TECHNICIAN
DeSimone elected to all three U.S. National science academies Joseph DeSimone has recently been elected to the Institute of Medicine, marking the third U.S. National Academy that he has been elected to. Previously, DeSimone has been made a member of the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Sciences. In particular, the Institute of Medicine is regarded as being one of the top honors that a person in the health and medicine fields can receive. DeSimone now joins a total of fewer than 20 people who can claim election to all three of the U.S. National Academies. He is a distinguished professor of chemical and biomedical engineering at NC State as well as is chancellor’s eminent professor of chemistry at UNC-Chapel Hill. DeSimone has founded many companies, had over 300 publications and more than 180 patents. SOURCE: NC State Press Release
State Health Plan to cover employees’ spouses of same sex As of Oct. 10, North Carolina now allows same-sex marriages and also recognizes same-sex marriages that took place before this date as being legal. Same-sex spouses of NC State employees are now able to be covered under the State Health Plan and the NCFlex Program, according to Joe Williams, the director of benefits and programs for Human Resources at NC State, in an NC State press release. Employees have 30 days from Oct. 10 if they were already married and 30 days from the date of their marriage if they married after the date to enroll their same-sex spouses for coverage and benefits. Other research universities already offer benefits for samesex spouses, so the recognition of same-sex couples will now put NC State on a more equal footing with peer and competitor institutions in terms of attracting employees to the university, according to Williams in the press release. SOURCE: NC State Press Release
Jess Thomas Correspondent
HOMECOMING 2014 TECHNICIAN Bringing Back the Pack PHOTO COURTSY NCSU LIBRARY HISTORIC COOLLECTIONS
See insert.
The Women’s Center’s These Hands Don’t Hurt campaign ended Wednesday after raising awareness about domestic violence for nearly a month. This year’s campaign was the Women’s Center’s most expansive to date, as it included Centennial Campus and the College of Veterinary Medicine for the first time. These Hands Don’t Hurt is a na-
‘It’s a culture, not a costume’
M
BY SAM FELDSTEIN
onse Alvarez, a senior in religious studies , holds up a poster saying “It’s a culture, not a costume,” depicting a stereotypical Native American Halloween costume in the Brickyard Wednesday. Alvarez was dressed in an Aztec dancing outfit. The Aztec was a tribe indigenous to central Mexico, which is where Alvarez’s family is from. Alvarez was participating in an event hosted by the Multicultural Greek Council and the Union Activities Board which encouraged students to sign a pledge to end cultural appropriation by not wearing disrespectful Halloween costumes. “We need to think beyond Halloween and remember that our society encompasses different communities and cultures, especially as a higher-education institution,” Alvarez said. “I hope students realize the consequences of these actions.”
Balancing act
ATHLETE continued page 3
HANDS continued page 3
Correspondent
KAI MCNEIL/TECHNICIAN
Vanessa Bateson, a freshman in First Year College and a mid-distance runner on the Track & Field team, proofreads a report for her English class in Case Academic Center on Oct. 14.
Obviously, student-athletes are tasked with maintaining high grade-point averages and athletic prowess, but beyond that, student-athletes also face problems with relationships and career preparation, according to
Otis McGresham, assistant director for Interpersonal Violence Advocacy Services
Romo. Many athletes have problems differentiating between their real friends and those who are just attempting to be their friends be-
Harrison Allen In the midst of the academic scandal plaguing UNC-Chapel Hill and its athletic program, an NC State professor released a study finding that the lives of Division-I student-athletes are harder than many people think, and there is more at play than simply balancing school and sports. Lynsey Romo, an assistant professor of communication, authored the study, which examined how student-athletes deal with the uncertainty inherent in their positions. Uncertainty, as defined by the study, is how a given person reacts to unpredictable situations. “This study was done to look at the uncertainties that studentathletes face, and how they manage those uncertainties,” Romo said.
“The handprint is the person’s visible representation of the commitment to play their role in stopping domestic violence,”
tionwide campaign that takes place during the month of October, which is Domestic Violence Awareness Month. During the course of the month-long campaign, participants across the country and across NC State’s three campuses painted their handprints on tarps as a symbol of their pledge to end domestic violence. Otis McGresham, assistant director for Interpersonal Violence Advocacy Services, a part of the Women’s Center, helped start the campaign and said the program is meant to be a commitment against domestic violence. “The handprint is the person’s visible representation of the commitment to play their role in stopping domestic violence,” McGresham said. Though These Hands Don’t Hurt is not new to NC State and has been successful in the past, McGresham said the Women’s Center had more ambitious plans for the campaign this year, which is why the center expanded the program beyond main campus. “Although we got lots of positive feedback, we knew we were missing portions of campuses and other groups of students, so we decided to do the campaign on all three NC State-affiliated campuses during the month of October,” McGresham said.
NEW STUDY FINDS THAT STUDENT ATHLETES ARE JUGGLING MORE THAN SCHOOL AND SPORTS
Yates Mill Bakery now accepting online orders Harrison Allen Correspondent
insidetechnician
2014
These Hands Don’t Hurt campaign wraps up
IN BRIEF
Mo-Yuen Chow and Habiballah Rahimi-Eichi’s paper about “range anxiety” will be presented at the 40th annual Conference of IEEE Industrial Electronics Society. Chow and Rahimi-Eichi, from NC State’s advance diagnosis, automation and control lab, have developed what they consider to be an alternative to current but often inaccurate measurements of how long the battery of electric cars will last. A fear is that while driving, the electric car will lose power and turn off. Chow and Rahimi-Eichi detail a software in their paper that uses a “big data” approach that gathers more than just information on the driver’s recent behavior to make measurements. Their model allows the driver to enter the GPS coordinates of their destination and receive a measurement that takes into account factors such as weather, traffic and the condition of the roads. The system has the potential to be commercialized within two years, according to Rahimi-Eichi. SOURCE: IEEE Spectrum
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Raleigh, North Carolina
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NC State researchers present work on electric batteries
thursday october
Yates Mill Bakery in Talley Student Union is now accepting online orders for cakes and various other baked goods. Jennifer Gilmore, director of marketing and communication for Campus Enterprises, said the online ordering service started to help parents and family members send baked goods to students without having to cram cookies into envelopes or cakes into shipping crates. The bakery, which is based out of Talley Student Union, launched its online ordering service about two weeks ago and has since re-
ceived 15 orders. Anybody interested in ordering a cake or other baked goods from Yates Mill need not worry, according to Gilmore, because the process is fairly pain free. Simply go online, choose what you want to order, personalize it (if you would like) and pay. After the order is placed and completed, the recipient will receive an email notifying him or her that he or she has an order to pick up at Yates Mill Bakery. However, two things are required to complete any online order: a credit or debit card and time. Orders must be placed at least three days before the desired date of confectionary consummation. And if you’re planning to place an order using
dining dollars, don’t. Currently, students who would like to use the online ordering system would not be able to use dining dollars as a payment option, Gilmore said. In addition to cakes, those involved with the project through Campus Enterprises are looking to expand the goods the bakery offers through its online ordering service. Gilmore said she and her cohorts at Campus Enterprises are looking to add pies and other baked goods to the list of orderable goodies during the holidays. Gilmore also said Campus Enterprises might
Who: Why: When: You! A $30 donation allows To help us reach our goal of November 21, you to pack 100 meals for packing 50,000 meals for 6pm-Midnight children in need. children in need. What: go.ncsu.edu/servicencstatemeals Where: 9th Annual Meal Carmichael Gym Packaging Event
Service NC State
BAKERY continued page 3
News
TECHNICIAN POLICE BLOTTER October 28 4:57 A.M. | Suspicious Person Daniels Hall Report of suspicious subject in restroom. Officers responded but did not locate anyone. 8:17 A.M. | Suspicious Package Free Expression Tunnel Report of unattended box. It was determined box was empty. 9:22 A.M. | Medical Assist Early College High School Units responded and transported juvenile in need of medical assistance. 10:14 PM | Traffic Violation Dan Allen Dr/Thurman Dr Non-student was cited for seatbelt violation and possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia. Student was cited for being in possession of drug paraphernalia. 10:16 A.M. | Fire Alarm Waste Management FP responded to alarm caused by heated oven.
ATHLETES
continued from page 1
cause of their athlete status, Romo said. She also said the student-athletes who don’t expect to go pro in their respective sports find that they don’t have time for internships or career preparation during college due to hectic practice and game schedules. “It would be nice for student-athletes to be able to do internships to prepare them for a career outside of athletics,” Romo said. Unfortunately, however, Romo said this isn’t always the case at big universities, which she said need to help better prepare their athletes for careers after graduation by developing relationships with employers and provid-
BAKERY
continued from page 1
partner with the bookstore to make gift baskets with baked goods and items from the bookstore available to order online. However, these plans have not been finalized. Though the online ordering service has been around for less than a month, it’s already exciting some students. “I think that this service is a great idea because it’s a way for your parents to show you that they are thinking of you, which is important
4:53 P.M. | Suspicious Person Coliseum Deck Report of subject loitering. Officers checked area but did not locate anyone. 5:25 P.M. | Welfare Check Tucker Hall Officer conducted welfare check on student. It was determined student had been in vehicle accident which caused missed classes. 5:54 P.M. | Traffic Accident Dan Allen Deck Staff member and student were involved in traffic accident. 7:19 P.M. | Fire Alarm Avent Ferry Complex Units responded to alarm caused by fog machine. 8:01 P.M. | Traffic Violation Stinson Dr/Pullen Rd Non-student was cited for driving with revoked license and not having child in seat belt.
ing athletes with internships during the off season. “Universities need to give student-athletes more downtime away from their sport,” Romo said. Romo conducted her study by inter viewing 17 athletes from an undisclosed Division-I school in the southwestern United States. Though Romo said her study is not generalizable, Zachary Kuder, a freshman in business management and a member of the NC State football team, said he could relate to Romo’s findings. “My biggest cha llenge is time management and finding time to get all of my homework done and at the same time still go to practice,” Kuder said. Though Kuder said time management is a struggle, he
when you’re stressed out like many college students are,” said Hayley Derscheid, a senior in industrial engineering and psychology. The online ordering service is particularly exciting to students, such as Abigail Keller, a freshman in English, whose parents don’t live near Raleigh. “This service is a great idea because my parents live at least three hours away and aren’t able to send me things in the mail because it’s so expensive, so this is a cool way for them to send me things,” Keller said.
CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS
Send all clarifications and corrections to Editor-in-Chief Ravi K. Chittilla at technician-editor@ncsu.edu.
In Wednesday’s issue of the Technician, in the story “Students conduct discussions at Tuesday Talks,” we misidentified P.J. Adams, a staff psychologist with Student Health with Lee Mun Wah. Adams presented the video featuring Lee, but Lee was not in attendance. In Tuesday’s issue, we reported that OIT will be conducting maintenance on student websites such as MyPack Portal, Delta and VCL this Saturday. This was incorrect as it will be conducting its maintenance Nov.8-9. In Monday’s issue, in the story “Pack Poll finds Students think Talley is a voting site,” we incorrectly reported that most students living on campus will vote at the Brooks Ave. Church of Christ. This is incorrect as most students will vote at Freedom Temple Church. Students living at North Hall will vote at the Brooks Ave. location, and the only University Housing affiliated location that will not vote at Freedom is E.S. King, whose residents will vote at the Method Road Community Center. The story also incorrectly stated that Talley has been a early voting site for non-presidential elections in years past. The Talley Student Union last served as an early voting site during the 2012 election,
said the university helps student-athletes balance school and sports by making studyhall sessions mandatory to ensure athletes are getting their schoolwork done and not procrastinating. “If I’m struggling in a class, I get tutoring, and I have to
go to study hall,” Kuder said. However, Romo, who also concentrated on the different coping mechanisms that student-athletes use to deal with the challenges that they face, said study hall alone is not enough to put studentathletes’ uncertainties to
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 • PAGE 3
HANDS
continued from page 1
The goal of the campaign, as McGresham sees it, is to impart three things upon participants and onlookers. Each handprint represents a participant’s commitment not to commit acts of domestic violence, to educate the public about the issue and to intervene if he or she sees someone in an unhealthy, abusive relationship, McGresham said. “The campaign is meant to get people engaged, get people to talk about it and really take that act of commitment to prevent them from participating in acts of domestic violence, and building a community that supports that stance,” McGresham said. The tarps containing the handprints of the pledges will be kept in the Women’s Center, and they loaned out to various departments to promote domestic-violence awareness.
rest. “One of the biggest struggles of being a student-athlete is not knowing what you’re going to do with your life after college,” Romo said. All in all, student-athletes are misunderstood and face many challenges that the
Betsy Taylor, a psychologist at the College of Veterinary Medicine, helped the Women’s Center bring the campaign to the vet school. One of the main reasons for expanding the campaign to all of NC State’s campuses was to reach different groups of people who may have otherwise not been involved in the campaign, Taylor said. “I think because the vet school is a little bit removed from the rest of the campus, sometimes we miss out on these awareness types of activities, so we wanted people to have a chance to speak out about domestic violence,” Taylor said. Sherrie Yuschak, a clinical behavioral technician at the veterinary hospital, said domestic violence is one of the more prevalent problems in society, and it needs attention. “It’s one of the more rampant problems in our society, and it’s important to raise awareness about domestic violence and also provide more support for victims,” Yuschak said.
normal student doesn’t, Romo said. “People think that studentathletes have such an easy, glamorous life, but there are a lot of challenges that they face,” Romo said.
Opinion
PAGE 4 • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014
TECHNICIAN
Commissioners don’t go far enough for education T
he Wake County Democratic Party sent out a press release recently endorsing the Democratic candidates for County Commission; it included a chart showing the amount of times current commissioners r a i s e d teacher pay. Evidently, Jacqueline the commissioners have Lee raised their Assistant own pay by Opinion Editor a greater amount and more often than they have raised teacher pay. The press release doesn’t take into account that the numbers reported were supplements to the base pay the state provides, according to The News & Observer’s article, “Democrats fault Wake GOP Commissioners on teacher pay.” As the author writes, “It’s not exactly an apples-toapples comparison.” But the point of the press release was to point out that the Republican-led commission had voted more times to raise its own pay than it did for teachers. It was addressing its actions as independent from the state’s efforts to raise teacher pay. The press release states, “Over the past four years, they voted for budgets that gave themselves nearly five times more in pay increases than they gave teachers.” The main principle and message of the press release is lost in The N&O’s reporting about the release. When it comes down to it, the Republican-led commission did raise its pay more times than it did for teacher pay; the fact that
this happened is ridiculous and not what Wake teachers need. Matt Calabria, a Democrat running to replace Republican Phil Matthews as a District 2 commissioner, said he wants to invest more in education. “The fact is that the current Republican commissioners had opportunities to increase teacher pay and did next to nothing,” Calabria said. “These facts and figures informed voters that the Republican commissioners increased their own pay nearly five times more than they did teachers.’” Yes, the state did raise teacher pay, but the point was being made about the actions of the commissioners alone. Obviously, pay hasn’t been raised enough since as The N&O reported, the state’s increase from “about $30,000 to $33,000 is hardly a gamechanger for people trying to support their families,” and North Carolina is 46th in teacher pay in the nation. “When Wake County loses over 600 teachers in a year and has teachers protesting in the streets, it becomes obvious that public education is not a priority for the commission majority,” Calabria said. The commissioners did not put a referendum on this year’s ballot, so Wake County residents could vote whether or not to implement a sales tax increase that would supplement teacher pay. As residents of Wa ke County, we deserve a Board of Commissioners in Wake County that makes public education a top priority and takes opportunities such as this to raise teacher pay. At
the very least, make it up to residents in Wake County to decide. There certainly need to be improvements in Wake County with the public school bus system as well. The News & Observer reported, “School officials say they only have 845 full-time permanent drivers for the 908 buses that hit the road daily.” Parents should be able to rely on buses being there to take their children to school instead of worrying and having to miss work to take them. We’ve also seen the job fair in May, which offered some North Carolina teachers up to $16,000 more per year to teach in Texas, according to The N&O. With our teachers being tempted with better salary offers from a state across the country, more needs to be done to retain North Carolina teachers. The N&O editorial board wrote of the current commissioners, “They’ve battled repeatedly over money and other issues with the Wake school board, sending a message that public education isn’t Priority One with them.” I definitely kept all of this in mind when I went to the polls, and I encourage other voters to learn about the current commissioners before they vote. Wake County is a growing county with so many young people and we are not at all represented well at all by the current leadership. It is critical in their next term, the County Commissioners make public education a top priority.
Death’s Job
Davis Leanard, senior in technology, engineering & design education
Vote, or don’t W
alking across campus on a recent afternoon, I was stopped by a volunteer holding a clipboard. She wanted to know if I was registered to vote, and if not, if she could help register me. Attempts to encourage poCR Denning litical parCorrespondent ticipation like this become pervasive around election season. Organizations such as Rock the Vote, which, according to its website, “works to mobilize the millennial voting bloc and the youth vote,” take pride in the swaths of young people they help register. The sentiment that “voting is your civic duty” is repeated ad nauseam around election time in the hope of driving more voters to the polls. But nothing about voting nauseates me more than the thought of encouraging people, who m ig ht ot her w ise have stayed home on Election Day, to vote. “Robust voter turnout is fundamental to a healthy democracy,” as FairVote, a nonpartisan electoral reform advocacy group, said. Despite the claims of FairVote and their ilk, it’s not “robust voter turnout,” but an informed voting public, which is “fundamental to a healthy democracy.” Another burgeoning tra-
In response to ‘The Red Sea isn’t parted just yet’ O
n Oct. 22, Associate Features Editor Taylor Quinn published a column, “The Red Sea isn’t parted yet.” In her column, she wrote about the recent synod of bishops that Pope Francis called for regarding issues of the family. SpeJosiah cifically, she Keilson Staff Columnist wrote about the issue of acceptance of homosexuals in Catholic Church, which the synod discussed. Although this is indeed a topic of great importance and necessary discussion, Quinn made a number of statements and claims that were bold, unfounded and likely offensive to many people of the Christian faith. For those unfamiliar with the term, a synod is a formal assembly of clergy members who deliberate on various topics and doctrines. Toward the beginning of the column, Quinn rhetorically asks, “Who cares what some Bible verse says?” In
answer to Quinn, I would say more than 2.1 billion people do. In 2010, 2.18 billion Christians occupied the world, according to the Pew Research Forum on Religion & Public Life. Quinn goes on, stating that the Bible is a “book that is worshipped by millions.” This is both a bold and unfounded claim. Christians do not worship the Bible itself— to us that would be considered idolatrous. Rather, we worship the loving God we believe to have inspired those writings. Because Christians believe the Bible to be an inspired collection of writings, it will have a profound effect on the way those many people of the Christian faith view issues of morality, politics and their place in the world. Additionally, Quinn stated, “The Bible was written thousands of years ago and translated so many times that nobody truly knows what messages it is trying to convey.” This is a bold and extremely subjective claim. True, disagreements within Christian churches about secondary doctrinal issues are indeed
widespread. Although these disagreements are too often the center of attention, it is of immense importance to note that the vast and overwhelming majority of Christian denominations and churches agree on the fundamental messages of the Bible. These core messages include doctrines like the Deity of Jesus Christ, His death and resurrection and salvation by grace. So, though there are disagreements about many secondary doctrinal issues concerning the Bible in the Christian faith, that by no means justifies dismissal of the Bible’s relevance as a religious text. Finally, while there are important conversations occurring within Christianity over the issue of homosexual acceptance, it is highly unproductive to those conversations to attempt to simply dismiss the Bible and the undeniable relevance it still holds for billions of people worldwide today.
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is not simply undesirable, but it’s dangerous. Making a voting decision based on mistaken beliefs leads to bad policy, which has the potential to cause actual harm to others. Because of the risk of harm, uninformed voters not only have no civic duty to vote, they have a duty to abstain from the political process. Voting is not a duty; it is a right. I’m certainly not advocating government restrictions on voting—which have historically been used to disenfranchise certain groups—but I do think uninformed voters should choose for themselves to sit out. You might point out that uninformed voters may not realize they are uninformed, and if that’s true, how are they going to know to stay home on Election Day? They might not have to. We could start weeding out the uninformed by not encouraging wholesale voting. Those who are invested in politics enough to make informed decisions probably also care enough to register on their own. It’s not quantity we’re after, but quality. Voter turnout in United States elections is always low—around 50 percent for presidential elections, lowering for midterm elections—according to the Pew Research Center. Some see that as a problem. I don’t. If eligible voters can’t be bothered to get to the polls, let them stay home. It’s their civic duty.
Are you a registered voter? If so, where do you plan on casting your ballot?
BY ABHILASHA JAIN
“Yes, I will be going home which is 4 hours from Raleigh to cast my vote.” Kelly Mackinney, freshman, agriculture business management
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“Yes, at Freedom Temple Church in Raleigh.”
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dition around election time is late-night talk show hosts pointing out just how uninformed the public is. Before the 2012 election, Howard Stern interviewed supporters of then-candidate Barack Obama, asking things such as what they thought of Obama’s choosing Paul Ryan as his running mate. The sad, but unsurprising result was that many had no idea Ryan was campaigning against Obama. This is unsurprising, as it turns out, because most people have little incentive to inform themselves on political issues. Economist Bryan Caplan argues that most voters are “rationally irrational.” Meaning: We choose to remain uninformed because we have more valuable uses for our time than spending all day learning about politics, economics and so on. Mistaken or uninformed political beliefs cost us almost nothing, but the cost spent developing informed views—our time—is high. Voting is not a civic duty, any more than it’s our duty to give surgery advice, Caplan argues. “Now, we like to think that political issues are much less complicated than brain surgery, but many of them are pretty hard. If someone doesn’t know what he’s talking about, it really is better if they say, ‘Look, I’m just gonna leave this in wiser hands.’” It’s important to note about Caplan’s analogy that, like uninformed surgery advice, uninformed voting
Managing Editor Austin Bryan technician-managingeditor@ncsu.edu
Technician (USPS 455-050) is the official student newspaper of N.C. State University and is published every Monday through Friday throughout the academic year from August through May except during holidays and examination periods. Opinions expressed in the columns, cartoons, photo illustrations and letters that appear on Technician’s pages are the views of the individual writers and cartoonists. As a public forum for student expression, the students determine the content of the publication without prior review. To receive permission for reproduction, please write the editor. Subscription cost is $100 per year. A single copy is free to all students, faculty, staff and visitors to campus. Additional copies are $0.25 each. Printed by The News & Observer, Raleigh, N.C., Copyright 2011 by North Carolina State Student Media. All rights reserved.
Features
TECHNICIAN
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 • PAGE 5
trapped inside the mind *THE FOLLOWING STORY IS FICTIONAL
Taylor Quinn Associate Features Editor
Lifeless bodies were all I saw all day, every day. Bodies that have harmed themselves, bodies who have harmed others in unimaginable ways. Bodies that gave up. They wandered aimlessly around the common room; their bodies were here but their minds were somewhere nobody would ever want to venture. And I was one of them.
I wasn’t, though. I wasn’t. I swore to them over and over, I didn’t do it. But they won’t believe me, and I’ve accepted the fact that they never will. The pills scraped the sides of my throat as they went down. My eyes had not seen the light of day in an ungodly amount of time. I longed for sunshine to beam on my skin. I was careful not to daydream for too long, though, because the utter desire caused me to grind my teeth. If I ever get out of here, I don’t want people to judge me by my teeth. I splashed water on my face to remind myself that I could still feel. I looked up from the sink and was startled by my reflection. I had only been in this hell hole for a fe w weeks, but it looked like I had spent my whole
Graphic by Bailey Knight
life here. I wallowed in self-pity for a bit. I usually block out at least a small part of my day for this activity. At least I felt bad for myself; at least I still cared. I don’t understand how they could legally keep us here. When I was a free woman, I would drive by this place on my morning commute. This place was under scrutiny for inhumane “healing” methods. Little did I know I would soon become the subject for these corrupt behaviors. It is 1950; torture methods need to stop. I do not belong here. But, there is nothing that my family can do. They’ve tried multiple times to get me out; they took this place to court five times as of yesterday, but nope, I’m still here. It’s not fair. There is no way to prove that somebody is mentally unstable. I had been going to a psychiatrist for depression, and the next thing I know the police showed up at my house and took me here. I was a normal woman, a teacher, a wife, a mother. Now I’m an inmate, stripped of my freedoms and dignity. I miss them. I miss my husband, my daughter, my son. My husband comes to visit sometimes, but I haven’t seen my children in a long time. He says that he can’t bring them. I guess I understand—this is no place to take young children. It reeks of bodily fluids and shame. I guess it’s better for them. I keep telling myself that at least. I have to get out of here. I need to get out of here. I don’t deserve this. I’m going to find my file and disappear into the sunset to live the rest of my life in my
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home with my family. They all think I’m crazy, so I’ll use that to my advantage. I waited until it was time for bed. I entered my bunk like a good little inmate, waited a few minutes and then started screaming. Wailing. Making sounds of pure agony. A guard rushed in and told me to be quiet because I was disturbing the others. I asked him if he could talk with me. He agreed. Before I could say one word I shoved him on the bed and put my pillow over his face. He said nothing when I took his keys. I peered down the dark hallway and bolted toward the administrative office. I felt alive for the first time in a
long time. Even if they caught me and tortured me for this, it would be worth the inkling of independence I felt at this moment. I unlocked the door. I searched through the file cabinets and scanned all of the folders for Baker. It wasn’t there; is this place making me crazy? Baker. Where is it? That is my last name, right? Yes. Of course it is, I won’t let this place defeat me. No. Well, maybe they put my paperwork in the wrong folder. I pulled all of the folders out and scattered them, the floor becoming a sea of light beige. I started to feel like I was losing touch with myself. Where am I? Did they bring me here against my will? I don’t belong
here. Is this a joke? But then I saw it. I saw my face. A sigh of relief exited my mouth but the feeling quickly turned into something else. A few minutes passed and it wasn’t until I felt vomit running down my arm that I came to again. Skyler Hannigan Convicted of two counts of murder. Committed on Dec. 2, 1932. Notes: Mrs. Hannigan tied her husband to a chair and made him watch her murder their two children. He came to visit for a few years but ended up committing suicide in 1937. She is usually harmless but tends to try to escape often. She thinks her name is Marcia Baker.
Sports Features
PAGE 6 • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014
MEN’S SOCCER
TECHNICIAN
Pack to conclude regular season at Clemson Garrett Melia Correspondent
The NC State men’s soccer team looks to close out its regular season this Friday in Clemson, South Carolina, against the No.19 ranked Tigers. Friday’s game will be a good test for the Pack (7-5-4, 1-3-3 ACC), which are coming off a convincing 4-1 win against the Liberty Flames Tuesday. Despite Clemson’s 9-6-1 record overall and being 4-2-1 in the ACC, NC State Head Coach Kelly Findley isn’t worried. “I feel good,” Findley said. “I think we are playing the best soccer of the year. Our guys are working hard as well, and that combination will allow you to compete against any team in any game.” Findley’s confidence more than likely stems from the good form his team has been in lately, with a record of 4-21 in the last seven games. Most notably is NC State’s track record against ranked
opponents, as the team defeated then-No. 5 Louisville in a late thriller off of a sensational goal from junior defender Reed Norton. More recently, the Pack tied another No. 5 ranked program in Syracuse (13-2-1, 4-21 ACC), 0-0. NC State held off the high-powered Orange offense that has scored 29 goals this season in double overtime with only 10 men. Even more impressive was State’s last minute chance from redshirt junior midfielder Philip Carmon that almost saw them to victory. However it was denied by Syracuse junior goalkeeper Alex Bono, who has only conceded six goals all season. Regardless, State became one of only three teams to take points off of ‘Cuse this season. Going into Friday night’s game, the Pack backline will have its hands full with Clemson’s offense. While the Tigers do not have an outright leading scorer, five players all have three goals,
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and those five players have fourteen assists combined for the season. This means Clemson has some offensive f lexibility, with various threats capable of scoring or assisting, thus providing a stern test for the Wolfpack defense. State’s defense has seen many changes this season. Senior defender Clement Simonin went down midway through the year due to injury, forcing senior Moss Jackson-Atogi and freshman Matias Fracchia to split time alongside freshman sensation Conor Donovan, the only consistent starter in the back four this year. At the beginning of the season, senior Ryan Metts and Norton f lanked the center back pairing, but both players found themselves relocated by the strong play of freshman defender Caleb Duvernay and senior defender Matt Ingram. Duvernay and Ingram are much more natural fullbacks with excellent stamina,
strong defensive skills and consistent attacking down the line. Undoubtedly, Donovan has been the standout this season among the back four. The Fuquay-Varina native has been a consistent member of the U.S. Under-20 Men’s National Team and was recently rated the fourth-best freshman player in the country by Top Drawer Soccer. Donovan may be a rock in the back line, but the true anchor of the team is junior goalkeeper Alex McCauley. McCauley has recorded 67 saves this season, making a career-high 12 in the Louisville game, including a penalty-kick save. The Pack offense, which scored four goals on Liberty Tuesday, will need to challenge the Clemson defense. The Tigers have conceded 15 goals while only giving away 69 corners and 185 shots. This compares to NC State’s 18 goals, 109 corners and 195 shots. NC State struggled to con-
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Sophomore midfielder Michael Bajza chips the ball over the goalkeeper for the second goal in the Wolfpack’s 4-1 win against Liberty at the Dail Soccer Stadium Tuesday.
vert chances in big matches this season, and losses to UNC-Chapel Hill and Virginia Tech, as well as the tie with Syracuse, all came on the back of a lack of clinical finishing in front of goal. State will have a boost with the return of freshman attacking midfielder Zach Knudson, who sat out Tuesday’s match due to a red card collected against Syracuse. Knudson’s partnership with sophomore wingers
Yanni Hachem and Travis Wannemuehler must prove fruitful if the Wolfpack wishes to breach Clemson’s defense. Having the upper hand in a road match against a strong opponent will not only put pressure on Clemson that will lead to mistakes, but a win will increase the chance of State playing into the NCAA tournament.
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INSIDE
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TECHNICIAN
PAGE 8 • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014
FOOTBALL
Pack seeks fifth win at ‘Cuse Men’s basketball team attends ACC Media Day in Charlotte
Drew Nantais Staff Writer
Coming off a bye week, the NC State football team looks to grab its fifth win of the season and first conference win of head coach Dave Doeren’s tenure on the road against ACC rival Syracuse. After a promising 4-0 start, the Pack (4-4, 0-4 ACC) has lost its last four games by an average of 21 points in each contest. With the impending threat of falling under the .500 mark for the first time this season, NC State is eager to return to its winning ways from earlier in the year. A trip up north to a below-average Syracuse team (3-5, 1-3 ACC) just might be the right remedy to the Pack’s recent woes. With a week of rest and preparation under its belt, the Pack is hungry for its first action in almost two weeks. “I think the week of rest was really beneficial,” NC State Head Coach Dave Doeren said at the weekly ACC Coaches Press Conference. “I think you’ll see there is a lot of improvement in a lot of areas. A lot of guys are playing better and young guys are growing into the system.” The last time we saw the Pack in action was a road game at Louisville. State was able to hang with the Cardinals for four quarters, but a last-minute touchdown put the game out of reach for the Wolfpack. Redshirt junior quarterback Jacoby Brissett had a solid performance going 18-for-32 with 223 yards, two scores and one interception. The Pack was able to put up 16 points on the third-ranked scoring defense in the country,
With the season opener only a few weeks away, the NC State basketball team traveled to Charlotte for the ACC media day on Wednesday. At the event, coaches and players participated in radio shows, TV pieces and print interviews. Once the team members suited up in their red and white, players took part in TV and photo shoots. The day also included a preseason poll of the league created by the media who attended the event. The day not only served for promotional services by the media but also allowed players and coaches in the ACC to relax and socialize without competing against each other. SOURCE: GOPACK.COM
Basketball ranked No. 9 in preseason ACC poll
NC State will enter the 2014-15 season ranked No. 9 in the Atlantic Coast Conference, according to a vote of media in attendance at the league’s annual Operation Basketball. Duke was ranked first in the poll, followed by UNC-Chapel Hill, ACC newcomer Louisville, Virginia, Syracuse, Pitt, Notre Dame, Florida State and NC State. Miami, Clemson, Wake Forest, Georgia Tech, Boston College and Virginia Tech rounded out the poll. NC State finished the 2013-2014 season with a 22-14 total record and a 9-9 conference record. Head Coach Mark Gottfried led the Pack into the second round of the NCAA tournament, losing to St. Louis 80-83. SOURCE: THEACC.COM
Women’s tennis to compete at Jack Kramer Club Invitational
The NC State women’s tennis team will compete at the Jack Kramer Club Invitational in Rolling Hills, California, Oct. 30-Nov. 2. Sophomores Natalia Janowicz and Liza Fieldsend, junior Joanna Nalborska and senior Sophie Nelson will represent the Wolfpack in California. All four will compete in singles play, and Janowicz/Nalborska and Fieldsend/Nelson will be back in action for doubles play. The Pack most recently competed in the ITA Carolina Regional tournament in Chapel Hill Oct. 16-20. SOURCE: GOPACK.COM
RYAN PARRY/TECHNICIAN
Redshirt junior quarterback Jacoby Brissett throws the ball during N.C. State’s game against Boston College Saturday, Oct. 11. Brissett threw for 174 yards and one touchdown in the Wolfpack’s 30-14 loss to the Eagles at Carter-Finley Stadium.
promising signs for Offensive Coordinator Matt Canada’s offense. “I think you see the resiliency of our team in that game,” Doeren said. “Nobody thought we had a chance with the injuries and the suspensions going into that game. The guys really rallied around each other in their effort for the game.” The Orange limps into Saturday’s matchup having lost five of its last six games, with the most recent coming in a 16-6 loss at Clemson last weekend. In the wake of senior quarterback Terrel Hunt’s leg injury, the last three games have seen ‘Cuse turn to true freshman quarterback AJ Long. Long had a mediocre game against the Tigers, completing 12 of 27 passes for 82 yards and two interceptions.
“Their quarterback is a versatile kid that makes plays with his feet,” Doeren said. “They’re really balanced on offense.” Defensively, the Orange isn’t much of a threat, giving up 375 total yards to Clemson, 166 of those yards on the ground. However, the defense did force four turnovers on the day against the Tigers. “They’re a pressure defense,” Doeren said. “They bring a lot of different pressures—edge pressures, middle pressures, moving guys around. They play hard on defense and pride themselves on stopping the run.” The good news for the Wolfpack is the return of the seven suspended players, including linebacker Jerod Fernandez and safety Josh Jones.
With the defense regaining some of its key players, look for a better showing from the Pack on the defensive side of the ball. “I think it was a great lesson for those guys, and I really think they learned a lot,” Doeren said. “It forced our players to have to rally around each other, which is a really good thing for our football team to have to do.” Even with the recent struggles and slump the Wolfpack has experienced, it hasn’t deterred Doeren and company from finishing strong. “It’s a four game season,” Doeren said. “It doesn’t matter how we won the first four and lost the next four. We’re really trying to take that attitude with a fresh start and a strong finish.”
Q&A
Canada masterminds Wolfpack offense in 2014 Jake Lange Associate Sports Editor
QUOTE OF THE DAY
The NC State football team made a significant acquisition this year in former Wisconsin offensive coordinator Matt Canada. After growing a successful career in the Big Ten Canada chose to take his talents eastbound and down to NC State. The Technician caught up with Canada to talk about his experience with the Pack so far. Technician: What made you want to become an offensive coordinator? Canada : I’ve always enjoyed the game. I always enjoyed the strategic part about it. Obviously, I like coaching, and I like the game and all of those things. I don’t know of anything specific, but I do enjoy the strategy part of our profession and trying to find a way to get our players matched up to make plays. T: What do you see as redshirt junior quarterback Jacoby Brissett’s best characteristics? C : He’s very smart, he’s very talented, he’s accurate, he throws the
“I think you see the resiliency of our team in that game. Nobody thought we had a chance with the injuries and the suspensions.” Dave Doeren Head football coach
ball very well. He does a lot of really good things, so I’m very fortunate to have him to coach. Brissett’s getting nothing but better every week, and he’s a winner. T: You’ve got three great running backs. How do you use them in different roles? C : We kind of see who gets a hot hand. Coach Des Kitchings, our running back coach, does a great job when he’s on the field watching them. He really controls the playing time of those three kids. They all have different things they do well. Ultimately it’s about who gets going in the game and who’s seeing it well, and then we go from there. T: How confident are you in the receivers this year? C : I feel good. We’ve got a lot of different weapons. We’ve got multiple guys to throw the ball to where you can’t just cover one player. T: Wolfpack fans have come to expect a lot of the Wildcat formation this season. What’s your favorite part about running it? C : It’s been good. We’ve handed it off; we’ve had the chance to throw
the ball. It’s a fun deal for us, and the reason you run that formation is it gives you another gap that they have to defend, and it gives you numbers. It’s all about numbers. T: Was the 2013 Rose Bowl the biggest game you’ve been a part of? C : Yeah, probably. I mean, the Big Ten championship game in Indianapolis where we beat Nebraska to go to the Rose Bowl, that was in my hometown, and we scored 70 points against Nebraska that night. That was special. And to get to the Rose Bowl certainly was an ultimate goal there. In the Big Ten growing up, that was a big game for me, obviously. At the point of the Rose Bowl there were a lot of things going on for me professionally; I was on my way here. That was certainly a high point. T: What went right in the first quarter against Florida State? C : We always had a decent plan, our kids made plays and things went well, but we just didn’t quite finish it up at the end there. We had a couple bad breaks and turnovers. It’s a game of inches, and if those plays don’t happen, it’s a different day. I was
proud of the way we played; we just needed to score a few more. T: What parts of the offense need to improve going forward? C: All of it. We’ve got to score more points. We were on a roll there for a while. We haven’t scored enough points to win in the last four weeks. Against Florida State, we could’ve scored more, so we’ve got to do that.
PHOTO COURTESY OF NC STATE ATHLETICS
Offensive coordinator Matt Canada took charge of the Wolfpack offense this season after a successful tenure at Wisconsin.
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NC State vs. Syracuse
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No. 2 Florida State at Louisville
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No. 24 Duke at Pittsburgh
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Virginia Tech at Boston College Virginia at Georgia Tech No. 10 TCU at No. 20 West Virginia No. 4 Auburn at No. 7 Ole Miss No. 14 Arizona at No. 25 UCLA Arkansas at No. 1 Mississippi State
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