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dailytarheel.com

Volume 123, Issue 25

Monday, April 6, 2015

Lets
take
on the
world

DTH FILE PHOTO


Sean May (42) led UNC with 26 points against the Fighting Illini
on April 4, 2005, at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis.

By Pat James
Assistant Sports Editor

There are only a few moments in life that


cement themselves in the hearts and memories
of thousands, only a few that can bring forward
laughter, ecstasy and childlike exuberance.
For North Carolina mens basketball
fans, April 4, 2005 provided one of those
moments. The team clinched the programs
fifth national championship the crowning glory for a team and a season that would
be forever a part of UNCs history. Tonight,
as Duke and Wisconsin square off in the
NCAA championship, theyll compete for
that elusive prize.
As the NCAA continues to investigate findings of academic fraud at UNC, the 2005 team
and title have come under scrutiny this year,
and many question whether the banner will
fall as part of the NCAAs response.
The title leaves a mixed legacy of controversy and excellence, but, 10 years later, it
remains something that players, coaches and
students wont ever forget.

It was championship or bust


In the early 2000s, UNC mens basketball
appeared to be a shadow of its former self.
The 2001-02 season culminated with an 8-20
finish the worst in program history and
the 2002-03 season wasnt much better,
resulting in a trip to the National Invitation
Tournament and the dismissal of Matt
Doherty as head coach.
On April 14, 2003, Roy Williams officially accepted the head coaching job, 10 days
removed from leading Kansas to the national
championship game. With Williams at the
helm, the Tar Heels returned to the NCAA
Tournament in 2004 before bowing out in the
second round.
Roy Williams, UNC mens basketball coach:
The year before, 2004, was my first year back.
I told the kids at that time, If you do exactly

Tar Heels remember the 2005


NCAA title 10 years later

what I say, well make the tournament this


year. Meaning 2004. Nobody on our squad
had ever played in the NCAA Tournament
So I said, If you do exactly what I say, well
make the tournament this year, well get a
little help in recruiting and next year well win
the whole blasted thing. And I really believed
that, I really did.
Dan Blank, former senior sports writer
for The Daily Tar Heel: They were coming
off of arguably the worst three-year stretch
of their programs history, at least since
the early years of Dean Smith That team
alone, just coming in with that experience,
everyone had huge expectations. Then you
throw in a guy like Marvin Williams, who
came in with all this hype but no one has
seen him yet. It added this tremendous X
factor. It was championship or bust right
from the start.
Marvin Williams, 2005 freshman forward:
You could tell that summer when I arrived
on campus that it was very business-like and
that everybody was very motivated. I felt like
no one took the summer off. I feel like people
were constantly in the gym.
UNC entered the 2004-05 season ranked
No. 4 in the country and traveled to Oakland,
Calif., for its season opener against unranked
Santa Clara. But with junior point guard
Raymond Felton suspended one game for
playing in an unsanctioned summer league,
the Tar Heels lost 77-66.
The Tar Heels faced a quick turnaround,
immediately heading to Hawaii for the Maui
Invitational. But as opposed to letting the loss
affect them, they blew past their competition
reeling off 14 straight wins and living up to
their pre-season hype.
Felton: We kind of woke up from there.
I came back the next game when we got to
Maui, and we just kind of turned it up from
there.
Blank: They got really focused after that.
They would just go on runs for where five,
six, seven minutes. They were unstoppable.

DTH FILE PHOTOS


After the UNC mens basketball team won the 2005 NCAA
Championship 75-70 over Illinois, students rushed Franklin Street.

They would force turnovers, they would get


out and run in transition. It was like a tornado. You just had to run and hide and hope you
werent in the path of destruction.
The Tar Heels headed into the regularseason finale against Duke with a chance to
claim the ACC regular-season championship
outright for the first time since 1993 and a
No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. Those
who were a part of the 2005 team describe
the home game against Duke as being just as
important as the championship. In what had
been a rather lopsided rivalry in recent years
with the Blue Devils winning 10 of the previous 12 meetings UNC was determined to
avenge itself.
Both teams traded blows back and forth,
but with just over three minutes remaining, Duke led by nine. Roy Williams called a
decisive timeout.
Marvin Williams: I just remember during the timeout, a couple of guys had their
heads down, and Coach Williams, the first
thing he said, he said, Hey, everybody, pick
your head up. Were going to win this game.
Everybody believed. I think every single person on that team believed what he was saying,
and we believed in each other.
Roy Williams: I promised them during the
timeout that we would have a chance to win
the game. Thats a silly thing to do, but I told
them, Well make plays, just do what I tell you
to do again. Well make plays and well have a
chance to win at the end.
UNC emerged from the timeout and cut
Dukes lead to two with less than a minute
remaining.
Felton: The floors felt like they were shaking. Everybody was into it. It was just crazy,
and you could see it in those guys from Dukes
eyes. There was a different look in their eyes
a look I hadnt seen all night. So I kind of
knew at that point we had them.
Following a timeout with 27 seconds left,
Felton drove to the basket and was fouled. His
first free throw was good, making it 73-72. But

with a chance to tie the game, Feltons second


free throw bounced off the rim.
Felton: Ive got to find a way to get this
ball back. Thats the only thing that was going
through my head. I went after it, saw Marvin
open, realized I wasnt going to be able to grab
the ball, so I did the next thing that came to
my mind. It was to try to tap it to him.
Felton found the freshman forwards hands.
Marvin Williams: I felt like I was open, so
I shot it. Thankfully it went in, and I was able
to get the and-1. At that point in my life, it was
definitely the biggest shot I had ever made. I
had made some pretty big ones in high school,
but it was the Duke-Carolina game and the
magnitude of that game was so big.
Blank: When that ball went through the
basket, it was delirium like I have never seen
or experienced in a sporting event. Its the
loudest Ive ever heard the Dean Dome. Even
on TV, it sounds like a jet engine blasting off.
It was so loud, I didnt even hear the whistle
for the and-1.
With a chance to put the Tar Heels up two,
Marvin Williams buried the free throw with 17
seconds left to give UNC a 75-73 edge. Dukes
Daniel Ewings shot at the buzzer fell into
Sean Mays hands, and chaos ensued.
Blank: I was a DTH reporter, and we take
our objectivity very seriously I made up my
mind that I wasnt going to storm the court.
If that meant me being the only person left
in the risers, so be it. But that was a decision
like, I wasnt going to let this riptide carry me
out to the ocean. Ewing takes his final shot,
the air ball that falls into Sean Mays hands,
the buzzer sounds, and next thing I know Im
at mid-court. I dont even remember moving
my feet.
Kathryn Howlett, freshman student manager: I actually had broken my foot earlier
that year at another game, and the doctor
told me, Dont run around, no jumping. But I
definitely rushed the floor that night when we

SEE ORAL HISTORY, PAGE 4

UNC students bring research to Raleigh


Their work on oysters
helped inform two N.C.
General Assembly bills.
By Elizabeth Matulis
Staff Writer

In the fall semester, UNC students Jerome Allen, Michaela


Meredith and John St. Clair were
extensively studying oyster populations at the Outer Banks and now
their research has helped inform two
N.C. General Assembly proposals.
The trio on Thursday presented
their research on oyster aquaculture,
which is linked to two bills, to lawmakers during a meeting of the Joint
Natural and Economic Resources
Appropriations Committee.
Oyster aquaculture is the practice of farming oysters for human
consumption. It involves cultivating
oysters in plastic net bags supported on a rack where water can flow
around them, allowing oysters to

flourish in areas that might not be


friendly to oyster populations.
Allen, a junior and one of six
students who spent the fall at the
Outer Banks, said they analyzed
aquaculture by surveying, doing
policy analysis and evaluating current practices.
The two bills moving through
the legislature aim to expand
these oyster hatcheries and make
it easier for those looking to join
the industry by cutting down on
application and rental fees that are
often barriers.
Meredith, a junior, said they
were invited to N.C. General
Assembly after giving a public presentation in December.
I didnt realize until I got there
how big of a deal it was, Meredith
said. At first, I thought it was just
fun for college students and they
were doing it as part of an outreach,
but they really wanted our opinion
and our research.
Oysters have important ties to
the culture and traditions of the

The issue is important right now because our oyster


populations are at a historical low.
Lindsay Dubbs,
associate director of the Outer Banks Field Site

Outer Banks, said Lindsay Dubbs,


associate director of the Outer
Banks Field Site.
The issue is important right now
because our oyster populations are
at a historical low, and oysters are a
very important part of the ecosystem, she said.
Theyre important to the water
quality, and theyre also organisms
that people love to eat.
Allen said he and the other students surveyed local businesses,
finding that customers were more
likely to pay more for oysters if they
knew the oysters were local and
knew the benefits they provide to
the ecosystem.
They also found that the hatcheries improve water quality by filtering
it, among other benefits, Allen said.

Coastal pollution is moving at


a rate that is not a safe rate, Allen
said. Any way or form that we can
address climate change, (we) want
to mitigate as much as possible.
Oyster aquaculture can also have
significant economic benefits, which
have been realized in other states,
Allen said.
Meredith said states like Virginia
have oyster industries that are making millions of dollars more in revenue than North Carolinas industry.
Meredith said presenting the
research at the legislature was a oncein-a-lifetime experience.
Its something, especially as an
undergraduate, you really dont get to
see and experience.

Jerome Allen, a
junior at UNC, was one
of six students who
spent the fall semester
studying aquaculture
in the Outer Banks
and conducting policy
research.
Michaela Meredith,
also a UNC junior, is an
environmental studies
major. She was in the
group that presented
research on oyster
aquaculture to the N.C.
General Assembly.
John St. Clair is a
UNC junior majoring in
environmental studies.
His research on oysters
helped inform two
bills currently making
their way through the
N.C. General Assembly.

#WheresRameses
state@dailytarheel.com

THE SEARCH BEGINS APRIL 6

Never trust a computer you cant throw out a window.


STEVE WOZNIAK

News

Monday, April 6, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel


www.dailytarheel.com

Fast food made faster

Established 1893

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BADGERS BEAT WILDCATS

DAILY
DOSE

122 years of editorial freedom


JENNY SURANE
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

The Daily Tar Heel

From staff and wire reports

ometimes you just cant wait in that drive-thru line to get your
Chicken McNuggets and large milkshake. A man in Texas used
some imagination to cut the drive-thru line. The man used sirens
and flashing lights to impersonate a police officer to skip to the
front and get his fast food faster than everyone else. The man was wearing a
uniform that made him look like an officer. He also used the sirens and lights
to get through traffic lights. In case you didnt know, impersonating an officer is usually frowned upon by law enforcement, especially for something so
arguably trivial. The man was arrested and freed on $15,000 bond. Although
if you ask us, getting fast food 10 minutes faster is pretty darn important and
totally worth it. Wed do pretty much anything for a McFlurry right now.

NOTED. Emergency officials are not there


for complaining about your bar tab. But a
man in Idaho did just that. He called 911
more than 10 times to report that he had
been overcharged at a bar. The 911 officials did not find this humorous, and the
man now faces a $1,000 fine and a stay
in prison.

QUOTED. Im as fertile as sin, I dont believe


in contraception and I love sex. Ive got 22
kids that carry my name, and theres about
18 probably a few more that dont.
Mike Holpin, who has 40 children,
age 3 to 37. He said he doesnt recognize
some of them and that he has no plan to
stop procreating anytime soon.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY

2015 Murphy Lecture: Judge


Thokozile Masipa, the second
black woman to be admitted to
the Bench in South Africa, will
discuss her experiences in law.
The event will be free and open
to the public.
Time: Noon to 1 p.m.
Location: Van Hecke-Wettach
Hall, Rotunda
Transforming Judiciaries in
the Global South: Lessons
from the Kenyan Judiciary:
Willy Mutunga, the chief justice
of Kenya and president of the
Supreme Court in Kenya, will be
giving a lecture on judiciaries
in the global south. Mutunga
was also a political prisoner and
a reform activist in Kenya. The
lecture is free and open to the
public.

Time: 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.


Location: FedEx Global Education Center, Nelson Mandela
Auditorium

TUESDAY

And Polio was a Nightmare:


Christopher Jensen, the 2012
McLendon-Thomas Award winner, will be discussing polio and
its impact on UNC. The event is
sponsored by Bullitt History of
Medicine Club. The event is free
and open to the public. Refreshments will be provided.
Time: Noon to 1 p.m.
Location: Health Sciences
Library, Room 527
Wikipedia Edit-a-thons: Art
+ Feminism: During this edita-thon, UNC students can help
provide research to Wikipedia
for encyclopedia entries. Anyone

is free to participate, and refreshments will be provided.


Time: 5 p.m. to 8:45 p.m.
Location: Hanes Art Center,
Sloane Art Library
UNC baseball vs. Coastal Carolina: The North Carolina baseball
team will take on Coastal
Carolina in regular season play.
Hot dogs and drinks will be $1.
Admission is free for all UNC
students.
Time: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Location: Boshamer Stadium
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.

CORRECTIONS
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections
printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Katie Reilly at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.

Like us at facebook.com/dailytarheel

Follow us on Twitter @dailytarheel

TNS/MARK CORNELISON

entuckys Willie Cauley-Stein (15) steps out


of bounds as he tries to make a move on
Wisconsins Sam Dekker (15) in the NCAA
Tournament national semifinal in Indianapolis
Saturday. Wisconsin advanced, winning 71-64.

POLICE LOG
Someone reported the
theft of 20 Vicodin pills, 40
Klonopin pills and 10 cigarettes from a residence on the
300 block of Estes Drive at
4:01 p.m. Thursday, according
to Carrboro police reports.
The items stolen were worth
a total of $12, the report states.

Someone broke into,


entered and stole from a
residence on the 100 block of
Cottonwood Court between
8:31 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole a Vizio
Smart television and an Apple
TV, worth a total of $900, the
report states.
Someone reported indecent exposure at 120 S. Estes
Drive at 11:25 a.m. Wednesday,
according to Chapel Hill police
reports.
Someone reported an
undisciplined child at an

office building at 828 Martin


Luther King Jr. Blvd. at 9:28
a.m. Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Two people were acting
suspiciously at the PTA Thrift
Shop at 125 W. Main St. at
10:50 p.m. Wednesday, according to Carrboro police reports.

TIPS
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
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All rights reserved

DAY OF THE DANCING

PULSO
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APRIL 7 AT MEMORIAL HALL
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$10 TICKETS ALL PROCEEDS BENEFIT UNC FAMILY MEDICINE

News

The Daily Tar Heel

Pay gap
in nursing
stagnates

Monday, April 6, 2015

From the farm to the dorm

The pay gap in the femaledominated field hasnt


narrowed in 25 years.
By Jenn Morrison
Staff Writer

In the female-dominated field of


nursing, men are still bringing home
the larger paychecks.
A recent study revealed that male
nurses out-earned female nurses by
more than $5,000 on average per
year, with no narrowing of the pay gap
over the last 25 years.
This is not information that
should be taken lightly or dismissed,
said Debra Barksdale, professor and
director of the Doctor of Nursing
Practice program. This is information that the nursing profession needs
to take a good hard look at.
Male nurses were paid $70,000
on average in 2013 versus $60,000
for women. The study showed a
range of income disparities depending on specializations within the
field, but a gap existed in every specialization except for orthopedics.
The largest gap, for nurse anesthetists, was approximately $17,000
per year.
Barksdale said this study was
important in quantifying an assumption many professionals in the field
already had.
For many years there had been
talk of a discrepancy between the pay
of male and female nurses but nothing of this scale, she said.
Of the 333 undergraduate students currently enrolled in the
School of Nursing, 44 are male. This
includes students in the six-semester
Bachelor of Science in Nursing
option and the four-semester
Accelerated Bachelor of Science in
Nursing option, said Carlee Meritt,
assistant director for undergraduate
admissions in the School of Nursing,
in an email.
Nursing is the largest profession
in the health care industry, and about
2.5 million women are affected by this
pay inequality, according to the study.
Men account for less than 10 percent
of registered nurses as of 2013.
Sophomore Ashleigh Luttrell will
begin the nursing program in May
with plans to become a nurse anesthetist, the specialization with the largest
pay gap.
I wasnt surprised about the pay
gap. I was surprised about the extent
of the pay gap $17,000 is ridiculous, she said.
Luttrell was also alarmed that the
gap had not changed over time.
The fact that this pay gap has
existed for 25 years at this magnitude
is shocking, she said. It just shows
that this country is so stagnant.
The study suggested possible reasons for the pay gap beyond gender
discrimination, including men negotiating for raises more assertively and
women leaving and re-entering the
workforce more frequently.
The study said the role of registered nurses in particular will
expand as the Affordable Care Act
places more emphasis on teambased health care.
As a nation we sort of embrace the
concept of equal pay for equal work,
Barksdale said. If we cant get this
right in such a female-dominated profession, I dont know what hope we
have for other fields.
university@dailytarheel.com

DTH/KATIE WILLIAMS
Lydia Ippolito and her daughter Carina Ippolito offer samples from their Delight Soy stand at the Fair Local Organic Food spring farmers market Thursday.

Fair Local Organic Food held its biannual farmers market


By Victoria Mirian
Staff Writer

For studentsthat werent running to an exam, Thursdays walk to


class was the ideal time topick up
local produce thanks to a collaboration between a student organization
and Carolina Dining Services.
Fresh Local Organic Food and
CDS hosted its semi-annual farmers market in the Pit.
Were trying to get students
more aware of farmers markets in
general, said Alexandra Willcox,
FLOs organizing representative
and market manager.
This year we brought representatives from the Chapel Hill and
Carrboro farmers markets to talk
to students to get them to come
out to get food and produce from a
local market.

Willcox said FLO has worked


to bring vendors to UNC for more
than five years.
Representatives from 17 groups
set up tables and tents in the Pit
to sell everything from farm-fresh
vegetables to homemade soap.
A few years ago,UNCalumnus
Dorian West and his wife quit
their jobs to open the Hillsborough
Cheese Company and sell their
cheeses at local farmers markets.
Im surprised because when
I was a student, I didnt care as
much, but they are more enlightened and aware,said West, the
self-titled Big Cheese at his cheeseproducingcompany. Theyare
actually interested, more so than
the people who just come to shop.
Representatives from The Farm
at Penny Lane, a therapy farm
located near Chapel Hill, sold pro-

duce and eggs beneath a tent. The


farm gives mental health patients
access to sustainable food sources.
Ive been encouraged
todaylots of people are buying
our things, even the things that
need cooking, so I guess theres
a change in the wind here, said
Doug Jones, who works with The
Farm at Penny Lane.
Metzli Rodoli said she was
tempted to buy produce when she
stopped in the Pit between classes.
I think its a great idea bringing
fresh vegetables to campus because
if not, wed be living off of ramen
noodles because its there and its
available, Rodoli said.
FLO is a student-run organization that supports the local
economy and teaches students
about the areas food climate. The
once-a-semester farmers market,

Willcox said, is a way to introduce


students to local sources of food
and other products.
The fall farmers market was
rained out and moved from its
usual location in the Pit to the
Great Hall in the Union.
We want students to realize
that they can do this all the time.
Its important to eat local support local businesses, Willcox said.
AttheHillsborough Cheese
Companys stand, sophomore
Sean Petersen sampled cheese
with a friend.
Its really cool to see local businesses, farmers and groups that
are making local produce and
sharing with our community so
that people in the area can see
what they are doing.
university@dailytarheel.com

Obey Creek critics talk parking, trac


A new proposal would
use the Southern Village
Park and Ride lot.
By Avishai Halev
Staff Writer

While the discussion about the


proposed Obey Creek development
continues, residents are expressing
concerns about a pivotal portion of
the plan transportation.
The most current incarnation for the Obey Creek project,
which is planned to be built along
U.S. 15-501 across from Southern
Village, calls for 1.5 million square
feet of retail and affordable housing.
While the economic potential for
the town is significant, residents are
worried about the projects scope.
Susan Lindsay whose home in
the Dogwood Acres complex is just

across the highway from the proposed development said she was
in favor of some development, but
thought the council needed more
information before embarking on
any construction.
I dont think theyve proved that
doing it this size is the best return
for the town, she said.
Lindsay said that such a large
project will cause traffic problems
in the area.
(U.S.) 15-501 will only be able
to absorb so much more traffic,
she said.
Lindsay said she is one of many
residents who see Obey Creek as
too large, but are in favor of some
development.
Why should we go and build
this giant thing over there if its all
going to be a wash? she said.
Fellow Dogwood Acres resident
Dana Rea called the implications terrible and not in line with how Chapel

Hill historically conducts business.


The reality of this project, to
me, is obscene, Rea said.
As an alternative, Lindsay
said the town could develop the
Southern Village Park and Ride lot.
Two scenarios were presented
for the Obey Creek development
in March. Both have some of the
lot used for a hotel, residential
and office space, with additional
space left as parking and the rest as
mixed-use buildings.
The second scenario also includes
plans for a large format retailer on
the end of the development closest
to the park and ride lot.
The second scenario might
result in additional development
of the Southern Village Park
and Ride lot so that some of the
spaces could be used for parking
for private businesses.
Lindsay said this scenario would
require less infrastructure and at a

lower cost to the town, and that it


would allow the town to profit from
the property via ground leasing,
property taxes and sales taxes.
The park and ride development
was being considered as a complement to Southern Village and Obey
Creek, said Chapel Hill Mayor
Mark Kleinschmidt.
The park and ride lot is a separate process, he said. The community began to think about other
opportunities for development.
Despite extensive discussion on
the matter, finalize plans for Obey
Creek and the park and ride are
still a long way off.
No final decisions have been
made about these developments,
said Chapel Hill Town Council
member Lee Storrow. We have a lot
more conversations and dialogues
to have in the upcoming months.
city@dailytarheel.com

New research says Southern accent is leaving Raleigh area


An NCSU professor says its due to
an influx of out-of-state residents.
By Cole del Charco
Staff Writer

To some people, the Southern accent is a


euphonic staple of Southern living, while to
others its a blemish that hearkens back to the
Civil War.
But whether you love it or hate it, its harder
to find in Raleigh, said Robin Dodsworth, a
North Carolina State University associate professor of linguistics.
Dodsworth said the gradual change in accent
was largely influenced by an influx of people from
outside the state. During the rise of the Research
Triangle, many white-collar workers from around
the nation moved to the Raleigh-Durham area.
Companies like IBM have all these jobs for
folks, and so they move down from the North,
and you have a kind of change in population
in that sense, she said. And you have a lot of
people from the North moving in and importing some cultural norms.
Although the main stimulant of the withdrawal of the Southern accent came with new
people, existing residents also changed their
dialect, she said. A bad connotation started
to accompany the Southern drawl, and as a
result, some younger Raleigh residents might
try not to speak with a Southern accent.

I think theres a lot of young people these days


who understand that, in many other parts of the
country, a Southern accent is heard as stupid or
lazy or uneducated or whatever even though,
of course, there is no truth to that at all, she said.
Dodsworth conducted the study by conversing for an hour with 300 Raleigh locals over the
past 10 years. Each of the interviewees voices
was analyzed using acoustic analysis software
that measures frequencies in the sound wave
that are amplified by the shape of the vocal tract.
Christopher Carignan, a post-doctoral
research scholar at N.C. State, said Dodsworths
study is unique.
There are only a couple places in the world
that have this kind of research available, he said.
Dodsworth found that younger residents had
less of the long vowel sound than older residents
and that white-collar speakers are significantly
less southern than blue-collar groups, as identified by occupation.
The shift away from the Southern drawl is a
general lessening of the local accent, she said.
Theres significant change over time, such
that the traditional southern vowel system is
retreating and a more a-regional system is taking over, she said.
John Forrest, Dodsworths research assistant
for the project and a Ph.D. student at N.C. State,
said further research is planned on accent shifts
in North Carolina including a similar study he
will begin conducting in Charlotte this year.
We will (be) interviewing people who

Age and residence affect vocabulary usage across North Carolina

Walt Wolfram and Jeffrey Reaser faculty colleagues of Robin Dodsworth at N.C. State University have identified that both age
and urban-rural residence influence speech patterns. A few examples of vocabulary differences are included in the table below.

Word

Younger+Urban Older+Urban Younger+Rural Older+Rural

Yall
plural you

Kin
a relative

Fixin to
plan to

Stay
currently
live at

Poke
bag, sack

SOURCE: TALKIN TAR HEEL BY WALT WOLFRAM AND JEFFREY REASER

grew up in the area and will be asking them,


essentially, life history stuff. From that we can
measure how theyre talking, but we can also
get social stuff, he said.
Elliott Moreton, linguistics professor at UNC,
said Dodsworths findings are plausible, as vowel
shifts have been going on for a long time.

DTH/TYLER VAHAN

Its common for people to express group


affiliation by trying to sound like the group they
want to fit in with, Moreton said. It might
be that you end up with one class without the
Southern shift and another class with it.
state@dailytarheel.com

News

Monday, April 6, 2015

Man arrested for fatal Friday stabbing


By Holly West
City Editor

A person has been arrested in connection with a fatal


Friday night stabbing in
downtown Chapel Hill.
Around 11:45 p.m.,
police responded to 209 E.
Franklin St., near University

Presbyterian Church and


right across the street from
McCorkle Place.
The male victim, whose
identity the police had not yet
released by late Sunday, had
been stabbed in the chest.
He was taken by ambulance
to UNC Hospitals, where he
later died.

According to an
AlertCarolina message
issued early on Saturday
morning, the victim was not
a student.
Witnesses told police the
assailant had been wearing a
blue windbreaker or hoodie,
red shorts and a black
do-rag. He was seen fleeing toward East Rosemary
Street.
Early Saturday morning, police charged Charles
Anthony Rhames, 25, with
the crime and issued a warrant for his arrest.
Rhames was apprehended
on Jones Ferry Road in
Carrboro later that day.
He faces a charge of first
degree murder and is being
held at Orange County Jail
under no bond. The Chapel
Hill Police Department
was not releasing any other
information on the case
until Monday morning, said
Sgt. Gabriel Shinn.
city@dailytarheel.com

The Daily Tar Heel

ORAL HISTORY

FROM PAGE 1

beat Duke.
Ben Couch, senior sports
writer for The Daily Tar Heel:
That really was one of the
wins you felt like gave them
momentum, like Hey, we
were able to get past Duke.
And they wouldnt have that
hanging over their heads
Its like, Lets get ready for
the tournament. Its time.
Lets take on the world.
As the No. 1 overall seed,
UNC marched through its
side of bracket en route to
arriving in St. Louis for the
Final Four. The Tar Heels
dismantled Michigan State
in the semifinals, inching one
step closer to winning Roy
Williams his first national
championship. In the championship, The Tar Heels
would face off against Illinois,
who had lost only one game
all season.
Roy Williams: We were
a little mad because people
were talking about how we
had the talent, but Illinois
had a better team, so I challenged them to show every-

body that we were a team


also. Yes, we were talented,
but we were a team. We
would play together. I challenged them to shut those
people up. And also, I said,
Hey, theres only two teams
that have a chance to win a
national championship. One
of those two teams tonight is
going to win, why not let it be
us? Lets just play our tail off
and see what happens.
The Tar Heels put the
team-versus-talent narrative to rest early, procuring
a 13-point lead heading into
the locker room. UNC would
extend its lead to 15 points
in the second half, but the
Fighting Illini continued to
fight back.
Illinois tied the game
twice in the waning minutes of the game and had
a chance to send the game
into overtime, but Luther
Head missed a 3-pointer
with merely 17 seconds
remaining. Felton was
fouled following the miss
and stepped to the line with
a chance to seal the game.
Felton: I just took myself
away from the arena. It felt

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like I was back at the Dean


Dome, just me in the gym by
myself, nobody else in there.
I felt like it was just me and
the rim.
The junior point guard
made both, and as May
hauled in his final rebound,
the buzzer sounded and the
Tar Heels were declared
national champions once
again, winning by a score of
75-70.
Roy Williams: When they
shoot the ball and miss and
Sean gets the rebound, I
look at the clock and theres
two seconds left, and then
I look back and Sean still
has it. Then I look at the
clock, and it goes from one
to zero The next thing
I knew, this big, sweaty,
smelly, big fella comes up
and just puts me in a big
bear hug. One of the greatest moments of my life.
Felton: My first initial
thing was to try to get to my
mom and dad, but they were
in the stands. I was just trying
to find a way to run to them,
but somebody had to grab
me. I fell, the others fell and
everybody else on the team
came piling up on top.
Howlett: When the game
ended, I remember we just
all filed out of our seats and
just ran toward the court I
definitely felt like I was in a
movie or something. It was
surreal. Its like, this is it. You
dont have to work any more.
Youve done it.
The celebration spread
from the floor of the Edward
Jones Dome and into the
locker room, where former
Coach Dean Smith and
Michael Jordan met the
team.
Roy Williams: When they
got down there, I said, Guys,
North Carolina basketball is
Dean Smith, Michael Jordan,
Phil Ford, the 57 national
championship team, the
82, 93. But from this day
forward, North Carolina
basketball is also going
to be you guys. The 2005
national champions. It was
a great moment for me, and
I hugged Coach Smith. Ill
never forget it. I said, Coach,
thank you. And he looked
at me, the most sincere, and
said, No, thank you.
sports@dailytarheel.com

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Opinion

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, April 6, 2014

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 Jamal Rogers, jmlrgs@gmail.com

Handle of Jack

NEXT

Mike Mineer, on visiting students after a noise complaint was filed

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR

A listicle
for the
aspiring
traveler

JUSTICE LEAGUE
Seth Rose reflects on March
Madness as a phenomenon.

They were the most uncooperative residents


Ive made an arrest for drugs, and those
people were more polite.

Aerial Cheeto, on a bill that would require professors to teach more

Senior public relations major from


Holly Springs.
Email: joshaugh@live.unc.edu

QUOTE OF THE DAY

This is part of an ongoing, concerted


attempt to dismantle public institutions by
the legislature.

Jackie OShaughnessy

tudying abroad is an
opportunity to explore
new lands, meet new
people and write a blog that
only your parents will read.
For some, making the
decision to miss a football or
basketball season and spend
a semester away from UNC is
difficult. They dont want to
miss out on the time spent on
the quad, nights on the porch
at Top of the Hill and inside
jokes they wont understand
once they return.
But stand up to your fear of
missing out because studying
abroad is one of the best decisions you can make in college.
Its the chance to literally get
lost while searching for Wi-Fi,
spend money that you definitely
dont have and get an article all
about it published on Thought
Catalog. If youre trying to talk
your parents into letting you
travel across an ocean or two,
here are a few selling points.
Youll learn something new
every day. Some days it may
be as small as figuring out
how the bus system works and
which bus driver is constantly
humming Sexual Healing by
Marvin Gaye. Other days, you
may learn how extroverted you
truly are, or in my case, are
not. At the end of a long day
of being a new person, all Id
want to do is curl up with the
third season of Orange is the
New Black. And yes, you are
still allowed to watch Netflix
when you study abroad if
youre willing to jump through
a few high-tech hoops.
Youll figure out who you are
without your comfort zone. On
campus, you can identify yourself by the organizations youre
involved in, friend groups you
run with and titles you hold.
When youre on your own, you
learn things about yourself
for instance, that old people
really gravitate towards you,
you get annoyed when people
squeal about cute dogs and
that you really can navigate a
foreign city on your own.
The world will seem smaller.
If you choose to study abroad
in Ireland, dont worry. Every
time you enter a pub with live
music, Wagon Wheel will
be performed at least once.
And scream-singing If I die
in Raleigh/At least I will die
free! from across an ocean
feels so much more satisfying.
Because traveling without
your parents finally is
THE BEST. Sorry Mom and
Dad, but instead of waking
up at 9 a.m. to travel three
hours to some old ruins, Im
going get up at noon, go to a
free comedy show and watch
Stand By Me in a park on a
giant projection screen.
Youre not on their schedule,
there are no leashes and there
are (probably) no fanny packs
and Hawaiian shirts. (Wait,
was I the only one on a leash
as a child?)
Youll have so much space
to explore, new foods to try
and experiences to have. Go
out in search of goose bumps,
and sure enough, youll find
a gorgeous mountain peak, a
much better Irish version of
Panera Bread, or even an old
man named Neil who will give
you advice on what to do with
your life.
But coming back might be
the best part. Studying abroad
makes cheese fries, chicken
biscuits and Blueberry Wheats
taste that much better once
you return to the Hill.

Race issues cannot be


compartmentalized

EDITORIAL

Put womens health rst


Abortion limits
disregard right to
health care access.

ome North Carolina


lawmakers are
attempting to use
a new bill to further dismantle the enforcement of
the principle established in
Roe v. Wade that women
are entitled to safe and
legal abortions.
House Bill 465
would prevent doctors
at University of North
Carolina at Chapel
Hill and East Carolina
University hospitals from
performing abortions.
The bill also requires
women seeking abortions

to talk with a qualified


health care provider three
days before the procedure
may occur.
This bill eliminates a
womans access to a timely procedure and needlessly restricts two of the
states most competent
medical centers.
These hospitals are also
important teaching institutions, and preventing
doctors from performing abortions at these
locations would disrupt
education about safe abortion practices for North
Carolinas next generation
of medical professionals.
North Carolina law
currently stipulates that
women seeking an abor-

tion must speak with a


medical provider 24 hours
prior to the procedure. By
increasing this time period
to three days, lawmakers
limit access to the abortion
procedure. This particularly
affects any for whom time
and distance to a medical
provider may be an issue.
In what ways do these
measures improve the
safety or situation of
women seeking an abortion? None at all.
By forsaking a womans
access to a safe and accessible abortion procedure,
House Bill 465 is a sad
example of lawmakers
ignoring well-established
legal principal to appeal to
a vocal minority.

EDITORIAL

Humanity in shackles
North Carolina
should cease prison
labor exploitation.

orth Carolinas
criminal justice
system is guilty of
robbing prisoners of their
natural right to be compensated for their labor.
Most prisoners in the
state are paid only 40 cents,
70 cents or $1 per day while
being tasked with performing tasks that, outside of
prison, would pay at least
minimum wage.
Furthermore, prisoners
are not allowed to consent to or reject the tasks

assigned to them.
Conviction of an offense
should not be coupled
with the deprivation of
basic human rights, particularly because North
Carolina and the rest of
the United States are
guilty, in the last half-century, of creating a system
of mass incarceration on
an unprecedented scale.
Many are imprisoned
for offenses that should
not result in incarceration. Others receive overly
punitive sentences.
This infrastructure
is particularly offensive
because it is racialized,
continuing a long history

of race-based labor exploitation. In 2013, 55 percent of North Carolinas


inmates were black.
This echoes past systems
of racialized labor exploitation such as sharecropping
and debt slavery. Poverty
continues to be criminalized to similar effect.
Prisoners should be paid
at least minimum wage for
their work. Robbing prisoners of the fruits of their
labor creates cycles of poverty that perpetuate crime.
A conviction for a crime
does not strip a person
of his or her humanity.
Law should be changed to
reflect this essential truth.

SPORTS COLUMN

Cherishing the lasts


Daniel Wilco signs off with a call to action for the younguns

month ago, I covered


my last sporting
event for The Daily
Tar Heel. A few weeks ago,
I watched my last UNC
basketball game as a UNC
student. Yesterday, I played
in my last water polo game
while wearing a UNC cap.
Now, I write my last piece
for the DTH.
Ive barely blinked. A four
year journey is in its waning moments. Luckily, Ive
learned some lessons along
the way, but the one that
sticks out most in my mind is
one I learned in my first week
freshman year of high school.
A friends older sister the valedictorian of
the senior class gave a
speech to us wide-eyed,
overly-cocky 15-year-olds:
Try everything you have
even the slightest inkling of
interest in, she said.
Listening to that advice is
how I ended up writing for
the school newspaper, which
led me to the DTH, and, jobwilling, a future career. It led
me to say yes when a friend
asked if I wanted to help start

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

a water polo team at a high


school without a pool. Eight
years later, writing for the
paper (and getting called a
Coach K shoe scrubber for it)
and wearing a blue Speedo
with the interlocking NC
on the rear have defined my
North Carolina career.
By senior year, every person at this school will have
a few lasts theyre dreading,
whether its the last time
watching a freshman argue
with the Pit Preacher, the
last pickup basketball game
or the last time linking arms
after a game, win or lose,
and singing the alma mater.
For everyone leaving

here in May, try your best


to cherish those lasts.
But for those of you lucky
enough to be coming back
to Chapel Hill in the fall, I
plead with you: Go out and
have as many firsts as you
possibly can.
There are very few places
or times in your life that provide so many opportunities
to branch out, and there are
very few times you will try
something new and regret
it completely. Best-case scenario, you find something
you love; worst-case scenario, you walk away with a
story. And no matter what,
you learn something new
about yourself.
Im going to miss UNC a
lot. Ill miss the DTH and
water polo, the late nights
at the library and the less
productive late nights at
The Library. Ill even miss
the classes.
But I realize how lucky I
am to have so many things
I will miss so very much.
These past four years have
been a dream. Now, its time
to wake up.

TO THE EDITOR:
I woke up yesterday at
Duke University to the
news that a noose was
found handing from a tree
in Dukes main social center. I, like many others,
was disgusted and disappointed with my community. Within six hours,
Dukes Black Student
Alliance organized a demonstration that drew hundreds of students.
As I recruited my
friends from both UNC
and Duke to join the
rally, I was shocked with
some of the responses
I received. My friends
asked me questions such
as, What exactly does
the noose have to do with
race? and, How are you
sure that this was directed
toward the black community? I realized then that
UNC and Dukes whitedominated cultures have
effectively erased a painful and important history
from the minds of many,
especially white students.
The ground UNC and
Duke are built on is the
same ground that only 80
years ago absorbed the
blood of black citizens who
were victims of mob violence, lynching, torture and
rape.
This hate act is disgusting, but it is not a Duke
problem. Students at both
Duke and UNC are living
on top of violent geographical history that we all share.
Let us, as UNC students, share the burden of
reminding one and other,
especially those of the
white race, of our history of
violence. Taking the time to
remember a painful history
is the least we can do to
honor those who were murdered in the slow, jagged
arc toward progress.
Monique LaBorde
Sophomore
Robertson Scholar

N.C. should not be


legislating health care
TO THE EDITOR:
We have a problem as
a country, and we have a
problem as a state the
quiet erasure and repeal
of Roe v. Wade on a stateby-state basis, while the
debate about abortion gets
shuffled into a dichotomy
of pro-life versus prochoice, as if womens lives
have ever been that black
and white.
N.C. House Bill 465
attacks numerous aspects
of womens reproductive
care and the rights of institutions in our state. It is a
direct reach into the UNC
system by an ideological
agenda that has nothing to
do with health care.
It adds erroneous and
redundant requirements
on something that is
already heavily restricted.
But at its worst, H.B. 465
is going to accomplish one
thing: Its going to harm
women. It is an intersectional issue, meaning it

will affect classes, races


and genders adversely.
There is a notable lack of
access to adequate health
care in rural counties in the
state. This means that rural
women, many of whom
have children, jobs, school
work and a myriad of other
obligations, are forced
to not only drive to have
access in the first place, but
must now spend even more
time and money to make
sure they can assure their
own reproductive freedom
and bodily autonomy.
A 72-hour wait period
means hotel fees, childcare
fees, time off work and
emotional trauma. This
targets low-income women,
low-income communities
and attempts to pass a law
that will directly result in
the death of many women.
Making abortion illegal
does not stop it; it simply
harms women for trying
to take control of their
own bodies. The women
who will be harmed will be
those who simply wish to
not be punished for a fact
of their biology.
We must rally against this.
We must protect women. We
must preserve our rights to
freedom from reproductive
oppression as a campus and
as a community.
Cara Schumann
Sophomore
Students United for
Reproductive Justice

Bill threatens health


care infrastructure
TO THE EDITOR:
Like some sort of sick
April Fools joke, the N.C.
General Assembly introduced a bill April 1 that
directly attacks the health
care-providing capacity of
UNC Health Care.
House Bill 465 is yet
another virulent, restrictive bill hailing from our
General Assembly. An identifying factor of this bill,
however, is that it bursts
our Chapel Hill bubble,
and there is very little effort
made to disguise the bill as
anything other than ideologically driven.
Past bills have placed
unnecessary restrictions on
abortion clinics with claims
of additional safety measures. H.B. 465 flatly states
that UNC Health Care
Systems cannot use any
finances or facilities toward
abortion services.
For now, the entire
breadth of implications is
unclear. There is potential
that faculty of UNCs medical school would no longer
be able to teach how to even
provide safe abortions.
The UNC Health Care
system finds its pulse on
our campus, but its services span across the state. It
is a public institution that
serves a variety of North
Carolinians, from the
poorest to the wealthiest.
The General Assembly has
no place in actively preventing our people from
obtaining the best health
care possible. Tar Heels,
lets stay awake.
Kaori Sueyoshi
Senior
Business administration,
political science

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.
Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number.
Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit
letters to 250 words.
SUBMISSION
Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill,
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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.

University

Monday, April 6, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

Students rattled by ocers visit for noise complaint


By Kristen Chung
Staff Writer

Housemates Zach Rachuba


and Jerome Allen were taken
by surprise when a Chapel Hill
police officer and the director
of the Office of Fraternity &
Sorority Life and Community
Involvement showed up at
their door one Friday, seemingly out of the blue.
The visit from Officer
Mike Mineer and Aaron
Bachenheimer was part of an
initiative to educate off-campus
students on the town noise

ordinance and to promote


being a good neighbor. Mineer
said reaching out to students
has had a pronounced effect on
noise complaint numbers.
Since that has started and
we have been religiously doing
follow-ups, calls in the 201314 calendar year have dropped
by almost 18 percent, he said.
Rachuba and his three
housemates received a noise
complaint during a February
party. The junior said he was
surprised to see an armed officer and a University official at
their doorstep nearly a month

after the noise complaint.


It was really inappropriate, Rachuba said. We dont
need an off-campus RA.
Mineer said part of his job
as an officer in the town of
Chapel Hills criminal investigations and alcohol law
enforcement division is to
review the past weeks noise
complaint reports. Every week,
Mineer said he spends about
two hours making follow-up
visits to the houses with noise
complaint reports. Mineer said
snow, spring break and personal vacations delayed some

Search for new law school dean begins


Daniel Crane is an
associate dean and professor at the University
of Michigan Law School.
There, he has pushed
campuswide initiatives
in entrepreneurship and
technology. Crane wants
to utilize UNCs location in the Research Triangle.
At Michigan, we have an entrepreneurship
clinic where law students provide legal services
for entrepreneurs in the wider university, he
said in an email. It could be an engineering
student who wants to develop a new product
commercially, a business student who wants
to start a company, a computer science student
who wants to launch a new website. I think this
is an interesting model for UNC to consider.

Martin Brinkley
is a partner at Smith
Anderson law firm
with deep ties to
North Carolina and
years of professional
experience in the Tar
Heel State.
There is in our profession today an increasingly urgent need to help novice lawyers
bridge the gap between analytical and practical knowledge, Brinkley said in an email.
There is also demand for a more robust sense
of professional integrity and a stronger orientation toward the public good. The legal profession is a guardian of practices that are vital
to societys well-being, practices in which all
citizens have a stake.

of his visits in March.


Allen said the 15-minute follow-up visit from
Bachenheimer and Mineer felt
condescending and insincere.
He tried to say things like
were just looking after you,
Allen said. He wanted to be
on our side, but we knew he
wasnt on our side.
Mineer said his goal is to
reinforce the good neighborhood partnership and explain
the Chapel Hill town ordinance that covers noise. He
said he wants to help students
avoid the misdemeanor viola-

tion, which involves a fine of


up to $150 plus court costs.
Mineer said Chapel Hill
is the only town he is aware
of that conducts in-person
follow-up visits for noise
complaints. He said that most
students are cooperative and
appreciative of the visit.
Ninety-nine percent of the
students we talk to are very
receptive, Mineer said. We
want you to have a good time
without getting in trouble.
Mineer said Rachuba and
Allen were an exception.
They were the most unco-

As Jack Boger steps down, a committee is


interviewing five candidates for the post.

Robert Ahdieh is a
vice dean and professor
at Emory University
School of Law, where his
research specialization is
regulatory design and its
application within different types of law. He
believes UNC should teach professionals in other
industries, like health care and engineering, but
also emphasize its own core programs.
Its important for Carolina law to identify current strengths: key areas where it can develop
distinctive excellence, he said. These pillars
of excellence are three, four or five things that
when people think about Carolina law, they can
identify those areas in which they are especially
strong and known for.

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

university@dailytarheel.com

By Senior Writer Deborah Harris.


university@dailytarheel.com

Michelle Anderson
is the dean of the City
University of New York
School of Law. She
transformed CUNYs
reputation and rankings
by strengthening its
standards, building new
facilities and developing innovative programs.
Anderson is a leading scholar on rape law. She
has been published by the Oxford University Press
for her work on the matter.
I hope to engage the outstanding Carolina law
faculty in a series of conversations to develop a
bold strategic vision for the future of the school,
she said in an email. The faculty has a profound
commitment to teaching and to students, but
the school is somewhat undervalued.

Samuel Bagenstos
is a professor at the
University of Michigan
Law School who has
experience both practicing and teaching law.
He attended UNC as
an undergraduate and
now specializes in constitutional and civil rights
litigation. He said he wants to tackle the major
problems the UNC School of Law is facing.
We would look at the issue of how to deal
with changes in legal education, particularly
at declining enrollment around the country,
Bagenstos said. We would look at changes in
the structure of the legal profession to see if the
curriculum is well-aligned to create leaders in
law over the course of a long career.

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

Line Classified Ad Rates

operative residents weve ever


encountered Ive made an
arrest for drugs and those people were more polite, he said.
Rachuba said he has written a letter to Chancellor
Carol Folt about the issue,
and housemate Kenzie Kline
said she would follow suit.
I think the whole thing
was totally unnecessary, Kline
said. Were adults. We dont
need another lecture. If we do
something to get us in trouble
again, its really on ourselves.

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Help Wanted

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 919-967-9576.

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.
AFTERSCHOOL HELP: Looking for child care.
M-F 3-6pm for 7 year-old girl and 5 year-old
boy in Chapel Hill. Please email aferrandino1@
gmail.com.
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.
CHILD CARE NEEDED: Part-time nanny for
school and camp pick up; playing; homework,
driving occasionally. Help with laundry, making lunches. Start in summer but also for school
year afternoons. Needs to like kids, be reliable,
own car and clean driving. Lzerden@email.unc.
edu, 617-794-0311.

For Rent
FAIR HOUSING

ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in


this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or 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.

QUESTIONS? 962-0252

If April 6th is Your Birthday...

Play your game full out this year. Practice.


Involve family. Romantic passion and partnership blossom over springtime. Plan an
educational journey for launch after 6/14.
A shift in your work after 10/13 opens new
directions. Late autumn planning leads to
winter changes, forged from new clarity on
your mission. Ask for your hearts desire.

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.

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Announcements
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this affects deadlines). We reserve the right to
reject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Please check
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APPLY ONLINE by visiting us at:

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

420590

Work with children in a natural environment this summer on our organic


Quaker farm in the mountains of NC. Help children care for animals & harvest
from the garden, go hiking & camping! campcelo.com 828-675-4323

For Rent

For Rent

CLOSE TO CAMPUS. Beautiful house. 2 units.


Main unit 4BA/2BA, 2,500 square feet. $2,750/
mo, parking included. Flexible move in date.
$1,000 off first month. 919-968-7226, rentals@millhouseproperties.com.
WALK TO CAMPUS, ONE BLOCK OFF FRANKLIN. 3BR/2BA. W/D, dishwasher. Recently renovated. Large back yard and deck. Car port. Sun
room, nice front porch. 209 North Roberson
Street. Available June. 919-933-8143, mpatmore@hotmail.com.
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.
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.
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES: Now
showing and leasing properties for 201516 school year. Walk to campus, 1BR-6BR
available. Contact via merciarentals.com or
919-933-8143.

MERCIA

WALK TO CAMPUS, GREAT LOCATION, RENT


REDUCED! 5BR/3.5BA W/D, dishwasher, central heat and air. Off street parking. $2,500/
mo. Water included.. Available June. 203-B
Carver Street. 919-933-8143, mpatmore@
hotmail.com.
4 BLOCKS TO FRANKLIN STREET and campus,
this is a 2BR/1BA apartment at 415 North Columbia Street, For more information, text Fran
Holland Properties at 919-630-3229 or email
fhollandprop@gmail.com.
MCCAULEY TRAIL TOWNHOMES. Newly renovated, spacious. 3BR/1.5-2BA. 2 stories. Great
front porches, hardwood floors, W/D. Walk to
campus. $1,755-$1,845/mo. $1,000 OFF the
security deposit Call 919-968-7226, rentals@
millhouseproperties.com.

PLACE A CLASSIFIED
www.dailytarheel.com
OR CALL 962-0252

Walk to
Campus!
Large 1-2 BR Condos
Washer/Dryers
$625-$850/month
Compare to dorm prices!
www.chapelhillrentals.com

919-933-5296
Help Wanted
PERFECT SUMMER JOB: Work in a TOY STORE!
Flexible hours; pleasant surroundings. Apply
in person at The Childrens Store, 243 South
Elliott Road, Chapel Hill or via email: becky@
thechildrensstoreinc.com.
ELMOS DINER CARRBORO Now hiring parttime HOSTS, SERVERS AND LINE COOKS.
Please apply online at: elmoscarrboro-cafesymmetry.companycareersite.com, 919-929-2909.
GR IS HIRING WAIT STAFF Galloway Ridge,
a retirement community located in Pittsboro,
is looking for friendly, caring and responsible
wait staff members. Responsibilities include:
bussing, setting tables, taking food orders and
cleaning duties. Please apply on our website
www.gallowayridge.com under Careers or
in person at 3000 Galloway Ridge, Pittsboro.
NEED AN EXTRA $160 IN APRIL? 1 afternoon
a week. Noon-5pm. Replace rickety slats with
deer fencing. Own transportation needed. 919929-2653.
YARD WORK HELP WANTED. If you like working outside we need help a few hrs/wk. $12/hr.
Send details and availability to tbarron105@
aol.com.

RECYCLE ME PLEASE!

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 .

Help Wanted
TEMPORARY OFFICE ASSISTANT NEEDED:
1-5 months. Must have administrative office experience and excellent computer skills;
highly proficient with EXCEL. Schedule can
be flexible: 4 hours part-time mornings or 7
hours full-time all day. $10/hr. Email resume to
jobs@townofcarrboro.org.
GOVERNORS CLUB GOLF OPERATION: Team
member at premiere private club. Benefits
include free meals and playing privileges. Location close to campus. Contact Matt, 919918-7214.
DOG SITTER, TRAINER WANTED. Need UNC
student who loves dogs and can work with
them. New basset hound needs training. Occasional overnight stays at my house. dpmcelwee@yahoo.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.
LIFEGUARDS: Chapel Hill Parks and Recreation
now hiring part-time lifeguards. Apply online
at www.townofchapelhill.org. Call 919-9682798 or 919-968-2789 for additional information.
SOCIAL MEDIA HELP WANTED. Popular Southpoint restaurant is looking for social media or
marketing guru to help us build our brand.
Email tomatojakes01@gmail.com for more
information. 919-572-7722.

Services
CHAPEL HILL ECO FOCUSED housekeeping
support. New openings, limited time. 3 hrs/wk.
$100. Contact: 919-260-1183 or domesticsolutionsforyou@gmail.com.

Aries (March 21-April 19)


Today is a 5 Talk gets further than
action today. Travel virtually instead
of actually. Search for what you need
online. Intuition provides a new vision
of the future. Follow a hunch. Put on
the brakes. Make do with less.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is a 7 Get organized and set
priorities. A temporary setback interrupts
work. Payments could be delayed.
Conserve emotional and physical energy.
Think from many perspectives and plan
your next steps. Make a useful discovery.
Brilliant ideas arise in the shower.

Taurus (April 20-May 20)


Today is a 7 Talk with your partner
over the next two days. Optimism
runs high. Tempers could flare,
though. Domestic responsibilities take
precedence. Stay in communication. An
amazing development changes your
options. Glimpse the future. Publish
your view.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)


Today is a 7 A new understanding
illuminates a personal matter today
and tomorrow. Resist being impulsive,
especially if friends are. Anticipate some
resistance. Sparks could fly. Talk it over,
but more importantly listen generously.
Prioritize love in family.

Gemini (May 21-June 20)


Today is a 7 Others vie for your
attention. Talk is cheap, but action
could get thwarted. Conflicting orders
require clarification. Change at the top
reveals new opportunities. Dont goof
off. Friends help you make an important
connection. Make an agreement.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)


Today is a 5 Discover a new mess and
clean it. Unexpected visitors could arrive.
Costs are higher than expected. Ask your
social circles for ideas and support. Its
more fun to collaborate, and others have
crazy ideas that may work. Count your
blessings.

Cancer (June 21-July 22)


Today is a 7 Things may not go as
planned, especially romantically. Go
back to a place you enjoyed. Play a
game you used to excel at. Postpone
cleaning house. Notice details as you
walk. Others want your attention.
Share it.

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)


Today is a 5 Work out plans with a
group project. A shared vision leads
to abundance. Insist on getting what
you need. A surprise at home requires
coordinated efforts. Keep travel plans
practical. Call a distant friend. Assess the
situation together.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)


Today is a 7 Unexpected
circumstances at home hold your
attention. New information changes
the picture. Put in the correction.
Consider all the facts. You can talk your
way out of anything today. Impress
someone important with a positive
presentation.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)


Today is a 7 Complications arise.
A scheduling conflict puts a kink in a
professional aspiration. Communication
resolves a barrier. Ask for what you want.
Take an idea and run with it. Be polite.
Create a dialogue. The conversation has
broad appeal.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)


Today is a 7 Work out the plan
before taking action. Consult an expert.
Discover problems before they cost
money. Resolve discrepancies to align
on priorities. Communications flow,
which is especially useful to manage
breakdowns. Use something youve
been saving.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)


Today is a 6 Heed a warning and make
long-range plans. Unexpected expenses
could change your options. Listen to
your intuition now. Figure out how to
fatten your savings. Talk over dreams and
schemes with your traveling companions.
Ask your networks for suggestions.
(c) 2015 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

Summer Jobs

Summer Jobs

SUMMER, PART-TIME WORK at Charles House


Association Day Center as well as Eldercare
Homes. Are you interested in a career in health
care? Compassionate? Love working with older adults? We will train the right people. Email
us at Employment@charleshouse.org.

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.

PART-TIME LAB ASSISTANTS: 2 positions available for biology majors at KaryoLogic, Inc.,
Durham. 1 early May thru June. 1 late June
thru mid-August. $12/hr. Flexible schedule. Requirements: Complete 50 credit hours before
start, interest in learning human karyotyping
and pass visual discrimination test at interview. Email interest and recent grade report to
info@karyologic.com.

Wheels for Sale


2008 SCION XB, 51K MILES. Manual transmission, original owner, non-smoker, new tires in
September 2014, 28 MPG. Clean title. Runs
great. $9,500. 919-452-9184.

ALL IMMIGRATION MATTERS


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UNC Community
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Mention this ad for current specials!

SportsMonday

The Daily Tar Heel

Monday, April 6, 2015

TRACK & FIELD: LEHARDY THIRD-BEST TIME IN NORTH CAROLINA HISTORY

Eight could qualify for NCAAs

Seven athletes set


personal bests this
weekend in California.
By Danielle Herman
Senior Writer

DTH FILE/KENDALL BAGLEY


After falling behind early against her opponent from Miami, senior Caroline Price rallied to win as
part of the womens tennis teams 5-2 overall victory in Florida over the weekend.

WOMENS TENNIS: NORTH CAROLINA 5, MIAMI 2

Womens tennis
stays undefeated

The Tar Heels


have now won 23
consecutive matches.
By Sarah Headley
Staff Writer

Temperatures were high in


Miami this weekend. Serena
Williams battled to win her
match against Simona Halep
in the Miami Open, an opponent she faced last October at
the year-end championships.
And while Williams was hitting
her way to the top, just miles
awayNorth Carolina senior
Caroline Price was doing her
best Williams impersonation
also fighting to outlast her
opponent after trailing early
in the first set.
No.18 Price faced 125thranked Lina Lileikite in a critical singles match on Court 3.
But like Williams and Halep,
this wasnt the first time the
two had met. The student-athletes played in the quarterfinals
at the ITA National Womens
Team Indoor Championship in
February. Price beat Lileikite
in straight sets that match,
clutching a 6-3, 6-0 victory followed by an overall victory for
the Tar Heels.
But Saturdays match was
different after Price, the
teams only senior, fell behind
early. But the Georgia native
gained momentum and won a
tiebreaker to eventually clinch
the singles point for UNC.
(Caroline) faced adversity
in the first and second set, and
she handled it extremely well,
Coach Brian Kalbas said.
Prices impact helped
the No. 2 North Carolina
womens tennis team secure
a 5-2 victory over the No. 16
Miami Hurricanes, this time
on Miamis turf outdoors.
Price wasnt the only one
whose effects were felt at
the match Saturday. Hayley
Carter, ranked No. 17 individually,left No. 36 Sinead Lohan
in the dust with a 6-2, 6-1 win
on Court 2, the best Kalbas
said he has seen the sophomore play all year. Carter
continued her winning streak
with her doubles partner
Whitney Kay, beating Miamis
No. 29 duo 8-4 on Court 1.
Kalbas deemed the win an
important confidence booster
for the team.
For us to go into their environment and their weather
their team is so competitive
and so tenacious, and they
play with such emotion, he
said. So for us going forward
I think it can only help us and
give us a lot of confidence.
Confidence the team will
need in the coming weeks.
No. 9 sophomore Jamie
Loeb, who beat sixth-ranked
Stephanie Wagner 7-5, 6-1,
overcame the heat and emotions in Miami.
We havent been playing
in really hot conditions, she
said. Today was basically a
challenge and a test for us,
but overall we did really well.
We were expecting them to be
rowdy; they werent as rowdy
as we thought.
North Carolina didnt have
much time to celebrate after
Saturdays win, just enough for
a meal and ride to the airport.
Time is preciousfor the Tar
Heels as they advance closer to
their matches against Virginia
and Duke, as well as the ACC

and NCAA Championships.


To date, the Tar Heels are
still unbeaten, holding onto a
23-match winning streak.
Were in a difficult stretch
of our season right now, with
Virginia who won the ACC
Tournament last year and

Seniors Annie LeHardy


and Lianne Farber are finally
on the same page.
Theyre training together,
and when theyre racing
together, they give each other
confidence.
So when LeHardy crossed
the finish line in the second section of the 5,000meter race at the Stanford
Invitational, her first thought
was that she hoped Farber
was behind her.
Having her in the race
really calms me down and
gives me confidence that I
can do this because shes right
there, Farber said.
LeHardy ran below 16
minutes for her first time, finishing in a blazing 15:52.65.
So her second thought was in
what she had accomplished:
Oh my gosh, I finally did it.
Farber, although not right
on LeHardys shoulder, also

set a new personal record,


finishing sixth in the same
heat in 16:05.90. After battling injuries for the last
year, Farber said this race
and getting the PR, even just
by two seconds, was special
for her.
Both are now on the
programs top-5 list for the
outdoor 5k, with LeHardy in
third and Farber in fifth on the
UNC all-time list. The woman
with the best time? Shalane
Flanagan, the greatest female
runner to ever come from
UNC and the second-place
finisher in the top section of
the womens 10,000-meter
race at Stanford.
You know Shalane is
basically the number one
record holder for every distance event, and shes one of
the greatest runners in the
world, LeHardy said. So to
be on a list with her, even in
the top 10, is just awesome.
Ten distance runners from
the North Carolina mens
and womens track and field
teams, including LeHardy
and Farber, competed Friday
in Palo Alto, Calif. at one of
the nations premiere meets
for distance runners, which

draws top collegiate and professional athletes.


Eight UNC athletes ran
times fast enough to put them
in contention to qualify for
the preliminary round the
NCAA Outdoor Track & Field
Championships, and seven
ran personal bests.
With a small group we all
could watch everyone closely
and be there for everyone,
and it was a great group and
really good atmosphere,
LeHardy said.
Senior John Raneri,
though the last to race for the
Tar Heels, was the highlight
on the mens side, running a
29:16.23 in the mens 10,000meter race more than 30
seconds faster than his previous best. He placed 16th in
the second section of the race
and now has the fourth-best
time in UNC history.
For Raneri, it was a race
where all the hard training
came together at the right time.
I was extremely exhilarated like crossing the line,
it was just amazing, he said.
I mean I cant even put it
into words.
sports@dailytarheel.com

Duke that beat us three times


last year, Kalbas said.
But now when the teams
meet again, the Tar Heels will
have some extra assurance by
way of Miami.
sports@dailytarheel.com

At UNCG graduate school,


you can reinvent yourself.
Thats what Im doing.
MELVIN HERRING

PhD Student, Human Development and Family Studies

Students lobbying
Students lobbied at the
General Assembly to promote oyster aquaculture. See
pg. 1 for story.

games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

Level:

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

Solution to
Thursdays puzzle

A pay gap in nursing


The $17,000 pay gap in
the nursing field hasnt narrowed in 25 years. See pg. 3
for story.

Noise reduction efforts


Students dont like the
Universitys efforts to follow
up on noise complaints. See
pg. 6 for story.

Law school dean


A committee narrowed
its search for the next law
school dean to five candidates. See pg. 6 for story.

For more information,


visit grs.uncg.edu

Earn hours and build


your GPA in Summer School!
summer.unc.edu

We have 8 slow-smoked meats


& 16 homestyle sides!

durham

5318 New Hope Commons Dr.

919.419.1101

catering hotline: 919.900.0518 or catering@gmwcarolina.com


Valid Monday - wednesday

Valid Anytime

BOGO 2 OFF
$

Buy one Big Barbecue


Sandwich anD get the second
one free (Valued at $550)

2015 Dickeys Barbecue Restaurants, Inc. Not valid


with any other discounts, specials, promotions, or online
ordering. Durham location only. Limit 1 coupon per party
per visit. Expires 4/11/15.

680

Any order of $10 or More

2015 Dickeys Barbecue Restaurants, Inc. Offer


excludes Alcohol. Not valid with any other discounts,
specials, promotions, or online ordering. Durham
location only. Limit 1 coupon per party per visit.
Expires 4/11/15.

681

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


ACROSS
1 Halloween costume part
5 640 acres: Abbr.
9 Longtime employee
14 Death Valleys is the
lowest in North Amer.
15 Mammoth feature
16 Chinas Zhou __
17 Dirty Jobs host Mike
18 County Kerrys isle
19 Deep chasm
20 *Manhattan site of
Strawberry Fields
23 So long
24 Young horse
25 One from Nairobi
27 Ultimate conclusion
30 Made of oak, e.g.
32 Small swallow
33 Pumps or clogs
35 Thin piece of change
38 __ out a living
39 *Prepare for printing
42 Guys partner
43 Bank (on)
45 Glue in a hobbyists kit
46 Let me think
...
47 Utter madness
50 Michelangelo
masterpieces
52 Tallied, with
up
54 Group after
boomers
55 How
relaxing!
56 Process for
selecting
theatrical
performers,

and a hint to the first


word of the answers to
starred clues
62 Bit of luck
64 Place for koi
65 Prefix with distant
66 Italian ball game
67 Woodworking tool
68 Put on a pouty face
69 Filled (in), as a comic
strip
70 Frogs kiddie-lit friend
71 Yard event
DOWN
1 Bygone Ford division,
for short
2 Sunburn soother
3 Stitched up
4 Complain
5 Furtive
6 Comforter to get comfy
in
7 Car sticker abbr.
8 Swedish furniture chain

9 Didnt hold water


10 Having five sharps,
musically
11 *Untrustworthy, as a
business
12 Course thats good for
ones GPA
13 Ascended
21 Barnyard perch
22 MGM rival
26 Homers nice neighbor
27 Password creator
28 High-speed highway
29 *Word processor error
finder
30 Teary-eyed
31 Bone, in Italian
34 Oil gp. with 12 member

(C)2015 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


All rights reserved.

nations
36 Papas partner
37 Stately shade trees
40 Paid out
41 Making, as a knot
44 Big laugh
48 Did some smooching
49 Aquafresh tube letters
51 Overabundance
52 Talmud expert
53 Brother of Moses
54 Tokyo shopping district
57 Petty quarrel
58 Chore list heading
59 Greenish-blue
60 Temporary calm
61 Similar to
63 Unreturnable serve

dailytarheel.com

Monday, April 6, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

SportsMonday

SCOREBOARD

BASEBALL: UNC 8, Clemson 7


WOMENS TENNIS: UNC 5, Florida State 2
WOMENS GOLF: UNC, 14th place at the
Bryan National Collegiate
FOLLOW US ON TWITTER: @DTHSports

MENS LACROSSE: NORTH CAROLINA 10, VIRGINIA 6

PONTRELLO PROPELS UNC

SOFTBALL: NORTH CAROLINA


6, SYRACUSE 2

Softball
unable to
reproduce
offense

Following a 15-run outburst


at Georgia, UNC struggled to
score against the Orange.
By C Jackson Cowart
Staff Writer

against Boston College, they faced a much


tougher challenge in No. 35 Notre Dame (12-9,
4-5 ACC) on Sunday. Even though Schnur was
unable to come out on top in three sets against
No. 17 Quentin Monaghan, UNC was still able
to come away with a 5-2 victory.
At No. 2 singles, Schneider sealed the victory with a 6-3, 6-3 win over Notre Dames
Josh Hagar.
It was really nice to go back to Court 2 it
felt more like home, said Schneider. Even
though Brayden lost, we become a much deeper
team with him in the lineup because everyone
can go back to their normal spots in the lineup.
As the Tar Heels continue to get healthier,
they are excited to have their best lineup going
into the home stretch of the season.
Whenever we put guys on the court, theyre
playing well, but we just have to get our top six
guys healthy and hopefully we can have everybody
playing their best tennis as we gear up for the
ACC and NCAA tournament, Schneider said.

After a dominating offensive display


under the lights at No. 9 Georgia on
April 1, the North Carolina softball team
was unsure if it would make its weekend
trip to face lowly ACC-foe Syracuse.
So when the stage was set for a
Friday doubleheader, UNC made plans
for an earlier flight.
But its offense was delayed.
In the series opener, the Tar Heels (2610, 10-3 ACC) mustered just three hits in
a 4-2 loss giving the Orange (14-19, 1-7
ACC) their first ACC victory of the season.
They were 0-6 in the conference, so
you always have to feel good about your
chances to win that series, Coach Donna
Papa said. We didnt really show up.
UNC bounced back in the second
game, scoring five runs in the final two
innings to claim a 6-2 victory.
But after Wednesdays impressive
outing, Papa expected more.
You would think it would give you
that confidence, said Papa of her teams
18-hit, 15-run performance. You cant
make one game bigger than another. It
was like totally two different teams.
Fridays edition managed 11 hits over
two games and struggled to get balanced contributions from its lineup a
far cry from North Carolinas showcase
under the lights against the Bulldogs.
We came out with so much energy
against Georgia, said freshman pitcher
Sydney Matzko. We needed to bring
that same amount to the game against
Syracuse, but we just didnt.
The Tar Heels lackluster output
might have been beyond their control.
With bad weather looming, the series
was on the brink of cancellation. And
after the three-game weekend series was
pushed to a Friday doubleheader cutting into the teams practice time UNC
was saddled with plane troubles to boot.
Papa refused to rely on the excuses.
Its really more of a mindset, she
said. We have to be prepared, and we
have to be mentally tougher to compete
at a certain level.
Papas team started just as flat in the
second half of the series, driving in only
one run through the first five frames.
But when the lights shined brightest
in the top of the seventh, senior Jenna
Kelly belted a three-run blast to put the
game away for good.
Though Papa praised the shot, the first
baseman downplayed its importance.
I was just going to try to get a base
hit, said Kelly, with modest reservation.
I didnt really think it was that big.
But her coach disagreed, dubbing the
hit as the play of the series.
I think we have a team that can do
some really special things this year,
Papa said. Its up to them to really take
control of the controllables so that we
can achieve what we want to achieve.

sports@dailytarheel.com

sports@dailytarheel.com

THE CAVALIER DAILY/LAUREN HORNSBY


The North Carolina mens lacrosse team was tied with the Virginia Cavaliers before Steve Pontrellos two goals in the third quarter led the team to a win.

The junior helped the mens lacrosse team to a 10-6 win


By Logan Ulrich
Staff Writer

Everything Steve Pontrello does


on the field is fast.
With the score between the No. 4
North Carolina mens lacrosse team
and No. 8 Virginia tied early in the
third quarter on Friday, the junior
midfielder blazed past the Virginia
defense and ripped a shot into the
top of the goal before anyone had
time to react. Less than a minute
later, Pontrello looped around the
goal and quickly snuck a pass from
senior attackman Joey Sankey into
the net, giving UNC a 6-4 lead it
would turn into a 10-6 win.
And all the while, he was still
recovering from a hamstring injury.
Hes not quite 100 percent yet,

and hed be the first to admit that,


Coach Joe Breschi said. But hes
getting better every week.
Soft tissue injuries have a tendency to linger and sap explosiveness, so Pontrello didnt play in
the first five games of the season.
But hes continued to improve as
the season has progressed, and
even 80 percent of Pontrello is too
much for a lot of defenses.
Hes just explosive; hes got terrific stick skills, Breschi said.
Pontrellos efforts helped break
open a close game. UNCs defense
stymied UVa. throughout the
game, forcing 18 turnovers, while
junior keeper Kieran Burke had
12 saves. Senior defenseman Jake
Bailey played a vital role, forcing
three turnovers and claiming eight

ground balls on his own.


A strong performance by
Virginia keeper Matt Barrett, who
had 18 saves, kept his team in the
game even under constant UNC
bombardment. Bailey and the
other seniors helped UNC remain
poised on the back end even as the
score remained close.
Weve been in those situations
before, Bailey said. Weve got a
bunch of tough guys in that group.
Even when things go bad, we bond
together and find ways to win.
Sankey added four goals
including three in the second half
to lead the team, while UNC
recorded a 48-34 advantage in
shots. Some teams might become
frustrated at the lack of success
offensively, but the Tar Heels main-

tained their composure and were


rewarded when Pontrello broke in.
Once you get to this point in
the season, everyone is tough,
Sankey said. Keep shooting,
eventually hell break down.
Fortunately for us, he broke
down in the fourth quarter.
UNC started four seniors, and
several others made key contributions. Especially in ACC play, where
all four teams UNC faces are ranked
in the top 10, experience can prove
to be the difference between a big
win and a deflating loss.
When you have four years of
starting, you dont get broken
mentally easily, Breschi said. We
never felt like they had a chance.
sports@dailytarheel.com

MENS TENNIS: NORTH CAROLINA 5, NOTRE DAME 2

Schnurs return halts Tar Heels slide

The mens tennis team rebounded


from a three-match losing streak.
By David Adler
Staff Writer

It almost happened a week ago, when the


North Carolina mens tennis team was scheduled
to battle Virginia Tech but Brayden Schnur
was a late scratch. This time, Coach Sam Paul
kept Schnur in the lineup and on the court.
I think this is exactly what the doctor
ordered, said sophomore Ronnie Schneider. It
was really nice to see Brayden back on the court.
After not playing since Feb. 28 due to a
lower body injury, the No. 12 sophomore
returned to the court and looked as dominant
as ever in his 6-2, 6-0 victory over Boston
Colleges Philip Nelson.
It felt pretty good to get back out there,
Schnur said. Ive been practicing for the past
two weeks, and I was hoping to get back on the
court last week, but coach said it was a bit too

early. But Im happy to be playing again.


Schnurs teammates followed his lead as the
No. 19 Tar Heels (16-8, 5-3 ACC) cruised to a
7-0 win over Boston College (7-13, 0-8 ACC).
We had a good week of practice, and it was
nice to have Brayden back out there, and he
played pretty well, Paul said.
Schnur, despite some early jitters, agreed
with his coachs assessment.
I was a little nervous at first, but I settled
down, Schnur said. I handled my opponent
well, did the right things I played my game
and got off the court as fast as possible.
As the Tar Heels found out that Friday would
be the day Schnur returned to the court, No.
24 Schneider admitted the team felt an added
boost going into the match.
I think there was a little extra positive
energy in the locker room before the match,
Schneider said. Brayden is obviously so good,
and hes been our rock at No. 1 singles for our
team whenever hes been healthy, so its really
nice to have him back.
While the Tar Heels were heavy favorites

WOMENS LACROSSE: NORTH CAROLINA 18, LOUISVILLE 5

Womens lacrosse knocks off fourth top-10 foe this season

UNC outscored the


Cardinals 11-1 in the
second half Saturday.
By Ben Coley
Staff Writer

As the No. 2 North Carolina


womens lacrosse team prepared for its first-ever game
versus No. 10 Louisville,
March 29ths close call against
Notre Dame weighed on the
mind of players.
UNC held a 7-1 lead over
the Fighting Irish at one
point, but allowed them to
come back and tie the game
at 8-8. A late goal by senior
midfielder Brittney Coppa
salvaged the victory.
But on Saturday in
Louisville, the Tar Heels (11-2,
4-1 ACC) needed no heroics from Coppa or any other

player. UNC put its foot on


the skinny pedal and used
a methodical 9-0 run in the
second half to cruise to a 18-5
victory over the Cardinals
(9-4, 1-3 ACC).
UNCs 18 goals were the
most the team has scored
against an ACC opponent
this season, and the five goals
allowed tied for the secondfewest all season.
There was a lot of chemistry and effort that led to a great
game, said junior attacker Aly
Messinger. We played the way
we wanted to play.
In the first half, the match
was back and forth. UNC
scored the first two goals of
the game, but the Cardinals
responded with a 4-1 run to
take a 4-3 advantage. But
UNC defenders kept swarming Louisville, forcing eight
turnovers and grabbing a 7-4
lead heading into halftime.

We got some defensive


stops, which I thought were
great, Coach Jenny Levy said.
So even if we didnt get the
possession right away, we made
it really difficult on them to run
plays on the offensive end.
The second half was dominated by the Tar Heels. UNC
outscored the Cardinals 11-1,
with goals coming from seven
different players. Louisville
was held scoreless for the last
25 minutes of play.
Levy said last week, Notre
Dame outplayed UNC for
most of the game the Irish
outshot the Tar Heels 31-18.
On Saturday, UNC outshot
Louisville 28-18.
Coppa agreed that UNC
allowed Notre Dame back into
the match. But she said the
team didnt dwell on its mistakes. Instead, it learned from
them and put those lessons to
use versus the Cardinals.

Last weeks game was


closer than we wished it would
have been, Coppa said. And
we knew going into halftime
that we had a little bit of a lead
but that we werent going to
give up and allow the same
thing happen again twice.
Now, the Tar Heels are 4-2
against Top-10 opponents on
the season.
Levy said there are no easy
games on the schedule, but
she added that her team has
scrapped. Every victory provides energy for the team.
I think finding rhythm
and finding confidence can
be a challenge, Levy said. So
having a game like today on
the road against a good opponent, and to come away with
a really dominate victory does
a lot for us, especially in light
of the schedule that we play.
sports@dailytarheel.com

DTH FILE/MATT RENN


Senior midfielder Brittney Coppa (35) scored three goals against
Louisville on Saturday as part of UNCs 18-5 victory.

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