Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
KNOCKED OUT
DTH/KATIE WILLIAMS
dailytarheel.com
Civil rights
center on
the block
CUTS
renaming of Saunders Hall and the contextualization of the Silent Sam monument.
Saunders Hall was named after William
Saunders, a confederate colonel in the Civil
War, a UNC trustee and a chief organizer for
the Ku Klux Klan.
Members of the Muslim Students
Association, the Black Student Movement, the
Radical Asians, The Real Silent Sam Coalition
*''.5)064*/(
DTH/CAMERON ROBERT
Drew Cameron, co-founder of the Combat Paper Project, visited Gerrard
Hall this weekend to run a workshop for veterans from the community.
Todays weather
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There are times in politics when you must be on the right side and lose.
JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH
News
EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
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TODAY
CORRECTIONS
Due to a reporting error, Thursdays page 5 story Injured officer uses book to discuss struggle
incorrectly stated what Demetrise Stephenson-Cobb saw when she arrived on the scene. She saw
a bike in the middle of the road. The story also mischaracterized her original career aspirations.
Stephenson-Cobb had hoped to work for the State Bureau of Investigation.
Due to a reporting error, Fridays front page story This is mental illness misstated the name of
the Cardinal Innovations Healthcare Solutions company and did not properly classify it as a managed care organization. The story also failed to clarify Keith McCoys full title. He is the associate
medical director of Cardinal Innovations Healthcare Solutions.
The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the errors.
POLICE LOG
Someone attempted to
commit larceny at the Lowes
Home Improvement store on
the 1801 Fordham Blvd. at
2:55 p.m. Wednesday, according to Chapel Hill police
reports.
The person placed a
Dewalt battery, valued at
$89, and a Bosch laser level,
valued at $129, in his or her
pocket and attempted to leave
without paying, reports state.
Someone broke and
entered through a window
on the 700 block of North
Heritage Circle between 7
p.m. Wednesday and 9:30
a.m Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole a Lenovo
laptop, Apple stereo equipment, Nike Air Jordans, clothes
and $1,000 in cash, and broke
a window, reports state.
*''.5)064*/(
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 Katie Reilly at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
Like us at facebook.com/dailytarheel
MCT/FRANCIS SPECKER
aty Perry performs hit song Roar during the Super Bowl XLIX halftime show
on Sunday at the University of Phoenix
Stadium in Glendale, Ariz. The New England
Patriots beat the Seattle Seahawks 28-24.
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News
Third grade
constructs
spaceships
A FUSION FESTIVAL
DTH/CATHERINE HEMMER
N.C. State University hosted UNCs Samaa and six other South Asian a cappella groups Saturday for an a cappella competition.
to dailytarheel.com to see
videos from the a cappella festival on Saturday.
from nature.
DW: Oh, thats easy. The botany, the basketball and the barbecue.
DTH: What do you think will challenge you
about the new position?
DW: Over the last 20 plus years, Ive been
able to build a network of relationships in the
conservation community here in Texas, and
that includes nonprofit organizations, state
agencies, federal agencies. Thats taken time,
and so thats going to be a challenge when I
first get there to find out who those players
are, get to meet them, get to know them, see
where our needs are simpatico and to work in
that larger conservation community for the
benefit of North Carolina.
DTH: What is your favorite plant?
DW: Ill tell you what Lady Bird Johnson
customers.
I would hope that some of the
people where it may be inconvenient to fight traffic downtown
will come here and give us a walkthrough, she said.
The construction around Fine
Feathers hasnt blocked the customer flow, Patterson said.
Alfredo Mendes, owner of Alfredos
Pizza Villa, has had his restaurant in
University Mall for 25 years and is
excited about the changes.
From my space, its easy to see
people coming in and out, and we do
see a lot of new customers coming
in, Mendes said.
Its been really good compared to
five years ago everybodys leaving,
now everybodys coming.
He said the rumors in the past
about the departure of many shops
may have triggered customers curiosities to check out the mall.
People are very curious, and they
want to see how the mall has been
changing for the past few years, he
said. I see a lot of people I dont
see for years coming in, telling me
Alfredo! Youre still here!
News
RALLY
FROM PAGE 1
Tasia Harris, who facilitated Fridays caucus, said it
was a welcoming environment for students of color
to voice their concerns and
create a sense of community
at a predominantly white
institution.
Some spoke towards feeling like they were not seen as
full, whole people or that they
had to prove themselves at
the University, Harris said.
Harris cited both national
and local events that made
students of color feel isolated,
mentioning the Wainstein
reports racial undertones
and the Board of Governors
proposal to cut research centers and institutes that serve
minorities.
Its especially bad on Yik
Yak, where there have been
many hurtful comments
made under anonymity,
Harris said. These racist
sentiments are still in peoples
minds today on this campus.
The movement continues
Monday, when activists plan
to gather outside Saunders
Hall from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Winkfield, who is an organizer for Mondays action,
said the group will use symbolism from the civil rights
movement and slavery to
illustrate the oppression people of color feel on campus.
Mondays action is
geared at giving a physical
representation of trying to
CIVIL RIGHTS
university@dailytarheel.com
FROM PAGE 1
environmental justice in
low-income and predominantly minority areas of
North Carolina.
Ted Shaw, director of the
center, said the work the
center does is crucial because
it trains the next generation
of civil rights lawyers and
advocates. While the center is
focused on legal work, he said
it also deals with public education and advocacy.
Board of Governors member Steven Long declined
to comment for this story,
but he said at the boards
December meeting that he
was concerned about the
advocacy work of several
centers. Advocacy efforts are
inherently partisan, he said,
which isnt appropriate for a
university-affiliated center.
Shaw said he is unapologetic about the centers advocacy.
We represent individuals
whove been victims of racial
discrimination, and we have
an ethical responsibility to
represent them zealously, as
any lawyer does his or her client, Shaw said.
Shannon Brien, a junior
and member of the studentrun UNC-Chapel Hill BOG
Democracy Coalition, said
given the board has denied any
ideological motivation behind
the review, she doesnt understand why the board would
care about a centers advocacy.
We in the coalition feel as
Ted Shaw,
director of the Center for Civil Rights
state@dailytarheel.com
to Victory!n 20
Its On!
Ja u
thr 0
2
Feb
#turnitGREEN2015
www.studentcommutechallenge.com
COMBAT
FROM PAGE 1
3GHRDUDMSHRNODMSN@KK4-""'RSTCDMSR
1201 Raleigh Road
Suite 102 Chapel Hill, NC 27517
(919) 942-4764 (919) 942-7553
www.theprinterychapelhill.com
qualitees@mindspring.com
Opinion
EDITORIAL CARTOON
BAILEY BARGER
PETER VOGEL
KERN WILLIAMS
BRIAN VAUGHN
KIM HOANG
COLIN KANTOR
TREY FLOWERS
DINESH MCCOY
Handle of Jack
NEXT
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
True
worth is
hard to
measure
JUSTICE LEAGUE
Seth Rose writes on Seattle
running back Marshawn Lynch.
Jackie OShaughnessy
White supremacists
legacy persists
EDITORIAL
EDITORIAL
n a move antithetical
to his duties as chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee,
Republican Sen. Richard
Burr reportedly sent a letter last month to the White
House requesting that
copies of the committees
report on post-9/11 CIA
interrogation techniques be
returned.
Yes, returned. The letter was in response to the
actions of former chairwoman, Sen. Dianne
of efficacy in obtaining
information.
Though the Senate
Intelligence Committee
was created to provide
vigilant legislative oversight over the intelligence
activities of the United
States, Burrs actions
prove he is committed
to hiding the truth of
Americas post-9/11 foreign policy, which continues to disregard human
rights and both national
and international law.
Burrs attempt to keep
the truth from reaching
the public is embarrassing, especially for North
Carolinians.
SPORTS COLUMN
Daniel Wilco
Senior Writer
Senior advertising major from
Atlanta, Ga.
Email: dwilco@live.unc.edu
TO THE EDITOR:
Despite the fact that
for years, students of
color have organized and
expressed their outrage
for sites on campus that
blatantly uphold white
supremacy, there remains a
resistance and callous hesitation from the University
administration to truly
serve its students because
men like Saunders were
men of their time.
What an immense
privilege it is to be able to
engage with these spaces on
a regular basis and be comforted by the fact that people like William Saunders
were men of their time.
As far as history goes,
those of us of marginalized
identities know far too well
that this history is incomplete by design and is characterized by its tendency to
silence the voices of people
of color. Contextualizing
and challenging these spaces helps us to write a more
complex history of times
past and a narrative for our
present time that reflects a
heightened consciousness
that this university is desperately lacking.
When students of color
walk in and out of Saunders
Hall, sit in the classrooms
or meet their professors
for office hours, they are
assaulted with images of
the violence and terror
inflicted on our ancestors
by men like Saunders.
Although our white counterparts may have the
privilege of distancing
themselves from such historical violence, students
of color do not have that
choice. The timelessness of
white supremacy reveals
itself in every facet of our
society, and our campus is
clearly not exempt. While
the nation tells us through
violence that black life is
negligible, our University,
through its blatant disregard of students of color,
upholds the same message.
Being a good student at
a prestigious university is a
challenge in itself. Students
of color meet this challenge
every day while bearing
the undue burden of white
supremacy in almost every
space they inhabit. We will
be showing you what that
feels like today from 11 a.m.
to 2 p.m. in front of the
soon-to-be Hurston Hall.
Tasia Harris
Senior
Public policy, sociology
Saunders legacy
remains useful
TO THE EDITOR:
Your editorial in support
of the renaming of Saunders
Hall reminds me of the
current movement to brainwash schoolchildren with
the notion of American
exceptionalism. That is,
by erasing reminders of
the checkered past that
some enlightened folk find
uncomfortable. Down the
memory hole with them!
In its recent manifesta-
Continue to seek
answers from BOG
TO THE EDITOR:
Several faculty colleagues
have made reasoned and
respectful responses to
the actions of the Board of
Governors decision to dismiss Tom Ross from his role
as UNC System President.
We have yet to hear a
similarly reasoned explanation from the Board to the
most pressing questions:
Why? To what end? We
encourage students to ask
why so that they learn.
We explain as a matter of
respect to those who ask
and who seek to understand and contribute to
further exploration.
We teach students in
the School of Medicine
to engage in truth telling
with their colleagues and
patients as a matter of
moral principle and out of
respect. What we ask of the
Board is no more and no
less. As University faculty
and citizens of the state,
we also reasonably expect
that the Board is accountable to us, as well as those
who appointed them. None
of our students would or
should accept an explanation from us that did not
contribute to their understanding, clarify a circumstance or lead to increased
ability to be informed.
No doubt the Board of
Governors would find unacceptable comparably opaque
and uninformative answers
to questions posed of us.
How ironic that those with
the responsibility to guide
us would not act in accord
with these principles.
Prof. Sue Estroff
Social Medicine
SPEAK OUT
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At-large student positions on The Daily Tar Heel Editor
Selection Committee
Commitment
Orientation: Thu. March 26 at 6:00 p.m.
Applications review: March 26-27
Editor interviews: Sat. March 28 at 9:30 a.m.
until finished
Deadline
March 6
Apply now at http://dailytarheel.com/selection
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POOL PROFESSIONALS IS NOW hiring lifeguards and pool attendants for the summer.
Work at a location close to campus! Flexible
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Services
ARE YOU A FRESHMAN, sophomore, junior? Year round, low stress job on campus: STUDENT assistant needed at Lineberger Cancer Center. FLEXIBLE 3 hour
shift Minimum. 12 hrs/wk. Email resume:
leslie_schreiner@med.unc.edu.
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ITS EASY!
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is an 8 Youre tuned into the
flow of the game. Enjoy it without taking
expensive risks. Get together to play with
a shared passion, hobby or sport. Fun
with friends reveals unexpected surprises.
Cuddle with someone sweet.
UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY
SportsMonday
MENS BASKETBALL WRESTLING: NORTH CAROLINA 22, DREXEL 13; N.C. STATE 22, NORTH CAROLINA 18
FROM PAGE 1
SWIMMING
FROM PAGE 1
WOMENS BASKETBALL
FROM PAGE 1
Sylvia Hatchell,
North Carolina womens basketball coach
sports@dailytarheel.com
sports@dailytarheel.com
Ernest et
Celestine
Tuesday, Feb 3rd
La Baie
desAnges
Bay of Angels
Thursday, Feb 5th
roml.unc.edu
Rally to rename
Students rallied to encourage the University to rename
Saunders Hall on Friday.
See pg. 1 for story.
games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level:
4
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
Solution to
Fridays puzzle
Uniformly artistic
Veterans at UNC made
art from their uniforms
through the Combat Paper
Project. See pg. 1 for story.
University Place
University Mall is rebranding and preparing for new
openings under the name
University Place. See page 3.
20/20
for
20
LESS
ACROSS
1 Burst into tears
5 Wander off the point
11 Rainy
14 Hodgepodge
15 In the planes cabin, say
17 New Years __
18 Pennsylvania borough in
todays news
20 Clintons instrument
21 Ambulance VIP
22 50s nuclear experiments
23 Founded, on signs
25 Foe
27 Approved, briefly
29 Pop singer Diamond
31 Henry VIIIs sixth wife
Catherine
32 Conk out
35 Make up your mind!
37 Germanys __ Republic,
1919-33
40 Flip-flops
41 What well have of
3-Down, according to
folklore, if 18-Across
62-Down sees
his 50-Down on
65-Across
43 Puppies
45 Bahamas capital
46 Thick fog
metaphor
48 Dirt road groove
49 Amt. on a new
car window
53 Venus de __
54 Mess of hair
56 Employee
handing out
playbills
57 Stoolie
59 Workshop grippers
63 Word after Iron or Stone
64 Corp. leader
65 February 2, every year
68 Coffee hour vessel
69 Asian language in a
region famous for tigers
70 __ vault
71 Letter before tee
72 La Brea discovery
73 Filled with wonder
DOWN
1 Girl who lost her sheep
2 Barnard graduate
3 Cold season
4 Bagel go-with
5 Landslide victory
6 Poker pot starter
7 Corp. execs degrees
8 Bend before in reverence
9 Lucky Luciano cohort
Meyer __
10 Before, in poetry
11 Cowboy movies
12 Shirking, as taxes
13 LBJs home state
16 Salon coloring
19 Speak
24 Sweetie pie
26 Dennis the Menaces
grumpy neighbor
28 Hate
30 Part of UCLA
32 Chinese appetizer
33 I think ..., in texts
34 Make, as money
36 Mets old stadium
38 Old Montreal baseballer
39 Back
41 Flippered aquarium
attractions
42 Sch. with a Spokane
campus
43 Typists stat.
44 Some young cows
47 Pennsylvania raceway
50 Sundial casting
51 Entertain in style
52 Victimized, with on
55 Outlet inserts
56 GI show gp.
58 USSR secret service
60 Santa __: West Coast
winds
61 1551, to Caesar
62 Given name of the critter
in todays news
64 Billiards stick
66 NBA official
67 Deans list no.
dailytarheel.com
SportsMonday
SCOREBOARD
Womens
basketball
team clips
the Eagles
DTH/CLAIRE COLLINS
Junior forward Brice Johnson (11) was the first UNC player to foul out with 3:54 remaining in the second half. Isaiah Hicks fouled out 41 seconds later.
In the past two games against crosstown rivals N.C. State and Duke, the North
Carolina womens basketball team struggled to find the nylon.
Both games reveal similar statistics 30
percent from the field, less than 20 percent
from behind the arc and 67 points on the
scoreboard.
In the Tar Heels 72-60 victory over
Boston College (9-12, 1-7 ACC) Sunday,
the offensive statistics in the box score
once again were an eye sore. So, similar to
the previous two matchups, the Tar Heels
relied on their defense.
Neither N.C. State nor Duke shot over
40 percent, and that streak continued in
Carmichael Arena Sunday.
The Tar Heels (18-4, 5-3) held the Eagles
to just 31.2 percent shooting and notched
10 steals. In the last three games, UNC
opponents have averaged 19.7 turnovers.
The Eagles had 18.
But the rim was not kind to the Tar
Heels. UNC shot just 35.2 percent from
the field and a woeful 2-of-15 from 3-point
range.
Im sure (the shooting) has been frustrating everybody, junior forward NDea
Bryant said. Im pretty sure if I wouldve
made a couple more shots tonight, we
wouldve won by 10 or 15. Its something
that I will definitely work on in the next
couple of days before we play Syracuse and
everybody else.
On defense, UNC had to worry about the
3-point shooting of the Eagles.
Boston College coach Erik Johnson
said his team has some of the best shooters in the conference and his players
know they have the green light. And for
the first 20 minutes of the game, he was
right.
The Eagles did shoot 41.2 percent from
the field and knocked down six threes in
Tar Heel
veterans
honored on
Senior Night
DTH/HENRY GARGAN
Sophomore midfielder Alex Moore (30) goes up against James Madison
defender Carter Reifsnider (8) during the Tar Heels season opener Sunday.