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Wainsteins report, NCAA notices and accrediting responses paint different pictures
DTH Staff Reports
In October 2014, the public was
given what was considered the end
of UNCs yearslong academic-athletic scandal: independent investigator
Kenneth Wainsteins report.
The results were striking 18
years of fake African studies classes
disproportionately helping athletes.
But since the release of the $3.1
million report, University reports,
NCAA notices and supplementary
records have challenged the narrative created by Wainstein.
A Daily Tar Heel review found
an opaque and conflicting version
of what actually constitutes UNCs
academic-athletic scandal.
As 2015-16 ends,
Folt looks to future
Folt wants to apply an innovative
approach to UNCs problems.
By Sofia Edelman and Jane Wester
Senior Writers
Confronting history
Folt said she was proud of initiatives that
have addressed the Universitys history this
year. One such project was the Task Force on
UNC-Chapel Hill History, which set out to
contextualize the history of the University,
even with state laws limiting the movement
of historical monuments and the Board of
Trustees 16-year freeze on renaming.
Tell me a single university that has ever
said theyre going to sit down and contextual-
Women at UNC
Folt said having a female UNC-system
president, a female commencement speaker
and herself as the campus first female
chancellor is a great opportunity.
Ive never had a woman boss, I kind of kid
around about that. Its fun for me thats
actually really wonderful, she said.
Tutor influence
Emails show academic counselors swayed athletes toward taking
courses with specific professors
in the Romance Languages and
English departments an item not
included in Wainsteins 136-page
report or UNCs 222-page Southern
Association of Colleges and Schools
response.
English professor Marc Cohen,
who appears in several emails used to
10
Opinion
CHRIS DAHLIE
JACK LARGESS
VISHAL REDDY
TREY FLOWERS
GABY NAIR
JACOB ROSENBERG
Brown Noise
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Letter
to a
brown
girl
NEXT
Jaslina Paintal
EDITORIAL
nbridled support
for an institution
is harmful. If we
are not willing to critique
something we love, then
we are not being responsible members of our community.
That is what this board
sought to do this year. We
met twice a week, through
all the stress, to discuss the
issues we thought to be
most troubling. We hope
you found our thoughts
to be, at the very least,
provocative and we hope
that you had conversations
about how to improve this
place with your peers.
Throughout the year, in
response to many of our
editorials people often
ask us, Why do you hate
UNC? or Where is your
Tar Heel pride? or Why
dont you just transfer?
In a time where UNCs
public relations spending
is skyrocketing, it may
make us seem like we are
anti-UNC. We are vocal
critics of the University
after all. We are not angry
at being labeled antiUNC, but we do feel it to
be incorrect. Here is the
secret we do love this
university very much.
If you read some of our
less controversial pieces,
EDITORIAL
Out of conversations
Community
interests ought to
be primary.
Kvetching board
Best of the 2015-2016
Kvetching Board
HB2 is a deterrent to
attending UNC
kvetch:
TO THE EDITOR:
I am a freshman at
Carrboro High School and I
am in our schools Sexuality
and Gender Alliance Club.
I would like to go to UNC
to get a degree or two, but I
cannot support them if they
continue to enforce House
Bill 2. People should be able
to be themselves.
The government said
that transgender people and
others shouldnt be able to
use the restroom that makes
them feel more comfortable
because they might attack
people in the same restroom
as them.
That is very, very unlikely.
They are the ones getting
attacked not the ones
attacking. Also, this bill
allows people to discriminate
freely. People should be able
to share their opinions and
beliefs, but not to oppress
others. Are they worth any
less than your fellow person?
Like I said, I would really
like to attend UNC to get a
degree or two. But I will not
if they continue to make my
allies and friends feel unsafe
to do something as trivial as
go to the restroom or wash
our hands.
Bodhi Moreau
Carrboro
SPEAK OUT
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TODAY
THURSDAY
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Bringyourconfidential
documentsforFREEandSAFE
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DropoffSite,behindHomeDepot
withdrivethroughservice.
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Editorial corrections will be printed on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections
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POLICE LOG
Someone committed
larceny at a hotel at 1301
Fordham Blvd. between 11:30
a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person stole four
keys, valued at $20 in total,
reports state.
Someone communicated
threats at the Red Roof
Inn at 5623 Fordham Blvd.
at 12:25 p.m. Monday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person threatened
hotel employees, reports state.
PAT JAMES
SPORTS EDITOR
SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
Someone possessed an
open container of alcohol on
the 800 block of Davie Road
and Jones Ferry Road at 9:12
p.m. Monday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
Someone reported a
robbery on the 900 block of
West Main Street at 10:49
p.m. Monday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
The person robbed
someone with a dangerous
weapon and stole $371 worth
of items, reports state.
Someone possessed an
open container of alcohol on
100 N. Columbia St. and East
Franklin Street at 5:42 p.m.
Monday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
Someone damaged
property at a residence on the
200 block of Barnes Street at
10:57 p.m. Monday, according
to Carrboro police reports.
The person damaged an
exterior door, causing $50
worth of damage, reports state.
Someone reported
loud music on 100 block
of Milton Drive at 12:46
a.m. Tuesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
CASH
BOOKS
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store.unc.edu/cashforbooks
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DTH/NICK BAFIA
The Daily Grind contact will not be renewed in June. Barnes and Noble College will arrange a coffee service to replace it when the current contract expires.
Committee tries to nd
space for growing sports
Varsity and club sports
sometimes share space
with Campus Recreation.
money.
Sophomore Resha Kodali said she liked to
study at The Daily Grind and was upset when
she heard the news of its closing.
Layman said she would probably go to
whatever coffee shop replaces The Daily
Grind.
Its definitely going to be different because,
I dont know I just like how The Daily
Grind is unique, she said.
By Jamie Gwaltney
Senior Writer
Staff Writer
university@dailytarheel.com
Controversial changes
to state election rules
including voter ID
regulations and registration
procedures were upheld
Monday by a federal judge.
Judge Thomas Schroeders
485-page opinion affirmed
the legality of ending same
day voter registration and
preregistration for minors,
shortening early voting by a
University
The Accessibility
Resources and Services office
has asked faculty to proctor
exams for certain students
who need alternate final
exam accommodations.
Tiffany Bailey, director
of ARS, said faculty are
being asked to help because
of the increasing number
of students requesting
alternate final exams.
Our numbers are
reaching into the areas of
265 individualized tests with
accommodations, which is
challenging to proctor that
many students in one day,
and then 1,200 in the course
of the six-day exam period,
Bailey said.
The last day for any student
CASH
BOOKS
increase in students
requesting alternate exam
accommodations since the
spring 2015 semester.
Jennifer Smith, a linguistics
professor, said in an email that
in the past, faculty have sent
copies of exams to the ARS
office but are now being asked
to accommodate students
during the regular exam
period.
Smith said providing extra
time during a three-hour exam
period will not be a challenge,
but providing a low distraction
setting will be difficult.
I am quite worried about
this option, actually. I really
want them to take the exam
at the same time as the rest
these disparities.
They actively work to create
spaces free of sexual violence
and interpersonal violence,
she said.
They ideally improve the
campus climate for all women,
and they administer mechanisms to report and monitor
the status of differently situated women across campus.
Ooten said another role is
to educate students on the
importance of inclusivity of
women on and off campus.
She also said in order to
guarantee the Womens Center
raises awareness on gender
disparities and inclusivity of
women, the center should
teach students about feminism
to bring about social change.
I think womens centers
can use this be to incubators
for social action. They can
augment a formal feminist
curriculum by educating a
more collective campus body.
Carol Tresolini, vice provost
for academic initiatives,
attended the forum to see how
Ooten handled questions.
The Womens Center
director reports to me so
I have a huge stake in the
choice of the Womens Center
director, she said.
Margot Stein, a professor
in the UNC School of
Dentistry, said she thought
Ooten had good plans for the
Womens Center.
She has a lot of ideas
and a breadth of vision that
will handle global, local,
community, state and national
implications, she said.
Ooten said although
womens studies lacks support
from the state, she is confident
UNC will provide the support
needed to implement change.
You do not have to
mobilize the masses to make
a lot of these changes. I
think there is a lot of work to
done but Ive found you have
strong institutional support
for this work, and that really
matters when you might not
have strong support at the
state level, she said.
university@dailytarheel.com
WAINSTEIN
FROM PAGE 1
Other departments
Wainsteins report says the
African studies department
was the only one involved
in the scandal, but emails
and records show potential
misconduct in other departments.
Records obtained by The
Daily Tar Heel say Boxill
taught 160 independent study
classes between Spring 2004
and Spring 2012.
In his October 2014 termination letter to Boxill, Provost
Jim Dean wrote it appeared
Boxills allowed student to
enroll in her philosophy independent study classes that
involved minimal academic
expectations and that were
offered at times to accommodate student-athletes.
Boxill refutes claims that
she taught all 160 independent study classes, according to her lawyer Randall
Roden. Boxill served as the
director of undergraduate
studies in the Department
of Philosophy from 1994 to
2006, and she says at the
time, it was common practice
to have all independent studies listed under the directors
name.
Current Associate
Chairperson of the
Department of Philosophy
Matthew Kotzen confirmed
that in some semesters prior
to 2011, students enrolled in
independent studies might
be officially registered in a
course with the director of
undergraduate studies even
though their work was being
supervised by another faculty
member.
University spokesperson
Jim Gregory declined to
elaborate on the allegations
against Boxill found in the
termination letter.
Boxills lawyer said she
taught more independent studies because she was willing to
put in extra time especially
FOLT
FROM PAGE 1
Folt said shes looking
forward to getting to know
UNC-system President
Margaret Spellings.
I think shes pretty
interested in womens issues
and womens groups, Folt said.
Silvia Tomkov, chairperson of the womens and
gender studies department,
said although having women
in high positions at UNC is
important, people should not
be satisfied with simply having women in power.
I am a little weary of
thinking that thats all were
asking for that the symbolic
value does the trick, because
20
16
REPLAY SCHEDULE
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Thursday, April 28th:
Friday, April 29th:
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News
News
Childrens books on
display at Wilson
By Madeline Rael
By Kelsey Mason
Staff Writer
Staff Writer
DTH/JESS GAUL
The exhibit Corruption of the Innocents opens Thursday at
Wilson Library and features scrapbooks, posters and literature.
This exhibition is
the result of a biannual,
semester-long collaboration
between librarians, faculty
and undergraduates, and
the course is designated as
an experimental education
general education requirement.
I know a lot of students
arent super willing to go in
(Wilson) because it can be
kind of intimidating, but it
was so cool to be able to go in
there and use it for all its got,
said Katie Martin, an English
295 student.
Kader said she anticipates
the exhibition to be wellreceived.
I think that (students) will
come and see things that they
recognize, Kader said. Or,
theyll come and see things
that they dont recognize at all
but will find really intriguing.
arts@dailytarheel.com
Restructuring at North
Carolina A&T State
University will replace the
College of Arts and Sciences
and the School of Technology
with three new colleges
sparking concerns from
students and faculty about
preserving the identity of
one of the nations largest
historically black colleges.
The plans were approved
Thursday by the North
Carolina Committee on
Education Planning, Policies
and Programs.
Derick Smith, a political
science adjunct instructor at
A&T and member of Faculty
Forward, said the restructuring
worsens a trend of shifting
focus towards STEM majors.
The funding seems to
stream to the School of
Engineering, and now weve
got a restructuring scheme
which further compartmentalizes the humanities and the
arts to the detriment of a liberal arts education, he said.
N.C. A&T also recently
increased joint programs with
UNC-Greensboro.
In April 2015, N.C. A&T
joined with UNC-G and
two local schools to create a
campus for a joint nursing
program, following the Joint
School of Nanoscience and
Nanoengineering in 2011 and
the Joint Master of Social
Work Program in 1997.
Vashti Hinton, a junior
at N.C. A&T, said she has
concerns about the mergers,
saying they dilute the HBCUs
ability to serve black students.
Going to an HBCU, youre
able to see people who look just
like you and see people who are
doing things with their lives
who are able to inspire you and
help you, she said.
Joy Cook, spokesperson
for N.C. A&T, said she would
provide a statement, but did
not by print time after several
phone calls and emails.
Joseph Graves Jr.,
professor and associate
dean for research in the
Joint School of Nanoscience
and Nanoengineering, said
neither university had the
resources to build the school
on its own.
It seems to me ludicrous
to have two universities in
the same city that arent
cooperating in their academic
programs, Graves said. Its
not 1930, segregation in the
U.S. is over.
Still, Michael Roberto, a
history professor and member
of Faculty Forward, said
he has to use the library at
UNC-G because N.C. A&T
has far fewer resources.
How long can you have
separate and unequal? he
Samantha Davis
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Celebrating 37
Years in Business
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DTH/ALEX KORMANN
John Geraghty listens to music on campus. Geraghty manages seven to nine artists at a time.
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DTH/GABRIELLE PALACIO
Carol Folt speaks alongside Associate Vice Chancellor Ives before signing the Real Food Challenge.
games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level:
4
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
Solution to
Tuesdays puzzle
A change of plans
House Bill 2 is shaking up
plans for entertainment and
travels to and from North
Carolina. See story online.
Nothing finer
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Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Across
1 Bumper car, at times
7 Cookbook author
Rombauer
11 Smoke
14 Lancelots unrequited
lover
15 Assam products
16 Barcelona bear
17 Equipment for picnic
competitions
19 Grabbed a chair
20 Melee
21 Ballet bend
22 State with five national
parks
23 Embryo development
sites
26 Priestly vestment
29 Right Guard rival
30 Old anesthetic
31 Willy Loman, in a 1949
play
34 Architect Jones
37 McDonalds founder
38 Make really happy
41 Nobel Prize
subj.
42 Cheers!
44 Connections
traced on
ancestry.com
46 Tiny
amounts
49 Chill in the
air
50 Denials
51 Big name on
Wall Street
55 French
friends
56 Elevator
option
57 Horseshoe-
shaped letter
61 Tried to get into an
office
62 Lisa Simpsons
instrument
64 With 43-Down, what a
criminal might be on
65 Augusta Nationals __
Corner
66 British Invasion star
67 Doesnt lack
68 Nothing more than
69 Its flag features a sixpointed star
Down
1 Weight room count
2 Burn soother
3 Damon of The Martian
4 Mazda roadster
5 Inters
6 Classic auto
7 Novelist Calvino
8 Deliver from memory
9 Succeed
10 In the Gospels, Jesus
39 Lease signer
40 The Very Hungry
Caterpillar writer Carle
43 See 64-Across
45 Galaxy alternatives
47 Title for Bovary
48 Distracting bedmate
51 Party on, Wayne
speaker
52 City on the Missouri
53 Sty denizens
54 Ugly campaign tactic
58 Cmo __?
59 The Wizard of Oz
family name
60 Skaters maneuver
62 Impact sound
63 Geishas sash