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Volume 123, Issue 77

Monday, September 21, 2015

Receivers etch names in UNC history


Ryan Switzer
and Quinshad
Davis each set
school records
WOMENS BASKETBALL

NORTH CAROLINA
48
ILLINOIS14
By Ben Coley
Senior Writer

As a receiver duo, North Carolina


senior Quinshad Davis and junior
Ryan Switzer have developed a close,
mentor-mentee relationship. Theyre
best friends Davis, the sure-handed possession receiver and Switzer,
the swift-footed return specialist.
For the past two seasons, both
have given headaches to opponents and both have mastered
their craft. And in Saturdays
48-14 victory over Illinois, both set
school records.
Davis grabbed his 22nd career
touchdown reception, passing
Hakeem Nicks for most all-time in
UNC history, while Switzer tallied
168 punt return yards to break a
single-game record that stood for
over 60 years.
Davis moment came midway
through the second quarter. Senior
quarterback Marquise Williams
zipped a 9-yard pass to the senior on
a quick slant. With the score, Davis
broke his 294-day tie with Nicks.
After the touchdown, Davis immediately searched for his mother along
the sideline to give her the recordbreaking football, which will be put
in a trophy case and out of his mind.
Everyone was talking about it,
Davis said. Q, you need to go ahead
and break the record. Q, you need
to do this and do that. But Im glad
that I finally got it off my chest.
But Coach Larry Fedora knows
breaking the record was never Davis

DTH/KATIE WILLIAMS
Senior receiver Quinshad Davis (14) hauls in a 9-yard pass and runs into the end zone, marking his 22nd career touchdown reception a new school record.

main focus.
Quinshad Davis is the epitome
of a team guy Fedora said. His
number one thing is to win football games.
Against the Illini, Davis led the
team with five receptions and 56
receiving yards, in addition to his historic score. His friend Switzer believes
the record was long overdue.
(Hes) one of the best receivers
to come through here, Switzer said.
Im happy for him and Im happy
for not only me, but the punt return
team that we got back on track today.

Switzer was happy for a reason.


Early in the second quarter, he gathered a punt, darted to his right and
scooted 71 yards down the sideline.
Later in the game, the junior sprinted 85 yards to the end zone, obtaining the yardage record and his sixth
career punt return touchdown.
The previous record was set in
1951 by Bud Carson, who had eight
returns for 166 yards against N.C.
State. But Switzer wasnt aware he
set the record until reporters told
him during interviews.
Solid, all right, Switzer snick-

ered after learning he set the record.


1951? Thats a long time. I wish I
did know (Carson). Ill have to do my
homework a little bit.
The 85-yard score was Switzers
first return touchdown since the Belk
Bowl against Cincinnati in 2013.
Fedora said the junior has been frustrated, but added that he received
several opportunities on Saturday.
Similar to Switzer, Davis wasnt
aware of the punt return yardage
record. But he was more shocked that
his friend hadnt broken it already.
For Switzer, I bet thats been a

Ackland is outdated but not in content


A friend of the museum
wrote that the Ackland
needs an update.
By Morgan Vickers
Senior Writer

Even though the Ackland Art


Museum features a variety of
modern pieces, the museums
architecture is stuck in the 1980s.
Chris Vitiello, a writer for Indy
Week and an independent curator, said he believes the Ackland,
which was last renovated in the late
80s, is in need of an update. He
published these opinions in a Sept.
9 commentary on the Acklands
newest exhibition, Testing Testing:
Painting and Sculpture since 1960
from the Permanent Collection,
which debuted in July.
Vitiello, a guest judge of The
Land of No Things: Selected
Works by the MFA Class of 2015,
worked directly with the Ackland
this summer designing exhibits
and said the building looks more

like an academic building than an


art museum.
They have to put a sign in
the window that says, Yes, were
open! in order to let people know
that they can come in, Vitiello
said. Its just not a building that
is welcoming to the public.
Of all of the Triangle-area universities, the Ackland is one of the
only museums that has not had
an update in recent years. The
Nasher Museum of Art at Duke
University debuted their reconfigured space on Aug. 27, and the
Gregg Museum of Art and Design
at N.C. State University built
entirely new facilities starting
April 14.
But the Ackland has no intentions of updating its facilities
anytime soon.
(A new museum) is not at the
top of our list right now, said
Peter Nisbet, the interim director
of the Ackland. The initiative we
have been taking is to make the
Ackland more welcoming, both
aesthetically and intellectually.
In the past year, more than

By Zaynab Nasif
Staff Writer

The traditional birds and bees


conversation might fly in a different
direction as a bill in the N.C. legislature considers how sexual education will be taught in the state.
N.C. Senate Bill 279, passed by
the N.C. House of Representatives
last week in an almost unanimous
108-2 vote, could overturn several precedents set in the 2009
Healthy Youth Act if passed by
the N.C. Senate. New requirements included in the bill state
that information presented in sex
ed classes can be peer reviewed

and accepted by any experts


not just the sexual health experts
identified in the 2009 act. Other
provisions mandate sex trafficking awareness and prevention.
But Elizabeth Finley, spokeswoman for SHIFT N.C. a
nonprofit aiming to spread sexual
health information said it is
hard to see the benefits of the bill.
She said some experts might
not be as qualified as others to be
included in sex ed curricula.
What if you turned over engineering to a math expert? she
said. Math is part of engineering,
but it is not entirely, and it breaks
down the beauty of the multidisciplinary aspect.
While Finley said she recognizes the importance of sex trafficking
awareness, she said she wonders
whether its inclusion in sex ed will
be helpful in the long run.

Teach for
America
sees decline
The program has had fewer
recruits nationally and at UNC.
By Olivia Browning
Staff Writer

DTH/CLAIRE COLLINS
The Ackland Art Museum is one of the only museums in the Triangle-area
that has not been updated in recent years. There is no current plan to update.

55,000 patrons visited the Ackland.


Of those 55,000, more than 10,000
of those were students.
Because of the location on
campus and because of the high
attendance of students, Nisbet
said he hopes to make the museum a more open space in which

students and other visitors can


find intellectual stimulation and
beautiful art.
Nisbet said a lack of funding
is not something he believes
will hinder the Ackland from

SEE ACKLAND, PAGE 5

NC legislature revisits sexual education


Critics say it is hard
to see the benefits
of the proposed bill.

long time coming, said Davis with


a grin. Over the past couple years,
hes been amazing on punt returns.
Davis said UNC has talent
across the field and that it was on
full display against the Illini. But
to summarize the rewriting of history, the receiver could only offer a
simple response.
Its always great to break a
record, he said.
And on Saturday, the Tar Heels
got two for the price of one game.
@BenColey15
sports@dailytarheel.com

There arent best practices in


education that will help with prevention, she said. We could end
up doing something that is ineffective and harmful.
Amanda Kubic, co-editor of
The Siren, a UNC magazine offering feminist perspectives on social
justice issues, said she remembers
having an abstinence-only sex ed
program in high school.
I dont recall learning about
contraception or how to use it or
demonstrations, she said.
She said she hopes the state will
offer a comprehensive and factbased sex ed program that allows a
space for instructors to cover birth
control, consent and LGBT sex ed.
My hope would be that sex education will exclude some religious
doctrine that is thrown around that
may create unsubstantiated fear
about sex, Kubic said.

Grace Garner, president of


Carolina Students for Life, said the
bill barely changes current policies.
She said sex ed curricula should
continue to emphasize pure scientific data and be determined by science teachers in the classroom.
However, the encouraging and
discouraging of certain behaviors,
such as abstinence versus using
contraception, should be left up
to parents, Garner said.
She said if sex ed programs do
not align with families religions
or are presenting an unbalanced
perspective on sex ed, parents
should have additional options.
Its important that parents
have the option of withdrawing
students from that (sex) education if they feel like it doesnt line
up with their beliefs, she said.
state@dailytarheel.com

Reading its the third best thing to do in bed.


JAROD KINTZ

Teach for Americas number of applicants


has decreased nationally in the past two
years, and the University is starting to notice.
UNC was ranked third among large colleges and universities contributing the greatest number of graduating seniors to Teach for
America in 2012. But there has been a decline
during the past three years at the University.
Jacquelyn Gist, assistant director of
University Career Services and the liaison
for Teach for America on campus, said the
decline can be attributed to numerous other
opportunities that are now available.
The job market right now for our graduating seniors and the internship market for
our first-years, sophomores and juniors is
stronger than it has ever been, she said.
Students have more choices and are looking for opportunities that will benefit their
long-term careers, Gist said.
Florence Matthews, the director of
recruitment managing Teach for Americas
partnership with UNC, said the program
is highly selective and emphasizes leadership experience.
We are looking for people who are passionate about working with kids in lowincome communities who believe that education inequity is a solvable problem and want
to be a part of that solution, Matthews said.
Matthews said she is working to increase the
number of applicants for the program at UNC
by hosting events such as networking nights
and working with Students for Education
Reforms Education Week in November.
Hannah Fussell, a UNC graduate, is currently a member of Teach for America. Fussell
said she decided to apply to the program after
working with Student U, an academic enrichment program in Durham where she was

SEE TEACH, PAGE 5

News

Monday, September 21, 2015

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Take Note: Jon Bellions music is exploratory

TYLER VAHAN
VISUAL MANAGING EDITOR

By Brett Zeck

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ENTERPRISE DIRECTOR

Take Note is a spotlight


series that features musicians
who can arguably be labeled
underground and who
deserve your attention. This
week, our pick is Jon Bellion.

Staff Writer

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DIRECTOR OF INVESTIGATIONS
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managing.editor@dailytarheel.com
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The Daily Tar Heel

Who: Jon Bellion


If youve never heard of
this man, then you might
have heard of his work.
Collaborating with big name
artists and delving his spirit
into a wide array of musical
genres, Bellion is an up and
coming New York songwriter

and hip-hop artist. He is signed


with Visionary Music Group.
He is responsible for the chorus
of The Monster by Eminem
featuring Rihanna and won a
Grammy for it in 2015.
You can also recognize
his input in Cee Lo Greens
Robin Williams, Zedds
Beautiful Now and Jason
Derulos Trumpets. Bellions
influences range from
Coldplay to Kanye West, the
latter of which inspired him
to drop out of college and
pursue music.

DTH ONLINE: Visit


dailytarheel.com.com/
blog/medium to read
the rest.

The Daily Tar Heel asked


respondents whether they
ever text while theyre walking.
Results as of publication.
Yes, no big deal.
50 percent
No, Im not obsessed
with my phone.
28 percent
Sorry, what? I was
texting.
15 percent
To weigh in on this poll
and others, head to dailytarheel.com/poll/archive.
The Daily Tar Heels polls
are updated every week.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY

Bring Your Laptop: Resume


and Cover Letter in 90 Minutes:
Join University Career Services
for a workshop on writing and
tweaking your professional cover
letter and resume. Participants
should bring their own laptops.
This event is free to attend.
Time: 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Location: Hanes Hall
UNC Mens Soccer vs. North
Florida: The No. 3 Tar Heels will
take on North Florida in a nonconference game. This event is
open to the public, and tickets
are $5.
Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Location: Fetzer Field

Bluegrass Jam: Come hone your


bluegrass skills and meet other
musicians at the ArtsCenter in
Carrboro. This event is free and
open to the public.
Time: 5:45 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Location: The ArtsCenter in
Carrboro

TUESDAY

Wikipedia Edit-a-thon: Assessment in Psychology: There will


be an event to meet and collectively edit Wikipedia pages on
assessment in psychology. Participants will meet on the second
floor of Davis Library. This event
is free and open to the public.
Time: 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Location: Davis Library Research Hub

UNC Humanities Great Books


Reading Group Meeting:
Join the reading group as it
discusses A Good Man is Hard
to Find and other works from
author Flannery OConnor. Light
refreshments will be offered.
Pre-registration is required and
can be done online or over the
phone at 919-962-1544. The
event costs $35 to attend.
Time: 10 a.m. to noon
Location: Flyleaf Books
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.

Heres a list of the best


local coffee shops, compiled
by one of our staff writers.
Give yourself a treat and
journey out to one of Chapel
Hill or Carrboros great
coffee houses. Its kind of
like a vacation, except it only
lasts for a few hours and
your stress is still front and
center in your head.
For more, go to Town Talk.

TOP HOST

Student Television is
holding a reality show
called UNCs Next Top
Host to find a new late
night talk show host.
For more, head to Canvas.

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

Follow: @dailytarheel on Twitter

Follow: dailytarheel on Instagram

BYE, IGGY

T.I. finally decided to drop


his mentee, Iggy Azalea.
Think back to the 2014
American Music Awards,
where Iggy was clad
in a Pizza Hut waitress
uniform and Fancy had
only just begun assaulting
eardrums nationwide.
For the full story, head
to our Medium blog on
dailytarheel.com.

DONATIONS

Mamma Ts Cleaning
Expertise is collecting supplies for a homeless shelter
for women and children.
For the full story, head to
Town Talk.

inBRIEF
ARTS BRIEF
North Carolina musician
Anthony Neff was born in the
same West Virgina hospital
where music legend Hank
Williams was pronounced
dead. By coincidence, hes
used some of Williams influence in his music, which is a
mix of country, rock and pop.
With comparisons to Elliot
Smith and the National,
hes used these influences
to record his newest album,
Blood Beneath the Sun, in
Durham. That album will
be released tomorrow, and
hell play at Carrboro Music
Festival on Sept. 27 at 1 p.m.
staff reports

CORRECTIONS

Like: facebook.com/dailytarheel

COFFEE RANK

CITY BRIEF
CHALT will hold a press
conference today at 1:30 p.m.
at Extraordinary Ventures on
South Elliott Road in Chapel

Hill. The organization will


announce their endorsements
for Chapel Hill mayor and
town council.
staff reports

UNIVERSITY BRIEF
A mobile exhibit memorializing people who died on
Sept. 11, 2001 will arrive on
campus at 6 p.m. tonight.
An honor guard of N.C.
State Troopers, sheriff s deputies and representatives of the
Chapel Hill Police and Fire
Departments will escort the
53-foot tractor-trailer as it
arrives in the Hanes parking
lot on Cameron Avenue.
The exhibit, which includes
artifacts and documentary
videos and recordings, will
open to the public at 11 a.m.
Tuesday. The one-day exhibit
closes at 10 p.m.
staff reports

POLICE LOG
Someone reported fraud
over the telephone at 828
Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. at
1:27 p.m. Thursday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person attempted
to obtain money by telling
someone their granddaughter
was in jail, reports state.
Someone broke into and
entered a residence with no

force on the 800 block of


Pritchard Avenue Extension
between 7 a.m. and 8:30
a.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole items,
including items such as a laptop, a bookbag and power tools
and other items, valued together at $835, from an unsecured
residence, reports state. The
bookbag was later recovered.

Someone made a traffic complaint at 828 Lanark


Road and Brandon Road at
4:21 p.m. Thursday, according to Chapel Hill police
reports.
The person reported an
aggressive driver yelled at a
bicycle rider, reports state.
Someone committed
larceny on the 1700 block
of Dobbins Drive between 8
a.m. and 8:11 a.m. Thursday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person stole a cell
phone, valued at $50,
reports state.
Someone disturbed the
peace on the 300 block of
Sunset Drive at 9:29 p.m.
Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person was suspicious
and looking for their neighbor, reports state.
Someone committed
larceny at Cafe Driade at
1215 E. Franklin St. at 10:04
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person ran out of
the business with the tip jar
which contained $45 in cash,
reports state.
Someone reported a
loud party on the 200 block
of East Rosemary Street at
12:41 a.m. Friday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone drove while
impaired on the 1200 block
of Raleigh Road at 1:55 a.m.
Friday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
Someone broke in and
entered on the 1000 block
of Bugle Court between the
hours of 1:50 p.m. and 4:05
p.m. Thursday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
The person stole a laptop
computer, valued at $1,000,
reports state.
Someone committed
misdemeanor larceny at
the Food Lion at 104 N.C
Highway 54 at 12:40 p.m.
Friday, according to Carrboro
police reports.
The person placed two
beers into his briefcase and
left the store, reports state.

Opinion

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, September 21, 2015

Established 1893, 122 years of editorial freedom


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

EDITORIAL CARTOON

EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS


ISHMAEL BISHOP
GABY NAIR
JACOB ROSENBERG
KERN WILLIAMS

TREY FLOWERS
SAM OH
JUSTINA VASQUEZ

CAMERON JERNIGAN
ZACH RACHUBA
BRIAN VAUGHN

By Kenneth Proseus, kennyp17@live.unc.edu

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

Dont
count
Paul out
of race

NEXT

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

EstoVir, on film incentives in North Carolina

Senior journalism and political science major from Weddington.


Email: alexht@live.unc.edu

Friends, Waffles, Work


Alice Wilder explains survivors
need more than one narrative.

If these establishments want to keep their


place, they should be model businesses. It is
important to keep up standards.

Film incentives were never meant to pay for


themselves with new tax revenue; they are
designed to bring new spending to the state.

A Time for Musing

QUOTE OF THE DAY

Sultan Henson, on Hes Not Here possibly losing its liquor license

Alex Thomas

here are a lot of ways to


describe Wednesdays
Republican presidential
debate. Luckily, two words can
do it effectively: It stunk.
Despite being a ratings success for CNN with almost 23
million people tuning in, it
was a disaster. Not only was
it three hours long, but it was
also pure chaos. The moderators lacked complete control,
turning what was supposed to
be an informative event into a
game of which candidate could
get the last word.
Nevertheless, a winner did
emerge: one candidate who
made the most sense and whose
campaign will hopefully benefit
the most from their performance. Carly Fiorina? No.
The true winner of the second debate was Rand Paul,
the libertarian-leaning senator from Kentucky. Unlike his
fellow 10 candidates, Paul
brought up what parts of the
Republican agenda needed to
change, mainly foreign policy
and marijuana policy.
On foreign policy, Paul
argued for discussion and
patience when facing issues
involving our standing
overseas, going against the
Republican trend of promoting a strong military presence
abroad. This includes the previously mentioned Fiorina, who
advocated for sending troops
abroad and adding more items
to our already bloated force.
I dont think we need to be
rash, Paul said. I dont think
we need to be reckless, and
I think need to leave lines of
communication open.
There was also the issue
of marijuana legalization, a
hurdle for Republicans who
still cannot seem to capture
the elusive youth vote.
While New Jersey Gov.
Chris Christie said he would
enforce federal law to ban
marijuana in states where it
is legal, Paul said the way we
handle marijuana nationally
is unjust, invoking the 10th
Amendment and stating states
should be allowed to experiment with the drug. Though
some candidates including
Christie threw support behind
drug rehabilitation, Paul took
it a step further, saying the war
on drugs has done more harm
than good for people in poor
and minority communities.
He then added how these
individuals are more likely
to be arrested for drug use
compared to those living in
wealthy and white communities, further damaging themselves and inner cities.
Not only do the drugs damage them, we damage them
again by incarcerating them
and then preventing them
from getting employment over
time, Paul said.
Despite a strong performance, the senator did not
nail every topic. His stance on
revising birthright citizenship
appears nativist. Yet the rest
of his arguments should put
Republicans on edge about the
future of the party.
We are still 13 months away
from the election. Paul is polling
more than 3 percent nationally
in the GOP race, but he still
has plenty of time to emphasize
his differences from the rest
of the field. Was it a perfect
performance? By all means,
no. However, it hopefully is the
performance that gives the Paul
campaign a much-needed boost
in the crowded Republican race.

Student Stores ought


to remain public

EDITORIAL

Silent Sam alt-activism


A few suggestions
on how to protest
Silent Sam.

ilent Sam has


wreaked havoc over
this campus since
1913. Dedicated to the 321
UNC alumni who fought
and died during the Civil
War and all students who
fought for the Confederacy,
Silent Sam honors the
institution of slavery and
its proliferation.
In light of recent activism happening with Silent
Sam, the Department of
Public Safety released a
game-changing statement.
After a Confederate bandana adorned on Silent
Sam was removed, DPS
spokesman Randy Young
admitted the transgression
on Silent Sam would not be
pursued because it is not a
criminal offense. So this got
us wondering, what exactly
can we do to Silent Sam?
The willful and wanton
injury to property is a Class
1 misdemeanor carrying a
potential sentence of up to
one year. This includes acts
such as defacing a monument with paint, scribble or
writing of any sort.
Below are four legal
ways to protest Silent
Sam in order from least to
most involved:
1. Outfit Silent Sam with
black power T-shirts and
hang the flag of the Black

Panther Party from his rifle.


Silent Sam is a stand-in
for white supremacy, a constant reminder to the tyranny and violence which has
kept black students away
from this campus. At its
unveiling, Silent Sam was
contextualized with a story
of abuse inflicted upon a
black womans body.
While the Black Panther
Party was not exempt from
decentering black women
and sexist organizing,
outfitting Silent Sam with
symbols of black power at
least alludes to a counternarrative of black existence
and involuntary servitude
that created this town,
school and community.
2. Cover Silent Sam
with notes, each detailing
the lived experiences of
black women, their influence on students at UNC
and their interactions with
Silent Sam. Essays could
be written, describing the
sexual and physical trauma inherent to slavery and
how the voices of women
were silenced in order to
proliferate such an egregious institution.
If the University continues to take its time on
the curation of Silent Sam,
then it should at least provide the site with notes for
students to voice their concerns, if spray paint and
other means of nonviolent
protest are not allowed.
3. Take an awkward selfie

with Silent Sam, either


using your own Snapchat
device or by standing in
the line of sight of security
cameras because UNC is
more concerned with protecting Silent Sam than
they are with keeping students safe. Take your selfie
and caption it with a Big
Sean or Drake lyric too vulgar to include here.
4. Screen The Birth
of a Nation, the 1915
silent film about the birth
of the Ku Klux Klan in
the Reconstruction era,
on Silent Sam. The two
fall heavily in line from
an ideological perspective. Both were created
around the same time in a
Confederate-sympathizing
culture. Many students
have not seen the film and
dont realize the extent of
what Silent Sam actually
represents, the historical context of why he was
erected and why he still
stands today in 2015. A
film like The Birth of a
Nation, while a dramatization, exemplifies what
being in the South was
like then.
At this point, we should
all know what Silent Sam
is and what it represents.
It stands facing the North
as the Souths last line
of defense against the
Union. We should protest
its existence at UNC until
the truth about its history
is realized.

EDITORIAL

What are we reading?


A diverse array of
literature creates
better discussion.

lmost every student


who has come to
UNC has encountered the perspectives of
William Shakespeare,
Jane Austen and Charles
Dickens. These writers
(and others like them)
were all white and have
been dead for more than a
century. They are all a part
of the traditional Western
Canon of literature an
elite club to be part of.
Their works are impressive and should be taught;
however, by focusing
only on these books and
more specifically on the
Anglo-Saxon perspectives
they provide, we are only
hindering the levels of discussion and inclusion that
could possibly be achieved
by teaching a diverse canon
of books with a diverse
and knowledgeable set of
professors. The University
ought to promote more
diverse readings and look
to hire professors with a
diverse range of expertise.

Recently, The John


William Pope Center published a research article
that dove into the change
of English departments. In
their research, they argued
that students are losing out
by learning from obscure
authors even mentioning UNCs own alumnus,
Paul Green.
Green was a Pulitzer
Prize-winning playwright
with a whole theater on
this campus named in
his honor, considered by
some to be one of the great
American dramatists far
from obscure. Besides,
there is a difference
between being unknown
and not being good.
Commercial sales do not
correlate to great writing,
and neither does the opinion of any one researcher
or editorialist.
What qualifies a great
book is finding a personal
value, or as author Ann
Patchett said to PBS, The
mark of a truly great book
for me is one that makes
me forget that Im reading.
To help share this value,
it becomes important to
hire a diverse set of pro-

fessors who have unique


expertise in varying fields
of literature. The University
should always promote
books of collegiate merit,
but professors should be
able to decide for themselves what that means.
The educators on this campus are qualified, and by
saying they are incapable of
picking challenging books
is insulting.
It is okay if students
and others do not like
works from Zora Neale
Hurston, Amiri Baraka
or Paul Green. All have
the right to argue which
books are the most challenging for students, but
to turn the discussion
into advocacy for one particular canon of work only
hinders learning.
The University has been
creating classes that are
focused on being more
inclusive. UNC should
keep in mind the expertise
of professors and what perspectives they bring to the
classroom when hiring.
Literature creates a free
flow of ideas, and it would
be a waste to limit ourselves
to the Western Canon.

TO THE EDITOR:
The news that South
Building is considering leasing the operation of Student
Stores comes as a not-sounexpected surprise. In my
22 years with the store, 20 as
director (I retired in 2010),
we were always looking over
our shoulders at the lease
operators. In my experience,
when a university considers
leasing, there is a lot of spin,
guile and misdirection. So
lets look at what we know
from the published reports:
Claims of savings of
several million dollars in
textbook costs to students.
This is preposterous. The
on-campus brick-and-mortar sales of course materials
at Carolina is less that $10
million. Plus, there might
well be another $10 million
sold off campus through
Amazon and other online
retailers. And despite the
buzz around leased course
materials, that model just
isnt popular with students.
Unless Follett sells below
cost, those projected savings
arent there.
$2.5 million to remodel.
Right, imply the cost of
gutting the sales floor and
bringing in the Follett
campus bookstore look.
We spent over $10 million
renovating the Daniels
Building from the ground
up from 2005-08. Its systems and infrastructure are
fine; these remodel dollars
are cosmetic.
Employees offered tremendous opportunity for
professional growth. Well,
no. A few of the younger
employees who are willing
to relocate may be offered
promotions, but thats about
it. And there will be no further growth of their state
employee pensions, with
only a corporate 401(k) as a
retirement benefit.
Finally, what about
student employees? The
store employs 200 student
employees, which collectively
puts hundreds of thousands
of dollars into student pockets every year a form of
financial aid which should be
recognized. The bookstore
chains are chronically short
staffed, and often do not hire
enough employees, of any
kind, to offer good customer
service. There will likely be
fewer jobs for students and
less student payroll within
the University.
Finally, the financial
details. The overhead of
Daniels Building maintenance, repairs and utilities
is hundreds of thousands
a year. Then, there is the
debt service on the remodel
loan. Those do not go away.
Are they paid from the $2.5
million to $3 million figure? If so, that reduces the
net from the lease operator
by quite a chunk. If not,
then who pays?
The University may well
lease out Student Stores, but
it owes the campus community, students and store
employees, whose life and
livelihood are being diminished, a fair and even-handed examination of the facts.

Leased stores are sometimes


seen as a panacea, especially
by those in the high-level
professional administrator
class who move from school
to school leasing stores with
no particular loyalty except
to their own careers.
John Jones
Director of Student Stores
1990-2010

White people at UNC


are failing on race
TO THE EDITOR:
Please explain to me why
at one of the best public
universities in the country and one of the highest
cohorts of educated people
in the world, we are still so
divided by race at UNC.
Explain to me why when
the #SayHerName vigil on
campus occurred, the participants were almost exclusively people of color.
Explain to me why
people feel the need to ask
me if I am Latina every
time I pass out fliers for
the Carolina Hispanic
Association in the Pit.
Explain to me why thousands of UNC students can
participate in Holi Moli
each year but are unwilling
to attend an event to raise
awareness about immigrant equality.
Explain to me why multicultural groups have so
much difficulty supporting
one another in their efforts
(which, might I add, are all
fighting toward the same
desired justice).
To anyone who might
wonder this about me, I
would like to respond:
I am white, but I refuse
to let this color limit what I
stand for. If there is a discussion regarding the recurring
vandalization of Silent Sam,
I want to be there. If there is
an initiative to raise awareness about Muslim religion, I
want to be informed. If campus groups organize a dialogue regarding the effect of
affirmative action on AsianAmerican students, I want
to participate. It matters that
we fight, not only our own
battles but also those of our
peers, alongside them. Race
is not ignorable.
But I do believe that in
some instances, we must
choose to overcome the
artificial boundaries that it
creates. I choose to support
Hurston Hall, One State,
One Rate, and other initiatives I believe in, not because
my individual support matters, not because white support matters, but because
widespread support matters.
It is overdue that we get
out of our own bubbles, overcome the hesitation and be
bold enough to respond with
the greatest powers we have:
our voice, our support, our
action. To ignore the difficulty that comes with actively
engaging in these spaces
would be a mistake. I do not
wish to underestimate this
reality; however, I do hope to
provoke mindful reflection
and response when appropriate. If I believe something
is right, I will fight for it, and
I encourage others in my
position to do the same.
Kristen Gardner
Junior
Global studies

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.
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Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit
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Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill,
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Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com
EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the
opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises 10 board
members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.

News

Monday, September 21, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

CLAWS releases three hawks, one owl


By Isabella Lupoli
Staff Writer

Some birds prefer trees,


others prefer selfies but
at Carrboros raptor release
Saturday morning, some
birds preferred the air.
Twenty to 30 people
stood next to a baseball
field in Hank Anderson III
Community Park, waiting for
the birds to take flight.
Weve only ever had this
happen once but because
we did have it happen once,
I have to warn people every
time we do a release: these
birds are not human friendly,
Kindra Mammone, executive
director of CLAWS Inc., said.
That means if they fly toward
you, they dont want a hug. So
if one of these birds does fly at
you, hit the ground.
Immediately after,
Mammone assured the crowd

that they have never had anyone injured at an event before.


CLAWS is a nonprofit wildlife rescue and rehabilitation
center in Chapel Hill. They
take in hundreds of animals
a year at the moment they
are nursing 42 squirrels back
to health some are there for
rehabilitation, and some are
rescues that will never be reintroduced to the wild.
CLAWS publicly released
three red-shouldered hawks
and one great horned owl
Saturday. All four were brought
to CLAWS as nestlings baby
birds unable to fly.
Mammone said normally
upon finding a nestling, people are encouraged to place it
back in its nest. She also said
the popular notion that mothers will kill a baby if it has a
human scent is not true.
Vinny Mammone, Kindras
husband, gave the tossers

their training one by one


before releasing the birds.
(Vinny) gives about 30
seconds of very in-depth
training. Trust me, no ones
ever gotten hurt doing this,
Mammone told the four bird
tossers doing the release.
Kindra Mammone said it
takes fewer than 30 seconds
from release for the birds to
be out of sight.
All four raptors were
released within 10 minutes,
and the crowd was directed to
the gazebo where three large
rescue birds were brought
out: Tagred, a red-shouldered
hawk with a wing amputated
at the elbow; Khalitra, a great
horned owl; and Grip, an
African raven who loves selfies. These birds are just a
few in the CLAWS collection
of teaching animals, which
include an Arctic marble fox,
a kinkajous and a Patagonian

cavy among many others.


Khalitra is an example of
one of the more drastic cases
they deal with. She was found
facedown, emaciated and
blinded in her right eye after
being shot.
She can fly just fine; she
just doesnt always stick the
landing, Vinny Mammone
said.
CLAWS is the only rehabilitation center in the
four surrounding counties.
Kindra Mammone said public events like this release
bring attention to the work
that CLAWS does in providing care for the animals.
Amanda Bock and her son
Peyton had never heard of
CLAWS before Saturday.
We were here for my other
sons baseball game, and we
just saw it, said Bock, an
assistant professor of special
education at William Peace

DTH/VERONICA BURKHART
Vinny Mammone, treasurer for CLAWS Inc., holds one of their rescue birds, Khalitra, a great horned owl who is blind in one eye.

University. They witnessed the


release, and she was able to
hold Grip, the African raven.
(This information is) nice
to know if I find an injured
bird, Bock said. I have in the

past found injured birds and


tried to find a place to take
them. Now I know where to
take them.
@Bella_Lupoli
city@dailytarheel.com

Hes Not T-shirts point nger at broader issue


By Ziyad Habash
Staff Writer

In response to a fatal
drunken driving crash near
Chapel Hill in July, former
UNC student Cole Boyer has
taken a stand and created
T-shirts emblazoned with the
slogans Frees Not and Stop
Driving Drunk.
Boyer, who designed the
shirts himself, is selling them
for $20 on teespring.com
until Oct. 6. The proceeds go
to the GoFundMe that supports the family members of
crash victim Darlene McGee.
On July 19, former UNC
student Chandler Kania

drove drunk and hit a car


as he was going the wrong
way on I-85, resulting in the
deaths of three people and
injuring another. He had
purchased alcohol underage
at Hes Not Here.
On Sept. 2, the state ABC
Commission recommended
Hes Not surrender its liquor
license on or before Nov. 6.
The local bar is a popular
destination in Chapel Hill
and is well-known for its
oversized Blue Cups.
Hes Not Here is as much
Carolina as the Old Well for
some people, junior Will
Henriques said.
Henriques believes the

sanctions are too severe.


I dont think a bar that
has served the students and
community and has become
a true staple of Chapel
Hill should be totally lost
to everyone based on one
night, he said.
UNC ethics professor Lois
Boynton said bars face a
financial and moral dilemma
when it comes to serving
underage clients.
There is not an easy
answer, she said in an email.
While bars may put themselves at a disadvantage by not
opening their doors to students
who are not of drinking age,
they can also risk of fines and

This is the age of Uber. There is never a


reason to drive drunk.
Cole Boyer
former UNC student and creator of the T-shirts

revocation of their licenses


if they serve those who are
underage. For a place like Hes
Not Here, those penalties could
put them out of business.
Boyer described the downtown bar as an institution of
Chapel Hill.
It is a safe place to be introduced to drinking, he said.
Boyer said he assigns singular responsibility for the
accident to the driver.

This is the age of Uber.


There is never a reason to
drive drunk, he said.
Junior Sultan Henson was
less sympathetic toward Hes
Not.
If these establishments
want to keep their place, they
should be model businesses.
It is important to keep up
standards, he said.
Although Boyer has only
sold a couple shirts, he said

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Help Wanted

Direct Support
Professional
We are currently recruiting for
motivated and enthusiastic individuals
to work with residents with
developmental disabilities of all ages!
A great opportunity for psychology
and social work students!
Various shifts available
including PT and FT.

More information
and application available at

$10.10/hr.

http://www.rsi-nc.org/

Child Care Wanted


WEEKEND SITTER needed 3-6 hrs/weekend. Must be willing to babysit during UNC
football games. Kids are 5, 7 and 9. Near
campus. $13/hr. Please send resume to
chapelhillsitter@gmail.com.
PART-TIME BABYSITTER. Seeking an afterschool babysitter for 2 middle school girls.
Flexible schedule: 3 days/wk, 3:30-5:30/6pm.
Duties: Homework help and possibly drop
off to activities. khermichel@yahoo.com or
919-448-4909.
PART-TIME CHILD CARE NEEDED for boy (17
months-old). Perfect for students with 2-3 days
availability. Tu/Th/F 9am-1pm. $12/hr. Walking distance from campus. Driving not needed.
rekhapitts@yahoo.com.

YMCA AFTERSCHOOL
COUNSELOR
Counselors needed for fun and engaging afterschool program at the Chapel Hill-Carrboro
YMCA. Hours are 2-6pm. Opportunity to work
with K-5th aged kids in active and creative afterschool activities emphasizing the Ys core
values of honesty, respect, caring and responsibility. Apply online at the link provided online
or contact Youth Director Nick Kolb (Nick.
Kolb@YMCATriangle.org) for more information. 919-442-9622.
LOOKING FOR dependable, compassionate person to work with an 11 year-old
autistic girl in the afternoons. Reply to
rosalindjane.allen@gmail.com
and
acquire2001@yahoo.com.

For Rent
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ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in


this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
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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
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the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
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ONE MONTH FREE RENT!


Apply by 10/1. Internet, cable, HBO,
W/D included. Only a few homes left!
612Hillsborough.com, 919-636-5132.

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Announcements

the popularity is not important to him.


He said he believes the
important thing to focus on
is combating drunken driving
through selling T-shirts.
Senior Susie Proctor questioned sending the money to
the families after they had sued
Hes Not and La Residence.
It would make sense to
donate the money to drunk
driving prevention, she said.
But Boyer said he had a
moral obligation to donate the
proceeds to the McGee family.
Its simply the right thing
to do.

For Rent

Help Wanted

Research Computing
Help Wanted!

RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES: Now


showing and leasing properties for 2016/17
school year. Walk to campus, 1BR-6BR
available. Contact via merciarentals.com or
919-933-8143.

MERCIA

2BR/2.5BA DUPLEX ON BUSLINE. Convenient


to campus, open floor plan, lovely hardwood
floors, covered parking. $950/mo. Pets negotiable. Contact Fran Holland Properties,
fhollandprop@gmail.com.
BIKE FROM THIS 2BR/2BA HOUSE on Branch
Street (off of MLK Blvd). Lovely hardwood
floors, great room, 1 car garage and large
fenced in yard. $1,300/mo. Fran Holland Properties. Email fhollandprop@gmail.com or text
919-630-3229.
LOVELY 3BR/2BA HOME ON WOODED lot.
Lots of windows, Convenient to I-40 this
open floor plan features fireplace, hardwood
floors thru house, large deck. Pets negotiable
with fee. $1,390/mo. Contact Fran Holland
Properties: fhollandprop@gmail.com or text
919-630-3229.
GRAD STUDENTS: THIS Carrboro 1BR apartment above garage. Very quiet neighborhood.
$540/mo. For more info contact Fran Holland
Properties, fhollandprop@gmail.com.
AVAILABLE 9/1. 2BR/1.5BA Carrboro townhome at 504 Hillsborough Street, Greenbriar
Apartments, Carrboro. Pets negotiable, on
busline. $775/mo. Water included. Fran Holland Properties. Email fhollandprop@gmail.
com or text 919-630-3229.

Help Wanted
PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST. The Beehive Salon
in Carrboro needs a personable, multitasker.
Weekday evening shifts. Stop by the salon and
fill out an application. 919-932-4483.
SALES ADMIN, SOFTWARE COMPANY. Were
hiring a sales admin to assist our software
sales team with day to day tasks from answering emails, processing orders, answering
phones, etc. Being detailed oriented and having excellent communication skills is a must.
Our offices are located in Southern Village.
Short commute to UNC campus and on busline.
Flexible part-time hours, minimum 20 hrs/wk.
$15/hr. Email jobs@cdata.com to apply.
PARALEGAL, LEGAL ASSISTANT. Ability to
multitask, good telephone skills, writing skills,
computer literacy are required. Computer
savvy and work with a legal case management
and accounting system as well as occasionally
using programs such as Excel. Some secretarial
type work such as answering phones, schedul-

HOROSCOPES

Help Wanted

ITS Research Computing is seeking part-time


student help to provide technical support
for UNC researchers.
Flexible schedule, 10-20 hrs/week
Earn $18/hour
Opportunity to learn
about advanced computing.
See http://its.unc.edu/research/its-research-computing/
graduate-student-position for more details or contact
research@unc.edu to apply or for more information.

ing appointments, typing, filing, making copies, etc. Salary commensurate with education
and experience. 919-960-5848.

Lost & Found


FOUND: BOX OF VARIOUS ITEMS in the middle
of East Franklin Street Wednesday 9/2. Address
label on box: From Urban Outfitters in Nevada
to Los Angeles, CA. Text 336-437-7888 or text
336-437-7199. Texts only.

Rooms
FREE, PRIVATE ROOM for someone 20+ in
exchange for housecleaning, laundry, cat care,
errands for retired woman. F busline. Nonsmoking. References required. 919-949-3678,
cwcook@gmail.com.

Sublets
SUNSTONE APARTMENT SUBLET. Spacious
2BR/2BA third floor apartment available now.
4 buslines, free parking and pet friendly. $975/
mo. with September rent already paid. Email
sunstonesublet@gmail.com.
UNIVERSITY APARTMENTS SUBLET: 1BR
ground floor apartment with patio available
now in University Apartments. Easy walk to
campus. Will pay for parking for 11 months.
571-246-7067.

Volunteering
BE AN ESL VOLUNTEER! Help school age
ESL students from various countries, Chapel
Hill-Carrboro Schools. Training 9/28 or 9/30,
5:30-8:30pm. Register: http://bit.ly/CHCCS2volunteer Email:gmccay@chccs.k12.nc.us or
call 919-967-8211 ext. 28339.

If September 21st is Your Birthday...


Enjoy this year in the spotlight. Dedicate
yourself for community benefit. Have your
home support your game. Get family on
board. Share resources for common goals,
especially after 9/27. Fall in love again after
3/8. Generate new income after 3/23. Follow
passion.
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is an 8 - Crazy dreams seem
possible. The next two days bring
lots of career movement. Make an
important connection. Plan your
moves. Allow for miracles. Abandon
old fears. Youre being tested.
Angels guide your actions.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8 - The way is blocked,
so sit still for a while. Plan a trip
over the next few days. Research
the route, destination and possible
fun to be had. Review options.
Theres no need to decide yet.

Help Wanted

LUXURY DOWNTOWN CONDOMINIUM concierge needed. Must be smart, attentive and


reliable. $12/hr. Part-time. Saturdays, 7am7pm, Sundays 1-7pm. Email resume for consideration: 140westconcierge@gmail.com.

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Gemini (May 21-June 20)


Today is an 8 - Manage finances today and tomorrow. Work together
to resolve priorities. Discuss what
you each love and want. Use money
to make money. Opposites attract
even more so now. Keep your sense
of humor.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 7 - Negotiate to refine
the plan. Work with a partner
for the next few days. A conflict
between love and money could
arise. Work it out. Dont be afraid if
you dont know how. Get promises
in writing.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 9 - Focus on your work
over the next few days. Gather
support for your project. Ask for
assistance and get it. Dont fund
a fantasy. A positive attitude plus
persistent efforts add up to some
serious cash.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 9 - Finish what you said
youd do before starting a new
project. Romance is a growing possibility over the next few days. Its
getting fun. Use your connections.
Work with what you have. Practical,
inventive design delivers.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is an 8 - Cleaning house leads
to the discovery of buried treasure.
Begin a practical domestic phase.
Make changes. Reinforce infrastructure. Home and family take priority
today and tomorrow. Get together
and draw up your fantasies. Realize
a shared dream.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 9 - Accept a challenging
assignment and learn new tricks.
Resist the temptation to spend on
shiny stuff you dont need. Get what
you do. Write, perform and express
yourself. Youre especially clever
today and tomorrow.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 9 - You can make lots of
money today and tomorrow. Work
interferes with play. Take the cash,
and ask a loved one for patience.
Satisfy the customer, and celebrate
after the job is done. New opportunities merit attention.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7 - Enjoy a two-day
self-confident phase. Increase your
leadership. Take responsibility for a
project, and provide results. Attend
meetings and participate. Work with
friends. Count your blessings. Its
an excellent time to travel, or just
go out.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8 - Get into thoughtful planning mode. Dont worry
ineffectively. Send someone else
ahead. Contemplate your next move
carefully over the next few days.
Meditate in seclusion. Study the
situation. Imagine different solutions
and consequences. Listen to your
heart.

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News

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, September 21, 2015

Library research hubs give new space for innovation


By Jamie Gwaltney
Staff Writer

The UNC research hubs,


located in Davis Library, the
Health Sciences Library and
the Kenan Science Library,
provide a more innovative
way to do research.
Joe Williams, the director of
public services for UNC libraries, said the three hubs are
coordinated and share information, but each one is specialized for the researchers need.
A researcher can walk
into any location, and theyre
connected to a whole pool of
resources of library staff and
staff from other partnered
organizations, Williams said.

These hubs are not just


for class assignments and
research projects, said Judy
Panitch, director of library
communications. Anyone
affiliated with UNC is free to
use the resources for no cost.
People come for their
personal ideas and passions,
Panitch said.
Since opening, the hubs
have seen increased student
use, Williams said. He said
more than 1,400 transactions, whether research
questions or consultations,
have been reported at the
Davis location alone.
Everything is evolving,
Panitch said. One of the
ideas of the hub is that it was

sort of where things happen


and where we connect people
and connect with other parts
of campus. I think weve realized that quite well.
The campus organization Be a Maker, known as
BeAM, creates a network of
Makerspaces, which are collections of resources for students to use in their creative
and innovative processes.
The research hub at the
Kenan Science Library has
Makerspaces with six 3-D
printers, a 3-D scanner,
soldering and other creative spaces. The library has
recorded 263 uses of the 3-D
printers and 22 workshops.
The research hubs

have hosted fairs, Global


Entrepreneurship Week, a
Create-a-thon and a Women in
Science Wikipedia Edit-a-thon.
One project, through a
partnership with MakNet and
the Morehead Planetarium
and Science Center, is called
the Maker-In-Residence. In
the first program, undergraduates are collaborating with an
expert to build a telescope.
The expectation is that
folks will pay it forward.
They will have this expertise
and hopefully share it by
either running a workshop
or volunteering in the BeAM
group, said Danianne Mizzy,
head of Kenan Science
Information Services.

Williams said UNC libraries research hubs have surpassed expectations, but officials have more plans in store.
The Kenan Science Library
is still completing renovations
with a grand opening event in
the works.
The hubs have helped
students complete many
projects, from helping
womens studies classes map
catcalling on campus to creating teaching models for
campus professors.
It just met such a need,
so much energy around it,
Mizzy said. People do such

amazing stuff on this campus.


The research and the inquiry
and the projects that come up
are fascinating.
Lisa Croucher, executive
director of Triangle Research
Libraries Network, said she
understands the importance
of different types of research.
These hubs bring together
a diversity of disciplines that
allow faculty and students
to learn from each other. It
creates an opportunity to
access technology and human
resources, Croucher said.
university@dailytarheel.com

Chapel Hill hosts rst PARK(ing) Day


A Franklin Street
parking space turned
into a park on Friday.
By Burhan Kadibhai
Staff Writer

Between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m.


Friday, four UNC students
came together with fellow
classmates and organized
the first ever Chapel Hill
PARK(ing) Day.
Within the confines of
one parking space in front of
Starbucks on Franklin Street,
students constructed a miniature park in the hopes of
bringing the global event to
the Chapel Hill community.
PARK(ing) Day, a global
open-source event, started
when Rebar, an art and design
studio in San Francisco, transformed a metered parking
space into a public space with
a tree, a bench and grass.
The parking space was
decorated and equipped with
many homemade items, like
a benches, an assortment of
plants and colorful, artistic
displays. The event also featured activities like mini-golf,
sidewalk chalk and live music.
UNC students were excited
to see the artistic innovation, but older and younger
residents of Chapel Hill and

ACKLAND

FROM PAGE 1

producing new facilities.


Rather, he said the museum
currently has no intentions
of building a new museum.
I believe that if we have
a great plan and great ideas,
the money will come, Nisbet
said. Expansion and a new
building are important to
bear in mind, but what were
talking about is more of programmatic shift.

Carrboro were also excited for


the event.
According to the organizers, there were more than two
hundred people in attendance
throughout the day. One of
the many visitors was UNC
senior Mackenzie Day.
I think the purpose of this
event was to create a space
downtown where people
come together, Day said.
Meg McGurk, executive
director of the Chapel Hill
Downtown Partnership,
rented the parking space for
the day and purchased several
Starbucks gift cards for the
event organizers to hand out
to participants of the event.
Caroline Lindquist, a
senior environmental studies
major and city and regional
planning minor, was one of
four students who orchestrated the independent event.
Other students involved in
planning and coordinating
the event were sophomore
Brian Vaughn, who is a member of The Daily Tar Heels
editorial board, senior Alexi
Wordell and junior Evan Day.
The thing I love about
PARK(ing) is its the idea of
using design to help create
community, Lindquist said.
Promoting this event, we
made sure not to say our
park to make it accessible to
all citizens.

The events student organizers got the idea for bringing


sustainable research to the
Chapel Hill community while
studying abroad in Europe
as part of the Burch Field
Research Seminar. On this
trip, the students saw many
grassroots efforts geared
towards creative sustainability
and the use of public spaces as
communitywide movements.
Senior Gray Johnston also
took part in the research seminar. When he arrived at the
event in the morning, he was
greeted and assisted by a man
who is homeless and who had

Wendy Hower, director of


engagement and marketing
at Nasher, helped oversee
the museums update with
the creation of its New
Galleries exhibit.
She said the museums
update, which included reconfiguring the space to better fit
its growing collections, was a
large project, but one that the
Ackland can utilize.
Its not always the answer
to do more or expand a physical building, Hower said.

Focusing on your strengths is


the key.
Nisbet agrees.
The Acklands facilities are
not ideal, but my belief is that
great art and great ideas can
transcend that, Nisbet said.
If the art is good, the
ideas are good, the conversations are good and the
teaching is good issues
with the facilities seem
much less important.
@mmorganpaigee
arts@dailytarheel.com

DTH/JIE HUANG
(From left) Seniors Lauren Moore, Mackenzie Day and Thais
Weiss sit on Franklin Street for the first ever PARK(ing) Day.

read about PARK(ing) day. The


man assisted him and the other
students in setting up the layout of the parking space.
Charles Cleaver, a town
resident, was excited to see
the handmade park.
I think this is a really great
use of public space. Chapel
Hill needs to do more things
to engage with the people,
Cleaver said. The more we
are getting people to care
about space that we all use
and are all responsible for, the
more we are getting out.
@BurhanKadibhai
city@dailytarheel.com

Were having it all


Kelsey and Alice learn
how to have it all with
advice only a mom could
give. Go online for podcast.

games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

Level:

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

Solution to
Fridays puzzle

TEACH

FROM PAGE 1
exposed to vast inequalities in
the educational system.
Students would tell me
things like, I cant do this, I
dont have internet at home,
or, I cant go to the library
because my mom doesnt have
a car, Fussell said.
She said she was devastated by these conversations
and decided to apply to Teach
for America.
Fussell was accepted into the
program and began working
with the Miami-Dade corps in
2014. While she is grateful for
the experience, she said there
are parts of Teach for America
that have been stressful.
The organization places
graduates in schools that
dont necessarily have enough
teachers, and the declining
rate of participants in Teach
for America only makes that
more difficult, she said.
The difference between
Teach for America not having
recruits and having recruits is
seen at my school, Fussell said.
The year before me, there were
six Teach for America recruits.
My year there were four, and
this year there are zero.
Fussell said her school
was left with six vacant
teaching positions meaning some students were left
having new substitute teachers every day, an effect that
puts their education even
further behind.
She said parents arent
able to advocate for their
kids because they had the
same experience.
The students in these
low-income communities
dont know what its like to
have a really strong teacher,
Fussell said.
university@dailytarheel.com

Finding grace in service


After losing her home,
Theresa West found her passion for service by cleaning.
Visit Town Talk blog online.

Volleyball back on track


After losing to Michigan
State, womens volleyball
came back to beat out
Michigan. See pg. 6 for story.

Caffeinating in style
With the semester in full
swing, check out the best
local coffee shops to get work
done. Visit Town Talk blog.

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


ACROSS
1 Light fog
5 No ifs, __ ...
9 Italian city known for a
shroud
14 __acte
15 Come in last
16 Have __ in the hole
17 Make laugh in a big way
18 *Pickled peppers picker
20 Deodorant choice
22 Raised ones glass to
23 Play lightly, as a guitar
24 Greek Xs
25 Walked stealthily
28 Bandleader Artie
32 TV network with an eye
logo
35 Reclined
36 1970s New York mayor
Abe
37 *Miss Manners concern
41 Classroom assistants
42 In unison, in music
43 Paranormal ability, for
short
44 MDs pronto
45 Very, very old
48 Mailbox
opening
49 Energy
53 Proud member
of a select
group
57 Breathe
59 *Clog-clearing
company
61 Some old
radios
62 Love to pieces
63 Grandkid

spoiler, often
64 Cookie grain
65 Clearing-in-the-woods
shelters
66 Breaks off
67 Water slide users cry
DOWN
1 Flat-topped lands
2 Coastline recess
3 Fab Four drummer
Ringo
4 *Compete, as for a role
5 Purina dog food brand
6 Christmas carol
7 Annual reason to reset
clocks: Abbr.
8 Do a slow burn
9 Spanish appetizers
10 Les tats-__
11 Hanging on every word
12 Slurpee alternative
13 The Big Bang Theory
type
19 __ rage: PED users
aggression

21 Expresses happiness
24 Address book entry
26 Golf goal
27 Even score
28 Understand
29 Detest
30 Pts. and qts., for two
31 Cry ones eyes out
32 Tax pros
33 London native,
informally
34 Fizz in a gin fizz
36 __ Aires
38 Shelter adoptee
39 Dictator Amin
40 Canadian prov.
bordering Vt.
45 Just want to add ...

(C)2015 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


All rights reserved.

46 Nary a soul
47 *Typewriter area,
letterwise, for the
answers to starred clues
48 Stable studs
50 Biblical prophet
51 Chatter endlessly
52 Steppenwolf author
Hermann
53 Part of Q.E.D.
54 Miners bonanza
55 Bring __!: Lets
fight!
56 Civil suit cause
57 Tear violently
58 Gay Nineties and
Roaring Twenties
60 Almond-colored

dailytarheel.com

Monday, September 21, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

SportsMonday

SCOREBOARD
CROSS COUNTRY: UNCs Stephen Mulherin earned first place in the mens 5K
race at the Adidas XC Challenge
WOMENS TENNIS: UNCs Hayley Carter
finished second in the Oracle/ITA Masters

Winn, Tar Heel oense break through


The sophomore forward led the mens
soccer team with two goals on Friday
MENS SOCCER

NORTH CAROLINA
NOTRE DAME

4
2

By Logan Ulrich
Assistant Sports Editor

DTH/KATIE WILLIAMS
Alan Winn (18) breaks past Patrick Hodan (27) during Fridays matchup against Notre Dame.

In 2014, the North


Carolina mens soccer team
was the most explosive in the
nation, scoring an incendiary
52 goals to lead all teams.
But the Tar Heels will
need to replace 42 of those
goals, due to players graduating or being injured.
Sophomore forwards Alan
Winn and Zach Wright were
called on to fill the void, but
their youth compared to
UNCs experienced lineup
from a season ago has created mixed results.
I wouldnt call them rambunctious, but theyre excitable, Coach Carlos Somoano
said. (Last year) we were able
to give information and it was
absorbed pretty quickly.
With three goals in 2014
to lead all returning players, Winn was expected to
become the centerpiece of the
Tar Heel offense. Yet through
the first five games he failed
to score until No. 3 UNCs

4-2 win against No. 2 Notre


Dame on Friday.
Winns best asset is his
blazing speed. Like 2014 with
forward Andy Craven, UNC
plays its best with speed at
the point of the attack.
We have a lot of speed
up top and we want to test
that, said junior defender
Colton Storm.
Figuring out how to unlock
that speed has been the
challenge. Heading into the
match against Notre Dame,
Somoano and the coaching
staff spent extra time in practice on the attack working to
set Winn loose.
Whatever adjustments they
made worked. Winn scored
his first two goals of the season in UNCs victory.
Zach was making brilliant
runs in behind, Winn said.
When (my teammates) do
their jobs, it makes my job a
lot easier.
Winns speed makes him a
threat to pick off lazy passes
by opposing defenders. Hes
also dangerous running
underneath lob passes from
the midfield behind the back
line of the defense.
But one of the most dangerous uses of the overall
team speed the Tar Heels

possess is the counterattack.


Somoano said his 2014-15
team knew enough to execute
counterattacks to perfection.
With the youth on his current team, Somoano said hes
needed to do more teaching.
With this group, we need
to really punish teams on the
counter if theyre going to press
us, he said. You need to really
break it down as to what that
means and how to do it.
But Somoano said this
young UNC team makes up
for what it lacks in experience
with enthusiasm. He said he
has been impressed with the
fight in his team and how
they play hard for each other
until the whistle blows.
Its led to goals for UNC
in the last five seconds of
the first half three times this
season, including against
Notre Dame to take the lead
for good.
For a young team still
searching for an identity, that
sort of competitiveness could
be something to build on.
Thats more important
than perfectly executed
counterattacks sometimes,
Somoano said.
Hopefully we get both.
@loganulrich
sports@dailytarheel.com

Field hockey seniors relish rst home wins


FIELD HOCKEY

NORTH CAROLINA
MIAMI (OHIO)

3
0

By Will Bryant
Staff Writer

For the North Carolina field


hockey teams three seniors Casey
Di Nardo, Nina Notman and Emily
Wold the twilight season is well
underway. But in the final home
opener of their four-year careers,
nothing was taken for granted.
When they are freshmen, they
feel like they will live forever, Coach
Karen Shelton said.
A year is such a long time, but
you know it goes so quickly. Your
senior year, you just cant believe its
your last go-around, and everything
takes on added meaning.
The Tar Heel seniors seized the
moment in UNCs (7-1, 1-1 ACC)
first two home contests this weekend, routing No. 9 Louisville 5-0 on
Friday before dismantling Miami
(Ohio) in 3-0 fashion on Sunday.

After scoring three goals in the


teams first six road games, Di Nardo
pushed across No. 3 UNCs first goal
at Francis E. Henry Stadium this
season during Fridays match. And
at the conclusion of the victory, the
realization of this being her final
campaign began to set in.
Every time we do the anthem, I
realize its one less time Ill be out
here with the team, she said
Di Nardo wasnt the only senior
to find the back of the cage against
the Cardinals (6-2, 0-2 ACC). Wold
extended the Tar Heels lead to
3-0 in the first half, and Notman
notched the fourth and fifth goals of
the game to secure the sentimental
victory for the senior trio.
The seniors realize what it takes
to win, and what it means to wear
the uniform, Shelton said.
Wold, who added her teamleading eighth goal in Sundays
affair, expressed the sacred aspect
of this being her final year at
North Carolina.
It is your last year, Wold said.
You just have to savor it and hold
on to it.

Although each senior contributed


on the weekend, it was Wold who
stole the show. In addition to scoring
two goals, the midfielder tallied an
assist and a defensive save to lead
her squad to early home success.
Being a senior makes me want to
do more, Wold said. It makes you
feel more in control.
While the seniors were cherishing their final season in Francis E.
Henry Stadium, the freshmen were
busy making their first impressions
in it.
Freshman Ashley Hoffman
recorded her first collegiate goal on
Sunday against the Redhawks (5-4,
1-0 Mid-American Conference),
leading Di Nardo to reminisce on
her first goal in a Tar Heel uniform.
We werent supposed to score
because we were up by so many,
said Di Nardo of her first career
goal. But whether youre supposed
to score or not, the first one is
always exciting.
Three years later, Di Nardo and
her teammates are making the most
of their swan songs. And with their
team ranked No. 3 in the nation,

DTH/ALEX KORMANN
Senior midfielder Emily Wold (9) takes aim against the Miami (Ohio) goalie in
Sundays 3-0 victory. All three seniors scored in UNCs opening homestand.

Shelton knows the importance of


her seniors presence for the Tar
Heels championship hopes.
Emily Wold is a world class player, Nina Notman is stepping up and
really providing tremendous leader-

ship (and) Casey Di Nardo is giving


us a lot of energy up front, she said.
Im proud of how our seniors are
leading the way.
@WBOD3
sports@dailytarheel.com

Volleyball team wins for Womens soccer wins in ACC opener


CAROLINA
2
injured Hayley McCorkle NORTH
VIRGINIA TECH
1
WOMENS SOCCER

VOLLEYBALL

NORTH CAROLINA
3
MICHIGAN0
By Megan Marenghi
Staff Writer

The North Carolina volleyball team proved its toughness on Saturday night in the
wake of tragedy almost 24
hours earlier.
Despite Saturday nights 3-0
victory over No. 20 Michigan,
the ACC-Big Ten Classic began
on a much less triumphant
note for North Carolina, who
fell to Michigan State 3-1 on
Friday night.
The fluctuation in momentum
and the multiple mishaps ultimately cost the Tar Heels (3-6)
the game against the Spartans
(8-3), despite a well-fought
comeback in the third set.
But the loss to Michigan
State was not the one that
brought tears to the Tar Heels
eyes. Redshirt junior Hayley
McCorkle tore her Achilles
tendon in the third set of Friday
nights match, which will cost
her the rest of the season. In
26 sets this season, she tallied
49 kills, ranking fourth on the
team for kills.
Every time I talk about

Hayley, said senior Paige


Neuenfeldt, choking back tears,
It makes me cry right now.
The Tar Heels made a huge
turnaround on Saturday evening in their game against the
Wolverines (10-1). Saturdays
game was about redemption
and proving they have the
ability to beat a ranked and
undefeated team.
Everyone showed up to win,
and the Tar Heels swept the
Wolverines in three sets.
Im real proud of our team
being able to turn it around
in a short amount of time,
Coach Joe Sagula said. We
had a lot of doubt yesterday
and this is going to build some
confidence again.
The Tar Heels were determined to avoid the same
mistakes on Saturday that
plagued them on Friday a
determination that was apparent the minute the team
stepped onto the court. In
addition to playing confidently, the team was playing for a
bigger purpose.
They were playing for Hayley.
Hayley is like my other half
she is my counterpart so I
knew I had to step up for both
her and me and as well as the
team, said redshirt sophomore
Taylor Fricano, a transfer from
Wisconsin. Hayley means the

Weve hit a turning


point in our season
where now were
learning from this.
Paige Neuenfeldt
senior middle hitter

world to me and I knew I had


to do a lot for her.
The team hopes this game
will be a turning point as
they head into conference
play, which begins Friday at
Virginia Tech.
The focus for the Tar Heels
will be learning from this victory and carrying it into the
coming games.
Weve hit a turning point
in our season where now were
learning from this, Neuenfeldt
said. We are going to bring
that same game where everyone
played great together for the
rest of the season.
Finding inspiration from
McCorkles injury, the Tar Heels
now know they have what it
takes to defeat top teams
even in the face of adversity.
Ill just say this, what a difference a day can make, Sagula
said. Good thing one day ends
and another one starts.
@Meg_Marenghi21
sports@dailytarheel.com

By Mohammed Hedadji
Senior Writer

The North Carolina womens soccer


team faced its toughest test yet.
The No. 3 Tar Heels traveled to
Blacksburg, Va., to take on No. 9 Virginia
Tech on Saturday night. For both teams,
it was their first matchup against a top10 opponent.
Both teams had yet to record a loss this
season, and neither looked ready to fall in
their first conference game of the season.
But for the Tar Heels, it was Katie
Bowens play that made the difference in
a tight 2-1 victory. In a game where scoring opportunities were limited, her play
in the midfield helped her team mount
meaningful attacks against the stiff
Hokie defense.
The Tar Heels (8-0-1, 1-0 ACC), with the
help of Bowen, moved the ball well in the
first half, firing seven shots. But it would
take a special shot to get past Virginia Tech
goalkeeper Kaylyn Smith, who had two
saves in the first half.
In the 21st minute, Joanna Boyles delivered that shot, blasting a 25-yard strike
into the top corner to give UNC a 1-0 lead.
The Tar Heels took the lead into halftime, but the Hokies (8-1-1, 0-1 ACC)
answered less than three minutes into the
second half with a goal of their own.
Shots were much harder to come by for
UNC in the second half, as the Tar Heels
managed just two in the entire period.
But two was all they needed. UNC once
again turned to Bowen, and the senior

answered with the game-winning goal in


the 61st minute.
Bowen was asked to play defense and
midfield throughout the game, and with
her help on the back line, UNC warded off
the Hokies to claim the win.

Quotable
That was Katie Bowens best game in a
Tar Heel uniform. She not only scored the
game-winning goal, but she helped secure
our defense to help us ride out the 2-1 victory. Coach Anson Dorrance of Bowens
performance.

Notable
Bowens game-winner marked her first
goal of the season. After failing to score in
both her sophomore and junior season, the
goal also marked her first goal since the
2012 season, when she scored two goals.

Three numbers that matter


1: Boyles goal in the first half was the
first goal Virginia Tech had allowed in the
first half of any game this season.
11: Dorrance played as many reserves
(11) in Saturdays game as starters, showing his confidence in his second unit
against tough opponents.
9: The Tar Heels took only nine shots
against Virginia Tech. It marked the first
time they have been held to single digits in
shooting all season.

Whats next?
UNC hosts Syracuse on Thursday at
Fetzer Field at 7 p.m.
@_Brohammed
sports@dailytarheel.com

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