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Friday, April 26, 2013 dailytarheel.com Volume 121, Issue 39
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By Nicole Comparato
University Editor
When a younger Holden Thorp played bass in the band, he
would think of himself as the guy who sits in the background
and makes the other instruments sound good.
As a student at UNC, he would go to the outside bar Hes
Not Here to enjoy a drink with his friends from the lab but
would leave at 9:30 at night, because there was work to do
and he took it seriously.
Throughout his life, Thorp was never the kind of per-
son who wanted to draw attention to himself, so as he rose
through the ranks at his alma mater and eventually earned
what he considers the most public position in North Carolina,
it was quite the adjustment.
But add in a few years of unraveling scandal, and the job
grew to be more difficult, as that faint spotlight on Thorp
turned into a high-powered microscope.
I was starting to feel that being the chancellor of one of
the most public universities in the world was maybe not per-
fectly suited to my skills, Thorp said.
Seven months since he announced his resignation, Thorp
is more confident than ever in his decision as he prepares
to leave for his new position as provost of Washington
University in St. Louis.
But some of Thorps colleagues disagree that he lacks the
skill set and personality to lead a public university.
I wouldnt say that, said Executive Vice Chancellor and
Provost Bruce Carney. I think he has the personality to be a
leader in a public or private (university).
Carney hopes this isnt the last UNC will see of Thorp, who
dedicated close to three decades as a student, professor, dean
of the College of Arts & Sciences and then chancellor.
Im hoping he ll come back some day, Carney said. I
dont know if that will happen, but I hope he does.
When Thorp steps out of South Building for good in less
than 10 weeks, one question will remain on the minds of
those who followed his chancellorship: What is his legacy?
Dr. Bruce Cairns, director of the North Carolina Jaycee
Burn Center who worked alongside Thorp on the chancellors
advisory committee for years, said all thats happened during
Thorps term should make the answer clear.
When we think about the legacy that he leaves behind,
think about this series and what those events could have
done, they could have torn the fabric of the University to its
core, he said.
Yet we had this individual who had all these skill sets that he
was able to put those things together, and whatever his personal
legacy is theres no question that were in a better place.
Assault records show inconsistencies
A Daily Tar Heel analysis of sexual assaults reported in 2010 reveals discrepancies in how the total number was compiled.
SEXUAL ASSAULT ON CAMPUS
By Caitlin McCabe
Senior Writer
Months after allegations surfaced
accusing UNC of violating federal
law when reporting sexual assaults,
a Daily Tar Heel analysis reveals that
the Universitys 2010 sexual assault
data is riddled with discrepancies.
The analysis raises questions about
one year of sexual assault reporting
2010 that has been scrutinized
since January, when former Assistant
Dean of Students Melinda Manning
accused the University of pressuring
her to underreport sexual assault.
The University has emphatically
denied Mannings allegation, citing
that the University Counsels office
reported 23 forcible sex offenses to
the federal government that year
seven more than the 16 forcible sex
offenses Manning submitted.
But a DTH assessment of the
23 incidents reported in 2010 dis-
covered discrepancies in how that
number was compiled calling into
question the Universitys vigilance in
collecting statistics for a year that is
now the subject of a federal investi-
gation.
Sexual assault data is com-
piled and submitted to the U.S.
Department of Education by the
Office of University Counsel.
Initial discrepancies for 2010
data emerged from three University-
produced documents, which
revealed that conflicting data was
produced for two reporting agencies.
Karen Moon, director of UNC
News Services, said the conflicting
sexual assault data reflects UNCs
evolving understanding about which
incident reports were received by
which reporting agency.
Moon said that though initial
discrepancies existed among the
agencies, its important that the total
number of 23 forcible sex offenses,
reported to the Department of
Education, remained consistent.
Manning could not be reached for
comment.
In February, the University pro-
vided the DTH with a breakdown
of how the 23 forcible sex offenses
were compiled in 2010, including
what campus and community agen-
cies submitted sexual assault data,
as well as how many incidents each
submitted.
The February breakdown detailed
that the University received sexual
assault data from four reporting
agencies in 2010: the Division of
Student Affairs, the Department of
Public Safety, the Chapel Hill Police
Department and UNC Hospitals.
Also in February, the University
provided the DTH with a second
document: an archived copy of the
2011 Campus Security Report. The
report is a federally mandated docu-
ment that logs crime statistics that
happen on and around campus for
the previous year.
A third University-produced
document was used in the DTHs
analysis: an online version of the
2011 Campus Security Report.
Close examination of the three
documents revealed discrepancies
Rite season deemed a success
Rite of Spring boosts Carolina Performing Arts ticket sales
The Rite of Spring at 100season led to an increase in overall ticket sales for Carolina Performing Arts. CPA
sold 4,638 more tickets than it did in 2011-12, giving it the second highest total in seven years.
SOURCE: MARK NELSON DTH/DANIELLE HERMAN
40,228
35,624
39,724
33,538
38,249
35,125
39,763*
06-07 07-08 08-09 09-10 10-11 11-12 12-13
* Denotes Rite of Spring at 100
By Samantha Sabin
Staff Writer
All eyes were on Carolina
Performing Arts Rite of Spring at
100 series in the fall. And now, at
its close, the yearlong experiment
has vindicated for CPA leaders the
idea that a year of performances can
be designed around a single theme
or idea and still be successful.
The thing we hope people take
away is the process of discovery and
learning can actu-
ally be enjoyable,
said Emil Kang,
UNCs executive
director for the
arts. The process
of learning doesnt
always have to be like homework.
The centennial celebration of
Vaslav Nijinsky and Igor Stravinskys
ballet, along with the regular season,
sold more than 39,700 tickets this
year, which eclipses last seasons
totals by more than 4,000. And this
years program garnered the highest
number of tickets sold CPA has seen
since the 2007-08 season.
But Kang said that although CPA
has received international attention
this year, Memorial Hall cannot and
will not become the next Carnegie
Hall, and thats OK.
If we were in New York City, that
would be our goal, but were not, he
said.
And despite the fact that CPA will
not sport a season quite like this
Carolina Performing Arts
yearlong season sold the
most tickets since 2007-08.
IT sector resilient
through downturn
RITE OF
SPRING
at 100
next year, Kang said The Rite of
Spring helped the company grow.
I think this year proves to me
that great ideas always come first,
Kang said.
We have to build a season around
an idea, rather than whether we have
the money or demand or shows.
Out of the 23 Rite of Spring per-
formances, seven sold out, compared
to only three sold-out regular season
By Madeline Will
Senior Writer
When Priscilla Alden first started
working in North Carolinas infor-
mation technology sector more than
20 years ago, personal computers
were exciting, new and rarely used.
As the years went by, Alden saw
the information technology world
transition from
word-process-
ing PCs to high-
speed, hand-
held devices.
And now, as
the Universitys
assistant vice chancellor for user
support and engagement, Alden
has seen how the new advances in
technology affect higher education.
(In) higher education, were
always pushing the envelope a little
bit, she said.
With draws like Research
Triangle Park, which is centered
around several top research uni-
versities, North Carolinas informa-
tion technology sector has thrived.
On Thursday, Gov. Pat McCrory
announced plans to build an
Innovation Center in the N.C.
Department of Environment and
Natural Resources building. The
center will be a place to test the
latest technology.
Brooks Raiford, president
and CEO of the N.C. Technology
Association, said job openings have
increased in information technology
from January to April. More than
100,000 North Carolinians work in
technology fields, he said.
That is a number that has not
The states technology
sector employs more
than 100,000 people.
SHIFTING GEARS:
A look into the states
changing economy
SEE IT SECTOR, PAgE 4
SEE RITE OF SPRING, PAgE 4
SEE ASSAULT DATA, PAgE 4
SEE THORP, PAgE 4
LAST DAY OF THE DTHS SEMESTER NEWS PUBLISHING
The DTH office will close Monday at 5 p.m. and reopen May 13 at 9 a.m.
Holden Thorp says hes
leaving the University on a
path to xing its problems.
NOTED. And now, with a disclaimer that
youre free to reject my advice if its not
your style, here are a few words:
Overachievers out there, slow down. A
thesis doesnt define your worth. You do.
Internalize that. Keep your shoulders back
and shrug off the people who dont get you.
Never think youve arrived. Onward.
QUOTED. People go to college to find who
they are as a person and find what they
want to do in life, and I kind of already
know that so it would be like Id be taking
a step back or something.
Lindsay Lohan is here to remind us
that despite all our uncertainties, were in
pretty good shape, arent we? Go Heels.
I
n times of anxiety and uncertainty aka the end of the school year
that brings so many existential crises we college kids love to lean
on the advice of others, specifically, garbage think pieces delineating
the shit we should, apparently, do to qualify as twenty-somethings.
Beyond the vapidity and self-indulgence of all these dumb lists, the worst
thing is the one-size-fits-all tone. Those writers happened to find stuff they
liked, and theyre here to tell you 10 Ways Youre Wasting Your Time in
College. Yeah, no. Instead, do what you need, instead of what you think you
should want. Figure out what makes you feel cool, what calms you down,
what challenges you. Not all of us can be the superstars of UNC. Some of us
are just gonna float along and succeed in our own way. And thats fine.
All the advice you shouldnt take
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone damaged prop-
erty at 107 Cole St. at 6:30
a.m. Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person threw a beer
bottle through a window,
reports state.
Damage to the window was
valued at $250, reports state.
Someone damaged prop-
erty at 105 Cole St. at 6:41
a.m. Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person threw an object
through a window. Damage
to the window was valued at
$100, reports state.
Someone shoplifted
at 1201 Martin Luther
King Jr. Blvd. at 9:05 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person took a
Budweiser beer, valued
at $6.99, without paying,
reports state.
Someone lost property
at 11 Frances St. between
1:50 p.m. and 2:08 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person placed items on
the roof of a car and lost them
while in transit, reports state.
The person lost a purse,
valued at $50, a Samsung
phone, valued at $300, and
$400 in cash, among other
items, reports state.

Someone stole property
at 201 E. Main St. between
12:05 a.m. and 12:26 a.m.
Tuesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
The person stole a white
iPhone 5 and a green wallet,
reports state.
Someone reported a
suspicious condition at 1130
Hillsborough Road at 5:48
p.m. Tuesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
The person said a man
came to her door trying to sell
a vacuum, reports state.
POLICE LOG
News Friday, April 26, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2
beads for a benefit
A
lyssa Patel, a junior economics and public
policy major, sets up beads in Polk Place to
sell for Carolina for Amani on Thursday. The
group is a part of the Campus Y and a branch of the
Amani Childrens Foundation of Winston-Salem.
dth/taylor sweet
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.
www.dailytarheel.com
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tOday
Tour of coker Arboretum: A
Priceless gem walking tour with
grant Parkin, natural science
educator at the n.C. Botanical
gardens. free and open to the
public.
Time: 3 p.m.
location: UnC Visitors Center
Art a la carte for UNc students:
get your hands dirty making
still life drawings with charcoal.
$8 per class. Materials provided.
Designed for beginners but also
suitable for those with some
experience. Instructed by Con-
nie Zamorano, artist, and Erica
Longenbach, art historian.
Time: 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.
location: ackland art Museum
Dirty bourbon river show
concert: also featuring Crystal
Bright and the Silver Hands. all
ages. $8.
Time: Doors open 9 p.m., show
begins 9:30 p.m.
location: Local 506
lila cD release show: Also with
I Was Totally Destroying It and
Unifer. $5 to $7.
Time: Doors open 8:30 p.m.,
show begins 9:30 p.m.
location: Cats Cradle
UNc vs. Duke: The Tar Heel
mens lacrosse team begins aCC
Tournament games by playing
the Blue Devils at home.
Time: 7:30 p.m.
location: Kenan Stadium
UNc vs. boston college: The
Tar Heel womens lacrosse team
plays the Eagles in the aCC
Tournament.
Time: 3 p.m.
location: Fetzer Field
To make a calendar submission,
email calendar@dailytarheel.
com. Please include the date of
the event in the subject line, and
attach a photo if you wish. Events
will be published in the newspaper
on either the day or the day before
they take place.
COMMUnIty CaLEndar
satUrday
mipso concert: Robust Records
presents the Chapel Hill four-
some, which plays a blend of folk,
rock and bluegrass. also with
andrew Marlin & josh Moore and
Virgins family Band. $10.
Time: Doors open 8 p.m., show
begins 8:30 p.m.
location: Cats Cradle
honeychile concert: Presented
by 506 front Room. also featur-
ing Pussy Mountain. free.
Time: Doors open 8:30 p.m.,
show begins 9 p.m.
location: Local 506
The Student Experience in the
Research University (SERU) survey
is a powerful way to share your
experience, thoughts and opinions
with the University.
Purticipunts cun win one oI Ioor Apple iPud minis
und[or one oI So Amuzon.com e-giIt curds
The sorvey tukes uboot o - g minotes
Yoor responses ure condentiul
Pleuse muke sore yoor voice is heurd.
For details visit:
curolinusorveys.web.onc.edo[sero[
Want to help
shape the future
of Carolina and
win an iPad mini?
GET THE SCOOP ON UPCOMING PERFORMANCES AND EXCLUSIVE PREMIERES,
BUY TICKETS, AND GO BEHIND-THE-SCENES WITH THE ARTISTS AT
THERITEOFSPRINGAT100.ORG 919.843.3333
Martha Graham Dance Company returns to Memorial
Hall for two nights to perform Myth and Transformation,
featuring the classic version of The Rite of Spring as rst
choreographed by Martha Graham in 1983, along with
Aaron Copelands timeless Appalachian Spring and the
world premiere of Rust. Student tickets only $10.
MOVEMENT
NEVER LIES.
MARTHA
GRAHAM
DANCE
COMPANY
UNCS MEMORIAL HALL
FRIDAY APRIL 26
U
8:00 PM
SATURDAY APRIL 27
U
8:00 PM
News Friday, April 26, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3
City BRiEFs
Chapel Hill Transit hosts info sessions
about South Columbia Street project
Chapel Hill Transit will host information ses-
sions about the South Columbia Street widening
project today and Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 1
p.m. in the Student Union.
The sessions will give people the chance to learn
about transit service changes related to the project,
which will widen South Columbia Street between
Purefoy Road and Manning Drive.
Between May 13 and Aug. 13, traffic on South
Columbia Street will run one way from Fordham
Boulevard toward Manning Drive.
Chapel Hill Fire Department warns about
recent impersonators of fire inspectors
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chamber of
Commerce said in a release Thursday that people
impersonating fire inspectors recently visited and
intimidated local business owners of restaurants
and convenience stores.
The Chapel Hill Fire Department said the
impersonators claimed to conduct kitchen inspec-
tions and system service.
Townspeople are encouraged to contact the
town of Chapel Hill Fire Department and the
Carrboro Fire-Rescue Department with questions
or concerns.
Campus BRiEF
Positions available on The Daily Tar Heels
summer staff; no experience necessary
The Daily Tar Heel is seeking students to serve
on the summer staff on a multitude of writing and
visual desks.
Interested students should email dth@dailytar-
heel.com, and the summer editor, Megan Cassella,
will be in contact about opportunities.
No previous experience is required. All inter-
ested students are encouraged to join.
From staff and wire reports
inBRIEF
Website aims to help town parking
By Paige Ladisic
Staff Writer
A new website launched this week may
help alleviate the hassle of parking for those
hoping to grab a bite or hit the stores on
Franklin Street.
The site, Park on the Hill, aims to solve
parking problems by showing downtown
visitors where parking is available on a loca-
tor map.
The Chapel Hill Downtown Partnership
joined with the Chapel Hill/Orange County
Visitors Bureau and the town of Chapel Hill
to create Park on the Hill.
The site launched Monday and shows all
parking lots, garages and metered spots
as well as their locations, costs and hours of
operation.
Bobby Funk, assistant director of the
Downtown Partnership, said when creating
the site, the group hoped to answer all visi-
tors parking questions.
Its a one-stop resource tool for anyone
whos trying to find parking in downtown
Chapel Hill, Funk said.
But he said he thinks Chapel Hill can
still do more to improve parking down-
town.
Theres always room for improvements
when it comes to parking, and were always
working to make those improvements as we
can, Funk said.
Laurie Paolicelli, executive director of the
Visitors Bureau, said she was pleased when
the town and Downtown Partnership came
to her with the idea for a parking guide
website.
We were a ready partner, because more
than 2 million visitors come here a year, she
said. According to our research, 80 percent
of them drive.
Paolicelli said it was important that the
site show the different parking options
available downtown, with a catchy title and
a clean design.
We all rolled up our sleeves and plotted
the lots we have, she said.
And Paolicelli said she thinks Park on the
Hill will be an effective tool to make finding
Carol Folt
takes action
on campus
turmoil
Downtown parking options are
shown on Park on the Hill.
By Marisa DiNovis
Staff Writer
One burning question surrounding the future
leadership of Chancellor-elect Carol Folt is wheth-
er the interim president of Dartmouth College can
manage the sort of controversy associated with a
large public university.
But Folt didnt have to wait until July 1 to prac-
tice her crisis communication.
After a protest at an event for admitted students
April 19, Folt and other administrators canceled
classes Wednesday to address social justice issues.
Folt could not be reached for comment Thursday.
Dartmouth sophomore Alex Procton said the
protesters forced their way into an auditorium
where freshmen were putting on a skit about
Dartmouth campus life for prospective students.
Procton said the protesters held signs about
racism, homophobia and sexism at the college and
chanted, Dartmouth has a problem. He said the
students protested because they felt the skit was
an inaccurate depiction of Dartmouth life.
Procton said offensive comments were posted
online, including threats toward the protesters.
Justin Anderson, a Dartmouth spokesman, said
the leaders of the college agreed it was worthwhile
to cancel classes for the day in response to both the
protest and the issues from which it precipitated.
Ultimately, it was (Folt) working with the dean
of faculty who decided to pause and have a
day of reflection where students, faculty and staff
could take a critical look at the campus culture
and try to figure out ways to improve the campus
environment and create space for a respectful dis-
course and disagreement, Anderson said.
Jessica Pettitt, a social justice and diversity con-
sultant, said her visit to Dartmouth Wednesday had
been planned for about a year, but that she was asked
to become the keynote speaker in light of the protest.
I personally think that the correct decision
was made to stop courses, not to stop learning,
Pettitt said.
Anderson said Pettitt spoke in an auditorium
with a 200-person capacity, and there were five
overflow rooms where her speech was aired.
Pettitt, Dartmouth administrators, three stu-
dents and one 2012 graduate, spoke to 1,500 stu-
dents on the schools quad later in the day. About
2,500 students and faculty then attended a com-
munity lunch, Anderson said.
Procton said he thought the day of activism was
well-received by the student body.
There were a lot of people who posted on
Facebook saying, I know it can be tempting to
take the day off and just drink a lot tonight, but we
need to address these issues, Procton said.
UNC sophomore Katie Coletta said Folts
actions at Dartmouth make her hopeful for future
awareness promotion on this campus.
I feel like theres just a lot of things going on
on campus that really need to be changed, Coletta
said. Its not just campus culture its the culture
we have in the U.S., and I dont think that can be
changed so easily but I would love to see efforts
changed by people in authority.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
Dartmouth College canceled
classes due to a protest on campus.
VISIT THE WEBSITE
To check out the Park on the Hill website,
which launched Monday, visit:
www.parkonthehill.com
140 west opens today
dth file photo
Chapel Hill officials and leaders of Ram Development Company work together to break
ground on the 140 West Franklin multi-use development at a Jan. 5, 2011 ceremony.
dth file/katie bailey
Construction at the 140 West development site
neared completion on Jan. 21, 2012.
online sellers may have to pay sales taxes
By Claire Strickland
Staff Writer
Online retailers such as Amazon.com
and eBay have been enjoying the benefits of
not paying sales taxes in states like North
Carolina for years but a controversial U.S.
Senate bill would permit the collection of
taxes for online purchases.
The bill, known as the Marketplace
Fairness Act and introduced in the Senate
last week, would allow states to collect state
and local taxes from internet retailers at the
time transactions take place.
Per current law, states are only authorized
to collect sales taxes if the merchant has a
physical store, business office or warehouse
in the state. Consumers are technically
required to pay the tax on online purchases,
but it is rarely enforced by retailers.
Supporters of the bill in North Carolina
say the legislation would benefit brick-and-
mortar businesses that create jobs in the
state, helping them compete with online
retailers.
Christie Burris, spokeswoman for the
N.C. Retail Merchants Association, said the
state loses nearly $436 million in sales tax
revenue when residents do not report online
purchases.
Burris said the bill would not create a
new tax, but force businesses to pay a tax
that they already owe.
Its time to create a level playing field,
she said.
John Gorsuch, director of UNC Student
Stores, said he is in favor of the bill
because it would help standing businesses
like Student Stores keep pace with online
competitors.
But some online marketplaces that host
retailers on their site, such as eBay, fear the
bill would place a burden on those small
businesses.
In an email sent to the eBay community,
eBay CEO John Donahoe said the bill could
undermine competition, consumer choice
and low prices for small online businesses.
Tod Cohen, vice president and deputy
general counsel of government relations at
eBay, said in a statement that the bill would
impose unfair taxes on the internet retailers
hosted by eBay.
(It would be) treating them the same
as large national retailers who have the
resources and capabilities to collect sales
taxes nationwide, Cohen said.
Businesses generating less than $1
million annually in U.S. sales can qualify
for a small seller exception, which would
exempt them from paying the taxes, the
bill states.
Lew Ebert, president and CEO of the N.C.
Chamber of Commerce, said the bill would
also help simplify the states tax code.
Online-only retailers (would have) to
adhere to the exact same tax policy that
North Carolina retailers comply with every
day, Ebert said.
Brent Lane, director of the Carolina
Center for Competitive Economies, said the
bill is multifaceted but small online busi-
nesses would feel the most impact.
Still, Lane said, the bill would benefit
North Carolinas economy and its resi-
dents.
When the state wins, we all win, he said.
The bill, which has bipartisan support, is
expected to continue moving forward in the
Senate next week.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
The bill could benefit small
businesses in the state.
dth/taylor sweet
parking easier.
We dont hear the complaints so much
as we hear the confusion and questions, she
said.
Ryan Hill, a manager of The Clothing
Warehouse at 109 E. Franklin St., said he
thinks parking is more of a problem for visi-
tors than Chapel Hill residents.
While Hill said he hadnt previously
heard of the Park on the Hill website, he
said he thought it would benefit those who
are unfamiliar with downtown Chapel
Hill.
Locals know where parking is, but
maybe not tourists or people who never
come down here, he said. To those targeted
people, its probably a good idea.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
A
fter more than 10 years of planning and construction, the 140 West development will officially open today
with a grand opening ceremony at 7 p.m. The $75 million mixed-use development is bringing condos,
retail space and parking space to Franklin Street.
From Page One Friday, April 26, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4
Nobodys prepared
Thorp admits he had
enjoyed a streak of good
luck as dean of the College
before taking the reins of the
University in 2008.
UNC had just seen the three
best budgets in history, fund-
raising was going well, and
Thorp was even giving raises.
Everybody thought I was a
genius, he said. I did probably
do a good job at that, but I had
all the intangibles going for me.
And then I got in this job,
and had a bad budget, an
athletics crisis, discovered a
14-year-old academic fraud
problem, so I had a lot of bad
luck in that sense, but Id had
a lot of good luck.
Though Thorp believes the
administration handled the
budget challenges well, noth-
ing prepared him for what was
on the horizon with athletics.
We had never had any-
thing like that in 50 years that
we just didnt have as much
stamina and muscle tone as we
needed to deal with it, he said.
He said the gravity of the
situation hit him the day
the news broke about for-
mer tutor Jennifer Wileys
improper assistance to foot-
ball player Marvin Austin.
He went to football practice
to talk to the team as a news
helicopter hovered above.
So you can talk all the
time about Holden wasnt
prepared for this nobodys
prepared no college profes-
sor is prepared to go talk to
somebody and have the news
chopper filming them.
As the situation escalated,
Thorp said, it became harder
to stay on top of everything.
But Thorp said now, despite
the problems he has faced, pos-
itive aspects of his tenure will
carry the narrative forward.
With the hiring of Athletic
Director Bubba Cunningham,
football coach Larry Fedora
and Carol Folt, who will step in
as chancellor on July 1, Thorp
said aspects of UNCs image
including its recently criticized
handling of sexual assault
are on their way to being fixed.
Throughout my life Ive
thorp
from page 1
emerging from two agen-
cies: Student Affairs and the
Department of Public Safety.
The three documents
offered three versions of the
number of forcible sex offens-
es reported solely to Student
Affairs in 2010:
11 forcible sex offenses:
The February breakdown
indicates that Student Affairs
reported 16 total forcible
sex offenses in 2010 11 of
which were reported solely
to Student Affairs and five
of those were reported to
both Student Affairs and the
Department of Public Safety.
Eight forcible sex offens-
es: The archived version of the
2011 Campus Security Report
includes a footnote for forcible
sex offenses, which says that
eight incidents were reported
solely to Student Affairs.
14 forcible sex offenses:
The online version of the
2011 Campus Security Report
includes a similar footnote
for forcible sex offenses, but
says that 14 incidents were
reported solely to Student
Affairs. The report provided
no asterisk explaining why
the change was made from
the previous report.
Analysis of the February
breakdown document also
indicated discrepancies with-
in the Department of Public
Safety for 2010:
10 forcible sex offenses:
The February breakdown
indicates that 10 forcible sex
offenses were reported to the
Department of Public Safety.
Nine forcible sex offenses:
Randy Young, spokesman
for the Department of Public
Safety, said in an interview
that nine forcible sex offenses
in 2010 were reported to
Public Safety.
The Daily Tar Heel
addressed these discrepancies
with Moon, who said the con-
flicting numbers were a result
of inaccurate information
collected from blind reporting
forms a resource that pro-
vides sexual assault survivors
the option to report an inci-
dent of sexual assault without
attaching their names to the
report.
Blind reporting forms,
submitted to Student Affairs,
give survivors the option to
provide information about
whether their sexual assault
was reported to law enforce-
ment.
Moon said some blind
reporting forms were filled
out incorrectly causing the
numbers reported by each
agency to be skewed.
Moon said questions raised
by the DTH about discrepan-
cies prompted the University
to revisit the 2010 incident
reports.
She provided a second,
updated version of the
February breakdown of the
2010 data offering a fourth
data set containing entirely
new numbers:
12 forcible sex offenses:
The updated breakdown indi-
cates that Student Affairs still
reported 16 total forcible sex
offenses in 2010 but instead,
12 were reported solely to
the Office of Student affairs,
and four were reported to
both Student Affairs and the
Department of Public Safety.
Nine forcible sex offenses:
The updated breakdown indi-
cates that nine forcible sex
offenses were reported to the
Department of Public Safety.
Consistent with the
February breakdown, the
Universitys updated 2010
breakdown included one forc-
ible sex offense reported to
UNC Hospitals and one forc-
ible sex offense reported to the
Chapel Hill Police Department.
Vice Chancellor for
Student Affairs Winston
Crisp said it is likely that the
discrepancies exist because of
the different points in time in
which the data was evaluated.
The important thing in
this situation is that we are
consistently reporting 23,
Crisp said. If these discrep-
ancies meant that we werent
getting that number every
time, that would mean we
dont have a grip on the inci-
dences.
That isnt the problem
here, he said.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
assault Data
from page 1
shows out of the 25 total.
But Mark Nelson, CPAs
director of marketing and
public relations, said The
Rite of Spring shows were
more difficult to advertise.
Its about getting in front
of people, especially when its
about a new work, he said.
In an after-performance
survey, audience members at
The Cleveland Orchestra per-
formance in March, a regular
season show, were asked how
they heard about the show.
The top three answers were:
CPAs brochure, at roughly half,
the website, at roughly one-
third, and the email subscrip-
tion, at roughly one-third.
The same survey was also
given after puppeteer Basil
Twists show earlier this month,
a Rite of Spring show. The
top three responses were the
email subscription and the bro-
chure, at one-third each, and a
friend, at one-fourth.
Nelson said the results
were more evenly distributed
for the Basil Twist survey,
and it showed more influence
from articles in the national
media.
But one strategy CPA relied
on was campus collaboration.
During the course of the
year, 14 courses were offered
that tied into the Rite of
Spring series.
When you get students
involved, you get professors
involved, and it becomes
more than just a single per-
formance, Nelson said.
Joe Florence, CPAs mar-
keting manager, said his team
thinks of different strategies
for each performance.
You have to treat each per-
formance like its its own item
and reach out accordingly,
and sometimes you have to
do just print ads and you let it
go, he said.
The Rite of Spring even-
tually became its own mar-
keting tool, though. Although
some of the performances in
the series were abstract in
nature, audiences still attend-
ed because the Rite of Spring
name was attached to it.
One such performance was
Basil Twists show, Kang said.
If it werent a Rite of
Spring project, I promise you
it wouldnt have been so suc-
cessful, he said.
At the height of it, its still
abstract theater. It has no
characters, no plot, no pup-
pets really. Its just images,
and yet we had two sold-out
houses. People went crazy.
But, overall, Kang said
The Rite of Spring series
exceeded expectations.
Our objective was never
to get the whole campus to
see this thats not realistic,
Kang said. What was real-
istic, I think, was to build a
sense of awareness that this
anniversary was present and
that we were all around it.
Contact the desk editor at
arts@dailytarheel.com.
rItE oF sprING
from page 1
declined in a way that many
other sectors declined during
the (economic) downturn,
Raiford said. Its a good field
to be in the demand is high
and the average wages are two
to three times what the aver-
age wage overall is in North
Carolina.
Jason Mooneyham, execu-
tive director of U.S. sales at
Lenovo, said the company
moved to North Carolina
after acquiring IBMs person-
al computer division in 2005
and remained because of the
quality of life.
Lenovo employs about
3,000 in the state, he said.
And in addition to hard-
ware companies like Lenovo,
the state is also home to soft-
ware companies like SAS.
Youve got a very good
cross-section of talents, of
companies that intertwine
very well together, he said.
Lenovo works with univer-
sities, especially Wake Forest
University and UNC, to get
feedback on its products.
Theres a strong higher
education presence in the
Triangle area a lot of talent
we can recruit from, he said.
In addition to recruiting
students for jobs and intern-
ships, Lenovo works with
UNC as part of the Carolina
Computing Initiative, he said.
Alden said UNC has a spe-
cial relationship with Lenovo
because the company values
students and administrators
input.
We tend to be the canary
in the coal mine, she said.
We see (something wrong)
pretty quickly because we
have a big enough population.
We ll help them troubleshoot
what the problem is, and
they ll fix it and make it better
for the next computer.
Raiford said technology is
always evolving.
You have to constantly
upgrade your skills, he said.
Mooneyham said for
consumers, technology will
continue to expand until it
touches every aspect of ones
life with phones, cars and
even refrigerators becoming
more interactive.
Lenovos work with univer-
sities helps the company see
where technologys heading,
he said.
Students want informa-
tion all the time, he said.
You wont find any more of a
demand than you do on col-
lege campuses.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
It sECtor
from page 1
sometimes gotten myself
into these types of difficulties
because I am inquisitive and
ask a lot of questions about
whats going on, he said.
But Ive always managed
to find a good way to fix it all
in the end, even if it wasnt an
elegant pathway to get there.
Enough giant lizards
When Thorp tries to
explain to friends his new
position as provost, he puts it
in terms they understand.
Its sort of like being Mr.
Spock, he said about assisting
Chancellor Mark Wrighton.
You stay on the ship and do
all the analyzing and Captain
Kirk goes down to the planet
and fights the giant lizard.
Ive had enough Ive
fought enough giant lizards.
And now that Thorp is
finishing the fight, he thinks
about the times he felt like
the right person doing the
right thing at the right time.
And they usually involved
students, faculty and staff.
I feel like the way I was able
to connect with and listen to
the people on campus was as
good as I could do, Thorp said.
Hes proud of UNCs growth
in research funding, his revi-
talization of town politics and
what he has put in place to
move the University forward,
including emphasizing inno-
vation and entrepreneurship.
James Holman, a house-
keeping crew leader, said
Thorp has helped change
the culture of housekeeping
on campus, and there might
never be another chancellor
who is as concerned about
staff issues as Thorp is.
Hes fantastic the man
I would do anything for him,
Holman said. Anything hed
ask me to do, I would do it.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
No college profes-
sor is prepared to
have the news chop-
per filming them.
holden thorp,
UNC chancellor
8pm door Shows starts at 9
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Friday, April 26, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 5
SportsFriday
Grice lines up a shot at her goal
dth file/kaki pope
Casey Grice is a junior on UNCs womens golf team. She aspires to play on the LPGA Tour after what has so far been a successful college career.
By Dylan Howlett
Staff Writer
It started with a suggestion from her
mother. Casey Grice was just 12.
As soon as I could walk, I was kicking
a soccer ball, Grice said. She played with
a competitive travel team near her College
Station, Texas, home until her team disband-
ed in high school. Grice also played volleyball
and basketball, but without soccer her spring
schedule remained vacant.
Then came the moment that would shape
the next nine years of her life. Grices older
brother, David, was set to play in a local golf
tournament. Her mother insisted that she
tag along.
You have to go, Grice recalled her mother
saying. Youd probably rather play than walk
around and watch for five hours.
She registered her daughter for the tour-
nament and handed her a set of clubs.
Just go out and have fun, she told her
daughter.
Did she ever.
It wasnt a competitive round, and she
didnt play particularly well but Grice fell
in love with the sport.
So began a staggering ascent up the ranks
of golf that has hit a high point this weekend
at the North Texas LPGA Shootout in Irving,
Texas, where the top Tar Heels womens
golfer will rub elbows with the pros.
Obviously, its just the start, because I
want to be competing in majors, Grice said,
her tone more determined than brash.
Her competitive career began rather
inauspiciously in middle school. Grice said
she typically shot in the 50s in nine holes.
Thats a blood-boiling prospect for any
golfer, but Grice wasnt too concerned about
her scores. Having fun and practicing with
teammates who made the sport even more
enjoyable was good enough for her.
I started off the same as everyone else,
Grice said. Its a hard sport.
Easy for her to say.
Grice advanced to the Texas State
Regionals her freshman year of high school
and missed qualifying for the state champi-
onship by a few strokes. She was 15.
After only two or three years of practice,
Im so close to state, Grice said she thought
at the time. I think I want to do something
with this. Just a little improvement, some
hard work, and I can do it.
She won the Texas State 5A Championship
the following year as a sophomore. She was
16.
And after that, her thoughts became a bit
more zealous.
Once you get past a certain level, this
is fun, and I want to keep recreating these
shots, Grice thought afterward.
Going from novice to state champ is no
small task its a quantum leap that Grice
said she couldnt have taken without the help
of two key mentors.
Her grandfather laid the foundation of her
now flourishing game, Grice said. Malcolm
Douglass had been a decorated golfer in his
own right at Texas A&M. He took home sev-
eral collegiate titles and had the chance to
play professionally.
But law school beckoned, as did his wife
and the chance to raise a family, so Douglass
set down his clubs. Two generations later,
he would see enough promise in his grand-
daughter to dust off his irons and teach Grice
the game he loved.
He knew the game so well, Grice said.
He got my mechanics and my basic swing
off to a great start.
Soon after she entered her first tourna-
ment with her brother, Grice and Douglass
set up a practice net and mat off the familys
back porch in College Station. Grice would
smack plastic golf balls into the net nearly
every day while her grandfather offered tips
about her grip, stance and other golf facets.
Thats why I feel like Im here, Grice said.
Theres been so many other people along the
way that have helped me, but looking back
to the beginning, it was more because of him
getting me started.
Hes been there the whole way.
Grice quickly flashed enough skill to
warrant more formalized instruction. Her
mother approached Jeanne Sutherland, the
former head pro at Vail Golf Club, about
teaching Grice the finer points of golf.
There a partnership began, and it endures
to this day. Grice would visit Sutherland in
Vail, Colorado, during the summer to play
practice rounds and tournaments under her
UNC to start ACC Tournament with Eagles
By Grace Raynor
Staff Writer
Its been more than a
decade since the North
Carolina womens lacrosse
team has brought an ACC
tournament title back to
Chapel Hill.
In the last three years the
Tar Heels have made it to the
championship game only to
fall short each time.
The quest to snap that
streak starts at 3 p.m. today
on Fetzer Field, when the
squad will take on Boston
College, who defeated
Virginia Tech in the first
round Thursday.
Senior Kara Cannizzaro
said she could not be more
excited to lace up her cleats
and run out onto her home
field. But she said that in
order to be successful against
the Eagles today, it all comes
down to focus.
Were really just focused
on being in the moment and
playing our game how we
want to play, she said.
I think its great that were
at home, but we would be
ready to play wherever we go.
The last time the Tar Heels
The womens lacrosse
team beat Boston
College in March.
ACC TournAMenT
Time: 3 p.m. today
Location: Fetzer Field
Info: bit.ly/11P7FPB
matched up with Boston
College, UNC came away with
a 19-11 win as Brittney Coppa
led the way with five goals.
Since the victory, junior
Abbey Friend said her team
has matured and has proved
it can play at the highest level.
She, too, said focusing on
one play at a time and break-
ing the two halves down into
four quarters will help the
group maintain its focus.
In the first 15 minutes left
in the first half, we kind of all
take a mental note and kind
of let the first quarter go and
really focus on the second
quarter, she said.
Focusing on the moment
is really important, not neces-
sarily looking back at what
happened or looking toward
the future of the game.
And with five Tar Heels
just awarded ACC honors,
Cannizzaro said her team
should have no problem
doing that.
I have more than enough
confidence in my team that
we can finish the games now,
she said.
We were young, but were
old and mature now. Weve
got everything together so Im
excited for the weekend.
A win today would carry
the Tar Heels to the ACC final
yet again, where they might
just see top-seeded Maryland
waiting for them.
The Terrapins snapped
UNCs 11-game winning streak
this season with a one-goal
victory in College Park. They
also defeated the Tar Heels in
the ACC final last season.
Were both fast athletic
midfields, strong defenses,
strong attacks, Friend said.
Its just the matchup of two
really great teams and its
always fun playing them.
Though Cannizzaro said it
would certainly be an exciting
game of lacrosse if the two
teams were to meet again,
the senior said she is more
focused on being with her
teammates in her final ACC
tournament.
I like to act like its not
my senior year. Its hard, its
sad, but its also awesome and
amazing at the same time,
because this is my favorite
team. I would never want to
play a senior year with any
other team, she said.
Its been a great run, but
I think its far from over and
we ll have so much fun. Im
really excited for it.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
See GriCe, page 10
Casey Grice is playing in her
first LPGA event this weekend.
Friday, April 26, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6 Friday, April 26, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7
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Thursday, 5/9/13 3pm-6pm
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SportsFriday Friday, April 26, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 8
swing coachs supervision.
Its been a great friend-
ship, Grice said. Shes like
a second mom now because
weve known each other for
so long.
The collegiate accolades
piled up as quickly as they
had in high school: a 26th-
place finish at the NCAA
Championships her freshman
year, All-ACC her sophomore
year and top-15 finishes in
seven of UNCs nine events
this year.
Casey definitely has a
gift, said Sutherland, now
the womens golf coach
at Southern Methodist
University. She has a gift to
play the game without really
thinking a lot about what shes
done. She can go play and not
get down on herself while shes
playing, or try too hard.
Grices pursuit of the LPGA,
which she hopes will be her
full-time employer after she
graduates, hasnt diminished
her commitment to UNC
Grices first instinct and first
priority, she said.
Shes just an awesome
person inside and out, junior
teammate Katherine Perry
said. Shes a great golfer,
great teammate and just
someone you want on your
team.
Grice felt some nerves
March 12 standing on the first
tee at Las Colinas Country
Club in Irving, the site of the
qualifier and now the tourna-
ment. They hardly showed
she rolled in a birdie putt on
the 16th hole, then made par
on the final two holes to clinch
a spot in the tournament.
There was a moment after
I qualified after I knew
that my score was in and I
was going to be one of them
that it was a little surreal,
Grice said. This is what Ive
been working for.
Its what shes dreamt about
ever since she became seri-
ous about golf. She idolized
Annika Sorenstam the
Tiger Woods of womens golf,
said Grice and has read sev-
eral of Sorenstams books.
Thats who I want to be
one day, on that leaderboard
up there competing with those
great players, Grice said.
Shell get her chance this
week when she tees it up in
front of her mother, brothers,
Sutherland and close friends.
Health issues will likely keep
Douglass in his Virginia home,
while Perry says her team will
be glued to the Golf Channel.
Sutherland and UNC
coach Jan Mann both said
Grice will need to keep refin-
ing her game in particular,
Grice is searching for more
confidence with her putter.
But both said, in no uncertain
terms, that Grice has the tal-
ent to make the LPGA.
I think shes definitely one
of the more gifted players
(Ive coached), Mann said.
Her natural ability is defi-
nitely a strong point for her.
When visiting Sutherland
in Vail, Grice often met up
with Mike Ortiz, the executive
director of the Vail Recreation
District, to play a round in
her spare time.
Whenever you make it (to
the LPGA), hit me up for a
caddy job, Ortiz would often
kid her.
Grice remembered the
running gag, and Ortiz kept
his word he ll carry Grices
bag in Irving.
It ll be a good time to get
my feet wet with the profes-
sional tour, see where I am
and what I can improve on,
Grice said of the tournament.
Of course, its going to be
crazy playing with profes-
sional players that Ive been
watching on TV.
Crazy. Perhaps thats the
best way to describe a mete-
oric rise that Casey Grice
hopes will land her among
the stars of her sport.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
grice
from page 5
Cooper, Williams selected in NFL Draft
Offensive guard Jonathan
Cooper was taken off the board
early in the night by the Arizona
Cardinals with the seventh pick.
Twenty-one picks later, defensive
tackle Sylvester Williams was
picked by the Denver Broncos at 28.
They became the fifth and sixth
former Tar Heels since 2008 to
be picked in the first round of the
NFL draft.
Bernard will likely be
picked in the rounds
tomorrow.
With the 28th pick in the NFL draft,
6-foot-3, 315-pound tackle is headed
to the Denver Broncos. Williams was
one of two Tar Heels picked in the first
round. Williams spent the 2011 and
2012 seasons at UNC after transferring
from Coffeyville Community College.
With the seventh pick of the 2013 NFL
draft, Cooper became the first UNC line-
man selected in the first round of the NFL
draft since Harris Barton in 1987. He was
a 2012 consensus All-America Selection
and won the 2012 Jacobs Blocking Trophy,
given to the ACCs top offensive lineman.
Jonathan cooper
position: og
pick #: 7, to arizona
Sylvester Williams
position: DT
pick #: 28, to Denver
WilliamS StatS
Four-star prospect coming out
of high school.
Recorded eight and a half sacks
in two seasons with the Tar Heels.
First-team All-ACC last season.
Pro-Football Weekly All-
American last season.
27 bench-press repetitions at
225 pounds at the NFL combine.
Recorded 13.5 tackles for 50
yards lost in 2012.
cooperS StatS
Outland Trophy Finalist, given to
the nations top interior lineman.
35 bench-press repetitions at
225 pounds at the NFL combine.
First team All-ACC 2012,
Second team All-ACC in 2011
and 2010.
One of 25 Lombardi Award
final candidates.
Fourth offensive lineman picked
in the first round from UNC.
Friday, April 26, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 9
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
HElp MY DAUgHTER lEARN SpANiSH Seeking
a Spanish tutor to talk and play with toddler
2 afternoons per week. Contact Katharyn at
katharyn.vreeland@gmail.com.
SEEKiNg ExpERiENCED CHilD CARE Seeking
infant child care 9am-5 pm 3-5 days/wk. Must
have experience with infants, reliable transpor-
tation and credible references. Flexible hours.
Reply to info@gardensalon.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, limi-
tation, or discrimination based on race,
color, religion, sex, handicap, familial sta-
tus, or national origin, or an intention to
make any such preference, limitation, or
discrimination. This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertising which
is in violation of the law. Our readers are
hereby informed that all dwellings adver-
tised 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.
lOvElY 3BR/2BA HOME ON WOODED lot. lots
of windows, Convenient to i-40 this open foor
plan features freplace, hardwood foors thru
house, large deck. pets negotiable with fee.
$1,390/mo. Contact Fran Holland properties:
fhollandprop@gmail.com, 919-968-4545.
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.
4BR/4BA UNivERSiTY COMMONS condo.
New carpet and paint, $1,400/mo. All
utilities and internet included. On bus-
line. Contact Fran Holland properties at
fhollandprop@gmail.com. 919-968-4545.
SpACiOUS 4BR SUMMER RENTAl: very nice
4BR/3.5BA rental available June and July.
Near UNC hospitals. All appliances and utili-
ties iNClUDED. partially furnished. $2,600/mo.
919-730-3763.
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.
$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.
SUBlET ROOM with female roommates for frst
and/or second summer session. price negotia-
ble. Near Franklin Street. Contact Amanda at
srsic@live.unc.edu.
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.
CONvENiENT TO lAW AND MEDiCAl schools.
grad or prof students. 3BR/1.5BA ranch in
quiet glen lennox neighborhood. large yard,
carport, hardwood foors, bus nearby. East
CHH, Culbreth, glenwood, $1,390/mo. (pets
negotiable). Contact Fran Holland properties,
fhollandprop@gmail.com.
FUllY FURNiSHED 2BR TOWNHOME in Oaks
Condos available for short and long term lease.
Different terms for different time periods. great
location, close to Friday Center, on busline.
Bring your suitcase and move in. Email Fran
Holland properties at fhollandprop@gmail.com
or call 919-968-4545.
For Sale
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
NATiONAllY RECOgNizED and locally owned
insurance agency seeks full-time sales associ-
ate. prefer candidate to possess NC property
and Casualty license but will consider licens-
ing. Excellent phone and computer skills a
must. Small business environment with com-
petitive wages. please email inquiries, resume
to a076080@Allstate.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.
Lost & Found
lOST: KEYS! Near UNC hospital, Chevy keys,
fob, string of colored plastic beads, bottle
opener, Kinetix card. plEASE email or call:
collini4519@bellsouth.net, 919-260-0490.
lOST: iSUzU CAR KEY (has a broken key ring
loop) lost on UNC campus on Monday April
15th. if found please call 704-219-6138
SUBlET MY FURNiSHED Chapel view
apartment and kick it by the pool
this summer. $599 due on June 1 and
July 1, all utilities included. Move
in mid-May. Bonus: contact be-
fore May 1 and get a free Tv. Email
sarahellenglen@gmail.com.
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.
LOOKINg FOR
SUMMER SUbLETER
for Chancellor Square. 2BR/2BA fully furnished
$1,400/mo. WilliNg TO NEgOTiATE or take
what you can give. Contact: joyurcaba@gmail.
com or 910-783-5182.
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.
Announcements Help Wanted 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

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DTH offce is open Mon-Fri 8:30am-5:00pm
Help Wanted Sublets


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
* All Immigration Matters *
Brenman Law Firm, PLLC Visas-us.com
Llsu 8renmun NC 8ourd CerLlfled SeclullsL
Work vlsus Creen Curds ClLlzenshl
ReJuceJ Consu/t lee j or 0NC locu/ty 5tuJents
AAMCO RTP
The Complete Car Care Experts
919-493-2300
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!
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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
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
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
Announcements
Announcements Announcements Announcements
For Rent
For Rent Help 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 an 8 -- Figure out your f-
nances. if you asked for a tax fling
extension, now may be a good time
to complete your return. Dont wait for
October. get it done and celebrate.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8 -- vivid expressions of
love and creativity bubble forth. Your
team is on fre with productivity, and
your leadership capabilities impress.
its a good time to get messages
across. Haste makes waste.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 9 -- get inspired by your
work. The action may be backstage,
but you can still participate. its a great
time to write your novel. Craft the in-
frastructure. Be bold, and prosper.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8 -- Stife outrage for now.
Distractions are abundant. Keep focus-
ing on what you want, especially your
fnancial objectives. Relax with friends
and something tasty later. Youll have
an entertaining story.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7 -- put your own oxygen
mask on so you can help others. Keep
your nest tidy. Someone surprises you
by acknowledging you for the value
you provide. Dont gloss over it. Take
it in.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is an 8 -- its all so clear now
... handle priorities frst, and explain
it to co-workers. Accept a creative as-
signment. Also offer your support for
anothers project. Upgrade workplace
technology. Expect another great
learning experience.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 9 -- its getting lucrative,
but its too easy to spend new income.
Shop to get the best deal. Act quickly,
but not impulsively. love is all around;
share your dreams and everything looks
possible.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is an 8 -- The next few days get
active and fun. A turning point regard-
ing home and career keeps you busy.
Use your experience wisely. get what
you need from far away. its refreshing.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 7 -- Curtail spending for
now, and review priorities and plans.
Deadlines are looming; keep your fo-
cus. Clean out closets, and discover
something that was missing. You have
plenty, distribute it wisely.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is an 8 -- A new money-making
scheme tempts, and a scheduling tool
opens new possibilities. Your public life
interferes with privacy. Some things
may have to be left behind. Enjoy the
attention.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8 -- Take responsibility.
Choose strategies and budget. Accept
coaching from the competition. Tem-
pers could fare; stick to cool effciency
and prioritize, for a shift in a donation
campaign. imagine it fowing perfectly.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 -- Youd rather play than
work; take advantage of the mood for
future planning. Communication around
scheduling eases crankiness. You dont
always have to say yes. A great bur-
den lifts.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If April 26th is Your Birthday...
good financial fortune shines
for the first half of the year. Take advantage
of this golden chance to save. Your social life takes
off. play, share and reconnect; partnerships develop
new opportunities. Contribute with groups
that further your passion. Alone time
for peace and vitality balances.
MERCIA RESIDENTIAL
PROPERTIES
is now showing 1BR-6BR
properties for 2013-14 school
year. Check out our properties
at www.merciarentals.com
or call at (919) 933-8143.
Get a Jump Start on Housing for Next Year!
Walk to
Campus!
Large 1-2 BR Condos
Washer/Dryers
$600-$775/month
Compare to dorm prices!
www.chapelhillrentals.org
919-933-5296
Binkley Baptist
Church
9:30am...Sunday School
11:00am...Worship
binkleychurch.org
All students
cordially invited!
Call Now: 866-370-5959
www.greendryusa.com
Green Dry Carpet Cleaning
Moving Out? Need a Professional Carpet Cleaner?
Eco-Friendly Residential and Commercial
Dry and Low-Moisture Carpet Cleaning 2 Room
+ Hall
= $59
Durham psychology practice hiring temporary, PT administrative
assistant for short-term organizational project. Hourly salary 8-16 hours
per week. Applicants should be organized and motivated individuals who
work well independently. Application for additional work may be considered
upon completion of the project. Fax resume to Jamie Workman at
(919) 493-1923 or email to mail to: joworkmanphd@gmail.com.
Place a Classified Today!
dailytarheel.com/classifieds
Find the perfect place to live by distance
from the pit! check out heelshousing.com
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Questions?
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Search

Community Food Finder

in the iTunes store!


A local app created by the Daily Tar Heel & the Chapel
Hill/Carrboro Chamber of Commerce. Peruse full menus,
search by cuisine, late nite, outdoor seating & more!
SportsFriday Friday, April 26, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 10
Spring success
Carolina Performing Arts
leaders have declared The
Rite of Spring at 100 a suc-
cess. See pg. 1 for story.
Publicizing parking
The town of Chapel Hill
has rolled out a new web-
site to illuminate parking
options. See pg. 3 for story.
Welcome, 140 West
140 West, a development
that has been worked on for
a decade, opens today. See
pg. 3 for photos.
DTH takes a break
This is The Daily Tar
Heels last day of news pub-
lishing. The summer edi-
tion will begin on May 16.
games
Solution to
Thursdays 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 __ squad
5 Sharp fasteners
10 Line of movement
14 In a while
15 Go back to the
beginning, in a way
16 Spread unit
17 One lingering in
Edinburgh?
20 Hoglike mammals
21 I could __ horse!
22 Touch
23 Stravinskys The __ of
Spring
25 DX V
26 __ a rip-off!
27 Some Athenian
physicians?
32 Black gold
33 Big Bird buddy
34 DOD subdivision
35 Really feel the heat
37 Plus
39 Carpenters tool
43 CD
conclusion?
46 Charge carriers
49 Fury
50 Berlin
sidewalk
writing?
54 Valiant son
55 Heavenly altar
56 Hockey Hall of
Famer Mikita
57 Sum (up)
58 Personal time?
60 Some govt.
investments
64 Fancy singles event in
Stockholm?
67 New coin of 2002
68 One may work with a
chair
69 Vivacity
70 Church section
71 Angling banes
72 Ohs role in Greys
Anatomy
Down
1 Humongous
2 Worshipper of the Earth
goddess Pachamama
3 Condo cousin
4 Complete
5 British university city
6 Legal issue
7 Off the Court author
8 Separate
9 Post
10 Links standard
11 Like citrus fruit
12 They might make cats
pause
13 Chefs array
18 57-Acrosss wheels
19 Military surprises
24 First name in humor
27 Tar
28 Sea inlet
29 One who observes a
fraternal Hour of
Recollection
30 Source of invigoration
31 One leaving a wake
36 Mess up
38 Self-recriminating cries
40 Have a health problem
41 Hindu title
42 Sweetie
44 Muscat native
45 Some Roman Catholics
47 Babbles
48 Perspective
50 Mature
51 Adds to the database
52 __ Detroit: Guys and
Dolls role
53 Like some tree trunks
54 Having no clue
59 Peel on The Avengers
61 King who succeeded
59-Down
62 Swedish model
Nordegren in 2004
nuptial news
63 Tough going
65 Bucks mate
66 Hosp. test
Tar Heels prepare to take on Duke
By Max Miceli
Staff Writer
Going into the ACC
Tournament this weekend,
the No. 2-seeded North
Carolina mens lacrosse team
is on a hot streak, having won
its last seven regular season
games.
Unfortunately for the Tar
Heels, the team that handed
them their last loss is the
same team they will face in
the first round the No.
3-seeded Duke Blue Devils.
If the Tar Heels want to
make it to Sundays ACC title
game, they will have to beat a
team that has bested them in
the last five meetings.
Theyre obviously a really
solid team, senior captain
Marcus Holman said. Were
going to have to bring our A
game.
UNCs last time out against
Duke was a dominant perfor-
mance by the Blue Devils at
the face-off X that kept the
ball out of the hands of the
Tar Heels best players and
put pressure on UNCs young
defense.
Even though All-American
junior face-off specialist
R.G. Keenan had a tough
time against Dukes Brendan
Fowler the first time around,
coach Joe Breschi has no
doubt that he can put togeth-
er a better performance today.
Anytime you go against a
guy for a second time you feel
like, Okay, I know him a little
bit better, Breschi said.
Before UNCs loss to Duke
in mid-March, the Tar Heels
were in the middle of an up-
and-down season in which
every win was followed by a
loss.
But since then, the team
has taken down a top-ranked
Maryland team and domi-
nated almost every team its
faced.
The guys have done a good
job of taking a deep breath
and playing loose, Breschi
said. Theyre not as anxious
as they were early in the sea-
son. Theyre having fun.
With two recently named
All-ACC players on the attack
Holman and sophomore
UNC VS. DUKE
Time: 7:30 p.m. today
Location: Kenan Stadium
Info: www.goheels.com
Joey Sankey its no small
wonder UNC has found suc-
cess offensively.
Since the loss during
spring break, the Tar Heels
have averaged about 14 goals
a game.
But the most important
key to the Tar Heels success
has manifested itself on the
other end of the field.
Breschi said that his
defenses improvements have
been welcome, and that its
recent stellar play started
with freshman goalkeeper
Kieran Burke.
Knowing and having
confidence in the guy behind
you really helps out. Theres
no doubt about that, Breschi
said. When you have a goalie
like Kieran Burke the confi-
dence of the guys in front of
him is going to grow.
For Burke, midseason
improvements came from
calming down and realizing
he has the talent to be great.
That talent has helped
Burke hold opposing teams
to fewer than eight goals a
game in the second half of the
season.
Coming into a game
against a team that has been
historically dominant against
the Tar Heels, Burke said
UNC isnt afraid of Duke like
it might have been in the
past.
We know were a better
lacrosse team than they are,
Burke said. We easily can
win.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
UNC hosts the ACC
lacrosse tournament
this weekend.
Reli
g
ious
Directory
Place a Classified: www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252
Reli
g
ious Directory
214 Pittsboro St. - Across from the Carolina Inn
919- 942-2152 uncwesley.org
Sunday: 7pm Worship, 201 Chapman
Monday: 11:30am-1:00pm Lunch at Lenoir
Thursday: 6pm Dinner & Program, at Wesley
Also: Fellowship, Spiritual Growth Groups,
Service Opportunities, Alternative Spring Break,
Music Groups, Residential Community
Amanda Dean, Campus Minister
Welcome! Welcome!
To the Chapel Hill
Christian Science
Church
CSChapelHill.org
christianscience.com
1300 MLK, Jr. Blvd.
919-942-6456
NewContemporaryWorship Service
Mount Carmel Church
2016 Mt Carmel Church Rd.,
Chapel Hill, NC 27517
919-933-8565
www.mcbc1803.org
Coffee and snacks served at 8:45am
Contemporary Worship service 9:00am
MASS SCHEDULE
Saturday: 5:15pm
Sunday: 9am, 11am & Student Mass at 7pm
919-929-3730 218 Pittsboro St., CH
Reli
g
ious
Directory
JAWS I (1975) 35MM - One Week Only
Fri: 7:00, 9:30 Sat: 4:30, 7:00, 9:30
Sun: 4:30, 7:00 Tue-Thu: 7:00, 9:30
SAFE HAVEN J
Fri: 7:10 Sat & Sun: 4:40, 7:10
Tue & Wed: 7:10
WARM BODIES J
Fri & Sat: 9:20 Tue-Thu 9:20
The Varsity Theatre
123 E. Franklin Street, Chapel Hill 967-8665
www.varsityonfranklin.com
Movie Showtimes for Week 4/26-5/2- All Movies $4.00
CLOSED MONDAY
Downtown Chapel Hil l
942-PUM P
106 W. Franklin St.
(Next to Hes Not Here)
www.yogurtpump.com
Mon-Thurs 11:30am-11:30pm
Fri & Sat 11:30am-12am
Sun Noon-11:30pm
A Tar Heel favorite since 1 982!
A Tar Heel favorite since 1 982! A Tar Heel favorite since 1 982!
Study contemporary Spain through film in SPAN 362. Maymester.
summer.unc.edu
(
The Daily Tar Heel Office will be closed April 30-May 12.
Any classifieds placed over this break will go online within 72 hours
and will begin in our 1st weekly summer print issue on May 16th.
www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds
The Fun
Place
To Be!
All shows $7.00 for college students with ID
Take 15/501 South towards Pittsboro
Exit Market St. / Southern Village
BIG WEDDING K . . . . . . . . . . 1:10-3:10-5:10-7:20-9:40
PAIN AND GAIN K . . . . . 1:20-4:20-7:10-9:50
OBLIVION J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1:15-4:15-7:15-9:55
#42 J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1:00-4:10-7:10-9:45
THE CROODS I . . . . . . . .12:45-2:55-5:00-7:15-9:30
Opinion Friday, April 26, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 11
EDITorIal BoarD mEmBErs
Established 1893, 120 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATUrED OnlinE rEADEr cOmmEnT
Its disingenuous to never balance your
own perspective with the reality that sexu-
al assault cases are inherently difficult
Mystic, on the difficulty of correctly convicting perpetrators
Its sort of like being Mr. Spock. You stay
on the ship and Captain Kirk goes down
to the planet and fights the giant lizard.
Holden Thorp, on his next job as a private universitys provost
EDiTOriAl cArTOOn By Daniela Madriz, daniela.madriz@gmail.com
Finding
how to
get to
Mars
L
ast week, I went to the
planetariums senior
night, a very nostalgic,
senior-y thing. It felt vast,
scary, and as the screen rotated
toward Mars, I was transport-
ed back to that little-girl place.
A fact: Last week, just a day
after the Boston bombings,
astronomers discovered the
two most Earth-like planets in
the very-distant constellation
Lyra.
A bright spot, in an other-
wise dark week a dark year,
really.
This is my last column
in this space, an inevitably
weighty task, because writing
this column has meant the
world to me. But also because
I think its important to end by
acknowledging what a rough
year this has been for the com-
munity.
Just three Thursdays ago,
UNC junior Laura Rozo died
after a long battle with cancer.
I didnt know her well, but
to say the least: Laura was a
remarkable person.
She left a blunt, unwavering
commitment to cut through
the bullshit and get to things
that matter. In essence: dont
do things because they are
good networking. Dont play
games. Do what you love, and
do it now, rather than later.
Sometimes I wonder how it
would be to grow up in the age
of space exploration, a time
that seemed tinged with a sort
of astronomical optimism.
And this is not to romanti-
cize the Cold War, but just to
say: Our generation doesnt
look far. We find the future not
in untapped galaxies, but in
better data. This programs us
to brand our identities so that
they give us better friends and
jobs, to adopt capitalist modes
of understanding one another.
I do not mean to be dramat-
ic: Capitalism is not the end of
ourselves, nor the beginning.
But often, it comprises the
middle.
It fragments the way we
understand the casual politics
of college life and distorts the
visions we allow ourselves.
The intellectual life becomes
a means to an end, the emo-
tional life an opportunity cost.
We judge quickly, and this
must partly stem from a fear of
not belonging. Even here, in a
place I love, Ive never felt like
quite enough.
But to scale back: the most
meaningful moments Ive
had here are when, above the
competition and comparison,
real wonder emerges like a
high-rise apartment to tempo-
rarily eclipse doubt. Im talking
about the quiet moments.
Sitting in the dark of a
friends piano recital, totally
windswept by beauty. An
unexpected kindness from a
professor that is so adhesive to
our emotional imaginations, we
dont have time to be cynical. A
hello to someone that turns into
three hours at Cosmic. When we
admire someone and actually
say it. When we look up.
In a time of funding cuts
and spiraling cynicism, I dont
know if we ll know whether
there is life on other planets.
But people like Laura remind
us that, at least, there is life
here on earth and either it
is very long or it is very short.
But it wants to be maximized.
How there are no zeros among
us. And how, ultimately, none
of us can pass by each other
without being affected.
5/16: THE SUMMER DTH
Look out for weekly summer
issues of The Daily Tar Heel!
N
E
X
T
Sarah Edwards
Down Home Girl
Senior American studies major from
Davidson.
Email: scedward@live.unc.edu
SPEAK OUT
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Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit
letters to 250 words.
suBMissiOn
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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.
support.
Thanks to the 40:60 ratio, I
had to go to the dark side,
Duke, to get some action.
What did karma give me in
return? A UTI.
To the Carrboro resident
who spotted a UFO while
pissing outside on his com-
post pile: Whatever hippie
drink got you that drunk,
send it my way.
I think if we all died and
went to hell, wed just wind
back up in Davis during
fnals week.
DTH, I think you graded our
SBP easier than the AFAM
department grades football
players.
To the people who care
about the Mr. and Miss
UNC election: Zip up your
college! Your high school is
poking out.
Im not the only one who
giggles when the bus drives
by and the sign says A
Weiner, right?
Even funnier than A Wein-
er is S Tripper. I have no
respect for buses like that.
Everyones been on them.
To the Non-Athletic Regular
People, aka NARPs: Do not
go to La Res. Its embarrass-
ing how much you dont
belong.
Genome Science Building:
Making seniors feel like
frst-years since 2012.
To the guy demanding Roys
resignation as basketball
coach: Go home. Youre drunk.
My favorite part about Con-
nect Carolina is when you
have to log out before you
can log in. Cool feature!
Beyonce for SBP.
UNC SBP races: Where the
platforms are made up and
endorsements dont matter.
I really hope all the SCOTUS
justices Im Facebook
friends with are swayed by
my new profle pic.
This whole portal to Dook
thing sounds a lot like Chat
Roulette.
I voted for that person for
SBP because they yelled the
most frequently and the loud-
est in the Pit. No one ever
In protest against annoying
Dance Marathon recruiters, I
will be holding Sleep Mara-
thon in my bed. FTK.
Ethical dilemma: If I gave up
soda for Lent, can I still use
my Coke-favored condom?
Id like to think that the late-
night Morrison fre alarm in-
terrupted a romantic evening
with my signifcant other, but
it just turns out that my hand
can wait 10 minutes.
Lets be honest, if Mike Rice
had been throwing those
basketballs at Duke players,
would anybody really care?
P
eople always talk
about how news-
papers are simply
too slow in reporting the
news. By the time you see
something in the paper,
your high school dropout
friend has already offered
his asinine, ill-informed
take on Twitter.
No more, this editorial
board says. If youre gonna
hear anyones asinine,
ill-informed take first, its
going to be ours.
Thats why were taking
the initiative and offering
up some end-of-year opin-
ions on events that have
yet to happen. Hows that
for timely?
The years in preview
EDiTOriAl
On July 1, Carol Folt
will take over for Holden
Thorp as chancellor. On
July 2, she resigns when
she finds out the Miata
isnt part of the perks. This
is a wise decision.
In November, in the
face of constant press
antagonism, UNC will
lobby the N.C. General
Assembly to change pub-
lic records law so that
requests must be filed
via carrier pigeon. The
General Assembly passes
the measure unanimously.
After the rollicking suc-
cess of the water theme
at UNC, administrators
will seek another easily
understandable, purpose-
fully vague theme. They
eventually narrow it down
to trees, animals and
shapes.
In 2015, The Daily Tar
Heel renames itself The
Daily Kvetching Board
and ceases publishing
anything that doesnt start
with To the guy who.
Circulation triples.
In 2016, Student
Congress tries to over-
throw the student body
president in a bloody coup
detat. This goes entirely
unnoticed among the stu-
dent body.
In 2019, the
Department of Public
Safety sends an all clear
warning informing stu-
dents that Hurricane
Sandy has passed by
North Carolina unharmed.
In 2194, Davis Library
purchases new elevators.
The building burns to the
ground the next day.
Have a good summer!
A lighthearted
prognostication of
years ahead.
R
eading this years
headlines gives the
impression of a
University marked by trag-
edies and scandals. There
is truth in that perception,
but it should not deflate
our sense of purpose.
Because the University
community has been
engaged in discussion
about the problems that
plague us and the tragedies
that have shaken us, there
is a window of opportunity
to actually address the
major issues of the year
with concrete, participato-
ry and thorough solutions.
Having the Universitys
dirty laundry aired to the
public sometimes to a
national audience was
not an easy process. But
it can create the pressure
necessary to encourage
leadership to implement
needed reforms that leave
the University better off.
That is as long as the
discourse is productive and
solution-oriented, rather
than focused on blame.
This year closes with
significant shifts in leader-
ship against the backdrop
of a sexual assault policy
badly in need of reform,
questions of the validity of a
student-run honor system,
state-level threats to public
higher education and a
general re-evaluation of the
role of collegiate athletics.
An NCAA investigation
in 2010 sparked a number
of revelations including the
discovery that a tutor gave
improper academic help to
UNC football players and
a University report reveal-
ing aberrant or irregu-
larly taught classes packed
full of athletes in the
A year in review
EDiTOriAl
Department of African and
Afro-American Studies.
Discussion this fall
centered on accusations
of the departments aca-
demic fraud reaching back
years. Alumni, faculty and
students sent in letters
expressing their dismay at
how the scandal has erod-
ed UNCs reputation.
The community has
continued to grapple with
tough questions about the
role of collegiate athletics.
Many question the prior-
ity athletics are given over
academics, and rightly
so. But because athletics
bring money, recognition,
community bonding and
a means for alumni to
remain connected, its not
as simple as divorcing ath-
letics and academics.
However, Chancellor
Holden Thorps suggestion
that university chancellors
should not control col-
legiate athletics is not the
answer. This would only
decrease oversight and
increase athletics promi-
nence over academics.
Though athletics
shouldnt take precedence
over academics, the cur-
rent exploitation of athletes
is unacceptable. College
athletes deserve to be paid
for their contributions and
should be allowed to earn
money from their names
and likenesses.
But beginning last win-
ter, the spotlight shifted
away from athletics as
reports began to come out
of students claiming to be
mistreated by the way the
University handled their
sexual assault cases.
The University can begin
by treating rape as the vio-
lent crime it is. UNC should
remove those cases from
the authority of the quasi-
judicial body that took
control in these cases from
Honor Courts jurisdiction.
The issue of sexual
assault brought to the
surface a host of prob-
lems that have placed the
future of student-led honor
system in uncertainty.
Although it needs reforms,
dissolving the institution
for being imperfect is not
the answer. Instead, there
should be a re-evaluation
of whether criminal charg-
es belong in the honor sys-
tems jurisdiction.
Considered among all
of these issues, a shift in
leadership could contrib-
ute to the sense of insta-
bility at UNC. But its also
an opportunity to utilize
fresh eyes and ears to con-
tribute reforms and to
the preservation of UNCs
core charge of enriching
the minds of youth.
Chancellor-elect Carol
Folts main challenge next
year will be protecting and
defending the value of a
public liberal arts degree.
The N.C. General
Assembly and Gov. Pat
McCrory have already
proved to be hostile to the
role and needs of higher
education in this state.
This is evidenced by dra-
matic slashes in the bud-
get, degrading comments
toward liberal arts as well
as the UNC system, and
the propagation of a phi-
losophy that the purpose of
higher education is merely
economic in nature.
This editorial board
believes such a philosophy
could not be farther from
the truth instead, we
respect the value to society
of education for educa-
tions sake.
And this is what is worth
protecting; this is why,
despite the challenges the
University has faced, the
turbulence is worth riding
through and overcoming.
This turbulent year
has created chances
for reform.
Kvetching board
kvetch:
v.1 (Yiddish) to complain
Shout out to the girl in the UL
who just shut down the cute
couple whispering sweet
nothings to each other. I kick
puppies for fun myself.
Can we all just take a mo-
ment to honor the patience
of a girl whose roommate
showed up with a squirrel
for two days?
Who do I have to blow to
get Jamba Juice back?
Obligatory kvetch about
frst-years still wearing
lanyards.
To the girl that managed
to stick her umbrella up
my shorts on the bus: I
will admit that you got me
wet, but honestly, Im not
interested.
To the girl soaked in Hol-
lister perfume in Davis: You
smell like middle school
and bad decisions.
Monday, Thorp resigns;
Tuesday, monsoon. Even
God is upset about your
resignation, Chancellor.
To the Mormons doing their
mission on campus: Unless
you are bringing Stilman
back to UNC, you have no
business here.
New University policy: If we
can go one week without a
scandal or resignation, ev-
eryone gets free Bojangles!
To the frat star behind me
who asked who Frederick
Douglass was: Hes like the
Tucker Max of the abolition-
ist movement, bro.
TOPO Vodka? Ef yeah. Prob-
ably tastes like GDI tears.
Duke might have the latest
Nobel laureate, but weve
got Bill Nye coming. UNC 1,
Duke 0.
Shouldnt Student Congress
matter before we decide to
fx it?
Can the B-schoolers make
themselves useful and
please fx our Wendys?
Can it really be considered
hazing if what theyre
throwing at you is a deli-
cious Italian meal?
My Febreze can says that it
eliminates odors and fresh-
ens, but Ive been spraying
it constantly and Freshens is
still here
Just used the battery from my
electric toothbrush to replace
the battery in my vibrator. I
really need to get laid.
Congrats, Human vs. Zom-
bies participants! Youve
reached virginity level 9,000!
To the moron who un-
plugged the jukebox at late
night because he didnt like
the song I chose: Id hate
to be your grandma on life
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
JOin US: The Daily Tar Heel is hiring for
the fall 2013 semester.
Apply for Fall 2013 to be assistant opinion editor, a mem-
ber of the DTH editorial board, a columnist or a cartoonist.
Editorial board members write unsigned editorials on behalf
of the DTH and attend one-hour meetings on Sunday, Tuesday
and Thursday each week to pitch ideas. Each board member
can expect to write a couple editorials a week.
Columnists and cartoonists have biweekly slots.
Email the opinion editor at opinion@dailytarheel.com for an
application and more information. Deadline is May 7 at 5 p.m.
The best of 2012-13
Friday, April 26, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 12
P HI L L I P S AMBAS S ADORS
http://phillips.studyabroad.unc.edu/
2013 Phillips Ambassadors
Carolinas Ambassadors to Asia
Congratulations
T
wenty exceptional undergraduates and one graduate student
will be traveling as Phillips Ambassadors for summer and
fall 2013 study abroad programs in Asia. Phillips Ambassadors
are chosen twice each year. Scholarship recipients are selected
for academic achievement and commitment to activities, service
and leadership roles in the classroom and community.
THINK STUDY ABROAD. THINK ASIA. THINK STUDY ABROAD. THINK ASIA.
The Phillips Ambassadors scholarship program is made possible through a generous gift from alumnus
Earl N. Phil Phillips, an entrepreneur and former United States Ambassador, and his family.
Emma Badia
CIEE Shanghai Summer
Claire Brown
NUS Arts and Social Sciences
Meredith Burns
UNC Summer in India
Neelesh Dewan
UNC Summer in India
Olivia Frere
KFBS: International Internship
Hong Kong Summer
Kevin Jang
UNC-PKU Entrepreneurship
Summer
Madeleine Kainz
UNC-PKU Entrepreneurship
Summer
Paige Kinsley
CET Beijing Summer
Hallie Kirkman
CET Harbin Summer
Daniele Lauro
Graduate research award for
research in Japan
Lauren Toppin
Nanzan University (Japan)
Evonne McArthur
SIT India
Cassandra Pezza
KFBS: International Internship
Hong Kong Summer
Aisha Rajput
International Christian
University (Japan)
Anthony Rotunda
UNC-PKU Entrepreneurship
Summer
Mahati Sridhar
KFBS: International Internship
Hong Kong Summer
Landon Sherwood
KFBS: International Internship
Hong Kong Summer
Abraham Sterling
NUS Science Summer Lab
Exchange
Ellen Murray
CET Kunming Summer
Alice Xu
SIT China: Community Health and
Traditional Chinese Medicine Summer
Stefanie Schwemlein
NUS Honors-University
Scholars Exchange

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