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Tuesday, April 23, 2013 dailytarheel.com Volume 121, Issue 36
The writers borough
Bill may
conict
with honor
system
dth/rebecca tobin
By Claire Bennett
Staff Writer
Amid controversy surrounding the Universitys
handling of sexual assault cases, state legisla-
tors have proposed a bill that could conflict with
UNCs student-run Honor Courts mission.
Earlier this month, Rep. John Bell, R-Craven,
filed House Bill 843, which would grant students
the right to hire a professional lawyer to represent
them in cases of disciplinary misconduct.
Currently, students are allowed to be repre-
sented by only their
peers. When a criminal
case is concurrent with
an Honor Court case,
licensed attorneys are
permitted to accompa-
ny students but they
can only confer with
students and cannot
address the panel.
The bill proposes
that any student or
student organization
charged with miscon-
duct at an institution
has the right to be rep-
resented by an attorney
during the case.
The bill simply pro-
vides language guar-
anteeing that students
would be able to have
formal legal represen-
tation during any formal disciplinary procedure,
said Rep. Jason Saine, R-Lincoln, one of the bills
sponsors, in an email.
I feel it is important that students be empow-
ered to have representation in order to protect
their rights and reputations, Saine said.
The bill has received bipartisan support, but
student leaders in the Universitys honor system
have expressed concern about the measure.
Nathan Tilley, a chairman of the Honor Court,
said that attorneys are not part of the current
honor system because it is not their specialty.
Attorneys are not trained like the counsels in
our system are, so they have less experience and
knowledge of our specific procedures those
aspects of our process that might not directly
resemble general legal proceedings, Tilley said in
an email.
Anna Sturkey, UNCs undergraduate student
Study shows NCAA model
may exploit student athletes
Sex trackers could
have to register in NC
By Marisa DiNovis
Staff Writer
The NCAA outlines standards
intended to create a fair playing field
in Division I sports.
But conclusions drawn from a
recent study show the associations
model could also be exploiting
athletes particularly African-
American males who come from
lower socioeconomic classes and are
playing revenue-producing sports.
Richard Southall, director of the
Universitys College Sport Research
Institute, presented this theory
Friday to a panel on the relation-
ship between Division I athletics
and academics led by Association
of American Universities President
Hunter Rawlings.
According to NCAA guidelines,
Division I football and mens basket-
ball players cannot profit from colle-
giate play and are instead supposed
to be from exploitation by profes-
sional and commercial enterprises.
But Southall said these athletes
might be exploited by not reaping
the benefits of the money they help
their schools earn and, in some
cases, by being recruited to schools
that they may not be prepared for
academically.
Southall said many student ath-
letes in revenue producing sports
By Lucinda Shen
Staff Writer
An N.C. Senate bill requiring
convicted sex traffickers to register
as sex offenders in North Carolina
awaits Gov. Pat McCrorys approval
a proposal proponents say is the
first step to addressing a crime that
often remains hidden.
Senate Bill 122 requires those
convicted of sex trafficking or traf-
ficking minors to register as sex
offenders and wear GPS trackers.
The bill, which passed unani-
mously through the N.C. House
and Senate, will probably be
signed into law this week, said the
bills primary sponsor, Sen. Thom
Goolsby, R-New Hanover.
We hope the bill helps potential
victims by identifying perpetrators
on the registry with the crime they
committed, creating awareness of
any danger they may pose, he said.
The Polaris Project, a national
organization that raises awareness
about human trafficking, ranks
North Carolina as a top-10 state
for the crime. The bill will address
some of the states shortcomings
regarding the issue, said Sen. Ellie
Kinnaird, D-Orange.
The state tends to attract sex
trafficking because it hosts a large
agricultural industry, military base
and extensive transportation veins,
HOUSE BILL 843
The bill could alter the
legal representation stu-
dents can seek before
the Honor Court:
The bill gives students
the right to hire an
attorney for proceedings
involving misconduct.
Currently, students are
allowed to be represent-
ed only by their peers.
The bill does not men-
tion representation for
faculty.
Students could be granted the right
to a professional lawyer.
A Senate bill requires
convicted traffickers to
register as sex offenders.
A UNC professor showed
his findings to the Hunter
Rawlings panel Friday.
SEX TRAFFICKING BILLS
STUDY FINDINGS
N.C. legislators have proposed
measures to combat sex traffick-
ing in the state:
The bill would require con-
victed sex traffickers to register as
sex offenders. It awaits Gov. Pat
McCrorys approval.
Senate Bill 683 would stiffen
penalties for sex traffickers and
encourage victims to testify. It
will be passed to the judiciary
committee this week.
Richard Southall, director of the
College Sport Research Institute,
highlights findings including:
The majority of NCAA football
and mens basketball players are
African-American males who come
from disproportionately lower
socioeconomic backgrounds than
their teammates.
Because of this socioeconomic
disparity, the student athletes
sometimes lack the necessary
college preparation to succeed
academically.
said Caitlyn Dixon, co-chairwoman
of Carolina Against Slavery and
Trafficking, a Campus Y group.
The bill is a significant step in
the right direction, Dixon said,
increasing awareness about human
trafficking by publicizing the per-
sonal information of offenders.
It is progress because we are
finally getting people aware of it on
the local level, and it is one more
tool to dampen down this difficult
situation, she said.
Senate Bill 683 also known as
the Safe Harbor bill is another
measure proposed by lawmakers to
combat sex trafficking.
Goolsby said the bill is more
comprehensive and stiffens penal-
ties for participants in sex traffick-
ing. A minor involved in sex traf-
ficking would not be held liable for
prostitution.
Similar to domestic violence
See HONOR SYSTEM, Page 4
See ATHLETE STUDY, Page 4 See SEX TRAFFICKING, Page 4
As a writer I wanted a peace-
ful, quiet community. The his-
tory of the town mattered
Allan Gurganus,
writer, essayist and hillsborough resident
By Tyler Clay
Staff Writer
On any given Tuesday night, live jazz
music permeates the walls of Antonias, a
small restaurant in Hillsborough.
Waiters carrying trays of Italian food
weave through the crowded dining room
and out onto the sidewalk cafe.
And at a corner table, award-winning
authors Michael Malone and Allan
Gurganus eat and discuss their latest work.
We love it there. Its like Paris, our own
cafe, said Malone, a Hillsborough-based
novelist and Emmy-winning television writer.
When Malone bought his house in
Hillsborough more than a decade ago, he
joined a flourishing community of more
than a dozen nationally recognized novelists
and essayists who call Hillsborough home.
a Southern culture
Many writers cite Hillsboroughs loca-
tion, small size and Southern soul as rea-
sons why they located to the town.
Its just a great little town with tons
of writers. Its remote, and though we are
close to downtown Hillsborough, it seems
removed from things, said author Jill
McCorkle, who released her sixth novel in
March and lives in a renovated farmhouse
in Hillsborough with her husband.
This rural setting has attracted many of
the towns writers.
As a writer I wanted a peaceful, quiet
community. The history of the town mat-
tered to me and I chose the state capitol
from the 1750s, said Gurganus, an influen-
tial novelist and essayist.
Malone also said authors tend to be
found in clusters.
The more there are, the more there are
going to be, he said.
And Hillsboroughs proximity to major
universities is also part of the attraction.
Hillsborough has a lot of Southern writers
and is a very Southern town. The Southern
culture feeds their creative energy, said UNC
alumnus John Claude Bemis, a childrens
novelist and the 2013 Piedmont Laureate.
a creative community
David Payne, who has authored five
books, said there is a sense of understand-
ing between writers in the community.
I think everyone knows everyone else
and we see each other socially, Payne
said. I think people are also very respect-
ful of other writers privacy and give
See HILLSBOROUGH, Page 4
Hillsborough attracts writers with its small-town feel
I think you have to be cautious about changing the
system that serves so many people so well.
Bubba Cunningham,
Unc athletic director
football and mens basketball
are African-American, and many
of those athletes come from lower
socioeconomic backgrounds.
If athletes come from lower socio-
economic backgrounds, he said, they
might not have had as much aca-
demic support before college, and
they might have learning needs that
have not been addressed.
Southall said so much emphasis
is put on student athletes training
schedules that can require more
than 50 hours of practice per week,
making it harder for students who
might have to work more to keep up
academically.
The NCAA requires a student
athlete to complete at least 40 per-
cent of coursework for a degree by
the end of the his or her second year.
Athletes that come from cultur-
ally distant settings come into an
environment where theyre not as
comfortable, Southall said.
But theyre also systematically
isolated because they are spend-
ing so much time training for their
sport. They cant take time going
to lectures or listening to a poet
laureate. Their choices are limited
by the structure in which they find
themselves.
Billy Hawkins, an associate
professor of kinesiology at the
University of Georgia who worked
with Southall on this research, said
he thinks schools should make
freshmen student athletes ineligible
to participate in sports so they could
acclimate to undergraduate aca-
demic demands.
After the initial year of ineligibil-
ity, Hawkins said, athletes would
then be eligible to play on a team for
four additional years with a reduced
course load.
I think they need to reduce the
Someone communicated
threats at 1860 Martin Luther
King Jr. Blvd. at 3:46 a.m.
Monday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
The person threatened a
store clerk at Cruizers Exxon,
reports state.
Someone vandalized
property at 105 E. Franklin
St. at 12:24 a.m. Monday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person damaged a
front door window at Sweet
Frog Frozen Yogurt, causing
$250 in damages, reports
state.
Someone broke into and
entered a residence at 309
Caldwell St. between 11:40
a.m. and 11:56 a.m. Sunday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person shattered a
rear glass door, causing $250
in damages, reports state.
The person also stole $1,000
worth of jewelry, according to
reports.
Someone was assaulted
at 100 W. Rosemary St. at
2:48 a.m. Sunday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person punched some-
one in the face, reports state.
Someone reported a
suspicious condition at 5623
Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd. at
11:33 p.m. Saturday, accord-
ing to Chapel Hill police
reports.
The person reported pos-
sible underage drinking and
drug use in a room at the Red
Roof Inn, reports state.
Someone shoplifted 12
beers from Walgreens at 108
E. Franklin St. between 10:16
p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Saturday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
One Budweiser beer, val-
ued at $3, was later returned,
according to reports.
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POLICE LOG
News Tuesday, April 23, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2
COrrECtIOns
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections
printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Elise Young at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
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Noted. Toughest guy on
the planet: A fisherman
from Brazil who acciden-
tally shot himself in the
face with a speargun, which
went six inches into his
skull via his left eye socket.
He lived and didnt even
want to go to the hospital.
Quoted. The granddaugh-
ter informed her grand-
mother that giraffes were
chasing her down the hill
after she ate mushrooms.
This Colorado police
blotter is just a lesson in
why you should avoid hallu-
cinogens while skiing.
I
ts no fault of your own if you need a little
company come exam time. I get it. Its
stressful. But by no means is it excusable
for you to order a My Knitted Boyfriend
a life-sized rag doll shaped like a guy.
Its what was bound to result from our Etsy-
obsessed generation. You can personalize em,
too, with bow ties, knitted mustaches and more.
This way you will never feel alone ever again,
the doll creators boast. (Right, but youll forever
be devoid of a real-life boyfriend as soon as the
guy youre bringing home spots his competition.)
Try stufed animals
from staf and wire reports
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DOSE
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The Daily Tar Heel
tOday
uNc vs. uNc-wilmington: The
Tar Heel baseball team plays the
Seahawks at home.
time: 6 p.m.
location: Boshamer Stadium
uNc symphony orchestra:
The orchestra performs Brahms
Symphony no. 3 and Shosta-
kovichs Symphony no. 9. $15
general admission. $10 UnC
students, faculty and staf. for
tickets and information, call 919-
843-3333.
time: 7:30 p.m.
location: Memorial Hall
empty mansions concert: also
with Robes. $10. all ages.
time: Doors open 8 p.m., show
begins 8:30 p.m.
location: Local 506
Author event: aaron White
discusses What are They Think-
ing?!: The Straight facts about
the Risk-Taking, Social-network-
ing, Still-Developing Teen Brain.
free.
time: 7 p.m.
location: flyleaf Books
COMMUnIty CaLEndar
WEdnEsday
painting in the p.m.: Monthly
art time geared to kids 3 to 8
years old. Painting takes 10 to 15
minutes. Supervised by staf.
time: 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.
location: Kidzu Childrens
Museum
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News Tuesday, April 23, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3
campus BRIEF
3 students won awards at the North
Carolina conference for Phi Beta Lambda
Three UNC students won first place awards at the
statewide Phi Beta Lambda conference in Charlotte
earlier this month.
Freshman Joey Skavroneck won first place in the
job interview category. Sophomore Siqi Jiang won first
place in the microeconomics category. Sophomore
Benjamin Zhao won first place in the macroeconomics
category.
spORTs BRIEF
ACCs Council of Presidents announces grant
of rights agreement to combat realignment
The ACC Council of Presidents announced Monday
that all 15 member schools had signed a grant of media
rights, effective immediately.
If a school leaves the conference before the end of the
leagues contract with ESPN in 2026-27, revenue from
media rights during that period will stay with the ACC.
This announcement further highlights the continued
solidarity and commitment by our member institutions,
ACC Commissioner John Swofford said in a release.
From staff and wire reports
inBRIEF
Bombing backlash concerns Muslims
By James Thorpe
Staff Writer
Salma Rezk stepped outside after
watching the news of the Boston
Marathon bombings, fearful of the
stares her hijab would attract.
Rezk is one of many Muslim
students at UNC who says she
still experiences negative attitudes
toward Muslim Americans, 12 years
after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
UNC sociology professor Charles
Kurzman said surveys of the
American public suggest anti-Islam-
ic attitudes have continued to rise
since 9/11.
This isnt the first time America
has faced a terrorist attack by
Muslim Americans, and I imagine
the response will not be all that dif-
ferent, he said.
The suspects links with radi-
cal Islam are still not confirmed.
But earlier this week, the FBI
revealed that a foreign government
had requested information about
Tamerlan Tsarnaevs links to radical
Islam in 2011.
Ali Sajjad, secretary of the Muslim
Students Association at N.C. State
University, said he was concerned old
attitudes would reemerge.
We always worry about back-
lash, he said.
The attack April 15 killed three
people and injured more than 200,
according to FBI statistics.
The suspects, Tamerlan Tsarnaev
and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, have links
to the predominantly Muslim region
of Chechnya, Russia.
Initially, before the suspects were
found, Im pretty sure more than half
of the American citizens thought this
was a terrorist act done by some radi-
cal Muslim, Sajjad said.
Aya Zouhri, a member of UNC-
CHs Muslim Students Association,
said those who carry out terror-
ist attacks do not represent the
Islamic values of the vast majority of
American Muslims.
A 2010 study by the Pew Research
Center found that Muslims made up
0.8 percent of the U.S. population.
Cemil Aydin, a history professor
at UNC, said American Muslims are
often the target of suspicion and dis-
crimination.
So many people in America have
negative opinions of Muslims, he
said.
Sajjad said his clubs recent events
were well received by the UNC com-
munity, and the group would con-
tinue to educate people about Islam.
President Barack Obama said at
an interfaith service in Boston last
week that Americans stand unified.
Our faith in each other, our love
for each other, our love for country,
our common creed that cuts across
whatever superficial differences there
may be that is our power, he said.
Zouhri said she would be praying
for the victims of the bombings.
It is an opportunity to show
support and condemn the act of
violence equating Islam with vio-
lence is ridiculous, she said.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
WOMENS TENNiS: UNC 4, BC 0
Womens
tennis team
grabs ACC
season title
dth file/halle sinnott
Taylor Mac, center, performs the role of the Emcee in PlaymakersCabaret. He performed a section of his work, The 1780s, on Monday.
By Andrew Tie
Staff Writer
On a cold and windy day in Chestnut Hill, Mass., the
weather was the smallest of obstacles the No. 1 North
Carolina womens tennis team had faced in the last few
days. The team carried the same unfazed mentality it
used this past weekend to defeat No. 63 Boston College
Monday and claim the outright ACC regular season title.
In the 4-0 victory against the Eagles (9-9, 3-7 ACC),
the Tar Heels (24-2, 10-1 ACC) took
the doubles point along with singles
wins from freshman Whitney Kay
and seniors Lauren McHale and Zoe
De Bruycker.
On Sunday, UNC clinched at least a
share of the ACC regular season title,
but senior Gina Suarez-Malaguti said
the team didnt want to share.
Weve worked so hard, and just
in comparison to those teams, weve
really shown were the better team,
Suarez-Malaguti said. Were classier,
more athletic, feistier, more competi-
tive, so after all that hard work, to
share that with a team that we dont
consider as tough as we are is sad.
Had the Tar Heels lost Monday or elected not to return
to Boston after having Fridays match postponed, they
would have shared the regular season title with Clemson
and UVa., the only ACC team UNC lost to this season.
(Coach Brian Kalbas) asked us if we wanted to come
back to Boston or share the title with UVa. or Clemson,
and were like, No, we dont care if we miss classes on
Monday, McHale said. Whatever it takes, we wanted
to come here and win.
Kalbas reflected on the season, and said senior lead-
ership, depth and chemistry have been the keys to win-
ning an indoor national championship in February and
now the ACC regular season, Kalbas second at UNC.
After a long road trip that saw the team fly to
Massachusetts, then to Maryland and then back up to
Massachusetts, the Tar Heels said theyre exhausted and
looking forward to returning to Chapel Hill.
Weve flown four out of the last five days, so its
amazing how our teams been able to handle the rigors
of going hotel to hotel, the difficult circumstances (with
the lockdown) and playing back-to-back days, Kalbas
said. We got into our hotel at 11:30 last night it was
a long weekend.
For now, the Tar Heels can rest as champions, but the
turnaround will be quick. Suarez-Malaguti said the key
for this week is to get prepared mentally and physically.
Everyone is going to come at us, Suarez-Malaguti
said. Were the big target. We have to be ready for that
and bring our A game all the time. I have no doubt that
were going to do amazingly.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
Gina Suarez-
Malaguti is one of
three seniors who
now have a 40-4
record in aCC regu-
lar seasons.
Taylor Mac, who plays the Emcee
in PlayMakers Repertory Companys
Cabaret, performed a section of his
work on popular music The 1780s
Monday at Top of the Hills Back Bar.
Staff writer Elizabeth Baker spoke with
Mac about his role in Cabaret, what peo-
ple can learn from it and his inspirations.
Daily Tar Heel: What is your goal as an
actor and as an artist?
Taylor Mac: Im always trying to remind
the audience of aspects of themselves
things that theyve forgotten or buried
or dismissed. In Cabaret, were dealing
with World War II, the Nazis and our
responsibility toward being socially con-
scious citizens, so thats what Im trying
to remind them of.
Sometimes we forget that some-
times we think, Oh, I just want to go
see a funny show. My job isnt to teach
them, but its just to remind them of stuff
theyve forgotten or dismissed.
DTH: Why is it important for you to
push the envelope through your perfor-
mances and theatrical pursuits?
TM: What I think is important is to
honor what has come before but to
remind people they are in the present
moment so not to get dragged down
by what has come before then to use
that information to help bring the culture
forward, to inspire the audience to go out
into the world and do things, and to make
their own world and their own culture.
To surprise people is very important.
Sometimes that looks like pushing the
envelope. Surprising people opens people
up and makes them feel and makes them
think about things. I dont think the the-
ater should be comfortable I think it
should be a dangerous place. But not so
dangerous that you go into a coma.
DTH: How do you come up with the
elaborate costuming used in your shows?
TM: I grew up in suburbia. In my town
there was a real emphasis on everyone fit-
ting in and being the same and looking the
same. That also melted into the aesthetics
there was a real homogeneity.
I rebelled against that Im rebelling
against the homogeneity.
The idea is to create a multifaceted
experience for people. The outfits become
masculine and feminine, and they
become extraordinary and messy and
detailed and colorful and bland and ugly
and beautiful. They become everything
that we are as human beings.
DTH: Can you relate to the Emcee
in Cabaret in any way, or do you just
immerse yourself in his character?
TM: Im primarily playing him from the
perspective of being a cabaret performer
myself, and also as somebody who was
living at a time and working at a time
right after Sept. 11 in New York City.
A lot of our civil liberties were taken
away from us, which is very similar to
the situation that was happening with
the Germans and the cabaret performers
during the Weimar Republic era.
I relate to the character a lot and
what the character is going through. I
say theres no point in doing Cabaret if
were not going to treat it like a warning
as to what can happen to our country.
There are movements in our country
that are trying to make everything the
same and decide the morality for others
and the laws for others that are based on
very strict Puritan tradition. Thats not
what Americas about.
I mean I ll just say it flat-out. I think
the Tea Party is really horrible and is a
great danger to our country. People who
are in line with that, who are supporting
that and the economic disparity thats in
our country, are part of what was happen-
ing in Germany.
We have to fight against that becom-
ing what the Germans became. Im trying
to help us not go down that road.
DTH: Why do you think the arts are an
important aspect of the educational scene
at a public liberal arts college like UNC?
TM: Without the arts, there would be
no real joy. Creation is a great thing. In
America, we are getting away from cre-
ating, and we are moving toward shuf-
fling. Our brightest minds are going to
universities that are teaching them how
to shuffle money, like thats how to be a
successful person.
We need innovation, and creativity
is innovation. We need it. We need to
inspire it, we need to teach it, we need
to learn it, we need to practice it every
single day. That is the way we become a
better society and a better culture, and
thats the way you get closer to God. By
creating.
Contact the desk editor at
arts@dailytarheel.com.
A UNC professor said
anti-islamic attitudes
have risen since 9/11.
The Tar Heels defeated Boston College
4-0 in a rescheduled match Monday.
Free Microsoft classes available for UNC
By Neal Smith
Staff Writer
Students looking for
guidance on how to use
different computer programs
can now get their questions
answered online in a new
program by Information
Technology Services.
Last week, ITS launched
its version of the Microsoft
IT Academy, a collection
of free courses that aims to
teach participants how to use
Microsoft computer programs.
At UNC, students, faculty or
staff with an Onyen and pass-
word can register.
You can take an online
course for Excel, for
PowerPoint, said Priscilla
Alden, assistant vice
chancellor for user support
and engagement.
Greg Neville, the Universitys
software acquisitions
supervisor who launched the
program, said there are more
than 2,000 courses offered.
Titles range from Whats new
in MS Word 2010, to Server-
Side Code for Web Forms.
I would really like to see
people here at UNC utilize IT
Academy to help teach UNC
students the different Microsoft
programs and applications,
Neville said.
Alden said the courses are
self-taught and self-paced,
and all the instruction is done
online.
If you started a course, and
then you had to leave and come
back to where you left off, you
could, she said.
Courses are available on
the ITS website, and users can
register through ITS at any
time by requesting an access
code through an online form,
Alden said.
She said the program was
adapted to make it accessible to
anyone affiliated with UNC.
What we did was tailor it a
little bit, by offering things that
people on campus could use,
Alden said.
She said these online courses
do not count for academic
credit, but they do teach a
variety of special skills.
Students can take courses
to become certified in different
areas, she said.
But she said the experience
is different with each course.
Alden said the academy
has courses that count toward
becoming a Microsoft Certified
Systems Engineer, for exam-
ple.
Theres courses you could
take toward that certification
if a person wanted to do that
certification, she said.
Courses from the academy
help students prepare for final
certification tests, which are
offered externally, she said.
Sharon Glover, a customer
relations employee at ITS, said
The Microsoft iT
Academy offers 2,000
online courses.
the courses also allow small
group work, which will be ben-
eficial to students who want to
learn software together.
Glover said she took courses
in the academy to help with the
programs testing and set-up.
I liked it because I could
start and then take it for 30
minutes, and return two to
three days later right where I
left off, she said.
She said the program offers
a wide range of courses for
basic experiences.
You might only need a
small tune-up, she said. But
you can build skills in areas you
may not be as familiar with.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
TAKE A COURSE
To register for a Microsoft
IT Academy course or for
more information, visit: bit.ly/
XRjGr5.
Onyen login required.
LEARN FROM THE PAST
Q&A with Cabaret performer Taylor Mac
News Tuesday, April 23, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4
State could further limit access to abortion
By Kelly Anderson
Staff Writer
The N.C. General Assembly
could place Gov. Pat McCrory
in a bind if it sends a series
of bills to his desk that critics
say would limit access to
abortion procedures.
McCrory, who campaigned
as a moderate Republican
in the 2012 gubernatorial
election, pledged to not
sign any new bills affecting
abortions in the state.
But after the legislature
passed new regulations
affecting abortions in 2011,
lawmakers have proposed
a series of new measures
this session. The bills would
prohibit abortions based on
sex and provide protections
for physicians who choose not
to perform abortions, among
other proposals.
John Dinan, political
science professor at Wake
Forest University, said in
an email that ideological
leanings will likely not be the
deciding factor in McCrorys
decisions on the legislation.
He said McCrory will
probably govern on an issue-
by-issue basis, and more will
be revealed when the bills
emerge from the legislature.
The bills would amend the
Womans Right to Know Act,
which was signed into law
in 2011. The act established
a 24-hour waiting period
before a woman could receive
an abortion and mandated an
ultrasound test.
Senate Bill 308 would
require doctors to obtain
admitting privileges from
a hospital before using
their facilities to perform
an abortion, a measure
opponents say is aimed at
private clinics that offer the
procedure.
According to research by
the Guttmacher Institute, an
organization that advocates
for sexual and reproductive
health, there are 31 abortion
providers in the state, and 86
percent of counties have no
provider.
Sarah Urdzik, president
of Carolina Students for
Life, said her organization
supports the proposed
legislation because it will
make abortions safer.
Hospital admitting
privileges will help ensure
that if something goes wrong
during the procedure, she can
be admitted for hospital care,
she said.
But Sarah-Kathryn Bryan,
president of UNC Feminist
Students United, said in an
email that the legislation will
disadvantage women.
The proposed legislation
violates the sanctity of a
womans relationship with her
medical care provider, as well
as her right to control her
own body, she said.
Paige Johnson, spokeswom-
an for Planned Parenthood of
Chapel Hill, said she doesnt
think abortion issues should
be legislated.
Pregnancy decisions are
personal and complex, which
is why these positions are
best made between a woman,
her family and a doctor, she
said.
Politicians have no place
in these decisions.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
attorney general, said the
bill could create inequality
between students and faculty.
Sturkey said the bill only
specifies the right of a student
to a licensed attorney and
does not mention faculty.
Faculty are also represented
by a student counsel before
the Honor Court.
But Saine said he is more
concerned about ensuring
that students have a right
to a lawyer if they want one,
rather than how the bill could
affect the honor system.
Sturkey said she does not
think students would hire law-
yers frequently, but she said
the bill could undermine the
mission of the honor system.
We have students as coun-
sels because we believe in the
power of student-led the
power of having students
have a say in protecting the
integrity of the campus and
consequently the integrity of
their own degrees.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
honor SYSTEM
from page 1
number of hours they are
required to take to give them
a more quality educational
experience and extend their
time on campus, Hawkins
said.
Hawkins said he thinks
this would increase student
athlete graduation rates, and
it would also reduce both aca-
demic ineligibility to play and
the number of cheating scan-
dals at Division I schools.
But UNC Athletic Director
Bubba Cunningham said he
thinks the NCAAs collegiate
model has worked for many
students.
We have 400,000 stu-
dents compete at NCAA
levels, and the vast majority
are outstanding students,
Cunningham said. A large
part of the discussion is
about a very small number of
students.
I think you have to be
cautious about changing the
system that serves so many
people so well.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
aThlETE STudY
from page 1
cases, most traffickers, often
the victims lover or relative,
are not convicted because
the victims decline to testify,
Goolsby said.
And similar to domestic
violence laws, the Safe Harbor
bill is designed to encourage
victims to testify.
The Safe Harbor bill
seeks to address this trend
with new mandates on law
each other space to do their
work.
As one of the newer
authors in the area, Bemis
said other writers have been a
source of advice.
The other writers are very
generous. Ive found that a
lot of them have been very
supportive and helpful, he
said.
Malone characterized the
community as a powerful
force, as well as a distrac-
tion.
When writers get together
its like a nuclear reaction
it builds upon itself. We
can read each other, we can
talk to each other, and we
can avoid writing with each
other, Malone joked.
hillSborough
from page 1
SEx Trafficking
from page 1
A literary gateway
Hillsboroughs literary
community extends beyond
just those who write.
Sharon Wheeler, owner
of Hillsboroughs indepen-
dent bookstore Purple Crow
Books, interacts regularly
with the authors.
With 550 square feet of
space, Wheelers small store
is a home to both writers and
readers of local literature.
I try to keep all the
authors books in stock all the
time. I think its one thing that
helps this bookstore be suc-
cessful, she said. Its a niche
you cant find elsewhere.
Gurganus and many
Hillsborough authors frequent
Purple Crow to see the new
stock and check in on Wheeler.
Sharon Wheeler is an
answered prayer. Few towns
this size have a living breath-
ing heart that is a viable
independent bookstore,
Gurganus said.
Malone said the store is
also a gateway for visitors to
learn about and experience
the literary community.
When people come tour-
ing colonial Hillsborough, she
will bring them in and show
them her three shelves of
local authors, he said.
And Wheeler said
Hillsboroughs authors dont
hesitate to give back to the
town and the community that
has influenced their writing.
She said she is often able
to get local authors to sign
books for interested readers
and theyre always happy
to do so.
Bemis, who previously
taught elementary school and
plays several instruments,
caters his book releases to chil-
dren and often visits schools.
At Johns book releases
he ll play and sing and get
children to sing with him,
Wheeler said.
Malone said he and his
wife hold casino night fund-
raisers throughout the year to
support causes like the local
Burwell School Historic Site.
And for more than a
decade, Gurganus and
Malone have put on an
annual performance of
A Christmas Carol at St.
Matthews Episcopal Church.
Gurganus plays Ebenezer
Scrooge while Malone por-
trays all of the ghosts.
Thats really the core of
who I am, personally. I want
to bring people together,
Malone said. And the arts
have proven a great way to do
that in this town.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
enforcement and the court
system to properly address
the crime, Goolsby said.
The same prosecuto-
rial aggression is required in
sex trafficking of minors to
ensure pimps dont get off
by convincing victims not to
testify or scaring them away
from pursuing prosecution.
The bill will be passed to
the Senate judiciary commit-
tee this week, he said.
Dixon said the state also
needs to educate people about
the signs of sex trafficking
because victims often cannot
help themselves.
We need to educate our
friends on the issue and let
victims know that someone
out there is looking out for
them, she said. They are not
alone.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
Life After
Life
Jill McCorkle
The Four
Corners
of the
Sky
Michael
Malone
Oldest
Living
Confeder-
ate Widow
Tells All
Allan
Gurganus
Back to
Wando
Passo
David Payne
The Nine
Pound
Hammer
John Claude
Bemis
DTH/marY BUrKe INformaTIoN CompILeD BY KaTIe reILLY
Bemis debut novel features 12-year-
old ray, who sets out on a journey to dis-
cover what happened to his father. along
the way, he meets a band of sideshow
performers with magical talents.
ransom Hill, formerly the lead singer
of a renowned rock group, travels to
South Carolina to reconnect with his
wife. There, he uncovers the mysterious
history of a Civil War-era love triangle.
The main character of gurganus
novel is 99-year-old Lucy marsden, who
tells a life story that includes marrying a
colonel at age 15 and living through the
death and destruction of the Civil War.
malones novel follows Navy pilot
annie peregrine-goode as she faces the
challenge of confronting her estranged
and dying father in order to learn about
her mothers identity.
Set in fulton, N.C., mcCorkles most
recent novel chronicles the life of the
unique elderly residents and staff mem-
bers at the pine Haven estates retire-
ment facility.
A collection of works written by authors living in Hillsborough
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News Tuesday, April 23, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 5
By Julia Craven
Staff Writer
Several Carrboro residents
and police officers came out
Monday night to give input on
qualities they would like to see
in Carrboros new police chief.
About 10 attendees at the
public input session discussed
goals for the future chief,
ranging from a good person-
ality to an understanding of
the communitys diversity.
Whoever the town
hires will replace outgoing
Carrboro Police Chief Carolyn
Hutchison, who is stepping
down in October after 29
years with the department.
The discussion was led
by Steve Straus, president of
Developmental Associates
LLC the consulting firm
hired by the town to lead the
search for the new chief.
Straus said candidates are
recruited for the position, and
there are currently less than
50 applicants for the job.
Heidi Perry, treasurer
for the Carrboro Bicycle
Coalition, said Hutchison
understands the uniqueness
of the Carrboro community.
I would like to see a (new)
police chief who is strong
with community, she said.
Perry also said the depart-
ment needs someone who
is sensitive to different
groups of people, particularly
Carrboros Karen and Latino
communities.
Anissa McLendon, a
Carrboro resident and former
employee of the Carrboro
Police Department, said she
thinks one of the biggest chal-
lenges facing the department
is keeping officers interested
in staying in a small town
instead of leaving for bigger
jurisdictions.
new police chief
Carrboro is currently
searching for its next police
chief:
January: Carrboro Police
Chief Carolyn Hutchison
announced she will retire.
Summer: Carrboro will
work with an outside firm to
find a new hire.
October: Carrboros next
police chief will take office
following Hutchisons retire-
ment on October 1.
McLendon said she hopes
the new chief will reduce
turnover.
She also said there should
be more outreach between
the chief and the town.
Straus said the new chief
will undergo a series of inter-
views and screenings before
Carrboro Town Manager
David Andrews makes a hir-
ing decision.
First, a retired police chief
will interview the candidates.
Then nominees will
undergo two psychiatric
evaluations with separate
psychologists.
Each of the three evalua-
tions will be done indepen-
dently as a part of the pre-
liminary screening process for
the position.
Allison Delaney, a Carrboro
police officer, said maintain-
ing a good working relation-
ship with Chapel Hill and
Orange County is something
she would like to see the new
chief continue.
Delaney said a closer rela-
tionship with these jurisdic-
Public input begins
for police chief search
tions would allow the depart-
ment to keep the community
safer.
She also said she wants a
chief who can balance profes-
sionalism and personality.
As a police officer, Delaney
said, she wants to be respect-
ed and trusted to do her job
by the new hire.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
By Lindsay Masi
Staff Writer
The North Carolina soft-
ball team is used to playing
under pressure.
But this was a different
type of pressure.
Against Georgia Tech in
the rubber game of a three-
game series, the Tar Heels
were not only facing the
pressure of needing to take
the series they were also
playing in front of a televised
audience on ESPNU.
And they didnt disappoint.
UNC defeated the Yellow
Jackets 11-6 on Monday night
to take the series.
This win means a ton
to us, starting pitcher Lori
Spingola said. It gives our
team so much confidence.
Just knowing we have that
fight in us is just amazing for
our team.
After starting off hot with
three runs in the bottom of
the first inning, the Tar Heels
(36-16, 12-6 ACC) quickly
found themselves behind
after Georgia Tech (22-26,
7-8) put five runs on the
board in the top of the third,
sending 10 hitters to the
plate.
The big inning has caused
the Tar Heels trouble during
the past several games.
Those innings have been
a problem, coach Donna
Papa said. The bottom line
is, Lori needs some rest, and
we dont have that opportu-
nity to get her a lot of rest, so
were going to have to battle
through that.
Papa said that although
the big innings have been an
issue for her team as of late,
dth/isabella bartolucci
UNC senior Constance Orr positions herself to slap down a tag at
third base. Orr hit two home runs and drove in four runs Monday.
UNC takes rubber
match from Tech
its solid defense and ability to
match teams run-for-run will
help it overcome that.
Despite quickly relinquish-
ing their early lead, the Tar
Heels continued to prove that
theirs is a game of patience,
key hitting and striving under
pressure.
In the bottom of the sixth
inning with no outs and the
bases loaded, pinch hitter
Kati Causey stepped up to the
plate.
Causey found herself in
a similar situation Sunday,
when she was called in to
pinch hit with two outs in
the bottom of the seventh
and blasted a two-run home
run to bring UNC within
three.
This time, Causey proved
yet again that she could han-
dle the pressure.
She sent a rocket past the
third baseman for a two-run
double, and helped the Tar
Heels grab a 6-5 lead that
they would not relinquish.
I just try to take it like
any other situation, Causey
said. My job as a pinch hitter
is just to get a base hit and
DTH ONLINE:
Check dailytarheel.com
for more on the keys to
UNCs 11-6 victory.
move the runners. Tonight,
I just went up there and did
what I do best.
Papa said she believes that
Causeys hit gave UNC the
momentum it needed to put
away the Yellow Jackets.
Kati came up big, she
said. Hitting is a lot of
momentum, and once some-
body like her starts to do
something, it kind of just
goes.
Spingola said that even
though the Tar Heels have
struggled to come back in
games this year, this one was
going to be different.
Knowing our hitters have
been doing so well lately,
I think we were all pretty
optimistic about coming
back.
Theres always pressure,
but this time it was a good
type of pressure.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
softball: north carolina 11, GeorGia tech 6
the softball team
beat the Yellow
Jackets on espnU.
carrboro police chief
carolyn hutchison is
stepping down.
919-942-5161
Open from 7am - 6pm Mon-Sat 9am-5pm Sun
Located at 159 East Franklin St., Chapel Hill
90th Anniversary!
5 Hotdogs, french fries & drink
(limit 2 hotdogs per person)
Wednesday, April 24th from 11-4:30 (Dine in only)
Ba- Da
Ba- Da
Ba- Da
Ba- Da
Tea
Tea
Y a l l
Y a l l
Daily 11am-2am
302 B East Main Street
Carrboro, NC
919.960.0656
badawings.com
$ 3 pints all day Wednesday $ 3 pints all day Wednesday $ 3 pints all day Wednesday
Tuesday, April 23, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6
Not valid with any other offer. Valid only at participating locations. Customer pays
all applicable sales tax. Additional toppings extra. Good for carry-out or delivery.
Limited delivery area.
Not valid with any other offer. Valid only at participating locations. Customer pays
all applicable sales tax. Additional toppings extra. Good for carry-out or delivery.
Limited delivery area.
Papa Johns Pizza
607-B W. Franklin St.
932-7575
Order Pizza Online!
www.papajohns.com
HOURS
Mon-Wed 10am-2am
Thurs-Sat 10am-3am
Sunday 11am-1am
Accepts
UNC OneCard
EXPIRES 4/30/13
#1 in Customer Satisfaction!
$
1 0
00
ANY LARGE
PIZZA
LARGE 2-TOPPING
PIZZA
+ tax
$
1 2
00
+ tax
414620.CRTR EXPIRES 4/30/13
$
20
00
+ tax
2 LARGE 2-TOPPING
PIZZAS
Tuesday, April 23, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7
919-929-0246
UNC Campus Carrboro
412 E. Main Carrboro
HEEL DEAL
EARLY WEEK
Mix & Match 2 or More!
Not valid for delivery. Additional charge for Deep Dish.
LARGE
3-Topping Pizza
Medium 2-Topping Pizzas
Stuffed Cheesy Bread
Oven Baked Sandwiches
Pasta (Breadbowl add $1)
$
5
99 $
5
99
PLUS TAX
106
108
Delivery charge may apply. Additional charge for Deep Dish.
PICK ME UP
$
7
99 $
7
99
PLUS TAX
Mon-Wed Pickup Special
413582.CRTR
BUY ONE
REGULAR SUB
OFFER VALID ONLY AT CHAPEL HILL LOCATION
919-918-7827 245A S. Elliott Rd., Chapel Hill
Hurry! Offer expires 4/21/2013. One coupon per person per visit per day.
Not to be combined with other offers. No cash value. Redeemable in person only.
& Two Fountain Drinks,
Get a
REGULAR SUB
FREE!
FREE! FREE!
Mention this ad and
receive 25% off one item!
scoutandmollys.com
919.969.8886 201 S. Estes Dr. University Mall
TART TORY BURCH TIBI ALICE & TRIXIE A
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RACHEL PALLY MICHAEL STARS KIRRIBILLA
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City Tuesday, April 23, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 8
NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS
Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to
publication for classifed ads. We publish Mon-
day thru Friday when classes are in session. A
university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e. this
affects deadlines). We reserve the right to re-
ject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Acceptance of ad
copy or prepayment does not imply agreement
to publish an ad. You may stop your ad at any
time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for stopped
ads will be provided. No advertising for hous-
ing or employment, in accordance with federal
law, can state a preference based on sex, race,
creed, color, religion, national origin, handicap,
marital status.
Child Care Wanted
PART-TIME CHILD CARE NEEDED. We are look-
ing for a UNC student to pick up 2 children
(ages 5 and 8) from school and provide care
at our house 2:30-4:30pm M-Th. References,
resume and clean driving record needed. Start
end of August. afterschool1314ch@gmail.com.
For Rent
FAIR HOUSINg
ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in this
newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing
Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise
any preference, limitation, or discrimination
based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, fa-
milial status, or national origin, or an intention to
make any such preference, limitation, or discrimi-
nation. This newspaper will not knowingly accept
any advertising which is in violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis in accordance with the
law. To complain of discrimination, call the U. S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
housing discrimination hotline: 1-800-669-9777.
REDUCED RENT! Private, spacious bedroom
and bath 5 miles from campus (SW Durham)
in exchange for pet care and household chores.
Rate is negotiable depending upon time avail-
able. Must be NON-smoker, love animals (2
dogs). No cats and have excellent references.
Please email: Mtmoriahfarm@yahoo.com.
UNIvERSITY COMMONS 4BR/4BA.
$1,600/mo. Includes: UTILITIES, walk
in closet, internet, furnished living
and dining. On J, D buslines. Available
8-1-2013. 919-767-1778. One left:
PerreiraProperties.com.
MILL CREEK APARTMENT
On Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. In need of a sub-
leter for Fall 2013. Townhouse style. Walk to
campus. Near bus stop. Full kitchen. W/D. Park-
ing space included. $475/mo. utilities. Contact
kmreilly@live.unc.edu, 978-609-6247.
$400/MO. PER BEDROOM in 6BR/5BA
townhouse. 4 buslines, minutes to
UNC, hardwood foors, W/D, extra
storage, free parking, non-smoking.
spbell48@gmail.com, 919-933-0983.
APARTMENT FOR RENT 2BR/1BA, W/D, dish-
washer. $650/mo. No pets or smoking. Call
919-933-8802.
COzY 1BR CARRBORO APARTMENT. Beautiful
Bolin Creek Greenway setting. Includes dish-
washer, W/D, internet, water. Bike, bus to cam-
pus. Available 5/1. $595/mo. No pets, smoking.
919-454-3739.
WALK TO CAMPUS. 3BR/1.5BA. Avail-
able June. Fully renovated. W/D. Dish-
washer. Central AC, heat. $1,700/mo.
Merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143.
SMALL, FURNISHED APARTMENT attached
to private home. Private entrance, bath.
1.25 miles from Planetarium. $475/mo, in-
cludes utilities. Available for summer school.
919-967-5552, before 10pm.
SPACIOUS 4BR RENTAL: very nice 4BR/3.5BA
rental starting June 1. Near UNC hospitals.
All appliances including W/D, refrigerator.,
dishwasher. Partially furnished. $2,300/mo.
919-730-3763.
WALK TO CAMPUS. Available June or August.
2BR/1BA. Fully renovated. W/D. Dishwasher.
Central AC, heat. $875/mo. Merciarentals.com,
919-933-8143.
STARTING AUGUST: 2BR apartment.
W/D, 3 miles from campus, on 10 acres
of land. In exchange for work inside
and outside. Students preferred. Call
919-967-3221.
WALK TO CAMPUS. Available June or August.
2BR/1BA. Fully renovated. W/D. Dishwasher.
Central AC, heat. Large back deck. $975/mo.
Merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143.
LARGE HOUSE FOR RENT: AvAILABLE 8/2013.
$2,750/mo. +1 month free! 5-6BR, 3BA.
Fenced yard, plenty of parking. Busline. Stu-
dents welcome. tom@TerraNovaGlobal.com or
919-451-0740.
For Sale
BOOKS: Alors! Wolfclaw zee cocker spaniel
ees missing! Why? Learn zee terrible truth in
Clumsy Hearts, a slightly misguided romance,
by Hysteria Molt. Available via Amazon.com.
ESTABLISHED CURvES FRANCHISE Roxboro,
NC. Excellent business opportunity for moti-
vated individuals. $45,000 including all equip-
ment. Call Donna at Remax Premier Realty,
336-597-8000.
Help Wanted
HOUSEKEEPER FOR DURHAM FAMILY needed.
Fridays preferred. Transportation required. $14/
hr. Email fried002@mc.duke.edu.
IMMIGRATION INTERN:. Full-time, 2nd summer
session. 12-20 hrs/wk fall and spring. Unique
environment near Global Education Center.
MUST be fuent in Spanish, mature, reliable, de-
tail oriented, conscientious, with 3.0+ GPA. Re-
sume, most recent academic transcript to: Law
Offce, PO Box 551, Chapel Hill, NC 27514.
CHAPEL HILL DAY CARE CENTER is hiring
afternoon assistants. Requires at least 4
credit hours in Early Childhood Education. A
criminal record check and a TB test required
prior to starting work. Interviewing only can-
didates who are available M-F until 6pm.
Start time vary. $9-$10/hr.. Send letter of in-
terest to pam@chapelhilldaycarecenter.com.
License #68000135.
YARD AND HOUSE MAINTENANCE. Next week
beginning 1,000 square foot deck. Need mus-
cles. 4 miles from campus, in woods, on water.
Must be student. $10/hr with possible raise.
Flextime. Robert and Rebecca. 919-967-0138.
vALET DRIvERS needed for upscale restau-
rants, hotels and events. Great for students.
Flexible hours, lunch shifts available. $8-$13/
hr. Including tips. For more information call
919-796-5782.
LEGAL ASSISTANT: Raleigh law frm seeks
UNC graduate. Excellent typing, editing, proof-
reading, Word, Excel skills required. Interest
in law school encouraged. Email resume to
nnwlaw@gmail.com.
SWIM INSTRUCTORS, COACHES: Great sum-
mer employment. Quality swim lesson in-
structors for our summer season needed
starting May. Certifcation not required. Email
aquatics@shalomdch.org, 919-354-4941.
GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR: Chapel Hill
Gymnastics has part-time positions available
for energetic, enthusiastic instructors. Ap-
plicants with knowledge of gymnastic termi-
nology and progression skills preferred, but
will train right candidate. Send a resume to
margie@chapelhillgymnastics.com.
PART-TIME CHURCH custodial, security posi-
tion. 7-10 hrs/wk at $10/hr. Set up tables and
chairs, clean rooms and bathrooms and assist
church staff as needed before, during and af-
ter worship on Sundays. Occasional Saturday
hours, as needed. Must be able to perform
physical, manual labor, have good interper-
sonal skills. Criminal background check will be
performed prior to employment. Submit resume
and references to weekend@upcch.org or mail
to PO Box 509, Chapel Hill NC 27514.
MODELS NEEDED for evening sessions for
Durham sculpture studio. Classical fgure and
portrait. Andrew Bryan, 919-929-9913.
PERSONAL ASSISTANT NEEDED. Student with
computer skills. General help organizing: fles,
house, closets, everything. 4 miles from cam-
pus. $11/hr. Rebecca, 919-967-0138.
Homes For Sale
REAL ESTATE AUCTION: 1609 Skye Drive, Cha-
pel Hill. Bids due April 24. 4,500 square feet,
4BR/3BA, fnished walkout basement. Info at
CasaDiColore.com or 919-601-7339. NCAL/BL
8116, 8121 and 221277..
Internships
EDITORIAL INTERNSHIP: Media company in
Chapel Hill is looking for a paid editorial in-
tern for summer 2013, with the potential to
continue work into the school year. Interns
will have the opportunity to build a portfolio
by writing both short and long stories for the
print editions of our magazines, as well as the
websites. Other duties include copy editing
and posting news releases to our websites.
This is a fantastic, real world opportunity to
gain valuable experience in publishing. Please
send cover letter, resume, 3 writing samples to
internship@foodnewsmedia.com.
Misc. Wanted
WEB DEvELOPER. Need a web savvy person to
help with Wordpress site development, Google
Places and SEO. Will pay by hour or project.
lorenzo@acornhcs.com; 919-259-6189.
SUBLET: Summer sublet available. House with 3
girls. $500/mo. unless 2 people share room. 15
minute walk to campus and on busline. Email
atompkin@live.unc.edu.
LOOKINg FOR
SUMMER SUbLETER
for Chancellor Square. 2BR/2BA fully fur-
nished $1,400/mo. WILLING TO NEGOTI-
ATE or take what you can give. Contact:
joyurcaba@gmail.com or 910-783-5182.
SUBLET ON MCMASTERS: 1BR for June, July
and (negotiable) August 2013. Plenty of
parking, 10 minutes walk to campus. Bath,
full kitchen. $500/mo. includes all utilities,
negotiable. Contact pashton@live.unc.edu.
Summer Jobs
FIELD HOCKEY INSTRUCTORS: Instructors and
assistant instructors needed to run summer
camps the weeks of June 24 and July 15. Pre-
vious coaching and playing experience with
sound knowledge is preferred. For additional
information contact the Carrboro Recreation
and Parks Department at 919-918-7376 or
email cwolfe@townofcarrboro.org.
HELP WITH HOMEWORK: Looking for an under-
grad or recent graduate to help our 10thgrader
fnish out the school year (Algebra 2 especially).
Help studying for tests and doing homework
through early June (and perhaps next school
year). 4-5 days/wk. Please email, or call or text
919-824-6045.
Announcements For Rent Help Wanted For Rent
BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room

Deadlines
Line Ads: Noon, one business day prior to publication
Display Classifed Ads: 3pm, two business
days prior to publication
Line Classifed Ad Rates
Private Party (Non-Proft)
25 Words ....... $18.00/week
Extra words .. 25/word/day
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25 Words ....... $40.00/week
Extra words ...25/word/day
EXTRAS: Box: $1/day Bold: $3/day
To Place a Line Classified Ad Log onto
www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252
DTH offce is open Mon-Fri 8:30am-5:00pm
Help Wanted Help Wanted


Robert H. Smith, Atty At Law
312 W. Franklin Street 967-2200 chapelhilltrafficlaw.com
FREE
CONSULTATION
Carolina graduate, expert in traffic and
criminal cases for students for over 20 years.
SPEEDING DWI CRIMINAL
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5116 S. Hwy 55, Durham, NC
Julia W. Burns, MD
Adult, Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist
109 Conner Dr., Building III, Suite 203
919-428-8461 juliaburnsmd.com
Tar Heel Born & Bred!
CLOSE TO CAMPUS at CARRBORO PLAZA ~ 919.918.7161
PASSPORT PHOTOSMOVING SUPPLIES
COLOR/BW PRINTING, NOTARY PUBLIC,
LAMINATING, BINDING, MAILBOX SERVICES, FAX,
STAMPS, PACKAGING, INTERNATIONAL SHIPPING !
T IME T O G O T AXI
chapelhilltaxiservice.com 919-407-9747
STUDENT & SENIOR
DISCOUNTS!
CALL 919-962-0252
DTH
Advertise in the
DTH Service Directory...
Its effective and affordable!
Interested
in this
Space?
UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY
Over 165 Different High-End Cigars
in Our New Humidor Room
BEVERAGE
& TOBACCO
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306 E. MAIN STREET, CARRBORO 968-5000


(in front of Cats Cradle)
CIGARS
GRE, GMAT, LSAT, SAT Prep Courses
In partnership with select programs of UNC, Duke, Campbell, and
FSU, PrepSuccess has helped thousands of students prepare for
entrance exams. Early Bird rates are only $420 to $504 for 30 -
42 hour courses. GRE PREP begins May 4th at UNC-CH.
Attend classes in person or Live Online. To visit a class or to
learn more, go to prepsuccess.com or call 919-791-0810.
For Rent
For Rent
Looking for physically fit, morally strong
leaders who are interested in the
Marine Corps Officer Programs
including law and aviation
opportunities.
For more information contact the
officer selection team at
www.facebook.com/MCRSROST
Walk to
Campus!
Large 1-2 BR Condos
Washer/Dryers
$600-$775/month
Compare to dorm prices!
www.chapelhillrentals.org
919-933-5296
May to August 2013,
30 to 35 hrs/week.
Must be independent, detail
oriented. Must have auto.
$11.00/hr plus mileage.
Send cover letter & resume to
hire@louisebeckproperties.com
Management Company
HIRING
Property Inspectors
for Summer
In Town & Out of Town
Great Professional Service
$30 Flat Rate to Airport!
EXPIRES 8/13/2013
ABLE TAXI
9 1 9-699- 1 3 12
Announcements
Announcements
Help Wanted
Sublets Tutoring Wanted
Chapel Hill Bible Church
DR. HUGH ROSS ,
astrophysicist, Christian apologist,
and founder of Reasons to Believe
(www.reasons.org) will be speaking at
the Chapel Hill Bible Church on
SUNDAY, APRIL 28 .
His 9:30 sermon topic will be
Cosmic Reasons to Believe in Christ
and at 11:05
Genesis & Science: Enemies or Allies.
260 Erwin Rd., Chapel Hill biblechurch.org
Guests welcome Stay for both services
The Daily Tar Heel office will
close Monday, April 29th
at 5pm for Exam Break
Deadlines for
Thursday,
May 16th issue:
Display Ads & Display Classifieds -
Monday, May 13th at 3pm
Line Classifieds -
Tuesday, May 14th at noon
We will re-open on
Monday, May 13th at 9:00am
(c) 2013 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERvICES, INC.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 9 -- A hero comes to your
rescue when least expected. Continue
to put in the effort, though. Dont
depend on others to do the work for
you. Stay active, and remain open to
contributions.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 7 -- Two days of intense
work begin. Getting it done is easier
than thinking about doing it. Avoid
distractions; youll have time to stop
and acknowledge efforts later. Dont
be afraid to ask for help, and return
the favor.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 9 -- Youll have more time for
love and relaxation. How will you take
your romance to a new level? Dont
look at what you want, but rather at
what you can contribute.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8 -- Repetitiveness can be
especially tiresome right now. Break
the routine and add some wild creativ-
ity. Get outside, too. Then take care
of yourself at your home sweet home
with a good nights sleep.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Theres still plenty of
work to do, but suddenly everything
starts making sense. Continue ex-
ploring new directions in your career.
Youll be surprised by what you learn
about yourself.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 8 -- Your ideas are attracting
attention. Cash fow improves. Pay ex-
penses before splurging. Youre really
cooking now, and the orders fow in.
Get help if needed, and stash profts.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 9 -- Youre stronger, more
self-confdent and sensitive for the
next two days. Watch out, world!
Take charge of your destiny. This week
should be very active and fun. Get out-
side and play.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is an 8 -- Be sensitive to a loved
ones wishes. Youre under pressure re-
garding deadlines. If you can get away,
its also a good time for treasure hunt-
ing. Notice your dreams.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 9 -- Celebrate accomplish-
ments. Your friends are your inspiration,
and they provide solid support. Get out
and play together, but remember your
budget. Make it a potluck or go Dutch.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 6 -- This phase brings lots of
career action. Take charge and man-
age responsibilities. It may require
discipline, determination and patience.
Reward yourself later with a thought-
provoking flm or book.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8 -- By now you should
know how much you can spend. If
you can get away for a little while, go.
Watch the big picture, and plan your
agenda. Then put on your rambling
shoes.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 9 -- Focus on fnances; get
organized and practical. Things are
beginning to shift. Consider an invest-
ment in your education. Study proftable
ventures. Rejuvenate your relationship.
Sensuality takes front stage.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If April 23rd is Your Birthday...
For the next three weeks, renew old friendships.
The first six months of 2013 bring a nice financial
boost, so hide away savings. Discover hidden
resources. Communications go farther, and
networks grow. Focus on partnership, and learn
about new cultures. Network with groups
that share your passion. Strengthen ties.
The fastest way to place
your classified ad.
www.dailytarheel.com
click on classifieds
Online
Classifieds...
Chapel Hill may build veterans memorial
By Caroline Hudson
Staff Writer
War veterans could soon be
getting more recognition after
the Chapel Hill Town Council
voted Monday night to pro-
ceed with plans for a town
veterans memorial.
Former council member Jim
Merritt petitioned the council
in 2009 to build a memorial in
honor of local veterans.
Butch Kisiah, director
of Chapel Hills Parks and
Recreation Department, said
a committee of local veteran
group representatives and res-
idents is hoping to raise about
$300,000 for the memorial.
The committee has pro-
posed the brick plaza area
of the Chapel Hill Memorial
Cemetery as the location for
the memorial.
The memorial is expected
to include five pillars to rep-
resent the five branches of the
U.S. Armed Forces.
This is a really important
piece of ground, Kisiah said.
He said the committee is
working to keep maintenance
costs low, although it is too
early to know what the exact
costs will be.
He said the committee
wants to make the memorial
a reasonable size.
It would fit within that
cemetery, he said. Its to be
tasteful.
Chapel Hill resident and
World War II veteran Robert
Patton strongly supported
building a veterans memorial
before he died on April 11.
Lee Heavlin, Pattons
friend of 20 years, said
Patton started advocating
for memorials after visiting
a mass unmarked grave in
Mauthausen, Austria.
In 2012, Patton received
Frances Legion of Honor, the
countrys highest distinction.
Heavlin said Pattons regi-
ment helped liberate prison-
ers in a concentration camp
in Mauthausen.
It was a concentration
camp where you didnt come
home, Heavlin said.
He said there are
many descendants of the
Mauthausen concentration
camp survivors living in the
Chapel Hill-Durham area.
Jim Stallings, a Carrboro
resident and member of
Veterans of Foreign Wars and
The American Legion, said he
supports the memorial plan.
Stallings served in the
Korean War and said many
people dont know much
about Americas role in the
war, but hed like that to
change.
I want to be remembered,
he said.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
News Tuesday, April 23, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 9
Reaction to bombings
Some fear that there will
be a backlash to Muslim
students after Bostons
events. See pg. 3 for story.
New courses from ITS
Information Technology
Services launched free
courses on computer pro-
grams. See pg. 3 for story.
UNC defeats BC
UNCs womens tennis
team beat Boston College
4-0 in Chestnut Hill on
Monday. See pg. 3 for story.
And on Wednesday
Pick up a copy of the
DTH to read about poten-
tial changes to North
Carolinas film industry.
games
Solution to
Mondays puzzle
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
2013 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
(C)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACross
1 Pink drink, briefly
6 Arson aftermath
9 Hutt crime lord of sci-fi
14 According to
15 Grazing area
16 Light purple
17 ONeill drama set in
Harry Hopes saloon
20 Tailors target
21 Many a Beethoven
sonata ender
22 Popeyes __ Pea
23 Jabber on and on
24 __ in November
25 Likable prez
27 More than feasts (on)
28 With 30-Across, drama
based on 70s
presidential interviews
30 See 28-Across
32 Aspiring docs course
33 Walked alongside ones
master
35 On the Pacific
36 Fertilizable cells
38 Just __!: Be right
there!
40 Drama about Henry II
and Eleanor of
Aquitaine
45 Friendly skies co.
46 Greatly feared
47 Comstock Lode find
48 Fred of My Cousin
Vinny
50 Oozed
52 With 54-Across,
Viva La Vida rock
group, and what 17-,
28-/30- and
40-Across each is?
54 See 52-Across
55 Pottery pet
58 Smooth transition
60 Pastoral poem
64 Invisible vibes
65 More than most
66 Wine tasting criterion
67 Quilting parties
68 Corrida cheer
69 Neuter, horsewise
Down
1 Slyly spiteful
2 Irish actor Milo
3 Say what you will
4 Golda of Israel
5 The Lord of the Rings
baddie
6 Answering the
penultimate exam
question, say
7 Actor Connery
8 How lovers walk
9 Jersey Girl actress, to
fans
10 Goals
11 Emulated Mt. St.
Helens?
12 With __ breath:
expectantly
13 Pains partner
18 Answering machine
button
19 Journalist Roberts
24 Name, in Nmes
26 Program file suffix
29 Not counterfeit
31 The Good Earth
mother
32 Nonsense!
34 Tractor manufacturer
35 Give __: yank
37 By way of
39 Believability on the
street, slangily
41 Drivers license fig.
42 Threat words
43 Actor Snipes
44 Thought
49 March Madness
games, informally
51 Sizing up
53 Whip It band
54 Like the driven snow
55 Red wine choice, for
short
56 Tint
57 Wrath
59 Salon goop
61 Mommy deer
62 Initials on LHomme
fragrance
63 Took the reins
By John Howell Jr.
Staff Writer
Upon hearing the news of
Appalachian State University
Chancellor Kenneth Peacocks
impending resignation, ASU
sophomore Ellie Simpson
reflected on his reputation
among the student body.
She said there is a gen-
eral sense that he is highly
respected and will be missed.
He typifies what it
means to be a Mountaineer,
Simpson said.
Appalachians Peacock to step down
Kenneth
Peacock
announced his
plans to step
down as ASUs
chancellor
after almost a
decade.
Last week, Peacock
informed UNC-system
President Thomas Ross and
the ASU Board of Trustees
that he plans to step down
from his position of nearly a
decade.
Ross said in a state-
ment that he reluctantly
accepted Peacocks decision
and praised the chancellors
accomplishments during his
time at ASU.
In countless ways, he will
leave Appalachian stronger
than he found it, and thats
quite a legacy in and of itself,
he said.
Joni Worthington, spokes-
woman for the system, said
the search for a new chancel-
lor will be conducted accord-
ing to the university code, and
Peacock will be involved.
He made his intentions
known well in advance so that
there would be adequate time
for a search to be conducted,
she said.
Simpson said students
have been sad to hear of
Peacocks resignation, but she
expects he will leave the uni-
versity in good hands.
Im sure he will not hand
over the position to anyone
less than deserving, she said.
Simpson said Peacock is
invested in and interacts with
every student on campus.
If you wave at him, he will
treat you as if you guys go way
back, she said.
Peacock said he isnt leav-
ing until the right person is
found to be his successor.
It was important to me
that this transition be smooth
and that nobody is rushed,
he said.
He said the decision to step
down wasnt easy, but he is
looking forward to the next
chapter in his life.
I dont know what its going
to be, I dont know where its
going to be, but I know its
going to be exciting, he said.
I want two months to sit,
unwind and read, he said.
Simpson said Peacock has
advocated for his students
and accepts only the best.
He will be greatly missed
on this campus, but we really
appreciate his time here and
all that hes done for this uni-
versity, she said.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
On the wire: national and world news
Death penalty possible
for Boston bomber
WASHINGTON, D.C.
(MCT) The Justice
Department on Monday
charged Boston Marathon
bombing suspect Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev with using a weapon
of mass destruction, a charge
that could bring the death
penalty.
In a criminal complaint
initially filed under seal, and
then unsealed in federal
court in Boston, prosecutors
charged Tsarnaev with one
count of using and conspiring
to use a WMD and one count
of malicious destruction of
property by means of an explo-
sive device resulting in death.
Tsarnaev, 19, had his initial
court appearance Monday
from his hospital room.
Although our investigation
is ongoing, todays charges
bring a successful end to a
tragic week for the city of
Boston, and our country, said
Attorney General Eric Holder.
The charges were unsealed
the same day that White
House spokesman Jay Carney
said the Obama administra-
tion had determined that it
wouldnt designate Tsarnaev
as an enemy combatant.
Tsarnaev will be repre-
sented by the federal public
defender.
Along with his older
brother, Tamerlan, who was
killed early Friday in a shoot-
out with police, Tsarnaev is
suspected of planting the two
improvised explosive devices
that killed three people and
wounded more than 180
April 15 near the finish line of
the race.
The arrest of Tsarnaev
and todays charges should
send a clear message to those
who look to do us harm,
Boston Police Commissioner
Edward Davis said.
Dozens killed in battle in
northern Nigeria
TKANO, Nigeria (MCT)
Dozens of people, includ-
ing many civilians, died
in gun battles between
Nigerian security forces and
Islamist militants in recent
days, according to Nigerian
officials.
Nigeria has been grap-
pling with a devastating
rebellion by an Islamist
militia, Boko Haram, which
has left thousands dead in
recent years. Despite a heavy
military crackdown, authori-
ties have been unable to halt
attacks or weaken the group,
which is popular in parts of
the north.
Babagana Adamkolo, a res-
ident, said the fighting broke
out after Boko Haram gun-
men attacked a sports viewing
center and shot at a man who
managed to escape. In many
parts of Africa, small outlets
broadcast sports matches on
cable TV, and people pay to
watch.
Adamkolo said a large
contingent of Nigerian secu-
rity forces arrived and went
on a shooting spree and set
homes on fire. They opened
fire on anybody within sight.
Women, children and the
elderly were not spared. Many
people are still missing, they
have not been seen since they
fled the troops attack. We
fear some of them might have
plunged into the lake and
drowned to escape military
bullets.
Kerry to host Afghan,
Pakistani leaders
BRUSSELS (MCT)
Secretary of State John F.
Kerry is to host a meeting
of top Afghan and Pakistani
leaders in Brussels this week
in hopes of breathing new life
into flagging Afghan peace
efforts.
The meeting set for
Wednesday is to bring togeth-
er Afghan President Hamid
Karzai and his defense
minister, Bismullah Khan
Mohammadi, with Pakistani
army chief Gen. Ashfaq
Kayani and Foreign Secretary
Jalil Abbas Jilani.
A State Department official
described the encounter as
part of a series of three-way
meetings that occur regularly
at a lower level.
With most U.S. troops
scheduled to leave
Afghanistan by the end of
next year, the Obama admin-
istration is eager to work
out a peace accord between
Karzais government, Taliban
militants and the countrys
neighbors. But the Taliban
appear in no hurry to make a
deal, and neighboring coun-
tries have their own goals in
the talks.
The Afghan-Pakistani
conversation has been
strained by incidents at the
countries borders and by
other issues.
Karzai recently accused
Pakistan of failing to live
up to commitments it has
made in previous talks. His
spokesman, Aimal Faizi, said
in Kabul that the president
would attend this weeks
meeting in an effort to resus-
citate the peace process.
The Pakistani Foreign
Ministry said in a state-
ment that the country has
consistently endeavored
to facilitate an Afghan-led
and Afghan-owned peace
process.
In a Monday afternoon
meeting with U.S. diplomatic
staff in Brussels, Kerry said
the leaders will talk about
the peace effort in the sim-
plest, most cooperative, most
cogent way.
New pope! Same church? Find out in RELI 162. Maymester.
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Opinion Tuesday, April 23, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 10
EDITorIal BoarD mEmBErs
Established 1893, 120 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATUrED OnlinE rEADEr cOmmEnT
Advocate for rural
public charter schools
TO THE EDITOR:
Public charter schools in
rural North Carolina pres-
ent an opportunity for more
school choice options and
economic development in
the states 85 rural counties.
Parental school choice
gives parents the freedom
to meet their childrens
needs regardless of income
or address. This value
should be a priority in all
North Carolina communi-
ties, especially given the
majority of public charter
schools are in urban coun-
ties, specifically in Wake
and Mecklenburg counties.
Advocating for rural pub-
lic charter schools ensures
that education resources
are available throughout
the state while providing
economic development
opportunities within disad-
vantaged communities.
In North Carolina, rural
public charter schools
represent 56 of the current
107 charters while charter
schools are only in 12 of
the 40 most economically
disadvantaged counties in
North Carolina.
Education continues
to be a high priority for
North Carolina residents
and expanding educational
opportunities in rural areas
would have a strong impact
and effect in the immediate
county.
For example, opening a
public charter school may
increase local job oppor-
tunities, spur creative use
of existing infrastructure,
incentivize community col-
laborations and increase
access to local resources.
While increasing public
charter schools in rural
communities could benefit
many, the idea also presents
challenges, according to the
National Alliance for Public
Charter Schools Beyond
City Limits Issue Brief.
One challenge is the bud-
getary constraints, which is
always a concern because
rural schools are often lim-
ited in funds due to high
operating costs and some-
times limited tax revenue.
However, public char-
ter schools bring a diverse
public and private revenue
stream to the community
through foundations, non-
profit organizations and pri-
vate donors. Secondly, due
to budgetary constraints
and commonly limited
capacity, there are limited
course offerings available in
rural public schools.
Meanwhile, public charter
schools can help to integrate
services and curriculums
between established charter
management organizations,
helping to lower the cost to
develop resources.
Another challenge is the
difficulty of teacher and
principal recruitment.
However, public charter
schools, in partnership
with a charter management
organization or leadership
incubator, could broaden
the pool of individuals
willing to serve in the com-
munity.
Rural communities also
lETTErS TO
THE EDiTOr
Lets include students (those who are here to
learn) and alumni (those who care about the
integrity of their alma mater) into the fight...
ChapelBill, on the relationship between faculty and athletics
(Hillsborough is) just a great little town
with tons of writers. Its remote, and it
seems removed from things.
Jill McCorkle, on Hillsborough as a destination for authors
EDiTOriAl cArTOOn By Mark Viser, mviser@email.unc.edu
Put a
fence
around
Raleigh
R
epublicans have a bone
to pick with UNC. Its a
conservative vs. liberal
dynamic that has defined the
precarious relationship of the
N.C. General Assembly with the
states flagship public university
for eons. But rarely has the
hostility been this pronounced.
From the infamous (and
unconstitutional) 1963 Speaker
Ban law targeting communists
to the bill filed earlier this
month to block gender-neutral
housing, conservatives in the
legislature have always been
fond of meddling with UNC
when its an easy political target.
The late U.S. Sen. Jesse
Helms (R-N.C.) was notorious
for bashing UNCs radical
tendencies in the 1960s. GOP
mega-donor and current head
budget writer Art Pope has
used his family foundation to
generously support the John
William Pope Center for Higher
Education Policy, UNCs most
outspoken detractor.
The opening salvo this year
was the resounding backlash
against Republican Gov. Pat
McCrorys disparaging remarks
about UNC gender studies
majors and the merits (or lack
thereof) of a liberal arts degree.
I wonder who GOP lawmakers
had in mind when they filed a
bill to make it harder for college
students to vote.
For the first time since the
1800s, the GOP has unchecked
power to set higher education
policy, write the budget and
appoint the UNC-system Board
of Governors. Its an unprec-
edented opportunity for critics
to flex their political muscle to
reshape the University in their
free-market vision.
Veteran Democratic strate-
gist Gary Pearce noted last
week: Chapel Hill is an
essential element of North
Carolinas progressive tradi-
tion. Which is why its in the
crosshairs. Pearce described
the current acrimony as the
Speaker Ban Law sequel.
The response has been loud
and angry. Student activists
created the N.C. Student Power
Union last year as a vehicle
for protest. Professors formed
Scholars for a Progressive
North Carolina to denounce the
GOPs policy agenda.
Outgoing Chancellor Holden
Thorp has vociferously opposed
McCrorys call for big tuition
hikes for out-of-state students.
Provost Bruce Carney described
the proposal to redirect that
money to the states general
fund as morally indefensible.
Even the appointment of
environmental scientist Carol
Folt as UNCs next chancellor
feels like a sharp rebuttal to
a Republican majority thats
not so keen on science or
the environment these days.
Remember, House Speaker
Thom Tillis reportedly said
last year his dream is to fire
all the chancellors and replace
them with general managers.
Folt is a renowned Ivy League
researcher, not a corporate CEO.
Conservative commenta-
tor Chub Seawell famously
summed up right-wing skepti-
cism about UNC as the states
liberal bastion: Why should
North Carolina build a zoo
when the state could just put
up a fence around Chapel Hill?
With no end in sight for the
battle between Republicans
and UNC, Im inclined to
start building a fence around
the Legislative Building in
Raleigh. Whos with me?
4/24: ODE TOALL-NIGHTERS
Michael Dickson discusses the
effects of sleep deprivation.
N
E
X
T
Stewart Boss
Old North State Politics
Senior public policy and public rela-
tions major from Bethesda, MD.
Email: sboss91@live.unc.edu
SPEAK OUT
Writing guidelines
Please type: Handwritten letters will not be accepted.
Sign and date: No more than two people should sign letters.
Students: Include your year, major and phone number.
Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number.
Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit
letters to 250 words.
suBMissiOn
Drop-off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary Street, Chapel
Hill, N.C. 27514
E-mail: opinion@dailytarheel.com
editOrs nOte: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily
represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect
the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which is made up of
eight board members, the opinion editor and the editor.
often have limited trans-
portation services due to
the high financial and time
costs to commute. As a solu-
tion, public charter schools
provide an alternate school
location and allow for local
education agencies to work
together to cover transpor-
tation expenditures.
These challenges are
common when providing
services in rural communi-
ties; however, with North
Carolinas strong focus on
education, many of these
issues can be addressed
through public and private
partnerships common with-
in public charter schools.
As a result, North
Carolina residents should
advocate for more rural pub-
lic charter schools, especially
in economically disadvan-
taged counties. This is an
opportunity to work past the
barriers and provide school
choice to parents while serv-
ing as a catalyst for economic
development with disadvan-
taged communities.
Maggie Parker 15
Masters of Public
Administration
Intern
Parents for Educational
Freedom in North Carolina
seniors, even a dollar
can make an impact
TO THE EDITOR:
With less than three
weeks left until graduation,
weve reached approximate-
ly 36 percent participation
for the senior campaign.
It has been truly gratify-
ing witnessing so many
seniors give back to UNC
while further advancing the
culture of philanthropy and
service Carolina is known
for. However, were still 391
donations away from our
goal of 48 percent.
The senior campaign
is a way for students to
give back to whatever
aspect of UNC has shaped
their Carolina experi-
ence. Students can give to
almost any organization on
campus, including Dance
Marathon, the Eve Carson
scholarship, club sports,
various departments and
professional schools and
thousands more.
If we reach our goal of
48 percent, an alumni will
make a matching donation
of $20,000, and the school
will engrave a Tar Heel logo
on our class stone, which
resides permanently at the
Bell Tower.
We know finances can
be tight for students, so
any donation of $1 or more
counts. That means just $1
can help us work toward a
$20,000 gift.
UNCs continued success
benefits every graduate, so
its important for seniors to
give back even if it is just
a dollar.
Help the class of 2013
leave its Heel print! Seniors
can make a gift at giving.
unc.edu/gift.
Tim Palmer 13
Senior Class President
Nora Chan 13
Senior Class Vice
President
Simon Scholl 13
Senior Campaign Chair
S
tudents interested
in campus parking
permits will have
to go through a different
process this summer when
applying for next years
allocation of spots.
While the old system
was not a perfect plan, this
replacement isnt much
better.
Students will now have
two weeks to register for
a lottery, from which the
spots will be randomly
allocated. Formerly, the
process was first-come,
first-served, with students
able to register at 9 a.m.
on the selected day.
Last year, 8,000
A walk in the parking
EDiTOriAl
students vied for just 400
available parking spots.
It was a rush to be one
of the first to register,
and success depended as
much on a good internet
connection as planning.
The new lottery process
is set in stone for next
year, and the Department
of Public Service has said
that there is a certain
number of spots for each
class, and students will be
filtered by their class year.
Since seniors are more
likely to live off campus,
DPS should make the
most significant portion
of the spots available to
them. At least half of the
spots should be allocated
to seniors. The remain-
ing half should be split
between juniors and
sophomores.
This new shift in policy
most directly benefits those
who like to sleep in a little
longer and institutionalizes
random selection.
Though the previous
system was not ideal, it
did reward students who
were willing to plan and
wake up early to secure a
spot.
In future years, DPS
should return to its first-
come, first-served process.
However, 9 a.m. on
a Wednesday 2012s
registration time isnt
the best idea. Perhaps a
time in the evening when
students arent at work
or commuting would be
more equitable.
And for those who
desperately need it,
theres still hardship
parking.
The parking lottery
should be sure to
emphasize class.
H
ouse Bill 843 is a
well-intentioned,
albeit misguided,
bill with potential ramifi-
cations that could destroy
the UNC honor system.
This bill intends to bol-
ster the rights that students
have during disciplinary
proceedings at institutions
across the UNC system by
giving students or student
organizations the right to
be represented by an attor-
ney at any point during a
university disciplinary pro-
ceeding.
In its current form,
the bills effects at this
University would be highly
ambiguous. At best, it
Give students due process
EDiTOriAl
would leave the honor
system intact, but at worst
it could be used to inject
attorneys into a student-
run honor system.
At UNC-CH, accused
students receive counsel
from members of the stu-
dent attorney generals staff
and are tried by other stu-
dents. But this isnt the case
at other schools across the
system where the judicial
system isnt student-run.
This could lead to dis-
crepancies between those
students who could afford
to hire attorneys and those
who could not. It could
also create a situation
where a full-time attorney
is arguing a case against
an undergraduate mem-
ber of the attorney gener-
als staff a disconcerting
power dynamic.
This bill tries to treat a
symptom of a larger issue.
Accused students might
feel university proceed-
ings trample on their due
process, and due to a lack
of transparency many stu-
dents are uncertain about
how university proceed-
ings operate.
Writing a single bill
that will create the desired
effects at each member
institution will be extremely
difficult. The best way
of providing students
appropriate due process is
through a discourse with
the administrators and
students leaders of each
UNC-system campus in
order to determine the best
solutions for that campus.
A catch-all bill would
have dramatically different
effects on each campus.
But dont destroy
self-governance on
the way.
G
iven the fact that
the recent years
damaging scan-
dals at UNC have been
traced back to athletics,
it only made sense for the
University to host Fridays
open campus discussion
on the role of athletics in a
university setting.
Of course, few answers
came out of the discussion.
Also, Chancellor Holden
Thorps suggestion that uni-
versity presidents shouldnt
be the ones ultimately
responsible for college ath-
letics suggests a fatalistic
and irresponsible outlook
on the universitys role.
But perhaps the most
Pay athletes their worth
EDiTOriAl
foundational issue and
one the athletics panel
could publicize is the
one most directly affecting
those who make college
athletics what it is: athletes.
This editorial board
can definitively say that
University athletes should
be paid, and have the right
to make money using their
names and likenesses.
This should happen for
two reasons: to eliminate
inequitable treatment and
reward the invaluable con-
tributions big-time ath-
letes give to their schools.
As of now, the NCAA
is a multi-billion dollar
business. And who drives
it? The athletes, of course.
In fact, athletes are the
only students on campus
who cant earn money off
their own name or like-
ness. Jay Bilas, an ESPN
analyst and former Duke
basketball player, rightly
told the panel this is a
conceptual and moral
problem. Athletes should
be able to market them-
selves just like any other
student on campus.
Universities and the
NCAA are making money
hand-over-fist off the
marketability of their star
athletes. And the athletes
themselves come up empty.
College athletes are fun-
damental to the success of
their schools, whose pres-
tige, image and fundraising
are often dependent on the
success of their athletes in
the field or on the court.
Its time to embrace this
fact and level the playing
field for all students and
that includes the athletes.
Athletes should
be able to market
themselves.
anDy Thomason EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
ChElsEa PhIPPs OPINION CO-EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
naThan DamBrosIo OPINION CO-EDITOR
sanEm kaBaCa ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR
NAYAb kHAN
TREY MANguM
zACH gAvER
MATTHEw OAkES
kAREEM RAMADAN
PATRICk RYAN
CODY wELTON
SIERRA wINgATE-bEY

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