TECHNICIAN
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xcvi cxxii issue
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UNC System President to visit NCSU
Pearl Jam, Boston cancel concerts in response to HB2
In response to House Bill 2, which restricts rights of the LGBT community to only using bathrooms that correlate with their gender, rock bands Pearl Jam and Boston canceled shows across North Carolina. Pearl Jam canceled a show at PNC Arena that was scheduled for Wednesday. Boston canceled three upcoming shows in Raleigh, Greensboro and Charlotte. Pearl Jam and Boston are among the many concerts that have been canceled in response to HB2. Source: WRAL
‘Moral Monday’ leader removed from airplane due to derogatory remarks
Moral Monday leader the Rev. William Barber was removed from an American Airlines flight Friday after he responded to a comment from another passenger. Apparently, the passenger who made the comments toward Barber said that he had a problem with Barber’s purchasing two airline seats for himself. Barber’s derogatory retort made crewmembers call the police. Moral Monday is a social awareness movement where political leaders in North Carolina try to raise support for a variety of social injustices, including voting rights, environmental causes and public education. Source: WRAL
Duke leaders speak out against HB
Duke University President Richard Brodhead, Provost Sally Kornbluth and Chancellor for Health Affairs A. Eugene Washington wrote a statement on Monday that rejects the new North Carolina law that limits rights of the LGBT community. In their statement, university leaders addressed House Bill 2, saying that Duke University does not tolerate acts of discrimination and that they will continue to work to make Duke an inclusive environment. Leaders also addressed economic issues within the university because of HB2. Concerns over the “bathroom bill” have caused prospective students to question attending a university in a state with such discriminatory laws and is keeping some alumni and staff from further involvement with the university. Source: The Washington Post
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FEATURES Held takes unique path to stardom See page 8.
19 2016
Raleigh, North Carolina
University to focus surveys on campus sexual assault
IN BRIEF UNC System President Margaret Spellings is visiting NC State Wednesday as part of her tour of all 17 campuses in the UNC System. Spellings started in her position as UNC System president March 1. She served as Secretary of Education during the George W. Bush Administration from 2005 to 2009. Students are planning to gather on Stafford Commons Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. to protest Spellings’ visit and the passing of House Bill 2.
tuesday april
Gavin Stone Staff Writer
PETE HUFFMAN/TECHNICIAN
Amelia Fujikawa, a senior studying environmental sciences, Tyler Boquet-Caron, a junior studying environmental technology, and Annie Lopez, a junior studying biological and agricultural engineering, accept the Student Organization Award of Distinction on behalf of the NC State Stewards. The LEAD Awards took place Monday night in the Talley Mountains-Piedmont Ballroom and recognized student leaders and organizations.
LEAD Awards celebrate student accomplishments Staff Report
NC State student leaders and organizations were honored for their passion, vigor and creativity at last night’s Leadership, Engagement and Development Award Ceremony in Talley’s Mountains-Piedmont Ballroom. Awards were separated into four categories: Debra S. Moore Service Awards, Wolfpack Leadership Challenge Awards, Student Organization Outstanding Achievement
Awards and CSLEPS Awards. The 2016 award descriptions and winners are as follows: Debra S. Moore Service Awards Outstanding Student Volunteer This award recognizes a student who has been involved in service to the community throughout their college career. Winner: Veronica Catete, graduate stu
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NC State will administer a new survey this fall that will collect information and opinions from graduate and undergraduate students about the campus climate as it relates to sexual assault, according to Amy Circosta, interim vice provost of the Office for Institutional Equity and Diversity. NC State’s Campus Climate Surveys have dealt with sexual violence-related questions in the past, but they are only conducted every five years and they cover a wide range of topics. Circosta said in an email that these surveys were used to assess the university’s outreach, prevention and response initiatives related to sexual violence, but they needed to be updated to provide greater accuracy. “Unfortunately, the response rate for the most recent Student Climate Survey was lower than expected, which makes the
data less reliable,” Circosta said. The new survey will be based on the Campus Climate Survey Validation Study, which coincided with the launch of the It’s On Us campaign laid out by the White House Task Force to Protect Students From Sexual Assault in 2014. NC State’s Title IX Team officers and the Office for Institutional Research and Planning are currently reviewing various questionnaires that have been developed and tested by experts in the field to determine the best practices in administering such a survey, according to Circosta. The current projection is that the new survey will be conducted every two or three years, a timeline that the Student Senate felt was still too infrequent to collect sufficient data on sexual assault. The most recent survey, conducted in spring 2015, dealt primarily
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Students map out gender neutral bathrooms Corey White Correspondent
The GLBT Center and its Volunteer, Internship and Practicum Program are sponsoring a new project at NC State which maps out all 254 bathrooms on campus to create a reference of each bathroom’s
accessibility. The project, called “Safe to Pee,” was started by Victor Eduardo, a freshman study ing statistics and Graecie Vrchota, a senior studying social work. When most people go to the bathroom, they do not have to worry about if it is wheelchair accessible,
if it is single occupancy, or if the sign is also written in Braille, they said. But because some people do have to worry about these things, they decided to create the “Safe to Pee” project. The current map of gender neutral and/or single sta l l bat hrooms is out
of date, so “Safe to Pee” launched a scavenger hunt to identif y those bat hrooms in 16 buildings on campus. “Ideally we will end up with a map of all the gender inclusive bathrooms and it will end up on our website,” said the GLBT Center’s Program Coor-
dinator Andy DeRoin. DeRoin went on to say that the map could serve as a reference to future construction projects so that more gender inclusive bathrooms could be built in places where they aren’t already, making campus
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Somos Talentosos es sobre más que talento Jordan Arroyo Corresponsal
Inclusión era el tema más importante durante el evento “Somos Talentosos” el viernes pasado. Mi Familia, el grupo cultural latino del campus, organizó dicha producción. El evento incluyó actuaciones musicales, artes marciales, poesía hablada, parodias y bailes. El motivo de Somos Talentosos fue de celebrar el fin de año y presentar los talentos que los estudiantes poseen. Este es el cuarto año de Somos Talentosos, según Jorge Pacheco Santiago, el presidente de Mi Familia y estudiante de cuarto año estudiando educación de tecnología, ingeniería y diseño. Sin embargo este año, Pacheco Santiago dijo que quería crear un evento más grande y más elaborado que los anteriores. “Quería crear un evento que festejara todos de los logros de Mi Familia en conjunto. Pero este siendo mi último año en NC State, quisiera asegurarme que este evento tuviera más atracciones,” dijo Pacheco Santiago. “Pienso que he tenido éxito con eso en el pasado. Trabajé muy duro para asegurarme que todo estuviese perfecto. El Cinema de Witherspoon fue decorado con globos coloridos, el escenario fue iluminado con luces amarillas, y la vestimenta fue formal, ya que el tema del evento fue Sábado Gigante. Los estudiantes del campus llenaron el teatro y las familias de los participantes asistieron para dar su apoyo. “Don Gabriel,” el anfitrión del
evento, empezó por llamar varios países latinos y esperando el aplauso de la audiencia. Gabriel Carrión, un estudiante en su primer año de ingeniería, siendo el anfitrión dijo que el propósito de “somos talentosos” era presentar el éxito de la comunidad estudiantil y al mismo tiempo promover la inclusión. “Para mí, no es un evento que apoya la tolerancia de los hispanohablantes como una cultura distinta, pero es sobre la inclusión de los estudiantes como estudiantes normales,” dijo Carrión. “En realidad, este evento está abierto para todos los estudiantes del campus que deseen participar.” Para los estudiantes que participaron en Somos Talentosos, el evento significó un número de cosas diferentes. Por ejemplo, Angélica Rodríguez, una estudiante que es parte del grupo de baile latino Sube Ritmo y una estudiante de cuarto año estudiando ciencias biológicas, dijo que estaba emocionada por presentar sus bailes. “Estoy emocionada de presentar un baile en particular,” dijo Rodríguez. “Es una combinación de tango y bachata, que es muy interesante porque los dos bailes son tan distintos.” Ella se presentó con su grupo Sube Ritmo y también presentó una danza del vientre ella sola. Ambas representaciones fueron populares con la audiencia y recibieron muchos aplausos.
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GAVIN STONE/TECHNICIAN
“Build The Wall” is written on the wall leading out of the Free Expression Tunnel on Monday. Another person added “DON’T” in front of the message. NC State prohibits chalking on vertical surfaces.
#TheChalkening: Trumpisms show up on campus Gavin Stone Staff Writer
As students walked to class Monday morning, several locations on NC State’s campus were covered with pro-Donald Trump messages written in chalk, sparking more dialogue about the presidential candidate prior to Tuesday’s new round of primary elections. The messages, each accompanied by #thechalkening, read, among other variations, “make America great again” (or abbreviated MAGA), “build the wall,” “secure our borders” and “NC State supports Trump.” In front of the Caldwell Hall stairs, the pro-Trump chalk had a message for those who would be offended by their statements. “End political correctness. If this offends you you’re part of the problem.” This was later countered with a message reading, “I’m offended by idiots” and “YOU are the problem.”
The hashtag has caught on nationally at universities such as University of Illinois, Ohio University, University of California-Santa Barbara, DePaul, University of Michigan, Kansas, Connecticut, College of William and Mary and Tulane, sparking debate over the limits of free speech. Nearly all of the pro-Trump messages were countered by anti-Trump messages which simply turned the statements into negatives or rebutted them. Near a heavily chalked message reading “build the wall” in Spanish, accompanied by #LatinosforTrump, was a message reading “Muslims are friends not terrorists!” Also among the counter-chalkening were pro-Sen. Bernie Sanders messages, such as “feel the Bern.” The university prohibits chalking on vertical surfaces.
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