April 21, 2016

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

vol.

xcvi cxxiv issue

technicianonline.com

thursday april

21 2016

Raleigh, North Carolina

Margaret Spellings visits NC State IN BRIEF Kaitlin Montgomery

Sexual assault reported in Wolf Village

University Police released a crime warning at about 9:30 p.m. Wednesday notifying students of a sexual assault reported to have occurred in the Wolf Village Apartments on Saturday. According to the alert, the survivor is a female student who knows the perpetrator reported to the police. The email also included a link to all of the available resources for survivors of sexual assault on campus. For more information, visit http://campuspolice.ehps. ncsu.edu/victim-resources/. SOURCE: NC State University Police

Harriet Tubman to replace Andrew Jackson on $20 bill

Editor in Chief

UNC System President Margaret Spellings visited NC State Wednesday morning as the 12th stop on her tour of the 17 UNC campuses. The majority of her day focused learning about the STEM work happening at NC state and included tours of Hunt Library and Talley Student Union. Chancellor Randy Woodson accompanied Spellings on her tour as she took time to meet with students, faculty and staff. Spellings started her tour at the Center for Additive Manufacturing and Logistics, also known as CAMAL. The center is home to a number

of machines that create, using 3-D imaging, prosthetics for pet surgeries that take place in collaboration with the veterinary school. A process known as osseointegration, the prosthetics are infused into the bone for a more stable replacement. “The message we’re working to leave here [at NC State] is the collaborative nature of STEM work,” Woodson told Spellings. As Spellings rode throughout campus, Lisa Johnson, university architect, told Spellings the history of buildings such as Daniels Hall, BurKAI F. MCNEIL/TECHNICIAN lington Engineering Labora- Margaret Spellings, former secretary of education and current president of the UNC tories and Harrelson Hall. System, Paul Nolan, student body president and a senior studying material science and engineering, Mike Giancola, associate vice provost of the Division of Academic and SPELLINGS continued page 3 Student Affairs and Chancellor Randy Woodson discuss the features of Talley Student Union during their tour of NC State University on Wednesday.

Harriet Tubman, an AfricanAmerican abolitionist well known for helping slaves escape to the North via the Underground Railroad, will replace Andrew Jackson as the new face of the $20 bill, the U.S. Treasury announced Wednesday. Tubman will be the first African-American ever to be depicted on U.S. currency as well as the first woman to be depicted in more than 100 years. The U.S. Treasury originally proposed replacing Alexander Hamilton, the first U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, on the $10 bill, but was met with backlash from the public. Instead, the Treasury decided to remove Jackson, the seventh president of the United States as well as a known slave owner. The new bill is set to be unveiled in 2020. SOURCE: The Associated Press

Mild winters soothe fears of climate change for Americans

Milder winters have caused millions of Americans to stop stressing climate change, researchers from New York University and Duke University found in a recent study. For most people living in the United States, the average July temperature has risen only half a degree over the past 40 years, while the average January temperature has risen more than four degrees. Many Americans have reportedly taken these warmer winters as a reason to be less worried about global climate change, with many describing the change as “pleasant.” Patrick Egan, a researcher from New York University, said evidence suggests public opinion starts to change when summer temperatures start to rise, which scientists predict will happen within several decades. SOURCE: NPR

Protest draws low numbers during Spellings’ visit Staff Report

GRAPHIC BY DEVAN FEENEY

Rising tuition costs are changing the status quo Inez Nicholson News Editor

Go to college for four years directly out of high school, get your diploma a nd immediately join the workforce. That has been the status quo and the supposed key to social mobility and f inancial wellbeing. However, rising tuition

costs over the past 30 years have made it harder and harder for Americans to uphold this golden standard. Tuition prices at Americ a n u niversit ies have increased 600 percent between 1980 and 2010, more t ha n a ny ot her product or service, according to The Atlantic. Even if a student were to

work full time at minimum wage, they would not begin to cover the price of tuition, fees and textbooks. At NC State, more than 60 percent of undergraduate students rely on financial aid to help pay for tuition, according to Maria Brown, director of

TUITION continued page 2

About a dozen students gathered in protest of the newly appointed UNC System President Margaret Spellings’ visit to campus Wednesday, a stark contrast to the crowd of hundreds who greeted Spellings during her visit to UNC-Chapel Hill in March. The 12 students with signs were surrounded by police officers on horses and in plain clothes, which further emphasized the lower-thanexpected turnout among demonstrators. Spellings took office as the UNC System president March 1 and has since been the subject of an onslaught of protests. Starting before she took office and continuing through the present, faculty and students have expressed concern with the direction Spellings will take the UNC System. Protesters have criticized her remarks

about the LGBT community, as well as her corporate connections and ties to President George W. Bush’s education administration. The few students at the protest stood on the stairs in front of the NC State insignia in Talley Student Union with signs reading “Maggie Spells Trouble” and “We Are Not This.” The small showing of students who went to protest was attributed to the fact that NC State was a STEM school, according to the protesters. They criticized the fact that NC State has a poor history with activism and has no infrastructure for organizing protests. The 12 students who came to protest Spellings got the chance to speak with her as she walked between meetings. Spellings responded to their comments by say-

PROTEST continued page 3

Designers depict obsession in 15th Art2Wear Laurie Howard Correspondent

insidetechnician

FEATURES SOUL garden: grows vegtables, community See page 5.

This Friday marks the 15th annual Art2Wear fashion show, where students in the College of Art and Design display their work in a studentrun event. Each production brings a new theme and new designers to the stage, so a distinctive display is guaranteed for this year’s performance. The show is an opportunity for students to experience the development of a runway show firsthand. For designers, that means creating a collection from start to finish, from the early drafts to the final walk. By formulating and solidifying the outer and inner workings of the pro-

duction, student directors are able to experience the factors that go into coordinating such an event. Preparation begins in August when the theme is announced to those interested. Designs are expected to lean toward the avant-garde, embracing this year’s theme, the “Virtue of Obsession.” Students are expected to have a presentable sample of their collection ready to present to judges by early December. The panel isn’t solely a collection of fashion critics, rather, the judges come from a diverse background — and with that comes diverse opin-

ART2WEAR continued page 6

CAIDE WOOTEN/TECHNICIAN

Erin Roberts, a senior studying textile technology management, models a dress by Bethany Faulkner at Art2Wear 2015 on April 17, 2015 in the Talley Student Union State Ballroom.

Event shows students personal effects of HB2 Gavin Stone Contributor

SPORTS Former Pack star finds new meaning See page 8.

A group of more than 20 NC State students Wednesday attended an information session about the effects of House Bill 2, hosted by the Lambda Theta Phi Latin Fraternity in conjunction with the NC State GLBT Center.

The information session focused on the basic definitions of what it means to be transgender, the implications of HB2 for transgender and queer people in North Carolina, the lawsuits currently in court surrounding the legislation and the economic impacts of the bill. Students were also given the chance to hear from and talk to

Natalie Nguyen, assistant director of the GLBT Center and a trans person. HB2, which Gov. Pat McCrory signed into law on March 23 following a special session of the NC General Assembly, requires people to use the restroom that corresponds to their sex as it is listed on their birth certificate regardless of

their self-identification. The bill also lifts protections against employment discrimination based on sexual orientation. Additionally, HB2 prevents cities and localities from passing future non-discrimination legislation.

HB2 continued page 2


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