Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
dailytarheel.com
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.
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.
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.
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
DTH/JULIA KLEIN
Oliver Smithies, Nobel Prize winner and UNC professor, spoke at
a ceremony honoring his and Aziz Sancars achievements.
Ive got a blank space, baby, and Ill write your name.
TAYLOR SWIFT
News
EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
KELSEY WEEKMAN
ONLINE MANAGING EDITOR
ONLINE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
BRADLEY SAACKS
ENTERPRISE DIRECTOR
ENTERPRISE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
SAMANTHA SABIN
DIRECTOR OF INVESTIGATIONS
SPECIAL.PROJECTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
DANNY NETT
COMMUNITY MANAGER
COMMUNITY.MANAGER@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
JANE WESTER
UNIVERSITY EDITOR
UNIVERSITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
KERRY LENGYEL
CITY EDITOR
CITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
HAYLEY FOWLER
STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
STATE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
SARAH VASSELLO
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
ARTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
PAT JAMES
SPORTS EDITOR
SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
JOS VALLE
DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
DESIGN@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
KATIE WILLIAMS
PHOTO EDITOR
PHOTO@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
ALISON KRUG
COPY CHIEF
EDITORIAL STAFF
executives
Marketing Team: Joe Daley,
Cici Du, Pavle Jeremict, and Julia
Meder
Advertising Production:
Gwendolen Blackburn, creative
manager
The Daily Tar Heel is published by the DTH Media Corp., a nonprofit North Carolina corporation,
Monday through Friday, according to the University calendar. Callers with questions about billing or
display advertising should call 962-1163 between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Classified ads can be reached
at 962-0252. Editorial questions should be directed to 962-0245.
OFFICE AND MAIL ADDRESS:
151 E. Rosemary St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
ISN #10709436
The best of
online
How to get through watching Game of Thrones
By Sarah McCulla
Staff Writer
COPY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
GABRIELLA CIRELLI
VIDEO EDITOR
MULTIMEDIA@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
TIPS
Contact Managing Editor
Mary Tyler March at
managing.editor@dailytarheel.com
with tips, suggestions or
corrections.
Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Paige Ladisic, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086
Advertising & Business, 962-1163
News, Features, Sports, 962-0245
Distribution, 962-4115
One copy per person;
additional copies may be purchased
at The Daily Tar Heel for $0.25 each.
Please report suspicious activity at
our distribution racks by emailing
dth@dailytarheel.com
2015 DTH Media Corp.
All rights reserved
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY
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
FRIDAY
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
Someone communicated
threats on the 5600 block of
Old Chapel Hill Road at 7:39
p.m. Tuesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
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.
News
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.
NORTH CAROLINA
SOUTH CAROLINA
15
0
By Jeremy Vernon
Assistant Sports Editor
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
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
News
Durham deportation
case stalls for appeals
By Ana Irizarry
Staff Writer
Deadlines
Announcements
NOTICE TO ALL DTH
CUSTOMERS
RECYCLE ME PLEASE!
QUESTIONS? 962-0252
For Rent
Help Wanted
For Rent
FAIR HOUSING
Walk to
Campus!
MERCIA
RESIDENTIAL
PROPERTIES:
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.
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
Its fast.
Its easy.
Its local...
Place a DTH
Classified!
www.dailytarheel.
com/classifieds
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.
919-933-5296
Services
STARPOINT
STORAGE
NEED STORAGE SPACE?
(919) 942-6666
ITS EASY!
Do it by Pit
distance!t
HeelsHousing.com
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
919.797.2884
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
Sundays at 10:30am
Creekside Elementary
Religious Directory
Presbyterian
Campus
Ministry
lovechapelhill.com
News
MCCRORY
FROM PAGE 1
HONOR COURT
FROM PAGE 1
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
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!
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
Heading to camp
UNC student Madison
Tibbetts is raising money to
go to a camp for people with
autism. See online for story.
Nothing finer
than a summer at Carolina!
Check out summer.unc.edu
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
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
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
CHRIS DAHLIE
JACK LARGESS
VISHAL REDDY
TREY FLOWERS
GABY NAIR
JACOB ROSENBERG
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Simpson
trial is
still
relevant
NEXT
Alex Thomas
Southern Urbanist
Brian Vaughn writes about balancing writing and doing.
EDITORIAL
n organizing spaces,
disagreement and holding ourselves accountable is key.
EDITORIAL
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
Winning title
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.
SPEAK OUT
WRITING GUIDELINES
Please type. Handwritten letters will not be accepted.
Sign and date. No more than two people should sign letters.
Students: Include your year, major and phone number.
Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number.
Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit
letters to 250 words.
SUBMISSION
Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill,
NC 27514
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.