the Athens-Clarke County police report. Officers responded to the theft report at approximately 11 a.m. on June 23, where they were informed that the University of Georgia students’ two 32-inch TVs and an Apple iPad Mini were stolen from their resi-dence. The total loss for the stu-dents was at approximately $800.

—Brad Mannion

Early in the morning of June 21, a University of Georgia police officer observed the offender making a right turn into the “wrong way” of traf-fic, according to the report.

After attempting to make a turn from Broad Street to Hull Street, the offender, John Lewis Schimmel, was pulled over, and making contact with the driver, the officer smelled a “strong odor” of alcohol, according to the report.

When asked how much he drank, Schim-mel responded saying he “probably had three drinks,” but the officer still had the offender perform a field sobriety test.

After performing the test, Schimmel was given a breatha-lyzer test, where he was recorded to have a blood alcohol content of 0.172 grams, .092 grams higher than the legal limit.

The officer pro-ceeded to ask Schim-mel once more how many drinks he had, and he said he had “four drinks” and asked the officer if he really did “that bad” on th sobriety test.

Schimmel was transported to the Clarke County Jail and received two citations for DUI.

Schimmel's vehicle, following the arrest, was left at the scene.

—Brad Mannion

UGA students lose TVs in theft

UGA student driving wrong way, faces DUI charge

By Marena Galluccio@MarenaGalluccio

The Terry College of Business has started its 2013 summer sessions for the Terry Business Academy, a program aimed at students both considering college and wishing to work in the business world.

“It is a pre-colle-giate program that we designed to expose high school students to vari-ous careers and oppor-tunities that they would have as a business major at the Terry College,” said Randy Groomes, the director of diversity relations and the pro-gram director for the Terry Business Academy.

The program is sponsored by Deloitte, the largest accounting and consulting firm in the world, Groomes said.

“So they came in and decided that they wanted to invest in the next generation of busi-ness leaders,” he said.

Applying for this pre-collegiate program is just as detailed as a regular admission pro-cess for the University of Georgia.

“We have a pretty competitive application process that we try to mirror the UGA admis-

sions, and we are look-ing at their academics as well as their leader-ship and their interest in business and their application quality,” Groomes said.

The program is offered twice during the summer, between June 23 to June 29 and July 7 to July 13, according to the program’s website.

The program lasts for one week and the 30 rising juniors and seniors are able to stay on campus for the pro-gram, Groomes said. Current UGA students also serve as their Residential Advisors for the program.

“It’s a great oppor-tunity for our students to be able to have that leadership opportunity and relationship skills as well as being a men-tor to the younger stu-dents,” the director said.

Groomes said envi-ronments where busi-ness is conducted can always change, so stu-dents are prepared for the most formal and casual environments, such as a golf course.

“So much of busi-ness is done on the golf course and so we try to give them some training of how to act and how to conduct themselves in a professional golf out-

ing,” Groomes said.Students also get to

brush up on their artis-tic side in dealing with business.

“We try to also include the arts so stu-dents also will spend some time at the Georgia Museum of Art,” he said.

To conclude the session, students will compete in a marketing competition where they will have to compete by creating a special smart application for a project that they do for AT&T.

Groomes said the program has a good influence on the future students and provides for a good foundation. At this time, the first group for the academy will soon graduate and put their skills to the test.

“I think the pro-gram has had a really profound impact on the number of students that are interested...in being business majors,” Groomes said. “We are now at the point where our first students who did the program are now becoming to be seniors in college and are doing extremely well in their studies and are getting great internship oppor-tunities and really build that experience that gave them a leg up.”

Sessions begin for Terry Business Academy

By BraD Mannion@madbrannion

Since its first award in 1993, the HOPE scholarship has donated more than any other scholarship program in the state of Georgia.

In 20 years, the scholarship has provided exactly 1,480,056 individual students with more than $6.8 billion in awards – this all coming from the pro-posed legislation of former Gov. Zell Miller wanting to establish a statewide lottery in 1991.

At the University of Georgia alone, HOPE has given approximately $1 bil-lion in awards to roughly 208,303 recip-ients – and these numbers only range from fiscal year 2001 to 2012.

“The HOPE Scholarship has truly had a transformative impact on the state of Georgia, the University System of Georgia and certainly the University of Georgia” said UGA President-elect Jere Morehead. “The HOPE Scholarship has exceeded its intended goal of transforming the way Georgians think about higher educa-tion in this state.”

In 1991, the decision to amend the Georgia Constitution to allow for a lot-tery was near unanimous in the Georgia Senate at 47-9 and a landslide decision in the Georgia House 126-51.

Miller, the mastermind behind the HOPE Scholarship, established three separate divisions to use a portion of the lottery money — the HOPE Scholarship Program, a voluntary pre-kindergarten program for four-year-olds and an instructional technology

program.Collectively, roughly $14.3 billion

have gone to funding these three pro-grams.

In 2002, the same year HOPE reached the mark of awarding more than 600,000 students and awarded roughly $1.5 billion since its establish-ment, the state of Georgia was in its fifth year of “[leading] the nation in providing academic-based financial aid” as determined by the National Association of State Student Grant and Aid Programs, according to the Georgia Student Finance Commission website.

Years after its creation, people from different states, and even foreign countries, have traveled to Georgia to understand “why [the scholarship] works so well,” said Tracy Ireland, president of the GSFC.

“Just recently – not two weeks ago,” Ireland said, “we had visitors to the commission from Yemen to find out how we do what we do. Over the years – and practically every year – we have visitors from all over the country come and find out how HOPE works so well.”

For his efforts in providing this to the state of Georgia, Gov. Nathan Deal declared June 26, 2013 as Zell Miller Day.

“It is a great day for education into our state,” Deal said at an event commemorating the scholarship’s 20th anniversary. “It is a celebration of an idea that was born in the mind of our former governor Zell Miller. This is a tribute to him.”

Georgia celebrates 20 years of HOPE

For former Georgia Gov. Zell B. Miller's work in establishing the HOPE Scholarship, Gov. Nathan Deal declared June 26 as Zell Miller Day. erin o. SMith/Staff

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Page 3: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

3 News Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

By Laura James@laurajames225

Every Thursday during the months of June and July, 34 chil-dren ages 5-12 will have the opportunity to eat a healthy meal for free at Herschel’s Famous34 Pub & Grill.

In an effort to fight childhood obesity and encourage healthy eating, Herschel’s Famous34 Pub & Grill, located on Clayton Street in downtown Athens, introduced a healthy chicken sandwich to its kid’s menu.

On Thursdays, the sandwich can be purchased for $5 after the 34 complimentary sandwiches are given out to children who are accompanied by an adult. On every other day of the week, the sandwich will also be sold for $5.

The sandwich contains a low sodium chicken breast, a slice of 2% Milk Reduced-fat Kraft Singles American cheese on a fresh-baked whole-wheat bun from Engelman’s Bakery, served with fresh apples and Planters peanut butter, according to a press release.

Also according to the press release, Herschel Walker, a University of Georgia Heisman Trophy winner, expressed his pas-sion for encouraging healthy eat-

ing among children.“As a young child, I was over-

weight and didn’t have much self-confidence,” Walker said. “Once I discovered the importance of exercise and eating right, my life improved.”

A student at UGA described the healthy components of the meal.

“It’s definitely a balanced meal,” said Kylie Woodall, a fourth-year health promotions major from Alpharetta. “It has a protein, a dairy, a complex carb, and a fruit.”

Although she said it was a balanced meal, Woodall acknowl-edged some ways to make the meal even healthier.

“I was kind of shocked by the absence of vegetables because that’s one of the things we need to make sure kids are introduced to at a young age and are com-fortable with eating,” Woodall said. “They could do something like have celery and apple slices with the peanut butter to get some vegetables on the plate.”

Woodall commended the res-taurant for their contribution to help combat childhood obesity, but also said their work isn’t over just yet.

“It’s a step in the right direc-tion to try to make sure that kid’s

menus are more than just chicken fingers and french fries, but I think they could go a step fur-ther,” Woodall said.

George Fiorile is the vice president and business developer of Dover Downs Leisure Management Corp., the company that owns and manages the res-taurant. He shared his outlook on the new menu item.

“We view this as a stepping-stone,” Fiorile said. If you have children like I do, it’s always hard to get them to try something new. [The sandwich] just becomes another alternative for them.”

Fiorile also discussed the res-taurant’s attitude towards imple-menting additional healthy items for the kid’s menu in the future.

“I think we’ll gauge the suc-cess and feedback from the cus-tomers,” Fiorile said. “At the end of July or early August, we’ll see how it goes, and I think the mar-ket will tell us how to react.”

Woodall talked about ways to help healthy food more appealing to children.

“Just making sure they get a variety of fun colors on the menu and trying to make the food fun and appetizing is probably the best things they can do,” Woodall said. “It’s really just about mak-ing food fun for kids,” she said.

By stephen mays@stephen_mays

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 on June 26 that the provision in the federal Defense of Marriage Act defining marriage as between one man and one woman was unconstitutional.

Due to that ruling, same-sex couples who are married in the 12 states that have legalized same-sex marriages and the District of Columbia are now offered the same federal benefits as heterosexual partners.

That action allows those couples to claims “hun-dreds or thousands” of benefits previously denied to them, said Hillel Levine, an associate professor in the University of Georgia School of Law.

Some of the major benefits same-sex couples in those legalized places will now have access to include those related to Social Security, taxes, health care, housing and veterans’ benefits.

“I think the Supreme Court’s decision today was one that was eventually going to happen,” said Nadgey Louis-Charles, a fourth-year biology and psy-chology major from Alpharetta. “I’m not saying I 100 percent agree or disagree with either side, but we are a generation of change, and today’s decision showed that once again. Today is a day that shows the pro-gression of our rights and our country.”

Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote the majority opinion for the ruling, saying that DOMA “tells those couples, and all the world, that their otherwise valid marriages are unworthy of federal recognition.”

Despite this victory for same-sex couples, the ruling only concerns federal law.

States still have the ability, for now, to place parameters on same-sex marriages, evident in the 38 states which have banned same-sex marriages.

Jon Hurst, a coordinator with the LGBT Resource Center at UGA said, “Today was a huge victory, but there are a number of battles to come.”

Hurst expressed that today was only the begin-ning of a very long process to see equality across the country — specifically in the states where same-sex marriages have been banned.

“I don’t think the Supreme Court just made a good decision today,” Hurst said. “I think they made the right decision.”

Logistics for federal recognition in the states that have banned same-sex marriage have yet to be

fully developed.“The court ultimately left the biggest questions

open for another day, much as most commentators expected,” Levine said.

As well as the case concerning DOMA’s constitu-tionality, the Supreme Court also took a look at California’s Proposition 8 which banned same-sex marriage in the state.

The court dismissed the suit concerning Prop 8 on the grounds that the proponents of the ban had no standing to appeal the lower court’s ruling that Prop 8 was unconstitutional.

Same-sex marriages in California are expected to begin again soon.

“It doesn’t only come down to money or particu-lar benefits,” Levine said. “There’s a dignity that comes with being recognized by your federal govern-ment as equal.”

By BraD mannIOn@madbrannion

Athens received a greater reputation in medicine when a formalized partnership between the Georgia Regents University and the University of Georgia formed in 2009.

The Classic City may gain even more notice in the medical community with the construction of two medical office parks in suburban Athens.

These two offices will provide “up to 2,000 health-care workers” with space to work, according an Atlanta Business Chronicle arti-cle.

This $30 million project will

cover 30 acres and will “include up to 10 buildings including med-ical office buildings, an assisted living facility and a hotel,” accord-ing to the article.

It has been roughly one month into construction, and potential tenants have already begun to show interest.

“We’ve had several doctors that [are] interested in having their practices there on that property,” Edward R. Nichols, vice president of the Nichols Land and Investment Company, said in the article.

Along with today’s doctors, students looking to become doc-tors have also shown interest in the rising medical reputation of

Athens.“It would definitely appeal to

all the pre-medicine students,” said Halie Johnson, a junior bio-logical sciences major from Warner Robins. “The possibility of finding work right after school, or the idea of coming back to the Classic City after med school, is really comforting.”

Along with the proximity, Johnson said the thought of being helped by fellow UGA alumni for her medical needs is also a posi-tive factor for the establishment of these medical offices.

“Plus,” Johnson said, “who wouldn’t want their local profes-sional medical doctor to be a bull-dog?”

Herschel's unveils ‘stepping stone’ menu item

UGA weighs in on DOMA, Prop 8 court rulings

Every Thursday during the months of June and July, Herschel's Famous34 Pub and Grill will hand out free chicken sandwiches to the first 34 eligible children to help promote fighting childhood obesity. erIn O. smIth/Staff

The Supreme Court's rulings on June 26 set a new precedence for same-sex marriages. Courtesy Doug Vinson

Medical office parks under construction in Athens

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4 Views Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

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OpiniOn Meter: The week that was

Orientation leads to jealousy and nostalgia

JULIE BAILEY/Staff

AMC’s critically acclaimed television series “Mad Men” is set

in 1960s New York and centers around advertising man Don Draper and his associates who work at the Sterling Cooper advertising agency.

This series not only delves into the ups and downs that are part of the advertising industry, but it also shows how that industry must change with the times.

I have heard much praise about this series so I was curi-ous to learn what all the excitement was about. After watching six seasons in one week I can definitely under-stand why this show is so pop-ular.

“Mad Men” is like a 1960’s version of “The Office” — only better.

Viewers not only get to see the characters in the office but they also get to see them in their personal lives.

Seeing Draper’s troubled childhood and darkest secrets adds depth to his character and the show as a whole.

Draper’s protégé, Peggy, and ex-wife Betty are just as interesting as Draper.

Both Betty and Peggy are considered old-fashioned and find it difficult to change with the times, yet Peggy has no other choice as the advertising industry is constantly fluctuat-ing.

Betty, however, is left to stay stuck in the past. Betty’s childish behavior and subse-quent depression and weight gain that follows her separa-tion from Draper reveals how she remains anchored in what used to be.

The 1960s was a wonderful decade for fashion and “Mad Men” showcases this perfectly. The neatly-tailored suits worn by Draper exude confidence and let his good looks shine through, showing his desire to be the center of attention and his need to impress women.

The perfectly pressed dresses worn by Betty are very Jacqueline Kennedy and dem-onstrates how she wishes to convey the image of a perfect woman with a perfect life.

Draper’s business partner Joan by far has the best style. Joan and her fashion are mir-rored after Marilyn Monroe and her image as a sex symbol.

“Mad Men” is unlike any other show I have ever seen and I am sure that it will become a classic.

As long as this show is running I will continue to be inspired by the amazing fash-ion, continue to be intrigued by the complex characters and continue to be mesmerized by the superb casting.

— Khadija Dukes is a sopho-more from Conyers majoring in journalism and compara-

tive literature

XBox One still not worth purchasing

You don’t have to be a hardcore gamer to know that the initial reception of the upcoming XBox

One has been extremely negative.For the most part, though, that criti-

cism was well-deserved for a multitude of reasons.

One major “feature” that Microsoft has recanted since the E3 gaming conven-tion is that the system would require a one-time hard drive download for all games, which would have effectively wiped out the used games market.

The blowback from that facet alone was strong enough that the company pulled a “just kidding.”

The other recalled feature was that the XBox One would require a constant Internet connection to play any game, offline or not.

That would have required each user to buy an XBox Live subscription, priced at $60 per year.

A little extortion never hurt anyone.You could just sense the collective

panic of the Microsoft executives when they realized they had gone too far with some of those ridiculous policies. So they made an attempt to fix them.

Too late.The fact that Microsoft was either so

unaware of how consumers would react — or perhaps cared so little that they would be screwing over a large chunk of its cus-tomer base — is almost enough to drive me away entirely.

And in fact, it does drive me away entirely when you consider that, in addi-tion to Microsoft’s horrible policies, each person who spends over $500 to get that shiny new XBox One is paying largely for the console’s other features — Netflix, social media connectivity, live television and access to sports programming via ESPN.

Being someone who writes about and obviously enjoy sports, you might think that ESPN and live television apps would induce me to stay with Microsoft this fall.

However, I already own a TV, which I use to watch sports, that does not cost $499.

And I already own a laptop, which I use for social media, that also costs me less than the XBox One.

And I already own a gaming system, that I actually use for — wait for it — playing video games!

Microsoft barely cares about that aspect of its video game system, evident by the fact that gaming is the fourth cate-gory on the XBox One dashboard. (http://indiestatik.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Xbox-One-Dashboard.jpg)

I don’t understand it. Have we really reached a point in

society where being required to find the input button on the remote is considered an inconvenience?

I’m just waiting for Microsoft to require a social security number, bank account and life insurance policy to play XBox One so that it can begin managing my life for me.

I know Microsoft is trying to pull off the whole “all in one system” marketing angle.

And from what I’ve seen, the compa-ny truly believes that when the XBox One comes out, it will be operating on an entirely different level than Sony and Nintendo because of these added fea-tures.

And I know that, by including the silly Kinect motion-sensor camera, Microsoft is blatantly appealing to fami-lies with small children — families that are totally willing to drop $499 on a con-sole which may or may not have an appealing exclusive games list because Zombie Destructo Wars 9 is apparently too intense for little Jimmy.

But hey, Kinect is great if you’re type of parent that wants your kid inside all day.

Who needs sports? Or sunlight?I don’t care for Kinect — not only

because I prefer controllers, but also because I feel ridiculous jumping and waving my arms in front of a TV screen. My neighbors would probably think I’m watching a Richard Simmons instruction-al video.

So for those of you who buy video game consoles to play video games — it’s wild, I know — you’re probably better off going PS4, or even buying a Wii U (com-patibility with old systems is a great thing).

As for me, I think maybe I’ll break out the old Nintendo 64 and play some games that aren’t filled with 20-minute cut scenes or prepubescent 12 year-olds screaming at their headsets.

Mario Kart, anyone?

— Alec Shirkey is a senior from Dunwoody majoring in English and

finance

‘Mad Men’ popular for many reasons

Amber EstesOpinions Editor

Khadija DukesGuest Columnist

Alec ShirkeySports Editor

Dawgs snatch Dukes: Linebacker Detric Dukes committed to Georgia on Sunday after recanting his com-mit to Louisville. Dukes is a three star recruit from Tucker High School in Atlanta. With Dukes, the 2014 recruiting class has 11 players.

the hOneyMOOn is Over: The University of Georgia Foundation’s executive committee voted not to fund full-health insurance benefits for domestic partners of UGA employees. This denial of benefits may be a turn-off for potential employees since so many other uni-versities do provide these perks.

herschel’s DOes healthy: Herschel’s Famous 34 Pub & Grill will be giving 34 children a free healthy meal every Thursday during June and July. The grilled chicken sandwich will appear on the kid’s menu everyday in an attempt to promote healthy eating among chil-dren.

terry is DOwn tO business: The Terry College of Business has start-ed its pre-college program, Terry Business Academy, catered to stu-dents considering both college and the business worlds. These summer sessions expose high school stu-dents to aspects of Terry College and the business world in general.

Last week as I was doing home-work at the MLC between classes, I noticed that my peers

were unusual given the setting.They were younger looking teen-

agers nervously walking back and forth with whom I could only assume to be their parents.

Then it hit me — it must be ori-entation.

I answered several scared moms’ questions about where buildings were and what classes to take.

I answered marginally more questions from excited upcoming freshman about what were some organizations to get involved with and what I thought of my freshman year.

As I pondered over the latter question, I couldn’t help but get a lit-tle bit jealous.

Here these 18 year-olds were, about to embark on what would be the most difficult, most frustrating and best year of their entire lives.

All I could do was smile, and simply tell them it would be an expe-rience they’d never forget.

Freshman year provides a clean slate on which you can decide who you are and where you’re going.

The incoming freshmen don’t know this yet, but coming to the University of Georgia changes you.

You transition from belonging to some high school chosen largely by location and your parents, to being a part of this amazing institution that gives you the tools and processes by which to succeed — academically and otherwise.

When people ask me where I go to school, I can’t help but smile when I answer.

I’m so proud to be a Georgia Bulldawg, and in a couple of months these freshman will understand way.

They will feel that sense of com-radery as they cheer wildly in the student section of home football games.

They will feel that sense of accomplishment as they make good grades at one of the most academi-cally prestigious schools in the South.

And they will feel that moment of absolute bliss as they call the Dawgs with their friends and perfect strangers alike, just because they share the same smoldering pride for what they once called their college, but has somehow transformed into their home.

I can’t help but to think Athens and the university will always have an irreplaceable place in my heart.

I found myself here. I grew up here. I learned more about academ-ics, people and life here than I ever thought possible.

And it all starts with freshman year.

So as I listened to the zealous ramblings of the freshmen who couldn’t fully grasp yet what this place was going to mean to them, I took a minute to be grateful for the hours I’ve cried here, the feats I’ve accomplished here and the lessons I’ve learned here.

Go Dawgs. Always.

— Amber Estes is a junior from Athens majoring in public relations

Page 5: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

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Here’s some advice I wish I would’ve got when I was your age...Live every week like it’s Shark Week.”- “30 Rock’s” Tracy Jordan

With Shark Week quickly approaching this sum-mer, I thought it important to stress the gravity of this event.

First conceived as a means to promote shark awareness, due to what I can only assume was the public’s dwindling interest in the “Jaws” franchise, Shark Week premiered on July 17, 1987 and has since become a yearly staple of The Discovery Channel.

Over time, this week long event has gained a considerable amount of traction. The series main-tains a solid average rating of 7.6/10 on the popular online movie database IMDB, and is frequently hosted by celebrities such as “Saturday Night Live’s” Andy Samberg, the “Mythbusters” duo Adam Savage/Jamie Hyneman as well as “The Late Late Show’s” Craig Ferguson.

There is no doubt that Shark Week has been a rousing success, but that success can only be attrib-uted to the series’ tremendous societal importance.

Unfortunately, television today is absolutely inundated with “reality” shows that are entirely lacking in substance and meaning.

Without complaint, we’ve allowed scripted accounts of pawn shops, beauty pageants and duck calls to be thrust upon us.

Yet this cultural wasteland has, at the very least, given Shark Week as a sharp relief against its peers.

The series stands tall among the wreckage, a

shining monument to humanity’s ability to over-come.

Though we may live in an age in which the face of the moon is more familiar to us than the bottom of the ocean, Shark Week valiantly defies the 70 per-cent of the earth’s surface that has yet to be con-quered.

Today’s world needs Shark Week now more than it ever has before.

Our lives are constantly threatened by a myriad of sinister forces — the stress of living in constant fear of government spying, terrorism and financial crises has begun to take its toll.

These issues are dividing us, splitting the world into factions as we bicker over what matters are most pressing.

With such an excess of infighting, there are a precious few things in this world that can provide us with common ground to stand on.

Thankfully, The Discovery Channel gives cable subscribers everywhere an opportunity to rally together, and unite against a single common enemy. The Discovery Channel does not deal with abstract concepts and issues, but a single, physical threat.

Although Shark Week may allude to the idea of conservation and protection of sharks, the underly-

ing message is clear — there is only room on this planet for one of these two species.

Pitted against a shark in its natural habitat, a single human is easily overwhelmed.

In fact, sharks have been clocked at swimming 20 miles per hour, possess rows upon rows of razor sharp teeth and do not know the meaning of the word mercy.

Given this information, how are we to pretend that these creatures are anything but godless killing machines with an unquenchable bloodlust?

Perhaps all of this could be excused, were it not for the fact that the beach is a universally recog-nized vacation destination.

What was intended to be a place of relaxation, a period of time that could provide punctuation for your long stretches of fear and uncertainty, is instead spent in fear of a shark attack.

Vacations, those too-few sacrosanct moments we’re allotted each year, are in grave danger.

If we value any respite from the monotony of our day to day lives, we will interrupt our regularly scheduled programming and watch Shark Week.

— Jackson Moore-Ragusin is a junior from Acworth majoring in English

Saturday night, as I was scrolling through my Facebook news feed, I came

across a link to an article entitled “The Top 5 Regrets of the Dying.”

As I read through the list, I realized that these were common themes I’d heard about often times before.

The top two regrets struck me the most.

Second Most Regret: “I wish I hadn’t worked so hard.”

One thing that has been instilled in me from the time I was young is that money doesn’t buy happiness.

There are many cases of famous, wealthy people who have ultimately fallen from their celeb-rity status, crashed and burned.

Their lives were centered around making a dollar, and they had no true fulfillment in any-thing.

I’m well aware that money is an important thing to have, but what about happiness? Is it just a myth?

My answer is no, it isn’t. I’m a firm believer that life

can be enjoyed by anyone as long as they are willing to make it more enjoyable for themselves.

This all-out desire for wealth and prosperity has caused a great moral and ethical decline in this world over the last several years.

While there are many stories

of people helping one another and showing genuine love and support for others, the vast majority of society, it seems, is out to become as rich as they can, and don’t care at all about their fellow man.

I believe that if we all started caring for others a little more and cut back on our selfish desires we can see positive change in this world.

First Most Regret: “I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.”

Something that has always bothered me is that some people want you to be solely who they want you to be, rather than allowing you to become your own person.

Over the last few years, I’ve grown much bolder in my own personal beliefs, goals and aspira-tions. I am who I am, and couldn’t care less what anyone thinks about it.

Sadly, many people today aren’t like that.

Don’t get me wrong — I’m certainly not saying I’m better than anyone. I just hate the fact

that individualism is a fading concept these days.

There are many people who are pursuing degrees and careers all because someone else told them to do so. These people are trying to please their parents, friends or any significant others they have.

There will always be expecta-tions for people to meet, but I believe that we should all make our own decisions.

This world needs different, unique people, and a lot of times that comes about by going against the norm and challenging what ”society” expects of us.

If you want to become an artist, do it. If you want to be an archaeologist, outstanding.

And, if you’re like me, and you want to become a reporter and/or commentator for a profes-sional baseball team, don’t listen to the critics who tell you that you don’t have the “look,” or that your southern accent is just a lit-tle too strong.

We’re not perfect beings, but we can do great things with the abilities that we possess.

Don’t wait until the end and have regrets — the time to act is now.

— Justin Hubbard is a sophomore from Union Point majoring in

digital and broadcast journalism

A few nights ago, I received a frantic phone call from my best friend asking why I was mad at her.

I was instantly confused because I wasn’t, in fact, mad at her, and I didn’t comprehend how she had come to that conclusion.

After a couple of minutes, I found out it’s because I responded to a text message she sent me earlier in the day with “Ok.”

I wanted to laugh at this reason, but then I real-ized that this is product of our culture.

Our conversations are dominated by texting — a form of communication that leaves us guessing at hidden meanings that most likely don’t even exist.

Due to my usually enthusiastic style of texting, she found my absence of exclamation points and elaboration on whatever subject it was to be indica-tive of a rift.

Such an instant, impersonal method of exchange makes for frequent misinterpretations. Fights easily manifest simply because people get their feelings hurt over exchanges that are meant to be nothing but amicable.

Texting lacks tone, facial expression and body language — all of which are integral parts of human interaction.

How can you expect to have a meaningful con-versation with someone while staring at the screen of a phone?

Even though texting is convenient, it’s not used only in opportune moments, but instead as the sole method by which some people talk.

I have friends who hate to talk on the phone — they claim it’s uncomfortable.

We’ve become so dependent on being able to type instead of talk that hearing a fellow human’s voice has become awkward when the alternative is available.

The intrinsic value gained from putting your arm around a friend or receiving a big smile from a loved one is lost to text emojis and excessive punc-tuations.

Don’t get me wrong — I’m extremely thankful for technology and all of the ways it’s improved our quality of life. I appreciate texting and how it allows us to communicate when speaking isn’t an option.

Even though I’m grateful for technology and texting, I still resent the artificial spin it has put on communication.

There’s something to be said about the proximi-ty of a loved one during an important conversation or a hard time. And that something can’t be felt through letters on a screen.

— Amber Estes is a junior from Athens majoring in public relations

Shark week: an important time for television and people everywhere

Jackson Moore-RagusinGuest Columnist

Don’t die with regrets – the time to act is now

Justin HubbardGuest Columnist

Texting puts an artificial spin on communication

Amber EstesOpinions Editor

Page 6: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

BY BRAD MANNION@madbrannion

The summer of 2013 will welcome the newly renovated Rutherford Hall, with a dedication cere-mony on June 27.

Other renovations at the Unversity of Georgia include the changes made on Oglethorpe House, but not everyone may see them as improvements.

“The windows have been completely replaced in all of the building, and the new windows are not operable,” said Arzu Yilmaz, project manager for the Oglethorpe House renovations.

The reason draws to fiscal responsibility and climate balance within the residence hall.

“The reason is to maintain the climate control within the building by building new units inside the rooms,” Yilmaz said, “so when you open one window, that changes the balance of the whole building.”

While this may raise concern of safety hazard, Gerry Kowalski, executive director of University Housing, said the right precautions were taken before taking on this $5 million budgeted project.

“If there was a major safety hazard, we wouldn’t be able to do it by code,” Kowalski said. “This is a project that will eventually be reviewed by the state fire marshal, and we wouldn’t go through the expense of that kind of replacement if we somehow thought there would be a problem at the end of the process. Because our mission is safe, comfortable and affordable, we wouldn’t do anything that creates

a health or safety issue for students as we do a reno-vation.”

He even said the idea is common among struc-tures.

The reason for this change, Kowalski said, was to make the over 40-year-old residence hall work with a better “efficiency” with student preferences also taken into consideration.

“The windows were a very important part of the upgrade, in addition to complete new heating, cool-ing and fresh air makeup in the building,” Kowalski said. “There’s an opportunity to filter some of the sun rays and cut down on solar heat gain in the rooms, so a lot of the things we’re doing is based on student comfort.”

Oglethorpe House will undergo installing these “upgrades” in two separate sessions — once during the summer of 2013 and the second during the folow-wing summer — in order to “keep the facility in operation during the 2013-14 school year,” according to the University Architects' website.

Along with the windows, the residence hall will involve basic mechanical, electrical and plumbing upgrades.

Due to its age, Oglethorpe has undergone these renovations, so residence halls such as the newly constructed Rutherford Hall will not face this issue.

Thanks to a unique system it shares with few residence halls at UGA, Rutherford Hall will serve as an energy-efficient building with in advanced system to cut costs.

“We have a system in place in that building that is similar to that of Building 1516, which is when a student opens a window, the air conditioning unit in that room is shut down,” Kowalski said. “The build-ing operates most efficiently if the entire building envelope is sealed. If you were on a ship, and you have a small leak...you’re going to try to close that leak because that small leak could potentially be damaging to the entire ship. It won’t be lethal and life-changing if we open a window, but the point is it operates best when the envelope is sealed.”

6 News Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

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BY BRAD MANNION@madbrannion

The University of Georgia chapter of the Kappa Alpha Order fra-ternity lost someone who many would con-sider the 134th member of its organization.

Larry Foote, house manager for the KA fra-ternity, passed away earlier this month, and with his passing, Foote has left a long legacy to be remembered by many of the fraternity’s brothers.

“He was here I think in ‘82 or ‘81, so he’s been here for 30+ years,” said Hamilton Harbin, a senior finance major from Augusta and president of the KA Order fraternity. “He started out as our jani-tor, and he was so well liked that he was initi-ated like 20 years ago.”

As manager, Foote helped with the suste-nance of the fraternity house.

“A house manager generally keeps up with the maintenance of the house,” said Will Douglas, advisor for the Interfraternity Council, “and even though now-adays it is much more common for a member of the chapter to fill that role, he stayed with the organization

for such a long time that they sort of made him their manager.”

Harbin admired his ability to single-hand-edly maintain the upkeep of the organiza-tion’s house.

“People usually have cleaning crews, but he was the sole

man in charge,” Harbin said.

Although he stopped helping with house maintenance due to old age, Foote still remained active with many members of the fraternity.

“When he was something like 50 years

old,” Harbin said. “he couldn’t clean the house, but he would come and hang around with the guys.”

Both students and alumni recognized Foote as an excellent addition to Kappa Alpha.

“He was born in Athens and has been a character around UGA for a long time,” said Matthew Molony, a UGA alumnus and for-mer member of the fra-ternity, in an email to The Red & Black.

A funeral for Foote was held on June 24, where current brothers and “all kinds of alum-ni” joined to mourn the loss of such a close friend to the fraternity, Harbin said.

Reminiscing on the past, Harbin recalled one of many stories by which Foote will be remembered.

“There’s about a million — anyone can tell you a funny story,” he said. “You’d be walk-ing down the road, and you’d see Foote driving your car because he would just take the keys and do whatever he wants, and it wasn’t a big deal.”

For many, Foote will be remembered as just the Kappa Alpha Order house manager.

But for others, he will be remembered as a “character” who left his mark on the people of UGA.

“Everybody that interacted with him had the pleasure to hang out with him and really enjoy his pres-ence,” Harbin said. “He was one of our family, and he will be missed around our chapter. He’s one of a kind.”

Oglethorpe windows made ‘inoperable’

Oglethorpe House is in the process of upgrading mechanical, electrical and plumbing systems, along with installing inoperable windows. ERIN O. sMIth/Staff

The Kappa Alpha Order fraternity at the University of Georgia mourned the death of its house manager, Larry Foote. A funeral for Foote, which drew in current and past fraternity brothers, was held on June 24. ERIN O. sMIth/Staff

UGA’s Kappa Alpha Order fraternity loses ‘one of a kind’ house manager, considered ‘family’

Page 7: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

7 News Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

➤ From Page 1

A proposal for domestic partner benefits was drawn up in 2005, and UGA met it with granting domestic partners a UGA card — a card allowing access to certain areas of the school.

“It would allow access into [the Ramsey Student Center]…it would let you go to UGA-only events, it would let you check out a book,” Frick said. “They were very small things, and we thought ‘whoopty-do.’”

It was not until May 2013 when soft benefits – including vision, dental and accidental death and dismemberment coverage — were granted for domestic partners, at the expense of the UGA employee and no other entity.

Providing hard benefits, however, would include the school to provide funding — which is what the foundation refused to do.

But the foundation is not the only source of money to grant domestic partner benefits.

“That was one way to do it, and that’s not going to work — let’s see what other options are on the table,” Frick said.

Suggestions have been made to utilize funds from different organizations, such as the athletic association, to provide the benefits, but much like with the foundation, the setbacks are the employees paid by the state.

“They have the same issues,” Jackson said. “All areas have this problem because all of our support-ing organizations have state paid employees.”

The UGA Foundation does not recognize the need to provide what are known as hard benefits for unmarried part-ners of UGA employees, much like how the state of Georgia does not recognize marital status for same-sex couples.

No public institution in the state of Georgia has granted hard benefits to domestic partners, but peer institutions, such as the University of Florida, recognize domestic partner benefits while their state bans same-sex marriag-es.

While the policy not to affect state funds remains the same in Florida, UF has still managed to provide coverage for domestic partners through its different sources of revenue.

“The institutional benefits for domestic partners are paid with non-state dollars that the University of Florida has access to,” said Janine Sikes, assistant vice president for media relations and public affairs at the University of Florida.

At the time, UGA has not found any alternatives for providing coverage.

“There’s not an apparent alternative, and I can not say what the next step is,” Jackson said. “I think we’ve gone as far as we can on this particular path.”

The Supreme Court, having struck down California’s Proposition 8 and the Defense of Marriage Act on June 26, has left Frick hopeful for future change.

“While I was initially upset, I would say now I’m more hopeful,” she said.

This decision could put UGA at risk of recruit-ing and keeping faculty, staff and even students.

“I would say I think that UGA tends to be very cautious when it comes to moving in new direc-tions,” Frick said, “but I think caution on this par-ticular issue is highly detrimental to our national reputation.”

Advocacy from administration, though minimal in some people’s minds, was met with a “wall,” pre-venting any more push to approve these benefits.

“We pushed it to this point in administration, but it looks like we have gone as far as we can go,” Jackson said.

Until these hard benefits are granted to domes-tic partners, Frick said she will continue to advocate against what she considers an “embarrassment” for a top-ranked institution.

“In light of [June 26’s] Supreme Court ruling,” she said, “the long arc toward equality is moving for-ward, and we don’t want to be left behind.”

BENEFITS: Despite UGA Foundation's denial to grant coverage, Frick remains ‘hopeful’

Jackson

By Brad Mannion@madbrannion

William Wilson Heaton Jr., the man accused of fleeing the scene where a woman suffered severe brain damage after she was struck by a car, was indicted by a Clarke County Superior Court grand jury earlier this week.

Heaton was charged with six counts of seri-ous injury by vehicle, one count of driving under the influence, one count of driving with an unlawful alcohol con-centration, one count of reckless driving, one count of leaving the scene of an accident involving serious injury, one count of failure to report accident result-ing in injury, one count of failure to maintain lane and one count of open container, as stat-ed in the indictment.

Emily Bowman, the woman struck by the

vehicle allegedly driven by Heaton on Feb. 16, was left with serious brain damage, rendering her body “useless,” as stated in the indict-ment.

Bowman, a student of Kennesaw State University, was visiting Athens to celebrate a friend’s birthday when she suffered severe brain damage, a broken pelvis and hip and went into a coma.

Heaton was named a suspect on March 3, and the indictment was filed June 18.

By Brad Mannion@madbrannion

A University of Georgia student has filed a lawsuit against a school administrator for using a Facebook photo of her in a presentation at a Georgia high school.

C h e l s e a Chaney, a fresh-man at UGA, posted a photo on Facebook of her-self wearing a “two-piece bikini next to a card-board cutout of legendary rapper Snoop Dogg,” according to Yahoo! News arti-cle. The technical director of Starr’s Mill High School then used the photo — without

receiving or trying to receive Chaney’s or her parents’ permis-sion – in a seminar.According to the news article, the picture was taken when Chaney was “a student at the school and a minor,” and the caption with the picture allegedly stated, “Once it’s there, it’s there to stay.”

“I was embar-rassed. I was hor-rified,” Chaney said to WSB-TV. “It never crossed my mind that it would ever — that this would ever happen to me.”

While a school official has apolo-gized to Chaney, saying it was “ran-domly chosen,”

Chaney was still skeptical of how random it was.

As a result, Chaney’s attorney, Pete Wellborn, “filed a lawsuit on her behalf for $2 million” under the reason that “a

person does not cede rights to oth-ers by posting images on Internet sites such as Facebook,” according to the news article.

“Their idea that putting something

on Facebook gives them a license to steal it and carte blanche to do with it what they did is wrong ethically, it’s wrong morally and it’s absolutely wrong legally,” Wellborn said.

Bowman suspect indictedUGA student sues over photo

A UGA freshman has filed a lawsuit against a high school for using a Facebook photo without permission. Graphic by Erin O. Smith

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Performers and spectators alike eagerly took in the sounds, sights and excitement of AthFest 2013. Bronson Tew of Lassine Kouyate (top left), Page Campbell of Patterson Hood and the Downtown Mystic Rumblers (top right), Matt McDonald of Ghost Owl (bot-tom left) and a bevy of crowd surfers (bottom right) were all high points of AthFest.

TAYLOR CRAIG SUTTON/Staff

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AthFest Rewind

Rock'n'roll dominated at AthFest 2013, proving that while the music industry is becoming more electronic by the day, nothing beats a head-banging, mosh-pitting, good old-fashioned rock show. Performers included Patterson Hood of Patterson Hood and the Downtown Mystic Rumblers (top left), Ben Hackett of New Madrid (top right), Julian Dorio of The Whigs (middle left) and Ryan Nall of Zoogma (bottom left).

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Page 10: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

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By Jake GoodmanThe Red& Black

Nashville-native Terry Price experienced more hardship in one part of his life than some people do in all their time on earth, the kind of hardship that would knock the average musi-cian down and leave them there permanently.

But Terry Price is not an average musician.

In 2010, Price’s band, Oblio, a Nashville-based rock trio, broke up after six years, around the same time that his father passed away.

And as if that wasn’t enough, Price was then diagnosed with Bell’s Palsy, which paralyzed several muscles in vari-ous parts of his face.

During these trou-bling times, Price chan-neled himself into his music, discovering how it became his main source of relief from the troubles of the world.

“I found myself alone, in my life, and so I retreated and just wrote”, Price said.

After compiling the most meaningful and powerful songs, he creat-ed his debut album “How To Say Goodbye” under the band name Photo Ops.

Price describes Photo Ops’ music as a blend of indie, rock, and folk.

Some of his musical influences include Paul Simon, Neil Young, The Beatles, Tom Petty and Neil Diamond.

Each song off the album conveys the emo-tion Terry felt during the most difficult times of his life.

“I wanted to make sure each song would hit you on the head, and roll smoothly”, Price said.

For Price, the most meaningful song on the album was “February Ocean Breeze.”

“I wanted to write a song to capture this day… we went to the beach and as soon as we got to the beach, I just burst into tears and it all hit me: my father was gone”, Price said.

After his father’s death, Price discovered a collection of beautiful photographs from a trip across the United States that his father took in the 1970s.

The photographs became the inspiration for his new band’s name.

“He took all of these beautiful Polaroids of the country, like Manhattan, San Francisco, the Golden Gate Bridge, and origi-nally I was going to call it ‘Photo Opportunities’”, Price said.

Photo Ops, for the most part, is solely the writings and recording of Price, who plays nearly every instrument on the album.

“I got my first guitar when I was twelve”, Price said. “I can play the bass, guitar, piano and drums. I can find my way around on a lot of instruments.”

What inspired Price to choose the overarch-ing theme of Photo Ops’ debut album, a catalog which he will perform much of during his upcoming stint at the The World Famous, isn’t difficult to understand.

“The album is about rowing up and saying goodbye to your father, your friends, people you trusted and knew… just saying goodbye to youth,” Price said.

By ColBy newtonThe Red & Black

For much of its history, American ani-mation has been an afterthought of a medium, good for entertaining children and filling time on Saturday mornings but hardly acceptable for an adult to seriously consume.

In the last few years, though, there has been a sea change in the mainstream acceptance of animation; suddenly, college students who 10 years prior would have rolled their eyes at the idea of watching a cartoon are salivating over the next epi-sode of “Adventure Time.”

Disney viewing parties are a regular event in freshman dorms, and the release of the latest Pixar or Dreamworks film is an event at least on par with the latest studio blockbuster.

With the continually high ratings of animated television among college stu-dents and the recent $136 million opening of Disney-Pixar’s “Monsters University,” it’s worth asking: just how did animation break out of the children’s entertainment ghetto and become such a profitable, pop-ular form of expression?

As with most success stories, it all started with “The Simpsons.”

While animated shows like “The Flintstones” aired in primetime before, “The Simpsons” was the first truly adult-oriented animation to be broadcast nationwide, and viewer response was through the roof. “The Simpsons” rode a wave of popularity and viewer goodwill to become the longest-running show on net-work television – and paved the way for more adult-geared animation to rise in its wake.

Animated features, meanwhile, contin-ued to languish. While Disney saw some success with its 1990s slate of animated features (particularly “The Lion King”) the public perception of animated film still seemed to rest firmly on the idea of chil-dren’s animation. It wasn’t until 1997 and the breakout of CGI-loving Pixar Studios that animated features would truly become a respected medium.

“’Toy Story’ was really the biggest thing for animation in the past 20 years,” said Richard Neupert, a University of Georgia professor of film and theatre stud-ies. “All these animated TV shows sort of told people that it was okay to go see ani-mated movies… ‘Toy Story’ built on that.”

After “Toy Story,” Pixar was the dar-ling of the animated — and film — world.

Critics loved its films for their well-written stories and clean-cut animation, and audiences loved them for their relat-able characters and clever, easy humor. The studio’s profits rose year after year, and as the creators became more finan-cially stable, the films became riskier and more experimental. Meanwhile, Pixar attracted its own set of imitators, hoping to cash in on the sudden popularity of ani-mated films.

“The thing is, these are hugely expen-sive movies to make,” Neupert said. “It costs so much to put together a rig for these characters… if the film doesn’t have good storytelling to back it up, then it’s

going to fail.”Storytelling is what’s generally set

Pixar apart from its host of mimics; too often an afterthought for animators con-cerned with clever visuals and bright col-ors, the stories Pixar tells resonate with audiences in a way that all the pop-culture references in the world can’t.

“One thing I always tell my students is that storytelling is the most important part of making an animated feature,” said Mike Hussey, head of UGA’s animation department. “The best thing to do in the animation business is to become a creator of content… you don’t want to be an ani-mator your whole life.”

Of course, Pixar’s rise to success hasn’t come soley from its storytelling abil-ities; a generation of children who grew up on classic Disney animations suddenly found themselves in their teens and 20’s with money to spend and nostalgia hitting hard.

“When [Toy Story 3] came out, people our age were kind of moving away from

animation,” Connor Cuevas, a UGA film student, said. “Afterwards, people started to remember why they liked animation so much. You saw stuff like ‘Adventure Time’ and ‘Regular Show’ got really big around that time, too.”

The rise of collegiate interest in ani-mated television may have been spurred by “Toy Story,” but it’s developed a culture all its own: from the semi-ironic “Brony” culture to “Adventure Time” hats sprout-ing up everywhere, animated television is the most popular it’s been in years — and just like the movies, it can be traced back to nostalgia and storytelling.

“Kids our age, they grew up on stuff like ‘Dexter’s Lab’ and ‘Samurai Jack’ that tried to be better than older cartoons.” Cuevas said. “These shows are just the next level of that.”

Rather than being taken as a sign of arrested development or immaturity, an interest in animation is now seen as simply another facet of the college experience, and we seem to be the better for it.

Everybody's favorite scary monsters return as college students in 'Monsters University,' a prequel to Pixar's 'Monsters Inc.' Animation is no longer just for kids, as many college students now list animated shows among their favorites. Courtesy Disney-Pixar

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Page 11: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

11 Variety Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

By GaBrielle BaylorThe Red & Black

Jetsetter, Olympic-level athlete, female pilot and inventor of the fannypack — the Georgia Museum of Art is pleased to introduce the University of Georgia to the fearless style icon, Ann Bonfoey Taylor.

The exhibit “Fashion Independent: The Original Style of Ann Bonfoey Taylor” will be at the GMOA from June 1 to September 14. With nearly 200 items, a short documentary, and enlarged snapshots by fashion pho-tographer Toni Frissell, this is the museum’s first major fashion exhibit and hopefully a preview of things to come.

Taylor is best known for her fash-ionable skiwear and collaborative couture designs with top fashion minds like the Spanish Basque designer Cristóbal Balenciaga, America’s first couturier Charles James, the infamous Hubert de Givenchy and many more. The exhibit spans from the 1930s to the 1970s and includes elegant eveningwear, innova-tive skiwear, casual sportswear and beautiful boots.

“When you first walk into the exhi-

bition [you see] her lists of rules on the wall: no red lipstick, only pink; you’re not done until your hair is done. So she clearly had ideas and stuck to them,” said Hillary Brown, the Director of Communication of the Georgia Museum of Art.

Taylor’s adventures clearly served as inspiration in her fashion designs. A woman with a lifelong passion for physical activity, her designs are com-fortable and do not constrict but flow with the body. Her eveningwear is pure Americana with a special devo-

tion to the female form. When admir-ing the luxurious gowns, one is struck by the cleanly curved lines that emphasize and celebrate the breasts and hips, a trait not often found in modern couture. Taylor’s divine boot collection, which any shoe aficionado would envy, expresses her rugged determination and world-traveling nature. Her engraved Givenchy bags and accessories highlight her aristo-cratic lifestyle.

“It kind of tells a story the way you go through the exhibition. You start

out by going through the first two gal-leries where you learn more about her life and her story, then the skiwear, the military outfits that she did and then you get more into the couture that she patronizes, and you finish up with the evening wear, which I think for many people that’s the highlight of the show,” Brown said.

GMOA director William Underwood Eiland was impressed with the collection during a visit to Phoenix, and worked to bring the exhibit to Athens. Executing the exhibit has been a valuable experi-ence for the museum, which seeks to host more major fashion exhibits in the future.

“We have talked and made some steps toward doing an exhibition of Emilio Pucci’s work," Brown said. “He actually has a connection to UGA. He was Italian royalty but he came here in the 30’s to study the animal hus-bandry program, so we’re hoping to do something with that. It’s a lot to put on a big show like that and to draw things from all over the place, but we’re working on it.”

Visit the closet of a lifetime with the GMOA

Fashion Independent: The Original Style of Ann Bonfoey Taylor will hopefully function as a successful test-run for GMOA's fashion aspirations. HeatHer Pitts/Staff

WHat: Fashion Independent: The Original Style of Ann Bon-foey Taylor

WHeN: June 1- September 14

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of Art

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By CHelsey aBerCromBie@comma_freak

When you picture a stereotypical artist, he’s probably a lone beret-wearing guy standing at an easel in the corner of a dark room.

But the [blank] proj-ect by Double Dutch Press, a joint venture between several local artists and the Prince Avenue printmaking stuio, proves that art can be a collaborative effort.

“We have asked ten artists to send us designs specifically for this project, and it can be anything they want,” Burk said. “They just have a size perimeter to work within.”

Five local artists par-ticipated in the current installation.

“My role is essential-ly to create the art-work, choose the color, create the drawing, choose the scale, and then they make the screens and print the prints,” said Brian Hitselberger, an Athens-based artist and professor of paint-ing and drawing at Piedmont College.

Hitselberger’s print was inspired by a recent trip to an artist’s retreat located in Rabun Gap, Georgia.

“There was a chain-link fence that had been punctured by something, just one of those things that caught my eye,” Hitselberger said. “There was this contin-uous grid of perfect geometric lines with this round shape miss-ing in the middle. I just found it really beauti-ful.”

Hitselberger’s sketches from his retreat became “Lacuna,” a four color screen print for [blank].

Eleanor Davis, an Athens-based cartoon-ist and illustrator whose work has appeared in The New York Times, BusinessWeek and The Guardian, also contrib-uted a print to the cur-rent installation.

Davis’ print, “Mulberry,” a six color screen print, depicts men doing strenuous labor on one side, sur-rounded by male mul-berry trees, while the other side depicts women caring for chil-dren surrounded by female mulberry trees.

“Most plants aren’t gendered,” Davis said, of her inspiration. “I’m just interested in gen-der and gender roles, and the positive and negative feelings associ-ated with gender roles.”

The process of creat-ing the prints, whereby artists submit their work to Burk and Burk’s co-operator, Katherine McGuire, to create the actual prints, is somewhat unusual in the art world. Normally

artists create their work and print it them-selves.

The artist of the cur-rent [blank] installa-tion range in profes-sion from cartoonists to tattoo artists to profes-sors, which insured a variety of subjects and styles for Maguire and Burk to work with in the printing process.

“They’re not neces-

sarily pieces that are typical screen prints. We’ve been given chal-lenges by those artists, which is really fun,” Burk said.

Maguire and Burk print exactly 30 copies of each print, which are currently being sold for $50 each in their studio.

Several pieces from [blank] are also on dis-play in the MAKE:

Paper & Print Works gallery currently on dis-play at Hotel Indigo. Curated by Didi Dunphy, the pieces will be on display through August 20.

While [blank] is cur-rently the biggest proj-ect at Double Dutch Press, reaching out into the artistic community is only one way of accomplishing the stu-

dio’s larger goal.“We want to gener-

ate a fine printmaking resurgence," Burk said. “We wanted to kind of access artists that maybe don’t do a lot of printmaking and open up that door to them, but also make art accessible for the pub-lic, too.”

Artists stand to ben-efit just as much as

Katherine and Amanda.“Three weeks ago

this thing was an idea in my mind, and now it’s real. This idea that I have exists in the physi-cal world — that never starts getting old,” Hitselberger said. “The interesting thing with this particular process was that it was some-one else who brought it there.”

Double Dutch Press works with artists to produce work that is anything but [blank]

Page 12: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

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By ColBy NewtoNThe Red & Black

After three years of serving up coffee, cock-tails and the cream of the local music scene, Hendershot’s Coffee is moving to a brand-new location.

The Athens institu-tion announced the move back in March, after a parking dispute with neighbor Transmetropolitan forced the hand of owner Seth Hendershot. The shop, which has gained a rep-utation as one of Athens’ best-kept secrets, will be moving

to a brand-new, much larger location in the Bottleworks complex on Prince Avenue. It’s a bold move for the out-skirts coffee shop, but one that Hendershot hopes will pay off.

“We have a fanbase, and that’s important,” Hendershot said. “This new place is in between downtown and Normaltown and every-thing. We’re in this nice little pocket where everybody can access us.”

Almost twice the size of the original, the upgraded Hendershot’s features an expanded kitchen, more impres-

sive bar service, and a newly-constructed green room for visiting artists.

“What we found in the old place is that when we had good music and good people, those were our best nights,” Hendershot said. “We’ll be that sort of mid-level club that might attract a nation-al act who’s doing his own thing... if Frank Black were to quit the Pixies and go solo, he could come here. In fact, I’m officially invit-ing him.”

The new location also boasts an expand-ed version of the classic

Hendershot’s stage — transported piece from the old location — and a pizza oven.

Hendershot’s old location will serve its last lattés on June 28 before closing for good. The new location will have a soft opening in the second week of July before its grand reopening August 19, the three-year anniver-sary of the original location’s opening.

“We’ve got a lot of people that like this place, and we think they’ll follow us,” Hendershot said. “I think this will affect us in a positive way.”

By Chelsey ABerCromBie@comma_freak

One of Athens’ favorite sustainable living sta-ples, Farm 255, is closing its doors after eight years.

“Over the past few years, Farm 255’s partners moved away from Athens and on to other opportu-nities in food and agriculture,” said Kate Venugopal, one of Farm 255’s several co-owners. “We felt the location could be better utilized as a community asset if operated by a local community member.”

The decision to close the Washington Street restaurant was not a simple one.

“Given that Farm 255 had become such a main-stay in the community, it was not an easy decision, and one that required many months of delibera-tion,” Venugopal said.

Farm 255 experienced its fair share of ups and downs in its eight years.

“One of the greatest challenges of running a restaurant is maintaining consistency,” Venugopal said. “We have been fortunate to have an amazing staff over the years to help achieve this.”

Good memories are equally as vivid for Farm 255’s former staff, such as when the restaurant was filled with revelers during the 2006 World Cup.

“The restaurant was packed wall-to-wall and had a great energy,” Venugopal said.

Farm 255’s last day of operation will be July 19, after which Juan and Vanessa Molina, owners of Broad Street Coffee, will take over the space. Venugopal said the deal brokered between Farm 255 and the Molinas was an average real estate transac-tion that was executed without issue.

“We worked through negotiations with Broad Street Coffee for several weeks to reach an arrange-ment that was suitable for all parties involved,” Venugopal said. “As with most real estate deals, there were many details to take into account.”

Farm 255’s bevy of co-owners and operators have moved on both to other opportunties and other zipcodes. Farmer Jason Mann will remain at the helm of developing Farm Burger Enterprises and currently resides in San Diego. Olivia Sargeant was recently married and now divides her time between California and Italy, working as a consul-tant for food and farming businesses. Venugopal is employed with the California Sustainable Winegrowing Alliance in San Francisco. Jerid Grandinetti now works for Dunkin Brands International and lives outside of Boston.

Juan and Vanessa Molina, owners of Broad Street Coffee, will be closing their Broad Street location before they move into the Farm 255 space.

“We bought the assets for Farm 255,” Vanessa Molina said.

The Molinas’ new venue, China Cat Sunflower, will serve the same Vegan fare, but it will also fea-ture an expanded menu and a Sunday brunch.

China Cat Sunflower will open August 1.While Athenians might miss the grass-fed and

antibiotic-free smorgeshboard that was Farm 255, the owners are leaving the space knowing it is the best thing for the community at large.

“It’s hard to part with something you created and watched grow up into a thriving business,” Venugopal said, “but ultimately we knew it was the right thing to do for the community.”

Farm 255 to close its doors after eight years of organic goodness

STREETS: Streets Café blazes trail for future food truck initiatives

Hendershot’s Coffee gains size, green room in move

Farm 255, which prided itslef on featuring farm-grown, locally and responsibly sourced ingredients for its cuisine, will officially become the fully vegan restaurant China Cat Sunflower on August 1. seAN tAylor /Staff

Ryan Morgan and Streets Café's global-inspired cuisine can be found around downtown on weekends until 2 a.m. tAylor CrAiG suttoN/Staff

➤ From Page 1

Customers have to go mobile to get the full Streets Café experience.

“The [most fun] part is actually being on the truck,” Morgan said. “Once you’re there and everything is set up and good to go, just cooking for the customers is by far — it’s hot, sweaty work—but it’s instantly gratifying.”

Morgan worked in several restaurants in Athens before the birth of his first child spurred his desire to open Streets Café.

“I decided it was time to take the plunge because we had a child, who’s going to be three in July,” Morgan said. “Literally the truck was purchased and was supposed to be up and run-ning before he was born, and it took me three years to get it legitimized in town.”

Streets Café can regularly be found on weekends until 2 a.m. around downtown, but operat-

ing his business wasn’t always easy.

“In the Caledonia lot three years ago was my first opening. I moved to 40 Watt for a period of time, then I got a citation from the Health Department because I wasn’t legit,” Morgan said.

According to Morgan, food-related laws passed ahead of the 1996 Summer Olympics make it nearly impossible for a food truck to become legitimized by the Health Department.

“I’m pretty sure I’m the first one since 1996 that’s solely a truck, not connected to a restau-rant,” Morgan said. “For the Olympics they rewrote the laws so people couldn’t just pull over

on the side of [state route] 400 and serve food.”

Morgan's ultimate goal is to open up an Athens-based food truck park.

“I’m actively now trying to put together a food truck park with this other lady,” Morgan said. “I’ve had a couple people come by the commissary to see how it’s done the way [the Health Department] wants it, so that gives them something to see what they’re up against.”

Despite the odds, Morgan has high hopes for both his Athens food truck park.

“Apparently opening the food truck wasn’t really possi-ble,” Morgan said, “but I did it.”

Page 13: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

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13 Sports Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

BY JUSTIN HUBBARD@JHubb93

Park is an athletic signal-caller with a quick but strong delivery on his throws, and possesses superb accuracy on short and mid-range throws. There were multiple instanc-es in his junior year in which Park displayed the ability to squeeze the ball into tight coverages over the middle. ESPN’s “300” lists Park as the sixth-best quarterback in the country, and a lot of it has to do with the fact that he is very nimble on his feet.

He has the eyes of a good run-ning back to see open lanes to run through, but he also has the ability to escape the pocket and give plays extra time to develop. On one partic-ular play, Stratford was three yards outside of the end zone, and Park was able to maneuver around multi-ple rushing defenders and throw the ball over the heads of three men in the secondary to find his open receiv-er.

As far as Park’s playing ability goes, there are no glaring weakness-es, but there are concerns regarding

his decision-making abilities. On sev-eral plays, Park will opt to escape the pocket to buy time and find an open target. But with stronger coverage on deck at the college level, Park will need to learn to make quicker deci-sions and pull the trigger a little sooner.

Park resembles Aaron Murray in regards to his quick delivery, and he fits Georgia’s scheme well. Park's run-ning abilities are enough that offen-sive coordinator Mike Bobo may even create some tailored running plays should he ever develop a prominent role on offense.

Park committed to Georgia over Alabama and Virginia Tech, and gives the school a talented quarterback.

BY SAM LACK@samuellack

Less than one month removed from his big league debut, Alex Wood is shutting down his competition from the mound. In nine games and 12.2 innings, Wood has already compiled 18 strikeouts and a 2.89 earned run average. Last week, he made his first major league start, giving up one earned run on two hits in three innings of work.

Before being called up, Wood was 4-2 with a 1.26 ERA with Atlanta’s Double-A affiliate the Mississippi Braves. In 10 starts, he threw 57 strikeouts and allowed just one home run. Wood also held oppo-nents to a .178 batting average.

Isner advances at Wimbledon

John Isner breezed through his first-round match at Wimbledon, defeating Russian native Evgeny Donskoy in a 6-1, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (2) set sweep on Monday. He moves on to face Adrian Mannarino and looks to pass the second round for the first time in his career at Wimbledon.

It was just over three years ago that Isner was vaulted into record books after he defeated Nicolas Mahut in a marathon 11-hour match that took three days to complete and became the longest ten-nis match ever played.

Farmer, Powell make minor league debut

Former Georgia shortstop Kyle Farmer signed with the Los

Angeles Dodgers on June 10, draft-ed as a catcher in the eighth round. Over the weekend he made his debut with the Ogden Raptors in the Rookie Pioneer League, recording four hits and four RBI in two games.

Former Bulldog Curt Powell also debuted. Powell was drafted by the Detroit Tigers in the 21st round as a short-stop, despite playing third base for the Bulldogs. Powell has one RBI and no hits through three games with the Single-A Connecticut Tigers.

DAWGS OFF THE LEASH

Wood shines for Braves, Isner gets fast win

ISNER

PARK

NAME: Jacob ParkPOSITION: Quarter-backSCHOOL: Stratford High SchoolSTATUS: Verbally com-mitted to Georgia

SCOUTING REPORT: JACOB PARK

Page 14: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

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14 Sports Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

BY LUKE DIXON@LukeCODixon

Summer at the University of Georgia is usually laid back and relaxing.

For Ron Courson, Georgia’s Senior Associate Athletic Director and Director of the Sports Medicine Program, summer is anything but a vaca-tion.

“I think it’d surprise a lot of people, you know what do you do during the summer time, you’re off,” Courson said. “Summer is actually our busiest time of the year.”

Courson, who works mainly with the football student-athletes, said that summer is a key time for him and his staff because it is when players have the most time available for injury rehabilitation and recovering.

“When you’re in football and it’s during the season, you have practice at 4:00 and all 125 guys are out there at the same time,” Courson said. “The summer time we have three or four lifting groups, three or four run-ning groups.”

Courson wasn’t lying about the multitude of players who arrive for injury rehab on the first floor of the Butt-Mehre Athletic Complex.

At 8 a.m. on a Friday, Courson, his staff and some of the student-

athletes weren’t just starting their days - they were clearly well into their rehabilitation programs for the day as Courson tended to a patient while others were sweating profusely during workouts.

“We may start at 6:30 in the morning and go until 7:30 at night,” Courson said. “We also have rehabs, physicals and we’re conducting some research studies with guys who’ve had head inju-ries.”

The irony about Courson’s current position is that he began his career path after suffering an inju-ry in college.

“I played two sports in college and had never even thought about this as a profession. I was going to be a coach. My junior year in college I hurt my knee playing ball. My orthopedic surgeon and ath-letic trainer told me to change my major and that’s how I got into it.”

Though Courson’s most recent posts have included Georgia and Alabama, he has also spent time working with Pop USA Football and the National Football League.

In his work and research with the NFL, Courson has focused mainly on the prevention of head inju-ries and in particular concussions, which have recently become one of the most highly publicized injuries that affects former collegiate and profes-sional players even after their playing days are over.

“It’s been fun,” Courson said of his work with the NFL. “I think one of the reasons people get invested in (player safety) is they want to make a

difference. I’ve been blessed with some really unique opportunities. We have a sports concussion research lab here and I’ve done a lot things nationally with sports concussion and head and neck injury preven-tion.”

Courson adds that he hopes his and others research with both the NFL and Pop Warner will help prevent future players from suffering head inju-ries.

“That’s how I got involved with the NFL and Pop Warner USA football,” Courson said. “What [the NFL and USA Football] gives you is a platform to make a difference. For example, if you can make a rule change, you can impact hundreds and thou-sands of people and hopefully prevent some things.”

Now that the game of football is again undergo-ing drastic changes, Courson believes that even though the awareness of concussions and head inju-ries has been raised and there aren’t as many cata-strophic injuries as before, there’s still much to be done.

“I think we’ve done a great job of learning how to better evaluate and treat [head injuries], but we got to learn how to prevent them,” Courson said. “I think it’s ultimately going to come with behavior changes. We’ve got to do a better job with teaching and coaching, better technique, and particularly in our youth sports.”

In addition to his renowned research and work with the Athletic Association, Courson is also an adjunct professor at the University of Georgia’s department of Kinesiology. Teaching is something Courson believes is quite helpful, especially in keep-ing up in his rapidly-changing field.

“I love to teach,” Courson said. “One of the rea-sons I’m here is because I had great teachers when I was in college. I really take that to heart. I really feel like if you’re going to be at the top of your game, you’ve got to be involved in teaching research because that’s how you stay current. Teaching, one, helps me because to be able to teach, you’ve got to go study yourself.”

Courson adds that one of the most rewarding parts of teaching is seeing how students grow and develop, during and even after their time with him.

“Last semester, I got a text from one of my for-mer students,” Courson said. “She had graduated two years before and she said, ‘I was at a basketball game tonight and one of my student-athletes had a cardiac arrest. I did CPR, defibrillated him and saved his life. I learned that in your course.’ That’s rewarding again because you have a chance to make a difference.”

For Courson, the best of the day and his career overall is getting to work with his student athletes and seeing them retake the field fully recovered.

“There’s nothing more fun than having some-body, who maybe has an unfortunate injury, but working through a surgery and rehab and seeing them go back do what they did before at the same level, and having a big smile on their face,” Courson said.

BY ALEC SHIRKEY@AShirkey

It seems as if every-one has words of criti-cism directed at the NCAA these days.

In the midst of the potentially landmark Ed O’Bannon lawsuit, which seeks damages from the NCAA for profiting off of individu-al players that received no compensation in return, former players are not mincing words when it comes to the practices Mark Emmert and company have adopted in recent years.

A major focus of the suit has been the powerhouse of college foot-ball. The sale of jerseys in univer-sity bookstores and online, which use numbers of popular or suc-cessful athletes at the collegiate level such as Knowshon Moreno’s No. 24, has caused many to ques-tion whether the NCAA’s policies are fair to the players that actually compete and drive the financial prof-it tied to football games.

“It’s such a grey area whenever you’re talking about college athletics, because you’re talking about amateur sports, but there’s a huge, billion-dollar business around it as well,” former Georgia quarterback David Greene said. “The way [the NCAA] is getting compensated is sometimes directly off the player. You look

at how many people are walking around in No. 11 [Aaron Murray] jer-seys right now. It’s something to consider.”

The issue O’Bannon and other former players have in several cases do not attempt to hone in on the the trade of athletic involvement for schol-arships and education, but rather the mer-chandise and market-ing profits the NCAA and its member schools earn on an individual, player-by-player basis.

A noted example of this is the “NCAA Football” video game series designed and

produced by EA Sports, which uses the likeness-es of famous col-lege football play-ers such as Darren McFadden and Tim Tebow on its covers.

Virtual quar-terbacks are made to have

throwing motions and celebrations similar to their real-world coun-terparts, clear evidence of EA selling a game based on the feats and habits of college foot-ball players.

“I don’t know if there’s a good way to address it,” former Georgia offensive line-man Matt Stinchcomb said. “I do think if you’re capitalizing on an individual and somehow or other there’s been a value that’s been set on that, and it’s zero dollars, and it’s unbeknownst to that individual that they’re creating value as an individual, then I think that there’s merit to some type of request on that individual’s part.

In the eyes of many, the fact that the NCAA can capitalize on the a player’s face or number goes beyond the scope of the schol-arship contracts all athletes sign before enrolling in college.

A popular counter-argument from the rul-ing ranks of the NCAA with regards to player compensation is that college athletics serve as a springboard for players that wish to turn professional.

But with no guar-antee attached to this “positive” of college athletics, former play-ers such as Greene note the necessity of examining the issue and evaluating what is objectively fair or unfair to the athletes that put their bodies on the line.

“Is it a platform for most guys? Yeah, for some of them,” Greene said. “But you take 80 or 90 percent of the other guys that get a chance to play in the NFL, they only make it one or two years and they’re getting paid minimum salary and they’re out in the real world by 26.”

The O’Bannon case will move forward, with the presiding Judge Wilken recently requesting that current players be included before a ruling takes place on whether the case constitutes a class-action lawsuit.

If Wilken rules it a non-class-action case, players would have to file their grievances individually and essen-tially halt much of the current momentum.

But if in fact it is ruled a class-action suit, the NCAA could potentially be staring at billions of dollars in damages.

“It’s the balance of [fans thinking] ‘all these players are greedy,’ that they see an opportunity when they should appreciate the opportunity to play and represent your school and enjoy a game at the collegiate level. And we do. That’s the awesome side of football,” former Georgia offensive line-man Jon Stinchcomb said. “Is it greed, or is it somewhat being taken advantage of on the individual level?”

Fix me up doc: UGA’s head trainer among the best

COURSON

Former Bulldogs sound off on Ed O'Bannon lawsuit

O'BANNON

Page 15: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

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15 Sports Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

BY ALEC SHIRKEY@AShirkey

They say there’s an app for everything, but not every app puts eight decades of Bulldogs football film right at your finger-tips.

The Vault, designed by the Atlanta-based company One of a Kind Films, brings fully restored, color highlights and game clips dating as far back 1929 to your iPhone. Georgia is the first school to have its footage avail-able.

“We want to give you access to [films] that you’ve never had access to before,” said CEO and President Myles Berman. “There’s so much stuff, it is liter-ally unfathomable. To be able to [return] to these moments of the past, it’s a wonderful oppor-tunity to share history in a very

unique way.”Former Georgia kicker

Kevin Butler, a vice president with One of a Kind Films, helped the group to acquire decades worth of Georgia game film, which was then digitized, color-corrected, synced with sound and uploaded to the app’s plat-form, which users can then search for specific games or players that they may have in mind.

App users have unlimited access to that film, and can cre-ate a running “favorites” list of highlights and clips for quick viewing.

“It’s very easy to find the play you want to see or high-lights from the game you want to see.” Chief Creative Officer Bob Summers said.

With its unprecedented archive access, The Vault pro-

vides younger fans with an edu-cating experience that can expose them to all-time Bulldog greats no longer well-known.

Hall of Fame halfback Charley Trippi, for instance, is just one of the many Georgia legends whose history is revived with the app.

“If you mention someone like Trippi outside of maybe the hardcore fan base, maybe stu-dents or younger fans, they have no idea who he is,” said Operations specialist Jody Smith. “You get past maybe the mid-80s moving back and a lot of people have no idea of who makes up the Georgia playmak-ers.”

The Vault can be purchased on the iTunes App Store at a subscription price of $4.99 and downloaded on any iPhone sup-porting iOS6.

BY ALEC SHIRKEY@AShirkey

Georgia’s annual Countdown to Kickoff charity event returns to Athens for its eighth edition next month, and the participants will include members from the 2002 Georgia football team.

The brainchild of former Bulldogs Matt Stinchcomb, Jon Stinchcomb and David Greene, Countdown to Kickoff creates a special experience that brings together Georgia football alumni, cur-rent team members and fans, the proceeds of which all go towards Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and the Georgia Transplant Foundation.

“My brain could not conceive of something this successful so far. I borrowed brain space and neu-rons from these two clowns,” Matt Stinchcomb said on Monday. “This year at the fan festival, the emphasis is going to be on the 2002 SEC Championship team. The idea of it is going to be an anniversary of sorts, 10 seasons removed.”

The Kickoff’s fan festival, which runs from 12 pm to 3 pm on July 13 at the UGA football practice fields, allows Georgia fans to receive autographs, participate in drills and mingle with Georgia foot-ball legends of days past.

“It kind of breaks down a couple of barriers in a number of ways, and I think the fans appreciate the most that there are direct interactions with current players,” Jon Stinchcomb said. “It’s fun for us because there are guys we haven’t seen for 10 years that we’ve contacted from this ‘02 SEC Championship team that have said they’re coming.”

The list of players from the 2002 team invited to this year’s Countdown to Kickoff, though not yet confirmed, includes D.J. Shockley, Tony Taylor, Tony Gilbert and Martrez Milner.

Also returning will be the Celebrity-Dawg Classic, a golf tournament being held on July 12 at the University of Georgia Golf Course that pairs fans with a Georgia football player or coach. The golf outing has attained plenty of success in recent years, and 2013 has been no different.

“This is the second year in a row that the golf tournament has been sold out at least a month in advance,” Matt Stinchcomb said. “Through the par-

ticipation and support of this fan base, it will be over $1 million raised for these charities. To be able to say that, it’s something that everybody [is proud of].”

Both Greene and the Stinchcomb brothers spoke not only to the event’s success, but also to the unique interactions it provides for both the fans and players that participate.

“You get to see old players, you get to see old buddies and you’re raising money for a good cause,” Greene said. “It’s good the fans can actually see that these guys are real people. They’re more than just football players.”

“And a defensive lineman can throw a spiral,” Matt Stinchcomb added. “It’s amazing how athletic

some of these guys really are. It’s like they’re trying out for the coaches.”

Individual tickets for the fan festival are priced at $25, while four-ticket family packages are $75.

BY DRAKE NEWTONThe Red & Black

It may not be con-sidered among the nation’s “traditional” sports, but with its fast-paced blend of soccer, football, and cross-country, Ultimate Frisbee provides many high school athletes a chance to continue their athletic involve-ment in college without participating in a varsi-ty sport.

Georgia’s women’s Ultimate Frisbee team was one of the most successful club sports of last year, sweeping the southeast regional competition and earn-ing its first trip to nationals since 2006.

Lane Siedor, one of the team’s three cap-tains, spoke about the team’s incredible accomplishments this season.

“We’ve been a team with so many high level

athletes that just hadn’t quite made the cut for so many years. Now it was our turn to make it,” Siedor said

Many ultimate Frisbee players pick up the sport later in life, after they can no lon-ger compete at the highest level in other sports, but Siedor has been extremely pas-sionate about the game

since elementary school.

“I fell in love with the sport at an early age when my best friend and I could beat up on all the boys,” Siedor said.

While there are some players like Siedor that have loved the game since child-hood, many pick up the game in high school or

even college. The num-bers show that Frisbee has been growing in popularity steadily over the past decade, and membership in colle-giate teams is skyrock-eting.

Whether this “Frisbee state of mind” is achieved or inherit-ed, Siedor confirmed that Ultimate players are quite involved in the sport, and especial-ly at Georgia.

“If you’ve ever encountered a group of Frisbee players togeth-er at one time you’ve probably noticed that all they can do is talk about Frisbee,” Siedor said.

Whatever the rea-son behind Ultimate Frisbee’s rise to promi-nence on campuses across the country, it seems to be here to stay, and Dawgma con-tinues to welcome new players into its tight-knit community.

‘The Vault’ app brings Georgia football’s storied legacy to life

‘Countdown to Kickoff’ combines past, present of Bulldogs football

Dawgma a perfect example of Frisbee’s culture

Former Bulldogs Matt Stinchcomb (left), David Greene (center) and Jon Stinchcomb (right) were essential in the creation of Countdown to Kickoff, which caters to fans while also serving a good cause. ERIN O. SmITH/Staff

Dawgma, captained by Lane Siedor, earned its first nationals berth since 2006. Courtesy Lane Siedor

Page 16: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

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16 Variety Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

THURSDAY, JUNE 27

Write Club #3When: 7 to 8 p.m.Where: The World Fa-mousPrice: $10Contact: theworldfa-mousathens.com

Jim CookWhen: 6 p.m.Where: DePalma’s Ital-ian CafePrice: FreeContact: depalmasi-taliancafe.com/timothy

The Segar Jazz AffairWhen: 7 p.m.Where: The Omega BarPrice: Free ($5 after 9 p.m.)Contact: theomegabar.com

Universal SighWhen: 11 p.m.Where: Georgia Theatre RooftopPrice: FreeContact: georgatheatre.com

Kyshona ArmstrongWhen: 5 p.m.Where: Hotel IndigoPrice: FreeContact: indigoathens.com

Don Chambers, Bleed StoneWhen: 9:30 p.m.Where: Caledonia LoungePrice: $5 (21+) to $7

(18-20)Contact: caledo-nialounge.com

Tre PowellWhen: 5:30 p.m.Where: Terrapin Beer Co.Price: FreeContact: terrapinbeer.com

Photo Ops, Foe DestroyerWhen: 9 p.m.Where: The World Fa-mousPrice: $5Contact: theworldfa-mousathens.com

The Strays, Decent Lovers, DJ MahagonyWhen: 9 p.m.Where: Flicker Theatre & BarPrice: FreeContact: flickertheatre-andbar.com

Danny Hutchens, Bryan Howard, Kathy Kirbo, Claire & Paige CampbellWhen: 7:30 p.m.Where: The Melting PointPrice: FreeContact: meltingpointa-thens.com

Evan Barber & The Dead GamblersWhen: 10 p.m.Where: Nowhere BarPrice: FreeContact: facebook.com/

nowherebarathens

I Am God, Visc., New WivesWhen: 11 p.m.Where: Farm 255Price: FreeContact: farm255.com

Leaving Countries, Station 42When: 10 p.m.Where: Boar’s HeadPrice: FreeContact: facebook.com/The-Boars-Head-Downtown

FRIDAY, JUNE 28

God Of CarnageWhen: 2 p.m.Where: Athens Commu-nity TheatrePrice: $5Contact: townandgown-players.org

LaughlinWhen: 8 p.m.Where: Butt Hutt Bar-B-Q Price: FreeContact: butthuttbar-becue.com

Funk You, Lazy Locomotive, The Kinky AphrodisiacsWhen: 9 p.m.Where: Georgia TheatrePrice: $7Contact: georgiathe-atre.com

Tealvox, Stone KidsWhen: 9 p.m.Where: 40 Watt ClubPrice: $5Contact: 40watt.com

Lefty HathawayWhen: 9 p.m.Where: Green RoomPrice: FreeContact: greenrooma-thens.com

Rick Fowler Band, Bev-erly “Guitar” WatsonWhen: 8 p.m.Where: The Melting PointPrice: $8Contact: meltingpointa-thens.com

Crazy Hoarse, RevienWhen: 9 p.m.Where: The World Fa-mousPrice: $5Contact: theworldfa-mousathens.com

The Owsley Broth-ers, Shitty Candy, Los MeesfitsWhen: 10 p.m.Where: MaxPrice: FreeContact: facebook.com/TheMaxCanada

Night & Day, Avery & ThomasWhen: 9:30 p.m.Where: Caledonia LoungePrice: $5 (21+) to $7 (18-20)Contact: caledo-nialounge.com

The Cryptides, Black Moon, Killer ClueWhen: 9 p.m.Where: Flicker Theatre & BarPrice: FreeContact: flickertheatre-andbar.com

The LootersWhen: 10 p.m.Where: Nowhere BarPrice: FreeContact: facebook.com/nowherebarathens

Rebecca Jones, Mans Trash, U*S*AWhen: 11 p.m.Where: Farm 255Price: Free

Contact: farm255.com

SATURDAY JUNE 29

Burlesque BetaWhen: 10 p.m.Where: Go BarPrice: $3Contact: facebook.com/Go-Bar

God Of CarnageWhen: 2 p.m.Where: Athens Commu-nity TheatrePrice: $5Contact: townandgown-players.org

Abbey Road LiveWhen: 3:30 p.m. & 8 p.m.Where: Georgia TheatrePrice: $8Contact: georgiathe-atre.com

Deja VuWhen: 8:30 p.m.Where: The Melting PointPrice: $10 (adv) to $13 (door)Contact: meltingpointa-thens.com

PrismaWhen: 10 p.m. Where: Green RoomPrice: FreeContact: greenrooma-thens.com

PPP Vs. BHC Variety ShowWhen: 11 p.m.Where: Farm 255 Price: FreeContact: farm255.com

Of The Vine, Family & FriendsWhen: 10 p.m.Where: Georgia Theatre RooftopPrice: FreeContact: georgiathe-atre.com

Showtime, The Swank, Crane, 3 & 20When: 9 p.m.Where: 40 Watt ClubPrice: $5Contact: 40watt.com

Savagist, Colossus, For The VultureWhen: 10 p.m.Where: Caledonia LoungePrice: $5 (21+) to $7 (18-20)Contact: caledo-nialounge.com

Zigtebra, Ukelele Menace, Katie PruittWhen: 9 p.m.Where: Flicker Theatre & BarPrice: FreeContact: 9 p.m.

Bad Tempered RabbitWhen: 10 p.m.Where: Nowhere BarPrice: FreeContact: facebook.com/nowherebarathens

Pure Sun Project, Isaac Bramblett BandWhen: 10 p.m. Where: Little Kings Shuffle ClubPrice: $5Contact: facebook.com/lkshuffleclub

SUNDAY JUNE 30

Big Dogs on the River w/ Shonna Tucker & Eye CandyWhen: 12 to 8 p.m.Where: Oconee RiverPrice: $10 to $25Contact: altamahariver-keeper.org

Classic City BandWhen: 3 to 4 p.m.Where: State Botanical Garden

Price: FreeContact: classiccity-band.org

God Of CarnageWhen: 2 p.m.Where: Athens Commu-nity TheatrePrice: $5Contact: townandgown-players.org

MONDAY JULY 1

Drinking Liberally; Beer & PoliticsWhen: 7 p.m.Where: The GlobePrice: FreeContact: facebook.com/groups/athensdl

Blues Night With Big CWhen: 10 p.m.Where: Nowhere BarPrice: FreeContact: facebook.com/nowherearathens

Kenosha KidWhen: 8 p.m.Where: The World Fa-mousPrice: FreeContact: theworldfa-mousathens.com

Kater Mass, Todd Kill-ings Jr., Wade BoggsWhen: 10 p.m.Where: MaxPrice: $3Contact: facebook.com/TheMaxCanada

TriviaWhen: 8 p.m. Where: Highwire LoungePrice: FreeContact: highwire-lounge.com

TUESDAY JULY 2

OpenTOAD Comedy Open MicWhen: 9 p.m.Where: Flicker Theatre & BarPrice: $5Contact: flickerthatre-andbar.com

Josh Ritter & The Royal City BandWhen: 8 p.m.Where: The Melting PointPrice: $22Contact: meltingpointa-thens.com

Chief RockaWhen: 9 p.m.Where: New Earth Mu-sic HallPrice: FreeContact: newearthmusi-chall.com

Tuesday Night Confessional When: 9 p.m.Where: Nowhere BarPrice: FreeContact: facebook.com/nowherebarathens

Sacred Teachers, Cottonmouth, k i d s, Christ, LordWhen: 10 p.m.Where: MaxPrice: FreeContact: facebook.com/TheMaxCanada

WEDNESDAY JULY 3

The Athens Cowboy Choir, The Darnell Boys, The Shoal Creek Stranglers, Art Rosen-baum, The Orange Twin Family Band, Old Time Pickin CircleWhen: 5 to 11 p.m.Where: Orange Twin Conservation Commu-nityPrice: $10Contact: orangetwin.com

Beer AcademyWhen: 7 p.m.Where: Trappeze PubPrice: FreeContact: trappezepub.com

Georgia Museum of Art: Tour at TwoWhen: 2 p.m.Where: Georgia Mu-seum of ArtPrice: FreeContact: georgiamuseu-mofart.org

Speaking PagesWhen: 6:30 to 7:0 p.m.Where: Avid BookshopPrice: FreeContact: avidbookshop.com

Canine Cocktail HourWhen: 5 to 7 p.m.Where: Madison Bar & BistroPrice: FreeContact: indigoathens.com

SALSAthensWhen: 6:30 to 7:30 p.mWhere: Little Kings Shuffle ClubPrice: $8Contact: facbook.com/SalsaAthens

Dwayne Holloway & FriendsWhen: 10 p.m.Where: Nowhere BarPrice: FreeContact: facebook.com/nowherebarathens

Faster Circuits, Hot FudgeWhen: 9 p.m.Where: Flicker Theatre & BarPrice: $3Contact: flickertheatre-andbar.com

Rooftop RondezvousWhen: 8 p.m.Where: Georgia Theatre RooftopPrice: $30Contact: georgiathe-atre.com

Events

See parents battle over preschool in God of Carnage Courtesy of Town and Gown Players

Page 17: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

17 Views Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

“Fast Turn Around”10% off for students with valid ID

3690 Atlanta Highway • #110 • Athens, GA 30606 • 706.247.8877 | TechShopAthens.comBetter Business Bureau Accredited

378 E. Broad St. Athens, GA 706.548.2700 make smart choices about alcohol. be a

uhs.uga.edu/aod/NCAAchoices.html

Drink and Dining GUIDE Your weekly guide to Athens’ daily deals.

Thursday FrIday saTurday suNday MONday TuEsday WEdNEsday

HAPPY HOUR 5 to 10 p.m.$1 off of everything,

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Where: 256 E. Clayton St.Phone: (706) 549-0166Website:www.allgoodlounge.com

$6 Frozen drinks,$13 House wine bottles $3 Well drinks & shots

$5 Pitchers Coors/High Life

$3 Wells

$5 Pitchers Coors/High Life

$3 Wells

$5 Pitchers Coors/High Life

HAPPY HOUR$1 Pints of High Life

all day

8pm - Trivia$7 Domestic pitchers,

$1 High Life pints

Where: 320 E. Clayton Suite 201Phone: (706) 613-0892Website:mellowmushroom.com

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but on a HUGE want ? bUdgetT E E N Y

Over 300 itemsChinese Japanese and

American/Sushi, Ribeye,and Seafood

Over 300 itemsincluding crab legs

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Chinese Japanese andAmerican/Sushi, Ribeye,

and Seafood

Over 300 itemsincluding crab legs

Chinese Japanese andAmerican/Sushi, Ribeye,

and Seafood

Over 300 itemsChinese Japanese and

American/Sushi, Ribeye,and Seafood

Over 300 itemsChinese Japanese and

American/Sushi, Ribeye,and Seafood

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American/Sushi, Ribeye,and Seafood

Where: 3567 Atlanta HwyPhone: (706) 316-3382Website:www.athenschinastar.com

Mommas Love, Nachosor Soup, and Drink $7.99

Chicken Salad MeltChips & Drink $5.99

Kids eat free(with purchase of an

adult meal)

10% off entire orderw/church bulletin

Grilled Chicken Saladand Drink $6.99 $1 off Momma’s Nachos

Turkey Delite ComboWith Chips and Drink

$5.99

Where: 245 N. Lumpkin St.Phone: (706) 543-5195Website: mommagoldbergsdeli.com/

athens/

Loose-leaf tea 16 oz.- $2.85

Cubano Con Leche withcinnamon & sugar 12 oz.

- $4.45

Real-Fruit Smoothies- $4.25

Italian Soda with cream- $2.65

Personal French Press 16oz- $2.95

Cappuccino 6 oz.- $3.15

Frozen Latte Ghiaccio- $4.45

Where: 1680 S. Lumpkin St.Phone: (706) 850-5422Website: www.twostorycoffeehouse.com

Terrapin pints $2 1/2 doz wings + domestic pitcher $10

1/2 doz wings + domestic pitcher $10 N/A Mini mega nachos + PBR

$10Frozen Margarita pints

$2.75Selected craft/import beers

$2Where: 247 E. Broad St.Phone: (706) 549-1446Website:www.thetacostand.com

The Japanese Sudoku puzzle relies on reasoning and logic. To solve it, fill in the grid so every row, every column and every 3 by 3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. Nothing needs to add up to anything else.

The Japanese Sudoku puzzle relies on reasoning and logic. To solve it, fill in the grid so every row, every column and every 3 by 3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. Nothing needs to add up to anything else.

Difficulty: 10 Difficulty: 10

7 1 3 6 8 4 9 2 58 9 2 5 7 3 4 1 64 5 6 9 1 2 3 7 85 4 8 7 2 6 1 3 96 7 9 8 3 1 2 5 42 3 1 4 5 9 6 8 79 2 7 1 4 8 5 6 31 8 4 3 6 5 7 9 23 6 5 2 9 7 8 4 1

Di� culty level: 10

7 1 3 6 8 4 9 2 58 9 2 5 7 3 4 1 64 5 6 9 1 2 3 7 85 4 8 7 2 6 1 3 96 7 9 8 3 1 2 5 42 3 1 4 5 9 6 8 79 2 7 1 4 8 5 6 31 8 4 3 6 5 7 9 23 6 5 2 9 7 8 4 1

2 4 1 9 8 3 5 6 79 3 6 4 5 7 8 1 27 8 5 6 1 2 9 3 41 6 8 7 3 4 2 5 93 5 7 8 2 9 1 4 64 9 2 5 6 1 3 7 85 2 9 1 7 6 4 8 38 7 3 2 4 5 6 9 16 1 4 3 9 8 7 2 5

Di� culty level: 10

2 4 1 9 8 3 5 6 79 3 6 4 5 7 8 1 27 8 5 6 1 2 9 3 41 6 8 7 3 4 2 5 93 5 7 8 2 9 1 4 64 9 2 5 6 1 3 7 85 2 9 1 7 6 4 8 38 7 3 2 4 5 6 9 16 1 4 3 9 8 7 2 5

The Japanese Sudoku puzzle relies on reasoning and logic. To solve it, fill in the grid so every row, every column and every 3 by 3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. Nothing needs to add up to anything else.

The Japanese Sudoku puzzle relies on reasoning and logic. To solve it, fill in the grid so every row, every column and every 3 by 3 box contains the digits 1 through 9. Nothing needs to add up to anything else.

Difficulty: 18 Difficulty: 18

3 7 1 4 8 9 5 6 28 9 4 2 6 5 7 1 32 5 6 7 1 3 4 8 94 8 3 5 7 2 6 9 19 1 2 6 4 8 3 7 55 6 7 3 9 1 8 2 46 2 5 1 3 7 9 4 81 4 9 8 5 6 2 3 77 3 8 9 2 4 1 5 6

Di� culty level: 18

3 7 1 4 8 9 5 6 28 9 4 2 6 5 7 1 32 5 6 7 1 3 4 8 94 8 3 5 7 2 6 9 19 1 2 6 4 8 3 7 55 6 7 3 9 1 8 2 46 2 5 1 3 7 9 4 81 4 9 8 5 6 2 3 77 3 8 9 2 4 1 5 6

8 9 5 6 1 3 7 2 46 1 2 8 4 7 3 5 93 7 4 9 2 5 6 8 12 8 6 7 3 4 9 1 54 3 7 1 5 9 2 6 81 5 9 2 6 8 4 7 35 6 8 3 9 2 1 4 79 4 1 5 7 6 8 3 27 2 3 4 8 1 5 9 6

Di� culty level: 18

8 9 5 6 1 3 7 2 46 1 2 8 4 7 3 5 93 7 4 9 2 5 6 8 12 8 6 7 3 4 9 1 54 3 7 1 5 9 2 6 81 5 9 2 6 8 4 7 35 6 8 3 9 2 1 4 79 4 1 5 7 6 8 3 27 2 3 4 8 1 5 9 6

Page 18: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

256 E. Clayton St • 706-549-0166 • Mon-Sat Noon-2AM

Sometimes too much to drink isn’t nearly enough.

STOP BY FOR ALL YOUR POOL

SIDE NEEDS!2545 Atlanta Highway • Athens • (706) 354-8707

Import Car DoCtors

1900 W. Broad Street (706) 353-6006

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Celebrating35 years

in Athens!

Are you Mild, Hot,

or Extra Hot?thetacostand.com | facebook.com/TheTStand

www.alumni.uga.edu/SAA1-800-606-8786SAA

You’ll find answers here...www.fcs.uga.edu112 Dawson Hall

706-542-4847

ACROSS 1 Penny 5 Donkeys 10 TV’s“__Trek” 14 Declareopenly 15 Colorofhalfthecheckers 16 Enormous 17 Evergreentree 18 Instrumentusedfor

“Taps” 19 Inthesack 20 Pullmancar 22 Havingnogoal 24 Attempt 25 Last 26 Backstreet 29 Golfingterm 30 Australianmarsupial 34 Tush 35 Thatwoman 36 Gems 37 AswanorHoover 38 Rattlinggourds

40 Rodent 41 Largefish-eatinghawk 43 Tooktheprize 44 Magazinetitle 45 Adjustanalarm 46 Madealap 47 Cutasheep’swool 48 Bash 50 Luaudish 51 Schoolbeeparticipant 54 Socked 58 Germancar 59 Fencingsword 61 ActressBallard 62 Frenchgirlfriend 63 Bleacherlevels 64 __though;albeit 65 Cavedwellers 66 Asporadder 67 Examination

DOWN 1 Berets&tams 2 Wicked 3 Zero 4 Smallloudspeaker 5 Monastery 6 Insultingremark 7 Droop 8 Fancydessert 9 Coilofyarn 10 Superficial;lackingdepth 11 Test__;tinybottleina

lab 12 Growsgray 13 Communists 21 Benosy 23 Creates 25 Inthedistance 26 Zeal 27 Contractwithalandlord 28 Sourcesoflight 29 __person;apiece

31 Eagle’snest 32 Camel’ssmallercousin 33 Fallflower 35 Barndinner 36 Wintermonth:abbr. 38 Ironortin 39 Rollawaybed 42 Answers 44 Densegrowthof

shrubbery 46 Overexert 47 Malechild 49 Takesanap 50 Handbag 51 Swedishauto 52 Wildfeline 53 Correctatext 54 __up;becomecheery

again 55 Possess 56 Facialfeatures 57 Fenderbendermemento 60 ActressArthur

p u z z l e s1

ACROSS 1 Smallnumber 4 Walkedthefloor 9 Nylons 13 Gambles 15 Superiorto 16 ManinEden 17 Poisonivysymptom 18 Jotsdown 19 Acceptedstandard 20 Mostcheaplyconstructed 22 Colorofsteel 23 Smalllabbottle 24 ActressLupino 26 Bitsofparsley 29 Worship 34 Take__;putfortheffort 35 Wherecirrhosisstrikes 36 Hightailedit 37 Ladderstep 38 2-footedanimal 39 Flashoflightning

40 Pompousfool 41 Hightemperature 42 Legbone 43 Adolescent 45 Nauseated 46 Gowrong 47 Hurry 48 Usesastraw 51 Nonstop 56 Borderon 57 YankeeJeter 58 Biden,forshort 60 Smallbrook 61 Tomb 62 Pitcher 63 __ofCapri 64 Lawnbordertrimming

tool 65 Wildblueyonder

DOWN 1 Japanesesash 2 Equipmentfortrawling 3 Engrave 4 Black-and-whitebears 5 Bubblingawayonthe

stove 6 Pigeoncoop 7 Arden&Plumb 8 Fated 9 Airplaneshelter 10 Reasontobathe 11 ActressMia__ 12 TVshowaward 14 Pushing 21 Delves 25 Germanarticle 26 “Jack__couldeatno

fat...” 27 DVDremotebutton 28 Dishwashercycle 29 Deadlyserpent 30 Hardly__;seldom 31 Fragrance

32 Ankle 33 Doorway 35 Nottaped 38 Resent;view

disapprovingly 39 Colonyforbuzzinginsects 41 __away;inthedistance 42 Complain 44 Getcomfy 45 MemberoftheFriends

Church 47 LateactorChristopher__ 48 Indiangarment 49 Wadingbird 50 Yank 52 Intellectual 53 Ruggedpeak 54 Latestinfo 55 Computertech,perhaps 59 Useacrowbar

FRIDAY CROSSWORD - ANSWER ONLINE JUNE 28

THURSDAY CROSSWORD - ANSWER ONLINE JUNE 27

SATURDAY CROSSWORD - ANSWER ONLINE JUNE 29

ACROSS 1 __-Cola 5 Blacksuit 10 Babybuggy 14 Difficult 15 Eagle’snest 16 Gossipcolumnist__

Barrett 17 Cincinnati,__ 18 Dollwithhairmadeof

yarn 20 __upwith;tolerate 21 AutryorWilder 22 Hosedown 23 Tinybitsofland 25 Bevictorious 26 Fungalgrowth 28 Tarry 31 Chilidogtopper,often 32 Sealtokeepwaterout 34 Encountered 36 Shapingtool 37 Spinrapidly 38 ActressDelany

39 Passaway 40 Pictureborder 41 ErieorPanama 42 Venerated 44 Roundshape 45 Refusetoallow 46 SingerPage 47 Faint 50 Guineapig’shome 51 Playonwords 54 Earlyantibiotic 57 Dad 58 Cerealgrains 59 Sierra__;Africannation 60 Perchedupon 61 Horse’sgait 62 Cat,toatoddler 63 Camera’seye

DOWN 1 Useanax 2 Hawaiianisland 3 Foundfaultwith 4 Hubbub 5 Lurchsideways 6 Istilted 7 Encourage 8 Large 9 Lookat 10 Askingnosyquestions 11 Reddishhorse 12 Jillian&Curry 13 Lion’sneckhair 19 Beverage 21 Secludedvalley 24 Pumporloafer 25 “Time__tell” 26 Washingmachinetubful 27 NewDelhi,__ 28 Entice;draw 29 Setfree 30 Ofthekidneys

32 ActorEverett 33 Goal 35 Story 37 Songbird 38 Movequickly 40 France’sdollarbefore

theeuro 41 Giveatrafficticketto 43 Woodwindplayer 44 TV’s“__&Lacey” 46 Applyacoatofcolorto

awall 47 Blemish 48 __out;become

dilapidated 49 Climb__;mount 50 Blood__;causeofa

stroke,often 52 Come__;find 53 Restsinthedaytime 55 Type;variety 56 Luaugarland 57 Chum

MONDAY CROSSWORD - ANSWER ONLINE JULY 1

ACROSS 1 Banana__;icecream

treat 6 Diminishes 10 Pigeoncoop 14 Sierra__;Africannation 15 __asapin 16 Finished;done 17 ActorJeremy 18 Winddirectionindicator 19 Shakespeare’s“King__” 20 Change;genealteration 22 “Nowthat’s__ofa

differentcolor!” 24 Verysmall 25 Useddynamite 26 __of;missing 29 Desertrefuge 30 “__Maria” 31 Hollers 33 Shirtnecktag

37 Lager 39 Sourceofnewsformany 41 Oldstringedinstrument 42 Lopsided;awry 44 __B.DeMille 46 Kindofcan 47 __up;makehappyagain 49 Historicaltale 51 Choices 54 Barkingmarinemammal 55 Materialbetweenbricks 56 Goeson;lasts 60 Vicinity 61 Capable 63 Boise’sstate 64 Makewell 65 Tenth-grader’smath

class,often:abbr. 66 “Underno

circumstances!” 67 __up;tallies

68 Finishes 69 Sayhelloto

DOWN 1 Thin;slender 2 Lima’snation 3 Pillage 4 Natural;inborn 5 Declareunderoath 6 Officialambassador 7 Three-__salad 8 Prohibit 9 Takesillegally 10 Enormous 11 Plaintosee 12 Joshwith 13 Goofed 21 Bury 23 Icyformofprecipitation 25 Fundamental 26 “Ali__andtheForty

Thieves” 27 Nightsbefore 28 Smellstrongly

29 Lessyouthful 32 Addsboozetothepunch 34 Computermemoryunit 35 ActressMoran 36 Giveforatime 38 Pianostudents’

presentations 40 Refuelingship 43 Commandtoarunning

horse 45 Renting 48 Infuriate 50 Silentplane 51 Nebraskacity 52 __over;readcarefully 53 __on;trample 54 Appears 56 Trudge 57 Keepforlater 58 You,biblically 59 Putinorder 62 ActorAffleck

18 Puzzles Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

Page 19: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

Puzzled by your current housing situation?Landmark has the soLution!CaLL 706.395.1400 for more info!

Save BIG Moneyon New & Used Textbooks

Top of Baxter Hill across from Cane’s • ocbs.com

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register a team • 5 questions every week submit answers online • win cool prizes!

*Questions(Hint check out Red & Black publications)

1. Which two restaurants in Athens are closing? - 5PTS

2. Which UGA horticulture professor is retiring? - 3PTS

3. How many years has the HOPE scholarship been active? - 3PTS

TOP TEAMS

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How to Enter: 1. Register a team 2. Submit answers online by Wednesday at 12 noon. 3. PLAY EACH WEEK AND WIN BIG!!

4. Which video game system is mentioned in this week’s paper? - 3PTS

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Student Organizations:check back next week!

Student Team Scores:check back next week!

AthensLivingUGA presents

11767

Call 706.433.3001 to find out how.

Two words meaning great advertising

P U

S P O N S O R

Z Z L E

p u z z l e s1

ACROSS 1 Burst 4 Shovel 9 Seaweed 13 Fillswithwonder 15 Warsawnatives 16 Zone 17 Jump 18 Valuableitem 19 Orangepeel 20 Pharmacy 22 Loose__;unfinished

business 23 Curvededges 24 Femalesheep 26 Growls 29 Handcrafted 34 Canwrapper 35 Yearned 36 Cry 37 Passionate 38 Rescued 39 Givethecoldshoulder

to 40 Rotten 41 Secretagents 42 Honkingbirds 43 Slumberers 45 Laughedloudly 46 PCalternative 47 Smallbrook 48 Messyperson 51 Abouttooccur 56 Swimmingspot 57 Injures 58 Orderly 60 Toolwithacurvedblade 61 PyleorEls 62 Violentwind 63 __with;befullof 64 Homesinthetrees 65 __away;fled

DOWN 1 Buddy 2 Wasindebtedto 3 BoscorBartlett 4 Charleyhorses 5 PutsonTwitter 6 Additionally 7 Gracefulforestanimal 8 Highlyrespected 9 __Abdul-Jabbar 10 GrayorMoran 11 Givetoaborrower 12 Cushions 14 __on;incited 21 Fish’sbreathingorgan 25 Marry 26 Thickslices 27 USNA;UnitedStates

__Academy 28 Tolerate 29 Beecolonies 30 Singles 31 ActorEdward__

32 Throwwateron 33 Lessened 35 Couple 38 Samplesetasidefor

testing 39 Makingairtight 41 Mineralspring 42 Weddingringmaterial 44 Symbol;badge 45 Hosesdown 47 Sendinpayment 48 Quarrel 49 Mother__;richore

deposit 50 Seepout 52 Femalehorse 53 Bowler’stargets 54 Withinwalkingdistance 55 Festiveevent 59 Billdenomination

WEDNESDAY CROSSWORD - ANSWER ONLINE JULY 3

Rates(0-24 words)

Private Party..................................$10.00Housing..........................................$23.00Help wanted..................................$23.00Business..........................................$21.00

FREE ADSFor University Community Only

(Private Party Merchandise, Under $101) (0-15 words)

3 Consecutive Days..................................................FREE(Merchandise must be priced. One item per hsld per week.

Ads must be received from UGA e-mail address only. No walk-ins or standard mail accepted.)

CLASSIFICATIONS10. Roommates 20. Housing 25. Subleases30. For Sale 35. Computers 40. Wanted45. Seeking Job 50. Auto 60. Services75. Tickets 80. Employment 85. Travel90. Yard Sales 95. Events 100. Notices110. Personal 120. Lost & Found

[email protected]

www.redandblack.com/classifieds/

Classifieds Information

ClassIfIeds dIsClaImer

The red & Black does not verify, investigate, or endorse any classified ad. Readers are urged to use caution when responding to an ad.

ACROSS 1 Caveman’smallet 5 Hugefellow 10 Wiseman 14 Socks&nylons 15 Beneath 16 Followorders 17 Eras 18 Mr.Agassi 19 Sandmound 20 Baggagehandlers 22 Leftempty,asaroom 24 Irate 25 Rise 26 __AllanPoe 29 Yrbk.section 30 “All__leadtoRome” 34 Wrought__;fence

material 35 Lettersbeforeanalias 36 Revoke,asalaw 37 Waterbarrier 38 Mount__;highest

peakinGreece

40 Regret 41 Comeforth 43 Unrulycrowd 44 Femalereddeer 45 Moreunusual 46 Mom’smate 47 Countscalories 48 Postpone 50 Wheelcenter 51 Deepred 54 Yellowfruits 58 Inthisplace 59 Equestrian 61 Relinquish 62 ActressChase 63 Treatsroughly 64 Fogginess 65 Closedsac 66 Laziness 67 Datingcouplegossiped

about

DOWN 1 Fellow 2 Companysymbol 3 Drugaddict 4 Memberofthe

weddingparty 5 Watchman 6 Hostels 7 Alsosay 8 Bundleof__;anxious

person 9 “Trickor__!” 10 Softdrink 11 Lierightnextto 12 ActorHackman 13 Observed 21 Hearingorgan 23 Makeswell 25 Rulesforlanguageuse 26 Seaduckwithsoftdown 27 Theatricalplay 28 __Pyle;roleforJim

Nabors

29 Heavenabove 31 Eagle’snest 32 Discourage 33 Toboggans 35 Puborder 36 Massage 38 Villains 39 Peacasing 42 Beeforvenison 44 Smallbarbecue 46 In__;refusingtoface

reality 47 Finalbill 49 Shapes 50 Severe;rough 51 Stylish 52 __on;placeone’s

trustin 53 Irritates 54 Waistaccessory 55 Shipshape 56 Shapingtool 57 Appear 60 Singingcouple

TUESDAY CROSSWORD - ANSWER ONLINE JULY 2

aUTO 2000 ford Taurus 4D Sedan

SES, maroon, 179K mi., auto-matic 3.0L V6 engine, power locks/windows/seats/mirrors, AM/FM stereo, cassette player (with iPhone/iPod adapter), multi-disc CD, A/C. $2,400 obo. E-mail: [email protected]

emplOymenTI have 8 years experience in

F&B and I'm a fully trained server & bartender. I also have restau-rant management experience. I am friendly, outgoing, and hardworking. 706-877-2437

HOUsIng $350 month, $400 month,

each side is ½ house, furnished! Private BR, Office, Bath. Share Kitchen, LR, DR, Laundry. 7 miles/15 minutes UGA 404-217-8266

Brick duplex 2 Bed/1 Bath $500/Month. 2 Miles North of Downtown, just off the loop. Stove, refrigerator, dishwasher, washer/dryer connections. Pets OK. Call 7062476444.

Condominium 2 Br/1.5 Ba. Two miles from UGA Arch, on bus route. Pool/reserved park-ing. None smokers. Available AUG 1. $750/mo 770-962-4608

new 4Br/4Ba house for rent on Oconee St. HW floors, stain-less appliances, W/D, security system, surround sound. $1800/mo. (706)540-6482.

renovated 2/1 duplex. 10 min to campus. $500 total. Pets ok. racproperties.com 706-308-4444.

speCIal! greaT 4Br 4BA house. 1/2 mi. from campus. Front porch, back deck, nice yd., DW, W/D, CHAC. All Electric. Pets OK, no pet fee. Avail. 8/1. $990/mo. 706-338-9173.

rOOmmaTes looking for 2 roommates

to share a 3 bedroom/3bath townhome at The Summit of Athens. Complex is just 2 miles to downtown & campus. $335/room, +equal share of utilities. Non-smokers

share with a male Grad stu-dent, nice 2bdrm townhome in Appleby Mews, less than a mile from campus and downtown. $375/mo. www.AthensApt.com 678-887-4599

sUBleases female sUBleaser needed-

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rOOm fOr renT AT THE WOODLANDS OF ATHENS!Gated neighborhood, 4 bed-room house, 3 roommates, look-ing to sublease 1 room. Spacious bedroom with private bath, located directly across from clubhouse and pools. Will cover first month’s rent ($500/month). Contact: (912) 531-6923

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looking for that PERFECT ROOMMATE?? What better way to find them than in the RED & BLACK roommates Section. Bringing roommates together for 110 years.

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19 Puzzles Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

Page 20: June 27, 2013 edition of the Red & Black

3690 Atlanta Highway #110706.247.8877

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20 Sports Thursday, June 27, 2013 The Red and Black

STATS2011-2012

31 Games started 32

32 Games played 32

422 Total points 591

13.2 Points per game 18.5

11 Blocks 17

58 Steals 65

45 Offensive rebounds 37

121 Defensive rebounds 189

5.2 Rebounds per game 7.1

39 Assists 58

39.6% Field goal percentage 43.3%

30.4% 3 point shot percentage 37.3%

65.4% Free throw percentage 79.9%

2012-2013

Caldwell-Pope played well as a freshman, scoring the second-most points for UGA. TAylOR CRAiG SuTTOn/Staff

As a sophomore, KCP's performance was enough to earn SEC Player of the Year. TAylOR CRAiG SuTTOn/Staff

➤ From Page 1

“Size, shooting and athletic abili-ty. He has all three of those things, so you got to figure he’ll be at least a decent NBA player on that alone,” said Jonathan Tjarks, NBA Draft guru for SB Nation. “It’s kind of hard to tell [how he adjusts to the NBA] given what he was doing in college, because he’s had so little help around him. I thought he really did a decent job of not forcing the shot too much at Georgia.”

Even when considering the con-cerns teams may have about Caldwell-Pope’s shot selection or the

mental aspect of his game on defense, Tjarks believes he should still be a mid-first-round pick.

“I would say after the first seven or eight guys, there’s a huge range of possible spots,” Tjarks said. “He could go as high as probably No. 9 to Minnesota or No. 10 to Portland. Those are both spots he could go. If he doesn’t go there, he could fall down to maybe No. 20 with Chicago. I would guess his range is about nine to 20.”

With all of his physical tools, Caldwell-Pope’s success might have seemed like a foregone conclusion, but his head coach spoke to a differ-

ent side of his star player that emerged last season.

It was a tougher, more mature Caldwell-Pope that saw the changes he needed to make. Soon, he began rebounding more and playing better defense than he ever did as a fresh-man.

“I think that [you have] to give Kentavious the credit he deserves. He was the hardest worker on our team,” Fox said. “We started the year slow last year largely due to the fact that he wasn’t playing as well. He was very willing to look himself in the mirror, become a much more efficient player the second half of the season and

continue to improve and grow.”With professional basketball call-

ing, Caldwell-Pope will begin putting his college days in the rear-view mir-ror. His legacy still lives on, however, and the story of his success as a Bulldog can only serve to help Fox in his quest to recruit the state and build Georgia’s basketball program.

“It shows that at Georgia your dreams can come true,” Fox said. “It is something that we use to our advantage in recruiting because every young guy has the dream of going to play at the next level, and you have to be able to prove that you can help players do that.”

KCP: Former UGA hoops star has size, shooting ability NBA teams covet in first round