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SG hosts Night Walk event tonight to learn about safety concerns
First woman to lead engineer support battalion is North Carolinian
Lt. Col. Lauren Edwards is the first woman to lead an engineer support battalion. She took over for Lt. Col. David Morris during a change-of-command ceremony Monday at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. She will lead the 8th Engineer Support Battalion, which provides general engineering support to all units with the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force. When deployed in Iraq as a company commander, she led more than 150 Marines and several vehicles in defensive maneuvers while taking enemy fire. SOURCE: ABC 11
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2015
Raleigh, North Carolina
UNC students protest outsourcing
IN BRIEF Student Government, University Police and the Senate Staff invite the NC State community to walk around the areas they live, learn or work to help identify safety concerns tonight at 7 p.m. Safety concerns include things like inadequate/non-functional lighting, non-functional emergency equipment, overgrown shrubbery and other hazards. The walk will teach attendees how to be proactive and address the issues. Attendees can meet at Stafford Commons outside of Talley Student Union, the Bell Tower, Sullivan Pyramids, the Oval Courtyard on Centennial Campus, the entrance of Greek Village or Terry Animal Hospital Courtyard. SOURCE: Student Involvement
tuesday december
Andrew Cochrane Correspondent
Sheldon Koppenhofer Correspondent
where we only seek information that feeds into our belief system and proves that what we believe is right. Fishel asked, “How many people do you know, myself included, go about life every day to try and find people or information that tells us we’re wrong?” If we did this, Fishel said, we would have to admit we “goofed up” or “didn’t know enough.” “We have developed this tribal loyalty, where you have to walk in one step with your tribe with everything,” Fishel said. Fishel explained that we listen to podcasts, read blogs, follow so-
Students, faculty and staff, in partnership with the State Employees Association of North Carolina, gathered at UNC-Chapel Hill Monday to protest the privatization of UNC Student Stores. There are possible administrative plans to outsource student store operations to private parties. In September, UNC-CH Student Stores celebrated 100 years in business, as being the No. 1 retailer in the world for UNC-licensed merchandise. However, the university is considering submitting a request for proposals to companies interested in privatizing the student store operations. The university has already received unsolicited requests from interested buyers such as Follett, a company that owns more than a thousand student stores across America. NC State’s associate director of NCSU Bookstores, Anthony Sanders, doesn’t believe that NC State is considering following in UNC’s footsteps toward privatizing our student stores. “We are a brand-new store, and we have a very excellent relationship with our administration at NC State,” Sanders said. “We donate everything we can back to the university. As long as we’re running a good operation … I don’t see why there would be out-
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NICKI LEARY/TECHNICIAN
Greg Fishel, a meteorologist for the WRAL-TV television station, speaks to Biology 105 students about the controversial issue of climate change in Bostian Hall on Nov. 30. Fishel, who has been working as a meteorologist since 1979, emphasized how important it is for students to be open to any and all new ideas that come up in their lifetimes, even if they contradict an existing belief. Fishel’s argument for the existence of climate change is based on his idea that, “a small amount of three or four gases can make the difference between an inhabitable and an uninhabitable planet, so isn’t there at least a chance that humans might be having an effect?”
WRAL weatherman forecasts shifting beliefs on climate change Fishel admits to past hesitations, doubts Inez Nicholson News Editor
Greg Fishel, chief meteorologist at WR AL, woke up one morning five years ago with a nagging question on his mind: “Greg, are you doing the same thing that the people you’re criticizing are doing, in that you’re just looking for
information to support what you already think?” He was searching for information to support his beliefs that climate change was not real. Educated at Pennsylvania State University and certified by the American Meteorological Society, it took Fishel a while to shake off those false pretenses. Fishel drove a Prius before he accepted the reality of climate change. Fishel admitted to being a climate change skeptic Monday afternoon to, biological sciences teaching assistant professor, Jennifer Landin’s BIO 105 class and how he realized the core of the issue. He said we can be stuck in dangerous “ ideologica l trenches,”
NC State Clothing Closet provides students free professional attire Samuel Griffin Correspondent
KRISTIN BRADFORD/TECHNICIAN
The NC State Styled for Success Clothing Closet hosts all sorts of professional clothing items that come in all shapes and sizes and are free for student use. The Career Closet is available on Mondays from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m., Tuesdays from noon - 4 p.m., and Fridays from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
It’s sad but it’s true, what you wear can and will affect what people think about you. Therefore it is important to dress well for the right occasion. Showing that you know how to dress professionally for a job interview or a career fair can leave a good impression and make all the difference, but nice clothes can be hard to come by. A new suit or dress can be expensive, and if you do manage to get the job you’re shooting for, you then might find yourself needing nice clothes five days a week. Fortunately, NC State has a resource that can help make the process of looking good a little easier. It’s called the NC State Styled for Success Clothing Closet. Opened a few years ago, the NC State Styled for Success Clothing Closet is operated by The NC State Career Development Center in partnership with the Pre-Law Students Association. However, due to a lack of awareness from the NC State community, the resource is promoting more advertisement to get the word
out, according to Michelle Nigro, the clothing closet coordinator and a senior studying biology. “It’s been running for awhile but really got kickstarted this semester by putting the clothes together, finding a space and getting the word out,” Nigro said. The Clothing Closet is a source for all kinds of professional attire students may need including overcoats, blazers, ties, dresses, skirts, slacks and even a nice pair of shoes. The best part is, the clothes are given away at no cost to the student. Located at the Career Development Center on the second f loor of Pullen Hall, the closet aims to provide students with a free source of proper attire that might be all that stands between them and the job they are shooting for. “[The closet] is for any student that needs professional clothes [because] they’re not cheap,” Nigro said. “Not everyone can afford that, and if you need multiple outfits it can be get very expensive very quickly.” One problem the NC State Styled for Success Clothing Closet has had
difficulty with is advertising to the intended users of the service. “A common misconception about the closet is that you have to have low income to use the closet, and that is not true,” said Amanda Smith, the marketing and communication intern for the Career Development Center and a junior studying animal science. “Any NCSU student can come to the closet regardless of income level and take whatever they need for their interviews, jobs or anything like that.” A student is not required to return the clothes they take from the closet but can if they wish. Nigro said that the clothing closet encourages people to keep the clothes as needed. The Career Development Center also provides advice to students on how to dress professionally such as finding the right fit for a piece of clothing and picking out the most appropriate outfit for whatever reason the student needs the clothes. “It’s extremely important if you are going into a job where you have
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