Você está na página 1de 12

Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

Volume 119, Issue 57

dailytarheel.com

Thursday, August 25, 2011

EPILEPTIC EPISODE
Charges were dropped against a UNC professor who stole an ambulance and crashed it six times while suffering from an epileptic episode. Page 3.

Inside

Alert Carolina changes on the way


A third alert option is one major change being discussed by officials.
By Becky Bush and Nicole Comparato
Staff Writers

DIVERSIONS

Check out the latest movie and music reviews, and look for whats going on this weekend in the first Dive section of the year. Page 5.

In the early hours of April 4, Kate Matthews left her door in Morrison Residence Hall unlocked. Just a few floors away, some of her fellow students were being robbed at gunpoint. The incident at Morrison sparked campus-wide protest of the Universitys decision not to notify students of the fleeing gunman through its emergency warning system, Alert Carolina. If I had known there had been an armed robbery occurring I would have definitely gotten out of bed and locked (the door) to be on the safe side, Matthews said. In response to concerns

about Alert Carolina, a group of University officials that included senior administrators, public safety officers and student leaders began reviewing the system in April. Four months later, the team is almost ready to reveal significant alterations to the warning system. The changes being discussed help fill the hole in the system that was made painfully apparent last semester, officials said. While the current system only designates emergencies either siren or non-siren, the proposed changes add a new tier of response: one that alerts individuals of a situation but does not sound the alarm, said Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Winston Crisp. The changes are still in draft form, but will be made public within the next week or two, said University spokesman Mike McFarland.

Tentative changes
The current version of Alert Carolina sounds the alarm for only three scenarios: an armed person near or on campus, a major chemical spill or hazard or a nearby tornado warning. For any other campus emergency, the Department of Public Safety must form a plan of action tailored specifically to that scenario. The revised system will institutionalize a new response a second tier that holds a middle ground between siren and nonsiren emergencies, Crisp said. This tier, which wouldnt activate the siren but would send out text messages and emails, serves as an alert to a possible danger but not an immediate crisis. In the second tier, something has happened on campus but there is no immediate threat, Crisp said. We want people to be in a heightened state of alert. The remaining two tiers will

Alert Carolina could add new tier to response plan 1. Emergency


- sirens go o and speakers tell people what to do - faculty, sta and students receive texts and emails - update on Alert Carolina

Months of review have resulted in tentative plans to add another tier to Alert Carolinas emergency plan. The new option would notify the campus via texts and emails, but no siren would sound.

2. No immediate 3. No threat
threat
- no sirens - faculty, sta and students receive texts and emails - update on Alert Carolina
- no sirens - faculty, sta and students dont receive texts and emails - update on Alert Carolina

SOURCE: WINSTON CRISP, VICE CHANCELLOR FOR STUDENT AFFAIRS

DTH/MEG WRATHER

largely resemble those already in place, Crisp said. The first tier is when we actually need students, faculty and staff to do something to obey the threat, he said. In the case of an immediate threat, the siren would sound, instructions would be issued over

the loud speaker and emergency text messages and emails would be sent out. The third tier would include an update to the Alert Carolina website, but wouldnt require any action.

SEE AlerT CArOliNA, PAgE 9

NC abortion law sparks controversy


The state could face lawsuits due to a new right-to-know act.
By Estes Gould
Staff Writer

POSTERS IN DAVIS

Davis library is opening a gallery exhibit, featuring reproductions of 40 posters from the past two decades. Page 11.

dth/ALLISON RUSSELL David MacDonald dives into the pool at UNCs Koury Natatorium. MacDonald became the first Tar Heel to earn a spot in the Olympic Trials with a 12th-place finish at the AT&T National Diving Championships.

TRYING TO PRINT?
University administrators say delays in printing are caused by first week of classes and moving of printers. Students have been expressing their frustration after having to wait in line. Page 3.

Planned Parenthood is already fighting the N.C. General Assembly for funding, but it could soon decide to file another lawsuit against the state this time about the Womans Right to Know Act. The law requires a 24-hour waiting period before receiving an abortion, as well as ultrasound images and other information to be offered to the patient. It has been criticized by a range of pro-choice organizations, including Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union, as an unprecedented step by the state into a womans privacy. The Republicans social agenda has, with this bill, invaded a womans life as never before by marching straight into her doctors office and dictating the medical advice and treatment she receives, said Gov. Bev Perdue in a statement after her veto of the bill was overridden. But N.C. Rep. Paul Stam, RWake, the House majority leader, said the law is constitutional and supported by a majority of the state, according to a poll taken by Civitas Institute, a conservative think tank. This is not a change in the people; this is a change in the leadership, he said.

Right-to-know legislation has been upheld in other states, and the U.S. Supreme Court decided in 1992 that restrictions on abortion are constitutional if they dont place an undue burden on a womans right to the procedure. This is about giving women all the information so they can make informed decisions, Stam said. Opponents to the law say the new requirements make getting an abortion more cumbersome, especially to rural women who would need to go to an abortion provider twice because of the 24-hour rule and to low-income women paying for the ultrasound. The cost to the patient would go up, but were trying to figure out how to implement this at the lowest possible cost to our patients and still be as accessible as possible, said Janet Colm, the chief executive officer at Planned Parenthood Central North Carolina. If there is enough evidence that the law causes such difficulty, especially delays in care abortions are safer the earlier they are performed the court could side against the state, said Maya Manian, a womens issues law professor at the University of San Francisco. But the undue burden is not the only thing calling its constitutionality into question, said Katy Parker, the legal director for ACLU-North Carolina. Neither Planned Parenthood nor the ACLU has decided to pursue legal action yet, but both

SEE AbOrTiON, PAgE 9

QUICK HITS
See whats up, whats down this week on todays opinion page. Also, read todays editorials, letters and column. Page 4.

A HISTORIC PLUNGE
A UNC diver will be the first in school history at Olympic Trials.
By Jonathan LaMantia
Staff Writer

UNC warns students of hurricane danger


By Colleen Volz
Assistant University Editor

This day in history


Aug. 25, 1992
The Center for the Study of the American South was founded to encourage teaching about, research on and service to the South at UNC.

Todays weather
Listserv replyalls expected H 92, L 71

Fridays weather
Those kvetches better be good H 91, L 72

It might have been luck that landed North Carolina diver David MacDonald in the semifinals of the mens threemeter at the AT&T U.S. Diving National Championships, but it was perseverance that earned him a place in UNC history. MacDonald finished two spots outside of the top 18 in the quarterfinals of the Championship meet, which ordinarily would not have allowed him to advance to the next round. But two divers could not attend the semifinals, and the redshirt senior squeezed his way into the last spot.

With a 12th place finish in the semifinals, MacDonald became the first Tar Heel diver in school history to qualify for the Olympic Trials. I knew if I made finals Id make trials, MacDonald said. Mainly, I wanted to prove to myself and to people that hadnt seen me dive before that I can dive. Competitors at the championships included Olympians Troy Dumais and Chris Colwill, but MacDonald tried to keep the stiff competition off his mind. It didnt really affect me as much as I thought it would, MacDonald said. When youre on the side everyones just chilling, no one is put on a pedestal. MacDonalds calm demeanor on such a grand stage was no surprise to teammate Bryant Wooten, who considers the trait one of MacDonalds

major strengths. A redshirt sophomore, Wooten said he has benefited from MacDonalds leadership on the team. Its great being able to ask him questions in practice and have him coaching us on the sidelines, Wooten said. MacDonald said there was a lot less pressure on him in the championships because he didnt have to worry about performing well for his team. This time, he just had his own successes and failures to worry about. But for MacDonald, staying calm is a trick of the trade. In a sport where even minor mental lapses can result in point deductions at the judges table, MacDonald said the key to his focus on the diving board is a clear mind. Ive done (the dives) so

SEE DiVer, PAgE 9

Flashlight. Food. Water. Medicine. Radio. As Hurricane Irene threatens to hit Chapel Hill this weekend, campus emergency officials are recommending that every student has these basic emergency materials on hand. Although UNC is not expected to feel the eye of the storm, heavy rain and winds could represent a threat to student safety, said Bill Gentry, director of the community preparedness and disaster management in the Gillings School of Global Public Health. Students received an email Wednesday from the University offering advice on how to best prepare for the storm. Students are responsible first and foremost for their own safety and situation immediately after an event, Gentry said, adding that the University cannot possibly keep tabs on every student. Randy Young, spokesman for the Department of Public Safety, said the University plans to communicate with students

Students are responsible first and foremost for their own safety and situation immediately after an event.
bill Gentry,
director of the community preparedness and disaster management in the gillings School of global Public health

in as many ways as possible should the hurricane become a serious threat to their safety. This includes sending text messages to registered phones via Alert Carolina, UNCs emergency warning system. Larry Hicks, director of housing and residential education, said officials from departments across campus met Wednesday to discuss their individual contingency plans. These groups included Campus Health Services, housing, the office of the dean of students, Carolina Dining Services, Facilities Services and DPS. Hicks said a conference call

SEE HUrriCANe, PAgE 9

Why join the navy if you can be a pirate?


STEVE JOBS

Thursday, August 25, 2011

News
DAILY DOSE

The Daily Tar Heel

The Daily Tar Heel


www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893 118 years of editorial freedom
STEvEN NOrTON EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

VEGGIN OUT

Whats the opposite of stealth?

EDITOR@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

TArINI pArTI MANAGING EDITOR

MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

KELLy MCHUGH vISUAL MANAGING EDITOR ANDy THOMASON UNIvERSITy EDITOR jEANNA SMIALEK CITy EDITOR

From staff and wire reports

UNIvERSITy@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

CITy@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

ISABELLA COCHrANE STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR


STATE@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

ext time youre thinking of practicing your ninja skills, you may not want to work on them at a parochial school. Hillsdale, Okla., police arrested 21-year-old Gavin Stiffler Aug. 18 after he showed up at Hillsdale Christian School in full ninja attire. Stiffler, who was found by authorities in a crane pose, was charged with possession of a weapon on school property. He was carrying a samurai sword and a pair of ninja sai the same weapon wielded by Raphael on Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. School principal Renae Haymaker said to reporters that no one was harmed by the ninja, but declined to release video of the incident. If Stiffler is convicted, he could face a fine of up to $5,000 and two years in prison.
QUOTED. If somebody were to go to church slurring and drunk thats not a good example. Maria Sanchez, Sacramento, Calif., resident. Sanchez lives near All Hallows Church, where Rev. Julian Medina arrived an hour late for a baptism service Saturday. The 64-yearold priest reportedly slurred and stumbled through the service before falling over drunk.

ARTS@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

KATELyN TrELA ARTS EDITOR

DIvERSIONS@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

jOSEpH CHApMAN DIvERSIONS EDITOR KELLy pArSONS SPORTS EDITOR ALLIE rUSSELL PHOTO EDITOR

SPORTS@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

NOTED. U.S. Marines stationed in Afghanistan will now have to be even more silent-butdeadly after authorities banned audible farting for downrange Marines. The ban on farting follows other military policies that ban soldiers from discussing things like politics or women in order to avoid offending the Afghani soldiers.

PHOTO@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

EMILy EvANS, GEOrGIA CAvANAUGH COPy CO-EDITORS


COPy@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

CoMMUNIty CaLENdaR
Bike tour of Chapel Hill: Bring your bike and join Campus Rec Director Marty Pomerantz for a bike tour of the town, weather permitting. Time: 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. Location: Meet at the front entrance of the SRC International coffee hour: Participate in a monthly social hour for both international and American students and staff. Time: 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. Location: FedEx Global Center South Campus Cookout: Come enjoy a free dinner from the grill with your friends. Kosher food will be available.

lise Margoles, the owner of Elysian Fields Farm, holds up a fairy tale eggplant at her stand at the Carrboro Farmers Market. The market is held yearround every Saturday from 7 a.m. to noon and, from April to October, Wednesdays from 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.

DTH/LOGAN SAVAGE

today

Time: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Location: Ehringhaus lawn Sex After Dark: Learn answers to questions youve always been afraid to ask from sexual health experts and receive free samples. Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Location: Student Union, Cabaret Hypnotist: Watch as hypnotist Peter Mamos puts your friends under his spell during a comedy show/ Time: 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. Location: Student Union, Great Hall Midnight Mystery Tour: Learn some of UNCs lesser-known mysteries during an after-dark walking tour. Refreshments will be provided.

Time: 10 p.m. to 12 a.m. Location: Bell Tower lawn Foursquare Scavenger Hunt: Learn facts about UNC and get to know the schools campus by participating in a scavenger hunt led by the Heelraisers Council. Those who participate will have a chance to win prizes. Time: 1 p.m. Location: The Pit To make a calendar submission, email calendar@dailytarheel.com. Please include the date of the event in the subject line, and attach a photo if you wish. Events will be published in the newspaper on either the day or the day before they take place.

PoLICE LoG
Someone broke into an unlocked 2011 gray Chevrolet Suburban and stole items between 12:30 a.m. and 6 a.m. Tuesday at 2 Gooseneck Road, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The victim reported stolen a $100 canvas purse, four debit and credit cards valued at $1, running glasses valued at $50, an N.C. drivers license valued at $15 and a Garmin GPS unit valued at $350, reports state. A bicycle was stolen around 10:30 p.m. Tuesday at 508 W. Franklin Street, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The Peugeot bike was valued at $800, reports state. A suspicious person rang the doorbell of a house and ran away when the lights were turned on at 10:40 p.m. Tuesday at 101 Glade Street, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Police responded to a report of individuals on top of buildings on East Franklin Street at about 1 a.m. Wednesday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Someone slashed tires on lawn mowers and a sport utility vehicle between 4 p.m. Sunday and 2:25 p.m. Monday at 500 Weaver Dairy Road, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Damage to the tires was valued at $1,300, reports state. Someone was attempting to sell CDs and when costumers refused to buy them he began screaming around 3:30 p.m. Tuesday at 207 W. Main St., according to Carrboro police reports. Three men were involved in a fight at a store at 9:45 p.m. Tuesday at 1401 W. Main St., according to Carrboro police reports. Reports state that the suspects left the area in multiple cars. According to reports, they come to the store on a regular basis.

ONLINE@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

SArAH GLEN ONLINE EDITOR

FRIday

ArIANA rODrIGUEz-GITLEr DESIGN EDITOR


DESIGN@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

GRAPHICS@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

MEG WrATHEr GRAPHICS EDITOR

MULTIMEDIA@DAILyTARHEEL.COM

zACH EvANS MULTIMEDIA CO-EDITOR

tIPs
Contact Managing Editor Tarini Parti at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with news tips, comments, corrections or suggestions.
Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St. Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Steven Norton, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086 Advertising & Business, 962-1163 News, Features, Sports, 962-0245 One copy per person; additional copies may be purchased at The Daily Tar Heel for $.25 each. Please report suspicious activity at our distribution racks by emailing dth@dailytarheel.com 2011 DTH Media Corp. All rights reserved

CoRRECtIoNs
Due to an editing error, a headline on page 7 misnamed the Ackland exhibition Carolina Collects. Due to a reporting error, Wednesdays page 3 story Former student questions BOG retreat incorrectly stated when the UNC system plans to comply with a record request. The system plans to comply with the request in one to two days. Due to a reporting error, Tuesdays page 17 story Carrboro ordinance stalls development incorrectly attributed some information about the Shelton Station development to Carrboros interim Town Manager Matt Efird. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the errors.
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 Tarini Parti at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.

UNC OFFICE OF DISTINGUISHED SCHOLARSHIPS Informational Meeting


for Juniors and Seniors considering graduate school for Sophomores and Juniors studying Science or the Environment

Scholarships Include:
RHODES MARSHALL TRUMAN LUCE GOLDWATER MITCHELL JACK KENT COOKE UDALL CARNEGIE CHURCHILL

104 West Main Street, Carrboro, NC 27510 (919) 967-5104

Information Meeting: 5:15 p.m. on Monday, : August 29 Student Union Theater Email ods@unc.edu for more information.

0 2009-201

We l c o m e Back Sale!
$50 Off Any Adult Bike!
Offer cannot be combined, nor used in conjunction with any other discount. Offer applies to new bicycles only. Must be paid in full at time of purchase.

Presented by
James M. Johnston Center for Undergraduate Excellence www.distinguishedscholarships.unc.edu

Offer expires August 31st, 2011

The Daily Tar Heel

News

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Professors case dropped after epilepsy diagnosis


By Jeanna Smialek
City Editor

Academic Progress Rates of the Atlantic Coast Conference


School
Boston College Clemson University Duke University Florida State University

On Aug. 11, the NCAA raised the Academic Progress Rate cuto from 900 to 930. Teams with a four-year rolling average lower than 930 will be banned from competing in the postseason. The one-year scores in bold dipped below the new 930 cuto for the 2009-10 season.

Football Score

Basketball Score

School
University of Miami North Carolina State University University of North Carolina University of Virginia

Football Score

Basketball Score

971 977 986 932 966

972 964 990 926

979

975 985 985 940 985 953


DTH/JESSICA TOBIN

Patrick Akos regained consciousness lying handcuffed on a curb on the morning of April 1. Only after he was transported to UNC Hospitals did he find out why. Akos, an associate professor in the School of Education, learned he had stolen an ambulance Patrick Akos, a from Orange County EMS and driven it UNC professor, around his neighfaced charges in April for his actions borhood, crashing it six times, in a postafter an epileptic seizure stupor. episode. He has since been diagnosed with epilepsy, which he says triggered the episode. It was pretty hard to believe, said Akos, whose wife had summoned the ambulance because she thought her husband was having a stroke. Akos faced charges of larceny for stealing the ambulance, one count of reckless driving and six counts of hit and run following the incident. Those charges were dropped by District Attorney Jim Woodall at the end of July. Its a huge load off of me, Akos said. But he said he is still working to deal with his disease and the damage the ordeal caused to his reputation. The only thing I could think about was people are going to think Im

defective or Im a criminal, he said of his feelings following his incident. Akos said he is moving forward by bringing the details of his story into the open and by working to improve epilepsy awareness. It will be helpful for others to understand that, like any disability, you can overcome it, he said.

Living with epilepsy


Akos, who first experienced a possible seizure in November but wasnt conclusively diagnosed until this spring, said he has learned people with epilepsy often become disoriented or enter a state of autopilot following a seizure. There are all different kinds of epilepsy, he said, explaining that in the future he hopes to work with services that have been helpful to him like the Epilepsy Foundation of North Carolina to raise awareness. Patricia Gibson, who heads that group and the Epilepsy Information Service at Wake Forest School of Medicine, said epileptics are fairly commonly punished for behavior during seizures a similar incident occurred in Wake county earlier this year. She said that could be prevented if people were informed about epilepsy. People dont understand a lot of times that in a seizure, people are in a very confused state, Gibson said. It takes a while to get all of your books back on the shelf. Akos said living with epilepsy can be manageable, since many types of epilepsy Gibson says as many as 60 percent of cases respond well to medication. She said another 10 to 15 percent can be managed well with more extensive treatment. Gibson said Akos might speak at a dinner to honor those who work to raise epilepsy awareness Oct. 21. Contact the City Editor at city@dailytarheel.com.

929
955 947 955 971

Dealing with the fallout


Woodall said the charges were dropped because medical evidence showed Akos was not conscious of his actions and did not have criminal intent. He added that Akos repaired damage to yards he had driven through and made insurance arrangements to pay for damage to the cars he hit with the ambulance before he came to court. Akos said UNC has been supportive throughout the ordeal, but he lost a consultation with a local school district after the incident. Having a mug shot on the Internet I cannot tell you what that does to your career. Akos attorney, Michael Paduchowski, said he and Akos other attorney are working to have Akos criminal record expunged. As his legal concerns draw to a close, Akos said he is still adjusting to his epilepsy a disease that has required regular doctor appointments and prevented him from driving his 8- and 10-year old daughters to school.

Georgia Tech University of Maryland


SOURCE: HTTP://WWW.NCAA.ORG

915
945

Virginia Tech Wake Forest University

922

UNC outperforms new APR standard


By Mark Thompson
Senior Writer

A PAIN TO PRINT

The NCAA introduced a new rule earlier this month that raised the Academic Progress Rate benchmark from 900 to 930, and teams that fail to reach that standard could face consequences. Under the new rule, a four-year rolling score below 930 would result in a postseason ban for Division I teams. But UNC athletic director Dick Baddour isnt sweating the NCAAs increased academic expectations. It wont (affect UNC), Baddour said. Not if we continue to perform like we have been. Academic support will always be our number one priority. The new standard is a product of a twoday presidential retreat at which Division I board directors focused on improving the academics, fiscal responsibility and integrity of intercollegiate athletics. Since the NCAA began penalizing teams for low APR scores in 2005, the UNC football teams multi-year APR scores havent fallen below 943, and the Tar Heels scores for 2008-09 and 200910 have been the highest at 957 and 955, respectively. In basketball, the Tar Heels have performed significantly better, posting multiyear APR scores between 985 and 995 since 2005. A Division I football program is allowed 85 scholarships to help complete its roster. Each of the 85 studentathletes contributes two points toward an APR score, one retention point for staying in school and one eligibility point for remaining academically eligible. For example, if four scholarship football players dropped out because they

were academically ineligible and three remained in school but didnt meet the minimum 2.0, that would be a total of 159 out of 170 points, or a ratio of .935. That, multiplied by 1000, would give the school an APR score of 935 for that year. UNC has met that standard consistently and the Universitys academic assistance task force doesnt expect that to change. What (the NCAA is) doing is theyre kicking the schools that are lagging behind, and we are definitely not in that group, said Steve Reznick, chairman of the faculty athletics committee. And since 2005, UNC football hasnt even been close to being a part of that group. Based on 2009-10 APR scores, Louisville and Maryland were among 17 Division I football programs that were issued scholarship-reduction penalties due to low scores. And with the increased standard, more teams could be affected by those penalties in the future. Im not just going to be complacent just because were meeting that standard, Reznick said. Im going to assume that obviously were going to meet that standard. I want us to not just get a C. I want us to get an A or a B+. Reznick said UNC has no clear-cut benchmark beyond the NCAAs, just a set of goals unique to each individual so they can receive a quality education. Those goals include ensuring that student athletes have strong academic support and both extracurricular and classroom opportunities. What were going to be continuing to do is what we need to do to enhance the educational experience of our student athletes, Reznick said. Contact the Sports Editor at sports@dailytarheel.com.

dth/hELEN WOOLARd Students wait to print in the Undergraduate Library. Delays and long lines have elicited angry reactions from students.

Printing delays blamed on rst week of class


By Taylor Hartley
Staff Writer

Community colleges suer from state cuts


By Vinayak Balasubramanian
Staff Writer

Students overwhelmed with new classes during the first two days of the fall semester met an additional and unwelcome inconvenience at campus printers this week. In the lab of the Undergraduate Library, the line to use the Carolina Computing Initiative printers was much longer than usual, prompting angry reactions from students. CCI normally experiences delays during the first days of classes as students hurry to print course documents. Because of the high volume, it just seems to be one of the things that we face throughout the first couple of days of the semester, said Jeremiah Joyner, manager of Information Technology Services

labs and systems. Some of the confusion has also resulted from the move of two printers from the basement of the Undergraduate Library to the ground floor, Joyner said. Crowds should die down in the coming weeks, Joyner said. But students have been complaining about the long lines and delays in the system. Sophomore Chandler Gurley said she has seen lines wrapped around the desks in the library. Im not waiting 30 minutes to print out a syllabus I could print in my dorm, she said. Other printing locations on campus, such as the Student Union, are experiencing similar issues, students said. Theres a five-minute delay time between when you hit print and when it shows up, said senior

Danielle Bringard. She waited in line twice to print an invoice, she said. Joyner said delays in the system have been reported from students, but that it is not a widespread issue. Many students are looking for alternate solutions to CCI printing. My roommate went to get a router and set up a wireless printer connection so that she didnt have to deal with it anymore, junior Chelsea Parker said. After the first week in each semester, students typically begin to stagger the times they choose to print, Joyner said. In the meantime, library officials have encouraged students to use the printers in Davis Library to help dissipate the long lines. Contact the University Editor at university@dailytarheel.com.

by the numbers

Campus Briefs

inBRIEF

City Briefs
Town to honor citizens for lifelong social justice commitment
The Town of Chapel Hill will honor individuals who have had a lifelong commitment to peace and social justice on Sunday, Aug. 28. The town will hold a ceremony at the Peace and Justice Plaza at 3 p.m. The honorees will be recognized for their commitment to civil rights for all people. The granite marker currently bears the names of nine now-deceased leaders. The ceremony will be opened by Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt, N.C. Sen. Ellie Kinnaird, D-Orange, and the Rev. William Barber, president of the N.C. NAACP. The event will take place rain or shine, but might have to move indoors because of the impending hurricane.

Professor to receive national lifetime achievement award


The American Public Health Association announced UNC professor Rune Simeonsson as the recipient of its Lifetime Achievement Award. Simeonsson, who is a professor of psychology and early childhood education, will be honored at the associations annual meeting in October in Washington, D.C. He has worked extensively on the assessment and classification of disabilities among children. Among other achievements, Simeonsson has received more than $20 million in federal funding from the National Institutes of Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Education. Simeonsson has worked in the School of Education since 1976.

Town to conduct a public study on Eubanks park-and-ride lot


The Town of Chapel Hill will hold a public input meeting to discuss the expansion of the Eubanks Road parkand-ride lot. The town is looking to expand the lot located in the north end of Martin Luther King Boulevard. The process would begin with a feasibility study and could last up to six months. The feasibility study will look at the level of demand for park-and-ride spaces, the site suitability as it relates to an expanded park-and-ride facility and alternatives for park-and-ride expansion. The study will also examine the financial strategies and implications of park-and-ride development. The meeting will be held Wednesday in the Great Hall of the Seymour Senior Center at 2551 Homestead Road. -From staff and wire reports

Although going back to school has become an attractive option for state residents in a tough economy, community colleges are struggling to cope with increased demand and declining resources. N.C. community colleges received a 10.7 percent cut in state funding in the budget enacted this summer. Thousands of students continue to flood the campuses, forcing admissions offices to place many on wait lists. Charles Chrestman, president of Robeson Community College, said an almost record 2,750 students enrolled at the college this fall. But 178 additional students who tried to register were unable to do so due to lack of space and resources. It has been the toughest year in my over 30 years of community college business, he said. Administrators have laid off part-time lecturers and staff and increased class sizes to cope with significant state funding cuts. Chrestman said future cuts in state funding would only cause the waiting list to increase. If things do not change, we could be sitting at 200 students or so next fall because we do not have adequate state funding, he said. Laurie Clowers, director of public relations at Wake Technical Community College, said the campus has increased enrollment by almost 10 percent since last year, with a total of nearly 20,000 students. More than 6,400 students are wait listed for at least one class, while about 1,000 students have not been able to register for any classes, she said. Clowers said Wake Tech actually received more state funding for enrollment growth, but it failed to cover the number of students admitted by a wide margin. We try to bring in as many students for training and education as possible, but demand exceeds the ability to serve them, she said. Where we can we are increasing our class size where seating is available.

10.7

Percent cut in state funding to community colleges across the state

19,910 6,400

Students enrolled at Wake Technical Community College

Students wait listed at Wake Technical Community College

The recent surge in enrollment at community colleges can be partially attributed to adults seeking to attain more skills and compete in a state with an unemployment rate of 10.1 percent. Community college enrollment for persons older than 25 increased by 16 percent between 2008 and 2009, and nearly 5 percent between 2009 and 2010. The increase in enrollment for persons younger than 25 was 5.5 percent and 2 percent, respectively. We have been seeing many older students coming back, saying, Ive been in manufacturing all these years, but I really want to become a chef, Clowers said. The increased demand for admission to community colleges might also make it more difficult for students who hope to transfer to a UNC-system school. Bobbi Owen, associate dean for the College of Arts and Sciences, said the number of transfer students admitted to UNC-CH has remained fixed, but increased retention rates might make it harder for transfer students to enter. Given that our very high retention rate, we could have capacity problems at college, she said. We have a commitment to transfer students at community colleges, but we have a primary obligation to serve our native students. Contact the State & National Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

News
Established 1893, 118 years of editorial freedom

The Daily Tar Heel

QUOTE OF THE DAY


The only thing I could think about was people are going to think Im defective or Im a criminal.
Patrick Akos, UNC professor, who faced several charges after stealing an ambulance and crashing it six times. Akos was later diagnosed with epilepsy.

STEVEN NORTON EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM C. RYaN BaRBER OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM DakOTa WilliamS ASSOCIATE OPINION EDITOR

EDiTORial BOaRD mEmBERS


CALLIE bOST WILL DORAN IAN LEE TARIq LUTHUN RObERT FLEMINg

cOlUmn

EDiTOriAl cArTOOn

By Mark Viser, mviser@email.unc.edu

FEATUrED OnlinE rEADEr cOmmEnT


mark laichena
Columnist Senior political science and PWAD major from London, U.K. Email: laichena@email.unc.edu

Jesus christ its a nutritional supplement. It barely works. If you really wanted to get pills, people should have gone to frat court later in the night.
More like failfest, On pill distribution at FallFest

Its a freshmans world at UNC


his campus revolves around its youngest members the freshmen and their assimilation on campus. But the rest of us should keep exploring, even if were not expected to venture away from what we know. Ive been excited about senior year for a while: wearing my Im a senior, who the #@!$ are you? sticker, and sitting at the top of the campus food chain. But its been a bit anticlimactic, and Im realizing this campus is hardly ours. What would UNC be without the uncommitted new arrivals eager to join sports teams, fill the Carolina Fever seats at varsity events, rush fraternities and sororities, and join campus organizations new and old? Freshmen are the lifeblood of this campus, and theyre in demand across the University community. Each newcomer is a potential underwater hockey player or religious group devotee, if only they can be lured in with the right flyer or free food. But by the time a year or two has passed, theyve lost the luster. Each sophomore and junior is expected to have found a defined identity on campus; athlete/ non-athlete, Greek/non-Greek, steadily climbing the hierarchy in whichever segment of student life tickled their fancy when they arrived. And spare a thought for the seniors: Nine months from leaving (and not worth the efforts of the evangelists of student life), we wear stickers to fight our growing irrelevance on campus. Wearing my senior sticker from FallFest feels a little less triumphant than I thought it might. Its tough to convince myself that any of the freshmen rushing across campus really care who the #@!$ we are, after all. So we hide off campus and go to bar nights, settled in the tried and tested bits of UNC life that are familiar, doing what weve been doing for the past few years. This campus isnt about to stop getting excited about new arrivals, but the rest of us can still step up and break out of the expected molds. And what about the sophomore or upperclassman who didnt find their niche (or was simply overwhelmed) the first time around? We need to help all students discover (and rediscover) new sides to this University, in the spirit of past initiatives like Second Start, Sophomore Reorientation and more. It seems obvious what better a time than after a year or two of experience to try something new? We cant have signed up for all the right listservs that first FallFest, after all. Or alternatively, think about your own organization. Sure, freshmen are enthusiastic, impressionable, and attend meetings just because you give out candy (or pills), but its probably worth the investment to reach out to older folk with a little more experience, too. This semester, Ill be using my weekly column to do a little reorientation myself. Ill be examining the workings of UNC and will explore some of the decisions made within the Universitys administration. At the very least, Ill be trying to push outside of my comfort zone in my final year here.

lETTErS TO THE EDiTOr


Seniors, tell us how we can make your year
TO THE EDITOR: Seniors, congratulations. Starting your final year of college is a big deal way to go. We know this year is busy and crazy and overwhelming. But we want you to know that the General Alumni Association and senior class presidents and marshals are here to help make this the best year of your life. Theres going to be a lot on your plate this year classes, clubs, service projects, preparing for the future, maybe even a social life and we want to help you as much as we can. Heres how were going to do it: well plan social events for you, with special prices and deals to help out your wallet. This includes tonight, at La Residence bar on Rosemary Street, Friday night at R&R on Franklin Street (both from 10:30 p.m. to 2 a.m.), and a pool party Saturday at Kessing Pool starting at 4 p.m. Service projects will be coming your way starting in September, with different monthly service partnerships to give you the opportunity to give back. Well also be having networking nights in the spring for you to start adjusting to the working world. But more than all of this, we want you know that this is, very much so, YOUR senior year. And we want to hear from you what you want. So please email us at dean. mohammad12@gmail.com and let us know what you want from your last year at Carolina. Our intent is to be as accessible to you as possible. Starting next week, youll be able to access a social and service calendar at uncseniors2012.com. Follow @ UNCSeniors2012 on Twitter for constant updates, and be sure to check us out on Facebook. Dean Drescher Senior Class President Journalism & Mass Communication, Religious Studies Mohammad Saad Senior Class Vice President Health Policy & Management Those conversations occurred mid-winter of last year, during my corps year with City Year in San Antonio. I served to change the fact that every 26 seconds in the U.S. a student gives up on school. City Year is a national non-profit and AmeriCorps program that deploys young leaders (between ages 17 and 24) as full-time mentors, tutors and role models in 22 cities across the country to keep students in school and on track. However, epilepsy was different than a math problem or a well-written essay. This was an accomplished student, who did not need my help in the classroom. His road to success, I thought, was clear with his ability to understand concepts and keep up his grades. The spine-straightening jolt I felt a few weeks later, when I heard that a student had fallen from an epileptic fit, still lingers. I found him on a bed in the school nurses office minutes later. He looked dazed and sad. I sat and talked with him about soccer for a while. He loved the sport, as did most of the Latino students I tutored. By the beginning of February, I had started a soccer club. The offer of a structured team to this largely Latino-populated middle school was a hit, even though they were required to complete their homework to play. And on the field, this student was the best. His skill and dedication surpassed his peers, yet he helped his teammates grow as well. His teacher and I knew that he would easily place out of the ESL program at the end of the year. But he was absent the day of the mandatory placement test and the state did not offer a retake. I knew why he was out. Since his epilepsy medication made him sick, he will now have to trudge through a third year of the ESL program. Seeing him, head down, as he walked up to my table at the back of the classroom, broke my heart, because I already knew the news he would mumble to me in his thick Mexican accent. Yes, we tutor them in academics. But that is usually the easiest part. For those who drop out, life has often presented them more obstacles than academics. Near the end of the school year, I gave him a brochure about the magnet programs offered by the nearby high schools. He had not heard of them, so I asked him to look it over and let me know if any interested him. The next day, he came back and told me he wanted to attend the Design and Technology Academy, because he liked computers almost as much as soccer. Abe Johns Admissions Manager for City Year San Antonio Class of 2010

Pinning down pills


hough its surprising that a stricter screening process was not already in place for FallFest giveaways, UNC should be applauded for quickly responding to the distribution of improperly labeled appetite suppressants at the annual welcome event. Student Union officials immediately asked the retailer, Complete Nutrition, to stop offering students the free pills and ensured that future sponsors will have to provide a written list of products they plan to offer students. On Sunday night, event officials were notified of a booth that was passing out the dietary suppressant EphedFx

EDiTOriAl

UNCs fast-acting response to dietary supplements at FallFest ensures safety.

to students. Pre-packaged boxes had run out, so the retail representatives began doling out the diet pills in plastic bags that didnt feature the extensive warning label normally associated with the pills. Though FallFest officials responded swiftly, its surprising that the University didnt have a system in which it made clear the acceptable protocol for handing out samples. Carolina Union Director Don Luse explained that he and his staff lacked forewarning because its not something we thought someone would do. But naivety is no excuse. Clear portrayals of all products is not an unreasonable expectation, especially at an event where students look to gather as many free goods as they can. Complete Nutritions

reckless distribution of dietary supplements demands not only closer oversight of distribution practices but also the products promoted at UNC events. Appetite suppressants send a troubling message for what passes as healthy dieting. The appearance that UNC promotes these products undermines the emphasis it places on healthy living in required LFIT classes and in the UNC Eating Disorders Program. Cynthia Bulik, the director of the program, said UNC shouldnt allow any type of pill that remotely deals with dieting or weight management. The University owes its students a safer FallFest. It can redeem itself by making good on its plans and conducting more thorough reviews of sponsors and the way they peddle goods in the future.

Sweeten Sugarlands deal


he University is souring a sweet deal for Chapel Hill by refusing to sell Sugarland the space it needs to expand. In a sputtering economy that has left many a storefront vacant, UNC is being picky in denying the bakery additional space because it would compromise diversity and finances downtown if a building was mostly inhabited by eateries. UNC should do Chapel Hill a favor and relax its draconian stance, or risk running a local legend out of town. Katrina Ryan, the stores owner, said the Universitys opposition to her expanding next door has forced her to strongly consider relocating

EDiTOriAl

UNC should show less reluctance toward selling Sugarland empty space.

to Raleigh. Its a fair ultimatum given the crummy lease and poor explanation she says she has received from the University. Jeff Kidd, director of the UNC Property Office, said the finances and diversity of nearby storefronts led to the Universitys decision. That two-pronged reasoning is backwards on both fronts, as the dessert shops strong finances, unique offerings and homegrown history give it added value on a street that many chains have invaded. Sugarland and its hold on Chapel Hills luxury sweet spot is a good bet for the future. Chapel Hill has more to offer than exceptional scholarship and college athletics. It has a rich artistic and culinary culture that would be at a loss without Sugarland. In 2010, the Food Network featured

the dessert store for its gelato and frozen martinis, and the (Raleigh) News & Observer voted its Spumoni cupcake the best in the Triangle area. The review site Yelp.com even went as far as to call it the 10th best cupcake place in the entire country. This is not the right time or place to take this stand, and the University should do everything in its power to keep Sugarland local. Stores making money and creating jobs should be more desirable than a gamble on whatever might make the space more diverse. Ryan says her deadline for action is Oct. 1. If UNC doesnt give Sugarland any reason to stay and Ryan is true to her word, the Chapel Hill community can look to the University as the reason for one more cavity on Franklin Street.

Join City Year now to start mentoring students


TO THE EDITOR: I had a scissor seezor a seizure, one of my students struggled to utter under his breath. He had pulled me away from his other friends, who were playing a pick-up soccer game during an activity time we facilitated every morning before the school doors opened. Were you diagnosed with epilepsy? I asked, cautiously. He nodded and I suppressed a look of fear. I knew friends who had epilepsy and knew how dangerous it could be. But I counseled him, did more research, and helped him better understand the disorder.

QuickHits
CCI Macs
MacBooks caught on in their first year with the Carolina Computing Initiative, splitting sales about 50/50. Expect some of those users to break out the black turtlenecks to mourn Steve Jobs resignation.

Pills at FallFest
Were sure some people get excited when theyre handed a clear plastic bag full of pills. But these made us lose our appetites. Not sure this is what freshman had in mind for the fight against the 15.

Earthquake
Tectonic plates moving about willy-nilly is never a good thing, but there have been no reported injuries from Tuesdays 5.8 quake. Itll still be tough to claim we survived an earthquake with a straight face.

SPEAK OUT
WRITINg guIDElINES Please type: Handwritten letters will not be accepted. Sign and date: No more than two people should sign letters. Students: Include your year, major and phone number. Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number. Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit letters to 250 words. SuBMISSION Drop-off: at our office at 151 E. Rosemary Street. Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board. The board consists of five board members, the associate opinion editor, the opinion editor and the editor.

Vince Carters donation


Vince Carter forked over $2.5 million to make the largest donation in the history of the Carolina Basketball Family Fund. He wouldnt happen to have some spare cash for the Blue Zone, would he?

Hurricane Irene
Hopefully this will wuss out like this weeks non-earthquake. This isnt the wind students need in their sails for summertime parties. Nothing dampens the mood quite like 115 mph winds.

Freshman 5
A recent study found that the 15 pounds freshmen traditionally pack on has gotten closer to the freshman 5, and for guys thats usually muscle mass. So thanks, class of 2015, for doing your part.

NEXT

Columnist Andrew Harrell sums up a four-year education at UNC in four minutes of Tweets.

The Daily Tar Heel

diversions

dailytarheel.com

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Visit the Dive blog: dailytarheel.com/dive

(( FINAL BOW
hen Durhams c Tr o i k a M u s i e Festival cam last udden close a to a s hat speculation t sic June, u neighboring m w n new, o al in downt a festiv oik g h k i l l e d Tr r e . Ralei dfi a d l i k e w i l the spre eek, Dive sets This w t. record straigh

NAKED GODS Last years Troika brought the Triangle together for three days of homegrown music. Past headliners include Chatham County Line, Hammer No More the Fingers, Mount Moriah and Whatever Brains.
DTH/JosePH CHAPMAN

By JOSEph ChApmAN
DiveRsioNs eDiToR

Melissa Thomas has been busy. Her day job as a software developer has her commuting to Austin, TX, on Sundays and flying back home to check on her Durham-based record label, 307 Knox, on Thursdays. When the weekend comes, shes been picking up tour dates with her punk outfit, 8 Inch Betsy. Its last gig was in Chicago. Up next? Indiana. In June, Thomas announced something that really shouldnt have come as a surprise to the Triangles music community: her ten-year running brainchild, Troika Music Festival, would not see eleven, and was cancelled forever. But there was plenty of room for speculation. Last year, eight weeks before Thomas three-day, local bands-only festival, Independent Weekly launched its own Hopscotch Music Festival in downtown Raleigh, but with national bands headlining alongside local acts. So Hopscotch took Thomas model, added more popular bands and bankrolled it, killing Troika and other, smaller festivals in its wake, right? We could not compete, period, done, Thomas said. Do I feel like theres a Wal-Mart factor? Maybe it could turn into that. But do I feel like it is a necessity for the Indy to use those funds, use

that leverage, use those terms of what I could contacts and bring expect and if she could something the size offer any help. of Hopscotch to the In the festivals Triangle? Hell yes. first year, Currin and Grayson Currin, Lowenhagen proved it - MELISSA THOMAS, TROIKA DIRECTOR music editor at the could not only coexist Independent and alongside Troika, but Hopscotch curator, argues that if they were to ever collaborate as its neighbor. When Troika hosted and become the Wal-Mart of festivals, it would be the curated a free day party at Kings Barcade during weirdest one ever. From the beginning, Currin and Hopscotch, the festivals banner hung proudly in the codirector Greg Lowenhagen set out to minimize venue while bands like Atlas Sound and Megafaun the impact of their proposed festival, saying to other headlined the last two nights. Thomas returned the local establishments, were going to do this how favor when Troika 2010 came around, and Currin can we do it so it doesnt ruin what you already do? and Lowenhagen curated one night at its biggest When I reached out to (Thomas) in November, venue. she was one of the first people outside of the Hopscotch I was successful enough to warrant inner circle of the Indy, besides the city planning Hopscotch II and hopes from the Independents people that we needed to talk to, that was aware president for Hopscotch XX, and Troika 2010 was that the Independent was going to do something, in the black. Lowenhagen said. Given their mutual success, when Thomas posted We had a really positive conversation about a letter on the festivals website announcing its cloheres what we think were going to be planning or sure, people started pointing fingers. how its going to be done, heres how we can hopeIts the first backlash that probably gave me fully work together and play off each other and pause in terms of, Hmm. Is this right? Currin said. support one another. She was really helpful, both in Because when people complain about their favorite

Gone? Yes. Are we going to resurrect it? No. Are other things going to happen? I hope so.

band not playing, were just kind of like, well, you know, its one festival. Its Greg and I beating each others heads against a wall for months, figuring out the 150 bands we want to play. The Troika thing definitely gave me pause. Just thinking about the conversations we had with Melissa and thinking about the way we approached that and thinking about how adamant we were about partnering together. For Thomas, the decision to end Troika ultimately stemmed from a feeling that the festival had peaked, that 2010s Troika Music Festival was the best that the festival would ever be. And when you hit the top, Thomas says you have to ask yourself: are you going to go over that cliff or end on a high note? If people are bummed, Thomas thinks that means the festival did something right. And with her trust in the Independent, the spirit of Troika continues. I feel like part of what Troika did was to help Greg and Grayson and the Indy have a vision, curate it and have the audience that they needed. Were just a part of, now, history. Contact Dive at diversions@dailytarheel.com.

Troika (( hopscotch
Spring 2002 November 2009 September 2010
Troika begins as the Durham Music Festival and soon changes its name to encompass the entire Triangle area. Lowenhagen meets with Troika organizers to discuss his vision for Hopscotch and see how the festivals can work and grow together. Troika hosts a free party at Kings Barcade for Hopscotch Music Festival. Currin and Lowenhagen pitch the idea of a music festival held in downtown Raleigh to the indy Weeks owner. Tickets go on sale for Hopscotch Music Festival. First Hopscotch Music Festival held in downtown Raleigh with headliners Broken social scene, Public enemy, The Rosebuds and The Love Language.

A TALE OF TWO FESTS

November 2010

June 2011
Melissa Thomas posts a letter on Troikas website, announcing the festivals closure.

Just a month and a half after Hopscotch, Troika 2010 is held in downtown Durham. Lowenhagen and Currin curate a bill.

Tickets go on sale for Hopscotch ii, with headliners the Flaming Lips and Guided by voices.

Early 2009

April 2010

September 2010

April 2011

TODAY IN DIVE
MUSIC. MOVIES. ON-CAMPUS. Q&A. With its new album, Katharine Whalen & Her Fascinators surprises listeners with its weighty and sincere rock . Page 6 Conan the Barbarian flops as another generic, CGI-heavy sword and sandals flick. Page 6 From the Cradle to the Cave: 18 Years of NC Poster Art opens tonight with a reception and panel in Davis library. Page 8 Dive Editor Joseph Chapman talks to Jonathan Scales, a musician recently hailed as the Bela Fleck of Steel Pans. Page 8

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Diversions
divorce decides to dress up as an English nanny (the title character) to make sure he can see his kids. His ruse worksfor a little while, at least. Hijinks and hilarity ensue. Theres some heartwarming junk at the end, but theres also the cleaning montage set to Dude Looks Like a Lady. of this summers Locally Grown concert series features two NC bands loud enough to knock your socks off. Future Islands brings post-wave, electronic pop music, while Motor Skills plays rock-tinged synth thats meant to be experienced live. 7:00 p.m., free feature members of The Love Language and the recently defunct Huguenots playing that good, oldfashioned indie pop. 9:30 p.m., $7 8:00 p.m., $8/$5 with student ID Mipso Trio, Mandolin Orange

The Daily Tar Heel


Wednesday Mid Century Modern Nightlight | That club down Rosemary St. hosts a free dance party centered on the jams of the 50s and 60s. Soul music is a given, but also spinning will be rockabilly, jazz and more nittygritty or otherwise obscure treats. The tiny club has the perfect setup for those who want to dance but arent up for places with cover charges and blaring Top 40 hits. 9:30 p.m., free

DIVERECOMMENDS
Album from the Vault:
Squirrel Nut Zippers, Hot: SNZ turned up the heat with this 1996 record. Its single, Hell, propelled the jazzy Carrboro natives to national recognition. The ragtime vibe and slightest hint of insanity make it the perfect album to draw summer to a close. Hooker Field | UNC-CHs own Mipso Trio has been blowing up Delta Rae, Jeanne Jolly lately. Want to try-before-youCasbah | Folk-rock group Delta Rae buy tickets to its September gig gained significant online attention with Papa Avett at the Local 506? (read: tons of YouTube hits) last Catch it free at Hooker Fields Friday spring with its cover of Kanye Wests Friday night. Mandolin Oranges Luego, Soft Company, Lilac Shadows All of the Lights. Its other material Andrew Marlin just broke his hip, is markedly less genre-bending, but so prepare for a once-in-a-lifetime Local 506 | William Moose, mempleasant nonetheless. The Durham wheelchair-bound performance. ber of all three bands, is leaving buzz band doesnt play the Triangle 8 p.m., free the Triangle, and this shindig is a often, so catch them while you can. last hoorah of sorts. The bands

Events:
Thursday Future Islands, Motor Skills Rosemary St. Parking Deck | The last

Movie from the Vault:


Mrs. Doubtfire: In this 1993 comedy, a father distraught by his

MUSICSHORTS
Katharine Whalen
Madly Love Rock

CD RELEASE SHOW
Time: 8 p.m. Friday, August 26 Location: Motorco Music Hall 723 Rigsbee Ave., Durham, NC Info: motorcomusic.com, myspace.com/katharinewhalen

MOVIESHORTS
reminder that unanticipated bits and pieces can end up as a beautiful, distinctive whole. Beast revitalizes the memory of Jazzamatazz. While emcee Pierce Freelon and company trade in some of the typical energy for -Linnie Greene more jazz-oriented fluidity, the EP still packs a punch with the sharp The Beast wordplay that defines much of the groups work. Guru Legacy EP State of Clarity touches on racism, politics and the Tea Party Hip-Hop/Jazz even the Wake County school board. When the smooth beats and With a seamless fusion of jazz soulful keys combine with the poiand hip-hop and an affinity for gnant words of Freelon and guest social awareness, The Beast cerstars, each track is infused with a tainly grabs the Bull City by the fresh, local appearance. horns and electrifies the rest of the The album wraps up with an Triangle with its refreshing presinterview between Freelon and ence. ?uestlove of The Roots, touchOn Guru Legacy EP, the latest ing on Gurus legacy, his death from Durhams frenetic hip-hop and the state of hip-hop. While outfit, this musical fusion is only interesting, the interview feels out epitomized. The EP is a tribute to of place and drags down the wellthe late emcee Keith Elam, aka crafted flow. Guru, whose Jazzamatazz volumes Still energetic and fresh, Guru are memorialized in the six songs Legacy represents a progression performed by the members of of hip-hop and demonstrates the The Beast, local poets Shirlette value of remixing. The record is Ammons and D. Noble, emcees not only a reincarnation, but a John Robinson and Silent Knight representation of the future of the and many others. trade. Remixing Guru careerspanning tracks like Keep Your -Elizabeth Byrum Worries and Loungin, The notes Conan has the heart of a king that may be true, but he has the vocabulary of a brain The original Conan the trauma victim. Barbarian was never meant to The supporting cast suffers be a complex film, and its titular from characterization that is main character was little more either broad or inane. Despite than a brute spewing one-liners. being a nun, nominal love interFor whatever reason, director est Tamara (Rachel Nichols) has Marcus Nispel decided the best more inexplicable combat skills way to improve an already barethan the hobbits from Lord of bones movie was to make it some- the Rings. how dumber and more basic. Unfortunately, the battle Conan (Jason Momoa) sequences that should redeem the is a member of the barbaric movie fall well short of doing so. Cimmerian tribe who witnesses Theyre dark and clumsily edited, the slaughter of his father (Ron and filled with CGI blood and Perlman) and his entire village at screaming men. In fact, so much the hands of bloodthirsty generic of the movie contains pained, warlord Khalar Zym (Stephen grunting, burly, leather-clad men Lang). From there, Conan sets out that it might qualify better as an to get his revenge and save the S&M film rather than an action world with nothing more than his flick. sword and the occasional disposAttempts to update venerable able secondary character. classics often fail, but few do so in The films biggest flaw is such epic proportions as Conan Conan himself. Taking the the Barbarian. Despite all the role made famous by Arnold hacking, slashing and pillaging, Schwarzenegger is admittedly dif- the movies most barbaric act ficult, but Momoa does little more might be making the audience than serve as a sentient piece of suffer through it. meat that makes guttural noises and stabs people. One character -Mark Niegelsky

Conan the Barbarian

Theres the music, theres your expectation of what the music will sound like and then theres that space in between the reality and your prediction sometimes a reservoir, sometimes a stream. But for Katharine Whalen & Her Fascinators Madly Love, the gap between the expected and the actual was a gulf, one that reveals Whalens breadth and distinguishes her latest from her past work with The Squirrel Nut Zippers. Title track and opener Madly Love attests that these songs carry more weight than your standard rock ballad. Weird and intriguing, its a distillation of David Byrneian quirkiness and an Appalachian folk singers strange vowels. It exemplifies what Whalen and company do so well taking what could be hooky and riffy and massaging it around the edges until it only vaguely resembles what youve heard before. For most of the album, this rule holds true, and the group and its

frontwoman throw in enough oddity to keep you on your toes. There are places, especially on the slower tracks, where the momentum falters, but its momentary. Like clockwork, Whalens next verse interrupts the malaise, and youre reminded of another influence you didnt see coming. With You, the records closer, defies the precedent its slower forebears set. What seems lethargic elsewhere feels intentional here. Thats likely due to the vocals, Whalens most heartfelt mixed with the sad caw of a crow at the end of the song, they sound completely organic. Even music critics misjudge, and the basis is often silly an album cover, a snippet of a song, a naysayer, or, in this case, an artists past work. But Madly Love is a record that forces you to reset your gauge, an imperfect but enjoyable

WHATS ESSENTIAL FOR BEAUTIFUL HAIR COLOR?


aveda hair color is 99% naturally derived*
* from plants and non-petroleum based minerals

schedule your FREE custom color consultation today


avedainstitutechapelhill.com | 200 w franklin st | unc campus | 919.960.4769
Cosmetic Art School
Work done exclusively by supervised students

The Daily Tar Heel

Thursday, August 25, 2011

the journey of a lifetime starts here


Enter The Create My Journey Sweepstakes
www.startmyjourney.com text Journey to 72579
Capita l One J ourne y Ad: Illustr ation Conce p ts 4.0
Capital One Journey Ad: Illustration Concepts 4.0

epts Illustration Concepts 3.0 y Ad: 3.0 Concepts 3.0 llustration

San FranciSco

london

Sydney

Barcelona

coSta rica

Enter the Capital One Create My Journey sm Sweepstakes and you could win a trip for you and three friends to your choice of Paris, San Francisco, London, Sydney, Barcelona, or Costa Rica. After you enter, increase your chances of winning (and your credit knowledge) by checking out credit-smart quizzes, tips, and tools that will help you start your journey with credit on the right foot. Its the journey of a lifetime and the only way to win is to enter now at www.startmyjourney.com. Brought to you by Journey sm from Capital One

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO ENTER OR WIN. All entries have an equal chance of winning. Sweepstakes ends 10/6/11. Open to legal US residents who are 18 years or older; must be a full-time student to win. Void where prohibited. Standard text and data rates may apply. See Official Rules at www.startmyjourney.com. Offered by Capital One Bank (USA), N.A. 1680 Capital One Drive, McLean, VA 22102. Member FDIC. 2011 Capital One. All rights reserved.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Diversions

The Daily Tar Heel

DIVE: Q&A

Jonathan Scales
of the music theory classes. Im using that: Im writing music and people are getting into it, and Im trying to build my career up. Im very happy that I went and got that degree, even though its obscure.

Placing the steel pans inside a progressive concept album, the latest release from Ashevilles Jonathan Scales has garnered him comparisons to banjo pioneer Bla Fleck. This week, Diversions editor Joseph Chapman asks Scales just how that music degree is working out for him. steel pans in 2002 as a freshman music major at Appalachian State University. What style of music did you start with in class?

STEEL pAN JAmS


Time: 9 p.m. Saturday Location: The Nightlight 405 1/2 W. Rosemary St. Info: www.nightlightclub.com, www.jonscales.com

From the Cradle to the Cave preserves posters


By Allison Hussey
Assistant Diversions Editor

CHECk OuT THE ExHIbIT


Opens: 5 p.m. Thursday, runs through Jan. 25 Location: Davis Library Info: www.lib.unc.edu/blogs/sfc

DIVERSIONS: You started playing

DIVE: How did Bla Fleck influence you as a musician?


Appalachian State when I was there. And I saw him at a clinic earlier that day. And it was awesome that was the first time I saw him, and I loved it. I wasnt going to the show that night because it was sold out. So I was like, Oh, thats too bad, I cant go to the show. So, during the set break, my friend Joel called me up and said, Hey man, its the intermission. If you want to sneak in, theyre not really checking tickets anymore. So I ran down from my dorm and went to the theater and got to see the whole second half of Bla Fleck and Edgar Meyer. That performance was so astounding that, right there, I was like, I want to play my own music on the steel pans and travel and tour and make albums.

JS: Bla Fleck did a show at

JONATHAN SCALES: Steel band is like a 20-piece group that was actually started at that college in 1984. That steel pan group was playing a good mix of traditional steel pan music and also some cool pop arrangements. I was actually a saxophone player going into that school, and a composer. Originally I wasnt interested in being in steel band, but all my friends convinced me to do it, and Im very glad I did. DIVE: In retrospect, do you think your music degree was worth it? JS: Its based on what you want out of it, really. The paper itself is worthless. Like, my composition degree isnt worth anything. Well I guess its worth tens of thousands of dollars, but other than that, its not really worth anything. Its about your experience and what you get out of it. When I was in college, I took a lot out of my private lessons and I took a lot out

of people with my degree, they go off and get their masters and their doctorate and then they teach college music theory or college music composition. And thats not what I wanted to do. At first, my teacher was really concerned about how I was going to make it. How are you going to eat, how are you going to pay the bills, how are you going to do this, how are you going to do that?

DIVE: Youve played almost 40 shows already this year. Are you satisfied with the pace of your career? JS: Its kind of a tricky thing. Me as an artist, I see things differently than someone whos perceiving it. To me, a lot of times, to be honest, I dont know that Im going anywhere. Im just stuck in my own world, it seems like nothings moving. Ill just be sitting at home at my desk wondering if anyone is even listening to my music. I do have times like that, but then I have to sit down and say, Alright, in 2002, I started playing steel drums. And in 2009, I played a jazz festival in Trinidad, the birthplace of steel drums. So sometimes I have to think about it like that. I try not to get too wrapped up in where I am, I just have to keep going.

DIVE: So, in college, you told yourself you were going to make a living being a musician? JS: Yes, I definitely planned on it. When youre in college and you make a decision like that, sometimes it might not be seen as the most wise decision. A lot

DIVESTAFF
Joseph Chapman, Editor Allison Hussey, Assistant Editor diversions@dailytarheel.com Linnie Greene, Rocco Giamatteo, Mark Niegelsky, Elizabeth Byrum, Lam Chau, Lyle Kendrick, staff writers Ariana Rodriguez-Gitler, Design Editor Cover Design: Alyssa Bailey

In Chapel Hill, theres no shortage of sign space. Bulletin boards, shop windows and signboards are all cluttered with dime-a-dozen photocopies begging for your attention. Among the neon sheets seeking jobs, lost pets and lab rats hide works of art with expiration dates: concert posters. UNC-CHs Southern Folklife Collection has stepped up to the challenge of preserving thousands of posters by local artists. From the Cradle to the Cave: 18 Years of NC Poster Art opens Thursday in Davis Library and will run through January, displaying 40 posters from artists Ron Liberti, Chris Williams, Casey Burns, Jason Lonon and Matt Hart. The event came to fruition when director Steve Weiss suggested a poster art exhibit featuring artists whose work he was already collecting for the library. I thought it would be a nice kick off to the fall semester, appealing to students, faculty and community, and a nice opportunity to highlight the artists work, he said. UNC alumnus Casey Burns noted that the Universitys involvement with archiving concert art is a big thing. He argues that the Universitys recognition of these posters as art might push people to pay more attention to the fliers, hopefully nudging them to support local music. Artist Ron Liberti stressed the importance of archiving works that are, by definition, temporary.

STARS
POOR FAiR GOOD ExCELLENT CLASSiC

the

WorlD comes here

A sense of spontaneous combustion and ever-dangerous living


The Times, UK

Im stoked and honored that [the posters are] up there in a controlled environment, and itll be around long after Im gone. For me, just for the local music scene and the people that inspired me to make these posters is important for the future. Its garbage today, but tomorrow, its going to be priceless. None of the artists have stayed strictly on the design side of the scene. All of them have at some point been musicians, and many of them got started by making posters for their own bands. For Chris Williams of Raleighs Plastic Flame Press, it was as early as his pre-teen years. Somewhere in middle school, when I started wanting to play music, I would draw up little posters for the bands I hoped to form, he said. He kept up with the poster art scene through his high school and college years, following both Burns and Libertis work. Shortly after graduating college, Chapel Hills Nightlight recruited Williams to make fliers, and he worked his way up to doing posters for Local 506, and eventually, Cats Cradle. The result, he said, is a dream come true. Its a rare thing, but I can honestly say that, for the last six years, Ive gotten to do what I wanted to do when I grew up. Given that half a life ago, if asked, I wouldve said I just wanted to make posters for the Cradle. Its pretty rad. There is a certain futility to poster art: an artist spends hours creating and perfecting a piece, only to have it torn down and destroyed within a few weeks. Public art by local artists however ephemeral is nonetheless a contribution to the arts community as a whole. And if the end result is a thriving, diverse scene, who can balk at that? Said Liberti, If I make a good poster for your band, and someone goes to check out your band, its good for both of us for all of us. Contact the Diversions Editor at diversions@dailytarheel.com.

Courtesy of Casey burns Burns calls this Spoon poster his favorite piece so far, describing it as conceptually, more interesting than his previous work.

Courtesy of ron liberti Libertis work is striking with contrasting colors. According to him, picking a favorite work would be like choosing a favorite child.

Courtesy of Chris williams Williams posters often involve animals and muted color palettes. Of his hundreds of posters, Williams says hes only proud of a handful.

STUDENTS, FACULTY, & STAFF

only us performAnce

Deutsche KAmmerphilhArmonie Bremen with stefan litwin, piano


Sept 7/8
Wednesday/Thursday, 7:30pm

Get involved this year to make UNC a more sustainable campus! Mingle with fellow students and campus staff. Learn about Carolinas many green student organizations, departments, and internship opportunities. 5:00 PM on Thursday, August 25 @ Student Union Art Gallery
Learn more @ CarolinaGreen.unc.edu Hosted by the UNC Sustainability Office & the Environmental Affairs Committee of Student Government

September 7 program Haydn Symphony No. 49 in F minor (La Passione), Hob. I:49 Beethoven Wind Octet E-flat major, Op. 103 Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 1 in C major, Op. 15 September 8 program Haydn Symphony No. 80 in D minor, Hob. I:80 Schoenberg Verklrte Nacht (Transfigured Night) for String Orchestra, Op. 4 Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 3 in C minor, Op. 37

919-843-3333 | carolinaperformingarts.org

size: 1/8 Vertical paper: The Daily Tar Heel due: 8/22 runs: in the Thursday paper

in the Diversions section

The Daily Tar Heel

News

Thursday, August 25, 2011

lArping And lAughing

Student Artery to relocate for third time


a coat of paint cant fix, she said. We arent trying to make a dingy basement into the Metropolitan. For Chapel Hills only studentThe Artery moved into run art gallery, home is where the University Mall in July, after art is. Jennifer Collins-Mancour the Due to lack of a permanent malls arts initiative director space, UNCs Student Artery has read an article about the students had three rent-free locations since search and offered them space. it was founded in Fall 2009. Near the end of September, Although constantly searching the University Mall space will be for new space can be challenging, occupied by the Chapel Hill Public co-founder Gavin Hackeling, who Library. The current co-directors graduated in 2010, said the Artery St. John and Sheridan Howie was founded with mobility in mind. said they have already resumed Its the model we intended their search, this time looking along that wherever space is available, Franklin Street and in Carrboro. we set up, he said. We never Our ideal gallery space would intended to pay rent or occupy a be somewhere close to campus, permanent space. Howie said. Though the founders intended Although the gallery was origifor the gallery to move, they did nally intended to move from place not include moving costs in the to place, Howie said a permanent original budget. Often the spaces location would be an asset. require the Artery to pay for It would help us to maintain paint, wiring and lighting. our presence in the community, But current co-director Kate St. she said. It would allow for a John said its still cheaper to move greater stability and more freto different rent-free spaces than quent programming. to have a permanent space. But St. John added that a perWe usually have to do quite a manent space is not possible until bit to clean up spaces, but in most they secure more funds. cases, its nothing that a mop and The gallerys first location
Staff Writer

By Grace Tatter

dth/bailey Seitter

riana and Auriana Laws lie on the ground after roleplay-fighting with former UNC student Annie Maxine Clontz. The twins, who turned six on Tuesday, were immediately intrigued when they saw Clontz and her friends roleplaying from Franklin St. Before the girls left, Clontz told them the times and dates of their practices.
of balance and grace, Lawrence said. Amid MacDonalds excitement in earning a spot in the Olympic Trials which will be held in Federal Way, Wash. in June 2012 MacDonalds and Lawrences expectations are tempered by the fact that only two divers will have the opportunity to represent the United States in MacDonalds event in the 2012 Olympics. But Lawrence is hopeful that with a strong season at UNC under his belt, MacDonald will have a chance at punching his case they cant communicate. He said students should have supplies on hand, stay indoors, avoid flooded areas and stay safe. I just think people should use common sense, McCracken said. He added that having a flashlight on hand would be important in case of a power outage since candles arent permitted in the residence halls. Gentry said all students should create a personal action ticket to the London games. Earning an opportunity longed for by athletes all over the world would no doubt be an honor for MacDonald. But for now, he will settle for going down in the North Carolina diving history books. When it happened I didnt really know (I was the first), MacDonald said. Coach just told me the other day Yeah, no ones ever done it.

137 E. Rosemary St. came relatively easily, gallery co-founder Hallie Ringle said. Students wrote letters to local property owners, explaining their vision for a student-run art gallery. We thought it was going to be impossible, Ringle said. But then the manager of the Bank of America space at 137 E. Rosemary St. offered it to the students. We were surprised that someone with the property would allow us to use the space, Hackeling said. When novelty store Expressions chose to open a hookah bar in the space, the gallery relocated into the vacant bar space next door at 136 E. Rosemary Street. In April, the group found out they would have to move the gallery yet again, this time because of fire code violations. Their next stop was University Mall. Ringle said she is happy the Artery still exists, but a permanent location would be a departure from the founders original plan. We always envisioned it moving around, she said. Contact the Arts Editor at arts@dailytarheel.com.

from page 1
many times, MacDonald said. Its kind of just getting in the zone and doing what your body knows how to do. After watching the countless hours MacDonald has spent training to get stronger, UNC diving coach Kevin Lawrence attributes much of MacDonalds success to the power he generates on the diving board. Hes kind of built like a linebacker, and hes got a good sense

DIVER

from page 1

ALERT CAROLINA

Something has happened, but there is not any threat at all, Crisp said. There is a significant enough event that people might want to know about it. This would also help to dispel rumors, Crisp added.

If you dont feel safe at Carolina youre unable to excel as an athlete, a student or anything.
Mary Cooper,
Student body president

from page 1

HURRICANE

between all these departments is scheduled for every day leading up to this weekend. Young said students who have not registered their phones already to Alert Carolina should do so. Jeff McCracken, chief of campus police, suggested that students tell family members where they will be during the storm in

Contact the Sports Editor Moving forward at sports@dailytarheel.com. University officials, along with some students, have acknowlplan and should visit webedged that not every situation can sites like Federal Emergency be planned for, Crisp said. Management Agency and You can only do the best you the Red Cross for tips. Alert can to anticipate the different Carolina will publish UNCkinds of things that can happen, specific information, he said. The better prepared the students are, the better off they will be immediately after the event, Gentry said. Contact the University Editor at university@dailytarheel.com.

he said. The execution isnt going to be as clean as it looks on paper either. University officials said they hope students will appreciate the improvements to the emergency warning system and its clearer standards of what requires an alert. I think students will appreciate it, Student Body President Mary Cooper said. The new system took what we already had

and recategorized it in a way that made sense and emphasized communication. Cooper added that this should remove confusion around the system and will improve safety. If you dont feel safe at Carolina youre unable to excel as an athlete, a student or anything, she said. Contact the University Editor at university@dailytarheel.com.

Tar Heel first


David MacDonald is the first Tar Heel diver to qualify for the Olympic Trials. See pg. 1 for story.
2009 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

games
Level: 1 2

Alert Carolina updates


UNC officials are proposing changes to the Alert Carolina system. See pg. 1 for story.

from page 1

ABORTION

4
Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9.

Womens right-to-know laws state by state


Since the 1992 U.S. Supreme Court case Planned Parenthood v. Casey, which upheld Pennsylvanias right-to-know law, other states have adopted similar controversial policies.

are investigating, and the organizations could work together if the issue goes to court. Parker said the legislation might also violate the First Amendment, infringing on doctors and patients rights to free speech with its information requirements. And Manian said gender equality has become an issue with similar cases. Normally, we treat adults as capable of making these decisions in medical care, but these laws treat women like children, she said. These womens right-toknow laws should be called women-know-nothing laws because thats the implication theyre making. UNC senior Shabnam Emdadi said she thinks the law is unnecessary and condescending. Its paternalistic, trying to guide you in some supposed right direction, she said. Planned Parenthood is already in the midst of a court battle with the state for funding. North Carolinas budget banned all funding, state and federal, from going to the organization, say-

Waiting for school


Community colleges are having trouble accommodating a rise in enrollment. See pg. 3 for story.

Solution to Wednesdays puzzle

Printing delays
Officials say first week of classes and relocation of printers is causing delays. See pg. 3 for story.

NCSU hotel
N.C. State University is building a hotel across from their bell tower. See pg. 11 for story.

No requirements Counseling requirements Counseling and waiting periods requirements* Counseling, waiting period and ultrasound requirements in e ect
* Arizonas counseling requirement is temporarily not in e ect. SOURCE: HTTP://WWW.NCSL.ORG DTH/JESSICA TOBIN

ing the state has a right to show its preference for childbirth over abortion. Planned Parenthood sued to overturn the ban, and they received a temporary injunction to unfreeze the funding on Friday. The case to permanently overturn the ban is ongoing. This will allow us to keep our

doors in Durham open while we fight the ban, Colm said of the injunction. No federal or state funding pays for abortions, so the money funds prevention programs and health services in Durham, she said. Contact the State & National Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


ACross 1 Beatles film 5 Globetrotters need 9 TV choice 14 x, y and z, in math 15 Israels Barak 16 Curved moldings 17 Hard to spot 18 Muddy up 19 Chestnut-hued horses 20 Chicken, beef, or fish? 23 Bar order 24 Sweetie 25 Three-time Oscar winner for Best Foreign Language Film 27 Saw 32 Membership list 33 Slangy morning cup 34 Tabloid exclusive 36 Inferior 39 Director of the last episode of M*A*S*H 41 Concerning 43 Hersheys toffee bar 44 First name in daytime TV 46 Worldweariness 48 Gin maker Whitney 49 Jazz and swing periods 51 Word with crew or key 53 Gridiron call 56 Respectful title 57 French vineyard 58 Expensive bottle of wine? 64 River including Livingstone Falls 66 Major in astronomy? 67 Balm ingredient 68 Milk dispenser 69 Hardly handsome 70 Loads 71 Run for the __: Kentucky Derby 72 Understands 73 Gusto Down 1 Boaters and bowlers 2 Auditorium sign 3 Leading With My Chin author 4 Film with a creepy motel owner 5 Archies heartthrob 6 Dennys competitor 7 Diamonds, but not emeralds 8 Robin Williams forte 9 Tight braid 10 Gone by 11 Shop specializing in Winnie the Pooh merchandise? 12 Lotte who played Rosa Klebb in From Russia With Love 13 German steel town 21 Fashion designer Michael 22 Anthem contraction 26 Pontiac muscle cars 27 Slightly cracked 28 Anglers need 29 Money set aside for garden mazes? 30 Drink brand with a lizard logo 31 Mars pair 35 __ rock 37 Alone 38 Joyces homeland 40 Ostentatious behavior

(C)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved.

Are you currently experiencing around one or both of your lower

PAIN

42 __ With Morrie: Albom best-seller 45 Salts on the ocean 47 Hip bones 50 Star Wars prog. 52 German sub? 53 Present itself, as a thought 54 Tolkien ringbearer 55 1975 Tony-winning play about a stableboy 59 The munchies, e.g. 60 Cruise stop 61 Dark purple fruit 62 Eternities, seemingly 63 Midterm or final 65 Golly!

WISDOM TEETH?

UNC School of Dentistry is presently enrolling healthy subjects who: are non-smokers between the ages of 18 and 35 have pain and signs of inflammation (pericoronitis) around a lower wisdom tooth (3rd molar) Participation requires three visits. Benefits for participating include: free initial treatment of painful problem a free dental cleaning up to $50.00 payment for your time free consult regarding options for 3rd molar treatment
If interested, please contact: Tiffany V. Hambright, RDH Clinical Research Coordinator Department of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery 919-966-8376 or Tiffany_Hambright@dentistry.unc.edu you will be contacted within 24 hours.

your
STUDENTS: SEE ThE worlD for $10

////// (919) 843-3333 carolinaperformingarts.org

10

Thursday, August 25, 2011

The Daily Tar Heel

Line Classified Ad Rates


Private Party (Non-Profit) Commercial (For-Profit)
25 Words ....... $18.00/week 25 Words ....... $40.00/week Extra words ..25/word/day Extra words ...25/word/day EXTRAS: Box Your Ad: $1/day Bold Your Ad: $3/day

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

Line Ads: Noon, one business day prior to publication Display Classified Advertising: 3pm, two business days prior to publication BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room

To Place a Line Classified Ad Log onto www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252


Child Care Wanted
PART-TiME CHiLD CARE Chapel Hill, 2 girls (12 and 6). M/Tu 6:30-8am and 2:45-6:45pm and W/Th afternoons, starting immediately. Non-smoker. Safe car. 919-619-2487. eleekim@hotmail.com.
NEWHOPE CHURCH HiRiNG FOR SUNDAY. Seeking child care staff for Sunday mornings, 6:00am-1:30pm. $11/hr. Must love working with kids and be committed with dependable transportation. Send resume to: amy@newhopenc.org.

Deadlines

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

Child Care Wanted


AFTERSCHOOL BABYSiTTER NEEDED

Child Care Wanted


AFTERSCHOOL CHiLD CARE NEEDED: Looking for help caring for 3 children ages 5, 7 and 10. M-Th. 2:45-5:30pm. Help with homework, taking kids to activities. Whitfield Road area. christinaghinkle@gmail.com. WANTED: AFTERSCHOOL Help M/Th/F for Chapel Hill, Carrboro family. Need ability to safely drive son and daughter from McDougle School to activities. $10/hr. Please email lisa_voss@yahoo.com. CHiLD CARE NEEDED: Looking for a warm, high energy, experienced person to care for my 4 wonderful daughters, ages 8, 11, 12 and 15 (though the oldest will not be around much), on Wednesday and Friday afternoons. We live very close to campus, but a car is required. if you are interested, please call Andrew, 919-967-4924. PART-TiME MORNiNG NANNY needed to take care of a sweet 22 month-old girl in southwest Durham. Located near Garrett Road and 15/501. $8.50/hr, 9-11:30am, M-F. Stay at home mom or full-time nanny may use their own house. shcwillis@gmail.com with resume and references.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE. $13/hr. Close to campus. 3 kids, ages 9, 11 and 13. Walk to McDougle schools in Chapel Hill. M-F 2:30-5:30pm starting 8-29. Must be responsible driver for afterschool sports practices in town. obx_ jellies@yahoo.com, 919-599-9282.

Child Care Wanted


CHiLD CARE NEEDED: UNC family seeking afterschool care and transportation for daughters, ages 9 and 12. Reliable transportation essential. Availability needed Monday through Friday, 2:30-5:30pm. $12-15/hr. Contact 919-451-9105 or asauls@email.unc.edu. AFTERSCHOOL CHiLD CARE Tu-Th 5-7pm, 13 year-old. Pick up Mt. Sinai Road, Play sports, make dinner, help with homework, chores. $12/hr. Homestead Road. 919-928-3256.
AFTERNOONS M-F. Are you an ener-

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS

Mondays and Fridays 2:45-5:45pm, Chapel Hill. 919-968-3386.

UNC Phonathon Now Hiring!


Earn $8.50/hour, build resume experience, flexible hours around your class schedule!
Seeking students committed to making a difference at Carolina. Apply online at http://unc.thecallingcenter.com (no www.) or call 919-913-1660
(priority given to online applications)
407824

RESPONSiBLE, CARiNG individual needed to provide afterschool care for our 8 year-old daughter in Durham. Job involves tutoring in math and reading, and taking child to afterschool activities. 3:15-6pm most days. Email kristinasilberstein@hotmail.com. PART-TiME NANNY needed for 201112 school year for 2 girls, 5 and 9. M-F 2:30-6:30pm. Must have excellent references and clean driving record. Email: 4falek@gmail.com. CHiLD CARE needed for boy 10 and girl 8. Transport to sports and piano. Weekdays 34 hrs/day. Email woods038@mc.duke.edu or call 919-451-9796. AFTERNOON NANNY needed for 2nd and 4th graders. 2:30-5:30pm M-F, in Carrboro. Start mid to late Aug. Excellent driving record, own car required. Send references, experience to Jennifer: jarnold@email.unc.edu. AFTERSCHOOL CHiLD CARE: Our kids (3, 7) need a fun and responsible sitter 3 days/ wk (including Tuesday but not Friday) 2:306pm. Cooking skills a plus! Will pay extra for laundry. Must commit to whole school year and have clean driving record. Send resume, references, and your availability to clows002@mc.duke.edu. CHiLD CARE: Seeking afterschool child care provider for 13 year-old girl in the beginning of September. 3-5:30pm, 3-4 days/wk. Must have a car. School and residence are minutes from UNC. jonf1640@bellsouth.net. 919-932-7749. iSO RESPONSiBLE, fun sitter for 2 girls, ages 8 and 11. M/Tu/W/F 2:30-5:30pm. Afterschool pick up, homework supervision, occasional drop off at an activity. Location: 3 miles from UNC. lbiggers@unc.edu, 919-360-0795. AFTERSCHOOL SiTTER CHAPEL HiLL Caring, energetic sitter needed to pick up children, ages 11 and 7, from school, 2:30-5:30pm, 3 days week. Transportation, experience and references are required. Please send your resume or summary of your experience to dstevens2@nc.rr.com.

)))

ITS T-SHIRT TIME!


Carolina womens soccer fans, the cabs are heeere! Finish your GTL, grab MVP and come see the situation this Friday night at Fetzer Field. Be there at 7pm to catch hundreds of free t-shirts as the #3 Tar Heels meet #1 Notre Dame!
ADOPTiON: UNC grad and wife wish

FUN AFTERSCHOOL CARE needed for boys ages 13 and 11 from about 3:30-5:30pm, 2-5 weekdays, $10/hr. Supervise homework, chores, outdoor play, take to activities. Car required. Send resume, availability to Margaret, mpendzich@mindspring.com. FUN, ENERGETiC on call sitter needed for my girls! Must drive, be reliable, and flexible. Sense of humor is key. Adjacent to campus. Schedule varies. $12/hr. Email kristi, farmgirl@me.com. AFTERSCHOOL CARE WANTED. i am looking for someone to pickup my 2 children (10 and 12 year-olds) from school 2-3 days/ wk. kids are very easy going. i pay competitively. Need car, CV and references. Contact sbl.nd1991@gmail.com.

getic person who loves kids? Wed like someone now to help 2:30-6pm in our Chapel Hill home with our 10 year-old son and 14 year-old daughter. Excellent references, reliable car needed. $12/hr, negotiable. bgaynes@med.unc.edu or 932-7547 after 6pm

)))

to adopt a baby. if you are interested in exploring this option for you and your baby, please contact us. Expenses paid. 1-800-373-8846 http:// julieandsteveadopt.squarespace. com, julieandsteveadopt@hotmail. com. Homestudy completed 4/4/11 by The JSSA.

CHiLD CARE: AFTER SCHOOL SiTTER NEEDED for 2 great older boys. Homework, driving, chores, M-Th, 3:30-6:30pm, $10/hr. Contact by email: jsweeney@email.unc.edu.
AFTERSCHOOL BUDDY NEEDED: Male

For Rent
wALk TO UNC
Mill Creek $990/mo. 2BR/2BA townhouse layout condo. All appliances. Walk out patio, lot of storage. Water and parking included. 919-671-4230. WALk TO UNC. 2BR/1.5BA contemporary townhouse on quiet street. Central AC, W/D, dishwasher, microwave. 2 park spaces. Decks overlooking woods. $985/mo. includes water. 207-420-7070. 4 BLOCkS TO CAMPUS, and Franklin. 2BR/1BA apartment has W/D connections, electric heat. $675/mo. 415 North Columbia Street. Fran Holland Properties: email herbholland@intrex.net or call 919-968-4545. PROFESSiONAL, GRADUATE STUDENT to share great condo. 15 minutes to UNC. includes W/D, dishwasher, fireplace, private bath, on bus route. $345/mo. +security deposit. 919-357-4230. FOR RENT: 2BR/1BA. August 10, 2011-2012. 701 Church Street. $1,050/mo. Dunlap Lilley Properties. Audrey. Hartye@gmail.com, 828-768-3111. TWO STORY TOWNHOME iN CARRBORO. Approximately 1.5 miles to campus, Franklin Street. 2BR/1.5BA. $750/mo. W/D included. 919-535-8118. 310-429-5814. panmails@yahoo.com. FOR RENT: Graduate student, professional. 1BR, studio apartment. on busline. Utilities, cable and internet included. $450/mo. vandermast1@nc.rr.com. GARAGE APARTMENT. Quiet, wooded neighborhood. Private entrance. Full kitchen. Carpeting. Separate living room, bedroom, bath. Many windows. Preferred by grad students. $750/mo. includes utilities. Available August 18. 919-929-6072. WALk, BikE FROM 13 DAViE CiRCLE. This 2BR/1BA house has hardwood floors, W/D, pets negotiable with fee. Only blocks to campus, it is located off Frankin Street. $1,025/mo. Email Fran Holland Properties, herbholland@intrex.net. WONDERFUL 1BR APARTMENT, unfurnished, near campus with picture windows, great room, patio, fireplace, parking, W/D. Seeking quiet graduate, professional student or professional. No pets or smoking. $700/mo. includes utilities. Call 919-619-5138.

Help Wanted
SPANiSH SPEAkER NEEDED for part-time office administrator at wine importer. M-F, 124pm. French proficiency a plus. Must be 21+. cpataky@demaisonselections.com. HABTECH: keston Care is looking for males and females who are interested in working as Habtech or CNA to work 1 on 1 with the elderly or disabled children in Durham, Orange and Chatham Counties. Afternoon, evening and weekend hours available. Reliable transportation a must! if interested in a CNA or Habtech position, please call keston Care. M-F 9am-4pm at 919-967-0507 (CPR, 1st aid). HOUSEkEEPER, CUSTODiAN: Chapel Hill - Carrboro YMCA needs an energetic, self starter for a light housekeeping position. M-F 4-7pm. The job includes cleaning and disinfecting lockerooms, bathrooms, cleaning offices, gym, 5 star child care center as well as maintaining the overall appearance of the facility; mopping, sweeping, dusting vacuuming, dishes and trash. Provide excellent customer service for members and participants. Ability to follow directions, remain flexible with excellent time management skills. Application is on our website, www.chcymca.org or you can apply at Chapel Hill Branch at 980 MLk Blvd. Forward applications to nchan@chcymca.org or leave at the front desk of the Chapel Hill Branch.

AUDITIONS
This week for Carolina Choir, Chamber Singers, Mens and Womens Glee Clubs. Sign up in Person Hall 106. All singers welcome! More info: skleb@email.unc.edu. iTS THE JOBS, STUPiD! Visit the website: http://itsthejobsstupid.com. Read the book: iSBN 9781 4620 21437, or 21451 (ebook). NEiGHBORHOOD YARD SALE! Heritage Hills Community Neighborhood: Annual Yard Sale on August 27th 8am-Noon. Smith Level Road and Yorktown.

ExPERiENCED BABYSiTTER FOR afterschool care 2-3 days/wk, occasional evenings for 2 children. 10 minutes from UNC. Reliable transportation necessary. italian speaker a plus. maalzepa@gmail.com. References required. CHiLD CARE WANTED. Full-time or part-time. immediate start. UNC students only. Please send your CV to malawsky@gmail.com. 919259-3425. RELiABLE SiTTER NEEDED to provide in home care for our 14 month-old son. M/W/F from 12:15-3:15pm. 1 mile from campus. $12/hr. mgilkey@jhsph.edu. ExPERiENCED SiTTER NEEDED ongoing for our children ages 5, 3 and 1, M-Th 5:307:30pm and/or Saturday 5:30-8pm plus Sundays 7:30am-12:30pm. Near UNC. $12/hr. Email resume: chapelhillsitter@gmail.com. NANNY, CHiLD CARE: i am looking for a fun, loving, reliable person to help care for my children, aged 6, 4 and 2 on Tuesday and some Thursday mornings, 8:30am-1:30pm. Usually, the 6 year-old in school. Must have experience with these ages, clean driving record, non-smoker and provide recent references. Pay highly competitive. Please email interest to lkboucher@gmail.com. 2GREAT kiDS! Looking for afterschool care for 10 and 7 yea-old children. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday afternoons 2:455:45pm. Must have own car and safe driving record. Competitive salary, based on experience. vermeers@mac.com, 919-593-0599. AFTERSCHOOL CARE: 3-6pm, M-F, flexible. Needed for our 8th grade son in Chapel Hill. Pick up from school, supervise homework, drive to music lessons. Contact: k.r.brouwer@att.net. NEED RELiABLE person to transport my 16 year-old daughter from school at Pace academy to our house at Erwin Road. M- F. Will pay gas money and a hourly rate of $15/hr. Reply to a01saba01@gmail.com. Must have a good driving record. AFTERNOON CARE AND driving for 2 children to sports practices. Reliable car and clean driving record a must. Experience with kids. Non-smoker. Must love pets. Flexible scheduling to begin with. $15/hr +mileage. Reply to: northchapelhillmom@gmail.com.
CHiLD CARE, HOUSEHOLD CLEANiNG 3-6pm, M-F. Help needed for

AfTERSCHOOL bAbySITTER
UNC family seeking afterschool babysitter for 11 year-old daughter. Pick up from school and transport home or to activities. Reliable transportation, clean driving record essential. Availability M/W/Th. 3:30-5:30pm. $12/hr. Contact abryan2@email.unc.edu.
CHiLD CARE NEEDED: Child care, transportation needed for 13 yearold son. Must have car and excellent driving record. 5-10 hrs/wk. Will pay gas. 919-968-9444.

or female buddy needed at faculty couple home in Hillsborough 3:306:30pm M-F for our 17 year-old son with Down Syndrome. Experience helpful. References needed. Job sharing possible. $10-$12/hr. 919-732-1680, sweir@unc.edu.

CHiLD CARE WANTED: Sitter needed for our 18 month-old daughter. Near Southpoint, starting immediately. 10-15 hrs/wk flexible, $10/hr. Send resume/experience to jill.sirko@gmail.com.

For Rent
ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis in accordance with the law. To complain of discrimination, call the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development housing discrimination hotline: 1-800-669-9777.

fAIR HOUSINg

Child Care Wanted


HiLARiOUS kiDS (ages 5, 3, 1, baby) looking for fun, full-time nanny in Durham, Chapel Hill! Send CV and description of yourself to 531nanny@gmail.com.

www.dailytarheel.com

AFTER SCHOOL CHiLD CARE. High energy, creative person to care for our 10 and 7 year-old in our Chapel Hill home (near Lake Hogan Farms) M-F 2:30-5:30pm. Must be able to legally work in the US and be a non-smoker. Please reply to nannysearch27516@gmail.com. CHiLD CARE CLOSE TO UNC. Seeking care for rising 6th grade girl; smart, fun. Help with homework, light house work, walking a great friendly dog. Car is best but close to busline. Great neighborhood with pool and stores.: Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 3:30-6:30pm, 15/hr. 818-430-1963. CHiLD CARE WANTED for 12 and 9 yearolds. Pick up at Woods Charter, homework, transport to activities, light meal prep. M-F 3-6:30pm. $10/hr. Excellent driving record a must. Resume with references to jlja1970@earthlink.net. AFTERSCHOOL SiTTER needed for 3 fun children (boy, age 10; twin girls, age 8) in our Chapel Hill home. Monday through Thursday 2:30-6pm. Must have own car and a safe driving record. Competitive salary based on experience. elenalea@yahoo.com. WATCHiNG 2 GREAT kiDS for special hours. Great opportunity for responsible person to make money watching kids in Chapel Hill area. 919-428-6620. CHiLD CARE: 2 children looking for fun loving sitter, Wednesday evenings 6-9pm and occasional weekends. Please send your resume or summary of experience to hoathout@bellsouth.net. AFTERSCHOOL CARE TU/ TH: Seeking afterschool babysitter for 6 year-old girl from 2-6pm. Pick up at FPG and take to ballet or swim. Have your own car or use ours. Must have proof of clean driving record (non-certified) and NC driver license. $10/hr. Email: stephanieengel@rocketmail.com. BABYSiTTER NEEDED in Chapel Hill. Weekday afternoons for an awesome 4th grade boy. $10/hr. You will need a car to drive him to activities. Please call Meg, 919-357-4941. CHiLD CARE: 2 great kids need fun, dependable sitter. 2 days/wk, 2:45-5pm. Close to UNC. Experience and references required. Education majors and grad students preferred. Send resume to raymari34@gmail.com. AFTERSCHOOL CARE for my 6th grade daughter in Chapel Hill (near McDougle). M-F from 3pm. Would include dropping off at sports practices. Excellent driving record and references required. glofrese@yahoo.com. AFTERSCHOOL CHiLD CARE: Energetic college student needed for 3 hours 3-4 days/wk. for 2 girls, 7 and 10. in Chapel Hill. Help with homework and transport to activities. Must have own car. Call 919-929-5116.

Announcements

Announcements

LIfEgUARDS
The Y is hiring certified lifeguards and experienced swim lesson instructors. Please visit our website, www.chcymca.org print an application form and mail it Attn: HR Director.

CHILD CARE
Need someone to watch my 7 year-old and 10 year-old in my home; Tuesdays 2:30-6pm, other days possible. $12-15/hr, references required. 919-969-8281. YARD WORkER NEEDED: Must be strong, experienced and have transportation. Weekend work. $13/hr. 919-929-4220. ADMiNiSTRATiVE ASSiSTANT: Computer work in CPAs office. Learn Excel, Quickbooks Pro accounting software, bookkeeping. Flexible hours. Good for accounting majors. Email resume, hourly rate: cardello@fpec.org. TEACHiNG ASSiSTANT: Small five star center in southern Durham is looking for a full-time assistant to work with 1 and 2 year olds. Please send resumes to harvest@harvestlearningcenter.com. HiRiNG NOW: CATERiNG server and bartender positions for all home football and basketball games. Catering experience not necessary. Only responsible, reliable candidates need apply. Please email resume to rockytopunc@gmail.com if interested. First game is Sept. 3rd!

AbOvE gARAgE ApARTMENT


1BR/1BA. 800 square feet. H2O, W/D included. $800/mo. Private entry. 68 Oakwood Drive. $200 security deposit. Dogs Ok with additional deposit, rent. 919-280-8675. LOVELY WOODED LOT FOR 2BR/1.5BA townhome in North Chatham County. This Vickers Road duplex has fireplace, a lot of privacy. $750/mo. water included. Pets negotiable with fee. Email Fran Holland Properties at herbholland@intrex.net or call 919-968-4545.
HOME AT RESORT STYLE COMMUNiTY

Monday, August 29th at 6:00pm in Fetzer Gym C.

Come be a part of this special tradition!

4Br/4BA, 2726 square feet. 2 car garage At Briar Chapel, Chapel Hill, NC $2,600/mo. Jeff J. 919-490-9050. WALk EVERYWHERE iN DOWNTOWN CARRBORO. Newly renovated 2BR/1BA apartment at 118-E Bim Street. Hardwood floors, W/D connections. Available immediately. $750/mo. with water. Fran Holland Properties, 919-968-4545 or email herbholland@intrex.net, 9am to noon. QUiET CARRBORO 4BR/2BA RANCH (or 3BR with large family room) available August 10. Hardwood floors, W/D connections, nice yard with room for garden. On Cheek Street. You can bus or bike to campus, $1,380/mo. Fran Holland Properties: herbholland@intrex.net or call 919-968-4545. ROOMY TOWNHOME NEAR CAMPUS: 2BR/2.5BA Nice Canterbury townhouse with fireplace, W/D, parking. Great layout for roommates or couple. Near UNC, Highway 54 and 15-501, on busline. No pets. Available early August. $850/mo. 919-360-0991. BRiGHT GARDEN CONDO 1BR/1BA, W/D in the unit. Close to UNC bus and walking trail to campus. Quiet area close to shopping. $700/mo. includes gas and electric. 919-490-1342. 4BR/2BA HOUSE. New central air, gas heat. Refinished hardwood and tile floors. $1,400/ mo. ideal for group of 4. Plenty of parking. On busline. 919-929-3288. WHiTE OAk CONDO FOR LEASE 105 Fidelity. 2BR/2BA $950/mo. 9-12 month lease. Email kathydahan@aol.com. 650-814-7650. 4 BLOCkS TO CAMPUS, Franklin Street. Check out this 4BR/2.5BA house on Stephens Street. Hardwood floors, W/D, dishwasher. Great location for students. $1,800/mo. or rent a bedroom for $500/mo. (all utilities included) 10 month lease available. Fran Holland Properties: herbholland@intrex.net.

For Sale
YARD SALE: Great items for students! Computer desk. futon, clothes and household items. Saturday 27th, 8am-1pm, 200 Forsyth Drive. Chapel Hill, 537-8564.

NURSINg App
FUTURE NURSES: Check out this nursing app: www.pocketcareboard.com.

UNC CHEERLEADING T RYOUTS


TRYOUTS
Sunday, August 28th 3:00pm Gym C Fetzer Gymnasium
All trying out for cheerleading must have a physical approved by UNC Sports Medicine at least two days prior to the date of tryouts
Please visit our website for details:

13 year-old boy plus household cleaning. Own car and references needed. $11/hr plus gas. Start date: now. 919-906-0105 or beckham@duke.edu.

SAVE A TREE, RECYCLE ME!

CLASSIFIEDS
CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

HOROSCOPES
If August 25th is Your Birthday... Others rely on you. Make a plan for mutual prosperity this year, but dont be pushed to start until the pieces are in place. Ultimately, you get a lot farther than expected, earning respect. Take persistent action, and thank your team every step of the way.
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

MOTHERS HELPER: College student sought as mothers helper in Chapel Hill to carpool. Wednesdays 6:30-7pm and 8:30-9pm. Must have own transportation and safe driving record. Experience with teenagers preferred. Email wendy@tanson.com or call 971-7180. AFTERSCHOOL SiTTER needed August 24 for twin 9-year old boys Monday to Thursday from 3-6ish. Duties include picking up from school in Durham and driving to activities. We live between Duke and UNC. Must have reliable car and references. Contact semley@buckleysandler.com. LOOkiNG FOR ExPERiENCED child care provider for 2 month-old in our southwest Durham home (near Target) starting in September, 8-10 hrs/wk, Days, times flexible, prefer 2 weekdays for 4-5 hours. Prefer infant CPR certified. Pay: $8-10/hr. Contact Melissa at 310-801-6674 with questions; send resume to mmj@unc.edu. BABYSiTTER FOR 5 young children, though rarely all 5 together. Hours M/Tu/Th 2-4pm, W/F 2:30-6:30pm. Extra hours possible. Located near campus on Gimghoul Road. Partial availability considered. Fluent Spanish a big plus. $12-15/hr. Email: laurieabbey@hotmail.com. AFTERSCHOOL CARE NEEDED for 11 yearold boy in Carrboro 3-5pm Tu/Th and a ride from McDougle Middle to guitar lessons at 3pm on Wednesday. $12/hr, $60/wk. Supervise homework, take to activities. Car required. Send resume, availability to Danielle, daniellegraceking@gmail.com.

www.wix.com/gotarheels/uncspiritprogram
407838.

COME PREPARED TO WORK OUT!

SATURDAy SITTER wANTED


for 4 year-old boy. Most Saturdays from 9:30am-5:30pm. Must like dogs, playing all sports, imaginative games, crafts and exploring nature. Some Spanish a plus. $10-$11/hr. Need own car. Email: cabbytwo@netscape.net. PART-TiME NANNY: Faculty family seeks experienced, reliable, honest and creative person to help with our 2 wonderful girls, ages 3 and 1 for approximately 12-16 hrs/wk. Competitive pay, warm environment. 10 minute drive from downtown Chapel Hill. School year commitment and car is necessary. Email nannyfor2girls@gmail.com. OCCASiONAL BABYSiTTER WANTED for my 2 boys, ages 3 and 9 months, at our home in historic Hillsborough. Must have availability during the day. $10-12/hr. Contact: leighann19@hotmail.com.

Dance Team
August 30-31 6:00-9:00pm Auditions at Eddie Smith Field House, please bring headshot & maximum one-page dance resume COME PREPARED TO WORK OUT!

UNC

gARDEN ApARTMENT
Large 1BR basement apartment with private entrance available early September. $650/mo. all utilities included, washing machine and dryer, large living room with old barn wood fireplace. Private patio faces the garden. Grad students preferred. 919-942-9961.
HOUSE FOR RENT: Walk or bus to UNC, UNCH, Franklin. 2BR/1BA, fenced yard, parking. Pets Ok. $1,100/mo. Terms negotiable. Available 9/1. tgmcinerney@hotmail.com or 919-929-0121.

Tryouts!

CHILD CARE AND DOg wALkINg


Talented, animal loving, multi-tasker needed to provide intermittent care and transportation for 2 children. Must also be able to walk dogs 2-3 times a week and run an occasional errand or do some light housekeeping. Must be available for some early Thursday mornings from 5:30-8:30am. Hours vary from 5-12/wk, depending on our work schedules. Must be good with dogs and be able to take on high energy kids and tolerate some chaos. Pay is $12/hr. Must have your own safe, reliable transportation. Email legatosmom@gmail.com.

CHILD CARE, DRIvER. $15/HR.


Care for girls ages 14, 12 and 9. 3-6:30pm, 2-4 days/wk. Safe driver, light housekeeping, basic meal prep. required. Spanish language skills a plus. Call 933-5330. FAMiLY HELPER wanted for general household tasks, 2-4 hrs/wk. No child care involved. $12. Car required. Conscientious, fun? Please send detailed note to tbarron105@aol.com. THANkS!

$595/MO, 1BR 1 STUDY. Newly refinished, All utilities including internet, cable free. Great location. Walk to Whole Foods, busline. No pets, smoking. Adam, 919-599-2000.

407839.CRTR

More details at www.wix.com/gotarheels/uncspiritprogram

QUESTIONS: 962-0250

Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is an 8 - You can really get into simple work right now, with keen focus. Uncertainty in the morning eases by the afternoon. Love opens new doors this evening. indulge a passion. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is an 8 - Take the lesser-traveled road, and bring someone dear along. keep to your map and be flexible. A negative stretch turns out to be quite the opposite. Gemini (May 21-June 21) Today is an 8 - Only spend on whats truly needed. Finish up old business, and move quickly. Youll be glad when its done! This afternoon brings luck with love and money. Cancer (June 22-July 22) Today is an 8 - keep your sense of humor, and ignore someones offensive remarks. Your team is hot, financial prospects are good and theres sweet news in the romantic arena. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 9 - Do what you already know works, and use quality materials. Follow a strong mentor, and dive into focused action. Put your fears aside for a time. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is an 8 - Dont launch before youre ready or spend impulsively. Go slow and steady, and you get more than you anticipated. Resist the urge to run away. Others are paying attention.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is a 7 - Be generous, but keep track of where your ducats go. Leverage your contribution by inspiring others to do the same. Resist temptation in favor of long-range benefit. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a 6 - in the adventure of your daily actions, you could discover excitement or boredom. its all in how you look at it. invent something. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 7 - its easy to get in your head about money now. The best thing you can do is pay attention to your finances, pay the bills and move on to whats important to you. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a 5 - There could be some chaos, and you may have some explaining to do. Reaffirm a commitment. There is plenty of action and profit hiding in the details. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is a 7 - Difficulties may arise, but dont let them keep you from doing your job. Provide excellent work, and let a partner take the lead. keep an open mind and be adaptable. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 6 - Your optimistic nature clashes with your natural pessimism today. Try to favor the first, as the other leads down a slippery slope. Focus on love. Pay attention to cynicism later.
(c) 2011 TRiBUNE MEDiA SERViCES, iNC.

TS J
CAMPUS
BEVERAGE

Micro & Imported Beers


Cigarettes Cigars Rolling Tobacco
306 E. MAIN STREET, CARRBORO 968-5000 (in front of Cats Cradle)

Over 600

SERVICE DIRECTORY
PASSPORT PHOTOSMOVING SUPPLIES
CLOSE TO CAMPUS at CARRBORO PLAZA ~ 918.7161
COLOR/BW PRINTING, NOTARY PUBLIC, LAMINATING, BINDING, MAILBOX SERVICES, FAX, STAMPS, PACKAGING, INTERNATIONAL SHIPPING!

UNC Community

Student Legal servives SD 2009.crtr - Page 1 - Composite

OFFICER, AM I FREE TO GO?


Contact Student Legal Services
Suite 3407 Union 962-1302 csls@unc.edu

to learn why SIX WORDS are important

Robert H. Smith, Atty At Law


SPEEDING

DWI

CRIMINAL

Carolina graduate, expert in traffic and FREE criminal cases for students for over 20 years. CONSULTATION
312 W. Franklin Street 967-2200 chapelhilltrafficlaw.com

The Daily Tar Heel

News

Thursday, August 25, 2011

11

BOCC examines volunteer residency


By Corinne White
Staff Writer

Requirements for Orange County advisory board members are up for revision after a volunteer was denied reappointment. County officials said May Becker, who holds residency in North Carolina and Florida, was not reappointed due to issues with her dual residency. But Becker says she was denied a second term on the planning board because of her political beliefs. It wasnt really a question of residency, she said. Becker said her hard line on the environment wasnt welcomed by the commissioners and prevented her reappointment.

The long-term effort to revitalize N.C. State Universitys retail corridor on Hillsborough Street is now expanding to accommodate travelers. The university announced Tuesday its selection of two firms to build and manage a proposed hotel able here on campus. By Britton Alexander with ground-floor retail space The poster art comes from local Staff Writer on property the university bought venues, including Carrboros Cats Davis Library isnt just a haven Cradle and Franklin Streets Local across from the historic bell tower for studying its also a venue using its endowment 506. for art. But the project is not without Many of the posters featured Tonight, the librarys gallery its drawbacks. are copies of ones seen previously will open From the Cradle to the on lampposts. Similar work is Some students and business Cave: 18 Years of North Carolina owners are weary of construction. featured at the Ackland Museum Poster Art. Im kind of fed up with whats Store and was seen last January in The exhibit features reproduc- the Carolina Union Gallery. going on campus, and if theyre tions of 40 posters from the past adding more construction that The posters are clustered two decades advertising local seems a little annoying to me, together to highlight the five conbands and music venues. said Alexandra Anastasi, a sophotributing artists. As a part of an initiative to docmore at NCSU. These posters have commonument the regions music culture, alities which make for a cohesive Local businesses, including Steve Weiss, head of the Southern display, said Linda Jacobson, Sadlacks Heroes, a sandwich shop Folklife Collection, asked the popular among students, are in line keeper of the North Carolina individual artists to donate their to be displaced by the construction. Collection Gallery. work. Rose Schwetz, owner of This is something really new The University Library Public Sadlacks, said she has very little that were doing, Jacobson said. Art Committee chose to place the Were trying to think of things information on the project and artwork in Davis due to the space that are attractive to the campus does not know how long her busiavailable and the large audience, community as well as the general dth/MARY KOENIG ness will be able to remain open. Weiss said. Were just going to roll along public. The art of Ron Liberti is featured in the Davis Library Gallery. His posters can also be seen in the Ackland store. While the Chapel Hill library like normal until somebody says Jacobson said that the tones of the Chapel Hill music scene. shows, the posters remind me Weiss said he hopes the event system has many art pieces, this we cant be open, she said. the poster artwork vary. To me all the work underof all the great live music I have will be well-attended. is only the second exhibit brought I just have to ride it out, she You will note the differences in scores what is so great about our heard in our area and our musical He said, I hope students will to the Davis gallery, said Winifred the artwork, from the more repsaid. Thats just the way life is. local arts community, Weiss said. history, Weiss said. have a great time and enjoy the Metz, cochairwoman of the comThe university selected Bell resentative and nostalgic to the He said the posters arent just At tonights opening, all five music and wonderful artwork on mittee. View Partners, based in Raleigh, fanciful and abstract, she said. aesthetically pleasing advertiseartists will participate in a panel display. Our goal for the gallery to develop the land, and The The artists Matt Hart, Ron ments theyre also historical discussion about their work. is engagement, she said. Bernstein Companies, based in Liberti, Jason Lonon, Casey A concert by local band The Contact the Arts Editor Washington, D.C., to manage Engaging and getting folks to Burns and Chris Williams have documents. Because they advertise past Kingsbury Manx will follow. at arts@dailytarheel.com. the development, said Ralph think about art and whats avail- played significant roles in shaping Recchie, director of real estate at NCSU. The university has not sold the land to Bell View Partners yet, and all revenues from that sale will return to the universitys endowment, he said. Despite mixed emotions about the development plans, some business managers say the new ing to bolster Russias economic Jobs resigns as Apple CEO, serve, if the Board sees fit, as hotel does have its perks. involvement in northeast Asia. Chairman of the Board, direcbecomes chairman of board tor and Apple employee. He A recent overhaul of Russia wants to build a pipeHillsborough Street, which line through the Korean peninalso recommended the company SAN JOSE, Calif. (MCT) included repaving the road and sula to sell Siberian natural gas implement its succession plan by Steve Jobs has resigned as CEO adding traffic circles, cost the city to North Korea, Japan and South naming Cook as CEO. at Apple, the company he coof Raleigh $10 million and caused Korea. Cook, who had been acting founded at age 21 and turned into disruptions for many businesses, In a statement released before in Jobs place while Jobs was on an international business icon, but the new layout also boosted the meeting, the Kremlin said the medical leave, had previously known for its tremendous profits business for stores, said Chris Filan, pipeline project was critical. served as chief operating officer, and elegantly designed devices manager of Porters City Tavern, a Russian media reported that responsible for the companys like the iPhone, iPad and Mac restaurant on Hillsborough Street. worldwide sales, supply chain and Kim and Medvedev tentatively computers. There are very few places for agreed to move ahead with the The Cupertino, Calif., company other operations. He also headed parents of NCSU students to stay, pipeline, but analysts expressed Apples Macintosh division. announced Wednesday that vetso the proposed hotel would be doubts over any deal with the Apples stock dropped more eran executive Tim Cook has been beneficial for businesses, Filan said. authoritarian regime. than 5 percent in after-hours named as Jobs replacement. I really see this as nothing but The two leaders also reporttrading Wednesday after the comI have always said if there a great thing for us, he said. edly discussed a plan for Russia pany released Jobs letter. ever came a day when I could Specifics of the hotel constructo extend power lines into North no longer meet my duties and MCt/WIRE tion are not yet finalized. expectations as Apples CEO, I North Korean and Russian Korea to sell electricity from facilThe hotel construction will cost ities like the Bureya hydroelectric Steve Jobs, seen in this file photo from September 9, 2009, resigned as would be the first to let you know. leaders meet in Siberia Apple CEO in a letter released Wednesday afternoon. tens of millions of dollars, and it plant. Unfortunately, that day has come, will not be complete or occupied MOSCOW (MCT) Reclusive Jobs wrote, in a letter addressed but dip to 8.5 percent as the 2012 for a few years, Recchie said. North Korean leader Kim Jong to the Apple Board of Directors Federal deficit is expected to back on track. The Congressional Budget election approaches, a slight The development will house an Il met with Russian President and the Apple Community. hit $1.3 trillion in 2011 Office said Wednesday the federal improvement but still high and on array of local retailers, which will Dmitry Medvedev in remote eastThe 56-year-old Jobs has been deficit is projected to hit $1.3 tril- par with previous projections. be tailored toward the tastes of WASHINGTON, D.C. (MCT) ern Siberia on Wednesday reporton his third medical leave after lion in fiscal 2011, the third year of Democrats and Republicans students and residents, he said. A third consecutive year of edly to discuss such issues as a previously being treated for panshortfalls at levels not seen since seized on the report as Congress I think it will definitely add natural gas pipeline, economic aid massive federal deficits and a creatic cancer and a liver transWorld War II. and President Barack Obama preto student life when it comes to slumping economy with high and nuclear disarmament. plant. As the economy continues pare to battle anew over the best Hillsborough, Anastasi said. unemployment portrays a bleak Kim, on his first trip to Russia The company said the board approach to improving the ecofiscal outlook for the U.S., promis- to struggle, unemployment is in nearly a decade, is desperate had voted to elect Jobs as chairexpected to remain stubbornly nomic outlook while reducing the Contact the State & National ing a divisive political debate this for economic aid for his starving man. In his letter, Jobs told the high through the end of the year, nations debt. Editor at state@dailytarheel.com. fall over how to get the country country, and Medvedev is seekApple board, I would like to

She said after being found eligible to serve on the board she was asked by the commissioners if she wanted to be considered for a second term. Becker said she told them that she would be interested in serving again. Then, after she brought up her opinions on the environment, the county attorney repeatedly called and questioned her, she said. But County Attorney John Roberts said Beckers dual residency might have caused a conflict of interests, and that is why she was not reappointed. County Commissioner Vice Chairman Steve Yuhasz said during the last two years the Orange County Board of Commissioners has been working to revise how

it appoints people to advisory boards. He said the board, which looks for members with diverse views, could begin to interview applicants and look into backgrounds. The county attorney is working on a set of legal regulations and expectations for board members, such as the legal definition of residency for those who wish to sit on an Orange County advisory board, Yuhasz said. Roberts said the commissioners have considered two residency definitions members would have to either be a permanent resident or registered to vote in Orange County to be appointed. County Manager Frank Clifton said Becker was on a board that is popular among volunteers.

(The) county commissioners cant have a resident of another state advising them on land usage.
John Roberts,
Orange County attorney

Becker said Roberts asked her specifically about her Tampa, Fla., property after issues were raised with her residency status and her reappointment became uncertain. She said the questions were irrelevant because she considers herself a North Carolina resident. But Roberts said every question he asked her was relevant. Its a serious question for the planning board because the county commissioners cant have a resident of another state advising them on land usage,

Roberts said. Becker said the harassment of questioning has not turned her away from public service. I wouldnt say Im in politics. I would say I care about my community, Becker said. I was asked to be there to contribute something, and I feel that others have encouraged me to contribute to continue to do something in that direction. Contact the City Editor at city@dailytarheel.com.

NCSU in talks to build hotel


The project would offer retail space and room for NCSU families.
Brendan Cooley
Staff Writer

Davis Library to feature concert poster exhibit

On the wire: national and world news

Know more on todays stories: dailytarheel.com/nationworld

The Daily Tar Heel


Help Wanted
Drivers: OTr and regional. Great pay and excellent benefits. 401K, bonuses. Miles and guaranteed hometime! CDL-A 6 months. OTr experience required. 866-265-3715. DireCT CAre sTAff NeeDeD: The Arc of Orange County is seeking direct care staff to work with individuals with developmental disabilities. Part-time, afterschool, weekend hours available. High school diploma, clean record required. Application: ckeller@arcoforange.org. CLiNiCAL TeACHiNG TuTOrs needs advanced math, science, english, writing, special educators, reading, educators for tutoring. Car. superb scholarship. MAT, scholars welcome. superb spoken english. Days and hours available: 7 days available. $17/hr. and up. Marketing and organization: $10/hr. Jlocts@aol.com.
reTAiL sALes: Omega sports at

The Daily Tar Heel


Help Wanted
CArrBOrO reCreATiON AND PArKs (Athletics). Part-time temporary. YOuTH BAseBALL uMPires: August thru October for games involving ages 6-12, umpiring experience and/or sound baseball, softball knowledge preferred, 2-10 games/wk played M-f evenings and saturdays. Pay rate: $15.50-$23.50/game, depending on league. BAsKeTBALL OffiCiALs: October thru february for games played M-f evenings and saturdays, 2-10 games/wk, flexible scheduling, previous experience and/or sound basketball knowledge preferred. Pay range: $16.50$21.50/game. fACiLiTY, ACTiviTY suPervisOrs: August thru October, 4-20 hrs/wk; week day, evening and weekend hours. Assist with special events, general and athletic programs. recreation program experience and knowledge preferred. Pay rate: $9/ hr. Positions are open until filled. for more information, call 918-7364. for an application contact Hr, 301 West Main street, Carrboro, NC 27510; or visit our website at www.townofcarrboro.org. eOe.

Help Wanted
GYMNAsTiCs iNsTruCTOrs WANTeD! sport Art Gymnastics Center Chapel Hill looking for enthusiastic, reliable individuals. Teach recreational gymnastic classes part-time. Children age 5 and up. start now. Gymnastic teaching experience required. Mark, 919-929-7077, 919-732-2925.

Help Wanted
BeCOMe A BArTeNDer! $250 a day potential No experience necessary. Training courses available. 1-800-965-6520 ext. 105. AfTersCHOOL COuNseLOr: Chapel HillCarrboro YMCA are hiring afterschool counselors. Positions are available for grades K-8th, Monday thru friday, 2-6pm and flexible schedules are available. You must be 18 years or older and have experience working with children. education majors are preferred but most of all you need to enjoy working with children. Application is on our website, www.chcymca. org or you can apply at Chapel Hill Branch at 980 MLK Blvd. forward applications to nchan@chcymca.org or leave at the front desk of the Chapel Hill Branch.
eGG DONOrs NeeDeD. uNC Health

Parking
PArKiNG sPACe reNTAL, Walking distance to campus. $200/semester. Call 919-219-2891. GreAT LOCATiON: Parking space 2 blocks from Carolina inn. $340/semester. Call 919-929-3494.

Rooms
furNisHeD rOOM WiTH PrivATe BATH iN PrivATe HOMe. Major busline and park and ride. Kitchen privileges, much privacy. Nonsmoker. 919-225-7687. $100/MO. Off chapelridgeliving.com. rent is usually $594/mo. but will rent for $494/ mo. everything on site and included. 575415-6930.

Volunteering
Are YOu A WOMAN who smokes cigarettes and does not want to quit? You can contribute to science by participating in a smoking study that examines how smoking affects your thinking and mood. Do you answer yes to the following questions? Are you between the ages of 18 and 45? Are you smoking at least 10 cigarettes per day? Do you have a normal menstrual cycle? if so, please call Joe at 919-416-2099 or Liz at 919-4162425. if you participate in this study, we will compensate you up to $118 for your time. Pro0002799.

fun recePtionist needed!


Outgoing, organized receptionist needed for fun childrens hair salon near southpoint.. Part-time, Tu-f. $8/hr. email resume and availability: jill@peekado.com.

Roommates
rOOMMATe WANTeD: furnished 2Br/2BA condo 10 minutes from uNC and Duke. Available 8-24, $750/mo +utilities. sdula@live.unc.edu, 704-213-4440. feMALe GrAD, PrOfessiONAL looking to share beautiful 2Br/2BA in quiet condo community. $500/mo. W/D, large bedroom, bath, on busline. rmbeitia5@hotmail.com, 386-405-4863. 919-240-5385. 1Br WiTH PrivATe BATH available in 4Br house with 3 male uNC seniors. $550/mo. +utilities. Available now with lease through 5-28-12. s2schwartz@gmail.com. 1Br WiTH PrivATe BATH available in 4Br house with 3 male uNC seniors. $550/mo. +utilities. Available now with lease through 5-28-12. s2schwartz@gmail.com.

Services
MATH TuTOr, editor, proofreader, vegan chef and tutor, organic hand tool gardener, mothers helper, convalescent or elderly helper, housekeeper. Dr. Christi Jones, PhD. 919-923-1313, christijones55@gmail.com.

office manager
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA Boomerang Program is seeking administrative office manager. responsible for providing support services by overseeing and performing clerical and administrative tasks. Proven experience in developing work procedures and standards to improve office efficiency and effectiveness. strong proven skills in managing multiple projects in an ever changing environment; Professional demeanor a must with ability to communicate, verbally and written, with youth, families and community partners; Proficiency in Microsoft Office required, as well as other office equipment. full-time, M-f with benefits: medical, dental and life insurance paid for by the YMCA. submit resume, cover letter and application to N. Chan at nchan@chcymca.org or 980 MLK, Jr. Blvd., Chapel Hill, 27514. Application on website: www.chcymca.org.

Wheels for Sale

New Hope Commons is seeking part-time sales associates. Training, buying discounts, incentives, flexible schedules. Contact Michele at MHinnant@Omegasports.net.

Part-time office assistant


uNC alum owned transportation business. 15-24 hrs/wk. flexible schedule. Minimum GPA 3.2. Prefer junior, senior. $12-$14/hr. Must have car. Great opportunity to work in small business setting. email uNCAssistant@gmail.com with letter of interest, desired schedule.

Care seeking healthy, non-smoking females 21-30 to become egg donors. All ethnicities welcome. $3,000 compensation for COMPLeTeD cycle. All visits and procedures to be done local to campus. for written information, please call 919-966-1150 ext. 5 and leave your phone number.

PiAGGiO fLY sCOOTer: Low mileage and in pristine condition with helmet and HOuse CLeANiNG: Professional, thorough, reasonable. 1 time, ongoing, special note heelshousing.com.crtr -best offer. 1x1.6 sticky events. battery charger. $2,000 or Page 1 919-619-1172. Carrboro Cleaning by Marc Kolman (owner, operator). 724-3840.

- Compo

Tutoring Wanted
TuTOrs NeeDeD fOr 9TH GrADer. Need 1 tutor for english, World History and 1 for Geometry, Biology. All honors classes. smart student with learning differences. Prior teaching, tutoring experience required. Less than 1 mile. from uNC. Late August thru early June. 1-2 hours twice a week. jessicaxsmith@nc.rr.com. MATH TuTOriNG: reliable math tutor to help delightful Chapel Hill High freshman learn and manage her math homework. 6-7:30pm, 3 days/wk. $20/hr. Please email words@nc.rr.com or call 919-824-6045.

uNC COLLeGe sTuDeNT to work at Chapel Hill deli restaurant. several positions open. Apply in person at Tracys Deli, Galleria, 400 south elliott road or tracysnewyorkdeli@yahoo.com. MOrNiNG BArN HeLP: Do you miss horses already? small dressage barn 20 minutes from uNC. 10-15 hrs-wk. $10/hr. No riding, lessons available. send resume: NCDressageBarn@gmail.com.

Homes For Sale


WALK TO CArrBOrO!! Close to uNC. 105K Jones ferry road. 2Br/2.5BA. Hardwoods, stainless appliances, granite counters, tiled bathrooms, 2 master bedrooms, walk in closets, large loft, covered rear patio, all appliances convey. MLs #1774181 $258,000. Call Craig (CB HPW), 919-593-4439.

Rooms
$425/MO. rOOM TO reNT. Beautiful 3Br home in Woodlake subdivision. Minutes from uNC, Duke, southpoint Mall. fireplace, W/D, front porch, back deck, fenced yard, views of the lake and walking trails, pool and gym room. Call sarah, 919 321 8545 or steve, 919 593 1684.

ce nd pla e fi liv to ing.com


www.h eelsho us
RECYCLE ME PLEASE!

PLACE A CLASSIFIED
www.dailytarheel.com OR CALL 962-0252

www.dailytarheel.com

Place a Classified: www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252

12

amazon_11x21_color.pdf Thursday, August 25, 2011

8/2/11

12:16:26 AM

The Daily Tar Heel

Up to

30 OFF
%

New Textbooks at Amazon

CM

MY

CY

CMY

Students get FREE Two-Day Shipping


Download the Amazon Price Check app and check textbook prices instantly.

Free two-day shipping available to customers who qualify for our free Amazon Student program.

Você também pode gostar