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Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

VOLUME 118, ISSUE 152


The Daily Tar Heel www.dailytarheel.com
monday, february 14, 2011

versity

ersity
To cope with a shrinking budget, administrators are looking to cut more degree programs.

WHAT WILL BE CUT NEXT?


niversity

ersity
iversity

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Student group protests


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tuition hikes after 60


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programs were slashed
by Dorothy Irwin and Jen Serdetchnaia
12 staff writers
About 30 student protestors marched from the Pit to the UNC-
3 7 system Board of Governors meeting Friday, determined to bring
9 attention to how students could be affected by budget cuts and
8
2 10 tuition hikes.
1 3 7
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Board members voted to eliminate 60 degree programs system-
8 wide and increase tuition by an average of $208 for undergraduate
2 10
1 11 in-state students in an effort to offset the expected decrease in state
3 7 funding.
9 12 “We must avoid permanent damage to the University,” said UNC-
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2 11 10 system President Thomas Ross at the meeting.
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There needs to be a balance between quality and access, he said.
Although the board decided to approve the increases proposed by
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most campuses, tuition at UNC-system schools remains much lower
than that at peer institutions nationwide.
12 “But I know that’s no consolation to those trying to find the dol-
14 lars,” Ross said.
6 7 The protestors, members of N.C. Defend Education Coalition,
5 9
8 chanted and held signs outside the Spangler Center — the meet-
2
1 6 7
14 ing place of the board — until they were invited inside by board
4
5
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9 members.
2 The coalition is made up of UNC-CH students and drop-outs
11
1
14 from across the UNC system, who were demonstrating against
4 6 7 the tuition hikes, program cuts and faculty layoffs, among other
5 9 12
2
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11 issues.
1 The coalition is seeking the attention of the board because it is
one of the largest lobbying groups in the state, said UNC junior
FRENCH ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE MUSIC
4 12
Laurel Ashton and a member of the coalition.
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“Higher education is not a privilege, it is a right — a right we’re
The above maps show the status of three academic areas at UNC- 1. Western Carolina University 8. UNC-Chapel Hill
2. UNC-Asheville 9. North Carolina Central University willing to fight for,” she said.
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system schools with degree programs that could be cut due to their 3. Appalachian State University 10. NC State University The coalition was successful in securing a half-hour-long meeting
proximity to similar programs and operational costs. Programs in yel- 4. UNC-Charlotte 11. UNC-Pembroke with Hannah Gage, chairwoman of the board, and Ross.
5. UNC-School of the Arts 12. UNC-Wilmington Coalition member Eva Panjwani, 23, said she had to drop out of
low also have low enrollment, and programs in red were cut Friday. 6. UNC-Greensboro 13. East Carolina University UNC-CH a year ago because she was no longer able to afford pay-
7. NC Agricultural and Technical State University 14. Elizabeth City State University ing for tuition.
CUT LOW-PRODUCING GOOD STANDING *Winston-Salem State University and Fayetteville State University do not have these programs.
SOURCE: UNC GENERAL ADMINISTRATION DTH/RYAN KURTZMAN, NATASHA SMITH, MEG WRATHER
See protest, Page 4

System seeks programs to eliminate


by elise young ed a study to look for unnecessarily duplicated this year will be on a larger scale and will be
senior writer degree programs to help the system cope with a conducted by a central committee headed by
The UNC-system Board of Governors voted potential 15 percent — $405 million — budget Jim Woodward, the former chancellor of UNC-
Friday to cut 60 degree programs, and other pro- reduction for the upcoming academic year. Charlotte and N.C. State University, instead of
grams in the system might face a similar fate if “We know that it can be cost-saving,” said Linda individual schools.
an upcoming review deems them unnecessary. Seestedt-Stanford, interim provost and senior “This is a chance to stop and look systemati-
The review, slated to begin after March 1, will vice chancellor at Western Carolina University. cally at it,” Mabe said.
encompass both undergraduate and graduate “We know that it can enhance our programs.”
programs and consider student demand, oper- Looking for unnecessary programs is not an Waiting on parameters
ating cost and regional need. entirely new concept for the system.
Unnecessary programs might be discontin- Every two years, the board asks each univer- Administrators agree that program duplica-
ued, combined with a more productive program sity to evaluate programs that graduated a low tion is not always a bad thing.
or converted to an online program, said Alan amount of majors. The 60 programs cut Friday, The 16 UNC-system universities offer 17
Mabe, senior vice president for academic affairs English undergraduate degree programs and dth/melissa key
including 36 baccalaureate programs, were a
for the UNC system. result of the 2010 review. Students protest tuition hikes and faculty layoffs in the Pit on Friday.
UNC-system President Thomas Ross request- But the search for unnecessary duplication See Duplication, Page 4 The group protested at the Board of Governors meeting as well.

friday, i’m in love SBP results may come out Tuesday


Student court to consider dismissal SBP election timeline
Feb. 7: Deanna Santoro resigns as
By Andy Thomason election following a dismissal, can-
speaker of Student Congress and
Assistant University Editor didates would be given a full week files a complaint to the Student
The results of the student body for further campaigning. Supreme Court against the Board
president election won’t be released Phillips said he would release of Elections.
until Tuesday at the earliest, said the results as soon as possible after
Jessica Womack, chief justice of the hearing if the complaint is dis- Feb. 8: Election results for SBP are
the Student Supreme Court. missed. withheld due to the court’s
injunction in response to Santoro’s
The court will hold a pre-trial “Part of my job involves getting
complaint. Andrew Phillips,
hearing Tuesday at 8 p.m. to hear the election results to campus as chairman of the board, files a
arguments on the issue of whether quickly as possible,” he said. motion to dismiss the complaint.
or not to dismiss a complaint lev- If the complaint is not dis-
ied by Deanna Santoro, former missed, the trial would likely not Feb. 10: Court grants requests
speaker of Student Congress. immediately follow the pre-trial from both parties to extend the
Santoro resigned her post Feb. 7 hearing, since the trial requires all deadline for submitting briefs.
and filed a complaint stating that of the members of the court to be
the Board of Elections had mis- present, rather than just the chief Feb. 12: Court, after receiving
interpreted the Student Code in justice, Womack said. briefs, decides to hold a pre-trial
a way that allowed Student Body Per the request of the court, hearing during which it will
Secretary Ian Lee to run for stu- both parties submitted briefs on consider Phillip’s motion to dismiss.
dent body president. Saturday.
Andrew Phillips, chairman of In her brief, Santoro cites a
dth/lauren mccay the board, filed a motion to dismiss student elections case last year — Feb. 15: Court will meet to hear

F
the complaint on the grounds that Holgate v. Gillooly — in which the arguments and decide if it will
ormer UNC-system president Bill Friday and his wife, Ida, who are both in their dismiss Santoro’s case. If it does,
Santoro does not have standing to chief justice decided in a pre-trial
early nineties, have been married for 68 years. The two were set up on a blind file a complaint and that the 96-hour hearing to consider the case despite
SBP results will be released
immediately afterward, Phillips
date in the 1940s when Friday was a student at N.C. State and his wife-to-be was statute of limitations for complaints questions of standing, she said. said.
outlined in the code had expired. In his brief, Phillips cites the
attending Meredith College. See our Valentine’s Day features, including a Q&A with Bill He added that he was unsure of SOURCE: STUDENT SUPREME COURT
and Ida Friday as well as Chancellor Holden Thorp and his wife, Patti, on page 5. whether, in the event of a runoff See election, Page 4 DTH/JESSICA TOBIN

this day in black university | page 3 SportsMonday| page 10 Today’s weather


history WEEKEND FRIEND HEELS HANG ON Aeolian processes
FEB. 14, 1936 … Friday Night Friends, a The men’s basketball gone wild
H 72, L 32
The National Negro program started by a team played sloppily in
Congress convenes for the UNC medical resident, its first match since it Tuesday’s weather
first time. The group fought for provides free respite care lost to Duke, but pulled
Strong chance of
black rights, but was accused to special needs children away from Clemson in the yellow ninja stars
game’s final minutes. H 57, L 32
of having ties to communism. one night a week.
2 monday, february 14, 2011 News The Daily Tar Heel

The Daily Tar Heel DAILY swinging away


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Established 1893
117 years of
editorial freedom Spear hunter raises atlatl awareness

A
SARAH FRIER jonathan From staff and wire reports
EDITOR-in-chief jones Montana man has offered his governor a spear-hunting demonstration to
962-0372 SPORTS Editor
editor@
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962-4209
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show his support for a bill which would permit the practice.
STEVEN NORTON dailytarheel.com Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer labeled the bill “frivolous” last week,
Managing editor
962-0372
BJ Dworak, but Bob Perkins, or “Atlatl Bob,” as he is known, said the governor might
managing.editor@ lauren mccay
dailytarheel.com photo co-editors not know how effective hunting with a spear is.
photo@
jarrard cole dailytarheel.com
Perkins once killed a bison with an atlatl, a prehistoric tool that gives hunters
visual Managing
editor emily evans, leverage when throwing spears.
962-0372
managing.editor@
jenny smith The spear-hunting bill, proposed by a Republican state senator, has drawn criti-
copy co-EDITORs
dailytarheel.com copy@ cism from liberal Montanans. One local blogger has dubbed the bill the “Stone Age
dailytarheel.com
C. Ryan barber Hunting Act of 2011.”
university EDITOR PARIS FLOWE
843-4529 ONLINE EDITOR
university@ online@ NOTED. Two 30-year-old men were injured QUOTED. “It just makes you realize these
dailytarheel.com dailytarheel.com
in a street fight involving a samurai sword this stories are more than stories. They’re about
VICTORIA kelly mchugh weekend in Glasgow, Scotland. real lives.”
STILWELL design editor Following the six-man attack, police said — Historian Nathaniel Philbrick, after
CITY EDITOR design@
962-4103 dailytarheel.com they found “a number of offensive weapons,” marine archaeologists found the sunken whal-
city@dailytarheel. including the samurai sword and golf clubs. ing ship belonging to Captain George Pollard,
com Ryan
kurtzman
The two injured participants were treated for who inspired the novel “Moby Dick.”
Tarini Parti graphics editor face lacerations and head injuries, which were Pollard’s ship hit a coral reef and sank in 1823.
STATE & NATIONAL dth/daniel turner

I
graphics@ said not to be life threatening. His previous ship was rammed by a whale.
EDITOR dailytarheel.com
962-4103 saac Westfield, a graduate student in the marine sciences
state@ ZACH EVANS,
dailytarheel.com RACHEL SCALL department at UNC, swings his club during a round of
Nick Andersen
Arts Editor
multimedia editorS
multimedia@ COMMUNITY CALENDAr “Tennis Golf ” on Saturday. Westfield played with other
843-4529 dailytarheel.com graduate students in the department, and the game used the
arts@dailytarheel. allyson today theories to their love lives in his last Civil War lecture: Author Michael
com
batchelor traditional lecture before he retires Kreyling will give a lecture on Davie Poplar tree and the statue of Silent Sam as “holes.”
linnie greene special sections Counter-terrorism talk: Former from the University. the Civil War titled “Who Needs
Police log
diversions editor editor
diversions@ batch207@email.
U.S. Ambassador to Yemen Edmund Time: 6:30 p.m. Ceremonies of Memory?: The 150th
dailytarheel.com unc.edu Hull will discuss conducting counter- Location: Carroll Hall, Room 111 Anniversary.”
terrorism operations against al- Time: 4 p.m. n A 21-year-old Hillsbourough Loop, according to Chapel Hill
➤ The Daily Tar Heel reports any Qaida. Romantic planetarium: Learn Location: Alumni Center, Royall man was charged with possession police reports.
inaccurate information published Time: 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. about constellations and the legends Room of a stolen firearm, possession Items stolen include a $120
as soon as the error is discovered. Location: Gardner Hall, Room 008 of love ancient cultures told about with intent to manufacture, sell or Sony car stereo and a $250 iPod,
➤ Corrections for front-page errors them. Cost is $6 for students. Journalist lecture: Pulitzer Prize- deliver, maintaining a vehicle used reports state.
will be printed on the front page. Candidate forum: David Lee, Time: 7 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. winning journalist Seymour Hersh to keep or sell a controlled sub- Damage to the driver’s side win-
Any other incorrect information vice president for research at the Location: Morehead Planetarium will discuss the Obama administra- stance, carrying a concealed weap- dow was valued at $100, reports
will be corrected on page 3. Errors University of Georgia, will take part tion’s war effort in Afghanistan. on, possession of drug parapher- state.
committed on the Opinion Page in an open forum before he inter- Multi-instrumentalist show: Time: 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. nalia, a window tint violation and
have corrections printed on that views for the position of vice chan- French artist Yann Tiersen will per- Location: Gerrard Hall driving left of center at 2:21 a.m. n Someone stole two lawn
page. Corrections also are noted in cellor of research at UNC. form in Carrboro, along with Atlanta- Friday on U.S. Highway 15-501 chairs worth $40 off a front porch
the online versions of our stories. Time: 4 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. based singer-songwriter Shannon Honors film forum: Watch “The near Eastowne Drive, according between 5 p.m. and 9:42 p.m.
➤ Contact Managing Editor Location: Sonja Haynes Stone Wright. Constant Gardener,” a 2005 film to Chapel Hill police reports. Friday at 211 Church St., according
Steven Norton at managing.edi- Center Time: 9 p.m. which explores Africa’s medical cri- Damien Rashad Forney was to Chapel Hill police reports.
tor@dailytarheel.com with issues Location: Cat’s Cradle, 300 E. Main sis, followed by a discussion led by a taken to the Orange County Jail
about this policy. Asian labor lecture: University of St., Carrboro student from the School of Medicine in lieu of $20,000 secured bond, n Someone stole a laptop that
London professor Dae-oup Chang about global access to medicine. reports state. was left unattended between 1
Mail: P.O. Box 3257, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 will talk about the hierarchies tuesday Time: 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. p.m. and 1:15 p.m. Thursday at the
Office: 151 E. Rosemary St. among East Asian workers in a lec- Location: Graham Memorial, Room n Someone broke a $50 bed- Looking Glass Cafe and Boutique,
Sarah Frier, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086 ture titled “The Rise of East Asia and Musician tribute: Mary Lindsay 039 room window between 3 a.m. and according to Carrboro police
Advertising & Business, 962-1163
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Classes of Informal Labour.” Dickinson, widow of late Memphis 3:15 a.m. Friday at 742 S. Merritt reports.
Time: 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. musician and record producer Jim To make a calendar submission, Mill Road, according to Chapel
One copy per person; additional copies may be
purchased at The Daily Tar Heel for $.25 each.
Location: FedEx Global Education Dickinson, will present music, photos e-mail calendar@dailytarheel.com. Hill police reports. n Someone called the police
Please report suspicious activity at our Center, Room 1005 and texts from her husband’s 2008 Events will be published in the requesting information on obtain-
distribution racks by e-mailing memoirs. newspaper on either the day or the n Someone smashed a window ing a permit to keep livestock at
dth@dailytarheel.com Economics of love: Economics Time: 2:30 p.m. day before they take place. of a bronze 2005 Honda Civic and 9:49 a.m. Thursday at 206 Carol
© 2011 DTH Media Corp. professor Ralph Byrns will teach Location: Wilson Library, Pleasants Submissions must be sent in by stole $371 worth of property at St., according to Carrboro police
All rights reserved attendees how to apply economic Family Assembly Room noon the preceding publication date. 7:31 a.m. Friday at 102 Melville reports.

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The Daily Tar Heel Top News monday, february 14, 2011 3

Campus Briefs
More than 2 million books
read via Tar Heel Reader New dean will focus on Greeks Library
More than 2 million books have
been read on Tar Heel Reader, an
online book source created by UNC
professors that offers nearly 15,000
Sauls to assess office structure, councils
by Lyle Kendrick
is that there are places where it
doesn’t make sense to have a one-
size-fits-all way of doing things
the Greek community is crucial for
fraternity and sorority members
and Sauls.
location
will be
the adequate resources needed to when you have real, concrete dif- Sauls said he plans to work
books in 15 languages. Senior writer be successful and not have to wait ferences,” he said. closely with Bettina Shuford when
UNC professors Karen Erickson Jonathan Sauls said he plans to for professional support for meet- A set of resolutions set out by the she steps into the role of associate
and Gary Bishop created the pro- make Greek affairs a top priority ing particular standards. board in November, which called vice chancellor for student affairs
gram, which hit 2 million books when he steps into the job of dean Sauls said he wants to make sure for the creation of a performance- in April.

decided
read on Friday­—1,000 days after it of students today — a strategy that an issue with one chapter doesn’t based recruitment system, will also Shuford, who is currently assis-
was launched. could include restructuring the way reduce the office’s ability to resolve factor into Sauls’ approach. tant vice president for student
Erickson is director of the UNC the office approaches on-campus matters with other organizations. Sauls said he will examine how affairs at Bowling Green State
Center for Literacy and Disability fraternities and sororities. “It’s sort of like squeezing a bal- resolutions will impact councils University, said she has served as
Studies, and Bishop teaches in the Part of his approach will include loon,” Sauls said. individually. a faculty adviser for fraternity and
computer science department.
The site allows teachers, parents
examining his office’s structure
for handling the Greek system
He said another important part
of his term will be to make sure the
Brent Macon, president of
the Interfraternity Council, said
sorority life at UNC-Greensboro
and in Bowling Green.
Council to vote
and volunteers to create books on
topics of interest to readers of all
to determine how to implement
potential changes.
dean of students office sees each of
the councils within the Greek sys-
he thinks Sauls will help create
an open line of communication
She said she has not directly
spoken with Sauls yet regarding
on move to mall
ages. It is used in 150 countries and Sauls said this change could tem as a separate entity. between the Greek system and the Greek affairs.
all 50 states. result in hiring additional per- “The needs of one council may University administration. “I don’t know that much about by Eric Pesale
Readers with impaired movement sonnel to expand the resources not mirror the needs of another,” He said he is already working what they’re doing on campus relat- staff writer
can read books using one or two available to the Greek community, he said. with Sauls on several issues, includ- ed to Greek life,” Shuford said last The future of the Chapel Hill
switches, and readers can also have though he is not certain. Winston Crisp, vice chancel- ing making specific plans to imple- week. “I will be committed to what- Public Library will be decided
the book read aloud on the site. “We are not wedded necessar- lor for student affairs, said at the ment the recruitment resolutions ever direction the office is going in tonight, and it likely won’t include
The site has been used to teach ily to the same structure we had January meeting of the Board of set out by the board and creating a with working with students.” a change of address for the local
English as a second language in before,” he said. Trustees that an umbrella approach robust academic plan for Greeks. landmark.
many countries. Sauls said he wants to make is not ideal. Macon said a close relationship Contact the University Editor The Chapel Hill Town Council
sure each individual chapter has “One of the things we’ve learned between the dean of students and at university@dailytarheel.com. will vote on whether to accept a
UNC to offer new major in proposal from Madison Marquette
business journalism in 2011 to permanently move the library
from its 100 Library Drive location
UNC’s School of Journalism and to the current location of Dillard’s
Mass Communication and Kenan- at University Mall.
Flagler Business School will offer a Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt
new business journalism program, said the town council will likely
starting in the fall semester of the reject the proposal, which has
2011-12 school year. stirred conflict in the community
The program will be a niche since it was initially brought up in
major open to 15 students, and the November.
spots will be split between students In an e-mail to town officials,
from the journalism and business Madison Marquette Managing
schools. Director Jay Lask wrote that the
Students will apply during the savings for the town if the library
fall for the major, which will train moved would now be about $1.5
them to work as a business journal- million, compared to an earlier
ist or a corporate communications estimate of $3 million to 4 million
representative. in savings.
Students in the program must “We need to realize considerably
complete at least 22 credit hours more cost-savings than what is
from the journalism school and 16 proposed by Madison Marquette,”
hours from the business school. Kleinschmidt said.
Participants will need to take The staff report the council will
seven courses in the journalism receive tonight breaks down the
school and four from Kenan- costs of both the move and reno-
Flagler. vation.
Journalism school courses The total-costs comparison of
include “Business and the Media” the two sites shows that the reno-
and “Economics Reporting”, while vation of the current space would
business requirements include be between $1 million and $5.4
“Operations Management” million more expensive than the
and “ The Legal and Ethical move to the mall, according to the
Environment of Business”. report.
The School of Journalism also Sheila Ainbinder, owner of
offers a certificate in business jour- Retail Development Resources
nalism for majors and a minor in and a commercial real estate con-
business journalism for non-majors. sultant, said the Dillard’s location
Both programs will continue. dth/ben berry would serve the town better as a
Victoria Bouloubasis, class of ‘04, raises her fist during the fifth annual Historic Thousands on Jones rally in Raleigh on Saturday. retail space.
City Briefs “Why would we bring a place in

MARCH ON RALEIGH
that wouldn’t bring revenue to the
Local students win contest county and not bring people who
for U.N.-related projects were thinking about shopping?”
she said. “The mall attracts a dif-
Five students from East Chapel ferent kind of customer.”
Hill High School and three from
Carrboro High School placed in
Rally for social justice focused on civil rights not one step back.”
One New Jersey native said she came to Council member Penny Rich
the event to see which social issues North said if the council votes to keep
the U.N. Contest for high school the library at its current location,
students.
by Elizabeth johnson event with the help of nearly 100 other Carolinians are focusing on. Brionna Allen-
staff writer sponsors. Event organizers and speakers Jordan, also a student at N.C. Central it will focus on improving transit
Sponsored by the West Triangle access to the location and decreas-
RALEIGH — Music and cheers could be pushed a 14-point agenda, which included University, said she decided to come to HKonJ
Chapter of the United Nations ing traffic issues that could arise
heard Saturday morning from across down- items ranging from “redressing ugly chap- after hearing about it in one of her classes.
Association, the goal of the con- once Walgreens opens nearby at
town Raleigh as nearly 1,000 people gath- ters in the state’s racist history” to promot- “These issues are really affecting the youth
test is to foster interest in the U.N. the corner of East Franklin Street
ered for the fifth annual HKonJ — Historic ing environmental justice. and future students. If we start fixing these
through projects related to the and South Estes Drive.
Thousands on Jones — rally. President of the N.C. NAACP, Rev. William issues now, then generations to come won’t
U.N.’s mission. Rich added that improving
The crowd walked more than a mile Barber, who was introduced as the leader have to worry as much,” Allen-Jordan said.
First place and a prize of $750 vehicle access both into and out of
from Shaw University to the N.C. General in the fight for justice, addressed support- Fellow demonstrator Glenn said these are
went to David McDonogh, a junior Library Drive will also be a priority.
Assembly to promote civil rights, a diverse ers when they arrived on West Jones Street. just common sense issues.
from East Chapel Hill High School, “We need to look at the big pic-
educational system and economic equality. Barber began his speech by recognizing Feb. “All interests should be represented regard-
for his project “Timor East and ture and try alleviating the tensions
UNC student Alayah Glenn said she 12 as the 102 anniversary of the NAACP. less of race, social status or economic back-
West.” of car drivers as well as the people
joined friends at the rally because she want- “‘We’ is the most important word in the ground,” she said. “The legislators haven’t
East Chapel Hill freshman who are on the bus,” she said.
ed to show her opposition to re-segregating social justice vocabulary,” Barber said to the been fighting for our needs or our rights.”
Kathy Dai received second place Rich said the town council
the school systems. crowd. He emphasized the state’s need for Barber also had a message for members
and $500 for her project “U.N. received about 1,000 letters and a
“Immigrants and minorities aren’t getting diverse education systems, a fair budget and of N.C. General Assembly.
Leadership Roles in Humanitarian petition with 200 names against
the quality educations they deserve,” Glenn progressive Democrats in office. “We challenge the Democrats who aren’t
Aid.” the proposal to move.
said. “We need to establish an inheritance Crowd members hoisted signs displaying progressive and the Republicans who want
A group of three Carrboro High But Kleinschmidt said commu-
for the future generations so they don’t have slogans such as, “Race and Poverty Are Not to revert us back to our old ways.”
School seniors, Joe Baker, Parker nity opinion was split on the issue.
to deal with the same problems again.” Crimes,” and “Education, Not Deportation.”
Edwards and Adam Glasser Chapel Hill resident Laura
The N.C. National Association for the Singing and chanting, demonstrators cele- Contact the State & National
received $250 for third place for Wenzel, for example, said she
Advancement of Colored People led the brated the event’s theme, “Forward together, Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.
“U.N. Aid for Indonesia.” would like to see the library moved
The students will present a sum- out of its original location.
mary of their projects to the spon- “If you’re elderly or have chil-

Program aids special needs children


sor April 27, and the projects will dren with you, walking to the
be on the sponsor’s website, www. library can be difficult,” she said.
una-westtriangle.com, in early “It would be better to have the mall
May. location for walkers or for pedes-

Local school board to discuss Friday Night Friends gives childcare trians who use the bus.
“I know some people objected
impact of budget cuts, goals to losing the location with the nice
By Lauren Ratcliffe ATTEND OR VOLUNTEER trees outside, but when you go to
A local school board will con- Staff writer a library you’re not going there to
Time: March 27 and May 25, 6 p.m.
sider today which programs to cut DURHAM — Alex Castillo used look at trees. You’re going there to
to 9 p.m.
in the face of budget deficits at the to cry when his parents would drop look at books.”
him off at Friday Night Friends. Location: Newhope Church, Durham
state and local levels. Resident Chris Allen usually
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro City But this time, on Friday, his par- Info: egersuk@unch.unc.edu
shops for groceries, electronic
Schools Board of Education will ents could hardly keep him in the appliances and pizza at the mall,
use its planning retreat, which lobby long enough to stick a name by way of Elizabeth Gersuk, a and he said he wouldn’t mind get-
starts today, to examine different tag on his back. fourth-year resident at the depart- ting his library books there, too.
aspects of the school system, rang- Alex, 3, is high-functioning ment of physical medicine and “I thought it was a good idea,”
ing from increasing costs to aca- autistic. And once every couple of rehabilitation at UNC. Gersuk he said. “It’s almost like a recy-
demic achievement. months, his parents bring him and started her first Friday Night cling act. Let’s recycle the Dillard’s
Board Chairwoman Jamezetta his little brother, Ben, so they can Friends in Blacksburg, Va., in 2005 building rather than build some-
Bedford said in an e-mail that the have a few hours off. and has since launched programs thing new.”
district is expecting increases in Friday Night Friends is a free in Roanoke, Va., and Durham. But Ainbinder said the library’s
enrollment and overhead costs, respite care program for fami- Gersuk said she started the pro- current location is an asset with
including utilities and medical lies with special needs children gram because her older brother, dth/lauren ratcliffe which the mall just can’t com-
costs. at Newhope Church in Durham. Stephen, has special needs, and the Kelly Buchanan helps Gracie Saprano, 2, glue a heart on a Valentine’s pete.
“One of the primary purposes Parents said it gives them a bless- two grew up attending a similar “I just didn’t see why we would
Day card while holding Ben Castillo at a Friday Night Friends event.
(of the retreat) is to review budget ing — a night without worry. event in Texas. She said the program take the library, which is in a very
requests from each school improve- “It’s free for us,” said Katharine fills a need she saw in the commu- ents said they were eager to make the Gersuk said she hopes to expand lovely spot where you feel good
ment team,” Bedford said. Evaul, whose 18-month old son nity, one she would not have known most out of their three hours. the Durham program to include when you’re there … and move it
The state is facing a budget def- Liam attends the program. “But of had it not been for her brother. “It’s a blessing,” Evaul said. “It’s adults with special needs who live at into a mall that hasn’t been suc-
icit of $2.7 billion to $3.7 billion, it’s not free, it’s immeasurable.” “Knowing that these parents very difficult to find child care that home, adding that she is motivated cessful,” she said.
and the loss of stimulus funding is Ed Kenney brought his 5-year- don’t have respite care (motivates can handle children with special by the gratitude of parents, who say
expected to create a funding gap at old son David for the first time on me),” she said. “Most respite care needs. You can’t just get a teenager they are uncomfortable leaving their Contact the City Editor
the local level as well, which could Friday and said he was looking that is available there’s a fee for or hoping to make a couple bucks.” children in untrained hands. at city@dailytarheel.com.
affect programs and positions at forward to taking his wife out to it is only for the child with special Liam was born 11 weeks early “It’s e-mails like that and phone
the county’s two local school sys- dinner — an activity he only gets needs. We care for kids with dis- and now is overcoming develop- calls that I get on a regular basis ATTEND THE MEETING
tems. two to three nights each year. abilities and their siblings.” mental delays including feeding that say, ‘You are an answer to our Time: 7 p.m.
Visit www.dailytarheel.com for “We are excited to have a Relieved to see their children run- problems that cause him to some- prayers,’” she said. Location: Chapel Hill Town Hall,
the full story. Valentine’s date night,” said Kenney, ning into the arms of volunteers — times choke on food. 405 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
whose son has Down syndrome. many of whom are medical students “You need people who don’t Contact the University Editor Info: www.townofchapelhill.org
-From staff and wire reports The program came to Durham or professionals themselves — par- panic,” Evaul said. at university@dailytarheel.com.
4 monday, february 14, 2011 News The Daily Tar Heel

protest “If students are sunday games duplication degrees nixed by the board Friday.
The university suggested discon-
from page 1

“I guess I’ll just stay in retail,”


working two or from page 1

19 history programs.
tinuing the program, said Wanda
Lester, interim associate vice chan-
Panjwani said. “All those years of three jobs, they But classes in these disciplines cellor for academic affairs at N.C.
honors and APs will just lead me are necessary for a liberal arts edu- A&T.
to selling toys.” can’t make it to our cation, so they aren’t considered French classes will still be
Both Gage and Ross thanked
the coalition members for their meetings.” unnecessary, said Bruce Carney,
executive vice chancellor and pro-
offered, but students will no lon-
ger have the option of majoring in
attendance and respectful atti- vost at UNC-CH. French, she said.
hannah gage, bog chairwoman “I think it’s going to save money
tude. Determining if a program is an
“We are fairly isolated from uing 60 programs based on their unnecessary duplication will depend in terms of administrative roles
students,” Gage said. “We don’t low productivity and low enroll- on student demand, its proximity to that may be associated with it,”
hear the real concerns, because if ment, said James Deal, chair of schools with a similar program, and Lester said.
students are working two or three the board’s educational planning, a campus’ ability and willingness to She said she would be willing to
jobs, they can’t make it to our meet- policies and programs committee. provide the program. reduce more programs in a similar
ings — they’re working. Only three new programs were But unnecessary duplication has fashion in order to more effectively
“We know cuts are hurting aca- approved, he said. not been defined, and administra- use the university’s resources.
demic experiences,” she said. Board members are unsure of tors are still waiting on word from Cutting programs that don’t pro-
Gage suggested the coalition how much money the system will Ross, said Stephen McFarland, duce many majors is one approach
work with the UNC Association of save as a result of the cuts. vice provost for academic affairs at to eliminating unnecessary dupli-
Student Governments or another “It’s hard to put a price tag on UNC-Wilmington. cation, said Jon Young, provost and
venue besides the board. the programs, because they have “The parameters have not yet vice chancellor for academic affairs
Ross also said former UNC- relatively low enrollment,” Gage been identified,” McFarland said. at Fayetteville State University.
Charlotte Chancellor Jim said. There are no standardized crite- “If it doesn’t have many gradu-
Woodward’s systemwide review to Ross said this process will ria for the process, Mabe said. ates, then maybe that’s a sign that
eliminate duplication is a new ini- become even more aggressive. “There’s a little bit of relativity it’s not necessary,” he said.
tiative; however, Woodward will “Over 200 programs have been here,” he said.
not be starting from scratch. identified with low enrollment.” Considering necessary costs
“Our campuses scrutinize low Potential impact on UNC-CH
productivity,” Ross said. Contact the State & National English and history degree pro-
The board approved discontin- Editor at state@dailytarheel.com. The 2008 report of low-pro- grams are both classified by the
ductivity programs identified six system as category one programs,
of UNC-CH’s baccalaureate pro- which are the least expensive ones
grams as having low enrollment, to operate. Programs are rated
including comparative literature, from category one to category four,

Volunteers for
dth/daniel turner and art and science programs have

S
Slavic languages, interdisciplinary
enior political science major Ben Keilman instructs studies, biostatistics and environ- higher operating costs.
mental health sciences. UNC-CH’s baccalaureate pro-
players setting up for a Humans vs. Zombies skir- The report recommended the gram in radiologic science — the
mish on Sunday. A dozen students practiced their University work to increase enroll- only one in the system — is expen-

Chest Cold Study! skills through various games like capture the flag and team ment in its comparative literature, sive, and most of the program could
Slavic languages and biostatistics be offered online, which would save
deathmatch while alternating as humans and zombies. programs. It acknowledged low money, Mabe said.
enrollments would likely continue “We’re looking at some innovative
for the other two. ideas as we have to deal with budgets
Cough, Cold, Mucus? election happens,” she said.
The public hearing will be held The Slavic languages degree was and that sort of thing,” he said.
from page 1 eliminated by the Board of Governors For high-cost programs, admin-
in the Graham Kenan Courtroom
ambiguity of the Code’s passages at the School of Law. Womack said Friday, and the department could be istrators must assess if it’s neces-
regarding student government it will likely last between 45 min- merged with German studies. sary to have more than one pro-
Are you experiencing chest congestion, involvement in elections. The utes and one hour. Carney said a program’s security gram producing graduates in that
board’s December interpretation The case holding up the release depends on the number of gradu- discipline, McFarland said.
productive cough, or mucus from a cold that of the Student Code was “the most of the results of the UCommons ates it produces and how its gradu- “The question to ask is, ‘what are
started within the last 6 days? reasonable way to resolve the tex- referendum to renovate the Student ates fare on professional exams. the needs of the state?’”
tual conflict,” he argues. Union has also been delayed. Passing rates and academic
The University of North Carolina is conducting a Santoro said she is not worried Briefs are due from both parties on rankings are consistently high for Meeting regional need
about the outcome of Tuesday’s Tuesday. UNC-CH’s programs, he said.
clinical research study on the effects of an FDA hearing. “I can’t see any programs here Western Carolina University’s stu-
“I’m just looking forward to Contact the University Editor that are on a large scale at risk,” he dents serve a distinct region of the
approved medication. A comprehensive health
going in there and seeing what at university@dailytarheel.com. said. state, and it wouldn’t make sense to
assessment will be conducted prior to beginning The University offers the only consolidate them Stanford said.
the research study. baccalaureate programs in compar- “With the budget being the way
ative literature and biostatistics. it is now, I think we have to go to
N.C. State, UNC-CH’s neigh- the next level,” Stanford said. “That
Consider participating in this study if: bor, also offers degree programs in may include collaborating.”
• You or a member of your family is 18 to interdisciplinary studies and envi- Young said FSU’s nursing pro-
ronmental science. Four other uni- gram is necessary because the
65 years old versities in the system offer inter- surrounding region is in need of
disciplinary studies majors, and six minority nurses, and the university
• Experiencing a chest cold others offer environmental science. is a historically black college.
Carney said a sharing of resources The program also reaches
• In good general health, and Maureen A. Hartford, Ed.D. among programs in the Triangle — out to more remote populations
President, Meredith College like the library partnership among through online education, he said.
• Non-smoker, no asthma, and no current N.C. Central University, NCSU and An online baccalaureate degree
active allergies UNC-Chapel Hill — might be cre- in nursing through FSU is in the
ated, but he said he does not think planning stages.
If you qualify and are enrolled you will receive a “Critical Thinking in programs at the University will be “We want to make sure we’re
cut because it is the best-perform- offering courses that are specifically
study-related medical evaluation and study Women’s Education” ing school in the system. targeted to where they’re needed,”
medication at no cost. You will be compensated “I can’t imagine that would hap- said Marshall Pitts, a member of
pen here,” he said. “I can’t imagine the Board of Governors.
for your time and travel. programs at State being cut either.” “You’re talking more of a consol-
Monday, February 28, 2011 at 7 p.m. idation,” he said. “In less frequent
To learn more, please contact Heather at (919) 843-8472 instances you’ll have some cuts of
Jones Auditorium • Meredith College Evaluating student demand
by email at: heather_duckworth@med.unc.edu or contact programs.”
Free, open to the public N.C. Agricultural and Technical
Aline at 919-843-9108 by email at: kala_aline@med.unc.edu
State University’s baccalaureate Contact the State & National
www.meredith.edu/campus-theme degree in French was among the Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.
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The Daily Tar Heel Valentine’s Day monday, february 14, 2011 5

Thorps, Fridays share love stories, advice


Patti and Holden Thorp ing someone for so long, we kind Governors elected me to be Ida and Bill Friday called back and we’ve lived hap- DTH: What is one of your most
of just knew we were going to get Chancellor, we renewed our wed- pily ever after. memorable moments?
by nicole comparato married. ding vows. It’s more special after by Claire McNeill That was 68 years ago, and we’ve
staff writer He had followed me to Yale when so much time. You know how staff writer been happily married ever since. BF: There was the time when
The most powerful couple on I went to drama school, and he much work it has been and how Before he was president of the our first child came to our home.
campus started at age 12. got his post-doctorate. Actually, in much it really is. UNC system, Bill Friday was pres-
DTH: How did you propose? That’s a memory no one forgets.
Growing up in Fayetteville, 1989, on our first Valentine’s Day
DTH: What is the key to love? ident of the N.C. State University BF: (I proposed) just like any- The happiness of being together,
Holden and Patti Thorp were cast together, he gave me a set of four student body — and he didn’t have body else, but it was before I was you never forget that. We always
in a production of “Peter Pan.” glass plates and bowls, and that’s PT: Commitment and marriage date. leaving to go to war. worked as a team. I didn’t want to
Holden Thorp said he fell in love when he asked me if I would takes a lot of trust. A friend set him up on a blind Many proposals were made in do anything she didn’t share.
with her on the spot in a friendship marry him then. What was great about him know- date with a Meredith College student those days. She was sweet enough DTH: What is the key to love?
that has blossomed into a 20-year The intention behind the plates ing me so long when we started named Ida. Years later, they would to accept and we’ve had three
marriage. and bowls was that we would get dating was that I eventually tried marry and have three children. daughters in our family since that BF: Well, the first thing, of
Though it falls every year in a married, and they would be for to push him out of my life, like I In 68 years of marriage, Bill and time. course, is complete trust and com-
busy and occasionally cold month, our life together. always did with my love interests, Ida, both in their early nineties, have plete acceptance. That’s where
the two celebrate their relationship but he had seen that before, and enjoyed the company of chancellors
DTH: What is your favorite thing you start. You’re two people build-
on this day each year.
DTH: What is your favorite thing wouldn’t let me. It’s knowing and presidents. But the company
about the other person? ing one life and you do it together.
about the other person? BF: We’re a great team. We work And you do it recognizing that
someone’s patterns. they value most is each other’s.
DTH: How did you two meet? PT: His sense of humor is my together on everything we did. neither of you is perfect, but you
Holden Thorp: My mother favorite. Also, he’s very honest,
HT: You need to recognize that DTH: How did you two meet? We built two houses together, can do it together. And we did.
the other person is going to do
runs the Cape Fear Regional forthright, and usually delivers
stuff that drives you crazy, but
Bill Friday: You won’t believe and we’ve had a great time every
Theatre in Fayetteville, and we met bad news gently. No matter how it, but it was a blind date. It was day. Every day seems to be a new Contact the University Editor
if you have the ability and want at university@dailytarheel.com.
because there was a production of bad things are, he’s there. Greater University Day, an occa- adventure.
to work through it, that’s the
“Peter Pan” put on in 1973, and we sion when State and Carolina
were both cast in it.
HT: She’s always going to keep secret.
played football way back in the
me on the ground. She reminds
I fell in love with her then, and she
me of how I was when I was 12.
PT: Like I told him about that 40s. I happened to be class presi-
didn’t fall in love with me until 12 tweet (from the Duke game), it’s a dent of State, and all the guys
years later. DTH: What is one of your most good thing that he’s cute! had girlfriends come and be their
memorable moments? sponsors. I didn’t have one so I
DTH: How did you propose?
Contact the University Editor called out to Meredith College ...
Patti Thorp: Well, after dat- HT: The night the Board of at university@dailytarheel.com. I found her so interesting that I

Love from China to Chapel Hill


Couple dated across hemispheres
by Lilly knoepp on his birthday in March this year,
staff writer and the couple is planning their
It might seem as though two wedding. They would like to hold
people who live a world apart and a small marriage ceremony in early
speak different languages could May, and might also go to China
meet and fall in love only in the after graduate school for a more
plot of a romantic movie. traditional Chinese wedding.
But that scenario is a reality for But the couple doesn’t have any
UNC graduate student Grant Ligon big plans for this Valentine’s Day.
and his fiancee, Jingyuan Sun, now Ligon said it would be difficult to
a UNC graduate student herself. top their travels.
The couple met in Qingdao, “It’s hard to think of something
China, while Ligon was on a sum- impressive to do,” he said. “We real-
mer study abroad program at ly love going out to dinner together
Ocean University in 2009. In a city so that’s probably what we’ll do.”
of more than 7 million people, the This is perfectly fine with Sun.
two still managed to meet one day “We don’t require a lot to be
at the university’s tennis courts. happy, that’s one of the great things
“I’d never really considered a about our relationship,” Sun said. dth/melissa key
white boy before but he just kept
Current UNC graduate students and engaged couple Grant Ligon and
asking me to eat,” Sun said. Contact the University Editor
When she finally said “yes,” the
Jingyuan Sun met in China while Ligon was there studying abroad.
at university@dailytarheel.com.
couple hit it off and their relation-
ship quickly progressed.
Although Sun spoke limited
English and Ligon spoke no Chinese,
the two connected immediately. Immerse yourself in
“A big step in our relationship
was when I proposed that I meet
her parents about three weeks after
meeting her,” Ligon said.
Spanish or Chinese –
Meeting Ligon shocked Sun’s
parents, who live in Changchun without leaving campus!
and who had never seen a white
person before.
Just a few weeks later it was Language Immersion Programs in Spanish and Chinese will be offered at UNC-
time for Ligon to return to the U.S., Chapel Hill in summer 2011. Students will take language classes and extend
but the couple decided to continue their language learning through cultural and social activities. Both immersion
the relationship by chatting daily
over Skype. It was never a burden programs will be offered in first summer session May 10 – June 14, 2011.
for them to make time to be able to
talk to each other, they said. In the Spanish program, students will earn six credits for SPAN 111. In the
“Don’t let the difficulties of Chinese program, students will earn credit for a language class, CHIN 101, and
staying in touch get in the way,” he
said. “You can find the time to talk a culture class, CHIN 150.
to someone even if it means get-
ting up in the middle of the night An application is required. Each program will be limited to 20 students.
because of the time difference.”
Over the next year, Sun was able
to apply for a visa to visit Ligon.
For more information and how to apply, go to
While visiting UNC, Sun decid- http://www.unc.edu/languageimmersion/.
ed to apply to a graduate program
so she could stay with Ligon. She
was accepted into the program but
had to return to China to finish her
senior year of college.
“We were all so sad when she
left the first time, myself and my
parents, that was when we knew it
was serious,” Ligon said.
Just before the pair started grad-
uate school together, they decided
to take a pre-honeymoon trip to
Dubai, Italy, France and Spain.
“It was a dream,” said Sun.
But since the vacation was a stop
on Sun’s way to the U.S., they had
to bring her luggage from China
with them on the trip.
“We had to drag about 67 pounds
of luggage all through Venice’s cob-
bled streets,” Sun said.
Ligon remembers differently.
“No, I had to carry all that lug-
gage around Europe,” he said,
laughing.
Before their 22-day trip to
Europe, they had already trav-
eled to South Korea, Guizhou and
Malaysia.
Their love of travel has spread to
Ligon’s family, who visited China
for the first time in October to sur-
prise Sun.
“My parents were blown away by
China — they loved it,” he said.
“We even got to take my par-
ents to the tennis courts where we
met.”
After all of their adventures, the
pair said they are happy to be living
in Chapel Hill.
Ligon said Sun has become a
true UNC student. Sun said she
came to understand a major part of
UNC life while watching the Duke
game on Wednesday.
“Before I didn’t know why they
say ‘Go to hell Duke’ in the school
song, but now I do,” Sun said.
Ligon asked Sun to marry him
6 monday, february 14, 2011 Opinion The Daily Tar Heel

Sarah Frier
QUOTE OF THE DAY:
The Daily Tar Heel EDITOR, 962-4086
Frier@email.unc.edu
EDITorial BOARD members

Cameron Parker callie bost Greg Smith “I guess I’ll just stay in retail. All
Established 1893, Opinion EDITOR Robert Fleming Shruti Shah
117 years
of editorial freedom
cdp@unc.edu
Pat ryan
Taylor Holgate
Sam Jacobson
Nathan D’ambrosio
Taylor Haulsee
those years of honors and APs will
Maggie Zellner
just lead me to selling toys.”
associate opinion EDITOR
pcryan@email.unc.edu

Eva Panjwani, 23, who said she dropped out of UNC


EDITORIAL CARTOON By Connor Sullivan, cpsully@email.unc.edu
when she couldn’t afford tuition

Featured online reader comment:

Sam Ellis
“Maybe they should repeal another
Sports columnist
Senior econ and exercise and sports
stupid law, the 18 percent cap.”
science major from Chapel Hill.
E-mail: swellis@email.Unc.Edu Matt, on UNC being fined for admitting too many
out-of-state students

Love and LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

sports: UNC students need to


remain one unified body
UNC is about more than
simply basketball games

a natural TO THE EDITOR:


Having graduated from our
TO THE EDITOR:
The other night I went for a

bond
wonderful institution this past run to relieve some stress after
May I have to say that I love our gut-wrenching loss to Duke.
Carolina now more than ever I’ll admit it — I was angry, frus-
and miss it dearly. But, having trated, even grieving. The Duke

V
caught up on recent events that game is like a holiday, marked on
alentine’s Day presents seem to be plaguing the student the calendar months in advance,

Punitive, not productive


a great opportunity to elections and our unfortunate but and the Heels — our Heels
reflect on the impact of hard fought loss at Duke this past — had just let a huge lead slip
love and intimate relationships week, I just want to urge my fel- away to some unfortunate-look-
in our lives. And UNC happens low Tar Heels to remain unified. ing college kids from Durham.
to be an excellent place to find a
significant other. Retroactive fine by the BOG is worse I have moved abroad and
therefore watched the Duke
I couldn’t help but imagine the
elation Duke students were
Just ask our very own Roy
Williams, who has been married than inconsistent enforcement game via Skype with my family
back home in the states at 3 a.m.
experiencing.
It started out like any other

T
to his college sweetheart for local time and I have to say I have run, but it didn’t take long for
nearly forty years. he UNC-system Board of UNC’s admissions office could of the inherently unpredictable
never been more proud of our that to change. Upon reaching
You might be surprised to know Governors was wrong to do to rectify the problem. legislative process. Cameron Avenue, out of the
boys. They were classy, fought
some of the parallels between ath- fine UNC-Chapel Hill for Charles Mercer, chairman of Such speculation adds an hard, and upheld every value of hundreds of songs on my iPod,
letics and the holiday. breaking a rule that did not exist the BOG’s budget and finance unnecessary layer of complex- sportsmanship that Carolina is James Taylor’s “Carolina in my
While Chapel Hill is a mag- when the infraction occurred. committee, said the fine was ity to the already difficult job and should remain known for. Mind” began to play. As I was
nificent place to find someone Though it is important that the imposed anyway because his of running a university in unfa- Those qualities should not only about to pass the Old Well, I
to forge a relationship with, the BOG enforce its policies con- committee thought it “better to vorable economic times. be apparent on the court, but decided to stop and reflect on my
venue of courtship can be criti- sistently, fines should not be act consistently with the policy.” These considerations aside, should permeate the student soon-to-be four years at UNC.
cal. It might take some bravado, body whether you wear a jersey Then, it hit me.
enforced retroactively. Though this is a reasonable it is simply unsound policy
but meeting someone at the gym or a T-shirt to basketball games. This place is about more than
could lead to a better long-term UNC was fined for exceed- defense of imposing the fine, to enforce laws retroactively,
ing the number of out-of-state it fails to address the negative especially when the “infrac- As a recent alumnae passing basketball. It’s about more than
relationship than the person down some now “outsider” per- top-notch students, budget cuts
you took home from the bar. students it is allowed to enroll. consequences of the decision tions” cannot be reversed.
spective, we attend an amazing or even Franklin Street. This place
After all, alcohol is considered a However, when they were — consequences which are far There are many factors
school that is respected world- is about family, tradition, learn-
depressant and exercise-related admitted, the students who worse than appearing incon- administrators cannot predict or ing to deal with adversity, creativ-
wide. We are mostly blue-collar
endorphins are proven to make now constitute the excess were sistent. control, and they have no choice students that work hard and ity and excellence. It’s about the
you happier. allowed to be considered in- By retroactively imposing but to try to account for them. succeed, and we have an amaz- Old Well, the Bell Tower, the Pit.
Regardless of the vehicle of state for tuition purposes. this fine, the BOG has set a The decisions of the state legisla- ing legacy. Regardless of student It’s about thousands of students
introduction, sports bring us This past summer, the state precedent under which UNC- ture shouldn’t be one of them. election fumbles, wins and losses banding together as one to sup-
all together through a com- legislature repealed the law that system schools are incentivized The BOG should act in a way on the court or differing opinions port a group of basketball players
mon focus. What better way to grants these scholarship students to hedge their bets and consider that shows it is in fact on the elsewhere, stay unified, and trust who battled with every ounce of
impress your trophy fratdaddy me when I say there is only one effort they had.
than to play with him in the
in-state status, thereby putting possible future legislation when same team as the schools it gov-
UNC over its limit. However, deciding their schools’ policy. erns. Distinguishing between Carolina. Losing to Duke might cut my
upcoming basketball marathon heart out, but at least I bleed
on Saturday? since the students in question This new dimension com- genuine errors and deliberate
Sarah Hiser Carolina blue. That’s a feeling
Or perhaps you idolize ath- had already been accepted and pels university administrators violations would go a long way
Class of ’10 those folks down the road will
letes and aspire to create a enrolled, there was nothing to try to predict the outcome toward sending that message. never have.
genetic offspring capable of
challenging UNC’s own Mia This Valentine’s day, save
Chris Howerton

Mr. Medlin goes to Raleigh


Hamm and husband Nomar Earth by using condoms Senior
Garciaparra’s children for ath- TO THE EDITOR: Public Relations
letic dominance . “Wrap with care, save the
UNC’s Campus Recreation
took a hands-on approach to
polar bear” and “Wear a condom Carolina-Duke rivalry okay
promoting healthy relationships Presence at capital the best way to influence the agenda now, save the spotted owl” are
just two of several slogans that
to be passionate about

W
among students by organiz- will appear on the packages of TO THE EDITOR:
ing a Valentine’s Day Couples ith all the commotion other system presidents have an orities become more transpar-
of student body presi- advantage on UNC’s other lob- ent over the next few weeks, condoms which Helping Paws, This is in response to “UNC
Challenge. Couples competed the committee of the Campus fans should do their best to keep
against other couples in an array dent elections — and bying organizations — by put- Medlin and Co. will have a bet-
Y devoted to animal protection their cool” (Feb.11).
of athletic and mental challenges this one in particular has had ting students on financial aid ter idea of exactly what points Katie Hill, you are the kind
and advocacy, will be handing
intended to add a unique and more than its share of drama face-to-face with legislators, to push on. out this Valentine’s Day. of Carolina fan that fuels the
active twist to the Valentine’s — it can be easy to lose sight of they can better understand the If more out-of-state stu- Human overpopulation is the “wine and cheese” stereotype.
experience. what we’re really voting for. real impact any cuts in state- dents with merit scholarships root cause of the current wave of The Carolina-Duke rivalry is
Valentine’s Day ought to evoke Last week, Student Body funded financial aid will have. are forced to give up in-state mass extinction that is dominat- the best in all of sports. It’s a
nostalgic memories of the appre- President Hogan Medlin Although Medlin said he tuition rates, it would be devas- ing the planet. According to E.O. rivalry rooted in tradition and
ciation of another’s company. fueled by emotion. The hatred
traveled to Raleigh with the is planning to go back in late tating to the campus’ diversity Wilson, the famed evolutionary
And in the spirit of both charity biologist and UNC’s 2011 com- is natural. “Go to Hell Duke” is
and chivalry, dates with members
UNC Association of Student March or early April — when and intellectual environment.
Government’s “Students Day the budget discussions will be The ASG recently voted down mencement speaker, Earth is in our fight song, just as “Go to
of UNC’s basketball team were losing 30,000 plant and animal Hell Carolina” is in theirs. The
recently auctioned off for Dance at the Capital” to advocate for most heated — the new stu- a proposal that would ask for a
species per year to extinction (or games played between the two
Marathon. the University. dent body president should be voting position on the Board of
three species per hour). programs are remembered by
The “Blue Steel,” famous for The ASG’s four legisla- prepared to jump into campus Governors, which shows a seri- fans for lifetimes. This rivalry is
Too many people are using too
their sticky note prank on John tive priorities seem sound. advocacy in Raleigh as soon as ous lack of institutional confi- much of the world’s fresh water, the Battle for Tobacco Road. It’s
Henson, which was filmed by It’s important that individual he or she is chosen. dence on its part — yet lobbied land mass, and other natural 8 points in 17 seconds. It’s the
Daniel Bolick (aka the Yellow campuses retain the flexibility We applaud Medlin’s will- for exactly that last week. resources while heavily polluting bloody Montross game. It’s “J.R.
Mamba), even managed to fetch to make cuts where they see fit, ingness to get to know the new This board has been critical much of what remains unused can’t Reid.” It’s Stackhouse strut-
$375. instead of having the General legislators and put a human of ASG, but we were impressed by humans. One of the biggest ting down the floor at Cameron.
And while Valentine’s Day is Assembly dictate what needs to face to the university system. by their lobbying priorities. The steps you can take to curb spe- It’s Duhon’s reverse layup in OT.
typically associated with roman- It’s Wojo slapping the floor. It’s
be cut where. But there certainly is room ASG — and individual campus cies extinction is to employ fam-
tic interpersonal relations, some ily planning in your life and also Marvin’s put back. It’s the Bloody
historic moments came at the Financial aid was another one for adaptation of strategy and student body presidents —
of the association’s priorities. greater specificity. should continue building rela- to promote it to others. Family Hansbrough game. It’s Dean vs.
intersection of athletics and planning involves deciding when K. It’s Roy vs. K.
Valentine’s Day. This is where Medlin and the As legislative budget pri- tionships with legislators.
and how many children to have Bottom line is this, we hate
On Feb. 14, 1957, the Georgia and utilizing birth control meth- them, and they hate us. And you
state senate unanimously

Taking on toking
ods, like condoms, to implement know what? That’s okay. Just
approved Sen. Leon Butt’s bill said plan. watching replays of past games
that barred black people from The average child born in gets me fired up as if it was hap-
playing baseball with white peo- the U.S. will consume as much pening right in front of me all
ple citing that it could give them energy (and hence, resources) over again. And that is what this
a “sense of equality.” The bill’s
initial passage sparked a national North Carolina has better issues to address than K2 as 13 Chinese children or 128
Bangladeshi children. So the
rivalry is all about. So excuse me
if I get a little ticked because we
outrage that eventually resulted

I
next time you think having your let one get away from us, but
in the bill’s defeat and the rise of t was probably only a mat- thankful that our government ize spice, but to enact more fis- own show on TLC about your we’re Carolina, we never “accept
a more socially inclusive model of ter of time. has acted so forcefully to keep cally responsible policies. gigantic brood is a decent career defeat,” we deal with it. You deal
interracial athletics. As surprising as it was allegedly harmful substances No politician wants to be seen option, reconsider, for biodiver- with it your way and I’ll deal
Landmark civil rights events of that imitation cannabis was out of consumers’ bodies, we as soft on drugs but we wish the sity’s sake! with it mine.
the past, including the desegrega- legalized at all, there is no doubt would prefer it limits its actions N.C. General Assembly would
tion of baseball, are responsible dedicated smokers of “spice” to substances we have no choice focus on more pressing issues Alex Lane Jack Frost
for leading to more progressive Co-chairwoman Sophomore
societies such as the modern
were well aware that its legal sta- in consuming — fire retardants and not on devising a ban that
tus was probably as short-lived in pillows, heavy metals in will probably be circumvented Helping Paws Business Administration
UNC community.
A special “Happy Valentine’s as the high K2 itself gives. paints and other substances in the coming years anyway.
Day” goes out to everyone who A bill to ban imitation can- widely regarded as toxic. With a ban on marijuana and
nabis will probably be voted Although a ban on K2 will now a possible one on synthet-
SPEAK OUT department and phone number.
managed to maintain high ➤ Edit: The DTH edits for space, clar-
enough standards to remain on this Thursday in the N.C. probably not dissuade anyone ic cannabis, legislators should Writing guidelines: ity, accuracy and vulgarity.
➤ Please type: Handwritten Limit letters to 250 words.
Valentine-less for today’s holiday. House and Senate. from moving to North Carolina, admit it’s not the substance they letters will not be accepted.
But everyone else: Take the N.C. Rep. Jimmy Dixon, it does send another signal that want to ban but the high. SUBMISSION:
➤ Sign and date: No more than
time amidst your intimate cel- R-Duplin, a co-sponsor of the the state is moving in a different Manufacturers will likely two people should sign letters. ➤ Drop-off: at our office at 151 E.
ebrations to think about how Rosemary Street.
bill, told The Daily Tar Heel that direction than much of the U.S. just come up with a new way ➤ Students: Include your year, major
sports, Valentine’s Day, and your and phone number. ➤ E-mail: opinion@dailytarheel.com
he expected the bill to pass. Synthetic marijuana should be to circumvent the letter but not ➤ Send: to P.O. Box 3257, Chapel
personal life are so closely and ➤ Faculty/staff: Include your
In a country where medical in the same category as alcohol the spirit of the ban. Hill, N.C., 27515.
surprisingly intertwined.
marijuana is increasingly accept- and tobacco — substances that It’s time state legislators stop
Tuesday: ed, the state stands to lose more can be dangerous, but are highly making bans that limit citizens’ EDITOR’S NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions
than tax dollars by banning K2. regulated and heavily taxed. freedoms and focus on ways to of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel edito-
Matthew Moran will elucidate the
case to meditate.
While the general populace The new Republican major- solve the very real and substan- rial board. The board consists of nine board members, the associate opinion editor, the
is, no doubt, supposed to feel ity’s mandate was not to illegal- tive issues the state faces. opinion editor and the editor.
The Daily Tar Heel News monday, february 14, 2011 7

AIDS Memorial Quilt National and World News


Egyptian military dissolves country’s
N&W

is thematic companion
Know more on
today’s top story: parliament and suspends constitution
CAIRO (MCT) —Eg ypt ’s arrests, pressure on independent
Leaders of the army said they military disbanded the country’s candidates, news-media harass-
On display with would only keep power for six
months, or until new elections
parliament and suspended the
constitution on Sunday, saying it
ment and a boycott by some
opposition groups. Last week, in
current PRC play can be held http://wapo.st/eJU-
GUC (via Washington Post)
will rule for six months or until
presidential and parliamentary
the final days of Mubarak’s rule,
hundreds gathered in front of the
Wyre Davies says there is elections are held, according to a parliament building in addition to
by Michelle Lewis an ‘upbeat mood’ in Cairo’s statement by the military council the thousands in Tahrir Square.
staff writer Tahrir Square. Watch the read on state television. The army appeared to have
Jerry Cohen. Roy Cohn. Howard video http://bbc.in/gqALEN The announcement, which left in place the Cabinet, which is
Okorofsky. (via BBC) came two days after the ouster of running the country.
These are among the 91,000 Egypt’s Central Bank decid- President Hosni Mubarak, met Earlier Sunday, the army began
names honored in the AIDS ed it will suspend work in some of the demands of anti- to clear Tahrir Square, the center
Memorial Quilt, maintained by the banks on Monday http://bit. government protesters who for of the protests, tearing down tents
NAMES Project Foundation. ly/gxyXQ4 (via Al Jazeera) nearly three weeks demonstrated and opening it to traffic.
Four 12-by-12 foot sections
against Mubarak and the parlia- The popular uprising shut
of the quilt will be on display at Go to dailytarheel.com/ ment, demanding constitutional down Egypt’s economy, sparked
the Paul Green Theatre through index.php/section/state to reforms. fighting and froze activity in
March 6 to accompany PlayMakers
discuss new developments Parliamentary elections held downtown Cairo, home to the
Repertory Company’s presentation
of “Angels in America,” playwright
in Egypt. in November were considered government and major busi-
fraudulent and marred by mass nesses.
Tony Kushner’s award-winning
play on AIDS in America.
Each panel of the quilt is cre-
ated by friends, family or admirers Italy opens refugee camp for Tunisians Obama to present
LAMPEDUSA , Italy (MCT) “additionally encourage” refu- federal budget
in memory of someone who died
of AIDS.
The entire quilt measures 1.3 —Bowing to local pressure in a gees from heading toward the
million square feet. rising tide of Tunisian refugees, tiny island. WASHINGTON, D.C. (MCT)
Jeffrey Meanza, associate artis- Italian Interior Minister Roberto A further 1,000 Tunisian boat — President Barack Obama on
tic director for PlayMakers — who Maroni decided Sunday to reopen refugees arrived overnight on Monday will propose a federal
also plays Louis Ironson in “Angels a large refugee camp on the south- Lampedusa, further straining budget that would add $11 tril-
in America” — said he volunteered ern island of Lampedusa. the tiny Italian island’s facilities lion to the nation’s debt over the
for the NAMES project while he The central camp took in about to assist them. next decade, White House officials
was in college. 1,000 people on Sunday evening, At least 230 people were say.
“I thought it’d be the perfect dth/mary koenig Italian media reported. redistributed to camps in Sicily Obama will stress that it could
opportunity for us to showcase this Community members stand beneath an AIDS Memorial Quilt in the Many of the refugees reported- and the mainland by ferries and be even worse, saying he’s actually
on campus,” Meanza said. lobby of the CDA, where PlayMakers’ “Angels in America” is showing. ly were reluctant to be admitted planes on Sunday, Italian media proposing cutting the red ink by
“The play is so much about the into the camp, fearing that they reported. About 2,300 refugees $1 trillion over the decade through
silence that lingered among the poems and notes. would be arrested. nevertheless remained on the a combination of tax increases and
SEE THE AIDS MEMORIAL QUILT island by the afternoon, with spending cuts.
lives of those people and about giv- The panel dedicated to Kurt W. Maroni was bowing to pres-
Time: Now through March 6 sure from the local population in another 300 sighted on the sea But that falls far short of the
ing a voice to those folks suffering Massey has an entire tuxedo jack- Location: Lobby, Center for
with AIDS and HIV. et beside a picture of him and his the decision, after Rome rejected and expected to arrive in the eve- recommendations of his own
Dramatic Art reopening the camp so as not to ning, police said. budget deficit commission.
“It feels like it’s for them. There’s partner.
Info: www.playmakersrep.org
a sense of ‘this is why we’re doing Two panels on the display are
this play,’” he said. in memory of Roy Cohn, a lawyer
Each panel measures 3 feet by portrayed in “Angels in America” Pairing the quilt with “Angels in
6 feet — about the size of a human who denied being homosexual and America” makes a great connec-
grave.
“If you think back to the early
days of the epidemic when people
having AIDS.
“They’re not particularly favor-
tion, Rhoad said.
“(It was) calling America’s atten-
tion to this disease in a very differ-
University Florist
and Gift Shop
able portrayals of him because he’s
were talking about statistics and not exactly the most respected per- ent way than other works had done,
not really talking about real lives, son in history,” Meanza said. and calling on us to ask questions
real people lost to this disease. We One of Cohn’s panels displays about life and the value of life and
needed a big visual to say, ‘here’s the words: “bully, coward, victim.” what that meant for us all,” Rhoad Chapel Hill, NC
the evidence, don’t ever forget,’” Jeffrey Blair Cornell, who plays said. “I think the quilt did the same
said Julie Rhoad, executive direc-
tor for the NAMES project.
The panels of the quilt on display
Cohn in “Angels in America,” said
Cohn was ultimately a victim.
“All his power and all his influ-
thing.
“Essentially, it’s almost impos-
sible to walk away from the quilt
If you’ve been Come in today to
at the theater range from simple to
highly elaborate.
Some panels only display a name
ence and all his connections
couldn’t save him,” Cornell said.
“The disease doesn’t care about
unchanged.”

Contact the Arts Editor


busy and have no choose flowers for
while others include pictures, human conceit or vanity.” at arts@dailytarheel.com.
flowers yet, your special
come see us today, sweetheart.
there’s no need to fret!
The Official
Ring Collection of
The University of 919-929-1119 • 124 E. Franklin Street
405872-02-14.CRTR
www.universityflorist.com

North Carolina James A. Hutchins


Lecture Series
Spring 2011
February 15:
“WHO NEEDS CEREMONIES OF MEMORY?:
THE 150 TH ANNIVERSARY”
Michael Kreyling will be speaking about his research
around his new book that explores the cultural politics
of memory in representations of the South through an
examination of re-enacted memory in latter-day versions
of the Civil War, the construction of white liberal
southern-ness in post-Civil Rights fiction and works by
authors such as Robert Penn Warren and W.E.B. Dubois.

March 1:
Marci Campbell
HEALTH AND WEALTH: ADDRESSING ROOT CAUSES
OF POOR HEALTH IN EASTERN NC THROUGH ASSETS
Last Chance to Order! DEVELOPMENT
Marci will speak about her work in eastern NC with

Monday - Friday, February 14 – 18 recognizing and intervening creatively to address root


causes of poor health. She will also talk about the
evolution and current status of HOPE projects, which
10:30 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. blend health promotion with social and economic
empowerment strategies.

Carolina Union – West Lounge ALL TALKS BEGIN AT 4PM IN THE


ROYALL ROOM OF THE G.W. HILL ALUMNI CENTER.
(at the corner of stadium dr.& ridge rd.)
CSAS@UNC.EDU
919.962.5665
UNCSOUTH.ORG
CAN2024-11 17199 BK06178-13
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babysitter needed immediately for 10 year-

Residential Services, Inc.


Deadlines are NOON one business day prior
to publication for classified ads. We publish old boy. Mondays, Wednesdays, some Fri-
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too (i.e. this affects deadlines). We reserve
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The Daily Tar Heel Sports monday, february 14, 2011 9

Women’s lacrosse gets by Rookies lead UNC in debut


Florida in season opener
By Brooke Pryor charged down the field in their ACC Rookie of the Year scored
Staff writer campaign to tie the score. three times.
North Carolina’s matchup But UNC senior defenseman Robert Morris’ unique style of
against Robert Morris on Saturday Ryan Flanagan never gave them play, which included fake flips and
was not simply a season opener; it the chance. unusual rebounds, might differ
by Justin Mayhew and took the game into her own possession struggles into the sec- was the collegiate debut of coach After forcing a turnover by from the Tar Heels’ techniques, but
Staff Writer hands. ond half, scoring only one goal in Joe Breschi’s No. 1 recruiting Matisz, Flanagan earned the it did not cause Breschi to alter his
The North Carolina women’s “Our first play actually didn’t the first 24 minutes of the period. class. ground ball and started on a fast game plan.
lacrosse team kicked off its sea- work, and I knew that the time “The offense just didn’t have Freshman attackman Nicky break down the field. “I think what we talked about
son in dramatic fashion Saturday, was getting down so I just decided enough possessions,” coach Jenny Galasso, the top-rated recruit in the “That might have been the play were the fundamentals, the way
defeating Florida 10-9 on a game- to attack on the crease,” Donohoe Levy said. “I thought the posses- country, lived up to expectations of the season so far, where he picks you have to play those guys, the
winning goal from senior Corey said. “I just went for it, and luckily sions we had, we didn’t capitalize by netting four goals, including off that pass in a one-goal game Canadian kids, is just stick to the
Donohoe with seven seconds I got the inside roll and I was able and they were really quick and we one in the final and goes down and hits his fellow fundamentals and not try to do
MEN’S three minutes, West Islip player, Galasso, on the anything out of sorts,” Breschi said.
remaining in overtime. to get a shot off.” need to be a little more patient.”
lacrosse to help lead the doorstep to go up two with three or “Just try to take the ball away and
After trading goals with Florida She spun off her defender and But facing a two-goal deficit
(0-1) in the first half of the over- finished with a shot that landed with seven minutes remaining in RMU 11 No. 3 Tar Heels four minutes to go,” Breschi said. play good, sound defense.”
time period, the in the upper-right pocket of the regulation, UNC got its act togeth- UNC  14 to a 14-11 win Less than two minutes after The UNC defense did its job as
WOMEN’S No. 3 Tar Heels goal. er quickly. against the No. Galasso’s goal, fellow freshman they helped the team earn 12 out of
lacrosse (1-0) took pos- Though they controlled posses- The Tar Heels scored two goals 21 Colonials. Mark McNeill sealed UNC’s win 13 possible clears along with scoop-
Florida 9 session at the sion for 96 percent of the second in 24 seconds to even the score, The Tar Heels never trailed, but by scoring an unassisted goal on ing up 36 ground balls to Robert
UNC  10 b e g i n n i n g o f overtime half, the Tar Heels strug- 8-8. the game appeared to be slipping an open net with 1:08 remaining Morris’ 22 for the game.
the second with gled throughout the game with The scoring spurt was sparked away in the final period as Robert in game. The defensive effort carried all
hopes of holding the ball for the holding onto the ball. by Donohoe, who picked up a Morris brought the game to with- McNeill ended the game with the way to the goal, as redshirt
last shot of the game. After jumping to a 3-0 lead in loose ball at midfield and thun- in a goal after Colonial midfielder two second-half goals and one senior and 2010 All-ACC goalie
North Carolina safely worked the first 14 minutes, North Carolina dered down to the 8-meter crease Kevin Brownell scored with an assist. Chris Madalon had 11 saves on
the ball around the goal for the gave up five straight Florida goals, before she was fouled. Donohoe assist from Kiel Matisz. “The freshmen just did a tre- Robert Morris’ 31 shots.
first 2:30 of overtime’s second half some of which came off UNC turn- converted her free-position shot But the Tar Heels appeared to mendous job of keeping their poise “I think offensively we did a
to ensure the Gators would have overs. to put the Tar Heels within one be unfazed by the Colonials’ last- under pressure, and the veteran great job over all and defensively
little time to respond with a pos- “Basic throwing and catching, goal of the lead. minute comeback attempt. guys stepped up,” Breschi said. really we did a sound job,” Breschi
session of their own. throwing the ball away, not watch- The Donohoe goal woke up the “We had to slow the ball down Flanagan’s goal might have been said. “It’s just preparation now …
With 30 seconds left to play, ing the ball into your stick, basic under-performing Tar Heels, who and move the ball,” Galasso said. the play of the season thus far, but really just fine tuning our game.”
UNC started to run its offense, fundamentals that we do everyday began to show flashes of the team “We had to make singles instead of Marcus Holman’s goal as time
but had little success penetrating in practice we just weren’t getting that beat Florida 18-5 last season. making the home run plays.” expired in the second quarter was Contact the Sports Editor
Florida’s tight defense inside the down,” Donohoe said. “This is a work in progress,” Levy After their goal, the Colonials the play of the first half. The 2010 at sports@dailytarheel.com.
crease. “And they caused turnovers, and said. “We’re not going to play our
That’s when Donohoe stepped we gave them possessions, and they best lacrosse on Feb. 12.”
in. were capitalizing on those posses- blocks 15 with two points.
“We’ve been really fortunate to
during the summer, Henson and
Zeller choose opposite sides in
She got the ball with 18 seconds sions.” Contact the Sports Editor from page 10 catch him on two days that he has pick-up games.
left to play, looked up at the clock North Carolina continued its at sports@dailytarheel.com. field. The inability to get the ball in shot the ball like that,” Williams said Zeller described his compatriot
the paint forced the Tigers to pass of Grant. “John is really long, and as deceptively long and said Henson
miami “Good shooting basketball the ball out of the lane and to the
perimeter.
he affects some shots that he doesn’t
even block. Those guys inside are a
has turned away “his fair share” of
Zeller’s shots in summer ball.
from page 10

that is athletic enough to attack


cures a multitude from page 10
“That helps us a ton,” said Zeller
the time. We don’t work on play- on Henson’s length. “Our guards can
big-time obstacle for the other team
to get something in the basket.”
“I go after every shot I can,”
Henson said. “Sometimes I should
the offensive glass and still not get of sins, and we’re ing ugly, but we work on halfcourt pressure a little more and know we’re Henson finished the game with take a charge — I’m working on
burned on transition,” Meier said. offense, on guarding people.” behind them. I think we did a good four blocks, but none bigger than that. I just try to block all the shots
Williams, the ACC’s leading 2-for-22 from the Forgotten in the highlights job with challenging shots. We were his denial of Grant early in the sec- and be that intimidating factor
scorer, had no problems escaping
UNC’s defense to sink 25 points three.” was Marshall’s shooting from the lucky that they weren’t hitting.”
free throw line. Had he not gone Henson was a point and a
ond half. With the shot clock wind-
ing down, Grant seemingly played
and make them think twice when
they’re going to the basket.”
from 31 attempts. 10-for-11 from the charity stripe — rebound shy of a double-double volleyball with Henson and set up
Sylvia hatchell, UNC coach
Turning to a full-court press including 7-of-8 in the final minute at halftime. He turned away three the UNC sophomore with a spike. Contact the Sports Editor
nearly from the start of play, but even she was disappointed with — the game could have easily gone Clemson attempts as the Tigers Clemson guard Andre Young at sports@dailytarheel.com.
UNC’s attempts at an aggressive the Tar Heels’ effort. Clemson’s way. shot 27.3 percent from the field in gathered the loose ball and hoist-
stop weren’t enough to spur a “It was pretty frustrating, but Instead, Marshall’s steady free the first half. Clemson finished the ed a weak layup that was in turn
run and even sent senior Cetera more so on defense,” Broomfield throw shooting caused the Tigers’ game with 16 points in the paint rejected by Zeller. The block party
DeGraffenreid straight to the bench said. “That was the most frustrat- late string of 3-pointers to be little but borrowed some from the eight was the second-most demoraliz-
with three fouls in just more than ing thing for me — the plays where more than desperation shots. fast-break points. ing play for Clemson, trailing only Take 15/501 South towards Pittsboro
10 minutes of play. they just kept getting easy layups.” “We kept going to the free throw Clemson’s starting power for- Harrison Barnes’ facial on Milton Exit Market St. / Southern Village
With seniors Jessica Breland
and Italee Lucas — who shot 1-for-
With a week off before playing
N.C. State next Monday, UNC has
line and killing ourselves by only ward and center, Devin Booker and
making one shot, but Kendall went Jerai Grant, combined to go 0-for-
Jennings.
“We like to make it as difficult
JUSTIN BIEBER: NEVER SAY NEVER H ......12:45-3:00-5:10-7:25-9:40
9 from the 3-point range — kept time to regroup before attempt- 10-for-11,” Williams said. “That was 9 from the field for two points and as possible in the lane,” Zeller said. JUST GO WITH IT J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1:15-4:15-7:15-9:45
nearly silent, it seemed like only ing to work their way up the ACC huge for us. Needless to say, we feel five rebounds. Zeller and Henson “Anytime you can do that, you get THE FIGHTER K . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1:10-4:10-7:20-9:45
Laura Broomfield could score to standings as they drop behind very fortunate to get the heck out of went 9-for-20 with 24 points and a little momentum and I think THE KING’S SPEECH K . . . . . . . . . . . .1:20-4:05-7:10-9:40
counter Miami’s growing lead.
The junior forward shone for
Duke, Florida State and Miami. here with a win.” 19 rebounds.
In the two contests against
that helped shift the momentum
our way.”
TRUE GRIT J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1:00-4:00-7:15-9:35
All shows $6.50 for college students with ID
North Carolina with a double-dou- Contact the Sports Editor Contact the Sports Editor North Carolina this season, Grant The pair has worked in the paint Bargain
Matinees
ble for 15 rebounds and 18 points, at sports@dailytarheel.com. at sports@dailytarheel.com. has shot an underwhelming 1-for- together for the last two years, but $6.50

Hunting for funds


Budget cuts could force 60 degree
Now accepting applications for the: programs to be cut from the UNC
games system. See pg. 1 for story.

UNC Harvey Beech Level: 1 2 3 4


© 2009 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved. Marching for awareness
Nearly 1,000 people rallied in

Scholarships
Raleigh during an annual NAACP
event. See pg. 3 for story.
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
From China with love
bold borders) con- Two students maintained their
Open to all SOPHOMORES and JUNIORS tains every digit 1
to 9.
relationship from opposite sides of
the world. See pg. 5 for story.
Solution to
Friday’s puzzle
Tribute to AIDS victims
Sections of an AIDS memorial
quilt are on display at the Paul Green
Theatre. See pg. 7 for story.

Dating like champions


Fifteen couples faced off in a
Valentine’s Day-themed challenge.
Visit dailytarheel.com for story.

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Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle All rights reserved.

Winners chosen based on academic GPA Across


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PAGE 10
SportsMonday The Daily Tar Heel
monday, february 14, 2011
www.dailytarheel.com
SCOREBOARD Men’s Tennis UNC 0 Auburn 7 gymnastics Penn State 195.925 UNC 192.975 Softball UNC 7 Bethune Cookman 2

Tar Heels get defensive on Tigers


Barnes’ dunk shifts momentum for UNC
by Louie Horvath Barnes’ dunk launched a tranquilizer dart into
senior writer the neck of the Clemson faithful. The crowd’s
CLEMSON, S.C. – Both teams struggled to pointed silence reverberated through Littlejohn
play anything resembling basketball for the first Coliseum.
37 minutes of North Carolina’s 64-62 win against “I saw Harrison do that in the summer, I had
Clemson. never seen him do that in the game,” forward John
But then UNC freshmen produced two flashes Henson said. “I think that’s a top-10-play type
of physical prowess that helped propel the Tar thing. I can’t wait to see it on film.”
Heels to a victory. After Marshall’s steal, the freshman point
With just more than three minutes left, guard showed experience beyond his years, as he
Harrison Barnes muscled a dunk through the pushed the ball despite appearing to go 1-on-2.
hoop off a spin move that left He outraced one Tiger and finished the
MEN’S Milton Jennings sprawled on layup over the other to widen the lead to four
BASKETBALL the ground and Clemson’s fans points.
UNC 64 aghast. “Easy baskets are hard to come by tonight.
Clemson  62 Two possessions later, They’re a great defensive team, especially at
Kendall Marshall swiped the home, so I wanted to take advantage of the break,”
ball out of Demontez Stitt’s grasp and took the ball Marshall said.
the other way for a layup to increase the lead. The game as a whole was not pretty, as both
“It was kind of a spur-of-the-moment thing,” teams combined to shoot 36 percent from the
Barnes said of his dunk. “I got high enough that I field.
could, and I just dunked it.” Some of the offensive futility could be attrib-
Barnes did not plan to join former Tar Heel uted to a lack of movement, but both defenses
Jerry Stackhouse, who was in attendance on should get credit for shutting down each offense’s
Saturday, in the pantheon of most memorable strength.
UNC dunks — it just happened. “We have always said we want to win in the
“I was more reacting to the way the dude fell,” 90s, but we got to be able to win in the 60s,”
Marshall said. “Harrison’s a strong kid, and to see UNC coach Roy Williams said. “We work on it all
him go up like that and keep elevating on a dunk
like that. That was a Blake Griffin-type dunk.” See basketball, Page 9

UNC throws block party


Henson intimidates
Clemson in low post
by Jonathan Jones
sports Editor
By now, opponents of North Carolina
should have seen the scouting report on
John Henson.
He’s long and he blocks shots.
Yet the entire contest Clemson went
into the lane against the 6-foot-10 forward
like he was a contestant for the Bob Cousy
Award.
“It’s just human nature,” said Henson,
who scored 14 points and gathered nine
defensive rebounds. “You’ve been playing
basketball so long you’re not just going to
back down. Rightfully so, you shouldn’t.
My length always bothers people, surpris-
es people. It’s something you’ve got to deal
with.”
The Clemson big men refused to deal.
The Tigers tried the paint early and moved
outside once they realized Henson and fel-
low forward Tyler Zeller would have none
of their high-percentage shots.
dth/will cooper The duo was especially effective on a day
dth/will cooper John Henson used his length to bully would-be when Clemson shot 34.4 percent from the
Harrison Barnes brutalizes Clemson’s Milton Jennings with a one-handed dunk with three minutes left in UNC’s Clemson scorers on Saturday. He swatted four shots
64-62 win against Clemson on Saturday. Barnes scored a game-high 20 points and grabbed five rebounds. while daring Tigers to enter the paint on defense. See blocks, Page 9

Nebraska pins Miami 3-pointers bury No. 13 UNC


North Carolina Tar Heels fall to 4th in ACC
Williams, Yderstrom star as

by Megan Walsh
By Chris Moore Jake Corrill, Pat Owens and senior writer
Staff writer Mike Rappo also couldn’t provide It was a game of threes Sunday in Carmichael Arena
The North Carolina wrestling any answers for UNC, falling 6-0, as the North Carolina women’s basketball team faced
team knew that beating No. 14 7-1 and 10-3, respectively. Miami.
Nebraska would be a tall task. Down 21-0, the Tar Heels found But they weren’t exactly falling from the hands of the
Immediately following Saturday’s hope in the 149-pound match. Tar Heels in their 78-66 loss to the Hurricanes.
duel with the Cornhuskers, the Tar After wrestling fairly even through No. 13 UNC (22-4, 8-3 ACC) failed to hit a single one
Heels (8-9-1) realized just how the first five and a half minutes, of its nine 3-point attempts in the first half and sank
tough it was. On senior day for the Nick Stabile scored two points on just two in the second to shoot an abysmal 9.1 percent
Tar Heels, UNC lost 31-6. a reversal and gained a lead which from beyond the arc.
Eight UNC wrestlers dropped he kept until the final buzzer. “Good shooting cures a multitude of sins, and we’re
their bouts against Nebraska on Stabile’s win reenergized the 2-for-22 from the three and they’re 10-for-24,” UNC
Saturday. No Tar UNC squad, especially with thriv- coach Sylvia Hatchell said. “You
Wrestling Heel registered a ing Corey Mock wrestling next. WOMEN’S gotta make your shots.”
Nebraska  31 takedown until “I was definitely riding off that BASKETBALL Meanwhile, thanks to four
UNC 6 the sixth match momentum,” he said. “I was feeling Miami 78 3-pointers apiece from guards
nor led his oppo- good, but later when I started my UNC  66 Riquna Williams and Stefanie
nent until the seventh match. legs started getting tired.” Yderstrom, No. 20 Miami (22-3,
“We just got beat by a better team Mock set the tone in the first set, 8-2) had no trouble putting up big numbers to main-
today,” coach C.D. Mock said. registering a two-point takedown tain a steady lead throughout the game.
Mock attributed the large score when he dragged his opponent “That had to surprise Carolina a little bit — that was
gap to the Cornhuskers’ experience. back into the ring by his foot and big for us,” Miami coach Katie Meier said. “They swarm
Nebraska, of the historically strong put the Cornhusker on his back. the ball so heavy. They’re so unbelievably hard to score
Big 12 Conference, only wrestled But he was soon spent. Nebraska’s in the paint against, you kind of have to get it in and
one freshman. The Tar Heels threw Tyler Koehn fought back and took kick it out and say a nice prayer and hope it goes in.”
six rookies onto the mat. control of the match, scoring a fall Although junior Chay Shegog powered through three
“It was just confidence and when he pinned the freshman with Hurricane defenders to tie the game at 44 less than five
experience,” Mock said. “Wrestling just eight seconds left. minutes into the second half, Miami’s shooters were
in the Midwest … these guys are “I didn’t cut my weight very well there to once again widen the gap with a 10-0 run.
banging heads with very, very I don’t think,” Corey Mock said. “I “I thought when we tied it up that we’d get things
tough teams every single week all was really tired, I blew all I had in going,” Hatchell said. “And then we came down and
year long, and they gain valuable that first takedown.” didn’t match up a couple times on transition defense,
experience pretty quick.” The fall clinched the win and they got open and made a three.”
Thomas Ferguson was one of for Nebraska by putting the The Tar Heels’ woes certainly started from 3-point
two UNC wrestlers to win his bout, Cornhuskers ahead by 24 points. rage, but the team’s defensive approach provided nearly
picking up the decision in the final “They’re tough,” Stabile said. as many problems.
match of the afternoon. “They wrestle Big Ten, Big 12 style. Miami outrebounded UNC, most notably in the
Each of the Cornhuskers first We’re trying to adapt to that, and offensive category, picking up 16 second-chance points
three wrestlers was nationally that style is clashing right now, but to pull away — all while maintaining composure on
ranked in the top 15, which helped we’ll get there.” transition plays to keep UNC from scoring.
Nebraska take the 184-pound, 197- “I think we’re one of the few teams in the league dth/daniel turner
pound and heavyweight bouts over Contact the Sports Editor Starting at forward, Laura Broomfield scored 18 points and grabbed a season-high 15
Tar Heel freshmen. at sports@dailytarheel.com. See Miami, Page 9 rebounds for UNC in the loss. She was the lone bright spot offensively for the team.

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