March 1, 2016

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TECHNICIAN          

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xcvi xcviii issue

technicianonline.com

IN BRIEF Student Government voting closes at 8 p.m.

Voting for student body president and vice president, student senate president, student body treasurer, student body chief justice, InterResidence Council president, Union Activities Board president, Student Centers Board of Directors president, Student Centers Board of Directors and Student Media Board of Directors is open until 8 p.m. tonight. Cast your vote at https://getinvolved.ncsu.edu/. SOURCE: Student Government

Police search to ID man who exposed himself near campus

Chapel Hill police turned to the public for help Monday afternoon while trying to identify a man who exposed himself near Fraternity Court Sunday morning. The man asked a woman for directions and waited for her to approach his car. When she arrived to at the car, she saw that the man was naked from the waist down, according to investigators. The man attempted to grab the woman’s arm before she ran away. A similar report was made later in the day, except the second incident did not involve any nudity. Investigators are still searching for the man. SOURCE: WRAL

Staff Report

A Raleigh police officer shot and killed a felony drug suspect fleeing arrest Monday afternoon near Bragg and East Streets, according to the Raleigh Police department. The officer’s name has not been released yet, but he was said to be chasing the suspect who allegedly had an outstanding warrant. Rolanda Byrd told WRAL News that the suspect was her 24-year-old son, Akiel Denkins. The firearm was found close to the deceased suspect, according to Raleigh Chief of Police Cassandra DeckBrown. Denkins had three drug charges against him, according to the Department of Public Safety. Last year, he had impending charges against him for possession with intent to distribute cocaine and probation violations. An anonymous source told WRAL

BIENVENIDOS

News that when Denkins was approached by the police he took off and hopped two fences. The police officers could not clear the second fence to get him, so one of them started shooting, the source said. “When they got to the tall fence, the boy jumped the tall fence, but the police couldn’t,” the source said. “When the police went to jump over the tall fence, he fell. When he fell, he just started shooting his gun.” The follow up investigations are still in the early stages, according to Deck-Brown. The State Bureau of Investigation will conduct the criminal investigation concerning the officerinvolved shooting, and its finding will be presented directly to the Wake County District Attorney. Raleigh Police Department’s Internal Affairs Unit will conduct an administrative investigation that will focus on departmental policy matters.

Jonathan Carter Correspondent

LAUREN HIGHT/TECHNICIAN

Assistant Director of University Scholars Program Chester Brewer, and Adam Skrzecz, a freshman studying political science, engage in discussions about race after viewing the MTV documentary “White People.” The documentary about race among today’s generation aired for students on Monday in Witherspoon Cinema.

MTV film ‘White People’ discusses race Roughly 450 students attended Student Diversity’s annual spring Campus Diversity Dialogue Monday, featuring MTV’s 2015 documentary “White People” in Witherspoon Cinema. The film, produced by journalist and filmmaker Jose Antonio Vargas, focused on white millennials

Staff Writer

SPORTS Why Cat Barber should be the ACC POY See page 8.

and their perceptions of race based on their experiences and environment. The film’s intent was to hear from white people about what it means to be white and to include these perspectives in the conversation on race in America. Vargas approached white millennials from across the country with questions such as “What does

FILM continued page 3

Christopher Caldwell, a professional journalist and news editor at the Weekly Standard, gave a lecture Monday discussing the future of Europe and how the European Union is plagued by myriad crises. During this lecture, which is an installment of NC State’s John W. Pope Lecture Series, Caldwell outlined two main crises that Europe is currently facing: the immigration crisis and the financial crises of the European Union. Caldwell, a Harvard graduate, discussed how countries in Europe, such as Germany, are experiencing a massive inf lux of immigrants due to conf licts in the Middle East. “Germany received twice as many newcomers last year than births in their country,” Caldwell said. “And considering these immigrants are predominantly Muslim, large social adjustments will take place.”

Caldwell discussed how this influx of refugees was completely unexpected and unprecedented. He said Europe does not know how to handle this problem effectively, mainly because there is no way to effectively handle it. Migrants are ver y rational, according to Caldwell. He said that because the places they are coming from are so poor and insufficient for human needs, they will do anything they can to get to Europe and stay there. “Angela Merkel and her aids often say that fences don’t help and barbed wire is no solution, but they are wrong,” Caldwell said. “We know this because 92 percent of asylum seekers have settled in just 10 states.” Many of Caldwell’s statements were considered controversial. “If Europeans are unwilling or unable to place conditions on all this pressure on migration, how capable will they be in policing the migrants once they arrive on European soil?” Caldwell said.

LECTURE continued page 3

NC State alumnus creates app to connect patients Ashleigh Polisky

See page 5.

Raleigh, North Carolina

Journalist discusses European refugee, financial crises

Correspondent

The Latin America project fundraises for better lives

2016

GRAPHIC BY DEVAN FEENEY

Garrett Hattman

insidetechnician

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Raleigh police officer shoots, kills suspect

NY man charged with trying to sell counterfeit tickets to the Duke-UNC basketball game

A 21-year-old man from New York was charged Monday with two felonies for counterfeiting and selling fake tickets to the North Carolina-Duke men’s basketball game Saturday. He was charged with felony obtaining property by false pretense and felony possession with intent to sell and deliver counterfeit tickets. He tried to sell 21 fake tickets on Craigslist valued at $6,300. An undercover cop from Carrboro Police caught him. He is being held under a $50,000 bond and appears in court today. SOURCE: WRAL

tuesday march

You are sick, in a hospital bed, lonely and wanting to connect with people who understand what you’re going through. Thanks to an NC State alumni, this will be possible through a new app that launches in June, HealthBeMe. HealthBeMe is a social media platform that connects people with similar health conditions so that they can share their experiences and knowledge, according to Jason Dragos, founder and CEO of HealthBeMe. “Healthcare is the most cold and

scientific industry in the world when it should be something very human because it’s a very human thing to be diagnosed with some sort of chronic disease,” Dragos said. Dragos’ frustration with health care is what inspired him to start HealthBeMe. “I think the people in the world who need the most care and support often times don’t get it in any situation,” Dragos said. “So I wanted to create a social platform that wasn’t about taking selfies, it wasn’t about self promotion, but it was about doing good, so we created a place for people to help

2408 Hillsborough ST

each other.” Through the app, people are able to share their stories with others and get advice from those who have gone through the same thing. Dragos said that people will also be able to give reviews on doctors and medications for others to view. Dragos used the metaphor that when somebody wants to buy a laptop, they go and check out reviews online and look at several options, but when a doctor tells a patient to take a medication, the patient just accepts what the doctor is saying. This app now gives patients the option to ask people

who have used that medication. HealthBeMe is trying to raise one million dollars by its June launch. There are currently ten members on the team, but they are looking for eight more software developers. “I get really bummed by the world being super greedy, so we wanted to create something that, number one, gave everyone access to better health, and, number two, created an environment where people can do good for each other,” Dragos said. Dragos has been closely work-

HEALTH continued page 2

www.work4arm.com

JOIN US this Tues and Weds @ 6PM for FREE PIZZA and DRINKS in the ARM Leadership Lounge!


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March 1, 2016 by NC State Student Media - Issuu