Sei sulla pagina 1di 10

Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

The disease which inflicts bureaucracy, and what they usually die from, is routine.
john sTuarT mill
Friday, January 18, 2013 dailytarheel.com Volume 120, Issue 133
Complaint: UNC pressured dean
to underreport sexual assault cases
SEXUAL ASSAULT ON CAMPUS
By Caitlin McCabe and Andy Thomason
Senior Writers
In 2011, the University Counsels office pres-
sured Melinda Manning, then UNCs assis-
tant dean of students, to underreport cases
of sexual assault, according to a complaint
against UNC filed to the U.S. Department of
Education by Manning and four others.
Manning, three students and one former
student filed the complaint Wednesday, alleg-
ing that the University has violated the Clery
Act, Title IX of the Education Amendments
of 1972, and Title VI and Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, among other federal laws.
The complaint, obtained by The Daily
Tar Heel, is centrally concerned with the
Universitys handling of sexual assault cases.
But Mannings experiences, documented
in the complaint, serve as a large-scale indict-
ment of the actions of high-level University
administrators specifically, Dean of
Students Jonathan Sauls, Vice Chancellor for
Student Affairs Winston Crisp and the Office
of University Counsel.
The complaint alleges Manning was told by
the University Counsels office that the number
of sexual assault cases she compiled for 2010
was too high before the total was decreased
by three cases without her knowledge; that she
was made the victim of a hostile work environ-
ment in the dean of students office; and that
her efforts to reform the Universitys handling
of sexual assault cases were stymied more than
once by higher administrators.
Crisp wrote in an email that he could not
respond to the complaints allegations until the
complaint has been provided to the University
by the U.S. Department of Educations Office
for Civil Rights. He said his email response
was sent on behalf of Sauls, Leslie Strohm,
the Universitys general counsel, and Kara
Simmons, associate University counsel.
Sauls, Strohm and Simmons did not respond
to calls and emails requesting comment.
I want to assure you that the University
takes the issue of sexual assault very seriously,
and we are all working together to make sure
that our process for handling these cases is
fair, effective and supportive, Crisp wrote.
Threats and retaliation
Manning joined the University, which she
Melinda Manning faced threats
and discrimination, complaint says.
Redistricting
plan passes
school board
By Grace Tatter
Staff Writer
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of
Education passed a redistricting plan Thursday night that
will require more than 1,000 elementary students to change
schools in August.
The plan, approved by the board 5-2, takes socioeconom-
ic diversity, as well as geography, of students into account.
Not overburdening any one school gives all of our stu-
dents an equitable opportunity to be in a diverse environ-
ment, said board member Gregory McElveen.
The majority of the redistricted elementary school
students will make up the inaugural classes of Northside
Elementary, the systems newest elementary school.
The district first identified a need for an eleventh ele-
mentary school more than four years ago, as overcrowding
in the systems existing elementary schools mounted.
The board also unanimously approved a spot redistrict-
ing plan for high school students at the meeting. The plan
will move about 100 Carrboro High School students to
Chapel Hill High School or East Chapel Hill High School.
The redistricting effort began in August, when a
Redistricting Advisory Council was formed to make recom-
mendations to the Board of Education. The board reviewed
the four proposed redistricting plans in December during
two public hearings, and plan 2.1 appeared as a frontrunner.
The board ultimately passed a slightly revised version of
plan 2.1 which added two residential areas to Northsides
district and allowed Frank Porter Graham Elementary
School fourth and fifth graders to remain at the school
without bus transportation.
Parents who spoke during the public comment lauded
the board and council for their goals in redistricting, but
they said they wished there had been more transparency
and opportunity for input.
Assistant Superintendent Todd LoFrese said parent voices
More than 1,000 elementary and middle
school students will change schools.
201 S. Estes Dr. Chapel Hill, University Mall | 919-929-7133 | southernseason.com
Last chance to save- saLe ends Jan. 20 customer appreciation saLe
25% oFF coFFee & tea, candY, GiFt, speciaLtY Food, cheese, GadGets, cooKWare & more
|
pLus, deeper discounts on seLect items
Sustainability goal viewed with skepticism
By Hunter Toro
Staff Writer
Carolina Dining Services recently
reported reaching its goal of 20 percent
sustainable food eight years sooner
than expected but some criticize the
achievements legitimacy.
CDS partnered with the student orga-
nization Fair, Local, Organic (FLO) to
participate in the Real Food Challenge,
which encourages universities to have
20 percent of their dining hall food to be
sustainable year-round.
The University did not sign an offi-
cial commitment to the Real Food
Challenge. However, CDS still strove for
this goal unofficially, using the Real Food
Calculator to track progress.
Sophomore Blair Crumpler, a FLO
member and CDS intern, said FLO mem-
bers agree that the Real Food Challenge
CDS reached its sustainable
goal for a 5-week period.
SEE reDiStriCtiNg, PAgE 4
Chancellor salary may
change with successor
SEE CDS, PAgE 4
By Sarah Brown
Staff Writer
In the search for a new chancellor, UNC-CH is looking
to lock in a top-performing higher education leader.
But performance comes with a price.
Schools in North Carolina continue to face stiff compe-
tition from other universities that often offer their leaders
better pay. Knowing this, N.C. State University has already
taken precautions to keep its chancellor in the state.
In a closed-door meeting last week, the UNC-system
Board of Governors voted to raise the salary of N.C. State
Chancellor Randy Woodson to $495,000 and approved
other benefits, making him the highest-paid chancellor in
the system.
UNC could also seek to raise the salary of the replace-
ment for Chancellor Holden Thorp, who will step down
from his role in June. Thorp makes $420,000 a year.
UNC-system spokeswoman Joni Worthington said in an
email that the increase in Woodsons salary was passed to
help retain Woodson at the university. The same philoso-
phy applies to schools looking for a new leader, she said.
When searching for a new chancellor, our campuses
must offer competitive compensation in order to attract
the very best candidates, she said.
Woodson and Thorp are the two highest paid chancel-
lors in the system but their salaries are lower than uni-
versity leaders at many of UNCs peer institutions.
The University of Michigan-Ann Arbor recently increased
President Mary Sue Colemans salary
to $603,357 a year, and University of
California-Berkeleys incoming Chancellor
Nicholas Dirks received a $50,000 raise in
November to earn $486,800.
What UNC pays for its chancellor
is low by national standards, said John
McGowan, an English and comparative
literature professor and a member of the search committee
looking for Thorps replacement. The committee will meet
again today to evaluate potential candidates.
No decision concerning compensation for Thorps suc-
cessor will be made until a short list of candidates is final-
After N.C. State University raised its
chancellor salary, UNC could raise its pay.
SEE SAlArieS, PAgE 4
SEE ASSAUlt, PAgE 4
New
Chancellor
$100,000 10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 $200,000 $300,000 $400,000 $500,000 $600,000 700000 800000
Univ. of Texas - Austin
Univ. of Michigan
Univ. of Pittsburgh
Univ. of Washington - Seattle
Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison
Univ. of California, Berkeley
Univ. of North Carolina - Chapel Hill
Univ. of California, Los Angeles
Univ. of Maryland - College Park
$420,000
$486,800
$437,500
27,979
28,766
27,838
29,167
25,774
18,503
27,941
26,826
39,977
$550,000
$580,000
$603,357
$624,350
$416,000
$450,000
Chancellor salary (2012-13)
Chancellor salary and enrollment at peer institutions
Undergraduate enrollment
UNC-CH pays its chancellor relatively less and enrolls fewer undergraduates than the public universities the Board of Governors identies as the Universitys peers.
SOURCE: CHANCELLOR SALARY REPORTING DTH/KEVIN UHRMACHER
DefiNiNg reAl fooD
The Real Food Challenge uses four cat-
egories to qualify food as real:
Local/community based: production
and distribution occur within 150 miles
Fair: certified by fair labeling
organizations
Ecologically sound: certified by eco-
logical organizations
Humane: found to treat animals fairly
SPORTS FRIDAY
Catch up on the weeks sports news including a womens
basketball win against Virginia and see whats on this
weekend. Plus, read a Q&A with sophomore basketball
standout Jackson Simmons. Pages 5, 6 and 7.
Inside
Cold but sunny. This is
January I can live with.
H 49, L 32
Sunlight gleaming off
freshly fallen snow.
H 40, L 24
saturdays
weather
Todays
weather
NOTED. Granted, infestations of any kind
are gross, but 6,000 feral camels plagu-
ing the Australian town of Docker River
brings it to a whole new level.
Camel apologists say the animals are
just thirsty, but most feel the town is
under siege. The camels will be herded
further into the Outback and shot.
QUOTED. When I was feeding her, she
was making funny noises and almost
choking.
The daughter of a 75-year-old
British woman who lost her dentures,
only to have them found by doctors four
visits later. Were talking multiple weeks
of teeth in her throat. Oh, old people.
H
ey ladies! Even though an estimated 95 percent of women
have cellulite, a new pair of jeans is here to save you from
being, like, sooo embarrassed you have it. Give thanks for
Wranglers new Smooth Legs moisturizing jeans, which
claim to fight cellulite, as well as perform a host of other magic tricks.
Not only do these skinny jeans change your biological makeup, theyre
also loaded with skincare products such as shea butter and kernel oil,
intended to hydrate your skin. Never mind that you already own lotion.
Just kill two birds with one stone! The denims ingredients (ew) purport-
edly last about two weeks, and for them to work, you have to wear em
for weeks on end. You in? That ll be $136 a pair, please.
The jeans we were waiting for
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone vandalized
property at 140 W. Franklin
St. at 8 a.m. Wednesday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person partially cut
some copper panels, valued at
$200, reports state.
Someone damaged
property at 200 Westminster
Drive at 8:41 a.m. Wednesday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person took flowers,
valued at $50, from office
landscaping, reports state.
Someone broke and
entered a business at 408
Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
at 11:09 p.m. Wednesday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
Someone reported a
suspicious person at East
Franklin Street at Booker
Creek Trail at 6:13 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person was hiding off
the trail and mumbling in the
dark and drinking, reports
state.
Someone damaged prop-
erty at 529 Hillsborough St.
at 11:36 p.m. Wednesday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person punched a win-
dow, valued at $150, reports
state.
Someone reported a
suspicious person at 5623
Fordham Blvd. at 10:29 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person was knocking
on doors and running, reports
state.
Someone broke and
entered a residence at 306
Estes Drive between 5:15
p.m. and 11 p.m. Monday,
according to Carrboro police
reports.
POLICE LOG
News Friday, January 18, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2
hail to the chief
W
orkers secure large flags decorating the
west front of the United States Capitol as
preparations are made on Thursday for
Mondays inauguration of President Barack Obama
in Washington, D.C.
mct/george bridges
COrrECtIOns
Due to a reporting error, thursdays page 3 story Nc judge dismisses frampton lawsuit quoted
UNc professor Mark Williams as saying if the Board of trustees rules against Paul frampton in his
appeal to receive his University salary, frampton wouldnt pursue further legal action. Williams said
frampton would pursue legal action if that is the ruling.
the Daily tar heel apologizes for the error.
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed 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
Established 1893
119 years of editorial freedom
The Daily Tar Heel
ANDy ThOmAsON
EDITOR-In-CHIEf
editor@dailytarheel.com
ElisE yOUNg
ManagIng EDITOR
managing.editor@dailytarheel.com
sArAh glEN
DIRECTOR Of EnTERPRIsE
enterprise@dailytarheel.com
AllisON rUssEll
VIsUaL ManagIng EDITOR
visuals@dailytarheel.com
NicOlE cOmpArATO
UnIVERsITY EDITOR
university@dailytarheel.com
chElsEy DUlANEy
CITY EDITOR
city@dailytarheel.com
DANiEl wisEr
sTaTE & naTIOnaL EDITOR
state@dailytarheel.com
brANDON mOrEE
sPORTs EDITOR
sports@dailytarheel.com
cArsON blAcKwElDEr
aRTs EDITOR
arts@dailytarheel.com
AllisON hUssEy
DIVERsIOns EDITOR
diversions@dailytarheel.com
KEviN UhrmAchEr
DEsIgn & gRaPHICs EDITOR
design@dailytarheel.com
KATiE swEENEy
PHOTO EDITOR
photo@dailytarheel.com
cOllEEN mcENANEy
MULTIMEDIa EDITOR
multimedia@dailytarheel.com
lAUriE bETh hArris
COPY EDITOR
copy@dailytarheel.com
DANiEl pshOcK
OnLInE EDITOR
online@dailytarheel.com
pAUlA sEligsON
sPECIaL PROjECTs ManagER
special.projects@dailytarheel.com
Contact Managing Editor
Elise Young at
managing.editor@dailytarheel.
com with news tips, comments,
corrections or suggestions.
tIPs
Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary st.
Chapel Hill, nC 27514
andyThomason, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086
advertising & Business, 962-1163
news, features, sports, 962-0245
One copy per person;
additional copies may be purchased
at The Daily Tar Heel for $.25 each.
Please report suspicious activity at
our distribution racks by emailing
dth@dailytarheel.com
2013 DTH Media Corp.
all rights reserved
tOday
From russia, with love And
a Touch of the blues: fRanK
gallery continues its blues-
themed exhibit with jazz music
and refreshments. $40 for one
ticket, $75 for two.
Time: 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
location: fRanK gallery
Abbey road livE! concert: The
Beatles cover band performs
songs from both Rubber soul
and Revolver. Tickets $12.
Time: Doors open 8 p.m., con-
cert begins 9 p.m.
location: Cats Cradle
TANgO! concert: Triangle Tango
performs in Carrboro, with a free
tango lesson.
Time: Lesson from 8 p.m. to
9 p.m., music and dance until
11:30 p.m.
location: Open Eye Cafe
Annuals concert: featuring
Lollipops, Eros and the Eschaton.
all ages. Tickets $8 to 10.
Time: Doors open 9 p.m., con-
cert begins 9:30 p.m.
location: Local 506
satUrday
winter pajama party: Kids aged
4 to 8 are invited to this after-
noon of art, dress-up and more.
Pajama attire is encouraged.
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
free and open to the public.
Time: 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
location: ackland art Museum
carbon leaf concert: featuring
Chris Hendricks. Tickets $15 in
advance, $17 day of show.
Time: Doors open 8 p.m., con-
cert begins 9 p.m.
location: Cats Cradle
News Friday, January 18, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3
city briefs
Chapel Hill police seek teen
who went missing Sunday
The Chapel Hill Police
Department is looking for a missing
teen last seen Sunday at 3:30 p.m.
Michael Wayne Wilson, a
17-year-old white male, was last
seen Sunday at his home on Indian
Springs Road wearing a white
t-shirt and blue gym shorts. He is 5
feet 9 inches tall, about 175 pounds
and has blue eyes and blonde hair.
He is thought to be in the down-
town Chapel Hill area. Anyone
with information about Wilsons
whereabouts can call Chapel Hill
Police at 919-968-2760.
Chapel Hill Public Library
welcomed Muslim collection
The Chapel Hill Public
Library and the UNC School of
Information and Library Science
welcomed a collection of books
about Muslim culture in the U.S.
to its shelves this month.
The Chapel Hill Public Library
is one of 12 libraries to receive the
Muslim Journeys Bookshelf collec-
tion. After receiving the collection,
the Chapel Hill Public Library is
eligible for programming about
Muslim culture.
Ackland Museum to host
kids pajama party Saturday
The Ackland Art Museum will
host its Winter Pajama Party on
Saturday beginning at 2 p.m. for
kids ages 4 through 8.
Kids are encouraged to wear
their pajamas for a day of dress-up.
Children will have the opportunity
to try on costumes like the ones
they ll find in the artwork and
make jewelry and mustaches.
cAMPUs briefs
UNC student on bicycle col-
lided with car, injured hip
Junior Ethan Butler was bicy-
cling to class Thursday around
10:50 a.m. when he collided with
a car at the intersection of Church
and Caldwell streets.
Butler said it was a four-way
stop, and both the car and the
bicycle moved into the intersection
at the same time.
Butler said he sustained a deep
bone bruise in his hip, and he
stayed at UNC Hospitals until
3 p.m. He is now recovering at
home.
Dance Marathon to have
fundraiser battle with Duke
During the Saturday basketball
game against the University of
Maryland, UNC Dance Marathon
will compete with the Duke
Crazies Who Care in the Smith
Center Childrens Challenge to see
who can raise the most money for
their respective childrens hospi-
tals.
UNC Dance Marathon hopes to
raise more than $22,000, which
would require every attendee of
the game to donate $1.
This is the fourth year of this
competition.
UNC law student selected to
be a student ambassador
A UNC School of Law stu-
dent was selected to serve as a
2012-13 Federal Service Student
Ambassador, which is a program
that tasks students with publiciz-
ing career opportunities to their
peers.
Naiema Blanchard is one of four
students picked to work with the
Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau.
From staff and wire reports
inBRIEF
New grant to fund J-School students
By Jordan Bailey
Staff Writer
A new grant could send journal-
ism students all over the country
in search of the job theyve always
wanted.
The Dream City Fund gives stu-
dents in the School of Journalism
and Mass Communication the
opportunity to travel to any city and
interview with organizations they
hope to work for.
Susan Credle, the UNC alumna
who donated the money for the
fund, said she let the journalism
school decide how to use her dona-
tion, but she was excited when she
learned it would be used for this
purpose.
Students can apply to win up
to $1,000 to fund their trip. It is
open to all journalism students who
plan to interview with at least three
organizations.
Our students want to go to a
range of places. It could be as close
as Raleigh or Cary, to as far away as
San Francisco, New York, Chicago
and beyond, said Jay Eubank,
director of placement and special
programs in the journalism school.
But a lot of times ... money
makes it really difficult to travel
and go to those places in person,
he said. So this fund will allow stu-
dents to hopefully meet profession-
als in the field theyre interested in
in person, and that should help cer-
tainly with gaining internships and
without a doubt will help in finding
full-time jobs.
The grant will be awarded to
as many students as possible, said
journalism professor John Sweeney
but he wouldnt comment on
how big the fund is.
We have a certain amount of
money lets say incredibly com-
pelling things come in and they
cost $1,000 a trip, Sweeney said.
Well, thats different than, heck,
four kids at $250 a shot to run to
Atlanta. And we wont know that
until we get the proposals from the
students.
Though the grant does not help
students make connections for
interviews in their city of choice,
Sweeney and Eubank both said
they would help students make
contacts in cities where they know
people in the industry.
Sophomore journalism major
Kayla Slake said she is excited
about the opportunity.
I think I would definitely be
interested in it because being a PR
major, I feel like being in the big
cities in the U.S. would be benefi-
cial for my area of study, she said.
I know travel can be expensive,
and boarding and all that, she said.
Its called the Dream City Fund,
but it sounds like a dream come
true or something.
The journalism school pro-
vides other networking and travel
APPLY FOR THE GRANT
Applicants must submit a one-
page application and a resume to
Linda Peterson in Carroll Hall 115
by early next week.
Info: http://bit.ly/X1HphH
opportunities to its students, but
Eubank said the Dream City Fund
is unique.
It allows students to pitch the
idea of going a lot of different plac-
es that are within reason, he said.
Sweeney said he thinks the new
grant will benefit students.
Oh my goodness, its a chance
for somebody to get on a plane
and go to a distant city that may
contain the finest firms in places
in your chosen field, and suddenly
you have a chance to get there?
he said.
I mean, I think its wonderful.
Its just extraordinary.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
I THINK I CAN
dth/chloe stephenson
Bev Perdue speaks in the first event of the UNC journalism schools Women in the Media Leadership Series.
Charter
school to
open this
summer
By Paige Ladisic
Staff Writer
When most schools doors are
closed for summer vacation, a new
charter school in Hillsborough will
be welcoming its first student body.
The Expedition School a
recently approved charter school
will welcome about 350 kinder-
garten through sixth grade students
this July.
Were just a grassroots opera-
tion, said Patricia Brummitt, a
board member for the school.
Brummitt said she plans to teach
at the school, which will focus on
STEM topics science, technology,
engineering and mathematics and
project-based learning.
The charter school will be indepen-
dent from Orange County Schools.
Charter schools are an emerg-
ing trend nationwide, said Michael
Gilbert, spokesman for Orange
County Schools.
Historically, charter schools have
received backlash from people con-
cerned about declining funding for
public school systems.
When students leave a public
school district, the school system
loses funding.
Charter schools also use public
funds, but they arent subject to the
same state regulations as public
schools as long as they achieve the
goals listed in their charters.
But Brummitt said The
Expedition School hasnt received
any negative feedback from the
school board or parents in the
Hillsborough community.
She said she thinks parents like
having a choice in where and how
their children will be educated.
We believe that schools dont
necessarily all need to be the same,
she said.
Robert Landry, chairman of
the board of directors for the N.C.
Alliance for Public Charter Schools,
said charter schools are beneficial
because of the range of options for
students and parents.
There is flexibility for how they
teach and what they teach, he said.
He also said charter schools allow
the community to engage in the
childs education.
It can bring the flavor of the
community, he said. It brings the
opportunity for choice for your chil-
dren.
Landry said he believes North
Carolina will see an increase in
schools applying for charters in the
coming years. In the last year, North
Carolina has received 156 letters of
intent to open a charter school as
of Jan. 4. But not every school is
approved, he said.
Theyre going to have to show
evidence that theyre going to do
something totally different than you
can find in a regular school, Landry
said.
Brummitt said board members
chose to focus on science and math-
ematics because of the growing need
for STEM-educated adults.
Students will also learn in multi-
age classroom settings instead of
traditional age-based classrooms.
Our approach is to start with
students from where they are and to
make them grow from where they
are at a pace that makes sense for
them, she said.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
ECU sues Cisco over use of trademarked slogan
Former Gov. Perdue talks on leadership
By Madeline Will
Senior Writer
Former Gov. Bev Perdue has a
quote from a great philosopher
framed. Its been hanging on her
wall for years.
And on Thursday at UNC, she
led an audience of more than
200 in a rousing rendition of that
quote: I think I can; I think I
can; I know I can.
The Little Engine That Could
inspired Perdue throughout her
four years as governor and the
rest of her political career, she
said during the first Women in
the Media Leadership Series
event.
The event, hosted by the UNC
School of Journalism and Mass
Communication, featured Perdue
sitting on a couch with Susan
King, dean of the journalism
school, Karen Gil, dean of the
College of Arts and Sciences, and
journalism students Averi Harper
and Jessica Kennedy. The con-
versation focused on women in
leadership positions.
I find myself sometimes,
even now, in rooms of guys
where Im the only woman, and
that is tiresome to me, Perdue
said.
Perdue was North Carolinas
first female governor. She was
succeeded by Gov. Pat McCrory
after deciding not to seek re-
election.
Perdue said that when she real-
ized early in her term the signifi-
cance of the states budget deficit
she decided that she would not
focus on re-election.
I made a promise to myself
that I would make each deci-
sion on the understanding that it
would be the best thing for North
Carolina, that I would be willing
to suffer the political price for the
state to be better off when I leave
office, she said.
And despite the low poll
numbers that plagued her term,
Perdue said, she hopes her
legacy focuses on her leadership
of the state through the Great
Recession.
I think I ll be known as the
governor who transformed this
state, she said.
She blamed social media, the
blogosphere and the 24/7 news
cycle for her low public approval
ratings.
I believe that as long as the
economy is weak They ll think
the person who is in charge is not
doing a good job, she said. You
cant let that get you down.
Now, Perdue is looking toward
a new career. She said her next
step will be announced Thursday.
Perdue, who is also co-writing a
book about her memories as gov-
ernor, said she wants to be part of
an educational foundation focus-
ing on technology.
King, who launched the series
to spotlight women leaders and
encourage female students to
aim high, said she enjoyed the
discussion with Perdue.
I saw a different side to her,
she said after the event.
Kennedy, one of the student
interviewers, said the experience
was nerve-wracking but exciting.
I think the governor was really
inspiring, she said. She had
great things to say about women
in politics.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
The Expedition School in
Hillsborough will open
its doors this July.
We feel it is essential to
take action to protect
that defining trademark
of our identity.
Steve Ballard,
ecU chancellor
By Amy Tsai
Staff Writer
According to East Carolina
University, tomorrow can only start
in one place.
The university is suing Cisco
Systems Inc. a global networking
company to settle a dispute over
the schools trademarked slogan,
Tomorrow starts here.
ECU filed a lawsuit late last week
against Cisco for unlawful use of the
slogan, which adorns the top of the
schools website and other products.
Cisco has been using the slo-
gan in an advertising campaign
launched last month that includes
60-second television ads.
ECU claims Ciscos use of the
slogan violates trademark law and
confuses consumers who associate it
with the university.
We feel it is essential to take
action to protect that defining
trademark of our identity and
vision, said ECU Chancellor Steve
Ballard in a statement.
ECU uses the slogan to pro-
mote its College of Technology and
Computer Science as well as its
research, software development and
licensing, according to the official
complaint.
Kristin Carvell, spokeswoman for
Cisco, said the company was sur-
prised by the complaint.
Cisco takes intellectual property
rights very seriously, and we are
confident that our new campaign
does not create any confusion in
the marketplace, Carvell said in an
email statement.
A university press release states
that ECU started using the slogan
more than a decade ago. Records
from the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office show that ECU received the
trademark in 2011.
Deborah Gerhardt, a law profes-
sor at UNC-CH who studies trade-
mark law, said ECU needs to prove
that Ciscos use of the slogan will
cause consumers to mistakenly buy
Cisco instead of ECU products.
We rely so much on brands
in our economy, Gerhardt said.
People will sue so that their sym-
bol will have a distinct commercial
impression.
But if two companies belong to
different industries and have unmis-
takable products, they can legally
use the same slogan, she said.
Its really hard to know just
from a lawyer looking at a dispute
whether or not somebody can win,
she said.
Gerhardt added that ECUs law-
yers could find it difficult to prove
that Ciscos use of the slogan will
confuse consumers.
But Rick Matthews, a lawyer rep-
resenting ECU, said he expects the
university to win the case.
ECUs lawyers argue that Cisco
and ECU products are part of the
same computer technology indus-
try, according to the official com-
plaint.
Gerhardt said each trademark
rights suit is different in terms of
how long it takes to resolve the dis-
pute, and the timeline depends on
particular aspects of the case.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
Dream City Fund will
award students up to
$1,000 for travel costs.
The university wants
to protect its slogan,
Tomorrow starts here.
From Page One Friday, January 18, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4
attended as an undergradu-
ate and law student, in 2001
as assistant dean of students.
Much of her work focused on
training programs for those
involved with the system used
for reporting sexual assault.
Manning declined to com-
ment Thursday on the com-
plaints allegations.
According to the complaint,
in 2006, the year Sauls was
hired as judicial programs
officer, all language requir-
ing sexual assault training for
judicial boards disappeared.
The complaint states that
in 2010, Manning began to
encounter a hostile environ-
ment within her own office
and the Universitys upper
administration an environ-
ment that only grew increas-
ingly aggressive during the
remainder of her time at UNC.
According to the com-
plaint, in 2010, when Crisp
was promoted from dean of
students to vice chancellor for
student affairs, Manning met
with Crisp to ask him about
applying for the vacant dean
of students position.
Vice Chancellor Crisp told
her that he would never hire
her because she had a young
child at home and what that
could mean, according to the
complaint, which cites the
action as a violation of Title
VII of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, which prohibits discrim-
ination on the basis of gender.
Sauls was hired for the
position.
For the next two years, the
complaint states, Manning
endured persistent hostility
from Sauls, her direct superi-
or, who lashed out at her with
threats, retaliation and silence
a stressful combination that
eventually affected her health,
according to the complaint.
The document claims this
hostility violated Title IXs
guarantee to an equal oppor-
tunity work environment.
On separate occasions,
Sauls reprimanded Manning
for reaching out to Chancellor
Holden Thorp and the Office
for Civil Rights regarding
UNCs handling of sexual
assault, the complaint states.
She was told by Dean Sauls
that she should never contact
the Office for Civil Rights
again, the complaint says.
The complaint also states
Sauls told Manning she
would suffer consequences for
assault
from page 1
were crucial to the plans and
the format of the process itself.
This process was devel-
oped by parents and staff fol-
lowing the last redistricting,
he said.
He said the time frame of
the process had to be shorter
because the board wanted to
use the most current student
data possible, which meant it
had to move more quickly.
But McElveen said he
wished the plans couldve
better reflected parents
voices and concerns about
issues like long bus rides
and uprooting their chil-
dren.
Theres a difference
between listening and being
able to act upon it, he said.
Board member Mike
Kelley voted against the pro-
posal because travel time was
not examined closely enough.
I dont support the pro-
cess, and I dont see how the
fruit of that process could be
supported, he said.
LoFrese said travel time is
a less important issue in such
a small district.
Chances are no matter
where you are, your school is
redistricting
from page 1
goal of 20 percent has not
officially been met, as the
purchasing period sampled by
CDS that reported 20 percent
sustainability was only for a
five-week period.
If we had done that for the
entire year, most likely CDS
wouldnt have been at 20 per-
cent, Crumpler said.
In addition, FLO members
would also like to see more of
the real food percentage meet
two or more categories of real
food, which currently only
about five percent of the din-
ing hall food meets.
Group members said this is
a step in the right direction for
CDS, but is not an end.
It doesnt mean were done
now, that we can give up,
Crumpler said. We are not
done working with the Real
Food Challenge or trying to
improve.
Senior Suzanne Fleishman,
a leader of FLO, said that while
its important to keep improv-
ing, the success of last year
should not go unappreciated.
From 2011 to 2012, the
increase in real food in UNC
dining halls was 10.2 percent.
Glenn Lippig, FLO mem-
ber and leader who worked
as a CDS intern on the Real
Food Calculator, said the ini-
tial report was exciting.
We spent weeks research-
ing it, he said. When we saw
the 20 percent, we were so
surprised that we checked it
like five times.
So not only do we know
this number is accurate, but it
was met in a way thats trans-
parent and representative of a
legitimate commitment to food
sustainability on CDSs behalf.
Inspired by this achieve-
ment, Crumpler and
Fleishman said they hope to
eventually have 20 percent
real food year-round.
FLO and CDS have not yet
set a plan to achieve these
goals, but have stated that it
will be a major focus of 2013.
These five weeks are a
great achievement, but we
can still do some more work,
Crumpler said.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
cds
from page 1
Salaries of UNC-system leaders
Below are the salaries of the 17 UNC-system leaders for 2011-12. With UNC-CHs
ongoing chancellor search, the school is likely to oer its next leader a pay raise.
SOURCE: UNC GENERAL ADMINISTRATION DTH/RACHEL HOLT
0 100,000 200,000 300,000 400,000 500,000 600,000
UNC GA*
NCSU
UNC-CH
ECU
N.C. A&T
UNC-C
UNC-G
ASU
NCCU
UNC-W
WCU
FSU
UNC-P
WSSU
UNC-A
UNCSA
ECSU
NCSSM
$525,000
$420,000
$420,000
$315,000
$300,000
$315,000
$315,000
$290,000
$315,000
$275,000
$275,000
$234,000
$240,000
$234,000
$237,930
$236,000
$216,300
$210,000
*President of UNC system Thomas Ross
**
**NCSU Chancellor Randy Woodson
received a raise, bringing his
total salary to $495,000
ized, said Wade Hargrove,
chairman of the UNC Board
of Trustees and the commit-
tee.
When that process is com-
plete, committee members
will decide whether poten-
tial competition from other
schools will influence pay,
Hargrove said.
The marketplace will
speak to that, he said.
McGowan said he thinks
UNCs lower salary can be
attributed to the schools tra-
ditionally lower tuition rates.
Weve been proud of the
fact that we dont occupy that
universe of huge executive
salaries, he said. (UNC-CH
has made) a commitment to
a certain notion of education
and a certain sanity about our
price.
But he said he believes its
likely that the next chancellor
will be offered a sizeable pay
increase.
In order to get someone
to take the job, we ll have to
offer a bigger salary, he said.
Non-state funds provided
by N.C. State will pay for
Woodsons raise, Worthington
said.
McGowan said he thinks
its a possibility that private
money could also be used to
lure Thorps successor to the
university with a higher sal-
ary. Higher education observ-
ers have raised concerns in
the past about the influence
of donors and alumni on
chancellors who are paid with
private money.
But regardless of how
Woodsons compensation
is paid for, John Taylor,
associate vice chancellor
for advancement services
at NCSU, said the move to
increase the chancellors pay
was necessary.
If (state universities) want
to retain or hire the best, then
we need to come up with
funding, he said.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
salaries
from page 1
elementary plan 2.1r
1,047
total students moved
13 percent
at-risk student variation
0.73
socio-economic variation
only going to be a few miles
from your house, he said.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
(Manning) was
asked to look
over the numbers
again.
complaint against unc,
filed by five individuals Wednesday
writing to Thorp. Though at
the time Sauls did not specify
what the consequences would
be, the complaint says he later
rated her as needs improve-
ment in her annual review
and told her that others had
suggested he fire her.
The complaint then details
how Manning felt isolated by
Sauls. He initiated and then
canceled eight separate meet-
ings with Manning and often
failed to respond to her emails,
according to the complaint.
The document also states
that at points, Sauls made
Manning uncomfortable and
scared.
Sauls balled one of his
hands into a tight fist on
the small table that he and
Manning were sharing,
according to the document.
This action made Manning
feel fearful for her safety, and
she therefore decided to end
the meeting.
But Mannings mistreat-
ment extended beyond Sauls,
according to the complaint.
Manning eventu-
ally reached out to Crisp to
express her concern that she
was being retaliated against
by Sauls. Crisp told Manning
that filing a grievance against
him would only go badly
for her, according to the
complaint.
When the retaliation was
eventually investigated,
Manning was told that the
University found no evidence
of retaliation or bullying
behavior from Sauls, accord-
ing to the complaint.
After Manning resigned at
the end of the fall semester, she
learned that Sauls had tried
to persuade one person who
was interviewed to change her
testimony for the investigation,
the document states.
Too high
According to the com-
plaint, in 2011, the University
Counsels office pressured
Manning to underreport cases
of sexual assault for 2010 to
the federal government.
The Clery Act requires
campuses to disclose crime
statistics to the federal gov-
ernment each year.
(Manning) was told by
a member of University
Counsel staff that the number
of reports was too high and
she was asked to look over
the numbers again, the com-
plaint states. For two weeks,
she received multiple phone
calls from various members of
University Counsel staff ask-
ing her to make sure that her
numbers were correct.
The number of sexual
assaults that appeared in
that years Clery report was
three lower than the number
Manning submitted to the
Office of University Counsel,
the document states.
The University reported
six incidents of forcible sex
offenses on campus for 2009,
19 for 2010, the year for which
Manning was asked to com-
pile statistics, and 12 for 2011.
The maximum fine for vio-
lating the act is $35,000 per
incident.
Frank LoMonte, executive
director of the Student Press
Law Center, said the accuracy
of numbers reported through
the Clery Act is a national
issue.
Nationally, theres no
question that Clery Act crime
statistics all across the board
look suspiciously low, he said.
I would say its rare that you
see direct evidence that peo-
ple intentionally manipulate
the numbers. And these are
just accusations, obviously.
The fact is theres enough
confusion and misunder-
standing about how Clery
works that youre never
certain whether the under-
statement is intentional or
accidental, he added.
I tend to suspect its inten-
tional because its not all that
confusing.
LoMonte said one can only
remove a case from Clery Act
statistics if it is found to be
completely unfounded.
If its not entirely unfound-
ed, then you have to count it,
even if it doesnt result in any
punishment, he said.
Jim Bradshaw, spokesman
for the Office for Civil Rights,
wrote in an email Thursday
that the office had received
the complaint and was work-
ing to determine whether it
warranted an investigation.
Theres no established
timeline set out for complaint
investigations, LoMonte said.
Its conceivable that it
could hang out there for even
a matter of a couple of years.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
Quality Dental Care in Chapel Hill
and Surrounding Areas
Mon., Wed., Fri. & Sat. 8:30 AM - 5 PM
Tues. & Thurs. 10 AM - 7 PM
CHAPEL HILL
109 Conner Dr.,
Suite 2100
919-442-1670
DURHAM
105 Newsom St.,
Suite 103
919-797-2689
CARY
204 Ashville Ave.,
Suite 30
919-480-0279
www.tarheeldentistry.com
Friday, January 18, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 5
SportsFriday
Q&A with
Jackson Simmons
dth photo illustration/erin hull and katie sweeney
Reserve forward Jackson Simmons broke into the spotlight on his 20th birthday last weekend in UNCs first ACC victory against Florida State.
Jackson Simmons, a sophomore on the
North Carolina mens basketball team, is
coming off an eight-point, four-rebound
showing at Florida State. With the help
of a key bucket and some late free throws
from Simmons, who turned 20 years old
Saturday, UNC left FSU with a 77-72 win.
Sports Editor Brandon Moree sat down
with Simmons to talk about the roadtrip to
Florida and where hell go from here.
DAILY TAR HEEL: Have you ever had a
better birthday?
JACKSON SIMMONS: You know what, that
was the first Ive played a few times on my
birthday, once in high school, and it didnt
turn out too well. So yeah, this is up there in
terms of games being played on my birthday,
because it was a big win against a pretty good
team at their place and what they did to us a
year ago. Being able to get our season back on
track, there was a lot riding on that game.
DTH: You were left out there on the floor
last year, werent you?
JS: It was blown out of proportion a little
bit. There were some safety issues at UNLV
when they stormed the court there. Safety
was the number one priority. The thing I
was saying was when that clock hits zero,
your first couple steps need to be toward
that locker room, and they were. It was
good to redeem what happened a year ago
with a big win.
DTH: Was that any sort of motivation?
JS: Oh, absolutely. And also the fact that
we lost two games to Virginia and Miami
was kind of unsettling. We had to kind of get
back on track. There was a lot riding on that
game from last year and for this years team.
DTH: So I guess its safe to say youve got
better memories now?
JS: Yes sir, a lot better memories.
The new man in the rotation
DTH: What was practice like leading up to
the Florida State game? Did you anticipate
that you might get some more minutes?
JS: I anticipated that there was a
possibility that I could. Youve always got
to be ready because you never know when
your numbers going to be called. It was just
a good week of preparation, and it all just
came together. For that game, my number
was called, and I tried to give 100 percent.
DTH: Last year, you were out there as one
of the last five guys. This year you were out
there because coach Roy Williams saw what
you were doing and liked it. What do you
bring to the floor when youre out there?
JS: I just try to do my job, and thats to be
the best screener that I can possibly be. If
theres a loose ball, go get it. Box out and just
do the little things that can help a team win.
DTH: What was the locker room like after
the game?
JS: It was pandemonium. Like I said, it
was a big win, and we really wanted that
game. There was a different tone before
that game than there had been. A lot of
seriousness, a lot of focused faces. We just
pinned our ears back and went and got it.
DTH: How far do you think youve come
as a player since your freshman year to
where you are right now?
JS: Ive come a long way. I still have a long
ways to go, but from last year, Ive come a
long way. The coaches have helped out with
me. Hubert Davis has helped me out a lot,
see SIMMONS, page 6
SportsFriday Friday, January 18, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6
Tar Heels
come out on
the attack
Tar Heel defense sties Cavaliers
By Jonathan LaMantia
Assistant Sports Editor
Last season at Virginia,
Cavalier guard Ataira
Franklin scored 29 points on
the Tar Heels in a double-
overtime loss to UNC a stat
that was not lost on North
Carolina guard Tierra Ruffin-
Pratt during Thursday nights
71-60 win.
We knew that she was
going to come in and try to
score and try to take over in
the second half when they
were down, Ruffin-Pratt said
We kind of keyed into that
from last years perspective.
The Tar Heels held
Franklin to just five points.
Franklin, who averages 11.9
points per game, also record-
ed two assists while turning
the ball over four times.
UNC (18-1, 6-0) entered
Thursday nights contest lead-
ing the nation in steals with
14.9 per game and stayed
close to pace against the
Cavaliers, converting 14 steals
into 32 points.
At halftime, UNC led UVa.
17-0 in points off turnovers.
Theyre big on traps, and
they play passing lanes,
Virginia coach Joanne Boyle
said. You get in the paint,
theyre great shot blockers.
Theres a lot of different ways
they can do it.
On Virginias second pos-
session of the game, UNC
employed a full-court press,
and sprinkled the technique
in throughout the first half
to make Virginia work to get
past the half-court line.
Even when the Cavaliers
made it far enough to begin
their half-court offense, UNC
used double teams to hassle
Virginia into 24 turnovers.
It didnt get any easier for
the Cavaliers in the second half,
as they opened play with a five-
second violation when Franklin
was unable to inbound the ball
past senior Krista Gross out-
stretched arms.
Virginia forward Telia
McCall said her team failed to
use ball fakes effectively to gen-
erate space on in-bound plays.
Ruffin-Pratt took it a step
further later in the second
half when she stole guard
Kelsey Wolfes inbound
bounce pass at half-court and
finished with an uncontested
layup to stretch the Tar Heels
lead to 53-31.
Hatchell said her players
take pride in playing stifling
defense.
All five of them dont want
to be the weak link and they
really get after it, especially
when (center) Waltiea (Rolle)
is on the throw-in, Hatchell
By Dylan Howlett
Staff Writer
Theres a sign attached
to the locker room door of
the North Carolina womens
basketball team it simply
reads, Attack.
Taking the mantra to heart,
the No. 11 Tar Heels (18-1,
6-0 ACC) besieged unranked
Virginia in a 71-60 win
Thursday night that was as
punishing as the wintry weath-
er outside Carmichael Arena.
I think we just came out
with a lot of intensity on
defense, senior guard Tierra
Ruffin-Pratt said. And that
just sparked the offense.
The game never felt as
close as the final score.
Overall, I thought we did
a lot of good things, coach
Sylvia Hatchell said. Were
working really hard in prac-
tice, these kids are, on what
we need to work on.
And were getting better
its showing, its paying off.
UNC flexed its defensive
muscle to pull away from
Virginia (11-6, 3-3 ACC) in
the first half, the teams best
of the season, according to
Ruffin-Pratt. The Tar Heels
turned blocks, steals and
errant UVa. passes into 17
points off turnovers.
UNC finished the opening
half with nine steals, includ-
ing three by the tenacious
Ruffin-Pratt.
Ruffin-Pratts line also fea-
tured eight assists.
At the beginning of the sea-
son, (playing point guard) was
a task that I wasnt really used
to, Ruffin-Pratt said. And it
got to a point where I was like,
I dont want to do it anymore.
But the coaches trust me
with the ball in my hands, so if
they trust me, I trust myself.
The scoreboard soon
became lopsided as UVa.s
carelessness continued and
UNCs defensive vice-grip
tightened. UVa. would score
just three points in the final
7:55 of the first half.
Not helping Virginias cause
was a mismatch at center.
The Cavs undersized starting
five, including 6-foot-3-inches
center Simone Egwu, had
no answer for the imposing
6-foot-6-inches Waltiea Rolle.
Rolle accounted for
more than half of UNCs 26
points in the paint, with the
Cavaliers mustering just 16.
shooting a lot before practice.
And my teammates have
helped me out. Theyve
always told me to be focused
and be ready for when your
time because you dont know
when your numbers gonna be
called. And it was just great
to see a lot of hard work show
up in that moment.
DTH: Coming off the
Florida State game, whats the
attitude been like in practice?
JS: Its been positive. Much
more relaxed, like I said. Its
a lot better being 1-2 than it
is being 0-3. Hopefully by
Saturday we ll say being 2-2s
better than being 1-3. Weve
got two practices to get ready
for Maryland, whos coming
off a big win against N.C.
State. They won 13 games in
a row at one time, so its going
to be a good challenge.
DTH: Coming off arguably
your best game, how do you
try to build on that?
JS: To just keep doing my
job. I dont worry about trying
to duplicate performances,
because when you do that,
frustration can easily set in.
Im just going to keep doing
my job. We ll see where that
goes.
The only thing Im
concerned with and were
concerned with is winning
building off that win on
Saturday.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com
SimmonS
from page 5
Brandon Brooke Jonathan Henry Kelly michael Carson
moree Pryor Lamantia Gargan Parsons Lananna Blackwelder
Last Week 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
record to date 0-0 (.000) 0-0 (.000) 0-0 (.000) 0-0 (.000) 0-0 (.000) 0-0 (.000) 0-0 (.000)
UNC vs. Maryland UNC UNC UNC UNC UNC UNC UNC
Virginia Tech vs. Wake forest VT VT VT VT VT Wf VT
florida State at UVa. fSU fSU fSU fSU fSU fSU fSU
Clemson vs. N.C. State NCSU NCSU NCSU NCSU NCSU NCSU NCSU
Louisville vs. Syracuse Syracuse Louisville Louisville Louisville Louisville Louisville Louisville
gonzaga at Butler Butler Butler Butler Butler Butler gonzaga gonzaga
missouri at florida florida missouri florida missouri missouri florida missouri
Texas vs. Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas Kansas
DTH PICKS OF THE WEEK
The DTH Sports staff and one celebrity guest compete to pick the winners of the biggest
ACC and national college football games each week.
football season is finally over, and confer-
ence play is well under way in the world of
college basketball.
much to the relief of our pickers, the
change of season means that the slate is
wiped clean, and for at least one week, all
the pickers are on an even playing field or
court, if you will.
We usually have at least one new face each
week in our rotating guest picker spot, but
this is a special week. after a first-place finish
in the football season picks, robbie Charms
Harms has decided to go out on top and
retire from his post as an assistant editor and
picker extraordinaire.
But have no fear, weve replaced Harms
with new assistant editor Jonathan
Lamantia.
Lamantia hails from the great state of New
York and is, unfortunately, a Jets fan. But
enough about him, this isnt an eHarmony
profile.
our other fresh face is new arts editor of
The Daily Tar Heel, Carson Blackwelder. He is
a connoisseur of all things related to televi-
sion, and he even interned at TV guide. Hes
pretty good at picking out good television
shows, so heres to hoping that hell be a
natural at picking out game winners, too.
Weve got an exciting slate of games this
weekend.
UNC looks to build off of its momentum
from the florida State win last weekend. But
the Tar Heels will face a pesky maryland team
that just knocked off N.C. State with a tip-in
basket with .9 seconds left in the game.
also on tap for Saturday, Syracuse will
head down south to take on top-ranked
Louisville. Though these two teams arent
in the aCC quite yet, the matchup has the
Carson Blackwelder is
this weeks guest picker.
Blackwelder, a senior
journalism major, is the
The Daily Tar Heels new
arts editor.
potential to be a rivalry for years to come.
another game with aCC ties, the missouri-
florida matchup, should also be a nailbiter.
former miami coach frank Haith and his
Tigers will travel to florida to take on the
hungry gators. Though florida has the
homecourt advantage, anything could hap-
pen in this SeC game.
The picks are pretty straightforward this
week, but keep an eye on michael Lananna,
who predicts Wake forest to beat Virginia Tech
and gonzaga to beat the UNC slayers Butler.
DTH/moira giLL
Krista Gross and other Tar Heel defenders swarm Virginias Sarah
Imovbioh. UNCs swift defense has been key to its success so far.
said.
Hatchell said her teams
ability to communicate on the
court is the result of chemistry.
Chemistry has a lot to do
with it, Hatchell said. Its
like the wind. You cant really
see it, but you sure can see the
results of it.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
DTH/moira giLL
High-flying guard Danielle
Butts skies for the ball against
Virginia. She contributed eight
points and four rebounds.
The ACCs reigning
Rookie of the Week Xylina
McDaniel scored 15 points
and grabbed nine boards in
29 minutes.
The freshman forward epit-
omized the Tar Heels relent-
lessness early in the second
half. With her team up by 22,
McDaniel got her own rebound
below the basket as three
Cavaliers descended on her.
She wrestled her way
through contact and drew a
foul.
I just feed off of my team-
mates every single person,
McDaniel said of her effort.
Once I see them pumped up
and doing good, Im like, Oh,
Ive gotta get in here too and
get some action.
That enviable energy bled
from the locker room sign onto
the floor. Hatchell was not sure
who hung the sign, but she
endorsed its simple message.
Thats sort of the mental-
ity we want to have attack
on offense and defense.
And that attack is making
life a pleasure for the Tar Heels.
Its fun were 18-1. And
this is a really good group of
kids to coach, Hatchell said.
I tell you, I really enjoy
them. And theyre listen-
ing and learning and paying
attention. And they have a lot
of chemistry, and this makes
it fun for the coaches.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
WomEnS BASKETBALL: UnC 71, VirGiniA 60
Mon-Wed: 11:30am-11pm Thurs-Sat: 11:30am-11:30pm Sun: Noon-11pm
Downtown Chapel Hill
919-942-PUMP
106 W. Franklin Street,
next to Hes Not Here
www.yogurtpump.com
just another just another
food group food group
SportsFriday Friday, January 18, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7
By Haley Rhyne
Staff Writer
Though the North Carolina
mens and womens swim-
ming and diving teams try to
maintain their focus on the
end-of-the-season champion-
ship meets, this weekend is all
about one rivalry.
The meet against an
undefeated Virginia team in
Charlottesville Saturday rep-
resents one of the last confer-
ence meets for the seniors, and
the first taste of a long-stand-
ing rivalry for the freshmen.
With all the hype that comes
with this competition, coach
Rich DeSelm is relying on his
seniors to lead the team.
Im counting on them for
their leadership, knowing what
this meet is like, the intensity
of it, the rivalry, DeSelm said.
I hope their experience and
wisdom from doing it three
times will be helpful for them
and the team.
The No.16 womens team
(3-1) hasnt beaten UVa. in
the last three years, while the
No.22 mens team (4-0) won
its dual meet last year for the
first time since 2008.
Senior co-captain Katie
Nolan said she is more excit-
ed about this meet than she
is nervous, but shes prepared
for another close competition,
To come away victori-
ous, senior co-captains Brett
Nagle and Nolan are ready to
step up and lead their team-
mates through one of the
most exciting meets of the
season.
Our goal is always to get
better as the season goes on.
So we want to be at our high-
est level for this meet and
come away with a victory, but
know that its geared at peak-
ing later, Nagle said. We
dont want to make this meet
any bigger than it is.
UNC will have no prob-
lem with its level of intensity
going into the competition,
but the true challenge will
come with design of the meet.
In previous meets the
mens and womens teams
alternate by event, but in this
meet, the men will complete
all of their events before the
women take over the pool.
This means each swimmer
will have half the recovery
time he or she is used to.
To succeed, Nolan said her
solution is mental toughness
and confidence.
You need to be really con-
fident in yourself and know
that what youve been doing
all year is the right thing,
Nolan said. Having all this
work behind you just builds
up your confidence even
more.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
By Aaron Dodson
Staff Writer
As the North Carolina
track and field team heads
into its first meet of the year,
senior sprinter Clayton Parros
has great hope for the pro-
gram that underwent major
changes in the offseason.
This weekend, UNC will
host and compete in the Dick
Taylor Invitational led by some
fresh faces including that of
UNC alumnus and new head
coach Harlis Meaders.
There was a good atmo-
sphere before, but now its just
amazing, Parros said. The
coaches came in and just cre-
ated a real family atmosphere.
I think the coaching staff
is doing a lot of great things
for this program, and Im
excited to see how this years
going to go.
Following a long fall of
practice and conditioning,
Meaders said, he sees the
weekend as a chance for the
Tar Heels head to Charlottesville for rivalry
New era in track starts at home
Condence building for UNC gymnasts
By Daniel Wilco
Staff Writer
With one of the least expe-
rienced rosters in recent his-
tory, the North Carolina gym-
nastics team had trouble with
confidence in its first meet of
the season.
But with one meet out of
the way, the Tar Heels feel
much more prepared for
their upcoming meet against
William & Mary and George
Washington at Carmichael
Arena Sunday.
Aside from being the home
opener for the Tar Heels, the
meet is also a pink meet, an
extension of a partnership
the team has formed over
the years with the Get Real
and Heel program that helps
rehabilitate breast cancer
patients.
I think we were really
excited for the first meet,
senior co-captain Maura
Masatsugu said. But now
after having that one meet
under our belt its going to
boost our confidence a whole
lot, especially because this is a
home meet.
The Tar Heels placed sec-
ond in the Lindsey Ferris
Invitational with 192.95 points.
Though she was pleased
with her teams performance,
redshirt junior Meredith
Magjuka said the first meet
provided some mental obsta-
cles that affected the teams
performance.
Our focus was on some of
the aspects of competing that
dont necessarily involve hit-
ting a perfect routine the
things that are the founda-
tions of having a good meet
and a good competition but
may not have reflected in our
scores, she said.
Redshirt junior Michelle
Ikoma credited the lack of
focus to the timing of the meet.
Everyones a little more
nervous for that first meet
because its the first time
youre competing for a good
six or seven months, so you
just kind of have to dust off
some of the cobwebs, Ikoma
said. Coming out for the
second meet, I think every-
body is just a little bit more
focused.
Coach Derek Galvin said
that aggressiveness and confi-
dence in routines will be criti-
cal to further improvement.
(Last week) we had some
performances that were a
little bit tentative because
they were trying not to make
mistakes, Galvin said.
What we have been talk-
ing about this week is that we
want them to go big. Its okay
to make a mistake if youre
going big you dont want
to make a mistake because
youre holding back.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
Gymnastics team
will open home
schedule on Sunday.
Roy Smith
is a junior
hurdler and
played wide
receiver on the
football team
during the
offseason.
Clayton
Parros is
a senior
sprinter. Last
season he was
part of the
ACC Champion
4x400 team.
team to get a long-awaited
taste of competition and live
up to its high expectations.
Were excited to get the
season started, Meaders said.
It ll be good to see some
schools of different colors and
actually get a chance to com-
pete a little bit.
Our goal for the season,
our theme for the season, is
simply to be a better blue.
When you think of Carolina,
you think of excellence. So
we want to be the Carolina
that people expect.
Parros said sprinting coach
Steve Rubin has helped him
get into the best shape of his
life, although some of his
teammates are still trying to
get their legs back.
Junior hurdler Roy Smith,
who spent the fall playing
wide receiver on the football
team, admits to getting off to
a slow start on the track.
The transition is a little
tough from football in the fall
back to track, Smith said. But
since I run the (400-meter)
hurdles, some of the condition-
ing we do for football correlates
to what I do in track.
Im just really falling back
into things and getting where
Im supposed to be.
With a long season ahead,
Parros said he and his team-
mates will likely use the first
meet to get rid of early-season
butterflies. The teams focus
this weekend will simply be to
remain healthy and perform
to its potential.
The goal is for everyone
to stay healthy go into the
meet healthy and come out
healthy, Parros said.
I would like to see every-
one execute whatever plan
they put together for the meet.
Because if you execute the first
meet, you wont have prob-
lems executing in the future.
Parros said he hopes the
team will not take its first meet
lightly, but rather use it as an
opportunity to present a confi-
dent face to its competition.
People are gunning for us,
but some might underesti-
mate us, he said.
Its just about everyone
being confident in what they
can do and knowing that
when they step out on the
track this weekend, nobody
can touch them.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
The Lowdown on saTurdays Game
Compiled by brooke pryor
maryland vs.
North Carolina
14-3, 2-2 ACC 11-5, 1-2 ACC
dean e. Smith Center
broadcast: eSpN
radio: WCHl 97.9 Fm
head-To-head
The Bottom Line North Carolina 63 , Maryland 57
The Tar Heels have struggled to find a con-
sistent identity in the post, but the emer-
gence of Jackson Simmons could be a big
help. The Terrapins have sophomore Alex
len who is coming off of a game-winning
tip-in against N.C. State. edge: um
Backcourt
UNC has a young point guard in marcus
paige, but hes been improving in every
game. marylands peshon Howard has
been struggling as of late. Hes only aver-
aging 3.8 points despite playing about 24
minutes per game. edge: unC
Frontcourt
Bench
Intangibles
maryland has had a strong bench all
season. Though hes started three games,
Seth Allen usually comes off the bench and
averages 8.2 points per contest. UNC also
has a solid bench led by p.J. Hairston, who
dropped 23 points against FSU. edge: unC
both teams are coming off momentum build-
ing wins against ACC foes after losing their
first two conference games. UNCs win was
a week ago in Tallahassee, while marylands
Wednesday-night win against N.C. State will
be fresh on its mind. edge: um
Ikb
+ WINE + 8Ak
Fr|day Jaruary 18
lr
114 henderson 8t Rosemary 8t
/ 0FF
a|| ||quor
3alurday Jaruary 19
lr
/ 0FF
se|ect w|ne by the g|ass
www.trubar.net
News Friday, January 18, 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
Monday thru Friday when classes are in session.
A university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e.
this affects deadlines). We reserve the right to
reject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Acceptance
of ad copy or prepayment does not imply
agreement to publish an ad. You may stop your
ad at any time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for
stopped ads will be provided. No advertising
for housing or employment, in accordance with
federal law, can state a preference based on
sex, race, creed, color, religion, national origin,
handicap, marital status.
Child Care Wanted
IM lOOkINg FOR someone to watch my 2
year-old daughter at our home on Tuesdays
and Thursdays from 12:30-3pm. Must have
transportation and experience. 919-403-7858.
NANNy SOUgHT!
Nice professional couple with 2 healthy, active,
good natured children (boy 3.5, girl 18 months),
3 blocks west of UNC campus in art flled home
with large yard. Full-time (8:30am-5pm), starts
April 1st. Russian or Spanish language abilities
and/or BA/BS preferred. Send resume salary
requirements: halpernvera@gmail.com.
AfTERNOON SITTER TU/TH
Interested in helping our bustling, sporty
family run more smoothly? We would love to
meet you! We will pay $13/hr. for your help
with our 3 kids (10, 13, 15) on Tu/Th afternoons
3:30-6pm. Car and great references required.
Please call Courtney at 919-619-4937.
PART-TIME CHIlD CARE WANTED: Chapel
Hill family seeks responsible, experienced
babysitter for children ages 2 and 4. Mondays
1:15-5:15pm; Tu/Th 7-9:30am; Wednesdays
9am-1:30pm. $12/hr. M/W hours can be
tweaked for the right person. Excellent
references, safe driving record, ability to
accommodate 2 car seats a must. Contact
leighann19@hotmail.com.
SEEKINg NANNy
Seeking a nanny for full-time, 9am-5pm M-F,
for in home care in Durham starting January
for 1 infant. Superior experience, background
checks required. Please send references/resume
to mdwilkers@gmail.com, 919-419-1492.
NANNY NEEDED AUgUST, SEPTEMBER
full-time, M-F. Infant care needed in our
home. Outstanding experience, clean criminal
and driving record and 3 exceptional
references. We dont want someone to
bring their child to our house. Degree in
education or similar desired. No smoking.
liza.makowski@post.harvard.edu.
For Rent
fAIR HOUSINg
All REAl ESTATE AND RENTAl advertising in
this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal
to advertise any preference, limitation, or
discrimination based on race, color, religion,
sex, handicap, familial status, or national
origin, or an intention to make any such
preference, limitation, or discrimination. This
newspaper will not knowingly accept any
advertising which is in violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper are available on
an equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
2BR/2.5BA CHAPEl HIll TOWNHOUSE.
Downing Creek neighborhood. 5 minutes from
UNC. Recently updated. granite countertops,
stainless appliances. W/D included. Hardwood
frst foor. $1,300/mo. 919-933-0175.
4BR RENOvATED
MILL CREEK UNIT
Beautiful 4BR unit with granite counters,
stainless appliances, fooring, carpet, lighting!
$2,100/mo. Available in August for 12 month
lease. Visit website Millcreek-ChapelHill.com,
email jim@jimkitchen.org, 919-801-5230.
4BR/4BA UNIVERSITY COMMONS condo.
New carpet and paint, $1,400/mo. water and
electric included. On busline. Contact Fran
Holland Properties at fhollandprop@gmail.com.
919-968-4545.
lOVElY 3BR/2B 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.
5BR/2BA CONDO in triplex. 611 Hillsborough
Street. Completely remodeled, hardwoods,
tile throughout, new appliances, W/D, near
bus stop, $2,875/mo. Available August 2013.
704-277-1648 or uncrents@carolina.rr.com.
5 MINUTES TO SOUTHPOINT, 15 minutes
to UNC, Duke. AVAIlABlE NOW. 2BR/2BA
house. Deck, W/D. Recently renovated.
$950/mo. +utilities. 4919 Wineberry Drive,
Durham. mrvincent23@gmail.com.
WAlk TO UNC: We still have houses
and apartments walking distance
to Franklin Street available for
the 2013-14 school year. Details
at www.hilltopproperties.net or call
919-929-1188.
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.
SwEET HOME
IN HILLSBOROUgH
3BR/2BA, 1,048 square feet $900/mo. good
schools, easy access to Chapel Hill, Durham.
Deck, W/D, good storage space. Available now.
919-241-4449.
WAlk TO UNC CAMPUS. 3BR/3BA house.
Park 3+ cars. Deck, W/D. Available July 1st.
Year lease. $1,650/mo. +utilities. 516 South
Merritt Mill. Email mrvincent23@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. Email Fran Holland
Properties at fhollandprop@gmail.com or
call 919-968-4545.
WAlk TO CAMPUS. 2BR/1BA. Fully renovated.
W/D. Dishwasher. Central AC, heat.
large back deck. Available immediately.
Short term lease available. $1,000/mo.
Merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143.
For Sale
SAlE: Downsizing sale. Home contents, tools,
piano, furniture, miscellaneous items. January
26-27. Inclement weather date February
2-3. 100 Springhill Forest Road Chapel Hill.
919-969-9361.
BOOkS: Susannah simply wanted to marry a
tall, dark, handsome, strong, rich man and
live in a country estate. What could go wrong?
Just about everything, in Clumsy Hearts, a
slightly misguided romance by Hysteria Molt.
Available via Amazon.com.
FOOD DElIVERY DRIVER: Experienced food
delivery driver for restaurant delivery in Chapel
Hill. Must have car. Start immediately. Send
resume to goldprema_2000@yahoo.com.
RESEARCH: looking for 18-22 year-old UNC
undergrads interested in using Twitter, ftness
apps to be healthier and lose weight! Contact
tweetingtohealth@unc.edu for more info!
WANTED: TRACk ATHlETE to assist with
coaching a local high school track team.
Should be able to coach either the hurdles or
the jumps. Afternoons, 3:45-5:15pm. $12/hr.
Contact dennis.cullen@da.org.
CAROlINA BREWERY: Now hiring hosts and
servers. lunchtime availability and previous
experience is a plus. Please check out our
website for an application or stop in. We
also have one position open for a kitchen
supervisor. 919-942-1800.
COMPANIONS NEEDED. A Helping Hand seeks
paid companions to assist senior citizens and
adults with disabilities with transportation
and daily tasks. Flexible schedule, competitive
pay. Email info@ahelpinghandnc.org or call
969-7111.
RESEARCH: UNC clinical research study
recruiting subjects age 18-75 with anal
fssure to determine effcacy and safety of
investigational medication. 919-966-8328,
Meley_woldeghebriel@med.unc.edu.
SEEkINg JOB WITH HORSES, part time, in
the Chapel Hill area. For interview please
call 919-370-0183.
CONSTIPATION: Experiencing abdominal
bloating associated with chronic constipation?
UNC clinical research study recruiting
subjects to evaluate safety and effectiveness
of an investigational drug. 919-966-8328,
Meley_woldeghebriel@med.unc.edu.
PART-TIME FlOATER, ASSISTANT teacher
for small child care center. Hours
noon-5pm Send resumes to harvest@
harvestlearningcenter.com. No phone calls
please.
Homes For Sale
ExqUISITE HOME IN southwest Durham.
Close to UNC. 3BR/2.5BA and 2 car garage.
Upgrades galore! A must see! $186,500.
Call laleh Rostami, 919-358-3520.
Lost & Found
FOUND: UNC DOg TAgS. Found at Southern
Village. let me know what the inscription
reads and Id be happy to return them.
jessica_howell@med.unc.edu.
FOUND: kEYS on a worn, faded red carabiner
on 1-12 on brick outside of The Daily Tar Heel
offce. To claim, please call 919-412-8387.
Rooms
lOWER lEVEl PRIVATE ROOM and bath.
Seeking the right professor or working
professional. 3 minutes from UNC and major
busline. 919-929-6879 or 919-225-7687.
ROOM TO RENT $475/MO. Ensuite large
master bedroom in beautiful 3BR house
available now. Woodlake subdivision, minutes
from Southpoint, UNC and Duke. Porches,
fenced yard, freplace, W/D. Views of the lake,
walking trails, gym and pool amenities. Young
professionals. Call Sarah 919-593-4974.
POOl PROFESSIONAlS is hiring managers,
lifeguards and attendants for the summer.
Flexible hours and competitive pay. Contact us
today to secure your summer job. agreiner@
poolprofessionals.com, 919-787-7878.
Travel/Vacation
BAHAMAS SpRINg BREAK
$189 for 5 DAYS. All prices include: Round trip
luxury party cruise, accommodations on the
island at your choice of 13 resorts. Appalachia
Travel. www.BahamaSun.com, 800-867-5018.
Volunteering
SCHOOl READINg PARTNERS! Help
beginning readers practice reading skills,
1-2 hours weekly, Chapel Hill-Carrboro
Schools. Training 1/22 or 1/24, 5:30-9pm.
Register: http://bit.ly/CHCCSvolunteer. Email:
srp@chccs.k12.nc.us or call 919-967-8211
ext. 28336.
COACH WRITE VOlUNTEERS! Conference
one on one with students to improve
their writing skills. Training 1/17 at 5:30-
8:30pm or 1/24 at 9:30am-12:30pm.
Register: http://bit.ly/CHCCSvolunteer Email:
sphillips@chccs.k12.nc.us or call 919-967-8211
ext. 28369.
lOW COST BIRTH CONTROl: Recruiting
healthy local women aged 18-35 for a
long acting birth control study. Women
should want an IUD, have no plans
to move and be in a monogamous
relationship for six months or more.
Join us today! Call 919-260-4791.
Email: M360_study@unc.edu.
BE AN ESl VOlUNTEER! Help school
age ESl students from various countries,
Chapel Hill-Carrboro Schools. Training 1/23 or
1/31, 5:30-9pm. Register: http://bit.ly/CHCCS-
volunteer. Email gmccay@chccs.k12.nc.us or
call 919-967-8211 ext. 28339.
Announcements For Rent For Rent Child Care Wanted
(c) 2013 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 9 -- Something new is coming
your way. Increase your personal
responsibility and ride it out. A partner
revitalizes your spirit. give yourself
permission to excel. list goals.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 6 -- Things are working out for
the better, even if they dont quite seem
so yet. Do what you know will please a
loved one and yourself. You dont have
to do everything.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 9 -- Organize your ideas,
add some water and sunshine, and
let them flower. Your curiosity is your
ally, and so are your friends. Continue
to increase awareness of personal
values.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8 -- Update your resume
with your latest accomplishments. listen
to others advice. Your efforts pay off.
Continue to decrease doubt. All of a
sudden, it all makes sense!
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Put your heart into it
and embark into a writing project.
Publish your best book. But dont spend
more than you get. The important stuff
is all hidden. Randomness brings joy
now.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 5 -- Immerse yourself in a
team project. You provide a balanced
approach on what is needed. The
boss is in a talkative mood. listen.
Remember to get out for some exercise.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 9 -- Theres still plenty to
be done, but you can take a breather
to acknowledge the team, rest, and to
receive well-earned compliments. Then
ramp up participation.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 7 -- Handle obligations and
increase efficiency this week to clear
your plate. A journey with friends
would be excellent. listen to your
subconscious. Change the scenery for
inspiration.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8 -- Dont get too wrapped
up in your worries today. Choose
romance over money. Write a love
letter. Encourage creativity in others
& enjoy the results. Your understanding
is expanding.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 9 -- Cut clutter to clear
space for creative thinking. Invest in
your dreams to really make them come
true. Delays and detours are part of the
process.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 7 -- The communication key
can open doors that until now were
locked. Use the power of words to
discover a whole new world. Its an
excellent moment to express love.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 6 -- You have a tough job. You
can do it, so relax. grow your area of
influence over the coming days. Friends
help you advance. Repay a favor.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If January 18th is Your Birthday...
Career achievement sparks action for the first half
of 2013. Summer brings a slower pace & romantic
flavor, w/ interesting new characters. Family &
home changes color the autumn, w/ remodeling,
relocation or care for a loved one possible. To
thrive, grow wellness practices that enliven.
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
Commercial (For-Proft)
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


UNC Community

SERVICE
DIRECTORY
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
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 !
PACK IT! SHIP IT!
Up to 30% OFF Boxes 15% OFF Shipping w/Student ID
UPS FedEx DHL Postal Services
1202 Raleigh Rd. (Glenwood Square) 968-1181
WE RECYCLE
STYROFOAM
PEANUTS!
Summer Jobs
www.millcreek-condos.com
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
MASS SCHEDULE
Saturday: 5:15pm
Sunday: 9am, 11am & Student Mass at 7pm
919-929-3730 218 Pittsboro St., CH
Reli
g
ious
Directory
Volunteering
The Daily Tar Heel office will be
closed Monday, January 21st in
honor of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
We will re-open on Tuesday,
January 22nd at 8:30am
Deadlines for Tuesday,
January 22nd Issue:
Display Ads & Display Classifieds:
Thursday, January 17th at 3pm
Line Classifieds: Friday, January 18th at noon
Deadlines for Wednesday,
January 23rd Issue:
Display Ads & Display Classifieds:
Friday, January 18th at 3pm
Line Classifieds: Tuesday, Jan. 22nd at noon
Announcements
Announcements
For Rent Help Wanted
RECYCLE ME PLEASE!
By Mary Feddeman
Staff Writer
Workers by day. Dancers
by night.
The Carrboro Modern
Dance Company opens its
doors to both experienced
dancers and novices alike.
The company, created in
June 2011, is teaming up
with the ArtsCenter to host
Forward, only the companys
second show, on Saturday.
The performance will
feature several pieces of origi-
nal choreography by local
dancers, including Marie
Middleton, who teaches class-
es for the company.
I think the audience will
really enjoy seeing adults who
have nine-to-five jobs per-
form, Middleton said.
I think they ll appreciate
the commitment that people
like themselves have.
Forward will feature a
variety of styles, including
performances from Durhams
Blank Slate Dance company,
as well as a piece performed
by middle school students
and one solo performed with-
out music.
The show will be a good
sampling from local artists of
different levels from differ-
ent backgrounds, said Mary
Norkus, artistic director at
the dance company.
Were different from a top-
notch professional company.
Were really about supporting
dancers locally.
Norkus said the company
dth/kathryn bennett
The group Arts In Action prac-
tices and prepares for its open-
ing act in the dance show.
Dance company to perform at ArtsCenter
was intended to be a vehicle
for local dancers to have the
opportunity to choreograph,
perform and collaborate.
This is not the first time
the company has worked with
the ArtsCenter.
The ArtsCenter hosted
Coming Home, the companys
first show, in November 2011.
Beven Ramsey, the dance
companys managing director,
said Forward will be a pro-
gression from 2011.
I feel like we have an even
better foundation this time
around, Ramsey said. Its
really been a strong, creative
process.
Since the initial show,
the two organizations have
formed a partnership, with
the company becoming the
resident dance company of
the ArtsCenter an unusual
practice for the arts organiza-
tion, Norkus said.
Many of the companys
first participants were some
of my former students, she
said.
This area has such a tight,
close-knit dance community,
and the ArtsCenter is a won-
derful place for something
like that.
As part of the partnership,
the company holds classes on
Sundays at the ArtsCenter
on various kinds of modern
dance, all taught by local
dancers.
Jeri Lynn Schulke, artistic
director of the ArtsCenter
stage, said the partnership
between the dance company
and the ArtsCenter is broad
and will continue to grow.
Its really an all-encom-
passing relationship, Schulke
said.
They offer a variety of
opportunities to local danc-
ers, and thats what the
ArtsCenter is all about. We
want to bring the community
to the arts.
Contact the desk editor at
arts@dailytarheel.com.
ATTEND THE SHOW
Time: 8 p.m. Saturday
Location: The ArtsCenter
Info: http://bit.ly/VqVBEp
Tickets range from $8 to $14.
News Friday, January 18, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 9
Semi-sustainable
Carolina Dining Services
reached its real foodgoal
early with some caveats.
See pg. 1 for story.
Perdue speaks
Former N.C. Gov. Bev
Perdue spoke at UNCs
journalism school today.
See pg. 3 for story.
Slogan scandal
East Carolina is suing
Cisco over use of the uni-
versitys trademarked slo-
gan. See page 3 for story.
Interview anywhere
UNCs journalism school
launches a grant to send
students to their dream city.
See pg. 3 for story.
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 Socks for Clinton, e.g.
4 Mums relatives, in a
way
9 Weber State University
city
14 Trouble
15 Petrol purchase
16 __ Laredo, Mexico
17 Bolshevik film festival
fodder?
19 Key of the Eroica
symphony
20 Grant
21 With 51-Across, Puerto
Rico pecan and Cuban
coconut custard?
23 Ode preposition
25 Musicians deg.
26 Audens vineyard?
33 Dawn deity
34 Last words
35 __ Peach: Allman
Brothers album
38 Subdued
40 Montral moniker
41 Jewel box item
42 Gym ball
43 Attic window
45 Doctor of music?
46 Side dish made
with russets and
Tanqueray?
49 Sigma follower
50 Hosp. readout
51 See 21-Across
57 The Kiss
painter
61 Lot of baloney
62 Legendary
musician
responsible for whats
missing from 17-, 21-,
26- and 46-Across
64 Its often stored upside-
down
65 City on the Penobscot
66 Have a life
67 Naturalis Historia
author
68 Parlement franais
division
69 Bury My Heart at
Wounded Knee author
Brown
Down
1 Cut down
2 Adams apple spot
3 Lincoln in-law
4 Looked askance
5 Actress Tyler
6 Left __: rewarded
7 Cologne crowd?
8 Zaires Mobutu __ Seko
9 Unrepeated event, in
Essex
10 Roared
11 Upper-bod muscle
12 Cole Porters Well, Did
You __?
13 A or E, but not I, O or U
18 Instrument heard on
Simon & Garfunkels
Bookends
22 EPA concern
24 45-Across genre
26 Sub
27 Happy __
28 Legally prohibit
29 Cte-dOr crop
30 Ecuadoran province
named for its gold
production
31 Its capital is Amiens
32 Gauge opening?
36 Bagels, shapewise
37 Closing word
39 Cyberface
41 Nutty
43 Smear
44 Denver-to-Wichita dir.
47 Q neighbor
48 Citrus hybrid
51 Soviet letters
52 Kazakhstan border sea
53 Pasta __: food brand
54 Long poem
55 Yorkshire river
56 Gas on Broadway
58 Tech debut of 2010
59 Just
60 Genealogy chart
63 Trial evidence, at times
By Andy Willard
Staff Writer
Junior Ciera Combs only
misses basketball games at
the Smith Center for exams.
She prefers the risers section,
down by the floor.
Theres no better feeling
than being down there with
my friends, she said.
But when Combs watched
the team play McNeese State
during winter break, she
noticed something unex-
pected.
The cheerleading team was
standing in the risers of the
student section, instead of its
usual place on the sides of the
court.
Brown Walters, UNC var-
sity cheerleading coach, said
a decision was made in con-
junction with the marketing
department and officials at
the Smith Center to move the
team in an effort to fill out the
student section for the winter
break games.
In my opinion, its bet-
ter its an improvement,
he said.
We havent taken away
any of their seats; we stand
on the floor where they are
not allowed.
But students said they
have trouble seeing the
game through the cheerlead-
ers megaphones and pom-
poms.
Thats where we have
stood since I have been here
thats just where we stand,
Combs said.
Jack Frost, co-chairman
of Carolina Fever, said he
wanted to meet with the ath-
letic department to discuss
the change as soon as he
noticed it.
I was infuriated because
those spots should go to the
best student fans the peo-
ple that have waited in line
for them, he said.
Frost said he has received
many emails from current
and former students who are
angry about the decision.
Senior Associate Athletic
Director Rick Steinbacher
said that the decision was just
one of many ideas the depart-
ment has to improve the
game-day atmosphere.
Combs and Frost said
they dont want to cause
antagonism between the
students and the cheerlead-
ers but they prefer the
cheers to come mainly from
students.
Cheerleaders perform a
great function, but students
really get excited when the
cheers come from other stu-
dents, Frost said.
Frost met with officials
Wednesday to tell them that
there are better alternatives
and proposed several ideas,
including a student fan who
stands in front of the student
section with a w hite board
directing cheers.
Steinbacher said no
changes are permanent
and they are open to other
options.
Oh yeah, white board idea,
we love it, Steinbacher said.
But for now, the cheerlead-
By Holly West
Staff Writer
Chapel Hill Town Council
member Matt Czajkowski is
ready to move on from last
years unsuccessful cellphone
ban.
The ordinance, which the
council passed in March,
banned the use of both hand-
held and hands-free cell-
phones while driving. It was
overturned in August after a
judge ruled it unenforceable.
During the councils
Monday night meeting,
Czajkowski petitioned the
council to repeal the inactive
ban a move that ultimately
failed in a 5-2 vote.
Czajkowski said he thinks
the back-and-forth on the
ordinance which was the
first of its kind is taking
up valuable town resources,
which are in high demand as
the town is battling multiple
lawsuits.
To me, it brought back
this whole discussion of
opportunity cost, he said.
Something else doesnt get
done if people are using their
time for that.
Town Attorney Ralph
Karpinos said the town is
currently involved in seven
or eight lawsuits. Due to the
influx of cases, the town had
to hire a third party counsel
for one case.
We have a lot going on,
and we have a lot of other
demands on our time, he said.
The cellphone ban was
originally challenged by
Georges Towing & Recovery.
Owner George King sued the
town, claiming the ban and
another ordinance regulating
towing were unconstitutional.
On Aug. 2, Superior Court
Judge Orlando Hudson ruled
the cellphone ban unenforce-
able and overturned the tow-
ing ordinance.
The town is in the pro-
cess of appealing that deci-
sion. Karpinos said the N.C.
Appeals Court should decide
in the next month or so if
oral arguments will be heard
before a ruling is made.
Council member Jim
Ward, who voted against
Czajkowskis motion, said
the lawsuits are worth the
resources they use.
While there are more of
these going on than typical,
I still support putting the
required resources into defend-
Town vote to repeal
cellphone ban fails
Bring it on to the student section
dth/melissa key
Students cheer from the risers during UNCs game against UNLV on
Dec. 29. Cheerleaders will now be allowed to stand in the risers.
ers will stay.
Its not a contest, it
shouldnt be an all-for-one
thing, Walters said.
Ultimately, we want to
make the game the best it can
possibly be.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
ing those actions, he said.
But though the ordinance
is unenforceable, Ward said,
it should be maintained to
educate people about the
dangers of using cellphones
while driving.
Czajkowski said he thinks
the cellphone ordinance was
valuable but has had unin-
tended consequences.
When you stretch like
we did, you dont know what
kind of consequences it will
create, he said.
One consequence
Czajkowski is concerned about
is the effect of the cellphone
ordinance on the towing ordi-
nance. Many towing company
employees operate with cell-
phones in their vehicles.
We have to defend that
towing ordinance, he said.
Weve put in jeopardy every
towing ordinance in every
municipality in the state.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
Fans are not fired up
about cheerleaders
invading their space.
Read todays news cheat sheet: dailytarheel.com/blog/in-the-know
On the wire: national and world news
US trying to suppress
Syrias chemical arsenal
WASHINGTON, D.C.
(MCT) The Obama admin-
istration has quietly arranged
for thousands of chemical
protective suits and related
items to be sent to Jordan and
Turkey and is pressing the
military forces there to take
principal responsibility for
safeguarding Syrian chemical
weapons sites if the countrys
lethal nerve agents suddenly
become vulnerable to theft
and misuse, Western and
Middle Eastern officials say.
As part of their prepara-
tions for such an event,
Western governments
have started training the
Jordanians and Turks to
use the chemical gear and
related detection equipment,
so theyre capable of protect-
ing the Syrian nerve-agent
depots if needed at least for
a short time, U.S. and other
Western officials say.
Washington has decided,
moreover, that the best
course of action in the after-
math of Syrian President
Bashar Assads possible fall
would be to get the nerve
agents out of the country as
quickly as possible, so its
begun discussions not only
with Jordan and Turkey, but
also with Iraq and Russia
to chart the potential with-
drawal of the arsenal and its
destruction elsewhere.
ARGO K
Fri & Sat: 7:00, 9:30 Sun: 7:00
Tue & Wed: 7:00, 9:30 Thu: 9:30
THE PERKS OF BEING A WALLFLOWER J
Fri: 7:10 Sat: 4:30, 7:10 Sun: 4:30 Tue-Thu: 7:10
FLIGHT K
Fri & Sat: 9:20 Sun: 7:10 Tue-Thu: 9:20
HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA I
Sat & Sun: 4:40
The Varsity Theatre
123 E. Franklin Street, Chapel Hill 967-8665
www.varsityonfranklin.com
Movie Showtimes for Week 1/18-1/24 - All Movies $4.00
CLOSED MONDAY
413605.CRTR
BUY A COUCH FIND A JOB
DITCH YOUR ROOMMATE
SELL YOUR CAR VOLUNTEER
FIND A SITTER
w
w
w
.
d
a
i
l
y
t
a
r
h
e
e
l
.
c
o
m
/
c
l
a
s
s
i
f
i
e
d
s
were here for you.
all day. every day
408843.CRTR
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
SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK K . . . . . . . 1:20-4:05-7:20-9:50
THE LAST STAND K . . . . . . . .12:40-2:55-5:05-7:25-9:40
GANGSTER SQUAD K . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1:15-4:15-7:20-9:45
ZERO DARK THIRDY K . . . . . .12:45-3:45-7:00-10:00
LINCOLN J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1:00-4:00-7:15-10:00
www.CoolBlueRentals.com
Check out the really cool houses at:
We make finding your house easy.
Complete information on our houses
online. We ONLY rent clean, well
maintained homes. Contact us soon to
get a chance at yours.
413351.CRTR
4 Bedroom
Houses?
We Got em!
Opinion Friday, January 18, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 10
EDITorIal BoarD mEmBErs
Established 1893, 119 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATUrED OnlinE rEADEr cOmmEnT
University needs to
stand with Manning
TO THE EDITOR:
Today the DTH revealed
how former UNC Assistant
Dean of Students Melinda
Manning was the target
of repeated incidents of
harassment and gender-
based discrimination
at the hands of UNC
administrators.
As students who are
aware of Mannings con-
tributions to UNC, we are
ashamed and angered at the
repeated injustice she was
shown. We encourage the
entire Carolina community
to support her.
Many survivors of sexual
violence have experienced
discrimination at the hands
of the same administrators
who pressured survivors
main ally and advocate on
campus out of her position.
The movement to combat
this discrimination was
initiated by a group of UNC
students determined to
shed light on the corruption
of UNC administrators
and reform the way the
University handles cases of
sexual violence.
This movement did not
originate with Manning. It
was carried out by students.
This group Survivors and
Allies For Empowerment
and Reform approached
Manning about signing on to
the complaint to the Office
of Civil Rights.
Manning sacrificed much
for students in her time here.
Now because students know
what Manning has done for
us, we stand behind her fully.
For too long administra-
tors have not been held
accountable for their actions
and have denied survivors
the support they deserve.
Now is the time to make that
change happen.
Tim Longest
Landen Gambill
Zaina Alsous
Cartoon on students
names was distasteful
TO THE EDITOR:
Thursdays editorial
cartoon making fun of the
C-START program was
not only a lame attempt
at humor but a totally
inappropriate mocking of
the names of two students.
Students who teach these
courses put a great deal of
effort into designing them
and offering them to their
fellow students. Additionally,
they benefit students
interested in those subject
matters as well as their own
experience of teaching.
Mocking students for
unusual names is a hurtful
and unwarranted cheap
shot far below the standards
of journalism and civility to
which I would expect the
DTH to hold itself.
I would hope that the
DTH editors would review
and uphold its standards on
such practices with its staff,
including its cartoonists.
Richard Andrews
Professor
Department of public
policy
lETTErS TO
THE EDiTOr
She and Andrea should have filed a police
report. You dont think its necessary to file an
actual criminal report for an investigation?
1452352525, on the filing of the complaint against the University
Weve been proud of the fact that we dont
occupy that universe of huge executive
salaries.
John McGowan, on the salary for the Universitys next chancellor
EDiTOriAl cArTOOn By Daniela Madriz, madriz@live.unc.edu
The end
of dating?
Nope, not
really
C
an I have your num-
ber? Id just spent
an hour talking with
the guy about homework, but
the question caught me off-
guard.
It was the Mark Rothko
of pick-ups: direct and
unadorned, as was the message
on my phone later: Hi, Sarah.
How am I supposed to ask
you on a date when you dont
pick up? Being used to more
indirect strategies, I was
surprised by the frankness.
But here is the punch line:
statistically speaking, people
are unlikely to meet a spouse
in college. People are marrying
later than they once did, which
is why most students I know
think of serious relationships
in the abstract. If meeting
a spouse is on your college
bucket list, this reality is
awfully depressing.
I use the opening
illustration because it doesnt
happen often (also, it didnt
work out), which is why a
recent New York Times article
dourly decried the end of
courtship. Technology has
thrown a wrench in romance,
complicating the subtext
of casual relationships and
making it simultaneously
harder and easier to connect.
But has technology actually
killed romance?
Yes, but only if romance is
simply the sum of a patriarchy-
based courting system that
results in early marriage
and procreation. But if the
definition of romance is a little
broader no, not at all.
Being dissatisfied with con-
temporary dating is normal,
as is pining for the corsage-
formality of the relationships
that once upon a time began at
the movies and not by making
out sloppily at a party.
This dissatisfaction, though,
can put romance on a binary
scale. On one side of the spec-
trum, the relationships that
lead to weddings right out of
Pinterest on the other, the
nebulous tenure of hook-up
culture represented by the
HBO show Girls.
This binary gives the
illusion that nothing falls in
between; that we are subject
to the unwritten rules of an
unwritten culture. It is trendy
to fetishize technology as
the malaise all disconnected
20-somethings suffer from
and to say that we lack
relationships because texting is
confusing, the economy is bad
and the Internet is big.
But within my own longing
for substance in daily life, a
choice is lodged. If I want
to unplug, I can; if I want to
express interest in someone,
I can. Choosing to despair
the contemporary dating
scene as I often do might
be fun, but its not helpful.
Its important to validate
technology as something that
has complicated romance, but
also broadened it. Change,
after all, is the only constant.
And romance is a part
of that constant. I find the
blurring of rigid gender
expectations romantic,
along with the freedom to
experiment and marry later; to
have platonic friendships and
dance with my best friend.
Its inaccurate to eulogize
romance just because it lacks
the prescription of 50 years
ago. I dont want a prescription
for romance. Courtship may be
dead, but romance isnt.
1/21: DRINKINGAT GAMES
Memet Walker says why UNC
should sell alcohol at games.
N
E
X
T
Sarah Edwards
Down home girl
Senior American studies major from
Davidson.
Email: scedward@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
seven board members, the opinion editor and the editor.
T
he new Global
Visiting Students
program, which
will allow 20 international
students to directly enroll
at UNC starting this fall,
should be applauded. It
increases the Universitys
global presence, even if the
number of new students is
a drop in the bucket.
Direct enrollment dif-
fers from a normal foreign
exchange program in that
UNC does not have to
send the same number of
students it receives.
At first glance, it may
seem that this program
exists solely to benefit
international students,
Global expansion
EDiTOriAl
but the value to students
already at UNC will be
immense as well.
Learning alongside
international students will
make for a more enriching
and intellectually chal-
lenging environment for
UNC students.
Students will be
exposed to other cultures
through interactions on
campus, exchanges of
ideas in the classroom and
more opportunities for
involvement in the global
community.
Additionally, more
international students
will add prestige to the
University. The attractive-
ness of a research institu-
tion that thinks globally
cannot be denied.
UNC must be at the
forefront of international
research. The University
cant afford to lose any
more ground to its coun-
terparts in this arena.
According to a 2009
UNC Global study, the
number of enrolled under-
graduate international
students was barely above
1 percent of the student
population. That same fig-
ure was more than 5 per-
cent for Duke University
and 4 percent for the
national average of col-
leges of a similar caliber.
For a University that
prides itself on a diversity
of ideas, this direct enroll-
ment program manifests
that pride.
In fact, if anything, the
only question we should
be asking the University
is why so few will be join-
ing us.
The new global
enrollment program
strengthens UNC.
T
he Rogers Road
Task Force pre-
sented its final
report on Dec. 6, making
recommendations to the
Orange County Assembly
of Governments on what
to do about the com-
munity center and sewer
system in the Rogers Road
community.
But some county lead-
ers including Chapel
Hill Council member Lee
Storrow and Carrboro
Alderman Michelle
Johnson have started
a petition to extend the
mandate of the task force.
The Assembly of
Governments should do
More time needed
EDiTOriAl
precisely that. The task
force, in its report, also
asked for more time to for-
mulate recommendations,
even though it had per-
formed its original charge.
The promises to the
community, though long
overdue, must be fulfilled
correctly and thoroughly.
Of course, every day spent
debating the issue is a day
spent not fixing it. The
force should get an exten-
sion, but it must make a
final recommendation at
the end of it.
Some members of the
task force, though, have
expressed that the duties
charged to them have
been completed.
But those who wish
to extend the task force
think the task force has
built a bridge between the
community and elected
officials, and any prog-
ress will be lost if the task
force disbands now. This
is a fair assumption, given
that so many promises to
the community have been
unfulfilled.
But even if the task
force doesnt reorganize,
officials, community
members and everyone
involved should heed the
recommendations made
by the task force to move
forward in repairing the
community.
There are several social
and health-related prob-
lems that need solving in
the community and prompt
action must be taken.
The neighborhood
needs its community cen-
ter back, and it has waited
long enough.
If given more time,
the county task force
must use it wisely.
T
he N.C. General
Assembly should
pass public
policies that protect the
fundamental right of
patients at pregnancy care
centers family planning
organizations that provide
alternatives to abortion.
These policies should
mandate providing unbi-
ased, factually accurate
medical information in
pregnancy-related deci-
sion-making.
On Monday, the Chapel
Hill Town Council passed
a resolution to rein in
issues of malpractice and
misinformation at preg-
nancy care centers.
We need to be clear
EDiTOriAl
NARAL Pro-Choice
North Carolina, an
abortion rights activist
group, presented the
resolution to the Chapel
Hill Town Council.
In the resolution, the
Town Council promoted
the following three items:
Firstly, patients have
the right to medically
and factually accurate
information.
Secondly, misinforma-
tion and deception under-
mine this fundamental
right.
And, lastly, the proposal
called on the N.C. General
Assembly to protect this
right by pursuing public
policies to ensure that the
principles stated above
are applied for pregnancy-
related counseling.
On its own, the Town
Council has no authority
to do anything by itself.
However, by passing this
resolution, the Town
Council is asking the N.C.
General Assembly to take
action.
The General Assembly
should heed this call.
The Republican lead-
ership in the legislature
should realize that this is
not a matter of anti-abor-
tion or pro-abortion rights.
Passing this resolution
in the General Assembly
should, thus, not be influ-
enced at all by opinions
regarding abortion.
Rather, this is a matter
of promoting clarity in
medical counseling.
No one should be
misled when seeking
information about health
care.
Dont mix abortion
issues with clarity,
General Assembly.
Kvetching board
kvetch:
v.1 (Yiddish) to complain
So were a football school
now?
Umbrellas: 6. My face: 0.
To Voldemort: Please call
off your dementors. Im
sick of all this fog and
gloom.
To the guy demanding
Roys resignation as bas-
ketball coach: Go home.
Youre drunk.
Is the rat maze in the upper
level of Student Stores a sa-
distic scientifc experiment
on college students or is it
just for laughs?
We Tar Heels have many
talents, skills and abilities.
Clapping in sync with the
band at sporting events is
not one of them.
Thanks to the New Years
resolutioners, I now bring
my orgo book to read while
I wait for a machine. FML.
My favorite part about Con-
nect Carolina is when you
have to log out before you
can log in. Cool feature!
To the girl on her phone
in Graham Memorial: You
turned my nap time into a
nightmare.
To the guy passed out
under a tree by Kenan on
Saturday: Hope DPS treated
you well just trying to
help a fella out.
To the ladies of UNC:
Please withhold sexual
favors from the team until
they get their act together.
When an iPhone vibrates on
a table in Davis and everyone
checks to see if its theirs.
Hey iPhone weather app:
Still waiting for that 64
degrees today! Sincerely,
anyone in shorts and
soggy running shoes.
To the girl who slept through
our entire physiology lecture
during the frst week of
classes: Looks like your cells
could use some ATP.
The only upside of having
to spend all day in Phillips is
that there is no shortage of
reading material when you
have to use the restroom.
To the guy that sent me his
number over a Facebook
message: Can we skip the
poking and just have sex?
To the girls singing ob-
noxiously in the UL study
room: The walls here are
as thin as your chances of
making it on American Idol.
To the girl on South Road
rocking the extra jumbo
infnity scarf: Lets be hon-
est, I think we both know
thats a blanket.
How am I supposed to
know where to piss now
that the cows are gone?
Girls with rain boots on
/ Afraid to walk through
puddles / Youre ridiculous.
Rainy days: When short
people with umbrellas
exact their revenge on tall
people with backpacks.
To my fellow seniors: Can
everyone please keep say-
ing last? Last, last, last.
Send your one-to-two
sentence entries to
opinion@dailytarheel.com,
subject line kvetch.
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
MATTHEW OAKES
KAREEM RAMADAN
PATRICK RYAN
CODY WELTON
SIERRA WINGATE-bEY

Potrebbero piacerti anche