Horoscopes by Drunk Editors December 2013

Sagittarius (Nov. 22 – Dec. 21): Answer your emails.

Capricorn (Dec. 22 – Jan. 19): When things start to get dangerous, do not let anything get to you.

Aquarius (Jan. 20 – Feb. 18): Let your spirit run free and dance on your way to class. Dance like there is no one watching.

Pisces (Feb. 19 – March 20): Sometimes you slip up at something you did not see coming. Do not let that get you down.

Aries (March 21 – April 19): People are like aglets. You never know how useful they are until they are gone.

Taurus (April 20 – May 20): Stop putting off that last item on your to-do list.

Gemini (May 21 – June 20): It takes a lot of guts to get up and work without a plan. You know how to do more than you think you can do.

Cancer (June 21 – July 22): Tradition might be warm and fluffy. But truth is, it can be easily seen as outdated.

Leo (July 23 – Aug. 22): It is going to get cold.

Virgo (Aug. 23 – Sept. 22): Be honest, be clear, and take time to yourself.

Libra (Sept. 23 – Oct. 22): Check in on your family more often! They (probably) love you.

Scorpio (Oct. 23 – Nov. 21): Do not let other people lead you around in life. Make your own choices.

Being a Great Teammate

This month, Frankly Speaking posed the question “What qualities or characteristics make someone a great teammate?” to the student body of Olin. The following are the responses we received.

Doing good work on time, accepting feedback, always making sure the team is on track and actively making sure the team meets deadlines, not showing up late for meetings, never assuming that someone else will do the work for you, being open to learning new things for the team but not to the extent that it holds back the team (so if it would hold back the team, you learn it on your own time, not during meetings). – Anonymous

Be communicative and responsive. Let me know how your work is going, if there are any setbacks, if you need more time, if things are done, etc. Don’t leave your teammates in the dark until your meeting – it kills meeting productivity when no one knows what to expect. – Brett Rowley

Honesty about what they will and won’t be able to do. Clear communication. Showing up to meetings and to class, and staying on topic during meeting. Calm under pressure, and a focus on fixing the problem rather than casting blame when things don’t work. Caring about the project. – Anonymous

Someone who is patient and diligent. – Anonymous

The ability to listen. The concept of “ideating” is huge at Olin – but in the process of generating ideas, it’s very easy to drown out quieter team-members and to shut down a weird or wacky concept. A successful team that has everyone invested precedes a successful project. We need to remember to foster serious listeners as well as visionaries. – Liani Lye

Not wanting to meet except when actually necessary or helpful.
Doing tasks that are helpful.
Doing the tasks quietly and not asking for things in return.
Gives feedback in a considerate way, but still gives it.
Doesn’t judge.
Listens.
Accepts they can be wrong and that the team’s idea is most likely better than his or her own.
Likes the project.
Flexible.
Understands that scheduling should happen with consideration and with as much fore planning as possible.
Understands that people work best in different ways and helps people work in a way that works for both that person and the team. – Anonymous

Plans things early.
Reacts to difficulties with humor, not anger.
Expresses clearly the facets of a project that are interesting to that person, and enquire about their teammate’s preferences.
Clearly willing to put time and effort into the project – “cares about it.”
If they don’t care about it, express that early and still do an acceptable minimum amount of work.
Don’t waste meeting time, though a certain amount of having fun is acceptable. :) – Anonymous

Next month’s question: “Why do you choose to participate in the clubs and student

Under Utilized Resources

This month, Frankly Speaking posed the question “What is one resource available to Olin students that is massively under utilized?” to the student body of Olin.

IT Resources! Everything from stuweb (Olin-hosted webspace!), to the Cable TV in the dorms, to all the shares (like stufac or your network-wide private user folder. Check out \\fsvs01 sometime!). Judging by the amount of unclaimed print jobs I see daily, very few people do ‘secure printing’ on the Xeroxes. And see the software on Applications (ECEs, we have DipTrace!). Beyond all that, we have a fantastic network everywhere on campus with Gigabit, powered ethernet and a new, whole-campus wifi network. And the IT Helpdesk is open 8-6 on weekdays to help with almost any issue you may have. Check out it.olin.edu to see everything that you can do!
– Mitch Cieminski

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the one who moves

You are the one who moves
Who can’t sit still
There are too many tools to grab
Too many races to run
Too many sources of brilliance in this world
And you want to know them all
You want to feel the burn of your soul as it struggles to find new meaning
Its sinews stretching
Skin sweating
It will ache tomorrow
But grow back stronger

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Interview with the Foundary

In this email interview, Frankly Speaking asked Brett Rowley from the Foundry a few questions about the presence of the Foundry on campus and how students can get involved.

FRANKLY: What is the Foundry?

ROWLEY: The Foundry is Olin’s student-run entrepreneurship organization. It’s been around nearly as long as Olin, albeit in several different forms. “The Foundry” used to specifically refer to Edison House on Great Plains, which acted as an incubator and office space to student startups like Big Belly and the coffee guys. As it grew, it merged with another Olin entrepreneurship group and “the Foundry” became the name for both the building and the group. Now, since Edison house was re-appropriated for Marketing and External Relations office space, “the Foundry” largely refers to just the student group. We do have space in the Campus Center (on the 3rd floor, you’ll see our sign) that is available for students to use, but that space is not utilized as much as we’d like.

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