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MAHATMA GHANDI
Monday, February 10, 2014 dailytarheel.com Volume 121, Issue 148
PACE Academy charter not renewed
By Zoe Schaver
Staff Writer
When she heard her school might
have to close, BreAnna Lee put her
foot down.
The 16-year-old high school
junior, who struggles with speaking
in front of others, wrote an informal
speech to perform for her fellow stu-
dents for the first time Friday.
Lee was upset it was the morn-
ing after the State Board of Education
voted not to renew the charter for
PACE Academy in Carrboro.
PACE is a charter school founded
in 2004 for students who do not feel
comfortable in a regular school setting
not as a result of behavior issues,
but because theyve been bullied, have
mental health issues or need one-on-
one attention from teachers.
Ive got a sister who has strug-
gled so much that when she got
here, her whole person changed
so much that it made myself want
to change, Lee said. And if PACE
closes, were going to suffer.
The state board annually votes
to renew North Carolina charter
schools charters based on their
compliance with state regulations.
The Office of Charter Schools
found PACE struggled with non-
compliance in the areas of account-
ability, criminal records checks,
governance and finance, according
to a presentation given to the Board
of Education Thursday.
Charter schools are given auton-
omy in exchange for accountability,
and there is no guarantee of renewal
it has to be earned, Joel Medley,
the director of the state Office of
Charter Schools, said in an email.
Medley said the office contacted
PACE to warn the school about com-
pliance issues prior to the renewal
cycle and made five or more visits to
the school in 2012.
If a school struggles or closes, it
is not the fault of the students but
rests on the adults that have received
the charter, he said.
PACE will have 60 days to appeal
the vote.
These decisions are never easy,
State Board of Education
voted to not renew the
schools charter.
RALLYING IN RALEIGH
H
oliday Clinkscale II participates in the Moral March in Raleigh. Organizations and thousands of individuals from
across the state and nation gathered on Saturday for the Historic Thousands on Jones Street rally, which was in con-
junction with the states Moral Monday movement. Many of the marchers held up signs advocating for a broad range
of issues, including voting rights, access to health care and funding to public education. The march went from Shaw University
to the State Capitol and included speakers, music and prayer. See page 3 for Moral March coverage.
DTH/MELISSA KEY
Salaries
for UNC
football
trail ACC
By Jonathan LaMantia
Senior Writer
Seth Littrell didnt have much
time to get acclimated when he
was announced as North Carolinas
offensive coordinator Jan. 24. He
explored Chapel Hill that weekend
with his wife, and three days later
he was back on the recruiting trail
this time as a Tar Heel, not an
Indiana Hoosier.
The college football coaching
carousel brought Littrell to Chapel
Hill, though recently a Tilt-a-Whirl
has seemed a more apt analogy.
In the Football Bowl Subdivision,
20 programs replaced their head
coaches following the 2013 season,
down from 2012, when nearly one-
fourth of the 125 FBS programs
made a head coaching change.
UNC lost three assistant coaches
this offseason, including Littrells
predecessor Blake Anderson,
who signed a five-year, $3.5 mil-
lion contract to become the head
coach at Arkansas State on Dec. 19.
Anderson brought Walt Bell, UNCs
tight ends coach and recruiting
coordinator, with him.
Then, on Jan. 26, running
backs coach Randy Jordan was
hired to fill the same position with
the Washington Redskins.
One of the biggest worries I
have is stability in our coaching
staff, identifying the appropriate
talented individuals to run pro-
grams and then trying to retain
them, UNC athletic director
Bubba Cunningham said.
The offseason changes mean
five of the nine assistant coaches
UNC head coach Larry Fedora
hired in 2012 have left the program,
including assistant coaches Deke
Adams and David Duggan, who left
for South Carolina and Southern
Mississippi, respectively, after 2012.
Among the eight ACC universi-
ties required to disclose public
records in USA Todays database,
UNC ranked last in total assistant
coach pay at about $2 million.
Boston College, Duke, Miami,
Pittsburgh, Syracuse and Wake
Forest are not included in the data-
base, which compiled data from all
public FBS schools compelled by
state law to disclose salaries.
Cunningham noted UNC has
increased its salaries the com-
bined assistant coach staff pay
rose 9 percent in 2013 from a year
earlier. He pointed to a conser-
vative culture, in terms of com-
pensation for both coaches and
faculty, as one reason UNC lags
behind some of its peers.
Cunningham said he believes the
departures of Anderson, Bell and
UNCs combined assistant
coach pay ranked last in
the ACC in 2013.
Social work student remembered as role model
By Sarah Chaney
Assistant University Editor
She posted the picture on Facebook Feb. 1.
A proud grandmother spending time in the
park with one of her beloved granddaughters.
When the 50-year-old doctoral student posted
the photo, she was doing more than sharing a
moment she was highlighting one of the most
important parts of her life.
I remember thinking, Wow, she is in the
doctoral program, and here she is totally proud
and making time for her granddaughter, said
Kim Strom-Gottfried, a professor in the School of
Social Work.
Teresa Ilinitch, a clinical instructor in the UNC
School of Social Work, died Feb. 3.
She passed away in her sleep unexpectedly,
said Rebecca Brigham, a professor at the School
of Social Work.
The shock of such a beautiful, young, vibrant
person in the peak of her career, who was just
alive and so excited by the students she was
working with, the shock of it has been terrible,
Brigham said.
Ilinitch was viewed as more than just a
coworker in the eyes of her colleagues; she was a
role model and an empathetic individual always
willing to listen.
She would often refer to herself as the mother
of our cohort, said Todd Jensen, a Ph.D. student
in the School of Social Work. There are three
others of us in her cohort, and in a very real way
she kind of played that role in terms of being a
confidant, someone who is older and wiser who
could give us reassurance and an authentic pat on
the back.
Ilinitch frequently shared inspirational quotes on
Facebook: Do one act of kindness each day of the
year, and change 365 lives, she posted this year.
The night before she died, Ilinitch posted an arti-
cle about why she was a social worker, which Sherry
Mergner, a professor in the School of Social Work,
said represented the true essence of who she was.
Ilinitch was interested in a variety of issues
within social work, including working with sur-
vivors of sexual abuse. She taught masters level
courses before deciding to begin her doctoral work.
Jensen said her influence was far-reaching because
she engaged with the faculty, masters students and
graduate students.
Teresa was one of the most affirming people
I have ever known, Brigham said. She made
you feel like you were the most special person on
earth. So if you were having a good day she would
laugh with you, and if you were having a struggle
she was there for you to listen.
Many of Ilinitchs colleagues attested to her
invisible acts of kindness and her contagious ener-
gy that permeated through a magnificent smile.
Her smile, her essence. You look at that smile,
and you just know who she is, said Mergner. She
treated everyone with such love and care, and
Ive never met a person who was more loving and
bright.
Despite Ilinitchs many responsibilities as a
doctoral student and dedicated family member,
she put others at the forefront of her priorities
and lived in the moment, Strom-Gottfried said.
I think the biggest thing that Ive been think-
ing about this week is her ability to be really in
the moment with people, Strom-Gottfried said.
She was as busy as anyone I know, but when
COURTESY OF UNC SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK
Teresa Ilinitch, a clinical instructor and doctoral
student in the UNC School of Social Work, passed
away on Feb. 3. She was 50 years old.
she was with her granddaughters, she was crazy
about time with them. When she was in a meet-
ing, she was in that.
Professor Marty Weems said Ilinitch would be
missed by everyone in the School of Social Work.
There arent many workplaces where people
feel that sense of connection with somebody and
that sense of loss.
university@dailytarheel.com
SEE COACHING, PAGE 5
SEE PACE ACADEMY, PAGE 5
Teresa Ilinitch, doctoral student in
School of Social Work, died Feb. 3.
Tuesdays weather
Todays weather
Inside
Just get us to
Wednesday.
H 37, L 21
Who the heck
knows?
H 39, L 27
FINAL SOUND-OFF
FOR SBP CANDIDATES
Four student body president
hopefuls debated one another in
a fnal candidate forum spon-
sored by The Daily Tar Heel. Learn
what they had to say before vot-
ing tomorrow. Online
THIS DAY IN HISTORY
FEBRUARY 10, 2005
Mary Frances Berry is the featured
speaker at UNCs frst campus-
wide lecture for African-American
History Month. She was the frst
black female to head the U.S. Com-
mission on Civil Rights.
TAR HEELS TOP IRISH
The mens basketball team defeated
Notre Dame 73-62 Saturday, extend-
ing its winning streak to fve games.
Page 7
TODAY
Tai Chi in the Galleries: Im-
prove your mental and physical
balance with a Tai Chi session.
This class, inspired by the Asian
art collections in the Ackland Art
Museum, uses gentle sun-style
tai chi routines suitable for all
ages and skill types. This class
is free for Ackland members
and $5 for everyone else. All
movements are done standing.
Wear comfortable clothes and
supportive shoes.
Time: Noon - 1 p.m.
Location: Ackland Art Museum
Adult Spelling Bee: The UNC
Department for the Humanities
and Flyleaf Books will hold their
third adult spelling bee. The
event is sure to be a fun time and
will put the publics orthography
skills to the test. Anyone can take
part and teams are welcome. No
registration is required. There will
be two types of contests, one tra-
ditional individual competition
and relaxed team competitions.
The competitions will start out
with difcult words and progress
to impossible words.
Time: Doors open at 6 p.m.,
Contest begins at 7 p.m.
Location: Flyleaf Books
TUESDAY
RACA (Film screening): The
Diaspora Festival of Black and
NOTED. Surviving Sochi hotels during
the Olympics should be a competition in
of itself and United States bobsledder
Johnny Quinn should get all the medals.
Quinn was trapped in his hotel bath-
room and with no phone to call anyone,
he used his bobsled push training to break
out of the door Saturday.
QUOTED. Dumb Starbucks is not
affiliated in any way with Starbucks
Corporation.
A press release for Los Angeles
newest coffee hotspot, Dumb Starbucks,
which has lines out the door since open-
ing. No one really knows what the point of
this parody shop is, but its provocative.
I
f youre going to protest the worlds fascination with celebri-
ties, theres no better place to do it than on the red carpet,
right? No? Well, actor Shia LaBeouf totally gets it, anyway. The
Nymphomaniac star wore a brown bag over his head at the
German premiere of the film.
The bag read I AM NOT FAMOUS ANYMORE. The caps were
clearly there for emphasis. Prominently displayed at the top of the bag
was a barcode because the commodification of wealthy actors is real, yall.
Wonder if he struggled answering on-carpet interviews.
LaBeouf, he aint a part of this system. Its whatever. We totally get it.
Well, kind of.
LaBeouf: Not famous anymore
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone fought and
was trespassed at 1406 E.
Franklin St. at 11:32 a.m.
Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person fought on
a Chapel Hill Transit bus,
reports state.
Someone trespassed at
1830 Fordham Blvd. at 1:03
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person trespassed and
scared employees at Blue
Cross Blue Shield, reports
state. Reports also state a
knife was involved in the
incident, but no injuries were
reported.
Someone committed
automobile theft from a
parking lot area at 100 E.
Rosemary St. at 4:57 p.m.
Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole a white
2008 Lexus, valued at
$10,000, reports state.
Someone committed
automobile theft at 1800
Service Road between 9 p.m.
Thursday and 3:26 a.m.
Friday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
A tan 2006 Honda valued
st $12,000 was stolen from a
residence but was later recov-
ered, reports state.
Someone damaged prop-
erty at 300 S. Elliott Road
between 9:30 p.m. Thursday
and 8:18 a.m. Friday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person cut phone lines
and broke lights outside a
business complex, causing
damage estimated at $600,
reports state.
Someone broke and
entered at a residence at 517
Red Bud Lane at 12:34 a.m.
Friday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
The person forced entry
into a residence through a
kitchen window, reports state.
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on either the day or the day before
they take place.
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Independent Film will screen,
RACA, which tackles racial
inequality in Brazil by following
the lives of three black Brazilians,
including a senator, singer and
activist. Discussion will follow
the screening with flm director
Joel Zito Araujo.
Time: 7 p.m. - 10 p.m.
Location: FedEx Global Educa-
tion Center
POLICE LOG
News Monday, February 10, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 2
FRIDAY TENNIS
W
oongsun Au, a junior biology major,
plays tennis with his friends on Friday
afternoon at the Cobb Tennis Courts.
Au took advantage of the warm weather to play
tennis outside with his friends.
DTH/KENDAL BAGLEY
Due to a reporting error, Thursdays page 3 story, Winston Howes embraces technological solu-
tions mischaracterized Information Technology Servicess relationship with Winston Howes. ITS
has not collaborated with Howes in producing a technological application.
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 below. 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 Cammie Bellamy at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
CORRECTIONS
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News Monday, February 10, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 3
The Daily Tar Heel presents special coverage on
Historic Thousands on Jones Street
Activists
hopeful
for Moral
future
DTH/MELISSA KEY
Raleigh native Jacob Tobia, a student pursuing a degree in human rights advocacy at Duke
University, dances during a chant at the Moral March in Raleigh on Saturday.
DTH/CAMERON ROBERT
Ole Sorensen listens to march leader Rev. William J.
Barber II as he speaks to the growing crowd.
MARCHING FOR MORALS
By Eric Garcia and
Lindsay Carbonell
Staff Writers
RALEIGH As the crowd joined
voices in We Shall Overcome, the
sun emerged from the gloomy skies,
warming the swaying marchers.
Organizers said it signaled a
bright future for the movement,
which is advocating for funding to
public education, the expansion of
Medicaid in the state and protecting
the rights of immigrants, women
and the LGBT community.
Even the universe shines on
this day, said the Rev. William
Barber II, president of the N.C.
NAACP and main organizer
of the Historic Thousands on
Jones Street march in Raleigh on
Saturday. He urged attendees to
commit to helping to register vot-
ers, regardless of party affiliation,
before Election Day.
He said the N.C. NAACP would
continue to pursue legal options
against the states new voting laws.
The Rev. Jemonde Taylor, a
priest at St. Ambrose Episcopal
Church in Raleigh, said Sunday vot-
ing, often called souls to the polls,
was widely used by people in his
congregation but Sunday voting
was eliminated by the changes to
the states voting law.
Taylor said he and 20 other min-
isters drafted a letter to send to more
than 100 churches to encourage
them to facilitate voter registration.
(Voting) has been a mark of civil
rights in this country for the past
half century, he said.
For protestors from other states,
taking a step forward after the
march means staging similar events
back home.
Weve been super excited by
the North Carolina Moral Monday
movement, said Roger Sikes,
organizer with Atlanta Jobs with
Justice, which advocates for fast
food workers in Atlanta. North
Carolina has certainly built a
model and a coalition that has
obviously worked.
Michael Wood, research direc-
tor of the Pennsylvania Budget and
Policy Center, said it is important
to join with other states to fight for
equality in the days to come.
If this can be successful here,
its something that can be repli-
cated in other states also as a way of
pushing back, Wood said, adding
that Pennsylvanias legislature had
passed policies similar to those in
North Carolina.
Debbie Goldstein, who marched
with Carolina Jews for Justice, said
the organization will continue to
register and inform voters.
Were also doing events to raise
awareness of education policies
and voting rights issues, she said.
Were going to get organized and
make a difference after the march
is done.
Ronda Gordon, a school social
worker in Forsyth County, said she
and other educators marching will
continue to discourage teachers to
trade their tenure for a potential pay
raise for the top 25 percent of teach-
ers in each district.
There are a lot of educators who
are standing against this, she said.
We keep fighting until they hear us,
until some changes are made.
Chris Telesca, president of
the Wake County Progressive
Democrats, said his organization is
working to channel voters frustra-
tions into election results.
All of these problems everybodys
complaining about out here are
going to be resolved for political
action, he said.
And Barbara Lau, director of the
Pauli Murray Project of the Duke
Human Rights Center, said building
coalitions and starting conversations
are crucial to moving forward.
I dont think of this as the end,
this is really the beginning, she
said.
state@dailytarheel.com
Moral March protesters
strive to build upon
recent momentum.
By Tara Jeffries
Assistant State & National Editor
RALEIGH Several groups rallied in the
Historic Thousands on Jones Street march in
Raleigh on Saturday. Some marchers stood with
Planned Parenthood, others with the NAACP.
Zoe Nichols, 12, stood with Dumbledores Army.
Zoe, a seventh-grader at Ligon GT Magnet
Middle School in Raleigh, held a sign read-
ing Dumbledore wouldnt let this happen,
referring to the iconic, white-bearded and
progressive headmaster of Hogwarts in the
Harry Potter books.
He definitely wouldnt support education
cuts, Zoe said. The whole point of this is that
theyre making a lot of really crappy laws.
Funding education would not be the only
policy on the headmasters platform, she said
the legendary wizard, who is gay, might also
advocate for LGBT rights.
In the Berreth family, the Moral Monday
movement spans three generations.
Meg Berreth, a UNC Hospitals nurse-mid-
wife who protested Saturday with her mother,
husband and 10-year-old daughter, criticized
the states rejection of Medicaid expansion.
It really means the most poor and vulnerable
people dont have access to health care, she said.
Her mother was arrested at a Moral Monday
march this summer, fueling the familys activism.
The march lined the streets with strollers
one of them sporting a sign with a tiny traced
Jones Street march attracts activists for an array of issues
Faith calls leaders to action
By Madeline Will
State & National Editor
RALEIGH They stood out among the thou-
sands, with their clerical collars and yarmulkes.
The Historic Thousands on Jones Street
rally, coined the Moral March in reference to
the Moral Monday movement, drew thousands
of people from all walks of life to downtown
Raleigh on Saturday. It also drew hundreds
of people of faith: religious leaders and their
flocks.
(This is) our religious obligation as Jews,
said Zemer Lexie Hallman, who serves as the
director of Jewish music at Raleighs Temple
Beth Or. Beyond just the political side of this,
its a moral call, to fight for people who dont
have a voice.
Most of the religious communities repre-
sented at the march identified as progressive.
Religious leaders at the march said they were
attracted to the social justice aspect of the
movement.
N.C. NAACP President the Rev. William
Barber II, who serves as pastor of Greenleaf
Christian Church in Goldsboro, is the face of
the movement and frequently uses prayers in
his rallying speeches.
The Rev. George Reed, executive director of
the N.C. Council of Churches, said there is no
unified stance for people of the religious com-
munity, but the council, which is a collection of
congregations from across the state, tends to be
on the less conservative side.
Racial justice and integration were some of
the founding issues for the council, and Reed
said members are still concerned about social
inequalities today.
(This is) where we ought to be lots of
clergy here today, he said.
Dr. Bruce Grady, dean of the Shaw University
Divinity School, said Christians are widespread
in their views on special interest groups, but for
him and the about 50 students and faculty from
the Divinity School that came to the march,
injustice for any group was an injustice for all.
We believe that God is concerned about the
welfare, justice and peace of North Carolina;
the inequalities of access to insurance, public
education and the concerns of immigrants as
well as Latinos and women (and) people of a
variety of sexual orientations, he said. Its a
matter that we address from our understanding
that we are to love God and love our neighbor.
Love is bound to justice.
Brent Bissette, a pastor for the United
Church of Christ in Pinehurst, said three of the
churchs national leaders were at the march.
The churchs mission aligned with some of
the issues being represented at the march, like
equal access to health care, he said.
As a group, we believe in helping the people
who have been pushed to the margins, he said.
Senior writer Hayley Fowler contributed
reporting.
state@dailytarheel.com
DTH/BRIAN FANNEY
N.C. NAACP President Rev. William Barber II addressed
thousands of onlookers at the Moral March.
DTH/MELISSA KEY
Protesters rallied on Fayetteville Street in front of the North Carolina State Capitol to listen to speeches from activists and religious leaders.
Religious leaders from across the
state protested Saturday.
DTH ONLINE: Head to dailytarheel.com
for video coverage of Saturdays Historic
Thousands on Jones Street march.
handprint: Give your hands to struggle.
Chelsea Earles of Durham, who attended the
march with her partner, Themis Stone, and her
6-year-old daughter, said she had attended the
Historic Thousands on Jones Street marches
since they started eight years ago. But she said
this time, it was all about her child.
Stone decried a policy that would replace
K-12 teacher tenure with pay bumps and four-
year contracts for the top 25 percent of each
districts educators.
Dr. Alex Cho, a professor in Duke Universitys
School of Medicine, attended the march clad
in his white lab coat, his 6-year-old daughter
clutching his coattails.
He said the states rejection of Medicaid expan-
sion stifles the economic needs of rural counties.
Hospitals are the largest employers in most
of these counties, he said. To take away literally
billions of dollars out of political spite is just sad.
Tom Dessereau and Monika Gross made the
trek from Asheville with their daughter to advo-
cate for immigrants without documentation.
They fear coming forward to express their
rights, Dessereau said. They deserve to be here.
Dave Bennard, a special needs teacher in
Granville County, brought another kind of fam-
ily his teaching assistant and a substitute
teacher in his department.
Bennard said low teacher pay drives educa-
tors across the state border.
People are looking at those little gas-efficient
cars, (thinking), Can I do a 60-, 80-mile range a
day? he said. For more support, yeah, they can.
For many marchers, the event hearkened back
to the political past and it reunited George and
Susanne Sawyer of Charlotte with an old friend.
George was arrested June 3 with about 150
demonstrators his wifes childhood friend
among them, making it the first time in 56 years
the two saw each other.
The march drew voices from across the globe.
Hugo Bouvard, a visiting lecturer at Duke,
said North Carolinas political landscape differs
starkly from that of France, his home country.
France legalized gay marriage last year almost
exactly a year after North Carolina banned it in a
constitutional amendment, prompting Bouvard
to channel his activism across the Atlantic.
Douglas Campbell, a Duke Divinity School
professor and New Zealand native, said his per-
spective makes it easier to spot political shifts.
When youre an outsider, youve got a bet-
ter handle on how extreme things are, he said.
When you are actually here, its like a frog
being boiled alive slowly you dont notice it.
Staff writers Amy Tsai, Mary Tyler March
and Lindsey Brunson contributed reporting.
state@dailytarheel.com
Opinion Monday, February 10, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 4
Established 1893, 120 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT
Duke student ticket
information
TO THE EDITOR:
As in past years, the
line for Phase 1 student
entrance to the Duke
basketball game will be
randomized. We do this
because of the overwhelm-
ing interest in the game
and its proven ability to
work and keep students
safe.
With this structure,
students can start lining
up outside of Entrance C
of the Smith Center begin-
ning at noon. Anyone who
attempts to line up before-
hand will be turned away.
At 1 p.m., the riser line and
the Phase 1 line will be
randomized. If there are
more than 400 in the riser
line, all will be randomized
the first 400 will stay in
the riser line, the remaining
will move to the back of the
randomized Phase 1 line.
If you are in Phase 1 and
come after randomization,
you will line up at the back
of the line.
Once you are in line, you
are to stay in line. Please
note that no one is required
to take part in the random-
ization process this is
only for those students with
a Phase 1 ticket that want
to begin lining up early.
All students with a Phase 1
ticket will receive either a
riser or lower level location
if they arrive before 7 p.m.
Like all games, Phase 1 will
have the first 30 minutes
to enter the game. For the
Duke game, this time frame
is 6:30 p.m. 7 p.m.
Phases 4 and 5 will line
up in Koury Natatorium in
order to help keep Entrance
C from getting too con-
gested and to keep the lines
better organized. These
phases will be escorted to
Entrance C approximately
10 minutes prior to their
entrance times. Those who
do not line up in Koury
Natatorium for Phases 4
and 5 will be placed at the
back of the Koury line upon
its arrival at Entrance C.
Allison Hill
President
Carolina Athletic
Association
The elements of
transformative change
TO THE EDITOR:
Apathy is the simplest
way to give up power.
In the past week, I have
become increasingly
alarmed by the number of
students who express the
sentiments of a narrative
of apathy. How often I
have heard the argument
that one person cannot
change the world; that the
system is in such disre-
pair that nothing short of
a miracle could save the
state, the nation or the
world from corruption.
After attending the
HK on J March this past
Saturday and listening
to the wise words of Rev.
William Barber, I am other-
wise convinced. During his
speech, I thought of what it
must have been like during
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Is there any expectation that the 1,000th
iteration of this argument is going to have a
different result from the first 999?
doubleEwe, on the controversial racial history of building names
To me, its about coming in and working in
a place and an environment that you feel like
you can be successful and enjoy.
Seth Littrell, on UNCs ability to pay its assistant coaches
EDITORIAL CARTOON By Guile Contreras, gcontrer@live.unc.edu
Congress
pigs
out once
again
L
ast week, the members
of todays famously
divided Congress got
together for a rare show of
bipartisan cooperation, pass-
ing the Agriculture Act. The
bill is comprehensive 949
pages and $946 billion and
received support from law-
makers in both parties, as well
as from President Obama.
Political commentators have
been bemoaning the deadlock
and lack of action that have
come from Congress for the
past few years, so it would
be natural to assume that
Congress finally doing some-
thing substantial would be
cause for celebration.
Unfortunately, nothing could
be further from the truth.
The farm bill has two major
components: food stamps and
massive subsidies for the farm
industry. While the merits of
food stamps are debatable, it is
the subsidy part of the bill that
is most evidently a bad idea.
Essentially, the bill gives a sub-
sidy of billions of dollars to an
industry that does not need it.
When the government
bailed out the auto and bank-
ing industries in 2008, there
was massive outrage. The bank
bailout, in particular, drew
wide condemnation, even
sparking movements such as
Occupy Wall Street, as citizens
felt that bankers were being
unfairly rescued.
Whatever you think about
the 2008 bailouts, it is unde-
niable that both the financial
and auto industries were in
trouble. Those industries
would have taken substantial
damage without subsidies, yet
the bailouts were still deeply
troubling to a wide segment of
the American population.
The farming industry, in
contrast, is doing great. Since
2008, the value of farm assets
has increased by 50 percent.
It is not an industry in dire
need, yet Congress still insists
on sending billions of dollars
its way, at a time when the
government is cutting other
programs in the name of fiscal
responsibility. The subsidies
cannot even be defended as
a means to help struggling
Americans, because it is well
known that they dispropor-
tionately benefit large, wealthy
agribusinesses rather than
smaller, poorer farmers.
Where, then, is the outrage?
Many members of our UNC
community have been out-
raged over North Carolinas
education budget cuts, which
have erased almost half a bil-
lion dollars from the UNC sys-
tems budget since 2011.
This amount, though, pales
in comparison to the $20 bil-
lion in subsidies per year that
Congress just gave away, in one
bill, to a farming industry that
does not need help.
UNC students are up in arms
about losing half a billion dur-
ing the course of three years, but
there is deafening silence when
Congress needlessly promises to
give out 40 times that amount
every year for the next 10 years
to a prospering industry.
Bipartisanship created the
massive blunder that is the
farm bill, and I hope biparti-
sanship can get us out of it.
We all need to open our eyes
to the colossal giveaway that is
the farm bill, and demand that
the government stop wasting
taxpayer money on market-
distorting and unnecessary
subsidies.
Graham O. Palmer
GOPs Musings
Junior economics and political sci-
ence major from Northboro, Mass.
Email: gopalmer@live.unc.edu
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E-mail: opinion@dailytarheel.com
the Civil Rights Movement,
to hear the words of the
great Martin Luther King
Jr. as he proclaimed that,
the arc of the moral uni-
verse is long, but it bends
towards justice.
This was no leftist or
socialist gathering this
was one of the largest civil
rights demonstrations
in the South since 1965.
For those who had the
opportunity to attend, I
offer gratitude may your
good works continue to
inspire change in our com-
munity.
For those who did not
attend, or who continue to
believe that change is out
of reach, I would ask you to
read the newspaper, to lis-
ten to the radio, to be aware
of the policies enacted by
our local and state govern-
ments, to consider the
injustices of others, to begin
a dialogue and to be willing
to recognize yourself as an
individual with the power
to do what is right and what
is just. Because whether we
realize it or not, these are
the very elements of trans-
formative change.
Dana Calloway 16
History
Peace, war and defense
North Carolina doesnt
need fracking
TO THE EDITOR:
Shalefield Stories, a
compilation of personal
accounts and hardships
experienced by those liv-
ing on or near fracking
sites, should be read by
every North Carolinian.
From finding carcinogenic
arsenic and barium in
drinking water to having
a 15 million gallon frack-
ing waste pit constructed
just 200 feet from their
houses, those who are fea-
tured Shalefield Stories
know all too well about
the destruction caused by
fracking.
This so-called clean
energy source produces
billions of tons of toxic
wastewater per year, pol-
lutes ground water sources
and destroys homes and
communities. The truth is
that natural gas is a fossil
fuel, and there is absolutely
nothing clean about the
process of extracting it.
But Gov. Pat McCrory still
wants to bring fracking to
North Carolina, putting
things like Jordan Lake, the
Eno River and the drinking
water for as many as 2.4
million North Carolinians
at stake.
If we want to keep our
drinking waters free of
toxic chemicals and car-
cinogens and preserve our
beautiful natural spaces
for years to come, we
must heed the warnings
set forth by Shalefield
Stories. We must demand
that our elected officials do
what is in the best inter-
est of the health of North
Carolinians, and not what
is best for the gas industry.
Lets make sure that the
next issue of Shalefield
Stories doesnt include
personal accounts from
North Carolina.
Michelle Graziosi 15
Environmental science
L
ets be honest, The
Daily Tar Heels edi-
torial board doesnt
exactly have the best record
for student body president
endorsements. In recent
years, despite the infallibility
of the editorial board, each
endorsed candidate some-
how doesnt make it into
office. Its like we hex them
or something.
Some people may think
that this qualifies the endorse-
ments as wrong they arent,
it doesnt work like that.
But even if you subscribe to
this manner of thinking, it
would be hard to go wrong
when picking a candidate to
endorse this year.
This is my third year
Beyond the endorsement
EDITORIAL NOTEBOOK
shows more than proficient
knowledge and passion for
some critical area.
And it would be tragic
for this ingenuity to go to
waste. All of the candidates
have already left a mark on
UNC, and that should not
stop after Election Day. Just
because three people will not
be able to put SBP on their
resume, does not mean they
should be written off. Each
one deserves the resources to
continue their work.
Whoever wins on Tuesday
should keep this in mind and
work with the other candi-
dates as much as possible
over the next year.
Above all though, no mat-
ter whom we endorse. No
matter who each individual
votes for. No matter who
wins. I am confident that
UNCs student government
will be in good hands come
next year.
The pool of
SBP candidates is
impressive.
T
he town of Chapel
Hill does well to
explore the addi-
tion of solar panels on
town-owned facilities,
but economic feasibility
should be the chief con-
cern in deciding whether
or not to install them.
As the town continues
to explore sustainability
options, it is important
to continue to differenti-
ate between inefficient,
feel-good opportunities
and responsible, profitable
ones.
The environmental
benefits of solar panels
are well documented, and
expanded use in Chapel
Walking on the sun
EDITORIAL
Hill would be another
major step forward in
the towns sustainability
efforts.
The host-to-own model
that would allow third-
party entities to lease town
property and install the
solar panels offers a prac-
tical alternative to state or
federal funding.
Putting installation in
the hands of these private
third-party entities and
out of the hands of the
local government ensures
that this task is done
efficiently, as their profit-
driven nature avoids the
inefficiencies that often
accompany bureaucracy.
At the same time, this
profit-driven nature has
these companies pushing
for a good deal, and the
town should be certain
that it doesnt come out
of this deal on the losing
side.
Ideally, this arrange-
ment should benefit both
parties, as the town gets
renewable energy with
long-term benefits and the
third-party receives sig-
nificant tax relief.
The benefits of turning
traditionally overlooked
and dormant roof space
like that in the Chapel Hill
Transit bus parking lot,
one of the potential loca-
tions of the solar panels
into a permanent energy
source for the town are
undeniable.
The town has already
acted responsibly by
choosing to pursue solar
panels; now it must con-
tinue to do so with an eco-
nomic focus.
Solar panels should
be implemented
with efficiency.
W
hen students
head out to
vote for student
body president, they should
consider the qualities they
want in the next leader.
Each person has his or
her own vision of what
makes a good leader. To
some, toughness and an
extroverted personality
is important. To others,
intelligence outweighs all,
and so on and so forth.
But what everyone can
agree on is that UNC is
facing a critical time in its
history. The student body
president will play a role
in how it is handled on the
student side, and that per-
Decide for yourself
EDITORIAL
sons actions will reflect on
the whole student body.
Throughout the years,
student body presidents
have dealt with higher edu-
cation issues that are chal-
lenging to policy experts,
let alone 21-year-olds. For
those who have been here
for three years, they know
what those issues have
been: years of academic and
athletic scandal, adminis-
trative transition, tuition
hikes and budget cuts to
name a few. Those who are
still somewhat new have
had their own taste, too.
The student body can
debate at length about the
effectiveness and student
body presidents ability
to enact real change, but
no matter what, there will
still be one elected, wheth-
er it be tomorrow or next
week after a runoff.
Educate yourselves about
what is on these four stu-
dents platforms, because
you might actually learn
something. Whether that
be about how UNC works,
or how student leaders
work to keep your voices
heard, it could change your
view on these elections.
But do take a moment
to consider what is impor-
tant to you. Is it social
issues like sustainability
on campus or academic
issues like working on
tuition with the Board of
Governors? What qualities
should someone have to
advocate for these? And
why does it matter?
Ask those questions as
the student body president
candidates vie to answer
them for you.
Students should
think about good
qualities of an SBP.
2/11: THE SOCIAL NETWORK
John Guzek on the personaliza-
tion of the internet.
N
E
X
T
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EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily
represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect
the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which is made up of
eight board members, the opinion editor and the editor.
ALEXANDRA WILLCOX
DYLAN CUNNINGHAM
GABRIELLA KOSTRZEWA
KERN WILLIAMS
DAVIN ELDRIDGE
MAHMOUD SAAD
SIERRAWINGATE-BEY
TREY BRIGHT
Zach Gaver
Opinion Editor
picking an SBP candidate
to endorse, and it might
the hardest. Not to dimin-
ish past candidates, but this
years pool seems to not only
be the most skilled, but also
the most diverse.
This type of diversity has
nothing to do with ethnic-
ity weve all read The New
York Times article but
with the areas in which these
candidates are more than
competent.
Whether it be institutional
reform, advocacy, education
or technology, each candidate
News Monday, February 10, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 5
but the unanimous votes
by both the Charter School
Advisory Board which is
comprised of charter educa-
tors themselves and the
State Board of Education says
quite a bit, Medley said.
PACE principal Rhonda
Franklin said school officials
have spent the past year work-
ing on compliance issues.
She said the school had
solved all its issues apart from
some testing accountability
issues prior to the schools Dec.
10 presentation to the Charter
School Advisory Board.
At the meeting we were
introduced with 10 to 12 min-
utes of negativity. Some of the
statements were not true.
Franklin said the teacher
licensure issues cited at the
meeting were the result of slow
correspondence by the states
licensure department and
the schools efforts to solve its
issues were not acknowledged.
The school currently enrolls
169 students. Each student
receives one-on-one interac-
tion with teachers, and school
officials help students find
internships, said Jamie Bittner,
PACEs transitions coordinator.
The transition is different
for every single one of them,
and we celebrate that for all
of them, she said.
The stress Louie Green was
under when he attended a
public high school caused him
to have a seizure nine times
during his tenure there.
That was before the film
enthusiast started school at
PACE, where he is now a senior
and applying to colleges.
For a lot of the kids that
come here, this is really the
only school that would truly
accept them, where they would
be accepted by others, he said.
I think a lot of them, myself
included, would not make it in
a regular school.
Cody Ellis is a PACE
senior who has worked with
the Carrboro Fire-Rescue
Department. He now works as
a personal care assistant and
hopes to go to school to be a
nursing assistant or a nurse.
Ellis said the small class-
room setting at PACE largely
contributed to his success.
When I graduate, I will do
whatever it takes to help this
school stay open, he said.
On Friday, Lee and some
of her friends at PACE made
signs promoting keeping the
school open.
This school is our heart,
and were the beat of that heart
without the beat, there is
no education, she said in her
speech. PACE is our family. In
order to keep your family, you
have to fight for them.
city@dailytarheel.com
Jordan were unrelated to sal-
ary concerns.
But for Adams,
Cunningham said the oppor-
tunity for a 20 percent pay
raise was a major factor in
leaving.
I think there are a lot of
attractive reasons to be at
North Carolina, but I dont
think pay is one that is a driv-
er for us, Cunningham said.
Cunningham and Littrell
both declined to comment on
the terms of the new offensive
coordinators contract, which
has yet to be approved by the
Board of Trustees. Littrell also
declined to reveal whether
his UNC salary would be an
upgrade from his previous
contract at Indiana, which
paid him $356,500 in 2013.
Coaching turnover in col-
lege football has become the
norm at most programs, as
the pressure to win and the
deep pockets of Division
I programs have caused
upheaval at programs across
the country.
Because of the higher
returns to success and the
higher cost of failure, coach-
ing tenures are getting short-
er on average, said Raymond
Sauer, the chairman of the
economics department at
Clemson and president of the
North American Association
of Sports Economists.
The median salary of a
Football Bowl Subdivision
assistant coach in 2013 was
$180,000, according to USA
Todays database. That number
rises significantly among ACC
schools, where the median
assistant coaching salary at the
eight schools disclosing that
information was $242,500.
Many programs are willing
to pay much more, though.
Chad Morris, Clemsons
offensive coordinator, topped
all assistant coaches in 2013
at $1.3 million.
Clemson athletic director
Dan Radakovich, whose assis-
tant coaching staff is the high-
est paid in the ACC at nearly
$4.2 million, said keeping a
stable coaching staff is neces-
sary to create lasting relation-
ships with recruits, current
players and alumni.
That family atmosphere
that everybody talks about
becomes, not just something
to talk about, but actually
exists, he said.
Chapel Hill is Littrells fifth
stop in his 12-year coach-
SALARIES AT A GLANCE
$180,000
median salary among FBS
assistant coaches in 2013
$242,500
median salary among ACC
assistant coaches in 2013
$250,000
median salary among ACC,
SEC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12
and AAC assistant coaches
PACE ACADEMY
FROM PAGE 1
COACHING
FROM PAGE 1
Fathers save the dance for daughters
By Graves Ganzert
Senior Writer
Most of the time, these bal-
lerinas are dancing in a per-
formance for their fathers.
But Sunday these little girls
took time to actually dance
with their dads.
The Triangle Youth Ballet
hosted the Father Daughter
Valentine Dance for those
interested in spending an
evening enjoying dancing,
games, food and Valentines
card making.
The dancers gathered at
Extraordinary Ventures in
Chapel Hill to share that spe-
cial relationship fathers only
have with their daughters.
Around 50 people attended
the dance.
Beth Mueller, a volunteer
and a cupcake supplier for the
event, said she was pleased
with the turnout.
Mueller said she has volun-
teered since the events incep-
tion three years ago.
More people are com-
ing to the event, she said.
We have them coming from
Raleigh to dance with their
daughters.
Mueller said the local
dance community has used
events like this to grow into a
large family.
The dance community
has really grown together
and gets to know one another
from participating in these
events, she said.
Anne Anders from Triangle
Youth Ballet coordinated
the event. She said events
like this create a magical
and memorable moment
for fathers and daughters to
share forever.
The young children enjoy
spending time with their
father, Anders said.
What better way to cel-
ebrate the unique father-
daughter relationship than
with a dance?
Anders said a group of
10 volunteers gathered to
transform the Extraordinary
Ventures room into a
Valentines themed ballroom.
Its really magical to have
a memorable moment, she
said. Daughters grow up
so fast and they only have a
short time before they dont
want to dance with dad.
Carrboro resident Eliot
White said this is the second
year he has participated in
the event. This year, White
brought both of his daugh-
ters.
We do a lot of dancing
around the house together
and now we can take our
moves public, he said.
Gina Dronio, a volunteer
for the event, said she was
surprised with the huge num-
ber of daughters that arrived.
It is really sweet to see the
little girls enjoying time with
their dads and to see that the
dads are enjoying it too, she
said.
This event was not limited
to just fathers and daughters.
Will Girder, a son present at
the event, said he had a great
time dancing to the music.
I think Valentines Day is
my favorite holiday because
you can share your love with
the people you like.
Fiona Morgan said she
thought the dance was per-
fect.
I love Valentines Day it
is my favorite holiday, she
said.
I really like everything
about it. I love doing twirls
when dancing with my dad.
city@dailytarheel.com
DTH/CATHERINE HEMMER
Tim and Kara Badstein dance together at the Father Daughter
Valentine Dance on Sunday evening at Extraordinary Ventures.
Rogers Road hearing may be delayed again
By Mary Helen Moore
Staff Writer
The Chapel Hill Town
Council might postpone a
public hearing on the Historic
Rogers Road neighborhood
for a second time this year at
its meeting tonight, this time
delaying the hearing until fall.
The Rogers Road communi-
ty agreed to house the countys
landfill in 1972, on the condi-
tion that the landfill would
only be there for 10 years and
that they would later receive
hookups to water and sewer.
But more than 40 years
later, people in the commu-
nity still feel neglected.
For years, the town council
has discussed extending sewer
to 86 households in the Rogers
Road neighborhood with the
Carrboro Board of Aldermen
and the Board of Orange
County Commissioners.
Were like a car stuck
in the mud, said the Rev.
Robert Campbell, presi-
dent of the Rogers-Eubanks
Neighborhood Association
and the Chapel Hill-Carrboro
NAACP. Its time to stop
spinning our tires.
After the landfill closed in
June and the Historic Rogers
Road Task Force released its
final recommendations in
September, residents were
hopeful the project was finally
moving forward.
Per the task forces rec-
ommendations, the town
council began looking into an
extraterritorial jurisdiction
to include the Rogers Road
neighborhood in June.
Extraterritorial jurisdic-
tions give towns the authority
to apply regulations in areas
outside city limits, said David
Owens, a professor in the
School of Government.
You do not pay city taxes,
but you are subject to city
development regulations,
Owens said of residents in an
extraterritorial jurisdiction.
Theres a lot more gray to this
issue than it first appears.
The extraterritorial jurisdic-
tion would enable Chapel Hill
to legally contribute its share,
43 percent or nearly $2.5
million, of the cost to provide
sewer to the community.
A hearing on the extra-
territorial jurisdiction was
scheduled for Jan. 13, but was
delayed until tonights meeting,
when it will likely be pushed
back again.
Judy Johnson, a senior
planner with the town, said
tonights delay might hap-
pen because the managers
of Carrboro and the Orange
County have been meeting
with Chapel Hill officials to
explore other options.
Councilman Lee Storrow
said he thinks its time for the
council to decide the best way
to move forward policy-wise.
Its taken a long time
because it should have hap-
pened 40 years ago, Storrow
said.
Campbell said the commu-
nity deserves sewer connec-
tions because its well water is
contaminated by the landfill.
Were talking about
peoples lives and health,
Campbell said. Now how
do we get the municipalities
to work together to right the
wrongs that go back to 1972?
Johnson said if the town
council approves adopting the
extraterritorial jurisdiction,
Orange County commissioners
will then have the final say.
But Orange County com-
missioner Penny Rich, co-
chair of the task force, said she
thinks both the residents and
local governments are moving
in a positive direction.
Once you get into the
details, thats where it gets
complicated, Rich said. But
this time we really have an
action plan to get the people
of Rogers Road what they
want, which is water and
sewer.
city@dailytarheel.com
ing career, which began as a
graduate assistant at Kansas
in 2002.
Littrell said UNC offers
him the opportunity to recruit
some of the top athletes in the
country and live in one of the
best places. As for UNCs abil-
ity to pay its assistant coaches,
Littrell said he isnt worried.
Its not as much about the
money, and thats not talk
thats reality, Littrell said. To
me, its about coming in and
working in a place and an envi-
ronment that you feel like you
can be successful and enjoy.
sports@dailytarheel.com
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UNC School of Law
For more information & to schedule an appointment:
studentsorg.law.unc.edu/vita
WHEN:
Feb. 13 - March 29, 2014
Wednesdays & Thursdays: 6-9pm
Saturdays: 12-3pm
WHERE:
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to check those dates and to make appointments.
News Monday, February 10, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 6
By Kate Albers
Staff Writer
Each student who attends
UNC has his or her own set
of problems, but everyone
has to deal with the con-
stant increase in the price of
obtaining a degree.
According to the College
Board, the price of attending a
public four-year university has
risen an average of 5.2 percent
every year. And at every stu-
dent body president candidate
debate this week, all candidates
expressed concerns about the
costs of attending UNC .
Matt Farley, student body
treasurer, said student influ-
ence depends on past actions
with administrators. He
has worked this year on the
student fee advisory subcom-
mittee which reviews all the
fee requests and makes recom-
mendations to administrators.
The influence you have
on a tuition conversation and
a tuition conversation that
comes up at the tuition and fee
advisory task force or Board of
Trustees all depends on how
youve been interacting with
administrators and the Board
of Trustees from the minute
you step in office until you get
to that point, he said.
Andrew Powell, who pre-
viously sat on the Student
Advisory Committee to the
Chancellor said the connec-
tions he has will help him
implement his strategies. He
said he plans to yield lower
college costs through blended
learning and classroom reform.
Farley said anything stu-
dents try to accomplish with
tuition and fees is ambitious,
but some changes are possible.
Winston Howes has said
the University could save
money through replacing
some outdated systems with
technology, such as aspects of
academic advising.
Farley said what was most
important was taking into
account the diverse experi-
ences of all of UNCs students.
Youve got make sure youre
looking at or thinking about
every students potential finan-
cial situation, he said.
According to Emilio
Vicentes platform, he plans
on holding a listening tour
with students, while lobbying
the N.C. General Assembly
and working with the treasur-
er to maintain affordability.
Although many candidates
want to consider costs, Shelby
Hudspeth, director of state
and external affairs for student
government, said its hard to
guarantee affordability.
Its definitely difficult
because it is kind of out of our
hands, she said.
Hudspeth said it is chal-
lenging to change tuition
costs because they are often
set years in advance and the
legislators might not share the
same opinions about costs.
Hudspeth said students have
an influence in the discussion.
And when you get enough
students talking, it definitely
shows that were interested,
she said. But the thing is that
theres only so much any stu-
dent can do.
According to Nikita
Shamdasanis platform , she
said this constant conversa-
tion will have an impact.
At a forum hosted by
The Daily Tar Heel Sunday,
Shamdasani said it is impera-
tive to begin working on
creeping tuition costs imme-
diately.
Farley said dedication to the
issue is essential.
Any goal you set in regards
to tuition, as long as there is
a goal and youre working on
it, that means good things are
going to happen, Farley said.
university@dailytarheel.com
By Zachery Eanes
Staff Writer
Research comprises the
bulk of revenue for many uni-
versities, drawing added pres-
sure to the researching sector
a trend that Stefan Franzen,
N.C. State University profes-
sor, thinks is compromising
research ethics.
Franzen knows firsthand
the quagmire that comes
from lapses in research ethics
after being embroiled for the
past nine years in a research
misconduct case.
In 2005, Franzen joined
then-NCSU professors Bruce
Eaton and Dan Feldheim,
along with graduate student
Lina Gugliotti, in a project to
create palladium crystals by
using RNA a potentially
lucrative process.
A federal investigation
confirmed that research from
2004 had been falsified in a
report released last month.
I used to believe people
only fabricated things for
fame, but now I believe it is
for money, Franzen said.
He left the project when
he discovered falsifications in
the groups research, and after
the other members refused to
deliver a correction in their
published work, Franzen
worked to refute their claims.
The National Science
Foundation found that Eaton,
Feldheim and Gugliotti had
recklessly omitted experimen-
tal details and overstated their
results, although the report did
not use their names.
Franzen said two-thirds of
academic research cannot be
reproduced in the manner it
was first performed, which he
believes stems from a focus at
universities to use research as
an economic engine.
Investors come in when
you promise you can do
something, but you know you
cant, he said. There really
isnt anyone there to check.
UNC receives just less than
$800 million a year in rewards
for research. Private companies
are responsible for 6 percent
of research funding, and 80
percent comes from the federal
government as well as federal
money given to private compa-
nies to invest in research.
Research brings more (rev-
enue) than any other source,
said Barbara Entwisle, UNCs
vice chancellor for research.
It brings in more than tuition,
more than private giving and
more than state support.
Entwisle said UNC ensures
research integrity with pre-
emptive education and a con-
fidential, multi-level process.
She said questions of mis-
conduct should be brought to
faculty, and the University has
an anonymous compliance
and ethics hotline.
These complaints are
handled by the Universitys
research integrity officer, who
organizes a team of senior
faculty that determines if
an investigation needs to be
made and if the investiga-
tion ultimately finds miscon-
duct, the outcome is deter-
mined by the dean or provost.
Research integrity is fun-
damental to the conduct of
the research itself, Entwisle
said, adding that documenta-
tion and peer review are also
important checks.
state@dailytarheel.com
SBP candidates make tuition hikes a priority
NC State group accused of falsifying research
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AFTERSCHOOL CAREGIVER For 9 year-old
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4BR HOUSE AND 2BR COTTAGE. 209 North
Columbia Street. Completely remodeled with
hardwoods throughout. $600/mo per bed-
room. Available August 2014. 704-277-1648
or uncrents@carolina.rr.com.
AWESOME 6+ BR IN CARRBORO! Available
June 1. 3,000 square feet. Walk to downtown.
6BRs up plus 1 or 2 down, sunroom, pool room,
and bar room! Hardwoods, carpet, dishwasher,
W/D, carport. No dogs. $2,750/mo. Call
919-636-2822 or email amandalieth@att.net.
1.5 BLOCKS TO FRANKLIN STREET: 1BR and
2BR apartments at 408 MLK. Spacious
rooms with lots of light. Parking and wa-
ter included. Avaiable. June and August.
Limited time special rates: 1BR $600/mo.
and 2BR $900/mo. 919-929-1188 or
www.hilltopproperties.net.
UNIVERSITY COMMONS 4BR/4BA.
$1,600/mo. Includes: UTILITIES walk
in closet, internet, furnished living
and dining. J, D lines. Available 8-1-
2014. 919-923-0630. For application:
NolAloha@nc.rr.com.
1BR/1BA COTTAGE. 116 North Street, right
off Franklin Street. Small covered front
porch, W/D, water included, $875/mo.
Available August 2014. 704-277-1648 or
uncrents@carolina.rr.com.
GRADUATE STUDENT WANTED to live in
beautiful home and assist lady in exchange
for low rent. Call 919-542-6780.
1BR/1BA FRIENDLY LANE. Best location in
town. Half duplex with spacious rooms, hard-
wood oors, AC, parking. Available June 1.
Year lease, no pets, no smoking. $820/mo.
Visit www.hilltopproperties.net for photos and
details. 919-929-1188.
For Sale
BOOKS: CHANGES may be genetically engi-
neered, outside us or inside us, with or with-
out our consent. WONDERS AND TRAGEDIES,
a science ction novel, is by Alan Kovski.
Available via Amazon.com.
BOOKS: AFTER GLOBAL catastrophe, how
will we rebuild our world? What vision will
we follow? And who will corrupt it? WILDER-
NESS, a science ction novel, is by Alan Kovski.
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BOOKS: THE FUTURE may be beautiful, terrible,
bewildering. People will have to deal with
it somehow. REMEMBERING THE FUTURE:
science ction stories by Alan Kovski. Available
via Amazon.com.
Help Wanted
GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR: Chapel Hill Gym-
nastics has part-time positions available for
energetic, enthusiastic instructors. Applicants
with knowledge of gymnastic terminology
and progression skills preferred, but will train
right candidate. Send a resume to margie@
chapelhillgymnastics.com.
SUMMER RECREATION CLUB JOBS! Looking
for camp directors, pool managers, life-
guards and maintenance personnel. Close
to UNC! Visit www.southernvillage.com
for more information or email manager@
southernvillageclub.com.
SUMMER CAMP STAFF WANTED: Raleigh
Parks, Recreation and Cultural Resources
Department is seeking enthusiastic summer
camp counselors for our youth programs
division who are interested in working with
campers ages 5-11. Experience working with
children is preferred, but not required. For more
information or to apply, please contact Hillary
Hunt by email at Hillary.Hunt@raleighnc.gov.
CAROLINA STUDENT LEGAL SERVICES is
seeking candidates for its legal assistant
position to begin July 15, 2014. Duties
include typing, ling, reception, book-
keeping and legal research. Knowledge
of Microsoft Ofce is a must,. Knowl-
edge of Macintosh computers and
website development is helpful but not
required. This is a full-time position,
M-F, 8:30am-5pm, requiring a 11.5
month commitment starting on July
15, 2014 and ending on June 30, 2015.
Perfect for May graduate who wants
work experience before law school.
Mail resume with cover letter as soon
as possible but no later than March
16, 2014 to Dorothy Bernholz, Director,
Carolina Student Legal Services, Inc., PO
Box 1312, Chapel Hill, NC 27514. CSLS
Inc. is an Equal Employment Opportunity
employer.
THE ARTS AND SCIENCES Annual Giving Ofce
seeks a full-time annual giving intern for a 1
year, paid internship. The ideal candidate will
be organized, creative, an enthusiastic sup-
porter of undergraduate liberal arts education.
Under the direct supervision of the director of
annual giving, the annual giving intern will
interest and involve alumni, parents and
friends in the advancement of the college
through annual support. For more information
and to apply, visit http://unc.peopleadmin.com/
postings/38842 or call 919-962-7266.
LIVE IN CAREGIVER. $4,200/mo. Companion
for 90 year old woman. Companionship,
light housekeeping, cooking, accompany on
errands. Ideal for retiree. Send resume, detailed
background. billkennedy1958@gmail.com.
CARRBORO RECREATION AND PARKS
(athletics division). Part-time temporary.
YOUTH BASEBALL UMPIRES: March thru June,
ages 6-15 years-old, games M-F evenings and
Saturday. 4-10 games/wk, exible schedul-
ing. Training provided, previous experience
and/or sound baseball knowledge preferred.
Pay range $16-$24/game. ADULT SOFTBALL
UMPIRES: April thru June. Games Tuesday and
Thursday evenings, 3-6 games/wk, exible
scheduling. Previous experience and/or sound
slow pitch softball knowledge preferred. Pay
range $21-$23/game. Application deadline:
February 28, 2014. For an application contact
Human Resources, 301 West Main Street,
Carrboro, NC 27510, 919-918-7342 or visit
website at www.townofcarrboro.org. EOE.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: The Duke Faculty
Club is hiring tennis and summer camp coun-
selors, lifeguards and swim instructors for
Summer 2014. Visit facultyclub.duke.edu/
aboutus/employment.html for more informa-
tion.
POOL PROFESSIONALS IS hiring pool atten-
dants, lifeguards and managers for the summer.
Contact Ali today at agreiner@poolprofession-
als.com to secure your summer job. Pay is $8-
$15/hr 919-787-7878.
BAHAMAS SPRING BREAK
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luxury party cruise, accommodations on the
island at your choice of 13 resorts. Appalachia
Travel. www.BahamaSun.com, 800-867-5018.
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Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 9 -- Youll concentrate well
today and tomorrow. Schedule carefully.
Run options past your own personal set
of rules. Theres an unexpected bonus.
You perceive the answer, see what the
real costs are. Anticipate some confusion.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 9 -- Proceed with caution. Wait
for later to make a deal. Good scheduling
leads to more fun. Make money and
dont spend it today and tomorrow. Keep
your head down and chip away. Work
out a creative compromise.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 6 -- Save up your money for
a bigger item. There may be less than
you thought. Today and tomorrow call
for high energy. Youre gaining a distinct
advantage. Find what you need far
away. Use your power responsibly.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 7 -- Maintain your indepen-
dence. Talk in generalities at rst. Slow
down and consider options. Contem-
plate the developing situation. Listen
to someone who disagrees with you.
Enforce the rules. Watch out for surprises
for the next two days.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Dont get intimidated.
Schedule meetings for today and tomor-
row. You could organize a team to help
you do it all. Anticipate a little resistance,
and sweeten the pot. Make sure you
know whats required. You gain clarity.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Take on new responsibili-
ties today and tomorrow. Private action
gets more accomplished than public.
Stand outside a controversy as much as
possible. Practice makes perfect in the
coming phase. Anticipate delays, and
relax in the down time.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Dont react without thinking.
Put in the research today and tomor-
row. Plan your next vacation. A conict
or disagreement could put a kink in
things. Hold out for what you really want
(respectfully). Take a philosophical view.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is an 8 -- Pesky regulations
interfere with the plan. For the next
two days, study money. Prepare for the
negotiation phase. Count the money, and
consider the consequences. Arrange for
priorities. Keep your feet on the ground.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 9 -- An older person provides
support. You have something they can
use, too. Share resources to mutual
benet. Youll have more help today
and tomorrow. You dont have to save
everything you get. Spend time with
someone attractive.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7 -- The next two days
hold high-powered action. Work out
details. Make do with what you have.
A controversy could erupt when some-
one disagrees with the direction. Dont
get cocky. Moneys still tight. Quiet
productivity shreds your inbox.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 6 -- Today and tomorrow
overow with creativity and passion. Use
existing materials. Stay on top of the
supply chain. Get into a luxuriously lovely
phase. Review, revise and reform. Tweak
away. Youre getting into a cuddly mood.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 -- An old enemy changes
tunes. Youre good at solving problems,
too. Focus on home today and tomorrow.
Find out whats needed at home and
build it. Save time to play with family and
friends.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If February 10th is Your Birthday...
Planning really works this year. Capture creative
ideas. To increase income, turn up the fun while
remaining true to your dreams. Your enthusiasms
contagious. Domestic improvements set the stage
for a new romantic phase. Apply discipline to health
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SportsMonday Monday, February 10, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 7
Moral Mondays future
Following Saturdays
Moral March, leaders weigh
in on whats next for the pro-
tests. See pg. 3 for story.
Be mine, Valentine
Triangle Youth Ballet
organizes a Valentines
dance for parents and chil-
dren. See pg. 5 for story.
Taking on tuition
College affordability has
been a buzzword among
student president candidates
this season. See pg. 6 for story.
Campus Y elections
Meet the candidates run-
ning for co-presidents of
the Campus Y. See dailytar-
heel.com for story.
games
Solution to
Fridays puzzle
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
2014 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
UNC drops 6th
straight match
WRESTLING: VIRGINIA 21, NORTH CAROLINA 9
By Pat James
Staff Writer
In a season marred by
inconsistency, the North
Carolina wrestling team
has looked to junior Evan
Henderson as its unwavering
leader.
Henderson entered Fridays
dual meet against No. 12
Virginia with an immaculate
29-3 record that has allowed
him to catapult up the nation-
al rankings, where hes ranked
fourth among wrestlers in the
141-pound division.
So when the reigning All-
American opened the match
at Memorial Gymnasium with
a 4-0 upset loss to No. 16 Joe
Spisak, the wheels were set in
motion for UNC to drop its
sixth straight match in a 21-9
loss to UVa.
Despite the defeat, not
all was lost for the Tar Heels
(5-10, 0-4 ACC) in their trip
to Charlottesville, Va.
Associate head coach Cary
Kolat was disappointed with
the team returning to Chapel
Hill with another loss, but
said he was pleased with the
teams resiliency following
Hendersons suprising defeat.
Any time you have a guy
like that who technically gives
you momentum and then they
go down like that, it can set
your team back, he said. They
recovered well, and, individu-
ally, each went out there and
battled the best they could.
A battle is what redshirt
sophomore Christian Barber
was in store for as he took the
mat against Justin Van Hoose
in the 149-pound match sub-
sequent to Hendersons loss .
Barber managed to pull off
an escape in the third period
to tie the score 1-1 at the end
of regulation. The match then
proceeded to two 30-second
tiebreaker periods in which
Barber was able to execute a
reversal in the second period to
walk away with a 4-3 win.
It was definitely very tiring,
but I still felt confident in the
overtime matches, Barber said.
I felt like I was in good shape,
and I pulled out the win.
Barbers victory was one of
three on the night for UNC as
junior Alex Utley and sopho-
more Nathan Kraisser were
able to maintain their recent
success both winning by
decision.
Outside of the victories,
the rest of the Tar Heels were
able to grind it out in their
matches to avoid giving up
any bonus points.
Barber said the team wasnt
concerning itself with wins or
losses in this match against a
tough Cavalier squad, but it
was instead looking to improve
for the upcoming road ahead.
Its an end of the season
match, so everyones trying
to get prepared for ACCs
and nationals, Barber said.
Virginia is a tough team, and
we had to go out there and just
keep working, getting better.
Separating the team from
those postseason matches
are four final dual meets
most notably a showdown
on Tuesday against a rival
Duke team the Tar Heels will
be looking to extend a nine-
game win streak against.
As to whether or not the
inconsistency that has plagued
the Tar Heels will rear its
ugly head against their rival,
Henderson said it wouldnt.
Were going to beat them,
he said emphatically before a
single question was asked.
We dont lose to Duke.
sports@dailytarheel.com
Mens tennis picks
up 2 Sunday wins
MENS TENNIS: UNC 4, TEXAS CHRISTIAN 3; UNC 7, NCCU O
By Caleb Waters
Staff Writer
Two starkly contrasting
games, yet the same outcome.
On Sunday, the North
Carolina mens tennis team
added two more wins to its
total this season, beating both
Texas Christian, 4-3, and
North Carolina Central, 7-0.
Although these two oppo-
nents were quite different,
coach Sam Paul said that he
does not worry about who his
team is going up against.
Its not about them. Its
about us, Paul said. Its about
us competing and getting
ready, staying disciplined and
focused on what we are sup-
posed to be doing. I dont care
about who we are playing. I
care more about our mentality.
One of the major differ-
ences in the two matches was
the doubles play.
Against TCU, the Tar Heels
dropped their first doubles
point of the season.
Sophomore Brett Clark
and freshman Brayden
Schnur lost the first doubles
game 6-2. Freshmen Ronnie
Schneider and Jack Murray
then tied doubles at one
apiece with a 6-3 win against
the Eagles. But junior Esben
Hess-Olesen and senior
Nelson Vick could not clinch
the doubles point, losing 6-5
(7-3).
After singles wins from
Vick, Schnieder and Clark,
the Tar Heels grabbed a 3-1
lead. But the Horned Frogs
answered by winning two sin-
gles of their own, evening the
score at 3-3. Finally, Schnur
put the match away with a
6-1, 3-6, 6-3 victory, giving
UNC its smallest margin of
victory of the season, 4-3.
Junior Oystein Steiro, who
recently re-entered the lineup
after struggling with a hip
flexor injury, said that the vic-
tory against TCU was much
needed.
This win against TCU was
big, I think, Steiro said. We
lost to them last year, and it
was a tight match today as
well. We got a little eye-open-
er in the doubles there, and I
think it was a very important
win for us.
The match against NCCU
went a little differently. The Tar
Heels rolled through the dou-
bles play, with victories from
the Steiro-Vick combo at No.1,
and James Coxe, a redshirt
junior, and Clark at No. 2.
North Carolina then went
unbeaten in singles, with
Schneider, Clark, Steiro,
Murray, freshman Johan
Skattum, and sophomore
Stuart DePaolo all winning in
straight sets.
Vick, who transferred from
Ohio State after his sophomore
year, said that the team is win-
ning because of the chemistry.
This is definitely one of the
DTH/ARAMIDE GBADAMOSI
Freshman Brayden Schnur
improved to 7-0 in singles
matches this season with a win
against Texas Christian Sunday.
more fun teams I have ever
been on, Vick said. We have a
great group of guys, just a great
team chemistry. We have had a
lot of tough matches so far and
we have won pretty much all of
them. And its fun because we
all play for each other.
Sometimes you see other
teams. They arent actually
friends, they just happen to
wear the same uniform. But
we actually compete and
fight for each other and you
see that by the way everyone
competes hard everyday.
sports@dailytarheel.com
most rewarding match of all,
with five of the six singles
matches needing a tiebreak.
Kalbas said that he was
extremely proud of his teams
resilience demonstrated
Sunday and the fight that his
players showed.
We became a team today,
Kalbas said.
We talked for quite a
while after the Duke match
about some things that we
need to get better at to
show more unity, toughness
and togetherness.
We did that today, we defi-
nitely formed an identity of
competitive toughness.
Freshmen Loeb and
Carter agreed that the ITA
tournament was the most
difficult weekend of play
they have experienced as Tar
Heels, both mentally and
physically.
Loeb said that she thinks
her team will use it as prepa-
ration for the future.
This past weekend we
were really tested, Loeb
said.
It made us realize that
things are not going to be
easy and we need to set our
minds that it is going to be a
battle.
sports@dailytarheel.com
WOMENS TENNIS
FROM PAGE 8
way.
Coach has given me that
role as the defensive stopper
on the team, Tokoto said.
(Hes) said all these nice
things about all the athleti-
cism I have and I can be the
best offensive rebounder,
defensive player hes had at
Carolina.
So with him saying that,
coming from coach, its a
huge compliment. A lot of
pressure, but its good pres-
sure to have.
Tokoto is tied for the ACC
lead with 2.1 steals per game
in conference play and
helped lead the Tar Heels to a
season-high 13 steals against
Notre Dame.
His offensive game hasnt
yet been perfected the
free-throw line, from which
he went 1-for-5 Saturday,
offers its challenges but
hes shown increased range
with his jumper and said hes
tried to be more aggressive
and less tentative with his
shots.
Hes a young man thats
getting better and better
every day, and hes under-
standing his game and his
strengths and his limitations
and everything every single
day, Williams said.
He has that athleticism
that is off the charts, and hes
learning how to use that
Im really proud of the way
hes changed some things.
From Menomonee Falls,
Wisc., Tokoto put together
his Saturday performance in
front of about 30 friends and
family members who made
the four-hour trip.
When he walked out to the
court after the game, they
were the only fans left, hud-
dling together and cheering
loudly. They saw the dunks,
the rebounds, the box-outs
and the steals.
And to them, they were all
highlights.
sports@dailytarheel.com
BASKETBALL
FROM PAGE 8
her own, it seemed like any
and all Tar Heels, regardless
of age, were putting the ball
in the back of the net.
Junior attacker Taylor
George, who added three
goals, said it was exciting
to watch the veterans and
newcomers finally get a
chance to work together on
the field.
We have such a dynamic
group this year, she said. On
any given day any person, no
matter the grade, year, posi-
tion, can come out and score
and have a big day.
Thats huge for us. We just
have so many threats that
if you shut down one of us,
someone else is going to step
up.
After leading 6-2 at half-
time, the Tar Heels really
stepped on the gas following
halftime.
North Carolina outscored
the Gators 14-6 in the second
half.
The final 30 minutes
was highlighted by a game-
sealing run in which UNC
turned the score from 10-5
into 15-5 in the blink of an
eye, or to be more exact, 2
minutes and 35 seconds of
game time.
Despite the big win, Levy
knows one game doesnt
define a season and empha-
sized her teams need to get
better.
Its good to win, but we
need to consistently improve,
she said. Its early, its a long
season, and we have a lot to
work on.
sports@dailytarheel.com
LACROSSE
FROM PAGE 8
The Tar Heels
defeated Texas
Christian and NCCU.
The Tar Heels won
only three matches in
loss to UVa.
DTH ONLINE: Visit
dailytarheel.com to
read on senior captain
Abbey Friends big day.
(C)2014 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Class with numbers
5 One making a coffee
run, say
10 Spot to shop
14 Lot measurement
15 Skip over, in speech
16 Reed to which an
orchestra tunes
17 Bil Keane comic strip
20 Briny
21 Buzzing homes
22 Tree houses?
23 Journalist Sawyer
25 Chess pieces
26 Chess piece
28 Bygone Honda CR-V
rival
34 Teachers Apple
35 Expansive
36 Gardner of Hollywood
37 Strip of latticework
38 Low card
40 Its Your Space rental
company
41 Gobbled up
42 The Clan
of the
Cave
Bear
author Jean
43 Diet label
word
44 Fliers
upgrade
48 Fruity
quenchers
49 It may be
doffed
50 Backup
strategy
52 Like an enthusiastic
crowd
55 Guiding principle
57 Sub sandwich dressing
item
60 Sondheim song, and a
hint to the ends of 17-,
28- and 44-Across
63 Wear a hole in the carpet
64 Dance studio rail
65 Actress Fey
66 Winter transport
67 Prints and threads, to
detectives
68 __ in Show: dog prize
DOWN
1 Wrestling surfaces
2 Workout woe
3 Stay afloat in place
4 Pajamaed mogul,
familiarly
5 Zodiacs Twins
6 Martini garnishes
7 Store in a folder
8 Ice cream brand
9 TiVo button
10 Multitalented Rita
11 Basic lessons
12 Big oaf
13 Not as much
18 Figured it out!
19 Unmoving
24 Creep (along)
25 Source of inspiration
26 Rice dish
27 Vintage violin
29 Throat dangler
30 Tween heartthrob Efron
31 Life on Mars? singer
32 Online party notice
33 Desert retreats
38 Conduit for tears
39 Slippery swimmer
40 Oscar winner Arkin
42 Arcade pioneer
45 Out of the sun
46 Region of influence
47 Cuts for a sandwich
51 Commonly injured knee
ligament, for short
52 Deadly snakes
53 Genuine
54 A single time
55 List finisher: Abbr.
56 No __ traffic
58 Travelers
stops
59 Future D.A.s hurdle
61 The Voice network
62 Gambling letters
University of Chicago professor
Michael Geyer
The 20th Annual Mary Stevens Reckford
Memorial Lecture in European Studies will be
delivered on Thursday, February 20 by
Free & Open to the Public
Gerrard Hall at 7:30pm
Visit iah.unc.edu/reckford2014
for more details
Age of Destruction:
World War I -
One Hundred Years Later
THE
TOURNES
FESTIVAL
New French Films
on Campus
Feb. 10 Doors 6:30 Film 7:00
Nelson Mandela Auditorium, FedEx Global Education Center
Amour (Amour)
Supported by: Cultural Services of the French Embassy in the US & Centre National de la Cinmatograp hie et de lImage Anime
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Monday, February 10, 2014
SportsMonday
dailytarheel.com The Daily Tar Heel 8
SCOREBOARD
MENS LACROSSE: North Carolina 19,
Furman 3
FENCING: The mens team finished 3-2
and the womens team finished 2-3 at the
Duke Home Meet.
CHOMPING THE GATORS
WOMENS LACROSSE: NORTH CAROLINA 20, FLORIDA 8
Blue
Devils
knock
out UNC
WOMENS TENNIS: UNC 4, DUKE 2
DTH/LAMON JOHNSON
Aly Messinger scored three goals against No. 4 Florida Saturday. The sophomore attacker was one of four Tar Heels with three or more goals.
By Haley Rhyne
Staff Writer
Last winter, the North Carolina womens ten-
nis team took home its first-ever Intercollegiate
Tennis Association Indoor National
Championship.
This weekend, the Tar Heels were on the cusp
of doing it again before running into Duke on
Saturday.
The No. 3 Tar Heels fell 4-2 to the No. 10
Blue Devils in the quarterfinals of the Indoor
National Championship tournament in
Charlottesville, Va.
UNC bounced back the following day, defeat-
ing No. 4 University of Georgia 4-3 Sunday after-
noon in the consolation round.
North Carolinas freshman Jamie Loeb, who
is ranked No. 2 in the country, lost her first
match of the season to No. 3 Beatrice Capra of
Duke.
Loeb was frustrated with her loss as well as the
teams but said that it was an experience the Tar
Heels will learn from.
Sometimes you need to take one step back to
take two steps forward, Loeb said.
I think this was a good weekend for us even
though we lost to Duke, in general, it will help us
prepare for the rest of the season.
Coach Brian Kalbas said that he was proud of
his team for the toughness they displayed over
the course of their three difficult matches last
weekend.
The North Carolina team defeated
Vanderbilt 4-3 on Friday; three of the six
singles matches went into tiebreak freshman
Hayley Carter clinched the victory for UNC 7-6
(7-3), 7-6 (7-2).
The following day against the Blue Devils,
three of the matches went into tiebreak as well,
but this time the Tar Heels were on the losing
end.
Sunday proved to be the most difficult and
By Brandon Chase
Staff Writer
This was a highly anticipated
matchup in the world of wom-
ens lacrosse.
No. 1 North Carolina, com-
ing off the programs first-ever
national championship, facing
off against No. 4 Florida, an
explosive young team in only
its fifth year as a program, in
the season opener for both
teams.
The Fetzer Field press box
was jam-packed, and there was
an undeniable buzz generating
in the stands and on the field,
everyone looking forward to a
matchup that would surely go
down to the wire.
Then, the game started.
And after only 84 seconds ran
off the clock, it was clear that
this matchup was anything but
even.
The Tar Heels took a 2-0
lead that they would never
relinquish, going on to win the
contest in a rout, 20-8.
Once North Carolina went
up by 10 goals late in the
second half, the referees no
longer stopped the game clock
to let the Gators get out of
Chapel Hill as quickly as pos-
sible.
Coach Jenny Levy said she
UNC womens lacrosse beat Florida in season opener
SEE LACROSSE, PAGE 7
SEE WOMENS TENNIS, PAGE 7
Tar Heels lean on Tokoto
in ght at Notre Dame
By Michael Lananna
Sports Editor
SOUTH BEND, Ind. A tipped
pass, box-out or rebound wont get
you on SportsCenter.
J.P. Tokoto has been on
SportsCenter. He knows.
The North Carolina sophomore
has dunked his way into the spot-
light on more than one occasion. He
did so again just five minutes into
Saturdays 73-62 win against Notre
Dame, receiving a feed from point
guard Marcus Paige on the break,
taking one dribble, cocking his arm
back and then taking flight for a
one-handed, arena-rattling slam.
Still, that dunk impressive an
athletic feat as it was did little to
change the course of the contest.
The dunks may draw the most
attention, but Tokoto makes greater
contributions in other, less high-
light-worthy ways.
Coach Roy Williams called Tokoto
a stat-sheet stuffer after Saturdays
win, and a brief look at that stat sheet
shows 13 points, seven rebounds,
four steals and two assists.
The casual basketball fan will
appreciate his dunks, Paige said.
But the way he gets out in the
passing lanes, the way he rebounds
as a three-man, some of those
rebounds, he skies over all the big
guys and gets it. He can start the
break on his own, so hes so skilled
in so many aspects of the game that
thats what we really appreciate.
When UNC struggled to score
early against Notre Dame, Tokoto
provided an offensive lift, scoring
UNCs first four points and nine of
its first 18.
And when the second half began,
DTH FILE/CHRIS GRIFFIN
J.P. Tokoto tries to pass around a defender. Tokoto scored 13 points, had four
steals, seven boards, two assists and shot 6-for-13 at Notre Dame Saturday.
Tokoto helped the Tar Heels turn
up their defensive intensity, tallying
three steals in the first six and a half
minutes one of which led to his
own fast-break dunk.
Its defense, Tokoto said, that he
takes the most pride in.
Before Tokoto came to North
Carolina, he was highly touted for
his raw athleticism, his dunking SEE BASKETBALL, PAGE 7
The sophomore forward
filled nearly every
category on the box score.
UNC struggles in
opening weekend
By Patrick Ronan
Staff Writer
It was a weekend of close but
not close enough for the North
Carolina softball team.
In UNCs season-opening week-
end in Lafayette, La., the Tar Heels
dropped three of four games in the
Louisiana Classic.
In Fridays opening game of the
season, the Tar Heels battled back
and forth with Northern Iowa.
After taking an early 5-2 lead, the
Panthers scored four runs in the
bottom of the fourth inning to go
ahead.
Redshirt sophomore first base-
man Jenna Kelly tied the game at
7-7 in the sixth inning after sending
her first home run of the season
over the center-field wall. Northern
Iowa responded in its half of the
sixth, scoring the deciding run on a
Tar Heel error to win 8-7.
Coach Donna Papa said it was
disappointing to play so hard and
come out with a loss.
Its tough when you lose a game
where you have 12 hits and three
home runs, Papa said. It was kind
of a backbreaker to start the sea-
son.
But the Tar Heels had no time
to think about the loss to the
Panthers. Just 20 minutes after
their game, they were back on the
field, this time versus No. 10 Texas.
The bats werent as hot against
the Longhorns. The Tar Heels
finally got on the scoreboard in the
sixth inning, but it was too little,
too late as Texas got the 7-3 win.
The Tar Heels got their first win
of the season Saturday morning in
a 3-2 win against Purdue.
After taking the loss against
Northern Iowa, senior pitcher Lori
Spingola got back to her All-ACC
form, throwing all seven innings
and giving up just two runs and
seven hits.
On Friday I came out strong
in the first two innings and was
competing well, but over the next
few innings I wasnt competing,
Spingola said. Going into the
second day I realized I really had
to fight better for my team, go in
there and trust my pitches more,
and I think I did that today.
After securing the seasons
first win, the Tar Heels were right
back on the field to face tourna-
ment host and No. 13 Louisiana-
Lafayette.
The Tar Heels and Ragin Cajuns
went back and forth all afternoon,
trading the lead multiple times
before Louisiana-Lafayette tied it 5-5
in the seventh inning. The Tar Heels
had runners on first and second but
failed to manufacture a run, sending
the game into extra innings.
The Cajuns sent a solo shot out
to center in the 10th that would
prove to be the game-winning run.
The extra-inning loss marked
the end of a tough weekend for the
Tar Heels, but Papa said she isnt
discouraged.
Its a long season. Weve got to
enjoy the journey and just take it
one game at a time, she said. We
cant look far ahead. We just want
to try and make it a one-game
season every time we play and not
worry about our next opponent.
sports@dailytarheel.com
The softball team
dropped three of its four
games this weekend.
prowess often compared to UNC
and NBA great Vince Carter.
But when Williams recruited
Tokoto, he saw things a different
DTH ONLINE: Visit dai-
lytarheel.com for full-game
coverage of UNCs 73-62
defeat of the Fighting Irish.
Womens tennis was eliminated
from indoor tournament.
On any given day,
any person can
come out and score
and have a big day.
Taylor George,
junior attacker
was excited to see how her
team would respond once the
Tar Heels finally reached the
season opener, and needless to
say, she was pleased with what
she saw.
Im really happy with how
we responded, Levy said.We
played last weekend in a couple
short scrimmages, but nothings
like a game.
And when we come into
the game, it gives us more
information about who we
are, what we need to work on
and what we potentially can
do.
Based on Saturday after-
noon, Levys team seems to
have a world of potential to go
along with a team that knows
how to win right now.
Whether it was freshman
attacker Sydney Holman scor-
ing five goals, or senior attack-
er Abbey Friend adding five of
Its tough when you lose
a game where you have
12 hits and three home
runs.
Donna Papa,
softball head coach

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