Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 8

COUNCILMAN CHARGED WITH DWI PG.

3
Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

dailytarheel.com

Volume 123, Issue 61

Suit accuses
Duke, UNC
of antitrust
violation

Thursday, August 27, 2015

MORE ROOM TO GROW

The plaintiff alleges a policy


preventing faculty poaching
hurt wages and career goals.
By Marisa Bakker
Senior Writer

While UNC-Chapel Hill and Duke


University might be in fierce competition, medical school administrators
have declared a truce but one faculty
member has called foul.
Dr. Danielle Seaman, assistant
professor at Duke School of Medicine,
filed a class-action lawsuit this summer
against Duke, Duke University Health
System and Dr. William Roper, dean of
UNC School of Medicine, for violating
antitrust laws.
UNC, UNC School of Medicine and
UNC Health are included in the complaint as unnamed co-conspirators,
meaning they are not yet named as
defendants in the case. But because
of the legal placeholder, additional
defendants could be added as the case
progresses.
The policy in question in the alleged
violation is a no-hire agreement
between the deans of Duke and UNCs
medical schools meant to prevent faculty poaching. According to her complaint, Seaman was denied a teaching
position at UNC School of Medicine,
despite her qualifications.
The suit accuses the medical schools
of suppressing healthy competition

SEE POACHING, PAGE 7

DTH/KASIA JORDAN

ancy Easterling, the director of education for the North Carolina Botanical Garden, walks through the garden on
Monday afternoon. Jim and Delight Allen pledged an $8 million gift to the garden during the 2015 fundraising year,
which helped the garden exceed its fundraising goals by 1,200 percent. See page 3 for the full story.

A year later, more communication needed for sexual assault policy


Important terms addressed in the policy:

zz
z
Consent

A verbal, conscious and voluntary yes is required


under the policy to engage in sexual activity.

z
z

DTH GRAPHICS/TYLER VAHAN, JOSE VALLE

By Acy Jackson

Incapacitation

In a situation where either party is incapacitated,


consent for sexual activity cannot be given.

Assistant University Editor

Intoxication

Stalking

Intoxicated persons can give consent, but the line


dividing intoxication and incapacitation is undefined.

Conduct that causes an individual to experience serious


fear for ones safety, like repeated, unwanted attention.

Developments at UNC and in the nation since the policy change

Compiled by
Bradley Saacks

Since Aug. 28, 2014, there has been groundbreaking legislation, a sexual assault documentary and changes in UNCs Title IX office
Feb. 27, 2015
Dec. 1, 2014
Howard Kallem leaves his post as
UNCs Title IX coordinator to take a
similar position at Duke University.
Kallem, a former attorney for the
U.S. Office of Civil Rights, stayed in
Chapel Hill for less than a year.

Sept. 28, 2014


California becomes the first
state to pass legislation requiring
affirmative consent a verbal, voluntary and conscious yes for
all colleges in the state, including
private and community schools.

2014

September

Dec. 3, 2014

The Hunting Ground, a documentary about sexual assault on


campus created by UNC alumnae
Andrea Pino and Annie Clark, premieres. The movie references several colleges, including UNC, and
fraternities across the country.

July 7, 2015
New York is the second state
to pass affirmative consent laws
for its colleges. Unlike California,
the laws only apply to State
University of New York schools.

Katie Nolan, a former


Title IX coordinator at the
University of Alabama, is
announced as Kallems
interim replacement. Nolan
is still in the position more
than 8 months later.

2015

November

January

Students said they still


arent sure about details
of the changed policy.

March

May

July

When your cause is noble, you shall never know fear.


JUSTIN K. MCFARLANE BEAU

After a year with the new sexual


assault policy, students and administrators are still looking for the right
ways to explain and punish sexual
assault.
The new policy, released Aug. 28,
2014, redefined stalking and consent
for sexual activity, explained the
resources available for survivors and
changed the process for reporting
sexual assault.
Assistant Vice Chancellor for
Student Affairs Christi Hurt led the
sexual assault task force that spent 18
months creating the new policy. One
major discussion was where the line
should be for giving consent while
intoxicated.
The EMS person said, Think
about whether or not you would be
comfortable if your friend was walking up a flight of shaky stairs or leaning across a balcony. Think about
the way youre pulling your friends
back in those sorts of situations, and
encourage students to think through
that same analysis around whether
or not someone can give consent,
Hurt said.
Vice Chancellor for Student
Affairs Winston Crisp said the work
continues.
Were only a year in, and its certainly a work in progress, and we
are by no means finished. Even as

SEE SEXUAL ASSAULT, PAGE 7

News

Thursday, August 27, 2015

The best of online

The Daily Tar Heel


www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893

MORE TO SEE ONLINE:

122 years of editorial freedom


PAIGE LADISIC
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

FOOTBALL

EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

MARY TYLER MARCH


MANAGING EDITOR

MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KELSEY WEEKMAN
ONLINE MANAGING EDITOR

Two Faced: Drake v. Serena

ONLINE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

TYLER VAHAN
VISUAL MANAGING EDITOR
VISUALS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

BRADLEY SAACKS
ENTERPRISE DIRECTOR

ENTERPRISE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

SAMANTHA SABIN
DIRECTOR OF INVESTIGATIONS
SPECIAL.PROJECTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

DANNY NETT
COMMUNITY MANAGER

COMMUNITY.MANAGER@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JANE WESTER
UNIVERSITY EDITOR

UNIVERSITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KERRY LENGYEL
CITY EDITOR

CITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

HAYLEY FOWLER
STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
STATE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

SARAH VASSELLO
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
ARTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

PAT JAMES
SPORTS EDITOR

SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JOSE VALLE
DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
DESIGN@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KATIE WILLIAMS
PHOTO EDITOR

PHOTO@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

ALISON KRUG, DREW GOINS


COPY CHIEFS
COPY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

TIPS
Contact Managing Editor
Mary Tyler March at
managing.editor@dailytarheel.com
with tips, suggestions or
corrections.

CompSci@Carolina is one of the highest paid majors on campus

Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St.


Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Paige Ladisic, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086
Advertising & Business, 962-1163
News, Features, Sports, 962-0245
Distribution, 962-4115
One copy per person;
additional copies may be purchased
at The Daily Tar Heel for $0.25 each.
Please report suspicious activity at
our distribution racks by emailing
dth@dailytarheel.com
2015 DTH Media Corp.
All rights reserved

The Daily Tar Heel

In this installment of
Two Faced, Assistant Arts
& Entertainment editor
Ryan Schocket and Arts &
Entertainment editor Sarah
Vassello discuss the emerging
relationship of Drake and
Serena Williams.

Sarah: Hes been flirting


with her on Twitter for four
years saying, I cannot wait
to put it on you and make you
sweat..........during our match
this weekend, all the way
back in 2011.
He was seen at Wimbledon
this past month, where
Serena won her sixth title.
According to Alice Wilder,

columnist and one half of the


podcast talent on Having it
All, Drake and Serena dated
once years ago, but it ended
when he cheated on her.

Ryan: In the world of blog


shit-talking, I am Drake, and
Sarah Vassello is Meek Mill.
This week, were arguing
over whether rapper Drake
and tennis beast Serena
Williams should be together.
The two were recently
caught swapping spit by
TMZ.
READ THE REST:
Go to www.dailytarheel.com/blog/medium for more.

Check out The Daily Tar


Heels 2015-16 Football
Preview, in boxes on Friday.
We break down UNCs
upcoming season, how
each position on the team
fares and what makes some
of the teams most and least
well-known players tick.
But even better on
Friday, youll find exclusive
coverage of all of UNCs
opponents online at dailytarheel.com.

NEWSLETTER

Dont miss anything


in UNC athletics with our
newsletter, Sports At a
Glance. Well deliver sports
news directly to your mailbox on Monday and Friday
mornings. To sign up, head
to bit.ly/1hIJpy3.

TODAY

Stranger Danger: Join DSI Comedy Theater for an improv show

centered on your bad dating


experiences from the people
involved to the motivations behind what happened. This event
is free and open to the public.
Time: 10 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.
Location: DSI Comedy Theater

theme from the DTHs coverage, but the first forum will be
an opportunity to ask the staff
questions and let us know what
needs to be covered.
Time: 5 p.m.
Location: 151 E. Rosemary St.

FRIDAY

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.

DTH Public Forum: In the first


of a monthly series in public
forums, meet The Daily Tar Heels
desk editors, reporters and
editorial board. Future events
will be a panel discussion with a

CORRECTIONS
Due to an editing error, Tuesdays front page story Proposed sales tax bill could unite urban,
rural counties in N.C. misrepresented the story in the headline. The headline should read Proposed
sales tax bill could divide urban, rural counties in N.C.
Due to a reporting error, Tuesdays story Carrboro residents split over proposed shopping center misrepresented the date of the shopping centers approval. The plans for the center were approved on June 9.
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 on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections
printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Mary Tyler at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
Like: facebook.com/dailytarheel

Follow: @dailytarheel on Twitter

Staff writer Wei Zhou on


the installation of UNCs
first interactive classroom:
Greenlaw 101 was
renovated to become the
Universitys first interactive
lecture hall.
Moveable tables and
chairs replaced the classrooms fixed stadium seating to help students interact with instructors. Course
contents will be digitally
shown on screens hanging
along the walls.
The completed classroom, used for the first time
this semester, cost an estimated $314,886.
For the rest of the story,
head to dailytarheel.com.

STATE BRIEFS
Burger King says its
time to #SettleTheBeef
Burger King asked longtime rival McDonalds to
#SettleTheBeef Wednesday
for the International Day of
Peace, using a culinary masterpiece the McWhopper.
They made the formal proposal via Twitter, titling it
An Open Letter from Burger
King to McDonalds.
But McDonalds responded
with limited enthusiasm on
Facebook: Lets acknowledge that between us there
is simply a friendly business
competition and certainly not
the unequaled circumstances
of the real pain and suffering
of war. Well be in touch.
Steve, the signee of the
response, also made sure to
comment on any future lines
of communication between the
fast food chains: P.S. A simple
phone call will do next time.
staff reports

POLICE LOG

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
CUAB Presents Open House
2.0: If youre interested in learning more about the Carolina
Union Activities Board, come
meet some of the board members at their second open house
tonight. See how you can get
involved on campus. Food will be
provided.
Time: 7 p.m.
Location: Student Union 2519

CLASSROOMS

inBRIEF

Follow: dailytarheel on Instagram

Someone pickpocketed
at 211 Pinegate Circle at midnight Monday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person took a wallet
containing $800 in cash from
someone, reports state.
Someone damaged
property on the 200 block of
Pinegate Circle at 3:26 a.m.
Tuesday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
The person damaged food
bowls valued at $50. Police
also seized narcotics, reports
state.
Someone possessed marijuana at 1100 N.C. Highway
54 at 10:42 a.m. Tuesday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
Someone stole razors from
Walgreens at 1106 Environ
Way between 9:28 p.m. and
9:33 p.m. Tuesday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole four

razors, valued at $100 total,


and walked out of the store.
The razors were stuffed in
the persons pants, reports
state.
Someone broke into a
house on the 300 block of
Broad Street in Carrboro
between 6 p.m. Monday and
12:36 a.m. Tuesday, according
to Carrboro police reports.
The person damaged a
screen window and stole bicycles valued at $400, reports
state.
Someones dogs were
barking loudly on the 300
block of Hillsborough Road
in Carrboro at 9 a.m. Sunday,
according to Carrboro police
reports.
The dogs were in the backyard when the officer arrived.
The officer attempted to contact the owner and explained
the towns noise ordinance
to the complainant, reports
state.

WHAT
CANT YOU
DO WITH A
CS DEGREE?
/HWXVNQRZZKHQ\RXQGRXW

0HDQZKLOHFRPHQGRXWZKDW\RXcan do
with a degree in computer science at the

Computer Science
8QGHUJUDGXDWH
Open House
7KXUVGD\$XJXVWWK
5:00 PM
Sitterson Hall 014
Free pizza provided.
$OOVWXGHQWVZHOFRPH
SPONSORED BY

facebook.com/unccompsci

twitter.com/unccs

COURTESY OF ROB HOLLIDAY


Chancellor Carol Folt talks with renowned physicist Stephen Hawking. Folt introduced Stephen
Hawking at the The Hawking Radiation Conference in Stockholm, Sweden.

UNC professor, Hawking in Sweden


By Jane Wester
University Editor

Chancellor Carol Folt, along


with other administrators
and astrophysics professors,
spent the week in Stockholm,
Sweden at the Hawking
Radiation Conference.
Celebrated astrophysicist Stephen Hawking gave
a lecture the topic was
Quantum Black Holes,
naturally at Mondays
conference. Folt delivered
opening remarks before
Hawkings speech, according
to an announcement from
UNC Global.
The conference was the
brainchild of Laura MersiniHoughton, a professor in
the Department of Physics
and Astronomy, department
chairman Chris Clemens said.
Mersini-Houghton ...
spends her summers in
Cambridge, studying cosmology in the same group that
Stephen Hawking works in,
Clemens said.
Black holes are a main
point of discussion at the conference, which runs through
Saturday, Clemens said.
Mersini-Houghton, who is
still in Stockholm and could

not be reached for comment,


wrote a controversial paper
on the subject in 2014.
In physics, generally
what one does is if theres a
disagreement, you get everyone in the room and you
have a workshop and try to
work out whats really going
on, he said.
Mersini-Houghton started
planning the conference
in May, Clemens said. He
estimated she has known
Hawking for at least five years.
She was compelling
enough in her argument for
such a conference to get all
the right people to attend
and was able to get Stephen
Hawking, her friend, to speak
publicly, which he doesnt do
that often, he said.
Folt said she appreciated
Hawkings listening skills and
sense of humor.
I was with him for nearly
a day and was deeply moved
and impressed by the way he
engaged with people, from
individuals to crowds of fans,
Folt wrote in an email from
Stockholm.
Even after a busy afternoon, he went to the opera
and then dinner and then
back to his room to continue

working on his lecture.


Folt presented Hawking
with a scarf designed by
Alexander Julian in Glen
Carolina plaid.
It is made of spun bamboo, a new environmentally
friendly luxury yarn that is
soft, cool to the touch and
warm when its cool, she said.
Folt met another famous
physicist, Peter Higgs, in
March when she gave him an
honorary degree.
Now that shes added
Hawking to her list, the
chancellor and former
Dartmouth College biology
professor said shes pretty
sure she has reached the
pinnacle of meeting astrophysicists.
Clemens said his department will enjoy the reflected
glory from MersiniHoughtons work in organizing the conference.
The physics department at
UNC is undergoing a renewal
in basic physics research, he
said.
Weve been hiring people
who work on fundamental
questions like the ones going
on at this conference.
@janewester
university@dailytarheel.com

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Drennon aims high with low number


Dajaun Drennon
brings speed and
nesse to game
By Ben Coley
Senior Writer

Sophomore defensive end Dajaun Drennon


is easy to spot during a football game. And
thats not because hes 6-foot-4-inches, 255
pounds and has shoulder-length dreadlocks.
While most defensive linemen have jersey numbers in the 70s or 90s, Drennon has
settled for No. 17 a number most associated
with skill players such as quarterbacks, running backs and wide receivers.
Im skinny, so I dont look like a D-lineman
anyway, Drennon said jokingly. I wanted
number eight, which I had in high school, but
Coach (Larry) Fedora said no one could have
single-digit numbers on the defensive line. So
I just tried to pick the lowest number possible
that was still available.
Drennon said he plays with speed and
finesse two qualities often associated with
a skill position. In 2014, he used his speed to
notch 36 tackles, 5.5 tackles for loss and two
sacks, starting all 13 games in the process.
Defensive line coach Tray Scott said he has
been impressed with Drennons attention to
detail when learning fundamentals, such as
being physical at the point of attack or collapsing the pocket.
But being an old-fashioned coach, Scott finds
Drennons choice of jersey particularly odd.
These days, these kids want to wear single
digits. They want to be pretty boys, Scott
chuckled. I love for them to play in big linemen numbers like 72 or 75.
In the preseason, Drennon has been competing for a starting spot with redshirt junior
defensive end Junior Gnonkonde. Scott said
that the competition was close and that theyve
kept pressure on each other.

DTH/TYLER VAHAN
Sophomore defensive end Dajaun Drennon (17) feels more comfortable on the field this year after starting each of the 13 games in the 2014 season.

He shows up every day, so it makes me


practice harder, Gnonkonde said. I cant let
myself down, and he cant either. We both have
speed, and we both know the game.
Even though speed and agility are his
strengths, Drennon has worked to become more
physical. Usually he comes off the ball using his
shoulder, but now he has worked on using his
hands and extending his arms to rebuff blockers.
The sophomore lineman added that starting
every game in 2014 helped with learning tech-

nical adjustments and building his confidence.


As a younger guy, sometimes you feel like
youre a liability, he said. But now with my
experience, I feel more comfortable on the field.
For the 2015 season, Drennon expects to
improve his pass-rushing abilities, which
include doubling his tackles for loss from a
season ago and reaching double-digit sacks.
But even though he plans to be more physical,
Drennon will still swiftly evade the opposition.
He has his number to live up to, after all.

DTH TOMORROW: The Daily Tar


Heels football preview will be inserted in
Fridays paper. You can find more coverage
at dailytarheel.com.
He might be big, but he plays like a skill
guy and has a lot of speed, Gnonkonde said.
I think your number is the way you define
yourself.
sports@dailytarheel.com

Verizon drops call on two-year contracts


Customers will pay
more upfront costs
for new phones.
By Audrey Wells
Staff Writer

Heeding the call of competitors, Verizon Wireless


eliminated two-year contracts
from its business model
ending years of subsidized
cellphone plans.
Verizons decision is similar to T-Mobiles contractual
changes in 2013.

A while back, they eliminated subscriptions and


contract limitations, said
Noel Greis, co-director of
the Center for Logistics and
Enterprise Development
at UNCs Kenan-Flagler
Business School. In fact, I
was one of the people who
switched from Verizon to
T-Mobile because of that.
Despite the increase in
upfront cost, she said additional charges were being
incorporated in customers
contracts.
It wasnt like Verizon was
giving away the iPhone for

free, Greis said.


David Ardia, an assistant
professor at the UNC School
of Law, said the cost of phones
without contracts might be
cheaper in the long run.
Studies have shown that
American consumers pay
more over the life of the
contract for the cost of the
hardware than they would if
they purchased the hardware
at the front end on their own,
Ardia said.
This model without contracts has long existed outside
of the country without the
subsidies that U.S. companies

offer their patrons.


Its our view that this is
the way its done, but in other
places, consumers expect to
purchase the phone separate
from its contract, he said.
But the lack of contracts
has not deterred consumers
from purchasing new phones.
This year alone, iPhone sales
have doubled in Germany,
Korea, Malaysia and Vietnam
and have increased more than
45 percent in several countries including Italy, Spain
and Turkey.
Under this new sales
model, Ardia said cellphone

companies can make the


process more transparent
for consumers.
They will understand
more clearly what the cost is
of the hardware and what the
cost is of the service, he said.
Ardia said without government regulation, Verizons
decision is unlikely to be
overturned by the courts.
It is very unlikely that customers of Verizon would have
any chance of suing Verizon
for this change, Ardia said.
Sophomore Nikki
Newman said without contracts, the cost of purchasing

a new smartphone would be


too high.
Subsidies would definitely
help, she said. I have to pay
for tuition here, too, so I cant
afford that much.
Despite the publics mixed
feelings, it is expected that
other companies will follow
suit.
I see things moving more
in this direction, Greis said.
It does create a lot of frustration for folks when they have
to be limited and locked into
contracts.
state@dailytarheel.com

Council member
charged with DWI
Chapel Hill councilman Lee Storrow
still plans to seek re-election.
By Erin Kolstad
Assistant City Editor

DTH/KASIA JORDAN
Largely thanks to an $8 million gift from the Allen family, the North Carolina Botanical Garden exceeded its 2015 fundraising goal by 1,200 percent.

Married gardeners nurture a legacy in the soil


Jim and Delight Allen
will donate $8 million
to botanical garden.
By Elizabeth Baker
Staff Writer

Jim Allen came to Chapel


Hill in 1968 to join the Carolina
Population Center.
It was the North Carolina
Botanical Garden that made
him stay.
He was sitting on a bench one
day at the Coker Arboretum
one of many parts of the garden
when he made up his mind
that he wanted to stay at UNC.
Allen went on to teach 30
years at the School of Public
Health. His wife, Delight, came
to Chapel Hill about 10 years
ago and recognizes the impact

the botanical garden had on her


husband.
From then on, the Allens were
in love with the botanical garden
at UNC.
From that love sprouted
another big decision. The Allens
pledged an $8 million planned
gift in the 2015 fundraising year,
which ended June 30. It will be
given to the garden as an endowment as part of their estate after
their passing.
The garden exceeded its 2015
fundraising goals by 1,200 percent largely because of that gift.
Jim Allen said the idea to
leave part of their estate to the
garden really sprung from his
study of population.
He said the two basic issues of
the world currently are overpopulation and addition of carbon
dioxide to the atmosphere, which
is due to the large population

and the burning of fossil fuels.


As far as we were concerned,
the plants are very much endangered by this whole process, he
said. Plants will need all the
help they can get, so we decided,
for what little good it would do,
we would just leave our estate to
the garden and to the plants.
Charlotte Jones-Roe, director of development, said she
expects the Allens endowment to generate $350,000 to
$400,000 in interest per year
for the garden.
She said in addition to its
large planned gift, the Allen family makes other gifts frequently.
Just this summer, the Allens
funded an internship at the gardens for a UNC student.
They didnt know the student. They just wanted to be sure
that we were able to engage a
Carolina student for the summer

and be able to pay them for their


hard work, she said.
Damon Waitt, director of the
garden since April, said it was
exciting to hear the garden had
exceeded its fundraising goals in
his first year.
Its wonderful to have their
support in this life and in the
afterlife, Waitt said.
Jones-Roe said she hopes the
Allens, who visit almost daily,
will live a long time, as she said
most garden members do.
And although the gift is a
wonderful gesture, she said she
hopes the garden wont see it
anytime soon.
We are happy that the Allens
have adopted us as their heirs,
she said. They know that it
takes generations to build a great
garden.
arts@dailytarheel.com

Lee Storrow, the youngest member of the Chapel


Hill Town Council, at 26, was charged with driving
while impaired and speeding
early Wednesday morning after
blowing a blood alcohol content
of .16, according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
At around 1:20 a.m.
Wednesday morning, Storrow
was pulled over for speeding
at the intersection of Martin
Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Lee Storrow is the
Municipal Drive, reports state. youngest member
While Storrow was pulled
of the Chapel Hill
over, the officer suspected
Town Council. He
that he was under the influwill appear in court
ence of alcohol. The arrest
on Sept. 3.
report states Storrow was
arrested and taken back to the police station.
His car was secured and left at the scene.
When he willingly submitted a breath sample,
Storrow blew a .16, which is twice the legal limit
in North Carolina. At 3:30 a.m., he was released
on a written promise to appear in court, according to the arrest record.
Im deeply sorry for my actions, Storrow said
in a statement.
I let myself, my supporters and my community down. This has brought into clear focus that
Im not only an elected official but a role model,
and I take that responsibility more seriously now.
Im committed to making better decisions going
forward.
Storrow was elected to the Chapel Hill Town
Council in 2011 and graduated from UNC that
same year with a political science degree.
In March, he announced his intent to run for
re-election in November and officially filed for reelection on July 9, according to a tweet from his
account posted that day.
Lt. Josh Mecimore, spokesman for the Chapel
Hill Police Department, confirmed the arrest
report for Lee Walkup Storrow. Mecimore said
Storrow will have his first appearance in court
on Sept. 3, when he will announce his plea to the
misdemeanor charges.
Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt did not respond to
phone calls by The Daily Tar Heels press time.
@erin_kolstad
city@dailytarheel.com

University

The Daily Tar Heel

Thursday, August 27, 2015

BSM strives for a unied campus


By Hannah Smoot
Assistant University Editor

At the first meeting of the


Black Student Movement,
Jeremy Mckellar emphasized
campuswide unity.
Mckellar, the president
of BSM, was elected on the
theme forward together.
Carrying on the theme,
Mckellar introduced several
administrators at the meeting, including Student Body
President Houston Summers
and Derek Kemp, associate
vice chancellor for campus
safety and risk management.
Mckellar said having Kemp,
who spoke about the new body
camera initiative, at the meeting showed students that the
University supported them.
I definitely wanted him
to come for our students, to
show that our administrators
and those that are in power
really do care for us actually seeing a visual statement
of that, he said.
He said the forward together theme was something he
wants to be reflected in BSM,
as well as campuswide.

Thats why the Black Student Movement was


made: to be the voice for black students
Jeremy Mckellar
president of the Black Student Movement

I believe that you cant


really work toward a unified
campus if youre not unified
as your own organization,
Mckellar said.
Kemp said he hopes to talk
to other student groups about
campus security as well.
We wanted to show, demonstrate, that we support the
students, he said.
Summers said student government has been looking into
building plots for National
Pan-Hellenic Council fraternities and sororities, an initiative
from his campaign, saying
student government is looking
into using unused residence
halls for this purpose.
However, the meeting was
not without tension.
Alicia McDowell, artistic
director of Ebony Readers/
Onyx Theater, performed
a spoken word piece about
the anger and fear many feel

about police brutality.


Death wears a blue uniform as a shield, she read
aloud.
Department of Public Safety
Chief Jeff McCracken, who also
attended the meeting, said he
understands where this sentiment comes from.
I think, unfortunately,
there are a lot of people who
for very legitimate reasons
across the country, have those
feelings, McCracken said.
And we want to do whatever
we can to make all our students feel comfortable with
the officers that are in charge
of protecting them here.
Mckellar said he wants to
work with administrators and
students to confront national
issues like police violence.
Were going to need everybody, he said.
Subgroups like a cappella
group Harmonyx and the

DTH/HANNAH SMOOT
Harmonyx, an a cappella shoot-off of the Black Student Movement, performs during a BSM meeting.

UNC Gospel Choir also performed during the meeting.


Mckellar said BSM will
continue to promote the voices of black students through
these subgroups.

We want to keep striving


for justice and freedom for
everybody, he added.
And thats why the Black
Student Movement was
made: to be the voice for

black students and for perpetuating black culture. And


we want everybody
this year
75004
to be a part of that.
@hgsmoot
university@dailytarheel.com

WEVE FOUND THAT

INTEGRITY
IS NOT SUBJECT TO
BULL AND BEAR MARKETS.

While performance can fluctuate, our


disciplined, long-term approach to investing
rests on values that are immune to market
fluctuations. Were here to benefit others. And
to improve the financial well-being of millions.
Just what youd expect from a company thats
created to serve and built to perform.

Learn more about ways we


can improve your financial
health at TIAA.org/Integrity

BUILT TO PERFORM.
CREATED TO SERVE.

The Lipper Award is given to the group with the lowest average decile ranking of three years Consistent Return for eligible funds over
the three-year period ended 11/30/12, 11/30/13, and 11/30/14 respectively. TIAA-CREF was ranked among 36 fund companies in 2012
and 48 fund companies in 2013 and 2014 with at least five equity, five bond, or three mixed-asset portfolios. Past performance does
not guarantee future results. For current performance and rankings, please visit the Research and Performance section on tiaa-cref.org.
TIAA-CREF Individual & Institutional Services, LLC, Teachers Personal Investors Services, Inc., and Nuveen Securities, LLC, members
FINRA and SIPC, distribute securities products. 2015 Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of AmericaCollege Retirement
Equities Fund (TIAA-CREF), 730 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017. C24849C
1

Consider investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses carefully before


investing. Go to tiaa-cref.org for product and fund prospectuses that contain this
and other information. Read carefully before investing. TIAA-CREF funds are
subject to market and other risk factors.

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Two health centers to open in Chapel Hill


Affordable Care Act
dollars contributed
to the facilities.
By Camila Molina
Staff Writer

After receiving $3,972,500


from the Affordable Care Act,
North Carolina is poised to
fund five new community
health centers, two of which
will be in Chapel Hill.
The Chapel Hill centers
will be financed by Piedmont
Health Services Inc., a nonprofit health care organization that serves communities
facing financial, geographic,
language and other barriers.
Piedmont received $270,833
from the Affordable Care Act.
Earlier this month, the

Health Resources and


Services Administration
announced that $169 million
from the act would fund 266
new community health center
sites in 46 states, the District
of Columbia and Puerto Rico.
The purpose of these new
sites is to provide comprehensive primary care in underserved communities.
The need for these new
centers stems from the presence of individuals in Orange
County with unmet medical needs who are not being
served by a health care facility. Many of the these individuals seek medical service
at the Carrboro Community
Health Center, one of
Piedmonts eight primary and
comprehensive health clinics.
The health resources agen-

cy estimates these new sites


will spread health services to
more than 1.2 million patients
nationwide, administration
spokeswoman Elizabeth
Senerchia said in an email.
To qualify as a community health center by Health
Resources and Services
Administration standards,
a site must meet 19 requirements, including providing
health care in medically
underserved areas, being a
nonprofit organization, offering services to the community
and having a patient-majority
governing board.
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro
Inter-Faith Council for Social
Services mens homeless
shelter will house one of the
centers, which will open in
mid-September. The other,

currently unnamed, will open


between Martin Luther King
Jr. Boulevard and U.S. 15-501.
The community raised
money to build the health center inside the relocated homeless shelter, but Piedmont
is providing all the medical
equipment and professionals,
said Michael Reinke, the shelters executive director.
Reinke said the center will
let residents streamline getting assistance by offering
dental, family and psychological care for residents.
There are not a lot of places that exist where you can
get assistance in one spot,
Reinke said.
He said private therapists
serving in the current homeless shelter on Rosemary
Street will likely provide care

in the new location.


Piedmont has eight general health care sites across
the state, but its only site in
Orange County is the Carrboro
Community Health Center.
Piedmont aims to make
health care affordable for
patients with a sliding fee
scale that determines the eligibility for discounts according to the patients ability to
pay. Clinics also have on-site
pharmacies where patients
can receive medicine for a
reduced price.
It allows us to keep our
costs low and to provide
quality and comprehensive
services to our patients, said
Misty Drake, Piedmonts chief
operating officer.
Drake said Orange County
still has pockets of high need

BY THE NUMBERS

$169 million
Affordable Care Act funds
to 266 centers nationwide

$3,972,500

Affordable Care Act funds


to North Carolina

$270,833

Affordable Care Act funds


to Piedmont Health Services

for affordable health assistance.


We felt this was a good
opportunity to be more accessible, Drake said.
city@dailytarheel.com

Quarterback Mitch Trubisky continues to battle


The UNC sophomore
remains driven
despite a backup role.
By Logan Ulrich
Assistant Sports Editor

During the summer of


2014, quarterback Mitch
Trubisky found himself at the
center of the biggest storyline
for the North Carolina football team.
Trubisky, then a redshirt
freshman, was in a battle for
the starting quarterback job
with current senior Marquise
Williams.
Williams won the competition, but Coach Larry Fedora
employed a two-quarterback
system to give Trubisky plays
during the season.
Trubisky appeared in 10
games in 2014, throwing for
459 yards, four touchdowns
and four interceptions. This
offseason, Fedora has killed
the two-quarterback system, leaving Williams as the
unquestioned starter and
Trubisky as the backup.
For some, that would
be it. Players only get four

years, and every season,


many quarterbacks transfer
after losing competitions
in order to maximize their
eligibility.
But Trubisky stayed. Hes
a competitor; he wants to
compete.
A lot of guys couldnt do
that and wouldnt do that,
said sophomore receiver
Austin Proehl.
I give him a lot of credit
for not accepting it, because
I think he works every day to
be the starter.
Because of an injury
Williams suffered near the
end of the 2014 season,
Trubisky took all of the reps
with the starters during
spring practices. He took
that opportunity to work on
everything about his game:
footwork, accuracy, size,
strength and speed. But he
focused on one thing in particular.
Being more verbal,
Trubisky said.
Letting the linemen and
receivers and running backs
know that when Im out
there, Im running the show.
Trubiskys growth as a
leader is apparent by the

Hes always focused,


hes always ready to
go. Hes always got a
purpose.
Austin Proehl
sophomore wide receiver

relationship he has with his


teammates. He and Williams,
despite competing against
each other, maintain a good
relationship.
Williams and other teammates hovered around him
after practice on Tuesday,
trying to get him to crack
up during an interview.
Sophomore running back
Elijah Hood succeeded, telling reporters that the No. 10
Trubisky wears stands for his
10-inch biceps.
Receiver Bug Howard, a
member of the Tar Heels
2013 recruiting class with
Trubisky, said he chose UNC
because of the quarterback.
When I heard Mr.
Ohio was coming to North
Carolina, I had to jump on
that ASAP, Howard said.
Mitch was like my brother
when he first stepped on

DTH FILE PHOTO


Mitch Trubisky (10) runs the ball up the middle of the field during last seasons Clemson game.

campus.
Although hes been
branded as a backup quarterback now, Trubisky has not
changed his approach. He
still works as if hes the start-

er, preparing for any scenario


where the coaches need him
to step on the field.
Each and every day, Mitch
is the type of guy that comes
out and is ready to work,

Proehl said.
Hes always focused;
hes always ready to go. Hes
always got a purpose.
@loganulrich
sports@dailytarheel.com

WCHL, Chapelboro to transfer ownership post-bankruptcy


By Rachel Herzog
Senior Writer

Chapel Hills top radio


source for local news, sports
and talk was bought out of
bankruptcy by a Kansasbased investor this month.
WCHL 97.9 FM and its
affiliate, community news and
t 1 8/10/15 4:30 PM Page 1
features website Chapelboro.
com, are currently undergoing court proceedings to turn
the business over to Leslie
Rudd, founder of Leslie Rudd
Investment Company, whose
operating companies are primarily in the publishing and
food and beverage industries.
Jim Heavner, WCHLs
previous owner, said he had
hoped the company would be
sold to a Chapel Hill resident
but that Rudds bid was a
happy surprise.
By all accounts, (Rudd) is

a superb and very successful


businessman, Heavner said
in an email. He certainly has
the financial capability to do
about anything with it, and
he says he wants to make our
programming even better. So
all in all, I think this could be
a great outcome for all, especially the community.
WCHLs bankruptcy wasnt
a surprise but intentional,
Heavner said. He said it
was a strategy to thwart an
attempted hostile takeover by
a potential buyer who bought
the companys debt.
He said putting WCHL in
the courts protection by filing
for bankruptcy allowed the
company to be selective about
its new owner.
In a statement posted on
Chapelboro.com, Rudd said he
is exploring the idea of taking
on area investment partners

to create a local ownership


group for WCHL. He said this
is something his investment
company has done with other
firms it has acquired.
Although the company is
headquartered in Wichita,
Kan., WCHL acting general
manager Jan Bolick doesnt see
the new owner as an outsider.
Leslie Rudd has lived in
Chapel Hill, owned property
here and is still a frequent
visitor, Bolick said in a statement posted on Chapelboro.
com. He loves this community and has many friends here;
he also loves this radio station
and wants to see it survive
and flourish.
Chapel Hill-Carrboro
Chamber of Commerce
President Aaron Martin
Nelson shared that sentiment.
Were very excited to back a
Chapel Hillian, he said. Often

academic

Lecture

Prophecy Before the Birth of Israel


THE KAPLAN BRAUER LECTURE ON THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF JUDAISM TO CIVILIZATION

Monday, August 31, 2015, 5:30 p.m. / Hyde Hall


JACK M. SASSON, professor emeritus of Jewish Studies and
Hebrew Bible at Vanderbilt University, will discuss how, not
long ago, it was believed that prophecy was uniquely manifested
in ancient Israel, reaching perfection before and after the
Babylonian exile. The decipherment of ancient documents from
the ancient Near East hardly jolted that preconception until the
recovery of the Mari archives from Middle Euphrates Mesopotamia. There,
many letters testified to the engagement of kings with prophets and solicited
their prognostications. We will review what we have learned and rely on
examples to recreate the contexts in which prophecy thrived.

when a transition happens, you


dont get someone who knows
the community that well.
In 2013, the chamber
inducted Heavner, the previous
owner, into its Hall of Fame to
honor his more than 40 years
of business leadership and contributions to the community.
I dont attribute his bankruptcy to bad management or
bad leadership, said Nelson. A

bad thing happened to a very


good businessman. Its tragic
for him to lose something he
spent so much time building.
Rudd will officially become
the owner sometime this fall,
WCHL news director Blake
Hodge said. The sale isnt
really final until the FCC
license transfers, he said. It
takes several weeks from the
time of the court approval to

AUGUST
8/28 Be Loud! 15: S.C.O.T.S, NEIL DIAMOND
ALL-STARS, JOHN HOWIE JR. & THE
ROSEWOOD BLUFF, THE CHICKEN WIRE
GANG. ($20)
8/29 SA: Be Loud! 15 day session (1 PM -5
PM):
Some Antics, The Vernacular, Girls Rock NC,
Will McInerney (Spoken Word Poet), Flash
Chorus, Skinny Bag of Sugar ($10)
8/ 29: Be Loud! 15: DILLON FENCE, THE
VELDT, PREEESH! ($20)

919-967-9053
300 E. Main Street Carrboro

SEPTEMBER
3: Trevor Hall ($17/$20) w/ Tubby Love
4 FR and 5 SA: MIPSO Album
Release Shows!
8 TU: MICK JENKINS / STWO ($15/$18)
10: An Evening With the Watkins Family
Hour ( SOLD OUT)
9/12: COSMIC CHARLIE ( HI Energy Grateful
Dead from Athens GA) $10/$12
9/13: The Fall Of Troy
w/And So I Watch You From Afar, Slothrust
($17/$20)
9/14: Titus Andronicus, Spider Bags, Baked
($10)
9/18: Langhorne Slim & The Law w/ Twain
($16/$18)
9/19 ( Day Show, 11:30 AM -2:30
PM): Carrboro Elementary Back To School
Bash with SCOTS, Shark Quest, Swang
Brothers, Michael Rank, Dave Hedeman,
INSECTO
9/19: KODALINE ($20/$23) w/Good Old War
Sept 22: POKEY LAFARGE ($15/$17)w/
Escondido
9/24: JOYCE MANOR w/ Cheap Girls ($15)
9/29: FIDLAR**($15) w/ Dune Rats

WE ARE ALSO PRESENTING...

SOUTERN CULTURE ON
THE SKIDS

OCTOBER
10/3: TYLER WARD**($15/$18)
OCT. 8: DESTROYER w/Jennifer Castle **
($15/$20)
OCT. 9: MATT NATHANSON ( Sold Out)
OCTOBER 10: NOAH GUNDERSEN ($15/$17)
w/ Field Report (solo)
OCT. 11: THE GROWLERS ($15/$17) w/The
Babe Rainbow
OCT 12: SMALLPOOLS w/Phoebe Ryan,
Machineheart ($20/$23)
Oct 13: WAXAHATCHEE w/ Weyes
Blood ($14/$16)
10/16: BLITZEN TRAPPER ($17/$19)
10/17: ARCHERS OF LOAF**($20)
Oct 18: Dave Alvin & Phil Alvin with the
Guilty Ones ($20)
Oct 21: VINTAGE TROUBLE ($20/$22) w/
Greg Holden
Oct 22: THE DEVIL MAKES THREE w/The
Deslondes**($20)
Oct 23: Rasputina ($17/$20) w/Daniel Knox
Oct. 27: UNDERACHIEVERS w/ Pouya and
The Buffet Boys,Kirk Knight, and Bodega
Bamz ($20)
Oct 28: PEACHES** w/ Christeene ($18/$20)
10/31: The Districts w/Lady Lamb ($15)

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2
NICKI BLUHM & THE GRAMBLERS

NOVEMBER
11/2: GOVERNMENT ISSUE, WAR ON
WOMEN, Totally Slow ($12/$15)
11/3: YOUTH LAGOON w/Moon King ($17/
$20)
11/4: MINUS THE BEAR**($23/$25) w/
OBrother, Aero Flynn
11/5: DIIV w/ No Joy and Sunflower Beam
($15/$17)
11/8: DEAFHEAVEN w/Tribulation ( $18/$20)
11/10: Nathaniel Rateliff &
The Night Sweats ($13/$15; moved from
Cats Cradle back room )
11/11: THE STORY SO FAR w/ Basement,
Turnover ($21/$23)
21 SA: THE BLUEGRASS BALL: TRAVELIN
MCCOURYS feat. DREW EMITT & ANDY
THORN from Leftover Salmon ($20/$23)
11/27 FR: THE SWORD w/ Royal Thunder
($17/$19)

DECEMBER

FRI.-SAT. SEPTEMBER 4 & 5

MIPSO

PETTIGREW HALL, SUITE 100


CAMPUS BOX 3152
CHAPEL HILL, NC 27599-3152

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

SHOW AT NC MUSEUM OF ART (RALEIGH):


Sept 25: DAWES**($24-$35)
SHOW AT CAROLINA THEATRE (Durham):
Sept. 26: YO LA TENGO (featuring Dave Schramm)
SHOW AT LOCAL 506 (Chapel Hill):
Nov. 5: The Dirty Nil
SHOW AT DPAC( durham):
NOV. 27: GLEN HANSARD
SHOW AT THE ARTSCENTER (Carrboro):
Sept. 24: OVER THE RHINE

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3
TREVOR HALL

DEC 16: THE GET UP KIDS 20th Anniversary


Tour ( $19.50/$23)

Serving

8/28: Chicken Wire Gang ( part of Be Loud! 15)


8/29: The Good Life w/ Big Harp ($12/$14)
8/30: The Cry w/Lost Element ( $8/$10)
8/31: EARTH w/Holy Sons ( $13/$15)
9/2: Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers w/John Moreland ($15)
9/4: Big Fat Gap, The Holland Brothers ($8)
9/5: The Vagabond Saints Soc. presents: XTCs Skylarking
9/8: Bobby Long ($12/$14)
9/11: Mimicking Birds ($8/$10)
9/13: Laetitia Sadier w Deradoorian ($10/$12)
9/14: The Donkeys ($8)
9/15: Eilen Jewell $16/$20 ( Presented with Marianne Taylor Music)
9/16:Tony Lucca**($15)
9/18: US Elevator ($10) w/The Roman Spring
9/19: Vacationer w/ Great Good Fine Ok ($13/$15)
9/21: Spirit Family Reunion ($12)
9/23: Gardens & Villa w/Palehound ($12)
9/24: Big Daddy Love, Dark Water Rising, Rebekah Todd & Odyssey ($10/
$12)
9/25: Mike Krol ($8/$10)
10/1: WILLIE WATSON w/Heather Maloney ($15/$17)
10/3: BIRDS AND ARROWS -- Album Release / Farewell show ($8/$10)
Oct 4: Lighthouse & The Whaler ($12/$14)
10/6: David Ramirez**($12/$14) w/Dylan LeBlanc
10/8: Pure Bathing Culture w/ Wild Ones ($10/$12)
10/9: HEARTWOOD - 40 Year Reunion w/ Wyatt Easterling
10/10 & 10/11: HEARTWOOD - 40 Year Reunion w/ Wyatt Easterling (both shows are sold out)
10/12: Empress Of ($10)
10/15: Matt Pond PA ($13/$15) w/ Laura Stevenson, Completions
10/18: Telekinesis and Say Hi ($13/$15)
10/20: Cannibal Ox w/ Liam Tracy ($14/$16)
1021: Widowspeak ($10)
10/23: NO BS! BRASS BAND ($12)
10/25: The Stray Birds ($10/$12)
10/26: Mikky Ekko ( $15)
10/29: JULY TALK/ LITTLE HURRICANE ($13/$15)
11/2: JOANNA GRUESOME**($10/$12)
11/4: Born Ruffians **($10/$12)
11/5: Murs w/Red Pill, King Fantastic ($15/$17)
11/10: THE KING KHAN & BBQ SHOW ($13/$15)
11/14: Together Pangea w/ White Reaper ($10/$13)
11/17: Skylar Spence ($12/$14)
11/18: David Wax Museum ($12)
11/20: Turquoise Jeep ($13/$15)
12/7: Cas Haley ($12/$15; on sale 8/28)
12/9-10-11: RED CLAY RAMBLERS & THE COASTAL COHORTS
SHOWS AT HAW RIVER BALLROOM:
Sept. 14: BEST COAST**($20/$23) w/Lovely Bad Things
Sept. 27: CALEXICO w/Gaby Moreno
Sept 28: IBEYI w/Vicktor Taiwo
Oct. 8: BEACH HOUSE w/Jessica Pratt (Sold Out)
Oct. 28: Bonnaroo Spotlight Series Presented by Angry Orchard Featuring...X
Ambassadors w/ Skylar Grey and Kevin Garrett ($15)
Nov 11: NEON INDIAN**

CAROLINA BREWERY Beers on Tap!

CATS CRADLE TICKET OUTLETS: Schoolkids Records (Raleigh), CD Alley (Chapel Hill)
** ON -LINE! @ http://www.ticketfly.com/ ** For Phone orders Call (919) 967-9053

RUTH VON BERNUTH


DIRECTOR

go through the FCC process.


Even with a new owner, dayto-day operations at the station
will remain about the same.
Were all coming in and
working on the same things
that we were doing before,
Hodge said. Were just looking forward to continuing
doing those things.
@rachel_herzog
city@dailytarheel.com

www.catscradle.com
The BEST live music ~ 18 & over admitted

SHOW AT KINGS (Raleigh):


Oct. 8: ELECTRIC SIX w/ Yip Deceiver ($13/$15)
SHOW AT MEMORIAL HALL (UNC-CH):
Dec 12: STEEP CANYON RANGERS
SHOW AT PINHOOK (Durham):
Oct 18 -- ISRAEL NASH ($12)
SHOWS AT THE RITZ (Raleigh):
SEPT. 16: PURITY RING
SEPT 28: LORD HURON
SEPT 29: FATHER JOHN MISTY w/Michael Cronin
OCT.13: GLASS ANIMALS
OCT 18: NEW FOUND GLORY, YELLOWCARD, Tigers Jaw
SHOW AT RED HAT AMPHITHEATRE (Raleigh):
Tu Sept.15: DEATH CAB FOR CUTIE w/ Twin Shadow

City

The Daily Tar Heel

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Amid Franklin closures, landmark eateries survive


By Zhai Yun Tan
Senior Writer

Angelo Marrone, owner of


Italian Pizzeria III, is relieved
his restaurant is still operating on Franklin Street in the
face of the string of closures
the downtown district has
suffered in recent years.
Thank God were still
here, Marrone said. That
makes me feel good.
In the ever-changing face
of Franklin Street, only a few
familiar establishments, like
Carolina Coffee Shop and
Suttons Drug Store, have

weathered the closures alongside IP3.


At least six restaurants
including Gigis Cupcakes, Mei
Asian and Krispy Kreme
closed down over the past year.
Many blame expensive rent
and insufficient parking for the
high turnover.
Marrone, who runs the
restaurant with his brother,
said IP3, which celebrated its
35th anniversary Monday, has
survived because of the connections it has with residents
and athletic teams.
The shop walls are plastered with pictures of ath-

letes, soccer team scarves,


UNC sports posters and
photographs of a packed IP3
during soccer games.
For the past 10 or 12 years,
we won the best place to
watch soccer in the Triangle,
Marrone said. Its crazy here.
Suttons, which opened in
1923, is one of the oldest restaurants on Franklin Street.
Photographs of customers
hang from the ceiling and
flow onto the wall. Owner
Don Pinney said the drugstore started collecting the
pictures in 1982 and now has
almost 10,000 in storage.

We have people who come


back, and the first thing they
do is look for their picture, he
said. They ask, Is my picture
still on the wall?
It wasnt easy for Suttons
to survive. Pinney had to close
the pharmacy last year. But he
is optimistic and said Suttons
will remain because it adapts
to changing environments.
We extended our hours,
which has helped, and our
menu items changed, too, he
said.
When students leave town
in summer, IP3 and Suttons
dont see a drop in business,

both owners said. In fact, they


said the traffic increases.
We are actually busier in
the summer, Pinney said. Not
many businesses can say that.
Carolina Coffee Shop, established in 1922, is the oldest restaurant on Franklin Street.
General manager Jeremy
Ferry credits the restaurants
longevity to its unique ambiance and historic significance.
I was told that during the
50s and 60s, professors and
students would meet here
after class and have debates
here, Ferry said. You could
catch cooks running out the

back door to join protests.


The three restaurants
survived as Franklin Street
changed through the decades,
becoming town landmarks.
Allison Lazard, assistant
professor at the School of
Media and Journalism,
moved to Chapel Hill a
month ago. Carolina Coffee
Shop was one of the first restaurants she tried.
I like to see historic places; I like to see places with
character, she said. I would
say this is one of those places.
@natzhaiyun
city@dailytarheel.com

DTH office is open TODAY


from is
9am-5pm
DTH9:00am-5:00pm
office will re-open at 8:30 on 8/13/14
DTH office
open Mon-Fri

Line Classified Ad Rates

To Place a Line Classified Ad Log Onto


www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252

Private Party (Non-Profit) Commercial (For-Profit)

Deadlines

Line Ads: Noon, one business day prior to publication

25 Words ....... $20.00/week 25 Words ....... $42.50/week


Display Classified Ads: 3pm, two business
Extra words ..25/word/day Extra words ...25/word/day
days prior to publication
EXTRAS: Box: $1/day Bold: $3/day
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

Announcements

Child Care Wanted

For Rent

Help Wanted

NOTICE TO ALL DTH


CUSTOMERS

AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE and transportation


needed for 2 sweet girls, 8 and 11. Monday,
Tuesday, Thursday 2:30-5pm. Competitive salary. Must have excellent references, clean driving record. Contact Allison at nanny.tarheel@
gmail.com, 919-724-5738.

AVAILABLE
9/1.
2BR/1.5BA
Carrboro
townhome at 504 Hillsborough Street,
Greenbriar Apartments, Carrboro. Pets negotiable, on busline. $775/mo. Water included. Fran Holland Properties. Email
fhollandprop@gmail.com or text 919-6303229.

PART-TIME KENNEL HELP and bathers needed.


Mostly on weekends. Experience preferred.
Must be smart, hardworking, animal lover. Apply in person. 710 West Rosemary Street. Love
Overboard Kennels and Grooming. Or email
luvdog22@bellsouth.net.

Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to


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

AUDITIONS
for Carolina Choir, Chamber Singers, Mens
and Womens Glee Clubs THIS WEEK! Sign up
in Person Hall, Room 106. More info: skleb@
email.unc.edu.

Child Care Wanted


AFTERSCHOOL
BABYSITTER

needed 2-3 days/wk starting immediately for


3 great kids (ages 7, 11, 14). Some driving for
activities necessary, so a car and good driving
record required. beournanny@earthlink.net.
BABYSITTER WANTED: Part-time babysitter wanted for 4 children in Carrboro
aged 11, 8, 6, 3. Regularly Mondays 5.307.30pm +other evenings as needed. Email
clairegiordano@yahoo.com.

YMCA AFTERSCHOOL
COUNSELOR
Counselors needed for fun and engaging after
school program at the Chapel Hill-Carrboro
YMCA. Hours are 2-6pm. Opportunity to work
with elementary school students in active as
well and creative afterschool activities emphasizing the Ys core values of honesty, respect,
caring and responsibility. Apply online at the
link provided. 919-442-9622.
CHILD CARE FOR 15 month-old. 8:30am5pm M-F. Part-time or full-time. Experience and references preferred. Walking
distance from campus, driving not needed.
rekhapitts@yahoo.com.

SUNDAY SITTER
Wanted for 8 year-old boy. Must have reliable
and safe transportation. Must love SPORTS,
creative play and dogs. Most Sundays 9am5pm. Saturday flexibility a plus. $11+/hr. Email
cabbytwo@netscape.net.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE NEEDED for 2

great kids (9 and 12) 3-4 days/wk from 2:455:45pm in Carrboro. Must have reliable car.
Good pay, mileage reimbursed. Email: midwifemeg@yahoo.com, 919-428-0422.

HOUSEHOLD HELP: Lovely family seeks cleaning, organizational household help. Character
important, references required, freshman preferred, $12/hr. to start. Walk from campus. Do
your laundry here. Contact Mrs. Fitzpatrick,
pamela@hsgfellow.org.
AFTERSCHOOL SITTER needed for ages 5
and 9. 2.30-5.30pm M-Th. Prior experience and references required. Please contact
sasokan@gmail.com.
NANNY, HOUSE MANAGER NEEDED for 3 children (grades 6, 9 and 11) in Hillsborough. Tasks
include organizing family schedule, getting the
6th and 9th graders where they need to go,
grocery shopping and light housekeeping with
kids and homework help. Some fixed hours,
but middle of the days are free and schedule
is flexible. Position includes private suite and
$30-$40k salary. Please email questions and
resume to ncnanny2015@gmail.com.
SITTER NEEDED for boy (8) and girl (12) in Chapel Hill near UNC campus. School pick up and
activities Tu-Th until 6pm plus some evenings.
Must be reliable and creative with clean driving
record and good references. $14/hr. +gas money. Cooking a plus. battlepark68@gmail.com.

AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE WANTED. Seeking fun, creative and experienced helper for
after school M-Th 3-5:30pm for son (12) and
daughter (13). Help with homework and driving to activities. Safe driving record a must.
BadgerFamilyNC@gmail.com.

AFTERNOON BABYSITTER
NEEDED
Kind, caring and committed babysitter needed
for 2 children (6 and 3 year-olds) in the afternoons (12/1-5:30pm) from mid-September.
Close to Southpoint. Pre-tax wages of $13-$15/
hr. based on prior qualifications. Own transportation required. Gas expenses reimbursed..
Email babysitter1521@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE NEEDED Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays 3-5:30pm
for 2 children, ages 5 and 9, in Carrboro.
Days and hours somewhat flexible. Contact
yourkavi@live.unc.edu.
LOOKING FOR compassionate and dependable candidate to work M-F afternoons with
11 year-old autistic girl. Job includes supervising at an afterschool program and community outings. Also hiring for weekends.
Some experience preferred. Please respond
to Tricia at triciawildman@yahoo.com and
acquire2001@yahoo.com.

For Rent
FAIR HOUSING

ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in


this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers
are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
1 MILE FROM UNC LAW SCHOOL. Studio
apartment in quiet residential neighborhood.
Full kitchen and bath. Utilities included except internet, cable. On site laundry. 1 year
lease required $700/mo. $700 security deposit.
seaports1@yahoo.com.

SPACIOUS 2BR
TOWNHOME $899
Cable, internet and W/D included! Hardwoods
throughout. Walk to class! Volleyball and bocce. Lease now or for next year! 919.636.5132.
LOVELY 3BR/2BA HOME ON WOODED lot.
Lots of windows, Convenient to I-40 this
open floor plan features fireplace, hardwood
floors thru house, large deck. Pets negotiable
with fee. $1,450/mo. Contact Fran Holland
Properties: fhollandprop@gmail.com or text
919-630-3229.
NICE FURNISHED ROOM with private bathroom
in a fully furnished 2BR/2.5BA condo. Equipped
kitchen, W/D. Tennis court, swimming pool.
Walk to shops, bus to UNC. $749/mo. per room.
All utilities, TV, internet included. No pets. Pictures: www.uncduke.com, Email: unc.duke.
apartment@gmail.com or text: 919-525-7521.
NEWLY RENOVATED unit at McCauley Trail.
Walk or bike down McCauley to class.
3BR/1.5BA townhouse, $1,500/mo. 3 parking passes included. Call 919-968-7226 or
email rentals@millhouseproperties.com.

2BR/2.5BA DUPLEX ON BUSLINE. Convenient


to campus, open floor plan, lovely hardwood
floors, covered parking. $950/mo. Pets negotiable. Contact Fran Holland Properties, fhollandprop@gmail.com.

MILL CREEK CONDO: Live in this nice Mill

Creek condo, near the pool and a short


walk to the bus stop on MLK. 4BR/2BA,
a deal at $1,600/mo, 4 parking passes
included. Call 919-968-7226 or email
rentals@millhouseproperties.com.
AVAILABLE. Furnished room $550/mo. for 1,
$650/mo. for 2 in our home near Eastgate.
Separate entrance, kitchen and bath shared
with other tenant. Utilities, internet, phone,
cable included. No smoking, drugs, pets.
Lease, $400 deposit required. 919-932-1556,
919-616-5431.
2BR/2.5BA DUPLEX ON BUSLINE. Convenient to campus, open floor plan, hardwood
floors, covered parking. $950/mo. Pets negotiable. Contact Fran Holland Properties,
fhollandprop@gmail.com or text 919-6303229..
5 BLOCKS TO TOP OF THE HILL! 4BR/3.5BA
carriage house. Double garage, skylights,
hardwoods, all electric. Available September.
$2,700/mo. Call: 919-942-6945.
STUDIO: Lakeside efficiency apartment in
home; separate entrance, private bath,
use of lake, on street parking, bike to campus, walk to Whole Foods, Trader Joes. All
utilities included (except phone). $600/mo.
mgslibrary@gmail.com, 919-942-2897.

WINGS OVER CHAPEL HILL is hiring cooks,

counter help and delivery drivers for the fall


semester. Excellent part-time and full-time
opportunities. Apply in person at 313 East
Main Street in Carrboro. 919-537-8271.

YARD AND HOUSE MAINTENANCE. Some


muscles needed. Multiplicity of tasks. Student
preferred. $12/hr, raise possible. 4 mile drive
from campus. Robert, 919-967-0138.
ASSISTANT NEEDED PART-TIME for helping
student in wheelchair. $10/hr, hours flexible
but consistent. Duties include driving, no car
needed, assisting with meals, homework,
getting to classes and other physical activities. Contact neededassistant@gmail.com,
919-414-0494.

PART-TIME OFFICE,
EVENT STAFF

UPSCALE APARTMENT
HOMES $$ OFF
Granite, stainless steel, hardwoods, designer
kitchens, sports simulator, swimming pool,
cabanas, volleyball, valet waste. Discount until
end of summer! 919-929-7005.

TAKEOUT CENTRAL NEEDS


HEROES

For Sale
MOVING SALE. 8am, August 29. 24 McDowell,
Fearrington Village. Extensive furniture and
household items, antiques, love seat, sofa bed,
bed frame, linens, fridge, microwave.

Help Wanted
HOUSE HELPER: Regular cleaning, light computer work, organizing. 6-10 hrs/wk. Student
preferred. $12/hr. raise possible. 4 mile drive
from campus. Rebecca, 919-967-0138.
HIRING NOW: CATERING server and bartender
positions for all home UNC football and basketball games. Catering experience NOT necessary. Only responsible, reliable candidates need
apply. Please email resume to rockytopunc1@
gmail.com if interested. Perfect job for students!
PRESCHOOL TEACHER WANTED: Harvest
Learning Center, a 5 star preschool in south
Durham, is seeking a full-time 2/3 teacher. Education and experience preferred but will train.
Send resumes: harvestdirectors@harvestlearningcenter.com.
AQUATICS STAFF WANTED: Chapel Hill Parks
and Recreation is hiring Lifeguards and swim,
water exercise Instructors for Fall 2015. Apply
online at www.townofchapelhill.org. For more
information contact Lizzie Burrill at eburrill@
townofchapelhill.org.
FULL-TIME, experienced veterinary assistant
needed at busy, small animal veterinary clinic in
Hillsborough. Must be able to work Saturdays.
Email resume to hillsboroughvet@gmail.com.
YOUTH, STUDENT MINISTRY position, 7-10 hrs/
wk. Gathering Church. allgather.org. To apply,
email mark@allgather.org.

www.dailytarheel.com

If August 27th is Your Birthday...


Personal power surges this year. Practice your
passions. Home refreshes you. Assume leadership (after 10/13) to support family financial
changes (after 10/27). Fall in love anew after
3/8. Communicate and compromise, especially
after 3/23. Discover spiritual partnership.

NATIVE SPANISH SPEAKER. We would like a


native Spanish speaker to spend 1-2 hrs/wk
with our daughter to help keep up her Spanish
language skills. She is a former Spanish immersion student for 6 years. Must be talkative and
creative. Early afternoons preferred. 4-5pm.
Please email me: mcshaw@nc.rr.com.

Part-time office assistants, event coordinators


at alumnus owned transportation and special
event company. Great hands on opportunity.
Minimum GPA: 3.0 (NO EXCEPTIONS!). Junior,
seniors, grad students preferred. Flexible, can
work around your classes, exams, activities.
Business, marketing, media&journalism students encouraged (not required); INCREDIBLE pay ($13-$16/hr); Some weekend special event coordinating. Email availability,
outline of work experience, area of study to
BeckyMcMorrow@CarolinaLivery.net.

GRAD STUDENTS: THIS Carrboro 1BR apartment above garage. Very quiet neighborhood.
$540/mo. For more info contact Fran Holland
Properties, fhollandprop@gmail.com.

HOROSCOPES

Takeout Central delivers from local restaurants to homes in Chapel Hill. We are hiring
part-time and full-time employees for taking
phone orders from customers. Earn $10/hr.
working with 4 other recent UNC grads. Email
Charles@takeoutcentral.com.
SUCCESSFUL LOCAL REAL ESTATE company is
looking for a part-time intern (10 hrs/wk) to
help with online marketing, particularly email
marketing, web site management, social media marketing, including Snapchat, Instagram,
Periscope and more. Applicants should have
demonstrated training or practical applications
in these areas. Flexible hours. Email responses/
resumes to info@realestateexperts.net.
OFFICE, DRIVER, REPAIRS. Help needed with a
variety of office tasks, occasional client transportation and cleaning. Applicant must have
own transportation. We also have 1 opening
for someone to assist in home repairs, maintenance and light construction work. Please send
resume to hw@ecacinc.com.
SWIM COACHES AND INSTRUCTORS: Blue
Dolphins Aquatics is hiring swim instructors
and swim coaches. Pay $10-$20/hr. Email
info@bluedolphinsaquatics.com.
CHILD, DOG, HOME HELP WANTED. UNC-Chapel Hill family looking for UNC student to help
with our 12 year-old daughters afterschool
activities, dog walking (very mellow lab),
light household chores and driving from 3.305.30pm. M-F. $12/hr. Previous child care experience required. 10 minute drive from campus.
Please contact chesca.colloredo@gmail.com.

To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 7 Network and grow new
connections. Rely on expert support over
the next three weeks, with Mercury in Libra.
Today and tomorrow are great party days.
Pass along what youre learning. Listen to
experience. Collaborate and share credit.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is a 7 Fun is the name of the
game today and tomorrow. Passions get
stimulated. Youre even smarter than usual,
with Mercury in Libra. Decide what you really
think before speaking your mind. Listen to
multiple views.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)


Today is a 7 Anticipate changes. Begin
a creative phase, with Mercury in Libra
over the next three weeks. Expect more
responsibility today and tomorrow, under
the Aquarius Moon. Career opportunities
arise. Things get interesting. Stay in rather
than going out.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)


Today is a 6 Home and family take priority
today and tomorrow. Get into private planning over the next three weeks, with Mercury
in Libra. Make household improvements and
upgrades. Play with long-range plans. Learn
from the competition.

Gemini (May 21-June 20)


Today is an 8 For about three weeks
youre especially charming, with Mercury
in Libra. Embrace creative wordplay. Your
intelligence is attractive. Dont rely on an
unstable source. Explore options today and
tomorrow. Its getting easier to express love.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 7 Today and tomorrow favor
financial planning. Its getting easier to
communicate at home over the next three
weeks, with Mercury in Libra. Achieve
family consensus on remodeling and
renovation. Upgrade home communications
infrastructure. Changes necessitate budget
revisions.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 Spend time with someone
attractive. Romance and partnership flower
today and tomorrow. Its getting easier to
learn over the next three weeks, with Mercury in Libra. Apply logic as well as emotion.
Communicate a well-balanced perspective.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 9 Focus on a major improvement. Making money seems easier, with
Mercury in Libra for the next three weeks.
Communications and networking grow
your income. Dig into a big job. Profit from
meticulous service today and tomorrow.

Hiring part-time Saturday event staff. Occasional Friday night but almost exclusively
Saturday work. Assist with coordinating weddings, college football game day groups, wine
tours, etc. EXCELLENT PAY! Send your letter
of interest by email along with the resume if
you have one and your field of study. Email to
careers@carolinalivery.net.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)


Today is a 9 The funding is available today
and tomorrow. Get cooking! Public speaking
impacts your professional status. A wealth of
profitable ideas and opportunities bloom over
the next three weeks with Mercury in Libra.
Share your experience and passion.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 9 Expand your territory over the
next three weeks with Mercury in Libra. Your
audience appreciates an interesting conversation. Form a new partnership. Your charisma
grows under the Moon in your sign today and
tomorrow. Wear your power suit.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 6 Take two days for private
meditation and peaceful productivity. Think
before acting. Get your partner on board
with your plan. Use the next few weeks,
with Mercury in Libra, to implement financial
changes. Invest wisely.

(c) 2015 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

Pets/Livestock

Tutoring Wanted

HORSE BOARDING: UNC student missing your


horse? Beautiful barn 5 miles from UNC-CH
campus. 5 stalls; riding ring; owners on-site.
$350-$550. 919-475-6993.

MATH, SCIENCE TUTOR for 28 year-old man,


high functioning on autism spectrum. $25 per
2 hour weekly session. Life sciences or pharma
undergrad or grad. At parents home in Southern Village. Email brian.buxton@gmail.com.

Roommates
MALE SEEKING ROOMMATE in 2BR house 2
blocks off campus (near Columbia and Ransom
Street). Rent $600/mo. including utilities. Email
room6177@gmail.com.

Tickets For Sale

PART-TIME SATURDAY
EVENT STAFF

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)


Today is an 8 Youre excellent at speaking
to groups over the next few weeks, with
Mercury in Libra. Crowdsource solutions.
Consensus comes easier. Your popularitys
increasing. Studies, research and communication outreach flow with ease today and
tomorrow.

USC V. UNC FOOTBALL


TRIP

Charter bus from Chapel Hill to Charlotte on


September 3rd. $50 roundtrip. Some game
tickets also available. Tailgate optional.
703-906-4099.

UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY

Online
Classifieds...
The fastest way to place
your classified ad.

www.dailytarheel.com
click on classifieds

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

Hwy 15-501 South & Smith Level Road

Religious Directory
jrogers@upcch.org 919-967-2311
110 Henderson St., Chapel Hill
Thursdays Fellowship dinner
& program 5:45-8 PM
Weekly small groups

EPISCOPAL CAMPUS MINISTRY


Join us for dinner & fellowship!
Tuesdays at 5:30 p.m.

Sundays at 10:30am

Creekside Elementary

Sunday Worship at our six local


Partner Churches.

5321 Ephesus Church


Rd,Durham, NC 27707

A Parish in the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina

www.uncpcm.com

919.797.2884

304 E. Franklin St. Chapel Hill, NC


(919)929-2193 | www.thechapelofthecross.org

Trips to the NC mountains & coast as well


as annual spring break mission opportunities.

allgather.org

Student Chaplain - The Rev.Tambria Lee


(tlee@thechapelofthecross.org)

Sundays 10:00 and 11:45


The Varsity Theatre

Presbyterian
Campus
Ministry

a new church with a


mission: to love Chapel Hill
with the Heart of Jesus

lovechapelhill.com

(919) 942-6666

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Howell Hall holdups worth the wait


The new psychology
labs are expected
to cost $12.3 million.
By Katie Reeder
Senior Writer

When the renovations on


Howell Hall began in March,
workers soon realized they
didnt even know where the
sewage was draining.
You could say the arboretum may have benefited,
said Jerry Guerrier, project
manager for the Howell
renovations.
Thats the running joke.
The mystery of the
untraceable sewage was just

SEXUAL ASSAULT

FROM PAGE 1

we speak theres a group put


together, as was promised, to
look at a year deep, to assess
what has gone well and what
hasnt, he said.
Crisp believes the policy
is doing what it is supposed
to do.
The number of reports
has gone up precipitously;
the number of people accessing the services have gone up
steeply, he said. We have
been hard-pressed, frankly, to
keep up enough staff and to
keep expanding the staff fast
enough to keep up with the
demand.
While members of the
administration are working
to make sure the policy continues to be applicable, accessible and supportive, some
survivors dont agree.
Senior Christine Allison,
who had doubts when the
policy was released, still sees
issues with the policy a year
later.
The new policy actually
gives them more power. They
get to investigate themselves.
They get to decide themselves, she said.
Its just the same people
doing the same thing they
always have.
Allison said the policys
problems arise in the punish-

POACHING

FROM PAGE 1

curbing wages and damaging


the professional outlook of
skilled individuals.
All workers have the right
to be paid according to a
competitive marketplace for
their talent, and that includes
faculty members and other
skilled medical professionals,
said Dean Harvey, an attorney
with Lieff, Cabraser, Heimann
& Bernstein LLP, the firm
handling Seamans case.
The lawsuit originally
filed June 9 and amended
Aug. 12 to include Roper is
in the first stage of litigation.
If the court decides Seamans
claim has sufficient factual
basis, she could subpoena
relevant information from the
universities.
Representatives for UNC,
Duke and the two medical
schools declined to comment.
In an email earlier this
year, Seaman contacted
the chief of cardiothoracic
imaging at UNC School of
Medicine to ask about a job
opening, following two years
of communication about job
opportunities, during which
time she was assured she
would fit in nicely with (the)
cardiothoracic imaging group
at Carolina.
I agree that you would
be a great fit for our cardiothoracic imaging division,
the chief told Seaman in an
email, which is included in
the complaint. Unfortunately,
I just received confirmation
today from the deans office
that lateral moves of faculty
between Duke and UNC are
not permitted. There is reasoning for this guideline, which
was agreed upon between the
deans of UNC and Duke a few
years back. I hope you understand, it said.
Jeff Hirsch, a professor at
UNC School of Law, said such
an agreement would be a violation of antitrust law.
Without a doubt, there
is a valid claim being made.
The trickier issue in this case
is whether or not the plaintiff
can prove in fact that there
was this agreement, he said.
The agreement need not be
a formal policy for Seaman to
have a valid case; it could take
the form of an oral or gentlemens agreement.
Whether the agreement
is official or unofficial is

Department of Psychology
and Neuroscience.
Were renovating a turnof-the century building
into a state-of-the-art lab,
Guerrier said. Were trying
to maintain the integrity of
the historic contributions, but
stitching in all-new technology and systems.
Built in 1906, Howell
Hall originally housed the
chemistry department. It
also held the pharmacy and
journalism schools at different times, said Tamsen
Foote, executive assistant in
the psychology and neuroscience department.
Prior to its renovations,
the building operated as a
swing space where profes-

sors could have temporary


offices, a place psychology
department Chairman Don
Lysle called the odds and
ends of different departments.
Although the design phase
began in 2013, Guerrier said
the project didnt get off the
ground until 2014, and construction didnt start until
March 2015 one month
after the original plans projected end date.
People in the psychology
department were disappointed with the delay but understood that such large projects
take time, Lysle said.
Much of Howell Hall was
not up to code. The building
had no sprinkler system, and

what life-safety system did


exist was deficient, Guerrier
said. Construction workers
tore out the metal fire escapes
and added interior staircases
at both ends of the building,
along with a new entryway
that allows easier access to
the elevator.
Workers are upgrading
utilities including the sewage system and replacing
windows, putting on a new
roof and redoing the landscaping. The budget for the
entire project is $12.3 million, and Guerrier expects
construction to finish in
March 2016.
When Davie Hall, the current home of the department,
was reassessed for space, the

report found the department


needed twice as much space
as it had, Lysle said.
The field is becoming
much more technologydriven, which requires more
equipment, he said.
The fields of biology and
psychology are also moving
together, creating the need for
physiological research as well,
he said.
Lysle said people in the
psychology department are
excited to expand into the
much-needed space Howell
will provide.
Were just happy that its
going on, even if its construction noise, he said.

I think UNC should start expelling perpetrators and being clear about that.

support and information


also comes from the Equal
Opportunity and Compliance
Office.
When somebody comes
forward with a case and
they bring forward a report
to the Title IX office, the
Title IX office and the Equal
Opportunity Office, they look
at all of the things that a student might need, Hurt said.
So they look at housing
change, to a class change,
to move an exam, change
a schedule, and they make
referrals for things like going
to the law enforcement and
medical providers.
Students interviewed
around campus Wednesday
were somewhat unclear about
the changes in the policy.
I had to go through (Title
IX) training for my on-campus job as an office assistant,
so I know that theres a really
big push among campus
staff those who are designated to help report so
that students can have good
access to resources, but other
than that, I dont know very
much, junior Brooke Benson
said.
As well as being unaware,
some students believe the
policy changes will not
accomplish anything.
If youre raised a certain
way, I feel like its your mindset, like the way you look at

the opposite sex or the way


you look at sex so its like
a cultural thing as opposed
to a policy, junior Jason
Leaning said.
But junior Collette
Weinberger said there has

been an increase in conversations about sexual assault,


which Hurt said she has also
seen across campus and the
country.

one of the unforeseen challenges of renovating the


more-than-100-year-old
building.
To replace the windows,
for example, workers have
had to not only remove the
windows, but also the brick
masonry surrounding them.
They salvaged what bricks
they could and then spent a
month-and-a-half searching
for new bricks that would
match the buildings look,
Guerrier said.
Designers wanted to preserve the historic integrity of
the building while installing
new technology. The renovated building will house a lecture hall and labs for an additional wing of the Universitys

Andrea Pino
Director of Policy and Support at End Rape on Campus

ment of violators and the ways


the hearings are structured.
When I looked beyond
the surface of, Hey, you need
affirmative consent, it was
stuff like, once the decision
was made by the University
whether or not you could have
a hearing, you couldnt do anything about it, she said.
Allison said she is worried
that the same people are still
in charge, but Crisp said this
isnt true.
Any other people who
were still around under the
old policy were faithfully
operating that policy, and
theyre faithfully operating
this policy. The new people
vastly outweigh the people
who were here, he said.
Andrea Pino, a UNC
alumna and the current
director of policy and support
at advocacy group End Rape
on Campus, was one of the
first students to call out the
old policy for mistreating survivors and failing to process
cases.
She said the University has
made strides in the past year.
Theyve gone from no one
that focuses on sexual assault

to having an entire office as


well as others in other offices
that focus on sexual assault,
Pino said.
However, she does have
reservations about the implementation of the policy and
whether punishments are
actually being handed out.
I think UNC should start
expelling perpetrators and
being clear about that, she
said.
Part of the policy discusses
giving continued support to
survivors.
Continued support can
come in a number of ways,
said Mary Covington, executive director for Campus
Health Services.
Sometimes I think that
the student would feel more
comfortable not being at
CAPS and be more comfortable if they met with someone out in the community,
she said.
This support is confidential, and Campus Health has
trained staff members to
provide examinations and
referrals to the right places
for support.
Referrals to appropriate

irrelevant under antitrust


law. What matters is whether
there was a meeting of
minds, Harvey said.
Harvey recently helped
litigate a high-profile classaction lawsuit in Silicon
Valley involving a similar nopoaching agreement between
major technology firms
Apple, Intel, Google and
Adobe. The law firm represented a class of 64,600 people harmed by the agreement,
which suppressed employee
and wage competition.
The class prevailed, and on
July 9, the court held a final
hearing to approve a $415
million settlement.
Daniel Crane of the
University of Michigan
School of Law said plaintiffs
can seek two remedies in
antitrust cases: damages or
an injunction that terminates
the offending misconduct. In
such cases, plaintiffs typically
choose to do both.
It can be hard to prove
what their damages are, but
if they can establish reasonably what their lost economic
opportunities were if there
was to be increased economic competition between
the two university hospitals,
then there might be damages
awarded, Crane said.
While UNCs status as a
state actor complicates liability in the legal proceedings,
Crane said public university

standing should not prevent it


from being named in the case.
As a general matter, a
public university can be
named in an antitrust lawsuit. Thats not really an
issue, he said. State universities are sued all the time for
all kinds of things.
While the anti-poaching
agreement in Seamans complaint is limited to incriminating the medical schools,
some speculators have suggested it extends further. But
UNC has seen several faculty
members leave to join Dukes
staff most recently Jeremy
Petranka, former economics
professor; Omid Safi, former
religious studies professor;
and Valerie Ashby, former
head of UNCs Department of
Chemistry.
The fact that you can find
professors who have switched
is going to undermine
that case a little bit, said
Petranka, now an associate
professor in the Fuqua School
of Business. But if it does
exist and you find someone
who has made the switch, I
cant fathom them saying,
Oh, yeah, no, we had to work
around that, he said.
Im in a nice position where
I dont know, but for some
who did, I cant imagine theyd
come right out and say that
given the legal implications.
state@dailytarheel.com

university@dailytarheel.com

university@dailytarheel.com

Councilman charged
Lee Storrow of the Chapel
Hill Town Council was
charged with a DWI on
Wednesday. Updates online.

games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

Level:

4
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.

Solution to
Wedesdays puzzle

Record fundraising
A couple loves the North
Carolina Botanical Garden
$8 million worth of love.
See pg. 3 for story.

35 years of IP3 pizza


The owners of IP3 and
other longtime businesses in
Chapel Hill reflect on their
success. See pg. 6 for story.

Were students, too


Editor-in-Chief Paige
Ladisic encourages readers
to think about who works for
the DTH. See pg. 8 for views.

AWARD-WINNING STUDENT
JOURNALISM SINCE 1893

Everything You Need to Know at UNC!


www.dailytarheel.com

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


ACROSS
1 Word seen before or
less on supermarket
signs
6 Elisabeth of Hollow
Man
10 American __
14 Musical ensemble
15 Cautious
16 Gospel trio
17 Caddy for pigeons?
19 Combustible heap
20 NBA division that
includes the Bklyn. Nets
21 Very long time
22 On the agenda
24 Autograph signers aid
26 Musical ensemble
27 Range stat.
28 Statistical aid for sheep?
31 1973 Rolling Stones
ballad
34 All in the Family spinoff
35 Doomsday beginning?
36 Coming Home actor
37 Outmoded
38 Co-star of
Boris in Son
of
Frankenstein
39 Latin I word
40 See 34-Down
41 Connected, in a
way
42 Cantatas for
cows?
44 Wine container
45 Code name
46 Longtime
family-owned

firearms company
50 Much
52 Undecided
53 Take flight
54 Big Bird buddy
55 Phone service for crows?
58 Sight from a slope
59 Stem-to-branch angle
60 Like some astrological
charts
61 Without
62 Register compartment
63 Migratory birds
DOWN
1 16th-century conquest
victims
2 Nail partner?
3 __ Gay
4 NSAID, e.g.
5 Skyline highlight
6 Hogs
7 Dutch artist Frans
8 High-tech address
9 Sleepers aid
10 Make worse

11 Market speculator
12 Storybook meanie
13 Served up a whopper
18 Sports ball brand
23 Theater ticket word
25 Word with dance or fall
26 Saving the whales, e.g.
28 Rudimentary
29 Mononymous kicker
30 Take charge of
31 Start of a big race?
32 Nautilus skipper
33 Wedding attendant
34 With 40-Across, 1911
chemistry Nobelist
37 Nonthreatening type
38 Anglers hope
40 Temple feature in old

(C)2015 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


All rights reserved.

films
41 Bark, perhaps
43 General __
44 2012-13 Bates Motel
Emmy nominee
Farmiga
46 New Years highlights
47 Well-worn
48 Bluefin and yellowfin
49 Its a matter of degrees
50 Old-timers
51 Goyas Duchess of __
52 One of a hotel room pair
56 Terminate
57 Menlo Park monogram

Opinion

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Established 1893, 122 years of editorial freedom


EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS

PAIGE LADISIC EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM


SAM SCHAEFER OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
TYLER FLEMING ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR

ISHMAEL BISHOP
GABY NAIR
JACOB ROSENBERG
KERN WILLIAMS

EDITORIAL CARTOON

TREY FLOWERS
SAM OH
JUSTINA VASQUEZ

CAMERON JERNIGAN
ZACH RACHUBA
BRIAN VAUGHN

By Andrew Shoemaker, ashoemak@live.unc.edu

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

CDS
workers
deserve
kindness

NEXT

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

slantingleft, defending the Black Lives Matter movement

Sophomore English major


from Concord.
Email: evanab@live.unc.edu

Its Not Personal


Chiraayu Gosrani argues the
Durham lockback is inhumane.

I believe that you cant really work toward a


unified campus if youre not unified as your
own organization.

The state and society has demonstrated


empirically that these certain lives do not
matter.

Mistress of Quirk

QUOTE OF THE DAY

Jeremy Mckellar, on Black Student Movements newest theme

Evana Bodiker

enoir rushed,
crowded and stressful
when crunched for time
between classes.
Common courtesy tends
to be left in the Pit when the
lunchtime crowd comes in
around noon.
Not to say this is a terrible
crime; between people pushing in the mac and cheese line
and the immediate bad blood
that forms when that table gets
snagged, even though your
hand was on one of the chairs,
its easy to get annoyed and
fast in Lenoir.
The weekdays are stressful enough, so when we arrive
at the dining halls, our first
thoughts arent usually on our
manners. Despite the limited
time, and seating, its important to keep your cool even
when that last M&M cookie
gets snatched from the case.
We tend to forget that our
occasionally sassy attitudes dont
just affect our fellow students.
The Carolina Dining Services
workers are the unsung heroes
of UNC, but they tend to get the
brunt of our bad attitudes.
Despite the hustle and bustle
of the everyday, these are the
people who our typical teenage
(and post-teenage) angst should
never be directed at. Sound like
Im getting on a soapbox? Well,
try to hear me out.
During my first year at
UNC, I was so surprised at the
lack of gratitude some, but definitely not all, students showed
towards the cafeteria workers.
I noticed the quick demand
of certain food items without
thank-yous to follow.
Perhaps my parents just
drilled the art of appreciation in
me from a young age, but I cant
be the only one noticing the
disparity of thankfulness from
others. This might be a soapbox,
but its an important one.
CDS workers are some of
the kindest employees Ive
encountered on campus. Not
only do they work long and
hard hours, but they are also
responsible for a large portion
of students dietary well-being.
And for that, a small thankyou goes a long way.
Every now and then, we
all get caught up in where we
have to go next, but a simple,
Hi, how are you? wont
hold up the line too much. As
cheesy as it sounds, a smile
takes even less of your time.
The cafeteria workers are
invaluable members of the UNC
community. Its a new year, so
we need to remember their
instrumental place on our campus. If it werent for the employees dedicated work, producing
lunch or dinner without venturing to Franklin Street would be
a challenge for most of us.
Its normal to get a
little stressed in Lenoir or
Rams Head Dining Hall.
Comparatively, the two arent
much unlike Grand Central
Station, so anxiety upon entering is not exactly unreasonable.
The CDS workers strive to
make our lives a lot easier, so
treating them with kindness
can add even more ease of
mind to our hectic lives.
Just try not to let your stress
affect those who are behind
the counter and who are possibly even more stressed out
by the rush than you are. And
if you take a little time to be
thankful for those who labor
so much to make your plate of
food delicious, I promise your
food will taste even better.

The Daily Tar Heel

Black womens issues


linked with mens

EDITORIAL

We like to read, promise


Summer reading
should integrate
other art forms.

hen students
enroll in the
University of
North Carolina, most
understand that they will
be entering a community
devoted to tackling some
of societys most pressing
issues.
It is for this reason that
UNC promotes its summer reading program for
incoming students every
year. Despite the fact
that not all students will
dedicate their academic
careers at UNC to the
study of prose, the program acts as a prelude to

the intellectual debates


students will face regardless of their major.
In order to enhance the
conversations freshmen
have, UNC should consider
supplementing the current
book program with alternative forms of art that relate
thematically to the book.
That is not to say that
there is no benefit to the
current system. The discussion about justice catalyzed
by this years assigned book
Just Mercy by Bryan
Stevenson is clearly
worth having.
But including a wide
range of mediums, like
films or music, to spur
the conversation for each
years event might provide
incentives for more stu-

dents to participate.
Furthermore, certain
artistic avenues are arguably better at conveying
different ideas and perspectives than others are.
Whereas a book relies
on the connection between
an authors prose and a
readers imagination to
elicit meaning, a film uses
moving images and sound.
However, the program
should not only include
literature and film. Rather,
each year, the selections
ought to come from as
many distinct art forms as
is practical.
An update to the program should steer first-year
students toward ideas and
discussions that are even
more complex.

COLUMN

Were with you


The DTHs staff are your peers, and we take our jobs seriously.

pinion Editor Sam


Schaefer gets this
look in his eyes
when he says The Daily Tar
Heel is a watchdog for the
UNC community. Its a look
of passion, drive and above
all, fearlessness.
That fearlessness is what
keeps us going. Its fearlessness that could only thrive at
a public liberal arts institution like UNC. But that fearlessness also seems to really
piss people off.
Sometimes, I think the
University at large forgets
who works for The Daily Tar
Heel, especially when we
do something many arent
pleased with. No, were not
all future News & Observer
reporters, as many of our
online commenters would
tell you. Were UNC students.
We are part of the 29,000.
And we are critical of our
university and our community because we should be.
The Daily Tar Heel is
staffed by roughly 200 UNC
students, both graduate
and undergraduate, when
at full force. Those staffers
include student-athletes
and Morehead-Cain and
Robertson Scholars. Our
staffers arent just journalism majors theyre
students across all majors
and departments. We have

Paige Ladisic
Editor-in-Chief
Senior journalism major
from Oak Island.
Email: editor@dailytarheel.com

students in political organizations, volunteering at


nonprofits across Orange
County, performing in plays
or even writing them. We are
not as diverse as we might
like, but we acknowledge it
and are striving to represent
our community.
Every day, I interact with
staffers who I know are
smarter and more talented
than I am, and soon well
be welcoming 100 more
there are a lot of us. And we
are fearless.
When you wonder who
works for The Daily Tar
Heel, who wrote that crazy
editorial, who edited that
story on the front page, its
someone who might be sitting next to you in class, or
passing by you in the quad,
or standing behind you in
line at Alpine, or pulling
an all-nighter in the UL. If

you dont like our message,


thats your choice but
think about the people
youre criticizing when you
send a nasty email or post
on social media. DTH staffers arent that different from
anyone else.
Through three years at
The Daily Tar Heel and at
UNC, Ive found one thing
to be true: When the DTH
criticizes the University,
many dont feel that we have
the right.
Were UNC students,
so we should support our
University in its efforts to
move forward from the
academic-athletic scandal,
cheer for our athletes in
every situation and always
think that its a #GDTBATH.
But UNC has encouraged
all of us, DTH or not, to be
more than that. I take that
responsibility seriously. We
dig deep into all the facets
of the academic scandal
reports, we report on our
athletes when they make
mistakes and we admit when
we are disappointed with
our school.
If theres one thing Ive
learned about the staffers
and editors at The Daily Tar
Heel, its that they arent
willing to settle for less
than what we know UNC is
capable of.

QuickHits
Drivers will be okay

Help us, Hawking

Dont give up, teach

The funding for drivers


education in North Carolina
is getting lower
than a 16-year
olds new Honda
Civic. Being a
state that prides
itself on its NASCAR history,
it is probably safe to assume
all North Carolinians are
endowed with the spirit of
Richard Petty. He learned to
drive on his own, so there is
no reason others cannot.

Chancellor Carol Folt is


chilling with Stephen
Hawking and
others in Stockholm. Hawking
is one of the
most revolutionary astrophysicists in
history. Hopefully Folt has
tapped into his knowledge
of the stars to peer into
the future and see if UNC
will be NCAA champions
this year.

Those pesky computers


with all their buttons and
beeping are
once again
winning in the
eternal conflict
against some of
the more technologically
inept professors. Class
time is wasted as the red
phone is dialed for the
third time this week to
complain that the projector isnt turning on.

TO THE EDITOR:
In a recent editorial about
responding to activism with
public action, the lagging
graduation rate for men of
color was referenced.
As underrepresented
men of color, we applaud
the increased attention our
demographic has received
in the past few years, as
support from the entire
University community is
still much needed. However,
we want to state that issues
facing underrepresented
women of color are inextricably bound with ours.
One issue cannot be
recognized while simultaneously ignoring another
issue, because it implicitly
washes out the presence
of women of color while
placating the seriousness of
their needs as a collective.
Women of color have to
deal with continued racial
assaults and microaggressions at this predominately
white institution while
simultaneously dealing
with misogynistic interactions and gendered exclusionary practices from
male-dominated enclaves.
Women of color have
been at the forefront of
campuswide protests against
institutionalized racism.
In a recent (Raleigh)
News & Observer opinion
piece, professor Reginald
Hildebrand asserts that,
Someday, inspiring, inclusive monuments to the
ideals of Emancipation will
become as ubiquitous in
the South as monuments to
the Confederate war effort
are today.
Let us hope that maybe
one day this will be so, but
at the same time maintain
awareness that this ideal
was brought forward by a
very diverse and eclectic
coalition made of both
men and women of color;
cis, trans and gender nonconforming individuals;
the socially aware; and the
young and old alike.
Marty Davidson
Senior
Political science
Parker Martin
Senior
Management and
society, economics
Christopher Faison
Coordinator
Men of Color
Engagement,
Center for Student
Success and Academic
Counseling

DTH articles statistics


were highly suspect
TO THE EDITOR:
I was very disappointed
in your recent improper use
of statistics and the presentation of all relevant factual
information concerning
the relationship between
the death penalty and the
race of the perpetrator.
Your article highlights a 6.2
percent range difference
between the death penalty
sentencing when the race of

the victim is examined, yet


readers are left to wonder
if this is truly statistically
significant.
A statistical test, error
bars, or a sample size would
have been highly helpful. A
6.2 percent difference hardly seems to be dramatic as
Frank Baumgartner asserts.
Additionally, it would
have been helpful to inform
readers that while its true
whites only account for 43
percent of the death row
population, they also account
for fewer murder offenders.
To truly address and
begin to resolve racial
disparities, we need a full,
unfiltered picture with all
the relevant statistics.
Moreover, please have
your staff consult your mathematical and statistically
minded peers before you
print stories such as this.
You only muddy the waters
of race relations through
presentation of improper
statistics. On a side note, I,
personally, do not believe
in putting anyone to death,
regardless of their race or the
race of their victim.
Lance Jubic
Graduate student
Biological and
biomedical sciences

Larry Fedoras record


is disappointing
TO THE EDITOR:
To quote legendary head
coach Bill Parcells, You are
what your record says you
are. In Coach Larry Fedoras
tenure at UNC, the Tar Heels
have been 21-17 all together,
1-1 in bowl games and a combined 3-3 against Duke and
N.C. State. In a word, the
Tar Heels under Fedora have
been average.
Whats worse is that, in
each of the years Fedora has
been at UNC, the football
team has declined from
the year before, with the
Heels finally falling below
an even win-loss record last
year after the 40-21 loss to
Rutgers in the Quick Lane
Bowl. 6-6 regular seasons
are hard to stomach for fans,
especially at Carolina. It
feels like nearly every other
sport is competing for a conference or national championship while the football
team is fighting for a six-win
season (out of twelve games)
to become bowl-eligible.
If this university was not
so successful academically
or athletically in basketball
and soccer, fans would be
fed up with being average
in the largest revenue sport
in the country. When has
average ever been enough
at the University of North
Carolina?
The only real job security in the world of coaching
is having a larger number
in the win column than in
the loss column, and the
UNC football team has
been moving in the wrong
direction since Fedoras first
season, when the team went
8-4. (Thanks, Gio!) Unless
average is accepted at
Carolina, time may be running thin for Coach Fedora
in Chapel Hill.
Jack Carver
Senior
Exercise and
sports science

SPEAK OUT
WRITING GUIDELINES
Please type. Handwritten letters will not be accepted.
Sign and date. No more than two people should sign letters.
Students: Include your year, major and phone number.
Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number.
Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit
letters to 250 words.
SUBMISSION
Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill,
NC 27514
Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com
EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the
opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises 10 board
members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi