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Open doors

Ross said a major element of Fridays


legacy is a focus on low tuition.
Weve learned the importance of having
the doors of the University open to every-
one who wants to and is qualified to come
regardless of their ability to pay, Ross said.
James Leloudis, a history professor and
associate dean of honors at UNC, said
Friday understood the value of a public edu-
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Insomnia
Cookies
Cookies will replace clothing store
Late-night cookie, brownie, cookie cake and ice cream delivery service
Insomnia Cookies will open its doors on Franklin Street Nov. 4.
SOURCE: GOOGLE MAPS DTH/EMILY HELTON, SARAH LAMBERT
Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893
...in diversity there is beauty and there is strength.
maya angelOu
Friday, October 11, 2013 dailytarheel.com Volume 121, Issue 91
A disproportionate reality
4.1%
of UNC freshmen
identify as two or
more races
5.2%
of UNC freshmen
identify as black
females
2.5%
of UNC freshmen
identify as black
males
26.7%
of UNC freshmen
identify as white
males
0 20 40 60 80 100
Y
e
a
r
Racial identication of new rst-year males at UNC from 2007-2013
Racial composition of male and female new rst-years across the UNC system
Race of new rst-year males
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
*
*
*
*
Black White Other (includes Asian, American Indian and Alaska Native, Hispanic and Pacic Islander)
*Starting in 2010, students were given the option of identifying as two or more racesor unknown.This data represents students who identied as only black.
COMPILED BY JULIA CRAVEN DTH/CECE PASCUAL AND RACHEL HOLT
UNC
Chapel Hill
(Fall 2013)
UNC
Charlotte
(Fall 2012)
North Carolina
State University
(Fall 2012)
Appalachian
State University
(Fall 2013)
UNC
Greensboro
(Fall 2012)
Plan for
teacher
walkout
stalls
Only 98 of nearly 4,000 new rst-years are black males
By Julia Craven
Senior Writer
Out of 3,946 new first-year students, only
98 males about 2.5 percent self-identify
as black, based on data from UNCs Office of
Institutional Research and Assessment released
last month.
This number includes athletes, full- and
part-time students but does not factor in inter-
national students or transfers.
Low black male enrollment needs to be exam-
ined more closely, said Taffye Clayton, UNCs vice
provost for diversity and multicultural affairs.
Carolina continues to be committed to
increasing diversity on our campus, she said.
Theres more that we can do.
The U.S. Census added new racial classification
categories in 2010, which could have prompted
black men to identify themselves differently.
Students could only report belonging to one racial
group before, but now incoming students can
state they belong to two or more races.
There were 156 black males reported as new
first-years in 2009 a number that dropped
to 106 in 2010 after the census change, with 46
males reporting being multiracial.
This fall, 54 male and 108 female new first-
years reported being multiracial, including stu-
dents mixed with races other than black. And
205 females reported identifying as black.
Males who have historically identified as
African-American who now have the option to
identify as biracial or of mixed-race heritage
(may) exercise that option, Clayton said.
She said this could account for the lower
black male enrollment reported this year.
While we dont know if that is precisely the
case, it certainly could be, she said.
There has also been an increase in the num-
ber of students who do not report a race or
ethnicity, said Ashley Memory, senior assistant
director of undergraduate admissions.
This fall, 194 new first-years opted out of
reporting their race up from 87 in 2012.
applicants versus admittance
The UNC Office of Undergraduate Admissions
takes into account all student-reported races and
ethnicities when determining the demographic
breakdown of applicants and admitted students.
Weve been required to report separately those
students who disclose more than one race or eth-
nicity, Memory said, adding that admissions sorts
data differently from the Office of Institutional
Research and Assessment. Our office counts all
students who identify as African-American, even
if they report multiple races.
This method of reporting causes students who
identify as belonging to more than one racial or
ethnic background to be counted as a member
of both groups, which could potentially skew the
application and admittance numbers.
For the 2013-14 academic year, 1,136 males
identifying as black either fully or partially
applied to UNC out of 30,835 total applicants.
Of the 1,136, 245 gained admission a
number fairly aligned with UNCs 27.6-percent
overall acceptance rate.
But the UNC black undergraduate population
is not representative of the state demographics.
Black men and women make up about 21
By Lauren Kent
Staff Writer
North Carolina teachers upset with
low pay and recent cuts to public
education were planning to walk out
of the classroom Nov. 4 to send a mes-
sage to the N.C. General Assembly
but an actual walkout is looking
unlikely.
Due to fears that participating in
the event, called the N.C. Teacher
Walkout, would cost them their jobs,
many teachers have decided to opt
out.
A lot of teachers are apprehen-
sive, said Josh Hartman, one of the
original organizers of the walkout,
who recently quit his job as a technol-
ogy teacher in Wake County after six
years.
Lawyers at the North Carolina
Association of Educators warned
event organizers that teachers who
call in sick as a form of protest could
be fired, Hartman said. And Gov. Pat
McCrory has condemned the walkout.
This teacher strike doesnt get
us to a solution and puts the educa-
tion of our children in jeopardy, said
McCrory spokesman Ryan Tronovitch
in an email.
Organizers are asking teachers to
call in sick or arrange for a substitute
rather than leave students unattended
but the act could still be consid-
ered unlawful protest because North
Carolina is a right-to-work state.
Though Thursday was the last day
of school for Hartman, he said he
will continue speaking out for higher
teacher pay.
Ive always had to have a second
job, he said. Now its gotten to the
point where teaching is my extra
income.
The walkout might not occur, but
education advocacy groups across the
state are taking less drastic measures
to challenge new public education
policies.
The N.C. Association of Educators
Some N.C. teachers worry
about the protests effect
on their jobs.
Bill Fridays legacy lasts a year later
By Haley Waxman
Staff Writer
It has been a full year since former UNC-
system President Bill Friday died, but his
presence still remains on UNC-CHs cam-
pus.
He was president for a total of 30 years;
that in and of itself is quite a legacy, said
current UNC-system President Tom Ross.
Ross said Friday, who served as the sys-
tems first president from 1956 to 1986, was
responsible for shaping the UNC systems
reputation in many positive ways.
During his time as president, Friday
emphasized the importance of affordability,
standing up for students and striking a bal-
ance between athletics and academics
issues that are still relevant today.
Balancing act
Friday was a founding co-chairman of
the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate
Athletics, a group that emphazises the value
of a commitment to academics in intercol-
legiate sports.
Amy Perko, executive director of the
Knight Commission, said Fridays contri-
bution to college athletics was driven by a
commitment to integrity.
He put a priority on the academics, but
still understood that athletics had a role to
play, she said. But that that role should not
overshadow or any way compromise the core
objective of education.
Former UNC-CH Athletic Director Dick
Baddour said Friday taught him to make
the right decision even if it was unpopular.
He taught me that it was really impor-
tant to approach very difficult and complex
problems in a very empathetic and compas-
sionate way, Baddour said.
James Moeser, who served as UNC-CH
chancellor from 2000-08 said the balance
between athletics and academics could
never be as simple as Friday wished it could
be.
I know he believed that the kind of
scandals that ultimately emerged were the
inevitable result of a desire to really be com-
petitive at a high level, Moeser said.
Mens basketball Coach Roy Williams
said Friday was an instrumental and posi-
tive leader in intercollegiate athletics.
He loved college athletics, Williams
said.
He had questions about the direction
things were going, but he loved the games.
The former system presidents
memory is cherished.
Cookie delivery
comes to town
By Zoe Schaver
Staff Writer
Warm cookies and milk, ice cream, brownies
and cookie cake will soon serve students sleepless
nights when Insomnia Cookies opens on Franklin
Street in less than a month.
The new cookie delivery business will move into
Clothes Hounds old location at 145 E. Franklin St.
Founded by a student at the University of
Pennsylvania in 2003, Insomnia Cookies which
delivers its desserts until 3 a.m. now has more
courtesy of north carolina collection, unc-ch
Bill Friday sits onstage with President John F. Kennedy in Kenan Stadium in 1961. President
Kennedy came to UNC to speak on that years University Day.
see walkouT, Page 7
see eNrollmeNT, Page 7
see bill friday, Page 7
insomnia Cookies will open on
franklin Street on Nov. 4.
SEE PAGE 3: for a Q&A with biogra-
pher William Link, who wrote William
Friday: Power, Purpose, and American
Higher Education.
see CookieS, Page 7
today
Water in Our World: As part of
University Day festivities and the
installation of Carol Folt as UNCs
chancellor, University faculty will
present three academic panel
discussions surrounding the
topics of innovation, water and
the future of UNC as a public
university.
Time: 3 p.m. - 3:35 p.m.
Location: Carolina Inn
Laramie Inside Outscreen-
ing: The department of womens
and gender studies will present
Laramie Inside Out. The flm
explores the town that prompt-
ed a nationwide debate about
homophobia and hate crimes
after a student was brutally
beaten to death.
Time: 7 p.m. - 9 p.m.
Location: Stone Center
University of Alabama-
Birmingham Arts Trio: Visiting
artists from the University of
Alabama-Birmingham will
present a recital of contempo-
rary chamber music featuring
a clarinet, trumpet and piano.
The event will also include
a world premiere by William
Price.
Time: 8 p.m. - 10 p.m.
Location: Hill Hall auditorium
Saturday
NOTED. Drunk-dialing U.S. Congress
members? Best way to spend a night. And
one website is helping you do just that.
DrunkDialCongress.org connects prank-
sters with a random member of Congress,
and even provides users with talking points
like, Why dont you make yourself useful
and at least mow the lawn?
QUOTED. The cheetah comes from the
African jungle, and hip-hop also came
from Africa, so its sort of the storytelling
of the transition coming from Africa into
the concrete jungle.
A pageant mom on Wednesdays
Toddlers and Tiaras episode, discussing
the merits of a hip-hop pageantry.
D
oes the five-second rule apply to eating cat vomit? One
Connecticut meteorologist is wondering just that after eat-
ing what he thought was spilled cereal on the floor. When
Scot Haney of Hartford-based CBS affiliate WFSB was in
the middle of a studio segment, he saw what looked to be Grape-Nuts on
the floor, and like any normal person (right?) he proceeded to scoop the
substance off the floor and eat it with his fellow anchors looking on.
Whats worse is then he chose to revisit the incident by entirely dedi-
cating his Trending Now segment to his stupidity. My cat threw up and
I must have stepped in it, and thats what I ate. I thought it was Grape-
Nuts. I ate cat vomit right here on television. Yeah Haney, you did.
Curiosity killed the cat
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone damaged prop-
erty at 4000 Environ Way
between 8:30 a.m. and noon
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person keyed a car and
slashed its tires, causing dam-
age to the vehicle estimated at
$300, reports state.
Someone committed
larceny at 107 Pinegate Circle
between 2:15 p.m. and 8:15
p.m. Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole items
valued at $90, including a
mailbox key, a taser, a bed
comforter and a bathroom
rug, reports state.
Someone damaged prop-
erty at 316 W. Rosemary St.
between 3 p.m. and 9:27 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person dumped insu-
lation on a car, reports state.
Someone shoplifted
at 108 Meadowmont
Village Circle at 3:45 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole a hand-
bag, valued at $465, reports
state.
Someone threatened
to stab people at 1105 N.C.
Highway 54 at 4:38 p.m.
Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone reported a
suspicious person at 108
Ephesus Church Road
between 12:34 a.m. and 12:36
a.m. Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill reports.
A person was talking or
preaching loudly, reports
state.
Someone assaulted a
female at Plant Road at 10:26
a.m. Wednesday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person bit their teach-
er, reports state.
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
Magic in the Garden: The
young and the young-at-heart
are invited to a morning of crafts
and nature-themed fun.
Build homes for fairies and elves,
and craft your own fairy wings.
Costumes encouraged. There is a
$10 fee per child.
Time: 10 a.m. - 12 p.m.
Location: N.C. Botanical Garden
Education Center
PoLICE LoG
News Friday, October 11, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2
a carolina proposal
J
unior Bruce Ward proposed to Ciara Davis at
the Old Well Thursday night. A crowd of about
30 students hid to the side of South Building
in front of the Campus Y and ran out to cheer from
across the street. Davis, a junior, said yes.
dth/brian fanney
Due to a reporting error, Thursdays front page story Drop-add petition gains 5,000 in 24 hours
said members of student congress would collect petition signatures in the pit next week, but the
event is organized by the Unc Executive Branch.
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 below. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections printed
on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Cammie Bellamy at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
CorrECtIoNS
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News Friday, October 11, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3
A HELPING HAND
dth/cameron robert
Mark Holt (left) gives Phillip Gilliam a free haircut at Project Connect, a program that connects people to a broad range of long-term services.
By Jeremy Vernon
Staff Writer
One day a year, the Hargraves
Community Center is transformed into a
place where people facing homelessness
can access basic services.
On Thursday, the center hosted Project
Connect, an annual event planned by
the Orange County Partnership to End
Homelessness.
The event, now in its seventh year, offers
many services for those experiencing or at
risk for homelessness including hous-
ing, employment opportunities, health and
dental care, social service benefits, legal
services and more.
Im sure a few people didnt come because
of the crummy weather, but its not all about
the numbers, said Jamie Rohe, programs
coordinator for the partnership. Its about
the quality of the services, and I think the
services have gotten stronger every year.
Some of the more popular services
included free dental screenings, free eye
exams and feet cleaning and care by mem-
bers of the podiatry program at UNC.
Numerous providers and volunteers
helped with this years event, including
attorneys from Legal Aid and students from
the UNC law, nursing and dental schools.
I really feel like we are helping people
who think they have legal problems to get
in touch with an attorney at Legal Aid,
said Holly Safi, a UNC law and city and
regional planning student.
Other volunteers included members of
the Chapel Hill Police Department and
students from nearby Cedar Ridge High
School in Hillsborough.
Of course at first I thought it would be
nice to get out of school for the day, but when
I started working today that all changed,
said David Brooks, one of the volunteers
from Cedar Ridge. I was really shocked at
how many guests were here. It was a little
disheartening, but Im just glad were here
doing everything we can to help them.
Most of those who received care at the
event had not been able to receive proper
medical attention or basic social services
in years.
Dennis Horton spent the majority of his
day getting his teeth checked.
Ive had a bad tooth for a while now and
they showed me a place where I can get it
pulled out for free, he said.
Horton said he suffered a heart attack
30 days ago due to complications from the
tooth, and his doctor told him he needed to
get it pulled as soon as possible.
People are just very grateful and a lot of
people have been surprised at the scope of
services were offering, said Shauna Farmer,
a volunteer working at the foot care station.
I heard one guy say that Jesus washed feet,
and what we were doing was very humbling.
city@dailytarheel.com
A year ago Saturday, Bill Friday, known as the
father of the UNC system, died in his sleep at the
age of 92, leaving a more than 50-year legacy of
committment to higher education.
Friday became the UNC systems first president
in 1956. In his 30 year term, the system grew from
three to 16 campuses as the entire landscape of
higher education changed. Even after his retire-
ment in 1986, he remained active in public life.
William A. Link, a history professor at the
University of Florida, began the several-year pro-
cess of writing a biography of Friday when he was
a UNC-Greensboro professor. The biography, titled
William Friday: Power, Purpose, and American
Higher Education, was published in 1995. After
Fridays death, Link updated the biography for a
recently-published second edition.
State & National Editor Madeline Will spoke
with Link about Fridays life and legacy.
The Daily Tar Heel: What was it like to work with
Bill Friday while writing his biography?
William Link: It was easy, he was very easy to
work with. He was extremely cooperative. He tried
to be forthcoming, I think, for the most part.
He had a real spirit of openness I think that
was unusual. We had this arrangement from the
beginning that I would be able to write it indepen-
dently and not the pre-approved version, not the
white-washed version.
DTH: What do you see as his lasting legacy?
RJ: His most lasting legacy is the University of
North Carolina.
The University of North Carolina is one of the
better public university systems in the country, its
in everybodys top five, I think. This wasnt just
Bill Friday who did that, but he played a major
part in that. I think that his real passion people
like to say his only passion was the university.
The university was his monument.
DTH: One of his big passions was maintaining the
integrity of college sports. How did he feel in the last
few years about the football scandal at UNC?
RJ: It was a life-long passion for him to try to
keep college athletics under control so it didnt
corrupt the mission of the uni-
versity. I think he was definitely
dismayed the last few years at
the things that happened at
Chapel Hill because Chapel
Hill had always been at least
for 30 or 40 years had been
beyond reproach. The things
that happened with the football
program especially were very
dismaying to him. It was like
his own baby, his own child,
was (going) wrong here.
I think he felt that it was
always fixable, that there was
something you could do to
restore the integrity.
DTH: What was his relation-
ship like with then-Chancellor Holden Thorp?
RJ: My sense is that they were in close contact,
they were in regular contact. I think he was hon-
estly probably a little disappointed the way the
chancellorship played out. Thorp, in the end, left
because of the cloud hanging over the University,
thats the only way to describe it.
He did not publicly criticize Thorp, and he was
very careful to never criticize him privately either.
Were sort of surmising here, but I think that a
sense of disappointment is probably an honest
way to describe what happened.
DTH: How did he feel about the hiring of Butch
Davis as UNCs football coach?
RJ: I think he was horrified when Davis was hired.
Davis was a big-time football coach, and the football
fans were happy. But I think Friday was very con-
cerned that he would bring an array of things that
come with big-time football that would bring prob-
lems, and he was ultimately right about that.
Friday was old-fashioned about athletics, he felt
like it shouldnt be professionalized, it shouldnt
have lots of money in it, that they were students
primarily rather than athletes (first). I think he
definitely saw trouble on the horizon with the hir-
ing of Butch Davis, no question.
DTH: The UNC system has increased tuition
significantly in the past several years. What did he
think of that?
RJ: He was always very strongly opposed to
that. That was one thing he was very consistent
about the universitys obligation to keep tuition
as low as possible.
DTH: What are some of Fridays other qualities?
RJ: I think he was a very unusual leader. He was
able to master bureaucracy, he understood how
bureaucracies worked, but at the same time, he
wasnt a product of the bureaucracy.
In the same way ... he liked to use power but he
wasnt consumed by power. That kind of personal
touch is very unusual nowadays, theres so much of
a corporate model in how leadership in universities
occurs. He may be a throwback, but he was also
very, very effective in terms of modern organiza-
tions. He wasnt out-of-date, he was a person who
knew how to run the processes, but he also had the
ability to understand people on a one-on-one basis.
Hes got to be put down as one of the most
influential and important people in the 20th cen-
tury of North Carolina. When its all said or done,
you can look at governors, you can look at sena-
tors, you can look at business leaders, Bill Friday
has got to be in the top two or three most impor-
tant people in the 20th century of North Carolina.
state@dailytarheel.com
Q&A with
Bill Fridays
biographer
William Link
William A. Link
is a history profes-
sor at the University
of Florida who
wrote bill Fridays
biography.
Project reaches out, provides care for the homeless
World celebrates Folts installation
By Ally Levine
Staff Writer
The world is coming to
Memorial Hall Friday evening
in celebration of UNCs new
chancellor.
Carolina Performing Arts free
event, The World Comes Here:
Celebrating the Performing Arts
at Carolina, presents perfor-
mances by Alvin Ailey American
Dance Theater, Charanga
Carolina, Dom Flemons from the
Carolina Chocolate Drops with
Hogmaw, Jason Moran and the
Clef Hangers.
The show is in honor of the
installation of Carol Folt as the
Universitys 11th chancellor.
At Dartmouth, she was a
huge proponent of the arts and
right away, she wanted to indi-
cate that here, said Joe Florence,
CPAs marketing manager.
He said the show was curated
as per Folts request.
She understands the impor-
tant critical nature of the arts
within an educational cur-
riculum, said Rick Davis, the
General Alumni Associations
director of enrichment pro-
grams.
The performers were selected
based on their previous involve-
ment with UNC.
dth/kathleen doyle
Dom Flemons of the Carolina Chocolate Drops plays in his studio,
Music Maker Relief Foundation, in Hillsborough on Thursday.
and his students, the perfor-
mance is not only a way to show
support for the new chancellor
but also for Folt to learn about
Charanga.
I treasure this opportunity,
in particular, knowing that if
she doesnt already, she will
know about Charanga Carolina,
Garcia said. It is a special
opportunity for me as a repre-
sentative of the department of
music at this concert to demon-
strate to the chancellor that we
are a vibrant and diverse faculty
in terms of the types of music
we teach.
Charlie Harris a senior
public policy major and presi-
dent of the all-male a cappella
group, the Clef Hangers said
he views the opportunity to per-
form with the variety of groups
as the most beneficial part of the
performance.
It is called The World Comes
Here, and for the past four years
of my schooling, I have literally
seen that happening at Memorial
Hall, Harris said.
Davis views the arts as a key
part of education at UNC.
The traditional classroom
instruction is certainly critical,
but the arts widens our scope
of thinking in a way that some-
times a lecture cannot do, he
said.
He hopes that the perfor-
mance will reaffirm the global
reputation of the arts at UNC.
In one night you have that
depth and breadth of variable
arts experiences and Im amazed
that we offered it free and open
to the public.
arts@dailytarheel.com
A free CPA event
integrates campus
musicians.
Students march against BOG
By Sarah Chaney
Staff Writer
Whose university? Our University!
students chanted on their march to protest
at the first day of the monthly UNC-system
Board of Governors meeting.
About 30 students representing groups
including Student Power, the Sierra Student
Coalition and the Gender Non-Specific
Housing Coalition, marched from the Pit to
Spangler Building on Raleigh Street.
They were protesting issues like the
shortening of the course drop period to 10
days from eight weeks and the boards deci-
sion in August to ban gender-neutral hous-
ing after the UNC Board of Trustees had
passed the housing plan last year.
Kevin Claybren, a leader in the gender-
neutral housing campaign, said he attended
the board meeting as a supporter of other
groups, like the Sierra Student Coalition,
which is advocating for coal endowment.
All these decisions, like the add-drop
policy, can be struck down by the BOG
just like with the gender-neutral housing,
he said.
The board members met Thursday for a
series of board committee meetings. The full
board will reconvene today at 9 a.m.
The system Association of Student
Governments President Robert Nunnery
updated the boards university governance
committee about finding alternatives to
gender-neutral housing.
Nunnery, system General Administration
members and UNC students have been
discussing alternatives, which include a
housing application option where students
indicate if theyd like to participate in a
diverse living situation, and a diverse living-
learning community for LGBT students.
Nunnery said ASG would take students
concerns into account and write a resolution.
In an interview, Nunnery said he hopes
to have the resolution passed by the associa-
tion by its February meeting. The ideas will
be shown to the board, but Nunnery said
ultimately, it will be up to the campuses to
implement the ideas which he is hopeful
will happen by next academic year, he said.
Dylan Su-Chun Mott, an organizer for the
rally, said he thinks the board has been unre-
sponsive to the voices of its main constituents.
The BOG is not taking the student voices
into account, he said. Theyre making deci-
sions about other interests.
Nunnery had told the committee mem-
bers that students were not only disap-
pointed in the policy change but also felt as
if their voices were not heard.
Protestor Ping Nguyen said he was fight-
ing for transparency in the board.
The BOG is ignoring the deans, the stu-
dents. They just push it aside and move on
with their agenda, he said.
Senior writer Madeline Will
contributed reporting.
state@dailytarheel.com
Protestors focused on the
drop-add policy and housing.
These are folks who really
engage with the campus com-
munity, when they are here to
perform, outside of their perfor-
mance, Florence said.
For instance, Hope (Boykin
from Alvin Ailey American
Dance Theater) will do a master
class every year over in Gerrard
Hall where dance students can
come and learn from an Alvin
Ailey dancer.
Boykin will be performing a
piece that incorporates Indian
Kathak dance rhythms. She is a
Durham native and a three-time
recipient of the American Dance
Festivals Tuition Scholarship.
Jason Moran, a jazz musi-
cian performing in the show,
finds his inspiration from other
art media, such as 20th-cen-
tury painters like Jean-Michel
Basquiat.
Dom Flemons, a member of
the Carolina Chocolate Drops,
will perform solo, but will also do
a few numbers with Hogmaw, a
folk band from Pennsylvania. His
life in Chapel Hill and interac-
tion with other North Carolina
artists helped to develop
Flemons style. His goal is to link
blues and jazz with the string
band while retaining the tradi-
tional aspects of all of the genres.
Charanga Carolina, a group
of student Cuban-style music
performers enrolled in Music
213, will start off the show with a
lively, contemporary Cuban song.
For music professor David
Garcia director of Charanga
sports hernia a soft tissue
injury that occurs in the groin
area.
He missed the entire
spring season of his redshirt
freshman year.
And after playing 15 games
as a redshirt sophomore,
Rice hoped his redshirt
junior season his fourth
year at UNC would get off
to a better start.
But that wasnt the case.
Rice tore both of his ham-
strings and was limited to
only five appearances all year.
And now, in his fifth year
at UNC, Rice has sustained
another injury something
hes grown accustomed to
doing. But in his final season,
he is fighting through a sec-
ond hernia in order to make
sure he stays on the field.
Its really tough, he said,
looking back on all of the
injuries. Its tougher than
you think.
Not only do you still have
to go to all of the practices
and help you have to be
in the training room an hour
and a half before practice and
in some cases after practice.
And then its the mental
thing too. Youre sitting there
watching when you really
want to be playing.
Getting his due
Just like when he was
asked to transfer back dur-
ing his freshman year, Rice
is adept at using adversity to
help motivate and encourage
himself.
Im pretty good at turning
negative energy into positive
energy, he said.
David Walden, a junior
midfielder at UNC who also
played with Rice on their
high school club team the
Richmond Strikers echoes
that statement.
Ive probably known Josh
since my sophomore year of
high school, Walden said.
Hes very passionate about
whatever he decides to do.
He would definitely try
and turn a negative into a
positive, whatever his setback
was, he would spin it into a
positive light and pull good
from it.
Its taken four long years,
but Rice finally seems to be
taking hold of those positives
this season.
Hes started each of the
teams 10 games this season
and has earned the praise of
his coach.
I thought hes played
well this year, coach Carlos
Somoano said after the Wake
Forest game. Hes done a lot
of things for us. Hes been
working very hard, and hes
been doing a lot of things
well.
Im glad he finally got a
reward for what hes putting
into it and Im hoping that
can spark momentum for him
going forward.
With everything Rice has
been through, he sees himself
as a player who can show oth-
ers how to keep grinding, how
to keep working for what they
want.
I think I serve as a model
of somebody that was given
feedback that the level wasnt
good enough and was able to
push through it, Rice said.
And a lot of people dont end
up pushing through it.
Its difficult right? You
really have to be persistent
keep putting in the hard
work and it will eventually
pay off.
sports@dailytarheel.com
SportsFriday
Friday, October 11, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4
Finally getting his chance
Josh Rice has overcome many obstacles since coming to UNC 5 years ago
dth/kaki pope
Redshirt senior Josh Rice has started all 10 games for the Tar Heels this season. After coming to Chapel Hill in 2009 he changed positions and fought multiple injuries.
By Carlos Collazo
Staff Writer
On Sept. 28, with a 26th-
minute goal against Wake
Forest, all of Josh Rices hard
work finally paid off.
It wasnt a game-winning
goal or even a goal in the final
minutes to salvage the UNC
mens soccer game.
However, to redshirt senior
Rice, it was everything.
It was the first goal he had
scored in two years, and it
represented a culmination of
perseverance and a relentless
dedication to overcoming a
laundry list of obstacles that
have tried to hold him back
since he arrived in Chapel
Hill in 2009.
During the fall of his first
season, Rice battled a groin
injury, and along with a dif-
ficult adjustment to collegiate
soccer, the Virginia native
rarely saw playing time.
Shortly after the season
started, former coach Elmar
Bolowich gave Rice bad news.
I hadnt seen any playing
time in any games, Rice said.
The issue came up in a meet-
ing with (Bolowich) and he
was like, Im going to redshirt
you.
At the time I was frus-
trated and was like, You
know I really want to play,
but as I thought more about
it, I thought this could really
be something that could
work out for me academi-
cally.
Rice started to focus more
on his schoolwork and found
himself taking a pretty heavy
course load during the spring
semester of his freshman
year.
I was in a bunch of heavy
(computer science) classes
that required pulling all-
nighters programming, Rice
said. I had a couple practices
in the spring where I just
didnt do very well.
One day after practice
(Bolowich) says, Josh, can we
talk in my office after prac-
tice? and I was like Oh, OK,
sounds good, and he said, I
dont see you fitting in very
well. You might want to look
at transferring.
Being redshirted one
semester and then asked to
transfer the next might be
the breaking point for many
college athletes but not for
Rice.
I was like, No, Im going
to do everything that I can.
I love UNC, Rice said. Its
not even an option. Im
going to fight to get a start-
ing spot.
I just looked him in the
eye and said, I dont know
how you can say that, youve
never given me a chance.
Bolowich told Rice he liked
his mentality but that he
needed to prove he deserved a
spot on the team.
And thats exactly what he
did.
Moving forward
Since hearing Bolowichs
words, Rice made a point
to prove he belonged on the
field, each and every time he
set foot on it.
From that point on I really
turned up the volume, Rice
said. Every practice I was
hungry. I was out there to get
something.
Rice got what he was look-
ing for during a spring seven-
v.-seven practice.
I had one practice where
we did a small-sided game
and I think I had seven
goals. It was like every time
I touched the ball it went
in.
He was playing forward for
the first time in his life.
And for the first time in
his collegiate career, Rice was
starting up top, alongside
Billy Schuler.
Rice got more playing time
and had a bit of success the
remainder of the spring.
Then during the sum-
mer, he scored five goals in
five games with the Carolina
Dynamo club team.
Things finally seemed to be
turning around for him.
Setback after setback
Rice continued to get more
playing time in the early part
of his redshirt freshman sea-
son, his second year in Chapel
Hill.
But injuries continued to
haunt him, and he was unable
to finish the season.
During the summer before
his redshirt freshman year,
Rice had surgery to remove
an extra bone in his ankle a
condition called Os Trigonum
syndrome.
The next spring, he had to
have his other ankle operated
on.
And then to top it all off,
Rice also suffered from a
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SportsFriday Friday, October 11, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 5
Munerlyn scores rst goal
By Michael Lananna
Senior Writer
Amber Munerlyn charged
into the Fezter Field box
with a reckless abandon
the kind of aggression you
wouldnt normally see out of
a person who had her teeth
knocked in a couple of weeks
ago, who still had a splint
holding her jaw together, who
dentists strongly suggested
shouldnt even be on a soccer
field.
There were six minutes left
in North Carolinas Thursday-
night 3-0 win against N.C.
State, and there Munerlyn
was, amid a crowd of
Wolfpack defenders, taking a
ball that knicked off of Kealia
Ohai and punching it past the
goalkeeper.
It was her first career goal.
Earlier in the contest, in the
59th minute, the freshman
forward tallied her first career
assist.
Munerlyn was all over
the field in her second game
back from injury after she
took an elbow in the face in
the first 30 seconds of UNCs
Sept. 15 match against Notre
Dame. She ll need to wear
her splint for at least another
month.
All the while, UNC coach
Anson Dorrance looked on
from the sidelines, amazed at
her effort.
Her jaw could fall out,
her upper mandible could
fall out, and this is a contact
sport, Dorrance said. She
North Carolina volleyball team to test streak against Duke
By Grace Raynor
Assistant Sports Editor
Theyve won 15 games in
a row, 29 consecutive games
in Carmichael Arena, and are
4-0 in the ACC.
With a 15-0 record to open
the season, North Carolina
is making history with the
best start of any UNC volley-
ball team, and with the high-
est-ranking ever at No. 10.
The hype swarms, the chat-
ter of their perfect season
ever present.
But the athletes ignore it
thats what theyve been taught.
And thats just the way
coach Joe Sagula likes it as
his squad prepares to host
Duke tonight followed by
Wake Forest Saturday.
We really dont talk about
streaks and stuff like that.
Those are things you look at
after the season they really
are, he said.
I hope things go well, but I
dont know what will happen.
The Blue Devils arrive
in Chapel Hill with a 4-0
ACC record, as well, and a
nine-game winning streak of
their own. With a threaten-
ing offense that stems from
a powerful front row, Sagula
said it is important that his
team try to simulate Dukes
tendencies as accurately as
possible in practice this week.
We know that they have
three very good hitters. Their
two outside hitters (Jeme)
Obeime, (Emily) Sklar and
their right side (Elizabeth)
Campbell, are a lot of their
offense, he said.
Were trying to block
really well we have to block
well Friday.
He said his own attack
must be balanced and utilize
all of its offensive threats, not
just its outside hitters.
We want to really do a
good job running our middles
against them. We cant
become one or two dimen-
sional, he said.
We cant become a team
thats just setting to our out-
side hitters alone.
With such a visible streak,
junior outside hitter Lauren
Adkins said that her team is
certainly aware of what is at
stake tonight and Saturday,
but that the players are trying
to think of what they have to
gain, as opposed to lose.
Everyone is coming at
your throat they want to be
the first one to beat the unde-
feated team, she said.
I think that does come with
pressure, but I think we like
the pressure, too, of playing our
hearts out to stay undefeated.
It will be Kayla
Berringers one of two
seniors last time playing
the Blue Devils in Carmichael
Arena during the regular
season. To date, the hitter has
tallied 124 kills in 47 sets good
for second-best on the team.
A wide grin split her face,
her exuberance evident as
she spoke about her favorite
rivalry.
I want to go beat them. I
want to go beat them. Thats
whats going through my
mind, she said.
And (I) want to beat them
bad.
sports@dailytarheel.com
No. 10 North Carolina
is undefeated with a
15-0 record to date.
WOMENS SOCCEr: UNC 3, N.C. StatE 0
dth/spencer herlong
Freshman forward Amber Munerlyn goes after the ball in a Thursday night win against N.C. State.
couldve taken another elbow,
couldve hit someones head,
the ball couldve popped up
and hit her in the jaw. She
plays with a wonderful sort of
fearlessness.
After the game, Munerlyn
showed a drastically differ-
ent side of her personality, a
timidity that never shows on
the soccer field.
It was another first for her
her first interview.
She was nervous.
It felt good, yeah, she
said, grinning with her make-
shift jaw as she recalled her
goal. It was about time.
A native of Corona, Calif.,
Munerlyn was the No. 6 2013
recruit in the country by Top
Drawer Soccer and a member
of the U20 National Team.
Dorrance said shes surpris-
ingly coachable for being
a high school superstar.
He said that shes unselfish
with the ball, that players
love playing with her, and he
raved about her ability to play
defense. Senior Crystal Dunn,
who Munerlyn assisted on a
goal Thursday, said she has an
engine on her that she loves
to see out of the forwards in
front of her.
Shes a fighter, Dunn said.
Shes a hard worker. She fits
in well with this system. Its
embedded in us just pres-
sure, pressure, pressure, and
she never stops running.
Munerlyn, evidently
uncomfortable with cameras
and reporters surrounding
her, was quick to deflect
praise after the game.
Especially as a freshman, I
just have to prove myself and
show them that I really want
to be here, she said.
Dorrance had a different
view.
Shes a really sweet,
humble kid, Dorrance said.
She doesnt have to be. She
was one of the top recruits in
America last year, and shes
got a wonderful sense of her-
self and humility, and I think
shes going to be a whale of a
Tar Heel.
On Thursday, Munerlyn
showed why.
sports@dailytarheel.com
Dunn dazzles in
UNC shutout
By Max Miceli
Staff Writer
Fetzer Field was slick on
Thursday night in Chapel
Hill when the No. 4 North
Carolina womens soccer team
took on in-state rival N.C.
State.
But senior midfielder
Crystal Dunns moves were
even more slick in the Tar
Heels dominant 3-0 victory
against the Wolfpack.
She is one of the greatest
dribblers Ive ever seen in my
life, coach Anson Dorrance
said, almost like a shoot first
point guard. She just (says),
Come at me, Im going to
carve you off the dribble and
bash this thing into the goal.
About 20 minutes into the
scoreless game, Dunn show-
cased that fancy footwork
at the top of the box. As her
defender fell for a hard fake,
Dunn hit a low hard strike
with her left foot to the side,
finding the net to give UNC a
lead it would not relinquish.
I was going toward the
right side and I kept her
going that way, Dunn said.
Then I cut it real quick back
to the left and I got the ball
on my left foot.
While the Wolfpack had
trouble getting any sort of
offensive opportunities and
rarely possessed the ball in
their offensive end, the Tar
Heels had no issue finding
the goal.
With 26 shots, the Tar Heels
thoroughly peppered the N.C.
State goal, forcing Wolfpack
goalkeeper Mackenzie Stelljes
to make five saves.
The Tar Heels second goal
of the night was Dunns elev-
enth of the season.
As freshman Amber
Munerlyn dribbled toward
the right side of the goal from
the 18-yard box, Dunn trailed
her, and the youngster knew
what she had to do.
I saw her coming in
underneath so I knew I had
to give it to her, Munerlyn
said. I just flicked it under
my foot.
Dunn took it from there,
threading two defenders and
slipping it past the goalie on
a shot she didnt think shed
made until she heard cheering.
While at this point it seems
as though Dorrance might be
expecting performances like
this from his best player every
game, he said he cant.
Whats shes doing is truly
remarkable, Dorrance said.
If I ever take that kid for
granted just smack me in the
face.
sports@dailytarheel.com
UNC Womens Basketball Team UNC Womens Basketball Team
holding
OPEN TRYOUTS!
OPEN TRYOUTS! OPEN TRYOUTS!
TO REGISTER for TRYOUTS
Contact Coach Ivory Latta
919-962-5186
ilatta12@unc.edu
OCTOBER 14th
6:30-7:30am
IN CARMICHAEL

ARENA
YOU MUST BE A
FULL-TIME STUDENT
& HAVE MEDICAL
CLEARANCE TO
PARTICIPATE.
Friday, October 11, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6
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.
Business
Opportunities
INTERESTED IN STARTUpS?
RoundBuzz, an RTP high tech company, is
looking for local agents to evangelize our
location aware text check ins. Bring your en-
ergy, innovation to promoting trials by local
merchants and UNC community. Base pay
$11/hr. +performance bonus. Send resume:
jobs@roundbuzz.com.
Child Care Wanted
PART-TiME SiTTER NEEDED ASAP! 3 boys,
ages 10, 7, 4. Mondays 12:45-4:30pm, Tues-
days 11:45am-6:45pm, Thursdays 11:45am-
4:30pm. Will pay above market for experience.
Non-smoker, must like dogs. 301-848-9406.
CHilD CARE NEEDED: Pick up from school
and babysitting for 6 year-old and 4 year-
old, Wednesdays, 11:30am-4:30pm. Sal-
ary negotiable. Mary Ann, 919-929-2948 or
mak1nc@aol.com.
SEEkiNg ExPERiENCED BABYSiTTER for in-
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wk. Must have excellent references. Spanish
speaking, CPR and First Aid certifed a plus.
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TUTORiNg AND SCHOOl PiCk UP. College
student needed to pick up my 2 kids from
school and tutor on basic math and science
every day M-F from 3:15-5pm or 5:30pm. 2
bright, engaging kids (1 middle school, 1 high
school) who are self motivated and fun. Need
help for dual working professional parents!
Call, text or email leisadennehy@hotmail.com.
919-960-7073.
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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.
SHARiNg A qUiET HOME. grad student
preferred. On a little lake, a few miles
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FOR RENT: Mill Creek on Martin luther king
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DElivERY DRivER: Tarheel Takeout needs de-
livery drivers. Your car, your music and none of
the headaches of being a waiter. Up to $1,000/
wk Email charles@tarheeltakeout.com.
ARE YOU A freshman, sophomore, junior? Year
round, low stress job on campus: STUDENT as-
sistant needed at lineberger Cancer Center.
FlExiBlE 3 hour shift Minimum. 12 hrs/wk.
Email resume: leslie_schreiner@med.unc.edu.
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE
CTi is a small business in Chapel Hill looking
for an individual to help coordinate 1 or more
of NiH funded research programs. Projects de-
velop online ed and/or serious games related to
substance abuse treatment, obesity, evaluation
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lOCAl TOY STORE NEEDS HElP! Now hiring
part-time staff for next semester. Would pre-
fer folks who can work at least some of the
upcoming winter break but we can be fexible.
Apply in person at The Childrens Store, 243
South Elliott Road, Chapel Hill (between Jersey
Mikes and the Monterrey Mexican restaurant).
UP AND DOiNg iT lANDSCAPiNg looking for
part-time landscapers and personal garden-
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Please respond to upanddoingit@yahoo.com.
UNC CliNiCAl RESEARCH STUDY recruit-
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to determine effcacy and safety of in-
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Candidate would fnd experience chal-
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RESEARCH ASSOCIATE
CTi is a small business in Chapel Hill looking for
an individual to help coordinate one or more
of NiH funded research programs. Projects de-
velop online ed and/or serious games related to
substance abuse treatment, obesity, evaluation
and reporting. NiH funded research. MA, MS,
MPH or higher. Please read full description and
apply at www.clinicaltools.com, Work at CTi.
919-960-8118.
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE
CTi is a small business in Chapel Hill looking
for an individual to help coordinate one or
more of NiH funded research programs. Proj-
ects develop online ed and/or serious games
related to substance abuse treatment, obesity,
evaluation and reporting. NiH funded research.
Masters preferred. Please read full description
and apply at www.clinicaltools.com, Work at
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Call 919-383-5708.
Internships
PAiD iNTERNSHiP: gain valuable sales expe-
rience with University Directories, a Chapel
Hill collegiate marketing company. Flexible
schedule. Average $13/hr. Email resume to
amoore@ucampusmedia.com, 919-240-6107.
Photography
liFE STYlE MODElS: $18-$25/hr, www.
meridiusmedical.com, Healthy, Ages 18+
should apply with pictures via email to
carolinability@gmail.com.
Roommates
ROOMMATE WANTED by female UNC sopho-
more. Mill Creek townhouse. 2BR/2BA, full
kitchen, W/D, carpeting, half mile to campus.
Rent share: $620/mo. includes water, parking.
336-339-2551.
FURNiSHED ROOM in apartment in home
near Eastgate. Separate entrance, utilities,
basic cable, internet, phone included. No
smoking, pets, deposit and lease required.
$550/mo. Photos available. 919-616-5431 or
919-932-1556.
Travel/Vacation
BAHAMAS SpRINg BREAk
$189 for 5 DAYS. All prices include: Round trip
luxury party cruise, accommodations on the is-
land at your choice of 13 resorts. Appalachia
Travel. www.BahamaSun.com, 800-867-5018.
Tutoring Wanted
PORTUgUESE TUTOR: UNC student looking for
Brazilian Portuguese tutor and conversation
coach. ideally would like to meet once a week.
Contact portuguese.unc@gmail.com.
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2016 Mt Carmel Church Rd.,
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Coffee and snacks served at 8:45am
Contemporary Worship service 9:00am
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EPISCOPAL CAMPUS MINISTRY
Join us for dinner & fellowship!
Tuesdays at 5:30 p.m.
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(c) 2013 TRiBUNE MEDiA SERviCES, iNC.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 6 -- Write or record your ideas.
Continue to increase enthusiasm. Except
for right now, when there could be a
breakdown ... more research is required.
love gives you extra patience. Be careful
now. go ahead and get started.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 6 -- A friends change in plans
alters your anticipated expenses. Work
it out. Take the philosophical high road.
Resist spending for the time being. Con-
sider it all with a sense of humor. Re-
search gets fascinating.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 6 -- Make travel plans, al-
though you have more at home than
you may realize. Continue to increase
creative output. generate a little contro-
versy. veto power could get exercised.
intuition guides you. keep completing
tasks and decreasing obligations.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 6 -- Make your move already.
An emergency at work requires full at-
tention. Postpone travel and commit-
ment. Youre gaining infuence. Expand
your understanding. Push hard to fnish a
project, and start a journey another day.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Share a dream with as-
sociates, and advance a level when they
sign on. Stay cool and move quickly.
Practice what you preach. Shift emo-
tional direction. Consider consequences
before acting. keep increasing your au-
thority this week.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 6 -- Stand up for what you
know is right. Watch your step, though.
Build a strong foundation. get what you
need. Have it delivered. Bring order out
of chaos. Find the fun in the situation
and grow that.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 6 -- Your status rises. Review
recent action to gain greater insight. Store
books and papers. Stay out of somebody
elses argument. Check equipment before
launching. Continue to gather data. Relax,
and it will come naturally.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 6 -- You get a jump on the
rest of the pack. Dont gamble. keep do-
ing your homework. Be diplomatic. gain
more than expected, although there may
be a disappointment as well. T
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 7 -- Youre moving up. Make
adaptations to your living arrangements.
Revive old associations and friendships.
Career opportunities percolate. Check
work orders for changes. Plan your strat-
egy so you can strike while the iron is hot.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7 -- Take it one step farther.
Stay fexible when something you try
doesnt work. Open your heart, but dont
tell all, yet. Watch for hidden complica-
tions. Dont get intimidated. Maintain
objectivity in a controversy. Finish up and
reward yourself with a treat.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 6 -- You and your team accom-
plish more than expected. Share expenses.
keep playing and expand the game. Apply
theories logically. Maintain your eye on
the ball. Anxiety could push you to act too
soon. Review your wish list.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 5 -- New possibilities open up,
including an interesting development.
Youll need to choose! Cut stress by re-
laxing with friends. Consider ideas as you
apply elbow grease to a household chore.
keep practicing. Youre gaining wisdom.
Be willing to expand.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If October 11th is Your Birthday...
Romantic fantasies become more achievable,
with domestic bliss available. Career or studies may
include travel, which suits you fine. Discovery and
exploration recur as themes. good news develops for
you and your partner next spring. keep squirreling
your nuts away and take time for play.
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From Page One Friday, October 11, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7
What am I thinking?
The Amazing Kreskin, a
real-life mind-reader, is com-
ing to Carrboro Saturday.
See online for story.
Water in Our World
UNCs Water in Our
World theme has been
extended another year. See
online for story.
Rices time to shine
UNC mens soccer player
Josh Rice finally gets his
chance to show his skills. See
pg. 4 for story.
Writing Fridays story
Read about William
Links biography of former
UNC-system President Bill
Friday. See pg. 3 for story.
games
Solution to
Thursdays 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
(C)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACross
1 Auto club offering
4 Gregory Peck role
8 Foster on a screen
13 Stretches of history
15 He actually played the
lyre
16 Amherst sch.
17 Two-time NBA MVP
Steve
18 Component of ocean
H2O
19 Lawn game using lobbed
missiles
20 Buff ancient ruler?
23 Attorney general before
Thornburgh
24 Yanks foe
25 Dudes
28 Own a few James Brown
albums?
33 Fez, e.g.
36 Bankruptcy factor
37 Polynesian island nation
38 Break __!
40 Fare named for
its shape
43 Fabric quantity
44 Mother of three
French kings
46 Shiny fabric
48 Arctic coast
explorer
49 Leaps over an
oily mud
puddle
53 DSL users need
54 Maos successor
55 Sticky-footed
lizard
59 Beef baloney?
64 Botanists category
66 Dweeb
67 Size measure
68 Competitors dream
69 A bit off the ground,
up
70 Sound like an ass
71 Bobbin
72 Ketel One competitor
73 NFL stats
Down
1 Common break hr.
2 Speak
3 Refuse
4 Pitch Perfect co-star
Kendrick
5 Summer phenomenon
6 Curved support
7 Short jacket
8 Concession stand candy
9 Easternmost Arabian
Peninsula country
10 Dr. Strangelove feature
11 Adherents suffix
12 Start to stop?
14 With 52-Down, grilled
fare
21 Take control
22 Bottom line?
26 __ Gay
27 Ray in the ocean
29 Boxers attendant
30 Fall back
31 Its a wrap
32 Terrif!
33 Pilgrim to Mecca
34 Diamond clan
35 Trophy case memento
39 Econ. measure
41 Bug
42 Earthbound bird
45 Crewman for 4-Across
47 Tech sch. grad
50 Slow boat
51 Hangs around the house?
52 See 14-Down
56 Pungent Thai dish
57 Play with, as clay
58 Gives the go-ahead
60 First name in folk
61 Cause wrinkles, in a way
62 Joel of Wicked
63 Water whirled
64 Some mil. bases
65 Edge
percent of North Carolinas
population compared to 8.5
percent of total UNC under-
graduates who report being
only black.
Deborah Stroman, chair-
woman of the Carolina Black
Caucus and an exercise and
sports science professor, said
this is concerning.
The University is the uni-
versity of the people, she said.
We have an obligation as the
flagship university to repre-
sent the people of the state.
Memory said the low num-
ber of black males applying to
college is a national issue, and
its hard to speculate why this
is happening.
She also said fewer young
men in general, regardless of
race, are applying to college,
and they might not be attend-
ing in order to help support
their families.
It really depends on what
the life goals are for these
men, Memory said.
Shakeel Harris, a junior at
UNC who identifies as black,
said getting black men to
UNC starts in the home.
If youre not pushed as a
child to do well and succeed
educationally, you ll lack the
drive, he said.
Harris also said white stu-
dents are more likely to be
pushed to do well educationally
than blacks, giving them privi-
lege over minority students.
UNC doesnt have an offi-
cial affirmative action policy,
but personal attributes are
considered when looking at
applications though they
do not guarantee admission.
We do seek qualities in the
student that will help shape
the incoming class, Memory
said. (But) we only want to
admit the strongest students
of all ethnicities and colors.
The UNC environment
Stroman said low black
male enrollment is of crisis-
level concern and UNCs envi-
ronment should be taken into
consideration.
Is (UNC) a welcoming
community for young black
men? Does it embrace their
culture? she said.
Darius Latham, president
of UNCs Black Student
Movement, said the University
has a fairly welcoming envi-
ronment for black men.
I dont necessarily know
if UNC, as an entire campus
community, embraces Black
culture, he said in an email.
However, Im confident that
the UNC community is toler-
ant of its existence.
But some believe UNC is not
as diverse as advertised.
We are diverse in certain
aspects, Harris said. But, in
terms of race, Im not going
to say were missing the mark
completely, but there are
strides that need to be made.
Clayton said black males
who are currently enrolled
should be asked why they
applied to UNC to get a sense
of what could be done dif-
ferently to help alleviate low
applicant and enrollment
numbers.
Latham made similar
remarks to Clayton.
I dont know how many
minority students were actually
admitted to Carolina and sim-
ply decided not to enroll, he
said. But it would be beneficial
to the University (because of
these low enrollment numbers)
to reach out and see exactly
what led students to enroll at
other institutions.
He also said minority stu-
dents should speak up during
class discussions.
If you happen to be the
only minority in a class, you
should make more of an effort
to be involved in classroom
conversation not because
youre a race representative,
but because your viewpoint
and outlook on topics is just
as valued, he said.
Despite a low number of
black males, freshman Garrett
Holloway said he doesnt feel
out of place at UNC.
Ive been able to form some
bonds with other African-
American men here, and I
think the fact that there arent
a lot of black men here is what
makes us closer, he said.
Stroman said the black male
voice benefits and enhances
UNCs academic environment.
(Black men) bring about
a greater richness in thought
and action, she said. I would
hate to have a university where
the only young black men
on this campus are athletes.
That doesnt help the athletic
department. That doesnt help
the academic community.
Student groups such
as BSM make it a point
to ensure the black voice
remains present at UNC.
(BSM) makes sure the
Black voice does not get lost
or undermined and that issues
pertaining specifically to our
community do not get pushed
under the rug, Latham said.
Minority outreach
The undergraduate admis-
sions office holds recruitment
events in the state and nation-
wide in an attempt to educate
larger numbers of black men
about the University.
Were just casting a wide
net, Memory said. Students
of any background, whether
theyre born in North Carolina
or not, can fit in at Carolina.
The Provosts Committee
on Inclusive Excellence and
Diversity is also assessing how
students are connected with
and informed about opportu-
nities at UNC, Clayton said.
We need to connect more
authentically with those pop-
ulations, she said.
Minority outreach pro-
grams such as Project
Uplift and Tar Heel Target
aim to do just that.
These programs connect
with communities and fami-
lies, inform minority students
and help them begin to see
themselves at UNC, Clayton
said.
Tar Heel Target sends
minority student recruitment
volunteers to their hometown
high schools to meet with
prospective students. Project
Uplift invites about 1,000 ris-
ing high school seniors from
historically underserved pop-
ulations to spend two days
experiencing the academic
and social climate of UNC.
Carolina College Advising
Corps, another outreach
program, advises students on
how to apply for college and
reaches 18 percent of all black
high school seniors statewide.
We see excellence and
diversity as inextricably
linked, Memory said.
We dont think we can
have one without the other.
university@dailytarheel.com
ENROLLmENT
from page 1
cation.
Bill understood that
public universities serve the
individual interest of students
that the ability to come at a
reasonable price was the door
to upward mobility, he said.
The great defender
Friday presided over the
system during the Cold War,
a tumultuous time for the
United States.
Bill may be the only major
university president to sort
of survive that entire period,
Leloudis said. That was a
time of extraordinary change.
Leloudis said the most
obvious example of Fridays
integrity during a tough polit-
ical time was his response
to the Speaker Ban of 1963
that forbade members of the
Communist Party or any-
one who pleaded the Fifth
Amendment when questioned
about their communist affili-
ation from speaking at sys-
tem campuses.
Leloudis said the ban was
BILL FRIDAY
from page 1
never endorsed the walkout.
Instead, the association is
organizing a walk-in during
American Education Week,
which begins Nov. 18, associa-
tion President Rodney Ellis
said.
We want to invite our
decision-makers and policy-
makers to visit schools ... just
see for themselves, firsthand,
the impact that their deci-
sions have had, he said.
Meanwhile, he said the
association is planning legal
action against several recent
legislative decisions, includ-
ing a law that uses state
money to fund vouchers for
private school tuition.
WALKOUT
from page 1
than national 30 locations,
primarily in college towns.
Construction has already
begun for the Chapel Hill store.
We open about two loca-
tions a month and have no
plans of slowing down, said
Renee Sarnecky, a marketing
manager at Insomnia Cookies.
After recent success with our
(University of South Carolina)
and (University of Georgia)
campuses, Chapel Hill was a
logical move for us.
Ronnie Edwards, the gen-
eral contractor for the build-
ing project, said construction
is set to end Nov. 1, and the
store will open Nov. 4.
Insomnia will operate next
to BSkis and a few stores
down from Pita Pit, which
also offer late-night cookie
delivery service.
To be honest, I dont think
that a place like ours, which
is predominantly a meal and
pita place, or any of the other
places such as Jimmy Johns,
are really going to be affected
that much, said Josh Sanders,
owner of Pita Pit. I dont think
people are going to be decid-
ing, Do I want a pita Philly
steak or do I want a chocolate
chip cookie? I think generally
you just have your craving.
Insomnia offers catering
for large groups as well as gift
boxes to accompany its regu-
lar menu, which includes 12
cookie varieties with optional
toppings, ice-cream-and-cook-
ie sandwiches, brownies a la
mode, cookie cakes and milk.
Sarnecky said campus out-
reach for the business will be
a priority.
We will have marketing
reps all over campus once we
open, Sarnecky said. We will
be distributing free cookies
coupons and delivery deals to
celebrate our opening.
Though cookies and more
are tempting to some stu-
dents, others are skeptical
about price.
I think most Carolina
students get their fill of cook-
ies from the dining hall, said
sophomore Emily Milkes.
It sounds pretty good, said
sophomore Justin Pack. I feel
like at night its just whatever
youre craving. Your inhibi-
tions go out the window.
city@dailytarheel.com
COOKIEs
from page 1
Highlights from the life of Bill Friday
Bill Friday served as president of the UNC system from 1956 to 1986. He was respected by politicians and college presidents for his
level-headed and diplomatic reactions to the many controversies he faced during his tenure.
COMPILED BY CAROLINE LELAND, SOURCE: NORTHCAROLINAHISTORY.ORG DTH/DANIELLE HERMAN
July 13, 1920
Bill Friday was born
in Raphine, Va.
1941
Friday graduated
from what is now
N.C. State
University.
1948
After earning his law
degree from UNC,
Friday started work
as an assistant dean
of students at UNC.
1956
He was appointed
president of the
UNC system.
1963
Friday worked to
overturn the
Speaker Ban law.
1970s
Friday presided
over racial
desegregation.
1971
Friday was
appointed to lead all
16 universities in the
system.
1985
He received the American
Council on Educations
National Distinguished
Service Award for Lifetime
Achievement.
1986
The Council of Advancement
and Support of Education rated
Friday the most eective public
university president. He retired
the same year.
Oct. 12, 2012
Friday passed away
after years of
continuing to speak
out against tuition
increases.
primarily trying to silence
students who were calling for
racial justice.
Through all of that, Bill
was a great defender of free
speech and open inquiry on
public university campus, and
of the right to students and
faculty to pose hard questions
about the world we live in,
Leloudis said.
Bill was a target of the
lawsuit, but behind the scenes
he was advising students
about how to effectively battle
the speaker ban.
A lasting legacy
Moeser said he learned
about modest leadership and
integrity from Friday.
The lesson to learn from
Bill Friday is that effective
leadership is often quiet,
behind the scenes and not
flamboyant, he said. The
other thing I would add is
tenacious adherence to prin-
ciple. He never departed from
what he believed in.
Ross said Friday defined
how the UNC system should
serve North Carolina.
I think were still deeply
committed to our mission
of service and reaching into
every community in North
Carolina, he said.
Williams said when he
thinks of Friday, he thinks
of the great leaders love for
Chapel Hill.
If the mention of a per-
sons name brings a smile to
your face, thats a pretty dog-
gone good legacy.
university@dailytarheel.com
He added that the group
is speaking out against the
removal of higher salaries for
teachers with masters degrees.
Who doesnt want a
teacher with masters degree
certification in the class-
room? Ellis said. Thats just
ridiculous.
Another advocacy effort
involves Red4EdNC, a cam-
paign started by teacher
Angie Scioli, which encour-
ages teachers to wear red on
Wednesdays in protest of
state education policies.
Scioli said teachers state-
wide are frustrated about
stagnant salaries and growing
class sizes.
We feel like both parties
are in a position to pass bet-
ter laws, said Scioli, who has
taught in Wake County for 20
years. We should all be mad.
The state of North Carolina
has slipped to 46th nationally
in teacher salaries, paying
teachers an average salary of
nearly $10,000 less than the
national average.
Chuck Hennessee, a mid-
dle school teacher in Chapel
Hill, said many of his col-
leagues left their jobs because
their pay does not cover living
expenses.
We have become the
laughingstock of the nation,
he said. I will continue to
(teach) as long as I can, but
even I am considering other
options.
state@dailytarheel.com
WERE THE MILLERS K
Fri & Sat: 7:10, 9:30 Sun: 7:10 Tue-Thu: 7:10, 9:20
THE WAY, WAY BACK J
Fri: 7:00 Sat: 4:30, 7:00
Sun: 7:00 Wed & Thu 7:00
THIS IS THE END K
Fri & Sat: 9:20 Wed & Thu: 9:10
DESPICABLE ME 2 I
Sat & Sun: 4:40
The Varsity Theatre
123 E. Franklin Street, Chapel Hill 967-8665
www.varsityonfranklin.com
Movie Showtimes for Week 10/11-10/17
All Movies $4.00 CLOSED MONDAY
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Opinion Friday, October 11, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 8
Established 1893, 120 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATUrED OnlinE rEADEr cOmmEnT
Celebrate our history
this University day
TO THE EDITOR:
On behalf of the Board of
Trustees, I invite the entire
Carolina family students,
faculty, staff, alumni, par-
ents and community mem-
bers to show their sup-
port for Chancellor Carol
Folt this Saturday, Oct. 12,
on University Day.
University Day is an
opportunity for us to cele-
brate Carolinas rich history
and look to the future. This
year the day will be even
more exciting for Carolina
with Chancellor Folts
installation. We ll hear her
speak about the Universitys
future as we celebrate 220
years of public higher edu-
cation in America.
The festivities begin at
1:30 p.m. in Polk Place, on
the steps of South Building,
and a reception following
installation will be held
outside Wilson Library. (In
case of rain, the ceremony
will be held in the Smith
Center.)
The days events include
presenting five outstand-
ing Carolina alumni with
Distinguished Alumna and
Alumnus Awards and hon-
oring one of our top faculty
members for service to the
state, the nation and the
University.
University Day is part
of four days of compelling
events that begin Thursday
evening and continue
through Sunday afternoon
with a students-only cel-
ebration known as Folt
Fest. For details about all
the events surrounding
the installation of our 11th
chancellor, see installation.
unc.edu. I look forward to
seeing you throughout the
weekend.
Lowry Caudill
Board of Trustees
Chairman
Athletics fee increase
cant be justified
TO THE EDITOR:
In response to the Oct.
10 story on athletic fees, I
was very disappointed to
see Athletic Director Bubba
Cunningham and Senior
Associate Athletic Director
Martina Ballen justify their
request for an increase in
the student fee for athletics
by saying its just an infla-
tionary increase. Have they
had their head in the sand
for the last several years?
High unemployment
continues to dog the state,
faculty and staff have had
little or no raises for years,
and academic departments
have to do more with less
every year, while everything
on the athletic side of cam-
pus is getting supersized or
expanded or gold-plated.
Where is our inflationary
increase?
That this request comes
from the side of campus
that has brought shame
and disgrace to UNC is all
the more galling.
Jim OHara
Professor
Classics
lETTErS TO
THE EDiTOr
This petition is a great way to make sure
that student voices are heard and then
immediately ignored by our beloved BOG.
justaguy, on the petition against the change in the drop-add period
If the mention of a persons name brings a
smile to your face, thats a pretty doggone
good legacy.
Roy Williams, on the legacy of Bill Friday one year after his death
EDiTOriAl cArTOOn By Ngozika Nwoko, nwoko@live.unc.edu
Trade
a beer,
make a
deal
T
ucked at the end of a
cobblestone street, just
around the bend from
the Houses of Parliament, an
aged pub sits like any other.
Inside, a heavy, dusty bell sits
in the shadows. Waiting.
It rings seldom, this bell,
but with purpose. This is the
Members of Parliaments pub.
And on the days they skip ses-
sion, in search of a pint and a
good conversation before a big
vote, the bell reminds them
when its time to get back to
business.
Eight minutes, the ring
means. Eight minutes to get
back in time. The drunker you
are, the better.
It shows a bit of the British
mindset: work professionally,
but not always too seriously.
Have a pint with lunch, or
hold a happy hour at the office.
Dont skimp on the ales.
They say its this last one
that helps the country run so
smoothly. Its this last one, then,
thats fueling the Brits disbelief
toward America these days.
While Im here, theres no
hiding my roots. I cant say five
words before its clear where
Im from.
They all notice the accent,
all want to know what I think
about their rain and markets
and double-decker buses.
Recently, though, the Brits
only have one question.
Whats the deal with your
government these days?
They always frame it that
way: my government. As if
I own it. As if I or anyone can
explain the nonsense going on
in Washington.
Nonsense is the operative
word, one says.
They arent interested in the
details. From here, all they see
is the worlds most powerful
nation collapsing under the
weight of its own hardheaded-
ness. They see America as that
weird, distant aunt the colo-
nies that broke away, dumped
the tea in the ocean and then
downgraded their language.
And now, were bordering
on becoming the international
laughingstock.
It must be awfully dark
around there these days, a col-
league laughs, when I tell him
Im from D.C.
Your politics are quite
funny, you guys, says another.
Your politicians are like little
children.
A third, by the time Im
about to start spewing high
school Spanish and pretending
Im from Madrid, has kinder
words.
I like Americans, he says.
I think youre very welcoming
people.
But things like this make
it so easy to have a go at
Americans to really just
bash them.
They dont get it. They cant
begin to fathom it, to imagine
political polarization dramatic
enough to paralyze an entire
system and bring a country to
a screeching halt.
I just want the shutdown to
go away, a friend in the States
said the other day. I want to be
able to talk about something
else. But here, we cant talk
about America in any other
capacity not as long as the
shutdown drags on. Were left to
gear ourselves up, fight against
the ridicule, start arguments in
defense of the nonsense.
Or we can simply take a step
back, look for a compromise.
And we can have another beer.
10/14: YELLOWTAIL
Columnist Katherine Proctor on
wine fromdown under.
N
E
X
T
megan cassella
Notes from a Small Island
Junior journalism and global stud-
ies major from Laurel, Md.
Email: megancassella@gmail.com
SPEAK OUT
Writing gUidelines
Please type: Handwritten letters will not be accepted.
Sign and date: No more than two people should sign letters.
Students: Include your year, major and phone number.
Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number.
Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit
letters to 250 words.
sUBMissiOn
Drop-off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary Street, Chapel
Hill, N.C. 27514
E-mail: opinion@dailytarheel.com
Kvetching board
kvetch:
v.1 (Yiddish) to complain
So much for Blackout. Im
wearing white as a sign of
surrendering this season on
Zero Dark Thursday.
Some girls need to be
reminded: If you wear high-
heeled rain boots ... youre
gonna have a bad time.
To that litterer who dropped
a fruit peel on the Ehaus
trail the other morning:
Orange you glad I have this
big-ass bruise on my knee
from slipping?
Wearing long pants but still
having to shave for your
LFIT ... the struggle is real.
To the #lesbihonest girl:
You have a boyfriend in
New Zealand. #acaawkward
#whoopthereitis
To the lab that sent me an
email with subject, PARTIC-
IPANTS NEEDED FOR ANAL
FISSURE STUDY: You and
me both, right???
To my housemates who
found out weve been pay-
ing the wrong power bill
when our electricity was
turned of: I feel like weve
really been kept in the dark
about this one.
To the football player nap-
ping in Davis on Monday.
Did your siesta on the feld
this Saturday not accommo-
date your lack of sleep?
Number of times Ive used
my $200 textbook to study:
Two. Number of bugs Ive
killed with it: Three.
SafeWalk walks me all the
way home only to leave
when I get to my door. What
a tease! At least tuck me in.
To the UNC physics depart-
ment: If you think an aver-
age score of a 69 on a test
means it was too easy, then
youre as dysfunctional as
our government.
To the tour guide I over-
heard: If by We call the third
through eighth foors of
Davis the stackyou actually
mean, No one has a special
name for part of a library,
that would be weird,then I
totally agree with you.
Quick shoutout to my
fellow students in Animal
Behaviors who suppressed
the urge to giggle when we
started talking about the
birds known as Great Tits.
To the boy who left his
laundry in three washers in
Stacy for so long that it was
dry and it smelled: DO BET-
TER. And its time to invest
in some new boxers.
To the girl in Wendys who lis-
tens to Miley Cyrus We Cant
Stopon repeat while under
the infuence of Adderall:
Maybe you *should* stop!
There could be an Over-
smelled at Carolina dedi-
cated to Frat Court.
The deepest circle of hell
is reserved for people who
provide spreadsheets of
numerical data in JPG form.
To the dead fly in my
breakfast at Lenoir: I know,
the new music is killing
me too.
Send your one-to-two
sentence entries to
opinion@dailytarheel.com,
subject line kvetch.
T
he absence of fire
drills in the wake
of the costliest
residence hall fire in recent
memory indicates a lack
of earnestness in Granville
Towers safety policies and
preparations. Fire drills
should not be seen as a
burden or a waste of time;
rather, they should be com-
mended as the pre-emptive
safety measure that they are
and taken more seriously.
The fire and resulting
damage that took place
A second for safety
EDiTOriAl
in Granville Towers last
November cost up to $1
million. Nonetheless,
Granville Towers has only
just begun scheduling fire
drills and might not have
had a fire drill in years.
Not only are these
practices dangerous and a
disservice to its residents,
but it is a blatant viola-
tion of the fire code, which
requires quarterly unan-
nounced fire drills.
The argument that fire
drills will cause compla-
cency among residents is
nothing more than a poor
excuse aimed at down-
playing the illegal and
unsafe practices or lack
thereof that have been the
norm at the residence hall.
Its time for a change in
the fire safety policies of
residence halls campus-
wide. The fact that many
students cannot recall prac-
ticing a fire drill indicates
that more attention should
be paid to safety precau-
tions across the board.
The best way to prepare
for disasters is through
practicing your reactions
to these situations. If a fire
drill is responsible for sav-
ing even just one life on
this campus then it has
served its purpose, and its
time that Granville Towers
plans accordingly.
More importance
should be given to
fire drills.
R
enewable energy
is no longer only
a product for
wealthy environmentalists
and green corporations.
Sustainable power sources
are emerging all over the
place. From the rooftops
of Morrison Residence
Hall to new solar farms
in Orange County, renew-
ables are becoming a feasi-
ble source of clean energy.
And there should be
more of it in Chapel Hill.
The addition of solar
panels on the roof of
Morrison is a testament
Get green
EDiTOriAl
to the willingness of the
University to invest in
renewable technology
on campus. While space
around campus for installa-
tions akin to the solar farm
developments in Orange
County is hard to find,
there are still plenty of roof-
tops for the expansion of
the solar panel technology
present on campus.
The recent controver-
sies surrounding the coal
divestment movement
show that environmental
awareness is in the hearts
of students. Central to the
debate is the Universitys
commitment to the envi-
ronment. While divest-
ment from coal may be a
long way off, investment
in renewable energy
technology on campus is
another possible outlet to
honor this commitment.
Diversification of energy
sources via implementation
of new renewable technol-
ogy will only serve to lower
energy costs for Orange
County residents includ-
ing the Universitys costs.
Moreover, Strata Solar, a
solar technology provider,
is based out of Chapel Hill.
The University would liter-
ally be buying the technol-
ogy from its neighbors
helping not only the local
environment, but the local
economy.
The stage is set for
renewable energy to solidi-
fy its place at UNC.
Renewable energy
sources are needed
on campus.
cOlUmn
U
niversity adminis-
trators are often the
last to know about
whats going on in the stu-
dent body. While professors
and deans may work with
us on a day-to-day basis, the
transition to South Building
seems to erect a stone wall
that separates leaders from
the students they oversee,
and hence administrators
and students alike need to
make a focused effort to
make that dialogue happen.
Jim Dean, the new provost
who formerly served as a pro-
fessor and as dean of Kenan-
Flagler Business School, said
previously that working with
students was the best part
of his job. Interaction came
more easily then.
Now, as provost, what
used to come naturally is a
focal point of his job: getting
to know the views of the stu-
dent body.
The starting point is
working with (the student
body president). Though I
realize that he would proba-
bly be better connected with
students who are involved in
Jim Dean
Executive vice chancellor and
provost and former dean of
Kenan-Flagler Business School
Email: james_dean@unc.edu
student government.
Beyond an official or
political capacity, upper-level
administrators must also get
to know students personally.
I try to have a lot of ran-
dom interactions with stu-
dents. When I see students,
Ill just try to introduce myself
to them, get their perspectives
and so on. And Im a pretty
avid user of social media.
The clear failures of com-
munication weve seen in our
new state government must
not be repeated in UNCs new
administration. In addition to
a new chancellor and provost,
we also have a new chairman
of the Board of Trustees, chief
information officer, vice chan-
cellor of finance and adminis-
tration and vice chancellor for
communications and public
affairs. A lot of scandals have
afflicted this University in the
last few years; with so many
new faces at the top, we risk
veering off into a completely
new direction.
Dean has studied how
organizations work for
most of his academic life.
New leadership can change
too quickly or not quickly
enough. There is a risk of los-
ing the way of the University
or trying things that dont
make sense. Its important
for us to touch base with the
appropriate people around
campus, so that any changes
that we need to make will be
as informed as possible.
With a job that will give
him a lot of hell in the next
few years, Dean is optimistic.
I sometimes say it tongue
in cheek, but I mean it: This
University got through the
Civil War. I think were going
to be OK.
Matt Leming is a cartoon-
ist for The Daily Tar Heel.
Jim Dean talks about connecting with students in his new job.
The Friday Interview
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
nine board members, the opinion co-editors and the editor.
EDITorIal BoarD mEmBErs
NIcolE comparaTo EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
saNEm kaBaca OPINION CO-EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
zach gavEr OPINION CO-EDITOR
mIchaEl DIcksoN ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR
AlexAndrA willCox
AliZA ConwAY
dYlAn CunninghAm
gABriellA KostrZewA
KAreem rAmAdAn
Kern williAms
mAhmoud sAAd
sierrAwingAte-BeY
treY Bright

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