The Appalachian Thursday, October 8, 2015
COSTUMES see PAGE 5
Students create custom street signs by Kelsey Hamm A&E Editor
T
he Appalachian Popular Programming Society hosted a Makeyour-Own Street Sign event yesterday in the Plemmons Student Union. The event is one of multiple “fun, free” events hosted by APPS every month, Erin Parrish, graduate assistant for the special events council, said. “We do two events per month and they are usually free events for students,” she said. “We just bring in vendors and it’s a first come first serve basis.” Queen City Novelties, a Charlotte based event company, provided equipment
for the signs. Jack Bracey founded the company in 2012. Events are a passion for him, he said. “I used to work for an entertainment company before I started this one,” he said. “I’ve always had a passion for events – I would say I’ve been hosting and volunteering for special events since I was 5 years old.” The amount of originality in signs varies, he said. “The most popular thing for students to get is their names,” he said. “Today I’ve seen a lot of inside jokes that would only make sense to one person – but that’s why people become excited about this, because it’s individual-
SEE SIGNS PAGE 3
Kelsey Hamm
Paige Clayton, Paulo Neto, and Morgan Nystedt all created personalized messages at the MakeYour-Own Street Sign event in the Plemmons Student Union.
Rain, outages in Boone by Sammy Hanf News Reporter
On Sunday, students had their day of rest disturbed by a power outage hitting many big buildings on campus such as East Residence Hall and Sanford. The student union was unaffected by the outage and the library was running on backup generators and still able to check out books, but the student computers were down and running water was lost. The outage happened in the afternoon and lasted around a half hour, according to New River Light and Power. The exact cause of the outage
could not be immediately determined. Scott Eggers of New River Light and Power said it could have been caused by some over-adventurous vermin disturbing the power lines. All the buildings regained power at the same time, except the Belk Library, which was experiencing its own separate problems and stayed down for around an hour. Eggers said a square D breaker in the building was down, part of ongoing electrical problems in the library. What is behind these electrical issues is also unknown.
SGA referendum to improve representation in Greek life
For a full photo essay on the weekend’s weather, flip to page 7 Lindsey Honkomp
Malik Rahili
A new referendum which is up for voting by the Student Government Association aims to improve representation for minorities in the student senate.
by Thomas Culkin News Reporter
Appalachian State University’s student body is currently voting on a recent referendum proposed by the Student Government Association that would improve representation for minorities in the student senate. Currently, Greek life has three seats in the senate. Those seats can be filled by members of any members of Greek life. Unfortunately, the demographics of Appalachian State mean minorities rarely get their voice heard. “Basically, right now, all three seats could be filled by anyone in Greek
life,” said Carson Rich, the SGA president. “Right now, just based on populations, IFC and PHC provide more votes than NPHC can, and it’s not fair and it’s not equal.” To counter this problem, SGA has proposed a referendum that would guarantee the three seats are filled by each of the three main organizations which make up Greek life: the National Panhellenic Council, comprised of the African American fraternities and sororities; the National Panhellenic Conference, comprised of the sororities; and the Interfraternity Council, com-
SEE SGA PAGE 2