Technician - Nov. 5, 2014

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TECHNICIAN

wednesday november

5

2014

Raleigh, North Carolina

technicianonline.com

IN BRIEF

Dog harness measures well-being David Roberts, a mathematician and computer scientist at NC State, was among the team who developed a harness that has the ability to measure a dog’s well-being. The harness is complete with sensors that measure how the dog is doing and feeling through its heartbeat, temperature and activity level. With users having control over the harness through a cellphone app, they are also able to send input back to the dog using haptics. The harness can be used on service dogs as well as dogs trained for the military. The team is also in the process of making adjustments to the harness so it can also be used in animal shelters and hospital settings as well. SOURCE: VOA news

Raleigh construction sign of progress Economic progress can be measured by the increasing construction sites that have popped up in Raleigh recently. After difficulty relating to the recession, the number of requests for permits has been increasing, according to Curt Willis, the deputy director of inspections in Raleigh. Construction has been following a brisk pace, evident from the sites all over Raleigh, Willis said. Even projects that were stopped due to the recession have been restarted and are gaining momentum, according to Willis. Mike Walden, a distinguished professor in economics at NC State, cites the increased confidence of developers in the economy as a reason for the boom in construction. Walden also predicted that the triangle area’s economy will surpass even that of its pre-recession standards soon. SOURCE: WRAL

NC sees increased early voting numbers

During the early voting period for the election, about 1.1 million people in North Carolina voted, according to the board of elections. This reflects a 20 percent increase from the midterm election in 2010. According to Andrew Taylor, a professor of political science at NC State, possible reasons for the increased turnout include the will of liberals to mobilize voters due to the reduction in the number of days designated for early voting. Taylor also cites the growing popularity of voting early. This particular U.S. Senate race with Kay Hagan and Thom Tillis is also a race that is high-profile and competitive, possibly sparking voters’ interest and motivating them to cast their votes. SOURCE: WUNC

insidetechnician

FEATURES Student expands sunglasses company

CAIDE WOOTEN/TECHNICIAN

UNC-Chapel Hill College Republicans Richard Wheeler and Idris Jarely Parada embrace in celebration of Thom Tillis’ election to the United States Senate Tuesday evening, Nov. 4, 2014 during the North Carolina Republican Party’s Election Night Watch Party at Shucker’s Oyster Bar & Grill in Raleigh. Tillis’ election, along with six other Republican candidates across the country, gave the control of the Senate to the Republican Party.

Tillis win secures GOP control of U.S. Senate Rachel Smith Correspondent

Former NC Speaker of the House Thom Tillis took North Carolina’s senatorial seat for the Republican Party by about two percentage points, defeating Democratic incumbent Kay Hagan Tuesday night after a $111 million race, the most expensive senatorial race in the nation.

Final U.S. Senate percentages

49.04% 47.20% 3.76% Thom Tillis

Kay Hagan

Sean Haugh

Tillis was the sixth candidate to win a seat in the Senate for the GOP, officially giving Republicans control of the U.S. senate for the next two years. Candidates and supporters of the North Carolina Republican Party gathered at Shuck-

ers Oyster Bar and Grill in downtown Raleigh Tuesday night in anticipation and celebration of Tillis’ senatorial win. “Regardless of the results, I am so happy with the turnout tonight,” said Nicole Simmons, a Raleigh citizen in attendance. “It is so nice to see that we have this much support for Thom Tillis and the rest of the Republican candidates running in this election.” After North Carolina’s polls closed at 7:30 p.m., tension throughout the room increased as Republican supporters in attendance awaited the first results of this year’s election. “I have been following this race very closely, and it is nice to get to talk to some of the other Republican candidates involved in this election,” said Ashley Bright of Raleigh. Bright said she felt a shift in conversation and mood throughout the room as the election initially grew in favor of Hagan. As the results continued to come in, the crowd huddled around television screens, keeping a close watch on the other senatorial races taking place throughout the U.S. The room periodically filled with applause and excitement as the results of other senatorial races were announced in favor of the Republican Party. “I am happy for West Virginia,” Bright said in response to Senator Shelley Moore Capito’s win. “The U.S. is well on its way to a Republican Senate.” The cost of this year’s election was a heavy topic of discussion among attendees throughout the night. At about $111 million, North

JOHN JOYNER/TECHNICIAN

Democrats Sig Hutchinson, Matt Calabria, Jessica Holmes and John Burns swept all four available seats on the Wake County Board of Commissioners Tuesday, leading to a complete democrat takeover.

College Democrats contribute to sweep of Commissioners in Wake County Inez Nicholson Correspondent

All four Democratic candidates for Wake County commission won in Tuesday night’s election, partially thanks the help of members of the NC State College Democrats who began volunteering for many of the commissioners’w campaigns in early May. “At the beginning of the summer, Brian Fitzsimmons, vice chair of the Wake County Democratic Party, said he wanted an army of

TILLIS continued page 3

Bringing sexy back ... to the polls

See page 5.

Casey Oldham Correspondent

SPORTS A rich history of homecoming at NC State See page 8.

SPORTS Pack prepares to take down the Blue Devils See page 8.

If an “I Voted” sticker wasn’t enough to motivate people to make their way to the polls, Cosmopolitan Magazine enticed students with male models, shuttling them to voting sites on party buses Tuesday. Though the magazine’s website reported the models would be shirtless when it first announced NC State had won the contest, Tuesday’s models were wearing “Voting is Sexy” tank tops, which were also given out free to each of the event’s participants.

COSMO continued page 2

SAM FELDSTEIN/TECHNICIAN

Male model, actor, and software designer CJ Richards from New York City hands out hats with the American flag design on them to Mattison Newman, freshman in animal science and Tara Khera, freshman in First Year College on the Cosmo Bus “I felt really excited when I got the hat” Newman said. The bus took students to their voting sites Tuesday.

DEMOCRATS continued page 3

ELECTIONS UPDATES 2014 US Senate: Thom Tillis (R) US House of Representatives District 4: David Price (D) NC House of Representatives District 34: Grier Martin (D) NC State Senate District 16: Josh Stein (D) District Attorney, District 10: Nancy (Lorrin) Freeman (D) NC Court of Appeals Judge: John M Tyson, Lucy Inman, Donna Stroud, Mark Davis NC Supreme Court Chief Justice: Mark Martin NC Supreme Court Associate Justice: Sam J Ervin IV, Robin Hudson, Cheri Beasley NC Superior Court Judge District 10A: Paul C Ridgeway NC District Court Judges District 10: Michale J Denning, Margaret P Eagles, Craig Croom, Keith Gregory, Ned W Mangum, Louis Meyer, Vincie Rozier Jr NC Constitutional Amendment: FOR Raleigh Parks and Rec: FOR SOURCE: : NC BOARD OF ELECTIONS


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Technician - Nov. 5, 2014 by NC State Student Media - Issuu