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dailytarheel.com

Volume 124, Issue 31

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Jackson likely to declare for NBA draft


He has not hired an
agent and could still
return to UNC.
By Pat James
Sports Editor

A day after Roy Williams

said he anticipated some of


his players to declare for the
NBA draft, Justin Jackson
might have decided to test his
stock.
ESPN basketball insider
Jeff Goodman reported on
Wednesday that the sophomore wing is expected to
declare for the NBA draft but

will not hire an agent.


In January, the NCAA
changed its rules to allow
underclassmen to evaluate
their NBA draft status while
also maintaining eligibility.
A season ago, players who
declared for the draft had
until April 16 to withdraw
their names from the draft

list. Now, under the new


rules, players have until 10
days after the NBA draft combine to do so.
This year, that date is May
25. The NBA draft combine
starts in Chicago on May 11
and ends on May 15.
I think that some of our
guys will try to go to the

Doing the work with them

(draft) combine, will declare


and not hire an agent, and
see how they play in the
combine, said Williams on
Tuesday.
And I have no problem
with that. If I were the father
of some of our players, Id get
them to do the same thing.
As a sophomore, Jackson

Honor Court
penalties for
DWI vary
The court does not
consider past cases in
its sanction rulings.
By Bradley Saacks
Director of Enterprise

DTH/EMMA TOBIN
North Carolina wrestling coach Coleman Scott critiques team members wrestling technique from afar at practice Tuesday.

Coleman Scott leads his wrestlers by example


By Mohammed Hedadji
Senior Writer

Coleman Scott tries to lead a simple,


boring life.
Most days, he drops his daughter off
at day care in the morning, and he picks
her up in the afternoon.
While his daughter is at school, Scott
heads to work, where he just finished
coaching his wrestling team to a No. 15
end-of-season ranking in his first year.
The UNC wrestling coach is the youngest in program history and the youngest
of any top-25 program in the nation.
With his first recruiting class arriving at UNC next year, Scott juggles
practicing with his players and scouting
young wrestlers on a daily basis.
If hes not at work, Scott is exercising.
He works out daily and keeps a strict diet
and training routine. He is also a player,
wrestling nationally and internationally.
Scott has won a national title at the
collegiate level and won an Olympic
bronze medal in 2012, and he works
every day to make sure he doesnt stop
there.
Simple enough, right?
Despite his efforts, Scotts life fails
to be the simple, boring one he works
toward but not for a lack of effort.
Between wrestling and competing
and my family and everything else, it can
get pretty hectic, he said. But I really

try to keep that boring routine. It just


seems like Im more successful that way.
But in everything from scouting
seniors to shooting single legs, Scott
does things a bit differently.

The young gun


Scott doesnt have a signature coaching stance. Its more of a signature squat.
In a near-perfect catchers stance,
Scott squats down to get on the same
level as his wrestler. His hands form a
cup around his mouth, constantly projecting instructions for his players.
Scotts players can feel his poise, even
when theyre in the heat of battle.
Coach Scott definitely calms me during my matches, said redshirt junior
Joey Ward. When he gives you that
look, you know its time for business.
Despite his calm, mature demeanor,
Scotts pose gives him away. With a signature squat like that, theres no hiding
his youth.
For a 29-year-old in his first year
as a head coach, Scott is the new kid
to Division I coaching, and he has
received some criticism for it.
People dog on us all the time about
it, Scott said. But that helps us more
than anything because were willing to
change, and were willing to keep our
minds open.
Despite his youth, Scott mentored two

ACC champions and helped send seven


Tar Heels to the NCAA Championships.
What we lack in experience as a
staff, we make up for in effort, he said.
We make up for it on the mat with
those guys.

Not too old to thump you


Except for the few hours every week
that he has to dress up and holler
instructions from the sideline in his
super squat, of course Scott probably
wont tell you what to do.
Hell show you.
Wrestling is a feel sport, Scott said.
I cant just stand there and tell a guy
how to do something.
Scott is one of the few coaches in the
nation who joins his players on the mat.
He cant just stand and watch.
Playing for Scott doesnt just mean
learning from a national champion and
Olympic medalist, but actually wrestling against one.
A leader is someone who does the
work with them, he said. We strap our
shoes on, and we scrap with them.
Scotts coaching staff views wrestling
with its players as an advantage. Being
young has its perks, after all.
And if one of his wrestlers isnt
engaged, Scott uses the wrestling mat

SEE COLEMAN SCOTT, PAGE 5

finished fourth on the Tar


Heels in scoring with 12.2
points per game.
He also averaged 3.9
rebounds per contest, shot
29.2 percent on 3-pointers
and shot 66.7 percent from
the free throw line.
@patjames24
sports@dailytarheel.com

Two UNC students can be


arrested for the same crime, go
through the same Honor Court
proceedings and receive completely different punishments.
Since 2011, Chapel Hill
Police, Carrboro Police and
UNC Department of Public
Safety have arrested dozens of
students every year for driving while impaired.
Even though a DWI is a
non-academic crime, students
who are caught by one of the
three local law enforcement
agencies should appear before
the Universitys Honor Court,
according to the Honor Code
and Honor Court officials.
And because of the way the
Honor Courts sanctions are
structured, students arrested
and charged with DWI can
receive punishments that run

from a semester of probation


to community service to a
semesterlong suspension.
Shafali Jalota, Honor Court
chairperson, said the court
strives to give out the most
equitable punishment instead
of what would be the most
equal punishment.
I would contend that if
you give everyone the same
sanction that it ultimately
results in a different outcome
of sanction, said Jalota,
who identified financial aid
recipients and international
students as two groups that
would be punished more by
cookie-cutter sanctions.

No precedent
Jalota said the court does
not take precedent into
account when deciding on a
sanction, instead ruling on a
case-by-case basis.
We are not required, and
it is not in our scope, to consider what the outcomes of
previous cases were, she said.

SEE HONOR COURT, PAGE 5

HB2 doesnt help


McCrorys re-election
Despite executive
order, damage might
already be done.
By Haley McDougal
Staff Writer

When N.C. Gov. Pat


McCrory issued an executive
action Tuesday, he included
sexual orientation and gender
identity in the states nondiscrimination policy.
But for some, the action
was too little, too late.
David McLennan, a political
science professor at Meredith
College, said in an email the
governors unexpected action
was an attempt to mitigate the

SEE MCCRORY, PAGE 5

STORY SO FAR
February 2016: The
Charlotte City Council passes nondiscrimination ordinance, including a provision
on the bathroom issue,
known as House Bill 2.
March 23: The legislature
meets in special session
to pass House Bill 2, which
McCrory signs into law.
March 28: Several civil
rights groups file a lawsuit
in response to the law.
April 12: McCrory signs
executive action, backtracking his former support of the controversial
law.

Two Nobel Prize medals take up residence in Davis Library


Carol Folt said shes
glad students will see
the medals.
By Cailyn Derickson
Staff Writer

On Wednesday, the first


floor of Davis Library was
filled with students, but
instead of having their eyes
glued to laptop screens or
textbooks, the students gazed
at the Nobel Prize medals
of Aziz Sancar and Oliver
Smithies.
The medals of UNCs two
Nobel laureates will be on
display in Davis Library for
one year as a part of the Be
Inspired: Carolinas Nobel
Laureates exhibit.
When I learned that
the University wanted to
display Dr. Sancar and Dr.

Smithies Nobel laureates


in a place where people,
especially students, would
be able to view them and be
inspired by them, I knew
right away there could be no
more perfect place than the
Davis Library, University
Librarian Sarah Michalak
said.
Smithies, UNCs first Nobel
laureate, won the Nobel Prize
in physiology or medicine in
2007 for his work involving
genetically modified mice.
Ive never done a days
work in my life, Smithies
said.
What I do is what I want
to do and what I enjoy doing
and so when I come here, I
am coming to play in a sense.
To do the things that are
exciting to me.
Smithies said students
need to find their passion and
choose a job they enjoy, just

like he did.
Although Im rather
ancient, I still find the dayto-day work or day-to-day
play enjoyable, he said.
So the message I want to
convey to all you students
is dont do something that
is work for the rest for your
lives. Find something that
you enjoy so much that you
can say, as I said, Ive never
done a days work.
Sancar earned the 2015
Nobel Prize in chemistry for
his work with DNA repair.
As opposed to Dr.
Smithies, Im not good in the
lab. Im not good with my
hands, so most of the work
that earned us the Nobel
Prize was done by my students and postdocs, and I
am very grateful to them all,
Sancar said.
It has taken UNC and the
whole community of Chapel

Hill to get me to where I am,


and I am forever grateful for
that.
Sophomore Gabby
Whiten said she attended
the event because she saw
Sancar recognized at a UNC
volleyball game and wanted
to celebrate his accomplishments again.
They brought him along
with the team, and they had
him sit with the team and do
the huddle ups with them,
and they brought him out on
the court, and the entire time
he was just smiling from ear
to ear. It was the cutest little
thing, she said.
Chancellor Carol Folt
attended the ceremony and
said her favorite part was
seeing so many students
crammed in the librarys first
floor to celebrate the accomplishments of the two men.
Its really exciting to me,

DTH/JULIA KLEIN
Oliver Smithies, Nobel Prize winner and UNC professor, spoke at
a ceremony honoring his and Aziz Sancars achievements.

in part, because Im a scientist


so I admire what they do so
much, but the very best was
looking around that room
and seeing so many students
here and knowing both of

Ive got a blank space, baby, and Ill write your name.
TAYLOR SWIFT

them wanted (the medals)


right where undergraduates
would see it, so thats kind of
perfect, she said.
university@dailytarheel.com

News

Thursday, April 14, 2016

The Daily Tar Heel

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The best of
online
How to get through watching Game of Thrones
By Sarah McCulla
Staff Writer

Heel-o, Friends. Because


college basketball is over and
one of the biggest shows on
television, Game of Thrones,
returns in two weeks, Ive
decided to give a quick review
and get excited about the new
season. This will be split up
into portions for:
1. Everyone who has a
vague interest/maybe thinking about starting to watch
it and/or has seen bits and
pieces and havent seen all
five previous seasons.
AND 2. Those who have
seen all five previous seasons
and are gearing up for the
newest season/those who
dont care about spoilers at all.
The road ahead will be
well-marked, but please keep
all hands, arms and feet inside
the emotional roller coaster at

all times. Thank you.


First: Game of Thrones
Starter Pack
Tissues to lament all of
your favorite characters and a
blanket to hide your sadness/
anger from the world.
Based on the books by
George R.R. Martin
Time commitment: High.
Each episode is roughly an
hour, and I mean the entirety
of 60 minutes, not 43. With
10 episodes per season, its
roughly a 50-hour commitment. I strongly recommend
not watching all 50 hours in
one sitting. You need food and
water and human interaction.
Is it inappropriate? Yes.
Not a show I would recommend for the faint of heart or
the extremely sheltered.

READ THE REST:


Go to www.dailytarheel.com/blog/
medium

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VIDEO EDITOR

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COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY

The First 90 Days on the Job:


University Career Services will
host this workshop for students
to learn the best approaches for
making good impressions in the
first few months of a new job.
Participants will learn to position
themselves for promotions and
develop their professional ca-

reers. This event is free and open


to the public.
Time: 4 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Location: Hanes Hall 239
2016 Douglass Hunt Lecture
Difference without Domination: This years Douglass Hunt
Lecture, Difference without
Domination: Reconciling Free

Speech and Social Equality on


College Campuses, will explore
the climate of free expression at
universities and how that relates
to discussion of safe spaces. This
event is free and open to the
public.
Time: 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Location: Sonja Haynes Stone
Center

CORRECTIONS
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections
printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Mary Tyler March at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.

Like: facebook.com/dailytarheel

Follow: @dailytarheel on Twitter

Follow: dailytarheel on Instagram

Push Up Poker: Campus


Recreation and Alpha Phi Alpha
fraternity will host a special push
up poker tournament to honor
the late Stuart Scott. The tournament will take place in the Great
Hall.
Time: 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Location: Student Union
One Person, One Vote:
Universal Suffrage, Voting
Rights and the Constitution:
The Whats the Big Idea? series from the Friday Center will
take on the legal and cultural
factors of suffrage and the U.S.
Constitution.
Time: 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Location: Friday Center

FRIDAY

National High School Ethics


Bowl: This will be the largest
National High School Ethics
Bowl to date with 2,680 students
participating. Teams will debate
various topics and be judged on
their performances over a twoday conference.
Time: 10 a.m.
Location: Student Union
To make a calendar submission,
email calendar@dailytarheel.com.
Please include the date of the
event in the subject line, and
attach a photo if you wish. Events
will be published in the newspaper
on either the day or the day before
they take place.

POLICE LOG
Someone was publicly
intoxicated on the 500 block
of Jones Ferry Road at 8
p.m. Tuesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
Someone reported trespassing at 1500 Fordham Blvd.
at 9:39 a.m. Tuesday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone committed

automobile theft at 310 W.


Franklin St. at 1:17 p.m.
Tuesday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
Someone shoplifted at
Lowes Home Improvement
at 1801 Fordham Blvd.
around 3:50 p.m. Tuesday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person stole $299

worth of hand tools and


power tools.

Tuesday, according to Chapel


Hill police reports.

Someone communicated
threats on the 5600 block of
Old Chapel Hill Road at 7:39
p.m. Tuesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.

Someone committed indecent exposure at 9


Adelaide Walters St. at 8:06
p.m. Tuesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.

Someone forged prescriptions at CVS at 137 E.


Franklin St. at 5:26 p.m.

Someone drove with


a revoked license at the
intersection of Fordham

Boulevard and Carmichael


Street at 10:27 p.m. Tuesday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
Someone committed
larceny at the intersection of
West Rosemary Street and
Sunset Drive at 3:26 a.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole two street

signs each valued at $150.


Someone reported damage to property on the 100
block of Hargraves Street at
8:27 a.m. Tuesday, according
to Carrboro police reports.
The person reported that
someone ran them off the road
and damaged their cars front
passenger wheel, causing $100
worth of damage, reports state.

Librarians make students shelf-sufficient


By Elizabeth Baker
Staff Writer

They had different reasons


for wanting to be librarians.
For Angela Bardeen,
whos always loved libraries,
it didnt occur to her until a
couple years after graduating
college that librarianship was
a profession she could pursue.
I worked as a counselor at a
domestic violence agency and
an educator for a few years,
and I did Teach for America
and taught in New Mexico, she
said. I really enjoyed teaching,
but I realized that maybe working with a different audience
would be interesting to me.
For Suchi Mohanty, it was a
work study that introduced her
to libraries and pushed her on
a path toward her current position as head of UNCs undergraduate library.
But no matter the reason
or the road that led them to
libraries both share the same
passion about their careers.
Bardeen, behavioral and
social sciences librarian, said
the experiences she had working with students and faculty
as a research assistant in the
undergraduate library as a
graduate student were what
initially excited her about being
an academic librarian.
Theyre just always following these new ideas and often
helping people with research.
Im getting to learn about
things I might normally think
about, she said.
Bardeen, who consults
student looking for help with
research and also helps build
the librarys collection related
to her fields, also said she
loves the energy of being a
librarian in an educational

DTH/CHICHI ZHU
Angela Bardeen, UNC research instructional services librarian, reads a book at Davis Library Wednesday.

institution.
We just had two Nobel
laureates in Davis Library
today talking to the students a
little bit about their research,
so thats the kind of thing you
dont get all the time that you
do get at an academic institution if youre lucky, she said.
Mohanty said before her
work study, she wanted to be
a teacher. But after taking a
few education courses, she
realized teaching wasnt the
perfect fit for her.
I loved the work that I saw
my supervisors doing in the
library, and I realized that is a
form of teaching, she said.

Mohanty said the library is a


special place and a crossroad.
Its a place where students
and faculty can come together
to consume the information
they need and be successful
scholars, but its a place where
they can produce the information as well, she said.
Mohanty said the most fulfilling part of her job is feeling
that she plays an a part in students academic careers.
The work I do helps students be successful academically, and once they get out in
their profession, whatever their
profession is, she said. To me,
thats really important.

First-year Graham Tinsley,


whose class toured the library,
said the librarians were helpful.
They were really friendly,
and they were really engaging
when you came in, she said.
This week is National
Library Week something
Bardeen said she usually celebrates with colleagues.
She said the librarians
havent celebrated yet.
We have a barbecue every
year thats going to happen in
May. We try to find opportunities to celebrate ourselves
and celebrate each other.
arts@dailytarheel.com

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Making a statement

SC to
vote on
its own
version
of HB2
The proposed bill is
facing backlash from
politicians, activists.
By Sam Killenberg
Staff Writer

DTH/ALEX KORMANN
Outfielder Tyler Ramirez (14) rounds third base during No. 13 UNC baseball teams 15-0 rout of No. 7 South Carolina at BB&T Ballpark in Charlotte on Wednesday.

UNC thumps South Carolina in Charlotte on Wednesday


BASEBALL

NORTH CAROLINA
SOUTH CAROLINA

15
0

By Jeremy Vernon
Assistant Sports Editor

CHARLOTTE The North Carolina


baseball team opened the season with
back-to-back series wins against top-20
opponents, taking two of three games
against then-No. 9 UCLA and sweeping
No. 16 Oklahoma State.
That stretch seemed like a distant
memory for the No. 13 Tar Heels heading into Wednesdays game against
No. 7 South Carolina.
UNC started the season with an
18-2 mark the third-best 20-game
start under Coach Mike Fox but had
since gone 5-7.

So as North Carolina dismantled


the Gamecocks in BB&T Ballpark in
Charlotte en route to a 15-0 win, it
was a welcome turn of events for a
team trending downward.
Everything was just clicking on
all cylinders today said sophomore pitcher Hunter Williams, who
threw 6 1/3 shutout innings against
the Gamecocks. I think we can
definitely take this and carry it over,
and I cant wait to see what happens
this weekend (against Virginia).
The Tar Heels (24-9) made a
habit of putting up big numbers
in the scoring column for the first
month of the season but have seen
their offensive output dwindle in
the past few weeks.
But success can change everything. Once North Carolina broke
through for its first hit of the game
in the top of the fourth inning,

everyone else hopped on board.


The Tar Heels scored in bunches
Wednesday night, putting up three
or more runs in four different
innings. Eleven of UNCs 15 runs
came via two-out rallies.
Thats a lot of what hitting is
Fox said. Its predicated on who they
run out there as well as us. We just,
we had everything going tonight.
Though it means nothing in
terms of conference standings, the
victory over South Carolina might
give the Tar Heels momentum as
they head into the meat of their
ACC schedule.
Three of UNCs final five conference opponents on the season are
ranked in the top-25, including No.
8 Louisville and No. 14 N.C. State.
In 2015, UNC lost its last six ACC
regular season games, limped into the
conference tournament and failed to

make the NCAA Tournament for the


first time since 2001.
This season the Tar Heels are
looking to avoid a similar stretch,
and a dominant win over the firstplace team in the SEC could be a
catalyst for a deep postseason run.
Its nice to come out here and not
just win, but make a statement, especially after the couple of weeks we
had, said outfielder Tyler Ramirez.
This is just one of the games we
needed to get those big two-out
hits, those big hits with runners on
base and we just got that tonight
All teams are gonna hit that bump
in the season where its like, things
arent gonna go your way, and youre
not gonna hit as great. So its nice just
to get out there and keep going at it
and keep getting better as a team.
@jbo_vernon
sports@dailytarheel.com

UNC House Bill 2 enforcement is unclear


UNC is continuing to add
gender-neutral single-stall
bathrooms on campus.
By Belle Hillenburg
Staff Writer

University officials are refusing to


speculate on how UNC will enforce
House Bill 2s requirement that
people use the bathroom that corresponds to their biological sex.
On Friday, top administrators
including Chancellor Carol Folt sent
a campuswide email saying UNC will
uphold its policies. In the email, they
said they have been asked how the
University will enforce the bathroom provisions of the law.
All that Carolina has worked hard
to establish over the decades policies

including protections for sexual orientation and gender identity and fostering a culture of acceptance, respect for
one another and human dignity above
all else remain a fundamental cornerstone of what our University aspires
to be, the email said.
Terri Phoenix, director of the UNC
LGBTQ Center, said there is no process for handling complaints related to
students using a particular bathroom.
My understanding is that there
is no procedure for enforcement,
either in the bill or at the level of the
University, Phoenix said.
The University is upholding its
non-discrimination policy, according
to Fridays email.
The Universitys policy on non-discrimination says UNC is committed to
providing a welcoming environment
regardless of a persons gender, gender
expression, gender identity, genetic

information and other factors.


Hilary Delbridge, spokesperson
for the Equal Opportunity and
Compliance Office, said the office
oversees the Universitys non-discrimination policy.
House Bill 2 will not impact
University policy on prohibited discrimination, harassment and related
misconduct, she said.
If any member of our campus
community feels they have experienced discrimination or harassment
based on any protected status thats
stated in our policy, we encourage
them to contact our office, and if they
feel unsafe, they should call 911.
Randy Young, spokesperson for
the Department of Public Safety, said
the DPS is working with administrators to make campus a welcoming
environment.
I think the important thing is that

the University has been charged to do


its best to comply with all of the laws
in the state of North Carolina, the
laws that govern us, but at the same
time take critical steps to try and find
discomfort and any distress within our
University community, Young said.
According to the email, the
University is continuing to add gender-neutral single-stall bathrooms.
There are currently 57 gender-nonspecific bathrooms.
Young said the email spoke to the
Universitys commitment to providing an environment of inclusiveness.
As these things are stated, one of
the priorities here is to make sure
that were understood to be as welcoming and inclusive to all populations and the entire University community, Young said.
university@dailytarheel.com

Trans woman of color talks race, prison and survival


CeCe McDonald spoke in
Chapman Hall to share her
unique perspective.
By Emily Perry
Staff Writer

CeCe McDonald is a trans woman


of color, and in 2011, she was
aggressively pursued by a neo-Nazi,
transphobic man. After defending
herself and killing another attacker,
McDonald was sentenced to 41
months in prison .
Wednesday night, she spoke to
a crowd of nearly 200 in Chapman
Hall about the intersections of race,
gender and the prison industrial
complex. The event was sponsored
by UNControllables, an anarchist
student group committed to dismantling systems of oppression.
Senior Madeleine Scanlon, a
member of UNControllables, said the
group thought McDonald would be
able to provide a valuable perspective
on issues of white supremacy, gender
liberation and prisons in particular.
We thought that this would be a
really great way to talk about things
that are happening here and now,
Scanlon said.
The group drew attention to the
possible construction of a new jail in

Orange County.
McDonald said she became an
activist during her time in prison.
Since then, she has been outspoken
about her experiences and the way
the current penal system affects marginalized trans people of color.
Shes kind of a folk hero of our
time on the level of someone like
Cesar Chavez or Gloria Anzaldua or
Huey Newton, Scanlon said.
McDonald realized early on that
no part of her identity would work
in her favor. As a homeless trans
woman of color and a victim of rape
and abuse, the cards were already
stacked against her.
I was really scared at that
moment because I thought if these
people dont kill me, these cops are
going to kill me, she said.
The more she read about the
prison system in the United States,
the more she was convinced it was
devised to suppress already marginalized individuals like herself.
These systems are made for us to
fail, she said.
As a transgender woman,
McDonald was forced to comply with
a binary prison system in which she
was imprisoned with men.
I got there, and its like misogyny
hell. Its like misogyny and bigotry
times a million, she said.
In prison, McDonald began to

DTH/CHICHI ZHU
Activist CeCe McDonald (left) spoke about her work in prison abolition activism
as well as her own experiences as a black transgender woman in prison with
UNControllables members Mitch Xia and Suad Jabr (right) on Wednesday.

speak out about her experience, writing blogs to try to educate people.
But her actions were not wellreceived.
Radical work is considered very
bad in those types of spaces, she said.
Now that shes out, she spends as
much of her time as she can educating people on the flaws of the prison
system and the experience of trans
people of color. She has aligned with
Laverne Cox, who stars in the Netflix

series Orange is the New Black.


Still, she has hope that education
and increased awareness are hope for
change.
Senior Ashley Creese was one of the
students and community members
who came to hear McDonald speak.
I thought it was really, really
enlightening, she said. She brought
up issues that I didnt know existed.
@ecperry17
as@dailytarheel.com

A bathroom bill modeled after North Carolinas


House Bill 2 faced scrutiny
in the South Carolina Senate
Wednesday.
The bill, proposed last
week by S.C. Sen. Lee Bright,
R-Greenville, would limit access
to multiple-occupancy bathrooms in the state to people of
the same biological sex.
Bright said the bill is a common-sense measure.
Men and women sharing
bathrooms in public places is
just beyond me, Bright said on
the Senate floor.
But opponents of the bill
allege it is specifically designed
to discriminate against individuals who do not identify with
their biological sex.
This bill does nothing but
single out the transgender community and create discrimination, said Shaundra Scott,
executive director of the ACLU
of South Carolina.
Scott was one of many critics
who voiced displeasure yesterday
during Senate committee hearings for the bill, saying it particularly targets transgender youth.
Bright defended the bill, calling it the same as the bill that
was signed by N.C. Gov. Pat
McCrory in late March.
I want to stand with North
Carolina; I think you should as
well, Bright said in his introduction of the bill on the Senate
floor. With our neighbors to
the North who are showing
some common decency and
some common sense.
Conservatives in states like
South Carolina are proposing
bathroom bills because of the
N.C. General Assemblys success
with House Bill 2, Scott said.
She said the bill was pushed
through the S.C. Senate quickly
in order to avoid controversy.
Things are moving in a very
quick fashion and very not
by the books, she said. Very
quickly, very under the radar
like while everyone was asleep.
And we woke up, and this bill
was on the books.
But after businesses halted
expansion plans in North
Carolina as a consequence of
House Bill 2, many politicians
from both parties are wary
South Carolinas bathroom bill
could have similar results.
Most notably, PayPal withdrew its plans for a global
operations center in Charlotte
that would have employed more
than 400 people.
Theyre getting so much
grief up there, Bright said in
the Senate address. Apparently
PayPal has shown its support
for pedophiles by wanting to go
into bathrooms.
Among the critics of the bill
is Republican S.C. Gov. Nikki
Haley, who said she felt the bill
was unnecessary.
We are a state where we
dont have to mandate respect
and kindness, Haley said in a
press conference.
Bright, who is facing re-election in 2016, has also faced criticism for the bill from rival candidates. Republican candidate
David McCraw, a contender for
Brights Senate seat, said the bill
would hurt the state economy.
What we cant do is create
issues that will cost jobs, cost
families money and cost income
to the state, McCraw said in
Monday press conference. And
exactly what Mr. Bright is doing
is creating an issue that we
dont have.
On the Senate floor, Bright
spoke out against the companies that took their business out
of North Carolina after House
Bill 2 was signed.
He said hed had enough of
the more than 100 businesses
he accused of assaulting North
Carolina.
I just want to say to these
100 companies, Hey, the silent
majority is watching.
state@dailytarheel.com

News

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Chapel Hill supports and


defends Clean Power Plan
The plan requires a
32 percent reduction
of CO2 for all states.
By Sarah Crump
Staff Writer

Chapel Hill has joined


more than 50 municipal governments across the nation to
support the amicus brief filed
to defend the Environmental
Protection Agencys Clean
Power Plan.
The Clean Power Plan seeks
to promote clean energy practices and to combat pollution
by setting national standards
for each state to reduce its
carbon dioxide emissions by
32 percent, comparative to
2005 levels, by 2030. The
plan would give each state the
power to customize its own
plan to meet their respective
emission targets.
The North Carolina
Department of
Environmental Quality is one
of the plaintiffs in the multistate lawsuit filed against the
plan, on the grounds that its
requirements extend beyond
the EPAs authority and are
too costly to implement.
The amicus brief was
written by the Sabin Center
for Climate Change Law at
Columbia Law School and

was filed in the U.S. Court of


Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
April 1st. The brief argues
that the plan is a critical
legal step in addressing the
economic and safety threats
posed by climate change.
Oral arguments for the
case with the court of appeals
begin June 2.
Michael Burger, executive
director of the Sabin Center,
said that the hope is that the
court will look at the brief
and the story it tells about
climate change. He said that
the brief sends the message
that the Clean Power Plan has
widespread support from the
local leaders who experience
the effects of greenhouse gas
emissions firsthand.
Its a power signal when
a states politicians take one
view, while the local leaders who represent powerful
population sectors take the
opposite view, Burger said.
Chapel Hill Town Council
member Nancy Oates said
that improvements in energy
efficiency and emission
reductions are important
goals for the town council.
Weve spent so much time
and money on creating a livable city, but if we dont have a
good environment, that means
nothing, Oates said. Global
warming is a real issue and
it troubles me that were still

having to convince some of the


elected officials of this fact.
According to the
N.C. Department of
Environmental Quality, the
state is on track to meet the
mandates set by the Clean
Power Plan. The state has
reduced its carbon emissions
by 24 percent since 2008.
Stephanie Hawco, a
spokesperson for the department, said that the plan fails
to take into account the progress certain states have made.
Theyre trying to make
a Prius more efficient while
other states are driving 1972
Cadillacs, Hawco said.
Hawco said that the plan
will also increase energy prices for state residents.
Annual electricity prices
are projected to increase by
an average of 12 percent if the
plan is implemented. Hawco
said that as energy prices disproportionately hurt the poor,
the department does not want
to see state residents pay for
an act of federal overreach.
Its interesting because
a lot of people ask, well, if
youre already on track, why
do the standards matter?
Hawco said. But why do
we need this kind of federal
intervention if were already
on track?
city@dailytarheel.com

The Daily Tar Heel

Durham deportation
case stalls for appeals
By Ana Irizarry
Staff Writer

U.S. Immigration and


Customs Enforcement will
await the outcome of Wildin
David Guillen-Acostas immigration proceedings before
taking further action.
Acosta was taken into custody by ICE on Jan. 28 outside
his home in Durham. Acosta
who is now 19 years old
was on his way to Riverside
High School when ICE officers
approached and detained him.
Mr. Acosta falls within an
enforcement priority category
due to a final order of removal
issued by a federal immigration judge in March 2015,
ICE said in a statement.
ICE Director Sarah Saldaa
halted Acostas deportation
in March until an appeal
could be heard. Advocates for
Acosta, like U.S. Rep. G.K.
Butterfield, D-N.C., asked for
time for the teenager to appeal
his case. Acosta was detained
on a Friday and issued to be
deported on a Sunday giving the teenagers attorneys no
time to appeal.
I believe that U.S.
Immigration and Customs
Enforcements limited resources would be better utilized
focusing on dangerous criminals who pose a threat to our
communities rather than high
school students and teenagers

trying to make better lives for


themselves, Butterfield said in
a press release.
Acosta fled his native
Honduras when he was 17
to reside with his family. He
said that he moved because
of threats made by gangs in
Honduras. He was granted a
hearing in front of an immigration judge, but he failed
to appear in court on the
advice of his attorney.
To stay in the United States,
Charlotte immigration attorney Robert Zuniga said Acosta
must prove he needs asylum.
These individuals have to
prove that they are under persecution, and it usually has to
do with a group they are born
into, Zuniga said.
Federal law defines those
groups as race, religion,
nationality, political opinion
or membership in a particular
social group.
Zuniga said gang violence
affects too large a group in
Honduras to grant Acosta
asylum.
If you have a family member that has been killed by a
gang, and you have reason to
believe they will go after you,
Zuniga said. But it needs to be
a present threat in your life.
Butterfield and other advocates said Acostas age and
student status should be considered during his appeals.
Under the law, an 18 year-

old is an adult, and they are


tried like one. But I remember
being 18, and I went to college, and there are people that
at 19, they still live with their
parents, and they havent had
the social experiences that
mature them enough to be an
adult, Zuniga said.
Ron Woodard, director of
N.C. Listen, a nonprofit organization interested in immigration, said Acosta should be
deported for breaking the law
regardless of his age.
Its unfortunate when any
of us feel unsafe, but you cant
just go and cross somebodys
border, he said. Why not go
to Costa Rica, for example?
Thats a whole lot closer than
the United States if youre just
worried about violence.
But UNC geography professor Altha Cravey said there
are no safe alternatives in
Central America.
In the United States, we
helped create a lot of the violence happening in Central
America back in the 80s,
she said.
According to Cravey, U.S.
foreign policy has done little
to implement democratic
policies in Central America.
Its a moral contradiction,
and we have a moral obligation to help these people,
Cravey said.
state@dailytarheel.com

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Child Care Wanted


SUNDAY SITTER

Wanted for 9 year-old boy beginning in May.


Must have reliable and safe transportation.
Must love SPORTS, creative play and dogs.
Most Sundays 9am-5pm. Job can continue into
fall, spring semesters. Saturday flexibility a
plus. $12/hr. cabbytwo@netscape.net.
NANNY, BABYSITTER NEEDED starting July
1st, Durham family ISO part-time nanny for
15 month-old son. Hours would be 1-5/6pm
M-F. Position requires experience with toddlers. must be CPR-certified already or willing
to become and can provide excellent references. Hoping to extend into school year.
Hourly rate negotiable. Please contact Jenn,
jennifer.rasic@gmail.com or 201-247-7025.
AFTERNOON SITTER wanted for southwest
Durham family. 3:30-6:30pm, 2-3 days/wk.
Must have own car, excellent driving record
and references. nicki.hastings@yahoo.com.
UNC PSYCHIATRY PROFESSOR hiring part-

time child care provider for 3 children (ages


9, 6, 3). May, June M/W/Th afternoons. July,
August M/W/Th 8:30am-5:30pm. Opportunity to continue next year if interested.
Additional hours available. Located in West
Cary, 15 minutes south of Southpoint mall.
Safe transportation that can accommodate
multiple car seats is needed. Please email:
jenniferskirby@gmail.com.

SUMMER NANNY needed for 2 children (9 and


13), 20-40 hrs/wk depending on availability.
$18/hr. Car required. Could extend into fall if
interested. 919-685-5601.
CHILD CARE NEEDED. In search of responsible
child care provider for terrific 10 and 13 yearolds in Chapel Hill during month of AUGUST
and 2 days/wk AFTERSCHOOL during 2016-17
school year (Tu/W). Must be interactive, have
references and be a safe driver with reliable
transportation. 919-619-1098.

RECYCLE ME PLEASE!

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For Rent

FAIR HOUSING

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summer?

Walk to
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ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in


this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers
are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
205-C SUNRISE LANE. 2,000 square feet.
4BR/2BA condo close to UNC campus. $1,500/
mo. Includes utilities (power, water, natural gas). W/D provided. Available 8-1-2016,
on a year to year rental agreement. Call
336-798-3570, or text 336-491-5388.
REMODLED 3BR/2BA HOUSE with huge
deck. 15 minute walk to campus. Located
at the end of Cameron Avenue. $1,650/mo.
919-219-2891.
Now
showing and leasing properties for 2016/17
school year. Walk to campus, 1BR-6BR
available. Contact via merciarentals.com or
919-933-8143.

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Help Wanted
RESPONSIBILE, WARM, RELIABLE CARETAKER
needed for Sunday mornings to work with
the babies and toddlers of Greenleaf Vineyard Church. Send resumes to angela@greenleafvineyard.com. Compensation dependent on
experience.
SUMMER CAMP STAFF NEEDED. The City of
Raleigh Parks, Recreation and Cultural Resources Department offers over 100 camps for ages
3-18. Applicants, 18+ years-old, apply at www.
raleighnc.gov/employment (search Youth
Programs Specialty Camps). Contact joseph.
voska@raleighnc.gov. for more information.
YARD WORK. Roughly 20 hours in the short
run, more hours in the longer run. $15/hr. Apply at evelyneshuber@gmail.com ; mention
relevant experience.

Lost & Found


FOUND: SILVER BRACELET with special inscription, on sidewalk between Grimes and Manly.
919-843-6671.

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Visit us at jobs.rsi-nc.org!

Summer Jobs
SUMMER CAMP INSTRUCTORS. If you are
interested in working with kids in a fun environment, Chapel Hill Gymnastics is hiring
for summer camp instructors to work in our
gymnastics camps beginning June 6. Gymnastics or fitness experience preferred, but
not required. We will train the right candidate. Send a resume and the contact information of two professional references to
chelsey@chapelhillgymnastics.com.
CHAPEL HILL PARKS & RECREATION is hiring summer camp counselors, coordinators,
inclusion counselors, lifeguards, swim instructors and swim coaches for Summer 2016.
Visit www.townofchapelhill.org for more
information.

Volunteering
HEALTY VOLUNTEER
STUDY

The US Environmental Protection Agency is


seeking volunteers ages 18-40 to participate in
a research study on the UNC Chapel Hill campus. You will complete 3 visits over 4-6 weeks.
Compensation up to $375 given for your
time and travel. For more information on the
study, contact our recruiters at 919-966-0604
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HOROSCOPES
If April 14th is Your Birthday...
Envision and plan bold adventures this year. What
to learn? Launch creative projects after 5/9, and
an educational journey after 8/13. Begin a new
two-year phase in your relationship. Breakthroughs
in work and health (after 9/1) lead to an inner shift
(after 9/16). Support each other.

Large 1-2 BR Condos


Washer/Dryers
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Best prices on UNC Campus.
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To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

Aries (March 21-April 19)


Today is a 6 Enjoy sports, hobbies
and diversions over the next few days.
Practice your moves. Hang out with
family and friends. Someone attractive
is drawing you into their orbit ... kindle
a spark.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is an 8 Team projects go
well over the next two days. Develop
your strategies to win. Creativity swirls
throughout the conversation. Write
down what gets invented. Encourage
each other.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)


Today is a 7 Domestic projects
satisfy over the next two days. Use
brains over brawn to resolve a
household problem that will only grow
more expensive with neglect. Manage
structural issues.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)


Today is an 8 Take on greater responsibility over the next two days to surpass
a hurdle or challenge. Express your feelings aloud. Let people know what you
need. Come to a new understanding.

Gemini (May 21-June 20)


Today is a 9 Speak out, and your
message goes further today and tomorrow. Stand up for whats right. Support
comes from unexpected directions.
Actions and words get a power boost.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 9 Your communications
get profitable. Theres money to be
made over the next few days. Write
marketing copy. Get involved with
promotions or social media. Make
your pitch.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 Enjoy the spotlight
over the next two days. Take advantage of the microphone and ask for
the change you want to see. Share
convincing data. Others are listening.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 7 Look back for insight
on the road ahead. Pay attention to
your dreams over the next few days.
Conclude arrangements and complete
old projects. Note new plans, goals
and deadlines.

5321 Ephesus Church


Rd,Durham, NC 27707
allgather.org

919.797.2884

EPISCOPAL CAMPUS MINISTRY


Join us for dinner & fellowship!
Tuesdays at 5:30 p.m.

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

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)


Today is an 8 Get expert assistance
with a tricky job today and tomorrow.
Long-distance support comes through.
Think of clever ways to repay the favor.
Use something youve been saving.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 Jump into a busy phase
over the next two days. Make a shrewd
move. Find what you need far away. Talk
with your networks to find solutions and
resources. Love energizes you.

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

Sundays 10:00 and 11:45


The Varsity Theatre

Sundays at 10:30am

Creekside Elementary

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)


Today is an 8 Consider an investment
in your own education. Focus on finances
for the next two days. Confer with your
team. Apply for scholarships or grants.
Work all the angles.

(c) 2016 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

Religious Directory
Presbyterian
Campus
Ministry

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)


Today is a 7 Travel conditions look
excellent today and tomorrow. Make
sure the bills are paid first, and then pack
your bags. Plan the itinerary in detail
and reserve in advance. Get out with an
interesting companion.

a new church with a


mission: to love Chapel Hill
with the Heart of Jesus

lovechapelhill.com

News

The Daily Tar Heel

MCCRORY

FROM PAGE 1

damage from House Bill 2 on


McCrorys re-election.
The governor is likely to
discover that the damage to
his campaign has already
been done, McLennan said.
He said according to poll
numbers, the law was hurting
the states ability to attract business and McCrorys reelection campaign is centered on
his work to reinvigorate the
states economy, prompting the
executive action.
Mike Meno, spokesperson for the American Civil
Liberties Union of North
Carolina, said the action
essentially does three things:
expands protections for
LGBT workers who are state
employees, affirms that private businesses can do what
they want with their nondiscrimination policies and calls
on the legislature to restore
residents private right of
action in state court.
House Bill 2 initially took
away North Carolinians
right to file a lawsuit in state
court if they were terminated
because of discrimination.
Residents could only file in the
federal court, a process that
Meno said was more expensive, harder to find attorneys
for and gives only a 180-day
window to file and now its
up to the very legislature that
passed the law to change it.
Sarah McBride, spokesperson for the Center for
American Progress, said while
protection of LGBT state
workers is a step in the right
direction, some of the most

HONOR COURT

FROM PAGE 1

One student was arrested


and charged with a DWI
by Chapel Hill police in fall
2013 his senior year. He
said he was unable to find a
job after he left UNC because
his diploma was held for a
semester, even though he had
completed his degree by the
time of the ruling.
I went to commencement,
my name was in the bulletin,
I defended my thesis but I
wasnt a graduate of UNC until
December instead of May, said
the former student, who asked
that his name not be used.
The former student was
unable to apply to graduate
schools as a senior because a
hold was put on his transcript.
He moved back home
and waited tables, unable to
apply for high-level jobs until
December because he was
still not a college graduate.
You cant have anything
done without precedent
thats not how legal systems
work, the former student said.
UNC senior Christine,
who asked that her last name
not be used, lost her appeal
Wednesday night. She said
the court ruled that all her
work this semester will no
longer count because of her
August 2015 DWI.
Christine said she felt the
court did not take into consideration the work she had
done since she was arrested.
I started going to AA, I get
on-campus treatment, I did
30 hours of out-patient treatment, she said.
Christine said she is an alcoholic and believed the work she
had put into maintaining her
sobriety would sway the court
to change its original sanction
of a suspension for this semester to probation.
I said that a suspension
was more harmful than beneficial for me, said Christine,
whose routine of going to
class and studying helped her
stay sober.
Still, the appeal panel ruled
in favor of the original sanction
Wednesday, she said. She will
now lose the 12 hours she was
enrolled in this semester and
will not be able to graduate in
August like she had planned.
I will most likely have
to graduate next spring and
reapply for financial aid and
reapply to the University and
all of that mess, she said.
Others have found the court
responsive to their situations.
Senior Israel Moleiro, who
was arrested and charged
with DWI by Chapel Hill
Police in September 2014,
said the Honor Court took
into account that he was
graduating in May and had a
job lined up after graduation.
He received a semesterlong
probation from the court.
I would have had to come
back for another semester
and would have lost my job
offer if I was suspended. I was
glad they took that into consideration, he said. He noted
that his lawyer, Matthew
Suczynski, helped.

harmful aspects of the law are


still present.
It does nothing to protect
North Carolinians who are
transgender from discrimination. It does nothing to protect
transgender UNC students
from discrimination when
they try to access bathrooms,
and really it just doubles down
on some of the worst aspects
of HB2, McBride said.
But the Rev. Mark Creech,
executive director of the
Christian Action League,
issued a statement Wednesday
that supported McCrorys
decision to maintain the
restrictions of public bathrooms to biological sex only.
The executive order
also keeps intact the right
of private businesses to live
and work according to their
peacefully expressed beliefs,
Creech said in the statement.
Still, McCrorys action has
not stalled the civil rights organizations and North Carolina
residents who filed a lawsuit
against House Bill 2 after it
was signed into law March 23.
Meno said the lawsuit
did not change as a result of
the executive action the
anti-transgender bathroom
provision still stands, and the
governors action only lessens
discrimination instead of
eliminating it entirely.
I think its a sign that the
governor is feeling a lot of
heat from this law, from the
business community, from
people in North Carolina and
from the nation who wont
tolerate this type of discrimination, he said.
state@dailytarheel.com
Despite working with the
Honor Court, Suczynski is
still critical of the courts
choice not to use precedent.
You get very disparate
punishments at the trial
level, he said.

Reaching off-campus
Suczynski, a defense attorney in Chapel Hill, said he
thought the boundaries for
Honor Court cases have been
going farther out into Chapel
Hill and Carrboro.
I see them going after
more and more off-campus
things, he said.
The Honor Code lists driving while impaired under the
Student Conduct Adversely
Affecting Members of the
University Community or the
University section. Jalota
said as more students and
staff migrate into areas like
Carrboro, the University community extends as well.
A student is still a member
of the University (away from
campus), she said.

Checking names
Student Attorney General

COLEMAN SCOTT

FROM PAGE 1

to get them back in the learning mood.


It also helps, if guys arent
responding one day, that you
have a coach that can come in
there and thump you a little
bit, said assistant coach Neil
Erisman.

A model for success


Even when he doesnt
know it, Scotts players are
watching him.
If wrestling with his players is a rare experience, being
coached by an elite wrestler
as he competes is one no
other player experiences.
I get to look at him as a
model, Ward said. I see what
he does the week before a big
competition or the morning
of a big match, and I use that
to prepare the same way.
Scotts preparation carried
him back to the U.S. Olympic
Team Trials on Sunday, where
he was the only Division I
coach competing. Wrestling
at 57 kilograms, he reached
the semifinals but fell short of
a return to the Olympics.
His 30th birthday five days
away, Scott knows the competitive chapter of his wrestling
career is nearing its close.
But Scott knows he can
still affect the careers of those
around him as a coach.
So itll be back to hitting
signature squats and joining
his players on the mat.
Itll be back to his same old
simple, boring life.
@_Brohammed
sports@dailytarheel.com
Frank Jiang said in an email
that the Office of Student
Conduct, which is not run by
students, receives police bulletins daily and runs the name
of every arrested and cited
person through the University
directory to identify students.
He said in his experience, the Honor Court has
never misidentified a student
because the arrest reports
come with other identifying
information. He also said he
does not know of any student
arrested by one of the three
law enforcement agencies for
DWI that was not brought to
the Honor Court.
Senior Briana Carter just
might be a first.
The peace, war and defense
major is graduating in May
and was arrested by Chapel
Hill Police for speeding and
driving while impaired during
the fall semester.
She said she has not heard
from the Honor Court since
her arrest.
I was surprised I didnt
hear anything ... for whatever
reason, its just never come
back to me.
@SaacksAttack
university@dailytarheel.com

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Q&A with Peter Coclanis


Peter Coclanis is a history
professor and former chairperson of the history department.
He recently published an article
in The New York Times about
Study Abroads Seven Deadly
Sins. Staff writer Blake Hoarty
spoke with Coclanis about his
article and his own experiences
going abroad.
DAILY TAR HEEL: What motivated
you to write the article?
PETER COCLANIS: I have been
involved in international
education for a long time
in a variety of ways. Ive led
study abroad programs. Ive
consulted for other universities as they design them. Ive
evaluated them. Ive been on
international, organizational
reviews where we vetted different universities for best
practices and internationalizing. So Ive had quite a bit
of experience in study abroad
and international education
in general.
Im a parent, and both of
my kids went on study abroad
programs So I thought that
some of my experience, you
know, led me to maybe lay
out some of the possible pitfalls that could pose threats
to students, and these are
some things that I thought all
students and parents should
think about if they are interested in the study abroad
experience.
DTH: You said there are a lot of
vices available in Europe that
students take advantage of.
Can you talk about those?
PC: When you are on your
own in a different part of
the world, there are certain
things to think about in order
to make the most of your
experience. I listed the seven
of these seven threats I
called them sins because of
the saying about the Seven
Deadly Sins I wasnt saying one shouldnt partake at
all in going out to the pub, or
meeting people, or shopping,
or smartphoning, or selfietaking
I was trying to suggest in
the piece that people can get
more out of the experience
if they are purposive about
planning it and trying to
understand the pros and cons
But sometimes its less than

great, and one of the reasons


I think is that people are
not really self-conscious and
explicit and thoughtful before
they go.
DTH: What makes these study
abroad trips special and
worthwhile?
PC: If one thinks in advance
about what one hopes to get
out of it and makes sure that
this precious time that you
have as a 19- or 20- or 21-yearold in a foreign country (is
spent) taking in a different culture, different professors, meeting different students (and)
forming lifelong relationships.
DTH: What are the biggest
challenges your students
must face when studying
abroad?
PC: The biggest challenges and
frustrations again are kind of

the opportunity costs. Many


of the students at UNC have
wanted to come to UNC their
whole life and worked hard
to get here, and youre obviously going to miss some of
that campus experience while
going abroad So you have
to really think about what
is really important to you in
your college experience and in
your lifetime aspirations.
One shouldnt study
abroad just to check it off.
One should have real affirmative reasons for going,
whether its to learn another
language, experience another
culture, meet people with
different viewpoints. Try to
negotiate with what can be,
in certain environments, a
difficult terrain, at least at the
outset, where youre going to
be a little bit outside of your
normal comfort zone.
university@dailytarheel.com

Full Breakfast
Served All Day
Omelettes
Pancakes
Biscuit Sandwiches

Open 24 Hours,
24 Hour Delivery

New Location!
201 East Franklin Street
(across from Court House)

Celebrating 38
Years in Business

Thank You!

Whats the buzz about


Bee Downtown is spreading beehives and food
sustainability through the
Triangle. See online for story.

games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

Level:

4
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.

Solution to
Mondays puzzle

48th Annual

Fred T. Foard Jr.


Memorial Lecture

Heading to camp
UNC student Madison
Tibbetts is raising money to
go to a camp for people with
autism. See online for story.

Food blogs = love


We round up five of the
best food blogs from every
corner of the web. Visit
Carolina Living for more.

XOXO, Gossip Girl


Check out this Binge
Watch Guide to Gossip
Girl, which is a must-watch.
Visit Medium for more.

Nothing finer
than a summer at Carolina!
Check out summer.unc.edu
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

High Hanging Fruit:

Make a Difference in the World and Your


Life by Reaching Higher

with keynote speaker

Mark Rampolla, MBA

Author and Founder, ZICO Coconut Water

FREE and open to the public


Thursday, April 14 - 6:00p.m.
The William and Ida Friday Center
(on the FCX bus line)

Reception with healthy, local foods to follow.


Please register online today at
sph.unc.edu/alumni-pages/foard

Across
1 Tousle
5 F and G, e.g.
10 Soaks (up)
14 Bad thing to be caught
in
15 Spells
16 Virginie, par exemple
17 Need You Tonight
band
18 Start of an old news
announcement
20 Frequent Lemmon
co-star
22 Chimney
23 Dublin-born poet
24 AWOL trackers
26 Tiny
27 Shine, in Cambridge
29 Ammunition dumps
31 Request to Sajak
32 Stipulation on le menu
34 Numerical prefix
36 Progressive pitcher?
37 When theres no
turning back
41 Where gas and lodging
may be
found
46 Tulsa sch.
47 Brings to
light
50 Pitcher, for
one
52 Cambodias
Lon __
53 Enzyme
suffix
54 Moisten, in
a way
55
Northeastern
octet
57 Old but

coveted
60 Nachos, e.g.
64 Peach __
65 Landed
66 Ken Jenkins Scrubs
role
67 CVI halved
68 Old map divs.
69 Dallas Miss
70 North-of-the-border
gas
Down
1 Injure badly
2 Radius neighbor
3 Historic Chicago-toSanta Monica route
4 Largish combo
5 Proctors concern
6 Infiniti competitor
7 No. after a phone no.
8 Not agin
9 Fed. benefits agency
10 Stimulating message
11 Senators home
12 Part of UPS
13 Betting specifications

19 County bordering
Suffolk
21 Dwell annoyingly (on)
24 Fantastic Dahl
character
25 Initials on a radial
27 Well, __-di-dah!
28 Lyon article
29 Weigh station counts
30 Composer Rorem
33 __ shoe fits ...
35 Literary assortment
38 When translated to
English, beer brand that
hints at the common
feature of the five other
longest puzzle answers
39 We __ Marshall:
2006 film

(C)2012 Tribune Media


Services, Inc.
All rights reserved.

40 Brynner of filmdom
42 Wipe off
43 Some Cadillacs
44 Scott classic
45 Try
47 Hall of Fame Colts
quarterback
48 Grisham output
49 Potion
51 Suppress
54 Low voices
56 First responders,
initially
58 Israeli arms
59 Opera star Pinza
61 Classic Jag
62 Small Wonder state:
Abbr.
63 In need of treatment

Opinion

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Established 1893, 123 years of editorial freedom


PAIGE LADISIC EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
SAM SCHAEFER OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
TYLER FLEMING ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR

EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS


ISHMAEL BISHOP
CAMERON JERNIGAN
ZACH RACHUBA
KATE STOTESBERY

CHRIS DAHLIE
JACK LARGESS
VISHAL REDDY

TREY FLOWERS
GABY NAIR
JACOB ROSENBERG

I am sure that there are a number of sports


in which women will regularly do better than
men, and that is a good and natural thing

A Time for Musing

NClaw441, on the imbalance of mens and womens sporting events

Senior journalism and political


science major from Weddington.
Email: alexht@live.unc.edu

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

Simpson
trial is
still
relevant

Chase Rice ought to


be welcomed home

NEXT

A leader is someone who does the work with


them. We strap our shoes on and we scrap
with them.

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

Alex Thomas

Southern Urbanist
Brian Vaughn writes about balancing writing and doing.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

Coleman Scott, on his role as UNCs wrestling coach

EDITORIAL CARTOON By Drew Sheneman, The Star Ledger

f you have been watching


television lately, you may
have noticed one persons growing presence: O.J.
Simpson.
The FX show The People
v. O.J. Simpson: American
Crime Story concluded last
week, ending a 10-episode run
detailing the criminal trial
regarding Simpson and the
June 1994 murders of Nicole
Brown Simpson and Ron
Goldman. This summer, ESPN
will release a five-part documentary titled O.J.: Made
in America, which will focus
on Simpsons complete rise
and fall. The latter received
extreme amounts of praise
when it premiered at the
Sundance Film Festival.
Both of these productions
are great learning opportunities for our generation. It does
not just tell us about the real
Simpson, but also why this
situation is significant today.
Simpson was more than
just a defendant. He was a
football star, an advertising
spokesperson, broadcaster
and actor. He was admired
by millions of people and he
seemed indestructible.
There is no hypothetical
comparison in the America
of today, sports commentator Keith Olbermann says of
Simpsons stardom. There is
nobody who was as Teflon as the
O.J. Simpson of pre-June 1994.
Yet the case was more than
just a national superstar in
trouble. There was also the
issue of race and the justice
system as a whole. Keep in
mind the trial in Los Angeles,
a city that was nearly torn
apart in 1992 following the
acquittal of four police officers
in beating Rodney King.
Despite being beloved by
the public, Simpson at the end
of the day was a black man.
Race was not just on the forefront; it was an issue fairly or
unfairly impossible to ignore.
Then there was the massive
amounts of media coverage.
Cameras never seemed to stop
rolling, whether it was covering the white Bronco chase,
pundit debates or detailing of
the private lives of all parties
involved. People never stopped
talking about the trial, and
every little detail was magnified by the press.
All of these things fame,
race, journalistic and public
obsession are matters we
still deal with currently. Our
culture of celebrity worship,
debate over racial justice and
questions regarding what journalists and people focus their
attention towards (see the
obsession over Donald Trump)
are issues just as prominent
now if not more so than they
have been before. The Simpson
chapter forced all of these
things into a single courtroom
for a nation to take in.
The Simpson trial has
been defined by many as the
trial of the century, but it is
so much more than that. It
was a moment where culture
and crime came together in
an event like no other. The
People v. O.J. Simpson put
those matters in place for
viewers to understand, and
it will likely be done in O.J.:
Made in America. Both are
not just detailing what happened in 1995; they are telling
the story of the United States
and how in some ways we
have not changed in the past
two decades.

The Daily Tar Heel

EDITORIAL

No callous call outs


Call out culture
can cause harm to
activist coalitions.

n organizing spaces,
disagreement and holding ourselves accountable is key.

Both underpin the way


we keep each other in our
community accountable
to the people. These are
the natural products of
good communication and
critical thinking.
But when communication fails in times of crisis,
we run the risk of reproducing the same violence
that already promises to
bring about our end.
Instead of holding
ourselves and each other

accountable to our own


standards, some cultivate
a call-out culture that
damages any alternative
ways we strive to live.
Call-out culture privileges
certain information and
identities and is at times
unwelcoming of new
members and ideas.
The alternative, holding
each other accountable,
pushed us to be responsible for ourselves just as
much for one another.
While education is certainly integral to coalition
building, a lack of it can be
systemic rather than individualistic. This is not to
invalidate repeated abuse
or malign treatment at
the hands of toxic people
or institutions. Nor is this

an excuse to dictate ideas


without challenge. This is
moment for a collective
breath to occur.
The violence has less to
do with the member who
misspeaks or takes the
mic at an action. In these
everyday interactions
between people, we ignore
or excuse the violence carried out by the state. We
are asking for a pause on
call-out culture until we
have successfully rebuilt
our coalitions and movements back up.
We hope that our movements that push UNC and
the General Assembly are
strategic and purposeful
without having to risk losing pieces of ourselves in
the process.

EDITORIAL

Mark a forgotten past


A ceremony for the
segregated should
be held in the fall.

arlier this year,


a slight kerfuffle
played out in the
pages of local media outlets, including this one,
about the installation of a
marker in the Old Chapel
Hill Cemetery honoring
African-Americans buried
in unmarked graves there.
A marker honoring
those persons was installed
without much public input
or notice. Some objected
to town government. The
marker was removed.
In early March,
Chapel Hill Mayor Pam
Hemminger said she hoped

a decision about a potential


new marker would be made
in May, after public input.
Respectfully, this editorial board asks that any
ceremony around the introduction of a new marker be
done as conspicuously and
publicly as possible.
In the past several years,
this campus has witnessed
important and controversial discussions around historical memory, the impact
of historical injustices on
our present and who shapes
narratives about history.
But since the UNC Board
of Trustees introduced a
16-year moratorium on
renaming buildings on
campus, and the North
Carolina General Assembly
passed a law banning the

relocation or removal of
historical monuments, the
organizing actions that led
to those productive conversations have been cut short.
As more students who
witnessed these discussions prepare to graduate,
we are reminded of the
unfortunate effects of a lack
of institutional memory
among UNCs student body.
It is therefore the
responsibility of those
permanently located in
town to keep these conversations alive. If a new
marker is installed, wait
until fall to install it, and
try to make a ceremony
around it prominent. It
is from learning from our
past that we understand
our present.

QuickHits
Pat back

Go Duke! (?)

Gone to Carolina

Gov. Pat McCrory said he


knew things were wrong
with House Bill 2
and that is why
he enacted an
executive order.
McCrory, in
signing the bill into law, at
least you had an excuse in
your vile form of conservatism. With this executive
action, youve shown yourself to be an idiotic person
and a poor conservative.

We can happily put our


rivalry with Duke aside to
give The Duke
Chronicle a
shoutout for
their excellent
coverage of the
protests on their campus.
We love and appreciate all
college media outlets, but
their work in particular has
been really high quality.
Check it out and support
them at dukechronicle.com.

Admission tours leave out


so much context. They
should say: Welcome! See all
these buildings?
If they were not
built by slaves,
they were probably named
after racists. Why dont we
rename them? We cannot.
Be sure to buy some swag
before you leave! UNC sandals are better than talking
about academic scandals.

Winning title

None for you

Actually pay them

With yesterday being our


Gender Issue from our
fabulous investigations team,
one title came
up a few times.
Title IX is a great
piece of legislation. It has
been used to promote
equitable gender policy
on campus, combat sexual
assault and fight against
House Bill 2. We should all
be thankful to have it.

The weather is nice, the


sun is out and the stress
of the semester
is keeping you
from enjoying any of it.
Want to go for
a walk? You have a history
paper due. Want to eat ice
cream on the quad? Your
biology research presentation is tomorrow. This is
the stuff they dont tell you
before going to college.

While we find enjoyment


and appreciate the Rammys, wouldnt
it be better to,
you know, actually pay athletes
or give them
more tangible benefits?
Sure, an awards show is a
nice and fun way to honor
athletes, but it does nothing to actually solve the
plantation system that is
college athletics.

TO THE EDITOR:
I have always considered myself from the
South. Born and raised in
North Carolina means a
lot to me, and I am proud
to be a North Carolinian.
I am also a proud fan of
country music, and I am
so ecstatic for Chase Rice
to come to campus this
Saturday night.
Country music is not
just a tune or a rhythm.
It describes a way of life
for many people, just as
other genres of music do.
Millions of people across
our nation, and even many
people around the world,
can connect and relate to
country music. Chase Rice,
however, is different from
other country music artists.
Whether you like country music or not, he is a Tar
Heel. He played football
for this great university. He
sweat as he walked up the
hills from South Campus to
The Pit. He cried over some
(not so great) test scores.
He loves UNC, as we all do.
He is one of the most successful country artists in
contemporary society, and
he represents UNC well in
those regards.
I hope that as we go into
this weekend, the campus
will unite around the above
facts and refrain from ridicule or negativity over his
unpopularity with some
students. We are all Tar
Heels, and no one deserves
condemnation from members of the student body,
even if the choice of Jubilee
artist does not please all
30,000 students. After all,
no artist ever will.
Go Chase, Go Tar Heels,
Go America!
Travis Broadhurst
Sophomore
Geological sciences and
physics

Column represented
the DTH poorly
TO THE EDITOR:
The recent contributions
by Jaslina Paintal represent
this newspaper very poorly
and do a disservice to the
ideologies and positions
that she supports.
In her column, Paintal
makes no effort to support her claims empirically or theoretically. Nor
does she make any effort
to treat those with whom
she disagrees with anything resembling charity
or respect. This is perhaps
most jarring when it is
applied to feminists, who
share many of the same
goals and ideals that
Paintal values so highly.
If one compares Paintals
work to the other coverage that issues of race,
gender and oppression
have received in The Daily
Tar Heel, the difference is
striking. Compare the work
of Chiraayu Gosrani, who
points out racism and racist
institutions using evidence;
the testimony of those who
have experienced it; and
honest, sober rhetoric.

Make no mistake The


Daily Tar Heel needs writers who are critical of capitalism, systemic racism and
misogyny. But on a campus
such as ours, radical writers are ambassadors for
their ideologies.
I believe that the ideas
Ms. Paintal represents
deserve an ambassador
who is capable of putting
them forward clearly and
convincingly. I believe
that The Daily Tar Heel
deserves a writer who is
capable of treating opposing viewpoints with the
respect they deserve rather
than demonizing even
progressives who disagree.
I believe, ultimately, that
Ms. Paintals column is not
good for racial equality, it
is not good for feminism
and it does not belong in
this newspaper.
David Hawisher
Class of 15

DTH does not provide


enough GPSF context
TO THE EDITOR:
On April 12, the Graduate
and Professional Student
Federation became the
second of the Universitys
student legislative bodies to
pass a resolution condemning House Bill 2. You would
not know this fact by reading The Daily Tar Heel.
While the DTHs article
concerning that Senate session addresses important
points, the author made
a decision to highlight as
most significant the current debates over student
governance. In choosing
to focus on these divisions
in our community, they
ignored one of the most
important pieces of legislation under consideration
a resolution in which the
GPSF joined with Student
Congress to declare what
being a Tar Heel means.
Both SCR-97-363 (passed
by Student Congress) and
Resolution 16-16 (passed
by the GPSF Senate) adamantly declare that HB2 is
not the Carolina Way.
Instead, Carolina is
inclusive, and House Bill 2
hampers our ability to be
so. Both legislative bodies
deemed the law discriminatory against the LGBTQ+
community, reaffirmed
the protected status of all
groups listed in the existing
University anti-discrimination policies, called for
the repeal of the law and/or
the adoption of state laws
protecting all groups listed
in those policies, and sent
their respective resolutions
to legislators, administrators, and faculty on behalf
of the student body.
The students of the
University need to know
that their representatives
whether in Student
Congress or in the GPSF
stand together on this
issue. Students can expect
their representatives to
continue to honor their
protected statuses and to
continue to advocate for
the equal rights of all students on this campus.
Brian Coussens
Graduate student
Religious studies

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Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com
EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the
opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises 10 board
members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.

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