The Daily Tar Heel For August 19, 2013

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Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

Yeah, they keep sayin whale, but my name Wale


Wale, Chillin
Monday, August 19, 2013 dailytarheel.com Volume 121, Issue 53
Gender-neutral no more
Budget
cuts still
piling up
Wale to headline Homecoming
Courtesy of New uNIversal eNtertaINmeNt ageNCy, New york
Wale (left) and Ace Hood (right) were selected to perform at UNCs homecom-
ing this fall. Wale released his third studio album The Gifted in June.
By Sarah Brown
Assistant State & National Editor
Long before the N.C. General Assembly
finalized a new state budget last month,
higher education leaders knew two more
years of tight finances would be on the
horizon.
The UNC system has seen nearly half a
billion dollars erased from its state funding
since 2011, including about $65 million in
fresh cuts in the 2013-14 budget.
Charlie Perusse, the UNC systems chief
operating officer, said chancellors were
warned months ago to prepare for a cut of 3
to 5 percent but the implications of a fifth-
straight year of budget cuts remain to be seen.
Smaller schools like Elizabeth City State
University, which will see its $35 million
budget slashed by nearly 10 percent, could
feel the brunt of the burden, Perusse said.
UNC-CH will take a 5.5 percent cut
of $28 million including a $15 million
reduction for the UNC School of Medicine.
UNC-CH took a pretty big percentage,
but they ll be able to manage, Perusse said.
For a little school like Elizabeth City State,
10 percent is tough.
Jim Dean, UNC-CH executive vice chan-
cellor and provost, said the lack of finances
to support faculty is one of his chief con-
cerns. The budget did not include raises for
UNC-system employees.
In the last year, weve lost more faculty
than weve been able to keep, Dean said.
System leaders have said they dont want
to shift more financial pressure onto stu-
dents President Tom Ross announced
earlier this month hed recommend a
tuition freeze for in-state students next year
after a decade of increases.
But the budget included a tuition hike in
Another year of cuts will slash
$65 million from UNC system.
By Josephine Yurcaba
Arts Editor
The Carolina Union Activities
Board officially announced Sunday
that rap artist Wale will be perform-
ing at the fall 2013 Homecoming
Concert with Ace Hood opening.
Lauren Sacks, adviser to CUAB
and assistant director of student
learning, said the committee chose
the performer after the most expan-
sive student input polls it has ever
completed. CUAB used Facebook,
Twitter and large white boards with
markers attached in the first and
second floors of the Union asking
students who they wanted to see for
Homecoming to generate student
feedback.
Its a tricky spot because the art-
ists who garner the most support
might be Beyonce, but Beyonce does
cost half a million dollars, so we try
to garner as much information from
students as we can without setting
unreasonable expectations, Sacks
said.
Sacks said CUAB took a tally of
the votes accrued by each popular
artist, and then decided if the artist
would be feasible for Homecoming.
She said though the performers for
this and last years concerts were
both rap or hip-hop artists, that the
decision was not purposefully made
by the board.
Two things influenced the choice
of the artists: One was based on
student feedback so a lot of the
artists that we heard about were in
the hip-hop and rap genre. Secondly,
it happens that artists in that genre
are within budgetary feasibility,
Sacks said.
Khalani James, special events
coordinator for CUAB, agreed that
student feedback was critical to
planning this years concert. He
said the board was also considering
Macklemore, A$AP Rocky, Big Sean,
Childish Gambino, The Lumineers
and Avicii.
He said CUAB sent offers to
Macklemore and Wale, but the
former performer was unavailable.
The other performers they were con-
sidering were either out of CUABs
budget, or they were already booked
for other events. So overall, James
said he is very happy with CUABs
choice.
I think that the fact that hes
from a nearby area thats promi-
nently represented at UNC the
Ace Hood will be the
opener in the Nov. 2
Homecoming concert.
By Amanda Albright
and Lucinda Shen
Senior Writers
Senior Kevin Claybren has spent two years
advocating for gender-neutral housing at
UNC-CH.
Last fall, his goal was finally realized when
the UNC Board of Trustees unanimously
approved a gender-neutral pilot program
with spaces for 32 students.
But on Aug. 9, the UNC Board of Governors
overturned the housing option for all 17 UNC-
system schools, before the plan ever took off.
Its sad because the UNC Board of Trustees
saw all the work that was done, all the pre-
sentations, and had an opportunity to hear
from students, Claybren said. If youre on the
BOG, you havent heard what students want
and the reality.
The four UNC-CH students who planned
to live in gender-neutral housing have now
been placed in on-campus or off-campus
housing, said Larry Hicks, director of hous-
ing and residential education.
Housing also worked to ensure the students
would still have a safe place to live, said Terri
Phoenix, director of UNCs LGBTQ Center.
Claybren said he planned to live in gender-
neutral housing.
Having the decision made two weeks
before school limited my options and I
couldnt look at off-campus options, he said.
In November, 2,807 UNC-CH students
signed a petition in favor of gender-neutral
housing. Other UNC-system schools, including
UNC-Asheville and UNC-Charlotte, also con-
sidered the option.
But this isnt the first time the program has
come under fire statewide.
Before the boards decision, an N.C. Senate
bill in April sought to ban gender-neutral hous-
ing at UNC-system schools, and legislators
discussed a provision in an N.C. Senate budget
proposal to eliminate UNC-CHs program.
The housing debate formed amid concerns
that gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender
students are bullied in residence halls.
But board members say that taxpayer dol-
lars can be spent to make all students feel
safe on campus through other methods.
The board believes there are more practical
ways to achieve that goal than assigning young
men and women to the same campus suite,
said Peter Hans, chairman of the board.
Hans said campuses could instead create
outreach programs for LGBT students.
Leading up to the vote, board members
also said that the program could distract
from academic issues.
Tami Fitzgerald, executive director of the
North Carolina Values Coalition, said in a let-
ter to the board that a gender-neutral hous-
ing program could increase sexual assault
Students re-housed in wake of programs demise
Sexual Assault
Task Force
continues work
D.C., Maryland, Virginia area the
fact that hes from that area and also
the fact that he has an album that
just released this summer help to
make this an exciting homecoming,
James said.
James said because the
Homecoming concert is about what
pleases the UNC student population,
he believes Wale is the best musician
for this years show.
When Mathews made the
HomeComiNg 2013
Student tickets for the
Homecoming concert will be
available at the Student Union box
office and online:
The show will be Nov. 2 at 8 p.m.
in Carmichael Arena.
By Andy Willard
Assistant University Editor
The Universitys Sexual Assault
Task Force will continue rewrites
of the Honor Code this fall
despite its original goal to have
recommendations ready by the
time students returned to school.
The 21-member committee
was commissioned by former
Chancellor Holden Thorp to exam-
ine the section of the Honor Code
dealing with student-on-student
complaints of sexual violence.
His actions came after a fed-
eral complaint was filed with the
Department of Education claiming
the University underreported cases
of sexual assault.
In June, Christi Hurt , interim
Title IX coordinator and chairwom-
an of the task force, said the group
hoped to deliver its recommenda-
tions to Chancellor Carol Folt by the
beginning of the semester.
But Hurt said they were unable
to finish the recommendations
because members were adamant
that they wanted to completely
rewrite the section of the Honor
Code that addresses sexual assault.
The group was very clear that
they wanted to create something
that was UNC-specific, she said.
The group will meet on Aug. 26,
but Hurt said there is no set sched-
ule for future meetings after that.
She said the task force has
already clarified the language of
the policy and rewritten the section
on the process of how a complaint
is filed. Now members are looking
at who should sit on the panel to
judge those cases, Hurt said.
Thats the lions share of our
work, Hurt said.
UNC moved sexual assault out
of the jurisdiction of the Honor
Court effective Aug. 1, 2012 to
comply with federal mandates.
Deputy Title IX Coordinator Ew
Quimbaya-Winship, a member of
the task force, led discussions about
the current system this summer.
He said he was surprised at the
groups commitment to sharing the
information they learned with the
community.
Theres been a full vetting of the
concerns and issues, Quimbaya-
Winship said. Were working
really hard to get it right.
Sarah-Kathryn Bryan, an
undergraduate student serving
on the task force, said she would
initiate conversation by answering
students questions about sexual
violence around campus.
She said members were
The group had planned
to present concrete
policy ideas by August.
see geNder NeUTrAl, Page 7
see NC BUdgeT, Page 7
see sexUAl AssAUlT, Page 7 see HomeComiNg, Page 7
dth Photo IllustratIoN/ChrIs CoNway
FallFest returned to South Road after
being rained out last year. See more
photos and video at dailytarheel.com.
dth/ChrIs CoNway
today
Busing Your Way Around
Campus: Learn to navigate your
way around campus and the
town with the aid of Chapel Hill
Transit buses and Zipcars.
Time: 10:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.
Location: Student Union 3206
New Student Ice Cream Social:
Freshmen and transfer students
are invited to cool of with a
sweet treat and meet fellow
newcomers courtesy of the
General Alumni Association.
Time: 3 p.m. - 4 p.m.
Location: Rams Head Plaza
Student Government Open
House: Get to know Student
Body President Christy Lambden
and the faces behind his admin-
istration, Student Congress and
the Honor System.
Time: 3 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Location: Student Union 2501
Dance at UNC:
Learn about UNCs dance groups
and the new dance minor.
Time: 5 p.m. - 6 p.m.
Location: Murphey 116
Sunset Serenade: Enjoy perfor-
mances by some of UNCs best
a cappella groups including the
Clef Hangers, Loreleis, Achor-
dants, Cadence, Harmonyx and
Tar Heel Voices.
Time: 7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.
Location: Polk Place
tuesday
Tour The Daily Tar Heel: Come
tour our ofce to get a behind-
the-scenes look at what it takes
to put out the paper each day.
Time: 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Location: 151 E. Rosemary St.
NOTED. If only someone couldve sued
Robin Thicke, Pharrell and T.I. before
the release of Blurred Lines, so the radio
wouldnt play it every four minutes.
But alas, the artists are pre-emptively
suing Marvin Gayes children over a
threatened lawsuit regarding copyright of
the song which pays homage to Gaye.
QUOTED. All the letters in finer not
in jeans is (an anagram) for Jennifer
Aniston. Its like a premonition for your
role.
Chris Stark, a BBC Radio 1 personal-
ity, to Jennifer Aniston in another cringe-
worthy interview after a viral encounter
with Mila Kunis.
T
he answer to a larger postgrad paycheck may not be that sec-
ond major or an additional resume-building extracurricular,
but instead just more sex, apparently. A recent study out of
the carnal-loving country of Germany (another survey has
shown Germans have more satisfying sex something has got to be in
their bratwurst) found that people who do the dirty more than four times
a week nab a 3.2-percent higher paycheck than those who have sex once
a week. So, if the only action you get is from the phone vibrating in your
back pocket, what does that mean for your salary-earning potential? Just
asking for a friend here. Lesson to be learned: If you havent seen much
action recently, youre screwed except not literally. Sorry about that.
Overtime under the sheets
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
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.
CoMMuNIty CaLeNdaR
Memorial Hall Open House:
Catch a glimpse at what goes on
behind the curtain at shows put
on by Carolina Performing Arts.
Enjoy light refreshments while
learning how to get involved.
Time: 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.
Location: Memorial Hall
Yoga in the Galleries: Take a
break from a busy frst day of
classes by exploring the practice
of yoga in one of Ackland Art
Museums galleries. Free for
members, $5 for nonmembers.
Time: Noon - 1 p.m.
Location: Ackland Art Museum
PoLICe LoG
News Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2
BuBBa Moves IN
B
ubba Cunningham, UNC athletic director,
helped students move into Craige Residence
Hall on Saturday. This was his first year vol-
unteering at UNC for move-in help. More than 400
people volunteered to help move people on campus.
DTH/KaTie Williams
CoRReCtIoNs
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 Cammie Bellamy at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893
120 years of editorial freedom
The Daily Tar Heel
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VISUaL ManagIng EDITOR
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UnIVERSITY EDITOR
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jENNY SUrANE
CITY EDITOR
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MADElINE WIll
STaTE & naTIOnaL EDITOR
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BrOOkE prYOr
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jOSEpHINE YUrCABA
aRTS EDITOR
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AllISON HUSSEY
DIVERSIOnS EDITOR
Diversions@DailyTarHeel.com
rACHEl HOlT
DESIgn & gRaPHICS EDITOR
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PHOTO EDITOR
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Someone broke into a
residence at 107 Cobble Ridge
Drive between 3:30 a.m. and
3:35 a.m. Tuesday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person damaged a
window lock, valued at $10,
reports state.
Someone broke into a res-
idence at 104 Oosting Drive
between 7:15 a.m. and 3:49
p.m. Tuesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person broke into
the interior garage and stole
items valued at $11,450. The
items stolen included $350 in
cash, seven necklaces valued
at $1,000 each, one hoop ear-
ring valued at $1,000, pearl
earrings valued at $2,000
and a jewelry box valued at
$100, reports state.
Someone damaged prop-
erty at 101 Cynthia Drive
between 8:30 p.m. Tuesday
and 7 a.m. Wednesday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person damaged a
mailbox post valued at $75
and wood for a flower bed
valued at $20, reports state.
Someone broke into a
residence at 117 Forsyth Drive
between 6:45 p.m. and 7 p.m.
Tuesday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
The person broke into
the residence through an
unlocked door and stole
electronics valued at $2,500,
including an Xbox 360 valued
at $350 and a Mac Airbook
valued at $1000, reports
state.
Someone damaged
property at 102 Newell St.
between midnight and 6:10
a.m. Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person used ketchup
to draw pictures of genitalia
on a sidewalk. Damage to the
sidewalk was valued at $2,
reports state.
News Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3
Arts
The Daily Tar Heels Arts Desk calls for UNC
students fiction submissions for blog posts
Call to fiction writers: The Arts Desk is looking for
UNC students writing any kind of fiction to submit
content biweekly to be published on the papers blog.
The desk editors will choose the best pieces to be
featured on the Arts blog, Canvas.
Were looking for creative work that is no longer
than 800 words. This can include short stories, rap,
poetry and any other type of creative and fictional
content.
Submissions must be typed and submitted elec-
tronically. Send submissions to the Arts Desk email:
arts@dailytarheel.com.
inBRIEF
By Sarah Chaney
Staff Writer
The University is spending
approximately $3 million on a new
Wi-Fi system that would gradually
reduce the need for ethernet cords
in campus housing by fall 2014.
The project, launched in May,
is a collaborative effort between
Information Technology Services,
the Department of Housing and
Residential Education, the Residence
Hall Association and ResNet.
My community director told
me that surveys had to be changed
from, What improvements would
you like to see in residence halls? to
What, besides Wi-Fi, would you like
to see in residence halls? said RHA
President Kendall Nicosia-Rusin ,
who lived in Cobb last year and led
the initiative.
Hinton James, Craige,
Ehringhaus, Horton, Koury, Craige
North, Hardin and Morrison resi-
dence halls are scheduled to have
Wi-Fi by Tuesday.
We had been pushing it for a
while but didnt have the money,
said Larry Hicks, director of housing
and residential education.
The choice to start with South
Campus residence halls was based
on a prioritized schedule. The high-
rise dorms were the most difficult to
install with Wi-Fi, Hicks said.
We didnt choose the low-hang-
ing fruit first, Hicks said.
Chris Kielt, vice chancellor for
information technology, said the proj-
ect will be funded by the University
Priorities and Budget Committee.
Kielt, who started his position
in July, said installing campuswide
Wi-Fi was his goal from day one.
Residence halls that require
more significant changes in wiring
and structure, including Kenan,
Alderman, McIver, Spencer, Old
East and Old West, will not have the
Wi-Fi until next year.
Kielt said Baity Hill and Ram
Village will be more challenging to
install with Wi-Fi, and it may not be
offered there until spring 2015.
The $3-million price tag for the
project is on-campus residents main
concern, Nicosia-Rusin said.
Students primarily own laptops
and dont work exclusively in one
place in their room, Nicosia-Rusin
said. They also have iPods, tablets
and other forms of technology that
dont allow for ethernet connec-
tions.
Christina Campbell , a junior
biology and psychology major, said
not having Wi-Fi in her dorm room
for two years was a burden.
It was extremely frustrating
because anytime I wanted to do
anything school-related in the room,
I had to be connected to the wall,
Campbell said.
Campbell said the organizations
at UNC took measures to minimize
the projects cost.
The school did a good job of
ensuring it wasnt wasting money
by using more ports and things than
necessary.
university@dailytarheel.com
By Summer Winkler
Staff Writer
For months, parking in the Northside neighbor-
hood has been a source of stress for landlords and
tenants. And now, it's the subject of the lawsuit.
In September, an ordinance went into effect that
set a four-car maximum for parking at homes in the
Northside neighborhood a primarily low-income
area between Columbia and Lloyd streets. The ordi-
nance was adopted by the Chapel Hill Town Council
in response to the growing student population in the
historically African-American neighborhood.
After fielding complaints from residents, Mark
Patmore and William Gartland, who both own rental
properties on Brooks Street in Northside, sued the town
of Chapel Hill in November over the ordinance.
Nicholas Herman, the attorney representing the
landlords, said the case is currently before the North
Carolina Court of Appeals.
The landlords have asked the court to declare the
regulations unlawful and void, and to forbid further
enforcement of the ordinance.
Ethan Kavanaugh, a Northside resident and UNC
senior, said after the ordinance passed, he and his
four housemates struggled to follow the guidelines
laid out by the town council.
We had space in our driveway to fit more than
four cars in our driveway we had five people with
cars in our house, he said.
It was annoying because if there were already four
cars in the driveway, we had to go find street parking
and walk back to the house.
Herman said his clients think the ordinance is
unconstitutional because it exceeds the power given
to municipalities by the state legislature.
The General Assembly has specific statutes that
give cities certain powers to regulate. One of the
powers deals with parking. That statute talks about
parking in all kinds of different contexts, but does not
allow what theyre doing, Herman explained.
If the legislature said you could do it, you could.
But Chapel Hill doesnt have the authority to do this.
Neither Gartland nor Patmore returned multiple
calls for comment.
Under the new ordinances, landlords can be
charged up to $100 a day for parking violations com-
mitted by renters.
Between September and October, Patmore and
Garland each received separate notices of parking
violations by tenants on their properties, carrying
penalties of $100 for each landlord.
Herman said the plaintiffs also feel the way the
town enforces the ordinance is unfair.
Patmore and Gartland had no idea their tenants
were in violation of the parking ordinances and nei-
ther landlord has control over whether their tenants
follow the regulations, according to the lawsuit.
We say that enforcement method of citing the
owner is unconstitutional, Herman said. How can
you hold someone to a violation when they had noth-
ing to do with violating anything?
city@dailytarheel.com
UNC will expand
wireless networking in
on-campus housing.
Northside
owners sue
over parking
Northside parkiNg
As more students moved into the Northside neighbor-
hood, the town placed parking restrictions on renters:
January 2012: The Chapel Hill Town Council passed
an ordinance prohibiting more than four cars from
parking at homes in the Northside neighborhood.
September 2012: The ordinance went into effect.
October 2012: The town penalized Northside land-
lords Mark Patmore and William Gartland after their
tenants violated the parking ordinance.
November 2012: The landlords filed a lawsuit against
the town calling the ordinance unconstitutional.
med deli is Now opeN
Time: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
Location: Lenoir Mainstreet
Info: http://www.mediterrane-
andeli.com/
a lawsuit brought by two landlords
opposes the four-car limit.
dth/chris conway
Pierce Freelon (right) raps a verse alongside James Livingston behind Motorco in Durham. The pair will teach the Emcee Lab at UNC this fall.
Med Deli returns to Lenoir Mainstreet
dth/KEVin hU
Rony Ordonez, Jose Ordonez and Enay Ordonez work to set up
Mediterranean Deli in Lenoir Mainstreet, which opens Monday.
the restaurants full
menu will be served in
the new location.
rappiNg with cLass
Music department to oer fall course on emceeing
Wi-Fi set to launch on South Campus
By Gabriella Cirelli
Staff Writer
Aspiring emcees and music culturists
alike will now have the chance to practice
and appreciate the craft in the classroom.
Music 286, called Music as Culture, or
Emcee Lab, is being offered for the first
time at UNC this fall. The idea for the
class came from music department chair-
man Mark Katz.
Katz said the inspiration for the class
came from a hypothetical Carolina Beat
Academy, a beat-focused music program
he created for a class project in an arts
entrepreneurship class he taught.
Its kind of coming true, which is
really amazing to see. Ive taught and
continue to teach a class called Beat
Making Lab, as well as DJing and a class
called Rock Lab, which is where students
come together and form bands and put on
a show at the end of the semester, Katz
said.
So one of the missing pieces was rap.
Katz asked Pierce Freelon, a music
professor at UNC, to develop the sylla-
bus for the class in the same style as the
Beat Making Lab, which Freelon already
teaches.
Emceeing, with your voice as an
instrument, hasnt been offered yet, said
Freelon, who stressed the importance of
distinguishing between emceeing and
rapping.
With an emcee, theres a lot more to it,
and a lot more than just knowing how to
rhyme words.
The class is much more than just learn-
ing how to emcee, though, Freelon said.
I hope (students) take away a sense of
the extent to which rap music and what
you hear on the radio is really just a
sliver of hip-hop culture, he said.
Emceeing is something much more
robust, and hip-hop is a lot more robust
than any genre on your iTunes playlist.
Sophomore Jeremy Kleiman, who
took the Beat Making Lab class with
Freelon over the summer, said he really
enjoyed the contemporary structure of
the course.
Its a nontraditional music class with a
focus on a more modern music form than
the more academic class composition
stuff that exists, especially with the Beat
Making Lab, he said.
James Livingston, also known as
Median, is a practicing emcee in the
Durham area. He will be co-teaching the
class with Freelon.
Basically, were teaching students how
to analytically observe hip-hop, in addi-
tion to how to practice it, Livingston said.
Hip-hop came as a response to a set
of conditions America was in at the time
in the early to mid-70s, and its some-
thing that continues throughout the
tradition as a way to give a voice to the
voiceless.
Livingston also said the course has
things to offer for all students, even those
who arent music majors.
Its about empowering yourself, he
said.
And thats something that a person
can take from the class even if theyre not
interested in being an emcee as a profes-
sional goal.
arts@dailytarheel.com
Andy Willard
Assistant University Editor
Mediterranean Deli, one of
Chapel Hills healthiest staples,
will make its return to Lenoir
Mainstreet today after a year-
long hiatus.
Jamil Kadoura, owner of
Med Deli, said they were asked
to return to campus by Carolina
Dining Services because the
Greek diet would be an alterna-
tive to the typical fast food in
the dining hall.
The quality and the health
of our food, thats why we ll
succeed, he said.
The restaurant will be taking
the area that was previously used
as the pizza station. The pizza
station will be moved to Lenoir
Mainstreets self-serve section.
Kadoura said the new loca-
tion is a great opportunity and
a better option than the space
they shared with Subway two
years ago, where they were
unable to serve their full menu.
If we want to do it, we want
to be who we are, he said. Last
time it was like a half-deli,
a quarter-deli. This time its
going to be the full thing.
The restaurant will also use
biodegradable and sustainable
materials such as wheat for
food containers, Kadoura said.
And while the new location
will be more expensive to oper-
ate, Kadoura said he believes
the restaurant will succeed.
I think we will because
weve been in Chapel Hill for
26 years were almost a
household name.
Scott Myers , director of food
and vending for CDS, said CDS
asked Med Deli to return to
Lenoir Mainstreet as part of an
effort this summer to offer a bet-
ter on-campus eating experience.
In addition to bringing back
Med Deli, CDS also redesigned
Cafe McColl in the Kenan-
Flagler Business School and the
hot bar in Lenoir Mainstreet.
Our main goal is to get
more satisfaction out of that
area, and that usually equates
to more sales, Myers said.
Med Deli will be open for
lunch Monday through Friday.
International masters stu-
dent Yifan Liu said she appre-
ciated the effort to bring an
organic option to campus.
She said she eats on campus
often, but would prefer a non-
American dining option.
All the fast food turns me
off from the restaurants
theres too much cheese.
Freshman Sarah Brooks,
a Chapel Hill native, said she
frequents the Med Deli on
Franklin Street because of the
quality of the food.
In the few days shes been on
campus, Brooks said she has
chosen healthier alternatives.
Sometimes thats why I
dont eat in (the dining halls)
I have healthier food in my
dorm, she said.
university@dailytarheel.com
Arts Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4
Q&A with the Acklands Emily Kass
This year, the Ackland Art
Museum has major plans
to get the community more
involved in its work.
Emily Kass, director of the
Ackland, spoke to Arts Editor
Josephine Yurcaba about the
fall exhibition, some sneak
peeks into spring and the dif-
ferent ways students can get
involved in the museum.
Daily Tar Heel: How is the
Ackland looking forward
from last year? What are your
goals?
Emily Kass: We have just
launched a new strategic
plan, which is probably a five-
year plan and its based on
what our existing strengths
have been do more and do
better in those areas that we
already excel.
One of our key goals is get-
ting more and more UNC stu-
dents involved and engaged
with the museum.
Also, related to that, a
focus on contemporary art
and the way it can inform and
overlap with many different
disciplines.
Which is why the fall
exhibition is so exciting to us
because its an exhibition of
a collective of artists based
in India called The Sahmat
Collective: Art and Activism
in India Since 1989.
Its a group of artists who
work in a variety of medi-
ums over the past couple of
decades. Street theater as well
as objects, but also perfor-
mance, highly political and
hints as to what kind of works
will be featured this year?
EK: Were shifting to a more
historical series of exhibi-
tions that are kind of related
about American art, and one
of them is actually engravings
that are the first European
view of the native population
in the United States. They
were done in the 15th century
it was the way everyone in
Europe first began to under-
stand the New World.
For us they are particularly
fascinating, partly because of
their inaccuracies, but also
because of a pretty realistic
view maybe a little fantas-
tical of the flora and fauna
... of lifestyles of the native
people.
So we ll be teaming up with
the anthropology depart-
ment and the history depart-
ment, American studies and
American Indian Center
to really look at what these
engravings tell us about the
New World.
Then weve got a small
exhibition of work related to
an Andy Warhol drawing that
was given to us last year.
DTH: Will the Ackland be
featuring more interactive
exhibitions like some of the
pieces in More Love?
EK: The Sahmat exhibi-
tion, its divided up almost
like a timeline, it goes year
by year. And there are nine
or 10 iPads, so its interactive
in that way, you can watch an
interview or get some infor-
mation, listen to some music.
And there are a couple of
videos, and then theres also a
room with film that will have
pillows and you can lay on the
floor and watch things.
There will be lots of ways
that people can engage with
the artwork in a way that isnt
standing in front of it and
gazing upon it.
arts@dailytarheel.com
Emily Kass
is the director
of the Ackland
Art Museum.
Kass discussed
programming
planned for
the fall.
social work that will be of a
lot of interest to students and
faculty at Carolina as well as
the public.
DTH: What do you believe
was the Acklands biggest suc-
cess last year?
EK: In terms of exhibi-
tions, the spring exhibition,
which was a contemporary
show called More Love: Art,
Politics and Sharing Since the
1990s.
That was such a hit. It
was really popular, it was a
very ambitious show, it really
stretched us in good ways.
DTH: Can you give me some
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Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 5
News Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6
Summer ooding strains
librarys drainage system
Courtesy of town of Chapel hill
The Chapel Hill Public Library suffered flood damage due to
heavy rains over the summer and is undergoing renovations.
By Jenny Surane
City Editor
Repairs began last week on
a newly installed stormwater
management system at the
Chapel Hill Public Library
a system that is already giving
residents headaches.
The system, which was
installed during a $16 mil-
lion library renovation that
wrapped up in April, began
to fail almost immediately
after construction ended,
according to a report from
the projects engineer Michael
Hammersley.
This summers flooding
further weakened the system,
leaving residents to deal with
crumbling sediment washing
into nearby creeks and parks.
The stormwater manage-
ment system is supposed to
collect rainwater and pipe it
off-site as quickly as possible.
If such a system fails, it can
cause structural damage to a
facility and erode important
vegetation and soil.
Eric Hyman, a Chapel Hill
resident who lives adjacent
to the library, said he imme-
diately noticed when the
librarys stormwater system
began to fail. Sediment and
silt became loose and started
making its way into the creeks
in Pritchard Park, the wooded
area that sits between his
property and the library.
It was quite a failure, he
said. All that silt went into
the creek and, while it would
be nice, Im not sure how
theyre going to clean it up.
Hyman said Pritchard Park
is known for the trails and
creeks that wind through it.
It hasnt really affected the
trails all that much, he said.
The librarys bioretention
cell, which is the part of the
stormwater system designed
to temporarily contain up
to 12 inches of water dur-
ing severe storms, began to
fail in April, according to
Hammersleys report.
It took project managers
nearly two months to come
inspect the property, and ini-
tial repairs werent made until
June 8, the report states. The
contractor was waiting for a
dry period to commence work
on the cell, said town spokes-
woman Catherine Lazorko.
Lazorko said the town
and taxpayers wont shoul-
der the cost of the repairs.
Instead, she said, the contrac-
tor will be responsible for
paying to restore the cells.
The first phase of the
work involves the removal of
unsuitably wet fill materials
and the temporary closure of
the breach in the embank-
ment to contain water in
the basin while permanent
repairs to the embankment
are completed, Lazorko said
in an email.
The town will work
with the State Division of
Environment and Natural
Resources to complete the
repairs of the bioreten-
tion cell, said Public Works
Director Lance Norris in
an Aug. 9 email to Town
Manager Roger Stancil.
Hammersely, along with
the sites Construction
Administrator Ken Smith,
issued a directive to begin
the repairs last week. In his
report, Hammersely estimat-
ed the job would take about
three weeks to complete.
city@dailytarheel.com
OPENING EVENT
Cook-Out at Holy Trinity
Monday, August 19th at 5:30 p.m.
SUNDAY
Worship Services:
Contemporary at 8:30 a.m.
Traditional at 11:00 a.m.
WEDNESDAY
Beginning August 21st, 2013
Student Worship at 5:30 p.m.
Fellowship Meal at 6:15 p.m.
LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY
(One block across the street from Morehead Planetarium.)
Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 300 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill, NC
Phone: 919-942-2677 Email: prmark@holytrinitychapelhill.org
Website: holytrinitychapelhill.org/lcm/
From Page One Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7
incidents on campus. She said
LGBT students rarely feel
threatened in residence halls.
But according to Campus
Pride, a national group that
advocates for LGBT rights, 23
percent of lesbian, gay, bisexu-
al and queer students, faculty
and staff on college campuses
have reported harassment,
and 39 percent of transgender
people reported harassment.
Shane Windmeyer, execu-
tive director of Campus Pride,
said the Board of Governors
did not seek input from
the students and advocates
involved.
But Joni Worthington,
spokeswoman for the UNC
General Administration, said
position statements were
shared with the board before
the meeting, including a let-
ter advocating gender-neutral
housing from Campus Pride.
Anthony Dondero, a stu-
dent at UNC-C who worked
on the gender-neutral hous-
ing campaign, said the board
was motivated by politics.
Students have been work-
ing on it for a long time, and
to see it shot down not by our
schools, but by the BOG on a
statewide level, is a clear mes-
sage that were not welcome
in the UNC system as we are,
Dondero said.
Claybren said the board
ignored the activism of stu-
dents and administrators.
Theres a disconnect
between the Board of
Governors and students and
administrators at UNC, he
said. Our Board of Governors
went in with a political ideol-
ogy and plan to strike it down.
The board met with 16 new
members all appointed by
the Republican-controlled
N.C. General Assembly for
the first time on Aug. 8.
Al Humber, public rela-
tions and community out-
reach director for UNC-As
Alliance, an LGBTQ group
on that campus, said the deci-
sion was not surprising after
recent legislation around
social issues, such as the new
law that puts stricter limita-
tions on abortion clinics.
I thought, well, that sucks
the pink cherry on top of the
pudding cluster-mess, a dis-
gusting amount of backwards
treading for the state, Humber
said.
For Campus Pride, the
boards treatment of the issue
foreshadows a stormier future
for communication between
members and students.
Windmeyer said the group
will talk to leaders about what
they see as the boards inac-
cessibility this year.
The Board of Governors
did not want students to
know, and the larger issue
(is) that the BOG act on busi-
ness when students are away,
Windmeyer said.
Windmeyer said he believes
the board purposefully sched-
uled the vote on gender-neu-
tral housing during the sum-
mer to avoid student input.
Now that the ban is in
place, campus administra-
tors are turning their atten-
tion toward helping LGBTQ
students who may have felt
alienated by the ban, said
Arthur Jackson, vice chan-
cellor for student affairs at
UNC-C.
The ban allows no recourse
for people of different genders
or sexual identities, Jackson
said. We are going to be talk-
ing to our GLBTQ students
and let them know that we
support them.
Both UNC-A and UNC-C
will continue arranging spe-
cial accommodations for stu-
dents on a case-by-case basis.
The coming year will be
punctuated by gender-neutral
housing discussions, Jackson
said. He plans to talk with
faculty, students and board
members to help all students
feel safe while complying with
the new regulations.
Windmeyer said he
is hopeful that one day,
when the state elects more
Democratic politicians, the
ban will be reversed.
But Fitzgerald said she
believes the ban is permanent.
The BOG and the General
Assembly appear committed
to a policy that would pro-
hibit young men and young
women from living together
in close proximity at taxpayer
expense, she said in an email.
But the ban is by no means
the final page of the gender-
neutral housing discussion,
Jackson said.
It's an issue that is still
alive and very much on the
radar, he said. Its an embry-
onic topic, and its just start-
ing to be discussed.
state@dailytarheel.com
gender neutral
from page 1
2014-15 for undergraduate out-
of-state students at 14 system
schools, including a 12.3-per-
cent increase at UNC-CH.
Dean said he was con-
cerned financial aid might not
be able to offset extra costs to
nonresident students.
(UNC has) no wherewith-
al to be able to give scholar-
ship money based on (the
tuition raise), he said.
Cuts for teachers
In addition to phasing out
both K-12 teacher tenure and
the N.C. Teaching Fellows
scholarship, the budget ends
the 10-to-15-percent pay
supplement for K-12 teachers
with masters degrees.
Bill McDiarmid, dean
of UNC-CHs School of
Education, said the prospect
of no bonus for a graduate
degree is already causing
statewide enrollment declines
he estimated that for UNC-
CH, enrollment has dropped
about 40 percent this fall.
Were asking teachers
to make a very significant
investment, and theres no
guarantee of a return on that
investment, he said.
Ellen McIntyre, dean of
UNC-Charlottes College of
Education, said masters pro-
grams offer specialized train-
ing for teachers.
But Terry Stoops, an analyst
at the conservative John Locke
Foundation, said legislators
took notice of recent studies
showing that masters degrees
do not significantly bolster
teachers performances.
The budget mandates that
graduate students finish by
December to get the pay bump.
Moving forward
Perusse said UNC-system
chancellors will report to the
General Administration by
late September with an over-
view of where cuts will occur
on each campus.
McIntyre said she under-
stands that legislators had
tough financial calls to make.
Legislators do care about
education, she said.
Still, Dean said questions
remain as to how UNC-CH
will absorb the new reductions.
Everything is on the table.
Anything thats easy to cut
has been cut already.
state@dailytarheel.com
nc budget
from page 1
disappointed they didnt finish
sooner, but they were pleased
with how Hurt created a docu-
ment that was open to input.
Its supposed to be a liv-
ing document that responds
to a very vibrant community,
Bryan said.
Kiran Bhardwaj, presi-
dent of UNCs Graduate
and Professional Student
Federation, said the ground-
work laid this summer paved
the way for policy rewrites.
Its not like theres a model
in law enforcement or other
universities, she said.
Bhardwaj said she hoped to
see recommendations within
the next month or two, but
Hurt said it is still unclear.
Sometime in the fall
wouldnt be unreasonable,
she said. The work of this
task force is ongoing.
university@dailytarheel.com
sexual assault
from page 1
announcement at FallFest
Sunday night, there were only
a few cheers spread through-
out the crowd.
Senior Ryan Langerak, a
big Wale fan, said student
excitement would increase
closer to the show.
Wale is just original, hes
got great flow, Langerak said.
Hes pretty great live too.
Though the official con-
tracts for Wale and Ace Hood
have not yet been released to
The Daily Tar Heel, CUAB
President Carly Mathews
said the budget for this
years concert was about the
same as last years. For the
2012 Homecoming Concert,
the University paid J. Cole
$105,000 plus hotel and local
transportation expenditures.
The budget last year was
higher than in past years, but
knowing how successful that
concert was and knowing
that students were willing to
pay a little more for tickets
to a good performance, we
didnt worry about the budget
as much this year, Mathews
said.
Mathews and James said
they feel confident that Wale
and Ace Hood are accurate
representations of student
interests and hope the student
feedback process will only get
better in coming years.
arts@dailytarheel.com
homecoming
from page 1
Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 8
Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 9
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State Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 10
Moral Monday cases
weigh legal options
By Sarah Brown
Assistant State & National Editor
Court officials in Wake
County are looking to simplify
the aftermath of nearly 1,000
people being arrested over the
dozen Moral Monday protests
this summer but some
UNC-affiliated arrestees say
they are hesitant to comply.
Wake County District
Attorney Colon Willoughby
announced last week he
would offer those arrested the
option of deferred prosecu-
tion completing 25 hours
of community service and
paying $180 in court fees
to have all charges dropped in
lieu of a trial.
Willoughby said he wants
to speed up the process of
trying the 924 protestors and
reduce costs for the county.
But Irv Joyner, an N.C.
Central University law profes-
sor and a lawyer representing
some of the protestors, said
only a few people so far have
accepted Willoughbys offer.
Though protestors would
not have to admit guilt,
many have said they pre-
fer the trial option because
they believe the arrests were
unjust, he said. They had a
constitutional right to go to
the General Assembly and
address their legislators, he
said. They were not inter-
rupting any proceedings that
were going on at the time.
Most of the protestors were
charged with trespassing,
violation of General Assembly
building rules and failure to
disperse all misdemeanors.
Trials for Moral Monday
protestors are slated to begin
early next month. About 65
lawyers from Orange, Wake
and Durham counties, includ-
ing Joyner, have volunteered
to represent the arrestees in
court free of charge.
Two UNC students
arrested said they are leaning
toward refusing the deferred
prosecution.
Id want to have a conver-
sation with the lawyer about
it, said senior Josh Orol.
Part of me feels like I wasnt
arrested for anything I should
have been arrested for.
Orol, arrested June 10 with
150 others, said he thought
about potential long-term
implications of having an
arrest on his record but he
said a misdemeanor was a
small price to pay for actively
promoting social justice.
I cant say (the arrest) is
not risk-free, he said. But I
felt pretty comfortable with it.
Junior Kaori Sueyoshi,
arrested July 29, said going
through with a trial would be
more meaningful to her.
The arrest is more public,
but the trial is where youre
doing something with the sys-
tem thats cumbersome, and
(state officials) have to deal
with it, she said.
But Jacquelyn Hall, a UNC
history professor, said she
feels ambivalent about the
deferred prosecution. She
said those arrested could
use community service to
directly address the issues
they protested against like
volunteering to register voters
and ensure they have proper
ID. Hall said she is unsure if
she wants to protest the law
under which she was arrested.
This is not the place I
want to put my energy and
take my stand, she said.
She added that deferred
prosecution might be a good
option for students.
I dont think it is an
invalid thing at all to consider
the benefits of having this just
taken off your record, she
said. Hall said she will think
carefully about her final deci-
sion before her Sept. 30 trial.
Among most of the people
I have talked to, one thing
they share is that whether
they accept the offer or not,
they do so reluctantly, she
said. Sueyoshi said if a future
opportunity for civil disobedi-
ence arose, she would make
the same choice.
If an arrest is what it
takes, I think Id do it again.
state@dailytarheel.com
Republican bills
dominate summer
By Madeline Will
State & National Editor
July 26 marked the end of
Republicans first legislative
session since taking control
of both chambers of the N.C.
General Assembly and the gov-
ernors mansion in November
the first time in 140 years.
Gov. Pat McCrory has
until Aug. 25 to sign or veto
35 still-pending bills as of
Sunday afternoon, or they will
automatically become law.
Bills signed into law
House Bill 937 The law
expands where concealed guns
are allowed, including locked
cars on campuses of public uni-
versities and schools, bars and
restaurants and playgrounds.
Senate Bill 353 Both
a motorcycle safety and an
abortion law, it limits abor-
tion coverage under city and
county health insurance. It
also prohibits abortions based
on the fetus sex and tightens
standards for abortion clinics.
House Bill 589 The law
requires voters to provide a
government-issued photo ID
and does not accept college
IDs. It also shortens early vot-
ing by a week and ends high
school pre-registration and
same-day registration.
Bills vetoed
House Bill 392 The
bill would have required
drug testing for recipients on
some welfare programs, and
McCrory said he had con-
cerns about its implementa-
tion. The section to deny wel-
fare benefits or food stamps
to fleeing felons or parole
violators was approved in an
executive order.
House Bill 786 The
bill, RECLAIM N.C., would
have studied different ways
of addressing illegal immi-
gration in North Carolina.
It also tripled the amount
of time from 90 days to
about 9 months to exempt
seasonal workers from being
E-Verified.
McCrory vetoed the bill
because the study wasnt
funded, and he said the bill
could take away jobs from
North Carolinians.
Bills pending
Senate Bill 480 The
state would fund campus
renovations for some UNC-
system schools. UNC-CH ren-
ovations include $4 million to
the Craige Parking Deck and
$25 million to replace Odum
Village.
state@dailytarheel.com
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Board memBers
Columnists
Get to know your
opinion staff
Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 12
I
t is our honor to introduce
this years opinion staff.
Comprised of editorial
board members, columnists and
cartoonists, the opinion desk is
tasked with providing insightful
commentary to its readers.
Editorial board members
come from a variety of back-
grounds in an effort to ensure a
balanced perspective on relevant
news issues.
This has been the mantra
since the papers inception.
A quote from a 1932 column
in The Daily Tar Heel titled The
Aim of the Paper summarizes
this motto: It is the aim of The
Daily Tar Heel to foster open-
minded and genuine liberality,
which will admit the possibility
of two sides to every question.
The editorials remain
unsigned and reflect the major-
ity of the views of the editorial
board.
Each topic we select to opine
on is carefully researched and
discussed amongst the editorial
board and, through these discus-
sions, we come to a consensus
opinion.
This is not to say that these
opinions wholly reflect those
of the numerous writers across
the different desks of The Daily
Tar Heel. While the newsroom
is tasked with the majority of
the reporting, it is the editorial
boards responsibility to spin
actionable ideas onto its writ-
ing.
Columns are another essential
part of the opinion page.
These pieces range from
sardonic social commentaries
to remarks on otherwise-over-
looked topics that are meant to
spur discussions.
Columnists come from dif-
ferent corners of the campus
community and bring their own
views and perspectives.
These writers connect with
readers on a more personal level
by addressing everyday topics,
conventional and unconven-
tional.
Therein lies the essential dif-
ference between the two posi-
tions editorials reflect nine
voices serving as one board
to push actionable responses
while columnists each demon-
strate their own beliefs in a way
that forces readers to approach
these issues through a different
lens.
Similarly, cartoonists create
pieces that are up to the personal
interpretation of the audience,
fostering discussion.
Their unique representation
of various issues can cover poli-
tics, sports or squirrels on any
given day.
With our editorial board
members, columnists and car-
toonists in mind, we write this
with the hope that the coming
year will bring dialogue.
And social media is an essen-
tial complement to the opinion
page.
We hope to engage our read-
ers through various outlets
Twitter (@DTHopinion), email,
online comments and letters to
the editor.
It is through these venues that
readers will keep the opinion
staff accountable as we aim to
encourage an engaging relation-
ship with our readers.
This paper is built for and
by its readers. So we invite you
to reach out to us whether
that be in support or dissent
throughout the course of the
upcoming year.
News Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 13
Repairs still underway
after ood damage
By Caroline Leland
Assistant University Editor
Weeks after record-break-
ing rainfall flooded Chapel
Hill, some University build-
ings are still under repair.
The flooding reached resi-
dential, academic and athletic
buildings, causing several
hundred thousand dollars in
damage across campus.
One weight room in Kenan
Stadium normally used by
the UNC football team is still
closed for repairs.
Kevin Best , the assistant
athletic director for com-
munications, said the weight
room is the last part of the
stadium to be repaired.
The water, which came
in through the front of the
building, was 6 to 10 inches
deep. Repairs cost about
$650,000, Best said.
He said it will take four to
six more weeks for the dam-
aged weight room to open. The
football team, which started
training camp Aug. 1, has been
using a weight room on the
other side of the stadium.
The Student Recreation
Center on South Road, which
closed for several weeks, is
now open though not fully
repaired.
Reggie Hinton, the facili-
ties and operations director
for campus recreation, said
3 inches of water covered
the first floor of the building,
damaging the floors of offices
and the weight room area.
The only thing that
remains to be completed is
part of the weight room floor,
he said. Were very thankful
for how quickly things are
somewhat back to normal.
Hinton declined to com-
ment on the cost of repairs
because the project is incom-
plete.
Rick Bradley, associ-
ate director of UNCs
Department of Housing and
Residential Education, said
damage to residence halls was
minimal. Bradley said the
flooding damaged the base-
ment of McIver Residence
Hall, adding that it took one
day to clean up.
Susan King, dean of the
School of Journalism and
Mass Communication, said
the flooding also damaged
Carroll Hall.
There was quite a lot of
water that came in through
the window, she said.
Flooding in a large base-
ment classroom displaced
summer classes into other
classrooms of the building.
It smelled for a good two
weeks, King said. It was
pretty bad.
dth file/Chris Conway
The basement of Granville Towers East flooded after record rainfall in Chapel Hill on June 30.
Damages occurred in
several academic and
athletic buildings.
Were very thank-
ful for how quickly
things are ... back to
normal.
Reggie Hinton,
Campus recreation
King declined to comment
on the estimated total cost of
repairs.
Granville Towers is also
still under repair.
Kelly Stasko, general man-
ager of Granville Towers, said
repairs to the towers mainly
consisted of replacing flooring.
The West Tower basement
sustained the biggest impact,
she said. It ll be a couple
more weeks to finish there.
Stasko said students liv-
ing in Granvilles West Tower
can still access the basement
laundry room and mailboxes.
The South Tower basement,
which houses a group study
room, is also still under repair.
Stasko said those repairs will
be completed this week.
The flood damage to
Granville Towers required a
professional restoration com-
pany. Stasko declined to com-
ment on the estimated total
cost of repairs.
(The damage) was exten-
sive, she said. It was defi-
nitely an expensive flood.
university@dailytarheel.com
Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 14
NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS
Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to
publication for classifed ads. We publish Mon-
day thru Friday when classes are in session. A
university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e. this
affects deadlines). We reserve the right to re-
ject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Acceptance of ad
copy or prepayment does not imply agreement
to publish an ad. You may stop your ad at any
time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for stopped
ads will be provided. No advertising for hous-
ing or employment, in accordance with federal
law, can state a preference based on sex, race,
creed, color, religion, national origin, handicap,
marital status.
SOCCER PLAYERS AND REFEREES WANTED.
Come play recreational, coed soccer with
OCASL! We also need assistant referees
(will train). Good exercise, money. Contact
Rob: rob@ocasl.org.
Child Care Wanted
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE for fun lov-
ing and caring twin 9 year-old girls in
Chapel Hill. Wednesday 2:30-5:30pm
required plus 1-2 days fexible. Reliable
car needed; salary based on experience.
Leave message at 919-636-9797 or
pajacu@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL BABY SITTER needed for 2013-
14 school year for 2 girls, 7 and 11. M-F 2:30-
6pm. Must have excellent references and clean
driving record. Email 4falek@gmail.com or call
919-960-2808.
LOOKING FOR ENERGETIC, compassionate,
reliable person to work with 9 year-old autistic
girl every Saturday beginning in August. If in-
terested, apply to triciawildman@yahoo.com,
cc: acquire2001@yahoo.com. Please include
cell number.
SUNDAY SITTER
Wanted for 6 year-old boy. Must have reliable
and safe transportation. Must love SPORTS,
creative play and dogs. Most Sundays 9am-
5pm. Saturday fexibility a plus. $11/hr. Email
cabbytwo@netscape.net.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE needed for
2 girls (ages 5 and 7) to help with home-
work and drive to activities on Wednesdays
starting at 2:30pm. Must have references.
jshweky@yahoo.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE: 2 UNC professors seek-
ing UNC student to help with afterschool
child care (3-5:30pm) for 11 year-old boy
and 8 year-old girl starting August 26. Ide-
ally M-F but job sharing is a possibility. Kids
school and home in Chapel Hill. Must have
reliable car, good driving record, references.
momshelper27516@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE FOR 13 year-old boy.
School pick up, assist with homework and
other activities. 3-6:30pm, 2-3 afternoons per
week. Competitive pay. Call 919-489-5929 or
email lb12@duke.edu.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILDSITTER WANTED with
good references, car for 10 year-old boy in Hill-
sborough starting ASAP for 2-3 afternoons per
week. School pick up, assist with homework,
occasional driving. Non-smoker. Competitive
pay. Email giovanni.zanalda@duke.edu, call
919-428-3075.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE: Seeking ex-
perienced sitter 2-3 afternoons per week
for 2 awesome kids, ages 9 and 12. Must
be active, creative and have access to
own car. Position is in Chapel Hill. Salary
is competitive. 919-593-0599.
CHILD CARE WANTED: Afterschool child care
needed ASAP. M-Th, 3-6pm, in Chapel Hill
home. Looking for a reliable individual to care
for 2 children ages 13 and 15, Math and sci-
ence tutoring ability preferred. Must have reli-
able transportation and clean driving record.
Please contact daniellegraceking@gmail.com.
Competitive rate.
DRIVER NEEDED! Safe, reliable student with
car needed to drive 2 students from East Cha-
pel Hill High to The Hill Center. 11:50am pick
up (maximum 2 hour round trip from UNC). 2-5
days/wk. Text, call 919-619-4937.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE, CHAPEL HILL:
Looking for an energetic, reliable afterschool
caregiver for 3 children ages 5, 8 and 10 years-
old. 2:15-5:15pm. Start September 3. Ideally
looking for someone to be available for the full
school year. Own transportation needed. Con-
tact reneegambill@gmail.com, 919-240-4180.
M/TU PM CHILD CARE WANTED: Respon-
sible person with clean driving record
needed to pick up 2 children afterschool
and assist with homework on Mondays
and Tuesdays 3-6pm for upcoming
school year. Pay and gas money nego-
tiable, we live near PIttsboro. Contact
Jennifer at jlja1970@earthlink.net.
CHILD CARE NEEDED: UNC family seek-
ing excellent driver to pick up daughters
ages 11 and 14 from school and trans-
port to activities. Reliable car essential.
Availability needed Monday thru Friday,
2:30-5:30pm. $12-$15/hr. Contact 919-
451-9105 or asauls@email.unc.edu.
CHILD CARE: Seeking bilingual (Spanish),
friendly child care provider for 2 children (el-
ementary and middle school) from 3-6pm M/
Tu/W, occasional Friday. Help with Spanish
and math homework and transportation to af-
terschool activities. Carrboro. $13/hr. Contact:
jscompton@me.com, 919-886-9163.
NANNY NEEDED: Fun, reliable sitter wanted
for 2 boys (ages 4 and 7) in Chapel Hill. 2
or 3 weekdays per week, 9am-5pm. Spe-
cifc days fexible. Can start at 12pm on
Monday, Wednesday or Friday if needed.
jps298@hotmail.com.
TUESDAY SITTER NEEDED
Looking for sitter Tuesdays from 4-8pm. Need
help with getting kids to activities and evening
routine. I have a 7, 5, 2 and 6 month-old. Live
next to campus. Clean driving record. Car pre-
ferred. References required. Pay competitive.
cherylbriner@gmail.com.
CHAPEL HILL MOTHERS CLUB seeking babysit-
ters to be added to provider list that is shared
exclusively to club members every semester.
Reliable sitters who enjoy working with chil-
dren for $8-$10/hr. can email babysittingcoor-
dinator@gmail.com to be considered.
PART-TIME SITTER needed to pick up our 9
and 11 year-olds, drive them to activities and
have fun with them. Tu/Th 2:30-6pm. Call
919-381-2041.
CHILD CARE WANTED 8/19 thru 8/22 in Car-
rboro, 9am-5pm. 2 children, ages 7 and 3.5.
Contact jenyourkavitch AT yahoo.com.
NANNY, HOUSEHOLD MANAGER NEEDED:
Children 6, 8, 13, 15. Must be organized, ener-
getic, warm, and kind with references. Duties:
Transporting children, errands, grocery shop-
ping, light housework. We provide minivan.
10-20 hrs/wk. Very busy schedule, approxi-
mately 3 afternoons per week. Optional morn-
ings. No weekends or evenings. $13/hr. Home
300 feet from UNC with parking. Resume with
GPA to BB(at)TeleSage.com Subject Nanny.
CHILD CARE: Great kids (ages 11 and 8)
need fun, reliable sitter with car. M-W
and maybe Thursday, 2:45-5pm. $12/hr.
Close to UNC. Send resume +references to
raymari34@gmail.com.
NANNY, CHILD CARE: Energetic, attentive,
loving nanny to care for 4 and 6 year-olds.
Mondays 7am-6pm. Reliable car to drive
children. Pay is negotiable. Contact Troy at
tlokitz@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE IN CARRBORO: Sitter
needed for 2 sisters (9 and 6), starting 8-26-
13, M/Tu/W, 2:45-5.45pm. Non-smoking,
energetic individual who enjoys playing with
kids. Email resume to: caydin@email.unc.edu,
704-756-3274.
SITTER WANTED: Looking for a sitter 2 or 3
afternoons a week from 2:30-5pm at Lake Ho-
gan Farm. Starting August 26. Transportation
needed. mcterrien@hotmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE for 13 & 10
year-old boys in Chapel Hill. 2-3 afternoons
each week (Mondays, Thursdays and Fridays)
around 2:45-6pm. Must be comfortable with
2 yellow lab dogs and reliable. Also requires
safe driving habits and a car to be able to take
kids to afterschool activities. Please email
dunca033@yahoo.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE needed for
2013-14 school year for 2 sweet girls, 6 and
9. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday 2:30-5pm.
Competitive salary. Must have excellent refer-
ences, clean driving record. Contact Allison at
nanny.tarheel@gmail.com, 919-724-5738.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE: Professionals with
two kids (girl, age 7 and boy, age 11) seeking
child care M-F 3-6pm to include picking up kids
from school (Triangle Day School). We live near
NC 54 and I-40. Must have own car, non-smok-
er. Competitive pay +gas $. Email mankad.vs@
gmail.com or call 919-428-8244.
AFTERSCHOOL SITTER needed starting Au-
gust 26 for our 2 children (7 and 9). Must love
dogs too! M/Tu/W/Th. Hours: 2:30-5:30pm.
Must have car for afterschool activities. Email
eoconnell@s-3.com.
SEEKING AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE for 2-3
days/wk for 2 kids, 10 and 13, in Carrboro.
Pick up from school and back home; help with
homework and driving to activities. Experi-
enced babysitter with references and a clean
driving record. Fluency in Spanish preferred.
Hours are 2:30-5:30pm; days are fexible. Email
dschoenf@yahoo.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE PROVIDER needed for 9
year-old girl in Chapel Hill Tuesday, Wednes-
day, Friday. 2:30-5:30pm. Some local driv-
ing for activities. Clean driving record. Car
preferred. References required. 919-932-0636.
SITTER: Fridays only, to meet 11 year-
old girl at bus stop (2:30pm) in Chapel
Hill. Looking for responsible and en-
gaged student to spend creative time
for 2 hours beginning immediately.
jamiermiller@msn.com.
PART-TIME
BABYSITTER NEEDED
Part-time babysitter needed for 2 children (6
and 9) who love sports, outdoors. Every M-F
2:50-5:30pm starting 9-3-13. School pick up
(Durham Academy), assist with homework,
and play! Must have child care experience,
references, non-smoker, energetic, speak
English, own transportation, like dogs. Com-
petitive pay. Call Laurie 425-246-4662 or email
laurietu@microsoft.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE wanted in Carr-
boro. M-F 2:45-5:45pm. 2 children, ages 7 and
3.5. Contact jenyourkavitch AT yahoo.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CARE: Chapel Hill fam-
ily seeking reliable individual for af-
terschool care of 2 children (9 and
11). 2:30-5.30pm daily, M-F. Respon-
sibilities include transporting children
to afternoon activities and help with
homework. Own reliable transportation
is essential. Start date August 26th to
continue through academic year. 919-
942-0867.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE: Sisters (ages
11 and 13) need fun, dependable sitter with
car. M-F, 3:30-5:30pm. $12-$14/hr. Carrboro.
Email biggers@unc.edu or text 919-360-0795.
PART-TIME SITTER IN SOUTHERN VILLAGE.
Need a long term part-time sitter for our 3
boys, (10, 7, 4) and a big dog! School pick up
in neighborhood. Mondays 11:45am-4:30pm,
Tuesdays 12:45-7pm, Thursdays 11:45am-
4:30pm. Start week of 8/23. Experience, non-
smoking, education background a plus, very
competitive pay! Jennifer, 301-848-9406.
DRIVER,
CHILD CARE WANTED
Chapel Hill family looking for fun, responsible
student to transport our 12 and 14 year-old
boys to afterschool activities, start homework,
etc. Desire M-F, 3:30-6:30pm, but fexible. If
interested, please call 919-951-4274.
SITTER AND HOUSEHOLD ASSISTANT
needed: 20-30 hrs/wk caring for 5 and 10
year-old boy and girl. Duties include school
pick up and activities weekdays until 6pm,
some evenings. Flexible daytime hours for
household organization. Excellent pay for
the right person. Clean driving record. Cook-
ing a plus. Send resume and references to
battlepark68@gmail.com.
SEEKING AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE for 12
year-old boy in Durham. We are Duke Law
and NC State professors. Will pay above mar-
ket wages for experienced babysitter with
good references and a clean driving record.
Hours M-F 3-6pm and some weekends. Email
adler@law.duke.edu.
For Rent
FAIR HOUSING
ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in
this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or dis-
crimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspa-
per will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers
are hereby informed that all dwellings adver-
tised in this newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
UNC 4BR/2.5BA,
50% OFF 1ST MO.
1ST MONTH HALF RENT: 4BR/2.5BA. $400/mo.
single room or $1,500/mo. the whole house.
Walk, bike or bus to UNC. End row unit, off
street parking. Quiet private block. Umstead
Park in walking distance with swimming pool,
basketball, tennis, softball, picnic and trails! 2
stories, fridge, range, dishwasher, W/D, central
AC, rear deck. 267-282-1390.
WALK TO UNC: 3BR/1.5BA new renovation.
Hardwood foors, new kitchen, fre place,
W/D, dishwasher. Central heat and air. Off
street parking Available now. $1,500/mo.
merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143.
AVALABLE 9-1-13: 2BR/2.5BA Oaks condo
backs up to golf course, Living room with
freplace, dining room, Walk, bike or bus
to Meadowmont and Friday Center. $925/
mo, Fran Holland Properties, fhollandprop@
gmail.com or text 919 630-3229.
HOMES FOR RENT: Carrboro, 3BR/2.5BA. Big
porch. All kitchen appliances plus microwave,
large parking area on property. On busline.
Walk to shopping. $1,400/mo. 919-942-4027,
jay2coop@gmail.com.
AVAILABLE NOW: Walk to Weaver Street in
Carrboro. 106-A Mulberry street 1BR/1BA
duplex rents for $550/mo. Water included.
For more info contact Fran Holland Prop-
erties, fhollandprop@gmail.com or text
919-630-3229.
WALK TO UNC CAMPUS. 2BR and study, new
renovation. Hardwood foors, new kitchen, fre
place, W/D, dishwasher. Central heat and air.
Off street parking. Available now. $1,400/mo.
merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143.
4BR/2.5BA, 2824 BOMBAY DRIVE: Must see
beautiful home. Meadows of Pagehurst, Dur-
ham. Fenced backyard. Short commute to
Chapel Hill. $1,295/mo. Call HCO Properties,
919-604-0093.
105 BPW ROAD, 3BR/2.5BA DUPLEX of-
fers hardwood foor in great room, great
kitchen, 2 car garage. On busline, pets
negotiable with fee. $1,395/mo. Fran
Holland Properties at fhollandprop@
gmail.com or text 919 630-3229.
CLOSE, QUIET, COMFY 2BR/2.5BA condo, 220
Elizabeth Street, Pets negotiable, on busline,
1.5 miles to UNC, new appliances, W/D, 2
parking spaces, swimming, tennis, trail $950/
mo., water included. ramkmu@yahoo.com or
919-274-6137.
For Sale
FACULTY MOVING OUT SALE: Quality IKEA
furniture, futton tables, shelves, TV, stereo,
appliances etc. Please write for full listing.
mcantle@email.unc.edu.
Help Wanted
PART-TIME EVENINGS and weekends at La
Vita Dolce, Southern Village. Need barista,
counter service. Starting immediately. Apply in
person, Sandy, 919-968-1635.
CHILDREN. Chidlrens Boutique in Chapel
Hill is hiring for afternoon and weekend
help. Must be cheerful, responsible and
great with kids. Please send your resume to
jngarstka@yahoo.com.
CARRBORO RECREATION AND PARKS (Athlet-
ics): Part-time temporary. YOUTH BASEBALL
UMPIRES: August thru October for games in-
volving ages 6-12, umpiring experience and/or
sound baseball, softball knowledge preferred,
2-8 games/wk played M-F evenings and Sat-
urdays. Pay rate: $16-$21/game, depending
on league. BASKETBALL OFFICIALS: November
thru February for games played M-F evenings
and Saturdays, 2-10 games/wk involving ages
6-15, fexible scheduling. Previous experience
and/or sound basketball knowledge preferred.
Pay range: $17-$22/game. ADULT SOFTBALL
UMPIRES: Juy thru October for games played
on Tu/Th evenings, 3-6 games/wk, previous
experience and/or sound slow pitch softball
knowledge preferred. Pay rate: $21-$23/
game. FACILITY, ACTIVITY SUPERVISORS:
August thru October, 4-20 hrs/wk; weekday,
evenings and weekend hours. Assist with
special events, general and athletic programs.
Recreational program experience and knowl-
edge preferred. Pay rate: $9/hr. Positions are
open until flled. For more info, call 919-918-
7364. For an application visit our website at
www.townofcarrboro.org. EOE.
PERSONAL ASSISTANT, TUTOR needed
full-time for busy executive. Requires
doing mundane tasks, grocery shopping
plus academic tutoring for high school
student. Range of initiatives requires
fexibility, willing to take on new chal-
lenges, 3.7+ GPA, high energy, ability to
execute with excellence, Microsoft Of-
fce, superior written, verbal communi-
cation skills. Base salary with full health
benefts. Resumes to missy.seaman@
sageworks.com
THE CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO YMCA after-
school is looking for bus drivers. Hours will
be Monday thru Friday, 2-3pm but a chance
of longer hours exists. Class B CDL with P
endorsement is required. Applications can
be found on our website, www.chcymca.
org, or you can apply at the Chapel Hill
Branch at 980 MLK Blvd. Send applications to
nchan@chcymca.org or turn in at the Y.
PART-TIME JOB AT IGLOOYOGURT: FroYo
Shop in Governors Village is hiring. 15-20
hrs/wk, afternoon and/or evening shifts,
reliable transportation a must. Interested?
jobs@iglooyogurt.com.
CHAPEL HILL GYMNASTICS is seeking a
part-time front desk registration clerk to
work approximately 15-20 hrs/wk early af-
ternoons and evenings, some Saturdays
8:30am-12:30pm. Duties include calculating
and accepting customer payments for tuition,
events and vendor items, answering phones,
scheduling birthday parties and managing
class enrollment. Please send a resume to
margie@chapelhillgymnastics.com.
THE CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO YMCA is looking
for afterschool counselors. Counselors actively
participate in sports, homework, crafts and
other activities each afternoon with students
grades K-8. Hours are generally 2-6pm, Mon-
day thru Friday. Applications can be found on
our website, www.chcymca.org, or you can ap-
ply at the Chapel Hill Branch at 980 MLK Blvd.
Send applications to nchan@chcymca.org or
turn in at the Y.
PART-TIME SWIM COACHES for local
USA Swimming club. 2-4 evenings per
week. Send resume and 3 references to
brentawatkins@gmail.com.
BARISTA: Reopening coffee bar at the FedEx
Global Learning Center for the fall semester.
We are seeking part-time baristas. No nights
and no weekends. Competitive pay plus tips.
Fun and fast paced atmosphere. Previous baris-
ta experience is a plus. Please apply in person
at EspressOasis at the Beach Cafe inside Brink-
hous Bullitt. 919-537-3612 for directions.
BABYSITTER AND DRIVER needed for weekday
afternoons (generally 3-5:30pm) to pick up
3 kids (ages 14, 12, 7) from Durham schools
and take home or to school practice, etc.
Generous pay and mileage provided. Email:
bill.steinbach@duke.edu.
CLINICAL TEACHING TUTORS NEED: SAT, ACT,
GRE, math, science (advanced), all subjects,
ADHD, LD, Dyslexia coaching, special ed, liter-
acy. MAT students great. Superb spoken Eng-
lish, scholars, excellent character, personality.
Car. Days and hours available for entire school
year. Chapel Hill, Cary, Pittsboro, Hillsborough.
Available 7 days. Send days and hours to:
jlocts@aol.com, $20/hr and up, TBD.
EMPLOYMENT: The Carolina Brewery is
looking for experienced line cooks, serv-
ers and host staff for both our Chapel
Hill and Pittsboro locations. Check out
our website for more info http://caro-
linabrewery.com/about/employment/
919-942-1800.
HIRING NOW: CATERING server and bartender
positions for all home UNC football and bas-
ketball games. Catering experience NOT nec-
essary. Only responsible, reliable candidates
need apply. Please email resume to rockyto-
punc1@gmail.com if interested. Perfect job for
students!
DELIVERY PERSON NEEDED: Food deliv-
ery person needed IMMEDIATELY. Must
have car. Apply at Tracys NY Deli, 400
South Elliott Road, Chapel Hill, NC 27514 or
tracysnewyorkdeli@yahoo.com.
GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR: Chapel Hill
Gymnastics has part-time positions available
for energetic, enthusiastic instructors. Ap-
plicants with knowledge of gymnastic termi-
nology and progression skills preferred, but
will train right candidate. Send a resume to
margie@chapelhillgymnastics.com.
SUBLET IN CARRBORO!
2BR/1.5BA condo. 1,056 square feet. Fantas-
tic Cedar Court unit! Walk to everything in
downtown Carrboro! Updates include all new:
kitchen cabinets, granite countertops, appli-
ances, windows, lighting, hardware, bathroom
vanity, hot water heater. Hardwood foors re-
fnished and new interior paint. W/D located on
frst foor! $1,250/mo. Available October 1st or
before (prorated). Email for more information:
jncellini@gmail.com.
Tutoring Wanted
ACADEMIC COACH for high school junior.
Approximately 2 hrs/day, 10-12 hrs/wk.
Requires GPA of 3.7+ as course load is
diffcult. Ideally looking for 2 years if
possible. Location is Raleigh, Cary bor-
der. Compensation $25/hr. Applicant
must have fexibility. Email resumes to
missy.seaman@sageworks.com.
Wheels for Sale
1999 AUDI A6, 103K, dealer maintained recent-
ly serviced inspected tires great shape, new oil,
flter, power steering pump, belts. Bose Audio.
Drives great. $5,500, OBO. 919-560-8527.
Announcements Help Wanted Tutoring Help Wanted Tutoring Help Wanted
Help Wanted Sublets
Announcements Announcements Announcements Announcements
Child Care Wanted Child Care Wanted For Rent


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(c) 2013 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 7 -- Its hard to sit still now.
Use your energy to move your project
forward and crowdsource. A group con-
tributes ideas and probably even funding.
But defnitely do not gamble.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 7 -- Your plan advances. Face a
challenge squarely. Assume more respon-
sibility, even leadership. Help a skittery
friend stay calm in a confrontation. With
calm fexibility and persistence, bridge a
river.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8 -- Plan a getaway to relax.
Get extra thoughtful and consider your
options. Venture farther than before, and
get imaginative. List priorities, and keep
to the budget. Include romance in the
itinerary.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 7 -- To avoid a potential prob-
lem, play the game exactly by the book.
Show your discipline and gain a lucrative
assignment. Your infuence is expanding.
Count funds and pay bills. Toast your
success.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Accept a promise without
breaking your own rules. Dont squander
your money (or anyone elses either).
Tax and insurance issues get clear. Col-
lect unexpected benefts. Today and to-
morrow seem extra romantic. Do what
worked before.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 9 -- Fulfll promises youve
made. The pace is picking up, and its
getting intense. Handle one detail at
a time. Support colleagues. Schedule
meetings for later. Use your imagination.
Ask for help from a technical wizard.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Youre gaining support. Be
sensitive to one whos sensitive. Abruptly,
the game changes at work. Notice those
around you who hold you to your highest
ideals. Listen to them. Gather the info you
need. Aim for fun.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 6 -- Catch up on the latest news
from friends for a brilliant suggestion.
Domestic crafts provide fun and delicious
results. Take a practical approach to fne-
tuning your place. Love fnds a way.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 7 -- Youll learn quickly, so pay
attention. Travel later. Apply new insights
to a family problem. Someone is feeling
rebellious. Discover new communication
tools. Love is the foundation. Ask ques-
tions. Mostly listen.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 9 -- Dont let a newfound
treasure slip through your fngers. Its
defnitely not a good time to gamble.
Start computing expenses. Postpone seri-
ous shopping. Listen to all considerations.
Compromise with your mate. Not spend-
ing takes less effort than earning.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 9 -- Assertiveness works well
now. Keep heart; youre gaining a distinct
advantage. Use your imagination. This is
a confdent phase. Insights pour in. Gain
more than expected. Write and record
them. Postpone travel.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 6 -- Finish your end of the deal
now. Defer gratifcation. You have the
facts to back up your theory. Finish your
work in private. Postpone buying treats. A
visionary effort succeeds. Add color to the
presentation.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If August 19th is Your Birthday...
Social life, new friendships, romance, fun with chil-
dren and expanding horizons recur as themes this
year. Home and family keep you comfortably rooted.
Its busy at work, so keep calm and maintain mo-
mentum. Home renovation projects excel, but dont
go into debt for them. Listen, read,
study, research and learn.
BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room

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www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252
DTH offce is open Mon-Fri 8:30am-5:00pm
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In partnership with select programs of UNC, Duke, Campbell, and
FSU, PrepSuccess has helped thousands of students prepare for
entrance exams. Early Bird rates are only $420 to $504 for 30 or 42
hour courses. GRE PREP begins at UNC on Sept. 7th. Attend
classes in person or Live Online. To visit a class or to learn more,
go to www.PrepSuccess.com or call 919-791-0810 .
Want to build your resume & gain valuable experience?
Weekend hours are available working with children and
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achieve their personal goals. Gain valuable experience
for psychology, sociology, nursing majors, and other
related fields. Various shifts available. $10.10/hr.
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RECYCLE ME PLEASE!
Arts Monday, August 19, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 15
State bill roundup
A breakdown of sum-
mers major bills passed by
the N.C. General Assembly.
See pg. 10 for story.
Moral legal options
Trials for arrested Moral
Monday protestors are slated
to begin early next month.
See pg. 10 for story.
Flood aftermath
Repairs are still underway
on some campus buildings
after summer flooding dam-
age. See pg. 13 for story.
FallFest fun
FallFest was scheduled
to happen rain or shine this
year. See dailytarheel.com/
multimedia for coverage.
games
Solution to
Saturdays puzzle
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
2013 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
Courtesy of staCy Crabill
Courtesy is Contagious is one of Stacy Crabills pieces featured in the Big Sugar exhibit put
on by the Durham Arts Council. Her work will be on display until Sept. 8.
Durham art exhibits
blend past, present
By Breanna Kerr
Staff Writer
Two local artists who look
to the past for inspiration are
showing their paintings at the
Durham Arts Council as the
city of Durham continues to
support emerging artists and
the arts in the Triangle area.
The Durham Arts Council
has a special focus on up-and-
coming artists, said Lindsay
Gordon, the councils artist ser-
vices manager. Keeping that in
mind, the council presents two
retrospective Southern artists
in its latest exhibits.
Local artists Stacy Crabill,
a 2012-13 Ella Fountain Pratt
Emerging Artist Grant recipi-
ent, and William Beatty have
had the special opportunity
to show their pieces July 19
through Sept. 8 in the Semans
Gallery and the Allenton
Gallery, respectively.
Although not inten-
tionally collaborative,
Crabills Big Sugar and
Beattys ROADSCAPES &
BLUESCAPES complement
each other well and both use
a lot of color, Beatty said.
We both have loud pieces
that evoke memory, he said,
describing the fact that each
artists reflection on a differ-
ent time period is highlighted
in his or her art.
Crabill draws on her child-
hood to paint the large-scale
candy featured in her exhibit,
which includes 10 paintings.
Ive always been drawn to
candy, and the colors and tex-
tures as well as the taste too,
but the packaging is beauti-
fully designed and so clever,
Crabill said.
Crabill was able to work on
these large-scale pieces after
the Durham Arts Council
awarded her a grant last year.
With that support, she has
been able to super-size the
candy and really get the detail
right, she said.
The Durham Arts Council
has special support for emerg-
ing and upcoming artists,
which both Crabill and Beatty
said they are grateful for.
The project was made
possible by an Ella Fountain
Pratt Emerging Artist Grant
from the Durham Arts
Council with support from
the N.C. Arts Council, a divi-
sion of the Department of
Cultural Resources.
The artists both said the
council devotes a lot of care to
the artists it gives grants to,
tracking their progress and
supporting them through the
process of making art.
Durham Arts Council is a
conduit between artists of dif-
ferent types and the public,
Beatty said.
Whereas Crabill drew on
childhood images of candy
for her exhibit, Beatty focuses
on an infusion of landscape
and blues in his art, drawing
on the images and music of
Memphis, Tenn. a place he
called home for 18 years.
Beatty paints representa-
tional landscape art, which was
inspired by driving through
the Center of Blues. He said he
painted the landscape as if it
were moving instead of a fixed
point of reference.
This is where a lot of our
music comes from. My paint-
ings are the experience of trav-
eling through the Delta.
arts@dailytarheel.com
(C)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACross
1 33-Across topper
6 Points (at)
10 Trucker on a radio
14 Former Idol judge
Abdul
15 Tie in chess
16 Cosmo competitor
17 Marx Brothers
shenanigan
18 Topnotch
19 Sugar bowl block
20 Long-eyed stitching tool
23 Students Web address
ending
24 One on the other side
25 Right on time
28 Finally registered,
mentally
30 __ cheese dressing
32 Dinghy mover
33 Dairy Queen order
36 The __ Baltimore:
Lanford Wilson play
39 __ Wiedersehen
40 Picnic spoilers
41 Proverbial
backbreaker
46 Main element in
pewter
47 Dance in a pit
48 Soak up
52 Promotional
theater display
item
54 Martini order
55 Theology subj.
56 Maines nickname,
and a hint to the
ends of 20-, 33- and
41-Across
60 Army vehicle
62 I figured it out! cries
63 Craze
64 Gets older
65 Army status
66 Rags-to-riches author
Horatio
67 Murder mystery staple
68 Russian fighters
69 British city on the River
Aire
Down
1 Black suit
2 Ottawas country
3 Beat in a race
4 thirtysomething actor
Ken
5 Worlds largest ocean
6 Time is money, e.g.
7 Golfers selection
8 Lions tresses
9 Popeyes kid
10 Violin cousin
11 Song title words before
You saw me standing
alone
12 Horror film street
13 Workout unit
21 Nada
22 Beaten instrument
26 Breathe after sprinting
27 Yvess very
29 Pass idly, as time
30 Hair neatener
31 Exited
34 Sylvester and Garfield
35 Cornfield cries
36 Internet address opening
37 Cincinnatis home
38 State-of-the-art 1970s
bike
42 Church agreement
43 Pitchers problem
44 Hard to find
45 Totally dreadful
49 Autumn color
50 Tightened, as shoelaces
51 Dims with tears, as ones
vision
53 A bit too happy at happy
hour?
54 Office workplaces
57 Spicy cuisine
58 Jingled
59 A __ of Two Cities
60 Fighters punch
61 Self-regard
UNDERSTAND YOUR OPTIONS
Call P REGNANCY S UPPORT S ERVICES
Chapel Hill: 919-942-7318 or Durham: 919-490-0203
www.trianglepregnancysupport.com
Free & confidential pregnancy tests
Free limited ultrasound & STD testing
Community Resources
Monday, August 19, 2013
SportsMonday
dailytarheel.com The Daily Tar Heel 16
dth/chris conway
Sam Euler (navy) is one of three UNC goalkeepers vying for the starting position this season. UNC graduated top goalkeeper Scott Goodwin last year.
By Aaron Dodson
Assistant Sports Editor
For the last three seasons, one player and
one player only took to the 24-foot-wide
space between the two 8-foot goal posts at
the start of each game for the North Carolina
mens soccer team.
Wearing the No. 1 jersey, given every year to
the teams starting goalkeeper, Scott Goodwin
made 73 starts and logged more than 6,800
minutes in goal.
But last year, Goodwins four-year career
came to an end with a loss to Indiana in the
quarterfinals of the NCAA Tournament. And
for the last time, the veteran goalkeeper took
off the jersey he wore when he broke both
UNCs single-season and all-time records for
shutouts in 2012.
For now, redshirt junior Brendan Moore
the only current Tar Heel goalie to have regis-
tered collegiate minutes is listed on UNCs
roster as the bearer of the No. 1 jersey. Moore
played in goal only once for the Tar Heels in
a 2011 game for 19 minutes.
But coach Carlos Somoano said the start-
ing job is still up for grabs heading into this
season, calling for Moore, redshirt sophomore
Sam Euler and redshirt freshman Cole Brooks
to compete for the position in the preseason.
We dont look at it as a tough thing to lose
Scott Goodwin, Somoano said. Im going
to miss him, were all going to miss him. But
now its an opportunity for somebody else and
thats exciting.
We have three goalies ... and theyre all
capable.
With Goodwin playing every moment of
UNCs 2012 season in goal, Brooks said there
wasnt much of a battle between the teams
three current goalkeepers to be the next in
line.
For Euler, the time the three goalies spent
behind Goodwin was valuable. The 5-foot-11,
180-pound goalkeeper, who is the smallest of
the group but most similar in size to Goodwin,
said the three were able to form a strong rela-
tionship with one another last year, making
this season's competition a friendly one.
Its odd. People are always questioning why
goalkeepers are such good friends, Euler said.
We use each other to get better and learn
from each other every day.
Were best friends off the field and help
each other on it, using that camaraderie to
help us get better.
Fortunately for the contending goalkeepers,
UNC has returned all three starting back line
Tar Heel goalies play for keeps
Hairstons summer
in the fast lane
A June 5 Durham trac stop marked the beginning a summer of trouble for junior shooting
guard P.J. Hairston. Following a reckless driving charge on July 28, coach Roy Williams suspended
Hairston indenitely. But at a faculty meeting on Aug. 15, Athletic Director Bubba Cunningham
speculated that Hairston would play, but not all the games. Bubba Cunningham takes a P.J.
question. Will he play? Answer: Yes, but not all the games,tweeted journalism professor Andy
Bechtel. Cunningham didn't elaborate further, Bechtel wrote in an email.
SOURCE: DTH REPORTS DTH/CECE PASCUAL, BROOKE PRYOR
May 13
Hairston is cited for speeding 2012 Chevy Camaro SS
with Virginia tags rented by Catinia Farrington.
June 5
Durham Trac Stop
July 3
Rental receipts show Thomas rented the SUV.
July 10
Durham Police dont anticipate ling any additional
charges against Hairston from June 5 incident.
July 15
Roy Williams states that there will be serious consequences.
July 22
Hairstons charges from June 5 incident are dropped.
July 28
Hairston is cited for reckless driving in Rowan County and is
suspended indenitely.
Aug. 2
Hairston has a court date from May 13 speeding ticket but
it is continued to Sept. 13.
Aug. 30
Hairston has a court date in Rowan County for July 28 ticket.
Sept. 27
NCAA Division I basketball teams may begin practice.
Oct. 25
Late Night with Roy
Hairston charged with driving without a license, and
marijuana possession
Gun and magazine recovered outside car
2013 Yukon rented by Haydn FatsThomas
Hairston with Miykael Faulcon and Carlos Sanford
dth/katie sweeney
T.J. Thorpe (5) and the Tar Heels have spent the past three weeks of the pre-
season preparing for their opening matchup against No. 6 South Carolina.
By Max Miceli
Staff Writer
Thirty seconds remained in
a game knotted at 35 in Kenan
Stadium when N.C. State lined up
to punt on its 25-yard line. Giovani
Bernard was back to return.
The rest was history. The electrify-
ing Tar Heel playmaker, who had 19
touchdowns in 2012, scored the big-
gest touchdown of his UNC career by
breaking the teams five-year losing
streak against the Wolfpack.
This season, Bernard will not be
returning punts for the Tar Heels
he was drafted by the Cincinnati
Bengals in April. Now, coach Larry
Fedora is faced with the daunting task
of finding a return man to replace the
All-ACC talent during training camp.
Weve got three guys that are
working out there on punt returns
right now, Fedora said Aug. 1, the
first day of training camp. Just in
the little bit I saw today, we ll be able
to find somebody out of that group.
Among the candidates to replace
Bernard is an equally undersized true
freshman who has proven himself to
be a playmaker in his own right.
He's telling me hes 5-foot-9,
sophomore T.J. Thorpe said of Ryan
Switzer. I know good and well hes
not 5-foot-9.
Switzer, who doesnt yet have an
assigned position, has broken onto
the scene during camp and shown
that he could be what Fedora is
looking for in the return game.
Hes got that will, Fedora said.
Hes got that thing youre looking
for inside his chest.
An ESPN four-star recruit and the
No. 1-ranked player in West Virginia,
Switzer was highly touted coming out
of high school. Now, as a Tar Heel,
hes looking to make an impact as
quickly as possible.
Along with fighting for a spot in the
return game, Switzer has impressed
offensive coordinator Blake Anderson.
Anderson said Switzer and the other
true freshmen have performed at
a high level, especially considering
they're new to UNCs system.
(The true freshmen) have made
an immediate impact and had a
really good camp, Anderson said.
Theyre filling some roles that we
didnt really have a year ago that we
just manipulated with other people.
Fedora said Switzers position as an
A-back on offense is unique to UNCs
system. Switzer will have an opportu-
nity to play both in the backfield and
in the slot, while splitting playing time
with sophomore Kendrick Singleton.
But in the return game, he still
has to beat out Thorpe, who was a
Johnny Rodgers Award finalist
given to the top return specialist in
2011 before a broken foot forced him
to miss all of the 2012 campaign.
Though Thorpe now healthy
wants to return punts and kicks
himself, he said the young speedster
from West Virginia is more than
dth/chris conway
Coach Carlos Somoano (left) will enter his third
season with the Tar Heels. Last season, UNC lost
in the quarterfinals of the NCAA Tournament.
members sophomore Jonathan Campbell
and juniors Jordan McCrary and Boyd
Okwuono to a defense that led the nation in
shutouts last year .
Three of the back four on that line have
been there so they know what the expectations
are, Somoano said. And whoever fills in that
fourth spot (in goal), it ll be new in terms of
on-the-field experience.
But as long as our team is functioning as
an 11-man unit, and beyond when theyre out
there on the field, then we ll be OK on D.
While the Tar Heels are looking to match
the succes they had on defense last season,
Okwuono said starting the preseason without
a sure starter at goalkeeper is the least of the
defenses worries.
We have good talent (in the position) this
year, Okwuono said. All three keepers are
doing really well and Im sure any one of them
would be a good fit for the job.
I am not worried about it, to be honest ...
I just look forward to keeping zeros clean
sheets (on the scoreboard) every game and
basically do the same thing we did last year,
maybe even better.
In the teams first several practices, each
goalkeeper has looked to develop a cohesive
relationship based on constant communica-
tion with the teams starting back line.
Left shoulder! ... right shoulder! Moore
said to multiple defenders as the opposing
Tar Heel offense threatened his teams back
line during a scrimmage at last Wednesdays
practice.
After making a routine save and attempt-
ing to clear the ball, Moore was then met with
a piece of advice from junior defender C.J.
Odenigwe.
Take your time, Odenigwe said to the pro-
spective starting goalkeeper.
Somoano said he will not choose a starter
for UNCs Aug. 30 regular season opener
against Monmouth until after its three exhibi-
tion games.
Each one of us, I think, feels the same way,"
Euler said. Were just going to keep working
and Coach is going to make a decision.
Until then, the counsel Odenigwe lent
Moore patience may be valuable to all
three young goalkeepers as they attempt to
earn the coveted No. 1 jersey.
sports@dailytarheel.com
Only one of three contenders has
in-game experience with UNC.
UNC freshmen turn
heads in training camp
Freshman return man
Ryan Switzer looks to fill
void left by Gio Bernard.
Hes telling me hes
5-foot-9. I know good
and well hes not
5-foot-9.
T.J. Thorpe,
sophomore wide receiver
capable of making a difference.
Im a big Switzer fan, Thorpe
said. He has a chance to turn the
return game around, whether Im
doing it or hes doing it.
This season, when a win is at
stake, Bernard wont be back to
return the punt, but Switzer might
be out there to take it to the house.
(Switzers) got a chip on his shoul-
der being that small, Thorpe said.
(He tries) to go out and prove every-
body wrong, that size doesnt matter.
He is electrifying.
sports@dailytarheel.com
DTH ONLINE: Head to
dailytarheel.com to check out
a video of the UNC football
team at training camp.

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