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The Daily Tar Heel For Oct. 3, 2016
The Daily Tar Heel For Oct. 3, 2016
The Daily Tar Heel For Oct. 3, 2016
dailytarheel.com
DTH/NATHAN KLIMA
UNC kicker Nick Weiler (24) is hoisted by his teammates after kicking a career-high 54-yard field goal with four seconds remaining to lift North Carolina over No.12 Florida State in Tallahassee on Saturday.
The senior kicker hit a 54-yard field goal to lift Tar Heels over Florida State
By Brendan Marks
Senior Writer
TALLAHASSEE This
moment would be inscribed,
for its ecstasy or its agony, in
out magistrate
law challenge
stayed in school. Hes struggling to understand why her life ended this way.
I want to know the reason why he got
on that road and drove drunk, John said.
Anytime you drink and you drive, you put
your life in jeopardy and other lives in jeopardy.
Dionne McGee, Johns wife, knew Darlene
for more than 20 years. They talked almost
every day, and when they didnt have time for
a phone call, they texted.
She said Darlenes bright smile could light
up a room.
She was a beautiful person, Dionne said.
(She loved) singing, making people happy,
going to church, helping people.
Darlene worked with people who were
handicapped and had special needs.
Everybody at her job, they fell in love
with her, Dionne said.
As Kanias trial approaches, Dionne said
shes struggled to try to forgive him.
I believe in God, I believe in forgiving
people, but its just so hard, she said. Her
brother misses her daily. They were like
twins, they were so close.
News
JANE WESTER
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
By Lauren Farrington
EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
Staff Writer
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STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
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SWERVE DIRECTOR
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C JACKSON COWART
SPORTS EDITOR
Celebrations
ENGAGEMENTS
BIRTHS
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ZITA VOROS
DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
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SARAH DWYER,
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TIPS
Brad and Lucia (UNC 05) Riley welcomed Landon Archer Riley (8 lbs, 12 oz., 22 inches
tall) at 5:18 a.m. on Aug. 9, 2016. Landons grandparents are Sprite (UNC 70) and Connie
Barbee of Pinehurst and Priscilla Riley of Carthage.
WEDDINGS
Madison (Hayes) and Daniel Rauscher
Madison Hayes (UNC 16) and Daniel Rauscher (UNC 15) met as students at Chapel Hill
in 2013 through a combination of student ministry and intramural sports.
They got engaged at the Chapel Hill mural behind Hes Not Here in November 2015 on
the morning before the homecoming game versus Duke.
Madison, daughter of Billy and Susan Hayes of Holly Springs, graduated with degrees in
Management and Political Science and works in retail management. Daniel, son of Todd and Barb
Rauscher of Pinehurst, graduated with a Sports Administration degree and works in management.
They got married in Cary on Aug. 14, 2016, and are excited to now be Tar Heels born,
bred and wed!
J
ill
McC
orkle
T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F N O R T H C A R O L I NA AT C H A P E L H I L L P R E S E N T S
a born storyteller
2016
Thomas
Wolfe
Lecture
Tuesday, Oct. 4
7:30 p.m.
Genome Sciences Bldg.
(Auditorium)
250 Bell Tower Road
UNC Campus
Free / Open to the Public
englishcomplit.unc.edu/wolfe
Sponsored by John and Jessica Skipper,
The Department of English & Comparative
Literature, and The Thomas Wolfe Society
Kevin Robert Kiley and Annie Baer Kiley were married June 11, 2016.
Kevin, a son of Edward and Patricia Kiley of Cary, is a Ph.D. student in the sociology department at Duke University. Annie, a daughter of Katherine Ellis Baer of
Chapel Hill, and Robert Andrew Baer and Mary Mallory Baer of Boca Grande, Florida,
is a web developer with Smashing Boxes in Durham.
Kevin and Annie met as first-year students at UNC, when Annie was looking for a
television on which to watch LOST. The flirtation quickly followed. A highly embarrassing string of still-public Facebook messages indicate that neither was very good
at it. On November 9th, 2006, after the annual Morehead-Cain fall banquet, the two
talked for hours outside of the Undergraduate Library (Annie had lied to Kevin about
needing a book from the library in order to spend more time with him, a fact Kevin
only learned several years into their relationship). Their first date was dinner at Jack
Sprat on Franklin Street followed by a production of Hamlet on campus. After nine
years of dating, much of which was spent in different time zones, they got engaged
on the steps of Old West (Annies first-year dorm) on Nov. 17, 2015, shortly after
moving back to the Triangle together. They got married at the Carolina Inn. It was
awesome.
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 Hannah Smoot at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
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POLICE LOG
Someone reported damage to property at the 200
block of South Elliot Road at
10:17 a.m. Thursday, accord-
News
DTH/PEGGY MULLIN
Olivia Valdes adds some paint to create a work of spin art with friends at the Carrboro ArtsCenter booth at Festifall on West Franklin Street on Sunday.
By Brinley Lowe
Staff Writer
DTH/ARAMIDE GBADAMOSI
A group discussion about race relations in America took place following a showing of Detroit 67 on Saturday Oct. 1.
News
FOOTBALL
FROM PAGE 1
MCGEE
FROM PAGE 1
a similar mindset.
What would I say? We
need you to make it? Fedora
said. Theres nothing to say.
He knows what he needs to
do.
Fedora had already spoken to Weiler twice during
Saturdays contest, but only
after his kicks. More specifically, after his misses. The
first was a 51-yard attempt
Weiler pushed wide right to
start the second half.
The second was much
more recent, and more
consequential. After quarterback Mitch Trubisky
found Thomas Jackson for a
34-yard touchdown with 2:31
to play a score which put
UNC (4-1, 2-0 ACC) up six
she said.
She said karate has helped
her in many aspects of her life
other than self-defense.
Theres a lot of emphasis
on focus and perseverance,
and also learning and teaching at all levels, knowing that
you can learn from younger
students as well as older,
more advanced students,
Rojas said. Ive gained confidence. I feel like I can handle
my body better because its
helped me with my coordination.
Like Rojas, first-year
Wayne Ruan said UNC
Shotokan was his first exposure to karate.
Before karate, I was a person who studies and doesnt
have time for exercise, but
now, Im using karate as a
gateway for exercising each
day and staying healthy, he
said.
Ruan said he sticks with
the club because of their
instructor, Kent Wang,
despite the large time commitment three-hour practices, three times a week.
He knows what hes
doing, Ruan said. I just trust
him.
Wang, fifth degree JKS
Staff Writer
DTH/LACHLAN MCGRATH
Sensai Nagatomo (center) engages a diverse range of competitors at a UNC Shotokan Karate tournament Saturday afternoon.
Course evaluations
may become public
By Kayla Drake
Staff Writer
Deadlines
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Send a resume to hr@chapelhillgymnastics.
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TRUNK OR TREAT: Chapel Hill Parks& Rec is
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SERVICE DIRECTORY
HOROSCOPES
If October 3rd is Your Birthday...
Grow and develop like a weed this year. Polish your
presentation. Spring social changes lead to surging
physical and intellectual vitality. A romantic turning
point next autumn comes before new possibilities
inspire a group project. Nurture your roots for thriving.
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Sports
NORTH CAROLINA 5
MICHIGAN1
By Sam Doughton
Staff Writer
A 37-day transformation
for the No. 2 North Carolina
field hockey team culminated
in the Tar Heels (9-2, 3-1
ACC) riding four second-half
goals to a 5-1 defeat of No. 9
Michigan (7-4) on Sunday.
The game fell in stark
contrast to the Tar Heels
season-opening 1-0 loss to
the Wolverines 37 days ago.
UNC fell on an untimed
penalty-corner goal in the
teams first season-opening
loss since 2002.
Becoming a team is a
process, Head Coach Karen
Shelton said.
We talk a lot of the time
about getting 1 percent better each day. And I think our
team has embraced that.
Some things have changed
for the Tar Heels in those
37 days. For one, they have
a resume with wins over
defending national champion Syracuse and national
semifinalist Duke just one
weekend ago.
Senior Lauren Moyer said
early on in the season, the
team had an expectation of
winning but didnt really put
in the work necessary to actually win games.
In the past, weve just kind
of let our name carry us, and
just because were Carolina,
were supposed to win games,
Moyer said.
Senior Julia Young agreed.
The games weve gone in
just kind of playing, and not
working hard, just expecting
it, are the games that weve
lost, Young said.
But something switched
for North Carolina after that
first game against Michigan
and a loss to Boston College.
The Tar Heels saw themselves in a different light
as underdogs.
Being bumped down to
No. 5 last week really helped
us play well against Syracuse
and Duke, Young said. I
DTH/NICK BAFIA
UNC forward Eef Andriessen (10) fights for possession of the ball
during the Tar Heels 5-1 victory over Michigan on Sunday.
Played em to a draw
The womens soccer team
tied the Virginia Cavaliers
in a home game this weekend. Visit online for more.
games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level:
4
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
Solution to
last puzzle
prefix
66 Genetics lab subj.
67 Audacity
68 __ Island
69 Incidentally, in texting
... and a hint to three
long puzzle answers
Down
1 RoboCop is one
2 Wine storage area
3 Inferior cigar
4 Compliment on the
back
5 Princely letters
6 S-shaped molding
7 Soup serving
8 Out-of-use anesthetic
9 White terrier, familiarly
10 Ctrl-__-Del: PC reboot
combo
11 Youre getting too
excited
12 Like a 45-10 football
game
17 Roll of bills
18 Long-range nuke
22 Many pride parade
participants
24 Therefore
25 Bucks and does
30 Instructions
component
31 Superman, e.g.
33 Superman lover Lane
34 In that case ...
35 Consequently
37 Lunchbox alternative
38 And so forth
39 Cyberzine
40 Small dam
41 Berry rich in
antioxidants
44 Whenever you want to
45 Ugly duckling, as we
learn later
47 -ly word, usually
48 Admonition to a sinner
49 Act that suppresses free
speech
52 What an unruly
courtroom lacks
54 Part of NCAA: Abbr.
57 Carve in stone
58 Chase off
61 Evil film computer
62 Last in a sequence
63 __ is me!
Opinion
TREY FLOWERS
DAVID FARROW
JONATHAN NUNEZ
KATE STOTESBERY
CHRIS DAHLIE
GEORGIA BRUNNER
ZAYNAB NASIF
ELIZA FILENE
WILL PARKER
SEYOUNG OH
CRYSTAL YUILLE
NEXT
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Just
gonna
watch
me burn
Mejs Hasan
ASGA is in solidarity
with protesters
EDITORIAL
COLUMN
n Friday, we did
something important.
The Daily Tar Heel has
long argued that when someone is found responsible for
sexual assault on campus,
the University should release
the records of the case.
Theres a specific exception in FERPA, the law that
protects student privacy, that
says universities can do this
once the case is over.
UNC has always said no to
our public records requests
for this information. FERPA
says universities can release
the information, not that
they must release it.
We say releasing the
records of these cases is a
public service and, quite
simply, the right thing to do.
On Friday, we made
another records request for
the information and, this
time, we were joined in
the request by eight North
Carolina media outlets,
Fusion and the Student
Press Law Center.
UNCs Equal Opportunity
and Compliance Office
released a 2014-15 annual
report that described the outcomes of sexual assault cases
that year in an extremely
Jane Wester
Editor-in-Chief
Senior history major from
Charlotte
Email: editor@dailytarheel.com
TO THE EDITOR
We are members of the
American Studies Graduate
Student Association. We
write now in solidarity
with the protests against
police violence in Charlotte
following the murder of
Keith Lamont Scott and
with those fighting against
the transphobic politics of
North Carolinas House Bill
2. The purposeful denial of
humanity to people of color
and transgender individuals by our state and local
governments is a violent
stain on our state, which
has been a silent, but active
participant in the destructive repudiation of human
complexity and diversity.
As citizens of North
Carolina, we write for a
future state that discards
the legacy of its racist, bigoted past and present, and
begins the work of valuing
and honoring difference.
As students and teachers at
UNC-Chapel Hill, we write
to defend the Universitys
tradition of progressive
scholarship and service
for and with marginalized
communities in our state.
And as students and teachers of American Studies,
we write to uphold our
commitment to study and
teach the complexity of our
nations past and present
and to empower others
to value that complexity
toward the creation of an
equitable future.
The murder of people of
color through public statesanctioned violence and
the refusal to acknowledge
transgender individuals
as citizens are both part
of a history of violence in
our state in which governments kill and discriminate
with impunity. We stand
with those protesting in
Charlotte and across North
Carolina and ask our colleagues to stand publicly
with us.
In solidarity,
American Studies
Graduate Student
Association
TO THE EDITOR:
The Daily Tar Heel
Editorial Board selective
critique of Israel linked
in the context of appropriate protest of murders
of African Americans in
the U.S. is truly shameful.
Coming at the same time as
the Death of Shimon Peres
and right before the start
of one of the holiest days of
the Jewish New Year, Rosh
Hashanah, an opportunity
to promote a message of
Peace and coming together
was clearly lost on your
paper. (On Thursday), delegations from almost every
country in the free world
came to Israel to stand up
for a message and vision of
peace. The State of Israel
simply has tried for over 75
years to live in peace and
protect its citizens from
wars and rocket attacks
from those who want to
see her wiped off the map.
Editorials that selectively
target one of the great
democracies in the world
are flawed and dangerous.
Viewpoints sparked a
good conversation
Adam Goldstein
Class of 93
TO THE EDITOR:
As University
Entrepreneur-inResidence and one of the
founders of the E-Minor
in the Department of
Economics I could not
be more pleased with the
provocative and thoughtful
essays on entrepreneurship in the Viewpoints
column. Hopefully, this is
the beginning of a continuing conversation about
ways that innovation and
entrepreneurial thinking
can be appropriately integrated into a liberal arts
curriculum.
Dean Kevin Guskiewicz
has convened a think tank
and other advisory committees to consider the curriculum in the College and
how traditional disciplines
can be applied outside of
academia in ways that do
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Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com
EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the
opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises 11 board
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