TECHNICIAN
thursday january
9
2014
Raleigh, North Carolina
technicianonline.com
NCSU profs help health-care pros speak Spanish PROFESSORS CREATE PROGRAM TO CATER TO GROWING HISPANIC POPULATION
Emma Cathell Assistant Features Editor
N.C. State Spanish professors Ana Gray and Cheryl Block, along with author Patricia Willoughby, created a program called ProSalud in the spring of 2013, as a means of helping health-care professionals effectively communicate with Spanish-speaking patients. The program consists of translation services, an online Spanish course and an online certificate. According to the creators of ProSalud, the growth of the Hispanic population in this state, and in this country, is not slowing down. “It’s the number one minority,” Gray said. “Spanish is the secondmost spoken language in the United States.” According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the estimated population indicates, as of 2011, there were “roughly 52 million Hispanics living in the United States, representing approximately 16.7 percent of the U.S. total population, making people of Hispanic origin the nation’s largest ethnic or race minority.” Spanish for Health Professions, FLS 201-603, is a 3-credit online course offered through DELTA. Because ProSalud is an online program, it is not only available for students at N.C. State, but it is accessible to students in the UNCSystem and even to students around the world. “We can reach a broader audience in North Carolina, in the United States, and in the world,” Gray said. “ProSalud has a certificate online
Percentage of the total population of North Carolina that is Latino
1.2% 1990
4.7% 8.4% 2000
8.7%
2010 2012
SOURCE: U.S. CENSUS
The percentage of Hispanic people living in North Carolina has been steadily increasing during the past two decades. As a result, health professionals and other non-Hispanic residents are learning Spanish to communicate better with their clients.
that students can take right after they finish FLS 201 or people in general who already have a background but need to strengthen their resume and interview without waiting until they complete the minor or the major in Spanish, which could take several semesters.” The grammatical structures are the same in FLS 201-603 as they are in every other 201 class, according to Block. However, this course is geared toward students following the medical path. The textbook for the class, written by Gray, Block and Willoughby, has chapters, topics and vocabulary catered to the
medical field. “The chapters were chosen by things that come up in the Latino community: diabetes is a large health issue, heart conditions of different kinds could be a large health issue, and then of course everything else like infectious illnesses and injuries,” Block said. “The vocabulary is chosen along those lines too. So for example, there’s an entire vocabulary section on just legal terminology; there’s another vocabulary section for different injuries and also terminology for rescue equipment.” According to Gray and Block, the FLS 201 medical course presents a
service-learning opportunities. “In this class, there is an element of service learning, because we agree that’s a very important aspect,” Block said. “We require in this 201 class that students either do 3 hours of interpretation at a health care clinic hospital or that they interview someone in Spanish who works very closely with the Latino community in the health sector. “One reason [Spanish] is so crucial for medical personnel is that if a child goes along as a translator, would you want your child to learn you had cancer before you learned? That’s a huge problem because
sometimes they make take a very young child.” The component of the online FLS 201 medical course is not the only helpful tool of ProSalud. The online certificate can help students greatly in the professional field. If the student passes the two-hour online exam about reading, writing, medical terminology and grammar skills in Spanish for healthcare, they will receive the Certificate in Spanish for Health Professions from N.C. State. This certificate can be used as proof of applicants’ knowledge of Spanish in the medical field, which helps strengthen their interview and resume, and at times, can even be a way to receive a pay raise too, according to Gray and Block. “Once they take this certificate, the turn around time is quite insignificant compared to the time needed to complete a minor or major in Spanish,” Gray said. “But, in the meantime, the beauty of the certificate is that it gives a lot of confidence. That is an amazing tool once they have it.” Gray said that she and her cofounders have advocated and developed ProSalud since 2007 because of the spirit of service. That is what helped the program begin and could become the reason for its growth. “I think, with the spirit of service, we are all one,” Gray said. “And we can all work in order to make this place a better world. Principally, to let the students know that there is such a thing that we can all be together.”
DACA students to take protest Campus Enterprises gives to Cooper’s office on Saturday $1.2 million to University Staff Report
Members of the NC DREAM TEAM are organizing a march to Attorney General Roy Cooper’s office Saturday in an attempt to win in-state tuition rates for students who qualify under the Deferred Action Childhood Arrival policy. The March of Broken Dreams will start on UNC Chapel Hill’s campus and end outside Cooper’s office in Raleigh where protestors will sup-
port DACA students who emigrated to the U.S. illegally as children. The march is part of a series of protests by DACA students and their supporters. On New Year’s Day, students gathered outside Cooper’s office to demand that he end his silence and issue a formal opinion. Juan Prezas, a DACA student living in North Carolina, was featured on the NC DREAM TEAM website where he asked other students and activists to join the protest.
insidetechnician SPORTS Q&A Thursday: freshamn forward Travis Wannemuehler See page 7.
“Every day [Cooper] refuses to support students like me, he is killing our futures,” Prezas said on the website. “I hope you can be there. But if you can’t, sign and share the petition calling on Attorney General Cooper, the UNC Board of Governors and the NC Community College System to give DACA students in-state tuition now.” The petition can be found at http://action.dreamactivist.org/ northcarolina/instate.
Gregg Museum gets a new start, home See page 5.
SPORTS Temperfect coffee
See page 6.
Campus Enterprises at N.C. State gave a $1,191,394 check back to the University on the Brickyard during the Bookstore’s Finals Madness sale event last month. According to Jennifer Gilmore, director of marketing and communications for Campus Enterprises, The University will use the check for the 2013-2014 academic year as a part of Campus Enterprises’ annual scholarship and student sup-
port programs contribution. “We understand the financial challenges to obtaining a college degree, and we are proud to allocate a significant portion of our proceeds to help our students in their pursuit of a degree from N.C. State University,” said Dan Adams, associate vice chancellor of Campus Enterprises. Campus Enterprises has given a portion of its proceeds to the University for scholarships and finan-
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Student Government to add, eliminate legislative seats during spring semester Jacqueline Lee Staff Writer
FEATURES
Staff Report
This semester, Student Government is planning new ways to represent students, while deciding which legislative seats to keep or eliminate. Next Wednesday, Student Government is starting this semester with a retreat where the executive and senate branches will meet to determine its priorities for the semester, according to the Student Body President Alex Parker. Among these priorities will be some of the Student Government members’ proposal to add or eliminate some seats in its executive and legislative branches. According to Parker, members are looking to add more seats other than ones that represent each col-
lege, which is how the system is now. Seats could include representatives from Greek life or an on-campus University Housing representative. Student Government will also eliminate or add seats to the executive branch to better represent students. “We will be strategically planning ways to have more students represented by student government,” said Parker. “We want to make student government more accessible to students.” The installment of the new Vice President position coming in Student Government’s March elections will be another change, according to Parker. The Vice President’s duty will mainly be to lead the legislative branch. Working with the Board
of Trustees and other University leadership will remain a responsibility of the Student Body President. Parker said his top priority will be helping students prepare for next semester’s change in the class drop date. Under the new policy, the eight week add/drop period will be shortened to 10 days. The UNC Board of Governors passed the new policy in April of last year, which implemented a uniform policy throughout the UNC-System. N.C. State along with UNC-Chapel Hill will no longer be the only two schools in the UNC-System to have the eight-week course drop date. “This is going to be a huge culture shift for students,” Parker said.
S S A 20” Pizza or Pokey Stix for Only $9.99 G I B Y A D S R 2712 Hillsborough St. 919-836-1555 U TH Topping and Dipping Sauces Extra/Valid Thursday Only
SG continued page 3
News
PAGE 2 • THURSDAY, JAN. 9, 2014
TECHNICIAN
CORRECTIONS & THROUGH JOANNAH’S LENS CLARIFICATIONS
POLICE BLOTTER
Send all clarifications and corrections to Editor-in-Chief Sam DeGrave at editor@ technicianonline.com
Jan. 8 2:09 A.M. | DISTURBANCE Avent Ferry Complex Wolfline bus driver reported occupants were standing in front of rear door and refusing to sit down when asked. Officers made contact with nine students and one non-student. Subjects agreed to comply with request. No action taken. Jan. 7 10:04 A.M. | FIRE ALARM Wolf Village FP responded to alarm caused by cooking. 10:21 A.M. | FIRE ALARM BTEC FP responded to alarm caused by malfunction at loading dock door.
WEATHER WISE Today:
49/34 Partly cloudy
Tomorrow:
8:19 A.M. | MEDICAL ASSIST Student Health Center Units responded and transported student in need of medical assistance.
51 46
9:02 A.M. | FIRE ALARM ES King Village FP responded to alarm caused by hair dryer. 9:42 A.M. | SPECIAL EVENT Friday Institute Officers monitored visit from Governor McCrory.
Few showers
Saturday
71 47 Rain/thunder SOURCE: WWW.WEATHER.COM
1:43 P.M. | ANIMAL COMPLAINT Varsity Drive Lot Student reported fox in the area. Officer located animal. There did not appear to be any threat. 1:50 P.M. | FIRE ALARM BTEC FP responded to malfunction at loading dock door. 10:43 P.M. | FIRE ALARM EB III Units responded to alarm caused by malfunctioning heat detector. Facilities responded to correct the problem.
CAMPUS CALENDAR
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Jan. 10 LAST DAY TO ADD A COURSE WITHOUT PERMISSION OF THE INSTRUCTOR
3:02 P.M. | LARCENY 1911 Building Student filed on-line report that cell phone had been stolen.
Jan. 13 UNIVERSITY COUNCIL MEETING AND RETREAT 10 a.m.-1 p.m.
Readin’ on my scraper bike
A VIEW TO THE MAKING: PORTRAITS OF NORTH CAROLINA CRAFT ARTISTS AT WORK 2 p.m. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. DAY COMMEMORATION: DICK GREGORY 6-8 p.m.
PHOTO BY JOANNAH IRVIN
D
anielle Smith, a sophomore in elementary education, rides a bicycle in Carmichael Gym on Wednesday. “I come here because it helps me get a break from everything,” Smith said, “I normally bike but if it is really pretty outside then I will run.” Smith reads to entertain herself on the bike. She is currently working through Son of a Witch, the sequel to the popular novel Wicked.
3:10 P.M. | FIRE ALARM Schuab Hall FP responded to alarm caused by water leak. Electronics notified. 3:43 P.M. | ASSIST PERSON Student Health Center Officer provided escort for nonstudent to Wake County Crisis Center.
Interested in joining the Technician? Come see us!
We will be holding an interest meeting in our office on the 3rd floor of the Witherspoon Student Center on Friday from 2:30 – 3 p.m. Anyone interested in joining is welcome. Come see us!
News
TECHNICIAN
Majority of university presidents disapprove of Obama’s proposed college-rating system Staff Report
Most college presidents and chancellors don’t think President Barack Obama’s proposed rating system will be an effective way to lower the cost for college, according to a recent poll. The poll, conducted by Gallup, concluded that out of 675 college and university presidents surveyed, 65 percent said Obama’s rating system would be successful. Only 2 percent said they think the system will be “very effective”, and 32 percent predicted that the program will
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cial aid every year since its inception in 2009 for a total of $4.5 million. Earnings from each of Campus Enterprises organi-
be “somewhat effective.” In late August, Obama unveiled the plan that would judge universities based on their affordability and performance and then distribute federal aid with the goal of making college more affordable. The proposed rating system would rank colleges based on affordability, average student loan debt and tuition. Prospective students could thus use the rating system as a “buyer’s guide.” As of now, most colleges and universities get a certain
amount of financial aid based on enrollment. In an earlier interview with the Technician, N.C. State economics professor Douglas Pearce pointed out some potential flaws in the president’s plan. “The goal is to improve the education of students, but you have to be careful that if you put in incentives that reward you for observable things like graduation rates, instead of improving education, you lower standards to get that goal,” Pierce said.
zations make up its contribution, according to Gilmore. Campus Enterprises is the lead division for retail and hospitality at NC State University, which encompasses University Dining, N.C. State Bookstores, University Trademark Licensing, the
Lonnie Poole Golf Course, Student Center Operations and the Wolfpack One Card. This year’s contribution is an increase from the $1,187,367 it gave for the 2012- 2013 academic year.
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“Student Government will be working with administration to make all class syllabi available for a student right when they enroll in a class.” According to Parker, Student Government will also be helping students with its new service, Wolfpack Pick-up, coming later this month.
THURSDAY, JAN. 9, 2014 • PAGE 3
The new service will provide transportation to student with disabilities around campus, both temporary and chronic, according to Parker. Next semester Student Government’s offices will relocate to the Talley Student Union. “This is really exciting for us, because it means we will be closer to the heart of campus and student life,” Parker said. “We want to maximize this opportunity by taking a strategic look at how we rep-
resent students.” Parker also mentioned an annual event, the Night Walk, where Student Government representatives meet with members of the University Facilities Division and volunteers to walk around campus and find where improvements need to be made. “It’s a chance to see where there need to be more lights or any other improvements to make the campus safer,” Parker said.
NCSU, UNC researchers develop cancer-fighting nanomachine Staff Report
Researchers at N.C. State and UNC Chapel Hill have developed a nanomachine to fight cancer earlier this month. The nanoparticle is programmed to perform a series of tasks in order to eliminate cancer cells. First, it gets the cancerous cells to attach to the nanomachine in one of the steps before destroying the cells, according to the
News & Observer. According to Tiany ue Jiang, a lead author of the paper and a biomedical researcher at N.C. State, the machine is a “drug delivery vehicle.” The researchers tested the vehicle with human breastcancer tumors in mice. According to the N&O, the results were significantly better than conventional methods for reducing similar tumors.
In addition, the machine delivered a combination of different drugs to prevent the cancer cells from becoming resistant to a single drug. However, the researchers made it known that results from the mice trials don’t with mice automatically translate into human results. The next step involves testing the nanomachine with larger animals.
LAST CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS January 17 th
is the final deadline to submit your work to be published in the 48th edition of Windhover, NC State’s literary and arts magazine.
Students, faculty, and alumni are encouraged to submit their original art, designs, poetry, music, and short stories. Please submit to
windhover-editor@ncsu.edu
Opinion
PAGE 4 • THURSDAY, JAN. 9, 2014
TECHNICIAN
Athletics benefits from affiliation; why don’t we? W
ith an overall record of 3-9, the Wolfpack’s 2013 football season was its worst since 2006. It was also the first time since 1959 that the Pack had gone winless in the ACC. To put it frankly, the season was disappointing. But despite our team’s poor performance, the success of our ACC rivals has benefited N.C. State. The ACC operates a revenue-sharing model, meaning all ACC schools receive an equal share of the revenue that the conference earns for its teams making bowl game appearances. Between Florida State’s appearance in the BCS National Championship game and Clemson’s appearance in the Discover Orange Bowl, the ACC earned $30.2 million. Split equally among the 14 ACC teams, that’s $2 million and some change for N.C. State — minus any expenses and deductions. The
The unsigned editorial is the opinion of the majority of the Technician’s editorial board, and is the responsibility of the editor-in-chief. University essentially earned a bonus for its ACC affiliation. Though we are happy that the University is receiving this money, this just further demonstrates that universities don’t have their priorities straight. It comes as no surprise to us that so much money is tied to athletics, and we are aware that football and basketball generate a huge amount of revenue for the school. Still, we find it somewhat disheartening that a losing football team can generate $2 million simply for being a part of a group, while other branches of the university have to fight and struggle for funding and pay raises. For example, salary freezes are making it in-
creasingly difficult for the University to keep veteran professors from searching for work elsewhere. In the past five years, the North Carolina legislature has only approved a 1.2 percent raise for professors. Jim Martin, an N.C. State professor of chemistry and member of the Wake County School Board, said he could pretty readily be making $50,000 to $100,000 more per year if he “played the game.” Martin explained that in the current system, the best way for professors to get a raise is to get an offer from another university and elicit the “home university” to give a counteroffer. There must be something wrong with the
system when professors have to almost threaten to leave to earn a raise, yet the football team can garner $2 million for simply sharing a conference name with the BCS champions. On that note, we wish people on the academic side, such as professors, would receive benefits just for being a member of a group. For example, we think it would be great if N.C. State professors’ salaries were adjusted for inflation simply because they teach at a UNC-System school. We are a university first, and we are proud that coaches, including Dave Doeren, have emphasized the importance of academics. However, we would hope that our University’s revenue reflected the hard work of our students, staff and faculty, rather than the hard work of 50-some Florida State men.
Newspapers don’t liberate people; people liberate people O
state in the country illustrates a strikingly different picture. According to the CATO Institute, a right-leaning think tank, the U.S. spent about $93 billion, or 5 percent of the national budget, on corporate welfare in 2006. That same year the government spent about $59 billion on social welfare programs. This means that each year, the government spends about 50 percent more on corporate subsidies than it does on traditional welfare programs. In light of these facts, it appears that the real moochers of government funds are wealthy, multinational corporations such as Exxon Mobil and Shell, rather than poor, impoverished citizens who refuse to get a job. Moreover, the popular argument that the market is being tampered with when green energy firms are given an unfair advantage due to government subsidies is also drastically different from reality. According to the Energy Information Agency, fossil fuels have received 75 times the amount of government subsidies that renewable energy sources have. This information came as a shock to me, to say the least. To be exact, the oil-and-gas industry has received $446.96 billion in subsidies from
1994 – 2009, whereas renewable energy companies have received $5.93 billion, when adjusted for inflation. This is why, although only popular among Democrats, the End Polluter Welfare Act of 2013 is such an important piece of legislation to be considered. This trend is antithetical to that of those in progressive countries such as the Netherlands or France where gasoline is taxed at remarkably high rates. The tax on gasoline in the Netherlands accounts for about 57 percent of the total cost of gas. Given that the state of the climate is only going to get worse if we continue to consume fossil fuels as our primary energy source, if there is any way that the market should be influenced to give an advantage to a certain energy industry, green energy should receive the larger portion of the funds. The Obama Administration has undertaken decisive actions to help mitigate this trend, but needless to say, these attempts have not sufficed. Until the green energy industry is at least on a level playing field with the oiland-gas industry, it will remain impossible for the U.S. to meet its energy demand in an environmentally sensible manner.
n Jan. 1, The New York Times and The Guardian published editorials urgi ng P re s ident Barack Obama to grant Edward Snowden clemency. ishan Raval Snowden is Staff Columist t he whistleblower responsible for the leaks, which took place in June, regarding the NSA surveillance program PRISM, and he is currently in political asylum in Russia. Since the he leaked the information, his portrayal from the security establishment has been hostile, and government officials from the United States have been trying to get their hands on him to try him for treason In light of this, such a step taken by mainstream publications not just lauding his actions, but also pressing Obama to grant him safe passage home is rather special and, it could well be argued, impressive. It is one thing, in an editorial, to take a stance about an issue; it is quite another to phrase the rhetoric as telling the President what to do. Some might look at this happening and see such media groups as the heroes we’ve been waiting for. But one of the first questions that people should be asking themselves is, “Can news outlets, however influential, pressure the state to change?” The answer is no. Granting clemenc y to Edward Snowden would amount to the government voluntarily relinquishing control over a focal point in the battle between it and the forces that are against its power. But the U.S. government (or any government in
“$10,000.” Virginia Parker senior, communication
“$5,000 or $10,000.” Alex Yllanes senior, biology
“$100,000.” Mike Fuller freshman, first year engineering
Davis Leonard, senior in technonogy, design, engineering education
End polluter welfare H
ouse Bill H.R. 3574, otherwise known as the End Polluter Welfare Act of 2013, was introduced to the congressional committee on Nov. Tim Gorski 21, 2 01 3 . Staff Columnist Although the bill has about a 2 percent chance of getting passed the committee, the intentions of the legislation are an indescribable part of a sensible energy policy in the United States. In light of the $17 trillion national debt in the U.S., the notion that we should continue to subsidize an industry that has annual profits on the order of hundreds of billions of dollars and harms the environment in the process is absurd. Conservatives often argue that the welfare state in this country is out of hand, and that the money the government takes from hardworking Americans is unrightfully given to those who choose not to work and earn an honest living. This, they say, penalizes those who work hard and facilitate economic development and rewards those who contribute nothing to society. However, a look at the numbers concerning the welfare
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IN YOUR WORDS
ed in that kind of situation, Obama has prosecuted more than twice as many whistleblowers (seven) under the 1917 Espionage Act than all prior presidents since then combined.] Frederick Douglass was correct when he said, “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.” The exhortations of newspapers can be demands, but U.S.-government-exhorting newspapers are as much constituents of the U.S. government as citizens of other countries are. They can only force the U.S. government to do something if other such external agents can threaten the government with negative consequences, which publications by themselves cannot do. Or, they can only force it if its own constituents want something to happen as well, which is what will be required here. Looking at it structurally and objectively, The New York Times and The Guardian writing editorials asking the bitter winter to grant us clemency has as much power by itself to make the weather warmer as does this enjoinment to Obama. But that’s not going to happen. Reality is already at a certain point, and that’s what we have to work with, not a simpler, easier one that we wish we were in — be that the reality of power structures or the reality of climate change. Cases of assertion like these from The New York Times and The Guardian are boosts that we can use, but in the end, newspapers just print words, while people transform reality.
“$5,000,000.” Charlie Moran junior, finance
“$100,000.” Kasey Clinard sophomore, mechanical engineering
}
How much money do you think N.C. State made from Florida State winning the BCS National Championship? PHOTOS BY CAIDE WOOTEN
Editor-in-Chief Sam DeGrave
323 Witherspoon Witherspoon Student Student Center, Center, 323 NCSU Campus Campus Box Box 7318, 7318, Raleigh, Raleigh, NC NC 27695 27695 NCSU Editorial Editorial Advertising Advertising Fax Fax Online Online
an equivalent position), being the entity it is, would never do that. Actions of power at a structural or societal level are fundamentally driven by economic logic, not moral motives. And the benefits about the power nexus integrating the government (executive branch, NSA, etc.) and the private sector (the contractors whose business is the defense/intelligence complex) have taken form and been normalized in such a way that the economic flow into a tiny cluster of points is too great for this power nexus to give it up when simply asked to. Power must be wrested from the existing structure and dispersed more democratically, or in other terms, more anarchically. In other words, the power structure must be destroyed. Having come to the point it’s already at, that is the only way it will stop accumulating and abusing power as it is. To br i ng it bac k to Snowden, the U.S. security establishment has vested interests, interests essential to its very existence as it is, that would prevent it from backing off in the slightest in going after Snowden. It is intrinsic to the nature of power to want to surveil, and it is intrinsic to the nature of a lot of power to want to surveil a lot more. And because the security complex spying on us is a case of “a lot of power,” whistleblowers like Snowden are a threat to its hegemony, and it’s not going to pardon whistleblowers unless forced to. [This is empirically true for the U.S.: the power of the U.S. as a national entity, and with that, the power of security establishment, have grown exponentially since 9/11, and as would be expect-
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Technician (USPS 455-050) is theisofficial student newspaper of N.C. The Technician (USPS 455-050) the official student newspaper of State University and is published every Monday throughout N.C. State University and is published everythrough MondayFriday through Friday the academicthe year from August through May except during holidays throughout academic year from August through May except during and examination periods. periods. OpinionsOpinions expressedexpressed in the columns, cartoons, holidays and examination in the columns, photo illustrations and lettersand thatletters appear onappear Technician’s are the cartoons, photo illustrations that on thepages Technician’s views are of the writers and cartoonists. a public forum for pages theindividual views of the individual writers andAs cartoonists. As a public student expression, the students determine the content of the publication forum for student expression, the students determine the content of the without prior review.prior To receive reproduction, please write publication without review.permission To receive for permission for reproduction, the editor. cost is $100 per A single copyAissingle free to all is please writeSubscription the editor. Subscription costyear. is $100 per year. copy students, staff and visitors tovisitors campus. copies arecopies $0.25 free to all faculty, students, faculty, staff and toAdditional campus. Additional each. Printed The News & Observer, Raleigh, N.C., Copyright 2011 by are $0.25 each.byPrinted by The News & Observer, Raleigh, N.C., Copyright North Carolina State Student Media. All rights reserved. 2011 by North Carolina State Student Media. All rights reserved.
Features
TECHNICIAN
THURSDAY, JAN. 9, 2014 • PAGE 5
Gregg Museum gets a new start, home Taylor Quinn Assistant Features Editor Note: This article is the first in a two-part series.
The Gregg, N.C. State’s own museum, is in the process of moving to a new home. Chancellor Randy Woodson’s previous residence will hold a plethora of art pieces. We know where The Gregg is going, but where did it come from? The director of The Gregg, Roger Manley, took some time to explain how pieces of collected artwork in storage on campus blossomed into the stand-alone museum that it will be in the future. “The Gregg got started in a very informal way back in the late 1960s,” Manley said. “Throughout that period, people were starting to give artwork to the University, and people were starting to lose track of them -- so they decided to hire a curator.” The curator was hired to find all of the art and make sure it was safe and in the right hands. This part-time job eventually became a fulltime one. The curator now collects all of the work to keep a catalogue. “From there it sort of grew into a thing called the Visual Arts Program, which happened in the late 1970s, then it progressed into the visual arts center for which they ob-
VICTORIA CROCKER/TECHNICIAN
“Phoenix Rising” is located outside of the new location of the NC State Gregg Museum of Art & Design on Hillsborough Street. The bamboo structure, which spans 18 feet, was designed and built by N.C. State Professor Will Hooker’s landscape design class to celebrate the new start for the museum.
tained a space,” Manley said. “Then about seven years ago they decided to make it a museum.” Manley said that for a long time NCSU did not want a museum because they thought museums should be left for other institutions to tackle. According to Manley, eventually it was decided that having a museum would be a good thing for the University.
Manley has been the director for four years. He started working for the University during the 1990s. “I started here as a guest curator to curate one exhibition,” Manley said. “And that went so well that they hired me to stay on for another three and a half years to curate all of the shows for a while.” Manley said he went abroad
for 10 years after that to work in France, and by the time he got back, the director of The Gregg was retiring. “She mentioned to me that she was getting ready to retire,” Manley said. “She also mentioned that I should apply for the job, so I did and I got hired.” During the four years he has been director, The Gregg has undergone changes. The
actual museum started in Talley, but when the student center got torn down The Gregg had to move. Mostly all of the pieces are in the Brickhaven building for now and will soon be moved to their new home in the Chancellor’s old mansion. According to Manley, though its home is changing, the museum’s purpose will never change.
“I want people to come to The Gregg Museum and feel like they have seen something or they have come away with an idea of something they can try,” Manley said. “We make sure the experience is as hands on as possible.”
WHERE DOwant toUlive? 3333 Melrose Club Blvd. Raleigh, NC 27603 raleighU_half 1.21.13.indd 1
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Features
PAGE 6 • THURSDAY, JAN. 9, 2014
TECHNICIAN
Temperfect coffee cup is heating things up Kaitlin Montgomery Staff Writer
The battle between coffee lovers and their burnt tongues finally have a victor: the Temperfect coffee cup. Logan Maxwell, a researcher at N.C. State and the co-founder of Joeveo, the company that makes the “Temperfect” mug, has developed a coffee mug that keeps coffee hot—but not too hot— for hours on end. “It all started with a friend of mine,” Maxwell said. “He would always get a cup of coffee in the morning and always had to drink it really fast before going to his internship. He would sit there trying to drink his coffee quickly, burning his lips and tongue. It was ridiculous.” As an undergraduate at N.C. State, Maxwell originally set out to find a way to make a hollow coffee cup that would allow someone to put water in it, cooling the coffee down to a drinkable temperature. “After a while we started to think that maybe we could use something other than water,” Maxwell said. “A material that will initially absorb the heat and then re-release it so it will both bring your drink to a tolerable temperature, but also keep it hot for a long time.” What once was ‘just an idea’ to Maxwell became a developed prototype that he
used as part of his senior design project. An insulated mug with three walls, the Temperfect coffee mug has a vacuum between the outer and middle walls. The substance between the middle and the inner walls is what cools the drink down and keeps it warm. Maxwell refers to this as the phase-change material. “At the end of the year when we were giving out final presentations, people started to come say that we needed to actually make it,” Maxwell said. “They were saying it could be on Kickstarter and even Shark Tank. I never had any intention of following it through.” Maxwell spoke with an entrepreneur named Aly Khalifa, who created the Impress, a French press that also acts as a coffee mug. Aly Khalifa told him that there was a man, Dean Verhoeven, in Wake Forest who had been working on the same idea for 20 years. “It was really kind of awkward at first,” Maxwell said. “I didn’t know if he was going to say, ‘Sorry, but I’m launching it’ or if we’d have to compete with one another. When I contacted him he was great and told me he could use my help. He asked me to join the team.” Verhoeven, having already done an extensive amount of work, found ways to work t hroug h ma nufacturing
problems and design issues that Maxwell would eventually run into. “I came to him with a crappy prototype,” Maxwell said. “He had already basically designed the whole thing in his garage. He had all the machines and everything he needed to make a vacuuminsulated mug in his garage.” According to Maxwell, regardless of how the launch of the Temperfect goes, the experience is one he will never forget. “I’ve learned so much,” Maxwell said. “Even if this blows up in our faces and we go bankrupt after we get all the mugs out, it was an amazing experience.” Looking back, Maxwell said that originally he was working on the idea simply to make a good grade on his senior design project. He had no idea of what opportunities and experiences would come from it. “I was in the right place at the right time,” Maxwell said. “There’s still so much to learn but when you’re in school you do things for the grade. When I was invited to come back and talk to the kids taking the engineering entrepreneurship class I was in, I told them that this was an opportunity for them. I was in their position – in it for the grade. You learn so much.”
PHOTO COURTESY OF LOGAN MAXWELL
Logan Maxwell and Dean Verhoeven worked together to create a coffee cup that doesn’t burn the lips of whoever is using it.
PHOTO COURTESY OF LOGAN MAXWELL
Above left: The Temperfect coffee cup prevents users’ lips from being burned. Above right: Maxwell and Verhoeven
Sports
TECHNICIAN
THURSDAY, JAN. 9, 2014 PAGE 7
Q & A Thursday: freshman forward Travis Wannemuehler Andrew Schuett Sports Editor
After playing in all 17 games for N.C. State in 2013, freshman forward Travis Wannemuehler has quickly established himself as a crucial part of the Wolfpack soccer program. Wannemuehler, the No. 35 recruit in the class of 2013, played the majority of his debut season on the right and left wings of State’s midfield. Following a strong debut season in Raleigh, Wannemuehler was invited to train with the U.S. Under-20 Men’s National Team in Lakewood Ranch, Fla. from Jan. 3–12. The Technician spoke with Wannemuehler bet ween training sessions to find out how life with the National Team compares to playing for N.C. State. Te c h n ic i a n : Ta ke u s through a day in the life of Travis Wannemuehler. Wannemuehler: The first training period of the day is really intense. We’ll wake up, have breakfast, train hard for two hours, go to lunch, nap for an hour, get treatment, train again for two hours, have team meetings, go to bed and do it again the next day. It’s pretty much twoa-days, except for the days
RYAN PARRY/TECHNICIAN
Freshman forward Travis Wannemuehler fights for possession of the ball against a UNCWilmington player, Aug. 24. The Wolfpack tied the Seahawks 1-1 during its exhibition match at Dail Soccer Stadium.
when we have intra-squad games. v Q: Apart from the lack of classes, what else about the National Team is different
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than N.C. State? A: “I’d say everything is more of a competition. At N.C. State, you’re competing for a starting spot or for
some minutes, but still you live with your teammates and go to class with them. They’re your best friends and it’s competitive, but nothing
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like it is here [with the National Team]. Down here, guys are trying to get called back to the next camp, so it’s definitely a more serious culture at these camps. It’s all soccer too, while at N.C. State you’re a student first and an athlete second.” Q: How does the level of competition in training at N.C. State compare to that of the national team? A: “Our practices at State are very competitive. People will tackle each other and get into it, but it’s just different here. Around 60 or 70 percent of the kids here are already professional players, so I’m in their environment. Back at their clubs, everything is as competitive as it can be. They bring that competitiveness to the table, so then all the collegiate players have to match their intensity. The competitive environment here is just at a whole other level.” Q: What have you learned so far from the coaches and other players that can help your game? A: “I’ve been playing at right back here, where I usually play winger or a forward for N.C. State. So I kind of get to switch spots and see through the perspective of the guy who usually guards me. I think it’s good that I’ve
learned to play on both sides of the ball and be a versatile player. Now I know what defenders will do more often than I used to, and that will help me when I’m attacking on the wings. But it’s also been good to play defender here so I know what attackers want to do. It’s really helped me develop and not become too one-dimensional.” Q : How much has the image of “N.C. State Soccer” changed since you first started attending national team camps as a 15-year old? A: “It’s actually grown a lot since I first committed to State. Right after I committed, I went to a camp with the Under-18 National Team and I told kids and they were like, ‘Oh, you’re going to N.C. State. Why are you going there?’ But now, like at this camp, kids know I’m at N.C. State and they know it’s a good program. There’s also a defender [Conor Donovan] here that is coming to State in the fall, so there’s two Wolfpackers here. So State’s image has grown a tremendous amount between when I was 16 and now when I’m 18. Just in two years, people really respect State’s program much more than they used to.”
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FOR RELEASE DECEMBER 12, 2013
Level: 1 2 3 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3ACROSS box (in bold borders) contains every digit Keyless 1 to17 Top 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, 13 Crude dudes visit www.sudoku.org.uk. 15 Some woodwind players
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SOLUTION TO WEDNESDAY’S PUZZLE
12/26/13
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working on a 35Across 18 Missile spot 19 Socially awkward type 20 Fish-eating eagle 21 Talking Trans Am of classic TV 22 Speak incessantly about 24 Spenser’s “The __ Queene” 28 Some elimination rounds 30 Quite a lot 31 Kirsten of “Melancholia” 32 Otologist’s concern 35 Pastime that will celebrate its 100th anniversary on © 2013 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. All rights reserved. 12/21/2013 38 Saturn model until 2007 39 Pet sounds 40 Nostrils 41 Name of eight English kings 42 Lunch, say 43 It may be used after a break 46 Requisite 48 Quite a while 49 Not even semipro? 50 Vocalist James 54 How to finish working on a 35Across 58 Corrida figures 59 Gets in order 60 Tense 61 Satisfies the munchies DOWN 1 Nails, as a test 2 Doorman’s cry 3 Roundish 4 Literary sea captain
12/12/13 5 Porthos, to Wednesday’s Puzzle Solved Aramis 6 Gentle giant in “Of Mice and Men”12/26/13 7 Crude meas. 8 __ cit. 9 Crude fleet 10 Seize 11 Pool worker 12 Chief Ruhr River valley city 14 Discontinued depilatory 15 Long-established VISIT TECHNICIANONLINE.COM 17 Inventor of the 35-Across 21 Branches on some trees 22 Metal fastener (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 12/12/13 23 Adjusted (to) 24 Central points 50 Woolly females 37 Microwave 25 High style 51 Composer who 41 Was indirect 26 Avenger John was a CBS 42 Keep from getting Steed’s alma reporter out of control mater 43 Took care of 52 Veracious 27 Thing in court? 53 Threatening 44 Former Argentine 29 Limits slitherers ruler 31 __ prize 55 Centimeter-gram45 Longest river in 32 Biblical reformer second unit France 33 Brown or golden 56 Shoe part 47 Catchall abbr. drinks 57 __ Balls: Hostess 49 Sounds of 34 Take ten 36 Made an exit snack food contentment By Robert W. Harris
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Sports PAGE 8 • THURSDAY, JAN. 9, 2014
COUNTDOWN
• 2 days until men’s basketball takes on Virginia in the PNC Arena.
INSIDE
• Page 6: Student and faculty member redesign coffee cups
TECHNICIAN
Watson earns prestigious honor
Luke Nadkarni
Assistant Sports Editor
Wolfpack women look to extend winning run With a win in Chapel Hill on Thursday, the N.C. State women’s basketball team would improve to 15-1 on the season, matching the best start for the Pack since the 1997-98 campaign. That season, Kay Yow led State to the Final Four. SOURCE: N.C. STATE ATHLETICS
Golf signee wins honor
On Tuesday, future N.C. State Will Blalock, a senior at Forestview High School, was named the North Carolina Junior Player of the Year. Blalock, who signed with the Wolfpack in November, finished in the top 10 in 10 of 17 tournaments he played in this past season and was ranked No. 11 on GolfWeek’s list of the top 100 players from the class of 2014. SOURCE: N.C. STATE ATHLETICS
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Today WOMEN’S BASKETBALL VS. NORTH CAROLINA Chapel Hill, 6 p.m. Friday SWIMMING & DIVING VS. VILLANOVA Raleigh, 3 p.m. MEN’S TENNIS @ WOLFPACK INVITE Raleigh, All Day Saturday MEN’S BASKETBALL VS. VIRGINIA, PNC Arena, 5 p.m. WRESTLING VS. PITTSBURGH Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. RIFLE VS. COLUMBUS ST. Murray, All Day MEN’S TENNIS @ WOLFPACK INVITE Raleigh, All Day Sunday WRESTLING VS. CLARION @ PITT DUALS Pittsburgh, 12 p.m WOMEN’S BASKETBALL VS. WAKE FOREST Winston-Salem, 2 p.m. WOMEN’S GYMNASTICS VS. NORTH CAROLINA Chapel Hill, 2 p.m. MEN’S TENNIS @ WOLFPACK INVITE Raleigh, All Day Wednesday MEN’S BASKETBALL VS. WAKE FOREST Winston-Salem, 9 p.m. Jan. 16 WOMEN’S BASKETBALL VS. FLORIDA ST. Reynolds Coliseum, 7 p.m. Jan. 17 WOMEN’S GYMNASTICS VS. TOWSON Raleigh, 7 p.m. MEN’S TENNIS @ SHERWOOD COLLEGIATE CUP Thousand Oaks, All Day TRACK @ GENE ANDERSON INVITATIONAL Chapel-Hill, All Day Jan. 18 MEN’S TENNIS VS. UNCGREENSBORO Raleigh, 10 a.m. MEN’S BASKETBALL VS. DUKE Durham, 2 p.m. MEN’S TENNIS @ SHERWOOD COLLEGIATE CUP Thousand Oaks, All Day Jan. 19 WRESTLING VS. KENT ST. Kent, 1 p.m. WOMEN’S GYMNASTICS VS. KENT ST. Kent, 1 p.m. MEN’S TENNIS @ SHERWOOD COLLEGIATE CUP Thousand Oaks, All Day WOMEN’S BASKETBALL VS. MIAMI Coral Gables, 2 p.m. Jan. 20 MEN’S BASKETBALL VS. MARYLAND PNC Arena, 9 p.m. MEN’S TENNIS @ SHERWOOD COLLEGIATE CUP Thousand Oaks, All Day
Often at major college football programs, there is a perception that players devote their time squarely on their craft and show little interest for anything else. For recently graduated tight end Asa Watson, that certainly isn’t true. Watson was honored at the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 2 in New Orleans, along with a host of other college football players from around the country, as part of the Allstate Good Works Team selected by the American Football Coaches Association. The association honored players who demonstrated outstanding examples of community service. “I wasn’t really expecting it,” Watson said. “So I definitely felt very honored.” The 6’ 3”, 237-pound native of Rock Hill, S.C. almost saw his career end with a heart problem in 2011, but recovered to post his best career season in 2012 with 24 catches for 282 yards. He caught a touchdown pass in a 37-6 win over Wake Forest on Nov. 10, 2012. He did his service through Athletes in Action, a nationwide sports ministry which blends faith and athletics. Many prominent athletes and coaches have been associated with this ministry, including Wolfpack head men’s basketball coach, Mark Gottfried. Watson is not the only Triangle-area player to receive the honor. Duke senior guard Dave Harding was also selected, along with senior quarterback Jordan Reid of North Carolina Central University. Senior quarterback Stephen Morris of Miami was the other
CHRIS RUPERT/TECHNICIAN
Graduate student Asa Watson runs the football on Aug. 31 at Carter-Finley Stadium against Louisiana Tech. The Wolfpack defeated the Bulldogs 40-14.
ACC player honored. In total, 22 college football players, each from a different school across all NCAA divisions, were honored. There was one all-Football Bowl Subdivision team of 11, and comprised of 11 players from the Football Championship Subdivision and Divisions II and III. Watson traveled to Los Angeles and took part in a youth football clinic. He also helped tutor children
at a YMCA. In New Orleans, Watson and the rest of the group were recognized on the field, one by one, at halftime of the Sugar Bowl between Alabama and Oklahoma. Before that, they put on another youth football clinic. “This clinic was for kids from seven to 15 years old.” Watson said. “It was a lot of fun, but it was also a lot of work.” “We got a chance to go
out on the town for New Year’s,” Watson said. “I enjoyed seeing Bourbon Street all lit up.” Watson is aiming to eliminate the stereotype that college football players are self-centered people who often find themselves on the wrong side of situations. “So many times you hear about a player who got in trouble. Somebody did this, somebody did that,” Watson said. “That’s why it’s great to
see a lot of guys being honored for something positive like this.” Watson said that helping others is something that he will continue to make a point in his life. “I’d definitely be interested in pursuing something like that down the road,” Watson said. “But right now, I’ve got to focus on football, as well. I’m still trying to figure out what to do later in life.”
Red-hot Pack set to battle Heels Rob McLamb Staff Writer
The N.C. State women’s basketball team will embark on a trip to face the No. 13 North Carolina Tar Heels in Chapel Hill Thursday. It is fresh off winning its second game against a top-25 opponent Sunday at home versus Syracuse, who was then ranked 20th. The Wolfpack enters the contest in Carmichael Arena against its bitter rivals with a 14-1 record and are No. 20 in the latest AP poll. It is the first time State has been ranked since the end of the regular season in 2007. Thursday’s matchup marks the first time both teams have entered the game nationally ranked in a regular season game since February 2, 2006. “I would imagine it will be a good turnout,” head coach Wes Moore said. “They [UNC]are obviously ranked very high. I am sure they have got some excitement going on over there, and I feel like we do. Two ranked teams; that is nice.” In Moore’s first season in charge, the Wolfpack continued to be led by senior center Markeisha Gatling. The Raleigh native averages 16.1 points and 6.3 rebounds per contest. Her 70.1 percent field goal percentage is tops in the NCAA. In State’s victory over Syracuse
JOHN JOYNER/TECHNICIAN
Redshirt senior forward/center Lakeesa Daniel looks to pass the ball during the game against Presbyterian in Reynolds Coliseum on Nov. 16. The Wolfpack defeated the Blue Hose 85-45.
on Sunday, Gatling had 14 points and a career-best 15 rebounds. Two-time Academic AllAmerican senior forward Kody Burke is also chipping in with 14.3 points and 5.3 per game. State has six players averaging more than eight points a game. Against the Tar Heels,
N.C. State will be facing a talented but young team. North Carolina has no seniors on its squad, and nine out of the 13 players on the team are either sophomores or freshmen. While the Heels are coming off a loss to No. 8 Maryland at home in its ACC opener, UNC has surprised some onlookers
with its start and Moore is wary of their ability. “They are long, and they are athletic,” Moore said. “A lot of teams have players that are more one-dimensional. A lot of these players are capable of beating you more than one way. It is a little bit tougher matchup trying to decide what you want to
take away.” UNC has four players who are averaging double figures in scoring and are led by freshman guard Diamond DeShields, the daughter of former Major League Baseba ll player Delino DeShields. The native of Norcross, Ga. accounts for 14.9 points and 4.7 assists per contest despite only playing 22 minutes per game. “Obviously, DeShields is familiar to me being from (near) Atlanta,” Moore said. “Four freshmen and a sophomore are starting. That is a pretty talented class. We are not going to beat them oneon-one. Hopefully playing five-on-five, we can keep it competitive.” The Tar Heels will be led into battle by interim head coach Andrew Calder, who is filling in for head coach Sylvia Hatchell, while she undergoes radiation treatment for leukemia. Hatchell and Moore both coached at Francis Marion (Division II in Tennessee) early in their career. “We [ACC coaches] had a conference call and she [Hatchell] was in on it,” Moore said. “She sounded good. We are all anxious for her to come back.” The tip-off is set for 6 p.m. in the 97th meeting of the old foes. N.C. State leads the series 51-45.