Read without ads and support Scribd by becoming a Scribd Premium Reader.
 
Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893
Thursday, July 7, 2011Volume 119, Issue 50
dailytarheel.com
I ve ipped te uy bd f Et… Put ut my d, d tuced te fce f Gd.
 John GIllEsPIE MaGEE Jr.,
“HigH FligHt”
 weekly summer issue
ANOTHER LAWSUIT
Former UNC deensve endMchae McAdoo s sunUNC and he NCAA over hseby.
Pge 3.
A NEW ‘TARHEEL VOICE’
Jones Ane srepacn onmepay-by-pay an-nouncer Woody Dur-ham as ‘Voce o he tar Hees.’
Pge 3.
This day in history
JULY 7, 1972
 the Board o governorsor he newy ormed UNCsysem hed s rs meena he Unversy o NorhCarona a Charoe.
DUST TO DUST
RIP
Inside
CCI EXPANSION
inormaon technooyServces ofcas say MaryCooper’s pan o expand CCiprnn w be mpemenedn he a. Prnn w bemore expensve or sudensnex year, houh.
Pge 3.
Rno Sarr
Beatles drummer
Arhur ConanDoye
Scottish writer
Bo: Jy 7, 1940Dd: Jy 7, 1930
Cause o Deah: Hear aack 
Up, Up, And AwAy 
Goveror’sSchool iee of $200,000
The progra st rase the oeb the e of Agst to keep oe of ts two capses ope for stets.
By Stirling Little
Saff Wrer
 About 30,000 high school students have attend-ed the state’s Governor’s School program since itsinception in 1963. After lawmakers eliminated funding for the pro-gram in the most recent state budget, directors arehoping those alumni will give back to ensure theprogram remains accessible to prospective students.Jim Hart, president of the Governor’s School Alumni Association, said the program’s usual cel-ebration of its Alumni Day on Saturday will now bededicated to fundraising efforts.Governor’s School is a six-week summer residen-tial program held at campuses in Winston-Salemand Raleigh for rising high school seniors.Hart said Alumni Day will also consist of “a fewhundred people of all ages brainstorming together”about ways to solicit more private donations.The program must raise at least $200,000 by the end of August to gain approval from the state’sDepartment of Public Instruction for the operationof at least one of the two campuses, he said.“The news that Governor’s School lost fundinghasn’t been well received by alums,” Hart said. “Butit has gotten lots of people charged up about doingsomething about it.”Michael McElreath, director of the campus inRaleigh, said Governor’s School has traditionally  been one of the few extracurricular programs in thestate that did not require students to pay tuition orfees.“There are lots of ways to reach education if yourparents have enough disposable income,” he said.“Governor’s School is a way to get it without that.”In 2010, Governor’s School began charging stu-
Alumni dAy 
Time:
10 a.m. o 5 p.m. Saurday
location:
Vann Hall a Meredh College and heSalem Fne Ars Cener n Wnson-Salem
Info:
hp://b.ly/pkU1Bo
Dth/erin hull
 the Unversy’s Medcal Ar Operaons, currenly a Horace Wllams Arpor, s movng o he Ralegh-Durham inernaonal Arpor a he end of he monh.
Electio filigs et to sho real race
Homeless struggle ith metal healthcare
Dth/Stephen Mitchell
Mchael Wood eaches a class forhomeless ndvduals abou hehousng, fnancal and healhcareresources avalable o hem.
Hoeess peope copewth te access toa a treatet.Poteta caateshave t J 15 tofe for the fa eecto.
Meical Air service to leave Horace williams Airort
By Andy Thomason
Summer Edor
H
orace Williams Airport isn’tmuch more than a 4,000-foot runway, a few trailer-like buildings and an openfield of small planes and rusty utilities.To get in during the day, you can driveinto the gravel parking lot through theopen gate. At night, you can enter thepasscode that’s clearly printed on theclosed gate (it’s 1-1-1-1).In an age of ironclad airport security,Horace Williams is quaint even by smallairport standards. And, only a five-minute drive from cam-pus, the University-owned airport is 420quiet acres at a time when UNC is relent-lessly expanding on all sides.Not for much longer. At the end of the month, the University’sMedical Air Operations will move fromChapel Hill to the Raleigh-DurhamInternational Airport, ending its 43-yearresidence and signaling the beginning of the end for Horace Williams Airport.The move comes despite the fact thatthe airport, scheduled to be closed perma-nently to make space for Carolina North, will probably not close for at least a year. And it has some faculty upset.“For most of (the pilots), yes, it’s moreinconvenient and more inconvenient for(medical faculty), particularly those thatlive in Chapel Hill,” said Dr. Tom Bacon,director of the North Carolina Area HealthEducation Centers (AHEC), the organiza-tion that oversees the Medical Air service.But the discontent goes beyond mereinconvenience, Bacon said.“There’s a lot of attachment to the oldairport,” he said.“There’s this long tradition of our peopleflying in and out of there,” he added.“Change is hard. Anytime, change istough. So there’s that.”
By Sarah Glen
Cy Edor
 With six days left for poten-tial public servants to file forNovember’s election, the fieldstill lacks true competition. As of Wednesday morning,15 people hadfiled to run forthe 18 openseats in OrangeCounty, butnone of theopenings cur-rently havemore candidates than positions.The two-week filing periodruns through July 15.
Cpe hi
 With one term under his belt,Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt hasdecided to run for another term.Kleinschmidt said he wants tosupport development by updatingthe town’s Comprehensive Plan.“The question we need toanswer is how is our community going to handle the trauma of change?” he said.
LOCAL OFFICIALS DECLARE CANDIDACY FOR NOVEMBER ELECTION
Fifteen of the 18 open seats in Orange County have been led for, but candidates are yet to face opposition. Filing ends July 15.
SOURCE: HTTP://WWW.CO.ORANGE.NC.USDTH/ANNA THOMPSON
 
CHAPEL HILL
Mayor: 1 Seat
Mark Kleinschmidt *
Town Council: 4 Seats
Lee StorrowLaney DaleMia Day Burroughs *James Barrett
CHAPEL HILL  CARRBORO
CARRBOROHILLSBOROUGH
Augustus ChoJason Baker
Mayor: 1 Seat
Mark Chilton *
Board of Alderman: 3 Seats
Dan Coleman *Michelle Johnson
Mayor: 1 Seat
Tom Stevens *
Town Commissioners: 3 Seats
Evelyn P. Lloyd *Eric Hallman *Lydia Lavelle *
Board of Education: 4 4-year term seatsBoard of Education:2 yrunexpired term
Jamezetta R. Bedford *
* These are incumbents
By Chelsey Dulaney
Senor Wrer
Michael Wood has seen hisshare of dark days. What developed as a bad habitin his teenage years eventually landed him a 13-month stint inprison and later left him living onthe floor of a Chapel Hill home-less shelter.Last year, Wood was one of about 3.5 million Americans whoexperienced homelessness.He was also part of the esti-mated 25 percent of that popula-tion — or about 875,000 indi- viduals — who struggled with achronic mental illness. And compared to the largenumber of homeless individuals with mental illnesses, the mentalhealthcare services available aredisproportionately low.
Te cue
 Where the cycle of high mentalillness in the homeless popula-tion begins is difficult for many to discern.Chris Moran, executive direc-tor of the Inter-Faith Councilfor Social Service, said for many chronically homeless people,
See
HOmElESS,
page 7See
GOVERnOR’S SCHOOl,
page 7See
AiRPORT,
page 7
Council members Jim Ward,Donna Bell, Matt Czajkowskiand Sally Greene all have termsthat expire this year but have yetto file for reelection.Recent UNC graduate LeeStorrow said he will seek a seaton the council by supporting astrong sense of involvement.“I’m passionate about citizenengagement and reaching out tocommunities to see how people want their town to look,” he said.Laney Dale, who moved tothe area four years ago, said he isrunning to give back to the com-munity he has grown to love.“I would like to maintain andimprove upon the quality of liv-ing in Chapel Hill,” he said. Augustus Cho, chairman of thetransportation board who ran asa mayoral candidate in 2009, hasalso filed for a council seat.“Chapel Hill is a special place,and I would like to play a part infurthering the greater interest versus narrow interests,” he said.Jason Baker, who sits on thetown’s planning board, has puthimself in the running and said
 
ELECTIONSLOCAL
       2       0       1       1
See
ElECTiOn,
page 7
 
today
Swt Calna S:
Th CaiWla Ba will b plai at thist which atus sha acia a ba tt. Th t is .
T:
6 p.m. t 9 p.m.
Lcatn:
Uisit Mall
Friday
Fas n t Fnt Pc:
MlMlt a Th Wick Mj willb plai at this wk’s t. Tht is .
T:
5 p.m. t 9 p.m.
Lcatn:
Th Calia I
10 b 10 (fstval):
10 b 10 is aitatial stial  10-miutplas. Th stial psts 10  thm tha 900 scipts submitt. Thal amissi pic is $14 acsts $16  th a  th shw. Th t ctius thuhut thwk.
T:
8 p.m.
Lcatn:
Th Cab AtsCt
Saturday
Fal fn:
Sp th a i Hills-buh, which is fi a ull slat actiitis that appal t all as. Th a will utu atisa m-statis a ui tus, amth this.
T:
Stats at 8 a.m.
Lcatn:
137 W. Maat La,Hillsbuh
 
 A suspicious person wasknocking on a window at 12:29a.m. Sunday at 700 BolinwoodDrive, according to Chapel Hillpolice reports.
 
Someone reported a suspi-cious Crown Victoria with a thin blue line license plate on its frontand tinted windows at 8 p.m.Sunday at the corner of EstesDrive and Martin Luther King Jr.Boulevard, according to ChapelHill police reports.Children were playing with alighter and started a fire outsideat 6:26 p.m. Saturday at 500Umstead Drive, according toChapel Hill police reports.
 
Someone threw a rockthrough a window and stole sev-eral items at 7:45 p.m. Saturday at310 McMasters St., according toChapel Hill police reports.The person stole seven alco-holic beverages worth a total of $135.50, a Lenovo laptop worth$1,700, a backpack worth $75 andcamera equipment worth $990,reports state.
 
 A male spit on a female at 9p.m. Friday on Market Street,according to Chapel Hill policereports.
 
 An unknown person rang adoorbell several times and ranaway at 9:48 p.m. Friday at 5Silver Cedar Lane, according toChapel Hill police reports.
Due to a reporting error, June 30’s front page story “New leaderof Reese Felts begins tomorrow” incorrectly stated that Reese Felts was an alumnus of the UNC School of Journalism and Mass Com-munication. He was in the department of radio, television and motionpictures, which later was incorporated into the journalism school.The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
CorreCtionS
To make a calendar submission,email calendar@dailytarheel.com.Please include the date of the event inthe subject line, and attach a photo if  you wish. Events will be published inthe newspaper on either the day or theday before they take place.
CoMMunity CaLendarPoLiCe LoG
News
Thursday, July 7, 2011
The Daily Tar Heel
2
www.dailytarheel.com
 Established 1893118 years of editorial freedom
The Daily Tar Heel
ANdy ThomASoN
 SUMMer edITor
MAnAgIng.edITor@dAILyTArHeeL.CoM
LyLe KeNdriCK
UnIverSITy edITor
UnIverSITy@dAILyTArHeeL.CoM
SArAh GLeN
CITy edITor
CITy@dAILyTArHeeL.CoM
dANieL WiSer
STATe & nATIonAL edITor
 STATe@dAILyTArHeeL.CoM
TAriq LuThuN
ArTS edITor
ArTS@dAILyTArHeeL.CoM
KeLLy PArSoNS
SPorTS edITor
SPorTS@dAILyTArHeeL.CoM
eriN huLL
PHoTo edITor
PHoTo@dAILyTArHeeL.CoM
ChriS hArrW
CoPy edITor
CoPy@dAILyTArHeeL.CoM
miKe rodriGuez
onLIne edITor
 onLIne@dAILyTArHeeL.CoM
ANNA ThomPSoN
deSIgn edITor
deSIgn@dAILyTArHeeL.CoM
Cntact Summr editrAndy Thmasn atmanaging.ditr@dailytarhl.cmwith nws tips, cmmnts, crrc-tins r suggstins.
tiPS
offic a Mail Ass:151 e. rsmay St.Chapl Hill, nC 27514-3539Ay Thmas, Summ eit,962-4086Avtisig & Busiss, 962-1163nws, Fatus, Spts, 962-0245o cpy p ps;aitial cpis may b puchasat Th daily Ta Hl f $.25 ach.Plas pt suspicius activity at uistibuti acks by -mailigth@ailytahl.cm© 2011 dTH Mia Cp.All ights sv
SUpeRpoweReD waTeR
O
n his way to Pepper’s Pizza, Jackson Hannon, 6,drinks from the Old Well, which his uncle, ToddHannon, told him would give him superpowers.
dth/josh clinard
• The Daily Tar Heel reports any
inaccurat infrmatin pub-lishd as sn as th rrr isdiscvrd.
• Editorial corrections will be
printd blw. errrs cmmittdn th opinin Pag hav cr-rctins printd n that pag.Crrctins als ar ntd in thnlin vrsins f ur stris.
I
f all had gone according to plan, Juan Ramirez Tijerina’s conjugal visit with his wife would have rocked his world. With a rolling suitcase in tow, Tijerina’s wife Maria del Mar Arjona walked into a prison in Chetumal, Mexico and stuffed her husbandinside her luggage before trying to leave.Police foiled the couple’s plot when ofcers noticed the bulky bag andstopped Arjona before she could leave the premises.
Chck u husba at th at
Fm staf a wi pts
DAILY DOSE
CorreCtion
 
 
Are you currently experiencing
 PAIN
 around one or both of your lower
 WISDOM TEETH?
 UNC School of Dentistry is presently enrolling healthy subjects who:
 are non-smokers between the ages of 18 and 35 have pain and signs of inflammation (pericoronitis)around a lower wisdom tooth (3rd molar)
 Participation requires three visits. Benefits for participating include:
 free initial treatment of painful problem a free dental cleaning up to $50.00 payment for your time free consult regarding options for 3rd molar treatment
 If interested, please contact: Tiffany V. Hambright, RDH
 
Clinical Research Coordinator • Department of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery 
 919-966-8376 or Tiffany_Hambright@dentistry.unc.edu
  you will be contacted within 24 hours.
 
Downtown Chapel Hill •
942-PUMP • 106 W. Franklin St.
(Next to He’s Not Here)
 
Mon-Thurs 11:30am-11:00pm • Fri & Sat 11:30am-11:30pm • Sun Noon -11pm
  www.yogurtpump.com
 THE TASTEOF SUMMER
 EURO EURO 
 
TartTart
 
YogurtYogurt
 
By Josh Clinard
Staff Writer
Student Body President Mary Cooper’s plan to expand printingservices in the face of budget cuts will likely be implemented this fall,Information Technology Servicesofficials said.JeremiahJoyner, man-ager of ITSlabs andsystems, saidCooper’s planto expandprinting is fea-sible and will be incorporat-ed in phases asclasses start in August.“Whatthe platformpoint brought to (InformationTechnology Services’) attention was the fact that there’s a resourceon campus that students are pay-ing for that is not accessible to allparts of campus,” Cooper said.Cooper said the expansionof ITS printing will begin withGraham Memorial and PhillipsHall and then move off campusinto Greek housing. While expansion in the face of cuts will go forward, the cost of printing to students will rise.Cooper said the cost of eachpage will rise from 5 to 10 centsduring the fall, but the change isnot due to expansion plans.“It’s not like we’re raising it to10 cents so there can be a printerin Graham Memorial,” Coopersaid. “It’s more like ITS needed to be able to fund printing projectsoutside of what they get from thestudent fees.” Aaron Bachenheimer, interimcoordinator of fraternity andsorority life, said the imple-mentation in Greek houses willdepend on each house’s coopera-tion in funding the project.Each house would be respon-sible for buying the printer,as well as giving the Auxiliary Services division a specific wire-less network to access OneCards,said Mike Freeman, director of  Auxiliary Services.During the school year, Auxiliary Services and ITS print-ing will begin collaborating toprovide the same accessibility forstudent printing during budgetcuts, Cooper said.Expansion is not the only planfor making printing more acces-sible to students. A mobile applica-tion is being created to allow stu-dents to access the nearest printinglocation on campus, said CharlieGreen, assistant vice chancellor forteaching and learning.The application will include afeature showing available com-puters in a lab and the number of printing jobs in the queue.
Contact the University Editor at university@dailytarheel.com.
By Kelly Parsons and Chris Harrow
Staff Writers
Former UNC defensive end MichaelMcAdoo, who was deemed permanently ineligible by the NCAA in November,filed a lawsuit against Chancellor HoldenThorp, the University and the NCAA onFriday in an attempt to have his eligibility reinstated.The lawsuit claims McAdoo “wasimproperly and unjustly declared perma-nently ineligible to play intercollegiateathletics.”McAdoo was suspended by theUniversity for the first three games of the2010 football season after officials foundthat he had received extra benefits valuedat $110, as well as impermissible academicassistance, according to documents includ-ed in the lawsuit.The lawsuit comprises 284 pages of documents which include a transcript of the NCAA reinstatement hearing, as wellas multiple emails exchanged betweenMcAdoo and former tutor Jennifer Wiley.In a notice of allegations sent to UNC by the NCAA, McAdoo is cited for accepting benefits valued at $54.50, paid for by ToddStewart of Pro Sports Financial.The NCAA also claimed that McAdooreceived impermissible academic benefitsmultiple times over several months.The University self-reported the viola-tions to the NCAA in September, andaccording to a letter written to the NCAA  by Athletic Director Dick Baddour, theUniversity claimed that McAdoo wasn’taware at the time that the academic assis-tance he received was impermissible.Noah Huffstetler, McAdoo’s lawyer,said the suit is based on the Instrument of Student Judicial Governance.“The Instrument is an agreement between students and UNC... and should be enforceable against UNC as well as stu-dents,” Huffstetler said.“Honor Court has the full responsibility to make judicial decisions in these mat-ters,” he said.The UNC Honor Court only foundMcAdoo guilty of one academic viola-tion. On Oct. 14, the body found McAdooguilty of “representing another’s work ashis own” with respect to an assignment inJuly 2009. The Honor Court ruled thatMcAdoo could play football again in thefall of 2011.UNC appealed the NCAA’s decision, but following a hearing in December theNCAA upheld its decision about McAdoo’seligibility on Jan. 27.McAdoo’s lawyers sent a letter to theNCAA on June 3, claiming the organiza-tion failed to consider important infor-mation in the hearing, but they did notreceive a response. After the NCAA sent a notice of alle-gations to the University on June 21,McAdoo was prompted to file the lawsuitin response to the notice’s claims — whichHuffstetler said are false.McAdoo is seeking full reinstatement toplay this fall.
Contact the Sports Editor at sports@dailytarheel.com.
News
Thursday, July 7 , 2011
The Daily Tar Heel
3
Campus Briefs
Survey shows high rate of spanking in North Carolina
 Adam Zolotor, a medicalschool professor, was the leadauthor in a study that showed30 percent of mothers in NorthCarolina with children less thantwo years have spanked their chil-dren in the last year.The survey showed that fivepercent of North Carolina mothersof 3-month-old babies said they have spanked their children.Zolotor said the consequencesof spanking children include poorself-esteem, impaired parent-child relationships, substanceabuse, mental illness and behav-ioral issues.The open-access online journal Frontiers in Child andNeurodevelopmental Psychiatry published the study June 24.
City Briefs
Registration for residentialtown parking permits open
Residents who wish to renewtheir Chapel Hill residential park-ing permits can now do so.Permits cost $25 per householdand will last until June 30, 2012.Those who already have per-mits must submit a renewal form with a copy of the vehicle’s regis-traion.To receive a new parking per-mit, residents must fill out anapplication and provide a validdriver’s license, vehicle registra-tion and proof of residency.
sports Briefs
Colin Moran selected as the2011 Freshman of the Year
North Carolina third base-man Colin Moran was selectedas Baseball America’s 2011Freshman of the Year, accordingto a UNC press release.Moran led the Tar Heels with a.335 batting average and finishedthe season with an ACC-high 71RBI.Pitcher Kent Emanuel was alsonamed to the All-Freshman FirstTeam.
-From staff and wire reports
The University, whichappealed McAdoo’s ban, isalso included in the lawsuit.
McAd fi awu aan NCAA 
dth/Erin hull
Jones Angell stands in the Smith Center. Angell, formerly a color commentator, will replace Woody Durham as the play-by-play announcer for North Carolina football and basketball.
By Kelly Parsons
Sports Editor
 W
hen he was a child, Jones Angell and hisfather watched North Carolina basket- ball games on television with the soundmuted.Instead of listening to the TV broadcasters, Angellenjoyed tuning into the Tar Heel Sports Network to hearradio play-by-play announcer Woody Durham.The young fan grew up listening to the renowned“Voice of the Tar Heels” — long before it even crossed Angell’s mind that one day he would inherit the much-sought-after position.On June 27, just two months after Durham revealedhis decision to retire, Athletic Director Dick Baddour andLearfield Sports general manager Gary Sobba announcedthat Angell would be the next play-by-play announcer forNorth Carolina football and basketball games. And though the promotion fulfills the 32-year-old’sdream, Angell is well aware of the challenge that stands before him as he follows in the footsteps of a local legend.“I don’t think anyone can ever really replace Woody, Angell said. “I’m not going to try to do it, and I don’tthink anybody could have. What I am going to try to dois just try to continue that level of excellence that Woody set for so long in this position.” While visiting his family in December 2010, Durhaminformed his sons about his plan to retire. And to the broadcaster’s delight, his son WesDurham, a play-by-play announcer for Georgia Tech,offered his full support.“He said, ‘Well Dad, if you do it after this season isover, you will go out on your terms,’” Durham said. “Ilike that a lot, because that’s the way I wanted to do it.”During his 11 years working with the Tar Heel SportsNetwork, Angell has experienced just about everythingthe job has to offer.The UNC alumnus began working for the networkin the summer of 1998 after his sophomore year of col-lege — delivering lunches, listening to tapes and doingrandom odd jobs as needed.During his career, Angell has called play-by-play forUNC women’s basketball and baseball, and since 2005has served as host of Durham’s play-by-play broadcasts.But even though they didn’t have to look very far for thenext “Voice of the Tar Heels,” Baddour and Learfield Sportsdecided to conduct a nationwide search for prospectivecandidates when they learned of Durham’s retirement. Angell submitted a resume and tapes, and he had fiveor six interviews before finally snagging his new gig.Sobba said many applications were submitted, butultimately it was Angell’s proven competency that madehim right for the job. Angell was informed about his promotion while he was in Omaha, Neb. calling play-by-play for the UNC baseball team during its recent appearance in theCollege World Series.The Tar Heels would go home without a nationalchampionship, but Angell returned to Chapel Hill withthe opportunity of a lifetime in hand. After hearing that Angell had been selected for the job, Woody Durham called his successor to congratulate him.Because of Angell’s experience and the loyalty of UNCfans, Durham said he’s confident the transition will besmooth.But just for good measure, Durham gave Angell asmall piece of advice about keeping his audience engaged.“I said, “Jones, all you have to do is to get the namesand the numbers right,’” Durham said. “‘And the TarHeels will take care of the rest.’”
 Visit dailytarheel.com for the full story.
Contact the Sports Editor at sports@dailytarheel.com.
Big Heels to fill
Jn An hrd  b nx ‘Vc  h tar H’
in
BRIEF
Pr cnnu a grnbrd
By Chelsey Dulaney
Senior Writer
Controversy surrounding GreenbridgeDevelopments continued Saturday evening when about 15 area residents stood in non- violent protest against the condominiums.The protest came after a June 18 riot leftfour in the Orange County Jail and caused$3,400 of damage to the 10-story develop-ment located in the historically black andlow-income Northside neighborhood.The development was scheduled to go upfor sale June 27 after defaulting on its loans, but Bank of America lenders delayed the saleto allow developers a chance to find inves-tors to cover their $28.7 million debt.
‘I felt disturbed’
Michael Cohen, a Northside resident, par-ticipated in the protest.“I felt disturbed by the overwhelmingpolice characterization of the riot as violent,”he said. “My goal is to make this project sucha hassle that it’s difficult to continue.”Opponents of Greenbridge claim that thedevelopment, which developers hail as envi-ronmentally friendly, is causing gentrifica-tion in the Northside neighborhood, forcinglong-time residents out in favor of studenthousing.“Northside neighbors are facing displace-ment by rising rents and taxes while 60 unitsof luxury housing sit empty,” said protestorganizer Sarah Johnson in a press release.“We want to draw attention to the ongoingdisplacement and exclusion of poor people inChapel Hill, of which the racist gentrificationof the Northside neighborhood is one part.”Cohen said he would like to see the devel-opment used as affordable housing and afree community space.
Protesting the protesters
Robert Dowling, executive director of theCommunity Home Trust in Orange County,said he decided to attend the protest toinform the protesters that there are low-income people living in Greenbridge. As dictated by town affordable housingstandards, 15 of the development’s 97 condo-miniums are designated as affordable hous-ing units, all of which are occupied.“Part of (the protesters’) problem is they think a bunch of rich people live in the building,” he said.Robert Bland, a Durham resident whoattended the protest, said he thought the
About 15 people protested non-violently at the condominiumson Saturday night.
event was ineffective.“At the end of the day, you’re not hurtingthe people in the building, you’re just being anuisance,” he said.
Contact the City Editor at city@dailytarheel.com.
dth/JEnnifEr dAvis
About 15 area residents stood in non-violentprotest against Greenbridge DevelopmentsSaturday evening.
Mary Cooper’s
plas o expadpriig servicesdespie bdge cswill likely be imple-meed is all.
Michael McAdoo,
ormerunC deesive ed, iled alawsi agais Cacellorholde torp, e uiversiyad e nCAA o friday ia aemp o regai iseligibily.
Mary Coopers initiativewill increase access toCCI printing this fall.
CCi wxpandn a
Search History:
Searching...
Result 00 of 00
00 results for result for
  • p.
  • More From This User

    Notes
    Load more