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Volume 123, Issue 98

Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

Thursday, October 22, 2015

dailytarheel.com

WHAT WE KNOW
OCT. 22, 2015
3

WHAT WE KNEW
OCT. 22, 2014
$990
per hour

lawsuits

hourly rate for


Kenneth Wainstein

by former
student-athletes

136

$3.1

pages

million

in the Oct. 22 Wainstein report

total spent on
Wainstein report

UNRESOLVED.

employees

facing disciplinary action

4 of 9

employees

Folt said would be fired

3,100

year

probation by UNCs
accrediting agency

level-one
violations

students

of NCAA bylaws

took paper classes in the former


department of African and AfroAmerican Studies

5 of 9

47.4

identities

percent of 3,100
were student-athletes

DTH/TYLER VAHAN, BRADLEY SAACKS

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

The final investigation.


That was what the 136-page report
on UNCs academic-athletic scandal by former federal investigator
Kenneth Wainstein and his team represented to a University in the midst
of a seemingly never-ending scandal.
Released a year ago today, the
report was billed as doing what
the other investigations could not:
finally determining the extent
of academic fraud in the former
Department of African and AfroAmerican Studies and who was
ultimately responsible for it.
And the results could not be
ignored, even for the most passionate UNC die-hards.
For nearly two decades, fake classes were used to artificially inflate athletes grades thanks to an empowered
secretary, a lack of administrative
oversight and desperate tutors.
Was this an academic or an ath-

letic issue? Clearly it was an issue in


both areas. It was a university issue,
Chancellor Carol Folt said a year ago.
Now, after 365 days, three lawsuits
from former student-athletes and
countless questions from all sides
of the University community, Folt
believes UNC is stronger than ever.
We faced the biggest issue in
University history, she said on
Wednesday. We had brought forward
details that had not ever been seen.
We pushed forward more than 70
reforms and initiatives, which have led
to major changes at the institution.
I think it is stronger, more productive than its ever been.

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

University would face disciplinary review including four whose


employment would be terminated.
That day, responding to questions
from the crowd, Folt declined to
share the identities of these individuals until they received their due
process through the Universitys
human resources processes.
Two firings, of former athletic
tutors Jaimie Lee and Beth Bridger,
and two resignations, by former
professors Jan Boxill and Timothy
McMillan, are all that have been
made public by the University after
a settlement among UNC and 10
media organizations, including The
Daily Tar Heel.
The Daily Tar Heel attempted
to contact all current University
employees who were specifically
named in the Wainstein report, not
including the witness account summaries section which summarized
the more than 100 interviews the
Wainstein team did. African, African
American and diaspora studies pro-

fessor Alphonse Mutima declined to


comment on the report but did confirm that he is under review.
The University hasnt made a
definitive decision regarding my
situation, he said.
Many other employees chose not
to comment or could not comment
due to the NCAA investigation.
Mutima, according to the report,
pushed back against attempts by
former administrative assistant and
director of the paper class scheme
Deborah Crowder to change grades
and place students in his Swahili
courses that Mutima said misbehaved.
Despite his frustration, the report says
Mutima ultimately took advantage of
the paper classes by directing distracting students out of his classroom.
When asked about the time
frame for the remaining employees
assumedly still under review, Folt
also declined to comment.
As soon as we are completed with
it, we will let you know. But it is only
a tiny part of the amount of work we

reopened NCAA investigation

Students pursuing
African-American
studies are proud.
By Jane Wester
University Editor

In fall 2010, 104 students


were majoring in the former
Department of African and
Afro-American Studies.
That number would fall
precipitously in the next five
years, as news of a paper
class scheme in the department cast UNC in a national
scandal.
By spring 2013, there were
66 majors, according to data
from the registrars office. The
next semester, that number
was cut in half.
Now there are 23 students
majoring in the renamed
Department of African,
African American, and
Diaspora Studies. The paper
class scheme ended before
current undergraduates started college, but the negative
voices havent stopped.
Junior Abigail Parliers
Facebook page shows her
major, so when the Wainstein
report came out, she said,

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

SEE WAINSTEIN, PAGE 11

ongoing NCAA investigation

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

have been doing, she said.


This protection of information is
supported by several at the University,
like Faculty Athletics Chairperson Joy
Renner, who commended the school
for not making to rash decisions.
Youre wanting to know because
you need to know or because youre
curious, or you can also look at it
like if that were me, would I want
the University to protect my rights?
Renner said.
Do I need to know right now? I
dont need to know right now. Am I
happy to know the University protects my rights? Yes, I am.

did not respond to requests


for comment. Director of
Undergraduate Studies
Kenneth Janken declined to
comment.
Since 2010, the departments curriculum and leadership have changed completely, Provost Jim Dean said
but he isnt surprised by
the decline in enrollment.
A couple of faculty members, out of a large number
of faculty members, really
unfortunately created a bad
reputation for all of them,
and its really a shame, he
said.
That reputation sticks
around, he said, because of a
concept known in public relations as the lag effect.
If you have a really good
reputation and you start to
do some things that arent so
good, the reputation holds up
for a pretty good while before
it really starts to go down, he
said.
And then when your reputation goes down and you
start to do some good things,
it takes a long time for your
reputation to be restored.
Dean said hes tried to go

SEE AAAD, PAGE 11

UNC graduate really feels


the sting of his AFAM minor
Andrew Dykers wants UNC to make
amends to AFAM degree holders.
By Kiana Cole
Senior Writer

To make whole is a legal term, explains


Carrboro resident Andrew Dykers.
It means to make amends, to right your
wrong. Its an attempt to put the person back
into the condition they would have been if the
wrong had not occurred, said Dykers, who
graduated from UNC in 1995.
Dykers wants the University to make him
whole; as he says, UNC has wronged him
and he wants it righted. The Wainstein
report, released a year ago today, detailed
extensive academic fraud in the former
Department of African and Afro-American
Studies, which Dykers minored in.
Dykers, a Carrboro-based lawyer, made the
decision to remove his minor from his resume
after the release of the Wainstein report.
Wainsteins report concluded that from
1993 to 2011, the University offered fraudulent classes within the AFAM department.
Though he never took an illegitimate
class, Dykers said he took a class with Julius
Nyangoro, who oversaw some of the fraudulent classes, the report concludes.
You know, there was all this talk about these
bogus classes where no work was done, but that
class was actually challenging, Dykers said.
What was happening was there was a fairly
large group of football players, and I could tell
they were clowning and not concerned. And I
was a deans list student, and I knew that it was

difficult and they had more to lose than I did,


and I immediately knew something was up.
But the evidence of his hard work on his
resume the listing of his minor is overshadowed by the scandal that is now synonymous with the former department.
Dykers said once he removed his minor
from his resume, he felt his job search process become easier, prompting his decision to
appeal. He said UNC should let degree holders take new classes if they choose.
The school acknowledges wrongdoing and
disrepute. The school has fired people, and
it has changed the name of the program. You
dont change the name of a program unless it
has suffered disrepute, he said.
The more than 70 reforms UNC lists as
proof of progress from the scandal ignore the
people most affected by the scandal, he said.
Of course we need things in place to make
sure professors arent giving 300 independent
study classes a year. You want a pat on the
back for that? Dykers said.
Provost Jim Dean said UNC has been
focused on specific students who were in the
irregular classes. He said no offer has been
made toward degree holders like Dykers who
never took an irregular class.
For students who are in that situation, we
feel we have a responsibility to make it right
for them, and we have reached out and done
that, he said.
Only some students have inquired about
it, and to Deans knowledge, no one has taken
UNC up on the offer.
Dykers said the students who took the

SEE DYKERS, PAGE 11

If you want to keep a secret, you must also hide it from yourself.
GEORGE ORWELL, 1984

News

Thursday, October 22, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

POLICE LOG

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Someone was selling hot


dogs downtown without a
permit outside of Walgreens
at 108 E. Franklin St. at 3:53
p.m. Tuesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.

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Someone caused noncriminal damage to the gate


arm in the Swain parking lot
on Cameron Avenue at 4:10
p.m. Monday, according to
Department of Public Safety
reports.
Someone conducted
an odor investigation at
Granville Towers South
at 12:21 a.m. Wednesday,
according to Department of
Public Safety reports.
Someone was given a
warning of trespass at the
ITS Manning Building at
11:55 a.m. Tuesday, according to Department of Public
Safety reports.
Someone conducted a
drivers license checkpoint
at the intersection of South
Road and Raleigh Street at
9 a.m. Tuesday, according to
Department of Public Safety
reports.

The Daily Tar Heel

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY

Makery Masterpieces: Learn


how famous artists like Monet,
Pollock and Smithson created
their masterpieces, and make a
few masterpieces of your own.
All ages welcome.
Time: 10 a.m. to 12:30 a.m.
Location: 201 S. Estes Drive
Regulator Brewing Company

Launch Party: Celebrate the


opening of one of the Triangles
newest breweries. The Wooden
Nickel Pub is holding Regulators
launch party, where you can try
the brewerys flagship brews:
Tavern Alley Hazelnut Brown,
Capsheaf Kolsch and Six of
Twelve IPA.
Time: 11:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m.
Location: 105 N. Churton St.

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
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News

The Daily Tar Heel

ACADEMIC SCANDAL

UNC reviews
admissions
after
Wainstein

Thursday, October 22, 2015

An activists balancing act

The admissions reform focuses


on student-athletes at UNC.
By Cole del Charco
Staff Writer

This story is part of a series from The


Daily Tar Heel examining the more than 70
reforms the University has said were made
since information about the academicathletic scandal became public in 2010.
The complete list of reforms can be found on
carolinacommitment.unc.edu.
UNC promised to reform the admissions process for student-athletes after the
Wainstein report was released last year.
The reformed process starts with coaches
recruiting high school athletes. Transcripts
and test scores are evaluated and compared
to the Universitys standards. Then the
Department of Athletics sends selected profiles to the undergraduate admissions office
for its portion of evaluation.
Coaches and the athletic department
predict the athletes GPAs using a formula
developed with the Odum Institute.
If a student-athletes predicted GPA is
above 2.3, admissions information can be
sent to the Committee on Special Talent,
but not all student-athletes are reviewed by
the committee.
In 2015, 152 student-athletes were admitted through the committee, while nine had to
go through a more extensive review process.
The NCAA requires incoming first-years
to maintain a minimum GPA of 2.3 to be
eligible to compete in their first year. UNCsystem schools require a GPA of 2.5 and a
combined critical reading and math SAT
score of 800.
The committee also evaluates students
who do not meet academic requirements
to gain admission to UNC but might bring
skills other students cannot, said committee
member Layna Mosley.
They are a set of students that bring
things to the University that might not be
captured purely by academic credentials,
Mosley said.
In a given year, the committee approves
about 160 students for athletics, 20 for
music and 20 for dramatic arts.
Ashley Memory, the senior assistant
director of admissions in the Office of
Undergraduate Admission, said the majority of the members on the Committee on
Special Talent are required to be tenured or
tenure-track professors.
All 188 student-athletes in the class of 2019
met the minimum course and GPA requirements. One student did not meet the testing
component but met the GPA component.
Although the final decision rests
with Vice Provost for Enrollment and
Undergraduate Admissions Stephen
Farmer and the department of undergraduate admissions, the department seriously
considers the committees advice.
Steve has never gone against what our
committee has recommended; hes never
admitted someone that we recommended
against admitting, ever, Mosley said.
Memory said the projected first-year
GPA has not always been factored into
admissions.
Beyond the criterion, theres really no
formula for admission, and this is true of
all admissions at Carolina, student-athletes
as well, Memory said. We do a holistic
review. We evaluate each student extensively and comprehensively.
Vince Ille, a senior associate athletic
director who oversees UNCs compliance
and student-athlete development offices,
said coaches and the athletic department
narrow the search for student-athletes
throughout the recruiting process.
This is a collaborative effort, and we
only want to bring forward prospective
student-athletes that the coach and the
athletic department believe can succeed
here academically at the University of North
Carolina. Those are the candidates we want
to bring forward, Ille said.
Ille said the University is continuously
improving its admissions process.
The idea that whatever were doing
today, the goal at the end of the day is to lay
your head on the pillow, and youre a little
bit better at the end of the day than you
were at the beginning of the day, Ille said.
university@dailytarheel.com

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.

Dawkins-Law juggles doctoral studies with activism


By Belle Hillenburg
Staff Writer

Shelby Dawkins-Law crawled out of a


totaled car unscathed.
Dawkins-Laws, who has spoken against
tuition hikes, racism on campus and sexual
assault, said it was the near-death experience
in August 2015 that made her want to become
more vocal.
The way that I usually heal, or deal with
seeing injustice or being a victim of injustice,
is by advocating against it. I throw myself into
it. And honestly, its exhausting, she said.
Dawkins-Law went on a Black and Blue
Tour which helped her to understand the history behind UNCs campus.
I started looking around campus and seeing the triggers, she said.
Dawkins-Law is a member of the Real
Silent Sam Coalition and actively speaks out
against the Silent Sam monument. She said
she helped organize the recent University
Day protests.
I just sit there as an act of resistance, she
said. Im going to sit here at this monument,
and Im glad that Im sitting here because the
people who dedicated it wouldnt want me sitting here, and I am going to reclaim this space

as my own. This is my university, too.


Dawkins-Law is pursuing a doctorate
in education at UNC and was the 2014-15
president of the Graduate and Professional
Student Federation.
Current GPSF president, Brandon Linz,
worked as her vice president last year.
Shes very much a freight train. Once she
sets her mind to it, shes going to get it done in
one way or another, Linz said.
Dawkins-Law said her mothers decision to
send her to private school made her want to
pursue a degree in education.
Realizing that a public school teacher
would not send her own child to a public
school that she attended It really made me
wonder about inequality, she said.
She said when she arrived at UNC, she met
students with different levels of preparation
for college, which was another factor in her
decision to pursue education.
As an undergraduate student, DawkinsLaw participated in a program called Gold-NLove that allowed her to mentor children in
the Chapel Hill-Durham area.
When I heard their stories and their backgrounds, and started connecting the dots, it
was like, all these things that I care so deeply
about are things that have to be advocated

I am going to reclaim this


space as my own. This is my
university, too.
Shelby Dawkins-Law
UNC doctorate student

for, Dawkins-Law said.


Student Body President Houston Summers
has worked with Dawkins-Law in student
government and considers her a friend.
Shes given me some wonderful perspective
that I never would have considered, he said.
Dawkins-Law currently serves on
the Student Advisory Committee to the
Chancellor.
I think shes driving change in a good way,
Summers said.
Dana Thompson Dorsey, Dawkins-Laws
graduate advisor, said over the past three
years, Shelby has become part of her family.
Ive come to care about her a great
deal, Thompson Dorsey said. And Im very
impressed with her dedication to equity, justice and advocacy, and fighting for the underdogs and fighting for what is right.
university@dailytarheel.com

Jean Holcomb travels into Business Hall of Fame


The owner of Viking Travel is
adding another award to her wall.
By Kieran Hodnett
Staff Writer

The Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chamber of


Commerce will induct seven business leaders into its Hall of Fame on Nov. 5. The Daily
Tar Heel will feature each of these inductees.
Jean Holcomb, owner of Viking Travel, will be
among those inducted.
When Jean Holcomb first sought to create
Viking Travel, she ran into plenty of problems
around Chapel Hill.
People told her there couldnt be a woman
in business, said Avery Harris, director of
marketing at Viking Travel and Holcombs
grandson.
But this didnt stop Holcomb from building
her company from the ground up she just
started working harder.
Notable businesses such as Mama Dips,
Julians and Kenan Oil and Kenan Transport
have all been inducted into the Business Hall
of Fame, and soon Viking Travel will join them.
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro Business
Hall of Fame recognizes and permanently
enshrines the business leaders who have,

SEE HOLCOMB, PAGE 5

DTH/LOUISE MCDONALD
Jean Holcomb, a UNC alumna, will be among the seven inducted into the Business Hall of Fame.

A look inside CHALT, Chapel Hills rst ever PAC formed


CHALT is concerned
with development
practices in town.
By Rachel Herzog
Senior Writer

Chapel Hill residents have


worried about Chapel Hills
development before, but this is
the first time theyve formed a
political action committee.
Chapel Hill Alliance for
a Livable Town, known as
CHALT, formed in January.

Founding member Tom


Henkel said CHALT is a grassroots movement of people who
dislike the direction in which
Chapel Hill is heading. Now,
more than 15,000 people subscribe to CHALTs newsletter.
Theres going to be development, and my colleagues
on CHALT are all in favor of
development, but its got to be
what we call sustainable development, Henkel said. I dont
think people want Chapel Hill
to be Manhattan South.
According to a Public
Policy Polling report released

on Sept. 23, 36 percent of


voters say they approve of the
Town Councils work, while
40 percent dont.
While members of
CHALTs leadership have
been politically active, their
political action committee is
the town of Chapel Hills first.
Its surprising to see sort of
national PAC politics play in
Chapel Hill for the first time,
said Aaron Nelson, secretary
of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro
Chamber of Commerce.
Henkel said the group has
raised between $5,000 and

$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

the committee endorses


Pam Hemminger for mayor
and Jessica Anderson, David
Schwartz and Nancy Oates for
Chapel Hill Town Council.
Henkel said CHALTs supporters are a cross section of
Chapel Hill. He said CHALT
members have been canvassing neighborhoods heavily
over the past few weeks.
Were finding out that
people are going to vote for a
change, he said.
Henkel said he thinks

SEE CHALT, PAGE 5

FACTS ABOUT CHALT

About $5,000
raised since January

15,000

newsletter subscribers

3 candidates
endorsed for Town Council

1 candidate
endorsed for mayor

Opinion

Thursday, October 22, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

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EDITORIAL CARTOON

ISHMAEL BISHOP
GABY NAIR
JACOB ROSENBERG
KERN WILLIAMS

TREY FLOWERS
SAM OH
JUSTINA VASQUEZ

CAMERON JERNIGAN
ZACH RACHUBA
BRIAN VAUGHN

By Andrew Shoemaker, ashoemak@live.unc.edu

Larry Ash, on majoring in liberal arts in college

Sophomore English major from


Concord.
Email: evanab@live.unc.edu

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

Dont fall
under
the
weather

NEXT

Its Nothing Personal


Chiraayu Gosrani argues gentrification is a violent process.

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT


College is for exploring and in the end
nobody cares what your major was after
you graduate.

Mistress of Quirk

Its the person that has to go and put


(African and Afro-American studies) on their
resume that really feels the sting.
Andrew Dykers, on the effect his AFAM major has had on his life

Evana Bodiker

all and winter are my


favorite seasons. Call
me a grandma, but
when the air gets chillier, I
feel happier. Between hot tea,
cozy sweaters and the best
holidays of the year during
these months, I love almost
everything cold weather has to
bring. Well, except how many
colds I contract during these
months; and how many of my
friends and classmates seem
to be falling under the cooler
seasons sickly spell.
None of us can help existing in a constant state of
under the weather. With more
than 29,000 undergraduate
students at UNC, it seems like
if one person gets sick, all of
us get sick. Call it what you
want: The plague, the common cold, the UNC sniffles,
but no matter what you have,
it can feel debilitating.
Most of us can suffer
through a couple days of
incessant sneezes, endless tissues and the inability to hold
down anything but chicken
noodle soup. However, for
those of us with weaker
immune systems including
myself a day or so of recovery is needed.
For someone like me a
self-diagnosed hypochondriac when I hear someone
in class with a deep cough, I
immediately cringe. It sounds
melodramatic, but it boils
down to concern for that
persons health. Sometimes,
we just dont notice when a
cough turns into something
more serious.
Its important to be proactive, especially when were
heading into the colder
months. While pumpkin spice
lattes and hay rides might be
hallmark autumn traditions,
one more should be added to
the list: Flu shots.
I know shots are a tempestuous subject for most, but
no matter what you believe,
getting your flu shot is so
important. While you might
have a resilient immune system, its important to think of
classmates who dont. There
are so many students at UNC
with invisible illnesses that
you would never know about
unless they told you.
Dont be that person who
comes to class and is the cause
for a minor flu apocalypse
(weve all seen The Walking
Dead). Not to mention, getting the flu isnt fun. Even with
my poor track record filled
with instances of the common
cold, Ive only had the flu two
or three times. However, those
few times made me never want
to have it again.
Missing class might sound
like a dream, but having the
flu is a nightmare. Do yourself the smallest of favors
and get a flu shot before the
newest strain of it starts to
rage at UNC. Campus Health
Services provides walk-in
hours every weekday, and
most pharmacy offers walk-in
hours as well.
Think of it this way: A flu
shot now could guarantee
you wont miss out on all
the autumnal activities your
friends are planning to do
this year. There are so many
excuses you could make not
to get the vaccine, but at the
end of the day, itd be better
to not lose a week of your life
feeling awful than it would be
to lose an hour to soreness in
your arm.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

UNC-system president
search is alarming

ENDORSEMENT

The mayor has earned


Chapel Hills trust
This editorial board
endorses Mark Kleinschmidt
for re-election because his
consistent, intelligent, moral
leadership has made him an
exemplary mayor.
Voters can be assured
Kleinschmidt cares about
and fights for the values they
hold sacred.
Since 2009, Kleinschmidt
has fought for this community to be open-minded,
diverse, affordable and environmentally responsible,
and he has done so valiantly
within the limits of his office.
He exhibits a mastery of
the issues and an intimate
knowledge of the workings
of the town and its residents,
all while being an articulate
champion of its values.

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

pursue a better relationship


with leaders of the RogersEubanks community, which
has been wronged by the
town historically. Every
action the town takes that
affects it should be done with
consciousness of that fact.
Kleinschmidt also should
have fought harder for affordable housing concessions
in the Ephesus-Fordham
district. Still, Kleinschmidt
is correct in asserting the
area needs to provide more
benefits to residents to make
up for its status as an environmentally harmful eyesore,
and his agenda as mayor has
made that possible.
Kleinschmidt is the right
person for the job, and his
excellent record proves it.

ENDORSEMENT

Vote Bell, Parker, Ward


and Storrow for council
DONNA BELL

MICHAEL PARKER

Voters should choose


Donna Bell for Chapel
Hill Town council member primarily for her
strong track record as a
current council member.
A resident of the
Northside community,
her position for a housing
Donna Bell is a
wage rather than a living
wage considers the towns social worker who
has served as a
long-term residents
increasing need for afford- member of the
Chapel Hill Town
able housing.
Another of Bells focus- Council for six years.
es is flexible economic
development. She aims to bring more retail
into the town, but she has demonstrated she
knows it must be done with care, especially
with an eye on the environment.
The editorial board believes Bell could
improve her communications with the media
and UNC students. These entities are valuable parts of her constituency.
Still, Bell has proven after six years on
the council she can tackle issues pressing in
Chapel Hills underserved communities.

The only non-incumbent we choose to endorse


for Town Council, Michael
Parker, is a candidate with
a balanced and informed
perspective on town government. Parkers was one
of the few campaigns that
did not devolve into perMichael Parker
sonal attacks and erroneis a health care
ous claims.
Though he has not pre- consultant who
viously held elected office, has served on the
town Transportation
Parker showed commitment to bettering the
Advisory Board.
town with his service on
the Transportation Advisory Board and the
Central West Steering Committee. Unlike
other challengers, Parkers platform is nearly
apolitical, showing his willingness to work
with fellow council members.
With the upcoming challenges that the
town will face in optimizing the efficacy of
light rail as a transit mode, the Town Council
would benefit greatly from the service of
another transit expert.
The voters should trust this candidate.

LEE STORROW

JIM WARD

Lee Storrow has been


the bridge between UNC
students and the Chapel
Hill Town Council for
four years.
He, more than any other
candidate, has reached out
to campus organizations,
relates to students and
Lee Storrow is
provides a younger perspective to the Council. He executive director of
the N.C. AIDS Action
hosts town hall meetings,
available to the entire com- Network and seeking a second term
munity, allowing people
to express their opinions
in office.
directly to him.
Storrow also serves as the executive director of N.C. AIDS Action Network and has
been a long time advocate for many other
health and social issues.
While his recent DWI was horrible and
entirely inexcusable behavior, he apologized
and took responsibility for his mistake in a
very professional and sincere way.
Storrow provides a unique perspective
and has served his community in an open
and inclusive way.

Jim Ward is clearly a


level-headed, committed
and knowledgeable member of the Chapel Hill
Town Council, and voters
should reward him with a
vote to continue his tenure in town government.
Ward has demonstrated
Jim Ward is a
he is a practical thinker
UNC employee at
and is unafraid to take
the N.C. Botanical
a stand. He was right to
Garden. He is seekpush for more affordable
ing his fifth term in
housing concessions in
the Ephesus-Fordham
office.
district, even though the
rest of the council was keen on recognizing
the necessity of revitalizing the area.
Still, Ward has shown his disagreement
doesnt stop him from being a collegial and
effective member of the council.
Ward is also particularly impressive
with his knowledge and care for environmental issues.
Chapel Hill is an exceptional community,
and Jim Ward is committed to keeping it
that way. Voters should re-elect him.

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

Alice Wilders column


promotes WGST
TO THE EDITOR:
The Department of
Womens and Gender
Studies thanks Alice Wilder
for the column about her
decision to no longer apologize for being a WGST
major.
As an interdisciplinary
faculty, including a political scientist, a sociologist, a
historian, a photographer,
specialists in literature,
a science and technology
digital humanities professor and an anthropologist, we offer a variety of
perspectives and a global
array of teaching and
research interests.
Our common ground is
a feminist framework that
poses questions and casts
a critical perspective on
issues at the intersection
of gender, race, class and
ethnicity.
All students who take
courses with us learn
essential skills of higher
education: how to ask
critical questions; how to
engage with public issues
in an informed and wellresearched manner; and
how to write and speak in a
convincing manner.
We are proud of our
large number of majors
and minors.
We follow their paths
when they leave UNC
and are pleased to report
that they do very well in
all types of careers, from
journalism and nonprofit
work, to law, business or
medicine.
We passionately defend
the value of a broad liberal arts education: Every
society needs civic-minded
community members and
critical thinkers who can
see beyond the immediate years after college, and
have the vision to apply
skills in creative ways.
The program in WGST

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

Chapel Hill is a town


for drivers
TO THE EDITOR:
Contrary to your claim
that UNC was built for
pedestrians, I will point out
that prior to the 15-501-54
bypass, four major highways ran through campus.
Quite a bit of major
traffic still does. Contrary
to your expectation that
vehicles have time to wait
for long lines of pedestrians,
the maintenance crews and
emergency response crews
responding to such problems as pipe bursts flooding
two floors, chemical spills
and lab fires, not to mention
ambulances and fire trucks
do not have time to wait on
ambling students texting.
While the law says
that pedestrians in the
crosswalk have the right
of way to safely complete
their crossing, that does
not mean that people
approaching the crosswalk,
should begin crossing, nor
does it mean that jaywalkers have the right of way.
But perhaps most disturbing about your article is
the implication that a driver, in a vehicle of a ton or
more of metal can possibly
stop for those pedestrians
who are not paying attention to traffic even if under
the legal speed limit.
If you want to prevent
accidents, it is up to pedestrians to determine a safe
distance to cross in front of
a moving vehicle, whether
they have the legal right of
way in the crosswalk or not.
Note that even at 10 miles
per hour, it takes 27 feet to
stop, which is better than
twice most car lengths.
Roger Connor
Department of
Environment, Health and
Safety

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

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members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.

From Page Three

The Daily Tar Heel


FROM PAGE 3

People told her


there couldnt be a
woman in business.
Avery Harris
Jean Holcombs grandson

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.

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have an election, she said.
Nelson said CHALT is only
bringing one issue development to light and possibly
raising unnecessary concern
about growth.
Chapel Hill has so many
more things that are more
important than whether a
building is going to be three
stories or six, he said.
@rachel_herzog
city@dailytarheel.com

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If I succeed at winning
a seat on Town Council, the
success will be due in large
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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

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over the decades, built our


community and whose
enterprises served the
people, paid the wages and
invested in our citizens and
its service organizations
to ensure that our region
would thrive, said Robert
Saunders, chairperson of
the Chapel Hill-Carrboro
Chamber of Commerce
Board of Directors, in a
statement.
Viking Travel, founded in
Chapel Hill, provides traveling counsel to personal vacations and business trips alike.
Even before going into
business, Holcomb graduated from UNC in 1950 and
attended the University of
Wisconsin for two years to
earn her bachelors and masters degrees in business.
She moved to Orange
County in 1957.
Originally, (Holcomb)
wanted to start a baking
business in Chapel Hill,
Harris said.
But she saw a need
within the town for a travel

agency and shes always


loved visiting places.
Since becoming a permanent resident, Holcomb has
held leadership positions in
the Chapel Hill Preservation
Society, YMCA and Chapel
Hill-Carrboro Chamber of
Commerce.
Holcomb has also received
many accolades, such as being
named mother of the year
by the Chamber, receiving
the Town Treasurer Award
in 2010 from the Chapel Hill
Historical Society and being
made a lifetime member of
Traveling Times in recognition of serving on the Travel
Advisory Board.
Shes served on the ASTA
Southeast, Sonesta Hotels,
Cruise West and Traveling
Times advisory boards.
Service and wanting to
help people is the keynote to
any local business, Holcomb
said.
Weve been here 36 years
because of that service.
Holcomb was told of her
upcoming induction through
a phone call and a letter
sent to her from the Chapel
Hill-Carrboro Chamber of

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Thursday, October 22, 2015

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Enjoy craft beer, fresh food,
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Join us before the game and


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The Daily Tar Heel

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Serving a variety of hot dogs.
Also serving Hersheys
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Tel: (919) 240-4206

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Thursday, October 22, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

Thursday, October 22, 2015

HOMEGROWN HALLOWEEN ON FRANKLIN STREET


Prohibited Items: Costume
accessories that look like
weapons; Weapons; Alcoholic
Beverages; Glass Bottles; Paint;
Fireworks and Explosives;
Flammable Substances; Animals;
Coolers.
Downtown Residents: The
Town of Chapel Hill will make
every effort to keep people who
are attending the event from
parking in your neighborhood.
Access to your neighborhood
will be limited by barricades
and police personnel leading
into your neighborhood. This
will begin early in the evening.
Residents of the neighborhood
will be able to drive in and out
of the enclosed area. Tell the

officer at the barricade where


you live.Your guests will also
be able to enter and leave. They
will need to tell the officer at the
barricade exactly where they are
going. Illegally parked vehicles
(even of residents, guests) will
be ticketed and towed.Traffic will
be congested and getting past
the barricades may be a slow
process.
Chapel Hill Transit and
Safe Ride Buses: During the
evening of Saturday, October
31, 2015, Chapel Hill Transit will
end service early on the NU route
and EZ Rider to accommodate
the Halloween celebration on
Franklin Street. The following
schedule modifications will be in

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effect: NU Route will end at 8:17


p.m. at RR Lot. EZ Rider service
will end at 8:30 p.m.All other
routes will operate on regular
routes and published schedules,
although minor delays may
occur due to increased traffic.
Safe Ride buses will operate
from 11 p.m. to 2:30 a.m., along
detoured routes. View schedules
and maps of safe ride routes
at www.townofchapelhill.org/
saferides. Safe Ride is a service
funded by the UNC-Chapel Hill
Student Government for the
safety of students. Safe Rides
will not serve the Downtown/
Franklin Street area, but will
serve the following stops near
downtown:Safe T - pick up and
drop off from Chapel Hill Town
Hall; Safe J - pick up and drop off
from Passport Motors (Franklin
Street at Graham Street); Safe
G - pick up and drop off from
Columbia Street at Sitterson
Hall across from Carolina Inn.
Please be advised that due to
road closures and traffic pattern
changes, CHT may be unable to

operate published schedules for


these routes.

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

Westbound traffic on Manning


Drive will be detoured south onto
S. Columbia Street. Northbound
traffic on S. Columbia Street will
be detoured east onto Manning
Drive. S. Columbia Street will be
closed to northbound traffic at
Manning Drive.

Rosemary Street to East Franklin


Street

Beginning at about 8:30


p.m., some downtown streets
will be closed to vehicular traffic,
including: Franklin Street,
from Raleigh Street to Mallette
Street; Columbia Street, from
Rosemary Street to Cameron
Avenue; Raleigh Street, from
East Franklin to Cameron Avenu;
Henderson Street, from East

Parking: There will be


limited parking in downtown.
There will be no place for
charter buses to drop off or
pick up passengers. Charter
buses entering the downtown
Chapel Hill area will be directed
by law enforcement officers to
the outskirts of Town prior to
dropping off any passengers.
There will also be no parking
in the neighborhoods adjacent
to downtown. Access to
neighborhoods will be limited by
barricades and police personnel
at the roads leading into them.
This will begin early in the
evening.

Residential streets near


downtown will be closed except
to residents of those streets and
their guests. View a map of street
closures on the town website

Vehicles parked on streets


to be closed will be towed
beginning at 6 p.m. Vehicles
that are illegally parked will
be ticketed and towed, with a
minimum recovery cost of $105
plus the cost of the ticket.
For the latest UNC public
safety information on Halloween
(street closures and parking
restrictions) visit www.move.unc.
edu/events/halloween

See our Living Social deal!

www.preservationchapelhill.org

Media: Media parking will


be provided at the Morehead
Planetarium. Media vehicles
should plan to be in place no
later than 8:30 p.m. Vehicles
will not be permitted to enter
these staging areas after the
streets are closed.Chapel Hill
Police Department PIO Lt. Josh
Mecimore will be available to
give Halloween event updates at
10:30 p.m. and again at midnight,
if necessary. The location will
be at the upper entrance to
University Square on West
Franklin Street.
Contact Information:
Police Officer Phil Smith at
919-968-2864 or psmith@
townofchapelhill.org, Lt. Joshua
Mecimore at 919-968-2747 or
jmecimore@townofchapelhill.
org or Communications
Manager Catherine Lazorko
at 919-969-5055 or clazorko@
townofchapelhill.org.

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Thursday, October 22, 2015

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.

Ramlila festival reenacts


Hindu gods journey
By Maggie Mouat
Staff Writer

Many students have never


heard Ramlilas story.
Now they can, in the exhibition Ramlila: The Story
of Ram in Indian Devotional
Theater.
The festival of Ramlila
reenacts the Hindu god Rams
travels and experiences on
Earth. This festival consists of
performances, and traditional
festivals can range from a week
to a month.
Wednesday, a free public
reception took place, which
featured Ramlila performances and keynote lectures.
Devendra Sharma, associate
professor of communication
at California State University,
Fresno, participated in the first
of two common performances
of Ramlila, playing Lord Ram.
The exhibit is about
Ramlila, which is one of the
most, I would say, popular

stories in India, he said.


This is about Lord Ram, who
is supposed to be the incarnation of the God, so its almost
like Christians telling the
story of Christ.
Pamela Lothspeich, an
associate professor of Asian
studies at UNC, helped organize the event.
Its a beloved story that
everybody knows in India
even non-Hindus. But its so
famous because it has ethics
and moral, she said. Its, of
course, religious, but its also
a dramatic and exciting story.
Lothspeich also said the
event will feature an exhibition
of photography, festival footage, costumes and backdrops.
Her Asia 382: The Story of
Rama in Indian Culture class
performed in the first performance along with Sharma.
I brought my students
to the exhibit, and they
liked it, Lothspeich said.
I can say the photographs

are quite beautiful; the costumes are very extravagant


and gorgeous.
Sharma said he believes it
is important for students and
the public to come to events
that concern other cultures
and religions.
So I think if people come
to watch this performance,
they will learn about some
other culture like Indian
South Asian culture, but they
will also learn some lessons
for their own life.
Sophomore Priyanka
Srinivas said she appreciates
how the festival offered a different perspective.
(The performers) were
talking about how they kind
of modified it to be more
modernized here, as opposed
to the Ramlilas in India, and
I thought that was kind of
cool, she said.
Sophomore Sahana
Raghunathan connected the
performance to her studies

Nickelodeon presidential picks rarely fail


By Hari Chittilla
Staff Writer

Pundits and analysts


might have a hard time analyzing polls, but for six of the
past seven presidential elections, the Nickelodeon kids
vote has accurately predicted
the winner.
Nickelodeon created the
Kids Pick the President program in 1988. The only election where the kids vote didnt
predict the winner was in 2004
with former President George
W. Bush and former Sen. John
Kerry, D-Mass. The 2012 election had more than 521,000
childrens votes cast.
These votes are primarily
those of the adults though,
said Susan MacManus, professor of political science at the
University of South Florida.
Whether it be grandma or
parents or anyone older talking about politics.
MacManus said kids vote
like their parents, and the
reason the poll has been so
predictive is because of those
who watch the channel.
Kids watching these shows
are coming from well-educated families, she said. Theyre
watching an educational
program, so their families are
much more likely to be educationally oriented. Theres
a clear straight line between
education level and turnout.
Abby Kiesa, youth coordinator and researcher at the
Center for Information and
Research on Civic Learning
and Engagement, said the
Nickelodeon campaign is a
good opportunity for kids
to get involved, but she was
concerned about who these
programs affected.
One of the issues around
civic education in schools
is that it is disproportionately distributed, she said.
Wealthier districts are more
likely to have access to higher
quality civic education.
But MacManus said she

thinks programs that give


kids an opportunity to vote
are important in involving
kids in civic education early.
(These programs are)
instilling in children that voting is fun. Voting is (a) choice,
and you shouldnt be afraid of
the equipment you are going
to use, she said.
She said no age is too
early to learn about civics
and voting.
This concept and choice
is integral to democracy and
makes it easier to appeal to
(children) and grab their interests as they get older because it
is something that they personally experienced, she said.
Grace Buie, a UNC sophomore, said programs that
encourage early civic action

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

SEE THE EXHIBITION


Time: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. until
Dec. 13
Location: FedEx Global
Education Center
Info: bit.ly/1QVgwdA

and personal life.


I had never seen it actually played out before like
the whole theater part of
it, she said. Ive read the
story before, and Ive heard
it from parents and things
like that.
Sharma thinks the performance is universally relatable.
I think it has a great
story, and it has great morals, he said.
Its kind of an exposure
and opportunity to know
about traditional performance from a different country and different region.
@maggsmouat
arts@dailytarheel.com

North Carolina defensive


end Jalen Dalton felt as if he
was being redshirted for the
2015 season.
Dalton had not touched
the field through his first
five games as a Tar Heel.
But due to injuries to fellow
defensive linemen including senior Jessie Rogers and
redshirt sophomore Nazair
Jones Dalton received his
chance against Wake Forest
on Saturday.
And the first-year made the
most of his opportunity.
Dalton, who is from
Winston-Salem, recorded
four tackles and a quarterback hurry against the
Demon Deacons. Dalton
knew hed eventually get a
chance to play as long as he
kept progressing.
(Defensive Coordinator
Gene) Chizik brought me into
his office Thursday on our bye
week, he said. And we talked
about if I had a good practice
that Thursday and Sunday
that there would be a good
chance that Id play.
The first-year entered UNC
as the third-ranked weak-side
defensive end in the class
of 2015 by 247Sports, while
Rivals tabbed him as the top
recruit in North Carolina.
Dalton said beginning on
the scout team and going
against UNCs starting offensive linemen helped prepare
him for Wake Forest. He
added that the coaching staff
has been impressed with his
quick first-step and his ability
to rush the quarterback.

Despite Saturdays game


marking Daltons first game
action, Chizik said he did not
sense any hesitancy.
In the last month, its been
night and day, he said. You
never know when the light
is going to come on, and its
come on for him. And he hasnt
arrived yet, and he knows that.
Were still trying to put
weight on him, but if he continues on the track of improvement, hes going to continue to
be a really good player.
After taking a look at
Saturdays game film, senior
linebacker Shakeel Rashad
was impressed with Daltons
performance.
Whenever the senior
observes the offensive and
defensive linemen drills, he
usually sees Dalton beating
his opposition.
At the time, I was like,
This guy is going to be so good
next year, because we thought
he was going to redshirt,
Rashad said. But come to find
out, due to circumstances, he
had to step up and play this
year. And he did a great job.
In his first season as a collegiate player, Dalton said
hes adjusted to the games
speed, become more aggressive and learned how to use
his hands while battling
offensive linemen.
The young defensive end is
confident he can help bolster
UNCs defense for the rest of
the season, including filling
the box score.
Im looking forward to getting my first sack, Dalton said
with a smile. Thatd be nice.
@bencoley15
sports@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

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

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

10/22: KATE TAYLOR (Fundraiser for the Dr. I M


Taylor Med Student Scholarship Fund) -- $20/$75
10/23: NO BS! BRASS BAND ($12) w/ Three Torches
10/25: The Stray Birds ($10/$12)
10/26: Mikky Ekko ( $15) w/Transviolet
10/28: Nikki Lane ($12/ $14) w/Frankie Lee
10/29: JULY TALK/ LITTLE HURRICANE ($13/$15) w/
Blood Red River
10/30: MAKE, Solar Halos, Bitter Resolve ($8/$10)
11/2: JOANNA GRUESOME**($10/$12) w/Aye
Nako, King Of Cats, Museum Mouth
11/4: Born Ruffians **($10/$12) w/ Young Rival
11/5: Murs w/Red Pill, King Fantastic ($15/$17)
11/6: John Moreland w/ Aubrie Sellers ($10/$12)
11/7: The Color Exchange, Happy Abandon, Lairs (
$7)
11/10: THE KING KHAN & BBQ SHOW ($13/$15)
w/Milk Lines
11/11: Yonatan Gat ($10) w/ Stray Owls
11/12: Fourth Shift, Ari Roar, Sam Brown ( $5)
11/13: Gasoline Stove Band,
Lester Coalbanks & The Seven Sorrows
11/14: Together Pangea w/ White Reaper ($10/
$13)
11/17: Skylar Spence ($12/$14) w/Mark Redito
11/18: David Wax Museum ($12) w/Anthony
DAmato
11/20: Turquoise Jeep w/ Juan Huevos, Kosha Dills
($13/$15)
11/21: Driftwood ($12/$14)
11/22: GIVERS w/ Doe Paoro ($15)
11/25: Mary Johnson Rockers and the Spark w/Pat
Reedy ($8/$10)
11/28: Colossus w/Demon Eye ( $8)
11/30: All Them Witches w/New Madrid ($10)
12/7: Cas Haley ($12/$15) w/Colin Hauser
12/9-10-11: RED CLAY RAMBLERS & THE
COASTAL COHORTS
12/12: Marti Jones & Don Dixon ($15/$18)
12/13: Don Dixons Medicare Card Birthday Bash
featuring Me & Dixon!
12/18: Wyatt Easterling w/Laurelyn Dossett ($20)
12/19: Red Collar w/ Temperance League and
Hammer No More The Fingers ($10)
1/23: Larry Campbell & Theresa Williams
SHOWS AT HAW RIVER BALLROOM:
Nov 11: NEON INDIAN**
Dec. 19: CHTHAM COUNTY LINE: Electric Holiday
Tour
Jan 16: BRIAN FALLON AND THE CROWES w/ Cory
Branan
SHOW AT LOCAL 506 (Chapel Hill):
Nov. 5: The Dirty Nil
SHOW AT DPAC( durham):
NOV. 27: GLEN HANSARD w/ Richard Thompson
SHOW AT Carolina Theatre ( durham):
Feb 25, 2016: JOSH RITTER & THE ROYAL CITY
BAND
SHOW AT THE ARTSCENTER (Carrboro):
Dec. 12: DELTA RAEs Winter Acoustic Tour (sold
out)
SHOW AT MEMORIAL HALL (UNC-CH):
Dec 12: STEEP CANYON RANGERS and JERRY
DOUGLAS

10

News

Thursday, October 22, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

UNC alumni unite on Foxs Grandfathered


By Sarah Vassello
Arts & Entertainment Editor

Both Brittany Hendricks,


a 2014 graduate, and Ravi
Patel, a 2001 graduate, are
well respected in their fields.
Hendricks won awards for
her multimedia packages during her time as a journalism
student, and Patels documentary, Meet the Patels,
has been called an Academy
Award contender.
The two graduated from
UNC 13 years apart. But now,
the Fox show Grandfathered
is bringing them together.

Patel is a recurring character,


and Hendricks works in postproduction on the show.
Their meeting was a coincidence.
I had to give Ravi a ride on
set and basically escort him
to do (additional dialogue
recording). On the way back,
we were talking, and I told
him I graduated from college
not too long ago. He asked
where I went, and I said,
UNC, and he said, Oh no
way, me too. And I thought he
was joking around, Hendricks
said. He was like, No, for
real, I went to UNC.

As an actor on the show,


Patel said his role was one
of the best hes had. He was
auditioning for another pilot
when he was approached.
Afterwards they said, We
dont actually have a role for
you on Grandfathered. Were
having trouble finding someone to be (John Stamos) best
friend. We wanted someone
50 to 55 years old. But come
in to read for this part. Maybe
theyll change the character.
And they did.
They changed the characters name to Ravi, and
now hes like a completely

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

Grandfathered, which has a


7.3 out of 10 rating on IMDB.
Im not sure the ratings
are that good, Patel said.
Every time were on, were up
against something big, like
a debate or baseball. But its
cool people that people seem
to like it.
For UNC senior Natalie
Carney, a dramatic art
and communication studies major, Grandfathered
allows her to see a future that
seems unattainable.
Ive never watched
Grandfathered, but Ive seen
ads for it, and it seems like a

pretty good show, she said.


I didnt know that that actor
went to UNC, but thats really
awesome to see someone
from here go far like that.
For Hendricks, the connection between her and Patel
just proves how far UNCs
network reaches.
We always say hi to each
other now. Hes a great guy,
nice guy, she said.
Its crazy how small this
world is.
Kristina Kokkonos contributed reporting.
@sarahvassello
arts@dailytarheel.com

Pharmacy researchers show vaginal mucus may prevent HIV


By Rachael Scott
Staff Writer

A new study, led by UNC


Pharmacy Professor Dr. Sam
Lai, offers new prospects for
protecting women from HIV.
The key to this new discovery
a bacteria present in the
cervical vaginal mucus of certain women.
The HIV was either highly
mobile or effectively trapped.
It was two extremes.
Lai said when the research
team tried to find a connection between the samples and

their ability to block HIV,


they could not find a clear
correlation.
The only thing that turned
out interesting was that a particular form of lactic acid, what
we call d-isomer of the lactic
acid, was elevated, was present
in greater quantities in women
whose mucus was able to effectively trap HIV, Lai said.
Humans are unable to produce this particular form of
lactic acid, which led Lai and
his team to conclude the bacteria present is responsible for
ability to prevent HIV.

Lai said it is unknown


whether the causes of differences in the mucus were
genetic or environmental.
But researchers found those
mucuses that were unable to
trap HIV are often found in
women in developing countries.
Dr. David Wohl, an associate professor of medicine at
UNC, said he believes this
study is an important step in
changing clinical practice.
We are on the cusp of a
really incredible revolution
that this and other studies are

helping to ensure, Wohl said.


Specifically, we are learning that germs in our body
play a role. They are not there
just to hangout; germs are
not just there to compost
the food we eat but that they
are active. They are sending
chemical signals that affect
our health and can protect us
from other types of infection.
With this study, Wohl said
there is increased interest in
examining the use of bacteria to help protect and cure
instead of antibiotics, which
wipe out bacteria.

Were very interested in


manipulating the microbiome for beneficial purposes,
Wohl said.
UNC is one of the worlds
leaders in HIV research
according to Dr. Peter Leone,
a professor of medicine at
UNC. In addition to research,
UNC runs clinical trials in
North Carolina, Africa and
Latin America.
UNC has a very large
global footprint around HIV
treatment, prevention and
cure, Leone said.
Leone said because new

research allows doctors to


prevent and treat HIV, there
are compelling and ethical
reasons to prioritize HIV.
Whats unique about HIV is
that it strikes people during the
most productive period of their
life, Leone said. Meaning
that it has profound impacts
on the family structure in the
economies of countries because
youre losing individuals frequently in their 30s and 40s
from HIV, and it can be transmitted from mother to infant.
university@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

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To Place a Line Classified Ad Log Onto


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For Rent

Announcements
NOTICE TO ALL DTH
CUSTOMERS

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.
FREE bOTTlED WATER (6 pack, Deer
Park) for UNC students. Compliments of
uncwalkforhealth.com to help raise awareness
of and prevent dehydration. Available everyday
M-F, noon, until April 11, 2016. Generosity is
our policy.
EARlY VOTING now through Saturday 10/31
for Chapel Hill, Carrboro elections, M-Th noon7pm, Friday noon-6pm, Saturdays 9am-1pm.
Chapel of the Cross, 304 East Franklin (next
to Morehead Planetarium), Carrboro Town
Hall, 301 West Main, Seymour Center, 2551
Homestead Road. Orange County voters can
go to any site. Address changes within Orange
can be reported when voting. More details
http://bit.ly/1NSstD9.

Child Care Wanted


YMCA AFTERSCHOOL
COUNSELORS

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

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.tt Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
STONECROP Apartments. Walk to campus, downtown, affordable, 4bR/4bA.
Rent includes all utilities, WiFi, W/D, huge
kitchen, rec room, parking in garage, security entrance with elevator. Call 919-968-7226,
rentals@millhouseproperties.com.
5 blOCKS TO TOP OF THE HIll! 4bR/3.5bA

Volunteering

Pets/Livestock

Healthy volunteers needed to help us


find the genes that influence anorexia!
Participants receive a $25 Amazon gift
certificate. For more information
call 919-966-3065 or
visit www.unceatingdisorders.org/angi

PONIES SEEK RIDER(S). 13.2-14.2h; PC-bers


preferred; experience with untrained, green
broke equines a must. References and demo
required. Within 2 miles of UNC; on busline.
peppermintspr@aol.com; 919-621-1234..

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.

THE DAILY TAR HEEL


will be accepting applications for the advertising sales staff from October19 thru November
1, 2015. Go to http://www.dailytarheel.com/
page/hiring#Advertising for more details on
how to join our team!
SWIM COACHES: blue Dolphins Aquatics is hiring swim coaches for afternoon practices. Pay
$10-$20/hr. Email info@bluedolphinsaquatics.
com.

carriage house. Attached double garage, skylights, hardwoods, energy efficient. Available now. $2,700/mo. Call:
919-942-6945.

VAlET DRIVERS NEEDED for restaurants, hotels


and events. Great for students. Flexible hours.
Includes great tips nightly. For more information, call 919-796-5782. Apply online: www.
royalparkinginc.com.

5bR/2.5bA HOUSE. Downtown! On Frankilin!


Off street parking, great backyard. $2,350/mo.
919-264-3391.

GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR: Chapel Hill


Gymnastics has part-time positions available for energetic, enthusiastic instructors.
Applicants with knowledge of gymnastic
terminology and progression skills preferred,
must be available 2-4 days/wk. 3:30-7:30pm,
some weekends. Send a resume to
margie@chapelhillgymnastics.com.

7bR/3.5bA HOUSE. Walk to campus! Huge

common area with many decks, roof top


patio with outside shower! 2 kitchens
and kitchenette, fireplace. $3,450/mo.
919-264-3391.
RESIDENTIAl PROPERTIES: Now
showing and leasing properties for 2016/17
school year. Walk to campus, 1bR-6bR
available. Contact via merciarentals.com or
919-933-8143.

ASSISTANT STORE
MANAgER NEEDER

MERCIA

Help Wanted
RESPONSIblE DOG SITTER: Pays $50 per stay,

Underground Printing is looking for a full-time


assistant store manager for our location on
UNCs campus. To apply: http://undergroundshirts.com/jobs/view/assistant_store_manager_-_chapel_hill.

Homes For Sale

requires overnight in our home while away,


plus 1 hour care (each) at morning and evening feedings. live in or come and go freely
otherwise. Internet and HD. Very nice home.
Some 3-5 day stretches 4 times per year at
same rate. Non-smoking. Prefer text for interview time. 919-360-1635.

CONDO FOR SAlE. 2bR/1bA. 924 square feet.


Good condition. $66,000. J and CW to UNC.
Contact by email jck_dai@yahoo.com or voice
message, text 919-593-5064.

NOW HIRING MOES SW GRIll. Welcome to


Moes! Moes is now hiring for cashiers, line
cooks, hostess and host, prep cooks, shift managers. Apply in person M-F from 10am-6pm.
110 West Franklin Street.

DEAR SWEETHEART, Monogamous? No risk?


Are you sure? Honey, you need the AIDS
Course! Spring, Wednesdays, 5:45-7pm, one
credit. Enroll in PUbH 420 (undergrad) or PUbH
720 (graduate and professional). love, Mom.

dailytarheel.com

Personals

HOROSCOPES
If October 22nd is Your Birthday...

Fortune grows with thoughtful planning this


year. Meditation, contemplation and review
provide clarity. Make bold declarations. Produce
results through communications and networking.
Participate! New professional opportunities next
spring rearrange personal priorities. Seeds you
nurture cascade into a fruitful autumn. balance
work and health with love.

Roommates

Travel/Vacation
BAHAMAS SpRINg BREAk

$189 for 5 DAYS. All prices include: Round trip


luxury party cruise, accommodations on the
island at your choice of 10 resorts. Appalachia
Travel. www. bahamaSun.com, 800-867-5018.

Announcements

The AIDS Course


Spring, Wednesdays:
5:45-7:00pm One Credit
Enroll in PUBH 420 (Undergrad)
or PUBH 720 (Graduate & Professional)
An hour of credit for a lifetime of knowledge!

Its fast!
Its easy!
Place a
Classified
Today...
dailytarheel.
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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!

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is a 9 Dont believe everything you
hear. Get a second source. Stick to tested
pathways. Put together a profitable deal
that takes advantage of your experience
and talents. Meticulous service keeps your
customers satisfied. Fulfill (or reschedule)
your promises.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 9 Hang out with someone you
admire. Play with strong competitors to learn
more. A delicious conversation could lead to
romance. Relax and savor the moment. linger
to watch the sunset. Share your appreciations
of each other.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 7 Adapt to shifting circumstances. Get strong feedback from a test.
Discuss research in private and put in
corrections. Apply what youre learning to a
domestic project today and tomorrow. Mix up
the recipe for something original.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7 Get your message out over the
next few days. Choose your words carefully,
or risk an unexpected reaction. Have answers
for different scenarios and keep them up your
sleeve. Hone your talking points. let your
feelings show.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 9 Youre making money today
and tomorrow. Its profitable if you avoid
spending it all. Stash some where you cant
get it. Pay bills and buy groceries. Dont
borrow or lend. Postpone giving your time
away for free.
pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 9 Youre coming into your own,
especially over the next few days. Assume
responsibility. Ask probing questions to get to
fundamental issues. Your partner helps. Make
a logical case. Use your persuasive charms.
Take charge of your destiny.

(c) 2015 TRIbUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY

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

From Page One

The Daily Tar Heel

WAINSTEIN

FROM PAGE 1

department and the lack of


review of the AFAM department and its chairperson.
The graduate school, which
normally reviewed departments, didnt have an AFAM
masters degree. Moeser, who
served as UNCs chancellor from 2000-08 during
the height of the paper class
scheme, said that fault was
enormous.
You could drive a truck
through that loophole, he said.
One of the silver linings for
UNC was that the structural
and cultural flaws mentioned
by Moeser and expanded on
by Wainstein were already in
the process of being resolved.
UNC claims to have more
than 70 reforms, with items
ranging from the implementation of ConnectCarolina
to small requirements like a
deans signature on any grade
change form.
I do think thats one of
the positive benefits of going
through something like this,
Folt said. Really embracing
what it means to truly reflect
how did we get here, and
how do we really see ourselves
proceeding in a way where we
are proud and excited of what
we are doing.
One of the reforms UNCs
administration highlights is
the formation of the StudentAthlete Academic Initiative
Working Group, headed
by Provost Jim Dean and
Director of Athletics Bubba
Cunningham.
I dont think youll find
anything like that anywhere
else in the country, Dean said,
citing the collaboration among
the most senior academic and
athletic administrators.
And while the reasons for
the working group are unsavory, the results of its work
have been positive in Deans
eyes. He said the University
has never been so integrated.
I think what we did learn
in the last two years is that we
are delighted with where we
are, said Cunningham, referencing the entire University
community and not a single
reform in particular.
UNC law professor Michael
Gerhardt who helped
in creating many of the
Universitys reforms in the last
year on the Faculty Executive
Committee said constant
self-criticism is needed to get
ahead of past mistakes.
We cant be very sure that
weve found the last misconduct that was committed,
Gerhardt said. The very fact
that we cant be sure of it, I
think, means weve got to be
more vigilant.
Gerhardt said the
University should also focus
on finding new potential gaps.
How else can people try
and abuse this system that we
just havent seen in the past?

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

Thursday, October 22, 2015

history is essential to understanding the United States,


especially in the South.
A fall 2013 course taught
by Janken about the history of
the civil rights movement convinced senior Lindsey Terrell
to major in the department.
Terrell, who is white, said
she still gets questions about
why she cares about AfricanAmerican studies mostly
in her rural hometown. The
questioning got worse after the
Wainstein report came out.
She said the report was all
she could think about for a
while, and she worried about
the negative perception her
professors faced.
My AAAD instructors are
my favorite instructors Ive
had in my life, she said.
To think that students or
people in general may judge
them because of the depart-

ment they work in, it just


breaks my heart.
Senior Jaelyn Coates is
majoring in the department
along with political science.
When the Wainstein report
came out, she said she scheduled an appointment with her
adviser to talk things over.
Ultimately, I came to the
decision that it wasnt about
African-American studies,
she said.
It was about people who
made some mistakes in a

department, and it could have


been any department, and
what I didnt want to do was
contribute to the negative
voices that were saying things
like African-American studies dont matter or its not a
valid degree.
So she kept the major.
I wanted to be part of the
people who were like no, this is
important, Coates said. This
is an important field of study.
university@dailytarheel.com

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

paper classes havent suffered


as much as the AFAM degree
holders who never took irregular classes.
I dont see them as innocent frankly, for lack of a better
term, as I do people like myself
who never took any bogus
classes, and thats the only
group that has been offered any
kind of reconciliation from the
school, he said. All Im asking
them to do is extend that same
offer to people like myself its
the person that has to go and
put it on their resume that
really feels the sting.
Dean said Dykers is the
only degree holder who hasnt
taken an irregular class that is
seeking amends.
I certainly respect his
point of view, he said.
Dykers said his decision not
to speak up while he was a student is what makes him passionate about the issue now.
That class was easily the
best preparation I had for law
school. You hear all this talk
about paper classes that
was a paper class, but no one
was writing it for me.
Dean said he is proud to
have the department at UNC.
To look back now and say
that the department is some-

how unworthy because of one


professor teaching courses at
one period of time, and that
means anybody that has a
degree from that department
is somehow harmed I just
cant get there, he said.
Dykers would rather not
sue his alma mater, but he
thinks he could build a case on
breach of duty and negligence.
I love the University.
I do not want to fight the
University; I want to work
with the University. I want
the integrity of the University
to be restored fully, he said.
I dont think that can
occur until there are actions
taken to make whole the students who have suffered the
most disrepute.
@kianamcole
university@dailytarheel.com

Election Day is November 3rd!


Calling all voters
With election day fast
approaching, learn about
your candidates before Nov.
3. See pg. 12 for voter guide.

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

Next dominoes to fall


In the spring, the University
must reply to the NCAAs
Notice of Allegations, which
cited the school for five level
one violations namely a
lack of institutional control. A
few months later, UNCs yearlong probation implemented
by its accrediting agency,
the Southern Association of
Colleges and Schools, will end,
forcing the agency to make a
ruling on the schools status.
The worry of UNC being
punished too harshly is certainly on the minds of fans of
UNCs sports team.
I do not trust the NCAA
to do this fairly, said Moses
Musilu, a sophomore and the
public relations chairperson
for Carolina Fever. I understand their motive, but I feel
like their main motive is to
make an example out of us.
Law professor Lissa
Broome has been involved
with the Faculty Athletics
Committee and has served as
the schools representative to
the NCAA and the ACC.
She believes the NCAA has
mechanisms that allows for
many different perspectives
to be heard like the fact
the investigators do not rule
on their findings but in
the end, UNC and its sports
teams have to trust that they
are going to be fair.
To keep accreditation, the
University has to show it has
corrected the broken accreditation standards revealed in
the Wainstein report.
What (SACS) focused on
is of the things we said we
were going to do in the future
and said whats the update
and we embraced as you
do with anything from your
accrediting agency, Folt said.
What do you learn when
you decide to go inside-out,
to put everything up for ques-

11

Child fortune tellers


Kids Pick the President
has accurately predicted our
commander in chief all but
once. See pg. 9 for story.

UNC players reinstated


UNC cornerbacks Mike
Hughes and M.J. Stewart will
return to play against Virginia
Saturday. Read more online.

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

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

W in 2 field passes forthe Nov.


7th U NC vs.Duke H om ecom ing
gam e & a signed footballfrom
Coach Fedora!
Subm itnow and as
m any tim es as you can by
Nov.1st!

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

(C)2015 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


All rights reserved.

40 Website help sect.


41 Post-op area
44 Privileged groups
46 Stand-up comic Boosler
47 Breakfast choice
48 No-tell motel meetings
50 Pulls hard
51 Intimidating look
52 Rubbernecks
56 Monty Python segment
58 Vancouver setting: Abbr.
59 30-day mo.
60 Note from one whos
short
61 The __: Uris novel
62 No, No, Nanette
foursome

12

Thursday, October 22, 2015

2015

CANDIDATES FOR CHAPEL HILL MAYOR


MARK KLEINSCHMIDT

Candidate
age
45

Political
affiliation
Democrat

PAM HEMMINGER

Political
affiliation
Democrat

Campaign
funding total
$7,883

What is your top priority?


Making sure that we have a progressive view
toward the future.
Why do you want to run?
This community has an opportunity right now to
move forward and embrace the opportunities of
this century. There are people that look back, and
Chapel Hill has always embraced new things.
Why should we vote for you?
I am a double Tar Heel. I have the real life
experience of being a student. I am involved in
the community.

Candidate
age
55

GARY KAHN

Political
affiliation
Democrat

Campaign
funding total
$12,400.67

What is your top priority?


Besides her vow to bring more voices to the
table, Hemminger wants to bring in more commercial office space.

Candidate
age
59

Campaign
funding total
$5

What is your top priority?


Kahn said one of his top priorities is to expand
the transportation system. He said transportation in the town is nearly obsolete, and the town
needs to raise more money for it.

Why do you want to run?


She says its about better decision-making. She
says Chapel Hills lack of commitment to the
Rogers Road Neighborhood community center
pushed her to run.

Why do you want to run?


Kahn said after running and failing in elections
for Chapel Hill Town Council and Orange County
commissioner, he was motivated to run, especially after receiving more than 11,000 votes in his
run for commissioner.

Why should we vote for you?


She points to her past experience as a county
commissioner, chairperson of the school board
and her work with nonprofits, including Habitat
for Humanity and the Triangle Conservancy.

Why should we vote for you?


Because I can give (the voters) something
different.

ON THE LIGHT RAIL


I am in favor. I was very involved in getting the
plan to where it is today.

ON THE LIGHT RAIL


Hemminger believes this is a great project and
wants to make sure Chapel Hill receives the best
route possible. She wants to get it right, and she
thinks shes the one to get it right.

ON THE LIGHT RAIL


Kahn said the focus should be on raising more
money for buses and that the light rail will
service very few people compared to buses.

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.

CANDIDATES FOR CHAPEL HILL TOWN COUNCIL


JESSICA ANDERSON

Political affiliation: Democrat


Age: 36
Campaign funding total: $4,552
Endorsed by: Chapel Hill Alliance for
a Livable Town, Indy Week

ADAM W. JONES

NANCY OATES

Political affiliation: Democrat


Age: 59
Campaign funding total: $8,442.01
Endorsed by: Chapel Hill Alliance for
a Livable Town

LEE STORROW

Political affiliation: Republican


Age: 52
Campaign funding total: $2,800

Incumbent since 2011


Political affiliation: Democrat
Age: 26
Campaign funding total: $20,721
Endorsed by: North Carolina Sierra Club,
Equality N.C., Orange County AFL-CIO,
Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund

DONNA BELL

Incumbent since 2009


Political affiliation: Democrat
Age: 44
Campaign funding total: $3,127.04
Endorsed by: North Carolina Sierra
Club, Equality N.C., Orange County
AFL-CIO, Indy Week

JIM WARD

Incumbent since 1999


Political affiliation: Democrat
Age: 66
Campaign funding total: $5
Endorsed by: North Carolina Sierra
Club, Equality N.C., Orange County
AFL-CIO, Indy Week

MICHAEL PARKER

Political affiliation: Democrat


Age: 65
Campaign funding total: $6,761
Endorsed by: North Carolina Sierra
Club, Equality N.C., Orange County
AFL-CIO

PAUL NEEBE

Political affiliation: Democrat


Age: 54
Campaign funding total: $305

DAVID SCHWARTZ

Political affiliation: Democrat


Age: 50
Campaign funding total: $5,163
Endorsed by: Chapel Hill Alliance for
a Livable Town

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:

Board of Elections Office:


Hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., today and
Friday; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Saturday; 9
a.m. to 6 p.m., Oct. 26 through Oct.
30; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Oct. 31
Location: 208 S. Cameron St.,
Hillsborough
Carrboro Town Hall:
Hours: Noon to 7 p.m., today; noon
to 6 p.m., Friday; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
Saturday; noon to 7 p.m., Oct. 26
through Oct. 29; noon to 6 p.m.,
Oct. 30; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Oct. 31
Location: 301 W. Main St., Carrboro
Chapel of the Cross:
Hours: Noon to 7 p.m., today; noon
to 6 p.m., Friday; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
Saturday; noon to 7 p.m., Oct. 26
through Oct. 29; noon to 6 p.m.,
Oct. 30; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Oct. 31
Location: 304 E. Franklin St.,
Chapel Hill
Seymour Senior Center:
Hours: Noon to 7 p.m., today; noon
to 6 p.m., Friday; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
Saturday; noon to 7 p.m., Oct. 26
through Oct. 29; noon to 6 p.m.,
Oct. 30; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Oct. 31
Location: 2551 Homestead Road,
Chapel Hill

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