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Enough madness? Enough? And how do you measure madness?


THE JOKER, BATMAN: ARKHAM ASYLUM
Friday, March 21, 2014 dailytarheel.com Volume 122, Issue 15
ITS TIME TO DANCE
DTH/CHRIS CONWAY
The North Carolina mens basketball team gathers in a huddle Thursday. UNC will take on Providence today in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
By Brooke Pryor
Senior Writer
SAN ANTONIO Even after the
bus had pulled up to the doors of the
AT&T Center Thursday afternoon, the
North Carolina basketball team didnt
want to unload.
They had a schedule to stick to, an
afternoon of preparing for their date
with 11th-seeded Providence as dic-
tated by the NCAA.
But schedules be damned.
The satellite-enabled, in-bus tele-
vision was turned to the matchup
between Harvard and Cincinnati. And
despite their obligations, the play-
ers refused to leave until No. 12-seed
Harvard completed its upset of fifth-
seed Cincinnati.
It was a sobering reminder that at
the end of the day, the seeds are sim-
ply numbers, often devoid of any true
value.
We were just on the bus and saw
Cincinnati lose to Harvard, and they
were a No. 5 seed and Harvard was
a 12, J.P. Tokoto said. Its basically,
anything could happen, you see it
happening in front of you.
The No. 6 seed Tar Heels will face 11th-seeded Providence
UNC
system
faces
ACA costs
DTH ONLINE: Head over
to dailytarheel.com for a photo
gallery of UNCs practice day in
San Antonio.
But the gravity of their situation
didnt appear to phase the sixth-
seeded Tar Heels (23-9).
After exiting the bus, the group was
lighthearted.
Wade Moody donned a green wig
and tinted glasses in the locker room
and took on the role of interviewing
his teammates.
Brice Johnson sang his own ren-
dition of Beyonces Single Ladies.
Kennedy Meeks got down on his
hands and knees in an attempt to
distract Marcus Paige during inter-
views.
Out on the court, others playfully
took jabs at each other and attempt-
ed wacky shots during the open
practice before coach Roy Williams
chided his players to take game-like
shots.
It was a celebratory atmosphere,
reminiscent of the mood during the
The system will incur
additional costs of up
to $47 million.
By Kate Grise
Staff Writer
As the Affordable Care Act con-
tinues to roll out, the UNC system is
facing an up to $47 million increase
in costs associated with insuring a
growing number of employees, caus-
ing officials to consider trimming
employee hours or weighing less
expensive health care plans.
Beginning in January 2015, the
UNC system will have to provide
insurance coverage for the 8,600
employees who work 30 hours a week,
but are not currently covered by the
state insurance plan, said Marty Kotis,
a member of the Board of Governors.
Those employees include gradu-
ate teaching assistants, student
employees, postdoctoral employees,
temporary or visiting faculty and
library and administrative staff.
But the $47 million cost is a
maximum amount calculated using
the $5,452 price of insuring an
employee, said Charlie Perusse, chief
operating officer for the system. The
actual cost will likely be much lower.
Theres a lot we dont know.
Number one, the feds are still
adjusting guidelines and param-
eters. We could have some sets or
subsets of employees that would be
exempted from coverage, he said.
Kotis said the systems General
Administration has considered dif-
ferent options to combat the high
cost, including shifting costs from
other areas, seeking less expen-
sive health coverage plans, cutting
employee hours and increasing rev-
enue to the system which could
include tuition increases.
Perusse said the campuses could
manage employee costs more effi-
ciently to reduce the total number of
employees who need to be insured.
Do you need someone always at
30 hours a week, or could they be a
little less and still provide the same
service? he said.
SEE ACA, PAGE 11
SEE NCAA TOURNEY, PAGE 11
Theater management
minor to begin in the fall
The new program will
focus on the business side
of the theater industry.
Department works
on gender inclusivity
UNCs department of
philosophy focuses on
including more women.
By Sarah Niss
Senior Writer
While some philosophy depart-
ments nationwide are wracked with
scandal and gender issues, UNC is
working to ensure inclusivity.
More than 650 people have
signed a petition to the American
Philosophical Association request-
ing a code of conduct for philoso-
phy professors, following a string
of sexual harassment accusations
against professors at universities such
as Northwestern University and the
University of Colorado at Boulder.
Twenty years ago this stuff would
have been swept under the rug,
said UNC graduate student Jennifer
Kling. There is a cultural problem
in the department but its in the
process of changing.
The field faces a longstanding prob-
lem of gender representation, and phi-
losophers want to understand why.
Philosophy has historically been
the domain of middle-upper class
white men, Kling said. We have
very few women and few persons of
color in the profession.
About 23 percent of tenure-track
faculty in philosophy departments
nationwide are women, according to
the associations Committee on the
Status of Women. UNC has more
female philosophy professors and an
equal number of men and women
pursuing graduate degrees.
No other department in the top
30 or 40 has anything remotely like
that, said philosophy chairman
Marc Lange.
UNC faces problems at the under-
graduate level, where the majority of
By Breanna Kerr
Staff Writer
The majority of students who
come to the department of dramat-
ic art intend on acting, but soon
there will be another option off the
main stage.
Catering to the students interest-
ed in the business side of the theater
industry, the new theater manage-
ment minor will start up in the fall.
Hannah Grannemann, the
managing director at PlayMakers
Repertory Company and lecturer in
the dramatic art department, had
been teaching theater management
classes for two years when she decid-
ed to compile courses into a minor.
Weve had theater management
courses in the catalogue for a long
time, Grannemann said. It seemed
to me a good idea to expand our
offerings and grow the department.
She said putting together a
minor track was quite easy, and she
started working on it last summer.
Dramatic art classes from the
past are resurfacing, being created
and revamped, but the addition
of the theater management minor
doesnt require any additional
funds or faculty.
Grannemann said she will be
teaching DRAM 279, a new class
called Introduction to Theater
Management, in the fall. An exist-
ing class, DRAM 193, Production
Practicum, is being given a man-
agement track, DRAM 491 is resur-
facing and DRAM 493 is being rei-
magined for theater management.
There are four courses that
make up the minor track, but we
I hope they understand
that the arts can be
looked at as an art form
and as a business.
Adam Versenyi,
department of dramatic art chairman
also have cross-listed courses in
business in economics, she said.
The new classes will be avail-
able in time for next semesters
registration period, and students
can declare a theater management
minor in the fallas well. Classes in
theater management are not lim-
ited to dramatic art majors.
This is a great next step for the
department, and it can attract stu-
dents who are interested in the arts
but dont necessarily want to be per-
SEE THEATER MINOR, PAGE 11 SEE PHILOSOPHY, PAGE 11
THE LOWDOWN ON FRIDAYS GAME
Providence vs.
North Carolina
23-11, 10-8 Big East 23-9, 13-5 ACC
7:20 p.m.
AT&T Center
Broadcast: TNT
HEAD-TO-HEAD
The Bottom Line North Carolina 67 , Providence 61
UNC should have no problem outrebound-
ing the Friars after a recent heavy empha-
sis. Kadeem Batts and LaDontae Henton
are biggest interior threats. Edge: UNC
Backcourt
Frontcourt
Bench
Intangibles
Providence uses a short rotation, and Bryce
Cotton playing 39.9 minutes a game. UNC
substitutes more freely and gets more con-
tributions from the bench. Edge: UNC
Until now, Providence hasnt made the NCAA
Tournament since 2004 and has struggled
against teams in this years field. UNC is 0-2
in NCAA games in San Antonio. Edge: Push
Both Marcus Paige and Bryce Cotton lead
their team in points and minutes played.
Cotton has played all but 10 minutes in his
teams last 13 games. Edge: Push
TODAY
Art a la Carte (Workshop): Kick
of your weekend on a creative
note with an art class designed
exclusively for UNC students.
This weeks class will focus on
turning ordinary objects into art.
Participants will have the oppor-
tunity to walk around campus to
collect various objects for their
own projects. Classes are de-
signed for beginners but are also
suitable for students with some
art experience. $10 per class.
Time: 4 p.m. - 7 p.m.
Location: Ackland Art Museum
UNC Baseball vs. Georgia Tech:
Take advantage of the warm
weather, and enjoy a day at the
ballpark.
Time: 7 p.m. - 9 p.m.
Location: Boshamer Stadium
SATURDAY
Gardens and Gardening as
Agents of Health and Wellness
(Workshop): Gardens brighten
up your backyard but also
help improve your health and
wellness. Come learn about the
history of gardens across cul-
tures and their benefcial efects.
Participants will hear about
the long-standing horticultural
therapy program. Free but ad-
vance registration required. Visit
http://bit.ly/1pfKjyD.
Time: 2 p.m. - 4 p.m.
Location: N.C. Botanical Garden
Education Center
Encounter ArtTour: Let an
Ackland Student Guide lead you
through a tour of the Ackland
Art Museums galleries to help
you gain a greater understand-
ing of the museums permanent
NOTED. Dont ever give New York-based
Ron Gordon Watch Repair a bad review
on Yelp. The stores owner has just threat-
ened to sue customer Matt Brand, who
gave the place a two-star review on the
site, for alleged defamation.
No worries, Brand. Gordons lawyer has
one- and two-star reviews, too.
QUOTED. If you look at my recently
used emojis, its like, heart, alien, poop,
kiss, smile, pizza, rainbow. Those are the
ones I always use.
EDM producer Skrillex, in an
interview with Rolling Stone, gets to
the deep stuff. Yeah man, and your song
Bangarang was like, totally subversive.
W
hen someone shafts you, dont get mad get clever.
When Edd Joseph of Bristol, England, never received a
PlayStation 3 game console after he shelled out about
$160 through an electronic money transfer, he said he
got back at the seller by sending him long passages from Shakespeare in a
continuous stream of text messages.
According to the Bristol Post, Shakespeares 37 works would mean
29,305 texts given the 160-character restriction.
Joseph said hes received a few abusive messages after he began the
process, meaning his evil plan must be working at least until he gets
blocked, but thats not stopping him. He says hes going to keep at it.
A fools paradise
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone committed lar-
ceny from a vending machine
and damaged property at Red
Roof Inn at 5623 Durham-
Chapel Hill Blvd. at 4:20
a.m. March 13, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person broke the glass
of the vending machine,
causing damage estimated at
$100, and took $25 worth of
candy from it, reports state.
Someone reported a pub-
lic inebriate at 2 Shepherd
Lane at 4:26 a.m. March
13, according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
Someone committed
larceny from a vehicle at
201 S. Estes Drive at 5:30
a.m. March 13, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person removed a
license plate valued at $1
from a vehicle, reports state.
Someone broke and
entered and committed
larceny at 421 Yates Motor
Company Alley between 11
a.m. and 3:30 p.m. March
13, according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person opened an
unlocked window and entered
a house, taking jewelry and
two laptops, reports state.
Someone shoplifted at
137 E. Franklin St. at 11:24
a.m. March 13, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole a case of
Bud Light beer from CVS/
Pharmacy. The beer was
recovered and the person was
issued a trespass warning,
reports state.
Someone broke and
entered at 105 Galway Drive at
4:40 p.m. March 13, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person tried to break
in to an occupied dwelling
and caused $150 in damage
to a porch screen and side
door, reports state.
To make a calendar submission,
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com. Please include the date of
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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
collection. This tour will focus
on tensions artists and others
felt toward mass urban migra-
tions, from the disappearing of
the Breton culture to the Great
Migration of African-Americans
to the industrial North. Free. No
reservation required.
Time: 3 p.m. - 4 p.m.
Location: Ackland Art Museum
UNC Baseball vs. Georgia Tech:
Cheer on the Tar Heels as they
take on the Buzz.
Time: 6 p.m. - 8 p.m.
Location: Boshamer Stadium
POLICE LOG
News Friday, March 21, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 2
PINATA WITH PURPOSE
P
riscilla Townsend, a senior psychology major,
hits a pinata as part of Relay For Lifes Rally
Week on Thursday afternoon. Students were
encouraged to donate $2 or sign up to participate in a
walk to raise money for the American Cancer Society.
DTH/CLAIRE COLLINS
CORRECTIONS
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections
printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Cammie Bellamy at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
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News Friday, March 21, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 3
GETTIN JIGGY
DTH/CATHERINE HEMMER
Members of the Carolina Irish Association practice in the dance studios below Woolen Gymnasium on Thursday for the groups upcoming showcase.
ASG to
get new
ocers
By Paul Kushner
Staff Writer
New leaders and fresh internal reforms are
on the agenda for this weekends UNC-system
Association of Student Governments meeting at
Winston-Salem State University.
Alex Parker, student body president of N.C.
State University, and Leigh Whittaker, UNC-
Ashevilles student body president, are running
unopposed for president and vice president.
ASG, which is funded by a $1 annual student
fee, is a student advocacy organization composed
of delegates from all 17 UNC-system schools.
UNC-CHs delegate to ASG, Student
Congress Speaker Connor Brady, who nomi-
nated the two candidates, expressed support for
them as well as the reform resolutions.
I believe that Alex and Leigh will plan advo-
cacy efforts, empower students from all over
North Carolina and be a part of a new direction
for an organization that so far has been a hin-
drance to real progress, Brady said. Alex cur-
rently represents a large university, and Leigh a
small one. That mix will ensure that no school
in our system is forgotten and all voices will be
brought to the table.
Andrew Powell, UNC-CHs student body pres-
ident-elect, does not plan to attend this week-
ends meeting because he has not yet taken office.
But Powell said he is excited to work with
ASG, particularly with its new leaders.
Ive heard great things about the candidates,
he said. I know that they ll do a good job of
coming together and representing students all
across the state.
One reform resolution would authorize ASG
to purchase iClickers to track how delegates
vote, which would be posted online for public
access a move Brady supports.
Another resolution would support changing
UNC-system student identification cards to
potentially meet higher standards at the polls
after North Carolinas voter ID law banned col-
lege IDs at the voting booth.
I recognize that this is an opportunity to
ensure that students have the proper identifica-
tion to vote prior to the enactment of the voter
identification law, Brady said.
But ASG President Robert Nunnery remains
uncertain of the resolutions success.
We are trying to move towards making our
campus IDs more accountable and more offi-
cial, he said. The goal is to eventually petition
the legislature to include college IDs as permis-
sible IDs in the new voter ID law.
Another resolution would request that
the State Board of Elections reconsider
Watauga County Board of Elections decision
to move early voting off of Appalachian State
Universitys campus.
state@dailytarheel.com
By Zhai Yun Tan
Staff Writer
Their acronym may be CIA, but the
Carolina Irish Association does not tap
secrets they tap their feet to tunes.
The Carolina Irish Associations spring
showcase on Sunday will feature tra-
ditional Irish dances and a showdown
with the Carolina Tap Ensemble. It is the
organizations first showcase, following its
efforts to expand its presence on campus
this year.
Most people dont know what Irish dance
is and we want to show people what it is,
said sophomore Olivia DeSena, the groups
marketing and publicity department officer.
Its very athletic and a really cool form
of dance.
Many of the dancers in the club are
highly experienced in Irish dancing and
the pieces for the showcase are all student-
choreographed by the group members.
A lot of our dancers have competed at
national and regional levels, and one of the
girls placed at the world championships and
won nationals one year, DeSena said.
We have a wide variety of talent.
The Carolina Tap Ensemble was
invited to perform in the Carolina Irish
Associations showcase because tap dancing
shares similar roots with Irish dancing.
We make similar sounds, we just make
different moves, DeSena said. We wanted
to play with that.
In addition to infusing tap dance with
Irish dance, the showcase will also add a
modern twist to the traditional dance by
dancing along to the James Bond theme
song.
I just really like that were doing tradi-
tional music as well as really contemporary
things, said junior Halie Reed, co-president
of the Carolina Irish Association.
Our initials go with CIA, so I figured, lets
play on that, and we chose James Bond.
Beginners will also be performing in the
showcase. This is the first time the organi-
zation has accepted beginners and offered
free lessons in Irish dancing.
We really wanted to bring more people,
Reed said. We wanted more structure and
a more cohesive as well as fun group.
Both DeSena and Reed said there is a
general curiosity surrounding Irish dance
on campus.
The Carolina Irish Association will hold a dance show
SEE THE SHOWCASE
Time: 7 p.m. Sunday
Location: Great Hall, Student Union
Info: on.fb.me/1ikcYRW
I actually choreographed a piece for
Blank Canvas last semester with an Irish
style dance, and people were saying its so
unique and they liked it, Desena said.
So hopefully people will see it and like
it, and they can join us as beginners or just
learn a bit more about Irish dance.
Sophomore Olivia Barnes has practiced
Irish dancing since she was young.
I took lessons since I was little, but I
stopped when I got to high school because I
was too busy, she said. I picked it up again
here and its exciting.
Barnes will be performing in eight out of
10 dances.
Just getting back into dance brings back
a lot of memories when I was a kid, she said.
I think all of us have a little bit of Irish
in us, somewhere.
arts@dailytarheel.com
The president and vice president
will be elected this weekend.
Pizza promotion draws campers
DTH/JOHANNA FEREBEE
Old Chicago owner Jeremy Andrews greets customers on Thursday morning during the restaurants grand opening.
By Colleen Moir
Staff Writer
UNC has a growing, diverse
group of sororities that rep-
resent different ethnic, extra-
curricular and socioeconomic
backgrounds.
But interest in these orga-
nizations varies greatly, with
some Greek organizations see-
ing more growth than others.
Brittney Bahlman, coor-
dinator of the Office of
Fraternity and Sorority Life
and Community Involvement,
said in 2013, 760 women par-
ticipated in the Panhellenic
Associations fall recruitment,
which was about 35 more than
in 2012. She said this formal
recruitment, held each fall, has
experienced an average growth
of between 30 and 50 women
each year.
Our enrollment of women
in the University is not grow-
ing, which means that there is a
growing interest among female
students, Bahlman said.
Bahlman said in fall 2013,
the Panhellenic Association
issued about 500 bids. Each
sorority was given a minimum
quota of 48 new members, and
nine of the 10 sororities in the
association achieved it.
Nationally, theres a grow-
ing interest in being a part of
Greek life, said junior Jamison
Kies, who is president of Alpha
Chi Omega. People see it as a
one stop shop for everything
you can do in college.
Junior Meredith Babb, vice
president of recruitment for
the Panhellenic Association,
said growth in the Panhellenic
community is important to her.
The more people who are
involved in Greek life, the big-
ger impact we can have on the
greater Carolina and Chapel
Hill community.
Bahlman also said that
the diversity found in the
two councils beyond the
Panhellenic council is highly
valued, as well.
I think that a lot of the
diversity of the University is
reflected in the diversity of our
sorority community, Bahlman
said.
But sororities in the Greek
Alliance Council, which was
created in 2000 and now
includes 14 multicultural and
interest-based sororities and
fraternities, have found growth
to be difficult.
Small chapter numbers
and difficulty spreading our
name on campus is something
that my sorority, as well as
(the Greek Alliance Council)
has been suffering in the past
couple of years, said senior
Jasmine Kreig, president of
Theta Nu Xi, which has only a
few members. Many chapters
in our council have very small
chapters and encounter the
same difficulties with recruit-
ment that we do.
Despite the varied meth-
ods of recruitment and level
of interest garnered, women
across the different councils
agreed that there are many
benefits to sorority life.
Babb said she thinks soror-
ity life opens the door to many
opportunities on campus.
At Carolina, joining a soror-
ity is not only a way to gain a
home away from home, but a
way to become a better woman
through friendships, leadership
opportunities, scholarship,
social activities and philan-
thropic projects.
university@dailytarheel.com
Certain sororities have
seen a big jump in
recruitment.
UNC sorority rush
grows in popularity
By Holly West
Assistant City Editor
UNC students will do anything for
free pizza.
Early Thursday morning, more
than 50 people lined up outside of Old
Chicago Pizza and Taproom in down-
town Chapel Hill in the hopes of win-
ning a year of free pizza. Some people
even camped out overnight.
I think there were about a dozen
people who did that, said Chris
Beckler, vice president of operations
for CraftWorks Restaurants and
Breweries, Inc., the company that owns
the Chapel Hill location of the pizza
place.
Old Chicago, the newest addition to
the 140 West development on Franklin
Street, gave away books of 12 free pizza
coupons to the first 76 people in line
at their grand opening celebration
Thursday morning.
The 76 signifies the restaurants
opening almost 40 years ago in 1976.
Beckler said security guards for the
development had to kick the camp-
ers out around midnight, but they
returned at 3 a.m.
Sarah Headley, a junior journalism
and political science major and a staff
writer at The Daily Tar Heel, was one
of the lucky few to receive the prize,
though she did not camp out.
I got there around 9 a.m., she said.
I was 42 or 43.
Headley said there were a lot of
people there waiting for the grand
opening to start, but the group wasnt
organized.
There was no rhyme or reason to
how it was set up, she said.
One of the guys in line took it upon
himself to rip up a sheet of paper and
write numbers one through 76 on
them.
The event also included a free-throw
contest in which UNC intramural bas-
ketball players and local celebrities
took turns shooting. For each basket
scored, Old Chicago donated $76 to
Farmer Foodshare, a nonprofit orga-
nization that collects extra food from
farmers markets and gives it to people
in need.
In the afternoon, pizza and craft
beer samples were offered in exchange
for a $2 donation to the organization.
Beckler estimated that nearly
$2,000 was raised in total on
Thursday. He said another $3,500
was raised for the organization at a
friends and family event on March 8
and 9.
Beth Miller, a Farmer Foodshare
volunteer who was representing her
organization at the event, said the
money will go a long way.
Miller said the organization donates
food to local charities, like the Inter-
Faith Council for Social Services shel-
ters and food pantries, which distrib-
ute it to people in need.
We need money, she said. Its a
way to get fresh food to people who
normally cant get fresh food.
This is the first Old Chicago Pizza
and Taproom location in the Carolinas.
Beckler said his company is look-
ing into expanding further into the
Carolinas in the near future.
city@dailytarheel.com
Dozens camped out for free
pizza at the Old Chicago
Pizza and Taproom opening.
Friday, March 21, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 4
DUKE UNIVERSITY IS SEEKING
NON-SMOKING ADULTS
18 YEARS OR OLDER WITH ASTHMA
TO PARTICIPATE IN A STUDY ON ASTHMA
DO YOU HAVE
MILD ASTHMA?
Participate in our
research study!
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Friday, March 21, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 5
SportsFriday
REACHING NEW HEIGHTS
By Bryan Frantz
Staff Writer
Cameron Overstreet is not
a prototypical pole-vaulter.
At just 5-foot-5 and a half
inches, the junior on the
North Carolina track and
field team is a few inches
short of what coaches look for
in an ideal vaulter.
But Josh Langley, the
vaulting coach for UNC,
couldnt help but notice how
good she was.
Wow, shes kinda short for
how good she is, he said to
himself when he first met her.
She wont be growing any-
time soon she has been the
same height since seventh
grade. And now that her third
indoor season at UNC has
come to a conclusion and the
outdoor season officially kicks
off today, she accepts there is
nothing she can do about her
height. But her coaches say she
has certain intangible qualities
that all coaches seek. The same
words pop up, over and over.
Dedicated. Determined.
Motivated. Intelligent.
While the first three are
hard to demonstrate on
paper, Overstreet leaves little
doubt that she is just as much
student as she is athlete. After
graduating among the top 10
in her high school class, she
came to UNC and continued
to excel in the classroom.
ACC Honor Roll twice.
U.S. Track & Field And Cross
Country Coaches Association
All-Academic honors twice.
Deans List every semester.
Kyle Bishop, Overstreets
high school vaulting coach
in Virginia, met her through
some of the girls on his team
who were also her friends. She
was just an eighth-grade gym-
nast and he knew immediately
he wanted her on his team.
That day, I said, Shes
going to be a state champion,
Bishop said. And her (gym-
nastics) coach looks at me and
says, Yeah, in gymnastics.
After that, the two coaches
fought for her time. Eventually,
Bishop and pole-vaulting won
her heart, and soon enough,
Overstreet was a state pole-
vaulting champion.
Shes a scrapper, Bishop
said. She might not be the
greatest physical specimen out
there, but shes the kid that
you can count on. When her
backs to the wall, shes going
to go as hard as she can.
While few who know her will
argue theres a better competi-
tor, effort is just one element of
the equation. Three weeks ago,
at the ACC Indoor Track and
Field Championships, the other
elements werent working.
On her final attempt at
13-11 1/4 she fell millimeters
shy, barely clipping the bar.
DTH/LOUISE MANN CLEMENT
Cameron Overstreet, a junior from Mechanicsville, Va., is a pole vaulter for UNC. She recently missed the NCAA Championships for the indoor season but returns to outdoor competition today.
Had she cleared it, she would
have set a new personal
record. Instead, she was elim-
inated from the competition
her chances of advancing
to the NCAA Indoor National
Championships crushed and
her indoor season ended.
I just knocked it off with
my thigh, she said, stressing
the just.
But Overstreet knows she
can use the early finish as fuel.
Youve got to look at vault-
ing as a four-year commit-
ment, she said. If you have
one season where you dont
have all your dreams come
true, then its OK ... as long as
you come back in a strong way.
Langley has no doubt
that Overstreet will return
for the outdoor season with
a vengeance. While he said
not making the National
Championships hurt at first, it
will add an entirely new level
of motivation to her approach.
And ultimately, it will be her
competition that suffers.
She already is determined,
shes already dedicated, but
I think youre going to see a
whole different animal, come
outdoor season, Langley said.
Cameron Overstreet with
something to prove, thats dan-
gerous for the rest of the ACC.
Though the ACC
Championships might be a
sore topic for Overstreet, one
UNC vaulter set a new career
best that day in Clemson,
S.C. Freshman Amanda
Benninghoff tied for fifth
place with a jump of 12-11
1/2, and credited Overstreet
the only non-freshman
female vaulter for guiding
her early in the season.
Cam was like our mom on
the team, leading us through
the workouts in the fall,
Benninghoff said.
Fellow freshman Caroline
Brailsford echoed Benninghoff.
She has this dedication
about her thats really admi-
rable, Brailsford said. She
eats so well, she studies really
hard, she takes really good
care of her body in training.
Shes just the perfect role
model.
As a freshman, Overstreet
had then-sophomore Sandi
Morris to look up to and train
with. After that season, Morris,
who holds the UNC indoor
and outdoor womens pole
vault records, transferred to
Arkansas. Overstreet was left
as the tems only female vaulter.
Langley said she constantly
pestered him to recruit some
vaulters for her to train with,
so when he brought in a crop
of freshmen this season,
Overstreet was overwhelmed.
She has really done an
outstanding job of taking
them under her wing and
showing them the ropes,
Langley said. It helps me a
lot because I dont have to go
through the whole processes
of the small things.
Brailsford, Benninghoff and
Langley all credit Overstreet
for bringing the vaulters
together. Before the first meet
of the indoor season, she
wrote each vaulter a letter,
praising their accomplish-
ments and encouraging them
to keep striving to be better.
Her influence on the
impressionable freshmen
became noticeable almost
immediately, and soon
enough, the rookies had
returned the favor.
A few days before the ACC
Championships, Overstreet
went to Virginia Tech for an
additional chance to record
a performance that would
qualify her for the National
Championships.
She was the only member
of the team who went only
Langley accompanied her
but the other vaulters were
there in spirit, rooting on their
mentor. Each freshman vault-
er, including the men, wrote
Overstreet a letter of their
own, hoping to boost her con-
fidence enough to propel her
to the NCAA Championships.
Overstreet was touched by
the letters, which she said con-
gratulated her for what she had
already accomplished. Though
she ultimately came up short,
the letters helped remove some
of the initial stress.
It was just really nice to
hear, because Im kind of hard
on myself, she said. Its kind
of weird to think that at the
end of the day, even though
you gave it your best effort, it
still wasnt enough.
Though it wasnt enough
this time, Overstreet
did make the National
Championships last year, and
still has the outdoor season
this year, as well as the indoor
and outdoor seasons next
year, to reach new heights.
She and Langley have
already begun working on ways
she can improve and changes
she needs to make, including
moving five inches up to a
14-foot pole, but she said her
perspective has changed after
the indoor season.
Just enjoy the journey
instead of just basing it on the
outcome, she said. Thats
something Ive learned.
You cant just be focused
on the outcome, you have to
enjoy the whole package.
sports@dailytarheel.com
The pole vaulter has
a strong presence on
and off the field.
Friday, March 21, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 6
SUMMER SCHOOL
OPENS MARCH 24-25
REGI STRATI ON
ALL
HAVE IT
THIS
MAYMESTER
More than 50 courses offered
Two-thirds satisfy Gen Ed requirements
MAY 13-30
FIRST SESSION:
MAY 13 - JUNE 17
SECOND SESSION:
JUNE 19 - JULY 25
Graduate in 8 semesters or fewer
Add a second major or minor
Build hours and your GPA
Teaching that fits your learning style
your friends are
HERE
- no FOMO
Check out courses at summer.unc.edu
Follow @UNCSummerSchool for whats happening in summer
SportsFriday Friday, March 21, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 7
THE LOWDOWN ON SUNDAYS GAME
Tennessee-Martin vs.
North Carolina
21-7, 15-1 OVC 24-9, 10-6 ACC
3 p.m.
Carmichael Arena
Broadcast: ESPN
HEAD-TO-HEAD
The Bottom Line North Carolina 82, Pittsburgh 69
UT-Martin starts four guards, all under six
feet tall, and one forward. Four players in
UNCs starting five are six feet or taller,
looking to exploit mismatches. Edge: UNC
Backcourt
Diamond DeShields and Allisha Gray com-
bine for 32 points a game. But UT-Martins
Heather Butler and Jasmine Newsome are
the top scorers in OVC history. Edge: Push
Frontcourt
Bench
Intangibles
Only three reserve players see significant
minutes for UT-Martin. Five players provide
energy off the bench for UNC, combing to
average 24 points a game. Edge: UNC
UT-Martin has two elite scorers, but UNC is
a young, fast team led by espnWs national
freshman of the year Diamond DeShields.
UNC will also be at home. Edge: UNC
By Danielle Herman
Staff Writer
Expectations are high
entering the 2014 outdoor
track season, and North
Carolina track and field ath-
letes are hungry.
Following a successful
indoor season, which ended
less than a week ago, the
outdoor team is looking to
perform even better in the
upcoming season.
The teams first outdoor
meet of the year, the Carolina
Relays, will start tonight at 5
p.m. and last through the day
Saturday at the Belk Track.
Its our first meet of the
year, so were going into it
optimistic, but its really just a
chance to get out and stretch
our legs outside, said head
track and field coach Harlis
Meaders.
As the team preps for the
meet, some team members
view the meet as an opportu-
nity to see where they stand
after a long winter.
I think our kids are anx-
ious to compete outdoors,
said Meaders.
The kids that havent had
a chance to compete yet, the
outdoor only events, discus
throw, javelin throw, 400
meter hurdles, this will be
their first attempt to do their
primary event.
The team is coming off
a successful indoor season,
during which the mens
team placed second at the
ACC Indoor Championships
and sent 11 competitors to
the NCAA Indoor National
Championship.
I think the kids that saw
their teammates qualify for
national championships, now
theyre excited, Meaders said.
UNC track and eld gets set for outdoor season
DTH FILE/LAMON JOHNSON
Senior defensive midfielder Ryan Creighton scoops up a ground ball in North Carolinas 13-10 victory against Harvard Tuesday.
By Max Miceli
Staff Writer
The No. 6 North Carolina
mens lacrosse team might be
feeling a little bit of deja vu
heading into its game against
top-ranked Maryland in
Kenan Stadium this Saturday.
The team found itself in a
nearly identical situation last
year.
Facing the top-ranked
Terrapins, questions surround-
ed the direction the Tar Heels
season was headed. This game
would either be a phenomenal
addition to UNCs tournament
resume or a detrimental loss in
the toughest conference in the
nation.
But the Tar Heels won that
game a year ago and didnt
lose again after that until the
NCAA tournament.
It was the turning point of
their season.
Last year, we were in a
pickle, coach Joe Breschi
said. We had three losses so
youre either coming out of
there .500 or with a nice win
under your belt.
And this season with the
addition of Notre Dame and
Syracuse to the ACC and a
new tournament format, a
loss would be more injurious
to UNCs title chances than it
Tar Heels to face top-ranked Terrapins
out of the penalty box have put
UNC in trouble against teams
like Notre Dame, Princeton
and even Harvard.
A UNC player found him-
self in the penalty box fifteen
times in those three games
resulting in seven goals that
resulted in giving up double-
digit goals and even a loss
against the Irish.
I feel like were playing
pretty well (in) six-on-six
defense, Creighton said. As
long as we can prevent early
offense and transition oppor-
tunities and stay out of the
penalty box I think we can be
pretty successful.
It might seem like the pres-
sures on for the Tar Heels,
but dont tell Breschi that.
Hes excited for the take on
the Terrapins.
(Whenever) you play
the number one team, the
pressures more on them,
Breschi said. Anytime you
get a chance to play the num-
ber one team specifically in
Kenan Stadium on a beautiful
day in Chapel Hill its a great
thing.
And its that optimism that
oozes from Breschi that may
very well lead to UNC experi-
encing more deja vu at the end
of the weekend with a win.
sports@dailytarheel.com
The mens lacrosse
team looks to avoid
falling 0-3 in ACC play.
may have been in the past.
Though the ACC has six
teams, only four will play in
the conference tournament at
the end of the season. The two
teams with the worst records
will get a chance to play a
consolation game against each
other, they will not get a chance
at the ACC title.
With an 0-2 record already
in the ACC off of two hotly
contested one-goal losses
against the newly added
Fighting Irish and rival Duke,
the Tar Heels have put them-
selves in a vulnerable position
one that could see them
out of the tournament.
Senior captain Ryan
Creighton isnt even thinking
about that though.
As a captain and a leader
of the team, its all about the
next game, Creighton said.
I dont think were too con-
cerned about that.
If the Tar Heels are going
to prevent that fate, one that
could keep them from having
the chance to even defend
their 2013 ACC title, it will
start with the defense.
While in the first three
games of the season the Tar
Heels made light work of
severely overmatched teams,
the team started to struggle
once it began facing ranked
opponents.
Although the defense boasts
strong, athletic players like
Mark McNeill and Creighton, a
combination of lacking off-ball
defense and issues with staying
Hopefully we ll have double
that number by the time the
outdoor championship rolls
around in June.
Houston Summers, a soph-
omore javelin thrower, said
the cross country and indoor
track seasons set the bar high
for the outdoor track season.
Were extremely excited,
he said. Were a stronger
outdoor team. I really believe
that we have a chance to win
ACCs, and as a whole, its
kind of sparked this energy
and belief that we are defi-
nitely on the right track.
Summers, who barely
missed qualifying for outdoor
NCAA Nationals last spring,
said thinking about how close
he came to doing so increased
his drive during the off-
season.
Practice has been very
encouraging lately. I feel
stronger and more experi-
enced this year, he said.
Summers said long-term,
he would like to break the
school record.
We ll see this weekend,
and it will give us a gauge to
see where we are and how
realistic those goals are, he
said.
Tory Kemp, a sophomore
multis competitor, will offi-
cially compete for the first
time since last outdoor sea-
son.
Weve been working so
hard, she said, especially
those who have been red-
shirted.
Kemp placed second in
the heptathlon and third
in the pentathlon last
year at the ACC Outdoor
Championships.
She echoed Summers sen-
timents on the bar set by the
indoor season.
Its our turn to come out
there and raise the bar, raise
the level of competition,
and really become more of a
national presence, she said.
sports@dailytarheel.com
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D R . J ONATHAN R EYNON D R . M ICHELLE Y UN
News Friday, March 21, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 8
UNC Libraries celebrates 7 million books
By Deborah Harris
Staff Writer
Not every library gets to
celebrate its millionth book.
On Thursday, UNC had
that opportunity for the sev-
enth time.
Chancellor Carol Folt
accepted the 7 millionth
addition to the Wilson
Library collection in a cer-
emony in the Nelson Mandela
Auditorium of the FedEx
Global Education Center.
I believe everyone in here
believes that the library is the
heart of a university, Folt said.
We are obligated to keep
the library alive.
The book, donated by
The John Wesley and Anna
Hodgin Hanes Foundation,
contains Latin poetry that
was written by Juan Latino,
a native of Spain of African
descent, more than 400 years
ago.
The foundation has given
the University a book each
time it reaches the milestone
of another million books.
The Carolina Center for
By Kelsey Weekman
Staff Writer
Six local elected officials
stepped out of their offices
and into the communities
they represent this week to
help homebound residents.
As a part of Meals
on Wheels Community
Champions Week, Chapel Hill
Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt,
Rep. Verla Insko (D-Orange)
and several Carrboro
Aldermen and Orange County
Commissioners are helping
volunteers deliver meals to
those who have trouble leav-
ing their home.
Community Champions
Week is part of a national
campaign to raise awareness
for senior hunger and encour-
age the local community to
take action.
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro
division of Meals on Wheels
has provided personally-
delivered meals to home-
bound and disabled individu-
als in the area for more than
40 years.
We think of Chapel Hill as
affluent and well-educated,
Elected ocials deliver food to the homebound
The book resonated with
both existing collections and
multiple academic disciplines.
Richard Szary, associate
university librarian for special
collections, said the ceremony
was held in the FedEx Global
Center for the first time
because of its intersectional
nature.
Funke said the acquisition
of the book relating to the
African Diaspora is also nota-
ble, marking the 50th anni-
versary of the Civil Rights Act
of 1964.
Because we are really the
major research library in
the southeast, we are always
actively acquiring this mate-
rial interestingly enough,
even when (North Carolina)
was still segregated, she said.
This places UNC in the top
rank of research universities.
As of fall 2012, UNC has
the 22nd largest library
in the nation, according
to the American Library
Association.
Funke said UNC Libraries is
one of only 21 university librar-
ies to hold more than 7 million
books in North America. She
added that it was one of very
few libraries that has a copy of
Latinos book.
university@dailytarheel.com
Chancellor Carol Folt
accepted the book on
Thursday night.
Six officials are
taking part in Meals
on Wheels.
We think of Chapel Hill as affluent and well-
educated, but there is still a lot of need here.
Stacey Yusko,
executive director of the Chapel Hill division of Meals on Wheels
but there is still a lot of need
here, said the divisions
Executive Director Stacey
Yusko.
She said the elected offi-
cial volunteers got into cars
with complete strangers who
drove them through a deliv-
ery route, then accompanied
them to meet the recipients.
Its impressive that the
officials made time in their
busy schedules to do this,
Yusko said. They were
positive and personable so the
exercise was very easy for us.
Kleinschmidt said he was
happy to check up on people
who would not have human
contact otherwise.
It really calls into question
the myth about what Chapel
Hill is, he said. They think
we are wealthy and elite and
all of these horrible adjec-
tives, but we are also people
Everyone in here
believes that the
library is the heart
of a university.
Carol Folt,
chancellor
the Study of the Middle East
and Muslim Civilizations, the
UNC African Studies Center
and the Center for European
Studies collaborated with the
FedEx Global Center to orga-
nize the celebration.
The books author is con-
sidered one of the first sub-
Saharan individuals to have
published a book of poems in
a Western language.
Latinos book is significant
as a first because it marks the
beginning of African Diaspora
literature in the West, said
Claudia Funke, curator of the
rare books collection at Wilson
Special Collections Library, in
a press release.
The book will reside in
the Rare Books collection in
Wilson Library.
The reception ended with
the lecture, Juan Latino
and the Dawn of Modernity
by New York University his-
tory professor Michael A.
Gomez.
with great hearts for others
in need.
Carrboro Alderman
Damon Seils said partici-
pating in the program is an
important way to publicize
what the organization is
doing and see the town
through a different lens.
We saw a lot of people we
represent who are usually
homebound, he said.
Commissioner Penny Rich
said serving with Meals on
Wheels is something close to
her heart.
Ive known about this for-
ever and I have often chipped
in and donated, she said. I
want to make sure people
never go hungry, and make
sure that people who wouldnt
usually have a nice meal get
one.
Insko, who has been a part
of Community Champions
Week once before, said Meals
on Wheels is sponsored by
state funds and falls under
the part of the state budget
that she works on.
I was in parts of my dis-
trict that I havent seen in
years, she said. Its a mag-
nificent program. It is com-
pletely run by volunteers, and
this is a way of showing that I
appreciate their work.
city@dailytarheel.com
DTH/CLAIRE COLLINS
Chancellor Carol Folt accepted the 7 millionth book for the University of North Carolinas
library from the John Wesley and Anna Hodgins Hanes Foundation on Thursday evening.
STUDENTS, ALUMNI, PARENTS, FACULTY & STAFF...
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Friday, March 21, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 9
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NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS
Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to
publication for classied ads. We publish Mon-
day thru Friday when classes are in session. A
university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e. this
affects deadlines). We reserve the right to re-
ject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Acceptance of ad
copy or prepayment does not imply agreement
to publish an ad. You may stop your ad at any
time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for stopped
ads will be provided. No advertising for hous-
ing or employment, in accordance with federal
law, can state a preference based on sex, race,
creed, color, religion, national origin, handicap,
marital status.
Child Care Wanted
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE: Seeking expe-
rienced sitter (with good driving record) to
meet the bus for 11 and 10 year-old, M-F.
Drive to activities or monitor homework, play
at home, 3-6pm. CHCCS calendar. Refer-
ences required. Call 919-812-9584 or email
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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 dis-
crimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspa-
per will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers
are hereby informed that all dwellings adver-
tised in this newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
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3BR HOUSE FOR RENT: Walk to campus
AND downtown! Charming 1 story. 3
private bedrooms, parking, appliances.
$1,800/mo. 502-A West Cameron Street.
919-604-8177.
MEADOWMONT BASEMENT APARTMENT.
1BR/1BA in private home, 1,000 square feet,
kitchenette, private entrance, soccer eld and
golf course view. Excellent condition, W/D,
busline, 1.5 miles to UNC. Excellent references
required, NO SMOKING, no pets, 1 year lease
required. $1,000/mo. +$1,000 security deposit.
Includes all utilities, cable, wireless internet.
Available immediately. 919-949-4570 or lma-
haley@nc.rr.com.
AVAILABLE MARCH 1: FURNISHED OAKS
town home convenient to Friday Center,
I-40 and busline to campus. Bring suitcase
to 2BR/2.5BA.and move in. 3+ month term
available. 1 check $1,275/mo. all utilities and
internet included. Fran Holland Properties:
fhollandprop@gmail.com, 919-630-3229.
A QUIET LOCATION, 2 blocks from main
campus. 2BR/1BA frame house with a large
screened porch. Available June 1 with a 1 year
lease. $1,300/mo. 919-968-8293.
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.
FOR RENT. Starting June, 2BR apartment, W/D,
3 miles from campus, on 10 acres of land, in
exchange for work inside and outside. 919-
967-3221.
SUMMER RENT IN CARRBORO. 2BR, great
for 2 students, clean, furnished, excel-
lent location. Reduced price $700/mo.
negotiable. Near bus. June 1st thru
August18th. Non-smokers, pet friendly,
from professor. http://goo.gl/C9ZTcN.
lenny@unc.edu, 919-593-9951.
For Sale
KING BED: Mahogany. Like new condition.
$600. 919-225-7687.
Help Wanted
PAID INTERNSHIP Looking for customer service
experience? Interested in collegiate market-
ing? The AroundCampus Group seeks strong
communicators for client relations internship.
Contact Megan: mpierce@aroundcampus.com;
919-968-0225.
WORK WITH PEOPLE WITH AUTISM. Gain valu-
able experience related to your major! Part-
time and full-time positions available helping
people with Autism and other developmental
disabilities. Evenings, weekend shifts avail-
able, $10.10/hr. Apply online: jobs.rsi-nc.org/.
SEEKING PATIENT ASSISTANCE for weekend.
$10-$12/hr. 919-225-7687.
GUITAR TEACHER: 9 year-old seeks guitar
teacher for weekly introductory lessons. Gimg-
houl Road. Parking available. Wages BOE.
BB@TeleSage.com.
RALEIGH LAW FIRM in Cameron Village area
seeking 2014 graduate to work minimum of 1
year in full-time courier, clerk position. Ideal
for pre-law graduate. Require reliable vehicle
for travel. Must be dependable and detail ori-
ented. Email resume: law@jordanprice.com.
SUMMER STAFF: The ArtsCenter (Carrboro)
seeks ArtsCamp assistants from June thru Au-
gust. 2 positions, 30 hrs/wk. For information
visit: http://www.artscenterlive.org/about/job-
opportunities/.
UNC STUDENTS: Need strong, reliable person
to help with yard and housework. Experience
a plus. Must be able to follow instructions
and work independently. References required.
Flexible schedule. $12/hr. 919-933-7533.
SUMMER INTERNSHIPS. CONTRACT POSI-
TIONS: Gain hands on experience designing
ads, editing artwork, copy editing and man-
aging production department workow. If
interested, visit www.aroundcampusgroup.
com/student-internships/production-internship
for details.
JERSEY MIKES SUBS in Chapel Hill is look-
ing for energetic, enthusiastic, HAPPY
people to join our team! At our Elliott
Road and Chapel Hill North locations,
we will teach you how to make the best
sub sandwich on the planet, but we
need awesome personalities that love
customer interaction and enjoy coming
to work each day. We are opening a
new store in April and plan to expand
more in the future, so there are oppor-
tunities for rapid advancement to shift
leaders, management, even ownership!
If you think you have what it takes to
join our winning team, please call or
email Charlie to set up an interview.
$8-$10/hr. +tips. cfarris12@gmail.com,
919-918-7827.
THE CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO and Meadow-
mont YMCAs are hiring certied lifeguards
and experienced swim lesson instructors for
the summer. Part-time with exible hours,
$8-$8.50/hr. based on experience. We will be
holding 3 group interviews at the Chapel Hill
branch and will involve a 300 yard swim (both
positions) and demonstrations of several life-
saving skills (lifeguards only). March 23 1:30-
3:00pm, April 6 1:-2:30pm, April 27 3-4:30pm.
Fill out the employment application form on
our website (www.chcymca.org) and send it to
J. LaQuay (jlaquay@chcymca.org).
SWIM LESSON INSTRUCTORS needed for
spring/summer on weekdays and/or weekends.
Email swimschoolda@gmail.com for more info.
LIFEGUARDS: Chapel Hill Tennis Club.
Great work environment. Assistant
managers, supervisors, head guards,
lifeguards. Certications required: ARC
lifeguarding, rst aid, CPR professional
rescuer. Availability preferred mid-May
to mid-September. Alan Rader, Man-
ager: arader-chtc@nc.rr.com.
[B]SKIS DELIVERY DRIVERS: $10-$20/hr.
We are looking for self motivated, team
oriented people. $6.55 base pay per
hour. Keep all tips! Listen to your own
music! Please apply at www.bskis.com.
SOFTWARE ENGINEER: Must be procient in
JAVA, HTML, JAVASCRIPT, SQL. Experience
working with Groovy, Grails is a plus. Commit
30+ hrs/wk at our Chapel Hill ofce. Minimum
of 2-5 years experience, with 5+ preferred.
Email englishforeveryone.org@gmail.com or
call 919-475-3740.
INTERNSHIP: Property manager seeking as-
sistant plus annual bonus and transportation
stipend. Needs to be detail and business ori-
ented. Hours exible. Please email resume to
ww7866@gmail.com.
Summer Jobs
SUMMER JOB AT A POOL. Pool Professionals
is hiring lifeguards, attendants and managers.
GREAT SUMMER JOB. Flexible hours and great
pay. Contact Ali today to set up interview agrein-
er@poolprofessionals.com, 919-787-7878.
Tutoring Wanted
MATH TUTOR NEEDED for 9th grader. Local
home. $25/hr. +tips for success. 919-357-5478.
Announcements For Rent Help Wanted Help Wanted For Rent
BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room

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dan@hatleylawoffice.com
151 E. Rosemary St., Ste. 205
www.hatleylawoffice.com
919-200-0822
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APPLICATIONS DUE TODAY!
THE DTH IS SEEKING FOUR STUDENTS to
serve on the 11-member board that will convene to
select the next editor of the paper.
These students will join the other members in reviewing
the applications for editor, interviewing the applicants,
and choosing the next editor on April 5th. Any UNC
student not working on the DTH staff may apply.
Applications are due March 21st.
Applicants must be available Thursday, April 3 from
6-7 p.m. and Saturday, April 5 from 10:00 a.m. to as late
as 3:00 p.m. (meals are served).
Apply at:
dailytarheel.com/page/editor_selection
The Daily Tar Heel
Choose the Next
DTH Editor
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Announcements Announcements
Walk to
Campus!
Large 1-2 BR Condos
Washer/Dryers
$625-$900/month
Compare to dorm prices!
www.chapelhillrentals.com
919-933-5296
Internships
MERCIA RESIDENTIAL
PROPERTIES
is now showing 1BR-6BR
properties for 2014-15 school
year. Check out our properties
at www.merciarentals.com
or call at (919) 933-8143.
Get a Jump Start on Housing for Next Year!
United Church of Chapel Hill:
Welcoming & Affirming
Open to EVERYONE
Social Justice EQUALITY
Multi-cultural Mutli-racial
Uniting - Just Peace Church .
-College Students Welcome-
Coffee Hour & Classes at 10:00 a.m.
Worship at 8:45am & 11:00am
Our Faith is over 2,000 years old
Our thinking is not
God is still speaking

EPISCOPAL CAMPUS MINISTRY


Join us for dinner & fellowship!
Tuesdays at 5:30 p.m.
A Parish in the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina
Student Chaplain -The Rev.Tambria Lee
(tlee@thechapelofthecross.org)
304 E. Franklin St. Chapel Hill, NC
(919)929-2193 | www.thechapelofthecross.org
MASS SCHEDULE
Saturday: 5:15pm
Sunday: 9am, 11am & Student Mass at 7pm
919-929-3730 218 Pittsboro St., CH
jrogers@upcch.org 919-967-2311
110 Henderson St., Chapel Hill
Thursdays Fellowship dinner
& program 5:45-8 PM
Weekly small groups
Sunday Worship at our six local Partner Churches.
Trips to the NC mountains & coast as well
as annual spring break mission opportunities.
www.uncpcm.com
Presbyterian
Campus
Ministry
First Pentecostal Church
Days Inn, 1312 N. Fordham Blvd.
Worship
with Us :
WEDNESDAYS
at 7:30pm
Special Music & Singing in Each Service
For more details: 919 - 47 7- 6555
Johnny Godair, Pastor
Visit us in Durham at 2008 W. Carver St.
Sunday 10am & 6:30pm, Tuesday 7:30pm
Religious
Directory
New Contemporary Worship Service
Mount Carmel Baptist Church
2016 Mt Carmel Church Rd.,
Chapel Hill, NC 27517
919-933-8565
www.mcbc 1803 .org
Coffee and snacks served at 8:45am
Contemporary Worship service 9:00am
Spring/Summer
JOBS!
Legacy Academy Summer
Camp & Preschool
$8-11/hr BSAC A Plus!
919-929-7060
(c) 2013 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 7 -- You reap the benet of the
seeds youve sown. Share results. You
can take new ground today and tomor-
row. You see a new, more practical di-
rection. Travel and exploration suits you
ne. Go forth and discover.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 7 -- Youve got the energy to
go wherever you need. Together, you and
a partner build a strong foundation. Sort
through your treasures. Follow your gut
instincts. Check the data, too. A theory
gets challenged.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8 -- Rely on your partners
over the next two days. Compromise is
the magic element. Theres a nancial
opportunity calling. Work together for
some intensity that forwards the action.
Join your energies. Call in a distant as-
sociate.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 6 -- Formulate a practical plan
of action to address the increased work
coming in, without sacricing health.
Dig into a big job. Synchronize watches.
Follow safety rules. Self-discipline is one
of your best weapons. Provide excellent
service.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Maintain self-control as
you dive full speed ahead into a new
passion. Stick to your routine and handle
chores. Youre attractive, and attracted,
today and tomorrow. Make time for fun
and games. Play with kids.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 6 -- Home and family take cen-
ter stage now. Others are pleased with
your work. Measure your progress as you
go. Make copies of records for your les.
Reconsider priorities. Thrifty habits make
more possible. The powers on.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Catch up on reading, and
do the research. Provide information.
A new assignments coming. Show the
team your appreciation. Youre gaining
respect as well as income. Get the lesson
the group wants to teach you.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is an 8 -- Keep it respectful. The
next two days can get quite protable.
The energy may get intense, and your dis-
cipline could get challenged. Use data to
your advantage. Keep your word. Accept
a bonus. All is well.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 7 -- Personal matters require
your attention. Go with love. The next
two days are pretty good for travel. Ex-
pand your inuence. Accept a challenge
if it pays well. Set long-range goals, and
consider your passions.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7 -- Revise your plans. Your
dreams can inspire a change for the bet-
ter. Assume authority, with no strings
attached. Set personal goals. You have
plenty of energy, and a friend has experi-
ence you lack. Take notes.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 6 -- Celebrate your accomplish-
ments today and tomorrow with friends.
Reconnect with someone you havent
seen in a while. Youre learning, with
practice, useful new skills. Share an in-
tense or exciting adventure with someone
you admire.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 -- Revert to an old strategy
for success. Keep the energy high. Accept
more responsibility and earn more money
and status. Ask for what you were prom-
ised. Do your chores before you go play.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If March 21st is Your Birthday...
Income arrives commensurate with
your fun level. Realize dreams with greater
ease, as you hone in on what you love doing.
Home renovation and entertaining thrives.
Family, children, games and social diversions
delight. Romance gets spicy over autumn.
Your search
for a place to live
just got easier.
www.heelshousing.com
Search for apartments by bus route, number of rooms,
price and even distance from the Pit!
2x3 Heelshousing - your search.crtr - Page 1 - Composite
Something?
Search the
Local Yellow Pages
Located on the right at
LOST & FOUND ADS RUN
FREE IN DTH CLASSIFIEDS!
PLACE A CLASSIFIED
www.dailytarheel.com
OR CALL 962-0252
News Friday, March 21, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 11
Improving sorority life
UNC sorority chapters
look to improve retention
among members for the
future. See pg. 3 for story.
Officials give back
Local elected officials
lend a helping hand to
Meals on Wheels this week.
See pg. 8 for story.
System happenings
East Carolina creates app
for heart risk while N.C. State
helps fund rural students
learning. See online for story.
Dancing up a storm
Carolina Dance Initiative
will host its spring show-
case tonight at Memorial
Hall. See online 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.
2014 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
(C)2014 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Chess ploy
7 Antique cane topper
11 Home of the N.Y.
Rangers
14 Fundraising targets
15 Wrath, in a hymn
16 Scarfed down
17 Annual Christmas party
group
19 Small group
20 Brightened, with up
21 Bible book
22 Let it be so!
24 Thrice due
25 Wetlands protection org.
26 Driving Miss Daisy
setting
29 Humor that wont
offend
31 Long poem
33 One of two Pauline
epistles: Abbr.
34 __ for Innocent:
Grafton novel
35 Pentecost, e.g., and what
can literally be found in
this puzzles four
other longest
answers
40 Same old thing
41 This American
Life host Glass
42 Run
43 Exercised caution
48 Theatergoers option
49 Fla. NBA team
50 Maker of 3 Series
cars
53 Beloved author
Morrison
54 Fromage hue
55 Yay relative
56 Part of a disguise
57 Singer with the debut
solo album Love.
Angel. Music. Baby.
61 Loan letters
62 Lisas title
63 Passes
64 Relaxing retreat
65 Against
66 Winning run, perhaps
DOWN
1 Pens for Dickens?
2 Caine title role
3 Civilian garb
4 ASCAP rival
5 Grow
6 Jams
7 Social group
8 Org. co-founded by
Gen. George Wingate
9 Knucklehead
10 Happen to
11 Got some attention
12 Flier that may have four
lines
13 Prefix with thermal
18 Right away!
23 Key abbr.
26 He makes no friends
who never made __:
Tennyson
27 Grass-and-roots layer
28 50s Dem. presidential
hopeful
29 Good, in Hebrew
30 Brilliance
31 Effort to equal others
32 Relative of a T-shirt
launcher
36 Hill worker
37 Creamy spread
38 Flowing out
39 Tankard contents
40 Tach no.
44 Dark side
45 Its hard to untangle
46 Fifths on a staff
47 Knifelike ridges
50 Support
51 __ ray
52 Chefs tool
54 __ Brith
56 Nintendos __ Mini
58 Finished on top
59 Dr.s specialty
60 Distant
Fate of little house depends on review
DTH/MITALI SAMANT
A local couple has requested permission to tear down this historic house, located at 704 Gimghoul
Road, to build a new one in its place. The house was built in the 1920s.
By Morgan Swift
Staff Writer
Its a case of one mans trash
being another mans treasure.
Bob Bacon and his family
lived at 704 Gimghoul Rd. for
more than 45 years.
In my opinion it has
always been one of the best
looking houses on the street,
Bacon said.
But now the homes new
owners plan to demolish the
home.
Bacon said Tanner
Hockand his wife bought
the house more than a year
ago with no indication they
planned to tear it down.
Bacon said the house, like
many in the neighborhood,
was built in the 1920s, giving
it a unique character.
Last week, the Hocks sub-
mitted a proposal to demol-
ish the house to the Historic
District Commission.
The commission voted
there was insufficient informa-
tion on the structural integrity
of the house and a decision
would have to be postponed.
If the commission members
agree the house is historically
significant, they can delay
demolition for only 365 days.
Benjamin Brodey, a mem-
ber of the comission, said
there was no question the
house has historical merit.
He said the house once
belonged to Ernest Rutherford
Groves and his wife Gladys
both UNC professors.The
Groves published more than
20 books on psychology and
sociology that can still be
found in UNC Libraries today.
Brodey also said many
residents of the neighborhood
claimed Andy Griffith lived
in a stone cottage behind the
house during his time at UNC.
We love the Gimghoul area,
and its our ultimate goal to
embrace the spirit of the neigh-
borhood and unfortunately in
this circumstance we are not
able to do that, Hock said.
Brodey said neighbors have
come together and offered to
pay for an engineering report
to evaluate the home in hopes
of preserving it.
Its really nobodys fault,
Hock said. The house is old
and it has been neglected.
He said he thinks the design
for the new home will be a fit-
ting addition to the neighbor-
hood and flow better with the
side of the street it sits on.
Susan Lessard, Bacons
daughter, grew up in the house.
Lessard said the Chapel
Hill Preservation Society once
photographed the door to use
it on their poster.
So back in those days,
people mustve thought it was
worth photographing.
city@dailytarheel.com
height of the Tar Heels
12-game winning streak.
But the reality of North
Carolinas situation is much
more serious than the players
let on Thursday afternoon.
After experiencing
the finality of an early
ACC Tournament loss to
Pittsburgh, the Tar Heels
spent the interim readying for
their next batch of sudden-
death matches.
Once we lost, that was
it, senior Leslie McDonald
said. We were kicked out of
the tournament. We had to
re-evaulate ourselves. We had
to understand that, Hey, this
is a one and done deal. We
dont want to be like how we
were in the ACC Tournament
where we was watching other
people play for the champion-
ship.
I think its hit us. We
understand whats at stake, so
we ll be ready.
Despite closing the season
with a 12-2 streak after a 1-4
start in conference play
, the Tar Heels stumbled
through the final stretch of
games.
A fire ignited by the prod-
ding of Williams and the
eruption of typically quiet
James Michael McAdoo
seemed to smoke out as North
Carolina barely scraped out
wins against Virginia Tech
and Notre Dame before los-
ing to Duke and Pittsburgh.
During that stretch we got
kind of comfortable, McAdoo
said. We kind of got by by
not necessarily playing our
best, but obviously when we
play against better competi-
NCAA TOURNEY
FROM PAGE 1
But Kotis said cutting
employee hours would come
at a high cost to the commu-
nity and the UNC system.
In Chapel Hill, if everyone
has to reduce their employees
hours to 30 hours or less,
youve got people who were
working 40 hours a week, and
suddenly they have to have a
second job, he said.
He said if those employees
got a second job, they would
still work full-time hours every
week, but lack benefits from
either employer, forcing them
to buy their own insurance
under the Affordable Care Act.
There has not yet been an
official decision regarding
the cost by UNC-CH or the
General Administration.
At this point, most of
the work regarding the
Affordable Care Acts provi-
sions has been focused on the
entire UNC system. It is too
early right now to address
how the ACA will affect UNC-
Chapel Hill specifically, said
Kathy Bryant, spokeswoman
for UNC-CHs Office of
Human Resources.
The General Administration
should receive the final guide-
lines from the federal govern-
ment this summer, and then
officials will be able to develop
guidelines to send to campuses
by Sept. 1, Perusse said.
state@dailytarheel.com
ACA
FROM PAGE 1
formers, Grannemann said.
Adam Versenyi, the dra-
matic art department chair-
man, said he hopes students
will see that there are a vari-
ety of avenues for studying
and working in the theater.
Once more, it goes much
beyond what you see in perfor-
mance on the stage, he said. I
hope they understand that the
arts can be looked at as an art
form and as a business.
Junior Rachel Davis took
Grannemanns theater man-
agement class last semester
and said shed like to take the
new practicum course that is
being offered in the fall.
Often times, working in
theater means working on a
show here and a show there
with gaps in between, and
while its incredibly reward-
ing, it can also be incredibly
difficult, she said.
Working in theater man-
agement can offer you the
stability of a year-round job
with consistent income and
benefits, while still leaving
you time to work on shows.
arts@dailytarheel.com
THEATER MINOR
FROM PAGE 1
philosophy majors are male.
The department will host
a workshop in April to focus
on ways to attract and retain
undergraduate female majors.
It will feature philosophers,
students, psychologists who
have studied implicit bias, and
a UNC physics professor who
worked to increase female
representation, said philosophy
professor Mariska Leunissen.
Many have theories on why
women are underrepresented.
Some say being a minority
might deter women.
It is true that when you
walk into a room with only
white men and youre not
white or not male theres a cer-
tain exclusion, Leunissen said.
Kling said at conferences
she has felt like people expect
her to speak for all women.
That can be threaten-
ing. Thats going to make me
quiet, Kling said.
Others point to the com-
bative environment of philos-
ophy debate as unappealing.
Theres a sense in which
philosophy is perceived as
aggressive. We debate and
discuss a lot, and those dis-
cussions are pretty hardcore,
Leunissen said.
The lack of female philoso-
phers on syllabi could also
discourage engagement.
Its hard to come in as a
woman or person of color and
think, Im not reading any-
one like me, Kling said.
UNC added more women
to course syllabi in an attempt
to attract women, Lange said.
Professor Susan Wolf said
the climate of philosophy is dif-
ferent than it was 30 years ago.
The women who were suc-
cessful, a generation above
me, were really tough women,
she said. They wouldnt dress
in a way that called attention,
wouldnt talk about family
most didnt have children.
She said although the
numbers arent even, women
in philosophy today dont
need to fit a male mold.
Sophomore Sophia Catanoso
declared her major in philoso-
phy because she was interested
in it, and didnt know she was
in a minority until after.
When I tell people Im a
philosophy major they think
its crazy, she said. But I dont
know why there arent more.
university@dailytarheel.com
PHILOSOPHY
FROM PAGE 1
tion, youve got to play to the
best of your ability.
Not to say that we played
horrible in those games, we
still had a chance to win both
of them, but I think that just
shows how good we can be
and how capable we are when
we do play to the best of our
ability.
But the extra time
between tournaments gave
the team a chance to go
back to its roots and find an
intensity lacking from the
last few games.
Tonight, the Tar Heels face
Providence (23-11), a red-hot
team coming off an upset
of Creighton in the Big East
championship.
The Friars boast a top-
notch free throw percentage,
a dynamic point guard in
Bryce Cotton and a shallow,
yet tireless rotation.
Theres a list of things
Williams could point to as
necessary for UNCs suc-
cess. But in the end, avoiding
the same fate as Cincinnati
and the growing list of other
bounced higher seeds boils
down to one thing.
Technically weve got to
rebound, coach Roy Williams
said. Weve got to run. Weve
got to defend. Weve got to do
all those things. But I think
its just the passion. You have
to have more passion now,
and I think they understand
that.
sports@dailytarheel.com
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Opinion Friday, March 21, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 12
Established 1893, 121 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT
Photo sent a poor
impression
TO THE EDITOR:
I was appalled when I
saw a picture on the front
page of The Daily Tar Heel
this morning of Carol Folt,
James Dean and the Faculty
Athletics Committee, seated
around what looked like a
large, polished dining room
table, grinning at each other
while raising wine glasses in
an apparent toast, under the
headline, Athletic commit-
tee meets at Folts house.
Sometimes, appearance is
nearly as important as real-
ity, and this picture gives the
appearance that the admin-
istration and the committee
simply have not even started
taking our multiple athletic
scandals seriously.
This only confirms my
impression that in fact they
are not taking this seriously,
except for damage control.
While Holden Thorp
made two serious errors
(not firing Butch Davis
quickly and not firing Dick
Baddour at all) handling a
problem he inherited, this
administration continues to
bumble the problems it has
inherited.
Would this group really
like to see this picture on the
front page of the News and
Observer, let alone the New
York Times? What were they
thinking?
Robert M. Hamer, Ph.D.
Professor of psychiatry
and biostatistics
Thoughts on Israel
and abortion
TO THE EDITOR:
Roderick Flannery says
Israel is not being threat-
ened by the rest of the
Middle East and implies
it is not the only Middle
Eastern democracy, but
then offers no support for
this assertion. I hope this is
because it was edited out of
the letter.
Every poll I have seen
puts the percentage of
Arabs that want Israel
destroyed in the range of
80 percent. Most of the
Middle Eastern countries
are still in a state of war
with Israel and have yet to
normalize relations.
Before the Arab spring,
Israel was certainly the only
democracy in the Middle
East, and as democracy in
Egypt is currently question-
able, it may still be.
As for abortion, as
someone who has studied
chemistry and biochemis-
try, I have certainly looked
at embryology textbooks,
but nothing in science
unequivocally says a fetus
is a human being and not
an organ/outgrowth of its
mother.
The anti-abortion cru-
saders have recently tried
to wrap themselves in sci-
ence, but this really doesnt
work. Abortion is a moral
issue and, as such, outside
the bounds of what science
can tell us much about
directly.
Daniel W. Cole 15
J.D. Candidate
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Im sure all the online commentators com-
plained about the redesign five years ago,
and will do the same for the next redesign.
RalphUNC, on The Daily Tar Heel website redesign
We were kicked out of the tournament. We
had to re-evaulate ourselves. We had to under-
stand that, Hey, this is a one and done deal.
Leslie McDonald, on UNCs early exit from the ACC Tournament
EDITORIAL CARTOON By Ngozika A. Nwoko, Chapman and Hilligan, nwoko@live.unc.edu
Calling
BS
when its
needed
D
adgum is usually
sufficient for Roy
Williams.
He often censors himself
at least in public. There
was that one time, though, in
2003, when his Kansas team
had just lost the national title
game and he was asked, rather
insensitively, if he had given
any thought to the North
Carolina coaching job.
I could give a shit about
North Carolina right now,
he answered, irritated, on
national T.V.
Then there was Thursday, in
San Antonio, when Williams
took the AT&T Center stage as
ironically enough North
Carolinas head coach.
A frustrating group to
coach? Williams said, echo-
ing a question he had received
about UNCs inconsistency. Oh
my gosh, no. All the bullshit
around it has been frustrating.
Williams offered a pseudo
apology for his sharp tongue,
saying he normally just uses
the letters, B.S.
No apology was necessary.
B.S. alone would not have
been enough.
Whether you sympathize
with UNCs plight or not, you
cant argue that Williams team
has been through one of its
most wearing, chaotic, turmoil-
filled seasons in recent memory.
Williams has said its been
the toughest season hes had
as a coach. The P.J. Hairston
investigation and his subse-
quent removal from the team
was emotionally sapping. Add
in Leslie McDonalds NCAA
troubles, a still-brewing aca-
demic scandal and a team thats
played like a Carowinds ride,
and its a wonder UNC has even
made it to the Big Dance.
Its also a testament to the
man at the helm, who has his
No. 6-seed Tar Heels posi-
tioned to take on No. 11-seed
Providence on Friday after
starting 1-4 in ACC play. He
maneuvered his team past all of
the external distractions or
bull excrement, as Williams
might say and into the NCAA
tournament, where many pun-
dits, early on, said UNC didnt
belong.
His incessant talk of estab-
lishing a sense of urgency
dominated every press confer-
ence, but it also clearly bur-
rowed its way under his teams
skin as the Tar Heels rattled off
12 wins in a row.
Old Roy wont read this.
There isnt a chance. Hes
expressed his exasperation
with the media on more than
one occasion. At the ACC
Tournament, after UNC fell to
80-75 to Pittsburgh, Williams
quipped that sophomore
Marcus Paige was smarter
than half of the journalists in
the room.
Dont blame him for his frus-
tration, but also dont blame
the media for their coverage.
Theyre protecting the integrity
of the sport; Williams is pro-
tecting the sanctity of his team.
Almost every coach in the
tournament loves their team,
Williams said Thursday. It
would be a great challenge to
find a coach that loves their
team more than Roy Williams
does.
That same idea held true
for Williams 11 years ago
when he told a T.V. reporter he
could give a shit about North
Carolina.
These days, its clear he
couldnt give more of one.
3/24: GOPMUSINGS
GrahamPalmer on living with
libertarian values at UNC.
N
E
X
T
Mike Lananna
Sports Editor
Senior journalism major from
Clemmons.
Email: sports@dailytarheel.com
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
Kvetching board
kvetch:
v.1 (Yiddish) to complain
To the guy walking around
campus with the metal
lunch pail, in the words
of Jameis Winston, IF WE
GON DO IT THEN, WE DO IT
BIG THEN!
And here I was thinking that
St. Patricks Day meant Irish
beer, not Irish weather.
When its just snack time at
the Pit Stop and the cashier
is like Are you SURE you
dont need a bag for that?
To the pizza delivery guy
who interrupted my class
by saying, Is this where
the partys at?You would
not BELIEVE how much the
answer is no.
To all the letter writers of
Israel-Palestinian and abor-
tion issues in the DTH, cant
we all just get along?
To the girl who ate Cheerios
steadily for an hour and
15 minutes in BIO 202, I
commend your appetite
but would appreciate a little
less crunching next class.
To the guy who emailed the
class listserv at 11 p.m. the
night before the test asking
what it will be on, thanks
for making me feel better
about my preparedness.
Picked UNC to go all the way
in my bracket. Crazy fan or
winner of 1 billion dollars?
To the people who helped
me after I crashed my car
into a hydrant, a HUGE
thank you.
If you dont feel like you
need to post a Missed Con-
nection on Craigslist, youre
doing spring break wrong.
To the ridiculously resilient
ridge of high pressure, get
out of the eastern Pacifc
and stop bringing us winter
weather already!
To the Glow Stick Games,
you sound like a glowy pe-
nis event for charity. Where
do I sign up?
To the guy singing Frankie
Valli on the balcony of Mor-
rison, youre just too good
to be true.
Just saw a bus that said
Severin Weiner.You stay
away from me, bus.
To Global Studies, your
students are all social
justice activists who live in
the Campus Y. Did you really
think we wouldnt get our
graduation ceremony rein-
stated within 24 hours?
Dear individuals of Davis
Library, please stop taking
group study rooms to
yourself. Sincerely, groups.
To the beautiful ginger
guy wearing rugby shorts
with the Scottish accent,
never change, but you
might want to get some
more sun on those thighs.
To the UNC student that
everyone in Cancun called
Fat Brad Pitt, if you lose
a few pounds and that
accent, you can be my Mr.
Smith.
To the guy snoring in the
library, I saw you tweet
about me glaring at you.
Send your one-to-two
sentence entries to
opinion@dailytarheel.com,
subject line kvetch.
THE FRIDAY INTERVIEW
Every Friday an edito-
rial board member speaks
with a prominent figure
from the University or sur-
rounding community. This
week, Alexandra Willcox sat
down with Ashley Memory of
the Office of Undergraduate
Admissions.
I
ts an exciting time in
the admissions office,
with the regular decision
announcements just around
the corner. Soon, thousands
of students will be celebrat-
ing their enrollment, but
even more will be rejected.
Memory and the rest of the
admissions office are ready to
provide consolation and sup-
port to all who need it.
Its horrible when your
heart is set on a college and
unfortunately, youre not
admitted. We can under-
stand that here. Thats part
of what we do we feel hor-
rible for the applicants, and
we want to do all we can do
to help them through this.
The admissions process is
not faceless. Memory finds
personal connections with
students every day, and those
who review applications take
a holistic approach, consider-
ing everything a student has
done not just test scores.
Each year our (admitted)
students bring a different set
of talents. They are definitely
very smart, but its hard to
quantify them as a complete
class because we get to know
them on a very individual
level.
This year, the office had
to deal with a new prob-
lem when glitches in the
Common Application were
disabling students from sub-
mitting parts of their appli-
cation on the day of the early
action deadline. That day,
Memory and her colleagues
received over 1,000 phone
calls and ended up postpon-
ing the deadline for a week,
and even longer for some
students with extenuating
circumstances.
They understand all the
work students have put into
preparing for college, and
dont want their applications
to be in jeopardy because of
technical bugs.
In reference to the recent
changes to the SAT, includ-
ing making the essay portion
optional, Memory again
thinks first and foremost
of making the process
smoother for applicants,
especially first-generation
college students who may be
most unfamiliar with stan-
dardized tests.
We know that the over-
arching goals for this change
were to make it more acces-
sible to students from all
backgrounds. And we do
certainly welcome that. We
want to do our part.
The motto of the admis-
sions office is great cheer.
Memory encourages the
UNC community to reach
out to the thousands of pro-
spective students who are
expected to be on campus in
the upcoming weeks.
Not just a numbers game
Ashley
Memory
is UNCs
Senior
Assistant
Director of
Admissions.
Admissions officers
care about each
individual student.
A
fter a brief scare
earlier in the week,
senior global stud-
ies majors no longer need
to worry that they will be
snubbed come graduation
day nor should those
following in their foot-
steps.
If nothing else, the
mishap that put the
department graduation
ceremony in jeopardy
should serve as a lesson to
University administration
moving forward.
Here to stay
EDITORIAL
Budget deficits are a
legitimate concern, but
$2,500 is a small price
for the College of Arts of
Sciences to pay for a cer-
emony honoring an entire
department of students
four years of hard work.
Graduation day comes
each and every year and
the ceremonys $2,500
price-tag should be a
permanent line-item in
the global studies depart-
ments budget.
During the frenzy that
was putting the graduation
ceremony on hold, some
students offered to raise
the cost of the ceremony
themselves. While this was
a valiant offer from a group
of students that had just
been subjected to a last
minute injustice, there is
no reason this department
shouldnt foot the bill the
same way other depart-
ments do.
A student-paid for grad-
uation ceremony would run
the risk of delegitimizing
the major and making the
department look like little
more than a charity case.
If the department
wants to continue entic-
ing students to enroll in
their department, the least
they could do is give them
the recognition that they
deserve.
Departmental
graduations need
to be protected.
S
igma Alpha Epsilon
fraternitys decision
to ban pledging in
all chapters nationwide,
including UNCs, will natu-
rally be met with resistance
by Greek traditionalists.
While this ban will
likely have backlash, the
Interfraternity Council
should closely monitor the
progress of Sigma Alpha
Epsilon to see if it is able
to maintain its promi-
nence, and perhaps others
should look into banning
pledging if the results are
positive.
Give it a chance
EDITORIAL
Sigma Alpha Epsilon is
one of the most popular
fraternities in the country,
ranking in the top five
in membership, which
includes a strong chapter
at UNC. If the fraternity
can survive this ban with
its reputation intact, then
it would serve as a promis-
ing model for other frater-
nities exploring eliminat-
ing the pledging process.
This is not to fully
endorse the move to ban
pledging it has a valu-
able place in building
brotherhood and vetting
new members. A whole-
sale ban on pledging
could create a disconnect
between alumni and new
members, who would have
had strikingly different
experiences.
Despite moving away
from a hallowed tradi-
tion, its impossible to say
this would not come with
benefits.
Banning pledging effec-
tively takes out the most
dangerous time of the
year for fraternities, and it
would lead to a safer envi-
ronment, at least on paper.
Enforcing the ban would
be difficult, to say the least.
Simply put, this is a note-
worthy move from a major
player in Americas Greek
scene. With such a promi-
nent fraternity involved, the
results will have legitimate
implications on fraternity
culture nationwide.
Nationwide ban on
pledging should be
studied on campus.
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS
NICOLE COMPARATO EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
ZACH GAVER OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
DYLAN CUNNINGHAM ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR
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

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