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ing to have on-campus tailgates this season.

Those games will be against East Carolina


University, Boston College and Old Dominion
University.
Cruz said their goal is to provide a safe
environment for students to hang out and get
hyped for the game together.
Darvin said the tailgate will be close to the
football stadium. He said their only goal is to
get more people in the stadium and help them
have a good time.
Much of the buzz on campus relates bas-
ketball, but wed love to transfer some of that
energy to football, Darvin said.
By Andy Willard
Staff Writer
There are few things that keep students
away from Franklin Street on a Friday night.
But senior Cody Allen said he has two rea-
sons to stay inside on Fridays in the fall a
home football game and a tailgating tradition.
Saturday is a long day, you might as well
sacrifice one night for that, he said.
Allen said the tradition started when his
father was a UNC student in the 1970s. Allens
grandfather would drive to UNC and put on a
tailgate for Allens father and his friends.
The family has kept it going ever since,
and their tradition will kick off once again
this Saturday when UNC football plays its
home opener against Middle Tennessee State
University at 12:30 p.m.
Allen said his parents drive to campus
bringing barbecue, casseroles and drinks.
My only job is just to invite friends and
when I get there I help my dad as the bartend-
er, Allen said.
But to join in on the tailgating Saturday on
campus, fans like Allens father have to have a
parking pass, which is handled by the Rams
Club.
Nick Fulton, the director of annual cam-
paigns for the Rams Club, said there are
approximately 6,000 parking passes for game
days, and they are given out to alumni based
on a points system.
Alumni earn one point for every $100 they
donate to the University and three points for
every year they are members of the club.
Every three years we reshuffle things and
establish ranks, he said.
Fulton said he did not know how long the
system has been in place.
Students earn one point for every $25 they
donate and three points for each year of mem-
bership. The points can only be accumulated
while students are in school, and they cant be
eligible for a parking spot until graduation.
Allen said if students were given parking
passes, it would improve the atmosphere on
game days.
I think it would be better it would
change the whole experience, he said.
Senior Tricia Seitzer said as an underclass-
man she went to tailgates at fraternities, and as
an upperclassman she goes to Hes Not Here,
though she said its not the same as the sports
tradition.
Its a little frustrating because unless you
have family members coming up theres no space
for people to tailgate on campus, she said.
Alexandra Cruz and Andrew Darvin, co-
chairmen of Carolina Fever, said they are hop-
Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893
Tailgate. Bring your own party.
Brooks Boyer
Thursday, September 5, 2013 dailytarheel.com Volume 121, Issue 65
All geared up, nowhere to go
The tailgating tradition for UNC home games limits premier spots to alumni. Game day parking passes are awarded to the alumni based on a point system. Merchandise courtesy of UNC Student Stores.
McCrory vetoes overridden
By Kathryn Trogdon
Staff Writer
In just 10 minutes, the N.C. Senate
voted Wednesday to override Gov. Pat
McCrorys only two legislative vetoes,
bringing the General Assemblys 2013
special session to a close.
The action mirrored the N.C. House
of Representatives decision Tuesday,
which also attained the three-fifths
majority necessary to override the gov-
ernors veto on a welfare drug testing
bill and an immigration bill.
The Senate voted 34-10 in favor of the
welfare drug testing bill, which would
require background checks and drug
testing for some welfare applicants.
N.C. Sen. Jim Davis, R-Macon, said
the bill was not designed to be an effec-
tive way to fight criminal drug abuse,
but to make sure they were not support-
ing illegal drug use and moving illegal
drug users toward self-sufficiency.
In response, McCrory said in a state-
ment he would not implement the law
until funds were available. The back-
ground checks and drug testing were not
included in the 2013-15 state budget.
Mitch Kokai, an analyst for the con-
servative John Locke Foundation, said
unless McCrory calls for another special
session, the General Assembly cannot
do anything to fund the law until the
short session, which begins May 14.
The Senate also voted 39-5 to over-
ride the immigration bill veto, which
extends how long employees can work in
the state without verifying citizenship.
Sen. Brent Jackson, R-Sampson, said
he supported it because it eliminates
extra paperwork that farmers have to do
every year and, despite misconceptions,
it doesnt support illegal immigration.
It is the right thing to do for our (agri-
cultural) community, he said. This bill
The N.C. Senate overturned
vetoes on drug testing and
immigration bills.
Parking permits in prime tailgating locations are often occupied by alumni
Democrats rework strategy
UNC women to be
honored Saturday
courtesy of jeffrey camarati
The North Carolina womens soccer team celebrates after win-
ning the 2012 NCAA womens soccer championship its 21st.
By Meredith Burns
Senior Writer
Despite the Republican presence in
most legislatures and governors man-
sions across the South, Democratic
leaders are looking to reclaim the
region in 2014 and beyond.
Party leaders from 10 states, includ-
ing North Carolina, recently formed
the Committee of the South to com-
bine resources and strengthen the
Democratic party in the traditionally
conservative region.
The committee aims to fortify
regional Democratic candidates and
establish a more powerful national
presence, said Robert Dempsey,
the executive director of the N.C.
Democratic Party.
Eight of the 10 participating states
have Republican-dominated legisla-
tures Kentucky has a majority-Dem-
ocrat House and Virginia has a split
Senate and a Republican House. Eight
states are led by Republican governors.
Leaders from Arkansas, Florida,
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia are
participating in the committee.
What Im looking for is a stronger,
more unified party, Dempsey said.
The committees goals include creat-
ing a regional network of Democratic
campaign operatives, sharing demo-
graphic and electoral data and tailoring
party messages to reach more Southern
voters including youth, Latinos and
women.
We have an evolving electorate, and
we need to make sure were evolving as
well, Dempsey said.
Peter Vogel, president of UNC
A new Democratic group
will focus on the South.
CommiTTee objeCTiveS
The Committee of the South will
focus on three main objectives in
strengthening southern chapters of
the Democratic Party:
Training and retaining Democratic
campaign workers
Gathering and sharing data
Strengthening party messages
Young Democrats, said he supports the
regional collaboration.
I think its a very good idea because
every state has their strengths, he said.
Ferrel Guillory, a UNC journalism
professor who specializes in Southern
politics, said the Democratic efforts in
the South are similar to the Republican
Partys national efforts to win the next
By Daniel Wilco
Assistant Sports Editor
Whats in your wallet?
If youre the North Carolina
womens athletic program, the
answer is a $200,000 check
and a shiny new trophy.
The Tar Heels were declared
the winner of the 2013 Capital
One Cup in June and will
receive their award dur-
ing halftime of UNCs home
football game against Middle
Tennessee State Saturday.
The competition honors
each of the best mens and
womens Division I college
athletics programs in the
country, according to the
Capital One website.
Programs earn points
through NCAA national title
wins and final official coaches
polls. The womens and mens
teams with the most points of
the athletic year claim the cup.
North Carolina racked up
its 140 points 10.5 points
above runner-up Stanford
through NCAA champion-
ships by the womens soccer
and lacrosse teams and top-
five finishes by the tennis and
field hockey teams.
It is recognition of out-
standing achievement for
our womens program that
has been very good for so
many years, Athletic Director
Bubba Cunningham said.
Womens soccer coach
UNC womens athletics
won the Capital one
Cup in june.
see TAilgATiNg, Page 9
see CApiTAl oNe, Page 9
see SoUTherN STATeS, Page 9
see NCgA veToeS, Page 9
dth Photo illustration/kaki PoPe and chris conway
DTH ONLINE: Turn to pg. 7 to read
about a new tailgating cookbook recently
published by UNC Press.
today
Capitalism and Resistance in
the 21st Century: Take part in
a discussion about capitalism
and how it has changed over
the past several years, and fnd
out what these changes mean
for workers and students. The
discussion is part of Radical Rush
Week.
Time: 7 p.m.
Location: Student Union Room
3408
The Storied South: Voices of
Writers and Artists: Join UNC
professor and renowned folklor-
ist William Ferris in his discus-
sion of his new book published
by UNC Press.
Time: 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Location: Wilson Library, Pleas-
ants Family Assembly Room
Friday
Carolina Symposia in Music
and Culture: Kate van Orden:
Harvard Universitys Kate van
Orden delivers the James W.
Pruett Lecture. She is an early
music historian who specializes
in cultural history.
Time: 4:15 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Location: Person Hall
Global Protests in Context:
Here and Now Series: As
protests continue to spring up
throughout the world, learn
what makes them diferent and
what they can tell us about the
future. Each panelist will speak
for a few minutes and then take
questions from the audience.
Free and open to the public.
Time: 5:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.
Location: FedEx Global Educa-
tion Center
NOTED. Got to love people who create
Change.org petitions. They really know
whats messed up in the world like the
fact that Alexis Bledel and Matt Bomer
werent cast in the Fifty Shades of Grey
movie. Seriously messed up.
Props, yall famine, sexism and rac-
ism are way too difficult to fix, anyway.
QUOTED. Its time for this nerd to get
dancin.
Bill Nye, the Science Guy, in a tweet
announcing that he ll be competing in the
16th season of Dancing with the Stars.
Were a little grossed out, but does any-
one else want to crash a show taping and
shout Bill! Bill! Bill! Bill!?
I
dea: Instead of handing down harsher prison sentences to repeat
law-breakers, why dont we just make criminals wear giant, ugly
signs? Well, thats the punishment one municipal court judge in
Cleveland, Ohio, sentenced 58-year-old Richard Dameron to after
he had drunkenly threatened police officers.
Dameron had to stand in front of Clevelands Second District police
department holding a sign that proclaimed himself an idiot (you said
it, buddy, not us). I apologize to Officer Simone and all police officers for
being an idiot, calling 911 and threatening to kill you, the sign read. Im
sorry and it will never happen again. Maybe someone could do this to
the next UNC athlete who gets in trouble?
Glutton for punishment
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone resisted arrest
at 102 Glade St. at 2:38 a.m.
Tuesday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
The person tried to drive
off and would not get out of
the car, reports state.
Someone approached a
person suspiciously at 103
E. Franklin St. at 11:21 a.m.
Tuesday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
The person walked up to a
woman with a note, reports
state.
Someone made loud
noises at 805 S. Merritt Mill
Road at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person was mak-
ing noise on a higher floor,
reports state.
Someone reported the
theft of construction sup-
plies at 425 Hillsborough St.
between 6:15 p.m. and 6:31
p.m. Tuesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
No supplies were found
missing at the construction
site, reports state.
Someone broke and
entered at 119 Cole St.
between 6:45 p.m. and 8:36
p.m. Tuesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person broke down the
front door, causing damage
valued at $200, reports state.
Someone violated a city
ordinance at 200 E. Franklin
St. at 1:09 a.m. Wednesday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person was operating a
for-hire vehicle without prop-
er permits, reports state.
Someone broke and
entered at 801 Hillsborough
Road between 5 p.m.
Saturday and 11:14 a.m.
Monday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
To make a calendar submission,
email calendar@dailytarheel.
com. Please include the date of
the event in the subject line, and
attach a photo if you wish. Events
will be published in the newspaper
on either the day or the day before
they take place.
CoMMUNity CaLENdar
Art a la Carte: Kick of the week-
end with this hands-on art class
exclusively for UNC students.
This session, which focuses on
surrealism, begins at the Ack-
land Art Museum, where youll
learn about artist techniques
and materials. Then youll go to
the Hanes Art Center to craft
up your own masterpiece. The
session is $10 and designed for
beginners, though those with
experience are welcome.
Time: 4 p.m. - 7 p.m.
Location: Ackland Art Museum
PoLiCE LoG
News Thursday, September 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2
THE MARATHON RETuRNs
J
uniors Chelsey Fizer (left) and Maria Wynn
promote UNC Dance Marathon Wednesday
in front of Davis Library. Wynn is on the
Fundraising Projects Committee and Fizer is a sub-
chair for the Publicity Committee.
dth/ Louise Mann CLeMent
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News Thursday, September 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3
Campus Briefs
Applications for Ronald E. McNair
Scholars program now open
Sophomores can now apply to be
a McNair Scholar, a program offered
to undergraduate students for doc-
toral studies through involvement in
research and other scholarly activi-
ties.
McNair Scholars are either first-gen-
eration college students with financial
need or members of a group tradition-
ally underrepresented in graduate
education.
The program offers an eight-week
paid summer research program, inter-
active workshops and travel opportuni-
ties.
From staff and wire reports
inBRIEF
Students bike cross-country
Candy
factory
comes to
county
By Corinne Jurney
Staff Writer
UNC students might be munching
on Japanese candies fresh from Orange
County while a Japanese business exec-
utive dons a North Carolina football
jersey in Asia.
After months of shopping for an
American location, Morinaga America,
a leading Japanese confectionery com-
pany, selected Orange County for its
first U.S. factory.
Leaders of the company spent a lot of
time visiting Orange County with Steve
Brantley, the countys economic devel-
opment director. Brantley took them
T-shirt shopping on Franklin Street,
where one Morinaga executive bought
a Bryn Renner football jersey, which
he was excited to sport back home in
Japan.
Morinaga is like the Nestle or
Hersheys of Japan, Brantley said. He
said Hi-Chew the candy produced
by Morinaga is a fruity, chewy candy
similar to Starburst.
Construction on the factory will
begin in early 2014, with a planned
opening date in 2015. Hi-Chew is cur-
rently produced in Taiwan, according to
a company statement.
The factory will be located off of
Interstate 40, near the Tanger Outlets
shopping center in Mebane, and its
logo will be visible from the highway.
Brantley said Morinaga will bring
between 90 to 120 jobs to the county.
The companys arrival will also diver-
sify the tax base and alleviate property
tax increases on already strained resi-
dents. Homeowners pay for 87 percent
of property taxes in Orange County,
Brantley said.
The $48 million capital invest-
ment will rank the company as Orange
Countys fourth- or fifth-largest tax-
payer, he said.
County Commissioner Renee Price
said she is excited for this opportu-
nity.
This is a Japanese company so its a
good opportunity culturally, Price said.
Its going to do a lot to expand diver-
sity and culture in Orange County and
Im looking forward to it.
Some of the Japanese executives
relocating to the area were excited to
see the diversity in Orange Countys
schools, where 20 percent of students
are Asian the schools largest minor-
ity, Brantley said.
Morinagas executives sampled
spirits at Top of the Hill, admired
Michael Jordans legacy at the Carolina
Basketball Museum, dined at the
Carolina Inn and even visited the Duke
University Chapel.
We made a point to tell them that
UNC has at least one more basketball
championship than Duke, Brantley
said.
Morinagas 20-acre factory will be
the companys first on U.S. soil.
North Carolina is well-known as
a state which provides a remarkable
business environment, said Masao
Hoshino, CEO of Morinaga America, in
a statement.
The president and chairman of the
company also met Gov. Pat McCrory
and Secretary of Commerce Sharon
Decker, who lobbied for the state,
Brantley said.
The factorys payroll will total more
than $3.4 million plus benefits, accord-
ing to a statement from McCrorys
office.
We feel honored to be a member
of the community and are determined
to do our very best to contribute to the
state as well as to make our business in
the U.S. a success, Hoshino said.
city@dailytarheel.com
By Oliver Hamilton
Staff Writer
Despite the impending demolition of
University Square, students wont have to
worry about missing out on their chicken
cheddar biscuit from Time-Out.
The comfort food restaurant, which has
been a Chapel Hill staple for 35 years, is hit-
ting the road in the form of a food truck.
The food truck was parked outside of the
Franklin Street location last week while Eddie
Williams, the owner of Time-Out, searched for
a location in town to begin serving out of the
truck.
We started the food truck last February,
and weve done food truck rodeos in Raleigh
and Durham, along with private parties,
Williams said.
We have done little to nothing in Chapel
Hill because its tough finding the right place
to do it.
Williams said he has to find a viable loca-
tion for his truck and work out an agreement
with the owner of the site where the food truck
will be located.
It is hard finding a location with the same
amenities as the current location because we
have free parking, close vicinity to Granville
Towers and the same location for 35 years, he
said.
In May, the Chapel Hill Town Council
rewrote the towns food truck rules to lower the
regulatory fee and allow trucks more catering
opportunities. Judy Johnson, senior planner
with the town, said Time-Out does not yet have
the requisite permits to operate in Chapel Hill.
Food truck owners must get a business
license and pay the annual regulatory fee of
$200, she said. The county health depart-
ment handles the health aspect, which
includes the sanitation of the food and cleanli-
ness of the truck.
Williams said the food truck offers a shorter
menu that includes chicken cheddar biscuits,
macaroni and cheese and shredded chicken
barbecue.
Williams said that the closing of the
University Square location wouldnt be the end
of Time-Out in Chapel Hill.
The food truck is not supposed to be a
replacement for the store Ive been looking
at 10 to 15 places once this one closes, he said.
Sophomore Bailey Castillo said she
noticed the Time-Out truck and is glad
the restaurant will still have a presence in
Chapel Hill.
I think its a smart idea because they can
continue getting students to visit, she said.
But some students said the elusive nature of
food trucks made it hard to find the trucks on
a consistent basis.
I dont know where to find the food trucks
maybe if they came at night so students can
try it, Castillo said.
Williams said he is optimistic about the
future of Time-Out, and the eatery is not going
anywhere.
Im not going to close down, were open 24
hours a day, he said. I ll find something.
city@dailytarheel.com
By McKenzie Coey
Assistant City Editor
Carrboros newest police chief
isnt so new he has been a part
of the towns police department for
20 years.
Carrboro Police Capt. Walter
Horton was sworn in as chief of
police Tuesday and will take over
the position Oct. 1.
Horton was selected for police
chief out of 101 applicants, said
Town Manager David Andrews. He
said applicants were from a large
span of places, including New
York, New Mexico and the U.S.
Virgin Islands.
At the end of the day, Chief
Horton was our top choice,
Andrews said.
By Breanna Kerr
Staff Writer
UNC students traditionally use
the summer to recuperate from the
school year, but several students
challenged that idea and them-
selves by biking across the coun-
try this summer.
Junior Aidan Kelley, an
American studies major, rode cross-
country this summer. Kelley was
a co-leader of the Lucky 13 Bike
Trip out of Chapel Hill, guiding
members of Chapel Hills Boy Scout
Troop 845 throughout the journey.
The group rode from Maryland
to Oregon, averaging 75 miles a
day for 10 weeks, for a total of
3,700 miles over the summer,
raising $34,000 for the UNC
Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer
Center.
This was not Kelleys first
outdoor adventure he has
also hiked the John Muir Trail
in California and built houses in
Guatemala and Belize.
He said his inspiration for the
Lucky 13 Bike Trip was a similar
courtesy of Brian Burnham
Aidan Kelley (left) and D.J. Recny take a break outside an abandoned house in
South Dakota. They rode cross-country to raise money for charity this summer.
from biking to build homes, mostly
working with Habitat for Humanity.
We had 15 build days, where we
did stuff like painting, siding, roof-
ing and basically everything you
can do on a house, Siler said.
She said the Bike & Build group
spent their nights wherever they
could find staying in churches,
community centers and even peo-
ples homes, eating home-cooked
meals if they were lucky.
Riding through small-town
America restored my faith in
humanity, Siler said.
Junior American studies major
Emerson Rhudy also biked cross-
country through Bike & Build,
which she said was both a physical
and mental challenge.
Her trip went from Nags Head,
a town in the Outer Banks, to San
Diego 3,592 miles in about 70
days.
If I can bike across the country,
anyone can do it, she said.
university@dailytarheel.com
A Japanese sweets company
will open its first U.S.
factory near Mebane.
A Chapel Hill group made
the 3,700-mile trip to
raise money for charity.
DTH ONLINE: Go to
dailytarheel.com to see an
interactive map of the bike
routes across the country.
cross-country bike ride he took
when he was in high school but
this year he was a role model for
the group of teenagers, which
included his younger brother.
My responsibility as a guide
was to navigate every day as well
as just to help the high school guys
along the way, he said.
For every $15,000 raised and
donated to the Lineberger Center,
the center will send a patient to
Victory Junction, a camp for chil-
dren with illnesses.
Troop 845 leader Brian
Burnham coordinated the trip and
said he has led many bike trips
across country and other outdoor
adventure programs in the past
including those with Kelley.
Sophomore history major
Hannah Siler also biked across
America this summer with Bike
& Build, a nonprofit organization
that supports affordable housing.
She said she rode from
Providence, R.I. to Half Moon Bay,
Calif., traveling more than 4,000
miles in three months. Siler raised
$5,055 for the organization.
Siler and her group took days off
dth/kaki pope
Chapel HIll favorite Time-Out has gone mobile with its food truck. The truck was parked outside of the Fordham Blvd. location on Wednesday.
Time-ouT and abouT
New police chief to start in Carrboro
Walter Horton
will take over as
chief of the carrboro
police department
on oct. 1. he has
served with the
police department
for 20 years.
Capt. Walter Horton will
take over as chief at the
beginning of October.
Andrews said he thinks the
position garnered a high number
of applicants because the town is
an ideal place to move and raise a
family.
I think that Carrboro is a great
community and we have an excel-
lent staff, he said. We have an
excellent police department.
Horton started at the police
department as a patrolman in
1993 and has worked in varying
positions since then. Andrews said
despite Hortons extensive history
with the town, it was not a factor
in the decision.
When the applicants were nar-
rowed down to a group of five,
they were given tests to determine
who was the best candidate, and
Horton made the top score.
Theres always some subjec-
tivity to it, Andrews said. Chief
Horton came out on top of that
also.
Andrews said it was an added
bonus that Horton was a Carrboro
native and was already familiar
with the town.
It was also a real plus that he
was born and raised in Carrboro,
he said. He has a very good under-
standing of the Carrboro commu-
nity.
During the Board of Aldermen
meeting Tuesday night, Mayor
Mark Chilton said he was optimis-
tic about the future of the depart-
ment under Hortons leadership.
He has been in our community
for a very long time. We are very
proud of him, Chilton said. We
have a lot of confidence and a
lot of high expectations for Chief
Horton.
Horton said he does not plan on
making any major changes to the
department once current Police
Chief Carolyn Hutchison retires in
October.
Hutchison, who was the first
openly gay police chief in North
Carolina, has served with the
Carrboro Police Department for
29 years.
What I have in mind are just
minor procedural changes. We are
in very good shape, Horton said.
He said he plans on discussing
ideas with administration before
making any decisions, but most
will be typical changes expected
with shifts in leadership.
Walter is an excellent person
and an excellent choice. He has the
greatest integrity, Andrews said.
I have no doubt that he will be
a successful police chief here in
Carrboro.
city@dailytarheel.com
Franklin Street restaurant looks for food truck venue
News Thursday, September 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4
By Gabriella Cirelli
Staff Writer
William Ferris is bringing
the voices of Southern writers,
artists and thinkers together
Thursday at Wilson Library.
Ferris will be sharing his
latest book, The Storied
South: Voices of Writers and
Artists, in a discussion co-
sponsored by The Southern
Folklife Collection, UNC
Friends of the Library and
The Center for the Study of
the American South.
Ferris, who is senior associ-
ate director for The Center
for the Study of the American
South, spent decades collect-
ing interviews and narratives
from some of the Souths most
influential writers and art-
ists, including Alice Walker,
Cleanth Brooks, Bobby Rush
and Ferris close acquaintance
Eudora Welty.
I feel close to all of them,
but I knew Eudora the lon-
gest, Ferris said.
We first met when I was
a child, and I visited her a
number of times over the
years and interviewed her
repeatedly. Those interviews
are collected into one narra-
tive voice in her section.
Welty won the Pulitzer
Prize in 1973 and the
Presidential Medal of
Freedom in 1980.
Ferris said his work is
a collection of interviews,
photographs, DVDs and CDs
of sound recordings with 26
different people and that he
will be sharing these various
media types at the discussion.
They represent a diversity
of black and white men and
women, old and young, who
share a common interest in
the American South, and this
book offers a very intimate
relationship with each of
them, he said.
Steve Weiss, curator of The
Southern Folklife Collection
at Wilson Library, said Ferris
work makes resounding con-
nections with Southern stud-
ies and academics at UNC.
The book is published
by UNC Press, and the raw
materials for Bill Ferris field
work came from books in the
Wilson Library that are under
an archival collection in The
Southern (Folklife) Collection
under his name, Weiss said.
It showcases the work of
one of our distinguished fac-
ulty, he said.
Patrick Horn, associate
director of The Center for the
Study of the American South,
said Ferris personal connec-
tions with his subjects pro-
vide a deeper understanding.
Hes not just studying
their lives and writing biogra-
phies on them, Horn said.
These are truly personal
conversations that show a dif-
ferent side of people like C.
Vann Woodward, who few of
us know in that deeper sense,
and (Ferris) provides us with
By Breanna Kerr
Staff Writer
Before coming to UNC,
sophomore Cecilia Polanco, a
global studies major, was often
asked the question, If you
could travel anywhere in the
world, where would it be?
Polanco never took this
question seriously until she
was offered a grant from
UNCs Global Gap Year
Fellowship that made her
dreams of traveling the world
a reality.
Polanco ended up traveling
to five different countries
Italy, Spain, France, Sweden
and Australia for her eight
months of service volunteer-
ing at churches, soup kitch-
ens and on local farms, even
working as an au pair.
Being able to travel was
something I always wanted
to do, and I finally had the
opportunity to do it through
this program, Polanco said.
UNCs Global Gap Year
Fellowship, one of two gap
year programs offered in the
country, was established in
2011 by the Campus Y and
funded by an anonymous
donation of $1.5 million,
said the Campus Ys Global
Programs Manager Jakelin
Bonilla. Each student selected
to be a part of the program
receives a grant of up to
$7,500 for the year to plan his
or her travels and housing.
The only requirements for
this program are that the stu-
dents make their own plan for
Southern voices heard
again in new book
UNC global fellows
use gap year to travel
courtesy of william ferris
William Ferris will speak tonight about his latest book, The Storied South: Voices of Writers and Artists.
what they want to do as soon
as they apply, which must
include a minimum of six
months of service.
During the programs first
year, there were 40 applicants
and only five incoming fresh-
men were offered a fellowship.
These students are currently
sophomores at UNC. The
2013 Global Gap Year Fellows
group includes seven students.
Freshman Keegan McBride,
a mathematics and chemistry
double major, said he wouldnt
have been able to take a gap
year without the grant.
A lot of the things I did
during my travels, like travel-
ing to Machu Picchu, I did
because I was comfortable
spending my own money, he
said.
Bonilla said as the Campus
Y tries to expand the number
of fellows, it will also try and
expand the funds each stu-
dent has available to them.
The advantages of taking
a gap year are incredibly sig-
nificant, she said.
We are excited to see the
impact they will have on this
campus as they define their
Carolina experience, Bonilla
said. For the whole year, the
world has been their class-
room.
McBride, who traveled to
the Galapagos Islands, Costa
Rica, Peru, Spain and Hungary,
said the things you learn about
yourself while traveling are the
most important.
What you learn from a gap
year is difficult to articulate,
but in the end you know its
beneficial.
As a freshman, McBride
said there were advantages to
attending UNC after taking a
gap year.
Personally, I dont have to
deal with any of the This is
my first time living away from
home feelings because I did
that last year, he said.
And living with a room-
mate? Thats fine by me at
least they speak English.
university@dailytarheel.com
Seven students were
offered fellowships in
the 2013 cohort.
William Ferris is
hosting a discussion
at Wilson Library.
The SToried SouTh
Time: 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Location: Wilson Library,
Pleasants Family Assembly
Room
Info: http://bit.ly/17AtRDo
DTH ONLINE:
See dailytarheel.com
for an Q&A with UNC
author William Ferris.
these really personal connec-
tions.
One purpose of the discus-
sion is to examine Southern
voices in the context of
American history.
I think people will really
gain a sense of how connected
the South is, even between
places like Chapel Hill and
Mississippi, but also between
places in the South and out of
the South, Horn said.
And that these connec-
tions transcend race, gender
and other categories and
boundaries that divide us.
Ferris said in addition to
the academic aspect of the
discussion, he hopes attendees
will view the night as a cel-
ebration of the South as well.
Its a subject close to so
many people here at UNC,
where the study of the South
began over a century ago,
Ferris said.
It has grown in dramatic
ways over the years and we
will be celebrating that legacy
on Thursday.
arts@dailytarheel.com
Great Yogurt,
Great prices!
Downtown Chapel Hill 942-PUMP
106 W. Franklin St. (Next to Hes Not Here)
Mon-Thurs 11:30am-11:30pm
Fri-Sat 11:30am-Midnight, Sun Noon-11:30
www.yogurtpump.com
UNC Mens Basketball Team UNC Mens Basketball Team
OPEN JV TRYOUTS! OPEN JV TRYOUTS!
Students interested in trying
out for the Junior Varsity
Mens Basketball Team
must attend a
MANDATORY
INFORMATIONAL
MEETING
Sept. 10 4:30 PM
Dean Smith Center
Every full-time student interested must
be in attendance, including junior varsity
players from past years.
Please enter the Smith Center at
Entrance A and sit in section 121.
holding
diversions
Visit the Dive blog: dailytarheel.com/dive
Thursday, September 5, 2013 dailytarheel.com The Daily Tar Heel 5
Rap musics boy wonder and Odd Future luminary Earl Sweatshirt returns with his much-anticipated sophomore release. Page 6
Woody Allens latest drama Blue Jasmine tracks the progress of its titular character after the dissolving of her marriage. Page 7
Dive talks with Dezrick Dixon, one of the organizers of the Bull City Music Awards taking place this weekend in Durham. Page 6
Its that time again! Dive is heading to the Hopscotch Music Festival. Keep up with the blog for our extensive festival coverage.
MUSIC.
MOVIES.
Q&A.
ONLINE.
TODAY IN DIVE
DIVE: Youre playing two separate shows
at Hopscotch how does playing with each
act differ?
SKYLAR GUDASZ: Thursday at The Long
View Center Ill be playing songs from my
solo album due out next year. There will be
a real piano, upright bass, cello and some
woodwinds with a few awesome, secret
guest appearances to be announced soon.
On Friday, Spooky Woods is playing at Deep
South the Bar. This is more rock- and percus-
sion-driven, and we all share songwriting and
instruments.
DIVE: You also are a UNC alumna, correct?
Did you attend or play the festival while you
were a student?
SG: I am a UNC alumna go Heels! But I
did not attend because the festival began the
year I graduated. However, one of the decid-
ing factors for me to stay to play music in the
Triangle was because Hopscotch came right
at that time and showed me that we really
have our finger on the pulse of live music
right here.
DIVE: How does Eros and the Eschatons
dreamy album experience play into the
live show?
ADAM HAWKNS: The record is a quite
a bit different than what we have been
doing as just the two of us. We have had
to go through and pick out what is the
most essential piece of the song which
has been a process of discovery for us. We
just recorded the songs and then figure
out how to play them so as far as when it
is just the two of us it is way scaled back
but with the band it should be just as lay-
ered, full, loud and rockin.
DIVE: Are you trying to recreate the
ambiance from the album in the live
show?
AH: Our goal, I think, would be at some
point in some incarnation of the band ...
to recreate the sound of the album but
we are also kind of tweaking the arrange-
ment depending what the band is ... We
are changing it and switching it around.
DIVE: Being a local musician from Raleigh,
how have you been involved with Hopscotch
in the past?
TROY HANCOCK: This will be my first per-
formance for Hopscotch. Some of my friends
have done it and Ive gone to see them play. I
always felt like I wanted to do it one day.
DIVE: Wool is a relatively new band, how
did you go from getting situated to playing
Hopscotch so quickly?
TH: Honestly, it just all came about after
writing the songs. After a show of mine in
Raleigh, Raymond Finn volunteered the
drums, and his friend (Johnny) Hobbs said
hed do bass and Zack (Oden) got on guitar.
We recorded songs that Id done solo before
and then put it out. From there, Bulletin Air
got good recognition and people liked it.
Then we got called up to play Hopscotch by
Greg Lowenhagen (the festivals director) at a
coffee shop.
DIVE: What is the formula to Body Games,
both musically and nonmusically?
DEREK TORRES: I think just contemporary.
We talk about what is on the radio more than
anything. We are trying to make pop music but
we all come from rock backgrounds, so we are
constantly thinking about contemporary music
but we are always being guided by our rock n
roll backgrounds or whatever music we were
listening to.
DIVE: What can people at Hopscotch be
expecting for the show?
DT: Essentially we are trying to get it to feel
like one continuous piece of music. A lot of
bands have a lot of stops and breaks.
DAX BEATON: We used to have that. We had
good music but no continuity, but we have so
many settings to do so it kills the momentum
when you stop. You play a really good song and
everybody is into it and then it is silence, people
start chattering and the next song starts and
people start to slowly get back into it.
COURTESY OF GAIL GOERS
COURTESY OF EROS ANDTHE ESCHATON
COURTESY OF TROY HANCOCK
COURTESY OF BODY GAMES
Diversions Thursday, September 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6
Terry Malts
Nobody Realizes This Is Nowhere
Pop punk
Punk trio Terry Malts is a
little bit loud and a whole lot
of fun. Its full-length sopho-
more album, Nobody Realizes
This Is Nowhere, is a quick,
unapologetic slap to the ear-
drums with crashing percus-
sion, fuzzed-out guitar chords
and droning vocals.
The albums introductory
track Two Faces features an
alarming opening, chiming
for a full 10 seconds before
smashing into a heap of brash
guitars and hurtling drums.
Vocalist Phil Benson repeats
Theyve got two faces, two
faces for the entire track, but
thanks to drummer Nathan
Sweatt and guitarist Corey
Cunningham, its hard to lose
interest.
MUSICSHORTS
The album doesnt skip
a beat, flowing seamlessly
to Lifes a Dream, a one-
minute crash course on the
combination of anger and
hidden sensitivity. Bensons
speedy delivery of Lifes a
dream and I dont want it /
One mans food is anothers
vomit almost allows the lis-
tener to dismiss the sound for
classic punk fury. But when
paired with upbeat riffs and
commanding percussion, the
song takes on new depth.
Standout track No
Tomorrow starts off with the
static quote I dont care if its
gonna fall apart tomorrow.
I dont remember yesterday.
This is what we are doing
now. This unconventional
opener draws the audience in
for a refreshing even light
song about living life in the
moment.
Nobody Realizes This Is
Nowhere forces you to take
what you think you know
about punk music and throw
it right out the window.
What the album lacks in
poetic lyrics and instrumental
variety, it makes up for with
raw energy and fun. Even if
you think punk isnt quite
your thing, give this album
a shot. You might really be
surprised.
Olivia Farley
Franz Ferdinand
Right Thoughts, Right Words,
Right Action
Rock
Almost 10 years since
its self-titled smash debut
album, Franz Ferdinand and
its fourth record shows just
how much fun this band
can still be. Right Thoughts,
Right Words, Right Action
doesnt reach the heights of
the bands first two records,
but its poppy instrumentation
and relatable lyrics make it a
solid addition to the bands
discography.
Its evident right from
the beginning that Franz
Ferdinand has not lost its
touch in creating strong and
catchy choruses.
The first couple of tracks
all feature memorable and
toe-tapping refrains. The
monotone voice of lead singer
Alex Kapranos complement
the bright tones of the tracks,
intertwining with the more
stirring music.
Stand on the Horizon
in particular could rival any
of the bands more popular
songs from its debut. The
sudden, stripped-down
change halfway through the
song is inspired, incorporat-
ing more of a New Wave
sound.
Despite some creatively
bizarre lyrics, the slower
songs near the end of the
record drag and Kapranos
voice comes off as too melan-
cholic. Where his voice works
earlier in pulsing tracks,
songs like The Universe
Expanded suffer as he drolly
warbles about a lost relation-
ship.
Interestingly, many of the
tracks get better and better
with each listen, something
not always associated with
this band. The rhythmic beats
and choruses will slowly
worm their way into your
head.
Right Thoughts, Right
Words, Right Action likely
wont gain the band any
new fans, but those already
comfortable with Franz
Ferdinands catalog will find
the record worth the time.
Mac Gushanas
Earl Sweatshirt
Doris
Hip-hop
Much has changed since
Earl Sweatshirts grimy and
abrasive debut mixtape Earl.
A much-publicized hiatus,
his subsequent return and a
few excellent guest features
have built up a consider-
able amount of hype for the
19-year-olds major label
debut. Doris, Earls new LP, is
well worth the wait.
When Earl released
Chum, the first single from
Doris, he announced a change
towards more emotional and
heartfelt lyrics. Songs like
Chum and Sunday show
him at his most personal.
But Doris still contains the
same zany lyricism that the
Odd Future collective is noto-
rious for. Sasquatch and
Whoa both feature darkly
funny verses from Odd Future
leader Tyler the Creator.
Although most of the guest
appearances on Doris are
stellar, a few fall flat. SK La
Flares feature on Pre is a
head-scratcher, especially
since his voice is the first
heard on the album.
The production on the
album is uneven in places.
When guest producers
step in such as RZA on
Molasses and The Neptunes
on Burgundy the instru-
mentation is at its best. But
the Earl and Tyler-produced
tracks fail to standout from
one another, each having the
same minimalistic aesthetic.
While Doris isnt an instant
classic or album of the year,
Earl Sweatshirt has demon-
strated that he is well worth
the hype, and that this LP
could be a stepping stone in a
legendary career.
James Stramm
Q&A with Bull City Musics Dezrick Dixon
The Bull City Music
Awards, organized by the
Bull City Music Group, is
a Durham-centric awards
show honoring entertainers
for their contributions to the
music industry.
The awards ceremony
will be held at 7:30 p.m.
on Sunday at the Carolina
Theatre in Durham.
Preceding the show itself is
a black carpet event, which
begins at 6 p.m.
Staff writer Amanda Hayes
spoke with Dezrick Dixon,
CEO of the Bull City Music
Group, about the awards and
Durham's music scene.
DIVERSIONS: How did the
idea for this awards show
come about?
DEZRICK DIXON: Im an artist
myself from North Carolina.
So I want to actually give
other artists the platform to
show their talent. This event
is also to pay homage and to
honor the legends that came
from here.
They paved the way for the
artists in this time. This show
is also part of a revitalization of
Durham. Its not just an awards
show. Were trying to rekindle
the musical platform we used
to have here a long time ago.
DIVE: Who chooses the
nominees and who votes for
the winners?
DD: Artists are voted on
by their peers. We sent out a
nomination field letter and
some independent artists
promoted it and some of their
peers nominated them.
We then set up a nomi-
nation site that could be
accessed by the artists.
They would choose the cat-
egory and vote on whichever
artist.
DIVE: Who are some of the
nominees?
DD: Theres a long list of
artists. Theres Annie Adams,
Blak Godi, Bull City Kartel,
Baby Eye, Lemoi and just a
whole list of others.
Some of the nominees are
performing. It gives them a
chance to show people why
they are nominated and why
their peers actually voted for
them. Were also honoring
Georgette Johnson, DJ Scazz
and DJ Witted.
DIVE: What are some of the
categories artists are nomi-
nated for?
DD: The categories include
all different genres. Theres
Performer of the Year, Hip-
Hop Artist of the Year, Video
of the Year, Female R&B
Artist of the Year.
Theres the R&B Artist
Legend Award, Gospel Artist
of the Year, Hip-Hop Group
of the Year and some humani-
tarian awards as well.
DIVE: How are you con-
nected to the Triangles music
scene?
DD: Ive been in music
since before middle school,
so probably since I was in
elementary school. I did a lot
of talent shows.
Later, I got into church and
started singing gospel. I have
two albums out and a single
called Testify. Its like R&B
gospel. Im also a promoter
now, a new promoter.
DIVE: What are you hoping
this awards show will do for
the people of Durham and its
music scene?
DD: I hope that other cities
and states will come together
with Durham. Its open to the
Triad. I want to make sure
revitalization takes place.
I want music and artists to
be part of Durhams makeup.
Its about getting back to the
musical foundation.
I also hope this awards
show can grow and be tele-
vised next year. It would be
the first local awards show to
be televised.
diversions@dailytarheel.com
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Diversions Thursday, September 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7
The Spectacular Now
The Spectacular Now is
not your average teen movie.
The trailer is ambiguous as
far as plot, and the actors
looked kind of familiar but
not noteworthy. Was it a high
school romance? A coming-
of-age film? A tragic comedy?
Even after watching the
movie, I am still asking these
questions.
The film follows the story
of Sutter Keely (Miles Teller),
who is always the life of the
party. He cares about having
fun, getting drunk and, most
of all, living in the now. Life
is great, despite the fact that
he doesnt have a father, his
mother is keeping secrets
and he is currently failing
geometry as a senior. After
a drunken evening, Sutter
wakes up in the neighbor-
hood of shy Aimee Finecky
(Shailene Woodley).
While Sutter refuses to
look past the now, Aimee lives
for the future. But as Sutter
gets closer to her, he realizes
that she has no choice but
to be shy after being domi-
neered by nearly everyone in
her life. Sutter creates a plan
to save Aimee.
There are no makeover
montages in the film (thank-
fully). Sutter simply dates
Aimee and introduces her
to the finer things in life
(mainly whiskey in a person-
alized flask).
As Sutter forces Aimee to
confront her fears in life, he
has no choice but to face his
as well. But as high school
comes to a close, Sutter may
not like what he finds out
about himself and will do
anything not to drag Aimee
down with him into his not
so spectacular now.
Scott Neustadter, known
for writing (500) Days of
Summer, infuses similar
stylistic writing qualities into
The Spectacular Now.
For those who have seen
the 2009 film, it is important
to note that both movies
share the quality of wanting
so much to be a love story, but
not quite getting there.
The Spectacular Now
has no definite conclusions or
perfectly placed epiphanies.
It just has real heart and real
consequences.
Lizzie Goodell
MOVIESHORTS
The Grandmaster
Hes not Bruce Lee. Hes
not a panda. And hes not
the Karate Kid. He is Ip
Man. The master of kung
fu, the champion of China
and the epitome of The
Grandmaster.
The Grandmaster is the
story of the man who trained
Bruce Lee. It follows Ip Man
(Tony Leung Chiu Wai), a
kung fu master in a divided
China, with the North and
South having distinct styles of
kung fu.
The Grandmaster con-
fronts the issues of self-worth,
family legacy and power. It
broaches what it means to live
in a world that is constantly
changing. The film shines a
light on what honor means in
a dark culture.
The choreography in the
movie is brilliant. The fight-
ing is beautifully organized
and stunning.
If a films quality was only
based on how well the actors
can fight, it would be the best
of the best.
However, a movie is
more than its action its
supposed to have a con-
stant and steady plot. The
Grandmaster does not. The
essential theme of the film
changes two-thirds of the way
through, causing the audience
to lose focus and even more
so, interest.
The movie has many other
problems. One such issue
is the inability to manage
jumps between time. The
Grandmaster tries to handle
a long span of time in Ip
Mans life. It tries to show
the audience the difference
between his older and young-
er self, but there is no varia-
tion in looks and no distinct
sign of time change.
Even worse is when the
movie switches to the life of
his counterpart Gong Er (Ziyi
Zhang) while trying to keep
up with Ip Man.
The Grandmaster is a
movie to be watched for its
action and nothing else. The
movie appears to be of great
value, but falls short of the
beauty of its trailer.
Disappointingly, The
Grandmaster doesnt cross
the threshold from apprentice
to master.
Jeremy Wile
Blue Jasmine
Blue Jasmine, writer and
director Woody Allens 45th
film, is as engrossing as the
best of his recent works. The
film marks Allens return to
a setting within the United
States, though now in San
Francisco rather than his
native New York. Allen con-
tinues his creative streak that
began with 2011s magnificent
Midnight in Paris, though
with far more paranoia and
underlying darkness.
Cate Blanchett stars as
Jasmine, the former wife of a
Bernie Madoff-style financial
crook (played with hilar-
ity by Alec Baldwin), who is
forced to move in with her
sister in San Francisco. And
that premise, while deceiv-
ingly simple, lays ground
for perhaps Allens best
character study since 1989s
Crimes and Misdemeanors.
Blanchett gives an Oscar-
worthy performance in the
lead role, showing Jasmines
psychological flaws and inse-
curities without ever seem-
ing heavy-handed. Allens
writing is similarly excellent,
providing even the smallest
characters (Louis C.K.s bit
role comes to mind) gems of
dialogue.
And just as Allen explored
the nuances of New York
life in his classic films, San
Francisco acts as another
character in Jasmines world.
Flashback scenes set in New
York City only serve to ampli-
fy the comparison, as the film
shows Jasmine swinging back
and forth between her old
New York lifestyle and a new
one in San Francisco. It is
this tension which makes the
films exploration of Jasmines
hold on reality riveting.
As the film progresses, the
pacing of details via flashback
means that for every new turn
in Jasmines story we receive
an equally illuminating detail
of her past. This culminates
in the illustration of the true
extent of Jasmines mental
instability whilst adding an
immense helping of moral
confusion to her present.
All in all, this film tran-
scends the almost-genre of
a Woody Allen film to be a
true success in its own right.
It may feature the white
credits in Windsor font and a
soundtrack of classic jazz, but
Jasmine is a unique character
all her own, and one that is
truly fascinating to explore.
James Butler
Allison Hussey, Editor
Chris Powers, Assistant Editor
diversions@dailytarheel.com
Olivia Farley, Bo McMillan,
James Stramm, Jeremy Wile,
Lizzie Goodell, staff writers
Rachel Holt, Design &
Graphics Editor
Cover Design: Rachel Holt and
Ashley Weaver, guest designer
DIVESTAFF
Book gives pointers
on tailgate cuisine
By Elizabeth Tew
Staff Writer
Taylor Mathis, author of
The Southern Tailgating
Cookbook: A Game-Day Guide
for Lovers of Food, Football,
and the South, has a passion
for food and college towns.
Mathis, a Charlotte native,
went to 35 football games
around the country over a
span of three years to do
research on foods at college
tailgating parties. His cook-
book, the product of his culi-
nary exploration, was released
last month by UNC Press.
Part of his research includ-
ed attending games at differ-
ent times of the day in order
to assess which types of foods
would work best and when.
But he said climate is also
an important aspect to con-
sider when planning meals.
When its super-hot, you
dont want hot chocolate,
you want a more refreshing
drink, he said.
The book focuses on every
aspect of the tailgating meal,
starting with drink recipes like
the lime cooler punch, and
then different recipes for side
dishes, main meals, such as
jambalaya, and desserts, such
as deep-fried cookie dough.
Food is an important aspect
in Southern culture, said his-
tory professor Bill Ferris.
They say you are what you
eat, he said. The American
South at every period in
its history has been deeply
defined by the kinds of foods
that we eat. Southerners love
to eat outside in picnics, so
tailgating is a very natural
part of Southern life that
draws on our love of food and
our association of food with
sports events.
History professor Harry
Watson said football is a
staple of Southern culture
because of the male bravado
that it epitomizes.
Football is immensely
important as a test of man-
hood, endurance and semi-
military virtues, all of which
have been so important in
Southern culture for so long,
Watson said.
But family traditions, like
recipes, handed down through
generations play a role as well.
They pass down recipes
from generation to generation
as a way of honoring the mem-
ory of different ancestors,
Ferris said. At a tailgating
event there might be apple pie
and chicken and dumplings
cooked from recipes that fam-
ily members have shared.
Mathis said the recipes in
his cookbook are laid out so
that even beginners can fol-
low them no fancy equip-
ment required.
He said a passionate fan
base is the driving force
behind tailgating.
I went to smaller
schools like Davidson and
Appalachian State, and
then I also went to schools
like Alabama, Mathis said.
Places where you have pas-
sionate fans, youre going to
have great tailgating.
Tailgating is also a way for
college friends to meet up
after graduation.
Once you get out of college,
you move away from everyone
you knew, and a tailgate is a
great way to come to a central
location and meet up on game
days, Mathis said.
Football and food together
it doesnt get much better
than that.
arts@dailytarheel.com
Granny Smith Apple Salsa
Adapted from The Southern Tailgating Cookcook: A Game-Day Guide for
Lovers of Food, Football, and the South by Taylor Mathis.
Ingredients
12 cup fresh lime juice
1 12 cups diced Granny Smith apples
5 cups seeded and chopped Roma tomatoes, drained on
paper towels
1 cup chopped cilantro leaves
1 cup chopped yellow onions
34 cup seeded and diced poblano peppers
14 cup seeded and finely diced jalapeo peppers
12 cup chopped shallots
1 tablespoon grated lime zest
1 teaspoon salt
14 teaspoon McCormick Coarse Ground Black Pepper
Directions
Mix ingredients together in a large bowl. Place in a seal-
able container and store the salsa in the refrigerator over-
night. Keep in cooler on game day and stir before using.
FRIDAY, SEPT. 6 TOUBAB KREWE
919-967-9053
300 E. Main Street Carrboro
Serving CAROLINA BREWERY Beers on Tap!
**Advance ticket sales at SchoolKids Records (Raleigh), CD Alley (CH).
Buy tickets on-line www.etix.com | For phone orders CALL 919-967-9053
www.catscradle.com
The BEST live music ~ 18 & over admitted
NOVEMBER (cont)
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 18
AUSTRA
SEPTEMBER 2013 @ Cats Cradle:
5 TH: ABBEY ROAD LIVE (performing the
Beatles Abbey Road, & more)
6 FR: TOUBAB KREWE w/The Broadcast**($15)
7 SA: DOUG PRESCOTT BAND & Harvey Dalton
Arnold Band**($10/$12)
9 MO: US ROYALTY **($8/$10)
10 TU: BLACK JOE LEWIS **($14/$16) w/Dex
Romweber Duo
14 SA: ACOUSTIC SYNDICATE Record Release
Party**($15)
16 MO: PHOSPHORESCENT **($15/$17) w/ Indians
17 TU: PINBACK w/ Deathfix**($14/$16)
18 WE: AUSTRA w/DIANA**($12/$14)
19 TH: KISHI BASHI **($12/$14) w/My Darling Fury
20 FR: GRAM PARSONS Tribute**($10)
21 SA: WHOS BAD -- Michael Jackson Tribute!**
($17/$20)
22 SU: DEERHUNTER **($18/$20) w/Crystal Stilts
23 MO: WASHED OUT **($15/$18) w/ Haerts
TU 24: MUDHONEY w/ Cheap Time**($18/$21)
27 FR: STRFKR **($15/$18) w/Chrome Sparks
28 SA: WALK THE MOON w/Magic Man**($20)
29 SU: BILL CALLAHAN **($15/$17) w/New Bums
30 MO: SAVES THE DAY w/ Into It. Over It. and
Hostage Calm**($16/$20)
OCTOBER 13:
1 TU: SURFER BLOOD **($14/$16)
w/ Team Spirit and Andy Boay
4 FR: GREGORY ALAN ISAKOV **($15)
w/Patrick Park
5 SA: BLACK REBEL MOTORCYCLE CLUB **
($22/$25) w/Restavrant
SU 6: UNKNOWN MORTAL ORCHESTRA
w/Jackson Scott**($12/$14)
7 MO: WAVVES w/King Tuff and Jacuzzi Boys**
($17/$20)
8 TU: JUNIP **($15) w/Barbarossa
11 FR: ZOSO -- The Ultimate Led Zeppelin
Experience**($12/$15)
12 SA: JASON BOLAND & THE
STRAGGLERS w/ Jason Eady**($15/$18)
14 MO: ELECTRIC SIX w/ My Jerusalem**($12/$14)
WE 16: AARON CARTER **($14/$16;
VIP Tickets also available)
17 TH: WATSKY / WAX ...Hug A Hater Tour**
($15/$17)
18 FR: FINCH ( playing What It Is To Burn in its
entirety) w/ Dance Gavin Dance** ($20/$23)
20 SU: SOJA w/Aer**($20/$25)
22 TU: O F MONTREAL
w/ Surface To Air Missive**($17)
25 FR: FATHER JOHN MISTY w/ Kate Berlant**
($18/$20)
26 SA: THE ENGLISH BEAT **($17/$20)
28 MO: MAN MAN **($15) w/ Xenia Rubinos
29 TU: MIKE STUD ** ($12/$14) The Relief Tour
30 WE: BUILT TO SPILL w/ Genders and Slam
Dunk**($20/$23)
31 TH: MONDO ZOMBIE BOOGALOO: SCOTS,
LOS STRAITJACKETS, & THE FLESHTONES**
($18/$20)
NOVEMBER 13:
1 FR: PHANTOGRAM **($16/$18)
2 SA: BIG D AND THE KIDS TABLE **
($14/$16)
3 SU: DAVID BROMBERG QUINTET **
($24/$27)
OCTOBER
DECEMBER
6 WE: COCOROSIE **($18/$20)
7 TH: LEFTOVER SALMON **($22/$25)
9 SA: MANCHESTER ORCHESTRA
w/ The Front Bottoms**($17/$20)
12 TU: KATE NASH **($15/$18) w/ La Sera
15 FR: STEEP CANYON RANGERS/
MIPSO **($15/$17)
17 SU: FLATBUSH ZOMBIES
w/ Bodega Bamz**($13/$15)
19 TU: JOHNNY MARR **($22/$25) w/Alamar
20 WE: MATT WERTZ **($14/$16) w/Elenowen
21 TH: MIKE DOUGHTY used to be in SOUL
COUGHING ( Performing all Soul
Coughing material) **($20)
22 FR: CARBON LEAF w/ Mel Washington**
($15/$18)
30 SA: NORTH CAROLINA MUSIC LOVE
ARMY album release show
WE 18: GREG BROWN **($28/$30)
SEPTEMBER
NOVEMBER
SHOWS @ LOCAL 506 ( Chapel Hill):
Sept. 9: Jesse Ruben/ Caitlin Crosby**
($10/$12)
Sept. 18: OBrother w/ Native and
Daylight**($10/$12)
Sept. 21: TWIN FORKS**($12.50/$15)
w/ Matrimony and Steph Stewart
Oct. 9: Quasi**($12/$15) w/ Jeffrey Lewis
Oct. 20: The Moondoggies w/Rose
WIndows**($10)
Oct 26: TIM BARRY w/ Des Ark**($10)
Oct. 29: The World is a Beautiful Place
and I am no Longer Afraid to Die**
($8/$10)
SHOW AT MOTORCO (Durham):
Oct. 30: CULTS**($15/$18)
Nov. 2: King Khan & The Shrines w/ Hell
Shovel and Black Zinfandel **
($14/$16)
DURHAM PERFORMING ARTS CENTER:
Sa Oct. 26: NEKO CASE**
KOKA BOOTH AMPHITHEATRE (CARY):
Fr Sept 20: ALABAMA SHAKES w/
Dexateens and Majestico**
SHOWS AT THE HAW RIVER BALLROOM:
Sept. 19: LUCINDA WILLIAMS ( Second
Show Added! ) $35
Sept. 26: Blitzen Trapper**($16/$18)
Sept. 27: Langhorne Slim & the Law**
($16/$18) w/Jonny Fritz
Oct. 9: AIMEE MANN
w/ Ted Leo (solo)**$25
SHOWS AT THE RITZ (Raleigh):
Nov. 10: THE HEAD AND THE HEART
w/Thao..., Quiet Life**($22/$25)
Nov. 19: JANELLE MONAE**($22/$25)
SHOW AT Fletcher Theatre (Raleigh):
Sept. 23: Richard Thompson**
Shows at Kings (Raleigh):
Oct 12: THE HELIO SEQUENCE/
MENOMENA**($15)
Oct. 24: HALF JAPANESE w/LUD**($12)
Show at Carolina Theatre (Durham):
Nov 6: COLIN MELOY
w/ Eleanor Friedberger
Show at Memorial Hall, UNC-CH:
Nov. 14: TRAMPLED BY TURTLES**
($22) co-presented by UNC CUAB
WE ARE ALSO
PRESENTING...
TUESDAY, SEPT. 17 PINBACK
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 ALABAMA SHAKES
Thursday, September 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 8
NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS
Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to
publication for classifed ads. We publish Mon-
day 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 re-
ject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Acceptance of ad
copy or prepayment does not imply agreement
to publish an ad. You may stop your ad at any
time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for stopped
ads will be provided. No advertising for hous-
ing 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
AFTERSCHOOL, CARRBORO: Afterschool care
and driving to activities needed for one 4th
grade girl on Tuesdays and/or Wednesdays
3-6pm; clean driving record, car and prior child
care experience required. Contact katherine-
baer@hotmail.com.
CHAUFFEUR,
ROLE MODEL, FRIEND
needed for our 3 tween, teen girls in South-
ern Village, Tu/W/Th and some Fridays,
2:30-6:30pm-ish. Excellent driving record
and sense of humor required. Cooking, laun-
dry skills and creative thinking a plus. Email
ncrockarts@aol.com.
TUTOR: Chapel Hill family seeks student to
drive kids home from school M-Th after-
noons and help 15 year-old with Algebra 2
and Physics homework. Hours vary from 230-
6pm. Applicant needs own car, clear driving
record, provide references. Competitive rate.
daniellegraceking@gmail.com.
AFTERNOON CHILD CARE: Part-time care
needed for 2 older children (10 and 13). Family
lives near UNC. Every M-W 2:50-5:30pm start-
ing 9-3-13. School pick up (Durham) and assist
with homework. Must have child care experi-
ence, references, non-smoker, energetic, speak
English, own transportation. Competitive pay.
Email Lenora at lenora.x.hunter@gmail.com.
CHILD CARE NEEDED Need college student,
dependable person for 2-3 days/wk to pick 11
year-old up from school and stay until 2am.
May sleep over. Good with dogs. Good oppor-
tunity for college student. $60/day. Im a nurse
at UNC, my shift is 2pm-2am. 772-766-2030.
BEST CHILD CARE job in town! Chapel Hill
(north side of town) family seeking a spirited
and dependable caregiver for 2 awesome kids
ages 6 and 10. Days can be fexible, but must
be available between 3:30-6:30pm, 3-4 days/
wk (9-15 total hrs/wk). Sa/Su hours gener-
ally not needed. Must have reliable transpor-
tation and like to have fun with kids: sports,
practices, reading, just hanging out at home.
Background check required. Ideal candidate
will continue into spring semester with simi-
lar schedule. Contact bakernc@gmail.com or
call 919-306-8827 with interest and previous
experience or resume.
CHILD CARE FOR AFTERSCHOOL Babysit-
ter needed M-Th afternoons 3:20-6:20pm.
Friday 3:30-4:40pm. Okay with splitting the
days between sitters. Responsibilities would
include picking up from the bus stop, walk-
ing our puppy helping with homework. 6pm.
919-961-4187.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE for 8 year-old
daughter of UNC profs. Tu/Th 2:30-5:30/6pm.
Pick up from school, take to activities, care at
home in Chapel Hill. Reliable car, clean driving
record, excellent references, and warm per-
sonality. Competitive salary plus gas money.
rsaver8@gmail.com.
SCHOOL AFTER CARE $16/HR at our house
in Chapel Hill for 2 fun girls, 9 and 11.
Few days/wk. 2-3 hrs/day starting 2:30pm.
archna.johnson@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL HELP NEEDED for our 6
year-old daughter in our home 7 miles
outside Carrboro. 2pm-5pm M/W/F, Tu/
Th, or all 5 days. Will include pick up at
school in Hillsborough. Must have expe-
rience, great driving record, reliable car,
references, like dogs. $12/hr. Respond to
babysitterreply@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL SITTER NEEDED. Sitter
needed to drive kids to afterschool ac-
tivities 4:30-6:30pm M-Th. Must have clean
driving record, safe car, child care experi-
ence. $12/hr. 5-10 hrs/wk. Contact Ann at
wintervann@yahoo.com.
DAILY CHILD CARE NEEDED Seeking experi-
enced child care provider. Chapel Hill family
with 3 children (girls, ages 11, 9 and 6) needs
energetic, reliable caregiver with clean driv-
ing record and 3 references. Spanish speak-
ers preferred, but not required. Job will start
from September 3, 2013 thru June, 2014 for
weekdays throughout the school year (and
possibility of summer hours 2014). Daily, 2:30-
6pm. CPR certifcation a plus. Daily routine
will include: afterschool pick up, homework
assistance, snacks, outdoor play and trans-
porting kids to activities. Van will be provided
for transportation. If interested, please email
anitachapelhill@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL SITTER NEEDED for 11 year-old
girl. Duties: Take to activities, care at home
in Chapel Hill, assist with homework. Pre-
fer student interested in education. M/W/Th
3:45-6:30pm. Clean driving record, safe car,
friendly personality. $12/hr. Contact Sara at s
v_ky@hotmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL, $15/HR.
Seeking UNC student to help with 3 teen girls.
Clean driving record. Light housekeeping and
meal prep REQUIRED. M/W 3:30-6pm. Call
919-933-5330.
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 dis-
crimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin, or
an intention to make any such preference, limi-
tation, 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 opportuni-
ty basis in accordance with the law. To complain
of discrimination, call the U. S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development housing dis-
crimination hotline: 1-800-669-9777.
SPACIOUS 3BR/2.5BA DUPLEX offers open
foor plan with hardwood foor and
freplace in great room, kitchen, large
master suite and bath, 2 car garage.
On busline, pets negotiable with fee.
$1,395/mo. Fran Holland Properties at
fhollandprop@gmail.com or text 919-
630-3229.
4BR/2.5BA,2824 BOMBAY DRIVE: Home at
Meadows of Pagehurst, Durham. Fenced back-
yard. Short commute to Chapel Hill. $1,295/
mo. HCO Properties: 919-604-0093.
1BR/1BA FULLY FURNISHED apartment: Walk
in closets, living room, W/D, dishwasher mi-
crowave, high speed internet. Safe, quiet, free
parking. $595/mo. +deposit and references.
919-485-9700.
AVAILABLE NOW, 3BR/1.5BA Carrboro house
on North Greensboro Street. Large yard, hard-
wood foors, carport, pets negotiable with fee.
$1,250/mo. Lease term negotiable. Fran Hol-
land Properties: fhollandprop@gmail.com or
text 919-630-3229.
2BR/2.5BA OAKS CONDO: Backs up to golf
course, Living room with freplace, dining
room, Walk, bike or bus to Meadowmont and
Friday Center. $925/mo. Fran Holland Proper-
ties, fhollandprop@gmail.com or text 919-
630-3229.
FURNISHED OAKS 2BR/2.5BA condo close to
Friday Center, on busline. Bring suitcase and
move in. 3 month+ term available. One check
$1,250/mo. all utilities and internet included
(other terms available). Fran Holland Proper-
ties: fhollandprop@gmail.com, 919-630-3229.
CLOSE TO CAMPUS: 3BR/2BA apartment. Re-
frigerator, stove, dishwasher, W/D. Includes
parking and water. 326 Brooks Street $900/
mo. 919-929-1188.
1BR APARTMENT ON CHURCH STREET,
only 4 blocks to Franklin Street. Available
now for $610/mo. For more info, email
fhollandprop@gmail.com.
BIKE OR WALK TO CAMPUS FROM 6 Bolin
Heights. 3BR/1BA house is complete with
hardwood foors, W/D, 9 month lease avail-
able. $875/mo. Fran Holland Properties,
fhollandprop@gmail.com or text 919 630-3229
STUDENTS: RENT BR WITH PRIVATE bath
in 4BR University Commons condo. New
carpet, paint, $400/mo.all utilities and WiFi
included. On busline. Contact Fran Holland
Properties at fhollandprop@gmail.com or text
919-630-3229..
BIKE FROM THIS 2BR/2BA HOUSE on Branch
Street (off of MLK Blvd). Lovely hardwood
foors, great room, 1 car garage and large
fenced in yard. $1,300/mo. Fran Holland Prop-
erties. Email fhollandprop@gmail.com or text
919-630-3229.
2BR/2BA FULLY RENOVATED condo AVAIL-
ABLE NOW. 210 McGregor Drive. $500 off frst
months rent. On D, DX and CL buslines. Pet
friendly. W/D, microwave, dishwasher, deck
with gas grill. $1,090/mo, 904-400-0618 or
Patrick.taus@gmail.com.
FINLEY FOREST
CONDO AVAILABLE
2BR/2.5BA condo, freplace, refrigerator,
dishwasher, W/D hookups, pool, tennis court,
clubhouse. Complex backs up to Friday Center
where you can catch a bus to campus! 919-
796-1674.
CONVENIENT TO UNC: Grad or prof stu-
dents. 3BR/1.5BA ranch in quiet Glen Lennox
neighborhood. Large yard, carport, hardwood
foors, bus nearby. East Chapel Hill High,
Culbreth, Glenwood. Rent reduced $1,340/
mo. (pets negotiaable). Contact Fran Holland
Properties, fhollandprop@gmail.com or call
919-630-3229.
AVAILABLE NOW: Walk to campus 2BR/1BA
remodeled house at 115 Cole Street. Hard-
wood foors, AC, W/D, dishwasher $850/mo.
+deposit. 919-389-3558.
CLOSE TO FRIDAY CENTER: Beautiful 2BR/2BA
condo. Laminate wood foors, granite counters
and freplace. Includes W/D, water, pool and
tennis courts. Downing Creek. $1,045/mo.
919-929-1188.
MEADOWMONT BASEMENT APARTMENT.
1BR/1BA in private home, 1,000 square feet,
kitchenette, private entrance, soccer feld and
golf course view. Excellent condition, W/D,
busline, 1.5 miles to UNC. Excellent references
required, NO SMOKING, no pets, 1 year lease
required. $1,000/mo. +$1,000 security deposit.
Includes all utilities, cable, wireless internet.
Available immediately. 919-949-4570 or
lmahaley@nc.rr.com.
Help Wanted
THE CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO YMCA is looking
for afterschool counselors. Counselors actively
participate in sports, homework, crafts and
other activities each afternoon with students
grades K-8. Hours are generally 2-6pm, Mon-
day thru Friday. Applications can be found on
our website, www.chcymca.org, or you can ap-
ply at the Chapel Hill Branch at 980 MLK Blvd.
Send applications to nchan@chcymca.org or
turn in at the Y.
ART TEACHER: Seeking art or photogra-
phy teacher to give in home lessons to 11
year-old child. Must have transportation.
Sarah.c.armstrong@gmail.com.
HABILITATION TECHNICIAN: Pathways for
People, Inc. is looking for individuals in-
terested in making a difference in the lives
of individuals with intellectual disabilities.
We have a position with a teenage male
with autism in Chapel Hill. M-F 20 hrs/wk
and weekend hours also available. Please
contact Larry at 919-462-1663 or email
info@pathwaysforpeople.org for more infor-
mation.
WINGS OVER CHAPEL HILL
is looking for several part-time counter em-
ployees for the school year. Flexible hours. Ap-
ply in person at 313 East Main Street, Carrboro.
919-537-8271.
CLINICAL TEACHING TUTORS: Need someone
for North Chatham, Sanford for biology, geom-
etry, English ASAP. Also needed literacy, EC,
advanced math and science in Chapel Hill. Car.
Excellent spoken English. Please send days and
hours to jlocts@aol.com $20/hr and TBD.
PART-TIME RETAIL POSITION: The Wild Bird
Center of Chapel Hill, located nearby UNC in
Eastgate Shopping Center, is now hiring a part-
time sales associate for weeknight hours. $10/
hr, 10 hrs/wk minimum. Students welcome.
Apply by sending resume and qualifcations to
chapelhill@wildbird.com.
EXECUTIVE
ADMINISTRATIVE ASST
Executive, administrative assistant. Small
business in south Chapel Hill that creates
online education, training for health profes-
sionals. Experience with offce administration,
Quickbooks, BA/BS required. Any experience
with grant funded research a plus. Interest in
medical topics required. 25-30 hrs/wk. fex-
ible. Starting $14/hr. Apply online only at
www.ClinicalTools.com.
PART-TIME SWIM COACHES for local
USA Swimming club. 2-4 evenings per
week. Send resume and 3 references to
brentawatkins@gmail.com.
PART-TIME TEACHER ASSISTANT at Cha-
pel Hill Daycare Center. Work with infants
and toddlers. Must be available M-F 1-6pm
2-6pm or 3-6pm. $10/hr. Reliability is es-
sential. Criminal record check and TB screen-
ing required. Must have or take course
in early childhood education. Contact
pam@chapelhilldaycarecenter.com.
THE CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO YMCA is hiring
certifed lifeguards. If you are an energetic,
friendly, and dedicated lifeguard who takes
pride in being a frst responder then come on
down. Hours are fexible and pay is $8-$8.50/
hr. based on experience. Please fll out the ap-
plication form on our website (www.chcymca.
org) and send it to N. Chan (nchan@chcymca.
org). We will be in touch with you via email
to set up an interview. All interviews involve a
water skills test so be prepared!
THE CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO YMCA is hiring
Red Cross CPR, lifeguard instructors. Must be
certifed to teach CPR for the Professional Res-
cuer, First Aid and Oxygen. Pay is $10-$15/hr.
based on experience. Please fll out the applica-
tion form on our website (www.chcymca.org)
and send it to N. Chan (nchan@chcymca.org).
Music
THE VILLAGE BAND of Chapel Hill-Carrboro is
currently seeking new members to join us for
the 2013-2014 season. Trumpet players are
particularly needed, but all are welcome. We
rehearse Mondays from 7:30-9pm in the East
Chapel Hill High School band room begin-
ning September 9. Check out our website at
www.thevillageband.org. Contact Charles
Porter at cport174@gmail.com.
PIANO TEACHER: Seeking qualifed piano
teacher to give in home lessons to 2 chil-
dren (11, 8). Must have transportation.
Sarah.c.armstrong@gmail.com.
Tutoring Wanted
TUTOR FOR ADVANCED Precalculus Honors
Grade 10 twice a week evenings in Cha-
pel Hill close to UNC. $12/hr. 919 636 5807,
joyevalentine at yahoo.com.
SPANISH TUTOR for high school student. Pre-
fer fuent Spanish major. Salary negotiable.
Transportation to Southern Village neces-
sary. 1 day/wk. Send contact information to
north_carolina_999@yahoo.com.
Volunteering
ENJOY HELPING CHILDREN LEARN? Be a
classroom volunteer, all grades with Chapel
Hill-Carrboro Schools. Stop by UNC Student
Union room #3102 any time between 10am-
3:30pm, September 3, 5, 9 or 11. Email vol-
unteer@chccs.k12.nc.us or call 919-967-8211
ext. 28281.
Announcements Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Announcements
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Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is an 8 -- Follow directions. Keep
the future in mind. One phase ends and
another begins regarding your education,
with the New Moon in Virgo. With love,
anything is possible.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 6 -- Youre learning quickly.
Do what you promised. A new door
opens regarding your income, reaching a
new level of success. Save more for the
future. Keep fnances confdential and well
organized to save time and energy.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 6 -- Practical measures
help. Listen carefully. Your associates
begin a new project to save money. One
romantic stage ends and another begins.
Accept encouragement. Show your team
some appreciation.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 7 -- Revise your rules, and stick
to them. Document practical aspects of
the game. Persuade skillfully. Creativity
brings in more wealth. Your work speaks
well for you. The best things in life are
still free.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Increase productiv-
ity. Perfection pays well. Add some
spice to the mix. Flaunt it. Your success
depends in part on past performance. Love
pleasantly surprises. Get grounded, and
connect with the earth. Youre radiant.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is an 8 -- A door opens with the
New Moon in your sign. Contact a wise
old friend. Prepare and consider actions
carefully. Use technology to increase ef-
fciency. Startling revelations could affect
your course. Your view is respected.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 6 -- Double-check the data
to get to the truth. Your theory works!
Capitalize on the fow of ideas. Friends
keep you on the right path. Make the
practical choice. Celebrate with your
crew.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 6 -- Make sure your partner
shows a proft. Its a good time to ask for
a bonus. The important stuff is hidden.
Close deals and make new contacts. Shop
to ft the available space.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 6 -- Leave a margin for error.
Look at new options. Let your partner
take the lead. A dream reveals a new
beginning. Write a poem about it. Take it
easy. Do something nice for yourself.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7 -- Confrm your standards.
Youre feeling more secure. Discuss a
partnership with a good support person.
Let your partner set the rules. You have
more than what shows, and your curiosity
knows no boundaries. Be persuasive.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 6 -- You can do it. An older
individual supports your plan. Youre get-
ting close to pay dirt, with your brilliant
idea. Re-affrm a commitment. Set achiev-
able goals. Maximize security. Wait a bit
longer. Then move quickly.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 -- Youre gaining respect,
but dont ignore reality. Its a good time
to bond with a group. Consult an ex-
pert. This leads to more work. Cinch a
romantic deal.
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News Thursday, September 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 9
Honor court
Members of the Honor
Court Advisory Committee
meet to discuss faculty train-
ings. See pg. 4 for story.
Tailgating cookbook
Cook up a delicious rec-
ipe next game day with the
help of a UNC press cook-
book. See pg. 7 for story.
Global fellows
A special fellowship allows
students to travel during their
gap year before college. See
pg. 4 for story.
Mens soccer injuries
Andy Craven and Rob
Lovejoys injuries prevent
them from playing this sea-
son. See pg. 9 for story.
games
Solution to
Wednesdays puzzle
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
2013 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
(C)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACross
1 Behold, to Ovid
5 Graded
10 Stow on board
14 Dcembre event
15 Mosul resident
16 Supply-and-demand
subj.
17 Group for jive fools?
19 Boat that can navigate in
shallow waters
20 Big name in taco sauce
21 Smooch
23 NHL legend
24 Kingston Trio song that
inspired the Boston
subways CharlieCard
25 Superman Returns
character
27 Fed. nutrition std.
29 Great joy
31 Quick swim in la mer?
33 Lip-__
34 FDR had three of them
35 Started the
day
36 Like single-
malt scotch
38 Ran when
wet
39 Iron clothes?
41 Lingerie top
42 Short run
46 GI unlikely to
pass
inspection?
48 When
Worlds
Collide
co-author Philip
49 Zeniths opposite
50 Tour de France stage
52 Jurisprudence org.
53 Justice Fortas
54 Drying oven
56 Boring tool
58 Longtime Lucci role
60 Reneged on politically
motivated funding?
62 Rescue teams, briefly
63 Kiddies refrain
64 Jim Davis pooch
65 Lip
66 Sunset __
67 Campus official
Down
1 Puts in a vault, in a way
2 Refined, as manners
3 Positive
4 Sexy Sommer
5 Saudi capital
6 Parenthesis, e.g.
7 Loquacious types
8 Like some track stars
9 Mine!
10 Arles article
11 Camp David __
12 Like a Hail Mary pass
13 Swaddle
18 They may clash on a set
22 Bolivian capital
26 Calif. law group
28 Poorly made
30 Shrimp dish
32 The Lion King lioness
34 Trs
37 Hit the big leagues
38 La __ Tar Pits
39 Talladegas home
40 Capybaras, e.g.
41 Coca-Cola producer
43 Apple pie order
44 Remote, undesirable
locale, figuratively
45 Pay heed, in literature
46 Racers and rattlers
47 Ignatius of Loyola
follower
48 Garden intruder
51 Hosp. area
55 Zoo primates
57 ... peas in __
59 Last of the Mohicans?
61 Year in Claudius reign
in no way adds to the illegals,
and if youre hiring illegals, its
still illegal to do so.
Kokai was not surprised
at the outcome because both
chambers had a clear majority
during previous votes and
the Senate had made clear its
intent to override the vetoes.
It really all boils down to
what North Carolina House
Speaker Thom Tillis wanted
to do, he said.
John Dinan, a Wake Forest
University professor, said the
governor and the legislature
had agreed on many other
bills, including ones on voter
identification and abortion.
The disagreement here
probably shouldnt overshadow
the broad agreement for the
rest of the session, he said.
But Robert Dempsey, the
N.C. Democratic Partys execu-
tive director, said in a state-
ment that the overrides show
the General Assemblys power.
Republican majorities
managed to band together and
send Gov. McCrory a very loud
and clear message of just who
exactly is running the show in
Raleigh, Dempsey said.
state@dailytarheel.com
Anson Dorrance said the
accolade was a University-
wide effort.
Of all the teams that con-
tributed (it) demonstrates
that weve got a tremendous
collection of student athletes
and coaches and administra-
tors here that are committed
to success in womens sports,
Dorrance said.
In the cups three-year histo-
ry, UNC is the second womens
program to earn the honor.
Stanford won the womens
division in the awards first two
years.
Dorrance also said he was
proud UNC was the first ACC
school to win the award, but
the prize brings more than
just bragging rights. Its also
accompanied by a more tan-
gible $200,000 check.
Chris ONeill, the direc-
tor of digital public relations
campaigns for Capital One,
said though the award is
intended for a specific use,
the company has no official
stipulations for whether the
money is allocated for mens
or womens athletic programs.
It is designed for student
athlete scholarships, he said.
Its up to the university how
they want to use it, but it would
be in the context of scholar-
ships for student athletes.
Dorrance and Cunningham
also applauded the award for
its equality.
The cup has offered a
womens award as well as a
mens award since its incep-
tion, and the monetary com-
pensation is equal for both.
I think this demonstrates
that the Capital One group is
committed to sort of a gender
equity because theyre dem-
onstrating that theyre willing
to not only have a mens win-
ner, but also a womens win-
ner, Dorrance said.
And for some, that equality
is more valuable than any-
thing that could go in a wallet.
sports@dailytarheel.com
CAPITAL ONE
from page 1
NCGA VETOES
from page 1
Coach Larry Fedora said in
an interview that his goal to get
students into Kenan Stadium
by kickoff has not changed.
I think the people under-
stand what we need to do,
he said.
Department of Public Safety
spokesman Randy Young said
students need to move their
cars on game days to make
room for the designated game
parking areas, but only those
who park at Craige, Morrison,
Ehringhaus and Hinton James.
Those students can park in
Craige Parking Deck or S11 lot.
Though tailgating often
involves alcohol, Young said
there is an open-container
ban on campus and alcohol is
banned from Kenan Stadium,
and DPS does not usually
make arrests while people are
consuming alcohol.
Young said officers are not
actively patrolling the alumni
parking lots, but watch careful-
ly as people enter the stadium.
We mostly respond after
the drinking occurred, he said.
Obviously, its not a campus
where alcohol is flowing
freely.
university@dailytarheel.com
TAILGATING
from page 1
Tar Heels lose Craven, Lovejoy to injury
dth file/spencer herlong
The North Carolina mens soccer team will likely be without Andy
Craven (above) and Rob Lovejoy for the rest of the season.
By Dylan Howlett
Staff Writer
The North Carolina mens
soccer team, seconds after
winning its first game of the
season in overtime Friday
night, formed a boisterous
mob on Fetzer Field.
Andy Craven could only
watch.
Craven, the teams lead-
ing goal scorer in 2012, saw
his teammates flood off the
bench to join the powder-blue
crush. Minutes later, with
his left leg stretched out on
a medical cart, Craven dis-
mounted and hobbled toward
the locker room on crutches.
Its pretty painful that I
cant get out there and play,
but its not in any selfish way,
Craven said by phone Tuesday,
nearly a week removed from
season-ending foot surgery.
That doesnt deter me at all
from doing the best for the
team and being there.
Craven, who will return
in 2014 for his fifth and final
year of NCAA eligibility, faces
a three-month recovery after
doctors reattached a tendon
in his left foot Aug. 25. He
hurt his foot this spring and
recently suffered a fracture,
which broke through scar tis-
sue on the outside of his foot.
Ive kind of just accepted
my injury and the process
that it takes to recover, the
2012 College of Charleston
transfer said. Im trying not
to be negative in any light.
Soon after learning about
Cravens fate, UNCs attack
absorbed another sharp blow
with the loss of fellow for-
ward Rob Lovejoy, who will
likely miss the season with a
pinched nerve in his left leg.
UNCs second-leading
scorer in 2012, Lovejoy said
he could play at limited
strength, but wouldnt be
healthy enough to be effec-
tive. The Greensboro native
received a cortisone shot last
week and will wait to see how
his leg responds to treatment.
Im over that whole feel-
ing-sorry-for-myself stage,
Lovejoy said, who plans to
return in 2014 if he sits out
this season. Ive met some
great people here at UNC, and
my parents and other fam-
ily members really help me
through these tough times.
With Craven and Lovejoy
sidelined, UNC has lost the
lions share of its potent 2012
offense. Danny Garcia and
Martin Murphy, another pair
of go-to scorers, departed this
spring, as did ensemble scor-
ers Cameron Brown, Mikey
Lopez and Jordan Gafa.
Thats the great thing about
this program, Lovejoy said.
Year after year, we get unbe-
lievable players. I know (the
goals) are going to come.
Craven and Lovejoy know
the drill of long-term recu-
peration. Both sustained seri-
ous injuries in recent years
a hamstring tear ended
Cravens sophomore season at
Charleston, while a trouble-
some groin limited Lovejoy to
11 appearances in 2012. Both
said they intend to remain
present for their teammates.
What we got are two great
guys on our team, coach Carlos
Somoano said. Theyre still
leading our guys ... Im still glad
theyre part of our program.
Craven knows this. He
knew it when he joined his
teammates, albeit belatedly, in
celebration. But like Lovejoy,
he could, for the most part,
only watch from afar.
sports@dailytarheelc.om
The mens soccer
senior forwards will
likely miss the season.
presidential election.
I think this group of 10
state party chairs is a reflec-
tion of the impulse of the
political party out of power
to figure out what its going
to take to win again, Guillory
said.
But he said that one caveat
to the committees regional
approach is that the South is
not as politically unified as it
used to be.
In states like North
Carolina, Virginia and Florida
where Obama won in the
2008 presidential election,
the Democratic partys future
outlook isnt bleak, he said.
But in other Southern states,
like Louisiana, Mississippi
and Alabama, the Republican
grasp remains strong.
Still, Dempsey said he is
optimistic about the partys
viability in the South.
To say that the Democratic
Party is dead, thats just not
true, Dempsey said. Were
seeing a lot of possibilities to
grow.
state@dailytarheel.com
SOUTHERN STATES
from page 1
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8210 Renaissance Pkwy
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Opinion Thursday, September 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 10
Established 1893, 120 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATUrED OnlinE rEADEr cOmmEnT
Obama should look
away from bombing
TO THE EDITOR:
Tuesdays article about
the Syria protest in
Carrboro deserves nuance.
The protesters got it
right bombing Syria is
a bad idea. However, its
not because Syria is too
much like Iraq or because
it might create anti-Ameri-
can sentiment.
Bombing Syria is a bad
idea because limited air
strikes will do little to
resolve the crisis or protect
civilians.
The Obama adminis-
tration decided to strike
now because they want to
deter the use and prolifera-
tion of chemical weapons.
Notably, the planned
attack is not intended to
protect Syrians and will
likely kill many.
The logic of bombing
Syria is shaky at best. It
goes like this: If the U.S.
and its willing allies strike
Assad for using chemical
weapons, he and others
will be less likely to use
them in the future. This
thinking ignores the fact
that the circumstances
under which Assad used
chemical weapons are
very rare and situationally
specific.
If the U.S. decides to
show restraint, it doesnt
mean that chemical
weapons-wielding dicta-
tors around the world
will reach for their launch
codes.
If the U.S. is genuinely
invested in assuaging and
ending the Syrian crisis, it
will help raise the $3.5 bil-
lion of humanitarian aid
requested by the United
Nations, intensely pres-
sure Russia to bring the
regime to the negotiating
table and facilitate a politi-
cal settlement. Launching
bombs into Syria is a step
in the wrong direction. Its
wrong on moral, strategic
and pragmatic levels. This
conflict will be solved with
a pen, not a sword.
Sean Langberg 14
Global Studies
Geography
McDonald House has
helped for years
TO THE EDITOR:
While we applaud the
heartfelt efforts of the
Herman family to create
a new housing option for
families of pediatric brain
tumors here in Chapel
Hill, a recent article in the
DTH, A house is a home
for cancer families, does
not accurately describe
longstanding efforts by
UNC Hospitals and the
Ronald McDonald House
of Chapel Hill to provide
family support and lodging
for all families of pediatric
patients.
For the past 25 years,
the Ronald McDonald
House of Chapel Hill, in
partnership with North
Carolina Childrens
Hospital, has provided
a fully stocked pantry,
nightly home-cooked
lETTErS TO
THE EDiTOr
Can we cut off all these groups? The extra
fees beyond tuition add an extra 1/3 to the
cost of tuition.
Pat_in_NC, on recent cuts to College Republicansfinances
Republican majorities managed to ... send
Gov. McCrory a very loud and clear message
of just who exactly is running the show.
Robert Dempsey, on the N.C. Senate overriding Gov. McCrorys vetoes
EDiTOriAl cArTOOn By Matthew Leming, mleming@live.unc.edu
Go home
America,
youre
drunk
T
itle credits fade. We
open on a wide shot,
panning across the
bloody, urban desert. America
is a rogue cop, fed up with the
bureaucratic nonsense and
moral decay of modern society.
He hits the streets like a medi-
eval cowboy, cruising through
todays international wasteland,
dealing out his own blend of
backwoods, home-distillery jus-
tice. Vigilante justice, that is.
So look out Lex Luthor;
watch out al-Assad, because
when grizzled ex-detective
America comes back out of
retirement, no one is safe from
his hairy, irrational bravado.
But wait! Rogue cop feels
far too 20th-century and a
little too straightforward as far
as moral logic is concerned.
Thats obviously America for
some, but Im not satisfied yet.
Lets try that again.
America is a superhero
(global superpower, right?).
But not one of those infal-
lible and covertly jingoistic
heroes like Captain America
or Superman although
theres definitely something of
America in both of them.
No, America is one of those
morally ambiguous heroes,
like Batman, the Punisher,
the Boondock Saints or some-
one from Watchmen. (And
who watches the Watchmen?
Certainly not the U.N.)
But letting America be
Batman is giving the nation far
too much credit. Clever and
resourceful? Maybe. Ignorant
of laws and customs, here and
abroad? Well, yeah. Vengeful
and affluent? Most definitely.
But Batman is at least aware
of his collateral damage not
to mention subtle (dont make
me laugh, CIA). He has the
foresight to understand that his
actions have consequences, and
that people he hurts might get
angry and try to hurt him back.
And then theres that not
insignificant ethical factor
about Batmans aversion to
guns and murder. I cant think
of many superheroes whod
feel all right with bombing
the biological daylights out of
Baghdad or indiscriminately
killing with assault drones.
America is a caped crusader,
fighting for principles more
essential and basic than any
codified set of laws. Its funny
though that caped crusader
has crusade built right in,
which is pretty much modern
shorthand for severely mis-
placed fervor based on a sense
of ones own cultural or nation-
al superiority, easily giving rise
to violent irrationality.
I should be clear: These
are Americas of the past (I
hope). Bruce Wayne isnt that
bad a guy! And Im not saying
vigilante justice is always inher-
ently wrong. (Lord knows we
mightve used some in Rwanda.)
But America the
Exceptional is that crusty old
vigilante who keeps dramati-
cally faking his death just to
unexpectedly and reluctantly
come out of retirement again
as soon as another fool-
ish young cop or endangered
nation-state comes along to
draw him out of the manor
and into the street of extralegal
intervention one more time.
So lets get out of that
manor on the hill and take it to
the streets. We can participate
in some round-table discus-
sions and make Gotham a little
bit brighter. But lets put away
that cape and cowl for good.
9/6: SYRIANINTERVENTION
Columnist Memet Walker on
the use of chemical weapons.
N
E
X
T
michael Dickson
Cries from the Peanut Gallery
Senior English and journalism
major from Raleigh.
Email: miked3592@gmail.com
SPEAK OUT
Writing guiDelines
Please type: Handwritten letters will not be accepted.
Sign and date: No more than two people should sign letters.
Students: Include your year, major and phone number.
Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number.
Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit
letters to 250 words.
suBMissiOn
Drop-off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary Street, Chapel
Hill, N.C. 27514
E-mail: opinion@dailytarheel.com
meals, lodging, free laun-
dry service, transportation
to and from the hospital,
as well as other supportive
programs for families of
pediatric patients. The
House has served more
than 34,000 families from
all 100 counties of North
Carolina, 39 other states
and 13 foreign countries.
This service is made pos-
sible, in part, by the lov-
ing support of the entire
Chapel Hill community
and hundreds of UNC stu-
dents who volunteer at the
House each year.
In early 2014, the
Ronald McDonald House
will break ground on a
new facility designed
specifically for long-term
families, those who must
stay in Chapel Hill for
months, even years, while
their children are receiv-
ing treatment at UNC
Hospitals.
This new facility will
increase the number of
families we can serve each
night from 29 to 53 and
will include eight two-
bedroom apartments.
Our goal is to be able
to offer a warm, safe and
comfortable place to stay
to any family who needs us.
Time and again, we hear
from our guests that hav-
ing the loving community
that the Ronald McDonald
House offers has made all
the difference to them dur-
ing a difficult time in their
lives.
We look forward to
continuing that service for
many years to come.
Shelley Day
Executive Director
Ronald McDonald House of
Chapel Hill
unC is not as liberal
as some like to think
TO THE EDITOR:
At a recent session
of Student Congress, I
repeatedly heard that
UNC is a very liberal uni-
versity.
This is the same school
that rewards overwhelm-
ingly white and affluent
applicants with an alumni
privilege in admissions
because of their parents,
but punishes undocu-
mented students with out-
of-state tuition because of
their parents.
This is the school where
only 5 percent of all fac-
ulty members are black
despite a 23 percent black
population of the state,
and every chancellor of
the last 220 years has been
white (and male, until this
summer).
And our Board of
Trustees that advises the
Chancellor? Well, it also
remains very white (92
percent) and very male (86
percent).
Our highest-paid
employee is not a ground-
breaking cancer researcher;
he coaches the mens bas-
ketball team.
I would love to attend a
very liberal university, and
I hope one day UNC can
be one.

Zach Ferguson 14
Student Congress
District 9
School of Law
U
NC has indi-
cated through the
Carolina Digital
Humanities Initiative that
it is fully committed to
creating programs that
strive to meet and solve
the complex problems
presented in a constantly
changing world.
Big data and technolog-
ical trends have indicated
that there is a strong need
for people to understand
the consequences of digi-
talization.
CDHI is a graduate cer-
tificate program in digital
humanities, which will
A new digital frontier
EDiTOriAl
allow students to learn
about the relationship
between the humanities
and online information
sharing.
The program strives
to promote collabora-
tion, conversation and the
exchange of research in
humanities digitally.
Traditionally, only
the science fields have
had access to the online
exchange of information.
The specialization in
digital humanities will
be useful to graduate and
doctoral students not only
during their time at UNC,
but will help to set them
apart in an extremely
competitive job market.
The creation of CDHI
shows the renewed effort
UNC has placed on
research and scholarship
that will benefit not only
academics but also the
public as a whole.
What will propel this
program forward is the
future inclusion of under-
graduate students.
The program says that
it will introduce CDHI
to undergraduates in the
coming semesters.
This allows under-
graduate students to be
exposed to more informa-
tion and to conduct their
own original research.
As a research university,
it is UNCs role to be an
innovator. CDHI exempli-
fies this commitment and
indicates UNCs under-
standing of its role.
New initiative
teaches importance
of digitalization.
A
s part of a
Republican intra-
party movement,
North Carolinas General
Assembly has success-
fully overridden two
vetoes signed by Gov. Pat
McCrory this summer.
One such veto override
upheld House Bill 392,
which is bad news for
families and individuals
throughout the state.
This legislation was
designed to enforce back-
ground checks and drug
testing for some welfare
applicants and would
prohibit fleeing felons
Drug tests not a solution
EDiTOriAl
and probation and parole
violators from receiving
welfare benefits.
Following his veto of HB
392, McCrory issued an
executive order that inten-
sified the existing back-
ground check policies.
But the executive order
left legislators dissatis-
fied, and they overrode
McCrorys veto in votes
Tuesday and Wednesday,
changing the minds of
some N.C. representa-
tives.
This means that HB
392 is now law.
While much controversy
certainly exists pertaining
to the means and policies
of welfare, this legislation
is not the answer.
Welfare is a means of
aiding those who need the
help.
Sometimes recovering
drug users are the recipi-
ents of this assistance.
It does not take much
imagination to recognize
that a fairly large portion
of these people could be
left out to dry because of
this law.
This legislation is not
addressing the debates
surrounding welfare; it is
ignoring them.
It is nearly a death sen-
tence for welfare recipi-
ents struggling with drug
abuse.
Regardless of moral-
ity, this veto override is
yet another unimpressive
move on behalf of the
General Assembly.
House Bill 392
enforces dubious
welfare law.
A woman in Yuzhou, China,
was pulled over recently for
breast-feeding
her crying
18-month-old
son while weav-
ing in and out of
trafc on her moped. This
is the type of multitasking
and innovation that Ameri-
cans need to adapt if we
want to keep up with China
in the global economy. The
baby was given a DUI.
QuickHits
UNC football will debut
argyle end zones this
weekend againt
Middle Tennes-
see State. Frat
stars everywhere
rejoice. The only
question is, does this make
UNC any closer to having
an SEC environment at
Kenan Stadium? No? Well
at least people will have a
distraction from another 8-4
season.
An Iowa student at last
weeks football game tried
to enter the feld
during play, only
to be arrested
and promptly
Breathalyzed.
She blew a .341 BAC. Vodka
Samm, as she calls herself,
tweeted just went to jail
#yoloand my mom hates
me.The last time a hang-
over was this big, Mike
Tyson lost a tiger.
Mom of the Year Vodka samm #endZoneswag
Rejoice, freshman men
no booze, no boysis over.
Sorority rush
ended yesterday
with Bid Day, a
chance for each
sorority to wel-
come its new sisters. Its also
a new chance for sorority
women to talk behind each
others backs, get white girl
wasted and leave football
games halfway through the
second quarter.
the reaping
Beginning last Thursday
with the biggest Cock block
UNC has felt in
recent years,
college football
season is back.
Tonight also
marks the opening of the
National Football League.
Surprisingly, the highest-
paid player this year already
began his season by playing
a half against Rice Univer-
sity on Saturday.
Football is back
On Sunday night John
Boyett, a safety for the
Indianapolis
Colts, was ar-
rested for public
intoxication
while stating,
You cant arrest me ... Im
a Colts player. Boyett has
since been released from
the Colts. Unfortunately for
Boyett, You cant arrest me
... I bag groceriesdoesnt
work either.
You cant arrest me
eDitOrs nOte: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily
represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect
the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which is made up of
seven board members, the opinion co-editors and the editor.
EDITorIal BoarD mEmBErs
NIcolE comparaTo EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
saNEm kaBaca OPINION CO-EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
karEEm ramaDaN OPINION CO-EDITOR
zach gavEr ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR
AlexANdRA WillCox
dylAN CuNNiNGhAM
GAbRiellA koStRzeWA
keRN WilliAMS
SieRRAWiNGAte-bey
tRey bRiGht

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