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JIM BENTON
Tuesday, August 19, 2014 dailytarheel.com Volume 122, Issue 54
Turning the tables
DTH/CHRIS GRIFFIN
Rob Sekay (left) and Trevor Dougherty, seniors, are two student DJs who oppose local bars having ladies nights.
Student disc jockeys campaign against sexist bar culture
By Gabriella Cirelli
Arts & Culture Editor
Disc jockeys Trevor Dougherty and Rob
Sekay do it for the ladies.
The UNC seniors, who have made names
for themselves at bars and clubs like Pulse
Nightclub and Cats Cradle, are joining other
student DJs to speak out against discrimina-
tion in bars and clubs.
The movement is targeting the practice
of offering free or discounted admission for
women, which they believe is demeaning to
female bargoers.
I dont think a lot of women really real-
ize that they are actually the product being
sold, Sekay said. By advertising ladies night
or by offering no cover to women, that tells
the male audience that this is where all the
women are going to be. And not only is that
objectifying the women, but its also commod-
ifying them as well, which is pretty harsh.
Dougherty decided to become vocal about
the issue after an incident at Fitzgeralds
Irish Pub in April. A female patron com-
plained when the DJ played the popular song
Blurred Lines by Robin Thicke, which has
drawn criticism from feminist activists who
say the song promotes rape culture.
Dougherty helped orchestrate a small boy-
cott of Fitzgeralds in April, but he said that
isnt the goal of this movement. The DJs have
agreed not to play during any nights that offer
different admission rates to men and women.
As performers and as people who live off
of this night scene, boycotting clubs would
be boycotting ourselves, he said.The big-
gest thing I want would be to start a con-
versation with the people who control the
night culture in Chapel Hill.
Sekay said he plans to start a web cam-
paign highlighting some of the sexism he sees
in nightlife and approach venues to see if they
might engage in this discussion.
I think that they would be willing to
work with us as long as we come at them
with an open expression of dialogue and
were not hostile, he said.
Pulse Nightclub owner Richard Sergo
is one such person who is on board with
the DJs campaign. He has worked with
Dougherty, a resident DJ at Pulse, for
almost three years.
Weve noticed that, basically, whether
or not we do a ladies night or just a regular
night, the turnout was the same, if not better,
Sergo said. (Trevor) talked to me about how
Pulse would feel, essentially making a com-
mitment to divert from that practice in our
official Pulse events, and I dont see why that
would be a bad idea.
MARKET MOVERS
The Chapel Hill Farmers Market
is looking for a new location, but
budget restraints have them
worried. Page 13
Wednesdays weather
Todays weather
Inside
But rain.
H 90, L 72
Sunny, with a
chance of syllabi.
H 86, L 72
A DAY IN FOLTS LIFE
The Daily Tar Heel analyzed
Chancellor Folts schedule from
the frst fve months of the year
to fnd out how she spends her
time and who she meets with the
most. Page 16
Sexual assault
policy not yet
updated
By Bradley Saacks and Jenny Surane
Senior Writers
Today students will have classes and assign-
ments but still no updated sexual assault
policy.
The Sexual Assault Task Force said it would
have its new policy ready by the beginning of the
year. The release has been delayed several times
since the Task Force originally convened in May
2013. At first, the group said it would release
preliminary recommendations for the University
before the start of the 2013-14 academic year.
We expect (the updated policy) to be released
very soon, said Joel Curran, the Vice Chancellor
of Communications and Public Affairs.
The University began evaluating its sexual
assault policies after three students filed a
complaint against the University with the U.S.
Department of Educations Office for Civil
Rights, alleging that UNC facilitated a hostile
environment for victims reporting sexual assault.
Since then, members of the Sexual Assault Task
Force have spent months defining words like
consent, inebriation and black-out drunk to
craft a new policy that would address the emerg-
ing prevalence of sexual assault on campus.
Curran declined to comment on why the new
policy wouldnt be ready today. Junior Sarah-
Kathryn Bryan, a member of the Sexual Assault
Task Force, said the Chancellors office didnt
receive the groups final draft until last week.
We had our final meeting in June, Bryan
said. But we had to make sure all the language
was in line with the task force.
Between May 2013 and June 2014, the Sexual
Assault Task Force met 20 times, according to The
Daily Tar Heels analysis of the groups schedule.
The group spent $4,842.88 on food, bever-
ages and catering for these meetings, according
to public records provided to The Daily Tar Heel.
University trust funds, not student fees, paid for
the food expenses, the record shows.
The University is part of the growing number
of colleges and universities to revisit their sexual
The final draft was delivered to
the chancellor just last week.
Construction dominates quad
By Bradley Saacks
University Editor
Instagram feeds across UNC
will be missing the customary first
day of classes quad pictures today.
The University is currently
removing asbestos insulation
from the steam tunnels that run
under campus. The construction
wont be completed until March
2015, said Bill Lowery, the
cogeneration systems manager.
There will also be additional
vents added to the tunnels as
well as improvements to the
supporting structure for under-
ground pipes.
It is one of those unfortunate
realities that we all live with,
that to be able to provide the
level of service that we do on this
campus and the quality environ-
ment for a great education, we
must occasionally disturb areas
to maintain and care for them,
Lowery said in an email.
The paths to some build-
ings have been blocked because
temporary fencing has been
placed around the construction,
but there are signs indicating
detours. Lowery stressed all
buildings are still open.
This project is not preventing
access to any campus buildings,
he said. The project does have
some sidewalk and building
access point detours that are in
place for the safety of the stu-
dents, the public and for our con-
struction team, but all facilities
will remain accessible for use.
The construction will cost the
University nearly $5 million,
according to a document from
Susan Hudson, a spokeswoman
for the University.
Asbestos removal on main campus
Removal of asbestos from the insulation of the steam tunnels beneath UNCs campus has forced
construction crews to block of certain areas of the main campus.
Polk Place
Carroll Hall
Wilson Library
SOURCE: GOOGLE MAPS, REPORTERS NOTES DTH/EMILY HELTON
South Building
The Pit
Fenced construction area
Lenoir now
open on
weekends
The project began in
early June and will not
finish until March 2015.
By Colleen Moir
Staff Writer
Students craving weekend brunch on North
Campus now have an option that will save them
the walk to Rams Head Dining Hall.
Starting this weekend, Top of Lenoir Dining
Hall will serve brunch from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on
Saturdays and Sundays, as well as lite lunch on
Sundays. It will continue to be open for Sunday
dinner, as it was previously.
We believe this is what the students were
asking for, said Mike Freeman, director of
Auxiliary Services for UNC.
Sophomore Sarah Brooks thought the new
The North Campus dining hall will
offer weekend brunch.
SEE SEXUAL ASSAULT, PAGE 5
SEE BAR CULTURE, PAGE 5
SEXUAL ASSAULT ON CAMPUS
SEE LENOIR, PAGE 5 SEE CONSTRUCTION, PAGE 5
DTH/CHRIS GRIFFIN
TODAY
Open Climb (Event): Campus
Recreation is inviting students to
experience all 2,400 square feet
of its climbing wall for free. No
experience is necessary. It will
be held in the same place at the
same time until Thursday.
Time: 3 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Location: Rams Head Recre-
ation Center
EcoReps Information Fair
(Event): Come hear about sus-
tainability while you play carni-
val games. Learn what it means
to be sustainable and what UNC
is doing to get there. Meet the
EcoReps, UNCs trained peer-to-
peer sustainability ambassadors,
and even sign up for training to
become one.
Time: 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Location: Rams Head Plaza
Inside The Daily Tar Heel
(Event): Visit the newsroom
of the Universitys student-run
daily newspaper to take a tour,
meet editors and learn about
applying to work for the paper.
Time: 6 to 8 p.m.
Location: 151 E. Rosemary St.
Durham-Chapel Hill-Hillsbor-
ough Old-Time Jam (Music):
Come listen to some old string
band music, which has a long
history in the area that goes
back to the 1960s.
NOTED. Jennifer Lawerence is supposedly
dating Coldplay frontman Chris Martin.
Huh? The bubbly and vivacious Lawrence
seems an odd counterpart for the poster-
boy of somber ballads.
This coupling does have potential.
Lawrence would be the ideal muse for his
upcoming album, Begrudgingly Happy.
QUOTED. What plans are in place to pro-
tect the town from a dragon attack?
A question that was posed to one of
Englands town councils and thankfully
published Saturday by Englands Local
Government Association. I think I can
speak for my fellow Skyrimmers when I
say the people need to know!
A
word of advice for med students: Don t take sou-
veniers from your operations. Croatian police arrested a
52-year-old nurse for amassing quite a large collection of
penises that he had been taking from dead patients. The man
kept the body parts in glass jars filled with formaldehydebecause prop-
er preservation is a must. The hospital said they had no idea that Buffalo
Bill was decorating his pad with stolen appendages. The nurse had no
previous criminal record, and those who knew him described him as a
family man. In his defense, the collection could have been scientific. I,
for one, am curious as to whether George Costanzas principle of shrink-
age applies to the undead as well.
Not that kind of organ donor
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone reported a miss-
ing recycling bin, which was
taken from a home at 902
Christopher Road at 2:28
p.m. Friday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone trespassed
at Johnny T-shirt at 128
E. Franklin St. on Friday
between 3:55 p.m. and 4:02
p.m., according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person was given a
verbal warning, report states.
Someone impersonated
an IRS agent and threatened
a resident at 2 Chatham
Lane at 5:14 p.m. Friday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
Someone reported larceny
from an unlocked vehicle at
211 Henderson St. on Friday
between 7 p.m. and 10:00
p.m., according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The suspect stole a
MacBook Pro valued at
$2,000, a Garmin GPS val-
ued at $30, a North Face
backpack valued at $75, a
textbook valued at $250 and
$20 in cash, report states.
Someone refused to
leave Cats Cradle at 12:07
a.m. Saturday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
There was a verbal dispute,
report states.
Someone broke a mail-
box at 200-BLK Gary Road
between 7 p.m. Sunday and
10:11 a.m. Monday, according
to Carrboro police reports.
No one was injured, report
states.
Someone was involved
in a verbal dispute at Cats
Cradle at 300 E. Main St. at
12:08 a.m. Saturday.
The person was intoxicat-
ed and refused to leave the
establishment when asked,
reports state.
To make a calendar submission,
email calendar@dailytarheel.
com. Please include the date of
the event in the subject line, and
attach a photo if you wish. Events
will be published in the newspaper
on either the day or the day before
they take place.
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Location: Earl & Rhoda Wynn
Theater
WEDNESDAY
Dodgeball: Duck, dive, dip, and
dodge! The Intramural Sports
staf is hosting a few games of
dodgeball open to all students.
Time: 6 p.m.
Location: Woolen Gymnasium
POLICE LOG
News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 2
PITCH PERFECT
T
he a capella group, the UNC Walk-Ons,
performs at Sunset Serenade. Due to severe
thunderstorms the event was moved from
Boshamer Stadium to Memorial Hall. Other perform-
ers included Cadence, Harmonyx and Psalm 100.
DTH/CAMERON ROBERT
Due to a reporting error, Mondays page 5 story Anarchists claim credit for damaged cars incor-
rectly stated the original website on which anonymous anarchists took responsibility for vandal-
izing Chapel Hill police cars. The blog post was originally published on anarchistnews.org and then
reposted by the Prison Books Collective. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed below. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections printed
on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Katie Reilly at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
CORRECTIONS
Like us at facebook.com/dailytarheel Follow us on Twitter @dailytarheel
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Established 1893
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PRODuCTIOn DIRECTOR
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unIvERSITY EDITOR
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HOLLY WEST
CITY EDITOR
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SARAH BROWN
STaTE & naTIOnaL EDITOR
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GRACE RAYNOR
SPORTS EDITOR
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GABRIELLA CIRELLI
aRTS & CuLTuRE EDITOR
ARTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
TYLER VAHAN
DESIgn & gRaPHICS EDITOR
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CHRIS GRIFFIN
vISuaL EDITOR
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MARISA DINOVIS,
KATHLEEN HARRINGTON
COPY CO-EDITORS
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TIPS
Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Jenny Surane, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086
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All rights reserved
News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 3
By Holly West
City Editor
This Friday, students who
want to celebrate making it
through their first week of
classes will have a new hang-
out to visit The Heel Bar
and Grill.
The Heel is located in the
former space of Chapel Hill
nightclub The Thrill, which
closed July 11 after two years
in business.
The new bar is student-
focused, said owner Glen
Turner, who also owned The
Thrill.
Turner said he partnered
up with Buzz Rides CEO
Joey Skavroneck and some
other UNC students to
create a concept for a res-
taurant and bar that would
capture students attention.
The group spent time get-
ting feedback from students
and applying it to their busi-
ness plan.
Turner said there didnt
seem to be any bars in Chapel
Hill that catered directly to
students, including his.
Chapel Hill isnt a club
town, he said. Its more of a
friendly bar town. We want
to cater to the right group of
people, and we felt that The
Thrill wasnt drawing that
group that we wanted.
Peter Wu, a junior econom-
ics major, said hes sad to see
The Thrill go.
Between that and East
End closing, its a shame, he
said.
But Elizabeth Commitz, a
Durham resident who visits
Chapel Hill and Carrboro
often, said she welcomes a
bar with a more laid-back
atmosphere.
A club doesnt really fit
into this area, she said.
The Heel had its soft open-
ing last weekend and will
celebrate its grand opening
Friday.
The bar will have a spe-
cialty drink menu featuring
signature cocktails with
names like Moonshine
Mojito and Bullet Bourbon
Lemonade.
Turner said many of the
drinks have locally-sourced
ingredients.
Its kind of like a North
Carolina recipe with a mod-
ern day kick, he said.
Its full food menu includes
classic offerings such as
cheeseburgers in addition
to quirkier options such as
chicken and waffles and deep
fried grilled cheese sand-
wiches.
Its kind of a spin on
American cuisine and some
southern food as well, Turner
said.
For more adventurous
diners, The Heel offers a chal-
lenge the Doms Dump
Burger Challenge.
The Doms Dump Burger
is a one-pound burger topped
with mac and cheese, onion
rings, barbecue sauce and
bacon. It is served with a
pound of fries.
Anyone who completely
finishes the meal will get their
picture hung on the wall and
receive a T-shirt.
The Heel will have live
music a couple times a
month, Turner said.
Ryan Godwin, a Winston-
Salem resident who visits
Chapel Hill frequently, said
thats something hed love to
see.
I would like to see more
live music, he said.
As far as late night on
Franklin, I dont know a lot of
places.
Fridays grand opening
will include a performance by
Chapel Hills The Trap House
Band.
city@dailytarheel.com
DTH/CAMERON ROBERT
Good Neighbor Initiative volunteers Cassandra Bennet (far left) and C.J. Click (far right) speak with UNC students Jakob Nielsen (left) and Nataniel Lelental.
Chapel Hill residents get to know the students next door
By Zoe Schaver
Assistant City Editor
The ever-expanding Good Neighbor
Initiative saw 55 volunteers sign up to go door-
to-door Monday afternoon, only slightly fewer
than last years all-time high of 63.
During the event, volunteers including
UNC students, Chapel Hill residents, police
officers and University staff split into groups
to visit houses and offer advice on how to be a
polite, law-abiding neighbor.
Megan Wooley, community sustainability
planner for the Town of Chapel Hill, has been
volunteering with the initiative for four years.
What we find is that a lot of students who
live in the neighborhoods have just never lived
on their own before, so its important to remind
them that theyre living in a different space,
Wooley said. Its encouraging them to keep the
towns regulations in mind and, in a lot of cases,
letting them know what the regulations are.
Typical topics of conversation include the
towns four-person occupancy rule, noise ordi-
nances and trash pickup guidelines. This year,
some new topics arose, such as parking rules
that were released in September, as well as
changed rules for recycling collection.
Organized by event leader Aaron
Bachenheimer, director of UNCs Office of
Fraternity & Sorority Life and Community
Involvement, the volunteers spent two hours
walking the length of the Northside, Cameron-
McCauley, Pine Knolls and Davie Circle neigh-
borhoods, as well as along Pine Bluff Trail.
Weve expanded our resources significantly
over the years, said Bachenheimer, who has been
with the Good Neighbor Initiative since 2009.
Chapel Hill resident and volunteer Tristan
Routh, an attorney for Carolina Student Legal
Services, said he volunteered for the first time
this year to inform students of their legal rights
and duties as residents.
For people to be good neighbors, its espe-
cially important for them to know the law, he
said.
Bachenheimer said that in recent years, vol-
unteers have hit about 1,000 houses through
the event. Wooley said many neighborhoods
have requested that the initiative expand to
include them.
Becca Reardon, a UNC student living in the
Northside neighborhood, one of the areas volun-
teers visited, said she lived off campus last year
as well.
I was in an apartment, which makes you
feel like its only students living around you,
Reardon said. Here, its a weird mosaic of
people. We have a little kid living next door,
and Im so used to living only around people
my own age.
One of the events first-time volunteers was
Faith Thompson, ombudswoman for the town
of Chapel Hill.
Im hoping I ll see a light bulb go off in
someones head, like, Oh, thats what I can do
to be a good neighbor! she said.
city@dailytarheel.com
The Thrill is gone, The Heel is here
The new bar and grill
on Rosemary Street is
student-focused.
A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN
THE NEIGHBORHOOD
By Crystal Yuille
Staff Writer
The UNC Studio Art Majors
Association is made up of student art-
ists who love displaying their work in
Hanes Art Center. The associations
art gallery in the building, though, is
nothing more than a simple storage
closet.
The group strives to redefine what
creative expression means on campus,
particularly when it comes to censor-
ship in student art.
Senior Diego Camposeco, president
of SAMA, said their storage closet is
not a form of censorship by the school.
Rather, the artists of SAMA decided to
censor themselves.
Its more self-censorship than
anything else, said Camposeco, who
used to work for The Daily Tar Heel as
a photographer. A lot of people self-
censor a lot of people dont want to
create controversy.
While the space might seem bizarre,
Camposeco said its most important
to create art that strays from what is
expected, regardless of where its being
displayed.
In the Hanes Art Center, artists feel
that it is their space. They know their
art will be valued more there, he said.
Camposeco cited an exhibit that
SAMA hosted last year in the closet
space titled, Coming In An Art
Show On Queer Aesthetics, in which
then-senior Andy Champions sculp-
ture titled Devotion featured 20
phallic wax candles and glitter.
We had a penis altar in the show.
If we put that piece in the middle of
campus, it wouldnt have the same
effect, Camposeco said.
Some students like junior
Victor Foster, a member of the
Undergraduate Art Association, want
to see a serious reevaluation of the type
of art being displayed on campus.
I can definitely testify to the fact
that there is a real lack of dynamic art
around here, Foster said.
To me, dynamic art is the type
of art that takes you somewhere. It
evokes feelings of love and regret, hap-
piness and disgust. Art is supposed to
make you feel human. I havent seen
much of that kind of art around UNC.
Similar sentiments were expressed
by another member of the UAA, fresh-
man Kishan Rana. While he hasnt
been here long, he said disapproves of
the idea of censorship.
America is obsessed with social
media and fitting in. We have unrealis-
tic social standards and norms, Rana
said.
Its so stupid that women have to
cover their nipples when men can free-
ly expose them. We all have dicks and
vaginas. What now? Embrace it.
Camposeco said he has similar opin-
ions about how social norms enforce
censorship.
Its a form of censorship when peo-
ple dont want to stray from the norm
because they feel pressure from their
peers to conform to what theyre doing
or what theyre saying, he said.
Camposeco said he also feels
SAMAs own self-censorship opens the
space to those actively seeking differ-
ent expressions of art. He said at the
groups queer art show students made
art that revolved around the defini-
tion of queer and what being queer
means.
Its because they feel different
they dont feel a part of the main-
stream, he said.
Our mission is simply to make art
that we realize isnt shown anywhere
else. We want to see real art, and its
unfortunate that we have to take it
into our own hands.
arts@dailytarheel.com
Students
self-censor
phallic art
Studio art majors want
to redefine creative
expression at UNC.
New Honor Court rules for hearings, penalties
By Langston Taylor
Assistant University Editor
The Honor Court will now need
less evidence to convict students
after major changes were imple-
mented to the student Honor Code
this month.
The changes to the Instrument
of Student Judicial Governance,
the result of years of work by the
Committee on Student Conduct,
also include changes to suggested
academic dishonesty sanctions and
the notation of forced class failures
on students transcripts.
Faculty involvement
In a primarily student-run honor
system, trained faculty will take part
in academic dishonesty hearings in
which students plead not guilty.
The five-person panels were all
students, but a faculty member will
now replace one of the students.
Honor Court Chairwoman
Dakota Foard said the change was
done to make faculty feel included
and should not change much.
At the end of the day, it prob-
ably will not change the outcome of
the hearings in any significant way.
Adam Bridges, a freshman from
Raleigh, said he liked the idea.
Different backgrounds have dif-
ferent points of view, he said.
But freshman Tyler McCollum
said he was concerned about faculty
members being more sympathetic to
their co-workers than to students.
The new Instrument also allows
for students and instructors to settle
the case without going through a
hearing if the student has no prior
academic dishonesty violations.
Lower burden of proof
Formerly, students charged with
Honor Code violations were con-
sidered innocent until proven guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt. The
burden of proof has been lowered to
clear and convincing evidence.
Student Attorney General Raquel
Dominguez said the previous stan-
dard was the highest possible and is
rare for colleges around the nation.
Foard said the high standard,
though unusual, did not pose a prob-
lem for convicting students. Eighty-
seven percent of students either pled
guilty or were found so in Honor
Court cases between Feb. 18 and
Dec. 4 of last year, she said.
Sanctioning changes
The court reduced the minimum
The new Instrument
incorporates more
faculty participation.
Changes to Honor Court hearing processes
Changes to the Instrument of Student Judicial Governance, which describes prohibited conduct and
determines Honor Court processes and sanctions, took efect Aug. 1.
SOURCE: THE INSTRUMENT OF STUDENT JUDICIAL GOVERNANCE DTH/KAITLYN KELLY AND LANGSTON TAYLOR
NEW INSTRUMENT OLD INSTRUMENT
LESSER
MINIMUM
SANCTIONS
FACULTY IN
HEARING
PANELS
SANCTION
NOTED ON
TRANSCRIPT
LOWER
BURDEN OF
PROOF
Students were innocent until proven
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
Students are innocent until proven
guilty by clear and convincing
evidence.
The minimum academic dishonesty
sanction included probation for one
semester.
Cases were heard by a panel of fve
student Honor Court members.
A failing grade from a sanction
showed as an F on the students
transcript.
The minimum sanction no longer
includes probation, and diferent
levels of dishonesty carry diferent
usual sanctions.
Academic dishonesty cases are heard
by four student members of the Honor
Court and a faculty member from
the Faculty Hearings Board Panel.
A course failure from a sanction
shows as an XF on the students
transcript. The student can later
petition to change it to a normal F.
sanction for academic dishonesty
cases and made the sanctioning
system more flexible overall.
The Honor Courts usual sanc-
tion previously included suspension
for a semester; a minimum sanction
included a semester of probation.
The court now separates violations
into three levels, the least severe of
which will not warrant a recom-
mendation for probation.
Dominguez said some professors
were hesitant to charge students
because they thought the penalties
were too harsh. Each student who
receives a failing grade due to a sanc-
tion will see the violation noted on
the students transcript.
The changes to the Instrument
took effect Aug. 1.
We really encourage any stu-
dents to look into them and learn
about them because they do affect
students, Foard said.
university@dailytarheel.com
News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 4
All up in your business
Part of a weekly update
on local businesses.
Compiled by Holly West and Zoe Schaver
Chapel Hill Barber Shop moves
H2Only cleans without toxins
Varsity Theatre hosts film screening
Mellow offers throwback pricing
Textbook and apparel store opens
Trolly Stop to open Franklin spot
After almost 50 years in
the University Square devel-
opment, Chapel Hill Barber
Shop has relocated to the
Courtyard.
The barber shop, which
has been in business since
1952, had to vacate its space
in University Square because
the development is being
demolished later this fall.
Drew Ingle, one of the
barbershops owners, said
that while the location has
changed, the services offered
by the shop will stay the
same.
Its still on Franklin
Street and its close enough
to the college that students
can reach us easily, Ingle
said.
The Triangles only self-
proclaimed toxin-free dry
cleaning company has set up
a new shop in Chapel Hill.
Mark May, an employee
at the new H2Only Cleaners
store on Rosemary Street,
said the cleaning method
was developed by German
companies and does not
produce carcinogenic fumes
like other dry cleaners.
The Rosemary Street
location is the fourth
H2Only location in the
Triangle.
A lot of cleaners will say
theyre organic cleaners.
Organic doesnt really mean
anything, May said. The
stuff theyre using to clean
your clothes is still toxic.
The Varsity Theater
is hosting a screening of
Freedom Summer tonight
at 6:30 p.m.
The PBS documen-
tary chronicles the 10-week
period in 1964 when activ-
ists traveled across segre-
gated Mississippi to register
African American voters.
Before the screening, com-
munity members will speak
about the importance of pro-
tecting voting rights.
The speakers will touch on
the new voter identification
laws that take effect in North
Carolina in 2016.
The event is being spon-
sored by a coalition of local
social justice organizations.
Doors open at 6 p.m.
In celebration of its
40th anniversary, Mellow
Mushroom is offering its
1974 prices for several items
on Wednesday.
The nationwide pizza
chain will be offering cheese
pizzas for $2.50 and coke
products for 30 cents.
Ashley Cohn, assistant
general manager of the
Chapel Hill location, said
extra toppings will cost extra
at modern-day prices.
Budweiser and PBR beer
will be on tap for 75 cents,
and bottles of Michelob will
also cost 75 cents.
The Chapel Hill restau-
rant is located at 310 W.
Frankin St. and will offer
special pricing all day.
The space left empty by
Ram Book & Supply has
finally been filled by
Chapel Hill Fan Shop.
Chapel Hill Fan Shop,
which is owned by Illinois-
based Follett Corporation,
opened its 306 W. Franklin
St. location Aug. 8.
The store carries a range
of UNC-themed apparel and
accessories.
Sales associate Audrey
Norton said the store will
get different seasonal items
throughout the year.
The store also carries text-
books that can be purchased
or rented. Many of the mate-
rials can also be purchased as
e-books for laptops, tablets
or e-readers.
Trolly Stop Hot Dogs is
well on its way to opening a
Chapel Hill location.
The North Carolina-based
hot dog chain is working
with the town to get per-
mits for a space at 306 W.
Franklin St., said Trolly Stop
owner Rick Coombs.
Coombs said the restau-
rant will also offer hand-
dipped ice cream and beer,
but hot dogs will remain its
main business.
All we do is hot dogs,
Coombs said. There arent
a lot of people out there that
specialize in one item.
The store will offer spe-
cialty hot dogs, including
sausage dogs and burger
dogs.
Join The Daily Tar Heel business staff for a rewarding
professional experience this year!
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managers, helping Tar Heels and clients! Interest and class work in marketing or business is helpful but not
required; well train you.
Apply online at dailytarheel.com
Under the About menu
From Page One Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 5
BAR CULTURE
FROM PAGE 1
Rob Davis, the former gen-
eral manager of the Henderson
Street bar Recovery Room and
the new general manager of
the Franklin Street bar The
Deep End, said he sees no
problem with charging lower
cover prices for female patrons
or students.
For us, its just purely from
a business standpoint, he
said. If girls are in your bar,
CONSTRUCTION
FROM PAGE 1
Lowery said the asbestos
insulation has been in the
steam tunnels since their con-
struction in the early 1940s.
Some students arent excited
about the prospect of a semes-
ter and a half of construction,
but realize it is something the
University had to do.
I know a lot of old stuff
was built with asbestos before
SEXUAL ASSAULT
FROM PAGE 1
assault policies as the national
dialogue around sexual assault
on college campuses surges.
In July, the U.S. Senate
Subcommittee on Financial
& Contracting Oversight
released a report that said
universities are largely
failing to address sexual
assaults. A survey of 440
universities found that
40 percent of schools had
not investigated a single
instance of sexual assault in
they knew the health effects,
but, I mean, it is a shame it
has been there as long as it
has, junior Chichi Orji said.
You know as long as theyre
getting rid of it, its fine.
Freshman David Doochin
agreed, saying it is surprising
that the University is address-
ing it now, but the construc-
tion is helping more than
hurting.
I dont really think it is a
huge bother, but it certainly
isnt aesthetically pleasing ...
I would say it is necessary,
he said.
Lowery said the construc-
tion has been in the works for
ten years, and it is a part of a
larger campus master plan.
The timing for construc-
tion was a matter of coordina-
tion with other campus activi-
ties and needs and allocation
of funding, he said.
Freshman Annie
Konzelman said the construc-
tion could have an effect on
potential student tours.
I saw (the construction),
and I was a little bit disap-
pointed that it didnt look as
beautiful as when I came to
visit, she said.
Freshman Madeleine
Shafto said it will take some
adjusting to, but it wouldnt
have made a difference to her
if the construction were there
when she toured the campus.
It wouldnt have affected
my decision, because it is
necessary, so, at some point,
these things are going to have
to happen, she said.
Orji said, personally, he
would not have taken the
construction too seriously if
he were a prospective stu-
dent visiting campus, but he
understands the issue.
I know a lot of people
would see that and be just
completely taken back by
that, he said.
Lowery acknowledged
the situation is not ideal, but
the amount of construction
on campus is actually much
lower than a few years ago.
This campus is well over
200 years old. It takes a lot of
TLC to provide the wonderful
institution that you see before
you today and for those that
came before and those that
will follow.
university@dailytarheel.com
guys come in. The DJs might
have a problem with it, but
the guys dont.
Davis said his main concern
is providing a positive environ-
ment for UNC students, which
is why Deep End often charges
a lower cover for students who
present a UNC One Card.
I just want a place where
students and locals can come
and feel safe and have fun,
he said.
The Deep End doesnt host
specific ladies nights. The bar
often offers discounts on cov-
ers for women. Dougherty
said the practice creates a meat
market in bars and clubs and
draws attention away from
what nightlife should be about.
These nights are about
the music and the party and
the experience, he said. The
hookup culture people might
enjoy, but thats secondary.
But Davis said he doesnt
know of a bar in town that
would survive without promo-
tional nights or cover discounts.
When our customers start
complaining, Ill do something.
But until then, everybodys
copacetic with it, he said.
Dougherty and Sekay said
they want to encourage stu-
dents to speak out about what
they want from Chapel Hill
bar culture.
Franklin should be run
by the opinions of students,
Dougherty said. And we have
that power.
arts@dailytarheel.com
five years.
In its report released earlier
this month, the UNC-system
Board of Governors said that
system schools should prompt-
ly investigate and adjudicate
reports of sexual assault.
After releasing its new
Gender-Based Misconduct
Policy for Students last
week, Columbia University
was criticized for failing
to address accomodations
for survivors and leaving
the appeals process in the
hands of administrators with
little experience. Harvard
University also updated its
Sexual and Gender-Based
Harassment Policy earlier
this summer after its original
policy failed to provide aca-
demic and therapeutic sup-
port for victims.
The task force was commit-
ted to including student and
administrative feedback, and
Curran said that means releas-
ing the report took longer.
Administrators have
already adopted many of the
policies laid out in the task
forces report, Bryan said.
Having a formal rollout
wasnt expected, Bryan said.
We have people working in
accordance with the new policy
even though it hasnt been inte-
grated into the whole campus.
Going forward, the mem-
bers of the task force will
work with the University to
ensure the new policies are
implented smoothly.
I will be focused on dis-
pensing as much information
to people entangled in inter-
personal violences issues,
Bryan said.
university@dailytarheel.com
weekend hours would be a
positive addition.
Last year, I felt the frustra-
tion of always having to use
Rams or Franklin Street. I wish
these new hours affected bot-
tom of Lenoir, too, she said.
Freeman said every five
years, the University brings
in food consultants to give
dining officials an unbiased
examination of food services at
UNC. Last year, a firm called
Envision Strategies hosted
focus groups with students as
part of this assessment, and the
lack of weekend hours came up
LENOIR
FROM PAGE 1
often in these focus groups.
Freeman said another
motivation for adding Lenoir
brunch was the increasing
popularity of brunch at Rams
Head Dining Hall in recent
years. Last year, an average
of 1,500 to 1,800 students
came to eat brunch at Rams
each weekend. Comparatively,
lunch which is currently
the most crowded meal at Top
of Lenoir averages 2,200
students per day.
To get the quick service
we wanted at those times, we
felt that those numbers were
high enough to open Lenoir
Hall for breakfast and lunch,
Freeman said.
Freeman said he has a
goal of 1,000 students eating
brunch at each location.
The cost of the new
weekend meals is expected
to be between $150,000
and $180,000 for Carolina
Dining Services. These costs
mostly go toward labor with a
smaller portion going toward
additional food purchases.
The costs are covered by the
prepaid meal plans students
have purchased.
Freeman said he hopes
the new hours will cause an
increase in the number and the
size of meal plans purchased.
He said similar increases hap-
pened with the addition of
late-night meals at Rams Head
Dining Hall in 2010.
The convenience of the
additional hours appealed to
senior Lisa Morris.
Its definitely more conve-
nient for people on campus. If
I lived on campus, Id be really
happy about it, Morris said.
Sophomore Jennifer Jin
had mixed feelings about the
new hours.
I think its convenient,
she said. It was a struggle as
a freshman, but it was also
nice to see upperclassmen at
Rams. It was always nice to
see new faces.
university@dailytarheel.com
UNC
CAROLINA
WOMENS CENTER
Learn more
about our work at
womenscenter.unc.edu
...or come visit us!
The Carolina Womens Center:
The center for gender equity.
Suite 101
Stone Center
150 South Road
Chapel Hill, NC
919-962-8305
email: cwc@unc.edu
@UNCWomensCtr
Carolina
Womens Center
@UNCWomensCtr
News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 6
UNC-system happenings
Part of a weekly update
on UNC-system schools.
Compiled by senior writer Hayley Fowler.
A&T protests Browns death New UNC-A chancellor named N.C. State merges degrees UNC-P students work at NASA
Around 400 people
attended a peace-
ful protest Monday
at N.C. Agricultural
and Technical State
University over the Aug.
9 shooting death of
18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo.
N.C. A&T sophomore Keyanna Morrow,
who organized the event, said she wanted to
draw attention to the injustice surrounding
Browns death.
Brown was unarmed when he was shot
multiple times by Officer Darren Wilson
during what was allegedly a robbery. Several
N.C. A&T students spoke during the event in
support of Brown.
Many attendees wore all black and held
signs protesting the Ferguson police forces
actions. Officers have struggled to contain
violent protests in the streets of the St. Louis
suburb since Browns death.
The Missouri National Guard is being
deployed to Ferguson to help contain the
riots, state Gov. Jay Nixon said in a state-
ment Monday.
UNC-Asheville
appointed its seventh
chancellor on Aug. 1.
Mary K. Grant, president
of the Massachusetts
College of Liberal Arts,
will start Jan. 5.
Grant succeeds former Chancellor Anne
Ponder, who announced her retirement in
January.
Grant will become one of five female
chancellors in the UNC system, among them
UNC-CH Chancellor Carol Folt.
Other female system leaders include
N.C. Central University Chancellor Debra
Saunders-White and Appalachian State
University Chancellor Sheri Noren Everts
both of whom were installed and named,
respectively, earlier this year.
In a statement, system President Tom
Ross praised Grants 25 years of experience
as a university leader.
(She brings) a solid reputation as an
energetic and creative problem solver and
a passionate belief in the enduring value of
liberal arts education, Ross said.
Five N.C. State
University foreign lan-
guage bachelors degrees
will soon be consolidat-
ed into a single new pro-
gram, foreign language
and literature.
The UNC-system Board of Governors
approved the consolidation earlier this
month. The move will affect students look-
ing to major in German studies, French
and Spanish language and literature and
French and Spanish language and litera-
ture teacher education.
Students enrolled in these programs will
be able to finish their degrees under the cur-
rent structure.
The desire to be more efficient motivated
the decision, said Ruth Gross, head of the
foreign languages and literature department,
in an email.
By merging into one major with concen-
trations, we not only reduce the number of
majors at N.C. State something that the
administration has been striving to do but
we also become more flexible as a unit.
Four students and
one professor from
UNC-Pembroke, a
group known as the
Weightless Lumbees,
attended NASAs
Reduced Gravity
Education Flight program in July.
Rachel Smith, a chemistry professor,
and team leader and recent graduate Molly
Musselwhite joined three students at the
Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, to
conduct research on the effect of weightless-
ness on human biological processes.
Smith said they conducted their experi-
ments in the Weightless Wonder, an airplane
that simulates two times the gravitational pull
on its way up and zero gravity on its way down.
The flight lasts 30 seconds, and the group
repeated it 30 times for the experiment.
Musselwhite said their group was the
last to experience the program because its
been discontinued.
Being weightless is indescribable, she
said. The experience was definitely life
changing.
By Jasmin Singh
Assistant City Editor
The town of Chapel Hill
is expanding its Rosemary
Imagined project to include
all of downtown, including
Franklin Street.
Part of the Chapel Hill
2020 plan, Downtown
Imagined aims to unify and
improve the downtown area.
We were working off of
the draft master plan called
the Downtown Development
Framework and Action Plan,
which came out in 2010
and looked at the entire
downtown area, said Meg
McGurk, executive director
of the Chapel Hill Downtown
Partnership.
Rosemary Street resident
Michael Parker said his street
has been neglected for too long.
What I want to see is for
Rosemary Street to come to
life as a vibrant commercial,
living, playing area, Parker
said.
McGurk said the expan-
sion from Rosemary Street to
the rest of downtown was the
plan from the beginning.
We started with focusing
on Rosemary Street to get
the communitys input and
ideas, and now we have kind
of pulled back the scope to
encompass the rest of the
downtown, she said.
McGurk said having com-
munity involvement since the
beginning led to creative ideas.
What I would like to see
is for Rosemary to be a vital,
good looking area where peo-
ple are walking, where people
are transacting business,
where people live, Parker
said. Make it into a vibrant,
thriving area.
McGurk said the town is
looking for student involve-
ment in the planning process.
We would really like stu-
dent input, and we would
be really happy to come to
student organizational meet-
ings or hold a special session
for students, she said. Its
an incredible opportunity for
students to be involved with
the community process.
Linda Convissor, director
of local relations at UNC, said
the downtown area is very
important to campus.
With all of the student
housing being built around
downtown, I think that is
going to have a significant
impact on the downtown we
see in the next several years,
Convissor said. A healthy and
vibrant downtown is what
helps us have a healthy and
vibrant campus.
McGurk said the final
plan will be presented to the
Chapel Hill Town Council
later this year and should be
up for adoption early next
year. But Parker said imple-
mentation is everything.
The plan is only as suc-
cessful as it is implemented,
he said. Its nice to have a
plan, but if its not imple-
mented, then its not really
useful, so the important thing
now is to make sure that there
are mechanisms put in place
so that things move forward.
Parker said that though
students might not see the
work they put in come to life
during their time at UNC,
their ideas would leave a
legacy for future students.
Downtown is and
should continue to be a
place where students are
and want to be, he said.
The best way to make that
happen is for todays stu-
dents to make their views
known so that tomorrows
students will have a place
where they want to be.
city@dailytarheel.com
Revitalization plans
extended to all downtown
Workshop
opens consent
dialogue
By Jane Wester
Assistant University Editor
Week of Welcome just got
a little more serious.
As students wander
between Week of Welcome
events to learn directions to
classes, attend interest meet-
ings for clubs and find end-
less options for free food, they
can now also examine their
understanding of consent
sexual and otherwise on a
college campus.
Omega Phi Beta Sorority,
Inc. will sponsor From
Blurred Lines to the Green
Light: Exploring Consent in
the Student Union Wednesday
night.
Carla Salas, programming
director for Omega Phi Beta,
said she hopes participants
will learn what consent is,
when its necessary and how
to ask for it.
The purpose at the end
of the program would be to
have a better understand-
ing of consent and be more
comfortable talking about
consent, she said. On a
college campus specifically,
but pretty much anywhere
as well, consent is not some-
thing thats always talked
about.
If students are encour-
aged to talk about consent,
Salas hopes they will see
consent as an important
conversation instead of a
mood-killer.
Kelli Raker, the sororitys
adviser and a student violence
prevention coordinator for
Student Wellness, said in an
email that she wants students
to see consent as commu-
nication. Raker also works
with One Act, which, unlike
Wednesdays event, addresses
consent from a bystanders
point of view.
CONSENT EVENT
Time: 6:30 p.m. Wednesday
Location: FPG Student
Union Room 3205
Info: bit.ly/UwW8rt
Salas said her sorority was
inspired by UNC alumna Ariel
Eures work with the Sadie
Nash Leadership Project,
a program for high school
women in New York City. Eure
designed a consent workshop
for project participants after
realizing they rarely encoun-
tered the topic otherwise.
If they had sexual educa-
tion at all in their schools,
consent was definitely not the
key that was talked about,
Eure said.
Eure said becoming com-
fortable discussing consent is
important in all areas of col-
lege students lives.
When youre going out
on Franklin Street, when
youre in class, when youre
in your dorm room whats
consent then? she said.
To ask for consent for
something, to give consent
for something I think
everyone could benefit from
it, whether youve grown
up talking about consent or
whether this is the first time
youve ever had a conversa-
tion about the topic, she
said.
Eure also saw a need for
the workshop based on her
own experiences.
She suggested the idea
to Omega Phi Beta, which
decided to adapt it for UNC
students.
I went to school not under-
standing consent, she said.
I think what was really
frustrating ... that things
that were happening to me,
around me, and I didnt have
that understanding of what
that was and why it was
important.
university@dailytarheel.com
Omega Phi Beta
Sorority, Inc.s event
will explain consent.
Downtown Chapel Hil l
942-PUM P 106 W. Franklin St.
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News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 7
By Zoe Schaver
Assistant City Editor
PACE Academy will need
its parents and students to be
as invested as PACEs Board
of Directors in keeping the
school open for the foresee-
able future.
Principal Rhonda Franklin
said the school will continue
to prioritize the varying needs
of individual students but will
also have to focus on organi-
zation and meeting academic
benchmarks.
That will start with the first
board meeting of the year on
Thursday at 6 p.m.
A lot of it revolves around
improving academics and
what we can do to grow as a
school, with the overall men-
tality of being proactive ver-
sus reactive, Franklin said.
PACE is a charter school
in Carrboro serving students
who do not perform well in a
normal school setting because
of issues with concentration,
cognition, socializing or other
problems.
The State Board of
Education declined to
renew the schools charter
in February but changed its
decision in June, provided
PACE meets certain stan-
dards and guidelines in the
next three years before the
next charter renewal cycle.
Joel Medley, director of the
Office of Charter Schools, said
PACEs issues were three-fold.
By Claire Nielsen
Assistant City Editor
Those looking to get per-
mits for their businesses
or homes should have an
easier time after a renovated
Development Services Desk
opened at Chapel Hill Town
Hall Aug. 11.
In the past, the process
for obtaining permits and
inspections for residents and
business owners has been a
long one.
Before, it used to be that
the departments were split up
in different places, and there
was a challenge for people
who were trying to get their
business open or to get a new
building finished, Chapel Hill
Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt
said. They had a lot of run-
ning around to do.
When the first floor of the
Town Hall was damaged by
floodwater in the summer
of 2013, the town had the
opportunity to redesign, so
they combined the permit
and inspections divisions.
Its a one-stop destina-
tion that brings people from
different parts of our town
organization together so
they can be more efficient,
Kleinschmidt said.
Aaron Nelson, CEO of the
Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chamber
of Commerce, said many busi-
nesses working with the cham-
ber had trouble with the old
system, and the chamber was
happy to hear about the newly
consolidated desk.
This community is very
excited at the possibility of a
one-stop shop, he said. We
think it will be well received,
and we look forward to hear-
The charter schools
board will launch a
new strategic plan.
Divisions for permits
and inspections have
joined in a new desk.
PACE works on compliance issues
Chapel Hill improves
development services
ing feedback.
The Development Services
Desk will provide a central
portal for all development
application submissions.
It will take care of permits,
inspections, plan review and
code enforcement.
There will also be a rev-
enue office so that people can
pay for permits and taxes.
Phil Mason, co-manager of
Development Services, said
combining the permit and
inspections divisions should
make the process easier for
everyone.
Were always interested in
doing things more efficiently,
he said. Were always looking
to do improvements to our
development review process,
and its something that we
assess on a continual basis.
The components of the
Development Services Desk
are grouped within the
Planning and Sustainability
Department, which also
includes long-range planning
and transportation divisions.
In its first week of opera-
Were going to request a more active role
from the parents...
Rhonda Franklin,
PACE Academy principal
The first thing is legal
compliance, he said. The
second is performance, and
the third is financial integrity.
The final thing is academic
excellence. When my office
looked at the information we
had, we noted deficiencies in
those areas.
Medley said the board
must improve its oversight,
including being more trans-
parent for parents and stu-
dents, meeting monthly with
an attorney present, electing
a treasurer and secretary, and
keeping regular minutes and
thorough financial records.
These requirements are
listed in a settlement agree-
ment between PACE and the
Board of Education, which
stipulates that PACE must
also consistently provide the
North Carolina Department
of Public Instruction with
details from its board meet-
ings in order to keep its char-
ter in three years.
Franklin said PACEs
board participated in a
retreat on Aug. 8, during
which board members brain-
stormed ideas for improve-
ment in various areas. One
of those areas is testing
accountability.
As far as inside changes,
were going to start the school
year out with pre-assessments
of the students in the areas of
English, writing and math, as
well as overall career assess-
ments to get an idea of what
they plan on doing once they
graduate, she said.
Franklin also said the
board would gather student
input on incentives that
would encourage students
to show up on standard-
ized testing days. In the
past, PACE has not met the
requirement that 95 percent
of students take standard-
ized tests.
We have plans for the
beginning of the year already
if students have good
attendance for 30 days, we
will sponsor a trip to the state
fair, she said.
Other changes the board
discussed include notify-
ing parents automatically of
student absences via email,
applying for grants to add
new vocational programs
for students and encourag-
ing parents to attend board
meetings.
PACE will host its par-
ent orientation night on
Wednesday at 6 p.m.
Were going to request
a more active role from the
parents, like participating in
fundraisers and taking a more
active role in the students
learning, Franklin said.
Members of the PACE
Board of Directors did not
respond to repeated calls for
comment over several days.
city@dailytarheel.com
This community is
very excited at the
possibility of a
one-stop shop.
Aaron Nelson,
Chamber of Commerce CEO
tion, Mason said the new sys-
tem has been successful.
Its a little early to tell, but I
think were all noticing that its
nice for people from different
divisions that didnt work side
by side before to be working in
closer proximity and being able
to ask each other questions
and then look at applications
together, he said.
Nelson said he also has
high hopes for the division.
We think that the town of
Chapel Hill is becoming more
and more responsive to the
needs of the business com-
munity, he said. We appreci-
ate this customer-centered
approach.
city@dailytarheel.com
RELI 123 / JWST 100 Introduction to Jewish Studies
This course explores some of the key topics that are characteristic of Jewish studies
as an academic field: the Hebrew Bible; the formation of rabbinical Judaism;
Christian-Jewish relations throughout the ages; Judaism in the Medieval World;
modernity and the reconfiguration of Jewish life; the Holocaust; Zionism and Israel,
and more. This course is required of those pursuing a major or minor in Jewish
Studies. The course will meet on TTR at 9:30-10:45 AM with Professor Andrea Cooper.
JWST 697 Capstone Course: How Jewish is Jewish Humor?
What turns a joke, an anecdote, a graphic novel, or a movie into a representation
of Jewish humor? This course seeks to define how humor and Jews were related in
history by exploring material from a variety of sources from Europe, Israel, and
America. The Capstone Course is required for those pursuing a major in Jewish
Studies and is also open to non-major undergraduates and graduate students. The
course will meet on Thursdays, from 4:40 7:10 PM with Professor Ruth von Bernuth.
NOW ENROLLING
PETTIGREW HALL, SUITE 100
CAMPUS BOX 3152
CHAPEL HILL, NC 27599-3152
P: 919-962-1509
E: CCJS@UNC.EDU
W: JEWISHSTUDIES.UNC.EDU
RUTH VON BERNUTH
DIRECTOR
CCJS DTH Ad 8.2014 v2_Layout 1 6/27/14 12:52 PM Page 1
Arts and Culture Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 8
By Sarah Vassello
Senior Writer
Its sure to be bloodthirsty.
Thats what the directors
and producers at student
theater group Company
Carolina say about their
upcoming fall season. After
putting on shows like Legally
Blonde and Youre A Good
Man, Charlie Brown last
year, the group is going in a
slightly different direction
this year with productions of
Little Shop of Horrors and
Dracula.
Its very much a creepy
vibe, said McKenzie Millican,
one of Company Carolinas
associate producer and the
producer of Dracula.
Producing publicity direc-
tor Catherine Clark attributed
the trend to the applications
the organization received dur-
ing the selection process for
the season, which consisted of
directors submitting applica-
tions for the shows they desired
to produce and describing the
fresh perspective theyd bring.
There is an application
process for every semester, so
anyone is welcome to submit,
but were really excited to be
working with them, espe-
cially because applications
are sometimes few and far in
between, Clark said.
We dont usually do themed
seasons, but we definitely think
in terms of marketing, it will be
an easy way to keep everything
together keep Company
Carolina in students minds.
One of the selected direc-
tors is sophomore Jesse
McGuire, a Company Carolina
newcomer, a self-described
vampire lover and the student
heading up Dracula.
Were going to revamp
Dracula and take it out of
this cliche, old story about
some dude with fangs, she
said. Were going to make it
classy again. Its going to be
fang-tastic.
In addition to the shift
into the ghoulish, Company
Carolina is also working on
developing technical theater
workshops to draw students
to the production process.
Obviously, were interested
in actors, but anyone inter-
ested in any aspect of design
or building or tech, were
willing to teach, Millican
said. We want to get new
faces involved were really
excited about that.
Clark said Millican
approached her and produc-
ing artistic director Duri Long
about the project earlier in
the year and thought the idea
would benefit the company.
Its McKenzies idea, so
were just in the beginning
stages of figuring it out, but a
lot of times, we get students
who are interested in theater
and dont know where to
start, she said.
The workshops will teach
students more about the
world of technical theater,
including lighting, sound,
set design and set building.
While the workshops will take
the Company Carolina name,
they will also be open to stu-
dents outside of the theater
group in an effort to increase
involvement in the shows.
McGuire said the new tone
and the open-arms attitude are
good changes for the company.
Company Carolina is real-
ly pushing themselves, which
is the goal of theater to
always try new things and see
how it works, she said. And
Company Carolina is jumping
in with both feet.
arts@dailytarheel.com
Company Carolina brings fangs, esh
The groups fall
season will see
horror on the stage.
Doug Largent Trio stays
close to home with concert
By Kelly Cook
Staff Writer
With jazz, its all about the
atmosphere.
And tonight, the scene will
be set at Carrboros Looking
Glass Cafe. The Doug
Largent Trio will give guests
a combination of music and
casual sophistication at the
coffee shop.
Largent, the organist for
the group, and guitarist Brad
Maiani formed the trio, a
small ensemble specializing
in reinventing jazz standards
from the 1950s and 60s into
a unique and personal sound.
They play with a rotating
drummer tonights will be
Tyler Leak.
The Trio has also taken
inspiration from organist
Big John Patton, whose song
Soul Woman is both a group
and crowd favorite.
Largent said his personal
career has introduced him
to myriad jazz musicians
and taken him from North
Carolina to New York City
and back again.
He said that today he tries
constantly to develop his
craft and further his love of
the genre.
I really like the sound of
(jazz), he said.
You can listen to any-
thing deeply and hear the
texture of the instruments.
Especially with the organ,
theres just so much going
on with the sound of it, you
never get bored.
Carolyn Griggs, owner and
performance organizer at
Looking Glass Cafe, said she
booked the trio after being
approached by Maiani about
the cafes weekly jazz and
game night.
We love to have differ-
ent events in the evenings.
We have such a nice outdoor
space that is well-suited for
jazz in the garden, she said.
Personally, I know the
quality of their music and
know how wonderful it is, so
I am very excited for some
good jazz.
Looking Glass Cafe, a
Carrboro staple, prides itself
both on its fair trade organic
coffees and its friendly, wel-
coming atmosphere.
The trio likewise hold a
coveted spot in the areas
social and music scene as
graduates from UNC and cur-
rent North Carolina residents.
Its something nice to go
out into your community and
hang out in a local spot and
listen to really good quality
music, Griggs said.
(The trio) seem like they
just have such a good time
jamming out together, so it
makes it really entertaining.
Largent said he shares
Griggs excitement for the
Carrboro event and plans
on creating a set list of an
assortment of jazz favorites.
He also wants to add in less-
er-known material the group
discovered on records from
THE FALL SEASON
Company Carolina will
produce the following
shows this season:

Dracula, adapted by
Hamilton Deane from the
novel by Bram Stoker.
Directed by Jesse McGuire.

Little Shop of Horrors


written by Alan Menken and
Howard Ashman. Directed
by Bryce Edwards.

For more information


about opportunities with
Company Carolina, visit
http://www.unc.edu/com-
pany/involved/
SEE THE SHOW
Time: 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Location: Looking Glass
Cafe, Carrboro
Info: http://lookingglass-
cafe.us/
the 1960s to expose audience
members to different styles
of jazz.
Largent said that after
nearly five years of collabo-
ration and joint performanc-
es, he and Maiani have built
a solid musical foundation,
with their bond acting as
one of the keys to the trios
success.
Were really tight and have
a good sound. Were not just
a bunch of dudes who got
together for one weekend,
Largent said.
We really work hard at it
and really appreciate when
people come out to listen,
because its a lot of work to
put it together.
arts@dailytarheel.com
The trio will perform
at Carrboros Looking
Glass Cafe tonight.
The State of Medical Education in Iraq Today
Dr. Hilal Al Saffar, Professor, Baghdad University School of Medicine
A Free Press: Great countries are not afraid.
Mr. John Drescher, Editor of the News and Observer
The New UNC Medical Student Curriculum: What has changed and why
Dr. Julie Byerley, Vice Dean, Dr Cam Enarson, Vice Dean,
Ms. Essra Bayoumi, MSIV
Panel Discussion
A Firsthand Account
Faculty Members from the University of Baghdad School of Medicine
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Community
is invited to a
Strengthening Medical Education In Iraq
The Problems Confronting Physicians and Patients in Iraq
UNC School of Medicine University of Baghdad School of Medicine
International Medical Corps United States State Department
Carroll Hall
UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
6-7:15 PM
Special Musical Guests
MedUNCedoos
UNC School of Medicines student acapella group
FORUM
News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 9
KNOW YOUR
newsroom
JENNIFER SURANE
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Ultimately responsible for all print
and online content; serves as the
public face of the paper.
(919) 962-4086
EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
Another year brings a fresh crop of Daily Tar Heel editors. Use this page to see who they are, where
theyre from and what roles they fill. Also read below to see the editor-in-chiefs goals for this year.
Introduce digital elements to enhance
our print products
Our commitment to our print product does
not always translate well to other Daily Tar
Heel platforms, like the mobile application.
This year, I will be working with web develop-
ers to create a cost-effective way to improve
the mobile application service.
The stories and visual packages we produce
for our print product will also be enhanced for
breaking news through multimedia elements
and background stories.
Our printed paper is where youll find the
analysis and award-winning journalism were
known for. Our mobile application and website
is where you can find that along with innova-
tive digital products to enhance your print
experience.
KATIE REILLY
MANAGING EDITOR
(919) 962-4086
MANAGING.EDITOR@
DAILYTARHEEL.COM
BOXFORD, MASS.
SENIOR
ENGLISH, POLITICAL SCIENCE
Oversees all daily newsroom
operations and administrative
information.
TARA JEFFRIES
FRONT PAGE EDITOR
(919) 962-4086
ENTERPRISE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
STOKESDALE
SENIOR
JOURNALISM
Responsible for editing all print and online stories for clarity, accuracy and grammar.
Oversees all page work, including headline writing.
BRADLEY SAACKS
UNIVERSITY EDITOR
(919) 962-4086
ENTERPRISE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
(919) 962-4086
DTH@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
JAMESTOWN
SENIOR
JOURNALISM
Responsible for all University news,
excluding varsity sports. Responsible
for issues pertinent to students,
administrators, faculty and staff.
HOLLY WEST
CITY EDITOR
(919) 962-0245
CITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
HUNTERSVILLE
SENIOR
JOURNALISM, COMMUNICATIONS
Covers Chapel Hill and Carrboro
within the boundaries of
Orange County and parts of
Chatham County.
MCKENZIE COEY
PRODUCTION DIRECTOR
HUNTERSVILLE
SENIOR
COMMUNICATIONS, LINGUISTICS
PAIGE LADISIC
ONLINE EDITOR
(919) 962-1163
ONLINE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
OAK ISLAND
JUNIOR
JOURNALISM, POLITICAL SCIENCE
Responsible for dailytarheel.com,
online versions of stories and
content created exclusively
for the Web.
AMANDA ALBRIGHT
I-TEAM LEADER
MARY BURKE
I-TEAM ART DIRECTOR
(919) 962-1163
SPECIAL.PROJECTS@
DAILYTARHEEL.COM
(919) 962-1163
SPECIAL.PROJECTS@
DAILYTARHEEL.COM
CHARLOTTE
SENIOR
JOURNALISM
HUNTERSVILLE
SENIOR
JOURNALISM
Responsible for spearheading the
production of a monthly special
section for the Projects
& Investigations Team.
Responsible for creating and
coordinating visuals for the Projects
& Investigations Team.
MARISA DINOVIS
COPY EDITOR
(919) 962-4086
COPY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
GREENSBORO
SENIOR
JOURNALISM, COMMUNICATIONS
Responsible for ensuring print and online products including photos, graphics and multi-
media presentations are visually progressive, appealing and complete. Oversee all visual
content and head up collaboration between desks on long-term projects.
ANDY WILLARD
FRONT PAGE EDITOR
(919) 843-4529
UNIVERSITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
SAYVILLE, N.Y.
SENIOR
JOURNALISM, ENGLISH
CHRIS GRIFFIN
VISUAL EDITOR
(919) 962-0750
PHOTO@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
CARY
JUNIOR
JOURNALISM
Responsible for editing all photos
in print and online and overseeing
print and online features, including
photo essays and slideshows.
TYLER VAHAN
DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
(919) 962-0750
DESIGN@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
WINSTON-SALEM
JUNIOR
JOURNALISM, ITALIAN
Responsible for daily page design
and layout as well as the creation
of graphics for news packages and
special sections.
SARAH BROWN
STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
(919) 962-4103
STATE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
ERWIN
SENIOR
JOURNALISM, HISTORY
Responsible for coverage outside
Orange County, focusing on the
UNC system and state and national
politics.
GRACE RAYNOR
SPORTS EDITOR
(919) 962-0245
SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
SOUTHERN PINES
SENIOR
JOURNALISM, POLITICAL SCIENCE
Responsible for covering all UNC
mens and womens varsity sports
with game stories, analysis and
regular features.
GABRIELLA CIRELLI
ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR
(919) 843-4529
ARTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
MORGANTON
SENIOR
JOURNALISM
Responsible for covering
arts-related news in the University
community and throughout
Orange County.
KATHLEEN HARRINGTON
COPY EDITOR
(919) 962-4086
COPY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
ANDOVER, MASS.
JUNIOR
JOURNALISM
Place a premium on long-term projects
and investigations
I learned the power of strong journalism
from my mother, who was an executive at a
hospital when I was growing up. She told me
everytime she and her colleagues made deci-
sions, they ran The Newspaper Test. If they
werent comfortable having their decisions run
on the front page of a newspaper, they would
think again.
The Daily Tar Heels Projects and
Investigations Team will be the force that
causes local policymakers and UNC admin-
istrators to think twice. We have assembled
a dozen of our best journalists to provide
investigative pieces on a monthly basis and
institute narrative journalism and magazine-
style writing in our newsroom.
Engage regularly with readers through
community office hours
The Daily Tar Heel should be a member of
your family, your sorority, your office, your
dorm. As your community newspaper, I want
to give you, dear reader, the chance to engage
with me in person and not only through
Letters to the Editor.
You can always reach me at editor@daily-
tarheel.com or at (919)-962-4086, but I want
to invite you to meet me on the first floor of
the Student Union on Mondays at 12:30 p.m.
Or join me in The Daily Tar Heel office at 151 E.
Rosemary St. on Fridays at 10 a.m.
These will be my regular office hours for the
semester. I want to hear every comment and
criticism, every concern and complaint. This is
your newspaper as much as it is mine.
Responsible for ensuring the paper
is meeting its public service
mission, mainly through oversight
of long-term projects.
CORNELIUS
SENIOR
BUSINESS JOURNALISM
News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 10
Football to hit the ground running
By Grace Raynor
Sports Editor
Dont get T.J. Logan
wrong, Marquise Williams is
athletic.
Williams, a redshirt junior,
has the speed for the run
game and the arm for the
pass game.
And Logan knows this. So
does Romar Morris. And so
does Khris Francis. But now
its time to beat Williams.
A quick glance down
the 2013 stat sheet for the
North Carolina football
team shows that Williams,
a quarterback, out-rushed
every single member of the
team last season, including
Logan, Morris and Francis
all tailbacks.
While Williams barely
edged out Logan Williams
with 536 and Logan with 533
rushing yards the quarter-
back rushed for more yards
than Morris and Francis did
combined.
Last year, the 6-foot-2-
inch, 220-pound Williams
became the first UNC quar-
terback to rush for more
than 100 yards since Darian
Durant in 2003, as well as
the first quarterback to lead
UNC as a whole in rushing
since Gayle Bomar did it in
1968.
Now the running backs are
ready to regain their throne.
Not a knock on
Marquise, but thats some-
thing that we have to beat
him in, Logan said.
I feel like were going to
push it and try to get that
started up early this year, so
its going to be good.
The running back core
has added Elijah Hood to
help them in their quest.
Hood, a freshman out of
Charlotte, was named the
2013 Associated Press North
Carolina High School Player
of the Year.
Logan, Morris and Francis
all said that Hood has seam-
lessly transitioned into the
college style of play and that
his sheer athleticism has
quickly separated him from
the pack. The freshman is
capable of squatting at least
600 pounds.
Of course Elijahs defi-
nitely one of the stand-up
guys coming in this fresh-
man class, Francis said.
Hes just built really
solid 230 (pounds). Hes
running kids over. Thats his
style, and everybodys enjoy-
ing it. Im looking forward
to seeing him do that during
the season.
But Morris suggested that
Hoods strengths arent just
limited to his physical make-
up and that he has also made
it a priority to really study his
position.
Hes a smart kid, Morris
said. Hes going to be a great
The tailbacks are
ready to take control
of the rushing game.
Not a knock on Marquise, but (rushing is)
something that we have to beat him in.
T.J. Logan,
Sophomore tailback
young back for us. He grabs
the playbook, and he knows
it very well, so he has a good
grasp already. I can see the
good in him.
Coach Larry Fedora said
the group of running backs
he has might collectively be
the most close-knit part of the
team. Hood joins them.
They eat together, they
spend their weekends
together and they identify
like brothers united by one
common goal to take over the
running game once again.
Again, youve got a bunch
of guys competing, but they
really have grown close,
Fedora said. The chem-
istry in that room is really,
really neat to watch. They
care about each other tre-
mendously, and they pull for
each other, and they work
extremely hard. Im really
pleased with the progress
theyve made.
Now its just a matter of
execution.
sports@dailytarheel.com
Political groups plan
for fall campaigns
By Paul Kushner
Staff Writer
UNCs on-campus politi-
cal organizations are jumping
into the fray as the falls mid-
term campaigns get underway.
The contentious U.S.
Senate race between incum-
bent Kay Hagan, D-N.C., and
N.C. Speaker of the House
Thom Tillis, R-Mecklenburg,
will be the focus of stu-
dent activism efforts by the
Universitys Young Democrats
and College Republicans.
We know Thom Tillis is
a go-getter and this will be a
defining election for North
Carolina, said Kathryn
Walker, president of College
Republicans.
Wilson Parker, president
of Young Democrats, said
the group plans to canvass in
neighborhoods throughout
Chapel Hill and Durham for
Hagans campaign.
Higher education policy
should be a priority in this
election, Parker said.
The number one thing
the state invested in histori-
cally was higher education,
he said. These investments
have been under attack under
Speaker Tillis budgets.
Young Democrats will also
be helping with voter regis-
tration, encouraging students
to vote in November.
Since 2011, there has been
an on-campus voting site
at Rams Head Dining Hall
but this fall, that polling
place will move off campus,
to North Carolina Hillel on
Cameron Avenue. The Orange
County Board of Elections
made the decision in April,
citing a need to make the site
more accessible for handi-
capped voters, though some
members expressed concerned
that students would be dis-
couraged from voting.
The Libertarian-leaning
group on campus is plan-
ning a different type of
student engagement in com-
ing months. Alex Johnson,
president of UNC Young
Americans for Liberty, said
her organization disengages
from the political process
and instead hosts forums for
students to discuss the funda-
mental principles of liberty.
Im hopeful that my
involvement will open the
doors to students minds and
grant them the opportunity to
actually learn what liberty and
freedom truly mean, she said.
In North Carolinas U.S.
Senate race, a Libertarian can-
didate is playing an increas-
ingly prominent role pizza
delivery man and Durham
resident Sean Haugh.
Jason Melehani, former
executive director of the
Libertarian Party of North
Carolina, said Libertarians play
a key role in advocating against
further increases in the size
and scope of the government.
Melehani also emphasized
the significance of student
activism and voting.
Government affects our
lives and our childrens lives
and that means we should
all care, he said.
state@dailytarheel.com
News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 11
NCs unemployment benets debt drops
By Sharon Nunn
Assistant State & National Editor
North Carolinas unem-
ployment debt has dropped
by 76 percent since 2010 to
$597 million, according to
Gov. Pat McCrory.
McCrory said in a state-
ment last week that the state
is now projected to pay off
its debt to the federal gov-
ernment by August 2015.
Original estimates had the
state paying off its debt by
November 2015.
North Carolina incurred
its unemployment debt after
the states funds for unem-
ployment benefits ran out in
2009 during the economic
recession.
The state ranked sixth
nationally for highest unem-
ployment debt in August
2011 before the federal
stimulus package ran out
and the state had to begin
paying interest on its loans.
When McCrory took office in
January 2013, the debt stood
at $2.5 billion, McCrory said
in his statement.
The new debt numbers
coincide with North Carolinas
declining unemployment
rate, which dropped from 10.7
percent in June 2010 to 6.4
percent in June 2014.
In a May report, state
lawmakers said the lower
debt can be attributed to a
variety of factors, including
an increase in the unemploy-
ment tax on businesses
which had been cut before
the recession. Changes to the
unemployment benefit policy
also contributed to the lower
debt.
Those changes consisted
of major reductions to the
states benefit payments to
the unemployed, said Patrick
Conway, chair of the UNC
economics department.
The N.C. General Assembly
in 2013 cut unemployment
insurance compensation from
$535 per week to $350 per
week.
The trust fund is being
repaid, but its being
reduced by reducing the
payout to the unemployed,
Conway said.
The states unemployment
trust fund was in a surplus
before the recession started,
he said, but the state had to
borrow from the federal gov-
ernment to continue to pay
out the benefits.
Conway said the state leg-
islature originally reduced the
unemployment tax levied
on businesses as a contribu-
tion to the states unemploy-
ment trust fund because of
the funds surplus at the time.
The trust fund was getting
bigger and bigger, Conway
said. Having done so, they
left the trust fund too small to
handle the recession.
Conway said the state had
a high unemployment debt
because of the pre-recession
unemployment tax cuts com-
bined with North Carolinas
identity as a state with strong
manufacturing and construc-
tion industries.
Those were the two sec-
tors that were hit relatively
hard in the recession, he said.
We had a higher unemploy-
ment shock than other states
North Carolina might be
compared to.
McCrory in his statement
praised Dale Folwell, the N.C.
Department of Commerce
assistant secretary of employ-
ment security and his team
for lowering the debt.
Its not enough to pay it
off, Folwell said. We need to
build a surplus and keep the
trust fund solvent.
To maintain the trust fund,
Conway said, the state needs
to find an unemployment pay-
ment level that allows unem-
ployed North Carolina resi-
dents to support their families
until they can find work.
state@dailytarheel.com
Gov. McCrory said
the state will pay the
debt by August 2015.
4
8
12
2009 2010 2011 2012
North Carolina unemployment rate continues to drop
North Carolinas declining unemployment rate from June 2009 to June 2014 coincides with the 76 percent
decline in the states unemployment debt.
2013 2014
U
n
e
m
p
l
o
y
m
e
n
t

r
a
t
e

SOURCE: THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS DTH/KAITLYN KELLY
10.6
10.7
10.4
9.4
8.3
6.4
Year
summer.unc.edu

@ UNCSummerSchool
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News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 12
UNC artists grow creative community
Students use social
media to sell artwork
to fellow students.
By Zhai Yun Tan
Senior Writer
Between playing mini golf
in the library, going on the
traditional late-night Target
run and attending FallFest,
new students might feel
overwhelmed with Week of
Welcome activities that could
divert their attention from the
Carolina Summer Reading
Program.
The reading discussion is a
voluntary Week of Welcome
event that aims to expose
freshmen and transfer students
to academic life at UNC.
It allows students to be
introduced to the academic
expectations of Carolina, said
Alison Spannaus, associate
director of the New Student
and Carolina Parent Program.
DTH/CLAIRE COLLINS
Christina Townsend, a junior communication studies and journalism double major from
Waxhaw, creates works of art that she sells to fellow students for their dorms or houses.
The Summer Reading
Program aimed to
increase interest.
By Breanna Kerr
Senior Writer
Instead of cluttering dormi-
tory room walls with cliche slo-
gans and movie posters, senior
Violette Zhu said asking stu-
dent artists like herself to com-
mission original work would be
better for decorations.
Zhu is one of several student
artists who have turned their
love of the arts into a business.
She also juggles it with her
classwork from two majors.
If youre looking to deco-
rate your wall, why not have
it be art from someone you
know and someone who
would appreciate the encour-
agement? she said.
Zhu creates watercolor
paintings and sells her cre-
ations to students on Facebook.
Junior Christina Townsend
has also used social media
Summer reading on the mend
to market her creations. The
journalism and communica-
tions double major was sitting
at home last summer when a
Pinterest obsession sparked
an artistic interest.
Townsend said she saw
quotes online she wanted on
her wall, but decided to make
them herself. She bought
paints and canvases and
continues to use the supplies
more than a year later for
her business, which she calls
Wallart by Christina.
Townsend has sold about 40
paintings since she began mar-
keting her business through
Facebook and Instagram last
summer. Each painting costs
$15 to $25 depending on the
size and intricacy of the paint-
ing. She has even shipped her
art to New York City as a gift.
I think whats special about
my paintings is that theyre
custom, she said. If that
quote hanging on the wall can
give someone a dose of daily
encouragement or inspiration,
I think thats a good thing.
Townsend has made wall
art for students in Greek
life to decorate their houses,
including members of Delta
Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.
and alpha Kappa Delta Phi
sorority.
Some students, like junior
Maura Hartzman, cre-
ated a Redbubble page to
display their drawings and
oil and watercolor paintings.
Redbubble is an online hub
similar to Etsy. Customers can
request copies of her work to
be printed as posters or on
phone cases and pillows.
Im not an art major but I
still have stuff I want to share
with the world, she said. This
site is a really good avenue for
people to get the word out.
Hartzman also does tattoo
designs for friends and cus-
tomers. She said making her
customers ideas a reality is
more important than money.
Some things are just bet-
ter expressed through colors
than words, she said.
Zhu took her art across
the world when she studied
abroad in Copenhagen and
Hong Kong last year.
My goal was to paint or
draw a picture of everywhere
I had been in the past year,
she said, adding that studying
abroad gave her the reflec-
tive time she needed to take a
break and just draw.
Zhu said her art is not a
business so much as it is a
way to contribute to an artis-
tic community on campus.
People consider art a lot of
the times to be inaccessible,
she said. Its kind of a bougie
thing to be an art collector, but
it doesnt have to be. Theres a
lot of talent on campus, so sup-
port other artists and students.
arts@dailytarheel.com
Its about being an active
learning member of the com-
munity here at Carolina.
Attendance at the discus-
sions has fluctuated during
the 16 years of the program.
It peaked in the early 2000s
when the program was man-
datory, but in 2002, a con-
troversial book choice caused
attendance to plunge. The
chosen book, Michael Sells
Approaching the Quran,
drew criticism in the after-
math of the 9/11 attacks.
It was a book trying to
help Americans understand
the Islamic religion, said
John McGowan, professor
of English and comparative
literature. But there was a
huge outcry in the state of
North Carolina about how we
were indoctrinating people
by making them read a book
about the Quran.
A lawsuit was filed against
the school and the program
was changed from mandatory
to voluntary attendance.
We have to count on the
students being interested
enough to want to have the
experience, McGowan said.
In an attempt to raise
attendance rates, the Summer
Reading Program has collab-
orated with Duke University,
First-Year Seminars Program
and the Department of
Housing and Residential
Education.
Resident advisors are
expected to notify their resi-
dents about the session and
co-facilitate it with faculty
members.
Were building up our
attendance, Spannaus said.
Were utilizing more social
media, having discussions
with freshmen through resi-
dence halls and we have an
entire website dedicated to
summer reading.
Sophomore Lindsey
Holbrook said she didnt
attend the discussion last year
because she didnt know the
details of the event.
I didnt really know much
about the logistics of it and
there was just so much other
stuff to do on welcome week,
she said. Going to the book
discussion was kind of last on
my list.
While students might not
be as enthusiastic about the
sessions, administrators and
faculty members are actively
contributing.
Chancellor Carol Folt
and Student Body President
Andrew Powell hosted a ses-
sion, as did the provost dean
and chair of the faculty senate
among others.
A lot of administrators
love participating in the
summer reading program
because theyre not the ones
who are in the classroom, so
they like being able to meet
the new students at Carolina,
Spannaus said.
They actively want to do it,
which is what is really great.
arts@dailytarheel.com
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News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 13
By Kristen Chung
Staff Writer
With the start of a new
school year and the start
of his term as faculty chair,
Bruce Cairns stressed that
collaboration is key.
Cairns began the position
on July 1 after being elected
by the faculty earlier this year.
The election set the record for
the greatest voter turnout.
For the next three years, he
will lead the Faculty Council,
a group of 96 members who
address issues that are impor-
tant to the faculty. There are
approximately 3,800 voting
faculty members.
We know that we have had
a substantial growth in fixed
term faculty, he said.
Cairns said some possible
challenges in the coming years
include faculty retention,
recruitment and the budget.
Were not quite sure what
the future will bring, he said.
There are 27 standing
committees that report to the
Faculty Council and tackle
issues, such as tenure, nomina-
tions, grievances and athletics.
Jan Boxill, former chair-
woman of the Faculty
Council, advised Cairns to
have a diverse group of people
at the table.
The biggest challenge is
change and also lots of differ-
ent ideas and how changes
ought to be done, she said.
The biggest thing is to listen.
Cairns said he plans to col-
laborate with other groups on
campus. He said he has already
met with Andrew Powell, stu-
dent body president; Shelby
Dawkins-Law, president of
the Graduate and Professional
Student Federation; and
Charles Streeter, chairman of
the UNC Employee Forum.
Streeter said he and Cairns
have already been working
closely together and members
of the employee forum are
going to serve on the Faculty
Chapel Hill Farmers Market
looks to nd new location
By Jasmin Singh
Assistant City Editor
After almost seven years at
the University Mall parking
lot, the Chapel Hill Farmers
Market wants to find a place
to call its own.
The market has a list of
basic requirements for its new
home, such as permanent
signage, parking for custom-
ers and access to restrooms
and electricity. Finding a new
home is a difficult process,
but market manager Ali
Rudel said the market is open
to any options it comes across
that can fit its tight budget.
We really dont have that
much money, said Rickie
White, co-owner of Waterdog
Farms in Hurdle Mills and
board member of the Chapel
Hill Farmers Market. Well,
we dont have any money for a
location.
White said the new home
should also be accessible by
the public transit system,
especially for students.
I think theres a little bit
of a barrier for students get-
ting on the bus and coming
down to shop, White said.
We would like to try to find
a way to bridge that gap
somehow.
Though the market wants
to find a new permanent loca-
tion, some vendors are hesi-
tant about the move.
I think the reason why
a lot of them want to stay is
because we know our cus-
tomers here, the market is
doing really well, we enjoy
the neighborhood were in, we
enjoy the people we are with,
White said. We dont want
to move too far away because
we dont want to make it
more inconvenient for those
customers that walk or bike
here.
The market asked the
Chapel Hill Town Council for
help finding a location earlier
this year.
Some of them are regular
shoppers here, he said. They
know us. They appreciate the
resource.
Council member Lee
Storrow said there is strong
support from the council.
We are hopeful that we
will be able to work with
them to identify a location
in the future, Storrow said.
Sometimes were really
fortunate and find partners
and locations for community
groups like this very quickly,
and sometimes the process
can take several months.
The market features almost
40 vendors selling a variety
of goods, such as fruit, veg-
etables, bread, tea, coffee,
beer, seafood and chocolate.
It also has artisan and crafts
vendors.
Will Cramer, a farmer
at Ever Laughter Farm in
Hillsborough and president
of the markets board, said
working in his hometown of
Chapel Hill allows him to bet-
ter connect with shoppers.
Knowing that Im feed-
ing my community has been
enjoyable, Cramer said.
Thats why the Chapel Hill
Farmers Market means a lot
to me.
Cramers farm special-
izes in plants, flowers, eggs
and vegetables. Ten-year-
old Maddie Moore came to
Cramers stand at the market
to find fresh tomatoes.
They are better for you
and fresher, and I like mak-
ing bruschetta, Maddie said.
I think they are better than
the ones you buy in the store.
They taste better.
While the market looks for
a new home, White said it
would continue to be a place
where the community can
gather, eat and have fun.
You can hang out with
other people, you can talk
to them and bond over that
tomato that you both think
is really cool, he said. Its
definitely kind of a hidden
jewel.
city@dailytarheel.com
Faculty chair
Bruce Cairns
begins term
Bruce Cairns
is the faculty
chairman and
an associate
professor of
surgery in
the school of
medicine.
Bruce Cairns plans to
collaborate with
myriad UNC groups.
DTH/CAMERON ROBERT
Ben Bergmann, a farmer from Fickle Creek Farm, has been a
participant at the Chapel Hill Farmers Market for 12 years.
The market faces a
tight budget in the
search for a new site.
Councils welfare committee.
I cant say theres anything
to improve, Streeter said.
Were already taking those
steps.
Cairns said he is also work-
ing with the Royster Society of
Fellows to reduce the stigmas
associated with mental health.
We all have to work togeth-
er in this new era working
with the Board of Governors
and the Board of Trustees as
we move the University for-
ward, Cairns said.
Faculty has control over the
curriculum at UNC. During
Boxills term, changes were
made to the English require-
ment, the honors program and
the independent study policy.
Cairns said he wants to
ensure that classes at UNC
are of high academic quality.
How do we measure the
effectiveness of the education-
al curriculum? Cairns said.
Thats one of the issues were
going to have to address.
Cairns said he also planned
to increase the amount of
global educational opportuni-
ties and explore alternative
classroom setups, including
the flipped classroom.
One of the issues I know
Andrew Powell is interested
in, and one we have to address,
is the future of the flipped
classroom and the blended
classroom and what the role of
technology is, he said.
Cairns said he worked close-
ly with Boxill to ensure there
would be a smooth transition.
She suggested Cairns under-
stand how all his committees
and advisors can help him.
Its an increasingly com-
plex job, said Cairns. Its
important to represent the
views of an ever-expanding
and complex environment.
university@dailytarheel.com
Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 14
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News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 15
Q&A with advocate for adjuncts Jean DeSaix
Adjunct faculty rights
are the subject of legislation
that passed the U.S. House of
Representatives earlier this
month, requiring colleges to
report certain data about
adjuncts, including their
working conditions and pay.
State & National Editor
Sarah Brown spoke with Jean
DeSaix, a UNC biology profes-
sor who has helped advocate
for contract and fixed-term
faculty on UNCs campus.
The Daily Tar Heel: Who
qualifies as adjunct faculty?
Jean DeSaix: The term
adjunct faculty means about
a dozen different things at
different places. Quite often
nationally what it refers to is
temporary, part-time faculty
people brought in to teach
one course every now and
then.
The (UNC) policy now,
which is sort of new, is that
adjunct can only be used for
somebody who has a full-time
position somewhere else but
needs an affiliation with biol-
ogy or history or (whichever
department) so that they can
teach a course, or be on a doc-
toral committee.
wait, this isnt fair. Why arent
fixed-term faculty getting
computers? The administra-
tors say, Oh, we hadnt even
noticed that that was happen-
ing. Let us fix it.
DTH: Anything youre par-
ticularly proud of?
JD: In Arts and Sciences,
(fixed-term faculty) have
never had a professor title.
But just last month the (UNC-
system) Board of Governors
approved the title of teaching
professor for faculty on this
campus who are not on the
tenure track but whose jobs
are mostly teaching.
I am technically now a
teaching professor. I went from
being a master lecturer, which
is a tacky, awful name. For
me ... its one of the best things
thats ever happened to me.
state@dailytarheel.com
Jean DeSaix
is a biology
professor
who advocates
for contracts
and fixed-
term faculty
at UNC.
WELCOME AT THE WELL
A
s part of the Week of Welcome, Isaac Warshauer and Austin Glock
Andrews, president and historian of the Dialectic and Philanthropic
Societies joint senate, lead students on a tour Sunday afternoon to help
them learn about the past experiences of students and the history of the University.
DTH/CLAIRE COLLINS
DTH: What is the situation
for adjuncts nationwide now?
JD: A lot of schools around
the country, with the budgets
being cut, are seeing that the
more courses you can get
taught by people you dont
have to give benefits to, the
better your financial situation.
There are people who have
Ph.D.s who would like to be
full-time faculty, but all they
can find are these rotating,
itinerant positions teach a
course at Elon, teach a course
at Carolina ... Theyre cobbling
together these courses, none of
which have benefits.
DTH: Who is working for
adjunct benefits at UNC?
JD: When Holden Thorp
was our chancellor, he had
a priority of making those
mainly teaching, lecturer
positions attractive career
positions in other words,
dont hire people one course
at a time, two courses at a
time, with no benefits.
(UNCs) Fixed-Term Faculty
Committee ... has fought hard
for benefits of all sorts titles,
benefits, mailboxes, parking
passes and so forth.
DTH: How would this bill
help adjunct faculty?
JD: If anybody high up,
like the federal government,
says, You have to report to us
what faculty youre hiring who
are not full-time faculty, and
what benefits and all that they
have, thats a good thing.
It keeps a department from
hiring somebody year after
year on one-year contracts
without the world knowing it.
DTH: So are adjunct rights a
problem at UNC?
JD: Our take has been, on
this campus, most discrimi-
nation against these types of
faculty has been benign rather
than malevolent.
In an administrative unit, it
wont occur to them that fixed-
term faculty arent getting
computers, when all the rest
of the faculty are. They just
overlooked it.
Then one of us says, Wait,
News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 16
What was Carol Folt doing spring semester?
Committee Meetings - 2.9 percent
Folts schedule was sometimes consumed by meetings with commitees, such as
the Faculty Athletics Committee and Faculty Executive Committee. She often met
with members before the meetings.
10.7 percent - Development
Taking up a signifcant portion of Chancellor Carol Folts time,
development entails meetings and dinners devoted to fundraising for
the University. Folt traveled to Charlotte, Boston, New York City, Atlanta
and West Palm Beach, Fla., for development events.
According to Folts schedule, she attended eight
performances at Memorial Hall that did not feature
students, including pianist Lang Lang, violinist
Joshua Bell and the Alvin Ailey American Dance
Theater. She also spent nearly six hours over the
course of two days in March writing speeches.
Students - 10.5 percent
Folts contact with students included two meetings
with then Student Body President Christy
Lambden. She also met six times with the Student
Advisory Committee to the Chancellor, which is a
part of student governments
executive branch.
External - 19.9 percent
Folt met with Chapel Hill Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt
and Town Manager Roger Stancil twice. She
traveled to Raleigh for separate meetings with Gov.
Pat McCrory and former state budget director Art
Pope. She also attended White House summit
meetings on protecting students from sexual
assault and maintaining collegiate accessibility and
afordability.
Faculty - 9.8 percent
This section refers to meetings with professors
and deans. She also visited many diferent
schools with Jim Dean during the past semester.
Folts schedule had 69 diferent meetings with her vice
chancellors. She met with Jim Dean, the executive vice
chancellor and provost 18 times the most of any vice
chancellor.
7.8 percent - Athletics
Folt attended a lot of sporting events,
according to her schedule. She also met
with student-athletes and athletic
department personnel on many
occasions. Folt also had a meeting with
Charles Scott, the frst black scholarship
athlete at UNC.
23.9 percent - Other
Folt few to West Palm Beach, Fla.,
and back to Raleigh in one day to
attend a two-hour development
reception. The entire trip took nine
hours and 45 minutes.
March 31
Folt and Hunter Rawlings, president of
the Association of the American
Universities who released 28
recommendations for UNC last year,
met in his ofce in Washington, D.C.
Feb. 25
Notable activities
Folt and Athletic Director Bubba
Cunningham met with ACC
commissioner John Swoford in
Greensboro. Swoford is entering his
18th year as the commissioner.
Feb. 27
Over the course of three days in
February, Folt spent more than 13
hours preparing to give a lecture on
arsenic to the National Insititute of
Environmental Health Sciences.
Feb. 26-28
14.5 percent - Direct Reports
SOURCE: OFFICE OF THE CHANCELLOR DTH/ZACH WALKER, BRADLEY SAACKS, JANE WESTER, AMANDA ALBRIGHT, TYLER VAHAN AND ARAMIDE GBADAMOSI
In the 2014 spring semester, Chancellor Folt attended 477 meetings. The Daily Tar Heel analyzed her schedule
to identify the types of meetings she scheduled most. Some meetings are listed under multiple categories.
Over the course of any given week, Chancellor Folt has many touch points with students, faculty, staf, alumni and other key constituents that impact the
life of the University. It is a tough and demanding job, and her calendar refects it. Joel Curran, Vice Chancellor of Communications and Public Afairs
News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 17
By Claire Nielsen
Assistant City Editor
Local government lead-
ers from all over the country
will assemble in Chapel Hill
for the Mayors Innovation
Project summer meeting
Wednesday to discuss afford-
able housing, civic engage-
ment and developing entre-
preneurial communities.
The projects summer
meetings are always hosted
in the town of one of the
projects Steering Committee
members. As a member of
the committee, Chapel Hill
Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt
pitched Chapel Hill for this
years summer meeting.
Mayor Kleinschmidt was
very enthusiastic about host-
ing us and made a very strong
argument to the Steering
Committee that he should
host this year, said Satya
Rhodes-Conway, managing
director of the project.
We look at trying to
spread our meetings around
the country. We want to make
(our summer meetings) easier
for member cities to get to in
a particular region.
Chapel Hill has been
a member of the Mayors
Innovation Project since 2006.
Hosting aside, just being part
of the project is beneficial for
the town, Kleinschmidt said.
The fact that were host-
ing gives us the opportunity
to kind of show off a little bit
about things that were doing
really well but also to confess
some of the challenges we
have in order to get some feed-
back and some suggestions
from people who are kind of
removed from it, he said.
About 75 mayors will attend
the conference, said Laurie
Paolicelli, executive director
of the Chapel Hill and Orange
County Visitors Bureau.
The logistics of the projects
summer meetings including
tours, speakers and panel dis-
cussions take time to plan.
Its a fairly extensive
process, Rhodes-Conway
said. We start planning the
meetings at a minimum of six
months out.
The conference attendees
will stay at the Carolina Inn,
and the conference will kick
off Wednesday evening with
a reception at Top of the Hill
Distillery. On Thursday, the
mayors will participate in a
series of tours in the area.
Being municipal leaders,
these arent your typical tourist
tours. These are tours of afford-
able housing, higher education,
things like that, Paolicelli said.
Its not like theyre just this big
motor coach bus of tourists.
Thursday evening will
feature keynote speaker Cass
Sunstein, a Harvard law pro-
fessor and author.
On Friday, there will be
panels and discussions, along
with a trip to the Carolina
Basketball Museum and a tour
of the Smith Center organized
by the Visitors Bureau.
We are grateful to the
people like Mayor Mark
Kleinschmidt who bring their
national associations to Chapel
Hill and Orange County, which
not only improves our tour-
ism economy but really gives
national leaders a chance to see
all that we did right here in our
own backyard, Paolicelli said.
city@dailytarheel.com
Chapel Hill to host US mayors for 3-day conference
UNC professors join boycott
of Israeli academic institutions
It is incumbent on
citizens of Israel
... to engage with
their government.
Nadia Yaqub,
Asian studies professor
I didnt get to work with
him for the last two weeks,
Blau said. I didnt get to say
goodbye to him.
Ari Gauss, executive director
of North Carolina Hillel, which
supports Jewish life on cam-
pus, said the group has not for-
mulated any plans to address
the recent letter. Gauss said he
thinks the letter oversimplifies
a complex situation.
Its not the first time a
boycott of Israeli academic
institutions has affected UNC.
A panel discussion in March
centered on a similar American
Studies Association boycott.
We think its really impor-
tant for everybody who cares
to educate themselves, to
really look thoughtfully for dif-
ferent voices, and we certainly
pray for peace, Gauss said.
We recognize that theres a
lot of pain, a lot of fear among
everybody in the region. I
hope that one day there will
be a peaceful solution.
state@dailytarheel.com
By Tatyana Berdan
Staff Writer
More than 400 scholars
and librarians from around
the world, including four
professors from UNC, signed
their names to a letter this
month that called for a boycott
of Israeli academic institutions
until certain demands are met.
The letter was published
on the website of Jadaliyya,
an independent online maga-
zine produced by the Arab
Studies Institute.
The scholars and librarians
demanded an end to the vio-
lence in the Gaza Strip and said
the boycott would continue
until certain conditions were
met, including recognition of
the rights of Palestinian refu-
gees and Arab-Palestinian citi-
zens. The letter cited violations
of international law, destruc-
tion of Palestinian life in Gaza
and obstacles to higher educa-
tion access for Palestinians by
the Israeli state.
Nadia Yaqub, an Asian
studies professor at UNC and
one of the faculty members
who signed the letter, said she
found it through Facebook.
Im certainly happy to talk
to all kinds of people about
this, but it sort of makes
sense to me as an academic
to address other academics,
Yaqub said.
Yaqub said she hopes her
action will help put pressure
on Israeli academics to engage
with an ethical question.
It is incumbent on citizens
of Israel, and particularly
academics who are shaping
the minds of educated Israelis
into the future, to engage with
their government, she said.
And its my responsibility as a
citizen of the world to use the
nonviolent tools that I have to
encourage them to engage.
Layla Quran, a UNC junior
and president of UNCs chap-
ter of Students for Justice in
Palestine, said the group sup-
ports the boycott and wants
to raise awareness about it.
The academic boycott and
any cultural and economic
boycott are really important
ways to hold Israel account-
able when politicians and the
media and really the inter-
national community has
failed to do so, Quran said.
Daniel Blau, a UNC junior,
spent eight weeks in Jerusalem
this summer for an internship
and witnessed the conflict up
close. He said he disagrees with
the Jadaliyya letter.
I had to go to the bomb
shelter about 10 different
times, Blau said.
He said a colleague he
worked with got called into
the Israeli reserves near the
end of the summer.
Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 18
NOTICE TO ALL DTH
CUSTOMERS
Deadlines are NOON one business day prior
to publication for classied ads. We publish
Monday thru Friday when classes are in
session. A university holiday is a DTH holiday
too (i.e. this affects deadlines). We reserve
the right to reject, edit, or reclassify any ad.
Please check your ad on the rst run date,
as we are only responsible for errors on the
rst day of the ad. Acceptance of ad copy or
prepayment does not imply agreement to
publish an ad. You may stop your ad at any
time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for stopped
ads will be provided. No advertising for
housing or employment, in accordance with
federal law, can state a preference based on
sex, race, creed, color, religion, national origin,
handicap, marital status.
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 Wanted
AFTERNOON DRIVER NEEDED for UNC
familys 2 daughters, ages 12 and
15. 2:30-5:30pm, M-F. Reliable car
and excellent driving record required.
$12-$15/hr. asauls@email.unc.edu,
919-451-9105.
BABYSITTING M-F FOR 4 children ages 3-11.
Must have own transportation and clean
driving record. Located near campus on
Gimghoul Road. Approximate minimum hours:
M/Tu/F 3-6pm, W/Th 3-6:30pm. Position to
be lled immediately. $18-$20/hr. Contact:
laurieabbey@hotmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL PICK UP and care needed
for 2 sweet girls. 2:30-5pm M/Tu/Th.
Reliable transportation, clean driving
record, previous child care experience
required. nanny.tarheel@gmail.com,
919-724-5738.
BEST NANNY EVER
A fun loving Chapel Hill family looking for a
funny nanny 2-5:30pm. 4-5 days/wk. for the
school year. Flexible hours based on class
schedule. Fluent Spanish and clean driving
record preferred. Competitive $. tdx360 at
gmail dot com.
ENERGETIC AFTERSCHOOL SITTER
WANTED: Looking for a reliable,
energetic individual to care for 2
children, 9 and 12. Excellent driving
record required. Please send resume
to markdickey@nc.rr.com or call
919-219-2515 after 6pm.
CHILD CARE, PIANO LESSONS: Love to tickle
the ivories and little kids? Looking for a student
to pick up kids afterschool Mondays and
Wednesdays. 2 great kids, 4th and 6th grades.
Ideally a short piano lesson afterschool, help
with homework and around the house. $10/hr.
919-260-5504.
AFTERNOON SITTER NEEDED for our 2 sets
of twins (ages 8 and 9) in Chapel Hill. Help
needed 2-3 afternoons/wk. 2:30-5pm starting
August 25th. Sitter must have a reliable
car, clean driving record, be able to drive
our kids to swim team practice 1-2 days/wk.
tkbkbaby@hotmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL BABYSITTER needed 2 days/
wk, 3-6:30pm for 3 wonderful children ages
13, 10 and 6. Availability Monday thru Friday
preferred. Must own a car. Some driving
for afterschool activities required. Email
beournanny@earthlink.net.
LOOKING FOR experienced child care provider
for 1 child. Position requires good driving
record and references. 2:30-6pm 4 days/wk,.
Pays $15/hr. Email amycking@gmail.com.
CHILD CARE WANTED
Child care needed in afternoons in Chapel Hill.
Will pay $15/hr. Must have your own vehicle.
Background check required. Please call Doug
at 919-259-3425.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE. Babysitter
for Carrboro family: 2 wonderful (and well
behaved!) girls ages 7, 3. Duties include school
pick up (car provided). M/Tu/Th/F 2:30-5:30pm.
Text or call: 919-360-1277.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE: Looking for a
dependable, mature person (male or female)
to pick up my 8 year-old son from Creekside
Elementary at 3:30pm daily and take to
appointments, activities and to help him
do homework until 5:30-6pm. Start date is
exible. 919-616-8426.
AFTERNOON SITTER: Experienced babysitter
needed ASAP M-F 2:30-6:30pm for 2 fun,
imaginative boys 8 and 12. We live close
to UNC campus. Sitter must have own
transportation, be willing to drive to activities,
no cat allergies, supervise homework and have
fun with kids. Excellent driving record, non-
smoker, and references required. $10/hr. +gas
money.. Email stchapelhill@gmail.com.
CHILD CARE: Seeking fun, reliable sitter with
car for 2 kids (ages 12 and 9). Tuesdays, 2:45-
5pm. $13/hr. Close to UNC. Send resume and
references to raymari34@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE needed
WEDNESDAYS, 2:30-5:30pm, starting August
25. Looking for an individual to care for our
children in Chapel Hill ages 8 and 6. Requires
dropping off 1 child in downtown Durham.
Contact jshweky@yahoo.com.
AFTERSCHOOL SITTER NEEDED! Looking for
responsible, caring babysitter with exible
afternoon, evening schedule for 8 year-old
sports loving son. Will involve school pick
up, taking to sports activities. Car access
necessary. Must be comfortable around dogs,
cats. References, license, insurance required.
scsauter@yahoo.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE NEEDED 3 days/wk,
4-7pm to take teen to activities, help with
cooking and light housework. Must have a
clean driving record and fondness for golden
retrievers. Contact lb12@duke.edu.
CHILD CARE WANTED: Excellent driver and
kind person wanted to help with getting 11
and 14 year-old boys to and from activities.
Summer hours exible with afternoons needed.
Possibility to continue into fall. References
and clean driving record a must. Pay
commensurate with experience. Contact us at
desi3101@gmail.com.
SEEKING MOTHERS HELPER for 3 children,
6:45am-8:45am M-F, beginning August
19th. $16/hr. Near UNC campus. School
prep and driving (in our minivan). Must be
organized, rm and kind. Email resume:
chapelhillsitter@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL SITTER NEEDED for 3
children ages 6, 8 and 12 years in
Chapel Hill. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday
and Friday from 2:45-5:15pm. 2 people
to share position is acceptable. $14/hr.
Email: amy_mottl@med.unc.edu.
BABYSITTER NEEDED. Creative, fun babysitter
needed for our 6 year-old daughter in our
home outside Chapel Hill. Tu/Th 2:30-5pm.
$12/hr. Must have experience, own car and
references, as well as like dogs. Reply to
babysitterreply@gmail.com.
CHILD CARE, PART-TIME. Afterschool starting
8-25. 3 afternoons/wk. 2 school age children in
Carrboro. Must have car and exible schedule.
Email resume to midwifemeg@yahoo.com.
CHILD CARE WANTED: Widowed mother
looking for a college student to assist with
13 and 14 year-old girls. Responsibilities
include driving to soccer practices in Cary and
household chores in exchange for FREE room
and board. Home located 6 miles from campus.
Must be reliable and have a clean driving
record, valid auto insurance and have solid
references. Please call 618-444-6461.
AFTERNOON CARE, CARBORO. Afternoon
kidsitter needed for 10 year-old daughter in
Carrboro. Tuesdays, Wednesdays 3-5:30/6pm
with some driving. Must have clean driving
record and like a sweet yellow lab. Please
contact katherinebaer@hotmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE,
$18/HR.
UNC students only. Driving teen girls to
activities and light housework. Mondays and
Wednesdays, 1.5-2 hrs/day. Start at 3:30pm.
Respond: schanzerdavid@gmail.com.
BABYSITTER, AFTERSCHOOL: Afterschool
sitter, moms helper needed in Chapel Hill area,
weekdays from 4-7pm. Duties include taking
teens to appointments, cooking dinner and
cleaning up kitchen, doing laundry and grocery
shopping. Must have drivers license and be
available for occasional overnights. $15/hr.
Contact Caroline at 215-480-5270.
CREATIVE AND RESPONSIBLE? South Durham
family seeking intelligent, creative and
responsible UNC student to care for bright,
easygoing 6th grader and her sweet puppy.
Afternoons, evenings, occasional afterschool
pick ups. Schedule will vary! If you are
upbeat and have a safe car and excellent
driving record, please email resume and
references. $15/hr. (bonus if you played high
school soccer and can coach a MS player!).
marjoriepierson@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE Play and care for 2
wonderful children ages 7 and 11. Afternoons
(3-4 days/wk.) 2:50-5:30pm. Clean driving
record and enjoys sweet kids. Call or text
919-428-8416!
MOMS HELPER NEEDED: Looking for a fun
loving, responsible, reliable mothers helper
for afterschool hours. Days exible (though
some Tuesday afternoons required). Average
2 afternoons/wk. Responsibilities may include
some driving to afterschool activities (car
required), very light housework, helping with
home work. References, clean driving record,
background check required. NON-smokers
only. CPR certication preferred. Call Robyn
617-312-5588.
PART-TIME HELP WANTED with 2 infants and
1 toddler, housekeeping, cooking, errands, etc.
Afternoons, evenings, some weekends. 919-
885-8642.
CHILD CARE WANTED: Afterschool child care
needed M-F, 2:30-5:30pm, starting August 25
in our Chapel Hill home. Looking for a reliable
individual to care for our 2 children ages 13 and
10. Must have own transportation. Competitive
rate. Contact nannysearch27516@gmail.com.
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
discrimination based on race, color, religion,
sex, handicap, familial status, or national
origin, or an intention to make any such
preference, limitation, or discrimination.
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any
advertising which is in violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper are available on
an equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
3BR/2.5BA. 10 MINUTE WALK TO UNC.
Spacious townhouse 1/2 mile to UNC and
Franklin Street, bus to campus right at corner.
$1,800/mo. Available now with exible start.
See website for details and photos! Contact
807NColumbia@gmail.com, 607-279-1880.
GARAGE APARTMENT. Quiet, wooded
neighborhood. Private entrance. Full kitchen.
Carpeting. Separate LR, bedroom, bathroom.
Many windows. Partly furnished. $785/mo.
includes utilities, cable, internet. Available.
919-929-6072.
TREETOP STUDIO. Furnished, 1 mile from UNC
Med. $570/mo. woodburnwalk@gmail.com.
VERY LARGE 2BR furnished or unfurnished
apartment in private home. Chapel Hill.
Very private, quiet. Beautiful setting. Rent
covers everything: Electricity, gas, water,
cable, internet. Live in a gorgeous home
while enjoying the carefree lifestyle of an
apartment, At unbelievable rent: $975/mo.
Non-smoking. Sorry, no pets. 919-933-7533 or
919-260-5645.
EASY WALK TO CAMPUS. 6BR/3BA shared
house near campus. $570/mo. including
utilities. Large HDTV in living room. Hardwood
oors. Just off Franklin Street. 919-357-1738.
HOUSE FOR RENT: Walking distance from
campus, deck in the back, lots of parking,
available immediately. 4BR/2BA, W/D, price
negotiable. gyl_watson@yahoo.com or
919 521 8897.
WALK TO CAMPUS. 2BR/1BA. Fully renovated.
W/D. Dishwasher. Central AC, heat. Available
immediately, $900/mo. Merciarentals.com,
919-933-8143.
DUKE FOREST HOUSE, SEMI FURNISHED.
2BR/1BA. $1,370/mo. with deposit. No pets or
smokers. woodburnwalk@gmail.com.
MCCAULEY STREET 3BR/1BA. Walk to campus.
Full kitchen. W/D, parking. Initial lease thru
May 31, 2015. $1,700/mo. +utilities. Contact
sduval-shave@nc.rr.com or 919-370-9467.
For Sale
MOVING SALE ongoing. Mini fridge and
microwave. Call Clare, 919-904-2626.
Help Wanted
THE CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO YMCA is
accepting applications for afterschool
counselors. Counselors actively participate in
sports, homework, crafts and other activities
each afternoon with students grades K-8.
Candidates should be available afternoons
from 2-6pm Monday thru Friday. Apply online
at http://www.ymcatriangle.org/y-jobs. EOE.
TOWN HALL GRILL located in Southern
Village is looking for experienced servers and
bartenders. Hosts, hostesses are also welcome.
Please apply in person at 410 Market Street,
Chapel Hill. 919-523-0968.
HELP WANTED: Time Warner Cable News
freelance multimedia journalist. Weekend
mornings. Shoot, write and edit television news
stories on deadline. Must have audition reel.
http://bit.ly/1zuT7aR.
FIELD HOCKEY COACH needed for
McDougle Middle School. Practices begin
week of August 25th 3:30-5pm. Games
September 8th thru October 13th. Contact
jkucewicz@chccs.k12.nc.us.
WINGS OVER CHAPEL HILL is hiring! Look for
cooks, counter help, delivery drivers to work
in fast paced environment. Nights, weekends
make it a perfect part-time job for students.
Free wings during shifts! Apply in person, 313
East Main Street or call 919-537-8271.
UNC STUDENTS: Need strong, reliable person
to help with yard and housework. Experience
a plus. Must be able to follow instructions
and work independently. References required.
Flexible schedule. $12/hr. 919-933-7533.
NURSE MANAGER: RSI is seeking an RN to
supervise staff and residents at our senior living
center in Durham. Qualied candidates must
have a current RN license. Previous supervisory,
leadership experience preferred. Schedule: M-F
8am-5pm. Compensation: $40,000 per year
+$1,000 dollar bonus after 6 months and a
year of successful employment. Apply online at
www.rsi-nc.org.
CLINICAL TEACHING TUTORS needs advanced
math and science, literacy, EC tutors in
all neighboring counties plus Chapel Hill.
Car., superb spoken English, smart phone.
References. days and hours available, any
weekends? Jlocts@aol.com $18/hr. and up.
Also, $12/hr. as needed ofce and market help.
Car.
CHAPEL HILL PARKS AND RECREATION:
Part-time. Looking for lifeguards, exible
hours. Current certications required. Apply
online at www.townofchapelhill.org or call
919-968-2789 for additional information.
THE CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO YMCA is hiring
lifeguards, swim instructors and water aerobics
instructors. Lifeguards and aerobics instructors
must have current certication. Requires
excellent customer and communication skills.
Flexible hours and competitive pay. Apply
online at http://www.ymcatriangle.org/y-jobs.
EOE.
SOCCER AND TBALL COACHES NEEDED:
Brookridge Soccer Consultants has
immediate work for coaches. Pay
is from $15-$25/hr. depending on
experience. Hours vary and range from
casual to part-time. Looking for staff to
start immediately and as of September
Contact rbryan@brookridgesoccer.com
with your resume 919-949-1831.
BARISTA: Gourmet coffee bar on the UNC
campus is seeking part-time baristas to ll
shifts at the reopening at Global Cafe. No
nights and no weekends! Competitive pay. Fun
and fast paced atmosphere. Previous barista
experience is a plus. Please apply in person at
EspressOasis at the Beach Cafe inside Brinkhous
Bullitt or email your resume for consideration.
537-3612 for directions.
SALES ASSOCIATE needed at The Red
Hen, a childrens and maternity resale
boutique in University Mall in Chapel Hill.
Seeking energetic, friendly, hard worker
for afternoon, evening and weekend shifts.
Please email resume and cover letter to
theredhen@gmail.com.
CLINICAL TEACHING, a busy educational
service, needs math, science (and advanced to
stats, physics), history. Also needed: Homework
coaches, exceptional child, literacy. Car,
excellent spoken English, references. Chapel
Hill, Chatham and Triangle. Please send days
and hours available to jlocts@aol.com. $21/hr.
and TBD for independent work.
WAITRESSES, DISHWASHERS needed for
Queen of Sheba. With experience only. 1129
Weaver Dairy Road, Suite O. Apply in person.
919-932-4986.
STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES ASSOCIATE at
Carolina Population Center. Duties include
sorting and delivering mail to 4 campus
locations, moving furniture and boxes, ofce
set up, running errands across campus. Ability
to move objects weighing up to 200 pounds.,
required. Hours: 1-5pm, M-F. Afternoon hours
are exible. Position available immediately
and continuing about 4 weeks. $11/hr. Send
email describing your qualications for the
position and detailing your availability to
dbmorris@email.unc.edu. EOE.
SWEETEST JOB EVER
Sugarland on Franklin Street is hiring! We
offer great pay, a guaranteed schedule
and awesome coworkers. Smart, fun,
responsible students should stop in or
email their resume and availability to:
info@sugarlandchapelhill.com.
BAILEYS PUB AND GRILLE is currently hiring
for all hourly positions! We are looking for
energetic individuals who will thrive in a
fast paced environment. Baileys is full of
opportunities and excitement. We provide
competitive wages, exible work schedules
and health, dental and vision insurance plans.
Please apply in person Sunday thru Thursday
from 2-4pm at: Rams Plaza, 1722 Fordham
Blvd, Chapel Hill, NC 27103 or online at
www.foxandhoundcareers.com.
SOFTWARE ENGINEER to work on enthusiastic
team to help build ReadTheory.org. Pay
starting at $45/hr and is subject to increase.
Must be procient in JAVA, MVC, HTML,
JS. Groovy/Grails is a plus. Email support@
readtheory.org.
THE BOOMERANG PROGRAM is hiring a
part time ofce manager providing support
and will be the main point of contact for
incoming students and ofce visitors as
well as clerical duties. Apply online at
http://www.ymcatriangle.org/y-jobs. EOE.
KENNEL HELP AND BATHERS NEEDED part-
time or full-time. Must be smart, hardworking,
animal lover. Apply in person. 710 West
Rosemary Street. Love Overboard Kennels and
Grooming.
WOMENS RESALE STORE, Clothes Mentor
Chapel Hill, is now hiring for a part-time
sales associate and buyer. Outgoing, fashion
lovers, with retail experience preferred.
chapelhill@clothesmentorstores.com.
HIRING NOW: CATERING. Server and
bartender positions for all home UNC football
and basketball games. Catering experience
NOT necessary. Please email resume to
rockytopunc1@gmail.com if interested. Perfect
job for students!
Internships
PAID INTERNSHIP: Gain valuable business
experience with The AroundCampus Group,
a Chapel Hill collegiate marketing company.
Flexible schedule. Average $13/hr. Attending
August 20th Job Expo. Email resume to
amoore@aroundcampus.com.
Parking
LOOKING FOR A PARKING SPOT? We have
parking spaces available off of Franklin
Street behind Jiffy Lube. $250/semester.
Call 919-968-4321.
Roommates
ROOMMATE. BOLINWOOD APARTMENT.
Roommate wanted for my apartment. I have
a 3BR/2BA and 1 of the rooms is available.
Bath is shared with male student. Totally
remodeled apartment: Hardwood oors
updated bathrooms. Must be very clean and
organized! 1.5 miles from UNC campus.
$550/mo. +utilities. Call Nic if interested:
786-210-6709.
Rooms
ROOM FOR RENT in house shared with
professional in Southern Village. Great
location, 1.25 miles from UNC and on busline.
Furnished, utilities included (internet, cable,
W/D). No smokers. $700/mo. Contact Michael
at 512-799-3093.
Services
SET ACADEMIC GOALS. Make a career plan.
Follow up! www.collegeperformancecoaching.
com. Develop your leadership, time
management, health and communication skills.
Find career and grad school mentors. 919-324-
9007 info@collegeperformancecoaching.com.
CNA TRAINING CLOSE TO UNC. 16 hour CNA
prep course. $425. Downtown Carrboro.
www.ChapelHillCNA.com.
Tutoring Services
WRITING IS HARD. Get professional
help! Editing and coaching. Papers,
theses, dissertations, ction. MFA
in Creative Writing AND 20 years in
journalism. John Yewell, 831-392-7062
(Durham), johnyewell@gmail.com,
www.johnyewell.com.
Tutoring
Child Care Wanted
Tutoring Announcements
(c) 2014 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If August 19th is Your Birthday...
Let your love light shine this year. Your talents
are in demand. October eclipses (10/8, 23)
open new doors at work and home. Household
renovation strengthens infrastructure. After
12/23, its easier to express love and win
at games. Springtimes good for financial
organization and making connections.
Spontaneous travel and educational
opportunities arise (until 2018). Steadfastly
save resources. Share gratitude.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 7 -- An unexpected develop
provides a pleasant surprise. Avoid
distractions, and schedule carefully. Take
control to nd the answer. Keep quiet
about it. Associates reveal glamorous plans.
Make sparks behind closed doors. Keep
the peace.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 9 -- A windfall opportunity
showers you with bountiful gifts. Proceed
with caution anyway. Friends help. Wait
until others decide what they want before
trying to provide it. Use native plants in a
garden project.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 9 -- Get what you need
delivered. Follow a hunch to advance. One
possible route has a dead end. What works
here wont work there. Planning saves time
and energy, and provides security. Invest
in success.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8 -- Make sure you have the
funds required. A partner can help you
advance. Psyche out the opposition. Quiet
pursuits reap unexpected rewards. Choose
the option that feels most true. Follow
your heart.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Theres pressure to perform.
Heed an older persons nancial advice.
Keep your opinions mostly to yourself.
Dont get swayed by smoke and mirrors.
Listen to someone who disagrees with you.
Friends provide a lovely surprise.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Dont gossip about work.
Finish up, despite changes. Find out whos
really in charge. Discover another option.
All is not as it appears. Take your partner
along for extra insight. Double-check
instructions. Practice techniques.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Travel and exploration
entice. You dont have to go far to try
something new. Carve out some time for
romance. Have a party and invite interesting
friends. Research and creative projects
ower with collaboration.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 7 -- Its okay to test limits. Provide
facts, and wait for what develops. You dont
have the full picture. Revise plans to roll
with changes. Practical, creative actions
solve the problem. Count your earnings.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8 -- Replace what you left
behind. Appearances can deceive.
Inspiration comes from the strangest places.
Your imagination lls in the gaps. Reconnect
with distant friends. Love drops a surprise
in your lap.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7 -- Dont fall for a fantasy... get
out before the spell wears off. Unexpected
circumstances at work offer new options.
Choose the most practical direction, the one
that adds to your family coffers.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 7 -- Your partner reveals a
surprise in the game. Think fast, and keep
an ace up your sleeve. Try something
unconventional. Listen to the competition,
and use best quality supplies... but only the
minimum needed.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 6 -- Domestic chores provide
satisfying results today. Simple efforts like
cooking and cleaning keep the household
thriving. Surprises require postponing what
you had planned. Graciously offer tea and
comfort to unexpected guests.
BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room

Deadlines
Line Ads: Noon, one business day prior to publication
Display Classied Ads: 3pm, two business
days prior to publication
Line Classied Ad Rates
Private Party (Non-Prot)
25 Words ....... $20.00/week
Extra words .. 25/word/day
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EXTRAS: Box: $1/day Bold: $3/day
To Place a Line Classified Ad Log Onto
www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252
DTH ofce is open Mon-Fri 8:30am-5:00pm
Chapel Hill Law Firm seeks
temporary, part-time office assistant
to work 24 hours per week from
September 1st through December.
Duties will include performing
general administrative office tasks,
such as filing, copying, answering
the phone, greeting clients, and
scheduling appointments.
Candidate must be professional and
well organized, have strong
communication and computer
skills, and be detail-orientated.
Applicants should reply
to chapelhilllaw@gmail.com and
submit resume and cover letter.


UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY
ALL IMMIGRATION MATTERS
REDUCED FEE FOR FACULTY & STUDENTS!
Work Visas Green Cards Citizenship
NC Board Certified Attorney Specialist
LISA BRENMAN 919-932-4593 visas-us.com
Its easy to place
a DTH Classified...
www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds
Announcements
Child Care Wanted
Announcements
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Attention 1st year males!
Fall Retreat Sept. 13-14, 2014
Carolina Males
Developing a 4-year plan
for academic success
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News Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 19
Carol Folts schedule
Take a look at how the
chancellor spent her time
during the spring semester.
See pg. 16 for the breakdown.
Brunch at Lenoir
Lenoir Dining Hall
is opening for weekend
brunch starting Aug. 23.
See pg. 1 for the story.
Advocacy for adjuncts
Biology professor Jean
DeSaix advocates for con-
tract and fixed-term faculty.
See pg. 15 for the Q&A.
Downtown imagined
The Chapel Hill 2020
project aims to unify and
improve all of downtown.
See pg. 6 for the 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.
2014 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
(C)2014 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Curtain hanger
4 Execs Now!
8 Works for People,
perhaps
13 50s political slogan
name
14 Because Freedom
Cant Protect Itself gp.
15 Dead Sea discovery
17 Stuffy room need
19 Overly affected
20 Cab ride cost
21 Smith, to Abigail Adams
23 UFO navigators, so they
say
25 One-one, for one
26 Messy type
27 In and of itself
30 Tip holder
31 Me, to Matisse
32 Language of Southeast
Asia
33 Mello Yello rival
38 Recipient of much Apr.
mail
39 Baby seal
40 Overnight stopping
place
41 Anger
42 Door-controlling
sensor
45 Like very familiar
jokes
46 Acidity nos.
47 Road crew goo
48 40-Across postings
50 Resort near
Ventura
52 Spanish month
53 El Al home: Abbr.
54 1984 Prince hit
57 Purina rival
61 Error-removal aid
62 Painted setting behind
stage actors, or what the
ends of 17-, 21-, 33-,
42- and 54-Across can
literally have
64 DVD player error
message
65 Lago filler
66 Bustle
67 Uses Avis, say
68 Put in order
69 Kentucky Derby action
DOWN
1 Repeated musical
accompaniment
2 Pod vegetable
3 XING sign critter
4 Thats the spot
5 Takes for a ride
6 Et __: and others
7 17th-century New
England settler
8 First name in makeup
9 Anti-rodent brand
10 Attaches, as patches
11 Complete dolt
12 Like many NFL replays
16 Pop singer Lisa
18 Dates
22 More in need of
cleaning
24 Entices
27 Ballet bend
28 Viscounts superior
29 Traditional New Years
Day procession
30 Planet with the most
moons
31 Gold rush figures
34 Your and my
35 Unspecified number
36 Author Gardner
37 Gets married
43 Contributes for a joint
gift
44 Melons with wrinkly
rinds
49 Very dry
50 Start serving customers
51 Courtroom panelist
52 Former Ford autos,
briefly
53 Acquire, as debts
55 For fear that
56 Shakespearean villain
58 Many a Syrian
59 Airplane __: cellphone
setting
60 Parking space
63 Krazy comics feline
Looking for Moore with the Tar Heels
By Brendan Marks
Assistant Sports Editor
With attacker Abbey
Friend graduated, the North
Carolina womens lacrosse
team was primed to enter this
year without its leading scorer
from last season.
That was until Friday,
when the Tar Heels took a
major step toward replacing
Friends offensive production.
Alex Moore, who led
the University of Southern
California in scoring as
a freshman last year,
announced her transfer to
UNC for the upcoming sea-
son. After recording 35 goals
and 11 assists for the Trojans,
Moore is expected to help fill
the void Friend left behind.
Carolina has such a repu-
tation for being great that I
just want to come in, work
my hardest and do whatever
I can to help this team,
Moore said. If they need
me to score goals, then I can
help with that, but Im really
just ready to start playing
and contribute in any way
that I can.
Coming out of high school,
Moore was expected to con-
tribute right away Inside
Lacrosse even named her one
Alex Moore is
a sophomore
lacrosse player
transferring
to UNC from
the University
of Southern
California.
On the wire: national and world news
In Ferguson, anger
over teens lost future
FERGUSON, Mo. To
understand Michael Brown
and why his shooting has
unleashed such anger here,
go to the place where he lived
and died.
Canfield Green
Apartments, a worn complex
of brick buildings surrounded
by trees and hills, has become
a rallying point for protesters.
They congregate at its center,
Canfield Drive, the two-lane
street where Brown died Aug.
9, shot multiple times by a
white police officer.
The apartments are a
working-class way station
a way out of the inner city,
adjacent to the slightly pricier
townhomes and tract houses.
But amid the trappings of
a working-class haven is an
edge of frustration and anger.
Many of the young have no
work. Some have served time
in prison for violent crimes,
including clashes with police.
The apartment complex com-
munity had a tense relation-
ship with Ferguson officers.
In this mix, 18-year-old
Michael Brown was known
as a good kid not an angel,
but someone who had hope
for the future.
It is part of the reason why
his death has reverberated so
strongly: He had hope, and he
was killed.
If his grandma said go
upstairs, he went. He was
respectful, recalled neighbor
Kevin Seltzer, 30.
He didnt bother people.
Thats why the community
here in Ferguson, the real
community of Canfield, were
upset now.
Brown stayed at Canfield
with friends and, earlier this
year, with his grandmother
at the adjacent Northwinds
apartments. He had just
graduated from nearby
Normandy High School no
small achievement here.
He was heavyset and quiet,
but not shy. He recorded rap
music with his best friend and
smoked marijuana with other
young men.
Everyone called him
MCT/CHRISTIAN GOODEN
MCT/ROBERT COHEN
A crowd gathers Aug. 14 in St. Louis, Mo., for a moment of
silence for Michael Brown, unarmed at the time of his death.
Protesters have raged in Fergusons streets every night
since Browns death, refusing to leave despite police orders.
Mike-Mike. Hes so big, they
said, you have to call him
twice. His cousin, Christine
Ewings, said Brown had
played on the high school
football team but stopped
because he was afraid of hurt-
ing smaller students.
Brown didnt have a car or
his license. Like many here,
he walked to nearby stores,
including the day he was shot.
Seltzer watched him
leave that day in a T-shirt,
shorts and flip flops. Brown,
who Seltzer teased as being
LeBron big, was headed for
a nearby minimart to buy
cigarillos, cigars often used to
smoke marijuana.
Police said Brown then
stole some cigarillos from the
minimart. Williams said he
didnt know if that was true,
but he said in this neighbor-
hood it wouldnt have marked
Brown as much of a criminal.
When youre growing up in
a rough situation, everybody
makes mistakes, Williams
said.
Brown was later shot after
being confronted on Canfield
Drive by police Officer Darren
Wilson in front of several
apartment residents.
A woman who lives in
the complex and asked not
to be identified for fear of
being targeted by residents
and police said she heard
the commotion and ran to
her balcony. She said Brown
threw his hands up in the air,
shouting, Dont shoot!
The officer kept shooting
and he fell to his knees, beg-
ging for his life, the woman
said. Thats when he finished
him off, shot him in the head.
The woman said she works
in a warehouse and moved
here in March with her
2-year-old daughter to escape
the violence in inner-city St.
Louis.
She knows hard-core
criminals, and said that
Brown wasnt one. He was
not a known drug dealer, not
a gang banger.
His death just pushed a
lot of people over the edge,
she said.
Governor orders curfew
after more violence
FERGUSON, Mo. In an
unusual declaration for an
American city, Gov. Jay Nixon
imposed a midnight-5 a.m.
curfew Saturday after fresh
violence erupted amid public
anger over the shooting death
of an unarmed black man by
a white police officer.
The governors curfew and
state of emergency decree
underscored the gravity of the
situation, where Ferguson offi-
cials have been unable to calm
tempers and racial tensions.
Critics, from black lead-
ers in Ferguson to Amnesty
International USA, were
quick to criticize Nixons
move and said it could further
infuriate protesters who have
gathered on the streets of the
St. Louis suburb nightly since
Michael Browns death.
At a chaotic news con-
ference where Nixon was
shouted down by specta-
tors demanding charges be
filed against Wilson, the
Democratic governor said
the way to restore peace
was to ensure safety on the
streets.
We cannot have looting and
crimes at night, Nixon said.
We cant have people fearful.
We cant have police offi-
cers killing people! someone
in the crowd yelled.
of the nations top 25 incom-
ing freshman. This came on
the heels of her breakout
junior year for Allentown
High, when she set the New
Jersey single-season scoring
record.
Despite excelling early
on at Southern California,
Moore decided to transfer for
academic reasons. She plans
to become a licensed nurse
after college, and Moore said
transferring would be the best
way for her to get the degree
she wants.
I committed to USC when
I was relatively young, and
so while I had an idea that I
wanted to do something in
the medical field, I wasnt
sure exactly what, Moore
said. I wanted to set myself
up for a bright future in
nursing and continue to play
lacrosse at the same time, and
Im lucky enough that UNC
could offer me both of those
opportunities.
For the Tar Heels, Moores
proficiency for scoring goals
will be a welcome addition.
After the Trojans struggled
with injuries and a lack of
depth last season, Moores
ability to play both attacker
and midfielder can only help
an already talented team.
She likes to get to the cage
and shes very quick, which
will fit very well into our style
of play. As the main option
at USC she proved that she
could break down a defense
one-on-one, but also that she
can pass out of that situation,
which is something that we
like to do, said coach Jenny
Levy.
It may have taken her a
year to get here, but now that
she is here, Moore can take
pride in excelling as both a
student and an athlete.
I wish I had gone through
a year of college before I
started my college search, but
now that Im here, I just want
to get on the field and start
competing, said Moore.
Im so happy and thankful
that I made this decision, and
I cant wait to see what my
future holds.
sports@dailytarheel.com
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Tuesday, August 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 20

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