Professional Documents
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***
London Perrantes knew
there would be backlash.
In late September, the
senior and his Virginia mens
basketball teammates knew
they wanted to take a stand. So
they talked in group chats and
post-practice meetings, looking for the right way to support
Kaepernick and his message.
On Sept. 29, Perrantes
posted a picture on Instagram
of the team wearing all black,
linking arms and kneeling on
the Cavaliers logo.
That was the only way we
felt that we can get peoples
attention he said. When
you create conversation, a lot
of people take actions with it.
UNC players have made
similar, but less public, protests.
During the football teams
win over James Madison,
DTH/ALEX KORMANN
Some high school, collegiate and professional athletes have knelt during the national anthem to protest racial injustice in the U.S.
Robinson, a sophomore on
the Boston College mens
basketball team. Were representing something more than
ourselves.
DTH/JORDYN CONNELL
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump held a rally in Selma, North Carolina on Thursday.
You, the people, have the power to make this life free and beautiful.
CHARLIE CHAPLIN
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Staff Writer
PlayMakers Repertory
Company presented their
own unique interpretation of Arthur Millers The
Crucible on the evening
of Nov. 1 as the production
enters the final stages of its
theatrical run in the Paul
Green Theatre.
Since the play opened to
local audiences on Oct. 19,
chatter continues to circulate around this adapted
depiction of Millers classic
piece.
Director Desdemona
Chiang based the story off
the playwrights original
play published in 1953. She
illustrates the story of John
Proctor (Ariel Shafir), Abigail
Williams (Allison Altman)
and the radical townspeople
Someone reported a
breaking and entering at the
1800 block of Legion Road at
9:39 a.m. Wednesday, according to Chapel Hill police
reports.
The person broke into the
victims car and stole a checkbook and a bible, valued at
$41 total, reports state.
ZITA VOROS
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POLICE LOG
Someone reported a
breaking and entering at the
Burger King at 450 S. Elliott
Road at 5:05 a.m. Monday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person broke a glass
door, valued at $500, and
stole a cash register drawer,
valued at $150, with $128 in
it, reports state.
CORRECTIONS
Due to a reporting error, the Oct. 28 page 7 story, Advocacy group urges action on N.C. student
debt, incorrectly stated the name of a UNC law professor. The professor interviewed was Deborah
Gerhardt.
The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
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 Hannah Smoot managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
Like: facebook.com/dailytarheel
6th Annual
Brian K. Kobilka, MD
2012 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Dr. Brian Kobilka earned his M.D. from the Yale School of Medicine in 1981, and
carried out his clinical training at Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis. During his clinical
training he became interested in intensive care medicine, where urgent interventions
often required treatments that acted on G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), such as
the adrenergic receptors, to control heart rate and blood pressure. It was this interest that
motivated him to pursue a position as a cardiology fellow in the laboratory of Dr. Robert
Lefkowitz at Duke University, giving him the opportunity to explore basic research and
ultimately carry out seminal work towards understanding the adrenergic receptors.
While working in the Lefkowitz lab, Dr. Kobilka cloned the gene that codes for the 2
adrenergic receptor (2AR), and soon thereafter several other adrenergic receptors.
Analysis of these initial sequences revealed a common transmembrane architecture
similar to that of rhodopsin, a GPCR specialized for light detection. This work opened
up the gateway to a new field of GPCR biology, and began Dr. Kobilkas pursuit to
understand these receptors at the molecular level.
Dr. Kobilka joined the faculty at the Stanford University School of Medicine in 1989,
where his lab focuses on understanding the structure and mechanism of GPCR activation.
In 2007, he made a major breakthrough towards these goals when his lab published the
structure of the 2AR receptor in an inactive state bound to an antagonist ligand. Then,
in 2011 his lab determined the structure of the agonist-bound 2AR receptor interacting
with a G protein, a structure that has been called a molecular masterpiece. Together,
his research tells a complete story of GPCR activation and opened the door to structurebased drug design. Today, it is estimated that nearly half of all medications target this type
of receptor.
Dr. Kobilka was awarded the 2012 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Dr. Robert Lefkowitz
for his outstanding contributions towards understanding GPCRs. Dr. Kobilka is currently
the Helene Irwin Fagan Chair in Cardiology at Stanford, where he continues to
revolutionize our understanding of these receptors. (adapted from www.nobelprize.org)
Schedule:
Dr. Oliver Smithies was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2007 for his work
on gene modification, and he has generously pledged his personal monetary winnings of the Nobel
Prize to the institutions at which he has been affiliated throughout his career. His hope and vision is
that each school use the funds to inspire a new generation of scientist; just like he was inspired by
Linus Pauling while an undergraduate at Oxford university.
At UNC-CH, we have chosen to honor Dr. Smithies generosity by holding an annual symposium
in his name where prominent Nobel Laureates will share their inspiring stories and highlight
critical experiences and driving forces that lead to their successes. In keeping with the strong
liberal arts tradition of UNC-CH, Nobel Laureates of all disciplines will be invited to participate
in the symposium. In partnership with the School of Medicine Office of Research, we also hope
that outstanding Postdoctoral Fellows from multidisciplinary backgrounds across the institution
participate in the selection of the speaker and the organization of the event. Our intention is twofold: to recognize the valuable contributions of postdocs to UNCs research mission, and to provide
them with a venue for networking and improving professional development skills.
Opinion
TREY FLOWERS
DAVID FARROW
JONATHAN NUNEZ
KATE STOTESBERY
CHRIS DAHLIE
GEORGIA BRUNNER
ZAYNAB NASIF
ELIZA FILENE
WILL PARKER
SEYOUNG OH
CRYSTAL YUILLE
Jesus Gonzalez-Ventura
Juice with Jesus
Mark, on the strange events in the long line for President Obama
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Go for
the salad
or take
the jog?
NEXT
VIEWPOINTS
THE ISSUE: The Unsung Founders Memorial in McCorkle Place recognizes the
enslaved people who built UNC. Over the years, people eating or changing
their childs diaper on the statue have attracted controversy. These viewpoints
debate what the memorials purpose should be.
Theyre unsung,
but they should
not be forgotten
The Unsung
Founders works
just the way it is
EDITORIAL
TO THE EDITOR:
In the North Carolina
gubernatorial debate
between Gov. McCrory
and Roy Cooper, McCrory
touted his economic record
and slammed Cooper for
trying to make the campaign about social issues.
McCrorys critique is hypocritical on two fronts.
It is the height of hypocrisy for a governor who
supports House Bill 2
to boast of his economic
record. Unprecedented economic fallout over the bill
has cost the state millions
in expected revenue from
the withdrawal of the 2017
NBA All-Star Game, the
ACC football championship
and NCAA tournament
games. McCrory should be
running and hiding from
his economic record, not
highlighting it.
It is further hypocritical
to antagonize focusing on
social issues when North
Carolina has been the center of national controversy
for police shootings and
racial tension.
It should be a prerequisite for any candidate seeking our states highest office
to take a vested interest
in social issues. Given the
record of the McCrory-led
and Republican-dominated
General Assembly, it is easy
to see why he wishes to
divert attention from social
issues.
We must vote out
McCrory and vote in a governor who will champion
social issues and repeal HB2.
Holt McKeithan
First-year
Undecided
Kvetching board
kvetch:
v.1 (Yiddish) to complain
I made the mistake of RSVPing to the Obama rally for
Hillary. Now I am deleting
30,000 of her emails.
I still cant tell which is longer: the line to see Obama
or the line to get Alpine
around 10 a.m.
If you are stupid enough
to wear a cowboy costume
complete with a Wanted
sign AND break into dorm
rooms, attend Duke.
Apparently, you can play
for an esteemed varsity
basketball team, assault
women, garner 1K wins
for your coach (who will
remain nameless) and get
away with anything!
So I couldnt kvetch a
profanity when I was in
school, but I can now?
Thats a load of bullshit!
I am basically the left
projector in Murphy that
doesnt work because
there isnt a light on inside
at 8 a.m. the day after Halloween.
Because of the print quality in the DTH lately, the
solution to the previous
puzzle is now a puzzle.
Its sexy when people use
big words I dont know
when cramming for plant
biology at my table in
Davis. Also, I photosympathize with your plight.
I have a hard time believing that EVERY SINGLE
Sudoku this year has been
a 1. For those of us whose
self-worth is defined by
our ability to solve level 4
puzzles, this year has been
a disappointment indeed.
To all the tall people blocking my view of President
Obama but still complained about me jumping
up to see yeah, fuck you.
Donald Trump is not a
Nazi, technically.
If Trump wins, prepare for
all the hate on democracy
for all of 2017.
Dont get me wrong, I love
democracy, but Im happy
that N.C.s mail-in voter registration deadline was last
Friday so I can walk to class
without being asked five
times if Im registered to
vote at my current address.
The election is almost
over. The election is almost
over. The election is almost
ovveeeeerrrrrrrr. No more
Trump (hopefully).
Dear DTH, your Obama
pictures were good, but
you should fire whoever
wrote the extended caption in Thursdays paper.
Dear bicyclists, I know
saying on the left is polite
when passing someone
on the left. But since that
phrase always causes
me to jump left as youre
passing me, can you pick
another one?
Can I complain about big
swings in temperature
from morning to afternoon,
even when we keep having
75 degree days? Yes.
Send your one-to-two
sentence entries to
opinion@dailytarheel.com,
subject line kvetch.
SPEAK OUT
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ATHLETES
FROM PAGE 1
***
Larry Fedora wasnt doing
enough.
Every offseason, local police
officers come to campus to
meet with the football team.
But this season, the UNC
football coach organized a
CLINTON
FROM PAGE 1
including in Charlotte
he changed the tenor of the
meeting.
A lot of people of my color
are scared if we were to get
stopped by a cop, said junior
Joel Berry. So they came in
and talked to us about what to
do: two hands on the wheel,
just in case, when in doubt
theyll know that you dont
have anything in your hands
I didnt have a problem
with it at all, and I dont think
anyone on our team did.
Its not just at UNC.
Coaches for the Virginia,
Boston College and Miami
mens basketball teams have
brought in police chiefs and
town officials to speak with
their teams.
In addition to meeting
***
This isnt new.
While social issues permeating sports feels like
a recent phenomenon,
Larraaga remembers athletes like Tommie Smith and
Muhammad Ali using their
platforms five decades ago to
speak out against racism and
violence.
For many athletes, protesting is the most effective way
to instigate change.
Regardless if you wanna
do the things such as
Kaepernick is doing or do
something else, you always
TRUMP
FROM PAGE 1
Protect our
Progress.
Stand with
Hillary and
Democrats.
Vote today at
Church of the Cross
at 304 E Franklin St.
All Orange County residents can vote early at
Church of the Cross between now and November 5th.
HillaryClinton.com
MORRISON
FROM PAGE 1
Youre going to
have Pharrell so
were all going to be
happy tonight.
Deborah Ross
Democratic senatorial candidate
We will build a
wall. It will be a real
wall.
Donald Trump
Republican presidential nominee
He still grabbed
hold of my chin and
said give me
a kiss.
Ceciel Huiberts
International student
News
donations illegal
Leaking water
underground is
causing the damage.
By Elizabeth Barbour
Staff Writer
A segment of Skipper
Bowles Drive will be closed
until early January to complete emergency repairs on
a steam tunnel leak. Until
construction is complete, the
CM, N, RU and U buses will
be rerouted.
Anna Wu, associate vice
chancellor for facilities services, said the construction
was deemed an emergency
because evidence of water
leaking was found in an
underground steam tunnel.
Water in the steam tunnel
isnt a good idea because it
can damage the distribution
lines, she said. So there was
concern about the integrity of
the existing steam lines with
this leaking happening.
Wu said the University
brought on a contractor who
discovered the leaking water
was washing away the dirt
around the underground
vault of a manhole. Without
dirt to support the vault,
Wu said there was risk of
the manhole collapsing and
breaking the surrounding
lines.
Wu said the project will
last until January because the
construction crew has to prop
up other underground utilities near the compromised
steam tunnel.
Department of Public
Safety spokesperson Randy
Young said they are working to have the project done
before basketball season and
will send out information
for parking and traffic for
football game days. He said
the parking lots on Skipper
Bowles will still be accessible,
just from alternative routes.
Brian Litchfield, director
for Chapel Hill Transit, said
students especially use the
By Davis McKinney
Staff Writer
DTH/BRI LADD
Emergency steam tunnel repairs conducted by UNC Facilities Services forces the closure of a
portion of Skipper Bowles Drive close to the Dean Smith Center through January 2017.
DINE OUT
T U E S D AY, N O V E M B E R 8
RESTAURANTS GIVE 10 PERCENT
ALL DAY LONGEVERY MEAL COUNTS
RSVVP is celebrating its 28th year of fighting hunger in our community.
Participating Restaurants:
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411 West*
ACME Food & Beverage
Akai Hana
Alfredos Pizza Villa
Als Burger Shack
Amante Gourmet Pizza
- Carrboro
- Chapel Hill
Armadillo Grill
The Bagel Bar
Bandidos Mexican Cafe
- Chapel Hill
- Hillsborough
The Blue Horn Lounge
Bread & Butter Bakery Cafe
Breadmens
Buns
Cafe Parizade* - Durham
Caffe Driade
Captain Johns Dockside Fish
& Crab House
The Carolina Club
Carolina Coffee Shop
Carrboro Pizza Oven
Carrburritos
Chick-fil-A at University Mall
City Kitchen
Crooks Corner*
Crossroads at the Carolina Inn*
Dominos Pizza
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The Egg & I
Elaines on Franklin*
Elmos Diner
Fiesta Grill
Glasshalfull
Guanajuato Mexican Restaurant
Hickory Tavern
Hunam Chinese
Il Palio at the Siena
Jade Palace Chinese
& Seafood Restaurant
Jersey Mikes Subs
- Chapel Hill North
- Elliott Road
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Joe Van Gogh
- Broad Street
- Chapel Hill
- Woodcroft
Jujube
K&W Cafeteria
Kipos Greek Taverna
Kitchen
La Hacienda
La Residence
La Vita Dolce Espresso
& Gelato Cafe
Lantern
Lindas Bar & Grill
Local 22 Kitchen & Bar
The Loop Pizza Grill
Lucha Tigre*
Magone Italian Grill & Pizza
Mama Dips Kitchen
Margarets Cantina
Mediterranean Deli,
Bakery & Catering
Mellow Mushroom
Mint Indian Cuisine
Nantucket Grill & Bar
- Farrington Road
- Sutton Station
Neals Deli
Neo-China* - Durham
Oishii Japanese Restaurant
& Sushi Bar
Open Eye Cafe
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DTH/BRIDGET CURRAN
Amy Townsend (left), Leona Amosah, Michelle Brown and Jasmyn Thomas are members of SWIRL, or Students With Interracial Legacies, which Amosah founded last year.
Noah Legall
UNC-CH SWIRL member
and discussions.
The first part is just saying, Hey, like we recognize
that you are all out there
that identify as multiracial
or mixed-race and like you
university@dailytarheel.com
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TYRONE B. HAYES
INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY PROFESSOR, UC BERKELEY
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Workroom is an
actual workspace.
We have an office
downtown.
Dana McMahan
Director of Workroom Initiative
DTH/EMMA TOBIN
The School of Media and Journalism received a $1 million donation from alumni Leigh and Bill Goodwyn to start a fashion program.
By Lorcan Farrell
Staff Writer
A group of students is
working with the Orange
County Solid Waste
Management Department to
encourage fraternities and
sororities to be more environmentally conscious.
Over 30 Greek Life societies have off-campus housing
which means they do not have
access to the convenience of
UNCs residential recycling
programs. A waste composition study conducted by a
group of interns for Orange
County Waste Management
showed that 26 percent of the
trash they collected should
have been recycled.
The study took three days,
the first two days we went
PHOTO COURTESY OF LILY SCHWARTZ
around to the different fraRecyclables from fraternity and sorority houses are piled into a wheel barrel to be surveyed.
ternity and sorority houses
Sorority Life and Community
ity they do, points are awardand took their trash, said Lily fraternities and sororities
to have more sustainable
Involvement in order to creed. At the end of the year the
Schwartz, an intern on the
behaviors and recycle more,
ate the Greek Green Games.
fraternity and the sorority
project. Then we set up shop
Orange County Solid Waste
The Greek Green Games
with the highest points will be
in the Pit on a Saturday and
November
Event Ads
v1_Sarna
11:07 AM
Page 2 with
Management
partnered
are a competition, Schwartz
rewarded.
sorted through
the
waste. Ads 10/21/16
The Office of Fraternity &
said. For each different activThe Greek Green Games
In order to encourage the
FREE PUBLIC
LECTURE
DEANS SPEAKER SERIES
CHRIS LINDLAND
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BETABRAND
From Judenhut
to Magic Hat
Free and open to the public. No tickets or reservations required. No reserved seats.
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If November 4th is Your Birthday...
Good things come to those who wait this year. Make long-term
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Springtime professional changes come before a passionate
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News
YOUNG
SOCCER
UNC-BOSTON COLLEGE
DORRANCE
FROM PAGE 10
FROM PAGE 10
FIELD HOCKEY
FROM PAGE 10
Heels to victory.
It was well-executed, good
team setup, Young said. We
stayed aggressive and focused
on executing our game.
UNC who was shut out
by Louisville earlier in the
season notched two goals
in the last six minutes.
Knowing we can crawl
back, even when were down,
Moyer said. Its nice to know
we have that ability.
With the win, the Tar Heels
move to the semifinals, where
they will face No. 1 Duke.
Having already faced Duke
Info: www.goheels.com,
and follow @DTHSports on
Twitter
***
Now in her senior season,
Julia is ready for wherever life
takes her. She could keep playing, working her way up the
national team ranks. Or she
could go to nursing school.
Shes tenacious, her mom
said. If she sets her sights on
something, shes gonna get
there.
Julias racked up several
personal awards, with a first-
FROM PAGE 10
NOV
4 FRIDAY
Rampagin
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games
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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
last puzzle
Money laundering?
N.C. Democrats are upset
about some Republican
campaign contributions.
See pg. 5 for story.
sign
12 Big name in jazz
14 Like IHOP syrup
18 Alabama Slammer
liquor
23 Type of tide
24 Troublemakers
25 Often
29 Bridge bid
30 Glasses with handles
31 One working on a
bridge: Abbr.
33 Fleur-de-__
34 What a kid is prone to
make in winter?
36 Farm mom
38 Pastoral call
39 Early exile
40 Ones with clout
45 Variable distance
measure
47 Hand-held allergy
treatment
49 Insatiable
51 Very long time
52 Political columnist
Molly
53 Island bird named for
its call
54 Doe beau
55 Long-eared critter
56 Similar
60 Snacked
61 __ Na Na
10
SportsFriday
Julia Young keeps calm through it all
The senior
center back
leads UNC
on and off
the field
By Sam Doughton
Staff Writer
***
When she was younger,
Julia wanted to do everything
her older sister Kaytlin did.
She danced. Then she did
gymnastics. Then soccer. So
when Kaytlin picked up field
hockey in the eighth grade,
fourth grader Julia wanted to
play, too.
When it came time for high
school field hockey, Julias
coach told her she wouldnt
make varsity if she didnt join
a club team. So 13-year-old
Julia tried out for a brand
new club, Focus Field Hockey
coached by UNC alum
Kristen McCann on a cold,
rainy, miserable day. She was
guessing shed make the U14
team, maybe the U16 team if
she had a good tryout.
Her father got a call from
McCann later that night.
She called and said, We
want Julia to play with the
U19s, Ted recalled. I said,
Kristen, you know shes 13
years old?
Ted heard McCann flip
through papers over the
phone. She didnt know Julia
was 13, but she didnt care.
She wanted her to play on the
U19s anyway. Julia was that
good.
It was the first time Julia
stood out from the rest of the
crowd on a field hockey field.
But it wouldnt be the last.
***
For Coach Karen Shelton,
Julia was an unusual recruit.
Normally, Shelton has
her eye on players starting
***
After arriving in Chapel
Hill, it didnt take long for
others to notice Julias potential. Winning the teams
rookie of the year her first
Senior Writer
The build up
UNC started off slow,
allowing Louisville to run off
The goal
A whistle blows a corner.
Moyer looks up at the clock.
Ten seconds remain.
Then the final buzzer
sounds this is UNCs
chance to win in regulation.
Gab Major takes her place,
set to slide the ball into the
circle as UNC has already
done six times in the game
none of which the team
converted.
Young sets her stick on the
The future
The goal propelled the Tar