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Inside

Trump visits Greensboro


The Republican presidential nominee
held a rally in N.C. on Tuesday to lay
out his plan for the general election.
See story on page 3

WEEKLY SUMMER ISSUE


Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

dailytarheel.com

Volume 124, Issue 47

The fight ahead of us

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Wolfe legacy lives


on in film Genius
A film about late UNC
graduate and author
was released last week.

Theres no doubt
that his work inspired
later generations of
writers.

By Jenni Ciesielski

Tom Muir

Arts & Entertainment Editor

DTH/NATHAN KLIMA
Mark Kleinschmidt reads names of Orlando shooting victims alongside Winston Crisp and Emilio Vicente at a vigil in Carrboro.

Vigils honored victims of the Orlando shooting


By Zoe Schaver
City Editor

Rainbow flags flew and contemplative words were spoken both


in Spanish and in English across
Chapel Hill this week as communities gathered to commemorate the
lives of the 49 people killed by a
shooter in an Orlando nightclub
Sunday.
Commemorative vigils were held
at the Carrboro Town Commons
and United Church of Chapel
Hill, as well as several events in
Durham, around the Triangle and
across the nation.
In Sundays early morning
hours, 29-year-old Omar Mateen

opened fire on patrons at Pulse,


a popular LGBT bar and club.
Mateen, who declared allegiance
to the Islamic State in calls to 911
responders during the shooting,
killed 49 people and wounded
at least 53 before he was gunned
down by law enforcement.
I see myself in what happened.
I could see myself going to Latin
Night at Pulse. I see my face in
many of the faces of those that
died, said Emilio Vicente, a UNC
alum who spoke during the gathering at the Carrboro Town Commons
on Tuesday, which hundreds of
people attended.
Vicente emphasized the community Mateen targeted was primarily

Latina and Latino LGBT people of


color, saying it would do a disservice to the victims not to acknowledge that.
While we wait for action or
inaction from politicians, we
should look inward, he said.
What are we all doing for those
who are marginalized, to make
sure we really are a community if
we say we are?
Carrboro Mayor Lydia Lavelle,
who became North Carolinas first
openly lesbian mayor in 2013,
recalled the history of LGBT rights
in the country as well as her own
history as a young member of the

SEE VIGILS, PAGE 4

Space Jam star Michael


Jordan is not the only UNC alum
to be a main character of a film.
UNC class of 1920 graduate and
renowned author Thomas Wolfes
life has been brought to the silver
screen in the film Genius.
The film, starring Colin Firth
and Jude Law, was released to
limited audiences in major cities on June 10, and will make its
N.C. debut tonight in Ashevilles
Thomas Wolfe Memorial House.
Tom Muir, the houses historic site manager, said he hopes
Genius will make more people
pay attention to the late author.
This is the first time Thomas
Wolfe has been a character in a
motion picture, Muir said.
Although Genius will not be
playing in Chapel Hill theaters,
UNC still honors the late authors
legacy through the Thomas Wolfe
Scholarship.
Created in 2001, this four-year
scholarship is granted to one
incoming first-year every year. It
was created by Frank B. Hanes,
a UNC class of 1942 graduate,
author and devoted fan of Wolfe.
He felt that, because of our
strong undergraduate creative
writing program, we needed a
scholarship that would bring in
a strong writing talent and only
pay attention to talent as opposed
to all the other criteria, said
Marianne Gingher, a co-director
of the scholarship.
Maddie Norris, a senior and
recipient of the scholarship, said
the scholarship has allowed her
to focus on writing instead of
stressing about paying for college.
It gave me confidence to pursue it in a way I wouldnt have
otherwise, she said. I think that

Historic site manager at Memorial House

it was a lot of validation to say


that yes, youre a good writer.
Wolfes impact on UNC goes
beyond the scholarship. While
acting as editor-in-chief of The
Daily Tar Heel, he changed the
paper from a weekly to a biweekly format.
Muir said Wolfe impacted
younger generations of authors
during his life, and still does after
his death.
Theres no doubt that his
work inspired later generations of
writers, Muir said. Pat Conroy
gave a lot of credit to the works of
Thomas Wolfe affecting him as a
boy and Jack Kerouac very much
emulated the lyrical style Thomas
had produced.
Gingher said many writers are
not only inspired by Wolfes writing techniques, but also by his
humble upbringing.
For many North Carolina
writers today, if it hadnt been
for Thomas Wolfe who came
from a simple background in the
mountains of North Carolina,
and proved even a kid from the
mountains with no other kind
of recognition or standing could
make it as a literary talent
they wouldnt have the hope that
they too can succeed in writing,
she said.
Norris said she believes creative works like Wolfes need to
remain important in academics.
I think creative writing specifically asks for empathy you
always have to have empathy for
the people and things youre writing about, and thats something
that is important in this day and
age, she said.
@yayjennic
arts@dailytarheel.com

Green Zone spreads awareness UNC footballs tough road


The program helps faculty and
staff learn more about veterans.
By Anna Freeman
Staff Writer

Green Zone training will expand to reach


out directly to academic departments to
make the training a part of their professional
development.
Currently, Green Zone trainers schedule
sessions independently and hope for interest.
Amber Mathwig, student veterans assistance coordinator, said Green Zone training
is for faculty, staff and students who wish to
learn more about the military-affiliated student experience.
Green Zone training is a training that we
do to help introduce staff and faculty and other
campus partners that may not be very familiar
with the...military lifestyle is like, the kind of
structure that our military students may be
used to when they come here to the campus
and about how they can properly assist a military affiliated student, Mathwig said.
Mathwig said the training starts off with a
discussion among trainees about what they
already know about the military, their presumptions about and their experiences with
student veterans.
We do focus a little bit on combat trauma, just trauma associated specifically with
military service, Mathwig said. Its something for people to be aware of, but generally
we do talk about how can you holistically
support this student.
David Rogers, assistant director of
outdoor education, is a veteran and has
undergone Green Zone training. He said
he learned how to advocate for and provide
resources for student and staff veterans.
I think (Green Zone training) just gives

(student veterans) an opportunity to connect


with people who understand the world from
the same perspective or similar perspective, Rogers said. And it just sort of creates
a network of resources that you might not
otherwise come across if youre not in that
community.
Payton Collier, who has worked with
Green Zone and the Carolina Veterans
Organization, said Green Zone training was
helpful for her because it made the student
veteran population more salient to her.
I had never thought about the student
veteran population at UNC as being as large
as it is, and a lot of people dont recognize
that, Collier said.
Collier said because UNC students strive
to recognize individual group rights, student veterans deserve the same recognition
and support.
Working with Carolina Veterans
Organization this past semester, one of the
biggest challenges we were hoping to overcome was just making other traditional
students and faculty aware that there
are...student veterans in their classes and
on-campus, sitting next them in Lenoir,
Collier said.
Mathwig said the overarching goal of
Green Zone training is to ensure staff, faculty
and other campus partners are aware that
military students are here.
Its kind of an invisible identity that they
have in the classroom, Mathwig said. And
to be aware of certain processes that we
have, or policies that we have or maybe curriculums that weve always used about how
a military student may be impacted by that
and just to make them aware of appropriate
ways to have a conversation regarding someones military service.
university@dailytarheel.com

DTH FILE/KENDALL BAGLEY


Jeremiah Clarke (49) tackles Brad Kaaya (15) in North Carolinas 59-21 win against Miami on Nov. 14.

By Jeremy Vernon
Sports Editor

With less than three


months until the start of the
college football season, fans
of the North Carolina football team are ready to see if
their team can improve on an
impressive 2015 campaign.
After losing their first
game a season ago a 17-13
defeat to South Carolina in
Charlotte the Tar Heels
rattled off 11-straight wins
to win the ACC Coastal
Division. But while some
regarded UNC as a top-10
team at the end of the regu-

lar season, many were concerned about the quality of


opponents the team played
during that stretch.
That worry proved warranted once the Tar Heels
moved onto their two postseason games.
In the ACC Championship
game on Dec. 5, the North
Carolina defense didnt have
an answer for Clemson sophomore quarterback Deshaun
Watson, who led the Tigers to
a 45-37 win.
A few weeks later, the Tar
Heel defense gave up 645
yards rushing to Baylor in
a 49-38 loss in the Russell

Love is love is love is love is love is love is love is love...


LIN-MANUEL MIRANDA

Athletic Bowl.
Did the amount of cupcakes UNC played on its
schedule a season ago doom
the Tar Heels during bowl
season? Theres certainly an
argument to be made that
it did.
But North Carolina
shouldnt have the same problem in 2016. Unlike its slate
a season ago, UNCs schedule
for the upcoming season
features multiple tests that
will show if the Tar Heels are
national contenders or just
average.

SEE FOOTBALL, PAGE 4

News

Thursday, June 16, 2016

POLICE LOG
Someone stole $4,000

worth of aluminum scaffolding from a construction site


on the 1700 block of Fordham
Boulevard between 7:30 p.m.
Sunday and 12 p.m. Monday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.

inBRIEF

Someone stole several

items left unattended by a pool


on the 100 block of Legacy
Terrace, including a cell phone
and two pairs of sneakers,
between 10:30 p.m. and 10:40
p.m. Sunday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.

MORE TO SEE:
TONY AWARDS

By John Bauman

UNC BRIEFS

North Carolina puts six


on All-ILWomen Team

Kenanfest 2016 planned


party for summer school

Six members of the North


Carolina womens lacrosse
team, Molly Hendrick, Aly
Messinger, Marie McCool,
Mallory Frysinger, Megan
Ward and Caylee Waters, were
named to Inside Lacrosses
All-ILWomen Team.

Residence Advisors for


Kenan dorm organized
Kenanfest 2016, an event
with music, games and water
balloons. The event was on
Friday in the Kenan Quad.
However, the event ended
early due to low turnout.

staff reports

The best of online


UNC receives $27 million from ACC

SPORTS BRIEFS

The Daily Tar Heel

staff reports

Staff Writer

North Carolina received


nearly $27 million from the
Atlantic Coast Conference
office during the 2014-15 fiscal year, an increase of $10
million from what the school
received during the 201213 season, according to the
(Raleigh) News & Observer.
UNC, N.C. State and
Duke all received roughly
the same amount of money,
which marks a record amount
for the schools, the N&Os
Andrew Carter reported
Tuesday.
North Carolina and all

ACC member schools are


benefitting from a growth
in revenue across the board
in college athletics. All ACC
schools roughly received the
same amount of revenue,
save for part-time member
Notre Dame, the N&Os
Andrew Carter reported
Tuesday.
The revenue received by
both the ACC and the individual schools continues to
increase due to rising revenue
from the sale of television
rights.

READ THE REST:

Go to http://www.
dailytarheel.com/blog/
press_box

If you didnt notice


Twitter getting a little hysterical the other night, it
was the 70th Tony Awards,
an annual awards show
that recognizes and celebrates the most successful
Broadway plays and musicals of the past season.
Other than the fact that
the show should have been
titled the HamilTONYs
the smash hit, Hamilton,
took home 11 awards,
nearly beating 2001s The
Producers as the winningest show of all time.
The night was jampacked with heartwarming
moments and phenomenal
performances. In case you
missed the action, there are
moments that everyone will
be talking about.

SUMMER POLL

The DTH asked online


readers their opinions on
summer 2016. Stay tuned
for more upcoming polls at
dailytarheel.com.
If you could describe
your summer in one word,
what would it be?

21% said it has been


enjoyable.
7% said it has been
adventurous.
24% said it has been
boring.
34% said it has been
okay.
14% said it has been
awesome!
READ THE REST:

Go to http://www.
dailytarheel.com/blog/
medium

The Daily Tar Heel COMMUNITY CALENDAR


www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893

123 years of editorial freedom


SOFIA EDELMAN
SUMMER EDITOR

MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

ALEX GAILEY
ONLINE MANAGING EDITOR
ONLINE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JAMIE GWALTNEY
UNIVERSITY EDITOR

UNIVERSITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

ZOE SCHAVER
CITY EDITOR

CITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

COLE STANLEY
STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
STATE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JENNI CIESIELSKI
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
ARTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JEREMY VERNON
SPORTS EDITOR

SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

DYLAN TASTET
DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
DESIGN@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

VERONICA BURKHART
PHOTO EDITOR
PHOTO@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JOHN BAUMAN
COPY CHIEF

COPY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KELLY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

ERICA PEREL
NEWSROOM ADVISER
PEREL@EMAIL.UNC.EDU

REBECCA DICKENSON
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR

LISA@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

Kyle Nachtigal (Concert):


Trained at Belmont University in
Nashville, Kyle can jump effortlessly between music genres.
Time: 7:00-9:00 p.m.
Location: Johnnys Gone Fishing, Carrboro

Shag Dance Fridays (Community): Put on your dancing shoes


and head over to the Strowd for
beach music and shag dancing.
No cover charge.
Time: 8:00-11:00 p.m.
Location: The Strowd, Chapel
Hill
Outdoor Movies on the Village
Green (Community): Outdoor
Movies on the Green begin at
dusk on Fridays & Saturdays all
summer long! Movie selections
and times will be posted. Movies
are $5. This week, welcome to
the real jungle with a showing of
Disneys The Jungle Book.
Time: 8:00-10:30 p.m.
Location: Southern Village
Green, Chapel Hill

SATURDAY

World Wide Knit in Public Day


(Community): All fans of yarn
crafts are invited to join us for
World Wide Knit in Public Day. It
will be an informal afternoon of
socializing, yarning and crafting,
so drop by!
Time: 12:00-4:00 p.m.
Location: Orange County Public
Library, Chapel Hill

Open Mic Night (Community):


Bring your friends & get ready to
hear some awesome local tunes.
Time: 6:30-9:00 p.m.
Location: Johnnys Gone Fishing

To make a calendar submission,


email calendar@dailytarheel.com.
Please include the date of the
event in the subject line, and
attach a photo if you wish. Events
will be published in the newspaper
on either the day or the day before
they take place.

TIPS
Contact Summer Editor
Sofia Edelman at
managing.editor@dailytarheel.com
with tips, suggestions or
corrections.
Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Sofia Edelman, Summer Editor, 962-4086
Advertising & Business, 962-1163
News, Features, Sports, 962-0245
Distribution, 962-4115
One copy per person;
additional copies may be purchased
at The Daily Tar Heel for $0.25 each.
Please report suspicious activity at
our distribution racks by emailing
dth@dailytarheel.com
2015 DTH Media Corp.
All rights reserved

CORRECTIONS

KELLY WOLFF
GENERAL MANAGER

LISA REICHLE
BUSINESS MANAGER

The Jane Austen Summer


Program: Mansfield Park &
Its Afterlives (Symposium):
Participants will have the opportunity to hear expert speakers
and participate in discussion
groups, partake in an English tea
and visit special exhibits tailored
to the conference. It is designed
to appeal anyone with a passion
for all things Austen! Register at
janeaustensummer.org.
Time: June 16-19
Location: Hampton Inn and
Suites, Carrboro

FRIDAY

GWENDOLYN SMITH
OPINION EDITOR

REBECCA@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

TODAY

A Southern Summer Outdoor


Concert (Community): The
Durham Ukulele Orchestra,
celebrating the mighty uke! No
cover. Bring chairs and blankets.
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Location: Southern Village,
Chapel Hill

Due to a reporting error, Thursdays front page story 23 years later, campus says goodbye to
Daily Grind incorrectly stated the date at which it was announced the Daily Grinds contract would
not be renewed and the date of its closing. The contract was not renewed in March 2015 and the
cafe closed June 2016.
The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections
printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Sofia Edelman at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
Like: facebook.com/dailytarheel

Follow: @dailytarheel on Twitter

Follow: dailytarheel on Instagram

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News

The Daily Tar Heel

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Trump draws crowds in Greensboro


The presumptive
presidential nominee
talked Hillary and policy.

...Trump just says things


that get under peoples
skin. He has a lot of
great ideas...

By Cole Stanley

Karen Bartley

State and National Editor

Trump supporter

Donald Trump has faced a good


deal of controversy from both his
partisan opposition and his self-proclaimed ideological peers over the
course of his presidential campaign.
So when the Republican
presidential nominees rally in
Greensboro Tuesday was interrupted
by fifty protesters who entered the
arena and immediately began chanting deport hatred; never Trump, it
came as a surprise to no one. Rather,
it was a moment that most inside
had anticipated, smartphones at the
ready to capture this now all-toocommon sight at Trump events.
Sometimes, Trump just says
things that get under peoples skin.
He has a lot of great ideas that could
really help move the country forward, if he could only learn to stop
with the hateful rhetoric, said Karen
Bartley, a retiree from Asheville. The
protests you see are just natural reactions to these types of things he says.
Bartley is a registered Democrat,
yet plans on voting for Trump in
November. She said the top policy
issues that drew her to Trump, factors that she suspects are drawing
millions of voters to the Republican
nominee, were national security, job
growth and bringing transparency
back to the political system.
Despite the never Trump protestors, as well as the seven other groups
that were escorted out by security
during the course of the rally, Mr.
Trump used his time on stage to lay
out his platform, highlighting issues
like the ones Bartley describes.
Were losing, folks. Were losing
in trade, were losing in negotiations
with countries that sponsor terrorism, were losing in business, said
Trump. And the reason that were

losing is we send these political


hacks to negotiate for us. Meanwhile,
China, Iran, all these other countries
are sending their best and brightest
to negotiate for them.
Trump also took aim at his presumed Democratic rival, Hillary
Clinton, calling her weak and suggesting that he is a truer feminist
than is Mrs. Clinton because she has
taken political contributions from
nations like Saudi Arabia which
actively discriminate against women.
Trump also said it is because of politicians like Clinton who are afraid to
take a more conservative stance on
immigration that the United States
witnesses tragedies like the recent
shooting in an Orlando nightclub.
The children of Muslim immigrants are responsible for an increasing number of deadly attacks on
Americans, said Trump, Thats a
fact. These immigrants have hostile
attributes. Just look at what this savage did in Orlando. And that could
have been stopped if politicians like
Crooked Hillary werent afraid to stop
them from coming in the first place.
According to Rick Jennings, a
furniture salesman and lifetime GOP
voter from Thomasville, a big part
of Trumps appeal is that he is not a
career politician like Clinton and as a
result he is willing to take stances that
many people support, but most public
figures arent willing to endorse.
Hillary and people like her are old
news. Theyre not bad people. They
just arent trustworthy, Jennings said.
They say one thing and do
another. Mr. Trump tells it like it is.
He doesnt care what the media or
anyone else has to say about it.
Trump also suggested throughout
the night that he is a stronger advo-

DTH/ARAMIDE GBADAMOSI
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump held a rally at the Greensboro Coliseum on Tuesday, June 14.

cate for LGBT rights than is Clinton.


Crooked Hillary wants LGBT
votes, so she acts all nice and pretends to be a friend to LGBT people.
Let me ask you a question How
can she be a friend of LGBT people
when she supports and takes money
from governments of countries where
being gay is illegal? I will not only be
a stronger ally for LGBT people than
Hillary, Ill be the best ally for LGBT
people there is, said Trump.
Many prominent figures in North
Carolina politics were present at
Tuesdays rally, including UNC
Board of Governors member Marty

Q&A with womens


basketball coach
Sylvia Hatchell wrote
a book about beating
her cancer.
UNC womens basketball coach Sylvia Hatchell
talks about her battle with
cancer in her new book,
Fight! Fight!: Discovering
Your Inner Strength When
Blindsided by Life, with staff
writer Macon Gambill

The Daily Tar Heel: What is

the book about?

Sylvia Hatchell: My book

is about my personal battle


with leukemia and I wrote
it because I wanted to help
other people when they go
through difficult times, hard
times...I just wanted to let
other people know what I did
and give them encouragement and really, the courage
to fight. Youve got to have
that mentality...I just want
to help a lot of other people
when they are blindsided like
I was. When youre blindsided
by adversities of life, youve
got to fight.

DTH: What do you hope

that readers will take away


from your book?

SH: Inspiration, motivation,

and determination that they


can fight. They can fight and
beat any adversity that they
face. It would be inspirational, motivational where theyre
just like Hey, I can do this.
You know, Coach Hatchell
did it, and when they read it,
they come away with encouragement and inspiration and
determination that I want to
do this.

DTH: What are some books


or movies that have influenced you as you are today?
SH: Oh wow, theres so
many of them...I love books,
stories and movies about
people and about their lives
and about how theyve won
battles as they live and made
accomplishments. And also,
I like stories about when
people help other people...So
Ive always liked books and
stories like that that give
encouragement and motivate
you and things like that. I
mean, Ive been coaching for
42 years. Ive got so many
books like that, and I never
get tired of them...
DTH: Who are some people
who have helped shape
you into the person you are
today?
SH: So when I came along,

there werent that many


female role models in sports.
And my parents were wonderful. I had the greatest
parents in the world, and
they encouraged me that anything I wanted to do, I could
do. Just put my mind to it,
put my heart to it and great
things are going to happen.
Because I grew up in North
Carolina...I was in high school
watching Dean Smith in the
sixties. I watched him coaching here at the University
of North Carolina and then
when I first started coaching,
my coaching style...I tried
to pattern after what Coach
Smith was doing...But theres
just a lot of people that have
been mentors to me, as far
as just being inspirational,
encouragement, giving me
the confidence that I could
accomplish great things and
do great things and not to
give up, not to quit, no matter what the obstacle was,
no matter what the situation was...My husband tells
people all the time, he says,
Please dont tell her she cant
do something. Because shes
gonna die trying to prove you
wrong. So please dont tell her
she cant do something.
university@dailytarheel.com

Kotis, as well as Mike Hager, the


Republican majority leader in the
N.C. House, who delivered an introductory speech to begin the event.
Former NASCAR legend and North
Carolina native Richard Petty also
took to the stage to endorse Trump.
North Carolina is ready for
Trump, said Brandy Marston, a
retiree from Lexington, Our economy needs a kickstart and hes the
man for the job. I was really happy
to hear him praise Pat (McCrory),
and I think wed be much better off
if we could start electing people who
think like Trump does.

To close his speech, Trump


expressed confidence that he would
win North Carolina in November.
When we started the primaries,
I was up against 16, 17 guys and they
said there was no way we would win
North Carolina. But we did, Trump
said, Greensboro is a perfect example
of why. You walk around and theres
empty factories and empty warehouses we need to bring the jobs
back, folks...Were going to win this
state in the general, and were going to
win it big.
state@dailytarheel.com

Decision on coal ash action


still remains at a standstill
Advocates say possibility of
overthrowing veto remains.
By Jessica Baucom
Staff Writer

A week after Governor Pat McCrory vetoed


Senate Bill 71, legislators and environmentalists remain in conflict over how to best manage coal ash pollution in North Carolina.
Senate Bill 71, which was ratified by congress June 1, 2016, would have reinstated the
Coal Ash Commission, which was disbanded
earlier this March after debate over the constitutionality of how members may be appointed.
The commissions presented purpose was
prevention of human and environmental
health risks, particularly those arising from
spills of coal ash such as the huge overflow
into the Dan River in February 2014.
The Coal Ash Management Act was
ultimately passed in response to the Dan
River incident and created the Coal Ash
Commission, which was intended to act
as supervision over the closure of Duke
Energys coal ash ponds after several instances of contaminated drinking water.
On June 6, McCrory vetoed Sentate Bill
71. This veto was expected, however, as
McCrory had announced his disapproval
before the bill was ratified, citing mostly concerns over the timeliness of the bill and its
efficacy in environmental protections.
This legislation is not good for the environment or for the rule of law in North
Carolina, McCrory said.
This veto aligns the governor with environmental advocates, but some believe this is

merely coincidental.
McCrory actually vetoed the bill for entirely different reasons, said Frank Holleman,
attorney at the Southern Environmental Law
Center. He has been involved in a power
struggle for deciding who can make political
decisions and appointments.
Senate Bill 71 is a bailout for Duke Energy.
Holleman said if the bill remains vetoed,
Duke Energy remains solely responsible for
its own coal ash management, which explains
Duke Energys fervent support of the bill.
We dont understand why the Governor
would veto a bill that makes North Carolinas
Coal Ash law even stronger, said Duke Energy
in a statement. Very importantly, it reconstitutes a Commission that will evaluate the safety and cost of any closure plan on customers.
The main concern for environmental
advocates like Holleman pertains to the
rumor that Senate may overthrow the veto.
It is now more likely leaders in Congress will
seek compromise with the Governor, rather
than voting again, leading to the institution
of a commission which would benefit politicians and not people.
Holleman said this makes the veto a fix
for right now, but the coal ash commission
described in Senate Bill 71 would consist of
industry representatives and mainly focus on
protecting Duke Energy.
There is one simple solution and that is
what is happening today in South Carolina,
which is to get the coal ash out of our waterways and out of the leaking pools near our
groundwater supplies and into safe dry-land
storage, Holleman said.
state@dailytarheel.com

Scrap Exchange gets unlikely help from goats in gardens


The Goat Squad
helped clear land for
a community garden.
By Julia Faulkner
Staff Writer

Scout, Buddy, Elby and


their friends chewed through
the kudzu behind The Scrap
Exchange, a nonprofit organization, for a cause on Saturday.
Diana Tetens brought her
goats, dubbed The Goat Squad,
to help clear an overgrown lot
to make room for gardens.
The Scrap Exchange collects materials and offers many
services, including a retail
store with cheap and accessible
materials, onsite programming, corporate team building
and birthday parties. The organization is a resource for artists
and teachers and is dedicated
to environmental progress and

community development.
Our mission is to promote
creativity, community and
environmental awareness
through reuse, said Marya
McNeish, development director of The Scrap Exchange.
The Scrap Exchange
received a grant from Duke
University to develop community gardens in the area
behind the building, McNeish
said. The building is located in
a largely unoccupied shopping
center with an asphalt parking
lot, and the organization wants
to utilize the space to benefit
members of the community.
Hendall Loeffler, an urban
farmer who is working for The
Scrap Exchange to help lead
the project, said the vision is
to purchase the majority of the
shopping center and make it a
community-oriented hangout
spot. He said they plan to take
out the asphalt and put in beds
for more gardens as well as a

pavilion.
We really want to transform
this outside space into more of
a park, he said. Were gonna
remove all this pavement and
make it a green and friendly
social space.
And this transformation is
exactly what brought The Goat
Squad to The Scrap Exchange.
Tetens started The Goat
Squad four years ago. The
Squad offers vegetation
removal services via goats
as well as awareness about
the effects products have on
natural systems.
Tetens said while she was
executive director of a watership protection group, she
found out about the issue
of nonnative invasive plants
destroying habitats and the
continued destruction from
the methods used to remove
them. She learned about using
goats as a solution and has
been molding her business ever

since.
Besides being fun to watch
work, Tetens said goats are perfect for inaccessible, environmentally-sensitive areas. While
they can be used for all types of
plants, she said, they are especially great for kudzu.
Kudzu happens to be the
absolute number one perfect
food for goats nutritionally perfect and they love
it, Tetens said. Its a great
match. I wish there was more
kudzu in Durham.
McNeish said transforming
the entire shopping center will
help make the area more environmentally friendly. Taking
out the asphalt will help with
drainage and make the area
more usable for the community
in the future.
But for now, The Scrap
Exchange just wants The Goat
Squad to work its magic.
university@dailytarheel.com

DTH/NATHAN KLIMA
Diana Tetens brought her goats to chew through and clear out
the kudzu behind The Scrap Exchange on Saturday morning.

News

Thursday, June 16, 2016

VIGILS

FROM PAGE 1
LGBT community.
Many of my generation
knew what it was like to say
Im going to the bar this
weekend everyone knew
what bar you were going to.
For me, it was a three to four
hour round trip, simply for
the opportunity to dance and
party and be with my community. It was really the only
place where you could be
yourself. You felt supported,
and you felt safe, Lavelle
said.
I thought of this when
I thought of the 49 people,
dancing, partying and hanging out with their community.
This easily could have
been any of my friends back
in the day. Its really hard to

wrap my head around.


Monday evening, the United
Church of Chapel Hill held its
own interfaith vigil where Terri
Phoenix, director of UNCs
LGBTQ Center, spoke.
Maybe it isnt so much
the words that are said and
exactly what happens in
spaces like this thats sacred
maybe whats sacred is
holding the space in and of
itself, Phoenix said.
To me, the target chosen
for this violence is indicative
of the larger violence that
each of these communities
face on a daily basis. And
thats where I think we should
target our efforts, after we
pause to grieve.
Jenny Schultz, youth pastor at United Church, urged
legislative action.
We should unite and
collectively decide to com-

The Daily Tar Heel

We have no choice... Were gonna fight this


fight til theres nothing left.
Winston Crisp
UNC Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs

mit ourselves to legislative


advocacy until our children
black, white, Latino, Karen
can play in our backyards, in
our neighborhood streets, at
the mall, in the movie theater,
at a social club, in classrooms,
without fear of gun violence,
she said.
At Tuesdays vigil in
Carrboro, Winston Crisp,
vice chancellor for student
affairs, noted that both orientations held for incoming
first-years this summer have
taken place around the time
of mass shootings first a
shooting at the University
of California in Los Angeles,
then the shooting in

Orlando.
I hope as we all join
together to grieve together,
that we find renewed energy
for the fight ahead of us
because we have no choice
but to throw into this with
everything weve got and turn
this tide, Crisp said. Were
gonna fight this fight til
theres nothing left.
city@dailytarheel.com
Editors note: If you or
someone you know has been
affected by these events, UNC
Counseling and Psychological
Services can be reached at
(919)966-2281.

Sweet
Summer
June 20-24, 2016
All events are free and open to the public.
Concerts Monday-Thursday at 7 p.m.
Monday, June 20 - Wilson Library Lawn

OPENING OUTDOOR CONCERT


La Fiesta Latin Jazz Band
(Gregg Gelb, tenor sax; Beverly Botsford, percussion; Ramon Ortiz, drums;
Andy Kleindienst, bass; Stephen Anderson, piano; Juan Alamo, percussion)

Tuesday, June 21 Kenan Music Building 1201

North Carolina Jazz Repertory Orchestra


Featuring Kate McGarry, vocals; Jim Ketch, Director
(Kobie Watkins, drums; Jason Foureman, bass; Stephen Anderson, piano)

Tuesday, June 21, 9 p.m.-midnight

Late Night Jam Session at Buns Burgers


($5 cover OR purchase of food; located at 107 N. Columbia in Chapel Hill)
(House Trio: Evan Thompson, piano; Kevin Beardsley, bass; Jake Buchanan, drums)

A Tar Heel tradition since 1982

Wednesday, June 22 Kenan Music Building 1201

FOOTBALL

2016 SCHEDULE

FROM PAGE 1

Sept. 3 vs. Georgia in


Atlanta

Sept. 3 vs. Georgia


For the second year in
a row, North Carolina will
begin its season against an
SEC opponent. This time,
the Tar Heels will take on
the Georgia Bulldogs in the
Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game in
Atlanta.
Unlike UNC, Georgia is
coming off an underwhelming 2015 campaign. After
starting the season as the
favorites to win the SEC
East, the Bulldogs dropped
three conference games
including a 28-point loss to
Alabama and a 27-3 defeat
to rival Florida to finish
the regular season at 9-3 and
miss out on the SEC title
game.
Following the regular
season, the Bulldogs fired
Coach Mark Richt and
hired former Crimson Tide
defensive coordinator Kirby
Smart, who is looking to
help bring the program back
to the forefront of college
football.
Smarts track record shows
that he should undoubtedly
help the Bulldogs defense
in 2016, but what North
Carolina will have to look out
for most is Georgias offensive
attack.
While the Bulldogs have
yet to name a starting quarterback for the season opener,
the presence of running back
Nick Chubb in the backfield
will test the Tar Heels rush
defense, which was horrid in
2015.
Chubb rushed for 745
yards and seven touchdowns
in five games a season ago
before tearing multiple ligaments in his left knee on his
first carry against Tennessee
an injury that caused
him to miss the rest of the
season.
If Chubb is anything like
his old self on Sept. 3, North
Carolina will have its hands
full and then some against
the Bulldogs.

Oct. 1 at Florida State

Jerald Shynette/Jim Ketch Quintet


(Jerald Shynette, trombone; Jim Ketch, trumpet; Kobie Watkins, drums;
Jeffry Eckels, bass; Stephen Anderson, piano)

Thursday, June 23 Kenan Music Building 1201

Scott Sawyer/Dave Finucane Quartet


(Scott Sawyer, guitar; Dave Finucane, tenor saxophone; Dan Davis, drum;
Jason Foureman, bass)

Mon-Thurs 11:30am-11:00pm
Sat 11:30am-11:30pm Sun Noon-11:00pm

Summer Jazz Workshop Student Combos Concert

Follow @UNCSummerSchool
for whats happening on campus in summer.

summer.unc.edu

Friday, June 24, 4:15-7 p.m. Kenan Music Building 1201

Downtown Chapel Hill


942-PUMP
106 W. Franklin Street
(Next to Hes Not Here)
www.yogurtpump.com

A big reason why the Tar


Heels finished the 2015 regular season 8-0 in the ACC is
they avoided Atlantic Division
members Florida State and
Clemson. UNC wont be as
lucky in conference play this
season, however.
After taking on Pittsburgh
at home to open up ACC play,
the Tar Heels will travel to
Tallahassee, Fla. to take on
what could be a top-5 team in
the Seminoles.
North Carolina actually
won the last time it played at

DTH office is open TODAY


from is
9am-5pm
DTH9:00am-5:00pm
office will re-open at 8:30 on 8/13/14
DTH office
open Mon-Fri

Line Classified Ad Rates

Sept 17 vs. James


Madison
Sept 24 vs. Pittsburgh
Oct. 1 at Florida State
Oct. 8 vs. Virginia Tech
Oct. 15 at Miami
Oct. 22 at Virginia
Nov. 5 vs. Georgia Tech
Nov. 10 at Duke
Nov. 19 vs. The Citadel
Nov. 25 vs. N.C. State

Florida State a 37-35 victory back in 2010 but the


Tar Heels are just 2-15-1 all
time against the Seminoles.
Florida State will bring
some of the same things to
table as Georgia will offensively.
The Seminoles have their
own Heisman candidate in
running back Dalvin Cook,
who led the ACC with 1,691
yards and 19 rushing touchdowns. And if the Tar Heels
cant slow down the junior,
it will be a very long day in
Tallahassee for the UNC
defense.

Oct. 15 at Miami
Two weeks after North
Carolina plays Florida State,
the team will return to the
Sunshine State to take on
Miami.
In 2015, the Hurricanes
were supposed to challenge
for the Coastal Division title
behind sophomore quarterback Brad Kaaya, but the
team ran into more than a
few hiccups down the road.
Miami had the unfortunate
fate of playing both Florida
State and Clemson during
the regular season in 2015.
The Hurricanes dropped both
games, including a 58-0 loss
to the Tigers on Oct. 24 that
led to the firing of Coach Al
Golden.
Three weeks later, Miami
fell to UNC, 59-21. The loss
knocked the team out of the
division race.
But the Hurricanes should
be back in the picture once
again in 2016.
The team hired Richt,
the former Georgia coach,
to lead the way, and with a
potential future top-5 draft
pick in Kaaya under center,
Miami could give the Tar
Heels a run for their money
come Oct. 15.
@jbo_vernon
sports@dailytarheel.com

Deadlines

To Place a Line Classified Ad Log Onto


www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252

Private Party (Non-Profit) Commercial (For-Profit)

Sept. 10 at Illinois

Line Ads: Noon, Tuesday prior to Thursday publication


25 Words ....... $20.00/week 25 Words ....... $42.50/week
Display Classified Ads: 3p.m., Monday
Extra words ..25/word/day Extra words ...25/word/day
prior to Thursday publication
EXTRAS: Box: $1/day Bold: $3/day
BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room

For Rent

Announcements
NOTICE TO ALL
DTH CUSTOMERS

Summer deadlines are NOON Tuesday prior to


publication for classified ads. We publish every
Thursday during the Summer School sessions. A
university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e. this
affects deadlines). We reserve the right to reject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Acceptance of ad
copy or prepayment does not imply agreement
to publish an ad. You may stop your ad at any
time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for stopped
ads will be provided. No advertising for housing or employment, in accordance with federal
law, can state a preference based on sex, race,
creed, color, religion, national origin, handicap,
marital status.

Child Care Services


UNIVERSITY UNITED METHODIST Preschool
located on Franklin Street. Adjacent to UNC
campus. Has openings in twos, threes and
fours classes for the next school year. Contact
919-967-8867 or uumpchapelhill@gmail.com.

Child Care Wanted


CHILD CARE NEEDED

In search of responsible child care provider for


a sweet autistic 12-year-old girl M-F afternoons
(20 hrs/wk). Position entails outings in the
community including but not limited to stores,
museums, gymnastics, swimming, horseback
riding, etc. Transportation is provided. Requirements: Clean driving record, reliable, compassionate, and proactive. Please email: triciawildman@yahoo.com and Derek.wildman@gmail.
com.

LIFE SKILLS TUTOR


NEEDED
Help an active 16 year-old boy with Autism
in Durham, Chapel Hill develop leisure and
academic skills, practice language, learn social,
self help and independent skills, get exercise
and go on community and social outings. Seeking a tutor who will keep him engaged and
have fun doing activities such as swimming,
cooking, and singing. Experience preferred, but
extensive training is provided. Supervision for

HOW CLOSE TO THE PIT


DO YOU WANT TO LIVE?
www.heelshousing.com

ABA certification is available. This is a great


opportunity for students or professionals to be
part of a strong behavior-based home intervention program. A 10-25 hour commitment for a
minimum of 1 year. jillgoldstein63@gmail.
com.
PART-TIME. Looking for compassionate, energetic and reliable candidate to work with an
12 year-old autistic girl. Job entails working
on goals in community setting and engaging
in physical activities. M-F 2-6pm. $12/hr. Respond to rosalindjane.allen@gmail.com and/or
triciawildman@yahoo.com and acquire2001@
yahoo.com.

For Rent
FAIR HOUSING

ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in


this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers
are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES: Now
showing and leasing properties for 2016/17
school year. Walk to campus, 1BR-2BR
available. Contact via merciarentals.com or
919-933-8143.

MERCIA

DO YOU LIKE YOUR OWN PRIVACY? Perfect


studio apartment (approximately 500 square
feet) within walking distance of UNC. Covered
carport, high ceilings, full kitchen and bath,
W/D and beautiful Italian terracotta tile. $675/
mo. includes all utilities and wireless. Sorry, no
pets. Move in August 1. Email for appointment:
cognacjac@aol.com.

Help Wanted

Volunteering

APARTMENT FOR RENT SOUTHERN VILLAGE..


2BR/2BA apartment in Southern Village, Chapel HIll; 2nd floor unit; $1,200/mo. 1 year or
6 month lease available. immediately. Quiet
street, 5 minute walk from Market Street,
Weavers, etc. Walking trail, NS and V buses
convenient to campus. NO CATS please. Contact agent: Bennett Robinson, brobinson@reddoorcompany.com.
GARDENING Need help gardening, pulling
weeds, mowing. etc Also other chores around
house like painting. $12/hr. Flexible times.
Write to simons.house1@gmail.com.

UNC campus. jenmacy@gmail.com, 336-7080749.

DRIVER: Seeking summertime driver for 1 child


to, from camps in Chapel Hill several weeks
this summer. Requires good references and
driving record. Contact for details. 919-8245912.
PART-TIME, FULL-TIME OFFICE ASSISTANT
NEEDED at local transportation, hospitality
business. Some event coordinating and greeting duties as well. Must project professional
image and have customer service skills. Hospitality experience a plus but not a requirement.
Can become flexible job during school year.
Minimum GPA 3.0, Please email jennifermcmorrow@carolinalivery.net for more information.
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT NEEDED. Immediate need for an experienced administrative assistant by a registered and fast growing
company. 1 year of administrative experience
would be an advantage. We pay $23.50/hr.
subject to review. Please send your cover letter
and rsum to oasissfm@hotmail.com. 919765-8982.
PROGRAMMER WANTED: Experience with: Javascript, HTML, C# (Java, C, C++ acceptable)
required. Experience with: jQuery, C#. Net 4.0,
SQL, CSS desirable. TeleSage is located next to
the UNC campus. Full-time, part-time, benefits,
wages BOE. resume and letter to smcconnell@
telesage.com.

Summer Jobs
DOG SITTER: Looking for a responsible student
who is great with dogs to do some summer pet
sitting while we are away on vacation. Near

PART-TIME, FULL-TIME OFFICE ASSISTANT


NEEDED at local transportation, hospitality
business. Some event coordinating, greeting
duties as well. Must project professional image, have customer service skills. Hospitality experience a plus but not a requirement.
Can become flexible job during school year.
MINIMUM GPA 3.0. Please email jennifermcmorrow@carolinalivery.net for more
information.

Volunteering
RESEARCH STUDY

The US EPA is seeking individuals between the


ages of 18 to 40, non-smokers and healthy
needed for air pollution research study. You
will receive 1 free physical exam, blood will be
drawn, and breathing tests will be performed.
You will complete a total of 3 visits over 4-6
weeks. Compensation of $375 given for your
time and travel. For more information please
call FEFA EPA Recruitment at 919-966-0604 or
visit www.epastudies.org.

Were
here for
you
24/7

Run a classified
in print AND
online
for one low price.
DailyTarHeel.com
/classifieds

HOROSCOPES
If June 16th is Your Birthday...

Its all for love and family this year. Partnerships


grow with shared efforts. Home transformation
this autumn comes before a new career direction
arises, and you begin a two-year fun and
romantic phase. Revise communication plans for a
professional boost over winter. Work together for
what you love.
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 9 -- Consider how to use available
resources to grow your fortunes for the
future. Invest for long-term growth. Find
ways to leverage a windfall. You have more
than expected. Expand your territory.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 9 -- Together, you go farther. The
better you feel, the better you do. Something
you didnt expect to work actually does.
Invest in efficiency. Stash away the surplus.
Celebrate the fruit of your collaboration.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8 -- Dance to a quicker pace at
work. Unexpected benefits come with a rise
in demand for your attention. Get creative,
and find long-term solutions. Use what you
gain to benefit your family.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Follow your heart. Take advantage of favorable circumstances to raise the fun level.
Family, friends and excellent diversions have
your attention. Share a dream for the future.
Everything seems possible.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Take care of home and family. Do what you already know works. Figure
out how to make what you want. Cook up
something wonderful. Discover unplanned
domestic bliss.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Youre especially clever and
persuasive. Ask probing questions. Write
your theories and view. Upgrade your skills
and technology. Strengthen foundational
structures. Good things with long-term
benefit come through communication.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is a 9 -- Keep practicing and your skills
improve. You know which way to go. Youre
gaining skills and confidence. Focus on bringing home the bacon. An opportunity leads to
long-term profit.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is an 8 -- Provide leadership on a
matter of personal passion. You have more
resources than you realize. Friends provide
support when they get whats at stake. Invite
participation to generate long-lasting benefit.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 5 -- Lay low and recharge your
batteries. Clean up one game before
beginning the next. Listen for what wants to
happen. Make plans for the long-term. Begin
new health practices. Rest deeply and well.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is an 8 -- You dont have to start from
scratch. The resources you need are in your
networks. Reach out and touch someone.
Collaborate for long-term community benefit.
Your friends are your inspiration. Celebrate
together.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8 -- Invest in your career. An
opportunity presents far-reaching benefit, if
you go for it. Get your team motivated, and
they propel you to a rise in status. Youre
gaining respect.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 -- Conditions are better for travel
now. A practical partner is your guide. Expand
in the direction of least resistance. You can
also adapt as you go along. Regenerate
together.
(c) 2016 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Farmers market provides new composting


The new program will
allow composting of
dairy and meat.
By Sara Kiley Watson
Staff Writer

Carrboro residents who


want to compost leftovers from
their homes but are unsure
how to go about it will soon
have a free and easy solution.
Starting June 18, the
Carrboro Farmers Market
will partner with the
Orange County Solid Waste
Management Department
to pilot a free program for
local residents and farmers
market attendees, where
theyll be able to drop off food

waste to be composted every


Saturday market day through
September.
The program will enlist the
help of Brooks Contractor, a
commercial composting company that can compost veggie
scraps as well as all meats,
bones and dairies, which typically cannot be processed in a
backyard compost system.
Blair Pollock, a planner for
Orange County Solid Waste
Department, said the idea
began when a council member asked why commercial
compost wasnt set up at one
of the seven farmers markets
in the area.
Pollock said when Carrboro
Farmers Market said yes to
a pilot, that was the tipping
point.

Carrboro is the best, the


oldest and the most organized
(farmers market), he said.
Erin Jobe, manager of the
market, said she didnt originally see the programs full
potential.
Originally, I thought there
was a need for farmers to
have a place to drop compost
at the end of the market day,
Jobe said. It just evolved into
what I thought was the best
need that our customers
may be interested.
The pilot period for the
program will kick off with
a food awareness party on
Saturday, complete with
composting demonstrations,
worm bin explorations and
free food waste collection
buckets for those who decide

to participate in the program.


During the kickoff, volunteers will teach locals about
the compost collection and
monitor the collection carts
to be sure that all composting
is done correctly.
Muriel Williman, education
and outreach coordinator for
Orange County Solid Waste,
said volunteers are necessary
for the pilot because they will
help monitor the success of the
program and help determine if
it should be continued after the
pilot period has ended.
They will talk to users
about proper items, if need
be, and educate others that
might be interested about the
collections purpose and use,
she said. The major contaminants are plastic including

plastic bags and plastic produce labels and metal.


Although this is an educational opportunity, Williman
said backyard composting
requires its own training.
If people are interested in
learning how to compost at
home on their own...they can
take one of the classes we offer
in the spring and fall, she said.
Pollock said he sees the pilot
as an opportunity to educate
people about commercial composting.
We are grateful for the
Town of Carrboro and the mar-

ket for working with us and


enabling the program, he said.
Not only will the market
provide composting to those
who do not have it set up in
their own homes, it can supplement those who already do.
Even if you are composting at home, you can enhance
your organics diversion by
using this drop-off, he said. It
can accept meat, bones, dairy,
baked goods, all kinds of food
items that would not go well in
a backyard compost.
city@dailytarheel.com

Austen celebrated at symposium


By Alexandra Blazevich
Staff Writer

Jane Austens legacy


lives on in Carrboro for this
years Jane Austen Summer
Program, Mansfield Park &
Its Afterlives.
This weekend, Austen fans
have the opportunity to delve
into the world of Austens
third novel, Mansfield Park.
The purpose of the annual
symposium is to bring readers together to celebrate
Austens work.
What drives us together is
our love for this one author,
which helps people build relationships with other attendees, said event volunteer
Jenny Abella.
Attendees will take a trip
back to the Regency period,
the era Austen lived in, where
they will experience daily life
as she did in her 41 years.
Program director and UNC
English professor Suzanna
Geiser said the event intends
to immerse attendees in the
culture of this time period.
We arent just touching
lightly on things, we are really
getting into historical issues
and literary topics, Geiser said.
Geiser said many people

have read Pride and


Prejudice, but there is more
to Austen than her most
famous book. The late author
left a legacy behind which
directors and authors have
expanded upon time and time
again.
There are many things
that people do not know
about Jane Austen, said
James Thompson, a codirector of the program and
English professor. That is
why we meet every summer
and discuss these issues.
2016 marks the fourth year
of the program.
This sold-out event features scholar-led panels,
small group discussions and
even a pub crawl.
Guests also have the
opportunity to take dance
lessons for the Regency Ball,
held on Saturday, June 18 in
UNCs Gerrard Hall.
This year, the event features a rare book emporium,
where attendees have the
opportunity to read antique
copies of Austens novels from
the 1930s and 1940s.
As far as I know, there is
nothing quite like it in the
Triangle, Geiser said. It
offers a really in-depth look at

COURTESY OF JANE AUSTEN SUMMER PROGRAM


The Jane Austen Summer Program will hold the 2016 Regency Ball
at Mansfield Park on June 18 to celebrate Austens legacy.

a novel, a novelist and a historical period.


Abella said graduate students and academic scholars
will lead panels and discussion groups about various
aspects of Mansfield Park,
including everything from lap
dogs to playing cards.
These groups will also
discuss more controversial
topics, such as slavery and
womens rights in Englands
history, which both make

appearances in Austens book.


This is not just an academic audience. We want
people who are interested in
just chatting about Austen,
said Geiser.
Even if they dont know
how much they love her yet, I
think they would still find this
conference fun and thoughtprovoking.
arts@dailytarheel.com

Divers fight for Olympic spot


By Cole del Charco
Staff Writer

North Carolina has never


had a diving Olympian, but
that could all change next
week when three Tar Heels
compete in the Olympic Trials
in Indianapolis with a chance
at qualifying for the games in
Rio de Janeiro on the line.
Two of the three divers,
Elissa Dawson and Jack
Nyquist, are current studentathletes and members of
North Carolinas diving team.
The third, Michole Timm,
graduated from UNC in 2015.
All three are competing in
the three-meter springboard.
UNC diving coach Abel
Sanchez said the three Tar
Heels have a chance at making it into one of the top two
spots required to qualify for
the Olympic Team.
Anyone thats in the meet
has a shot, he said. If youre
in the stands, youre just a
spectator, if youre out on the
board, then you have a shot
and anything is possible.
Dawson agreed.

There are so many variables


that go into a competition that,
from day to day, the place that
you get could change. she said.
In Sanchezs three years
as UNCs head diving coach
the team has continued to
improve.
Nyquist credits Sanchezs
unique coaching style, which
emphasizes mental toughness, for the teams success.
Well be practicing and
hell just stop to simulate situations, Nyquist said. Like
sometimes well be walking
down the floor and hell just
stop us and be like, Oh, sorry,
theres a baby crying, time to
redo your dives.
Sanchezs focus on the mental side has brought success to
UNCs diving team, much like
it did in his stint as the diving
coach at New Mexico.
Timm was a diver at New
Mexico, but transferred and
followed Sanchez to UNC.
Sanchez said she has a real
chance at making the team.
I always thought this was
going to be her year, he said.
Sanchez expects Dawson

to compete for one of the top


two spots in the trials as well.
Ive been diving since I
was young, Dawson said.
And I remember when I was
eight, going to the Olympic
Trials to watch and I looked
up to so many of the divers
that I was watching, and I
never imagined that I, one
day, would also be competing
at the Olympic Trials so for
me its just an absolute blessing to be there.
Nyquist, a rising senior
whos spent his entire college
career under Sanchez, said
hed be elated to make the
Olympic team.
Itd be a dream come
true, Nyquist said.
But just because its a
dream doesnt mean he thinks
its out of his reach.
There are probably only
like two (divers in the competition) that I havent beaten,
just in my career, so its fun
having that confidence, like,
to know that I can do it,
Nyquist said.
@ColedelCharco
sports@dailytarheel.com

Please

Dont Bag your Recyclables.


Let your recyclables loose and free!
Thank you for keeping plastic bags
OUT of the carts,
bins and
drop-offs.

Orange County Solid Waste Management (919) 968-2788


recycling@orangecountync.gov www.orangecountync.gov/recycling/

Vigils across the area


Vigils were held across
the triangle to commemorate the lives lost in
Orlando. See pg. 1 for story.

games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

Level:

4
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.

Trump comes to NC
The GOP candidate
visited Greensboro to rally
support for this campaign.
See pg. 3 for story.

Heres the goat squad!

The Goat Squad came to


Solution to
last Thursdays puzzle clean up kudzu behind the
Scap Exchange and it was
adorable. See pg. 3 for story.

Farmers market plus


The Carrboro market
just added a dairy and meat
composting option. See pg.
5 for story.

dailytarheel.com/classifieds
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Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


Across
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5 Whisks
10 Thought-provoking
14 Arkin of Argo
15 Prenatal test, for short
16 Former Fashion
Emergency host
17 Bug
20 Industrial Revolution
power source
21 Kilt wearers refusal
22 Destructive insect
23 Bering Sea port
25 Invigorates
26 Bug
31 Cocoon and
Posturepedic
32 Parks in American
history
33 Cuba libre ingredient
36 Confident
37 Flags down
39 Cuba libre ingredient
40 Decorates with Angel
Soft, briefly
41 Now that
you mention
it ...
42 Places for
French
lessons
44 Bug
46 Backless
furniture
49 Pallet piece
50 Put up with
51 One to hang
with
53 Pro shop set
57 Bug

60 4-Fs opposite
61 Intense
62 Cuba libre ingredient
63 Part of a wine list
64 Migratory birds
65 Its measured in inches
Down
1 Some square dancers
2 Settled on a branch
3 Zap
4 Involve in a complicated
way
5 Negative decree
6 8 Mile rapper
7 Breaking Bad Emmy
winner Gunn
8 Buster Browns dog
9 Ground cover
10 Deeply religious
11 Dubai dignitaries
12 Link between speakers
13 Reviewers of academic
essays
18 Atlanta university

19 Scary name in 2014


news
24 Kitchen gadgets
25 Five-time NBA MVP
Bill
26 Wordless summons
27 Do another stint
28 Couple in a dinghy
29 Superfluity
30 Moviefone parent co.
33 Othello or Iago
34 Hula strings
35 Difficult spot
38 __ carte
39 Instrument panel array
41 Cunning
43 Adjusters concern
44 Beverages sometimes

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Services, Inc.
All rights reserved.

made from potatoes


45 Archipelago parts
46 Relish
47 Chophouse choice
48 Quieted, in a way
51 Rate
52 Reason for cold
compresses and extra
blankets
54 Chief god of Asgard
55 Literary sea captain
56 Large quantity
58 Sign of a canine
excitement
59 Bridal bio word

Opinion

Thursday, June 16, 2016

EDITORIAL CARTOON

QUOTE OF THE DAY

By Drew Sheneman, The Star-Ledger

I had never thought about the student


veteran population at UNC being as large as
it is, and a lot of people dont recognize that.

Jalea Morris

Payton Collier, on the veteran population at UNC

Georgia Peaches and Opinions


Sophomore health policy and management major from Winston-Salem

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

Email: jaleabm@live.unc.edu

I wish people could get as energized about


free expression on the UNC campus as they
do about coffee.

It is
more
than just
a joke

Anonymous, on saying goodbye to the Daily Grind

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR


We wear the mask
campaign at UNC

ow dare you complain


about [insert petty
misfortune]? There
are starving kids in Africa!
Really? Can we get away
from this? No, seriously. Have
we yet to learn what to say and
what NOT to say?
When someone complains
about something, using the
joking rebuttal of starving
kids in Africa is not only inappropriate, but also most of the
time unrelated.
It is unfair to compare
something as extreme and
important as famine to minuscule tasks or situations we may
groan about on a daily basis.
For the record, your use of this
is problematic and, if anything
else, makes it appear as though
you are entirely insensitive to
the situation.
It is neither cute nor funny
for you to say this. Stop the
madness.
Some of you may say Oh,
but it is just a common exaggeration! No harm, no foul.
The thing is, there is power in
language.
What we have to say says a
lot about who we are and what
we believe to be true. Starving
kids in Africa generalizes the
continent as having nothing
but hungry children walking
around everywhere you see.
Wait, you do realize Africa is
a whole continent, right? Not
every country in Africa has
been subjected to extreme
hunger. But for the countries
that do, lets think about the
historical implications that
caused this.
Side note: Make sure your
knowledge of this region
stretches far beyond the for 10
cents a day commercials we
know all too well.
You are absolutely right
when you say there are starving kids in Africa. Its true.
Just like how there are starving kids in our own backyard.
Food insecurity is common
in over one in four North
Carolina children.
But will we ever tell someone not to complain because
there are starving kids in
North Carolina? Of course
not! Thats way too close to
home.
Instead well just assign
that misfortune to a whole
continent. If you are truly
concerned, our cities of
Winston-Salem, High Point,
and Greensboro have some
of the highest levels of food
insecurity in the NATION.
Also, using starving kids in
Africa as a response reinforces
the notion that Africa is solely
home to those who are poor,
starving and lacking in sufficient resources of any kind.
Its time we think about
what we say and how we say
things. If you ever visited
Africa and worked to improve
the environment and malnutrition, then talking about the
food insecurity is perfectly fine
because you wont use it as a
joke but chances are you
havent. If youre not actually
concerned with the issue, but
use it just to appeal to guilt, I
urge you to just think about
the issue a little bit more.

The Daily Tar Heel

EDITORIAL

You and gun control


People, not gun
control are the
main problem.

he problem is not
gun control; the
problem is your attitude about the problem.
There is a gun problem
in America.
Regardless of your
opinions towards gun control, or whether or not you
have a handgun in your
bedside dresser, this is a
fact. There is a problem.
9 people were killed for
going to church.
12 were killed for going
to a movie.
20 children were killed
for going to school.
32 people were killed
for being on a college
campus.
49 people were killed
for enjoying a night out.
Whats next? 70 people
shot and killed for going
grocery shopping?
To put this into perspective, our staff at The Daily
Tar Heel has been alive for
three of the top five mass
shootings our country has

ever seen and to top it


off , the three deadliest
(Orlando, Virginia Tech,
and Sandy Hook) have
occurred within the past
ten years.
If, at this point, you do
not understand the need
for gun control the problem is your attitude about
the problem.
If your attitude is oh,
well it sucks that people
died but theres the second amendment to think
about and protect, you
are a part of the problem.
If you fall into this category, consider this: you
or someone you love is
tragically caught in the
next mass shooting. What
do you think your first
thought will be?
It can be guaranteed
that your first thought
will not be about the
second amendment. You
would wonder who would
commit such a crime and
why they had access to
weaponry. You would
regret each status you
posted and tweet you sent
out condemning those
who believe in stricter gun

control. You would probably ask and potentially


blame yourself for putting
yourself in that position,
even if it was one of most
mundane activities.
You should want, and
fight for there to be stricter gun control because
at the rate were going, it
is only a matter of time
before the next shooting
will be closer to home.
The problem is no
longer in the guns. You
and your attitude are the
problem.
If this weekends tragic
events did not challenge
you to truly evaluate the
repercussions of the current state of gun control,
you are a part of the problem.
You think it wont happen to you. You think
that, because you want to
have a gun, others taking
advantage of that right
doesnt pose a threat.
How much are you willing to risk in the name of
the second amendment?
At this rate, it is only a
matter of time before it
hits closer to home.

EDITORIAL

The Bern has a real cost


Think critically
about how you act
in the polls.

any of those who


did (and still do)
feel the Bern
have publicly announced
their decision to write in
Bernie Sanders as opposed
to voting for Hillary
Clinton.
While it is honorable
to stand by your beliefs
and remain true to who
and what you support,
it is crucial that you
think about each player
involved.
Those players include
the candidates, their
beliefs and actions and
their supporters, in addition to the potential to
thrive.
You must consider the
repercussions of writing
in. Sure, it may feel good
initially sticking it to
the (wo)man and all, but
once you leave the poll
and youre sitting at home
watching the votes roll in,
you dont want to have any

regrets.
If you believe Sanders
could win based on write
ins, what makes you think
he could garner enough
support if he did not
have enough to win the
Democratic nomination?
If you are choosing to
do so as a political statement to illustrate your
steadfastness, thats fine.
However, dont let this one
election cause you to be on
the wrong side of history.
If, after considering the
potential repercussions
of opting NOT to vote in
favor of the Democratic
party, you decide it is
the best option, do so.
However, there is too
much at stake this election
to base a vote on political
affiliation alone.
Whats at stake? A lot,
to be honest. Based on the
actions of both candidates
thus far, one has the ability to garner attention and
support based on radical,
inflammatory hate that
targets specific populations.
It is frightening.

At this point, many


people are finding themselves stuck in between a
rock and a hard place, but
think critically about who
and what youre fighting
for and take it to the polls.
A means to an end.
Has it been petty?
Yes. Has it caused you
to question the election
as a whole? Probably.
And it is bound to get
worse the closer we get to
November.
But in 10 to 20 years
from now, when your
children, grandchildren,
nieces or nephews ask you
who you voted for, make
sure you are proud your
response. Vote for the
future.
Hate is dangerous.
Hate speech is dangerous. Bigotry is dangerous. Liars are dangerous.
Inciting riots is dangerous.
Ignorance is dangerous.
And one of the two
presidential candidates
just so happens to fit the
description more closely
than the other, so act
accordingly.

QuickHits
A weird season

Tump in Greensboro

Congrats, graduates!

Yall...this heat

LDOC was on Monday,


exams began Wednesday
and Summer
Session II begins
on Monday. What
a challenge it is to
celebrate LDOC in
the midst of studying while
anticipating yet another
FDOC. Could there not be a
week in between? Its kind of
difficult to keep our thoughts
and mentalities in order. This
turnaround is a lot to handle.

This man, in a rally held


Tuesday evening, said the
children of immigrants are
responsible for
an increasing
the number of
deadly attacks on Americans
and commended Governor
McCrory on the fantastic job
he is doing...it is unfortunate
that our staffer, in the name
of news, had to attend the
rally on our behalf.

Although the traffic on Manning Drive has been terrible,


we are proud
and excited for
all of the graduates that had the
opportunity to
graduate in the best dome in
the country. Furthermore, we
would like to congratulate
ALL high school seniors. We
know it was rough but now
you can look forward to the
best four years of your life.

...Is no joke. Its frightening


to think about how summer
has not officially
begun and the
weather is already
consistently in
the 90s. It has
gotten to the point where
standing outside, even in the
shade for 60 seconds or more
can constitute a shower for
the average person. What
will July and August feel like?!
Stay hydrated, Tar Heels.

TO THE EDITOR:
Through personal experiences involving various
loved ones, my passion
has significantly grown for
mental health.
I was led to start a mental
health campaign catering to black students after
the incident that occurred
November 2015 with the
young man from Elon, who
fell off of Morrisons Balcony
on our campus. Personally,
I didnt know the details of
the situation, but I began to
think about the possibilities
behind this incident.
I came to the conclusion
that if there was even the
slightest chance that this
young man could have been
struggling mentally resulting in this heartbreaking
incident, that something
needed to be done.
I remember like it was
yesterday, I was sitting on
the floor in my friends
Hinton James dorm room,
and I told them that I
didnt know what I going
to do, but I was going to do
something.
The very next day I
began asking around
academic advisors, upper
classmen, and faculty to
see if anyone could lead me
in the right direction.
I was blessed when I
spoke with Chloe Russell
in an academic advising
appointment. She called
someone who she thought
would be able to help,
which was Christopher
Faison, who then introduced me to Erica Wallace.
That very day Chris and
Erica helped me to come
up with a name and ideas
for the initiative that is now
called the We Wear The
Mask Campaign.
This campaign is a
movement dedicated to
ending the stigma associated with mental health in

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the black community.


Its purpose is to encourage black students to feel
comfortable acknowledging, addressing and advocating for their mental
wellbeing.
As of now, I will be putting together a short film
pertaining to the initiative,
and planning events for the
Fall.
A Twitter account
has just been created to
keep people updated @
WeWear_TheMask and I
am constantly looking to
ally with others to help this
initiative successfully grow.
The ultimate goal is to
bring change and actively
improve mental health
in the black community
through collective efforts on
campus!
Im excited and looking
forward to whats ahead for
WWTM.
Atiyah J. Hamilton
Sophomore
Psychology

Answers about Dr.


Clayton are needed
TO THE EDITOR:
A few weeks ago, I was
disappointed to find out
that Dr. Taffye Benson
Clayton would be leaving
UNC.
I did not believe it to be
true, but come to find out,
she in fact will no longer
be serving as UNCs Chief
Diversity Officer. What is
shocking, however, is the
lack of coverage surrounding Claytons departure.
One would assume if this
was the traditional exit of a
school administrator, that it
would have been met with
lots of fanfare. However, Dr.
Claytons was seemingly not.
During her several years at
UNC, Dr. Clayton was a huge
asset to the university community, and as students, she
served us very well. I believe
any student that had the
opportunity to work with her
would attest to that. She will
be greatly missed.
Trey Mangum
Class of 2015
Black Student Movement
President, 2014-15

The Daily Tar Heel


Established 1893,
123 years
of editorial freedom
SOFIA EDELMAN
SUMMER EDITOR

MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

GWENDOLYN SMITH
OPINION EDITOR

OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

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