Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
dailytarheel.com
WHAT WE KNOW
OCT. 22, 2015
3
WHAT WE KNEW
OCT. 22, 2014
$990
per hour
lawsuits
by former
student-athletes
136
$3.1
pages
million
total spent on
Wainstein report
UNRESOLVED.
employees
4 of 9
employees
3,100
year
probation by UNCs
accrediting agency
level-one
violations
students
of NCAA bylaws
5 of 9
47.4
identities
percent of 3,100
were student-athletes
of employees facing
disciplinary review
known to public
A year after the Wainstein report, the NCAA and discipline decisions loom
By Bradley Saacks and Liz Bell
Senior Writers
Still waiting
After moving past the initial
shock of the reports findings, the
University community looked to the
names in the report to determine
who should be held accountable.
At the press conference last year,
Folt said nine employees at the
Students pursuing
African-American
studies are proud.
By Jane Wester
University Editor
A reformed UNC
Music professor James Moeser
said the situation went undetected
for so long because of two main fallacies: the fact that the academic
support system for student athletes
was, in reality, a part of the athletics
Defying critics in a
shrunken department
people from her hometown
questioned her.
It would just be like, So,
are you going to class? So,
I heard all your classes are
easy, she said.
Like, no. I work my ass off
in all my classes. I go to class,
I do my work, they dont give
me easy grades.
She said she believes her
degree will have equal value
to any other social science
degree.
Just because people pass off
my department as something
not very valuable or something
thats easy to be manipulated,
that doesnt determine its
worth, she said. Cause, I
mean, its priceless to me, and I
love it. I wouldnt have my education any other way.
In spring 2015, one
semester after the Wainstein
report was released, Parlier
had a Swahili class taught
by Alphonse Mutima, whos
mentioned in the report.
I was like oh, sh*t, whats
going to happen, she said.
But Mutima turned out to
be one of her favorite professors, and she said he didnt
cater to athletes.
Mutima and department
chairperson Eunice Sahle
If you want to keep a secret, you must also hide it from yourself.
GEORGE ORWELL, 1984
News
POLICE LOG
www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893
122 years of editorial freedom
PAIGE LADISIC
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
PAT JAMES
SPORTS EDITOR
EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
JOS VALLE
DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
KELSEY WEEKMAN
ONLINE MANAGING EDITOR
KATIE WILLIAMS
PHOTO EDITOR
MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
DESIGN@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
ONLINE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
PHOTO@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
COPY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
TIPS
Contact Managing Editor
Mary Tyler March at
managing.editor@dailytarheel.com
with tips, suggestions or
corrections.
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
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY
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.
CORRECTIONS
Due to a reporting error, Tuesdays front page story All Greek women can be Delta
Advocates misrepresented how survivors information is shared with Delta Advocates. Delta
Advocates share information they hear from survivors only with Cassidy Johnson, gender violence services coordinator.
Due to a reporting error, Tuesdays front page story Hookah bars are a thing of Chapel Hills
past misrepresented the rule prohibiting smoking in public places. The 2010 statewide smoking
ban does not apply in public places; it only applies to bars and restaurants. The 2012 Orange County
rule also prohibits smoking outdoors in any place owned or maintained by the towns or county. The
original version of this article misrepresented indoor smoking rooms. In Orange County, indoor
areas where the public is allowed or invited are required to be smoke-free, unless that space is
explicitly exempted from the rule.
Due to a reporting error, Tuesdays page 6 story Chapel Hill police to ticket residents for good,
lawful behavior incorrectly stated which companies would offer coupons. Noodles and Company
and Franklin Street Yoga are both confirmed coupons, said Lt. Celisa Lehew.
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.
75004
Contact Managing Editor Mary Tyler at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
Like: facebook.com/dailytarheel
WANT
MORE
MONEY?
JOIN THE CLUB.
Source: LIMRA Secure Retirement Institute, Not-for-Profit Market Survey, first-quarter 2015 results. Average assets per participant based
on full-service business. Please note average retirement account balances are not a measure of performance of TIAA-CREF retirement
offerings. 2 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. C24849D
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
ACADEMIC SCANDAL
UNC reviews
admissions
after
Wainstein
DTH/KYLE HODGES
Shelby Dawkins-Law poses at her apartment in Chapel Hill. Dawkins-Law is a graduate student on campus and is a part of the Real Silent Sam Coalition.
DTH/LOUISE MCDONALD
Jean Holcomb, a UNC alumna, will be among the seven inducted into the Business Hall of Fame.
$6,000 in donations.
He noted that none of the
donations to the CHALT
political action committee are from real estate or
development interests, like
some of the donations to
Mark Kleinschmidts or Lee
Storrows campaigns.
Our candidates are
beholden to the people of
Chapel Hill, not beholden
to development outside of
Chapel Hill, Henkel said.
These funds go toward
advertisements and yard signs
supporting the candidates
About $5,000
raised since January
15,000
newsletter subscribers
3 candidates
endorsed for Town Council
1 candidate
endorsed for mayor
Opinion
EDITORIAL CARTOON
ISHMAEL BISHOP
GABY NAIR
JACOB ROSENBERG
KERN WILLIAMS
TREY FLOWERS
SAM OH
JUSTINA VASQUEZ
CAMERON JERNIGAN
ZACH RACHUBA
BRIAN VAUGHN
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Dont fall
under
the
weather
NEXT
Mistress of Quirk
Evana Bodiker
UNC-system president
search is alarming
ENDORSEMENT
Mark
Kleinschmidt
is the mayor
of Chapel Hill
and a civil
rights lawyer
running for his
third term.
In contrast to charges from
his critics, Kleinschmidt has
proven himself an able listener, and his record of collaboration with UNC is strong.
Kleinschmidts challenger,
Pam Hemminger, has done
an effective job of critiquing the weaker parts of
Kleinschmidts record, but
her assertion that the town
hasnt been an effective collaborator rings hollow.
But Kleinschmidt should
ENDORSEMENT
MICHAEL PARKER
LEE STORROW
JIM WARD
TO THE EDITOR:
Those of us who have
been concerned about
the secretive and divisive
search for a new UNC
president could not have
imagined how brazenly
biased it has become. The
indication that Margaret
Spellings is now on the
verge of being named to
succeed Tom Ross is not
merely astonishing, it is
alarming. Whatever her
strengths, she enters the
picture as a grossly partisan figure who, in previous
roles, has had difficulty
with basic liberties essential in the academic world.
That may be no surprise,
since her own academic
credentials appear to be
modest. Will the friends,
faculty, students and alumni of UNC sit still for this
political coup detat? That
is the question of the hour
and the hour is late.
Edwin M. Yoder Jr.
Editor, The Daily Tar
Heel
1955-56
encourages students to
think outside the box to
find jobs and to have a positive impact on a changing
world. To read more, see
Michele Tracy Bergers book
Transforming Scholarship.
Prof. Silvia Tomkov
Department chairperson
Womens and gender
studies
Privatization would
be a terrible deal
TO THE EDITOR:
A. Bradley Ives letter to
the editor, published Oct.
19, uses clever language
to defend the indefensible
privatization of Student
Stores. He claims that an
outside firm could make
more money by providing
certain services ... centrally
(read: Outsourcing), but
that displaced Student
Stores employees would
be shifted over to a new
administrative division.
This creates a new
layer in an already bloated
administration, and it sticks
students and taxpayers
with the bill all for the
benefit of Folletts bottom
line. Its a terrible deal, and
UNC students ought not be
fooled by Ives legalese.
Sam Shaw
Senior
History
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,
N.C. 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.
Commerce.
She really laid a great
foundation for me going in,
Harris said.
@hodnettkieran
city@dailytarheel.com
CHALT
FROM PAGE 3
CHALT can have a real influence on Novembers election.
I think were going to
change the council this year,
he said. The anti-incumbent
feeling is running very strong
this year in Chapel Hill.
Schwartz said he has no
idea how much sway CHALT
will have in the election, but
hes thankful for the support.
To the
UNC Community
15%
Discoun
Discou
nt
~With~
Carolina Brewery
at The Carolina Inn
to Victory!
Take the Student
Commute Challenge:
19
Oct u
thr 1
3
Oct
c a ro l i n a i n n e v e n t s . c o m
studentcommutechallenge.com
brought to you by
If I succeed at winning
a seat on Town Council, the
success will be due in large
part to the various kinds of
help financial support, policy research, voter outreach
I have received from CHALT,
Shwartz said.
Town Council incumbent
Donna Bell said she thinks
CHALT already has had a significant influence.
Theyve already influenced
the conversation, which is
Freshmen, Sophomores
& Juniors
Wants You!
for
who?
the Ad Staff
to apply
Send cover letter
and resume to
rebecca
@dailytarheel.com
Deadline: Nov. 1st
DTHADSTAFF
DTH h DTH h DTH h DTH h DTH h DTH h DTH h DTH h DTH h DTHh DTHh DTHh DTH
DTH h DTH h DTH h DTH h DTH h DTH h DTH h DTH h DTH h DTHh DTHh DTHh DTH
HOLCOMB
YOURE NEVER
FAR FROM
FLAVOR
Th e Tr o l ly Sto p
Serving a variety of hot dogs.
Also serving Hersheys
Ice Cream and Beer.
REE
N F
UTE S,
L
G
HAS OT DOG IPS!
H
CH
S &
BUN
GO HEELS!
w Great locations
w Near bus stops
TARHEELRENTALS.COM
Street Closures:
Southbound traffic on Martin
Luther King Jr. Blvd will be
merged into one lane between
Estes Drive and Rosemary Street.
Traffic on E. Franklin Street will
be merged into one lane between
Estes Drive and Raleigh Road.
Westbound traffic on E. Franklin
Street will be merged into one
lane prior to the intersection of
Estes Drive. Westbound lanes on
South Road will be detoured onto
Ridge Road to Manning Drive
www.preservationchapelhill.org
News
DTH/KATIE WILLIAMS
First-year defensive end Jalen Dalton (97) pursues a tackle during the fourth quarter of Saturdays game against Wake Forest.
Dalton shines in
season debut
By Ben Coley
Senior Writer
DTH/JULIA KLEIN
A tapestry hangs in the FedEx Global Education Center as part of the Ramlila: The Story of Ram in Indian Devotional Theater exhibition.
are important.
I think its really important
to make voting a habit, she
said. I think kid voting programs do just that. I did kid
voting all throughout my childhood. When my parents voted,
Id be right next to them. They
show kids how important voting is from a very early age.
UNC sophomore Idalis
Payne Mason also participated in kid voting polls.
It was a kids voting thing,
she said. It covered state
and national elections. I even
volunteered for it at the elementary school I went to one
year when I got into middle
school. I remember doing it
every major election year.
state@dailytarheel.com
OCTOBER
Oct 22: THE DEVIL MAKES THREE w/The
Deslondes**($20)
Oct 23: Rasputina ($17/$20) w/Daniel
Knox
Oct/ 24: BANDWAY w/ Pipe ($10)
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 and Sun
Club ($15)
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)
11/6: COPELAND w/ Eisley, We Are The
City ( $20/$23)
11/7: THE FOREIGN EXCHANGE w/
Phonte, Nicolay ($25/$30)
11/8: DEAFHEAVEN w/Tribulation ( $18/
$20)
11/10: Nathaniel Rateliff &
The Night Sweats w/Caroline Rose (SOLD
OUT)
11/11: THE STORY SO FAR w/ Basement,
Turnover ($21/$23)
11/12: Comedy For The Climate: Randy
Lietke/ Joe Zimmerman, with MC Kaze &
DSI Hip Hop Improv ($15)
11/13: IDLEWILD SOUTH, BETTER OFF
DEAD ($8/$10)
11/14: MUSIC FOR FENCES Benefit w/ I
Was Totally Destroying It, Backsliders, &
much more ($8/$10)
20 FR: LIZZ WINSTEAD ($20)
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)
WE ARE ALSO
PRESENTING...
919-967-9053
300 E. Main Street Carrboro
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22
THE DEVIL MAKES THREE
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27
UNDERACHIEVERS
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28
PEACHES
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4
MINUS THE BEAR
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23
NO BS BRASS BAND
DECEMBER
Dec. 5: MADISEN WARD & THE MAMA
BEAR ($15/$18)
Dec 6: THE ACADEMY IS... Almost Here 10
Year Anniversary Tour w/ Party Baby; $25
Dec. 12: SOUTHERN CULTURE ON THE
SKIDS ($13/$15)
DEC 16: THE GET UP KIDS 20th
Anniversary Tour ($19.50/$23) w/ Into It.
Over it. and Rozwell Kids
Dec. 19: BOMBADIL w/ Kingsley Flood
($13/$15)
JANUARY
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25
THE STRAY BIRDS
MONDAY, OCTOBER 26
MIKKY EKKO
Jan 2016:
23 SA: PHIL COOK w/ The Dead Tongues
($12/$15)
FEBRUARY
Feb 2016:
3 WE: LOW **($20)
Serving
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11
NEON INDIAN
CATS CRADLE TICKET OUTLETS: Schoolkids Records (Raleigh), CD Alley (Chapel Hill)
** ON -LINE! @ http://www.ticketfly.com/ ** For Phone orders Call (919) 967-9053
www.catscradle.com
The BEST live music ~ 18 & over admitted
10
News
different dude.
For Hendricks, the show
offers a way to continue her
career in TV production.
A former multimedia editor for The Daily Tar Heel,
Hendricks thrives on the
stressful moments before
deadline.
Whatever youre imagining, multiply by 10, she said.
Theres a lot of people it has
to go through the cut process, a lot of back and forth,
notes and editing. Its a good
kind of chaos.
Fox has already ordered
six more scripts for
Deadlines
For Rent
Announcements
NOTICE TO ALL DTH
CUSTOMERS
Counselors needed for fun and engaging afterschool program at the Chapel Hill-Carrboro
YMCA. Great opportunity to work with elementary aged students leading active and
creative programming in the afternoon. Hours
are 2-6pm on weekdays. Please apply online
at link provided on dailytarheel, com/classifieds or contact Youth Director Nick Kolb at
919-987-8847 with questions.
HElPER NEEDED FOR 2 children (1 monthold, 3 year-old) approximately 5-10 hrs/wk.
Near Southpoint. References and experience with young children required. Email
carlyekincaid@gmail.com.
SEEKING DRIVER FOR afterschool activities for
13 year-old girl. Start immediately for Tuesdays, Thursdays and possibly Wednesdays,
Fridays. 3-5:30pm, Chapel Hill. Requires reliable car, good driving record, references. Email
resume. 919-824-5912.
FAIR HOUSINg
Volunteering
Pets/Livestock
Help Wanted
FREE RENT, ROOMMATE, HOUSE. Disabled female professional looking for roommate for a
house off Ephesus Church Road. Free rent and
partial utilities to sleep at house and help get
in bed. Must like pets. Will have 2 rooms and
bathroom. Share kitchen. For more info, email
deliza05@gmail.com.
carriage house. Attached double garage, skylights, hardwoods, energy efficient. Available now. $2,700/mo. Call:
919-942-6945.
ASSISTANT STORE
MANAgER NEEDER
MERCIA
Help Wanted
RESPONSIblE DOG SITTER: Pays $50 per stay,
dailytarheel.com
Personals
HOROSCOPES
If October 22nd is Your Birthday...
Roommates
Travel/Vacation
BAHAMAS SpRINg BREAk
Announcements
Its fast!
Its easy!
Place a
Classified
Today...
dailytarheel.
com
/classifieds
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 Wait on a final decision. Finish the research first. You can get the facts.
Rest and review. Slow to avoid potential
collisions. If you feel the weight of the world,
ask for someone to stand with you.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8 Your influence is spreading.
Accept a nice benefit. More work is required,
and your team can handle it. Practice making
respectful requests. Your popularity is on the
rise. Check public opinion and participate in
a bigger conversation.
gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8 An unexpected professional
development changes things. Provide leadership over the next few days. No stretching
the truth now. Temporary confusion could
rattle you if you let it. Friends make good
coaches. A rising tide floats all boats.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 7 Your wanderlust is getting
worse today and tomorrow. Plan your
itinerary and make reservations in advance.
Adapt for changing working conditions.
Manage your schedule carefully. Reserve
your strength, and pack light. Simplicity
saves time and energy.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 Contribute to family
finances over the next few days. Do the
bookkeeping, maybe. bring home the bacon.
Avoid gambling. Stash resources. Make
long-term plans. Sort, file and organize
papers. Get to the bottom of a controversy.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is an 8 bounce ideas off your partner today and tomorrow. Contribute another
perspective to each other. Compromise on
priorities to move forward. Get multiple
bids. Avoid assumptions. If you want to
know something, ask. Good news comes
from far away.
RECYCLE ME PLEASE!
UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY
STARPOINT STORAGE
NEED STORAGE SPACE?
Safe, Secure, Climate Controlled
Religious Directory
jrogers@upcch.org 919-967-2311
110 Henderson St., Chapel Hill
Thursdays Fellowship dinner
& program 5:45-8 PM
Weekly small groups
Sundays at 10:30am
Creekside Elementary
www.uncpcm.com
919.797.2884
allgather.org
Presbyterian
Campus
Ministry
lovechapelhill.com
(919) 942-6666
WAINSTEIN
FROM PAGE 1
DTH ONLINE:
To read named
employee reactions, go
to dailytarheel.com.
tion? Here we are a multibillion-dollar operation, educating people, all these amazing
things, and I think what I
am probably proudest about
is that it has become a place
where nobody takes anything
for granted.
An ongoing tension
Lloyd Kramer, a history
professor who was a member of the Faculty Athletics
Committee in the mid-2000s,
said he is asked, and occasionally razzed, about the
scandal at conferences and
meet-and-greets with faculty
from other schools.
But the people most fascinated with his take on the
relationship between athletics
and academics at institutions of higher education,
he said, are his colleagues at
European universities.
They are always surprised
by this particular aspect of
American universities why
do you have these multimillion sports programs as a
part of the university? said
Kramer, who specializes in
European history and frequently travels abroad.
Its just an anomaly of our
higher education system compared to other universities in
the world.
While Kramer is confident
a scandal of similar scope and
style could not happen again
at UNC, he still notes a balance issue between the academic and athletic realms.
There is an ongoing tension
between the academic mission
of the University and the pressure to win at the highest level
in high-revenue sports.
Former senior associate
dean for social sciences Arne
Kalleberg pinpoints Kramers
feeling.
The whole general ethos
that sports has as a moneymaking factor with alumni
and all that is a major issue,
said Kalleberg, who is currently a sociology professor.
To Renner, the Faculty
Athletics Committee chairperson and radiology professor, changing this perception
of athletics is on everyone
including the athletes.
If all they talk about is
their sport to people, then why
wouldnt anyone think that
that person is here for something other than their sport?
Kalleberg the last dean
to sign off on former AFAM
department chairperson
Julius Nyangoros reappointment did not say how he
would remedy the issue but
was firm on one thing.
The larger problem of the
culture of sports still exists.
university@dailytarheel.com
AAAD
FROM PAGE 1
out of his way to support the
department and eventually,
he expects students to return
to the major.
I know some people have
been skeptical of why we
would even have a department like this and I find that
very, very difficult to even
imagine that someone would
ask that question, he said.
You cant study history
without understanding Africa
and the contributions to
human development that
have been made by Africans
in various countries over
various years, whether youre
talking about architecture or
mathematics or other kinds of
culture.
In a similar vein, he said
studying African-American
DTH/KATIE WILLIAMS
Andrew Dykers poses with Slave Testimony, what he thought
was the most influential book from his first AFAM class.
DYKERS
FROM PAGE 1
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
Wednesdays puzzle
11
DTH endorsements
The Daily Tar Heel chose
its endorsements for this
years local elections. See
pg. 4 for endorsements.
dailytarheel.com/classifieds
find a job buy a couch sell your car
ACROSS
1 Lead-ins to some online
games
4 Magnetic induction unit
9 Nobelist Curie
14 Petal pluckers word
15 Use at the table
16 Dunderhead
17 Ditty from 1970s-80s
NFL wide receiver
Lynn?
19 Replicate
20 Fighting against
21 Rarely seen item on
casual Friday
22 Enjoy Whistler
23 Rule
25 Unwinding places for
actor Russell?
30 Sagittarius, e.g.
32 Sign of hope
33 See 8-Down
34 Mass __
37 Wander
38 Tough spot for actor
Walter?
40 Computer menu
heading
42 Hockey positions
43 Big club in
Atlantic City?
44 Neurologists
printout, briefly
45 Find out about
49 Easter adornment
made by
politician Dan?
53 Gretzky, during
most of the 80s
54 Foreign __
55 __ Cruces
57 Not
58 Emulate Whistler
61 Facial feature of actor
Ethan?
63 Bike wheel feature
64 Little Miss Sunshine
Oscar winner
65 Rebellious Turner
66 Structural support
67 Kids around
68 Some municipal trains
DOWN
1 Broken Arrow co-star
2 Wet blanket
3 Radio problem
4 Notable Downing Street
number
5 __ of Eden
6 Stiff-upper-lip type
7 Hardly a social butterfly
8 With 33-Across, Life of
Pi director
9 Plutos master
10 Improvise in a sketch
11 2014 World Cup city
12 Charged particle
13 Printemps follower
18 Lingerie purchase
22 Bundled up
24 Pi Day celebrant,
stereotypically
26 Circular gasket
27 Soothing succulent
28 Accelerate, with up
29 Understand
31 Common allergen
35 Mont Blanc covering
36 Emilio Estevez, to
Martin Sheen
37 Goosebumps series
author
38 Court answer
39 Twistable treat
12
2015
Candidate
age
45
Political
affiliation
Democrat
PAM HEMMINGER
Political
affiliation
Democrat
Campaign
funding total
$7,883
Candidate
age
55
GARY KAHN
Political
affiliation
Democrat
Campaign
funding total
$12,400.67
Candidate
age
59
Campaign
funding total
$5
ON OBEY CREEK
I ended up supporting it. The design elements
will be great for the community.
ON OBEY CREEK
Hemminger says the development project is
much too large for the land its on. She criticizes the decision-making process that she says
ignored local sentiment for a smaller project.
ON OBEY CREEK
Kahn said he is in favor of the Obey Creek
development plan.
ON AMITY STATION
We kicked them out of the chamber. I was not
a fan of the concept plan. They have not filed an
application.
ON AMITY STATION
Hemminger wants to use downtown spaces for
the development of commercial office space and
opportunities she says downtown needs instead
of more student housing.
ON AMITY STATION
He did not provide a clear stance on this topic.
He believes there should be a community meeting and public hearings that would potentially
lead to a development agreement.
ON EPHESUS-FORDHAM
Its the boldest approach to town development
we have ever had. I believe that it will transform
the area.
ON EPHESUS-FORDHAM
Great idea, bad implementation. She said she is
upset by a lack of a regulating plan and the lack
of plans for urban design, affordable housing
and environmental impact.
ON EPHESUS-FORDHAM
Kahn said he is in favor of the development
plans, as well as in favor of form-based code.
He agrees with community concerns about the
height of density, traffic and stormwater.
ADAM W. JONES
NANCY OATES
LEE STORROW
DONNA BELL
JIM WARD
MICHAEL PARKER
PAUL NEEBE
DAVID SCHWARTZ
JESSICA
ANDERSON
NANCY
OATES
MICHAEL
PARKER
ADAM W.
JONES
LEE
STORROW
PAUL
NEEBE
DONNA
BELL
JIM
WARD
DAVID
SCHWARTZ
LIGHT RAIL
SUPPORT
OPPOSE
SUPPORT
OPPOSE
SUPPORT
SUPPORT
SUPPORT
SUPPORT
OPPOSE
OBEY CREEK
OPPOSE
OPPOSE
NOT FOR OR
AGAINST
OPPOSE
SUPPORT
MIX OF GOOD
AND BAD
SUPPORT
SUPPORT
OPPOSE
AMITY
STATION
OPPOSE
OPPOSE
OPPOSE
SUPPORT
OPPOSE
SHOULD BE
CAREFULLY
CONSIDERED
NO COMMENT
OPPOSE
OPPOSE
EPHESUSFORDHAM
NEEDED
MORE
DISCUSSION
OPPOSE
SUPPORT
START IN THE
RIGHT
DIRECTION
SUPPORT
OPPOSE
OPPOSE
STANCES ON:
SOME PARTS
GOOD GOAL,
BUT HAS SOME COULD WORK
IN CHAPEL HILL
FLAWS
DTH/JOS VALLE
WHERE TO VOTE
Early voting starts today in Orange
County. You have until Oct. 31 for
early voting, and Nov. 3 is Election
Day. Heres where you can submit
your ballot: