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Volume 124, Issue 96

Friday, November 4, 2016

Athletes take a stand against injustice


Coaches say protest is a
players personal choice
By C Jackson Cowart
Sports Editor

Roy Williams didnt understand.


On Aug. 26, San Francisco
49ers quarterback Colin
Kaepernick knelt during the
national anthem of an NFL
preseason game. After the
game, Kaepernick said he
was protesting racial oppression and police brutality in
the United States. But many,
including the UNC mens
basketball coach, saw it as an
affront to American pride.
When he did it, at first it
made me very angry, Williams
said. Guys making $19 million what do you have to say
against our country?
In the coming months,
Kaepernicks protest became
a phenomenon in the sports
world. NFL players, high
school athletes and even
those singing the national
anthem before NBA games
took a knee in support of his
civil rights stance.
The day after Kaepernicks
protest made headlines,
Williams called his players
together and asked their
feelings about the racial
unrest in the country. After
the September protests in
Charlotte in response to the
police shooting of Keith Scott,
two players came to Williams
to ask his opinion.

Eventually, the coach


softened his stance on
Kaepernicks protest. And
while he doesnt want any of
his players to surprise him,
Williams said he supports
their decision to demonstrate
how they feel is right even
if it means taking a knee during the anthem.
Im about as patriotic as
anybody can possibly be, he
said. But its a very significant issue right now.

***
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.

senior Ryan Switzer threw his


fist in the air. Six days later,
players joined a campus protest against racial violence.
Were just showing support to the Black Lives Matter
movements and trying to help
out any way we can, sophomore Andre Smith said.
But some student-athletes
prefer to avoid the personal
and professional ramifications

I just feel like youve got to take the


responsibility to speak up as an athlete.
Sheldon Jeter
Pittsburgh mens basketball player

of protesting, while others


want to avoid bringing controversy to their team or school.
I dont think its our place
right now, said Jerome

Robinson, a sophomore on
the Boston College mens
basketball team. Were representing something more than
ourselves.

Many athletes, college and


professional, have stayed
silent on social issues over the
years. North Carolina alum
Michael Jordan was notoriously quiet about political
issues, and few athletes in
recent years demonstrated
publicly before Kaepernick.
To Pittsburgh mens bas-

SEE ATHLETES, PAGE 4

DTH/GRAY VAN DYKE


Bernie Sanders (left) and Hillary Clinton wave to the crowd after Pharell Williams (right) speech.

DTH/JORDYN CONNELL
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump held a rally in Selma, North Carolina on Thursday.

Clinton and Sanders rally in


Raleigh for Democratic unity

Trump rallies supporters


five days before election

The former rivals praised unity


and criticized GOP opponents.
By Kent McDonald
Assistant State & National Writer

Democratic presidential nominee Hillary


Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., stood
side by side Thursday night at Walnut Creek
Music Pavillion in Raleigh to demonstrate the
unity of the Democratic party and spoke about
North Carolinas importance in the election.
Clinton said she is grateful for both the

support of Pharrell Williams, also at the rally,


and Sanders, sharing how proud she is to have
worked alongside Sanders in the Senate and
to have ran a campaign based upon issues.
This election has become a lot more fun
now that were on the same side, she said.
Sanders said this election should be about
the people and should not be a personality
contest.
Were not voting for high school president;
were voting for the most powerful leader in
the free world, he said.

SEE CLINTON, PAGE 4

Trump attacked Clinton for her


position on border security.
By Jordyn Connell
Staff Writer

Donald Trump was joined by Congressional


Medal of Honor recipients and veterans
at a rally Thursday night in Selma, North
Carolina.
Trumps speech focused on building a
stronger military, supporting existing police
officers, soldiers and veterans as well as

improving foreign policy concerning Syrian


refugees, illegal immigration and the border.
Trump emphasized his longstanding position concerning building a wall along the U.S.Mexico border in his speech.
We will build a wall, Trump said. It will
be a real wall.
Trump also addressed national security,
and he mentioned a strong military as well as
a strong defense against terrorism as policy
goals.
We must be a safe nation, he said. Hillary

SEE TRUMP, PAGE 4

Costumed man breaks into Morrison rooms on Halloween


The man grabbed the
victim by the chin
and tried to kiss her.
By Dhvani Bhatia
Staff Writer

While Halloween is sup-

posed to be a fun event,


Monday proved to be the
opposite for some residents of
Morrison Residence Hall.
On Tuesday, an Alert
Carolina message was sent
to students and faculty about
a report of break-ins in
unlocked rooms in Morrison.
Ceciel Huiberts, an inter-

national student from the


Netherlands, was a victim of a
break-in in the residence hall.
After an evening on
Franklin Street, Huiberts and
her friends returned to their
dorm on the seventh floor
around 11 p.m. Around 3
a.m., Huiberts said she heard
her door open and the light

turned on. A man walked into


her room asking if she knew
an Emily.
I tried to point out the girls
in the suite and point out that
there was no necessity to be in
the suite because there were
no Emilys here, Huiberts said.
He turned to leave but then
turned around and grabbed

Huiberts by her chin.


He still grabbed hold of
my chin and said give me
a kiss, Huiberts said. I
said no and then he kind of
walked out, just like that.
Huiberts said she does not
believe that he was intoxicated.
He was literally four
inches from my face and I

didnt smell any booze or any


weed, Huiberts said. He also
seemed very aware of what
the conversation was about
and didnt seem wary about
the situation.
She said she then walked
outside after talking to a

SEE MORRISON, PAGE 4

You, the people, have the power to make this life free and beautiful.
CHARLIE CHAPLIN

News

Friday, November 4, 2016

The Daily Tar Heel

The Daily Tar Heel


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PlayMakers The Crucible offers modern twist

Established 1893

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A change halfway
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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

of Salem, Mass. in a way that


strays considerably far away
from the traditional source
material.
When lies and accusations
about the fanatical idea of
witchcraft are spread around
the village, religious extremists search in the form of
a witch-hunt to discover
suspected perpetrators, causing mass hysteria among the
community as a whole.
While the script kept the
overall dialogue, plot and
themes of Millers original
vision, some stylistic changes
were made to the final product of this particular production.
In Acts I and II, the setting of the play appears to
be the late 1600s. However,
in Acts III and IV, the stage
drastically changes from a
colonial village to a modern
21st century prison cell.
After intermission, the set
design, costume design and
props go through sudden
transformations. Characters
are wearing contemporary

clothing, using electronic


devices and living in todays
world.
This time shift adjustment
came off as quite jarring and
rather odd. In an attempt
to come off as different in
comparison to other dramatic
productions of Millers work,
the execution lacked subtlety
and left audience members
confused.
Although these flaws set
the performance back, the
stronger elements shined
through in memorable fashion. The ensemble cast and
the musical score piqued
numerous moments of tragedy and suspense.
The leading and supporting actors all left lasting
impressions on the audience,
as their characterizations
showcased genuine, realistic
and emotional reactions that
encouraged the audience to
feel sympathy for these characters.
Additionally, the musical
score provided a haunting
overtone to this dark narra-

PHOTO COURTESY OF JON GARDINER


The PlayMakers Repertory Company put on a modern-day production of Arthur Millers famous play The Crucible.

tive, instilling a sense of dread


and uneasiness to the events
happening on stage.
Overall, the performance,
while puzzling at times,
still contained a powerful
symbolic reminder of how
quickly people in a civil society can turn on each other

and proceed into absolute


chaos.
The final showings will
be this weekend. Fridays
show will open at 7:30 p.m.
Sundays showings begin at 2
p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
@KEberly1996
swerve@dailytarheel.com

Boulevard at 9:31 p.m.


Monday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.

Circle at 11:14 p.m. Monday,


according to Chapel Hill
police reports.

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.

Someone reported loud


music and a party on the 100
block of Forsyth Drive at 11:19
p.m. Monday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.

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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.

Someone reported damage to property at the 400


block of New Parkside Drive at
5:38 p.m. Tuesday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person shot a BB gun
into a window, valued at
$200, reports state.
Someone reported lar-

ceny from a vehicle at the 100


block of Homewood Drive at
10:58 a.m. Tuesday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person entered the victims car and stole $1,254 in
cash, reports state.
Someone reported
stalking at the 1600 block
of Martin Luther King Jr.

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.
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Someone reported vandalism at the 300 block of


West Rosemary Street at 9:47
p.m. Monday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone reported loud
music and a party on the
900 block of North Heritage

Someone reported lost


property on the 100 block
of South Roberson Street at
12:42 a.m. Tuesday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person lost a cell
phone valued at $500, reports
state.
Someone reported found
property on the 400 block of
West Franklin Street at 10:35
a.m. Tuesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.

6th Annual

Oliver Smithies Nobel Symposium


presents

Brian K. Kobilka, MD
2012 Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Helene Irwin Fagan Chair in Cardiology


Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology
Standford University

Brian Kobilka, M.D.

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:

10:00 AM - Panel Discussion on Integration of Academia and


Industry, & the future of careers in the sciences.
11:30 AM - Postdoctoral mentoring lunch
3:00 PM - Oliver Smithies Nobel Lecture
4:30 PM - Reception
For more information, please visit:
www.med.unc.edu/smithies-nobel-symposium

Organized & Hosted by:


Posdoctoral Planning Committee

Oliver Smithies, Ph.D.

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

The Daily Tar Heel

Friday, November 4, 2016

Established 1893, 123 years of editorial freedom


EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS

JANE WESTER EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM


TYLER FLEMING OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
EMILY YUE ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR

TREY FLOWERS
DAVID FARROW
JONATHAN NUNEZ
KATE STOTESBERY

CHRIS DAHLIE
GEORGIA BRUNNER
ZAYNAB NASIF
ELIZA FILENE

WILL PARKER
SEYOUNG OH
CRYSTAL YUILLE

EDITORIAL CARTOON By Tyler Fleming, flemingtyler1996@gmail.com

QUOTE OF THE DAY


I see so many people taking brilliant fashion
choices and fashion risks that I never would
have thought to take at that age.
Ben Bolling, on fashion at UNC and starting a clothing line

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT


Sky sandwiches made me laugh. Good
article.

Jesus Gonzalez-Ventura
Juice with Jesus

Mark, on the strange events in the long line for President Obama

Junior public policy and biology


major from Hope Mills.
Email: jesusagv@live.unc.edu

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

Go for
the salad
or take
the jog?

Vote out Pat McCrory


for a better N.C.

NEXT

f you are anything like


me, and you too often
find yourself questioning your life decisions after
ingesting a box of donuts, then
please read. Is exercise the
most effective way to stay at a
healthy weight?
Consider this: it would
take a 6-foot, 160-pound man
nearly an hour and a half of
vigorous biking to burn off
the calories from two Krispy
Kreme Apple Fritters. This
reality is underappreciated and
too often ignored 1.5 minutes to eat, 1.5 hours to burn
the calories.
More and more research
tells us that if you are interested in losing weight, the
true key is what you eat. Vox
reported that a recent National
Health Institute study found
that If a hypothetical 200pound man added 60 minutes
of medium intensity running
four days per week while keeping his calorie intake the same,
and he did this for 30 days,
hed lose five pounds. Would.
Only. Lose. Five. Pounds.
Maybe its just me I
expect to lose five pounds
after running just one day a
week. And let us not forget the
addictive nature of some foods,
which is quite real some
studies have found that sugar
is more addictive than some
drugs. This speaks volumes on
why it is so hard to stop yourself from unhealthy eating.
So then, why do we think
exercise is more important for
losing weight?
Think about this for a second excess sugar is easily
one of the unhealthiest substances we put into our bodies.
Companies like Coca-Cola
claim to be concerned with our
health, yet they continue to use
their own private research to
support their products. This
biased, unethical research
often confirms their agenda by
finding that sugar is not harmful. Oftentimes, they are able
to successfully shift the blame
to other food groups like fat or
perpetuate the claim that exercise will offset any unhealthy
effects of their products.
If companies like Coca-Cola
still want to make hundreds
of billions of dollars off ruining our health and at the same
time promote pseudo-active
healthy living, then they have
to start taking the brunt of
blame for our obesity crisis.
These industries are trying
to cover their asses and only
care about protecting their
profits. They are not concerned
about our health they only,
and will always only, care
about their bottom lines.
In my view, we should
mount an informational campaign (similar to anti-tobacco
advertisements) on the harms
of soda and salt, and shine
bright spotlights on the shadiness of the food industry.
Our children are increasingly
overweight and, for many of
us, there is nothing we can do.
In my view, the food industry
should pay these costs and put
the interest of people over their
profits. Greed for the sake of
greed must not go unchecked.
You may ask whether other
countries in the world are
experiencing this same obesity
epidemic? Well, the answer
to that is simple we live in
a country today where money
rules everything around us,
especially our government.
Think before you eat.
11/07: Annie Get Your Pen
Annie Kiyonaga writes on
womens issues on campus.

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

he basis of my viewpoint is built


off the reality that no new statue
will be built and no statue will be
removed given the current climate. The
Unsung Founders Memorial should not be
overshadowed by a statue commemorating
Confederate soldiers, but that is a fight for
another viewpoint.
The memorial was designed to be a place
where people could sit and reflect on the
impacts of racism and enslavement at UNC.
It wasnt meant to be large and flashy, but
reflective of how we still often forget those
who built this school.
Sadly, it is instead
becoming a place for
people to do anything
but think about racism.
It is a lunch table, a
diaper changing station
or a place to chat while
drinking coffee.
It is easy enough to
Tyler Fleming
not see the people holdOpinion editor,
ing the table on the botboard member
tom. People walking by
might never realize the
memorial is not a normal table. Clearly, the
memorial is not fulfilling its main purpose.
Something needs to be done.
A practical answer might be to put more
seating in the quad, or to place a plaque
near the memorial to say Please leave seats
open to those who wish to reflect on racism
at UNC (or something like that).
But to some degree, that still does nothing
to remember those our University forgot. The
best option, which does not only apply to this
situation, is to spread the history of racism
at UNC. This could mean making the Black
and Blue tour mandatory for all students and
family members at orientation or contextualizing the racist glorification monument a few
yards away. Maybe it is unrealistic or naive,
but hopefully if people become more aware
of the harms of their actions, they will be
more likely to change.

The Unsung
Founders works
just the way it is

ets keep the Unsung Founders


Memorial just the way it is. It feels
weird calling the memorial by its
formal name. Thats because, until recently,
I knew the tabular sculpture as The Table
of Oppression. Some friends and I began
calling it that our first year at UNC. I cant
remember where the phrase came from
exactly, but I do know this: My informal
title for a sculpture honoring many who
endured racism and slavery during UNCs
more than 200-year history was a joke. It
was a pretty puny revolt against political
correctness and pretty
callous given my experiences of privilege.
Table of Oppression
was also a nickname. Like
many nicknames, it was
an expression of affection.
This affection developed
as the sculpture served
variously as a slippery
Will Parker
Graduate student stage for dancing during
a snowy evening, a solieditorial board
tary spot for thinking sad
member
thoughts after morning
lectures and a resting point after drunken
nights. It functioned as a place to pine, frolic
and laugh, and I grew to love it for that.
Serve. Function. Those words grate
given the context, dont they? Isnt it ironic
and troubling that students who lack experience with racial injustice should show little
respect to a memorial commemorating those
who bore in many cases the heavy
burden of it? I think so. But marking it with
a sign requesting contemplative silence will
reduce much of its persuasive efficacy.
People with personal attachments to
the sculpture may be more likely to weigh
arguments and facts about the historical and contemporary realities of racism.
I think thats the magic of the Unsung
Founders Memorial: it elicits love as well
as thought in a powerful spell of persuasion. What does Silent Sam have on that?

EDITORIAL

The U.S. civil religion


History might have
too much of an eye
on the founders.

lot can be learned


from the origins of
this nation, but in
the modern United States,
the Founding Fathers have
taken on a status well
beyond that of important
historical figures. A civil
religion has formed in the
U.S., and the founders are
its deities. And as with
any religion, the followers
often invoke their images
when defending certain
partisan ideas.
Using their thoughts as
some sort of gospel truth is
not all that productive for
a democracy. They challenged authority now we
are challenging them.
The founders had many
of the problems we do
today, and they often did

not land on the divine,


perfect solutions we often
credit them with.
The famous Sons of
Liberty who were early
advocates for American
independence shut down
a lot of speech in their day.
Not in the way conservatives say liberals do today
they mutilated people
who disagreed with them
through tarring and feathering or pouring hot tea
down peoples throats.
Can you imagine if protesters tarred and feathered Ben Shapiro when he
came to campus? While we
do not agree with what he
said, we are happy no one
physically harmed him.
Even when Alexander
Hamilton proposed a
new form of government,
he was arguing for a society led by wealthy elites
in which average people
would be excluded.

The Founding Fathers


disagreed on which religions should be protected.
Jewish, Catholic and
agnostic people had good
reason to be worried about
their safety in some parts
of the country. To their
credit, Thomas Jefferson
promoted religious tolerance in 1777, and George
Washington wrote letters
to religious minorities
reassuring them of their
safety in the new country.
Thankfully, in this case,
the founders did not cave
to some public demand for
discrimination.
Idolizing the founders is
good in creating a national
story, but they were not
perfect, nor did they create a perfect system. Lets
recognize they were a lot
like us flawed, often
bigoted, but still trying to
make a better place for all
to live.

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

Self-care is better for


students than stress
TO THE EDITOR:
In the (editorial)
Midterms can hurt the
mind, body and spirit
take care of yourself, you
address the difficulties
that come alongside with
midterms. You mention
that although our GPA and
grades are important, students undergo enormous
amounts of stress during
the midterm-season. I
believe that stress occurs
because students are bombarded by them all at once.
If midterms were more
spaced out, stress would be
much less of a problem.
It is proven that sleep
deprivation can lead to a
higher chance of developing health problems such as
high blood pressure, heart
disease and stroke.
Is a grade on a test really
more important than that?
If midterms were more
spread out, students would
be able to take better care
of themselves both physically and spiritually. In the
long run, hard work and
self-care will be the most
important things to having
a healthy successful life.
Rob Monroe
Exercise and Sport
Science

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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Students: Include your year, major and phone number.
Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number.
Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit
letters to 250 words.
SUBMISSION
Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill,
NC 27514
Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com
EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the
opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises 11 board
members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.

From Page One

Friday, November 4, 2016

ATHLETES

FROM PAGE 1

ketball senior Sheldon Jeter,


silence is part of the problem.
The reason why some kids
grow up not knowing whats
going on is because they look
at athletes who dont ever talk
about stuff he said. I just
feel like youve got to take the
responsibility to speak up as
an athlete.

***
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

Sanders said the election


has to be about which candidate has the experience and
vision to work for middle and
working class families.

The Daily Tar Heel

luncheon to build camaraderie between the players and


officers. He saw it as a chance
for the players to see the officers as ordinary people and
for the officers to see the players in the same light.
I really was upset with
myself because I didnt feel
like Ive done enough in the
past to foster those relationships that we need he said.
So I was much a part of the
problem as anybody for the
last four years. And so I wanted to be a part of the solution.
While Williams had
brought in police officers to
speak with the team in the
past, it was never to address
racial tensions in America.
But after incidents of police
violence across the country

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

with the local police chief,


Miami coach Jim Larraaga
called his team together to
discuss civil rights issues such
as Kaepernicks protest, the
Black Lives Matter movement
and the impact of this years
presidential race.
He asked his players
whether they planned to
kneel not to stop them, but
to prepare if they did.
Its not my position to tell
them how to feel, he said. Its
my position to get them to be
aware, to open up their eyes to
different points of view.
Fedora plans to organize
social events with local police
again in the spring and every
year thereafter something
he says he should have been
doing all along.

It doesnt solve all the


problems, he said. But at
least its a start.

And in my view, without


a shadow of doubt, that candidate is Hillary Clinton, our
next president, he said.
Sanders said he is upset
with the Republican Partys
attempts to suppress voters.
We have cowardly

Republican governors all


over this country trying to
suppress the votes, he said.
Hillary Clinton and I believe
that our job is to get more
people to participate in the
political process not fewer
people.

He said these politicians do


not belong in office.
If you dont have the guts
to participate in a free, open
and fair election, get out of
politics and get another job,
Sanders said.
Clinton, Sanders and

Williams were joined by


N.C. politicians including
Democratic Senatorial candidate Deborah Ross, Rep.
David Price, D-N.C., and N.C.
Democratic Sen. Dan Blue Jr.,
D-Wake.
Ross focused on the
strength and unity of the
Democratic party, which she
said was illustrated by the
large gathering.
Were filling (the amphitheatre) for unity for the
Democratic party because
Hillary and Bernie are coming together, and you know
youre going to have Pharrell
Williams so were all going to
be happy tonight, she said.
Ross said her opponent, Sen.
Richard Burr, R-N.C., is out of
touch with the people of North
Carolina and their needs.
We need a Congress that
wants to stabilize social security and Medicare for this
generation and generations
to come, she said. Those
are N.C. values, those are
American values, those are
Hillary Clinton values.

***
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

So this year, in this election, Im asking you to join


me to reject cynicism and reject fear, and to summon
what is best in us; to elect Hillary Clinton as the next
President of the United States.
Barack Obama
Democratic National Convention July 27, 2016

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

Paid for by Hillary for America

supports open borders.


Trump said his solution to
the Syrian refugee crisis was
to build safe zones in Syria
rather than allow Syrian refugees entrance into the country, citing his concern over
violence in Europe.
We cant let what is happening in Europe happen
here, he said.
He also spoke about
improving the support of law
enforcement officers in light
of recent events.
Two police officers were
killed in ambush attacks
in Des Moines, Iowa on
Wednesday. The motive of the
attack is still unclear.
Trump said, under his
presidency, all men and
women in uniform will have
the support, resources and
medical care they need.
Anne Soeder, an attendee
of the event, said she specifically wanted to see corruption
in government addressed by
Trump.
He criticized Hillary
Clinton for her role as
Secretary of State and said
she is under multiple criminal
investigations, and that the
media and many politicians
were corrupt.
Soeder also said she was
appalled at late-stage abortions Clinton would support
as president.
I support Trump because
hes pro-life, said event
attendee Stephanie Keene.

MORRISON

FROM PAGE 1

neighbor who told Huiberts


the same thing had just happened to her. The two girls
found the resident adviser on
duty and spotted the man on
the third floor, Huiberts said.
They caught him and the
RA escorted him to the first
floor where he ran away. Before
fleeing, Huiberts said the man
said he lived in Ehringhaus
Residence Hall. The RA then
filed a report on the incident.
Katie Bartholomew, the
assistant director for conduct
and crisis management for
Housing and Residential
Education, said RAs are
instructed to provide any support needed to the student.
Any report we receive, we
respond to and involve public
safety, Bartholomew said.
We work together with getting extra support from other
organizations to help the student in any way we can.
He is described by the Alert
Carolina message as having
short, dark hair and wearing
a black-and-yellow striped
shirt tucked into jeans, with
a Wanted sign hung around
his neck and fake wounds on
his head.
UNC public safety spokes-

have the ability to inspire


people, Boston College
sophomore A.J. Turner said.
Whether you choose to do
that is your own decision.
Tonight at 7:30 p.m., the
North Carolina mens basketball team will take the court
for the first time this season
in an exhibition against UNCPembroke. While no Tar Heel
is expected to kneel during
the national anthem, Steve
Kirschner, senior associate
athletic director at UNC, said
the school should protect an
athletes right to speak out.
More than athletes, theyre
people, he said. Theyre students and they have a right to
say whats on their mind.
@CJacksonCowart
sports@dailytarheel.com

Youre going to
have Pharrell so
were all going to be
happy tonight.
Deborah Ross
Democratic senatorial candidate

Clinton said there is more


at stake this election than just
the presidential race.
It is now our turn to stand
up to people like your governor and your legislature,
she said. Because we are
fundamentally a good nation,
and we need to make sure we
deliver on that promise.
At the end of the night,
Clinton remarked that she
was just getting started.
We could go on all night;
Bernie and I could keep you
here until breakfast we get
excited about what we can
do, she said. But of course,
we cant do anything if you
dont go out and vote.
@kentomcdonald
state@dailytarheel.com

We will build a
wall. It will be a real
wall.
Donald Trump
Republican presidential nominee

Trump said the United


States economy needs to be
saved and mentioned multiple solutions to address the
problem.
We need to save Americas
economy, he said. That
begins with immediately
repealing Obamacare.
North Carolina Lt. Gov. Dan
Forest, a speaker at the event,
said Trumps positions on the
economy were a positive.
How would you like to
have a president whos not
going to add to our national
debt, but is going to pay off
our national debt? he asked.
Trump said his administration would renegotiate the
North American Free Trade
Agreement, a trade deal
between the U.S., Mexico and
Canada that decreases trade
barriers between the three
countries.
At the end of his speech,
Trump focused on one specific sentiment to be addressed
through his presidential policies.
My policy can be based on
three very important words:
peace through strength, he
said.
state@dailytarheel.com

He still grabbed
hold of my chin and
said give me
a kiss.
Ceciel Huiberts
International student

person Randy Young said


recent evidence from the case
now states the suspect was
wearing a Pablo Escobar costume, not a cowboy costume,
as stated in the Alert Carolina
message.
Were looking at the possibility of publishing suspect
photos on the Alert Carolinas
webpage and we will put out
social media, Young said. We
want to make sure that everybody can get a good look and
help us identify this individual.
Huiberts is currently getting counseling at the Equal
Opportunity and Compliance
Office.
I just want the guy to get
caught. Ive talked to a lot of
other girls in Morrison and
they all feel pretty unsafe,
said Huiberts. My dorm
used to be my safe space on
campus and now its just not
anymore.
university@dailytarheel.com

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Friday, November 4, 2016

Emergency steam tunnel Democrats call


repair will last until January GOPs use of

donations illegal

Leaking water
underground is
causing the damage.

The complaint says


the illegal donations
helped Pat McCrory.

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.

U and the RU buses, which


run through Skipper Bowles
Drive.
There are no really good
alternatives to Bowles Drive,
he said. Theres no parallel
street that we can operate
down to get closer to the
B-school or places like that.
It creates some challenges
for detours and anytime
that were detouring around
and not serving stops that
customers are utilizing, that
creates challenges for our customers getting to and from
where they need to go.
Sydney Ramsey, a sophomore resident advisor in
Hinton James, said she lives
closer to the routes affected,
but has managed to deal with
the detour.
Its not awful if you learn
to plan early, like get up earlier to walk to class because
classes are pretty regular at
this point, she said. Ive

There was the concern about the integrity


of the existing steam lines
Anna Wu
Associate vice chancellor for facility services

seen the bus drive by people


and its ridiculous. People are
freaking out, Im just like,
Oh no its not horrendous,
but its throwing a wrench in
peoples plans.
Litchfield said not only will
bus routes be affected, but the
bus time schedules will be as
well.
Especially during peak
hours, any time a bus has got
to drive, whether its a block
or more further beyond what
it normally drives, it affects
its ability to stay on time, he
said. Any type of detour or
closure will impact routes and
this again is impacting some
of our most heavily utilized
routes, and we look forward

to being able to get back to


serving Bowles Drive as soon
as possible.
Litchfield said though
inconvenient, the detour is
necessary.
We would only detour
from this area if the reason
for detouring out of there
was to allow the construction
process to move forward as
quickly as possible so we can
return to the area as soon as
possible, he said. So, if not
for that we would have kept
our route in the area, but
unfortunately that wasnt an
option to make that project
go as quick as possible.
university@dailytarheel.com

The N.C. Democratic Party


accused the N.C. Republican
Party of breaking state campaign finance laws in a complaint filed to the N.C. State
Board of Elections Saturday.
The Democrats allege that
the Republicans accepted
money that originated from
corporations.
N.C. Democratic Party
Executive Director Kimberly
Reynolds filed the complaint against the N.C. GOP,
the Republican Governors
Association, the federal super
PAC Republican Governors
Association Right Direction
and the Pat McCrory
Committee.
The complaint alleges that
the RGA, which accepts corporate donations, gave money
to the N.C. GOP through its
super PAC, and these donations were then used to help
Gov. Pat McCrorys reelection
campaign. State campaign
finance law prohibits direct
and indirect corporate contributions to campaigns.
The North Carolina
Republican Party, in turn,
has used these impermissible funds to try to boost the
reelection campaign of Gov.
Pat McCrory, Reynolds said
in the complaint. The State
Board of Elections must step
in to halt this scheme.
In a statement, Jon
Thompson, spokesperson for
the RGA, said the contributions do not violate campaign
laws. He said the complaint is
an attempt to mislead voters.
The RGAs contributions
contained no corporate dollars, as compliant with state
law, he said. Unable to

articulate a cohesive message


about the issues or counter
North Carolinas positive
momentum, its no surprise
that Roy Cooper and his
friends are using outright
falsehoods and fabrications
as the closing message for his
struggling campaign.
In the complaint, Reynolds
requested the N.C. State
Board of Elections force the
N.C. GOP and the McCrory
campaign to return all money
received from the RGA.
She said the Republican
Governors Association should
be fined.
In a statement, the N.C.
Democratic Party said the
alleged illegal contributions
total more than $1 million.
As of Oct. 27, RGA Right
Direction contributed close
to $1.6 million to the N.C.
GOP, according to Federal
Elections Committee filings.
Today, we call on Gov.
McCrory to disavow these
illegal contributions and
for the Republican Party to
return this money, Reynolds
said in the statement. We
also urge the State Board
of Elections to hold these
groups accountable in order
to protect the integrity of our
elections.
Dave Miranda, spokesperson for the N.C. Democratic
Party, said the N.C. GOP and
the RGA are wrong in claiming
the contributions were legal.
This is illegal, and they
know that, he said. The
RGA knows that. The N.C.
GOP knows that. Theyre trying to pull a fast one by laundering this money.
Patrick Gannon, spokesperson for the N.C. State
Board of Elections, said once
the RGA responds to the
complaint, the Board will
review the information and
decide whether or not to take
action.
@The_Davestroyer
state@dailytarheel.com

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News

Friday, November 4, 2016

The Daily Tar Heel

SWIRL looks to expand in second year at UNC


UNC-CH SWIRL is a
group for multiracial
students at UNC.
By Sophie Troyer
Staff Writer

In 2015, Leona Amosah


founded Students With
Interracial Legacies, or UNCCH SWIRL, which is the first
multiracial organization on
campus.
Now that the club has been
established for a year, they are
trying to expand.
Our main shift is that
it has kind of grown to be
more than it originally was in
that its meant to explore all
aspects of everyones identity
and recognize those different
identities, Amosah said.
In the past, Amosah preplanned the discussion topics,
but this year the club holds
weekly meetings on broader
topics related to UNC and life
in general, including gender
identities, relationships, politics, activism and intersectionality.
One of Amosahs goals for
the club is to collaborate more
with Duke SWIRL after two
people from Duke reached
out to UNC-CH SWIRL last
year to learn how to establish
their own organization.
In addition, Amosah hopes
SWIRL will become more
involved with other UNC
organizations and activism.
Junior Noah Legall said he
joined SWIRL after joining
other organizations, but not
feeling very close to them.
I felt like the people (in
SWIRL) were genuine,
Legall said. I felt like they
were in a way kind of like me.
Legall said he wants people
who dont feel like they fit into
one mold to feel welcomed

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.

and appreciated in SWIRL.


He said SWIRL gave him
the opportunity to talk about
things he wouldnt be able to
hear and talk about anywhere
else.
I wont lie, being in
SWIRL has opened my eyes
to a lot of things that I take
for granted, Legall said. Its
a club based off of having
a safe space for mixed-race
individuals, but we talk about

a whole gambit of things like


intersectionality, you know
just gender theory.
SWIRL Vice President Amy
Townsend said now the club is
working on structure, dividing
roles, having more member
input, publicizing and hosting
events in addition to discussion meetings. Townsend said
the club is trying to have a
multiracial awareness week
with film screenings, panels

being in SWIRL has opened my eyes to a


lot of things that I take for granted.

might understand you better


and be accepted as you are,
Townsend said.
Legall said although
SWIRL is an organization for
multiracial people, its a space
for anyone.
SWIRL is just created for,
you know, people that just felt
like they didnt fit in one box,
generally, Legall said.

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

know this is a place for you


to just to be yourself, to be
able to talk about that part
of your identity with other
people who might share
experiences with you, who

university@dailytarheel.com

SCOTUS will hear N.C. sex offender free speech law


Case could have
far-reaching First
Amendment impact.
By Becca Heilman
Staff Writer

The U.S. Supreme Court


agreed Friday to consider a
case regarding an N.C. law
that bars sex offenders from
accessing and registering for
websites that allow minors
to post.
The law, passed in 2008,
bans North Carolina sex
offenders from using commercial social networking

sites such as Facebook,


Twitter, YouTube and the
New York Times website.
Packingham v. North
Carolina, the case being considered, originated in 2011
following the indictment
of Lester Packingham for
illegal social media use as a
registered sex offender. The
defendant argued that the
statute was unconstitutional
due to its violation of the First
Amendment.
However, the N.C.
Supreme Court upheld the
statute last November.
The court says this is
a content-neutral speech
restriction, and therefore its

presenting...

The DTH Mobile App

permissible so long as it sufficiently serves an important


government interest, said
Eugene Volokh, a professor
at the UCLA School of Law.
Here, the interest is in preventing sex offenders from
finding out information about
children, so that they could
potentially contact them and
essentially arrange to molest
them.
Glenn Gerding, the North
Carolina appellate defender
who represented Packingham,
said the case raises concerns
about free speech.
The legal issue is whether
the state can restrict a persons access to the use of

social media websites, and its


an issue involving the First
Amendment, he said.
Bill Marshall, a professor at
the UNC School of Law, said
the court will look at other
channels of communication
available to sex offenders in
place of social media.
I think the case does
open up a possibility that the
court is going to look at social
media in a way that it hasnt
before, he said.
Volokh said the Supreme
Court generally considers
alternative forms of communication that provide similar
services to those restricted
when determining if content-

neutral restrictions are constitutional.


He said he thinks the
Supreme Court will strike
down the statute.
When youre talking
about foreclosing one of the
most important social networks out there, one of the
most important and practical
means of communicating
with people, that doesnt
leave ample alternative channels, Volokh said.
Gerding said the statute
should be struck down due to
its potential impact on future
First Amendment interpretation.
At the U.S. Supreme

Court, they obviously have


to be concerned about not
just the particular case but
also the impact on the entire
country, so the decision will
have application across the
United States, not just to
North Carolina, he said.
Volokh also said the impact
of the statute could be farreaching.
I just want to highlight
that the First Amendment
legal issues here go far
beyond sex offenders and
could apply to content-neutral restrictions that cover all
of us, he said.
@beccaheilman
state@dailytarheel.com

THE 2016 CROWN LECTURE IN ETHICS

TO BE HONE$T

When Scientific Integrity and


Corporate Interests Clash

TYRONE B. HAYES
INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY PROFESSOR, UC BERKELEY

Deformed frogs, pesticides, and a scientists unconventional


fight against corporate efforts to discredit his research

INTERVIEWED BY

PHILIP BENNETT

EUGENE C. PATTERSON PROFESSOR OF THE PRACTICE OF JOURNALISM AND PUBLIC POLICY

Monday, Nov. 14, 2016, 6:00 p.m.

Fleishman Commons | Reception to follow

Free and open to the public | sanford.duke.edu

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The Daily Tar Heel

Friday, November 4, 2016

Journalism school heads to runways


Bill and Leigh
Goodwyn gave a $1
million donation.
By Kayla Drake
Staff Writer

Workroom is an
actual workspace.
We have an office
downtown.
Dana McMahan
Director of Workroom Initiative

The School of Media and


Journalism is now providing
opportunities for students
interested in careers in fashion media and advertising.
Bill and Leigh Goodwyn,
alumni of the School of Media
and Journalism at UNC,
donated $1 million to the
school for the Workroom:
FashionMash project.
We had been thinking
about a gift to the University
for some time and we just
really wanted to get our
head around doing something new and different for
the University and we also
wanted to do something that
we felt like would have a passion appeal for me, Leigh
Goodwyn said.
The Workroom:
FashionMash program is led
by Dana McMahan, a professor and director of the journalism schools Workroom
initiative. The initiative
brings global brands like
American Eagle Outfitters
and Burts Bees into the classroom so students can gain
hands-on experience.
Workroom is an actual
workspace. We have an office
downtown that we can prototype and build everything

from experiential marketing


ideas to product design ideas
and we do it in conjunction
with a client for the duration
of the class, McMahan said.
It gives a chance for
students to go through the
prototyping process and the
thought process behind what
it takes to bring all of these
types of things to life.
John Sweeney, head of the
advertising specialization
at the School of Media and
Journalism, said this program
adds a fashion orientation
that the school didnt have
before.
(This donation) means
one of our most outstanding
faculty members now has the
support she needs to really
pursue a very career-oriented
and provocative area of interest for her and the students,
Sweeney said. (Students can
gain) a lot more experience
with sophisticated design in
the fashion industry and a
sense of the fashion industry
that they didnt have before.
The Goodwyns said they
are hoping this program will
provide more opportunities
for students who are interested in fashion.

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.

While 20 years ago getting


a degree in fashion merchandising may not have been
considered a serious major in
college, it is now and I think
its just the appropriate time
to really think more seriously about what we can do to
bring that opportunity to people who are truly interested in

fashion, Leigh said.


She said breaking into the
fashion industry isnt easy, but
a program like this could help.
What we wanted to do was
try to open up the opportunities for students to find these
great designers and awesome
brands and help them create
a pathway through internship

programs and through handson experiences and visits to


the major fashion markets
such as New York and L.A.
and Paris, Leigh said.
McMahan said the program is a great complement
to the other specific programs
of study the school provides.
Im super excited for the

students who want access to


this kind of material to have
it and be able to work in the
genre while theyre in school
that theyre thinking that
they might want to work in
when they get out of school,
McMahan said.
university@dailytarheel.com

UNC Greek life goes green in eco-friendly competition


The Greek Green
Games began by
going through trash.

The Greek Green Games provide us with the


resources and connections
Rebecca Burton
Green chairperson of Alpha Chi Omega

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 LECTURES

website has a breakdown of all


the possible ways points can
be earned.
Members who sign the Id
Tap That pledge which is
a water sustainability pledge
can earn two points while
those who help install a tankless water heater in the house
can earn 500.
Schwartz said participation has been great. Each
fraternity or sorority with an
off campus house has selected
a Green Chairperson to serve
as a point of contact and organizer for each chapter. Some
greek organizations, like Delta
Kappa Epsilon, have already
begun making plans to score
as many points as possible.
I would say the games
have been going well, said
Wes Stroud, the Green
Chairperson of Delta Kappa
Epsilon. I recently was
able to reach out to the
Orange County Solid Waste
Management Department
through the games so that we
can implement an electrical

waste bin within DKE.


The Games are a chance not
only to compete but to help
better the campus community.
The Greek Green Games
provide us with the resources
and connections to implement programs and organize activities that not only
improve our own chapters,
but bring awareness and environmental improvements to
the campus and community
as well, said Rebecca Burton,
Green Chairperson of Alpha
Chi Omega.
When the games are over
at the end of the year, another
waste composition survey will
be conducted.
While it is a competition,
the goal is educating (the
fraternities and sororities) on
how to be environmentally
friendly, Schwartz said. Even
if it is just little things like
Red Solo Cups arent recyclable so use clear alternatives,
that would be a win.
university@dailytarheel.com

FREE PUBLIC
LECTURE
DEANS SPEAKER SERIES

CHRIS LINDLAND
FOUNDER AND CEO
BETABRAND

NOVEMBER 7, 2016 | 5:30 P.M.


UNC KENAN-FLAGLER BUSINESS SCHOOL
KOURY AUDITORIUM, MCCOLL BUILDING
PLEASE RSVP AT KFBSRSVP@UNC.EDU
OR 919.843.7787

Rosenwald film screening and discussion


NOV. 7
7:00 p.m.
UNC Friday Center

AVIVA KEMPNERS film is the incredible story of Julius Rosenwald,


who never finished high school, but rose to become the President
of Sears. Influenced by the writings of the educator Booker T.
Washington, this Jewish philanthropist joined forces with African
American communities during the Jim Crow South to build over
5,300 schools during the early part of the 20th century.

From Judenhut

to Magic Hat

Iterations of a Medieval Garment


NAOMI LUBRICH (director of the Jewish Museum of
Switzerland) will discuss the significance of the Jewish
hat, which served as a distinguishing sign for Jews in the
German-speaking regions of the Holy Roman Empire
from the twelfth to the seventeenth century. Organized
by the Jewish Studies Graduate Student Network.

From Judenhut to Magic Hat: Iterations


of a Medieval Garment
NOV. 17
7:30 p.m.
Dey Hall
Toy Lounge

NAOMI LUBRICH (director of the Jewish Museum of Switzerland)


will discuss the significance of the Jewish hat, which served as a
distinguishing sign for Jews in the German-speaking regions of the
Holy Roman Empire from the twelfth to the seventeenth century.
Organized by the Jewish Studies Graduate Student Network.

November 17, 2016 at 7:30 p.m.


Dey Hall, Toy Lounge / Free and open to the public.
No tickets or reservations required. No reserved seats.

Free and open to the public. No tickets or reservations required. No reserved seats.
RUTH VON BERNUTH
DIRECTOR

PETTIGREW HALL, SUITE 100


CAMPUS BOX 3152
CHAPEL HILL, NC 27599-3152

P: 919-962-1509
E: JEWISHSTUDIES@UNC.EDU
W: JEWISHSTUDIES.UNC.EDU

T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F N O R T H C A R O L I N A AT C H A P E L H I L L

RUTH VON BERNUTH


DIRECTOR

PETTIGREW HALL, SUITE 100


CAMPUS BOX 3152
CHAPEL HILL, NC 27599-3152

P: 919-962-1509
E: JEWISHSTUDIES@UNC.EDU
W: JEWISHSTUDIES.UNC.EDU

T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F N O R T H C A R O L I N A AT C H A P E L H I L L

News

Friday, November 4, 2016

The Daily Tar Heel

All up in your business

Part of a periodic update


on local businesses

Compiled by staff writer Olivia Ross


Photos by DTH staff

Hes Not Here pink cups were a hit

Ulta builds foundations in Chapel Hill

High Life replaces Expressions

Customers of the popular Chapel Hill bar Hes Not


Here saw their typical Blue Cups turn pink for the second half of October.
The limited-edition cups were designed to raise
money for breast cancer research.
Proceeds from the cups sales were split between two
organizations 1in9, a Raleigh-based charity, and the
UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Fleming Fuller, Hes Not general manager, said the
initiative was a hit.
The sales went well, he said. People were very receptive to the concept of raising money for breast cancer
awareness, and well probably do something again like it
next year.
In 2017, Hes Not will make the pink cups available for
the whole month of October, Fuller said.
He said the Susan G. Komen organization has also
reached out to Hes Not, indicating that it would be
interested in collaborating with the bar next year.
Fuller said the bar ordered 10,000 cups and came
close to distributing them all.
The one case left over will be divided up and shipped
to people across the country who emailed to ask for one
of the keepsake cups.

A new Ulta Beauty Store in Chapel Hill will celebrate


its grand opening this weekend by giving away gifts to
customers today through Sunday.
The store, located in Eastgate Crossing at 1800 E.
Franklin St., will give the first 100 guests each day an
Ulta Beauty treat valued from $5 to $100.
Free makeovers will be available throughout the weekend, and customers can choose between a 50 percent
discount on a haircut and hairstyling service and a 50
percent discount on one of the skin treatments.
Carolyn Sutphen, a spokesperson for Ulta, said the
store will feature a range of makeup, fragrance, skincare
and haircare products along with a salon service.
We want to be a beauty destination for Chapel Hill,
she said.
Ulta Beauty had 928 retail stores across the country as
of Oct. 1.
Prior to the Chapel Hill stores opening, the closest
Ulta Beauty location was in Durham in the Renaissance
Center IV, near The Streets at Southpoint.
Sutphen hopes the 10,000-square-foot store will be a
one-stop shop for its customers.
Ulta Beauty is all things beauty, all in one place., she
said.

In September, Expressions transformed into High Life


Smoke Shop.
The store, located at 137 E. Franklin St., has joined the
largest chain of smoke shops on the East Coast.
Krista Holley, the manager of the Chapel Hill store,
said the previous owner of Expressions sold the entire
company to High Life, not just the shop in Chapel
Hill.
Holley said she is very impressed with the new ownership and their opportunity to do more with the business.
Since they order in larger quantities, the company
has better prices and they have a lot more capability to
remodel the shop, she said.
Created in 2010, High Life now has 20 stores throughout North and South Carolina, including Charlotte,
Asheville and Boone.
Holley said the store saw a lull in sales prior to High
Life taking over, but the sale numbers have returned and
surpassed previous levels.
We were running out of merchandise, she said. A lot
of people thought we were closing down or moving. We
even thought we might be moving.
Holley said the store will host a Black Friday sale in
November.

Jacob Tobia speaks on binary burden


UNC SAGA brought
Jacob Tobia to UNC to
speak about gender.
By Dominic Andrews
Staff Writer

Jacob Tobia wanted to be


Pocahontas at seven years old
for Halloween after seeing the
movie.
My mom was put immediately in this super shitty
situation, that the world put
her in, no one else put her in,
Tobia said.
This is sort of what I
think most of us face, because
its on the one hand you
can affirm your child and

then take them outside and


immediately theyre going to
be bullied and harassed by
everybody and set them up
to have basically the worst
Halloween ever. Or, you can
be like, Nah Im going to shut
you down now in the interest of your protection. Its a
terrible position people are
forced into.
Thursday night, the
UNC Sexuality and Gender
Alliance (SAGA) hosted
Glitter. Power. Love: A (re)
Introduction to Gender.
Led by Tobia a genderqueer advocate and artist
the workshop aimed to
explain the who, what, where,
when, why and how of the
genderqueer movement.

Gender is not just one or the other. It is a


broad spectrum of a lot of different things.
Jacob Tobia
Activist, writer, speaker and artist

Aaron Lovett, UNC SAGA


president, created the event
after getting feedback, especially from the LGBTQ community, that students wanted
to see more representation
of genderqueer, trans and
nonbinary people speak about
their activism work.
Essentially, I saw that
people wanted to engage in
that dialogue, Lovett said.
I thought that it was an
important topic to bring to
light on campus so I decided

a good way to do that would


be to bring one of the most
prominent writers, speakers,
advocates on that topic to
campus and right now that
person is certainly Jacob
Tobia.
After sharing several stories from their childhood,
Tobia dove into the more
conceptual material concerning trans, genderqueer and
nonbinary people.
Gender is not just one or
the other, Tobia said. It is a

broad spectrum of a lot of different things.


Tobia stressed that trans
and gender-nonconforming
people are at a moment of
incredible vulnerability and
face many struggles because
of that.
With visibility also comes
a lot of vulnerability, Tobia
said.
Kevin Adington knew
about Tobia because they
went to the same high school.
I mainly wanted to come
to the event to hear (Tobia)
speak again and to see
how their own experiences
changed over time, because I
remember when they didnt
use the pronouns they/them,
and I remember when they

DTH office is open Mon-Fri 9:00am-5:00pm

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werent as confident as they


are today, Adington said.
So seeing them kind of blow
up on social media and the
media at large has been fantastic, so I wanted to see that.
Tobia closed with a message denouncing the current
gender model.
Its not just about genderqueer and nonbinary people,
because as we briefly discussed earlier, this model isnt
just bad for trans and gendernonconforming people, its
actually bad for everybody,
they said.
Every single person in this
room has been burned by the
gender binary.

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Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to


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

Child Care Wanted


SOUTH DURHAM CHURCH looking for
part-time nursery worker Sunday mornings from 10:15-12:30 p.m. $18-20/hr.
If interested email cover letter and resume to kids@allgather.or 919-797-2884

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For Rent
FAIR HOUSING

ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in


this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers are
hereby informed that all dwellings advertised
in this newspaper are available on an equal
opportunity basis in accordance with the law.
To complain of discrimination, call the U. S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development housing discrimination hotline: 1-800669-9777.
STONECROP Apartments. Walk to campus,
downtown, affordable, 4BR/4BA. Rent includes
all utilities, WiFi, W/D, huge kitchen, rec room,
parking in garage, security entrance with elevator. Call 919-968-7226, office@millhouseproperties.com.
Now
showing and leasing properties for 2017/18
school year. Walk to campus, 1BR-6BR
available. Contact via merciarentals.com or
919-933-8143.

MERCIA

RESIDENTIAL

FOR RENT IN CHAPEL HILL: Newly constructed 4BR/3BA house, 109 Cole St., $2,500/
mo; 3BR/2BA house, 601 Morgan Creek Rd.,
$1,700/mo; 2BR/1BA house, 115 Cole St.,
$900/mo. All have DW, stove, refrigerator,
W/D, parking, wood floors. Call 919-309-6756.
UNC STUDENTS: Personal assistant needed. Average 5-6 hours a week. Flexible work schedule. Great for students. $12/hr. 919-933-7533,
919-260-5645.

STARPOINT STORAGE
NEED STORAGE SPACE?
Safe, Secure, Climate Controlled

Hwy 15-501 South & Smith Level Road

Directory

(919) 942-6666

Help Wanted

Serve your community, advance


your career, and have fun all at
the same time!

Full time and Part time positions available helping


individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
This opportunity is GREAT if youre interested in gaining
experience related to your major/degree in nursing,
psychology, sociology, OT/PT, or other human service
fields. Various shifts available - 1st, 2nd and 3rd.
Entry-level pay starting up to $11 per hour.
Visit us at https://rsiinc.applicantpro.com/jobs/

AFTERSCHOOL
COUNSELORS NEEDED
Counselors needed for fun and engaging afterschool program at Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA.
Great opportunity to work with elementary
aged students leading active and creative programming in the afternoon. Hours are 2-6pm
M-F. Please apply online at link provided on
dailytarheel.com/classifieds or contact Youth
Director Nick Kolb (nick.kolb@YMCATriangle.
org, 919-987-8847) with questions

SATURDAY CONCIERGE
Looking for persons with strong customer
service skills. 7am-7pm $12ph. Saturdays
only. Resume:140westmanager@ewclubs.com

RECYCLE ME PLEASE!

Travel/Vacation
BAHAMAS SPRING BREAK

$189 for 5 DAYS. All prices include: Round trip


luxury party cruise, accommodations on the
island at your choice of 10 resorts. Appalachia
Travel. www. BahamaSun.com, 800-867-5018.

Tutoring Wanted
NOW HIRING TUTORS We have tutoring po-

sitions available immediately for all subjects, Pre-K through 12th grade. Excellent
pay. Flexible hours. Contact us at info@
ClassHalfFull.com or (919)951-7676

CALC BC TUTOR NEEDED Daughter of UNC


Faculty needs Calc BC tutor on or off campus
ASAP. Competitive pay.

UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY
Sundays 10:00 and 11:45
The Varsity Theatre

Reli gious

PROPERTIES:

Help Wanted

a new church with a


mission: to love Chapel Hill
with the Heart of Jesus

lovechapelhill.com

HOROSCOPES
If November 4th is Your Birthday...
Good things come to those who wait this year. Make long-term
plans, dreams and visions. Make money with steady efforts.
Springtime professional changes come before a passionate
flowering. Home transitions next autumn lead to a career
breakthrough. True your course to your heart.
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 -- Make an important
connection. The next two days bring
lots of career movement. Test your
moves before making them. A plum
assignment is within reach.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 7 -- Do the homework.
You dont need to reinvent the wheel.
Someone has done what youre
attempting. Go to the source to get
the real story.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 9 -- Discuss shared
finances, and work out a compromise. You get farther with an agent.
Your partner and your team can help.
Creative negotiation wins big.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8 -- Work out a sweet
deal with your partner, and get
promises in writing. Set practical,
realistic goals and schedule actions.
Keep your eyes on the prize.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Pay extra attention to
nurturing your health and well-being.
Good food, rest and plenty of water
can work miracles. Exercise energizes
you. Balance work with play.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Love is your greatest
wealth. Savor it with friends, family
and especially with someone attractive. The odds are in your favor now.
Take time for fun.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is a 7 -- Domestic bliss is within
reach. Get a cup of something delicious
and tackle a household project. Create
beautiful details. Get family involved
with sweet enticements.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 6 -- Get into a writing or
research project. Youre especially
clever, and words come more easily.
Have patience; good things come to
those who wait.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8 -- Postpone a personal
project for now. Theres good money to
be made, and youre well positioned.
New possibilities arise, and completion
leads to advancement.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is an 8 -- Get innovative. Youre
in your personal comfort zone. Use your
power and confidence to make things
happen. Get advice, but make your
own decisions.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 5 -- Finish up old business.
Let go of worn-out baggage. Think
about where you want to go next.
Imagine how things could unfold.
Listen to your heart.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 -- Teamwork gets the job
done. Get help to clean up a mess.
Hold meetings and gatherings. Let
others carry the ball while you direct
traffic.
(c) 2016 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

UNC CHAPEL HILL


A UNITED METHODIST COMMUNITY

Worship: Sunday Nights 7pm


125 Chapman Hall
Free Dinner: Thursday Nights 6:15pm
University UMC Basement
For the latest details, connect with us:
www.facebook.com/groups/uncwesley
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Sundays
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at 10:30am
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News

The Daily Tar Heel

YOUNG

Friday, November 4, 2016

trust among her teammates


on the back line.
Shes the type of person
you feel as though shes got
your back, Travers said. Not
only does the team trust her,
but shes the type of person
who can trust herself.
With her development on
and off the field, Julia was
ready for a bigger role when
Travers graduated.
I was kinda just put in this
position where I had to step
up, she said. The fact that I
did get to play that much pre-

pared me for now.

season, Julia started making


her mark off the bench, then
worked her way into the starting lineup.
But Shelton knew Julia was
just scratching the surface of
what she could be.
Her freshman year, she
was a little too nice and a
little too soft, Shelton said.
Enter Sam Travers, Julias
predecessor at center back for
the Tar Heels, a second team

All-America and captain as


a senior in 2014. She took
Julia under her wing early on,
and Julia credits much of her
development to Travers.
Travers thinks Julia is
being too modest.
She knew how to take criticism better than anyone Ive
seen, Travers said. She knew
what to take in and to use and
what to discard.
Travers said that ability
to learn from mistakes and
fix the problems led Julia to
develop quickly and build

SOCCER

UNC-BOSTON COLLEGE

four of Nils Bruenings goals


against Boston College came
when the forward was left
unmarked inside the box.
The inconsistent play
in the Boston College back
line has been compounded
by shaky goalkeeping from
Cedric Saladin. Saladin saves
just 66.7 percent of shots
on goal that come his way
and has failed to bail out his
defense.

DORRANCE

FROM PAGE 10

FROM PAGE 10

Time: 1 p.m. on Sunday

and forced goalkeeper James


Pyle to make six saves.
Although the Eagles
depend on skill and precision
offensively, they are one of the
more physical teams in the
conference.
Boston College averages
nearly 14 fouls per game and
leads the ACC in yellow card
bookings with 1.94 per game.
North Carolina will have to
remain composed when dealing with the bruising brand of
soccer Boston College plays.

Location: Fetzer Field

Who stands out?


Senior midfielder
Maximilian SchulzeGeisthovel leads the Eagles
with seven goals on the season.
Despite leading the team in
scoring, Schulze-Geisthovel
is not a high volume scorer,
but in just 29 shots he has
converted nearly a quarter
into goals.

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

The Eagles have another


offensive weapon in senior
forward Zeiko Lewis. In the
teams win over Virginia Tech
on Wednesday, Lewis scored
both goals for the Eagles
including the game-tying goal
with less than five minutes
remaining.
Lewis five goals rank second on the team, but he is
also comfortable as a distributor, leading the Eagles with
five assists.

Whats their weakness?


Boston College relies
on the offense because its
lackluster defense leaves no
choice. Scoring is a must
for the Eagles because they
allow 1.65 goals per game. All
twice in the regular season
the first time a 3-2 win and
the second time a 3-0 loss
North Carolina knows what
looms ahead.
Theyre our archrival,
heavily favored, coming off
a bye, Shelton said. Were
shifting our sights to tomorrow.
Preparation for Duke
involves maintaining a clear
head and keeping composure.
Young knows this better than
anyone.
Were not dwelling on the
past, she said. Just playing
our game.
@WBOD3
sports@dailytarheel.com

How could they win?


In North Carolinas losses,
the Tar Heels tended to force
the offense, making careless
passes and taking low percentage shots.
Boston College has the
firepower offensively to take
advantage on counter attacks.
If the Eagles can maintain
possession and keep the ball
in the middle and attacking
thirds, they avoid relying
on their defense and have a
chance to pull off the upset.
@david_adler94
sports@dailytarheel.com

***
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

midfielder from Virginia,


they both have seven goals
in conference. And itd be a
crime if she didnt get rookie
of the year. So Bridgette has
improved dramatically in all
aspects of her game.
Megan Buckingham has
been our best field player. I
think our best player going
back to the beginning would
probably be Lindsey Harris,
but our best field player and
our most consistent every
game is Megan Buckingham,

HOME C OMING WEEK E VEN T S 2 016

team All-South region selection and a second-team AllAmerica selection a season


ago. This season, shes already
the ACC Defensive Player of
the Year.
But Julia is focused on the
teams goals namely, leading UNC to the national title
that has eluded her so far.
That journey continues when
the Tar Heels take on No. 1
Duke in the ACC Tournament
semifinals at 1 p.m. today in
Winston-Salem.
After falling in the national

title game a season ago, Julia


knows what the Tar Heels must
do to reach their potential. She
can see it from her spot in the
middle of the back line.
When were playing our
best, were running for each
other, were recovering for
each other, everyones playing
offense and defense, she said.
I think my duty as the
center back and the captain is
to recognize that and kind of
keep it going.
@sjdoughton
sports@dailytarheel.com

and she continues to improve.


I think since last year,
those three certainly
Harris, Buckingham
and then, from August,
Andrzejewski.
Julia Ashley is playing
out of her mind, and her
improvement since August
and last year has also been
absolutely remarkable.
Ive seen a steady improvement from our kids coming back from injury like
Cameron Castleberry, Dorian
Bailey and Darcy McFarlane,
all coming off last years
ACL tears, youre seeing a

steady improvement from all


three of them each week. So
Ive enjoyed watching them
improve from the beginning
of August.
Id say Annie Kingman,
who wrestled a starting
position in the USC game,
basically in our worst performance she was one of
our best players. I think her
improvement has been dramatic, and she also scored
some very important early
goals for us.
So I think that group.
@jbo_vernon
sports@dailytarheel.com

WELCOME BACK, ALUMS!

NOV

4 FRIDAY

How about another summer on the Hill?

Rampagin

Win fun prizes with the Student Alumni


Association, enjoy Dominos Pizza and place
your vote for Mr. and Miss UNC.

Foreign language courses


Enrichment courses
Day, afternoon,
and night courses
#UNCHC #WRECKTECH
alumni.unc.edu/studenthomecoming
General Alumni Association

More information at
summer.unc.edu
Follow @UNCSummerSchool

dailytarheel.com/classifieds
find a job buy a couch sell your car

Gnomes and lamps


Swerve explored the profoundly strange UNC gear
for sale on Franklin Street.
Visit online for more.

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
last puzzle

Skip Skipper Bowles


Skipper Bowles Drive
will be full of construction
until January. Its the tunnels. See pg. 5 for story.

Money laundering?
N.C. Democrats are upset
about some Republican
campaign contributions.
See pg. 5 for story.

The Devil Wears...


The journalism school
just got a $1 million donation for a new fashion program. See pg. 7 for story.

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


Across
1 Start of something
4 Know-it-all
9 Sticky roll
13 Title car in a Ronny &
the Daytonas hit
14 Michelangelos The
Last Judgment, e.g.
15 Australian export
16 Like Gen. Powell
17 Vito Corleone talking
bobblehead?
19 N.T. book before Phil.
20 Denver-to-Wichita dir.
21 Oppressive atmosphere
22 Goal of a holistic
chiropractor?
26 Renewal notice feature,
briefly
27 Like a well-written
mystery
28 Hammer users cry
32 Payment in Isfahan
35 Chem. and bio.
37 Drift (off)
38 As a group, emulate
Popeye?
41 Singer DiFranco
42 Pop
43 TV oil name
44 The Good
Wife figs.
46 Fabric rib
48 Its home
version
debuted at
Sears in 1975
50 Maiden aunt
mascot?
54 Israeli prime
minister after
Barak
57 __ Gotta Be
Me
58 Way to go:
Abbr.

59 Enjoying the new car ...


or what four puzzle
answers are literally
doing
62 Great Basin native
63 Saharan
64 Hydrocarbon gas
65 Rx item
66 Inheritance factor
67 Tends
68 Humanities maj.
Down
1 Way out
2 Mike or Carol on The
Brady Bunch
3 I guess the moment has
finally arrived
4 Impetuous
5 Find a new table for
6 Nile slitherer
7 Its here in Paris
8 Anchored for life, as
barnacles
9 Word in morning
weather forecasts
10 Mil. mail drops
11 It faces forward in a stop

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

(C)2012 Tribune Media


Services, Inc.
All rights reserved.

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

The Daily Tar Heel

Friday, November 4, 2016

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

In field hockey, center


back is the worst position
outside of goalie for your
daughter to play if youre a
nervous parent.
At least, thats what UNC
senior Julia Youngs father,
Ted, thinks.
Whenever (the other
team) gets close, Im nervous,
Ted said. Im always on edge.
But Julia never is. As the
anchor of the Tar Heel back
line, she calmly receives
passes, distributes the ball to
her teammates and, when the
need arises, gets the ball the
heck out of the circle.
That calm, stoic presence
out of the back is why her
teammates trust her. Its why
shes their captain, always
keeping a cool head and composed face for the team.
Maintaining that presence
wasnt always easy for Julia.
Neither was being thrust into
the spotlight for her accolades. But now, shes mastered
how to stay calm under pressure.
I think a lot of times when
you see people get flustered,
theyre thinking too much,
she said.

So I just try not to think.

***
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

DTH FILE/NATHAN KLIMA


Senior back Julia Young (16) moves the ball upfield while being trailed by an Appalachian State player on October 30.

around their sophomore year


of high school and plans out
who she wants to recruit by
their junior year.
But Shelton had no idea
who Julia was until she was a
junior.
One of her assistant coaches told her to go watch Julia
play a game at the National
Field Hockey Festival in
Arizona. Shelton walked over
and knew immediately whom

her assistant was talking


about.
It took me one time on
grass to see that she had
amazing potential, Shelton
said. I gotta have this kid.
At that point, it was a
matter of closing the deal.
Shelton had the Youngs down
for an official visit shortly
after the festival, culminating in what Shelton believes
is the best offer in collegiate

field hockey: to play for North


Carolina.
Driving back home to
Yorktown, Virginia, Julia
didnt take long to make her
choice.
Ted tried to reason with
her, suggesting she spend
some time thinking her
options over. Julia didnt need
to.
She said, Thats where I
want to make my mark, Ted

said. There was no decisionmaking. It was decided ten


minutes up the road.

***
After arriving in Chapel
Hill, it didnt take long for
others to notice Julias potential. Winning the teams
rookie of the year her first

SEE YOUNG, PAGE 9

Q&A with womens soccer


coach Anson Dorrance

DTH FILE/NATHAN KLIMA


Nils Bruening (14) celebrates after his first of four goals against Boston College on Sept. 23.

Tar Heels face Boston


College in quarterfinal
UNC beat Boston College 5-0 in
their September matchup.
By David Adler

unbeaten in their last five games and defeated


Boston College 5-0 earlier this season at Fetzer
Field behind Nils Bruenings four goals.

How do they play?

Senior Writer

After earning some time off with its first


round bye, the No. 4 North Carolina mens
soccer team begins the ACC Tournament with
a quarterfinal face-off against Boston College
at 1 p.m. on Sunday at Fetzer Field.
For the Eagles (7-7-3, 3-3-2 ACC), advancing to the quarterfinals was anything but
a given, as they went 4-3 on penalty kicks
against Virginia Tech after tying 2-2 in regulation to advance.
The Tar Heels (11-2-3, 5-1-2 ACC) are

Boston College relies on its offense to control


possession and patiently work the ball into the
box. While the Eagles dont generate a ton of
shots relative to the rest of the ACC, they are
one of the best at earning corner kick opportunities averaging over six corner kicks per
game.
While Boston College was unable to get on
the scoreboard against UNC in its prior meeting, it generated some quality scoring chances

SEE SOCCER, PAGE 9

The No. 10 North Carolina womens soccer


team takes on No. 6 Notre Dame in the ACC
Tournament semifinal Friday. The matchup
will be a chance for the Tar Heels to continue
their season turnaround.
UNC dropped its first ACC game of the season against N.C. State who earned its second win ever in the series but has lost just
once in its last 10 games.
Assistant Sports Editor Jeremy Vernon sat
down with Coach Anson Dorrance to discuss
the teams revival, his thoughts on its progress
and the upcoming game against the Fighting
Irish.
The Daily Tar Heel: Your team defeated Virginia,
3-0, in the ACC Tournament quarterfinals.
Were you expecting that margin of victory
against a tough Cavalier team?
Anson Dorrance: No, I wasnt. In terms of raw
talent, Virginia probably has more in more
positions than we do. And this gets back to
what I think we do better than anyone else,
which is develop players. And Ive got a staff
thats committed to that.
If you look at Chris Ducars legacy in developing goalkeepers is fantastic, and honestly
its his player thats sort of kept us alive early
when we were getting shelled.
And then Bill Palladinos been coaching
our defense from the beginning. And our center back is a lacrosse star. And our left back
has all kinds of knee challenges. Our right
back is only a sophomore. And yet, weve put
together the third or fourth best defense in
the ACC.
DTH: Your team is third in the ACC in goals
per game in conference play. Did you think
youd see that type of production after the
teams midseason struggles?

AD: Hell no.


Just a lot of good things are going on, and
a lot of our improvement I lay at the feet of
Damon Nahas ... Hes really contributed a lot
to my kids and to the program. He has the
same work ethic and passion for player development that I do I think what puts us in a
fantastic position honestly is our staff.
If you look at the resumes of all the coaches
we have working here, its a whos who of elite
coaches in the country, and that puts us in a
unique position so that, this team of kids that
no one expected to be in this position if you
looked back to August, certainly when the US
U20 National Team takes our two stars, and
yet here we are.
DTH: Notre Dame has the best defense in the
ACC. Whats your plan of attack against the
Fighting Irish back line?
AD: Its very hard because I dont think we
created that many scoring chances the first
time we played them. Now they didnt create
many against us either, but trust me, were
going to be working on our penalty kicks all
week.
DTH: Which of your players do you think has
made the most improvement from the beginning of the season?
AD: Id be hard pressed to say whos
improved the most, but I would say unquestionably since August these players have
to be a part of the conversation: Bridgette
(Andrzejewski), who, if she doesnt win the
freshman of the year, the coaches out there
have torpedoed her, because shes the leading
scorer in the ACC. Shes tied, in theory, the
best player in the conference, the attacking

SEE DORRANCE, PAGE 9

UNC field hockey pulls off comeback in ACC quarterfinals


Lauren Moyer scored
on a penalty corner
as time expired.
By Will Bryant
Senior Writer

Lauren Moyer looked up at


the scoreboard as she jogged
off the field for halftime. It
read 2-0, but Moyer never
once thought the No. 5 North
Carolina field hockey team
was out of the game.
When the score was 2-1
with 12 minutes left, she did
not waver.
Then, when the score was

tied with six minutes to go,


she knew it was the Tar Heels
game.
Theres obviously pressure
in a first-round, elimination
game, Moyer said. We just
kind of got together at halftime, and decided we werent
going to let it happen.
The Tar Heels stayed true
to their word, earning a 3-2
victory behind Moyers first
career hat trick to oust No. 8
Louisville from the ACC tournament.

The build up
UNC started off slow,
allowing Louisville to run off

with a 2-0 lead after the first


35 minutes of play.
Facing a two-goal deficit
at halftime, Coach Karen
Shelton knew her team needed a boost coming out of the
locker room a boost Moyer
provided, scoring 15 minutes
in to cut the Cardinals lead
in half.
Still, Louisville flashed a
robust defense for the next
few minutes, holding the
score at 2-1.
In the 62nd minute,
Shelton called a timeout in
order to bring in an extra field
player in hopes of netting the
tying goal.
Less than two minutes

later, Moyer put the tying goal


past the Louisville keeper.
Once we got the tying
goal, we had a lot of momentum moving into the last
minutes of the game. Shelton
said.
A yellow card for UNC
with five minutes left meant
the team would be a player
down for the rest of the game.
But the Tar Heel defense,
anchored by ACC Defensive
Player of the Year Julia
Young, kept the Cardinals
attack at bay.
We had come back after
being down before, Young
said. Our mindset didnt
change.

It was with mere seconds


remaining that UNC found
an opportunity in Cardinal
territory.

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

turf. Major knows its her target, glancing in the direction


of her teammates.
Moyer looks toward the
cage she had already found
twice this afternoon, yearning
to find it just once more.
Major fires. Young settles.
Moyer rips. The ball clangs
against the back of the cage.
A whistle blows.
Moyer looks up at the
scoreboard. It reads 3-2. UNC
wins.

The future
The goal propelled the Tar

SEE FIELD HOCKEY, PAGE 9

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