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Volume 123, Issue 20

Director
accused of
sex-for-hire

Monday, March 30, 2015

DRAG ROYALTY UNITES

A lawsuit said a former


housekeeping director hired
workers for sexual favors.
By Bradley Saacks
University Editor

This time, it isnt Mary Willingham


suing the University for mistreatment
after revealing troubling information.
On Thursday, a former zone manager in the housekeeping department
filed a lawsuit against the University,
specifically naming Darius Dixon,
housekeeping services director; Gena
Carter, senior director of employee
and management relations; and Ben
Triplett, assistant director of housing.
Clifton Leon Webbs suit said former
housekeeping services director Bill
Burston would fire black housekeepers
to bring in Asian housekeepers, who
would reciprocate the new job with sexual favors for Burston. Webb said he was
demoted and eventually fired for bringing this information to his superiors.
Plaintiff noticed that Director
Burston would terminate the employment of numerous black or AfricanAmerican employees for pretextual
reasons to create vacant positions in
which to hire employees from Asian
countries in exchange for sex and/or
sexual favors, the lawsuit reads.
Jim Gregory, a spokesman for the
University, said it is UNCs policy not to
comment on pending litigation.
We cant provide any further details
at this time, Gregory said in an email.
The suit says Webb informed
University ombudsman Wayne Blair
about the situation, and the information of Burstons hiring practices eventually made its way to Carolyn Elfland,
former associate vice chancellor for
facility services, and Ann Penn, former
vice chancellor for Equal Employment
Opportunity/American Disabilities Act.
After Webb made his observations
known, the suit says the housekeeping
department began to work to fire him.
On information and belief, UNCCHs reassignment of Plaintiff was
a planned step taken by Defendants to
build a case against Plaintiff for the
pretextual purpose of dismissing his
employment without just cause, the
lawsuit said.
Burston was removed from his position as director but was still working in some capacity at the University
in March of 2011, when PRM
Consulting Group was brought in to
review his department.
The groups report gave more than
45 recommendations for change and
led to the eventual firing of Burston
from the University.
The report made no mention of
Burston hiring anyone for sexual
favors, even though the lawsuit states

SEE LAWSUIT, PAGE 4

DTH/KYLE HODGES
Clockwise from top left: Junior Dakota Powell performs as Lady Jane Scandal on
Friday night at Chapel Hill Undergrounds drag show. Dashawnda Jackson, a drag
queen and hostess, started the show. A disc jockey played music for performers.

UNCs 13th annual Unity Conference hosted the drag show


By Erin Wygant
Assistant Arts & Culture Editor

Junior Alex Ponikvar shed his economics


major persona Friday night and strutted across
the stage in stilettos and a platinum wig as
drag queen Diana Thurst.
His performance of Aquas Barbie Girl
filled Chapel Hill Underground as flashing
lights ushered in UNCs 13th annual Unity
Conference.
The drag show, featuring three local drag
queens and a drag king, drew a crowd of
nearly 200 to celebrate the conference and
watch the divas lip sync and dance to popular
songs.
Everyone has a hobby, and mine happens
to be a little expensive and involve a lot of
makeup, Ponikvar said. I cant paint a picture,
but I can paint my face. And even if you look a
total mess but give off the vibe that youre into
it, people will love it.
Planning for the conference began over the
summer, when co-directors Lauren Martin,
a junior, and 2014 graduate Emily Chambliss
agreed that a drag show would set the right
tone for a fun and engaging conference.
While activist work is important, we need
to recognize the time to have fun, network and
be social, Martin said. A drag show is just a
great event for everyone.
The night began with local drag queen and
hostess Dashawnda Jackson expressing her
excitement for the conference.
Unity has been one thing I have loved,
Jackson said. Its time for everyone to unite
and come together as one.
Dakota Powell, whose stage name is Lady
Jane Scandal, is a junior at UNC whos been

performing drag for two years.


I taught myself how to do the makeup and
how to sew, which helps because I make some
of my own outfits, Powell said, spinning to
show off a paneled, sequined dress.
For Powell, the art of performing has been
a freeing experience, supported by the liberal
Triangle drag community in an otherwise conservative state.
Its about learning to let go and perform,
which isnt always easy, Powell said. Ill get
strange looks from people on my way to Pride
in Durham, but once Im there, everyone is
great.
Amateur nights in Raleigh have helped
Ponikvar practice different looks and routines, but he said drag comes at the price of
comfort.
Wearing a bra is unbelievable this underwire just digs into you, and its awful if you
dont have padding, Ponikvar said. But its fun
to try and capture the different aesthetics.
Victoria Chang, a junior environmental science and policy major at Duke University, came
to support the conference.
I had no idea what to expect at my first drag
show, but its been great, Chang said. We have
Blue Devils United, which is the LGBTQ community on campus, but I dont think we have
anything like this.
Malcolm Aaron, who has worked as the
bouncer at CHUG for four years, said he was
overwhelmed by the support for the event.
This is a big turnout, but Im not that surprised because its a fascinating event, Aaron
said.
CHUG gets so many bands and sorority
mixers that its great to see something different
and watch these ladies tear the house down.

Longtime YMCA renovations complete


The wellness club added a
new lobby and additional
studios for classes.

Alex Ponikvar,
economics major and drag queen in Fridays show

The conference focused on Past, Present,


and Future, a formulaic concept that Martin
hoped rang true in all the Unity events.
We need to see how the past LGBTQ experiences have shaped the current situations to
then see what we need to do for the future,
Martin said.
Powell said part of drags future involves
shedding light on its misconceptions, such as
assuming everyone who does drag is gay or a
trans woman.
Ponikvar agreed.
Sometimes its just bored, little gay boys
that want to dance around and paint their
face, he said.
Dorian Gaye, a drag king from Atlanta, performed for his second time on Friday. Gaye said
he is glad to have events like the conference to
perform for a supportive community.
Drag is overall a creative art, Gaye said. I
like it because I like being a ham on stage.
The group of LGBTQ, straight, young and
old partied through the night, celebrating what
Powell said was a successful way to appreciate
the art form.
Some queens have a character, but my drag
persona is just me, Ponikvar said. Theres
no right or wrong way to do drag. Its what
inspires you.

Staff Writer

By Elizabeth Matulis
Staff Writer

DTH/CLAIRE COLLINS
YMCA members attend a total body strength class in the main studio on March 23.

It was a long time coming, Lee said.


Everyone is really excited and happy to
have the space back.
He said the renovation also included
moving administrative offices downstairs
to a smaller, shared space to allow room
for more wellness space upstairs. There
are now machines and open space for
exercises with balls, mats and bands
where the offices once were, and new

TVs were added to the wellness area.


About 5,000 members were using
six treadmills before the number of
machines was doubled, Lee said.
He also said there are now two studios
for classes instead of one, so classes can be
held simultaneously, with new floors, ceilings and mirrors in both studios. Lee said

SEE YMCA, PAGE 4

Proposals similar to a controversial law just passed in


Indiana which critics allege
could allow individuals and
businesses to discriminate
based on religious beliefs are
making their way through the
N.C. General Assembly.
The two bills, both titled
the N.C. Religious Freedom
Restoration Act, were filed last
week and would allow any person or organization to cite religious beliefs as a legal defense
in court. William Marshall, a
UNC law professor, said the
bills language is very broad.
It could mean that a company owned by a Baptist could
refuse on religious grounds to
serve a Methodist, he said.
Frank Pray, chairman of the
UNC College Republicans, said

We all came into this world naked. The rest is all drag.
RUPAUL

arts@dailytarheel.com

Religious freedom
debate reaches NC
Lawmakers proposals
are similar to Indianas
new, criticized law.

By Bridget Dye
Theres no need to feel down now
that the Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA
on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard
has reopened after completing a massive renovation that began in October.
The renovation includes a new lobby,
an expanded wellness area, an additional studio for classes and a redesigned
youth area, said Greg Lee, spokesman
for several area YMCAs.
Lee said the entire upstairs of the
YMCA was redesigned to include a
modern lobby with an open layout, and
the glass separating the lobby from
the main wellness area downstairs was
removed to create a more open feeling.
He said the lobby was also opened up to
create a place where people can sit and
chat after working out.
People go to classes and then hang
out, he said. They build interests and
make friends.
The renovations were paid for with
funds saved by the YMCA over the
years, Lee said.

Theres no right or wrong way


to do drag. Its what inspires
you.

he thinks the bills language


needs refining but believes that
the proposals protect important religious liberties.
It is a step in the correct
direction of ensuring your
own property rights, your
religious freedom, while also
not having the government
discriminate against any individuals, Pray said.
Similar religious freedom
laws are already in place in 19
states, he added.
If you really own your own
property, you have the right to
use it and to let others use it
as you wish, he said.
Even if a business chose
to use the religious belief
defense to engage in discriminatory practices, Pray said,
studies have shown that these
businesses tend to suffer.
Marshall said Indiana has
already felt the economic
impact of its new law, which
was signed on Thursday
Angies List, a consumer review
site, said it was delaying a

SEE FREEDOMS, PAGE 4

News

Monday, March 30, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel


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An accidental high

122 years of editorial freedom


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WOODTURNING WONDER

DAILY
DOSE

Established 1893

From staff and wire reports

ome police officers in Indonesia ended up doing something they


were desperately trying to avoid. The police officers seized 1,100
pounds of marijuana that was worth $1 million. And because the
cops thought this would be a great idea, they decided to set fire to
the pile of marijuana. We are going to go ahead and say the officers werent
well-versed on what happens when you burn marijuana. The officers were
wearing masks while they burned the pile; however, the smoke was not contained and spread over the surrounding neighborhoods. It isnt hard to guess
what happened next. Locals reported feeling unusual and dizzy. And we
are sure that all of the local convenient stores ran out of Cheetos and frozen
pizza. And all fun was had for one night. Cops for the win.

NOTED. A Pennsylvania man received a


get well card from his dad with a lottery ticket tucked inside. Well, that lottery
ticket was the winning ticket and made the
man a cool $7 million richer. Moral of the
story: Never get upset when you get a lottery ticket from your grandmother or your
great aunt. It could be your lucky ticket.

Contact Managing Editor


Katie Reilly at
managing.editor@dailytarheel.com
with tips, suggestions or
corrections.
Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Jenny Surane, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086
Advertising & Business, 962-1163
News, Features, Sports, 962-0245
Distribution, 962-4115
One copy per person;
additional copies may be purchased
at The Daily Tar Heel for $0.25 each.
Please report suspicious activity at
our distribution racks by emailing
dth@dailytarheel.com
2015 DTH Media Corp.
All rights reserved

TODAY

Faculty Recital: Clara Yang, a


pianist at UNC, will be performing a recital along with
Dovid Friedlander and Peng
Li, musicians from the North
Carolina Symphony. The recital
will feature works from Bach,
Beethoven and Brahms. The
recital is free and open to the
public.
Time: 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Location: Person Hall

Movies in the Morning: A


Farewell to Arms: The Friday
Center will be playing the
Academy Award-winning film A
Farewell to Arms. The movie is a
love story between an American ambulance driver and an
English nurse during World War
I. There will be a discussion after

the film, led by Kimball King, an


adjunct professor of dramatic art
at UNC. The event is open to the
public. Admission is $10.
Time: 10 a.m. to noon
Location: William and Ida Friday
Center for Continuing Education
Writing a Medical Personal
Statement: University Career
Services is hosting a session
to give suggestions on how to
write a medical personal statement to apply to medical school.
There will be professionals from
Prehealth Advising, the Princeton Review and the Writing
Center to provide suggestions
on how best to write a personal
statement. The event is free and
open to all UNC students.
Time: 3 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Location: Hanes Hall, room
239b

5
1

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.

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 Katie Reilly at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.

Like us at facebook.com/dailytarheel

TIMBER
HOLLOW

APARTMENT HOMES

LivingChapelHill.com

The Diaspora Festival of


Black and Independent Film
Bound: The documentary,
Bound, will be playing with a
discussion following the screening of the film. The film explores
the tension between Africans
and African-Americans. The
discussion will be led by the director of the film, Peres Owino,
and four student panelists. The
screening is free and open to
the public.
Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Location: Sonja Haynes Stone
Center Theater

CORRECTIONS

86

The Apartments at

QUOTED. If you are trying to choose a


wingman or wingwoman, choose someone
as similar to you as possible, just slightly less
attractive.
Hannah Fry, a mathemetician, showing there is math and logic behind choosing
a wingman. She also wrote an equation for a
spouses reaction to almost anything.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

TUESDAY

TIPS

The Daily Tar Heel

Follow us on Twitter @dailytarheel

DTH/KATY MURRAY

etired forest manager Michael Thompson


demonstrates the art of woodturning at the
N.C. Botanical Gardens on Sunday. He creates a variety of products including bowls and candlesticks, which each have to dry for six months.

POLICE LOG
Someone reported a loud
noise violation at the 400
block of N.C. 54 at 12:42 a.m.
Friday, according to Carrboro
police reports.

of Trinity Court at 1:14 p.m.


Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Over $200 in cash was stolen, reports state.

Someone was trespassed


from Sup Dogs at 107 E.
Franklin St. at 12:36 a.m.
Friday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.

Someone committed
larceny at the 200 block of
Perkins Drive at 7:32 a.m.
Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person used bolt cutters to take an air conditioning unit, reports state.

Someone stole a bicycle


from a residence at the 500
block of Brookside Drive at
3:04 a.m. Friday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The bicycle was valued at
$100, reports state.
Someone reported cruelty
to animals at 700 Sykes St. at
2:10 a.m. Thursday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
People locked a dog in
a box in the trunk of a car,
reports state.
Someone reported a
loan scam at the 700 block

Someone stole a laptop


computer from a classroom
in a school at 500 Weaver
Dairy Road between 1:10
p.m. and 2 p.m. Thursday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The computer was valued
at $2,000, reports state.
Someone reported aggravated assault at a school at
500 Weaver Dairy Road at
8:50 a.m. Friday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.

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News

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, March 30, 2015

A FRUITLESS HUNT

Art clubs
turn to
benefits
Franklin Street restaurants
are helping art groups raise
the money they need.
By Madison Flager
Staff Writer

spark an even bigger conversation


about food and the Sonder Market.
Were just hoping to utilize its
attention, potential funding opportunities and more than anything,
student interest to help us proliferate what weve already got the ball
rolling on, Barczak said.
Barczak hopes that this semester will be a chance to grow an
even larger community surrounding the Sonder Market.
We are here to both make a
difference and enjoy ourselves and
have fun, and we want people to
have fun with us, she said.

Everyone has received a Facebook


invitation, or 20, for benefit nights.
Chapel Hill businesses regularly
partner up with student organizations,
donating a portion of sales from the
night to the group. Greek organizations
and philanthropic clubs host these
events often, but recently arts organizations have been turning to this method
of fundraising, too.
Prior to this semester, the coed arts
and literary fraternity St. Anthony Hall
did not host benefit nights, president
Emily Monnett, a junior, said. Without a
national charity, they didnt have much
to raise money for. But in need of funding for their annual alumni weekend
which will run April 10 to April 12 they
hosted two benefit nights this semester.
Beer Study went really well. They
chipped in some of their money to help
our cause, Monnett said. TRU (Deli +
Wine) was packed that night too, so I
think we made some good money.
On Saturday, TRU Deli + Wine hosted the fourth annual Mixed Concrete
art show benefitting the UNC chapter
of Habitat for Humanity, featuring artwork donated by students, alumni and
community members.
Mixed Concrete team member and
senior Kaitlyn Goforth said that in the
past, a big chunk of Habitats yearly
goal $40,000 came from Mixed
Concrete. As of Sunday night, they
raised $6,500.
TRU events manager Tanner King
said the number of requests he gets
for benefit nights has gone up over the
last year.
It used to be one to two a year, and
as of late were doing two to three a
week, he said.
King said Mixed Concrete is consistently TRUs most attended benefit
night every year.
Music fraternity Sigma Alpha Iota
is looking into hosting benefit nights,
too, after many years of avoiding such
fundraisers.
Past fundraising chairs have cautioned us against doing them because
theyve had problems with the restaurant not being particularly easy to work
with or it just not being a huge moneymaker, fundraising co-chairwoman
and junior Caroline Sprecher said.
I see a lot of other organizations
do benefit nights all the time though,
and I feel like if that many people are
doing them, there has to be some way
to be successful.
Music fraternity Kappa Kappa Psi
tries to host one benefit night a semester at restaurants such as the recently
closed Top This! and McAlisters Deli.
Its a bit tricky when your main
audience is broke college students,
treasurer and sophomore Ben Clements
said. We sell food because thats what
college kids want.
For restaurants and bars, it is an
opportunity to bring in business on
nights that might not otherwise be
crowded while supporting good causes.
JD Schlick, co-owner of Beer Study, said
he tries to do at least one benefit a month.
The events are good publicity, Sup
Dogs general manager Lindsey Ewing
said, and offer a chance for the business
to give back to their target customers
college students and become a bigger
part of the community.

university@dailytarheel.com

arts@dailytarheel.com

DTH/HENRY GARGAN
Violet Strickland of Hillsborough sits with her egg basket after the conclusion of Saturdays egg hunt at River Park in Hillsborough. She found one egg.

Organizers said they will buy more eggs for next years hunt
By Luman Ouyang
Staff Writer

About 2,000 parents and kids attended


Orange Countys annual community Easter
egg hunt in Hillsborough in hopes of grabbing some of the 10,000 scattered eggs
Sunday.
I dont know anybody who doesnt like a
good egg hunt. Just to get out of the house,
get a little exercise and have fun at a kid
event, Chapel Hill resident Shenandoah
Nieuwsma said.
The egg hunt was originally scheduled for
Saturday but was moved to Sunday because of
the weather.
Nieuwsma said she looked for a local egg
hunt event and found it on the towns website.
She said she went to an egg hunt two years
ago, but it was so competitive that even the
parents seemed to be in a battle.
I like that this year the egg hunt was collaborative, Nieuwsma said. People were really
nice this year. Everybody got enough eggs.
Shenandoah Nieuwsmas 6-year-old

daughter Allie Nieuwsma said she found


about 20 eggs.
I like picking up candy and eating it, Allie
Nieuwsma said.
Chapel Hill resident Yvonne Javorski said
she brought her daughters to the event because
it was a beautiful day and a good opportunity
to engage with the community.
Its close to our house, and its free,
Javorski said.
One of Yvonne Javorskis daughters, Ava
Javorski, said she had fun because hunting
eggs was more of a challenge for her this year
than last year.
Theres a lot more space than the one we
went to last year, and last year a few eggs were
just in front of me, Ava Javorski said.
Ava Javorski said she gave a few eggs to a
girl she just met.
She didnt have any. I want to give some to
her. All the eggs are mostly gone, she said.
Some of the eggs were golden or numbered,
indicating that they contained special prizes.
Ava Javorskis 9-year-old sister, Bella Javorski,
said she tried to find some special eggs.

I like most just finding the eggs and trying to see if I get golden egg or any numbered
eggs, Bella Javorski said.
The egg hunt was hosted by the combined effort of the Chapel Hill, Carrboro
and Orange County parks and recreation
departments, said Amanda Fletcher, supervisor of festivals and community celebrations
for the Chapel Hill Parks and Recreation
Department.
We all get together, and we rotate location
each year, Fletcher said. The next year will be
in Carrboro.
The event costs $3,000, which is mostly
used for buying eggs and prizes, Fletcher said.
Ten thousand eggs were scattered today, which
is twice as many as last year in Chapel Hill.
The parks and recreation departments
might decide to look into different locations so
they can host more people and provide more
eggs in the future, Fletcher said.
Some kids didnt get any (eggs). I will definitely want to put out more, she said.
city@dailytarheel.com

Sonder Market returns to the Pit


The group, which started
last semester, is back
from its winter hiatus.
By Hannah Smoot
Staff Writer

The Sonder Market, a studentrun store that brings fresh produce


to UNCs campus, returns Monday
after hibernating for the winter.
The Sonder Market began selling in the fall semester and aims to
provide fresh food for the campus
while also reducing food waste,
said Claire Strickland, a representative for the Sonder Market.
Because were using foods that
would have just been composted,
it helps us cut down on waste, sell
food that wouldnt have been used
and create this positive food feedback loop of cutting back and doing
whats sustainable, Strickland said.
Strickland said there are very

few stores on campus to buy fresh


food or ingredients for healthy
meals, a problem the Sonder
Market wants to fix.
We realized that there needs to
be a place within walking distance
where students and faculty and staff
can go buy fresh produce, she said.
Nikki Barczak, a leader of the
Sonder Market, said the group
wants to continue expanding.
We really want it to be something that is well-known on campus, that people shop from on a
regular basis, Barczak said. We
really hope to one day acquire the
funding and the opportunity for
a physical space thats kind of a
mini-Weaver Street Market.
The group purchases produce
from Farmer Foodshare, a local
organization that connects farmers
with a range of needs from hunger
relief to organizations like Sonder
Market that hope to provide a more
healthy alternative for its customers. The organization started in

2009 at the Carrboro Farmers


Market, said Karla Capacetti, a representative of Farmer Foodshare.
Were really working to connect
the dots between local farmers and
local eaters, and the campus community is not excluded from needing or deserving fresh local goodness all year-round, Capacetti said.
Capacetti said North Carolina
is the eighth largest agricultural
producer in the country, but hunger
in North Carolina is still very prevalent. According to a hunger study
done in 2014, North Carolina is one
of the 10 worst states in the country
for the percentage of children who
are consistently without food.
There is great agriculture bounty, but theres also immense hunger
within the same system, she said.
So what were trying to do is really
connect the people who grow food
with the people who need food and
try to close that gap a little bit.
Barczak hopes the Universitys
new pan-campus food theme will

THE SONDER MARKET


Time: Today from 10:45 a.m. to
3 p.m.
Location: The Pit
Info: www.thesondermarket.com

State of the Plate conference kicks o new theme


North Carolina chefs gave
the keynote speech for
the weekend conference.
By Ashlen Renner
Staff Writer

Vivian Howard was inspired to


create a southern cooking show
when she first moved to Jones
County, North Carolina.
We woke up one morning, and
there was this bag of really limp looking collards floating in a milky liquid
on our front doorstep, and I thought it
was a prank, she said. It turns out, it
was collard kraut and it was, in fact, a
gift. This led to me spending the afternoon with four 60-plus-year-old men
in their back shed making kraut, and I
was lit up by this experience.
Howard and Ben Knight, chefs
who star in the cooking show, A
Chef s Life on PBS, spoke alongside their producers Cynthia Hill
and Malinda Maynor Lowery in
a keynote lecture Saturday night.
The lecture was a given during

the State of the Plate gathering


part of the 10th annual Global
American South conference.
A Chef s Life showcases different farmers primarily from rural
eastern North Carolina where many
small towns struggle with poverty.
Howard said the show sets out not
only to teach people about southern
cuisine, but also to empower local
communities.
Being able to shine a light on
the culture of eastern Carolina and
showing that culture in a positive
way to the people that live there has
been incredibly powerful and gives
them a sense of pride, she said. Its
been the most positive thing to come
out of this show, in my perspective.
The show also raises awareness for farmers in a time when
most people go to the grocery store
instead of growing their own food.
The whole notion of farm-totable is sort of exotic now, but thats
how we grew up, Hill said. We grew
everything in the backyard and killed
animals, and thats what we ate.
The group has also been involved
in bridging the gap between rural

Food studies are vibrant


and important and a
really critical way to
understand our region,
Marcie Ferris,
American studies professor

and urban communities. Knight,


who grew up in Chicago and now
lives in Kinston, North Carolina,
sometimes found it hard to transition to rural life.
You have your preconceptions
of rural Southern life, but over the
years that has melted away, he said.
Marcie Ferris, chairwoman of
the conference committee, said she
admired the group for trying to revive
eastern Carolinas economy and represent people from that region.
This conference is a lot about
voices, and it was really important
to have them as leading voices in
North Carolina food cultures, said
Ferris, who is an American studies
professor at UNC. Food studies
are vibrant and important and a

DTH/KATIA MARTINEZ
Vivian Howard (right) speaks at the keynote panel at the conference Saturday.

really critical way to understand our


region. Its an expressive language
of place.
The conferences theme also served
to kick off the pan-university theme of
food, which will start in 2015.
State of the Plate set out to raise
awareness of the states global presence in the conversation about food.

I had grown up in eastern North


Carolina, left when I was 14 and said
I was never going back, Howard said.
I respected nothing about the cuisine
or the culture. But then I realized our
food had a story there was meaning
behind what was on the plate.
university@dailytarheel.com

News

Monday, March 30, 2015

CarolinaGO app to release update


Student leaders want
to tailor the app to
individual users.
By Mark Lihn
Senior Writer

Five months after its


release, the CarolinaGO
mobile application will soon
introduce its first update.
The app, available through
the Apple App Store and
Google Play Store, was part
of 2012-13 Student Body
President Will Leimenstolls
platform and was released in
October. The app is advertised as a one-stop shop for
University news, bus and
activity schedules and more.
Junior Diana Dayal a
member of the apps leadership team and recently confirmed director of state and

external affairs in Student


Body President-elect Houston
Summers cabinet said the
update will be released by the
end of March. It will add a
ConnectCarolina module to the
app, enhance the UNC library
module and possibly add an
academic advising module.
We definitely want to
have more people using it,
so thats why were doing the
update, Dayal said. It has
more features that are essential for all students to have
on their phones.
The team tracks the apps
progress through Google
Analytics with the help of
Information Technology
Services. As of Thursday, the
app had been downloaded by
2,847 people, and there were
up to 200 users per day, said
senior Nikita Shamdasani, who
is also on the leadership team.
In an effort to increase

usage, the team will launch


an advertising campaign
next month, Dayal said. The
team also held an informational meeting with some of
the campus biggest student
organizations Thursday.
Sophomore McKenzie
Folan, a member of student
government working with the
apps team, said the meeting
promoted CarolinaGO and
encouraged organizations to
update their schedules on the
UNC Student Life website,
which syncs with the app.
We hope this can spark
some conversation about the
application and that we can
hold more meetings for more
student groups in the future,
he said.
Folan said they want to
incorporate the app into new
student orientations.
What were hoping is that
almost every student at the

University, if not every single


one, has the app downloaded,
and it becomes the hub for
student engagement on campus, he said.
Allie Polk, an incoming
member of the app leadership
team, said the update will better tailor the app to individuals.
I think a lot of students
use some of the components,
like the buses, but theres definitely a problem with adoption and getting more people
to use it, she said.
Polk said students will be
able to adjust the main screen
buttons to fit their interests.
There will be more within the
app so it will redirect students
to websites less often, she said.
About 76 percent of the
apps traffic comes from mobile,
Shamdasani said, but its also
available online at m.unc.edu.
university@dailytarheel.com

The Daily Tar Heel

LAWSUIT

FROM PAGE 1

that Webb met with Patricia


Thomas, the chief investigator from PRM, and informed
her of Burstons sex-forhire practices.
The lawsuit said Webb was
eventually fired in January
2014, after more than a couple years of demotions that he
felt were unwarranted.
This is not the first time
Burstons actions have led
to legal trouble for the
University. In April 2013,
the University lost a suit to
Isabel Prudencio-Arias, a
former housekeeper, who
said her supervisor sexually
harassed her. After she complained, Burston made her
work life substantially more
difficult.
Burstons harassment
was unwelcome, hostile
and sufficiently severe or
pervasive to create an abusive working environment,
Arias suit said.
Maria Palmer, Arias law-

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Everything about
Mr. Bill Burston
that was said was
true
Maria Palmer,
lawyer and Town Council member

yer for the case and a member of the Chapel Hill Town
Council, said Burton still
returns to campus, to her
astonishment.
She said Burtons abuse left
her client with deep scars.
I have no doubt that
everything about Mr. Bill
Burston that was said was
true, she said.
Webb is represented by J.
Heydt Philbeck the same
lawyer who won Willingham
more than a third of a million dollars in her suit
against the University.
The suit has six different
causes of action, each with
a price tag of more than
$10,000 to settle the issue.
university@dailytarheel.com

YMCA

FROM PAGE 1
some classes were moved to
the gym or off-site during the
renovation, but theyre all back
and running now, although he
said the Zumba class that was
moved to the gym is too large
to be moved back to a studio.
The new studios have glass
walls that allow people in the
lobby to see in.
I like the fact people can
see in, said Kevin Cragwell,
health enhancement director.
Theres an energy transfer
between the instructor and
class, and the more people
joining in adds energy.
Lee said the youth area
that 250 kids use after school
during the school year was
also updated. There are new
tables and chairs, bathrooms
and a new child watch center.
Member Bob Epting said
he was especially happy with
how the renovations turned
out. In 2013, he and some
YMCA members protested the
facilitys decision to remove its
racquetball courts in order to
make room for the renovations.
Were happy that the
courts are maintained, he
said. There were times when
some user groups felt like
they werent invited to be part
of the conversation, but when
they spoke up they became
part of the conversation. I
praise the board for that.
city@dailytarheel.com

FREEDOMS

FROM PAGE 1

planned $40 million expansion


in the state.
He said the bills remind him
of practices decades ago when
businesses refused to serve
people on the basis of race.
Past civil rights laws
said that if you enter into an
enterprise, part of what your
obligation is is to serve the
general public, he said, adding that hes not sure why the
N.C. legislature is considering
these measures now.
Gov. (Jan) Brewer, a conservative Republican, vetoed
a similar bill in Arizona a few
years ago because senators
like John McCain and Jeff
Flake, both Republican senators, didnt think it would be
particularly helpful, he said.
Im wondering, given that
background, why people are
pushing this now.
Pray said he doesnt think
there have been any documented cases in North Carolina of
people refusing to serve others
based on religion but it is
better to be proactive.
Other states have seen situations where bakers who objected to same-sex marriage have
had to bake a cake for a gay
wedding ceremony, Pray said.
That baker, they are a
strong Christian, and they
dont think that actually is marriage, Pray said. They themselves are morally opposed to
baking a cake for them because
in their own minds that would
sort of be sponsoring it.
Jenna Marvin, a UNC
senior and former president
of the UNC Secular Student
Alliance, said in an email that
she was disappointed in state
legislators for proposing the
bill, but she wasnt surprised.
This bill has the potential
to hurt the North Carolina
LGTBQ community, as well
as minorities, in the name of
religious freedom, she said.
Its inexcusable to deny people services simply because of
their race, sexual identity, socioeconomic status or religion.
state@dailytarheel.com

Opinion

The Daily Tar Heel

Established 1893, 122 years of editorial freedom


EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS

JENNY SURANE EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM


HENRY GARGAN OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
SAM SCHAEFER ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR

EDITORIAL CARTOON

BAILEY BARGER

PETER VOGEL

KERN WILLIAMS

BRIAN VAUGHN

KIM HOANG

COLIN KANTOR

TREY FLOWERS

DINESH MCCOY

By Ngozika Nwoko, nwoko@live.unc.edu Chapman and Hilligan

Misadventures of a Naturalist
Senior environmental science major
from Atlanta.
Email: corey.bu@gmail.com

NEXT

FEMINIST KILLJOY
Alice Wilder writes about an
assault case at Vassar College.

QUOTE OF THE DAY


Sometimes its just bored, little gay boys
that want to dance around and paint
their face
Alex Ponikvar, on Fridays drag show that opened Unity Conference

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

RalphUNC, on the proposal for the University to rename Saunders Hall

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

Take the
Reeses
Cup,
damn it

I think the administrations plan is to always


delay, delay, delay and wait out students who
are months away from leaving campus.

Corey Buhay

amping in the snow


requires its own set
of skills. My friend,
Alexander, who is planning to
hike from Canada to Mexico
next year, decided he ought
to practice them. My friend
Michelle and I tagged along.
We set off for Mount
Mitchell, where we found ourselves shin-deep in snow.
On the ground it gave everything the look of undiscovered
wilderness. In a way, it was
no one had seen it as it was
right then, and only the tracks
of rabbits and coyotes marred
the snow. I felt honored to
experience it, but mere appreciation does little to protect the
unprepared.
Instead of wearing real hiking pants, I opted for four layers
of leggings. Four waistbands
crowded under the hip belt of a
pack make for some interesting
chafing patterns. Leggings are
also hard to remove, and shuffling uphill in deep snow quickly
becomes sweaty work.
Youve gotten to be a pretty
strong hiker, Alexander told
me. I beamed.
We pitched camp as dark
fell. The layers of soaked spandex started to cool down fast.
I couldnt get warm. I curled
my knees to my chest to stop
shaking. Soon I was crying. It
just happened; I couldnt help it.
I felt a pat on my back.
Want to talk about it?
Alexander seemed pretty
amused. Damn it, I thought.
Hes seen through my strong
hiker ruse. If I wasnt so cold,
I would have been embarrassed. As it was, I was having
trouble remembering enough
words to explain the situation.
Im just cold. Ill be fine, I
said instead, reflecting on how
much I preferred hiking alone.
I run alone, too. I handle pain
better on my own, without
anyone watching. And if I cant,
well, theres no one to see.
Alexander responded by
handing me a Reeses Peanut
Butter Cup.
Michelle marched up with
an armful of sticks. Her mission was clear; she, who had
just become the goddess of lifesustaining warmth in my eyes,
was bent on making a fire.
I wanted Alexander to leave
me alone. Instead he handed
me another peanut butter
cup. I took it and sat by the
fire. The water in my leggings
turned to steam.
I was ashamed because the
last thing any hiker wants to
be is the weakest link. But
Alexander and Michelle didnt
see it that way. They told me
to stay put when I offered to
help. Michelle fed the fire.
Alexander made dinner.
I steamed.
Later, when we were all
warm and fed, Alexander read
from his Wilderness First Aid
handbook.
Symptoms of moderate
hypothermia: shivering, clumsiness, confusion, irritability,
poor decision-making
On the hike home, we took
a screaming, scantily-clad dip
in a creek of snowmelt. In our
goose-bumped skin we were
cold, shivering, vulnerable.
But it was OK. We were
friends. Before the trip I
thought suffering was best
done alone. Now I think
otherwise. Theres no shame
in reaching out in times of
weakness. Especially if there
might be peanut butter cups
in the equation.

Monday, March 30, 2015

Saunders inhabitants
call for name change

EDITORIAL

Consciousness is critical
Conversations
series still has room
for improvement.

arolina
Conversations, an
initiative created by
the University to encourage
critical dialogue around
current events that impact
the Carolina community,
centered its first event last
Monday on issues of race.
While it is important to hold facilitated
conversations in public
spaces about race, it is also
important to acknowledge
that they have already
been happening groups
like The Real Silent Sam
Coalition and RadAsians

have voiced their frustrations and offered


suggestions. Carolina
Conversations should not
attempt to replace those
ongoing discussions.
In the future, oppressed
groups need to be centered
in similar events. This
should be done in ways that
place value on the lived
experiences of people of
color without tokenization.
Giving these groups a
platform to speak out along
with planning roles within
Carolina Conversations
events allows people
who are affected most by
these issues to be heard.
Otherwise, the same power
dynamics that exist outside
will be present and cater

to privileged people with


oppressive opinions.
While the discussion
drew a diverse crowd,
including some who have
not engaged in campus
activism, it is easy for
conversations to become
unsafe and unproductive
for people of color.
Facilitators should set
a formal list of ground
rules or group agreements
before discussion starts and
encourage privileged participants to be aware of the
space they take up.
Carolina Conversations
can be one of the first steps
in creating a more inclusive
and safe campus but only
if the same will happen
within its own events.

EDITORIAL

An unturned leaf
The Carolina North
Forest should be
more accessible.

estled just a few


miles from campus on 750 acres
of University-owned land,
Carolina North Forest is a
hidden gem of tens of miles
of trails ideal for students in
Chapel Hill and Carrboro
looking to get away without
even having to leave town.
Acquired by the
University in the 1940s,
portions of the land have
served many purposes in
recent decades.
Since 2006, the land has

become designated as the


focus of the Universitys
plan to create a satellite
campus called Carolina
North part of an longterm initiative to expand
the University to accommodate its ever-growing
student body and infrastructural needs.
While the latest plans do
not proscribe development
overtaking the entire site,
it is clear that the forest in
its current state will not be
around forever.
Efforts have been made
to make the forest more
accessible with a paved
greenway beginning
at its northern edge of

Homestead Road. It currently leads, however, to


an endpoint at an unpaved
loop trail. With so much
development planned for
the area, it would make
sense for paved greenways
to at least make connections between points of
entry to the forest.
Additionally, sections
of roads which border the
forest, including Seawell
School Road and Martin
Luther King Jr. Boulevard
do not have sidewalks near
forest entrances. These
should be provided to make
those sections conveniently
accessible to pedestrians
and runners.

SPORTS COLUMN

Dean Smith was terrible


Thanks to the NCAA, Smiths scheming ways have been revealed

m sure weve all had


our suspicions, but now
we know for sure: Dean
Smith was a terrible person.
Last week, we found out
about another one of Smiths
sly schemes. His will left each
of his former players $200 to
enjoy a dinner out compliments of Coach Dean Smith.
Nice try.
The holy scripture that is
the NCAA rulebook shows it
is impermissible for student
athletes to receive cash, or
the equivalent thereof (e.g.,
trust fund), as an award for
participation in competition
at any time
Grab your wrenches
and head to the rafters of
the Smith Center, right?
Unfortunately, maybe not.
The NCAA tweeted Saturday
that Dean Smiths generous
gift to former student-athletes
is NOT an NCAA violation.
Oh come on! I never
thought it would happen, but
youve let me down, NCAA.
It really spoke to your image
that the first reactions to
Smiths generous gift were
not solely in praise of the

Daniel Wilco
Senior Writer
Senior journalism major from
Atlanta.
Email: dwilco@live.unc.edu

man but questioning if the


NCAA would strike out in
retaliation for his brazen
defiling of its flawless laws.
But once again, NCAA,
your obsession with public
image betrays who you really
are. It looks like youll let this
one slide, and it sickens me
to see you bend to the will
of others so easily. I can only
hope you wont change the
rules in question even though
something like this hints they
might be overbearing. When
have you been overbearing?
But fine, want further proof
of Smiths slimy ways? When
he was an assistant coach, he
took a young black man to

The Pines, a segregated restaurant in Chapel Hill, under


the pretense of social justice.
Maybe Ive begun to think
like you too much, NCAA,
but this seems a bit fishy to
me. What if he were trying
to recruit him? He most
likely bought him a sandwich with a side of impermissible benefits. Why else
would he bring along Robert
Seymour? Seymour, posing
as a progressive pastor, was
indubitably a wealthy donor,
there to fund the sandwich.
For now, NCAA, I wait
with bated breath for you
to see the light and expose
Smith as the crook he was.
Without you, what could
dissuade more coaches from
emulating Smith?
In one day, Smith paid
$36,000 to his studentathletes. You, the omniscient, omnipresent NCAA,
have stood strong and paid
them nothing.
Thank you. The world
needs more of you, NCAA,
and fewer men like Dean
Smith. With your help, we
can make sure that happens.

TO THE EDITOR:
The Department of
Religious Studies is
located in Saunders Hall.
At their meeting in April
2014, the faculty in the
Department of Religious
Studies voted unanimously to support the renaming
of Saunders Hall.
William L. Saunders led
the North Carolina Ku Klux
Klan in the late nineteenth
century, a fact that was
emphasized in 1920 as a
reason for his memorialization on UNCs campus.
The Ku Klux Klan was
and is an organization
that espouses racial, ethnic and religious hatred.
Retaining the name contradicts UNCs policy on
non-discrimination, which
claims the University is
committed to providing an
inclusive and welcoming
environment.
Therefore, the
Department of Religious
Studies urges the University
to rename Saunders Hall.
Randall Styers
Chairman, Department
of Religious Studies

Summers: Saunders
Hall must be renamed
TO THE EDITOR:
The racially-motivated
violence conducted by the
Ku Klux Klan would be classified as terrorism according to the standards of any
generation. It was illegal in
the 19th century, just as it
is illegal today. As the chief
organizer of the Ku Klux
Klan in North Carolina,
Colonel William Saunders
was responsible, and even
honored, for that violence.
Saunders is indeed a part
of North Carolina and our
Universitys history. But that
is not reason enough for a
campus building to continue bearing his name.
The renaming of
Saunders Hall is a priority of mine and of the
Summers administration as
a whole. My administration
will work throughout the
year to encourage creative
thinking about how the
University can implement
mechanisms that accurately
contextualize the racial history of Saunders Hall and
the University for students
and visitors.
I firmly believe that we do
not have to choose between
renaming the building and
commemorating our history. These options are by no
means mutually exclusive.
The dialogue that has been
created among students, faculty and the administration
must continue.
The Summers administration will strongly
advocate for the renaming of Saunders Hall.
Throughout this process,
we will support all students at our University
and fight for their voices
to be heard.
Houston Summers
Student Body Presidentelect

Graduate students
need better visibility
TO THE EDITOR:
On March 31, there will
be a campuswide vote on
proposed changes to the student government constitution. A committee of student
leaders from the Graduate
and Professional Student
Federation, Executive
Branch, Student Congress
and the Honor Court met
over the course of six weeks
to update this document.
The main focus of GPSF
in these meetings was to
institutionalize the position
of graduate and professional
students within student government. When the current
constitution was written,
graduate and professional
students made up a small
percentage of UNCs campus.
Graduate and professional
students make up more than
one-third of the total student
body. Despite its size, this
student group still struggles
to fully participate in UNC
student government.
The main reason for this
is a difference in lifestyle;
many graduate students
focus on teaching, research
and professional development. Although graduate
students can spend nearly
a decade at UNC earning
their degrees, many never
step foot in places like the
Student Union or the Pit.
Despite such a disparity among the issues that
impact UNCs different populations, the undergraduate
initiatives within student
government take first priority and largely ignore the
issues relevant to graduate
and professional students.
For example, only two of
12 seats on the Student
Advisory Committee to the
Chancellor are for graduate
and professional students,
and only five of their districts in student congress
are typically active.
This Tuesday, you will
be asked to vote on this
new constitution. The
most substantive changes
include official recognition of GPSF as a branch
of SG, merging the duties
of the supreme court and
board of elections into a
newly designed district
court system, and updating
wording to be in line with
University policy.
We would like to encourage all students to vote yes
on the constitutional referendum this Tuesday, March 31.
If approved, the changes to
the constitution would more
proportionally represent
graduate and professional
students without diminishing the undergraduate voice.
We hope you will support
the graduate and professional students who mentor,
educate and inspire you here
at UNC.
Shelby Dawkins-Law
President, Graduate
and Professional Student
Federation
Brandon Linz
President-elect, Graduate
and Professional Student
Federation
Autumn McClellan
Treasurer, Graduate
and Professional Student
Federation

SPEAK OUT
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Sign and date. No more than two people should sign letters.
Students: Include your year, major and phone number.
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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 five board
members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, March 30, 2015

Midwest Region
1 Kentucky

1 Kentucky

16 Hampton

1 Kentucky

8 Cincinnati

8 Cincinnati

9 Purdue

1 Kentucky

5 West Virginia

5 West Virginia

12 Buffalo

5 West Virginia

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4 Maryland

13 Valparaiso
6 Butler

Cleveland, Ohio
March 28

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1 Kentucky

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2015 NCAA
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Monday, March 30, 2015

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Syracuse, N.Y.
March 29

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South Region

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16 Robert Morris

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Los Angeles
March 28

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Houston, Texas
March 29

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14. Georgia State

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13 UC Irvine

7 Michigan State

6 Xavier

11 Ole Miss

4 Louisville

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13 Harvard

12 Wyoming

4 Louisville

4 North Carolina

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5 Northern Iowa

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12 Wofford

9 LSU

4 Louisville

1 Wisconsin

8 Oregon

8 N.C. State

8 N.C. State

West Region
1 Wisconsin

16 Lafayette

8 N.C. State

7 Wichita State

2 Kansas

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7 Wichita State

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East Region

Indianapolis
April 6

3 Notre Dame

14 Northeastern

The Daily Tar Heel

2 Arizona

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15 North Dakota State

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Sunday, April 5 | 1 - 4 p.m. | FREE

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The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, March 30, 2015

Midwest Region
1 Kentucky

1 Kentucky

16 Hampton

1 Kentucky

8 Cincinnati

8 Cincinnati

9 Purdue

1 Kentucky

5 West Virginia

5 West Virginia

12 Buffalo

5 West Virginia

4 Maryland

4 Maryland

13 Valparaiso
6 Butler

Cleveland, Ohio
March 28

6 Butler

11 Texas

1 Kentucky

3 Notre Dame

3 Notre Dame

3 Notre Dame

7 Wichita State

2015 NCAA
Mens Basketball
Tournament

Monday, March 30, 2015

15 New Mexico State

16 Coastal Carolina

9 Oklahoma State
5 Arkansas

6 Xavier

7 Michigan State

Syracuse, N.Y.
March 29

15 Texas Southern

7 Michigan State
10 Georgia

7 Michigan State

2 Kansas

2 Virginia

2 Virginia

15 Belmont

South Region

1 Wisconsin

1 Duke

1 Duke

16 Robert Morris

1 Duke

8 Oregon

8 San Diego State

8 San Diego State

9 St. Johns

1 Duke

1 Wisconsin

5 Utah

5 Utah

12 SF Austin

5 Utah
4 Georgetown
Los Angeles
March 28

1 Wisconsin

1 Duke

Houston, Texas
March 29

4 Georgetown
13 Eastern Washington
6 SMU

11 UCLA

11 UCLA

11 UCLA

3 Iowa State

14 UAB

14 UAB

2 Gonzaga

7 Iowa

7 Iowa

10 Davidson

2 Gonzaga

2 Arizona

2 Arizona

14 Albany

7 Michigan State

10 Ohio State

10 Ohio State

3 Oklahoma

3 Oklahoma

2 Arizona

7 VCU

11 Dayton

3 Oklahoma

14. Georgia State

14 Georgia State

6 Providence

11 Dayton

6 Xavier

3 Baylor

13 UC Irvine

7 Michigan State

6 Xavier

11 Ole Miss

4 Louisville

4 Louisville

4 North Carolina

13 Harvard

12 Wyoming

4 Louisville

4 North Carolina

4 North Carolina

5 Northern Iowa

5 Northern Iowa

5 Arkansas

12 Wofford

9 LSU

4 Louisville

1 Wisconsin

8 Oregon

8 N.C. State

8 N.C. State

West Region
1 Wisconsin

16 Lafayette

8 N.C. State

7 Wichita State

2 Kansas

1 Villanova

1 Villanova

7 Wichita State

10 Indiana

East Region

Indianapolis
April 6

3 Notre Dame

14 Northeastern

The Daily Tar Heel

2 Arizona

2 Gonzaga

2 Gonzaga
15 North Dakota State

Celebrate Easter with us.

CHAPEL HILLS
FAVORITE BRICK OVEN

PIZZA!

Easter Egg Cookie Decorating

Saturday, April 4 | 2 - 5 p.m. | FREE

Looking for a fun Easter event to share with your roommates?


Stop by our tasting station for cookie decorating. Well provide
the egg-shaped cookies, icing and other decorations,
you provide the creativity!

Easter Brunch at Weathervane

Sunday, April 5 | 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. | $29

+MTMJZI\M-I[\MZI\?MI\PMZ^IVM )TTLIa_M_QTTJMWMZQVOI
special menu from Chef Spencer Carter that features seasonal
favorites and the best of the early spring harvest.

Beer Tasting: Freedom Beverage Co.


Sunday, April 5 | 12 - 3 p.m. | FREE

Join Freedom Beverage Company in the Wine and Beer


Department as they sample some of their best brews.

THE BEST
TEX MEX
AROUND!

Wine Tasting: Empire Distributors


Sunday, April 5 | 1 - 4 p.m. | FREE

Join us in the wine department for a complementary


wine tasting with Empire Distributors.

201 South Estes Drive, Chapel Hill | University Mall


(919) 929-7133 |
| southernseason.com/sign-up

(the best soft taco...PERIOD.)


120 EAST MAIN STREET CARRBORO, NC 919.929.4669

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News

Monday, March 30, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

Plane crash
sparks ight
safety debate
Some students say the
tragedy makes them
worried about flying.
By Joe Martin
Staff Writer

Airline tragedies like


Tuesdays Germanwings crash
in the French Alps likely
wont prevent students from
flying, but its enough to add
to flight anxiety.
UNC freshman Ace Motas
and senior Ted McRae both
said that the crash, which
killed 150 people, will be on
their minds next time they fly.
As Ive learned more
details about this plane crash
and about the pilots actions, it
has made me kind of nervous
about flying, McRae said. Its
very concerning even if the
likelihood is miniscule.
Motas, who prefers to go on
road trips instead of flying, said
it is frightening to think about
being in that situation, though
he said isolated incidents like
the Germanwings crash dont
concern him too much.
If you look at the number of
plane crashes compared to the
number of successful flights, its
a really small number, he said.
The investigation of the
flight 9525 crash has revealed
disturbing new facts throughout the past week. Officials
have determined that co-pilot
Andreas Lubitz, 27, intentionally crashed the plane, though
the investigation is ongoing.
Lubitz was still in the cockpit
and breathing before the crash.
French prosecutor Brice
Robin said in a news conference Thursday that no distress signals came from the
aircraft before the crash.
Lubitz told Captain Patrick
Sondenheimer that he could
leave the cockpit any time,
then locked him out before
the crash, according to CNN.

The New York Times


reported that Lubitz might
have had a medical issue
specifically with his eyes
that could have ended his
pilot career and might have
contributed to the crash.
The incident has also caused
widespread debate about flight
protocol and safety mechanisms, including some that
were put into place following
the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
One major post-9/11 change
involved reinforcing cockpit
doors so people would not be
able to break in, said Fuh-Gwo
Yuan, a mechanical and aerospace engineering professor at
N.C. State University.
Yuan said it is best for airlines to have two people in the
cockpit at all time a rule
that is standard in America
but generally a policy created
by individual airlines abroad.
Kuldeep Rawat, director of
the aviation science program at
Elizabeth City State University,
said in an email that the cockpit door of an Airbus 320
the model that crashed can
be unlocked from the outside
through an electronic keypad,
but the pilot inside the cockpit can override the lock for a
period of five minutes.
There is an escape door that
can be accessed in case of electronic failure, Rawat said, but
a person within the cockpit can
prevent it from opening.
East Carolina University
senior John Leopard said situations like these scare him.
In reality there is nothing I
can do, Leopard said. My life
is in their hands when I go up.
Leopard, who said he is a
frequent flyer, said that flights
are more comfortable when the
flight attendants talk to him.
Usually I let them know
that I hate flying, he said.
Sometimes they talk to me
and make me feel better.
state@dailytarheel.com

NOW OPEN!

DTH PHOTO ILLUSTRATION/JOHANNA FEREBEE


Many students at UNC and other universities are turning to casual physical relationships to explore sexuality and gain experiences.

Students down to fool around


Some prefer casual
hookups to committed
relationships.
By Kristina Kokkonos
Staff Writer

For many UNC students,


a large, populous university
is an open space to explore
a variety of majors and
interests but also casual
relationships and just hooking up.
Senior Ty Hodges said he
enjoys the possibilities that
are available in more casual
dating situations.
(Casually hooking up) is
great because you get what
you want immediately with-

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I guess it makes college
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Sophomore Cameron Blair
is currently engaged in a
casual hookup situation.
The casual hookup scene
was definitely something
I discovered once I got to
UNC, said Blair, who was in
a committed relationship in
high school.
I feel like a lot of kids I
know at very small schools
date more. I do know people
here that are in relationships, but in large colleges I
feel like casually hooking up
is pretty common.
Blair said in these types of
arrangements, sometimes it
can be hard to separate the

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I got way more out of meeting people than


in any of the class I took.
Dylan Moore
UNC graduate

physical from the emotional.


Youre doing something
thats very intimate, but you
cant be vulnerable in other
ways to that person, she
said. If you do, it complicates things.
Libby Hunter, referral
coordinator and therapist
for UNCs Counseling and
Psychological Services said
a problem shes seen among
students in casual hookup
relationships is when the
two involved arent on the
same page.
We see people who are in
relationships who are wanting
something out of it and the
partner isnt, Hunter said.
One person wants the
relationship to move further in
a monogamous way, and the
other wants to keep it casual.
Hodges said despite the
fact that he enjoys the freedom and easy-going nature
of casual hookups, they can
often lead to more.
I think all of my relationships have actually spawned
out of hookups, he said.
It starts off as that but
eventually you just get closer
and closer.
On the other hand, UNC
2014 graduate Dylan Moore
known as his stage name
Nicky Showtime and most
notorious for his strip prank
in a biology class last year
said he was never looking for
commitment to stem from
casual hookups while he was
in college.

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In fact,
he was lookHead
over
ing forward
heels
to casual
hookups as
part of his
college experience.
Hookups can give you
bragging rights, good stories
its usually the status quo of
a good weekend, Moore said.
I didnt take anything too
seriously. I was just out trying
to have fun.
Hunter said these practices
are not uncommon for college
students in this stage of emotional development.
One thing I would say is
that emerging adulthood is
a time where students are
finding themselves, figuring
out who they are, trying different things, she said its
a period of figuring things out
in every aspect, Hunter said.
Sexual exploration is really normative at this life stage.
It can include many different
things and looks different for
everyone.
For Moore, having fun
turned into valuable
experiences.
Its a pretty important
aspect of college in my
opinion because its not
just about tests and books,
Moore said.
I got way more out of
meeting and interacting with
people than in any of the
classes I took.

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Terry Sullivan, an associate professor in the political


science department, won an
Excellence in Teaching award
from the UNC-systems Board
of Governors.
The award recognizes
professors who are committed to their students and
bring passion to their teaching and research.
When nominating Sullivan
for the award, students commended him for the creative
learning environment he fosters. Sullivan has worked in
the political science department for the last 14 years. He
earned his undergraduate
and doctoral degrees from the
University of Texas.
Sullivan will accept his
award during the spring commencement ceremony in May.
staff reports

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, March 30, 2015

Businesses put a twist on frozen yogurt


By Meg Garner
Senior Writer

Khelfa began selling frozen


yogurt at his former Boston
restaurant, and it quickly

Chapel Hill has witnessed the recent rise of frozen yogurt, which is sourced and served differently at each of the downtown businesses, from Hummus Cafe to Yogurt Pump.

Ben and Jerrys


Small cup:
$4.45
Small vanilla calories:
210

West Rosemary Street


West Franklin Street

Sweet Frog
With 360 different branches
nationwide, Sweet Frog is one
of the largest frozen yogurt
chains in the country, and its
pink and green frog has sat on
Franklin Street since 2012.
Matt Smith, chief marketing
officer for Sweet Frog, said the

East Franklin Street


Yogurt Pump
Small cup:
$2.33
Small vanilla calories:
107

Yogurt Pump
The Yogurt Pump has been
a Chapel Hill staple since
1982, and its characteristic
frozen yogurt has long been
a favorite of college students
and townspeople alike.
Owner Scott Stephenson
said while the interior seems
retro, the yogurt machines
themselves are anything but.
Understanding them,
serving with them and working with them makes a large
difference in the texture and
quality of the yogurt, he said.
The business, which makes
a majority of its yogurt inhouse, has spent years crafting
creative and innovative flavors.

East Rosemary Street

By Anica Midthun
Staff Writer

North Carolina schools trying to improve performance


might have more leeway if
a proposal delaying tougher
standards in the states school
grading system becomes law.
The state instituted a new
school performance report
card system for its public,
charter and alternative schools
for the 2013-14 academic year
and the first report, released
in February, graded schools on
a 15-point scale. A score of 85
and above gave schools an A, a
score of 70 to 84 gave a school
a B, and so forth.
Starting with the 2014-15
report, grades were supposed
to shift to a 10-point scale,
making it more difficult to
achieve a passing score. But
bills introduced in the N.C.
House of Representatives and
Senate on Wednesday would
delay the change.
The delay would help
schools have more time to
adjust to the different scale,
said Yevonne Brannon, director
of the Center for Urban Affairs
and Community Services at
N.C. State University.
They need to be given
some time to meet that standard before labeling them as
failures, said Matt Ellinwood,
a policy analyst from the leftleaning N.C. Justice Center.
The grading scale uses a
variety of factors that combine to make up a grade out
of 100, with 80 percent of
the grade coming from standardized test scores and 20
percent coming from school
growth overall compared to
the state average.
Shifting to a 10-point
scale could cause some
schools to fail that would
have passed under a
15-point scale. A grade of 59
would currently be a C but
would become an F under
the new system. Some examples in and around Chapel
Hill include Frank Porter
Graham Elementary School,
Efland Cheeks Elementary
School and Gravelly Hill
Middle School.
Ellinwood said there has
been debate about how much
weight should be placed on
test scores versus growth. A
bill proposed Thursday would
reverse those ratios making
80 percent of the grade contingent on growth.
Still, some education
experts say the grading sys-

tems design is hurting the


states low-income schools.
When grades are examined,
over one-fourth of schools
were given a failing grade of
a D or an F. At nearly all of
these failing schools, more
than half of the students were
living below the poverty line.
Most of the grades correlate
directly with the poverty level
of the school, Brannon said.
Ellinwood said these labels
can be harmful to morale
and detrimental to schools
because a bad letter grade will
steer parents away from that
particular school.
Taking a variable and
labeling with a grade is essentially labeling the school with
a scarlet letter, Brannon said.
Supporters of the grading

Sweet Frog
Small cup:
$3.92
Small vanilla calories:
200

Cameron Avenue
COMPILED BY MEG GARNER

ability to create and serve your


own froyo is what customers
like best about Sweet Frog.
You can get the low-fat
vanilla with strawberries and
blueberries, or you could get
chocolate with M&Ms. Each
customer can decide exactly
what they want, he said.
In order to maintain continuity throughout its numerous
stores, Sweet Frog orders its
frozen yogurt from Illinoisbased food distributor US
Foods, Smith said.

Ben & Jerrys


It is a company known for
its ice cream, but in 2012, Ben
& Jerrys introduced a line
of Greek frozen yogurt. The
Franklin Street shop offers

DTH/EMILY HOBBS

three flavors.
Store manager Mallory
Sturdivant said that while
Ben & Jerrys frozen yogurt
is not as popular as its ice
cream, it does provide customers a suitable alternative.
Its actually Greek frozen
yogurt, so its a little different from the regular frozen
yogurt you would get other
places, she said. Its sort of
thicker and a little creamier.
Sturdivant said the Franklin
Street locations frozen treats
are produced in Vermont.
So whether they have it
swirled, twirled, topped or
scooped, Chapel Hillians will
definitely not be in a frozen
yogurt shortage anytime soon.
city@dailytarheel.com

Tougher school grades debated


Lawmakers hope to
keep the 15-point
scale for N.C. schools.

Hummus Cafe
Small cup:
$2.95
Small vanilla calories:
280

Raleigh Street

Hummus Cafe

Frozen sweets on Franklin Street

Columbia Street

It is common knowledge
that Americans love ice
cream, but the dessert is losing its status thanks to competition from a lower-calorie
substitute: frozen yogurt.
The frozen yogurt industry
jumped at an average annual
rate of 22.7 percent from 2009
to 2014, and it was expected to
generate $1.8 billion in 2014.
The ice cream and gelato
industry, however, dropped
1.3 percent in the same time
frame, and it was expected to
generate $3.2 billion in 2014.
This rise in popularity is
often credited to Americans
growing health consciousness,
and as this industry continues to grow, Chapel Hill is no
exception to its enticing nature.
In the coming months,
Abbes Khelfa, owner of
Hummus Cafe, will ramp
up his bimonthly drives to
Boston to get more of his
business regular supply.
Its special in that we cant
just ship it, he said.
We have to bring dry ice
and drive it back. I use to do it
every two months, but the way
it looks right now, I have to go
get it every month especially since its getting warmer.
Khelfas restaurant is not the
only one on Franklin Street to
serve this frozen treat.
In fact, his is just one of
four businesses that offer it,
and in order to break up the
monotony, each store serves
up its froyo a little differently.

became a fan favorite, which is


why he brought it with him to
North Carolina.
This frozen yogurt, you
just cant find it anywhere
else, in particular in North
Carolina, Khelfa said. You
just have to try it.
The recipe is a closely guarded one, created by the father of
one of Khelfas friends, and it is
so precious to the restaurateur
that he drives 11 hours from
Chapel Hill to Boston just to
pick up his regular order.
I have been eating it for
almost 30 years, and to tell you
the truth, when I travel and
come back, its the first thing I
want to have, he said. I swear.

Most of the grades correlate directly with


the poverty level of the school.
Yevonne Brannon,
director of the Center for Urban Affairs and Community Service at N.C. State

scale say it is helpful because it


holds schools accountable and
encourages them to improve.
But Ellinwood said the
pushback mainly comes from
schools that dont think the
grades they received are
accurate measures of their
performance.
The grading system is the
problem, not the grading
scale, Brannon said.
Why are we grading
schools; is this really effective?
state@dailytarheel.com

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News

Monday, March 30, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

Paige Ladisic chosen as 2015-16 editor


Ladisic wants to
improve the papers
digital offerings.
By Jada Harkins Andrews
Staff Writer

Paige Ladisic was chosen


as The Daily Tar Heels editor-in-chief for the 2015-16
school year by a 10-member
committee on Saturday.
The committee consisted
of student representatives,
University faculty, community
members and past editors-inchief of The Daily Tar Heel.
Ladisic, a junior journalism and political science
major from Oak Island,
began her experience at The
Daily Tar Heel as a freshman
working for the city desk.
She attributes her success
to her consistent hard work
and her willingness to grow
as a journalist.
The first thing Im going
to work on is acquiring my

staff, Ladisic said. There are


amazing people at this paper,
and I want them to know that
they are valued and have a
place with me. I think I will
have a great team next year.
After the decision, members of the committee praised
the new editor-in-chief.
Paige brought an energy
to talking about the paper
and its role on campus and in
the community that I think is
necessary as the public face of
the paper, community member Margot Lester said.
The committee also liked
her digital-first platform.
She had a very strong
vision for what the paper will
be in the online media, and
she had a very strong plan
and familiarity with that
that can help her drive that
plan forward for the next few
years, student representative
Mihir Pershad said.
The committee members
recognized Ladisics knowledge of the business side
of The Daily Tar Heel and

She had a very strong vision for what the


paper will be in the online media
Mihir Pershad,
selection committee member

respected that characteristic.


Paige had, from the
very beginning, that business aspect and knew what
was going to help to bring
that revenue in and get that
change through online,
Emma Gentry, next years
advertising manager for The
Daily Tar Heel, said.
Committee members had
good things to say about the
new editor-in-chief, hoping
their decision will help The
Daily Tar Heel flourish in a
changing print journalism
environment.
The committee members
also recognized many of these
great qualities in Ladisics competitor, Bradley Saacks. They
commended his enthusiasm
and his platforms plan to further diversify the newsroom.

I think that having those


two people together, it was
almost really a no-lose situation, I felt like. Both have
strong visions, both care
deeply about the paper, both
care deeply about journalism,
and thats a win no matter
what, Lester said.
Ladisic hopes to abandon
nothing within her platform,
although she recognizes that
some aspects might take time
to form. She is also excited to
incorporate the ideas of her
fellow staffers.
I love (The Daily Tar
Heel), Ladisic said. I feel
like a lot of people either love
it or are not that attached to
it, and I want to give everybody that chance to love it.
university@dailytarheel.com

DTH FILE/CHRIS GRIFFIN


Paige Ladisic, a journalism and political science major, wants to
focus on the digital product as the 2015-16 editor-in-chief.

DTH office is open Mon-Fri 8:30am-5:00pm

Line Classified Ad Rates

To Place a Line Classified Ad Log Onto


www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252

Private Party (Non-Profit) Commercial (For-Profit)

Deadlines

Line Ads: Noon, one business day prior to publication

25 Words ....... $20.00/week 25 Words ....... $42.50/week


Display Classified Ads: 3pm, two business
Extra words ..25/word/day Extra words ...25/word/day
days prior to publication
EXTRAS: Box: $1/day Bold: $3/day
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

Announcements

For Rent

The DTH will be closed

Walk to
Campus!

Friday 4/3
Deadline for 4/6 Paper: 4/1
Deadline for 4/6 Paper: 4/2

Announcements
NOTICE TO ALL DTH
CUSTOMERS

Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to


publication for classified ads. We publish Monday 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
reject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Please check
your ad on the first run date, as we are only
responsible for errors on the first day of the 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 housing or employment, in accordance with federal law, can state a preference based on sex, race, creed, color, religion,
national origin, handicap, marital status.

Help Wanted

Large 1-2 BR Condos


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

919-933-5296

FAIR HOUSING

EXPERIENCED SITTER NEEDED: 20-30 hrs/wk


caring for boy (7) and girl (11) in Chapel Hill
near UNC campus. School pick up and activities weekdays until 6pm, some evenings. Excellent pay. Clean driving record. Cooking a
plus. Contact: battlepark68@gmail.com.
EARLY MORNING daycare drop off for infant,
plus assistance with errands, household, dog.
Preferred schedule M-F 7-9am. Start ASAP,
but negotiable. UNC faculty home blocks from
campus. Seeking commitment through August.
kristin_wilson@unc.edu for application.

GARAGE APARTMENT. Quiet, wooded neighborhood. Private entrance. Full kitchen.


Carpeting. Separate living room, bedroom,
bathroom. Many windows. Partly furnished.
$765/mo. includes utilities, cable, internet.
919-929-6072.

SUMMER HELP NEEDED. Camp drop off and


pick up for fantastic 7 year-old. Wednesdays,
Thursdays, Fridays. June 17 thru July 24.
$20/ride. Contact arin.isenstein@gmail.com.

MILLCREEK 4BR/2BA AUGUST. Front unit by


pool. Best rent. Nicest apartment. Wood floors.
No nasty carpet. New granite countertops.
Sink, vanity in bedrooms. Full W/D. Parking.
Fresh paint. Must see. Start August. $1,900/
mo. jmarber@yahoo.com, 404-964-5564.

AFTER SCHOOL SITTER needed. 2 boys (age 7


and 10) for 3 hrs/day 3-5 day/wk (flexible), occasional evening. Grad student or grad student
spouse preferred. To be picked up from school
at 2:30pm. Some cooking would be great, not
necessary. Need to be able to drive to activities
(tennis, soccer, etc), and enjoy kids. Contact:
hroth@neurology.unc.edu.

COMPLETE PRIVATE FURNISHED loft. 2


rooms, bathroom. Indoor parking, gym.
Share lower level, W/D, kitchen, living and
dining room. Haw River, Saxapahaw. $300/
mo. with limited household contributions.
iluminate@earthlink.net.
MERCIA RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES: Now

showing and leasing properties for


2015-16 school year. Walk to campus, 1BR-6BR available. Contact via
merciarentals.com or 919-933-8143.
FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT. In Chapel Hill.
Nice 2BR/1BA apartment. On busline. $440/
mo. No deposit required, utilities, cable, WiFi
included. 919-237-1267.
STONECROP Apartments. Walk to campus, new, affordable, 4BR/4BA. Rent includes all utilities, cable, WiFi, W/D, huge
kitchen, rec room, parking in garage, security entrance with elevator. Call 919-968-7226,
rentals@millhouseproperties.com.

Help Wanted

Tennis Pro Shop Attendants


Part-time
Chapel Hill Tennis Club

15-20 Hours/Week for weekday and weekend shifts

Reliability, attention to detail, and friendliness a


must.Responsible for daily pro shop operations
such as scheduling court times, purchases in pro
shop, high quality customer service to members and
potential members, excellent communication skills.
Knowledge of tennis preferred, but not required.

For Rent
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 discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers
are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.

Child Care Wanted

Help Wanted

Use of the tennis, fitness, and swim facilities allowed!


Resume to Member Services Director,
Zoemma Steffen, at zsteffen-chtc@ncrrbiz.com

For Rent

Help Wanted

STUDIO APARTMENT, very nice neighborhood. Separate entrance, driveway, mailbox,


etc. Working fireplace. Recently renovated.
919-967-8306. Ask for Mr. Ho.

ELMOS DINER CARRBORO Now hiring parttime HOSTS, SERVERS AND LINE COOKS.
Please apply online at: elmoscarrborocafesymmetry.companycareersite.com,
919-929-2909.

Help Wanted

PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT. Are you a chemistry student? Dentist in Wake Forest seeking
assistance with development of topical anesthetic spray. Approximately 2 hrs/wk, pay $15/
hr. If interested, please call Dr. Kimbrough,
910-546-8266.

NATIONALLY RECOGNIZED and locally owned


insurance agency seeks part-time or full-time
administrative assistant. Must possess excellent phone and computer skills. Small business
environment, flexible hours with competitive wages. Please email inquiries, resume to
a076080@Allstate.com.
PART-TIME HELP WANTED: Occoneechee Golf
Club Hillsborough, NC Looking for pro shop
staff and course maintenance staff. Weekend
and evening hours. Must be 21 years of age.
Call 919-732-3435.
BAILEYS PUB AND GRILLE is currently hiring servers and bartenders! We are looking
for energetic individuals who will thrive in
a fast paced environment. Baileys is full of
opportunities and excitement. We provide
competitive wages, flexible work schedules
and health, dental and vision insurance plans.
Please apply in person Sunday thru Thursday
from 2-4pm at: Rams Plaza, 1722 Fordham
Blvd, Chapel Hill, NC 27103 or online at
www.foxandhoundcareers.com.
LIFEGUARDS AND SWIM INSTRUCTORS:
Stoneridge Swim Club in Chapel Hill is now
hiring lifeguards and swim instructors.
Great work environment. Find application at
www.sssrc.org. 919-967-0915. Contact Bill Lillard at club.manager.sssrc@gmail.com.
UNC HEALTH CARE is hiring part-time lifeguards for our Wellness Centers in Chapel Hill and Cary. Requires high school
diploma or GED and current CPR and
American Red Cross Advanced Lifesaving
Certification. Visit unchealthcare.org/jobs.

Gain Valuable Experience in Intellectual


and Developmental Disabilities
Weekend hours are available working with children and adults with
developmental disabilities, helping them achieve their personal goals.
Gain valuable experience for psychology, sociology, nursing majors, and
other related fields. Various shifts available. $10.10/hr.

www.rsi-nc.org

420072

Volunteering

Healthy, drug-free, right-handed participants


between the ages of 18 and 55 are needed
for an MRI study on brain function.
Call for more information: 919-668-4131
Or visit: TriangleSmokingStudies.com
Pro00043890

Summer Jobs

Tutoring Wanted

SUMMER CAMP HEAD COUNSELOR:: Stoneridge Club in Chapel Hill is now hiring a head
camp counselor. This position requires at least
2 years of previous counselor experience. club.
manager.sssrc@gmail.com, 919-967-0915.

AP STAT TUTOR in Chapel Hill for CHHS Junior twice a week, evenings. Call 919-9234280. Prefer math, stat grad or post grad UNC
student.

POOL PROFESSIONALS IS NOW hiring


lifeguards and pool attendants for the
SUMMER. Work at a location close to
campus! Flexible hours and great pay! Contact
us today! agreiner@poolprofessionals.com,
919-787-7878.

HOW CLOSE TO THE PIT


DO YOU WANT TO LIVE?
www.heelshousing.com

If March 30th is Your Birthday...


Set your own course this year. Set priorities
over springtime. Entertain a seductive offer.
April romance blossoms into new directions and
opportunities. Adventures, studies and travels
require advance preparation for clear sailing after
June. Follow rules closely. After Octobers eclipses
(10/13 & 10/27), professional transformations
lead into some soul-searching. Follow a dream
with someone beloved.

Homes For Sale


WOODLAKE. 3BR/2.5BA home. Granite, new
HVAC, paint, great yard. Dog park, pool,
trails. $203K. Near Southpoint, UNC. Contact
beth_sutherland@unc.edu for more details.

Help Wanted
Photo Specialties has multiple openings for
office work from approximately May 4th-May
29th. We offer a casual working environment
just minutes from the UNC campus. The
amount of hours that you could work are flexible,
ranging from 20-50 hours per week. Work
around another job/summer school or build up
the hours and take the rest of the summer off.
The choice is yours! Pay is $9.50/hr.
Please call Joel at 919-932-7684 .

Volunteering

Paid Volunteer Opportunity


for Smokers

GOVERNORS CLUB GOLF OPERATION: Team


member at premiere private club. Benefits
include free meals and playing privileges. Location close to campus. Contact Matt,
919-918-7214.

To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.

Aries (March 21-April 19)

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

Today is a 7 -- Good news comes from far


away. Choose the most fun option. Look
outside habitual routines. Keep standing for
love, even in the face of breakdowns. Show
respect, especially when others dont. Add
some passion to the game.

Today is a 7 -- Nurture your friendships and


partnerships by spending time together.
Hold meetings. Strengthen old bonds, even
as new ones spark. Expect some change
and separation with differing priorities and
personal directions.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

Today is a 7 -- Financial sands are shifting.


Get input from family, but dont look to
them for financial support. Discover hidden
treasure buried in your own house. Clear
out clutter. Create a more beautiful space by
selling unwanted stuff.

Today is a 7 -- Short-term prospects could


seem lean, but the long-term outlook is
positive. Revise your rsum to include recent
accomplishments. Polish your presentation
and it could raise profits.

Gemini (May 21-June 20)

Today is an 8 -- Learn as you go. Handle


details impeccably. Find the fun side of the
job. Youre making a good impression. Dress
up your report with visuals like charts and
graphs.

Today is a 7 -- Get into a creative project.


A friend leads you to the perfect partner.
Forge plans, contracts and agreements. Write
the intended outcomes and post publicly.
Streamline your routine to minimize chaos
and clutter. Share the process.

Help Wanted

Residential Services, Inc.

APPLY ONLINE by visiting us at:

Help Wanted

Cancer (June 21-July 22)

Hiring Lifeguards!
Chapel Hill Tennis Club

Great work environment. Assistant


managers, supervisors, head guards,
lifeguards. Certifications required: ARC
lifeguarding, first aid, CPR professional
rescuer. Availability preferred mid-May
to mid-September. Mike Chamberlin,
Pool Manager: chamby147@aol.com .

Today is an 8 -- Theres work coming in. You


may have more than expected. Work now
translates into profit and a rise in status
later. Avoid gossip and arrogance. Listen
to your partners advice. Follow your heart,
despite obstacles.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)

Today is a 9 -- You can get what you want.


Persuade your team by restoring optimism
and confidence. Refine your pitch to
emphasize the bottom line.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

LOST & FOUND ADS


RUN FREE
IN DTH CLASSIFIEDS!

Today is a 6 -- Youre most productive


behind closed doors. Focus on nurturing
yourself and others with meditation.
Consider where youve been and where
youre going. Aim for financial, mental,
physical and spiritual balance.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

Today is a 7 -- You find more room in the


budget by tracking meticulously. Your actions
now pay off later. A partner has good ideas.
Collaborate to get more done with less.
Provide straight facts in a confrontation.
Balance intensity with peace.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)

Today is an 8 -- Strengthen bonds with old


partnerships, and forge new ones. Spend
time together. Talk about what you love, and
re-commit to common goals. Choose the next
direction of your collaboration.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)

Today is an 8 -- Set your course toward


optimistic work goals. Make long term plans
that include more of what you love. Accept
coaching enthusiastically. Invest in success.
Try a new style. Produce powerful results
and impress clients. Demand grows.
(c) 2015 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

ALL IMMIGRATION MATTERS


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Sports

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, March 30, 2015

BASEBALL: NORTH CAROLINA 10, MIAMI 3

UNC bullpen struggles continue


By Jeremy Vernon
Staff Writer

Zac Gallen tried to keep


things upbeat Friday night
after the North Carolina
baseball teams 4-3 loss to No.
15 Miami, the first game of a
series UNC lost 3-4, 3-4, 10-3.
The sophomore right-handed pitcher had just thrown
seven strong innings against
Miami (20-9, 8-4 ACC) but
had to watch from the dugout
in the ninth as junior Trent
Thornton looked for the save.
Thornton allowed two of
the first three batters to reach.
Then a wild pitch to advance
them. Two batters later, Miami
had taken a 4-3 lead.
No. 22 UNC (16-11, 6-6
ACC) had squandered a tworun lead, and after they were
unable to retain it in the bottom of the frame, many fans
were left scratching their heads.
Gallen chalked it up to the
nature of the game.
The ball bounces one way
one night. I mean, its just the
way it is, he said. Youve gotta
have short-term memory in
this game.

And as the second game


wore on Saturday, it looked
like Gallens sentiments would
ring true. UNC got another
solid outing out of its starter,
freshman J.B. Bukauskas,
who allowed just two hits and
one run in seven innings. The
offense scratched across a run
of its own, and it looked like
the Tar Heels might win.
But again, here came the
ninth inning. Here came the
bullpen.
Trevor Kelley allowed a run
to put Miami up 2-1. UNC
wouldnt go down quietly,
though, plating a run on a Zack
Gahagan single with two outs.
The next two innings would
see two more UNC relievers allow a run, including
Thornton, who gave Miami
a 3-2 advantage in the 10th.
UNC would tie the score again
in the bottom of the 10th, but
couldnt muster any more
offense in the 11th, dropping
the game 3-4.
Bukauskas took the
same path as Gallen after
Saturdays loss. You cant get
too frustrated about it. I mean
theyre teammates you fight

DTH/KENDALL BAGLEY
Right-handed freshman J.B. Bukauskas pitched seven innings of
Saturdays game against Miami, allowing one run and two hits.

with all of them the whole season, he said.


Coach Mike Fox took a different route.
I dont think theres
anything more our starters
can do. I really dont, Fox
said. Our bullpen has got
to improve. They know it,
and theyre trying hard, but
I think were really missing
Reilly Hovis.
With the series already in
Miamis hands, the Tar Heels
headed into Sundays game

looking to salvage anything


they could. And through an
offensive explosion, including
nine runs in the first three
innings, UNC kept the game
out of reach and out of the
hands of its relievers.
I think it honestly gave
the bullpen confidence, said
Benton Moss, who started
Sunday. They had nothing
to fear and came in and just
pounded the zone.
sports@dailytarheel.com

WOMENS TENNIS: NORTH CAROLINA 7, PITTSBURGH 0

By Michael Freije
Staff Writer

Coach Brian Kalbas would


not have had it any other way.
The undefeated North
Carolina womens tennis team
swept Pittsburgh 7-0 at home
on Sunday. But two days earlier, the Tar Heels faced their
greatest challenge of the year
against No. 19 Clemson, when
Kalbas had a chance to obtain
his 500th career win even
if his team was unaware of
the milestone.
We had no idea until five
minutes ago, said sophomore
Jamie Loeb following UNCs
4-3 win over the Tigers on
Friday. Its awesome. It shows
how good of a coach he is and
how much hes done for the
program.

in any way I could, Loeb said.


The match would go to a
tiebreaker and would remain
close throughout, with the tandems constantly trading leads.
Price and Loeb won 8-7 (119) to give UNC an early edge,
but when singles started, the
Tar Heels found themselves
down on all but one court.
UNC dropped the first three
points of the singles competition, and Loeb and junior
Whitney Kay were the only Tar
Heels left with a chance to seal
the 500th win for their coach.
Loeb won her match 4-6,
6-2, 6-3 after battling back
from a first-set loss, making
Kays match the deciding
match on whether Kalbas
would get his 500th victory.
Kay dropped her first set
despite fighting back to send

keep the team afloat.


But Duke continued to
battle. The Blue Devils took the
lead by one with three seconds
left in the third quarter, then
tied it at 12 with 10:16 left in
the fourth quarter after surrendering two goals to the Tar
Heels to open the fourth. Three
straight UNC goals, including
two by senior midfielder Chad
Tutton, gave UNC a 15-12 lead.
Then the Tar Heels turned it
over to Burke to seal the win.
Sometimes you have to
wait to the fourth quarter,
Burke joked.
Thats what Burke does the
entire game. He sits and waits
like a pond on a windless day,
never getting too stirred up
because he knows something.
Your next save is your best
save.

FROM PAGE 12

quarter, with sophomore


attackman Luke Goldstock
scoring 13 seconds into the
match. But Duke responded
emphatically, highlighted by a
7-1 run to take a 7-3 lead with
5:25 left in the second quarter.
UNC was able to stop the
bleeding late in the second
quarter with two goals, then
continued its run into the
second half with three goals in
the first five minutes to take
an 8-7 lead. After Jones scored
for Duke to tie the game, Bitter
scored his first two goals of the
game in a 65-second span to
give UNC a two-point lead.
I didnt have a great first
half. I was taking selfish, bad
shots, Bitter said. We had
guys like (senior attackman)
Joey (Sankey) step up and

sports@dailytarheel.com

SOFTBALL

losses and starting a new win


streak all at the same time.
Its never a good feeling
losing, Chandless said. So
we had a lot of angst to put on
UVa. as a team.

FROM PAGE 12

against the Cardinals a week


ago. Every game is crucial.
And over the weekend,
UNC proved just that,
rebounding from recent

sports@dailytarheel.com

InView Eye Care


OD, PLLC

Brian Kalbas defeats Clemson for 500th win


Clemson had defeated UNC
in a 4-3 thriller to conclude the
2014 regular season.
The No. 2 Tar Heels (200, 8-0 ACC) wanted Fridays
match more than any other so
far this year, and Kalbas said
he would prefer his 500th win
come in a dramatic, competitive battle.
Every match we play with
Clemson is a dog fight, he said.
The fight started early in
the doubles point, where it
all came down to Loeb and
senior Caroline Price going
up against the third-best
doubles team in the country Beatrice Gumulya and
Jessy Rompies.
In the beginning, we were
down on each court, and I
wanted to stay out there as long
as possible and help everyone

LACROSSE

11

DR. JONATHAN REYNON DR. MICHELLE YUN

Services Include:

it to a tiebreaker, but she won


the second set to send the
match to a third, deciding set.
I knew going into the
match that she was a really
good player, Kay said. First
set, I got down and came
back and that gave me a little
more confidence going into
the second set. After I won
the second set, I knew I could
outlast her if I needed to.
After a long final-set deuce,
Rompies forced one more
game in which Kay got triple
match point and won it for the
Tar Heels and for Kalbas.
I didnt know that it was
the deciding match until they
ran at me, and even then, I was
kind of not sure cause I cant
see the scoreboard, Kay said.

Comprehensive eye exams


Eye glass prescriptions
Contact lens fittings
Dry eye management & more!

sports@dailytarheel.com

invieweyecare.com 919-572-6771

Takes most
insurance plans.
Insurance not needed.
Please visit us online or
call to make an
appointment.
8210 Renaissance Pkwy
Durham, NC 27713
Conveniently located next to
the Southpoint Target Optical

Community egg hunt

Seasonal allergies
shouldnt stop

YOU

There werent enough


eggs hidden at the community egg hunt in Hillsborough
this year. See pg. 3 for story.

games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

Level:

4
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.

from seasonal outings!

Solution to
Fridays puzzle

Come meet
a dedicated
specialist who
will take care
of all your
Allergy, Asthma
& Immunology
needs!

Casual hook ups


The latest story in our
series on the different types
of relationships at UNC.
See pg. 8 for story.

Frozen yogurt galore


The frozen yogurt industry
is booming, and local restaurants are getting in on the
action. See pg. 9 for story.

YMCA gets renovated


The Chapel Hill YMCA
got a major face lift, and its
members are loving it. See
pg. 1 for story.

Short 3 hours for graduation? Maymester!

David Fitzhugh, M.D.

Evaluating & Treating the


following conditions:
Allergic Rhinitis Asthma Food Allergies Eczema
Hives/Angioedema Anaphylaxis Sinus Problems
Bee Sting Allergies Chronic Cough Drug Allergies
Immunodeficiency Recurrent Infections

101 Cosgrove Ave., Suite 110


Chapel Hill, NC

919-929-9612
Leaders in Allergy
& Asthma Care
allergypartners.com/chapelhill

Check out summer.unc.edu

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


ACROSS
1 Also
4 Hotelier Helmsley
9 Make small adjustments
to
14 Post-ER area
15 First stage
16 ABBAs __ Mia
17 Black-and-white cruiser
19 High-tech prefix with
space
20 Memorial __ Kettering:
NYC hospital
21 Teensy bit
23 Word on a penny
24 Yins partner
25 Black-and-white puzzles
27 When doubled, a Pacific
island
29 Actor DiCaprio,
familiarly
30 Black-and-white music
makers
35 The Jetsons boy
39 Go over snow
40 Painkiller with a
Meltaways
childrens brand
42 __ Maria
43 2014 film about
civil rights
marches
45 Black-and-white
companion
47 Outfielders asset
49 Brouhahas
50 Black-and-white
flag
56 Take five
59 October birthstone
60 Curly-horned

goat
61 Happen
62 Really casual No prob!
64 Black-and-white ocean
predator
66 Pal of Threepio
67 Behave theatrically
68 Type
69 Way up or way down
70 Meeting of church
delegates
71 Albany is its cap.
DOWN
1 Slightly sloshed
2 City in Floridas horse
country
3 Released from jail until
trial
4 Diving lake bird
5 Picture that shows more
detail: Abbr.
6 Sesame Street grouch
7 Sweet!
8 Gillette razors
9 HBO rival

10 Totally awesome!
11 Campfire glower
12 Modify, as a law
13 Go-__: mini racers
18 Tease relentlessly
22 ISP option
25 Like dense brownies
26 Little shaver, to Burns
28 Dial type on old phones
30 Ltr. add-ons
31 Eisenhower nickname
32 Days of yore, quaintly
33 Supporting vote
34 NBC show that
celebrated its 40th
anniversary in Feb.
36 Cause an uproar of
Biblical proportions?

(C)2015 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


All rights reserved.

37 Fertility clinic eggs


38 Itch
41 Actor Sharif
44 Shoplifter catcher, often
46 Handheld burning light
48 Med. scan
50 __ Brothers: pop music
trio
51 Dizzying painting genre
52 Coffeehouse order
53 Bassoon relatives
54 Potentially infectious
55 Former jailbird
57 Tarnish
58 Tough hikes
61 Didnt pay yet
63 Laughs from Santa
65 From __ Z

12

dailytarheel.com

Monday, March 30, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

SportsMonday

SWIMMING & DIVING:


MENS TEAM 18TH
PLACE

AllAmerican
honors
for 6

SCOREBOARD

Womens Lacrosse: UNC 9, Notre Dame 8


Mens Tennis: Virginia Tech 4, UNC 3
Rowing: 1st Place for novice eight
Track and Field: Sarah Howard 1st place
Womens Golf: 7th at LSU Tiger Classic

WOMENS BASKETBALL: SOUTH CAROLINA 67, NORTH CAROLINA 65

NOT DENIED, JUST DELAYED

Sophomore Jack
Nyquist was selected
in consecutive years.
By Joey DeVito
Assistant Online Editor

Another year, another step


forward for the North Carolina
mens swimming and diving program at the NCAA
Championship meet this weekend in Iowa.
The mens team finished in
18th place. It was their fourth
Top-20 finish in the past six
years, but first since 2012.
Nine Tar Heels qualified for
the meet, mostly upperclassmen, with only one freshman
and one sophomore.
Junior Ben Colley was part
of the core of six juniors, five
of whom have competed in the
NCAAs the past three years.
We havent performed as
well as we would have liked our
freshman and sophomore year,
Colley said. This year I think
we still didnt do quite as well
as we would have liked, but it
was a step in the right direction,
and I think a lot of that has to
do with more experience.
Colley said that comfort in
the high level of competition
goes a long way.
I think the biggest thing transitioning from ACCs to NCAAs
is you have to understand that
you belong to swim there, Colley
said. It can be a very intimidating meet for underclassmen
because its the fastest meet in
the world besides maybe the
Olympic trials for the U.S.
The young Tar Heels certainly proved they belonged.
Sophomore Jack Nyquist
earned his second All-American
finish in the one-meter dive.
He becomes the first UNC
diver in 67 years to finish as an
All-American in consecutive
years.
Henry Campbell, the lone
qualifying freshman for UNC,
had an impressive meet as
well. He finished with an AllAmerican performance and a
school record in the 500-yard
freestyle, as well as a career-best
time in the 1650-yard freestyle.
He was one of six Tar Heels
to earn All-American honors.
I think he just has grit,
Coach Rich DeSelm said.
Competitive fire, passion and
grit its just being tough
when you have to be tough.
Campbell credited some of
his success to upperclassman
Sam Lewis, who helped him
settle down for his race.
He really stepped up to
kind of put the team on his
back, Campbell said. Seeing
someone like him step up and
go that fast kind of made me
believe that if he could do it,
why couldnt I?
Lewis was the highest placing Tar Heel, finishing fifth in
the 100-yard butterfly with a
time of 45.66 seconds.
I mean, he was incredible,
Campbell said. He was fifth
in the 100 fly and the top four
guys all went to the University
of Texas. Theyve got something
special going on there. They
won the meet handily.
But Sam being the best
butterflyer in the country that
doesnt go to the University to
Texas, thats pretty awesome.
DeSelm hopes Lewis and
the other seven returning
NCAA competitors bring that
same inspiration to the rest
of the team for next season
he wants them to bring their
experience back to Chapel
Hill.
Ive asked them to do that,
DeSelm said, so that more of
the team gets excited by what
their NCAA teammates went
through.
sports@dailytarheel.com

DTH/KENDALL BAGLEY
The UNC womens basketball team lost 67-65 to South Carolina in the Sweet 16 in Greensboro Friday. Stephanie Mavunga (1) led the Tar Heels with 13 rebounds.

The womens basketball team lost in the Sweet 16 on Friday


By Pat James
Assistant Sports Editor

GREENSBORO It was an
emotional tug of war in the North
Carolina womens basketball teams
locker room following its 67-65 loss
to South Carolina in the Sweet 16 on
Friday, with neither pain nor frustration gaining an edge over happiness and pleasure.
The scene was a conundrum of
sorts, considering the absence of utter
heartbreak and pin-drop silence one
would anticipate after a season-ending defeat and denied upset bid over a
top-seeded adversary.
There were teammates yelling
back and forth out of anger, while
others goofily danced. There were Tar
Heels devoured by the final minutes
of the loss hiding in the shower area,
and others flaunting welcoming
smiles as reporters waltzed in. There
were tears, and there was laughter.
But above all else, there was a

search for meaning a thorough


examination of the previous four
months work resulting in defeat.
Its motivation. We dont ever
want to feel like this again, said
freshman guard Jamie Cherry, whose
last-second heave ricocheted off the
backboard as time expired. Going
into next year, weve got to have the
same mindset. Well be fully ready.
Some wont be permitted the
opportunity to sweat and toil through
months of preparation in order to
quash the ailments of Fridays collapse, accounting for much of the
regret present in the locker room.
Senior guard Brittany Rountree,
as well as three other seniors, witnessed her UNC career come to
an abrupt conclusion after the Tar
Heels blew a three-point lead with
1:01 remaining in the second half.
Shell always remember the final
moments of her career, as SEC Player
of the Year Tiffany Mitchell drove the
heralded defender to the basket and

scored with 4.2 seconds left. Cherrys


Hail Mary, with a few seconds still left
on the clock to advance the ball, will
forever be etched in her memory.
I was pretty pissed. Something that
I wont forget, said Rountree before
changing directions and looking at the
game through an optimistic lens.
But South Carolina is a great
team, and were just as good. A lot of
people didnt give us a chance, but
we proved we can fight with them
and battle with them.
Even without All-ACC junior forward Xylina McDaniel. Since injuring her leg on Dec. 21, shes served
the team as a steady 6-foot-2 presence on the bench.
For nearly three months, she
watched as her teammates fought
to earn the No. 6 seed in the ACC
Tournament and No. 4 seed in the
Greensboro Region. But Fridays loss
proved to be the most vexing during
her absence, fueling her future return.
It was frustrating, but at the

same time, I am blessed to say I have


another year, McDaniel said. Well
be back, and Ill be back stronger.
As the Tar Heels sat in the locker
room, all they could hope for was the
same bolstering their 26-9, 10-6
ACC record as well as their roster
with two McDonalds All-Americans
and extending their tournament stay.
And for Coach Sylvia Hatchell,
she knows, possibly more than anyone else, what it takes for UNC to
fight back after being knocked out.
If anybody knows, I know lifes
not fair. Things happen. But you
have to be warriors and overcome
them, said Hatchell, who led a team
to the Sweet 16 for the first time
since 2011 after sitting out the 201314 season to fight leukemia.
I told them just because it was
a trip to the Elite 8, the Final Four
was delayed it wasnt denied, it
was delayed.
sports@dailytarheel.com

SOFTBALL: NORTH CAROLINA 12, VIRGINIA 4

Softball rights the


ship against Virginia
UNC had lost four
straight coming into
this weekends series.
By David Allen Jr.
Staff Writer

DTH/MATT RENN
Senior attackman Joey Sankey (11) tallied three goals in Sundays 15-14 win over Duke.

MENS LACROSSE: NORTH CAROLINA 15, DUKE 14

Defending champion
Duke falls to Tar Heels

Kieran Burke propelled the


mens lacrosse team to a
15-14 win over Duke Sunday.
By Logan Ulrich
Senior Writer

Kieran Burke sat and waited.


The clock ticked down. The No. 4
North Carolina mens lacrosse team clung
to a one-point lead against No. 6 Duke.
As the defense parted momentarily,
Dukes Myles Jones reared back and
rocketed the potential game-tying shot
through the gap toward the net the junior
goalkeeper stood guarding.
No matter the moment, Kieran is
always calm and collected, said senior
attackman Jimmy Bitter.
Burke deftly flipped his net up to

deflect and catch the shot, then stepped


forward to clear the ball out of danger.
UNC would go on to run out the remaining seconds and win the game 15-14, but
Burke remained waiting in the net until
the clock ran out, calm and steady.
You cant get too high, cant get too
low, Burke said. I definitely got pumped
up, but you cant let that show.
Burke had five saves in the fourth quarter the same as he had the entire game
to that point allowing UNC to hold on
to the lead they built in the second half.
Even though he allowed 14 goals, Coach
Joe Breschi had high praise for his keeper.
(He) really stepped up to his AllAmerican level in the fourth, Breschi
said. Hes so steady. He doesnt get
rattled by struggling early.
UNC struck quickly in the opening

SEE LACROSSE, PAGE 11

Bouncing back from a fourgame losing streak is never an


easy task, but it is something
that must be done to turn
around a mid-season slump.
With a little help from the
long ball, the North Carolina
(24-9, 9-2 ACC) softball
team answered that bill over
the weekend, sweeping the
Virginia Cavaliers (7-29, 1-11
ACC) in three straight games.
The first game on Saturday
afternoon went back-and-forth,
with the Tar Heels trailing 6-4
headed into the bottom of the
sixth inning. But UNC answered
with a nine-run final inning,
including two home runs by
junior Tracy Chandless, which
was good enough to hold off the
Cavaliers for a 13-7 victory.
Chandless led off the inning
with a solo homer, and after
UNC batted around, she cleared
the bases with a grand slam.
Ive never hit two home
runs in the same inning
before, Chandless said.
Something I can mark off my
bucket list, I guess.
Coach Donna Papa said the
sixth-inning rally was huge for
the team and credited it to having quality at-bats at the plate.
We just talked to them
about staying in the momentum
and really executing, Papa said.
The Tar Heels carried their

late momentum into game two


of the Saturday twin bill when
they exploded for 17 runs in the
first two innings en route to a
24-3 trouncing of UVa.
Kristen Brown, who broke
the single season home run
record over the weekend, hit
two dingers in the second
game to lead the team. She was
joined by four other teammates
for a combined seven home
runs a record-breaking
number for UNC softball.
Along with breaking the
home run record, the Tar Heels
also tied the single-game program run record with 24 and
broke the single-game hits
record with 22.
UNC pitcher Sydney Matzko
improved her record to 7-4 on
Saturday in impressive fashion,
holding the Cavaliers in check.
They were held hitless until the
fourth inning when they finally
broke into the run column,
halting the shutout as well.
UNC took the final game of
the series Sunday afternoon in a
mercy-rule victory of 12-4, finishing the sweep over UVa.
Every game from here on
out is important for this team,
Brown said. This series helped
give us positive mindsets going
into more ACC play.
Papa echoed Browns sentiment, saying the sweep was crucial for the Tar Heels to accomplish their goal of winning the
regular-season ACC title.
We stubbed our toes last
week in the Louisville series,
said Papa in reference to her
team dropping both games

SEE SOFTBALL, PAGE 11

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