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all hospitals can afford it, so if they can connect with other places and help share, to the degree possible, some of those resources, that can reduce cost as well,” Hurston said.
Caring for the state
Over his almost 30-year career, Hurston said he has  witnessed the health care industry change, and he thinks the industry is now headed in a direction toward larger networks instead of many independent hospitals.“We are sharing information,” Hurston said. “We’re learning things together and we’re implementing things that are used in other industries as  well as best practices.Kenji Brantley, system director of strategic planning for UNC Health Care, said part of his job is understanding and planning for the changes in health care across North Carolina. “You’ve got an aging population that is increasingly sick or has different health challenges,” Brantley said. “You have a growing population. You have changes in how hospitals and doctors are paid for the care they provide. You also have an increasing focus by everyone to provide care better, with a higher quality at a lower cost in a way that creates wellness and just well being for the patients.”Brantley said the growing network of UNC Health Care has allowed them to change how they help people and provide care. He said UNC Health Care isn’t waiting for patients to come to them — they have worked to increase accessibility for citizens across the state.“We have this network now across the state where patients who live in rural North Carolina communities — who may otherwise not have access to cutting edge cancer care or a renowned  vascular surgeon or may not be able to access those types of physicians — well,
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Wednesday, September 28, 2016
dailytarheel.com
Volume 124, Issue 76
By Grant Masini
Senior Writer
The gender pay gap in North Carolina is one of the smallest in the nation, but under cur-rent conditions it won’t close anytime soon — perhaps not until after 2100. According to The Simple Truth About the Gender Pay Gap, a report from the American  Association of University  Women, the United States will  be achieve pay equity in 2059 if current rates of change continue. But the rate has slowed since 2001, and by that slower rate, the gap won’t close until 2152. “North Carolina ranks fifth out of all states, but still has an 86 percent pay gap,” said Kate Nielson, state policy analyst for the AAWU. “Even though it’s comparatively good, it’s still a real problem.Nielson said closing the gap  would mean valuing women’s  work in a way the U.S. doesn’t necessarily do at the moment.“It would mean tackling occupational segregation, get-ting more women in STEM and  wage discrimination, among other things,” she said.In North Carolina, about two-thirds of women are bread- winners for their families and therefore play key roles in the state’s economic stability, said Jocelyn Frye, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress. “There is a common interest in making sure women are paid fairly because that makes the difference in whether families are making ends meet,” she said. “So the narrative that this is solely a women’s issue isn’t accurate — pay discrimination isn’t just about one segment of the population.”Frye said she thinks these issues are particularly impor-tant in North Carolina and for university students.“The reality is students are grappling with the future, work opportunities, student debt and beginning to start their families, and the wage gap can mean lost earnings and income that’s important to young peo-ple and families as they try to make ends meet,” she said. Among UNC federal aid recipients, the average gender  wage gap 10 years after enroll-ment was over $15,000, accord-ing to a study by the Center for
By L’erin Jensen
Staff Writer
James R. Clapper, director of National Intelligence, discussed issues surrounding presidential transitions and problems managing intelligence in an unpredictable society at UNC on Tuesday.The event was held in the Koury  Auditorium at the Kenan-Flagler Business School by the Peace, War and Defense department.Clapper, who is the principal intelligence advisor to the president, began by discussing challenges associated with presidential turnover — which was prominent when Harry Truman assumed office. Clapper said Truman wanted his successors to be better prepared than he  was because Truman knew nothing of the existence of the Manhattan Project, despite  being vice president to Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Because of Truman, each major party presidential nominee now receives selected daily briefings on intelligence information, Clapper said.“The day after the election, the briefing process I just described changes,” he said.Clapper said the president-elect will then receive President Barack Obama’s brief. “I’m glad (Truman) made that generous decision to better prepare his successors,” he said. After Clapper finished discussing the  beginning of presidential transitions, he shifted to modern problems facing intelligence.
Clapper encouraged the crowd to pursue intelligence careers.Lower paying jobs may have contributed to the wage gap decline.
Intelligence director discusses transitions
N.C. ranked fifth for gender wage gap
SEE
CLAPPER,
PAGE 8SEE
WAGE GAP,
PAGE 8
Expansions meet health care needs
Economists question Trump plan figures
By Luke Bollinger
Staff Writer
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump touted his plan for stimulating the economy and cutting taxes in last night’s debate — but the nonpartisan Tax Foundation has called into question Trump’s positive predictions.Trump’s path for the economy — originally outlined in his speech at the New York Economic Club on Sept. 15 — focuses on cutting taxes for all incomes, lowering the corporate income tax and decreasing government regulations.Michael Walden, a professor of economics at North Carolina State University, said Trump’s plan is grounded in supply-side economics. “This is not a new concept — this has been around at least 40 years,”  Walden said.During his speech at the Economic Club, Trump said his plan would create an average Gross Domestic
Plan moves corporate tax from highest rates to one of the lowest in the world.
DTH/ARAMIDE GBADAMOSI
Republican party presidential candidate Donald Trump spoke in Greensboro.
SEE
HOSPITALS,
PAGE 8
DTH/NICK BAFIA
 The main part of UNC Hospitals covers over 2.3 million square feet and is currently expanding due to shortage of space for patients.
UNC Health Care is increasing access in NC
By Jamie Gwaltney
Assistant University Editor
The stretch of Manning Drive where UNC Hospitals is located is the densest mile in North Carolina by population, Chapel Hill Mayor Pam Hemminger said.“It is almost impossible for them to squeeze yet another  body into that campus,Hemminger said.The main campus of UNC Hospitals is 2.3 million square feet and growing — officials are evaluating plans for an approximately $177 million surgical tower.Hemminger said the density of the hospital campus causes traffic problems, especially during peak times  when shifts change. She said Chapel Hill Transit buses only have 84 seconds at a stop  before the buses get backed up — so it is not feasible to add more buses to the road. Plans to build a light rail system in the Triangle  would alleviate the traffic, Hemminger said, but it would  be eight to 10 years before construction begins. She said a light rail system would free up  buses to travel to other parts of Orange County, which could transport patients to UNC Health Care clinics outside of Chapel Hill.
A growing system
UNC Health Care, the health care system UNC Hospitals is a part of, has acquired hospitals as far west as High Point and as far east as Kinston in the past three to five years, said Mel Hurston, senior vice president of operations for UNC Hospitals.The system, which was created in 1998, has built clinics and taken over the management of hospitals all over North Carolina, Hurston said.Hurston said this growth is driven by a need for more health care, something that isn’t always easy to provide. He said a state agency uses population studies to understand how much health care or how many more beds are necessary, then UNC Health Care applies the information from the study to provide the needed care. Hurston said with the growing locations, the system also needs more health care providers. He said UNC Hospitals alone employs more than 8,000 people.There are certain regulations hospitals must meet and costs associated  with them, Hurston said,  which means it can make more financial sense to join a large health care system, like UNC Health Care. Sharing functions, such as IT, human resources and suppliers, can cut down on costs.“(Meeting regulations) is a  very costly proposition and not revenues by between $2.6 trillion and $3.9 trillion. Walden said politicians often overstate the impacts of certain policies. But if Trump were elected president, this plan could be used as a starting point for negotiations with Congress, Walden said.“It would probably be fair to say that most economists would say that Mr. Trump’s plan, in terms of results, is overly optimistic,” Walden said.
@BollingerLukestate@dailytarheel.com
“(Supply-side economics) is not a new concept — this has been around for at least 40 years.” 
Michael Walden
Economics professor, North Carolina State University
Product growth of 3.5 percent each  year for the next 10 years, while adding 25 million new jobs to the economy. Walden said presidents usually have a modest impact on the economy during their time in office.“Think of the economy as a $19 trillion ocean liner out there, and  what the presidents and congresses can do is kind of nudge it one way or the other,” he said. According to an analysis of Trump’s plan from the Tax Foundation, the tax plan would increase GDP over the next 10 years by 6.9 percent or 8.2 percent. The Tax Foundation offers two estimates because the new tax plan does not clarify whether certain small businesses would be taxed as corporations or individuals — a point of contention on both sides of the aisle. Trump’s plan includes reducing the current income tax brackets from seven to three, with lower tax rates for all incomes.  According to the Tax Foundation analysis, although after-tax incomes of all groups would increase under this plan, the top earners would  benefit the most. Currently, the top tax bracket is taxed at a rate of 39.6 percent, but this rate would decrease to 33 percent under Trump’s plan.Trump also proposed lowering the corporate tax rate to 15 percent from 35 percent.“The corporate income tax is a substantial burden on investment in the U.S.,” said Alan Cole, an economist at the Tax Foundation’s Center for Federal Tax Policy, in the report. According to the report the current rate is the highest in developed world, but the proposed 15 percent rate would make it one of the lowest.The report also noted the new plan, accounting for economic growth, would reduce government
 
News
Wednesday, September 28, 2016
The Daily Tar Heel
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Six to Seven on Saturdays
 Jared Sain
Chrome cappedLit poleSpinning stripesReds, blues, whitesShimmering shearsSplit hairsHanging hair Crude humorClipper’s buzzThinning fieldsHead harvestShining scalpsBlazing bladesChin raidsCash tradesDone.Lights off Pole deadDoor lockedSpinning stripes still Varicose veinsTired eyesFeet set firePocketful: ten dollar bills.
 Jared Sain
 is a junior religious studies major. He is from Morganton, NC where his father and grandfather both work as barbers at Sain’s Barber & Style.”
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• Someone reported an alcohol overdose on the 400 block of West Cameron  Avenue at 12:13 a.m. Sunday, according to Chapel Hill police reports.• Someone reported  breaking and entering on the 200 block of Mitchell
CORRECTIONS
POLICE LOG
Lane at 2:17 a.m. Sunday, according to Chapel Hill police reports.The person took two laptops, two cameras, two  backpacks, a charger and a medical prescription valued at $3,390.00, reports state.• Someone found an iPhone on the 2700 block of Homestead Road at 8:25 p.m. Sunday, according to
• 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 Hannah Smoot at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
Chapel Hill police reports.The phone is worth $600, reports state.• Someone reported simple possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia and an open container in a passenger vehicle on the 100 block of Hillsborough Street at 8:41 p.m. Sunday, according to Chapel Hill police reports.• Someone reported  vandalism and damage to property on the 400 block of  West Franklin Street at 1:03 a.m. Monday, according to Chapel Hill police reports.The person broke a glass  worth $10, reports state.• Someone reported gunshots fired on the 400  block of Granville Road at 9:16 a.m. Monday, according to Chapel Hill police reports.• Someone reported trespassing on the 700 block of Trinity Court at 5:20 p.m. Monday, according to Chapel Hill police reports.• Someone reported soliciting on the 300 block of Burlage Circle at 8:40 p.m. Monday, according to Chapel Hill police reports.The person reported someone knocking on doors at night, reports state.• Someone committed larceny on N.C. Highway 54 near Burning Tree Drive at 11:18 a.m. Tuesday, according to Chapel Hill police reports.The person stole $40  worth of boat repair items and left the open package  behind at the bus stop, reports state.• Someone committed misdemeanor larceny on the 800 block of Old Fayetteville Road at 9:54 a.m. Monday, according to Chapel Hill police reports.The person attempted to steal Febreeze, an antenna and 2 DVDs worth $85 in total, but was confronted and assaulted during the incident, reports state.
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Kylie Lip Kit: 10/10, would buy 
DTH/ALEX KORMANNDTH/ALEX KORMANN
 The Kylie Lip Kit comes in a signature black box with a model handwritten letter from Kylie Jenner to add a personal touch to the kit.
By Betsy Alexandre
Staff Writer
Ever wonder how you  became friends with the friends  you’re friends with? Me too.UNC is conducting research for a Millennials Friendship Study, a campus-wide study designed to learn about the real experiences of college students through the eyes of their close friends. We predicted what these findings will be.
Instagram
Instagram is so much more than just a forum for sharing overly edited pictures.It’s actually a vital tool for honesty in your friendships.  All it takes is a quick little tag in the comments section, and you’ve confronted your  buddy with a real truth bomb. Instagram tagging is to 2016 as bathroom wall writing was to 2005.
Netflix and Chill
Netflix and Chill relates more to your relationship with  your bestie than it does to your relationship with your bae.Movies are great. TV shows are great. Netflix is the major mecca for both, and, yeah,  when you’re watching it, you do like to be chill. Please stop  with all this tongue-in-cheek sassiness about what it means to Netflix and Chill, because  you and your bestie literally Netflix and Chill on a nightly  basis. In fact, watching TV together is the best passive  bonding you know of, so let’s turn on “Stranger Things” and turn off the haters.
Low-quality photos
 You have an incredible number of low-quality photos together.The invention of the camera phone and the subsequent rise of Snapchat are responsible for this phenomenon. You sometimes find yourself looking through old picture albums of your mom in college, running through leaves with her pals, looking well-coiffed and carefree in a wonderfully curated way. And when this happens, you lament the fact that the majority of the pictures of you and your BFF feature a dog filter or an unfortunate face swap. Posterity has a lot to look forward to.
Meals at weird times
The majority of your shared meals together occur at unconventional hours.Everybody has different class schedules and daily routines, but nobody in your squad has different nighttime schedules. 1:00 a.m. on an uneventful Thursday means one thing and one thing only:  you and your BFF are going to Toppers. Enjoy. Meanwhile, I’ll  be at Jimmy John’s ordering a #12 with my #squad.
The squad
Speaking of, you definitely refer to yourself as a squad.Taylor Swift changed the face of friendships forever by  basically copyrighting the term squad and applying it to her A+ posse. Swift’s squad is literally a model squad (because they are all models, get it?). You feel a little weird about it, but in 2016, “friend group” is totally out and “squad” is totally in.Love us or loathe us, millennials know how to do friendships the right way. Basic as we may be, we show our affection via lighthearted GroupMe banter and extended Snapchat streaks. So keep it up, millennials of Chapel Hill, and remember to show your squad some appreciation on this hump day.
swerve@dailytarheel.com
UNC is doing a study on millennial friendships
By Megan Mallonee
Staff Writer
I have wanted a Kylie Lip Kit since the release months ago, but I needed an excuse to order one.That excuse came when I received an email from Kylie Cosmetics telling me that there would be one day of free shipping. My mom told me she  would disown me if I paid over $30 dollars for a Kardashian/Jenner product,  but without shipping they  were $29. Boom. I ordered my Dolce K lip kit to the laughter of everyone around me and with no knowledge of how to apply liner or matte gloss. I literally have no idea what I’m talking about. I just like to keep up  with the trends (and the Kardashians). The packaging was, as expected, flawless. The smooth black box opened to reveal a thank you note signed by Kylie herself!Not actually. But it’s a nice idea. Actually, applying the lip kit was difficult. I didn’t know  where to put the liner exactly,  but I felt like it was too basic to look up a YouTube tutorial.In the end, I went a little outside the edge of my lips to give a ~~plumping effect~~. The gloss was easier to apply. It dried pretty quickly, but the packaging recommends only one coat.Dolce K is a darker nude, so it wasn’t anything I was used to. It was outside my comfort zone, but in a good  way. I literally felt like Kylie. As far as effectiveness, the stuff lasted ALL night. I brushed my teeth, drank  various liquids (lol) and it was still there when I got home.Note: I didn’t have the opportunity to test the Lip Kit’s kissability. No comment. Someone else can write that  blog. As a Kardashian/Jenner super fan who knows little-to-nothing about makeup, I would give the Kylie Lip Kit a 10/10. The packaging, application and wearability  were better than expected. But what do I know?Thanks for reading my first article as a beauty guru! g2g try a Korean face mask!
swerve@dailytarheel.com
 
News
Wednesday, September 28, 2016
The Daily Tar Heel
3
‘Some people don’t feel safe’
Low-income families need help buying diapers
By Lauren Talley
Staff Writer
Diapers are a necessity for every child, but they can’t be purchased by low-income people using  WIC vouchers or food stamps. Eighteen percent of children in Carrboro come from low-income families, and the cost of their diapers can cause financial difficulties.Last week, the town of Carrboro issued a procla -mation to highlight Diaper Need Awareness Week. “The North Carolina Diaper Bank approached the mayor about issuing a proclamation to support their work in the community,” said Damon Seils, member of the Carrboro Board of Aldermen. Michelle Old, executive director and founder of the Diaper Bank of N.C., said her organization  works closely with families in poverty by distributing diapers through organizations that help low-income families. “The main reason for that is we feel very strongly that if a family is struggling for diapers then they’re struggling with other needs, and we really want them to connect to programs that can help them in other ways such as getting them food, getting them a stroller, getting them a high chair,” Old said.Troy Moore, spokesperson for the National Diaper Bank Network, said 32 governors, one state legislator and 92 cities and counties — including Carrboro — are recognizing Diaper Need  Awareness Week through proclamations. “We know 5.2 million children under the age of 3 live in poor and low-income families in the United States,” Moore said.Moore said the lack of diapers can keep families from going to work or furthering their education.“Diapers are integral to childcare,” Moore said. “If parents are continuing their education or  working a full-time job, day cares require that you have a daily supply of diapers. If you don’t have diapers, you don’t have day care. If you don’t have day care, you can’t go to work, you can’t go school.”Old said 78 percent of clients that receive diapers through the Diaper Bank of N.C. are working  between one to three jobs. She said many families have to choose between buying food or diapers.“Every time they’re going to pick food because  when you’re talking about feeding your children,  you’re going to make the diapers last a little bit longer than you probably should,” Old said.Old said the bank receives calls from clients of  various backgrounds.“We get calls all the time from teachers that cannot afford diapers, and we get calls all the time from military families where one spouse is fighting for our country and the other one is at home on  WIC and food stamps and they cannot afford diapers,” Old said.Diaper Need Awareness Week will run from Sept. 26 to Oct. 2.
@laurentalley13city@dailytarheel.com
First Amendment Day held panel on trigger warnings
By Brinley Lowe
Staff Writer
Student panelists debated if UNC should support trigger warnings, safe spaces and regulation of free speech on First Amendment Day at the panel “Trigger Warnings, Safe Spaces and ‘Special Snowflakes.’”Panelist and third-year law student Caleb Johnson said everyone is a minority, even if their minority status is being left-handed.“Can we as an institution be sensitive to every minority, every feeling, every possible offense out there without binding and shackling the free flow of ideas that make these institutions great?” he said.Emily Yue, assistant opinion editor of The Daily Tar Heel, said saying everyone is a minority is problematic because people have sensitivity issues beyond minority status.“I don’t feel super comfortable comparing people who are left-handed to, say, black  Americans because left-handed folk aren’t criminalized for being left-handed,” they said.Panelist Cara Pugh, co-chairperson of the UNC Student Government Multicultural  Affairs and Diversity Outreach Committee, said minority status and being historically oppressed are different. She said a lot of people do not like the word “privilege” because they think it is a bad thing. She asked audience members if they had certain privileges like being able to walk to Franklin Street without having to think about the Confederate monument Silent Sam. “The question of a safe space has to go to people that do feel unsafe for many of those privileges that they’re lacking,” Pugh said.Panelist Brooks Fuller, a Ph.D. candidate in the School of Media and Journalism, brought context to the origins of safe spaces and trigger warnings.Fuller said trigger warnings started to help rape victims and soldiers with post-traumatic stress from reliving their negative experiences. He said safe spaces were started by LGBTQ communities as a place where they could be themselves in the 1970s and 1980s.“I’m not sure if in the trigger  warning debate, it’s so much about accommodating minority status as much as it is accommodating power imbalance and correcting power imbalance,” he said.Pugh said she thinks it is acceptable for participants in social movements to not talk to the media, but she thinks most students
PHOTO COURTESY OF PARABON NANOLABS
Police hope a composite of Hedgepeth’s alleged attacker, produced by Virginia-based Parabon NanoLabs, will help bring a close to this still-open case.
By Davis McKinney
Staff Writer
Duke Energy agreed last week to pay a $6 million settlement to the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality for multiple violations of the federal Clean Water Act. According to the settlement, Duke Energy will pay $5,983,750 for spilling almost 40,000 tons of  waste into the Dan River in 2014. The utility company will also pay $16,250 for five other unauthorized discharges of wastewater that came after the 2014 spill. In a statement released after the settlement, Duke Energy said they are accountable for what happened. “This agreement is another important step in bringing the accident and its aftermath to a close as we continue working to safely close all ash basins in  ways that protect people, the environment and customer pocketbooks,” the statement said. Dan Crawford, director of governmental relations at the North Carolina League of Conservation Voters, said he is not satisfied with how the situation  was handled. “It’s good to be a multi-billion dollar company in North Carolina  because you get to call your own shots,” he said.“The DEQ has protected polluters more than they have the people, and people need to be paying attention to that.”Crawford said the public should  be concerned with the coal ash ponds at other Duke Energy plants.“The Dan River site will be cleaned up,” he said. “But then there’s a lot of options up in the air for the remaining sites, and I think that’s what people need to keep their eye on to make sure they’re clean.”Crawford said one option is to drain and cap the coal ash ponds, which could lead to more contamination because some waste  would be left in the ground.Catawba Riverkeeper Sam Perkins said the Dan River spill’s environmental effects can still be seen. “You can still go to the Dan River and you can find ash — it’s easy to find, you can see it miles downstream still,” he said.Duke Energy’s statement said the Dan River is thriving. Perkins said he was disappointed with the settlement.“What would be fair is to require them to clean up their mess,” he said. “Less than 7 percent of what was spilled has actually been cleaned up, so that will continue to be churned up and moved downriver.”Perkins said companies should  be forced to change their behavior instead of paying fines for violating environmental standards. According to a statement released by N.C. DEQ, Duke Energy must close the coal ash ponds at the Dan River site by Aug. 2019 and close all of its coal ash ponds by 2029. Perkins said North Carolina was lucky the spill happened at the Dan River plant since the surrounding areas are not densely populated. He said he’s concerned about other Duke Energy sites.“All 14 of these sites around the state have the same problem,he said. “They’re on waterways, they’re unlined, they’re leaking — they’re getting old and starting to fall apart.”
@The_Davestroyer state@dailytarheel.com
Diaper Need Awareness Week will run from Sept. 26 to Oct. 2.State environmental groups remain unhappy with the amount fined.
By Ryan Salchert
Assistant City Editor
It’s been four years since Faith Hedgepeth was found dead in her Chapel Hill apartment, and still the case remains unsolved. Now, police have released a new 3-D composite photo in hopes of finding her killer. The composite was introduced on Friday night’s episode of 20/20 titled, “Love, Hope and Faith,” which attempted to provide new clues to  bring Hedgepeth’s attacker to justice once and for all. The episode begins at 2014’s spring commencement in Kenan Stadium, where Hedgepeth was supposed to be, dressed in a Carolina blue cap and gown and accepting her degree.Throughout the 40-minute episode, 20/20’s Ryan Smith retraced Hedgepeth’s fateful night, painting a picture of what happened, where things become unclear and naming people of interest in the investigation.From there, police officers held interviews with family members, friends, police officers and private investigators to attempt to fill in the  blanks.It wasn’t until the end of the epsiode when the new composite of Hedgepeth’s alleged attacker was introduced.The composite, produced by  Virginia-based Parabon NanoLabs, used semen from the crime scene to produce a facial replica of what the assailant might look like. The program, called Parabon Snapshot, produces a detailed report  which includes eye color, skin color, hair color, face morphology and
Duke Energy will pay after Dan River spill
Police hope new composite could help break Faith Hedgepeth murder case
DTH/NATHAN KLIMA
Susan King, the Dean of the School of Media and Journalism, speaks on the steps of Carroll Hall at the First Amendment Day opening ceremony.
“The question of a safe space has to go to people that do feel unsafe...” 
Cara Pugh
Co-chairperson of MADO
involved think media coverage is important for these movements.“It’s unfortunate if media misquotes or doesn’t depict the story in the correct way, but  we’ve seen time and time again for civil rights movements and for other movements to go further, media was definitely involved and media was definitely needed,” she said.Pugh said UNC was created as a safe space for white men.“That might explain why some people don’t feel safe in this space,” she said. “Because it  wasn’t initially made for them. They had to make their way and it was difficult and it was tiring. And learning about that history won’t solve all our problems, but it would at least give you an understanding of where others are coming from.”
@lowebrinley university@dailytarheel.com
detailed biogeographic ancestry. The Snapshot produced in the Hedgepeth case reports that the assailant is most likely a Latino male, stating with 85.7 percent certainty that his skin color is dark to light olive, he has brown or hazel eyes, black hair and has zero to very few freckles. If you have any information regarding the case or the newly released snapshot, you are advised to contact Chapel Hill Police Crimestoppers at (919) 614-6363.
@ryansalchcity@dailytarheel.com
A new composite of the killer was introduced in an episode of 20/20 Friday.

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