Technician - Oct. 13, 2014

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TECHNICIAN Harrison Allen Correspondent

RYAN PARRY/TECHNICIAN

Sophomore running back Matt Dayes is stopped at the goal line while running the ball against Boston College Saturday. Dayes averaged 3.7 yards per rush in the Wolfpack’s 30-14 loss to the Eagles at Carter-Finley Stadium.

Attendence policies: irrelevant to success See page 5.

Alumna becomes finalist in HBO competition See page 6.

FEATURES The Flash quickly establishes DC superhero See page 5.

SPORTS Wolfpack prepares to compete in regional finals See page 8.

Northeast Leadership Academy of NC State, the number one educational leadership preparation program in the country, received a $2 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education. With a mission to help more students succeed, the money will be used to train future school principals who will eventually go to work in lowperforming rural schools in northeastern North Carolina. “U.S. Department of Education grants for school leadership development are actually

“In the highpoverty schools... the principal’s impact is actually twice as much.” Bonnie Fusarelli, professor and director of NELA at NC State

very highly competitive,” said Bonnie Fusarelli, professor and director of the Northeast Leadership Academy of NC State. The grant money will be

NELA continued page 3

Textiles students meet First Lady at White House fashion event Rachel Smith Correspondent

FEATURES

2014

$2 million grant will help train future principals

BOSTON COLLEGE RAINS ON WOLFPACK: SEE PAGE 8

OPINION

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Raleigh, North Carolina

technicianonline.com

insidetechnician

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creative director of J. Crew. “It was a great experience!” said Fatisha Harris, a sophomore in fashion and textile management. “My favorite part was when Jenna Lyons told me to contact her afterwards, that’s when it hit me that this was real.” Jordan Stokes, a sophomore in fashion and textile management, said she most enjoyed meeting Michelle Obama and Prabal Gurung, a Nepalese-American fashion designer who Stokes said was the reason she decided to pursue a career in fashion. “The best part about the event was meeting the founders of Opening Ceremony” said Chad Yeager, a sophomore in fashion and textile management.

Ten students majoring in fashion and textile management visited the White House Wednesday to attend the Reach Higher Fashion Education Workshop hosted by First Lady Michelle Obama. The event accommodated 150 high school and college students from across the country and allowed each student to participate in various fashion workshops and meet with a number of renowned fashion experts and designers including Anna Wintour, the Editor-in-Chief of American Vogue, Diana von Frustenberg, a fashion designer and creator of the iconic wrap-dress and Jenna Lyons, the FASHION continued page 3

ELIZABETH DAVIS/TECHNICIAN

Many shops on Hillsborough Street are out of business and have been closed for months without new businesses taking their place. However, Peter Hansma, bar manager of McDaids Irish Restaurant & Pub on Hillsborough Street, said business has been picking up over the last year. “Hillsborough itself has seen some more foot traffic since the city made an effort to make the sidewalks more enticing,” Hansma said.

More shops coming to Hillsborough Street Casey Oldham Staff Writer

While the vacant stores and empty restaurants on Hillsborough Street may cause one to think the area has long seen it’s heyday, behind the scenes construction in the works will soon attract more vendors and customers to NC State’s college street within the next few years. “At least seven of the buildings that are under construction on Hillsborough Street

are being renovated or built for new businesses and are about a year from opening,” said Jeff Murison, executive director of the Hillsborough Street Community Service Corporation. About four years ago, Hillsborough Street had more vacant shops, but as the market continues to improve many of these places have become occupied. However, these spaces appear as though they are vacant

STREET continued page 3

NC State professor composes score for Dracula ballet Emily Duckett Correspondent

The Carolina Ballet’s presentation of Dracula, a two-part ballet that includes a pieces inspired by stories written by Bram Stoker and Edgar Allen Poe, will run until Oct. 26 in Raleigh’s Fletcher Opera Theater, features the original music compositions of NC State

Art and Design Professor J. Mark Scearce. “There’s something inherent in Mark’s writing that I’ve always been attracted to as a performer, whether I’m singing or conducting,” said Al Sturgis, musical director of Carolina Ballet and conductor of Dracula. The show features two performances inspired by the stories

Dracula by Bram Stoker and The Masque of the Red Death by Edgar Allen Poe. Dracula was written around the cimbalom, a large Hungarian instrument played with two hammers, Scearce said. “The minute you hear that, it sounds like Transylvania because it’s from that part of the world,” Scearce said.

Since the Dracula piece was fairly short, The Masque of the Red Death was added to make the show more complete. “Dracula is more of a story, so it obviously has the dramatic element of the actor that’s on stage, and you have pantomime and you have scene changes and things like that,” Sturgis said. “I think Masque [of the Red Death] is more

Come see us in Talley in front of Port City Java on Mondays and Wednesdays 1:00-3:00p.m.

pure balletic and Dracula is more ballet quasi theater.” The Masque of the Red Death involves party goers wandering through different colored rooms, so the choreography and music for this portion of the show were based on color. The music was inspired partially by color the-

BALLLET continued page 2

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