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By Amanda Albright

University Editor
When Chancellor Carol Folt took the podi-
um Saturday to officially accept the position
she has held for three months, she had tears in
her eyes.
I am overwhelmed by Carolina warmth
and a Tar Heel welcome, she said at her instal-
lation ceremony Saturday, which was held on
University Day.
Folt was officially welcomed into her chan-
cellorship this weekend, with events ranging
from a concert at Memorial Hall to an infor-
mal get-together with hundreds of students at
Folt Fest Sunday.
Im convinced this is the best university in
the world, Folt said at the festival.
UNC Board of Governors Chairman Peter
Hans said the board approved Folt for the
chancellorship with the hope of a new begin-
ning for UNC.
This is a demanding role, and North
Carolinians are counting on her, he said.
Lead us forward.
Folts predecessor, Holden Thorp, spent
Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893
Celebrate what you want to see more of.
Thomas j. peTers
Monday, October 14, 2013 dailytarheel.com Volume 121, Issue 92
The privilege of my life
WIC
funded
through
October
dth/halle Sinnott
UNC-system President Tom Ross congratulates Chancellor Carol Folt at her installation ceremony on Saturday in Polk Place.
Carol Folt was ocially installed as chancellor Saturday
By Benji Schwartz
Staff Writer
From students at UNC all the way to
corporations like Food Lion, groups in
North Carolina sprang into action upon
hearing about the potential loss of sup-
port for low-income pregnant women,
new mothers and infants due to the
federal shutdown.
The N.C. Department of Health
and Human Services announced last
Tuesday that it would stop issuing
vouchers through the Women, Infants
and Children program due to a loss of
funding from the government shut-
down. But three days later, the DHHS
released a second announcement that
WIC would continue to issue vouchers
for the rest of October.
According to a statement from the
DHHS, funds to continue the WIC pro-
gram through the end of October were
found in lapsing funds from the previ-
ous fiscal year, contingency funds from
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
and product rebates from Nestle Foods,
a formula manufacturer for WIC.
According to the DHHS, 263,793
people receive aid from the WIC pro-
gram in North Carolina. In Orange
County, the WIC program serves about
3,000 people every month.
The program gives recipients vouch-
ers for food and nutrition education
classes, as well as health care referrals.
In response to the DHHSs initial
statement on WIC funding, Food Lion,
headquartered in Salisbury, donated
$500,000 in $5 gift cards to sev-
eral food banks located in Asheville,
Charlotte, Elizabeth City, Fayetteville,
Raleigh and Winston-Salem.
Once we learned (WIC) didnt receive
enough (funding), we really wanted to
take a leading role across the state in
providing that critical funding to the food
banks for the increased need they were
receiving, said Christy Phillips-Brown,
spokeswoman for Food Lion.
And at UNC, students Charlotte
Stewart, Natalie Deyneka, Melanie
Stratton Lopez and Kenley Eaglestone
set up a drop box in the School of Law to
collect baby formula, specialty formula
and various other nonperishables imme-
diately after the DHHS press release.
Food pantries all across the state
have been completely depleted, and
were still not sure whats going to hap-
pen at the end of the month, so were
going to continue the drive until we
The Department of Health
and Human Services will
continue issuing vouchers.
dth/Katie Sweeney
dth/Katie Sweeney Carol Folt became UNCs 11th chancellor
on Saturday. The ceremony took place on
University Day.
The installation of Chancellor Carol Folt took place on the steps of South Building Saturday after-
noon. There was a reception that followed the ceremony in Polk Place.
DTH ONLINE: Check out dailytarheel.
com for a photo gallery and video cover-
age of Carol Folts Installation Ceremony
on Saturday.
much of his tenure grappling with athletic and
academic scandal and years of unprecedented
budget cuts, topped off by federal investiga-
tions into UNCs handling of sexual assault
that were opened toward the end of his chan-
cellorship.
Collins Crossing considers new fee
By Will Parker
Staff Writer
A memorandum to the owners of the
Collins Crossing apartment complex has
inflamed an old controversy and renewed
discussion over the complexs future.
The announcement, sent to members
of the Old Well Owners Association, the
complexs homeowners organization, said
a new special assessment for each unit in
the complex will be voted on at the groups
meeting Tuesday. The amount of the pro-
posed fee, which would be used to pay for
improvements around Collins Crossing, has
not been disclosed.
The Collins Crossing complex has been
the subject of multiple controversies in
the past year. A $5,406 assessment fee,
approved on Dec. 19, drew protests and
concern among some unit owners.
Wendy Dale, who owns a unit at the
complex, said while she appreciated the
renovations the first assessment paid for,
there was very little input on the updates
from some unit owners.
These extra things: putting sliding
glass doors on the back of peoples units,
it is nice, and I know it adds value to the
units Dale said, But those are decisions
that were made pretty much unilaterally by
Alcurt Carrboro LLC.
Alcurt Carrboro LLC is the company
that owns a majority of the units at Collins
Crossing. Dale said she feels it has taken
over the complex without concern for the
other owners.
Alcurt Carrboro LLC did not respond
to a call for comment. Aspen Square
Management, the company that used to
manage the Collins Crossing property, also
did not respond to calls for comment.
The homeowners association is simply
a vehicle for Alcurt Carrboro to do what
they want to do, Dale said.
Judith Blau, a retired sociology profes-
sor at UNC, said she sold the two units she
used to own at Collins Crossing after the
first fee was levied.
I was still an owner when there was a
$5,000 assessment fee on top of the regular
homeowners dues, she said. I was shocked
that the owners who attended that meeting
voted for it.
Blau said the last assessment and the
potential new one are part of a movement
to push low-income renters out of apart-
ment complexes in the area.
She said Collins Crossing has taken other
steps to push these renters out of the com-
plex.
The other thing that Collins Crossing
has done is to get rid of Section 8, Blau
said. Section 8 is a federal voucher pro-
gram, and when Collins Crossing gets rid of
Section 8, they are getting rid of diversity,
refugees and disabled people.
The U.S. Department of Housing and
The last fee issued by complex
owners was for $5,406.
paST collinS croSSing iSSueS
Nov. 3: Residents protest Aspen Square
Management practices
Nov. 24: A 10-year-old boy fell through
a deteriorating stairwell at the complex
Dec.19: Old Well Owners Association
approves a $5,406 fee on all units
Jan. 8: Carrboro mandates the complex
renovate 24 stairways by March 4
April 16: Aspen Square Management
denies that it mistreats its residents
Sept. 18: The owners association issues
a memo informing owners a new assess-
ment fee will be voted on on Tuesday
Parking fee still
up for debate
By Bradley Saacks
Staff Writer
The proposed $10.40 addition to the student
transportation fee is still under debate after the stu-
dent fee advisory subcommit-
tee could not reach an agree-
ment in what was supposed to
be its last meeting on Friday.
Police Chief Jeff
McCracken and Department
of Public Safety representa-
tives Wilhelmina Steen and
Cheryl Stout spoke at the meeting Friday to clarify
the reasoning for the fee.
DPS recently proposed a $28.41 fee increase for
parking and transportation to the subcommittee,
including $10.40 for nighttime parking.
The additional fee is meant to cover costs associ-
ated with the currently free system where students
can park anywhere on campus after 5 p.m.
Student Body President Christy Lambden main-
tained his opposition to the fee.
My main issue is that I see increases in costs in
all areas, and no increase in services for students,
Lambden said.
The past few years of increases to the fee are part
TUITION & FEES
See DpS fee, Page 5
See univerSiTy Day, Page 5
See wic, Page 5
Urban Development Housing Choice
Voucher Program, also known as Section
8, is designed to help low-income families,
the elderly and the disabled afford private
housing. Private housing complex owners
are not required to accept the vouchers.
Concerned owners will have a chance
to address questions about the assess-
ment and more general community issues,
according to the memorandum announc-
ing the coming meeting. Owners will also
be given an update about how the money
from the last assessment was spent.
city@dailytarheel.com
DpS and students couldnt agree after
second meeting on the increase.
today
Class drop deadline: Today is
the last day for undergraduate
students to drop a fall course
through the Registrar. Advising
will be available for walk-ins.
Time: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Location: Steele Building
Yoga in the Galleries: Take a
break from your Monday to
enjoy and explore the world of
yoga within one of the Ackland
Art Museums galleries. This
hour-long session is free for
Ackland members and $5 per
session for all others.
Time: Noon - 1 p.m.
Location: Ackland Art Museum
The Start NowSummer In-
ternship Search: This workshop
provided by University Career
Services will explore strategies
and solutions for identifying
internship opportunities. Partici-
pants will also learn how to lo-
cate funding sources and obtain
credit for their internships.
Time: 4 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Location: Hanes Hall 239
tuesday
How to Apply to Teach for
America: Those interested in
becoming involved with Teach
for America can participate in
this workshop, which will feature
tips on how to prepare applica-
tion essays and ace interviews.
NOTED. A New York man is suing his
apartments building management com-
pany after his toilet exploded while he was
flushing last week, which has sent him
into post-traumatic stress disorder.
The man described the incident as a
porcelain bomb, which left him uncon-
scious and required 30 stitches.
QUOTED. I dont know where that leaves
you, but youre still deceased as far as the
law is concerned.
Judge Allan H. Davis of an Ohio
probate court to a man who was declared
legally dead after he fled from his home in
1986. Donald E. Miller testified on behalf
of his own existence and still lost the case.
S
erious talk: What has actor Shia LaBeouf been up to these
days? Sure, hes got that weird erotic drama Nymphomanic
slated to come out in December and is filming a movie with
Brad Pitt, but his latest recreational activity seems to involve
getting kicked in the testicles after making an idiot of himself.
According to a U.K. tabloid, The Sun, LaBeouf was out in London
when he saw two women vomiting on the side of the road. It was then
that he thought to himself, Hey, I should film this, probably for some
uber subversive indie project. When the women asked to be left alone, an
unidentified man proceeded to punch LaBeouf in the face and kick him
in the crotch. An award-winning sight, were sure.
A black and blue LaBeouf
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone stole a lap-
top from 216 N. Roberson
St. between 2 p.m. and 4
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The Lenovo laptop was
valued at $2,000. The per-
son also stole a laptop back
valued at $30 and computer
hardware valued at $75, all
of which were later returned,
reports state.
Someone stole clothes
from Johnny T-Shirt at 128
E. Franklin St. at 2:10 p.m.
Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person grabbed a stack
of clothing, valued at $180,
and left the store without
paying, reports state.
Someone broke into a res-
idence at 347 Wesley Drive at
5:10 p.m. Thursday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person broke into
the residence without force
and stole two gold wed-
ding bands, each valued at
$1,000, a Lenovo laptop
valued at $450, a Sony televi-
sion valued at $700, a Nikon
camera valued at $350 and
ABSOLUT Vodka valued at
$35, reports state.
Someone stole a tablet at
1801 Fordham Blvd. at 8:13
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole the
Samsung tablet, valued at
$400, from someones hands,
reports state.
Someone was assaulted at
316 W. Rosemary St. at 11:33
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person pushed another
person and left the scene,
reports state.
Someone committed sim-
ple assault at 306 W. Franklin
St. at 11:59 p.m. Thursday,
according to Chapel Hill
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
Time: 3 p.m. - 4 p.m.
Location: Hanes Hall 239
UNC Wind Ensemble and UNC
Symphony Band: The two
groups will present a concert of
music for winds. Tickets are $10
for students, faculty and staf,
$15 for all others.
Time: 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m.
Location: Memorial Hall
PoLICe LoG
News Monday, October 14, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2
finding balance
L
ydia Nguyen, a freshman from Cary, learns
the art of slack-lining from Nate Dierk, a sec-
ond year masters candidate in the computer
science program. The lesson took place in Polk Place
on Friday afternoon.
dth/arianna holder
due to an editing error, Thursdays page 3 story immigrant students takes protest to dc mis-
characterized daniela Hernandez blancos immigration status. Hernandez blanco is in the United
States with legal documentation.
The daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed below. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections printed
on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Cammie Bellamy at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
CoRReCtIoNs
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aRTS EDITOR
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News Monday, October 14, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3
State Brief
Ross names UNC systems top lawyer
At last weeks UNC-system Board of
Governors meeting, members unanimously
approved the appointment of the systems
new senior legal officer, Thomas Shanahan.
Shanahan has served as interim vice
president and general counsel since May,
after Laura Fjeld resigned from the position
in April to pursue a Congressional cam-
paign.
-From staff and wire reports
inBRIEF
dth/Jason Wolonick
Amir McClain spots a foul ball during the UNC baseball game Saturday. Young fans spent the day meeting athletes and Roy Cooper during College Day.
cooper pitches change
attorney general motivates underprivileged children
By Kristen Chung
Staff Writer
Baseball, a campus tour and a speech from
N.C. Attorney General Roy Cooper were
some of the events giving young students
from around the state their first taste of UNC
Saturday.
The events were part of the 2013 College
Day Experience, a program held at schools
nationwide by the Cal Ripken, Sr. Foundation
that aims to expose underprivileged kids to
campus life and encourage them to pursue
higher education.
Cooper, who said in an interview that he
might consider a gubernatorial run in the
state in 2016, spoke to the 71 elementary
and middle school students in attendance,
underscoring the importance of staying
away from crime, working hard and getting
good grades.
Part of Saturdays event was a baseball
program held jointly by the foundation and
the N.C. Department of Justice called Badges
for Baseball, played between the kids and
law enforcement. Cooper, who played in
the game, said he feels the program helps
encourage kids to become more comfortable
with police and make positive life decisions.
We want kids running to police cars
instead of from police cars, said Cooper.
The Cal Ripken, Sr. Foundation, which
started in 2001, works to build character
and teach life lessons to disadvantaged youth
through baseball- and softball-themed pro-
grams.
Cooper pitched a few games of quick ball,
a high-energy version of baseball designed
by the foundation where everyone runs the
bases no matter if they hit the ball or not.
The goal is to see how many people they can
get around the bases in two minutes.
The goal is to bring kids to campus and
show them first hand that if they make the
right decisions today, they can attend a place
like Chapel Hill in the future, Flynn Burch,
director of programs for the foundation,
said.
Kids in attendance were selected for the
program from 19 North Carolina organiza-
tions, including the Salvation Army chapters
of Winston-Salem and Durham as well as six
county chapters of the Boys & Girls Clubs.
Seven UNC sorority and fraternity stu-
dents gave the attendees a 45-minute tour
of campus, making stops at important land-
marks like the Bell Tower, the Quad and the
Pit.
The students had lunch in Kenan Stadium
while listening to three guest speakers: for-
mer UNC athletics director Dick Baddour,
fencer Kacie Albert and football player
Jarrod James.
Each speaker highlighted the importance
of taking advantage of opportunities and
studying hard.
James compared life to a game of baseball.
Lifes going to throw you a lot of oppor-
tunities, and its easy to watch them pass you
by. You could hit a home run, so never be
afraid to swing, he said.
The students finished the day watch-
ing a UNC baseball scrimmage between
the blue and navy teams. Many, including
12-year-old Demarcus Jones enjoyed the
experience.
Its exciting to know that successful peo-
ple have been on this campus, and I just want
to work to be successful too.
university@dailytarheel.com
By Katherine Ferguson
Staff Writer
More than 100 animals were res-
cued from a Pender County puppy
mill earlier this month, fueling
debate surrounding the lack of state
commercial breeding legislation.
The Pender County owner agreed
to surrender dogs and several other
farm animals after local law enforce-
ment investigated the property
and found animals suffering from
untreated medical conditions and
living outside in wire chicken coops.
North Carolina has seen more
puppy mill raids than any other
state this raid marks the 14th
since 2010, said Melanie Kahn, the
senior director of the puppy mills
campaign for The Humane Society
of the United States, which assisted
in the Pender County rescue.
Kahn said puppy mills are breed-
ing facilities that lack food and
water, veterinary care and clean and
spacious living conditions.
North Carolina has 200 to 300
puppy mills, and the state has no
commercial breeding law, Kahn
said. Breeders only have to be
licensed by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture to sell to pet stores.
But Brad Ringlien, who owns The
Pet Pad in Cary, said some animal
rights groups have an agenda.
(Animal rights groups) kind of
redefined what a puppy mill was, so
now its anyone who makes a profit
off of selling dogs is evil, he said.
(They) keep redefining it in order to
get people to send them money.
Ringliens store sells purebred
puppies from BJ and Guys Kennel
in Kansas. Although many animals
rights groups have accused the ken-
nel of being a puppy mill in online
advocacy campaigns, Ringlien said
he still stands by the owner, Sharon
Munk.
She wouldve been closed down
many, many years ago if she was
actually doing half the things that
people accuse her of, he said.
Although he said he has never
visited Munks kennel, he said she
has never failed a USDA or American
Kennel Club inspection in the 18 years
he has bought puppies from her.
But Kahn said passing these
inspections doesnt mean much.
Its virtually meaningless because
the USDA standards are so low to
begin with. The HSUS has raided
plenty of USDA-licensed facili-
ties, she said. North Carolina has
become a haven for puppy mill
operators.
The USDA, which has suspended
some operations due to the govern-
ment shutdown, did not respond to a
request for an interview.
The N.C. House of
Representatives passed House Bill
930, a commercial breeding bill in
May. The Senate could take it back
up in the short session next May.
The bill would give law enforce-
ment officials more specific standards
of legal dog care, said Aimee Wall, an
expert in animal control law at the
UNC School of Government.
Khan said increasing the standards
of care in breeding facilities is crucial.
You never get used to seeing dogs
seeing puppies, living in these
horrific conditions where they cant
even stand up and turn around,
where they are so emaciated you
can see their ribs, where theyre so
matted they cant even open their
mouths to eat.
state@dailytarheel.com
puppy mill raid spurs legislation debate
North Carolina has had
more puppy mill raids
than any other state.
By Emily Hackeling
Staff Writer
Carrboros reputation as a quaint, family-
friendly arts and innovation hub is likely to
flourish even more with The ArtsCenters
proposal to shift to a new, larger location in
the next two years.
Main Street Properties of Chapel Hill
LLCs ongoing redevelopment project at
300 East Main in Carrboro does not official-
ly include a new facility for The ArtsCenter.
But Art Menius, executive director of the
center, is working with Carrboro Board of
Aldermen to change the plans to include a
venue for the business.
Menius said that providing for an
expanded ArtsCenter space will allow for
more programming and classes, bringing
more families to the area and providing an
economic boost for surrounding businesses.
The proposed facility, officially presented
to the Carrboro Board of Aldermen Tuesday,
would not only provide a new place for arts
performances, but also meeting space for
entrepreneurs, new offices for surrounding
businesses, spaces for new tenants and cre-
ative development areas for phone applica-
tion development and 3-D printing.
Menius said the proposal was well-
received at the meeting.
If the design for the new facility goes
forward, the current plan for the 300 East
Main project would need to be revised.
Menius said nothing is set in stone yet,
and they are currently working on form-
ing a plan for the interior of the ArtsCenter
space.
We are keeping our options open and
accepting new ideas, he said.
Kevin Benedict, a partner in Main Street
Properties, said the new space will bring
more people to the area.
The new facility will fill a cultural need
not fully served by the school system in the
area, Benedict said.
Owners of local businesses near the
project said they are thrilled for its develop-
ment.
Brian White operates and co-owns Fleet
Feet, located in the same complex as The
ArtsCenter. He said the center is a great
neighbor that brings good business to the
area already, but the new facility would
bring even more people to the site.
Were really excited for the transition,
he said.
Fleet Feet also intends to move into the
new 300 East Main building when it is
complete.
The store will gain space for corporate
offices above its location. White said this
will be crucial for training new employees
and will also be helpful in holding more
local events.
We think its definitely going to do good
things for business in this part of Carrboro,
White said.
The ArtsCenters current space was built
in 1955 and requires constant upkeep,
Menius said. The new facility would require
less maintenance, allowing employees to
focus even more on expanding Carrboros
arts culture, he said.
We are super excited for the project to
progress and are truly energized by it now
that it has been formally presented, he
said.
arts@dailytarheel.com
By Andrew Craig
Staff Writer
Supporters of the Moral
Monday protests were not alone
when they gathered together in
May to plan their demonstrations.
An undercover officer had
attended two N.C. NAACP
demonstration planning meet-
ings, according to a statement
released by the Raleigh Police
Department.
The planning meetings took
place on May 6 and May 13 at the
Davie Street Presbyterian Church
in Raleigh. The summers Moral
Monday protests, which are still
continuing, led to the arrests of
nearly a thousand people for civil
disobedience.
Raleigh Police Chief Cassandra
Deck-Brown said in the state-
ment that the officer, who was not
wearing a uniform, only attended
public portions of the meet-
ings and was only there with the
express purpose to make sure that
the department was prepared to
handle the logistics of the protest.
She said the department want-
ed to gauge the potential number
of arrestees, so they could arrange
for sufficient transportation.
Irv Joyner, a professor of law at
North Carolina Central University
who is representing several
arrestees, said law enforcement
officials commonly observe pro-
test planning meetings.
It is a regular practice for
officers to attend such meetings
to ensure that they are prepared
for any dangers that might arise,
Joyner said. Its their job to keep
the streets safe.
Joyner said that the practice
was completely legal and that
groups such as the N.C. NAACP
are often aware it happens.
Throughout the civil rights
movement, weve always known
that police officials have been
at meetings to see whats being
planned, Joyner said.
Joyner said the revelations
wont change the terms of the
protesters arrests. Several pro-
testers are beginning to face trial.
In a statement released last
week, the N.C. NAACP said it was
not aware that the police were pres-
ent during planning meetings but
states that anyone was welcome to
attend the meetings.
The organization praised the
nc naacp unaware of surveillance
dth file/katie Williams
A Moral Monday rally held in the Peace and Justice Plaza on Aug. 28.
ArtsCenter
plans for
new space
A Raleigh police officer
attended two protest
planning meetings.
The center presented plans for
a new facility at 300 East Main.
conduct of the Raleigh Police
Department during the Moral
Monday demonstrations in the
statement, saying that they had
cultivated and enjoyed an excel-
lent working relationship with
the department during the 13
weeks of protest.
According to the N.C. NAACP
statement, demonstration orga-
nizers were in constant contact
with Capitol police regarding
their intentions.
All of our efforts were trans-
parent, and we had nothing to
hide from anyone, said the Rev.
William Barber, N.C. NAACP
president, in the statement.
Deck-Brown echoed that
sentiment in her statement,
saying that the Raleigh Police
Department and N.C. NAACP
had developed a close relation-
ship over the course of the dem-
onstrations.
As always, the overarching
goal of the police department was
to ensure all parties were able to
lawfully exercise their constitu-
tional rights of assembly and free
speech in a safe and orderly envi-
ronment.
state@dailytarheel.com
Opinion Monday, October 14, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4
Honorable changes
Established 1893, 120 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATUrED OnlinE rEADEr cOMMEnT
No opinions should
go unchallenged
TO THE EDITOR:
Despite the article,
Speak Like No Ones
Listening and its fairly
innocuous call to arms
and reminder that on the
whole, Carolina is a place
where students views are
accepted, I have a small
problem with the way it is
presented.
Everyones had their
political views berated at
some point or another,
whether by parents at the
dinner table or by some-
one calling you out in the
quad. I wager that this is
one of the most important
aspects of having political
views.
In light of the fact that
this is a secular university,
where one is expected to
have an open mind and
learn to challenge theirs
and others beliefs, I say
that you should be ready to
either defend your opinion
on Obamacare to the death,
or be open-minded enough
to hear the other perspec-
tive.
You might just learn
something by having that
argument you keep trying
to avoid.
Socrates couldnt spew
out a new theory without
expecting one of his peers
to question it, and the guy
philosophized for a living.
While its nice to be
able to walk through cam-
pus without being jeered
at, I think its unrealistic
to believe your politics
shouldnt be challenged.
They will. And its okay,
because you care enough to
get angry about it.
Christian Prosperi 17
Nursing
The ASG is wasteful
and ineffective
TO THE EDITOR:
Students should be dis-
appointed with the UNC
Association of Student
Governments.
At a time when stu-
dents expect action from
their student government
leadership, the association
built a procedural brick
wall rather than discussing
a simple resolution meant
for advocating for the
interests of students across
the state.
Rather than voicing our
opinions now, the asso-
ciation voted to spend a
month doing little to noth-
ing and allowing us to lose
the valuable momentum
that would spur action
across our sixteen cam-
puses.
Students deserve to
know that the dollar that
they pay to this organiza-
tion was spent on hotel
rooms, catered meals and
gasoline yet nothing was
accomplished at a meet-
ing that cost them around
$3,000 in total.
An organization that has
found itself in the midst of
criticism from our institu-
tion, as well as others, did
little to alleviate the con-
cerns we have about the
lETTErS TO
THE EDiTOr
Racism did not end abruptly in 1865 or
1965, and I think we all need to work more
diligently to combat it.
RalphUNC, on disproportionate minority admissions at UNC
This is a demanding role, and North
Carolinians are counting on her. Lead us
forward.
Peter Hans, on the installation of Carol Folt as chancellor
EDiTOriAl cArTOOn By Daniel Pshock, danpsho@gmail.com
Lets
booze
while its
still cute
T
his weekend, laid up
with a gnarly cold, I
turned to the ever trusty
DayQuil/NyQuil treatment
program. These medicines
labels warn consumers that 3
or more alcoholic drinks daily
while using this product may
result in severe liver damage.
Given that I am: 1) a person
who is perhaps excessively
obedient of pharmaceutical
warning labels and 2) a person
who does not believe she has
sufficiently tasted a wine
when she is temporarily with-
out her sense of taste, I found
myself prevented from review-
ing a wine this weekend.
I had designs on reviewing
a chardonnay by Yellow Tail
that wine from down under
and perhaps writing the review
in my best phonetic represen-
tation of an Australian accent,
which many would have
likely found cringeworthy and
potentially offensive.
Fortunately for the reader,
pathogens have intervened and
this plan has crumbled into a
chalky dust.
So, as I frequently do
when ill and/or stuck for an
idea, I picked up a book in
this case, Kingsley Amiss
Everyday Drinking.
In his essay First Thoughts
on Wine, Amis provides a
convenient Wine-Resenters
Short Handy Guide, which
advises those who find them-
selves in the unfortunate
situation of being surrounded
by people who are really into
wine.
Included in his list of advice
is to always drink wine in
restaurants with said wine
people, to serve at least chilled
white wine when entertaining
said wine people, to procure
a first-rate wine merchant
to do all of ones wine pur-
chases and to keep at hand a
good supply of beer, stout and
cider, not to speak of stronger
waters, to console you when
the whole business gets too
much for you.
I take Amis at his word,
but I suspect this advice will
not be terribly helpful to me
until Im at least 30 which I
believe is the age at which it is
not ridiculous for one to have
regular encounters with a wine
merchant and evidently
surrounded by terrible friends
who will drop me the second I
choose a less-than-impeccable
wine.
But Amiss list did make me
confront my ever-increasing
proximity to postgraduate life,
at which point toting wine
around in metal water bottles
and drinking it out of coffee
mugs at home will become less
than charming.
Wine is a beverage con-
ventionally associated with
sophistication, and soon it will
no longer be cute to drink it
unsophisticatedly.
Drinking wine as a real per-
son in the real world will have
rules. It will have to be done
out of glasses, and it will have
to be daintily sipped, and we
will have to pay extra money
for reds that dont stain our
teeth.
So heres my addendum to
Amiss advice: while we can
still get away with it, lets with-
hold from wine the reverence
it (maybe) deserves.
Lets drink it right from
the bottle standing up, and
lets pair it with burritos, and
lets remember that we can be
adults about it later.
T
he Universitys
student-led Honor
Court has had its
fair share of criticism
over the past few years.
However, thanks to active
leadership from vari-
ous parts of campus, the
changes to be implement-
ed in the future should be
applauded except one.
The proposals included
four distinct changes: The
first will be removing the
current usual sanction, in
favor of establishing a new
minimum.
It would be a shift from a
minimum sentence of one
full semester of academic
probation and supplement-
ed by an appendix outlining
the severity of violations.
This appendix will serve as
a way to hold the heavier
violators accountable, while
also giving minor offenders
flexibility, something that
was missing in the past.
The second revision will
be lowering the burden of
proof to clear and con-
vincing evidence. Doing
so will make Honor Court
members jobs easier.
It can be very difficult to
charge someone with aca-
demic dishonesty when the
burden of proof is as high
as it currently is. Lowering
the standard will also
appease some faculty crit-
ics who feel the court is too
easy on alleged violators.
The last two proposed
changes will deal with the
faculty role in the honor
system. The proposal to
create a student-instructor
resolution process has
good intentions and
allows faculty members to
have appropriate involve-
ment in the system.
This process will only
be used in minor academ-
ic cases, but it eliminates
some of the bureaucracy
that happens throughout
the honor court process.
The last proposal would
invite faculty to become
members of the court for
academic, not-guilty hear-
ings is the final possible
change being made.
Unlike the previous three
proposals, which all have
positive impacts on the
court and honor system as
a whole, this one would not
improve the system. Even
though faculty will not have
a direct leadership role,
they could have a signifi-
cant influence on the way
verdicts are decided during
the deliberation phase.
Bringing professors on
board undermines the
idea that students can
manage the honor system
on their own.
Students on Honor
Court are capable of run-
ning proceedings; they
dont need a faculty mem-
ber, who may have an alter-
native motive to aggres-
sively go after students, on
the court. Previous negative
experiences could push
some faculty to approach
deliberations with precon-
ceived biases.
Three of the four court
initiatives provide needed
additions to the honor
system, but they should
reconsider the fourth.
UNCs student-led honor
system has been proudly
run, independent of facul-
ty, for 138 years, and there
is no need to add faculty
to the court now.
EDiTOriAl
Katherine Proctor
The Sauce
Senior English and communication
studies major from New Bern.
Email: krsproctor@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
ability of ASG to serve as an
effective advocacy organiza-
tion.
One must wonder if a
procedural maneuver will
be used to avoid voicing
opinion on the UNC Board
of Governors pending deci-
sion to change the drop-add
period from eight weeks to
ten days.
Rest assured, the student
government leadership
at UNC will continue to
advocate for your interests.
We encourage you to stand
beside us.
Connor Brady 14
Student Congress
Speaker
Christy Lambden 14
Student Body President
The last thing dorms
need is more fire drills
TO THE EDITOR:
After we had our third
pulled fire alarm this year
in the Craige Residence
Hall on South Campus a
week ago, I cant help but
laugh at the thought of giv-
ing more importance to fire
drills.
The editorial board for
the article a second for
safety explains that prepa-
ration for emergencies by
imposing quarterly fire
drills would increase the
attention to safety, rather
than causing smugness in
the wake of danger, but fails
to evaluate the practicality
of this idea.
Obligatory safety proce-
dures that the University
mandates that students
follow like the Alcohol
Awareness tests and fire
drills remain overlooked
and skimmed through by
students. With classes,
homework, volunteering
and other extracurriculars
filling up the busy schedule
of a college student, distant
threats and probable yet
hypothetical situations fall
to last priority.
Students go through
the motions to complete
the required tasks in the
easiest and quickest ways
that detract least from
more immediate duties, so
increasing the number of
prerequisite preparations
would not solve the com-
placency problem.
If anything, requir-
ing more fire drills will
aggravate students to the
extent that theyd disre-
gard drills entirely. Having
experienced three false
fire alarms already this
year, I am far less inclined
to spring out of bed, and
quickly and calmly evacu-
ate my dorm because Im
trained to think that its
just another drill or false
alarm.
To prepare for emergen-
cies, the first matter of
business is not to increase
the number of practices,
but rather to decrease the
number of false alarms by
implementing punitive
measures on perpetra-
tors, and planning out
one dorm-wide drill far in
advance, so that students
know how to react to dan-
ger without disregarding it
as false or a waste of time.
David Lindars 17
Undecided
10/15: EXCERCISE OUTDOORS
Columnist Holly Beilin on going
beyond just the gym.
N
E
X
T
Professors should
have a limited role
in the Honor Court.
GUEST cOlUMn
B
efore UNC fans settle
into their couches or
bleacher seats to root
on the football team against
Miami this Thursday, the
Athletic Reform Group asks
that Tar Heels everywhere
contemplate the full costs of
the Thursday-night spectacle
to be played out at Kenan
Stadium.
According to NCAA aver-
ages, UNC football players
work roughly 45 hours per
week to get in shape, learn
the playbook, watch game
film, lift weights, travel to
distant stadiums and don
the Carolina blue before
screaming fans, all at the
risk of suffering brain and
bodily injuries.
In return for their efforts,
they are told that they are
given the opportunity to
receive a University edu-
cation. Leaving aside the
fairness of that exchange
offering in-kind compen-
sation to a work force that
has no bargaining rights is
at best a morally ambiguous
practice the UNC commu-
nity should consider some of
what football players give up
to play their sport:
Study time. Football play-
ers work a full-time job.
Yet statistics indicate that a
disproportionate percent-
age of football recruits were
brought to this campus
less than fully prepared
for the rigors of univer-
sity classrooms. They need
more time than most, not
less time, to manage the
demands of HIST 128 and
MATH 110. Midweek games
Jay Smith and lewis Margolis
Smith is a history professor, and
Margolis is an associate professor
for the School of Public Health.
Email: jaysmith@email.unc.edu,
lew_margolis@unc.edu
obviously apply additional
pressure to already packed
schedules. Have universities
really done all they should
to enable athletes to seize
the opportunity of an edu-
cation?
Choices. Every minute of
a football players 16-hour
day is scripted. As a conse-
quence, players have fewer
choices than other students.
Fewer classes, fewer majors,
fewer experiential opportu-
nities such as study abroad,
fewer chances to interact
with their professors. Their
menu of choices is deliber-
ately limited, their educa-
tional experiences necessar-
ily impoverished.
Autonomy. Football play-
ers are recruited to universi-
ties by coaches who deter-
mine their schedules and
have the power to rescind
their scholarships. The
NCAA forces players to sign
away their privacy rights and
their economic rights when
they accept their scholarship
agreements. In these condi-
tions, the likelihood that a
football player would ever
publicly disagree with his
coach or exercise leadership
on controversial issues is
next to nil.
Due process. Football
players are at the mercy
of a capricious system of
justice. When accused of
wrongdoing, players are
preemptively suspended
from the team pending
investigation of the allega-
tions against them. Even if
found to be innocent as
was fullback Devon Ramsay
during the scandal of 2010
players are forced to sac-
rifice reputations, playing
time and potential future
earnings at the tarnished
altar of NCAA purity.
The injustices of college
sport are many. Fans of col-
lege football have recently
focused, with good reason,
on the pay-for-play debate
and the mounting evidence
that football causes brain
damage.
But even apart from
these major issues of health
and compensation, football
players routinely make
other sacrifices that ham-
per their lives as students
and citizens of the UNC
campus.
Before Tar Heel fans
wave their pom-poms this
Thursday, lets give some
thought to how the college
sport enterprise can be made
more just and more in keep-
ing with the principles of a
center of learning.
Jay Smith and Lewis
Margolis are writing on
behalf of the Athletic Reform
Group.
What are UNC students actually cheering for this Thursday?
The true costs of football
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
nine 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
zach gavEr OPINION CO-EDITOR
mIchaEl DIcksoN ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR
AlexANdrA willCox
AliZA CoNwAY
dYlAN CUNNiNgHAm
gABriellA kostrZewA
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kerN williAms
mAHmoUd sAAd
sierrAwiNgAte-BeY
treY BrigHt
News Monday, October 14, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 5
By McKenzie Coey
Assistant City Editor
In an area where creat-
ing affordable housing often
seems impossible, it might
take 14 brains to come up
with solutions.
Chapel Hill Town Council
and Carrboro Board of
Aldermen candidates came
together Sunday to discuss
how both towns can ensure
affordable housing availability.
The forum was hosted
by Orange County Justice
United, a nonprofit focused
on social justice issues involv-
ing those who work, live and
worship in the county.
The forums moderator
asked the candidates ques-
tions relating to the creation
of affordable communities,
how they could be funded
and how diversity can be
increased in the towns.
Incumbent Sammy Slade
said he thinks it is important
to make a town appealing to a
variety of income levels.
Affordable communities
are essential to the future of
our town, he said.
Incumbent Jacquelyn Gist
said she was concerned about
whether she could afford to live
in Carrboro for much longer.
Affordability is such a
huge, huge issue, she said.
We have done such a good
job at making this a cool
place to live.
Unopposed Carrboro may-
oral candidate Lydia Lavelle
said she thinks a variety of
views are expressed in debates
and questionnaires, but more
can be considered in the future.
When we are setting pol-
icy for such a town, we need
to consider all perspectives,
she said.
Town Council candidate
Loren Hintz, who was giving
a presentation in Colorado
during the forum Sunday, had
his son, Carl, fill in for him
and answer the questions.
Chapel Hill is a great place
to live because of its diversity,
said Carl Hintz, a high school
senior. Everyones voice should
be heard, so we need to listen.
And Town Council candi-
date Amy Ryan said she thinks
Chapel Hill has good inten-
tions when it comes to diverse
representation, but still has
room for improvement.
Incumbent Sally Greene
called upon the audience and
stressed the importance of
community involvement in
order to keep discussion open.
Even in our lovely bubble
in Chapel Hill there is a grow-
ing distrust in government,
she said. Anything we can do
personally to reach out and
make those connections will
really help.
Town Council incumbent
Ed Harrison said he makes an
effort to answer phone calls,
but thinks others can improve
on being more accessible.
I got in the habit of mak-
ing and receiving phone calls,
he said. I think as individuals
elected officials actually can
be more proactive about doing
that. But thats up to us.
Town Council candidate
Paul Neebe suggested posting
schedules of town meetings in
Town Hall to publicize them
further.
Aldermen candidate Kurt
Stolka said he believed the
towns should work together
more often.
We need to collaborate
more with our neighbors, he
said.
Aldermen incumbent
Randee Haven-ODonnell
said she thought collabora-
tion between the towns was
important as well as among the
towns and other organizations.
I believe in the partner-
ship between Carrboro and
nonprofits, she said.
D.C. Swinton, a town coun-
cil candidate, said an impor-
tant factor in an affordable
community in the income
level of residents, which could
be improved with higher
wages.
We wont have to continue
the amount of affordable
housing because people wont
be asking for it as frequently.
George Cianciolo, a Town
Council candidate, said he
thought taking issues straight
to low and moderate income
residents would be an effi-
cient way to find solutions.
We need to understand
what it would be like to walk
in the shoes of these people,
he said.
Town Council candidate
Gary Kahn also said he
thought discussion would
benefit from more direct
involvement, like emailing
and attending meetings.
People of low income fami-
lies have to participate in our
government, he said.
Town Council candidate
Maria Palmer emphasized
the lack of programs and
resources that reach low and
moderate income families.
I think we need to do
a better. And we can, she
said. I am looking forward
to doing everything we are
doing and more.
city@dailytarheel.com
Most of the Universitys
challenges remain, but Folt
said in her installation speech
that she is optimistic for
UNCs future.
Ive been asked, Why do
you want to lead a large pub-
lic research university now, or
here? she said.
I am deeply inspired by
Carolinas history and its
higher purpose.
And as this Saturday,
University Day, marked the
date that UNC was founded
in 1793, Folts speech stressed
this higher purpose and the
value of public education to
the state and country.
I believe in the capacity of
a great public university, she
said. Our future depends on
keeping them strong.
Folt said the University
must be accessible and
diverse, as well as focus its
research on solving real
world problems, such as
human rights, water and
famine.
Lets de-silo this campus,
she said. Let us leverage our
cross-cutting connections and
our culture of collaboration
within and beyond campus.
Other speakers at the
installation ceremony also
emphasized the importance
of the University to the state,
but also the need for UNC to
have tangible benefits.
Gov. Pat McCrory said
UNC would be key to the
states economic recovery,
and that Folt has already
connected the University to
commerce.
Earlier this year, McCrory
said UNC should invest less
in liberal arts and more in job
creating programs.
He said in his speech
Saturday that the University
should continue to ensure
that its curriculum aligns
with the needs of the market-
place.
Our goal is to get us all
to think better, gain more
knowledge and get our gradu-
ates a job so they can immedi-
ately start contributing to our
economy, he said.
Folts speech emphasized
that liberal arts programs are
central to UNCs mission of
problem solving.
As other nations are seek-
ing to improve their own
educational systems, adding
the liberal arts is viewed by
many in China, India, and
elsewhere as the most effec-
tive way to increase the cre-
ativity and innovation in their
business and technology, she
said.
Folt has said that she is
going on a listening tour of
the University and hearing
from stakeholders before
changing policies. She has
taken tours of more than ten
schools on campus to hear
about their programs and
challenges.
Folt Fest, a welcome cel-
ebration hosted by a variety
of groups, including UNCs
Executive Branch of Student
of DPSs five-year plan, which
originally intended to raise
the fee by $14 each year.
If the fee does not pass,
students could be required
to purchase a $227 permit to
park on campus at night.
Graduate School President
Kiran Bhardwaj said she
agreed that students should
pay a fee but questioned the
amount proposed by DPS.
What I do not accept
is the way the amount was
reached, she said.
Bhardwaj requested the fee
be lower, saying there wasnt
enough information about why
that amount had been chosen.
McCracken said the
department decided on the
$10.40 amount based on
advice from an outside con-
sultant. He said it is near
impossible to find out exactly
how much students cost the
night parking system.
I think we are all going
to have agree to disagree,
McCracken said.
Subcommittee members
opposed to the fee found it dif-
ficult to provide alternatives
to support the parking infra-
structure.
UNIVERSITY DAY
from page 1
dth/halle Sinnott
Chancellor Carol Folt accepts a Folt Fest T-shirt at the celebration in the Union on Sunday.
There was free food and performances from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Government, gave Folt the
opportunity to hear from the
28,000 students she serves.
Student Body President
Christy Lambden said his
relationship with Folt was
strong.
Ive already been inspired
by her passion and her
approach of gathering input
and feedback, he said.
Sophomore Marcia Davis
said she hopes Folt will host
similar events in the future.
Most people know the
chancellors name and see her
at convocation, but are still
like, Who is that? she said.
Freshman Dory Deweese,
who attended Folt Fest, said
she would like Folt to be
empathetic to student needs,
such as the pushback on the
shortened drop-add policy to
be implemented on campus
next year and gender-neutral
housing.
Shes doing a good job by
having conversations with
students, she said.
Freshman Katherine
Manweiler also said she
would like to see Folt respond
to student activism on cam-
pus.
Make decisions with us in
mind, she said.
Folt said empowering
UNCs students was key to
continuing the Universitys
excellence.
How fortunate am I to be
in this special place, work-
ing and learning with some
of the worlds brightest and
most passionate people, on
far-reaching questions with
people who have a drive to
create, to teach, to learn, and
to heal, she said.
It is the privilege of my life
to be here.
university@dailytarheel.com
DPS
from page 1
Town candidates discuss aordable housing
have federal funding again,
Eaglestone said.
The collected supplies
will be distributed through
local groups, including the
Inter-Faith Council for Social
Service in Chapel Hill and
Carrboro and the Food Bank
of Central and Eastern North
Carolina, which Eaglestone
said currently has a great
need for supplies.
Local aid organizations
were also prepped to take
action.
Jamie Rohe, homeless
programs coordinator for the
Orange County Partnership
to End Homelessness, said
she had been contacted by
Stewart to help with the loss
of WIC aid.
Basically with a partner-
ship, when new things hap-
pen and new laws are passed
... we work with our partners
and communicate and see
what we can do to pitch in
to solve the problem what
our role will be, Rohe said.
Thats where we were
starting to work with our
partners on the issue.
state@dailytarheel.com
WIC
from page 1
Other students have voiced
varying opinions on the fee.
Freshman Billie Patterson
supports the fee but thinks
freshmen should be exempted
because they are not allowed
to have cars on campus.
Junior Dalisha Sturdivant
said the fee would be worth it.
Not having my car on
campus or being able to park
at nighttime is not conve-
nient, she said.
Because the $10.40 fee was
not passed, the subcommittee
was forced to schedule anoth-
er meeting Wednesday.
If a consensus cannot be
met then, the proposal will
go to the Tuition and Fees
Advisory Task Force for
review.
university@dailytarheel.com
S
t
u
d
y
Abroad
h t t p : / / s t u d y a b r o a d . u n c . e d u
To get more information, contact the Study Abroad Office.
962-7002 ~ http://studyabroad.unc.edu
Find out about program options, requirements, financial aid, course
credits. Dont wait, get going on planning your international experience
by attending this session.
Study Abroad 101 Information Session
Monday, October 14 12:00-1:00p.m.
Student Union
Room 2420
This session will cover all of the exciting possibilities
that the Study Abroad Office has to offer. Dont miss
this opportunity to get information, find the right
program for you, learn how to navigate the website,
learn how to apply and get the chance to talk to a
study abroad advisor. We hope to see you there!
416255.CRTR
Research Computing help wanted!
ITS Research Computing is seeking part-time
graduate student employees to help provide
technical support for our customers.
Flexible schedule, 5-20 hrs/week
Pay starts at $13/hour
Experienced students can earn more.
See http://its.unc.edu/research/its-research/
computing/graduate-student-position
for more details or contact research@unc.edu
to apply or for more information.
News Monday, October 14, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6
NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS
Deadlines are NOON one business day prior
to publication for classifed ads. We publish
Monday thru Friday when classes are in session.
A university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e.
this affects deadlines). We reserve the right to
reject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Acceptance of
ad copy or prepayment does not imply agree-
ment to publish an ad. You may stop your ad
at any time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for
stopped ads will be provided. No advertising for
housing or employment, in accordance with
federal law, can state a preference based on
sex, race, creed, color, religion, national origin,
handicap, marital status.
Business
Opportunities
INTERESTED
IN STARTUPS?
RoundBuzz, an RTP high tech company, is
looking for local agents to evangelize our
location aware text check ins. Bring your
energy, innovation to promoting trials
by local merchants and UNC community.
Base pay $11/hr. +performance bonus. Send
resume: jobs@roundbuzz.com.
Child Care Wanted
AFTERSCHOOL NANNY: West Chapel Hill
family seeking afterschool nanny. 2 boys, 6
and 10. Student interested in education with
patience to assist with homework and writing
practice ideal. Great M-F part-time job for stu-
dent with morning classes! Please call or apply
online. www.collegenannies.com/carync/join,
919-896-7227.
SEEKING EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER for
Infant: In home care of 3 month-old baby, 3
days/wk. Must have excellent references.
Spanish speaking, CPR and First Aid certifed
a plus. cmblue@gmail.com.
PART-TIME SITTER NEEDED ASAP! 3 boys,
ages 10, 7, 4. Mondays 12:45-4:30pm, Tues-
days 11:45am-6:45pm, Thursdays 11:45am-
4:30pm. Will pay above market for experience.
Non-smoker, must like dogs. 301-848-9406.
TUTORING AND SCHOOL PICK UP. College
student needed to pick up my 2 kids from
school and tutor on basic math and science
every day M-F from 3:15-5pm or 5:30pm. 2
bright, engaging kids (1 middle school, 1 high
school) who are self motivated and fun. Need
help for dual working professional parents!
Call, text or email leisadennehy@hotmail.com.
919-960-7073.
FAIR HOUSING
ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in
this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal
to advertise any preference, limitation, or
discrimination based on race, color, religion,
sex, handicap, familial status, or national
origin, or an intention to make any such
preference, limitation, or discrimination.
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any
advertising which is in violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper are available on
an equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
500 PITTSBORO ST. HOUSE Behind Carolina
Inn. Sleeps 10, completely remodeled in
2013, hardwoods, granite, new appliances,
$8,500/mo. Available August 2014. uncrents@
carolina.rr.com 704-277-1648
SHARING A QUIET HOME. Grad student
preferred. On a little lake, a few miles
from campus. $600/mo. includes utilities.
919-210-4532, rross919@gmail.com.
RENT APARTMENT. :Walking distance to
campus, 950 square feet, $1,400/mo.
2BR/2BA. All 7 appliances included, Lease
from June 2014, Security deposit required,
Free parking. 336-432-7110.
FOR RENT: Mill Creek on Martin Luther King
Blvd. Available August 2014. 4BR/2BA.
Excellent condition with all appliances
including W/D. $2,200/mo. 704-277-1648 or
uncrents@carolina.rr.com.
For Sale
BOOKS: STOLEN MEMORIES, dangerous
dreams, collapsing societies, lost identi-
ties, lost souls, engineered life, our world
transformed. Read Remembering the Future,
science fction stories by Alan Kovski.
Available via Amazon.com.
Help Wanted
ARE YOU A freshman, sophomore, junior? Year
round, low stress job on campus: STUDENT
assistant needed at Lineberger Cancer Center.
FLEXIBLE 3 hour shift Minimum. 12 hrs/wk.
Email resume: leslie_schreiner@med.unc.edu.
UP AND DOING IT LANDSCAPING looking for
part-time landscapers and personal gardeners.
Outgoing and energetic personality a plus.
Please respond to upanddoingit@yahoo.com.
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE
CTI is a small business in Chapel Hill looking for
an individual to help coordinate one or more
of NIH funded research programs. Projects
develop online ed and/or serious games related
to substance abuse treatment, obesity, evalua-
tion and reporting. NIH funded research. MA,
MS, MPH or higher. Please read full description
and apply at www.clinicaltools.com, Work at
CTI. 919-960-8118.
UNC CLINICAL RESEARCH STUDY
recruiting subjects age 18-75 with anal
fssure to determine effcacy and safety of
investigational medication. 919-843-7892,
renuka_kelapure@med.unc.edu.
DELIVERY DRIVER: Tarheel Takeout needs
delivery drivers. Your car, your music and none
of the headaches of being a waiter. Up to
$1,000/wk Email charles@tarheeltakeout.com.
THE CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO YMCA is hiring
an afternoon inclusion specialist for its
Boomerang program. Boomerang is a youth
support program providing middle and
high school aged youth with alternative to
suspension and afterschool programming. The
specialist will be assisting with the afterschool
programming, safety and management for
individual students and volunteers, assist
in tutoring and community service. 6-15
hrs/wk based on need. Fill out the application
form found on www.chcymca.org and mail
it to J. LaQuay at the CHCY or email to
jlaquay@chcymca.org.
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE
CTI is a small business in Chapel Hill looking
for an individual to help coordinate one or
more of NIH funded research programs. Proj-
ects develop online ed and/or serious games
related to substance abuse treatment, obesity,
evaluation and reporting. NIH funded research.
Masters preferred. Please read full description
and apply at www.clinicaltools.com, Work at
CTI. 919-960-8118.
DELIVERY DRIVERS NEEDED: Wings Over
Chapel Hill is growing fast and needs more
delivery drivers. Must have own vehicle.
Nights and/or weekends. Perfect part-time
jobs for students. Apply in person at 313 East
Main Street, Carrboro. 919-537-8271.
BUSY RETINOVASCULAR PRACTICE
seeks friendly, motivated, energetic
individual to work as an ophthalmic
assistant. Will be trained to use ultra-
sound electrodiagnostic equipment
and multiple instruments used in the
diagnosis of retinovascular disease.
Candidate would fnd experience
challenging and fulflling. Fax resume
to 919-787-3591 or email resume to
southerneyeassociates@yahoo.com.
LOCAL TOY STORE NEEDS HELP! Now hiring
part-time staff for next semester. Would
prefer folks who can work at least some of the
upcoming winter break but we can be fexible.
Apply in person at The Childrens Store, 243
South Elliott Road, Chapel Hill (between Jersey
Mikes and the Monterrey Mexican restaurant).
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE
CTI is a small business in Chapel Hill looking for
an individual to help coordinate 1 or more
of NIH funded research programs. Projects
develop online ed and/or serious games related
to substance abuse treatment, obesity, evalua-
tion and reporting. NIH funded research. MA,
MS, MPH or higher. Please read full description
and apply at www.clinicaltools.com, Work at
CTI. 919-960-8118.
Homes For Sale
HOUSE FOR SALE $512,000 Chesley
neighborhood, Chapel Hill. Distressed
home. NEEDS WORK. Tax value
$812,000. Short walk to ECHHS, city
bus. 6BR, 6 acre lot. 4,200 square feet.
Call 919-357-5708.
Internships
PAID INTERNSHIP: Gain valuable sales expe-
rience with University Directories, a Chapel
Hill collegiate marketing company. Flexible
schedule. Average $13/hr. Email resume to
amoore@ucampusmedia.com, 919-240-6107.
Roommates
ROOMMATE WANTED by female UNC
sophomore. Mill Creek townhouse. 2BR/2BA,
full kitchen, W/D, carpeting, half mile to
campus. Rent share: $620/mo. includes water,
parking. 336-339-2551.
Travel/Vacation
BAHAMAS SPRING BREAK
$189 for 5 DAYS. All prices include: Round trip
luxury party cruise, accommodations on the
island at your choice of 13 resorts. Appalachia
Travel. www.BahamaSun.com, 800-867-5018.
Announcements Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted For Rent
Announcements Announcements


* All Immigration Matters *
Brenman Law Firm, PLLC Visas-us.com
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Julia W. Burns, MD
Psychiatrist & Artist
5809 Cascade Dr., Chapel Hill, NC 27514
919-428-8461 juliaburnsmd.com
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BlackAndWhiteReadAllOver.com
Drug, Alcohol, and Traffic Offenses
H
Law Office of Daniel A. Hatley
Best Wishes to the Tar Heels in 2013-2014!
dan@hatleylawoffice.com
151 E. Rosemary St., Ste. 205
www.hatleylawoffice.com
919-200-0822
CALL 919-962-0252
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Display Classifed Ads: 3pm, two business
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Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 5 -- A blissfully insightful
moment interrupts mundane affairs.
Add some creative spice to the package.
Listen and watch. Pay attention. Keep
any secrets. Balance your interests. Learn
as quickly as possible. Friends help out.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 5 -- You work well w/ others,
and your attention is in demand.
Visualize solving a work-related problem.
Stand frm. Follow a defnite strategy.
You land right side up. Take it slow. Stay
in tonight.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 5 -- Make creative, inexpensive
repairs. Report on your activities. It may
take preparation. Go for the raise or
status rise. Watch out for hidden
agendas. Dont assume the new way is
better yet. Take careful action.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 6 -- You see the direction to
take. Get farther than expected. You
may need to scrape change for gas
money. You feel somewhat compulsive;
improve organization. Provide excellent
service. A crazy assignment is quite
proftable.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 6 -- Remain open to new
ideas as you provide well for family.
Store provisions for the future, and use
what youve kept. Order something that
you cant obtain locally. Consider an
investment in your own education. Plan
ahead.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 6 -- Pay back a debt. Postpone
travel. Spend time with an attractive
person, and let deadlines ride. Youll
have more help. It could be very nice.
Dont spend impulsively. Harvest your
earlier efforts.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 6 -- Dont fret about household
expenses. Its not good timing to shop
either, but worrying is futile. You see
what needs to be done. Clean up messes.
People vie for your attention. State your
case clearly. Youre earning admiration.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 5 -- Increase your profts
through organization. Make up an outline
to minimize confusion. Follow the money
trail, and provide value. No need to be
hasty. Your life gets easier. Make more
time for love and fun.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 6 -- Form a communications
connection where it was missing. Choose
faith over doubt. Youre entering a more
domestic phase. Review objectives.
Projects at home offer fun & beauty to
balance the workload. Get creative.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 6 -- Get ready for another great
learning experience. Ask for more and get
it. Expand your territory. Meetings could
confict with family time. Keep your wits
about you. Discover talents you didnt
know you had. Love wins again.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 6 -- Manage fnances over the
next two days. Keep it simple & organized.
It could be quite proftable. Suddenly you
understand someone elses view. Make
your feelings public. Find the right handy-
man & go for durable quality. Explore the
neighborhood for a quick break.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 5 -- Give yourself time for
feelings & logic to mesh. Review the
facts before taking action. Listen to all
the considerations. Youre getting more
sensitive. Rest up and enjoy simple
pleasures, like playtime and peace.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If October 14th is Your Birthday...
Discovery & adventure flavor this year. Develop
& renew work habits. New avenues open regarding
finances, education, partnership & social life. A simple
lifestyle comes naturally. New players enter & exit
the scene. Strengthen your spiritual connections.
Nurture health and wellness. Cultivate love.
The Daily Tar Heel Office will
CLOSE Wednesday, Oct. 16th
at 5pm for Fall Break
Deadlines for Mon.,
October 21st issue:
Display Ads & Display Classifieds-
Tuesday, October 15th at 3pm
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Deadlines for Tues.,
October 22nd issue:
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Line Classifieds - Monday, Oct. 21st at noon
We will re-open on
Mon., Oct. 21st at 8:30am
Want to build your resume & gain valuable experience?
Weekend hours are available working with children and
adults with developmental disabilities, helping them
achieve their personal goals. Gain valuable experience
for psychology, sociology, nursing majors, and other
related fields. Various shifts available. $10.10/hr.
APPLY ONLINE by visiting us at:
www.rsi-nc.org
Residential Services, Inc.
415574
Find the perfect place to live by distance
from the pit! check out heelshousing.com
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Forbes ranks NC as 4th best state for business
Orange County Schools sees federal funding cut
By Olivia Lanier
Staff Writer
Forbes ranked North
Carolina as the fourth best
state for business in a recent
study but local economists
say it only gives one side of
the picture.
The study examines the
state economy from the point
of view of the employers, not
the employees, said Patrick
Conway, UNC economics
professor.
North Carolina, with
no union work force, low
employer taxes, high unem-
ployment and low worker
wages, is a hotbed for busi-
nesses, he said, adding
that after he saw what was
factored into the study, the
rating Forbes gave North
Carolina didnt surprise him.
To calculate the rankings,
Forbes study incorporated six
factors for business including
costs, labor supply, regulatory
environment, current eco-
nomic climate, growth pros-
pects and quality of life.
North Carolina is one
of the nicest places to be as
an employer, Conway said.
These things are in actuality
disqualifying our state.
This study indicated that
North Carolina has one of the
smallest union workforces in
the country. This means that
employees are unable to orga-
nize and form unions, and in
turn cannot bargain for high-
er wages. This has resulted in
labor costs 19 percent below
the national average the
third lowest in the country.
Forbes also indicated that
North Carolina has one of the
highest migration rates in the
nation. Conway attributed this
to the number of available jobs
in the Triangle and Triad areas
prior to the recession.
The tremendous inflow of
workers into these areas is a
good thing because employ-
ers will find a larger pool of
potential employees, he said.
But North Carolinas
unemployment rates remain
much higher than the
national average. Conway said
migration plays a factor.
We had a fast growing
economy under the most
recent policies undertaken,
which created jobs at a quick
rate people would move to
North Carolina because there
were jobs being created, he
said. When they got here, the
recession would start. They
were already here and with-
out a job.
A statement from Gov.
Pat McCrorys office said that
some of his reforms and goals
achieved so far have aimed to
improve the economy, educa-
tion and efficiency in the state.
However, the gover-
nor remains committed to
reducing our unemploy-
ment rate and building upon
North Carolinas successes
to become the best state for
business and people, it read.
Michael Walden, professor
of agricultural and resource
economics at N.C. State
University, said business in
North Carolina could improve
by more vocational and tech-
nical courses in high schools.
The state has a ready sup-
ply of college graduates but
has a shortage of tradecraft
workers, he said.
state@dailytarheel.com
By Jordan Nash
Staff Writer
The Orange County
Schools district will once
again dip into its reserve
funds after losing millions in
budget cuts this school year.
Federal funding for the
district, including money
from the U.S. Department
of Education, was cut by 5.3
percent this year, according to
a memo from the district.
We did what we could
within our means to lessen
the deleterious impact of
state cuts, understanding
we could not possibly offset
all the damage, said Orange
County Commissioner Barry
Jacobs in an email.
The Orange County Board
of Education is now hav-
ing to draw from its reserve
fund, which includes extra
money saved in previous
years.
The board appropriated
$2.85 million of its reserves
last year after facing large
federal budget cuts.
The district will draw from
this fund again to balance
this years budget, said Donna
Coffey, chairwoman of the
board.
This years budget includes
a $1.2 million appropriation
from the fund.
Despite these cuts, the
district avoided laying off any
employees this year, she said.
Coffey said she is thank-
ful the changes havent been
more drastic.
Orange County Schools
will absorb these cuts by
reducing the amount spent
on materials, supplies and
training.
The Department of Public
Instruction estimates that
total enrollment in Orange
County Schools increased by
81 students this year.
The current per-pupil
appropriation is $3,167. This
means the county had to
spend about $256,000 more
than last year to handle the
increase in enrollment with-
out lowering that per-pupil
appropriation.
Dipping into the reserve
fund might not be a sustain-
able track for the district
the fund will be at about
$3 million this year after the
district takes the $1.2 million
in appropriated money.
The districts budget still
includes money to establish
a school safety contingency
fund and additional staff
positions. The textbook
appropriation also increased
almost $500,000.
But Michael Gilbert, stu-
dent discipline and safety
officer, said in an email the
increase in textbook allot-
ment doesnt go far only
increasing by one cent per
pupil.
Superintendent Gerri
Martin said in an email that
Orange County Schools has
faired better than some.
That being said, our stu-
dents still suffer with cuts
in that there are larger class
sizes and reduced services,
Martin said.
city@dailytarheel.com
SportsMonday Monday, October 14, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7
A puppy mill problem
After another puppy mill
shuts down in the state, the
General Assembly looks to a
new bill. See pg. 3 for story.
Affordable housing
Candidates for Chapel
Hill Town Council look to
housing affordability in
forum. See pg. 5 for story.
Balancing the budget
Orange County Schools
look for solutions after cuts
lead to an imbalanced bud-
get. See pg. 6 for story.
Missing the cut
The mens golf team fin-
ished fifth in the weekends
Rod Myers Invitational.
See online for story.
games
Solution to
Fridays 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 Actor Damon
5 Like unfizzy soda
9 Relatively cool heavenly
body
14 Suffix with buck
15 Grocery section
16 All done!
17 Long-running musical
variety TV show
19 Hunters hides
20 Spiral-shaped __ fries
21 Fair-hiring abbr.
23 Wiesel who said,
Indifference, to me, is
the epitome of evil
24 Just __ suspected!
25 Pre-playoffs baseball
drama
29 Work on, as a vintage
auto
31 Sudoku grid line
32 Honorary legal deg.
33 30s-40s film dog
34 Loggers tool
36 Man and Capri
38 Final triumph after
apparent failure
42 Fancy mushroom
45 Metric distances:
Abbr.
46 Roadies loads
50 Prefix with sex
51 Yale student
54 Kevin Klines
French Kiss co-star
56 Offensive in the First
Gulf War
59 __-Caps: candy
60 Bug-killing brand
61 Deer daughter
62 How some stock is sold
64 Sent to the
unemployment line
66 Retrace ones steps, and
what ends of 17-, 25-,
38- and 56-Across can
literally have
69 Key in
70 Mine, to Mimi
71 Java Freeze brand
72 Swiped
73 Tree anchor
74 Breakfast, e.g.
Down
1 Eyelash application
2 Stirs to action
3 One of a vacationing
busload
4 Turnpike fee
5 Pres. on a dime
6 Glee actress __
Michele
7 Sci-fi invader
8 Karaoke singers
ineptitude, to the chagrin
of the audience
9 Gas additive letters
10 See-through
11 Revealing, as a celeb
interview
12 An or the
13 Tends to a lawns bare
spot
18 AutoCorrect target
22 Johns Yoko
26 Distinctive periods
27 Bagel shop call
28 Itty-bitty branch
30 Fish story
35 Moose relative
37 __-Pei: wrinkly dog
39 Angel or Athletic, briefly
40 Rifle range need
41 Laptop operator
42 Confuses
43 Price of bubble gum,
once
44 Trattoria rice dish
47 Leader in social
networking until 2008
48 Cure-all
49 Enjoy coral reefs
52 Inc., in the U.K.
53 Meteorologists pressure
line
55 Future MBAs exam
57 Actress Georgia of
Everybody Loves
Raymond
58 Julios I love you
63 Quick haircut
65 Profitable rock
67 Suitors murmur
68 Model-ship-to-be
womens soccer
from page 8
Normally Im not much
of a goal scorer. Im more of
a defensive player, but all the
credit goes to Crystal on that
goal, McFarlane said. She
played me a perfect ball, and
I was just able to one time it
like Anson talks about and
get the goal.
McFarlane said she
believed the Tar Heels ability
to turn it around in the sec-
ond half is what saved them.
Boston College dominated
us at first and thats definitely
something we still want to
work on no matter what
the game or who were play-
ing we still need to come out
ready to play, she said.
Dunn said she believes the
win means a lot to the team
as it continues moving for-
ward with the season.
It was definitely a battle
field, Dunn said. BC played
really well. They took over the
game, and we had to earn it
back in the second half.
sports@dailytarheel.com
Tar Heels stumble to
16th place nish
By Brandt Berry
Staff Writer
Sitting in a tie for ninth
place after two rounds of
play at the Ruths Chris Tar
Heel Invitational, the North
Carolina womens golf team
was not happy.
After winning the tourna-
ment last season, expecta-
tions were much closer to a
first place finish than a ninth
place finish.
A 16th place finish? Out of
the question.
But after a third round
21-over-par 309, thats exactly
where the Tar Heels found
themselves, in 16th place in
an 18-team field.
For both assistant coach
Leah Wigger and head coach
Jan Mann, the round, and
subsequent result, caught
them both by surprise.
We honestly couldnt figure
it out, Wigger said. Maybe it
was a different mentality com-
ing out today, but were not
quite sure. Its frustrating to
watch and I know its frustrat-
ing for the team too.
Similar to the second
round on Saturday, the third
round got a slow start for
UNCs starting five as the
Tar Heels carded five bogeys
or worse on their first three
holes of the day.
Senior co-captain
Katherine Perry said the slow
start came down to putting.
For me the difference with
today was putting, Perry said.
I couldnt get the speed right
in the beginning.
Unlike Saturday, the poor
play followed the team into
its second nine-hole stretch of
the day. Every team member
bogeyed the par four second
hole, and the team sat in
second to last place at their
home course, in their own
womens golf: ruths chris invitational, 16th place mens soccer: unc 2, boston college 1
Mens soccer captures
rst conference win
By Jonathan LaMantia
Senior Writer
After scoring just two goals
in the past five games, the
North Carolina mens soccer
team found success against
Boston College, stringing
together passes and possess-
ing the ball until opportuni-
ties were available.
UNC (4-2-5, 1-1-5 ACC)
capitalized early, and staved off
a late charge from the Eagles
in a 2-1 win the teams first
against a conference opponent.
Redshirt senior Josh Rice
said the team played as well
as it had all season in the first
half.
It was fluid and it felt good
to possess the ball for 10 or 15
passes and be on the same page
with a lot of other teammates,
Rice said. With the exception
of maybe one or two other
games that was maybe the only
time its happened this season.
UNC jumped out to a
1-0 lead in the 12th minute
when junior forward Tyler
Engelscored off of a pass from
midfielder Alex Olofson.
Engel, who leads the Tar
Heels with four goals, took a
team-high four shots including
a 23rd minute header that was
stopped by goalie Alex Kapp.
Rice scored what would
become the deciding goal in
the 25th minute on the type of
play coach Carlos Somoanohas
urged his players to make.
The Tar Heels were award-
ed a free kick and midfielder
Raby George fired a shot,
forcing Kapp to punch the ball
into the air off the crossbar.
Rice collected the rebound
and tapped the ball in for his
second goal of the season.
Somoano said he has
talked with his players ad
nauseum about pouncing on
loose balls as Rice did.
Any forward whos success-
ful is constantly sniffing out
and chasing every lost cause
there is, and then they all of
a sudden happen to be there
when they need to, he said.
The reality is its not an acci-
dent when you show up at the
right place at the right time.
The Tar Heels had an oppor-
tunity to ice the game in the
71st minutewhen George was
awarded a penalty kick, but his
attempt missed wide, and the
Eagles stayed within two goals.
Boston College climbed
back into the game in the
83rd minute when forward
Isaac Normesinu received a
cross from the right side at
the goal line and scored.
Rice said he was disap-
pointed that the team didnt
sustain its first-half aggres-
siveness and played conserva-
tively with a late one-goal lead.
When they scored, I think
it was a little bit of a panic like,
Oh, we dont want to tie again.
We dont want to tie again,
Rice said. We kind of freaked
out just a bit, but luckily we
were able to get the win.
sports@dailytarheel.com
dth file/Sarah Shaw
Forward Josh Rice scored the game-deciding goal in the 25th
minute against Boston College. He has two goals on the season.
tournament.
But the team refused to
give up, even in the midst of
its rough round. Sophomore
Elizabeth Mallett birdied
the par five third hole, which
was immediately followed
by birdies from sophomore
Samantha Marks and Perry.
Senior co-captain Jackie
Chang also locked in on the
back nine, rolling in five pars
in a row, while junior Maia
Schechter carded seven pars
down the stretch. For Wigger,
the strong finish showed the
teams true identity.
We know that were a tal-
ented team and that we can
win, she said. We know we
can put in the birdies to win
tournaments.
Individually, the Tar Heels
were led by Perry and Mallett,
who both finished the week-
end in a tie for 38th place
with a seven-over-par 223.
Marks was the next highest
finisher for the team, carding
a 10-over-par 226 to finish in
tie for 53rd.
Chang and Schechter
were the final two scoring
players, finishing respec-
tively in a tie for 68th and a
tie for 76th. Freshman Leslie
Cloots, playing individually,
finished with Chang in a tie
for 68th as well, with a 13
over 229.
Perry said another one of
the few positives was the way
the team stuck together.
Its always disappointing
not to do as well as you want,
she said. But were a pretty
close team, so we ll get over it
quickly.
sports@dailytarheel.com
dth/taylor Sweet
Sophomore Elizabeth Mallet shot seven-over-par, tying for 38th
place at the Tar Heel Inviational this weeked hosted by UNC.
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Monday, October 14, 2013
SportsMonday
dailytarheel.com The Daily Tar Heel 8
SCOREBOARD
MENS GOLF: Rod Myers Invitational, 5th
MENS TENNIS: Esben Hess-Olesen and Brett Clark
won A doubles draw at Wake Forest Invitational
Swimming: Womens 4-0, Men 1-1
dth/Spencer herlong
Graduate student Jovana Bjelica had a game-high 16 kills against Wake Forest Saturday. She now has a team-high 183 kills on the season.
Tar Heels nd redemption
volleyball: unc 3, wake foreSt 0
By Ben Coley
Staff Writer
The No.10 North Carolina volleyball
teams historic 15-game win streak came to
a startling halt Friday when unranked Duke
handed UNC its first loss of the season.
The loss, in front of a record crowd of
5,322 fans, was the first home loss for the
Tar Heels since 2011.
Duke swept the matchup, winning each
of the sets by at least three points, and
throughout all three sets, UNC never led
by more than three points. Still, coach Joe
Sagula said, his team had its opportunities
to gain momentum.
I really thought we had our chances in
the first two sets when it was close, 15-14
both games, I thought we had a good
chance to do some things, he said.
"(But) we never made strong points or
runs at that point to establish ourselves.
The first and second sets were nearly
mirror images of each other. In both, the
Tar Heels opened with a 13-10 lead, but
Duke went on a 7-2 run and then a 7-1 run
to win each set 22-25 .
In the third and final set despite trail-
ing early 5-8 Duke stormed back to take a
15-12 advantage and 25-19 set victory.
Our energy just wasnt where it needed
to be to keep competing, sophomore middle
blocker Paige Neuenfeldt said. . The end of
the third game was definitely a big lull.
Against Duke, graduate student Jovana
Bjelica led UNC with 10 kills and sophomore
setter Jordyn Schnabl tallied a team high 17
assists. As a team, UNC totaled 28 attack
errors twice as many as Dukes 14.
Sagula emphasized that the keys to
rebounding from the loss were mental and
had to be handled with maturity.
We need to get a lot better, he said Friday
night. I think its going to be a wakeup call
for this team. This is now over. Its done, its
finished, and we need to move forward.
UNC did move forward and bounced
back to defeat Wake Forest in three sets on
Saturday (25-15, 25-20, 25-21).
In the first set, Wake Forest jumped
out to a 3-0 lead, but that proved to be the
largest lead the Demon Deacons would
hold throughout the match. UNC eventu-
ally tied the score 4-4 and outscored Wake
21-11 for the rest of the set.
In the second and third sets, Wake
Forest stayed competitive, but the Tar
Heels answered each of the Demon
Deacons runs and won each set 25-20 and
25-21, respectively.
In the match, Bjelica once again led the
Tar Heels in kills with 16, followed by junior
outside hitter Lauren Adkins who had 12.
I think everyone came in with a positive
mindset (Saturday) morning at practice,
Adkins said. Just, were going to get better
and were going to work through it.
Sagula liked how his team responded to
the loss and thought the two games proved
to be a good learning experience.
Well look back at this weekend as being
hopefully a really good turning point for our
team to get to the next level, Sagula said.
sports@dailytarheel.com
By Grace Raynor
Assistant Sports Editor
As of Friday afternoon, Joe Sagulas
team had won 15 games in a row.
The North Carolina volleyball team was
perfect in ACC play with a 4-0 start to con-
ference competition and hadnt lost a home
game since October of 2011.
A record-high crowd flooded Carmichael
Arena, eager to watch the Tar Heels take
on Duke, and with an unprecedented 15-0
start to the season, Sagula had every reason
to feel confident in his No. 10-ranked teams
ability to defeat the unranked Blue Devils.
That all changed an hour and 24 min-
utes later.
With the first loss of the season a 3-0
sweep at the hands of the Blue Devils
that optimism was nowhere to be found.
They outplayed us, they out blocked us,
they out dug us, Sagula said. They out hit
us, they out served us, they out passed us.
There was one statistic in which the UNC
very obviously outdid Duke errors.
We had 28 hitting errors, Sagula said,
letting out a quiet sigh. We hit .093 (per-
cent) pretty uncharacteristic of us.
Those 28 hitting errors were exactly dou-
ble Dukes 14, but the .093 hitting percentage
wasnt even half of Dukes .206. UNC tallied
eight service errors, one more than Duke.
Where to start? We tried every-
thing, sophomore middle blocker Paige
Neuenfeldt said. We tried switching things
around and we just couldnt find a groove.
Sagulas message to his team in the lock-
er room afterward was brief. Before Wake
Forest the next day, UNC certainly had to
fine tune a few things in practice, but harp-
ing on the loss was simply not an option.
And though they still registered three
more attack errors than Wake Forest
Saturday, Sagulas team walked away with
a 3-0 victory and just 18 errors on 120
attacks. The eight service errors from the
night before were cut in half.
Id like to be hitting better but overall I
thought we blocked better and hit better and
served much much better, Sagula said.
Junior outside hitter Lauren Adkins who
tallied 12 kills said the cleaner play stemmed
from a focused Saturday morning practice.
When the sets not perfect, when the
pass isnt perfect, (we practiced) just keep-
ing the ball in play and not making careless
errors, she said.
And after a hard fall to the Blue Devils,
the rebound less than 24 hours later was
just what the Tar Heels needed.
We discussed, Be mad until midnight,
Adkins said. (Saturdays) a new day.
And that it was.
sports@dailytarheel.com
Errors lead to UNCs rst loss
fIelD Hockey: unc 4, wfu 2
By Carlos Callazo
Staff Writer
When the No. 2 North Carolina field hockey
team arrived in Winston-Salem to play No. 15
Wake Forest Saturday, the Tar Heels werent able
to warm up on the field they would be playing on.
But that didnt seem to affect UNC at all, and
the team defeated Wake Forest, 4-2 behind a bar-
rage of early goals. Each of UNCs four goals came
in the first half, three within six minutes of the
start and the fourth coming off of a shot in the
33rd minute from Casey Di Nardo.
I think it was a wild start, coach Karen Shelton
said. It was kind of unusual. We scored early, and
they answered right back, and then we scored again.
Just bang, bang, bang out of the shoot.
Every year when UNC plays at Wake Forest, its
pregame routine is thrown off just a bit because it
travels on game day rather than the day before.
But to sophomore midfielder Emily Wold, it
wasnt much of a factor.
Usually we get to practice on the teams turf
beforehand, but this time we didnt, Wold said.
Personally it didnt affect me too much.
You just gotta deal with adversity, and I just
put my headphones in and listened to pump-up
music to get me amped for the game.
Shelton said that she was proud of the way her
team responded to a Wake Forest squad that kept
the pressure on throughout the entire game.
I admired the way Wake Forest played, she said.
They worked really hard put all kinds of pressure
on our team. And I think we responded well to that.
Wold got in on the scoring for UNC early and
often, putting goals in at the 3:17 and 5:42 marks.
I thought that we came out strong by scoring
really early, Wold said. (It) was good to get the
quick lead going into halftime by having four goals
behind us.
Di Nardo said the team played well in both
halves, but missed a few opportunities to widen
the lead it created in the first.
It was still kind of fast-paced the whole game,
she said. We had a lot of turnovers, though, and it
kept going back and forth.
I think we dominated most of the game. We
were in our attacking circle a lot. I think we just as
a team let a lot of opportunities slip by.
Even with a few chances missed in the latter por-
tion of the game, North Carolina improved to 2-2 in
the ACC and 10-2 on the season. UNC has won back-
to-back games after an overtime loss to Maryland on
Oct. 5 and remains undefeated in regulation.
We got a big ACC win, Shelton said. And there
are no easy ACC wins especially on the road.
sports@dailytarheel.com
unc secures
win early
dth file/kaki pope
Sophomore forward Casey Di Nardo scored her fifth
goal of the season Saturday against Wake Forest.
Tar Heels use second half to defeat Boston College
By Lindsay Masi
Staff Writer
Each time the North Carolina
womens soccer team faced Boston
College in the past two years, UNC
emerged with a nail-biting 1-0 vic-
tory.
This year was no different.
The No. 4 Tar Heels (12-2, 6-2
ACC) defeated the Eagles (7-7, 4-5
ACC) 1-0 Sunday afternoon to clinch
their fifth victory in a row and third
consecutive against Boston College.
But according to coach Anson
Dorrance, UNC was lucky to come
out of Chesnut Hill, Mass. with a
win.
Ive got to give Boston College
credit because they came out like
they were on fire, Dorrance said.
They put us under tremendous
pressure, and we werent respond-
ing. There was definitely a lack of
cohesion in the first half, and we
didnt really feel comfortable in the
game until we had a chance to chat
with them at halftime.
In the first minute of the game,
junior defender Satara Murray was
taken down by Boston Colleges
Lauren Bernard and forced to leave
the game. The Tar Heels were also
missing junior defender Caitlin Ball,
who had started every game shed
played this season, but failed to suit
up Sunday due to injury.
There is an inevitable confusion
that occurs when you have to take a
starter out, especially in the back,
Dorrance said. When you dislodge
a regular piece in the back, your
base is just unstable.
And unstable it was.
At the half, each team had only
taken a few shots at the goal with
the Eagles possessing a 5-4 advan-
tage something UNC hasnt often
experienced this season. The Tar
Heels headed into the game having
allowed only 55 total shots on the
year compared to taking 280 of their
own.
The second half, however,
belonged to UNC.
The Tar Heels fired nine shots,
and with fewer than 25 minutes
remaining in the game, senior
midfielder Crystal Dunn beat three
Boston College players and dished
a pass to senior defender Kelly
McFarlane who one-timed it low
across the goal frame and into the
back of the net.
woMenS Soccer: unc 1, boSton college 0
dth file/Spencer herlong
Kelly McFarlane scored the game-winning goal in the 65th minute against
Boston College. The goal was the senior defenders first of the season.
unc overcame a slow start
and missing defenders to
put the eagles away 1-0.
See woMenS Soccer, page 7
After losing to Duke Friday, UNC swept Wake Forest
the tar Heels scored four goals in
the first half to beat wake forest.
the volleyball team dropped its
first match of the season friday.

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