TECHNICIAN
vol.
xcvi xcii issue
technicianonline.com
thursday february
18 2016
Raleigh, North Carolina
Voter registration for primaries ends Friday IN BRIEF Celebrity chef takes over State Club kitchen
The State Club, NC State’s restaurant located inside the Park Alumni Center, recently got two new additions to the staff. Gerry Fong, winner of the 2014 Season of Food Network’s “Cutthroat Kitchen” joined the staff as the new executive chef, and Chris O’Leary, the former food and beverage manager with ClubCorp, took over as general manager. The two joined the team in an effort to revamp the leadership of the private dining club that serves more than 400 members. Dinner and special events at the club are exclusive to members, but the restaurant is open to the public for lunch Monday through Friday. Fong is a graduate of the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, New York. He became well known after his season on “Cutthroat Kitchen” where he won for his key lime pie recipe. SOURCE: NC State News
Jonathan Carter Correspondent
This Friday is the last day to register to vote for the North Carolina presidential primaries on March 15. The primaries are people vote for the candidates they want to represent their political party in the general election in November. Many college students have questions about the primaries, such as how to register to vote and where to vote. These questions are particularly important to students, as many students live far from places they grew up, which can affect their ability to vote. Anyone can check their voter registration online at the North Carolina Board of Elections website on the public voter search page. Information about a voter’s registration status, address of registration,
polling location and party affiliation can be found through searching on that website. For students wanting to register to vote, change party affiliation or change a place of residence to Wake County, the state requires voters to fill out a voter registration form, which can be printed off of the Board of Elections’ website, and have it postmarked to the Wake County Board of Elections by this Friday. If it is not postmarked by that date, the state will not accept the registration form. The mailing address for the Wake County Board of Education is PO Box 695, Raleigh, NC 27602. None of these voter services are currently available online and must be done by mail. Once registering is out of the way, there are three different ways to cast a vote in North Carolina: early voting or one-stop voting, absentee voting and regular election-day voting.
Lindsay Smith Staff Writer
SORENA DADGAR/TECHNICIAN
Customers grab a cup of coffee at Jubala Coffee’s new Hillsborough Street location Wednesday afternoon. This Hillsborough Street location opened late last week as part of an expansion from its original North Raleigh location in Lafayette Village.
KAI F. MCNEIL/TECHNICIAN
An espresso machine sits on the counter of Jubala Coffee on Hillsborough Street Wednesday. Jubala Coffee features locally roasted Counter Culture Coffee for its customers.
Pope Francis scolds overeager crowd that knocked him over
Pope Francis scolded a crowd of people gathered to meet him during his visit to Morelia, Mexico after some in the group became too forceful and yanked him off balance. The pontiff raised his hand to the crowd and said, “No seas egoista! No seas egoista! (Don’t be selfish! Don’t be selfish!).” Earlier at the event, which was geared towards inspiring young Catholics, somebody in the crowd also pulled at the pope’s neck when he was bent down to talk with a disabled girl. Mexico’s El Universal, the news outlet that posted the video, called the overeager crowd “the first mishap of the pontiff on his visit.” That same day, Pope Francis urged the young Mexican Catholics to value themselves in times of hardship. SOURCE: NPR
insidetechnician
PRIMARIES continued page 2
Student Senate votes to bus students to polls
College of Education holds open forums for dean candidates
The College of Education is in the process of holding open forums where students can come and ask questions to candidates applying to be the college’s new dean. The next upcoming forums are: -Monday, Feb. 22, 11 a.m. to noon in the Talley Student Union, Room 3222 Keith Wilson, Southern Illinois University Carbondale -Thursday, Feb. 25, 11 a.m. to noon in the Talley Student Union, Room 3210 Kathryn Chval, University of Missouri–Columbia -Monday, Feb. 29, 11 a.m. to noon in the Talley Student Union, Room 4280 Carole Basile, University of Missouri–St. Louis SOURCE: NC State News
GRAPHIC BY DEVAN FEENEY
KAI F. MCNEIL/TECHNICIAN
Jubala Coffee is currently haveing a soft opening with shortened store hours. The shop is known for not only its coffee but its food. Jubala Coffee says the mission is simple, “serve delicious, afforable drink and food that guests will want to return to week after week.”
SEE PAGE 3
Jubala Coffee opens Hillsborough location
With the North Carolina primary less than a month away, students have expressed concern over getting to the polls. On Wednesday, NC State Student Senate passed the Voting Bus Support Act in the Talley Governance Chamber. The bill calls on the university to provide transportation to and from voting locations for students on March 15, the day of the North Carolina primaries. The bus would run from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. “We are supporting the use of buses to make sure students
“It is a citizen’s right to vote, and it is the public’s responsibility to make polls accessible.” -Garret Mills, junior studying physics
are able to get to the nearest voting location since it is slightly inconvenient to them now,” said Student Sen. Jonathan Riggs, a senior studying animal science. Currently, the nearest voting location at Pullen Community Center is one mile from Talley Student Union and two miles from Hunt Library on Centennial Campus. The bill points out that it is difficult for students to vote off campus. The bill also pointed to several studies that support the transportation of students to voting locations. Young voters typically have a greater turnout in presidential election years, and the studies point out that providing transportation incentivizes people to vote. According to the bill, the 2012 presidential election occurred with 93 percent of the student body registered to vote and 90 percent of those registered went to vote. Garrett Mills, a junior studying physics, said he was excited at the possibility of a bus for students. “If the school’s goal is to get more young students to vote, then shuttling them is an excellent idea,” Mills said. “It is a citizen’s right to vote, and it is the public’s responsibility to make polls accessible. If I was a student with no car, I would highly consider utilizing the bus to get to the polls.” During the meeting, student senators said that NCPIRG and NC State University Transportation have supported
BILLS continued page 2
Senate passes bill to make ClassEval results public Jonathan Carter Correspondent
FEATURES The secrets behind Double Barrel Benefit See page 5.
SPORTS Pack baseball heads to Myrtle for season opener See page 8.
The Student Senate passed a bill Wednesday evening that proposed ClassEvals be made public to students who are deciding what classes to add to their schedules. The main push for the ClassEval Publication Act came from students who were displeased with the university’s relatively short 10-day drop-date period that the UNC Board of Directors enacted in 2014. The bill states that, since students have such little time to drop classes, ClassEval should be used to benefit students by providing public student feedback on the courses they are interested in taking.
The product of this legislation could be compared to online evaluation websites such as Rate My Professor and Koofers. These websites provide public feedback in an anonymous web forum, which many university students consider beneficial. “Making ClassEvals public does have its benefits because if the evaluations are truthful, they can help sway a student’s decision as to whether taking a certain class would be benef icial to them,” said Charlotte Rogus, a freshman studying animal science. Diya Sashidhar, the academics committee chairwoman of the Student Senate, said the bill was created to give students more information about a class before enrolling.
Sashidhar said she will be meeting with the standing committee on the evaluation of teaching on Friday to discuss how the bill could be implemented. In addition to the ClassEval Act, the Student Senate also reviewed and passed the Advisor Eval Act, which would provide students with the opportunity of evaluating their academic advisers annually. The Student Senate recognized that there is no official way to evaluate academic advisers. This is seen as unfair by the students seeing as how students are assigned an adviser in their academic departments that they are required to work with throughout their college careers. The Student Senate passed this
bill which recommends that NC State provide students with optional adviser evaluations to be conducted annually. These evaluations will be anonymous, not requiring students to submit their personal information. “I think being able to evaluate advisers would be very helpful,” said Graham Whitehouse, a freshman studying first-year engineering. “I had a negative experience with contacting my adviser, and this evaluation could help give them advice to help them improve.” Once a bill is passed in the Student Senate, Student Body President Khari Cyrus must sign it before it can be implemented. Cyrus has 10 class days to sign or veto the bill.