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Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

Volume 119, Issue 59

dailytarheel.com

Monday, August 29, 2011

Faculty split on honor system


Many are skeptical as the upcoming September review approaches.
By Caitlin McCabe
Staff Writer

As the University begins a full examination of its student-led honor system, it has become clear that a

large percentage of faculty roughly a third are firmly skeptical of the institution. In a survey HONOR COURT issued to faculty in 2010, 33 percent of respondents said they might or might not refer an issue of academic misconduct to the honor system. That reality stands in stark con-

trast to the fact that reporting such misconduct is a mandatory University policy, Dean of Students Jonathan Sauls said. This seeming lack of trust in the system poses a major obstacle to the review, which was prompted by a failure to recognize plagiarism in the case of former defensive end Michael McAdoo, some faculty members said. But those involved in the review say the planned addition of a five-per-

DTH ONLINE: See dailytar-

heel.com for a PDF of the survey about the honor system that was issued to faculty members.

son faculty advisory committee could help remedy that divide. I think its a perfect venue for integrating (faculty members) wishes to look at improving our system, said Student Attorney General Jon McCay.

New head of nance announced


Like Dick Mann, Karol Gray hails from Stony Brook University.
By Elizabeth Johnson
Assistant University Editor

see HONOR, Page 5

National Park Service Ranger Jeff Goad views the destruction to N.C. Hwy 12 on the north edge of Rodanthe due to the storm surge from Hurricane Irene.

Irenes aftermath
UNCs Irene tweets
Whats happening? Home dlksmith0612:
These newscasters use pounded and hammered more than a UNC frat boy. #Irene

mct/wire

The category 1 storm caused damage across the state, but left Chapel Hill mostly untouched.
By Jessica Seaman
Staff Writer

When Samantha Billings looked out the window of her Greenville apartment Saturday, she saw an uprooted pine tree on the roof of her neighbors apartment and a nearby pond overflowing small reflections of the damage in the state caused by Hurricane Irene. The hurricane unleashed its wrath Saturday morning, pounding North Carolinas eastern coast with rain and violent wind when it made landfall just west of Cape Lookout. Although students at UNC-CH were hardly affected, Billings, a senior at East Carolina University, said streets in her town were flooded and filled with tree branches, and many street lights were not working. Everything is chaotic because we are dealing with all of that, she said. I really didnt think it was going

BirdsTheWord619:
Dear UNC, Hurricane Irene is your karma for not accepting me into your school. And yes, Im #stillbitter

_cheynabonita:
oh snap ... #UNC finally alerted us about something. just got the Hurricane Irene email ... #bouttime

Rylanmi:
dtH/katie sweeney Due to the winds and rain caused by Hurricane Irene, tree branches fell down in McCorkle Place.

see HURRiCaNe, Page 5

Were starting to get cabin fever after watching a few seasons of Keeping Up With the Kardashians and L&O SVU. #hurricaneparty

After months of interviews and closed-door meetings, Chancellor Holden Thorp has recommended Karol Gray be named the next vice chancellor for finance and administration. Gray would be the second consecutive vice chancellor for finance from Stony Brook University, pending the Board of Trustees approval at its September meeting. Gray was selected from a pool Karol Kain Gray was recommended of three other finalists whose names were not released by the by chancellor Holden thorp to be University. Gray worked under current the next vice chanVice Chancellor for Finance Dick cellor for finance. Mann at Stony Brook. When Mann accepted the position at UNC, Gray took over his post. The projected first-year compensation for the Universitys top finance position is $240,000, according to a contract by Witt/Kieffer, the firm hired by the university to help with the search. Mann said he doesnt foresee any problems when the board votes on Grays appointment next month, and said the University is lucky to have someone as capable as Gray lined up for the job. She knows how to handle budget situations, which is key for us right now, Mann said. In many respects, shes had to deal with bigger budget problems because New York State is not as friendly to higher education as North Carolina is. As UNCs vice chancellor for finance, Gray would oversee the Universitys operating budget which was more than $2.4 billion in fiscal year 2009-10. She would oversee the Universitys financial planning and budgeting in addition to planning the facilities and construction projects. She brings more than three decades of experience at a distinguished public university to Carolina at a time when we face major budget challenges and changes to how we run the campus, Thorp said in a press release. The search committee, chaired by former UNC-system Vice President for Finance Bill McCoy, began reviewing applications May 15. The University signed a contract with Witt/Kieffer promising it a minimum of $65,000 for its assistance in the process. In the contract, Witt/Kieffer agreed to assess the Universitys needs, screen candidates and conduct background investigations on the finalists. Mann, who announced his retirement in January, has been at UNC since 2006. He said he plans to continue his work at the University until the new vice chancellor for finance takes charge Dec. 1. Gray has served 33 years in financial management positions at Stony Brook. Earlier this year, she was named one of Long Islands 50 most influential women in business by Long Island Business News. She received a bachelors degree from Hofstra University. Contact the University Editor at university@dailytarheel.com.

UNC keeps searches under wraps


By Paula Seligson
Staff Writer

As the search for the Universitys head of finance draws to a close, the search for a new athletic director is just beginning with a familiar twist. Chancellor Holden Thorp has told the members of the athletic director search committee not to share the names of the eventual finalists, said Lowry Caudill, chairman of the search committee. Thorp chose to utilize the same degree of confidentiality in the search for a new vice chancellor for finance and administration, arguing that it increased the probability of a successful search. I chose to make it private because I wanted to maximize the opportunity to attract a sitting vice chancellor for finance from a peer university, Thorp said. The odds of getting somebody whos in a comparable job at another university are higher when the finalists arent announced, he added.

Though the tactic has been used recently, most searches are open and receive direct community input through open forums. I dont think people should consider it to be a new trend. I think its an exception, said Winston Crisp, vice chancellor for student affairs. But sometimes an open search discourages qualified applicants from applying because it places their current positions in jeopardy, administrators said. In 2010, the University conducted an open search for a new dean of the School of Dentistry. Gregg Gilbert, a professor at the University of Alabama-Birmingham, was offered the job but declined it. The search began anew after the offer, and administrators chose to keep the finalists names private. Jane Weintraub, a professor from the University of CaliforniaSan Francisco, was offered the job and accepted. In the case of dentistry, the (first) search really did not produce satisfying results, said Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost

Bruce Carney. We basically needed a different pool of candidates, he said. The more people who are part of the (search) process, the more vetting you can get into the process, but thats only relevant to the pool of people who apply, he said. If you dont get better candidates with an open search, it might be better to make it closed. And making a search closed doesnt necessarily preclude the possibility of public input, said Don Curtis, a trustee and a member of the athletic director search committee. Having a diverse search committee can provide the same level of perspective, he said. If one person was selecting, I would think there would be a far more compelling reason for more openness, he said. A search committee is like a republic instead of a democracy. Two search firms presented to the athletic director committee on Friday. Both stressed

AD search committee holds rst meeting


By Kelly Parsons
Sports Editor

see SeaRCHeS, Page 5

The 13-member search committee that was formed to help find North Carolinas next athletic director held its first meeting Friday, at which the group refined the job description and decided to employ the services of a national search firm. The committee will help chancellor Holden Thorp by narrowing down candidates to replace current athletic director Dick Baddour, who announced his resignation after 40 years at UNC at a July 28 press conference a day after the University announced that football coach Butch Davis had been fired. And while it will be up to UNC officials to fill two vacant jobs in

the coming months, they are dedicated to first finding a new athletic director before the search for a new football coach begins. This is an important moment in the history of the University. Were at a difficult time, and were also at a time of great potential, Thorp said in an address to the committee. We do have a proud tradition and a history of being one of the great athletic programs in America, and Im sure you guys will help us figure out how to continue that. At the meeting, committee members helped fine-tune the job description, which will be included in the job listing. The ad must be posted for at least 30 days before a hire can be made.

see SeaRCH COMMiTTee, Page 5

Inside
Peace and Justice
Civil rights activists in Chapel hill were honored posthumously on Sunday. Page 7.

Sports Monday
Read about the UNC womens soccer teams win against Notre Dame in this weeks Sports Monday section. Page 10.

Announcement
The Daily Tar Heel will hold an informational meeting today at 5:30 p.m. at its office at 151 E. Rosemary St. for all students interested in working for the paper.

This day in history


AUG. 29, 1868
David Lowry Swain, UNC president from 1835 to 1868 and former N.C. governor, died after being thrown from his buggy on Aug. 11.

Todays weather
That was anticlimactic H 87, L 63

Tuesdays weather
It looked big online H 86, L 64

I always wanted to be somebody, but now I realize I should have been more specific.
LILy TomLIn, acTRess

Monday, August 29, 2011

News
DAILY DOSE

The Daily Tar Heel

The Daily Tar Heel


www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893 118 years of editorial freedom
STEvEN NOrTON EDITOR-In-chIEF

TWIG, TWO, THREE

Rolling on a river of stupid

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TariNi parTi managIng EDITOR

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KElly mCHUGH vIsual managIng EDITOR aNDy THOmaSON unIvERsITy EDITOR jEaNNa SmialEK cITy EDITOR

From staff and wire reports

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iSaBElla COCHraNE sTaTE & naTIOnal EDITOR


sTaTE@DaIlyTaRhEEl.cOm

ow, row, row your boat, just not down Main Street in Manayunk, Pa. Thats the message police are sending after arresting two men who used a raft as an alternate means of transportation down a flooded street Sunday morning. The men, identified only as Pete and Pat, admitted that they set out to raft down the street for fun. We thought it would be a good time, and it turns out it is, Pete said. Police arrested the pair for a lack of common sense, but no charges were filed in the case. According to Pat, the street floods often, making rafting a viable means of transportation but local authorities are determined to place an emphasis on safety.
QUOTED. Do we really need a National Weather Service? Headline on a story by two FoxNews.com columnists, Iain Murray and David Bier, on whether or not the U.S. should spend federal tax dollars on the weather service. In their column, they claim the weather service is a relic that hijacks local radio and television.

aRTs@DaIlyTaRhEEl.cOm

KaTElyN TrEla aRTs EDITOR

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jOSEpH CHapmaN DIvERsIOns EDITOR KElly parSONS sPORTs EDITOR alliE rUSSEll PhOTO EDITOR

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NOTED. Even though the heliocentric view of the universe has been accepted for centuries, a few Catholics are trying to change that. Catholics in several states are claiming that modern science is attempting to subvert the worldwide power their church once held, hosting conferences like one in Indiana titled, Galileo Was Wrong. The Church Was Right.

PhOTO@DaIlyTaRhEEl.cOm

Emily EvaNS, GEOrGia CavaNaUGH cOPy cO-EDITORs


cOPy@DaIlyTaRhEEl.cOm

COMMunIty CaLEndar
resume marathon: have your resume reviewed by counselors and receive helpful tips before submitting your application to the undergraduate Business Program. Time: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. location: hanes hall, Room 242 interest meeting: learn about how to help promote womens education with the student-run, non-profit group students for students International (s4si), which focuses on providing secondary scholarships to young women in Tanzania. Time: 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. location: murphey hall, first floor Nourish international: learn more about nourish International, an organization that aims to end global poverty. meeting will be followed by a celebration of the groups summers projects in honduras, Ecuador

ylvia Holtz, 2, right, and her sister Violet, 3, play with twigs and leaves in McCorkle Place on Friday afternoon. The girls were in the upper quad with their father, Eric. The family was visiting campus because they were in Chapel Hill for a wedding.

dth/jessica gaylord

tOday

OnlInE@DaIlyTaRhEEl.cOm

SaraH GlEN OnlInE EDITOR

and Thailand. Time: 7 p.m. location: campus y lounge

ariaNa rODriGUEz-GiTlEr DEsIgn EDITOR


DEsIgn@DaIlyTaRhEEl.cOm

gRaPhIcs@DaIlyTaRhEEl.cOm

mEG WraTHEr gRaPhIcs EDITOR

mulTImEDIa@DaIlyTaRhEEl.cOm

zaCH EvaNS mulTImEDIa cO-EDITOR

Career planning: seniors are invited to learn about what opportunities are available after graduation and why it is important to consider multiple options. Time: 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. location: hanes hall, Room 239B Gallery opening: celebrate the opening of Differentiate: Osterloh and mcWreath in the allcott gallery. The exhibit, which will run through sept. 27, will feature pieces that invent a sense of self through differentiation. Time: 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. location: hanes art center Go! Connect: meet with international interns, researchers and vol-

tuEsday

unteers to discuss how to connect your summer experience abroad with your life at unc in a studentled discussion. Time: 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. location: FedEx global Education center Health assessment forum: analyze the results from Orange countys 2011 community health assessment with friends and neighbors and help plan how to develop a community-wide strategy for improved health. Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. location: Efland-cheeks community center 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 vandalized a 2004 Chrysler Sebring around 2:06 a.m. Saturday in a parking lot at 100 E. Rosemary St., according to Chapel Hill police reports. The damage was estimated at $400, reports state. Someone reported a suspicious vehicle at 2:45 a.m. Saturday in the Eubanks Road Park and Ride lot, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Someone was trespassed at 11:28 p.m. Saturday from a bar located at 305 West Rosemary St., according to Chapel Hill police reports. Someone attempted to take a bike off of a porch at 8:32 p.m. Saturday at 211 Pritchard Ave., according to Chapel Hill police reports. The Schwinn mountain bike was valued at $140, reports state. Someone stole a cellphone between 2 a.m. and 4:06 p.m. Saturday from a restaurant located at 101 W. Franklin St., according to Chapel Hill police reports. The 16 gigabyte Apple iPhone 4 was valued at $500, reports state. Someone punctured a tire with a knife at 2:57 a.m. Saturday in an enclosed parking deck at 150 W. Rosemary St., according to Chapel Hill police reports. One rear tire valued at $120 was damaged, reports state. A bicycle valued at $200 was found at 10:10 p.m. Saturday at Porthole Alley on East Franklin Street, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Someone broke into a residence through the carport door using blunt force between 10:01 a.m. and 10:01 p.m. Friday at 320 Lone Pine Road, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Damage to the door is valued at $200, reports state.

tIPs
contact managing Editor Tarini Parti at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with news tips, comments, corrections or suggestions.
mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary st. chapel hill, nc 27514 steven norton, Editor-in-chief, 962-4086 advertising & Business, 962-1163 news, Features, sports, 962-0245 One copy per person; additional copies may be purchased at The Daily Tar heel for $.25 each. Please report suspicious activity at our distribution racks by emailing dth@dailytarheel.com 2011 DTh media corp. all rights reserved

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 Tarini Parti at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.

UNC OFFICE OF DISTINGUISHED SCHOLARSHIPS Informational Meeting


for Juniors and Seniors considering graduate school for Sophomores and Juniors studying Science or the Environment

Scholarships Include:
RHODES MARSHALL TRUMAN LUCE GOLDWATER MITCHELL JACK KENT COOKE UDALL CARNEGIE CHURCHILL

104 West Main Street, Carrboro, NC 27510 (919) 967-5104

Information Meeting: 5:15 p.m. on Monday, : August 29 Student Union Theater Email ods@unc.edu for more information.

0 2009-201

We l c o m e Back Sale!
$50 Off Any Adult Bike!
Offer cannot be combined, nor used in conjunction with any other discount. Offer applies to new bicycles only. Must be paid in full at time of purchase.

Presented by
James M. Johnston Center for Undergraduate Excellence www.distinguishedscholarships.unc.edu

Offer expires August 31st, 2011

The Daily Tar Heel

News

Monday, August 29 , 2011

uNc system considers athletic changes


By Miranda Murray
Staff Writer

UNC-CH isnt the only school making changes to its athletic program. Other system universities are also altering their programs following a report recently released by a system-wide task force on athletics. The task force, composed of athletic directors, chancellors and university administrators, was created by system President

Thomas Ross last March in response to the fall 2010 NCAA investigation of possible academic improprieties involving UNCCHs football program. Ross has not yet endorsed the report. He is expected to announce his decision in November. But many schools are already taking initiatives to improve student-athlete practices. In response to the report, Western Carolina University plans to create a new evaluation

system for recruiting, as well as a code of conduct for student athletes. Were going to talk to other schools and try to put one together for ourselves, said Chip Smith, director of athletics at WCU. The report suggested changes schools could put in place, including increased monitoring of student athletes who fall below a universitys academic admissions standards. Im looking at this report from the athletic directors point

of view, Smith said. Even if the report is not accepted, I think these are good ideas, and we want to implement them. At the NCAAs retreat earlier this month, administrators from Division I schools across the nation discussed revamping the associations rules and regulations, but the results of this meeting have not yet been released. Some schools say the task forces report anticipates changes that could come from the retreat.

WCU Chancellor David Belcher said he will heed both reports when considering changes to his universitys athletic program. It looks to me that a number of changes are going to come down from the NCAA in the coming months, so well be looking to both for changes, he said. The UNC task forces report also prompted some Division II schools to review their student athletic programs but some suggestions, such as revising the

tutoring system, do not apply to schools in that division. At UNC-Pembroke there are no athletic department-funded study halls or resource centers, Dan Kenney, the universitys athletic director, said in an email. UNC-P student athletes must utilize the excellent academic support services that UNC-P provides all students. Contact the State & National Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.

Nc legislature cuts disabled schools budget


A school for the hearing or visually impaired will close.
By Viviana Bonilla Lopez
Staff Writer

dth/ana rocha The Cupcake Challenge is part of the Cupcake Festival, an annual event held in memory of UNC philosophy professor Horace Williams.

30 bakers compete in Memorial cupcake Festival


By Ana Rocha

cupcake wars
said she proposed to turn Horace Williams birthday celebration into a cupcake festival three years ago. Always trust your crazy ideas, she said. This year, her idea attracted local as well as out-of-town guests, including Dr. Nazir Ahmad, a dentist with a self-proclaimed sweet tooth who traveled to the festival from Virginia. Ernest Dollar, executive director of the Preservation Society, said people were lining up two hours before the festival started. Moments before the doors opened, the line was wrapped around the building. Guests ate more than 500 cupcakes in 20 minutes last year, Dollar said a fact that prompted extra preparation for Saturdays festival. He said a security force of volunteers watched over the cupcake room to make sure people only took one cupcake at a time. I dont think we had as many people as last year, Koroluk said. But I think everyone had a better time. Joe Parker, who placed second in the

Staff Writer

leven-year-old Paulina Garcia Hernandez of Carrboro had never baked anything by herself before this week. But the first-time baker entered her Cuckoo Coconut cupcake into Fridays third annual Horace Williams Memorial Cupcake Festival and won first place and $100. The cupcake, made with coconut milk, shredded coconut and Cool Whip, beat out 29 other entries by professional and amateur bakers to win over the competitions three judges. This woman in my building usually helps me and sometimes I cook with her. But this is the first time Ive baked something by myself, Paulina said. Paulina was the youngest baker in the competition. The festival was the brainchild of Sherril Koroluk, the assistant to the director of the Preservation Society of Chapel Hill, who

Always trust your crazy ideas.


Sherril Koroluk,
assistant to the director of the Preservation society of chapel hill

contest, said the judges this year were more knowledgeable about cupcakes than past judges. Judges included Ruth Moose, last years second-place cupcake winner; Debbie Moose, a Raleigh-based cookbook author; and Emily Pierce, the marketing coordinator of Sugarland Bakery. The judges only instructions were to pick the most luscious cupcake. You want something that you put one bite in your mouth and say Ahhh, Ruth Moose said. Contact the City Editor at city@dailytarheel.com.

Dancing for a Boys and Girls club


By Ethan Robertson
Staff Writer

Local residents and community organizers spent Saturday night dancing for their very own branch of the Boys and Girls Club. The Boys and Girls Club of Eastern Piedmont, which aims to expand throughout Orange and Western Chatham counties, held a fundraising event called Dancing with the Stars of Carolina at the Carolina Inn. The club, which would offer after-school and summer enrichment activities to area children, has proposed a plan to renovate and add to the Pines Community Center on Johnson Street to make room for a new Chapel Hill branch. But according to the clubs website, organizers must have raised $250,000 the clubs first year of operating costs

before it can open its doors. Community leaders, including Chapel Hill police chief Chris Blue and UNC womens basketball head coach Sylvia Hatchell, came to the fundraiser to help achieve that goal. I just wanted to bring the community together and support the cause of the opening of the Boys and Girls Club, said Marla Benton, co-chairwoman and coordinator of the event. The venue was filled to capacity, she added. Though the Chapel Hill Planning Department has not received any formal plans for the Pine Knolls project, Chapel Hill Town Council member Donna Bell said the project is on track. They are already included in the town budget, and I understand they are doing their own fundraising, she said. They seem very proactive in getting the project complete.

Besides fundraising, the group is also holding public information meetings at the community center, including one Tuesday. We go to the meetings to make sure everyone is on the same page, said Sarah Marion, the chief professional officer for Boys and Girls Club of Eastern Piedmont. The Boys and Girls Club of America was founded in 1860 to give underprivileged youth enrichment opportunities and promote character development. It provides services to children ages 6 to 18, including lessons on decision-making, bullying and gang prevention, and health and nutrition, Marion said. Marion said she is excited to see the program expand to Chapel Hill, because its counselors build relationships with youth and serve as role models. When you see that, it makes your heart just leap, she said.

How to get involved


to help support the Boys and Girls club of eastern Piedmont monetarily or by volunteering, contact sarah marion at 919-663-6159. the club aims to expand through orange and Western chatham counties.

Although a moratorium on certain developments in the Northside and Pine Knolls neighborhoods was passed by the town council in June to slow the effects of gentrification, council member Penny Rich said it wont delay construction for the new branch. When we put in the moratorium on building in the Northside and Pine Knolls neighborhoods, we made sure that (the Pines Community Center) would be able to build, Rich said. Contact the City Editor at city@dailytarheel.com.

A slow-paced, robotic voice resonates from a room in Cobb Residence Hall. The voice is a special feature on UNC sophomore Kevin Currins phone which allows him to listen to text messages, instead of seeing them. Currin is one of the fewer than 10 visually BUDGET CUTS impaired students registered with the disability services office at UNC, said Jim Kessler, director of disability services at the University. Five students are registered as hard of hearing, he said. This isnt the first time Currin has been one of only a few visually impaired students. In the ninth grade, Currin switched from the Governor Morehead School for the Blind to a regular public school. By January, students who attend one of North Carolinas three residential schools for the visually impaired and hard of hearing might have to change schools. By that date, the N.C. Department of Public Instruction will announce the closure of either the Governor Morehead School for the Blind, the Eastern N.C. School for the Deaf or the N.C. School for the Deaf. The recently passed state appropriations bill mandates the state close one of those three schools because they no longer meet the needs of visually impaired and hard of hearing populations in an effective manner. The impact of this impending closure is uncertain. An estimated 220 students attend all three schools. These students represent less than five percent of visually impaired or hard of hearing students in North Carolina, said Tom Winton, a section chief in the departments exceptional children division. Its important to recognize that these schools are a small part of the educational services available, he said. Winton said most visually impaired and hard of hearing students attend regular public schools, where they receive services ranging from language development and literacy to independent living skills. At UNC, only one of the estimated 13 visually impaired or hard of hearing students on campus graduated from one of the three residential schools. Even though the schools serve a small market, Currin said he doesnt support closing

dth/melissa key Kevin Currin, a blind sophomore chemistry major, utilizes the resources available in the Davis Library for UNCs blind students.

one of them. I think it would be terrible for the kids who go there, he said. I know its a small number of people but still. Winton agreed the closing will have an impact. When one of those campuses shuts down of course it will greatly affect those students, he said. Audrey Garvin, director of the N.C. School for the Deaf, said her school offers unique services unavailable at regular public schools. Its a larger community than for one or two students in a public school who may or may not have any deaf role models in their communities or families, she said. Though the close of one of the schools is certain, administrators are unsure which school will be closed. The one that is closed will be consolidated, according to the appropriations bill. The state will close the school which least impacts services for students and minimizes costs of consolidation and required travel for students who transfer schools, among other criteria, according to the bill. Winton said other services will exist for students. Cape Fear High School, which was named one of the best high schools in America by U.S. News & World Report, is preparing for a possible influx of students from the school that closes, said Principal Lee Spruill. We already have a lot of things in place, she said. But Currin who graduated from a non-specialized school still sees value in his time at Governor Morehead. If I didnt go to the school for the first eight years, I wouldnt have had the skills necessary to go to public school, he said. Contact the State & National Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.

inBRIEF
arts briefs
Chamber Orchestra of the Triangle gets Arts Council grant
The North Carolina Arts Council awarded the Chamber Orchestra of the Triangle $10,000 for its support of the local community and economy. The orchestra will use the grant funds to produce its season-ending Spanish concert, centered on a puppet show in conjunction with Paperhand Puppet Intervention. This is the second consecutive year that the orchestra has won a grant from the Arts Council.

Campus briefs
Applications being accepted for paid internship with Stone Center
The UNC Stone Center is accepting applications for the Sean Douglas Leadership Fellows program. The chosen intern will participate in a 10-week program that spans September to November 2011. A stipend will be given to the intern for the 10 weeks. Work will include working closely with the Stone Center director on special projects and reports. The program is open to all UNC sophomores, juniors and seniors. For information about the program, contact (919) 962-9001 or jfjordan@ email.unc.edu or brazile@unc.edu.

City briefs
Chapel Hill Police investigating early Sunday morning shooting
The Chapel Hill Police Department is still investigating a shooting that occurred at 2:27 a.m. in the parking lot of the Kangaroo Express at University Mall. The two victims were treated for non-life threatening injuries at UNC Hospitals and released later in the day, said Sgt. Ed Brooks. Theyve gone back to their houses, he said. The police department had no new information on the suspects whereabouts Sunday night, Brooks said. The suspect was described as a young black male, wearing a white T-shirt and

a black hat, according to a press release from the department. If you have any information about the suspect, please contact Investigator Nikeisha Tabron at 919-968-2767 ext. 113, or Crime Stoppers at 942-7515. Calls are anonymous and confidential, and information that leads to an arrest could earn up to a $2,000 cash reward.

Chapel Hill Transits N and JN Buses will resume a closed route


Beginning Monday, Chapel Hill Transit N and JN routes will resume full service. Buses will be able to travel between the Umstead Drive bus pull-off near Bolinwood Apartments and Village Drive. Orange Water and Sewer Authoritys

contractor, Park Construction, Inc., has finished work on the stretch early, allowing the buses to travel through it earlier than originally expected. The Village Drive and Umstead Drive intersection will continue to be closed to through traffic. All stops along Village Drive will be served except for the bus stops nearest Winding Creek Lane. Buses will operate at low speeds through the construction area for safety reasons, possibly impacting NextBus predictions and potentially causing the buses to run several minutes behind. Real-time maps may be used to identify bus locations along the route. - From staff and wire reports

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the honor system understood the gravity of the offense that the student had committed, Perrin said. But a failure to take academic conduct seriously enough isnt the only reason for faculty dissatisfaction with the honor system, said Jay Smith, a professor leading the committee created to examine the surveys findings. Faculty members arent informed; there are few places faculty can engage in the system, he said. Given that so much of what the honor system deals with is integrity and its protection, many faculty think its peculiar that they are excluded from the processes from which academic integrity is upheld. The process can be time-consuming as well, with some cases continuing months after they are reported, Smith said. The reluctance to report cases, as shown by the survey, is what leads many faculty members to take the punishment of honor code offenses into their own hands, some professors said. Boxill said in situations that are not reported, the honor system is denied the ability to maintain records of a students misconduct. Both Boxill and Sauls said the reporting of plagiarism and cheating to the Honor Court is necessary in order to uphold the Universitys academic integrity and maintain student records. dents, Gitterman said. I have no regrets in using it. The NCAA cases were an anomaly, and it is unfortunate that it is not representative of the overwhelming number of cases that have been handled competently by the system. Gregory Kable, a senior lecturer in dramatic arts, said a student-led honor system is inherently valuable. Its important to have a student-led Honor Court because it gives peer perspective and understanding, he said. McCay said members of the honor system hope the review results in a better understanding between students and faculty. Its not about students being superior to faculty, McCay said. We want them to be happy with our decisions and to have our decisions based on faculty interest. Contact the University Editor at university@dailytarheel.com.

Monday, August 29, 2011

HONOR

from page 1

SeaRcHeS

A task force led by Jan Boxill, chairwoman of the faculty, will begin examining the honor system in September, Boxill said.

A peculiar exclusion
To some faculty members, the honor system is a divided establishment that excludes faculty opinion and influence, and is overly lenient to the serious issue of student misconduct. Sociology professor Andrew Perrin, one of the authors of the 2010 survey, was among the 51 percent of the 504 faculty members who responded who said they might or might not, probably would not or definitely would not refer an issue of academic misconduct to the honor system. I felt that neither the court, nor the rest of the members of

No regrets
To other faculty members, the honor system is an effective and admirable system that allows students to handle the problems of their peers. Public policy professor Daniel Gitterman said his five experiences with the Honor Court have all been positive. Ive always found the honor system to be a thoughtful, professional, competent group of stu-

confidentiality of the applicants. There will be some candidates who are definitely interested but will say, I just cant jeopardize my circumstance at home, said Bill Carr of Carr Sports Associates Inc. The 17-member search committee for vice chancellor for finance and administration and 13-member athletic director search committee each included one student and faculty members from a variety of departments. Aside from the final stages, searches follow the same general pattern, Crisp said. The committee accepts applications and conducts interviews with candidates in private. Open and closed searches are conducted in the same manner until finalists are chosen. In an open search, the finalists names are made public, Crisp said. In a closed search, the finalists names

are not released. Crisp said a search for a dean is different from a search for a vice chancellor because members of the individual departments want to be engaged in the process. The search that resulted in Thorps appointment to chancellor was closed. But the last search for the executive vice chancellor and provost and the recent search for the vice chancellor for research were open. The finalists in the ongoing search for the next associate provost of diversity and multicultural affairs will also be public, wrote the search committees chairman, Paul Godley, in an email. The searches were also open for the deans of the College of Arts and Sciences and the Schools of Journalism and Mass Communication and Information and Library Science. Contact the University Editor at university@dailytarheel.com.

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HuRRicaNe

to be this bad. ECUs campus received a lot of damage from the storm, she said. There are a bunch of trees down everywhere on campus, she said, adding that parts of the roofs on campus buildings had been torn off from the wind. ECU and Elizabeth City State University are closed today, according to the universities websites. UNC-Wilmington received minimal damage from the hurricane and the campus will resume classes today, said Dana Fischetti, spokeswoman for the university. Our whole area was very fortunate, considering what it could have been, she said. A voluntary evacuation issued Friday at noon. Keely Herron, a senior at UNCW, stayed in Wilmington despite the universitys recommended evacuation. She said when she woke up at about 7 a.m. Saturday it was windy, but there was very little rain. It was not nearly as intense as everyone thought it would be, Herron said in an email. Hurricane Irene was a category 1 storm with wind gusts up to 100 miles per hour when it made landfall at about 7:30 a.m., said Rachel Zouzias, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Wilmington. The hurricane

mct/wire Silver By The Sea has a message for Hurricane Irene at the Nautical Mile in Freeport, N.Y. Store owners closed their shops for the storm.

dth/Katie Sweeney Most of the damage in Chapel Hill caused by Hurricane Irene was fallen trees, like this one in McCorkle Place.

was originally projected to hit as a category 3 storm. It was getting some dry air sucked into the middle of it which was decreasing the intensity, Zouzias said. Damage caused by Hurricane Irene was widespread, said Tom Mather, a spokesman for the state emergency management office. He said flooding, especially

near the oceanfront, blocked many of the roads. When you have a storm like this you have to wait to see what happens, and the flooding is where most of the damage occurs, he said. Rainfall in the state ranged from four to 15 inches, said Casey Dail, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in

Morehead City. Mather said it will take a few days to know Hurricane Irenes full impact on the state. The more clear idea of damage, we will know in the aftermath of the storm, he said. Already six deaths caused by the hurricane have been reported in North Carolina, said Patty McQuillan, spokeswoman for

the N.C. Department of Crime Control and Public Safety. And as of Sunday morning, there were 525,000 power outages in the state, McQuillan said. Duke Energy reported 4,700 power outages on Saturday in Chapel Hill, but by Sunday afternoon all power lost by the hurricane had been restored, said Sally Thelen, a spokeswoman for the company. Chapel Hill faced winds of about 22 miles per hour on Saturday and received less than a quarterinch of rain, said Kathleen Carroll, a metrologist for the National Weather Service in Raleigh.

But that was enough to do at least some damage. Chrissy Luettich, a junior at UNC-CH, said at about 11 a.m. Saturday she and her roommates heard a loud sound outside their house on Church Street. When they went outside an hour later, a large tree branch was laying in their yard, blocking their front porch. But there was no damage to the house. That is pretty much all of the excitement we got from the storm, Luettich said. Contact the State & National Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.

from page 1

SeaRcH cOmmittee

Names of finalists for the position will not be announced in order to preserve the privacy of potential candidates who might currently hold jobs elsewhere. Though the committee plans to consider internal candidates for the job, with the help of an outside search firm, the committee plans to conduct a nationwide search. My charge for you is to look everywhere, Thorp said. I want you to look around the country for people with experience in athletics and administration, wherever they may be. The committee decided to use a search firm after hearing from representatives of two different firms and weighing the positives and negatives of each ones services. Committee chairman Lowry Caudill, who will meet with Thorp to decide which firm to use, said the service will be paid for by private funds from the athletic department and the Rams Club. During the meeting, the committee described its ideal candidate as having integrity and being a coach of coaches. The members were also in agreement that the next athletic

Were not broken... Weve had some issues, but weve had a lot of great success.
martina Ballen,
athletic director search committee member

director had to understand the culture at UNC and be willing to move on from a troubled past. Were not broken, said Martina Ballen, committee member and chief financial officer of the department of athletics. Weve had some issues, but weve had a lot of great success. Caudill noted that Baddour and predecessor John Swofford, who is currently the ACC commissioner, have set the bar high for UNC athletic directors. But its the committees job, he said, to make sure that the next candidate lives up to their legacies. If there were a hall of fame for athletic directors, and (Baddour and Swofford) would be in it, then our challenge is to find someone of that same caliber, who when they look back at their career, they would be in it as well, Caudill said. Contact the Sports Editor at sports@dailytarheel.com.

dth/jade poteat A representative of a search firm speaks to the athletic director search committee. Members listened to two different firms during the meeting.

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Opinion
Established 1893, 118 years of editorial freedom

The Daily Tar Heel


If there were a hall of fame for athletic directors then our challenge is to find someone of that same caliber, who when they look back at their career, they would be in it as well.
Lowry Caudill, chairman of the athletic director search committee

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TO THE EDITOR: Passionate about student life at UNC? Want to have a say on tuition and fee increases? Have an idea for making the arts community more visible on campus? Now is your chance to make your voice heard. The Cooper administration is currently seeking dedicated, energetic and motivated students to serve on a variety of committees and special projects. Please visit unc.edu/ studgov for more information and to download the Student Government committee application. Applications are due Friday by 5 p.m. Olivia Hammill Chief of Staff, Executive Branch of Student Government

Trying to get bi in a gendered world

n an upcoming study in the journal Biological Psychology, researchers at Northwestern University found that bisexual men are, indeed, bisexual. Okay, while this might not make the earth move under your feet (or maybe it did last week), bisexuality has remained a controversial topic for both science and society. Certain ideas persist: Everybody is really just gay or straight; bisexuals have to make a choice eventually; its either a stepping-stone toward being gay or just that one time in college. Some of these ideas are even supported by studies stating that 40 percent of gay men start off bisexual, or that most bisexual men shift toward homosexuality. In fact, the same lab at Northwestern published in 2005 that it remains to be shown that male bisexuality exists. While they acknowledged bisexuality as a behavior and identity, they wanted to find a distinct bisexual pattern of arousal. They showed sex films featuring two men or two women to male subjects identifying as gay, straight or bisexual. Then, using a penile gauge, they measured each subjects genital arousal, or erection. The bisexual subjects demonstrated much more genital arousal to one film or the other, similar to the gay and straight subjects. So why the revisit? The group conceded that the study might have been influenced by the subject recruitment method. They advertised in the gay community and found subjects through selfidentification alone. In the new study funded by the American Institute of Bisexuality, researchers found subjects in an online bisexual community who have a history of sexual and romantic relations with both sexes. And voila! Bisexual subjects, bisexual genital arousal. The immediate response has been mixed. Some might find it affirming; others, insulting. Terri Phoenix, director of the UNC LGBTQ Center, said, It only looks at one component of what it means to be bisexual. Phoenix said the study was limited by its gender binary approach, adding that a more qualitative study on the subjective experiences of bisexual, pansexual and queer persons would have been preferable. Danny DePuy, the centers assistant director, expressed some optimism. My hope would be that this opens up more room for good information, DePuy said. Bi or pansexual people often feel misunderstood. It seems silly that we need science to say it, but it does feel like a step toward acceptance of more sexualities than just gay or straight, a more fluid concept of what sexual orientation is and can be. The researchers even found a spectrum of arousal in their bisexual subjects and proposed this could fluctuate temporally. The science may not explain the whole story, but we can still learn from it. The 2005 study, though flawed, reveals that bisexual identity and arousal do not always line up, at least in the lab. Sex researchers will continue to ask questions and attempt to answer them; whats important is what we do with those answers. People of all sexual orientations should be respected, regardless of identity, behavior or attraction. So go forth and be bi. I hope you wont need a penile gauge.
Columnist Mark Abadi discusses why political involvement is important, especially for young people.

Keep elections in the citizens hands


n a country where the Bill of Rights protects businesses before it protects citizens, the voter-owned election system is a bastion of democratic sanity in a storm of corporate tyranny. The General Assembly should not allow Chapel Hills program to sunset this year, but rather pass legislation making the program permanent. It should also consider allowing other townships across the state to adopt similar systems. Voter-owned elections are a simple fix to the complicated can of worms the Supreme Court opened in its holdings from Citizens United v.

EDiTOriAl

Voter-owned elections must remain intact in Chapel Hill.

Federal Election Commission. With a narrow 54 majority, the court held in 2010 that election laws could not limit corporate funding in political broadcasts. The case struck a big blow to democracy, allowing an unprecedented level of corporate interventionism in American politics. Voter-owned elections stand in stark contrast to Citizens United. Also called fair or clean elections, voter-owned elections are exactly that a way to keep politicians accountable to the constituency they represent and keep big corporations out of a political system already rotting from corruption. The program stipulates that candidates for the Chapel Hill Town Council

cannot accept donations of more than $20 per person while receiving council funding. Implemented in 2009, the program is the only one of its kind in the state and solves many of the problems Citizens United has since caused. Currently, the program is both voluntary and restricted to local elections in Chapel Hill. This makes arguments against the program particularly weak, especially when considering the programs local support. And there is simply no fiscal argument for the state legislature the program does not cost any money to the state, instead drawing funds from the Town Councils budget. Statements by state legislators have suggested that the

programs future is in serious doubt, with Republicans representing the opposition to its existence an opposition that might very well be solely ideological. Although it is still unclear why exactly the legislature would discontinue Chapel Hills program, concern might stem from historical problems with voter-owned election initiatives. Other states that have pursued similar initiatives have run into trouble with the U.S. Supreme Court. Councilman Matt Czajkowski, who didnt participate in the program during his 2009 mayoral campaign, said he opposes the idea of publicly funded elections, referring to the system as a distraction from much more significant issues.

But Czajkowski lost for a reason. His patronizing comments on the issue illustrate his failure to grasp just how important voter-owned elections are in keeping the power of government in the hands of the people. Too often, political commentary invokes lofty democratic ideals for subtle shifts in trivial policies. But this is more than that. Where Citizens United is the artificial sweetener of American politics, voterowned elections are that spoonful of real sugar that helps the medicine go down. The N.C. legislature must consider the implications of stopping a program that so surely places political power in the hands of the voters at literally no political or fiscal cost to state government.

Redistricting deserves better attention


ts no surprise that state Republicans are being accused of foul play by redrawing North Carolinas electoral boundaries in their favor. For more than a century, theyve been in the minority, forced to swallow whatever the Democrats in power drew up. But the surprise has little to do with the party in charge and neither should redistricting. Thats why the N.C. House voted overwhelmingly in favor of a bi-partisan bill that would leave redistricting in the hands of a non-partisan commission beginning in 2020. The bill passed its first

EDiTOriAl

The Senate cannot ignore a bipartisan solution to the states redistricting.

reading in the Senate only to be sent to the rules and operations committee, where bills are typically sent to die. At a special September session focusing on constitutional amendments, the General Assembly should put politics aside and take up this bill. The momentum in Raleigh for non-partisan redistricting carries too much promise to die in a Senate committee. If passed, the bill would create a non-partisan redistricting system similar to the one used in Iowa and necessary to North Carolina, a state known nationally for its blatant gerrymandering. The state has become a textbook example of egregious redistricting that values re-election above fair and democratic representation.

Of particular concern is the infamous snake 12th congressional district that stretches from Charlotte to Winston-Salem, winding its way through primarily minority areas. Its little wonder why North Carolina has faced at least 25 state and federal lawsuits in the past two decades, according to Brent Laurenz, director of outreach for the N.C. Center for Voter Education. And that number doesnt account for new lawsuits to come with the next round of redistricting. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has already vowed to sue over the new lines, alleging discrimination. When Democrats were in power, Republicans often cried foul at the partisan

practices of Democratic redistricting efforts. But now that they are in power they are employing similarly partisan tactics, double-bunking Democratic incumbents to force them to run against each other. It is clear that neither party is innocent, and that politicians have always used and plan to continue using their clout to make elections less fair for their opponents. That is why the bill deserves more attention soon. A bill that had such even and widespread support 50 Democrats and 38 Republicans, including the speaker deserves prompt attention as there is clearly not only a problem but a strong desire to address it. North Carolinas desire for change mirrors legislation

proposed by one the states congressman. Rep. Heath Shuler, D-11th district, sponsored a bill requiring bipartisan redistricting nationwide, also by 2020. The people of this state would be well served by this national action if the state Senate continues to sit on the bill. Something certainly needs to change in a process that continuously disadvantages those whose party is not in power. Partisan redistricting is intended primarily to give some voters an inordinate amount of influence and to disenfranchise others, intentions that run counter to a proper democracy. In a political climate that is only getting more and more polarized, an injection of nonpartisan administration would be a welcome relief.

Higher temperatures... and food prices


Holly Beilen
Eye on the Environment Sophomore global studies major from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Email: beilen@email.unc.edu

cOlUmn

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 lettersfor space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit letters to 250 words. SuBMISSION Drop-off: at our office at 151 E. Rosemary St. 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. The board consists of six board members, the associate opinion editor, the opinion editor and the editor.

magine my surprise when I walked into Chipotle Mexican Grill last week and found myself paying more than I ever had for my chicken burrito bowl. My order was the same, I was sure of it. I scanned my receipt, confused, until the kid who made my meal informed me that prices of everything in the restaurant had increased during the summer. This wasnt just happening in Chapel Hill. Chipotle recently raised prices nationwide about 4.5 percent and expects to see more inflation this year. Why is this necessary? Chipotle isnt selling significantly less than before; if anything, the chain is increasing in popularity. Are they just greedy for the hard-earned wages of poor college students, desperate for burritos? The price hike is a bit more

complicated than that. The rising cost of food, largely caused by climate change and global weather disasters, has brought avocado, dairy and meat along with it in the past few years, said Jack Hartung, Chipotles CFO. In fact, food prices are rising almost everywhere. Since 2007, there have been two huge spikes in international grain prices, with staple crops like corn, soybeans and wheat getting monu-

mentally more expensive. More and more, scientists are pointing to the environment as the cause of food shortages driving prices up. Temperatures are rising rapidly, shortening growing seasons and killing crops. Freak weather disasters, which have been occurring with alarming frequency lately, have also hurt food. While its hard to imagine that a tsunami across the world can actually affect the price of a fast food meal here, the proof is in our empty wallets. Chipotle isnt the only chain forced to raise prices. Coca-Cola will raise drink prices between 3 and 4 percent within the year. And the average cost of groceries and restaurant meals went up 3.7 percent in the past year. So, the inevitable truth is that were all doomed to start spending a lot more on food, a tragic scenario for the average college

student. Cue sad music and tears running down the faces of UNC undergraduates, standing in front of the Chipotle counter with their bowls pleading, Please sir, can I have some more? However, there may be hope. Almost all scientists studying the climate change and food problem agree on one fact: this is largely a human-induced crisis. Weather isnt changing spontaneously. Our own actions led us into this trap. The good news is that actions can be changed. Im not about to preach that the reuse, reduce, and recycle mantra will solve the worlds massive food problems. However, its a start. Students, after all, are some of the worlds most wasteful inhabitants. Im not saying its going to change the world. But wouldnt it be worth it if in two years, the price of a chicken burrito bowl was back down to less than $7?

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News

Monday, August 29, 2011

On the wire: national and world news


Know more on todays stories: dailytarheel.com/nationworld
Irene hits East Coast with floods and power outages
NEW YORK (MCT) Already a killer storm, Irene sloshed through the New York metropolitan area Sunday, briefly flooding parts of the city and severing power to a million people but not provoking the doomsday urban disaster that had been feared. Irene killed at least 14 people in six states. More than 4.5 million customers lost power along the East Coast and well inland. Initial property damage estimates ranged up to $7 billion. Irene dumped immense amounts of rain on a region already saturated by summer downpours. Many communities in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, upstate New York, Connecticut, Vermont and elsewhere endured life-threatening flash floods and toppling trees. Authorities warned of more to come, and they begged residents not to become complacent. Along Irenes path, the death toll was expected to increase, but authorities said it could have been much worse. The evacuation of at least 2.3 million coastal residents and other precautions dramatically reduced risk to life, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said after briefing President Barack Obama. relief officials said Sunday. The Office of Civil Defense said six more people were missing as Typhoon Nanmadol battered the northernmost province of Cagayan and nearby areas on Saturday. Among the fatalities were five children ages 4 to 13 who were buried in landslides in the northern province of Pangasinan and the mountain resort city of Baguio, the office reported. Abigail Valte, a deputy presidential spokeswoman, said the government expressed sympathy to the victims of Nanmadol. Nearly 50,000 people were displaced and almost 10,000 of them were staying in different evacuation centers. The OCD said nine bridges and Mct/wire 28 roads remained impassable on Patti Pearson shovels debris Sunday due to floods, landslides from her home in Kill Devil Hills, and mudflows. after Hurricane Irene passed through the area.

dth/jessica gaylord Rev. William Barber, president of the N.C. chapter of the NAACP, spoke at the Peace and Justice Celebration.

Town honors peace and justice leaders


By Michelle Zayed
Assistant City Editor

Marijuana growers are using Indian reservations for farms

a UNC law professor, worked to desegregate businesses and the University. He also helped recruit Civil rights activists who dediUNCs first black basketball player. cated their lives to promoting indiIt is easy for us to recogvidual freedom in Chapel Hill were nize these people, but we have remembered and honored Sunday. to remember it was not easy The town added the names of for them, said N.C. Sen. Ellie Yonni Chapman, Rebecca Clark, Kinnaird, D-Orange, Pollitts wife. Rev. Charles Jones and Dan Clark lived and worked in the Pollitt, to a granite plate in front town as one of the Universitys of the post office at the Peace and maids. She was discriminated Justice Plaza. against by Jim Crow laws, but Some memorials are set to became known for encouraging remember the people, but other black residents to vote. memorials, like the one here She knew how to support you, today, are dedicated to rememhow to stand behind you, how to ber the movement made by the love you, but also she knew how people, said Rev. William Barber, to hold you accountable, said president of the N.C. chapter of Reginald Hildebrand, an associthe National Association for the ate professor for African and Advancement of Colored People. Afro-American Studies. The recipients were honored Chapman fought for the rights posthumously. of workers and blacks and defendThey have left an extraordied communists and non-communary legacy for us, said Mayor nists during the 1950s, said Sandi Mark Kleinschmidt. Not one of Chapman Osterkatz, his daughter. them stopped working, even when He was often sick and he they reached some success. was often tired, she said. But he One of those honored, Pollitt, often stood up and did the work

that had to be done. Jones founded the Community Church of Chapel Hill and allowed people of color to attend his service. His granddaughter, Karen Abbotts, asked residents to not bury her grandfathers aspirations with his ashes during her speech. Kleinschmidt said he continues to see a vibrant social justice movement in the town. I think its because of the legacy they left us, he said. We have to own it ourselves. Courtney Wilson, a senior psychology major, said she had looked at some of Chapmans cases in her class and that brought her to the ceremony. It connected the older generations with the younger ones, she said. Sarah Baker, a senior sociology major, said she found the event personally relevant. Its just important to remember our past and history, she said. Contact the City Editor at city@dailytarheel.com.

Typhoon kills 10, displaces thousands in Philippines


MANILA, Philippines (MCT) A slow-moving typhoon dumped heavy rains in northern and eastern Philippines, triggering landslides and floods that left at least 10 people dead, police and

grower, an armed Mexican national in camouflage clothing who federal prosecutors say had SEATTLE (MCT) In the backcountry of the Yakama Indian been tending the plot for almost Reservation in Washington state, four months. Tribal reservations, some with a handful of law enforcement officers spent part of last summer hundreds of square miles of rugged backcountry, have become searching for two things: marithe front line for law enforcejuana and the people growing it. ment eradication of marijuana Tribal police and officers grow operations in Washington, from the Drug Enforcement says Rich Wiley, who heads the Administration were acting on a tip about a vast marijuana planta- State Patrols Narcotics Division. Growers are targeting the outtion in the forested highlands of skirts of Indian country for their the sprawling reservation. Such marijuana farms, knowing tribal tips often yielded abandoned fields of cannabis, but none of the lands are sparsely populated and less policed, he said. culprits. Officials say none of the grow But the team hit pay dirt last operations uncovered by law August by uncovering a grow enforcement has been tied to operation with 8,850 marijuana tribal members. plants, as well as the suspected

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News

The Daily Tar Heel

Music therapy program receives $15,000 grant


By Nidhi Singh
Staff Writer

In an era of social networks and constant communication, its necessary to be able to socialize. With this idea, Yasmine White founded Voices Together, a program which utilizes music therapy to aid adults and children of all ages with disabilities. White created the program six years ago and has now expanded it to five school districts. It recently received a $15,000 grant from the

Triangle Community Foundation, a group that gives funds and grants to nonprofit organizations. Two committees review the applications and award money to the highest-scoring organizations, said Libby Richards, the scholarship and special projects coordinator for the foundation. Richards said the application process is highly competitive. Voices Together stuck out as an influential and eye-opening program. They are a strong organiza-

tion that works with a special group of young people, she said. White said that the grant money would be used to reach out to more schools and students. White, who is a music therapist, said she understands that students with autism and other mental disabilities find communication and social skills difficult. To improve these skills, White decided they should work in group settings. Being a community is the

epitome of socialization, White said. Every week, students participate in an hour-long session where they use music to talk about their feelings and emotions. White said that teachers and parents experience the effects of the program in the classroom and at home. It has a huge impact on the way they communicate. One parent said their child never spoke before, said White.

Aileen Womark, a teacher who helped introduce Voices Together into the Durham public school system, used to teach autistic high school students at the Durham School of the Arts. Womark said she found that the effects of Voices Together were almost ten times more beneficial than most speech therapy classes and that many of her primarily non-verbal students began to voice their feelings. This program really helps

these students find their place in a group and community, Womark said. Its a model program. White said she wishes to continue expanding the program so more students can become more social and confident communicators. If you cant advocate for yourself, you cant get what you need, she said. Contact the Arts Editor at arts@dailytarheel.com.

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Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to publication for classified ads. We publish Monday thru Friday when classes are in session. A university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e. this affects deadlines). We reserve the right to reject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Acceptance of ad copy or prepayment does not imply agreement to publish an ad. You may stop your ad at any time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for stopped ads will be provided. No advertising for housing or employment, in accordance with federal law, can state a preference based on sex, race, creed, color, religion, national origin, handicap, marital status.

Child Care Wanted


CHILD CARE WANTED for 12 and 9 yearolds. Pick up at Woods Charter, homework, transport to activities, light meal prep. M-F 3-6:30pm. $10/hr. Excellent driving record a must. Resume with references to jlja1970@earthlink.net.
CHILD CARE, HOUSEHOLD CLEANING 3-6pm, M-F. Help needed for

Child Care Wanted


CHILD CARE WANTED: Sitter needed for our 18 month-old daughter. Near Southpoint, starting immediately. 10-15 hrs/wk flexible, $10/hr. Send resume/experience to jill.sirko@gmail.com. WANTED: AFTERSCHOOL Help M/Th/F for Chapel Hill, Carrboro family. Need ability to safely drive son and daughter from McDougle School to activities. $10/hr. Please email lisa_voss@yahoo.com. AFTERSCHOOL CARE WANTED. I am looking for someone to pickup my 2 children (10 and 12 year-olds) from school 2-3 days/ wk. kids are very easy going. I pay competitively. Need car, CV and references. Contact sbl.nd1991@gmail.com. CHILD CARE: 2 great kids need fun, dependable sitter. 2 days/wk, 2:45-5pm. Close to UNC. Experience and references required. Education majors and grad students preferred. Send resume to raymari34@gmail.com.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Services
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NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS

UNC Phonathon Now Hiring!


Earn $8.50/hour, build resume experience, flexible hours around your class schedule!
Seeking students committed to making a difference at Carolina. Apply online at http://unc.thecallingcenter.com (no www.) or call 919-913-1660
(priority given to online applications)
407824

MAkE REAL MONEY

)))

13 year-old boy plus household cleaning. Own car and references needed. $11/hr plus gas. Start date: now. 919-906-0105 or beckham@duke.edu.

LOVELY WOODED LOT FOR 2bR/1.5bA townhome in North Chatham County. This Vickers Road duplex has fireplace, a lot of privacy. $750/mo. water included. Pets negotiable with fee. Email Fran Holland Properties at herbholland@intrex.net or call 919-968-4545. WALk, bIkE FROM 13 DAVIE CIRCLE. This 2bR/1bA house has hardwood floors, W/D, pets negotiable with fee. Only blocks to campus, it is located off Frankin Street. $1,025/mo. Email Fran Holland Properties, herbholland@intrex.net.

)))

Volunteering
ARE YOU A WOMAN who smokes cigarettes and does not want to quit? You can contribute to science by participating in a smoking study that examines how smoking affects your thinking and mood. Do you answer yes to the following questions? Are you between the ages of 18 and 45? Are you smoking at least 10 cigarettes per day? Do you have a normal menstrual cycle? If so, please call Joe at 919416-2099 or Liz at 919-416-2425. If you participate in this study, we will compensate you up to $118 for your time. Pro0002799. DO YOU SMOkE? Are you a regular smoker between 18-50 years? Do you experience difficulties with the following? Not paying attention to details, making careless mistakes, difficulty staying focused on tasks, difficulty completing work, chores or other tasks, disorganization, forgetfulness, difficulty staying seated restlessness, impatience. If you answered yes to all or some of the questions above OR have been diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), you may qualify for a study at Duke University Medical Center. For more information call 919-416-2099. Pro0000908. DO YOU SMOkE CIGARETTES AND not want to quit? You can contribute to science by participating in a smoking study that examines how ADHD medication affects smoking and behavior. If you answer yes to the following questions please give us a call: Are you between the ages of 18 and 50? Are you smoking at least 10 cigarettes per day? Do you experience difficulties with ADHD including: Making careless mistakes? Difficulty completing tasks? Disorganization? Restlessness? If you are eligible and participate in this study, we will compensate you up to $455 for your time. Please call Joe at 416-2099. Pro00005309.

AUDITIONS
This week for Carolina Choir, Chamber Singers, Mens and Womens Glee Clubs. Sign up in Person Hall 106. All singers welcome! More info: skleb@email.unc.edu.

NEED RELIAbLE person to transport my 16 year-old daughter from school at Pace academy to our house at Erwin Road. M- F. Will pay gas money and a hourly rate of $15/hr. Reply to a01saba01@gmail.com. Must have a good driving record. CHILD CARE: Seeking afterschool child care provider for 13 year-old girl in the beginning of September. 3-5:30pm, 3-4 days/wk. Must have a car. School and residence are minutes from UNC. jonf1640@bellsouth.net. 919-932-7749. SITTER FOR TWO 4 YEAR-OLD bOYS 1-5pm Wednesdays. Grad student, very mature undergrad to watch 2 friends. Must be playful and responsible, have car, be good with Legos and conversant about superheroes. $10-$12.hr. Helensart@aol.com. CHILD CARE: 2 children looking for fun loving sitter, Wednesday evenings 6-9pm and occasional weekends. Please send your resume or summary of experience to hoathout@bellsouth.net. AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE: Energetic college student needed for 3 hours 3-4 days/wk. for 2 girls, 7 and 10. In Chapel Hill. Help with homework and transport to activities. Must have own car. Call 919-929-5116. FUN, RELIAbLE SITTER wanted for 2 Chapel Hill boys, ages 2 and 5.1-3 days/wk (Tuesday, Wednesday, and/or Friday preferred) 8:30am4:30pm. jps297@hotmail.com. PART-TIME MORNING NANNY needed to take care of a sweet 22 month-old girl in southwest Durham. Located near Garrett Road and 15/501. $8.50/hr, 9-11:30am, M-F. Stay at home mom or full-time nanny may use their own house. shcwillis@gmail.com with resume and references.
CHILD CARE NEEDED: Child care,

Child Care Wanted


SATURDAY SITTER WANTED
for 4 year-old boy. Most Saturdays from 9:30am-5:30pm. Must like dogs, playing all sports, imaginative games, crafts and exploring nature. Some Spanish a plus. $10-$11/hr. Need own car. Email: cabbytwo@netscape.net.
NEWHOPE CHURCH HIRING FOR SUNDAY. Seeking child care staff for Sunday mornings, 6:00am-1:30pm. $11/hr. Must love working with kids and be committed with dependable transportation. Send resume to: amy@newhopenc.org.

For Rent
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.

gARDEN ApARTMENT
Large 1bR basement apartment with private entrance available early September. $650/ mo. all utilities included, washing machine and dryer, large living room with old barn wood fireplace. Private patio faces the garden. Grad students preferred. 919-942-9961. 4 bLOCkS TO CAMPUS, Franklin Street. Check out this 4bR/2.5bA house on Stephens Street. Hardwood floors, W/D, dishwasher. Great location for students. $1,800/mo. or rent a bedroom for $500/mo. (all utilities included) 10 month lease available. Fran Holland Properties: herbholland@intrex.net.

Help Wanted
MORNING bARN HELP: Do you miss horses already? Small dressage barn 20 minutes from UNC. 10-15 hrs-wk. $10/hr. No riding, lessons available. Send resume: NCDressagebarn@gmail.com.

Parking
GREAT LOCATION: Parking space 2 blocks from Carolina Inn. $340/semester. Call 919929-3494.

FAIR HOUSINg

pART-TIME OFFICE ASSISTANT


UNC alum owned transportation business. 15-24 hrs/wk. Flexible schedule. Minimum GPA 3.2. Prefer junior, senior. $12-$14/hr. Must have car. Great opportunity to work in small business setting. Email UNCAssistant@gmail.com with letter of interest, desired schedule.

Roommates
ROOMMATE WANTED for 4bR/2.5bA house on Merritt Mill. Furnished. $500/ mo. +1/4 utilities. We are good cooks, clean and pleasant. Available now. prheenan@email.unc.edu. ROOMMATE WANTED: Furnished 2bR/2bA condo 10 minutes from UNC and Duke. Available 8-24, $750/mo +utilities. sdula@ live.unc.edu, 704-213-4440. FEMALE GRAD, PROFESSIONAL looking to share beautiful 2bR/2bA in quiet condo community. $500/mo. W/D, large bedroom, bath, on busline. rmbeitia5@hotmail.com, 386405-4863. 919-240-5385.

For Sale
GOVERNORS PARk CUSTOM HOME: This custom home has approximately 3,400 +800 heated square feet on 0.51 acres, backs up to a wild life preserve (eagle nesting preserve) and was built in the summer of 2000. The home has wide maple flooring throughout with carpeting in the bedrooms and custom tile in baths, a first floor master bedroom, bathroom suit with his and hers walk in closets, guest bedroom, guest bathroom, large private office, formal dining, large open kitchen with granite counter tops, upgraded appliances, breakfast area, nook, living room with gas fireplace and heat blower, wet bar area, 9 foot ceilings, laundry room with laundry shoot from upstairs along with wrap around porch. Second floor has a full bath, 3 large bedrooms, a very large bonus room plumbed for a wet bar area all with skylights, ceiling fans throughout the home. CATV wired with security system and whole house water purification system. There is an oversized detached 3 car garage with a separate toilet area in the garage and a 2bR apartment above (rental income or in law suit). This home is in a great family neighborhood with a park, playground, tennis, volleyball, basketball courts, swimming pool, soccer fields. Available to move in at the end of summer! 919-928-8432.

OFFICE MANAgER
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA boomerang Program is seeking administrative office manager. Responsible for providing support services by overseeing and performing clerical and administrative tasks. Proven experience in developing work procedures and standards to improve office efficiency and effectiveness. Strong proven skills in managing multiple projects in an ever changing environment; Professional demeanor a must with ability to communicate, verbally and written, with youth, families and community partners; Proficiency in Microsoft Office required, as well as other office equipment. Full-time, M-F with benefits: medical, dental and life insurance paid for by the YMCA. Submit resume, cover letter and application to N. Chan at nchan@chcymca.org or 980 MLk, Jr. blvd., Chapel Hill, 27514. Application on website: www.chcymca.org. DIRECT CARE STAFF NEEDED: The Arc of Orange County is seeking direct care staff to work with individuals with developmental disabilities. Part-time, afterschool, weekend hours available. High school diploma, clean record required. Application: ckeller@arcoforange.org. YARD WORkER NEEDED: Must be strong, experienced and have transportation. Weekend work. $13/hr. 919-929-4220.

WALk TO UNC
Mill Creek $990/mo. 2bR/2bA townhouse layout condo. All appliances. Walk out patio, lot of storage. Water and parking included. 919-671-4230. STUDIO APARTMENT AVAILAbLE immediately near Whole Foods near UNC. kitchen appliances, own bath and kitchen, internet, private. $675/mo. all inclusive. sraolnt@gmail.com. 3 STORY TOWNHOME for rent located near downtown Chapel Hill. 3,000 square feet, 4bR/4bA, W/D, stove, refrigerator included. $2,400/mo. Please call 919-260-6635 or leave message to include full first, last name, phone number with area code and mention this ad at 919-932-6779. 4 bLOCkS TO CAMPUS, and Franklin. 2bR/1bA apartment has W/D connections, electric heat. $675/mo. 415 North Columbia Street. Fran Holland Properties: email herbholland@intrex.net or call 919-968-4545.

campus. 3 kids, ages 9, 11 and 13. Walk to McDougle schools in Chapel Hill. M-F 2:30-5:30pm starting 8-29. Must be responsible driver for afterschool sports practices in town. obx_ jellies@yahoo.com, 919-599-9282.

AFTERSCHOOL CARE. $13/hr. Close to

Rooms
FURNISHED ROOM WITH PRIVATE bATH IN PRIVATE HOME. Major busline and park and ride. kitchen privileges, much privacy. Nonsmoker. 919-225-7687.

AFTERSCHOOL bUDDY NEEDED: Male

or female buddy needed at faculty couple home in Hillsborough 3:306:30pm M-F for our 17 year-old son with Down Syndrome. Experience helpful. References needed. Job sharing possible. $10-$12/hr. 919-732-1680, sweir@unc.edu.

transportation needed for 13 yearold son. Must have car and excellent driving record. 5-10 hrs/wk. Will pay gas. 919-968-9444. CHILD CARE NEEDED: Looking for a warm, high energy, experienced person to care for my 4 wonderful daughters, ages 8, 11, 12 and 15 (though the oldest will not be around much), on Wednesday and Friday afternoons. We live very close to campus, but a car is required. If you are interested, please call Andrew, 919-967-4924. NICE FAMILY LOOkING for afterschool care for children, driving to sports, lessons, etc. 3 or 4 days a week from 2:45-6pm. Competitive pay. Please call Mary at 919-401-9454. PART-TIME NANNY needed for 201112 school year for 2 girls, 5 and 9. M-F 2:30-6:30pm. Must have excellent references and clean driving record. Email: 4falek@gmail.com. ENTHUSIASTIC, RESPONSIbLE, active babysitter needed immediately for 10 year-old boy. M-Th, approximately 3:15-5:15pm. Willing to use more than 1 sitter. $10/hr. Transportation required. Contact: pattipfox@gmail.com.

LOST & FOUND ADS RUN FREE IN DTH CLASSIFIEDS!

Wheels for Sale


PIAGGIO FLY SCOOTER: Low mileage and in pristine condition with helmet and battery charger. $2,000 or best offer. 919-619-1172.

AFTERSCHOOL CARE NEEDED for 11 year-old boy in Carrboro 3-5pm Tu/Th and a ride from McDougle Middle to guitar lessons at 3pm on Wednesday. $12/hr, $60/wk. Supervise homework, take to activities. Car required. Send resume, availability to Danielle, daniellegraceking@gmail.com.

HOROSCOPES
If August 29th is Your Birthday... You get more than you give this year. New opportunities arise for career and for influencing opinion. Choose love, every time. If you lose, use that juice for fantastic art. If you win, savor it. Your work earns attention and respect.
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

AbOvE gARAgE ApARTMENT


1bR/1bA. 800 square feet. H2O, W/D included. $800/mo. Private entry. 68 Oakwood Drive. $200 security deposit. Dogs Ok with additional deposit, rent. 919-280-8675. GOVERNORS PARk HOME FOR RENT: This custom home has approximately 3,400 heated square feet on 0.51 acres, backs up to a wild life preserve (eagle nesting preserve) and was built in the summer of 2000. The home has wide maple flooring throughout with carpeting in the bedrooms and custom tile in baths, a first floor master bedroom, bathroom suit with his and hers walk in closets, guest bedroom, guest bathroom, large private office, formal dining, large open kitchen with granite counter tops, upgraded appliances, breakfast area, nook, living room with gas fireplace and heat blower, wet bar area, 9 foot ceilings, laundry room with laundry shoot from upstairs along with wrap around porch. Second floor has a full bath, 3 large bedrooms, a very large bonus room plumbed for a wet bar area all with skylights and ceiling fans throughout the home. CATV wired with security system and whole house water purification system. There is an oversized detached 3 car garage with a separate toilet area in the garage and a 2bR apartment above (not included with rent). This home is in a great family neighborhood with a park, playground, tennis, volleyball and basketball courts, swimming pool and soccer fields. HOA fees not included. Available immediately! 919-928-8432. GARAGE APARTMENT. Quiet, wooded neighborhood. Private entrance. Full kitchen. Carpeting. Separate living room, bedroom, bath. Many windows. $750/mo. includes utilities, cable, internet. Available. 919-929-6072.

CHILD CARE, DRIvER. $15/HR.


Care for girls ages 14, 12 and 9. 3-6:30pm, 2-4 days/wk. Safe driver, light housekeeping, basic meal prep. required. Spanish language skills a plus. Call 933-5330. AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE: Our kids (3, 7) need a fun and responsible sitter 3 days/ wk (including Tuesday but not Friday) 2:306pm. Cooking skills a plus! Will pay extra for laundry. Must commit to whole school year and have clean driving record. Send resume, references, and your availability to clows002@mc.duke.edu.

Help Wanted
DRIVERS: OTR and regional. Great pay and excellent benefits. 401k, bonuses. Miles and guaranteed hometime! CDL-A 6 months. OTR experience required. 866-265-3715.
RETAIL SALES: Omega Sports at New

CHILD CARE
Need someone to watch my 7 year-old and 10 year-old in my home; Tuesdays 2:30-6pm, other days possible. $12-15/hr, references required.. 919-969-8281. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTORS WANTED! Sport Art Gymnastics Center Chapel Hill looking for enthusiastic, reliable individuals. Teach recreational gymnastic classes part-time. Children age 5 and up. Start now. Gymnastic teaching experience required. Mark, 919-929-7077, 919-732-2925. SWEDISH tutor needed for mom and teen. Salary negotiable, will work with your schedule. Call and leave message! 336-376-1638. WANT TO MAkE SOME MONEY? Im a mom of 2 little girls. Need someone to help around the house twice a week in the evenings. If interested, contact 919-523-9116, ada_mq@hotmail.com.

Hope Commons is seeking part-time sales associates. Training, buying discounts, incentives, flexible schedules. Contact Michele at MHinnant@ OmegaSports.net. COLLEGE STUDENTS: TAkE A SURVEY, GET $40! Are you a first year college student? Just answer a few questions about your experiences in college. Sessions take about 90 minutes. You may be eligible to participate and RECEIVE $40 CASH! Email: studentsurvey@rti.org Call: 1-877-653-1241 Flexible scheduling: weekends and evenings available. Completely confidential. bECOME A bARTENDER! $250 a day potential No experience necessary. Training courses available. 1-800-965-6520 ext. 105.
EGG DONORS NEEDED. UNC Health

Announcements

Announcements

bARTENDERS ARE IN DEMAND!


Earn $20-$35/hr. 1 or 2 week and weekend classes. 100% job placement assistance. Raleighs bartending School. Have fun! Make money! Meet people! back to school tuition rates as low as $299. CALL NOW! 919-6760774, www.cocktailmixer.com/unc.html.

Care seeking healthy, non-smoking females 21-30 to become egg donors. All ethnicities welcome. $3,000 compensation for COMPLETED cycle. All visits and procedures to be done local to campus. For written information, please call 919-966-1150 ext. 5 and leave your phone number.

Lost & Found


LOST: GOLD RING with yellow sapphire gemstone on top. Will be rewarded. Email mmehra@live.unc.edu or call 919-449-7363.

Monday, August 29th at 6:00pm in Fetzer Gym C.

HOME AT RESORT STYLE COMMUNITY

Come be a part of this special tradition!

4br/4bA, 2726 square feet. 2 car garage At briar Chapel, Chapel Hill, NC $2,600/mo. Jeff J. 919-490-9050. AVAILAbLE NOW! 205 Friendly Lane, 3bR/1.5bA. Lease runs August thru May. AC, dishwasher, W/D hookups, parking for 4. Call 919-824-7981 or email pro@hotwhere.com.

HAbTECH: keston Care is looking for males and females who are interested in working as Habtech or CNA to work 1 on 1 with the elderly or disabled children in Durham, Orange and Chatham Counties. Afternoon, evening and weekend hours available. Reliable transportation a must! If interested in a CNA or Habtech position, please call keston Care. M-F 9am-4pm at 919-967-0507 (CPR, 1st aid).

Parking
PARkING SPACE RENTAL, Walking distance to campus. $200/semester. Call 919-219-2891.

www.dailytarheel.com

Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is an 8 - Make an emotional appeal for something you care about deeply. You gain more than expected. The end of one thing is the beginning of another. Love prevails. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is a 9 - Advance to the next level. You make it look easy. Take your bearings, and then set an enticing goal. Its an excellent time for romance, and offers pour in. Gemini (May 21-June 21) Today is an 8 - A beautiful moment unwraps itself for you today, presenting truth, love and fortune. Later, get moving with lively conversation and physical action. Home nurtures. Cancer (June 22-July 22) Today is an 8 - When this job gets completed, the space will be left wide open for creativity. Consider what to paint on this blank canvas. Its easier than you expect. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 7 - A lucky break could come your way today. Its a good time to get the word out. Take charge, and have fun with it. Reconnect with a long-distance friend. Love will find a way. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 9 - Its harvest time: bring in the crops and set up stores for winter. Take time to notice the landscape. Abundance can be yours. It grows when you act in community.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is an 8 - Your recent education benefits many. Suggest an innovation, and cheer when it works! Contribute to your family. They need something that only you can give. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a 7 - Its time to get the band back together and put your creative juices in the blender of infinite wisdom. Drink it up and top it off with a homebaked cookie. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 7 - Youre being called to the bat. Remember that youre part of a team. Take the necessary risks, and add up the home runs. Whos on first base? keep score. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a 6 - You may be feeling especially sensitive to your spirituality today, to that which moves you and makes your clock tick. Indulge that craving. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is a 6 - Find a friend to help you solve a philosophical problem. Its a good time to complete projects, deliver communications and take new territory. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is an 8 - Take advantage of the wonderful conditions for friendship, partnership and even romance. keep your chin high, but avoid arrogance. Let folks know what you appreciate about them.
(c) 2011 TRIbUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

TS J
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The Daily Tar Heel

News

Monday, August 29, 2011

field hocKey: unc 5, michigan 0 iowa 0, unc 2

UNC shuts out Michigan, Iowa


the defense shined in north carolinas opening weekend.
By Jonathan LaMantia
Staff Writer

The North Carolina field hockey team braved last season without captain Kateyln Falgowski, who suffered a head injury in the preseason and never returned in 2010. This weekend the Tar Heels found out what it was like to have her back. The No. 2 Tar Heels opened the regular season Saturday against No. 9 Michigan with a 5-0 win in the ACC/Big Ten Challenge in Ann Arbor, Mich., and wasted no time putting the ball in the net. Senior Elizabeth Stephens

scored UNCs first goal of the season four minutes into the first half. She was assisted by Falgowski and junior Katie Ardrey. With the first game of the season you always want to be able to make a statement, Stephens said. It was a big stepping-stone for the team. Coach Karen Shelton was delighted to once again have Falgowski, who has appeared in more than 91 games for the U.S. National Team. Her experience, calm, poise and expertise on the field is invaluable, Shelton said. It was nice to have an opening weekend where she played so well. The Tar Heels scored four goals in the first 35 minutes to notch the shutout against Michigan, and UNC was fueled by strong goalkeeping from sophomore Caitlin Powers in the first

half and freshman Sassi Ammer in the second. Shelton has yet to make a decision on a starting goalkeeper, but said shes pleased to have two goalies on her squad capable of shutting out opponents. Sundays 2-0 win against Iowa started similarly, with a UNC goal in the fifth minute by junior midfielder Kelsey Kolojejchick. But Iowas Kathleen McGraw saved 11 shots, and the Tar Heels were only able to add one more goal, which came in the 68th minute from junior Jaclyn Gaudioso Radvany. Shelton said she was more impressed by her teams play against Iowa than against Michigan. I think we made a step from the first game to the second game, Shelton said. Even though the score didnt look like that, the play did. Powers and Ammer were back

(Falgowskis) experience, calm, poise and expertise on the field is invaluable.


Karen shelton,
North Carolina field hockey coach

at it again on Sunday, combining for their second shutout of the weekend. While the North Carolina goalies played well, it was the defense that limited Michigan and Iowa to a combined 10 shots. The Tar Heels took 39. I think that it was also our back four, and our defensive mentality at our midfield that contributed to getting two shutouts this weekend, Shelton said. Contact the Sports Editor at sports@dailytarheel.com.

dth file photo Midfielder Kelsey Kolojejchick dribbles the ball down the field. Kolojejchick had three shots and a goal in UNCs win against Michigan.

from page 10

mens soccer

That situation right there, you know that you cant hit the ball direct, someone has to touch it before you hit it so you know theyre going to be pressuring it, Martinez said. You dont need power, you dont need anything in that situation, just put it in the back of the net. Coach Carlos Somoano was very pleased with the execution of the set play, especially since it got the offense going for the Tar Heels. Enzo was very clever with that ball. He got it off quickly, which caught them off guard, Somoano said. Thats really where the players come into this thing, their talents and their creativity and ability and they pulled off a great play. The Tar Heels netted a second goal in the 61st minute off the foot of Billy Schuler. Schuler connected from three yards out off a cross from Rob Lovejoy. But

You dont need power. You dont need anything in that situation, just put it in the back of the net.
enzo martinez,
Junior midfielder

before the Tar Heels could appreciate the 2-0 lead, the Seahawks had already struck back. Fifty seconds after Schulers goal, UNC-Ws Daniel Roberts lobbed a free kick into the box where Jacob VanCompernolle headed it just over the hands of UNC keeper Scott Goodwin. That was disappointing, Somoano said. I thought we didnt give them a whole lot of clear looks at our goal throughout the game, and then they executed a very good free kick to give them credit. In contrast, North Carolina had plenty of good looks at goal taking 18 total shots and 11 in the second half. Somoano said that he was most pleased with not just the quantity of the shots his team was taking but the quality. He was also quick to praise Miller, who

came away with eight saves in the game, including a pair of strong diving saves and a charging slide to bat away a shot attempt. Lovejoy was subbed back into the game in the final seven minutes to provide some speed at the top of the UNC offense and try to extend the one-goal lead. With less than five minutes to play in the game, Lovejoy headed Kirk Ursos corner into the back of the net to give UNC the final 3-1 advantage. It was pretty aggressive in there at first, Lovejoy said. The goalie and the defender were both kind of shoving me. I just got a step on them and beat them to the ball. That was a great cross by Kirk Urso. Contact the Sports Editor at sports@dailytarheel.com.

from page 10

schuler

Wilmington. Its been a long time coming, Schuler said after Saturdays game. Long story short Im back playing competitively again. Against the Seahawks, Schuler was back to his old ways, scoring in the 61st minute on a give-andgo from Rob Lovejoy and putting the Tar Heels up 2-0. I had to finish it, Schuler said. I couldnt miss that shot. Schuler, an All-ACC forward, led the Tar Heels with a teamhigh nine goals during his sophomore season and ranked first in the ACC in game-winning goals. North Carolina beat UNC-W 3-1 in the Tar Heels regularseason opener, and Schuler said he was proud of his return performance. He works so hard, coach Carlos Somoano said. Hes just

Its been a long time coming. Long story short Im back playing competitively again.
Billy schuler,
redshirt junior forward

tireless. Hes constantly putting the defense under pressure. To have someone whos relentless like that can only make us better. It helps his teammates, too. He opens up space for other people. Schuler has been getting back in the swing of things by playing spring ball and working hard in the summer preseason, but he said it feels good to be completely part of the team again. And though hes happy to be back, Schuler noticed that playing competitively takes a much bigger toll on him than his offseason preparations. Its my first competitive game in a while, Schuler said. You dont realize how much more energy it takes out of you than a

summer game or spring game. My legs were kind of tired at the end, but as the season goes on, I think Ill be able to get all my fitness back. Fellow starter Enzo Martinez said he is extremely grateful to have Schuler back on the field for the Tar Heels this season, especially with the Nike Classic looming. The Classic will pit UNC against Louisville, which beat the Tar Heels in the 2010 College Cup semifinals. Having a player like Billy is amazing, Martinez said. He scores every game. Its what we were missing last year. Its what we needed. Contact the Sports Editor at sports@dailytarheel.com. of the match. Dalys fine performance forced overtime, where Jones put the game away in the 96th minute. After Kealia Ohai slotted the ball to her at the top of the 18-yard box, Jones roped a shot toward the left side of the frame and hoped. I do this thing whenever I shoot, Jones said. Everyone tells me to follow it but for some reason I just stand there and watch it. So, Im going to be honest, thats definitely what I did, just praying that the goalkeeper wouldnt get it. Not until after the ball found the left-side netting did Jones sprint, arms raised triumphantly, as she embraced her teammates and listened to the crowd erupt. Ive been a part of two national championships here, and its been such an incredible feeling, and Ive watched seniors ahead of me put on the show, Jones said. (Tonight) I felt like it was finally a chance to be one of them. Contact the Sports Editor at sports@dailytarheel.com.

dth/eliza Williams Redshirt junior forward Billy Schuler plays keep-away with a Seahawk in UNCs win against UNC-Wilmington on Saturday. Schuler scored a goal on an assist from teammate Rob Lovejoy in his first game back from injury.

Irene rips through NC

games
2009 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

As Hurricane Irene made its way up the East Coast, Chapel Hill was mostly unaffected. See pg. 1 for story.

The AD search is on
UNC plans to employ a national search firm to find the next athletic director. See pg. 1 for story.

Level:

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

Cupcake competitors
Paulina Garcia Hernandez, 11, took the top prize with her Cuckoo Coconut Cupcake. See pg. 3 for story.

from page 10

defense

from page 10

notre dame

rally deep in the Tar Heel box. Stabbing at the ball with her left hand, Daly managed to deflect Adriana Leons vicious strike and, in doing so, set up Courtney Jones game-winning shot in overtime. Some people are going to make mistakes, and their goal was one of them, Jones said. But (Daly) fights back so hard, and she saved our butts on almost every shot they had. Dalys miss of Fridays relatively soft goal wasnt the only defensive miscue of the weekend. While the young Tar Heel defense flashed its talent during the Carolina Nike Classic this weekend, it also displayed its inexperience. In the first half Sundays 6-1 win against Houston, defender Meg Morris made an aggressive play for possession and missed out on the ball, leaving an opening for the Cougars to score their first goal of the game. But it was the Cougars only goal, and with only seven shots taken to UNCs 33, the Tar Heels defensive aggressiveness certainly didnt come back to bite them. As the Tar Heels move forward, theyll took to further harness the potential that their backfield has shown thus far. Were just looking to get better and more consistent every game, defender Rachel Wood said. Were looking to play more as a unit. Its tough. We have a young back line, and were all pretty inexperienced Its just about playing, playing, playing. The more you play, the better you get at it.

gills Friday with 5,236 fans. Ranee Premji sent the fourthlargest home crowd in program history into pandemonium as she gathered the deflection from Jones cross at the penalty spot and laced a shot into the bottom left corner of the goal in the 20th minute. The goal gave UNC a 1-0 advantage it would carry into halftime. But as both teams came out to start the second half, a Hurricane Irene-fueled deluge engulfed Fetzer Field, inciting both sides to attack via the long ball rather than proper buildup. The Irish caught a break on one such effort when Jazmin Hall sent a 40-yard lofted cross into the penalty area in the 71st minute. As both Notre Dame striker Adriana Leon and UNC keeper Hannah Daly went up for the cross, the ball skipped off Leons head, slipped through Dalys grasp and trickled into the net to tie the score. But as Daly crouched at her sixyard box, eyes-at-turf, UNC captain Amber Brooks approached her. Stand up, Brooks said. Were not done. Sure enough, Daly kept the Tar Heels level down the stretch as she denied a flurry of Irish shots, racking up a career high seven saves in the process. What we get out of Hannah is sort of a mixed bag, Dorrance said. The goal we gave up obviously was a soft goal, but having said that, the save she made Contact the Sports Editor moments later on a drive across at sports@dailytarheel.com. the frame I thought was the save

Solution to Fridays puzzle

Budget cuts continue


Budget cuts could affect schools for visual- or hearing-impaired students. See pg. 3 for story.

Legacies remembered
Chapel Hill remembered those who fought for peace and justice. See pg. 7 for story.

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


ACross 1 Cookie holders 5 Baseball feature 9 What gears do 13 Lake into which Ohios Cuyahoga River empties 14 Alabama march site 15 Austen novel 16 *Not animated, in filmmaking 18 Rotating cooking rod 19 Grassland 20 Plunked oneself down 21 Disco dance 23 *Like replays that reveal bad calls 27 Affirmative! 28 Travelers guide 29 Dental fillings 31 A Dolls House playwright 34 __ noire: literally, black beast 35 Enveloping glow 38 I __ Pretty: West Side Story song 39 Doves homes 40 Do-it-yourselfers buys 41 __-Coburg, Bavaria 42 Like speaking 43 Wee parasites 44 Word with power or reactor 46 Casablanca pianist 47 iPhone download 49 *One who cant function under stress 53 Mealtime lap item 55 That feels great! 56 Org. issuing many refunds 58 Garden of Edens __ of life 59 Where the ends of the starred answers are filed 63 Emblem of authenticity 64 Proverbial waste maker 65 Movie lioness 66 Online business review site 67 Cut with acid 68 Medvedevs no Down 1 Come together 2 Astrological Ram 3 Opponent 4 Get it? 5 Spat 6 Quarterback Manning 7 __, amas, amat ... 8 Ways to get under the street 9 Army meal 10 *Ineffective executive 11 Look happy 12 Cant stand 14 Rascal 17 Nile dam 22 Italian a 24 Brunch staple 25 Neckwear pin 26 Santa Clara chip maker 30 Central Washington city 31 Uncertainties 32 Actress Arthur 33 *Hunk or babes attribute 34 90s Russian president Yeltsin 36 Numbered hwy. 37 Barnyard brayer 39 Old buffalo-hunting tribe

(C)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved.

43 Like a he-man 45 Kimono accessory 46 One of 50 47 Unable to sit still 48 City of Light, in a Porter song 50 Mars neighbor 51 Goofy 52 Wipe off the board 54 Brown seaweed 57 Whack 60 Cheerios grain 61 Trojans sch. 62 Quagmire

Take 15/501 South towards Pittsboro Exit Market St. / Southern Village

OUR IDIOT BROTHER K........................1:10-3:10-5:00-7:25-9:45 MIDNIGHT IN PARIS J .............................1:15-4:10-7:20-9:35 SPY KIDS: ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD in 4D I ...12:45-2:50-4:55-7:15 CRAZY, STUPID LOVE J...................................................9:30 THE HELP J ......................................................1:00-4:00-7:05-10:00 RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES J . . 12:40-2:50-4:55-7:20-9:40
All shows $6.50 for college students with ID Bargain Matinees $6.50

10

SportsMonday
WOMENS SOccEr: NOtrE daME 1, NOrth carOliNa 2 (Ot)

Monday, August 29, 2011

dailytarheel.com SCOREBOARD

The Daily Tar Heel


WOMENS SOCCER: Houston 1, UNC 6 VOLLEYBALL: Auburn 0, UNC 3 VOLLEYBALL: UNC 0, Florida 3 FIELD HOCKEY: UNC 5, Michigan 0 FIELD HOCKEY: Iowa 0, UNC 2

UNC OVERTAkES NO. 1 IRISH

dth/stephen mitchell The North Carolina womens soccer team celebrates after Courtney Jones punches in the winning goal in overtime to lift No. 3 UNC past No. 1 Notre Dame in the home opener at Fetzer Field.

Jones overtime goal seals Tar Heel upset


UNc takes down the Fighting irish in the first game of the carolina Nike classic.
By Kevin Minogue
Senior Writer

Defense anchors Tar Heels through rst two victories


Goalkeeper hannah daly sparks the North carolina defense this weekend.
By Michael Lananna
Assistant Sports Editor

Through her first three seasons at North Carolina, Courtney Jones witnessed UNCs veterans come through in tight spots for the Tar Heels time and again, year after year. But in her senior season, with a captains responsibilities on her shoulders, Jones decided Friday night that it was her time to deliver in the clutch. Jones notched the game-winning goal six minutes into overtime of UNCs 2-1 victory against No. 1 Notre Dame. The goal sealed the win in a match where the No. 3 Tar Heels were hindered by rain and inexperience. I have no delusions or illusions I thought Notre Dame outplayed us, North Carolina coach Anson Dorrance said. Having said that, I really respect our kids for fighting the whole time. I think as we get healthier, we can start to improve. But lets face it, a 2-1 victory over the No.1 ranked team and defending national champions is a tremendous achievement for our kids. The rematch of last years NCAA quarterfinal a 4-1 Irish victory and UNCs worst loss since 1985 packed Fetzer Field to the

dth/stephen mitchell Senior forward Courtney Jones dribbles the ball down Fetzer Field in Fridays game against Notre Dame. Jones had two shots, one assist and one goal in UNCs 2-1 victory.

I have no delusions or illusions I thought Notre Dame outplayed us.


anson dorrance,
north carolina womens soccer coach

see NOtrE daME, page 9

With 53 career goals, Notre Dames Melissa Henderson is one of collegiate soccers premier offensive forces. But not even she could break through North Carolinas shutdown defense this weekend. When the All-American forward left Fetzer Field on Friday without a single goal to her name, UNC head coach Anson Dorrance took it as a sign that his young defense is beginning to cash in on its raw talent. I dont think we gave her too many looks, and I credit an excellent defensive effort, Dorrance said. And you know what, we can build on that. We alternate a very fast defense for a very tall defense, and once we get those pieces jiving a bit better, I think its going to be hard to score against us. Of the shots that No. 1 Notre Dame took in the 2-1 Tar Heel win, most were handled by UNCs Hannah Daly. The junior goalkeeper set a career high with seven saves, six of which came during the first half. In the second half, though, it was the shot she didnt get to that almost rendered her performance irrelevant. In the 71st minute, Notre Dame defend-

dth/stephen mitchell UNC goalkeeper Hannah Daly jumps to save a ball in Fridays win against Notre Dame.

(Daly) fights back so hard, and she saved our butts on almost every shot
courtney Jones,
senior forward

er Jazmin Hall slipped a rain-soaked ball over the leaping Dalys fingertips, knotting the score at one and seemingly shifting the momentum toward the Irish. But in the 86th minute, Daly was able to redeem herself, snuffing out a Notre Dame

see dEFENSE, page 9

MENS SOccEr: UNc-W 1, UNc 3

Tar Heel men take season opener from UNC-W


Enzo Martinez opens scoring in the 2011 season on a free kick.
By Brandon Moree
Assistant Sports Editor

Schuler returns to Fetzer Field


Forward makes his first appearance following shoulder injury.
By Leah Campbell
Assistant Sports Editor

dth/eliza williams Midfielder Enzo Martinez chases after a loose ball in UNCs 3-1 win against UNC-W. Martinez scored the first goal of the season on Saturday.

It was a scene unlike anything North Carolina midfielder Enzo Martinez had ever seen before, and hes been playing soccer since he was three years old. UNC-Wilmington packed all 11 players in the goal to defend a free kick taken from just six yards away. But Martinez would beat them all to score the first goal in the regular-season opener for UNC and give the Tar Heels an early 1-0 lead on their way to a 3-1 win against the Seahawks. Seahawk keeper Brandon Miller, who otherwise had a fantastic day in goal, received a back pass from one of his defenders seven minutes into the game. When the Tar Heel forwards started creeping toward Miller, he scooped the ball up with his hands standing six yards away from his own goal. Keepers can only use their hands on passes from their own teammates if they come

dth/eliza williams Sophomore forward Rob Lovejoy scored UNCs final goal in the match against UNC-Wilmington.

from a header. The referee ruled it an illegal backward pass and awarded the Tar Heels an indirect free kick from point-blank range. Martinez would handle it from there.

Even Hurricane Irenes torrential rain and gale-force winds couldnt keep Billy Schuler away from the field any longer. Almost one year after his season-ending shoulder injury during a game against Seton Hall University in 2010, the redshirt junior returned to competition at Fetzer Field on Saturday for the North Carolina mens soccer teams match against UNC-

see MENS SOccEr page 9

see SchUlEr, page 9

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