TECHNICIAN
thursday november
20 2014
Raleigh, North Carolina
technicianonline.com
IN BRIEF Poole rents business attire CMF judging tonight The Campus Movie Fest finale and awards show will take place in the Witherspoon Student Center at 7:30 p.m. The organizers will show the top 16 best films as well as give awards for Best Comedy, Best Drama, Best Actors and Best Picture. The doors will open at 7:00 p.m., and admission is free. The top films have a chance to win prizes, and there will be a raffle for attendees. SOURCE: UAB
Deirdre An Correspondent
After learning that some students were unable to participate in professional networking and job search opportunities because they didn’t own professional attire, associate dean of Poole College of Manage-
ment Shannon Davis decided there must be something the university could do to help. Davis took her observations to the Poole College of Management’s (PCOM) Career Development Center (CDC), spurring them to create a closet full of professional business attire free for students to borrow to
prevent them from missing out on experience-building opportunities. “At the time, we have faculty members who are retiring and students moving to another stage in their career who were finished with their professional part of their wardrobe and were eager the find a place for their clothes to be reused,”
Davis said. Since the launch of the project three years ago, the collection has grown to two separate storage racks, one for men and another for women, filled with various items of professional attire, such as blazers,
SUITS continued page 3
SWIMMING & DIVING PREVIEW: SEE PAGE 8
Transgender Day of Remembrance today The GLBT Center is sponsoring Transgender Day of Remembrance, taking place today in Wolf Plaza and the Talley Student Union. The Transgender Day of Remembrance is a day meant to honor victims of anti-transgender violence. More than 200 transgender individuals have been murdered around the world, with an overwhelming majority being transgender women of color. Attendees have the opportunity to place a paper flower at the foot of the silhouette of Sevda Basar, a transgender woman who was murdered by her boyfriend in February. In addition to the memorial, visitors can sign a pledge card to take a stand against transgender violence. The event will take place from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. SOURCE: Facebook
COURTESY OF NCSU HISTORICAL RCHIVES
First 70 years of Technician now online
McKimmon Center hosts Agriculture & Biotechnology Summit NC State’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS) and the North Carolina Biotechnology Center’s AgBiotech Initiative collaborated Tuesday and Wednesday to put together the North Carolina Agriculture & Biotechnology Summit. The summit explored North Carolina’s growing role in global leadership in agricultural biotechnology. Wednesday’s keynote speakers included MeeCee Baker, president and CEO of Versant Strategies, Joel Bourne, Jr., contributing writer with National Geographic and former North Carolina Governor Jim Hunt. SOURCE: Suzanne Stanard, Media Contact
Young Adult author coming to Quail Ridge Young Adult author Elizabeth Langston will present her two new books Saturday at 2 p.m. at Quail Ridge Books & Music near Whole Foods in Raleigh. Langston concluded her Whisper Falls trilogy with her new book Whispers from the Past. The book combined historical fiction with a contemporary love story, using magical realism and time travel to accomplish the goal. Langston will also debut her series with a book titled I Wish. The event is ages 14 and up. SOURCE: Quail Ridge Books & Music
Staff Report
NICK FAULKNER.
Sophomore Gabrielle McDermott completes a dive during the Red, White, and Black scrimmage. The scrimmage took place September 26th, 2014.
The NCSU Libraries’ online collection will now serve host to the archives of the Technician. The Libraries’ collection has compiled 4000 issues of the Technician from its first publication date, Feb. 2, 1920 to 1990. The online archive of the Technician now joins other historical collections NCSU Libraries’ holds including the Historical State, Rare & Digital Collections and a series on Student Leadership.
Bestselling author announces short story contest winners Colleen Kinen-Ferguson Staff Writer
New York Times bestselling author Wiley Cash announced the winners of this year’s NC State Short Story Contest Wednesday evening in the Caldwell Lounge. The contest, which first began in 2003, awards winners, finalists and honorable mentions in two categories: the 2014 James Hurst Prize for Fiction and the NCSU Prize for Short Fiction. Additionally, one story was awarded the 2014 NCSU Undergraduate Fiction Prize. Two winners selected for short fiction and the James Hurst Prize for Fiction received a cash prize and copies of Cash’s new novel,
The Dark Road to Mercy. “I told the two guys who won I saw a lot of heart in what they wrote,” Cash said. “In this day and age, there’s a lot of drive to be witty and intellectual, which is great. But if you can do that and also make people feel something, then why not do that?” Wilton Barnhardt, a professor of creative writing, who has been running the contest for the past 10 years, said the contest has recently been expanded to include every college and university in the state, mainly their English departments. Since its inception, the contest has been judged by a professional writer from North Carolina. “We’re dependent a lot on local writers,” Barnhardt said. “We usu-
ally have someone famous, someone nationally known.” Ross Garrison, a first-year MFA student at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, was the winner of the James Hurst prize for fiction for his short story Migration. “If you are trying to become a writer, you spend so much time sending stuff out into the void,” Garrison said. “It’s gratifying to hear something back. It seems like more of a conversation instead of just talking to a wall.” Other first prize winners include Cadwell Turnbull, a graduate student studying creative writing, who won the 2014 NCSU Prize for Short Fiction, and Marcus Blyden, a ju-
WRITING continued page 2
NC State suspends Phi Beta Sigma fraternity chapter after hazing investigation concluds Staff Report
NC State’s chapter of Phi Beta Sigma fraternity has been suspended following an investigation into allegations of hazing, the university’s director of Greek Life Shelly Dobek told WNCN. Dobek said the university ceased recognizing the Xi Zeta chapter of Phi Beta Sigma after the
national fraternity suspended the chapter “for four years after concluding an investigation into allegations of hazing.” A spokesman from NC State told WNCN that Xi Zeta was made up of six members who did not live together in campus-sponsored housing. Phi Beta Sigma national fraternity executive director Daryl Anderson told WNCN by phone
that he was unaware of any investigations or sanctions that would have occurred at NC State, and he would not say whether or not he knew if the chapter was still active. Phi Beta Sigma is a historically African-American fraternity with a national headquarters in Washington, D.C.
insidetechnician
OPINION Birthing is not my duty See page 4.
FEATURES November celebrates Native American culture See page 5.
SPORTS Pack looks to continue strong start See page 8.