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Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

dailytarheel.com

Volume 123, Issue 155

Monday, February 22, 2016

New NC district map draws unexpected consequences


The congressional
primaries have been
delayed until June 7.
By Corey Risinger
Assistant State & National Editor

Less than a month before


the March 15 primary elections, candidates for U.S.
Congress in North Carolina
have entered uncharted territory with a new district map
and are now preparing for
a delayed June 7 primary.

N.C. legislators returned to


the drawing board last week
to correct two districts, the 1st
and 12th, ruled unconstitutional by a district court Feb.
5 for racial gerrymandering.
The U.S. Supreme Court did
not delay the lower courts
ruling Friday, prompting the
delay in congressional races.
But even with the passage
of the Republican-sponsored
redistricting plan Friday, N.C.
Rep. Graig Meyer, D-Orange,
said its a confusing road ahead.
Theres too many contingencies, so candidates and

voters really just dont know


exactly what system theyre in
right now, he said.

Unprecedented change
For some candidates like
incumbent U.S. Rep. Robert
Pittenger, R-N.C., a new map
brings a new set of constituents and a lot of campaigning thats no longer relevant.
Ive been on TV for over a
month, he said. Weve printed
a lot of materials that are no
longer valid because they dont
relate to the same counties.

Pittenger said he will get


on the road to meet his new
and more rural 9th District,
but there was not justice in
the timing of the changes.
They could have done it
last fall; theyve been working
on it for quite a while, he said.
And U.S. Rep. David Price,
D-N.C., a longtime Chapel
Hill resident, could have
faced off with Republican
incumbent George Holding,
R-N.C., in the altered 4th
District as a result of the
redistricting. But Holding
opted to run in the new 2nd

District, which includes some


of his former constituents.
Price said in a statement
that the new congressional
districts are not representative of the state.
The new districts are no
more legitimate than the old,
he said.

Voter turnout
Rob Schofield, policy director for N.C. Policy Watch, said
the summer date could lead
to a low voter turnout.
A lot of people heck, a

Student Stores current


leaders wrote their own
proposal to keep control.
By Anyssa Reddix
Senior Writer

Jackson, Pinson step up at the right time


MENS BASKETBALL

NORTH CAROLINA
96
MIAMI71
By Logan Ulrich
Assistant Sports Editor

Justin Jackson will tell you


straight up hes not an expressive
person.
The lanky sophomore from
Texas plays with the same stony
look on his face no matter what.
Hell thread a pass ahead for
a dunk, then follow up with a
3-pointer or his trademark floater
in the lane, while still looking
like his mother just told him he
couldnt get a puppy.
But late in No. 5 North
Carolinas 96-71 win against No.
11 Miami on Saturday, Jackson
hit his third 3-pointer of the day.
Seconds later, he stole the ball and
fed Isaiah Hicks on the fast break
to give UNC an 86-48 lead.
Running back up the court,
Jackson cracked a grin.
You might see that every once
in a while from me if things are
clicking, he said.
Theo Pinson more than makes
up for Jackson in expressiveness.
But Pinson has worn a long look

on his face when hes been on the


floor for a while.
After missing 14 games in his
first season because of a broken
left foot, the sophomore has looked
more like a rookie at times this
year with turnovers and inexperienced mistakes. Jackson, too, has
had rough stretches of play where
he hasnt shot the ball well.
But the two have started to
build some momentum. Jackson
has scored in double figures in
five of the past six games, while
Pinson has 21 assists in that same
time frame.
On Saturday, everything came
together for them and the Tar
Heels (22-5, 11-3 ACC) in perhaps
the teams most complete win of
the season.
Jackson had 15 points and a
career-high eight assists, while
Pinson added 10 points, five
rebounds and three assists.
Combined, the two had 25 points,
seven rebounds, 11 assists and a
pair of steals.
UNC hit nine 3-pointers
one from Pinson and three from
Jackson after making only one
in Wednesday nights loss to Duke.
The sophomore duos outburst came at the perfect time
for the Tar Heels. Coming off the
heartbreaking loss to Duke, UNC

needed to win to hold off Miami


for first place in the ACC. Pinson
said his team showed maturity in
bouncing back.
Today was a must-win, Pinson
said. Last year, we might have
come out flat to this team. This
year, we came out and punched
them in the mouth.
Pinson himself demonstrated
that maturity. Halfway through the
second half, Pinson drove straight
into a crowded lane, like he had
so many times before this season.
Instead of turning it over, though,
Pinson dished the ball over three
Miami players to Kennedy Meeks
for the layup.
Jackson dispelled the ghosts
of poor play, too. He hit more
3-pointers on Saturday than he
had in the first 10 games of ACC
play. His and Pinsons defensive
effort also helped jumpstart UNCs
transition offense, which can bury
teams in a hurry.
Coming out at halftime, Jackson
tallied three assists and a 3-pointer
to help a 42-33 halftime lead turn
into a 55-34 rout.
When we get going, you see
everybody smiling, Hicks said.
Everybodys pumped up.
Even Justin Jackson.
@loganulrich
sports@dailytarheel.com

SEE MAP, PAGE 4

8 proposals are in
for Student Stores

Super sophomores

DTH/ALEX KORMANN
Forward Justin Jackson (44) drives the baseline during Carolina mens basketballs game against Miami Saturday.

lot of college students will


be home, he said.
Some have already voted via
absentee ballot for the March
15 elections. But Meyer said
their votes in the Congressional
races will be kept confidential
by the local board of elections
until the June 7 primary.
But turnout is not predictable in this kind of situation,
said Theodore Shaw, a law
professor at UNC and director for the schools Center for
Civil Rights.

Proposals to manage the operations of Student Stores were due


Thursday, and the review process has
already started.
The University received eight proposals, including one from current
Student Stores management, said
UNC spokesperson Jim Gregory.
Were very proud of our proposal
and we think it offers the best options
for all involved, said Jim Powell, business officer for Student Stores.
In addition to the proposal from
Powells team, UNC received two
proposals from companies that want
to take over full operations of Student
Stores and five from companies offering kiosks for virtual course materials.
One of the full-service proposals
is from Follett, a company that owns
more than a thousand student stores
nationwide and sparked the privatization conversation by submitting
an unsolicited proposal to take over
Student Stores during the summer.
The next step is to send the
proposals to Campus Bookstore
Consulting, a national firm.
Theyll do a financial analysis,
said Brad Ives, associate vice chancellor for campus enterprises.
A Student Stores Request For
Proposal Advisory Committee is
being formed to help make the decision on whether the University will
outsource, and if so, to whom.
Were still in the process of taking final names for (the committee),
Ives said.
The committee will include two
student representatives, two representatives from the Employee
Forum, two representatives from or
chosen by the Faculty Council and
representatives from Student Aid,
Human Resources, Student Affairs
and the Provosts Office. Mike Patil
from Financial Services and Student
Body President Houston Summers
have already been placed on the
committee.
Based on (the Campus Bookstore
Consulting) analysis, well pick our
different vendors to come and present to the advisory committee March
14 and 15, Ives said.
After these presentations, the committee will discuss the pros and cons
of each option and forward that to the
administration for a final decision.
I think its going to be some time
in April, Ives said. It will depend on
if we went with the virtual textbook

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT


Proposals from companies
interested in taking over Student
Stores were due Thursday:
An advisory committee will be
formed to review the proposals
On March 14 and 15, vendors
will be invited to present to the
committee
In April the administration might
reach its final decision

provider, we might need more information.


Powell said the Student Stores
proposal was a group effort.
We didnt find out we could do
one until really early December, so we
really werent able to get started on it
until after the holidays, Powell said.
Despite the limited time frame,
they submitted just in time Thursday.
We want to maintain the selfoperation of the store. Weve been here
for 100 years, Powell said. In our
proposal everything stays as is except
we start renovating and innovating the
products and services that we sell.
Current Student Stores management pitched a hybrid option, where
books will remain on the floor but each
book will also be offered digitally.
Right now, quite frankly, there
hasnt been a big demand for not
even eBooks. Thats probably only
five percent of our sales at best,
Powell said.
We know ultimately weve got to
become a more virtual and digital
store. In our five-year plan, starting in
the next fiscal year, July 1 of this year,
we are going to be doing some testing
on different digital delivery services.
Powell said even if another company wins the RFP, he hopes current
management will still be able to have
a hand in the store.
If someone comes in and just
wins the textbook portion of the RFP,
then its uncertain, Powell said. It
could work that we maintain all the
store, or everything but books and
just have a partnership with whoever
wins the book deal.
Under the Student Stores proposal,
The Daily Grind would remain the way
it is. If another company wins, the coffee shops future is up to the vendor.
If you come to UNC as a freshman and theres no books in here at
all, you got to go online and order
every book, hope it comes in on
time, Powell said. We think theres
a bridge before every student is going
to want to order their books online,
and we would offer that.
university@dailytarheel.com

Spring 2018 Commencement may move away from Mothers Day


Emails also reveal
a push for a female
speaker for 2015.
By Bradley Saacks
Director of Enterprise

UNC moms rejoice you


might not have to share your
day with those pesky graduates soon.
There is a chance 2018
spring Commencement will
not be held on the traditional
Mothers Day slot it has held
for years.
Executive Vice Provost
Ron Strauss said Thursday
that it is the plan to move
2017 Commencement off of

Mothers Day, but University


spokesperson Jim Gregory
said the calendar has
already been set for 2017
Commencement to take
place on Mothers Day, and
the earliest this change could
take place would be 2018.
The calendar for the 2017-18
academic year will be voted on
next month, Gregory said.
Strauss, who chairs the
Commencement Committee,
said the two simultaneous
events put stress on the town,
potential speakers and faculty.
Some of the people we
invite to be speakers say, I
would come any other time
than Mothers Day its I
am a mother or Ive got a
mother, Strauss said.

Weve have lost major


possible speakers who tell
us, I cant be away for
Mothers Day.
He declined to list an example of a speaker who declined
to come because of the date
because the University is hoping to reach back out if the
date has been pushed back.
According to emails
between administrators,
student leaders and deans
obtained by The Daily Tar
Heel, a meeting was proposed by Strauss in January
2015 to discuss moving the
Commencement address
away from Mothers Day.
Several on the email chain
sent Strauss messages of support for the possible change.

Ron, glad youre doing


this, said Steve Matson, dean
of the Graduate School, in an
email response to Strauss.
The change from the
traditional Mothers Day
ceremony would not be permanent, Strauss said, and
the University would remain
open to feedback.
Emails obtained from the
Commencement Speaker
Selection Committee show
the group was hoping to bring
a woman to campus for 2015
Commencement.
The committees first sevenperson list, sent to Chancellor
Carol Folt in February 2014,
was entirely female, including

SEE GRADUATION, PAGE 4

DTH FILE/KENDALL BAGLEY


The class of 2014 gathers for graduation on Mothers Day. Many
students display a show of support for all the mothers attending.

Never forget that only dead fish swim with the stream.
MALCOLM MUGGERIDGE

News

Monday, February 22, 2016

The best of online

The Daily Tar Heel


www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893

MORE TO SEE ONLINE:

122 years of editorial freedom


PAIGE LADISIC
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

REVIEW

EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

MARY TYLER MARCH


MANAGING EDITOR

MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KELSEY WEEKMAN
ONLINE MANAGING EDITOR
ONLINE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

Wall-writers inspire, one vandalism at a time

BRADLEY SAACKS
ENTERPRISE DIRECTOR

By Bronwyn Bishop

SAMANTHA SABIN
DIRECTOR OF INVESTIGATIONS

Some of the worlds most


profound words can be found
on the inside of the bathroom
stalls in Phillips Hall. You can
also find a lot of nonsense.
This is a tribute to the wallwriters, offering us some of
the most relatable content
well ever see in print.
Why people feel the need
to become philosophers
when vandalizing a desk is
something that will never be
understood or appreciated.
But taking a study break to
read the nonsense written on
the walls is part of being a

Staff Writer

ENTERPRISE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

SPECIAL.PROJECTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

DANNY NETT
COMMUNITY MANAGER

COMMUNITY.MANAGER@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JANE WESTER
UNIVERSITY EDITOR

UNIVERSITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KERRY LENGYEL
CITY EDITOR

CITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

HAYLEY FOWLER
STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
STATE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

SARAH VASSELLO
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
ARTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

PAT JAMES
SPORTS EDITOR

SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JOS VALLE
DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
DESIGN@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KATIE WILLIAMS
PHOTO EDITOR

PHOTO@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

ALISON KRUG
COPY CHIEF

COPY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

GABRIELLA CIRELLI
VIDEO EDITOR

MULTIMEDIA@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

TIPS
Contact Managing Editor
Mary Tyler March at
managing.editor@dailytarheel.com
with tips, suggestions or
corrections.
Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Paige Ladisic, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086
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All rights reserved

The Daily Tar Heel

true UNC student.


DEATH IS NEAR, HOUR
12 OF BIOCHEM AND I
HAVE NO MORE HAIR
table in the Undergraduate
Library
The painters try to silence
my pen, but the shithouse
poet strikes again bathroom in Phillips Hall
I love justin! Aarya (we
are so energized by your passion, Aarya!)
THERE IS NO REALITY
EXCEPT IN ACTION
Sartre

READ THE REST:


Go to www.dailytarheel.com/blog/
pit_talk.

Staff writer Madison


Flager reviews the book
Big Magic: Creative Living
Beyond Fear.

TODAY

Salsa Mondays at Roots on


Franklin: Roots Bakery, Bistro
and Bar hosts salsa lessons every
Monday starting at 8:30 p.m.
There will be a full menu with
drinks available. Lessons are $5
per person.

Time: 8:30 p.m. to 11:50 p.m.


Location: 151 E. Franklin St.

TUESDAY

Making the Workplace More


Sustainable: The UNC Sustainability Office will host an interactive workshop for staff members
to learn how they can measure
and meet sustainability goals at
work. This is a two-part event,
with the second half taking place
at the same time this Thursday.
Time: 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Location: 104 Airport Drive
Physician Assistant Basics: University Career Services will offer
students help with understanding prerequisites and responsibilities associated with being a

A lot of us were that wellrounded kid in high school


with the extracurriculars,
the grades and the
athletics. When we got to
college, we probably felt
like we still had it all.
Coming to a Division I
university means our little
varsity and travel team titles
mean pretty much nothing
if we cant perform at a
higher level. Most colleges
offer their students club
and intramural sports so
they can stay active.

To read more, head to


dailytarheel.com.

To read more, head to


dailytarheel.com.

physician assistant.
Time: 3 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Location: Hanes Hall, Room 239
Wordsworthian Carnage
A Lecture by Duncan Wu:
Georgetown University professor Duncan Wu will discuss
William Wordsworths piece
commemorating Napoleons loss
at the Battle of Waterloo.
Time: 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Location: Wilson Library
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.

The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections
printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Mary Tyler March at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.

Follow: @dailytarheel on Twitter

UNIVERSITY BRIEF
Judge dismisses lawsuit
by former UNC athletes
On Friday a judge dismissed
a lawsuit from former UNC
football player James Arnold
and former UNC basketball
player Leah Metcalf, who
claimed the University did not
provide them with a quality
education because it encouraged them and other athletes
to enroll in paper classes.
staff reports

CITY BRIEF
NCDOT set to begin
construction on bridge
The N.C. Department of
Transportation will begin
construction on replacing the
bridge carrying Compton Road
over East Fork Eno River today
at 7 a.m. The bridge is set to
open by July 22.
staff reports

POLICE LOG

CORRECTIONS

Like: facebook.com/dailytarheel

Staff writer Qieara Lesesne


describes the struggles of
participating in club sports.

They say not to judge


a book by its cover, but
Elizabeth Gilberts book
looks like a piece of art, and
reads like one, too.
Gilbert, author of Eat,
Pray, Love, released Big
Magic as a motivational
tome for anyone wishing to
live a more creative life. This
includes those driven by an
interest in fine arts as well
as anyone who wants to put
curiosity at the forefront of
decision making.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Race, Innocence and the
End of the Death Penalty:
Gary Griffin, whose death row
conviction was overturned, and
Ken Rose, his appellate lawyer,
will discuss capital punishment
and why they think it should be
abolished. This event is free and
open to the public.
Time: 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Location: Genome Science
Building, Room G100

CLUB SPORTS

inBRIEF

Follow: dailytarheel on Instagram

Someone committed larceny from a residence on the


700 block of East Franklin
Street between 8:00 a.m. and
5:00 p.m. Thursday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole a sign,
valued at $150, from the front
lawn, reports state.
Someone committed
larceny from a parking lot
in the Carol Woods retirement community at 750
Weaver Dairy Road at 11:26
a.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole a backpack leaf blower, valued at
$700, reports state.
Someone vandalized a
bridge at 1800 E. Franklin
St. at 1:38 p.m. Thursday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person spray painted
the bridge walls, reports state.
Someone damaged prop-

erty at a parking deck at 137


E. Rosemary St. at 1:28 a.m.
Friday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports. The person damaged a vehicle on
purpose, reports state.
Someone committed
larceny from Top of the Hill
at 100 E. Franklin St. at 2:20
a.m. Friday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person attempted to
take beer tap handles, valued
at $90 in total, but was then
trespassed, reports state.
Someone disturbed the
peace at 120 W. Franklin
St. at 2:20 p.m. Thursday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports. The person
was yelling at people on the
sidewalk, reports state.
Someone trespassed
at Jimmy Johns at 306 W.
Franklin St. at 2:30 p.m.
Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.

DIVERSITY
CAREER FAIR

FEBRUARY 24 (WED), 3 6PM


Great Hall, FPG Student Union

Meet employers who are interested in creating work


environments that value and promote workforce diversity.
Participating employers: bit.ly/UNCDiv16

Bring multiple copies of your resume.


Professional attire recommended.
Seeking all majors, all disciplines.
Open to UNC-Chapel Hill students only.

Opinion

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, February 22, 2016

Established 1893, 122 years of editorial freedom


EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS

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


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

ISHMAEL BISHOP
CAMERON JERNIGAN
ZACH RACHUBA
KATE STOTESBERY

CHRIS DAHLIE
JACK LARGESS
VISHAL REDDY

TREY FLOWERS
GABY NAIR
JACOB ROSENBERG

Brown Noise

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

John Thomas, on Chase Rice, who will perform at UNCs spring concert

Junior nutrition major from Raleigh.


Email: jaslinap@gmail.com

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

When
experts
are
ignorant

Campus walkout to
protest Spellings

NEXT

Today was a must-win. Last year, we might


have come out flat to this team. This year, we
came out and punched them in the mouth.

What I see here is a pretty clear dislike for


country music Just because something isnt
to your musical taste doesnt make it bad.

Jaslina Paintal

Friends, Waffles, Work


Alice Wilder writes about being
kind to yourself.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

Theo Pinson, on UNCs dominating win over Miami on Saturday

EDITORIAL CARTOON By Kenneth Proseus, kennyp17@live.unc.edu

ast week in the UNC


Gillings School of
Global Public Health,
my sister and I listened as a
physician and former chairperson of the Department of
Maternal and Child Health
at the school effectively
reduced an entire continent
to a monolithic entity. How he
did this was with a sweeping
statement: You know, in the
90s, everybody in Africa was
dying of HIV/AIDS. It was
really terrible.
After exchanged some mad
side-eye, my sister raised her
hand, requesting the professor be more specific: So
was everyone in Africa dying?
Or could you specify a region
that was most affected by HIV/
AIDS? To which the professor
managed, after a long-winded
and also vapid explanation, to
say, sub-Saharan Africa.
Toward the end of the lecture, when the class was opened
up for questions, another classmate asked about unsafe abortions, a topic briefly touched on
in lecture. She asked the professor what exactly constitutes
unsafe abortions, to which the
he responded that he did not
exactly know. A final classmate
asked if the professor could
speak to sexual and reproductive issues that face the LGBTQ
community, and specifically
transwomen, to which the professor responded, I wouldnt
be able to give any answer to
that question because I am not
educated on the subject.
After this painful Q&A,
I approached the professor,
Dr. Herbert B. Peterson, who
is also currently serving as
the director of a center at the
World Health Organization,
to ask him why exactly he
neglected to specify a region
of the continent within his
lecture and to also request
that, in future lectures, he is
geographically specific when
speaking about infections that
often are racialized and are
often imagined to exist within
the entire African continent.
The response I received was
less than satisfactory; this
professor effectively avoided
the issue and ended his soliloquy saying that he could talk
about AIDS in Africa for days.
As a physician who has considerable experience working
internationally in the field of
public health specifically in
family planning his responses are unacceptable. This physicians work with the World
Health Organization has very
real implications for the health
of women worldwide, and particularly women of color living
in the global south. Aside from
the fact that this professor
demonstrated a robust level of
cultural irrelevance, as prominently exhibited on his lack
of knowledge of health issues
facing the LGBTQ community,
he also exposed a particularly
dangerous level of ignorance
on issues that are key to communities both nationally and
internationally.
We must ask, what does
it mean for those in positions of power, for those who
are responsible for advising
and for implementing health
interventions worldwide, to
be completely and willfully
blind to issues affecting members of our communities who
are most marginalized? And,
conversely, what would it look
like if instead we had folks
who were?

EDITORIAL

Family values?
State insurance
plan should not
exclude spouses.

rainstorming sessions, by definition,


come up with all
kinds of ideas, ranging from
good to beyond the pale.
The State Health Plans
Board of Trustees imagined
ways to limit or ameliorate
costs, to be voted on Feb. 5
and passed on to the state
treasurer for approval by
the legislature. Most of
their proposals suggested
familiar cost-cutting tactics in the management of
health care plans.
However, one measure
proposed was and continues to be unconscionable.
The board also proposed
the removal of the option
of spousal coverage from
the plan. Currently, state
employees and teachers
have the option once a
year (or due to a qualifying
event) to enroll their spouses in the State Health Plan
for employees and teachers.
Enrolling ones spouse is
not free; in fact, it costs the
employees family around
$600 a month depending
on the plan. Thankfully,
the State Treasurers Office
stated that this proposal
would not be considered,
and on Feb. 5 this idiotic,
cynical idea was tabled, at
least for now.
The reasons this propos-

al deserves the scorn this


paper now heaps upon it
are several. First, the elimination of spousal coverage
was considered almost certainly because the trustees
imagined the Affordable
Care Act federal exchange
providing a backstop once
spouses were kicked off the
plan. If the Republicans
hate the ACA as much as
they profess and want to
insulate the state against
it, then this is definitional
hypocrisy. Turfing our
own state workers loved
ones out into the federal
marketplace and diluting
the power of a large health
customer group and its
leverage power over pricing are both in contradiction with the states rights
and free market arguments
Republican lawmakers so
readily trot out when manning the battlements in
their holy war against the
ACA. This is a logical contradiction.
The second set of reasons is ethical and practical. Ask a question of
yourselves as residents,
temporary or permanent,
of this state. What kind of
people do you want working for you? What do they
deserve? The low order of
state employee and teacher pay in North Carolina is
now a familiar and melancholy song that need not
be resung here. However,
health benefits for families

have long been attractive


for well qualified state
workers, and rightly so.
While public service is
rarely fiscally lucrative, it
is relatively stable, and the
benefits in particular offer
security for ones family if
not unlimited riches. Even
proposing to degrade the
ability to take care of ones
family in the primal area
of health, on top of low
comparative pay, is the
moral equivalent to the
board kicking state workers in the face while the
General Assembly already
steps on their necks. And
in the wake of this kind
of treatment, even its risk
of proposal, how long do
you think good people are
going to want to serve you
and your state?
The State Health Plan
Board of Trustees, and
anyone else that finds this
an acceptable proposal
to limit state budgetary
costs, should be ashamed
of themselves. For now, it
seems that the Board of
Trustees, the Treasurers
Office and the General
Assembly, in reconsidering the logical, ethical and
practical parameters of
a proposal to eliminate
spousal coverage, put
this shameful brainstorm
result in a box. We ask
that it never be spoken of
again, but we fear that it
will come back out of that
box all too soon.

EDITORIAL

We cannot wait 16 years


UNC-CH needs to
follow UNC-G in
renaming buildings.

ast week, UNCGreensboros Board


of Trustees voted
to rename its former
Aycock Auditorium, which
we applaud. The man it
was named after, Charles
Aycock, was a former governor of North Carolina
who rode to power as part
of a white supremacist
political movement. We
are happy for the activists
on UNC-Gs campus that
made this change possible.
Yet, this change on a campus less than an hour away
from here reflects how sad
it is that UNC-CH persists
in its rule to enforce a
16-year ban on changes to
building names.
As we have argued
before, dismissing the
possibility of further
name changes for 16 years
appears to be an effort to
undercut needed discussions about the troubled
history of our university.
There is merit to the
argument that figures in

the past should be judged


by the standards of their
times. Even in our own age,
well-intentioned people are
capable of horrific behavior
encouraged or tolerated by
the norms of our society.
At the same time, this
must never be an excuse
to disregard the inherent
human value of those voices
erased from history the
victims of violence at the
hands of other humans.
Every victim of lynching in
North Carolina in Aycocks
time understood the full
force and effect of white
supremacy as angry mobs
took their lives and mutilated their bodies. These
were people with families,
influence and agency too.
And Charles Aycock
was not merely a man of
his time taught to think in
white supremacist terms;
he actively encouraged it to
forward his own political
fortunes. We dont believe
we should necessarily dance
on Aycocks grave or refuse
to engage with a holistic
understanding of his effect
on North Carolina. After
all, Aycock also argued for
democratic access to edu-

cation. He was a human


being. We all carry flaws.
But the lives of those
who died because of the
white supremacy Aycock
espoused didnt matter
any less than his. We have
a solemn duty to constantly re-examine our history
and the people in it we
choose to honor.
Our understanding of
the extreme violence and
terror associated with his
political rule means we
cannot continue to honor
him or others like him in
good conscience. After
all, we have a residence
hall named after this very
same man. We should follow the examples of other
universities in our system.
We must continue to
discuss the meaning names
we choose to honor. Closing
any possibility of change is
an abdication of the Board
of Trustees responsibility.
We commend the students, faculty and administrators who continue to
speak about these issues
even in the face of this
stubborn refusal to continue one of the great debates
of our time and place.

TO THE EDITOR:
Dear Campus
Community,
As you may be aware,
Margaret Spellings will
take office as UNC-system
president on Tuesday,
March 1. This event marks
part of a larger effort taking
place among the Board of
Governors and state legislature to corporatize the UNC
system against the wishes of
its true stakeholders the
students, faculty, staff and
people of North Carolina.
From attacks on historically black colleges and
universities to a greater
emphasis on metrics-based
testing to her time as a
board member of a student
debt-collection agency,
Spellings record shows that
her priorities do not align
with the needs of our public
university.
When Margaret Spellings
takes office on March 1, a
coalition of students, faculty, staff and community
members will walk out of
their classrooms and workplaces at campuses across
the state. Here at UNCChapel Hill, we are walking
out at 11 a.m. and rallying
at Wilson Library steps for
a public show of opposition
to Spellings appointment,
a sign of the boards lack
of concern for the university systems needs. We
will speak out against how
the Board of Governors,
General Assembly and
Margaret Spellings are dismantling the institutions
of public higher education
that are the most important
asset to North Carolina.
There are many ways
to get involved with this
demonstration, and participating at any level can
help us send a strong message of unity to the General
Administration. You can
first of all walk out of class
at 11 a.m. to join us on the
Wilson Library steps. If this
is not a possible course of
action, we also encourage
professors to hold their
classes outside on March
1 (weather permitting) to
participate in a teach-out.
If professors are unable to
alter their classes during
this event, we ask that they
consider excusing students
who do elect to participate
in the demonstration.
This walkout is being
sponsored in part by Faculty
Forward, which has been
instrumental in organizing
N.C. faculty across the state
in response to Spellings
appointment. If you would
like to contact Faculty
Forward organizers regarding this event, feel free to
reach out to Ashley Renner
(206-512-0285) or Amelia
Dornbush (404-272-5837).
Student organizer Shannon
Brien (603-508-1414) is also
willing to answer any questions you may have.
Thank you for your continued interest in protecting public education,
Shannon Brien
Senior
History and Asian studies

The Board of Governors


Democracy Coalition

Protecting NCs coast


from oil companies
TO THE EDITOR:
North Carolinians have
a reputation for fighting to
protect our environment.
The current fight against
offshore drilling is another
big opportunity to show the
pride we have in our state.
Over 100 municipalities
on the coast have spoken
against offshore drilling and thats great.
But the effort should be
consistent throughout the
Piedmont and western
North Carolina. We have
to recognize the billions of
dollars in revenue from our
thriving tourism and fishing economies that drilling
would put at risk.
And dont be fooled!
These oil companies are not
your next door neighbors
homegrown business. The
executives of BP, Exxon
and others plant their wells
where they want and go
back home where theyre
safe from the immediate
consequences of a spill. Its
companies like these to
which wed be entrusting
the future of our state.
When I think of the
North Carolina coast Im
reminded of days I spent
enjoying its natural beauty,
resting on sandy beaches
and soaking up the sun.
When oil companies think
of the North Carolina
coast they see a resource to
exploit for today Its time
for all of us to make up our
minds on this issue because
its up to us to cherish our
state enough to stand up
and protect it, otherwise no
one else will.
Paris Evans
Sophomore
Environmental studies

DTH opinion articles


are too academic
TO THE EDITOR:
My recent reading of
Jalynn Harris article, On
Black Herstory Month, left
me confused and a little
offended. Despite the fairly
radical views espoused in
the article, I do not have
an ideological bone to
pick since I assume the
free expression of UNC
students is a central part
of The Daily Tar Heels
mission. Instead, I take
issue with the articles style,
which oftentimes seemed
to be more at home in an
esoteric academic journal.
If this were an isolated
incident there would be
little cause for concern, but
articles similar in style are
published with alarming
frequency.
The editorial board fails
students when it frequently allows writing that is
only decipherable to a narrow segment of the student body with sufficient
experience in a specific
subject area. The DTH has
an obligation to shed the
air of intellectual elitism
and make its writing to all
students.
Jacob Olliffe
Junior
Business

SPEAK OUT
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letters to 250 words.
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Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill,
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Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com
EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the
opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises 10 board
members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.

News

Monday, February 22, 2016

MAP

FROM PAGE 1
In some ways, were in
uncharted ground this election year people are very
energized and maybe even
polarized politically, he said.
It may be theres a substantial turnout in June even after
the March primaries.

New representation
Under the new bill, Meyer
said there will be a new filing
period starting March 16 for
those running in the June primary elections.
Since the maps are all different, what we see as current
races are unlikely to remain
as such, he said.
Candidates for U.S.
Congress are not required to
live in the district in which
they run for office as long as

GRADUATION

they are state citizens, according to North Carolina law.


Elliot Engstrom, a staff
attorney with the conservativeleaning Civitas Institute, said
the potential for candidates to
represent a district now hundreds of miles away from them
could be problematic.
Meyer said the new maps
punished U.S. Rep. Alma
Adams, D-N.C. an AfricanAmerican woman by drawing her out of her district
by close to 100 miles. The
new district shifted Adams
from her base of support in
Greensboro and WinstonSalem to Charlotte.
I think its possible that
these new maps will make the
congressional delegation both
whiter and more male, he said.

A political gerrymander
Engstrom said the

FROM PAGE 1

Republicans claim that the


new map is inspired by partisanship is legal.
The Republicans have
just argued, We didnt gerrymander for racial reasons.
We gerrymandered to keep
Republican power, he said.
And thats perfectly fine.
And despite its poor timing, Pittenger said the map is
more cohesive than previous
efforts of Democrats.
Calling the redistricting
plan partisan is a calculated
assessment that plays on the
publics lack of interest or
level of cynicism, Schofield
said.
Its clearly designed to
pass a court challenge, but
perhaps one will wonder
whether itll pass the challenge of public opinion, he
said.
state@dailytarheel.com

nice balance by gender with


some of our speakers, he said.
The last female speaker
at spring Commencement
was former Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright in 2007,
but that streak will end at
spring 2016 Commencement
with speaker Anne MarieSlaughter. The University

First Lady Michelle Obama


and Queen Noor of Jordan.
Strauss admitted the committee was looking for a
woman after a relatively long
run of male speakers.
We did want to have some

The Daily Tar Heel

brought performing artist


Jessye Norman to speak at
2008 Commencement, but she
did not speak because heavy
rains shortened the ceremony.
Jason Kilar, the founder of
Hulu and the eventual 2015
Commencement speaker, was
also not on the revised list
that the committee created in

fall 2014. That list included


men and women from a variety of backgrounds, including actor Matt Damon and
actress Emma Watson.
Kilar, Strauss said, was
nominated by a senior staff
member at UNC who personally knew Kilar. The
final decision for spring

Commencement speakers
comes from the chancellor,
who takes the committees recommendations into account.
Former Student Body Vice
President Kyle Villemain, who
served on the 2014-15 committee, said he did not feel like
Folt had a certain person in
mind during the process.

We had a bit of bad luck,


Villemain said about attracting
the committees top candidates
from the original list of women.
But, Villemain added, the
selection of Kilar was a hit
a sentiment shared by Strauss
and others on the committee.
@SaacksAttack
university@dailytarheel.com

Racial history tour targets rst-years


Students have
demanded that the
tour be mandatory.
By Nic Rardin
Staff Writer

On Friday afternoon,
students walked the same
grounds they always do, but a
tour focusing on UNCs racial
history made the campus
their classroom.
After the 2014 resignation
of Tim McMillan, a senior
lecturer in the Department of
African, African American and
Diaspora Studies who had led
the Black and Blue Tour for 13
years, Robert Porter, a lecturer
in the same department, took
up the mantle.
Once professor McMillan
resigned, I thought, OK, we
cannot let this tour disappear, Porter said.

The Black and Blue Tour


was specifically mentioned
in the five demands brought
to Chancellor Carol Folt
after protests at the town
hall on race and inclusion
in November. Students said
they want the tour to become
mandatory for first-years.
Fridays tour was specifically
aimed at first-years, according
to a listing on the Curriculum
in Global Studies website.
This year, the First Year
Experience has started advertising the Black and Blue Tour
by promoting the event on
Twitter in an attempt to reach
more students. Justin Inscoe,
coordinator for the First Year
Experience, said he wants to
involve more first-years with it.
We want to connect firstyear students to the event,
Inscoe said.
But Inscoe said he isnt
sure what role the tour
will play in the First Year

Experience in the future.


Porter walked the tour
through an account of UNCs
racial history, learning about
figures like black poet George
Moses Horton alongside more
modern topics such as the
renaming of Carolina Hall.
If we just portray this
university as the history of
what notable white men
have done, we will get a very
incomplete history, one that
misses some very essential
points You cannot present this universitys story in
a vacuum as if slavery never
existed, Porter said.
Bri Small and Raelan
Miller, members of the Black
Student Movement who are
both first years, attended the
tour. Both said they wanted
to see the tour at first-year
orientation.
I dont know if it should
necessarily be mandatory, but
I feel like it should be offered

You cannot
present this
universitys story in
a vacuum.
Robert Porter
African-American studies lecturer

at orientation none of that


stuff was even mentioned,
Miller said.
Small said the Black
Student Movement is trying
to reach more students on
campus, especially first years.
We are trying to unify the
students that dont really have
a big representation on campus, Small said.
Though its unclear whether the First Year Experience
will remain involved with
the Black and Blue Tour, the
tour will continue next year.
Porter, who said hes willing
to do whatever the University

DTH/SAMANTHA DIKOLLI
Robert Porter, an African-American studies lecturer, explains the
racial history of UNCs campus on the Black and Blue Tour.

would like him to do to


expand the tour, will lead the
next tour this Friday.
I care very much about
the way this is done, and I
feel like I have something to

offer, Porter said.


He said African-American
history is essential to understanding American history.
university@dailytarheel.com

DTH office is open TODAY


from is
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Announcements

For Rent

NOTICE TO ALL DTH


CUSTOMERS

4BR/2.5BA HOUSE NEAR CAMPUS. 3 blocks


to Franklin Street, this house is located
across from Chapel Hill town hall. Available June 1, $2,340/mo. Text Fran Holland Properties at 919-630-3229 or email
fhollandprop@gmail.com.

Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to


publication for classified ads. We publish Monday thru Friday when classes are in session. A
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for housing or employment, in accordance with
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sex, race, creed, color, religion, national origin,
handicap, marital status.
NEW MULTI CULTURAL CHURCH THE POWER
OF RHEMA. STARTING FEBRUARY 28, 2016.
SUNDAY WORSHIP 12:30PM, CARRBORO
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Street (lower level). For info. 984-255-8626.
powerofrhema@gmail.com. CASUAL ATTIRE
WELCOME.

4BR, WALK TO CAMPUS. Charming 4BR/1BA

cottage in the heart of Chapel Hill. Hardwood floors, parking, available. 2016-17
season.
www.hilltopproperties.net
or
919-929-1188.

Help Wanted
SUMMER CAMP STAFF NEEDED. The City of
Raleigh Parks, Recreation and Cultural Resources Department offers over 100 camps for
ages 3-18. Applicants, 18+ years-old, apply
at www.raleighnc.gov/employment (search
Youth Programs Specialty Camps). Contact
joseph.voska@raleighnc.gov. for more information.

PART-TIME OFFICE
ASSISTANT

Child Care Wanted


CARRBORO FAMILY LOOKING for summer child
care for 18 month-old and almost 6 year-old.
Mid-June thru July (can be flexible about dates
for right person). 9ish-5ish. Experience, references required. kimbrarian@gmail.com.
LOOKING FOR SUMMER CARE for 3 and 6

year-old boys. 8am-5pm starting May 14.


Previous experience preferred, references
needed. Will need own transportation. contact olgaotter@gmail.com.

For Rent
FAIR HOUSING

ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in


this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers
are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.

Help Wanted

Chapel Hill company looking for weekly office help. Duties include moving boxes to
from warehouses and other odd jobs related
to a publishing business. Must have a valid
NC drivers license and clean driving record.
Interested candidates should email resume to
personnel@journalistic.com..
YARD HELP NEEDED. Need strong, hard
worker to spread mulch in garden beds.
Mulch and tools provided. $15/hr. Estimate
4-6 hours, Walk from campus. Please. contact
mildred_joyner@hotmail.com.
CAROLINA LIVERY HIRING full-time, part-time
office assistants, event coordinators for
spring, summer. Evening, weekend hours
available. Excellent compensation. Minimum GPA 3.2. Email BeckyMcMorrow@
CarolinaLivery.net with your availability to
receive a more detailed job description.

NOW HIRING: Elmos Diner in Carrboro is


now hiring part-time hosts and servers for
AM and PM shifts. Please apply online at
https://elmoscarrboro.companycareersite.com,
919-929-2909.
NATIONALLY RECOGNIZED and locally owned
insurance agency seeks part-time or full-time
administrative assistant. Must possess excellent phone and computer skills. Small business
environment, flexible hours with competitive wages. Please email inquiries, resume to
a076080@Allstate.com.

Closest Chiropractor to Campus!

919-929-3552
Dr. Chas Gaertner, DC

Voted BEST in the Triangle!

NC Chiropractic
304 W. Weaver St.

Keeping UNC Athletes, Students, & Staff well adjusted

Now in Carrboro! www.ncchiropractic.net

HOROSCOPES

Help Wanted

Serve your community, advance


your career,and have fun all at
the same time!

Full time and Part time positions available helping individuals


with intellectual and developmental disabilities. This
opportunity is GREAT if youre interested in gaining
experience related to your major/degree in nursing,
psychology, sociology, OT/PT, or other human service fields.
Various shifts available- 1st, 2nd and 3rd. Entry-level pay starting
up to $11 per hour. Visit us at jobs.rsi-nc.org!

Help Wanted
SWIM CLUB MANAGER. Experience in summer
camp and swimming programming, personnel management, facility maintenance and
marketing are desirable. Lifeguard and Pool
Operator Certifications required (or willingness to obtain). For detailed job description
go to http://www.sssrc.org/Employment.html.
Send cover letter, resume and 3 references to
office@sssrc.org.

Misc. Wanted
HAIR MODELS NEEDED: Male and female models needed for color and cut.
Avant garde styles and color. Email
urbanfringemodels@gmail.com for more info.

Summer Jobs
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: The Duke Faculty
Club is hiring camp counselors, lifeguards,
swim coaches and instructors for Summer
2016. Visit our website (facultyclub.duke.edu)
for applications and information.

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.

SAVE A TREE, RECYCLE ME!

Tutoring Wanted
ART TUTOR NEEDED

Looking to hire student to do crafts with


11 year-old daughter. Painting, scrap
booking, crafts, sewing, etc. Must be
able to drive self over. Please email:
yehudisbluming@gmail.com.

Volunteering
HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS NEEDED. We are looking for individuals between the ages of 18-33
non-smokers and healthy. You will receive 1
free physical exam, blood drawn and breathing
tests. This study requires 5 visits in 6 weeks.
Compensation up to $1,500. For more information please call FEFA EPA Recruitment at
919-966-0604 or visit www.epastudies.org.

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If February 22nd is Your Birthday...

Persistent professional efforts pay off this year.


Expand your networks. Personal discovery (after
3/8) precludes a turning point in shared finances
(after 3/23), which thrive over a two-year phase
beginning 9/9. Partnerships blossom (after 9/1).
Take charge for personal results (after 9/16).
Share passion.
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 Embrace your creative
inspiration at work under the Full Moon in
Virgo. Apply artistry to your efforts. Hold
off on making decisions. One phase ends as
another begins in service, health and labors.
Complete old projects.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is a 7 This Full Moon shines on
a spiritual fork in the road. Complete old
projects, and begin a new phase. Loves a
requirement, not an option. Enjoy peaceful
contemplation. Make plans.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)


Today is a 5 Take time over the next two
days for fun with family and friends. One
game folds as another begins under this Full
Moon. Reach a turning point in a romance,
passion or creative endeavor.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)


Today is a 7 A new social phase sparks
under this Full Moon. Doors close and open
with friendships. Share appreciations. Talk
about what you want for each other. Discuss
possibilities.

Gemini (May 21-June 20)


Today is a 5 A turning point at home
draws you in with this Full Moon. Domestic
changes require adaptation. A new phase in
family life dawns. Balance new work with
old responsibilities. Renovate, remodel and
tend your garden.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)


Today is a 6 Reach a Full Moon turning
point in your career. Shift focus toward your
current passions. Expect a test. Begin a new
professional phase. Hold off on launching a
new endeavor. Investigate all possibilities.

Cancer (June 21-July 22)


Today is a 6 Begin a new phase in communications, intellectual discovery, creative
expression and travel with this Full Moon.
Shift your research in a new direction. Start
a new chapter.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)


Today is a 6 The Full Moon reveals a new
educational direction. Begin a new phase
in an exploration. Wax philosophical as you
experiment with new concepts. To really
learn, visit the source. Plan your itinerary
before flying off.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)


Today is an 8 Profitable new opportunities
bloom under the Full Virgo Moon. A turning
point arises in your income and finances.
A busy phase has you raking in the dough,
and it could also require extra expenses.
Keep track.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)


Today is a 5 Consider the emotions involved
before taking action. A Full Moon turning
point develops in shared finances. Balance
old responsibilities with new ones. The stakes
could seem high. Work out the next phase
together.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)


Today is a 7 This Full Moon in your sign
illuminates a new personal direction. Push
your own boundaries and limitations. It
could get exciting! Contemplate possible
changes. As you gain strength, you also
gain options.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)


Today is a 6 A fork in the road appears. Begin a new phase in partnership with this Full
Moon. It could get spicy. Compromise and
work together for shared commitments. Be
flexible and cooperate. You can work it out.

www.dailytarheel.com

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Arts & Entertainment

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, February 22, 2016

DTH/KATIE STEPHENS
Valerie Kuehne & the Wasps Nests performed in the Ackland Art Museum Sunday afternoon.

Aesthetic jambalaya concert at Ackland


By Connie Hanzhang Jin
Staff Writer

There was head-banging,


3-D sheet music and a green
pig named Mr. Bacon.
Its going to be a real
aesthetic jambalaya, said
Sid Richardson, a Duke
University doctoral candidate
and co-organizer of Music in
the Galleries: Experimental
Music Study Group, before
the show.
The Ackland Museums
Music in the Galleries program and Experimental
Music Study Group, which
was founded by UNC and
Duke graduate students,
came together to create
Sunday afternoons event.
It was centered on connecting the work of abstract
expressionist Hans Hofmann
to the work of experimental
music composers, some of
whom were influenced by
Hofmann. These New York
School visual artists and
composers were influenced to
make abstract, informal and
non-representational art for
its own sake.
These artists included
familiar names like Jackson
Pollock and John Cage.
All of this was covered in
an opening presentation by
UNC doctoral candidate and
co-organizer Joanna Helms.

Performers from the Duke


New Music Ensemble opened
the concert with a piece
by Morton Feldman called
Voice and Instruments 2.
Richardson said Feldman
treats pieces like art canvases.
He talks a lot about time
canvases basically music as
similar to visual art, but in a
time-based medium, he said.
The second part of the
concert was centered around
a 3-D rendering of Earle
Browns December 1952.
So theres kind of a narrative trajectory instilled in
it, so were kind of doing our
own arrangement of a graphic
score, which is ironic in that
its not usually how its done,
Richardson said.
The audience watched as
the screen rotated, dictating
the performers movements.
The vehicle of the concert
soon moved forward to the
present, with Brooklyn band
Valerie Kuehne & the Wasps
Nests putting on a show. Selfdescribed as avant-metalcabaret, the trio combines
their talents into creating
theatrical experiences for the
audience. Theyve started
previous shows passing out
pickles and encouraging the
audience to finish the whole
jar off.
If you just walked into it,
you wouldnt realize it was a

If you just walked


into it, you wouldnt
realize it was a musical performance.
Valerie Kuehne
lead singer in Brooklyn-based band

musical performance. Youd


be like, Oh, this is some crazy
performance art. I either
love it or hate it, said lead
singer Valerie Kuehne. But
if you stick around another
five minutes, youll hear these
really intricately composed,
intense songs.
Kuehne began the performance by opening a blue
suitcase, scattering My Little
Pony toys, cards and jar lids
on stage. The trio performed
songs about evangelical cults,
porn and how to fake death,
and they closed with the
introduction of Mr. Bacon.
Kenneth Stewart closed
with a solo performance of his
piece Phase Locked Loop and
Modulo Games. He played it
on electric guitar with delayed
pedal, which created the effect
of waves of sound washing
over each other.
The challenge was keeping the train moving, Stewart
said.
arts@dailytarheel.com

VO TE
NOW !
FO R YO U R FAVO RITE
CARO LINA SPOTS!

w w w .carolinas-finest.com

The Best of
H ousing Dining
Living Snacking
Date NightM ovies
Shopping H anging O ut
& M ore!

in Chapel Hill
Enterto w in a $75 giftcard
to the C arolina Inn!
BRO U G H T TO YO U BY

Coal ash still on books


After finding a local coal
ash disposal site, people are
looking at better disposal
methods. See story online.

games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

Level:

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

Solution to
Fridays puzzle

Hillary seeks support


Hillary Clinton is trying
her hand a second time in
N.C. to gain the Democratic
nomination. See story online.

Dipping into culture


The American Indian
Center hosted a tour of the
American Indian sites on
campus. See story online.

What a time to be alive


Want to spruce up your
style? See these six boutiques
on Franklin Street. Visit
Business Boom for more.

dailytarheel.com/classifieds
find a job buy a couch sell your car

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


Across
1 Nickel or dime
5 Zenith
9 Toboggan, e.g.
13 Fairy tale villain
14 Visitor from space
15 Soft drink nut
16 You almost had it
19 2016 Hall of Fame
inductee __ Griffey Jr.
20 Weighty books
21 Curved fastener
22 Flabbergast
23 UPC-like product ID
24 Mork & Mindy or
Mike & Molly
32 Beef cut
33 Reason for a cold sweat
34 GI chow
35 Writing fluids
36 Parking __
38 Gauchos weapon
39 Dental suffix with Water
40 Slim racetrack margin
41 Slightly open
42 Event where
many dress as
Stormtroopers
or Klingons
47 Question
48 Grandson of
Eve
49 Malice
52 Sans serif
font
54 Hawaiian
tuna
57 What polar
opposites
have
60 Tiny pasta
used in soup

61 Washingtons __ Sound
62 Agreed!
63 Smile ear to ear
64 Enjoy a novel
65 After 1-Across, pregame
football ritual, and whats
literally found in this
puzzles circles
Down
1 Tilt to the side, as ones
head
2 Look at wolfishly
3 Small laundry room
appliance
4 Nintendos Super __
5 Homecoming attendees
6 Refer to in a footnote
7 Clothing store department
8 Music producer Brian
9 Slopes fanatic
10 Letterhead emblem
11 Israeli airline
12 Missile in a pub game
14 Regarding

17 Singer James
18 My Fair Lady director
George
22 The Star Wars planet
Tatooine orbits two of
them
23 Lasting mark
24 Mishaps
25 Greek column style
26 Kipling mongoose Rikki__-Tavi
27 Many times
28 Bridal bio word
29 Texting icon
30 1964 Tony Randall title
role
31 Thirst (for)
36 Lampoon

(C)2012 Tribune Media


Services, Inc.
All rights reserved.

37 Spanish that
38 Array on a dugout rack
40 Japanese-American
43 Get to the bottom of
44 Marked with streaks, as
cheese
45 Put into law
46 __ contendere: court plea
49 Stuffed shirt
50 Peruse, with over
51 Chichn __: Mayan ruins
52 Fever and chills
53 Capital of Latvia
54 Bullets and such
55 Soil-shaping tools
56 Wayside lodgings
58 Talk of the Nation airer
59 Yoga class need

dailytarheel.com

Monday, February 22, 2016

The Daily Tar Heel

SportsMonday

SCOREBOARD

WRESTLING: UNC 33, The Citadel 12


MENS TENNIS: UNC 7, Wofford 0
SOFTBALL: UNC 9, Illinois 2
WOMENS TENNIS: Michigan 5, UNC 2

DOUBLE THE DISAPPOINTMENT

Youth plagues mens lacrosse in first loss of the season


MENS LACROSSE

HOFSTRA10
NORTH CAROLINA
5

WOMENS LACROSSE

FLORIDA16
NORTH CAROLINA 15

By Noah Grant
Staff Writer

In the seasons first two games, the


North Carolina mens lacrosse team had
done well masking the loss of three of its
top four goal scorers from a year ago.
The No. 7 Tar Heels had outclassed
opponents, winning both contests by a
combined margin of 34-16. Even with a
younger team, UNC had shown promise.
But the teams inexperience was evident Saturday at Fetzer Field, as the Tar
Heels (2-1) fell 10-5 to Hofstra (1-0).
UNC tallied 16 turnovers after combining for 22 in its first two contests.
We knew coming into this season
that we had some young guys, Coach Joe
Breschi said. Some new guys in different
places on the field, too, trying to find out
who we are and who were going to be. We
found out a little bit of our youth today.
The teams new-look offense could
never find its footing after falling behind
early. Junior Luke Goldstock UNCs
leading goal scorer in 2015 registered
just one goal and an assist in the loss.
I dont think our sticks were really
there today. We dropped a lot of balls,
Goldstock said. I definitely didnt play
well. I let the team down.
Lacking production offensively, UNC
needed a strong defensive performance
to keep the game close. Hofstras 35
shots pressured the Tar Heels defense,
which had allowed 48 shot attempts the
entire season.
Redshirt sophomore goalkeeper Brian
Balkam said the lack of scoring affected
the defenses mindset.
When the offense is struggling, it
definitely puts a little bit of extra pressure on the defense because you feel like
you kind of got to make up for any of
their mistakes, Balkam said.
Breschi credited Hofstras defense for
disrupting his teams flow.
I felt their defense played very well.
We got to continue to search for answers
offensively, he said. This is really the
first time we kind of got out of sync.
Just three games into the season,

Tar Heels upset with


ociating in 16-15 defeat

By Kayleigh Payne
Staff Writer

DTH/SARAH DWYER
Midfielder Peyton Klawinski (42) fights for a loose ball in the match against Hofstra.

UNC will continue to look to gain experience for its younger players and work
to become more comfortable in its offensive and defensive sets.
We just got to keep working every
day during practice to kind of get our
sticks right and get that chemistry
between each guy to the point where we
can move the ball around very quickly,
knowing that well get a goal on the

other side, too, Goldstock said.


For a young team, a loss can either
help or hinder progress depending on
how players react. Balkam chose to take
the loss in stride.
Its a long season, he said. Its only
February. Its only going to get better
from here.
@NoahGrant13
sports@dailytarheel.com

The No. 2 North Carolina


womens lacrosse team was
edged out by No. 7 Florida on
Saturday, 16-15, for its first
loss of the season.
But it wasnt the loss that
upset Coach Jenny Levy.
In the early parts of the
game, it is on the officials to
make sure that they let the
players know what will be
allowed during the game and
what wont, and that didnt
happen today, she said.
Much of the game was
driven by physical play. UNCs
first goal of the game came
after a scrappy period of play
in front of the net.
After a few rough plays
on both ends of the field, the
fouls rapidly piled up. Florida
notched as many fouls in the
first half as the Tar Heels had
shots 24.
Despite the inflated number of fouls, North Carolina
felt the game lacked control.
Sophomore Marie McCool
who recorded a career-high
six goals in UNCs loss was
concerned by the sheer number of fouls called.
I think it got a little out
of hand, she said. We knew
it was going to be a physical
game, it always is when we
play Florida. But I think that
it just was not OK today.
In the first three games of
the Tar Heels season, a total
of nine yellow cards were
issued. Saturday, the referees
pulled the yellow card out of
their pocket 10 times.
The two-minute penalty for

receiving a yellow card didnt


seem to affect the teams
performances. The Gators
knocked in the first of their
eight second-half goals while
playing two players down.
But the momentum suffered.
I think early on in the
game the tempo is set by
whats going to be allowed
and whats not going to be
allowed, Levy said. If you
dont set that tempo right
away then the game is going to
get out of control both ways.
She expressed her concerns
for the safety of the players and the quality of game
demonstrated in Saturdays
match, but attributed the loss
to strong competition and her
teams lack of ability to finish.
I dont want to take anything away from Florida and
what their kids did. They had
a couple of unbelievable goals,
she said.
When you play a top-level
game like the game today thats
going to happen. Thats the
best part of this game when
you see two really great teams
battling against each other, and
you see some great plays on
both ends.
Junior Molly Hendrick
agreed with her coach.
It was a tough loss, but
theyre a good team and there
are a lot of lessons we can
take away going into our next
games, she said.
But despite this, Levys
biggest takeaway was still the
need for safety in a game that
can easily evolve into dangerous play.
We have a responsibility
as coaches and officials to
keep our game safe, she said.
Or else we are going to be in
helmets.
@Kayleigh_Payne7
sports@dailytarheel.com

UNC haunted by Wolfpack shooting spurt


WOMENS BASKETBALL

N.C. STATE
NORTH CAROLINA

80
66

By Ben Coley
Senior Writer

In North Carolinas second


possession against N.C. State on
Sunday, first-year guard Stephanie
Watts casually pulled up for a
3-pointer. Swish.
On the next possession, redshirt
junior forward Hillary Summers
sank a jump shot. Twenty seconds
later, sophomore guard Jamie
Cherry drained her own 3-pointer.
With each basket, the memory of the
29-point loss against N.C. State on
Jan. 31 was slowly fading away.
But in the second quarter, the
Wolfpack started making shots and
the Tar Heels started making mistakes shades of the first matchup. The Wolfpack out-scored the Tar
Heels 26-12 in the second quarter
en route to an 80-66 victory and a
season sweep over UNC for the first
time since the 1999-2000 season.
We started out great, Coach
Sylvia Hatchell said. We were fired
up and making shots. N.C. State
has a lot of weapons, theyre a very
veteran team ... They started making shots, and we started making
mistakes.

In Januarys match-up, the


Wolfpack held a 33-28 advantage at
halftime. To begin the second half,
N.C. State used a 28-11 run to bolster its lead to 61-39.
In that third period, the Tar Heels
committed four turnovers, shot 31
percent and ended the quarter with
a made field goal drought of three
minutes and 48 seconds.
On Sunday, the Tar Heels mishaps began before halftime. UNC
held a 36-21 lead in the second
quarter, but N.C. State used an 18-0
run to take a 39-36 advantage into
the locker room.
In Sundays second quarter, UNC
shot 33 percent from the field, committed four turnovers and ended the
period with a scoring drought of five
minutes and 40 seconds.
Sometimes we didnt match up
on transition defense, said Watts,
who scored a career-high 30 points.
Thats one of the main things that
we try to work on in practice. That
led to a couple quick threes.
In Januarys game and Sundays
game, first-year guard Destinee
Walker said the Wolfpacks attack
was led by junior guards Miah
Spencer and Dominique Wilson.
Spencer and Wilson combined
for 18 points during the third period
burst in the first match-up. On
Sunday, the duo combined for 12
points in the second period.
They stepped up in the second

DTH/ADDY LIU
Senior guard NDea Bryant (22) defends Dominique Wilson (right) during the game against N.C. State on Sunday.

quarter this game, Walker said.


They put the team on their back.
They hit wide open threes to go on
the 18-0 run.
Hatchell said young guards
Walker and Watts made mistakes,

but are continuing to improve.


She added that the season has
been full of growing pains, and
Sundays breakdown simply served
as a microcosm.
Its been like that this year,

Hatchell said.
We play really good at times and
then the momentum gets turned
and its hard to right the ship.
@BenColey15
sports@dailytarheel.com

UNC baseball opens season with 2-1 series win over UCLA
BASEBALL

NORTH CAROLINA 14
UCLA5
By Blake Richardon
Staff Writer

Once again, the North


Carolina baseball team gave
up an early lead, this time in
its series finale against UCLA.
But this time, No. 21 UNC
buried the No. 9 Bruins with a
five-run seventh inning, securing a 14-5 win in Los Angeles.
Junior outfielder Tyler
Ramirez grabbed the momen-

tum for the Tar Heels when


he ripped a three-run home
run in the first inning. The
home run was UNCs first of
the season and gave North
Carolina a 3-0 edge.
The Bruins responded
with a two-run home run in
the bottom of the second by
sophomore infielder Sean
Bouchard, chipping UNCs
lead to one.
The Tar Heels capitalized
on an RBI ground out and
a wild pitch in the third to
score two more times and
restore the three-run lead.
But plagued by errors,
North Carolina forfeited the

lead in the seventh.


While attempting to throw
a runner out on a dropped
third strike, first-year catcher
Cody Roberts missed sophomore first baseman Brian
Miller, allowing UCLA to
score. In their next at-bat,
the Bruins scored on a wild
pitch. Two batters later, Luke
Persico singled in a runner to
tie the game at 5.
But instead of folding under
pressure, UNC came alive.
Zach Gahagan knocked
one out of the park to give
North Carolina a 7-5 lead in
the top of the seventh. Then
junior left fielder Tyler Lynn

picked up an RBI double and


made it home himself off a
throwing error by UCLA.
North Carolina piled on
four more runs in the ninth to
put the Bruins in a hole they
couldnt dig out of.
With the win, North
Carolina walked away with a
2-1 series victory.

Quotable
We started playing small
ball, they started feeling the
ball around and we just kind
of capitalized on their errors.
Ramirez on his teams
performance in the seventh

inning.

Notable
Celebrating his 21st birthday, Ramirez led the Tar Heel
offense with a home run, two
runs scored and three RBIs.
Sunday marks the third time
in Ramirezs career that hes
earned three RBIs in a game.

3 numbers that matter


5: Sophomore pitcher
Jason Morgan set a careerhigh with five strikeouts in
5 2/3 innings. His previous
career-high was two strike-

outs on March 24 against


Appalachian State.
5: North Carolina held
UCLA to just five hits, but
still allowed the Bruins to
score five times.
8: The Tar Heels walked
Bruin batters eight times on
the day.

Whats next?
North Carolina will host
No. 11 Oklahoma State at
3 p.m. on Friday in the Tar
Heels first home game of the
season.
@BlakeR_95
sports@dailytarheel.com

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