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News Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 15
Hedgepeth
documents
sealed again
After resentencing, Lovette
gets life without parole
By Taylor Greene
and Jordan Bailey
Staff Writers
JULY 25 The records in
the Faith Hedgepeth homi-
cide case were resealed twice
over the summer.
On May 14, Durham
County Superior Court
Judge Orlando F. Hudson Jr.
ordered the records, includ-
ing all search warrants and
911 calls in the case, to be
resealed. On July 19, follow-
ing the expiration of that
order, the records were once
again sealed.
The new order is applicable
for 60 days, at which point
the district attorneys office in
Durham will have to release
the records or seek another
resealing order.
The court finds that
there is a preponderance of
evidence to believe that the
release of the information
contained in the court order
and application would under-
mine the ongoing criminal
investigation, the order
states.
The records have been
sealed repeatedly since
Hedgepeth was found dead in
her apartment the morning of
Sept. 7, 2012.
The Hedgepeth fam-
ily said they were not spe-
cifically informed about the
May resealing, but Roland
Hedgepeth, Faiths father,
said he was not surprised.
I dont know how much
longer this is going to go on,
but my understanding is that
they have to convince a judge
that it is of utmost impor-
tance to the case, so I have
to assume that the judges
know what theyre doing,
Hedgepeth said.
He said the family is doing
as best as they can given the
situation.
At this point, about as well
as can be expected, consider-
ing that we know absolutely
nothing, still, about what
happened, he said.
But Hedgepeth said he
remains confident the investi-
gation is moving forward.
If they are either con-
tinually eliminating people or
whatever they may be doing, I
would assume that it is some
type of progress.
A spokesman for
the Chapel Hill Police
Department said they are
in frequent contact with the
Hedgepeth family about the
case.
We are trying to keep
them involved as much as we
possibly can without com-
promising the investigation,
police spokesman Joshua
Mecimore said.
Amy Locklear Hertel is
the director of the UNC
American Indian Center,
an organization in which
Faith Hedgepeth was heavily
involved while on campus.
In May, Hertel said she was
saddened by the resealing,
but she remains hopeful that
the investigation would move
forward.
Were confident theyre
doing their jobs, she said.
Hopefully there will be
a resolution to the case. We
are looking forward to that
resolution sooner rather than
later.
In July, members of a
Native American sorority on
campus unanimously agreed
to extend honorary member-
ship to Hedgepeth.
Leslie Locklear, president
of the Alpha Pi Omega soror-
ity for the the 2012-13 year,
said the organization decided
to make Hedgepeth an hon-
orary member because of
her expressed interest in the
organization.
JUNE 3 After a June
resentencing trial, one of
the men convicted in the
2008 killing of Student Body
President Eve Carson will
serve the rest of his life in
prison without the possibility
of parole.
Laurence Alvin Lovette Jr.
was first sentenced to life in
prison in December 2011, but
the N.C. Court of Appeals ruled
the judge and jury were not
able to consider mitigating fac-
tors related to Lovettes age. He
was 17 at the time of the crime.
On June 3, N.C. Superior
Court Judge Allen Baddour
upheld Lovettes sentence.
Lovette was convicted on
charges of first-degree murder,
first-degree kidnapping, felony
larceny and armed robbery.
In February, the Court of
Appeals had vacated Lovettes
life sentence, asking that his
sentence be reconsidered.
The courts opinion in that
ruling stemmed from the
2012 U.S. Supreme Court
case, Miller v. Alabama. In
that case, the U.S. Supreme
Court ruled that a mandatory
life sentence without parole
for offenders younger than 18
constitutes cruel and unusual
punishment.
But Baddour argued
Lovette represented an
extreme case in which the
findings in Miller did not
apply. Baddour also said he
doubted whether rehabilita-
tion was possible for Lovette.
Co-defendant Demario
James Atwater, who was 21
at the time for the murder,
is serving two life sentences
after pleading guilty to the
crime in 2011.
From staff reports
pool photo
Lovette was resentenced June 3 to life in prison without parole
for the 2008 murder of Student Body President Eve Carson.
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Sunday 11am-1am
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AND PRIVATE DINING
DOWNTOWN CHAPEL HILL
460 WEST FRANKLIN STREET
CAROLINABREWERY.COM
SEASONAL MENU
750 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
Chapel Hill, NC
(919) 967-3663
Open 7:30 am to 8 pm
Seven days a week
Come have breakfast,
lunch or dinner with your
Foster family!
House-made baked goods,
soups, salads, sandwiches and
breakfast. We also offer locally
roasted coffee, gourmet
groceries, wine and candy.
Southwestern
Cuisine
Serving Lunch Weekdays & Dinner Monday-Saturday
Serving Sunday Supper from 4-8pm
Timberlyne Shopping Center 1129 Weaver Dairy Rd. Chapel Hill
919-942-4745 margaretscantina.com Follow us on Facebook
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News Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 18
System to review cap on
out-of-state students
UNC is not alone in
discussion to increase
nonresidents.
By Sarah Brown
State & National Editor
JUNE 20 The UNC
Board of Governors might
slacken a long-standing rein
on admitting out-of-state
students to UNC-system
campuses next year, joining
a nationwide debate among
universities on nonresident
enrollment.
A number of public univer-
sities have recently increased
their nonresident student pop-
ulation many in response to
decreased state funding.
The Board of Governors
is considering five proposed
changes to the UNC systems
out-of-state policy.
John Sanders, former
director of UNC-CHs School
of Government, said he
thinks the proposals could
be a product of UNC-system
budget cuts.
But Peter Hans, the board
chairman, said financial woes
are not driving the members
discussion.
Hans said admitting
more out-of-state students
would not increase the UNC
systems state-appropriated
funds, though it is a common
speculation.
The university (system)
doesnt receive four times as
much money for an out-of-
state student, even though
tuition might be that much
higher at UNC-CH, for exam-
ple, he said.
But Sanders said less state
support encourages univer-
sities to seek funding else-
where.
The motivation so far
as I see is to enable the
(UNC system) to charge out-
of-state students a higher
tuition rate and to make
money that way that
theyre not getting from
other sources, he said.
The Board of Governors
has mandated the UNC sys-
tems 18-percent out-of-state
cap from which the UNC
School of the Arts is exempt
since 1986.
Hans said the systems pri-
ority is, and always has been,
educating in-state students.
But he said board members
recognize the advantages out-
of-state students confer.
There is increasing aware-
ness that admitting bright,
qualified out-of-state stu-
dents who study here and
then live here after gradua-
tion can be a very positive
influence on economic devel-
opment, he said.
One proposed change
would raise the systemwide
cap to 22 percent, which
would have allowed UNC-CH
to admit 204 more out-of-
state students to last years
incoming freshman class.
The cap has given UNC-
CH admissions officers a few
headaches nearly 1,900
qualified applicants from
outside the state were denied
admission last year.
All five possible changes
would increase total system
enrollment, so the number
of in-state students admitted
would not be affected.
A 22-percent systemwide
cap would be hard to admin-
ister across campuses, Hans
said.
We would have to figure
out which schools get what
proportion of the nonresi-
dents allotted, he said.
Hans said out-of-state poli-
cy discussions will continue at
board meetings this year, but
he said there is no guarantee
adjustments will be made.
North Carolina students
will always remain our top
priority.
A
.K
.A
. a
w
e
s
o
m
e
e
v
e
n
t
s
d
e
s
ig
n
e
d
f
o
r
y
o
u
.
Every month Carolina Dining Services develops a
With a special focus on Health & Wellness and
Sustainability, the calendar features events like:
programming calendar.
FUN FACT
+ +
WHAT S HAPPENI NG
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OFF CAMPUS MEAL PLANS
+ +
These plans are designed to meet the needs
advantages of dining on campus. Plans
are available to students living:
L S
August and learn more about all that
C u S
checking out these upcoming events:
Mon. 08.26: Rams Head & Top of Lenoir
CHANGE IT UP: BLUEBERRY DAY
+
C C
Ram Village
Baity Hill
Odum Village
C 1
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Tues. 08.20: Dinner at Top of Lenoir
+
WELCOME BACK BASH
1 1 L
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MEET THE REGISTERED DIETITIAN
& SUSTAINABILITY COORDINATOR!
connect with us:
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LEARN MORE AT
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Chef Events, Monotony Breakers & WOW Dinners
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News Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 19
Performing
Arts grant
expands
NC Supreme Court puts
hold on towing restrictions
By Samantha Sabin
Arts Editor
JULY 11 At first glance,
Carolina Performing Arts
project to bridge the arts
and academics might seem
too simple to require an
$800,000 grant.
But Raymond Farrow,
CPAs director of develop-
ment, said the bulk of the
funding will be spent on per-
sonnel for the Arts@TheCore
initiative a five-year pro-
gram that will be implement-
ed in the 2013-14 year.
We have to have the peo-
ple on the ground, working
with us in order to make this
work, Farrow said.
For the Rite of Spring at
100 series during the 2012-
13 season, CPA received
a $750,000 grant from
The Andrew W. Mellon
Foundations performing arts
division, $50,000 less than
the Arts@TheCore grant.
Farrow said the larger
grant came from the higher
education division of the
foundation, which might be
able to provide more funding
for this project than the per-
forming arts division.
The amount of money (the
foundation has) to spend on
projects changes from year to
year, he said. So there could
be a whole host of reasons
why it was different.
The final grant amounts
are determined each year
after back-and-forth discus-
sions between both people
at Carolina Performing Arts
and the foundations program
organizer.
The Mellon Foundation
first asked the performing
arts group to draft a proposal
based on what the arts inte-
gration project would look
like if there were no limits to
the available funding.
And that was our initial
concept paper that we sub-
mitted, and I think the total
amount for that sort of broad
proposal was about $2 mil-
lion, Farrow said.
The grant for the arts inte-
gration project will be used
to support mostly the Mellon
Distinguished Scholar and
the postdoctoral fellow.
Professor Joy Kasson, the
first Mellon Distinguished
Scholar, will receive $134,000
over the course of her two-
year tenure to develop a fac-
ulty seminar and to facilitate
faculty research.
Aaron Shackelford, the
postdoctoral fellow who will
work alongside Kasson, will
receive $52,000 per year to
conduct research relevant to
the goals of the arts integration
program, teach one course per
year designed around one or
more performances and help
prepare materials for seminars
and meetings.
I really want to see stu-
dents come to expect for the
performing arts to become a
part of their education here at
Carolina, Shackelford said.
The grant will also fund the
other groups, but Farrow said
CPA plans to do more fund-
raising for different arts inte-
gration activities and events.
We feel like Mellon has
given us a great head start,
he said. But thats just the
beginning.
Joe Florence, CPAs mar-
keting manager, said the Rite
of Spring season was a pre-
cursor for this upcoming year.
There were Rite of Spring
classes, and we had tons of
artists visiting classrooms and
hosting master classes, he said.
For Arts@TheCore, we
want to broaden that expo-
sure, and just make it per-
forming arts-focused versus
just Rite of Spring-focused.
By Cammie Bellamy
City Editor
JUNE 27 After a sum-
mer of delays, Chapel Hill
officials may have to wait
several months to find out if
they ll be able to enforce new
towing restrictions.
On June 25, the N.C.
Supreme Court issued a tem-
porary stay on the restrictions
which cap the amount
towing companies can charge,
increase signage in tow-away
lots and require companies
to accept credit cards as it
decides whether to take up an
appeal against the towns tow-
ing and cellphone ban ordi-
nances. The Chapel Hill Town
Council had already decided
to hold off on enacting the
ban on using a cellphone
while driving until Oct. 1.
The towing restrictions had
been set to take effect June
24, but will now be delayed
until the state Supreme Court
decides how to handle the
appeal from Georges Towing
and Recovery and the com-
panys lawyer, Thomas Stark.
On June 4, the N.C. Court
of Appeals ruled the town
could move forward with both
ordinances. But later that
month, Stark filed a petition
for discretionary review with
the Supreme Court. He said he
expects the court to decide if
they will take the case within a
couple of months.
Prior experience would
tell me that it takes anywhere
from 60 to 120 days or so,
he said.
Stark said he and his client
decided to appeal over what
they see as questions regard-
ing the constitutionality of
the ordinances.
One of the issues not
reached by the Court of
Appeals was whether or not
the local bill that had been
given to Orange County and
other counties that allows
them to pass towing restric-
tions was constitutional
under the N.C. Constitution,
Stark said.
We had another 14 to 15
days to prepare an appeal and
to file a petition for discre-
tionary review, but we tried to
move more promptly because
we didnt want there to be
additional confusion. (The
ordinance) is confusing for
the public, its confusing for
the police and its confusing
for my client.
But some Chapel Hill offi-
cials said they think the tow-
ing ordinance is well within
the towns rights.
Im disappointed that
the courts issued a stay, but
ultimately Im confident that
once the legal process carries
itself out, that we ll be able
to enforce the towing restric-
tions, said Chapel Hill Town
Council member Lee Storrow.
It has made downtown a
really unfriendly place for
citizens and customers, and
I think the Court of Appeals
was pretty specific in their
ruling that the town has the
right to enforce this.
News Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 20
New law protects students who call 911
Chapel Hill approves budget
dth/kaki pope
UNC Hospitals received an increase in alcohol-related 911 calls from campus in recent semesters.
By Megan Cassella
Summer Editor
JUNE 6 The beds line
the walls, crowd the hallways
and form a ring around the
nurses station.
Theyre empty, most of
them its 11:30 p.m. in the
emergency room at UNC
Hospitals, and the day is com-
ing to a close.
But as the hour grows later
and the weekend looms, the
vacant beds start to fill, await-
ing the patients who tend to
inhabit them more often than
anyone else intoxicated
students.
With the number of calls
to emergency medical ser-
vices for student alcohol
overdoses rising, and new
statewide legislation in place
to encourage calling for help,
the University is now facing
a bigger question what, if
any, consequences these stu-
dents should face.
The hospital drunk tank
When a call reporting an
intoxicated person comes in to
the emergency services head-
quarters in Hillsborough, a
response team goes out.
And according to Orange
County Emergency Services
Alcohol-Related Incidents
report, its something that
has been happening more
frequently.
In the spring of 2012, EMS
received 40 alcohol-related
calls for 18- to 22-year-olds in
the campus area.
The following fall, that
same number jumped to 60
calls an increase of 50 per-
cent. Comparable data for ear-
lier years was not available.
Jeff Phillips, an E.R. nurse
who has worked at UNC
Hospitals for 18 years, said the
vast majority of intoxicated
students who come in dont
require much medical care.
For the most part, they
just sleep it off, he said.
We keep an eye on them,
give them a warm bed, just
let them lay there its like a
drunk tank, almost.
A new law on the table
Al Hunt, an EMS supervi-
sor, said when he hears of
instances where students
didnt call 911, its always for
the same reason.
They ll say, I didnt call
because I didnt want to get
in trouble, he said.
Now, under new legisla-
tion passed through the N.C.
General Assembly in April,
students are subject to lim-
ited immunity from legal con-
sequences in some situations
even if theyre underage.
Students must meet three
criteria to be protected under
the new legislation, said Dave
Crescenzo, an attorney with
Student Legal Services.
He said students must be
the first to call for help, give
their real names and remain
with the person until authori-
ties arrive.
In that situation, if you
were under 21 and the police
find alcohol, they would not
be able to charge you with
possession or consumption.
But while students might
not get in legal trouble, they
still could be charged with a
violation of the Honor Code
a loophole that the University
is now working to rewrite.
Blackburn said his office,
which is in charge of rewriting
the policy, wants to keep the
University operating in the
same spirit as the legislation.
So we are working now
in trying to devise some lan-
guage to our policy that will
speak to where and when the
University will also observe a
medical amnesty approach,
he said.
Crescenzo said before the
legislation, the de facto posi-
tion of both law enforcement
and the University had been
not to get students in trouble
but the rules were unwrit-
ten, and there were exceptions.
Whether somebody was
charged before was always up
to the cops, he said.
The classic situation is the
frat party, Crescenzo said.
Somebodys been chugging
purple Jesus and is passed out
on the floor, and rather than,
Oh my God, this guys barely
breathing, they would just
put him to bed and go home
or some stupid thing like that.
(The new law) addresses
that problem.
By Taylor Greene
and Cammie Bellamy
Staff Writers
JUNE 11 Residents can
expect higher municipal taxes
and expanded library hours
as Chapel Hills new 2013-14
budget goes into effect.
In June, the Chapel Hill
Town Council unanimously
approved town manager
Roger Stancils $94 million
proposed budget.
The budget is balanced by
two 1-cent tax increases
one to support the towns gen-
eral fund and one for Chapel
Hill Transit.
The increase brings the
property tax rate total to 51.4
cents levied on every $100
valuation of property.
Following calls from the
public for increased hours,
the Chapel Hill Public
Library will now be funded
for 64 hours per week up
from the current 54 hours,
but slightly less than the
pre-renovation 68 hours per
week.
Other items in the budget
include a 4-percent increase
in health care premiums for
town employees and raised
public parking rates for
metered lots and town pay
stations.
While all council members
approved the budget, some
said it was not ideal.
Every time we raise taxes,
for whatever good purpose, in
part, we make it harder and
harder for people of mod-
est or even above modest
means to live here, council
member Matt Czajkowski
said.
I think overall, as we bal-
ance trade-offs, that they
are well-balanced. But I will
vote for it with a heavy heart
because I know that some of
the very people who we are
constantly talking about serv-
ing in Chapel Hill wont be
here for us to serve after we
pass this budget.
But Mayor Pro Tempore
Ed Harrison said Chapel
Hills municipal taxes will
remain lower than those of
surrounding towns. He said
Durhams municipal taxes are
10 percent higher, Carrboros
are 15 percent higher and
Hillsboroughs are approxi-
mately 20 percent higher.
Were not doing all that
much in terms of forcing peo-
ple out of town if you look at
the actual numbers, Harrison
said.
If you can justify a tax
raise, this one is justifiable.
In late June, the Town
Council also heard recom-
mendations for a new plan
to extend sewer service to
the historically black and
low-income Rogers-Eubanks
neighborhood. That commu-
nity had housed the county
landfill until its closure in
June.
Over the summer, the
Historic Rogers Road
Neighborhood Task Force
decided on two options for
the sewer plan one that
would cost $5.8 million and
provide sewer service to 86
properties, and a second that
would cost $3.7 million and
serve 67.
Now, funding for one of
those plans will have to be
determined by the Chapel
Hill, Carrboro and Orange
County governments.
Many council members
voiced support for extend-
ing sewer service to as many
homes as possible through
the larger, 86-property plan.
To pay for Chapel Hills
share of the sewer costs, the
council voted that the town
manager explore two options:
creating a water and sewer
district for the neighbor-
hood in partnership with the
Orange Water and Sewer
Authority, or extending the
towns extraterritorial juris-
diction to include Rogers
Road.
919.929.1119 : www.universityorist.com
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Welcome Back Students, Faculty and Staff!
Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 21
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News Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 22
Contextualized
transcripts delayed
Horace Williams
avoids closure for now
dth/brennan cumalander
Horace Williams Airport has been used by local pilots since 1928.
By Jordan Bailey
and Marshall Winchester
Staff Writers
JULY 25 The first phase
of a plan to provide contex-
tualized grading information
for undergraduate classes
at UNC was implemented
in June, with the release of
the first Instructor Grading
Patterns reports.
But the final stage of the
plan implementing the
trranscripts for students
has once again been delayed.
Faculty members will
receive their reports each
term in order to compare
their grade distributions to
those of other faculty mem-
bers within their department
or across the schools.
Results of the reports are
visible only to the faculty.
Andrew Perrin, a sociology
professor and former chair-
man of the educational policy
committee, which developed
the plan, said the reports are
the result of concerns over
grade inflation and inequality.
There was a really strong
sense that both of those issues
grade inflation and grade
inequality were important
and were threatening the
validity of grading at UNC,
he said.
We decided that the
best way to approach that is
through the process of trans-
parency what grades mean
in their particular context and
how different faculty instruc-
tors are grading.
University Registrar
Chris Derickson said the
implementation of the
transcripts, which were
previously scheduled to be
rolled out this fall, has been
pushed back to fall 2014
due to updates to the pay-
roll and finance system on
ConnectCarolina.
(Information Technology
Services) will need to be heav-
ily involved in the design,
development and program-
ming efforts required to
implement the contextualized
transcript, he said.
And with so much of their
efforts focused on another
enormous system transition,
the decision was made to
push back the contextualized
transcript one year until fall
2014.
Perrin said the contextual-
ized transcripts and the grad-
ing patterns reports are both
important in understanding
UNCs grading.
I think that combination
is kind of the one-two punch
that should really provide
some real transparency on the
grading here, he said.
Derickson said the instruc-
tor grading reports include
the mean and median grades
of the course as well as a
breakdown of the number of
each letter grade awarded in
classes that have more than
five students.
He said the contextual-
ized transcripts will include
the median grade awarded
in a class, class size and
the percentile in which the
students grade falls for all
classes with 10 or more stu-
dents.
The transcripts will also
include the schedule point
average the GPA of a medi-
an student enrolled in a stu-
dents mix of course sections
and the number of class
sections for which the student
performed below, on or above
average for each term.
Perrin said administrators
will also implement a website
with more contextual infor-
mation than is on the tran-
script itself, which students
can show graduate schools or
potential employers.
Donna Gilleskie, an eco-
nomics professor, said the
reports will encourage discus-
sion among faculty.
I think one of the ideas
that were hoping this will fos-
ter is discussion about grad-
ing, she said.
The idea is to get everyone
talking about some of the
deeper issues of grade infla-
tion, grade compression and
grade inequality, and figure
out a way to address it.
By Daniel Schere
Staff Writer
JULY 25 For more than
35 years, Robert Epting has
been flying in and out of
Horace Williams Airport.
And for much of the time hes
been using it, he said, Chapel
Hill residents and University
officials have been underes-
timating their local airports
worth.
The value of that airport
for our community is often
overlooked and misstated,
said Epting, a lawyer and for-
mer UNC professor.
Since 2002, UNC officials
have been attempting to
close the airport in order to
make way for the Universitys
Carolina North satellite
campus. One of the most
recent attempts to close the
airport came in an early ver-
sion of the 2013 N.C. General
Assembly budget, which
would have closed Horace
Williams on Aug. 1.
The final budget, signed
in July by Gov. Pat McCrory,
did not include a provision to
mandate the closing. But that
doesnt guarantee the airport
will remain open indefinitely.
University spokeswoman
Susan Hudson said no date
has been set for the construc-
tion of Carolina North, as
funding for the project has
not been finalized. She said
ultimately, the University will
need the land the airport cur-
rently occupies.
We have been able to do
some infrastructure work at
Carolina North, she said in
an email.
But we will need to close
the airport to start con-
struction on the first build-
ing there because most of
the development area for
Carolina North is located on
or near the runway.
First opened in 1928, the
airport was bought by UNC
and named for former philos-
ophy professor Henry Horace
Williams after he died in
1940. During World War II,
it served as a Navy pre-flight
training school and saw for-
mer presidents Gerald Ford
and George H.W. Bush pass
through, along with baseball
player Ted Williams.
John Hunter, an instructor
with the Wings of Carolina
Flying Club since 1974, said
in the 1980s there were
reduced zoning laws in
Chapel Hill, which led to a
large increase in development
on the north side of town
around the airport.
People built like crazy out
there, he said.
He said one citizens group,
Citizens for Airport Planning,
was so opposed to the air-
ports operation that mem-
bers attempted to steal the
clubs membership list.
Until 2011, the airport
was used by UNC Hospitals
Medical Air Operations.
Those operations have since
been moved to Raleigh-
Durham International
Airport in advance of a poten-
tial Horace Williams closing.
Epting said he hopes the
airport is remembered as a
vital piece of Chapel Hills
history.
It ought not (to) be for-
gotten in the long run, he
said, saying he thought it was
unusual for a university town
with an airport to close it in
order to make way for future
development.
Amidst ongoing efforts to
shut down the airport, several
pilots still argue it is useful to
the community.
Most universities regard
having an airport as a tre-
mendous asset, said Chapel
Hill resident and pilot George
Scheer.
Horace Williams has been
a big part of my life for many
years, he said. Its a place
that welcomes visitors.
Yet some town officials say it
is time for the the airport to go.
Chapel Hill Town Council
member Jim Ward said the
community has been talking
about closing it for 35 years.
He said he thinks by doing so,
Carolina North will be able to
move forward, and there will
be fewer safety risks.
In 2010, a plane crash at
Horace Williams killed one
man and injured two others.
But Ward said he recogniz-
es that the airport serves an
important function and hopes
that it is relocated.
Its a conversation Im
willing to have, he said.
The UNC-owned
airport had been set
to close Aug. 1.
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News Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 23
Hospital opens Hillsborough campus
New leader to take
helm in the Union
School district ocials
hope to scrap class rank
dth/mary meade mcmullan
UNC Hospitals opened a new building on its 40-acre medical
campus in Hillsborough. Construction started in spring 2011.
By Madison Mundy
Staff Writer
JULY 4 Hillsborough
residents can now cut time
and miles out of their visits to
UNC Health Care facilities.
UNC Hospitals has
completed the first phase
of construction on its new
Hillsborough campus, located
at 460 Waterstone Drive.
The first part of the devel-
opment to be finished is a
60,000-square-foot medical
office building, which began
treating patients July 1. Crews
first broke ground at the site
on April 20, 2011.
The facilitys central utility
area is also complete, includ-
ing water boilers and chillers,
cooling towers and the cam-
pus mechanical and electri-
cal infrastructure located on
15,000 square feet.
The hospitals estimated
staff of about 500 people will
include employees shifted in
three phases from other UNC
Hospitals locations.
Positions specific to the
Hillsborough location will
also be created, said Ray
Lafrenaye, vice president of
facility planning and develop-
ment at UNC Hospitals.
Construction of the
40-acre development will cost
more than $200 million, and
the final facilities will include
68 patient rooms, kitchen
and cafeteria facilities, several
operating rooms, intensive
care units, radiology units
and an emergency depart-
ment, said Ben Huffman, the
hospitals project manager
with the construction group
Skanska U.S.A. Building Inc.
The campus remaining
facilities will be built in two
phases, starting with the
diagnostic and treatment
center and finally the patient
housing facilities.
The entire facility, located
near Interstates 40 and 85
and N.C. Highway 86, is pro-
jected to be operational by
July 2015, Lafrenaye said.
The folks in Hillsborough
have been very accommodat-
ing to building the hospital
there, Lafrenaye said. They
have been very helpful, very
participatory in the building
of the hospital, and its been
a great relationship with the
town of Hillsborough.
Hillsborough Town
Manager Eric Peterson said
town residents are excited
about the new facility, which
will be the largest medical
center in town.
To have world-class
health care right here in the
town of Hillsborough is just a
great amenity for everybody
in the community, Peterson
said. The new hospital is
going to be an economic
engine.
Despite the two remain-
ing years of development,
Peterson said Hillsborough
has already begun to benefit
economically from the proj-
ect. He said the future will
bring more jobs to the area,
both through the facility itself
and in businesses that will
grow up around it.
He said he expected busi-
nesses catering to patients
and their families, such as
restaurants and hotels, to
develop as the hospital grows.
As the hospital goes up
and other businesses go up in
Waterstone, that is just going
to help the other businesses
and it will circulate more dol-
lars throughout Hillsborough
and Orange County, he said.
We think (the hospital)
is going to drive a lot of the
type of new development and
growth that the businesses
and the citizens have wanted
in Hillsborough.
By Daniel Schere
Staff Writer
JULY 18 Chapel Hill-
Carrboro City School leaders
are looking to get rid of a
statistic many colleges use to
evaluate applicants.
District leaders want to
remove class rank the mea-
sure by which students are
ranked against their peers
from high school transcripts.
While the statistic provides
a way for college admissions
officials to evaluate an appli-
cants competitiveness, some
in CHCCS have said they
believe it leads to unnecessary
competition between students.
The class rank rule dates
back to a 1995 N.C. law that
required the information
to be displayed on all high
school transcripts, along with
a students GPA and stan-
dardized test scores.
CHCCS spokesman Jeff
Nash said the system asked
the State Board of Education
for a waiver last year to
remove class rank from tran-
scripts, but it was denied.
We hope to work with leg-
islators to get the law changed
in the coming years, but we
do not have the authority to
make that decision, he said.
System Superintendent
Tom Forcella was not avail-
able for comment.
Montez Thomas, a guid-
ance counselor at Chapel
Hill High School, said he
thinks students often take
more challenging Advanced
Placement courses in place of
electives that interest them to
boost their rank.
Our students are very com-
petitive and so conscientious
about how they do against
other students, he said.
Thomas said there are bet-
ter ways to measure student
achievement, such as look-
ing at SAT scores and overall
leadership experience.
He said he tells students
who come into his office to
follow their passion.
I encourage students to be
as well-rounded as possible,
and if that means encourag-
ing them to take something
theyre interested in even if
its less quality points, then so
be it, he said.
UNC Senior Assistant
Admissions Director Ashley
Memory said class rank is a
small factor in whether or not
they admit a student.
When reviewing applica-
tions, we consider a number
of factors, and class rank is
actually not as important to
us as grades and the rigor of
courses selected by our appli-
cants, she said.
Memory said students
whose transcripts do not
include class rank have the
same chance of getting in.
No applicant is disadvan-
taged for not providing a class
rank, she said.
Staff writer Taylor Greene
contributed reporting.
By Jordan Bailey
University Editor
JUNE 25 The Student
Union gained a new, more
permanent face this summer.
Crystal King, who has
more than 15 years of experi-
ence in student affairs, start-
ed her tenure as the Unions
newest director July 29.
Before she took over the
position, King said her first
act as the Unions leader
would be to acknowledge the
hard work of the Union staff
during the time of transition.
I think the very first task
is to celebrate the staff that
have worked so hard to keep
the operation moving for-
ward in a positive way for the
students and for the campus
absent a director, King said.
Don Luse, the former
director, retired in December
after 20 years in the position,
and Tony Patterson and Scott
Hudson have been serving
as interim co-directors in his
place.
Before her transition to
UNC, King served as the
associate executive director
of university unions at the
University of Texas at Austin,
where she managed the build-
ing operations of four student
life facilities.
King has also served as the
program director of student
life at St. Edwards University,
leaving her with experience at
both a large public school as
well as a small private one.
I think it has equipped me
and rounded me in a way and
gave me a really good, unique
skill set to be able to man-
age and direct the Union (at
UNC).
Bettina Shuford, the asso-
ciate vice chancellor for stu-
dent affairs who assembled
the search committee, said
Kings experience with work-
ing at a similar university was
among the reasons she was
chosen for the position.
Shes coming from another
research-oriented institution,
so shes very familiar with this
type of institution, Shuford
said.
Shuford also said King is
experienced in facilities man-
agement and campus activi-
ties and programming. She
added that King has a good
track record with working
with students and staff.
She was selected as
supervisor of the year by the
president (at the University
of Texas at Austin), Shuford
said. So her references were
very strong.
Hudson said King should
Crystal
King of the
university of
texas took
over former
union director
don luses
position.
familiarize herself with the
operations at the Union dur-
ing her first couple of months
at the University.
I think my advice is to
listen to and meet one-on-
one with all of her staff and
become familiar with the
student affairs strategic plan,
he said.
Hudson also said it will be
important for King to foster
relationships with student
leaders, which King said she
enjoys.
She said she had plans to
participate in a new student
orientation session in order to
better understand student life
at the University.
I get a lot of energy from
students, King said.
All of their ideas and the
things that they want to do,
and helping them accom-
plish their goals Im really
excited about that part and
learning what the students (at
UNC) are passionate about.
Sports Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 24
2013-14 UNC newcomers watch list
By Max Miceli
Sports Editor
Every year at least one
incoming North Carolina
freshman bursts onto the
scene, leaving a mark and
giving Tar Heels fans a taste
of what they can expect in the
years to come.
Whether its been mens
lacrosse goalkeeper Kieran
Burke, who started every
game for the Tar Heels and
helped them on their way to
an ACC title, or outfielder
Skye Bolt, who slugged his
Colton Storm: Storm is a four-
start midfielder who ranks fourth
among recruits from Pennsylvania
according to Top Drawer Soccer.
With the loss of sophomore mid-
fielder Mikey Lopez to the MLS,
Storm will be given an opportunity
to play immediately but at the same
time have to fill the shoes of a for-
mer ACC freshman of the year.
Jalen markey: Markey is a strong and physical center
back who is touted as the best 2013 recruit from the Pacific
Northwest. With the addition of Markey to the Tar Heel defense,
Boyd Okwuonu and Jonathan Campbell may be freed up to join
the attack on occasion.
Joanna BoyleS: Coach Anson Dorrance didnt have to go far
to find this five-star midfield recruit. Being the fifth-ranked mid-
fielder in the nation according to Top Drawer, the Raleigh native
has earned spots on the U-17 and U-18 U.S. national teams and
led the 94 CASL Chelsea Ladies in scoring for the last three
years.
Soccer
JoVana BJelICa: As a
graduate student from Florida
International, Bjelica will bring
her experience as an outside
hitter to Chapel Hill. In 30 starts
as a junior at FIU, Bjelica led her
team with 479 kills and 21 aces
and was named to the 2011 Sun
Belts first-team All-Conference
squad.
volleyball
lauren moyer: As a forward
Moyer will bring speed to coach
Karen Sheltons offense this fall.
Hailing from York, Pa., the Central
York High graduate made the
U-19 U.S. Junior National team
twice consecutively, and its no
wonder why. With 20 goals and
12 defensive saves for her high
school team last season, Moyer is
a solid overall player.
JulIa young: Incoming back Young played alongside Moyer in
Germany this summer for the U-19 U.S. national team. As a part
of one of the best recruiting classes Shelton said shes received in
recent memory. Young has a team-player attitude, according to
her club coach Kristen McCann Rushing.
Field hockey
SHane SImpSon: Coach Joe
Breschi is adding a second Canadian
to his Tar Heel squad this sea-
son with Simpson coming in as
an attackman. While playing for
Salisbury School in Ontario, the
speedster scored 30 goals and
recorded 45 assists. Along with
being a member of the 2012 All-
Canadian team, Simpson runs track
and plays hockey.
StepHen kelly: The Tar Heels will
add another Kelly to their team this season, and this one may be
the best yet. As the No. 2-ranked recruit in his class according to
Inside Lacrosse, Kelly will bring depth at the face-off X and add
to UNCs offensive arsenal. In his senior season at Calvert Hall this
Under Armour All-American recorded 24 goals and 21 assists.
lacroSSe These nonrevenue
athletes should be on
everyones radar.
way to the cleanup position
for the Tar Heel baseball
team, there are always new
Tar Heels worth looking out
for.
And this year shouldnt be
any different.
With a number of highly
touted freshmen and trans-
fers coming to UNC from
both near and far, there will
be plenty of opportunities to
see athletes that are new to
the Carolina blue performing
at high level.
While no one can perfectly
predict which newcomers
will rise to the top of their
class, here are a few student
athletes you might want to
keep an eye on this year when
you go to watch nonrevenue
sports in Chapel Hill.
Credit Programs for Part-time Students | Conference Center | Professional Development and Enrichment Programs
Carolina Courses Online
No matter where your busy life takes you, Carolina Courses Online are only a mouse click away.
Registration is now open for Fall 2013 in the following courses:
Note: Courses are subject to cancellation. For current information and registration, visit fridaycenter.unc.edu/cp/cco or call 919-962-1134.
AAAD 101: Introduction to Africa
ANTH 102: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
ANTH 142: Local Cultures, Global Forces
ANTH 277: Gender and Culture
ARTS 356: Introduction to Digital Photography
ASTR 101: Introduction to Astronomy Labora-
tory: Our Place in Space
ASTR 101L: Descriptive Astronomy Lab
BUSI 106: Financial Accounting
CLAR 245: Archaeology of Italy
COMM 100: Communication and Social Process
COMM 120: Introduction to Interpersonal and
Organizational Communication
COMM 140: Introduction to Media History,
Theory, and Criticism
COMM 142: Popular Music
COMM 170: Rhetoric and Public Issues
COMM 249: Communication Technology, Culture,
and Society
DRAM 120: Play Analysis
DRAM 284: Studies in Dramatic Theory and Criticism
ENGL 121: British Literature,19th and Early
20th Century
ENGL 123: Introduction to Fiction
ENGL 125: Introduction to Poetry
ENGL 128: Major American Authors
ENGL 130: Introduction to Fiction Writing
ENGL 206: Intermediate Fiction Writing
ENGL 313: Grammar of Current English
FREN 101: Elementary French I
GEOG 120: World Regional Geography
GEOG 259: Geography of Latin America
GEOL 101: Introduction to Geology
GEOL 105: Violent Earth
GEOL 159: Prehistoric Life
GLBL 210: Global Issues
HIST 127: American History Before 1865
HIST 140: The World Since 1945
HIST 151: History of Western Civilization to 1650
HIST 276: The Modern Middle East
HIST 364: History of American Business
HIST 367: North Carolina History Since 1865
INLS 200: Retrieving and Analyzing Information
LING 101: Introduction to Language
MUSC 121: Fundamentals of Music I
MUSC 143: Introduction to Rock Music
MUSC 144: Introduction to Country Music
MUSC 146: Introduction to World Musics
PHIL 101: Introduction to Philosophy: Main Problems
PHIL 155: Introduction to Mathematical Logic
PHIL 165: Bioethics
PHYI 202: Introduction to Physiology
POLI 100: Introduction to Government in the
United States
POLI 101: State and Local Government in the
United States
POLI 150: International Relations and World Politics
POLI 215: Political Psychology: An Introduction
POLI 239: Introduction to European Government
POLI 271: Modern Political Thought
PSYC 101: General Psychology
PSYC 245: Abnormal Psychology
SOCI 101: Sociological Perspectives
SOCI 112: Social Interaction
SOCI 122: Race and Ethnic Relations
SOCI 123: Crime and Delinquency
SOCI 130: Family and Society
SOCI 250: Sociological Theory
SOCI 412: Social Stratication
SOCI 415: Economy and Society
SOCI 422: Sociology of Health and Mental Illness
SOCI 469: Medicine and Society
SPAN 101: Elementary Spanish I
SPAN 102: Elementary Spanish II
SPAN 203: Intermediate Spanish I
SPAN 405: Intermediate Spanish for Health
Care Professionals
News Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 25
Abortion bills shake up the legislature
Bars train employees to recognize assault
A new program
promotes awareness
of sexual assault.
dth/sarah brown
In July, abortion protests occurred in response to House Bill 695.
By Sarah Brown
State & National Editor
JULY 11 First it was
Sharia law, then it was motor-
cycle safety two unexpected
paths for state legislators to
enact a flurry of new abortion
regulations before the N.C.
General Assemblys session
came to a close.
But after weeks of rapid-fire
debates, meetings and rallies
on abortion bills, the action
stalled until the July 25
Senate approval of a bill that
originally addressed motor-
cycle safety but was amended
July 10 to include abortion
language.
McCrory said in a July state-
ment he would sign the bill.
The Senate legislation
would give N.C.s Department
of Health and Human Services
the authority to ramp up
regulations on abortion clinics
similar to those applied to
ambulatory surgical centers.
But clinics would no lon-
ger have to meet the same
standards as ambulatory
surgical clinics, as was the
case in House Bill 695, which
flew through the Senate last
month.
Pro-abortion rights advo-
cates said the initial con-
straints would have forced
15 of the states 16 abortion
clinics to close due to high
costs.
Suzanne Buckley, execu-
tive director of NARAL Pro-
Choice North Carolina, said
even the looser language in
the Senates bill would still
spell trouble for many clin-
ics.
The revised bill also did
away with transfer agree-
ments for abortion patients.
It limits abortion cover-
age under state health care
plans.
The debate on the bill drew
crowds to the House cham-
ber rafters, separated cleanly
down the middle between pro-
abortion rights activists in pink
and anti-abortion advocates
in blue.
The exchange in the House
was bitter, tense and emotion-
ally charged, with both sides
seemingly unable to find com-
mon ground.
Weve made a mockery
of womens health and safety
by taking a motorcycle bill
and gutting it in order to pass
sweeping legislation that will
affect womens lives, Rep.
Alma Adams (D-Guilford)
said.
Rep. Ruth Samuelson
(R-Mecklenburg), the main
sponsor of the bill in the
House, said the regulations
were a necessary update of
clinic standards that have
not changed in nearly two
decades.
But Adams criticized the
sudden move by Samuelson
and bill supporters to push
forward new abortion lan-
guage without advance notice.
It was a long month for
legislators and advocates on
both sides of the abortion
bills debate.
Still, Irene Godinez,
spokeswoman for Planned
Parenthood, said pro-abor-
tion rights activists contin-
ued to rally at the General
Assembly every day, whether
or not action occurred.
Godinez said she was
appalled to see the House mir-
ror the Senate in taking anoth-
er undercover route to pursu-
ing what she labels a regressive
womens health agenda.
Meanwhile, Barbara Holt,
president of N.C. Right to
Life, said she was pleased the
legislature has taken firm,
productive action on the bill
so far.
Senior writer Tara Jeffries
contributed reporting.
By Anna Long
Staff Writer
MAY 30 As UNC grap-
ples with how best to prevent
sexual assault on campus,
local bar employees met May
28 to discuss their role in
keeping patrons safe.
The training and outreach
program, called Raise the
Bar, promotes awareness
of sexual assault in bars and
provides bar staff with a plan
of action to prevent it, said
Arianna Timko, an organizer
of the program.
UNC Student Wellness,
which hosted the program,
collaborated with community
volunteers to offer training to
teach bar staff in the Chapel
Hill area how to prevent
drug- and alcohol-facilitated
sexual assault.
We want bars to raise
awareness for their staff,
Timko said.
Bar staff know what (sex-
ual assault) is, they just dont
necessarily call it drug-facili-
tated sexual assault. They see
the situations, but we want
them to think about what
happens three hours later.
The training focused on
helping bar staff recognize
the danger of sexual violence
between patrons.
Timko said while most
people see drug-facilitated
assault as involving substanc-
es like so-called date rape
drugs, 79 percent of such
attacks involve only alcohol.
Timko, who specializes
in interpersonal violence
prevention, said she believes
starting a dialogue between
bar staff and owners about
sexual assault is an important
step to making bars in Chapel
Hill safer.
Daniel Llamas, the man-
ager of Goodfellows bar on
Franklin Street who attended
the event, said his staff has
always been aware of sexual
assault, but heightened atten-
tion at UNC has put a spot-
light on the issue.
Sexual assault is more out
there and more on your mind,
but (the attention) hasnt
changed our actions, Llamas
said. We have emphasized it
more, though.
Timko said she hopes bars
in Chapel Hill will host Raise
the Bar training sessions for
their entire staffs.
She said the training will
bring attention to the issue of
sexual assault and help people
brainstorm ideas on how to
handle such situations.
Timko said Raise the Bar
volunteers were met with
positive reactions when they
reached out to businesses on
Franklin Street to introduce
the program last month.
But Goodfellows was the
only bar to send representa-
tives to the training.
Llamas emphasized that he
considers Goodfellows a safe
bar, largely because of the
staff s awareness of the sexual
assault issue.
He said the bar was small
enough to allow staff to keep
an eye on the safety of cus-
tomers.
Luckily, I feel like were
not a bar where people go just
to pick someone up, Llamas
said.
Its a more relaxed feel and
we have a good amount of
regulars, so its usually fairly
easy to monitor.
dth/brennan cumalander
Sexual assault training for bartenders was held in early June.
UNDERSTAND YOUR OPTIONS
Call P REGNANCY S UPPORT S ERVICES
Chapel Hill: 919-942-7318 or Durham: 919-490-0203
www.trianglepregnancysupport.com
Free & confidential pregnancy tests
Free limited ultrasound & STD testing
Community Resources
Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 27 Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 26
Binkley Baptist
Church
9:30am...Sunday School
11:00am...Worship
binkleychurch.org
All students
cordially invited!
Campus
Christian
Fellowship
Worship Wednesdays at 6:30
Bible Studies Mondays at 7:00
Discipleship, Mission Trip
Open to All Students
Internationals Welcome
Making disciples on campus
who impact the World
www.ccf-unc.org
IN THE HEART OF THE
UNIVERSITY
COMMUNITY
Episcopal Campus Ministry
Starts 8/27 - Tues. - 5:30 pm in the
Campus Center
Sunday Service Schedule
Holy Eucharist: 7:30 am, 9:00 am,
11:15 am & 5:15 pm
Sung Compline (candlelit service):
Starts 8/25 at 9:30 pm
Weekday Service Schedule
Holy Eucharist: Wed. - 10 am&
Thurs. - 5:15 pm
Evening Prayer: Mon., Tues.,
Wed., & Fri. - 5:15 pm
A Parish in the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina
www.facebook.com/uncecm
Twitter: @UNC_ECM
304 E. Franklin St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
(919)929-2193
www.thechapelofthecross.org
OPENINGEVENT
Cook-Out at Holy Trinity
Monday, August 19th at 5:30 p.m.
SUNDAY
Worship Services:
Contemporary at 8:30 a.m.
Traditional at 11:00 a.m.
WEDNESDAY
Beginning August 21st, 2013
Student Worship at 5:30 p.m.
Fellowship Meal at 6:15 p.m.
LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY
(One block across the street from Morehead Planetarium.)
Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 300 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill, NC
Phone: 919-942-2677 Email: prmark@holytrinitychapelhill.org
Website: holytrinitychapelhill.org/lcm/
Newman Catholic Student Center Parish
218 Pittsboro Street, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27516 (located across from the Carolina Inn)
Office: 919-929-3730 Fax 919-929-3778
Pastor & Campus Minister: Msgr. John Wall
www.newman~chapelhill.org
MASSES:
Saturday 5:15pm; Sunday 9am, 11am, and 7pm (during academic year)
DAILY MASS: Tuesday-Friday 5pm
CAROLINA CATHOLIC NIGHT: Wednesdays beginning at 5pm
Catholic Campus Ministry
August 18: Sunday Evening Mass Resumes 7pm
August 19: First-Year Welcome, 5:30pm
August 21: Backyard Bash 5:30pm
Check out each of our
Sunday Worship Services
and find one that fits you...
8:3 0 AM
Praise and Eucharist
9:4 5 AM & 11 AM
Traditional Liturgical
7:0 0 PM
Wellspring Contemporary
United Methodist
919-969-8820 christmethodist.org
800 Market Street Chapel Hill, NC 27516
ruf
unc
at
Religion at UNC
Religion
at UNC
Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 27 Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 26
Binkley Baptist
Church
9:30am...Sunday School
11:00am...Worship
binkleychurch.org
All students
cordially invited!
Campus
Christian
Fellowship
Worship Wednesdays at 6:30
Bible Studies Mondays at 7:00
Discipleship, Mission Trip
Open to All Students
Internationals Welcome
Making disciples on campus
who impact the World
www.ccf-unc.org
IN THE HEART OF THE
UNIVERSITY
COMMUNITY
Episcopal Campus Ministry
Starts 8/27 - Tues. - 5:30 pm in the
Campus Center
Sunday Service Schedule
Holy Eucharist: 7:30 am, 9:00 am,
11:15 am & 5:15 pm
Sung Compline (candlelit service):
Starts 8/25 at 9:30 pm
Weekday Service Schedule
Holy Eucharist: Wed. - 10 am&
Thurs. - 5:15 pm
Evening Prayer: Mon., Tues.,
Wed., & Fri. - 5:15 pm
A Parish in the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina
www.facebook.com/uncecm
Twitter: @UNC_ECM
304 E. Franklin St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
(919)929-2193
www.thechapelofthecross.org
OPENINGEVENT
Cook-Out at Holy Trinity
Monday, August 19th at 5:30 p.m.
SUNDAY
Worship Services:
Contemporary at 8:30 a.m.
Traditional at 11:00 a.m.
WEDNESDAY
Beginning August 21st, 2013
Student Worship at 5:30 p.m.
Fellowship Meal at 6:15 p.m.
LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY
(One block across the street from Morehead Planetarium.)
Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 300 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill, NC
Phone: 919-942-2677 Email: prmark@holytrinitychapelhill.org
Website: holytrinitychapelhill.org/lcm/
Newman Catholic Student Center Parish
218 Pittsboro Street, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27516 (located across from the Carolina Inn)
Office: 919-929-3730 Fax 919-929-3778
Pastor & Campus Minister: Msgr. John Wall
www.newman~chapelhill.org
MASSES:
Saturday 5:15pm; Sunday 9am, 11am, and 7pm (during academic year)
DAILY MASS: Tuesday-Friday 5pm
CAROLINA CATHOLIC NIGHT: Wednesdays beginning at 5pm
Catholic Campus Ministry
August 18: Sunday Evening Mass Resumes 7pm
August 19: First-Year Welcome, 5:30pm
August 21: Backyard Bash 5:30pm
Check out each of our
Sunday Worship Services
and find one that fits you...
8:3 0 AM
Praise and Eucharist
9:4 5 AM & 11 AM
Traditional Liturgical
7:0 0 PM
Wellspring Contemporary
United Methodist
919-969-8820 christmethodist.org
800 Market Street Chapel Hill, NC 27516
ruf
unc
at
Religion at UNC
Religion
at UNC
News Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 28
Hot Dogs & Brew owner
Chris McCracken has reimag-
ined his 169 E. Franklin St.
site as a Mediterranean res-
taurant specializing in fresh
and healthy cuisine.
Hummus Cafe, which
opened in late July, serves
salads, subs and paninis, all
with a Mediterranean twist.
The menu also includes tradi-
tional Middle Eastern items
such as falafel and shawarma.
Co-manager Abbes Khelfa,
a former Boston restaura-
teur, said he approached
McCracken about starting the
restaurant.
We met almost a year
ago and I always wanted to
do something on Franklin
Street, Khelfa said. So when
we met, it matched.
Khelfa said the restaurant
will soon add custom-blend-
ed frozen yogurt to the menu,
something he thinks will be
popular with UNC students.
College kids love this kind
of healthy food, he said.
A 30-year-old Tar Heel
merchandise store threw in
the towel in June.
Carolina Pride sports-
wear, which manager John
Hudson said has been at its
151 E. Franklin St. location
since 1983, closed on June
18.
Hudson said employees
had foreseen the closing, but
had been hoping for a miracle
to keep the store open.
More money is going out
than is coming in, he said.
Weve had a couple of weeks
of moving the merchandise to
close up.
Hudson said a combina-
tion of factors, including
declining profits, contributed
to the decision to close the
business.
He said while hes talked
to people from other busi-
nesses on Franklin Street
about the business climate
downtown, few are willing to
discuss when they are strug-
gling.
Hummus Cafe fills in former site of Hot Dogs & Brew Longtime sportswear business Carolina Pride closes
All up in your business
Part of a periodic update
on local businesses.
Compiled by staff writers Cammie Bellamy
and Anna Long.
dth/kaki pope dth/kaki pope
Waffle House opened its
doors to customers in June,
adding to the mix of eateries
in downtown Chapel Hill.
The 24-hour breakfast
restaurant, located at 129 E.
Franklin St., received a warm
welcome from the community,
Waffle House regional man-
ager An-Twan Gaines said.
Weve had a lot of great
feedback and everyone has
been happy to have us (in
Chapel Hill), so were very
happy to be there, Gaines said.
Gaines said he thinks the
restaurant adds variety to
downtown, making the wait
for opening day worthwhile.
Weve been working
hand-in-hand with the con-
struction partner for the last
six months getting this store
ready, he said.
Its been a long time com-
ing, but were very excited to
open it. We think it will add a
lot of value to downtown and
give people different options
than they traditionally have.
By late October, CVS hopes
to open a new 14,000-square-
foot store currently under
construction at 137 E.
Franklin St.
The space has been vacant
since Bank of America closed
its downtown branch in
September after 39 years
in the eponymous Bank of
America Center.
CVS spokesman Mike
DeAngelis said the Franklin
Street location will allow the
company to solicit more busi-
ness from UNC students due
to its proximity to campus.
We have many stores
throughout our chain that
are located on or near col-
lege campuses, and we do
very well at those locations,
DeAngelis said.
We ll also carry products
that cater to the college com-
munity.
The Franklin Street store
will become the closest of
CVSs three Chapel Hill loca-
tions to UNCs campus.
Waffle House starts serving breakfast downtown CVS set to open new Franklin Street location this Fall
dth/kaki pope dth/kaki pope
NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS
Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to
publication for classifed ads. We publish Mon-
day thru Friday when classes are in session. A
university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e. this
affects deadlines). We reserve the right to re-
ject, edit, or reclassify any ad. 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 hous-
ing or employment, in accordance with federal
law, can state a preference based on sex, race,
creed, color, religion, national origin, handicap,
marital status.
Child Care Wanted
SiTTER WANTED: Looking for a caring, fun and
energetic sitter 2 afternoons a week from 2:30-
5:30pm for a 9-year-old girl and 7-year-old
boy. Days negotiable. Start week of August 26.
Non-smoker with own transportation needed.
mcrowson@gmail.com.
FLExibLE: Part-time nanny needed for 2
kids. Hours are variable and mostly can
be tailored to your class schedule. Most
important times are some early Thurs-
days and Fridays (5:30-8:30am to take
kids to school) and holidays. You must
like dogs, be easy going, have a car and
be able to tolerate some chaos! Pay is
$15/hr +gas money. Email your inquiry
to : legatosmom@gmail.com or call
919-489-0814.
AFTERScHOOL cHiLD cARE for 8 year-old
daughter of UNc profs. 2 days/wk (1 day
must be Thursday), 2:30-5:30/6pm. Pick up
from school, take to activities and back to
home in chapel Hill. Reliable car, clean driv-
ing record, excellent references, warm per-
sonality. Start late August, early September.
rsaver8@gmail.com.
AFTERScHOOL cHiLD cARE in Hillsborough
for 2 boys, 6 and 8. 3 days/wk, 2:30-5:30pm.
Possibility of additional hours. Must be a
safe driver with car to drive kids to activities.
kimchang23@yahoo.com, 919-241-4042.
cHiLD cARE: Responsible, creative, de-
pendable and energetic sitter wanted
afterschool, 2:45-4:45pm 3 days/wk for
sweet, fun 6 and 10 year-olds beginning
9/2/13. cPR a plus, Please contact cole.
jennifer2@gmail.com! 919-929-5694.
SEEkiNg ExPERiENcED cHiLD cARE Seek-
ing infant child care 9am-5pm 3-5 days/wk.
Must have experience with infants, reliable
transportation and credible references. cPR
certifcation a plus! Flexible hours. Reply to
info@gardensalon.com.
cHiLD cARE, cHAPEL HiLL: chapel Hill family
in need of part-time child care for summer and
through the school year. Summer hours: M-Th,
9am-1pm. Fall hours: M-F, 7:45-8:45am and
2:45-6pm. 919-801-4348.
For Rent
FAIR HOUSINg
ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in this
newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing
Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise
any preference, limitation, or discrimination
based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap,
familial status, or national origin, or an intention
to make any such preference, limitation, or dis-
crimination. 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 avail-
able on an equal opportunity basis in accordance
with the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
WALk TO cAMPUS. 2bR/1bA. Fully reno-
vated. W/D. Dishwasher. central Ac, heat.
Large back deck. Available August, $900/mo.
Merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143.
WALk TO UNc: 3bR/1.5bA new renovation.
Hardwood foors, new kitchen, fre place,
W/D, dishwasher. central heat and air. Off
street parking Available July. $1,500/mo.
merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143.
FURNiSHED STUDiO NEAR UNc MED. Perfect
for a quiet scholar. Rent $550/mo Deposit $550.
No smokers, no pets. pinfsh@nc.rr.com.
APARTMENT FOR RENT: Townhouse 2bR (1
loft) 2bA. 1,149 square feet. W/D included,
deck. $950/mo. security deposit. 114 Mcgregor
Street, chapel Hill. 919-493-4523.
cONDO FOR RENT OR SALE: chapel Hill,
Nc. condo, bus route, 2bR/1.5bA, 375-b
Umstead Drive, chapel Hill. Marble tiles
in bath and kitchen. On city busline.
Mark Heizer: 919-604-3478, http://
www.hcoproperties.com/PropertiesFor-
Sale.html.
WALk TO UNc cAMPUS. 2bR and study, new
renovation. Hardwood foors, new kitchen, fre
place, W/D, dishwasher. central heat and air.
Off street parking. Available July. $1,400/mo.
merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143.
ViSiTiNg FAcULTY, STUDENTS: Rent by
semester from $750/mo. Unique op-
portunity in newly refurbished older
home with big, light flled rooms: Luxury
shared housing includes large, 2 room
units with private baths, +common liv-
ing and media room, library, kitchen, W/
Ds, enclosed patio. Also available: 1bR
bungalow, 1bR cottage, 8 room house.
All are short walk to campus, hospital,
School of Public Health, busline, down-
town restaurants. Off street parking.
Opportunity to participate in programs
of center for Human Science (http://hu-
manscience.org/) next door. No smok-
ing, no pets. Short term leases totaling
$2,600-$6,300 per semester +shared
utilities. For more info and to apply on-
line, go to http://goo.gl/Rg4Al or email
manager@seafrolic.org.
APARTMENT FOR RENT 2bR/1bA, W/D, dish-
washer. $600/mo. Near bus park and ride lot.
No pets or smoking. Near UNc. call 919-933-
8802.
Help Wanted
BUyER, SALES ASSOCIATE
Platos closet near Southpoint mall is hiring
enthusiastic, customer service minded people.
This is a fun job if you enjoy fashion and people.
great opportunity to gain leadership skills in a
fun environment! Visit platosclosetdurham.
com for instructions to apply.
biSEx STUDY: Participants needed for study
of bisexual students get paid for writ-
ten surveys and personal interviews. info:
erosmodels@rocketmail.com.
gc cHiLD cARE STAFF: governors club is hir-
ing for their child care staff. Job hours are M-F
8am-12pm. Email resume and 4 references to
chantel@governorsclub.cc.
SERvERS WANTED
Elmos Diner, Durham seeks energetic servers
for summer AND fall. Part-time and full-time,
am/pm positions available. Apply in person at
776 Ninth Street.
Roommates
ROOMMATE NEEDED. Police offcer seeks
student to rent room. House in the country,
own bathroom, all access to common areas,
semi furnished bedroom. 20 minutes to UNc.
Deposit, background check required. $525/mo.
Email getslim173@gmail.com.
Announcements For Rent Help Wanted Child Care Wanted
CALL 919-962-0252
DTH
Advertise in the
DTH Service Directory...
Its effective and affordable!
Interested
in this
Space?
Julia W. Burns, MD
Psychiatrist & Artist
5809 Cascade Dr., Chapel Hill, NC 27514
919-428-8461 juliaburnsmd.com
T
a
r
H
e
e
l Born & B
re
d
!
BlackAndWhiteReadAllOver.com
CLOSE TO CAMPUS at CARRBORO PLAZA ~ 919.918.7161
PASSPORT PHOTOSMOVING SUPPLIES
COLOR/BW PRINTING, NOTARY PUBLIC,
LAMINATING, BINDING, MAILBOX SERVICES, FAX,
STAMPS, PACKAGING, INTERNATIONAL SHIPPING !
Closest Chiropractor to Campus!
Voted BEST in the Triangle by Readers of the Independent!
Keeping UNC Athletes, Students & Staff Well Adjusted www.ncchiropractic.net
Dr. Chas Gaertner, DC
NC Chiropractic
212 W. Rosemary St.
929-3552
UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY
(c) 2013 TRibUNE MEDiA SERVicES, iNc.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 7 -- balance rest with produc-
tivity. There are plenty of chores to be
done this weekend, with a cold drink in
a shady spot after. You have a defnite
advantage. Tackle the diffcult stuff. get
sexy.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8 -- Set long-range goals.
compromise. Move quickly. Shop care-
fully. Dont brag about your winnings
while youre still in the game. Should
you go or stay? Work out the plan, and
put it into play.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 7 -- There may be a tempo-
rary setback in the negotiations. Revise
the budget. Prepare and review, and
discover something that was missed. A
partner surprises you. Theres a confict
possible between career and family.
choose carefully.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8 -- be more willing to
share the load. Your personal judgment
is right on the money. Theres either a
breakdown or a breakthrough at work
(possibly both). Public plans interfere
with private.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 9 -- Focus on doing the work
as the load increases. You really cant
afford not to. its special. Dont forget
something important. Emotions go hay-
wire. Seek a new perspective.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Make more time for love.
Dont throw your money around, but fx
something before it breaks. go ahead
and take the class. Postpone long jour-
neys. A massage would be nice.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 7 -- balance feelings against
the facts. Youre on a roll. guard against
duplication of efforts through communi-
cation and organization. Dont forget an
important job.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 7 -- Youll retain information
well, even moreso than usual. Dress for
the role. The outcome may be disappoint-
ing due to some irregularities in your
income. be respectful. You gain useful
clarity.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 9 -- Romance sparks creativ-
ity for improved living conditions. Learn
about safe investment plans. intuition
puts you in the right place. Today and
tomorrow you can make extra cash. keep
your head down.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 9 -- Expect transformations. A
woman proves to be helpful. conclude
necessary renovations. Plan carefully.
Dont make any assumptions. Your pow-
er is increasing. grow in stature through
grace. Watch out for hidden surprises. it
all comes together.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 6 -- Your dreams can inspire
positive change. Dont rush into any-
thing. keep digging. get an authoritys
blessing. Turn down an expensive re-
quest. Obligations come due. A shift in
perspective alters the experience.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 -- Develop a team strategy to
take advantage of new opportunities. go
for love more than money. insist on com-
plete honesty. Thriftiness pays. Theres
potential for a mechanical breakdown.
Schedule time with friends.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If August 17th is Your Birthday...
Apply your special touch for beauty at home this
year. Household renovation projects flourish, and
family matters take priority. Avoid taking on debt
with careful budgeting and clever use of resources.
grow skills and perspectives, especially after
autumn. Follow an educational passion. balance
quick-paced work with shared love.
BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room
Deadlines
Line Ads: Noon, one business day prior to publication
Display Classifed Ads: 3pm, two business
days prior to publication
Line Classifed Ad Rates
Private Party (Non-Proft)
25 Words ....... $18.00/week
Extra words .. 25/word/day
Commercial (For-Proft)
25 Words ....... $40.00/week
Extra words ...25/word/day
EXTRAS: Box: $1/day Bold: $3/day
To Place a Line Classified Ad Log onto
www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252
DTH offce is open Mon-Fri 8:30am-5:00pm
Your search
for a place to live
just got easier.
www.heelshousing.com
Search for apartments by bus route, number of rooms,
price and even distance from the Pit!
2x3 Heelshousing - your search.crtr - Page 1 - Composite
News Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 29
New probe announced
A third federal inves-
tigation will examine the
Universitys sexual assault
policies. See pg. 4 for story.
Womens lax on top
The Tar Heels won the
NCAA championship for
the first time in program
history. See pg. 10 for story.
911 calls on the rise
A new law will protect
students from legal trouble if
they call for help after drink-
ing. See pg. 20 for story.
Abortion bills abound
State legislators spent
the summer pushing
sweeping abortion restric-
tions. See pg. 25 for story.
games
Solution to
7-25-13 puzzle
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
2013 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
a slice of summer
I
nstruments of Justice performed Sunday, June 9, at the Southern Village
Summer Music Series. Rosie Wong, 1, attends almost every Sunday with
5-year-old sister Gianna. Its part of the Southern Village lifestyle, said
their mom, Connie. Southern Village hosts a variety of bands every weekend
during the summer, and the concerts attract residents from all over the Triangle.
dth/Claire mayes
(C)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACross
1 Bug spray target
4 Hospital bug
9 Theyre usually
password-protected:
Abbr.
14 Where the buck stops?
15 Opening of a memorable
walrus song
16 F follower in vintage TV
17 Pius XIIs successor
19 Totaled
20 Trailer caution
21 Breaks down slowly
23 Beowulf translator
Heaney
24 John of Harold &
Kumar movies
25 Confused
26 Firms
27 __ melt
29 USPS assignment
30 Huff
31 Not likely to fall
33 Mesa natives
35 Road hog?
38 Magic power
42 Material flaw
43 Laid the
groundwork
for?
44 Didnt quite
expect
45 God that
leaves one
smitten
47 Insurance
salesman
Ryerson in
Groundhog Day
48 Stephen King classic
49 In a single effort
51 Lore components
52 Capital near the Red Sea
53 Celebrity perks
55 Employ with vigor
56 Dr. Dean __ of talk radio
57 Somme one
58 They might be hitched
59 Spur part
60 Humanities dept.
Down
1 Fiddles with
2 Situation when the first
pitch is thrown
3 Like many Argo
militants
4 One of five popes,
ironically
5 Mortgage payment
component
6 __ the Falling Snow:
Enya song
7 Golden ratio symbol
8 Intensified
9 Blade brand
10 __ space
11 Hang out (with)
12 Cookbook phrase
13 Laid eyes on
18 Ice-breaking aid
22 Over the hill, say
24 Saw your breath while
singing, maybe
27 Ponder
28 Quaint pointing word
31 Giving a once-over, with
up
32 Subtle absorption
34 Symbol of tiredness
35 Pompadour sporter
36 One way to Marthas
Vineyard
37 Showed affection for, in
a way
39 Begins to share
40 Maker of Natural Glow
lotions
41 Meandering journey
44 Georgian greeting
46 Catch
48 Butcher block wood
50 Vittles
51 Jet
54 Swear words
Saturday, August 17, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 30