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Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

Im not good. Im not nice. Im just right. Im the witch; youre the world!
THE WITCH, INTO THE WOODS
Friday, October 31, 2014 dailytarheel.com Volume 122, Issue 104
See page 3 for continued Wainstein coverage
ON TO PLAYMAKERS,
INTO THE WOODS
Centers
at UNC
respond
to review
The Board of Governors is looking
to cut spending in UNC centers.
DTH/HALLE SINNOTT
Lisa Brescia is the Witch in the PlayMakers Repertory Company production of Into the Woods. The plays first performance will take place Sunday.
PlayMakers opens Into the Woods to rotate with Midsummer
By Tatyana Berdan
Staff Writer
The Morehead Planetarium, the Ackland
Art Museum and the Carolina Womens Center
are among 26 UNC-CH centers and institutes
under a UNC Board of Governors review
but some center directors say they arent con-
cerned about their organizations futures.
A working group of board members is exam-
ining the UNC-systems centers for possible bud-
get cuts or termination, in response to a man-
date by the N.C. General Assembly to consider
taking $15 million away from the centers and
redistributing it to other UNC-system priorities.
We dont have a preset outcome, said James
Holmes, a board member who is part of the
working group. Its going to come down to ask-
ing questions about how individual centers fit
within the mix of the university system.
Todd Boyette, director of the Morehead
Planetarium, said this is the first time the
Planetarium has undergone this type of
review and is on the list because it receives
in-kind support, which is non-monetary
support.
He said he has no concerns about how the
Planetarium will fare in the review process.
The University of North Carolina has a
three-prong mission: teaching, research and
public service, he said. And the Morehead
Planetarium and Science Center has a 65-year
history of providing public service that the
university relies on to meet its mission.
The second phase of review will take place
during the next month and involve determining
which of the 91 centers that remain in limbo
should move onto the final round. Six institutes
have already been moved to the last stage of
review, including UNCs Center for Civil Rights.
These centers that continue to the final
round of the review will give presentations in
front of the working group at its December
meeting, and the group will then make final
recommendations to the board.
Carol Tresolini, vice provost for academic
initiatives, said in an email that UNC-CH has
its own policy for reviewing its centers and
institutes, which involves evaluating whether
they meet specific goals and obtaining feed-
back from clients.
Nine of the centers on the boards review
list report to Tresolini, including the
Morehead Planetarium.
By Robert McNeely
Staff Writer
The design of PlayMakers lat-
est undertaking is not immate-
rial. It is about storytelling.
From the detail and extrava-
gance of the costumes to the
intricate staging of multiple
sets, the company is presenting
its rotating repertory of Into
the Woods and A Midsummer
Nights Dream around one
central design element the
woods.
The woods participate in
both plays in similar ways,
although theyre being used to
pursue different themes, said
Joseph Haj, producing artistic
director for PlayMakers.
Theres loss of innocence,
theres a maturity, theres a
SEE CENTERS, PAGE 4
SEE PLAYMAKERS, PAGE 4
Town prepares for costumed revelry
Local man pleads
guilty of murder
By Sam James
Staff Writer
On Monday, Ali Cherfaoui
pleaded guilty to the 2012 second-
degree murder of his estranged
wife Chahnaz Kebaier.
Cherfaoui, 51, was sentenced
to a minimum of 31 years or a
maximum of 43 years in prison.
On May 25, 2012, at 2:08
p.m., Chapel Hill police respond-
ed to reports of a shooting
incident outside Mary Scroggs
Elementary School, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Kebaier, 40, was found injured
outside the school. She was admit-
ted to UNC Hospitals emergency
room and pronounced dead at
4:08 p.m. the same day from mul-
tiple gunshot wounds.
The basic gist of it was the
suspect went to the school his
children were, at a time he knew
his estranged wife would be there
and walked up and shot her, said
Lt. Joshua Mecimore, spokesman
for Chapel Hill police.
Cherfaoui was arrested shortly
after the shooting when officers
stopped a suspicious vehicle.
He was charged with first-
degree murder and later with
possession of a gun on educa-
tional property, discharging a
weapon on educational property
and second-degree kidnapping.
The incident was part of
a domestic dispute between
Cherfaoui and Kebaier, accord-
ing to police.
Cherfaoui has pleaded guilty to
three of the four initial charges.
He pleaded guilty to having a gun
on educational property Sept. 2.,
to discharging a weapon on edu-
cational property Sept. 16 and to
second-degree kidnapping Oct. 14.
As part of a plea bargain
with the prosecution, Cherfaoui
pleaded guilty to murder Monday
in exchange for the charge being
reduced from first-degree to
second-degree murder.
Lt. Mecimore said that in a
situation like this, the children
would usually be placed in the
care of family or of a foster family.
Assistant District Attorney
Michelle Hamilton said that as
shes concerned, the case is closed.
He has resolved all of his
cases in Orange County, she said.
city@dailytarheel.com
Ali Cherfaoui was
sentenced for killing his
estranged wife in 2012.
DTH FILE/HALLE SINNOTT
Kevin Coley, in purple, poses on Franklin Street during the 2013 Homegrown
Halloween. Coley dressed up as Captain Ginyu from the show Dragon Ball Z.
Officials are expecting
increased Homegrown
Halloween attendance.
By Jasmin Singh
Assistant City Editor
With Halloween on a Friday this
year, the town of Chapel Hill is expect-
ing a bigger costumed crowd at its
annual Homegrown Halloween cel-
ebration, now that revelers wont have
to go to school and work the next day.
Starting at 9 p.m., the town will
close off downtown roads, including
parts of Franklin, Columbia, Raleigh
and Henderson streets, to ensure
pedestrian safety during the three-
hour celebration.
Lt. Joshua Mecimore, spokes-
man for the Chapel Hill Police
Department, said there havent been
any major issues in the past few years,
and he doesnt expect any this year.
We expect that folks will continue
to act responsibly and respectfully,
Mecimore said.
Officials are striving to limit attend-
ees to students and local residents.
We try to discourage folks from out
of town from coming because theres
no parking, theres no shuttle buses,
theres no transportation for that, he
said. This is meant to be a hometown
Halloween event, not one for folks
who are from outside of the town.
The town started Homegrown
Halloween in 2008, when it managed
to reduce the crowd size by more than
half. In 2007, about 80,000 people
participated in the event. The next
year, only 35,000 attended.
Though there is no way of knowing
how big the crowd will become tonight,
Mecimore said it might be larger than
it was in 2013, when 30,000 people
descended on Franklin Street.
We are certainly planning for the
possibility that there might be a slight-
ly larger crowd because its a Friday
night, but we have no way to know
what that might actually be, he said.
Some businesses on Franklin Street
said theyll welcome the larger crowds.
Chris Carini, owner of Lindas Bar
& Grill on Franklin Street, said Chapel
Hills Homegrown Halloween used to be
a cool destination for visitors, but now
that it caters specifically to residents and
students, there are far fewer people.
You can imagine, businesses used
to do fantastic on those nights and
now were doing less than half of what
SEE HALLOWEEN, PAGE 4
ROTATING REPERTORY
Time: Saturday, A Midsummer
Nights Dream, and Sunday,
Into the Woods; 7:30 p.m.
Location: Paul Green Theatre
Info: playmakersrep.org
are dealt with, treated and per-
ceived, changes.
Williams designed the set for
both shows and said wood had a
big role in its construction.
Its all meant to be coming
out of the wood and forest, she
We want a story to understand who we are,
our place in the world thats the power of
narrative.
Joseph Haj,
PlayMakers producing artistic director
sexual awakening, and all this
gets explored in the concept of
the woods.
Haj is directing Into the
Woods and co-directed the
2013 rotating repertory around
the theme of water.
He had the idea to pair this
years shows together and said
it was about putting the plays
in conversation.
Into the Woods, which
opens Sunday and runs through
Dec. 6, is a contemporary
musical involving characters
from the Grimm fairy tales,
while A Midsummer Nights
Dream, which opens Saturday
and runs through Dec. 7, is a
Shakespearean comedy.
Though the shows are stylis-
tically different, scenic designer
Marion Williams said both of
the shows have elements that
tie them together.
Both shows are in literal
woods, but in some cases it feels
more symbolic, she said. We
actually have trees on stage for
both, but the way those trees
DTH ONLINE: To view
an online photo gallery
of Into the Woods, visit
dailytarheel.com
TODAY
Halloween Costume Contest:
The Carolina Unions costume
contest ofers prizes to winning
participants, including food
truck rodeo vouchers, gift cards
to Sugarland and Carolina Union
Activities Board homecoming
tickets. All participants can
enjoy music and refreshments.
Costume judging is at 11:30 a.m.
Time: 11 a.m.
Location: Carolina Union West
Lounge
Carrboro Halloween Carnival:
This event includes family-
friendly, fun Halloween
activities appropriate for
all ages, including carnival
games and a variety of food
and drinks available at the
concession stand. The event is
free and there is no registration
required.
Time: 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Location: 301 W. Main St.
Carrboro Pumpkin Carving
Contest: Enter a pumpkin for a
chance to have it displayed at
the annual Halloween Carnival
later in the day. Entries must be
received at the Carrboro Town
Commons by 3 p.m. Residents
will be the judge of the best
pumpkin. The event is free and
open to the public.
Time: 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Location: 301 W. Main St.
NOTED. A Chinese man got a nasty side
dish with the sushi meal he ordered: a
body infected with worms.
The man went to the doctor complain-
ing of stomach pain and itchy skin, caused
by a tapeworm infection. I guess this is a
reminder to take those disclaimers about
eating undercooked fish seriously.
QUOTED. I was watching the game, and
I said, I want my head to look like Tom
Bradys helmet.
Victor Thompson, who is apparently the
worlds most devoted fan of Patriots quar-
terback Tom Brady. His heads tattoos that
mirror Bradys helmet exactly. Officers took
extra mugshots when he was arrested.
W
ere already paranoid enough about Ebola spreading
throughout the U.S., but North Carolinians shouldnt
panic too soon a Raleigh mans 911 phone call, in
which he told dispatchers that he had the infectious
disease, was bogus. Police charged the 39-year-old man on Oct. 17 with
misdemeanor misuse of the 911 system after investigators concluded
that he had been lying about having Ebola to get a faster ambulance
response, according to reports from WRAL News. Police say the man
became belligerent when dispatchers started questioning him about his
Ebola symptoms. We ll go ahead and cross the faking Ebola tactic off
our list of ways to reduce emergency room wait times.
Man feigns Ebola on 911 call
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone reported a
breaking and entering and
larceny at the 400 block
of N.C. 54 at 5:44 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
A computer valued at
$2,600 and a guitar valued
at $700 were stolen, reports
state.
Someone reported a sus-
picious condition at the 500
block of Jones Ferry Road at
9:22 p.m. Wednesday, accord-
ing to Carrboro police reports.
Someone attempted
a breaking and entering
at the 400 block of South
Greensboro Street between
3:30 p.m. Tuesday and 1:30
p.m. Wednesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
Someone reported lar-
ceny of car parts and acces-
sories at the 200 block of
Old Barn Lane at 10:18 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The stolen parts were val-
ued at $50, reports state.
Someone drove while
impaired at 976 Martin
Luther King Jr. Blvd. at 1:43
a.m. Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone complained of
loud noise caused by land-
scaping equipment at 103
Lancaster Drive at 7:41 a.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Suspicious possible prank
calls were received at 512
Colony Woods Drive at 7:03
p.m. Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.

Someone reported
credit card fraud at UNCs
McGavran Greenberg Hall
at 10:29 a.m. Thursday,
according to reports from
the UNC Department of
Public Safety.
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attach a photo if you wish. Events
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on either the day or the day before
they take place.
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
SATURDAY
A Midsummer Nights
Dream: Presented in rotating
repertory with Into the Woods,
PlayMakers Repertory Company
will feature the Shakespearean
comedy. Tickets for the
performance start at $15.
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Location: Paul Green Theatre,
Center for Dramatic Art
POLICE LOG
News Friday, October 31, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 2
CANT BEET THIS
J
uniors Marisa Scavo (left) and Sandra Moraleda
stand outside of the Student Union with The
Sonder Market cart on Thursday. The Sonder
Market is a student-run grocery with the goal of
providing local, sustainable food at affordable prices.
DTH/ANI GARRIGO
CORRECTIONS
Due to a reporting error, Thursdays page 4 story DeSimone receives national recognition incor-
rectly stated the name of one of Joseph DeSimones most well-known inventions. He invented a bio-
absorbable coronary heart stent. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections
printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Katie Reilly at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
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ATTENTION FIRST-YEAR STUDENTS
You can become a Robertson Scholar!
Each year, irst-year UNC students are
invited to apply for the Robertson
Scholars Leadership Program.

Join us for an information session to
learn more about this opportunity!

Monday, November 10
th
, 7-8pm
Gardner 105

Meet current scholars and staff members
Discuss program beneits and expectations
Review important information about the application
and selection process
(Application deadline: January 26)
Learn more at www.robertsonscholars.org
News Friday, October 31, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 3
DISCREPANCIES
IN STATEMENTS
By Melody Jiang
Staff Writer
The Tuition and Fee Advisory
Task Force voted Thursday to
approve several tuition increases for
UNC professional schools. Its rec-
ommendations will be passed on to
the Chancellor and Board of Trustees
for the 2015-16 academic year.
One of the proposed increases
was for the UNC Medical School,
which, if approved, would raise
tuition by 13.2 percent for North
Carolina residents and 5.5 percent
for non-residents.
Despite tuition increases for this
year, UNC has the lowest under-
graduate resident tuition and fees
out of its peer group of institutions
as defined by the UNC General
Administration.
For nonresident tuition, UNC
is also within the bottom quartile,
said Dwayne Pinkney, vice provost
for finance and academic planning.
The task force also decided to
submit a proposed tuition increase
for the UNC Kenan-Flagler
Business School of 8.8 percent for
state residents and 3.7 percent for
nonresidents.
Proposed tuition increases for the
UNC School of Dentistry and the
UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy
were less than 5 percent.
After discussing the current
status of UNC tuition and fees, the
task force spent the majority of
the next hour discussing cuts and
increases presented by the Student
Fee Advisory Subcommittee, a
group composed of representatives
from the student body, faculty, staff
and provosts office.
SFAS
approved fees
for students in
the School of
Dentistry rang-
ing from $300 to
$900 for clinical
technology. Members considered the
proposals detailed and appropriate.
The students were satisfied
with the outcome here, said Laurie
Burroughs, business manager for
finance and administration.
One fee increase that was con-
tentious was the fee for Chapel Hill
Transit and Safe Ride.
This year, the Advisory Committee
on Transportation requested an
$18.75 increase for transit services,
which the Student Fees Advisory
Subcommittee approved. The tran-
sit committee also requested a $9
increase, which it also requested
in 2013 before it was denied. The
committee brought that combined
request to the task force meeting for
approval on Thursday, but the task
force did not reach a consensus on
the total fee increase.
Members of the Student Fee
Advisory Committee took issue
with how the transit committee had
developed its five-year financial plan.
Student Body President Andrew
Powell said the plan involved little
student input and was at odds with
the individual fees reviewed by the
student committee on a yearly basis.
Students will work with
the Advisory Committee on
Transportation to develop its plans in
the future, Powell said.
Well be heavily involved and
bringing the highest level of scrutiny
to the entirety of the five-year plan
with the expectation that, once that
five-year plan is approved, then that
serves as a commitment to those fee
increases that will be levied, he said.
university@dailytarheel.com
Task force OKs
tuition increases
The group recommended
increases in professional
school tuition and fees.
ATHLETIC-ACADEMIC SCANDAL
ATHLETIC-ACADEMIC SCANDAL
Students respond
to report in panel
By Rebecca Brickner
Staff Writer
Emotions ran high in Carroll Hall
Thursday night as a student panel led
more than 100 people in a discussion
of Kenneth Wainsteins report.
The panel consisted of eight UNC
students from varied backgrounds:
Student Body President Andrew
Powell, four athletes representing
four teams and three other students.
Powell opened the floor to stu-
dents questions by recognizing the
reports impact on the campus.
All of us are deeply disappointed
in what has happened, he said. Ive
been encouraged by all of you and
your resolve to move forward from
this situation and be stronger.
Early discussion centered on the
racial implications of the Wainstein
report perceived by groups like The
Real Silent Sam Coalition.
Panelist Taylor Webber-Fields,
a senior African, African American
and diaspora studies major and Real
Silent Sam organizer, said her inter-
est in the report was motivated not
only by her major but also by her
experiences as a black person.
I feel that this investigation
was an attack on my scholarship
and my race, she said. There are
certain racial undertones that have
not been addressed yet that need to
be discussed.
Charity Watkins, a graduate advis-
er for Student Wellness Diversity
and Inclusiveness in Collegiate
Environments initiative who attend-
ed the panel, asked about the focus
on the former African and Afro-
American studies department when
fraternities and other departments
have also been implicated.
Theres a lot of power in what
has been presented, as well as what
remains invisible, she said.
When attendees called into ques-
tion the investigations potential
biases, Powell defended Wainstein.
He has an unbelievable record
in terms of being an independent
investigator and figuring out exactly
what happens within organizations,
while being as unbiased as a human
can be, he said.
UNC junior Jarrod James, a for-
mer football player who sat on the
panel, said he began experiencing
scrutiny in 2012, his redshirt season.
Why are we being punished? he
said. The people who were involved
are not here anymore.
Swimmer, panelist and Student-
Athlete Advisory Council co-chair-
woman Kelly Corish addressed ques-
tions on the problems that arise when
athletics coexist with academics.
I dont think were the only
school in the NCAA who has prob-
lems like these, she said.
Corish also spoke about the dis-
crimination she has experienced as an
athlete at UNC. She said classmates
have avoided working with her on
projects because she is an athlete.
She feels students dont see that
athletes arent just here to play sports.
Im sick of people implying that
athletes arent students, she said.
university@dailytarheel.com
Athletes defended their
academic experiences to
peers and administrators.
The Daily Tar Heel analyzed past quotes from
those implicated in the Wainstein report
compared to what Wainstein himself wrote.
Bill Clinton returns to NC in final campaign push for Hagan
By Michael Liguori
Staff Writer
Former President Bill Clinton will
be back in North Carolina today for
the second time in a month to drum
up the Democratic base in the elec-
tions home stretch.
Clinton will join Sen. Kay Hagan
at Broughton High School in Raleigh.
The event is free and open to the pub-
lic, and doors open at 2:45 p.m.
He joins a wave of prominent
political names running through
North Carolina during this elec-
tion season including Sen. Rand
Paul, Gov. Chris Christie, Rep.
Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, Hillary
Clinton and Mitt Romney.
Clinton holds a 64 percent
approval rating according to a June
Gallup poll, making him the most
popular living president.
John Dinan, a political sci-
ence professor at Wake Forest
University, said in an email that
gaining new supporters is not the
goal of this rally.
The intent at this point is gen-
erally not to persuade undecided
voters, but to catch the attention
of leaning Republican or leaning
Democratic voters and motivate
them to head to the polls in cases
where they might not be thinking
about the election or planning to
vote, he said.
Dinan said the presence of a
former president turns the election
into a high-profile event, meant to
maximize excitement among sup-
porters and flood the news media.
The tactic, he said, is more about
fighting voter apathy and convincing
any voters sitting on the fence.
Who are the big-name national
Democrats, exactly? said Steven
Greene, an N.C. State University polit-
ical science professor. If you dont
want to bring in the President, which
(Hagan) obviously doesnt, theres not
the same kind of people with the same
kind of name recognition and general
positive feeling (as Clinton).
The statistical analysis website
FiveThirtyEight recently calculated
that Hagan has a 61 percent chance
of winning, as she has held a con-
sistent 3 to 4 percentage point lead
over Tillis for several months.
Tom Jensen, director of Raleigh-
based Public Policy Polling, said his
firms data is more conflicted.
We found the lead shifting
back and forth between Hagan
and Tillis from November to May,
Jensen said. Most of the undecid-
ed voters that make up their minds
are voting for Tillis.
Sean Haugh is a Libertarian can-
didate in the race, and while only
receiving around 5 percent support,
he has had a speculated spoiler
effect for Tillis, drawing support
from normally Republican voters.
Public Policy Pollings report
suggests that this is likely not the
case. When questioned on who their
second choice would be, 30 percent
of Haughs supporters answered
Hagan, and 34 percent answered
Tillis, meaning that Hagan is losing
almost as much to Haugh as Tillis.
With undecided and independent
voters mostly accounted for at this
point, candidates can focus on excit-
ing their bases. Greene said having
Clinton make an appearance is the
most logical choice for Hagan.
Everybody knows that any major
Democrat is going to support Hagan
and any major Republican is going
to support Tillis, Greene said.
Clintons general popularity, as
well as his strong and uncontroversial
identity as a Democrat, make him the
ideal endorsement, Greene said.
Its a lot easier to be popular
when youre a former president than
a current president. Hes popular,
and he probably excites the base
almost as much as Obama does.
state@dailytarheel.com
Clinton will join
the Democratic senator
in Raleigh this afternoon.
TUITION & FEES
THEN NOW
former Director of Athletics
We are arguing
that this
was Michael
McAdoos
work, even the
citations were
his work.
The clearest
example of
(knowing about
the classes) was
the plagiarized
paper that
Michael McAdoo
submitted.
Dick Baddour, about the reports that
McAdoos paper was plagiarized
Wainstein, about Baddours
knowledge of the irregular classes
former chair of the Department of
African and Afro-American Studies
Afro-American
studies is a solid
educational
discipline that
has piqued
the interest of
students.
Nyangoro
graded the
papers, but did
so with an eye
to boosting
student GPAs,
regardless of
paper quality.
Julius Nyangoro, about the popularity
of African and Afro-American studies
Wainstein, about the way Nyangoro
graded the irregular classes
former Head Football Coach
Please keep in
mind that neither
the NCAA nor
the Universitys
investigation
even suggested
any wrongdoing
on my part.
He certainly
knew by
November
2009 that
football players
in these courses
didnt go to
class.
Butch Davis, about allegations that he
was fired because of the investigation
Wainstein, about Davis knowledge
of the nature of the irregular classes
former director of the Parr
Center for Ethics and professor
in the Philosophy Department
Ive done more
than anybody
could think to
address the
problem
We know some
of the things
that went on.
Jan Boxill was
fully aware of
the lax work
requirements
and grading
standards in the
paper classes.
Jan Boxill, about her role in fixing the
UNC athletic-academic scandal
Wainstein, about Boxills knowledge
of the irregular classes at UNC
Was this an academic or an athletic issue? Clearly it was
an issue in both areas. It was a University issue.
Carol Folt,
about the UNC athletic-academic scandal
COMPILED BY JORDAN NASH
I hope that the outcome
(of the boards review) will
be an affirmation of the mis-
sion and value of each center
or institute, she said. The
centers and institutes pro-
vide resources and extensive
service to the university and
the community.
According to board docu-
ments, centers were chosen for
further review if they met one
or more of three criteria: if
they have a budget of less than
$50,000, have an economic
return ratio of less than two-
to-one or receive more than
$100,000 of in-kind support.
Holmes said making it
to the final round of review
does not necessarily mean
centers will face budget cuts
or termination.
that was when it was very,
very good, Carini said. So
basically just another busy
night for us nothing special
like it used to be.
As it has in previous
years, the town is encourag-
ing downtown restaurants
and bars to close their doors
to new customers at 1 a.m.,
though, legally theyre still
able to stay open later.
Lauren Shoaf, sales man-
ager for Fitzgeralds Irish Pub
at 206 W. Franklin St., said
the restaurant will still be
open on Halloween night.
Last year was the first time
we were open for Halloween,
and it was definitely a busy
night, and so we are expecting
the same this year, even more
since its a Friday, she said.
We are expecting more busi-
ness throughout the weekend
than a normal weekend.
One of the police depart-
ments main concerns is over-
consumption of alcohol. The
department will have about
400 police officers at the
event and alcohol checkpoints
as well as DWI enforcement
will be in place, according to a
town press release.
Mecimore said the cost of
managing this years event
should be close to 2013 expens-
es, which totaled $188,310.
I would expect this year to
be somewhere in line with that,
probably slightly more because
we have some more resources
available knowing that theres
the possibility that the crowd
size might be larger because of
it being on a Friday, he said.
city@dailytarheel.com
From Page One Friday, October 31, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 4
HALLOWEEN
FROM PAGE 1
CENTERS
FROM PAGE 1
PLAYMAKERS
FROM PAGE 1
HOMEGROWN RULES
The following items
are prohibited during
Homegrown Halloween:

Alcoholic beverages

Glass bottles

Paint

Fireworks

Explosives

Flammable substances

Live animals

Coolers

Weapons of any kind

Items resembling
weapons

Items made of wood,
metal, cardboard or plastic
In an age of greater accountability, I think
theyre trying to look at everything closely.
Peter Coclanis,
Director of the Global Research Institute
If there are those that
arent on mission, seem to not
fit within our purpose, then
sure we can opt to terminate
if we find some that we feel
like funds are better purposed
elsewhere, he said. But how
it will look, I dont know.
The Global Research
Institute is up for review
because it operates on a budget
of less than $50,000 all
of which comes from private
donors, said institute Director
Peter Coclanis.
He said he hasnt been
involved much in the review
process, and most of the data
he has been asked to provide
relates to quantitative mea-
sures such as the institutes
size and scope.
In an age of greater
accountability, I think theyre
trying to look at everything
closely to see if there are
redundancies, he said.
Holmes said the working
group plans to put together
a final report by Dec. 31. He
said beyond that, the board
plans to develop a uniform set
of policies for the creation and
review of centers throughout
the system a project that
will continue into 2015.
state@dailytarheel.com
said. Its a wooden floor,
there are the trees of course,
the props the dominant
material certainly is wood.
The Midsummer Nights
Dream set was designed to be
a more basic forest because of
the style of Shakespeare, while
the set for Into the Woods
is more lavish, with a grand
library and decorations.
Lisa Brescia, who plays the
Witch in Into the Woods,
said the costume design has
been equally elaborate.
Im extremely impressed
with the drapers and the
designers, she said.
The quality of the crafts-
manship that goes into mak-
ing these costumes is as high
as any Ive seen on Broadway.
Brescia has starred in
Broadway shows, such as
Mamma Mia! and Wicked,
and said costuming can be
freakishly transforming. She
said her initial costume for
the Witch is made almost
entirely of vegetables.
The dress itself is fabric,
made up of additions of
detail that are vegetation-
based, she said.
There are cabbage leaves
and ivy-like green foliage,
there are roots that come out
of the costume its as if shes
become one with nature.
Brescia said she has mul-
tiple costume changes, wear-
ing everything from a dress
that looks like its made of
water to a two-piece witchs
mask designed for mobil-
ity. Though she has seen the
show before, Brescia said the
changes for this production
tell the story in a unique way.
The witchs progression
of costumes is rooted in the
garden she manages, said Bill
Brewer, the costume designer
for the show.
We see these people
with our eyes before we
hear them sing, or speak or
anything else, and we need
to understand who they are
visually before they can take
us anywhere.
Brewer said the iconog-
raphy of the show would
be rooted in the 1950s as a
way of tying the show into
Americas happily ever after.
I dont want a Disney ver-
sion of this, he said.
I wanted these to be
real people with real life
struggles.
Haj said the shows
designs are powerful because
both plays are somewhat rep-
resentative of the unknown
world. He said connecting
through stories is how people
find their places in life.
We all want a story, he
said.
We want a story to under-
stand who we are, our place
in the world thats the
power of narrative.
arts@dailytarheel.com
CAROLINA
UCLA
OKLAHOMA
UAB
GEORGETOWN
FLORIDA
BUTLER
WISCONSIN
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located in Orange County
Friday, October 31, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 5
SportsFriday
SCHEDULE
FOOTBALL: at Miami, Saturday @ 12:30 p.m.
VOLLEYBALL: vs. Miami, Friday @ 6 p.m.
MENS SOCCER: vs. Virginia, Saturday @ 7 p.m.
WOMENS SOCCER: at Syracuse, Sunday @ 1 p.m.
FOLLOW US ON TWITTER: @DTHSports
ITS BASKETBALL SEASON
On Wednesday, senior writers
Aaron Dodson and Grace Raynor
headed to Charlotte for the ACCs
annual Operation Basketball event,
where two players and the head
coach from each conference team
were available for interviews.
The North Carolina mens basket-
ball team sent juniors Brice Johnson
and Marcus Paige, in addition to
Roy Williams, who enters his 12th
year at the helm of the program.
Johnson, held down the fort solo
during the morning players session,
while Paige stayed in Chapel Hill to
complete an exam in State and Local
Government, a class requirement for
Journalism students.
Johnson finished his sophomore
campaign leading UNC in field goal
percentage and blocks despite aver-
aging just 19.4 minutes per game.
With the departure of veteran for-
ward James Michael McAdoo to the
NBA Draft, Johnson will certainly
see increased minutes and could shift
into a starting role.
Johnson scored 10.3 points per
game, and enters his junior year
nearly 40 pounds heavier than he was
when he first came to Chapel Hill as a
freshman. Hes now hovering between
226 and 228 pounds at 6-foot-9,
doing everything he can to become a
healthier player in all aspects.
Trying to do everything right and
be in the weight room as much as I
can. Do a lot of the little things and be
as healthy as I can, Johnson said.
Upon his arrival in Charlotte
around 5:30 p.m., the point guard
Paige was informed that his 17.5
points per game during his sopho-
more year had helped boost him to
winning the conferences Preseason
Player of the Year honor.
It feels pretty good, I guess,
Paige said. I hope that means it can
translate into some wins.
But something else was on his
mind.
I see they picked us second in
the conference, he said. We have
goals of finishing higher than that,
if you guys can read between the
lines on that. We really want to win
the conference this year.
sports@dailytarheel.com
At ACC Basketball Media Day, the Tar Heels were picked to nish second
Tar Heels hopes
rely on tempo
By Aaron Dodson
Senior Writer
Marquise Williams favor-
ite word might be tempo.
The word is typically a noun.
Definition: The rate of speed of
motion or activity; pace.
Sometimes, Williams
describes the noun form of
the word, explaining the
tempo with which an oppos-
ing team plays.
After Tuesdays practice,
reporters asked the redshirt
junior quarterback about the
tempo the North Carolina
football team (4-4, 2-2 ACC)
SEE FOOTBALL, PAGE 8
Media
Day
Jahlil Okafor
The five-star
Chicago native was
named co-MVP of
the McDonalds All-
American game.
Marcus Paige
Amongst his acco-
lades, Paige was
named the ACCs
Most Improved
Player last season.
James Michael
McAdoo
He averaged 14.2
points per game
as a junior before
leaving for the NBA.
Leslie McDonald
After a nine-game
suspension to start
the 2013 season, he
returned to average
10.4 points a game.
Joel Berry II
The 6-foot point
guard was the
Florida Gatorade
Player of the Year
three times.
Justin Jackson
The 6-foot-8
Texas wing was
a McDonalds All-
American and a
five-star recruit.
Theo Pinson
The 6-foot-6 wing
from Greensboro
led his high school
to two consecutive
3-A state titles.
OKAFOR
The 6-foot-11 freshman
center out of Chicago was
overwhelmingly named
the ACCs Preseason Rookie
of the Year Wednesday in
Charlotte.
Of the 65 votes that were
cast, the 2014 Morgan
Wootten National High
School Player of the Year
racked up 62 of them. Okafor
also received 15 votes for the
Preseason Player of the Year.
MARCUS PAIGE PRESEASON P.O.Y.
PROJECTED FINISHES
KEY ARRIVALS
KEY DEPARTURES
The 2014 2nd-team All-
American Paige was named
the ACCs Preseason Player
of the Year Wednesday in
Charlotte.
Paige is listed as the top
point guard in the nation
by ESPN.com and Sporting
News.
As a sophomore, the Iowa
native averaged a team-high
17.5 points per game, good
for fourth in the ACC. He also
led the ACC in free throw
percentages, shooting 91
percent from the line.
Paige received 33 frst-place
votes Wednesday, more than
double the number second-
place fnisher Montrezl
Harrell tallied.
Wings Justin Jackson and Theo
Pinson, along with guard Joel Berry
II, make up North Carolinas No. 6
ranked recruiting class.
The three players each bring
shooting ability to the team and
were ranked No. 11, No. 17 and No.
27, respectively, in the 2014 class
according to Rivals.
Forward James Michael
McAdoo and shooting
guard Leslie McDonald
are the key departures for
the Tar Heels.
The two players were
second and third respec-
tively in scoring for the
team last year. McAdoo
specialized in the paint,
while McDonald made 43
3-point shots good for
second on the team.
Duke
The Blue Devils
finished third in the
ACC in 2013-14 but
are projected to fin-
ish first this season.
North Carolina
The Tar Heels are
projected to finish
second in the ACC
after last years
fourth-place finish.
Louisville
New to the ACC
this season, the
Cardinals are
projected to finish
third.
Virginia
Last seasons ACC
regular season and
tournament champs
are projected to end
2014-15 in fourth.
Syracuse
The Orange are
projected to finish
the 2014-15 season
fifth in their second
season in the ACC.
COMPILED BY GRACE RAYNOR, CARLOS COLAZZO, BRENDAN MARKS
DTH/JOSE VALLE
THE LOWDOWN ON
SATURDAYS GAME
North Carolina at Miami
5-3, 2-2 ACC
4-4, 2-2 ACC
12:30 p.m.
Sun Life Stadium
Broadcast: ACC Network
HEAD-TO-HEAD
The Bottom Line Miami 38, North Carolina 31
UNC is still among the nations
worst secondaries (No. 116) and
Miami QB Brad Kaaya has a 153
passer rating. No EDGE: Miami
UNC front
seven vs.
Miami
rush
Duke Johnson leads Miamis rush-
ing attack, which is ranked No. 45
in the nation, with 7.5 yards per
carry and seven TDs. EDGE: Miami
UNC
secondary
vs. Miami
pass
Miami front
seven vs.
UNC rush
Miami
secondary vs.
UNC pass
Miami has been solid against the
run (147.6 yards per game), but
Marquise Williams can pose a
threat with his legs. EDGE: Push
This is the strength of both teams.
UNC throws for 296.9 yards per
game, but Miami has the No. 9 sec-
ondary in the country. EDGE: Push
Grace Aaron Daniel Carlos Pat Brendan Harold
Raynor Dodson Wilco Collazo James Marks Gutmann
Record to date 52-17 48-21 48-21 46-23 48-21 33-27 37-23
UNC at Miami UNC UNC UNC Miami UNC UNC Miami
Duke at Pitt Duke Duke Duke Duke Duke Duke Duke
Boston College at Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech Virginia Tech
Virginia at Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech Georgia Tech
TCU at West Virginia TCU West Virginia TCU TCU TCU TCU TCU
Auburn at Ole Miss Ole Miss Auburn Ole Miss Auburn Auburn Auburn Auburn
Oklahoma State at Kansas State Kansas State Kansas State Kansas State Kansas State Kansas State Kansas State Kansas State
Arizona at UCLA Arizona UCLA UCLA Arizona UCLA UCLA UCLA
Utah at Arizona State ASU Utah ASU ASU ASU ASU ASU
DTH PICKS OF THE WEEK
The DTH sports staff and one celebrity guest compete to pick the winners
of the biggest ACC and national college football games each week.
Well, its been a lot of the same for the picks
crew this past week.
Sports Editor Grace Raynor continues to
lead the pack as she has since week one
and Assistant Sports Editor Brendan Marks
is still in last place.
Apparently this week though, Marks real-
ized how far behind he was.
As he walked into the office and looked at the
results from last week this is what happened:
Marks: Sweet guys! Guess what!?
Guys: What?
Marks: I went 8-1 in picks last week! I only
missed the Ole Miss-LSU game!
Guys: Ummm you do know that youre
still in last place right?
Marks: What? But I went 8-1.
Guys: Yeah, youre still in last place.
Eleven games out of first place to be exact,
and the guest picker even has a two-game
lead on you. But keep up the good work
man. Youll get there.
Marks: *Sighs.*
Marks: *Copies Patty Js picks*
Speaking of Patty J, the Assistant Sports
Editor is currently in a contested three-way
battle for second place, along with Aaron
UpsetDodson and Daniel Too-tall Wilco.
Second place could easily be just one person
next week though, with all three of these pick-
ers taking different strategies.
True to his nickname, Dodson is taking a
plethora of upsets hes the only picker to
take West Virginia over TCU and Utah over ASU.
Patty J and Wilcos picks only differ with one
game: Auburn at Ole Miss. Patty is crying War
Eagle! And Wilco is being a Rebel.
Another common trend this week is with all
of the DTH writers with the exception of
Carlos LosCollazo continuing to pick UNC,
despite a tough challenge down in Miami.
Los and guest picker Harold Gutmann are
Harold Gutmann
is this weeks guest
picker. He covers
North Carolina
athletics for the
(Durham) Herald-Sun.
the only pickers who havent started chug-
ging the Kool-Aid.
Have you seen Duke Johnson run the
football?Los said one afternoon. And have
you seen UNC tackle? Yeah I didnt think so.
Thats not exactly the best combination
for the Heels.
Gutmann is a Duke alum and UNC beat
writer for the (Durham) Herald-Sun. Last
season, Gutmann went a perfect 8-0 during
the last week of the season for the guest
pickers, clinching first place in the process.
You didnt really think wed let him go last
again, did you?
Arts & Culture Friday, October 31, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 6
DTH/HANNAH ROSEN
Members of the Carolina Indian Circle raised awareness about culturally offensive Halloween costumes in the Pit on Wednesday.
By Zhai Yun Tan
Senior Writer
Junior Shannon Ross
was stunned when she
arrived at Franklin Street on
Halloween last year.
She saw people dressed in
Native American costumes
with their faces painted red,
running around in circles
and ululating.
As a member of the student
organization Carolina Indian
Circle, Ross said she was
offended which led her to
participate in the organizations
campaign against culturally
insensitive costumes this week.
My culture is not my
costume is a campaign that
the Carolina Indian Circle
has organized for two years.
Members of the organiza-
Students protest costume ignorance
tion held up signs in the Pit
to raise awareness and incite
discussion.
Its trying to raise aware-
ness for cultural appro-
priation not just with Native
Americans, Ross said. Were
not trying to make people feel
bad. We just want to let peo-
ple know that they could be
offending someone and they
probably shouldnt do it.
Senior Cheyna Elliott,
who is part of the Carolina
Indian Circle committee, said
the campaign on Monday
received good responses. The
group put up posters with
slogans such as My culture
is not a costume, We are not
Pocahontas and Cultural
appropriation is not OK.
We had quite a few people
come up and ask questions,
Elliott said. A lot of people just
dont know that it persists.
Common Native
American-themed costumes
are the Disney character
Pocahontas and the native
warrior regalia, both of which
Ross said she saw frequently
on Halloween. Some of the
regalia are only worn by
Native Americans during cul-
tural events like the powwow.
What people dont real-
ize is the powwow dances are
sacred and you dont just run
around doing it, Ross said.
She said she accepts peo-
ple dressing up in another
cultures costumes if they
are not ignorant and they
behave appropriately.
I would just suggest that
if you are going to dress up as
anything of a different culture
to not disrespect it, Ross said.
If its a costume, let it be a cos-
tume and dont act a part of it.
But Carolina Indian Circle
faculty adviser Marcus Collins
said people including Native
Americans shouldnt dress
up in traditional costumes for
inappropriate events.
If I wanted to wear my
regalia and attend a cultural
festivity like a powwow, or
if Im going to a classroom
because I want to bring
awareness, then thats a dif-
ferent thing, Collins said.
But to take on somebodys
culture and make it part of
a costume in an event where
youre not even creating
awareness is just wrong.
Collins said he finds dress-
ing up as Disneys Pocahontas
disrespectful to Native
American culture.
It depends on whats
your philosophy in thinking
that Pocahontas, the way
Disney has romanticized it,
if its appropriate or not,
Collins said. For me, I dont
think it is.
arts@dailytarheel.com
Gourmet Marketplace,
Cooking School, and Restaurant.
A UNC Tradition Since 1975.
Cookbook Signing: Mud for Muno: 70
Amuzing Recipeo from Suzory to Sueet
with Jean Anderson
Saturday, Nov. 1 | 2 4 p.m. | FREE
In her new book, the legendary Jean Anderson turns
her increoible talents to mumns.
Sheri Castle Day
Launching The Southern Lizing
Community CooLhooL
Sunday, Nov. 2 | 12 4 p.m. | FREE
Help us celebrate the launch of Chef Sheri Castles
new cookbook at our party in her honor!
Beer Extravaganza
Saturday, Nov. 8 | 2 8 p.m.
$8 - $15 per person
Love beer? Then youll love Beer Extravaganza! Sample
the best from local and national craft breweries and
cideries, enjoy live music and more. $8 in advance, $10
at the door. Afterwards, move to the exclusive party on
Weathervanes patio for more live music and, of course,
more beer. Entry incluoes your nrst pint ol beer or
cider and an appetizer! $12 in advance, $15 at the door.
Visit: http://goo.gl/hNTY21
201 S. Estes Drive, Chapel Hill | University Mall
(877) 929-7133 | | southernseason.com
Pick up our Holiday Menu
when youre in the store. We
can help make this seasons
celebrations memorable!
News Friday, October 31, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 7
WHERE DO YOU
STAND ON THE
ISSUE?
Candidates opine on proposed
N.C. constitutional amendment
Im actually going
to vote for it, but
not many people
know about it
The accused have
a right to a fair and
speedy trial, but this
amendment does not
apply to capital cases.
With a bench trial, if
a person has no prior
convictions, they will
probably get a lesser
sentencing.
By Olivia Bane
Staff Writer
When Ashton Miller was
still alive, battling cancer
while going to UNC, she
didnt have a support group.
But the organization found-
ed in her memory, Ashtons
Angels, will begin providing
support for young adults with
cancer after it is approved
as an official student group,
which organizers expect to
happen in the next few weeks.
Miller died two months
before her graduation date in
the spring of 2010 after endur-
ing embryonal rhabdomyosar-
coma, a rare form of childhood
cancer, for three years.
When youre in college
and you have cancer, there
arent a lot of people you can
talk to about it. Its not some-
thing you can talk to your
friends about, Judy Miller,
Ashton Millers mom, said.
Judy Miller said there are
support groups for children
and older adults, but being
a cancer patient in college is
particularly difficult because a
student is no longer a child but
not yet considered an adult.
She added that her daugh-
ters room at N.C. Childrens
Hospital was decorated with
Disney characters, indicat-
ing that the hospital is geared
toward much younger patients.
There are Carolina stu-
dents who have cancer and
Angels provide support
to young cancer patients
are getting treatment and
fly under the radar, said
sophomore Elizabeth Grady,
president of Ashtons Angels
at UNC. They can be under-
loading classes, and people
dont even know that. We
want them to feel like a part
of the Carolina community.
Grady said programs like
the Make-A-Wish Foundation
and other groups provide
services for children, and
many support groups exist for
adults, but college students
dont fit into either age group.
We want to help college
students from ages 18 to 23
because there really isnt fund-
ing for this age group, said
Annie Scheffer, UNC vice pres-
ident of Ashtons Angels and
a member of Ashton Millers
sorority, Zeta Tau Alpha.
A group including Ashton
Millers parents, friends and
a favorite teacher first started
the organization at Western
Guilford High School in
Greensboro, which Ashton
Miller attended.
I had a long conversation
with Ashton a few months
before she passed, and she
wanted some good to come out
of all this, said retired Western
Guilford history teacher Brett
Stell. I helped start the organi-
zation to honor Ashton.
Until the UNC chapter
began, Ashtons Angels
had done all of its work at
Western Guilford, doing proj-
ects on art, history and travel
some of Millers passions.
Over the last four or five
years, Ashtons Angels raised
about $40,000 to provide
Western Guilford students
Ashtons Angels was
founded in honor of a
former UNC student.
with scholarships to go on a
student trip to Europe that
Stell led every other summer.
The group also raised money
to buy supplies for the art
department at the high school.
We want to bring this
program to UNC because this
is the place Ashton loved,
Grady said.
university@dailytarheel.com
If passed, the
constitutional
amendment would allow
defendants to waive a
trial by jury and choose
to only have a bench trial
made up of judges.
Ellie Kinnaird
is a former N.C.
senator.
A prosecutor will
charge several things
in any single crime
to up the ante, and
when the jury sees
those things added
up, it looks like a
vicious crime. A judge
is more objective and
knows the law very
well; whereas, juries
are more apt to be
swayed by the vicious-
ness of the crime.
I think its a great
addition to the judi-
cial system. I think
juries are incredibly
perceptive. They
can see things that
lawyers and judges
cant see sometimes,
but they dont under-
stand the law as
well as a judge, and
I believe that juries
can create issues that
dont exist in cases.
Juries sometimes
can get confused and
not be as judicial
or as careful as a
branch judge should
be. While the jury
tradition is a great
one, I really believe,
in terms of efficiency
and justice, the
defendant would
be better off with a
bench trial than a
jury trial.
Im opposed to
it
When you have
victims of violent
crimes, I want
a jury from the
community hearing
that case. I think its
a real cornerstone of
our criminal justice
system. I trust
juries, and they
increase confidence
in the courts.
The idea with
the jury is that you
have people from
the community that
participate in and
have a voice in what
happens. There are
lots of cases where
you need that, and
Im concerned
by whatever
mechanism that
community voice is
taken away.
WHAT ARE THE
ADVANTAGES AND
DISADVANTAGES
OF ALLOWING
DEFENDANTS TO
WAIVE A JURY
TRIAL?
Bill Massengale
is a law partner at
Massengale & Ozer.
Jim Woodall
is the Orange County
district attorney.
THE AMENDMENT
When youre in col-
lege and you have
cancer, there arent
a lot of people you
can talk to about it.
Its not something
you can talk to your
friends about.
Judy Miller,
Ashton Millers mother
COMPETE FOR A
$1000
CASH PRIZE
&
LEADERSHIP AWARD
Sign up by 11pm today:
http://palchallenge.web.unc.edu/
942-PUMP
www.yogurtpump.com
HOURS:
Mon-Thur 11:30am-11:30pm
Fri-Sat 11:30am-Midnight
Sun Noon-11:30pm
106 W. Franklin St. (Next to Hes Not Here)
Going Out?
Going Out?
Start your party here!
Start your party here!
419334.CRTR
Duke Young Adult ADD/ADHD & Nicotine Study
A new research study is recruiting healthy adults between the ages of 18-25 who meet the following c riteria:
Diagnosed with ADD/ADHD or have ADD/ADHD symptoms Nonsmoker Have not used other tobacco
products in the past three years Not currently taking psychiatric medications, except those for AD D/ADHD
If you meet these criteria, you may be eligible to participate.
Please call Aruna at 919-681-0048 for more information.
Compensation provided.
Or please visit www.trianglesmokingstudies.com
Pro00037792
VOTE
EARLY
HILLEL HOUSE CAMERON AVE.
OPPOSITE CAROLINA INN
TODAY, FRIDAY NOON 6 PM
TOMORROW, SATURDAY 9 AM 1 PM
Why Vote?
Threats to UNC.
Threats to your abortion rights.
Threats to your health insurance.
Recommendations:
US Senate: Kay Hagan
US House of Representatives: David Price (District 4)
or Laura Fjeld (District 6)
NC Senate: Valerie Foushee (District 23)
NC House: Verla Insko (District 56)
or Graig Meyer (District 50)
Orange County Board of Commissioners:
Mia Burroughs
NC Supreme Court Chief Justice: Mark Martin
NC Supreme Court Associate Justice: Sam Ervin IV
NC Supreme Court Associate Justice: Robin Hudson
NC Supreme Court Associate Justice: Cheri Beasley
NC Court of Appeals Judge: John Arrowood
NC Court of Appeals Judge: Lucy Inman
NC Court of Appeals Judge: Mark Davis
Paid for by Charles van der Horst, MD
SportsFriday Friday, October 31, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 8
For Rent For Rent Travel/Vacation Volunteering For Rent
Help Wanted
For Rent
BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room

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seeking a PhD level Clinical Psychologist for clinical cognitive assessment development and data rev iew. Position will
assist in developing and validating new test batteries, reviewing, analyzing and interpreting cognit ive test data, and will
oversee neurocognitive rater certification and data quality control for multi-site pharmaceutical co mpany trials. The area of
work will primarily be in Alzheimers disease, aging, and schizophrenia. These clinical trials usua lly involve a large
meeting of investigators and testers who require certification. Travel to US or international meetings is expected.
Familiarity with cognitive assessment is essential. Requirements: Doctoral degree in Clinical Psych ology, neurosciences
or related field Demonstrated experience (in clinical and/or research settings) in working with adult psychiatric populations;
experience with Alzheimers Disease, MCI, Schizophrenia, Depression, Multiple Sclerosis and neurodeg enerative
disorders; Clinical experience in conducting assessments and administering scales with adult psychia tric populations.
Submit resumes and salary requirements to:
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Spring, Wednesdays, 5:45-7:00pm
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UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY
ALL IMMIGRATION MATTERS
REDUCED FEE FOR FACULTY & STUDENTS!
Work Visas Green Cards Citizenship
NC Board Certified Attorney Specialist
LISA BRENMAN 919-932-4593 visas-us.com
Law Office of
Daniel A. Hatley
919.200.0822 dan@hatleylawoffice.com
DRUG and ALCOHOL OFFENSES
www.millcreek-condos.com
Sundays at 10:30am
Creekside Elementary
5321 Ephesus Church
Rd,Durham, NC 27707
allgather.org
919.797.2884
S
u
n
d
a
y
s

1
0
:
0
0

a
n
d

1
1
:
4
5
a new church with a
mission: to love Chapel Hill
with the Heart of Jesus
lovechapelhill.com
T
h
e

V
a
r
s
i
t
y

T
h
e
a
t
r
e
Unitarian
Universalist
Campus Ministry at UNC
Meets 5-6 PMThursdays in the Union
Contact: UNC.UUs@GMAIL.COM
Unitarian Universalism:
Whoever You are,
Whomever you Love, You are Welcome
www.c3huu.org/campus-ministry.html
Nurture Your Spirit. Help Heal Our World.
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
Worship 11am
1712 Willow Drive
(next to University Mall) Chapel Hill
919-942-4964
binkleychurch.org
BINKLEY BAPTIST CHURCH
All Are Welcome!
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
Welcome! Welcome!
To the Chapel Hill
Christian Science
Church
Sunday Service
10:30-11:30am
1300 MLK, Jr. Blvd.
942-6456
PEACEFUL OFF SOUTH COLUMBIA NEAR UNC HOSPITALS
GREAT HOUSE-MATE POTENTIAL FOR GRAD/MEDICAL STUDENTS
3 BEDROOMS, 2 1/2 BATHS
just $1,700/month plus utilities!
January 1, 2-15 to July 31, 2015
earlier occupancy possible
Wood floors throughout. French doors onto large deck atop woodsy ravine. Central air, woodstove in l iving room.
Gas stove; fridge, walk-in pantry. Washer and dryer. Two large bedrooms share full bath and half-bat h.
Third bedroom is spacious with sitting area & office alcove, large bathroom.
Sharon Fowler Inc 919-240-5662
www.SharonFowlerInc.com for photos
absolutely no smoking good rental history essential
Direct Support Professional
We are currently recruiting for enthusiastic and motivated
individuals to work with children and adults with autism.
A great opportunity for psychology and
social work students!
Various shifts are available including weekends.
$10.10/hr. More information and application available at
http://www.rsi-nc.org
Announcements
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
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cordance with federal law, can state a prefer-
ence based on sex, race, creed, color, religion,
national origin, handicap, marital status.
SNOWSHOE LIFT TICKETS. 3/$129. 11-1 and
11-2 at Alpine Ski Center. Also, pick up $12
tickets to Matchstick Productions Days of My
Youth and then a ski lm to be shown 11-16 at
7pm, Mission Valley Cinema. Open to the public.
Child Care Wanted
BABYSITTER WANTED:
Seeking UNC student to care for our active 3
year-old son in Carrboro, mostly Tuesday and
Thursday afternoons 2-5pm and some week-
ends. $10-12/hr. lszpir@nc.rr.com.
EVENING BABYSITTER needed for 7 year-old
daughter in our home outside Chapel Hill.
Thursday nights 5:30-9:30pm, with occasional
other nights, weekends also available. Must
have own car, references and like dogs. $12/
hr. Respond to babysitterreply@gmail.com.
PART-TIME NANNY WANTED NEAR UNC. We
are looking for an active, responsible nanny to
care for three well behaved kids. M-F, 2-6pm,
close to campus. Must help with light laundry,
meals, picking up preschooler (in our car) and ti-
dying up. Please email Bryan: bhunt at nc.rr.com.
For Rent
FAIR HOUSING
ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in
this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or 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.
APARTMENT FOR RENT! Fabulous location,
less than 1 mile from campus off Franklin
Street. 2BR/1BA, on busline in lovely wooded
neighborhood. W/D, central air, dishwasher,
yearly lease, water provided, pets OK with
deposit. Available January 1. $800/mo.
919-929-1714.


FOR RENT: Grad students. Mobile home.
Peaceful, country setting. Old Hwy 86. 2BR,
cable, well, W/D. 2 miles to Park and Ride.
$500/mo. +utilities. 919.967.6897.
For Sale
2011 FORD FIESTA SE. blue, automatic, like
new, all power, 20,500 miles, no dings, 36-39
MPG. Sync and Sirius radio. $11,250. Vincent,
919-542-5613.
BEAUTIFUL LOT in prime location. Wooded
with stream. Adjacent Moses Cone property,
off Blue Ridge Parkway. Near to downtown
Blowing Rock. 1.29 acres, $135,000. Contact
Cody Hawkins, 828-320-3268.
Help Wanted
CLUB MANAGER for neighborhood swim and
racket club. Responsibilities include managing
staff; overseeing recreational programs; main-
taining swimming pool, clubhouse facilities
and grounds; managing membership; and all
ofce admin. Life guard and CPO certicates
are highly desirable. Hours are exible part-
time in off season, full-time May thru August.
Send cover letter, resume and 3 references to
club.manager.sssrc@gmail.com by 11-15-14.
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT, part-time. Look-
ing for an energetic person to join a growing
physical therapy practice. Main responsibili-
ties include ling insurance claims, collection,
tracking payments, calling insurance compa-
nies, scheduling, answering the phone, greet-
ing clients when they enter the clinic. In addi-
tion, utilizing the Internet to modify WordPress
based blog style website, online scheduling
and billing systems, integration of social media
like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram will be
needed. www.experiencetheedge.com or call
919-493-1204.
SOFTWARE ENGINEER to work on enthusiastic
team to help build ReadTheory.org. Must be
procient in JAVA, MVC, HTML, JS. Groovy/
Grails is a plus. Email support@readtheory.org
or call 919-475-3740 for details.
GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR: Chapel Hill
Gymnastics has part-time positions avail-
able for energetic, enthusiastic instructors.
Applicants with knowledge of gymnastic
terminology and progression skills preferred,
must be available 2-4 days/wk. 3:30-7:30pm,
some weekends. Send a resume to
margie@chapelhillgymnastics.com.
EDITOR needed to assist in management of
online content for ReadTheory.org. Must have
outstanding English language and computer
skills. $18/hr. Part-time. 919-475-3740.
PART-TIME HOURS: Assistant needed Tu/Th 12-
5pm for helping 22 year-old male quadriplegic
student. Dependability a must. Duties include
driving and assistance with meals, homework,
getting to classes and other physical activities.
Ideal position for future health professional.
debrarmann@aol.com, 919-414-0494.
HOUSE CLEANING: kitchen, organizing clos-
ets, drawers, shelves, etc. Student preferred.
4 miles from campus. Pay $12/hr. Rebecca,
919-967-0138.
TEACHING ASSISTANTS: Harvest Learning Cen-
ter is hiring part-time and full-time teaching as-
sistants to work with toddlers to preschoolers.
Will train but must have work ethic and a love
for working with children. Send resumes to
harvestdirectors@harvestlearningcenter.com.
MODELS WANTED: Fine art gure photogra-
pher is seeking models. Will pay and will share
best pictures with his model. www.peters-pics.
com. Call Peter, 919-402-0304.
Lost & Found
LOST: CREST RING Oct. 17, between Top of
the Hill and McDade St. Gold family crest ring
with engraving of shield, spear, and banner
across the top. If returned $100 reward. Call
(336) 813-0622.
Personals
FREDDY, before we play beer pong and party,
lets take the AIDS Course together! AIDS
Course, Spring, Wednesdays, 5:45-7pm, one
credit. Enroll in Public Health 420, Section 1
(Undergrad) or Section 2 (Graduate). Yours,
Sorority Suzie.
BAHAMAS SPRING BREAK
$189 for 5 DAYS. All prices include: Round trip
luxury party cruise, accommodations on the
island at your choice of 13 resorts. Appalachia
Travel. www.BahamaSun.com, 800-867-5018.
Tutoring Wanted
CHEMISTRY TUTOR NEEDED! Looking for a
UNC student to tutor a high school student
in Honors Chemistry 1-2 days/wk. Please call
or email Katherine, kclarkrealtor@gmail.com.
Thanks! 919-636-0151.
YMCA YOUTH VOLLEYBALL (October thru De-
cember 2014) and BASKETBALL (January thru
March 2015) are currently needed. Fall vol-
leyball serves 4th-8th graders on Tu/Th nights.
Winter basketball serves PreK-8th graders
(Saturdays and weeknights for older divisions).
Email: mike.meyen@YMCATriangle.org.
Place a Classified Today!
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ITS EASY!
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is an 8 Family fun doesnt need to
get expensive. Cut costs by improvising and
making what you need at home. Prioritize
fun, delicious tidbits and entertaining
conversation. Invent a mysterious back story.
Choose characters, and meet new friends.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 7 Have the party at your place.
Heartfelt communications come easily. You
can wait for what you want. Save up, if its
expensive. Talk it over, and come up with
homemade solutions. Compromise. Prepare
and decorate. Invite contribution.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8 Your creative communications
get supercharged. Invent a message and
a punchline. Business could interfere with
pleasure. Keep loved ones informed. Hold out
for the important things. Balance conflicting
interests with straight talk. Aim to have it all.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 9 Ensure that the job gets done.
Only delegate to trusted partners. Theres
profitable work requiring your attention.
Reward a productive day by spending the
evening with friends and a light heart. Unveil
a mystery.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 9 Handle professional obligations,
and reschedule less urgent calls. Answer the
door! Creative juices flow, and a collaboration
invigorates. Share resources, and re-purpose
stuff you have. Play a part that youve always
wondered about.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 Should you stay or go? Peace
and quiet seem so enticing. Postpone travel,
and settle into some domestic bliss. Get
comfortable in private, and talk it over. Invite
someone special to help decide.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is an 8 Take off from work early if
you can. A temporary setback changes plans.
Discipline is required. It just takes longer
to get there. Dont touch your savings. Stay
close to home and uncover a family secret.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8 Keep a steady course while
cutting expenses. Friends share resources and
connections. Grab a great deal, and make
do with something you find. Adapt stuff
you have to the purpose you need fulfilled.
Relax together.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 9 Unleash your artistic creativity.
Practice your skills for an epic adventure.
Consider a females differing opinion, and
incorporate what works. Do a good job and
gain respect. Dont test physical limits. Your
message clicks.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8 Challenge old assumptions.
Be gracious to a troll. Indulge a creative
fantasy without breaking the bank.
Discussion clarifies the essential points.
Discuss private matters in private. Reveal
secrets in their own time.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 9 Decrease the unknown
factors. In a moment of scarcity, listen and
learn. Its not a good time to travel. Invite
friends to your house. Pile up provisions.
Work out practical details. Make it a pot
luck. Play together.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 9 Handle chores and
responsibilities before dashing off. Glamorize
the invitation. Dont travel or try a new
trick... trusted methods and flavors satisfy.
Treats at home spark into laughter and
mysteries unveiled. Get into the spirit.
If October 31st is Your Birthday...
Enliven the party this year. Youre on fire with
creativity and charisma. Apply it at work to rising
demand... raise your rates especially after 12/23.
Determine what you want and ask for it. Pursue
seemingly-impossible dreams. Build long-term
networks. Fun and romance rise to a new level
this springtime. Balance work with play for
sustainable endurance. Prioritize love.
(c) 2014 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.
FOOTBALL
FROM PAGE 5
will likely get to taste in a road
matchup with the University
of Miami Hurricanes (5-3,
2-2) Saturday.
Its the Miami
Hurricanes, Williams said.
They run like rabbits.
Most often than not, though,
Williams uses tempo as a verb.
He did this recalling UNCs
23-27 loss to Miami in 2013.
Last year they showed
theyre not very good with
tempo when were tempo-
ing them, he said. Thats a
lot of teams. When we get a
first down, get going and we
tempo, a lot of people tend to
start putting their hands on
their knees, substituting late,
getting 12 men on the field, if
we continue to go.
For UNC to pick up its third
consecutive win, Williams
believes it will take that tempo.
This means UNC must start
fast from its first possession of
the game, though the team has
struggled to do so all season.
In eight games, UNC has
only scored three times on
its first offensive drive two
touchdowns and one field goal.
The remaining five open-
ing possessions? Four punts
and one fumble.
A week ago, on the road
against Virginia, the UNC
offense didnt score until its
third drive of the game.
We gotta create our own
energy, Williams said. Last
week, we came out too flat
We found a way to keep going
and kept it going, kept it going.
But this week, were going to
try to jump on them early.
If the Tar Heel offense
starts as slow as it did against
UVa, it will find itself in quite
of an early hole in Miami,
Coach Larry Fedora says
especially given the speed and
experience of Miamis defense.
(Miami is) really good on
defense, Fedora said. Theyve
got seven seniors over there,
theyre playing hard, theyre
doing all the good. But we
have to take care of business.
We have to get our tempo
going, so that we can con-
tinue to move the chains.
Sophomore wide receiver
Mack Hollins has noticed
the lasting effect a fast start
from the UNC offense has on
opposing defenses.
That gives us a sense of
comfort that were gonna be
good the rest of the game,
Hollins said. If we can get
an early lead, since we play
If we can get an early lead, since we play so
fast, teams are dead by the fourth quarter.
Mack Hollins,
Sophomore wide receiver
so fast, teams are dead by the
fourth quarter.
Williams, who leads the
ACC in passing yards with
2,035, will face the nations
ninth-ranked pass defense in
Miami. Its a unit sprinkled
with speed from the defensive
line to the secondary.
The UNC quarterbacks
plan, though, is not to slow
the game down and make the
Hurricanes think. Rather, its
to match speed with speed.
Theyre big, and theyre
fast, and they compete, he
said. Were gonna do the
same thing. Were gonna go
down and compete.
Against Miami, Williams
wants to see how well his
offense can tempo.
sports@dailytarheel.com
News Friday, October 31, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 9
Statement differences
Administrators responses
to scandal allegations
conflict with report findings.
See pg. 3 for graphic.
PlayMakers shows
PlayMakers opens its
new woods-themed rotat-
ing show this weekend.
See pg. 1 for story.
Costume protests
The Carolina Indian Circle
protested potentially racist
Halloween costumes this
week. See pg. 6 for story.
Wainstein panel
A panel of students with
varied backgrounds spoke
about the Wainstein report
findings. See pg. 3 for story.
games
Solution to
Thursdays puzzle
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
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 Common telenovela
theme
5 Travel needs for many
10 Lose, in a Vegas game
14 Amplify, in a way
15 Not available
16 Fit
17 *Media member with a
curly tail?
19 Word with barn or storm
20 Sorceress jilted by Jason
21 Not interested
23 Seahawks org.
25 *With 50-Across, travel
guide that touts
Oranjestads worst
hotels and restaurants?
26 Time to split!
30 Ore. setting
31 Jos __: frozen Mexican
food brand
32 Sitar selections
34 Santa __ Mountains:
coastal California range
38 *Whatever you say,
wise goddess!?
42 In-land link?
43 Henie on the ice
44 Grammy-
winning We
Are Young
band
45 Cybernotes
48 Six, for many
50 See 25-Across
54 King Kong
studio
55 Franklins note
56 Cheers, e.g.
60 Qatari potentate
61 *Refrigerator on the front
lines?
65 In __ parentis
66 What a shin guard
protects
67 Legendary galley
68 __ school
69 How-to units
70 Actor Gosling
DOWN
1 Digital clock toggle
2 Squishy area
3 Didnt deny
4 Feel offended by
5 Itinerary word
6 India __
7 Fashion designer Anna
8 Buzzing with activity
9 Close securely
10 Run of lousy luck
11 Threat to a WWII
destroyer
12 Splash clumsily
13 Clipped
18 Trip to see the big game?
22 Birth announcement
abbr.
24 Climbing challenge
25 Subject for da Vinci
26 One may go into an
empty net
27 Earthenware pot
28 Bluff betrayer
29 Words of disgust
33 Holiday song closer
35 S&L offering for
homeowners
36 Word on the Great Seal
of the United States
37 Novelist Grey
39 Shower harbinger
40 Cracked open
41 Have words with
46 Dept. head
47 Workout garb
49 Beyond reasonable limits
50 Young wolf
51 One may be going
around
52 Ready if required
53 Not turn away
57 Not right
58 Multigenerational tale
59 Suffix with Jumbo
62 Mount Rushmore figure,
familiarly
63 Tang
64 Smallish batteries, and a
hint to how the answers
to starred clues are
formed
Council talks
Obey Creek
By Trent Hollandsworth
Staff Writer
Chapel Hill Town Council
members and residents met
Thursday night to discuss
the impact of the proposed
Obey Creek development on
traffic and transit.
This was one of 10 special
meetings about Obey Creek
planned for the next five
months.
Sabrina Oliver, spokes-
woman for the town, said
the meetings were requested
by the public and the coun-
cil. They are all close togeth-
er to front-load the sched-
ule, with the possibility to
cancel later meetings.
David Bonk, long range
planning manager for Chapel
Hill, said there is a poten-
tial conflict between the
town and the state over U.S.
Highway 15-501.
In order to accommodate
the development, the town
might want to make changes
to the road, which they can-
not do without the states
compliance.
Another concern is bike
and pedestrian transporta-
tion at Obey Creek.
The Bicycle Alliance of
Chapel Hill wants there to
be a bike lane near 15-501
from Dogwood acres to Mt.
Carmel Church Road.
They also suggested that
a non-motor crossway could
be more economical than
widening the James Taylor
Bridge, which is a trouble
spot for bicyclists.
Bonk offered the idea of
an extension of a planned
off-road path to Mt. Carmel
Church Road to make it
easier for bicyclists to get to
Obey Creek.
However, doing this might
require diverting funds from
the construction of a green-
way at Obey Creek.
Councilwoman Maria
Palmer voiced concern about
delaying the greenway.
A family could bike
around the development in a
big loop, Palmer said. The
By Caroline Lamb
Staff Writer
A project to construct a
major natural gas pipeline
running into North Carolina
is entering its planning stages,
but environmental advocates
say it will slow the states move-
ment toward renewable energy.
Virginia-based energy
company Dominion is team-
ing up with three power
companies, including Duke
Energy, to build a 550-mile-
long pipeline from West
Virginia to Robeson County,
N.C. The Atlantic Coast
Pipeline LLC, which would
cost between $4.5 and $5 bil-
lion, would transport natural
gas from the Marcellus and
Utica shales.
Dominion plans to use the
pipeline to increase the natural
gas supply in West Virginia,
Virginia and North Carolina.
Frank Mack, a spokesman
for Dominion, said the pipeline
will bring a reliable source of
energy to North Carolina and
allow for less reliance on coal.
Mack said the pipeline
would support about 4,400
jobs during construction and
bring $12 million of economic
activity to the state by 2019.
David Rogers, field direc-
tor at Environment North
Carolina, said that while nat-
ural gas is cleaner than coal,
it also slows the movement
toward renewable energy.
We have the technology
right now to get our energy
from things like the wind and
the sun that are drastically
better for the environment
and give us a fuel source that
will never run out, he said.
Richard Whisnant, a
public law and policy profes-
sor in the UNC School of
Government, said the pipe-
line leaves the transition to
renewable energy in question.
It will be interesting to see
if this pipeline is built and oth-
ers are built, how much that
plays into the question of the
utilities commitment to sup-
port renewables, he said.
Mack said natural gas has
half the carbon emissions of
coal, and that bringing it to
North Carolina and shutting
down coal-fired plants will be
beneficial for the environment.
Rogers said the process,
which includes drilling, could
negatively impact people and
wildlife if methane from
natural gas is released into the
air unburned, it is harmful.
Mack said Dominion
employs safety measures, such
as around-the-clock moni-
toring and, if the proposal is
passed, emergency shutoff sys-
tems and natural gas detection
devices at compressor stations.
Dominion is preparing to
perform surveys on land along
the route. The application
to build will be sent to the
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission next summer
after open houses are held at
the beginning of the year.
If the application is accept-
ed, construction will start in
2017.
Planning begins for natural gas pipeline
development needs recre-
ational facilities.
Craig Scheffler, proj-
ect manager for HNTB
Corporation, presented the
traffic predictions for the
development.
Scheffler said some of side
roads near Obey Creek are
predicted to be inefficient,
but 15-501 itself would not be
congested. The traffic on the
northern parts of town would
not be affected by the traffic
from the development.
Regarding transit, there
are two current routes that
would pass through the area.
Transit is predicted to reach
capacity on the NS route dur-
ing peak hours, which might
prevent some bus riders from
being able to use it..
The council discussed
the idea of a new bus route.
Councilwoman Sally Greene
said it is an option that
should be looked into.
I would like to see an
analysis of a new bus route to
Obey Creek, Greene said.
Palmer offered a sug-
gestion of a bus that loops
around the city, so Carrboro
and Obey Creek could be con-
nected without stopping on
the UNC campus.
Chapel Hill resident
Susana Dancy said the town
should evaluate the current
transit system capacity.
You need to come up
with a plan for Southern
Chapel Hill, Dancy said.
Road capacity is a public
resource.
city@dailytarheel.com
Mack said 12 percent of peo-
ple whose property Dominion
wants to survey have declined.
Rogers said Environment
North Carolina will help
people living on the route
learn their rights in terms of
letting companies survey their
property.
Whisnant said it could nega-
tively affect the economy and
environment at the micro level.
I personally dont like the
division of this all up into
theres economic issues on the
one side, and theres environ-
ment issues on the other,
Whisnant said.
They are all economic and
environmental issues to me.
state@dailytarheel.com
At what location is Bill Clinton joining Sen.
Kay Hagan in Raleigh for a campaign event?
THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU K
Sat: 9:20 Sun: 7:00 Wed & Thu: 9:20
THE SKELETON TWINS K
Sat: 4:40, 7:10, 9:10 Sun: 4:40, 7:10
Tue: 7:10 Wed & Thu: 7:10, 9:10
GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY J
Sat: 4:30, 7:00 Sun: 4:30 Wed & Thu: 7:00
The Varsity Theatre
123 E. Franklin Street, Chapel Hill 967-8665
www.varsityonfranklin.com
Movie Showtimes for Week 10/31-11/6
All Movies $4.00 Closed Monday
Heard about Light Rail?
Drop into a public meeting for more information
about the Durham-Orange
Light Rail Project
Meeting Dates & Locations:
Nov. 18
Durham Station
11am 2pm
515 Pettigrew St. | Durham, 27701
Nov. 18
UNC Friday Center
4pm 7pm
100 Friday Center Dr. | Chapel Hill, 27517
Nov. 19
Marriott/Spring Hill Suites
at Patterson Place
4pm 7pm
5310 McFarland Rd. | Durham, 27707
Nov. 20
Hayti Heritage Center
4pm 7pm
804 Old Fayetteville St. | Durham, 27701
All public meetings are held in ADA accessible facilities.
Any individual who requires special assistance in order
to participate in a public meeting is urged to contact
Triangle Transit at 1-800-816-7817 at least one week prior
to the rst meeting to make such arrangements.
Todas las reuniones pblicas se llevan a cabo en
las instalaciones de fcil acceso de ADA. Toda persona
que necesite ayuda especial para poder participar en una
reunin pblica, debe ponerse en contacto con Triangle Transit
al 1-800-816-7817 con al menos una semana de anticipacin
antes de la primera reunin, para hacer este tipo de pedidos.
Opinion Friday, October 31, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 10
B
y most accounts,
the Wainstein
report has indicat-
ed the Universitys com-
mitment to institutional
transparency insti-
tutional transparency,
at least, with respect to
UNCs most nationally
visible branch: its ath-
letic department.
It is now time to apply
this admirable desire to
publicly root out institu-
tional malfeasance to the
Universitys handling of
sexual assault, for which
it is much less likely to be
tried in the court of pub-
lic opinion.
UNCs new sexual
assault policy, released
earlier this semester, did
well to address what was
lacking. Moving forward,
UNC students should be
able to have somewhat
more confidence in the
system than in years
past. But all parties con-
cerned deserve the same
sort of historical, data-
based accountability
afforded to those affected
by the athletic-academic
scandal detailed in the
Wainstein report.
The University
should commission a
similar study into the
history of its handling of
Transparency for all
Level the playing eld
Established 1893, 121 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT
Willingham deserves
an apology from UNC
TO THE EDITOR:
What former North
Carolina governor Jim
Martin said was not an ath-
letic scandal IS an athletic
scandal far worse than any-
one could have imagined.
Clearly the need for these
paper classes was that UNC
admitted many athletes,
primarily football players,
were so poorly prepared
academically that they
could not possibly succeed
at UNC. This was exposed
by Mary Willingham and
confirmed by current UNC
learning specialist Bradley
Bethel in a private letter to
the Chancellor.
Willingham has been
vilified by many, including
Provost Jim Dean, who
called her research a trav-
esty. He compounded this
by enrolling outside experts
without providing them
with full information, as I
have learned from corre-
spondence with them. This
was a whitewash by the
administration. He and the
University owe Willingham
an apology and a return to
her original position.
Elliot M. Cramer
Professor Emeritus
Psychology
Research universities
should be questioned
TO THE EDITOR:
Much of the outrage fol-
lowing the Wainstein report
has been directed at athlet-
ics, but such limited outrage
misses a key issue. The paper
class scandal should be
prompting students, alumni
and other taxpayers to ask
what our public research
universities are doing to
monitor teaching quality and
student learning.
The paper classes were
able to persist because, as
is the case at most research
universities, the university
lacks a robust mechanism
by which to monitor teach-
ing quality and student
learning. Education experts
at the K-12 levels have long
known that effective teach-
er evaluations must include
regular class observations.
Had such observations
been in place at UNC, the
paper class scheme would
have been significantly con-
strained, if not altogether
prevented.
If the reforms that hap-
pen at UNC and universi-
ties across the country are
primarily limited to athletics
reforms, we will have missed
a critical opportunity to
improve American higher
education. The paper class
scandal demonstrates that
protecting academic integ-
rity requires not only balanc-
ing academics and athletics,
but also monitoring teaching
quality and student learning.
With the extraordinary lead-
ers we now have at UNC, I
am confident we will become
leaders in both regards.
Bradley Bethel
Academic Support
Program for
Student-Athletes
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
The culture of unquestioned love for
Carolina Blue basketball provided fertile
ground for this corruption.
keihin, on UNCs academic-athletic scandal
Theres a lot of power in what has been
presented, as well as what remains
invisible.
Andrew Powell, speaking at a student panel on the Wainstein report
EDITORIAL CARTOON By Ngozika Nwoko, Chapman and Hilligan, nwoko@live.unc.edu
Hold
power
up to
the light
W
hen we first broke
the news of nine
people who will face
disciplinary action from the
University for their involve-
ment in the fake paper class
scheme, my first thought
wasnt, Lets get this story up.
And those who know me
know thats weird. Instead
of thinking about The Daily
Tar Heel being first and being
right both things that I love
my first thought was a jour-
nalism commandment:
Afflict the comfortable.
Comfort the afflicted.
The employees facing
disciplinary action are just
a list of mid-level employees
people who were obviously
complicit in the scandal but
didnt truly have the power to
be ringleaders.
Somehow, the University
seems comfortable with the
knowledge that a couple of
athletic counselors, a secretary
and professors had the ability
to perpetuate massive academ-
ic fraud more comfortable
than it would feel acknowledg-
ing the reality that mixing a
top research university with
a Division I athletics depart-
ment is not always a good
idea. Perhaps thats why the
University hasnt done that yet.
Students from the Black
Student Movement and The
Real Silent Sam Coalition
stood on the steps of South
Building Wednesday and
admonished the University
for placing the blame for the
scandal squarely on the shoul-
ders of the Department of
African, African American and
Diaspora Studies. This, they
said, was a continuation of an
age-old tradition of denying
legitimacy to people of color
and their history at predomi-
nantly white institutions like
UNC.
Students were right to feel
outrage. Professors from the
Progressive Faculty Network
were right to bark back at the
University and media outlets.
In a way, that protest was able
to do something this newspa-
per and many others havent
done enough of lately.
It comforted the afflicted.
In reality, this could have
happened to any department.
Any secretary could have been
coerced by the power and
influence of college athletics.
And while Deborah Crowder
and Julius Nyangoro should
have to pay for their misdeeds,
they arent the reason this
scandal happened.
And blaming newspapers
for covering academic miscon-
duct only lets the University
off the hook.
Basketball coach Roy
Williams might not have
known everything about paper
classes of which his players
enrolled in about 167 but he
knew enough to pull his play-
ers out of the classes when it
started to look suspicious.
Womens soccer Coach Anson
Dorrance used faux classes as a
recruiting tool for players who
didnt want to come to a uni-
versity where they couldnt also
play for a national team.
These men didnt have the
threat of criminal charges
hanging over them to compel
them to talk. Therefore, can
their accounts in the Wainstein
report really be trusted?
Its the coaches and senior
level administrators who truly
deserve closer examination.
Lets afflict the comfortable.
MISADVENTURES
Corey Buhay reflects on the
beauty of the fall outdoors.
N
E
X
T
EDITORIAL
sexual assault cases. A
Campus Climate study
about LGBTQ life was
released in 2011, and the
University is in conversa-
tions about another on
sexual assault. Despite
our cautious faith in the
reforms offered under the
new policy, something
beyond a climate survey
is necessary to ensure jus-
tice is extended to those
who might have been
denied it in the past.
The implied expecta-
tion of this study would
not necessarily be that it
uncover similarly stark
cases of institutional
corruption. Its mandate
would instead be to pro-
vide a definitive look
at the effects of sexual
assault policy over time
and prevailing campus
attitudes.
The University should
look to the example of the
Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, which
recently released a study
of students experience
with sexual assault and
the conventional wisdom
surrounding it.
Much of the debate at
UNC surrounding these
issues stems from a lack of
local, reliable and concrete
data concerning the preva-
lence of sexual assault. An
exhaustive study furnish-
ing these details would
clear the way for more con-
structive discussions about
the future of sexual assault
policy and campus culture.
Of course, the thor-
oughness exemplified
by the Wainstein report
doesnt come cheap. In
these times of want, it
would be difficult not to
acknowledge the finan-
cial burden that would
accompany another inves-
tigation of its scope.
But the choice to set
aside those funds would
be a true indicator of the
Universitys willingness
to address impropriety
wherever it might occur,
irrespective of public pres-
sure to do so. The crisis of
sexual assault, we believe,
deserves at least the same
resources afforded to
Wainstein report.
We acknowledge the
limitations of conduct-
ing a study of crimes
committed around, but
not by, UNCs institu-
tions. Although evalua-
tions of the Universitys
handling of those crimes
should not be softened,
Wainstein and his team
had the advantage of
class records and other
University resources in
their investigation of aca-
demic misconduct.
But UNC should be
obligated to provide an
educational environment
that is both rigorous and
safe. A frank assessment of
its success, in this regard,
would be significant.
Other areas deserve
Wainstein-level
scrutiny, too.
A
s universi-
ties around the
country evalu-
ate the efficacy of their
admissions programs,
the University of North
Carolina system has
taken a measured step
away from some of the
flaws of standardized
testing. By reducing its
emphasis on applicants
SAT scores in admissions
to several UNC-system
schools, the Board of
Governors is proving its
literacy in the compli-
cated world of college
admissions and taking
a needed move toward
more equitable tools for
academic evaluation.
In 2011, the Board of
Governors made the mini-
mum SAT score required
for admission 800 out of
1600. The new policy helps
students who have high
GPAs in high school but
who dont quite reach that
threshold. Beginning in
2015, the policy will accom-
modate 100 students at
each of the three schools
where it is being tested.
Nearly 1,000 schools
around the country have
scaled back their reli-
ance on standardized test
scores as significant cri-
teria in their admissions
process. This is because
standardized tests tend
to disadvantage low-
income applicants.
College Board, the
college admissions con-
glomerate responsible
for the SAT, is officially
a nonprofit corpora-
tion, but it places an
eyebrow-raising amount
of emphasis on generat-
ing revenue that appears
to have little to do with
promoting education.
The high costs asso-
ciated with the SATs
themselves and the many
kinds of test preparation
courses and textbooks
available through College
Board favor high-income
students. Low-income
students, who tend to
come from weaker high
school and primary educa-
tion systems, cant always
afford the kind of test
preparation needed to
make high scores.
In order to overcome
exclusionary biases in
admissions, another pos-
sibility for college admis-
sions officers would be
to index applicants SAT
scores as predicted by
household income and
compare that data with
students actual test
results.
This would give admis-
sions boards a fuller pic-
ture of students accom-
plishments. Such a policy
would allow admissions
boards to view students
achievements without the
distortion of a test that
unfairly favors the eco-
nomically privileged.
The direct correlation
between high SAT scores
and high-income appli-
cants is clear, and the
Board of Governors has
made a good decision to
dabble in devaluing SAT
scores. Should this test go
well, the policy should be
more widely adopted to
include the systems larg-
er universities, includ-
ing UNC-CH and North
Carolina State University.
EDITORIAL
Jenny Surane
Editors Notes
Senior business journalism major
from Cornelius.
Email: editor@dailytarheel.com
SPEAK OUT
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Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill,
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Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com
Kvetching board
kvetch:
v.1 (Yiddish) to complain
OK, lemme get this
straight, the repeated ex-
ploitation of black bodies
to fill the pockets of white
men is the fault of whom
again?
Horrifed when I went to
The Purge: Anarchy to see
Future America thirsting
for violence and reveling in
peoples demise. The movie
was pretty scary, too.
To the guy who saw me
pick my nose in my car, its
snot what you think.
Breaking News: Looks like
Pope, McCrory and Jim
Crow are correct we
really dont need to study
AAAD, we just need to
profit from it.
If you walk around campus
without a backpack on,
Im going to assume that
youre in a paper class.
There is a special place in
hell for guys who dont
abide by urinal buffer
etiquette.
If my dad could see my
credit card bill, hed be
asking what Lindas is and
why I havent invested
stock in them yet.
Casually singing Its 5
oclock somewhere as I at-
tempt to park on campus
at 4:30 p.m. without get-
ting a ticket.
Senior year spending
an entire years salary
ordering transcripts and
sending test scores before
I even have a job yet.
Suggestion for a mandato-
ry freshman seminar: How
to tell people where youre
sitting in Lenoir.
NBA season started, and
Im just waiting for Lebron
to retire and play baseball
so that Space Jam 2 will
come out.
I took the GRE on Tuesday
and did well. I guess you
could say I did GRE-A-T.
To my laptop: I still have
to work when I dont
have any energy left, so
you need to get your shit
together.
Shout out to Jan Boxill:
Teaching us that ethics are
not black and white, but
rather qualified based on
loyalty.
You know youre in college
when your bed sheets
have peanut butter and
jelly stains in them.
To my fellow driver who
decided to make a dead
stop in the middle lane of
I-40 because you missed
the Fayetteville Road exit:
Your death wish is not
mine; please dont!
This just in: The average
person will spend 4.2 years
of their life untangling
headphones.
1989 the number of
cheapskates who have
asked to rip my copy of T.
Swifts new album.
For the UNC Red Carpet in
Miami: Caleb, WHO are you
wearing this weekend?
Send your one-to-two
sentence entries to
opinion@dailytarheel.com,
subject line kvetch.
Biased metrics for
college admissions
should be avoided.
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS
JENNY SURANE EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
HENRY GARGAN OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
SAM SCHAEFER ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR
EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily rep-
resent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the
opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises five board
members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.
BAILEY BARGER
BRIAN VAUGHN
PETER VOGEL
KIM HOANG
KERNWILLIAMS
COLIN KANTOR

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