October 23, 2013

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The student newspaper of north carolina A&t

Misuse of social networks has negative outcomes TAYLOR YOUNG

Register Reporter

Social media is sure to skyrocket with homecoming vastly approaching. Social media will play a big role in every event. Though social media can have its advantages, students should be aware of its negative affects when used inappropriately. Social media sites date back to 1985 when people had to search computers, but now social networks are accessible through mobile phones, tablets, iPads, or computer. Today, there is not just one way to stay connected to what is going on. Social media sites are meant to keep people connected. Being socially connected is always good, but the problem is when it takes a negative turn. A person’s character is in question when sexually explicit actions are being put out. When girls begin to post dancing videos or both males and females post pictures of themselves participating in illegal activity, it usually results in a negative outcome. “Social media is a powerful tool for our generation and the generations to come. In about ten years, social media has been established as a reputable means

for sharing information,” said Courtney Jackson, Social Media Manager for North Carolina A&T. “Social media has fueled revolutions. It has ended careers, and it has become a staple in all the major organizations in the world.” Some members of the student body are considered Generation Y, meaning they live in the now instead of focusing on what is to come later. According to Forbes magazine, Generation Y is the generation that is going nowhere and they are fine with that. During the time of the most socially connected generation, Generation Y, word spreads quickly. Someone can attempt to figure out who an individual is through social networks, such as Instagram and Twitter, and never lays eyes on him or her in person. “I think it reflects negatively on our generation because you see it a lot. But I do think that it’s impactful to know what people around the world are doing,” said Kendrick Smith, an A&T junior. “It allows us to see how certain societies live or how they react to different things. It’s a negative and a positive.” SGA President Canisha Turner sent out a letter to the student

body on Oct. 14 regarding various social media post that are and have been associated with A&T. In the letter, Turner says, “The University is requesting that students do not use #ncat hashtag or its logo to make derogatory statements about another person or to post sexually explicit photos and videos that may cause embarrassment of humiliation.” “We are an HBCU, so we are constantly under the radar… It’s a spiraling effect of negative things that can happen from the misusage of social media,” said Turner. “Now, I don’t think that all social media is bad, at all, we just have to use it in a positive way.” A&T has taken many negative hits when it comes to social media because students are unaware that tagging the school in posts creates havoc for the university. Though the student handbook does not specifically state the consequences for inappropriate and negative social media posts, administration strongly urges that students be aware of u See SOCIAL NETWORKS on Page 3

Grambling football returns for play JOSH MOON

MCT Campus

That breeze — and the shivers that accompanied it — originated in Grambling, La., where the entire Grambling State football team, angry about a number of things they had every right to be angry about, had just refused to board buses headed for Jackson, Miss., and a scheduled Saturday game against Jackson State. It was the first protest of its kind. And it demonstrates once and for all just how much power college football players — and some other college athletes — hold in today’s money-centric college athletics world. A cash-strapped Grambling University will now fork over hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines and lost revenue for forfeiting the game. It will deal with months, if not years, of negative PR that’s likely to drive away a number of future recruits and coaches. And it must work feverishly to placate donors and boosters, along with the Louisiana state government and the general public, who all must be questioning the leadership at the school today. The annual budget, awful as it was, is now shot for Grambling, because jerking six figures from a football budget that was only around $2 million will do that. The school, which had already transferred nearly $2 million from its general fund to athletics, will undoubtedly be forced to make cuts, some of which will likely fall outside of athletics. All of that because players didn’t get on the bus.

That’s quite a bit of power. And it’s power every AD in the country had better fear. Because more and more, college athletes are coming to realize that not only are they getting hosed by some current NCAA rules, but that they have at least some power to do something about it. Now, to be fair, the Grambling situation isn’t relatable to most schools, if any, on the Football Bowl Subdivision level, where the upper echelon of college sports teams compete. Grambling is on the Football Championship level — the old Division I-AA — where teams like Alabama State and other small-budget, small-fan base teams play. The Alabamas and Auburns of the world don’t deal with issues such as unsafe flooring, staph infections, dingy training areas, 10-hour bus rides, skipped meals on the road or substandard equipment. All of that, plus administrative in-fighting that led directly to the firing of former head coach Doug Williams, plagued the Grambling program. And many of those things plague other SWAC teams. ASU has vastly improved its facilities over the last few years, but it wasn’t long back that a player stepped through the floor of the old training room, which was housed in a mobile trailer. Those everyday safety issues at FCS schools are a product of school administrators who refuse to accept reality — that their fan bases and donor bases simply can’t support life at the Division I level. The SWAC should be a Division II league, where rules and

National Day of Protest The October 22nd Coalition marches each year in major cities to protest against police brutality and abuse. Yesterday the organization commemorated its 18th anniversary march as well as its 14th march in Greensboro. The coalition verbally displayed its distrust of the police and displeasure with the $114 million Guilford County Detention Center. The group also held a protest last month on the corner of Dudley and E. Market Streets to protest against police brutality. The October 22 Coalition will continue to protest and reach out to the families of these victims. PHOTOs & story by Keith Jones

u See GRAMBLING on Page 3

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PLANNED PARENTHOOD

THE REGISTER APOLOGIZES

AGGIES PLAY FAMU

EDITOR GOES TO TEEN VOUGE

Keep up with breaking news on our Web site. Slideshows, videos and more are available online.

The organization celebrates 30 years of service to the community and young women.

See what The A&T Register staff has to say about last week’s 20 Questions.

The football team will play the the Rattlers Saturday. Can the Aggies bounce back after three losses?

Get the inside scoop of Scene Editor Kourtney Pope’s experience at a top magazine.

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WEATHER wednesday

63° Low: 37° High:

Thursday: Partly Cloudy | High 57° friday: Partly Cloudy | High 52°


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events

The A&T Register | ncatregister.com | Wednesday, October 23, 2013

3

Planned Parenthood celebrates 30th anniversary Laci ollison

Register Reporter

Editor’s note: This is Part 1 of a four-part series.

Wednesday

23

8 Steps Forward, 48 Steps Backward Carver Auditorium 7 p.m.

Omega Psi Phi Pageant Harrison Auditorium 7 p.m.

Congo Week Forum GCB Auditorium 7 p.m.

thursday

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Honors Colloquium: “Salt Sugar Fat” Hines Hall Auditorium 3 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.

Congo Week Celebration Hines Hall Auditorium 7 p.m.

saturday

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Campus Farmers Market

Earlier this year, state legislators passed laws that could potentially diminish abortion access. The regulations could force 15 of the state’s 16 abortion clinics to close due to forced expenses. Guidelines are expected to be given by the N.C. Department of Health by January. MSNBC’s Melissa HarrisPerry was the keynote speaker at the 30-year celebration of Greensboro’s Planned Parenthood clinic last Thursday. During her address to the attendants of the event, HarrisPerry shared her personal story of how planned parenthood and reproductive technology played a part in her personal life. “Because I had a private doctor and had good insurance, I was able to get an abortion without anyone knowing besides the fact that I shared it with them. But I realize that many women don’t get that chance.” An alumna of both Wake Forest and Duke University, Harris-Perry praised the Moral Monday protests at the legislature as one of the only legitimate social movements in America today. Gail Hoffman-Hornsby, the clinic’s first executive director reflected on the opening. “There were questions. There were arguments. But people were very understanding once they learned the numbers of people getting care.” The organization hopes to raise $5 million in order to make the necessary upgrades to continue to operate its two health clinics that offer abor-

tion services in Winston-Salem and Wilmington. The Chapel Hill and Fayetteville Planned Parenthood clinics also provide abortion services but are managed by a different group. “We understand that we will have to fully comply with the ambulatory surgical centers just as we have in Virginia and South Carolina,” said Melissa Reed, a spokeswoman for Planned Parenthood Health Systems. “Make no mistake, we will comply. Planned Parenthood will be here no matter what.” Recent North Carolina legislation makes it difficult for women to receive proper health care. “The first activism work that I did was in Durham, North Carolina where I served as an escort for a young woman to go and receive the procedure. It was then that I realized the extremity of the situation.” Planned Parenthood Federation of America currently provides comprehensive reproductive and complementary health care services as well as human sexuality educational programs. The organization also advocates public policies and promotes research in reproductive health care. Hoffman-Hornsby, who no longer resides in North Carolina, says that she still remains informed on the state’s political status. “Planned Parenthood is a part of my spirit and my soul,” she said. “I have seen the results, from education, to birth control, to honoring a woman’s choice.”

Photo COURTESY OF PLANNED PARENTHOOD

Pictured ABOVE (from left to right) Alan Cone, Melissa Harris-Perry, and Sally S. Cone at the Koury Convention Center for Planned Parenthood’s 30th anniversary on October 17, 2013. (Below) Linda Carlisle, Gail Hoffman-Hornsby, Kay Stern, and Ron Johnson were honorees at the event.

—Email Laci at lkolliso@aggies. ncat.edu and follow The Register on Twitter @TheATRegister

Sockwell Hall 11 a.m. - 1 p.m.

SGA Updates: Monday, Oct. 21, 2013 •Coronation: “Into the Royal Waters beyond the Seas of Aggie Dynasty.” Final details are being tailored out and perfected now

Halloween is coming up! Do you like getting scared by ghouls and goblins?

Why not take a FREE trip to Woods of Terror?

•WNAA: Ads through radio, 1st mini segment is to come regarding social media, voting, and GHOE Safety ft. Madame Pres Canisha Turner. In the future, they to do a round table discussion on various topics with other cabinet members

The FIRST 5 people to send a picture of their favorite article to The Register’s Instagram or Twitter will receive a free ticket to Woods of Terror! In the post, you must say why the article was your favorite!

•Laundry Service Committee: working on improving washers and dryers on the Alumni’s side of company

Remember to tag @TheATRegister in the photo!

•Hoops for Hunger Oct. 24 6-9 p.m.: Tickets are being sold • Full Schedule of homecoming will be out this week for student body

•1st and 2nd Year Experience: working on revamping Aggie Pride where it won’t be a class but seminars. Possibly have Alumni mentor students •Dr. Buggs- temporary advisor •Senators are working on the Constitution •Next State of the Campus is coming up in November

The A&T

Register Box E-25 1601 E. Market Street Greensboro, NC 27411 Newsroom: NCB 328A (336) 334­-7700 www.ncatregister.com

social networks From page 1 the possible harm it could not cause the school but also for themselves in the future. Inappropriate use of any company or university’s name could result in legal issues.

—Email Taylor at tlyoung1@aggies.ncat.edu and follow The Register on Twitter @TheATRegister

Make sure to visit our website. www.ncatregister.com And follow The Register on Twitter and Instagram @TheATRegister

editor-in-chief: Karmen Robinson Managing editor/sports editor: Kalyn Hoyle opinions editor: Meagan Jordan scene editor: Kourtney Pope online Editor: Courtney Matthews copy desk chief: Kashian Scrivens GRAPHIC DESIGNER: Taylor Wilson

theBLOTTER Oct. 15 2:11 a.m. Aggie Village 4 Communicating Threats/DTP Prosecution Declined

Oct. 16 1:32 a.m. Aggie Suites PVA Service of Warrants Closed

12:00 p.m. Harrison Auditorium Vehicle Accident (Hit and Run) Further Investigation

4:00 p.m. Morrison Hall Lost Property Closed

3:00 p.m. Ward Hall Fraud/ Larceny Further Investigation

6:59 p.m. Dowdy Bldg Found Property Closed

GRAMBLING From page 1 requirements would save the member schools millions of dollars each year. Not to mention, the teams could compete on the national stage. At the BCS-level schools, where the strength and conditioning coaches outnumber the total coaches at many SWAC schools, the problems are different. But they, too, are nothing a walkout won’t solve. Because if a forfeit worth hundreds of thousands of dollars will make some folks take notice, how about one worth 10s of millions? That’s what the average game day at an Auburn or Alabama means to the school and the surrounding towns. Not to mention, with national title and bowl game invitations at stake, the dollar figure only climbs higher. What happened at Grambling, coupled with the recent

photo editor: Symone’ Austin Copy editor: Brianna Harrison senior reporter: Kamil Lockley reporters: Jeremy Days, Kimberly Fields, Lacy Ollison, Ziris Savage, Taylor Young content director: Anjan Basu faculty adviser: Emily Harris

All Players United movement and a steady increase in participation of amateur unions, players are becoming more aware that they hold more cards than they’ve realized. One day soon, they might notice that the guys blowing the whistles at practice each afternoon are driving home in Mercedes, raking in millions yearly and are coaching under guarantees that ensure their pay regardless of job performance. If those players ever compare all of that to the risk they’re taking, with little or no insurance, and the one-year scholarships they’re provided, maybe things don’t seem so fair. And maybe one sunny fall Friday, the Alabama team doesn’t board the bus for Starkville, Miss., or Nashville, Tenn., or Auburn. Chilly indeed. Visit mctcampus.com for more information.

The A&T Register is published every Wednesday during the fall and spring semesters by students at North Carolina A&T State University. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Register’s newsroom (subject to availability). All subscription requests should be directed to the Business department. The A&T Register has a weekly circulation of 5,000 copies on-campus and in the community and is a member of The Associated Press, The Associated Collegiate Press and the Black College Wire.


33.7231° -118.2659°

There’s a job waiting for you after college. And the benefits start right now. I had never considered a career in the military until my junior year at Morehouse College when I discovered the Coast Guard’s College Student Pre-Commissioning Initiative (CSPI). This program changed my life. Not only did the Coast Guard cover all tuition, fees, and books for two years, but they also paid me a very competitive salary while I was still a student. The best part, however, was knowing that I’d have a job the moment I graduate as an officer of the U.S. Coast Guard. My friends at other HBCUs spent a lot of time worrying about finding jobs after college, but after I joined CSPI, everything just fell into place. Visit GoCoastGuard.com/CSPI to learn more.


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The A&T Register | ncatregister.com | Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Syrian rebels in command of Lebanon corridor prepare for government offensive mitchell prothero MTC Campus

ARSAL, Lebanon — Syrian rebels and their Lebanese allies currently in command of a crucial corridor that links rebel havens in Lebanon with the embattled Syrian capital of Damascus are preparing for a massive government offensive aimed at bringing the strategic area back under government control. Rebels and activists in the Lebanese border town of Arsal say they expect the offensive to attempt to cut off sympathetic areas in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley from rebel-controlled villages just across the border in Syria. The enclave that has sprung up on both sides of the border near the Jebel Qalamoun mountain peak represents the largest rebel haven near Damascus, the ultimate goal of the insurgents. Its population is swollen by Syrian refugees and fighters who fled the government offensive earlier this year that retook the cities of Qusayr and Homs. Now tens of thousands of rebel fighters are preparing to make a final stand to keep Arsal from being cut off from the Syrian battlefield. “We will fight to the last man,” said Abu Omar Hujieri, a Lebanese activist and fighter who has ties to most of the rebel factions in the area. With Qusayr and Homs essentially back under the control of the government of President Bashar Assad, a government success in seizing the Jebel Qalamoun region would finish the rebel presence here. Almost from the beginning of the anti-Assad uprising 30 months ago, Arsal has been a crucial logistics hub and haven for Syrian rebels, who found the mostly Sunni Muslim population, with its strong family and political ties to Syrian Muslims, ready to openly assist. “This is our war just like theirs,” Abu Omar explained of the Lebanese involvement. “They are our family, our neighbors and our friends. All the people of Arsal are with the rebellion.” With about 30,000 refugees joining the 40,000 people who already lived here, the two communities appear to be acting as one even as the rest of Lebanon struggles to absorb, politically and economically, more than a

Photo by mitchell prothero • mct campus

Syrian refugees are living in concrete homes built adjacent to a mosque in the border town of Aarsal, Lebanon. Tens of thousands of refugees and rebel fighters in the border area anticipate the Syrian government to launch an offensive to sweep them from the region that links a refugee haven in Lebanon to Syria.

million refugees from both sides of the conflict. Signs of rebel sympathy abound, and the town has made housing available to tens of thousands in Arsal and the surrounding villages. The situation is alarming to Hezbollah, the Shiite Muslim group that’s Lebanon’s most powerful political organization and a staunch ally of Assad’s. Hezbollah officials say the tens of thousands of rebel fighters in Arsal and on the Syrian side of the border nearby leave Lebanon vulnerable to terrorist attacks. A Hezbollah commander, speaking only on the condition of anonymity because he wasn’t allowed to discuss sensitive matters with a reporter, said dangerous traffic moved both ways across the border, not just from Arsal into Syria but also from

rebel-held Syrian cities such as Yabrud into Lebanon. “The terrorists prepare booby-trapped cars in Yabrud and then they enter Lebanon through the smuggler routes to Arsal,” the commander said. Hezbollah is expected to commit scores of its fighting units to the battle in this area, and it’s been conducting reconnaissance missions on both sides of the border to plan an offensive, an undertaking that’s complicated by the area’s rugged mountains, which sit barren of trees yearround but fill with heavy snow in the winter. “Hezbollah has been training some special forces units to fight in this area,” the commander said. “It is different to fight in those mountains than the cities” or in southern Lebanon, where

the group traditionally operates. That snowfall is what has both sides anxiously watching the calendar and the weather as winter draws near. Snow will make fighting with heavy weapons nearly impossible. “We estimated there was a one-month-long opportunity to do this after the Eid holiday,” which ended last week, the commander said. “And now there’s less time.” That’s because the Syrian army hasn’t yet completed its operations to seize control of the Ghouta area east of Damascus. Retaking Ghouta was considered a prerequisite to moving on to the Jebel Qalamoun area, the commander said. Seizing Ghouta, where the Assad regime was accused of using chemical weapons in Au-

Religious debate fuels Jerusalem election Joel greenberg MTC Campus

JERUSALEM — Residents of Jerusalem, a politically contested city that’s a mosaic of cultural tribes, will select a mayor Tuesday in an election that pits secular Israelis against ultra-Orthodox Jews and rightists against leftists, with Palestinian residents mostly watching from the sidelines The vote, part of nationwide municipal elections, resonates with all the political and cultural conflicts that roil Israeli society. At the heart of the contest is a struggle for re-election by the incumbent, Nir Barkat, a former high-tech entrepreneur who’s pushed an agenda of boosting tourism, creating jobs and promoting an array of cultural activities to stem a flight of young secular residents to other cities as the ultra-Orthodox population grows. The election reflects a culture clash between strictly Orthodox Jews, about 30 percent of the city’s population, and more liberal Israelis over the character of Jerusalem, which in recent years has seen its population decrease as secular Jews flee. Ultra-Orthodox voters hope to regain control over crucial levers of power and patronage in city hall. Palestinians, who make up more than a third of the city’s population, are boycotting the

vote, as they have for years. They view the Israeli municipality as part of a foreign occupation of their neighborhoods in East Jerusalem. Barkat’s tenure in office, following an ultra-Orthodox predecessor, has seen a surge of cultural activities, ranging from street parties with live bands downtown to a marathon and race car rally on the city streets. He’s opened a restaurant-gallery-market complex in the city’s former Ottomanera train station _ the complex is open on Saturdays, the Jewish Sabbath _ and he’s created a new jogging and biking path along an abandoned railway line in the south of the city. Barkat also has supported Jewish settlers who’ve moved into homes in Jerusalem’s Palestinian neighborhoods, counting on their religious nationalist supporters to form a crucial swing vote that could help him overcome the political clout of the ultra-Orthodox. He openly advocates keeping all of Jerusalem under Israeli sovereignty, declaring, “Jerusalem can never be divided.” The challenger, Moshe Leon, an accountant and wellconnected political operator who moved to Jerusalem recently, is religious and hails from a suburb of Tel Aviv. He was drafted to challenge Barkat by former Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, the bluntspoken ultra-nationalist leader of a party that represents Russian-speaking immigrants, and

by Aryeh Deri, the leader of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, which represents Jews of Middle Eastern and North African origin. The two political power brokers hope to leverage electoral support from the ultraOrthodox along with backing from Russian-speaking voters to recapture city hall. Recent polls suggest that Barkat, who rode to victory in 2008 on a secular backlash against the policies of predecessor Uri Lupolianski, may win a second term, but he’ll need to turn out the vote among secular residents concerned about increasing religious influence in their city. The austere beliefs and lifestyles of the ultra-Orthodox have created a unique set of election issues, with some parties that are vying for seats on the city council promising that more theaters and restaurants will be open on Saturdays, that efforts by ultra-Orthodox extremists to ban women’s images from public signs and billboards will fail, and that more community activities will be organized in public spaces, particularly on weekends, so that secular residents will find alternatives to the traditional Sabbath strictures that shut down businesses and bus service on Saturdays. A billboard that the leftist Meretz party put up in the trendy German Colony neighborhood in southern Jerusalem _ long considered a liberal bas-

tion in an increasingly rightist, religious city _ proclaims that the “secular neighborhood will remain secular.” Despite his strategic alliance with the religious nationalists, Barkat, who’s secular, represents the hope of many liberal voters to keep the Jewish part of Jerusalem vibrant, tolerant and culturally eclectic despite the religious and ethnic tensions that permeate the city. Palestinians aren’t expected to turn out in any significant numbers Tuesday, underlining their rejection of the Israeli-run municipality and Barkat’s pro-settlement stance. None serves on the city council. The crucial question is whether the ultra-Orthodox will vote as a bloc for Leon or split their vote, rewarding Barkat for the financial support he’s given their institutions, said Shahar Ilan, former religious affairs reporter for the newspaper Haaretz. “If there is a split among the ultra-Orthodox, Barkat’s chances are good,” said Ilan, who’s now vice president of Hiddush, a nonprofit group that advocates religious freedom and equality. “All in all, Barkat has been a quite reasonable mayor and the city has been pretty quiet. He’s no pyromaniac” _ meaning he avoids needless provocation _ “and he’s running a coalition that includes everyone. He delivers the goods.”

gust, would, along with clearing the Jebel Qalamoun area, break the rebel siege of the capital. The slow progress of that effort might force the regime to delay an offensive into Jebel Qalamoun until spring, according to reports in pro-Syrian regime news outlets. A delay would certainly suit the rebels, who claim to have turned Yabrud into a workshop to produce mortars and other weapons they hope will help keep the area in rebel hands. As has happened elsewhere, the rebel forces in the ArsalQalamoun area have undergone a radicalization in recent months, with the Western-backed Free Syrian Army largely collapsing as rebel units have joined more radical Islamist-led groups. The Farouk Brigade, the secular

fighting group that was once dominant here, has begun to splinter, and control is now in the hands of Jaysh Islam, a coalition of Islamist units from the Damascus area led by Liwa alIslam, perhaps the most militarily effective purely Syrian group in the country. “We have no problem coordinating our rebel activities with Islamists,” said a young rebel fighter here who called himself “Salem” and who wore the same long beard and flowing hairstyle that’s common among devout rebels. “The Farouk, Nusra, Liwa Islam, these are all Syrian rebel units that work together and will fight and die together to protect Qalamoun.” “Nusra” referred to the Nusra Front, an al-Qaida-aligned fighting group that the United States has designated a terrorist organization. “Nusra is full of people that we know. They’re Syrian, and we will always work with them,” said another rebel, who called himself “Ahmed.” As he and Salem smoked cigarettes in a small refugee enclave next to a mosque that’s rumored to be affiliated with Nusra, he explained the difference between that al-Qaida affiliate and the Islamic State of Iraq and Sham, another al-Qaida group that has recently seized control of many of the key border crossings with Turkey from the secular Free Syrian Army. “We Syrians are a moderate people who want a society that respects all minorities and religions,” Ahmed said. “These groups are part of our community and reflect an Islamic view that is also Syrian. So we trust them and want them in this revolution. (The Islamic State of Iraq and Sham) has many foreigners. We don’t know them and we don’t know what they want. Right now they are helping us, but if that changes ... “ His comment made the other men in the room murmur with concern. Nobody wanted to finish the thought that this revolution, as bloody as it’s already been, with more than 100,000 dead on both sides, might turn to further violence even if the rebels win. “But if we lose Qalamoun, we will be finished,” Salem added. “We have to fight to the end there, because if we lose, we’ll have to sit in this room forever.”

Peru officials to investigate slaughter of dolphins Adrinna leon MTC Campus

LIMA, Peru — The Peruvian government has promised to investigate charges by an environmental group that the out-of-control slaughter of dolphins in Pacific coastal waters has put the ocean mammal at risk. At least 15,000 dolphins annually are being killed off the Peruvian coast by fishermen who use them as shark bait, the environmental watchdog group Asociacion Mundo Azul, or Blue World Association, said late Saturday. The organization conducted a months-long undercover investigation by placing informants aboard fishing vessels. Killing of dolphins was outlawed by Peru’s legislature in 1997, but Stefan Austermuhle, executive director of Blue World, said fishermen have continued to target the mammals, which they harpoon. Sharks, an increasingly coveted catch for meat, which is sold in Peru, and for fins sold on the black market in Asia, are also depleting rapidly, he said. “This ecological crime is an open secret in Peruvian fishing,” Austermuhle said in an interview, adding that most fishermen spear the dolphins swimming in schools as far as 50 miles from the coastline. Austermuhle himself accom-

panied fishermen and filmed the harpooning of several dolphins. His group calculated the approximate number of dolphins killed each year by multiplying the number of registered fishing boats by the average number of annual trips, and multiplied that number by the two to six dolphins that fishermen kill per trip on average, according to the organization’s on-board intelligence. “The fishermen even buy harpoons known as ‘dolphin killers,’” he said. “This happens in front of the entire world, and no one does anything.” Peru’s vice minister in charge of fishing, Paul Phumpiu, said Saturday that the government has opened an investigation into the allegations that will be completed by June. Gonzalo Llosa, a consultant to Peru’s environment ministry, said evidence gathered by Blue World had been forwarded to environmental police to demonstrate “the level of cruelty that is going on, as well as total impunity.” Blue World and other groups warn that killing of dolphins and sharks poses a threat to coastal food chains. Fishermen along Panama’s Pacific coast, for example, have said that shrimp and lobster populations have vanished because the killing of sharks has eliminated a natural predator of the octopus, which feeds on shellfish.


theBIZ

The A&T Register | ncatregister.com | Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Seniors struggle under the current debt load Hanah cho

MTC Campus

BALTIMORE — Norman Harvel is growing old under a mountain of debt. At 60, Harvel faces medical and credit card bills topping $80,000. Yet Harvel is unable to work, having been injured at a job site more a decade ago. The former building maintenance worker now lives on $904 a month in Social Security disability benefits. “I was so sick and tired of getting the bills, so I would throw them away,” Harvel said from his tiny basement apartment in Dundalk, Md. “I’ve had to try to tell myself that it’s something I will wake up from.” Across the country, baby boomers and other older Americans are drowning in debt, say credit counselors, elder law attorneys and economists. “It’s supposed to be the golden years, but it’s not, at least financially,” said Nicholas Del Pizzo III, a Dundalk attorney whose clients include many financially struggling seniors seeking bankruptcy help. From 1992 to 2007, the percentage of households of people in their mid-50s and older with housing and consumer debt rose from 53.8 percent to 63 percent, according to the Washington-based Employee Benefit Research Institute’s research using government data. The problem is even more acute for those 55 to 64, with 81.7 percent carrying debt. In the same period, the average overall debt for these 55-and-older households more than doubled, to $70,370, according to EBRI. In Harvel’s case, he piled up debt over years of taking care of his sick wife, Loretta, who died last year at 63. She had diabetes, was on dialysis and required two open-heart surgeries, Harvel said. Health care bills are a leading factor contributing to the indebtedness of graying Americans. Workers are paying more for employer-sponsored health insurance, while costs for

medical care are skyrocketing. Eligibility for Medicare doesn’t begin until age 65, and it does not cover such expenses as hearing aids, dental care and long-term nursing care. Meanwhile, more older homeowners are carrying mortgage debt into retirement. Making matters worse, declining housing values have cut into what had been a safety net for older Americans and retirees: their homes. Moreover, other older Americans are haunted by student loans years after they, or their children, left school. Adults 50 and older owe 17 percent of the nation’s $870 billion in student-loan debt, according to a March report by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The financial crisis also depleted savings and retirement accounts, contributing to a “perfect storm” of precarious finances among older Americans, said Marceline White, executive director of Maryland Consumer Rights Coalition. One illness or emergency can throw a senior into debt, White said. “If everything goes perfectly, they could manage,” she said. “If something goes wrong, something unexpected happens, they don’t have the liquidity to move on.” While recent government data shows declining consumer debt as families cut back on spending and saved more money, not all older Americans can follow suit. Not only are most older Americans past their prime earning years, but many must dip into their savings to stay on top of bills _ while those still working may make less than they did in previous years. Low-income seniors with excessive debt are having a hard time digging out in an environment in which “job growth is slow and salary increases are minimal,” said Craig Copeland, a senior research associate at EBRI, who wrote the study on debt among the elderly. David Jones, president of the Association of Independent Consumer Credit Counseling Agencies, said debtors age 60

and older now represent the fastest-growing segment seeking help at member offices across the country. The trend has been especially evident in the past two years, a period in which the eldest of the baby boomers began retiring, Jones said. “There were a lot of people in this population that decided to retire without the same kind of assets that previous retirees had,” he said. “In fact, we began to see people with $60,000 in nonmortgage debt.” In general, the association said, the average client at its nonprofit local credit counseling agencies has gotten older: 44.5 in 2011 versus 41 in 2007. The average client also was middle class and seeking help for reasons such as a job loss, reflecting the aftermath of the financial crisis, Jones said. While some older Americans are able to delay retirement, not all can. Unable to find work or other sources of money, many seniors can’t manage their debt on a fixed income. “These people don’t have the same options that others do,” Jones said. “They can’t in many cases find a job, and if they do, they have to work at a job at a lot less money than they’re used to.” Norman Zimmering, 81, exhausted his savings trying to pay off medical bills for his wife, Harriet, who died in 2009. She had a heart condition as well as dementia, Zimmering said. “Most of my money was spent on hospitals, nursing homes and whatever medication,” said Zimmering, who lives in a sparse Baltimore apartment. Soon after his wife’s death, Zimmering said, he was laid off after 11 years as a security guard at the Sands Expo Convention Center in Las Vegas. Unable to find work and keep up with medical bills, some of which he paid for with credit cards, Zimmering filed for bankruptcy last year, listing $42,020.87 in liabilities, mostly medical bills. A judge discharged his debts last year. “I kept repeatedly getting big bills and big bills. I tried

very hard. I couldn’t do it anymore,” he said. “I had to go into bankruptcy.” Zimmering moved to Baltimore a year ago hoping to find a job here either as a security guard or piano tuner, but so far he hasn’t had any luck. He said his age and bad credit because of the bankruptcy hurt his employment opportunities. “I even tell people, ‘I don’t care what you pay me, as long as it brings in some revenue and keeps my dignity,’ “ said Zimmering, whose primary source of income is $1,027 a month in Social Security. Louise Carwell, a lawyer who works with low-income seniors at the Maryland Legal Aid’s consumer law unit in Baltimore, said her clients are dealing with a wide range of debt, from credit cards to medical bills. Carwell and other publicsector attorneys who work with the elderly say indebted seniors want relief, a trend that has increased in the last several years. Mary Aquino, a staff attorney with Legal Aid’s Baltimore County Elder Law Program, said she recalled a 75-year-old client who was nine months behind on her mortgage, with $10,000 in credit card debt and an additional $36,000 in studentloan debt. The woman’s sole income was a monthly $1,100 Social Security check. Harvel expressed a mix of guilt and remorse for racking up so much debt but said he simply does not have the means to pay it off. After being homeless for eight months, Harvel now has a place to live, thanks to the Baltimore County Department of Aging. A bankruptcy, Harvel said, would give him a fresh start and peace of mind. After Harvel put away about $200 to pay for bankruptcy in recent months, Del Pizzo, the Dundalk lawyer, agreed recently to file the paperwork pro bono. “Maybe I’ll start seeing a little bit of sunlight,” Harvel said.

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Laws disrupt bank accounts with Arabic names Hannan adley MTC Campus

HACKENSACK, N.J. — In the chilling aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001 _ when authorities found that hijackers had active bank accounts in the U.S., including in New Jersey _ the federal government enacted laws to try to detect suspected terrorist links at financial institutions. But those laws have also had a side effect: Banks have delayed or blocked money transfers and shut down the accounts of some Muslims and non-Muslims who do business with them, sometimes because of an Arabic-sounding name. “Nowadays, given the Patriot Act and post-9/11 era, banks don’t even have to explain,” said Ibrahim Hooper, communications director for the Council on AmericanIslamic Relations. “They can close your account for any reason or no reason and (customers) have absolutely no recourse.” Among other things, the USA Patriot Act, signed into law by President George W. Bush six weeks after the attacks, expanded the obligations of financial institutions to monitor and report suspicious activity and gave government agencies greater power to go after banks that didn’t comply. In the days before Sept. 11, hijackers in northern New Jersey had used ATM cards, withdrawn cash and received wire transfers; two men living in Paterson, N.J., tried to buy three tickets with a debit card for American Airlines Flight 77, which crashed into the Pentagon, and ended up paying $1,842 in cash. Bankers consider numerous factors when looking at transactions, such as names on a watch list, the amount and frequency of the moves, overseas activity or anything that deviates from a customer’s routine. Anyone who does something unusual or provides incomplete information can be affected, said Annemarie McAvoy, a former federal prosecutor and adjunct professor at Fordham Law School who specializes in money-laundering and terroristfinancing issues. New Jersey Muslims believe the financial scrutiny has fallen disproportionately on them and is one of the ways life has changed because of their faith or their names. The scrutiny, they say, has extended from airport security checkpoints to banks and even to their mosques and businesses, as evidenced by the New York Police Department’s surveillance in their communities. On March 16, John Lory of Jersey City, N.J., said he tried to wire $1,000 to a business partner who co-owns a house they rent in South Plainfield, N.J. He wrote the name of a new tenant on the transfer with the comment “Saed’s rent” _ similar to notes he said he makes to mark who paid. For days, the money wasn’t sent. When Lory called his Chase bank, he said, a representative said the bank needed “Saed’s” last name, date of birth, country of origin and address before it could release or refund the money. Though he said he found the request offensive, Lory supplied the information on March 21. “It just felt wrong,” said Lory, who is not a Muslim. “It’s racial profiling when you can judge somebody based on their first name, and that’s all they knew about this person.” The representative called six days later and asked why Lory had misspelled the tenant’s name, which actually is Zaid, Lory said. He said he didn’t remember the spelling and didn’t think it mattered because it was a note to himself. The money was returned to Lory that day, he said, and he called the experience unsettling and disrup-

tive. It’s unclear whether any other factors prompted the bank to freeze the wire transfer. Chase spokesman Michael Fusco said he could not talk about the case for privacy reasons. He provided this statement: “As a U.S. financial institution we are required to comply with regulations set by the U.S. Treasury Office of Financial Assets Control.” Bankers must implement policies and procedures to minimize their risk of violating agency regulations, said U.S. Treasury spokesman John Sullivan. Those regulations require banks to stop transactions linked to nations under sanctions and to people and institutions on the agency’s 527-page list of known and suspected terrorists. “This may involve suspending a wire transfer containing a potential sanctions reference and waiting for clarifying information before completing the transaction,” Sullivan said. The problem with the Lory case is not that the bank asked for Zaid’s information, but that it didn’t request the same information when other tenants were noted on previous transfers, McAvoy said. “They need to know who the person is getting them the money,” she said. “They should do this with everybody.” Still, McAvoy said, customers will prompt more scrutiny if they are from certain countries or send money there. “The reality is that (banks) are under requirements to watch money from high-risk countries,” she said. “The reality is the Middle East is considered high-risk.” McAvoy said it’s difficult for bankers to examine large volumes of transactions without the training that is given to lawenforcement officers. “It’s like looking for a needle. You have how many transactions a day?” she said. The 9/11 Commission raised questions about banks’ ability to detect terrorist activity in its 2004 report, arguing that such activity is difficult to trace. The hijackers dealt in relatively small sums of money and their transactions raised no alarms. In all, the Sept. 11 plot cost al-Qaida $400,000 to $500,000, with about $300,000 of that passing through the hijackers’ bank accounts in the U.S., according to the commission. The commission also noted the commonality of many Muslim names; one official at a major financial institution said that 85 people in New York City alone had the same name as Sept. 11 ringleader Mohamed Atta. The stepped-up financial regulations can be burdensome for both banks and their customers, experts say. Banks must invest substantial time and money into compliance policies and are required to file frequent Suspicious Activity Reports. And they have a tremendous amount to lose if they don’t comply. They can be fined millions for failing to meet federal regulations, and experts say those fines have been levied many times. Banks also don’t want a terrorist to get financing on their watch for fear of a public-relations disaster. “The banks don’t want to be caught as having facilitated a transaction to terrorist organizations. It’s just very damaging to the reputation,” said Robert Rowe, vice president and senior counsel for the American Bankers Association’s Center for Regulatory Compliance. For that reason, some banks will shut down an account rather than take a risk. Generally, they are not allowed to tell a customer why because of the potential for tipping off a suspect to an investigation, McAvoy said. McAvoy said customers should not assume that the bank suspects them of terrorism or some other illegal activity if they encounter problems; sometimes, simple questions about a pattern of activity or a lack of information can prompt a bank to act.


theWORD 6

The A&T Register | ncatregister.com | Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Protecting the reputation of yourself and others The past month or so It saddens me to see has been booming with students ruin their repinappropriate pictures utations by exposing and videos placed on themselves or being social media. Although exposed doing inapI am not one to judge, propriate behavior, not there are many people suitable for the public who are, such as job reeye. I realize that if it cruiters, professors and were me, I would be fellow peers. Inappro- MEAGAN judged based on my priate posts could also JORDAN actions rather than my affect the possibility of character. You cannot having relationships outside of expect to be put in the spotlight the professional realm. and not expect people to pass

judgment based on what they see. Since this has been a reoccurring issue, I want to offer a solution to my peers. Know who is in your friend circle. Surround yourself with positive people and set limitations for yourself and your friends to ensure that you are never caught up in situations that will be detrimental to your reputation. Everyone has done something or “things,” that they are not proud of. Some of us make

The A&T Register apologizes To the N.C. A&T Campus Community: We, The A&T Register staff, apologize for the controversy caused by 20 Questions in the Oct. 16 edition of the campus newspaper. The 20 Questions segment is meant to poke fun at campus and national occurrences rather than offend our fellow students. As Aggies, we understand that we must maintain a certain level of respect and dignity for one another. We understand that the questions posted in last week’s issue may have gone too far and could be considered harsh and insensitive. As a staff, we failed to acknowledge this possibility before printing the publication. After realizing our mistake, the 20 Questions were immediately taken down from our website the same day. To the former SGA official, we acknowledge that criticism of your personal life should not have been dredged up. We apologize for causing the situation to resurface. To the young woman who was named in the 20 Questions segment, we apologize. To the other young woman who was mentioned, we also apologize. As student journalists and editors, we are aware that we will make mistakes; however, poor judgment of content is unacceptable. We are working on a solution to ensure that this does not happen again. Therefore, we are taking a short hiatus from 20 Questions, and we are in the process of creating a new format for the section. We are aware that past as well as recent 20 Questions have been ethically questionable. We apologize for any questions that may have been considered malicious, offensive, or unpleasant. In the future, we will strive to uphold The A&T Register’s legacy and high level of integrity. Sincerely, Karmen Robinson Editor-in-Chief

Putting a stop to terrorism and the ivory trade mct campus If the world needs another reason to get serious about combating elephant poaching, here’s one: The attack by terrorists on Westgate Mall in Nairobi. Income from illegal ivory trafficking is a substantial funding source for the Shabab, the group that claimed responsibility for the attack. The connection between terrorism and wildlife smuggling is clear. An 18-month undercover investigation conducted by our groups found an indisputable financial trail between the illicit trade in ivory and rhino horns and the Shabab. This connection is of increasing concern to world leaders. In her recent announcement of a new global effort to combat poaching, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton noted that African terrorist groups, including the Shabab, “fund their terrorist activities to a great extent from ivory trafficking.” Our investigation detailed how the Shabab acts as a middleman, taking orders from agents in Asia or Persian Gulf states and purchasing ivory from small-time brokers to fill those orders. The terrorist group, we found, pays better than many middlemen (about $90 a pound in 2012), making it an attractive buyer. The brokers (often related by clan) who engage the poachers, pay about $23 per pound, which means they make a hefty return in their dealings with the Shabab. The Shabab’s spot as a premier broker is in part due to its financial and organizational prowess. And a recent crack-

down by the Kenya Wildlife Service on ivory smuggling at its ports and airports has made the group an even more essential player. But the real driver of the Shabab’s ivory business is soaring demand in consuming countries, which raises prices and makes the trade ever more lucrative. Illicit raw ivory now fetches nearly $700 per pound in some parts of Asia. The money the Shabab earns from the black market in ivory allows the group to recruit and pay its soldiers well and consistently. Because of the trade, Shabab fighters are paid about $300 a month, while those in Somalia’s regular army have often earned far less. Breaking the Shabab’s financial lifeline won’t be possible unless consumers quit buying ivory. Every illegal ivory carving purchased has an associated trail of blood that leads from butchered elephants to terrorist fighters and ultimately to slaughtered human beings, like those in the Nairobi shopping mall. While we welcome recent actions, such as President Obama’s executive order and the justannounced three-year, $80-million Clinton Global Initiative Commitment to Action, which brings together NGOs, governments and concerned citizens to stop wildlife trafficking and the slaughter of Africa’s elephants, these things aren’t enough. It is ivory consumers who have the real power. It is consumers who must understand the devastating toll of their purchases and act accordingly. Last year, more than 30,000

elephants were butchered on the African continent. A recent study found that more than 60 percent of the forest elephant population had been killed for ivory in the last decade, and scientists say they could well be extinct in 10 years if the butchery isn’t stopped. And the larger savanna elephants are under attack too. In Zimbabwe, officials announced last month that more than 90 elephants were killed in a national park by poachers who spread cyanide in watering holes and salt pans, suggesting that poachers are growing more sophisticated and changing their tactics in response to more efficient operations by law enforcement agencies. Buyers of ivory must understand that they are not simply purchasing a beautiful trinket. They are taking part in the slaughter of elephants. They are contributing to the deaths of rangers, men and women who lose their lives protecting elephants and rhinos. They are harming farmers, who have seen an increase in attacks by elephants traumatized by poachers. They are harming villagers and disadvantaged communities, who have been exploited by the poachers or forced into criminal activities. It is expensive and logistically complicated for the Shabab to plan and carry out an attack, and the booming ivory trade is a very important source of funding. Consumers can impede the group by refusing to purchase ivory.

mistakes and move forward without having to relive those moment. Unfortunately, modern technology allows people to be exploited and forced to relive a mistake for the rest of their lives. Everyone has the right to make his or her own choices. What I have learned is that life “gives us with what we bargain for,” based on the situations we put ourselves in. College is not only about learning aca-

demically, but learning about people, and setting boundaries. Know your limits with friendships and your social life. Question your character and evaluate the things that peek your interest. Everyone is responsible for the decisions they make, from the persons committing the action, to the people passing judgment. With that being said, as being a staff member for The

A&T Register, I can attest we have each learned how our words and actions can cause harm to others. Know that healing takes time. We should all make a conscious effort to uphold others and ourselves to a certain standard to ensure no one gets hurt in the moment of “part-time bliss.” —Email Meagan at theatregister@gmail.comand follow her on Twitter @theatregister

Minorities at a disadvantage for college admission mct campus

The Baltimore Sun

Anybody who has ever encountered the college admissions process knows that there’s no such thing as an even playing field. Most schools will admit that up front. “Like all colleges,” Harvard College notes on its own admissions web site, “we seek to admit the most interesting, able, and diverse class possible.” In other words, schools often try to balance out an incoming class with students who not only have good grades or high test scores but have had unusual life experiences as well as those they regard as “well rounded.” Athletes often get preference (no surprise there), but so might a talented oboe player, actor or artist. There is no one set of criteria for the preferred applicant at Harvard or most anywhere else, as writing a particularly good application essay (or having a talented high school guidance counselor who knows how to edit one) can make a huge difference. It doesn’t necessarily involve an accomplishment, skill or talent but little more than chance in some cases _ schools often look to balance gender, geography and disability, too. Given that reality, the desire of any state to specifically ban affirmative action in the college admissions process seems suspicious. If schools are going to consider all sorts of extenuating circumstances in the name of diversity, why not factor in a person’s race? Indeed,

to refuse to consider it seems a form of racism itself _ the only real effect of such a ban is to make it unusually difficult for minorities to gain admission to the college of their choice. That point of view essentially won over the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled last November in Schuette v. Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action that Michigan’s prohibition on public universities and colleges from using race as a factor in setting admissions policies violated the Equal Protection Clause. Michigan voters approved that ban as “Proposal 2,” an amendment to the state constitution in 2006, but as the appeals court pointed out, it essentially left minorities with an unusually high hurdle to now challenge college admissions policies. Unfortunately, that argument didn’t seem to win over much of the conservative wing of the U.S. Supreme Court when the Schuette case was heard this week. Nor does it help the law’s opponents that Justice Elena Kagan has recused herself from the case because she had worked on it while serving as the nation’s solicitor general. Still, even Justice Samuel A. Alito acknowledged at one point that it’s a “big deal” to now require a constitutional amendment to change the law. Make no mistake, this isn’t about racial quotas. They have not been allowed since the 1978 Supreme Court decision in Regents of the University of California v. Bakke. But in that same decision, the high court ruled that using race as a criterion was allowed. In the last term, the Roberts court had an opportunity to abandon affirmative action entirely but did not in Fisher

V. Texas, ruling only that affirmative action policies must be closely reviewed. Admittedly, the argument against a ban on affirmative action is not a slam-dunk. After all, wouldn’t any society’s ideal be to foster policies that were entirely blind to race? But such a proposal fails to consider the sad legacy of racial discrimination in this country and the inherent disadvantage it has left African-Americans and others. According to the U.S. Census, about 18 percent of African-American adults over the age of 25 have a four-year college degree compared to nearly one-third of whites. AfricanAmericans are far more likely to live in poverty and not have access to the sort of collegetrack high school courses and counseling that are available to others. How does one break this cycle of poverty and missed opportunity? For decades, affirmative action programs have helped minorities make significant progress — righting the scales by tipping them against historical racial discrimination. Should states like Michigan and a handful of others be able to adopt laws that strip minorities of this kind of educational opportunity? That seems illadvised. Already, Michigan has experienced a drop in minority college enrollment. That ought to set off bells and whistles for the justices. Better to leave matters of admissions where they belong — in the hands of school administrators — and not allow policies like Proposal 2 that will ensure only that a disadvantaged group remains disadvantaged by race.

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theSCORE

The A&T Register | ncatregister.com | Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Basketball team optimistic about upcoming season shaina bodrick Contributor

Last season, the A&T men’s basketball team finished 2017. The team won the MEAC conference championship and appeared in the NCAA tournament for the first time since 1995. This summer, the Aggies traveled to the Dominican Republic where they won two of the three games they played. “The Dominican Republic’s culture was great. We lacked focus in the beginning but we produced in our last games and got it done,” said Lamont Middleton a senior guard from the Bronx, N.Y. Middleton was last season’s leading scorer (12.4 ppg). The team aspires to have more success in 2014. Since August, the Aggies have been working to sharpen defensive and offensive execution. The Aggies were 9-3 at home last year. The team does not plan on losing in Corbett Sports Center this year. They also hope to finish higher in the conference standings. “I see gradual improvement, but it is very slow. Rome was not built in a day,” said head coach Cy Alexander. “The good thing is that we have won a championship, so our players understand the hard work they have to do to continue to be champions.” Senior guard Jeremy Underwood from Washington, D.C. says that the team has put in tremendous work for the upcoming season. He believes the key to a successful season is to play hard, play better and play together. “We have been in the gym getting a lot of shots and conditioning. We are bigger, more athletic, and younger,” said Underwood. He plans to help lead

the team to another MEAC championship. Coach Alexander looks to Jeremy as the leader and an extension of himself on the court. Bruce Beckford, a 6’7 forward from Silver Spring, Md. says only teamwork and hard work will give them success this year. He also hopes that the team will win another MEAC championship. “Only hard work will get us another championship. We must pull our weight individually in order to be better as a unit,” said Beckford. Bruce is a sophomore this year and comes from one of the more prestigious high school basketball programs in the country at Montrose Christian Academy. Although Alexander describes him as a “late bloomer,” he definitely fits the Aggie uniform well and provides a good physical prowess to the team. When asked about personal goals, Beckford quickly responded saying he wants to be player of the year, average more than 20 points, and lead the team to another championship. “Success is competing every night, being consistent and having no let downs,” he said. Bruce gave the freshman some advice saying that in order to be successful, they must follow the footsteps of the guys who have been there. “Freshman will perform. They have been in every game. They could compete anytime of the year.” The Aggie men’s basketball team will play their first game on Nov. 4 in Corbett Sports Center against Fayetteville State University. —Email Shaina at ssbodric@ aggies.ncat.edu and follow us on Twitter @ATRegister

7

Women’s flag football team crowned state champs! AGGIES

RUNDOWN

football TEAM

MEAC

Bethune Cookman South Carolina State Delaware State Hampton Morgan State Norfolk State North Carolina Central Florida A&M North Carolina A&T Howard Savannah State

3-0 3-0 3-1 2-1 2-1 2-2 1-2 1-2 1-3 1-3 0-4

OVR. 6-1 5-2 3-4 2-5 2-5 2-5 3-4 2-5 3-3 2-5 1-7

SEPT. 25: vs. Howard Aggie Stadium (ESPNU) W (27-19)

Contributed photo

Aggie Elite 7, Campbell Chaos 6 Team Members— Kaila Doby, Sha’kera Rodriguez, Alexus Childs, Brianey Winstow, Sharonda Mcknight, Treka Thornton, Tatiana Weatherly, Ni’ jah Armstrong, Miranda Brown, Chandre’ Crawford, Briana Reavis, Jeana Daniels, and LaQuana Hordge All Tournament Team— Sharonda McKnight and LaQuana’ Hordge All Tournament MVP— Alexus Childs

Aggies look to rattle FAMU Jeremy days

Register Reporter

The N.C. A&T football team will head south to play the Florida A&M University Rattlers this Saturday at Bragg Memorial Stadium in Tallahassee, Fl. The Aggies loss 12-7 to the Delaware State Hornets last Saturday. “It was a heartbreaking loss as you can see. We couldn’t quite establish anything,” said A&T head coach Rod Broadway in the post-game press conference. A&T received the ball to begin the game, but the drive ended quickly. Early in the first quarter, the Hornets conducted a 61yard drive that gave them a 3-0 lead. Hornet’s cornerback Cameren Judge’s interception ended the Aggies’ third drive. Both teams played strong defensively. Neither team allowed a touchdown in the first quarter. The second quarter was a field position battle. Early in the quarter, A&T made a quarterback change in an attempt to jump-start the offense. After a deep DSU punt, running back Tarik Cohen got the offense out of dangerous territory after he broke a 40-yard run, placing the ball at the A&T 41-yard line. Once again the Aggies drive would end with a punt. A few minutes before halftime, D’Vonte Graham recovered a fumble by DSU wide receiver Aris Scott at the 41-yard line. The theme continued as the ensuing offensive drive would end with a punt for A&T.

After a late DSU field goal from 42-yards, the Aggies went into halftime down 6-0. “We couldn’t get into a rhythm in the first half because of the bad snaps,” said Broadway. Lewis Kindle re-entered the game relieving Aggies quarterback, Kwashaun Quick in the third quarter. Once again, Kindle and the A&T offense failed to move the ball. Delaware State took advantage with a short touchdown by Hornets fullback Lamar Shaw that advanced the score to 12-0 after an unsuccessful two-point conversion. During the next drive, a fourth down A&T field goal sailed right leaving a goose egg on the scoreboard. “The defense played good. It was probably our best performance since Appalachian State,” said Tallahassee native Graham. With less than three minutes left in regulation, Kindle completed two consecutive passes to Demonta Brown. Kindle finished the drive with a passing touchdown to Desmond Lawrence for seven yards. Facing a 12-7 deficit, the Aggies went for an on-side kick that was recovered by the Hornets. The Hornets assumed the victory formation expiring the remaining time on the clock. A&T put up 151 yards passing and 57 yards rushing. Bryan Houston led A&T defensively with 17 tackles. “We have to clean up a lot of things. We are making way too many mistakes,” said Broadway after the game. FAMU hosts A&T after falling to MEAC opponent Howard 21-10. Howard scored back-to-back touchdowns in the first while FAMU salvaged a field goal.

The Bison responded with another score of their own, advancing the score to 21-3 after Anthony Philyaw’s one-yard touchdown scamper. Lemond Buice’s 2-yard run brought the score to 21-10. If the Aggies are going to stop FAMU, they will have to play physical at the line of scrimmage and stop the run. Running backs, Al-Terek McBurse and Lemond Bucie combined have 95 carries for 461 yards and four touchdowns this season. Quarterback Damien Fleming has a completion percentage just over 56 percent along with 774 passing yards and 5 touchdowns. Receiver Lenworth Lennon leads the Rattlers with 282 receiving and two touchdowns. Lennon at 5’10 has 19 catches and is averaging just below 15yards per catch. The Aggies must protect the football, move it down field, and win on third down. Rattlers free safety, John Ojo leads the team with 49 tackles. Defensive back, Patrick Aiken leads the team with three interceptions returned for 135 yards. Linebacker Akil Blount has 30 tackles and leads the team with 7.5 tackles for a loss. Special teams is vital if the Aggies expect to win in the third phase of the game. FAMU punter Colby Blanton’s longest punt on the season was 78 yards and he has six kicks of more than 50 yards. Tallahassee would be an ideal place for the Aggies to put and end to their current four-game skid this Saturday at 2. —Email Jeremy at jsdays@ aggies.ncat.edu and follow us on Twitter @ATRegister

DID YOU KNOW THAT THERE ARE ONLY 11 DAYS UNTIL A&T MEN’S BASKETBALL BEGINS? North Carolina A&T vs. Fayetteville State Nov. 4 7 p.m. @ Corbett Sports Center

OCT. 5: vs. South Carolina State Atlanta, Ga. (Georgia Dome) L (24-29) OCT. 12: vs. Hampton Hampton, Va. L (26-31) LAST WEEK’S GAME: vs. Delaware State Aggie Stadium L (12-7) THIS WEEK’S GAME: Saturday vs. Florida A&M Tallahassee, Fla. 2 p.m. NOV. 2: vs. Virginia University of Lynchburg Aggie Stadium (Homecoming) 1 p.m. NOV. 9: vs. Morgan State Baltimore, Md. 1 p.m. NOV. 16: vs. Savannah State Aggie Stadium 1 p.m. NOV. 23: vs. N.C. Central Aggie Stadium 1 p.m.

volleyball TEAM

MEAC

OVR.

7-0 4-2 4-3 3-4 2-3 2-5 0-7

13-8 16-8 8-14 7-15 7-11 3-16 2-16

5-0 3-2 3-2 2-3 2-3 0-5

9-6 4-22 4-20 2-21 3-17 0-24

(N)

Hampton Howard Norfolk State Coppin State Morgan State Maryland Eastern-Shore Delaware State (S) Florida A&M Bethune Cookman North Carolina A&T North Carolina Central South Carolina State Savannah State

LAST WEEK’S MATCHES: Tuesday vs. Gardner-Webb Moore Gym L (1-3) Thursday vs. UNC Asheville Asheville, N.C. L (0-3) THIS WEEK’S MATCH: Friday vs. N.C. Central Moore Gym 7 p.m.

AROUND SPORTS TALLAHASSEE, Fla.— Florida State linebacker Christian Jones looks down at the blackand-white picture. The haunting illustration serves as a not-so-subtle reminder of an opportunity squandered, a season derailed. On Jones’ NC State gameinstallation pamphlet is an image of a play he would like to forget. It is a still of the Wolfpack’s game-winning play against FSU from last year. Mike Glennon threw a 2-yard touchdown pass on 4th-andgoal with 16 seconds remaining in the contest, giving NC State a stunning 17-16 victory against No. 3 FSU. “We knew how we felt after the game,” Jones said. “We don’t want that same feeling. That game right there, it could have changed our season from last year. “Seeing it on the page right now, I’m like ‘Dang, one play away.’” No. 2 FSU (6-0, 4-0 ACC) will be looking to avoid another debacle when it hosts NC State (3-3, 0-3) Saturday at 3:30 p.m. The game will air on ABC. Sandwiched between last weekend’s game against Clemson and next week’s game versus No. 7 Miami, it has all the makings of a trap game. The Seminoles are still riding high off of the 51-14 shellacking against Clemson, which was ranked No. 3 at the time.


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The A&T Register | ncatregister.com | Wednesday, October 23, 2013

#TRENDING TOPICS

Teen VOGUE or bust: Teen VOGUE’s Fashion University KOURTNEY POPE Scene Editor

Teen Vogue Fashion U students tweeted about their excitement throughout the weekend. Here are just a few from inspired students. @GabbyAlva90 @alexa_ chung Ive been using the term ‘Wanky’all day. Such a fun word! Not even sure I’m using it right, best interview at #fashionU #newfan @mercedesislove I think I’m suffering from #FashionU withdrawal symptoms @TeenVogue @DanTijerina @OscarPRGirl thanks for stopping by @ TeenVogue #fashionu, Erika! I would love to further discuss journalism & its correlation to PR. -DT

Madison Avenue was filled with excitement as Teen Vogue enthusiasts, fashion students, and journalism hopefuls from all across the U.S. gathered in New York for Teen Vogue’s Fashion University. I was among those lucky students anticipating what the weekend had planned for us. Little did I know just how amazing my time in New York would be. Teen Vogue Fashion University is a weekend seminar hosted every year for young girls who aspire to work in the industry. The age range was from 16-24 and the diversity of the students was impressive. Thousands of girls apply each year, but only a handful are accepted. Girls from as far as Missouri to Michigan all came here with open minds, anxious to absorb as much information as possible. The event took place at the Hudson theatre. Throughout the weekend, students attend classes featuring prominent figures in the journalism and fashion world. Last years keynote speakers fashion designers Phillip Lim and Andrea Lieberman. This year Teen Vogue did not disappoint. Jessie Randall, Joseph Altuzarra, Coco Rocha, and Thakoon Panichgul were just a few of the fashion insid-

‘Carrie’ remake: Is it a winner or waste? come witnesses of a film that says bullying is not right, but doesn’t do anything about it. Chloe Grace “Carrie”, a remake Moretz brought of the 1976 horror enough fury in this movie, may or may not film that it made up have upheld its stanfor the lack of condards in the box ofsequences that did fice this past weekend. not occur. The audiHorror remakes have ence loved watching proven themselves the vengeance just as time and time again much as Carrie ento be rather tricky and joys executing it. Moretz problematic to exThe only real isecute. sue is that the film is “Carrie”, is not only not available in 3D. With all an Oscar nominated film and the blood and the phenomenal acclaimed novel by Stephen special effects that display King, but one of the horror Carrie’s telekinesis powers, genre’s greatest achievements. no 3D version is available. The film is about a shy girl out- After viewers enjoy all of the cast by her peers and sheltered chaos Carrie caused, viewers by her deeply religious mother. are awkwardly shown a rushed She unleashes telekinetic ter- and easily misinterpreted endror on her small town after be- ing that left viewers in their ing pushed too far at her senior seats as the credits rolled. prom. Carrie, who is played While “Carrie” is far from by Chloe Grace Moretz, ex- a masterpiece, it is a great film periences trouble controlling with great acting. The acting her telekinesis powers. Carrie in this film is so well executed is kind hearted, her rage will that it is able to capture what cause bad things to happen to makes the first film so special. anyone around her. If you know nothing about the Chloe Grace Moretz sells first film, this sequel will come the mysticism of her powers across as fresh and spectacuand the frightening dialogue lar. with her mother Julianne Moore who also delivers an — Email Shania at theatregunforgettable performance as ister@gmail.com and follow us a religious extremist. on Twitter @TheATRegister The story revolves around bullying. Seeing that bullying is an issue in today’s society, one would think that filmmakers would have put more emphasis on the consequences of bullying. Instead, viewers beContributor

TOP

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TLC HITS

Oct. 23 to Oct. 30 The A&T Register’s guide to what’s going on this week in arts and entertainment.

ON SCREEN PHOTO BY KOURTNEY POPE • THE A&T REGISTER

PHOTO SUBJECT Amy Astley, editor-in-chief of Teen Vogue (left) Andrew Bevan and Coco Rocha (left to right)

ers included on the itinerary. Perhaps the highlight of the seminar was the chance that students received to sit down with Amy Astley, editor-inchief- of Teen Vogue, and the Teen Vogue editors for a Q&A session. All were forthcoming with information and candid when asked for advice on subjects such as internships, journalism, industry issues, and schooling. After each speaker was done with their classes, many stayed behind for pictures, advice, and to give words of encouragement. This seminar was also an excellent networking opportunity. Many vendors were on site that

partnered with Teen Vogue. Some sponsors included Express, Topshop, Sperry, Bulgari, Pantene Pro-V, Olay, and CFDA. At the end of the seminar one lucky student was awarded a scholarship on behalf of the CFDA. Friday and Saturday night, Teen Vogue hosted two private shopping events with Express and Topshop. There were DJs, discounts, vendors, and hor d’oeuvres. For many students, this was not their first time. Michelle Ambrosio from LIM College says that she has been coming since the program first started. This year was a pinnacle for Robert

Hurse of Michigan. He attended the university for three years and finally took a picture with Amy Astley and asked her questions about the industry. Overall, this event was an amazing opportunity. I am forever grateful for all the support from both my departments, the College of Arts and Sciences and the School of Agriculture. I want to extend a thank you to Professor Wiggins for all of her support of the JOMC department and students.

RICH HELDENFELS Audiences remain intrigued by the idea of Dracula, by the possibility of a monstrous, blood-draining creature who is nonetheless charismatic and certainly sexual if not sexy. It’s no surprise, then, that NBC is trying out a new “Dracula” TV series, premiering at 10 p.m. EDT Friday. But Dracula has long been a character best suited to short-form entertainment: books and movies, where there is some kind of resolution to a story in more or less efficient fashion. And TV series do not work that way. You have to have a bigger story, one that can stretch across 13 or more episodes, perhaps for season after season. If your main characters are vampires, then there has to be story enough to keep them going, as shows like “True Blood,” “The Vampire Diaries” and “Angel” have tried to do with varying success. But if you’re going to make that show about the big guy, Dracula, then it had better be a really good story you’re going to tell. Or at least a long one. Or so it seems on NBC’s “Dracula,” which takes a few notes from Bram Stoker’s original novel _ there’s a Van Helsing in the series, too, for example _ but puts them in service of a sprawling, conspiracy-laden tale that still allows for some nasty carnage. (See if you can get past the

Everyone has been taking a walk down memory lane since the premier of the TLC biopic “Crazy Sexy Cool”. Audiences tuned into Vh1 to view and critic the film. Twitter feeds were going wild with hash tags and movie quotes. The Register staff could not resist the nostalgia so we have compiled a list of our top five favorite hits. Lets see if you all agree. - K.P.

early scene where a man is killed and his blood drained onto a nearmummified corpse.) T h i s Dracula, played by Jonathan Rhys Meyers, goes to late-19thcentury Rhys Meyers London in the guise of Alexander Grayson, a wealthy American inventor and entrepreneur. Although it looks as if he wants to do business with the wealthy and powerful of London, Dracula / Grayson is really determined to dismantle an old Order of the Dragon, a conspiratorial group who did him an ancient wrong. In the premiere, his plans are thrown slightly off when he sees Mina Murray (Jessica De Gouw), who bears a startling resemblance to a woman from his past. But there is still a war to be waged against his opponents on an old battleground; there was a vampire attack on London eight years earlier, which the Order convinced the public was instead the work of Jack the Ripper. The “Dracula” series likes to weave in bits like that, much the way “Sleepy Hollow” does, though “Sleepy Hollow” is better at it _ and a better show generally. The “Dracula” premiere is painfully slow, and Rhys Meyers is a most peculiar character, creepy and rather unattractive. The dialogue is dreary,

BAD GRANDPA Johnny Knoxville is back at it again reviving his cynical character, 86-year-old Irving Zisman. Zisman along with his grandson Billy are going across America causing havoc on unsuspecting town people. Where ever Irving and Billy are, trouble is sure to follow. The shocking scams and pranks are sure to keep audiences laughing from start to finish. This film has all the characteristics of a “Borat” film with twice the mayhem. “Bad Grandpa” opens Oct. 25.

— Email Kourtney at theatregister@gmail.com and follow us on Twitter @TheATRegister

Another ‘Dracula’ drab ‘Twilight’ era runs its course MCT Campus

SHANIA BODRICK

hotlist

theSCENE

the characters’ behavior at times incomprehensible. There are better ways to get your frights.

ON ITUNES DO WHAT YOU WANT The new single from Gaga’s third album “Applause” definitely present a new kind of sound for pop culture. Fans think the song is a response to the negative comments Mother Monster has received over the years. The seemingly uncanny R.Kelly collaboration makes this a hit.

ON STAGE

Are you in a practicum? Do you desire to be published? Why are you not in our meetings? Every Wednesday 5 p.m. GCB rm. 328

Top 5 TLC Hits: 1. Waterfalls 2. Red Light Special 3. Ain’t to Proud to Beg 4. Creep 5. Scrubs

JITNEY North Carolina A&T State University and the Paul Robeson Theatre present the August Wilson classic, “Jitney”. The play tells the stories of men in the Pittsburgh Hill District trying to make a living as jitney’s, unlicensed cab drivers. Wilson’s does a tremendous job of unveiling the unresolved and festering issues of the characters such as trust, anger, violence, and love. The battle between lovers and family really pulls the audience in. “Jitney” is playing at the Paul Robeson Theatre Oct. 24 through 27.

Come be a part of theScene Contributors Meetings every Wednesday at 5 p.m. in GCB 328A


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