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No Ordinary Day » Pi Kappa Alpha members, alumni and friends party in what is thought to be the world’s largest Hatteras-style hammock at the fraternity’s house at N.C. State University. They gathered for the eighth annual Brian Cardini Volleyball Tournament in memory of a fraternity brother who died in a car wreck in 1996. The rope hammock, which measures 38 foot long by 12 feet wide and is load tested to hold 8,000 pounds, was donated to the fraternity by a hammock company to replace a smaller hammock that was stolen a year ago. ‘When our son went here to school here the hammock was a big deal’ said Cardini’s mother, Jane Cardini. ‘We have a lot of pictures of Brian and his friends where this hammock is.’ Proceeds from the tournament will benefit the Brian Cardini scholarship fund.

Pi Kappa Alpha members, alumni and friends party in what is thought to be the world's largest Hatteras-style hammock at the fraternity's house at N.C. State University. They gathered for the eighth annual Brian Cardini Volleyball Tournament in memory of a fraternity brother who died in a car wreck in 1996. The rope hammock, which measures 38 foot long by 12 feet wide and is load tested to hold 8,000 pounds, was donated to the fraternity by a hammock company to replace a smaller hammock that was stolen a year ago. 'When our son went here to school here the hammock was a big deal' said Cardini's mother, Jane Cardini. 'We have a lot of pictures of Brian and his friends where this hammock is.' Proceeds from the tournament will benefit the Brian Cardini scholarship fund.

Pi Kappa Alpha members, alumni and friends party in what is thought to be the world’s largest Hatteras-style hammock at the fraternity’s house at N.C. State University. They gathered for the eighth annual Brian Cardini Volleyball Tournament in memory of a fraternity brother who died in a car wreck in 1996. The rope hammock, which measures 38 foot long by 12 feet wide and is load tested to hold 8,000 pounds, was donated to the fraternity by a hammock company to replace a smaller hammock that was stolen a year ago. ‘When our son went here to school here the hammock was a big deal’ said Cardini’s mother, Jane Cardini. ‘We have a lot of pictures of Brian and his friends where this hammock is.’ Proceeds from the tournament will benefit the Brian Cardini scholarship fund.

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