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cated for two-way immersion pro-

gram at Coral Way Elementary.


Claudia Cervantes-Soon, an assis-
tant professor in the UNC School
of Education, said these programs
began as a response to language
minority groups demanding the
Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893
The ear of the leader must ring with the voices of the people.
WoodroW Wilson
Monday, April 15, 2013
dailytarheel.com
Volume 121, Issue 31
dth/katie sweeney
Carol Folt was elected the 11th UNC chancellor by the Board of Governors on Friday. She is currently the interim president of Dartmouth College.
UNC, meet Carol Folt
By Nicole Comparato
University Editor
When Carol Folt talks about her career
in higher education, she quotes former New
York Yankees baseball Hall-of-Famer Yogi
Berra.
I like to kid around about Yogi Berra,
but he says, you know, When you come
to a fork in the road, take it, she said in
an interview Saturday about applying to
become UNCs next chancellor.
This was that moment for me and I
decided, OK, that sounds amazing.
Folt, a 61-year-old Akron, Ohio, native
and current interim president of Dartmouth
College, was unanimously approved Friday
by the UNC-system Board of Governors
to become UNCs 11th and first female
chancellor. She will replace Holden
Thorp on July 1 with an annual salary of
$520,000, which is $100,000 more than
Thorps current salary.
Folt began a 30-year stint at Dartmouth
in 1983 as a research instructor in biologi-
cal sciences, eventually working her way to
dean of faculty, provost and then interim
president when President Jim Yong Kim left
to serve as president of the World Bank.
Folt, who has two children in their 20s,
was raised in an immigrant family. With her
second-generation Albanian mother and her
Norwegian father, she grew up with a mind-
set that hard work and advanced education
was essential, she said.
I look at them now and I think what
they gave me was just this sort of starry-
eyed belief that the future was yours, but
you had to work hard and study hard to
get it.
Her new role as chancellor at UNC will
bring a new challenge, as she transitions
from an Ivy League school to a public uni-
versity five times the size of Dartmouth.
Thorp said the transition to a public
university will be one of Folts most difficult
adjustments.
I think that coming from a private uni-
versity, there will be some new things to
be involved in, Thorp said in an interview
Sunday. Being part of a system, and also
being a part of a state government.
But he said she will be able to take what
shes learned at her current institution and
apply it to a new one, just like he will do
as provost at Washington University in St.
Louis, starting July 1.
State proposals target UNC campuses
By Eric Garcia
Staff Writer
Proposals in the N.C. General
Assembly ranging from tuition hikes
to student group functions have
brought a bedrock issue to the fore:
the degree to which UNC-system
campuses will continue to be grant-
ed autonomy from the state.
And they have drawn the ire of
UNC administrators and students.
University administrators lob-
bied against the 12.3 percent
tuition increase for out-of-state
students at six schools, including
UNC-CH, proposed in Gov. Pat
McCrorys budget.
Drew Moretz, vice president for
government relations for the UNC
system, met with McCrorys team
while his budget was being drafted
to discuss concerns.
He said the tuition increase could
result in fewer students enrolling at
system schools, which could discour-
age businesses from staying in the
state.
There were some ideas we dis-
agreed upon vehemently, and I think
the out-of-state tuition was some-
thing we disagreed with, he said.
The out-of-state tuition increase
makes it harder for some campuses
who are trying to recruit the best
and brightest.
But Sen. Jerry Tillman, R-Moore,
co-chairman of the N.C. Senate edu-
cation committee, said the increase
in tuition would be modest.
It will still be less to go to our
great institutions with the proposed
increase than it is to their compet-
ing counterparts in other states,
Tillman said.
Bruce Carney, provost for UNC-
CH, said the money from tuition
increases would funnel into the
states general fund rather than uni-
versities.
Increasing the tuition and keep-
ing the money is the legislatures
prerogative, but morally its indefen-
sible, he said.
The revenues from tuition
increases should be going to support
students, the faculties, the libraries
and the University operations.
Carney also said the tuition
increases could affect admissions to
the Universitys professional schools.
In addition, bills pertaining to
campus life have been met with
opposition from students.
Sen. Chad Barefoot, R-Franklin,
co-sponsored a bill that would pro-
hibit gender-neutral housing on
campus. Barefoot said the program
would be too costly in terms of time
and resources.
Yet Rick Bradley, assistant direc-
tor of housing for UNC-CH, said the
program will not impose any addi-
tional costs on the University.
Gender-neutral housing was
passed unanimously by the UNC-
CH Board of Trustees in November
after months of activism from
student groups and the UNC-CH
LGBTQ Center.
Sophomore Chris Sigmann,
political director for the UNC-CH
Tuition hikes, student
housing and more has
been discussed in Raleigh.
see LegisLaTuRe, Page 6
Dual-language programs
effectiveness questioned
By Gayatri Surendranathan
Senior Writer
Kelly Serrano, a Latina mother
with three sons in dual-language
classes at Frank Porter Graham
Elementary School, loves that her
children are taught in her native
language.
When the program first started
five years ago, my son was in kinder-
garten, and there were a lot of issues,
she said. But now its great they
can learn English and our language.
In August, Frank Porter Graham
will fully convert to a dual-language
magnet school based on a model in
which students spend the majority of
their time using a foreign language.
The move which officials hope
will make the school a world-class
institution has many local par-
ents concerned about the programs
accessibility and quality.
But experts worry that amidst
these concerns, the true aim of
dual-language education programs
has blurred in light of wealthy
white parents looking for an edge
and educators who fail to connect
with language minority students.
David Thomas, spokesman for
the U.S. Department of Education,
said dual-language programs have
been around since the 1960s, when
Miamis Cuban community advo-
Gunmen reports put nC
colleges on lockdown
By Madeline Will
Senior Writer
Three N.C. universities were on
lockdown last week after gunmen
were reportedly spotted on each
campus but outcomes ranged
from a student being shot to an
umbrella being mistaken for a rifle.
Shots were reportedly fired on
Elizabeth City State Universitys
campus Thursday night, and the
school went into lockdown. No stu-
dents were injured, according to a
university news release.
The campus went into lockdown
again Saturday night, and one stu-
dent was shot and taken to the hos-
pital. The student, 23-year-old Jake
Laumoli, has been released from the
hospital, according to the release.
The release said the shooting
was in retaliation for a fight that
occurred earlier that night. It is
unclear if the two lockdowns this
weekend were related.
North Carolina Agricultural &
Technical State University also went
into lockdown Friday morning when
a gunman was spotted on campus.
But upon reviewing video footage,
police said the rifle was an umbrella.
Deanna Ho, a sophomore at N.C.
A&T, said her classroom was evacuat-
ed because it had windows. She also
said SWAT teams searched dorms.
eLeMeNTaRY CONVeRsiON
The following are goals of the
Frank Porter Graham conversion:
Make the school a world-class
learning institution
Instill language skills in students
Reduce the achievement gap
Frank Porter graham will
launch its dual-language
program in august.
One student was shot
at elizabeth City state
university.
see DuaL LaNguage, Page 6 see guNMeN, Page 6
Carol Folt will take over as
chancellor on July 1.
Athletics debate sexual assault Provost search Fundraising
Folt is set to have a say in
the search for Executive Vice
Chancellor and Provost Bruce
Carneys replacement. Will the
second-in-command have the
UNC background Folt lacks?
What role will the new chan-
cellor play as a fresh face in the
ongoing dialogue about sexual
assault, sparked by two federal
investigations and student
protest?
Coming from Dartmouth
College, a Division I non-schol-
arship athletic program, how
will Folt be part of the effort to
bridge big-time college athletics
and academics at UNC?
With no permanent chief
fundraiser and an upcoming
capital campaign, will Folt suc-
ceed as the face of an effort to
procure billions of dollars for
UNCs future?
Four unanswered questions about Carol Folt
see CaROL FOLT, Page 6
How Dartmouth College and UNC-Chapel Hill compare
29,278
6,144
Operating budget
0
500000000
1000000000
1500000000
2000000000
2500000000
$738 mil.
Cost of attendance (1-yr. undergrad)
$55,365
Out-of-State:
$45,806
In-State:
$23,416
$2.4 bil.
Student-to-faculty
ratio
8:1
Dartmouth UNC-CH
18:1
Total student enrollment
U.S. News & World
Report ranking
#10
#30
SOURCE: WWW.ACCESS.UNC.EDU, WWW.DARTMOUTH.EDU, WWW.UNCNEWS.UNC.EDU, WWW.COLLEGES.USNEWS.RANKINGSANDREVIEWS.COM, WWW.STUDENTAID.UNC.EDU, WWW.UNIVERSITYRELATIONS.UNC.EDU DTH/ALLIE KNOWLES
NOTED. Planning on becoming famous at
some point in your life? Reconsider that.
A woman in New York whod been
stalking Hugh Jackman began hysteri-
cally crying in front of him at his gym.
Declaring her love for him, she then
horror of horrors threw an electric
razor filled with her pubic hairs at him.
QUOTED. Truly inspiring to be able
to come here. Anne was a great girl.
Hopefully she would have been a belieber.
Justin Bieber has managed to enrage
the entire world with his self-indulgent
guestbook signature at the Anne Frank
House. To be fair, she probably wouldve
gone for One Direction. Biebs is old news.
I
f Justin Biebers spiral into irrelevancy and desperation isnt proof
enough of the damage riches and stardom will do to a young, vul-
nerable, relatively obtuse kid (see todays Quoted), then I have a
bad feeling about the future of Isabella Barrett.
Shes a 6-year-old self-made millionaire. She clawed her way to the top
by way of Toddlers and Tiaras, where she wears $10,000 dresses, spray
tans and made-to-measure fake teeth. She orders $2,000 in lobster for
room service, has 60 pairs of shoes and basically sounds like a monster.
Whats not to like about being a millionaire? she said. Im a superstar
I never lose at anything and almost every pageant I enter, I win.
Whoever gets to marry her one day is one lucky, lucky man.
Child stars: predictably awful
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone broke into and
entered a residence at 1105
N.C. Highway 54 between 3
a.m. and 11 a.m. Thursday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person stole a laptop,
valued at $500, reports state.
Someone broke into
and entered a residence at
104 Harrison Court at 9:57
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person pulled on the
door and yelled, reports state.
Someone was robbed at
5623 Fordham Blvd. at 10:15
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person used a hand-
gun to rob the victims at a
car, reports state.
The person stole a phone,
valued at $50, a Gucci purse,
valued at $50, a house key
and an iPhone, reports state.
Someone broke into
and entered Warehouse
Apartments at 316 W.
Rosemary St. at 11:26 p.m.
Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person pushed in a
window, reports state.
Someone shoplifted at
101 E. Weaver St. between
9:50 p.m. and 9:55 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
The person placed several
frozen goods into a sack and
attempted to leave the store
without paying, reports state.
Someone reported a sus-
picious person at 302 N.C.
Highway 54 at 12:03 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
Police found a man sleep-
ing on grass near the tennis
courts at Anderson Park,
reports state.
The suspect said he was
resting his eyes, according to
reports.
POLICE LOG
News Monday, April 15, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2
honoring a legend
R
eggie McAfee, a North Carolina track and
field alumnus, was honored at the Joe
Hilton Invitational on Saturday. McAfee
was the first African-American to break the four-
minute mark of the mile in 1973.
dth/jason wolonick
COrrECtIOns
due to a source error, the page 9 photo accompanying Fridays front page story Student dies after
battle with cancer was credited to Christopher Batchelder. it was taken by hannah nemer.
The daily Tar heel apologizes for the error.
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 Elise Young at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
www.dailytarheel.com
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tOday
symposia celebration of
Undergraduate research:
Undergraduates who are curious
about research opportuni-
ties can explore projects that
match their interests, talk with
potential faculty advisers and
see what types of research their
peers have accomplished.
Time: 1 p.m. to 3:45 p.m.
location: Student Union
Film screening and discussion
market imaginary: The
2012 flm, which is 53 minutes
long, explores the Colobane
Market in Dakar, Senegal. The
flm is written, directed and
produced by joanna grabski.
The event is co-sponsored by
the department of art and the
african Studies Center.
Time: 5 p.m.
location: 107 Wilson Hall
broadway Twisted: The
one-night-only show fea-
tures gender-fipped musical
theater selections and benefts
Broadway Cares/Equity fights
aIDS and the n.C. aIDS action
network. $10. all ages.
Time: Doors open 7:30 p.m.,
show begins 8 p.m.
location: Local 506
tUEsday
UNc vs. coastal carolina: The
north Carolina baseball team
plays the Chanticleers at home.
Time: 6 p.m.
To make a calendar submission,
email calendar@dailytarheel.
com. Please include the date of
the event in the subject line, and
attach a photo if you wish. Events
will be published in the newspaper
on either the day or the day before
they take place.
COMMUnIty CaLEndar
location: Boshamer Stadium
Arab Jews present, past and
polemics: Zvi Ben-Dor Benite,
a history professor at new York
University, delivers a lecture on
the relationship between the
jewish question in Europe and
Middle Eastern and arab jews
and their histories.
Time: 5:30 p.m.
location: Toy Lounge, Dey Hall
G e n e r a l A l u m n i A s s o c i a t i o n
Become a General Alumni Association (GAA) life member before
graduation to receive your gift bag filled with a leather padfolio,
license plate, alumni koozie, Old Well key ring and more.
Stay connected to Carolina and enjoy member benefits: Alumni
Career Services, a Carolina Alumni Review subscription, priority
invitations to GAA events and member discounts.
What are you waiting for? Become a Tar Heel for Life.
(800) 9620742 alumni.unc.edu/join
18f 800l f0f lll0
Senior Week 2013 Ads - DTH v2_Layout 1 4/11/13 3:16 PM Page 1
By Lauren Gil
Staff Writer
Science enthusiasts clad with
I Love Science buttons gathered
Saturday for a day-long explora-
tion of science in the second annual
Carolina Space Symposium.
The student-led symposium
joined with the UNC Science
Expo, hosted by the Morehead
Planetarium, for the first time,
drawing a crowd of more than 120
in an effort to educate people on a
variety of scientific fields.
Last year was almost completely
talks, but this year, we wanted to
incorporate the UNC Science Expo
and add more than just speeches,
said Hannah Kerner, the lead stu-
dent organizer of the event.
The symposium events included
five guest speakers, a weather bal-
loon launch and a free show at
Morehead Planetarium and Science
Center on black holes. UNCs chap-
ter of Students for the Exploration
and Development of Space received
$2,997 from Student Congress to
help fund the event.
The symposium also featured
a booth at the expo, and used its
central stage as a platform for the
weather balloon launch.
The weather balloon is prob-
ably the most exciting thing for us
its built completely by students,
Kerner said.
Students also crafted a Rube-
Goldberg machine, a device that
intentionally performs a simple task
in a complex, extravagant way.
The machine cut the string to
release the weather balloon, which
made the show more entertaining,
Kerner said.
The space symposium also
attracted students from nearby uni-
versities, many who came to see the
high-profile speakers.
David Hight, a freshman at
N.C. State University, said he was
excited to see David Gump, former
president of Astrobotic Technology,
a company that develops space
resources for NASA.
Were switching more from gov-
ernment and NASA to commercial
companies and were expanding
space technology in ways that it
couldnt before David Gumps
topic is very relevant, Hight said.
UNC freshman Kara Thornton
said she stopped by the event
because she was fascinated by what
was going on.
News Monday, April 15, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3
hits with a twist
dth/AIShA ANWAR
Actors rehearse for Broadway Twisted, which will be performed tonight at Local 506. In it, songs will be sung by the opposite gender.
By Rebecca Pollack
Staff Writer
Tonight, Local 506 brings iconic
Broadway hits with a twist.
Broadway Twisted, a one-night-only
cabaret-like show, features gender-swapped
songs.
The show is based on a New York char-
ity event called Broadway Backwards, in
which performers are the opposite gender
of the characters they are portraying.
Tonights show benefits Broadway Cares/
Equity Fights AIDS and N.C. AIDS Action
Network.
Tim Scales, director of Broadway
Twisted, said Broadway Cares/Equity
Fights AIDS was founded in New York in
the 1980s.
(AIDS) was devastating the actor com-
munity, and the media wasnt giving it cov-
erage, he said.
Scales said N.C. AIDS Action Network
lobbies to change AIDS policy.
He said PlayMakers Repertory Company
and Manbites Dog Theater are covering the
production costs, so all of the proceeds can
go to the charities.
Some performers from PlayMakers cur-
rent show, Cabaret, are participating in
the event.
Its a great way to raise money for a
cause, said Maren Searle, who portrays
Rosie, one of the Kit Kat Girls in Cabaret.
Searle will be singing Some Enchanted
Evening from South Pacific in the benefit
show.
Ive always wanted to sing this song, but
its written for a man, she said.
The pronouns in the song remain the
same, so the songs will not just be about
heterosexual love, Searle said.
All kinds of songs will be covered, from
classics to newer songs, with a few rewrites
for humor, said Nathaniel P. Claridad, who
plays Bobby in Cabaret.
Claridad, who is also a director for
Broadway Twisted, said he helped the art-
ists pick out their songs.
We have some surprising props, some
surprising costumes, he said. Its kind of a
laid back cabaret-style show.
Searle said she is excited to see what
Obie Award-winning actor Taylor Mac,
who portrays the Emcee in Cabaret, will
perform.
Hes an absolute artist, she said.
Last year, Claridad and Scales worked
Performers swap genders in Broadway Twisted
Democrats
look to
midterm
elections
By Graves Ganzert
Staff Writer
After a disappointing 2012 election for state
Democrats, Orange County party members
convened Saturday to regroup before next years
midterm elections.
About 100 Democrats gathered at Mt. Zion
AME Church in Hillsborough to eat barbecue
and discuss the future of the party at the 2013
Orange County Democratic Party Convention.
Its encouraging that we
do things like this. Eating
barbecue in such an ideal
North Carolina setting
puts us all on the same
page before going into the
convention, said Orange
County Commissioner
Penny Rich.
The atmosphere was elec-
tric with cheers and hisses
as the speakers including
U.S. Rep. David Price, D-N.C.
and former N.C. Senator Cal
Cunningham reviewed the
year.
The party also elected
officers and State Executive
Committee members for the
upcoming year.
Matt Hughes was re-
elected as chairman of the
party, former N.C. General
Assembly member Alice
Bordsen was elected as first
vice chairwoman and Chapel
Hill Town Council member
Lee Storrow was one of five
elected to the 16-member
State Executive Committee.
Hughes said the party suc-
cessfully outlined its goals at
the convention.
In the next few years, we
should be laser-focused on
modernizing, organizing and
strategizing the Democratic
Party from top to bottom,
Hughes said.
We must focus on the
upcoming municipal elec-
tions, which are very impor-
tant.
Graig Meyer, Orange
Grove precinct vice chairman,
said even in a non-election
year, its important for the
party to come together.
Its a good chance for the
party to convene and coalesce. We still have
the business of seeing where we want to go as a
county, he said.
Meyer said one of the key successes of the
past year was electing former Orange County
Commissioner Valerie Foushee, D-Orange, to
the N.C. House of Representatives.
Foushee won the seat in November with
55 percent of the vote, even though the origi-
nal voting district had been redrawn by the
Republican-led legislature.
Meyer said Democrats need to actively pursue
their goals in order to regain the majority in the
General Assembly.
The challenge is that we dont want to play
defense just because the Republicans have the
power. We need to find ways to play offense, he
said.
Cunningham said North Carolina has always
been a closely divided state.
He said even though 2012 elections were
not successful for Democrats, the party still
managed to tally more votes in total than
Republicans.
Its important to reflect on the fact that elec-
tions matter, and the quality of leadership we
get out of those elections matter, Cunningham
said.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
Orange County Democrats met
Saturday to plan a new strategy.
More food trucks may come to Hillsborough
By Marissa Bane
Staff Writer
Hillsborough is joining Chapel
Hill in focusing on food trucks.
A proposal before the
Hillsborough Town Board might
bring more food trucks to the
town.
For now, food trucks are only
allowed in Hillsboroughs historic
district on special occasions. But
a local bar owner is trying to
change that.
At a meeting on April 8, the
owners of Maggies Hot Tin
Roof asked the board for per-
mission to have food trucks on
his property.
Owner Mark Bateman said he
wanted to use food trucks on a
rotating basis to serve customers
instead of setting up a kitchen in
the bar.
Hillsborough first created
its strict food truck policy in
November 2011.
This ordinance was a good
start and seemed to be very suc-
cessful, Hillsborough Mayor
Tom Stevens said.
It is a very exciting and grow-
ing phenomenon, he said.
We are just trying to figure
out how to regulate and license
the trucks.
Stevens said the board origi-
nally worried about food trucks
competing with brick-and-mor-
tar establishments.
The hardest part is determin-
ing how they can fit in with the
local economy, he said.
But Stevens said he is now
open to a less stringent food
truck policy.
Food trucks bring more peo-
ple to Hillsborough and create
a better business environment,
he said.
Stevens said a new policy
would allow food trucks to be on
private property.
He added that the board
would also create policies to safe-
guard against other problems like
A proposal before the
Town Board might
loosen restrictions.
The Carolina Space
Symposium joined with
the UNC Science Expo.
Student-led symposium explores space
Matt Hughes, a
UNC alumnus, was
re-elected as chair-
man of the Orange
County democratic
Party Saturday.
Alice Bordsen
was elected first
vice chairwoman of
the Orange County
democratic Party on
Saturday.
Lee Storrow, a
Chapel hill town
Council member,
was elected to the
State Executive
Committee.
trash and noise complaints.
Stevens said he also likes that
established restaurants are gen-
erally open to the idea of having
food trucks in town.
Local businesses are willing
to embrace the competition,
and more restaurants equal
more variety, he said.
Food truck owners are also
eager to enter the Hillsborough
food scene.
I believe that food trucks
could help activate public spac-
es and bring foot traffic to the
town, said Paul Inserra, owner
of the food truck American
Meltdown, which has served in
Hillsborough.
Inserra said he thought the
restaurants in Hillsborough
were friendly toward his truck.
Tracy Livers, owner of Olde
North State BBQ, also said she
would love to bring her food
truck to Hillsborough if the new
ordinance was passed.
Stevens said the towns goal is
to serve the larger community.
If folks continue to support
the idea of having more food
trucks, we will move on with
pursuing the creation of a new
policy, Stevens said.
We want to hear from a
wide variety of opinions to
determine the best way to move
forward.
He said a date for the new
proposal decision has not been
set.
There would certainly be
pros and cons to changing
the policy, but people gener-
ally seem pleased by the idea of
allowing food trucks, he said.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
SEE THE SHOW
Time: Doors open 7:30 p.m., show starts
at 8 p.m.
Location: Local 506
Fore more information visit: bit.ly/
ZZPSqI
POSSIBLE CHANgES
Per the proposal, food trucks
could be allowed on private
property if they:
Provide waste disposal
Minimize noise and signage
Pay all applicable fees and
charges
Carolina just has so much going on every day, and its
great how much the students are at the forefront of it all.
Kara Thornton,
UNC freshman
Even though Im not majoring in
astronomy, Im taking the class and
found the whole symposium to be
really interesting, she said.
Carolina just has so much going
every day, and its great how much
the students are on the forefront of
it all.
Kerner said she was grateful for
the large crowd in attendance, espe-
cially considering that the events
lasted all day.
We will continue to hold events
like this despite often meeting skep-
ticism or indifference from the pub-
lic, she said.
She said the organization is hop-
ing to host the 2014 Space Vision
Conference, the national convention
for SEDS-USA.
All campus chapters around the
country meet for this weekend long
conference, which is the largest stu-
dent-organized and student-focused
space conference in the nation.
Its worth all the time, all the
money and all the planning if you
can just move one person to believe
in our cause.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
together on 8, which centers around
Californias controversial Proposition 8 and
debuted one month before North Carolinas
Amendment One passed.
Scales said he and Claridad havent
decided whether Broadway Twisted will
become an annual event.
Weve only planned this one thing, but
we ll see, Scales said.
Claridad said he hopes this charity per-
formance will be more than a one-time
event.
Its a great opportunity for us as art-
ists to give something back thats not just
applause to give something thats more
than just us.
Contact the desk editor at
arts@dailytarheel.com.
Opinion Monday, April 15, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4
W
hen Chancellor
Holden Thorp
announced
his resignation last
September, he did so as
the University dealt with
academic and athletic
scandals unprecedented
in both their number and
seriousness.
Somehow, between
then and now, those
scandals have multi-
plied and deepened with
the Universitys failure
to competently handle
sexual assault, drawing
national ire and sowing
distrust between students
and the administration.
Come July 1, Carol Folt
will become chancellor
and take up the task of
solving the problems that
Thorps administration
has attempted to fix with
varying levels of success.
Doubtless, Chancellor-
elect Folt will pledge to
pursue the same sort of
goals that Thorp and those
who came before him have
extolled: affordable tuition,
academic success, faculty
retention and so on.
All of those goals are
worthy and precisely what
Folt under pressure
EDITorIal BoarD mEmBErs
Established 1893, 120 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATUrED OnlinE rEADEr cOMMEnT
Rozo is an inspiration
to maximize our lives
TO THE EDITOR:
Thank you, Laura Rozo.
It takes astounding courage
and strength to confront
such an aggressive, rare
cancer and not tremble
in fear or become over-
whelmed by anxiety.
For that youre the epit-
ome of a fighter, survivor,
hero and an inspiration. If
only I had not hesitated to
say a simple hello, then
we could have laughed and
cried and shared in our
journeys through cancer
together.
Its a diagnosis no col-
lege student ever imagines,
but in your words, were all
dying, and some of us just
need a harder push toward
death to realize the true
value of life.
You imparted such
simple words of wisdom
during your TEDxUNC talk,
Death is not a threat but
the condition that maxi-
mizes my life.
Rest in peace, Laura, to
know that death is still not
a threat to you because you
have inspired us to live and
maximize our own lives.
Carmen Kuan 13
Environmental science
Economics at Carolina
does need a change
TO THE EDITOR:
A few posters appeared
recently around Gardner
Hall calling for change in
the way higher education
institutions like UNC teach
the discipline of econom-
ics.
In dramatic language
that includes manifesto
and revolution, the signs
spoke a kind of everyday
radicalism that students
have naturally learned to
drown out.
Beneath the jingoism,
however, I believe they
raise a valid question that
all economics students at
UNC should consider: Is
our major, highly based in
theory, also preparing us
for the real world?
To give some background
on economics, it operates
on a very simple concept:
Society is composed of ratio-
nal individuals who make
decisions based on what
maximizes their happiness.
While there are many
theories on how we can
best help them do that, one
has come to predominate
at many economics depart-
ments that can be summed
up in four words: More
freedom, less government.
If we glance back at
the failures of communist
states past, it certainly
makes sense. Excessive gov-
ernment prevents people
from making the decisions
that are best for them.
If it gets out of the way,
many economists argue,
freer markets will always
produce better outcomes
for all.
But history has failed
to line up with this idea at
many points. In the years
leading up to the financial
crisis of 2008, for example,
lETTErS TO
THE EDiTOr
Folts appointment is a sign that were
moving past that to some extent, and as
such as have reason to be pleased.
Dingus, on women having been denied leadership roles in the past
Increasing the tuition and keeping the
money is the legislatures prerogative, but
morally its indefensible.
Bruce Carney, on proposed tuition increases
EDiTOriAl cArTOOn By Ryan Cocca, ryan@simplysea.com
Theres
no time
to be
neutral
I
n 1963, Martin Luther
King Jr. gave his I Have
a Dream speech, which
still rings as one of our most
honored memories of the civil
rights movement, to tens of
thousands who had gathered
in Washington, D.C., for the
March on Washington for Jobs
and Freedom.
1963 is also the year stu-
dents at UNC began picketing
outside businesses on Franklin
Street to call for integration.
The power of the civil rights
movement was not confined to
national demonstrations, but
it was also embodied in local
action.
While this 50 year anniver-
sary can be one for commemo-
ration and celebration, we
must also recognize that today,
we also find ourselves at a sig-
nificant historic juncture.
North Carolina is in the
midst of a political crisis, where
a majority in the state legisla-
ture is currently pushing forth
numerous policies that dispro-
portionately harm people of
color, youth and the poor.
Legislative proposals to
enact a photo ID require-
ment in order to vote have the
potential to disenfranchise
hundreds of thousands of
North Carolinians, according
to the voter advocacy orga-
nization Democracy North
Carolina.
Expansion of voting rights
was one of the key battles of
the civil rights movement, and
those hard-fought victories
could now be undermined.
The budget proposal writ-
ten by Gov. Pat McCrory and
Budget Director Art Pope calls
for millions of dollars to be cut
from public higher education
in N.C.
This massive budget cut
would push more than 8,000
UNC-system students off
financial aid and raise tuition
by thousands of dollars for
out-of-state and undocument-
ed students. Accessible, quality
public higher education as a
bedrock of our state is at risk.
We are not absolved of the
same responsibilities that
pushed so many youth to act
50 years ago. Communities
that are most vulnerable and
most silenced by this current
slew of regressive policies have
not changed.
Though the urgency that
inspired so many youth to join
the movement for economic
justice and civil rights may
seem obvious today, we must
remember that they too were
told it was not yet the right
time to take action.
John Lewis was a young
leader in the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee when he addressed
the March on Washington,
saying, To those who have
said, Be patient and wait, we
must say that patience is a
dirty and nasty word. We can-
not be patient; we do not want
to be free gradually.
Let us recognize the devel-
opments of a half century. But
do not let musings of progress
become an outlet to indulge in
neutrality.
UNC School of Law profes-
sor Gene Nichol writes in a
column in The (Raleigh) News
and Observer, An outraged
citizenry is now obliged to rise
in order to protect its children,
its future and its shared bond.
That cant wait for the next
electoral season. It ll be too
late. See you in the streets.
4/16: FAILEDCAMPAIGN
Memet Walker teaches lessons
fromrunningfor editor-in-chief.
N
E
X
T
EDiTOriAl
any chancellor should
strive to achieve. Where
Folt can distinguish her-
self and her administra-
tion is by how she achieves
those objectives.
Folt must place a pre-
mium on transparency.
So many of the issues that
marred Thorps time in
office were exacerbated by
closed doors and waiting
until it was too late to be
open and clear.
Closed systems like
the Universitys process
for handling sexual assault
cases that provoked com-
plaints to the Department
of Education are the
ones that often stoke the
most public anger and
require significant action
on the part of third parties
for resolution.
The Folt administration
must operate within an air
of transparency that per-
meates all of its actions.
Obfuscation and deflec-
tion hurt the University
and will make for a short
chancellorship
Hiding behind the
Family Educational Rights
and Privacy Act to keep
private what should be
public information doesnt
just impede progress on
important issues, it flies in
the face of what makes a
public university public.
Its imperative that
Folt understands and
internalizes the public
nature of the University.
While Folts experience as
president of Dartmouth
College a private insti-
tution will be helpful
in many respects, her new
office comes with new
responsibilities.
Folt needs to be able to
relate to and work with
the manifold stakehold-
ers of the University, from
the systems Board of
Governors to alumni to
housekeepers.
The office of the chan-
cellor is a highly public
one, and rightly so. Folt
must recognize that she
has a responsibility to the
people of the state as a
whole.
That responsibility
means being held to the
same standard of open-
ness that comes with
holding any other public
office.
Approachability and
affordability are all
important to the suc-
cess of the University
and its students. But if
Folt wants to succeed
where Thorp has failed,
she needs to maintain a
level of transparency and
openness that her prede-
cessor has lacked.
Carol Folts leadership
must be defined by
transparency.
Zaina Alsous
Counter Narratives
Senior political science major from
Raleigh.
Email: zaina.alsous@gmail.com
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Drop-off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary Street, Chapel
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E-mail: 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 is made up of
eight board members, the opinion editor and the editor.
the government followed
this advice and chose to get
out of the financial indus-
trys way.
However, the result was
not prosperity for all; it
caused the meltdown that
brought the Great Recession.
The possibility of such a cri-
sis was neither predicted nor
accounted for by dominant
economic models.
If UNC is to prepare
economics students to take
on the variety of very real
challenges our world faces,
it should stress the diverse
curriculum and foster the
diverse faculty necessary to
do that.
Teaching other schools
of thought, such as New
Keynesian, behavioral or
ecological, offers differ-
ent pictures of society that
would challenge students
to become the kind of criti-
cal thinkers our University
thrives on and our world
needs.
John Guzek 14
Economics
History
diversity isnt a proxy
for fairness on court
TO THE EDITOR:
I read with interest
Fridays article, Faculty
may serve on court. The
subject was covered well by
your reporter.
However, I was disturbed
to read the words near the
end of the article, spoken
by junior Schara Brooks,
who voiced concern about
the diversity of faculty
involved.
Brooks asked of a pro-
spective faculty Honor
Court member, Do you
have the diversity? Are you
representing everyone?
The new Honor Court
would be comprised of four
students and a single faculty
member. The logical fallacy
associated with either of the
questions as posed ought to
trouble all your readers.
I think too highly of
UNC students to believe
that the queries as framed
could really be what is
meant.
Who, after all, is the
magical individual that can
possess the group property
of diversity? Or even more
amazing, who can single-
handedly represent every-
one?
What truly matters is
that the Honor Court mem-
ber treats with justice all
those in the system, regard-
less of race, religion, gen-
der, sexual preference, etc.
How is the possession of
diversity if it were even
possible a proxy for fair-
ness?
I sincerely hope that the
questions are not code for
the following statement: If
you do not possess certain
attributes of race, gender or
sexual preference, you need
not apply.
Universities pledge
themselves to nondiscrimi-
nation on the basis of such
attributes. Hopefully UNC
students support such a
mission and seek Honor
Court members who will be
fair to all who come before
them.
Laura Burke
Great Falls, Va.
cOlUMn
D
ecrying the
faults of higher
education
is awkward for all of
us, since our credentials
are nonrefundable and
our college experiences
nonrenounceable, wrote
Dayna Tortorici in an issue
of n+1 magazine entitled
Bad Education.
Its not impossible to
critique higher education if
youve benefitted from it, but
that awkwardness that
the very institution being
critiqued is the one that
shaped the way we look at
it is rarely acknowledged
by those who most ardently
object to education in its
current form.
Critics range from those
who believe higher educa-
tion should be focused
on giving economic value
through credentials (such
as Gov. Pat McCrory) to
the disgruntled high school
seniors who did not make it
into the prestigious school
of their dreams and choose
major national papers as
their venue for griping.
The now infamous Wall
Street Journal column by
Suzy Lee Weiss painted just as
vivid of a picture of her frus-
tration at not getting into Ivy
League schools as it did of the
pressures high school seniors
are under to be successful, as
affirmed by the prestige of the
colleges they get into.
chelsea Phipps
Opinion co-editor
Senior global studies and politi-
cal science major from Sylva.
Email: chelsphipps@gmail.com
This is, after all, the age
of a new species of Super
People, as an op-ed in The
New York Times termed it.
The article questioned, Has
our hysterically competitive,
education-obsessed society
finally outdone itself in its
tireless efforts to produce
winners whose abilities are
literally off the charts?
It sounds good, at first, to
have a society full of extremely
educated people. But, as the
supply of highly skilled work-
ers has gone up just as the
demand for them has been
decreasing, those workers
have been forced to move
down the career ladder to
perform jobs traditionally
performed by lower-skilled
workers, according to a paper
from the National Bureau of
Economic Research.
That translates to a weak
job market so saturated with
overqualified people that
those searching for jobs feel
like they have to be super-
humans in order to qualify
for them. It creates an enor-
mous pressure to accrue cre-
dentials to boost resumes.
Perhaps thats the situa-
tion McCrory sees when he
imagines turning our uni-
versities into credential fac-
tories, producing better and
better workers to compete
for the few jobs available.
But I didnt go to college
just for the diploma, and the
diploma is only a small part
of what I gained. When our
younger selves dreamt of
going to college, Id venture
that most of us were not
imagining it solely as a line
on our resume.
The value of our creden-
tials (e.g., degrees, volunteer
work, leadership positions)
should come from the rich-
ness of the experience, not
the prestige of the creden-
tial. In our scramble to
compete, that can be easy to
forget as we embark on the
job search. This is exacer-
bated by the ever-increasing
expectations put on us
against the backdrop of a job
market still climbing out of a
recession.
College is more than a
credential, and we should
start viewing the step after
college that way, too more
in terms of what experiences
we can have.
We just mustnt forget:
No one ever said it would be
easy.
The value of college is in the experience, not just the degree.
Rise of credentialism
anDy Thomason EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
ChElsEa PhIPPs OPINION CO-EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
naThan DamBrosIo OPINION CO-EDITOR
sanEm kaBaCa ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR
NAYAb kHAN
TREY MANguM
zACH gAvER
MATTHEw OAkES
kAREEM RAMADAN
PATRICk RYAN
CODY wELTON
SIERRA wINgATE-bEY
Monday, April 15, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 5
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News Monday, April 15, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6
Local stars dance
to benet kids
By Jasmin Singh
Staff Writer
Chapel Hill lawyer Robert
Maitland will spend the next
few weeks learning to tango
for a good cause.
On May 4, Maitland will
be one of eight local figures
to participate in the second
Dancing with the Stars of
Carolina, an event benefiting
the future Boys and Girls Clubs
of America in Chapel Hill.
My goal is just not to fall
down or step on my partners
toes, Maitland said. Im
going to do my best to try to
win, but that isnt my expec-
tation.
Other stars include
Chapel Hill Mayor Mark
Kleinschmidt, Aaron Nelson,
president and CEO of
the Chapel Hill-Carrboro
Chamber of Commerce, and
Tina Cunningham, wife of
UNC Athletic Director Bubba
Cunningham.
The Boys and Girls Clubs
broke ground on a Chapel
Hill location in November.
Marla Benton, event coor-
dinator and a member of
the Boys and Girls Clubs of
Eastern Piedmonts Orange
County board, said the event
brought in $65,000 in 2011.
Local residents can partici-
pate by donating at least $10
for their favorite star.
Vote as much as you
want, Benton said. We want
to help the community as
much as we can.
Board member Deborah
Stroman, who is also dancing
at the event, said she thinks
the event is a great way to
bring the community together.
It is all about the chil-
dren, Stroman said. Making
sure they have a safe environ-
ment to not just learn and go
after school.
Maitland said he convinced
Kleinschmidt to join him on
the dance floor to help the
organization.
Kleinschmidt will do the
cha-cha at the event, a dance
dth/isabella bartolucci
Lawyer Robert Maitland practices with his dance instructor Laura
Kraich for the Dancing with the Stars of Carolina fundraiser.
style he says he learned in a
college fitness class.
I enjoyed it then, but
my feet dont really remem-
ber it as much as I hoped,
Kleinschmidt said. I ll try
not to look too silly.
The stars have been work-
ing with professional dance
instructors from the Fred
Astaire Dance Studio in
Durham. The participants
will perform a 1- to 3-minute
routine of their choice with
an instructor in the event.
The events judges will
choose a dance champion
based on the dancers style,
form and talent.
Dance instructor Laura
Kraich is working with four
of the male stars, including
Maitland and Kleinschmidt.
He has great enthusiasm
Young Democrats, said the
gender-neutral housing pro-
gram addressed an issue that
should be handled by campus
leaders.
This is not a policy that
would affect the state at
large, he said.
Students were also the
subject of a bill filed last week
that would allow religious
and political student orga-
nizations to determine their
core functions and resolve
disputes.
In 2011, senior Will
Thomason was expelled from
the Christian a cappella group
Psalm 100 by members of the
LegisLature
from page 1
right to be educated in their
native language and history.
In traditional ESL pro-
grams, language minority
students were being segre-
gated, she said. By putting
native speakers and minorities
together in the classroom,
minorities were empowered
the goal was not just fluent
English, it was being bilingual.
She said places that dont
have a history of bilingual
education, like North Carolina,
struggle to properly serve the
minority students for whom
the programs were developed.
On one side you have poor
immigrants, some of whom
are undocumented and all of
whom are grateful for anything
you can give them in their
native language, Cervantes-
Soon said. On the other side
we have rich, educated, white
families who want to give their
children an edge.
Misha Becker, an associ-
ate professor in the UNC
Department of Linguistics, said
dual-language education at the
elementary school level helps
with language-acquisition, cre-
ativity, memory and problem-
solving skills.
Children of immigrants
are also more likely to stay in
school and finish their high
school diploma if they are
taught in both English and
their native language, she said.
But Cervantes-Soon said
in the dual-language class-
rooms she has observed in
Chapel Hill-Carrboro City
Schools, Latino students
rarely participate.
Latino children are very
disenfranchised and know
that at the end of the day, the
language of status is English,
she said.
She said the problem is
exacerbated by wealthy white
parents and highly educated
teachers immigrants from
places such as Venezuela
who struggle to connect with
language minority students.
These hallmarks of dual-
language education in Chapel
Hill-Carrboro City Schools
make the goals of mutual lin-
guistic skill development and
cross-cultural understanding
difficult to achieve, she said.
Despite these concerns,
Serrano said she hopes to keep
her children in the program.
She said that she can speak
to her sons in Spanish, but she
would not have time to teach
them the reading and writing
skills they learn in school.
When I go to the class-
rooms I see Spanish-speaking
kids struggling to communi-
cate with English-speakers,
and its nice when they can go
ahead and express themselves
in Spanish and be under-
stood, Serrano said.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
They didnt know if it was
real, so Im glad they went
through all the precautions,
Ho said.
A few hours after N.C.
A&Ts lockdown was lifted,
N.C. Central University went
into lockdown on Friday
afternoon, following an
attempted armed robbery.
Meredith Clark, a UNC-
CH journalism Ph.D. student,
was teaching a class at NCCU
when the lockdown began.
The situation was especial-
ly alarming, she said, because
her door didnt lock from
the inside, and there was no
classroom phone.
I moved a desk in front
of the door, but if by chance
someone had come through
the door, there was no stop-
ping someone, she said. And
there was no way for me to
immediately tap into the net-
work at school.
Ayana Hernandez, NCCU
spokeswoman, said she
thought most doors at the
university locked from inside.
NCCU conducted a large
active shooter drill to test its
alert and lockdown system in
January, she said.
As of Friday, the investiga-
tion was still pending, she
said.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
gunmen
from page 1
duaL Language
from page 1
Thorps chancellorship
was cut short when a series
of scandals led him to resign,
and Folt said she is aware of
the issues she will face.
You dont take jobs like
this thinking this wonder-
ful honeymoon is how it is;
partly youre there to help the
institution deal with it, Folt
said.
UNC is the subject of two
federal investigations revolv-
ing around its handling of
sexual assault, as well as a
State Bureau of Investigation
probe into the Department of
African and Afro-American
Studies.
Thorp said he thinks Folt
has the experience to jump in.
I think when you have
somebody who has been a
provost and a president, you
know, theyve seen lots of dif-
ferent kinds of things related
to compliance, Thorp said.
Folt said at Dartmouth
she worked to implement
guidelines of the 2011 Dear
Colleague letter that circu-
lated to colleges nationwide
calling for changes to sexual
assault procedures. She said
she is looking forward to
bringing that work to UNC.
Folt has also had to deal
with her fair share of chal-
lenges at Dartmouth, includ-
ing a $100-millon budget
gap. She said some criticized
how she handled the short-
fall in certain cases, but not
her openness to different
opinions.
But none of this contro-
versy either at Dartmouth
or UNC deterred her
from going for the top job,
and she said she doesnt
believe UNCs reputation is
tarnished, even with all its
recent troubles.
What I was looking for is,
how were people addressing
it? And here I have to say you
get very high marks, she said.
Chairman of the Board of
Trustees Wade Hargrove, who
led the 21-member search
committee that chose Folt as
a finalist, said many appli-
cants felt similarly to Folt.
When I and others asked
the question, Why would
you be interested in this
University at this time? I
mean weve faced a lot of
adversity, over and over its
very reassuring, theyve said,
This is the best public uni-
versity in the country the
problems youve experienced,
caroL foLt
from page 1
group based on his beliefs
about homosexuality, lead-
ing to an investigation of the
Universitys non-discrimina-
tion policies.
Issues such as freedom of
speech and freedom of religion
are among our most treasured
rights, said Rep. Bert Jones,
R-Caswell, a co-sponsor of the
bill. Such issues are not lim-
ited to campus affairs.
But Sigmann said he is
worried about how some
organizations could imple-
ment the law.
Greg Steele, chairman of
the N.C Federation of College
Republicans, said that though
the bills were filed, it does not
mean they will pass.
A lot of these bills may
reflect the idea of just one
senator, Steele said.
Still, Steele said the legis-
lature has the right to imple-
ment policies on behalf of
voters.
I think that is a justifica-
tion to have those taxpayers
and people who represent
them to have a say in the
University, Steele said.
Regardless of the bills
chances of passing, Sigmann
said students should make
their voices heard in the polit-
ical debate.
The best chance (stu-
dents) have is to really make
(themselves) visible, he said.
Reach out to people outside
the University and make sure
they know the University is
going to be hurt.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
You dont take jobs
like this thinking
this wonderful hon-
eymoon is how it is.
carol folt,
uNc chancellor-elect
the frustrations, are those
which all of us are enduring
in one form or another at var-
ious universities, Hargrove
said Friday.
Bonita Langle, a senior
environmental studies and
Asian and Middle Eastern
studies major at Dartmouth,
said she is sad Folt will be
leaving.
Carol Folt is very passion-
ate about her students. She
wasnt able to interact with
students as much as interim
president, and she really
missed that, Langle said.
In this transition, Folt said
she will learn from Thorp,
who told her he will talk to
her as much as she wants, or
as little.
Staff writer Marisa DiNovis
contributed reporting
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
I enjoyed it then,
but my feet dont
really remember it
as much as I hoped.
mark Kleinschmidt,
chapel hill mayor
and a great attitude toward
dancing, Kraich said of
Kleinschmidt.
Kraich said shes enjoyed
teaching Kleinschmidt the cha-
cha and looks forward to danc-
ing with him during the event.
I will be wearing profes-
sional costuming, Kraich
said. Mark will at least be
wearing pants.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
SportsMonday Monday, April 15, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7
Doubles points key for UNC
By Wesley Lima
Staff Writer
The North Carolina soft-
ball team struggled to pro-
duce at the plate in its week-
end series against N.C. State
in Raleigh.
That malady, combined
with final-inning heroics in
consecutive games by the
Wolfpack, resulted in a 2-1
series loss.
After a narrow 2-1 UNC
victory in the first game, in
which there were only five
hits between the two teams,
N.C. State came back the next
game in epic fashion with an
11-8, extra-inning victory on a
walk-off home run.
On Sunday, the Wolfpack
repeated the phenomenon
after yet another back-and-
forth game where UNC main-
tained a slim 1-0 lead until a
final-inning homer lifted N.C.
State to a 3-1 walk-off victory
yet again.
After having a potential
victory snatched from them
by the last batter of the
game, the deflated Tar Heels
dropped to 33-15 on the sea-
son and 10-5 in the ACC.
Obviously, it was tough,
said UNC ace pitcher Lori
Spingola, who fanned 18 total
batters in 18.1 innings of work
in all three games combined,
including two complete game
efforts.
We battled back and forth
all day but at the end, theyre
the ones who came up with
the hit to win the game.
In an otherwise disap-
pointing series, freshman
shortstop Kristen Brown
stood out by putting together
a solid weekend at the plate
with four hits, three runs and
two RBIs for the otherwise
stagnant offense.
Brown also scored the Tar
Heels first run of the series
with a solo bomb in the top of
the fifth inning.
I was really confident at
the plate, and I was just going
up there, taking one pitch at
a time and it felt really good
to help my team out, Brown
said. I was just glad to be able
to help us score some runs
when we really needed it.
Assistant coach Boo
Gillette noted the team was
especially frustrated that it
had suffered two straight con-
ference losses in consecutive
days.
Our goal for every ACC
series is to go in and sweep,
but the cards didnt fall our
way this weekend, she said.
Going forward, were just
trying to win one game at a
time. Were not going to look
past any of our opponents.
With only eight regular-
season games remaining
before the ACC Tournament,
Brown and Spingola both
said the team remains confi-
dent moving forward, despite
its weekend stumble.
We know we can do it,
Brown said. We just need
to be strong, have good bats
at the plate and play strong
defense and we can come out
on top going forward.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
By Robbie Harms
Staff Writer
Another tune-up sporting
event on North Carolinas
campus took place less than
a mile away from the North
Carolina football Spring
Game Saturday.
The UNC track and field
team, less than a week out
from the ACC outdoor cham-
pionships, ran, jumped and
threw its way to the end of
its home season at the Joe
Hilton Invitational, the
Tar Heels last meet before
they travel to Raleigh for
the conference champion-
ships. Teams in attendance
included Duke, N.C. State
and Michigan.
Six UNC athletes won their
respective events, and seven
set personal bests.
One of those winners was
junior distance runner Isaac
Presson, who took first in the
McAfee Mile, an honorary
race commemorating for-
mer Tar Heel athlete Reggie
McAfee, the first African-
American athlete to run a
sub-four-minute mile during
his career at UNC. Saturday
was the 40th anniversary of
his record-breaking run.
Presson nearly matched his
effort.
The big goal was to try
and go under four minutes,
Presson said Sunday.
He started the race con-
servatively, running with the
pack of runners until it hit
1,000 meters. Then, with
about 600 meters left, he
surged to the lead, and he did
not relinquish it. He won the
race in 4:02.22.
Making Pressons win even
more notable was that he beat
Stephen Furst, a professional
runner sponsored by Adidas.
His win also had historic
implications: If the mile were
still an NCAA-sanctioned
Softball teams bats quiet in Raleigh
By Daniel Wilco
Staff Writer
At 5:30 p.m. Sunday, the
members of the North Carolina
mens tennis team stood in
complete silence at UNCs
Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center.
Though Florida State had
already clinched the match,
the Tar Heels were waiting
to see whether freshman
Brett Clark would pull out
a tiebreaker game against
Florida States Benjamin
Lock for the teams second
singles victory.
The pair had split sets,
and neither had taken a com-
manding lead in the playoff
game. But with the match on
the line, Clark keyed in on
Lock, and after more than
two hours with his foot in the
door, the freshman walked
through with a win.
Playing this high level
of tennis, its only a couple
of points that determine
the outcome, Clark said.
Especially how long the
match was, there were a
bunch of ups and downs.
Like Clarks singles match,
UNC had its ups and downs
this weekend.
Though the Tar Heels fell to
the Seminoles 5-2 on Sunday,
the weekend began on a high
note when UNC upset Miami
5-2 on Friday.
Against Miami, the power-
ful pair of Esben Hess-Olesen
and Clark fought back from
a 3-6 hole to win 8-6, and,
combined with an 8-1 win by
William Parker and Nelson
Vick, UNC took the doubles
point for the day.
The Tar Heels followed up
with a strong singles set, win-
ning four of the six matches.
But against FSU on
Sunday, UNC split the first
two doubles matches, and the
third showdown was another
close match.
With the final doubles
match tied at seven, sopho-
more Oystein Steiro and
senior James Coxe won the
next game and needed one
more win to grab the set and
doubles point for UNC.
But the Seminoles duo
pushed the set to a playoff
SOFTBALL: n.c STATe 3, nOrTh cArOLinA 1
outdoor event, Pressons time
would be the third-fastest in
UNC history.
It was a good last chance
to sharpen up for ACCs,
Presson said.
Another strong perfor-
mance came from freshman
Tory Kemp, who won the
womens high jump by clear-
ing 5 feet, 8 3/4 inches.
She really fired up the
field, sophomore pole vaulter
Cameron Overstreet said.
Overstreet, who placed
second at the ACC indoor
championships in February,
won the womens pole vault
Saturday. She cleared 13
feet, 3 1/2 inches but left
unsatisfied.
Individually I was a little
disappointed, Overstreet
said Sunday, adding that she
entered the meet encouraged
by a solid week of practice
leading up to it. I couldnt
put things together as well as
I was hoping to.
She said she hopes her
practices will come together
this weekend, when she vaults
at the conference champion-
ships. Her goal is to clear 14
feet.
Im motivated to do a lot
better at ACCs, she said. I
really want to prove to myself
that I can do that well.
This week the Tar Heels
will take it easy in practice
a mini-taper, as Presson
calls it, to prepare for the
weekend.
Presson and Overstreet
both have their sights set on
individual conference titles.
The goal at ACCs is to try
to win a gold medal in the
1,500, Presson said.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
MenS TenniS: FLOridA STATe 5, nOrTh cArOLinA 2
game, which it won 7-2.
That changed the momen-
tum, coach Sam Paul said. We
were up in almost every spot.
So that swung the momentum.
We have to finish.
But Clark said the players
didnt get down on themselves
after losing their first doubles
point in four matches.
I was pretty confident that
we could still do it, Clark said.
Weve lost the doubles point
times before, and weve been
right in there in singles. It was
a tough doubles point that we
lost, but no one was down
everyone was pumped up.
But the Seminoles would
not look back, winning four
of the six singles matches and
clinching the win.
Theyre a tough team, they
fought pretty hard so give them
some credit but the ball was
in our court, Parker said. We
could have just closed it out.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
dth/kaitlyn kelly
William Parker defeated FSUs Blake Davis in UNCs Sunday loss.
Unc hosted one last
event to prepare for
the Acc Tournament.
I really want to
prove to myself
that I can do that
well.
cameron Overstreet
sophomore pole vaulter
UNC track preps
for postseason
Monday, April 15, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 8
NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS
Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to
publication for classifed ads. We publish Mon-
day thru Friday when classes are in session. A
university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e. this
affects deadlines). We reserve the right to re-
ject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Acceptance of ad
copy or prepayment does not imply agreement
to publish an ad. You may stop your ad at any
time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for stopped
ads will be provided. No advertising for hous-
ing or employment, in accordance with federal
law, can state a preference based on sex, race,
creed, color, religion, national origin, handicap,
marital status.
CHEAp TUx $89 TO OwN!
Undergrad special just $89 to purchase a com-
plete tuxedo. Formalwear Outlet 415 Millstone
Drive in Hillsborough. 10 minutes from campus.
919-644-8243.
Child Care Wanted
NEED FUll-TiME SUMMER babysitting in my
home in north Durham on a week on, week
off basis. $400/wk. im a Duke employee.
carolharbers@yahoo.com.
EVENiNG CHilD CARE NEEDED:: We are look-
ing for a student to help with picking up 2 fan-
tastic kids (ages 5 and 7) and bringing them to
their activities. Available 4-6:30pm. Enthusiasm
for working with children, clean driving record
and 2 outstanding references are required. $20/
hr. masu@email.unc.edu. 919-597-0777.
SUMMER CHilD CARE NEEDED for children
ages 12 and 9 in our Chapel Hill home for
7-9 weeks June thru August. Weeks fexible.
7:30am-5pm M-F. Requires reliable transporta-
tion, English speaker, ability to work legally in
US, clean driving history. Non-smoker. Willing-
ness to engage children in creative play a must.
Email to nannysearch27516@gmail.com.
CHilD CARE NEEDED for 3rd grade girl and 5th
grade boy. Part-time, May 6 thru June 7, M-Th,
2:30-6pm. Full-time June 8 thru August 9. Also
seeking part-time care for 2013-14 school year.
919-381-2041.
CHilD CARE WANTED: Child care needed for
2 weekdays from 3-5pm or 3:30-5:30pm for
May and June. 2 children: girl (age 7), boy
(age 9). looking for engaging, experienced
and caring person. Car is necessary. References
and resume required. Please email Alyse at
adlevine1@gmail.com.
SUMMER NANNY: We have 3 children
(ages 5, 7, 11) in need of an ener-
getic sitter for the summer. Hours
are 8am-5pm M/Tu//Th/F. Pay is $12/
hr. Applicants should have a car
available and clean driving record.
amy_mottl@med.unc.edu.
SUMMER NANNY NEEDED June to August. 3
days/wk 8am-6pm for 2 boys, 6 and 3 years-old,
who love art, library, playgrounds. References
and reliable car needed. $13/hr. Email:tjiv99@
gmail.com.
PART-TiME SUMMER NANNY needed in Cha-
pel Hill on Tu/Th 9am-5pm June thru August.
Need a responsible, experienced and fun care-
giver for our daughters, ages 3 and 5. Email
amyspitler@hotmail.com if interested.
FAIR HOUSINg
All REAl ESTATE AND RENTAl advertising in
this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or dis-
crimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspa-
per will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers
are hereby informed that all dwellings adver-
tised in this newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
FUllY FURNiSHED 2BR TOWNHOME in Oaks
Condos available for short and long term lease.
Different terms for different time periods. Great
location, close to Friday Center, on busline.
Bring your suitcase and move in. Email Fran
Holland Properties at fhollandprop@gmail.com
or call 919-968-4545.
UNiVERSiTY COMMONS 4BR/4BA.
$1,600/mo. includes: UTiliTiES, walk
in closet, internet, furnished living
and dining. On J, D buslines. Available
8-1-2013. 919-767-1778. One left:
PerreiraProperties.com.
lOVElY 3BR/2B HOME ON WOODED lot. lots
of windows, Convenient to i-40 this open foor
plan features freplace, hardwood foors thru
house, large deck. Pets negotiable with fee.
$1,390/mo. Contact Fran Holland Properties:
fhollandprop@gmail.com, 919-968-4545.
WAlk TO CAMPUS. 3BR/1.5BA. Available
June. Fully renovated. W/D. Dishwasher. Cen-
tral AC, heat. $1,700/mo. Merciarentals.com,
919-933-8143.
$400/MO. PER BEDROOM in legal
6BR/5BA townhouse. 4 buslines, min-
utes to UNC, hardwood foors, W/D, ex-
tra storage, free parking, non-smoking.
spbell48@gmail.com, 919-933-0983.
CHANCEllOR SQUARE. 2BR/2BA townhouse.
Walk to campus. Full kitchen. Carpeted. W/D.
Parking fee included. $1,320/mo for two. Years
lease from mid-August. 919-929-6072.
WAlk TO CAMPUS. Available June or August.
2BR/1BA. Fully renovated. W/D. Dishwasher.
Central AC, heat. $875/mo. Merciarentals.com,
919-933-8143.
WAlk TO CAMPUS. Available June or August.
2BR/1BA. Fully renovated. W/D. Dishwasher.
Central AC, heat. large back deck. $975/mo.
Merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143.
5BR/2BA CONDO in triplex. 611 Hillsborough
Street. Completely remodeled, hardwoods,
tile throughout, new appliances, W/D, near
bus stop, $2,500/mo. Available August 2013.
704-277-1648 or uncrents@carolina.rr.com.
wALk OR bIkE TO UNC
Beautiful home for rent, 4BR/2.5BA, 3,000
square feet, generous common space, op-
tion for 5th bedroom and furnishing. Hard-
wood foors, vaulted ceilings. W/D. Piano!
loaded with azaleas and camellias. Safe, quiet
neighborhood, access to Battle Creek trails.
$2,500/mo. 919-967-1473.
MILL CREEk ApARTMENT
On Martin luther king Jr. Blvd. in need of a sub-
leter for Fall 2013. Townhouse style. Walk to
campus. Near bus stop. Full kitchen. W/D. Park-
ing space included. $475/mo. utilities. Contact
kmreilly@live.unc.edu, 978-609-6247.
BikE TO UNC: Quiet and sunny effciency base-
ment apartment facing trees in historic Carr-
boro home. Private entrance. Walking distance
to Weaver Street Market. On J busline and
near bike path. $575/mo. includes utilities and
internet. No smoking. No pets. Years lease.
Available May or June. 919-967-4406.
4BR/4BA UNiVERSiTY COMMONS condo.
New carpet and paint, $1,400/mo. All
utilities and internet included. On bus-
line. Contact Fran Holland Properties at
fhollandprop@gmail.com.. 919-968-4545.
BEAUTiFUl WAlkOUT APARTMENT: 1BR/1BA
Southern Village, private entrance, available
now. Furnished, internet, cable. $700/mo.
+utilities. Safe, walking distance, busline to
UNC, park and ride. 919-932-5986.
For Sale
BOOkS: Alors! Wolfclaw zee cocker spaniel
ees missing! Why? learn zee terrible truth in
Clumsy Hearts, a slightly misguided romance,
by Hysteria Molt. Available via Amazon.com.
Help Wanted
RESEARCH ASSiSTANT NEEDED for Duke Clini-
cal Research Study. Duties include physiologi-
cal monitoring, data entry and data processing.
Bachelors degree required. Please send resume
and cover letter to lauren.egger@duke.edu.
MODElS NEEDED for evening sessions for
Durham sculpture studio. Classical fgure and
portrait. Andrew Bryan, 919-929-9913.
BUSY RETiNOVASCUlAR PRACTiCE seeks
friendly, motivated, energetic individual
to work as an ophthalmic assistant.
Will be trained to use ultrasound elec-
trodiagnostic equipment and multiple
instruments used in the diagnosis of
retinovascular disease. Candidate would
fnd experience challenging and fulfll-
ing. Fax resume to 919-787-3591.
lEGAl ASSiSTANT: Raleigh law frm seeks
UNC graduate. Excellent typing, editing, proof-
reading, Word, Excel skills required. interest
in law school encouraged. Email resume to
nnwlaw@gmail.com.
iMMiGRATiON iNTERN:. Full-time, 2nd summer
session. 12-20 hrs/wk fall and spring. Unique
environment near Global Education Center.
MUST be fuent in Spanish, mature, reliable, de-
tail oriented, conscientious, with 3.0+ GPA. Re-
sume, most recent academic transcript to: law
Offce, PO Box 551, Chapel Hill, NC 27514.
WORk iN A TOY STORE this summer! Part-
time work available. Flexible hours. interesting
scene. Hoping for some folks who can work
into the fall. Apply in person at The Childrens
Store, 243 South Elliott Road, Chapel Hill (next
to Jersey Mikes, between kinetix Fitness and
locopops).
RAlEiGH lAW FiRM seeking graduate to work
minimum 1 year in full-time courier position be-
ginning in May. Reliable vehicle required. Email
resume to law@jordanprice.com.
JOiN US: Part-time handiwork and/or market-
ing for reputable home improvement company.
Pay and commission. raye81@yahoo.com,
www.fxallservices.com. 919-990-1072.
PROGRAM ASSiSTANT: Carrboro Police De-
partment. Part-time, temporary,. 19 hrs/wk..
Performs a variety of offce assistant duties, in-
cluding greeting visitors, answering telephone,
maintaining fles, completing special projects
and reports. High school diploma, clerical and
MS Offce experience required. Pay rate: $12/
hr. Bilingual applicants encouraged to apply.
Open until flled. For an application visit our
website at www.townofcarrboro.org. EOE.
STRONG STUDENT WANTED, experienced
with yard, garden and miscellaneous
outdoor work, to help at home near
campus. Must be available year round,
able to lift 75 pounds., use my equip-
ment. $15/hr., fexible scheduling. For
more details: lbanner@nc.rr.com.
lOViNG COUPlE SEEkS EGG DONOR: Seeking
healthy females between the ages of 21-31 to
donate eggs anonymously. Must be a healthy
non-smoker, pass all necessary screening. Must
be between 53 and 58, blue eyes, brown or
blonde hair. Some college education preferred.
$5,000 upon completion. Mention Mag-
nolia when contacting Atlantic Reproduc-
tive Medicine Specialists at 919-248-8777 or
donor@atlanticreproductive.com.
Homes For Sale
REAl ESTATE AUCTiON: 1609 Skye Drive, Cha-
pel Hill. Bids due April 24. 4,500 square feet,
4BR/3BA, fnished walkout basement. info at
CasaDiColore.com or 919-601-7339. NCAl/Bl
8116, 8121 and 221277..
HEAlTHCARE iNTERNSHiP: local eldercare
non-proft offering direct care training intern-
ships, summer 2013. Successful interns are
eligible for employment in innovative as-
sisted living. Send resume: Employment@
Charleshouse.org, 919-967-7570.
Lost & Found
lOST: kEYS. Near UNC hospital. Chevy keys,
key fob, string of colored plastic beads, bottle
opener, kinetix card. PlEASE email or call:
collini4519@bellsouth.net, 919-260-0490.
Rooms
ROOM FOR RENT with private bath. Ground
foor of private home. Near major bus park
and ride and Chapel Hill tennis club. Seeking
a visiting professor or working professional.
254-541-1740.
CALDwELL STREET HOUSE
in need of 2 subleters for June thru July 2013.
Duplex style. Walk to campus. Near bus
stop. Full kitchen and laundry room. Parking
space included. $575/mo. +utilities. Contact
lizcrampton18@gmail.com, 503-508-7137.
SUBlETTER NEEDED! JUNE MOVE iN Room for
sublet in large house in Carrboro. Sublet runs
until July 31 with possibility of signing lease
to stay in house for next school year. House is
shared by 6 female roommates. Full kitchen,
W/D, bathroom. $475/mo. all utilities in-
cluded. Email k.cartwright812@gmail.com for
more info.
Announcements Announcements Help Wanted Announcements
(c) 2013 TRiBUNE MEDiA SERViCES, iNC.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 9 -- Venus enters Taurus
on Tax Day: This next month can be
even more proftable. Use what youve
learned to gain confdence. Carefully
research your market with the latest
analytics. Get expert help.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 9 -- Youre lucky in love
these days, with Venus in your sign. its
easier to make money, too. Splurge on
a haircut or spa visit. The trick is to feed
your soul and stomach simultaneously.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 9 -- Fantasies abound this
next month, and your dreams will be
sweeter. Grasp every opportunity that
comes your way. You wont be tempt-
ed to wear your heart on your sleeve;
quiet time is productive.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 9 -- it may surprise you, but
youll be quite popular for the next four
and a half weeks. Go out more often,
strengthen your social infrastructure
and grow your career. Communicate
clearly. Smile.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 9 -- Today is an excellent
day to make romantic commitments.
Take on more responsibility. Grab an
opportunity. list problems to solve and
benefts. Teamwork is extra effective.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 9 -- The coming days are
good for setting goals and acting on
them. let a creative partner take the
lead. Collect an old debt or a windfall
proft, and count your assets.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 9 -- its easier to save and
increase your assets. Consider personal
decisions. Make plans together with
someone fun, and make time to play.
Find a sweet deal. Accept a good offer.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 9 -- Partnership and compro-
mise come with greater ease. Collect
the benefts that youve earned. The
solution becomes obvious. Put in extra
energy. Research how to accomplish
your specifc goals.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 9 -- Theres more fun work
on the way. Friends help you advance.
Share the credit. Caution brings greater
success; take it slow in a hurry. Youre
gaining wisdom, and romance fowers.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 9 -- Youre especially lucky
for the next month, in love and negotia-
tions. Expand your horizons. let your-
self be persuaded by passion and com-
passion. keep your promises and work
your plan. let your imagination lead.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8 -- Focus on household
improvements. Or learn to make some-
thing you used to buy. Youre gaining
skills. Your home can become your love
nest, without great expense. Modify
ideals.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is an 8 -- Study opens entertain-
ing new doors. Get creative with the
details. Make necessary adaptations.
Consider an interesting proposition. Use
money to make money. Rely on those
you trust.
HOROSCOPES
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By Aaron Dodson
Staff Writer
In the first half of the North
Carolina womens lacrosse
teams 16-4 rout of Jacksonville
on Friday, senior midfielder
Kara Cannizzaro saw the
perfect opportunity to give
her freshman teammate Aly
Messinger a reason to celebrate
with her on Senior Night.
With Jacksonville goal-
keeper Karli Tobin scram-
bling to return to the cage,
Cannizzaro led a fast break
following a Dolphin turnover,
scooping up the ball and hurl-
ing it to an open Messinger.
But the No. 3 Tar Heels
(12-2, 4-1 ACC) were unable
to convert the ball soared
over the freshmans extended
stick and out of bounds.
Though an 9-0 run in the
second half sealed the games
result, the play was an example
of UNCs sloppiness in a first
half marred by turnovers, wide
shots and stagnant set offense.
Despite scoring six goals
in the opening 17 minutes of
the game, the Tar Heels were
unable to find the net again
before halftime, and commit-
ted 12 turnovers in the period.
Coach Jenny Levy said she
told her players at halftime,
when they led 6-3, that she
wanted them to make adjust-
ments on their own.
Were not a veteran team
by any stretch of imagina-
tion, Levy said. But we cer-
tainly have enough experience
from the season to get out
there, work together, make
better choices and finish on
our opportunities.
Levys concise pep talk
SportsMonday Monday, April 15, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 9
Wanted: food trucks
Hillsborough is the latest
town to express interest in
allowing more food trucks to
operate. See pg. 3 for story.
Dancing with the Stars
The competition will fea-
ture local figures and ben-
efit a Chapel Hill organiza-
tion. See pg. 6 for story.
Broadway Twisted
Local actors perform
gender-swapped iconic
Broadway numbers for a
cause. See pg. 3 for story.
In Tuesdays paper...
The Chapel Hill and
Carrboro Human Rights
Center could close. Pick up
a DTH to read more.
games
Solution to
Fridays puzzle
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
2013 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
and coach guys when they do
make a mistake, Renner said.
Last year, I dont think that I
could do that.
On the defensive side,
senior defensive end Kareem
Martin could take on that
same kind of leadership role
in the absence of linebacker
Kevin Reddick.
The Tar Heels struggled
to defend the run Saturday,
a problem Martin said will
need to be corrected. But he
said he still has an optimistic
outlook for year two in the
4-2-5 system.
I think we are going to
be a lot faster than we were
last year because we know
the defense a lot better, said
Martin, who had four sacks
Saturday. Guys have played
in it already, and I think this
defense has the potential to
be a top-20, top-10 defense in
the country.
Fedora was a bit more
SPRING GAME
from page 10
field before eventually being
tackled.
The freshman tailback
rushed for a game-high 101
yards on 20 carries in the
White teams 34-10 defeat at
the hands of the Blue team.
Francis is only a few
months removed from a high
school career where he ran
the ball 251 times for 2,100
yards and 27 touchdowns in
his senior season.
Transitioning from high
school football to Fedoras
up-tempo style hasnt been an
easy process for Francis.
Though hes still been able
to find holes in the defense,
the rigorous offense has often
left Francis short of breath.
But luckily for Francis, he ll
likely be splitting time with
two veteran running backs,
A.J. Blue and Romar Morris.
I noticed that after a
couple of plays of running,
Im sucking for wind, Francis
said. Like they said, were
going to need all of us to get
through this season because
of how fast tempo we are.
Though Francis didnt
score a touchdown in the
game, he nearly rushed for
more yards than Blue team
running backs Blue and
Morris combined.
Both scored second-quar-
ter touchdowns for the Blue
team for the first two touch-
downs of the Spring Game.
Since Francis arrived at
UNC in January, Blue and
Morris have assumed the
responsibility of helping him
transition to college football.
Ive just been there to
coach him and teach him to
have short-term memory and
forget about those fumbles,
because its going to happen,
Blue said.
While coach Larry Fedora
might have entered the spring
season unsure of the solution
to filling a Giovani Bernard-
sized hole in his backfield, he
may have found at least part
of the solution in a player
who, in a few weeks, will like-
ly still put on a tux and attend
his senior prom.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
FRANcIS
from page 10
Womens lacrosse
wins home nale
dth/spencer herlong
Senior midfielder Kara Cannizzaro scored two goals against Jacksonville Friday night at Fetzer Field.
WOMENS lAcROSSE: NORth cAROlINA 16, jAckSONvIllE 4
DTH ONLINE:
Go to dailytarheel.com
to read about Margaret
Corzels performance.
seemed to quickly get through
to the Tar Heels. About a
minute into the second half,
Cannizzaro and Messinger
teamed up again, only this
time the result ended up on
the scoreboard. Messinger
assisted on Cannizzaros team-
high 40th goal of the season
and second goal on the night.
The Tar Heels scored
nine unanswered before
Jacksonville was able to answer
with a goal of its own with 5:08
left in the game. Jacksonvilles
four goals were the fewest
scored by an opponent against
UNC this season.
Junior attacker Abbey
Friend said UNCs success in
the second half was due in
large part to the teams shift
in offensive strategy.
In the first half we had a
lot of transition goals, and
sometimes its kind of hard to
tone back down and settle the
offense when youre moving
really fast the whole time,
Friend said. But in the sec-
ond half we slowed it down
a little more and were more
effective offensively.
For the second straight
game, Cannizzaro picked up
two yellow cards and was
removed from play.
Cannizzaro said she sees
room for herself and the team
to improve heading into the
final regular-season game
against Vanderbilt.
We cant wait until the
second half to turn it on
against any more teams this
season, Cannizzaro said. We
have to come out from the
beginning of each game and
show them what Carolina
lacrosse is.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
dth/katie sweeney
Quarterback Bryn Renner shows off UNCs new all-black jerseys,
which will be worn in its Thursday game versus Miami next season.
cautious in his assessment
of the teams performance,
saying that UNC still has a
ways to go in all phases of
the game. But he also said he
was pleased with his players
enthusiasm.
You should always have a
great energy level in todays
atmosphere, Fedora said.
They saw the (new) uniforms
last night. They were jacked
up about that. It was about
them having fun today, and I
think they did that.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
Nothing could be finer.
S
ummer
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chool at Carolina.
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Monday, April 15, 2013
SportsMonday
dailytarheel.com The Daily Tar Heel 10
SCOREBOARD
WOMENS TENNIS: UNC 5, Miami 2
WOMENS TENNIS: UNC 5, Florida State 2
MENS TENNIS: UNC 5, Miami 2
MENS TENNIS: Florida State 5, UNC 2
SOFTBALL: N.C. State 2, UNC 1 (series)
UNC springs into action in scrimmage
dth/katie sweeney
Wide receiver Sean Tapley sprints down the field during Saturdays Spring Game. Tapley had three receptions for 108 yards and a touchdown.
By Michael Lananna
Senior Writer
There was a buzz of anticipation a
sense of mystery, even surrounding last
years Spring Game. As North Carolina
headed into its first season under coach
Larry Fedora, it wasnt yet known how the
Tar Heels would look in their new spread
offense and 4-2-5 defense.
Now, compare that to this years Spring
Game, where Saturdays biggest mystery
was how the Tar Heels would look in brand
new uniforms.
Thats not to say that UNC is without its
holes the running back position in particu-
lar still needs to be settled. But by and large,
the second edition of Fedoras Tar Heels had
the look of a far more confident unit Saturday.
Led by redshirt senior quarterback Bryn
Renner, the more experienced Blue team
came away with a 34-10 win against the
younger White team.
Its a whole lot easier this year, said
receiver Sean Tapley, who scored a touch-
down. I feel like, now that we know the
concepts and everything, we can just go out
there and play our game.
It took a few throws for Renner to get
into a rhythm Saturday, but by the end of
the game, he was 16 for 27, and posted three
touchdowns and 216 yards.
The pieces around him still need to come
together. Romar Morris and A.J. Blue
who ran for 80 and 30 yards, respectively,
Saturday are the frontrunners to replace
Giovani Bernard at tailback, but freshman
Khris Francis 101-yard performance could
certainly thrust him into contention. And
Fedora said hes still not enamored with the
depth behind Tapley and Quinshad Davis at
the wide receiver position.
Regardless of who lines up with Renner,
the Tar Heels will have a quarterback who
now understands Fedoras offense, and can
guide them through it.
Its morphed into where I can be a leader
FOOTBALL: BLue 34, whiTe 10
uNC took the field for its annual
spring football exhibition.
Francis impresses in rst outing at Kenan
By Brooke Pryor
Assistant Sports Editor
In about two weeks, Durhams Hillside
High School will put on its annual prom.
With such a short time until one of the
biggest moments in a high school students
career, Khris Francis should be in the mid-
dle of tux-hunting and corsage-ordering.
But instead of joining his Hillside friends
in prom preparations, Francis was busy on
the field at Kenan Stadium Saturday after-
noon.
Francis, an early enrollee, took the field
with the rookie-laden White team in North
Carolinas annual Spring Football Game.
Though he wasnt working out with the
first-string squad, Francis still attracted
plenty of attention during his time on the
field, beginning with a 24-yard carry on the
second play of the game.
It set a tone for the White team, con-
sidering we started the game on offense,
Francis said. It really energized everybody,
especially when we just make a big play
period.
After carrying the ball for no gain on the
first play of the game, Francis again got the
handoff from back-up quarterback and fel-
low freshman Mitch Trubisky, broke free
from the defense and sprinted down the
see SPRiNG GAMe, Page 9 see FRANCiS, Page 9
Moran swings series for Tar Heels
BASeBALL: NORTh CAROLiNA 3, ViRGiNiA TeCh 0
By Brandon Moree
Sports Editor
The No. 1 North Carolina baseball
won three vastly different games at
Virginia Tech (22-15, 7-11 ACC) this
weekend, but a common thread tied
them together: the bat of third base-
man Colin Moran.
It was a weird weekend with all
the different scores, Moran said of
his teams 21-8, 9-8 and 3-0 victo-
ries. But it was good to get three
Ws.
In the Friday night series opener,
UNCs staff ace Kent Emanuel had
what he said was one of the roughest
outings of his career.
He gave up eight runs on 14 hits
in the winning effort and relied
heavily on the Tar Heel bats. They
came through for him as UNC (34-
2, 15-2 ACC) went on to win 21-8,
despite losing freshman standout
Skye Bolt to a foot injury that was
later revealed to be a broken second
metatarsal in his right foot.
(Emanuel) left a couple pitches
up but honestly, they just put some
good swings on the pitches, Moran
said. Its not easy to get runs off
Kent. But the wind was definitely
blowing out for both teams in
the first couple games.
Moran had four RBIs on a
three-for-five night at the plate.
Centerfielder Chaz Frank also pro-
duced four RBIs Friday, and Cody
Stubbs added three.
Saturdays contest against the
Hokies was much closer and needed
extra innings to decide the winner.
In the top of the 10th inning,
Moran scored what would be the
game-winning run as he crossed
home plate after a wild pitch, his
fifth such journey around the dia-
mond that game.
Moran again had four RBIs, this
time on a three-for-four performance.
Trent Thornton picked up his
eighth win of the season for three
innings of relief work.
In the finale on Sunday, the Tar
Heels sealed the sweep with a 3-0
win behind a strong showing from
Hobbs Johnson.
Johnson was, overall, sharper on
Sunday than he had been all year.
He pitched a shutout through six
innings and only allowed two hits.
He walked six batters and struck out
four.
He did pitch well, coach Mike
Fox said. He got his first win and
went into the sixth inning.
He pitched out of trouble some
got a couple good strikeouts and
worked around some walks. We
played good defense behind him.
On Sunday, Moran added another
RBI, giving him nine for the weekend.
I think I saw the ball well,
Moran said. I think maybe the
wind helped a little bit, but I put
some barrels on the ball and luckily
it fell.
Fox described the play of his No.
Skye Bolts injury didnt
prevent uNC from
sweeping the hokies.
By Grace Raynor
Staff Writer
There were three minutes and
12 seconds remaining in the North
Carolina mens lacrosse teams
matchup with Hofstra Saturday
night in Hempstead, N.Y.
Senior Marcus Holman had
scored his 16th career hat trick,
and his three goals put him just 14
goals behind North Carolinas all-
time leading scorer.
The Tar Heels had handily taken
a 14-5 lead against the Pride, a
lead they would hold onto until the
final horn.
Almost all of backup goalkeeper
Bradley Dunns extended family
had come to the game to see the
newest addition to UNCs squad
play, but they did not expect him to
see the field.
They certainly could never have
imagined that Dunn would steal
the show.
Dunn, a member of the UNC
club lacrosse team in 2011 and
2012, had tried out for the var-
sity squad both his freshman and
sophomore years, and was cut both
times.
On March 24, coach Joe Breschi
sent Dunn an email, notifying him
that there was a goalie position
open. Several of UNCs goalies had
been injured, and Breschi wanted
Dunn to serve as Kieran Burkes
backup.
It was an email on a Sunday
basically just kind of handing me my
dream on a silver platter, Dunn said.
Immediately, I stood up and I
told my friend Andrew that I got the
email, and he and I were so pumped
up. We actually couldnt stop talking
about it for the rest of the day.
So when Dunn stepped on the
field for the first time in his UNC
career Saturday night, the moment
he had been anticipating his entire
life had finally come.
With 1:51 remaining, Hofstras
Aaron Jones fired a shot at Dunn.
Fittingly, Dunn saved it sending
UNCs sidelines into a frenzy.
What a storybook situation for
him, Breschi said.
We call him up off the (Sigma
Alpha Epsilon) couch and say, Hey,
do you have any interest in jumping
on board and playing? He steps in
there and takes a lot of shots from
our players in practice and just the
opportunity to get him in the game
hes a terrific young man.
Breschi said it has been quite the
experience to see his athletes rally
around Dunn. His new teammates
couldnt be happier about his arrival.
He steps in and lets the first
team and second team guys just
hit him with shots, and he does it
with a smile on his face, Holman
said. I couldnt imagine standing
in front of the shots that he sees in
practice, so its definitely taken a
lot of courage on his part.
We were all excited when he got
that save. We all felt great as a team.
Dunns save gave him a 100
percent save percentage for the
season, but more importantly, it
allowed him to finally ease his
curiosity.
You kind of grow up and you
see all these guys playing college
lacrosse, and you kind of constantly
ask yourself, Can I stop that shot,
can I stop that shot? Would I have
had that one? And now I know.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
Backup goalie gets save in UNC win
Bradley Dunn earned his
first career save in a 14-5
victory over hofstra.
dth file/katie sweeney
Colin Moran swings the bat earlier this season. Moran hit seven-for-13 against
Virginia Tech this weekend, slugging one home run and driving in nine RBIs.
MeNS LACROSSe: NORTh CAROLiNA 14, hOFSTRA 5
SPORTS bRief
P.J. Hairston forgoes NBA Draft,
will stay at UNC for junior year
Sophomore guard P.J. Hairston
announced Friday afternoon via Twitter
and a University release that he will
return to UNC for his junior season.
Hairston said he made his decision
after talking with his family and coach
Roy Williams.
Coach always says, When you
focus on the team during the season,
I will support you in the off-season,
Hairston said in the release. This is
my way of supporting coach, my team-
mates and the Tar Heel community.
Hairston led UNC in scoring, averag-
ing 14.6 points per game last season.
Junior Reggie Bullock and sopho-
more James Michael McAdoo must
announce whether they will play at
UNC next season by the April 28 NBA
Draft early entry eligibility deadline.
From staff and wire reports
inBRIEF
3 hitter as sensational this weekend
and said Morans play had been
critical to the Tar Heels success
especially after cleanup batter Bolts
departure from the lineup.
We started off kind of crazy
Friday, Fox said. But we got all
three of them. It was a great three
game sweep for us.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.

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