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Those who have knowledge dont predict. Those who predict dont have knowledge.
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Friday, March 22, 2013 dailytarheel.com Volume 121, Issue 15
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University
responds
to federal
request
By Caitlin McCabe
Senior Writer
The University responded Thursday to a federal
request for information about UNCs handling of
sexual assault, marking its first effort to comply
with an investigation of sexual assault procedures.
The request, made by the U.S. Department of
Educations Office for Civil Rights, mandated that
UNC submit all documents, policies and data sur-
rounding sexual assault by Thursday.
UNC will release its response to The Daily Tar
Heel today once it has been redacted, said Karen
Moon, director of UNC News Services.
The requested documents include detailed
descriptions of procedures and a spreadsheet of all
student complaints of sexual harassment.
The investigation, announced March 1, was
opened after a complaint was filed by three stu-
dents, one former student and one former admin-
istrator with the office on Jan. 16, accusing UNC
of creating a hostile environment for survivors of
sexual assault.
What we have done up until now is not perfect,
Chancellor Holden Thorp said in an interview.
According to a UNC News Services press release,
UNC is cooperating fully and will continue to do so.
Jim Bradshaw, a spokesman for the Department
of Education, has said that the office aims to com-
plete investigations within six months.
In the last four years, the Office for Civil Rights
has received more than 120 complaints regarding
sexual violence but launched only 11 investigations.
This (investigation) is unbelievably important
and goes right to the success of the University, in
terms of our students feeling safe here, he said.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
UNC submitted information about its
handling of sexual assault cases.
sexual assault on campus
dth photo illustration/melissa key and chris conway
By Brandon Moree
Sports Editor
KANSAS CITY, Mo. North
Carolina mens basketball coach Roy
Williams made it clear on Tuesday
that he was surprised at his Tar
Heels (24-10) No. 8 seed in the 2013
NCAA Tournament.
But the coach of the Tar Heels
first round opponent, Villanovas Jay
Wright, was also slightly disappoint-
ed for a different reason.
That is an area we have struggled
all year, is defending the 3-point line,
Wright said Thursday. So, of course,
this is the way it works. Who do you
get in the NCAA Tournament? The
only Carolina
team that ever has
relied strictly on a
3-point line. Thats
the way it works.
The Wildcats
(20-13) rank 294th out of 345 col-
lege basketball teams in defending
the 3-point shot. They give up on
average more than seven shots from
deep, and opponents are connecting
on more than 36 percent of long-
range attempts.
Those numbers play right into
the hands of the Tar Heels, who are
making about 7.5 3-pointers a game
this season, with that number on the
rise since adding sophomore guard
P.J. Hairston to the starting lineup.
In the ACC Tournament, UNC made
30 shots from deep in three games.
And senior guard Dexter
Strickland is hoping that the Tar
Heels can replicate that long-range
success in tonights game, which is
scheduled to tip off at 7:20 p.m.
With us having a small lineup,
Strickland said, it allows the floor to
be more spaced out, allowing myself,
Marcus, to drop to the basket, find
North Carolina plays No.
9 Villanova in the NCAA
Tournaments second round.
Joffrey Ballet re-enacts Rite of Spring ballet
By Samantha Sabin
Staff Writer
Audiences will travel back to 1913
this weekend and experience Igor
Stravinsky and Vaslav Nijinskys
The Rite of Spring as if they were
there when it first opened minus
the violent riots.
As a part of Carolina Performing
Arts Rite of Spring at 100, the
Joffrey Ballet dance company of
Chicago will perform its reconstruc-
tion of Nijinskys original ballet
choreography at Memorial Hall this
weekend.
In addition to Nijinskys chore-
ography, the group will open with
dances from its repertoire, includ-
ing a new work by Stanton Welch
and After the Rain by Christopher
Wheeldon at its Saturday show.
Historians relied on notes
from the original ballet to
create their choreography.
SEE THE PERFORMANCE
Time: 8 p.m. Saturday and 7:30
p.m. Sunday
Location: Memorial Hall
More information: http://bit.
ly/14b6KyE
Hedgepeth to be honored in
weekend powwow on campus
By Paige Ladisic
Staff Writer
Attending her tribes annual
powwows was always close to Faith
Hedgepeths heart.
Hedgepeth, a UNC junior, was
found dead in her apartment the
morning of Sept. 7.
Six months later, little light has
been shed on the case, and no new
information has been released since
January, when police announced
Apartheid divestment
spurs new campaign
By Sarah Niss
Staff Writer
Students calling for UNC to divest
from coal are looking to the 1980s
for inspiration in their ongoing cam-
paign asking administrators to take
a moral stance on climate change.
In 1987, student-led protests cul-
minated in UNC divesting funds from
companies doing business in South
Africa in response to apartheid.
And now, Stewart Boss, events
coordinator of the Sierra Student
Coalitions Beyond Coal campaign
and a Daily Tar Heel columnist, said
the campaign is urging the University
to divest from coal to set an example.
Jim Leloudis, a history professor
and associate dean of UNCs honors
department, said divestment cam-
paigns in general call into question
the ethical responsibility universities
have in controversial areas.
There are two sides. One is that
the endowment and those that man-
age it have a responsibility to maxi-
mize yield, Leloudis said. On the
other side, the university does indeed
have a special ethical responsibility.
The apartheid divestment cam-
paign has served as a model for the
The 1980s protests are
used as a model for the
Beyond Coal effort.
The 26th annual Carolina
Indian Circle Powwow
will be held Saturday.
Faith Hedgepeth
was killed in early
september. she
was a unc junior
and a member of
the haliwa-saponi
american indian
tribe.
powwows growing up, said her
father, Roland Hedgepeth.
He said his daughter loved
going to the powwows to visit with
friends and family.
Its like a big Native American
family reunion, he said.
And his daughter loved any
opportunity to celebrate her culture
with those she cared about.
Faith was very much into her
family, and powwow time is a time
of seeing people you havent seen in
a long time, he said.
Hedgepeth stopped dancing in
the tribes annual powwows as she
got busier with school, her mother,
DNA found at the crime scene sug-
gested a male suspect.
To honor Hedgepeths life, stu-
dents with the Carolina Indian
Circle will hold its 26th annual
powwow Saturday in her name.
Hedgepeth, a member of the
Haliwa-Saponi American Indian
Tribe, often danced in her tribes
see VILLANOVA, page 4
see POWWOW, page 4 see DIVESTMENT, page 4
For Sundays performance,
the company will put on Age of
Innocence by Edwaard Liang and
In the Middle, Somewhat Elevated
by William Forsythe.
Dance historian and choreog-
rapher Millicent Hodson recon-
structed Nijinskys choreography,
and her husband, art historian and
set designer Kenneth Archer, recon-
structed the original set designs for
the ballet company.
The two historians relied on the
original musical scores and chore-
ographers notes to piece the ballet
back together, said Elizabeth Joyner,
the project coordinator at Carolina
Performing Arts.
Both Hodson and Archer will talk
about the reconstruction process at
a lecture before each show. Fridays
lecture will focus solely on the cho-
reography, and Saturdays lecture
will focus on the set design.
Joyner said the lectures fit in well
with Carolina Performing Arts goal
to not only expose the audiences to
various art performances, but also
teach them the meaning behind the
art.
Its not just about putting a per-
INSIDE: Turn
to page 8 to see
a breakdown
of UNCs game
against Villanova.
see JOFFREY BALLET, page 4
Will No. 8 UNC advance?
NOTED. A woman in Taiwan divorced
her husband because his size just wasnt
enough (where, apparently, it matters).
His penis is so small, like a kids, only 5
cm long, the 52-year-old divorcee who
discovered the problem on her wedding
night told a news outlet. Maybe she
should take up with Jon Hamm.
QUOTED. Weve had these type of toilet
facilities for 10 to 15 years, and he just
misused the toilet, unfortunately.
An old man in Georgia stood on the
rim of an outdoor toilet at a park instead of
sitting like a normal person. The result? A
plummet into five feet of poop and hos-
pitalization after 70 minutes stuck in there.
T
imes are tough for all of us right now, and the website eFinan-
cialCareers is here to be our guide. An article with 20 mon-
ey-saving tips from bankers and their wives is the godsend
youve been waiting for, full of rational, compassionate advice.
For instance, take this one: Start ironing. The wife is doing the iron-
ing, a banker told the publication. Shes not loving it, but she doesnt
want to get a job herself so is having to accept it. Way to save money!
And stop carrying so much cash, already! When you leave your wedge
of cash at home it reduces the temptation to tip people so much. Also,
ski more cheaply. It wont kill you to slum it with the middle-class folks
every now and then. (I wish this wasnt real. But its so terribly real.)
Get less rich quick
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone lost property
at 300 E. Main St. between 8
p.m. and 10:27 p.m. Saturday,
according to Carrboro police
reports.
The person was at a con-
cert when she decided to go
crowd surfing. While she was
crowd surfing, her iPhone,
in a pink case, fell out of her
pocket, reports state.
Someone injured prop-
erty at 101 Oak St. at 4:49
a.m. Sunday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
The person was tearing the
wooden boards off a fence
when police questioned him.
He said someone had asked
him to tear down the fence,
reports state.
The owner of the home said
he did not ask anyone to tear
down the fence, reports state.
The person, who was intox-
icated, later said he realized
no one would ask him to tear
down a fence at 4:30 in the
morning, reports state.
Someone broke and
entered at 301 Laurel Ave.
between noon March 11 and
6 p.m. Monday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
The person stole a pocket
book containing money for
graduation fees, reports state.
Someone lost a wallet
at 300 W. Main St. at 6:48
p.m. Tuesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
Someone stole items
from the Food Lion at 104
N.C. Highway 54 at 4:11 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
Someone was assaulted at
180 BPW Club Road between
midnight on Jan. 28 and 1:37
p.m. Wednesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
Someone reported an
open door at 106 Watters
Road at 4:59 p.m. Wednesday,
according to Carrboro reports.
POLICE LOG
News Friday, March 22, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2
just keep peddling
A
my Gwynn, a graduate student, along with
other UNC students, stretches out before
a cycling class in the Student Recreation
Center. Sarah McNamara, a graduate student, teach-
es the cycling class at 5:30 p.m. on Thursdays.
dth/taylor sweet
COrrECtIOn
A music review on thursdays page 6 of the giddens sisters I Know Ive Been Changed said
Rhiannon giddens was taking a break from the Carolina Chocolate drops to work on the album.
she is still touring and performing with the band.
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 Elise Young at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
www.dailytarheel.com
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tOday
blood red river concert: The
group is joined by new Town
Drunks, Phatlynx and Infdels.
Beneft for norton Records. all
ages. $10.
Time: Doors open 9 p.m., show
begins 9:30 p.m.
location: Local 506
wXyc 90s Dance: The semi-
annual dance night features the
best of the 1990s. $8, but $5 for
students with One Cards.
Time: 9 p.m.
location: Cats Cradle
carolina symposia in music
and culture: albin Zak of SUnY-
albany presents The Sound is
the Song: Revisiting the great
Cover Debate.
Time: 4:15 p.m.
location: Person Recital Hall
SatUrday
spaceghostpurrp concert: The
hip-hop artist performs in Carr-
boro with Raider Klan, Professor
Toon and Lord of the fly. $10.
Time: Doors open 8 p.m., show
begins 9 p.m.
location: Local 506
spring haiku workshop: Begin
with simple approaches to writ-
ing haiku, then compose haiku-
like poems based on words and
images from the audience. Bring
your lunch for a picnic after the
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.
COMMUnIty CaLEndar
workshop. free.
Time: 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
location: n.C. Botanical garden
Visitor Education Center
Jofrey ballet: The Chicago-
based ballet presents multiple
performances. Single tickets
start at $39, student tickets start
at $10.
Time: 8 p.m.
location: Memorial Hall
lm directed by PRASHANT BHARGAVA
UNC Global FedEx Center Nelson Mandela Auditorium
MONDAY MARCH 25
U
7:00 PM

MEET THE FILMMAKER RECEPTION U

6:30 PM
VIJAY IYER, PRASHANT
BHARGAVA and INTERNATIONAL
CONTEMPORARY ENSEMBLE
Memorial Hall
TUESDAY MARCH 26
U
7:30 PM

CO-SPONSORS: PROGRAM OF COMPARATIVE LITERATURE, COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES, GERMANIC STUDIES
CAROLINAPERFORMINGARTS.ORG/FREE-EVENTS 919.843.3333
FREE SCREENI NG
Dont miss the
groundbreaking
lm Radhe Radhe:
Rites of Holi.
Student tickets
only $10.
Campus briefs
The Daily Tar Heel wins
several awards from NCPA
The Daily Tar Heel brought
home nine awards from
Thursday nights 2013 N.C Press
Associations Winter Institute
awards ceremony.
The DTH was the only stu-
dent newspaper to win awards.
The judging period spanned the
leadership of 2011-12 editor-in-
inBRIEF
Medical school hopes
to build on rankings
By Taryn Rothstein
Staff Writer
A top national ranking for
the UNC School of Medicine
means more than prestige to
its leaders it means a con-
tinued commitment to treating
North Carolinas patients.
The school was ranked No. 1
for primary care by U.S. News
& World Report this year
for the first time, the school
announced on March 12.
Dr. Bill Roper, dean of
the School of Medicine and
CEO of UNC Health Care,
said the ranking featured
in the magazines Americas
Best Graduate Schools 2014
issue is a great achievement,
and primary care has continu-
ously been a strong part of the
schools program.
We need more doctors, and
this ranking as number one in
primary care is something we
want people across the state to
know about because its such
an important part of deliver-
ing medical care these days,
he said.
The school, which enrolls
782 students, also tied for 22nd
in overall research and ranked
second in family medicine, fifth
in rural medicine and tied for
ninth in AIDS.
Roper said that since the
school was ranked by its peers,
its clear that the rest of the
country recognizes the pro-
grams strength.
We are a medical school
that does a tremendous job of
training medical students and
residents in the primary care
specialties, and do it with a
strong commitment to research
and teaching together, he said.
Dr. Warren Newton, chair-
man of the Department of
Family Medicine and vice dean
for education in the school,
said the primary care ranking
reflects a team effort and a com-
mitment to health care reform.
We played a role in state-
wide initiatives like improving
roles in practice that dont just
help in Chapel Hill but also for
the state, he said.
Many people look at North
Carolina, at what we have
done, as a model of where they
need to go.
Roper said he thinks the
ranking can be attributed to
the strong faculty at the school.
Weve continued to have a
faculty that are viewed across
the country as leaders, he said.
Newton speculated that the
No. 2 ranking for family medi-
cine is a result of work in new
teaching initiatives.
Over the last years theres
been a lot of innovation of how
TOP 5 SCHOOLS
U.S. News & World Reports
rankings for primary care:
1. UNC-Chapel Hill
2. University of Washington
3. Oregon Health and
Science University
4. University of California,
San Francisco
5. University of Colorado-
Denver
Top national ranking
for primary care is
more than a number.
Carrboro residents
favor development
By Olivia Page-Pollard
Staff Writer
A mixed-use development that has
raised significant concerns among town
leaders met wide support from residents
during a public hearing at Thursdays
Carrboro Board of Aldermen meeting.
The proposed development, Shelton
Station, contains a four-story multi-family
residential building and a two-story com-
mercial building. It would be located at 410
N. Greensboro St. on 2.65 acres of land.
Kenneth Reiter, the projects developer,
presented the proposal for Shelton Station
Thursday.
The development would likely allocate 20
percent of its units as affordable housing.
Reiter said there would be no distinction
between the affordable housing units and
those at market price.
There will be affordable units, but we
will not be specifically choosing them,
Reiter said.
All of them will be built at market rate
and will be no different.
Reiter said this measure ensures flexibil-
ity in the sale process because open units
will not sit idle due to lack of viable renters.
Carrboro Mayor Mark Chilton said he
was concerned about the affordable hous-
ing units and their allotment to those with
true financial need rather than students.
I think thats not who were trying to
reach, Chilton said, referring to students.
The project also has an eco-friendly
focus, with the inclusion of 153 bike racks,
a Zipcar space and an electric charging
station.
Carrboro resident David Arneson, an
SHeLTOn STaTiOn
Shelton Station is a development with
commercial and residential space:
Roughly 20 percent of the residential
space is designated as affordable housing.
The proposed development would cost
roughly $15 million.
Developers plan to include recreational
and artistic metal and steel structures.
A LITTLE KNIGHT MUSIC
dth/chelsey allder
Ricky Ruvio, who plays Farmer Joe, tells the sheep a story of a dragon and a knight. A Little Knight Musicalwill be performed at elementary schools.
UNC student directs A Little Knight for children
By Rebecca Pollack
Staff Writer
A UNC student will be showing on
campus Saturday his original musical a
childrens fairy tale with a twist.
Company Carolinas current play, A
Little Knight Musical was written, com-
posed and directed by junior math and
communication studies double major
Edgar Harrell.
The show, which is geared toward chil-
dren, is being performed for after-school
programs at local elementary schools
for free, in addition to Saturdays per-
formance at UNC, in Hanes Art Centers
auditorium.
Even though the shows directed for
children, everyone can find a bit of fun in
it, said Flavia Crovesi, a junior biology
major who portrays Lady Katherine.
Were trying to make it a tradition, said
producer Sarah Beth Potter, a junior jour-
nalism and communications major.
After writing the music for a childrens
musical last year, Harrell decided to write
his own childrens musical, and A Little
Knight Musical was born.
I wanted to continue the tradition and
do that again to spread the arts to the com-
See THe SHOW
Time: 2 p.m. Saturday
Location: Hanes Art Center Auditorium
Info: bit.ly/WHjRmP
The plan for Shelton Station
would add affordable housing.
munity, Harrell said.
He said he wanted to do a story that
children would be familiar with, so he
chose a medieval fairy tale.
I wanted to add something to it,
Harrell said.
The sheep are the Greek chorus, and
there are a lot of sheep jokes in it.
The musical is about a young knight
named Aiden who goes off to fight the
green dragon with the help of his friend
Blarney, a sheep.
Together, they fight for a princess named
Katherine, and they also face the villainous
Black Knight.
Harrell spent two-and-a-half months
writing the script before he set to work on
the score.
I would alternate between writing the
music and the lyrics, he said.
It was me sitting at the piano a lot.
Once he had the cast and crew, he set to
work on adjusting the music and some of
the lines to fit the actors a rare process
for cast members.
The opportunity to get to work on a
DTH ONLINE: To watch a video
about the production of Company
Carolinas A Little Knight Musical, visit
dailytarheel.com.
show that was being developed ... is an
opportunity thats so rare, I didnt want to
miss out on it, said musical director Will
Hawkins, a junior vocal performance and
dramatic art major.
Daniel Doyle, a sophomore dramatic
art and philosophy double major who
portrays Aiden, said originating a role
brought a different kind of pressure to
acting.
You dont have that creative pres-
sure from playing a role thats been done
before, Doyle said.
(But) there is still the pressure that
you have to bring that character to life,
he said.
Its a chance for the community to come
out and see a show thats written, directed,
produced and acted by UNC students
Its short, cool and fun.
Contact the desk editor at
arts@dailytarheel.com.
Charter
school loses
partner
By Jenny Drabble
Staff Writer
National Heritage Academies announced Tuesday
that it would no longer be part of Carrboros first
approved charter school, raising questions for the
schools board about how to move forward.
The proposed Howard and Lillian Lee Scholars
Charter School, which was scheduled to open in
August, may be delayed as a result of the manage-
ment companys decision to back out.
We have the utmost admiration for Howard
and Lillian Lee, the members of the school board
and the many others we have partnered with in
the community to try to bring this school to life,
said Nick Paradiso, vice president of partner
services and government relations for National
Heritage Academies, in a press release.
Danita Mason-Hogans, board member for the
school, said the board was told the decision was not
due to controversy or lack of interest in the school.
National Heritage Academies will do an inter-
nal review of the situation before providing an
explanation to the charter school, she said.
Mason-Hogans said despite the setback, the
board is still committed to opening the school,
which was just granted its charter on March 14.
Weve had an overwhelming positive response
from the community at our community meetings,
she said.
But the school has met opposition from groups
such as the local NAACP and Friends of Bolin Creek.
Theres a financial impact to consider, too, said
Jeff Nash, spokesman for Chapel Hill-Carrboro
City Schools. If the school opens and gets 500 of
our kids, thats a big chunk of our money.
Nash said some of the districts funding from
the county would be redirected to the charter
school based on its enrollment.
He said while Durham has had success with
charter schools, he doesnt think a charter school
would succeed in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro area.
What parent would take their kid out of a
school in a top-scoring district to try a new school
they dont know anything about? Nash said.
What would they offer that you cant get at our
dare I say world-class school system?
But Mason-Hogans said the board is only trying
to give students another education option.
I think that might be a misconception that
were against the school system, but were not, she
said. We dont believe one size fits all, so we like
to give students a choice.
She said the board will meet next week to deter-
mine its steps forward.
Although we were kind of surprised and disap-
pointed by National Heritages decision, our com-
mitment remains firm, Mason-Hogans said. We
believe in what were doing, and we ll find a way to
make it happen.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
neW CHarTer SCHOOL
April 13, 2012: The charter school board submit-
ted its application to the State Board of Education.
Sept. 6, 2012: State Board of Education gave the
school preliminary approval.
March 5: Residents voiced concerns about the
school at a Board of Aldermen public hearing.
to design practice and how to
care for the uninsured, he said.
Cameron Watkins, fourth-
year medical student, said
the School of Medicine does
a great job of accommodating
students needs in a constantly
changing field.
Theres a great devotion to
teaching, she said. We have
this history of great professors
who are intelligent enough
and open enough to change
and accept different ideas that
people come up with in terms
of learning styles.
I hope the ranking will
make UNC more competitive
and respected because our
teachers go above and beyond,
and this ranking just proves
that this is the case.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
architect not involved with the project, was
one of many to show his support for the
project at Thursdays meeting.
I think in general its good for this kind
of location, Arneson said.
Medium use, medium density makes
sense to me.
Despite the approval from residents,
Alderman Jacquelyn Gist said she wor-
ried about traffic congestion during con-
struction.
I dont want to lose any more businesses
due to the construction of new businesses,
said Gist.
The proposal also mandates that 7 per-
cent of the budget or $75,000 must
be spent on urban amenities, including the
sculpture-inspired childrens play structure.
Chilton said he thinks there is enough
artistic talent in Carrboro to ensure that
the developer could meet the urban ameni-
ties quota.
I would like to see you spend the
$75,000 on supporting our local arts com-
munity, he said.
The board will make its final decision
on the conditional use permit for Shelton
Station on April 2.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
chief Steven Norton and cur-
rent editor Andy Thomason.
Daniel Wiser, Isabella
Cochrane, Memet Walker and
Nicole Comparato won third
place in the Duke University/
Green-Rossiter Award for
Distinguished Newspaper Work
in Higher Education.
The paper also won second
place in general excellence for
newspaper websites for daily
papers with a circulation of
12,500-34,999. Daniel Pshock is
the online editor.
Of the first place awards in
the same circulation range, Meg
Wrather won for graphics and
Stephen Mitchell won for sports
feature photo.
Nicole Comparato, Chelsey
Dulaney and Katie Quine won
second place for deadline news
reporting.
The Daily Tar Heel summer
staff won first place for its mail-
home special section for new
students.
Multiple staff members won
second place for multimedia
project, the paper won third
place for editorial page under
former opinion editor and 2012
graduate C. Ryan Barber, as well
as third place for appearance
and design.
Three faculty selected for
microbiology fellowship
Three faculty members in
the UNC School of Medicine
were elected as 2013 Fellows
of the American Academy of
Microbiology.
Dr. Myron Cohen, Peggy
Cotter and Blossom Damania
are joining more than 2,000
fellows.
Fellowship selection is based
on scientific achievement and
contributions in the field of
microbiology.
From staff and wire reports
News Friday, March 22, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3
The status of the school, which would
be Carrboros first, is uncertain.
News Friday, March 22, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4
Bill cuts funding for
for-prot schools
By Amy Tsai
Staff Writer
A measure that aims to
restrict the ability of for-profit
schools to use federal money
for advertising has received
the backing of N.C. leaders
at both the state and federal
levels.
U.S. Sen. Kay Hagan,
D-N.C., reintroduced the
Protecting Financial Aid for
Students and Taxpayers Act
earlier this month.
The bill did not advance
past committee in the last
legislative session.
Last week, 14 attorneys
general, including North
Carolinas Roy Cooper, sent
a letter supporting the bill to
six Congress members.
This important legisla-
tion is a vital first step to curb
abusive and deceptive recruit-
ing and marketing practices
by the for-profit education
industry, the letter stated.
Coopers office received 54
complaints about for-profit
schools last year, according to
a press release.
Common student com-
plaints included that some
classes at for-profit schools
lacked accreditation or could
not be transferred to tradi-
tional universities.
UNC does not use federal
money to recruit prospec-
tive students, said Ashley
Memory, assistant director of
undergraduate admissions at
UNC.
The majority of recruit-
ment and advising money
comes from application fees,
she said.
We spent $180,000 (this
year) to design, write and
publish print and electronic
media that we use to com-
municate with prospective
students, she said.
The school does not use
television and radio advertise-
ments or mass mail to recruit
students, Memory said.
In fiscal year 2009, 15 of
the largest for-profit education
companies spent a total of $3.7
billion about 23 percent of
their combined revenues
on marketing and recruiting,
according to the letter.
A Senate committee also
reported that for-profit educa-
tion companies received, on
average, 86 percent of their
revenues from funding provid-
ed by the federal government.
The for-profit corporations
include ITT Educational
Services Inc., and DeVry
Inc., which have campuses in
North Carolina.
According to the report,
ITT spent $252 million,
about 19 percent of its rev-
enue, on marketing and
recruiting in fiscal year 2009.
DeVry spent $287.6 million,
19.7 percent of its revenue.
Still, Steve Gunderson,
president of the Association
of Private Sector Colleges and
Universities, said in a press
release that limiting adver-
tising money would reduce
access to higher education for
non-traditional students.
Without guidance coun-
selors in environments like
a workplace or battlefield,
the vast majority of our stu-
dents get information from
traditional advertising,
Gunderson said.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
our great shooters, who are
Reggie (Bullock), Leslie
(McDonald), and P.J.
But Williams doesnt want
his team to get too wrapped up
in those numbers as enticing
as they may be because the
Wildcats have shown this sea-
son that they can be an efficient
defensive squad.
The first part of the
Marquette game, they were so
good defensively it was ridic-
ulous, Williams said. Thats
the thing that jumped out
about that right there how
good they were defensively.
Villanova guard Ryan
Arcidiacono said the Wildcats
had worked on slowing down
UNCs perimeter attack
Thursday afternoon in prac-
tice and for the past couple
of days.
Wright conceded that his
players have struggled on
defense at times, but he said
that they have the right game-
plan its just a matter of
VILLANOVA
from page 1
formance on stage and selling
tickets, Joyner said.
Its also about understand-
ing these groups on a much
deeper level, and Millicent
and Kenneth fit this per-
fectly.
Julie Walters, an assistant
dance professor at Duke
University, performed in
Joffrey Ballets first re-cre-
ation of the ballet in 1987.
She said seeing the live
Rite of Spring performance
is much more compelling
than seeing it on film.
The dynamic of his
movement and the power
behind imagery and the
story Nijinsky was telling
was extremely moving for
audience members, she
said.
Walters said the dance
not so much the musical
score played the biggest
jOffrey bALLet
from page 1
courtesy of Herbert migdoll
The Joffrey Ballet will perform its version of Vaslav Nijinskys
original Rite of Spring ballet choreography this weekend.
Connie Hedgepeth, said.
But she always supported
the events and her tribe.
She enjoyed the fellowship
and seeing people she knew
visit and help celebrate with
us, Connie Hedgepeth said.
Randi Byrd, program
assistant for the UNC
American Indian Center,
said Saturdays powwow is
student-driven.
The whole day is going to
be a celebration of honoring
her celebrating who she
was as a student, member of
the Carolina family and mem-
ber of the Indian community
on campus, she said.
Byrd said students in the
Carolina Indian Circle decid-
ed to honor Hedgepeth in this
way because powwow culture
was such a big part of her life.
Connie Hedgepeth said
she appreciates that students
think so much of her daugh-
ter to hold the powwow.
She said the reminders can
be difficult, but she tries to go
to any event for her daughter.
Its a way of people letting
the public know or letting
authorities know that shes
not forgotten, and that we
want them to solve this case,
she said.
And Roland Hedgepeth said
he is happy to see his daughter
remembered this way.
Her death has gone from
everybody talking about it to
hardly no one talking about it
anymore, he said.
Im glad they are doing it
in honor of her and keeping
this alive.
POWWOW
from page 1
length of the current effort.
It inspires and reminds
students that were in it for
the long haul, Boss said. It
doesnt get won in a day, a
semester or even a year.
Students voted in February
to approve a referendum
encouraging divestment of
coal from UNCs $2.1 billion
endowment. Student Congress
also passed a resolution March
5 to support divestment.
But Boss said some students
hoped to present to the Board
of Trustees budget committee
at next weeks board meeting
and were told they could not.
The Anti-Apartheid
Support Group was formed on
campus in 1985 and worked
with other groups until the
University committed to
divestment in October 1987.
Among other protests, stu-
dents built a shantytown in
Polk Place to demonstrate the
conditions the black popula-
tion of South Africa faced.
You had to be almost will-
fully blind to not be caught by
the sight of it, Leloudis said.
Robert Reid-Pharr, who
graduated in 1987 and was
active in the campaign, said
about 10 students lived in
each shanty at a time.
DIVeStMeNt
from page 1
part in what made The Rite
of Spring historic.
The dance is what created
a lot of the conditions for the
scandal, as well as music, but
the dance is what moved the
audience, she said.
Its what they saw (that)
struck a chord and started a
lot of the rioting and commo-
tion in the audience.
Joe Florence, market-
ing manager for Carolina
Performing Arts, said Joffreys
performance contextualizes
the entire series.
This is the springboard
from which our whole season
emerged, Florence said.
If you see it in as close to
the original form as you ever
will, it helps contextualize
past performances, especially
more ambitious ones that
are inspired by the Rite of
Spring.
Contact the desk editor at
arts@dailytarheel.com.
AtteND tHe POWWOW
Time: Noon to 7:30 p.m.
Saturday
Location: Fetzer Hall
Info: bit.ly/f4Szlr
Both Roland and Connie
Hedgepeth said they will
attend the powwow as long as
weather allows them to travel
to Chapel Hill.
It saddens me that we even
have to have these events,
Roland Hedgepeth said.
But he said he is thankful
for those who remember his
daughter and help keep the
public aware.
Faith was a trooper, he
said.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
Rudi Colloredo-Mansfeld,
co-president of the Campus
Y during the time of the cam-
paign and now a professor of
anthropology at UNC, said
the shantytown was essential
in inspiring campus aware-
ness of an international issue.
We were connecting
through our economy to that
world, he said.
But when UNC officially
decided to divest, administra-
tors gave largely economic
not moral explanations.
The holdings were a
relatively tiny fraction of the
endowment, and the yield so
low, that in very practical busi-
ness terms it made sense to be
done with them, Leloudis said.
Many UNC administrators
were engaged with the stu-
dent protesters in the 1980s,
Reid-Pharr said something
student leaders of the coal
divestment campaign said is
not fully happening now.
We need administrators,
trustees, and the endowment
board to take a look seriously
and hear out students, Boss
said.
The apartheid divestment
campaign was well-known
nationally when UNC divest-
ed. About 155 colleges had
also at least partially divested
from South Africa.
Five schools have divested
from coal companies, said
Mary Schellentrager divest-
ment campaign coordinator of
the Energy Action Coalition.
Leloudis said UNC has his-
torically been open to debat-
ing big issues.
Better to be a place thats
tumultuous and where the
questions are asked than to
be a place thats placid and
quiet and refuses to reflect on
its obligations, he said.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
UNC NCAA tournament results with a low seed
1990 1996 2000 2004
SWeet
SIxteeN
2ND
rOUND
fINAL
fOUr
2ND
rOUND
UNC lost to
four seed
Arkansas
96-73.
The Tar Heels
were blown
out by Texas
Tech 92-73.
A Cinderella
UNC team
lost to Florida
71-59.
Texas deep
bench
turned UNC
away 78-75.
8 8 6 6
sticking to it.
We feel like weve got a
good scheme. We just feel
like we have not executed it
through the year Transition
defense, defending their 3s,
is really important, Wright
said. I think this will be as
good a 3-point shooting team
as weve played all year.
The Tar Heels hope to prove
Wright right, and Bullock said
that given the way the team
has been playing lately, UNC
may do just that.
Were playing our best
basketball right now as
a team, Bullock said.
Everybody has confidence in
each other. Weve grown as
a team by every game. Were
just listening and doing the
things that coach wants us
to do. So were growing as a
team right now.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
The Spanish Summer Immersion Program has The Spanish Summer Immersion Program has
been, without question, my favorite academic been, without question, my favorite academic
experience at UNC so far. As a student who never experience at UNC so far. As a student who never
took Spanish classes but always wanted to, the took Spanish classes but always wanted to, the
Immersion Program was a fast way for me to learn Immersion Program was a fast way for me to learn
the language quickly, but in a way even more the language quickly, but in a way even more
enriching than a regular language course. enriching than a regular language course.
The personal classroom experience created by the The personal classroom experience created by the
instructors makes it so easy for students to learn in instructors makes it so easy for students to learn in
a way that fosters group support and individual a way that fosters group support and individual
success. Even more, the instructors are some of the success. Even more, the instructors are some of the
leading Spanish educators at UNC and teach in a leading Spanish educators at UNC and teach in a
way that inspires interest from their students. way that inspires interest from their students.
If youre looking to learn Spanish quickly from If youre looking to learn Spanish quickly from
incredible teachers, consider the Spanish incredible teachers, consider the Spanish
Immersion Program. Its just one of the many Immersion Program. Its just one of the many
unforgettable experiences offered by Carolina. unforgettable experiences offered by Carolina.
summer.unc.edu
Spanish Immersion Program
Joseph Pietrafesa Joseph Pietrafesa
Sophomore, Undecided Sophomore, Undecided
The Critical Speaker Series
of the Department of English and Comparative Literature
presents
Joanna Picciotto
The University of California, Berkley
Lecture
Union Without End:
The Physico-Theological Vision
March 26, 3:30-5:00 pm Toy Lounge, Dey Hall
Seminar
Reading Creatures: Characters, Persons, People
March 27, 3:30-5:00 pm Donovan Lounge, Greenlaw Hall
Scan the QR code to download the readings for the Wednesday Seminar.
For more information about any of the events, please contact Eric Meckley at
meckley@email.unc.edu or David Baker at davidbak@email.unc.edu.
Friday, March 22, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 5
SportsFriday
Fencing for the title
Tar Heels
continue
success in
the ACC
dth/molly cogburn
Sophomore sabre fencer Gill Litynski is one of four UNC qualifiers for the NCAA Championships.
By Andrew Tie
Staff Writer
Although the North Carolina fencing
team qualified four fencers for the NCAA
Championships in San Antonio this week-
end, sophomore Gill Litynski will travel
alone.
The men departed Wednesday morn-
ing as their tournament began Thursday
and will end today, but Litynski will stay in
Chapel Hill a bit longer until the womens
tournament kicks off on Saturday.
Litynski, a sabre fencer, is the sole female
qualifier for UNC. The mens squad qualified
senior Joe Alter of the foil squad and two
from the sabre squad junior Sam Austin
and senior Jackson Bryant-Comstock.
Gill should finish top eight, potentially
top four if shes fencing well, assistant coach
Josh Webb said. Sam and Jackson peaked
at the right time. Joes left-handed, which is
an advantage. Hes also a little weird, which
is an advantage.
Litynski is excited to represent her squad.
As the only female UNC fencer going, I
want to make sure I get my name out there
and finish high enough to represent the
Four fencers head to Texas for
the NCAA Championships.
By Emily Fedewa
Staff Writer
The No. 1 North Carolina womens tennis
team is beginning the conference season in
dominating fashion.
After securing a 7-0 victory against Wake
Forest in February to open ACC play, the
Tar Heels moved to 2-0 in the conference on
Thursday with another win, this time beat-
ing No. 40 N.C. State in Raleigh, 4-3.
N.C. State played very well, and they were
very confident. The environment was very
challenging for us, but our team responded
extremely well, coach Brian Kalbas said.
The Tar Heels started off strong with an
8-4 win from the doubles team of Ashley
Dai and Zoe De Bruycker in the first of three
doubles matches.
Though a Wolfpack win in the second
doubles match made it seem as though the
momentum was shifting away from the Tar
Heels, the UNC duo of Whitney Kay and
Caroline Price pulled out the final doubles
match to give the Tar Heels the doubles
point.
I was happy to help the team out and get
that first point on the board because if we
hadnt gotten that, we might have a different
result right now, Price said.
Price is one of five Tar Heels still unde-
feated in singles play this season.
The Wolfpack pushed North
Carolina into a four-hour match.
See TENNIS, Page 9
WOMENS TENNIS: uNC 4, N.C.
STATE 3
whole school, Litynski said.
Webb said the four make up one of the
most complete groups that UNC has sent in
the past few years. While Webb expects the
male contingent to perform well, he expects
See FENCINg, Page 9
Fencing scoring guide
SOURCE: CAMILLA POWIERZA
DTH/RACHEL HOLT,
JENNIFER JACKSON, CECE PASCUAL
Foil
Epee
Sabre
Touch on any part of the body with the
tip of the weapon to win a point.
Hit the torso, groin and back (but not the
arms) with the weapon tip to win a point.
WEAPONS
Touch any part of the upper body
(except the hands) to win a point.
In collegiate fencing, fencers compete in three-minute bouts
of sparring that end once a player reaches ve points.
UNCs fencing team is sending four members of the squad to
the NCAA Championships in San Antonio. Heres a breakdown
of the matches they are competing in.
Downtown Chapel Hil l
942-PUM P
106 W. Franklin St.
(Next to Hes Not Here)
www.yogurtpump.com
A Tar Heel Favorite Since 1 982
A Tar Heel Favorite Since 1 982 A Tar Heel Favorite Since 1 982
Mon-Wed 11:30am-11:00pm
Thurs-Sat 11:30am-11:30pm
Sun Noon-11:00pm
I love Summer School. I wanted to apply to Kenan-Flagler
Business School, and many courses had many
prerequisites. So I strategically planned to take the
most difficult one (Econ 410) the summer after my
freshman year. After being accepted to Kenan-Flagler
my sophomore year, I decided to enroll in Summer
School again. I took the most difficult business
school class for me: Corporate Finance.
Sarah Pellegrino
Junior, Business Administration
summer.unc.edu
I went through Summer School because Economics and Finance are not my strongest
subjects, and I knew that focusing all my time on one class would be beneficial.
I believe that the grades I earned in my summer classes were better than they
would have been if I had taken these classes during a busy semester with
other classes. Summer School classes are fast paced, but with how
available the teachers are, both summers went really well!
I finished classes by 1:30 and had the rest of the day to work my summer
job and study. Theres nothing greater than a summer at Carolina!
Summer School
The Douglass Hunt Lecture of the Carolina Seminars,
supported by the Massey-Weatherspoon Fund.

THERITEOFSPRINGAT100.ORG 919.843.3333
HEAR
THE STORY
BEHIND
THE DANCE
CAROLINA PERFORMING
ARTS PRESENTS A TWO-PART
LECTURE ON RECONSTRUCTING
THE RITE OF SPRING, FEATURING
MILLICENT HODSON AND
KENNETH ARCHER.
C A R O L I N A P E R F O R M I N G A R T S P R E S E N T S
THE RITE OF SPRING AT 100
HISTORIC PLAYMAKERS THEATRE
PRIOR TO THE JOFFREY BALLET PERFORMANCES
SATURDAY MARCH 23
U
7:00 PM // FREE
SUNDAY MARCH 24
U
6:30 PM // FREE

Friday, March 22, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7 Friday, March 22, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6
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Carrboro is certainly eclectic, but it is unique because there is also a sense of community
here - and the laid-back lifestyle has so much to offer. Enjoy an afternoon beer on the
porch of Southern Rail, take a class at the ArtsCenter, or catch a concert at Cats Cradle.
Anyone venturing into Carrboro can fnd something to enjoy, whether its the Farmers
Market on Saturdays, shopping at the clothing and jewelry boutiques, or eating at some
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Parts of the Piedmont - it will be worth the trip.
SportsFriday Friday, March 22, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 8
By Aaron Dodson
Staff Writer
Between the North
Carolina wrestling teams
four coaches lie eight NCAA
Division I Championship
appearances and three
national titles.
Five Tar Heels the most
since UNC sent seven in 2009
are competing in this years
championships, which began
Thursday in Des Moines, Iowa.
But out of the five wrestlers
that earned bids, only one
sophomore Evan Henderson
has made a previous
appearance.
Coach C.D. Mock said the
experience of each coach at
the championships provides
his wrestlers with a unique
approach to the event. Along
with Ohio, UNCs contingent
is the youngest at the champi-
onships.
The coaches have two
different views both
extremely beneficial, Mock
said. Youve got a guy in Cary
Kolat who won a national
championship saying This
is how I did it and this is the
mentality to have. And youve
got both Trevor Chinn and
Dennis Papadatos saying
Look. I got here and didnt
get it done.
The Tar Heels are led by
Henderson, who claimed the
ACC title for his weight class
in early March and is the No.
5-ranked 141-pounder.
Freshman Nathan Kraisser
is ranked seventh in the 125-
pound weight class.
Redshirt freshman John
Staudenmayer and sopho-
more Alex Utley earned
automatic bids by both taking
third place in the 165-pound
and 184-pound weight classes
respectively at the ACC
Championships.
Despite losing all three of
his matches at the conference
championships, freshman
Joey Ward was awarded an
invitation just a week before
the team headed to Des
Moines.
Mock said Des Moines
has been transformed into
the mecca of wrestling for
the championships and has
brought a sense of stressful-
ness to his wrestlers.
But Kraisser said he is
ready to take on the chal-
lenge of wrestling in front
of a crowd much larger than
any Tar Heel has experienced
this season.
Ive watched the NCAAs
the past couple of years when
I was in high school, and even
going back to middle school,
he said. So to be here on such
a big stage is pretty exciting.
While Utley admitted to
being nervous, he stressed
the importance of controlling
his nerves and focusing on
wrestling.
Im not too nervous yet,
but know I will be tonight
and tomorrow morning,
Utley said on Wednesday.
But you have to be in charge
of those nerves in order to
wrestle well.
Given the youth of his
wrestlers, Mock said its natu-
ral for them to be complacent,
but he stressed that he wants
them to seize the opportu-
nity to compete in the NCAA
championships early in their
college wrestling careers.
When you have young
guys in a place like this,
theres always the danger that
their mentality goes, Well,
Ive got a few more years,
Mock said. The mindset they
have to have is, Im a fresh-
man, Im a sophomore and
nows the time to get it done.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
Wrestling
team preps
for nals
SOURCE: WWW.GOHEELS.COM, WWW.VILLANOVA.COM DTH/KEVIN UHRMACHER
The matchups
15
RYAN
ARCIDIACONO
PPG
RPG
35.1 34.9 %
8
12
2.1 2.7
5
MARCUS
PAIGE
22
JAYVAUGHN
PINKSTON
46
PPG
RPG
42.6 %
14.2
4.2
13.1
4.9
15
P.J.
HAIRSTON
PPG
RPG
44.1 %
8
2.5
4
DARRUN
HILLARD
39.6
2.7
11.2
32
JAMES
BELL
40.7
8.7
4.2
PPG
RPG
49.1 %
6.6
14.3
When UNC and Villanova play tonight,
both teams starters will be put to the test.
Below is a comparison of season averages
for each starter against his opponent.
PPG points per game
RPG rebounds per game
% shooting percentage
VILLANOVA
1
DEXTER
STRICKLAND 35
REGGIE
BULLOCK
13
MOUPHTAOU
YAROU
47.1
9.7
7.8
%
PPG
RPG
45.1
14.4
7.4
43
JAMES MICHAEL
McADOO
womens basketball
A BREAKDOWN OF ALBANY Vs. uNc
mens basketball
A BREAKDOWN OF ViLLANOVA Vs. uNc
Compiled by Henry GarGan Compiled by brandon moree
albany vs.
north Carolina
Villanova vs.
north Carolina
27-3, 16-0 ae 20-13, 10-8 big east 28-6, 14-4 aCC 24-10, 12-6 aCC
2:45 p.m. Sunday
newark, del.
broadcast: eSpn2
7:20 p.m.
Sprint Center
broadcast: TnT
HEAD-TO-HEAD HEAD-TO-HEAD
The Bottom Line North Carolina 70, Albany 57 The Bottom Line North Carolina 75, Villanova 70
The Great danes have 6-foot-8 megan Craig,
but UnC has 6-foot-6 senior Waltiea rolle,
alongside rebounding specialist Krista Gross
and the forceful interior presence of fresh-
man Xylina mcdaniel. Edge: uNc
Villanovas leading scorer, JayVaughn
pinkston, is listed as a forward, but hes
only 6-foot-6. UnC will still need a strong
effort on the glass as four of the Wildcat
starters are 6-foot-6 or taller. Edge: Push
Backcourt Backcourt
albany is a much better shooting team than
UnC on paper, shooting 45 percent from the
field and 36 percent from beyond the arc. but
the speed of UnCs guards on defense has
been key to its success all year. Edge: Push
UnC will be looking to take advantage of
the Wildcats weak 3-point defense and
continue the hot shooting performances it
had in Greensboro. if the shots start falling,
Villanova could be in trouble. Edge: uNc
Frontcourt Frontcourt
Bench Bench
Intangibles Intangibles
both megan buckland and latifah Coleman
are capable of giving UnC a big night offen-
sively from the one and two positions, while
danielle butts provides an athletic spark
defensively and on the boards. Edge: uNc
leslie mcdonald added another 3-point
threat to the lineup coming off the bench in
the aCC Tournament. That could be crucial
against Villanovas defense. most of UnCs
size comes off the bench. Edge: uNc
The sting of being denied a berth in the tour-
nament last season has not faded for UnC.
dont expect the Tar Heels to allow their
successful journey back to the top to go to
waste so soon. Edge: uNc
The Wildcats have more key wins on their
resume than UnC, including a win against
the tournaments top seed, louisville. but
that was in January, and UnC is peaking. its
march anything can happen. Edge: Push
SportsFriday Friday, March 22, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 9
By Daniel Wilco
Staff Writer
The North Carolina gym-
nastics team has come a long
way since the beginning of
the season.
But they wont have
to travel much farther to
compete in Saturdays East
Atlantic Gymnastics League
championship, which will be
held in Chapel Hill for the
first time since 2001.
The Tar Heels are in good
position heading into the
postseason, coach Derek
Galvin said.
The Tar Heels, who are in
third place in the conference
behind Maryland and N.C.
State, are looking forward to
displaying their improvement
against all eight East Atlantic
Gymnastics League teams.
It will be exciting to finally
put all the work that weve
done into one meet and show
everyone what weve got,
senior Elizabeth Durkac said.
The Tar Heels have placed
first in all four of their home
meets this year.
When youre flipping
and twisting and youve got
familiar visual cues, its easier
to know where you are in the
air, Galvin said. We dont
have to make that adjustment
and other teams do.
But the Tar Heels will have
to adjust to a different rota-
tion of events.
In a random selection pro-
cess before the season began,
the teams were assigned their
event order for the champi-
onship. UNCs first event will
be the uneven bars, followed
by the balance beam, the floor
exercise and, finally, the vault.
Unlike regular season
FENCING
from page 1
particularly high results from
Litynski, expectations the
sophomore believes she can
live up to.
In order to win the cham-
pionship, I would have to
have a pretty good day, but its
definitely not out of my range
of capabilities, she said.
Litynski has the advantage
of experience at the NCAA
Championships, having quali-
fied her freshman year. Alter
is returning for his second
trip, but the first since his
sophomore year.
They know how to pace
themselves, Webb said.
They understand that its a
tournament that ebbs and
flows. Theyre not going to be
overwhelmed.
Though Bryant-Comstock
is excited to be at the tour-
nament, he said he isnt sat-
isfied with just making it.
Even though its an honor
to be here, I do expect to do
well, Bryant-Comstock said.
The biggest thing for me is
approach it like any other
meet. Ive beaten these guys
before, so its not an insur-
mountable task.
As a newcomer to the
tournament, Bryant-
Comstock said hes comfort-
ed by having his teammates
with him to provide support
and encouragement.
But Litynski wont have
that luxury, and she admits
shes a little nervous.
When Im out there, Im
alone, she said. I have to
remember to stay focused and
know there are people sup-
porting me from home.
Webb said the key for
Litynski will be her focus.
Every once in a while, shell
fade off for a touch or two,
Webb said. This week, shes
been very sharp in what she
wants to do. Of the four, shes
probably got the best chance.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
UNC, No. 1 Maryland
to reprise ACC rivalry
Gymnasts chase
league title at home
tENNIs
from page 1
dth file/spencer herlong
Elizabeth Durkac, pictured here on the uneven parallel bars, has
been a consistent performer for UNC in all-around competition.
meets with two teams, teams
in this weekends meet have
four byes to space out event
competitions, and UNC will
be ending the meet on a bye.
I dont think anyone enjoys
sitting on a bye watching the
last rotation, because you
cant do anything about whats
going to happen, Galvin said.
Nonetheless, the team is
content with its situation
going into the meet.
Were reaching our peak
at this point in the season,
senior Maura Masatsugu said.
I expect us to have a fantastic
meet hopefully the best
one weve had so far.
But Galvin believes the
momentum the team is riding
on isnt enough to get the Tar
Heels where they want to be.
Weve had some outstand-
ing performances on each of
the events during the course
of the season. Weve only put
it all together twice, though,
Galvin said. So the mindset
is its time to put it all togeth-
er again on all four events.
The Tar Heels dont expect
location alone to put them
out of reach. Of the eight
teams competing in the event,
Galvin said he believes seven
have reasonable opportunities
to win the title.
I expect a very exciting
competition he said. There
are a couple of teams that
have a slight edge, but theyre
going to have to have a very
solid meet to keep those of us
that are chasing them at bay.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
By Max Miceli
Staff Writer
The North Carolina mens
lacrosse team has faced its
fair share of ranked oppo-
nents this season including
two teams in the top five.
But this weekend, when
the No. 14 Tar Heels travel to
College Park, Md., they will
face their toughest test yet in
a top-ranked Maryland team
that hasnt lost a game all
season.
Anytime you play the
number one team, theyre the
number one team for a rea-
son, coach Joe Breschi said.
We take it as a great chal-
lenge for our team.
In the last three years, the
ACC rivalry between UNC
and the Terrapins has been
competitive.
While UMd. has gotten the
best of the Tar Heels in the
last three post-season meet-
ings, UNC has won the last
three regular season games
between the two ACC foes.
Whenever the Tar Heels
and Terrapins play, the out-
come is always unpredictable,
but one thing can be assured
physicality.
Theres going to be some
contact for sure. Its not going
to be for the leery-eyed, senior
captain Marcus Holman said.
Its definitely going to be an
emotional game.
In last years contest, the
physicality went too far, when
an illegal hit from a Maryland
player on then-junior mid-
fielder Greg McBride in the
last minute of the game start-
ed a fight that resulted in the
ejection of two players.
McBride would prefer that
that not happen again, but he
did say its important that the
Tar Heels play with emotion.
Were still going to be
just as pumped as we were,
McBride said about this
years game in comparison
to the last. But at the same
time were going to be really
focused on not hurting the
team by getting penalties.
Along with staying out of
the penalty box, the Tar Heels
will have to find a way to get
the ball past 2012 All-ACC
goalkeeper Niko Amato and
a defense ranked third in the
nation in goals against.
To Holman, the keys for
UNCs offensive success
are playing fast and taking
advantage of opportunities.
Holman said he thinks
UNC matches up well with
the Terrapins on the offensive
end and stressed that the key
to getting past Amato was to
not worry too much about
shot placement.
If you go down that road,
guys start to think too much,
Holman said. Theyre wor-
ried about placing their shot
versus unloading it.
Finishing against a team
that on average gives up
less than seven goals will be
critical for the Tar Heels if
they want to come out top in
the rivalry game a rivalry
that even Holman admits he
doesnt totally understand.
It just seems like theres a
little bit of bad blood between
our teams, Holman said. I
The environment
was very challeng-
ing for us, but our
team responded
extremely well.
Brian Kalbas,
Unc womens tennis coach
Though she was delayed
in starting her singles match
because N.C. State only has
four indoor courts, Price
dominated her opponent in
a 6-0, 6-1 victory to keep her
unbeaten streak intact.
Last year, I was not a
dependable player. I was very
up and down, Price said. So
that was one of my goals this
year I wanted to be that
teammate that no matter
who we play, my team could
depend on me. It feels good to
know Im accomplishing that
goal so far this season.
Kalbas said Prices strong
singles play and reliability
have been great assets to the
team, and knowing the Tar
Heels can count on her in a
tough match gives them con-
fidence.
Shes been such a great
leader on the court this sea-
son staying focused and
playing aggressive tennis,
Kalbas said. It gives us so
much confidence that we can
win and takes a lot of pres-
sure off some of the other
players.
The Wolfpack tried to rally
for the upset late in the match
by forcing De Bruycker, Kay
and Dai into third set tie-
breakers.
Although De Bruycker and
Dai both ended with losses,
Kay stayed strong, defeating
the Wolfpacks Rachael James-
Baker 6-1, 6-7, 6-3 to secure
the win for the Tar Heels.
Kalbas said a tough road
win will benefit the Tar Heels
going into their last noncon-
ference match of the season
against Northwestern, a
team that has beaten North
Carolina two years in a row.
Its always tough to play
up there, Kalbas said. But I
think the fact that we played
in such a difficult environ-
ment today against a very
aggressive opponent will give
us some confidence.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
dont think they like playing
us, and we dont like playing
them. I cant exactly put my
finger on what it is though.
While Holman believes
Duke is UNCs biggest rival,
McBride admitted he cant
prove that their rivalry with
the Blue Devils is any greater
than the one with Maryland.
I dont think its a bigger
rivalry by any means, he said.
But I have a problem saying
that its a smaller rivalry.

Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
GAME prIMEr
14
UNC players from Maryland
22
games in a row that Marcus
Holman has scored a goal
0
wins for UNC when scoring
fewer than 10 points
6.83
UMd.s goals against average
25
UNC wins vs. ranked teams
in Breschis five-year tenure
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some artists travel the world for inspiration
others dont need to.
Friday, March 22, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 10
NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS
Deadlines are NOON one business day prior
to publication for classifed ads. We publish
Monday thru Friday when classes are in session.
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.
CHEAp TUx $89 TO OwN!
Undergrad special just $89 to purchase a
complete tuxedo. Formalwear Outlet 415
Millstone Drive in Hillsborough. 10 minutes
from campus. 919-644-8243.
Child Care Wanted
ExpERiENcED BABYSiTTER NEEDED imme-
diately M/W 2:30-6pm for 2 fun, imaginative
boys 7 and 11. We live close to campus. Sitter
must have own transportation and be willing
to drive to activities. Excellent driving record,
non-smoker and references required. $10/hr
+mileage. Email sallyvtaylor@gmail.com.
BABYSiTTER FOR 7 YEAR-OlD giRl Babysitter
needed for sweet daughter of English prof
in chapel Hill April and May. Very close to
UNc campus. 3 days/wk, 2:40-4:30pm (or
5:30pm). $300/mo. please call Florence Dore,
919-672-2149.
NEEDED: pART-TiME NANNY to assist
in caring for 3 month-old, weekdays
9-11am, 3 days/wk. Required to
travel with mom to run errands and
perform light housework. good
references and previous experience
caring for infants mandatory. $10/hr.
carolina.hurant@gmail.com.
ExpERiENcED BABYSiTTER NEEDED for
occasional weekday, daytime care of 6 month-
old infant. Own transportation a plus. Must be
non-smoker, okay with pet. References and
experience with infants required. $12.50/hr
+mileage. Email guimbjs@gmail.com.
NANNY NEEDED AUgUST, SEpTEMBER full-
time, M-F. infant care needed in our home.
Outstanding experience, clean criminal and
driving record and 3 exceptional references. We
dont want someone to bring their child to our
house. Degree in education or similar desired.
No smoking. liza.makowski@post.harvard.edu.
cHilD cARE AFTERScHOOl. Help! Need
somebody to supervise my almost
independent boys (ages 13 and 14)
every other week afterschool, making
sure they dont burn the house down
or push each other down the stairs and
keep them honest about homework
and computer use. current caregiver is
quitting due to her courseload. $13/hr.
919-951-9632.
cHApEl Hill FAMilY SEEkS child care
M-Th afternoons from 2:30-5:30pm and
occasionally until 6pm. Applicant needs
own car, clear driving record, provide refer-
ences. Responsibilities: Driving to activities,
errands, oversight of children. $13/hr.
donna.benjamin1031@gmail.com.
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.
UNiVERSiTY cOMMONS 4BR/4BA: 2 desirable
top level units available on 6/1/13 and
8/1/13. Free bus. All utilities included.
Only $1,600/mo. for whole unit or
$425 per suite. cchang_1234@yahoo.com.
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VILLAgE gREEN
2BR/2.5BA located 220 Elizabeth Street near
Franklin Street and UNc. pool, tennis, busline.
Quiet, beautiful complex. W/D in unit. Walk to
campus. $950/mo. 12 month lease available
7/1. Email SMFc@att.net, 828-734-1535.
SOUTHERN VillAgE FURNiSHED 1BR
apartment! perfect for grad, med student.
Full kitchen, W/D, large rooms, big windows,
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Available 4/1/13. No smoking, no pets.
lb107@duke.edu.
lOVElY 3BR/2B HOME ON WOODED lot. lots
of windows, convenient to i-40 this open foor
plan features freplace, hardwood foors thru
house, large deck. pets negotiable with fee.
$1,390/mo. contact Fran Holland properties:
fhollandprop@gmail.com, 919-968-4545.
$400/MO. pER BEDROOM in legal
6BR/5BA townhouse. 4 buslines, minutes
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storage, free parking, non-smoking.
spbell48@gmail.com, 919-933-0983.
FUllY FURNiSHED 2BR TOWNHOME in Oaks
condos available for short and long term lease.
Different terms for different time periods. great
location, close to Friday center, on busline.
Bring your suitcase and move in. Email Fran
Holland properties at fhollandprop@gmail.com
or call 919-968-4545.
HOUSE FOR RENT
wALk TO UNC!
Newly remodeled 5BR/3BA house for rent
for 2013-14 school year. All NEW: kitchen,
appliances, lighting fooring, paint! covered
patio in back yard for hanging out with friends!
704-995-4184.
STUDiO ApARTMENT: charming, quiet, sunny
and unique. Studio apartment facing trees,
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campus. $625/mo. includes water and internet.
No smoking. No pets. Years lease. Available
May or June 919-967-4406.
5BR/2BA cONDO in triplex. 611 Hillsborough
Street. completely remodeled, hardwoods,
tile throughout, new appliances, W/D, near
bus stop, $2,625/mo. Available August 2013.
704-277-1648 or uncrents@carolina.rr.com.
4BR/4BA UNiVERSiTY cOMMONS condo.
New carpet and paint, $1,400/mo.
All utilities and internet included. On
busline. contact Fran Holland properties at
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cONVENiENT TO lAW AND MEDicAl schools.
grad or prof students. 3BR/1.5BA ranch in
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carport, hardwood foors, bus nearby. East
cHH, culbreth, glenwood, $1,390/mo. (pets
negotiable). contact Fran Holland properties,
fhollandprop@gmail.com.
SUBlETER NEEDED: For rent: Furnished
bedroom, private bathroom. $400/mo.
+utilities. 2 undergrads looking for 3rd
roommate. Easy access to multiple buslines.
Email: matthew.love29@gmail.com.
UNiVERSiTY cOMMONS 4BR/4BA.
$1,600/mo. includes: UTiliTiES walk
in closet, internet, furnished living and
dining. J, D lines. Available 8-1-2013.
919-923-0630. For application, email:
NolAloha@nc.rr.com.
UNiVERSiTY cOMMONS $1,600/MO
includes utilities. Walk in closet, internet,
furnished living and dining J, D lines
Available 8-1-2013. 919-923-0630,
application: email:NolAloha@nc.rr.com.
For Sale
BOOkS: Hysteria Molt echoes the great writers
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They may never forgive her for it. Some people
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gUlF SHRiMp iN cHApEl Hill: i bring premium
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www.louisianaFreshShrimp.com.
Help Wanted
THE cAROliNA clUB. part-time receptionist:
The ideal candidate possesses a friendly,
outgoing personality, positive attitude, strong
focus on customer service, outstanding
communication skills, attention to detail,
the ability to multitask, work independently
and strong computer skills. general hours
will be Tuesday thru Saturday evenings with
occasional Sundays and weekday mornings,
in a professional, upscale setting within
the george Watts Hill Alumni center on
the UNc campus. Email cover letter and
resume to elizabeth.cheek@ourclub.com. No
phone calls. EOE.
JApANESE TRANSlATOR NEEDED for
family history project. Rate negotiable.
919-933-5824.
RAlEigH lAW FiRM seeking graduate to work
minimum 1 year in full-time courier position
beginning in May. Reliable vehicle required.
Email resume to law@jordanprice.com.
THE cHApEl Hill-cARRBORO YMcA is seeking
a self starter to fulfll a maintenance position.
We are looking for someone with the ability
to follow directions and to take the initiative
when maintenance issues arise. The position
will be on a variable schedule with morning
and evening hours based on need. Days will
typically be M-F with occasional weekends, but
availability to respond to situations 24 hours
a day is a plus. $10-$12/hr based on experi-
ence. Experience in light plumbing, carpentry,
vehicle repair, and HVAc systems preferred.
Applications can be found on our website,
www.chcymca.org; or you can apply at the
chapel Hill branch at 980 Mlk Blvd. Send
applications to nchan@chcymca.org or turn in
at the Y. EOE.
YARD AND HOUSE MAiNTENANcE. Next
week beginning 1,000 square foot deck. Need
muscles. 4 miles from campus, in woods,
on water. Must be student. $10/hr with
possible raise. Flextime. Robert and Rebecca.
919-967-0138.
RESEARcH ASSiSTANT NEEDED for Duke
clinical Research Study. Duties include
physiological monitoring, data entry and
data processing. Bachelors degree required.
please send resume and cover letter to
lauren.egger@duke.edu.
gYMNASTicS iNSTRUcTOR: chapel Hill
gymnastics has part-time positions available
for energetic, enthusiastic instructors.
Applicants with knowledge of gymnastic
terminology and progression skills preferred,
but will train right candidate. Send a resume
to margie@chapelhillgymnastics.com.
NEigHBORHOOD pUB in Durham seeking day
bartender, hours 9am-6pm. Must have 2 years
bartending experience, trustworthy, fexible,
energetic and transportation. Forward resume,
letter::kbpaw_21@msn.com.
pAiD AccOUNTiNg iNTERNSHip: University
Directories is seeking a student for a summer
accounting internship. candidates must have
numbers or fnance inclination, possess strong
communication skills, be profcient in Excel,
detail oriented, able to work independently.
Apply to Mary: myow@ucampusmedia.com.
EDiTOR WANTED: Nc publisher seeks editor.
Develop, edit manuscripts written by self
publishers. part-time, paid per project.
Responsible individual who can creatively
rewrite, develop manuscripts. pO Box 3581,
chapel Hill, Nc 27515.
YARD WORkER NEEDED: Must be strong (able
to lift 60 pounds), experienced and have own
transportation. $13/hr. 919-929-4220.
cOMpUTER SciENcE iS SEEkiNg a student
to work part-time 5-10 hours/wk starting
now and continuing through fall and spring,
summer optional. Experience with computers
desired. Training provided. interested? contact
bill_hays@unc.edu. 919-627-1765.
YOUTH BASEBAll UMpiRES: Town of carrboro.
Needed March thru June for games played M-F
evenings and Saturday days for ages 6-15.
Training provided, umpiring experience and/or
baseball knowledge preferred. 4-10 games/wk.
pay rate: $16-$24/game. Open until flled. For
more info call 918-7364. For an application visit
www.townofcarrboro.org. EOE.
Internships
pAiD iNTERNSHip: University Directories is
seeking students for client relations summer
internship. candidates must be energetic, driven
and possess strong communication skills. Visit
www.universitydirectories.com for info or apply
to calin at cnanney@ucampusmedia.com.
Lost & Found
lOST: kEYS. Near UNc hospital. chevy keys,
key fob, string of colored plastic beads, bottle
opener, kinetix card. plEASE email or call:
collini4519@bellsouth.net, 919-260-0490.
Misc. Wanted
ExcEpTiONAl Egg DONOR NEEDED:
$15,000 compensation +all expenses paid.
graduate from university or attending.
Outstanding SAT, AcT and/or gRE
scores. please help. f.sherman@nccrm.com.
919-233-1680 ext. 121.
Egg DONOR
OF kOREAN DESCENT
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Roommates
ROOM FOR RENT: Female looking for a
roommate in 2BR/1BA apartment. Furnished
minus bedroom. close to campus. $375/mo.
+utilities. usmanova@live.unc.edu.
MILL CREEk ApARTMENT
on Martin luther king Jr. Blvd. in need of a
subleter for Fall 2013. Townhouse style.
Walk to campus. Near bus stop. Full kitchen.
WD. parking space included. Rent: $475/mo.
+utilities. contact kmreilly@live.unc.edu,
978-609-6247.
CALDwELL STREET HOUSE
in need of 2 subleters for June thru July 2013.
Duplex style. Walk to campus. Near bus
stop. Full kitchen and laundry room. parking
space included. $575/mo. +utilities. contact
lizcrampton18@gmail.com, 503-508-7137.
SUMMER SUBlET 5BR/3BA. professor
subletting nice house in quiet neighbor-
hood. 10 minutes to campus. Between
approximately late June and early August.
Write: jk247@duke.edu.
Summer Jobs
SUMMER LEASINg
SUpERSTAR!
Join our wonderful team at the Evergreens
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professional. Must be energetic, able to
multi task, excellent with customer service
and sales, dependable and able to work
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Experience working with youth and/or children
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August 9. Open until flled. For more info,
call 918-7364. For an application visit our
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seeks staff for Artscamp from June thru
August. Hiring 1 full-time manager and 2
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www.artscenterlive.org/about-tac/employ-
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Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 9 -- Youre irresistible this
month. in the face of sudden changes,
go for substance, not smoke & mirrors.
Dont forget to express gratitude.
Dont take what youve got for granted.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8 -- Youre becoming even
more attractive. catch up on the latest
news from friends. Talk about what
projects you could be playing on
together. Think about how your
friendship can help everyone proft.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8 -- What goes around
comes around, in the form of a surprising
opportunity. Accept an assignment with
a bonus. Youll need to fnd safe places
to stash your new treasure. Share a
fantastic meal to celebrate.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 9 -- For several weeks, your
mind is on social activities. Share details
with partners. pay debts and cash in
coupons so you can splurge on some
glitter. get out for a change of scenery.
Reach for the stars.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 -- its easy to venture forth
for a while, w/ Venus in Aries. Travel
calls. You get more done in private.
Handle new assignments w/ ease & then
take time off. love fnds a way.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is an 8 -- its okay to hide in your
shell for now, but dont forget to come
out for fresh air. You may be pleasantly
surprised, especially in the romance
department. Joint funds do well.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Theres no time to
be lazy with all that work coming in.
compromise is easy and partnerships
thrive. Appreciate your team and reward
their efforts. in the end, love prevails.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 9 -- The next three weeks
are good for achieving romantic goals.
Theres more opportunity coming in,
too; the kind you like. Social events take
priority. Be charming.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8 -- Youre very lucky these
days. Be receptive to bold advances,
without waste. clean up messes. Make
the best choice. Family roots run quite
deep. Dress up and get out for a visit.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is an 8 -- Home and family take
priority, so get serious about nesting. get
practical for the next two days. Accept
more responsibility. Ask probing ques-
tions for a lucky break. listen & learn.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8 -- Trust your heart. Study
is fun for the next month. Writing and
recording projects thrive. Speed up the
pace to increase your income; there could
be an unpleasant fnancial surprise. Quiet
productivity is best.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is an 8 -- Youre in the zone this
month, and the ducats fow in. Work
fows especially well over the next two
days. Friends help fnd the best partner,
in a stroke of genius. Offer advice only if
asked. Share encouragement.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If March 22nd is Your Birthday...
Slow down and savor flavors this year. planning
helps w/ this & allows for financial savings. launch
a project before summer, while communication
energy flows fast. Travel and education call in late
spring, and home projects take more importance
after. Share love with family and friends.
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

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SportsFriday Friday, March 22, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 11
For-profit school limits
The N.C. attorney general
is asking Congress to limit
how for-profit schools can
spend. See pg. 4 for story.
School of Medicine
U.S. News & World
Report gave UNCs school
a top ranking in its latest
issue. See pg. 3 for story.
A Little Knight Musical
Company Carolina pres-
ents a magical tale featur-
ing dragons and a princess.
See pg. 3 for story.
Coming next week
Pick up a Daily Tar Heel
on Monday to read full cov-
erage of UNCs basketball
teams NCAA play.
games
Solution to
Thursdays puzzle
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
2013 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
(C)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACross
1 Circa
7 Snack brand with a
monocled mascot
15 Retire
16 One of a kind
17 Army mints?
19 Bug
20 Plural Spanish pronoun
21 Emus extinct kin
22 Fleming and crime
writer Rankin
24 Smidgen
27 Endow
29 Temperamental Midler
impersonators?
33 Estate item
35 Got it!
36 Student of Elves, in
Tolkien
37 Penalize a Russian
leader?
41 Blast
44 Shrimp
45 __ Galilee
49 Poll on where to sink the
eight ball?
53 Down
54 Inner Hebrides isle
55 Cheers
accountant
57 Texters
afterthought lead-
in
58 Accounts
62 More than just calls
64 Seasonal shade of
pink?
68 Semisoft cheese
with an orange
rind
69 Titillating
70 Recordings are made in
them
71 Jimmy follower
Down
1 Provider of bucks
2 Catastrophic
3 City saved by Joan of
Arc
4 Troop group
5 1930s-40s Chicago
Outfit enforcer
6 Crime-solving locale
7 Pull with effort
8 Behind
9 Seed cover
10 Chemists salt
11 Teahouse floor covering
12 Not forthcoming
13 Rocker Ocasek
14 Old draft org.
18 Pierces co-star in The
Thomas Crown Affair
21 Museum curators deg.
23 Cheese with which port
is traditionally served
25 Salon offering
26 Setting for Columbus:
Abbr.
28 OED entry
30 Grizabella creators
monogram
31 Bards adverb
32 Agnus __: Mass prayers
34 Flag
38 Aficionado
39 P.O. purchase
40 Neighbor of Colo.
41 SUV option
42 Hunky-dory
43 Bush hooks, e.g.
46 Banff National Park
locale
47 Defeat in the regatta
48 Hardly hordes
50 Team of Rivals author
Doris __ Goodwin
51 One-third of a WWII
film
52 Backspace key, at times
56 Minuscule
59 Actress Virna
60 Joss this
61 Acronymous
submachine
gun
63 Procrastinators word
64 Trans __
65 Stick around a pool hall?
66 Union title, often
67 Calculator display, for
short
Tar Heels eager to make NCAA run
By Henry Gargan
Assistant Sports Editor
This time last year, North
Carolina womens basketball
coach Sylvia Hatchell and the
NCAA were on poor terms.
But as UNC heads into
its first-round game Sunday
against Albany as a three seed
a year later, Hatchell seems
to have reconciled her differ-
ences with the selection com-
mittee.
A lot of people were sur-
prised, but I wasnt, she said
of UNCs high seeding. Were
28-6, and of the six games we
lost, three were to Duke, and
then at FSU, at Tennessee and
at Maryland all top-ranked
teams on the road. We had no
bad losses at all.
I agree with the commit-
tee. I think we deserve the
three seed.
Although they bowed out
early to Georgia Tech in last
years ACC Tournament,
the Tar Heels still felt they
deserved a national tourna-
ment bid. But the NCAA
selection committee didnt
agree, and its been a sore
point that has motivated this
years squad from day one.
Not making the tourna-
ment is just not acceptable
at all, senior forward Krista
Gross said in October before
this season began. But thats
all just fuel to the fire. Were
definitely expecting to come
in and do some damage.
Now, a year after ending
its season prematurely, UNC
finds itself near the top of
the Bridgeport, Conn., region
bracket and leaves today for
Newark, Del.
Should UNC defeat 14th-
seeded Albany, it will face on
Tuesday either sixth-seeded
Delaware or West Virginia,
the regions No. 11 seed.
Maryland is the regions
four seed, and could conceiv-
ably meet the Tar Heels for
the fourth time this season in
the Elite Eight.
Hatchell said she was
pleased with the path granted
to her team, but its hard to
imagine the Tar Heels com-
plaining either way.
Around this time last year,
people were pretty much
ready for the season to be
over, senior guard Tierra
Ruffin-Pratt said. With this
team, everybody wants to
keep playing. Nobodys ready
dth file/Spencer herlong
Krista Gross, 21, takes a shot against Duke in the ACC Tournament
championship game. Gross scored eight points in UNCs 92-73 loss.
for the season to be over, and
the younger kids arent ready
for the seniors to leave.
UNCs main focus,
Hatchell said, will be return-
ing to form after two weeks
away from competition.
But she said practices have
been designed to keep her
team sharp. And unlike last
years injury-depleted team,
sophomore guard Latifah
Colemans knee pain is the
Tar Heels only real medical
concern.
Gross added that UNCs
recent experience in the
ACC Tournament final has
the younger Tar Heels well-
prepared for the upcoming
high-stakes games.
A year ago today, we
werent in practice, Gross
said. I was probably in my
room asleep right now. Its
just a whole different vibe
everybodys excited and really
expecting to do well.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
INSIDE: Turn to page 8 to see
a breakdown of UNC and Albany
leading up to their Sunday game.
UNC will play its first-
round game at
2:45 p.m. on Sunday.
Reli
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ious
Directory
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214 Pittsboro St. - Across from the Carolina Inn
919- 942-2152 uncwesley.org
Sunday: 7pm Worship, 201 Chapman
Monday: 11:30am-1:00pm Lunch at Lenoir
Thursday: 6pm Dinner & Program, at Wesley
Also: Fellowship, Spiritual Growth Groups,
Service Opportunities, Alternative Spring Break,
Music Groups, Residential Community
Amanda Dean, Campus Minister
Welcome! Welcome!
To the Chapel Hill
Christian Science
Church
CSChapelHill.org
christianscience.com
1300 MLK, Jr. Blvd.
919-942-6456
NewContemporaryWorship Service
Mount Carmel Church
2016 Mt Carmel Church Rd.,
Chapel Hill, NC 27517
919-933-8565
www.mcbc1803.org
Coffee and snacks served at 8:45am
Contemporary Worship service 9:00am
MASS SCHEDULE
Saturday: 5:15pm
Sunday: 9am, 11am & Student Mass at 7pm
919-929-3730 218 Pittsboro St., CH
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PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIEDS ONLINE! WWW.DAILYTARHEEL.COM/CLASSIFIEDS
Daily schedule available at http://binkleychurch.org
Binkley Baptist Church
is hosting the
Ecumenical Holy Week Labyrinth
March 24-29
The labyrinth is an ancient spiritual tradition
in many faiths - an inward pilgrimage.
Visitors are encouraged
to walk at their own pace, pause,
reflect, and pray.
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Fri: 9:20 Sat: 4:10, 9:20
Sun: 7:00 Tue-Thu: 9:20
LINCOLN J
Fri & Sat: 6:50, 9:30 Sun: 4:30, 7:10
Tue & Wed: 6:50, 9:30 Thu: 9:30
ARGO K
Sat: 7:10 Sun: 4:40 Tue & Thu: 7:10
The Varsity Theatre
123 E. Franklin Street, Chapel Hill 967-8665
www.varsityonfranklin.com
Movie Showtimes for Week 3/22-3/28- All Movies $4.00
CLOSED MONDAY
WE WANT YOU
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We are looking for dedicated individuals to be senior class marshals. Help make our last
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found online at 2014.unc.edu. Deadline to apply is Monday, March 25, at 5 p.m.
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www.tarheeldentistry.com
Opinion Friday, March 22, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 12
EDITorIal BoarD mEmBErs
Established 1893, 120 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATUrED OnlinE rEADEr cOMMEnT
Reality is that Israel is
an apartheid state
TO THE EDITOR:
UNC Students for
Justice in Palestine
hosted Israeli Apartheid
Week with the intent
of examining the situa-
tion in Palestine from a
viewpoint that more accu-
rately depicts the ongoing
Palestinian struggle.
Our events have attract-
ed a diverse audience,
including the three guest
columnists on Tuesday
speaking out against our
use of apartheid.
We have created an open
forum where everyone is
welcome to contribute, and
the issue has never seen so
much attention on campus.
Our use of the term
apartheid stems from the
realities in Israel/Palestine,
where Jewish-only roads
and settlements strangle
the villages of the West
Bank, where the native
population is tyrannized
through an aggressive
military occupation, where
buses are segregated by
the color of ones ID card,
where native Palestinians
are classified as present
absentee and given fewer
rights than Jewish citizens
just as in South Africa.
The comparison is not
new; Hendrik Verwoerd,
former South African prime
minister, said in 1961: The
Jews took Israel from the
Arabs after the Arabs had
lived there for a thousand
years. Israel, like South
Africa, is an apartheid
state.
Israel is an apartheid
state just as South Africa
was for many decades.
Shaking ones head in
denial of this simple fact
does not change reality, but
accepting it and using this
premise as a starting point
for conversation has proven
to be fruitful on campus.
Samer Hjouj 13
President
Students for Justice in
Palestine
Article on local vinyl
missed Back Door CDs
TO THE EDITOR:
Your article this morn-
ing about the local record
store scene is very timely
and informative. Vinyl
sales have increased dra-
matically since the younger
generation has discovered
sound quality over conve-
nience, analog is always
warmer and richer than
digital.
I see your writer covered
stores in Raleigh, Durham,
Chapel Hill and Carrboro,
but you left out a true gem
located right across the
street from your offices!
Back Door CDs Records
and Tapes, located at 136
E. Rosemary St., has been
in business for years, and
they have a great selection
of music. Give them a try
and expand your musical
horizons.
Rusty Rogers
UNC Institute for the
Environment
lETTErS TO
THE EDiTOr
As long as your background shows you can
handle the quantitative side, a liberal arts
major can actually be a big advantage.
doubleEwe, on the importance of quantitative classes
(Faith Hedgepeths) death has gone from
everybody talking about it to hardly no
one talking about it anymore.
Roland Hedgepeth, on his daughter, who was killed in September
EDiTOriAl cArTOOn By Daniela Madriz, daniela.madriz@gmail.com
Taking
the long
way
home
T
he distance between my
room and the classroom
has, historically, been
measured with swearing. Im
usually half-awake and late for
class. It is not a pleasant time.
But this semester my
last here Im beginning to
appreciate that distance more.
Not coincidentally, this
column comes with the
inauguration of spring in
Chapel Hill, a town famous for
springtime. The azaleas are
beginning to percolate pink,
bulbs poke up awkwardly and
lying on the quad feels (is)
more productive than making
it to class.
My appreciation for walking
began, however, not by choice.
Last spring, the love of my life
my bike, named T-Pain
was stolen.
I started walking to
class every day, an act most
people already do, but one
that requires a bit more
mindfulness than busing or
biking. The 30-minute hike
wore an observing groove into
my day that hadnt been there
before.
Theres no other time when
I would keep season with the
changing window displays,
sync schedules with the dog
walkers or stop to pet the
bookstore cats on Franklin
Street. (Side note: The cats
couldnt care less that I exist,
but its still worth it.)
Walking became an
obsession beyond the small
cartography of home-to-
campus. I began to understand
better the baffling reason why
suburban moms always seem
to get up at 5 a.m., just to walk.
Theres a lot to forget in a
college town. The markers
of quintessential Chapel Hill
come ready-made in glossy
pamphlets. We began to
reduce an understanding of
place with that one token bar,
that one pizza place.
And that is a part of Chapel
Hill, yes but its also a wide
panorama, found not just on
one street or ZIP code but in
the ecosystem of Durham, the
Triangle, North Carolina. We
know this.
But the reaction to the
DTHs recent article about
crime highlighted the inherent
tension located in a sense of
place, and how well we do or
dont know it.
As college students, we are
pandered to by the phrase
best four years that positions
us more as tourists than locals.
But going to a public university
funded by the state requires
some sense of ownership of
that state an ownership
realized not in entitlement, but
in getting-to-know.
A liberal arts degree isnt
something to be confined
behind classroom doors, but it
is also what we learn equally
from: a landscape where buses
keep running, shops open on
schedule and streetscapes are
filled with the well-lit windows
of daily life. To be not just an
observer of this, but a good par-
ticipant: Theres the challenge.
Its not a challenge met
merely by walking to class. The
people I look up to most are
(appropriately) the kind of peo-
ple who look up. And around.
By the divine interven-
tion of the Bike Gods, I got
T-Pain back. And in the end,
the medium of transportation
doesnt matter as much as the
mindset. But for now, I think
I ll try walking.
3/25: BLACKWOMANHOOD
Averi Harper honors Womens
History Month.
N
E
X
T
Sarah Edwards
Down Home Girl
Senior American studies major from
Davidson.
Email: scedward@live.unc.edu
SPEAK OUT
WRItIng guIDelInes
Please type: Handwritten letters will not be accepted.
Sign and date: No more than two people should sign letters.
Students: Include your year, major and phone number.
Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number.
Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit
letters to 250 words.
suBMIssIOn
Drop-off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary Street, Chapel
Hill, N.C. 27514
E-mail: opinion@dailytarheel.com
eDItORs nOte: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily
represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect
the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which is made up of
eight board members, the opinion editor and the editor.
Kvetching board
kvetch:
v.1 (Yiddish) to complain
So we send our solid waste
to Durham and they send
us their criminals? Seems
like a fair trade to me.
To the guy in my music class
picking Duke to win it all: I
hope you choke on a stale
marshmallow.
To all my friends who
werent eating in
preparation for spring
break: You literally only
lost weight in your boobs.
#suckstosuck
Gary Birdsong: making sure
theres one thing to hate
about beautiful spring days
since 1982.
Frat boys: Nobody gets a
chubbie when you wear
your Chubbies.
To the professor in the
knee-length purple blazer
outside Greenlaw: Why so
serious?
To the person in Davis
who bought the vending
machine tuna: Thank you
for making everyone within
100 feet want to vomit.
To my roommates troll
of a boyfriend who wont
move out of our room:
Wingardium Leviosa!
Every time that I watch
Marcus Paige play on the
court I feel like Im watching
the 2002 cinema classic
Like Mike.
So is DPS took my home-
work a valid excuse?
Just got my free Kildares
appetizer coupon in my
inbox. Well played, universe.
Dear yoga pants: Thank you.
To the giant raccoon I saw
outside the Student Stores
struggling to carry half a
pizza in its mouth: Dont
give up. Dont ever give up.
To the barefoot student
walking from the Pit to Da-
vis: I hope you fnd a book
on hookworms and read it.
To the the hungover frat
star who came in to my
POLI 150 class 10 minutes
late and in a green polo:
Top O the mornin to ya!
To my dance partner: How
about next time I teach you
how to shag?
As a woman sitting in the
back of lecture watching the
NCAA live stream, I think its
fair to judge the fact that
none of the men are watch-
ing. Seriously? Represent.
It seems like the dining halls
either serve nothing that
I want to eat or all of my
favorites at once.
When Dick Vitale says
Carolina should have gotten
points, you know the refs
are crap.
To all the overweight men
who think they look cool
with a shaved head: You
look like Mr. Potato Head
from the back.
To the rude Davis smoker:
Not only am I annoying you
about your smoking, I am
also the grader for one of
your classes. Enjoy the rest
of the semester.
Send your one-to-two
sentence entries to
opinion@dailytarheel.com,
subject line kvetch.
anDy Thomason EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
ChElsEa PhIPPs OPINION CO-EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
naThan DamBrosIo OPINION CO-EDITOR
sanEm kaBaCa ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR
NAYAB kHAN
TREY MANGuM
zACH GAVER
MATTHEW OAkES
kAREEM RAMADAN
PATRICk RYAN
CODY WELTON
SIERRA WINGATE-BEY
cOlUMn
P
resident Barack
Obamas historic visit
to Jerusalem means
the U.S. is back in the two-
state solution game. Now we
must do our part.
In a striking display of
leadership, Obamas speech
on Thursday laid out the
path to a lasting end to the
Israeli/Palestinian conflict.
In the speech, the president
acknowledged the importance
of decisive leadership on the
part of America, Israel and
Palestine. He asserted that
peace is possible, affirming
that there is a true partner in
President (Mahmoud) Abbas
and Prime Minister (Salam)
Fayyad of the Palestinian
Authority.
But most importantly, he
called on all of us to help end
the conflict. I can promise
you this: Political leaders
will not take risks if the
people do not demand that
they do. You must create the
change that you want to see.
Now more than ever, we
must all work together to
be that change. On campus,
this means working together
to educate, discuss and build
power, and to avoid creating
an atmosphere of division.
It means resisting wan-
tonly antagonistic politics
while searching for common
ground, alliance and action.
Yet too often, we all get
distracted by campus-level
disagreements, and we miss
Josh Orol, lauren Donoghue
and Jacob Plitman
J Street uNC outreach chairman
and co-presidents
Email: jstreetunc@gmail.com
possibilities for cooperation.
This week, UNC Students
for Justice in Palestine hosted
Israeli Apartheid Week, a
global initiative aiming to
educate people about the
nature of Israel as an apart-
heid system and to build
boycott, divestment and
sanctions (BDS) campaigns
as part of a growing global
BDS movement.
We deeply sympathize
with efforts to explicate the
plight of the Palestinians
under occupation. But the
events of apartheid week
blaming Israel alone for per-
petuating an unjust system
ignored the true nature of
the conflict: Israel proper
is not an apartheid (racially
separated) state, as Arab
members of the elected
Israeli parliament and
Supreme Court demonstrate.
And while the Israeli occu-
pation of Palestine is unjust
on many levels and involves
segregation and separation
that should trouble us all, it is
just that: a military occupa-
tion, not apartheid.
Eyeing the occupation only
through the lens of apartheid
does not provide students
with viable steps toward
peace. It divides us, leaving
us arguing over who holds
responsibility and whose
narrative is true, rather than
working together.
Most importantly, it
obscures a crucial fact: The
two-state solution is the
most preferred solution
by the majority of Israelis,
Palestinians and Americans.
We must come together
for a secure Israel and a
future state of Palestine.
Only united as a campus
and a nation-wide pro-peace
movement can we achieve
our goals: an end to the
occupation, a secure, demo-
cratic Jewish homeland and
the fulfillment of national
self-determination for the
Palestinians.
We call on every student
with a commitment to peace
and human rights to help
focus the campus climate on
the rights, dignity and secu-
rity needs of both peoples.
J Street UNC will be host-
ing open, dialogue-based
educational events on a
bimonthly basis for the rest
of this semester.
We invite everyone into
thoughtful action with us
behind President Obama.
Students must act to support Obamas vision for Israel/Palestine.
Apartheid misguides
cOlUMn
P
ast societies have
battled bitterly over
power, ideology and
access to resources. Wars of
the 20th century were fought
over oil, but some scholars
believe the 21st centurys
wars will be sparked by a
different resource water.
Water wars conjures
up images of deserts and
unstable governments. Water
conflict is for the Nile and the
Jordan rivers, and certainly
not for the U.S. If disputes do
arise, they happen along the
Colorado River in the Wild
West, where water is scarce.
Think again. Alabama,
Florida and Georgia have
been locked in a legal war
since 1990, with temporary
agreements failing
constantly. In 2007, water
scarcity became so dire that
the governor of Georgia led a
statewide prayer for rain.
North Carolina is not off
the hook; our state has been
in conflict over this resource
with Virginia, South
Carolina and Tennessee.
In response to global water
disputes and the need for
greater collaboration, the
United Nations declared
2013 the International
Year of Water Cooperation.
Celebrations culminate on
World Water Day, which is
held annually on March 22,
to focus attention on the
importance of sustainable
freshwater management.
Stefanie Schwemlein and
cate Parker
Water Theme Committee
Email: schwstef@gmail.com,
categparker@gmail.com
UNC recognizes the global
need for water cooperation on
this World Water Day. Along
with the UNC Water Theme,
the FedEx Global Education
Center is hosting a multifac-
eted exhibition, The Water of
Life: Artistic Expressions.
The exhibit opened
Thursday with a reception
for first-year student and
painter Caroline Orr and
Hanes Visiting Artist Bright
Ugochukwu Eke. The eve-
ning also featured a multime-
dia performance by composer
Allen Anderson and photog-
rapher and musician Brooks
de Wetter-Smith.
Eke articulates ideas about
human attitudes toward
nature through installation
art. His work in the FedEx
Center focuses on the his-
torical dimension of water,
suggesting that slavery is an
issue that cannot be forgotten
when discussing water.
It is through this art
that I can raise awareness,
Eke said, and get people to
start discussion on how to
ameliorate the situation.
De Wetter-Smith hopes
the program will transfer
existing knowledge into
a commitment to provide
water for all. We tend to
take for granted whatever we
do not believe to be a threat
to our current lives, he said.
Orrs series tells the story of
those whose lives are deeply
impacted by the water crisis.
The work puts a face behind
the facts and figures of the
global water crisis, telling the
personal stories that are all
too often glossed over.
Orrs artwork will be on
display through July and
auctioned online to benefit a
water infrastructure project
run by the student group A
Drink For Tomorrow. Orrs
work communicates a mes-
sage to the UNC community
and assists in the provision of
water to a community in Peru.
UNCs focus on water has
produced much academic
talk and research, which is
critical for assuaging the cri-
sis. However, we all absorb
information differently, so this
exhibits portrays water differ-
ently through imagery, sound,
texture and personal stories.
In an era of growing con-
flict over water, cooperation
and communication are more
important than ever. Art is a
universal language, and per-
haps the best way to start.
Rising global conflict over water calls for more cooperation.
World Water Day

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