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Volume 123, Issue 34

Schools aim to
navigate tricky
NCAA rules

Friday, April 17, 2015

An unexplainable bond

UNC self-reported more than 90


NCAA violations over 32 months.
By C Jackson Cowart
Staff Writer

Marielle vanGelder finds herself laughing at


the ridiculous nature of her schools self-reported
NCAA violations.
Whether its searching a prospects name on
Twitter and accidentally posting it, hitting reply
all to an email instead of forwarding it, or misusing the direct message feature, UNCs Associate
Athletic Director for Compliance has seen plenty
of comedic fodder cross her desk.
When you read them on paper, they look silly
to outside people who dont deal with it every day,
vanGelder said. But when youre seeing them constantly, you just get used to reporting those.
Silly or not, its still a violation.
In a public record obtained by the Daily Tar
Heel, UNC self-reported 91 violations spanning
from Jan. 1, 2012 to Aug. 13, 2014 the date the
record was requested ranging from impermissible texting and cash benefits to improper data
entry of transfer credit hours.
Having a healthy level of paranoia is generally how I put it for somebody in my position,
vanGelder said. You have to question everything
you see.
The NCAA which was unavailable for comment has long been scrutinized for the complexity and absurdity of its legislation, with the
media latching onto noteworthy cases.
In 2014, Ohio State University self-reported an
accidental text message sent to a recruit by a coachs
4-year-old son. In 2013, the University of Oregon
self-reported an impermissible gift when an assistant coach replaced a forgotten shaving kit for a
prospects father.
And while the NCAA later contacted both
schools to inform them no violation was actually
committed, the self-reporting process was already
complete and the stories only confirmed the
public disfavor of the NCAA rules.
The rulebook still continues to be just mindnumbing to look at, said UNC baseball coach
Mike Fox. You would have to write a whole novel
about it. Its an unbelievable challenge.
Coaches arent alone in their frustration, as compliance officers also bemoan the extensive regulations they must operate within.
There are certain rules in there that I completely agree with, and there are other rules in
there that I dont agree with as wholeheartedly,
said Jody Sykes, senior associate athletic director
and chief compliance officer at Oregon. We live
with them, whether we like them or not.
Social media infractions most irk vanGelder. Of
UNCs 91 self-reported violations, 16 have been
the result of a social media mishap.
Social media causes us so many problems, vanGelder said. If I looked at Twitter all day long, all I
would do would be report Twitter violations.
Social media plagues institutions across the
country. In March, Ohio State quarterback
Braxton Miller was ruled ineligible after posting a
commercial endorsement on his Instagram.
But when the university self-reported the incident, Miller was reinstated with no consequence.
Braxton posted the Instagram and within 20
minutes called one of our compliance officers, said
Doug Archie, associate athletics director for compliance at Ohio State. We said, Hey, probably not
a great ten-second decision, lets take that down.
Despite the prevalence of these types of violations, vanGelder has been frustrated by the NCAAs
inability to adjust to changes in technology.
Theyre just getting around to addressing
Facebook, she said. Theyre trying to word things
with a broad brush, but thats very difficult when
your coaches want to know, Well, how does that
relate to Snapchat?
Because NCAA legislation doesnt address technologies directly, the rules fail to accurately differentiate between various modes of communication.
If you direct message a prospect on Twitter,
thats just like an email, but they still cant text message, vanGelder said. Make it one thing, and dont
try to tell me that a text message is different than a
direct message on Twitter because its not.
Technology is a game-changer in recruiting.

Completely out of control


Fox remembers the days before roster limits and
scholarship caps. In 2009, the NCAA capped baseball rosters at 35 players in response to college baseball coaches signing surplus recruits to safeguard
against current players leaving to play professionally, only to cut these excess players in the fall.
Despite the noble intention of the rule, Fox disagrees with the prescribed solution, which limits the
number of walk-ons he can carry on his roster.
The NCAA says I cant have a 36th player, and
yet the NCAA promotes that its all about opportunity, said Fox, a former walk-on. I could talk
for two or three hours about why all of this is just
grossly unfair and wrong.
Fox also takes issue with coaches at big-time
programs using their resources to circumvent the
rulebook.
You used to be able to send a kid (recruiting

SEE REGULATIONS, PAGE 5

DTH/CAMERON ROBERT
Carter Gregory, second from left, attended the University of South Carolina for one year before transferring to UNC and joining the Clef Hangers.

The Clef Hangers say goodbye to a special senior


By Gabriella Cirelli
Arts & Culture Editor

Trying to travel anywhere with


Carter Gregory takes forever.
You literally cant walk
anywhere with Carter for more
than five minutes without
somebody wanting to stop and
say Hi to him every 10 feet. As
a friend, it is the most annoying
thing in the world, said junior
Channing Mitzell.
He literally pulls people to
him.
Mitzell met Gregory, a senior,
in the fall of 2013 when Mitzell
joined UNCs Clef Hangers a
cappella group as a sophomore.
Gregory, then a junior, had been
in the group for a year.
And within the Clefs,
Gregory holds a special, though
unofficial position as confidant.
Carter knows everybody in
the group better than anybody,
because everybody tells him
everything, Mitzell said.
And its not because he goes
searching for it, but because
people realize how good of a
friend and how level-headed
he is.

Junior Jason Hill, who also


joined the Clef Hangers in fall
2012, thinks Gregory is an integral part of the groups social
structure.
We come from very diverse
backgrounds and some kids are
just socially uncomfortable,
Hill said.
But then when you meet
guys like Carter that are just
socially comfortable, trustworthy, compassionate, empathetic,
it just helps those guys open up.
People turn to Gregory for
anything, Mitzell said.

A bit of liquid courage


In his junior year at UNC, it
was Gregory who needed someone to turn to.
I guess I was the first straight
guy he came out to, Hill said,
recalling a night at Hes Not
Here last year when Gregory
pointed out a male student he
liked as more than a friend.
He was expecting me to say
Oh, what the heck, or something and I was just like, Oh,
so you like tall guys? And he
was just like Yes! and started

smiling and he was just so


happy that it went over well,
Hill said.
That was a really big
moment for him for the one
time in his life, I think the roles
were switched, where he had
someone supporting him.
Gregory had been wanting
to tell Hill, his best friend, for
a while.
I definitely had a little bit of
liquid courage, Gregory said.
And when he gave me that
response it was just confirmation for me being like, there is
nothing to be scared about. I
have no reason to feel trapped
anymore at all.
Gregory credits the other
members of the Clef Hangers
with helping him accept his
identity as a gay man.
Just having that support
system along with sharing something like music that you share so
deeply with people, it creates this
unexplainable bond, he said.
That bond was something
Gregory knew he wanted to be a
part of from a young age.
I always wanted to go to
UNC that was my dream ever

Panel discusses assault epidemic


Carol Folt spoke
before The Hunting
Ground screening.
By Sofia Edelman
Staff Writer

Zero: the number of students expelled from UNC for


sexual assault in recent years.
This and many other shocking realities of sexual assault on
college campuses was revealed
by The Hunting Ground, a
documentary based off of the
experiences of UNC alumni
Andrea Pino and Annie Clark
and other survivors.
Pino, Clark, former
Assistant Dean of Students
Melinda Manning and
Chancellor Carol Folt spoke
on a panel before the film.
Manning worries sexual
assault cases are underreported or not taken seriously so a universitys brand
is kept clean from tarnish.
She admits during her time
in office, UNC did not handle
sexual assault cases well.
We did a horrible job preparing and training the Honor
Court (on) hearing the cases
appropriately, Manning said.
In that previous system, very
few students wanted to take
their cases to the Honor Court.
Survivor and advocate,
Landen Gambill, held a sign

DTH/CLAIRE COLLINS
Landi Gambill holds a sign addressing Carol Folt on Thursday.

that read Chancellor Folt, my


rapist confessed, where is my
justice.
In front of Gambill sat Folt,
who spoke about steps the
University has taken to support survivors while admitting
there is still work to be done.
I think we all know were
not declaring victory in any
way. Im here because I really
want to continue working
on this, and this is not what
you do in a year or a day or
even five years, said Folt, not
responding to the sign.
Gambill said she brought
the sign to call out the hypocrisy of UNC for not providing
recourse for people like her.
(The Universitys) line
is, Things are better, things
are getting better, Gambill
said. We want to be a voice
for ourselves, but a voice that

I look formidable.
VIN DIESEL

since I was in 8th grade, he said.


Because that was the first
time I had ever heard the Clef
Hangers.

A Change Is Gonna Come


Gregory attended the
University of South Carolina on
a music scholarship for one year
before transferring to UNC.
At South Carolina, he was a
member of the a cappella group
The Carolina Gentlemen.
But he still wanted to be a
Clef Hanger.
(The Carolina Gentlemen)
were good, said Tammi
Williams, Gregorys mother.
But he kept on saying,
Theyre just not the Clef
Hangers, theyre just not the
Clef Hangers.
Three years later, Gregory is
24 hours away from his last performance as a Clef. The group
will host its last official concert
of the year Saturday as a farewell to this years four graduating seniors.
In addition to being honored

SEE CLEF HANGERS, PAGE 5

Womens
Center asked
to go under
self-review
The center has paused its
search for a new director
during the review period.
By Emily Lowe
Staff Writer

(says) things are still just as


bad as they are in the movie.
And the University knows.
After the showing, Pino
spoke about the fears some
survivors have with informing
an administrator.
I was a Carolina Covenant
scholar and my fear of coming forward was that Id lose
my scholarship, Pino said.
Pino said it is hard for
institutions to find the inertia
to admit that their campuses
have a rape problem.
I think in colleges we have
this collective activism problem where nobody wants to
step up and admit it. Once
that first person takes that initial plunge hopefully administrators and leaders around the
country will follow.

This year has been one of uncertainty for the Carolina Womens
Center, with pressing questions
about the future of the center and its
new director so far unanswered.
In the fall, the center held open
forums for the four candidates for
the director position that opened
after Christi Hurt began working
in the office
of the Dean of
Center
Student Affairs.
& Institute
A new director was never
named because
of the Board
of Governors
review of centers that left the existence of the center in limbo.
The search has not ended I
would say the best word is paused
because what the Board of Governors

university@dailytarheel.com

SEE WOMENS CENTER, PAGE 5

CUTS

News

Friday, April 17, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel


www.dailytarheel.com

Candy Crush injury saga

122 years of editorial freedom


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STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
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SPORTS EDITOR

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ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR
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DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
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CHUMBE WEAVING

DAILY
DOSE

Established 1893

The Daily Tar Heel

From staff and wire reports

atch out for all you who are addicted to Candy Crush Saga
or any other very addictive phone game. A man from San
Diego said he played the popular candy game more than
six hours a day after he left the military. He said he usually
only played it with his left hand while holding a TV remote in his right. After
weeks of playing, the man found out he had ruptured a tendon in his thumb.
As in he physically injured himself. And needed surgery. The man said that
while he was playing, he didnt feel any pain. Please, for the love of humanity,
if you play these insanely addicting phone games, please do it in moderation.
We are the future. How are we supposed to solve all the worlds problems if
we dont have tendons in our thumbs from Candy Crush?
NOTED. Disorder in the court. Just as the
judge announced a prison sentence for a
man accused of assault, someone let one
rip. The audience then started laughing
and the court usher had to clear out the
courtroom before the rest of the sentencing could continue. Youve got to love
immature jokes in a mature setting.

QUOTED. That crash happened after the


pilot, who caused the accident, broke up
with his girlfriend. Hence, my friends,
know that we are absolutely encouraging
single pilots to marry.
Turkish Airlines CEO discussing his
rather unusual explanation for the recent
airplane crash by Germanwings.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY

Annual Edible Book Contest:


This event is a competition
among local artists and bakers
who make edible creations that
are representations of a book
in the Informations and Library
Science Library. There will be
three awards: best in show,
most humorous and best entry
based on a book for children or
teenagers. The event is free and
open to the public.
Time: 12 p.m. to 2:15 p.m.
Location: Manning Hall,
Information and Library Science
Library
UNC Percussion Ensemble
and UNC Global Rhythms
Ensemble: The UNC Percussion
Ensemble will present its spring
concert, featuring the UNC Global Rhythms ensemble. The event

is free and open to the public.


Time: 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Location: Kenan Music Building,
Rehearsal Hall
Cadence Spring Concert: The
all-female a cappella group will
perform its spring concert. Tickets can be purchased at the door
or in The Pit. The cost is $6 in The
Pit and $8 at the door. The event
is open to the public.
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Location: Hanes Art Center

Scholarship Benefit Concert:


The UNC Wind Ensemble and
Symphony Band will present a
scholarship benefit concert. The
cost is $10.
Time: 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Location: Memorial Hall

SUNDAY

University Band: The University


band will present an outdoor
concert. The event is free and
open to the public.
Time: 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
Location: Forest Theater

SATURDAY

Clef Hangers Spring Concert:


The all-male a cappella group
will perform its spring concert.
Tickets can be purchased at the
door. The event is open to the
public.
Time: 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Location: Memorial Hall

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
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

DTH/KAITLIN DUREN

ugo Jamioy (right) and Mama Pastora


Juajibioy of the Camentsa indigenous
nation in Colombia visit Hanes Art Center
Wednesday to discuss the importance of oral history
and preserving indigenous traditions and culture.

POLICE LOG
Someone stole items on
the 100 block of Hillspring
Lane at 7:06 a.m. Tuesday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person stole tools,
valued at $700, reports state.
The stolen items were a wheel
barrel, a string trimmer and a
hand tool.

Someone broke into a


vehicle on the 200 block of
South Estes Drive between
3:30 p.m. and 4:36 p.m.
Tuesday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
The person took several
types of medication, which
were all valued at $200, from
the unlocked vehicle, reports
state.
Someone stole an item
from the McDonalds restaurant at 409 W. Franklin St.
at 5:15 p.m. Tuesday, according to Chapel Hill police
reports.
The person stole an

iPhone, valued at $500, off of


the table, reports state.
Someone reported loud
music coming from a vehicle
at the 1500 block of Martin
Luther King Jr. Blvd. at 12:51
a.m. Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone stole an item
from a vehicle at the 1800
block of Martin Luther King
Jr. Blvd. at 9:44 p.m. Tuesday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person stole an
iPhone, which was valued
at $650, from the unlocked
vehicle, reports state.
Someone damaged
property on the 100 block
of Pinegate Circle at 11 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person scratched a
Toyota Camry, which caused
damage valued at $300,
reports state.

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Friday, April 17, 2015

Little library has big opening NC looks

into body
cams for
officers
A bill would require
most police in the state
to wear the cameras.
By Lauren Hong
Staff Writer

I am a carpenter by training. Ive


been doing it for many years, and so
I was really excited to have a place
to be able to work and to be able to
work on some of the equipment that
I usually cant afford, he said.
Right now, the equipment in
Hanes Art Center is only available
to MakNet organization members,
but in the coming months it will
open it up to the general student
population and will be holding
workshops to teach students how
to use it.
Freshman Joshua Hardin said hes
excited MakNet is making these technologies accessible for students.
I always wanted to do some kind
of invention work, but I didnt really
know how to go about it, he said. I
feel like this would be a great way to
learn how to use all of these tools at
my disposal.

By the end of the semester,


the UNC Department of Public
Safety hopes to equip all 53 of its
sworn police officers with body
cameras and North Carolina
lawmakers are looking to accomplish a similar goal statewide.
House Bill 537 would require
the majority of law enforcement
officers to use body cameras
during interactions with the
public. The bill would provide
$1 for every $5 departments
spend on purchasing cameras
and retaining the recordings.
A recent yearlong study completed by the Police Foundation,
a think tank, found body-worn
cameras reduced the amount of
force police officers used by 50
percent and led to nearly 10 times
fewer citizens complaints.
The body-worn camera is a
technology that has found its
time, said Rep. Edward Hanes
Jr., a Democrat from Forsyth
County and a primary sponsor
of the bill, in an email.
Hanes said they have seen
strong support from individual
police departments and have
been seeking support from the
N.C. Sheriffs Association and
the N.C. Law Enforcement
Officers Association.
The costs associated with
storage are staggering. Were
just trying to protect these
relationships through camera
implementation and provide
some financial assistance along
the way, Hanes said.
Earlier this year, UNC
approved a $60,000 request for
DPS to purchase the new cameras.
Randy Young, spokesman for
DPS, said the department has
been looking at body cameras
since spring 2013.
We have had dashboard
cameras body cameras are just
an extension and enhance our
record-keeping abilities. They
increase accountability and transparency, and are effective for preserving evidence, Young said.
Support for the N.C. bill is cut
largely down party lines, Hanes
said despite public opinion
surveys showing more than 70
percent of the general public
supports body-worn cameras.
Generally we think policeworn body cameras can be a
win-win for community and law
enforcement. It just depends on
how they are being used, said
Sarah Preston, policy director
of the American Civil Liberties
Union of North Carolina.
She said officers should not
be allowed to edit the video on
the fly, nor should they be able
to activate the camera themselves. Anyone subject to the
recording should also be able to
watch it on request.
Policies should be publicly
posted and the public should
be informed they are subject to
recording by law enforcement,
Preston said.
Josh Mecimore, spokesman for the Chapel Hill Police
Department, said the department has tested several body
camera models and are currently waiting on another model.
The department already has
cameras on all of their patrol
cars. Mecimore said the body
cameras would make it easier to
identify training needs and investigate complaints about officers.
Officer privacy and regulations
on camera usage could be disadvantages of the cameras, he said.
But Mecimore said he sees a
need for cameras for officers who
dont work in a vehicle such
as in the downtown unit, where
police are often on foot or bicycle.
The expectation is that officers
will behave like they are expected
to whether there is a camera there
or not, Mecimore said.
Hanes, the lawmaker, said
increased use of body cameras
will improve the relationship
between civilians and police.
Thankfully we havent had
a publicly known incident
that rises to the level of what
we saw in North Charleston.
Implementation of this bill may
very well save us from that terrible end, Hanes said.

arts@dailytarheel.com

state@dailytarheel.com

DTH/ALEX HAMEL
Girl Scout Troop 3064 and Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt (right) install the Little Free Libraries with a ribbon-cutting ceremony at Community Center park Thursday.

Girl scouts provide access to books with Little Free Libraries


By Luman Ouyang
Staff Writer

Eleven girls from Troop 3064 in Girl Scouts


North Carolina Coastal Pines will be installing Little
Free Libraries at several area locations this week.
Little Free Libraries was started by Wisconsin
residents Todd Bol and Rick Brooks in 2009. These
libraries are small boxes of books installed in communities to promote reading. There are over 25,000
Little Free Libraries in 70 countries, said Kris
Huson, spokeswoman for Little Free Libraries.
There are places where free books are hard
to access; we want to make sure that there are as
many free libraries in these places as possible, so
people have access to books, Huson said.
Little Free Libraries sustainability relies on
the exchange of books: When someone borrows
a book from the library, he or she is supposed to
bring at least one book back for exchange.
Between May 2013 and June 2014, the girl
scouts collected books from neighborhood houses
and schools to compete for the Girl Scout Bronze
Award program, said Kristen Zuco, one of the

leaders of troop 3064. After someone suggested


the idea of Little Free Libraries to them, the troop
decided to launch the project in September.
Zuco said the girls spent a weekend building
the library boxes by melting the materials down,
gluing them, setting them up and painting them.
Each group painted a little small library with
whatever design they came up with, she said.
Zuco said the girls looked through a few locations in town and reached out to different entities.
They kind of sent a letter of, If you are interested in having a little free library at your location, email us back, she said. Thats how actually it got to the director of the Chapel Hill library.
Sites include the Transit Operations Center,
Homestead Aquatic Center, South Estes Housing
neighborhood and Chapel Hill Community Center.
Susan Brown, director of the Chapel Hill Public
Library, helped connect the girls with other town
officials to solve some problems, Zuco said. For
example, while the four little libraries were installed
on town property, the girls were not charged with a
$400 building permit fee for each site.
We kind of recognized that its not something

we could afford, and she helped us to work with


the mayor and the council to allow us to be able
to build this without having to submit that kind
of building permit application, Zuco said.
Zuco said each Little Free Library will have a
different number of books depending on the size
of the library.
Anywhere between 40 and 60 books, at any
given time, can be in the library, she said.
Zuco said the girl scouts hope the libraries will
function for a long time.
They are in locations where the public will
respect the property and not try to do harm to
anything, so I think in their minds, the libraries
will be there forever, she said.
Brown said the girls helped as much as they
could for every part of the project.
They are very dedicated, persistent and they
have a vision for the project, Brown said. My
guess is that it will do what the girls set up to do,
which is support literacy and support the community in a creative way.
city@dailytarheel.com

Low-budget dining concerns students


Students felt $1.25 for
food every day was not
enough to eat healthy.
By Cain Twyman
Senior Writer

UNC students signed up to eat off


of $1.25 a day to raise awareness for
food insecurity in the community
but the low calorie count raised
other concerns.
In North Carolina, one in four children dont know where their next meal
is coming from. To bring awareness to
that issue, students lived off of $1.25
a day for food during an event called
Dine Below the Line. The event was
used to raise funds for organizations
trying to combat the issue.
For four days, 169 UNC students
lived off of prepackaged meals consisting of less than 800 calories per
day. It was organized by the Carolina
Microfinance Initiative, a group dedicated to poverty alleviation through
small-scale financial services.
A few students expressed concerns. After receiving their food
boxes, they thought that the program could be detrimental to people

with sensitivities concerning food.


Samantha Croffut, a masters student in the School of Public Health
studying nutrition, participated in
the program. Instead of doing the full
four days of eating below the poverty
line, she did two days of undernutrition and two days of overnutrition.
She experimented with overnutrition because she is training for a halfmarathon and wanted to explore the
opposite side of the food problem.
She worried how triggering
the event could be on a college
campus, because of the amount of
students with eating disorders, as
well as those who experience food
insecurity.
I think for special populations it
can be a concern, Croffut said.
She said the event was so focused
on being hungry during the challenge that she was not herself.
Ive been really grumpy, she said.
I havent really been wanting to talk
to anyone, and Im usually extremely
extroverted.
Participants expressed concern
over the small amount of calories
allotted by posting on the Facebook
page of the event.
Sophia Al-banna said she was
going to participate in the event but

State food insecurity rates compared to U.S. average

From 2011 to 2013, eight states showed higher food insecurity rates than the national average. Food
insecurity exists when people do not have consistent access to sufficient, affordable and nutritious food.
United States
Arkansas
Mississippi
Texas
Tennessee
North Carolina
Missouri
Georgia
Ohio

14.6
21.2
21.1

10

15

18.0
17.4
17.3
16.9
16.6
16.0

20

25

Percent
SOURCE: FEEDING AMERICA

decided against it.


I originally signed up thinking it
was a good idea I saw the basket
(of food provided) and was concerned, she said.
Al-banna posted on the Facebook
page after calculating the calories of
the food given. She found it was a
little over 800 calories per day.
I support the idea behind the
event, but theres no way you can live
on 800 calories, she said.
Sophomore Harry Edwards,
co-chairman of the Carolina

DTH/HEATHER CAUDILL

Microfinance Initiative, said the group


started planning the event in October.
He said the meals distributed were
similar to the international Live Below
the Line organizations guidelines.
Weve made it very clear that it is
not obligatory, Edwards said. There
is a disclaimer saying health is more
important.
He said he was pleased none of
the participants reported health
problems during the event.
university@dailytarheel.com

UNC CreatorSpaces invades Hanes Art Center


The initiative provides
unique equipment for
students to use.
By Paige Connelly
Staff Writer

Usually, technical equipment like


3D printers and laser cutters arent
easily accessible to students, but
UNC CreatorSpaces are encouraging English to engineering majors to
grapple with technical creation.
Part of the applied physical sciences department, CreatorSpaces
already has a significant amount of
technology such as 3D printers available to students at Kenan Science
Library makerspace.
The latest addition in the Hanes
Art Center, which had its grand
opening on Monday, gives students
a wider opportunity to demonstrate

technical skills, with things like


power tools and band saws.
Carolinas Maker Network, or
MakNet for short, is the student
organization helping to connect students with the technology available.
Applied science major Kai Shin, the
current president of MakNet, said
the space is a place where all majors
and hobbyists can mingle and create.
Why should art not be technical? Why does technology have to
not be artistic? he said. The whole
point of this is the whole network of
makers to show that makers come
from everywhere.
Shin stressed that part of these
makerspaces are to encourage everyone to use the technology available.
Its not that we have a technical
thing in an arts space, Shin said.
Its that we have sort of a blend
space where all these things can
come together.
Michelle Garst, the CreatorSpace

program manager, said she wants to


make sure there are countless uses
for the new equipment in Hanes for
every specialization, even those some
might not expect.
We want artists to come in and
make their stretcher-boards for
their canvases, she said. We want
English majors to come in and hold
book binding workshops.
Its about exposing people to each
other and bringing them together,
no matter the nature of their work,
said Garst.
Artists dont usually run into
physics majors in spaces and work
together on projects, she said. We
really think that this interdisciplinary and this cross-campus mission is
to bring people together on campus
that wouldnt ordinarily cross paths.
David Hill, a chemistry graduate student, came out to a general
meeting on Tuesday about the new
makerspace.

News

Friday, April 17, 2015

Branches of Nichols
poverty center crop up

LIVE AT UNCS
MEMORIAL HALL

THE WORLD

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SEE IT WITH YOUR OWN EYES.
TONIGHT
CPA
ARTIST

The Daily Tar Heel

MITSUKO UCHIDA, piano


DOROTHEA RSCHMANN, soprano

Be there for this rare Triangle appearance by all-stars pianist Mitsuko Uchida
and soprano Dorothea Rschmann as they collaborate on a recital program of love
songs by Schumann and Berg. Uchidas performances are always must-see events.
Save yourself a trip their next stop is Carnegie Hall.

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Vespers of 1610

The epic event that is Vespers of has inspired


audiences for centuries. Performed with proper
period instruments by the Monteverdi Choir and
English Baroque Soloists, led by the Sir John Eliot
Gardiner, it will be as close as humanly possible to
what Monteverdi intended for this sacred work.

APR
CPA
ARTIST

WENDY WHELAN
Restless Creature

For her inaugural independent project, Restless


Creature, Wendy Whelan chose four young
dancer-choreographers Abraham, Beamish,
Brooks and Cerrudo to create a duet for themselves
and Whelan. This is the freshest of cutting-edge
modern dance, performed by the industrys current
and rising stars.

By Marisa Bakker
Staff Writer

Faculty gathered at the


Old Well on Thursday the
Universitys long-standing
symbol in hopes of ensuring
that Gene Nichols Center on
Poverty, Work and Opportunity
has the same future.
The poverty center is slated
to close by Sept. 1, but the small
group of faculty announced
that more than 60 branches
of the center have popped up
across the UNC system.
The UNC-system Board of
Governors voted in February
to close the center, a decision criticized by many faculty members as a political
attack on Nichol, a law professor at UNC.
A branch is designated when
two or more scholars and their
students decide to collaborate

on research
and teaching
about poverty and
each one
features a
Carolina blue sticker.
When social scientists at
Chapel Hill explore the connections between poverty
and the creation of wealth,
income and wealth inequality
and economic and racial disparities, they form a branch
office, said UNC anthropology professor Don Nonini.
When humanistic scholars
write and speak about the history and literature on poverty,
capitalism, empires, racial
oppression, national identity
and class privilege, they constitute a branch office, he added.
Theyre housed in departments across UNCs campus including Saunders

Center
& Institute

CUTS

Hall and Bingham Hall, as


well as in the UNC School
of Law and the KenanFlagler Business School.
Several branches have also
appeared on other UNCsystem campuses, including
UNC-Pembroke and UNCGreensboro.
Addressing passing students
with a megaphone, faculty
members stressed the importance of academic freedom and
social justice on campus.
We do not need the permission of boards of governors,
assemblies, corporations, the
Pope Center, tyrants on training wheels or anyone else to
exercise our academic freedom
and freedom of speech to
study a topic of pressing public
concern like poverty in North
Carolina, said UNC geography
professor Altha Cravey.
While created in support of
the poverty center, the branches formed independently, without the assistance of Nichol.
I am, as ever, very grateful
to be a part of a faculty that has
such a remarkable commitment to academic freedom and
the sense of public mission and
obligation of the University of
North Carolina, Nichol said.
For those of us who work in
the poverty center, the support
has been breathtaking.
Nonini and other faculty
called the closing of the poverty center temporary. He said
he fully expects the board to
reopen the center. If not, he
said the branches will consolidate and launch a new center.
Even if the center is not reestablished, faculty and students will continue research
into eradicating poverty.
I think its quite clear
that no occupying Board of
Governors is going to be able
to stomp out research on poverty at the University of North
Carolina; theyre not going to
be able to change the character of this institution, which is
after all, the University of the
people, Nichol said.
state@dailytarheel.com

From Page One

The Daily Tar Heel

REGULATIONS

CLEF HANGERS

FROM PAGE 1

FROM PAGE 1

letters) more than 8 by 11,


Fox said. Used to be two colors. Now, I dont even know
the rules. We just dont send
kids anything.
Many coaches took it one
step further, using campus
funds to customize lockers
and display recruiting pitches
on the Jumbotron.
Thats why its so convoluted; everybody was trying to
think of a way to one-up the
next guy, Fox said. Coaches
thought of all those things,
and it got away from really
why youre supposed to be
recruiting a kid here.
(College athletics) is completely out of control.
But Archie sees the inequity
of resources as an inevitability.
Lets not pretend were
going to create this level
playing field in terms of
resources because were not,
said Archie, who previously
worked at Utah and North
Dakota. Were now recognizing that as a membership
and adopting rules that make
more sense.
Yet less stringent regulations
leave greater room for interpretation and exploitation.
(Coaches) are the best at
finding ways to want to do
something that may not be
addressed by the rule directly,
said vanGelder with a laugh.
We dont want rules, but we
also dont trust our neighbors
to do the right thing.
In a report provided by the
ACC to its member schools, 65
percent of violations committed by conference members
were related to recruiting.
And in vanGelders mind,
the distrust in the coaching
community ensures that regulations will continue.
You want to allow your
coaches to do as much as
they can so that theyre not at
a competitive disadvantage
with the school down the
street, vanGelder said. But
at the same time you need to
make sure youre within the
confines of the rules.
We just need to have a
little more common sense with
what we pass.

with speeches by fellow Clef


Hangers, the seniors will have
the opportunity to perform
senior solos in a song of their
choice.
Gregory will be singing
African-American singer Sam
Cookes 1963 song, A Change
is Gonna Come.
He said the song represents
the transformation he was
able to undergo through the
support of the Clef Hangers
and the UNC community.
I feel like I always knew
that I was gay, but I never
knew when I was going to
be able to have the courage
to actually be who I am and
speak out about it and just be
myself, he said.
And so I feel like that
change finally came for me,
and I couldnt have done
without being here and UNC
and without being in the
Clefs. Because both UNC
and the Clefs were my support system, and they gave
me the courage to establish
that change.

Tell mom and dad


Sykes knows her obligation to protect her university
against violations. Oregon is
serving a three-year probation,
stemming from major recruiting infractions.
And just as the Oregon
coaching staff was heavily punished for failing to recognize
their violations early enough,
Sykes speculates that former
Ohio State coach Jim Tressel
might have kept his job in 2011
had he self-reported major
infractions at his university.
While nearly all minor
violations result in little consequence, Sykes takes every
precaution to self-report
every possible incident even
when it involves shaving
cream and a razor.
Weve agreed to be a
member institution of the
NCAA; we pay our dues,
Skyes said. Were bound by
those, whether we agree with
them or not.
Contrary to popular belief,
the NCAA actually holds little
power in the creation of its
own rulebook. Member institutions are responsible for
proposing and voting on all
potential rule changes, leaving them accountable when
legislation proves effective.
Its easier to blame the
big bad NCAA to say its their
fault when we really need to
look in the mirror, Archie
said. The NCAA interprets it
and adopts it, but they didnt
make the rule.
All the rules that we dont
like are actually coming from
ourselves.
Though the power lies in
their hands, schools are often
quick to challenge their own
legislation, oscillating between
a desire for more regulations
and a demand for less.
Even when the rules are less
than satisfactory, schools are
quick to self-report even the
most ridiculous situations.
Its like a little kid, Im
going to go ahead and tell
mom and dad because I dont
want my friend to tell them,
Fox said. Itll be worse, so
Id rather them just hear it
from me.
While the process at times
seems laughable, Archie views
self-reported violations as
crucial to collegiate athletics.
Its much healthier when
were finding our own mistakes in good faith and turning them in as we find them,
Archie said. Our business
couldnt function without it.
enterprise@dailytarheel.com

An intimate moment
Though the senior solos
will likely be the highlight of
Saturdays performance for
the audience, Mitzell said the
most important moment for
the members of the group will
occur offstage.
Before the curtains go up,
the group huddles arm in
arm, and the underclassmen
Clef Hangers take turns telling the seniors how much
they have meant to the
group. Mitzell said this huddle is the same one the Clefs
hold when new members
join when senior members
of the group tell them how
much the experience will
mean to them.
The moments before we
go on stage, when the curtain
goes up, we get in a circle, we
put our arms around each
other, and everybody just
kind of goes around and we
speak to the seniors, he said.
And that moment is so
intimate, and its surreal.
Though new members will
fill the void of the seniors
next semester, Hill said the
seniors impact will continue
to shape and define the group
for a long time.
Just the way that student
organizations work, in four
years its a completely different group, he said.
But at the same time, that
group is affected by the legacy
of the guys who leave. And
these four guys are leaving an
incredible footprint on this

group.
Gregorys footprint on the
group though, is especially
large.
Hes definitely been able
to help others, inspire others,
lead others, Mitzell said.
Weve had guys who,
because of circumstances
beyond their control, are
not able to be publicly open
about who they are, but
through Carter hes definitely taken the lead on being
that person who can provide
that moral voice of reason
and who can provide that
support foundation thats
needed to keep going.
For Gregory to keep
going, he remembers a
phrase he coined while
studying abroad in London,
which is now tattooed on the
right side of his torso.
I always say the phrase,
Dont forget to live, he said.
There are speed bumps
and there are setbacks but I
always believe that a change
is going to come because
it came in my life, so it can
come to others.
For Williams, who has
watched her sons journey,
the Clef Hangers help remind
Gregory to live.
I am in awe of how they
stick together, she said.
They dont judge anyone.
Every member of that group
is really seen as a brother and
they accept you as you are, so
I absolutely respect them for
having that attitude and for
supporting Carter.
According to Mitzell, that
support comes just as easily to the group as the music
they sing.
Our music is based off of
our harmonies we have
to blend with each other in
order to sound good. Our
voices are all different, but
we have to find a way to
make them complement each
other, he said.
Similarly, we have to
find harmony within ourselves and with each other to
become a group, and not just
acquaintances. Carters story
definitely symbolizes that
harmony.
arts@dailytarheel.com

WOMENS CENTER

FROM PAGE 1

has asked us to do is do
a complete review of the
center, said Hurt, who still
serves as the director of the
Womens Center.
Hurt said the goal is to
review the centers programs,
services, goals and mission.
She expects the process to
clarify the future of the center.
Its not that the center is
being restarted from scratch.
This is a process that identifies what trends are moving
forward with the center,
what programs are currently
meeting those needs and
continuing to emphasize
those, she said.
The Womens Center review
has a shortened timeframe for
the review process because of
a special request made by the
Board of Governors.
The board specifically
requested the review to focus
on the centers counseling and
other resources surrounding
sexual assault, keeping pace
with the national movement
to address sexual assault on
college campuses.
The Board of Governors
wants to make sure that we
are doing enough in that
regard to evaluate whether we
needed additional resources,
said Carol Tresolini, vice provost for academic initiatives.
The review team will send
its report to the Centers and
Institutes Review Committee,
which reviews reports and
then makes recommendations to the provost.
Tresolini and Hurt expect to
have decided on a team within
the next two weeks. In the past,
it has taken around six weeks
to conduct a full, investigative
review, Tresolini said.
The biggest hurdle usually is trying to find a mutual
time for everybody to meet,
Tresolini said.
Tresolini expects the team
to be four people, including
the director of another universitys Womens Center.
Not all of the members of
the review team have been
selected, but Tresolini confirmed that Lynn Blanchard,
director of the Carolina

Friday, April 17, 2015


Center for Public Service, will
act as chairwoman.
Blanchard sees this review
as an opportunity to evaluate
the center through a fresh
perspective.
I think often when you are
working day to day, you dont
have time to step back at the
overall picture. And so having
these reviews really offers an
opportunity to take account
and say where do we want to
be, where do we want to go
and how will we get there.
she said.
Hurt and Tresolini have

positive feelings about what


the review means for the
Womens Center.
Although the search for
a new director is important, Tresolini appreciates
the boards urgency for the
review.
I think its an indication
of their desire to make sure
that we have the resources
that we need on this campus
to address issues of sexual
assault, and for that I commend them.
university@dailytarheel.com

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The Daily Tar Heel

Friday, April 17, 2015

MAYMESTER
May 13-May 29, 2015
Register TODAY! Earn 3 credits in 3 weeks
in Maymester. Check out the listing below for
courses, professors and Gen Ed requirements.
Find a complete course description at

summer.unc.edu
AAAD 201 African Literature: Contemporary Short
Stories (3), Donato Fhunsu. LA, BN

AAAD 260 Blacks in Latin America (3), Kia Caldwell.


BN, HS, GL

AMST 291 Ethics & American Studies: The Ethic of Standup


Comedy (3), Michelle Robinson. PH, NA

ANTH 147 Comparative Healing Systems (3), Michele RivkinFish. SS, GL

ANTH 423 Written in Bone: CSI and the Science of Death


Investigation from Skeletal Remains (3), Dale Hutchinson.
PL
ARTH 151 History of Western Art I (3), Dorothy Verkerk. VP,
WB
ARTH 551 Introduction to Museum Studies (3), Lyneise
Williams. VP, NA, EE

ARTS 290 The Walking Seminar (3), Mario Marzan.

ARTS 290 Special Topics: Sound Art (3), Hong-An Truong.

BIOL 474 Evolution of Vertebrate Life (3), Keith Sockman. PL


CHIN 464 City in Modern Chinese Literature and Film (3),
Robin Visser. LA, BN

CLAR 242 Archaeology of Egypt (3), Jennifer Gates-Foster.


BN, HS, WB
COMM 140 Introduction to Media History, Theory and
Criticism (3), Michael Palm.

COMM 390 Performing Sexual Health: UNC Sex-Ed Squad.


(3), Bryanne Young. EE

COMM 422 Family Communication (3), Kumarini Silva, US, GL

DRAM 260 Advanced Stagecraft (3), David Navalinsky. VP, EE


DRAM 290 Special StudiesOn Camera Acting: Integrating
Breath and Voice (3), John Patrick.

DRAM 292 Corner of the Sky : The American Musical (3),


Gregory Kable. VP
DRAM 300 Directing (3), Julie Fishell. CI

ECON 468 Principles of Soviet and Post-Soviet Economic


Systems (3), Steven Rosefielde.

ENEC 264 Conservation in Theory and Practice (3), Geoff


Bell. Includes one full week in Clearwater, Florida
(accommodations & transportation provided). Separate program
fee and application required. EE
ENGL 129 Literature and Cultural Diversity (3), James
Thompson. LA, NA, US

ENGL 225 Shakespeare: From Page to Stage (3), Ritchie


Kendall. LA, NA, WB

ENGL 376 Depictions of Childhood in Literature & the Visual


Arts. (3), Laurie Langbauer. EE, LA

ENGL 443 American Literature Before 1860. The Short Fiction


of Hawthorne and Melville (3), Philip Gura. LA, NA
EXSS 288 Emergency Care of Athletic Injuries and Illness (3),
Meredith Petschauer.
EXSS 408 Theory and Application of Strength and
Conditioning (3), Alain Aguilar.

GEOL 213 (ENEC 213) Earth s Dynamic Systems (3),


Michelle Haskin.

GERM 290 20 th Century European History in Graphic Novels


(3), Christina Wegel. LA, NA

GLBL 487 Social Movements Rethinking Globalization (3),


Michal Osterweil.

HIST 245 The United States & the Cold War: Origins,
Development, Legacy (3), Klaus Larres. HS, GL

HIST 277 (ASIA/PWAD 277) The Conflict over Israel and


Palestine (3), Sarah Shields. HS, BN

HIST 279 Modern South Africa (3), Lisa Lindsay. HS, BN

HIST 381 Bebop to Hip Hop: The Modern Black Freedom


Struggle through Music (3), Jerma Jackson. HS, US

HNRS 353 Silicon Revolution (3), James Leloudis. HS

INLS 385 Information Use for Organizational Effectiveness (3),


Mohammad Jarrahi.

ITAL 241 Italian Renaissance Literature in Translation (3),


Ennio Rao. LA, WB
JOMC 376 Sports Marketing and Advertising (3), John
Sweeney.

JOMC 475 Concepts of Marketing (3), Heidi Kaminski.

JOMC 491 Special Skills: Data Driven Journalism (3), Ryan


Thornburg.

MASC 220 (ENEC 220) North Carolina


Estuaries:Environmental Processes and Problems (3),
Marc Alperin. Includes one full week at the Institute of Marine
Sciences (IMS) in Morehead City. Separate program fee and
application required. EE, PL
PHIL 155 Introduction to Mathematical Logic (3), Matthew
Kotzen. QR

PHIL 165 Bioethics (3), Jonathan Anomaly. PH

PLAN 575 Introduction to Real Estate Finance, Investment


and Development (3), Emil Malizia. EE

PLCY 101 (PWAD 101) Making (American) Public Policy (3),


Daniel Gitterman. NA, SS

POLI 210 Policy Innovation and Analysis (3), Christine


Durrance. SS, CI

POLI 100 Introduction to Government in the U.S. (3), Pamela


Conover. SS, NA

POLI 150 International Relations and World Politics (3), Mark


Crescenzi. SS, GL

POLI 253 (PWAD 253) Problems in World Order (3), Layna


Mosley. SS, GL

POLI 432 Tolerance in Liberal States (3), Donald Searing. CI,


NA, PH
PSYC 245 Abnormal Psychology (3), F. Charles Wiss. PL

PSYC 503 African American Psychology (3) Enrique Neblett.


PSYC 566 Attitude Change (3), Steven Buzinski.

RELI 180 (ASIA 180) Introduction to Islamic Civilization (3)


Carl Ernst. HS, BN, WB
RELI 246 Supernatural Encounters: Zombies, Vampires,
Demons and the Occult in the Americas (3), Brendan
Thornton. SS, GL

SOCI 252 Data Analysis in Sociological Research (3),


Francois Nielsen. QI

SOCI 274 Social and Economic Justice (3), Neal Caren. PH

SPAN 255 Conversation I (3), Malgorzata Lee. Prerequisite for


255: SPAN 204, 212 or 402. CI

SPAN 293 Spanish Service Learning (1). Available to students


enrolled in SPAN 255 or SPAN 333. EE
SPAN 333 Conversation II and Cinema for Spanish
Conversation (3), Malgorzata Lee. Prerequisite for 333:
SPAN 250, 255 or 260. BN, GL

SPAN 345 The Caribbean and Southern Cone (3) Juan Carlos
Gonzalez Espitia. BN

SPAN 361 Hispanic Film and Culture (3), Samuel Amago. VP

Nothing could be finer. Summer School at Carolina!


@UNCSummerSchool summer.unc.edu

City

The Daily Tar Heel

Friday, April 17, 2015

Carolina Inn makes its own honey

Uniquely
Chapel
Hill

By Sarah Crump
Staff Writer

A canvas tarp protected


the elegant carpeting of
the Carolina Inns North
Parlor Thursday morning as
employees painted wooden
boxes that will house the inns
starter bee colonies.
As part one of a plan to
produce its own honey, the
Carolina Inn decorated empty
bee hive boxes to prepare for
its sponsorship of two hives at
Chapel Hills Just Bee Apiary.
The bees will be installed
into the hives at the apiary
on April 27, and the honey
will be harvested by the end
of the summer. The honey
will be used at the Carolina
Crossroads Restaurant and
sold in the inns gift shop.
Imane Hedadji, supervisor
of the inns gift shop, helped
paint the boxes. She said she
wanted to get involved with the
project because of the business
it will bring to the inn.
Anything that benefits
the Carolina Inn Im in,
Hedadji said. It really is a
miracle how bees make the
honey and how they get the
pollen and use it to make the
honey. I really like honey and
so Ill definitely buy some.
Michelle Voelpel, director
of marketing and public relations at the Carolina Inn, said
producing original honey has
been on the inns to-do list.
She said the sponsorship with
Just Bee aligned with the inns
desire to show support for
local businesses and farmers.
Its not like comparing
apples to apples, Voelpel
said. Generic brand honey
doesnt even compare to the
quality, flavor and health
benefits that organically and
locally produced honey has.

Kaplan Ads_Sarna Ads 3/23/15 11:34 AM Page 1

DTH FILE PHOTO


Marty Hanks, owner of Just Bee Apiary, a bee farm in Chapel Hill, checks on one of his hives.

Voelpel said she expects


the introduction of the honey
to bring something new and
exciting to the restaurant,
while also allowing it to sell a
product unique to Chapel Hill.
Guests will be able to take
a little bit of Chapel Hill with
them, said Marty Hanks,
owner of Just Bee Apiary.
Hanks said the bees only
travel a few miles away from
their hive to gather local
nectar and pollen.
He said every community
has distinct flora and that
the placement of the hives
directly influences the flavor
of the honey produced.
Every community has
a different story to tell a
different flavor, Hanks said.
Every year different flowers are in bloom, and so the
honey produced that season
represent the community at
that particular time.

Hanks said the apiarys


sponsorship with the Carolina
Inn will help keep the business
afloat, while also supporting
the apiary as bee activists.
Its a double sword, Hanks
said. Theyre getting a true
local product they can walk
right up and touch the hives.
Theyre also giving and supporting a local business and its
environmental activism.
According to data from the
Natural Resources Defense
Council, bees pollinate more
than $15 billion in U.S. crops
each year.
If we can make the world
a better place for bees, then
by default we are making it
better for us, Hank said.
Voelpel said the Carolina
Inn wants to be a part of the
solution in sustaining the bee
population, rather than a part
of the problem.
Its not just about making

honey for us, Voelpel said.


This is an opportunity for
us to tell the story of why
we need bees. Without bees,
theres no food, and so we
thank the bees for the cuisine
we are able to produce.

Staff Writer

Efforts to unify the countys


animal control policies wont
necessarily mean Carrboro
residents will now be allowed
to feed wild deer.
Orange County Animal
Services Director Bob
Marotto said no tremendous
changes would be made in the
unified ordinance, but just a
creation of consistency.
This is just putting
the ordinances of towns
throughout the county side
by side and seeing how they
deal with issues like rabies
and nuisance violations, he
said.
Then taking the best
aspects of these ordinances
and combining them in a way
that is flexible and coexists
across the county.
Marotto said making
adjustments to the ordinance
will be a collaborative effort
among county municipalities.
It is very important in the
process for us to make sure
the towns have the opportunity to review the unified
ordinance, he said.
Marotto said residents
should remember this is not
a uniform, but unified, ordinance.
Municipalities will be
able to keep the unique

aspects of their ordinances,


such as Carrboros livestock
and wild animal laws that
would remain intact, he
said.
This aspect of Carrboros
ordinance is covered in
Article 3, prohibiting the
feeding of deer, for example.
The unified ordinance
would not change specific
aspects of Carrboros personal
animal ordinance that makes
the town unique.
The discussion is not so
much the meat of the ordinance itself, Chaney said.
Its about removing
aspects that are common with
other municipalities in the
county to move in the direction of a unified ordinance.
Chaney said the new version of the ordinance would
help clarify protocol for
Animal Control officers.
She said it would also make
animal services policies more
uniform regarding animal
control procedures.
This ordinance would
be a way to make it easier
for Animal Control to know
what they can or cannot do,
she said.
The ordinance just makes
it clearer for everybody
involved.
Alderman Damon Seils
said these changes will not
have major effects on pet

owners in Carrboro.
We have contracted with
Orange County Animal
Control for years, so people
will not be seeing changes in
enforcement, he said.
Seils said the ordinance
will maintain each towns
unique features and that the
unified ordinance is still in
the draft phase.
Chaney said this is just the
first step in a long process of
drafting the ordinance.
My expectation would be
at least another month before
we see it come back in final
form, she said.
city@dailytarheel.com

Downtown Chapel Hill 942-PUMP


106 W. Franklin St. (Next to Hes Not Here)

www.yogurtpump.com

city@dailytarheel.com
420810.CRTR

FREE PUBLIC LECTURE

Carrboro makes progress on


unied animal ordinance
By Elizabeth Harvell

Crossing the Boundary

from Gentile to Jew

in the 19th Century American South

SYLVIA AND IRVING MARGOLIS LECTURE ON THE JEWISH EXPERIENCE IN THE AMERICAN SOUTH

DANA KAPLAN, lecturer in Jewish Studies at the United


Theological College of the University of the West Indies and a
rabbi in Kingston, Jamaica, will investigate the unique dynamics
underlying conversion to Judaism in the 19th century American
south, including how Jews adapted their religious and ethnic
identity to conform to the expectations of southern society.

April 20, 2015 at 7:30 p.m.


William and Ida Friday Center for Continuing Education
Free and open to the public. No tickets or reservations required. No reserved seats.

RUTH VON BERNUTH


DIRECTOR

PETTIGREW HALL, SUITE 100


CAMPUS BOX 3152
CHAPEL HILL, NC 27599-3152

P: 919-962-1509
E: CCJS@UNC.EDU
W: JEWISHSTUDIES.UNC.EDU

T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F N O R T H C A R O L I N A AT C H A P E L H I L L

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the universit y of north carolina at g reensboro

M.S. degree in
Parks & Recreation
Community Recreation Management.
Therapeutic Recreation.
Working with the CTR department motivated
me to achieve endeavors I had never dreamed
prior to graduate school. CTR faculty are
unique, detailed, and passionate.
LAURA (HARKINS) KELLY, CTRS (10)
Recreational Therapist, HCR Manorcare
Marietta, GA

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pizzas
after 10pM
sun-thurs

after 11pM
Fri & Sat

the uncg department of community and


therapeutic recreation offers a challenging
masters program with concentrations in Community
Recreation Management and Therapeutic Recreation.
For information, visit the website:
www.uncg.edu/ctr/graduate/prospective.html.
Application deadline is July 1, 2015.

In CTR, we challenge
you to do your best, to
find your passion, and to
make a difference in your
life, your profession, and
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501 Meadowmont village cir.


919.929.1942

LEANDRA A. BEDINI, PHD


Professor of Community and
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News

Friday, April 17, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

Lee dedicated to pharmacy research


By Anyssa Reddix
Staff Writer

At a research-based university like UNC, professors who


conduct and publish their
research are not uncommon.
What is uncommon are the
more than 823 articles KuoHsiung Lee has written in his
45 years at UNC.
Most of them are highimpact. This requires constant effort, Lee said.
His efforts have not gone
unnoticed; Lee was recently
honored with the 2015 Ernest
R. Volwiler Award, which is the

highest research award from


the American Association of
Colleges of Pharmacy.
Lee, who said he has never
had an application for a
research grant rejected, primarily researches HIV and
cancer treatments.
He said helping people is
what keeps him motivated.
You are not going to produce something that doesnt
go towards helping people,
he said. When you have
this in mind, this job is quite
enjoyable.
Lee said working with such
a high caliber of students also

makes his projects easier.


The students are usually
number one in their class,
Lee said. Working with
them, you never feel as if
youre getting tired.
Yu Zhao has worked in the
lab with Lee and said he is an
encouraging professor.
If I have a question, I am
always happy to discuss it with
him, Zhao said. He respects
the ideas of his students.
Zhao said working with Lee
has also helped her learn how
to work with researchers of
different backgrounds because
he is constantly bringing other

She has been able to assist


me for more than 23 years,
Lee said. We make mission
impossible become possible.
Morris-natschke said Lees
dedication is what sets him
apart from most researchers.
Dr. Lee is very productive
and very intense, Morrisnatschke said. He really,
truly wants to do something
to help his own mankind.
Along with Tai Chi, Lee
spends his time outside of
work with his four grandsons.
He also practices calligraphy.
He keeps balance with
hobbies that he enjoys and

researchers from all around


the world, especially China
and Taiwan, into the lab.
I know how to operate
with other people, and this
is very good experience for
me, Zhao said.
Lee said his lifestyle has no
secret or complicated method.
My life has been very simple: I wake up at 5:30 a.m. I
do Tai Chi and I start to work,
Lee said, describing his daily
routine for the past 45 years.
Lee also credited Susan
Morris-natschke, fellow professor at the Eshelman School
of Pharmacy, to his success.

DTH office is open Mon-Fri 8:30am-5:00pm

Line Classified Ad Rates

university@dailytarheel.com

Deadlines

To Place a Line Classified Ad Log Onto


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

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

family, Morris-natschke said.


Lee didnt always know hed
end up on this path.
I was originally trained as
a pharmacist in Taiwan, Lee
said. I had the license but
never practiced one day of
pharmacy in my life because
I changed my mind I love
research.
To those who know Lee,
the fact that hes written 823
articles didnt come as a shock.
I wouldnt be surprised if he
got to 1,000 before he decides
to retire, Morris-natschke said.

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Announcements

For Rent

NOTICE TO ALL DTH


CUSTOMERS

CHANCELLOR SQUARE. 2BR/2BA townhouse.

Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to


publication for classified ads. We publish Monday thru Friday when classes are in session. A
university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e. this
affects deadlines). We reserve the right to reject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Please check your
ad on the first run date, as we are only responsible for errors on the first day of the ad. Acceptance of ad copy or prepayment does not imply
agreement to publish an ad. You may stop your
ad at any time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for
stopped ads will be provided. No advertising
for housing or employment, in accordance with
federal law, can state a preference based on
sex, race, creed, color, religion, national origin,
handicap, marital status.

Child Care Wanted


FAMILY HELPER WANTED: Children (8, 10,
15, 16) looking for kind, organized, energetic
person to transport children, buy groceries, run
errands, keep house and kitchen neat. $13/hr.
15-20 hrs/wk. Start ASAP. Home less than 100
yards from campus. Resume with GPA to BB@
TeleSage.com.

For Rent
FAIR HOUSING

ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in


this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers are
hereby informed that all dwellings advertised
in this newspaper are available on an equal
opportunity basis in accordance with the law.
To complain of discrimination, call the U. S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development housing discrimination hotline: 1-800669-9777.
APARTMENT AVAILABLE: Male looking for student to take over my 12 month lease at Warehouse Apartments starting 8/1/15. 1BR in 4BR
unit. You will save $166/mo.off current lease
prices. Text me 704-574-1751.

FREE ROOM FOR


TUTORING
Grad student wanted. Private bedroom and
bath in exchange for evening homework help.
917-318-4010.

End unit. Walk to campus. Full kitchen, carpeted, W/D. $1,380/mo. for 2 people. Years
lease from mid-May. 919-929-6072.

2BR/2BA MILL CREEK


SUBLEASE
On MLK Blvd. For sublease June and July. Near
NU bus stop, walk to Franklin, $550/mo. Price
negotiable, +utilities. Furniture available upon
request. Call Andy at 336-880-8824.
CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Beautiful house. 2 units.
Main unit 4BA/2BA, 2,500 square feet. $2,750/
mo, parking included. Flexible move in date.
$1,000 off first month. 919-968-7226, rentals@
millhouseproperties.com.

STONECROP Apartments. Short term lease,


starting January 1st, 2016. Walk to campus,
new, affordable, 4BR/4BA. Rent includes all
utilities, cable, WiFi, W/D, huge kitchen, rec
room, parking in garage, security entrance
with elevator. Call 919-968-7226, rentals@
millhouseproperties.com.

Help Wanted
LIFEGUARDS: Chapel Hill Parks and Recreation
now hiring part-time lifeguards. Apply online at
www.townofchapelhill.org. Call 919-968-2798
or 919-968-2789 for additional information.
STRONG STUDENT WANTED for help with

yard, garden and miscellaneous outdoor


work at house near campus. Informal,
home based experience just fine. Job available year round. Must be able to lift 75
pounds, use my equipment. $15/hr. 4 hrs/
wk minimum, flexible scheduling to accommodate your classes. For more details:
lbanner@nc.rr.com.

wood floors, private patio, volleyball, picnic


areas, On Bolin Creek Trail, half mile walk to
campus and Franklin Street! 919-636-5132,
612Hillsborough.com.

GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR: Chapel Hill Gymnastics has part-time positions available for
energetic, enthusiastic instructors. Applicants
with knowledge of gymnastic terminology and
progression skills preferred, must be available
2-4 days/wk. 3:30-7:30pm, some weekends.
Send a resume to margie@chapelhillgymnastics.com.

Focus on fun at work and play this


year. Discover (and generate) romance.
Hone your skills and investigate a
passion. Release worn-out attitudes
to raise your game. An exciting
collaboration flowers. Profits grow
through communications. Make
long-term plans for implementation
after 6/14. Breakthroughs open new
professional doors after 10/13. Get
introspective after 10/27. Meditate on
love.

Various shifts are available including weekends.


$10.10/hr. More information and application available at

http://www.rsi-nc.org

To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

GARAGE APARTMENT. Quiet, wooded neighborhood. Private entrance. Full kitchen. Carpeting. Separate living room, bedroom, bathroom.
Many windows. Partly furnished. $765/mo. includes utilities, cable, internet. 919-929-6072.

LARGE CLEAN HOUSE: $2,500/mo. 1 mile from


campus, oak floors, 5 large bedrooms with
closets, W/D, dishwasher, garbage disposal,
60 plasma screen. Pets OK, Available August.
BB@TeleSage.com.

If April 17th is Your Birthday...

We are currently recruiting for enthusiastic and motivated


individuals to work with children and adults with autism.
A great opportunity for psychology and
social work students!

TOWNHOME FOR RENT. 2BR/2.5BA. UNC


bus stop out front. Newly renovated. $1,000/
mo. entire unit or $600/mo. individual. Water
included. Must prove income 3X rent. 919-9234284.

DUPLEX APARTMENTS FOR RENT. 3BR/3BA.


Recently remodeled. W/D. Dishwasher. 3 parking spaces per unit. Large backyard. 1 block to
bus stop. Units available June 1 and August 1.
$1,950/mo. 949-322-2204.

Help Wanted

Direct Support Professional

MCCAULEY TRAIL TOWNHOMES. Newly renovated, spacious. 3BR/1.5-2BA. 2 stories. Great


front porches, hardwood floors, W/D. Walk to
campus. $1,755-$1,845/mo. $1,000 OFF the
security deposit Call 919-968-7226, rentals@
millhouseproperties.com.

SMALL APARTMENT in quiet neighborhood at


private home 5 miles south of UNC. For mature
student, grad student, or professional person
only. Park and ride bus route 1 mile from house.
Private entrance, kitchen, living area, bedroom,
full bath. Internet access and free cable TV.
$395/mo. water included. $125 refundable
deposit. No smoking, no pets. References required. Phone 919-942-2432, leave message.
SPACIOUS 2BR TOWNHOME $980/mo! Hard-

Help Wanted

For Rent

Sublets

Walk to
Campus!

LIVE AT LUX THIS SUMMER! One room in a


4BR apartment available for $680/mo. during June and July! Live with 3 respectful
female housemates less than a mile from
campus with full gym and pool access. Other perks include a balcony, a business center
with computers and printers, a coffee station, free tanning and a clubhouse hangout
with TVs and game tables. 919-606-1253.

Large 1-2 BR Condos


Washer/Dryers
$625-$850/month
Compare to dorm prices!
www.chapelhillrentals.com

919-933-5296
Volunteering
MEDICAL ASSISTANT: Full-time medical assistant needed for busy dermatology practice
in Burlington. 36-40 hrs/wk. Send resume to
jlitten@alamancederm.com.
ELMOS DINER CARRBORO. NOW HIRING: Line
cooks, servers, hosts for AM and PM shifts.
Apply online at: elmoscarrboro-cafesymmetry.
companycareersite.com, 919-929-2909.
NATIONALLY RECOGNIZED and locally owned
insurance agency seeks part-time or full-time
administrative assistant. Must possess excellent phone and computer skills. Small business
environment, flexible hours with competitive wages. Please email inquiries, resume to
a076080@Allstate.com.
FILM, VIDEO HELP: Local company seeking
help in creating animated video. Write ups for
video provided. Need voice and animation to
create final video. Pay commensurate with experience, $15-$25/hr. 919-280-4098.
HOUSECLEANING: Need help with housecleaning during the summer once a week few hours.
$12/hr. write to: simonshouse1@gmail.com.

Pets/Livestock
CAT LOOKING FOR FOREVER HOME! Maddux
is a friendly 15 month-old kitty. Neutered, up
to date on vaccines, microchip. Adoption fee
$100. Visit Independent Animal Rescue (IAR),
www.animalrescue.net to adopt this sweet
boy!

Aries (March 21-April 19)


Today is a 9 Postpone travel and
expansion. Dont take risks or rush.
Follow the routine. Make professional
plans over the next five months, with
Pluto retrograde. Advancement on
long-term projects seems slowed or
suspended. Secure the ground taken.
Revise career goals.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 6 Dont let others make
your decisions. Question authority. Get
into scientific research and intellectual
study over the next five months with
Pluto retrograde. Review the data.
Prepare reports. Plan an educational
adventure for later in the year.

Summer Jobs
POOL PROFESSIONALS IS NOW hiring managers, lifeguards and pool attendants for the
SUMMER. Work at a location close to campus! Flexible hours and great pay! Contact
us today! agreiner@poolprofessionals.com,
919-787-7878.
PRIVATE CLUB IN Chapel hill is hiring several
seasonal cooks for the summer snack bar. Basic cooking experience required. Please call
executive chef Ben Guaman at 704-621 7097.
CAMP SPORTS SPECIALIST: Camp Shelanu at
the JCC in Durham seeks a part-time sports
specialist (15-20 hrs/wk.). Ideal candidate will
have experience teaching, coaching multiple
sports for ages 5-13, as well as a passion for
helping kids develop teamwork and sportsmanship. 919-354-4948.

Wheels for Sale


2009 HONDA FIT. immaculate shape inside
and out. No accidents. 1owner. ULEV. 85,000
miles. Black. Asking $10,000, retail worth
$11,340. 919-923-4284.

Gemini (May 21-June 20)


Today is a 9 Fine tune shared
finances over the next five months,
with Pluto retrograde. Re-affirm
and revise agreements. Review your
investments and plan for growth.
Research strategies for long-term
gain. Consider advice from an elder.
Grow family savings.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 9 Assume new leadership.
Review collaborative structures in
a partnership. Refine techniques,
strategies and procedures over
the next five months, with Pluto
retrograde. Reconsider habits and
routines, and discover ways to refresh
the spark. Schedule a break from
regular responsibilities.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 Explore today and
tomorrow. Review and reaffirm your
direction at work over the next five
months, with Pluto retrograde. Make
plans for action later in the year. Does
your work feed your spirit? What
would that take?
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 9 Follow anothers
experience and avoid making the
same mistake. Refine your winning
strategies over the next five months,
with Pluto retrograde. Make plans and
calculations. Tune your instruments
and prepare for a performance later
in the year.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is an 8 Talk with your partner.
Stick with tested methods at home
over the next five months, with Pluto
retrograde. Make an inspiration folder
with ideas. Research prices and confirm
contractors. Plan a renovation or
remodel for later in the year.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is an 8 Re-send an important
document. Chop wood and carry water.
Focus discussion around short-term
projects over the next five months,
with Pluto retrograde. Launch a major
promotion later this year. Prepare plans
and get your ducks in a row.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 9 Its getting fun (and
romantic) today and tomorrow. Find
ways to earn more. Refine routines for
efficiency over the next five months,
with Pluto retrograde. Reassess your
assets and develop what youve
acquired. Learn from past successes.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is an 8 Home comforts
entice. The next five months are good
for healing old wounds, with Pluto
retrograde. Finish up old business.
Release worn-out baggage. Review
personal desires and alter course to
suit. Plan a project for launch later
this year.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 9 Get the news out today
and tomorrow. Revise and refine your
practices for health and well-being
over the next five months, with Pluto
retrograde. Stick with the team youve
got. Do what you practiced. Enjoy a
retreat.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 9 Theres money to be
made today and tomorrow. Over the
next five months, with Pluto retrograde,
secure what youve achieved. Do what
worked before. Keep the current team
roster. Prepare a community effort for
later this year.

(c) 2015 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

Find where to live by distance from the Pit!

www.heelshousing.com

ALL IMMIGRATION MATTERS


Work Visas Green Cards Citizenship
REDUCED FEE FOR FACULTY & STUDENTS!
NC Board Certified Attorney Specialist

LISA BRENMAN 919-932-4593 visas-us.com

UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY

Town and Country Cleaning


Oustanding Cleaning for More than 23 Years!

Contact our helpful Customer Care Specialists


at www.cleanmychapelhillhouse.com

lovechapelhill.com

a new church with a


mission: to love Chapel Hill
with the Heart of Jesus

Mention this ad for current specials!

Sundays at 10:30am

Creekside Elementary

5321 Ephesus Church


Rd,Durham, NC 27707
allgather.org

Sundays 10:00 and 11:45


The Varsity Theatre

First Pentecostal Church

Days Inn, 1312 N. Fordham Blvd.

Worship
with Us:
WEDNESDAYS
at 7:30pm
Special Music & Singing in Each Service
Visit us in Durham at 2008 W. Carver St.
Sunday 10am & 6:30pm, Tuesday 7:30pm
For more details: 919- 477- 6555
Johnny Godair, Pastor

919.797.2884

EPISCOPAL CAMPUS MINISTRY


Join us for dinner & fellowship!
Tuesdays at 5:30 p.m.

Welcome!
To the Chapel Hill

Christian Science
Church

A Parish in the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina

Student Chaplain - The Rev.Tambria Lee


(tlee@thechapelofthecross.org)

304 E. Franklin St. Chapel Hill, NC


(919)929-2193 | www.thechapelofthecross.org

Sunday Service
10:30-11:30am
1300 MLK, Jr. Blvd.
942-6456

Presbyterian
Campus
Ministry
jrogers@upcch.org 919-967-2311
110 Henderson St., Chapel Hill
Thursdays Fellowship dinner
& program 5:45-8 PM
Weekly small groups
Sunday Worship at our six local Partner Churches.
Trips to the NC mountains & coast as well
as annual spring break mission opportunities.

www.uncpcm.com

The Daily Tar Heel

Friday, April 17, 2014

SportsFriday

SCHEDULE

Softball: Friday at 6 p.m., at N.C. State


Womens Lacrosse: Friday at 7 p.m. at Duke
Baseball: Friday at 5:30 p.m. at Virginia Tech
FOLLOW US ON TWITTER: @DTHSports

Moores journey nally has no more stops


The nursing student has
found a home in Chapel Hill
By Patrick Ronan
Staff Writer

Millstone Township, N.J. is a little


more than 450 miles from Chapel
Hill. But North Carolina womens
lacrosse player Alex Moore took
the scenic route to get there the
5,265-mile, yearslong scenic route.
The road started in Millstone
Township, diverted to Los Angeles
and finally culminated in Chapel Hill.
But to get here, the sophomore
midfielder had to start early her
father made sure she did.
Moores father, Scott, was captain
of the lacrosse team at Rutgers, so
she grew up learning the intricacies
of the game. With his years of experience as a player, coaching and genes,
his daughter showed early potential
to be an elite lacrosse player.
We didnt even have enough kids
on the seventh and eighth grade team,
so when I was a third-grader me and
a couple of my friends were playing
with eighth-graders, Moore said.
Those experiences as a kid helped
the New Jersey native make the
most of her natural talent.
Part of me credits part of the
opportunities Ive had in lacrosse to
getting an early start, playing better
competition right off the bat and
just kind of getting thrown right
in there, Moore said. I learned to
be fearless and I guess thats how I
learned to love the game.
That fearlessness and love of
lacrosse led Moore to leave Millstone
Township a town of fewer than
9,000 people and head to Southern
California, in the heart of downtown
Los Angeles.
Staying close to home wasnt a
concern for Moore, but she would
never discount the value of her family its what inspires her on and off

the field and, though she didnt know


it at the time, it laid the groundwork
for her career path as well.
In high school, my grandpa had
a really severe stroke, and I got
to see how he interacted with the
nurses compared to his doctors and
physical therapists, Moore said. He
really got to know the nurses on a
personal level, and I appreciated the
way they made him feel comfortable.
Hes the most stubborn man in
the world so the way he was able
to react so fluently to them, I just
decided then that that was definitely
what I wanted to do.
So after a year at USC a place
she thrived at, leading her team with
35 goals as a freshman and said she
loved Moore sat down with her
parents. She needed to weigh her
options to develop as both a lacrosse
player and a nurse.
Ultimately, Moore chose UNC.
Shes just smart, said Coach Jenny
Levy at the start of the season. Last
year for USC, she obviously had a
really big role on their team as a freshman. I know she is always alert and
aware and very confident about what
is going on on the field.
With the backing of all her
coaches at both schools, Moore felt
comfortable making the switch.
It was a really difficult decision,
but I had the support of my family, and I had the support of the
coaches at USC, as well, Moore
said. Everything kind of turned for
the best, and I couldnt be any more
thankful to be here.
So far, Moores goal-scoring prowess carried over when she switched
coasts. In 12 games this season, the
former Trojan has 13 goals and four
assists. And with sophomore Molly
Hendrick, who was leading the team
in goals before her season-ending

DTH FILE/HENRY GARGAN


Sophomore midfielder Alex Moore (30) has scored 13 goals for the North Carolina womens lacrosse team this season.

ACL tear on April 4, out for the rest


of the season, Moore should see even
more playing time.
I trust her to be on the field and
be in the moment, Levy said. Shes
very engaged, shes a team player and
she fits in very well with this group.
That fit extends even away from
Fetzer Field. Moore and her teammates have built a family among
themselves. On a Saturday in the offseason, Moore says shell be with her

UNC basketball recruits:


current targets to watch
The mens basketball team looks to complete its 2015 recruiting class
With another season in the books, the North
Carolina mens basketball team has quickly
turned its attention toward recruiting for next
season. All players are expected to be back with
the exception of J.P. Tokoto, and Roy Williams
is hoping to land at least one of the nations top
uncommitted prospects to join the Tar Heels.

teammates, tanning on the roof of a


Chapel Hill house or going to the pool
and playing beach volleyball.
Thats by choice, said Moore of
spending time with her teammates.
Theyre a bunch of really great and
unique girls, and I think thats what
makes us so good on the field and
off the field. Were so close and have
that chemistry.
That chemistry has led the No. 2
Tar Heels to a 12-2, 5-1 ACC record

This 6-foot-7 small forward


is arguably the top prospect
in the 2015 class.
The Georgia native
announced via a Bleacher
Report exclusive video that
he has narrowed his list of
schools down to eight. The
contenders?
Kentucky, Kansas, Georgia,
Georgia Tech, UCLA,

California, Michigan and


North Carolina.
Hes a five-star player and
the state of Georgias best,
according to 247Sports.
Hes projected to be a topfive pick in the 2016 NBA Draft
should he leave after his freshman year. Brown is expected
to make his college decision by
the end of the month.

Brandon Ingram
The Kinston, N.C., native
is ranked by 247Sports as the
No. 11 overall recruit and No.
1 recruit in North Carolina.
Duke, Kansas, Kentucky
and North Carolina are
among the top schools in
pursuit of the 6-foot-8, 180pound small forward.
During the McDonalds
All-American festivities at

Tevin Mack

After being released from


his Letter of Intent to Virginia
Commonwealth following
Shaka Smarts decision to
take the head coaching job at
Texas, the 247 Sports four-star
prospect has been contacted
by the Tar Heels, according
to the Twitter account for his
AAU team.
The 6-foot-6, 185-pound

the beginning of the month


when he scored 15 points
Ingram mentioned he wouldve
committed to the Tar Heels in
the fall of 2014 if it werent for
pending NCAA issues.
Ingram has visited UNC
more than any other school
recruiting him. He, too, will
decide by the end of the
month.

small forward has yet to receive


a scholarship from UNC.
The Columbia, S.C., native
is ranked by 247Sports as
the No. 12 small forward and
No. 68 overall prospect in the
class of 2015.
Texas, South Carolina,
Georgia, and Connecticut are
a few of the schools highly
recruiting him.

Kenny Williams
A 6-foot-2 shooting
guard and 3-point specialist, Williams also recently
decommitted from Virginia
Commonwealth when it was
announced that VCU coach
Shaka Smart would take the
head coaching job at Texas.
Williams has reopened
his recruitment and North
Carolina is on the list, as

well as Virginia, Georgetown


and Michigan according to
247Sports.
Virginia and North
Carolina are both aggressively
pursuing the Virginia native.
Williams is a four-star
prospect according to
247Sports, who reported
that Roy Williams and UNC
offered him Aug. 3.

Staff writer Ben Salkeld


contributed to reporting
sports@dailytarheel.com

Little free libraries


A local girl scout troop
celebrated the grand opening
of its Little Free Library on
Thursday. See pg. 3 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.

UNC currently only holds one commitment,


power forward Luke Maye out of Charlotte.
Maye is a four-star recruit by 247Sports
and is ranked the No. 2 player in the state of
North Carolina. With the possible departure of
Tokoto, here are four UNC targets that could
join Maye in UNCs 2015 recruiting class.

Jaylen Brown

heading into Fridays regular season


finale against No. 3 Duke.
I think our players are the best in
the country, so getting to play another
team, whatever the span of practice is,
I just cant wait for it, she said.
Regardless if its Duke or not.

Solution to
Thursdays puzzle

Center branches out


Gene Nichols Center
on Poverty, Work and
Opportunity lives on in
faculty. See pg. 4 for story.

A look into drinking


A look at the effects of students alcohol consumption
habits. See dailytarheel.com
for the graphic.

The buzz at the Inn


The Carolina Inn will
offer local honey with hives
its opening this month. See
pg. 7 for story.

Earn hours and build


your GPA in Summer School!
summer.unc.edu
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Year in which Salieri
was born
6 Spunkmeyer of cookie
fame
10 Sports __
13 Key artery
14 Seattles __ Place Market
15 Hazmat suit hazard
16 Nail the Miley Cyrus
impression?
19 Madam Secretary star
20 Family Feud source
21 Stately tree
22 ... __ the set of sun:
Macbeth
23 Disney title girl from
Hawaii
24 Permanently deleted
electronic message?
30 Cinch
32 Ah, broken is the golden
bowl! the spirit flown
forever! poet
33 GPS suggestion
34 Prod
35 Michaels et
al.
36 End notes?
38 Pay
extension?
39 It goes around
in winter
40 Antarctic
transport
41 Minor trade
adjustment?
45 Majestic
quality
46 Playboy
nickname

47 Kentucky Colonels org.


50 The Caine Mutiny
Oscar nominee
53 Genealogical record
55 The spasm preceded the
other symptoms, Doc?
57 Used to be
58 Hendrix hairdo
59 Royal __: scheduled
2016 British Open site
60 Unmatched
61 The Taj Mahal, e.g.
62 Garden plant that thrives
in shade
DOWN
1 Lackluster finish
2 Wooden pin
3 Vanilla treats
4 Key not used alone
5 Bass Islands locale
6 Wrote an essay, maybe
7 Polynesian carving
8 Turner of entertainment
9 Vacation area

10 Oregon State athlete, for


short
11 Rather red
12 Legion
15 Lose illegally
17 Winner of six David di
Donatello acting awards
18 __ film
23 Some August babies
25 Be selfish about, in a way
26 Low grade
27 Fox commentator who
was the 1992 N.L.
Rookie of the Year
28 Singer James
29 Try
30 Self-appointed expert
31 Online TV giant

(C)2015 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


All rights reserved.

35 Moreover
36 Common liquor
purchase, once
37 Scary squeezer
39 Homburg, for one
40 Nobel, for one
42 __ when that happens
43 Buster?
44 Tough syndicate
48 Get drunk
49 Insurance giant
50 USAF stealth plane
51 Due
52 Prepare, as for action
53 Chicken __
54 Early copter
56 One may be a CPA

10

Opinion

Friday, April 17, 2015

Established 1893, 122 years of editorial freedom


JENNY SURANE EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
HENRY GARGAN OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
SAM SCHAEFER ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR

EDITORIAL CARTOON

EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS


BAILEY BARGER

PETER VOGEL

KERN WILLIAMS

BRIAN VAUGHN

KIM HOANG

COLIN KANTOR

TREY FLOWERS

DINESH MCCOY

By Ngozika Nwoko, Chapman and Hilligan, nwoko@live.unc.edu

Dropping the The


Senior computer science major
from Asheville.
Email: mleming@live.unc.edu

NEXT

A full transcript of Matts


Q&A with Chancellor Folt is
available at
dailytarheel.com.
HANDLE OF JACK
Jackie OShaughnessy uses her
final column to celebrate.

Having a healthy level of paranoia is


generally how I put it for somebody in my
position.
Marielle vanGelder, on UNCs compliance with NCAA regulations

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

David Matos, on David Horowitzs speech on campus on Monday

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

A look
into
Folts
head

QUOTE OF THE DAY

You have to be woefully incompetent to


not realize Horowitz isnt just outside the
mainstream, but an outright racist.

Matt Leming

o you need to fix that


or something? Carol
Folt asked mid-sentence. My cell phone had been
blipping on and off when it
should have been recording.
I never expected to get an
interview with the chancellor.
So I was still surprised when,
two weeks after a phone call
with the new head of UNC
News a former spokesman
at the Pentagon I was sitting
across from her on the first floor
of South Building. Smiling, she
held a list of handwritten notes.
UNC spokesman Joel Curran
sat close by. I noticed a scar on
Folts knee.
We continued she was
speaking about the Board of
Governors.
I need to know what people
really think about (them),
but my job is to have the long
view, she said.
With UNC students and
faculty feeling slighted and
powerless before the BOG, there
stands an itching question: Is
the chancellor UNCs representative or employee?
I dont think Im there just as
the representative of the voice of
everybody, and truthfully, there
is not one voice, she said. It
would be a real mistake if the
chancellor felt that if every time
someone was agitated about
something, they had to microfilm that agitation. That is a
recipe for disastrous leadership.
Tom Ross had been fired,
and another such question was
whether Folt feared the same.
She denied it quickly: That
isnt what I think about.
In spite of kvetches, all I had
seen indicated that she had
been effective in working with
the BOG, and she made her
own positions clear. I wrote
two letters to the public saying
I disagree with them (on their
decision to close the Poverty
Center). But I think the most
important part for us in having
a relationship with the Board
of Governors is that we have to
have a relationship with (them).
Much of what she said had,
in fact, been echoed in her
March 4 formal notice her
disagreement there with the
closing of the Poverty Center
was clear. But it was mixed
in with attempts to paint the
BOG in a more positive light.
Folt often attempts moderation, and while this is often the
most effective strategy, it is not
always what students want to
hear from their leader.
Are you a Democrat or a
Republican or neither? I asked.
Im an independent.
Do you consider yourself
liberal or conservative?
Im independent.
Whats your opinion on the
recently proposed bill that will
require UNC faculty to teach
four classes per semester?
Again, theres that dilemma
of politics: Folt often has to
lean toward moderation.
Im completely against that,
she said, to my surprise.
If that really looks like it has
legs, well spend a lot of time
really doing much more effective job in explaining (to the
legislature) what faculty do.
Is she worried she wont be
able to make everyone happy?
Well, thats OK. It wouldnt
really be a university if everyone agrees.

The Daily Tar Heel

Diversity was aim of


Horowitzs invitation

EDITORIAL

Prove us wrong, please


UNCs next system
president will likely
be a white man.

ven prior to UNCsystem President


Tom Rosss official
resignation, the UNC
community has been
abuzz with the question
of who will step into the
presidency next.
When Daily Tar Heel
Columnist Seth Rose wrote
in September about rumors
of conservative billionaire
Art Pope potentially assuming the role, Ross quickly
denied this as meaningless
speculation, declaring decisively: I have no timetable
for retirement and remain
fully committed to leading our great University
system.
Ross comments now
seem largely meaningless
given the power the UNC
Board of Governors used to
force his resignation. More
disturbingly, given the lack
of ideological, racial or
experiential representation
on the newly created UNC
presidential nomination
committee, the possibility
of Pope or someone of his
ideological leanings becoming president of the system
seems increasingly likely.

Replicating the demographics of their current


membership, the board has
chosen a largely conservative, white male group to
select the new UNC-system
president. Out of the
12-person nominating committee, the board approved
only two women, one
African-American and one
Democrat to serve.
These dynamics are
unsurprising given that
they are selecting members of their own flawed
governing body. But given
the boards power to make
changes to this nominating group, their action to
maintain the status quo
highlights the boards continuing tone-deafness and
lack of connection with its
constituency.
In addition to these
representation issues, the
movements by the board to
expand their candidate pool
to include more privatesector leaders is simultaneously troubling and predictable. In November discussions of the idea of seeking
non-academic candidates
in relation to a chancellor
selection process, several
board members expressed
a desire to find candidates
that better understand the
current job market in a

marked snub of academia.


While Tom Ross does
not come from an academic background, the willingness of board members to
espouse a McCrory-esque
critique of academia and
instead advocate for an
explicit vocational emphasis in higher education disrespects the necessity of a
strong liberal arts foundation of the UNC system.
To address these troubling trends, the board
must reform its process
to include more diverse
perspectives in its selection process. It should add
student, faculty and staff
seats to the nominating
committee, putting a special emphasis on including
people of color and particularly women of color. These
voices should have equal
power on the committee,
providing alternative perspectives on criteria necessary for the new president.
The future of the UNC
system depends on the
selection of a leader who
values a strong public
university that benefits
all North Carolinians.
Given the past decisions of the Board of
Governors, this editorial
board wonders whether
that future is attainable.

EDITORIAL

Unworthy discussions
Campus speakers
should be chosen
with discretion.

avid Horowitzs
speech at UNC
earlier this week,
sponsored by the College
Republicans among other
organizations, has rightfully provoked an outcry,
including a social media
campaign, #NotSafeUNC,
which highlights the various ways students who are
members of marginalized
groups at UNC are made
to feel unsafe.
The groups and students Horowitz attacked
have already responded
effectively.
They have rightly
pointed out Horowitzs
prejudice, his conflation of
Muslims and Arabs, and
his dangerous narrative of a
clash of civilizations. Critics
have also pointed out the
mindless insensitivity of
the College Republicans in
inviting his hatemongering
to campus in the aftermath
of the shooting of three
Muslim students earlier
this year.
But Horowitzs appearance is also an example of
college campuses lending
their gravitas to speakers

who offer little intellectual


heft to back up their cultural prominence.
Just last week, Duke
University invited former
Republican presidential
candidate Mitt Romney
to speak about President
Obamas foreign policy
despite Romneys lack of
practical or academic experience in the subject.
Romney, while likely
briefed extensively about
national security issues
during his campaign for
president, did not match
that preparation with a
nuanced discussion of
national security policy,
instead employing charged
partisan rhetoric.
Universities, and by
extension, student groups,
have a responsibility to
promote serious discussions about controversial
issues. This responsibility
is inextricably linked to
universities statuses as
safe havens for free speech.
UNCs College
Republicans and Duke
should not lend the pageantry and platforms they
did to speakers such as
Horowitz and Romney if
they will only use their platform to advance ideological
agendas with little grounding in academic discussions

of these critical issues.


And in turn, students
should seek out and attend
events that feature speakers
who are perhaps less prominent on the national stage
but who offer more serious
discussions. Universities
and academia, while not
immune from the influence
of partisan politics, should
be bastions of meritocratic,
evidence-based research
and discussions. These are
often advanced by universities very own employees.
Duke students would
have been wise to be more
interested in what the
host of the Romney event,
noted foreign policy scholar and Duke professor
Peter Feaver, had to say.
Horowitzs reputation
for anti-intellectualism
and hate speech precedes
him, and he should not
have been invited to
UNCs campus at all.
This is not an attack
on freedom of speech.
Horowitz had every right
to speak on campus.
In the future, the
College Republicans
and other groups should
take more seriously the
responsibilities of academic institutions to
promote intellectually
substantial discussions.

TO THE EDITOR:
Our hosting of the lecture
by David Horowitz had the
purpose of inviting a discussion of radical Islamist violence, hatred of the nation
and people of Israel, and
extreme leftism in classrooms around the country.
Our first and most pressing concern are claims by
some that his lecture made
them feel unsafe on campus.
We wholeheartedly believe
that UNC is a safe place for
all students and call into
question any claims that
there are legitimate threats
to the safety of students on
the basis of color, creed or
ethnicity on UNCs campus.
We want to be sure that
UNC remains a safe place
for everyone.
Throughout his speech,
Mr. Horowitz brought many
uncomfortable facts and
opinions that challenged the
prevailing viewpoint regarding groups such as Students
for Justice in Palestine
and the Muslim Students
Association on the national
level. However, he did not
specifically attack the affiliated groups here at UNC,
nor did he say that all of the
members of these groups
held views in line with radical Islam. Horowitz said that
he believed that the majority
of Muslims are peaceful people. We do not condone hate
speech, but what we must
embrace on this campus is
intellectual diversity.
If the left can bring a
speaker as one-sided and
divisive as Angela Davis, who
was labeled a dangerous
terrorist and was put on the
FBI Most Wanted List for
her involvement in the deadly takeover of a courthouse
in Marin County, California,
the College Republicans
reserve the right to invite a
similarly passionate, yet lawabiding, individual in David
Horowitz.
The UNC College
Republicans aim to attend as
many events as possible that
put us outside of our comfort
zones. Fortunately for us,
many events that challenge
our traditional beliefs are
held during the school year.
Unfortunately, there are
very few events throughout
the school year that seek to
question traditionally liberal
viewpoints.
This is why the UNC
College Republicans, with
our limited funding, strive
to invite at least one speaker
with a conservative background per semester to
lecture on a topic of their
choosing. In closing, we
would like to extend an invitation to the entire student
body to attend more events
that challenge their worldviews. As humans, we grow
by confronting and considering opposing views.

Kvetching board
kvetch:
v.1 (Yiddish) to complain
Honestly, I probably
wouldnt have applied to
UNC if Id known it was a
Pepsi-only campus.
To the Sup Dogs owner
complaining about panhandling: Im pretty sure
the biggest obstacle to
your hot dog business is
the fact that its a hot dog
business.
To all of the UNC students
who constantly miss the
buses, its really very
simple: In order to catch a
bus, you have to THINK like
a bus.
The worms are out
The pollens in
My wet socks
cling to my skin
The world is green and
the warm rain splashes
against the red bricks
as my GPA crashes
Fifty Shades of Grey is
located on the 8th floor of
Davis. Coincidence? I think
not!
The thoughts of every
girl on this campus who
is single and looking for a
relationship: Water, water,
everywhere, and not a
drop to drink.
Anyone else really wish
that we could use emojis
in papers? I just really feel
like the little guy with sunglasses would help me get
my point about Doctor
Faustus across.
Shoutout to my baggie of
Goldfish crackers for being
the only things that have
smiled in the library this
week.
Shoutout to all my fellow
would-be Free Cone Day
attendees who walked
straight past the line and
into YoPo.
Anyone else feel like this
pollen is turning campus
into a Coldplay song this
week? Cuz it is ALL yellow.
Thanks to the new iPhone
update, all of my emojis
have jaundice now, so
thats cool.
If I had a vote for every
Hillary Clinton email Ive
gotten in the past 24 hours,
Id have better turnout than
this years SBP elections.
Just your annual biology
reminder that pollen is, in
fact, plant sperm. Youre
welcome.
As a conservative, is it
bad for me to look at the
College Republicans and
immediately think, Wow,
those guys dont look really trustworthy?
To the two seniors having
a kvetching competition:
You are the definition of
life goals.
Youll never know whether
us seniors are crying tears
of joy, tears of sorrow or
if we just have allergies. If
you would like to support
us, we are currently accepting hugs and Claritin.

Frank Pray
Chairman, College
Republicans

I wasnt feeling safe until


College Republicans told
me I should be. Thanks!

Ryan Bullard
Executive Vice
Chairman, College
Republicans

Send your one-to-two


sentence entries to
opinion@dailytarheel.com,
subject line kvetch.

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