dailytarheel.com
DTH/KASIA JORDAN
UNC students walk as a part of the Its On Us event on Thursday,
which sought to raise awareness of and prevent sexual assault.
are supported.
An incredibly disproportionate number of sexual assault
incidents occur at, in conjunction with, or shortly following an event at a Greek letter
(HB2), he said.
Rep. Graig Meyer,
D-Orange, said the timing
of McCrorys announcement
is politically motivated and
attempts to divert attention
from the recent law. The
announcement was made
without interaction from
other legislators, he said.
There was no statement
there that he had support from
legislative leadership, there was
no public announcement from
legislative leaders that they
were working together on the
budget proposal.
MCCRORYS PROPOSAL
$50,000
5 percent
Pay increase
$5,000
$2 million
News
THE STRUGGLE
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TODAY
Lighting on campus at
night really needs to be fixed.
Its a huge safety hazard.
35 percent
The campus drinking
culture has to be reformed.
27 percent
To weigh in, head to
dailytarheel.com.
Someone damaged
property on the 100 block of
Melville Loop between 11:30
p.m. Tuesday and 7:50 a.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person cut two sets
of tires on a vehicle, causing
$1,000 worth of damage,
reports state.
Due to a reporting error, Wednesdays pg. 3 story Project attempts to bridge food gap misrepresented where produce will be exported. Youth participants will be able to take home produce they
grow and excess will be donated to the Carolina Campus Community Garden.
The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections
printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Mary Tyler at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
Follow: @dailytarheel on Twitter
Contextualized
transcripts! Grade deflation
is so real.
39 percent
CORRECTIONS
Like: facebook.com/dailytarheel
CITY BRIEF
North Forest Hills Park
playground closed
The playground at North
Forest Hills Park, 121 Collums
Road, is closed for the nesting
season of Solitary Bees. The
bees are generally not aggressive and should not cause
problems for those in other
areas of the park.
staff reports
SPORTS BRIEF
Kenny Williams has
successful knee surgery
Kenny Williams, a firstyear guard on UNCs mens
basketball team, underwent
successful surgery on his
right knee Thursday, the team
announced. Williams tore his
meniscus during the 2015-16
season, but is expected to be
ready by practice this fall.
staff reports
POLICE LOG
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Thukhuma: Painting Myanmar in a Time of Transition:
This exhibit showcases more
than 36 paintings by artists
from Myanmar. They analyze
the political and social issues
present in the country today.
The exhibit will be on display
until July 29.
Time: 8 a.m. 5 p.m.
Location: FedEx Global Education Center
ONLINE POLL
inBRIEF
Someone committed
larceny on the 700 block of
Church Street at 12:13 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole checks,
valued at $775, and cashed
them at a bank, reports state.
Someone broke into and
entered a residence on the
News
Partnership to
research HIV
begins study
state@dailytarheel.com
university@dailytarheel.com
J-school faculty
have a graphic love
The Chuck Stone Program
co-directors had their first
date at Pizza Hut.
By Ziyad Habash
Staff Writer
it was a proud
Scholarly
moment for the
University.
I learned to
have even more
respect for him
as I learned the
Sweethearts
deeper details of
his pretty amazing career, said Susan.
He was part of a Pulitzer Prizewinning team in Ohio.
King undersold Terence he was
not part of only one prize-winning
team. He was a graphic design contributor for two separate Pulitzers,
won in back-to-back years, first for the
Miami Herald in 1993 and again for
the Akron Beacon Journal 1994.
The Olivers commitment to helping
others is apparent in their academic and
religious lives. Terence and Greta colead the Chuck Stone Program, a fourday summer event for attracting diverse
high school seniors to journalism.
The couple that ran it were retiring, and it was recommended to me
that they would make a good couple
to follow them in their leadership of
the Chuck Stone Program, King said.
That is how I got to know Greta better, and she has been doing that now.
This will be their third summer as
leaders in that program.
The couple are elders in the World
Overcomers Christian Church and
Terence has gone to Kenya with the
church to build a sustainable farm.
Terence said his wife is dedicated
to helping less privileged people in
society.
She is passionate as well and just
really focused as far as wanting to
make a difference and also for underrepresented groups and also anyone
who is marginalized, he said.
Lois Boynton, an associate professor
of journalism who is friends with both
of the Olivers, said the two are a power
couple.
They are wonderful together and
they are very comfortable, which I
think is very cool.
They can tease one another, and
one time when he was going to be late
and we needed him to do an assignment, she said, Ill make him do it.
arts@dailytarheel.com
City
General
Martin
Dempsey
(Ret.)
&
Dana
Priest
April 12, 2016
5:30 6:30 pm
Genome Sciences Building | Room 100
Moderated by Dr. Peter Feaver.
Additional Information: Jennifer Akin
(jboyle@live.unc.edu)
Curriculum in
Peace, War, and Defense
News
DTH/KATIE WILLIAMS
UNC senior Joseph Han, a former beauty consultant, travels the world spending weekends abroad in places like the Philippines.
Coalition.
The streets are public and
can be leveraged in a way that
can create a space for activity,
Perry said.
The Carrboro Bicycle
Coalition started Carrboro
Open Streets in 2013.
After the success of the
inaugural event in 2013, the
Carrboro Board of Alderman
opted to continue the event.
Open Streets is now
sponsored by the Carrboro
Recreation and Parks
Department.
The event is pretty low
maintenance in terms of
needing staff, said Board of
Aldermen member Bethany
Chaney.
Everyone pitches in.
This year the event also has
27 community vendors that
will be setting up activities for
attendees.
The Carrboro Bicycle
Coalition is still largely
involved with the event.
Every business is required
to offer an activity, and it does
help to get their name out
there, said Perry.
All of the activities offered
by local vendors this Sunday
will be completely free of
charge for Open Streets
attendees.
It is not a commercial venture, per se, but it taps into
the creativity and interests
of our community, and that
is what makes it so special,
Chaney said.
The event is really in line
with our values, convening
and healthy living.
48th Annual
city@dailytarheel.com
C arolinas F inest...
13 Years Straight!
High Hanging Fruit:
www.yogurtpump.com
Greg Jenkins
resentatives.
Harrison said the town
council has never before had
to approve such budget items,
but the council might receive
an announcement about it
happening.
Litchfield said Chapel Hill
Transit has been continually
improving bus stops whenever they have the resources.
He said in the next 12
to 18 months, Chapel Hill
Transit will be setting aside
additional resources for bus
stop renovations, as well as
using some federal grant
money.
We want to improve (more
stops) and make sure our customers, and those interested
in using Chapel Hill Transit,
have access, Litchfield said.
@brookenf1
city@dailytarheel.com
DANCE TEAM
FROM PAGE 1
ITS ON US
EDUCATION
FROM PAGE 1
FROM PAGE 1
said people have been planning the event for about three
months, and he estimated
between 450 and 500 people
would sign the Its On Us
pledge at the end of the event.
Kappa Kappa Gamma
President Sonia Schrager, a
junior business administration
and journalism double major,
said it is likely someone in her
sorority chapter has experienced sexual assault.
(We want to) make it be
known that we as an organization and as a campus are
right behind them. Making
sure that they feel safe here is
really important for our sisterhood, she said.
Hathaway Pendergrass,
president of the board of directors at the Orange County
Rape Crisis Center, said a conversation about sexual assault
would not have generated such
a large crowd when he went to
UNC 10 years ago.
What youre doing right
now is part of prevention. Its
having that discussion that
you havent had before its
talking about sexual assault,
words that were so taboo that
you would have to whisper
them in the past. Were not
doing that anymore. Youre
here talking about it, he said.
Matt Mengert, vice president of public relations for
the Interfraternity Council,
said the council expects to
have its own pledge against
sexual assault by the beginning of the fall semester.
Its not a real plan for helping people who are employed
by the state Its a political
stunt to try and change the
topic around (HB2), he said.
Mark Jewell, vice president of the North Carolina
Association of Educators, said
he was disappointed the governors proposal in a statement.
Once again there is no
long-range plan to elevate
public school educators to
the head of the class, he said.
Only election year proposals that do little to make up
for years of disrespecting the
education profession and dismantling our public schools.
With turnover rates
already rising amongst educators, Jewell said McCrorys
proposal offers little to education support professionals.
But Bitzer said McCrorys
budget proposal considers
both new and more experienced teachers, which could
improve teacher retention.
That is different from
what has happened in the past
because the last go around
they primarily focused on
entry-level teachers; now I
think theyre trying to do the
broad range of all teachers in
terms of salary, he said.
By appealing to a larger
demographic of teachers, the
proposal avoids alienating or
irritating teachers who have
dedicated a lot of time to the
profession but have yet to
see significant pay increases,
Bitzer said.
He said McCrorys budget
proposal could start a more
university@dailytarheel.com
Deadlines
Announcements
NOTICE TO ALL DTH
CUSTOMERS
Help Wanted
SUNDAY SITTER
Wanted for 9 year-old boy beginning in May.
Must have reliable and safe transportation.
Must love SPORTS, creative play and dogs.
Most Sundays 9am-5pm. Job can continue into
fall, spring semesters. Saturday flexibility a
plus. $12/hr. cabbytwo@netscape.net.
SUMMER NANNY needed for 2 children (9 and
13), 20-40 hrs/wk depending on availability.
$18/hr. Car required. Could extend into fall if
interested. 919-685-5601.
For Rent
FAIR HOUSING
RECYCLE ME PLEASE!
Help Wanted
For Rent
Help Wanted
MERCIA
Help Wanted
OFFICE SUPPORT for multiple business office.
No experience required. A resume must be
provided with any work experience and education noted. Chapel Hill located applicants
preferred. Full-time or part-time. $12.50-$15./
hr. Email resume and availability to hw@
ecacinc.com.
TEACH MENS HEALTH: Looking for applicants
interested in health education, comfortable
with their bodies, to teach male physical exam.
Training provided. $25-$35/hr. Part-time occasional work. mhtg.instructor@gmail.com.
QUESTIONS? 962-0252
Services
PAINTING AND BEYOND. Now servicing the
Chapel Hill area. Over 25 years experience.
Interior, exterior painting, drywall repair, pressure washing. Contact Ed Barbour, 336-2698868.
For Rent
Walk to
Campus!
HOROSCOPES
If April 8th is Your Birthday...
Prepare for an educational journey this year. Launch
creative projects after 5/9. Schedule travels and
studies after 8/13. The next two years after 9/9
benefit partnership and collaboration. Work shifts
direction after 9/1, leading to an introspective phase
after 9/16. Grow what you love.
919-933-5296
Services
STARPOINT
STORAGE
NEED STORAGE SPACE?
(919) 942-6666
Summer Jobs
CHAPEL HILL PARKS & RECREATION is hiring
summer camp counselors, coordinators, inclusion counselors, lifeguards, swim instructors
and swim coaches for Summer 2016. Visit
www.townofchapelhill.org for more information.
SUMMER CAMP INSTRUCTORS. If you are
interested in working with kids in a fun environment, Chapel Hill Gymnastics is hiring for
summer camp instructors to work in our gymnastics camps beginning June 6. Gymnastics
or fitness experience preferred, but not required. We will train the right candidate. Send
a resume and the contact information of two
professional references to chelsey@chapelhillgymnastics.com.
MOVERS NEEDED
Triangle Moving Service needs full-time and
part-time movers this summer. Experience
preferred but will train. Learn a trade, earn
$$, stay in shape, get tips all at once! Send
resume or pertinent information via online ad.
Trianglemoving.com, 919-942-6974.
ITS EASY!
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Sundays at 10:30am
Creekside Elementary
919.797.2884
jrogers@upcch.org 919-967-2311
110 Henderson St., Chapel Hill
Thursdays Fellowship dinner
& program 5:45-8 PM
Weekly small groups
Sunday Worship at our six local Partner Churches.
Trips to the NC mountains & coast as well
as annual spring break mission opportunities.
www.uncpcm.com
Religious Directory
Presbyterian
Campus
Ministry
lovechapelhill.com
dailytarheel.com
SportsFriday
SCHEDULE
DTH/KASIA JORDAN
Myles Wolfolk (11) faces off during spring practice Thursday
afternoon. The team will kick off their next season on Sept. 3.
Marcus Paige
2015-16 stats:
12.6 PPG
2.5 RPG
3.8 APG
Outside looking in
After finishing his UNC
career as the programs all-time
leader in made 3-pointers
(299) and 11th on the all-time
scoring list (1,844), Paige is
currently not projected to be
picked in the NBA draft by
most media outlets.
According to DraftExpress.
coms prospect rankings from
Wednesday, Paige is the No.
80 overall player in the draft.
He is also ranked as the No.
16 senior.
While Paige might have
been selected higher if he
would have left UNC early, he
hasnt regretted his decision
to stay.
A lot of times, the money
playing at the next level is
hard to turn down, Paige
said on March 16. But I dont
think anything beats these
four years.
Although there is a chance
he might not be selected in
the draft, Paige could still sign
with an NBA team, an NBA
Development League team or a
professional team overseas.
Potential first-rounder
Brice johnson
2015-16 stats:
17.0 PPG
10.4 RPG
1.5 APG
According to NBAdraft.
nets mock draft from
Saturday, Johnson will be
selected with the No. 11 overall pick by the Orlando Magic,
making him the 47th Tar
Heel to be picked in the first
round of the draft.
Bleacher Report, as of
Thursday, has Johnson as the
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
Thursdays puzzle
Poverty to success
Student Joseph Han has
made a place for himself in
the beauty supply industry
See pg. 5 for story.
Nothing finer
than a summer at Carolina!
Check out summer.unc.edu
option, in football
59 Home of the god Pan
60 Beverage sometimes
served with mint
61 Besides
62 Inning trio
63 Botched (up)
64 Model of industry
65 Put into words
Down
1 Failed miserably
2 Industry leaders
3 Fan letter?
4 Meaning
5 Industry leaders
6 Prepare tuna, in a way
7 Converse, e.g.
8 Take in
9 Quaker pronoun
10 It may be skillfully
created by one whos all
thumbs
11 Rests
12 Acute care letters
15 Eponymous skater
Paulsen
17 Ring decision
20 One putting on an act
25 Home of Norways
royal family
27 Bank holding: Abbr.
28 Carafe kin
29 __ Tin Tin
30 Shaggy-tailed bovid
31 First of September?
32 Lot of trouble?
33 A Hard Road to
Glory writer
34 Merrie __ England
35 Plant bristle
36 French narrative poem
37 Like some stocks,
briefly
41 Misspoke, as lines
42 Surround
45 Rachmaninoff s
__-tableaux
46 Light-sensitive layer
47 __ spoon
49 Upholstered piece
51 Fancy tie
52 Hotel amenity
53 Derby, perhaps
54 Some bills
55 Chances
56 Speck
57 It may be mined
58 Objective reference
Opinion
ISHMAEL BISHOP
CAMERON JERNIGAN
ZACH RACHUBA
KATE STOTESBERY
CHRIS DAHLIE
JACK LARGESS
VISHAL REDDY
TREY FLOWERS
GABY NAIR
JACOB ROSENBERG
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Building
the
Black
interior
NEXT
Jalynn Harris
EDITORIAL
ne of the biggest
peaks in the news
cycle following the passage of North
Carolinas House Bill 2
into law has been the
announcement by PayPal
that the company is canceling plans to open an
office in Charlotte. PayPal
is not alone in cutting off
cultural and economic ties
to North Carolina.
Rahm Emanuel, the
mayor of Chicago, has forbidden city employees from
traveling here on nonessential official business and
vowed to try to steal prospective business in North
Carolina. Other nationally
known politicians have
made similar decrees.
Even the composer
of Wicked, Stephen
Schwartz, has forbidden
the musical to be professionally performed in
North Carolina.
These efforts, while they
may be good faith efforts to
put pressure on lawmakers to overturn the bill,
strike this editorial board
as shortsighted and selfcongratulatory. We believe
there are more constructive
ways to oppose the law;
namely, assisting North
Carolinians opposed to the
legislation rather than iso-
EDITORIAL
TO THE EDITOR:
Carolina Union Activities
Board, Phi Mu, Chi Psi and
Sigma Phi Epsilon are hosting Bonnamu by the Bell, an
outdoor musical festival at
the Bell Tower Amphitheater
on Saturday, April 9, 2016.
The event will take place
from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. There
will be seven bands, two DJs,
four food trucks, games and
other activities! The money
raised from the event will
be donated to Childrens
Miracle Network Hospitals,
Phi Mus national philanthropy.
Bands will perform for
30 to 40 minutes and intermissions will be filled by
performances from local
DJs. Some of the bands
include Time Sawyer, an
electric folk/rock band from
Charlotte, and Episode, an
indie rock band based out of
New York City.
The groups also hope
to see families from UNC
Childrens Hospital and
Duke Childrens Miracle
Network Hospitals in
attendance. Tickets to the
event are $5 and can be
purchased in the Pit leading up to the event.
Childrens Miracle
Network Hospitals raise
money for 170 childrens
hospitals across the United
States. For more information, please visit https://
www.facebook.com/
events/732048883590303/
or email Wesley Smith at
smithwg@live.unc.edu.
Travis Broadhurst
Sophomore
Geophysics
Anti-abortionist had
no place on campus
TO THE EDITOR:
I was walking to class
today among hundreds of
other students like myself,
and I came across a huge,
strategically placed display of
posters supposedly protesting against abortion.
They contained the most
gruesome, unnerving photos of holocaust victims,
lynchings and dead children
that I have ever seen. Upon
viewing these images, I had
a panic attack in the middle
of the quad and missed my
class. This is a violation of
the basic rights of students
at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill in
that we should be able to
walk to class without being
bombarded by violent, triggering images.
It terrifies and infuriates me that this group is
allowed to force students
to view such brutality as
they walk to their classes.
I acknowledge that this
organization has the right to
exercise freedom of speech
and expression; however,
just as these rights cannot
be used to justify verbal acts
of racism or misogyny, they
cannot be used to justify the
terrorizing of the mental
health of our students.
Olivia Nieto Rickenbach
First-year
Kvetching board
kvetch:
v.1 (Yiddish) to complain
Yes, Janie Wagstaff, diversity seems to matter
in race, gender and class
but never in diversity
of ideas, if those ideas
are about how diversity
in race, gender and class
*dont matter*.
Dear last weeks kvetcher,
$8 for two Yuengs and six
wings at Lindas on Thursday and Saturday. Lindas
is definitely the best as
always.
Please, for the love of
god, before you criticize
the state or University
about the passing of HB2,
do some research. If you
want to exercise your
First Amendment right to
be loud and obnoxious,
the least you can do is
be in-freaking-formed.
Understand that the bill affects more than the LGBTQ
community, and listen to
proponents concerns before labeling them as racist
or homophobic.
Roy is too classy to say it,
but clearly, the fix was in
on those refs. Sad ending
to a fun year you gave
us a thrilling season, team!
Thanks for a great run!!
You would have better
luck finding Waldo, a
needle in a hay stack and
an ex-Nazi in one day than
finding parking in Chapel
Hill on a Friday.
Hey PayPal, nice move
canceling 400 North Carolina jobs over transgender
bathrooms. By the way,
your Asia HQ is in Singapore, where being gay
equals 2 years in jail.
NOVA, a Jesuit University,
apparently called upon
their 16th man, JC, with
4 seconds on the clock.
OUR 16th player? TAR HEEL
FAITHFUL! Thank you, guys
for the best season EVER!
I knew there was a reason I
unliked The Onion.
Isnt it kind of hypocritical
to be against public funding and pro-free markets
but still attend a public
university?
It really hurt watching our
team lose the national
championship on Monday
night, but at least I still
had my 8 a.m. STOR 155
exam the next morning to
soften the blow.
Overslept class, overslept
class registration. Overslept my future.
It is going to be a great
day when a future generation of college students
study our current meme
culture. There will be a
meme library with meme
archivist and professors.
The business school feels
like a place where people
use the word synergy
unironically. The journalism school is like that too.
The 2016 election is a joke
that has been going on for
far too long.
Chapel Hill needs more
Marxist rags.
Send your one-to-two
sentence entries to
opinion@dailytarheel.com,
subject line kvetch.
SPEAK OUT
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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.