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By Joey DeVito

Assistant Online Editor


Deems Wilson was surprised when,
shortly after starting his job as manager of
West End Wine Bar, he was told the business
didnt get inspected by the Orange County
N.C. Health Department.
West End Wine Bar, along with the rest
of the private clubs in North Carolina, is no
longer subject to health inspections.
I think its sort of outrageous that were
not inspected, Wilson said.
The new rule is an effect of the N.C.
General Assemblys Regulatory Reform Act,
which was passed in July 2013. It was a com-
prehensive bill that was meant to streamline
regulations dealing with restaurants, child-
care and a number of other issues.
What was significant and weird about
this law was that those bars that served
food were subject to the restaurant inspec-
tion laws and this law took them out of the
restaurant inspection law, said Jill Moore,
an associate professor at the UNC School of
Government.
They dont have to be inspected anymore,
even if theyre operating a full food service.
Moore said the change was unexpected
Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893
When life kicks you, let it kick you forward.
KAY YOW
Monday, October 6, 2014 dailytarheel.com Volume 122, Issue 87
SKIRTING THE
HEALTH STANDARD
Affirmative
consent as
state law
DTH/CAMERON ROBERT
A new inspection law allows bars that apply to be private clubs to avoid sanitation inspections. Zogs Art Bar and Pool Hall is a private club on
Henderson Street (top left). Tim Boole (left) sips a drink within The Cave on West Franklin Street (top right). West End Wine Bar owner Jared Resnick
(left) serves Angela Bond (bottom left). Patrons watch a baseball game within the Blue Horn Lounge (bottom right).
Private clubs no longer inspected in North Carolina
By Mary Tyler March
Senior Writer
As UNC and other campuses nationwide
engage in sexual assault policymaking efforts,
California has become the first state to enact
a new consent standard for colleges and uni-
versities in hopes of changing the culture sur-
rounding sexual violence.
On Sept. 28, California Gov. Jerry Brown
signed a statewide yes means yes law for
institutions that receive state money. The law
stipulates that the person accused of sexual
assault must prove that a clear affirmation of
consent was given by the accuser.
Christi Hurt, UNCs assistant vice chancel-
lor and chief of staff of student affairs, said she
supports many aspects of the California law.
She said UNCs campus-specific policy and its
definition of consent align with provisions in the
California law underscoring the importance of
affirmative consent instead of a definitive no.
I think any move to encourage the concept
around affirmative consent and striving towards
healthy sexuality is exactly the direction we need
to be moving toward for the country, she said.
North Carolina could benefit from a state-
wide law or policy regarding affirmative con-
sent, she said, but there could also be prob-
lems with such a legal standard.
Building a policy that worked for our
university it was so important to listen to
students, staff and faculty, she said. I hesitate
to put anything in place for any other campus
because a policy should reflect the needs of
each individual university.
Laura Palumbo, prevention campaign spe-
cialist for the National Sexual Violence Resource
Center, said a statewide policy in any state
would convey more benefits than drawbacks.
Its changing the standard from the idea
that the sexually assaulted person needs to
prove a no to making the standard of posi-
tive, enthusiastic communication of consent,
she said. The responsibility that (the stan-
dard) puts on campuses when it becomes a
statewide law is really significant.
Palumbo said Californias policy could push
colleges and universities to re-examine their
campuswide policies in particular, motivat-
ing them to consider the detrimental effects
of placing the policies unclear standards of
proof on the victims of sexual assault.
The standard of a no or a yes isnt giving
people all of the information they need because
there is a lot more complexity to that in rela-
tion to our interactions, she said. There arent
always black and white boundaries, but there
does always need to be clear communication.
Maddy Frumkin, co-chairwoman of Project
Dinah, a UNC group that works to end sexual
assault and interpersonal violence, said she
supports Californias adoption of an affirma-
tive consent model.
California enacts new standard
for sexual assault on campuses.
SEE YES MEANS YES, PAGE 4
SEE INSPECTIONS, PAGE 4
Sorority thinks pink for
breast cancer awareness
The Heel hopes
to reopen
By Dree Deacon
Senior Writer
The Heel, the student-run
pub, shut down about 15 days
ago due to building code vio-
lations and the need to refile
liquor and alcohol permits
with North Carolina Alcohol
Law Enforcement.
General manager Giuli
Lurito said the bar is planning
a staff meeting today, where
the bar will brief employees
about protocol. She will then
meet with an ALE officer
before the bar can be approved
to reopen.
Lurito, a UNC senior, said
in an email that the per-
mits are being resubmitted
because the bars owner, Glen
Turner, is looking to pursue
other avenues in Florida and
will be leaving Chapel Hill in
about a month.
The permits will be issued
in Luritos name to ensure the
permit holder is local.
The Heel opened in August
with the goal of being a bar
for students, run by students.
The site was formerly occu-
pied by The Thrill, which was
condemned in November 2012
due to building code violations.
It was later renovated.
The Heel is currently work-
ing on updating kitchen equip-
ment and is awaiting inspec-
tion from the fire department,
Lurito said.
The whole facility has been
closed due to the out-of-date
code violations indoors, she
said.
Changes will include the
implementation of a new fire
suppression system, she said.
Joey Skavroneck, a UNC
junior who works with The
Heel on marketing, said the
bar will reopen on Tuesday
with the new permits.
The Chapel Hill ALE office
could not be reached for com-
ment Sunday, and representa-
tives from the state ALE office
said they couldnt comment
until Monday.
city@dailytarheel.com
By Bradley Saacks
University Editor
For senior Lauren Kangas, Breast
Cancer Awareness Month hits close to
home.
Kangas, the 2012 chairwoman for
Zeta Tau Alphas Think Pink breast
cancer awareness campaign, was at the
national Zeta Tau Alpha convention
during the summer after her freshman
year when she woke up to a text from
her dad, asking her to call him.
Her grandmother had died early
that morning.
Just the day before, Kangas had
wanted to call her grandmother, who
was in hospice after her breast cancer
spread to other organs in her body. She
had paid for Kangas to go to the con-
vention, and Kangas wanted to tell her
how excited she was to be there, but
her dad had suggested she wait a day.
Kangas said her grandmother,
whom she called Jo Jo, was first diag-
nosed when Kangas dad was in high
school, but she was able to live with
COURTESY OF EMILY POPE
Zeta Tau Alphas Think Pink campaign will start at the end of the month.
the disease for decades before finally
succumbing.
I know she is proud of the differ-
ence I am making (with breast cancer
awareness), Kangas said.
October is Breast Cancer Awareness
Month, and Zeta Tau Alphas annual
Think Pink campaign is set to take place
during the last week of October, starting
on Monday, Oct. 27 and concluding on
Nov. 2, said Gabriella Gallo, the current
chairwoman of the campaign.
Gallo, a sophomore, said the soror-
ity is planning events for every day
of the week, leading up to the male
beauty pageant known as Big Man
SEE THINK PINK, PAGE 4
Zeta Tau Alpha sorority
members have personal
connections to the cause.
The bar temporarily
shut down due to
building violations.
It wasnt a big deal, it wasnt a
big hindrance or anything, but
it was largely unnecessary.
Wayne Faust,
employee at Blue Horn Lounge
and she is unsure why it happened.
To be honest with you nobody knows
where this came from or why the General
Assembly decided to change the law, she
said. Its really kind of strange. I honestly
have yet to encounter anyone who really
knows why the change in legislation was
made.
Eliminating unnecessary inspections
Moore said one possible reason for the
change is to exempt bars with minimal food
service from having to deal with unneces-
sary inspections. Some places were subject-
ed to the sanitation inspections even though
they were only handling already prepared
food.
If that was what the General Assembly
was trying to do, to exempt those people who
have that kind of limited food service, that I
might understand, but thats not what they
did, she said. What they did was exempt
anybody with any kind of food service.
While not everyone agrees with the
change, some businesses on Franklin Street
have benefited from it.
Blue Horn Lounge does not serve any
food, and employee Wayne Faust said for
places that only serve alcohol, the inspec-
tions were unnecessary.
We only got inspected twice a year before
that was changed, Faust said.
Its a lot easier to pass health inspections
when youre not preparing food. Its alcohol
so its not like we have our hands on the
booze or anything like that.
He said in places that only serve alcohol,
the only things that can pose a health risk are
the ice machines, which he said are cleaned
regularly at Blue Horn Lounge.
It just makes it more convenient, we
dont have to have a health inspector come by
twice a year, Faust said. Even then, it wasnt
a big deal, it wasnt a big hindrance or any-
thing, but it was largely unnecessary.
Zogs Art Bar & Pool Hall bartender James
Brown echoed Fausts sentiments about sani-
TODAY
International Cofee Hour with
the Undergraduate Library:
This monthly event is intended
to bring together staf and
students who are interested in
global engagement. Staf from
multiple departments will be
there to give information about
resources for students. Refresh-
ments will be provided.
Time: 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Location: FedEx Global Educa-
tion Center
TUESDAY
Global Projects Showcase:
Students Kathleen Borden,
Samantha Harrington, Fareeda
Zikry, Casey Collins and Kirsten
Cooper will be giving a presen-
tation about their international
travel experiences and provid-
ing information about funding
options. The Center for Global
Initiatives provided funding
for the students. Lunch will be
provided.
Time: noon to 1 p.m.
Location: FedEx Global Educa-
tion Center
UNC Wind Ensemble and UNC
NOTED. The Ugandan Parliament crimi-
nalized some unusual acts during its most
recent legislative session. The Ugandan
criminal code now includes the acts of
ding-dong ditching and back-seat driv-
ing, according to Kenyas Standard Digital
News. The punishment for these offens-
es now includes multiple years in prison.
QUOTED. It was actually the only alterna-
tive, nothing else would solve the problem.
A doctor who operated on a woman
who complained of severe stomach pain and
being unable to eat. The doctors removed a
four kilogram hairball. She apparently has a
compulsion called Trichophagia that causes
her to eat human hair. EW.
S
ome people just cant take no for an answer. One of those people
is Reza Baluchi. For some odd reason, he thought it would be a
good idea to put himself in a plastic bubble and try to make it
from Miami to Bermuda despite the U.S. Coast Guard warning
him that his stunt probably wasnt a great idea.
After multiple attempts to discourage him from making the voyage,
Baluchi set off for Bermuda. As you can imagine, it didnt go too well.
The U.S. Coast Guard had to rescue Baluchi, still in his bubble, about 70
miles off the coast of Florida. He sent out a distress signal and was res-
cued by a Coast Guard helicopter. We feel like there might have been a
few I told you so phrases muttered in that helicopter.
Rolling on the high seas
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone reported a
suspicious person at 1504
Lamont Court at 11:41 a.m.
Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person was soliciting
without a permit, reports
state.
Someone was publicly
inebriated at 215 Henderson
St. at 4:39 a.m. Thursday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person was sleeping
in the middle of the road,
reports state.
Someone stole medica-
tion at a public building at
503 W. Franklin St. at 2:07
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The medication was stolen
after someone left it unat-
tended, reports state.
Someone reported a sus-
picious person at 29 Clover
Drive at 7:56 p.m. Thursday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person was going
door-to-door soliciting
money, reports state.
Someone reported shots
being fired at 601 Jones Ferry
Road at 7:28 p.m. Thursday,
according to Carrboro police
reports.
Broken glass and bullet
casings were found at the
scene and the case is still
under investigation, reports
state.
Someone had an open
container of alcohol on a side-
walk at 100 E. Franklin St. at
1:15 a.m. Friday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone complained
of a loud noise at 520
Hillsborough Road at 1:08
a.m. Friday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
The resident was coopera-
tive, reports state.
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
Symphony Band (Concert): The
UNC Wind Ensemble and UNC
Symphony Band will present a
concert as part of the music de-
partments Scholarship Beneft
Series. This is the second of 19
events in the series. The tickets
are $10 for the general public
and $5 for students. Tickets are
available for purchase at the
door.
POLICE LOG
News Monday, October 6, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 2
Due to a reporting error, Fridays front page story State Fair affected by new NC fun law did not
fully explain Gov. Pat McCrorys opposition to the presence of guns at the N.C. State Fair. McCrory
agrees with the conclusion reached by N.C. Agriculture Commissioner Steve Troxler, who said he
will enforce the fairs no-gun policy.
Due to an editing error, Fridays page 3 story Emergency funds given to displaced included a sub-
head that mischaracterized the reason Orange County Section 8 tenants were put at risk of losing their
housing. While tenants still have vouchers, several properties have stopped accepting them.
Due to a reporting error, Fridays front page story Some athletes face a higher risk of developing
eating disorder symptoms incorrectly stated the degree Mariana Lucena is working toward. She is a
Pharm.D. candidate at the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy.
The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the errors.
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed above. 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 Katie Reilly at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
CORRECTIONS
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All rights reserved
Time: 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Location: Memorial Hall
October 6 - November 3 7:30 - 8:15 pm
FREE CLOGGING LESSONS!!
Held at the Teen Center, under the Old Post Office.
Corner of Franklin St and Henderson St.
All ages, no partner or experience necessary!
Questions? dance@a pplechillcloggers.org or visit
our website at applechillcloggers.org
News Monday, October 6, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 3
CHAPEL HILL COMES
TOGETHER AT FESTIVALS
DTH/ALEXANDRA YOUNG DTH/ KENDALL BAGLEY
The Seventh Annual Pepper Festival took place in Chapel Hill Sunday. The festivals best dish and
best beer winners received a honorary shovel. About 1,400 people attended PepperFest.
The United Tae Kwon Do Academy in Carrboro showcases its students skills in a demonstration
during the Festifall Arts Festival event held on West Franklin Street Sunday afternoon.
Sweet and spicy peppers attract locals Artists join for towns 42nd Festifall
By Christine Bang
Staff Writer
The Seventh Annual
Amazing Pepper Festival
returned to Chapel Hill
Sunday with local, organic,
pepper-infused food and
drinks.
Tami Schwerin, founder of
Abundance North Carolina
the festivals hosting founda-
tion said about 1,400 people
attended, enjoying live music
with the creations of chefs
from across North Carolina.
Its really lovely, Schwerin
said. Everyones in such a
good mood, and its a good
way to spend time.
PepperFest was started by
Abundance North Carolina, a
nonprofit foundation founded
in central North Carolina with
a focus on sustainability in
food and renewable energy.
Schwerin said the idea of
PepperFest originated when
a local farmer asked people
in his community what they
thought about the variety of
peppers he grew.
After participating in the
research project, Schwerin
realized that in addition to
being nutritious, peppers also
grow very well in the region.
This realization inspired
the creation of the festival,
which has evolved into an
educational community event
focused on showcasing non-
profits that promote renew-
able energy and work with
local pepper farmers.
Each year, PepperFest
hands out awards for the best
pepper dishes and pepper-
infused beers. A PepperFest
queen and king are also
crowned. This years fest added
sustainability workshops to
teach attendees how to live
more self-sufficient lifestyles.
Schwerin said it is a fami-
ly-friendly event that attracts
a mixture of educated, sus-
tainability-driven people and
newcomers who havent been
exposed to sustainability or
gourmet local food.
We host fun events to
motivate people to get on
board with supporting local
food and economy and
increasing renewable energy,
she said.
Craig Rudewicz owns
Crude Bitters and Soda, North
Carolinas first bitters com-
pany, which will open a loca-
tion in Raleigh next month.
He said he has participated in
PepperFest for two years.
We wanted to provide a
non-alcoholic alternative for
kids and adults who didnt
want to drink something
that would taste good on its
own but also when mixed with
other things, he said of his
products.
Top of the Hill Restaurant
& Brewery has also been
involved with PepperFest for
two years. Chef Matt Butler
had a booth set up with roast
beef sliders and assorted pep-
per jellies, created specifically
for PepperFest.
We wanted to do some-
thing familiar and have pep-
pers be the condiment, he
said.
Martin Sommerschuh
stood in line twice for the
TOPO booth while chatting
with his friends.
I love how the grass is
green, the sun is shining
and there arent any houses
around, he said of the festival.
Its the perfect getaway.
arts@dailytarheel.com
By Parth Shah
Staff Writer
Chapel Hill artist Stephen
Nesnow said his favorite part
of Festifall is seeing familiar
faces.
The best experience you
can get is when someone
says, I bought your pottery
last year, and I love this pot-
tery. I use it everyday, he
said. You cannot get a better
high than that.
The local arts festival
celebrated its 42nd year
Sunday with 81 area artists
setting up shop along the
west end of Franklin Street.
Wes Tilghman, festivals and
special events supervisor for
the town, said 15,000 people
were expected to come out to
Festifall this year.
Nesnow, who is also part
of Festifalls judging panel,
said jurors try to bring a vari-
ety of artists to the event.
You try to pick the most
unique thing, but you try to
pick a balance, he said.
For some artists, events like
Festifall make up the bulk of
their business. Nesnow said
compared to people at other
festivals, Chapel Hill fairgoers
tend to be more serious about
buying art.
People have a little more
expendable cash, he said.
They want to buy things that
are beautiful that they can
have in their house. And they
can afford it.
Shopping for art was only
one of the activities available at
Festifall. Fairgoers were kept
entertained with performances
from local musicians and
dance groups.
The North Carolina LEGO
User Group attended Festifall
for the first time this year,
showcasing large-scale LEGO
models of the Old Well and
Bell Tower as well as providing
craft opportunities for kids.
Chapel Hill local Christa
Cichowiczs daughter played
at the LEGO booth. Though
her daughter enjoyed
the childrens activities,
Cichowicz said she also ben-
efited from looking at art.
There was a piece of art
from one of the artists that
looks a little bit like her art,
so I said, Well that looks
kind of like the way you
draw, and she agreed, she
said. Exposing her to a lot of
things is important to me.
Rohan Smith, co-owner of
Franklin Street clothing store
Thrill City, kept the store open
for extended hours Sunday.
West Franklin is generally
the deader part of Franklin
Street, he said. Having an
event definitely generates
more buzz on this side of the
street.
Tilghman said Saturdays
home football game also
helped attendance.
Any time we have activi-
ties such as the UNC football
program and activities on the
University even folks who
attend the church services
downtown on Sunday its
a way for us to invite all our
stakeholders to be a part of
the event, he said.
Carrboro resident Veronica
Stevens has been coming to
Festifall since she moved to
the area in 1995. She said her
favorite part of Festifall is
watching the performers.
Im glad Chapel Hill has
something for us to come to.
I just love it.
arts@dailytarheel.com
Social media become
key campaign tool
By Tatyana Berdan
Staff Writer
Students voting in the midterm elec-
tion can expect more than just a knock
on the door or a message in their voice-
mail as candidates flood social media
platforms like Facebook and Twitter in
an effort to engage young voters.
Care Like Crazy is the tagline of an
ad campaign launched Oct. 2 by non-
profit, non-partisan Rock the Vote. The
campaign consists of television ads in
five states with large student populations
and high-profile races, as well as national
ads on Facebook, YouTube and Hulu.
In North Carolina, the ads will target
the Chapel Hill and Greenville areas.
Ashley Spillane, president of Rock the
Vote, said the ads, part of a $250,000
media campaign, are attempting to
increase turnout among young voters
in this falls election. Just 23.5 percent
of registered voters aged 18-29 in North
Carolina voted in the 2010 midterms.
There are hugely important issues
on the ballot, up and down the ballot, in
every state in the country including
North Carolina, she said in an email.
Spillane said as the media landscape
has shifted with the growing presence of
social media, groups like Rock the Vote
have invested resources into reaching
young voters on these new platforms.
Social media is crucial to engaging
with young voters because of how many
of them are active online. Ninety percent
of millennials are active on the Internet,
and more than 60 percent have wireless
connectivity away from home, she said.
Raffi Williams, deputy press secretary
for the Republican National Committee,
said the Republican Party aimed to boost
its online presence after the Growth and
ASG talks
youth voting
By Elizabeth Matulis
Staff Writer
As the first day of early
voting draws closer, the UNC-
system Association of Student
Governments focused on strat-
egies for student voter engage-
ment at its monthly meeting
Oct. 3-4 at UNC-Wilmington.
UNC-Chapel Hill received a
$900 grant from ASG for voter
mobilization at the meeting,
said Fields Pierce, a delegate for
UNC-CH appointed by student
governments executive branch.
UNC-CH student Anita
Simha, ASGs vice president
for campus community, gave a
presentation on voter engage-
ment and said the grant money
will help fund voter registration
efforts on campus. Early voting
begins statewide Oct. 23.
During the presentation,
ASG leaders emphasized the
importance of having students
participate in an election that is
key on both a state and national
level, with one of the countrys
closest U.S. Senate races.
Simha said the association is
taking a four-pronged approach
to voting: voter registration,
motivation, misinformation
and mobilization. Voter regis-
tration drives occur on a daily
basis at UNC-CH, she said.
It is important students do
vote, Simha said. In 2012, 19
percent of the voting popula-
tion was young people.
Mobilization efforts will
involve students going to the
polls together and using public
transportation if a voting site
has been moved off campus.
UNC-CHs early voting site was
moved off campus to North
Carolina Hillel on Cameron
Avenue. In 2012, it was in
Rams Head Dining Hall.
Some student leaders were
worried that the 2013 voting
law passed by the N.C. General
Assembly would impact the stu-
dent vote but one controver-
sial provision of the law, which
requires a photo ID to vote,
wont affect students until 2016.
Alex Parker, ASG president,
said delegates also discussed
the White Houses Its On Us
campaign, a nationwide effort
to combat sexual violence on
college campuses.
Parker said the implementa-
tion of the campaign will be an
extension of the UNC systems
campus security initiative, which
was released at the UNC Board
of Governors July meeting.
Student government mem-
bers at the meeting were trained
on how to implement the Its
On Us campaign on their cam-
puses. They plan to encourage
students to take the Its On Us
pledge to help combat sexual
assault.
At the meeting, delegates also
discussed techniques on how to
reach students and allow them
to have a larger say in dictating
where tuition increases can be
used at their campus.
Pierce said UNC-system
schools have different needs,
but ASG provides a forum to
discuss common issues.
It was apparent a lot of
problems we see at Chapel Hill
are seen at other schools in the
UNC system, he said.
state@dailytarheel.com
For young NC voters, low turnout in midterm elections
In the 2010 midterm election, less than a fourth of eligible voters aged 18-29 cast a ballot, signifcantly lower than
the 2012 presidential election turnout. Campaigns are trying new strategies in 2014 to reach the youth voter bloc.
SOURCE: CIVICYOUTH.ORG DTH/CLAIRE DRYSDALE AND KAITLYN KELLY
0
20
40
60
2012 2010 2008 2006 2004 2002 2000
Presidential
election
Midterm
election
P
e
r
c
e
n
t

o
f

v
o
t
e
r

t
u
r
n
o
u
t

f
o
r

a
g
e
s

1
8
-
2
9
23.5 percent
56.5 percent
Year
UNC-CH received a
grant for voter
mobilization.
Opportunity Project report, which ana-
lyzed the partys performance in the 2012
election, found a digital divide between
the GOP and Democratic Party.
Williams said the RNC recently
launched a Facebook voter challenge,
through which people can sign an online
pledge to vote and challenge friends to
do the same.
You still have to do the traditional
ways of reaching out to voters phone
calls, door knocking, events, rallies
but you also need to have a strong
online presence too, he said.
Rob Flaherty, the youth media
director for the Democratic National
Committee, said Democrats are also
aware of the importance of social media
in reaching out to the young voter bloc.
Its really just a matter of talking
about the issues that matter to young
people where theyre at, he said.
Earlier this year, Flaherty said, the
College Democrats of America launched
a social media campaign using the
Twitter hashtag #GOPandering criticiz-
ing Republican policies they felt were
harmful to young people.
Michael Bitzer, a political science
professor at Catawba College, said young
voters are typically not reachable with
traditional methods.
Its not a kind of two-way street. Its
still very much the campaign reaching
out and hoping that voters react, he said.
Susan MacManus, a government
and international affairs professor at
the University of South Florida, said
social media campaigning offers parties
a chance to broaden their outreach and
include young people in all aspects of the
campaign process.
Increasingly, campaigns realize they
have to have young people come in to
do their social media young to young,
thats what works, she said.
This election cycle will reveal a
clearer picture of the new role of social
media in politics, MacManus added.
Were in a midterm election where
turnout normally falls a lot, but this
is the first election, I think, where we
political scientists are going to be able
to really look at whether social media
can keep younger voter turnout at a
nearly presidential election level.
state@dailytarheel.com
Republicans and Democrats
use digital strategies to woo
the youth voter bloc.
News Monday, October 6, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 4
Retention program given $3M
INSPECTIONS
FROM PAGE 1
tation inspections.
Weve never needed one,
Brown said. Weve been
cleaning the same way since
day one. Every time we find
something, we clean it up.
Unless someone wants to lick
off the floor, I see no real need
for it.
Private clubs
The law eliminated the
need for health and sanita-
tion inspections in all North
Carolina private clubs.
Anywhere that food and
drink is provided to people
potentially causes a health
hazard, said Orange County
N.C. Health Department
spokeswoman Stacy Shelp.
Even your kitchen would
at home. Sure that causes
some concern, but food code
is written a certain way for a
certain reason.
A private club has to main-
tain selective membership
and cannot serve nonmem-
bers, unless they are the guest
of a member.
Before the change, the san-
itation inspection exemption
was only given to nonprofit
private clubs.
In order to become a
private club, the owner of
the establishment must
submit an application to the
Alcoholic Beverage Control
Commission.
The application requires
the owner to provide a copy of
the clubs membership card,
as well as its membership
application form.
It also has a yearly permit
fee of $1000.
Private clubs came into
existence when the legislature
in North Carolina was decid-
ing on whether or not to allow
businesses to sell mixed drinks.
When North Carolina
finally adopted liquor per-
mits in the late 1970s, the
legislature and the ABC
Commission made a policy
decision that North Carolina
wasnt going to have bars,
said School of Government
professor Michael Crowell.
Crowell said the right to
serve mixed drinks was given
instead to restaurants, and in
order to qualify to sell mixed
drinks, a certain percentage
of the restaurants business
had to come from food sales.
The exception to having to
serve food was a private club,
Crowell said.
Its not a place where the
public can just walk in and
get a drink. The state was sat-
isfied that that was okay.
It is this exception that
makes being a private club so
desirable.
The benefit of being a
private club is that, unlike a
restaurant that sells mixed
drinks, you dont have to sell
any particular amount of
food, Crowell said.
If youre a restaurant and
you want to have a mixed drink
permit and keep it you cant
just have a bar. You have to sell
food and it has to be a certain
percentage of your business.
Private clubs are still
required to undergo inspec-
tions from Alcohol Law
Enforcement and the ABC
Commission, but those
inspections do not deal with
health and sanitation, he said.
Theyre not interested
generally in sanitation,
Crowell said. Theyre inter-
ested in the compliance of the
ABC laws.
In Orange County, 22
establishments are registered
as private clubs, including
eight on Franklin Street and
five on Rosemary Street.
I was surprised when I
found out that theyre no lon-
ger inspected, Wilson said.
He said he believes all
places that serve food should
be inspected. He said even
though West End Wine Bar
doesnt serve a lot of food,
it should still have to be
inspected anyway.
I dont worry about us
because I know the quality
of work that we produce,
but I do worry about Joe
Schmos run-down bar,
Wilson said.
That guy can serve warm
oysters on half shells if he
wants and theres no regula-
tory agency to say you cant
do that.
Despite his general con-
cern, Wilson doesnt think
West End Wine Bar poses any
health risks because of the
new law.
We always carried very
high sanitation grades,
Wilson said.
It doesnt really affect us
either way, but I do worry
about other people.
city@dailytarheel.com
By Jenn Morrison
Staff Writer
A psychology professor has
received more than $3 million
in grants to increase UNCs
accessibility and graduation
rates, primarily among histori-
cally underserved students.
Abigail Panter, senior asso-
ciate dean for undergraduate
education and a psychology
professor, secured the grant
for the Finish Line Project a
program that will collaborate
with the School of Education,
the Center for Faculty
Excellence and the American
Indian Center to increase
retention and affordability.
Were thrilled about it,
Panter said. We were dancing
down the halls when we heard.
UNCs 2009 four-year
graduation rate of 81.8 percent
is high in comparison to other
schools receiving the grant,
but there is still concern for
the graduation rates of specific
groups, including transfer,
first-generation and students
from rural communities, said
Panter, who serves as the
Finish Line Projects principal
investigator.
The U.S. Department of
Education awarded the First
in the World grant to UNC
and 23 other colleges out of
500 applicants throughout
the nation. UNC was the only
school in North Carolina to
receive the grant.
The grant went into effect
Wednesday and will support
the program for four years.
However, the University
has made a commitment
to the long-term success of
the program, even after the
four years is finished, said
Cynthia Demetriou, director
for undergraduate retention
and the Finish Line Projects
executive director.
The program will focus
on historically underserved
students interested in science,
technology, engineering and
mathematics fields, providing
them with the guidance and
resources necessary to succeed,
Panter said.
With early interven-
tion, students could make it
through challenging introduc-
tory STEM courses and realize
they could potentially choose
science as a career, Panter
said. It could help students
to keep taking science courses
and continue in those majors.
The program will also
work to resolve discrepancies
between community college
and the UNC curricula.
RURAL
URBAN
Rural versus urban counties within North Carolina
The new grant given to UNC professor Abigail Panter will be used to improve retention and graduation rates of underserved students,
including students from rural areas. Out of North Carolinas 100 counties, 80 are considered rural, according to 2000 U.S. Census data.
SOURCE: NC DIVISION OF HEALTH SERVICE REGULATION DTH/ALICIA TAYLOR
The project weaves every-
ones ideas together under the
same vision, Demetriou said.
The grant will allow the
American Indian Center to
hire a native student engage-
ment coordinator, who will
encourage Native American
students to apply to UNC,
create a first-year seminar rel-
evant to Native Americans and
increase internship participa-
tion among native students.
The University has now
dedicated itself to the success
of this population through
the grant, said American
Indian Center Director Amy
Locklear Hertel.
The grant will also allow the
School of Education to develop
a pilot program with the Office
of Undergraduate Retention
to support students coming
from rural communities, said
Judith Meece, a professor at
the School of Education.
It seems to come at just
the right time, Demetriou
said. Its a really exciting
time to be here. It ll comple-
ment the work already being
done here and keeps us mov-
ing in the right direction.
university@dailytarheel.com
I think enthusiastic is a
step above willingness, she
said. The idea is that we want
people to want to engage in
sexual encounters, but that
definition has become very
misconstrued. Theyre afraid
of being coerced or what could
happen if they didnt consent.
Palumbo said she hopes pol-
icies and laws like Californias
could help create campus cul-
tures where students feel free
to communicate their needs.
For campuses, the goal is
emphasizing that every student
has the right to communicate
their boundaries and feel that
those boundaries are going to
be respected by their peers.
state@dailytarheel.com
YES MEANS YES
FROM PAGE 1
YES MEANS YES LAW
California has enacted a new
state standard for colleges
and universities on consent:

Institutions receiving
state money must comply
with 13 situations that might
arise in sexual assault cases.

The person accused of
sexual assault must prove a
clear affirmation of consent
was given by the accuser.

The accused cant claim
consent was given if the
person reasonably should
have known the other party
was incapacitated by alcohol
or drugs or was asleep.

A lack of protest or
resistance does not mean
consent, nor does silence.
THINK PINK
FROM PAGE 1
On Campus.
She said the events will
include a cotton candy
handout, a yogurt-eating
contest for the men compet-
ing in the pageant and a
trick-or-treat for pink candy
in the quad on Halloween.
We are going to try to be
super fun and super loud,
Gallo said.
She said the Think Pink
campaign is used to raise
awareness while the Big
Doctors OK long-acting birth control
By Katie Reeder
Staff Writer
The American Academy
of Pediatrics recently recom-
mended that long-acting,
reversible contraception meth-
ods should be the primary form
of birth control for teenage
girls. These methods include
implants and intrauterine
devices, known as IUDs.
Campus Health Services
offers IUDs, and more than
300 UNC students got
an IUD last year, said Dr.
Mary Schlegel, director for
Womens Health Services at
Campus Health.
Dr. Schlegel said insurance
covers an IUD for most stu-
dents and there is no co-pay.
She said Campus Health also
works with students to find an
in-network provider so anyone
can have access.
Advocates of reproductive
rights say although the AAP
endorsement is a positive step,
there is still more to be done.
While we think this is
good, it really isnt a compre-
hensive solution to the issue,
said sophomore Martha
Isaacs, co-chairwoman
of Students United for
Reproductive Justice (SURJ).
Cara Schumann, the other
co-chairwoman of SURJ, said
providing effective birth con-
trol is a matter of making sure
people are informed.
Insurance covers it,
Schumann said. Its a long-
term solution, and the proce-
dure probably isnt as bad as
people think.
Although IUDs are an
option at Campus Health,
Isaacs said there is not much
conversation about them and
its hard to find information
about them on the Campus
Health website.
If (the AAP) is saying that
they are (more effective), then
I think its UNCs responsibil-
ity to, A, provide that for stu-
dents, and, B, provide that in
a way that people know about
it, she said.
Dr. Schlegel also noted the
lack of awareness surround-
ing the safety of IUDs. She
addressed the reputation
IUDs have for causing infer-
tility or infection. She said
these are concerns associated
with the past design of IUDs
and that they are now safe.
Dr. Michael Fried, a physi-
cian at Chapel Hill Obstetrics
and Gynecology, said his
practice tends to be very pro-
IUD, but they are not the best
option for everyone. The pill
can help with hormone regu-
lation for women who suffer
from menstrual migraines or
other hormonal issues.
Both doctors attributed
much of the effectiveness of
IUDs to the fact that users do
not have to remember to take
it every day like they do with
the pill. They did, however,
emphasize that IUDs do noth-
ing to prevent the spread of
sexually transmitted diseases.
Dr. Fried said the biggest
concern with IUDs is the risk
of uterine perforation during
the insertion process, but he
estimated this only occurs in
one to two percent of patients.
Despite these remaining
On the wire: national and world news
Protests of Hong Kongs
government persist
HONG KONG (MCT) A
week after students started
occupying public spaces in
three points in Hong Kong,
some protest groups agreed
Sunday to give up some of
their ground, but hundreds
of rank-and-file occupiers
refused to comply.
Protest leaders hoped
occupiers would abandon a
protest site in the gang ter-
ritory of Mong Kok, on the
Kowloon side of Hong Kong,
to consolidate with protesters
who have occupied plazas and
streets near the government
complex in Admiralty. But
many Mong Kok protesters
either didnt believe the call to
retreat or took issue with the
strategy.
Mong Kok is totally dif-
ferent than Admiralty, said
Kelvin Cheung, 23, a supporter
of the students camped along
Nathan Avenue in Mong Kog.
We think it is wrong to
give up this place just because
the government allowed the
Triads to cause trouble here,
Cheung said, referring to the
gangs thought to have caused
a melee Friday in Mong Kok.
The anti-authoritarian
nature of the protests has
propelled thousands of Hong
Kong residents, most of them
COURTESY OF MCT
Morning scenes at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas
on Thursday, Oct. 2, 2014. The hospital is where Ebola patient
Thomas Eric Duncan sought treatment.
Its not just raising
money for breast
cancer, but raising
awareness as well.
Emily Pope,
Zeta Tau Alpha president
Man On Campus competi-
tion is used for fundraising.
This year will be the third
year of the male pageant.
Kangas said in its first year
the pageant raised about
$5,000.
young, to take to the street in
mass defiance of the Chinese
government and the citys local
government.
After taking a vote, a core
group of occupiers reportedly
voted to retreat from Mong
Kok, on the Kowloon side of
Hong Kong, where crowds of
angry men started attacking
protesters Friday, demanding
that streets be reopened.
Despite that vote, some
protesters refused to leave the
site and hundreds remained
there early Monday.
In Mississippi, hospitals
on high alert for Ebola
(MCT) When patients
walk into the Biloxi (Miss.)
Regional Medical Center burn-
ing with fever or displaying
nausea symptoms these days,
emergency room staffers face a
potentially crucial moment.
Like at other hospitals
across Mississippi, theyre
on the lookout for people
who recently traveled from
West Africa or have been
in close contact with some-
one who did and might
be carrying the deadly Ebola
virus that is raging through
Guinea, Liberia and Sierra
Leone.
After a hospital in Dallas
initially sent an Ebola victim
home, risking the spread of
the infection to at least 50
others with whom he had
contact, federal and state
health officials are work-
ing to ensure that anxious
medical staffers at hospitals
nationwide are prepared to
identify and isolate those
with highly suspicious symp-
toms.
The key issue is to identify
them as quickly as possible,
Mississippis state epidemiolo-
gist, Dr. Thomas Dobbs III,
said. Even before they come
into the emergency room
would be ideal. And then to
isolate them immediately to
limit potential transmission.
Court to decide soon on
taking gay marriage case
WASHINGTON (MCT)
A North Carolina traffic
stop will ease Supreme Court
justices into their new term
Monday, but things will accel-
erate from there.
Over the next nine months,
the court could decide wheth-
er same-sex marriage will be
legal nationwide.
The court has only filled
about three-quarters of its
expected docket for the 2014
term. The court typically
hears and decides about 75
cases each term, selected
from about 9,000 petitions.
The constitutional ques-
tion that could define the
2014 term, concerning
same-sex marriage, is one of
several still lurking around
the corner. Last Monday, the
justices had up for initial
consideration seven petitions
concerning marriage restric-
tions in five states. The peti-
tions will get a closer look
during at least one other con-
ference before the justices
decide whether to schedule
oral arguments.
Its not a foregone conclu-
sion, said David A. Strauss,
a professor at the University
of Chicago Law School, but
most people think they will
take up the issue.
Zeta Tau Alpha partners
with the UNC Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer
Center, among others orga-
nizations, and always invites
someone from the center to
speak before their Franklin
5K in the spring, Kangas said.
The 5K is the largest
source of fundraising for the
cause, Gallo said.
Zeta Tau Alpha president
Emily Pope said this year,
Big Man On Campus will
be expanding to include
other sororities and fraterni-
ties, with the winning soror-
ity-sponsored guy receiving
winnings for the sororitys
philanthropic cause.
Pope said what separates
Zeta Tau Alpha is how much
emphasis it puts on rais-
ing awareness about breast
cancer.
I think what is really
special about Zeta nationally
is that its not just raising
money for breast cancer but
raising awareness as well,
Pope said.
Kangas said Zeta Tau
Alphas commitment to
breast cancer awareness
helped her make the deci-
sion to join the sorority.
When I went through
recruitment as a freshman, I
didnt know anything about
what sorority I wanted to be
in, Kangas said.
I knew I wanted to be in
one, but I had no idea Zetas
philanthropy was breast can-
cer research and awareness,
and I liked the girls, so when
I found that out I was like,
OK, this is the house I want
to be in.
university@dailytarheel.com
questions, advocates agree that
IUDs are a good alternative to
the pill for college students.
Were busy, and tak-
ing something every day at
the same time is difficult to
remember, Schumann said.
Life is kind of hectic, and you
know, our sexual experiences
tend to be hectic.
university@dailytarheel.com
Opinion Monday, October 6, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 5
Established 1893, 121 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT
Disordered eating is a
pervasive problem
TO THE EDITOR:
I would like to thank The
Daily Tar Heel for its story
on disordered eating in ath-
letes. In particular, the dis-
cussion of males with disor-
dered eating is important.
Eating disorders are
often seen as a female issue.
While some men might not
call their experiences eating
disorders, men experience
disordered eating. Current
estimates are that approxi-
mately one in five college
students exhibit symptoms
of an eating disorder, and 25
percent of those students are
male. Based on UNCs popu-
lation, the male students
with eating disorders could
almost fill Memorial Hall.
This week is Mental
Illness Awareness Week,
a time to highlight the
prevalence of mental illness
and have important con-
versations about stigma. At
Embody Carolina, we hope
to educate the UNC commu-
nity about the signs of dis-
ordered eating so more men
and women can eventually
get the help they need.
If you think you or some-
one else, male or female, is
struggling with disordered
eating, please see embody-
carolina.com/resources and
consider signing up for one
of our trainings.
Sarah MacLean
Senior
Global studies
Embody Carolina
Co-President
Old Well woes are
misplaced
TO THE EDITOR:
This letter is in response
to Ever Castros Campus
landmark deserves a polish.
How absurd to use
Instagram and Snapchat to
support your plea that the
Old Well deserves a physi-
cal facelift. In a time where
our football uniforms are
far from the baby blues they
once were and graduation
gowns no longer match
those of family members
who graduated decades
before me, some things
should remain unchanged. It
certainly shouldnt be altered
to appear pristine in what-
ever app youre using on any
given day. We are, after all,
the first public university,
and our iconic Old Well
serves as a reminder of this.
You proposed that the
top be replaced with that
sweet Carolina Blue we all
love so much. If you visit the
General Alumni Associations
Facebook page, you will see
recent posts asking what
shade truly is Carolina Blue.
If you review the comments
on these posts, you will see
there is no consensus, some
leaning toward a bluish
green while others closer to a
periwinkle. A simple internet
search reveals that Pantone
542 is the closest. If you walk
through New West and visit
rooms where the Dialectic
and Philanthropic Societies
hold debates, you will find
them trimmed in a dustier,
grayish blue. Better yet, walk
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
The NC State Fair is literally in direct viola-
tion of North Carolina firearm legislation,
and more particularly HB 937.
uncfan1, on the decision to ban concealed carry guns from the fair
I dont worry about us because I know the
quality of work that we produce, but I do
worry about Joe Schmos run-down bar.
Deems Wilson, manager of West End Wine Bar
EDITORIAL CARTOON By Jamal Rogers, jmlrgs@gmail.com
Quick!
Deploy
the
cheddar!
T
he prospect of back-
packing concerns my
mother immensely. The
second thing she asks about,
after inquiring in an earnest
whisper as to my bathroom
needs in the absence of indoor
plumbing, is food.
Dear reader, I have ruined a
number of meals both in and
out of the wilderness. I almost
set a picnic table on fire. I
spilled a pot of boiling pasta
on my feet. I scorched a pan
of kale chips into dust. I cre-
mated some asparagus.
Fortunately, this level of
quality is often expected of
backpacking meals, and Hiker
Hunger is a very real phenom-
enon that makes even the most
inedible of foods seem delight-
ful to the palate.
I am one of the leagues of
college students with better
relationships with their arch-
nemeses from middle school
than with food. I frequently
struggle to eat like a normal
human being. For example, it is
firmly embedded in my lunch-
time dogma that cupcakes are
the devil (and therefore must be
eaten by the dozen when no one
is looking. Logic: infallible).
The mind-body connection
that is completely absent in the
dining hall becomes inescap-
able while backpacking. When
youre walking 15 miles a day,
you have to think about how
you feel tired or energetic,
strong or sore, full or hungry.
We hikers are good at eat-
ing. We eat when were hungry
because we need the fuel to
keep going. We stop when
were full because we need to
make sure theres enough to
eat the next day.
We dont worry about our
clothes because their only pur-
pose is to regulate body temper-
ature. We dont worry about the
thickness of our thighs because
our ability to power up moun-
tainsides with a 40-pound pack
is a matter of intense pride.
We dont think about calo-
ries unless were making sure
we get in our minimum intake.
We dont worry about burning
off those Oreos and peanut
butter we had for lunch.
We also eat everything.
A little dirt in my soup?
Trail spice. Perfectly accept-
able. Spicy mustard? I ll drink
it with a straw. The one gour-
met item is cheese, and we eat
it by the pound.
Last spring break, I went
backpacking with three
friends. We covered over 90
miles in six days. It was a good
thing someone thought to
pack the Emergency Cheese,
because the four pounds we
had with us went pretty fast.
Our biggest worry on that
trip was bears. We were in the
Great Smoky Mountains, where
there are allegedly two bears
per square mile. Compared to
that risk, the prospect of run-
ning out of cheese, and the
idea of Emergency Cheese, had
become a joke.
Look, a bear! Deploy
Emergency Cheese!
Oh, no, the rope is broken!
Quick, fashion the Emergency
Cheese into a carabiner!
Cheese is no laughing mat-
ter, my friends. Between mac
and cheese, pita pizzas and
the institutionalized Second
Breakfast, we ran out of cheese
around day five.
With nary a thought of calo-
ries or fat content, we opened
the Emergency Cheese, grate-
ful for the sustenance.
FEMINIST KILLJOY
Alice Wilder examines the
impact of Taylor Macs work.
N
E
X
T
Corey Buhay
Misadventures of a Naturalist
Senior environmental studies major
from Atlanta, Ga.
Email: corey.bu@gmail.com
SPEAK OUT
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Sign and date. No more than two people should sign letters.
Students: Include your year, major and phone number.
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letters to 250 words.
SUBMISSION
Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill,
NC 27514
Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com
through my grandmothers
home and see pennants
from 1982 that are the same
shade of rusted green you
mentioned. So tell me, which
shade did you have in mind
when suggesting the roof be
replaced?
The solution is not to
replace it with a new lid,
but instead to appreciate the
history (constructed in 1897)
and to take care of what we
have. Yes, a good scrub with
some elbow grease more
frequently would do it some
good, but that doesnt change
its construction. When the
appeal of Instagram and
Snapchat have dwindled
(Imagine that!), our time-
less icon will still remain.
We dont need a New Well;
our Old Well is just fine the
way it is. Maybe you could
just try a different Instagram
filter? Lo-Fi and X-Pro II
always seem to give me more
vibrant blues. Even better,
perhaps taking another path
so you arent so bothered by
its weathered appearance
would surely turn that frown
upside down.
Dont mess with the Old
Well.

Ashley Ward
Masters of social work
Top of the Hill article
confused pricing
TO THE EDITOR:
In any business retail
or manufacturing margin
is important and is calcu-
lated with two figures: cost
of acquiring or producing
and price of sale. The recent
article on Top of the Hill
Restaurant & Brewerys pro-
posal to allow the distillery
to sell its liquor on premises
got a few things wrong.
Firstly, if it costs TOPO
$16 to make a bottle of
vodka, they would not sell
it for $15.38. Thats how
much the ABC stores pay for
each bottle, at $184.60 per
case of 12. Either it actually
costs TOPO less than that to
manufacture, or they are lit-
erally giving it away without
making any margin on sales.
Secondly, retail busi-
nesses work on markup:
They pay a wholesale price
for goods and sell them at
an increased retail price.
A $15.38 bottle cost marked
up to $28.95 can be called
an 88 percent markup, or a
53 percent margin. It seems
thats standard for similarly
priced vodkas.
Finally, is this reasonable?
When they used a retail
mode, clothing company
Gustin sold jeans $81 whole-
sale. Retailers sold them
$205, a 153 percent markup
or 65 percent margin. Gustin
successfully eliminated
the retailers and now sells
directly online. But if they
tried to sell their jeans to
retailers, none would bite
because they know their con-
sumers would find a better
deal direct than they are able
to offer. Purchase limits may
get around this, but its still
bad business for retailers.
And unless you want to drive
to Kentucky every time you
feel like picking up a bottle of
bourbon, retailers (and their
markups) are a necessity.
Scott Neidich
Graduate Student
Nutrition
T
op of the Hill
Restaurant &
Brewerys chal-
lenge to an impractical and
unnecessary side effect of
North Carolina alcohol law
should be approved by the
North Carolina General
Assembly.
Scott Maitland, the
founder and manager of
TOPO has written a house
bill that would allow distill-
eries in the state to sell lim-
ited amounts of their prod-
ucts after distillery tours.
This bill should be
made law as soon as pos-
sible, but it should not
start a trend of eroding
the regulatory power of
Aint no moonshine
EDITORIAL
the Alcoholic Beverage
Control Commission.
Maitlands bill has
passed both houses of the
General Assembly, but
not in the same legislative
session. Maitland said the
bill has little opposition in
the General Assembly, and
what opposition does exist
stems from a concern that
the distilleries will take
some of the ABCs business.
If such a wariness exists,
it shouldnt. The proposed
piece of legislation gives
North Carolina busi-
ness owners a way to give
themselves a small boost
in business with negligible
possibilities of harm.
And distillery owners
have emphasized they have
no desire to challenge the
essential function of the
ABC Commission.
The ABC Commissions
control of the sale of
spirituous liquors in the
state is an example of
good governance and
sound social policy. The
ABC Commission simul-
taneously discourages
excessive drinking, places
tighter controls on under-
age drinking and brings
in millions of dollars of
needed revenues.
But allowing distillery
owners to sell limited
amounts of their products
to eager consumers at
the end of tours does not
challenge these essential
functions of the ABC
Commission. Instead, it
allows distilleries to more
directly compete with
wineries and breweries,
encouraging healthy com-
merce.
Alcohol law is
unintentionally
burdensome.
T
he University is a
leader in many cat-
egories, but it has
tangible room for improve-
ment in both waste mini-
mization and low-impact
dining.
According to the most
recent report by the
Sustainability Tracking,
Assessment & Rating
System (STARS), UNC
respectively scored 1.5
out of five and one out of
three in those respective
categories.
The University should
strive for perfection and set
a goal to earn full points in
these categories the next
time they are assessed.
Wasting away in Lenoir
EDITORIAL
Reaching this goal begins
with the actions of individ-
ual students, some of whom
are reading this editorial
over breakfast or lunch.
Feeding the Five
Thousand founder Tristram
Stuart astutely pointed this
out in a Wednesday article
in The Daily Tar Heel about
food waste.
You as an individual
can help alleviate those
problems by taking only
what you need and eating
what you take, he said.
Students, whether eat-
ing in the dining halls or
preparing food for them-
selves, should take this
advice to heart. By reduc-
ing portion sizes and sav-
ing otherwise wasted food
to eat later, the individual
can have an enormous
effect on how much food
the University community
wastes.
To remind students of
their obligation to waste
less, Carolina Dining
Services features a poster
describing a meals many
inputs in the dining halls.
The goal of this poster
to reduce food wasted
by students putting food
on their plates that will go
uneaten would come
closer to being achieved if it
were placed near the point
of consumption rather than
the point of disposal.
CDS should consider
placing the same poster in
sticker form on the dining
halls sneeze guards.
As a leader in sus-
tainability, UNC should
ensure less is being wasted
by helping students make
more conscious decisions.
Students should eat
with a mind toward
sustainability.
COLUMN
L
arry Fedora must be a
masochist. When hes
not shooting himself in
the foot on the football field,
hes doing it in the pressroom.
Saturdays 34-17 loss to
Virginia Tech was the fifth
game in which Fedora put
Mitch Trubisky in on the
games third drive. It was also
the fourth game where that
made absolutely no sense.
The two-quarterback sys-
tem works worse than the
Duke basketball bus in an inch
of snow, and Fedora knows it.
If we dont move the
chains and get into a rhythm
on offense well make it
very tough on our team, he
said Saturday.
Can he not hear him-
self? On the second drive of
Saturdays game, Marquise
Williams picked up 64 yards
and three points. He was
Daniel Wilco
Senior writer
Senior advertising major from
Atlanta, Ga.
Email: dwilco@live.unc.edu
moving the chains, and he
had gotten into a rhythm.
But that never matters
in Fedoras system. Hes not
going to look at the results
and reevaluate his offense
because of them, no sir.
So he threw in Trubisky,
who went three-and-out.
UNC didnt score another
point until the fourth quarter.
This year, Trubisky has
thrown two touchdowns and
three interceptions. All of his
picks have led to touchdowns.
What Trubisky has been
able to show us includes posi-
tives that are circumstantially
irrelevant and negatives that
are extremely detrimental.
But thats being too harsh.
I dont know that Mitch
has been in enough for you
to see what Mitch can do,
Fedora said. Hes not getting
the reps in a game to be able
to show what he can do.
Wait. You control who
gets the reps, Larry!
For Trubisky to be useful,
either make him the starter
and bench Williams, or wait
another year and reevalu-
ate at any time that isnt the
middle of the season.
For UNC to be successful,
the two-quarterback system
must be tossed.
Fedoras formula doesnt allow either quarterback to succeed.
What the hell, Larry?
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS
JENNY SURANE EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
HENRY GARGAN OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
SAM SCHAEFER ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR
EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily rep-
resent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the
opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises six board
members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.
BAILEY BARGER
BRIAN VAUGHN
PETER VOGEL
KIM HOANG
KERNWILLIAMS
COLIN KANTOR
Monday, October 6, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 6
Join Kappa Delta in
supporting breast cancer
awareness & prevention.
Turn the Town Pink
The Daily Tar Heel and these community members are proud to continue an annual tradition
in support of UNCs breast cancer research. Twenty percent of Turn the Town Pink ads is donated to
UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Care Center to mark Octobers Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
Please join the DTH in thanking the local businesses and groups on this page for their support!
UPCOMING EVENTS
TO SUPPORT
LINEBERGER
Pasta with Purpose
Oct 08, 2014 from 05:30 PM to
08:30 PM
The Carolina Club - George Watts
Hill Alumni Center
The Carolina Club invites
members and their guests
to Pasta with Purpose,
a special community
event to benet breast
cancer research at UNC
Lineberger. The event is
open to members and
non-members alike.
Diners will enjoy a bufet
of salad, garlic bread,
pasta primavera, pasta
with meat sauce and
ice cream. The Carolina
Club will donate $10
out of the $11 directly to
Breast Cancer Research
at UNC Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer
Center.
Adults - $11, Kids 6 to 12
- $6, Children 5 & under
complimentary (plus tax
and gratuity). Call 919-
962-1101 to reserve your
seat.
Breakfast for Dinner
at Ye Old Wafe Shop
Oct 09, 2014 from 05:30 PM to
08:30 PM
Ye Olde Wafe Shoppe, 173 East
Franklin Street
Join us on October 9 at
Franklin Streets iconic
Ye Olde Wafe Shoppe
and enjoy Breakfast for
Dinner. 100% of proceeds
from your $12 per person
meal will be donated to
UNC Linebergers Turn
the Town Pink campaign.
At this special Breakfast
for Dinner event, every
member of the Ye Olde
Wafe Shoppe staf
volunteers their time and
donates all of their tips
and proceeds to the cancer
center (vendors donate the
food).
Dozen Doughnut
Dash
Oct 11, 2014 from 10:00 AM to
12:00 PM
The Old Well
Starting and ending at
The Old Well, The Dozen
Doughnut Dash is a four
mile run with a sweet
surprise in the middle
- participants will eat a
dozen doughnuts at the
2.5 mark and then attempt
to nish the race. Onsite
registration is allowed
at this family-friendly
event and everyone is
encouraged to come out
and show their support
for UNC Lineberger, the
Lineberger is one of only six Specialized
Program of Research Excellence (SPORE)
programs designated by National Cancer
Institute (NCI) in the country.
What is Lineberger researching?
Faculty focus on these fve strategic areas:
Integrating molecular subtypes into epidemiology
and microenvironment
Technological advances in imaging and analysis
Genomic Analyses of Tumors
and Normal Breast Tissues
Mouse models
Tissue-based discovery, translation,
and clinical research program
Monday, October 6, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 7
www.dailytarheel.com for special
section advertising details!
ZCinPV http://paperless.
ly/ZCinPV.
HOURS:
Mon-Thurs: 11:30 AM -11:30 PM
Fri-Sat: 11:30am-Midnight
Sun: Noon-11:30pm
942-PUMP
www.yogurtpump.com 106 W. Franklin St. (Next to Hes Not Here)
T O P
T O P
YOUR NIGHT
YOUR NIGHT
OFF HERE!
OFF HERE!
Alpha Chi Omega
Supports
Breast Cancer Awareness & Prevention
Caddy Shack Golf Facility Caddy Shack Golf Facility
Chipping Greens Chipping Greens
Driving Range Driving Range
Golf Lessons Golf Lessons
Rental Golf Clubs Rental Golf Clubs
6911 Mt. Herman Church Rd.
Durham, NC 27505
(919) 383-0695
sole beneciary of this
event.
To learn more about
the event, visit www.
dozendoughnutdash.com.
UNC Womens Soccer
Team: 4th Annual
Project Heel Clinic
Oct 11, 2014 from 12:00 PM to
01:30 PM
The North Carolina
Womens Soccer Team
invites you to join them
for the 4th Annual Project
Heel Soccer Skills Clinic.
All proceeds will benet
the UNC Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer
Center.
Calling all soccer players,
8th grade or younger,
come work on your
skills with the 2012
NCAA Champions, UNC
Womens Soccer Team!
All proceeds will benet
the UNC Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer
Center.
Cost: $30 Pre-registration;
$35 Day of Event
Make donations to this
special event at www.
projectheel.kintera.org
Chapel Hill Fire
Department
Fill the Boot Drive
Oct 18, 2014
Kenan Stadium
For the three hours prior
to kick-of, members
of the Chapel Hill Fire
Department and Zeta
Tau Alpha sorority will
collect donations for
Turn the Town Pink with
their Fill the Boot drive.
Donations will be accepted
at Tar Heel Downtown and
at various Kenan Stadium
gates. Show your support
for these local heroes as
they support cancer care
in our community.
UNC Football: Cancer
Awareness Game
Oct 18, 2014
Kenan Stadium
Join UNC Lineberger at
Kenan Memorial Stadium
at the UNC-Chapel Hill
campus on October 18, as
the North Carolina Tar
Heels take on the Georgia
Tech Yellow Jackets, to
raise awareness and
ght cancer! Watch your
favorite Tar Heel players
and coaches support
cancer awareness while
wearing their pink gear
and hear special messages
from some very special Tar
Heels during the game.
Kickof time is still TBD.
A special Tar Heel
Downtown celebration
will be taking place all
day in Downtown Chapel
Hill prior to kickof! West
Franklin Street, from
Columbia to Mallette
streets will be rocking
- with the celebration
centered at 140 West
Franklin St! The family-
friendly (and free!) events
include a concert featuring
Liquid Pleasure, Tar Heel
sports network pre-
game radio show, bouncy
houses, ESPN coverage,
face-painting, a rock-
climbing wall, marching
band performances, the
opportunity to meet
Ramses and MORE!
The Pink Luncheon
2014
Oct 24, 2014 from 12:00 PM to
02:00 PM
Pine Knoll Shores
Join us in Pine Knoll
Shores to support research
at UNC Lineberger. In
its inaugural year, The
Pink Luncheon raised
more than $13,000 for
cancer research at UNC
Lineberger. This year,
the luncheon committee
hopes to surpass that goal
with their one-of-a-kind
pink-themed luncheon
featuring a speaker
from UNC Lineberger,
a fabulous auction and
other exciting events. This
years luncheon is hosted
by Rhonda Chused and
and Rhonda Scibal.
UNC Volleyball Pink
Game
Oct 24, 2014 from 06:00 PM to
09:00 PM
Chapel Hill, NC
UNC Volleyball against
Boston College.
To benet Get REAL &
HEEL.
The Farm Party
Oct 25, 2014 from 05:00 PM to
08:00 PM
Teer Family Farm
7729 Kepley Road, Chapel Hill, NC
Buy your tickets now
for the 2nd Annual
Farm Party to benet
UNC Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer
Center. Come out for
amazing food from Fig
& Honey, music by The
Major Sevens, a fun-lled
silent auction and lawn
games that everyone will
enjoy. Tickets are $40 each
and can be purchased
at http://paperless.ly/
News Monday, October 6, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 8
NOTICE TO ALL DTH
CUSTOMERS
Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to
publication for classied ads. We publish Mon-
day thru Friday when classes are in session. A
university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e. this
affects deadlines). We reserve the right to re-
ject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Please check your
ad on the rst run date, as we are only respon-
sible for errors on the rst day of the ad. Accep-
tance of ad copy or prepayment does not imply
agreement to publish an ad. You may stop your
ad at any time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for
stopped ads will be provided. No advertising
for housing or employment, in accordance with
federal law, can state a preference based on
sex, race, creed, color, religion, national origin,
handicap, marital status.
VOTER REGISTRATION: Make sure your NC
voter registration is up to date at https://www.
ncsbe.gov/webapps/voter_search/ October 10
deadline to register. Info on how to register at
http://www.ncsbe.gov/.
Business
Opportunities
LAVENDER HOME PARTY OPPORTUNITY. Stop
in and learn more about how you can earn an
extra income selling relaxing lavender products
at the FREE My Lavender Lifestyle Information
Open House. Thursday, October 16th from
noon to 7pm. Held at Bean Traders Coffee, 105
W NC-54 Hwy, Suite 249, Durham, NC 22713.
www.mylavenderlifestyle.com, 540-830-3541.
Child Care Wanted
BUDDY FOR BOY WITH SPECIAL NEEDS.
Afterschool care needed in downtown
Hillsborough M-F 4-7pm for boy with
Down Syndrome. He likes using iPad
and playing with his service dog. Ad-
ditional hours available. $12/hr. Email
sweir@unc.edu or call 919-732-1680.
For Rent
FAIR HOUSING
ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in
this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or dis-
crimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspa-
per will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers
are hereby informed that all dwellings adver-
tised 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.
MERCIA RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES: Now
showing and leasing properties for 2015-16
school year. Walk to campus, 1BR-6BR avail-
able. Contact via merciarentals.com or 919-
933-8143.
NOVEMBER 1ST. FURNISHED ROOM. Shared
bathroom ($550/mo. for 1, $650/mo. for 2) in
our home near Eastgate. Separate entrance.
Utilities, internet, phone, cable included.
No smoking, pets. Lease, deposit required.
919-932-1556, 919-616-5431.
WALK TO CAMPUS. 2BR/1BA. Fully renovated.
W/D. Dishwasher. Central AC, heat. Available
immediately, $825/mo. Merciarentals.com,
919-933-8143.
For Sale
COUCH: 3 SEAT, classic line, Ralph Lauren,
black and green hound tooth. Very good condi-
tion. $200. 919-942-3887.
KING SOMMA WATER TUBES BED. Great
condition. Uses regular king sheets. With
frame and mahogany headboard. $125.
919-942-3887.
DRESSER. WHITE. Very good condition. $45.
919-942-3887.
COUCH. HIDE A BED, 2 seat. Fly shing uphol-
stery. $150. 919-942-3887.
FUTON for sale. Full size mattress, comfort-
able, light, functions well, beige coloring.
Asking $200, price negotiable. Email Maria
mariadarling@indylink.org.
TEKE DINING TABLE from Thailand. 2 leaves.
Mahogany color. 2 arm chairs, 4 side chairs.
Top condition. $390. 919-942-3887.
Help Wanted
PART-TIME EVENINGS and weekends at La
Vita Dolce, Southern Village. Need barista,
counter service. Starting immediately.
Apply in person. Sandy, 919-968-1635.
FLEXIBLE SCHEDULE, GREAT PAY.
Ofce assistant, part-time and
full-time. Durham. Excellent pay.
Flexible schedule. Email work expe-
rience, education and availability.
ofceadmin2014@carolinalivery.net.
GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR: Chapel Hill
Gymnastics has part-time positions avail-
able for energetic, enthusiastic instructors.
Applicants with knowledge of gymnastic
terminology and progression skills preferred,
must be available 2-4 days/wk. 3:30-7:30pm,
some weekends. Send a resume to
margie@chapelhillgymnastics.com.
CLINICAL TEACHING TUTORS needs math,
science tutors. Advanced also. Also, needed
English, EC, writing, organization, elementary
education tutors. AP high school APES needed.
$21/hr. and TBD. Please send days, hours avail-
able: jlocts@aol.com. NEEDED ALSO: Flexible
help, packing supplies in ofce, organizing.
$8-$10/hr. Flexible. Superb spoken English.
Car. References.
ARE YOU A freshman, sophomore, junior? Year
round, low stress job on campus: STUDENT as-
sistant needed at Lineberger Cancer Center.
FLEXIBLE 3 hour shift Minimum. 12 hrs/wk.
Email resume: leslie_schreiner@med.unc.edu.
CHAPEL HILL DAY CARE CENTER seeks
warm and caring part-time afternoon assistant
teachers for infants and toddlers. Applicants
must be available to work M-F 1-6pm, 2-6pm
or 3-6pm. Must have passed at least 1 early
childhood education course. Requires energy,
dependability and excellent health. A TB test,
screening and criminal record check through
the Division of Child Development and Early
Education is required prior to start-
ing. Send resume and letter of interest to
chdcc@bellsouth.net or call 919 929-3585.
FUN RECEPTIONIST
WANTED!
Part-time receptionist needed ASAP at chil-
drens hair salon near Southpoint. Must be
organized and love kids! Available hours.
are Fridays 9:30am-6:30pm and Sundays
11:30am-5:30pm. $9/hr Email resume to
jill@peekado.com.
HELP WANTED: Spankys Restaurant
is looking for hard working, reliable
employees with weekend availabil-
ity. Part-time and full-time positions open!
spankys@spankysrestaurant.com.

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.
Wheels for Sale
$1,200, NEGOTIABLE,
BEST OFFER
2005 mini van, 7 seats, stow and go second
and third rows, high mileage runs good, not
detailed, everything works. Cash only, near
UNC. 919-932-4991.
Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Travel/Vacation
For Rent Help Wanted
BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room

Deadlines
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Display Classied Ads: 3pm, two business
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www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252
DTH ofce is open Mon-Fri 8:30am-5:00pm
Announcements
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 9 -- Discover a whole new
batch of options. Resist temptation to
run away or spend carelessly. Accept
an offer for more authority. Doors that
seem closed open later. You know what
youre talking about. Love transforms
you.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 9 -- Dont push too hard.
Theres more money coming in. Grasp
a potent opportunity. Beat out the com-
petition. Circumstances lead you in a
practical direction. Make a valuable dis-
covery. Enjoy.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8 -- You can see the road
winding into the distance. Theres a way
around this problem. Invest in long-
term solutions. Youre growing wiser
and gaining respect. Make plans now
for action later.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is an 8 -- Work could interfere
with trave.. Do your share of the chores.
If youve kept your word, you gain
status. Dont make new promises yet.
Consider the road ahead.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 9 -- Keep your focus and
maintain momentum to profit. Friends
offer good advice. Provide motivation.
Your work is respected. Develop a plan
of attack. Hand deliver your message.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is an 8 -- Finish a project that
youve been avoiding. Completion leads
to opportunity. Imagine perfection.
Passion can move mountains. Accept
a challenge. Your partner supports the
game. The vacation of your dreams is
possible; make plans and budget for it.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is an 8 -- Complete the task at
hand and then venture farther out.
Expand your influence, with help.
Mobilize team efforts. Accept a dif-
ficult assignment. Work interferes with
playtime.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8 -- Plan and prepare. Steer
a steady course, and tie up loose ends.
Someone needs to take responsibility.
Re-commit to a project. Figure out who
does what, by when.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 9 -- Consider a steady
income. Think about a partners good
idea. Let yourself get persuaded. Think
quickly, but move slowly. Confer with
family. One of them will see reason
first.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8 -- Take the practical path,
and the most direct route. Update your
equipment. Discover imaginative ways
to save money. Contemplate possible
changes. Watch for hidden dangers,
as you march boldly. Old stories are a
reliable guide.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Get empowered by
love. Youre even more attractive now.
Its okay to be proud of an accomplish-
ment. Consider long-term implications.
Prepare documents, and await signa-
tures. Theres no magic involved.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Invest in your home.
It doesnt need to be expensive.
Use something youve been saving.
Working at home increases your ben-
efits. Advance despite breakdowns
or distractions. Get your partners
involved.
(c) 2014 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.
If October 6th is Your Birthday...
Youre clear whats important this year.
Connect with friends, groups and
family. The two eclipses this month
(10/8, 10/23) incite changes in partner-
ship and new profitable opportunities.
Intention and action reap cash rewards
through 12/23, when focus shifts to writ-
ing, researching and recording. Spring-
time service leads to personal power.
Share love abundantly and playfully.


UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY
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REDUCED FEE FOR FACULTY & STUDENTS!
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NC Board Certified Attorney Specialist
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APPLY ONLINE by visiting us at:
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419073
Did You Know
You can now place your
DTH classified online at
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Click on Classifieds
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HeelsHousing.com
Library will add additional public art
By Katie Reilly
Managing Editor
Junot Diaz spent a couple
of hours challenging conven-
tion in Memorial Hall on
Saturday night.
The Pulitzer Prize-winning
author of The Brief Wondrous
Life of Oscar Wao and
Drown came to UNC for
Hispanic Heritage Month,
the fifth annual celebration of
Latino culture hosted by the
Carolina Hispanic Association
and the Carolina Latina/o
Collaborative.
Like many of us, Im
still kind of waiting for this
country to start celebrating
Latinos, Diaz said. Its been
a couple hundred years.
Diaz, who was born in the
Dominican Republic and
raised in New Jersey, strode on
stage wearing a sweatshirt and
sneakers, holding an Alpine
Bagel coffee cup, lacking a set
of notes or one of his books.
He opened the talk with a
handful of questions for the
audience.
Its a Saturday night. I
dont know what you guys are
doing here, Diaz said, break-
ing into the frank and honest
tone that characterized his
entire talk. We can talk about
whatever you want to talk
about.
And thats exactly what he
did, avoiding the typical for-
mat of college lectures.
He challenged the audi-
ence to think about race and
diversity, feminism and inter-
sectionality, education and
vocation.
This generation is under
so much pressure to brand
themselves occupationally,
Diaz said. Youre figuring it
out, but youre figuring it out
under the weight of being a
failed whatever.
He spoke about his own
experience with racial and
ethnic identity.
Im often being asked to
chop pieces of myself off to fit
a box, he said.
When it came time for him
to read, he asked the audience
if he could borrow a book,
reading an excerpt from This
is How You Lose Her, a com-
pilation of short stories about
intimacy a topic Diaz said
he is fascinated with.
One thing I appreciated
most was his brutal honesty,
said senior Ben Runkel, who
attended the talk. You dont
see that enough. He didnt
beat around the bush at all.
Amos Fung, co-director
of the Carolina Latina/o
Collaborative, estimated
about 650 people attended
the talk.
This is the largest keynote
speaker yet, Fung said. We
were pleasantly surprised to
see so many students show up
at the door.
The talk was organized by
the CLC in conjunction with
the Carolina Union Activities
Board.
Afterward, people who
had read his books and those
who just admired his stance
on social issues formed a line
leading outside of the Campus
Y to get his signature.
He asks questions. He
COURTESY OF JUSTO MARQUEZ
Pulitzer-Prize winning author Junot Diaz spoke in Memorial Hall
as the keynote speaker for Hispanic Heritage Month on Saturday.
The brief, wondrous visit of Junot Diaz
By Samantha Sabin
Senior Writer
In addition to adding four
limestone animal sculptures
to the front roundabout, the
Chapel Hill Public Library
will also have a multimedia
public art project installed
across from its main circula-
tion desk.
The Chapel Hill Town
Council gave Rhode Island-
based artist Erik Carlson
approval to start his
$130,000 public art piece at
the library Sept. 29.
Carlson is one of two art-
ists installing public art at
the library this year. Carlsons
interactive multimedia piece
will be mounted on a wall in
the library across from the
main circulation desk. The
second artist, sculptor Todd
Frahm, will be installing his
sculptures in the front round-
about. Both projects are set to
be unveiled in late spring.
The two pieces are funded
through the towns Percent
for Art Ordinance, which
requires that one percent
of the towns chosen capital
project funding go toward the
installation and maintenance
of public art each year.
The 2013-14 Chapel Hill
Library Public Art Selection
Committee made up of
members from the town coun-
cil, library staff, Chapel Hill
Public Art Commission and the
Ackland Art Museum chose
Carlson and Frahm from a pool
of 235 artists in November.
We had a very nice cross
section of the different mem-
bers of the town to review
these 235 artists and get us to
where we are now, said Dan
Cefalo, vice chairman of the
public arts commission.
Carlsons piece, Un-Bound,
will consist of a series of four
wedge-shaped panels with
glass convex lenses installed on
the panels to resemble Braille
dots. When a visitor looks
through one of the lenses, he or
she will see a specific message
or image, only visible when the
visitor looks through it.
The images seen through
the lenses will be displayed
through a series of hidden
video monitors, located behind
the panels, that are computer-
controlled to allow for thou-
sands of different images
within the image sequences.
Content for the image and
message clips found in the
piece will be gathered from
library sources and the com-
munity. With this, Carlson will
be looking for submissions in
the next few months for items
like home movies, letters, post-
cards, photos, family histories
and other items that relate spe-
cifically to Chapel Hill.
Basically, Im searching
out what I call Chapel Hills
hidden library, Carlson said.
Jeffrey York, public and
cultural arts administrator for
Chapel Hill, said the commit-
tee is happy there will be two
projects at the library.
Because the library now is
more than just books its a
lot of electronic information
we really like the idea that
this should be a multimedia
project, and it would also deal
with the whole idea of infor-
mation transfer both through
video and some other compo-
nents that the artist plans on
incorporating into it, he said.
It is all about the history
of libraries and information
past, present and future.
Council member Lee
Storrow said the process of
having an artist present his
work for approval isnt an
ideal way to create work.
When you get things that
come in front of the council
like this, sometimes it does feel
like micromanaging, Storrow
said during a Chapel Hill Town
Council meeting.
You cant help but think
that this is not the ideal way
that art is made with multiple
committees reviewing and
providing input and feedback
to artists but there will
probably be citizens who have
feedback for us, and they ll
appreciate this.
arts@dailytarheel.com
doesnt just answer questions.
He asks them too, said Carla
Salas, co-director of the CLC.
He tries to engage people.
As Diaz asked the audience
to challenge preconceived
notions and institutions, he
also made room for his opti-
mism about the future.
What we dont figure out,
you will, he said. And that is
the great hope always.
arts@dailytarheel.com
News Monday, October 6, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 9
Club inspections
Following a July 2013
decision, private clubs no
longer have to be inspected.
See pg. 1 for the story.
Junot Diaz speech
Author Junot Diaz
visited UNC Saturday for a
book reading and Q&A.
See pg. 8 for the story.
The Heel to reopen
The Heel has been shut
down temporarily due to
building code violations. See
pg. 3 for story.
Social media politics
Politicians are turning
to social media to mobilize
the youth vote. See pg. 3 for
the 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.
2014 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
(C)2014 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Club joke teller
6 Misfortunes
10 Motel worker
14 Traditional Pennsylvania
barn raisers
15 Tide type
16 Ploy
17 Letter-routing number
19 Overly submissive
20 Poker hand prize
21 Thai language
22 Baker that nobody
doesnt like
24 __ cum laude
26 Beer barrel
27 Can in an Andy Warhol
painting
32 __ New Guinea
33 Hairy Addams cousin
34 Norwegian capital
36 Fancy flower vase
37 Hat for a Western hero
41 Former Mideast
alliance: Abbr.
42 Emily Dickinson, e.g.
44 Apt name for a
painter
45 How the elated
walk
47 World Series
setting
51 2001 computer
52 Mars neighbor
53 Traveled around
52-Across, say
57 Mates for mas
58 Chicken __ king
61 Fight-or-flight
emotion
62 California Gold
Rush figure
65 Fly like a butterfly
66 Reverse
67 Early morning hr.
68 Heavy drinkers
69 Jump
70 Yellowish-brown
DOWN
1 Dogpatch creator Al
2 Melville novel
3 Light fog
4 Suffix with Marx
5 Fried Taco Bell
offerings
6 It may be gross or net
7 MGM mascot
8 Boys
9 Has a talk with
10 Nearsighted toon
11 The Mammoth
Hunters author Jean
12 Got it
13 Fake on the ice
18 Rams offspring
23 Hi-__ monitor
24 Church-owned Texas
sch.
25 Not very much
27 Chocolate substitute
28 Sleep disorder
29 Ranks for Columbo and
Kojak: Abbr.
30 Customary
31 Tartan pattern
32 Coyotes offspring
35 Hockey legend Bobby
38 Enough food for a feast
39 Mesozoic or Paleozoic
40 Thats a fact rebuttal
43 Saloon souvenirs
46 Old Testament book
before Esth.
48 Break bread
49 Computer on an airplane
tray table
50 Unravel at the edge, as
threads
53 Switch positions
54 Move, in real estate
lingo
55 Switch partner
56 Fully cooked
58 All over again
59 Low in fat
60 Soldiers group, a
member of which might
be stationed at the start
of 17-, 27-, 47- or
62-Across
63 Old vitamin bottle no.
64 Once __ while
UNC alumnus leading the
charge for education reform
By Katie Kilmartin
Staff Writer
After coming from an
underperforming high school
on the outskirts of Los Angeles,
UNC alumnus Preston Smith
is determined to give every stu-
dent a chance for a top-notch
education, regardless of where
they grew up.
I dont want outcomes
determined by zip codes, he
said. I want everybody to
have a fair shot.
Smith, the co-founder and
CEO of the public elemen-
tary charter school system
Rocketship Education, began
his educational mission when
he worked for Teach For
America after graduation.
Since its inception in 2006,
Rocketship has opened 11
public elementary charter
schools, nine of which serve
low-income students in the
San Jose, Calif., area. Another
school in Washington D.C.
is set to open in 2015 and 16
more are expected in the next
several years.
For most of the day, students
at Rocketship schools learn in
a traditional classroom. During
the last two hours, students go
to a computer lab, which uses a
blended learning technique.
The lab consists of online
lessons to enhance students
understanding of subjects.
Teachers can also assign prac-
tice problems that match each
students level.
Blended learning is not
just putting computers in a
classroom, but the purpose-
ful integration of technology
into curriculum instruction,
Smith said.
The approach allows stu-
dents to have lessons catered
to their individual needs,
UNC education professor
Keith Sawyer said.
The Rocketship model is
doing a lot of things right,
Sawyer said. I think one of the
potentials of this model is the
opportunity for personalized
learning where each learner
learns at a different pace.
Student Body President
Andrew Powell said the
method can help reduce the
economic achievement gap.
Through using these tech-
niques, you place more empha-
sis on individual and personal-
ized education, and you give
every student an equal oppor-
tunity to succeed, he said.
Smith returned to California
in 2001 when TFA placed
him in San Jose. He taught
first grade for three years
before he was recruited to
be the principal of another
local school, Learning in an
Urban Community with High
Achievement, despite a lack of
administrative experience.
Smith said he left LUCHA
due to differences with the
superintendent and considered
leaving education altogether.
But the same community
group who wanted him to be
principal of LUCHA told him
about John Danner, a former
software engineer who wanted
to open a charter school.
They opened their first
school, Rocketship Mateo
Sheedy Elementary School,
with 160 students in a church.
Our presence has helped
more than just Rocketship
kids, he said. It has really
helped transform a commu-
nity.
Smith hopes that in the
future, students wont allow
their neighborhood determine
the quality of their education.
If every kid regardless of
zip code and regardless of
demographics could attend
a great school, that would be
beautiful.
university@dailytarheel.com
Q&A with Census analyst Kurt Bauman
After growing by 3.2 million
between 2006 and 2011, college
enrollment in the United States
has declined for the past two
years, according to data from
the U.S. Census Bureau.
Specific minority groups,
including Hispanics, blacks
and Asians, also experienced
an increase in enrollment
between 2007 and 2012, but
minority enrollment did not
increase in the 2012-13 year.
Two-year institutions have
been most affected by this
decline, but four-year colleges
and graduate schools have
also been affected.
Staff writer Elizabeth
Matulis spoke with Kurt
Bauman, an analyst at the U.S.
Census Bureau, about the high-
er education enrollment decline
and the effects of the economic
recession on enrollment.
The Daily Tar Heel: What do
you think about the drop in
college enrollment?
Kurt Bauman: Our role is
to produce basic numbers
people can use, interpret and
work with. We have not seen
a large drop like this.
DTH: Why did so many
people enroll in college from
2006 to 2011?
KB: There was research
done by people at the Federal
Reserve Board in Chicago.
They researched how business
cycles affect college enroll-
ment, and they saw a strong
correlation between the two.
There are two differ-
ent effects of the recession.
When the economy gets bad,
people cannot find jobs. If
they cannot find a job, they
go back to school because of
the lack of good employment
activities. Other people find
work. Some people do not go
back to school if things are
so bad.
We saw people doing both
things. At least in theory, the
economic downturn could
have increased or decreased
college enrollment. With the
researchers at Federal Reserve
Board of Chicago, the effects
of recession were mostly seen
to increase enrollment.
DTH: Then is the economic
recovery a reason for the
enrollment drop?
KB: If the recession is what
led to an increase, at the
end of the recession, when
the economy is improving,
it would have the opposite
effect putting people in
jobs and not putting people
in college. Based on research
I have read, it seems to be a
consistent story with what I
am reading.
DTH: Have public univer-
sities had a larger decline
in enrollment than private
schools?
KB: I didnt see anything
strong in that pattern. If I
recall correctly, they are about
the same; there is not any-
thing going on in one section
more than the other. Some
other sources have slightly
different results.
DTH: Where is the decline
in enrollment happening?
KB: It seems to have
impacted all levels of school.
Four-year colleges, two-year
schools and even graduate
schools to some degree. The
largest changes were in two-
year schools; there was a
much larger decrease relative
to enrollment.
The research the Federal
Reserve Board of Chicago did
show that two-year schools
were more affected by eco-
nomic trends.
DTH: What are other inter-
esting trends?
KB: An interesting sidelight
to this is that a huge growth
has taken place in Hispanic
enrollment in colleges in the
past five to 10 years. (The
years) 2007 to 2012 saw an
increase by one million of the
number of Hispanic students
enrolled in college.
It seems to have leveled
off this year. The fast growth
in Hispanic enrollment is an
important phenomenon that
people have not noticed as
much.
DTH: Have other minority
groups seen similar increases?
KB: There were also large
increases in the number
of students in other racial
groups enrolled in college.
African-Americans student
enrollment increased by half
a million, and Asians enroll-
ment increased by 300,000
(over 2007 to 2012).
state@dailytarheel.com
Kurt
Bauman is
an analyst
at the U.S.
Census
Bureau and
an expert on
enrollment.
BUY A COUCH FIND A JOB DITCH YOUR ROOMMATE
SELL YOUR CAR FIND A SITTER VOLUNTEER
www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds
were here for you. all day. every day
UNC Mens Basketball Team UNC Mens Basketball Team
OPEN JV TRYOUTS! OPEN JV TRYOUTS!
Students interested in trying
out for the Junior Varsity
Mens Basketball Team
Oct. 13 & 14
7-8:30 PM
Dean Smith Center
Every full-time student interested must
be in attendance. If trying out, please
come to the Basketball office
before 10/13 to sign up.
Please enter the Smith Center at
Entrance A and sit in section 121.
holding
Contact head trainer Doug Halverson at
halverso@email.unc.edu with any questions.
All tryout participants must be medically cleared.
LIVE AT UNCS MEMORIAL HALL
In the universe of jazz, there is no equal to the Jazz
at Lincoln Center Orchestra (JLCO) led by Wynton
Marsalis. The multi-Grammy-winning horn player and
extraordinarily talented musicians will demonstrate why
jazz is a metaphor for democracy with a song list that
includes originals plus classic masterworks from Mingus,
Coltrane and Duke Ellington.
OCTOBER at : PM
By Jeremy Vernon
Staff Writer
Preston Hudak said it. Brett Daniels
said it. Even Jackson Bellenkes said it.
All three freshmen, new additions to
the North Carolina baseball team, had
the same thing on their minds after this
weekends three-game start to the Tar
Heels intrasquad Fall World Series.
Asked of their expectations for the
spring after the Blue side swept the three
games against Navy, 7-3, 9-2 and 7-1, all
three said one word. The one word that
perks up the ears of every college baseball
player, coach and fan.
Omaha.
The tone wasnt sarcastic. Each one of
them said it with a confidence that showed
they truly believed it that this years
squad can return to a winning form that at
times escaped them last season.
The experience this fall has been awe-
some, said Hudak, a second baseman
from Rock Hill, S.C.
The chemistry between all the guys is
already good. I think we have a chance to
do something special this year.
Hudak was the lone bright spot for Navy
on Friday night. After striking out in his
first at-bat, the freshman hit an RBI triple
off the top of the right field wall to score
Logan Warmoth. Hudak finished the series
2-for-11 with one RBI and one run scored.
Saturdays action ended much like
Fridays, as the Blue squad dismantled
Navy en route to a 9-2 win. And like Friday,
freshman players told the story of the game
namely three freshman pitchers.
For Blue, the righty Daniels tossed the
winning game, only giving up two runs on
five hits in six innings.
On the other side, it was a tale of two
vastly different performances.
Lefty Hunter Williams started for
Navy, but was quickly relieved after two
errors led to six unearned runs.
I thought Brett threw exceptionally
well, but with Hunter, the wheels just
came off, said Coach Mike Fox.
If I had to guess, its probably some-
thing he has never experienced before. He
just started rushing, and youve got to be
able to slow yourself down when things
get faster and faster.
Williams was relieved by fellow fresh-
man Bellenkes, who shined in his 3.1
innings of work. Bellenkes gave up one run
but didnt allow a hit, the lone run coming
off of a Skye Bolt sacrifice fly in the fifth.
Sunday offered more of the same, with
a duel between freshmen pitchers Jason
Morgan and Hansen Butler taking center
stage. Morgan came out on top, allowing
a mere run in six innings.
Butler had his fair share of success
as well in a losing effort, recording six
strikeouts in four innings.
The Tar Heels have gained a lot of new
pieces this year, but senior Benton Moss
said he isnt worried about a lack of expe-
rience heading forward.
The new players have fit in really well,
and weve just tried to welcome them and
have tried to make them feel at home, he
said.
Because in June, you want the guy
beside you to be pulling for you as hard
as he can, even if hes not in the starting
lineup.
sports@dailytarheel.com
Monday, October 6, 2014
SportsMonday
dailytarheel.com The Daily Tar Heel 10
SCOREBOARD
VOLLEYBALL: UNC 3, CLEMSON 0
FIELD HOCKEY: VIRGINIA 2 , UNC 1
WOMENS SOCCER: UNC 3, VIRGINIA TECH 2
SOFTBALL: UNC-G 9, UNC-CH 7
FOLLOW US ON TWITTER: @DTHSports
MENS SOCCER: NORTH CAROLINA 3, CLEMSON 2
THREE RUNNING
BACKS, 15 YARDS
DTH/MATT RENN
UNCs starting quarterback Marquise Williams looks to make a pass during Saturdays 34-17 loss against the Virginia Tech Hokies.
UNCs running game was essentially absent Saturday
Marcus Paige still the go-to man
DTH ONLINE: Head to
dailytarheel.com to read
about a special moment for
Sylvia Hatchell.
By Aaron Dodson
Senior Writer
Isaiah Hicks had a painful
moment of deja vu at the end of
the North Carolina mens basket-
ball teams Late Night With Roy
intrasquad scrimmage Friday.
With about 20 seconds left,
Hicks Blue team held on to a one-
point lead. The White team had
possession of the ball.
Hicks knew whod attempt the
game-winner for the White team.
Giving junior point guard
Marcus Paige the ball in crunch
time has been a habit in pick-up,
scrimmages, games, whenever.
Its become an instinct, even for
sophomore guard Stilman White,
who has just started playing with
Paige. White missed the last two
seasons while away on a Mormon
mission.
Late Night With Roy marked
his first time playing with Paige in
front of the Smith Center crowd.
White penetrated the middle of the
floor, the clock ticking down with
his team trailing the Blue squad,
41-40. As the defense collapsed on
White, he kicked the ball out to a
wide-open Paige, who set his feet
and elevated for a 3-pointer.
I thought he was going to
make it, Hicks said. He always
hits the last shot.
Paige missed, though, and the
White team lost 41-40. This time,
he couldnt finish the night with a
signature timely basket.
But Paiges performance in the
scrimmage resembled many of
his outings from his sophomore
season. The point guard got off to
a slow start, as the last player of
the White teams starting five to
score, but finished strong to lead
his squad with 10 points.
If anything has remained the
same since the 2013-14 season,
during which Paige led UNC with
17.5 points a game and was named
a second-team All-American, its
that the junior point guard is still
UNCs unquestionable leader.
But for host and former UNC
basketball player Bobby Frasor,
UNCs reliance on Paige to score is
one of the teams biggest concerns.
Will someone else besides
Marcus step up to knock down
shots? Frasor said.
As a sophomore, Paige propelled
UNC from deep, netting a team-
best 86 3-pointers in 34 games.
On Friday, six different players
made a 3-point shot, displaying
DTH/CHRIS CONWAY
Junior point guard Marcus Paige led the white team with 10 points.
Baseball
opens
Fall World
Series play
BASEBALL: BLUE TEAM
LEADS THE SERIES 3-0
The baseball team played in
three intrasquad scrimmages.
By Jake Barry
Staff Writer
The readiness of substitutes, like junior
defender Walker Hume, to make an immediate
impact proved to be the difference for the North
Carolina mens soccer team Friday night.
Carlos (Somoano) told us that he had 18
players that were going to have an impact on
the game, Hume said. So when he called my
name, I was ready to play.
Filling in for injured junior Jonathan
Campbell, Hume was brilliant throughout the
match for the Tar Heels (6-4-0, 2-2-0 ACC)
against Clemson (5-5-0, 2-2-0 ACC) in a 3-2
double-overtime victory at Fetzer Field.
Hume was involved in two of UNCs three
goals, assisting the first one and scoring the sec-
ond which sent the game into the first over-
time period. His play proved pivotal as Clemson
took a 2-0 lead in the games first 35 minutes.
Diego Campos opened the scoring in
the 22nd minute as he knocked in an Ara
Amirkhanian cross. But just as it appeared UNC
would equalize, Clemsons Austen Burnikel capi-
talized on a defensive lapse and put a breakaway
finish past keeper Brendan Moore giving the
Tigers a 2-0 lead late in the first half despite
being significantly outshot and out-possessed.
UNCs mistakes forced Somoano to make tac-
tical changes, giving new players, such as Hume,
a chance to contribute.
Two minutes before halftime, Somoanos
decisions paid off, as Hume and fellow sub Zach
Wright combined for Wrights first career goal.
The second half was all UNC, as Clemson was
forced to withstand a flurry of strikes on target.
A physical contest throughout, the game
became chippy in the 66th minute as UNCs
Omar Holness and Clemsons Phanuel Kavita
drew double yellow cards for a shoving match
near the sideline. Holness fire set the tone, as
UNC played with passion throughout the final
third of the contest.
Somoanos substitutes again paid off in the
78th minute, as Humes left-footed strike tied the
contest at two apiece sending it into overtime.
After a scoreless first period in overtime,
Somoanos insertion of freshman defender
David October was the spark his squad needed.
Two minutes into the second overtime,
Octobers left-side run resulted in a rash chal-
lenge by a defender, for a UNC penalty kick.
In a volatile matchup, the Tar Heels knew
they could count on the calmness of junior
midfielder Raby George to step up and take the
penalty. Their belief in George was rewarded, as
he stepped up and beat the keeper with a classy
penalty to snap the teams three-game skid.
George credited his teammates for bringing
UNC back after facing a two-goal deficit.
Getting the PK, fighting hard to come back
from 0-2 to 2-2, that was the hard part, George
said. I just had to step up and punch it in.
The spark provided by substitutes could be
the missing piece of the puzzle as UNC looks to
regain its early season form.
We havent been a big substituting team
in the past, Somoano said. But if youve got
them, youve got to utilize your strengths.
sports@dailytarheel.com
FOOTBALL: VIRGINIA TECH 34, NORTH CAROLINA 17
Subs step up in double overtime win
By Robbie Harms
Senior Writer
Elijah Hood, a small streak of dried bright
red blood under his right knee, fiddled with a
card in his wallet, searching for answers in the
Kenan Memorial Stadium media room.
He pulled the card out of a flap, slid it back in.
Out, in.
We shot ourselves in the foot a lot, said
the soft-spoken freshman running back after
North Carolinas 34-17 loss to Virginia Tech on
Saturday at Kenan Stadium. That just kind of
limited what we could do offensively.
Out, in.
It starts with everybody, Hood said. We all
have to be sound, get the count. Just have solid
fundamentals and then do your job. Everybodys
got to play their part. Whenever we get a false
start or something like that, it hurts the drive.
Out, in.
The Tar Heels (2-3, 0-2 ACC) were plagued
by offensive inelegance (10 penalties) once again,
but here is something perhaps more troubling:
running backs Hood, T.J. Logan and Romar
Morris combined for 15 yards on nine carries.
Quarterback Marquise Williams? 94 on 19.
There was Williams, 6-foot-2 and 220
pounds, scurrying for 23 yards through the core
of the Hokies defense on UNCs second drive.
There he was again, late in the fourth quarter
on third-and-2, cutting right for 22 yards on
the drive that would pull the Tar Heels within
10 points and provide them some semblance of
hope before Ryan Switzers muffed punt sealed
their third straight double-digit loss.
Among the trio of tailbacks, the longest run
was five yards. Hood, who had three carries for
four yards and a one-yard touchdown, explained.
Its pretty tough when you dont get a lot of
carries to get a good rhythm, he said. That was
just part of, again, our fundamentals. We were
giving ourselves a lot of long field to get first
downs. When it happens, it just makes it hard
for our running backs to run the ball.
And there are other reasons for the disparity
between the running backs and Williams.
Like the Hokies defensive schemes.
We expected them to run some bear
defense against us, and they did in some situa-
tions, Coach Larry Fedora said after the game.
We knew that would take some of the run-
ning game away.
Or giving up seven points within 44 seconds.
We didnt really get a chance to run as
many of our run plays as we had, right guard
Landon Turner said, because we didnt start
fast enough this week.
Or just Williams himself.
His plays work. He gets a lot of wide open
runs, Hood said. Hes a strong, physical runner.
Hes also a threat to pass the ball, so the defense
is maybe (like), Its just a fake! and then theyre
hesitant and he can get a quick step on them.
Out, in.
Hood was still fiddling with the card when
this question was asked: How much of the dif-
ference was because of Virginia Tech, and how
much was because of North Carolina?
I really dont know.
sports@dailytarheel.com
some unfamiliar scoring versatility.
Thats what we were lacking
last year, Hicks said. Hopefully,
we dont have to rely on Marcus all
the time.
Spreading the scoring wealth
may be in store this season for
a UNC team that returns start-
ing experience, and welcomes a
talented trio of freshmen led by
forward Justin Jackson, who led
all scorers with 17 points.
Yet, Hicks anticipates one thing
to remain the same.
The game-winning shot duties
are, for now, left up to one player
only. When in doubt, UNC gives
the ball to Paige.
Its kind of expected, Hicks said.
sports@dailytarheel.com

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