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Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

dailytarheel.com

Volume 123, Issue 15

Student
files to be
released

Monday, March 23, 2015

MENS BASKETBALL: NORTH CAROLINA 87, ARKANSAS 78

HOW SWEET IT IS

The schools Pi Kappa


Phi fraternity has
been suspended.

UNC students will be


able to see admissions
records on request.

By Joe Martin

By Corey Risinger

Staff Writer

Staff Writer

College acceptance might no


longer be a mystery to UNC students the University is expected to join a national movement
and release admissions files
under the Family Educational
Rights and Privacy Act.
We are glad to comply with
the law, said Steve Farmer,
vice provost for enrollment and
undergraduate admissions.
The student-led effort was
sparked by The Fountain
Hopper, an anonymous
Stanford University newsletter that, in January, sent out
instructions for requesting
admissions files under FERPA.
The 1974 law has two primary
objectives protecting students
information from being released
to third parties without permission and allowing students
access to their educational files.
Upon request for admissions
files, universities have 45 days to
respond, according to FERPA.
Farmer said UNC has seen its
first requests ever to view admissions files this year, and the
admissions department is still
working to establish a procedure
for honoring these requests.
Still, access to admissions files
will not necessarily reveal a concrete reason for acceptance, he
said. The admissions process is
too holistic and dependent upon
basic human experience to provide a single rationale, he said.
When folders are eventually
released, Farmer said they will
not include teachers recommendation letters one of the
primary causes of the admissions departments research
before releasing information.
Only students who did not waive
the FERPA rights prominently located on the Common
Application would be permitted to view recommendations.
What would remain, Farmer
said, might be a note or two
about an application and stu-

SEE ADMISSIONS, PAGE 4

NCSU
reacts
to book

DTH/HALLE SINNOTT
Saturday nights 87-78 victory over Arkansas was Coach Roy Williams 750th career win and 65th NCAA Tournament win.

The Tar Heels beat Arkansas to advance to Sweet 16 play


By Grace Raynor
Sports Editor

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. The


room went silent when Roy
Williams began to describe just how
much this one meant.
Moments before, the North
Carolina mens basketball coach had
been caught on video gleefully skipping into an elated locker room after
UNCs 87-78 victory over Arkansas
in the third round of the NCAA

Tournament on Saturday night. Hed


jumped up and down in the middle
of the UNC celebration pit, and hed
crouched down to flex at his players,
who all flexed and screamed back.
Excitement for a Sweet 16 bid
rang through the walls, and after hed
given 6-foot-9 Brice Johnson a heartfelt embrace, Williams had grabbed a
whiteboard marker to write the number 16 on the board for all to see.
For the first time since 2012,
Williams and the Tar Heels were

Sweet 16 bound theyd celebrated


appropriately, and the video was proof.
But when Williams took his seat
at the postgame press conference
to address the media, the jubilation
turned into thoughtful reflection.
There was a sense that perhaps this
one might have meant a little bit
more than usual.
When he was asked about it, the
room fell to a silence.

SEE BASKETBALL, PAGE 4

A notebook allegedly connected to N.C. State Universitys


Pi Kappa Phi fraternity filled
with racially charged and sexually derogatory comments has
sparked a temporary suspension
for the fraternity and widespread
reactions on campus.
The universitys Interfraternity
Council also suspended all N.C.
State fraternity activities involving alcohol Friday until further
notice. The council said in a
statement that it will help refocus the Greek community on the
behavioral standards they are
supposed to uphold.
The council, in conjunction
with the universitys administrators, has plans to issue
additional training to students
in areas like diversity, inclusion
and social justice.
Photos of the books contents
posted by WRAL revealed comments such as Dude if shes hot
enough, doesnt need a pulse.
Mike Mullen, N.C. States vice
chancellor, who described the
notebooks contents as deeply
troubling, said in a statement
these changes are necessary to
ensure that the Greek system
exceeds the councils standards.
Pi Kappa Phis national organization called the language in
the book reprehensible and
unacceptable and has sent
staff to Raleigh to participate
in the ongoing investigation by
the university.
The N.C. State incident is
one of several recent situations
to make the news involving fraternities nationwide. It comes
just two weeks after the viral
spread of a video documenting a racist chant that had
connections to the University
of Oklahomas Sigma Alpha
Epsilon chapter and led to the
fraternitys dismissal from the
university.
Since Thursday night, the
Twitter and Facebook pages for
N.C. States Pi Kappa Phi have

SEE FRATERNITY, PAGE 4

Carolina for the Kids dances its way to a fundraising record


The 17th annual dance
marathon raised
$570,561 on Saturday.
By Katie Reeder
Staff Writer

DTH/HANNAH PACKER
Carolina for the Kids, formerly Dance Marathon, raised $570,561 for the N.C.
Childrens Hospital. The annual event lasted 24 hours from Friday night to Saturday.

STARTS TODAY!
SUMMER SCHOOL
R E G I S T R AT I O N

Months of planning, recruiting


and fundraising culminated with 24
hours of standing and $570,561
raised for N.C. Childrens Hospital.
Carolina for the Kids exceeded the
$550,000 mark for the second year
in a row and beat the 2014 fundraising record by almost $20,000 at its
17th annual dance marathon.
It shows what people can
accomplish when they all rally
behind one cause, said Evan
Sherwood, executive director of
Carolina for the Kids.
This year, more than 2,000 students came together to dance from
8 p.m. Friday until 8 p.m. Saturday
in Fetzer Gym. Dancers were divided into 32 teams, and there were
34 kid co-captains who either are
or were patients in the hospital.

Junior Conner Frank participated


in the marathon for his first time.
A resident adviser, Frank said
many of his residents encouraged
him to sign up. He also wanted to
participate because he knew people
in similar situations to many of the
families Carolina for the Kids helps.
I told myself I would never do
something like this because I love
sleep, and Im kind of lazy, he said.
But its been good.
Throughout the academic
year, volunteers can connect with
children in the hospital and their
families by spending time in the
hospitals pediatric playroom and
helping with other social events.
Around hour 23, parents who have
benefitted from Carolina for the Kids
shared their stories. Kid co-captains
darted through pockets of dancers
and chased tennis balls while dancers stood with their eyes glued to the
stage for the emotional family hour.
Heather Murphy, a parent, said it
was the small things the organization
did for parents that helped so much.
After an accident left her son
Andrew with third-degree burns,

she said activities like parent dinners


helped parents leave without guilt.
Its hard enough to be a parent of
an active, 3-year-old boy, but when
you put that active, 3-year-old boy in
a hospital bed for two months, it gets
even harder, she said. How do you
keep him entertained and happy? Its
with the help of this organization.
Sherwood said every year most
of the money raised comes from the
dancers fundraising efforts. Each
dancer is required to raise $150.
He said one of the challenges
to fundraising is having a similar
donor pool to draw from as the
marathons at Duke University and
N.C. State University.
He said other organizations are
set up differently. The marathon
at Pennsylvania State University
partners with the Greek system, and
other schools are tied in with the
Childrens Miracle Network.
He was encouraged that UNCs
marathon has grown.
I think were on the road to do
good things.
university@dailytarheel.com

Check out courses at summer.unc.edu

Move along, move along just to make it through.


THE ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS

News

Monday, March 23, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel


www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893

122 years of editorial freedom


JENNY SURANE
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KATIE REILLY
MANAGING EDITOR

MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JORDAN NASH
FRONT PAGE NEWS EDITOR
ENTERPRISE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

MCKENZIE COEY
PRODUCTION DIRECTOR
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BRADLEY SAACKS
UNIVERSITY EDITOR

UNIVERSITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

HOLLY WEST
CITY EDITOR

CITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

SARAH BROWN
STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
STATE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

GRACE RAYNOR
SPORTS EDITOR

SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

GABRIELLA CIRELLI
ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR
ARTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

TYLER VAHAN
DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
DESIGN@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KATIE WILLIAMS
VISUAL EDITOR

PHOTO@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

AARON DODSON,
ALISON KRUG
COPY CO-EDITORS

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PAIGE LADISIC
ONLINE EDITOR

ONLINE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

AMANDA ALBRIGHT
INVESTIGATIONS LEADER

SPECIAL.PROJECTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

MARY BURKE
INVESTIGATIONS ART DIRECTOR
SPECIAL.PROJECTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

TIPS
Contact Managing Editor
Katie Reilly at
managing.editor@dailytarheel.com
with tips, suggestions or
corrections.
Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Jenny Surane, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086
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2015 DTH Media Corp.
All rights reserved

The Daily Tar Heel

I SCREAM, YOU SCREAM

DAILY
DOSE

Unsanitary feminine products

From staff and wire reports

riminals tried an age-old trick to smuggle in radioactive material to Beirut: hiding the illegal material in something that no
one wants to touch. Authorities at the airport in Beirut confiscated 30 crates of radioactive maxi pads that arrived from
Dubai. Yes, someone took products that men run from and that women
are embarrassed to take through the checkout line and filled them with
radioactive material. Electronic scanners in the airport alerted officials
to the unsafe nature of the maxi pads, which contained 35 times the airports radioactive limit. Also, the fact that someone was shipping 1,221
pounds of maxi pads might have seemed a little strange to airport officials. But hey, criminals, points for creativity.
NOTED. Good news! Now you can smell
like Burger King. The fast food chain has
come out with a Whopper-scented perfume called Flame-Grilled. The perfume
will be available only on April 1 and only
in Japan. Burger King said that, yes, the
perfume was made specifically for April
Fools Day but that it is real.

QUOTED. Ladies, number one cause of


divorce in America? Sweatpants.
Eva Mendes, the partner of Ryan
Gosling and a new mother, expressing a
rather controversial view on the correlation of sweatpants to divorce. If what she
is saying is true, we have lost all hope in
having a successful love life.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY

MBTI Personality Workshop:


University Career Services is
hosting a session at which
students can learn their MyersBriggs Type Indicator and how
their personality affects their life.
The event is free and open to all
UNC students.
Time: 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Location: Hardin Hub
John Crawford: Work and
Life in Silicon Valley: John
Crawford, an Intel Fellow and
chief architect for the Intel386,
486 and Pentium Processors,
will be discussing his career
path and the lessons he learned
along the way. Crawford worked
at Intel for 36 years. The event
is free and open to the public. A
networking reception will follow
the talk.

Time: 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.


Location: Sitterson Hall 014
NCAA Womens Basketball
Championship Second Round:
The North Carolina womens
basketball team continues its
journey in the NCAA Tournament and will take on No. 5 Ohio
State. UNC students with a valid
UNC One Card can receive free
tickets to the game.
Time: 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Location: Carmichael Arena

TUESDAY

Nonprofit Careers Panel and


Meet-Up: University Career
Services is hosting a panel of
nonprofit organizations. There
will be networking opportunities
after the panel. Refreshments will
be served. Nonprofit organizations present will include the U.S.

Peace Corps, the Orange County


Rape Crisis Center and Nourish
International. The event is free
and open to all UNC students.
Time: 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Location: Hanes Hall, room
239a/b
2015 Distinguished Writerin-Residence Reading: Terry
Tempest Williams, the 2015 distinguished writer-in-residence,
will read from her work.
Time: 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Location: Genome Sciences
Building
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.

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 Katie Reilly at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.

Like us at facebook.com/dailytarheel

Follow us on Twitter @dailytarheel

DTH/ANI GARRIGO

uring Carolina for the Kids Dance


Marathon this weekend, dancers compete
in the Vermonster Challenge in Fetzer
Gym. In the challenge, six people from each team
race to eat a gallon of Ben & Jerrys ice cream.

POLICE LOG
Someone drove after
consuming alcohol at 1598
E. Franklin St. at 2:03 a.m.
Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.

Someone reported a
suspicious person at an
apartment complex at 101
Legacy Terrace at 7:08 p.m.
Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person saw someone
playing with an unleashed
dog, reports state.
Someone possessed an
open container of alcohol on
a public street at 107 Creel
St. at 8:04 p.m. Thursday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
Someone disturbed the
peace at University Mall at
201 S. Estes Drive at 4 p.m.
Friday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
The person was also trespassing, reports state.

Someone reported suspicious people riding bikes in


the rain at Martin Luther King
Jr. Blvd. and Northfield Drive
at 3:39 a.m. Friday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone reported a
Craigslist scam at 24 Mt.
Bolus Road at 5:22 p.m.
Friday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
Someone was intoxicated
and disruptive at a bar at 137
E. Rosemary St. at 1:24 a.m.
Saturday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
The person refused to leave
the bar and caused a disturbance, reports state.
Someone reported the
possible larceny of gas at the
200 block of St. Andrews
Lane at 2:43 p.m. Saturday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
About $30 of gas was stolen, reports state.

EDUCATION
JOB FAIR
MARCH 25, 2015, 9AM 12PM
GREAT HALL FPG STUDENT UNION

The Trolly Stop


Serving a variety of hot dogs.
Also serving Hersheys
Ice Cream and Beer.

Grand Opening
March 28th
306 W. Franklin St., Suite B
Chapel Hill, NC 27516
Tel: (919) 240-4206

Are you interested in working in a


school system? Meet with hiring
representatives from city and
county school systems across the
nation. View participating schools
that will be represented at
bit.ly/Educ2015.
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@MCBNLDOQDO@QDCSNHLOQDRR
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 -NOQD QDFHRSQ@SHNMHRQDPTHQDC
SN@SSDMC



News

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, March 23, 2015

Established 1893, 122 years of editorial freedom


EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS

JENNY SURANE EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM


HENRY GARGAN OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
SAM SCHAEFER ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR

EDITORIAL CARTOON

BAILEY BARGER

PETER VOGEL

KERN WILLIAMS

BRIAN VAUGHN

KIM HOANG

COLIN KANTOR

TREY FLOWERS

DINESH MCCOY

By Jamal Rogers, jmlrgs@gmail.com

Handle of Jack

NEXT

Conner Frank, on participating in Dance Marathon this weekend

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

A listicle
for the
other
A-word

JUSTICE LEAGUE
Seth Rose writes a listicle about
springtime romance.

I told myself I would never do something like


this because I love sleep, and Im kind of lazy.
But its been good.

Igor De Goes Telles, on a proposal to ban Yik Yak on college campuses

Senior public relations major from


Holly Springs.
Email: joshaugh@live.unc.edu

QUOTE OF THE DAY

Even if UNC takes the decision to ban Yik


Yak, I can see the racists and misogynists
taking their bile somewhere else.

Jackie OShaughnessy

dulthood is an
extremely nervewracking word for
those of us leaving this beautiful campus in May. The expectation for most is that well
move to new cities, find jobs
and begin the rest of our lives,
leaving the best four years of
our lives behind us. Sounds
easy enough, until you start to
consider the finicky details.
Your parents will start asking
questions like, Whats the plan
for after graduation?, When
do job interviews start? and
Youre absolutely sure youre
graduating, right? Not having
answers to these questions is
daunting, and if your parents are similar to mine not
an option. With these bigpicture questions comes one
all-encompassing query: Do I
even know how to be an adult?
Sure, Ive had internships,
Ive worn dress pants and
Ive definitely interacted with
adults before, but Ive found
becoming one is much more
difficult than it looks. Even
at this late hour, I still have a
list of lingering worries about
how to become an adult after
graduation.
Small talk. How do I make
small talk with other adults if
I cant ask about what majors
theyre interested in or what
residence hall they live in?
These topics have been trusted,
excellent conversation starters
in any college setting. Countless
awkward silences in college
have been saved by griping
about 8 a.m. classes or wondering if there really is a pool in
the basement of Carmichael
Residence Hall. (Spoiler: Your
friends have been lying to you.
There is no pool.)
Meeting new people. How
am I supposed to find friends
if Im not automatically placed
in a suite of eight awesome
girls? College campuses consist
of mostly 18- to 22-year-olds
people youre bound to have
something in common with.
But in a city of millions of people of far more diverse ages and
backgrounds, am I gonna have
to resort to Tinder? Because I
cant go back there, yall.
The dress code. Do adults
have closets of interchangeable
blazers and slacks they wear
everyday? I imagine the closets of adults to look similar to
Charlie Browns, except instead
of racks of that same yellow
T-shirt over and over again, its
filled with black and blue blazers, penny loafers and a selection of briefcases. Maybe I just
need to be a graphic designer
or bass player so that I can keep
wearing flannels and Converses
every day.
Money, money, money.
How do I file my taxes? Whats
a W2 form? Should I be investing my money? Should I start
a retirement fund? How much
should I be paying for rent? Is
$8 too much for this artisan
doughnut with bacon in it?
Job qualifications. Ive had
jobs, leadership positions, and
I did Dance Marathon one
year, so clearly Im super philanthropic. What in the world
do I qualify for? I wish there
was an app that could scan my
LinkedIn page and come up
with a list of potential jobs I
could apply for.
That would save me plenty
of time, which Id use to do
important things like making sure my eyebrows are on
fleek and reading Larry Kings
Twitter feed.

Hillel is not complicit


in oppression

EDITORIAL

Concealed consequences
Concealed carry
is no solution for
sexual assault.

tudents for
Concealed Carry
took advantage of
the national dialogue on
sexual assault to push their
own agenda by suggesting
that easing concealed carry
restrictions would curb
sexual assaults on campus.
Concealed weapons
would not significantly
reduce sexual assault and
would create inadvertent
risks within other forms of
interpersonal violence.
And concealed weapons would be yet another
excuse to blame victims

for their own assaults. Like


other items on the list of
measures that would supposedly prevent attacks,
guns would not address the
causes of sexual assault.
Even worse, they could
reinforce rape culture
because the burden of stopping assault would be further placed upon women.
Allowing concealed
weapons on campus for
the purpose of preventing sexual assault will
create the unintended
consequence of increased
homicides stemming from
intimate partner violence.
Having guns that are
accessible in a household
where domestic violence
occurs increases the risk

of homicide. In 2005,
perpetrators used guns
in over half of cases of
female homicide related to
domestic violence.
Expanding concealed
carry restrictions on campus would arm potential
perpetrators not just of
sexual assault but also of
violence in relationships.
To reduce sexual
assault, focus should be
maintained on preventative programs that challenge rigid gender roles
and promote healthy
relationships as well as
intervention trainings that
teach peers to be active
bystanders rather than
on measures that will not
solve the problem.

EDITORIAL

Two coasts, one problem


Higher educations
governance must be
more democratic.
Earlier this year, students protested an unelected board for ignoring their
demands for affordable and
open education as police
looked on.
This scene played out
at the UNC Board of
Governors February meeting at UNC-Charlotte and
has now been repeated at
a meeting of the Board of
Regents of the University of
California system.
On both coasts of the
U.S., students are advocat-

ing for accessible education, and administrators


are looking away. To secure
a democratized future
for higher education, this
dynamic must be upended.
At the UC Board of
Regents meeting, Board
President Janet Napolitano
was recorded saying, We
dont have to listen to this
crap in regard to students protesting proposed
tuition hikes.
Though Napolitano later
apologized for the remark,
her words and the setting in
which they occurred, much
like the results of the UNC
Board of Governors meeting, demonstrate how little

these unelected bodies are


accountable for listening to
student voices.
Napolitano and
California Gov. Jerry
Brown are the only two
members of a committee that will recommend
changes to the systems
operating budget.
These rallies have shown
that, above all, students
desire accountability when
administrators make decisions that will affect thousands. Unfortunately for
students, the results of the
meetings described above
equally and clearly offer
little indication that these
boards are listening at all.

SPORTS COLUMN

A special kind of family


One Tar Heel went above and beyond for a Daily Tar Heel writer

ess Brinkley insists


shes not interesting,
that what she did is
not worthy of a conversation,
much less a column.
Dont listen to her.
Even though she graduated from South Carolina in
1980, Brinkley has always
been Tar Heel. Shes not
really sure why it was just
a fact of life growing up with
her family in Shelby. Her
mother was a Tar Heel and
so was her grandfather, and
it didnt matter that neither
of them went to UNC either.
So when she saw the
GoFundMe page for Aaron
Dodson, a Daily Tar Heel
reporter trying to cover UNCs
NCAA run despite DTH budget cuts, the fact that she had
never met Dodson was irrelevant. He was asking for $500
for travel expenses, expecting $20 from an alumnus
here, $15 from a friend there.
Brinkley donated $500.
When I told her how
impressed I was, she was
taken aback.
Its not a big deal, she
said.

Daniel Wilco
Senior Writer
Senior advertising major from
Atlanta.
Email: dwilco@live.unc.edu

Again, Im inclined to
disagree. In fact, her attitude
brings to mind a famous Dean
Smith quote: You should
never be proud of doing the
right thing. You should just do
the right thing.
Brinkley points to Smith
as one of the central reasons
UNC still speaks to her but
not the only one.
Have you ever had that
experience where you get
on an airplane and someone
has a Tar Heel hat on? she
asked. You just feel like youre
talking to somebody youve
known all your life. You have
the same points of reference,
you remember the same stuff,

you love the same things.


Theres something special
about the Tar Heel family,
she says.
I dont think that happens anywhere else. I really
dont.
And she would know. Shell
still watch the Gamecocks
when theyre playing, but she
doesnt care the way she cares
for her Tar Heels. So when she
saw one of those Tar Heels in
need, instinct kicked in.
My mom and I had some
of our greatest times around
March Madness, her post on
the GoFundMe page reads.
So in her memory, go realize
a dream GOHEELS.
Almost 50 people pitched
in a total of $1,875
enough to send a reporter
and a photographer.
But I was still hung up
on one point. Why do this
for someone she didnt even
know?
Brinkley paused for a
second.
I do know him, she said.
You could almost sense her
smiling on the other end of
the phone. Hes a Tar Heel.

TO THE EDITOR:
The recent accusations
against Israel, UNC Hillel
and Israel Fest in a letter
to the editor (Students
shouldnt celebrate Israel,
March 20) are both inaccurate and harmful.
The author uses onesided political rhetoric
systemic violence,
theft, oppression to
attack Israel, painting
an absurdly oversimplified picture of a complex
region. It would be equally
inaccurate and damaging to use such biased,
incendiary language about
Palestinians.
To suggest that Hillel
plays an active role in
the unjust oppression of
the Palestinian people is
outrageous. Hillel is open
to nuanced discussion of
the conflict, welcoming
opinions from across the
spectrum.
The author fails to provide any reasonable criticism of Hillels Birthright
Israel trips beyond a name
that irks him. Hillel should
not be accused of supporting colonialist oppression,
which in itself is a hateful
opinion that lacks historical
context and evidence.
Finally, Israel Fest
is an educational event
celebrating Israeli culture; it is not a political
forum. It includes Israeli
music and dancing, free
Mediterranean food, information about LGBTQ
rights in Israel and will
feature Artists 4 Israel, an
organization that uses art
to advocate for peace.
Anyone whose knowledge of Israel is limited to its conflict with the
Palestinians should educate
themselves about the country and its people before
making ignorant, unjustified accusations.
Israel Fest is a great
place to start that learning process. I encourage
everyone to stop by the Pit
on Thursday, March 26,
between noon and 3 p.m.
Rejection of an event that
aims to educate about culture and advocate for peace
is hateful and has no place
at this school.
Rachel Schwab
Sophomore
Political science

Join in fight for


higher wages today
TO THE EDITOR:
Know that churning
feeling of dread that arises
in the pit of your stomach
when looking over student
bills? Our generation of
college graduates is set to
accrue the most debt in
U.S. history.
According to the
Huffington Post, the average starting wage has
decreased by 10 percent
since 2000, but student
debt has increased by 500
percent since 1999.
And as many underpaid
adjunct faculty members
can attest to, 43 percent of

low-wage workers have at


least some college education, a degree or even an
advanced degree.
But we deserve more,
and we can win a better life
for us all.
Workers across the
country have embarked on
an exciting and dynamic
movement to revolutionize employee treatment.
What started off as a few
hundred brave fast food
workers challenging models
of economic inequality has
turned into a global movement demanding a future
where human rights mirror
employee rights.
Im joining the Fight for
$15 because if we dont get
organized and fight for a
change, we agree to a future
of poverty wages, irregular
work hours and crushing
debt for ourselves and for
generations to come.
Today, March 23, join us
at 6:30 p.m. in Chapman
201 for a forum with Mary
Kay Henry, president of
the Service Employees
International Union, as
she and workers in the
Fight for $15 movement
discuss the movement for a
$15 hourly wage increase,
union rights and how students can get involved.
Ebony Watkins
Freshman
Global studies, communications

DTH painted Indian


with broad brush
TO THE EDITOR:
I commend the good work
The Daily Tar Heel does
every day, but I was disappointed with the March 20
Daily Dose. The news item
was titled Cheating runs in
the family.
While I agree that this
news draws attention to an
important problem in the
education and social system
of Bihar, India, where more
than a million students take
the 10th grade exam every
year, it was incorrect and
inappropriate to draw the
inference that cheating is
an accepted practice not
only in Bihar but throughout India.
Also, the news item
failed to mention the consequences that those students
faced. About 750 students
were expelled for cheating, though this may not
address the larger issue.
Bihar has a population
of 100 million and has
hundreds of schools. Your
news seems to imply that
the entire education system and the law and order
machinery is pro-cheating.
Deducting inferences
from one incident and then
attributing them to all the
parents across India is not
only scientifically inaccurate, it undermines the honest and good work of millions of those students who
abide by the honor code.
I hope that you will
understand the essence of
my comment and feel the
pain of a student who has
lived and studied in Bihar
and is proud of upholding
the honor code.
Manish Kumar
Graduate Student
School of Public Health

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letters to 250 words.
SUBMISSION
Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill,
NC 27514
Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com
EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the
opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises five board
members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.

News

Monday, March 23, 2015

BASKETBALL

FROM PAGE 1

Im an emotional guy, he
said. Losing Coach Smith,
losing Ted Seagroves, my bigtime buddy, Stuart Scott, the
stuff that weve had going on,
Mitch Kupchaks daughter
its been a tough year. It really
has. I probably acted sillier in
the locker room after this game
than I have in quite a while.
Im going to try to enjoy
the dickens out of this one for
a while.
UNC, known for its quick
pace, beat Arkansas, the fastest
team it has played all season,
after a third-round matchup
that saw 10 ties, 11 lead changes and 40 total bench points
between the two teams.
Back and forth they went,
until midway through the
second half, UNC broke away
to send the Tar Heels to the
Sweet 16. Its the first time
that anyone on the current
team except for Stilman
White, Jackson Simmons
and Desmond Hubert has
advanced past the first weekend of the tournament.
And for the junior class in
particular, a weight has now
been lifted.
The first weekend has
been the hump for our class,
for our team the last couple
years, junior guard Marcus
Paige said. You dont want

to be a North Carolina basketball player and have the


reputation of not being able
to make it through the first
weekend of the tournament.
Exorcise the demons its
so liberating.
With the win, Williams
now has 750 career wins and
65 NCAA Tournament wins
good for second all-time in
the tournament and tied with
Dean Smith.
I forget who it was asked
me about if we (won Saturday)
Id tie Coach Smith for the
second most wins in the NCAA
Tournament, Williams said.
That means a lot to me.
And perhaps on this
Saturday night, it meant more
than it would in any other
season. For a few moments
in that locker room, laughter
and bliss took the place of
the grief and loss Williams
has felt during what has been
emotional year.
Ive never seen two guys
that were hurt as much as
(Williams) and (Hubert
Davis) were that day (Smith)
passed. Its a great honor to
be a part of this program and
get to honor him the way we
did, Johnson said.
I gave (Williams) a big
hug after today. Any time
we get a big win like that, I
always give him a big hug.
sports@dailytarheel.com

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ADMISSIONS

FROM PAGE 1

dents essays and transcripts.


Tara Schimelman,
Samantha Buckshon, Brooke
Tucker and Courtney Brown
all seniors in high school in
Mooresville said they would
want to see their records.
Farmer said the admissions
department respects each
individuals decision, but he
wouldnt personally choose to
view his own admissions file.
Following a stream of
requests to view academic

FRATERNITY

FROM PAGE 1

been deleted, and its website no longer lists members


names. The chapters phone is
also no longer in service.
Justine Schnitzler, a
sophomore at N.C. State, said
people on campus werent
necessarily surprised a fraternity scandal occurred, but

The Daily Tar Heel

files, universities like Yale


School of Law and Stanford
have reconsidered their policy
for admissions information.
Yale Law deleted admissions and career evaluations
on Feb. 25 without notice.
Stanfords 20-minute viewing
sessions of files was shortlived, too, as the school has
announced it wont be taking
more requests the Stanford
Daily reported that unrequested files have been deleted.
Advocacy groups like
Students for Fair Admissions,
a group that is suing UNC-

Chapel Hill over its admissions


policies, have called for the
reversal of such deletion policies. They argue admissions
files should be maintained for a
substantial amount of time.
Edward Blum, director of
Students for Fair Admissions,
said Congress should revisit the
FERPA legislation to clarify for
colleges and universities how
long theyre required to keep
students information on file.
Anne Klinefelter, a UNC law
professor, said FERPAs admissions policy often criticized
for its ambiguity applies

only to students who choose to


enroll in the institution.
Klinefelter said the deletion of admissions documents
would be reasonable considering the desire to protect
students records in the name
of better cybersecurity.
(But) I do not think an
institution would be FERPA
compliant if it were to adopt a
policy or practice of destroying
education records in response
to each students request for
those records, she said.

students have been shocked


by the content of the messages. Still, Schnitzler said the
situation probably wont have
tremendous effects on the
Greek community.
As far as the negative
opinion goes, people obviously are still pledging them, they
have very high retention rates
and the (number) of students
is comparable to the (num-

ber) of students you would


see at UNC, Schnitzler said.
But with that being said, I do
believe more people are aware
of there being issues going on,
especially legally.
As far as the supposed cover-up is concerned, Schnitzler
also said she noticed the names
of the brothers were deleted
from the Pi Kappa Phi website.
Jake House, an N.C. State

junior, said people often blow


situations like this out of proportion. He said he expects
that the book probably wasnt
meant to be taken seriously.
Theres plenty of good
fraternities out there, House
said. I feel like people, unfortunately, focus on the negatives more than the positives.

state@dailytarheel.com

state@dailytarheel.com

Whole Foods employees rock out


By Siena Scarbrough
Staff Writer

Under Cats Cradles back


rooms string of twinkling
lights, Whole Foods customers and employees united for
a good cause funding the
whole planet.
The local Chapel Hill Whole
Foods Market held its third
annual benefit concert last
night in Carrboro to raise
money for the companys
nonprofit, Whole Planet
Foundation. The concert
featured six local bands: dub
Addis, Karol Peril, Layaway,
See No Weevil, The Porchmen
and Barleycorn & Rye.
Each of the bands had at
least one Whole Foods employee as a member.
Whole Planet Foundation is
a private nonprofit established
by Whole Foods Market to alleviate poverty by financing institutions worldwide that develop
and offer loan programs and
other financial services to the
self-employed poor.
The foundations aim is to
give back to the communities
around the world that supply

Whole Foods Market stores


with their products and have
helped the company succeed.
Before the concerts
inception three years ago,
the typical method of fundraising for the organization
was to ask customers at the
register for donations.
Whole Foods employee Ian
Leinbaugh felt it was time for
the store to try a new approach.
I happen to play in a
band and knew some other
people other co-workers
who have bands; we thought
of a benefit concert to raise
money, Leinbaugh said.
Were just trying to find
another way to raise money
other than just asking.
Leinbaugh also said the
goal of each year is just
to do better than the last.
Fortunately, it looks like this
year did just that the concert saw an increase in numbers from previous years.
The last few ones its
mainly been employees that
show up, but right now Ive
seen plenty of customers,
said Jonathan Pineda, a
Whole Foods employee and

DTH/CATHERINE HEMMER
Barleycorn & Rye, an acoustic Irish folk music band, performs
at the Whole Planet Foundation benefit concert.

member of The Porchmen.


Although the foundation
was mentioned sparingly
during the benefit concert,
100 percent of the profits
was donated to the nonprofit.
Tickets for Cats Cradle members were $6, and nonmember tickets were $8.
Even though the benefit
concert is in its third year in
the Chapel Hill store, other
Whole Foods locations have
yet to catch onto the trend.
I havent heard of another

Whole Foods store to do this,


Pineda said.
Andrew Ellis, a butcher at
the Chapel Hill Whole Foods
and another member of The
Porchmen, spoke of a more
personal goal for the night.
I just want people to have
a good time and get more
involved in their community,
he said.
We work together. We
play together.
arts@dailytarheel.com

MARCH Greek
Spotlight

Caroline Perry: Delta Delta Delta

Caroline is a senior political science and


chemistry double major. Caroline has been
working in a research lab on campus for two
years to find ways to capture circulating tumor
cells (like acute myeloid leukemia cells) that are
in peoples blood when cancer begins to spread.
The lab she works in wants to find an early
detection method for certain cancers. In addition,
she has been diligently working on her political
science honors thesis about persuasion in
presidential politics. We look forward to seeing
what great things Caroline does in the future after
she graduates!

Allie Aponte: Lambda Pi Chi


Sorority, Inc.

Allie, a senior psychology major and education


and Latina/o studies minor, is the former
president of her chapter and currently serves as
recruitment programs coordinator. This semester
she has an internship teaching a STEM elective
at EG Pearson Elementary School in Durham
and over the summer she served as a middle
school teacher at Student U. She is the Lee
County Site Coordinator, a mentor for the
Scholars Latino Initiative, and a volunteer with
Chapel Hill Carrboro City Schools at Culbreth
Middle Schools ESL Program

Nikhil Jyonthinagaram:
Sigma Chi

While maintaining one of his chapters highest


GPAs, Nikhil founded a startup called Kliink,
which connects non-profit organizations in
developing countries with charitable donors.
Nikhils efforts with Kliink earned him a spot in
the finals of the Carolina Challenge, an
entrepreneurial competition held at the KenanFlagler Business School. For his scholarship,
involvement, and service, Nikhil was also
awarded his chapters Balfour Award, recognizing
the chapters most outstanding senior.

Joey Blake: Kappa Alpha Psi


Fraternity, Inc.

Joey, a political science major, is the president of


the Theta Omicron chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi
Fraternity, Inc. Since his initiation in the spring
of his sophomore year, he has done everything in
his power to shed a positive light on the Greek
community. He has helped his chapter to increase
its service and philanthropic efforts. Additionally,
he has pushed his and other chapters across the
councils to make efforts to collaborate with each
other when hosting events. On campus, he is the
community manager for Manning West
Community and a tutor for the AVID program.

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, March 23, 2015

Congress makes tough cuts to balance yearly budget


By Ashlen Renner
Staff Writer

The Student Congress


Finance Committee struggled to balance its annual
budget after 72 groups on
campus requested financial
assistance.
We had a lot more groups
apply in the sense that there
were a few more groups than
usual, said Josh Aristy, finance
committee chairman. There
were a lot more high value
requests, so we had to do more
cuts than usual because so
much money was requested.
The committee was allotted $180,527 to help student

groups, but there was more


than $423,000 in requests,
Aristy said.
When you talk about
$180,000, thats not a little
amount of money, but once
you add up all the need
amongst the groups, it
makes (balancing) difficult,
Treasurer Brittany Best said.
I think everyone on the
committee worked really hard
to maximize the support that
we gave to these groups.
Best has been involved
with the finance committee
for four years and has helped
balance four annual budgets. She said the amount of
money student government

allocates has remained generally the same, but the amount


of need has increased.
More and more departments are unable to support
student groups, so that leads
them to have more need,
she said. Weve also seen
an explosion of the number
of groups. There are new
groups every year, and that
means theres more need
every year.
Austin McCall, the treasurer of the Sexuality and
Gender Alliance, experienced
a $500 cut to his original
request of $2,510. The money
would help fund the groups
biannual magazine and a

drag event.
I think the cuts they
made were totally justifiable, McCall said. I expected to be asked more questions and have every single
number dissected, but the
committee was pretty thorough and knew what they
were doing.
Groups can appeal the
cuts made on Tuesday
before the committee sends
their proposals to Student
Congress.
The appeals likely wont
succeed I dont see any
of them succeeding, Aristy
said. Its really hard because
thats just the money we

Billing scam targets 6 Carrboro businesses


By Morgan Swift
Staff Writer

Carrboro businesses and


residents are the latest victims of a nationwide phone
scam from someone posing as
a Duke Energy employee.
Six Carrboro businesses
have been targeted so far,
according to police reports.
The people placing these
phone calls usually warn
customers that their bills are
past due and someone will be
dispatched to their residence
or business to turn off their
electricity unless a payment
is made using a prepaid debit
card immediately, according to
a Duke Energy press release.
Capt. Chris Atack with the
Carrboro Police Department
said the phone call scams
in Carrboro began Tuesday.
Atack said most reports have
come from businesses on the
Main Street corridor.
Its almost like someone
is going down a directory of
businesses in Carrboro and just
calling, he said. Its designed
to pressure someone into giving personal information.
Duke Energy representative Paige Layne said the calls
began two or three years ago.
She said they havent occurred
in concentrated areas but have
cropped up nationwide.
Usually customers know

when theyre coming up


on disconnection, and it
shouldnt come as a surprise,
Layne said. Customers
should always contact us or
check their accounts online.
Michael Benson, owner
of Southern Rail, posted on
Facebook that his business was
targeted by scammers Tuesday.
In his post, Benson said
the scammers told one of
his managers to make a cash
payment immediately at WalMart or Food Lion, and, fearing that the power would be
shut off on St. Patricks Day,
the manager complied.
Benson said when he called
Duke Energy the next day, he
was learned of the scam and
assured his payments were up
to date.
Police dont yet know who
is behind the calls.
With technology, these calls
could be coming from overseas
or next door, Atack said.
Lt. Josh Mecimore, spokesman for the Chapel Hill Police
Department, said the calls have
occurred in Chapel Hill as well.
If someone is asking you
to give an untraceable form
of payment, they are doing
something they shouldnt be,
Mecimore said. Thank them
for their call, and tell them
youre going to call Duke
Energy to verify that the call
is legitimate.

Layne said the calls are


most likely being made by an
organized ring outside the
country and that police and
federal agencies have been
working to solve this issue.

have. We have to justify taking it from somewhere else,


which is difficult because
were viewpoint neutral, so
we cant just say, this group
is better than this group.
Aristy said his team did
well during a weekend of
relentless budgeting.
I think we stayed true

to our mission of neutrality and trying to help the


students, he said. I think
any cuts we have made have
been done equally across
the board. We really do try
to think of the impact thats
being made.
university@dailytarheel.com

Political Cartooning After


Charlie Hebdo
An Evening with Editorial Cartoonist
Kevin KAL Kallaugher

If you call them, theyll talk


to you and tell you what they
are doing, Layne said. They
said, Good luck catching us.
city@dailytarheel.com

We have 8 slow-smoked meats


& 16 homestyle sides!
Date/Time: 03/23/2015 // 5:30 pm - 6:45 pm
Location: Freedom Forum Conference Center
(Located on the third floor of Carroll Hall on the UNC-CH campus)

durham

5318 New Hope Commons Dr.

919.419.1101

catering hotline: 919.900.0518 or catering@gmwcarolina.com


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Sandwich anD get the second
one free (Valued at $550)

2015 Dickeys Barbecue Restaurants, Inc. Not valid


with any other discounts, specials, promotions, or online
ordering. Durham location only. Limit 1 coupon per party
per visit. Expires 4/11/15.

SERVICE AND
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cartoonist for The Baltimore Sun and The Economist magazine
of London, will discuss the recent murders of the Charlie
Hebdo cartoonists in Paris, the role of political cartoonists in
political debate, and his career as a visual commentator and
lampoon artist.

Any order of $10 or More

2015 Dickeys Barbecue Restaurants, Inc. Offer


excludes Alcohol. Not valid with any other discounts,
specials, promotions, or online ordering. Durham
location only. Limit 1 coupon per party per visit.
Expires 4/11/15.

681

The World Encyclopedia of Cartoons in 1999: Commanding a


masterful style, Kallaugher stands among the premier
caricaturists of the (20th) century.
The event is free and open to the public.
Sponsors: UNC Center for Media Law and Policy,
World View and the Curriculum in Global Studies

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, March 23, 2015

Midwest Region
1 Kentucky

1 Kentucky

16 Hampton

1 Kentucky

8 Cincinnati

8 Cincinnati

9 Purdue
5 West Virginia
12 Buffalo

5 West Virginia
5 West Virginia

4 Maryland

4 Maryland

13 Valparaiso
6 Butler

Cleveland, Ohio
March 28

6 Butler

11 Texas

The Daily Tar Heel

2015 NCAA
Mens Basketball
Tournament

Monday, March 23, 2015

East Region
1 Villanova
8 N.C. State
8 N.C. State

5 Northern Iowa
4 Louisville
4 Louisville
Syracuse, NY
March 29

3 Notre Dame

3 Notre Dame
14 Northeastern
7 Wichita State
10 Indiana

15 New Mexico State

3 Notre Dame

3 Oklahoma

7 Wichita State

7 Michigan State
7 Michigan State

2 Kansas

2 Virginia

West Region
1 Wisconsin
16 Coastal Carolina

9 Oklahoma State
5 Arkansas

1 Wisconsin

1 Duke
1 Duke

8 Oregon

8 San Diego State

5 Arkansas

12 Wofford
4 North Carolina
13 Harvard
6 Xavier

5 Utah
4 North Carolina

4 North Carolina

4 Georgetown

6 Xavier

11 Ole Miss

5 Utah

Los Angeles
March 28

Houston, Texas
March 29

6 Xavier

3 Baylor
14 Georgia State
7 VCU
10 Ohio State
2 Arizona
15 Texas Southern

11 UCLA
11 UCLA

14. Georgia State

14 UAB

10 Ohio State

7 Iowa
2 Gonzaga

2 Arizona
2 Arizona

2 Gonzaga

Free Samples and Fun!

Beer Tasting
with Ararat Imports

Class: Cocktails Its All About Gin

Wed., March 25 | 4 - 6 p.m.

Wed., March 25 | 6 p.m.

Join us in the Wine and Beer


Department for a complementary
beer tasting. Ararat Imports will be
joining us to sample some
of their best craft beers.

In this class Gary will discuss the


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Plymouth, Old Tom, Genever,
London Dry and American.

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120 EAST MAIN STREET CARRBORO, NC 919.929.4669

armadillogrill.com

March 1 - March 31

While many people may have their minds on basketball this time
of year, were hosting a tournament of what we know best - the
gourmet lifestyle! In each department, well pair up contenders.
As to which one moves on to the next round, thats up to you!
Come sample, taste and vote for your favorites. Then in the end,
well crown champions in each department.

201 South Estes Drive, Chapel Hill | University Mall


(919) 929-7133 |
| southernseason.com

CHAPEL HILLS
FAVORITE BRICK OVEN

PIZZA!

1 Villanova
16 Lafayette
8 N.C. State
9 LSU
5 Northern Iowa
12 Wyoming
4 Louisville
13 UC Irvine
6 Providence
11 Dayton
3 Oklahoma
14 Albany
7 Michigan State
10 Georgia
2 Virginia
15 Belmont

South Region

Indianapolis
April 6
1 Wisconsin

8 Oregon

11 Dayton
3 Oklahoma

7 Wichita State

2 Kansas

1 Duke
16 Robert Morris
8 San Diego State
9 St. Johns
5 Utah
12 SF Austin
4 Georgetown
13 Eastern Washington
6 SMU
11 UCLA
3 Iowa State
14 UAB
7 Iowa
10 Davidson
2 Gonzaga
15 North Dakota State

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, March 23, 2015

SUMMER SCHOOL
REGISTRATION

OPENS TODAY!
HAVE IT

ALL THIS

MAYMESTER
MAY 13-29
More than 50 courses offered
Two-thirds satisfy Gen Ed requirements

FIRST SESSION: MAY 13 - JUNE 18

SECOND SESSION: JUNE 22 - JULY 28


Graduate in 8 semesters or fewer
Add a second major or minor
Build hours and your GPA
Teaching that fits your learning style

your friends are

HERE

Check out courses at summer.unc.edu

Follow @UNCSummerSchool for whats happening in summer

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, March 23, 2015

Gaming club welcomes spring with week of games


By Trevor Lenzmeier
Staff Writer

The UNC Urban Gaming


Clubs Week of Games is set
to usher in the beginning of
spring, as the new club will be
hosting outdoor team games
across campus this week.
The week kicks off with
capture the flag at the Old
Well today and culminates
with Humans vs. Zombies on
Friday at the Bell Tower.
Senior John Rusnak, club
president, said the week
appropriately concludes with
Humans vs. Zombies a game
hes played since his freshman
year. It was from these large
games that the club evolved.

Humans vs. Zombies has


been played on campus for a
long time, but it wasnt until
this year that we began to
expand from strictly Humans
vs. Zombies into other
games, Rusnak said.
At that point, we transitioned into the Urban
Gaming Club, so this is sort of
the start of a new era.
The club hopes to gain
recognition from the Union
as an official club on campus, but for now, the group
is focused on orchestrating a
great event.
Junior Ali Schneider,
advertising chairwoman of
the club, said the Week of
Games is an excellent oppor-

tunity for students to relax.


Were hoping to give
people a week long break from
the monotony and course load
of the semester, Schneider
said. But we also want to get
more people involved so we
can broaden our appeal and
decide exactly what we can
provide to the community.
The fun and camaraderie
of these games is the true purpose, Rusnak said.
What I found over my four
years of urban gaming is that
its not about Nerf, or zombies
or tag. The heart of all of this
is friendship, he said.
Sophomore Siena Fallon
said theres no better time for
the Week of Games.

Midterms just ended,


the weather is beautiful and
these games are so much
fun, she said.
Rusnak hopes that a successful Week of Games is just
the beginning for his up-andcoming club.
I would love to see Urban
Gaming become an institution at UNC, Rusnak said.
You have to go to the
Dance Marathon, rush
Franklin after a huge win,
drink from the Old Well I
want people to desperately
want to play a game that
those nuts at the Urban
Gaming Club put on.

WEEK OF GAMES SCHEDULE

Thursday at 6 p.m.:
Thunderdome tournament at
Connor volleyball court
at 4 p.m.: Freeze
tagTuesday
at Wilson Library
Friday at 5:15 p.m.:
Humans vs. Zombies game at
Wednesday at 7 p.m.:
the Bell Tower
Manhunt at the Old Well
Monday at 7 p.m.: Capture
the flag at the Old Well

arts@dailytarheel.com

Teach-in series lecture dissects network of Islamophobia


By Hannah Smoot
Staff Writer

Organizations profit off of


anti-Muslim media depictions,
according to Wajahat Ali, the
lead author of an investigative
report produced by the Center
for American Progress in 2011.
Ali spoke on Friday as part
of the UNC Muslim Students
Association teach-in series,
Examining Islamophobia. The
series was organized following the killing of three young
Muslims one of whom was
a UNC dental student by
Craig Hicks last month. Police
are investigating if the attack
was religiously motivated.
Ali said anti-Muslim bigotry fosters what he called an
Islamophobic network.
Alis report, Fear Inc.: The
Roots of the Islamophobia
Network in America, said the
Islamophobic network is made
up of people who profit from
anti-Muslim sentiment, including some media networks, academics and political players.
We dissected the network,
exposed it, categorized it,
named the names, connected
the dots, traced the funding
and showed the genesis of
several fictitious anti-Muslim
talking points, Ali said.
The report uncovered
seven groups that Ali said
have now given about $57

million to this network.


He said political propaganda plays into media depictions,
allowing people to profit from
fear and ignorance.
Ali said in order to divert
power from this network, its
platform must be taken away.
We expose those voices, we
marginalize them and hopefully we move forward as communities and leave them in the
dustbins of history, he said.
Ali told Muslims to be proactive in telling their stories.
I call on Muslims to step
up, he said. Have faith in
yourselves. First and foremost,
walk with humble swagger.
We have skills. We have talents. It will take all of our talents to change the discourse.
Saba Ijaz, a member of the
MSA, said she was surprised to
hear about the funding behind
the Islamophobic network.
Its not something you
think about, she said. I
thought it was really interesting how he was breaking
down the money trail.
Shamira Lukomwa, president of the MSA, said there
has been a lot of support from
campus organizations.
Its shown MSA members
and Muslims on campus that
were not alone and that there
are people who are willing to
and wanting to support us,
she said.

Ali echoed urged Muslims


to have hope.
We need to reach out
reach out our hands across
the aisle and in good faith

have hope that there will be a


friends hand that will grab it,
Ali said.
university@dailytarheel.com

919-929-0246
UNC Campus Carrboro
412 E. Main Carrboro

EARLY WEEK
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SPRING 2015 SERIES:

Food for Thought


Join us for four evenings of lectures in April as four
distinguished UNC-Chapel Hill researchersMarcie
Cohen Ferris, Alice Ammerman, Barry M. Popkin, and
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food history, culture, sustainability, and regulation,
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Thursdays, April 9, 16, 23, and 30, 78:30 pm,


at the Friday Center.
Fees: $10 per session or the entire series for $30.
Free admission with student ID.

Mon-Wed Pickup Special

LARGE
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Not valid for delivery. Additional charge for Deep Dish.

THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 2015

To register or for more information, visit

fri.center/foodforwbi

10

SportsMonday

Monday, March 23, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

MENS LACROSSE: MARYLAND 10, NORTH CAROLINA 8

Terrapins outlast UNC in slow match

UNC dropped its first


game this season to
No. 5 Maryland.
By Logan Ulrich
Senior Writer

Before Saturdays match


between No. 2 North Carolina
and No. 5 Maryland mens
lacrosse teams, the only similarity between the two was
their top-five rankings. Each
played polar opposite styles
fast-paced for UNC and
methodical for Maryland.
In the battle of opposites,
slow and steady won the
match for the Terrapins.
The Terrapins built a 7-2
lead before holding off a late
UNC rally for a 10-8 win and
UNCs first loss of the season.
They did a terrific job of
really being extra patient,
Coach Joe Breschi said. (It
was the) slowest game that
weve played all year.
UNC midfielder Chad

Tutton scored the first goal


for UNC (9-1), but Maryland
(6-1) responded with two
goals in a 40-second span to
take the lead. UNC tied the
score at two apiece but then
endured nearly a 34-minute
scoring drought in which
Maryland built its lead.
A lot of the shots werent
dropping. We werent getting
any bounces. It didnt seem
like anything was going our
way, Tutton said.
Led by attackmen Joey
Sankey and Jimmy Bitter,
UNC attempted a comeback.
The two seniors took turns
assisting the others on goals,
Bitter first and then Sankey,
to bring UNC back within
three.
Bitters goal marked
the 51st game in a row he
scored, breaking the old
school record of 50. Sankeys
goal was his 46th in a row
and kept him right behind
Bitter. The two added four
assists each.
Marylands deliberate

We werent getting any bounces. It didnt


seem like anything was going our way.
Chad Tutton,
midfielder

style of play threw the Tar


Heels off their rhythm.
Breschi said the Terrapins
almost doubled UNCs time
of possession, forcing them
to play more defense than
offense. Maryland did this
by dominating the faceoffs,
winning 15 to UNCs seven
and snaring 38 groundballs
to UNCs 29 the first time
all season UNC has been
topped in ground balls.
It sucks, but sometimes
youre going to get the
bounce, and sometimes you
arent, Tutton said.
When UNC was able
to mount an offensive,
Maryland kept bodies back
and prevented UNC from
gaining any kind of extraman advantage with their
attack. Breschi and Tutton

both said UNCs six-on-six


offense needed work heading
into the conference portion
of their season, which begins
Sunday against Duke, specifically the teams shooting.
A lot of the shots we took
were from good spots but not
good shot placement or good
timing, Tutton said.
Despite suffering the
first loss of the season, both
Breschi and Tutton had high
praise for the fight the team
had in clawing back into the
game. But UNC couldnt close
the gap. Each time it made a
push, Maryland answered to
stretch the lead back.
In the end, the Tar Heels
couldnt catch up to the
Terrapins.
sports@dailytarheel.com

DTH FILE/HENRY GARGAN


Senior attackman Joey Sankey (11) carries the ball down the field
during the Feb. 27 12-10 win over the University of Denver.

DTH office is open Mon-Fri 8:30am-5:00pm

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For Rent

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

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Residential Services, Inc.

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Campus!

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Compare to dorm prices!


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APPLY ONLINE by visiting us at:

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To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

420072

Announcements
NOTICE TO ALL DTH
CUSTOMERS

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. Please check
your ad on the first run date, as we are only
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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


NANNY SOUGHT by nice professional couple
with 2 healthy, active, good natured children
(boy, 5.5; girl, 3.5), living 3 blocks west of
campus in art filled home with large yard. Fulltime (35-40 hrs/wk). Clean criminal and driving
records required. Russian or Spanish language
abilities and/or BA/BS preferred. Send resume,
salary requirements: halpernvera@gmail.com.
SUMMER CHILD CARE NEEDED for children
ages 14 and 11 in our Chapel Hill home. Must
be available 8am-5:30pm M-F starting fulltime June 15th. We can also have you after
school 2:30-5:30pm May 12 thru June 12 if you
are available. Requires reliable transportation,
ability to work legally in US, clean driving history, non-smoker. Competitive pay. Email: nannysearch27516@gmail.com.
EARLY MORNING daycare drop off for infant,
plus assistance with errands, household, dog.
Preferred schedule M-F 7-9am. Start ASAP,
but negotiable. UNC faculty home blocks from
campus. Seeking commitment through August.
kristin_wilson@unc.edu for application.
EXPERIENCED SITTER NEEDED: 20-30 hrs/wk
caring for boy (7) and girl (11) in Chapel Hill
near UNC campus. School pick up and activities weekdays until 6pm, some evenings. Excellent pay. Clean driving record. Cooking a
plus. Contact: battlepark68@gmail.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.

If March 23rd is Your Birthday...


Dreams come true this year with help from
friends and family. For the next three months,
its easier to save money. Thoughtful introspection reveals a hidden passion. What to
learn? Plan a magnificent summer adventure
with someone special. Polish your image
before October eclipses (10/13 & 10/27)
illuminate your work. Play full out, and reap
rewards. Share with love.

SUMMER STAFF: The ArtsCenter


(Carrboro) seeks Assistants for
ArtsCamp from June through
August. Three positions, 30 hr/wk.
For information visit: http://
www.artscenterlive.org/about/jobopportunities/

For Rent
UNIVERSITY COMMONS 4BR/4BA: 3 suites
left. Available 6-1-15. D/J busline. Water,
electric, internet included. Only $415/mo.
per suite. $395/mo. for 3. Male roommates.
cchang_1234@yahoo.com. 480-322-6215.
MILLCREEK 4BR/2BA AUGUST. Front unit by
pool. Best rent. Nicest apartment. Wood floors.
No nasty carpet. New granite countertops
installing now. Sink, vanity in bedrooms. Full
W/D. Parking. Fresh paint. Must see. Start August. $1,950/mo. jmarber@yahoo.com, 404964-5564.
STONECROP Apartments. Walk to campus,
new, affordable, 4BR/4BA. Rent includes all
utilities, cable, WiFi, W/D, huge kitchen, rec
room, parking in garage, security entrance
with elevator. Call 919-968-7226, rentals@
millhouseproperties.com.
WALK TO CAMPUS, GREAT LOCATION.
3BR/2.5BA, W/D, dishwasher, central heat
and air, off street parking. $2,050/mo. Water
included. Available July. 314-B Brooks Street.
919-933-8143, mpatmore@hotmail.com.
WALK TO CAMPUS, ONE BLOCK OFF FRANKLIN. 3BR/2BA. W/D, dishwasher. Recently renovated. Large back yard and deck. Car port. Sun
room, nice front porch. 209 North Roberson
Street. Available June. 919-933-8143, mpatmore@hotmail.com.
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES: Now
showing and leasing properties for 201516 school year. Walk to campus, 1BR-6BR
available. Contact via merciarentals.com or
919-933-8143.

MERCIA

LOVELY 2BR CHAPEL HILL HOUSE this summer,


fall. Wonderfully located, comfortable, uncluttered, roomy. Quiet neighborhood 10 minutes
from UNC. Parks, piano. $2,000/mo. negotiable. dhalpe@gmail.com, 617-335-5347.
CHANCELLOR SQUARE. 2BR/2BA townhouse.

End unit. Walk to campus. Full kitchen, carpeted, W/D. $1,380/mo. for 2 people. Years
lease from mid-May. 919-929-6072.

HOUSE FOR RENT


5BR or 6BR. 1.25 mile from Pit. Oak floors,
large bedrooms and closets, W/D, dishwasher,
garbage disposal, 60 plasma TV. $2,900/mo.
Available August 1st. BB@telesage.com.

Help Wanted
NATIONALLY RECOGNIZED and locally owned
insurance agency seeks part-time or full-time
administrative assistant. Must possess excellent phone and computer skills. Small business
environment, flexible hours with competitive wages. Please email inquiries, resume to
a076080@Allstate.com.

Hiring Lifeguards!
Chapel Hill Tennis Club

Great work environment. Assistant


managers, supervisors, head guards,
lifeguards. Certifications required: ARC
lifeguarding, first aid, CPR professional
rescuer. Availability preferred mid-May
to mid-September. Mike Chamberlin,
Pool Manager: chamby147@aol.com .

Volunteering

Volunteering

Paid Volunteer Opportunity


for Smokers
Healthy, drug-free, right-handed participants
between the ages of 18 and 55 are needed
for an MRI study on brain function.
Call for more information: 919-668-4131
Or visit: TriangleSmokingStudies.com
Pro00043890

Aries (March 21-April 19)


Today is an 8 Get into some profitable
teamwork today. Friends help you stay
on task. Reminisce about old school
strategies. Talk about visions and dreams
while handling concrete, even mundane
matters. Theres a learning curve. Keep
at it.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is a 7 Avoid waste or financial
speculation of any kind. In a disagreement
about budgetary priorities, find common
ground to minimize risk. Keep optimistic.
Remember your manners. Love is the
foundation. Build from there, slowly.
Sugarcoat results if necessary.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)


Today is a 7 Treat yourself with restful,
peaceful activities. Write, draw and create.
Work with fantastical images from a
dream. Let your mind wander. Unplanned
obstacles could slow the action. Verify
reservations before you leave the house.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)


Today is an 8 You have less than
expected but enough to get by. Work
together to get a big job done. Cut
corners where necessary. Be respectful yet
undeterred. Recycle or up-cycle and save
money. You can afford to be gracious.

Gemini (May 21-June 20)


Today is a 6 Stay close to home while
making plans for a great adventure that
may include travel on or over water.
Confer with family. Read the fine print.
Rest while you plot and schedule. Hunt
for what you need online.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)


Today is an 8 Postpone travel. Write
down a dream. What you visualize you can
create. Ask probing questions. Love deeply.
Humor helps you get through a tough
spot. Take time to imagine success. Dont
hold back. Go for what you want.

Cancer (June 21-July 22)


Today is a 7 Figure out how to use
what you have without wasting a lot of
energy. Dont take risks. Share resources
if necessary. Someone else has what
you need. Plan a gathering or meeting.
Compassion wins friends at work.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)


Today is a 7 Get into a fun game with
friends. Household repairs could drain
resources. Cash in your coupons. Turn
down an expensive invitation. Working at
home is profitable. Old assumptions get
challenged. Play for the gold.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)


Today is a 7 A professional test or
challenge arises. Take it slow. No fair
cheating. Take one step at a time, and
focus to meet the deadline. Consult an
expert. Consider ethics, justice and fair
play. Nurture your team members.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)


Today is a 6 Home has a magnetic
draw. Work from there if you can. Avoid
jealousies or unexpected expense. Stay out
of an argument that doesnt concern you.
Stick to basic facts and common ideals.
Cook simple fare. Take it easy.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)


Today is an 8 Your educational journey
seems to progress more quickly than
anticipated. Believing you can do the job
helps. Dont get cocky, though. Things
may not be as them seem. Watch for
hidden obstacles or expenses. Others
rely on you.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)


Today is a 7 Imagination works when
all else fails. You have to do the work, too,
after crafting a plan. Open your heart and
mind. Expect nothing. Postpone paperwork.
Dont spend more than you can afford. Get
help building your dream.
(c) 2015 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

PART-TIME JOB FOR UNC STUDENT. Retired


professor seeks help with maintenance and
renovation of house near Village Plaza during
school year and summer. $15/hr. Approximately 6-8 hrs/wk. Time to be arranged. Send
inquiries and qualifications to cpjbsmith@
earthlink.net.

WANT $40 ONCE OR TWICE A MONTH ? Help


needed with projects we used to do ourselves.
Repairing and replacing deer fencing for puppies backyard. In bad weather pack up books,
tapes, LPs, VCRs, CDs. Noon to 5pm equals
$40. Own vehicle needed. 919-929-2653.

SWIMMING LESSONS: Looking for college student to teach my 2 daughters (ages 5 and 3)
beginner swim lessons on Friday afternoons or
Saturdays. 2 hrs/wk. Preferably on swim team
or lifeguard qualified. Pay $15/hr. Please call
Chad, 910-546-8266.

Summer Jobs

LIFEGUARDS AND SWIM INSTRUCTORS:


Stoneridge Swim Club in Chapel Hill is now
hiring lifeguards and swim instructors. Great
work environment. Find application at www.
sssrc.org. 919-967-0915. Contact Bill Lillard at
club.manager.sssrc@gmail.com.
BAILEYS PUB AND GRILLE is currently hiring
servers and bartenders! We are looking for
energetic individuals who will thrive in a fast
paced environment. Baileys is full of opportunities and excitement. We provide competitive
wages, flexible work schedules and health,
dental and vision insurance plans. Please apply
in person Sunday thru Thursday from 2-4pm at:
Rams Plaza, 1722 Fordham Blvd, Chapel Hill,
NC 27103 or online at www.foxandhoundcareers.com.

Tutoring Wanted
AP STAT TUTOR in Chapel Hill for CHHS Junior
twice a week, evenings. $12/hr. Call 919-9234280. Prefer math, stat grad or post grad UNC
student.

QUESTIONS
About Classifieds?
Call 962-0252

Find YOUR place to live...

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: The Duke Faculty


Club is hiring camp counselors, lifeguards,
swim coaches and swim instructors for Summer 2015. Visit facultyclub.duke.edu/aboutus/
employment.html for applications and information.
SUMMER CAMP HEAD COUNSELOR:: Stoneridge Club in Chapel Hill is now hiring a head
camp counselor. This position requires at least
2 years of previous counselor experience. club.
manager.sssrc@gmail.com, 919-967-0915.
POOL PROFESSIONALS IS NOW hiring lifeguards and pool attendants for the SUMMER.
Work at a location close to campus! Flexible
hours and great pay! Contact us today! agreiner@poolprofessionals.com, 919-787-7878.

www.heelshousing.com

LOST & FOUND ADS RUN


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SportsMonday

The Daily Tar Heel

WOMENS SWIMMING & DIVING: 19TH PLACE

Danielle Siverling
leads UNC at NCAAs

The senior swimmer


broke a school record
in her final meet.
By Sarah Headley
Senior Writer

It was her final goodbye, her final NCAA


Championship as a member
of the North Carolina womens swimming team.
Senior Danielle Siverling
was a member of the 400yard freestyle relay team
that finished 12th of 16
on the final day of the
NCAA Championships
in Greensboro Saturday.
Siverlings split was 49.09,
just shy of her all-time best.
The 400 free relay led the Tar
Heels to a 19th-place finish in
the tournament in a pool of
46 teams.
The 400 free relay was
really special to me, said
Siverling, a co-captain for
the team.
This year we were determined not to get 17th again
(in the relay), so it was kind
of cool to have that as my last
race ever.
Siverling had an 11thplace individual finish in

the 500-yard freestyle with


a time of 4:38.53 and also
broke a school record with
a 12th-place finish in the
200-yard freestyle, beating her career-best time
set last month at the ACC
Tournament.
For the third straight year,
Siverling earned individual
All-America honors.
But Siverling was just
one of 12 North Carolina
swimmers who earned AllAmerica honors this year at
the event.
We had the focus and
the attitude on not only
qualifying for the NCAA
Championships, but being
better than what it takes to
qualify, Coach Rich DeSelm
said.
DeSelm also emphasized
the importance of the teams
relays.
We had made relays a
pretty big focus this year,
and the team stepped up and
really embraced that idea,
and we were successful in
the four out of five relays,
DeSelm said.
Its been a great season
its been a season of the
team really.
The season of the team
ended with the Tar Heels who

didnt qualify for the NCAA


Tournament cheering on their
teammates in Greensboro,
creating a strong fanbase,
DeSelm said.
We just had a very positive season, DeSelm said.
We have a group of women
who are bonded and supportive of each other, work
hard in the classroom, work
hard in the pool and who
want to achieve.
After four consecutive NCAA appearances,
Siverling said she is grateful
for the team shes shared it
with.
I feel like Im processing
everything right now, I still
cant really believe its all
over, Siverling said.
And after her last night
swimming for North
Carolina, Siverling, a
Pennsylvania native,
thanked those who had supported her throughout her
swimming career.
I may not be a Tar Heel
born and bred, she later
wrote on her Facebook page.
But Ive been adopted by the
Tar Heel family, and it will
be in my blood for the rest of
my life.

Monday, March 23, 2015

11

inBRIEF
CAMPUS BRIEFS

NCAA Tournament play


continues in Carmichael
The NCAA womens basketball tournament moves
on to second round games in
Carmichael Arena today.
No. 4 seed North Carolina

(25-8) will take on No. 5 seed


Ohio State (24-10) at 6:30 p.m.
Tickets to the game are
free for all UNC students
with a valid UNC One Card.
The general public can purchase tickets which range
in price from $5 for college
students to $15 for adults
at GoHeels.com/tickets.

Groups of more than 10


people can purchase tickets
for $6 a piece, and youth tickets cost $8.
The winner of the game
will advance to play South
Carolina in the Sweet 16
round.
staff reports

GO, HEELS!
Nothing
could be finer.
Summer School at Carolina.
More information at summer.unc.edu
Follow @UNCSummerSchool

sports@dailytarheel.com

Duke imposters

Seasonal allergies
shouldnt stop

YOU

Police say scammers have


targeted local businesses by
impersonating Duke Energy.
See pg. 5 for story.

games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

Level:

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

from seasonal outings!

Solution to
Fridays puzzle

Come meet
a dedicated
specialist who
will take care
of all your
Allergy, Asthma
& Immunology
needs!

Islam teach-in series


The UNC Muslim
Students Association
hosted its second teach-in
lecture. See pg. 9 for story.

Week of urban gaming


The new Urban Gaming
Club at UNC is hosting a
week of gaming for students
to join. See pg. 9 for story.

A wholesome concert
Whole Foods employees
raised money for the companys nonprofit with a
concert. See pg. 4 for story.

Short 3 hours for graduation? Maymester!

David Fitzhugh, M.D.

Evaluating & Treating the


following conditions:
Allergic Rhinitis Asthma Food Allergies Eczema
Hives/Angioedema Anaphylaxis Sinus Problems
Bee Sting Allergies Chronic Cough Drug Allergies
Immunodeficiency Recurrent Infections

101 Cosgrove Ave., Suite 110


Chapel Hill, NC

919-929-9612
Leaders in Allergy
& Asthma Care
allergypartners.com/chapelhill

Check out summer.unc.edu

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


ACROSS
1 Gear tooth
4 Scotch whisky brand
9 Apples, e.g.
14 Sushi bar tuna
15 Inside the NBA analyst
Shaq
16 Scary bacteria
17 *Dots-and-dashes system
19 Charged toward
20 Long Island airport town
21 Divergent star
Woodley
23 Robber, to cops
26 Join the game
27 Electrical unit of
resistance
30 Fish market offering
33 Revolutionary Guevara
36 *Entre
38 Linen fiber source
39 Statesman Stevenson
40 Part of UNLV
41 Fly like a parasailer
42 Weed-control tools
43 *Boxy British economy
car
45 Take your pick
46 Ironed
47 Grounded fast jet,
briefly
48 Affordable __ Act
50 This __ unfair!
52 Car thief on a
pleasure spin
56 Car wheel shafts
60 Offensively
pungent
61 *Venue for
hypothetical legal
cases

64 Stop to think, say


65 Alma __
66 Word in itineraries
67 Tricky road curves
68 Roast host, and a hint to
the answers to starred
clues
69 Wild blue yonder
DOWN
1 Victorias Secret
garment, for short
2 Cries of discovery
3 You go, __!
4 My Cousin Vinny
co-star
5 Post-apartheid ruling
party: Abbr.
6 Prefix with conservative
7 Father figures
8 Ick!
9 Hazards
10 Central Florida city
11 *Wallet alternatives
12 Zing
13 Web browsing
destination

Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP)


Specialized for the Treatment of Eating Disorders
919.908.9740 iop@veritascollaborative.com
durham, nc veritascollaborative.com

18 Dainty taste
22 Church recess
24 Vintage vehicle
25 One of Tony Sopranos
henchmen
27 Mutual of __
28 Was wearing
29 *Hannah Montana
portrayer
31 Fiber-rich cereals
32 St. Francis of __
34 Greek god of the
underworld
35 Use, as influence
37 __ in November
38 Showman Ziegfeld
41 Devout term for a
churchyard

(C)2015 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


All rights reserved.

43 TV neigh
sayer
44 These, in Nice
46 Lion family units
49 Roll out of the sack
51 Kitchenware brand
52 Bit of mockery
53 Andean stew tubers
54 Buxom one-named
supermodel
55 What the buffalo do, in
song
57 Disposable diapers brand
58 CHiPs star Estrada
59 Time at a motel
62 Non-Rx
63 Golfers gadget ... or
where its used

12

dailytarheel.com

Monday, March 23, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

SportsMonday

SCOREBOARD

WOMENS TENNIS: UNC 7, Wake Forest 0


MENS TENNIS: Louisville 5, UNC 2
GYMNASTICS: UNC fifth place
SOFTBALL: Louisville 6, UNC 4
WOMENS FENCING: Litynski sixth place

WOMENS BASKETBALL: NORTH CAROLINA 71, LIBERTY 65

UNC wins for mama bear

WRESTLING: ETHAN RAMOS,


SIXTH-PLACE IN 165-POUND

Tar Heels
finish 24th
in NCAAs

Ethan Ramos led the UNC


wrestling team to its third
consecutive top-25 finish.
By Mohammed Hedadji
Staff Writer

the cage, so she passed it to Kelly


Devlin in the middle to just finish and out of no where the goalie
came. She shot it low, but the goalie just dove back in the cage.
Sophomore attacker Molly
Hendrick led the way for the Tar
Heels with four goals, and sophomore midfielder Maggie Bill added
two of her own. On the season, the
Tar Heels are now 3-2 versus top10 opponents.
Despite the loss, Hendrick said
nothing major needed to change.
Draw controls and finished possessions those are the keys to
maintaining success.
We just need to clean up the
small stuff, Hendrick said. We
need to get one full, consistent
game under our belt.

Despite poor seeding, North


Carolina wrestler Ethan Ramos
became just the fifth freshman in
UNC history to earn All-American
status. But Ramos is far from satisfied
with his sixth-place finish in the 165pound division at the NCAA Wrestling
Championships.
Ramos, despite being a No. 15 seed,
fought through the bracket and upset
Northwesterns Pierce Harger in the
quarterfinals to clinch All-American
status.
Ethan absolutely came out here to
win this tournament, Coach C.D. Mock
said. And you couldnt tell him differently if you tried.
Ramos would fall short against
Indiana wrestler Taylor Walsh, whose
reversal in the second period gave him
the ultimate edge in the 5-0 decision.
But Ramos tournament run would help
the Tar Heels tie for 24th nationally
with Indiana. Its UNCs third-straight
top-25 finish at NCAAs.
Of the five UNC wrestlers who
qualified, Ramos was the only one to
finish on the podium, but the wrestlers
and coaches are not lingering on the
tournament defeats.
The only thing I can say is I hope
people are watching out for us, said
redshirt sophomore Joey Ward,
because I know Im bringing the heat
(next season).
The tournament provided experience and a taste of success for the
UNC wrestlers, some of whom had
never been. Most wrestling events do
not see more than 100,000 fans in the
stands, but the crowds have been that
large in St. Louis for the past couple
of championships.
Wrestling doesnt get a whole lot
of attention or a whole lot of credibility, Mock said. This is one of the only
events each year where we feel like our
sport matters.
The Tar Heels will take this experience, along with a belly full of fire, back
to the wrestling room as they prepare
for next season.
For Mock, tournament experience
will be invaluable as his team continues
to develop and improve.
Coaches can only do so much, and
we have coaches with national titles,
Mock said. But when one of your teammates comes out here and gets it done,
guys start thinking, If he can do it, I
can do it.
All five UNC wrestlers who qualified for the NCAA Tournament will be
returning next year, along with a highly
anticipated freshman class.
Many of the wrestlers will now look
to the NCAA qualifiers as examples.
If I could give my teammates advice,
I would just tell them wrestle without
worrying about the outcome, Ramos
said. I think thats what helped me get
as far as I did.
Even if he wasnt completely satisfied.

sports@dailytarheel.com

sports@dailytarheel.com

DTH/BEN LEWIS
Sophomore guard Allisha Gray (15) led UNC with 17 points against Liberty on Saturday. The Tar Heels won 71-65 in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

Coach Sylvia Hatchell won in her


return to the NCAA Tournament.
By Logan Ulrich
Senior Writer

The elements seemed aligned for a classic upset story the kind everyone expects
from college basketball in March. No. 13 seed
Liberty looked to play the underdog in the first
round of the NCAA Tournament against No. 4
seed North Carolina.
But the real story was much better.
In Coach Sylvia Hatchells return to the
NCAA Tournament after missing last season
with cancer, UNC doused the Flames hopes for
an upset, pulling away for a 71-65 win.
Shes like a mama bear around us, said
sophomore forward Stephanie Mavunga. Shes
back and its like, Aw man, my moms here.
Liberty had more than blind faith that they
could pull off an upset. They had a significant
size advantage over UNC, with three players
6-foot-4 or taller. They had a 14-game winning
streak. Despite playing on UNCs home court

in Carmichael Arena, they had a sizable number of seats filled with raucous fans in red.
And through nearly eight minutes of play,
the Flames had the lead.
I really felt it, said redshirt senior guard
Emily Frazier, who played in her last game
with the Flames. I think all of us felt it.
But Mavunga, who had 12 points and
nine rebounds despite bearing the brunt of
Libertys defensive focus, and the rest of the
Tar Heels felt something stronger the challenge to give back to a mother who had given
everything to them.
If I get hit, and Im getting hit inside, Coach
Hatchells not having it, Mavunga said. Its
different when your moms coming out there
like, You got to watch it, theyre in there hitting
my kid.
She really takes care of us on and off the
court.
The whole team responded to take care of
Hatchell. Sophomore guard Allisha Gray had a
team-high 17 points and gritted through three
separate blows to the face by defenders.
You want to make an impact her first year
back, Gray said. You want to make it great.

DTH ONLINE: Head to dailytarheel.


com to read about senior guard Latifah
Colemans 15-point performance in the
first round of the NCAA Tournament.

With UNC trailing in the first half, sophomore Jessica Washington collected an offensive
rebound and drained a 3-pointer. The next time
down the court, she flew in from the wing to
grab a missed shot and put it back in the hoop.
That five-point swing sparked a 12-0 UNC run
that put the Tar Heels ahead for good.
At halftime, UNC held a 14-point lead.
Although the Flames kept playing hard, they
could never close the gap to fewer than six
points. The Tar Heels wouldnt let them.
Last year, UNC took interim coach Andrew
Calder to the Elite Eight. And in the words of
Mavunga, while they loved playing for him, its
different now that their mother is back.
You dont want to end your tournament run
earlier now that Coach Hatchells back, Mavunga
said. We want to cherish those moments and
have her around for as long as we can.
The storys not finished yet.
sports@dailytarheel.com

WOMENS LACROSSE: BOSTON COLLEGE 10, NORTH CAROLINA 9

Womens lacrosse falls prey to Eagles

UNC lost to Boston


College for the second
time in program history.
By Ben Coley
Staff Writer

Down 10-9 to No. 4 Boston


College with barely a minute left in
overtime, the No. 3 North Carolina
womens lacrosse team needed a
score. Badly.
And with an open net in front of
her, senior midfielder Kelly Devlin
had her chance. She received a pass
from junior attacker Aly Messinger
and rocketed the ball toward the
goal, but it never reached the net.
In a flash, the Boston College
goalkeeper dove to her right and
stopped the ball. The Eagles

retained possession and drained


the clock game over.
Boston Colleges 10-9 victory
over the Tar Heels (8-2, 1-1) was the
Eagles (9-0, 4-0) first win in Chapel
Hill and just the second time the
program has ever beaten UNC.
We had some opportunities that
we didnt finish, said Coach Jenny
Levy. We have to keep putting the
ball in the back of the net. BC just
made more plays than we did.
In the first half, the Tar Heels
could not generate any offense.
Boston College opened up with a
2-0 lead and eventually took a 4-2
advantage into the locker room.
UNC managed just two goals
despite having 14 shots.
In the second half, the fireworks
began for UNC. The Tar Heels lit
up Boston College with seven goals
in a little over 11 minutes to take

an 9-7 lead.
We were paying attention
to the game plan and following
through, Levy said. That helped
us to get to where we wanted to be
in the game.
But UNCs control would not
last for long. The Eagles erased
that lead and sent the game into
overtime. Boston Colleges Mikaela
Rix wrapped around the net from
the right side and pushed the ball
past the goalkeeper to help the
Eagles grab the lead.
And Boston Colleges goalie
made a diving spot later in overtime to seal the victory her ninth
and most important save of the
game.
It was a great play on her part,
senior midfielder Brittney Coppa
said. Aly Messinger scooped the
ball up, and she was on the side of

BASEBALL: NORTH CAROLINA 5, GEORGIA TECH 1

Dunbar home runs push Tar Heels to series victory in Atlanta

Korey Dunbar scored


his first two home
runs of the season.
By Andrew Tie
Staff Writer

After dropping backto-back games, the No. 18


North Carolina baseball team
rebounded to take the weekend
series at Georgia Tech behind
strong starting pitching and
the bat of Korey Dunbar.
The Tar Heels (14-9, 5-4
ACC) won the first game 5-3
in dramatic fashion thanks to
a two-run homer by Dunbar in
the ninth inning Friday night.
In the first part of a Saturday
twin bill, the Yellow Jackets
(16-7, 5-4 ACC) rallied from a
5-0 deficit in Game 2 to win
6-5. UNC then clinched the
series with a 5-1 victory.

Thats been a tough place


for us to win in the past,
Coach Mike Fox said. To lose
a heartbreaker in the first
one (on Saturday), our kids
showed some resiliency and
toughness and got a good outing from Benton Moss.
The series win was UNCs
first at Georgia Tech since
2009. It was also just the
second series win in Atlanta
in eight tries under Fox, whos
been at UNC for 17 years.
Injuries to the pitching staff
have had a domino effect:
Starting pitching hasnt been as
strong, requiring the bullpen to
pitch more, and if those pitchers falter, theres no safety net.
At Georgia Tech, the starters
eased the load for relievers.
(Pitching coach Scott)
Forbes told us our starting
pitching needs to go deeper
into the game, Moss said.
We did a good job of pound-

ing the zone and making our


pitches when they counted.
Sophomore Zac Gallen
pitched seven innings with
just two earned runs Friday.
Freshman J.B. Bukauskas
went 5.1 innings with three
earned runs in the first
Saturday game, and Moss
went six innings with just one
earned run in the finale.
That was the key to the
whole weekend, Fox said. We
didnt have a lot of breathing
room, so the starting pitching
was the key to the series.
While the pitchers kept
Georgia Tech off the scoreboard, UNC found some success hitting.
Dunbar, whos batting .357
on the season, went 5-for-11
in the three games and led the
offensive attack. His gamewinning homer Friday went
deep into center field, and he
also had a solo shot in Game 3.

Thats the best weekend hes


had as a Tar Heel, Fox said.
He was even better behind the
plate the number of balls he
blocked, the things that dont
show up in the box score.
Prior to those two home
runs, Dunbar hadnt cleared
the fence since April 9, 2014.
Ive been putting a lot of
pressure on myself, Dunbar
said. Just playing the same
game since I was five-, sixyears-old. Not trying to overcomplicate things and keeping it simple.
After losing to Davidson
but then traveling to Atlanta
and getting two wins, Moss is
encouraged for the season.
Weve beaten ourselves
rather than let someone else
beat us, Moss said. This
week is going to be a turning
point for our season.
sports@dailytarheel.com

DTH FILE/KATIE WILLIAMS


Catcher Korey Dunbar makes a hit at the March 7 game against
Duke. This weekend Dunbar hit two home runs at Georgia Tech.

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