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Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

Volume 124, Issue 79

dailytarheel.com

Monday, October 3, 2016

DTH/NATHAN KLIMA
UNC kicker Nick Weiler (24) is hoisted by his teammates after kicking a career-high 54-yard field goal with four seconds remaining to lift North Carolina over No.12 Florida State in Tallahassee on Saturday.

WEILER WALKS OFF FOR UNC

The senior kicker hit a 54-yard field goal to lift Tar Heels over Florida State
By Brendan Marks
Senior Writer

TALLAHASSEE This
moment would be inscribed,
for its ecstasy or its agony, in

the folds of North Carolina


football lore. It was simple, as
black or white a situation as
the team had faced in recent
memory.
Win, and jubilation. Not

just at the result a win over


No. 12 Florida State, in the
depths of Tallahassee, no less
but the way it was delivered. A mountainous lead,
then relinquishing it, then

reviving that same lead in the


games dying breaths.
Or, lose. Succumb again,
as always, to the gravity and
theatrics and the awe of one
of college footballs grandest

stages. Hear the chanting of


the 77,000-strong mob, clad
in garnet and gold; let those
cries reverberate in your
conscious, but more, too. Let
them echo in your soul.

And so it was Saturday


evening that the game hung
in the balance. Four seconds
on the clock, UNC down by

SEE FOOTBALL, PAGE 4

Family remembers drunken driving crash victim Judge throws

out magistrate
law challenge

The decision is based on precedent


that taxpayers lack legal standing.
By Neecole Bostick
Staff Writer

PHOTOS COURTESY OF DIONNE MCGEE


From left, Darlene McGee with her son Myson who is now 16 years old, with her friend Felecia (top right), and with her brother and friends (bottom
right). McGee died in a drunken driving accident on her way home to Charlotte on July 19, 2015. UNC student Chandler Kania was driving the car.

Darlene McGee died in a crash


on Interstate 85 in July 2015.
By Jane Little
City Editor

Darlene McGee held her family together


after her mothers death 10 years ago.
She made sure her tight-knit family
remained close and helped her brother, John
McGee, organize an annual memorial cookout to celebrate their mothers life.
On July 19, 2015, two days after the
anniversary of her mothers death, Darlene
McGee died in a drunken driving accident
on her way home to Charlotte, N.C., from the
cookout.
Police say former UNC student Chandler
Kania was driving the wrong way down
Interstate 85 when he hit a car head-on.
The crash killed three people Darlene,
46, her friend Felecia Harris, 49, and
Harris six-year-old granddaughter,
Jahnice Beard and injured a fourth,
authorities say.
Kanias trial will begin today. Kanias lawyers could not be reached for comment.

July is a hard month for John.


We were like Frick and Frack, he said.
We was one of a kind.
Darlene also had two children and two
grandchildren. She never got to meet her
second grandchild a boy.
John said everything is different now.
This year we missed her birthday,
Christmas, Thanksgiving and this guy is
home with his family, he said. Hes supposed to be behind bars. I feel like he needs
to be responsible those are three people.
Three people that he killed.
Even though he was the oldest of four siblings, John said he looked up to his younger
sister for guidance.
She was the one that held everything
down like my mother, he said. After she left,
I cant even explain it. It weighs on my heart
every day.
John has missed talking to Darlene and
having her check up on him.
Anytime I had a problem I could go talk
to her about it, he said. She said things
would get better in time. Its been a year, but
to me its been longer than a year.
Darlene was a good person, John said.
She stayed busy, she had a job and she

stayed in school. Hes struggling to understand why her life ended this way.
I want to know the reason why he got
on that road and drove drunk, John said.
Anytime you drink and you drive, you put
your life in jeopardy and other lives in jeopardy.
Dionne McGee, Johns wife, knew Darlene
for more than 20 years. They talked almost
every day, and when they didnt have time for
a phone call, they texted.
She said Darlenes bright smile could light
up a room.
She was a beautiful person, Dionne said.
(She loved) singing, making people happy,
going to church, helping people.
Darlene worked with people who were
handicapped and had special needs.
Everybody at her job, they fell in love
with her, Dionne said.
As Kanias trial approaches, Dionne said
shes struggled to try to forgive him.
I believe in God, I believe in forgiving
people, but its just so hard, she said. Her
brother misses her daily. They were like
twins, they were so close.

SEE MCGEE, PAGE 4

A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit filed against


Senate Bill 2 on Sept. 20, causing an immediately
filing to the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
SB2 was passed in June 2015, and allows magistrates to refuse to marry couples if it intrudes
on their religious beliefs. If all the magistrates of
a county exempt themselves, a magistrate would
be brought in with the use of taxpayer dollars to
conduct the marriage.
The six plaintiffs, which included couples of
both interracial and LGBT identities, filed a complaint against the bill arguing taxpayers dollars
should not be used.
You cant use taxpayers money to uphold
a religious point of view, said Luke Largess, a
Charlotte-based lawyer, on the lawsuit.
U.S. District Judge Max Cogburn dismissed the
complaint, ruling the plaintiffs lacked standing
because they were not harmed directly by the law.
Federal courts never recognized standing by
taxpayers, said Robert Orr, an adjunct professor
at the UNC School of Law. In the federal courts
you cannot say your only injury is of a taxpayer
there has to be actual direct harm.
The six couples were not denied the right to get
married, but a magistrate of their county refused
to perform their marriage, and they were therefore
not harmed or impeded from marrying, said Orr.
The judge was right based on the precedent of
the federal court, he said.
Couples who come before a magistrate for
marriage will not know beforehand if the magistrate will perform their marriage duties because
the magistrates previous decisions are not public
record, Largess said.
SB2 clearly originated in people being
opposed to marriage in same-sex couples and trying to find a new way to condemn same-sex couples, said Rev. Jasmine Beach-Ferrara, executive
director of the Campaign for Southern Equality,
which supported the lawsuit.
Kay Diane Ansley and Catherine McGaughey
of McDowell County, two of the plantiffs,
were married four days after North Carolinas
Amendment One was ruled unconstitutional.
Kelley Penn and Sonja Goodman of Swain
County, two other plaintiffs, are engaged.
Carol Ann and Thomas Roger Person of Moore
County, a legally blind, interracial couple as well
as the remaining plaintiffs, tried to marry in 1976,
but were refused by two magistrates, said Largess.
Since then, a federal court ruling found the magistrates violated their 14th Amendment rights.
This lawsuit isnt drawing as much attention
as HB2, but its the same thing, said Largess, Its
legalizing discrimination.
@nee_boos
state@dailytarheel.com

Some people wait a lifetime for a moment like this.


KELLY CLARKSON

News

Monday, October 3, 2016

The Daily Tar Heel

The Daily Tar Heel


www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893

123 years of editorial freedom

UNC students: Whats your favorite tailgate type?

JANE WESTER
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

By Lauren Farrington

EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

Staff Writer

HANNAH SMOOT
MANAGING EDITOR

Carolina students are experiencing the fall feels.


Couples buy each other
Pumpkin Spice Lattes a
gift theyll never forget, as the
nutmeg and cinnamon spices
warm their tummies and
their hearts.
A shorts-and-sweater
epidemic is sweeping UNC
in reaction to a 10-degree
temperature drop from 90 to
80 degrees. The FDA is in the
process of OK-ing a vaccine.
Meanwhile, we can live in our
cozy, but hot, illusion of fall
weather.
And of course, UNC football
season is here. After the teams

MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

DANNY NETT
ONLINE MANAGING EDITOR
ONLINE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JOS VALLE
VISUAL MANAGING EDITOR
VISUALS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

ALISON KRUG
NEWSROOM DIRECTOR
DTH@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

SARA SALINAS
DIRECTOR OF PROJECTS AND
INVESTIGATIONS
SPECIAL.PROJECTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

ACY JACKSON
UNIVERSITY EDITOR

UNIVERSITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JANE LITTLE
CITY EDITOR

win at Florida State University


on Saturday, students are hype
for the next home game on
Oct. 8 against Virginia Tech.
I am so pumped because
this will be the first one I can
attend, and, VT baby! But,
Im clearly rooting for the
Heels, UNC junior Alexandra
Allison said.
Yet what makes UNC football able to scratch its name
into bathroom doors with the
comment, Call for a ~good
time~ isnt the heat of Kenan
Memorial Stadium, but the
Tar Heel spirit.
The Tar Heel spirit only
communicates with the Tar
Heel born, bred and dead, so
theres no better way to have
a seance than a tailgate of

Carolina Blue, Carolina food


and Carolina attitude.
Use this list to find your
tailgate soulmate and get high
off the Tar Heel spirit.

The Marta Tailgate


Senior Marta Case said alcohol is her tailgate must-have.
Marta tailgates are the
type of tailgates that happen
at house parties with friends
who have known each other
since middle school. The
main decorations include a
You cant sit with us sign
on the door, because outsiders wouldnt understand the
inside jokes, and beer bottles
made into flower vases,
because at UNC we are classy.

At Marta tailgates, you are


comfortable because long-time
friends have seen drunk-you
and still love you. By the end
of a Marta tailgate, everyone is
too exhausted to walk to Kenan
Stadium. Instead, the group
mixes more drinks, watches the
game on TV, falls asleep and
dreams of a Tar Heel victory.

The Jun Soo Tailgate


I love meeting parents,
said junior Jun Soo Kim.
Jun Soo tailgates are family
tailgates, a Tar Heel memory
shared with parents and
friends. Students throw Jun
Soo tailgates not the parents. In control, the students
decide to make the party dry

no alcohol. Their greatest


fear: tipsy parents. Students
hope that no alcohol means no
embarrassing stories.
Jun Soo tailgates are the
perfect time for you to meet
your crushs parents. Then,
theyll fall in love with you.
Then, theyll talk about you
all of the time to your crush.
Then, your crush will fall in
love with you. Then, youll live
happily ever after. Jun Soo
tailgates are a win-win: high
on Tar Heel spirit, and low on
embarrassing baby pictures.
Dont worry too much if you
cant decide which tailgate is
for you. Itll be game day and a
#GDTBATH regardless.
swerve@dailytarheel.com

CITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

BENJI SCHWARTZ
STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
STATE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

SARAH VASSELLO
SWERVE DIRECTOR

SWERVE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

C JACKSON COWART
SPORTS EDITOR

Celebrations

ENGAGEMENTS

BIRTHS

Grayson Barnes and Zach Cross

SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

ZITA VOROS
DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
DESIGN@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

SARAH DWYER,
ALEX KORMANN
PHOTO EDITORS

PHOTO@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

COURTNEY JACOBS,
ELLIE SCIALABBA
COPY CHIEFS
COPY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

Annie (Baer) and Kevin Kiley

TIPS

Landon Archer Riley

Contact Managing Editor


Hannah Smoot at
managing.editor@dailytarheel.com
with tips, suggestions or
corrections.

Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St.


Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Jane Wester, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086
Advertising & Business, 962-1163
News, Features, Sports, 962-0245
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All rights reserved

Brad and Lucia (UNC 05) Riley welcomed Landon Archer Riley (8 lbs, 12 oz., 22 inches
tall) at 5:18 a.m. on Aug. 9, 2016. Landons grandparents are Sprite (UNC 70) and Connie
Barbee of Pinehurst and Priscilla Riley of Carthage.

WEDDINGS
Madison (Hayes) and Daniel Rauscher

Madison Hayes (UNC 16) and Daniel Rauscher (UNC 15) met as students at Chapel Hill
in 2013 through a combination of student ministry and intramural sports.
They got engaged at the Chapel Hill mural behind Hes Not Here in November 2015 on
the morning before the homecoming game versus Duke.
Madison, daughter of Billy and Susan Hayes of Holly Springs, graduated with degrees in
Management and Political Science and works in retail management. Daniel, son of Todd and Barb
Rauscher of Pinehurst, graduated with a Sports Administration degree and works in management.
They got married in Cary on Aug. 14, 2016, and are excited to now be Tar Heels born,
bred and wed!

J
ill
McC
orkle

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 NA AT C H A P E L H I L L P R E S E N T S

WORKS INCLUDE: Life After Life Going Away Shoes


Creatures of Habit Final Vinyl Days and Other Stories
Carolina Moon The Cheer Leader

a born storyteller
2016

Thomas
Wolfe
Lecture
Tuesday, Oct. 4

7:30 p.m.
Genome Sciences Bldg.
(Auditorium)
250 Bell Tower Road
UNC Campus
Free / Open to the Public
englishcomplit.unc.edu/wolfe
Sponsored by John and Jessica Skipper,
The Department of English & Comparative
Literature, and The Thomas Wolfe Society

Kevin Robert Kiley and Annie Baer Kiley were married June 11, 2016.
Kevin, a son of Edward and Patricia Kiley of Cary, is a Ph.D. student in the sociology department at Duke University. Annie, a daughter of Katherine Ellis Baer of
Chapel Hill, and Robert Andrew Baer and Mary Mallory Baer of Boca Grande, Florida,
is a web developer with Smashing Boxes in Durham.
Kevin and Annie met as first-year students at UNC, when Annie was looking for a
television on which to watch LOST. The flirtation quickly followed. A highly embarrassing string of still-public Facebook messages indicate that neither was very good
at it. On November 9th, 2006, after the annual Morehead-Cain fall banquet, the two
talked for hours outside of the Undergraduate Library (Annie had lied to Kevin about
needing a book from the library in order to spend more time with him, a fact Kevin
only learned several years into their relationship). Their first date was dinner at Jack
Sprat on Franklin Street followed by a production of Hamlet on campus. After nine
years of dating, much of which was spent in different time zones, they got engaged
on the steps of Old West (Annies first-year dorm) on Nov. 17, 2015, shortly after
moving back to the Triangle together. They got married at the Carolina Inn. It was
awesome.

Zach Cross proposed to Grayson Barnes


at the Biltmore House on June 4, 2016, with
both their families present on Graysons 21st
birthday celebration. They initially met in 8th
grade and quickly became best friends. When
Zach decided that he wanted to date Grayson,
he hatched a master plan; a night of putt-putt
and frivolity (chaperoned by their parents of
course, they were only 13). Grayson said no.
Zach, some might say blinded by the love,
decided that he would persevere and finally
got the apple of his eye, his future wife, at the
beginning of freshman year of high school.
Since then, its been a long period apart as
they havent gone to the same school since
middle school, but that changes July 15th,
2017! Grayson and Zach are very excited to be
united in marriage forever and embark on the
journey of life together.
Zach, a son of Tim and Jody Cross of
Greenville, South Carolina, is a senior at
Appalachian State. He is passionate about
football, friends, and his fiance. Zach
moved to Brussels, Belgium when he was 4
years old, and lived in Europe until he was
14. Grayson, a daughter of Paul and Denise
Barnes of Winston-Salem, is a senior at UNC.
(Zach writes, Youll never meet someone
with a negative view of her. Shes loved by
her friends, family, and most importantly
her toy poodle, Tasha. Her kind heart is her
best feature.)
They plan to marry July 15, 2017.

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 Hannah Smoot at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.

Like: facebook.com/dailytarheel

Follow: @dailytarheel on Twitter

Follow: dailytarheel on Instagram

POLICE LOG
Someone reported damage to property at the 200
block of South Elliot Road at
10:17 a.m. Thursday, accord-

ing to Chapel Hill police


reports.
A parking deck floor gave
out underneath the victims

vehicle, causing $200 in


damage, reports state.
Someone reported fraud
at the 100 block of Virginia
Drive at 1:16 p.m. Thursday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
Someone wired $2,250 to
an unknown account, reports
state.
Someone reported
arson and damage to property at the 1300 block of
Fordham Boulevard at 7:47
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone set up a fire next
to an occupied hotel room,
causing $110 in damage,
reports state.
Someone reported simple
possession and possession of
drug paraphernalia at Umstead
Drive and Martin Luther King
Jr. Boulevard at 10:28 p.m.
Thursday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
Someone reported an
overdose at the 1200 block
of Roosevelt Drive at 10:48
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone reported breaking and entering and larceny
from a vehicle at the 400
block of West Franklin Street
at 2:44 a.m. Friday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone stole a guitar and
a guitar case, valued at $700,
reports state.
Someone reported damage to property and aggressive driving at the 500 block
of Smith Level Road at 3:36
p.m. Thursday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
Someone damaged a headlight, valued at $100, reports
state.

Photo Tom Rankin

Someone reported damage to property at the 400


block of Roberson Street at
11:00 a.m. Friday, according
to Carrboro police reports.

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, October 3, 2016

Festifall celebrates local art and food


West Franklin
Street closed for
the fall festival
By Rosie Loughran
Staff Writer

West Franklin Street was filled with artists,


patrons, musicians and food trucks on Sunday
for the 44th annual Festifall Arts Festival.
While the inclement weather caused the
festival to be canceled last year, about 15,000
people took part in this years art festival.
Amanda Fletcher, supervisor of festivals
and community celebrations for Chapel Hill,
said Festifall takes about 10 months to plan.
From the applications going up on the
website to today, there are about 300 different
moving parts, she said.
Part of those 10 months was dedicated to
organizing and curating the applications of
about 100 artists.
Its a juried art show, so its all high-quality
art, Fletcher said.
A new special feature to Festifall included
photo booths and a living statue centerpiece
by local artists Paint Savvy with Lowes Home
Improvement. Paint Savvy also provided a face
painting station for the festival.
Food trucks were also at the festival, including Thai Box Zing, Kona Ice Kabana, Baton
Rouge Cuisine and Belgian Waffle Crafters.
Tom Wirtz of Little Dippers Italian Ice had
a booth at the festival for the second time.
Were off the main drag, but were still seeing a lot of traffic, he said, We appreciate
Chapel Hill doing this; its nice to have such an
event and we look forward to future years.
Art vendors sold wares ranging from jewelry to ceramics to photography, and many
artists were North Carolina natives. Delores
J. Hayes, a potter, spent her early childhood
in Chapel Hill and regularly teaches at the
Carrboro ArtsCenter summer camp.
Hayes has been professionally making
handmade ceramic work for about two years,
but this is her first year as a vendor at the

DTH/PEGGY MULLIN
Olivia Valdes adds some paint to create a work of spin art with friends at the Carrboro ArtsCenter booth at Festifall on West Franklin Street on Sunday.

festival. Other than her interest in selling her


work, Hayes said the festival is an opportunity
to connect with the community.
Its a way to bring the community together,
she said. You get to see people from all over
and neighbors you never even see, they come
out and have a good time. Its really about
staying connected.
For Leah Mancini, owner and designer of
childrens clothing shop Leluna Star, the festival served as a platform for exposure to new

customers in the Chapel Hill area.


For me, because I do a lot of events in
Cary and Raleigh, its about getting my name
and my product out there to a new crowd,
she said.
After some hesitation, Mancini decided to
apply for Festifall this year for the first time.
Ive heard people say its extremely organized, theres always a great turnout and so
far, thats exactly whats happening, she said.
About 35 nonprofit organizations and 25

performers were in attendance. Nonprofits


like Orange County Artist Guild, Bhakti Yoga
of N.C. and Go Chapel Hill shared information, while performers appeared on sponsored stages from the Local 506 and the DSI
Comedy Theater.
Its not too often that we can close down
Franklin and have about 15,000 people come
through, Fletcher said.
city@dailytarheel.com

Windsor releases zoo Civil rights museum denies


animals before floods Donald Trump event request
Animals in the street
are nothing new for
the eastern N.C. town.
By Kelsey Mason
Staff Writer

Eastern North Carolina


was impacted by severe flooding in late September, when
17 inches of rain fell over a
three-day period.
And during the flood residents of Windsor made their
home where the buffalo roam.
Billy Smithwick, chief of
the Windsor Fire Department,
said it is procedure for the
town to release certain animals from the local zoo in the
instance of a flood, such as
buffaloes, emus and ostriches
because they cannot be kept in
a pen for a prolonged period
during flooding.
The zoos protocol is to
release the animals into
the town two days before
any anticipated flooding,
Smithwick said.
They dont bother anybody as long as nobody bothers them, he said. They
wont bother anybody and

we learned that thats the best


way to handle them to just
let them go.
Smithwick said the animals never roam very far,
and they are corralled back
to the zoo with buckets of
feed. He also said the locals
in Windsor are used to these
events because of the towns
susceptibility to flooding.
We do it every time we get
water and we can get water
in the zoo when we dont get
flooding in the downtown
area, he said.
According to a press release
from Gov. Pat McCrorys
office, 138 people were rescued
from their homes and vehicles
by a state deployed rescue
team during the flooding.
McCrory visited Bertie
County on Sept. 26 to assess
the damage, joined by state
and local officials. He met
with residents to discuss the
impact of the flooding and
how the state can help.
Im extremely proud of
the strength and resilience
residents of northeastern
North Carolina have shown
in responding to this historic
flood event, McCrory said in
the press release.

Smithwick said the flood


had an economic impact on
the businesses downtown.
We were just getting our
downtown really going, and
now this, he said.
Gary Lackmann, professor
of marine, earth and atmospheric sciences at N.C. State,
said the meteorology of the
flooding was interesting
and it was actually a result of
Tropical Storm Julia.
He said because the system
wasnt named at the time, it
was not as high-profile of a
storm, which can affect relief
and recuperation efforts.
There are interesting societal implications there because
when a storm has a name
people tend to pay more attention to it, Lackmann said.
Smithwick said a number
of recuperation efforts are
being implemented in the
town, including attempts to
dry waterlogged belongings
as well as a request to the
state for dump trucks to haul
debris away.
Were all recovering well,
Smithwick said. Were gradually getting back to normal.
state@dailytarheel.com

Museum staffers have since


received threatening messages.
By Rebecca Ayers
Staff Writer

The International Civil Rights Center &


Museum in Greensboro, North Carolina
denied presidential candidate Donald
Trumps request for suspension of operations
last month.
The CEO and CFO of the museum, John
Swaine, said Trump wanted to reserve the
space for five hours or more, bring his own
personal tour guide and use the time for
media coverage.
Based upon our mission and our vision
we would never use the museum as a prop for
anyones ideology, its just not what we do, he
said. This is a very important landmark.
Swaine said since Sept. 26, museum staffers have received derogatory, life-threatening
phone calls and emails from Trump supporters.
I do believe the Trump campaign is comprehensively opposed to the work we do at
this museum, he said. He would never be
in support of our beliefs, when we talk about
non-violence, equal justice, housing discrimination those are things we want to educate
the world about.
Swaine said on Sept. 26 a man entered the
museum with a loaded weapon. His intent
was never disclosed.
Our politicians have a greater responsibility to everyone and not just to a narrow
segment of our population; we shouldnt

do things that will inflame their illnesses,


said Swaine. Racism is an illness and when
people are confronted with racism they
have a tendency to have blinders on and are
not focused.
Tanner Glenn, campaign manager for
Rich Nixons State House campaign in
Johnston, said the museum director made
the right decision.
I think it only goes to demonstrate the
pattern of disrespect from not only Trump
but also his campaign, he said.
Dave Miranda, spokesperson for the N.C.
Democratic Party, declined to comment on
the incident, but did comment on Trumps
overall campaign.
(Trump faces) the same challenges he
faces everywhere hes a candidate who has
zero experience, he lacks temperament and
has an economic plan that would sink us into
recession, he said.
Trump had permission to go into the museum as a private citizen and to go on a private
tour with one of the museum-provided tour
guides, Swaine said.
We welcome people from all over the
world Trump was welcome to come in, go
on a tour and learn about the struggle for
freedom in this country, he said. He just
wanted to have pictures of himself.
The museum has continued to receive support in spite of the harassing phone calls and
emails, he said.
When reached, the Trump campaign
declined to comment.
@rebeccaayers234
state@dailytarheel.com

Detroit 67 discussion compares Detroit, Charlotte riots


The Detroit race riots
mirror recent Charlotte
riots, one professor said.

SWERVE: Read the Detroit


67 review online at dailytarheel.com/section/swerve.

By Brinley Lowe
Staff Writer

After a performance of Detroit


67 Saturday, panelists discussed
race relations and police brutality 50
years after the Detroit Race Riot in
1967 to protests in Charlotte in 2016.
Perry Hall, a UNC professor in
the Department of African, African
American, and Diaspora Studies,
witnessed the 1967 Detroit riot as a
19-year-old college student home for
the summer.
Hall said when the riot occurred,
he thought police and race relations
were getting better in Detroit.
But it wasnt until years and years
later that I realized things were getting better for me, but they werent
getting better for the people who were
out there looting the store, he said.
Hall said recent events remind
him of the Detroit riot.
The first reaction I had to
Ferguson was how much it reminded me of Detroit, in terms of police
and community relations, he said.
Andre Pettigrew, a resident of

DTH/ARAMIDE GBADAMOSI
A group discussion about race relations in America took place following a showing of Detroit 67 on Saturday Oct. 1.

Durham who attended the play and


the conversation after, grew up in
Detroit and moved to south central
Los Angeles when he was 13, in 1966.
He said he still identifies as being
from Detroit, a city he sees as representative of economic opportunity

despite industrial decline.


It was interesting for my family
to watch the rollout of the riots in a
neighborhood that we were familiar
with and we had grown up in, he
said. I literally remember being
able to read Newsweek and Time

magazine and see store fronts from


my neighborhood, and people I
knew jumping out of windows while
watching the news.
Ariana Rivens, a psychology
major, said self-care is important to
keep in mind when being an activist.

It is really painful to consume


black death, black pain, black struggle and simultaneously balance the
fact that you want to be informed,
you want to be engaged with whats
happening, Rivens said.
Ruthie Allen, a public policy
major, said she was struck by how
journalist Philip Meyer benefited
from the Detroit riot. His coverage contributed to the Detroit Free
Press Pulitzer Prize.
Communities of color and people
rioting barely, if ever, benefit from
those riots, she said. A lot of the time,
its generations after them (who benefit)It just made me think about the
protests and current events in a different way. Like, whos benefiting.
Brandon Yelverton, a political
science and sociology major, said
we must change the perception of
people of color as criminals.
Dont let fear strangle the desire
to help, he said. Even if youre not
personally affected by these things,
if you see something is wrong, dont
ever be afraid to reach out to someone and figure out how you can help.
university@dailytarheel.com

News

Monday, October 3, 2016

FOOTBALL

FROM PAGE 1

one, with a 54-yard field goal


attempt on the way.
On the sidelines, Nick
Weiler was focused, practicing. That much was clear.
All around the senior
kicker was less clarity: To say
something to him, or not to?
If I was in that position,
I dont think Id want anybody saying anything to me,
receiver Ryan Switzer said.
But I was asking around his
special teams coach. I was
like, Can he hit this?
And they were like, Yeah,
hes got it. So I just let him do
his thing.
Coach Larry Fedora was of

MCGEE

FROM PAGE 1

This year, the memorial cookout for the McGees


mother also remembered
Darlene, Felecia and Jahnice.
Everybody felt it this year
because (Darlene) wasnt
here, he said. We couldnt
give a big one because she
wasnt a part of it.
Barbara Blackburn, state
victim specialist at Mothers
Against Drunk Driving N.C.,
works with victims of substance-impaired car crashes.
She said people who grieve
loved ones whove died in

The Daily Tar Heel

a similar mindset.
What would I say? We
need you to make it? Fedora
said. Theres nothing to say.
He knows what he needs to
do.
Fedora had already spoken to Weiler twice during
Saturdays contest, but only
after his kicks. More specifically, after his misses. The
first was a 51-yard attempt
Weiler pushed wide right to
start the second half.
The second was much
more recent, and more
consequential. After quarterback Mitch Trubisky
found Thomas Jackson for a
34-yard touchdown with 2:31
to play a score which put
UNC (4-1, 2-0 ACC) up six

Weiler trotted onto the field


for an obligatory extra point.
It was blocked.
I was just hoping the
offense would give me a
chance to redeem myself,
Weiler said.
The Seminoles (3-2, 0-2
ACC) promptly marched
down the field and scored
with 23 seconds left on a
quarterback scramble. Then
kicker Ricky Aguayo
who
missed three first-half field
goals of his own knocked
the extra point through the
uprights to give Florida State
a one-point advantage.
And heres where it comes
back to Fedora and Weilers
second talk.
The coach asked Weiler

what his range was, where the


offense needed to march to
have a shot. Weiler told him
the 35.
UNC didnt quite make it,
tugging its offense off the field
at the 37-yard line with four
seconds remaining. But before
Weiler could run onto the field,
before his attempt at redemption and immortality, one person did dare speak to him.
I dont know if youre
supposed to talk to a kicker
before he kicks a game winner or not, Trubisky said.
But I just went over to him
and I said, I love you no matter what.
With that, Weiler jogged
onto the field. He plucked a
few blades of weathered grass

crashes feel a range of emotions, including denial, fear,


anger and guilt.
Every persons grieving process is different, but
none of us can imagine the
magnitude of pain associated with a traumatic death
like this, Blackburn said
in an email. Your world is
changed after this experience and you may feel totally
out of control.
John said hes had trouble
sleeping, eating and focusing at work since his sisters
death.
In the past year, Dionne
and John moved from New

York to Wilmington, N.C.


They had planned to attend
the trial, but in the end they
decided against it.
John is worried race and
socio-economic status will
affect the case in Kanias
favor.
The familys white,
theyre alumni of N.C.,
the fathers a doctor, hes
alumni of the school, John
said. I feel that its going
to be some kind of different
weight because theyre part
of North Carolina. Their
family has been a part of it
for years.
He said hes not sure how

After she left, I cant


even explain it. It
weighs on my heart
every day.
John McGee
Darlene McGees older brother

hell be able to face Kania in


court.
I dont know how this is
going to turn out, he said.
But hopefully itll turn out
the right way and something
will be done.
@janelittle26
city@dailytarheel.com

Karate club teaches perseverance


By Charlotte Thompson

she said.
She said karate has helped
her in many aspects of her life
other than self-defense.
Theres a lot of emphasis
on focus and perseverance,
and also learning and teaching at all levels, knowing that
you can learn from younger
students as well as older,
more advanced students,
Rojas said. Ive gained confidence. I feel like I can handle
my body better because its
helped me with my coordination.
Like Rojas, first-year
Wayne Ruan said UNC
Shotokan was his first exposure to karate.
Before karate, I was a person who studies and doesnt
have time for exercise, but
now, Im using karate as a
gateway for exercising each
day and staying healthy, he
said.
Ruan said he sticks with
the club because of their
instructor, Kent Wang,
despite the large time commitment three-hour practices, three times a week.
He knows what hes
doing, Ruan said. I just trust
him.
Wang, fifth degree JKS

Staff Writer

This past weekend, UNC


Shotokan Karate, a student
organization, hosted the
Annual Fall Gasshuku, a
three day South Atlantic
Karate Affiliation camp.
Yasuaki Nagatomo, chief
instructor of the Japan Karate
Association of New Mexico,
led attendees as they practiced
their skills in preparation for
upcoming tournaments.
You cant turn your mind
off, Nagatomo said as he was
instructing the camp attendees.
Senior Maria-Adriana
Rojas, the club president,
said this weekends activities
helped them to learn what
judges are looking for, what
makes karate look good and
how to master both performance and skill.
Rojas said ever since she
was little, she was interested
in martial arts, but did not
pursue this interest until her
first year at UNC.
At FallFest, Shotokan
Karate caught my eye I
went to the first few meetings
and have been coming back
ever since, because I loved it,

DTH/LACHLAN MCGRATH
Sensai Nagatomo (center) engages a diverse range of competitors at a UNC Shotokan Karate tournament Saturday afternoon.

Shotokan black belt and head


instructor for the club, said
he has been involved with the
karate community ever since
joining his high school club
team on the island nation of
Trinidad and Tobago.
After he migrated to the
United States, he picked up
karate again as a graduate
student at the University
of Florida where he taught
karate for credit.
(Karate) also builds confidence, motivation to try harder, which helps individuals in
school to focus on their stud-

ies as well when you learn


focus in one area, it helps in
other areas, he said.
Wang said he has been
instructing the club since it
began over 20 years ago.
Wang isnt paid but said
he finds true enjoyment in
teaching students.
I enjoy seeing how (students) learn, seeing the contribution I provide to them
and seeing the joy that they
give to me as they progress in
their ranks, he said.
university@dailytarheel.com

and tossed them in the air


to test the wind. Nothing. A
clean shot would do it.
Long snapper Kyle Murphy
and holder Joey Mangili squatted into position, and Weiler
stepped backwards into his. He
was inches from stomping on
the midfield Seminoles logo,
just seconds and a made field
goal away from trouncing the
actual Seminoles.
What do you think about
in that moment? The gravity
of the kick, the pending emotions? Nothing at all?
Okay, youre going to hit
this kick, Weiler said. Youre
going to go right down the
middle, what are you going to
do after? Make sure you get
Joey, make sure you get Kyle.

Course evaluations
may become public
By Kayla Drake
Staff Writer

Course evaluations may


soon be redesigned and
the course feedback could
become public to all students.
Course evaluations are
used as a platform for students to provide feedback to
instructors at the end of a
course.
James Thompson, associate dean for undergraduate
curricula in the College of
Arts and Sciences, said the
University is interested in
changing the course evaluation system, which is used to
provide UNC with information about certain classes
from students.
(The questions) are really
long and repetitive and tend
to ask the same questions
in slightly different ways,
Thompson said. We are getting a return rate that varies
from sixty to sixty-two percent.
Thompson said the present
system is currently not public
to students and is used by the
Appointments, Promotions
and Tenure Committee to
evaluate instructors.
He said the new system
would allow students to provide feedback that is then
made public in a platform
similar to that of ratemyprofessors.com, although it will
be based around evaluating
courses rather than individual professors.
He said the course evaluation committee does not want
to ask questions specifically
about instructors because it
promotes negative commentary.
Any platform that aggregates anonymous remarks can

DTH office is open Mon-Fri 9:00am-5:00pm

Line Classified Ad Rates

get really nasty very quickly,


said Thompson.
He said the ideal system
would be similar to how
course evaluations are currently instructed, yet the
questions would be more
specific to the course. He
said these reviews could help
students when they register
for future classes.
Ana Rivera, a junior, said
she thinks it would be interesting to see reviews of other
classes before taking them.
You dont want to take
a course when you dont
know anything about it other
than the course description,
Rivera said.
Beatriz Vega, a senior, said
she thinks the information
provided by this new system
would be useful to her.
I think its a good idea,
Vega said.
Thompson said the information provided from the
course evaluations would be
password protected so that
anyone who works or studies
at UNC could use it.
We could set up a questionnaire for end of course
evaluations that had a set of
questions about the course,
not about the instructor, and
that information could, and
we think should, be published, he said.
Thompson said a report
has not yet been given to
University administrators,
but should be by the end of
next month.
This is an ongoing push
by all the people in this unit
who administer the course
evaluation process, he said.
We want to see this happen.
university@dailytarheel.com

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

Make sure you hug them.


The whistle blew, the ball
was snapped, and Weiler
strutted forward and clubbed
the ball into the air. Then he
watched not the ball soaring clean over the bottom of
the upright, but the arms of
the referees as they launched
into the air.
Good. UNC 37, Florida
State 35. Suddenly, the garnetand-gold-clad mob was silent
as swaths of UNC players tore
off the sidelines in celebration.
They shouted, leapt, clutching
their helmets, their teammates
and this moment all just a
little bit too tight.
It would be ecstasy, after all.
@BrendanRMarks
sports@dailytarheel.com

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NOTICE TO ALL DTH
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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
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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
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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.
REGISTERED TO VOTE in Orange County but
moved within county? Notify the Orange Elections Board of new address. Easiest ways? Your
voter registration card has change of address
form on back, send in BEFORE 10/14. Or report
new address at early voting Oct 20-Nov 5
JOIN UNC SHOTOKAN KARATE CLUB. We will
host SAKA camp from Sept 30th-Oct 2nd. Contact us at uncshotokan@outlook.com and visit
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RESEARCH STUDY: The US Environmental Protection Agency is seeking healthy, non-smoking


adults ages 18 to 40 for a research study. The
purpose of this research study is to acquire
cells from both blood and lungs for further
test tube studies of environmental agents. You
will receive 1 free physical exam, blood will be
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You will complete a total of 3 visits over 4-6
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visit our website at www.epastudies.org or call
FEFA EPA Recruiting at 966-0604. This email is
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STARPOINT STORAGE
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Closest Chiropractor to Campus!

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Keeping UNC Athletes, Students, & Staff well adjusted

Now in Carrboro! www.ncchiropractic.net

Help Wanted

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

LEARN ART OF LANDSCAPE gardening and


experience cycles of nature. Physically demanding work with established contractor. Drivers
license required. Full-time, part-time. $14/hr.
Andrew Bryan, 919-929-9913.

YOUTH OFFICE MANAGER


The Chapel Hill-Carrboro Y afterschool program is in need of an office manager for the
afternoons (1-5pm). Microsoft Office skills
necessary (especially Access). Primary responsibilities include tracking rosters, absences, filing
grant paperwork, and, parent communication
regarding attendance. Apply online at link provided online or contact Nick Kolb (Nick. Kolb@
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Volunteering
TRUNK OR TREAT: Chapel Hill Parks& Rec is
looking for organizations to volunteer for Trunk
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Please contact Lizzie Burrill, eburrill@townofchapelhill.org.

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HOROSCOPES
If October 3rd is Your Birthday...
Grow and develop like a weed this year. Polish your
presentation. Spring social changes lead to surging
physical and intellectual vitality. A romantic turning
point next autumn comes before new possibilities
inspire a group project. Nurture your roots for thriving.
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

Aries (March 21-April 19)


Today is a 9 -- Collaborate to grow
your joint finances. Teamwork
makes a difference. Abundance is
available. Share resources, experience
and talent. Make agreements, and
schedule actions. Follow a profitable
opportunity
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 7 -- Negotiate and
compromise to get a deal that
works for both. Collaborate on a
new assignment. Sort out resources,
and sweeten the pitch. It could get
romantic.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8 -- Slow to avoid
accidents and finish faster. Theres
plenty of demand for your attention.
Keep cool, and the intensity passes.
Appreciate what you have. True love
is revealed.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8 -- Look at things from
a new perspective. Follow a strong
attraction. Put your talent to work.
Combine delectable flavors, visuals,
fragrance and music to express your
love.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 6 -- Home and family have
your attention. Share concerns with
someone you trust. Solutions may
require physically moving things
around. The gentle approach works
best. Start from balance.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Turn on your creativity. Walk outdoors for inspiration.
Listen to music and poetry. Think in
terms of color, rhythm and style. A
partner spurs you to action.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is an 8 -- Review the budget
to get clear on expense priorities.
Research new methodologies. Cajole
someone into paying up. Keep the
faith. You can accomplish great things.
Follow through.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 9 -- You know what you
what and how to get it. Entertain a
personal dream. A loved one spurs
you on. Leap over fences. It could be
magical.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 6 -- Clean, organize and
plan your steps and goals. Strengthen
foundations for later action. Stay
sensitive to a loved ones wishes, while
remaining true to yourself. Invent
possibilities.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7 -- Your friends are your
inspiration. Have fun together. You
dont have to start from scratch; build
on what others have started. Make
beauty a priority.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8 -- A professional opportunity tempts. Persistent actions are
required. Prepare materials, and apply
yourself. Polish your presentation. A
friend can teach you what you need.
Take new territory.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is an 8 -- Sate your curiosity. Get
adventurous and explore. Make harmony a goal with your partner. Achieve
a new level of understanding together.
Improvise. Adapt as you go.
(c) 2016 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

Sports

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, October 3, 2016

Field hockey avenges first loss


FIELD HOCKEY

NORTH CAROLINA 5
MICHIGAN1
By Sam Doughton
Staff Writer

A 37-day transformation
for the No. 2 North Carolina
field hockey team culminated
in the Tar Heels (9-2, 3-1
ACC) riding four second-half
goals to a 5-1 defeat of No. 9
Michigan (7-4) on Sunday.
The game fell in stark
contrast to the Tar Heels
season-opening 1-0 loss to
the Wolverines 37 days ago.
UNC fell on an untimed
penalty-corner goal in the
teams first season-opening
loss since 2002.
Becoming a team is a
process, Head Coach Karen
Shelton said.
We talk a lot of the time
about getting 1 percent better each day. And I think our
team has embraced that.
Some things have changed
for the Tar Heels in those
37 days. For one, they have
a resume with wins over
defending national champion Syracuse and national
semifinalist Duke just one
weekend ago.
Senior Lauren Moyer said
early on in the season, the
team had an expectation of
winning but didnt really put
in the work necessary to actually win games.
In the past, weve just kind
of let our name carry us, and
just because were Carolina,
were supposed to win games,
Moyer said.
Senior Julia Young agreed.
The games weve gone in
just kind of playing, and not
working hard, just expecting
it, are the games that weve
lost, Young said.
But something switched
for North Carolina after that
first game against Michigan
and a loss to Boston College.
The Tar Heels saw themselves in a different light
as underdogs.
Being bumped down to
No. 5 last week really helped
us play well against Syracuse
and Duke, Young said. I

DTH/NICK BAFIA
UNC forward Eef Andriessen (10) fights for possession of the ball
during the Tar Heels 5-1 victory over Michigan on Sunday.

We talk a lot of the time about getting


1 percent better each day.
Karen Shelton
UNC field hockey coach

think we just kind of came


with that mentality this
week.
Getting into that mindset
is easier when youre playing
from behind, as UNC has
done the past three games.
Shelton said thats something
she wants to change.
I dont want to be known
as a second-half team,
Shelton said.
We want to play better
in the first half and then still
play well in the second half.
But I kind of dont like the
going down by a goal part.
But with second-half
performances like what the
Tar Heels showed against
Michigan, its hard to complain too much. UNC displayed its usual balance on
offense, with five different
goal-scorers.
Sophomore Ashley
Hoffman led the way with
a goal a flick shot off
a penalty corner for her
first of the season and
two assists. Moyer added
another goal, her teamleading ninth of the season,
and an assist of her own,
playing a ball into the circle
off open play. Junior Gab
Major poked it through the
Michigan keepers legs to
take a 3-1 lead.
Moyer and Hoffmans

goals came after a Wolverine


yellow card. Playing a player
up, the two goals in three
minutes proved to be North
Carolinas final blow in the
match.
The Tar Heels were able
to use their stick skills on
offense to draw fouls on
Michigan throughout the
game, leading to free hits
and 10 penalty corners for
the Tar Heels.
UNCs ability to capitalize
on penalty corners was another form of improvement.
Four of North Carolinas
goals came from penalty
corners, while UNC couldnt
convert any of its five penalty corners into goals in
their game against Michigan
in August.
These 37 days have shown
the Tar Heels are among the
best teams in the nation. But
Shelton knows her teams
work is not even close to
being over.
Were trying to take it one
game at a time, one practice at a time, to make the
improvements we need to
make to reach our potential,
Shelton said.
Were not there yet, but
I certainly think the second
half was a step for us.
@sjdoughton
sports@dailytarheel.com

Played em to a draw
The womens soccer team
tied the Virginia Cavaliers
in a home game this weekend. Visit online for more.

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
last puzzle

No ark was spotted


A zoo in Windsor, N.C.
let its zoo animals roam
free during flooding last
week. See pg. 3 for story.

To Boulder they went


Chapel Hill and Carrboro
officials learned about
urban trends in Colorado.
Visit online for more.

Dont tell the milkman


A student tried to take
extra milk from the dining
hall. Students defend him.
Visit Swerve for more.

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


Across
1 Hospital IV amts.
4 Irrational fear sufferers
suffix
9 Texas city
13 Until now
14 Specialized language
15 Dashing style
16 Expose wrongdoing
19 Gymnast Korbut
20 Choose by majority vote
21 Wok cooks flavoring
23 Attacked by surprise
26 Baseball card stat
27 Day, in Durango
28 MBA hopefuls test
29 Take a break
32 Lead singers part
34 No need to explain the
joke
36 Is obliged to pay
37 With the breeze at your
back, in sailing
41 Creative fields
42 Feathers
43 Hot chocolate drinks
46 Actor Morales
47 Braz. neighbor
50 Astounded
state
51 What it takes
to tango
53 Maple syrup
rating
55 Bank acct.
earnings
56 Peddlers
merchandise
59 Like
Supergirl,
ratings-wise
60 Where the
driver sits
64 Decimated
Asian sea
65 Budget

prefix
66 Genetics lab subj.
67 Audacity
68 __ Island
69 Incidentally, in texting
... and a hint to three
long puzzle answers
Down
1 RoboCop is one
2 Wine storage area
3 Inferior cigar
4 Compliment on the
back
5 Princely letters
6 S-shaped molding
7 Soup serving
8 Out-of-use anesthetic
9 White terrier, familiarly
10 Ctrl-__-Del: PC reboot
combo
11 Youre getting too
excited
12 Like a 45-10 football
game
17 Roll of bills
18 Long-range nuke
22 Many pride parade

participants
24 Therefore
25 Bucks and does
30 Instructions
component
31 Superman, e.g.
33 Superman lover Lane
34 In that case ...
35 Consequently
37 Lunchbox alternative
38 And so forth
39 Cyberzine
40 Small dam
41 Berry rich in
antioxidants
44 Whenever you want to
45 Ugly duckling, as we
learn later
47 -ly word, usually
48 Admonition to a sinner
49 Act that suppresses free

(C)2012 Tribune Media


Services, Inc.
All rights reserved.

speech
52 What an unruly
courtroom lacks
54 Part of NCAA: Abbr.
57 Carve in stone
58 Chase off
61 Evil film computer
62 Last in a sequence
63 __ is me!

Opinion

Monday, October 3, 2016

Established 1893, 123 years of editorial freedom


EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS

JANE WESTER EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM


TYLER FLEMING OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
EMILY YUE ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR

TREY FLOWERS
DAVID FARROW
JONATHAN NUNEZ
KATE STOTESBERY

CHRIS DAHLIE
GEORGIA BRUNNER
ZAYNAB NASIF
ELIZA FILENE

WILL PARKER
SEYOUNG OH
CRYSTAL YUILLE

EDITORIAL CARTOON By Ashley Griffin, ashleypg@live.unc.edu

Just a Crying Arab with a Violin

NEXT

Anna Shelton, on what most dining hall students fear

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

Just
gonna
watch
me burn

10/04: Art of the Possible


Kate Stotesbery writes on
campus issues.

She got in trouble one time for taking, like,


two cookies.

AI, on Joel Currans letter on public records request compliance

Third-year graduate student from


Concord.
Email: mejs@live.unc.edu

QUOTE OF THE DAY

If someone gives you the date and citation


number of 5-10 tickets, how could that take
1.5-2 years to produce a copy?

Mejs Hasan

n 2013, Egypt suffered a


military coup and their
president was arrested.
Many Muslims blamed the
Christian minority at least,
enough Muslims believed the
rumor of Christian coup support that 50 Egyptian churches
were reported torched.
One of these churches
neighbored a police station. In
that church and at others, the
police refused to intervene.
Often when a member of
a Middle East minority is
accused of a serious crime,
the rumor spreads that every
member of that minority
applauds the crime. Religious
and political leaders bray for
whole communities to pay, to
punish all of the other.
Whats so different when
American leaders spread lies
that thousands of American
Muslims cheered 9/11; tweet
exaggerations of Black crime;
brand entire groups rapists;
when news story comments
choke with cries to kill all cretin Muslims?
Two months ago, a
Lebanese-American man
called Khalid Jabara alerted
police that a neighbor was
brandishing a gun. This neighbor, who dubbed the family
dirty Arabs, ran his car over
Khalids mother last year but
spent mere months in jail. At
Khalids call, the police came,
tried to engage with the neighbor, failed and said there was
nothing to be done.
Ten minutes later, Khalid
was killed. Whats different
between how American police
treated that situation, and
Egyptian police who allowed a
church to burn?
Khalids death, like the huge
U.S. increase in Arab/Muslim
hate crimes, was virtually unnoticed. When the rare article gets
through, I suspect its in the
same spirit that local Egyptian
media likely covered their burning churches: You cant expect
us to talk nonstop about our
annoying minorities!
Were to the point where
many think killing Muslims or
burning mosques arent real
crimes, because as the rumor
goes, all Muslims secretly
cheered the Orlando and San
Bernardino shootings. This is
simply not true.
We Muslims are not perfect
and I have written columns
about our hypocrisies, but
bombs and massacres in the
U.S. horrify most of us.
Do you think Americans
dont have the same instinct
for mob revenge as in the
Middle East? All it takes is a
million hate-skewed huddles
at gas stations and dinner
tables, and leaders who confirm: yes, youre correct, every
last one of that group is bad.
Compare that to a place
where we all pledge allegiance
every morning, no group is
vilified, people trust each other
that makes a huge difference
as to the kind of Muslim or
Christian you grow to be.
Youre not going to get rid of
us by banning us; youre going
to turn into us. Can we escape
unscathed years of Donald
Trump lying about how dangerous other people are, until
we meet people and cant see
their face, but see only: Black,
Muslim, Mexican, white?
For Gods sake we already
have the worlds worst example
of what not to do convulsing
the Middle East. Dont push
our country there.

The Daily Tar Heel

ASGA is in solidarity
with protesters

EDITORIAL

Safe spaces dont exist


Designating a space
as safe does not
make it so.

rom the second we


are born, we live in
a state of threat or
insecurity.
We cant be sure what
lies around the corner. We
dont know what events
may cause emotional turmoil. The emotional abuse
and physical violence some
of us face can be worse
than scenes from a movie.
Paired with an invalidation
of our lived experiences,
that can cause us to seriously question ourselves
and our worth.
Today, we see a proliferation of spaces constructed with those issues
in mind. These spaces are
meant to be safe, where
visitors are heard and valued, maybe even sheltered
from outside dangers.
College students have
found particular uses for
such spaces and have gotten creative. Sometimes
these spaces have been
created with fluffy pillows, calming music and
even puppies.
But can we really
declare that a space is safe
and just expect it to be so?
There are plenty of reasons why the creation of
safe spaces as a definitive
solution for the problems
they address doesnt work.

For example, theres a


tendency for group meetings to be labeled as a
safe space, followed by
a facilitators encouragement that people should
be unafraid to express
themselves freely.
Even in our editorial
board meetings, members
with the minority opinion
find it difficult to speak
honestly when their words
might offend or hurt other
members.
Should the safe space
enable those with conservative voices the freedom
to speak up, or should it
protect the members who
have been historically
silenced by those voices?
It takes effort to make a
space truly safe, especially
in group settings.
First, there needs to be
a consensus on what constitutes safety for everyone involved. Next, there
needs to be a consensus
on acceptable ways of
addressing missteps, illintentioned or not, which
is easier said than done.
The word respect,
tends to get thrown
around frequently in these
circles, but when people
understand and define
respect differently, problems arise.
Therefore, its necessary
to lay down the expectations and be ready to
reflect before labeling a
space as safe. This could

require a constant selfreflection of ones own


actions within and outside
any collective they are a
part of.
We all have different
lived experiences as we
come from different backgrounds. Sometimes that
makes it hard for us to
understand experiences
different from our own.
Ideally, these experiences would be shared
between people in a manner that is both respectful
and productive in a safe
space.
However, that forum
can easily turn into a
space where unfiltered
expression comes at the
expense of all too frequent microaggressions
or watered-down hate
speech. For a marginalized person, the need to
validate their responses to
such aggressions through
articulating past negative
experiences makes spaces
unsafe. It can be hard to
defend yourself in a space
that is safe for everyone
but you.
No amount of sensitivity workshops, cultural
awareness lectures or puppies can guarantee a safe
space for all, because universally safe spaces arent
possible.
Safe spaces dont exist
because they shouldnt.
They dont exist because
they cant.

COLUMN

Stop hiding, UNC


We should know whos found responsible for sexual assault.

n Friday, we did
something important.
The Daily Tar Heel has
long argued that when someone is found responsible for
sexual assault on campus,
the University should release
the records of the case.
Theres a specific exception in FERPA, the law that
protects student privacy, that
says universities can do this
once the case is over.
UNC has always said no to
our public records requests
for this information. FERPA
says universities can release
the information, not that
they must release it.
We say releasing the
records of these cases is a
public service and, quite
simply, the right thing to do.
On Friday, we made
another records request for
the information and, this
time, we were joined in
the request by eight North
Carolina media outlets,
Fusion and the Student
Press Law Center.
UNCs Equal Opportunity
and Compliance Office
released a 2014-15 annual
report that described the outcomes of sexual assault cases
that year in an extremely

Jane Wester
Editor-in-Chief
Senior history major from
Charlotte
Email: editor@dailytarheel.com

broad way for example, it


listed all the sanctions and
corrective actions that had
been issued in the past year,
but it didnt say how many
people received any of the
consequences. For the outcomes of cases involving students, the report didnt break
apart policy violations from
voluntary resolutions.
In the report, the
University said getting more
specific would risk identifying people.
We say getting more specific is essential. I badly want
to know how many people
my school has found responsible for sexual assault and
what consequences those
people are getting.
The Greensboro News and
Record is one of the orga-

nizations joining us in our


request. On Friday, the News
and Records managing editor, Steven Doyle, told a DTH
reporter why he believes the
records should be public.
I dont think universities can hide behind laws to
pretend to privacy when the
crimes are so egregious and
the dangers are so great,
he said.
Hes right. Sexual assault
is a violent and serious crime.
We are a newsroom full of
college students at a moment
when a significant portion
of students will be sexually
assaulted before graduation we do not need to be
reminded why this matters.
Were taking on the fight
for access because we believe
you deserve to know whats
going on.
The Daily Tar Heel is one
of the freest student newspapers in the United States. We
dont take any money from
UNC, and we are proud of
that because of moments
like this moments when
we get to hold the University
accountable.
UNC has an Oct. 28
deadline to respond to our
request. Well keep you
posted.

TO THE EDITOR
We are members of the
American Studies Graduate
Student Association. We
write now in solidarity
with the protests against
police violence in Charlotte
following the murder of
Keith Lamont Scott and
with those fighting against
the transphobic politics of
North Carolinas House Bill
2. The purposeful denial of
humanity to people of color
and transgender individuals by our state and local
governments is a violent
stain on our state, which
has been a silent, but active
participant in the destructive repudiation of human
complexity and diversity.
As citizens of North
Carolina, we write for a
future state that discards
the legacy of its racist, bigoted past and present, and
begins the work of valuing
and honoring difference.
As students and teachers at
UNC-Chapel Hill, we write
to defend the Universitys
tradition of progressive
scholarship and service
for and with marginalized
communities in our state.
And as students and teachers of American Studies,
we write to uphold our
commitment to study and
teach the complexity of our
nations past and present
and to empower others
to value that complexity
toward the creation of an
equitable future.
The murder of people of
color through public statesanctioned violence and
the refusal to acknowledge
transgender individuals
as citizens are both part
of a history of violence in
our state in which governments kill and discriminate
with impunity. We stand
with those protesting in
Charlotte and across North
Carolina and ask our colleagues to stand publicly
with us.
In solidarity,

not compromise the academic mission. The Institute


of Arts and Humanities is
planning a series of conversations on the future of
the university with special
emphasis on the basic
principles that cannot be
compromised without
placing the very idea of a
university at risk. Former
Chancellor Holden Thorp
and I are working on a book
called Higher Calling that
considers the same subject.
As the dialogue continues I
hope all involved will agree
this is not a zero-sum game.
Innovation need not come
at the expense of the liberal
arts and entrepreneurial
thinking and critical thinking are often one and the
same.
Virtually all of the
instructors in the E-Minor
are graduates of the College
of Arts and Sciences and
Steve Jobs said the most
important college course he
took was calligraphy. Let
the conversation continue!
Prof. Buck Goldstein
Department of
Economics

Israel stands for a


message of peace

American Studies
Graduate Student
Association

TO THE EDITOR:
The Daily Tar Heel
Editorial Board selective
critique of Israel linked
in the context of appropriate protest of murders
of African Americans in
the U.S. is truly shameful.
Coming at the same time as
the Death of Shimon Peres
and right before the start
of one of the holiest days of
the Jewish New Year, Rosh
Hashanah, an opportunity
to promote a message of
Peace and coming together
was clearly lost on your
paper. (On Thursday), delegations from almost every
country in the free world
came to Israel to stand up
for a message and vision of
peace. The State of Israel
simply has tried for over 75
years to live in peace and
protect its citizens from
wars and rocket attacks
from those who want to
see her wiped off the map.
Editorials that selectively
target one of the great
democracies in the world
are flawed and dangerous.

Viewpoints sparked a
good conversation

Adam Goldstein
Class of 93

TO THE EDITOR:
As University
Entrepreneur-inResidence and one of the
founders of the E-Minor
in the Department of
Economics I could not
be more pleased with the
provocative and thoughtful
essays on entrepreneurship in the Viewpoints
column. Hopefully, this is
the beginning of a continuing conversation about
ways that innovation and
entrepreneurial thinking
can be appropriately integrated into a liberal arts
curriculum.
Dean Kevin Guskiewicz
has convened a think tank
and other advisory committees to consider the curriculum in the College and
how traditional disciplines
can be applied outside of
academia in ways that do

Dont lie if youre not


registered to vote
TO THE EDITOR:
Of the 100 or so people
I spoke to in the Pit today,
nearly all promised to vote.
This should be encouraging,
but the fact is that about 60
of them were lying to my
face; only 40 percent of citizens aged 18 to 29 voted in
the last presidential election.
In 2000, the Presidential
election came down to a
537 vote gap in the state of
Florida. Thirty times that
many UNC students wont
bother to vote in November.
So when you see us in the
pit, stop lying. Take three
minutes. Register. You
wont regret it.
Sam Shaw
Senior
History

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