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Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

DTH/KATIE WILLIAMS

dailytarheel.com

Volume 122, Issue 143

Civil rights
center on
the block

Monday, February 2, 2015

GROUPS RALLY TO RENAME

The center is unapologetic


about its partisan advocacy
efforts across the state.
By Caroline Lamb
Staff Writer

For Allen Buansi, it happened when


UNCs Center for Civil Rights presented to his class at East Chapel Hill
High School.
The value of the Center for Civil
Rights, (is)
it does not
just help out
Center
communities
& Institute
that are being
excluded or
treated unfairly,
it also has the
intangible value
of inspiring young people to go into
civil rights, Buansi said.
It was during that presentation that
Buansi, now a third-year UNC law
student, knew he wanted to be a civil
rights lawyer.
The center, founded in 2001, is one
of nine UNC centers that remains under
review by the UNC-system Board of
Governors which is deciding whether
to terminate various centers or remove
their university affiliation.
Jim Holmes, chairman of the working group reviewing the centers, said
he would not comment on specific
centers until after the groups report is
released Feb. 27.
The Center for Civil Rights focuses on issues of social, economic and

CUTS

DTH/JOHANNA FEREBEE AND ZACH WALKER


More than 50 students gathered in support of a movement to rename UNCs Saunders Hall. The building is named after a UNC trustee and KKK organizer.

Activists continue the fight to rename Saunders Hall


By Stephanie Lamm
Assistant University Editor

Students of color are joining together on


campus to support each other in ways they feel
the University is unable.
More than 50 students came to Fridays
caucus for people of color on campus. The caucus followed Fridays rally that called for the

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

and Ujima created the caucus to address the


lack of minority representation on campus.
Theres this feeling in class when youre the
only person of color, and you feel like you have
to speak on behalf of everyone in your race,
said Ashley Winkfield, an organizer with The
Real Silent Sam.

SEE RALLY, PAGE 4

SEE CIVIL RIGHTS, PAGE 4

Veterans turn combat uniform into art Online


The Combat Paper Project
drew about 100 people to
UNC this weekend.
By Madison Flager
Staff Writer

*''.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.

Standing before a picturesque


field, with mountains and a setting sun in the background, Tyler
Stevenson saw three young Afghan
girls playing.
It was an idyllic scene, and he
pulled a camera out to capture the
moment. Each time he touched his
camera, though, the girls ran out of
sight. Realizing the cultural aversion
to photographs, Stevenson began a
game of Simon Says instead, making funny faces at the little girls as
they erupted in giggles.
Touching moments like this one
stand out to Stevenson just as much
as the hard ones moments like
losing three close friends while
serving in Afghanistan. He had the
chance to transform those memories
through the Combat Paper Project,
which took up residence in Gerrard
Hall on Friday and Saturday.

DTH ONLINE: Head to

dailytarheel.com for video


of Saturdays Combat Paper
Project event.

Combat Paper Project co-founder


Drew Cameron gave visitors tutorials in making their own paper using
retired military uniforms. Stevenson
brought his U.S. Army uniform, cut
it up, put it into a machine that beat
it into pulp, and then turned it into
paper a process he called a liberating experience.
It was a way to turn it into a visual
representation of my service, said
Stevenson, now a senior attending
UNC through the GI Bill. Its an
artifact from my service, but it was liberating in the sense that its no longer
kept away in this box where I dont see
it, no one else sees it. Its a piece of art.
I can display it in my house and Ill be
able to keep it for years to come.
The workshop was open to the
public and saw well over 100 visitors,
including veterans, students, UNC
faculty and community members.
Participants learned how to sift the
pulped uniforms through a bin of
water, press the fibers onto a felt board

A SWIM LOSS TO STATE


The mens swimming team fell to the
Wolfpack 180-118 on Saturday.
See dailytarheel.com for story.

A DISTANCE TEAM WIN


As a team, UNC recorded six top-20
nationally clocked times at its track
meet this weekend.
See dailytarheel.com for story.

Todays weather

SEE COMBAT, PAGE 4

Not rain, but the tears


of Seahawks fans.
H 55, L 22

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There are times in politics when you must be on the right side and lose.
JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH

News

Monday, February 2, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel


www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893

EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KATIE REILLY
MANAGING EDITOR

MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JORDAN NASH
FRONT PAGE NEWS EDITOR
ENTERPRISE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

MCKENZIE COEY
PRODUCTION DIRECTOR
DTH@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

BRADLEY SAACKS
UNIVERSITY EDITOR

UNIVERSITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

HOLLY WEST
CITY EDITOR

CITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

SARAH BROWN
STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
STATE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

GRACE RAYNOR
SPORTS EDITOR

SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

GABRIELLA CIRELLI
ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR
ARTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

TYLER VAHAN
DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
DESIGN@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KATIE WILLIAMS
VISUAL EDITOR

PHOTO@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

AARON DODSON,
ALISON KRUG
COPY CO-EDITORS

COPY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

PAIGE LADISIC
ONLINE EDITOR

ONLINE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

AMANDA ALBRIGHT
INVESTIGATIONS LEADER

SPECIAL.PROJECTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

MARY BURKE
INVESTIGATIONS ART DIRECTOR
SPECIAL.PROJECTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

TIPS

HEAR HER ROAR

DAILY
DOSE

No order in the court

121 years of editorial freedom


JENNY SURANE
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

From staff and wire reports

alk about a lack of order in the court. A trial in an Arkansas


courtroom was interrupted when about 30 bats flew in and
wreaked havoc. According to reports, one bat tried to bite
a deputy, who, of course, was not going to have any of that.
He grabbed the bat by the wings to make sure he wasnt injured by the
creature. Officials evacuated the room and turned off the lights, which
calmed the creatures. Apparently, this bat problem is not new. A judge
said hundreds of bats inhabit the building and that their droppings are
everywhere. But the bat invasion in the courtroom evidently pushed the
problem over the edge because a pest control unit has been called in to fix
the problem. Wed say thats a solid decision. Better late than never.

NOTED. What is it that moves someone


to take a selfie? A lot of factors, to be
sure, but according to a United Kingdom
smartphone survey, men are almost twice
as likely to take selfies to attract a mate or
to make an ex jealous. Theyre also more
likely to take selfies of their bodies than
women are. #breaktheinternet

QUOTED. I think steel boils at about this


temperature.
A meteorologist in Arizona, playing off
a glitch in his weather slides that said the
high for the town of Cave Creek would be
2,960 degrees. Those are some weather predictions were actually happy to say turned
out not to be true.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY

The U.S. in World Affairs, the


Cold War and Beyond: UNC
professor Charlie Tuggle will
present his documentary, Las
Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo and
the Search for Identity. The film
tells the story of an organization
committed to finding children
who Las Abuelas de Plaza de
Mayo believes were stolen
during Argentinas Dirty War
between 1976 and 1983. Former
Assistant Secretary of State Hod-

ding Carter will lead a discussion


of the film after the screening.
Time: 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Location: FedEx Global Education Center
Exploring Majors at UNC: University Career Services is offering
a session to provide students
with resources to choose a
major or minor. The event is free
and open to all UNC students.
Time: 3 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Location: Hardin Hub

UNC Mens Basketball vs. Virginia: The North Carolina mens


basketball team will take on the
University of Virginia in ACC play
tonight.
Time: 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Location: Smith Center
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.

CORRECTIONS

Contact Managing Editor


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

The Daily Tar Heel

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

Follow us on Twitter @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.

Someone possessed marijuana in a vehicle with the


intent to sell and deliver at

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'SFFfood HTGGstuff HTGGfun

12:48 a.m. Thursday, according to Chapel Hill police


reports.
Someone was disturbing
the peace on the 400 block of
Hillsborough Street at 2:07
a.m. Friday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person was banging
on a door and yelling, reports
state.
Someone broke and
entered through an unlocked
window on the 900 block
of North Heritage Circle
between 9 a.m. and 12:10
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole two
iPad minis, four wallets, a
MacBook Air and a book bag,
reports state.
Someone reported a disturbance on the 400 block
of Smith Level Road at 7:45
p.m. Wednesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.

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CORO
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News

The Daily Tar Heel

Third grade
constructs
spaceships

Monday, February 2, 2015

A FUSION FESTIVAL

Franklin Porter Graham students


are competing to win $30,000.
By Rachel Herzog
Senior Writer

Allison Stewart never liked physics much, but


watching her third-grade students create their
own spacecrafts gave her a new perspective.
Over the summer, the Frank Porter Graham
Bilingue School teacher developed an innovative
new space unit for the third graders. In January,
the school submitted the program to the Follett
Challenge, a national competition that rewards
innovative learning programs.
A North Carolina Science Festival internship
during summer 2014 taught Stewart about the
physics of flight. She decided to use what she
learned to revamp the third grade unit on space.
I kind of took those pieces of the curriculum
in mind and pushed the envelope a little bit with
it because theres no standard about space exploration, Stewart said.
The nine-week unit started in October and
concluded in the first week of December with
a presentation to a panel that included North
Carolina State University engineering students
and Stewarts mentors from the science festival.
After learning and researching the physics of
outer space, the 50 third-grade students broke into
groups to design land rovers and used 3-D printers
at Smith Middle School and Duke University to
generate small-scale models of their spacecrafts.
Learning doesnt happen on a flat surface,
Assistant Principal Jose Nambo said. Learning
doesnt happen on paper or the screen its live.
The unit wasnt just science the students also
wrote five-paragraph essays to persuade companies to buy their craft. The school is bilingual, so
the students learned to advertise and market their
crafts during the Spanish half of the day.
A grand prize winner will be selected, and additional awards will be given to semifinalists in the
high school, middle school and elementary school
categories. Each winning school receives $30,000.
If Frank Porter Graham wins, the prize money
will buy more Spanish books for the school library.
It would be an absolute dream to have our
school library 50 percent English, 50 percent
Spanish, Stewart said. Some of our projects feel
very limited because we have limited Spanish
resources at the school.
Follett Challenge representative Amy Malpica
said the competition, which received 113 entries,
is a way to spread innovative ideas.
A school in Washington could find out about a
program thats going on in Florida, Malpica said.
A lot of times, there are great programs going on
that no one knows about.
city@dailytarheel.com

DTH/CATHERINE HEMMER
N.C. State University hosted UNCs Samaa and six other South Asian a cappella groups Saturday for an a cappella competition.

UNC is home to the states only South Asian a cappella group


By Christine Bang
Staff Writer

Samaa, North Carolinas


only South Asian fusion a cappella group and a UNC student
organization, graced the stage
Saturday at N.C. State University
during Sangeet Saagar the first
South Asian a cappella competition in the southeast.
Translating to sea of music in
Hindi, Sangeet Saagar featured
South Asian fusion a cappella
groups that sang mashups of
popular western and traditional
South Asian music from college
campuses across the nation.
Delta Sigma Iota Fraternity
Inc., a South Asian-oriented
organization, invited Samaa to
help screen the contestants. Both
N.C. State and UNC chapters
of the fraternity collaborated to
organize the event.
Because it gave its recommendations during the voting
process, Samaa did not compete
in Sangeet Saagar. Instead, the

group performed at the end as an


exhibition.
Of around 11 groups that submitted videos, six were selected to
compete: Massachusetts Institute
of Technology Ohms, Ohio States
Dhadkan, Rutgers Universitys
RAAG, Case Western Reserve
Universitys Dhamakapella,
Pennsylvania States Fanaa and
the University of Virginas Ektaal.
Samaa musical director Savita
Sivakumar, a senior economics and global studies double
major, is inspired by the emerging enthusiasm for South Asian
fusion a cappella.
Theres a lot of South Asian
fusion a cappella groups slowly
growing, so its really nice seeing
a competition so close to home
it makes it more worthwhile to
see lots of people doing the same
thing as you, Sivakumar said.
Samaa executive director
Karina Javalkar, a senior health
policy and management and biology double major, was excited for
the chance to see other national

South Asian a cappella groups.


Its nice to know that there
are other groups, Javalkar said.
Theres not another one in
North Carolina, so weve never
met anyone else.
Akshay Iyer, event leader and
previous president of the N.C.
State chapter of Delta Sigma Iota
Fraternity Inc., is a senior electrical engineering major.
We felt that there was a great
market for this sort of event
because there are a lot of dance
competitions, and people tend
not to focus on vocal competitions
at the collegiate level, Iyer said.
The proceeds from the event
will go toward Drive Education
and the Ekal Vidyalaya
Foundation. Both organizations
support childrens education in
both the U.S. and rural parts of
India.
This is kind of really important to us important to both
Beta and Gamma chapters
because were just trying to not
only raise money for these great

DTH ONLINE: Head

to dailytarheel.com to see
videos from the a cappella festival on Saturday.

nonprofit organizations but to


promote ourselves by saying
were an organization that really
cares about education, said Tim
Thomas, service co-chairman of
UNCs chapter of Delta Sigma
Iota Fraternity Inc.
The MIT Ohms won first
place at the competition, and
Case Westerns Dhamakapella
came in second.
Because Sangeet Saagar was
a success, both the Beta and
Gamma chapters of Delta Sigma
Iota Fraternity Inc. are trying to
make it a recurring event at alternating campuses.
Its also a great way for both
of our communities to come
together to show their support
for childrens education, Thomas
said.
arts@dailytarheel.com

Q&A with new garden director Damon Waitt


The North Carolina Botanical Garden hired
a new director, Damon Waitt. Waitt is currently
the senior director and botanist at the Lady Bird
Johnson Wildflower Center in Austin, Texas.
Daily Tar Heel senior writer Colleen Moir
spoke with Waitt to discuss his excitement
about his new position, making the change from
Texas to North Carolina and his favorite plant.

THE DAILY TAR HEEL: Why did you choose to


apply for and accept the position at UNC?
DAMON WAITT: It was just such a clear

choice. Theres a saying in the botanic garden


world, Its a small green world, and when it
comes to conservation-focused botanic gardens, its an even smaller green world.
So Ive been familiar with the people and
the programs and the garden for years, and
Ive always admired what theyve been able to
accomplish. It was an easy choice for me to
make the transition from the Wildflower Center
to the N.C. Botanical Garden. I really like how
the N.C. Botanical Garden incorporates people
into its mission and doesnt separate people

from nature.

DTH: What do you

hope to bring to the N.C.


Botanical Garden?

DW: I hope to bring my

53 years of experience and


love of the natural world and
botany and more specifically,
Damon Waitt is
my over a decade of experithe new director of
ence in managing almost
the N.C. Botanical
every aspect of the native
plant botanic garden. I think Gardens. He will
that my administrative and
start at the position
academic background will
on April 13.
all come together for the
benefit of the N.C. Botanical Garden.

DTH: How will you use your expertise in


native and invasive plants in your new position?
DW: Over the years Ive been very active in
invasive species communities I sit on the
National Invasive Species Council Advisory
Committee, I used to be the chair of the National

Association of Exotic Pest Plant Councils and I


founded TIPPC, the Texas Invasive Plant and
Pest Council. I know that the (N.C. Botanical)
Gardens very involved with invasive species
management, both on its own properties but
also in North Carolina, so Im looking forward to
working with those groups.

DTH: How will this new position be different

from your old one?

DW: The scale of (the UNC position) is


much larger. In my position here, (I am) basically managing all the different aspects of the
Wildflower Center ... The fact that the North
Carolina Botanical Garden has integrated the
botanical resources of the University, including
the herbarium and the Coker Arboretum, and
Battle Park management, and all these conservation lands, the scale is a little bit intimidating.
The parks got a publicly visited botanic garden,
but Im looking forward to that because I just
really appreciate the way that the University
thinks about those resources.
DTH: What are you most looking forward to

about being here?

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

used to always say when she was asked that


question. Its that theyre like my children, and
I cant pick a favorite one. So, theyre all like
my children.

University Mall continues its rebranding eorts


The mall will be renamed
University Place and begin
using a new logo.
By Zhai Yun Tan
Staff Writer

The 41-year-old University Mall is


preparing to welcome a new cinema
and many new tenants as part of its
ongoing rebranding process leaving
businesses in the shopping plaza optimistic about future opportunities.
Madison Marquette, the company
managing University Mall, launched
a rebranding campaign for the mall
in 2013 after the department store
chain Dillards left, according to a
press release.
The rebranding process will
include changing the name to
University Place and a new logo.
The process will focus on building a
regional mall that features distinctive local retailers.
The Dillards location will be taken
over by Silverspot Cinema, and a redcarpet opening will be held for the

luxury cinema this summer.


The 52,500-square-foot movie
complex will have 13 screens
and an upscale atmosphere that
includes a lounge area and full
restaurant. Tickets will be $16,
and the cinema will show foreign
movies, independent films, new
blockbusters and 3-D movies as
well as live broadcasts of cultural
performances.
A portion of the mall is under
construction as it readies for the
opening of Aveda Institute of Chapel
Hill, Planet Fitness and the luxury
movie theater Silverspot Cinema.
Several retailers from Franklin
Streets University Square, which
closed in summer 2014, have also
moved into the mall including
Fine Feathers and Peacock Alley.
Weve been welcomed by the
mall community, and we have settled
in very nicely, said Pam Patterson,
sales manager of the boutique Fine
Feathers, which opened in April.
Compared to its past location in
downtown Franklin Street, where
traffic was heavy, Patterson said the
new location is more accessible to

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!

COURTESY OF UNIVERSITY MALL


University Mall is changing its name to University Place. The new name is part
of a rebranding of the entire mall, as well as the introduction of a new logo.

Amid the excitement for new


openings, the construction has also
negatively affected some tenants.
Everything is still under construction, said Josiah Nicholas, assistant
manager at Burlington Shoes.
He said he looks forward to the

opening of the gym and theater.


Ever since Roses left, weve lost a
lot of business, he said. Hopefully
when those things open, itll be
worth the loss right now.
city@dailytarheel.com

News

Monday, February 2, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

Class buys car for a Granville employee


The business class
raised money for an
Agora employees car.
By Tyler Fleming
Staff Writer

When Agora kitchen assistant Equashia Mumin walked


out of Granvilles west tower
Friday afternoon, she had no
idea what was waiting for her.
Waiting in the parking lot
was a class of business students, a UNC Kenan-Flagler
Business School lecturer and a

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

new car her new car.


Mumin said she was filled
with joy the moment she realized what was going on.
I am overwhelmed, she
said. This is like I cannot
put it into words.
The car was donated to
Mumin after the Community
Empowerment Fund (CEF)
and Jim Kitchens entrepreneurship and business planning class partnered to raise
money to purchase her a car.
I tasked these students to
raise a profit for a purpose,
Kitchen said.
Mumin, a survivor of

domestic violence, said the


kindness that these students
have shown her will make a
big difference in both her and
her familys lives.
CEF has restored my faith
in humanity, she said.
Aaron Scarboro, director of
the 1789 Venture Lab, which
houses UNC startups, said
Mumins excitement was one
of a kind.
I do not think I have ever
seen someone so happy,
Scarboro said.
When the project began,
Kitchen contacted the
Community Empowerment

do your best while walking into spaces that say you


dont belong here, said
Harris. We want to represent the violent history that
these students of color face
every day.
Altha Cravey, a geography
professor, made Fridays rally
one of the topics students
could choose to write about
for an outside assignment.
She has incorporated the
study of many on-campus rallies into her course on space,
place and difference.
Cravey, who is also a member of the Progressive Faculty
Network, said many professors in her department bring
up the history of Saunders
Hall because their offices are
in that building.
Cravey said she could
remember an incident when
two faculty members who
worked in Saunders Hall were
describing how they enjoyed
intimidating a black student.
They were casually laughing about it over lunch with
me, Cravey said. Having that
name on the building facilitates that kind of behavior.
Cravey said the geography
graduate students have been
supporting the undergraduate activists, recently making
a video demanding Saunders
take on a new name.
The administration better
get on board, or theyre going
to be on the wrong side of
history.

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

Fund, which helped him pick a


recipient for the car.
Kitchen said Mumin was
chosen because of her desire
to turn her life around.
She really transformed
both professionally and personally, Kitchen said.
Junior Jackson Rand, a
student in Kitchens class,
said that to ensure the car
was purchased, they raised
money in all kinds of ways,
including a fraternity tailgate
and a television raffle.
Walter Sturdivant Jr., sales
and leasing consultant for
Crown Honda of Southpoint,

where Mumins 1997 Honda


Civic was bought, was on site
to watch the car be given away.
When selling the car,
Sturdivant said Crown Honda
did its best to make sure the
project was successful.
It was purchased for far
less than its worth, he said.
We tried to price the car so
it would be affordable for
this project.
For Sturdivant, helping
local community members is
simply a part of good business
practices.
We wanted to participate,
he said. If youre doing busi-

We represent individuals whove been


victims of racial discrimination.

son he chose to attend UNC


Law. He said he wanted to
become a civil rights lawyer
based off his experience growing up in a poor school system.
I thought to myself, the law
and civil rights work in general
might be a way to kind of try
to bring about some change to
some of the issues that I had
experienced myself, he said.
Maurice Holland Sr., former president of the Midway
Community Association in
Moore County, said the center
provided them with the legal
guidance to help Midway
a small community beside
Aberdeen that was excluded
from the town until June 2009.
The community is prosperous. We are in the city limits, we get trash picked up, we
have water, sewer and police
protection, we have a community watch set up, Holland
said. We wouldnt have been
able to achieve this had we
not had the center.
Despite the possibility that
the center could no longer
exist, Shaw said he is proud of
the work the center has done
and continues to do.
Regardless of whoever is
in power in state government
in Raleigh, I refuse to believe
that they are not or would
not be concerned about these
people who are disadvantaged, Shaw said.
Holland said the center continues to work with his community and other disadvantaged areas around the state.
We need them to be there
because the fight aint over,
Holland said. Unfortunately,
recent history says that its
going to continue, but you
have to keep fighting and you
have to pass it on to the next
generation.

Ted Shaw,
director of the Center for Civil Rights

though theres a disconnect


between the boards rhetoric and the specific actions
theyve taken, or the ways in
which theyve conducted this
review, said Brien.
Buansi said when he worked
at the center in the summer of
2013, he helped provide water
and sewer services to Chapel
Hills Rogers Road neighborhood, which housed the countys landfill for 40 years.
(It) benefited me tremendously because I learned
some more about my town,
about my county and the kind
of history we have here of not
making sure that everyone is
included, Buansi said.
Lewis Dozier, president
of the Royal Oak Concerned
Citizens Association, was troubled when Brunswick County
in southeastern North Carolina
decided to rezone some of the
property in the Royal Oak
community in order to expand
a nearby landfill.
Dozier said when the county
would not listen to the largely
minority communitys opposition, the Center for Civil Rights
intervened. They helped the
citizens ultimately keep the
landfill out of their community.
I cant state it strongly
enough that they are essential
and they are very capable
people they were very
dedicated to what they were
doing, Dozier said.
Brent Ducharme, a thirdyear UNC law student, said
the center was the main rea-

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ness with the community, you


want to help the community.
Maggie West, program
coordinator for CEF, said
more people can help community members with transportation needs.
She said a local company
called Wheels4Hope works
to fix used cars to be given to
people in need.
Mumin, after seeing her
new car and all the work the
class had done, said she was
left in awe.
I am humbled, she said.
university@dailytarheel.com

COMBAT

FROM PAGE 1

and decorate their newly made


paper with a stencil and dyed
pulp. The finished product was
then hung to dry for a day.
Visitors came from as far
as Richmond, Va., said Aaron
Shackelford, Mellon postdoctoral fellow at Carolina
Performing Arts, which hosted the workshops.
One thing that really struck
me is the range of people who
have come, Shackelford said.
The program was brought
to UNC by way of the Kronos
Quartet, who will perform at
Memorial Hall on Feb. 12 to
commemorate the World War
I centennial, but Shackelford
said it was particularly
important because of North
Carolinas military ties.
North Carolina is one of
the most military-friendly
states in the U.S., and as the
(states) flagship university, we
really want to respect that,
Shackelford said. Drews
work really exemplifies how
arts are part of a much larger
conversation on campus.
Stevenson served from 2006
to 2010, spending a year in
Afghanistan and time stateside
in Fort Hood, Texas and Fort
Knox, Ky. He said he wants to
give outsiders a better look at
veterans experiences.
For every photograph that
you take overseas, for every
video you take, theres thousands of moments that cant
be captured that are inside
you, Stevenson said. Im
hoping that people can see
that its a way for veterans to
further relay their experiences
to the outside world.
Marshall Montgomery,
an ROTC member at
Appalachian State University,
plans to join the army in a
year and a half. After traveling to UNC for the event, he
said he was glad to see support for the military.
With a decade of war, you
have a lot of (post-traumatic
stress disorder), so its cool
to see these kinds of programs offered for veterans,
Montgomery said.
Though the uniforms hold a
certain reverence and respect,
he said, theres a positive
transformational experience
that can occur in getting rid of
something that is reminiscent
of such strong emotions and
difficult experiences.
Cameron began the project
in 2007 after serving four years
of active duty and two years in
the National Guard. He began
touring and hosting workshops
that same year, visiting universities, bases and warrior transition units around the country
and internationally.
Cameron said he plans to
continue offering the workshop for as long as people
keep enjoying it.
This has been such an
amazing gift to be able to do
this work.
arts@dailytarheel.com

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Suite 102 Chapel Hill, NC 27517
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qualitees@mindspring.com

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Low Prices Everything Must Go!!

Opinion

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By Jamal Rogers, jmlrgs@gmail.com

Handle of Jack

NEXT

Its especially bad on Yik Yak these racist


sentiments are still in peoples minds today
on this campus .
Tasia Harris, a facilitator for Friday nights black student caucus

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

True
worth is
hard to
measure

JUSTICE LEAGUE
Seth Rose writes on Seattle
running back Marshawn Lynch.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

Outside Looking In, on a proposal to let students retake fake classes

Senior public relations major from


Holly Springs.
Email: joshaugh@live.unc.edu

Providing a few make-up classes years later


doesnt do anything for the students to help
them undo any loss of benefit.

Jackie OShaughnessy

rowing up with both


my mom and dad in
the military, I knew
there were lofty goals I was
expected to meet.
In elementary school,
I made perfect grades on
vocabulary tests, practiced my
multiplication on the way to
the bus stop and was in the
gifted program. In middle
school, I cried because I got
my first B in sixth grade language arts. In high school, I
took AP courses, applied to
top colleges and wore myself
out with hours spent studying
and working on papers.
My wake-up call came
by way of Laverne Cox, the
first transgender person to
be nominated for an Emmy
Award, who spoke last year in
the Great Hall of the Student
Union. She said something
that really hit a chord with
me that in order to avoid
or repress negative feelings,
she would pour herself into
achievement.
Wow. That sure hit close to
home, especially while I was
spending that semester in hours
of late rehearsals, countless
meetings, and long, dragging
study sessions. My brow was
permanently furrowed and my
room a constant mess a physical representation of how my
brain felt because I was pushing
myself to a breaking point.
She made me realize that I
was living for the future at the
expense of the present. This
is also pinned onto my quote
board on Pinterest, but that
does not make it any less pertinent or true.
Granted, it was this
achievement-based, forwardthinking thought process
and way of life that got me
accepted at UNC, but it
doesnt always brings out the
best in people.
My identity became the
things I accomplished. I did not
identify myself with the things
that I love, my friendships,
or my character traits, but by
the titles I held: President,
Founder, Chair(wo)man, etc.
I was never satisfied with
what I had accomplished.
Once I accomplished one goal,
Id immediately look toward
what achievement to tackle
next, rarely giving myself time
to enjoy my own victories.
Then there was the new
feeling of being average, which
did not sit well. My freshman
year, I left Holly Springs feeling like a big fish in a small
pond. When I reached UNC,
I quickly realized that everyone had received just as many
awards and titles as I had in
high school. I was average. The
thought of not receiving the
highest honors and getting the
best grades was not something
I was used to. My response
to push myself still harder
was anything but healthy.
This was a personal realization for me, but I want it to be
a wake-up call for others who
still feel similarly.
Your identity does not have
anything to do with the grades
you get, the awards you receive
or the prestige associated with
your career path.
You can try your hardest, fail,
and still be happy with yourself.
You can go to school and get a
degree in dramatic art and be
satisfied and successful. And
you can take a break from selfimprovement because you are
worth much more than your
grade point average.

Monday, February 2, 2015

White supremacists
legacy persists

EDITORIAL

Candidates: whos left?

This years SBP race


features a narrow
political spectrum.

oon, a new student


body president
will be elected. All
thats certain is that he or
she will not be part of the
amorphous entity that is
UNCs campus left. This is
an unusual and troubling
development.
At least within recent
memory, SBP races have
featured at least one candidate identifiable as an activist think Emilio Vicente
or Kevin Claybren and
often a candidate with a
strong base in the Campus
Y, such as Hetali Lodaya.

Other candidates, such as


Christy Lambden or Will
Leimenstoll, had campaign
teams well-connected with
progressive campus groups.
But a review of this
years candidates betrays
a conspicuous lack of
experience leading or even
participating in liberal
student groups.
Why is this a problem?
Many of the mainstream
causes endorsed by todays
candidates were the ideas of
radicals only a few years
ago. Someone had to push
for gender-neutral housing
and coal divestment, a better sexual assault policy and
more inclusive treatment of
students of color. Primarily,
though not exclusively,

the students who did so


came from the political left.
Without a leftist candidate,
our campus conversation
on these issues will be
impoverished.
Furthermore, who
among this crowd is ready
to lead the next fight in
the ongoing battle to fulfill
UNCs mandate to be the
university of the people?
Who will represent student interests to the
General Assembly, push
back against the Board of
Governors and work to
improve campus culture?
We dont yet know, and
we fear the answer is none
of them. For the candidates,
we have a request: go forth
and prove us wrong.

EDITORIAL

Burr-ying the truth


Burr shouldnt
block transparency
on torture.

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

Feinstein, who sent copies


of the report to various
departments in the executive branch.
While his own party
remains divided, Burr
has taken a dangerously
close-minded stance on
the debacle. Only the
reports executive summary has been made
public, but numerous
news outlets as well
as Burrs conspicuous
attempt to limit the
reports exposure suggest that its contents go
into extreme detail about
both the CIAs gruesome
enhanced interrogation
techniques and its lack

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

UNCs Moment of Truth


Tonights game against UVa. will reveal a lot about the Tar Heels

onight could have


been huge. Undefeated
Virginia heading into
the Smith Center to take on
North Carolina, a red-hot
team on a seven-game winning streak. The No. 1 team in
the ACC vs. the No. 2.
As with most things in
life, Duke ruined that for
us. And yes, Louisville had a
hand in it as well.
But maybe that wasnt a
bad thing. Maybe it set up
something greater.
Since falling to No. 1
Kentucky on Dec. 13, UNC is
11-2, and 2-2 against ranked
teams. Thats good. Its not
great. No matter how they
finish out, its pretty certain
that the Tar Heels will have a
good season. Tonight decides
whether that will be all the
history books have to say
about this team.
An undefeated UVa. squad
would have been a daunting
matchup, but now its even
more intimidating. The Hoos
dont lose not this year.
Saturday against Duke was a
fluke, and thats what theyre
out to prove tonight.

Daniel Wilco
Senior Writer
Senior advertising major from
Atlanta, Ga.
Email: dwilco@live.unc.edu

If they were watching


Saturday and they were
watching they saw the
cracks in UNCs game widen
against Louisville.
The Cardinals full-court
press befuddled UNC,
and it makes sense. North
Carolinas roster boasts five
scholarship guards, and
theres not one completely
healthy body among them.
Trying to break a press
without guards is like Dickie
V trying to call a game without talking about Duke. It
might be possible, but its a
hell of a lot harder, baby.
J.P. Tokoto had yet another
game with more turnovers

than assists, and, though it


pains me to say it, I blame
Gerry the Bear. Brice Johnson
ended up fouling out for the
third time this season.
But the most worrisome
crack that showed Saturday
was UNCs inability to close
out a game. With his team
up by 18 points in the second
half, Justin Coleman the
last member of this years
Blue Steel, if you dont count
Desmond Hubert should
be eyeing the clock and hoping his parents are watching.
Do the Tar Heels have a
contract with ESPN to keep
games interesting until the
last minute? Im sure we
could start a Kickstarter to
fill that hole in the budget.
Fans could contribute the
loads of money theyll save
by not having to keep a cardiologist on call every time
UNC faces a team that isnt
the Washington Generals.
Tonight could have been
an epic showdown. Instead,
its the ultimate test. Can the
Tar Heels bounce back? Can
they run with the big dogs?
Were about to find out.

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-

tions this misguided impulse


can be traced to Ronald
Reagans amiable citation of
the Pilgrim Fathers vision of
a city on a hill, a beacon to
benighted mankind. What
went unmentioned was their
subsequent treatment of
Indians, so-called witches,
Quakers and other dissenters
from their religious views.
Moreover, information concerning Colonel
Saunders relationship with
the KKK rests on hearsay,
and shaky hearsay at that.
So far as I am aware there
is no evidence that he was a
grand dragon of the Klan.
There is little evidence, for
that matter, that he was a
member. He himself denied
unlawful activity. But even
at their worst, historically
conditioned relationships,
following a bloody fraternal
war, do not justify historical vandalism especially
in the case of a man whose
service to this university
and to learning was exemplary. We should study the
past, the bad with the good,
not seek to repeal it; and we
should do so in the recognition that we too are imperfect beings with faults of
which we may not be aware.
I, for one, would welcome the due recognition
of Zora Hurston, but not at
the expense of memorials of
this universitys rich, varied
and imperfect past.
Edwin M. Yoder Jr.
DTH editor, 1955-56

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

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University

Monday, February 2, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

Toddlers pre-game ritual steals the Tar Heels show


By Shuyan Huang
Staff Writer

COURTESY OF ERIC HOOTS


Brady Hoots, 3, became an internet hit recently after a video of him
at a UNC mens basketball game was shared more than 6,000 times.

Everyone has his or her


own pre-game rituals but
not everyones goes viral.
Recently, a video of a
young UNC basketball fan
taking his pregame ritual very
seriously was shared over
6,000 times online.
In the video, 3-year-old
Brady Hoots swayed to the
national anthem while holding his right hand over his
heart. When the anthem was
over, he took off his T-shirt
and showed his No. 43 UNC
basketball jersey, as if to say,
Coach Williams, Im ready.
Several students saw the
internet sensation and said
they found the little future
Tar Heel adorable.

Hes so cute Im really


touched by his devotion
towards UNC basketball team,
said sophomore Sophia Wang.
Freshman Simran Khadka
said she was impressed by
his enthusiasm.
I wish I had that much
Tar Heel pride when I was a
child, she said. It would be
awesome if he attended UNC
in the future.
Eric Hoots, Bradys father
and director of player development for the UNC mens
basketball team, described his
sons passion for sports.
He rehearses his pregame
routine a lot in our house,
Eric said. He really loves the
national anthem, so he was
warmed (up).
Hoots is a UNC alumnus and has worked on Roy

Williams staff for more than


11 years. He has taken Brady
to quite a few baseball, soccer
and basketball games.
Because he took Brady to
so many games of different
sports, Hoots said Brady has
had a hard time picking a
favorite UNC sports team.
But he is a big Carolina
fan, Hoots said.
Steve Kirschner, a spokesman for the athletic department, was also impressed by
the huge enthusiasm of the
little boy.
He comes to every game
and he shoots around out on
the hoop. He wears his jersey
to every game, Kirschner said.
Kirschner said he thought
it was fantastic and truly
remarkable how many people
have seen the video.

DTH ONLINE:

Want to see Brady in


action? Head to
bit.ly/1KiWW6v

Kirschner also said they


had a lot of young fans like
Brady at sporting events.
Its fun to watch him, and
its fun to watch all the kids
come to the game, he said.
Sophomore Anita Chen
said sometimes adults can
learn from children.
Im a basketball fan, and
this video reminds me of the
sports spirit, Chen said.
Kids can always emotionally influence the adults.
I think kids have a positive influence on the whole
game.
university@dailytarheel.com

GYMNASTICS: UNC FINISHED SECOND WITH 194.500 POINTS

UNC gymnastics falters late, nishes second in quad meet


By Danielle Herman
Senior Writer

RALEIGH Two events


in and with a lead at the halfway mark, the North Carolina
gymnastics team was cruising in the noisy Reynolds
Coliseum, where screaming
fans belted out the lyrics to
Frozens Let It Go during a
break between events.
The Frozen-themed meet
didnt go as well as the Tar
Heels had hoped, as their
momentum froze halfway
through the meet. UNC finished in second place with

194.500 points despite having


a chance to reach the 195 range
for the second time this season.
We talked to the team
at the end of the meet and
said weve got to be prepared
to take advantage of every
opportunity, Coach Derek
Galvin said. We had an
opportunity tonight and let it
slip through our fingers.
After scoring in the 195range on Jan. 25 for the first
time in almost two years,
the North Carolina womens
gymnastics team felt strongly
going into Saturdays quad
meet against N.C. State, West

Virginia and William & Mary.


The Tar Heels momentum
picked up as they improved
on vault and floor, the two
events they had struggled
with the previous week.
We had our best vault
rotation of the season which
was really great, junior Sarah
Peterson said.
Peterson placed second
overall and first for UNC in
vault with a 9.875. She followed that by staying strong
through the teams last event
the balance beam placing
fifth overall with a 9.775.
But the teams focus had

faded before the last event.


For their bars routine, the Tar
Heels only managed a 48.425
their worst of the season
after coming off their best.
Peterson said the team
struggled to settle in for the
event and had a couple of
faults it usually didnt have.
Little things happened, and
I think it got to us. Competing
at N.C. State is always hard. Its
loud, its big, theres four teams
here, she said. We just need to
do a better job of keeping the
energy on our team.
Galvin said the team attributed the bars and beam chal-

lenges to lack of intensity.


They felt like last week,
bars was really strong and
beam was really strong, and
they knew we needed to focus
on floor and on vault to bring
them up to the level of bars, he
said. And what a couple of the
gymnasts said was maybe we
relaxed a little bit.
Freshman Morgan Lane,
who placed second overall
in the meet, thinks the team
learned from this meet the
importance of staying focused
for all four events, regardless of
how it performed last weekend.
I think bars and beam were

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this weekend we really focused
on vault and the floor, she said.
We just need to make sure we
pay as much attention to all
four events, so we can get them
all to go together and do well in
everything.
Unlike Elsa in Frozen,
the gymnastics team will
not be letting its mistakes
go. What it will be doing is
learning and moving forward
with intensity in the hopes of
achieving that fairy tale ending in its next meet.
sports@dailytarheel.com

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Cuddle with someone sweet.

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Youre getting stronger.
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SportsMonday

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, February, 2015

MENS BASKETBALL WRESTLING: NORTH CAROLINA 22, DREXEL 13; N.C. STATE 22, NORTH CAROLINA 18

FROM PAGE 1

After the game, in a UNC


locker room that was eerily
quiet other than the thud
of Johnsons head hitting
a locker, Meeks was asked
if his team had to be more
cautious as a result of all of
the fouls.
You do, he said. But at
the same time, you cant take
your foot off the pedal, and I
felt like I did at least, which
isnt good.
Additionally, the fouls
forced Williams to be more
creative with his lineup.
At one point, the Tar Heels
were forced to go small, keeping Meeks as the only big
man in the game. Later, at the
beginning of overtime, Britt
started instead of Johnson,
who could only watch from
the bench.
Paige wasnt hesitant to
admit that the foul trouble
affected the flow of the
offense.
But Williams refused to
cite his players overagression as one of the reasons
UNC lost.
Instead he blamed himself, saying fellow Hall of
Famer Rick Pitino outcoached him, and that the
Cardinals simply wanted
the ball more than the Tar
Heels.
(Foul trouble) affected
(the rotation), but thats an
excuse, too. Louisville beat
North Carolina, he said.
Somebody kicked our
tails and Im not going to
say anything trying to make
excuses.
Johnson, on the other
hand, still felt like he was
searching for answers in
terms of how many times
the three officials blew their
whistles.
I dont know what to say
to it. They called it, he said.
Its the end of the game
now. Cant do nothing about
it.
sports@dailytarheel.com

SWIMMING

FROM PAGE 1

Its just a fun thing to do


and I love doing it and I love
singing, Lohse said.
Since starting the tradition in 2006, Lohse has sung
the national anthems from
France, Canada, Malaysia
and many others. He said he
always memorizes them and
sings them in their native
languages.
The one national anthem
I am completely incapable of
singing is the United States
of America, he said. I cannot sing it. I cannot hit the
notes. I have a baritone voice,
but I sing a heck of a great La
Marseillaise.
Lohse said he is looking
forward to the end of the

Heavyweights doom Tar Heels


By David Adler
Staff Writer

C.D. Mock might have


thought North Carolina had
a better team than N.C. State,
but the scoreboard said otherwise.
And after another narrow
defeat, the UNC wrestling
team is still searching for its
first ACC victory. Despite holding an 18-7 lead, UNC (8-4, 0-2
ACC) could not hold on as the
N.C. State Wolfpack (13-4, 1-1
ACC) rallied to take down the
Tar Heels 22-18 at the Eddie
Smith Field House.
UNC responded to the
loss by defeating Drexel (6-9,
2-1 EIWA) 22-13, but the Tar
Heels lamented on the close
loss against N.C. State rather
than celebrate their other win.
We knew who we needed to
beat going into the dual, and it
was critical that we won all of
the matches from 133 pounds
to 174, so its a shame that it

WOMENS BASKETBALL

FROM PAGE 1

was Joey Ward who didnt have


a good day, Mock said. I dont
take anything away from State,
but we didnt wrestle as well as
last week. Im not sure why.
Ward, who is ranked 10th
in the country, lost in the 141pound weight class division.
With UNC trailing 7-6, redshirt junior Christian Barber
pushed the Tar Heels ahead
his takedown of N.C. State
freshman Sam Melikian in the
149-pound weight class gave
North Carolina a 9-7 lead.
I didnt wrestle my greatest
during the first two periods,
Barber said. I knew I had to
get the win for the team and I
just had to trust my instinct.
The Tar Heels held an 18-7
advantage over the Wolfpack
after three consecutive decision victories by Chris Mears,
Ethan Ramos and John
Michael Staudenmayer.
The turning point in the
dual came when N.C. States
heavyweights took the mats.

Nicky Hall pinned UNCs Scott


Marmoll in the 184-pound
bout to pick up a crucial six
points and get the Wolfpack
back in striking distance. N.C.
State picked up three more
points in the 197-pound bout
to decrease the deficit to 18-16
heading into the final match.
In the final match, N.C.
State redshirt junior Nick
Gwiazdowski lived up to his
undefeated No. 1 ranking as
he easily pinned UNC senior
Frank Abbondanza to finish
off the comeback and give
State the 22-18 victory.
Frank can go up against
anyone, but the kid that
he was going against was a
beast, Mock said.
Even in defeat, UNC had
plenty of individual accomplishments making the loss
sting even worse.
Its a tough loss because
guys like Ethan (Ramos) and
Troy (Heilmann) did their job
against State, Barber said. To

COURTESY OF BETH WARD


UNC wrestler Joey Ward is ranked 10th in the country at 141
pounds. This weekend, UNC lost to N.C. State but beat Drexel.

win youve got to have six or


seven guys perform and we had
a couple of downfalls today.
For Mock, the loss came
down to toughness more than
overall talent.
In the locker room after the
State dual I told the guys that
were a better team than State,

but we werent as tough as they


were, Mock said. We didnt
exemplify the toughness that is
needed to be nationally competitive, so well spend a lot of
time talking about how we can
be tougher.
sports@dailytarheel.com

I told them to not help and dont collapse


and just stay on your man.

the first half, but out of the


locker room, the Eagles were
not allowed to take flight.
In the second half, Boston
College shot just 20 percent
and went 2-for-18 from
behind the 3-point line.
Not giving those open
looks. I told them to not help
and dont collapse and just
stay on your man, Coach
Sylvia Hatchell said. I told
everyone that they had to
accept the challenge of guarding them and not fouling and
keeping their hands off of
them but staying in between
them and the basket.
No player epitomized
the offensive struggle and
defensive intensity more than
sophomore guard Allisha

Gray. The sophomore went


2-of-14 from the field but had
11 defensive rebounds and a
steal.
Shes just a rock-solid
kid, Hatchell said. If her
shot is not going in, she
makes up for it in another
area with rebounding or she
can go make a smart defensive play.
Sophomore forward
Stephanie Mavunga had eight
defensive rebounds, one block
and two steals in the win over
Boston College.
Our intensity on defense
turns over to what we do on

offense, Mavunga said. So if


we lock down on defense and
we get a stop, then that leads
to fast break points. Thats
one of the things that were
good at. Sometimes well be
struggling offensively, and
for those spurts were struggling offensively, we start
clapping and were looking
at each other and say, You
have to lock in and you have
to get this stop.
So for the Tar Heels, sometimes the best offense is a
good defense.

mens lacrosse season when


he gets to sing O Canada,
which he considers his specialty.
Along with Lowe, the
mens side celebrated seven
other seniors, while the
womens side celebrated
three.
We hate to see seniors go,
but thats really the whole
idea, Coach Rich DeSelm
said. Theyre supposed to
come and graduate and go on
to the next part of their life.
Every year were indebted to
the senior class. Youve got to
love their leadership.
Senior Danielle Siverling
celebrated her Senior Night
by winning the 200-yard
freestyle with a time of
1:49.18.
Siverling said the night

was emotional for all of the


seniors because all of the
time the team has spent
together over the past three
seasons.
Honestly I think my favorite memories here have been
watching other people have
great races, Siverling said.
Its been really cool to watch
my teammates do that kind
of stuff.
One of those teammates
was fellow senior Patrick
Myers, who won the 200-yard
backstroke with a time of
1:47.78.
Its just like a huge family here and throughout the
course of my four years these
guys are my best friends,
Myers said.
Theyre going to be friends
for life and just knowing that

this is going to be the last


time Im going to be racing
in this pool with a bunch of
them is pretty emotional for
me.

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

FREE - 7:00pm Doors at 6:30pm


Nelson Mandela Auditorium, FedEx Global Education Center
Supported by: Cultural Services of the French
Embassy in the US, Centre National de la
Cinmatographie et de lImage Anime, Dept. of
Romance Studies, Center for European Studies, &
Dept. of Asian Studies.

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.

Class buys a car


A business class raised
money to surprise an Agora
employee with a new car.
See pg. 4 for story.

20/20
for

20

LESS

Its not too early to start


thinking about summer!
Check out summer.unc.edu
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

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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

(C)2015 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


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dailytarheel.com

Monday, February 2, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

SportsMonday

SCOREBOARD

MENS TENNIS: ILLINOIS 4, UNC 3


WOMENS TENNIS: UNC 4, TEXAS A&M 3
GYMNASTICS: UNC PLACED SECOND
WRESTLING: UNC 22, DREXEL 13
FOLLOW US ON TWITTER: @DTHSports

MENS BASKETBALL: LOUISVILLE 78, NORTH CAROLINA 68 (OT)

TAR HEELS FOULED


OUT, KNOCKED OUT

WOMENS BASKETBALL: NORTH


CAROLINA 72, BOSTON COLLEGE 60

Womens
basketball
team clips
the Eagles

UNC overcame poor shooting to


defeat Boston College Sunday.
By Ben Coley
Staff Writer

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.

UNC conceded 44 free throw attempts on 33 fouls


By Grace Raynor
Sports Editor

LOUISVILLE, KY. In this moment, Roy


Williams has nothing to say. Instead, the body
language of the North Carolina mens basketball coach articulates everything his words
dont have to.
Williams is kneeling. His elbow is on his
knee, and two fingers frame his chin. Theres a
bit of a scowl on his face.
In just a second, hell take off his glasses
and point to sophomore forward Isaiah Hicks,
motioning for him to sub in for junior forward Brice Johnson.
There are still nearly four minutes left on
the clock of No. 10 Louisvilles eventual 78-68
overtime win over No. 13 North Carolina on

Saturday, but Johnson has already fouled out.


Hicks, who will replace him, has four, and in
a matter of just 41 seconds, hell be gone with
five, too.
Such was the script for the Tar Heels
(17-5, 7-2 ACC) Saturday, who saw six of
the nine players who took the floor end the
game with at least four fouls.
Kennedy Meeks, J.P. Tokoto and Justin
Jackson all had four by the end of the
overtime period, and Nate Britt would join
Johnson and Hicks on the bench with 43
seconds remaining in extra time. Junior
guard Marcus Paige had three.
We tried to talk about not fouling, and we
put them on the line 44 times, said Williams
in his opening statement.
When we played at Kentucky, we shot (12)

free throws, and they shot 31. Today we shot


20 and (Louisville) shot 44.
But it was UNCs own fault, Williams said
nothing his players couldnt control.
Im not talking about the officials, he said.
We made the fouls and we should not have
done that.
The Tar Heels ended the game with 33
team fouls, tied for fourth-most in school history and the most under Williams at North
Carolina.
The 44 free throws Louisville (18-3, 6-2 ACC)
shot were also the most a UNC team under
Williams command has ever allowed. The
Cardinals, on the other hand, only committed 16
team fouls for 20 UNC free throws.

SEE MENS BASKETBALL, PAGE 7

WOMENS LACROSSE: NORTH CAROLINA 13, JAMES MADISON 9

Womens lacrosse dethrones the Dukes

In their season opener,


the No. 2 Tar Heels
defeated James Madison.
By Ben Salkeld
Staff Writer

The last time North Carolina


womens lacrosse fans cheered
for goals from Brittney Coppa,
Sammy Jo Tracy, or Kelly Devlin,
the three were on their way to winning a national championship in
Villanova, Pa., on May 26, 2013.
All three were sidelined for the
whole 2014 season with injuries.
On Sunday, the trio returned
to Fetzer Field and each scored
once again, collaborating with a
mixture of other new and familiar
faces to earn a 13-9 season-opening victory for the No. 2 Tar Heels
against James Madison.
I think a year off has made me
want it a lot more than I ever have
in my whole life, said Coppa, now
a senior captain. It was great to
be back out there, and it was great
to get a win on our home field for
our first game.
Coppas eagerness to return to
the field was quickly made apparent: Her goal came just 37 seconds
into the game and set the tone for
an aggressive UNC attack.

I liked our aggressiveness and


how tough we were, Coach Jenny
Levy said. I thought JMU did a
great job of challenging us today,
and theyre a good team. This was
a great start to our season.
The Dukes displayed their
toughness all game long, even
taking the lead temporarily seven
minutes into the second half, until
the Tar Heels responded with a
streak of five unanswered goals to
seal the victory.
Of UNCs 13 goals, only three
came from Tar Heels who played
for the team last year.
Leading the team this time was
sophomore attacker Alex Moore,
who transferred to UNC after
leading Southern Californias team
in goals last year as a freshman.
Moore added four goals in
her debut as a Tar Heel, and she
received high praise from Levy
after the game.
Shes just smart, Levy said. I
trust her to be in the game and be
in the moment.
She missed a one-on-one with
the goalie in the first half, and its
not a big deal those things happen. But I like the fact that she
responded and, in the second half,
she put in some really great goals.
Moore said her first gameday
experience as a Tar Heel was
amazing and that she is already

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

SEE WOMENS BASKETBALL, PAGE 7

SWIMMING & DIVING: UNC 176,


DUKE 90; UNC 175, DUKE 133

Tar Heel
veterans
honored on
Senior Night

Eleven seniors on the swimming


and diving teams were recognized.
By Joey DeVito
Assistant Online Editor

DTH/HENRY GARGAN
Sophomore midfielder Alex Moore (30) goes up against James Madison
defender Carter Reifsnider (8) during the Tar Heels season opener Sunday.

dedicated to this offense.


My job as an attacker is to look
to go to goal and move the ball as
fast as I can, she said. So whatever
I can do to help, Im going to do.
But that doesnt end the list of
talent that the Tar Heels are welcoming this season.
Also among the list of goalscorers Sunday were freshmen
midfielders Ela Hazar and Marie
McCool both of whom were
included in Inside Lacrosses list
of top 20 incoming freshmen.

Coppa said she was thrilled to


see new faces fit in and to see the
team coming together early in the
season.
I think one of the best things
we have is heart and hustle, but I
think we can get better with staying a little bit more composed, she
said. Our offense needs to work
on slowing the pace down, but
other than that, I see nothing but
success for our team in the future.
sports@dailytarheel.com

It was business as usual for the North


Carolina swimming and diving teams on
Senior Night on Friday except for one
thing.
As the crowd and the teams prepared
for the final home meet against Duke a
meet the mens and womens teams won by
scores of 176-90 and 175-133, respectively
they heard something strange: the sound
of God Save the Queen ringing through
Koury Natatorium.
Dave Lohse, the spokesman for the swimming and diving teams, was singing the
British national anthem in honor of senior
Nick Lowe, who is from London, England.
Singing national anthems for foreign
athletes on their Senior Night is a tradition
Lohse has carried on for almost a decade.

SEE SWIMMING, PAGE 7

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