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lockwise from top left: Coach Larry Fedora raises the Belk Bowl trophy during the post-game presentation after UNC defeated Cincinnati 39-17 on Dec. 28, 2013.; Leslie McDonald drives against Texas guard Isaiah Taylor in his season debut game on Dec. 18, 2013.; P.J. Hairstons basketball career at UNC ended when North Carolina decided on Dec. 20, 2013 not to apply for reinstatement for the junior guard.; The Orange County District Attorneys office turned over 40,000 pages of discovery on hard drives and compact discs on Dec. 17, 2013 to the attorneys for those charged for their involvement in the UNC athletic scandal.; UNC seniors sing the Alma Mater at Commencement on Dec. 15, 2013 in the Dean Smith Center.; Members of the UNC football team celebrate after winning the Belk Bowl.
A bowl victory, NCAA reinstatement, graduation and more. Turn to pages 6 and 7 to catch up from winter break.
Carrboro police are still investigating a shooting last month that left one person dead and another injured. Police responded to a break-in and a possible armed robbery at 105 Wesley St. at around 2 a.m. Dec. 20, according to police reports. When officers arrived at the scene, they found two people with gunshot wounds. Durham resident David Lee Goodman, 27, was pronounced dead at the scene. The other person shot was transported to UNC Hospitals with nonlife threatening injuries, according to police reports. In the 911 call used to alert police to the incident, a man told the operator that two black man had shot someone at 105 Wesley St. before leaving the scene David Lee on foot. Goodman Police do not was killed in a believe the uniden- Dec. 20 shooting tified shooter poses at 105 Wesley St. an ongoing threat in Carrboro. to the community. Capt. Chris Atack, a spokesman for the Carrboro police department, said police have had to respond to 105 Wesley St. for separate incidents over the last few years. Police have responded to issues at the address 52 times since 2009 eight of those occurred during 2013. This house in particular, the year 2013 was pretty active, Atack said. Its not the norm that we have shootings. Records show the house is owned by Roy and James Atwater. Residents at the home refused to comment Tuesday. Carrboro police asked the State Bureau of Investigation for help during the initial phases of the investigation, but have since taken it over. They were involved in the initial phase to help collect evidence from the scene, Atack said. They have the expertise and training to do that. Theyre no longer involved. Once they process the scene, they turned the evidence over to us. Police still have no new information about the shooter since the incident was initially reported, but anyone with information about the crime should call Carrboro police or Crimestoppers. We dont have any additional information that we are releasing, Atack said. But its still actively being investigated. Police are seeking an unidentified black man for questioning in connection to the incident. The man was last seen in the vicinity of 105 Wesley St. on foot on Dec. 20. city@dailytarheel.com
Though the brothers of Chi Phi will continue living in their fraternity house, their privileges will be severely
limited as several organizations within and outside the University conduct investigations. The UNC administration and Chi Phis national organization have been independently investigating the chapter since before winter break and the student-run Greek Judicial Board might begin its own investigation this week. The Greek Judicial Board will get together in the next couple of days and
determine whether the investigation is going to be had on our front, said Fields Pierce, Greek Judicial Board chairman. Greek judicial boards can hear issues relating to violations of council constitutions, recruitment rules and alcohol and hazing policies, according to the UNC Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life and Community
FRATERNITY SuSPENSIONS
The University is investigating the Chi Phi and Pi Lambda Chi fraternities: The Chi Phi fraternity could face an investigation and sanctions from the Greek Judicial Board. Chi Phis national group announced UNCs chapter is suspended while it investigates reports of inappropriate new member activities. The Department of Public Safety cited five Pi Lamda pledges last month for misdemeanor larceny after members of the group stole paper products from the Student Union in connection with new member activities.
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s much as we disapprove of United States politicians, we sure enjoy making fun of them. If someone were to call Barack Obama a potato, itd largely be considered a harmless, albeit strange, jab. But dont go calling Zambian president Michael Sata a potato or you could be arrested and charged with defamation. Thats what happened to Frank Bwalya, head of the Alliance for a Better Zambia, after he called Sata a Chumbu Mushololwa, which literally refers to a sweet potato that breaks when bent and is intended to describe someone who doesnt heed advice. Please, if youre going to insult people by calling them complex carbohydrates, tell them they are a pasta, like rigatoni. Its totally bolder.
NOTED. Robert Vick, a Kentucky man, didnt plan accordingly when he decided to break out of prison right before this weeks polar vortex. By Monday, Vick had enough of the cold temperatures and turned himself back in. Dude, everyone knows to wait until April to break out of jail. Duh. QUOTED. Id suggest one ferret looks very much like another. Thats going to be one of the issues at the trial. Steve Tricker, a lawyer whose client has been charged with allegedly stealing ferrets in Hampshire County, England. For reasons still unknown to local police, ferret theft has been on the rise recently.
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Mike Daiseys The Story of the Gun (Performance): As part of the PlayMakers PRC squared Series, Mike Daisey will delve into the contentious subject of the United States relationship with guns. Daisey will provide historical and political context of guns in the nations culture through the use of comedy. Each performance is followed by a discussion between the artist and audience. The show will run every day until Jan. 12. Tickets range from $15 to $40. Time: 7:30 p.m. Location: Kenan Theatre UNC Mens Basketball vs. Miami: Cheer on the Tar Heels as they take on the Hurricanes in the home opener for Atlantic Coast Conference play. If you
n employee of UNC Student Stores searches a bookshelf for textbooks that students ordered online on Tuesday afternoon before classes start. Many students were in the Student Stores buying textbooks and supplies for the new semester.
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werent randomly selected to receive tickets in the student lottery, available seats will be filled by students in the stand-by line at the start of the game. Students may enter the stand-by line no earlier than one and a half hours before tip-off. Time: 9 p.m. - 11 p.m. Location: Smith Center
Night Cruiser Bike Ride: As part of the Watch for Me NC pedestrian safety campaign, take part in a bike ride. Free bike lights will be provided. Riders of all skill levels are welcome. Time: 7 p.m. - 8 p.m. Location: 108 N. Graham St., Carrboro Music at Local 506: Check out performances by Lowland Hum, Look Homeward and Auburn Kettle. Tickets are $7. Time: 9 p.m. - 11 p.m. Location: Local 506 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.
POLICE LOG
Someone physically assaulted a person at 456 W. Franklin St. at 1 a.m. on Jan. 1, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Someone reported a suspicious condition at 170 Hamilton Road between noon on Jan. 1 and 6:40 p.m. Thursday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Someone broke and entered at 111 North St. between 1 p.m. on Jan. 1 and 5:52 p.m. Sunday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The person shattered the back window of a residence. A computer valued at $1,000 and a phone valued at $300 were stolen from the residence, reports state. Someone reported shoplifting and trespassing at 201 S. Estes Drive at 3:35 p.m. on Jan. 1, according to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole miscellaneous items valued at $30.99. The items were later recovered, reports state.
Someone stole items on East Franklin Street at 8:49 p.m. on Jan. 1, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Items valued at a total of $302 were stolen when the owner set them down. The items were later recovered, reports state. Someone vandalized property at 751 Trinity Court between 11:59 p.m. on Jan. 1 and midnight Monday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. A door was scratched, causing damage estimated at $200, reports state. Someone reported a suspicious condition at 442 Deming Road at 10 a.m. Thursday, according to Chapel Hill police reports.
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Contact Managing Editor Cammie Bellamy at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with tips, suggestions or corrections. Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St. Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Nicole Comparato, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086 Advertising & Business, 962-1163 News, Features, Sports, 962-0245 One copy per person; additional copies may be purchased at The Daily Tar Heel for $.25 each. Please report suspicious activity at our distribution racks by emailing dth@dailytarheel.com 2014 DTH Media Corp. All rights reserved
UNC Womens basketball vs. NC State: Cheer on the Tar Heels as they take on the North Carolina State University Wolfpack. Students get in free with valid OneCards. Faculty, staff and immediate families get free entrance with valid OneCard while tickets are available. Time: 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. Location: Carmichael Arena
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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.
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The faculty of UNCs Department of American studies is meeting today to reconsider its participation in the national American Studies Association. The organization, which publishes materials on American studies and includes scholars from across the country, drafted a resolution to support a boycott of Israeli higher education institutions Dec. 4. The boycott, called for over
what the ASA sees as concerns for Palestinianss human rights, asks universities to not participate in international exchange with Israeli schools. UNC administrators responded with a rejection of the boycott. Chancellor Carol Folt and Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost Jim Dean released a statement Dec. 31 that said the University has a 200-year history of promoting access and international collaboration in higher education arguing that the ASAs resolution directly opposes that concept. Bernie Herman, chairman of UNCs American studies department, said this will be the first time faculty members have had a chance to discuss what if anything
they want to do in response to the boycott. Herman said the meeting would be closed to the public to allow faculty a chance to speak freely. He said many UNC professors have been or are currently actively involved in the association. He said he personally felt the issue was not about politics. It comes down to a question of academic freedom, and I will go to my grave protecting academic freedom, Herman said. It is antithetical to the values of a public institution. Curtis Marez, president of the ASA, said in an open letter to the associations members that its offices have received threatening phone calls and emails since the resolution
was written some have been targeted at specific schoolss programs. Marez said the resolution is protected by the First Amendment. While disagreement and contention are routine aspects of academic culture, threats and intimidation are not acceptable under any circumstance, he said in the letter. Junior global studies major Layla Quran moved to the United States from Palestine at the age of four and said the ASAs decision was a step in the right direction. I really applaud it and think its a wonderful thing, she said. She said the boycott is specifically aimed at the institutions themselves, which she said she thinks are complicit in the Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands. She said the
resolution is not aimed at actual scholars or research coming out of the country. Quran said the Association for Asian American Studies also made a decision to boycott Israeli educational institutions last year. It was the first major academic organization to do so. Quran said Israel has denied open access to education for many Palestinians, and said Folt and Dean should take that into consideration. Before they make such resolutions, she should understand that academic freedom isnt to support it for one group of people, she said. Academic freedom is something that should be applied to all people. university@dailytarheel.com
DTH/KEVIN HU Lindas Bar and Grill on Franklin Street is one of at least three Chapel Hill bars with a No Concealed Weapons decal displayed.
Concealed-carry permit holders have been allowed to bring guns into N.C. restaurants serving alcohol for months now, stirring controversy among interest groups on both sides of the debate. And now, bars are caught in the crossfire. For many Chapel Hill bartenders, the Oct. 1 implementation of the law hasnt had much of an effect on their business. At least three have posted signs forbidding guns on the premises and some Chapel Hill bars have banned weapons verbally. Still, the signs have become political tools for interest groups in the gun debate. Gail Neely, executive director of gun-control organization North Carolinians Against Gun Violence, started a campaign called Ask Before You Eat, which included compiling a list of N.C. restaurants that ban firearms, allowing patrons to thank those establishments. But Neely said the list was taken off the groups website when the tactic backfired restaurant owners were being harassed
by members of gun-rights organization Grass Roots North Carolina. At Grass Roots N.C., President Paul Valone started Safe Restaurants campaign and compiled a list of high-risk restaurants that ban guns. According to the groups website, restaurants are given a notice by Grass Roots N.C. to remove their sign, and if they do not, their information is posted on the website to allow concealed-carry holders and gun-rights activists to contact them further. Among the restaurants listed are Chapel Hill establishments Lindas Bar & Grill, The Blue Horn Lounge and Cholanad Restaurant & Bar. Blue Horn Lounge has a sign banning concealed weapons, but declined to comment. Representatives from Cholanad were unavailable for comment. Lindas owner Chris Carini said he has received a couple of letters in the past few months from Grass Roots N.C. I really dont care, Carini said. Its a sticker on a window. Other Chapel Hill bartenders said they havent been affected by the new law at all. I always thought (permit holders) were allowed to bring in concealed weapons, said
Mike Freas, owner of the bar Recovery Room. I dont know if anyones ever had a gun in here or not. Mandey Brown, owner of Zogs Pool Hall, said she does not allow weapons in her bar. Brown said Zogs hasnt been contacted by Grass Roots N.C., but she wouldnt mind it. Anyone who wants to bring a gun in my bar is welcome to boycott me if they dont want to be here, she said. I would like to be boycotted by people who want to wave guns in my bar. Under the N.C. law, to get a concealed-carry permit, individuals must complete an eighthour course and other requirements. Valone said allowing concealed weapons in bars helps to reduce violent crime by providing a deterrent to criminals. But Neely said she is concerned that allowing concealed weapons in restaurants that serve alcohol could cause more instances of violence. If you have a gun available, if you get in an altercation, its just easy to grab it and shoot rather than work your way out of that situation. state@dailytarheel.com
Before he died, Derek Oliverio dreamed of a restaurant where every menu item is a work of art and the dining area is a supportive environment shared by a community. He called that dream Sup Dogs, and the newsest location will open on Franklin Street in March. The 107 E. Franklin St. location the former home of longtime favorite Peppers Pizza until March 2013 is undergoing renovations. Sup Dogs serves specialty hotdogs and is known in its hometown of Greenville for its Sup Dog sauce. Derek Oliverio came up with the idea for the restaurant while in business school at James Madison University. In 2008, he found a location for Sup Dogs near East Carolina University, where his sister was studying.
Since he was 19 years old, there was no doubt what Derek wanted to do with his life it was creating Sup Dogs, said his brother Bret Oliverio. Two years ago, Derek Oliverio tragically died in a house fire in Greenville. In the days following his death, his family rallied to make sure the restaurant would stay alive. Sup Dogs was closed for one day in Dereks honor, before it was taken over by Bret Oliverio and his wife Jenny. Bret and Jenny left successful careers in Washington, D.C. Bret as the executive producer and on-air broadcaster on a sports radio channel and Jenny selling online home school curricula to learn the business of Sup Dogs from scratch and keep up with its growing demand. Sup Dogs has made us work much harder than we ever expected, but its been rewarding to work for ourselves and for our family, he said. I know my brother is proud of everything we have done since he passed away. Their other brother, Gabe
COURTESY OF BRET OLIVERIO Sup Dogs founder Derek Oliverio (left) poses with brother and current owner Bret Oliverio.
Oliverio Jr.,said Derek and Bret approached the business from different angles, which led to the restaurants success. Dereks best assets were his creativity and inventiveness, he said. Brets best asset is his business pragmatism. He said Derek and Bret had two things in common an obsession over every detail of the business, and a desire to expand. Before he died, Derek took a few trips to downtown Chapel Hill to scout the area for potential business locations.
Chapel Hill always seemed like the natural next step for Sup Dogs, Bret said. Derek wanted the restaurant to be as big as possible, and we are excited to be a part of such an amazing University and downtown community. Dereks father Gabe Oliverio Sr. said Dereks legacy lives on through Sup Dogs. Bret and Jenny have done a great job with expanding Sup Dogs. Like I always say, Im proud to be their pops, he said. city@dailytarheel.com
An online security breach of a UNC server gave the public access to private files of approximately 6,500 employees, former employees and students according to a letter released by the University on Dec. 10. The files contained personal information which included names, Social Security numbers or Employee Tax Identification numbers and, in some cases, addresses and dates of birth. According to the UNC Information and Technology Services website, the breach is believed to have occurred on Jul. 30 during scheduled maintenance of a University computer. An official in the Division of Finance and Administration was notified of the breach on Nov. 11 and, as of Nov. 23, the files were no longer accessible to the public. In response to the breach, UNC is offering a free year-long subscription to a credit monitoring service to the nearly 6,500 affected. Non-state funds will be used for the one-year subscription to a credit-monitoring service, said Patty Courtright, director of internal communications. This will have no effect on student fees. According to a University press release, the safeguards on the computer that normally prevent unauthorized viewing of the files were accidentally disabled. The files were then copied and displayed by an automated Google process. UNC officials said there is still more to uncover as they continue to investigate. Chris Kielt, vice chancellor for information technology, said the person responsible has not yet been identified and disciplinary action against the individual is still possible. He also said the server in question was within UNCs Finance and Administration department. Kielt said there was a gap between when officials were notified of the breach and when the information was no longer available to the public was because the information was cached in Google. We had to work with Google to have all of the cache cleared, and it was verified that this was completely taken care of on the 23rd, Kielt said. It was a server that had been from the physical device to a virtual device, and in the process some of the permissions were changed. Things that had been private subsequently became open and public. Courtright said no one has contacted the school about identity theft or fraud issues due to the breach. Sophomore Kevin Jang said he thinks student information is not protected well enough at UNC, and the breach should call attention to the transparency with which the school holds private student information. I understand how the directory can be used to find emails, but the ability to find any students personal living information is almost scary, Jang said. With that said, Im sure UNC has a lot of regulations and red tape that governs the security so it might be hard to change anything. But freshman Edward Diaz said that though the incident is disheartening, he still trusts the University with his information. I feel like the University is using its resources adequately to fix its mistake, Diaz said. university@dailytarheel.com
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COURTESY OF ONE STATE, ONE RATE Members of the One State, One Rate campaign held a rally outside of Attorney General Roy Coopers office on Dec. 23, 2013.
UNC students are known for promoting social justice issues, and now faculty are joining in the fight. The Faculty Executive Committee and the Faculty Council voted unanimously to support the One State, One Rate campaign last month. The campaign, launched Sept. 9, 2013, aims to give in-state tuition to students without documentation who received a high school diploma from a North Carolina high school or a GED within the state and lived in North Carolina for two consecutive years immediately prior to
graduation. Currently, undocumented students are required to pay out-of-state tuition and are not eligible to receive state or federal financial aid. Faculty at UNC are the first in the system to show support for the campaign. UNC-CH is leading the conversation in in-state tuition, said Emilio Vicente, one of the leaders of the campaign. Its about educating our future leaders, and I think the faculty understand that. Jan Boxill, chairwoman of the faculty, said it is the facultys duty to start the conversation on giving in-state tuition to undocumented students. Our belief is that if we are here to educate the people of N.C., and these have been long-term residents, then at least there should be some
Its about educating our future leaders, and I think the faculty understand that.
Emilio Vicente,
One State, One Rate campaign leader
consideration of their plight, Boxill said. Boxill said the UNC Board of Governors relies on faculty members across the UNC system to alert them to the issues that exist on the various campuses but said their actual influence on the board is minimal. She also said the facultys influence on Chancellor Carol Folt and the Board of Trustees is merely advisory. Daniela Hernandez Blanco, another member of the campaign, said the unanimous decision by the faculty council is an endorsement from educators. It shows that educators
are aware of whats going on, Blanco said. They are aware that they have students who are undocumented in their classrooms. Vicente said he hopes Folt and the Board of Trustees become part of the issue in the spring, and he wants to engage as many students as possible in the campaign. We want to continue this diverse coalition and share our stories as to why education is really important to us as students, faculty and staff on this campus, Vicente said. The campaign is awaiting a formal legal opinion from N.C. Attorney General Roy
COURTESY OF ONE STATE, ONE RATE A supporter, dressed as a snowman, campaigns in the Pit on Nov. 5, 2013 for One State, One Rate.
Cooper, who has not said what his stance is on the issue. I think he has no reason to not support the campaign, Blanco said. He has one duty: to support the law as it is written. There is nothing within the N.C. constitution that prohibits undocumented students from getting in-state tuition. Vicente said he and other
members of the campaign are dedicated to making the campaign a long-term commitment, he but hopes the campaign will achieve its goals by the end of this academic year. Were really hopeful and optimistic that (Cooper) will make a positive announcement in the next few weeks, Vicente said. university@dailytarheel.com
embark on a 20-mile trek from Chapel Hill to Raleigh to urge N.C. Attorney General Roy Cooper to provide a legal opinion on whether students
in the U.S. without documentation qualify for in-state tuition. This is the latest step in a recent push by student-led organizations such as the North Carolina DREAM Team, Immigrant Youth Forum and Students United for Immigrant Equality to advocate for in-state tuition for students without documentation. The groups are campaigning through rallies, press conferences and an online petition to Cooper, the UNCsystem Board of Governors and the N.C. Community College System. The marches, the rallies, they came out of the need to put pressure and hold (Cooper) accountable, said Daniela Hernandez Blanco, a UNC sophomore and an advocate for the One State, One Rate Campaign for instate tuition. Hes running completely silent. In the past few months, groups in the campaign held press conferences in Charlotte and Durham, as well as two rallies outside Coopers office. Another rally was held in November at the Equality N.C. Foundation Gala in Greensboro, an event Cooper attended. Hernandez Blanco said students were able to catch Cooper as he was leaving, and he promised a decision in the following week. But despite numerous phone calls afterward, he has remained silent, Hernandez Blanco said. While hes remaining silent, hes holding our
Were not going to rest. We are not leaving until we get what we want.
Daniela Hernandez Blanco,
UNC sophomore
degrees hostage, she said. Hernandez Blanco said the organizations want the march on Saturday called the March of Broken Dreams to garner even more public exposure. Were not going to rest, she said. We are not leaving until we get what we want. Noelle Talley, a spokeswoman for Coopers office, said in an email the attorney generals office is working on providing a response. N.C. Rep. Marcus Brandon (D-Guilford) also sent a letter to Cooper in mid-December requesting a review of the law requiring students without documentation to pay outof-state tuition. Brandon also requested Coopers written legal opinion as to whether these students are eligible for in-state tuition. We would like for him to be on record and give an opinion as the state attorney general, he said. I really reasonably believe we have a case here. Brandon said he was not able to get in touch with Cooper for a response during the holidays, but he expects a response by the end of the week. Even with a response from Cooper, the earliest that students without documentation would be able to receive in-state tuition would be next May when the General
Assembly would be back in session to change the law, Brandon said. However, he said, it is doubtful a change would happen that soon. Joni Worthington, spokeswoman for the UNC system, said the system must charge students without documentation out-of-state tuition unless the law changes. Our campuses could not charge in-state tuition rates to undocumented students without a change in state law, she said. But Brandon said he would encourage, support and possibly even write this legislation in the future. Brandon said he enjoys watching all the advocacy efforts that students without documentation have coordinated recently. If you dont advocate on behalf of yourself, no one will advocate for you, he said. I think it is beautiful to watch, and I think they are doing an excellent job. state@dailytarheel.com
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turned in a second half of the season that couldnt have been farther from the first. UNC won five straight games en route to winning six of its last seven, but the Tar Heels hadnt truly proved that they had changed their ways until they took the field against the Bearcats in the Belk Bowl. By the end of the first quarter, North Carolina led Cincinnati 16-0. In those 15 minutes and the 45 to follow, UNC showcased the facets that allowed for its fantastic turnaround. That turnaround and the Belk Bowl victory were led in most part by phenomenal freshman. T.J. Logan scored the Tar Heels second touchdown of the game on a 78-yard kickoff return and Ryan Switzer added six more points on an 86-yard punt return. Switzers return was his fifth touchdown return of the
season, tying an NCAA record and sealing his All-American selection. North Carolinas Belk Bowl title was the schools first bowl title since 2010.
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