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By Madeline Will

State & National Editor


After 17 years serving Orange County as one
of the most liberal voices in the N.C. Senate,
Sen. Ellie Kinnaird, D-Orange, is leaving an
increasingly conservative legislature.
Kinnaird, 81, announced Monday that
she was resigning from her seat to pursue a
grassroots project to make sure people can
still vote following the legislatures passage
of a bill that will require
voters to have a govern-
ment-issued photo ID.
Its a difficult deci-
sion, but one that I made
feeling confident that
it was the right deci-
sion, Kinnaird said in
an interview. I could not
accomplish anything in
the second session.
The N.C. General
Assembly adjourned from
its regular session late last
month, and the short ses-
sion is in May.
Kinnaird, who is in her
ninth term in the N.C. Senate, said she will
work with churches and community groups
to ensure that people have an appropriate
photo ID and know where theyre voting.
She said now, if voters go to the wrong pre-
cinct, their vote will not count.
Ive been working for several months on
this, and I realized it was something that could
really make a difference, she said. Perhaps we
could turn this tide, thats the goal.
Finding a replacement
Ferrel Guillory , a UNC journalism pro-
fessor who specializes in Southern politics,
said Kinnaird has been one of the most lib-
eral state legislators.
She has been the quintessential Orange
County representative in the legislature, he
said. Shes been less effective in the last few
years because shes been the minority, but
shes had a long and distinguished career in
both the local and the state government.
I dont think anybody would begrudge her
the opportunity to resign and open up the seat
for someone else let a new leader emerge.
Matt Hughes, chairman of the Orange
County Democratic Party, said he has had
several people contact him about potentially
replacing Kinnaird.
Needless to say, there have been people
who have been interested for several years in
the Senate seat, he said, adding that com-
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Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893
Tuesday, August 20, 2013 dailytarheel.com Volume 121, Issue 54
Life is one big road with lots of signs.
bob marLey, wake up and Live
wednesdays weather
Todays weather
Inside
HOMEGROWN BREWS
As the craft brewery scene continues
to thrive in state, several local brew-
eries are experimenting more with
favors and ingredients. page 3
NEW MEMBERS BRING
CHANGE TO TRUSTEES
With a new chairman and six new
members, the UNC Board of Trustees
aims to better communicate the value
of the University to the state and help
Chancellor Carol Folt ease into her new
position. page 8
Nah. Just kidding.
H 84, L 70
Maybe well see
sun today?
H 85, L 70
This day in history
AUG. 20, 1966
After John Lennon com-
mented that the Beatles were
more popular than Jesus,
attendees at a Memphis
concert threw rotten fruit at
the group.
Folts Long
Road Ahead
By Amanda Albright
University Editor
Chancellor Carol Folt doesnt want to tell
people what the University needs to change.
Instead, she wants to listen to what stake-
holders believe needs to be done.
In her second month on the job, Folts priority
is to hear from students and faculty, which she
believes will help her meet the challenges that
surround her chancellorship.
Even with three ongoing federal investigations
into the Universitys handling of sexual assault
cases, questions about the relationship between
academics and athletics and budget uncertainty,
Folt is confident in her ability to juggle it all.
There are many issues that every school
faces, she said. And I come to Carolina excited
to work on them.
Folt, who started her position July 1, previously
served as interim president at Dartmouth College.
She has spent her time since then meeting with
students, faculty, Board of Governors members
and legislators, and she has more talks in store.
Already, Provost (Jim) Dean and I have a
great plan to go around to all of the schools and
see what individual schools see as their opportu-
nities and challenges, she said.
James Moeser, who served as chancellor from
2000 to 2008, said it is important to listen to as
many students and faculty members as possible
rather than immediately implement a platform.
In Folts case, its a totally new institution,
and in Deans case its an institution he knows
as a dean, he said. Theyve both come into very
new and different situations. Theres a lot to
learn, in the first weeks its a matter of learning
about the different parts.
Sallie Shuping-Russell, a member of the UNC
Board of Trustees since 2007, said she is confi-
dent in Folts strategy.
This year is more a year of listening, and next
year is more a year of acting, she said.
Tackling a familiar issue
Much of what Folt will listen to could involve
the Universitys treatment of sexual assault cases
a subject that Folt is no stranger to.
The federal probes into UNC include an
investigation by the U.S. Department of
Education to decide whether the University
underreported sexual assault cases on campus.
At Dartmouth, a similar federal
Kinnaird
resigns
after 17
years
Lambden advocates change in assault policies
The senator will work to help
voters obtain photo IDs.
Haley Waxman
Staff Writer
Student Body President Christy
Lambden said representing student
interests is always on his mind
even if that means he has to go up
against an administrator.
And in light of federal complaints
filed against the University, alleging
the underreporting and mishandling
of sexual assault cases on campus,
he said it is clear that his role is to be
an advocate for students.
Lambden has been an active
member of the Universitys Sexual
Assault Task Force, which has been
meeting since June to create rec-
ommendations on how to improve
See KInnaIrD, Page 6
UNCs sexual assault policies. The
21-member task force includes
administrators, students, profes-
sors and sexual assault profession-
als.
Of his role, Lambden said he isnt
worried about having to butt heads
with administrators.
If that requires me to say that the
University needs to change some-
thing or that I get in a debate with
an administrator, then I will step up
to that role, he said.
Former Student Body President
Will Leimenstoll said he was in a
similar position last year advocat-
name name
isCum acidunt
nostis nos dolore
facinim delent
nim ipit vel ullut
alit doloreet ut la
am alit lum e
ing for gender-neutral housing
and against out-of-state tuition
increases.
He said debates between admin-
istrators could get heated but he
found that most administrators are
more than willing to speak out on
behalf of students.
Advocacy on most issues is typi-
cally warmly welcomed and support-
ed by administrators, Leimenstoll
said in an email.
He said most opposition to advo-
cacy comes from Raleigh, not South
Building.
Unfortunately its a little trickier
to communicate with folks out-
side of Chapel Hill hence the
recent shameful BOG decision to
ban gender nonspecific housing,
Leimenstoll said.
Former Student Body President
Mary Cooper said she had to form
partnerships and teams with admin-
istrators to reach a compromise that
works for everyone.
Its more about collaboration and
understanding problems holisti-
cally, she said. Youre able to bring
about more change that way.
Christi Hurt, interim Title IX
coordinator and chairwoman of
the Sexual Assault Task Force, said
she has been working closely with
Lambden.
She said Lambden is in tune with
UNCs diverse student body.
Over and over again he has
amazed me with his command of
the dynamics of the process and the
depth to which he understands the
students and his ability to strategize
and help us move forward, she said.
Jacob Morse, student body vice
president, said before Lambden
joined the task force, he listened to a
variety of stakeholders in the issue,
including students and members of
the community.
Lambden also assembled his own
task force last spring to receive stu-
dent input about the policies.
The dialogue didnt end when
Christy went to the table, but it
didnt begin there either, Morse
said.
Lambden said students can
expect to see real changes this
semester, including increased train-
ing for faculty and the benefits of
having more people employed solely
to address sexual violence. Morse
said a representative for students is
a person who is a sounding box for
the status quo but an advocate
for students is someone who takes
a position and works for it in the
interest of the people and the cause.
He has done a good job, and
every day when he goes to work on
things he keeps in mind who he is
working for, and that is what an
advocate does, Morse said.
university@dailytarheel.com
Lambden represents a
voice for students in the
Sexual assault Task Force.
Two months in, new
chancellor paves her way
DTH/RaCHeL HOLT, CeCe PaSCUaL, DaNIeLLe HeRMaN, MaRY BURKe COMPILeD BY aMaNDa aLBRIgHT
Ellie Kinnaird
Sen. Kinnaird
resigned Monday
during her ninth
term in the N.C.
Senate.
See roaD ahEaD, Page 6
today
Water at the Well: Tradition says
a drink at the Old Well on the
frst day of classes promises luck
and a year of good grades. Stop
by and learn about UNCs Water
in Our World theme.
Time: 7 a.m. to 10 a.m.
Location: Old Well
The Doctor is in (the Pit): Get
your health questions answered
and introduce yourself to Cam-
pus Health Services physicians,
nurse practitioners, physician
assistants and staf.
Time: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Location: The Pit
Outdoor Education Center
Meet & Greet: Get better ac-
quainted with the outdoors by
learning about the experiences
the Carolina Outdoor Education
Center ofers, from expeditions
to the challenge course.
Time: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Location: Student Recreation
Center
Tour The Daily Tar Heel: Come
tour our ofce to get a behind-
the-scenes look at what it takes
to put out the paper each day.
Time: 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Location: 151 E. Rosemary St.
Wednesday
Public Service Fair: Learn how
you can make a diference in
the community. Members of the
Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chamber
of Commerce will be there to
promote their respective causes
to students.
Time: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Location: The Pit
Part-time Job Expo: Bring sev-
eral copies of your resume to the
NOTED. Marie Gandron, a library director
in New York, wants the librarys most pro-
lific young reader to stop sticking his nose
into so many books.
Tyler Weaver, a 9-year-old, read 63
books during a six-week summer pro-
gram. Other kids quit because they cant
keep up, Gandron said.
QUOTED. I think to the people who did
the distressing of the whole fun at the fair,
two words: Get real.
U.S. Congressman Chuck Grassley in
response to vandals who covered the Iowa
State Fairs beloved butter cow sculpture
with red paint. He believes the butter cow
is emblematic of the greatness of the fair.
K
ids today dont have much to cling to anymore. They ll never
know how smashing Nigel Thornberrys mustache was.
They wont feel the remorse that comes with the loss of a
Tamagotchi digital pet after sustaining its poop-filled life for
16 days. All thats left for them to do is to just grow up.
The future may be dim, but LinkedIn is at least ensuring that the pro-
fessional futures of young teens wont suffer just because its no longer the
90s. The online professional network has just changed its use policies,
lowering its age limit to 14 in the United States and 13 elsewhere.
Does anyone get the feeling that there will be a whole lot more aspir-
ing popstars with zit-ridden profile pictures appearing on the site soon?
Teenage dreams on LinkedIn
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone committed
larceny at 120 E. Franklin St.
between 1 a.m. and 2 a.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole an Apple
iPhone valued at $400,
reports state.
Someone broke into a
residence at 1803 Legion Rd.
between 10 a.m. and 5:37
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person forced open a
back window and stole items
valued at $2,232, includ-
ing an Apple iPod valued at
$200, groceries valued at
$200, a flat-screen TV valued
at $650, a Canon camera
valued at $150, a DVD player
valued at $100 and a laptop
computer valued at $300,
reports state.
Several people fought at
403 E. Rosemary St. at 7:26
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Adam Modrich of Chapel
Hill was arrested and charged
with assaulting a female at
200 Westminster Dr. at 10:14
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The victim had a lacera-
tion on her knee from being
shoved into a vacuum, reports
state.
Someone was arrested
and charged with damaging
property at 316 W. Rosemary
St. at 3:26 a.m. Friday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person punched out
a window at Warehouse
Apartments, reports state.
Someone was arrested
and charged with damaging
property at 100 E. Franklin
St. at 4:06 a.m. Sunday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person kicked in the
back windshield of a taxi cab,
reports state.
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CoMMUnIty CaLendaR
expo, and meet with employers
who can help you earn a little
extra money this semester.
Time: 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Location: Student Union Great
Hall
Student Honor System Open
House: Get to know the faces
behind the three branches of
the student-run honor system:
the Attorney Generals staf, the
Honor Court and Honor System
Outreach.
Time: 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Location: Honor System Suite,
SASB North
PoLICe LoG
News Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2
planning a route
F
reshmen Summer Butner (left) and Jessica
McAfee try to locate their class buildings
before the fall semester starts. Im proud
to be a freshman and confused, says McAfee. I ll
find my way eventually.
DTH/Jason Wolonick
CoRReCtIons
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MEAL PLAN SI GN UP
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PROGRAMMI NG CALENDAR
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Block 50
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500 Dining Flex
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Chef Events: a member of the culinary team cooks their favorite dish
Monotony Breakers: change things up with a weekly featured item
WOW Dinners: the dining hall is transformed for these themed events
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News Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3
dth/kevin hu
Brewing vats fill the back room of Steel String Brewery in Carrboro. Steel String is one of many craft breweries that have opened in the area.
pursuit of hoppyness
By McKenzie Coey
Assistant City Editor
For the second year in a row, the Howard and Lillian
Lee Scholars Charter School will not open on time.
The State Board of Education denied the schools
request to delay its opening, said Joel Medley , the director
of the states office of charter schools. He said the school
has to reapply for a new charter by Dec. 6 if the administra-
tion wants to open in the 2014-15 academic year.
Medley said the state board denied the request for a
delay after reviewing the schools difficulties with opening.
The school applied for two other charters but has failed to
open on time due to issues with facility and management.
The state board, looking at the situation, (saw) that
the group had received two charters and had not been
able to open either one on time, Medley said.
The school originally
applied for a fast-track
charter, which would have
allowed it to open in August
2012, and it voluntarily gave
the charter back. The school
then reapplied in the normal
round and received the char-
ter that would have given it
a full year and allowed it to
open this month, had it not
been for the ongoing man-
agement issues.
Anytime that you are
granted a charter and do not
open as planned, that undercuts some of the community
support that may have been there, Medley said.
The school originally partnered with National
Heritage Academies, a for-profit charter school manage-
ment company located in Grand Rapids, Mich. But the
National Heritage Academies dropped the Howard and
Lillian Lee Scholars Charter School in March.
Medley said the boards decision does not mean the
schools next charter application will be denied.
Is it feasible that they can get an additional charter
granted to them? Absolutely, he said. You cant forecast
that far down the road.
The charter school has long been a concern for local
minority groups and education activists who worry the
school will segregate low-income students.
The Rev. Robert Campbell, president of the Chapel
Hill-Carrboro NAACP, has openly opposed the charter
school. He said he believes the school would only draw in
underperforming black children, keeping those children in
a separated environment.
The school was originally created to close the achieve-
ment gap in Orange County, according to the schools
original charter submitted to the state board in 2011.
But Campbell said he thinks there are better ways of
addressing that gap than creating a separate school.
You have people now coming up with ways to get
involved with the school get involved in the academic
side of making sure each kid has the necessary environ-
ment in order to learn.
city@dailytarheel.com
Lee Charter
School delays
opening again
By Paige Ladisic
Assistant City Editor
Carolina Brewery is a favorite for
students and Chapel Hill residents
alike but to meet the growing upward
trend in popularity and taste for craft
beer, owner Robert Poitras is changing
things up.
According to the North Carolina
Brewers Guild, there were 12 brewer-
ies in the state when Carolina Brewery
opened in 1995.
This number has grown steadily
since then there are currently 79
breweries in North Carolina, includ-
ing two in Chapel Hill and two in
Carrboro.
In addition to trademarks like Sky
Blue Golden Ale and Flagship IPA,
Poitras said he recently decided to let
his brewers be more creative and work
on a small-batch series of brews that
can only be found at the Chapel Hill
location.
The small-batch series will include
brews that have been popular in the
past, as well as experimental mixtures
of flavors and ingredients, Poitras said.
He said the older Franklin Street Lager
will be back soon, as well as a black
IPA.
We dont offer any domestic beers,
and we never have, Poitras said. Were
Craft breweries take off in Chapel Hill-Carrboro
The state boards decision requires the
school to reapply for another charter.
New Israel-focused ad comes to Chapel Hill buses
By Daniel Schere
Assistant University Editor
State budget cuts are hav-
ing a trickle-down effect on the
University, and this year its health-
care facilities will feel the impact.
The budget calls for a $15 million
cut to the UNC School of Medicine
and an $8 million cut to the
University Cancer Research Fund,
which is part of the UNC Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer Center.
The fund, which was created in
2007 with the opening of the N.C.
Cancer Hospital, receives $50 mil-
lion in state money each year.
But this year, the N.C. General
Assembly removed the section of the
budget that commits to $50 million
annually, leaving the fund with an
estimated $42 million.
Dr. Shelton Earp, director of
the Lineberger Center, said this
amounts to a 16 percent cut for the
fund. Earp said he is concerned this
will significantly compromise the
quality of the centers work.
Virtually everything that has
been supported will be reduced to
some extent.
Earp said the cuts would reduce
the number of projects the faculty
could work on, including on drug
development and genomics.
The center has recruited 140 facul-
ty in the past five years but reten-
tion will become increasingly difficult
because of the budget cuts, he said.
The cuts come as a result of a
decrease in the states Tobacco Trust
Fund, which is one of the main
sources of funding for the Cancer
Research Fund. Earp said the money
will instead be shifted to the states
general revenue fund.
He is also concerned that having
reduced faculty and resources will
make for stiff competition among
hospitals nationwide for out-of-state
funding. Last year, the Lineberger
Center received $88 million in out-
of-state funding most of which
came from National Institutes of
Health.
Earp said faculty members are
disappointed with the cuts, but he
said he remains optimistic that the
center will pull through.
Its our job to absorb these cuts
and come out as strong as we possibly
can, he said.
UNC's School of Medicine will
have to deal with a $15 million bud-
get cut, but spokeswoman Jennifer
James said it is too early to tell
which areas will be affected.
James said budget cuts are noth-
ing new to the school, especially
during the economic downturn.
Were confident we can do it
again, she said.
Bill Roper, dean of the School of
Medicine, said in a statement that
he hopes state politicians will recog-
nize the impact of the school.
Moving forward, we hope to
continue working with our legisla-
tors to help them understand that
as the states largest medical school,
we have a mission to train the next
generation of physicians and other
health professionals, he said.
UNCs School of Medicine was top-
ranked in primary care by U.S. News
& World Report this year.
UNC medical programs face new cuts
medical program cuTs
$8 million
from the University Cancer
Research Fund
16 percent
reduction to the Cancer Fund
$15 million
from the UNC School of Medicine
Even with the schools past expe-
rience with cuts, James said having
fewer resources is always an issue.
Obviously people are concerned,
she said. Were being asked to do
more with less.
university@dailytarheel.com
By Holly West
Assistant City Editor
As Chapel Hill Transit prepares to take
down the advertisement that prompted the
town to change its bus policy last year, a new
ad in opposition to it has just been put up.
The original ad featured two men, one
Palestinian and one Israeli, both holding their
grandchildren, with a tagline that read, Join
with us. Build peace with justice and equality.
End U.S. military aid to Israel.
That ad, taken out by Chapel Hill's
Church of Reconciliation, is scheduled to
be removed from Chapel Hill Transit buses
later this week because its one-year contract
has expired.
The new ad, which began running on all of
the towns 98 buses this weekend, depicts an
Israeli boy and a Palestinian boy embracing.
Its tagline reads Israel Seeks a Partner for
Peace.
It was placed by Triangle-based organiza-
tion Voice for Israel and national organization
Stand With Us. Both organizations describe
the new ad as pro-Israel.
Michael Ross, chairman of Voice for
Israel, said the ad was a response to the
ad taken out by Chapel Hills Church of
Reconciliation.
The churchs ad advocated for the end to
military aid to Israel. It sparked controversy
when it was first put on Chapel Hill Transit
buses last August.
Ross said his organization decided to place
an ad because it was offended by the current
one.
Sharon Shohfi, chairwoman of the Church
of Reconciliations Salaam Shalom committee,
said she doesnt have a problem with the new
ad.
The purpose of our bus ad was to spark
dialogue, she said.
But Shohfi said her church does object to
the attitudes of the opponents of the churchs
ad.
Theyre calling our ad and what we stand
for anti-Israel and thats a total mischaracter-
ization, she said.
Getting people to ask questions was the
impetus for the Chapel Hill Town Council
reviewing its bus advertising policy last
December.
The Church of Reconciliations ad was
pulled from buses shortly after it first
appeared last August because it failed to list a
contact for the church.
It was placed back when the information
was added.
Protecting perspectives
Complaints about the ad prompted the
town to rewrite its bus advertising policy.
The town council declared buses a limited
public forum. The new policy permits any
advertisement, including those expressing
political and religious views, on buses as
long as it is respectful and includes a dis-
claimer.
Town council member Lee Storrow said the
new advertisement is in line with the towns
advertising policy.
Its a respectful ad that articulates a view-
point, he said.
Storrow said town and Chapel Hill Transit
staff review ads before they go up on buses.
Its our job to make sure we are protect-
ing a diverse range of perspectives in terms of
speech, he said.
Despite the differences between the ad her
church placed and the latest ad, Shohfi said
The state budget trims
millions from the school
of medicine.
The pro-israel response will run
on 98 chapel Hill Transit buses.
courtesy of stand with us
The Church of Reconciliations ad, top, is being
removed from Chapel Hill Transit buses as
Stand With Us ad, below, it just starting to run.
courtesy of stand with us
shes glad the new ad will keep the discussion
going.
I hope it ll cause more talk, she said. I
hope it ll cause more people to ask ques-
tions.
city@dailytarheel.com
Chapel Hill just always kind
of had that yearning for
cooler things, whether its
music or food.
robert poitras, owner of carolina Brewery
cHarTer scHool
480
expected enrollment in
the schools first year
dec. 6
the new deadline for
the school to apply to
open in the next aca-
demic year
going to get you hooked on craft beer.
He said he thinks Chapel Hill is
a place where craft beer is meant to
thrive.
Chapel Hill just always kind of had
that yearning for cooler things, whether
its music or food, Poitras said. The
same thing goes for craft beer.
Senior Jessie Franklin , who said
he has visited many breweries in the
area and in the state, enjoys tasting the
unique seasonal and experimental brews
local breweries come up with.
Each of them has their own different
flavor, he said. I want to go to places
that have a really approachable atmo-
sphere.
Steel String Brewery is the first brew-
ery in downtown Carrboro and the new-
est in the area to enter the growing craft
beer market.
Will Isley, Steel Strings Brew Czar
and a co-owner, said he thinks people are
slowly moving away from the more com-
monly recognized brands of beer.
Everybodys embraced the idea of
enjoying a premium beer, something
thats a really specialized product instead
of a mass produced, very bland, boring
beer, he said.
Poitras also said he has seen people
from all walks of life enjoying craft beer
at a much higher frequency.
Craft beer is now hitting a very wide
demographic, Poitras said.
Poitras said the typical craft beer
drinker 20 years ago was a 30- to
40-year old male, but now men and
women anywhere from 21 to the upper
70s are enjoying craft beer all around the
nation.
But Franklin said he thinks the brew-
ery selections we have in the area have a
lot of room to grow and reach out to an
even wider customer base.
I think we have a lot of really big
competition in the other cities, he said.
Other breweries in bigger cities are
experimenting more with flavors and
ingredients, Franklin said, and he said he
would like to see the breweries in Chapel
Hill and Carrboro experiment more and
expand their market.
Right now, we have a very small sec-
tion, and theyre catering to a very spe-
cific Chapel Hill market, Franklin said.
I wish they would branch out.
city@dailytarheel.com
News Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4
Local businesses reopen after flood
By Samantha Sabin
Assistant Arts Editor
The arts businesses of
Chapel Hills The Shops at
Eastgate shopping center have
finally recovered from the June
rain that caused them to close
their doors over the summer.
Womancraft, a co-operative
made up of more than 70 local
artists, and Ten Thousand
Villages, an international
trade retailer chain of artisan
crafts, were both forced to
close after the flash flooding in
Chapel Hill on June 30.
It was a mess, said Sue
Kopkind, a member of
Womancrafts co-op. We were
closed for an entire month, so
we didnt have any sales for the
month of July so that hurts.
The co-op artists had to
remove the carpeting and
wall coverings due to mold
after an inch of water flooded
their store, Kopkind said.
Dottie Fiddleman, another
artist from the co-op, said the
day of the flooding was chaotic.
We had a contractor in here
cleaning up the water with
giant fans and mopping up
the water. And for about three
weeks, we just came in every
day and did our best to paint
and patch holes, she said.
The store reopened Aug. 1
after a month-long clean-up
effort, which cost between
$10,000 and $12,000. And
instead of relying on the federal
aid made available to Orange
County businesses through
the U.S. Small Business
Administration in July, all
members of the co-op are con-
tributing to pay for the repairs.
Karen Graves, another
member of the co-op, said
this was the fourth time
Womancraft has been affect-
ed by floodwaters.
Graves attributes the stores
continued flooding problems
to the shopping centers loca-
tion on top of a floodplain.
And Fiddleman said this
flood was more detrimental for
them than floods in the past.
Maybe its because (the last
flood) was so many years ago
that my memory just isnt as
clear, but we were out of busi-
ness for a lot longer this time,
she said.
Ten Thousand Villages also
closed for two weeks follow-
ing the heavy rains to replace
the carpeting and flooring.
Although the Ten Thousand
Villages corporate office paid
for the repairs, store manager
Keilayn Skutvik said the store
suffered a net loss of more than
$25,000 due to the closure.
Because we are a nonprofit
and we work with small artisan
groups that make handcrafted
products in other parts of the
world, it really cut into our
ability to make those sales for
those two weeks, Skutvik said.
It was a major loss in
income with not being able to
support (the groups) the way
we want to.
But Skutvik doesnt attri-
bute the stores problems to
being located on a floodplain.
dth/halle Sinnott
Loyal Womancraft Gifts patron Edna Webster, left, and Display
Chair Karen Graves, right, discuss a jewelry purchase.
Were here and theres
nothing really that can be done
about it because of poor plan-
ning about 40 years ago when
they built it, Graves said.
Eastgate is going to con-
tinue to flood until the water
finds another place to go, and
thats not going to happen any
time soon.
arts@dailytarheel.com
It is impacted by the
floodplain, but as you can see
with this most recent flood,
it affected Carrboro, Franklin
Street and other areas besides
just here, she said.
Despite the flooding,
Skutvik said Ten Thousand
Villages had above normal
sales the past month, which
she attributes to the stores
consistent customers.
But Fiddleman said the
flooding will continue to be a
problem for Eastgate shops.
dth/halle Sinnott
Carolyn George, Womancraft
Gifts member, organizes her
jewelry line Garden Stones.
Flooding this summer
damaged The Shops
at Eastgate.
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Quality Dental Care in Chapel Hill
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www.tarheeldentistry.com
Mon., Wed., Fri. & Sat.
8:30am - 5pm
Tues. & Thurs. 5pm-9pm
109 Conner Dr., Suite 2100
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
919-442-1670
Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 5
From Page One Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6
complaint was filed to look
into mishandling of sexual
assault.
Safety on campus, freedom
from bias, hazing and sexual
assault couldnt be more
important to me, Folt said.
Folt said she looks forward
to hearing the recommenda-
tions that UNCs sexual assault
task force will present to her.
I dont think anyone
expects that with a snap of
the fingers, a task force and
some actions are going to
change this, Folt said.
But the more we talk
about it, the more ideas we
have and the more we talk to
students, the better chance
we have to combat this.
Christi Hurt, interim Title
IX coordinator and chairwom-
an of the task force, said she
doesnt think Folts newness to
campus will be a hurdle.
It might be a challenge to
take time for all these voices
to be heard, but its a tremen-
dous opportunity, Hurt said.
Terri Phoenix, director
of the LGBTQ Center and
a member of the task force,
hopes Folt will not shy away
from addressing mistakes.
Chancellor Thorp was very
willing to own the places where
our University was not living
up to expectations, Phoenix
said. He was very willing to
say, We need to do better. I
would hope Chancellor Folt
would bring that similar level
of being reflective.
Examining athletics
Former Chancellor Holden
Thorp has admitted he wasnt
equipped to handle big-time
athletics when he started. For
Folt, Dartmouth is a Division
I school, but non-scholarship,
so questions have been raised
about her preparation, too.
But Athletic Director Bubba
Cunningham, who is a member
of Folts cabinet, said her learn-
ing curve shouldnt be too large
because she still led a school
with a big athletics presence.
Theres a lot of dialogue
about the governing structure,
but shes familiar with that and
that discussion, he said. She
has a year of experience at the
NCAA level at the Ivy League.
There are still some pend-
ing investigations related to
athletics at UNC, including
one by the State Bureau of
Investigation into the depart-
ment now known as African
and African American and
Diaspora Studies.
Wayne Lee, chairman of the
department of peace, war and
defense, said Folt must decide
whether to and how to change
the relationship between ath-
letics and the University.
The impression exists,
rightly or wrongly, that the
dog is being wagged by the
tail, Lee said. We should
take a leadership role in say-
ing that cannot be the case.
Jean DeSaix, a biology
professor who serves on the
faculty executive committee,
said the new administration
must be transparent.
Theres a suspicion that
has bubbled forth about
things that go on, DeSaix
said. Even when people are
doing their very best to fix
things, that word doesnt get
out and theres still suspicion.
Playing politics
Coming from a private
institution, Folt must adapt to
working with a state legislature
on advocating for UNCs bud-
get during a time of unprec-
edented cuts.
UNC-CH will absorb a 5.5
ROAD AHEAD
from page 1
kinnAiRD
from page 1
percent cut of $28 million this
year, and UNC-system stu-
dents could see in-state or out-
of-state tuition hikes this year.
Moeser said creating
personal relationships with
policy makers is critical.
Its a lot easier to sit down
and advocate for the University
if youve established a relation-
ship, he said. Theyre more
apt to listen to you.
Folt said she planned to
cultivate the political rela-
tionships necessary to advo-
cate for state funding. She
met with Gov. Pat McCrory
and state legislators on her
second day as chancellor.
In some ways the chan-
cellor of Chapel Hill has a
very enviable position, she
said. This state, with its long
tradition and its belief in the
importance of public univer-
sity, really values it.
When I go to the state
house to talk to people, peo-
ple are happy to talk to me.
Despite the challenges
ahead, Folt said she is
inspired by the shared desire
for improvement at UNC.
Its an institution that
doesnt want to hold itself to
average standards, she said.
Im sincerely impressed
with the people who say, We
want to hold ourselves to
higher standards.
university@dailytarheel.com
munity activists, elected offi-
cials and formerly elected offi-
cials have all contacted him.
Kinnaird has said in the
past she wants a woman to
take her seat.
Rep. Valerie Foushee,
D-Orange, said that she might
be interested in the position.
Were still trying to digest
the fact that Sen. Kinnaird is
no longer going to represent
us, she said. Other than
being interested in the process
and whats available to me
thats as far as I am right now.
Orange County
Commissioner Penny Rich
declined to comment about
her interest in the seat.
Kinnairds replacement will
be nominated by an execu-
tive committee comprised
of Democratic officials from
Orange and Chatham counties.
Gov. Pat McCrory will
formally appoint the nomi-
nee to serve the remainder
of Kinnairds term, Hughes
said, adding that he hopes
a replacement will be found
before the legislature con-
venes to possibly override
McCrorys recent vetoes.
A true public servant
Before taking the Senate
seat, Kinnaird was elected in
1987 as mayor of Carrboro
and served for four terms.
She has left an indelible
mark on Orange County,
Hughes said.
Chapel Hill Town Council
member Lee Storrow said
Kinnaird responded quickly
to constituents needs.
She really was a true public
servant, he said. And still is.
Rich said Kinnaird was a
mentor to women in politics.
She kind of led the pack
for those of us looking to get
into politics, Rich said.
In a public letter, Kinnaird
said N.C. Republicans have a
divisive and immoral agenda.
Ive never seen anything
like this before, she said. We
were always a moderate, pro-
gressive state. Now all of this
is going backwards.
City Editor Jenny Surane
contributed reporting.
state@dailytarheel.com
OPEN
HOUSE
Please join us for an Open House Party during the Week
of Welcome. Enjoy free gelato from Sugarland, live
music and VIP backstage tours. Plus, get your picture
taken on-stage where the worlds best perform!
carolinaperformingarts.org/openhouse
TUESDAY, 5:30 TO 7:30 PM
UNCS MEMORIAL HALL
AUG 20
// 2013
Learn more about our NEW student
organization at the Open House.
Tues 8/20
Wed 8/21
Thurs 8/22
Week of Welcome
Carolina Green Events
August 20 - 22, 2013
sustainability.unc.edu
Cyclicious
11am - 2pm, The Pit
EcoReps Recruitment Fair
4 - 7pm, Rams Head Plaza
Why Cant I Recycle My Pizza Box?
(And Other Recycling Questions)
5:30 - 6:30pm, Ehringhaus Lounge
Sustainability Features Campus Tour
4 - 5:30pm, Green Roof of the
FedEx Global Education Center
Carolina Campus Community Garden Tour
4 - 6pm, Wilson St.
Social Justice Yoga
12:15 - 1pm, Rams Gym
C
a
rolina Gre
e
n
s
u
s
tainability
socia
l
5 - 7pm
Student Union Art Gallery
Learn how to get involved to make
UNC a more sustainable campus!
6SRQVRUV 6XVWDLQDELOLW\ 2IFH (QYLURQPHQWDO $IIDLUV &RPPLWWHH
2IFH RI :DVWH 5HGXFWLRQ DQG 5HF\FOLQJ 6WXGHQW :HOOQHVV &DUR-
lina Campus Communtiy Garden, LGBTQ Center, Campus Recreation
News Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7
sunset serenade
T
ar Heel Voices perform at Sunset Serenade
in the Great Hall of the Student Union on
Monday night. Inclimate weather forced the
event indoors, causing many potential attendees to
be turned away as the hall reached capacity.
dth/katie williams
By Madeline Will
State and National Editor
Just a week after Gov. Pat
McCrory signed new voting
requirements into law, stu-
dents across the state are see-
ing the effects.
The new law requires vot-
ers to provide a government-
issued photo ID, but it does not
allow poll workers to accept
college IDs or out-of-state driv-
ers licenses. It also shortens
early voting by a week and ends
same-day voter registration.
Boards of Elections are cur-
rently reworking voting loca-
tions and trying to determine
how the new law will affect
local voting practices.
The Watauga County
Board of Elections has elimi-
nated the early voting site
and an election-day polling
precinct on the campus of
Appalachian State University.
The Pasquotank County
Board of Elections voted to
stop an Elizabeth City State
University senior from run-
ning for city council because
his on-campus address
doesnt establish residency.
And the Republican chair-
man of the Forsyth County
Board of Elections recently
announced that he plans to
eliminate the early voting site
on the campus of Winston-
Salem State University.
I will go as far as saying this
is an attack on student voters
theyre blatantly trying to
suppress the student vote, said
Robert Nunnery, president of
the UNC-system Association of
Student Governments.
Jocelyn Hunt, a student at
ASU and the director of state
relations for ASG, said there
were 50 to 60 students and
townspeople at the Watauga
County Board of Elections
meeting to show their opposi-
tion to the changes.
She said the new site for
early voting has limited park-
ing spaces and is located along
the highway, with no sidewalks.
I would be scared to walk
there, Hunt said, adding that
she and other student lead-
ers will have to find ways to
address the situation. We just
hope that students will still go
vote even though this obstacle
has been put in the way.
Nunnery said ASG will dis-
cuss ways to educate students
on the changes at its meeting
Saturday. He said he will ask
the body to allocate $20,000
to $30,000 to this project.
Stefani Jones, president
of Duke Universitys student
government, said that Duke
Student Government and
UNC-CH Student Congress
had jointly written a statement
denouncing the changes.
Shelby Hudspeth , director
of state and external affairs for
UNC-CH student government,
said she was concerned that
shortening early voting would
decrease student turnout.
For college students, we
utilize early voting because
we are extremely busy, and
standing in line on election
day isnt always an option for
us, she said.
There is an early voting loca-
tion at Rams Head Dining Hall
on UNC-CHs campus. Orange
County Elections Director
Tracy Reams said she doesnt
expect that to change the
Board of Elections has already
approved it for the municipal
election in November, and it
is pending approval from the
State Board of Elections.
The Orange County Board
of Elections will meet Tuesday
at 3 p.m., but Reams said that
location will not be discussed.
Jones said Dukes student
government was particularly
concerned with the provision
that stops those with out-of-
state drivers licenses from
voting in North Carolina.
"Its important to know
that were going to do every-
thing we can working with
students, she said.
state@dailytarheel.com
Id law aects student vote
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News Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 8
New members join Board of Trustees
By Caroline Leland
Staff Writer
The Board of Trustees is
going into the coming year
with a new chairman, six
new members, a new com-
mittee structure and a new
vision.
The board is chaired by
Lowry Caudill, a chemis-
try professor at UNC who
has served on the Board of
Trustees since 2011. Caudill
said he is looking forward
to addressing the challenges
that UNC has faced in the
past few years. The board
has dealt with five straight
years of unprecedented bud-
get cuts and tuition hikes,
as well as an ongoing State
Bureau of Investigation
Lowry Caudill
was elected
as chairman
of the board
in July. He has
been on the
board since
2011.
Sallie
Shuping-
Russell
is the new
secretary of
the board. She
has served
since 2007.
probe into what is now
known as the University's
African, African American
and Diaspora Studies
Department.
Board of Trustees member
Sallie Shuping-Russell said
the changes on the board
are an opportunity for the
University to move forward.
I think (former chair-
man) Wade (Hargrove) was
a great chair in a very dif-
ficult time, she said. I hope
that Wades tenure was one
of discovery and Lowrys
tenure will be one of solu-
tions.
Caudill said the Board
of Trustees has four central
goals for the 2013-14 aca-
demic year.
One of the boards first
priorities is to facilitate
a smooth transition for
Chancellor Carol Folt and
her leadership team. Caudill
has met with Folt sev-
eral times to help with her
adjustment to leading a new
University, he said.
There has been a lot of
conversation, he said. We
need them to be effective as
fast as possible. (Folt) is new
to Carolina, so she has to
learn about Carolina.
A second focus of the
board is to build effective
relationships with key con-
stituencies, Caudill said,
because the University
depends on support from
residents, the legisla-
ture, the UNC Board of
Governors, companies in the
Research Triangle and peer
institutions such as Duke
University.
One of the biggest changes
Caudill made after being
elected chairman in July was
to restructure the board. He
condensed the board into
four major committees
focused on finance and infra-
structure, university affairs,
external affairs and innova-
tion and impact, Shuping-
Russell said.
I think theyre up-to-
date, she said of the new
committees. They ll be
The board also starts
the school year with
a new chairman.
I think theres an opportunity to put the
recent past behind us.
Steve Lerner, member of the Board of Trustees
able to address what the
needs are of the modern
University.
One such need, Caudill
said, is to create a sustainable
approach to finances and risk
management.
Were a $4.5 billion enter-
prise, Caudill said. Theres
risk associated with anything
you do. Then theres risk asso-
ciated with things you dont
do.
Caudill also created two
new task forces, one for
enterprise and risk manage-
ment and one for external
affairs. The task forces are
made up of board members
who will meet outside of the
boards regular meetings this
year.
Weve got great stories to
tell over here, he said of the
boards increased focus on
external affairs. Weve got
to get better at sharing these
stories.
Board member Steve
Lerner said the University
is at a turning point for the
better.
I think theres an oppor-
tunity to put the recent past
behind us, he said. I think
it will be a much smoother
process because most people
are new.
New members on the
13-person board elected
this year are Jefferson
Brown, of Charlotte;
Haywood Cochrane Jr.,
of Elon; Charles Duckett,
of Winston-Salem; Kelly
Matthews Hopkins, of
Charlotte; Dwight Stone, of
Greensboro; and Student
Body President Christy
Lambden.
university@dailytarheel.com
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Sports Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 9
Tar Heels seek to ll
void left by seniors
dth file/spencer herlong
Junior Caroline Price returns the ball last year against Duke. Price will take on a larger role this sea-
son after the departure of seniors Gina Suarez-Malaguti, Zoe De Bruycker and Lauren McHale.
By Andrew Tie
Staff Writer
Despite being knocked out
in the quarterfinals of the
outdoor NCAA tournament,
the North Carolina women's
tennis team has turned its
focus to defending its first-
ever indoor national title.
The talent is still there with
six returning players, includ-
ing sophomore Whitney Kay
and junior Caroline Price.
But the team will have to
fill a void in production and
leadership after losing three
seniors who made up a class
that coach Brian Kalbas
called the most successful in
UNC history.
That was a class that set
the tone for work ethic and
the attitude every single day,
Kalbas said.
Hopefully, they will have
been able to show the young-
er players that if you work
hard and you put your mind
to it, you can become the best
tennis player and get in the
best shape of your career.
Though it will be an
adjustment, Price said if the
team can stay healthy, each
player has the potential to fill
those gaps.
Our team is very deep,
Price said. Anyone could play
anywhere. It depends on how
hard youre going to work and
whos going to step up and
lead.
Now an upperclassman,
Price said she plans to take on
a larger role. Seniors Laura
Slater and Tessa Lyons will
likely serve in a leadership
capacity, as well.
Its going to be a whole
new team, a whole new year,
Kalbas said.
You try and see, especially
in the fall, who steps up in the
other roles and other leader-
ship positions. Were very
excited for our two freshmen
coming in. What they can do
is maybe provide something
to ignite the team to a fresh
start and new beginning.
Those incoming freshmen
Hayley Carter and Jamie
Loeb could be asked to
contribute early, much like
Kay was last season.
While Kay could be headed
for one of the top two spots
in the lineup after playing at
the three seed for most of last
year, she knows its possible
she ll have to battle Carter
and Loeb.
I think both of them will
be (in the lineup), Kay said.
I dont really know, but I
would expect top four. We can
expect a lot from them this
year.
According to Tennis
Recruiting Network, both
Loeb and Carter are blue-chip
recruits, ranked No. 1 and No.
2 respectively in their class.
Kalbas said regardless of
where they end up in the line-
up, both freshmen certainly
have the potential to improve
UNCs doubles game.
We ll be a lot better in
doubles this year, Kalbas
said. Thats going to be a big
point of emphasis this year
where we struggled last year
against the best teams.
While roles are still unde-
fined on and off the court,
Price said the team as a whole
is looking forward to starting
the season.
Now that we won that
indoor national champion-
ship and we fell short at (the
outdoor) NCAAs, we are all
hungry, Price said.
We want this more than
ever to win and take home the
NCAA national champion-
ship.
sports@dailytarheel.com
Field hockey restocks
roster with a fresh dozen
By Daniel Wilco
Assistant Sports Editor
Four years in a row the
North Carolina field hockey
team has been to the national
championship. And three
years in a row the Tar Heels
have come up short.
But this year, UNC is
determined to not let its past
affect the future.
Its not hanging over us, but
it is in the back of everyones
head, junior forward Charlotte
Craddock said. We never want
to lose a game and unfortu-
nately we lost the last game last
year, so well try not to let that
happen again this season.
After the 2012 season, the
Tar Heels lost nine players,
including three of their top
five scorers. But a new year
brings new faces, and UNC is
faced with the task of filling
the void its veteran players
left with 10 freshmen seven
true and three redshirts.
Though a less experienced
team might be unsettling to
some, redshirt senior Meghan
Drake actually prefers it.
Its hard to teach an old
dog new tricks, Drake said.
In addition to the 10 fresh-
men joining the ranks, North
Carolina adds two internation-
al players for a total of six on
the roster something coach
Karen Shelton believes will
benefit the team in many ways.
Shelton said overseas field
hockey is more akin to soc-
cer and basketball in the
dth file/spencer herlong
Sophomore Emily Wold was
one of three Tar Heels to repre-
sent the United States in inter-
national play this summer.
United States, with players
being exposed to the game at
a young age. Most American
girls dont pick up the game
until junior high.
The coach of 33 years
believes the experience and
leadership international play-
ers bring are fundamental to
a successful team.
Every top program in the
country has their share of
international players, Shelton
said. Were kind of keeping
up with the Joneses there.
But while UNC has brought
players to the U.S., three
American Tar Heels left home
to represent their country in
international competition.
Senior Rachel Magerman
co-captained a U.S. team that
brought home bronze from
the World Maccabiah Games
in Israel, and sophomores
Emma Bozek and Emily Wold
played in the Junior World
Cup in Germany.
Drake said while the over-
seas competition provided
great experience for some of
her teammates, extra playing
time against top-tier oppo-
nents was not the only thing
that her team brought back
through customs.
Whats great about that is
we also had our coaches go
over and watch them, so pre-
season has been completely
different this year, Drake
said. Weve started incorpo-
rating new drills."
Those new drills are part of
an up-tempo preseason for the
Tar Heels that Shelton hopes
will see them through another
lengthy postseason.
Some may choose to
focus on the three con-
secutive championship losses
besmirching an otherwise
stellar three years for UNC,
but Shelton chooses to high-
light the teams unquestion-
able streak of success.
The good thing is were
very consistent. And were
consistently excellent,
Shelton said. Weve just got
to find a way to close the sea-
son out.
sports@dailytarheel.com
Sports Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 10
The North Carolina foot-
ball team has been plagued
with injuries on the defensive
end of the ball throughout
training camp this August. To
compensate for those injuries,
the coaching staff has placed
junior tight end Jack Tabb
with the linebacker corps to
provide depth at the position.
Staff writer Max Miceli
spoke with Tabb about train-
ing camp and his transition
to defense this preseason.
DAILY TAR HEEL: Youre a
couple weeks away from
opening up the season against
South Carolina, and you have
been through a few weeks of
practice. How do you feel at
this point in camp?
JACK TABB: Im feeling really
good. The offense is doing
really well. I havent been
with them in a few days, but
coach (Walt) Bell and coach
(Blake) Anderson told me
theyre still doing really well
over there. It looks like theyre
still doing really well.
On the defensive side,
since Ive been over here for
a few days, were really mak-
ing strides to make sure were
ready for South Carolina.
DTH: What are some of
the pros and cons to training
Q&A with UNC footballs Jack Tabb
camp from a players perspec-
tive?
JT: You know, its all about
how you make it. If you make
it miserable its going to be
miserable. If you make it fun
with all your friends, its going
to be fun.
DTH: Obviously training
camp can be exhausting, but
isnt it rewarding at the same
time? Do you maybe even like
getting up early to come?
JT: I wouldnt say I love get-
ting up in the morning, but
Once youre done getting the
stuff you need to get done
throughout the day, it feels
good once youre finished.
DTH: Youve made a move
from tight end to linebacker
recently. How are you starting
to feel it out now that youve
had a couple practices under
your belt? You said at your
first practice there was a lot
of, See ball. Hit ball. Is it a
little more than that now?
JT: It definitely is a little
bit more than that now. This
defense is pretty complicated,
but coach Vic (Koenning)
and coach (Ron) West have
helped me adjust to it so I can
pick up the schemes pretty
well. Its pretty fun.
DTH: With the recent move,
how much do you see yourself
contributing on the offensive
end of the ball now?
JT: I plan on being just as
big a contributor as every-
one else. Me and Eric Ebron
switch out (as the starters). I
plan on coming out here and
making a lot of big plays on
offense and defense.
DTH: What do you think of
the possibility now that you
could potentially play on both
the offensive and defensive
sides of the ball in the same
game?
JT: Thats interesting. Its
extremely exciting. Its truly
an honor. Especially because I
personally dont know of that
many people that have been
able to play both ways in col-
lege. So I think its a blessing
to do both.
sports@dailytarheel.com
Jack Tabb is
a junior tight
end. He played
linebacker last
at Red Bank
Catholic
High School in
New Jersey.
Religion
at
UNC
Campus
Christian
Fellowship
Worship Wednesdays at 6:30
Bible Studies Mondays at 7:00
Discipleship, Mission Trip
Open to All Students
Internationals Welcome
Making disciples on campus
who impact the World
www.ccf-unc.org
News Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 11
Groups gathered in
Northside for the
Good Neighbor Walk.
By Caroline Hudson
Staff Writer
About 50 local residents
and students braved the
rainy weather Monday night
to participate in the annual
Good Neighbor Walk,
intended to help improve
relations between long-term
Northside residents and
UNC students.
Divided into groups of
about five, the participants
met at the Hargraves Center
in Chapel Hill and began
their walk through the
Northside community.
Aaron Bachenheimer,
director of the UNC Office
of Fraternity and Sorority
Life and Community
Involvement, told par-
ticipants to introduce them-
selves, welcome new neigh-
bors to the community and
pass on information about
local ordinances.
Were not out today to
solve a bunch of problems,
he said.
Were here to spend three
to five minutes at each house
talking about what it means
to be a good neighbor.
He said the majority of
residents in the Northside
community are not problem-
atic.
The Northside neighbor-
hood is a historically black,
low-income community
between Columbia and Lloyd
streets. Over the last decade,
students have begun to rent
homes in the neighborhood,
causing property values to
rise and force out many long-
term residents who couldnt
afford to stay.
Lt. Lawrence Twiddy of
the UNC Department of
Public Safety said he hoped
the walk helped facilitate a
sense of community despite
the differences between resi-
dents.
You have a mix of students
and yearlong residents, he
said.
Twiddy said a Neighborhood
Night Out event will be held
on Sept. 12 at the Hargraves
Center to further encourage
friendly interaction between
students and yearlong resi-
dents.
Robert Barker, a Mebane
resident and UNC employee,
said he also wants to help
bridge the gap between
students and yearlong resi-
dents.
Its a great community
effort, he said.
Emily Gaspar , a Chapel
Hill resident and UNC
employee, said she hopes to
provide students with more
information about how to be
a better neighbor.
Part of the walks mission
is to educate students on
local ordinances that might
pertain to them as residents
of the Northside neighbor-
hood.
The Chapel Hill Town
Council passed an ordinance
in January 2012 that prohib-
its more than four cars from
parking at Northside homes.
The ordinance was crafted
in response to long-time
residents growing complaints
that students cars were filling
up the neighborhood.
Students, especially mem-
bers of Greek organizations,
participated in the walk
around Northside.
Senior Ross Masters , pres-
ident of Chi Phi fraternity,
said some students involved
in fraternities or sororities
live in the Northside neigh-
borhood.
He said he was hoping stu-
dents and yearlong residents
would learn to not step on
each others toes.
Stephen Stephano, a UNC
senior and president of Delta
Kappa Epsilon fraternity,
agreed with Masters.
Were part of this commu-
nity as well, he said.
city@dailytarheel.com
Were here talking about what it means
to be a good neighbor.
Aaron Bachenheimer,
director of the UNC Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life and Community Involvement
Students improve neighbor relations
dth/meLISSa key
Linda Smith, right, meets Delores Bailey and Lee Storrow as part of the Good Neighbor Walk.
Seniors Graduating
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Apply via Careerolina Deadline: 9/8/13 at 11:59PM
Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 12
News Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 13
On the wire: national and world news
Mubarak may be freed
from jail this week
CAIRO (MCT) Former
Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak, who is on trial for
murder-related charges in the
deaths of hundreds of protest-
ers in 2011, may be released
from prison this week after a
judge set aside a corruption
case against him.
He ll be out in a couple of
days, said Mubaraks lawyer,
Farid Deeb.
The 85-year-old former
leader remains in custody in
connection with another graft
case but is expected to be
cleared of those charges after
his family reportedly paid
restitution.
Reuters news service
quoted a judicial source as
saying Mubarak would spend
another two weeks behind
bars before judicial authori-
ties made a final decision in
the outstanding case against
him.
There is also the possibil-
ity that prosecutors could file
new charges against the for-
mer president.
Mubaraks release would
essentially mean he would be
free on bail while he stands
trial for the deaths of more
than 800 protesters who
were killed by security forces
and paid thugs during the
2011 uprising that ended his
30-year rule.
His release would likely
incite fresh unrest at a time
the military-installed govern-
ment is cracking down on the
Muslim Brotherhood follow-
ing the coup last month that
brought down Islamist presi-
dent Mohamed Morsi.
Security forces have killed
more than 800 Brotherhood
supporters and anti-mili-
tary demonstrators since
Wednesday.
Since his arrest two years
ago, Mubarak has loomed
over the public consciousness
even as the countrys political
and economic turmoil has
deepened.
His possible release from
Tora prison would signal
for many that the remnants
of the old guard are back in
power and that the revolution
that promised a new democ-
racy has been sidetracked by
the army.
Marijuana industry
eager for tax deductions
WASHINGTON, D.C.
(MCT) As Congress wres-
tles with big budget cuts, one
budding industry wants to
help out the federal govern-
ment with a novel message:
Tax us, please.
Marijuana businesses and
their backers say legalizing
the drug and taxing it like
alcohol would add billions to
the federal treasury.
Some analysts dismiss
a pot tax bonanza as far-
fetched, neither likely nor
lucrative. But the idea is stir-
ring newly serious debate on
Capitol Hill.
The Senate Finance
Committee, for instance,
included marijuana taxes in
an options paper listing
fresh possible sources of rev-
enue.
In the House of
Representatives, legislation
is pending on two tracks. The
first would legalize marijua-
na, tax it and regulate it on a
national scale. Even advocates
dont expect that to pass any-
time soon. A less ambitious
bill called the Small Business
Tax Equity Act would allow
the Internal Revenue Service
to provide immediate breaks
on federal income taxes for
marijuana businesses.
Susan Powells father
refuses to give up search
PUYALLUP, Wash. (MCT)
Chuck Cox was leaving
home again.
In early summer, he load-
ed up his black Dodge Ram
truck with the big V-8 engine
and headed southeast.
This time, one of his three
surviving adult daughters
rode shotgun to answer non-
stop calls on his cellphone,
with two volunteer private
investigators trailing in a
van.
Anything to find Susan.
With the certitude of an
old investigator, Cox recently
sat inside his living room in
this Pacific Northwest town,
recounting his relentless life
on the road, part of the four-
year quest to find his third-
born daughter.
For a week, after reach-
ing northern Oregon on that
June trip, the search party
leapfrogged its way along
Interstate 84, stopping at
every exit on the 485-mile
stretch between Pendleton,
Ore., and Tremonton, Utah
consulting local police, dis-
tributing fliers at gas stations.
They examined roadside
ditches and woods, trying to
think like criminals looking to
get rid of a body.
Cox looked strangers in
the eyes, shook their hands
and introduced himself as the
father of Susan Powell, the
28-year-old Utah stockbroker
and mother of two whose
disappearance in December
2009 made national head-
lines.
The 58-year-old Cox
believes his daughter was
abducted and says evidence
suggests her husband, Josh
Powell, may have disposed of
her body somewhere along
this mostly isolated stretch
of I-84.
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News Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 14
Abortion law to tighten regulations
By Hayley Fowler
Staff Writer
Even after Gov. Pat
McCrory signed a contro-
versial abortion bill into law
late last month, the future of
abortion in North Carolina is
still unclear.
Senate Bill 353 imposes
more stringent facility regu-
lations on abortion clinics,
limits abortion coverage
under county or town health
insurance plans, prohibits
abortion based on a fetus
sex and amends the Womens
Right to Know Act to require
doctors to be present when
the woman takes an initial
abortion-inducing drug.
Opponents say the legisla-
tion could temporarily shut
down several clinics in the
state.
In every state where simi-
lar legislation was met, the
regulations did not have to do
with patient care or health-
care, said Paige Johnson,
spokeswoman for Planned
Parenthood of Central North
Carolina.They have to do
with facility issues issues
that have no bearing in safe
and legal abortions.
Johnson said in other states,
legislators aim to close clinics
through regulations that often
pertain to door-width sizes and
parking space requirements
costs some providers wont be
able to afford.
Bills similar to this have
been used nationwide to shut
down safe and legal clinics,
she said, adding that it was
introduced in North Carolina
with the same intent.
The timetable for the
regulations has not yet been
decided, according to the N.C.
Department of Health and
Human Services.
Anti-abortion group
N.C. Right to Life President
Barbara Holt said she sees the
Gov. Pat McCrory
signed Senate Bill
353 into law in July.
law as a much-needed update
to the system.
She said the health and
well-being of women should
be abortion clinics highest
priority, but she thinks that
care has been lacking.
She said she thinks abor-
tions have grave consequences
for women and their families,
a statement she can attest to
from firsthand experience.
My sister had an abortion
30 years ago, and Ive seen
what its done to her in her
life, she said.
But Sarah Preston, policy
director for the American
Civil Liberties Union of North
Carolina, said a provision in
the law that prevents some
healthcare providers from
covering abortions could be
detrimental for women.
A woman would be
forced to continue a cata-
strophic pregnancy that is
unhealthy for her simply
because she cannot afford
the high out-of-pocket cost
associated with the proce-
dure, she said.
The law states that abor-
tion can be covered when
the pregnancy is the result of
rape or incest, or when the
life of the woman is endan-
gered.
Preston said the only
option is to await the rule-
making process and antici-
pate how severe regulations
New director, renovations for the Union
By Katie Quine
Senior Writer
Even after last summers
multimillion-dollar renovation
of the Student Union, students
can still expect more changes
when returning this semester
including lockers, storage
units and a new director.
While 2012 updates to the
Union boasted a 24-hour
Wendys, presentation area
and meditation room, this
summers renovations bring
smaller changes ones that
new Student Union Director
Crystal King said will
improve the experiences of
many students.
We do have 30 lockers
available for student use, and
hopefully they ll really speak
to the needs of our commuter
population, who dont have
the luxury of all this addition-
al space on campus to house
their things, King said.
Located in the Unions bot-
tom floor, the lockers are deep
enough to hold items such
as large backpacks and hel-
mets. While its free to use the
daily lockers, the project cost
$17,845 in student fees, which
rounds out to about 60 cents
per enrolled student, she said.
The Union had lockers
twice in the past, but they
were later scraped due to
infrequent use.
Fifteen 5-by-8-foot storage
units were also installed in
the Union at the request of
several student organizations
in an appeal for more storage
space. They have already been
allocated to student groups
for the school year, King said.
While plans for these
renovations had been in place
long before the summer
like everything else at UNC
theyre new to King, whose
first day as Union director
was July 29.
Being able to balance mov-
ing us forward, deciding a
plan and learning the Carolina
Way is all happening at the
same time, so that really is my
biggest challenge, she said.
King is already making
plans to meet with many stu-
dent groups and hopes to tap
into the interests of the stu-
dent population by increasing
the Unions social media use.
In terms of more tangible
goals, King will have her
hands full, with many future
Union renovations already in
the works.
Scott Hudson, senior asso-
ciate director of operations
for the Union, said students
can expect a new perfor-
mance space in the West
Lounge by the end of the
semester. Construction on the
space began this summer.
Its not going to be some-
thing that youre going to put
a play on there, but I think
that youre going to have a lot
of singer-songwriters, small
bands, acoustic bands, spoken
word, Hudson said. Theres
a lot of opportunity for space
like that.
Even though King is still
trying to get acclimated to
the new position, coworkers
say her outsider experience
in coming to UNC from the
University of Texas at Austin
will make her a great asset to
the team.
That experience will serve
us well and (help us) see
what the other large public
flagship institutions have
Lockers and storage
units will be added to
the Student Union.
and how they approach their
facilities and accomplish their
renovations there, said Tony
Patterson, senior associate
director of student life and
activities with the Union.
Shes very approachable, a
great person to talk to.
university@dailytarheel.com
dth/katie williams
Thirty new lockers located on the bottom level on the Student
Union are among some of the fall renovations. They are free to use.
will be for clinics in the state.
Femcare, an Asheville
abortion clinic, recently
shut down after the N.C.
DHHS announced that it
failed a routine inspection.
Representatives from Femcare
declined to comment.
As long as abortions
remain legal, Holt said abor-
tion clinics have to provide
the best care possible.
These folks wouldnt be
in this problem if they were
policing their own industry
and doing what they were
supposed to be doing by look-
ing out for the women they
serve, she said.
state@dailytarheel.com
W
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News Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 16
Alpha Epsilon Pi moves to Frat Court
By Daniel Schere
Assistant University Editor
When students begin rush-
ing fraternities this week,
they will find a new option on
Fraternity Court.
Alpha Epsilon Pi, UNCs
only Jewish fraternity, has
moved into the house once
occupied by Sigma Alpha
Epsilon as an apartment
annex.
Former Alpha Epsilon
Pi member Scott Bissinger,
who helped secure a seven-
year lease with Lawler
Development Group in
August 2012, said having a
house could help the frater-
nity recruit pledges.
When you have a house,
people walk in your door, he
said.
Bissinger said the the frater-
nity members have lived in a
few different houses since the
chapter was founded in 2002
but none was permanent.
He said the deal was able
to happen chiefly because it
made financial sense.
The main reason the
landlord needed a tenant is
so they could make money,
Bissinger said.
President Jacob Massey , a
computer science and applied
sciences major, said no one
currently in the fraternity has
had the experience of living in
a house with their brothers.
Its going to make a more
central place for our broth-
erhood to live together, be
together, have new opportu-
nities to do things together,
he said.
The building can house 26
people, which is about half of
the fraternitys membership.
Just living with 26 of your
best friends, theres really noth-
ing like that, Massey said.
The brothers began mov-
ing in just two weeks ago
and senior Jason Cooper, an
applied sciences major, was
one of the first to do so.
It was really amazing just
to walk through what was all
empty rooms essentially and
look at the space that weve
never had before in any of our
off-campus houses, he said.
Cooper, who is also co-presi-
dent of UNC Hillel, said Alpha
Epsilon Pi previously resided
in the Northside neighborhood
and faced stiff competition
with other fraternities during
the recruitment period.
UNCs only Jewish
fraternity now has a
house near campus.
Just living with 26 of your best friends,
theres really nothing like that.
Jacob Massey, Alpha Epsilon Pi president
dth/KAthlEEn doylE
Fraternity member Justin
Reyes, a philosophy major,
moves his speakers into his
new home on Friday.
dth/KAthlEEn doylE
Alpha Epsilon Pi moved into their new house in Fraternity Court on
Friday. The house was previously an annex of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Cooper said he thinks that
having a central meeting
space is key to recruitment
and brotherhood, but said he
hopes it does not lead to com-
placency.
We dont want to use this
as a crutch and say, Oh, now
that we have a house we dont
have to put in so much effort,
he said. Its actually the com-
plete opposite. We need to put
in twice the effort now because
we have the house.
The houses proximity to
campus, Franklin Street and
four neighboring fraterni-
ties gives Alpha Epsilon Pi a
much stronger public pres-
ence something that mem-
ber Justin Reyes, a junior phi-
losophy major, said is key.
Were going to make our
house very visible," he said.
We want the public to under-
stand our house. We want
people to be very familiar
with us.
I want people to get to
know the brothers.
university@dailytarheel.com
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Online gives top students access to the best online college classes
available. That means that you can access great professors and schools
as you work, travel, or participate in of-campus research programs.
Apply online at SemesterOnline.org/explore.
Online courses from: Greek Promo Day:
August 23rd 11-2 The Pit
Recruitment Kickoff:
August 25th 7pm Fetzer
Ice Cream Social:
August 28th 7pm McCorkle Place
Register TODAY at
uncpanhellenic.com!
Registration closes
August 25th
News Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 17
Carolina Performing Arts
2013-2014 season launches
the new initiative, Arts@
TheCore, which aims to bridge
the gap between the arts and
academics on campus.
Emil Kang, executive direc-
tor for the arts, spoke with
staff writer Sarah Ang about
the upcoming season.
Daily Tar Heel: Why is this
seasons overarching theme
reclaim, reinvent, rejoice?
Emil Kang: Last years The
Rite of Spring theme was
easy to understand because it
was a marker in history. This
year, we tried to think about
how we articulate our aes-
thetic through the program-
ming that we do. We spent
time discussing what were
looking for artists to express
through their art, and it was
those few words that came
out of it. In some respects,
you could argue that those
three words apply to all of
CPAs seasons.
For the first time, weve
also completely shifted away
from genre-based marketing
and programming. We used
to say, This is the World
Series, or This is the Jazz
Series. The general audience
likes that, but we feel that
theyre smarter than that and
can see across genres.
A person can listen to
Mozart and alternative coun-
try music. If we put up these
boundaries, people will think
about art in only those ways.
DTH: Whats the purpose of
the new CPA initiative Arts@
TheCore?
EK: This program relates
to how we engage faculty
members to use our program
in their teaching. Lets say
theres a class that addresses
homophobia. They might use
a dance company we have
that speaks to it. What Arts@
TheCore does is tries to actu-
ally institutionalize these
relationships between us and
faculty.
DTH: So youre reaching out
to connect and fund the pro-
fessors, hoping it will trickle
down to the students?
EK: Would an undergrad
go four years without going to
a basketball game? Its part of
the culture. Thats what were
trying to do.
The whole point of coming
to this university is that you
want the world to be at your
fingertips.
The whole Carolina experi-
ence is that this is a chance
for them to find what moves
them. The only way to do
that is by trying many things.
We cant force it down your
throat, but we want to add
dimension to the education.
DTH: How will you dis-
tribute the $800,000 grant
from the Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation for Arts@
TheCore?
EK: The idea (is) that were
launching this over five years.
We have a curatorial fellow,
a postdoctoral fellow and a
Mellon Distinguished Scholar,
professor Joy Kasson.
Her task, over the next
three years, is to develop
those relationships and create
a faculty advisory council to
actually launch all our perfor-
mances into the classroom,
so they become part of the
syllabi. They become a very
natural extension of teach-
ing, and the performance
becomes a three-dimensional
explanation of the professors
teachings. There are funds
for faculty to give free tickets
to their students, which is
worth it for us if the faculty
members insert it in their
teachings.
Q&A with CPAs Emil Kang
dth file/katie sweeney
Emil Kang is the executive director for the arts at UNC. Carolina
Performing Arts new initiative for this season is Arts@TheCore.
State budget provision favors Teach For America
By Sarah Brown
Assistant State & National Editor
The N.C. General Assembly
recently allocated $6 million
annually for the next two
years to grow the states Teach
For America program but
some in the education world
have mixed feelings about the
decision.
The move follows in the
footsteps of Texas, South
Carolina and Mississippi, all of
which provide significant state
support for Teach For America.
Teach For America recruits
college graduates to teach for
two years in underperforming
and poor districts. The pro-
grams teachers currently make
up less than 1 percent of North
Carolinas teaching force.
Robyn Schryer Fehrman,
executive director of Teach
For America in Eastern North
Carolina, said the rise in fund-
ing would allow the program
to expand further into key
low-income areas statewide.
Demand from our core
members in districts that are
historic placement areas (for
Teach For America) currently
exceeds supply, Fehrman said.
She said Teach For
America would also begin
maintaining a presence in
school districts in southeast-
ern North Carolina and in the
Triad over the next two years.
UNC-CH has ranked
among the top five large uni-
versities contributing to the
program nationwide over the
last two years. Seventy-five
2012 UNC-CH graduates
entered the program last year.
Leo Lopez, a 2012 gradu-
ate now teaching high school
social studies through the pro-
gram in Cincinnati, Ohio, said
he wasnt considering an edu-
cation career path until senior
year, when the program and
its mission caught his eye.
I liked that its a big net-
work its part of a move-
ment, Lopez said.
But Julian Vasquez Heilig,
an education professor at the
University of Texas-Austin,
said states shouldnt grant
limited resources to support a
program that already receives
funding from many founda-
tions and external sources.
In times of tight budgets,
Teach For America is awash
in money, he said.
In the most recent budget,
North Carolina phased out the
N.C. Teaching Fellows scholar-
ship, cut K-12 teacher tenure
and stopped bonuses for
teachers with masters degrees.
Heilig said several states,
including Nevada and
Minnesota, have recently
vetoed or discontinued state
funding for Teach For America.
He said they realized
that the programs teach-
ers are unlikely to remain in
the teaching profession for
long more than 80 per-
cent choose to pursue other
careers after three years.
Teach For America per-
petuates this revolving door,
he said. While (school dis-
tricts) are cutting experienced
teachers, theyre bringing in
temporary, cheap labor.
Heilig added that Teach
For America should require
participants to make four- or
five-year commitments.
But Fehrman said N.C.
programs will use some new
funding to improve retention.
Lopez said his Teach For
America experience has led
him to consider staying in the
teaching profession and he
said he knows of several oth-
ers in his corps in Cincinnati
who feel the same way.
It has exposed me to the
field of education and ... made
me a lot more passionate about
(improving) those disparities.
state@dailytarheel.com
DTH: Is this initiative meant
to bring more students to
Memorial Hall?
EK: Yes, but for the right
reasons. Our goal isnt sim-
ply to fill a house and force
people to go.
If thats all we want, then
we would bring performances
that students wanted, like
Mumford & Sons. Thats not
what we do.
arts@dailytarheel.com
The Printery
1201 Raleigh Road
Suite 102 Chapel Hill, NC 27517
(919) 942-4764 (919) 942-7553
www.theprinterychapelhill.com
qualitees@mindspring.com
Fine Quality Screenprinting
Featuring
Ladies
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T O T E S N U M B E R S T - S H I R T S S W E A T S C A P S



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Go Heels! Go Heels!
Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 18
NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS
Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to
publication for classifed ads. We publish Mon-
day 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 re-
ject, 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 hous-
ing or employment, in accordance with federal
law, can state a preference based on sex, race,
creed, color, religion, national origin, handicap,
marital status.
SOCCER PLAYERS AND REFEREES WANTED.
Come play recreational, coed soccer with
OCASL! We also need assistant referees
(will train). Good exercise, money. Contact
Rob: rob@ocasl.org.
AUDITIONS
for Carolina Choir, Chamber Singers, Mens
and Womens Glee Clubs THIS WEEK! Sign
up in Person Hall, room 106. More info:
skleb@email.unc.edu.
Child Care Services
CHILD CARE: Chapel Hill (north side of
town) family seeking a spirited and de-
pendable caregiver for 2 awesome kids
ages 6 and 10. Days can be fexible,
but must be available between 3:30-
6:30pm, 3-4 days/wk (9-15 total hrs/
wk). Sa/Su hours generally not needed.
Responsibilities include transporting
kids from school to home or extracur-
ricular activities (sports, music or just
hanging out at home). Must have reli-
able transportation and like to have fun
with kids without the use of an Apple
product. Background check required.
Ideal candidate will continue into
spring semester with similar schedule.
Contact bakernc@gmail.com or call
919-306-8827 with interest and previ-
ous experience, resume.
Child Care Wanted
LOOKING FOR ENERGETIC, compassionate,
reliable person to work with 9 year-old autistic
girl every Saturday beginning in August. If in-
terested, apply to triciawildman@yahoo.com,
cc: acquire2001@yahoo.com. Please include
cell number.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE: Chapel Hill fam-
ily seeking reliable individual for af-
terschool care of 2 children (9 and
11). 2:30-5.30pm daily, M-F. Respon-
sibilities include transporting children
to afternoon activities and help with
homework. Own reliable transporta-
tion is essential. Start date August 26th
to continue through academic year.
919-942-0867.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE needed for
2013-14 school year for 2 sweet girls, 6 and
9. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday 2:30-5pm.
Competitive salary. Must have excellent refer-
ences, clean driving record. Contact Allison at
nanny.tarheel@gmail.com, 919-724-5738.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE FOR 13 year-old boy.
School pick up, assist with homework and
other activities. 3-6:30pm, 2-3 afternoons per
week. Competitive pay. Call 919-489-5929 or
email lb12@duke.edu.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE: Professionals with
two kids (girl, age 7 and boy, age 11) seeking
child care M-F 3-6pm to include picking up kids
from school (Triangle Day School). We live near
NC 54 and I-40. Must have own car, non-smok-
er. Competitive pay +gas $. Email mankad.vs@
gmail.com or call 919-428-8244.
SITTER AND HOUSEHOLD ASSISTANT needed:
20-30 hrs/wk caring for 5 and 10 year-old
boy and girl. Duties include school pick up
and activities weekdays until 6pm, some
evenings. Flexible daytime hours for house-
hold organization. Excellent pay for the right
person. Clean driving record. Cooking a plus.
Send resume and references to battlepark68@
gmail.com.
CHILD CARE: Great kids (ages 11 and 8) need
fun, reliable sitter with car. M-W and maybe
Thursday, 2:45-5pm. $12/hr. Close to UNC.
Send resume +references to raymari34@
gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE: 2 UNC professors seek-
ing UNC student to help with afterschool
child care (3-5:30pm) for 11 year-old boy
and 8 year-old girl starting August 26. Ide-
ally M-F but job sharing is a possibility. Kids
school and home in Chapel Hill. Must have
reliable car, good driving record, references.
momshelper27516@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE needed for
2 girls (ages 5 and 7) to help with home-
work and drive to activities on Wednesdays
starting at 2:30pm. Must have references.
jshweky@yahoo.com.
SITTER WANTED: Looking for a sitter 2 or 3
afternoons a week from 2:30-5pm at Lake Ho-
gan Farm. Starting August 26. Transportation
needed. mcterrien@hotmail.com.
DRIVER,
CHILD CARE WANTED
Chapel Hill family looking for fun, responsible
student to transport our 12 and 14 year-old
boys to afterschool activities, start homework,
etc. Desire M-F, 3:30-6:30pm, but fexible. If
interested, please call 919-951-4274.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE wanted in Carr-
boro. M-F 2:45-5:45pm. 2 children, ages 7 and
3.5. Contact jenyourkavitch AT yahoo.com.
NANNY NEEDED: Fun, reliable sitter wanted
for 2 boys (ages 4 and 7) in Chapel Hill. 2
or 3 weekdays per week, 9am-5pm. Spe-
cifc days fexible. Can start at 12pm on
Monday, Wednesday or Friday if needed.
jps298@hotmail.com.
CHILD CARE WANTED: Afterschool child care
needed ASAP. M-Th, 3-6pm, in Chapel Hill
home. Looking for a reliable individual to care
for 2 children ages 13 and 15, Math and sci-
ence tutoring ability preferred. Must have reli-
able transportation and clean driving record.
Please contact daniellegraceking@gmail.com.
Competitive rate.
DRIVER NEEDED! Safe, reliable student with
car needed to drive 2 students from East Cha-
pel Hill High to The Hill Center. 11:50am pick
up (maximum 2 hour round trip from UNC). 2-5
days/wk. Text, call 919-619-4937.
SEEKING AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE for 12
year-old boy in Durham. We are Duke Law
and NC State professors. Will pay above mar-
ket wages for experienced babysitter with
good references and a clean driving record.
Hours M-F 3-6pm and some weekends. Email
adler@law.duke.edu.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE for 13 & 10
year-old boys in Chapel Hill. 2-3 afternoons
each week (Mondays, Thursdays and Fridays)
around 2:45-6pm. Must be comfortable with
2 yellow lab dogs and reliable. Also requires
safe driving habits and a car to be able to take
kids to afterschool activities. Please email
dunca033@yahoo.com.
AFTERSCHOOL BABY SITTER needed for 2013-
14 school year for 2 girls, 7 and 11. M-F 2:30-
6pm. Must have excellent references and clean
driving record. Email 4falek@gmail.com or call
919-960-2808.
CHAPEL HILL MOTHERS CLUB seeking babysit-
ters to be added to provider list that is shared
exclusively to club members every semester.
Reliable sitters who enjoy working with chil-
dren for $8-$10/hr. can email babysittingcoor-
dinator@gmail.com to be considered.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE: Sisters (ages
11 and 13) need fun, dependable sitter with
car. M-F, 3:30-5:30pm. $12-$14/hr. Carrboro.
Email biggers@unc.edu or text 919-360-0795.
M/TU PM CHILD CARE WANTED: Respon-
sible person with clean driving record
needed to pick up 2 children afterschool
and assist with homework on Mondays
and Tuesdays 3-6pm for upcoming
school year. Pay and gas money nego-
tiable, we live near PIttsboro. Contact
Jennifer at jlja1970@earthlink.net.
CHILD CARE NEEDED: UNC family seek-
ing excellent driver to pick up daughters
ages 11 and 14 from school and trans-
port to activities. Reliable car essential.
Availability needed Monday thru Friday,
2:30-5:30pm. $12-$15/hr. Contact 919-
451-9105 or asauls@email.unc.edu.
SITTER: Fridays only, to meet 11 year-
old girl at bus stop (2:30pm) in Chapel
Hill. Looking for responsible and en-
gaged student to spend creative time
for 2 hours beginning immediately.
jamiermiller@msn.com.
UNC PSYCHOLOGY PROFESSOR looking
for child care provider for happy and sweet
natured 9 month-old and 3 year-old boys.
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday 8am-5pm
with additional sitter availability on periodic
Wednesday and Friday a plus. Experience with
infants and toddlers preferred. Clean driving
record and reliable transportation needed.
Please email jenniferskirby@gmail.com for
additional details.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILDSITTER WANTED with
good references, car for 10 year-old boy in Hill-
sborough starting ASAP for 2-3 afternoons per
week. School pick up, assist with homework,
occasional driving. Non-smoker. Competitive
pay. Email giovanni.zanalda@duke.edu, call
919-428-3075.
PART-TIME
BABYSITTER NEEDED
Part-time babysitter needed for 2 children (6
and 9) who love sports, outdoors. Every M-F
2:50-5:30pm starting 9-3-13. School pick up
(Durham Academy), assist with homework,
and play! Must have child care experience,
references, non-smoker, energetic, speak
English, own transportation, like dogs. Com-
petitive pay. Call Laurie 425-246-4662 or email
laurietu@microsoft.com.
AFTERSCHOOL SITTER needed starting Au-
gust 26 for our 2 children (7 and 9). Must love
dogs too! M/Tu/W/Th. Hours: 2:30-5:30pm.
Must have car for afterschool activities. Email
eoconnell@s-3.com.
TUESDAY SITTER NEEDED
Looking for sitter Tuesdays from 4-8pm. Need
help with getting kids to activities and evening
routine. I have a 7, 5, 2 and 6 month-old. Live
next to campus. Clean driving record. Car pre-
ferred. References required. Pay competitive.
cherylbriner@gmail.com.
NANNY, HOUSEHOLD MANAGER NEEDED:
Children 6, 8, 13, 15. Must be organized, ener-
getic, warm, and kind with references. Duties:
Transporting children, errands, grocery shop-
ping, light housework. We provide minivan.
10-20 hrs/wk. Very busy schedule, approxi-
mately 3 afternoons per week. Optional morn-
ings. No weekends or evenings. $13/hr. Home
300 feet from UNC with parking. Resume with
GPA to BB(at)TeleSage.com Subject Nanny.
CHILD CARE: Seeking bilingual (Spanish),
friendly child care provider for 2 children (el-
ementary and middle school) from 3-6pm M/
Tu/W, occasional Friday. Help with Spanish
and math homework and transportation to af-
terschool activities. Carrboro. $13/hr. Contact:
jscompton@me.com, 919-886-9163.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE: Seeking ex-
perienced sitter 2-3 afternoons per week
for 2 awesome kids, ages 9 and 12. Must
be active, creative and have access to
own car. Position is in Chapel Hill. Salary
is competitive. 919-593-0599.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE PROVIDER needed for 9
year-old girl in Chapel Hill Tuesday, Wednes-
day, Friday. 2:30-5:30pm. Some local driving
for activities. Clean driving record. Car pre-
ferred. References required. 919-932-0636.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE for fun lov-
ing and caring twin 9 year-old girls in
Chapel Hill. Wednesday 2:30-5:30pm
required plus 1-2 days fexible. Reliable
car needed; salary based on experience.
Leave message at 919-636-9797 or
pajacu@gmail.com.
CHILD CARE NEEDED. 2 UNC law profes-
sors looking for a fun, responsible UNC stu-
dent to babysit 10 year-old daughter and
drive her to afterschool activities. Needed
for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday,
but job sharing possible. References and
good driving record required. Please email
mskenned@email.unc.edu.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE, CHAPEL HILL:
Looking for an energetic, reliable afterschool
caregiver for 3 children ages 5, 8 and 10 years-
old. 2:15-5:15pm. Start September 3. Ideally
looking for someone to be available for the full
school year. Own transportation needed. Con-
tact reneegambill@gmail.com, 919-240-4180.
SUNDAY SITTER
Wanted for 6 year-old boy. Must have reliable
and safe transportation. Must love SPORTS,
creative play and dogs. Most Sundays 9am-
5pm. Saturday fexibility a plus. $11/hr. Email
cabbytwo@netscape.net.
PART-TIME SITTER needed to pick up our 9
and 11 year-olds, drive them to activities and
have fun with them. Tu/Th 2:30-6pm. Call 919-
381-2041.
CHILD CARE WANTED 8/19 thru 8/22 in Car-
rboro, 9am-5pm. 2 children, ages 7 and 3.5.
Contact jenyourkavitch AT yahoo.com.
PART-TIME SITTER IN SOUTHERN VILLAGE.
Need a long term part-time sitter for our 3
boys, (10, 7, 4) and a big dog! School pick up
in neighborhood. Mondays 11:45am-4:30pm,
Tuesdays 12:45-7pm, Thursdays 11:45am-
4:30pm. Start week of 8/23. Experience, non-
smoking, education background a plus, very
competitive pay! Jennifer, 301-848-9406.
NANNY, CHILD CARE: Energetic, attentive,
loving nanny to care for 4 and 6 year-olds.
Mondays 7am-6pm. Reliable car to drive
children. Pay is negotiable. Contact Troy at
tlokitz@gmail.com.
SEEKING AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE for 2-3
days/wk for 2 kids, 10 and 13, in Carrboro.
Pick up from school and back home; help with
homework and driving to activities. Experi-
enced babysitter with references and a clean
driving record. Fluency in Spanish preferred.
Hours are 2:30-5:30pm; days are fexible. Email
dschoenf@yahoo.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE: Looking for
responsible, experienced babysitter for 3
girls ages 6, 8 and 10. Hours are M-F 2:45-
5:30pm, starting 9/3. Some driving may be
required. Must own a car and have a clean
driving record. Please send email with quali-
fcations, CV and 3 references attached to
vivianf_go@yahoo.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE IN CARRBORO: Sitter
needed for 2 sisters (9 and 6), starting 8-26-
13, M/Tu/W, 2:45-5.45pm. Non-smoking,
energetic individual who enjoys playing with
kids. Email resume to: caydin@email.unc.edu,
704-756-3274.
For Rent
FAIR HOUSING
ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in
this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or dis-
crimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin, or
an intention to make any such preference, limi-
tation, 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 opportuni-
ty basis in accordance with the law. To complain
of discrimination, call the U. S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development housing dis-
crimination hotline: 1-800-669-9777.
4BR/2.5BA, 2824 BOMBAY DRIVE: Must see
beautiful home. Meadows of Pagehurst, Dur-
ham. Fenced backyard. Short commute to
Chapel Hill. $1,295/mo. Call HCO Properties,
919-604-0093.
AVALABLE 9-1-13: 2BR/2.5BA Oaks condo
backs up to golf course, Living room with
freplace, dining room, Walk, bike or bus to
Meadowmont and Friday Center. $925/mo,
Fran Holland Properties, fhollandprop@gmail.
com or text 919 630-3229.
105 BPW ROAD, 3BR/2.5BA DUPLEX of-
fers hardwood foor in great room, great
kitchen, 2 car garage. On busline, pets
negotiable with fee. $1,395/mo. Fran
Holland Properties at fhollandprop@
gmail.com or text 919 630-3229.
WALK TO UNC CAMPUS. 2BR and study, new
renovation. Hardwood foors, new kitchen, fre
place, W/D, dishwasher. Central heat and air.
Off street parking. Available now. $1,400/mo.
merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143.
AVAILABLE NOW: Walk to Weaver Street in
Carrboro. 106-A Mulberry Street 1BR/1BA
duplex rents for $550/mo. Water included.
For more info contact Fran Holland Prop-
erties, fhollandprop@gmail.com or text
919-630-3229.
HOMES FOR RENT: Carrboro, 3BR/2.5BA. Big
porch. All kitchen appliances plus microwave,
large parking area on property. On busline.
Walk to shopping. $1,400/mo. 919-942-4027,
jay2coop@gmail.com.
CLOSE, QUIET, COMFY 2BR/2.5BA condo, 220
Elizabeth Street, Pets negotiable, on busline,
1.5 miles to UNC, new appliances, W/D, 2
parking spaces, swimming, tennis, trail $950/
mo., water included. ramkmu@yahoo.com or
919-274-6137.
WALK TO UNC: 3BR/1.5BA new renovation.
Hardwood foors, new kitchen, fre place,
W/D, dishwasher. Central heat and air. Off
street parking Available now. $1,500/mo.
merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143.
UNC 4BR/2.5BA,
50% OFF 1ST MO.
1ST MONTH HALF RENT: 4BR/2.5BA. $400/mo.
single room or $1,500/mo. the whole house.
Walk, bike or bus to UNC. End row unit, off
street parking. Quiet private block. Umstead
Park in walking distance with swimming pool,
basketball, tennis, softball, picnic and trails! 2
stories, fridge, range, dishwasher, W/D, central
AC, rear deck. 267-282-1390.
For Sale
FACULTY MOVING OUT SALE: Quality IKEA
furniture, futton tables, shelves, TV, stereo,
appliances etc. Please write for full listing.
mcantle@email.unc.edu.
Help Wanted
GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR: Chapel Hill Gym-
nastics has part-time positions available for
energetic, enthusiastic instructors. Applicants
with knowledge of gymnastic terminology and
progression skills preferred, but will train right
candidate. Send a resume to margie@chapel-
hillgymnastics.com.
HOUSEHOLD HELP WANTED. Looking for
someone to help with various household tasks
including: laundry, grocery shopping and food
preparation (following recipes), driving kids to
activities, organizing and picking up around
house, miscellaneous errands. About 20 hrs/
wk. Must have car and clean driving record.
Email Tanyalchartrand@yahoo.com.
PERSONAL ASSISTANT, TUTOR needed
full-time for busy executive. Requires
doing mundane tasks, grocery shopping
plus academic tutoring for high school
student. Range of initiatives requires
fexibility, willing to take on new chal-
lenges, 3.7+ GPA, high energy, ability to
execute with excellence, Microsoft Of-
fce, superior written, verbal communi-
cation skills. Base salary with full health
benefts. Resumes to missy.seaman@
sageworks.com
PART-TIME SWIM COACHES for local
USA Swimming club. 2-4 evenings per
week. Send resume and 3 references to
brentawatkins@gmail.com.
BABYSITTER AND DRIVER needed for weekday
afternoons (generally 3-5:30pm) to pick up
3 kids (ages 14, 12, 7) from Durham schools
and take home or to school practice, etc.
Generous pay and mileage provided. Email:
bill.steinbach@duke.edu.
DRIVER NEEDED
Monday thru Friday 11:15am-12:15pm. To
drive someone from Chapel Hill High School to
the Hill Center in Durham. $10/hr. +gas money.
Need someone to start ASAP! Reliability is a
must. 919-423-4214.
BARISTA: Reopening coffee bar at the FedEx
Global Learning Center for the fall semester.
We are seeking part-time baristas. No nights
and no weekends. Competitive pay plus tips.
Fun and fast paced atmosphere. Previous baris-
ta experience is a plus. Please apply in person
at EspressOasis at the Beach Cafe inside Brink-
hous Bullitt. 919-537-3612 for directions.
CHILDREN. Chidlrens Boutique in Chapel Hill
is hiring for afternoon and weekend help.
Must be cheerful, responsible and great with
kids. Please send your resume to jngarstka@
yahoo.com.
THE CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO YMCA after-
school is looking for bus drivers. Hours will
be Monday thru Friday, 2-3pm but a chance
of longer hours exists. Class B CDL with P
endorsement is required. Applications can
be found on our website, www.chcymca.
org, or you can apply at the Chapel Hill
Branch at 980 MLK Blvd. Send applications to
nchan@chcymca.org or turn in at the Y.
CARRBORO RECREATION AND PARKS (Athlet-
ics): Part-time temporary. YOUTH BASEBALL
UMPIRES: August thru October for games in-
volving ages 6-12, umpiring experience and/or
sound baseball, softball knowledge preferred,
2-8 games/wk played M-F evenings and Sat-
urdays. Pay rate: $16-$21/game, depending
on league. BASKETBALL OFFICIALS: November
thru February for games played M-F evenings
and Saturdays, 2-10 games/wk involving ages
6-15, fexible scheduling. Previous experience
and/or sound basketball knowledge preferred.
Pay range: $17-$22/game. ADULT SOFTBALL
UMPIRES: Juy thru October for games played
on Tu/Th evenings, 3-6 games/wk, previous
experience and/or sound slow pitch softball
knowledge preferred. Pay rate: $21-$23/
game. FACILITY, ACTIVITY SUPERVISORS:
August thru October, 4-20 hrs/wk; weekday,
evenings and weekend hours. Assist with
special events, general and athletic programs.
Recreational program experience and knowl-
edge preferred. Pay rate: $9/hr. Positions are
open until flled. For more info, call 919-918-
7364. For an application visit our website at
www.townofcarrboro.org. EOE.
PET SITTING: Beautiful larger dogs need midday
walks on Tuesdays and Thursdays for about 45
minutes in our neighborhood. Must be experi-
enced and comfortable with dogs. $15/hr. Email
northchapelhillmom@gmail.com.
DELIVERY PERSON NEEDED: Food deliv-
ery person needed IMMEDIATELY. Must
have car. Apply at Tracys NY Deli, 400
South Elliott Road, Chapel Hill, NC 27514 or
tracysnewyorkdeli@yahoo.com.
PART-TIME EVENINGS and weekends at La
Vita Dolce, Southern Village. Need barista,
counter service. Starting immediately. Apply in
person, Sandy, 919-968-1635.
PART-TIME JOB AT IGLOOYOGURT: FroYo
Shop in Governors Village is hiring. 15-20
hrs/wk, afternoon and/or evening shifts,
reliable transportation a must. Interested?
jobs@iglooyogurt.com.
EMPLOYMENT: The Carolina Brewery is
looking for experienced line cooks, serv-
ers and host staff for both our Chapel
Hill and Pittsboro locations. Check out
our website for more info http://caro-
linabrewery.com/about/employment/
919-942-1800.
CLINICAL TEACHING TUTORS NEED: SAT, ACT,
GRE, math, science (advanced), all subjects,
ADHD, LD, Dyslexia coaching, special ed, liter-
acy. MAT students great. Superb spoken Eng-
lish, scholars, excellent character, personality.
Car. Days and hours available for entire school
year. Chapel Hill, Cary, Pittsboro, Hillsborough.
Available 7 days. Send days and hours to:
jlocts@aol.com, $20/hr and up, TBD.
CHAPEL HILL GYMNASTICS is seeking a
part-time front desk registration clerk to
work approximately 15-20 hrs/wk early af-
ternoons and evenings, some Saturdays
8:30am-12:30pm. Duties include calculating
and accepting customer payments for tuition,
events and vendor items, answering phones,
scheduling birthday parties and managing
class enrollment. Please send a resume to
margie@chapelhillgymnastics.com.
HIRING NOW: CATERING server and bartender
positions for all home UNC football and bas-
ketball games. Catering experience NOT neces-
sary. Only responsible, reliable candidates need
apply. Please email resume to rockytopunc1@
gmail.com if interested. Perfect job for stu-
dents!
THE CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO YMCA is looking
for afterschool counselors. Counselors actively
participate in sports, homework, crafts and
other activities each afternoon with students
grades K-8. Hours are generally 2-6pm, Mon-
day thru Friday. Applications can be found on
our website, www.chcymca.org, or you can ap-
ply at the Chapel Hill Branch at 980 MLK Blvd.
Send applications to nchan@chcymca.org or
turn in at the Y.
Sublets
SUBLET IN CARRBORO!
2BR/1.5BA condo. 1,056 square feet. Fantas-
tic Cedar Court unit! Walk to everything in
downtown Carrboro! Updates include all new:
kitchen cabinets, granite countertops, appli-
ances, windows, lighting, hardware, bathroom
vanity, hot water heater. Hardwood foors re-
fnished and new interior paint. W/D located on
frst foor! $1,250/mo. Available October 1st or
before (prorated). Email for more information:
jncellini@gmail.com.
Tutoring Wanted
ACADEMIC COACH for high school junior.
Approximately 2 hrs/day, 10-12 hrs/wk.
Requires GPA of 3.7+ as course load is
diffcult. Ideally looking for 2 years if
possible. Location is Raleigh, Cary bor-
der. Compensation $25/hr. Applicant
must have fexibility. Email resumes to
missy.seaman@sageworks.com.
Wheels for Sale
1999 AUDI A6, 103K, dealer maintained recent-
ly serviced inspected tires great shape, new oil,
flter, power steering pump, belts. Bose Audio.
Drives great. $5,500, OBO. 919-560-8527.
Announcements Child Care Wanted Tutoring Help Wanted Tutoring Child Care Wanted
Help Wanted Help Wanted
Announcements Announcements Announcements Announcements
For Rent


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Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 7 -- Theres temporary confu-
sion. Friends are there to support you,
not to argue. Listen to them, and to your
inner wisdom. Take copious notes on
whats determined.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 7 -- Get the others to do as
much of the talking as possible. Stay busy
and relaxed, with fuid motion. Consider
new opportunities. When in doubt, rely
on family and friends for inspiration.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8 -- Theres a chaotic mo-
ment. Listen carefully, without revealing
what youre learning. Keep track of your
spending. You may have to turn down a
friends request. Sort out the details be-
fore making a determination. Watch for
misunderstandings.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 7 -- Figure out how much
you can afford to put away. Give up
something you dont need. Postpone an
outing. Offer advice only if asked. Have
what you need delivered. Respond to
queries quickly. Keep a secret.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 -- This Full Moon highlights
relationship pleasures and issues. Com-
munication fows, if you start it. Being
right can cost more than its worth. Get
yourself a special, inexpensive treat.
Work it out for love.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 9 -- A document arrives. Keep
communications channels open, but
dont get the message out yet. Prepare
the words. Budget for upcoming ex-
penses, including long-distance shipping.
Anticipate change, and be poised to hit
send when the timings right.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Cut business-related ex-
penses. There could be a misunderstand-
ing. Especially review fxed and repetitive
costs. With care, you come out ahead.
Dont gossip about work. If theres a mis-
take, fx it and start over. Save time for
fun.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 6 -- Measure your words care-
fully. Express ideas out loud. Stand up for
yourself. Today and tomorrow settle into
a homebody phase. Clean a mess, sort a
drawer, or take a delicious walk.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 7 -- Research the situation.
Shop carefully. Coordinate your schedule
to avoid conficts. Postpone a romantic
rendezvous temporarily. Provide emotion-
al support. Enjoy the feeling. Get used to
it. Listen frst. Dont talk about it.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 9 -- Ask questions, or write
down a list and share it. Record new
ideas. Provoke some controversy over
priorities. Boldly try new techniques and
design. It can proft. Call if youre going
to be late.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 9 -- Tie up loose ends. You cant
be two places at the same time... commu-
nication breakdown. Friends mean well,
but dont understand. Watch out for hid-
den agendas. Make a public announce-
ment. Share some loving words.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 6 -- Decline a public outing in
favor of a private invitation. Avoid step-
ping on toes. Exchange loving communi-
cation. Sometimes listening is a great gift.
Pay off debts frst. Dont leave something
important behind. Youre gaining respect.
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To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If August 20th is Your Birthday...
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News Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 19
Abortion law effects
Senate Bill 353 could lead
to the shutdown of abortion
clinics throughout the state.
See pg. 14 for story.
Union renovations
The space saw several
changes this summer, from
lockers to a new director.
See pg. 14 for story.
Fraternitys new home
Alpha Epsilon Pi moves
to the former home of Sigma
Alpha Epsilon in Fraternity
Court. See pg. 16 with story.
Q&A with Emil Kang
Carolina Performing
Arts executive director for
the arts talks new initiative.
See pg. 17 for story.
games
Solution to
Mondays puzzle
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
2013 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
Jason Melehani, 25, a
UNC-CH Ph.D. and M.D.
student at the UNC School
of Medicine, was recently
appointed executive director
of the Libertarian Party of
North Carolina.
State & National Editor
Madeline Will spoke to
Melehani about his new job.
DAILY TAR HEEL: Tell me
about your background.
JASON MELEHANI: I did my
undergrad at UCLA. I actu-
ally studied microbiology
immunology and graduated
in 2010, moved out here to
start medical school at UNC
and I got involved with the
Libertarian Party shortly after
coming here. But Ive always
been very libertarian and very
interested in politics, so I just
started getting deeper and
deeper into it as time passed.
DTH: What are your respon-
sibilities as executive director?
JM: The primary reason
they created this position and
put me into it was to have
a more serious fundraising
strategy. Thats kind of my top
goal start getting in touch
with people whove been sup-
portive over the years and get
them to make financial con-
tributions.
It also includes pretty
much everything across the
board from political strategy
and candidate training to
election research and identi-
fying target districts to run, as
well as organizational duties.
DTH: What are your per-
sonal goals in this position?
JM: Ideally, Id like to see
the Libertarian Party be put
on the map here in North
Carolina. Theres a lot of
opportunities here there's
recently been an election
law change which got rid of
straight-ticket voting, and
thats something we believed
hampered us tremendously in
the past.
Now, as a person goes
through the ballot, they ll
see the races and its maybe
a Republican versus a
Libertarian and there's no
Democrat, or the other way
around, and I think that will
provide us a more level play-
ing field to start from.
This year, were focusing
on the municipal races, city
councils, town councils. Next
year, were looking at the state
house and were going to try
to make a big push for that.
DTH: I saw that the
Libertarian Party in North
Carolina has grown?
JM: The state of North
Carolina keeps track of the
total number of registered
voters for each party, and our
numbers since January of
2012 have gone up 70 percent.
DTH: What do you think is
the reason for this growth?
JM: I think people are just
really getting fed up with the
two parties, the Democrats
and the Republicans.
I think a lot of people are
kind of disheartened, disil-
lusioned with the two main
parties and are looking to us
as an opportunity to change
the system.
DTH: North Carolina has
been known as a purple state.
Where do Libertarians fit in?
JM: If you look at the num-
ber of registered Democrats
and Republicans and the unaf-
filiated voters, the unaffiliated
has been going up while the
other two are going down.
We believe very strongly
that if people knew about
us, they would likely identify
with us.
DTH: Do you think 2014
and 2016 could be the years
for Libertarians?
JM: I don't know, I hope to
God it is.
Every time, particularly
for presidential elections,
it seems like a lot of people
dont have a choice theyre
happy with, but they just vote
against the choice theyre
more unhappy with. Im hop-
ing with the right candidates
and the right places and the
right races with the right
volunteer support I dont
think we're going to elect a
Libertarian president in 2016
or a governor in 2016, but if
we can get four or five people
in the state house, that would
be a tremendous change.
state@dailytarheel.com
Q&A with new Libertarian director
Small gas
spill brings
EPA to town
By Jenny Surane
City Editor
The owner of a Chapel Hill
gas station and a contractor
were cited this week by state
officials for involvement in a
gas spill that contaminated 1.6
milesof creeks and streams.
Danny Smith, the regional
supervisor for the N.C.
Department of Environment
and Natural Resources, issued
a notice of violation to the
owner of a BP gas station at
1201 Martin Luther King Jr.
Blvd. and William Bishop, a
contractor hired to do mainte-
nance work at the station, after
a submersible pump chan-
neled gasoline into Chapel Hill
creeks through a storm drain.
The contractor excavated a
hole to install footings at the
gas station that would extend
the stations awning. During
this summers storms, the
workers had to set up a sub-
mersible pump to pipe water
out of the excavated areas.
But after a piece of concrete
punctured the stations nearby
gas tank on Aug. 2, the sub-
mersible pump began to pipe
gasoline into nearby water-
ways, said Ken Rhame, a U.S.
Environmental Protection
Agency coordinator who
helped with the spills cleanup.
The owner and contractor
face up to $25,000 in penal-
ties for violating state envi-
ronmental regulations.
One dead fish
The tank might have con-
tained up to 3,000 gallons of
gas, according to Smiths letter.
The gas made its way into
Crow Branch Creek, Booker
Creek and an unnamed
tributary that leads into Crow
Branch Creek, said Autumn
Romanski, an environmen-
tal specialist for the N.C.
Department of Environment
and Natural Resources.
Officials still dont know
how many gallons went into
the creeks, Romanski said, but
her department has requested
information from the station-
owner in its violation notice.
Two environmental groups
hired to help with the cleanup
have 30 days after receiving the
notice of violation to respond.
Romanski said she
observed one dead fish during
her field work at the site.
Responsive and timely
The Chapel Hill Fire and
Police Departments were
praised for the quick response
to the spill by state officials.
The fire department worked
quickly to alert the Public
Works Division and began con-
structing an underflow dam,
which allows water to flow
under while capturing gasoline
on the surface of the dam.
They coordinated with
other departments in the city
really well to establish proper
containment and minimize
the impact, Rhame said.
A CHPD officer first arrived
on the scene and shut off the
pump, Romanski said, and his
quick response stopped the gas
from spilling into creeks three
hours after the leak began.
That certainly went a
long way to prevent things
from being worse than they
were, Romanski said.
city@dailytarheel.com
dth/kaki pope
The BP gas station on Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. is under
construction following a gas spill on Aug. 2.
Unique training toughens UNC
By Grace Raynor
Assistant Sports Editor
The North Carolina vol-
leyball team had just sat
down for a team meeting
in Carmichael Arena when
coach Joe Sagula briefly
stepped outside to bring them
in. There were two of them
one man and one woman.
The woman, small in stat-
ure, entered first. She didnt
say much. The man followed.
Sporting a shirt with a mili-
tary-style logo on the pocket,
he immediately created a
sense of order.
The first thing he did
was when he walked in, he
yelled at a girl to sit up and
get her arms uncrossed, said
senior outside hitter Kayla
Berringer. The man and
woman were both representa-
tives of The Program, a moti-
vational organization that
sends trainers to high school,
college and professional
teams to enhance leadership
and team-building skills.
With 11 of the teams 18
players being underclass-
men, all morning, Sagula had
emphasized stepping up on
the court. The representatives
from The Program, he thought,
would enhance that initia-
tive. The man and the woman
worked with the team for two
days, four hours each day.
At the conclusion of the
first day, the man turned to
freshman setter Abbey Curry
and told her that she alone
was responsible for ensuring
that her entire team made it
to the next days workout.
He told her while we were
in the gym, Between now and
tomorrow morning at 6:30
a.m. Im going to call you. Get
your team ready, be here at
the time specified, sopho-
more Victoria McPherson
explained. That call came at
4 a.m. and with it, a demand
to gather the team at the pool
within the hour.
McPherson and Berringer
both said the morning pool
workout was like nothing they
had ever experienced before.
We had to do stuff in the
pool where we were wearing
sweatshirts and having to
switch sweatshirts and get
them on while were swim-
ming and treading water.
Sagula praised his teams
ability to perform such a
daunting task, and for the
first time in 24 years of
coaching, canceled the annual
preseason fitness test.
They hate it, he said. Its
a test of their fitness, of how
hard they can go endur-
ance. We didnt even have to
do it, because we knew they
were fit.
As they begin the season
bonded tighter than before,
the Tar Heels have already
translated what they learned
from The Program to the
court. After three straight
seasons of missing the Sweet
16, Sagula is confident this
could be the year his squad
breaks through to find suc-
cess at the next level.
Sometimes coaches are
hopeful Well I think were
going to be really good. Im a
little more conservative, he
said.
I dont sandbag it usually.
But I really feel this is a team
that can get to that level
that Sweet 16. Weve got work
to do, and weve got to do it.
sports@dailytarheel.com
dth/isabella bartolucci
Jordyn Schnabl (right) will take over most of the setting duties
this season after the Tar Heels graduated senior Cora Harms.
A gas station owner
and a contractor face
a $25,000 fine.
The volleyball team
uses unconventional
preseason practices.
(C)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACross
1 Red planet
5 Put down stakes, maybe
11 Jack Sprats
no-no
14 Yeah, whatever!
15 It traditionally translates
to O come
16 Elem. school basics
17 Facts and figures
18 Thing to make when a
Post-it isnt handy
20 Surgeons tools
22 Call it a night
23 Fan magazine for teens
25 Exclusive, as
communities
26 Veto vote
27 Blessed __ the
peacemakers: Matthew
29 Carrying a weapon
32 Clearance event
34 Enveloping glow
38 Best Picture of 1965, and
a hint to the
ends of
18-, 23-, 50-
and 59-Across
41 Geologic
periods
42 Any time now
43 Not up to the
task
44 Distant
45 Supermarket
chain with a
red-and-white
logo
46 Take off
50 Warm, muted color
56 Former Indian prime
minister Gandhi
58 College class staples
59 Frenzied state
61 Shabby wear
62 Prefix with cycle
63 Sprawling property
64 To be, to Berlioz
65 Scale fifth
66 Game with falling blocks
67 Revolutionary Trotsky
Down
1 Central position
2 Beaded calculators
3 Change the price of
4 Blah quality
5 Paid a visit
6 Freds dancing sister
7 High-IQ group
8 Pasadena winter hrs.
9 Floride, par exemple
10 Downpour
11 Forward-facing side
12 Clarinetist Shaw
13 The way things are going
19 Gun lobby org.
21 Site of much Spanish art
24 Eagles picker-upper
28 Gridiron enforcer
29 Had a bite
30 Pi follower
31 Dudes
32 Sleep-disturbing sound
33 Excitement
34 In the altogether
35 Take advantage of
36 Shred
37 Not just sit by
39 Springsteens Born in
the __
40 Physical strength
44 Polecat relative
commonly kept as a pet
45 Needs scratching
46 London elevators
47 Month after diciembre
48 Aleve competitor
49 Be in the game
51 Raised church area
52 Prefix with linear
53 Give a speech
54 Part of UNCF
55 German steel city
57 Church recess
60 Former comm. giant
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Interest Meetings
Opinion Tuesday, August 20, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 20
EDITorIal BoarD mEmBErs
Established 1893, 120 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATUrED TwEET
Hairston should face
the consequences
TO THE EDITOR:
I am very disappointed
that the athletic direc-
tor indicated that P.J.
Hairston would play some
games.
I am personally embar-
rassed that he is even con-
sidered for further mem-
bership on the team and
the University.
What does he have to do
for an encore in order to
be dropped from the team
permanently?
He followed up his
previous charges with a
93-mph speeding ticket
and 12 more parking ticket
violations were found.
He obviously has no
regard for the standard
rules of conduct for
citizens generally and ath-
letic representatives of the
University in particular.
He is an embarrassment
to the school, coaches and
fans.
I would rather face the
consequences of a few
more basketball games
lost then have him contin-
ue to represent the school.
Secondly, it is of some
concern if the players still
on the team would accept
him as a member in view
of his past run-ins with the
law.
That would be an
endorsement of his behav-
ior by his fellow team-
mates!
Richard Lynch
Charlotte
Stop cuts to local
food assistance
TO THE EDITOR:
On July 11, the House
passed a version of the
farm bill that removed
nutritional and food
stamp assistance and
other key protections, all
in the name of budget
cuts.
With only nine more
legislative days before the
farm bill expires, the time
crunch that will be dif-
ficult, if not impossible,
to beat, even though this
deadline comes after a
nine-month extension.
The drastic spending
cuts are strongly opposed
by the Democrats in both
the House and the Senate,
with the Senate going
so far as to say that they
will not have any part in
a farm bill that does not
include food stamps.
The Houses version
also cuts the Conservation
Stewardship Program that
helps conserve natural
resources and includes
anti-farmer provisions that
would end regulation for
fair and competitive agri-
cultural markets.
Although the House
passed an unsupportive
bill, we want to encourage
the Senate to pass a bill
that would lend the great-
est support to local farmers
like the ones we value in
North Carolina.
The Senate bill has high-
er funding for rural devel-
opment, crop insurance,
LETTErS TO
THE EDITOr
I <3 Bugatti, but whoever they have booking
things over there is on whatever Ace Hood was
the night before he woke up in a Bugatti.
@yackogallagher, after the homecoming concert announcement
Would an undergrad go four years without
going to a basketball game? Its part of the
culture. Thats what were trying to do.
Emil Kang, on Carolina Performing Arts upcoming season
EDITOrIAL CArTOON By Matt Leming, mleming@live.unc.edu
Meat
the new
Franken-
Burger
T
he so-called test-tube
burger (or, in a slightly
less appetizing twist,
the Frankenburger) is the
culmination of a five-year
experiment by Dutch scientist
Mark Post. It involved growing
cattle stem cells in-vitro into
20,000 strands of protein. The
meat was then combined
with salt, breadcrumbs and
egg powder and formed into
a patty.
Is this burger something that
could, or should, appear on the
dinner table anytime soon?
Its a tough call.
While the experiment cost
250,000 euros, Post is con-
vinced he will eventually find
a way to make the product
economically viable. Although
the idea of meat flipped out
of a Petri dish makes some
squeamish, I also can see how
it might appeal to vegetarians
who have ethical concerns
about the poor treatment of
farm animals, but also crave a
good hamburger (I ll admit it,
veggie burgers just dont taste
the same).
So would test tube meat solve
this problem? The material is
technically meat, but no animals
are killed to produce it. That
means no animals were born
in an unhygienic birthing facil-
ity, caged in a tiny crate or run
through a slaughter line. One of
the most well-known organiza-
tions for animal welfare, People
for the Ethical Treatment of
Animals, is on board with the
idea of the lab burger.
Its also an environmen-
tal win. According to a
2006 report by the United
Nations Food and Agriculture
Organization, industrial agri-
culture contributes on a mas-
sive scale to climate change,
pollution, energy use and biodi-
versity decline. The meat indus-
try, particularly cattle farming,
is the worst culprit, contribut-
ing about 18 percent of global
greenhouse gas emissions.
And the demand for meat is
growing the World Health
Organization says meat pro-
duction is projected to rise to
376 million tons by 2030, an
increase of more than 150 tons
from current statistics.
But before we start replac-
ing all Happy Meals with lab
burgers, we have to look more
closely at what this meat actu-
ally is. First of all, is test tube
meat safe? The concerns about
Genetically Modified Organism
(GMO) crops having damaging
side effects in the long run are
only magnified when it comes to
a product as new and unstudied
as human-created beef.
Ethically, some vegetarians
and vegans oppose the meat on
the grounds that it reinforces
the idea that animal products
are necessary at all. If one advo-
cates the complete rejection
of animal products, lab meat
seems like an expensive, round-
about way of supporting the use
of animals for our own benefit.
But I dont know if I agree
with them. Theres more to
be said for the ethics of eat-
ing meat than a just say no
approach. Hamburgers give
people enjoyment and plea-
sure, and if we can provide
that without killing an animal
and hurting the planet (as long
as its safe), Im all for it.
So maybe in a few years,
well be able to chow down on
delicious, juicy Frankenburgers
guilt-free in Lenoir.
And yes, I will want fries
with that.
8/21: Stop and frisk
Columnist Trey Mangumon a
recent NYC policy.
N
E
X
T
Holly Beilin
Lean and Green
Senior global studies major from
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Email: hbeilin@live.com
SPEAK OUT
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SuBMiSSiOn
Drop-off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary Street, Chapel
Hill, N.C. 27514
E-mail: opinion@dailytarheel.com
editOrS nOte: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily
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the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which is made up of
eight board members, the opinion editor and the editor.
conservation accountability
and organic farms.
So much is up in the air
for passing the new five-
year bill.
But we need to ensure
that the local farmers and
people that need the sup-
port the most receive it, and
partisan arguments dont
get in the way with the
goals of nourishing people
with healthy local food.
Amelia Fisher 14
Public Policy
State workers deserve
bigger paychecks
TO THE EDITOR:
The last I knew, five
additional vacation days
didnt feed a state employee
or his/her family. I guess
our state legislators want
to run this state with vol-
unteers.
Thankfully, I dont con-
sider myself in poverty
something I am sure cant
be said for some of my fel-
low state employees.
So, for their sakes, I
can only hope we vote out
of office the legislators
who decided that state
employees don t need or
deserve a raise or that
retirees (who worked
many years for North
Carolina) don t deserve a
cost-of-living increase in
their pensions.
James Carpenter
Chapel Hill
Apply for student
government
TO THE EDITOR:
Welcome back, Tar
Heels!
Are you interested
in sitting on critical
University boards or com-
mittees?
Do you have a passion
for renewable energy, stu-
dent fees or safety?
Perhaps youre inter-
ested in serving on the
staff of the Speaker or of
the Student Congress as a
whole?
Congressional external
appointments are now
available!
Each year, the Student
Congress appoints students
of all demographic back-
grounds to serve in com-
mittees and positions across
campus.
The application process
for a number of positions
is now open for appoint-
ments of the legislative
branch of student govern-
ment.
Serving in these posi-
tions offers an opportunity
to engage with other stu-
dents, administrators, and
uphold the tradition of stu-
dent self-governance at our
beloved Carolina.
The application, along
with descriptions of
the positions, is avail-
able at http://tinyurl.
com/95thCongressAppts.
Applications are due on
Friday, Aug. 30 at 5 p.m.
Contact me at connor@
unc.edu with any questions.
I look forward to seeing
your application!
Connor Brady 14
Political Science
Speaker
95th Student Congress
I
n addition to
Kendall Marshall
and Taylor Swift,
@ChapelHillPD should
become a mainstay to all
self-respecting Twitter
feeds in Chapel Hill.
In a town with an age
demographic that trends
young, the use of social
media is a necessary com-
ponent of any outreach
program that hopes to
have a significant impact.
The Chapel Hill Police
Department has success-
fully done this by recent-
ly beginning to post the
times and locations of
upcoming speed enforce-
ment operations. This
#CHPD tweets
EDITOrIAL
strategy creates a much
safer traffic environment.
By embracing these
modern forms of media,
the Chapel Hill Police
Department has demon-
strated an effective way
to keep the roads safe.
Boasting more than
1,000 followers on
Twitter and hundreds of
likes on Facebook, the
department has the abil-
ity to reach a large por-
tion of the community.
With each tweet and
post about speed enforce-
ment operations, the
police department now
has the ability to slow
down traffic throughout
Chapel Hill.
This also demonstrates
proper priorities.
While many police
departments are often
accused of issuing unnec-
essary tickets in order to
meet quotas, this com-
munication demonstrates
that the Chapel Hill
police is more concerned
with keeping the streets
safe than gaining money
for the town through
fines.
If we don't write any
citations, we have com-
pleted our mission and
caused traffic to slow
down, said Drew Cabe,
crash investigation traffic
enforcement officer in a
recent CHPD Facebook
post.
With this use of social
media, the police depart-
ment is showing that it
is not afraid of keeping
up with the times and
staying connected to the
youth.
Chapel Hill Police
Department should
utilize social media.
U
NC-system
President Tom
Ross said last
week that he wants to end
tuition hikes for in-state
students this year.
After 10 years of tuition
increases, including a
much protested 13.5-per-
cent increase last year, a
freeze in tuition hikes is
a pleasant way to start off
the year.
However, this July, the
N.C. General Assembly
approved a two-year
budget that requires a
12.3 percent increase in
tuition for out-of-state
students at UNC-Chapel
Hill and three other
Please freeze hikes
EDITOrIAL
schools in the system.
It is unfortunate that
out-of-state students spe-
cifically will be hit with
higher prices, yet again.
These students have seen
tuition go up consistently,
so it is reasonable to cau-
tiously expect that this
promise may not last for
long.
It would be disappoint-
ing to see a year with no
tuition hikes followed by
a year with an unreason-
ably high spike in tuition
in order to compensate.
In a perfect world, this
freeze in tuition wouldnt
lead to massive increases
in years to come, or cuts
to funding for other
important and productive
programs on campus.
The tuition hikes will
make the school seem
less appealing to out-of-
state students who help
make the UNC experience
rewarding.
Balancing the budget
for a large public uni-
versity such as ours is an
unenviable task, especial-
ly with seemingly endless
cuts to the funding of the
UNC system.
President Ross should
follow through with his
promise to put the brakes
on tuition hikes in a way
that protects students in
the future.
Preventing a tuition
hike this year would be
would be the ideal situ-
ation, as long as it is not
at the expense of out of
state students or pro-
grams that make UNC
stand out and attract
excellent students.
President Ross
should fulfill his
tuition promise.
W
ith the new
school year
comes a new
era in UNCs history as
Chancellor Carol Folt ush-
ers in the class of 2017.
But this doesnt neces-
sarily mean all the issues
that plagued former
Chancellor Holden Thorp
and the University are
alleviated.
In order for these obsta-
cles to be fully resolved,
Chancellor Folt must step
up in her role as the leader
of the University. She must
remain an active presence
in the community and on
campus by reaching out
to all students, faculty and
Keep calm and Folt on
EDITOrIAL
administration and being
transparent in the process.
Since her induction, she
has already shown glimps-
es of being the approach-
able and headstrong
leader UNC needs right
now. With the creation of
the welcomecarol@unc.
edu email account in July,
Chancellor Folt asked for
feedback from students
about what they love about
UNC and what they would
like to see improve. In
doing so, she demonstrat-
ed a sense of dedication to
the University that goes
beyond the logistics of the
inner workings of the insti-
tution and towards getting
to know the students and
UNC itself.
Additionally, shes
shown her commitment
to the UNC brand by
creating the position of
vice chancellor for public
relations. This position
will have direct oversight
of the various offices that
serve as media outlets for
the University. Such a role
will promote transparency
between the University, its
students and other nation-
al outlets. By streamlining
all media connections, the
University can speak as
one voice.
These steps coupled
together indicate that she
understands what the
University needs. With
this mindset and the
preparations she has taken
in just one short month,
it is clear shes placed her-
self in a position where
she can succeed and the
University can finally
move forward.
Chancellor Folt
marks a new
beginning for UNC.
NIcolE comparaTo EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
saNEm kaBaca OPINION CO-EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
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