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CHAMPIONSHIP PREVIEW

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dailytarheel.com

Volume 124, Issue 23

Monday, April 4, 2016

One more game for glory

EDITORS NOTE:

If UNC beats Villanova


tonight (knock on wood), we
will print a special edition to
celebrate the championship
win.
In past years, weve had
rampant theft of papers,
and we want to make sure
everyone gets a copy and
history tells us that these editions are going to be sought
after, to say the very least. So
we have a few measures put
in place.

Q: Will there be
papers in boxes?

No. All papers must be


picked up at one of our pickup
locations.

Q: Where can I get


one?

DTH/KENDALL BAGLEY
UNC forward Brice Johnson (11) takes a shot against Syracuse in the semifinals of the NCAA Tournament. UNC took the victory with a score of 83-66.

UNC advances to NCAA championship against Villanova


By Carlos Collazo
Senior Writer

HOUSTON Brice Johnson is a


large reason why the North Carolina
mens basketball team will compete in the national championship
Monday night against Villanova.
Hes a first-team All-American.
Hes improved dramatically from his
junior season in every major category: scoring, rebounding, free-throw
shooting, blocking and stealing.

Hes having an all-time great season


for a North Carolina player.
Hes the first Tar Heel to grab 400plus rebounds in a season breaking
Tyler Hansbroughs 399 mark from
2008 and is a top-10 rebounder
and blocker in UNC history.
As senior point guard Marcus
Paige put it, Johnson is the head
of the snake that is the 2016 UNC
mens basketball team.
But during a crucial stretch in
Saturday nights 83-66 win over

3 things to know
about Villanova
UNC will play the Wildcats
today for the national
title at 9:19 p.m.
By David Allen Jr.
Senior Writer

HOUSTON In the storied


histories of the North Carolina and
Villanova mens basketball programs,
the teams have met in the NCAA
Tournament six times. In four of
those six meetings including both
of UNCs national championships
under Coach Roy Williams the
winner went on to cut down the nets.
Likely, this is just a random stat,
an anomaly, a mere glitch in the
path to glory. But nonetheless, the
Tar Heels and Wildcats have some

history. And now the stakes are bigger than ever before. The two teams
will square off Monday night with
the chance to be crowned national
champions.
Here are three things to note
about Villanova.

The hottest team in the land


Even though UNC has beaten
each of its opponents in the NCAA
Tournament by double digits thus
far, its Villanova who has had the
more impressive run of late.
On Saturday, the Wildcats
trounced Oklahoma to the tune of
a 95-51 win, which was the largest
margin of victory in Final Four history.

SEE VILLANOVA, PAGE 7

Syracuse, the head of the snake was


sitting on the bench.
With 9:05 left in the first half, the
game was tied at 16 and Johnson
found himself sitting and watching
after picking up his second foul.
This is where things take a downward turn for the Tar Heels, right?
Not exactly.
When (Johnson) went out, we
went small for a stretch and we
really upped our defensive intensity, Paige said. We got a bunch of

stops in a row.
Over that nine-minute stretch,
a Johnson-less UNC lineup held
Syracuse to just 5-of-14 shooting
with two turnovers. At the same
time, the Johnson-less lineup started to figure it out on the other end.
Then we were able to get a
couple fast-break points, Paige
said. Justin (Jackson) got out on
a run out, I got a fast-break jump

SEE JOHNSON, PAGE 7

Post play propels


UNC basketball
The Tar Heels relied on
their players inside to
reach the national title.
By Pat James
Sports Editor

HOUSTON Roy Williams has


always stood by an inside-out offense.
A proponent of attacking the basket and getting teams in foul trouble,
the North Carolina mens basketball
coach has defended this philosophy in
recent weeks as hes answered questions about the growing amount of
3-point shooting in college basketball.
But in Saturdays 83-66 win over
10th-seeded Syracuse, the top-seeded Tar Heels were forced to rely on
a seemingly inside-only offense as
they struggled from behind the arc.

This was what the North Carolina


mens basketball team was built for.
Were balanced, and that plays
into our favor, said Sean May,
UNCs director of player personnel. We try not to get too far on
one side or the other, whether it
be threes or twos. You need that
balance, because you never know
whats going to happen.
And in Saturday nights national
semifinals, the unexpected occurred.
Despite shooting 32.1 percent on
3-pointers entering Saturday, North
Carolina was shooting 38.2 percent
from behind the arc through four
NCAA Tournament games.
Less than two minutes in, Marcus
Paige elevated for a 3-pointer, looking
to continue his teams hot shooting
and dispel the notion of the NRG

There will be multiple


distribution and pickup locations. At press time, these locations have been confirmed:
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- The Pit ( 7 a.m.)
- The Quad (7 a.m.)
- Rams Head Dining Hall (9
a.m.)
Other pickup locations
might be released during the
day today.

Q: What if I cant pick


up a paper?

If youre interested in ordering a paper to be mailed to


you, you can preorder a paper
at store.dailytarheel.com.
Not all papers are listed
yet.

Q: How many papers


can I pick up?

Everyones first copy is free.


Additional copies are $1 each,
and only a maximum of five
per person are allowed.

Q: Wait! I have more


questions. Who do I
call?

Email our staff at dth@


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Additionally, selling copies
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them from us will be considered a copyright infringement
and will be handled as such.
Just dont do it.

SEE POST PLAY, PAGE 7

On Franklin Street, fans celebrate UNCs 83-66 win over Syracuse on Saturday

DTH/ALEX KORMANN
DTH/ALEX KORMANN
DTH/ALEX KORMANN
Students rush to Franklin Street after UNCs win against Syracuse in the Final Four. Students celebrated by lighting and jumping over small fires. UNC will play Villanova in the NCAA Championship today.

Can somebody grab me a DTH for today and save it for me?
MARCUS PAIGE

10

dailytarheel.com

Monday, April 4, 2016

The Daily Tar Heel

SportsMonday
UNC rolls
past the
Orange

The Tar Heels will play in the


title game tonight.
By David Allen Jr.
Senior Writer

Its hard to beat a team three times in


the same season. But the North Carolina
mens basketball team defeated Syracuse
for the third time and secured a spot in the
national championship with an 83-66 win.
It was the starting forwards who got
things going for UNC early. Through the first
11 and a half minutes, Brice Johnson and
Kennedy Meeks had 14 of UNCs 18 points.
The Tar Heels needed a spark.
With under 10 minutes to play in the first
half, Nate Britt fired up a 3-pointer that
bounced into the hands of Johnson, who finished it off with a ferocious dunk.
What about that spark?
After Johnsons put-back dunk, the
Tar Heels went on an 11-to-2 run, forcing
Syracuse to take a timeout to regroup.
And heading into halftime, it was the
UNC bench that helped cement the lead.
Isaiah Hicks hit a pair of turnaround
jumpers and Theo Pinson went coast-tocoast for a layup giving the Tar Heels an
11-point lead heading into halftime.
The opening minutes of the second half
were much like the first half, frenzied and
full of sloppy play.
Syracuse cut the lead to just seven
points, and UNC was once again in need of
a spark. And it came in the form of senior
leaders Marcus Paige and Johnson.
First, Paige buried his first 3-pointer of
the night and then less than 30 seconds
later Johnson sent the crowd to its feet
with a rim-rattling dunk.
From there, the Orange strayed away
from their normal half-court zone defense
and went with an intimidating full-court
press. But the Tar Heels handled it with poise
and pushed the lead out behind six Justin
Jackson points in the last four minutes.

Notable
After struggling in both the ACC and
NCAA tournaments, Meeks has reached
double digits in three-straight games,
including 15 points Saturday while shooting an impressive 7-of-9 from the field.

3 numbers that matter


16: It took Hicks 16 minutes to get four
personal fouls, enough to warrant a long
stay on the bench during the second half.
Hicks has committed at least four fouls in
18 of UNCs 39 games.
3: After shooting just 1-of-6 from the
field, Paige buried three key 3-pointers in
the second half.
50: UNC outscored Syracuse by 18
points in the paint and finished with 50 of
its total 83 points from inside.

Whats next?
North Carolina will take on Villanova in
the national championship today at 9:19 p.m.
@davidrallenjr
sports@dailytarheel.com

SCOREBOARD

MENS LACROSSE: UNC 17, Duke 16 (OT)


WOMENS LACROSSE: UNC 14 Notre
Dame 8
MENS TENNIS: Wake Forest 4, UNC 3
BASEBALL: Miami 7, UNC 4

Seniors ourish in nal ride


Marcus
Paige, Brice
Johnson and
Joel James
lead the way
By David Allen Jr.
Senior Writer

HOUSTON Win or lose,


Mondays national championship game will be the last time
Marcus Paige, Brice Johnson and
Joel James suit up for the North
Carolina mens basketball team.
Go ahead, take a minute. Let the
memories come roaring back. The
game-winning shots. The dunks.
The smiles. The best friends.
The trio has had a dominant run
in their four years at UNC tallying 108 wins but it wont be until
their final game together that the
three players will have a chance to
fulfill a goal. A dream. A destiny?
The Tar Heels wouldnt have gotten past Syracuse in the Final Four
without the play of the seniors.
When the Orange inched closer,
they answered. They werent going
to let the ride end just yet.
First, it was Johnson who
stepped up.
Syracuse was leading 16-14
when Nate Britt shot a 3-pointer
that hit the front iron and rocketed into the air. Johnson didnt
even give the ball time to start its
descent, flying in for a putback
dunk to start a 25-12 run to take a
double-digit lead into halftime.
I think any time Brice dunks,
the crowd gets electric, Justin
Jackson said. Momentum can
definitely shift your way when big
dunks happen.

DTH/KENDALL BAGLEY
UNC forward Joel James (42) shoots the ball during the semifinal NCAA Tournament game against Syracuse.

And it did just that. Even


though the Tar Heels let the
Orange draw closer, Syracuse
never retook the lead.
Next up, Joel James.
The 6-foot-11 senior came in
and was instant offense. Yes, you
read that right. James, known for
his defensive intensity and ability
to play tough down low, provided
a spark on the offensive unit.
The Orange cut the lead to five
during the final minutes of the first
half, and James pulled up from 12
feet. Swish. Two possessions later,
the ball was back in James hands
at the top of the key, with his team
up five. No question, right? Swish.
James said he meticulously
practices that jump shot during
practice, and when the ball came
to him he felt good.
I just stayed in the short cor-

ner, he said. Joel (Berry) drove


and kicked it to me, and I made
the shot.
Enter, Marcus Paige.
He started slow, finishing 1-for-6
in the first half. But when the game
was cut to seven points in the second half, it was Paiges 3-point shot
that cemented the lead.
I think it was probably the
biggest play of the game, Coach
Roy Williams said.
And the team agreed. When
Paige is shooting well, its more
than just three points added to
the scoreboard.
Marcus was hitting some bigtime open shots, Johnson said.
If youre going to leave Marcus
Paige open, Im quite sure hes
going to make a lot of those.
And for Paige, nothing is more
important than seeing the ball go

through the net. It gives him


and the rest of the Tar Heel squad
a comfort unmatched.
After it goes in, you can feel the
whole team take a deep breath,
Paige said.
You can feel those momentum
changes in the game.
This season, the trio makes up
38 percent of the Tar Heels points
per game. And in their final 40
minutes in uniform, the seniors
will need to bring their best.
The ultimate goal at the
beginning of the year was not to
come in second, Paige said. For
us to win it would be a perfect
storybook ending.
Im just proud to be part of the
biggest moment in college basketball for my last game.
@davidrallenjr
sports@dailytarheel.com

Soccer player sings before Final Four


Nico Melo joined other
student-athletes to sing
the national anthem.
By Carlos Collazo
Senior Writer

HOUSTON Who would


have thought being forced to
sing at the 2015 Rammy Awards
would send you to the Final
Four?
Certainly not North Carolina
mens soccer player Nico Melo,
who did just that singing the
national anthem along with
student-athletes from Syracuse,
Villanova and Oklahoma ahead of
the first Final Four game Saturday
night.
We obviously got to the Final
Four and they contacted me right

away like, Hey, would you want


to do it? And I had no idea (what
they were talking about), said
Melo, a redshirt junior midfielder.
People were calling me like, Are
you going to do it?
And I was like, What, the
Rammys again?
No, Nico. The Final Four.
In Houston, Texas. At NRG
Stadium. With thousands and
thousands of people including
former President George H. W.
Bush and current Vice President
Joe Biden in attendance
watching you.
No big deal for an accomplished
singer such as yourself, right?
(I) never sing, besides in the
shower and in my room, he said,
laughing.
Melo said hes only sang in
public once before at the
2015 Rammy Awards, when

he sang Ordinary People by


John Legend with sophomore
teammate and defender David
October accompanying him on
the keyboard.
He doesnt read music and
he had no idea what Houston
Symphony Chorus Manager
Anna Diemer was talking about
when she asked him about
octaves.
I was like, I dont know any of
that. Youre going to have to record
someone singing it and Im going
to have to try to match it, Melo
said.
Diemer talked with the
four student-athletes which
included Chevis Armstead II
of Syracuse, Karlie Crispin of
Villanova and Madison Ward of
Oklahoma over FaceTime and
told them their parts four days
before taking the court.

On Friday, the four met for the


first time and spent two hours
practicing and harmonizing with
each other before spending most
of the day Saturday practicing in a
green room.
Then it was time to take the
court.
Out of nowhere youre in front
of thousands and thousands of
people, Melo said.
All eyes on you. Its quiet. So
its really nerve-racking.
So much so that Melo said he
was more nervous about his performance than the UNC-Syracuse
game scheduled to tip off just a
few hours later.
I trust our guys, he said.
I think theyre going to play
great. I think theyre going to
win it.
@CarlosACollazo
sports@dailytarheel.com

Kennedy Meeks propels Tar Heels to championship game


The junior gave UNC
a much-needed boost
in its win Saturday.
By Pat James
Sports Editor

HOUSTON Before taking the court on Saturday


at NRG Stadium, Kennedy
Meeks received a familiar message from his favorite player.
Be confident in yourself.
The seemingly simple bit of
advice is the last thing Sean
May, the Most Outstanding
Player of the 2005 NCAA
Tournament, said to Meeks
before the past few games.
But given Meeks struggles
this season, North Carolinas
assistant director of player
personnel has used the expression to prevent the junior from
criticizing himself.
Hes good enough, and he
knows hes good enough, May
said. I think sometimes when
you dont play as well, you
have a tendency to get down
on yourself. But the staff and
the players on this team know
how much we need him.
And in Saturdays 83-66 win
over Syracuse in the national
semifinals, Meeks supplied the
Tar Heels with a much-needed
boost, scoring 15 points and

hauling in eight rebounds to


help them advance to Mondays
national championship game
against Villanova.
Meeks junior season has
been marred by a left knee
injury and offensive woes
upon his return. But in UNCs
past three games, hes averaged 13.3 points per game.
Im finally fighting back
from injury, and overcoming
that is something I always
wanted to do and always been
working toward, he said. For
it to finally be here at the right
time and the right moment is
something Ill cherish forever.
And on Saturday, Meeks
outburst came at a good time
for the Tar Heels. Senior Brice
Johnson picked up his first
foul 90 seconds into the game
and was charged for his second
with 9:05 until halftime, forcing him to stay on the bench
for the rest of the period.
Meeks assumed the load.
The junior scored four of
UNCs first six points off tipins, and his jumper with 14:09
left in the first half snapped a
5-0 run by the Orange.
His biggest basket came
minutes later, when he made
a layup while being fouled to
break an 18-all tie. His ensuing free throw sparked a crucial 9-0 run for the Tar Heels,
as they never surrendered the

lead for the rest of the night.


He had a couple of times
where guys got the ball down
low, but he just kept playing
through it, said sophomore
Justin Jackson. I think thats
a little different than what
hes been in the past. Even
with plays you might consider
bad or mistakes, he just kept
playing and kept his head up.
After UNC defeated
Florida Gulf Coast in the
first round of the NCAA
Tournament, Johnson and
Coach Roy Williams both
expressed their frustration
with Meeks for not jumping
under the basket.
But with about 14 minutes
left on Saturday, the junior
received a tip pass from senior
Marcus Paige and exploded to
the rim for a hard dunk.
Besides Johnsons comments, Paige said teammates
have steadily supported
Meeks and only one person
pushes the junior big man
harder than them.
Coach is probably on
Kennedy harder than anybody on the team, and I dont
even think its close, Paige
said. But I think the guys
understand that, so we dont
really get on him. We just keep
encouraging him. I know I
told him on several occasions,
Theres going to be a time

DTH/KENDALL BAGLEY
UNC forward Kennedy Meeks (3) dunks the ball against Syracuse during the NCAA Tournament.

where we really need you, and


we havent lost faith in you.
After returning from injury
on Jan. 9, Meeks scored in
double figures four times during ACC play. Following his
7-for-9 shooting performance
on Saturday, hes now accomplished that same task in

three straight games.


And when UNC faces the
Wildcats on Monday with the
national title at stake, Meeks
and his teammates could rely
on his continued success and
newfound confidence.
The tournament has been
kind of a new life for him,

honestly, Paige said. Hes


exploding, hes getting more
rebounds, hes being stronger
with the ball around the basket. And thats the Kennedy
Meeks we need, thats the reason were here.
@patjames24
sports@dailytarheel.com

News

Monday, April 4, 2016

The best of online

The Daily Tar Heel


www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893

MORE TO SEE ONLINE:

123 years of editorial freedom


PAIGE LADISIC
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

POLITICS

EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

Staff writer Yoon Ju Chung


breaks down the contested
Republican convention.

MARY TYLER MARCH


MANAGING EDITOR

MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KELSEY WEEKMAN
ONLINE MANAGING EDITOR
ONLINE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

What its like to dog sit during the Final Four

BRADLEY SAACKS
ENTERPRISE DIRECTOR

By Bronwyn Bishop

SAMANTHA SABIN
DIRECTOR OF INVESTIGATIONS

For all of my dedicated


readers (and Im sure there
are many of you), you know
that I was not able to go
to Houston this weekend
because I was dog-sitting.
The best part is that Im dogsitting my own dog, Petunia,
because my family is IN
TEXAS this week for my sisters spring break.
This is my extremely exciting Saturday spent dog-sitting
instead of being at the Final
Four game in Houston:
Petunia woke me up at 8
a.m. because she had to pee.

Staff Writer

ENTERPRISE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

SPECIAL.PROJECTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

DANNY NETT
COMMUNITY MANAGER

COMMUNITY.MANAGER@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JANE WESTER
UNIVERSITY EDITOR

UNIVERSITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KERRY LENGYEL
CITY EDITOR

CITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

HAYLEY FOWLER
STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
STATE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

SARAH VASSELLO
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
ARTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

PAT JAMES
SPORTS EDITOR

SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JOS VALLE
DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
DESIGN@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KATIE WILLIAMS
PHOTO EDITOR

PHOTO@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

ALISON KRUG
COPY CHIEF

COPY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

GABRIELLA CIRELLI
VIDEO EDITOR

MULTIMEDIA@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

TIPS
Contact Managing Editor
Mary Tyler March at
managing.editor@dailytarheel.com
with tips, suggestions or
corrections.
Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Paige Ladisic, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086
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2015 DTH Media Corp.
All rights reserved

The Daily Tar Heel

I took her outside. She peed.


I fed her once we got back
inside. I went back to sleep
for two hours.
I woke up with inexplicable
energy. Could it be true? Could
I really be here in my house
alone on one of the most exciting days of college? All I can
say is that I felt very lucky.
I then made myself a large
breakfast, trying fruitlessly to
replicate the breakfast potatoes
from brunch at the dining halls
(Can I get an amen?), and sat
at my kitchen table.

READ THE REST:


Go to dailytarheel.
com/blog/pit_talk

As Election Day
approaches, pundits,
politicians and voters alike
have tried to figure out
how Donald Trump only
498 away from the GOP
nomination secured the
coveted title of front-runner.
Whether it was the
Republican establishment,
the media or even President
Barack Obama, Trump
opponents can rest assured
knowing the Republicans
might have a shot at
blocking his nomination.
To read more, head to
dailytarheel.com.

TODAY

TUESDAY

Writers Discussion Series:


Edlie L. Wong will discuss Racial
Reconstruction, which explores
the effects of the Atlantic slave
trade and the importing of
indentured laborers from China.
This event is free and open to
the public.
Time: 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Location: Bulls Head Bookshop

Staged Reading of In Abrahams Bosom: A staged reading of In Abrahams Bosom by


N.C. playwright Paul Green will
be directed by Joseph Megel.
This event is free and open to
the public.
Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Location: Paul Green Theatre

Plant Communities of North


Carolina: The North Carolina Botanical Garden will explore the
historical causes of local plant
diversity and its effects on the
diverse regions of the state. This
event costs $117 for members
and $130 for non-members.
Time: 9 a.m. to noon

Location: N.C. Botanical Garden


All You Can Eat Night: UNC
Baseball vs. High Point: UNC
baseball will host the first allyou-can-eat night at Boshamer
Stadium. Buffet access is $5,
and admission is free for all
UNC students, staff and faculty
with valid One Cards or hospital IDs.
Time: 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Location: Boshamer Stadium
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.

CORRECTIONS
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections
printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Mary Tyler March at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.

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The Daily Tar Heel asked


respondents how they feel
about student protests in
response to the passage of
House Bill 2. Results as of
publication.
Just another reason to
love Chapel Hill
68 percent
Lindas <3
20 percent
Whether they like it or
not, House Bill 2 is the law
now.
12 percent
To weigh in on this
poll and others, head to
dailytarheel.com.

ARTS BRIEF
Alvin Blount to perform
at Binkley Baptist Church
Notable African-American
classical organist Alvin Blount
will perform at Binkley Baptist
Church tonight in a free evening of classical and spiritual
pieces. An Augusta, Ga., native,
he is comfortable in churches
he serves as director of
music and worship at St. Mary
on the Hill Catholic Church.
staff reports

CITY BRIEF
County animal services
to host spring adoption
Orange County Animal
Services is running its spring
adoption event from April 1
until April 30. During this
month, cat adoption fees are
reduced to $50, and dog adoption fees are reduced to $60.
staff reports

POLICE LOG

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
LGBTQ Rights and Discrimination on College Campuses:
Mark Joseph Stern, a Slate
columnist who writes about
LGBT issues and law, will lead
a discussion in the University
Room of Hyde Hall. This event is
free and open to the public.
Time: 3 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Location: Hyde Hall

ONLINE POLL

inBRIEF

Follow: dailytarheel on Instagram

Someone committed
breaking and entering on the
1000 block of Smith Level
Road at 5:11 a.m. Friday,
according to Carrboro police
reports.
Someone committed
extortion on the 200 block of
East Franklin Street at 3:04
a.m. Friday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone communicated
threats on the 00 block of
Maxwell Road at 5:05 a.m.
Friday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
Someone committed
breaking and entering on the
400 block of Landerwood
Lane at 5:28 p.m. Thursday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
Someone panhandled
at the intersection of 100
Stancell Drive and Barbee
Chapel Road at 2:27 p.m.

Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone drove while
impaired at the intersection
of Fordham Boulevard and
Carmichael Street at 8:40
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone communicated threats at 1201 Martin
Luther King Jr. Blvd. at 9:20
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person called the victim racial slurs.
Someone panhandled
at Red Roof Inn at 5623
Fordham Blvd. at 11:08
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone committed
larceny at Koury Residence
Hall at 6:00 p.m. Friday,
according to UNC DPS
reports.
The person stole a bicycle.

Opinion

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, April 4, 2016

Established 1893, 123 years of editorial freedom


EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS

PAIGE LADISIC EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM


SAM SCHAEFER OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
TYLER FLEMING ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR

ISHMAEL BISHOP
CAMERON JERNIGAN
ZACH RACHUBA
KATE STOTESBERY

CHRIS DAHLIE
JACK LARGESS
VISHAL REDDY

TREY FLOWERS
GABY NAIR
JACOB ROSENBERG

Editors Note

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

Usernameface, on how institutions contribute to car-dominated roads

Sophomore assistant opinion editor


from Randleman.
Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

Ackland
is a
campus
treasure

Businesses are right to


protest N.C. on HB2

NEXT

Its a team sport. We dont really care who


gets the most points. Wed rather be spread
out the way it was today.

UNC and Chapel Hill live off the backs of


people forced to get in their cars and drive
long distances each day.

Tyler Fleming

Not Your Token


Gwendolyn Smith calls on us to
celebrate the less celebrated.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

Brice Johnson, on UNCs balanced effort against Syracuse

EDITORIAL CARTOON By Calvin Ulrich, jculrich@live.unc.edu

his past weekend I was


in my friend Beccas car
on our way to lunch. I
mentioned I was writing a column on the deep appreciation
I have for UNCs own Ackland
Art Museum. After hearing this,
my friend said she had never
been to the Ackland. I responded in bewilderment. Why would
someone not go to Ackland?
The Ackland is a unsuspecting treasure near the intersection of Franklin and Columbia
streets. I have been fortunate
enough to see some of the best
art museums in this country,
and Ackland holds a special
place in my heart.
First off, Ackland upholds
many of the values I believe
in strongly, like the idea that
quality educational material
should be made freely available
to all. Even if you personally
do not like museums, I hope
you at least can appreciate this
eloquent mission statement:
The Ackland Art Museum
collects, preserves and presents great art to educate,
inspire and engage the university and its regional, national
and international audiences in
free and open inquiry.
The part I like most is the
use of free and open in that
statement. Ackland exists to
provide North Carolina with
fine art anyone can experience
free of charge. This is the first
of many things that make the
Ackland special to me.
The second is the building
itself. Sure, it is not much to
look at: It is just an uninviting
brick building. But Ackland
is a hidden jewel. It is within
in those lackluster brick walls
that many beautiful works lie:
It has the Centaur, a work by
one of the most famous artists
of all time, Pablo Picasso. It
also has works from famous
artists ranging from Flemish
artist Peter Paul Rubens to the
upcoming exhibit on the photographic work of Burk Uzzle.
The museum also features
international art. It even has
booklets around the exhibits
that provide context on the
cultures and times that influenced each piece of art these
really come in handy if youre
an information junkie like me.
These booklets are almost a
necessity to me now, and they
provide context that many
other museums fail to
even
celebrated ones like New Yorks
Metropolitan Museum of Art.
As I walk around the galleries, seeing all of the sculptures
and paintings is like looking
back in time. It helps me connect to the greater ideal of a
collective human narrative. Art
history is our history.
My favorite piece in the
collection is San Gimignano
by Alexander Kanoldt. It is a
city made of blocks on a hill;
it looks familiar but still has
some mystery around it.
I am confident that as you
walk around the galleries, you
will begin to notice things
that inspire you or are at least
interesting to look at. I have
been several times in my two
years here, but I always notice
something new.
The Ackland deserves your
time. You are doing yourself a
disservice if you do not make the
quick walk over to the Ackland
and enjoy the galleries at least
once during your time in Chapel
Hill. I promise you will not be
disappointed, but even if you
are, it is a free museum you
have nothing to lose.

EDITORIAL

A cappell-less
A cappella has gone
too far on campus
and needs to stop.

s the pollen floods


our nostrils this
April, there is
yet another inescapable
assault on our senses: A
cappella.
You hear it everywhere
you go. A reasonable
person would think, Oh,
those poor people are
using their mouths for
instruments. They must
have lost their instruments in a terrible fire.
But they didnt.
Instead they deliberately assume the
Sisyphean task of making music sound better
without accompaniment
pushing their musical
rock up to the top of a
hill, only to have it come
crashing down time and
time again in a heap of
off-pitch solos and poor
choreography. They are
choosing to make worse
music because they think
they can sing.
And they can, kind
of. But usually not good
enough to be in a band,
which somehow made
them come to the conclusion of making a band
where the only thing they
do is sing.
Do you see the twisted
logic a cappella creates?
Even in Pitch Perfect,

which is filled with a cappella songs, the only song


that survives outside of
the movie is the one where
Anna Kendrick is hitting
a cup. Why? Because even
using a single cup as an
instrument is better than
nothing at all.
Furthermore, few even
listen to a cappella after
college by choice. In fact,
outside of college, a cappella is a pretty embarrassing hobby ranking
just above collecting
stamps or re-enacting
Civil War battles. So why
are we awarding these
groups so much celebrity
now? Do you see the sort
of delusions a cappella
perpetuates?
Weve had enough: the
market is saturated. In the
Pit last week, there were
two a cappella groups performing at the same time.
There are innumerable a
cappella concerts taking
place. Somehow, a cappella on this campus has
defied basic economics
the supply is egregiously
exceeding the demand.
Adam Smith is rolling in
his grave.
Having so many a cappella groups is like when
someone starts singing
along really earnestly to
every song on the radio.
We get it you are pretty
good at singing. But it
would be better if you
werent singing.

We dont mean to be
cruel. Some of you are
our friends. (More of you
arent.) But some of you
are our friends. (Maybe
not after this editorial.)
We genuinely like you as
people, and we appreciate that youre finding
outlets for your talents.
It is out of esteem for
your talents that we beg
for diversification in
your forms of expressing
them.
We know this is an
uphill battle. Joining an a
cappella group is a boost
of status. We guess dressing up like waiters from
TGIF (Google it to see
the resemblance) or high
school baseball players is
cool nowadays.
What were proposing here is a grand vision
of what could be possible in the music scene
if a cappella werent the
dominant form of artistic
expression for 90 percent
of our musically inclined
folks.
Chapel Hill is capable
of producing some great
talent, but we need more
James Taylors and fewer
Anoop Desais.
In consistency with our
values on free speech, wed
never call for a stance as
hardlined as banning a
cappella.
We just want less of it.
There are these things
called instruments. Try em.

EDITORIAL

Better together
Enhance campus
volunteering with
advocacy.

NC is a passionate community that fosters a


unique culture of genuine
investment in making
the world a better place.
But even in the parts of
this community that are
already invested in making change, wed challenge
people to understand
genuine change comes
from thinking systemically
about the issues for which
were advocating.
In this way, philanthropy and service without advocacy can actually
be counter-intuitive for
justice, as it can cloud our
ability to understand how
these issues originate.
Service-based organizations like Campus Y committees and philanthropy
organizations such as
Carolina For The Kids
should implement advocacy as an essential part of
their program.
We do not mean to
diminish the work these

groups are doing. Issues


such as education inequity, food access, global
public health or funding
for cancer patients are
important causes to work
toward. However, by placing the work with which
theyre engaging within
the context of broader
forces, they can only
enhance the quality of the
type of work and create a
culture of fostering moreinformed, critical-thinking
advocates.
We cannot evaluate the
impact of these organizations so unidirectionally.
The reality is that volunteers are also impacted,
hopefully imbued with a
deepened perspective of
the world. By taking an
advocacy approach, we
transform these volunteers
from being self-congratulatory individuals into
advocates who have the
knowledge to understand
both the ways in which
these issues begin to
manifest and the amount
of work to be done.
Philanthropy organizations need to work in the
pursuit of self-eradication.

What is our vision of an


ideal world? In an ideal
world, we dont need to
dance for 24 hours once
a year to raise money
for hospitals. In an ideal
world, we dont need to
send tutors to low-income
communities. In an ideal
world, these problems do
not exist, and thus, neither do the organizations
addressing them.
Some would say we
dont need to politicize all
service or philanthropy
organizations. But we
must be reminded that
being apolitical is also
inherently a political
choice, just as choosing to
not act is an action.
We are not calling on
people to abandon direct
work in lieu of advocacy.
Philanthropic work is
essential to alleviating
suffering, and advocacy
without direct work can
be incomplete as well.
But if people are
genuinely invested in
accelerating our path to
a brighter future, they
need to integrate advocacy as a critical part of
their programming.

TO THE EDITOR:
As student representatives at UNC Kenan-Flagler
Business School, we condemn the actions of the
North Carolina General
Assembly and Governor
Pat McCrory to pass House
Bill 2, which intentionally
excludes LGBT and veterans
from anti-discrimination
protections in employment,
housing and public accommodation, and prohibits any
local government from providing such protections. It
erodes civil rights, endangers
vulnerable communities and
harms the reputations of our
state, local governments and
institutions.
The proponents of this
bill invented a moral panic,
depicting transgender individuals as predators who
intend to access bathrooms
to assault women and children. Not only is there no
record of any such thing ever
occurring, but transgender
people are often put in serious danger when forced to
use facilities conflicting with
their gender identity.
We applaud the major
employers that have
denounced House Bill 2. It
is wearing away our states
global status as a beacon of
growth and innovation. As
a public institution of N.C.,
Kenan-Flaglers reputation
will likewise suffer; the law
makes it impossible for our
top-ranked school to attract
the best students and faculty.
We choose to stand by our
schools core values: excellence, leadership, integrity,
community and teamwork,
and so we implore the
General Assembly and
Gov. McCrory to reconvene
and pass a comprehensive
non-discrimination act that
respects, values, and protects
all of North Carolina.
Susan Lawrence Hedglin
President of the MBA
Student Association
Jonathan Aronoff
Vice President for
Diversity
Signing on behalf of three
other organizations. Please
visit dailytarheel.com for a
full list.

Carol Folt needs to


speak against HB2
TO THE EDITOR:
Chancellor Folt, where is
your voice?
Your peers at Duke, the
dean of the UNC KenanFlagler Business School,
the dean of the Gillings
School of Public Health and
50 other Chapel Hill faculty
have spoken out against
House Bill 2.
Across the country, CEOs
of Fortune 500 companies,
state governors and important thinkers are standing
in solidarity. In your email
to the UNC community on
March 31, you address that
many in our community,
particularly those identifying
as LGBTQ, are experiencing
a great deal of uncertainty,
hurt, anger and fear.

You acknowledge that


we are hurting, yet refuse to
stand up and cast a spotlight
on the source of the pain?
The message tells a
marginalized community
to wait. It reiterates UNCs
commitment to ensuring
that everyone is treated
with dignity and respect
and that no one fears for
their safety.
In avoiding real criticism
of the real discrimination
that has been written into
law, the message that I
receive is that UNC is paralyzed with fear of the political repercussions that might
follow publicly disagreeing
with a law coming out of
the N.C. General Assembly.
During your time at
Dartmouth, I am sure that
you became familiar with
the schools motto: a voice
crying out in the wilderness.
You are in the wilderness
of the South now. You are
at the helm of an historic
institution whose motto
reads light and liberty.
Where is your voice crying
out in the wilderness, carrying the message of light and
liberty? Your community
would love to hear from
you.
Max Levin
Senior
Comparative literature

Campus politics have


not changed at UNC
TO THE EDITOR:
Having been a student at
UNC and a member of the
College Republicans while
on campus, its interesting to read about the Ben
Shapiro lecture and the student response to his lecture.
Similar events were held a
dozen years ago while I was
at Carolina. Not much has
changed. It continues to be
true that conservative/nonprogressive opinion is treated with hostility in Chapel
Hill. I do not portend to
defend or agree with all
that Mr. Shapiro said, but
its illuminating to hear yet
again a strident response
absent respect for a differing viewpoint. The leader
of the walk out, Ms. Charity
Lackey, stated she walked
out because Mr. Shapiro
did not have respect for her
or her opinion. Well, what
do you think walking out of
someone elses lecture communicates? Perhaps a lack
of respect for the speaker
and their opinion?
Ironic. Additionally, Ms.
Lackey stated it took a lot
of energy to sit in the room
for just five minutes. This
is obviously a statement
from someone lacking real
world experience and any
type of significant adversity.
Its somewhat remarkable
to state that sitting in a
heated and aired room at a
university as a college student listening to someone
with a viewpoint different
than your own is an energy
draining exercise only bearable for five minutes. Grow
up. The real world can be
unkind and unfair. I suppose it takes graduating
into it to actually understand what energy draining
adversity actually is.
Andrew Hogan
Class of 05

SPEAK OUT
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Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill,
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Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com
EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the
opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises 10 board
members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.

News

Monday, April 4, 2016

The Daily Tar Heel

Teach-in explains education inequity


By Megan Stout
Staff Writer

At the Campus Y Saturday,


students were handed one of
three index cards yellow,
orange or green to represent citizenship statuses.
During Higher Education
for Undocumented Youth, a
teach-in hosted by the North
Carolina One State One Rate
campaign, attendees participated in a simulation to show
the disadvantages undocumented immigrants face.
Currently, undocumented
students have to pay out of
state tuition, and its really
unfair, especially because
theyve been living there their
entire lives. And so thats kind
of what the campaign is about,
and this event is just trying to
shed some light on that and
also get people aware and
excited about this issue, said
Rachel Park, a first-year and
One State One Rate executive
board member.
Undocumented UNC students joined Moises Serrano,
an activist on undocumented
and queer issues, to speak
about their experiences.
A few weeks before Alma
Islas, a public policy major who
helped to organize the event,
was supposed to start classes
at UNC, the University asked
for her green card. She said her
financial aid was taken away
when she disclosed she was
undocumented. Islas withdrew
and worked three jobs that
year to save money.
I happened to run into
Golden Door scholarship,
which is wonderful. Its a
scholarship for undocumented students and is essentially
a full ride, she said.
Sophomore communica-

DTH/KASIA JORDAN
Public policy major Almas Islas conducts an exercise meant to give students examples of the experiences undocumented youth undergo Saturday afternoon in the Campus Y.

tions studies major Rubi


Franco spoke about the
importance of getting to know
the full context of the issue.
One of the biggest reasons
why we have a lot of people
who dont support an immigration reform or immigration reform bills is because
they dont have the knowl-

edge, Franco said.


Serrano shared his story.
Throughout my whole life
I always knew that I was different, he said. But it wasnt
because I was undocumented.
I didnt really realize what
undocumented was until
I was in high school. But I
always knew that I was differ-

ent because I liked boys.


He said since undocumented students can attend public
school through 12th grade but
can have difficulty paying for
college, he worked for three
years after high school to make
a living and help his family.
Nowhere not with my
friends, not with my govern-

ment, not with my family


I never found protection.
I never found love. I never
found acceptance, he said.
I wanted to go to college
that was my dream. My
dream was actually to come
to UNC and study journalism,
but that didnt happen.
Serrano said seven years

after graduating from high


school, he was accepted to
Sarah Lawrence College, a
private college, but he wasnt
given enough financial aid. He
said after appealing the financial aid, he was able to have
most of his tuition covered.
university@dailytarheel.com

Name change suggested for FSU


The UNC-system
HBCU could also see
lower tuition.
By Zaynab Nasif
Staff Writer

Fayetteville State
University could face a name
change by the state legislature.
N.C. Senate President
Pro Tempore Phil Berger,
R-Rockingham, proposed a
bill in February that would
lower tuition at FSU, one of
the UNC systems five historically black colleges. The
bill also includes provisions
that would change the name
of the university to UNC-

Fayetteville.
N.C. Rep. Craig Horn,
R-Union, said the only reason
he could understand a potential name change would be to
align the UNC-system schools
under similar names.
But Aaron Epps, membership and elections co-chairperson of the Black Student
Movement at UNC-Chapel
Hill, said a change to a universitys name especially
an HBCUs will take away
historical significance and
diversity.
It particularly impacts
African-American history,
he said.
The renaming of the first
African-American university
in our state is a method of
forcing African Americans

to assimilate, Epps said. In


my opinion, this is a step in
erasing African-American
history from the university
while standing behind the
name of inclusion.
Horn said he doesnt see
any substantial reason to
change FSUs name.
It seems to me FSUs
name has been that way for
quite some time, Horn said.
So I dont see what will be
accomplished by (changing
the name), so it should be
the decision of the university
system and the university
itself.
And a name change might
deter certain demographics
of students from applying to
the university, said Stanley
Johnson, a history professor
at FSU.
I have chatted with others
who feel that the proposed
change may include other
changes that add limited
access to higher education
for students who come from
compromised backgrounds,
he said.
Johnson said while the
negative effects of the name
change are not certain, it is
something that needs to be
discussed.

The proposed name


change is being advanced
by the state legislature, not
the UNC system, he said.
This could mean greater
uniformity and expansion
of programs, along with
an increase in funds and
resources.
Lowering tuition rates
could attract students to the
university, Horn said, but the
accompanying name change
doesnt need to occur.
A rose is a rose by any
other name, he said. Im a
supporter of our HBCUs and
that our heritage is important to the schools themselves and to the state. But
changing the name I dont
think adds or necessarily
detracts from the university.
Epps said the main concern is not just the name,
but that a university maintains diversity and inclusivity on campus.
You can change a name
all day, but if the institutions
within that university do not
reflect efforts to make the
campus more inclusive, then
the name change is completely void, he said.
state@dailytarheel.com

Try our healthy turkey


sandwich made
from real turkey sliced
off the bone
Open 24 Hours,
24 Hour Delivery

New Location!
201 East Franklin Street
(across from Court House)

Celebrating 37
Years in Business

Thank You!

DTH/QIAN LI
Pearl Hacks, an all-female hackathon, holds a Sponsor Fair from
11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the lower lobby in Sitterson Hall on April 2.

Hackathon joins
women and tech
Pearl Hacks is one of
the first all-female
hackathons.
By Olivia Schaber
Staff Writer

High school and college


women across the region came
to UNC and Sitterson Hall on
April 2 and April 3 for the third
annual Pearl Hacks hackathon.
Attendees went to workshops, created technological
applications and supported
gender diversification in
STEM fields.
There are so many hackathons and so few women in
technology, Emily Newman,
UNC junior and Pearl Hacks
co-executive director, said.
Pearl Hacks is a comfortable
environment for all women to
hack together.
She said it is one of the first
all-female hackathons.
Pearl Hacks hosts workshops for skills such as iOS
development, fixing bugs in
code and web development
for all skill levels. Companies
such as Google, Intel and
Cisco give 30-minute Tech
Talks and give prizes for best
use of their technology.
Women can win prizes at
the end for the best womencentric hack, Newman said.
People focus on things like
sexual awareness and safety
concerns.
Madison Pfaff, UNC senior
and Pearl Hacks director of
marketing, said Pearl Hacks
gains a lot of interest for
sponsorship from companies
because they are geared toward
women.
Being a minority, I was
very aware of the gap in technology fields for minorities as
well as gender, she said about
the low number of women in
STEM fields.

Pfaff is a computer science


and mathematical decision
sciences double major. She
said in her computer science
classes there are about 10
girls out of 100 students.
As women, we try to find
that community, and when
we find it, we flock to it,
Pfaff said about why she got
involved with Pearl Hacks.
Newman said boys are
typically pushed to go into
technology fields more than
girls are.
As kids, guys are given
toys that would make them
more into hardware, and girls
are given Barbies, she said.
Sophia Rowland, UNC
junior and computer science
and psychology double major,
said she wishes there were
more women in her computer
science classes, but she finds
there arent a lot of males in
her psychology classes.
There is a weird discrepancy where half of my classes
are mostly boys, and half are
mostly girls, Rowland said.
This was Rowlands first
time attending Pearl Hacks.
I think we should try to
engage more interest in STEM
fields, and Pearl Hacks is doing
a good job of that, she said.
UNC first-year and computer science major Rachel
Yuan said the hackathon is a
good way for women to get
programming experience.
I think it is sometimes
hard to get experience programming things because
in school the curriculum is
already laid out, Yuan said.
Pearl Hacks allows you to
choose what workshops you
attend and what skills you
want to improve upon.
While this years Pearl Hacks
has wrapped up, the planning
for next years event will begin
almost immediately, Pfaff said.
city@dailytarheel.com

University

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, April 4, 2016

Dance Marathon raises its own bar


2,500 volunteers
worked on this years
24-hour event.
By Nic Rardin
Staff Writer

The 2016 UNC Dance


Marathon broke their own
record, raising $44,000 more
than 2015s event.
From 6:30 p.m. on Friday
all the way to 6:30 p.m. on
Saturday, student volunteers raised money for the
patients at N.C. Childrens
Hospital and their families
with dancing and activities
in Fetzer Hall and out on
Hooker Fields.
Carolina for the Kids
Executive Director Meagan
Barger said this year the
organization was able to
raise $614,717.71 for N.C.
Childrens Hospital.
It was a really exciting
event, Barger said.
Volunteers said they were
overjoyed to learn they were
making a difference when
they learned how much
money they had raised.
We were all ready to fall
over at hour 22, but then the
total was revealed to us and
we were ready to go for the
next 24, said sophomore
Jacob Blount, technology
chairperson for CFTK.

Blount said the best part


of the event was standing
up on stage at the end and
making eye contact with the
crowd.
I love seeing the gratitude
on the faces of the patients
and their families, he said.
Entertainment chairperson Megan Fullarton said
this years event involved
everything from crafts,
board games and sports to
inflatables out on Hooker
Fields.
The best part was being
able to make it a fun and
rewarding experience for the
dancers, she said.
Thirty-three different groups performed at
the event, including the
Achordants, Tar Heel
Voices and Carolina Ukulele
Ensemble.
The most difficult thing
was definitely the scheduling,
Fullarton said. They planned
the 24-hour event down to
every five minutes.
The money raised by CFTK
will help pay for several different programs that support
the patients and families at
N.C. Childrens Hospital.
Publicity chairperson
Haley Waxman said money
will go toward helping families cover the costs that arent
covered by insurance, such
as transportation and lost
income from taking time off

DTH/VERONICA BURKHART
Jake Ellis, a kid co-captain, sang the alma mater and told did you know animal facts during the talent show at Dance Marathon 2016.

to care for a child.


Morale and recruitment
chairperson Caitlinn LaScala
said this years event was a
success bringing in more
enthusiasm and recruits than
previous years.
Morale was incredible
this year. I could not be more

proud of my committee members and how they worked


with their dancers, LaScala
said.
Waxman said recruitment
saw an increase this year
with a 25 percent bump to
bring CFTK up to 2,500 volunteers.

We have dance recruitment in the Pit from 10 a.m.


to 2 p.m. every day and we
hang out by Rams Plaza to try
and have one-on-one conversations, LaScala said.
LaScala and other leaders said the dedication of the
volunteers was amazing and

How do you feel with only 1 hour left?

essential to the event.


To the volunteers: Thank
you. I cant express that
enough, LaScala said.
None of our events would
have been possible without
you.
university@dailytarheel.com

Compiled by staff writer Terrance Hudson

Photos by Veronica Burkhart

Staff writer Terrance Hudson talked to dancers during the last hour of Dance Marathon family hour, when patients families speak.
Meredith Hunter
Senior
It is the strangest
mix of emotions and
physical and mental
stress its hard to
put into words. Its
really awesome.

Katherine Poulos
First-year
I feel awesome.
Family hour made
it all worth it I think.
My feet hurt, and Im
tired, but with the
families and things,
its all worth it in the
end.

Bimba Shrestha
First-year
Im pretty hyped.
Im a lot more
excited than at the
beginning, surprisingly, after all these
stories.

Jasmin Darden
First-year
It was really hard
to do it, but sitting
through family hour
made it worth it
we see the first
impact of our work,
and I love standing
for these kids who
cant stand.

Jeremy Joy
Senior
Im really tired and
in pain, especially in
my legs. Hearing all
these stories really
centers you and
helps you understand what this is all
about.

Nick Fenger
Junior
When you do
something this difficult, its worth it in
the end, especially
when you can see
families and hear
their stories.

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Sports

Monday, April 4, 2016

The Daily Tar Heel

Britt, Jenkins share brotherly bond


Britts family has
been Jenkins legal
guardians since 2007.
By Pat James
Sports Editor

HOUSTON Brothers
Nate Britt and Kris Jenkins
sat on opposite sides of
a room in their Upper
Marlboro, Md., home when
North Carolina played
Villanova in the 2013 NCAA
Tournament.
The two high school
seniors had already signed
with the two programs
Britt to the Tar Heels and
Jenkins to the Wildcats. So,

naturally, trash talk ensued.


At first, I dont think we
were even talking to each
other, Britt said.
I think we were texting
each other and talking trash
back and forth. Emotions
were high and the game was
pretty close throughout.
They watched the game
not only as brothers but as
competitors, too something that comes easily in the
Britt household, where races
up the stairs or even to fasten
a seatbelt are routine.
But when UNC and
Villanova face off in tonights
national championship game,
no other competition could
carry as much weight.
I do hope he plays well

and hes injury-free, Jenkins


said. But theres nobody in
the world I want to beat more
than my brother.
Jenkins and Britt are related by choice and not through
genetics.
They met as 10-year-olds
at an AAU tournament in
Florida, and their parents
stayed in touch. A year later,
Jenkins joined Britts AAU
team and the two developed
a bond.
When Jenkins mother,
Felicia, became the womens
basketball coach at Benedict
College in Columbia S.C., she
allowed Kris to continue playing AAU in Maryland and
stay with the Britts.
The Britts then became

Kris legal guardians in


2007.
For them to do what they
did for me, Jenkins said,
it just shows what type of
people they are, how high
character they are and how
they really love and care
about me.
Im really blessed and fortunate to have two families.
Jenkins and Britts relationship blossomed at
Gonzaga College High School
in Washington, D.C., where
they played together and
spent time with each other
every day in class.
And when it came time for
both players to start visiting
colleges, they went on their
recruiting trips together, too.

Playing basketball
together in college wasnt a
priority for them, but it was
Villanovas interest in Britt
that led Coach Jay Wright to
Jenkins.
We were recruiting Nate,
said Wright on Sunday.
We liked Kris, but we
thought hes overweight and
hes not going to want to do
all the stuff we do When we
met with Nate, we met with
Kris. You heard all the things
were saying to Nate, but
youre going to have to come
in here and work hard, get
your body fat tested.
Shortly after the visit, Nate
Britt Sr. told Wright that
Jenkins loved the speech.
If he loved that, we want

this guy, the Wildcats coach


remembers thinking.
Jenkins ultimately landed
at Villanova, and Britt chose
the Tar Heels. And for the
first time in their college
careers, they will play each
other in a game where
the stakes couldnt be any
higher.
While Britt doesnt know
who his family will be rooting for tonight or what they
will be wearing, he knows a
win could give him an edge
in their constant competition.
This right here is permanent bragging rights for the
rest of our lives.
@patjames24
sports@dailytarheel.com

COLUMN

A pretty fun ride so far


What its like covering UNC mens basketball in the Final Four.

OUSTON Its
been a pretty fun
ride so far.
North Carolina beat
Syracuse and is heading to
the national championship
game against Villanova. Its
not often you get to cover
a national championship
team, and people have asked
me what its like to be able
to do that.
Great question.
Its a blur. A rush. A joy.
Everything is quicker than
youd expect it to be, and most
of the time I have no idea
whats happening or where
Im supposed to be going
whether that means wandering
around trying to find my seat,
trying to find the bathroom or
trying to find out where to go
after the game to do interviews.
(That last ones almost as
important as the second one.)
At one point after the game
I ran into a familiar face,
Turner Walston with GoHeels.
com, and figured Id just tail
him around. Gotta follow
someone who knows what
theyre doing, I said to him.
Yeah, me too, he said,

Carlos Collazo
Senior sports writer
Senior communication studies
major from Sanford.
Email: sports@dailytarheel.com

laughing.
Thats kind of the point of
this whole thing, right? None
of us know what were doing.
Were just along for the ride.
The last time UNC made it
to a Final Four was in 2009.
In 2009, I was a sophomore
in high school in a town
called Sanford that most
of you have probably never
heard of. And if you asked me
then who Dean Smith was, I
would probably have told you
Ive never heard of him.
Many people have come
through this University without the same opportunity Ive
stumbled into. Certainly there
have been better writers who

have come through the DTH


who deserved the chance to
cover a national championship
more than me. Im just lucky.
Im lucky I wasnt escorted
out of the stadium by a member of the U.S. Secret Service
when I was trying (and failing)
to figure out how to get in. Im
lucky an Oklahoma reporter
left his seat after the first game
and never came back so I could
steal it and get a better view.
Im lucky I didnt get caught.
Im lucky I just happened
to be in the same class as
Marcus Paige, Brice Johnson
and Joel James as they finally
seem to be accomplishing all
of their goals.
Coach Roy Williams probably summed it up best in his
presser after the game:
I couldnt be having a
more fantastic ride than Im
having right now.
Were all lucky to be along
for that ride. But for Paige,
Johnson and James and me
and everyone else who only
has a month left in Chapel Hill
theres just one more stop.
And theres no telling what
that stop will bring.

DTH/KENDALL BAGLEY
UNC guard Joel Berry II (No. 2) dribbles toward the goal during the semifinal game against Syracuse.

Joel Berrys passing


carves up 2-3 zone
The sophomore had
10 assists against the
Orange on Saturday.
By Carlos Collazo
Senior Writer

HOUSTON For the


first 10 minutes of Saturdays
83-66 win over Syracuse in the
national semifinals, the North
Carolina mens basketball
team was in an offensive funk.
The Tar Heels had missed
all eight of their 3-point
attempts, leading scorer Brice
Johnson had made just three
baskets and the team with a
top-30 turnover percentage
had four turnovers.

Junior forward Kennedy


Meeks was proving effective
cleaning up the offensive
boards, but that wasnt a reliable game plan. Something
needed to happen.
Syracuse adjusted to how
we played against them the
first two times, said junior
point guard Nate Britt. They
didnt allow us to throw the
ball in to our bigs as easily.
We needed to get dribblepenetration inside the paint.
And Joel (Berry) took it
upon himself, as a guard, to
drive from the perimeter.
Thats exactly what he did.
With a little less than 10
minutes left in the first half,
Berry started to aggressively
attack Coach Jim Boeheims

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patented 2-3 zone defense.


He hit a midrange jumper
at the 8:31 mark and from
that point on began to ignite
UNCs offense. Throughout
the rest of the half he had
four assists, a steal and another midrange jump shot.
While he wasnt making
step-back jumpers or 3-pointers, Berry was a large part of
the reason why UNC went on
a 23-12 run over the last nine
minutes of the half, helping
the Tar Heels turn a 16-16 tie
into a 39-28 halftime lead.
Joel Berry did a fantastic
job penetrating the zone, said
senior point guard Marcus
Paige. For a while in the first
half we were just passing it
around the perimeter. And we
werent able to get any penetration from the dribble or
from the pass.
So we started getting in
the lane and making penetrating passes, and thats
when it allowed us to get our
full team going offensively.
For Berry, part of that
increased aggressiveness
at the midway point in the
first half came from missing 3-point shots. His first
two shots of the game were
missed 3-pointers, and while
Paige said after the game that
Syracuses zone was the reason for poor perimeter shooting, Berry was thrown off by
the altered depth perception
within NRG Stadium.
One (of my 3-point
attempts) was an air ball and
one barely hit the other side of
the rim, he said. I was like,
You know what, we need to
get it inside, and so I just tried
to do my best of penetrating.
And the big men stepped
up and our guys on the baseline did a great job of showing
their hands."
As UNCs second-leading
scorer and team-leader in
3-point percentage, it was no
surprise that Berry was influential in turning around the
Tar Heels offense.
But if you only looked at
the box score and saw that
Berry finished with eight
points the fifth-highest
total for a UNC player
you might have questioned
whether he was really the
offensive spark.
Joel Berry didnt get in
double figures but he had like
seven rebounds and like 10
assists, Paige said, accurately
pointing out his teammates
stat line. So that just points
to the type of team we have,
and its not a one-man show.
And thats why were here.
@CarlosACollazo
sports@dailytarheel.com

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, April 4, 2016

NC Community College Wester chosen as DTH editor in chief


System names president
By Tatyana Berdan
Senior Writer

By Kent McDonald
Staff Writer

The N.C. Community


College System will welcome a
new member July 1 James
Williamson, who was named
system president Wednesday.
Williamson is the current
president and CEO of the
South Carolina Technical
College System.
George Fouts, interim president of the N.C. Community
College System, said he was
not involved in the search process but thinks Williamson is
outstanding for the job.
The state board has
chosen well, and I told Dr.
Williamson Thursday after
the board meeting that I
think he is an ideal candidate
for this position, he said.
Former president Scott
Ralls who left the position in September said
Williamsons experience in
the private industry gives him
a unique skill set that will
allow him to handle the positions complexity.
Its a very complex system,
so its a system where you have
to know a little bit about a lot
of things, he said.
You have to understand
how colleges work, when you
need to push things and when

JOHNSON

FROM PAGE 1

shot Its easier to score


against that zone when its
not a zone, when theyre still
running back.
One might assume it would
be easier to score against that
zone with UNCs best scorer
on the court. But that wasnt
the case Saturday night.

VILLANOVA

FROM PAGE 1

Everything was clicking for


Villanova, as it finished the
game with a sweltering 71.4
percent shooting from the
field good enough for the
second-best performance in
Final Four history.

A senior led team


Much like North Carolina

POST PLAY

FROM PAGE 1

Effect thats plagued shooters


at NRG Stadium.
Clank. The ball bounced off
the rim. A minute later, Justin
Jackson came away with the
same unfruitful result.
Shot after shot, UNC failed
to convert from 3-point distance. And with the team
struggling from beyond the
arc, UNCs big men kept the
offense afloat.
We just wanted to be able
to impose our will the way
we know how to with me and
another big man in there,
senior Brice Johnson said.
Junior forward Kennedy
Meeks and Johnson combined
to score 17 of the Tar Heels
first 21 points, and Meeks
3-point play with 7:47 left until
halftime sparked a 21-10 run.
UNC finished the first half
0-for-10 on 3-pointers. But
Meeks, Johnson and forwards
Isaiah Hicks and Joel James
went a combined 12-for-15
for 27 points, giving their
team a 39-28 halftime lead.
Once the team arrived in
the locker room, Williams
didnt discourage his players
from shooting 3-pointers.
Coach just told the guards
to shoot with confidence,
Johnson said. Just go out
there and keep shooting.
Youre not going to be 0-for10 again. In the second half,
we didnt do that.
After North Carolina took
a 57-40 lead with less than 13
minutes left, the Orange used
a 10-point run to cut the deficit to only seven points.
But UNCs balance suddenly returned.
Paige received a pass
behind the arc and elevated
once again, hopeful he could
halt Syracuses run and hit
the Tar Heels first 3-pointer.
Swish. The ball fell through
the net. A minute later, Theo
Pinson rattled in a 3-pointer
to give UNC a 12-point lead
and control of the game.
(Sportscaster) Jimmy
(Gray) asked me when we
came out at halftime if were
going to keep shooting
(3-pointers), Williams said.
I said, Yes, because North
Carolina tries to have good

you need to get out of the way


of things.
Ralls also said it will be
important for Williamson to
build relationships.
You need to understand
how to collaborate with partners particularly education
partners like public schools
and universities, he said.
Ralls said the N.C.
Community College System
has a relationship with the
UNC-system that dates back
to when communities colleges
were founded in the 60s.
Its a very unique and very
strong and I would say deep
relationship, he said. Across
the country, I think its one
of the best relationships
amongst community colleges
and universities.
Joni Worthington, spokesperson for the UNC system,
said in an email that UNC
and North Carolina community colleges play different
but complementary roles in
providing education to the
states workforce.
N.C. community colleges
account for more than half
of all UNC transfer students,
and more than 24,000 students who began their studies at a N.C. community college are now undergraduates
on a UNC campus, she said

in an email.
Worthington said collaborations and partnerships
between the two systems have
grown in recent years.
Going forward, we certainly expect to work with
Dr. Williamson and his staff
to strengthen current relationships and build on past
efforts, she said.
Fouts, who did not apply
for the full-time position,
said the major initiatives he
has overseen this past year
including the bond campaign that was featured on
this years primaries have
caused challenges.
Interim presidents hope
that the period is going to
be calm seas and following
winds as the sailors say, but
this one hasnt been that way
because weve had so many
issues, he said.
Ralls said his personal
desire to get closer to students
and the excitement of college
is what motivated him to leave
the system president role.
When youre the system
president, its a little more
like being the league commissioner as opposed to being
the head coach of the football
team, he said.
@kentomcdonald
state@dailytarheel.com

A selection committee
elected UNC junior Jane
Wester as The Daily Tar
Heels 2016-17 editor-in-chief
on Saturday.
Wester, a history major
from Charlotte, said her love
for the paper and her desire
to continue working with the
DTH motivated her to run.
She began writing for the university desk at the DTH her
first year and has since served
as its assistant editor and current editor.
I wanted to see what (the
DTH) could do next year
because I think it just has
infinite potential, she said.
And I was really excited
to get to keep working and
hopefully do a good job leading all of these people I love.
Eric Johnson, a former
editor who now works in the
Universitys Scholarships and
Student Aid office, served as a
member of the selection committee. He said he was looking
for a candidate with a clear
understanding of the papers
values as an independent publication at a public university.
(I wanted) someone
who can bring that sense of
dialogue and the ability to
be an independent voice, as
opposed to part of the universitys overall administrative
apparatus and Jane had

a lot of experience, which I


think was comforting to a lot
of people on the committee,
he said.
The election is open to
any student wanting to run,
regardless of experience, and
candidates are evaluated on
the quality of their writing,
their performance during a
committee interview and the
content of their written platform.
For Wester, that platform
included promoting diversity at
the paper and ensuring everyone feels their voice is heard.
Im really hoping to
improve our engagement and
make sure that were reaching
out to the community and in
dialogue with the community, she said.
Tyson Leonhardt, a stu-

dent at UNCs law school


and another at large student member, said he liked
Westers desire to connect to
new audiences, particularly
on digital platforms.
I was looking for the candidate who most understood
how students are getting their
news now I feel like so
much of it is online and in the
digital realm and I felt like
Jane really understood that,
he said.
Wester said she has a lot on
her plate before the semester
ends.
I need to hire a team and
write three research papers in
the next three weeks, which
is going to be crazy but, no,
Im really excited.

The Tar Heels used five different lineup combinations


to finish the first half none
of which included Johnson.
In that period, the Tar Heels
outscored the Orange 23-12.
Thats how we want to
play, said Johnson after
the game. We want to play
together. Its a team sport.
We dont really care who gets
the most points. Wed rather

be spread out the way it was


today.
Joel Berry, who was instrumental in breaking down
Syracuses zone by penetrating off the dribble, echoed
those thoughts.
Thats what kind of team
we are, he said. Were not
all about ourselves. Were all
about making a good play.
You can see that in the way

this team passes the ball


they are fourth in the nation
with 17.8 assists per game.
You can see it in how they act
around each other in practices, during media sessions
and after games.
The team and winning
games as a team is the
most important thing.
We love each other,
Johnson said. We dont really

care who gets the credit.


You could see that after
the game Saturday night, as
Johnson stood outside the
locker room, badgering Coach
Roy Williams as he slowly
made his way to the entrance
before celebrating their first
national championship game
appearance since 2009.
Lets go! Johnson said to
his coach. Weve got some

stuff to do.
The two walked into the
locker room, and as the doors
closed behind them, the beginning of a celebration within
leaked out past the doors, joy
unable to be contained.
Johnson and the Tar Heels
hope theres still one more to
come.
@CarlosACollazo
sports@dailytarheel.com

relies on the play of Marcus


Paige and Brice Johnson,
the Wildcats lean on their
seniors.
Ryan Arcidiacono and
Daniel Ochefu have a critical
role in Villanovas success.
In the post, Ochefu leads
the team in rebounds and
blocks per game. At the guard
position, Arcidiacono leads
the team in assists, steals,
minutes played and 3-point
percentage per game.

The latters play has been


critical this tournament, as
Arcidiacono is shooting 60.9
percent from 3-point land in
the NCAA Tournament hitting 14 of his 23 shots from
beyond the arc in the past five
games.

trot out when his team needs


a boost. The small lineup
is essentially a four-guard
lineup with one, true forward
roaming the paint.
Villanovas starting lineup
looks much like this four
players stand 6-foot-6 or
smaller, with Ochefu being

the only traditional forward.


North Carolina, on the
other hand, boasts three
players at 6-foot-8-inch or
bigger in its starting lineup.
Something will have to give.
Villanova is likely to stick
with the small-ball look,
spreading the floor and not

shying away from shooting


the 3-pointer.
This will go in direct
contrast to the Tar Heels
approach of getting the ball
in the paint to Brice Johnson
and others.
@davidrallenjr
sports@dailytarheel.com

balance inside and outside.


The two biggest baskets in
the game were when they cut
it to seven and Marcus makes
a three, and Theo makes a
three right behind it.
But it was UNCs big men
who carried it to victory and
Mondays national championship game against Villanova.

The Tar Heels play in the


post has allowed them to reach
this point, but when asked on
Sunday if his team could win
without making a 3-pointer,
Williams issued a short reply.
I hope the heck we dont
ever try.
@patjames24
sports@dailytarheel.com

DTH/KYLE HODGES
Jane Wester has been chosen as the 2016-17 editor-in-chief for
The Daily Tar Heel. Wester is a history major from Charlotte.

Style of play
Theres been a lot of talk
recently about UNCs small
lineup that Williams likes to

state@dailytarheel.com

Congratulations
TO THE 2016

PUBLIC SERVICE AWARD RECIPIENTS!


The Carolina Center for Public Service is proud
to honor these 10 individuals and organizations
for their dedication to public service and
community engagement.
33333

SPRING 2016 SERIES:

Constitution in Crisis
Join us for four evenings of lectures in April as
UNC-Chapel Hill scholars share insights on important
legal and cultural aspects of the US Constitution.
The program will provide a forum for faculty in law,
government, journalism, and other disciplines
to share their ideas and engage the audience in
thoughtful discussions of these compelling topics.

Thursdays, April 7, 14, 21, and 28, 78:30 pm,


at the Friday Center.
Fees: $10 per session or the entire series for $30.
Free admission with student ID.

Ned Brooks Award for Public Service


Beverly Foster
Office of the Provost Engaged Scholarship Award
American Indian Center and NC Tribal Nations
Molly De Marco
Rhonda Lanning
Robert E. Bryan Public Service Award
Josh Hinson
Gayatri Rathod
Catherine Schricker and Korry Tauber
Christopher Wallace
Student Health Action Coalition

To register, call 919-962-2643 or 800-845-8640, or visit

fridaycenter.unc.edu/wbi

ccps.unc.edu

State & National

Monday, April 4, 2016

The Daily Tar Heel

Discrimination suits o the books for NC


H.B. 2 prevents N.C.
courts from hearing
discrimination cases.
By Ryan Salchert
Staff writer

For victims of workplace


discrimination, suing in state
court is no longer an option
under House Bill 2.
Section 3.2 of the bill
states discrimination lawsuits
by employees against their
employers will no longer be
heard in state courts across
North Carolina.
And according to a memo
by North Carolina Advocates
for Justice, the bill prevents
employees from filing lawsuits against their employers
for all forms of discrimination, including race, religion,
national origin, age, sex or
handicap.
By doing this, the state
has taken away its citizens
private right of action, said
Meg Maloney of Maloney

Law & Associates in


Charlotte.
She said the new process
is much more difficult for
employees to go through.
Now if an employee
chooses to sue for discrimination, they must go through a
federal court, which is much
more complicated, expensive and time-consuming,
Maloney said.
Section 3.2 of the bill also
outlines the procedure for
pursuing claims of workplace
discrimination.
According to House
Bill 2, the Human
Relations Commission
in the Department of
Administration will have
the authority to receive and
investigate charges of discrimination from the Equal
Employment Opportunity
Commission.
According to the bill, The
agency shall use its good
offices to effect an amicable
resolution of the charges of
discrimination.
Representative Graig

The state has


taken away its
citizens private
right of action.
Meg Maloney
Maloney Law & Associates

Meyer, D-Orange, said this is


a separation of power issue in
North Carolina.
Mississippi is the only
other state like North
Carolina where state courts
wont hear cases, Meyer said.
I dont like the idea that
were on the same list as
Mississippi about stuff like
this.
Meyer said hes also concerned about how effectively
the commission can handle
the additional workload.
According to Meyer,
the Department of
Administration almost had
their funding eliminated during the last budget meetings,
and theyre currently working
on a temporary budget.

DTH FILE/SARAH DWYER


Crowds gather at the Peace and Justice Plaza in protest of House Bill 2 on Wednesday.

Bill Bryan, deputy secretary of the N.C. Department


of Administration, declined
to comment on Section 3.2 of
the bill.
As for the effects the bill

will have on the U.S. Equal


Employment Opportunity
Commission, Reuben Daniels,
the district director of the
EEOCs Charlotte region, said
he isnt worried.

We dont believe the new


legislation will have any
impact on the EEOC, Daniels
said.
@ryansalch
city@dailytarheel.com

Couple fights House Bill 2 with air horn activism


Activists will blast
air horns at the
governors mansion.
By Eric Schwartz
Staff Writer

Three synchronized minutes of air horn blasts at the


governors mansion could
wake Gov. Pat McCrory to
opposition against House Bill
2, compelling him to reevaluate the bill.
At least, thats the hope
of Tina and Grayson Currin,

who are spearheading the


first of what they would like to
be weekly occurrences starting with an April 13 protest
dubbed Air Horn Orchestra #1.
Were not into discrimination and we love our state. We
think its important be loud,
figuratively, literally, said
Tina Currin, a creative strategist at Myriad Media.
The Currins have succeeded
in creative forms of activism
before their Saturday Chores
campaign finds them counterprotesting anti-abortion advocates by making satirical signs
of their own and documenting

the results on Tumblr.


This idea of being disruptive and quirky and weird
really seems to have hit a
chord with people, she said.
She said their non-traditional style can capture the
attention of people who usually tune out explicit discussions of issues.
Grayson Currin, music editor of INDY Week, said while
traditional forms of protest
are invaluable, the air horn
orchestra is an appropriate
rhetorical response to the
logic behind the bill.
Were just doing some-

thing as ridiculous as what we


see theyre doing, he said.
Michal Osterweil, a global
studies lecturer at UNC,
said while a social movement can be difficult to fully
understand, the publics swift
response against House Bill 2
could be interpreted by some
as a sign of a larger cause
the fight for greater diversity.
Grayson Currin said in
todays world, the internet is
a key platform to make voices
heard and mobilize events
like the air horn orchestra,
which is being shared on
Facebook.

While air horn activism


will be fun and different, it
will be a missed opportunity
if people dont actually vote
against the people who enable
measures like House Bill 2 to
pass, he said.
He said the influx of youth
participation is a good sign
for activism, and a bad sign
for the conservative ideologies
that currently dictate state
decisions.
Pat McCrory is going to
wish he was still the mayor of
Charlotte, he said.

He said todays fight is one


for sweeping inclusivity.
I think America is in the
midst of a really great civil
rights moment, he said.
Osterweil said the experience of activism being out
in the streets with other passionate people generates
momentum and galvanizes
people to follow up their protests by voting.
Other activists are so disillusioned with the political
system that they refuse to
participate, she said.
But Grayson Currin said he
hopes for the former.

state@dailytarheel.com

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Today is a 5 Clarify your direction
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slow for obstacles and turns. Allow extra time for unexpected circumstances.
Travel could be more challenging. Think
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PRIVATE CONDO. Finley Forest 3BR/2.5BA,


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Keep it respectful. Consider the consequences before speaking, especially as
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205-C SUNRISE LANE. 2,000 square feet.


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REPAIR ACCESSORIES, CELLPHONES Ekowireless new location in Chapel Hill. Full-time,


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encouraged to apply. Submit resume/cover
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SUMMER CAMP STAFF NEEDED. The City of


Raleigh Parks, Recreation and Cultural Resources Department offers over 100 camps for
ages 3-18. Applicants, 18+ years-old, apply
at www.raleighnc.gov/employment (search
Youth Programs Specialty Camps). Contact
joseph.voska@raleighnc.gov. for more information.
ASSISTANT NEEDED PART-TIME for helping
student in wheelchair. $10/hr, Hours flexible but consistent, prefer help Tu/Th evening
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INTERESTED IN PHYSICAL THERAPY or sports
med? Need interested person to assist work
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knowledge or skills needed (other than some
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Would like help 3-4 times per week for 1-1.5
hour sessions. $25/session. neededassistant@
gmail.com or call. 919-414-0494.
TEACH MENS HEALTH: Looking for applicants
interested in health education, comfortable
with their bodies, to teach male physical exam.
Training provided. $25-$35/hr. Part-time occasional work. mhtg.instructor@gmail.com.
SEEKING PAID INTERN Start up management
internship for Chapel Hill based food truck,
Smoothie Revolution. Start in mid-April, hours
morning to mid-afternoon. Start at 20 hrs/wk.
Opportunities for advancement. Must have
some weekend availability. Bobby, 919-2593330.

QUESTIONS? 962-0252

If April 4th is Your Birthday...


What will you study and learn this year? Plan for
action after 5/9. Save for a trip or classes after
8/13. Work breakthroughs arise after 9/1. Give
up outdated philosophies, especially after 9/16.
Dogma, overindulgence or hypocrisy are revealed.
Remember whats most important. Choose
happiness and peace.

Healthy, drug-free, right-handed participants


between the ages of 18 and 55 are needed
for an MRI study on brain function.

For Rent

REMODLED 3BR/2BA HOUSE with huge desk.


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of Cameron Avenue. $1,650/mo. 919-2192891.

HOROSCOPES

For Rent

Walk to
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LEASING ASSISTANT PART-TIME Durham,


Southpoint apartment community seeking
part-time leasing assistant. Must be available
on Saturdays! Administrative duties include:
Processing applications, filing, making copies,
faxing, answering phones, making follow up
calls. $11/hr. Must pass criminal background
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office@berkeleysouthpoint.com.

Compare to dorm prices!


www.chapelhillrentals.com

Rooms

919-933-5296

SHARING HOME WITH OWNER, 3BR/2BA.


Kitchen and laundry privileges. Private bedroom and full bath. $650/mo. Includes all utilities and cable TV and internet. Convenient to
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Please contact Robert Ross at rross919@gmail.
com or 919-210-4532.

Summer Jobs
SUMMER CAMP INSTRUCTORS. If you are
interested in working with kids in a fun environment, Chapel Hill Gymnastics is hiring for
summer camp instructors to work in our gymnastics camps beginning June 6. Gymnastics
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a resume and the contact information of two
professional references to chelsey@chapelhillgymnastics.com.
HIRING SUMMER CAMP counselors (deadline
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919-596-5420 for more info.

Large 1-2 BR Condos


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Summer Jobs
MOVERS NEEDED
Triangle Moving Service needs full-time and
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resume or pertinent information via online ad.
Trianglemoving.com, 919-942-6974.
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ITS NOT TOO EARLY to think about SUMMER
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Today is a 5 Everybody wants your
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Today is a 5 Your attention is required
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committing.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 5 Intellectual pursuits,
research and writing flow now. Delays in
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Amplify plans with better detail. Look to
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Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 7 Work faster and make
more money. Delegate what you can
to your team. You may be tempted to
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what you have?
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 Decide who youre
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Sports

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, April 4, 2016

WHO HAS THE FINAL EDGE?


In the final game of one of
the wildest college basketball
seasons in recent history,
the North Carolina mens
basketball team will face off
against Villanova in Houston
in the 2016 NCAA National
Championship Game.
After his teams 17-point
win over ACC foe Syracuse
on Saturday, Coach Roy
Williams is leading the topseeded Tar Heels (33-6, 14-4
ACC) to their first national
title appearance since 2009
when UNC rolled past the
Wildcats in the Final Four
before stomping Michigan
State in the championship
game.
On the other side, Coach

Jay Wright is coaching in the


first national title game of his
15-year tenure at Villanova
(34-5, 16-2 Big East). Since
losing to North Carolina in
the 2009 national semifinals,
the Wildcats had failed to
reach the Sweet 16 until
this season, when secondseeded Villanova stormed
through the tournament and
trounced No. 2 Oklahoma by
44 points to set up the championship showdown with the
Tar Heels.
Here is how North
Carolina and Villanova match
up for tonights game, which
tips off at 9:19 p.m.
Compiled by C Jackson
Cowart and Jeremy Vernon

SMALL FORWARD
Jackson might have had
the quietest 16-point game
of all time in UNCs win over
Syracuse in the Final Four.
The sophomore made a
living along the baseline, often
receiving passes from Berry
and finishing at the rim.
But Josh Hart has been
Villanovas top scoring threat
since the season began, scoring
23 points on 10-of-12 shooting
against Oklahoma on Saturday.
Hart has scored 18-plus
points in a game 17 times this
season, and he should get
be able to get the better of
Jackson on Monday.

Justin Jackson

Josh Hart

12.3 PPG
3.9 RPG
2.8 APG

15.5 PPG
6.7 RPG
1.9 APG

EDGE GOES TO:


VILLANOVA

SIXTH MAN
Neither Hicks nor Bridges
has been overly impressive
in the NCAA Tournament,
as both players have averaged less than nine points per
game in five contests.
To find separation between
the two, you have to look at
their respective regular season resumes.
Hicks acted as a catalyst
off the bench for UNC and
tallied 15 games in double
figures, including a stretch
of seven-straight games from
December to January.
Bridges, on the other hand,
scored 10-plus just four times
during the regular season.

POINT GUARD

Though Berry had his


lowest scoring total of the
tournament against Syracuse,
he played arguably his best
game falling two points
and three rebounds shy of a
triple-double.
Meanwhile, Arcidiacono
has posted double-digit
points in each of the past five
games, shooting 60.9 percent
from the 3-point line this
tournament.
Each point guard has
proven to be pivotal parts of
their teams offensive attack.
Either could win their team
the title. This one is a push.

SHOOTING GUARD

Joel Berry

Ryan
Arcidiacono
12.4 PPG
2.9 RPG
4.3 APG

12.6 PPG
3.4 RPG
3.8 APG

EDGE GOES TO:


PUSH

After a hot shooting start


to the NCAA Tournament,
Paige cooled off considerably
in the first half of Saturdays
game against Syracuse, shooting just 1-of-6 from the field.
But as he has done so many
times in his career, Second
Half Marcus came alive,
nailing three 3-pointers to lift
UNC over the Orange.
Brunson is the lone firstyear in the Wildcats lineup,
and while he has shown the
ability to score in bunches, he
will have a tough time competing against the experience
and skillset of Paige.

POWER FORWARD
Both Johnson and Jenkins
won the Most Outstanding
Player award for their respective regions in the NCAA
Tournament, and the two are
slated to face off against each
other on Monday night.
Jenkins has averaged 15.8
points per game in the Big
Dance, but despite his strong
showing, Johnson has shown
that he can take games over.
Johnson is averaging 20
points per game in the tournament, and with the chance
to cement his legacy with a
win, his dominance should
continue on Monday night.

Isaiah Hicks

Mikal Bridges

9.1 PPG
4.6 RPG
0.7 APG

6.5 PPG
3.2 RPG
0.9 APG

EDGE GOES TO:


EDGE GOES TO:
NORTH CAROLINA NORTH CAROLINA

Jalen Brunson

12.3 PPG
2.5 RPG
3.7 APG

9.7 PPG
1.8 RPG
2.6 APG

EDGE GOES TO:


NORTH CAROLINA

CENTER

Brice Johnson

Kris Jenkins

17.0 PPG
10.5 RPG
1.5 APG

13.6 PPG
3.9 RPG
2.2 APG

EDGE GOES TO:


NORTH CAROLINA

Meeks has become an


X-factor for North Carolina
after a rough regular season,
scoring double digits in three
straight games to help the Tar
Heels reach the title game.
Ochefu has been a constant
post contributor on a team
known for its stellar guard
play, averaging 10.1 points and
7.6 rebounds per game while
shooting 62.3 percent.
Ochefu has scored in double figures in 17 games this
season compared to Meeks
13 and Villanova is 16-1
when he does so.
Ochefu has the advantage.

COACHING
While Wright has his team
playing its best basketball of
the season, Williams has the
advantage of being on this
stage before.
The 28-year veteran has
been to four previous NCAA
title games, losing two as the
coach of Kansas (1991, 2003)
and winning two with the Tar
Heels (2005, 2009). Williams
is one of five coaches to appear
in the title game five times.
The edge goes to experience.

Marcus Paige

Kennedy Meeks

Daniel Ochefu

9.4 PPG
5.9 RPG
1.1 APG

10.1 PPG
7.6 RPG
1.7 APG

EDGE GOES TO:


VILLANOVA

PREDICTION

Roy Williams

Jay Wright

5 title games
2 NCAA titles
(2005, 2009)

1 title game
0 NCAA titles

72 71

Summer Positions Available at the Chapel Hill Tennis Club!


www.chapelhilltennisclub.com

Interested Lifeguards contact chamby147@aol.com


Interested Pro Shop Attendants contact zsteffen-chtc@ncrrbiz.com
Dancing for a cause
This year Dance
Marathon participants raised
$44,000 more than they did
in 2015. See pg. 5 for story.

games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

Level:

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

Solution to
Mondays puzzle

New editor selected


The Daily Tar Heels editor in chief for the 2016-17
school year will be Jane
Wester. See pg. 7 for story.

Whats in a name?
Fayetteville State
University could face a name
change from the legislature.
See pg. 4 for story.

Playlist for the ship


Find songs to get you in
the mood for todays national championship game. Visit
Medium for more.

Nothing finer
than a summer at Carolina!
Check out summer.unc.edu
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
Across
1 Law school accrediting
org.
4 Current information
source
15 Like many a Beverly
Hills partygoer
17 Heeds sound advice
18 Former seniors
19 Points for a piano
tuner?
20 Murder in the First
airer
21 Crossword legend
Reagle
22 Primed
23 Hogans Heroes
setting, briefly
24 Word with wash or
wear
25 Zen teaching
techniques
26 Aw, mom! sound
27 Zsa Zsas older sister
28 I think youll like it!
29 Sweat
inducer
31 Desolate
tract
32 One good at
figures?
33 Sea
35 Mirren of
The
HundredFoot
Journey
36 Thugs
37 BART stop
40 Hard to
grasp
41 Complex

42 Dutch word meaning


farmer
43 Triple Crown stat
44 Tequila Sunrise
writer/director Robert
45 Beverly Hills retreat
46 Bird named for its
large-scale migrations
49 DVD special feature,
perhaps
50 Time for fluff pieces
51 Soapmakers supply
Down
1 Lit
2 Castle wall
3 Promise
4 All scores?
5 Wooed successfully
6 Rather
7 Orphan Black star
Maslany
8 Govt. obligations
9 __ de los Timbales: Tito
Puentes nickname

10 Bakery output
11 Where Hollywood is:
Abbr.
12 American Sniper
director
13 Many British prime
ministers
14 Tooth layer
16 Web page standard
22 I copy
23 Not straight, in a way
25 Black on screen
26 They can be silly
27 Bristol bro
28 Interlace
29 Its first national
tournament was held in
1932 in Atlantic City
30 Nymph who ultimately

(C)2012 Tribune Media


Services, Inc.
All rights reserved.

became the stars of


Ursa Major
32 Hillary aides
33 Tied hats
34 Snow-Whites sister, in
Grimm
36 Trifle
37 t blazer
38 Grand theft auto, e.g.
39 Santa Anas county
41 Holy Sonnets poet
42 City NNE of San
Antone
44 Arctic-to-Antarctica
migrating bird
45 Like clematis
47 Needle
48 Gravel designation

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