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Jean-LuC Godard Wednesday, April 24, 2013 dailytarheel.com Volume 121, Issue 37 A new bill may limit lming movies in NC CHCCS to ask for $5.4 million By Gayatri Surendranathan Senior Writer In the face of state and federal bud- get cuts, Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools will ask Orange County offi- cials Thursday for $5.4 million in extra funding for the upcoming school year. The $5.4 million is in addition to the current $68.7 million budget CHCCS has submitted to the Orange County Board of Commissioners. A large portion of this extra money $1.9 million would go toward the com- pletion of Northside Elementary School, which will help address overcrowding in the systems elementary schools. Assistant Superintendent Todd LoFrese said the extra funding is neces- sary to ensure Northside is on par with the districts other elementary schools. All of our elementary schools have locally funded positions, and in new schools we have to offer the same ones, LoFrese said. He said these positions include teacher assistants, gifted education teachers and custodial support. Northside Elementary, which will be equipped with green features like a rooftop garden and bamboo flooring, will cost about $2.3 million to open in August $1.9 million of which is still Company to make space Rat-free See CHCCS BUDGET, Page 4 Friend charged in stabbing of alumni By Sarah Brown Staff Writer Robert Downey Jr. and Gwyneth Paltrow wined and dined in Wilmington for much of last year while filming the blockbuster Iron Man 3. Members of the states film industry say North Carolina was able to lure the Marvel Studios production, scheduled to release May 3, away from other states with a lucrative incentive for production companies. The state has a his- tory of drawing popular TV shows and films, such as The Last of the Mohicans and Forrest Gump. But a bill filed last week at the N.C. General Assembly would alter the incentive package by eliminating the tax credit refund sparking concerns among the states film advocates. House Bill 994, sponsored by members of both parties at the state legislature, would instead waive the N.C. tax liabilities for companies in the next five years. Legislators said they are concerned that the economic benefit of the film incentive does not outweigh its cost. That extra funding would help pay for Northside Elementary School. By Marissa Bane Staff Writer Chapel Hills once-famed Ramshead Rathskeller will not return to its cellar home just off Franklin Street but three other businesses could soon occupy the space the restaurant vacated in 2008. Located in Amber Alley directly across from Bandidos Mexican Cafe, the restaurant served as a watering hole for Chapel Hill resi- dents for more than 60 years. The original owner of the res- taurant wanted to accommodate war veterans with the opening of The Rat, said Johnny Morris, president of Morris Commercial, the real estate company represent- ing the buildings landlord. It was a great place for a long time, but the space for the build- ing was hand-dug, so there are just a lot of messed-up parts now, Morris said. Morris Commercial has hired contractors to begin renovating the space. The contractors are currently lowering the floors, putting in new plumbing and installing sprinklers. Morris said his goal is to create a space that will be more leasable. After the renovations are complete, Morris Commercial hopes to lease the building to three separate tenants. We could put offices down there, a deli or even retail shops, Morris said. By the end of the renovations, it will be a new shell space. Diane Fountain, current owner of The Rat, has been trying to re-open the restaurant in its original location since 2010, but she said structural problems with the space proved to be too much of an obstacle. She said the building was leaking and the floor from the upper level was falling through. There were mice, sewage would literally rain down on us, and The venue once occupied by Ramshead Rathskeller is being renovated. dth/rebecca goldStein The Ramshead Rathskellers vacated space is undergoing renovations. By Claire Williams Assistant State & National Editor Two UNC alumni, both promi- nent Democratic political strategists, were found with stab wounds on Monday near their Raleigh home. Jamie Kirk Hahn, 29, and her husband Nation Richard Hahn, 27, were taken to WakeMed Health and Hospitals Monday evening after police responded to a 911 call. Jamie Hahn and Nation Hahn were stabbed on Monday in Raleigh. Nation Richard Hahn, 27, was injured Monday night in a stab- bing incident in raleigh. he has been released from the hospital. Jamie Kirk Hahn, 29, and nation hahns wife, was stabbed Monday night in raleigh. She remains in the hospital in critical condition. Nation Hahn has been released from the hospital, but Jamie Hahn remains in critical condition, said former N.C. Democratic Party official Gary Pearce, who visited WakeMed on Tuesday. Nation Hahn attended a prayer vigil for his wife Tuesday. Jonathan Wayne Broyhill, 31, has been charged with attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill, inflict- ing serious injury. According to The (Orangeburg, S.C.) Times and Democrat, Broyhill was the best man in the couples 2009 wedding. Broyhill was also taken to the hospital. He will be processed at the Wake County Jail when his medi- cal condition permits, Raleigh police said in a press release. Police have not released a motive for the attack but said it was not domestic in nature. Pearce said Broyhill was friends with the couple. No one knows why he would do this, he said. The family of the couple released a statement Tuesday. a white sewage pipe went right through the building, she said. Catherine Lazorko, spokeswoman for the town of Chapel Hill, said in an email that the last construction permit for the space was filed in July 2012 for a structural ceiling repair. Morris said the structure of the building specifically its ventila- tion makes it almost impossible to have a full-service kitchen. Plus, with the economics of Franklin Street, I just dont see how another full-service restaurant would be successful down in that alley way. Morris said the company has not set a completion date for the renovations. He said there are no lease rates for the spaces yet, but he hopes to start marketing it soon. Contact the desk editor at city@dailytarheel.com. See FILM INDUSTRY, Page4 See STABBING, Page 4 d t h / h a n n a h
d o K S a n S K Y Notable movies that were filmed in North Carolina north carolina has pro- vided the backdrop for several major motion pictures. others not included below are the color Purple (1985), dirty dancing (1987), bull durham (1988), days of thunder (1990) and Patch adams (1998) which filmed on Uncs campus. SoUrce: WWW.ncFilM.coM, WWW.iMdb.coM dth/rachel holt, cece PaScUal, KathrYnaUten, KeVinUhrMacher, Katie PerKinSon, JeSSica Milbern, niKKi gaUthreaUX, SarahdelK 2 5 8 The Hunt for red october 1990 based off a tom clancy novel, this thriller was filmed in burke county and directed by John Mctiernan. it starred Sean connery and alec baldwin. 1 Forrest Gump 1994 this tom hanks and Sally Field movie, which shot scenes at the biltmore estate, won six academy awards, including best actor, best director and best Picture. Talladega nights: The Ballad of ricky Bobby 2006 this Will Ferrell com- edy filmed at both the charlotte Motor Speedway and the rockingham Speedway. 4 7 The Green Mile 1999 adapted from a Stephen King novel of the same name, this movie starred tom hanks and Michael clarke duncan and was filmed in the blue ridge Mountains. The Hunger Games 2012 this filmmade a gross $407,999,255 inthe U.S., andit ranks as the 13th highest-grossingfilmof all time inthe U.S. box office. Filmingtook place inthe blue ridge Mountains andShelby. The Last of the Mohicans 1992 daniel day-lewis starred in this period piece, which was filmed primarily in areas along the blue ridge Mountains. Teenage Mutant ninja Turtles 1990 this live-action adapta- tion made a gross total of $135,270,000 in the United States. Most of the movie was filmed in Wilmington. Hannibal 2001 the Silence of the lambs sequel, which starred anthony hopkins and Julianne Moore and was directed by ridley Scott, filmed at the biltmore estate in asheville. Iron Man 3 2013 Projected to be one of the biggest summer blockbusters, the robert downey Jr. movie based on the Marvel comic filmed in cary, currie andWilmington. 3 6 9 1 2 9 9 9 7 7 8 8 8 4 5 3 6 I ron Man 3, which premieres May 3, is the latest of several major motion pictures to be filmed in North Carolina. The state has tax incentives to attract production companies such as Marvel Studios, but a pro- posed bill could alter those incentives. Film flux in NOTED. Fraternities, adjust your plans accordingly: The so-called Cinnamon Challenge popular among the college crowd has been linked to lung disease, scarring and emphysema. In one case, it led to a collapsed lung when a kid laughed and inhaled all the cinnamon. Maybe just stick to butter dogs instead. QUOTED. Ms. Shapiro scattered little bowls around the house to catch her daughters offerings. A new trend of the insufferable New York elite: diaper-free child-rearing to stay in tune with infants and their intimate functions. Sure hope the dog doesnt get confused about which bowl is his. M ost of us will, at one point, experience the depravity thats the unpaid internship: working long hours, often doing a better job than actual employees, just to make nothing and be mis- taken in the cafeteria for a weirdo in the tech department. Its not glamorous work, but after reading the Craigslist post of one super creepy author named Chad, youll feel pretty good about your own plans. Basically, Chad wants an unpaid female participant for a 30-day erotic affair that hell turn into a nonfiction book. Its modeled after the novel he wrote about a young woman and old guy having an affair that lasted 30 days. Hot. The chosen woman will write a diary about the experience, which we imagine would quickly turn into, Day 15: Get me the hell out. Unemployment? Beats this. From staf and wire reports DAILY DOSE Someone committed larceny at 306 Cobblestone Court between 11:05 p.m. Monday and 12:15 a.m. Tuesday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The person stole $550 worth of clothes from a laundry room, reports state. Someone committed alcohol violations at 179 E. Franklin St. at 4:25 p.m. Monday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The person was drinking beer in front of the courthouse, reports state. Someone broke and entered a residence at 199 Forsythia Court at 9:37 p.m. Monday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The person pried open a door and caused $900 in damages to doors, reports state. The person also stole $5,585 worth of jewelry, including seven watches valued at $1,910, two ruby necklaces valued at $600, a ruby and diamond bracelet valued at $1,500, a diamond tennis bracelet valued at $1,200 and other items, reports state. Someone reported a suspicious vehicle at 101 Smith Level Road at 2:25 p.m. Monday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. An abandoned vehicle was found in a parking lot at Frank Porter Graham Elementary School, reports state. Someone stole items from CVS/Pharmacy at 200 N. Greensboro St. at 3:47 p.m. Monday, according to Carrboro police reports. The person stole a bottle of Sweet Baby Rays barbecue sauce and a pack of Hanes womens underwear. The items were later returned, reports state. POLICE LOG News Wednesday, April 24, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2 broadleys bubbles S enior Mike Broadley plays with bubbles on Polk Place on Tuesday afternoon. Broadley brought the bubbles and bubble equipment to campus as a moral support activity. The bubbles will continue until morale improves, he said. dth/brookelyn riley 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 Elise Young at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy. www.dailytarheel.com Established 1893 120 years of editorial freedom The Daily Tar Heel ANDy ThOmAsON EDITOR-In-CHIEf editor@dailytarheel.com ElisE yOUNg ManagIng EDITOR managing.editor@dailytarheel.com AllisON rUssEll VISUaL ManagIng EDITOR visuals@dailytarheel.com sArAh glEN DIRECTOR Of EnTERPRISE enterprise@dailytarheel.com NicOlE cOmpArATO UnIVERSITY EDITOR university@dailytarheel.com chElsEy DUlANEy CITY EDITOR city@dailytarheel.com DANiEl wisEr STaTE & naTIOnaL EDITOR state@dailytarheel.com brANDON mOrEE SPORTS EDITOR sports@dailytarheel.com cArsON blAcKwElDEr aRTS EDITOR arts@dailytarheel.com AllisON hUssEy DIVERSIOnS EDITOR diversions@dailytarheel.com KEviN UhrmAchEr DESIgn & gRaPHICS EDITOR design@dailytarheel.com KATiE swEENEy PHOTO EDITOR photo@dailytarheel.com cOllEEN mcENANEy MULTIMEDIa EDITOR multimedia@dailytarheel.com lAUriE bETh hArris COPY EDITOR copy@dailytarheel.com DANiEl pshOcK OnLInE EDITOR online@dailytarheel.com pAUlA sEligsON SPECIaL PROjECTS ManagER special.projects@dailytarheel.com Contact Managing Editor Elise Young at managing.editor@dailytarheel. com with news tips, comments, corrections or suggestions. tIPs Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St. Chapel Hill, nC 27514 andyThomason, 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 2013 DTH Media Corp. all rights reserved tOday painting in the p.m.: Monthly art time geared to kid vs. 3 to 8 years old. Painting takes 10 to 15 minutes. Supervised by staf. Time: 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. location: Kidzu Childrens Museum UNc vs. UNc-charlotte: The Tar Heel baseball team plays the 49ers at home. Time: 6 p.m. location: Boshamer Stadium UNc vs. UNc-greensboro: The Tar Heel softball team plays the Spartans at home. Time: 6 p.m. location: anderson Stadium sacrifcial poets grand slam Finals: The biggest youth poetry event in north Carolina. $10. $5 for students. Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. location: artsCenter tHUrsday supercollider concert: a stu- dent show features work from a UnC rock performance class, with groups Wading Through, Pepper Shakes and Love Like Monkeys. after the student show, Supercollider plays. all ages. free. Time: Doors open 8:30 p.m., show begins 9 p.m. location: Local 506 music on the porch: Perfor- mances by Ben Wiley Payton, an acoustic blues artist, and Logie Meachum, a storyteller. Cel- ebrate the Center for the Study of the american Souths 20th birthday with hors douerves and cake. free and open to the public. 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. COMMUnIty CaLEndar Time: 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. location: Love House and Hutchins forum Dance for parkinsons Exploring the brains move- ment potential: glenna Batson reviews the benefts dancing brings to those with Parkin- sons, such as a positive impact on brain connectivity. Students free with ID. for others, $10. Register online at fridaycenter. unc.edu/pdep/wbi/ or call 800- 845-8640. Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. location: friday Center Cash for Books at Student Stores www.store.unc.edu (919) 962-5024 facebook.com/uncstudentstores Four convenient locations to sell your books back and get CASH... not a gift card. 1) Daniels Building (Main Location) Monday 4/29 - Saturday 5/4 7:30am - 8:00pm Sunday 5/5 1:00pm - 6:00pm Monday 5/6 - Tuesday 5/7 7:30am - 8:00pm 3) Granville Towers (The Agora) Monday 4/29 - Saturday 5/4 10:00am - 7:00pm Monday 5/6 10:00am - 7:00pm Tuesday 5/7 10:00am - 3:00pm 2) Rams Head Dining (2nd Floor) Monday 4/29 - Saturday 5/4 10:00am - 7:00pm Monday 5/6 10:00am - 7:00pm Tuesday 5/7 9:30am - 2:00pm 4) Columbia & Cameron Ave. (Intersection) Monday 4/29 - Saturday 5/4 10:00am - 5:00pm Monday 5/6 10:00am - 5:00pm Tuesday 5/7 10:00am - 3:00pm April 29th - May 7th News Wednesday, April 24, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3 city BRiEF Suttons celebrates 90 years by selling food for 5 cents In celebration of 90 years of serving on Franklin Street, Suttons will offer food at 1923 prices today. From 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., hot dogs, french fries and drinks will all be available for 5 cents each. The restaurant opened in its 159 E. Franklin St. location in 1923. It was founded by Lynwood and Lucy Sutton. SPORtS BRiEF UNC mens basketball ACC matchups announced The ACC announced its match- ups for the 2013-14 basketball season on Tuesday afternoon. North Carolina will play a home-and-home series with Wake Forest, Duke, N.C. State and ACC newcomer Notre Dame. The Tar Heels will hit the road for games against Georgia Tech, Syracuse, Florida State, Virginia and Virginia Tech. UNC will host Miami, Maryland, Boston College, Clemson and Pittsburgh. This season will mark the Tar Heels fifth trip to Notre Dame and first since 1994. UNCs game against Syracuse will be the first meeting between the two teams since November 2009. camPuS BRiEFS Fellowships awarded to UNC students for research abroad Seven students were awarded UNC Class of 1938 travel fellow- ships, which will provide money for them to do research abroad this summer. The students Etiti Akhame-Ayeni, Portia Polk, Matthew Leming, Madison Morgan, Leonora Tisdale, Casey Crow and Kieran Fell were chosen from 42 applicants based on the quality of their proposals, as well as the financial request and seriousness of academic purpose. Each student will receive $5,000. Professor in School of Medicine awarded for study Margaret Gourlay, an assistant professor in the UNC School of Medicine, was granted a Top 10 Clinical Research Achievement Award from the Clinical Research Forum. Gourlay was recognized for her work leading the first study to define appropriate bone den- sity screening times for older women. She was given the award April 18 at the Clinical Research Forum annual meeting in Washington, D.C. Apply to work for The Daily Tar Heel during the summer The Daily Tar Heel is seeking students to serve on the summer staff. The summer edition will run from mid-May through the end of July. It will publish on a weekly basis. Interested students should email dth@dailytarheel.com, and the summer editor, Megan Cassella, will be in contact about opportunities. Staff writer positions are avail- able for the Arts/Diversions, City, Copy, Design/Graphics, Multimedia, Photo, Opinion, Sports, State & National and University desks. No previous experience is required. All interested students are encouraged to join. From staff and wire reports inBRIEF By Edmond Harrison Staff Writer Hill Hall, which served as the Universitys first library and now houses the music department, will undergo $15 million worth of renovations starting in 2015. The renovation will primarily focus on Hill Halls rotunda and auditorium, said Mark Katz, an ethnomusicology professor and music department chairman. That space wasnt made for music, Katz said. The acoustics have been OK, weve made some improvements, but its never been ideal. Were essentially going to get a new auditorium. The $15 million will be composed of $5 million from the Office of the Provost, $5 million from a fundraising campaign led by the College of Arts and Sciences, and the final $5 million will be contributed by the William R. Kenan Jr. Charitable Trust, according to a press release from UNC News. Katz said Kenan Music Building, built in 2008, was originally supposed to include a concert hall and additional rehearsal space, but plans to include those in its construction were scrapped due to lack of funding and logistical challenges. We see this renovation of Hill as a satisfactory substitute for the completion of Kenan, said Chancellor Emeritus James Moeser, a trained concert organist and current music faculty member. Richard Krasno, executive director of the Kenan Trust, said he views the renovations as a continuation of the trusts interest in the arts at UNC. With the creation of the Kenan Scholars Program and the Kenan Music Building we wanted to construct a program that was truly first-class, which requires good faculty, excellent students and good facilities, Krasno said. We have an excellent faculty. Weve always had excellent students FUNDING FOR THE PROJECT The total $15 million for the renovations will come from three sources: $5 million from the Office of the Provost $5 million from a special fund- raising campaign led by the College of Arts and Sciences $5 million from the William R. Kenan Jr. Charitable Trust The music building has a budget of $15 million for the improvements. Law rm oers Honor Court counsel By Katharine McAnarney Staff Writer Students might soon have the opportunity to hire legal counsel for cases of disciplinary misconduct tried by the honor system but one law firm already advertises help in some cases. Chapel Hills Everett Law Firm now publicizes legal counsel on its website to students who have criminal cases that are being processed by both court systems. Scott Eren, an attorney at the firm, said the firm wants to help students with how they present themselves. Students can think it is a safe context to try to explain themselves, but the Honor Court can turn that information into the police, and the person is basically self-incriminating themselves, he said. There is no privilege of confidence. House Bill 843, filed earlier this month, would give students the right to hire a professional lawyer for honor system cases. Under the current system, students can only be represented by fellow students in cases that appear before the Honor Court. Students can hire legal counsel when their case is being processed in both the criminal and honor systems simultaneously. But those lawyers can only advise students they cannot address the panel or speak. Eren said the bill would help students with their honor system proceedings. Sometimes students feel misrepresented by the University, and they want (legal) recourse, he said. The bill is designed to help them have an attorney before they get to that serious of a step. Anna Sturkey, UNCs new under- graduate student attorney general, said she thinks students should have the right to counsel if they have a concurrent criminal case. It is fine for attorneys to help pro- tect students federal rights, though I dont know how they can help with an honor system case, she said. But she said lawyers should not be involved in disciplinary miscon- duct cases. Were not trying to come up with crafty arguments to get students off for something, she said. That is something lawyers would bring because they get paid to do it. We are a truth-seeking system, and lawyers dont respect that, she added. Sturkey also said the bill might create inequality among students by allowing counsel to those who can afford it, but not providing public defenders to those who cannot. Richard Myers, associate dean for student affairs at UNCs School of Law, said the honor system should only process criminal cases after they have reached a verdict through the N.C. courts system, to avoid any A proposed bill would allow students to hire lawyers in some cases. Hill Hall to receive renovations in 2015 This is A WORLD RECORD L ying across Hooker Fields, 608 people broke the Guinness Book of World Records previous record of 529 people for the worlds largest spoon train on Tuesday evening. Participants were broken into groups of 50 to facilitate the event. The previous record was set in 2010 at Carleton College in Minnesota. dth/halle sinnott Carrboro looks to retain aordable housing By Jenny Surane Assistant City Editor After tabling a proposal that would allow the town of Carrboro to take over a contentious housing complex, the Carrboro Board of Aldermen is looking for new ways to preserve low-income housing. In December, former Alderman Dan Coleman proposed using the eminent domain clause of the Constitution to take over Collins Crossing Apartment Homes. The proposal came amidst grow- ing concern that the complexs man- agement was pricing out its low- income residents by raising rents, which management later refuted. Eminent domain would allow the town to take over private prop- erty without owner consent to further economic development in the town. But because of an N.C. General Assembly bill that would prohibit the towns ability to use eminent domain and general concern with legality of the process, the board dropped the proposal. During Tuesdays meeting, alder- men discussed creating a town hous- ing authority to manage the towns ownership of affordable housing. Sarah Hazel, a graduate student at the UNC School of Government, researched the possibility of a Carrboro housing authority. Hazel said for a town of Carrboros size, a housing authority probably wouldnt be the best fit. You could get into the business of owning affordable housing, but you wouldnt need an authority to do it, Hazel said. You could just have a department run it. Several aldermen expressed con- cern about possible town ownership of public housing. Alderman Jacquelyn Gist said that while she wants the board to continue to advocate for affordable housing in Carrboro, she felt hous- ing ownership is a responsibility of the county. I cant see where the money would come from for us to provide rental housing, Gist said. Housing and human services are a county responsibility. Mayor Mark Chilton said he worried that taking over Collins Crossing would only be a temporary fix for a severe problem in the town. Chilton, who works for the affordable housing non-profit Empowerment Inc., said the town should use caution when getting into the business of owning afford- able housing. Its a lot of work, it is a big responsibility and it comes with a lot of risks, he said. Instead of focusing solely on Collins Crossing, Chilton said he would like town staff to research the possibility of purchasing and renovating other affordable housing complexes in town. That way we dont have this Aldermen discussed creating a town housing authority Tuesday. EmINENT DOmAIN Dec. 17: Former Alderman Dan Coleman proposed taking over Collins Crossing using the eminent domain clause of the Constitution. Jan. 30: House Bill 8, which restricts town governments use of eminent domain, was filed in the N.C. General Assembly. The bill tabled the boards discussion of tak- ing over Collins Crossing. April 2: The board asked town staff to look into town ownership of public housing. Collins Crossing pattern repeat itself, he said. The board voted to have town staff research Chiltons proposal, which it will discuss again at its planning retreat in June. Contact the desk editor at city@dailytarheel.com The acoustics have been OK, weve made some improvements, but its never been ideal. mark Katz, music department chairman ... and the Kenan Music Building has been very helpful. But we felt that Hill Hall was antiquated and that the department needed more facilities to accommodate the faculty and the first-rate students. Bobby Warren, a sophomore music major, said he and other students welcome the renovations. Theres a fine line between historic and out-dated, Warren said. Hill Hall I love that building. But it needs some serious work. Andrew Carnegie funded the construction of Hill Hall in 1907. In 1930, the building was named after University trustee John Sprunt Hill, who helped fund renovations. Now, the Kenan Trust is another link in the Universitys long history of supporting the arts through private donor funding. Were the nations oldest public university, Moeser said. The univer- sitys founding was assisted by private support, and we have a long and won- derful tradition of private support, which helped us make this one of the best institutions in the country. Contact the desk editor at arts@dailytarheel.com. HOUsE BIll 843 The bill could change what legal counsel can represent students in honor system proceedings: The bill gives students the right to hire a licensed attorney for any type of proceeding regarding mis- conduct. Currently, students are repre- sented by only their peers in honor system cases. questionable sharing of information. But he said the bill and expanded legal counsel would overhaul the honor system. It would fundamentally alter how the honor system works, he said. I suspect the honor system would cease to look like it does now. Contact the desk editor at university@dailytarheel.com. North Carolinas current film incentive law, which took effect in January 2011, pro- vides a 25 percent tax credit refund to companies spending more than $250,000 on a pro- duction, with a per-credit cap of $20 million. Johnny Griffin, director of the Wilmington Regional Film Commission, said the incentive keeps North Carolina competitive with Louisiana, Georgia and other states with similar incentives. Its a tool that is required, Griffin said. Its how clients are making decisions on where to film. But a study done earlier this year by the legislatures Fiscal Research Division questioned the job-creating credentials of films. While film companies spent $220 million in the state in 2011, creating 3,300 crew posi- tions, only 55 to 70 of those jobs resulted from the tax cred- it, according to the study. By comparison, cutting business taxes by the same $30.3 million claimed under the credit in 2011 would have created 370 to 450 jobs. The study also notes that the state sometimes has to refund the amount of the tax credit to companies that do not owe state taxes. There is little to restrain the potential growth of this tax expenditure, the study says. But Aaron Syrett, direc- tor of the N.C. Film Office, said production companies increased their spending by $156 million from 2011 to 2012 and created jobs in the state, adding to the more than 4,000 high-skilled, permanent jobs in the industry. We have a meaningful incentive thats working, Syrett said. More than 20 productions are slated to film in North Carolina in 2013, and compa- nies have already spent $184 million in the state in the past four months, he added. Griffin said film compa- nies spent $247 million in the Wilmington area alone last year and employed about 1,000 local crew members. If we do away with the incentive, were saying were fine with them leaving the state or becoming unem- ployed, Griffin said. Jason Rosin, business agent for Wilmington-based IATSE Local 491, a labor union for production techni- cians in the Southeast, said production companies are in the state for a short period of time and would not benefit from a long-term tax waiver. The bill is currently in an N.C. House committee. Syrett said he is not concerned about the bill passing. (A challenge to the film incentive) goes through the legislative process every year, he said. Were optimistic well be successful in opposing it. Contact the desk editor at state@dailytarheel.com. News Wednesday, April 24, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4 FILM INDUSTRY from page 1 Businessman will run for sheri of Orange County By Paige Ladisic Staff Writer Andy Cagle wants voters to know hes more than just a candidate for Orange County sheriff hes an upstanding citizen, a business owner and a traveling bluegrass and gos- pel musician. Cagle, a resident of Efland, has declared his candidacy for Orange County sheriff in the 2014 election. The primary will be held in May 2014. Lindy Pendergrass has been elected as Orange Countys sheriff for eight consecutive terms since 1982. Pendergrass could not be reached for comment. Cagle opened Cagles Corner Grading, Hauling and Septic Systems in his home- town of Efland in 1997. While he has yet to release an official platform, his cam- paign website promises a focus on efficiency and reducing run- ning costs for the county jail. Cagle is a registered Democrat and said he plans to compete in the Democratic primary. But Cagle said political affil- iation isnt important to him. unfunded. We need to open this school, that is not optional, said CHCCS Board of Education member Annetta Streater. We could certainly be building a school for a lot cheaper, but not one that will meet all of our needs. She said the request bal- ances out to an extra $400 per pupil. The Board of Education has recommended the county raise the special district tax which goes directly to Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools to raise the requested funds. In order to fully fund the budget shortfall, a tax increase of $.0494 is needed. County Commissioner Penny Rich said though she doesnt want to support the tax raise, she believes local children deserve the best. Im not nervous about Northside I like the model, and we definitely dont want to fall behind, she said. This is one of those hard conversa- tions that needs to happen. She said it is unfortunate that the state has cut educa- tion funding so heavily, leav- ing the county to fill that gap. Board of Education mem- ber Jamezetta Bedford said she doubts the county will be able to fund the full request. We make a request every year, and they never give us all of it, Bedford said. We wont know what they decide until several meetings and work sessions later. And pending budget CHCCS bUDgeT from page 1 Andy Cagle, of efland, has declared his candidacy for the 2014 election for orange County sheriff. When I meet a person, I dont see color, and I dont see a Republican or a Democrat, he said. I see a person with a potential need. And helping those in need has always been important to Cagle, he said. Im running because I care about people in general. Ive always tried to help people, Cagle said. I like to see people doing well, I like to see people happy. He said he also sees room for improvement in the com- munication between residents and county law enforcement. I think Im the link to bridge that gap, he said. While he has only recently started laying out plans for what he could bring to the sheriff position, Cagle said he has one purpose in mind for his candidacy. My goal is to provide a safe environment for people to raise their families in Orange County, Cagle said. Larry Talbert, a friend of Cagles, said despite Cagles lack of law enforcement expe- rience, he is the kind of per- son Orange County needs. It doesnt take a law enforcement officer to make a good sheriff, Talbert said. You need a good administrator. Talbert said Cagle is well- thought of in the community, and he is a fair, respectable person. I dont know of anybody that could even say anything bad about Andy Cagle, he said. Morris Shambley, a neigh- bor and friend of Cagles, said he has known the Cagle fam- ily for years and has always thought well of them. Andys always been a nice and a well-up person, he said. Shambley also said he thinks Cagle is a fair leader with good judgment. I think that would be one of his strong points, how he treats people and respects people, he said. Contact the desk editor at city@dailytarheel.com. Jamie Hahn is fighting for her life, and Nation, her husband, is by her side. Our families and her friends are devastated. We deeply appre- ciate the thoughts and expres- sions of love we have received. Jamie is a strong and cou- rageous young woman and a bright light to us all. Pray for her. Nation Hahn had been scheduled to speak to UNC journalism professor Daniel Kreiss political communica- tion class Thursday. Kreiss said he met Nation Hahn when the latter was running a social media cam- paign against Amendment One. It is a momentously sad time for anyone who knew Nation or Jamie, given the countless hours and energy they have put into politics in North Carolina and nation- ally, Kreiss said. Nation works as the direc- tor of engagement at New Kind, a new media company in Raleigh that has advocated against Amendment One, among other issues. Jamie Hahn founded SkyBlue Strategies, which consults nonprofit organiza- tions and political campaigns on fundraising. The Hahns are members of UNCs Young Alumni Leadership Council. Nation graduated in 2008 and Jamie in 2006. Contact the desk editor at state@dailytarheel.com. STAbbINg from page 1 SCHOOLS FUNDINg $.0494 possible district tax increase $68.7 million CHCCS budget request $1.9 million needed to open Northside decisions at the state and federal level will also affect how much money CHCCS ultimately receives. What with sequestration at the federal level and salary increases at the state level, right now we dont know what to expect, Bedford said. Bedford said some of the requested money would go to purchase more supplies, as the state quit funding text- books three years ago. We also want middle school literacy coaches, more exceptional children classes and more security profession- als at all schools, she said. LoFrese said he does not expect to have a clear idea of state and federal funding until June or July. But Rich said for Orange County, education tops the list of priorities. Everyone comes and asks for money, and we have to see how much we have and how much we can actually give them, Rich said. Education, of course, will always be a priority. Contact the desk editor at city@dailytarheel.com. MAYMESTER Nothi ng coul d be fi ner. Summer School at Carol i na. AFAM 258 The Civil Rights Movement (3), Walter Rucker. HS AFRI 368 Political Protest and Conflict in Africa (3), Michael Lambert. SS, BN AMST 110 (HIST 110) Introduction to Cultures and Histories of Native North America, Daniel Cobb. HS, NA, US AMST 269 Mating and Marriage in American Culture (3), Timothy Marr. CI, HS, US ANTH 206 American Indian Societies (3), Valerie Lambert. SS, US ANTH 423 Written in Bone: CSI and the Science of Death Investigation from Skeletal Remains (3), Dale Hutchinson. PL ART 251 Art and Architecture in the Age of Caliphs (7 th 12th Centuries CE) (3), Glaire Anderson. VP, BN, WB ART 272 Northern European Art: Van Eyck to Bruegel (3). Tatiana String. ART 551 Introduction to Museum Studies (3), Lyneise Williams . VP, NA, EE CHIN 464 The City in Modern Chinese Literature and Film (3), Robin Visser. BN, LA CLAR 242 Archaeology of Egypt (3) Victor Martinez. BN, HS, WB COMM 422 Family Communication (3), Kumarini Silva. GL, US COMM 523 Communication and Leadership (3), Patricia Parker. DRAM 290 Special Studies On Camera Acting: Integrating Breath and Voice (3), John Patrick. DRAM 292 Corner of the Sky: The American Musical (3), Gregory Kable. VP DRAM 300 Directing (3) Julie Fishell. CI ECON 468 Principles of Soviet and Post-Soviet Economic Systems (3), Steven Rosefielde. ENGL 366 Literature and the Other Arts (3), Laurie Langbauer. CI, LA ENST 369 Energy and the Environment: A Coastal Perspective (3), Lindsay Dubbs. PL, EE EXSS 188 Emergency Care of Injuries and Illness (3), Meredith Petschauer. EXSS 273 Research in Exercise and Sport Science (3), Jason Mihalik. QI GLBL 390 Current Topics in Global Studies: Rethinking Globalization: Global Social Movements and Local Alternatives (3), Michal Osterweil. HIST 277 (ASIA//PWAD 277) The Conflict over Israel/Palestine (3), Sarah Shields. BN, HS HIST 434 Medieval England (3), Marcus Bull. ITAL 241 Italian Renaissance Literature in Translation (3), Ennio Rao . LA, WB JOMC 376 Sports Marketing and Advertising (3), John Sweeney . MASC 220 (ENST 220) North Carolina Estuaries: Environmental Processes and Problems (3), Marc Alperin . Includes one full week at the Institute of Marine Sciences (IMS) in Morehead City. Separate program fee and application required. EE, PL PLAN 590 Special Topics Seminar: Introduction to Real Estate Finance, Investment and Development (3), Emil Malizia. PLCY 101 (PWAD 101) Making Public Policy (3), Daniel Gitterman. NA, SS POLI 100 Introduction to Government in the United States (3), Jason Roberts. NA, SS POLI 150 (PWAD 150) International Relations and World Politics (3), Mark Crescenzi . GL, SS POLI 202 The U.S. Supreme Court (3), Isaac Unah . SS POLI 217 (WMST 217) Women and Politics (3), Pamela Conover . SS, US POLI 469 (PWAD/RUES 469) Conflict and Intervention in the Former Yugoslavia (3), Robert Jenkins. GL, SS PSYC 245 Abnormal Psychology (3), F. Charles Wiss. PL PSYC 490 Current Topics in Psychology: Childhood Maltreatment, Trauma, and Trauma-Focused Treatment (3), Deborah Jones. PSYC 503 African American Psychology (3) Enrique Neblett. RELI 125 Heaven and Hell (3), Randall Styers. PH RELI 162 Introduction to Catholicism (3) Evyatar Marienberg. NA RELI 283 (ASIA 300) The Buddhist Tradition: India, Nepal and Tibet (3), Lauren Leve . BN, CI RELI 321 Topics in Religion and Culture (3), Jonathan Boyarin. SOCI 252 Data Analysis in Sociological Research (3), Francois Nielsen. QI SPAN 255 Conversation I (3), Malgorzata Lee . Prerequisite for 255: SPAN 204, 212 or 402. CI SPAN 293 Spanish Service Learning (1). Available to students enrolled in SPAN 255 or SPAN 310. EE SPAN 310 Conversation II (3), Malgorzata Lee . Prerequisite for 310: SPAN 250, 255 or 260. SPAN 362 The Quest for Identity in Contemporary Spain (3), Samuel Amago . LA, NA Earn 3 credits in 3 weeks in Maymester. Registration begins in March. Check out the listing below for courses, professors and Gen Ed requirements. Find a complete course description at summer.unc.edu. May 14-May 31, 2013 summer.unc.edu Ambassador Anthony C. E. Quainton Lecture Why Do They Hate Us? Terrorism, Counter-terrorism, and Reflections on the Challenges for American Public Diplomacy. Respondent: Professor Ted Leinbaugh, Department of English and Comparative Literature and the Curriculum in Peace, War, and Defense. Anthony Quainton has served as the US Ambassador to the Central African Republic, Ambassador to Nicaragua, Ambassador to Kuwait, and Ambassador to Peru. Lecture: Thursday, April 25, 2013 5:30pm-6:30pm The Institute for the Arts and Humanities, Hyde Hall 176 E. Franklin Street, Chapel Hill Free and open to the public. Sponsored by PWAD. 919-942-5161 Open from 7am - 6pm Mon-Sat 9am-5pm Sun Located at 159 East Franklin St., Chapel Hill 90th Anniversary! 5 Hotdogs, french fries & drink (limit 2 hotdogs per person) Wednesday, April 24th from 11-4:30 (Dine in only) No appointments necessary Extended hours On-site digital x-rays Now Offering $10 sports physicals only at Chapel Hill location Offering all types of services, including STD screenings and womens health Open 365 days a year FAST MED has it all!
(919) 913-0996 1407 E. Franklin St, Chapel Hill News Wednesday, April 24, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 5 courtesy of connie Mahan Musical theater ensemble Universes was commissioned to write and perform Spring Training,a new interpretation of the work. dth/brookelyn riley Chris Munnelly started the game Tuesday night for the Tar Heels and pitched into the fourth inning. He gave up four runs on two hits and struck out four batters but avoided a decision in the loss. Tar Heels 14-game win streak snapped By Lauren Clark Staff Writer A creative collaboration among three performing arts companies has produced the next installment in The Rite of Spring at 100 series a world premiere starting tonight. Universes Theater Company, a musi- cal theater ensemble, was com- missioned jointly by PlayMakers Repertory Company and Carolina Performing Arts to write and perform Spring Training, a new and edgy interpretation of Igor Stravinskys The Rite of Spring. Joseph Haj, producing artistic director for PlayMakers, said he is excited the group is a part of The Rite of Spring at 100 series. PlayMakers and Carolina Performing Arts have been working together over the years, and were always looking for new ways to partner, he said. Haj said he was glad PlayMakers is working again with the ensemble, who first performed at UNC in 2007. We have a long relationship with Universes, he said. We believe in them as artists. They had free rein to make something contemporary out of The Rite of Spring. Jeffrey Meanza, associate artistic director for PlayMakers, said he and his colleagues believed that the group would create something innovative. We were very interested in Universes as a theatrical ensemble, he said. They are very contemporary. They are not traditional theater. Meanza said PlayMakers has kept its expectations open, and the finished piece honors Stravinskys legacy but proves to be its own work. There will be a combina- tion of lots of styles, including hip-hop, beat boxing, singing, rapping and reciting poetry. The audience will get an exciting and unique experience, he said. Steven Sapp, a performer in Universes, said The Rite of Spring was the inspiration for a more modern piece. It will be a completely different interpretation of the original ballet, Sapp said. Even if Stravinsky is not obviously in there, he is in there. The show is about looking at four characters with their own rites of spring. Meanza said the group is using The Rite of Spring as a springboard for contemporary ideas and personal narrative. (Universes) shows the idea of modernity, looking at it from an American perspective about diversity, Meanza said. Theyre providing an urban vernacular and perspective. SEE THE SHOW Time: 7:30 p.m. today through Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday Location: Kenan Theatre Info: http://bit.ly/11BCWa0 Sapp said group members enjoyed having freedom to write and perform the piece, allowing them to see what was and was not working. We are not afraid to keep pushing it and developing it. Each performance will be different, he said. Contact the desk editor at arts@dailytarheel.com. RITE OF SPRING at 100 By Grace Raynor Staff Writer With eight runs and only three Tar Heels having reg- istered strikeouts, North Carolina baseball coach Mike Fox said the statistics line would have suggested a win for his squad Tuesday night. But when Parks Jordans fly ball landed in the glove of UNC-Wilmingtons center fielder Steven Linkous with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning, the scoreboard read otherwise. The Seahawks snapped No. 1 UNCs 14-game winning streak taking a 9-8 victory with them back to the coast. UNC-Ws offensive domi- nance in the fourth inning led them to the come-from- behind win. We just didnt get it done on the mound. Walks and errors they ll get you. They got us tonight, Fox said. You can go back and say we lost the game in the fourth inning. The Tar Heels (39-3) squandered a 6-0 lead and allowed UNC-W to tie the game at 6-6 in a fourth inning that featured three dif- ferent UNC pitchers. In the bottom of the fourth, UNC retook the lead and shut out feelings of frustration stemming from the top half of the inning. Colin Moran followed up a Landon Lassiter triple with a home run, scoring two runs and giving UNC a two-run lead. It was huge when Landon led off with that triple, Moran said. It makes my job a lot eas- ier to get him in from third. and I was just trying to look for a ball up and luckily he left one up. But the pitching woes con- tinued for the Tar Heels as three of UNCs four pitchers turned in uncharacteristically poor performances. And with that, the Seahawks regained the lead in the top of the eighth inning. BASEBALL: UNc-WiLmiNgTON 9, NOrTH cArOLiNA 8 Spring Training turns Stravinsky piece on its head Fox said he was pleased with relief pitcher Chris McCues efforts, but McCue said ulti- mately his team needed to throw strikes and did not. A couple of the guys went in there and didnt necessarily have their stuff tonight, but its a process, obviously, McCue said. Its a long season. Theyve thrown well in the past so well be fine. Our pitching staff hon- estly is very good. Fox said the loss was a result of the fact that his pitchers werent connecting on the mound something they will put behind them. Its just one of those things Ive said it before theyre not robots. Theyre not trying to throw balls, its just part of the game, he said. Its not nerves, its just the plate is 17 inches wide. Youve got to be locked in and we just werent. DTH ONLINE: For more on Tues- days game check out dailytarheel.com. Fox praised UNC-Ws play and gave them credit for their ability to rally from a six-run deficit and eventually take the game. McCue said UNC will want redemption heading into todays game against UNC- Charlotte. Sometimes you just have those nights, McCue said. Charlotte just better be ready. Contact the desk editor at sports@dailytarheel.com. What do I love most about my job at Citrix ShareFile? work hard, play hard opportunity to grow I get to talk all day the ping pong table working with smart people happy hour free snacks I believe in what I do global company, local spirit great benefits learning about sales people listen to my ideas I am beating my goals Citrix ShareFile is one of the fastest-growing companies in the Triangle, and we are looking for smart and enthusiastic people to join our teams in sales, marketing, engineering and more. What will you love about working at Citrix ShareFile? Find out at www.sharefile.com/lovemyjob. University Wednesday, April 24, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6 By Lynsay Williams Staff Writer A little more than a week after the bombings at the Boston Marathon, Muslims in the Triangle came together Tuesday to promote Islam as a peaceful religion. The event, held in the Student Union and attended by about 60, was organized by the Research Triangle chapter of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community. It aimed to portray Muhammad and Islam as peaceful, using the phrase Love for all. Hatred for none. Marriam Azam, a member of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community who is enrolled at UNC and also has a daugh- ter studying at the University, said UNC has a very open- minded student body. Its a great opportunity for people to learn more and feel comfortable asking any ques- tions they have, she said. The event featured recita- tions of excerpts from the Quran, a holy text of Islam, and religious singing. The keynote address was given by Yahya Luqman, imam, or leader, of the Virginia chap- ters of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community. His speech focused on com- mon misconceptions about Islam: that the world would be better off without Islam and that the religion has a message of hate and intolerance, as practiced by Muhammad. Luqman used examples from Muhammads life and the Quran to dispel discrepancies. He also said the term jihad means the struggle and in context refers to an inner struggle or striving for righ- teousness. The word jihad is commonly associated with violence and holy war. There is nowhere in the Quran where jihad is used in the context of war, he said. Nasira Sayed, president of the womens section of the Research Triangle chapter of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, said she thought the event came at a good time. We want to spread the word of the prophet and show his character, she said. He was a peaceful prophet. He did not make his claim by the sword. Freshman Rachel Woods, a religious studies major and member of a religious plural- ism group, said when she heard about the event she was immediately interested. I just want to learn some- thing about the prophet and why hes considered a peace- ful prophet. Contact the desk editor at university@dailytarheel.com Leaders dispel ideas of violence in Islam NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to publication for classifed 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 PART-TIME CHILD CARE NEEDED. We are look- ing for a UNC student to pick up 2 children (ages 5 and 8) from school and provide care at our house 2:30-4:30pm M-Th. References, resume and clean driving record needed. Start end of August. afterschool1314ch@gmail.com. HELP MY DAUgHTER LEARN SPANISH Seeking a Spanish tutor to talk and play with toddler 2 afternoons per week. Contact Katharyn at katharyn.vreeland@gmail.com. SEEKINg ExPERIENCED CHILD CARE Seeking infant child care 9am-5 pm 3-5 days/wk. Must have experience with infants, reliable transportation and credible references. Flexible hours. Reply to info@gardensalon.com. For Rent FAIR HOUSINg ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or 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. LOvELY 3BR/2B HOME ON WOODED lot. Lots of windows, Convenient to I-40 this open foor plan features freplace, hardwood foors thru house, large deck. Pets negotiable with fee. $1,390/mo. Contact Fran Holland Properties: fhollandprop@gmail.com, 919-968-4545. SMALL, FURNISHED APARTMENT attached to private home. Private entrance, bath. 1.25 miles from Planetarium. $475/mo, includes utilities. Available for summer school. 919-967-5552, before 10pm. 4BR/4BA UNIvERSITY COMMONS condo. New carpet and paint, $1,400/mo. All utilities and internet included. On busline. Contact Fran Holland Properties at fhollandprop@gmail.com. 919-968-4545. REDUCED RENT! Private, spacious bedroom and bath 5 miles from campus (SW Durham) in exchange for pet care and household chores. Rate is negotiable depending upon time available. Must be NON-smoker, love animals (2 dogs). No cats and have excellent references. Please email: Mtmoriahfarm@yahoo.com. COzY 1BR CARRBORO APARTMENT. Beautiful Bolin Creek greenway setting. Includes dishwasher, W/D, internet, water. Bike, bus to campus. Available 5/1. $595/mo. No pets, smoking. 919-454-3739. $400/MO. PER BEDROOM in 6BR/5BA townhouse. 4 buslines, minutes to UNC, hardwood foors, W/D, extra storage, free parking, non-smoking. spbell48@gmail.com, 919-933-0983. SUBLET ROOM with female roommates for frst and/or second summer session. Price negotiable. Near Franklin Street. Contact Amanda at srsic@live.unc.edu. SPACIOUS 4BR SUMMER RENTAL: very nice 4BR/3.5BA rental available June and July. Near UNC hospitals. All appliances and utilities INCLUDED. Partially furnished. $2,600/mo. 919-730-3763. WALK TO CAMPUS. Available June or August. 2BR/1BA. Fully renovated. W/D. Dishwasher. Central AC, heat. $875/mo. Merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143. STARTINg AUgUST: 2BR apartment. W/D, 3 miles from campus, on 10 acres of land. In exchange for work inside and outside. Students preferred. Call 919-967-3221. FULLY FURNISHED 2BR TOWNHOME in Oaks Condos available for short and long term lease. Different terms for different time periods. great location, close to Friday Center, on busline. Bring your suitcase and move in. Email Fran Holland Properties at fhollandprop@gmail.com or call 919-968-4545. WALK TO CAMPUS. 3BR/1.5BA. Available June. Fully renovated. W/D. Dish- washer. Central AC, heat. $1,700/mo. Merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143. LARgE HOUSE FOR RENT: AvAILABLE 8/2013. $2,750/mo. +1 month free! 5-6BR, 3BA. Fenced yard, plenty of parking. Busline. Students welcome. tom@TerraNovaglobal.com or 919-451-0740. CONvENIENT TO LAW AND MEDICAL schools. grad or prof students. 3BR/1.5BA ranch in quiet glen Lennox neighborhood. Large yard, carport, hardwood foors, bus nearby. East CHH, Culbreth, glenwood, $1,390/mo. (pets negotiable). Contact Fran Holland Properties, fhollandprop@gmail.com. WALK TO CAMPUS. Available June or August. 2BR/1BA. Fully renovated. W/D. Dishwasher. Central AC, heat. Large back deck. $975/mo. Merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143. UNIvERSITY COMMONS 4BR/4BA. $1,600/mo. Includes: UTILITIES, walk in closet, internet, furnished living and dining. On J, D buslines. Available 8-1-2013. 919-767-1778. One left: PerreiraProperties.com. MILL CREEK APARTMENT On Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. In need of a subleter for Fall 2013. Townhouse style. Walk to campus. Near bus stop. Full kitchen. W/D. Parking space included. $475/mo. utilities. Contact kmreilly@live.unc.edu, 978-609-6247. For Sale BOOKS: Alors! Wolfclaw zee cocker spaniel ees missing! Why? Learn zee terrible truth in Clumsy Hearts, a slightly misguided romance, by Hysteria Molt. Available via Amazon.com. ESTABLISHED CURvES FRANCHISE Roxboro, NC. Excellent business opportunity for motivated individuals. $45,000 including all equipment. Call Donna at Remax Premier Realty, 336-597-8000. Help Wanted YARD AND HOUSE MAINTENANCE. Next week beginning 1,000 square foot deck. Need mus- cles. 4 miles from campus, in woods, on water. Must be student. $10/hr with possible raise. Flextime. Robert and Rebecca. 919-967-0138. PERSONAL ASSISTANT NEEDED. Student with computer skills. general help organizing: fles, house, closets, everything. 4 miles from campus. $11/hr. Rebecca, 919-967-0138. HOUSEKEEPER FOR DURHAM FAMILY needed. Fridays preferred. Transportation required. $14/hr. Email fried002@mc.duke.edu. vALET DRIvERS needed for upscale res- taurants, hotels and events. great for students. Flexible hours, lunch shifts available. $8-$13/hr. Including tips. For more information call 919-796-5782. PART-TIME CHURCH custodial, security position. 7-10 hrs/wk at $10/hr. Set up tables and chairs, clean rooms and bathrooms and assist church staff as needed before, during and after worship on Sundays. Occasional Saturday hours, as needed. Must be able to perform physical, manual labor, have good interpersonal skills. Criminal background check will be performed prior to employment. Submit resume and references to weekend@upcch.org or mail to PO Box 509, Chapel Hill NC 27514. MODELS NEEDED for evening sessions for Durham sculpture studio. Classical fgure and portrait. Andrew Bryan, 919-929-9913. gYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR: Chapel Hill gymnastics has part-time positions avail- able for energetic, enthusiastic instructors. Applicants with knowledge of gymnastic terminology and progression skills preferred, but will train right candidate. Send a resume to margie@chapelhillgymnastics.com. IMMIgRATION INTERN: Full-time, 2nd summer session. 12-20 hrs/wk fall and spring. Unique environment near global Education Center. MUST be fuent in Spanish, mature, reliable, detail oriented, conscientious, with 3.0+ gPA. Resume, most recent academic transcript to: Law Offce, PO Box 551, Chapel Hill, NC 27514. SWIM INSTRUCTORS, COACHES: great summer employment. Quality swim lesson instructors for our summer season needed starting May. Certifcation not required. Email aquatics@shalomdch.org, 919-354-4941. LEgAL ASSISTANT: Raleigh law frm seeks UNC graduate. Excellent typing, editing, proofreading, Word, Excel skills required. Interest in law school encouraged. Email resume to nnwlaw@gmail.com. CHAPEL HILL DAY CARE CENTER is hiring afternoon assistants. Requires at least 4 credit hours in Early Childhood Education. A criminal record check and a TB test required prior to starting work. Interviewing only candidates who are available M-F until 6pm. Start time vary. $9-$10/hr.. Send letter of interest to pam@chapelhilldaycarecenter.com. License #68000135. Internships EDITORIAL INTERNSHIP: Media company in Chapel Hill is looking for a paid editorial intern for summer 2013, with the potential to continue work into the school year. Interns will have the opportunity to build a portfolio by writing both short and long stories for the print editions of our magazines, as well as the websites. Other duties include copy editing and posting news releases to our websites. This is a fantastic, real world opportunity to gain valuable experience in publishing. Please send cover letter, resume, 3 writing samples to internship@foodnewsmedia.com. Lost & Found LOST: ISUzU CAR KEY (has a broken key ring loop) lost on UNC campus on Monday April 15th. If found please call 704-219-6138 WEB DEvELOPER. Need a web savvy person to help with Wordpress site development, google Places and SEO. Will pay by hour or project. lorenzo@acornhcs.com; 919-259-6189. Sublets LOOKINg FOR SUMMER SUbLETER for Chancellor Square. 2BR/2BA fully furnished $1,400/mo. WILLINg TO NEgOTIATE or take what you can give. Contact: joyurcaba@ gmail.com or 910-783-5182. SUBLET ON MCMASTERS: 1BR for June, July and (negotiable) August 2013. Plenty of parking, 10 minutes walk to campus. Bath, full kitchen. $500/mo. includes all utilities, negotiable. Contact pashton@live.unc.edu. SUBLET MY FURNISHED Chapel view apartment and kick it by the pool this summer. $599 due on June 1 and July 1, all utilities included. Move in mid-May. Bonus: contact before May 1 and get a free Tv. Email sarahellenglen@gmail.com. SUBLET: Summer sublet available. House with 3 girls. $500/mo. unless 2 people share room. 15 minute walk to campus and on busline. Email atompkin@live.unc.edu. Summer Jobs FIELD HOCKEY INSTRUCTORS: Instructors and assistant instructors needed to run summer camps the weeks of June 24 and July 15. Previous coaching and playing experience with sound knowledge is preferred. For additional information contact the Carrboro Recreation and Parks Department at 919-918-7376 or email cwolfe@townofcarrboro.org. Announcements For Rent Help Wanted For Rent BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room
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Send cover letter & resume to hire@louisebeckproperties.com Management Company HIRING Property Inspectors for Summer Announcements Announcements Help Wanted Misc. Wanted Sublets Chapel Hill Bible Church DR. HUGH ROSS , astrophysicist, Christian apologist, and founder of Reasons to Believe (www.reasons.org) will be speaking at the Chapel Hill Bible Church on SUNDAY, APRIL 28 . His 9:30 sermon topic will be Cosmic Reasons to Believe in Christ and at 11:05 Genesis & Science: Enemies or Allies. 260 Erwin Rd., Chapel Hill biblechurch.org Guests welcome Stay for both services The Daily Tar Heel office will close Monday, April 29th at 5pm for Exam Break Deadlines for Thursday, May 16th issue: Display Ads & Display Classifieds - Monday, May 13th at 3pm Line Classifieds - Tuesday, May 14th at noon We will re-open on Monday, May 13th at 9:00am (c) 2013 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERvICES, INC. Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is a 7 -- The more you love, the more you feel loved. Minimize travel, and dont send your package yet. Shop carefully. Its a good time to visualize utopia. Friends inspire you. Write down the possibilities. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is a 9 -- Confrm facts before jumping to conclusions. Keep doing the stuff that works. Cleaning your working space can increase your productivity. Dont move furniture to avoid getting the work done, though. Gemini (May 21-June 20) Today is an 8 -- Dont make wild promises you cant keep. Youre likely to change your mind later. Call for reinforcements, or consider a new part- nership that brings a new perspective. Ponder before speaking. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Today is an 8 -- Your mind is moving faster than usual. Take advantage of an extra dose of imagination to increase your earthly comfort. Prepare for a bumpy road, as well. Postpone travel. If you cant, add cushions. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 9 -- Review all options. Listen to what others want, and check the facts youve been presented. Your investiga- tion leads to a treasure. Long-distance communication clarifes. Celebrate your discovery with your team. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 9 -- While you can afford an excellent communication system, dont get more than necessary. There are hidden factors, & it may not be the best use of funds. You can solve the puzzle. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is a 7 -- New information illumi- nates. Watch out for hidden agendas. Check for changes, as a creative project gets delayed. You have what others want. Discover another source of revenue; it may require juggling. Improve your effectiveness. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is an 8 -- Youre good at gener- ating money now. It pays to recycle, so reduce unused stuff. An auction may bring the best price. You win free space and even cash. Take time for luxuriating and mindless wandering. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 7 -- go carefully. You may want to shout at people. If so, take fve. Call in a favor. Delay a meeting to spend more time with family. Include visiting a beloved locale. Share your dreams. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a 9 -- Conversations provide insight. Infuential people are watching. The action is behind the scenes. Theres a promise of riches. Being well organized is crucial; odds are good youll forget something. Share your joy. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is an 8 -- Shop carefully, and discover a treasure. You cant be two places at the same time; prioritize meetings. Friends provide support. Youre gaining respect, but dont get cocky. go farther than ever before. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 9 -- Intuition gets you through a sticky spot. Call the moment you see that youll be late. Financial success snowballs. Ask for more and get it. Pay back a debt. Dont push yourself so hard! HOROSCOPES To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. If April 24th is Your Birthday... Strengthen infrastructure, review numbers & work your plan; finances shine for the next six months. Save some away. Your team is crucial, so spread appreciation and build bridges. Social buzz sparks with family, friends & community. Participate, contribute and grow your networks and influence. SAVE A TREE, RECYCLE ME! Did You Know You can now place your DTH classified online at www.dailytarheel.com Click on Classifieds ITS EASY! News Wednesday, April 24, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7 An overhaul of Hill Hall The Kenan Trust gave $5 million to help improve the halls rotunda and audito- rium. See pg. 3 for story. New sheriff candidate Andy Cagle is hoping to get his law enforcement start as Orange County sheriff. See pg. 4 for story. Spring Training A musical and spoken word ensemble premieres a Rite of Spring-inspired show. See pg. 5 for story. Coming Thursday To read about UNC base- ball superfan Tom Jensen, pick up a copy of The Daily Tar Heel on Thursday. games Solution to Tuesdays puzzle Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9. 2013 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved. Level: 1 2 3 4 (C)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle ACross 1 Singer Bryant 6 Tooted in a Revolutionary band 11 Jacques, e.g. 14 Common java hr. 15 __ of Two Cities 16 Be in the red 17 Michael Jackson memorabilia 19 Coal container 20 Met display 21 Met supporter: Abbr. 22 Completely drained 24 Cold War concerns 27 Web address ending 28 Line-drawing tool 33 Fruity 36 Aristotelian pair? 37 Cauliflower __: boxing injury 38 Exodus author 39 Heavy curtain 41 Head of a family? 42 Channel for film buffs 43 Jalapeo rating characteristic 44 Nemo creator Verne 45 Conversational skill 49 Info source, with the 50 Like early life forms 54 Shakespearean actor Kenneth 58 SALT subject 59 Worker who handles returns, briefly 60 Tune 61 Uno ancestor, and, in a way, what are hidden in 17-, 28- and 45-Across 64 Prune 65 New worker 66 Pick of the litter 67 Sots symptoms 68 Readied, as the presses 69 Deep sleep Down 1 Engaged in armed conflict 2 Beatles jacket style 3 Contract change approvals: Abbr. 4 Tit for __ 5 Motel Wi-Fi, for one 6 Singer-dancer Lola 7 Jurist Lance 8 Top choice, slangily 9 Type of sch. with low grades? 10 Iron-fisted rulers 11 Dont sweat it 12 Babys boo-boo 13 Convalesce 18 First in a car, say 23 Uno e due 25 Retired fliers 26 Straddle 29 Spark plug measurement 30 Color 31 Look open-mouthed 32 Valentines Day deity 33 Target of a joke 34 St. Louis symbol 35 Sci-fi travel conveniences 39 Dict. feature 40 Dirty one in a memorable Cagney line 41 Sugar shape 43 Terrace cooker 44 Night-night clothes? 46 DDE, in WWII 47 Worn at the edges 48 Sarcastic remark 51 TV monitoring device 52 Most likely will, after is 53 Surgery beam 54 Not in need of a barber 55 Mob action 56 It may run from cheek to cheek 57 Carol opening 62 Zip code start? 63 Day-__: pigment brand mct/Ethan hyman Jacob Smith, 10, greets Spider-Man as window washers surprise patients in WakeMeds Childrens Hospital in Raleigh on Tuesday. On the wire: national and world news Kerry tells NATO to prep for response in Syria BRUSSELS (MCT) Secretary of State John F. Kerry urged nervous NATO allies to begin considering how they would respond if the Syrian regime uses chemical weapons in its civil war. Though NATO officials insist they are far from any military involvement in the 2-year-old conflict, Kerry told officials of the Western military alliance Tuesday that they needed to carefully and collectively consider how NATO is prepared to respond to protect its members from a Syrian threat, including any potential chemical weapons threat. He noted that the alliance has already begun planning for Syria contingencies and declared that such prepara- tion was an appropriate undertaking for the alliance. Kerrys remarks to the North Atlantic Council, NATOs political arm, came when the alliance is deeply conflicted over the war, alarmed at the mounting civilian casualties but eager to minimize any involvement in yet another conflict in the Middle East. NATO officials have insisted to reporters before this weeks ministerial gathering that they would not make any decisions at the session that would take them closer to a military role. And Kerry emphasized again that the U.S. goal is to solve the conflict through negotiations among the oppo- sition and the regime, once its leader, President Bashar Assad, is dislodged from his post. Yet the issue of a chemi- cal weapons attack looms larger every week. Britain and France believe there is reason to suspect Assad has used chemical weapons, and have asked the United Nations to investigate. A senior Israeli official Tuesday cited evidence of chemical weapons use. President Barack Obama has declared that chemi- cal weapons use by Assad was a red line and a game changer, to which the United States would unquestionably respond. Judge drops some charges against abortion doctor PHILADELPHIA (MCT) After hearing impassioned arguments from attorneys on both sides of the Kermit Gosnell capital murder trial Tuesday, a Philadelphia judge threw out three of the seven first-degree murder charges Gosnell faced for allegedly killing fetuses born alive at his abortion clinic. Common Pleas Judge Jeffrey Minehart also tossed out all five counts against Gosnell accusing him of corpse abuse for storing the feet of aborted fetuses in plastic containers in his now closed Womens Medical Society clinic. Also dismissed by Minehart was one count of infanticide the intentional killing of an infant. All other counts against Gosnell, 72, will be decided by the jury, the judge ruled. In addition to counts of first-degree murder for kill- ing four babies allegedly born alive, those charges include the third-degree murder of a patient who died of a drug overdose following a botched 2009 abortion and multiple counts of performing illegal, late-term abortions. Minehart also dismissed six of the nine counts of theft by deception against Gosnell co-defendant Eileen ONeill, whom prosecutors contend worked at the clinic as a doc- tor despite not having a medi- cal license. Gosnells attorney, Jack McMahon, argued that all seven counts regarding the fetuses should be dismissed. None were born alive, he said, all having been injected with death-causing drugs during the abortion process. Assistant District Attorney Edward Cameron argued that there had been enough testimony from former clinic employees that the seven babies were born alive to let the jury decide. The prosecution rested last week. Gosnell could be sentenced to death if he is convicted of the first-degree murders of the babies. Be introduced to data analysis and fulfill QI Gen Ed in SOCI 252. Maymester. summer.unc.edu ( The Daily Tar Heel Office will be closed April 30-May 12. Its not too late to get in our final issues (AND your ad will remain online until May 14th at no extra charge! www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds The Fun Place To Be! All shows $7.00 for college students with ID Take 15/501 South towards Pittsboro Exit Market St. / Southern Village OBLIVION J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1:15-4:15-7:15-9:55 QUARTET J . . . . . . 12:50-2:55-5:00-7:20-9:35 #42 J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1:00-4:10-7:10-9:45 THE CROODS I . . . . . . . .12:45-2:55-5:00-7:15-9:30 OZ: THE GREAT AND POWERFUL I . . . . . . . .1:15-4:15-7:20-10:00 GET THE SCOOP ON UPCOMING PERFORMANCES AND EXCLUSIVE PREMIERES, BUY TICKETS, AND GO BEHIND-THE-SCENES WITH THE ARTISTS AT THERITEOFSPRINGAT100.ORG 919.843.3333 Martha Graham Dance Company returns to Memorial Hall for two nights to perform Myth and Transformation, featuring the classic version of The Rite of Spring as rst choreographed by Martha Graham in 1983, along with Aaron Copelands timeless Appalachian Spring and the world premiere of Rust. Student tickets only $10. MOVEMENT NEVER LIES. MARTHA GRAHAM DANCE COMPANY UNCS MEMORIAL HALL FRIDAY APRIL 26 U 8:00 PM SATURDAY APRIL 27 U 8:00 PM Opinion Wednesday, April 24, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 8 EDITorIal BoarD mEmBErs Established 1893, 120 years of editorial freedom QUOTE OF THE DAY FEATUrED OnlinE rEADEr cOmmEnT Students: stand for reproductive justice TO THE EDITOR: If there was ever a time to be loud and passionate at UNC, April 22 was that day. But fear not my fellow classmates, because another opportunity is bound to present itself soon! Mondays opportunity came in the form of a little protesting. No matter which side you chose to stand with, whether that was with Planned Parenthood (pro- abortion rights) or against Planned Parenthood (anti- abortion), it was obvious that there was work to be done. As I braved the front lines, standing with my favorite pro-abortion rights supporters, I began to engage my anti-abortion counterparts. I discovered that: A. We fundamentally disagreed, and B. There exists some middle ground. The anti-abortion community fundamentally disagrees on platforms of sexual responsibility, contraception, reproductive health/education, intercourse and abortion. Arguing where life begins is extremely personal and not meant to be debated. But alas, there is a middle ground upon which we should be able to stand: stopping the oppression! Can we agree that it is in our best interest to end the classist, racist, sexist systems of oppression and patriarchy in which we live? Lets do substantially more to end hunger, illiteracy, poverty, HIV/ AIDS, obesity, etc. Instead of eradicating a safeguard for womens autonomy, we should end the influences that would cause her to consider an abortion. Coming to Carolina has taught me that it matters where you stand. Stand with Roe! Stand for reproductive justice! Stand with Planned Parenthood! Ishmael Bishop 16 Mathematics Anti-abortion group got the facts wrong TO THE EDITOR: Lets talk about abortion. On Monday afternoon, walking through Polk Place, I saw several signs advertising the Planned Parenthood Project. I stopped and was imme- diately horrified by the mis- information being propagat- ed by the Students for Life group. After seeing the rows of 915 crosses in the grass, representing the abortions that Planned Parenthood performs daily, I decided to stand with the Students United for Reproductive Justice. Students for Life: I dont know why you chose to target Carolina with your extremely offensive and misinformed demonstra- tion, but I would like to set the record straight on some key things. The most egregious lie being told by Students for lETTErS TO THE EDiTOr If our petty court system is going to attempt to handle real crimes, real attor- neys come with the territory. Hugo, on a bill that would give students the right to an attorney Were not trying to come up with crafty arguments to get students off for something. That is something lawyers would bring Anna Sturkey, on a problem with having lawyers in the honor system EDiTOriAl cArTOOn By Matt Leming, UNC Comics, facebook.com/unccomics An ode to the all- nighters T heres nothing quite like the feeling you get when you scratch sleep off of your to-do list. Its intimidating but liberating another bodily restraint youve ostensibly freed yourself from. You consign semi-regular sleep cycle to the scrap pile of nonessential needs with its companions three square meals a day and hygiene, and suddenly your homework window opens up like an eager psychiatric patient whos been stocking up on trauma for years and just needs somebody to talk to. And then, like an Augustinian monk well- versed in self-sacrifice, you cloister yourself in the UL, subordinating your worldly physical considerations to study and the redemptive salvation of your GPA. Theres something almost mystical about it. All analogies aside, the all-nighter in the library is one of those twisted, mind-bending experiences that we dont often stop to think about. I write my best papers that way (also my worst), and in the last couple of years, Ive started to appreciate the way my mind works when deprived of its most basic needs. Reality starts to become decidedly unreal as soon as you hit upon the auditory hallucinations never before has waking up to violin been so disorienting. Even supposedly normal things start to feel weird when you cant be sure youre not dreaming. Eventually you get to that fevered labor state where the cognitive levees youve thrown up between your dreams and your essay materials start to drift downstream in the flood of stress and free association, and before you know it, you wake up having dreamt about your paper and writing about your dreams. You briefly forget how to build a sentence as you take a break to fumble with a sleeve of Thin Mints, and then you doze off again before recalling what grammar is. Your screen becomes an aquarium of Tetris and puzzle games and you wake up typing a sentence about land sharks into the middle of your philosophy paper, but at that point youre just glad to be producing words. And then of course theres the day after. You wander around in a dazed, only vaguely lucid state, where everything always means so much more than it does because you get to sleep soon. The sun shining through the trees in the arboretum takes on a vividly technicolor tone like an old hand-colored film reel, and youre Dorothy, easing on down the astoundingly yellow-for-the- sake-of-being-yellow brick road. You feel unexpectedly nostalgic for sepia tones, and you wonder what colors doing in a movie. Why do we do it? Well, thats obvious: its homework. And we might as well be monastic copyists because these are some essays of Biblical proportions. But why is it so exciting? Maybe its the physical strain. Perhaps the all-nighter gives us a little sense of risk and adventure, however artificial, and elevates for a time the otherwise mundane, soul- sucking academic grind that university life can be. 4/25: FEELINGOF NOSTALGIA SarahBufkindiscusses loss in the graduationtransition. N E X T michael Dickson Cries from the Peanut Gallery Junior English and journalism major from Raleigh. Email: miked35@email.unc.edu SPEAK OUT Writing guidelineS Please type: Handwritten letters will not be accepted. Sign and date: No more than two people should sign letters. Students: Include your year, major and phone number. Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number. Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit letters to 250 words. SuBMiSSiOn Drop-off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary Street, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514 E-mail: opinion@dailytarheel.com editOrS nOte: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which is made up of eight board members, the opinion editor and the editor. Life was that 92 percent of Planned Parenthood Services is abortions. In fact, only 3 percent of what they do is abortion the rest of their funding goes toward birth control, STD screenings, pregnancy tests and other vital reproductive health services that many people would not ordinarily be able to afford. Furthermore, because of the Hyde Amendment, federal funding does not go to abortions, except in special cases. This was a common misconception heard from passing students, though not from Students for Life. I know and respect many people who very passionate about their anti-abortion stance. I invite them to think of it not as the death of 915 fetuses (as the crosses wrongly implied), but as 915 women who, each day, are given the freedom to choose what to do with their bodies. Katy Protin 14 Computer science Mathematics Attend the Women of excellence Conference TO THE EDITOR: The North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP announces today it will hold its Women of Excellence Conference and 58th Annual Mother of the Year Coronation Program in Durham on May 4. The events will be held at St. Josephs AME Church located at 2521 Fayetteville St. Each year, the conference opens with the Women of Excellence brunch symposium. This years symposiums theme is Voting Rights: What Women Must Do! with noted guest panelists. The conference will also commemorate the 58th Annual Mother of the Year Coronation Program, held to honor women from across the state for their service to the NAACP and for their contributions within their respective communities. The North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP is proud to announce the keynote speaker is attorney Judith Browne Dianis, co-director of the Advancement Project of Washington, D.C. Dianis is a prominent civil rights litigator and experienced racial justice advocate in the areas of vot- ing, education, housing and immigrants rights. She has served as counsel in several significant voting rights cases including against the state of Florida in 2000. The N.C. NAACP hopes the community can join us May 4 for the brunch symposium, which will begin at 10 a.m. Tickets are $20 for adults and are available by calling the N.C. NAACP State Office at 919-682-4700 or toll free at 1-866-NC-NAACP. The 58th Annual Mother of the Year Coronation Program will begin at 1 p.m. and is free and open to the public. Rev. William Barber President N.C. NAACP cOlUmn P eople matter most. I told the eighth graders Ive been student teaching that this lesson is more significant than every bit of information about WWII that I taught them. Combined. This is the most important thing to remember. More important than to Remember Pearl Harbor? asked a smart aleck. So, so much more important. I wanted to pound it into their typically self-centered, mate- rialistic adolescent minds. I didnt fully realize this until too recently. People matter most. Not appear- ances, not school, not even money. The highlights of my Carolina career werent Abby Poeske Senior middle grades education major from Beverly, Mass. Email: apoeske@gmail.com academic or extracurricular achievements, but rather the relationships Ive formed. Investing in friendships instead of in what would make you a seemingly more accomplished person will make you the best and most accomplished person. At UNC it wasnt the experiences themselves that were so memorable, but the people in those experiences. I wont remember my GPA years from now, but I will remember my best friends and my time with them. Work hard, but dont feel guilty abandoning Davis or skipping the gym to be with the people you love. You wont regret not studying for a quiz, but you will regret the time not spent with friends. So drop what youre doing and go take a walk with friends or grab a drink. I didnt do enough of this, and now I wish I had more time with the incredible people at this University. Because people matter most. Relationships are what make our Carolina experience so valuable. What we wish we knew anDy Thomason EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM ChElsEa PhIPPs OPINION CO-EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM naThan DamBrosIo OPINION CO-EDITOR sanEm kaBaCa ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR NAYAB kHAN TREY MANguM zACH gAvER MATTHEw OAkES kAREEM RAMADAN PATRICk RYAN CODY wELTON SIERRA wINgATE-BEY S ometime early in my undergraduate career here at Carolina I found myself being just a little bit angry about everything. And I mean everything academic papers with seven-plus word titles, Connorstock T-shirts, aspiring business majors, the is N.C. State our rival debate, WebAssign, aspiring philosophy majors, the female Chaco wearer revolution, anyone who eats BSkis, etc. But regardless of this brief meander into cynicism, Ive really come to like this place. My fondness for UNC did not come from my falling into a new social niche or finding beauty on Polk Place or even hammocking in the Wood robinson Senior environmental science major from Greensboro. Email: robinson.wood09@gmail. com arboretum (I was woken up by a cop and told to leave). Rather, my revelation came from a more live and let die perspective. My advice is to not only find what you love and pursue it, but also find what you hate and just get over it. Have an issue with that fratter that raves about the Bush Doctrine in your Economics 420 class? Go to Bobs with them next DJ night. What about that hipster sitting outside the Daily Grind with jorts on? Go try that Kombucha stuff they keep going on about you dont have to like it, just try it. Hate how everyone Instagrams the dogwoods at first bloom? Just remember that the pollen is tree sperm, and its exploding upon their precious iPhones. And if you figure out how to not mind Garys seeming- ly unassuming new protege, please let me know. Learn how to quit hatin and start appreciatin. M y Tar Heel experience has been like the perfect cup of joe. With Carolina academics, I knew I had my solid brew foundation I couldnt go wrong. That didnt stop me, though, from adding cream and sugar or even changing the roast. In much the same way, the recipe for success at our outstanding institution will be different for each of you. The key is to mix it up, add different ingredients and not be afraid to take a risk. Its a privilege to be at one of the top institutions in the country for academics, athletics, public service, the arts and so much more. meghan lyons Senior business journalism major from wilmington, Del. Email: melyons@live.unc.edu Brew early and often so that you dont miss out on a Saturday morning oppor- tunity to hear an amazing speaker like Corey Ford talk about embracing the drunk- en walk at TEDxUNC. Add some cream to an after dinner demitasse before join- ing friends at a Clef Hangers concert. Take a cup of joe to a womens field hockey game at Henry Stadium on a cool fall morning, and join Carolina Fever members as they cheer our team to its fifth straight birth in the NCAA finals. Buy a deep discount student ticket to a world- renowned dance troupe like Alvin Ailey in your very own Memorial Hall. Be thankful and give back to this wonderful community. Take this time to serve those less fortunate and hone your professional skills. I promise that as you grow and experiment in your four years at Carolina you will indeed find your own per- sonal Carolina blend. Each Carolina student experience will have a different ideal blend. M y first piece of advice was to avoid the self-help section of the DTH. But here we are, so let me offer just a few, scattered, parting thoughts. Spend on food, not drink. Good food is not for snobs. Its for sensible college students who spend their $6.50 at TOPO on the goat cheese salad instead of the liquid cocaine shot. Get to know professors. They are here because they are smart, passionate about their fields and committed to undergraduate education. So, do up that top button of your polo shirt and get your curious butt to office hours. Henry ross Senior classics major from New Hartford, Conn. Email: hross1@live.unc.edu Find out who Skye Bolt is. Hes got a bright future in Major League Baseball, he has the name of a porn star and he plays at one of the most beautiful stadiums in the NCAA all spring and summer. Dress nicely for tests and exams. You will spend Friday night admiring the good grade your seriousness has earned you, and Saturday night with an attractive classmate who took notice. Find prime doo-doo spots. If you dont know any, inform yourself. One may be company, but number two should never be a crowd. Write good sentences. Some U.S. Americans like such as in South Africa and everywhere like such as dont have a good education. You do. Express your thoughts in clear and elegant prose. No matter what, be an optimist. We all fall short sometimes, but this place has what you need to thrive. Have the enthusiasm and resolve to discover it. From toilet tips to TOPO taps, heres how to navigate UNC.