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Volume 124, Issue 27

Friday, April 8, 2016

BOTs call for You are the turning queen


coordinators
slowed by lack
of money
Cassidy Jones is currently UNCs only
gender violence services coordinator.
By Olivia Browning
Staff Writer

Both the Board of Governors and the Board


of Trustees have called for more gender violence
services coordinators at the Carolina Womens
Center but right now, the center only has
money for two.
One, Cassidy Johnson, has been supporting
survivors of gender, gender identity and gender
expression-based violence at the center since 2014.
Christi Hurt, interim director of the Carolina
Womens Center, said the center is hoping to hire
a second coordinator as quickly as possible, so
the new person can train over the summer and be
ready to work with students when they return to
UNC in the fall.
The recommendation was that we eventually
hire four, but we dont have a specific date or timeline for when that will actually happen, Hurt said.
On March 23, the Board of Trustees called
for the Carolina Womens Center to increase the
gender violence services staff by two positions as
soon as possible, with the eventual goal of hiring
a total of four coordinators.
A grant from the U.S. Department of Justices
Office on Violence Against Women currently provides the funding to support Johnsons role. State
funding will support the hiring of one additional
coordinator, Hurt said.
The Board of Trustees requested $50,000 for
the new coordinator.
Hiring additional gender violence services
coordinators is necessary so that members of our
Carolina community who are impacted by gender-based harassment and/or violence can receive
the best care and support possible, Johnson said
in an email.
Johnson provides students, faculty and staff
with services such as emotional support, answers
to questions about reporting incidents to the
University or police, assistance in navigating
through the reporting process and links to support at UNC and in the community.
Johnson said she has noticed people typically
reach out to her when they are most in need, and
because she helps so many people, individuals
often have to wait several days for an appointment.
Its an extremely long time to wait if youre
trying to get help and answers to questions like,
what does making a report to the school look
like? Whats the difference between making a
report to the school and the police? What will
happen if I tell my professor whats going on? Or
how do I tell my parents what happened? This
will hurt them so much, Johnson said.
Hurt said Johnson has been a tremendous asset
for the Carolina Womens Center, and she provides
a unique service as someone who can serve both as
a counselor and a rape crisis advocate.
She is definitely a good listener, is very empathetic and great to speak to if you dont want a
clinical experience, sophomore Emily Yue said.
Yue said she hopes the new coordinator will be
more representative of the marginalized population at UNC.
Cassidy is great, but hiring a queer woman
of color would be extremely beneficial to the
womens center, Yue said. This is a good opportunity to make the process more accessible for
everyone.
university@dailytarheel.com

DTH/ SAMANTHA DIKOLLI


Senior Taylor Hartzog (center) dances for the UNC dance team. On the team, she is known as the turning queen for her pirouettes.

Senior skilled at dance and embarrassing Marcus Paige


By Ryan Schocket
Assistant Arts & Entertainment Editor

Taylor Hartzog wasnt sure about


UNC, about dance team.
It was April of her senior year of high
school, and she had yet to commit to a college. Plus, she had already missed spring
auditions, and having grown up dancing
her whole life, Hartzog wasnt sure she was
ready to recommit.
But she was.
I ended up auditioning and was really

fortunate enough to make it, she said. And


since then, its been a really fun ride.
Fun, but not easy. The senior psychology
major, admissions ambassador and dance
team captain starts her days early and ends
them late.
I go to workouts at 6 a.m., and I usually get
done around 7, 7:15, she said. Ill come back
and shower for the sake of my classmates.
And for the sake of her teachers, she
sneaks in readings before heading to classes
at 9:30 a.m. After, shes in the lab until 4 p.m.
I go to the lab every day and either work

with MRI stuff or transferring data, she said.


At 5:30 p.m., its time for practice, which
is usually dictated by the time of the year:
Late spring is dedicated to practicing for
National Dance Alliances annual competition, which the dance team attended this
week. Yesterday, they secured a highly coveted spot in the final round.
Fall practices, held in the Eddie Smith Field
House, focus on football game performances.
We actually dont practice at any of the

SEE DANCE TEAM, PAGE 6

Greek groups host sexual assault discussions


One officer said
hundreds signed the
Its On Us pledge.
By Brinley Lowe
Staff Writer

Hundreds stood outside of the


Campus Y Thursday as Lauren
Debski recalled her experience of
sexual assault.
Will any man love a raped
woman? Debski asked, tearing
up. Will someone respect me for
who I am? Will I ever be able to
trust again?
Four Greek organizations
hosted Its On Us Thursday, an
event that brought attention to
sexual assault and raised money
for the Orange County Rape
Crisis Center.
Debski, one of the events
speakers, said she was raped on
her college campus in 2011.
Rape is not just a physi-

cal violation, she said. It is a


mental, emotional and spiritual
attack that significantly changes
your life.
Debski said after her rape, she
used alcohol to cope. She eventually feared going to class.
I experienced persistent
flashbacks of being raped every
single time I walked down my
college campus, Debski said.
The university gym became a
fearful place where I was afraid
of running into him.
After being diagnosed with
post-traumatic stress disorder,
Debski said she began to transition from victim to a survivor.
Debski said after she pressed
charges, the perpetrator was suspended from her university for
18 months.
Interfraternity Council
President Morgan Pergande told
the crowd the Its On Us pledge
a national campaign aims
to create a culture where sexual
assault is vilified and survivors

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

Interfraternity Council chapter,


he said. This needs to change.
Sigma Phi Vice President
Andrew Clark, a sophomore,

SEE ITS ON US, PAGE 6

McCrory raises issue of teacher salaries in time for election


The proposed budget
comes on the heels of
HB2 controversy.
By Kent McDonald
Staff Writer

North Carolina Gov. Pat


McCrory proposed raising the
average teacher salary in the
state to more than $50,000
on Tuesday.
The governors goals for the
upcoming education budget
proposal include recruiting

and rewarding teachers and


expanding college access. The
final proposal will be released
later this month.
Michael Bitzer, a professor
of political science at Catawba
College, said the announcement allows McCrory to frame
the ongoing political conversations in the state especially
considering the ongoing controversy with House Bill 2.
Certainly making an
increase in teacher pay as
a policy proposal I think
they would hope that would
move the conversation off of

(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 press office


did not respond to emails or
phone calls for comment.
Jacob Smith, a Ph.D. student at UNC who teaches in
the political science department, said the governor is
expected to make these types
of proposal announcements
during this time of year.
I imagine this has been
in the works for some time,
presumably he was going to
announce it sometime before
this legislative session, he said.
Smith said the education
proposal is designed to appeal

to more moderate voters;


whereas, House Bill 2 has galvanized both conservative and
liberal groups in the state.
The sort of people who
this is more targeted toward
are the people who are sort
of more in the middle the
swing voters, he said.
Meyer said he predicted
the governor would propose
teacher salary increases last
year and questions the practicality of the budget proposal
in addressing teachers issues.

SEE EDUCATION, PAGE 6

Its amazing Im in this maze with you.


JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE

MCCRORYS PROPOSAL

$50,000

Average teacher pay

5 percent
Pay increase

$5,000

Bonus for veteran teachers

$2 million

Recruiting STEM teachers

News

Friday, April 8, 2016

The best of online

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Established 1893

MORE TO SEE ONLINE:

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PAIGE LADISIC
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

THE STRUGGLE

EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

MARY TYLER MARCH


MANAGING EDITOR

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KELSEY WEEKMAN
ONLINE MANAGING EDITOR
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What they wont tell you while touring UNC

BRADLEY SAACKS
ENTERPRISE DIRECTOR

By Kylie Marshall

SAMANTHA SABIN
DIRECTOR OF INVESTIGATIONS

As College Decision Day


approaches, prospective students are flooding the campus
learning about *important*
things like where academic
advising is, how the meal plan
works and what exactly is the
Old Well. But, there are some
things the tour guides just
dont tell you.
1. You will never get over
seeing basketball players on
campus. Even the millionth
time you will put a snipe of
one on your Snap Story.
2. Yes, Alpine is a gift from
God, but the line is ridiculous,

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

and honestly youre better off


going to Pit Stop especially
between classes.
3. The bricks are beautiful,
but youll most definitely hate
them by day three when youve
already tripped 50 times.
4. Dont attempt to understand the layout of Phillips
Hall. Maybe, just dont take
classes in Phillips Hall??
5. You will get over the
Old Well, and eventually, you
wont want to take a picture
in front of it every time you
pass it.

READ THE REST:


Go to www.dailytarheel.com/blog/
pit_talk

Staff writer Brett Zeck


relates to the struggles of
being a full-time student
with a part-time job.

Students with jobs


are the chosen ones, the
schedule Jedis who can
handle working out before
their four classes and then
come into work for a sixhour closing shift.
At least, theyre the
ones that can do this and
(usually) avoid breaking
down (in front of you).
Ive been working at
Chick-fil-A for about seven
weeks now.
To read more, head
to our Pit Talk blog at
dailytarheel.com.

TODAY

Creative Writing Workshop


with Joy Castro: Award-

winning author and University


of Nebraska-Lincoln professor
Joy Castro will hold a creative
writing workshop. Participants
should bring their own pens and
notebooks. This event is free an
open to the public.
Time: 10 a.m. to noon
Location: Greenlaw Hall, Room
223
UNC Baseball vs. Virginia Tech:
The Tar Heels will take on the
Virginia Tech Hokies at home
in Boshamer Stadium. The first
500 fans will receive Go Tar

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 committed larceny from the Harris Teeter


at 201 S. Estes Drive at 10:25
p.m. Tuesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole $352.48
worth of items, reports state.

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.

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

Heels rally towels. Access to the


all-you-can-eat buffet costs $5.
Admission to the game is free for
UNC students, staff and faculty
with valid UNC One Cards or
hospital IDs.
Time: 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Location: Boshamer Stadium

CORRECTIONS

Like: facebook.com/dailytarheel

The Daily Tar Heel asked


respondents what they
think is the most important
change that UNC is considering. Results as of publication.

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

Follow: dailytarheel on Instagram

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

1200 block of Martin Luther


King Jr. Boulevard at 4:50
p.m. Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person damaged a window screen, causing $50 worth
of damage, and stole an Xbox
One, valued at $298, jewelry,
valued at $5,000, and $1,300
worth of cash, reports state.
Someone committed
larceny from a residence on
the 300 block of West Poplar
Avenue between midnight
and 7:24 a.m. Tuesday,
according to Carrboro police
reports.
The person stole a check,
valued at $100, reports state.
Someone shoplifted
from the Harris Teeter at 310
N. Greensboro St. at 10:57
a.m. Tuesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
The person stole $52.57
worth of filet mignon and
$18.34 worth of N.Y. strip
steak, reports state.

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Friday, April 8, 2016

Partnership to
research HIV
begins study

Talking on egg shells

UNC and GlaxoSmithKline are


working to develop a cure for AIDS.
By Belle Hillenburg
Staff Writer

firm commitment to freedom of expression


on college campuses.
I think its just a reaffirmation of a lot of
the things that they already claim to believe,
and its a way to show solidarity with professors and with the general goals of academic
freedom, he said.
Lukianoff accepted questions from the
audience following the lecture, which
focused on administrative policies and
neutrality, academic freedom, studentathlete exceptions and speech codes
historically being used to target minority
populations.
Jessica Allen, a UNC student who attended the event, agreed with Lukianoff s overall
message.
By limiting what we experience on a
college campus, we no longer have justified
reasons for believing what we do, she said.
Ben Jealous, a former president and CEO
of the NAACP, will be speaking as part of
the speaker series Monday in Memorial
Hall. The lecture is titled The Forgotten
Origins and Consequences of Race in
America.

The HIV Cure Center may enroll a patient as


soon as this week for its first study.
The center was created in May 2015, when
UNC partnered with GlaxoSmithKline to develop
a cure for AIDS.
Director David Margolis said the scientists
began work in November after lab construction
finished.
Margolis said the partnership between the
University and GSK has helped with research.
This is exactly what we hoped by bringing the
two worlds together in this one physical space, so
thats been really very nice to see, he said.
Margolis said the center hopes to start two new
projects by the end of the year.
Weve had a lot of progress on a lot of fronts.
Both basic science in the labs, discovery of some
potential new approaches and moving some of
the more validated approaches into clinical studies, Margolis said.
The center is working on a combination study
to reverse HIV latency and clear the remaining
infection, he said. HIV latency is the virus second
stage of infection.
Many people have been working on this
problem for a couple of years now, and although
theres been a lot of technical advances, no one
has actually cleared persistent HIV infection in
a measurable way with the exception of giving
someone a total bone marrow transplant, he said.
Andrew Spaltenstein, vice president of the HIV
Discovery Performance Unit at GSK, said the team
wants to focus on applying for grants to fund new
research projects and expand the center.
We already have a number of grant opportunities, but wed like to see more of that, he said.
Richard Dunham, investigator at GSK, said
the scientists from GSK and the University have
worked well together since the lab was completed.
Dunham said the collaborative nature of the
lab has been positive.
Weve found some really good places where we
can synergize and fulfill that aspiration that we
have to find the best of pharma and the best of academia and bring those together, Dunham said.
But Spaltenstein said the center still has progress to make.
We have made some scientific progress, weve
generated some good data, but we are obviously a
long way away from our final goal which is to
cure HIV, he said.
But I think were off to a good start and were
looking forward to growing our projects and
growing our cure center.

state@dailytarheel.com

university@dailytarheel.com

DTH/ NINA TAN


Greg Lukianoff, the president and CEO of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, lectures about free speech on college campuses.

University free speech advocate rebukes restrictions


By Caroline Metzler
Staff Writer

According to Greg Lukianoff s campus


rights advocacy organization, UNC has a
green light rating for free speech meaning while there are no policies explicitly
restricting it, the University might not
actively support it.
Lukianoff, famous for co-writing The
Coddling of the American Mind for The
Atlantic, spoke to a group of students in the
Student Union Thursday about the importance of challenging limitations to free
speech.
Almost every time the campus speech
code has been challenged at a public university, it has been shot down by a court of law,
he said.
Lukianoff is the CEO and president for
the Foundation for Individual Rights in
Education, which he said has won all of
their lawsuits against campuses violating
freedom of speech.
He was invited to campus as part of the
50th anniversary of UNCs Speaker Ban Law
Speaker Series, in a lecture titled Freedom
of Speech or Freedom From Speech.

Our hope was to bring someone who can


talk about examples from other schools as to
how free speech issues have been handled,
said Diana Dayal, director of state and
external affairs for student government and
one of the organizers of the series.
The series, organized by student government and the Campus Y, invites guest
lecturers to promote conversation about
freedom of speech in higher education.
The Speaker Ban Law was passed by
the N.C. General Assembly in 1963 and
prohibited known communists from giving
speeches at public universities.
Vishal Reddy, outgoing co-president of
the Campus Y and one of the organizers
of the series, who is also a member of The
Daily Tar Heels editorial board, said UNCs
reaction to the law has led the University to
become a bastion of free speech.
The UNC student body president partnered up with the UNC-system president,
Bill Friday at the time, to actually put on a
lawsuit against the school, and they ended
up winning in court, he said.
Lukianoff said UNCs freedom of speech
policies were acceptable, but he would like
them to pass the Chicago statement a

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

When Terence and Greta Oliver


moved to Chapel Hill in 2010, the
University gained a couple dedicated
to family, service and community.
Terence is a professor in the UNC
School of Media and Journalism,
where he teaches courses about graphic design and motion graphics. Greta
has built a career by creating successful diversity programs at institutions
like UNC.
Susan King, dean of the journalism
school, said Terence is an innovator of
graphic design.
When I came here, Terence Oliver
was one of our rather new professors
in an incredibly important area, in
visual communications, said King,
Which is a digital frontier. He is one
of the leaders in an area called motion
graphics.
The couple married in 1986 at
Christian Fellowship Center in
Cleveland. Greta said she was first
drawn to her husbands polite demeanor and strong faith.
He was a strong Christian, a nice
guy and definitely easy on the eyes,
Greta said.
The two of them have been married for 30 years, with their first date
occurring at a surprising venue.
Where did we go? Pizza Hut? We
went to Pizza Hut actually, Greta said.
The couple lived in Athens, Ohio
until Terence was offered a teaching
job in Chapel Hill. The family, which
now included four children Darrel,
Phylicia, Antonio and Brittany
moved to Chapel Hill and discovered
the charms of North Carolina.
It is a lot more peaceful. The people are more pleasant, Terence said.
The Southern hospitality is definitely
present.
King was part of the tenure process
for Terence during his first years as a
teacher, and said that when Terence
became a full member of the faculty,

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

DTH FILE/NINA TAN


UNC student Mitch Xia participates in a protest on Franklin Street against House Bill 2 on March 29.

HB 2 has Wicked repercussions across NC


Composer Stephen
Schwartz is banning the
rights to his plays in N.C.
By Jenni Ciesielski
Staff Writer

Broadway composer Stephen


Schwartz is no longer singing the
praises of North Carolina.
Last week, Schwartz joined
major production companies and
film studios, like A&E Network
and Turner Broadcasting, in the
fight against House Bill 2 when he
denied the right to any organization based in North Carolina to
produce any of his shows.
First-year William Leitch said
he believes the consequences of
this ban will be larger than a lot of
people think.
If you dont think you know
Stephen Schwartz, youve more
than likely heard him, Leitch said.
Schwartzs works include
popular high school theater production choices like Godspell
and Pippin. His most famous
work, Wicked, is frequently performed at Charlottes Blumenthal
Performing Arts Center.

One venue already feeling the


effect of Schwartzs ban is the theater department at East Chapel
Hill High School.
We were looking at Godspell
for next season, and now we
cant, said Hope Hynes Love, East
Chapel Hills artistic director.
Blumenthal President Tom
Gabbard said he isnt aware of any
immediate effects that Schwartzs
ban will have on the performing
arts center but believes it will
have negative ramifications on the
states theater scene especially if
others follow Schwartzs lead.
The end result is that people
in North Carolina could expect to
see a real change in whats available for arts and entertainment,
Gabbard said.
Adam Versnyi, the chairperson of the UNC Dramatic Art
Department, said he thinks more
artists will boycott North Carolina
due to the bill, which worries him
for the departments future.
My fear is that HB2 will make
it more difficult for us to recruit
the most qualified faculty and
graduate students to join our program, he said.
Despite the losses both theater
departments could face, Gabbard

and Versnyi both said they support Schwartzs opposition to the


bill, as well as his decision to pull
his shows from the state.
But not all members of the
North Carolina arts community
agree with Schwartzs actions.
Leitch, a performer in UNCs
Pauper Players, said he shares
Schwartzs thoughts on House Bill
2 but thinks the composers actions
unfairly hurt the states theater.
The theater community has
always gone against the grain to
send a message about accepting
people with open arms particularly towards the gay community,
Leitch said.
Versnyi said UNCs Center for
Dramatic Art will continue to send
that message, regardless of bills
North Carolina legislators pass.
As soon as the bill was passed,
I sent out a message to everyone involved with the Center for
Dramatic Art as well as all dramatic arts majors, strongly stating
my own opposition to the bill and
reaffirming the centers strong
opposition to any discrimination
based on sexuality and gender
identity.
@yayjennic
arts@dailytarheel.com

City

Friday, April 8, 2016

The Daily Tar Heel

5 topics brought up to General Assembly


The Orange County Board of
Commissioners came up with five
topics to discuss with their legislators
at the N.C. General Assembly short
session on April 18.
The topics aim to help the General
Assembly determine the next course
of action for implementing new rules
regarding the issues at hand.
Compiled by staff writer Lindsey
Hoover.
Discuss prioritizing school
issues, such as calendar flexibility and drivers education
funding

Raising the juvenile age in


court from 16 to 18
North Carolina is one of two
states that prosecutes 16- and
17-year-olds as adult offenders
New York is the other.
According to Commissioner
Barry Jacobs, this transition of
raising the juvenile age would
give courts more time to work
with juveniles.
He said it would also give them
more time to address the behavior
that got these juveniles into their
situations.
I think its feasible, Jacobs said.
I think people can recognize
some things are less just than others and treating people who are in
their teens like adults is unfair.
Adolescents who are sent
to adult prison facilities are
twice as likely to be placed in
solitary confinement, according
to a study from the New York City
Department of Healths Bureau of
Correctional Health.
There have been several
attempts at changing the law
in North Carolina, such as the
Young Offender Rehabilitation
Act in 2014.
Unfortunately, this bill passed
with great support in the N.C.
House of Representatives, but
never ended up making it to the
Senate.

The commissioners plan to


discuss several factors about the
school systems with the N.C.
General Assembly, including how
the school calendar is organized
and the lack of flexibility that goes
along with it.
Modern-day school calendars
are based on tourism schedules in
North Carolina.
School districts schedule calendars according to what times
of the year coincide with a students ability to work and when an
increase in profits can be made in
the tourism industry.
Jeff Nash, spokesperson
for Chapel Hill-Carrboro City
Schools, said the calendar flexibility forces the school districts
to make tough choices.
They tell you when you can
start and when you can finish,
Nash said.
Well, within those dates there is
not enough time.
He said the school board is
put in a tough spot when deciding whether or not to come on
Saturdays or Memorial Day or
other holidays when figuring out
how to make up missed school
days.
If we could just simply add a few
days or have the freedom to select
when we start our school years, this
issue goes away and it wouldnt be a
problem at all, he said.
According to Jacobs, if a school
system should want to change
their calendar for situations
regarding weather or religious
holidays that dont pertain to
Christianity, the school system
should not be held back by their
current restrictions.

Expanding broadband capability to underserved areas


of North Carolina in attempts
to foster business and farm
development, along with the
creation of new jobs
Commissioner Penny Rich
explained that the Board of
Commissioners is pushing to make
broadband and internet access a
utility.
The folks that can have it and
have access have a different level of
intelligence, she said.
Just like everything you use on
a daily basis, the internet should be
a utility.
According to Jacobs, there
are locations throughout Orange
County that dont have any broadband access or the speed of the
internet is extremely slow.
One of the things we added
was to have a minimum standard,
he said.
So you cant claim a speed
which is not available to everybody,
it either exists or doesnt exist.
Jacobs said the addition of
broadband networks to areas that
dont already have internet access
will also lead to the creation and
development of businesses and
jobs.
In order to be competitive,
business needs to be able to move
at speed through the internet and
if it takes a while to download anything, youre obviously at a disadvantage, Jacobs said.
You can accommodate people
working at home, which allows for
more small businesses to operate
and keeps down the miles to travel,
which improves air quality and
quality of life.
According to Rich, residents
cant live in the more rural areas of
Orange County and be successful
without access to broadband.

The UNC-TISS National Security


Fellowship Program presents:

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

Seek legislative action


that will provide all North
Carolina governments the
authority to include sexual
orientation and gender identity as protected classes to
protect them from discriminatory practices
Its self apparent. We believe in
equal treatment and social justice,
Jacobs said.
We dont believe in singling out
anybody to not be protected by the
law.
According to Jacobs, the board
passed a resolution, before the legislature held its session.
He said the resolution asked
the N.C. legislature to leave alone
the rights of local governments
to make decisions that they think
best fits the wishes of their constituents.
I think its important to not
accept discrimination without
speaking up against it, even though
you think you have no chance to
change minds that are closed,
Jacobs said.
If you dont speak out, then
youre acquiescing. Theres too
much of that in history to not learn
a lesson.
The commissioners are asking
for a repeal of House Bill 2 with
addressing this topic at the General
Assembly.
House Bill 2 states that a person
must use the bathroom that corresponds with their biological sex in
public agencies.
Passed by Governor Pat
McCrory on March 23, there has
been an uproar in the state, calling for the repeal of the discriminatory bill.
Chapel Hill, Carrboro and
Orange County have all passed
resolutions opposing House Bill 2
entirely.

Clarify that farms on which


production of crops and
livestock is the primary use
are the only properties that
qualify for previous zoning
exemptions
Orange County saw a difficult
situation as a couple registered
their property under the federal
government as a working farm
when it wasnt being used as one.
Instead of using the space as an
area for crop or livestock production first, they turned their farm
into a wedding venue and grew
flowers on their property to keep
the title and protection from zoning laws.
There are all sorts of benefits
to having a farm that the federal
governments gives to people, Rich
said.
If you are a functioning working farm, you are allowed to have
a secondary business on your land.
This is a way to get around Orange
County zoning rules to create a
party space where a party space
doesnt belong.
Rich said the commissioners are
addressing this issue to make sure
it does not keep happening.
She said the county does not
want the secondary farm usage to
become the primary reason for the
property.
If people are buying farms, they
should be functioning farms, she
said.
Its not so much other farmers that theyre affecting, its the
surrounding neighborhood. What
used to be a quiet dirt road is now
a busy dirt road with a lot of noise
until late at night. In all aspects, its
not the way Orange County wants
these numbers to be used.
@lmh0987
city@dailytarheel.com

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Friday, April 8, 2016

Joe Han: UNCs most interesting man alive


By Erin Wygant
Senior Writer

Joseph Han never has a


Monday.
Ask any question about
meeting a celebrity or traveling the world most likely,
Han has done it.
Hes curled Blake Livelys
hair, lived near Ben Affleck
and laughed it up with Conan
OBrien.
By weekday, hes in classes,
and by weekends, hes in his
favorite spot a remote
island in the Philippines.
But the UNC seniors life
wasnt always so glamorous.
Han was on his own at
18. Struggling to support
himself, he slept in Taco Bell
bathrooms and ate paper to
survive.
You boil paper toilet
paper, publication paper, anything and you mix it with
Elmers glue, he said.
But his life was about to
change. He was taken in by
a family from his church and
started working in their business The Beauty Supply, a
Michigan-based company in
desperate need of a new business model. And Han had
the solution.
I wanted to set people
who were on the wrong path
on the right one, he said. So
I told them about the beauty
industry in Hollywood.
Han tripled the companys
profit in three months.
But he didnt stop there.
Realizing he could set

himself apart by offering


more than just products, he
became a beauty consultant
himself.
Hes worked on blockbuster hits like Batman v
Superman: Dawn of Justice
and X-Men: Days of Future
Past, helping create the characters signature looks and
picking up some colorful stories along the way.
When I met Samuel L.
Jackson as a beauty consultant, he was really chill and
down to earth, Han said.
Not at all what I expected.
He later left the beauty
supply industry to pursue
financial advising a field
he said wasnt always easy
for a young professional. But
he earned clients trust and
found success yet again.
I guess I had a little knack
for it, but I really just focused
on delivering the extra little
bit, he said.
If you really do something
you love, youll want to go
beyond what youre asked.
For Han, going beyond
meant getting to work early
and staying late. Most importantly, it meant having confidence in himself.
You dont have to be 22 to
get into the real world. Start
early. It doesnt matter how
old you are if they see the
promise you can bring.
But Han isnt all business.
His friends say hes the life of
the party and can entertain a
room with his stories.
Some of his stories are

DTH/KATIE WILLIAMS
UNC senior Joseph Han, a former beauty consultant, travels the world spending weekends abroad in places like the Philippines.

hard to believe because one


day hell just decide to jet-set
across the world or talk about
meeting Victoria Beckham
in Spain, said Hans friend,
Kalin Williams.
Dustin Carden was Hans
roommate sophomore year
and said it took a while to
adjust to Hans lifestyle, like
when he traveled to Paris for a

summer to learn how to cook.


At first it caught me off
guard when he just would
take off on a trip to Europe,
Carden said.
But after a while I just
stopped trying to figure out
when Joseph was going to
come back or do his homework.
While some college stu-

dents cringe at the thought of


missing class or pulling allnighters, Han said his lifestyle
reflects his priorities.
If you think about what
you do every day by the
minute, not by the hour
you can see how much time
you really have, he said. So
even though schoolwork is
important, traveling was a

priority for me.


For Han, it boils down to
exploration.
Try experiencing everything you can think of. Just
try it. Youll be surprised at
what you might like, he said.
And if you try new things,
youll find a new self.
@ErinWyg28
arts@dailytarheel.com

Carrboro Open Streets Transit looks to improve bus stops


(Some stops need) seats and shelters where
bus stops have
gets residents active Some
people can get out of the rain when it rains.
not been upgraded
The town will host
the communitydriven event Sunday.
By Lauren Miller
Staff Writer

Weaver Street in Carrboro


will be closed off to traffic on Sunday to encourage
residents to come out and get
active.
On Sunday from noon
to 4 p.m, Carrboro will be
celebrating its annual Open
Streets event.
The event will offer activities such as yoga, dancing,
bike riding and rock wall
climbing.
The idea of the Open
Streets event is to use the
public space for activities that
encourage healthy living and
bring the community together, said Galen Poythress,
recreational specialist for the
town of Carrboro.
Its not about selling
things but contributing to
building a healthy community, Poythress said.
Poythress said that the
Carrboro event mirrors other
Open Streets events across
the country and that the
idea came from ciclovias, a
similar event held in Latin
America.
The event shows people
a few things. One, there are
a lot of ways to be active.
Two, its fun, and you are
not sitting inside and watching something happen, said
Heidi Perry, board member
of the Carrboro Bicycle

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.

since the 1970s.


By Brooke Fisher
Staff Writer

On any given day, hundreds of Chapel Hill and


Carrboro residents rely on
Chapel Hill Transit to get
them to and from work,
school and businesses.
Some of these stops have
bus shelters and benches
even digital signs telling
commuters the length of time
until the next bus arrives
but others only have a blue
sign that reads Bus Stop.
Brian Litchfield, Chapel
Hill Transit director, said out
of the 597 bus stops in the
Chapel Hill transit system,
about 26 percent of them
have passenger amenities
bus shelters, benches and
digital signs a percentage
higher than other transit systems in the area with about

the same number of stops.


But were not satisfied with
that number, Litchfield said.
Litchfield tweeted
Wednesday that Chapel
Hill Transit was excited to
announce plans to start some
new bus stop improvements.
Litchfield said these
improvements would include
upgrading some older bus
stops to comply with the
Americans with Disabilities
Act. The act was first passed
by Congress in 1990.
We have stops that have
not been improved since
those stops were probably
placed in 1974 and 1975
when the system started,
Litchfield said.
He said improvements
to bus stops to make them
more accessible could include
installing sidewalk curbs and
cutting ramps into the sidewalk. Other improvements
would include adding benches and bus shelters.
Renovation time would
vary, with the installation
of bus shelters taking a few

48th Annual

Fred T. Foard Jr.


Memorial Lecture

city@dailytarheel.com

C arolinas F inest...
13 Years Straight!
High Hanging Fruit:

Make a Difference in the World and Your


Life by Reaching Higher

with keynote speaker

Mark Rampolla, MBA

Author and Founder, ZICO Coconut Water

FREE and open to the public


Thursday, April 14 - 6:00p.m.
The William and Ida Friday Center
(on the FCX bus line)

Downtown Chapel Hill


942-PUMP
106 W. Franklin St.
(Next to Hes Not Here)

www.yogurtpump.com

Reception with healthy, local foods to follow.


Please register online today at
sph.unc.edu/alumni-pages/foard

Greg Jenkins

Chapel Hill resident

hours to a day, while installing sidewalk curbs would take


longer to complete.
It really depends on the
complexity of the improvement that needs to be done,
Litchfield said.
Chapel Hill resident Greg
Jenkins said he rides the
bus every day to get around.
Jenkins said some of the bus
stops he uses do need to be
improved.
"(Some need) seats and
shelters where people can get
out of the rain when it rains
on them, Jenkins said.
Chapel Hill Town Council
member Ed Harrison said in
an email that a budget item
for renovations to bus stops
would be shown to the Public
Transit Partners Committee, a
committee made up of Chapel
Hill, Carrboro and UNC rep-

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

From Page One

Friday, April 8, 2016

DANCE TEAM

FROM PAGE 1

dance studios on campus,


especially because its really
difficult to get that space
its usually reserved, she said.
Other spaces are reserved
for other dance groups on
campus but arent built to
host more than 20 dancers.
Plus, the field house does not
have mirrors, something crucial for dance performances.
Thats the one thing we
always struggle with, she said.
And when theyre not learning dances, theyre teaching
them to basketball players for
Late Night With Roy.
(The basketball players) are
good about knowing that we
put time into it, but if a basketball floats out into the middle
of the court, bad things happen. We just lose their attention, Hartzog said, jokingly.
And at Late Night her sophomore year, Hartzog caught
the attention of a specific
point guard Marcus Paige,
her boyfriend now for almost
2-and-a-half years. The two
were dance partners for the
song Holy Grail, prompting
Paige to reach out afterward.
I sent her a message and
was like, Hey, it was a lot of
fun being your partner. We
should hang out some time,
Paige said. I got lucky.
Paige also quickly won
over the approval of Hartzogs
friends, including former
UNC dancer and Hartzogs
best friend, Yasamin Sanii.
Im pretty picky usually for
my friends, but hes been very
good to her, and hes so fun to
be around, she said.

Hartzog has also become


close with Paiges teammates.
(Taylor) and Brice are
really good friends. Every
time Brice sees her, hell walk
over to her and pick her up
because shes small. Hell
mess with her, like how I do,
Paige said. Her and Theo are
close. Sometimes it feels like
shes part of the team. Shell
joke around with the guys,
like shes part of the team.
And while she messes with
his teammates, her favorite
person to mess with is Paige.
She pulls up his old high school
interviews, and he plays videos
of her as a tap dancer.
Im always trying to innovate and find a new way to
drive him crazy, so the YouTube
videos of him especially of
him in high school feel free
to go Google, she said.
Paige said theres two ways
to drive her crazy. The first: if
he says hes on his way when
hes not. The second is serious.
Her first name is actually
Kimberly. If I ever want to
get on her nerves, Ill call her
Kimberly, or call her Kim, he
said, laughing. That usually
results in her attacking me.
Despite the jokes, Paige said
hes proud of Hartzog and the
team and thinks they deserve
more recognition.
Its important for people
to realize how hard they work.
They train just like the sports
teams do. They get up and do
6 a.m. workouts twice a week.
They practice almost as much
as we do. They need to be a little more appreciated, he said.
And while Paige might be
the king of threes, Hartzog is
the queen of turns, meaning

she can skillfully pirouette,


twirling multiple times while
balancing on one foot.
Shes our Turning Queen.
She could do an endless
amount and make it look easy.
Shes so good at it, Sanii said.
Hartzog said though only
some strangers recognize her,
classmates tell her she looks
familiar.
Usually well come back to
class, and somebody will be
like, I saw you at the football
game I waved to you!
For now, the Beyonc of
UNC chooses to spend her
nights with her Jay-Z, getting
YoPo and watching movies.
He introduces her to popular
films she hasnt seen, like The
Shawshank Redemption,
Pulp Fiction and Paiges
favorites both Ace Ventura
movies and nearly all of the
Star Wars films.
Were like an old married
couple, Paige said.
Reflecting back on her time
at UNC, Hartzog said one
moment still gives her chills:
the Louisville game last year.
It came down to a last-second shot, and Im up there in
the stands panicking, thinking, I really think Marcus is
going to take this shot, and I
really hope he makes it.
Hartzog said itd either be
the greatest or worst moment
ever. It was the greatest; Paige
hit the game-winning layup.
He just stopped and made
this face, like, I did it.
I thought, Im doing the
thing that I love, and youre
doing the thing you love
simultaneously.
@ryanschocket
arts@dailytarheel.com

The Daily Tar Heel

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

Its a political stunt


to try and change
the topic around
(House Bill 2).
Graig Meyer
North Carolina representative

positive approach toward


teacher recruitment and
retention.
Whether this will be the
main attraction or will help to
reverse that tide, I think its
anybodys guess right now,
Bitzer said.
Earlier this year, N.C.
House Speaker Tim Moore,
R-Cleveland, said he anticipated a 2 percent average salary increase for teachers less
than the 5 percent proposal.
These discrepancies are
typical, Bitzer said.
When you have separate
branches of government having to share power over a
state budget, this is where the
lines get drawn, he said. And
ultimately they will come to a
compromise and a resolution,
but this is all part of the game
of politics.
But Meyer said given the
lack of coordination with
General Assembly leaders,
McCrorys proposal will not
benefit teachers.
(The legislature is) not
interested in doing anything
we really need to do like
bringing teachers salaries up
to the national average, he
said. I believe that the publics patience with this legislature is going to wear thin.
@kentomcdonald
state@dailytarheel.com

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Help Wanted

Want to earn extra


money for the summer!
We have full time and part time positions
available helping individuals with intellectual
and developmental disabilities.
Various shifts available 1st, 2nd and 3rd.
Entry-level pay starting up to $11 per hour.
Visit us at jobs.rsi-nc.org!

AFTERSCHOOL CARE person needed for 2 boys


in Chapel Hill. Weekdays 3-5:30pm. General
supervision, driving to afterschool activities.
Contact Kate at czechkate1@gmail.com

Child Care Wanted


SUMMER CHILD CARE. for super 6 and 8 yearolds. Wednesdays 8-9am and Th/F 8-9am and
5-6pm. Car required. $20/hr. for each ride.
Opportunities for additional afternoon and evening hours. arin.isenstein@gmail.com.

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.

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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: 1-800669-9777.
MILL CREEK 4 BED, 4 BATH AUGUST. $1,790/
mo. Best Mill Creek rent. Newest apartment. Wood floors. Granite countertops.
No nasty carpet. Parking. Fresh paint. jmarber@yahoo.com, 404-964-5564.

RECYCLE ME PLEASE!

Help Wanted

For Rent

Help Wanted

205-C SUNRISE LANE. 2,000 square feet.


4BR/2BA condo close to UNC campus. $1,600/
mo. Includes utilities (power, water, natural
gas). W/D provided. Available 8-1-2016, on a
year to year rental agreement. Call 336-7983570, or text 336-491-5388.

BULL CITY GYMNASTICS of Durham is looking


for a full-time camp director, instructor. The
director manages camp registration processes,
schedules and manages staff, and updates and
distributes weekly camp lessons and rotation
schedules, communicates with parents and
oversees the resolution of camp issues. Preferred candidates will have knowledge of safe
execution of simple gymnastics skills and use
of equipment, ability to communicate in a calm
and mature manner with parents, children and
staff, ability to modify gymnastics activities
and games to a variety of themes appropriate
for campers age and/or motor skills. Compensation: Benefits include 2 weeks annual
PTO and a health insurance stipend. Salary
commensurate with experience. Please submit
cover letter with resume to hr@bullcitygymnastics.com.

REMODLED 3BR/2BA HOUSE with huge desk.


15 minute walk to campus. Located at the end
of Cameron Avenue. $1,650/mo. 919-2192891.
PRIVATE CONDO. Finley Forest 3BR/2.5BA,
great spot. Deck, balcony, fireplace, bookshelves, washer/dryer, storage, swim, tennis.
On busline. Walk to stores and food. Near
Friday Center, golf, trails, UNC, I-40, mall.
Available June 1. $1,300/mo. Pets negotiable.
919-516-7888.
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES: Now
showing and leasing properties for 2016/17
school year. Walk to campus, 1BR-6BR
available. Contact via merciarentals.com or
919-933-8143.

MERCIA

WALK TO UNC. BASEMENT APT $650/mo.


Furnished, utilities included, except internet,
phone. Lease, references required. Please include personal and UNC affiliation information.
aptinhome@gmail.com.
TREETOP FURNISHED STUDIO. Quiet scholar
$675/mo with $1,000 deposit. Furnish, includes utilities. 05/1/15 to 1215/16. 2 miles
medical center. woodburnwalk@gmail.com.

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

PHOTO SPECIALTIES HAS multiple openings for


office work from approximately May 5th-27th.
We offer a casual working environment just
minutes from the UNC campus. The amount of
hours that you could work are flexible, ranging from 20-50 hrs/wk. Work around summer
school or another job or pile up the hours and
take the rest of the summer off. The choice is
yours! Pay is $9.50/hr. Please call Joel at 919967-9576 or email info@photospecialties.com.
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.

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.

LOST & FOUND ADS RUN


FREE IN DTH CLASSIFIEDS!

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.

Large 1-2 BR Condos


Washer/Dryers
$625-$850/month
Compare to dorm prices!
www.chapelhillrentals.com

919-933-5296
Services

STARPOINT
STORAGE
NEED STORAGE SPACE?

Safe, Secure, Climate Controlled


Hwy 15-501 South & Smith Level Road

(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.

Did You Know


You can now place your
DTH classified online at
www.dailytarheel.com
Click on Classifieds

ITS EASY!

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 an 8 Your mind is full of
ways to make money. Compare prices
before spending. Get several bids
before signing contracts. Your past
work reflects you well. Stir up the cash
flow. Pay it forward.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is an 8 Update accounts and
review budgets over the next two days.
Strategize and prioritize with your partner. Get terms in writing. Find creative
ways to cut costs and grow income for
peace of mind.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)


Today is an 8 Take time for yourself
over the next few days. Get out in
nature. Create a spa experience at
home. Enjoy soothing rituals. Find the
heart in what youre creating, and talk
about that.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)


Today is a 7 Brainstorming sessions
produce profitable plans over the next
few days. Favor practical solutions.
Collaborative efforts go further than
those of lone rangers. Work out the goal
and the message. Compromise. Tap into
hidden assets.

Gemini (May 21-June 20)


Today is a 5 Notice your dreams over
the next few days. True your course
toward inner satisfaction. List what you
want to be, do, have, and contribute
... or at least consider. Friends have
your back.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 6 Set long-range goals.
Your friends are your inspiration. Think
about whats next. Group input helps
today and tomorrow. Clean up a mess
together. Share music and delicious
flavors.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)


Today is a 7 Romance is a growing
possibility. Theres more time for love
over the next few days. Relax and play
with friends and family. Get out and try
new flavors and diversions.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)


Today is an 8 A challenge presents
itself, for a professional prize. Push
ahead for career goals over the next
two days. Bounce ideas around
with someone clever. Outsmart the
competition.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)


Today is a 5 Domestic pleasures draw
you in today and tomorrow. Prepare the
place for an upcoming gathering. Clear
out clutter. Get family involved in a
household project. Conserve resources by
cooking at home.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)


Today is a 7 Expand your perspective
today and tomorrow. Schedule upcoming explorations. Mistakes are part of
the learning process. Consult experts,
and discuss plans with loved ones.
Discover hidden answers.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)


Today is an 8 Creative work sparkles
with energy. Take notes and draw
pictures. Youre especially brilliant
today and tomorrow, and you retain
information well. Study, write and share
your view.

(c) 2016 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

Sundays at 10:30am

Creekside Elementary

5321 Ephesus Church


Rd,Durham, NC 27707
allgather.org

919.797.2884

EPISCOPAL CAMPUS MINISTRY


Join us for dinner & fellowship!
Tuesdays at 5:30 p.m.

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

A Parish in the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina

Student Chaplain - The Rev.Tambria Lee


(tlee@thechapelofthecross.org)

304 E. Franklin St. Chapel Hill, NC


(919)929-2193 | www.thechapelofthecross.org

Sundays 10:00 and 11:45


The Varsity Theatre

Religious Directory
Presbyterian
Campus
Ministry

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)


Today is an 8 Get down to the actual
work for the next two days. Deepen your
understanding. Use what youve learned.
Evolve your methods and practices.
Establishing an efficient routine now
saves money later.

a new church with a


mission: to love Chapel Hill
with the Heart of Jesus

lovechapelhill.com

dailytarheel.com

The Daily Tar Heel

Friday, April 8, 2016

SportsFriday

SCHEDULE

BASEBALL: UNC vs. Virginia Tech, 7 p.m.


Friday
WOMENS LACROSSE: UNC vs. Louisville,
noon Saturday
FOLLOW US ON TWITTER @DTHSports

UNC defense moves beyond simplicity


The Tar Heels
prepare for year two
under Gene Chizik.
By Logan Ulrich
Assistant Sports Editor

North Carolinas defense


did a lot of good things in
2015. Under first-year defensive coordinator Gene Chizik,
the Tar Heels allowed 15
fewer points per game than
the year before. They finished
as a top-20 pass defense and
won 11 games and a spot in
the ACC Championship.
But two losses one to
Clemson in the ACC title game
and another to Baylor in the
Russell Athletic Bowl ended
the season on a sour note.
Now the attitude at spring
practices is undeniably dif-

ferent for UNC than a year


ago. The bar has been raised.
A second year in Chiziks
scheme brings added familiarity, but added expectations.
We did a great job last year
winning 11 games, said redshirt junior defensive tackle
Nazair Jones. But we got bigger heights to reach next year.
The Tar Heels will try to
reach those heights without
linebackers Shakeel Rashad
and Jeff Schoettmer. The
senior duo accounted for
almost half of UNCs tackles
and played a huge leadership role on the team. Junior
Cayson Collins and sophomore Andre Smith will be
looked to as the next men up.
I dont know that were
going to have the leadership
from that group that we did
last year because of the two
guys weve lost, but weve got

some really athletic guys that


can run, Coach Larry Fedora
said.
Jones and senior cornerback Des Lawrence have
taken it upon themselves
to step into the leadership
void. Theyre at a slight disadvantage because neither
of them play linebacker like
Schoettmer and Rashad did,
but Lawrence has a loud
enough personality that it
might not matter.
Im just trying to put
myself in a position where
everybody knows that Im
going to come work every day
and that they can rely on me,
he said.
After installing only two
calls at this point a year ago,
UNC has worked on layering
complexity into its defense
this spring. Chiziks defense
was praised for its simplicity

compared to what his predecessor ran, and much of the


reason the defense played
better was players thought
less and reacted more.
That simplicity hurt UNC
against the higher-powered
offenses of Clemson and
Baylor, though, which shredded the Tar Heels at the end
of the year.
Now that we know the
basics, now its time to do the
extra stuff, Jones said. Now
its time to do the same thing
and make it look different, or
to do something different and
make it look the same. Were
just trying to make it more
difficult for offenses to figure
out what were doing.
Its been 102 days since
UNCs season ended, and its
still 149 days until the Tar
Heels season opener against
Georgia on Sept. 3. The team

DTH/KASIA JORDAN
Myles Wolfolk (11) faces off during spring practice Thursday
afternoon. The team will kick off their next season on Sept. 3.

will find out a lot about itself


in between now and then.
But the defense already
knows what it has to do.
Weve got to finish in
those big games, Jones said.

We cant lose to Clemson, we


cant lose to Baylor.
We just got to dominate
no matter if they score.
@loganulrich
sports@dailytarheel.com

Johnson, Paige look to nd spot at next level


With their college basketball careers now over, seniors
Marcus Paige and Brice
Johnson will look to catch the
eye of pro scouts before the
NBA Draft.
UNC first-years, sophomores or juniors, like Justin
Jackson and Kennedy Meeks,
have until April 24 to enter
the draft. As of now, Johnson
and Paige are the only Tar
Heels who are expected to
move on to an NBA career.
Both players will likely
participate in the NBA Draft
Combine starting on May 11
in Chicago before the draft is
held on June 23 at the Barclays
Center in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Here are where the experts
think Paige and Johnson
will land. While both players

Marcus Paige
2015-16 stats:
12.6 PPG
2.5 RPG
3.8 APG

found success at the college


level, their draft projections
vary greatly.

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

Coming off one of the


best seasons in the history of
North Carolina basketball,
Johnson has seen his draft
stock rise significantly.
The 6-foot-10 forward, who
was mostly projected as a second round pick a season ago, is
now projected by most media
outlets to be a first round selection in June after earning firstteam All-America honors in his
senior season.
On his latest Big Board,
ESPNs Chad Ford lists
Johnson as the No. 28 overall
prospect in this years draft.

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

No. 22 overall pick, going to


the Philadelphia 76ers. The
76ers received the pick from
the Miami Heat.
As of April 1, Sports
Illustrated lists the forward as
the No. 27 player taken in the
draft. The 76ers also own this
pick, which they acquired from
the Oklahoma City Thunder
via the Cleveland Cavaliers and
the Denver Nuggets.
DraftExpress.com, as of
Wednesday, has Johnson
going to the Los Angeles
Lakers as the second pick of
the second round of the draft.
Compiled by Pat James
and Jeremy Vernon

Summer Positions Available at the Chapel Hill Tennis Club!


www.chapelhilltennisclub.com

Interested Lifeguards contact chamby147@aol.com


Interested Pro Shop Attendants contact zsteffen-chtc@ncrrbiz.com
Bus stop makeovers

Win Gift Cards to


Local Restaurants
and Stores!

The Chapel Hill Town


Council plans to make bus
stops more accessible. See
pg. 5 for story.

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

Author spoke at Union


Greg Lukianoff spoke at
the Student Union on the
freedom of speech at universities. See pg. 3 for story.

Poverty to success
Student Joseph Han has
made a place for himself in
the beauty supply industry
See pg. 5 for story.

More gender services


The Board of Trustees
requested $50,000 for a new
coordinator at the Carolina
Womens Center. See page 1.

Nothing finer
than a summer at Carolina!
Check out summer.unc.edu

Tell us why you love


your DTH!
Post it to Twitter,
Instagram or Facebook.
Submit now and as
many times as you can by April 8th!

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


Across
1 Walks, on scorecards
4 Rehab hurdle
7 Calm
13 Well, __-di-dah!
14 Deli choice
15 Ducks home
16 Some Anne Rice novels
18 Dupes
19 *Assist Charles M.
Schulz?
21 Completely
22 Wapiti
23 ID checker
24 __ any drop to drink:
Coleridge
26 Surface
32 *Free ticket given to
Target Field players?
35 Burn soothers
38 Modern reaction to a
riot?
39 Group of species
40 *Timepiece at a stag
party?
43 Important
Philippines
export
44 Bros, e.g.
45 Fraction of
a joule
48 Not allow to
atrophy
50 My
vegetable
love should
grow / __
than empires
... : Andrew
Marvell
53 *Law office?
58 Option play

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,

(C)2012 Tribune Media


Services, Inc.
All rights reserved.

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

Friday, April 8, 2016

Established 1893, 123 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

The Wandering Womanist

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

NClaw441, on the story about an anti-abortion group on campus

Junior geography and linguistics


major from Baltimore, Md.
Email: Jalynnh@gmail.com

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

Building
the
Black
interior

Come support kids at


upcoming event

NEXT

You dont have to be 22 to get into the real


world. Start early. It doesnt matter how old
you are if they see the promise you can bring.

The headline was about the anti-abortion


group and yet the photograph was of the
counter-protest. Really?

Jalynn Harris

Its Nothing Personal


Chiraayu Gosrani examines
race and other issues critically.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

Joseph Han, on succeeding at any point in ones life

EDITORIAL CARTOON By Drew Sheneman, The Star-Ledger

ainstream conceptions of Blackness


are stuck on categorizing what and who is
real what legitimate Black
is and aint. The exterior performed self is in contest with
snapbacks, Black vernacular,
baggy pants and the stuff reality shows and music videos are
made of. Lack of realness is
checked on elementary recess
courts, labeled not Black
enough or youre not Black
like the other ones.
But this begs the question,
if the anti-Black mainstream
is obsessed with constructing
images of real Blackness, what
is possible in the Black surreal?
Elizabeth Alexanders The
Black Interior poses this
question. The Black interior is
both a literal space of living
aunties plastic-covered living
room love seat and metaphorical spaces of building
the talisman we wrap our
hair with, the homies we Pit sit
with, the beats we make late at
night. It is in this unconscious
dream space that we become,
we create, we are real.
Alexander says, we are too
often prisoners of the real,
trapped in fantasies of Negro
authenticity that dictate the
only way we truly exist for a
mainstream audience is in
their fantasies of our authentic-ness
As diasporic bodies reduced
to flesh, with complexity mutated to fixed points, orphanhood
statelessness, dispossession,
displacement are native to
our being. As orphans, we cling
to the biological and largely
non-biological families we create. We understand the family
a kind of Black interior to
be the first unit of knowledge
production and self-imagining.
But mainstream imaginary
erases native senses of knowing, feeling and imagining.
Building a Black interior
is working toward a self that
understands that all the tools
and resources necessary to
reclaim, create, become and
imagine are already within us.
Not the constructed propagandized real pre-determined to
stunt your imagination, but the
inherently disruptive dreams of
an orphan who has nothing but
the things they create.
Black creatives from Octavia
Butler to Nina Simone have
been urging us to not just work
toward a better tomorrow, but
to begin living in the future,
as if our freedom has already
come. This is the language of
revolution existing outside
a social imaginary sustained in
our opposition.
Ntozake Shange, the author
of For Colored Girls Who
Have Considered Suicide
When the Rainbow is Enuf
(of which an upcoming interpretation is occurring at
Bingham 203 April 15th and
16th at 6 p.m.), wrote:
As black people we exist
metaphorically and literally as
the underside, the underclass.
We are the unconscious of the
entire Western world. If this
is in fact true, then where do
we go? Where are our dreams?
Where is our pain? Where do
we heal?
We heal in the surreal. In
the understanding that Black
is imaginary; that is whats
real. We heal in our oceanselves, underwater, in outer
space, in the celestial energies
we share and the worlds we
create.

The Daily Tar Heel

EDITORIAL

Fight not ight


Outside institutions
should engage to
fight HB2.

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-

lating the entire state.


Withdrawing cultural,
political and economic
exchanges with North
Carolina, besides providing momentary blips of
news stories, seems to do
little to improve the lives
of LGBT folks in the state.
First of all, it reduces
North Carolinians to a
monolithic caricature of
backward bigots who dont
deserve to be in conversation with the rest of the
country. Withholding
jobs, political contacts and
theater productions seems
unlikely to convince the
hard-liners who control
North Carolinas mechanisms of state power to
reconsider their positions.
Indeed, Republican
leaders have doubled
down. House Speaker
Tim Moore and Senate
President Pro Tempore
Phil Berger have doubled
down on the bill and
absurdly blamed the loss
of the PayPal office on
Charlotte Mayor Jennifer
Roberts and the far-left
Political Correctness Mob.
Ironically, PayPals decision seems as if it will hurt
the people of Charlotte,
which passed the progressive ordinance that
sparked the whole controversy, more than it may the
legislators who overturned
the original ordinance.
We appreciate the interest and solidarity from

those outside of North


Carolina. Your opposition
to House Bill 2 is welcomed. But we must make
sure our opposition to the
bill is smartly targeted and
self-critical.
It may be that PayPals
withdrawal may help the
fight. But we wonder if
it wouldnt help North
Carolinas LGBT population more if PayPal executives instead held fundraisers for challengers to
legislators who supported
the law.
Emanuel, instead of
threatening to poach our
business, why not publicly
endorse and campaign for
Roy Cooper or North
Carolina state legislators
in opposition to the law?
Stephen Schwartz, why
not write a satirical song
against House Bill 2 and
similar pieces of legislation popping up across the
country rather than depriving all North Carolinians
the opportunity to see your
popular musicals?
Furthermore, folks from
other states cutting ties
with North Carolinians
only encourages the states
young, progressive-minded folks with employment
options to jump ship,
perhaps dooming North
Carolina to a future of
regression.
A strong fight against
bigotry requires engagement, not withdrawal.

EDITORIAL

Lets take a quiz


Quote tests and
final papers impede
class engagement.

ets begin with a


test. Below are four
quotes. Choose to
answer all four. For each,
recall the exact editorial
these quotes are from.
Additionally, include the
actual author and write a
brief paragraph about the
significance of each. Go.
1) And if so, how do we
change this system?
2) Campus Y
3) ...even a less popular
one
4) A cappella
If you thought such a
test would be impossible
to accomplish, even for
our most devout reader of
The Daily Tar Heel (Hi,
Mom!), youd be right.
Student input has consistently pointed out the flaw
with quote tests and oneand-done paper classes.
When we refer to one-anddone, were not thinking of
the University of Kentuckys
basketball team, but rather
classes with one heavily
weighted paper submitted

at the end of a semester.


Both assessments are popular not only in middle and
high school language arts
classes, but unfortunately
as well within university English departments,
including at UNC.
Yet for years these examinations have persisted to
come around like a childhood bully who is hired
to a senior management
position at the same
company that refuses
to promote you. Were just
saying its less than ideal.
According to Blooms
Taxonomy, the quote test
meets the lowest level of
questions (but the highest
level of Dantes Inferno).
Bloom designed this classification system with
six levels, hierarchically
arranged from the least to
most complex. It seems
counterintuitive that a
student newspaper would
call for more complexity on
their exams; however, lets
consider why this matters.
Complexity welcomes
discourse in a way that
is productive versus the
quote exam, which stifles
dialogue and prioritizes one

particular type of student


over critical thinking and
full engagement. One-anddone essays can have the
same effect when professors refuse to provide useful
feedback and deny students
the option of resubmission.
As a student paper,
we are committed to
principles of free speech,
discussion and criticalthinking, and we encourage our peers and professors to practice these ideals
inside their classrooms.
Eradicating the quote test
or the one-and-done paper
is imperative. Eliminating
the quote test takes
thoughtful preparation on
the part of the educator
but is pertinent for a genuine culture of learning.
One example for papers
is to include a peer-review
process. This can easily
provide feedback and promote a dialogue without
adding to the workload of
teachers and professors.
Centering teachers
in the classroom comes
across as prescriptive,
whereas centering students creates a world of
possibility.

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.

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