SEPTEMBER 9, 2009
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VOLUME 101, ISSUE 1 919 530 7116/CAMPUSECHO@NCCU.EDU WWW.CAMPUSECHO.COM
Campus
Sports
Opinion
A&E
SGA leaders Dwayne Johnson and Ginelle Hines discuss their plans for the SGA.
Late TD reversed, Eagles lose season opener to Hampton.
From A to Z: This student is not too wild about the Millennium Hotel
Jazz vocalist Lenora Helms kicks off Butterfly Concerts in support of fire victims.
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Campus Echo NCCU nabs top spot Named best public HBCU
Jobless see few signs of hope gressmen and senators, and found private booths for Supreme Court justices wary of the public eye. As a senior waiter for 12 years at The Prime Rib, one of Washington’s most venerable eateries, McCaffery was a man in demand, the preferred choice of the powerful and the envy of fellow waiters who bristled when
BY TONY PUGH MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS (MCT)
WASHINGTON — As America prepared to salute its working people this Labor Day, Matthew McCaffery wasin no mood to celebrate. In better times, McCaffery served prime rib to three U.S. presidents, brought cocktails to con-
the best customers requested his services, and his only. “I had a lot of jealousy from other waiters because I would have so many; not just big shots, but regulars who would only have me wait on them. And if I wasn’t working that night they wouldn’t come in.” Among his prized possessions is a recommendation
letter from the late Sen. Edward Kennedy, whose funeral service last weekend brought tears to McCaffery’s eyes. “He would never let anybody else wait on him but me,” McCaffery recalled. “He was really great.” After a lifetime in food service during which he’s worked as a chef, bartender,
AMARACHI ANAKARAONYE
BY CARLTON KOONCE ECHO EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Three N.C. Central University department chairs were demoted prior to the fall semester because they were not tenured prior to their appointments. Deborah Boyd of Modern Foreign Languages, James Pearce of English and Mass Communication, and Theodore Pikes of Special Education are now as assistant chairs of their depart-
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AMARACHI ANAKARAONYE ECHO STAFF WRITER
It’s a situation loaded with conflict. A freshman leaves home with the notion that he or she is only a few steps away from leading an independent life at NCCU. Instead, there’s another “parent” in the student’s life – one that goes by the name of “RA.” Some freshmen say a residential assistant can be a bit militant; others say that
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Three chairs ousted
ECHO STAFF WRITER
N.C. Central University is nationally ranked 10th out of 80 Historically Black Colleges and Universities in U.S. News and World Report’s “Best Colleges 2010.” A majority of private HBCUs took the top 10 rankings, but NCCU was the top ranked public HBCU. “I think it’s good,”said Ainsley Owens, president of the Greensboro chapter of NCCU’s Alumni Association, Inc and previous national officer. Owens graduated from NCCU in 1999 with a B.A. in political science and a B.S. in criminal justice. “It speaks well on our current academic program,” said Owens, “and on the strength of past administrations. NCCU has something to offer that is equal to other prestigious HBCUs.” This is the third consecutive year U.S. News and World Report has ranked undergraduate programs at
New home not for all
dining room manager and even restaurant manager, McCaffery, 48, has been jobless for 13 months. Decades of working on his feet have left him with a bum knee that now requires surgery, and his work history doesn’t wow restaurant owners like it used to.
LATHAM’S LAST STAND PHOTOS
AND STORY BY
SAVIN JOSEPH/ECHO PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
A poet falls silent BY MATHEW BEATTY ECHO EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Lance Johnson used his words to make his voice known on campus. He often spoke of heartbreak, but he earned some notoriety for winning an on-campus poetry contest last semester. But now his words will no longer be heard. Johnson, 21, was found dead inside his Campus Crossing Apartment on Aug. 27. Durham police are not investigating his death as a homicide. Officials have not said if
ver the years, Latham Residential Hall has been home to about 9,000 N.C. Central University students. The co-ed residential hall, which has 188 beds, was built in 1960 for just over $.5 million. It was last renovated in 1996 at a cost of over $3 million. But Latham, named after Louise M. Latham, teacher and former dean of women from 1948 to 1968, is going the way of the dinosaurs. It’s being demolished at a cost of $147,000 to make way for a five-
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Architectural drawing of parking garage as seen from Lincoln and Lawson streets.
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Courtesy of NCCU Offfice of Design and Construction Services
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Minorites scarce in sciences Participation rates in the sciences have ‘flatlined, declined’ BY NENICIA SCOTT ECHO STAFF REPORTER
Despite years of policydriven efforts from the federal government, not enough minorities are making it into the sciences, according to the Research and Policy Council of National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering. “Participation rates in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields have flatlined or, in some cases,
declined,” reports the council. “Others think that the major is hard and they do not want to take the time and effort to put in the work,” said biology junior Natushia Harris. According to the NSF, “almost 30 percent of high school graduates enter college unprepared for firstyear coursework or arrive at the workplace without the mathematical, scientific and technical skills that employers require”.
According to David Kroll , chair of pharmaceutical sciences, these issues are particularly problematic for students coming from underfunded school districts. Kroll has been recruiting African-American and Hispanic students in the biotechnology and pharmaceutical fields since the early 1990s when he was at the University of Colorado. In 2006, the Bush administration tried to address the low number of minori-
ties in STEM careers with the American Competitive Initiative . The ACI encouraged minorities into STEM related fields by offering minorities opportunities to experience STEM careers. More recently, the Obama administration understood has introduced the “Enhancing Science, Technology, Engineering and Math Education Act of 2008” to establish a commit-
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Tracie Locklear and Onjinade Adeyuje working on the “western blot,” an anlytical technique that finds specific proteins in tissue. SAVIN JOSEPH/Echo Staff Photographer