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dthmelissa key Amy Martin was treated at UNC Hospitalss free-standing postpartum unit in November of 2008 after she had her third child. The unit is the first of its kind nationwide.
depression defeated
postpartum unit at UnC brings help for moms
By Claire McNeill
Assistant University Editor
Not even a lifelong history of depression could prepare Amy Martin for what she felt after having her third child, Avery, in 2008. Martin, then 34, had been treated for depression since college. Her first two pregnancies were accompanied by mild postpartum depression. But with Avery it was different. I went from feeling OK to hitting rock bottom, Martin said. She was plagued by anxiety attacks, often hyperventilating as her panic level spiraled out of control. She took the depression medicine she had stopped using during her pregnancy, but it didnt help. She couldnt control her thoughts, even when she knew they werent rational. I had completely lost faith in my ability, she said. I was afraid that I would
hurt Avery in some way. I was afraid I would hurt myself. UNC Hospitals staff had women like Martin in mind when establishing the nations first free-standing perinatal psychiatry unit, a modern response to the 10 to 15 percent of pregnancies that bring some form of postpartum depression. When women are so vulnerable, they need a special unit, said Chris Raines, a perinatal psychiatric nurse practitioner at the unit. That specialized care now comes in the form of five inpatient beds in the clinic, located within UNCs Neurosciences Hospital. It opened Aug. 15. Samantha Meltzer-Brody, director of the perinatal psychiatry program at the UNC Center for Womens Mood Disorders, realized the need for an inpatient component to the existing outpatient program and launched a pilot in 2008. Meltzer-Brody said the pilot was successful, but without a freestanding space,
the team wasnt able to conduct all of the necessary therapies. They needed to expand. With the support of hospital administrators, UNC Hospitals funded an $80,000 construction of a separate space for the unit, said Stephanie Crayton, media relations manager for UNC Hospitals. Five pre-existing beds were designated for the unit, UNC Hospitals spokeswoman Jennifer James said. Overall hospital revenue will not increase with the addition of the unit. This is not a change in revenue structure for UNC Hospitals, but a commitment to a particular line of service, James said. Raines said the UNC Hospitals team hopes the unit can serve as a model for other states. Women entering the clinic receive treatments including medication manage-
As Hurricane Irene advances toward North Carolinas coast, university officials fearing dangerous levels of rain and wind are urging students to evacuate inland. A hurricane warning is in effect for the whole N.C. coast, according to the National Hurricane Center, forcing both Elizabeth City State University and UNC-Wilmington to cancel their Friday afternoon and Saturday classes. Both schools administrators are strongly encouraging students to evacuate. The hurricane is expected to hit the coast Saturday afternoon as a Category 3, with winds up to 115 mph, said Barry Baxter, a meteorologist at the center. According to an email sent to ECSU students and employees Thursday afternoon, residence halls will close at noon on Friday. Students that cant relocate to an off-campus location must stay in the universitys gym. About 400 to 500 people will stay in the gym, and the university will provide food and water, said ECSU Student Body President DeVon McNair. Ill be in the gym tomorrow, he said. McNair, who is from Kinston, North Carolina, said he would rather stay with his fellow student body than evacuate. A lot of people dont know that ECSU is underneath sea level, so that is the way of keeping everybody safe, McNair said about students taking refuge in the gym. The storm surge is expected to be five to 10 feet above ground level, Baxter said. According to UNC-Ws emergency information website, the hurricane is projected to make landfall near Emerald Isle, which is about 90 miles north of Wilmington. More than eight inches of rain are expected to fall Friday and Saturday, according to an alert posted on the website. Kevin Madsen, emergency management coordinator at UNC-W, said the university has a hurricane operations plan that includes several checklists each department must fill out when a
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Candidates for the 2011 election in Chapel Hill joined Thursday for the first major event of the season. At the Friends of the Downtown forum, candidates discussed issues ranging from downtown beautification to business development. Our little ballroom in the Franklin Hotel was filled to capacity, said Gregg Gerdau, secretary of Friends of the Downtown and moderator of the event. Gerdau said the volunteer group, which focuses on development in Chapel Hill, has hosted the forum four times, but this was the first time it started the season. He said all nine of the Chapel Hill Town Council candidates attended, and two of the three mayoral candidates incumbent Mark Kleinschmidt and newcomer Tim Sookram spoke. Kevin Wolff, the third candidate, was invited but did not attend. Spots on both the Chapel Hill Town Council and Carrboro Board of Aldermen are up for election Nov. 8, as are the mayorships of both towns.
JONATHAN JONES: Youre a new head coach, but youve also got a quarterback whos thrown two passes in college. How much are you going to be leaning on him, and how much is he going to be leaning on you this year? EVERETT WITHERS: I think, and I made this statement earlier, anytime you have a quarterback thats young, thats inexperienced, you have to rely on the people around him to play well. We cant expect Bryn Renner to go out there and win games for us. Thats not the way all of this works. So what well do is, well try to be efficient running the football, give him some things in the passing game, but well try to help him build his confidence and become a better quarterback as the season goes on. JONES: Quinton Coples is slated to be a top pick in next years NFL draft, already hes in these mock drafts. Describe his freakish talents on defense, and who does he remind you of?
obviously has the size, speed,
measurements that all the NFL scouts look at. I think his strength is an attribute. I really think Quinton is still ways away from being what hes going to be. Hopefully hell progress this season, but we think Quinton has all the ability in the world and can help us be a really good defense. His abilities are what they are right now. We hope they continue to get better.
JONES: Youre the interim head coach. With that tag, how do you stay focused when the future is unclear, and better yet, how do you keep the team focused when there is no certainty for a year from now? WITHERS: Well I think anytime youre a football coach, youre day-to-day anyway. And thats the way Ive always been in this profession Ive been day-to-day. So you know, my focus is take care of what I can take care of, and the things that I want to take care of are this football team and the kids on this football team. Its not an issue of focus for me. Because everyday is about trying to make this environment good for our kids.
see WITHERS, Page 4
dth/allison russell Everett Withers was named interim head football coach on July 28. He has spent the last three seasons as defensive coordinator.
Inside
BASEBALL
Nineteen UNC baseball players played in summer leagues all across the U.S. Page 5.
CUAB CONCERT
Local bands Mipso Trio and Mandolin Orange will showcase their folk style when they perform tonight at Hooker Fields as part of CUABs Back to School Concert. Page 9.
Todays weather
I can see clearly now the rain is... H 92, L 72
Saturdays weather
...DAMMIT IRENE H 81, L 69
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he next time youre lamenting your houses crappy air conditioning, or that funny stain on your dorm room ceiling, remember, it could be worse: You could have an SUV on your roof. Six people inside a Kansas City, Mo., home were shocked to find an SUV sitting in their attic after hearing a loud crash Wednesday night. Michelle Brown and five children heard the crash at about 8:30 p.m. Her son discovered the SUV, saying, Momma, theres a truck in the ceiling! Police arrived to find three people in the SUV. Police said they believe the driver of the SUV was speeding when they drove up onto the lawn in front of the home, which acted like a ramp, sending the vehicle into the homes attic. Police said they are investigating whether the driver was impaired.
QUOTED. I think its illegal to actually refuse to give people free tap water. A San Francisco woman, visiting New York. Striking union workers revealed that Central Park Boathouses iconic restaurant has been selling filtered municipal water for $8 and pulling a fast one on customers for years.
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NOTED. A Wilkesboro man who got drunk at a Sagebrush restaurant decided to sleep rather than drive home in someone elses car. Police said the vehicles owner woke up Friday morning and found the man naked as he was leaving the scene. When the owner looked inside, he saw that the man had thrown up and defecated on the back seat.
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COMMUnIty CaLEndar
Foursquare scavenger hunt: learn fun trivia and facts about unc, and get to know the schools campus a little better by participating in a scavenger hunt led by the heelraisers council. Those who participate in the event will have a chance to win prizes. Time: 1 p.m. location: The Pit Open climb: Experience more than 2,000 square feet of rock climbing terrain. climbers of all experience levels are welcome to attend. Time: 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. location: Rams head Recreation center
oren Hart, a class of 2000 graduate from UNC, demonstrates his support for the summer reading book Eating Animals Jonathan Safran Foer. Like Foer, Hart believes current food systems have contributed to negative impacts on the environment and society.
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tOday
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Cupcake festival: Join local bakers at the horace Williams memorial cupcake Festival and enjoy locally made treats. Bakers who enter the contest must deliver their cupcakes between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Friday. awards will be announced at 8 p.m. Time: 7 p.m. location: horace Williams house Carolina Nike classic: Watch the unc Womens soccer team take on notre Dame. Tickets cost $5. Time: 7 p.m. location: Fetzer Field Best show ever: learn the tricks behind improv from unc alum and comedian John Reitz. Topics will include feeling confident on stage
and exercising creativity. Time: 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. location: student union, cabaret
POLICE LOG
Someone stole the spare tire from the trunk of a 2002 gray BMW between 9 a.m. Aug. 2 and 7:02 p.m. Wednesday at 828 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., according to Chapel Hill police reports. The suspect removed a tire valued at $300 and an alloy rim valued at $900, reports state. Trail, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Damage to the hedge was valued at $300, reports state.
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Honey Bee Day: Observe Farm Fairys Observational hive and learn about the importance of bees as pollinators. Time: 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. location: chapel hill Farmers market 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.
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CLarIfICatIOn
Tuesdays page 3 story Ramshead Rathskeller sees construction delays reported that Diane Fountain has headed past unsuccessful business ventures. Fountain said her five previous ventures, which were dissolved by the N.C. Secretary of State, were in the television industry and that she voluntarily exited them. She said she intentionally allowed the businesses to expire. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for any confusion.
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered. Editorial corrections will be printed on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections printed on that page. corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories. Contact Managing Editor Tarini Parti at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
Someone reported screaming coming from the woods around 8:20 p.m. Wednesday at 211 Melville Loop, according to Chapel Hill police reports. No injuries were reported, Someone stole money from the reports state. Chapel Hill Public Library around 10 a.m. Wednesday at 100 Library A woman was carelessly drivDrive, according to Chapel Hill ing a white Toyota Corolla in the police reports. Carrboro Plaza Food Lion parking Police reports say $0.01 was lot on Tuesday, according to stolen from a cash drawer. Carrboro Police reports. Police located the suspect and Multiple individuals jumped gave her a warning, but no further out of a taxi cab, taking the cabbies action was taken and no damages money at 4:25 p.m. Wednesday at were reported, reports state. 130 S. Estes Drive, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Someone took a wooden bench About $60 was stolen, reports and replaced it with a chair from a state. neighboring apartment from in front of an apartment at 12:15 p.m. Someone backed into a hedge Tuesday at 201 N.C. 54 according at 10 p.m. Wednesday at 176 Ridge to Carrboro police reports.
Scholarships Include:
RHODES MARSHALL TRUMAN LUCE GOLDWATER MITCHELL JACK KENT COOKE UDALL CARNEGIE CHURCHILL
Information Meeting: 5:15 p.m. on Monday, : August 29 Student Union Theater Email ods@unc.edu for more information.
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Campus Briefs
Nearly 170 UNC students to get study abroad funding
Private gifts to the College of Arts and Sciences have allowed the University to help fund study abroad initiatives for 169 students this year. The money, totaling approximately $637,000, will help students study in one of the more than 70 countries where the University offers programs. UNC has one of the highest study abroad rates among the nations public universities. Robert Miles, the associate dean for study abroad and international exchanges, said students today have an even bigger need to study internationally because of the global job market and economy.
Roommates at UNC might not have to be of the same sex if a proposal currently in its early stages is approved by administrators. This fall, a group of students is working to draft a petition that would allow men and women to share apartments and rooms in UNCs residence halls. Organizers said their proposal will be modeled after similar programs on campuses like Duke University, the University of California at Berkeley and the University of Michigan. Sophomore Kevin Claybren
who began researching this housing option for a class project last spring said the option would create a more inclusive and compatible environment on campus, especially for gay students. The new option could discourage harassment issues between roommates who dont have the same sexual preferences, he said. As a college student, we can pick everything from our classes to our dorms, but we cannot pick our roommates, Claybren said. This is a personal preference issue. He said in 2006 an antiquated N.C. statute that mandated unmarried men and women could not live together was struck down and, with it, the last barrier to gender-nonspecific housing. Claybren stressed that the group is not out to radically change housing policies but to
provide options for students who might feel more comfortable living with members of the opposite sex on campus. While the option to allow different genders to live together could open doors for couples to share a room, Claybren said data from similar programs at other universities suggests the occurrence is uncommon. Claybren said he has worked closely with Terri Phoenix, director of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Center, to devise the best option for UNC. A resolution to allow gender nonspecific housing at Duke was passed last October. This fall, about 20 students will participate in a pilot housing program that allows men and women to share apartment-style residence halls on Dukes central campus. Sophomore Rachel Harris said she would not have been
able to live with her male roommate, senior Manny Hidalgo, if it werent for the new option. Students had to attend several information sessions before being allowed to live together, Hidalgo said. They wanted us to understand if either one of us gets reassigned, the apartment does not stay gender neutral and thats because the process is entirely opt-in and its strictly voluntary, said Hidalgo, who is also an employee of Duke Resident Life and Housing Services. He said his opinions are not representative of the housing department. The push for gender-neutral housing was led by members of the Duke LGBT community, Hidalgo said. Contact the University Editor at university@dailytarheel.com.
The group will skip the years first meeting due to Hurricane Irene.
Expected torrential rain and wind from Hurricane Irene will keep members of the UNC Association of Student Governments off of the road this weekend. Student delegates from each of the 17 institutions in the UNC system were supposed to meet at UNC-Asheville Saturday morning for their first meeting of the school year. The original meeting location was at UNC-Wilmington but was later changed to UNC-As campus to escape the brunt of the storm. But after having conversations with student body presidents from schools on the eastern coast, ASG President Atul Bhula decided to cancel the meeting. If we have an ASG meeting, then I want to include everybody and not just include western schools, he said. The hurricane is supposed to hit Saturday afternoon as a category 3 with wind gusts as high as 115 miles per hour. Bhula said he was worried about people driving back toward the eastern coast after the meeting. At Elizabeth City State University, administrators notified students through email to evacuate today by noon. Those who cannot evacuate will be housed in R.L. Vaughan Center on campus. DeVon McNair, student body president at ECSU, said he was disappointed the first ASG meeting of the 2011-2012 academic year was cancelled, but he understands safety comes first. Originally I thought it was a bad thing that we were canceling it, but at the same time coming back on Sunday will be hard, he said. It will set us back because we want to get a lot of stuff done. ASG members meet once a month at different UNC-system campuses, where they discuss policy impacting students. Travel to the meetings and hotel lodgings are funded by an annual $1 fee from every UNCsystem student. The association has no plans to make up the meeting in person, but Bhula said he will be trying to communicate with student body presidents via phone. I will be calling up individual student body presidents and talking with them, he said. Were getting our presence on campus. Mary Cooper, student body president at UNC-CH, said she too hopes to communicate with Bhula. I want to ask him a little bit more information about what the officers were going to present and maybe send out some information, so its not a completely wasted month, she said. ASGs next meeting will be the weekend of Sept. 23 at UNCCharlotte. Contact the State & National Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.
dth/Logan Savage Nina Vaidya, David Harmon and Maggie Trunk won a round of sexy bingo, in which players had to yell words like penis and G-spot.
City Briefs
Chapel Hill Transit to halt bus services for Labor Day
The Chapel Hill Transit system will not operate on Monday, Sept. 5, in observance of the Labor Day holiday. All bus routes will be suspended. Transit services, which serve Chapel Hill, Carrboro and surrounding areas, will resume on Tuesday, Sept. 6.
Penis, boobs, G-spot, balls and labia were not just body parts at Sex After Dark, a Week of Welcome event. They were also the Sex Bingo team names and the words potential winners had to shout out to claim their prizes. The event, held Thursday night in the Student Union Cabaret, drew about 120 students, all of whom were interested in learning about one thing: sex. Most of the students who attended were female freshmen who, on average, believed about half of their friends have had sex. The event was organized by sex health educators from Campus Health and Wellness Services, such as Meredith Kamradt, who worked the event for the third consecutive year. A big reason we do this is to make sure people are aware of sexual health services, Kamradt said. We want to look approachable, fun and interesting. Molly McFatrich, another coordinator, outlined the top three most important things freshmen should know about sex.
Communication is super important, like what a partner likes, and consent, McFatrich said. A latex or polyisoprene barrier is good all the time to prevent sexually transmitted infections. And have fun. McFatrich mentioned a fun, sexy way that she has seen students at these types of events handle condoms. Something different is cheeking a condom, or first putting it in your mouth and then putting it on, she said. Before students could learn about special techniques, the organizers asked a few questions, which students answered via text message. One question that elicited a lot of responses was What is sex? Students responded with, a connection between two bodies, a key in the lock and raw passion, among others. Freshman Soren Watson said he doesnt feel awkward talking about sex. His mother is a sex therapist, so sex is nothing weird to him, he said. I came here to see what my peers have to say about sex, Watson said. There also may be something I dont know, and free stuff is always good.
Condoms were the main giveaway, items coordinator Diana Sanchez said students should never have to pay for. Senior Jazmyn Gallimore also attended the event. I have heard about this event all of these years, so I had to finally come, Gallimore said. There is a lot of sex around usually unprotected. Gallimore and other participants played a few games of Sex Bingo, with their Bingo cards containing the answers to sexual health questions, such as Which sexually transmitted infections have no cure? After Bingo, a few brave attendees had a condom relay to see who could put a condom on a dildo the fastest. The event also included a question and answer session. If Im a female, how do I achieve an orgasm? You should be in the right frame of mind, have no interruptions and it usually cannot be achieved by solely vaginal intercourse, coordinators said. Contact the University Editor at university@dailytarheel.com.
The fate of a freestanding library in southwest Orange County remains unknown. On Tuesday night, the Orange County Board of Commissioners voted unanimously not to purchase a highly contested site at 210 Hillsborough Road, which would have been used for the construction of a southwest branch Orange County Library. The site is a 2.69-acre property located near Carrboro Elementary School. Alderman Joal Hall Broun said she is hopeful the commissioners decision will not be a major setback. The board held a special vote Tuesday to continue to search for a new location for the library. I consider it a bump in the road, Broun said.
The proposed site had drawn criticism from neighbors and county officials due to its location in a residential area, its cost and several title issues. Orange County would have had to pay more than $600,000 to construct the library. And even after the area was rezoned for the library, neighbors threatened to sue the county about breaking building restriction agreements if the library was built. I believe that the title issues are pretty severe and could have a high financial impact on the county, said Bethany Chaney, a Hillsborough Road resident. Go back to the drawing board and find another site, she said. Jenae Tharaldson, a Carrboro resident with two children in Carrboro Elementary School, said that a freestanding library in Carrboro would be more
convenient than the current Carrboro Branch Library housed in McDougle Middle School. We try to come here often, but they have limited hours and books, Tharaldson said. Tharaldson also cited transportation concerns. We like to walk and bike everywhere, she said. Having it nearby would definitely increase accessibility. But the fate of the library rests upon finding a satisfactory location, Carrboro Alderman Dan Coleman said. I think we need to hear from the county on what theyre looking at, he said. Citizens who are interested in the issue will also have a say. Coleman said he was surprised at the commissioners decision not to purchase the site. We knew there were various
We like to walk and bike everywhere. Having it nearby would definitely increase accessibility.
Jenae Tharaldson, Carrboro resident
issues they needed to investigate, and it is my understanding that these turned out to be negative, he said. Broun said if a location is not determined by February 2012, she will consider the project significantly stalled. Commissioner Barry Jacobs said it will take cooperation between the town of Carrboro and Orange County to make the decision happen. Its important for us to have partnership with the town of Carrboro and for them to join us in the search for a site, Jacobs said. Coleman said communication between the aldermen and commissioners has not been an issue. I believe the county has made it clear they are fully committed, Coleman said. Its been good communication. Broun said there is still a sense of urgency surrounding the southwest branch library. If you live in southwest Orange County, you have two choices, Hillsborough and Chapel Hill, Broun said. A library in Carrboro would shorten the drive for a lot of people, save energy and reduce pollution. Contact the City Editor at city@dailytarheel.com.
News
from page 1
WITHERS
JONES: How much support have
you received from Tar Heel fans and the Tar Heel nation since becoming head coach?
When Jonathan Safran Foer published his book Eating Animals, he said he expected a response from the factory farms. Instead, there was silence. Foer highlighted this issue, along with several others, to a packed Memorial Hall on Thursday night as part of UNC and Duke Universitys joint summer reading program. Why would they be so silent? Foer asked. Maybe because there is no response, he said. Or maybe its because they know that an expan-
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sion of the conversation hurts them. Foer said he didnt aim for activism or pushing vegetarianism when writing his book, which was the first joint summer reading venture between the two schools. What I was trying to do was expand the conversation on something we ignore, he said. Foer said polarizing food issues into either caring or not caring about animals is the wrong approach and that a person does not have to be a vegetarian to disagree with the way food is produced. Freshman Mariah Conte, who attended the lecture, said she is a vegetarian and has been attacked in discussions for being a hypocrite. The lecture helped her find ways to answer people who question her choices, she said. I feel like its not as much a dichotomy anymore as much as a spectrum, she said. Foer said the subject of where food comes from is difficult to talk about in an accessible way because people become defensive. Philosophy and information doesnt seem to persuade people when it comes to food, he said. Foer said he tried to broaden the books audience by slowly getting into the difficult facts and avoiding the use of graphic images to tell his story. Most meat comes from factory farms, which are notorious for cruel animal conditions and overusing antibiotics, he argued. No one hates factory farms as much as farmers do, because it has taken from them what is good and exciting about farming, he said. Foer said farmers choose their profession for the variety and challenge, which factory farming eliminates by mass-producing meat. I also wanted to correct what I came to learn were these manipulative uses of language created by the meat industry, he said, pointing to phrases like happy cow and free-range chickens. Free range isnt even legally defined, he said. I could have 1,000 chickens under my chair and you could call that free
WITHERS: Well I think Ive received a lot of support. I try and look at the support, not so much for me, but for this football program. I want this support to be for this program. I want the students to be in that Tar Pit yelling and screaming and make that a great environment for our team when they come out. It helps us in recruiting. I want the alumni and the lettermen in the stands yelling and screaming
JONES: Youre kind of banged up in the backfield right now with Ryan Houston recovering from an injury, as well as Giovanni Bernard with his hand injury. Is
WITHERS: Right now its not because I think Gios injury will be something that he could play today if he had to. Hes been practicing just like he has no injury. He can catch the ball, he can do all those things so were not as concerned about that. Ryan, I think weve done a great job this offseason and the summer taking care of him. This camp weve done a good job. Ryans probably in as good of shape as hes been in since hes been here, so hopefully thatll be a plus.
Contact the Sports Editor at sports@dailytarheel.com. ing celebrities like Brooke Shields and Gwyneth Paltrow, both of whom have publicized their struggles with postpartum depression. Im really proud to be at UNC at this point, Meltzer-Brody said. Its just a really great day for womens health, for motherhood and for UNC. But the mission to reduce the illness stigma is far from finished, Raines said. The word of postpartum depression is really getting out there, but its not as well known as we would like it to be, she said. Martin agreed. I dont want other women to have to go through such a horrible experience, feeling such horrible feelings and feel like theyre alone, she said. There is help out there, and you can get better. Contact the University Editor at university@dailytarheel.com.
dth/jade poteat Sara Henderson and Madeline White sell a copy of Eating Animals by Jonathan Safran Foer to a student.
range, he said. Justin Jornigan, a third year student of veterinary medicine at N.C. State University, said he felt the book dehumanized the entire industry and that it was too subjective. He said great strides have been made in farming industry in the last 20 years that were not mentioned in the book. I just encourage people to not stop at one book, he said. The student group Fair, Local and Organic made the lecture part of its first meeting. Group member Meghan Robbins said the organization attended the event to help freshmen feel comfortable and knowledgeable about the variety of food issues the group addresses, which include sustainability, nutrition and workers rights. Robbins said the group wanted to attend the lecture to show its support of the discussion. She said, The more people we can get out there, hopefully the more people can recognize that it is an important issue and its worth considering.
After a few weeks, Martin talked with family and decided from page 1 she needed help. She heard about a pilot program for women with ment, support therapy and mothpostpartum depression and, deser-infant attachment groups. perate for help, applied. Raines said the team wants to I thought, I cant be a good parmaintain a family approach. This truly doesnt just affect the mom; it ent if Im feeling like this, she said. She left for the hospital but affects the entire family, she said. not without apprehension. The units brochure lists feaI was really scared of the stigma tures like protected sleep time, extended visiting hours for moth- of being considered a mental ers and babies, lactation supplies, patient with a mental illness, but at group therapies, yoga, family- and the same time I didnt really care, Martin said. I wanted to get help. partner-assisted psychotherapy, Meltzer-Brody said many nutrition consultation and transiwomen refuse to go to a clinic tion to outpatient treatment. Raines said having a small clinic labeled psychiatry. Being admitted to a psychiatmeans women can feel comfortable bringing their babies into the ric hospital is a little bit daunting, and there is a stigma with that, unit and talking to other patients. Raines said. Part of the support system But attitudes are changing. within our unit is the moms This issue has gotten national being able to support each other, attention, Meltzer-Brody said, listRaines said.
POSTPaRTum
from page 1
ElEcTIONS
I think they are going to be largely defining the issues for this campaign, he said.
Carrboro aldermen
Four candidates will compete for three seats on the Carrboro Board of Aldermen and since Joal Hall Broun is retiring, the board will see at least one change in position. Former alderman Braxton Foushee, incumbents Lydia Lavelle and Dan Coleman and newcomer Michelle Johnson will compete for the spot. Candidates cited development, finding a way to deal with day Contact the University Editor laborers who gather daily at Jones at university@dailytarheel.com. Ferry Road and sustainability as major issues in the race.
Kevin Wolff. Sookrams website says he will address smart growth, and though he could not be reached for comment, Wolff s previous platforms have prioritized appointing experienced people to town positions. Kleinschmidt says he will bring continuity to the town in the midst of a comprehensive plan update.
from page 1
EvacuaTION
Carrboro mayor
Mayor Mark Chilton, who became the youngest elected official in North Carolina when he was elected to Chapel Hill Town Council as an undergraduate at UNC, will run for his fourth and he says his last term as Carrboro mayor. Chilton is running unopposed. In my last two years as mayor, I hope to continue building Carrboros local economy while expanding the towns bike and pedestrian infrastructure, Chilton wrote in an email. Contact the City Editor at city@dailytarheel.com.
hurricane is projected to hit the area within a day and a half. The university has issued a voluntary evacuation beginning Friday at noon. The last time an evacuation was issued at UNC-W was in 2003, when hurricane Isabel hit the area directly, said Stan Harts, director of environmental health and safety at the university. Betty Cona, a junior at UNCW, drove home to Charlotte Thursday night to escape the hurricane. But Cona said some of her friends are planning to wait out the inclement weather. Miranda Smitherman, a UNC-W senior, said shes planning to stay in her off-campus house, despite her parents urging her to come home. Theyre begging me to Im not sure what Im going to do yet. Contact the State & National Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.
TODAY
SEPTEMBER 22
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SportsFriday
Inside
Top Tar Heel baseball talent showcased in Cape Cod League.
By Brandon Moree
Assistant Sports Editor
Follow @DTHsports for updates on all your favorite Tar Heel sports.
The No. 3 North Carolina womens soccer team will take on No. 1 Notre Dame tonight in UNCs home opener. PAGE 6
The No. 2-ranked North Carolina field hockey team is ready to start the 2011 season and to win its seventh national championship. PAGE 6
ONLINE
Go to dailytarheel.com to check out senior writer Jonathan Jones interview with new interim head football coach Everett Withers. Withers talked about the upcoming season, and the status of a pair of injured Tar Heels.
dth file photo Lefty pitcher Kent Emanuel started five games and struck out 13 batters for the Falmouth Commodores in the nations premiere summer league.
Unbeatable experiences
For their strong starts to the
(Summer baseball) is a very important part of their progress and their development, North Carolina coach Mike Fox said. The guys that go up in the Cape are playing against the best, and its very high-level baseball. Now back from their summer ventures, its time for the Tar Heels to begin preparation for the fall
schedule. But first, Fox knows some of his guys might need a little break. I expect them to be tired for one, Fox said with a laugh. Some of them havent had a whole lot of rest. Contact the Sports Editor at sports@dailytarheel.com.
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dth file photo Sophomore forward Kealia Ohai chases after a Notre Dame player in last seasons 4-1 loss to the Fighting Irish.
The North Carolina womens soccer team has had one game circled on its calendar all offseason. And today, the Tar Heels will have a chance to get back at a familiar foe. No. 1 Notre Dame visits Chapel Hill this weekend the same team that bounced UNC out of the NCAA tournament last season with a 4-1 win. The Fighting Irish went on to win the national title while the Tar Heels were denied a chance at a three-peat. This team embarrassed us last year, Crystal Dunn said. We want to come out strong because this game means so much to us. We want to take back our title. But in order to do that, No. 3 UNC will need to find an answer for Notre Dames Melissa Henderson. The senior All-American has 53 career goals to her name and helped defeat the Tar Heels last season with a goal and an assist. Hendersons a really good forward, junior Ranee Premji said. Shes fast, shes pretty skilled, and
last year she gave us a little trouble, so were expecting the same as last year. Bolstering Notre Dames attack is senior Courtney Barg, a 2009 All-American who missed the first two months of last season with an injury. Barg will play in the midfield where she will not only support Henderson and the Notre Dame offense, but will also help the defense try to stave off a dangerous Tar Heel frontline. Theyre going to play with four back, and well have three up front, coach Anson Dorrance said. The way we attack is to rely on one of our wonderful front runners. UNC will lean heavily on forwards Kealia Ohai and Courtney Jones to beat defenders one-onone. Assisting Barg in stopping UNCs forwards is three-time team captain Jessica Schuveiller. She leads a defensive backline that shut out Wisconsin in the Fighting Irishs first game of the season. Notre Dame returns seven starters from last years championship team. They have a lot of fine veterans
in many positions, Dorrance said. (Henderson) is one of the best in the country but theyre also going to be very well organized. On top of the talent both teams will bring to the contest, emotions are expected to be running high. UNC is still bitter about last seasons contest in which the Tar Heels lost by more than one goal for the first time since 1985. We know what they did to us last year, Premji said. And you never want to repeat that, especially not on our home field. Facing the nations top-ranked team will be an early test for the Tar Heels, who defeated Nebraska 2-1 in their first match. Dorrance expects the game to not only be an entertaining match, but also a learning experience for his squad. Theyre going to be a formidable opponent, he said. Theyll give us all we can handle and hopefully share with us this early in the year where we need to work in order to compete to beat all the best teams in the country. Contact the Sports Editor at sports@dailytarheel.com.
By David Adler
dth/erin hull A Tar Heel field hockey player dribbles the ball down the field in a game last season. UNC will be in the hunt for its seventh NCAA championship. dth file photo A UNC volleyball player prepares to knock the ball over the net. North Carolina has two preseason All-ACC players on its roster this season.
play No. 9 Florida. Two weeks later, UNC will play No. 20 San Diego. Overall, North Carolina will play 12 2010 NCAA Tournament teams during the 2011 season. Seven of those twelve opponents come from within the ACC. But Sagula said that although ACC play is always challenging, the difficulty of UNCs matches outside the conference is as important a factor as any in preparing the team for
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Shelton said. We want to win the national championship. But if we think we are already there, then we are in trouble. What we dont When the North Carolina want to do this season is talk field hockey team takes on about the end. We want to focus Michigan in its season opener on each game and practice as they Saturday, UNC will face more than the Wolverines. Theyll also present themselves. Returning to the field in 2011 be competing against the presare National Player of the Year sure that comes with the Tar Contact the Sports Editor Heels potential. candidates Katelyn Falgowski at sports@dailytarheel.com. and Kelsey Kolojejchick as well as After a devastating double2010 ACC Defensive Player of the overtime loss to Maryland in the national championship game last Year Van Sickle. North Carolinas roster is season, UNC is primed for anothoverflowing with individual accoer title run in 2011. lades, but the focus is still on the The six-time national champion Tar Heels are the favorites in team. I would really like to be an the ACC, boast three players on All-American four years in a row, the Preseason All-ACC team and will enter the season ranked No. 2 Kolojejchick said. I would love to be National Player of the Year. in the nation. But most of all I want to win the With such high expectations, national championship. the Tar Heels are not holding We are not thinking of indiback on their goals for the season. We would love to win the ACC vidual achievements. We didnt championship because we havent like that feeling at the end of last year, and were working hard to done that in a few years, junior get back there and win. Caitlin Van Sickle said. But I As disappointing as the doublethink one of our higher goals is to overtime loss in last seasons be undefeated. I think our team Advertise your student national championship game has the potential to be pretty organization on STV. was, its become just as much of great. Contact Alexis Davis: a motivating factor for this years But with a tough schedule in alexisd@live.unc.edu 2011, the Tar Heels goal of perfec- squad. It doesnt matter what youve tion might be hard to come by. Cover your event live. North Carolina will play seven done, where you have been or Contact Sydney Holt: what someone expects us to do, of the preseason top-20 this ssholt@email.unc.edu Shelton said. year, including a much-anticiIts what you do next. As long pated rematch with defending national champion Maryland on as we focus on the process of the entire season, and enjoy the jourOct. 22. ney, I think we can make our own The teams goals are lofty, and the pressure will be on head coach destiny, and that gives us a lot of confidence. Karen Shelton to keep the Tar Heels focused on the field. Contact the Sports Editor Were a much better team at sports@dailytarheel.com. this year than we were last year,
Staff Writer
the NCAA tournament. The ACC is wide open with six or seven teams competing for the title, and we train at a high level, Sagula said. But the first thing we try to do is play a challenging non-conference schedule. That helps us prepare for the rest of the season, and how we do at the beginning can determine where we are at the end.
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SportsFriday
The E evator
On the rise
North Carolina Central
Last week, North Carolina Central made the transition into full-time Division I status. This fall, all Eagle teams will be eligible to partake in postseason play. The NCCU board voted in 2005 to make the jump to Division I, and the time has finally come. Well Eagles, welcome to the big time.
Oct. 28/29
Carrier Classic Nov. 11 vs. Michigan State (USS Carol Vinson) Nov. 13 at UNC Asheville IBN Sports Las Vegas Invitational
On the decline
As the Tar Heels prepared for the 2011 season, cornerback Jabari Price injured his hand in practice. The injury required surgery and Price will have to sit out for six weeks. The secondary might already be the thinnest part of the North Carolina defense and with Prices injury, its getting thinner and thinner.
Jabari Price
Mississippi Valley State Tennessee State vs. South Carolina vs. Southern California or UNLV
ACC/Big Ten Challenge Nov. 30 Dec. 3 Dec. 6 Dec. 17 Dec. 19 Dec. 21 Dec. 29 Jan. 1 Jan. 7 Jan. 10 Jan. 14 Jan. 19 Jan. 26 Jan. 29 Jan. 31 Feb. 4 Feb. 8 Feb. 11 Feb. 15 Feb. 18 Feb. 21 Feb. 25 Feb. 29 March 3 Wisconsin at Kentucky (Rupp Arena) Evansville Appalachian State Nicholls Texas Elon Monmouth Boston College Miami at Florida State (Donald L. Tucker Center) at Virginia Tech (Cassell Coliseum) NC State Georgia Tech at Wake Forest (Lawrence Joel Coliseum) at Maryland (Comcast Center) Duke Virginia at Miama (BankUnited Center) Clemson at NC State (RBC Center) at Virginia (John Paul Jones Arena) Maryland at Duke (Cameron Indoor Stadium)
Levi Michael
Former UNC shortstop Levi Michael signed a deal with the Minnesota Twins worth more than a million dollars. The Twins picked Michael 30th overall in the first round of Junes MLB draft. He was the 6th Tar Heel taken in the first round since 2006.
Georgetown Hoops
On a tour of China, the Georgetown mens basketball team found itself amid a chairtossing skirmish with a Chinese professional team. From the looks of the video, it appears that the Hoyas were not the aggressors in the incident, but it still looks bad to be involved in a fight on a goodwill tour. Especially if Vice President Joe Biden is at the game.
T.J. Yates
Former Tar Heel quarterback, T. J. Yates, made his professional debut with the Houston Texans in a preseason game against the New York Jets. Yates currently sits third on the Texans depth chart behind starter Matt Schaub and former USC Trojan Matt Leinart.
Marvin Austin
Former UNC defensive tackle Marvin Austin, now a New York Giant, will have to wait even longer to return to the field as he tore a pectoral muscle on his left side. The injury will require surgery. Austin said via Twitter I like to say thanx for all the love and support of my family #BIGBLUENATION...I promise Im gonna be back with a purpose.
Miami Football
Convicted Ponzi schemer Nevin Shapiro revealed information regarding several current and former University of Miami football players, including quarterback Jacory Harris. Shapiro allegedly arranged the services of prostitutes for players, among other things. The NCAA is in the process of investigating the situation and NCAA president Mark Emmert said the death penalty could be an option.
Saturday, Aug. 27
on Polk Place
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The Eating Disorders Program at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is conducting a research study to treat bulimia. Eligible participants will receive 16 sessions of group therapy specifically designed to reduce binging and purging at no cost. You must be 18 years old and have a home computer with internet access.
919.966.2882 cbt4bn@unc.edu
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Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to publication for classified ads. We publish Monday thru Friday when classes are in session. A university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e. this affects deadlines). We reserve the right to reject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Acceptance of ad copy or prepayment does not imply agreement to publish an ad. You may stop your ad at any time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for stopped ads will be provided. No advertising for housing or employment, in accordance with federal law, can state a preference based on sex, race, creed, color, religion, national origin, handicap, marital status.
ADOpTiON: UNC grad and wife wish
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
to adopt a baby. if you are interested in exploring this option for you and your baby, please contact us. Expenses paid. 1-800-373-8846 http://julieandsteveadopt.squarespace.com, julieandsteveadopt@ hotmail.com. Homestudy completed 4/4/11 by The JSSA.
DAY. Seeking child care staff for Sunday mornings, 6:00am-1:30pm. $11/hr. Must love working with kids and be committed with dependable transportation. Send resume to: amy@newhopenc.org.
LOOkiNG FOR ExpERiENCED child care provider for 2 month-old in our southwest Durham home (near Target) starting in September, 8-10 hrs/wk, Days, times flexible, prefer 2 weekdays for 4-5 hours. prefer infant CpR certified. pay: $8-10/hr. Contact Melissa at 310-801-6674 with questions; send resume to mmj@unc.edu.
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For Rent
fAIR HOUSINg
ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis in accordance with the law. To complain of discrimination, call the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development housing discrimination hotline: 1-800-669-9777. FOR RENT: 2BR/1BA. August 10, 2011-2012. 701 Church Street. $1,050/mo. Dunlap Lilley properties. Audrey. Hartye@gmail.com, 828-768-3111. WHiTE OAk CONDO FOR LEASE 105 Fidelity. 2BR/2BA $950/mo. 9-12 month lease. Email kathydahan@aol.com. 650-814-7650. ROOMY TOWNHOME NEAR CAMpUS: 2BR/2.5BA Nice Canterbury townhouse with fireplace, W/D, parking. Great layout for roommates or couple. Near UNC, Highway 54 and 15-501, on busline. No pets. Available early August. $850/mo. 919-360-0991. 4 BLOCkS TO CAMpUS, and Franklin. 2BR/1BA apartment has W/D connections, electric heat. $675/mo. 415 North Columbia Street. Fran Holland properties: email herbholland@intrex.net or call 919-968-4545. 4BR/2BA HOUSE. New central air, gas heat. Refinished hardwood and tile floors. $1,400/ mo. ideal for group of 4. plenty of parking. On busline. 919-929-3288.
HOUSE FOR RENT: Walk or bus to UNC, UNCH, Franklin. 2BR/1BA, fenced yard, parking. pets Ok. $1,100/mo. Terms negotiable. Available 9/1. tgmcinerney@hotmail.com or 919-929-0121.
For Rent
LOVELY WOODED LOT FOR 2BR/1.5BA townhome in North Chatham County. This Vickers Road duplex has fireplace, a lot of privacy. $750/mo. water included. pets negotiable with fee. Email Fran Holland properties at herbholland@intrex.net or call 919-968-4545. $595/MO, 1BR 1 STUDY. Newly refinished, All utilities including internet, cable free. Great location. Walk to Whole Foods, busline. No pets, smoking. Adam, 919-599-2000. WALk TO UNC. 2BR/1.5BA contemporary townhouse on quiet street. Central AC, W/D, dishwasher, microwave. 2 park spaces. Decks overlooking woods. $985/mo. includes water. 207-420-7070.
AUDITIONS
This week for Carolina Choir, Chamber Singers, Mens and Womens Glee Clubs. Sign up in person Hall 106. All singers welcome! More info: skleb@email.unc.edu.
AfTERSCHOOL bAbYSITTER
UNC family seeking afterschool babysitter for 11 year-old daughter. pick up from school and transport home or to activities. Reliable transportation, clean driving record essential. Availability M/W/Th. 3:30-5:30pm. $12/hr. Contact abryan2@email.unc.edu. AFTERSCHOOL CARE: 3-6pm, M-F, flexible. Needed for our 8th grade son in Chapel Hill. pick up from school, supervise homework, drive to music lessons. Contact: k.r.brouwer@att.net. CHiLD CARE: 2 children looking for fun loving sitter, Wednesday evenings 6-9pm and occasional weekends. please send your resume or summary of experience to hoathout@bellsouth.net. FUN AFTERSCHOOL CARE needed for boys ages 13 and 11 from about 3:30-5:30pm, 2-5 weekdays, $10/hr. Supervise homework, chores, outdoor play, take to activities. Car required. Send resume, availability to Margaret, mpendzich@mindspring.com. BABYSiTTER NEEDED in Chapel Hill. Weekday afternoons for an awesome 4th grade boy. $10/hr. You will need a car to drive him to activities. please call Meg, 919-357-4941. 2GREAT kiDS! Looking for afterschool care for 10 and 7 yea-old children. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday afternoons 2:455:45pm. Must have own car and safe driving record. Competitive salary, based on experience. vermeers@mac.com, 919-593-0599.
AFTERSCHOOL BABYSiTTER NEEDED
gARDEN ApARTMENT
Large 1BR basement apartment with private entrance available early September. $650/ mo. all utilities included, washing machine and dryer, large living room with old barn wood fireplace. private patio faces the garden. Grad students preferred. 919-942-9961. QUiET CARRBORO 4BR/2BA RANCH (or 3BR with large family room) available August 10. Hardwood floors, W/D connections, nice yard with room for garden. On Cheek Street. You can bus or bike to campus, $1,380/mo. Fran Holland properties: herbholland@intrex.net or call 919-968-4545. WONDERFUL 1BR ApARTMENT, unfurnished, near campus with picture windows, great room, patio, fireplace, parking, W/D. Seeking quiet graduate, professional student or professional. No pets or smoking. $700/mo. includes utilities. Call 919-619-5138.
getic person who loves kids? Wed like someone now to help 2:30-6pm in our Chapel Hill home with our 10 year-old son and 14 year-old daughter. Excellent references, reliable car needed. $12/hr, negotiable. bgaynes@med.unc.edu or 932-7547 after 6pm
13 year-old boy plus household cleaning. Own car and references needed. $11/hr plus gas. Start date: now. 919-906-0105 or beckham@duke.edu.
AFTERSCHOOL SiTTER needed August 24 for twin 9-year old boys Monday to Thursday from 3-6ish. Duties include picking up from school in Durham and driving to activities. We live between Duke and UNC. Must have reliable car and references. Contact semley@buckleysandler.com. AFTERSCHOOL CARE WANTED. i am looking for someone to pickup my 2 children (10 and 12 year-olds) from school 2-3 days/ wk. kids are very easy going. i pay competitively. Need car, CV and references. Contact sbl.nd1991@gmail.com. pART-TiME CHiLD CARE Chapel Hill, 2 girls (12 and 6). M/Tu 6:30-8am and 2:45-6:45pm and W/Th afternoons, starting immediately. Non-smoker. Safe car. 919-619-2487. eleekim@hotmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL BUDDY NEEDED: Male
ExpERiENCED BABYSiTTER FOR afterschool care 2-3 days/wk, occasional evenings for 2 children. 10 minutes from UNC. Reliable transportation necessary. italian speaker a plus. maalzepa@gmail.com. References required. AFTERSCHOOL CHiLD CARE: Energetic college student needed for 3 hours 3-4 days/wk. for 2 girls, 7 and 10. in Chapel Hill. Help with homework and transport to activities. Must have own car. Call 919-929-5116. CHiLD CARE needed for boy 10 and girl 8. Transport to sports and piano. Weekdays 34 hrs/day. Email woods038@mc.duke.edu or call 919-451-9796. WATCHiNG 2 GREAT kiDS for special hours. Great opportunity for responsible person to make money watching kids in Chapel Hill area. 919-428-6620. CHiLD CARE: 2 great kids need fun, dependable sitter. 2 days/wk, 2:45-5pm. Close to UNC. Experience and references required. Education majors and grad students preferred. Send resume to raymari34@gmail.com. AFTERNOON NANNY needed for 2nd and 4th graders. 2:30-5:30pm M-F, in Carrboro. Start mid to late Aug. Excellent driving record, own car required. Send references, experience to Jennifer: jarnold@email.unc.edu. OCCASiONAL BABYSiTTER WANTED for my 2 boys, ages 3 and 9 months, at our home in historic Hillsborough. Must have availability during the day. $10-12/hr. Contact: leighann19@hotmail.com. AFTERSCHOOL CARE TU/ TH: Seeking afterschool babysitter for 6 year-old girl from 2-6pm. pick up at FpG and take to ballet or swim. Have your own car or use ours. Must have proof of clean driving record (non-certified) and NC driver license. $10/hr. Email: stephanieengel@rocketmail.com. AFTERSCHOOL CHiLD CARE: Our kids (3, 7) need a fun and responsible sitter 3 days/ wk (including Tuesday but not Friday) 2:306pm. Cooking skills a plus! Will pay extra for laundry. Must commit to whole school year and have clean driving record. Send resume, references, and your availability to clows002@mc.duke.edu. pART-TiME NANNY: Faculty family seeks experienced, reliable, honest and creative person to help with our 2 wonderful girls, ages 3 and 1 for approximately 12-16 hrs/ wk. Competitive pay, warm environment. 10 minute drive from downtown Chapel Hill. School year commitment and car is necessary. Email nannyfor2girls@gmail.com.
WANTED: AFTERSCHOOL Help M/Th/F for Chapel Hill, Carrboro family. Need ability to safely drive son and daughter from McDougle School to activities. $10/hr. please email lisa_voss@yahoo.com.
RECYCLE ME PLEASE!
or female buddy needed at faculty couple home in Hillsborough 3:306:30pm M-F for our 17 year-old son with Down Syndrome. Experience helpful. References needed. Job sharing possible. $10-$12/hr. 9 19-732-1680, sweir@unc.edu.
4 BLOCkS TO CAMpUS, Franklin Street. Check out this 4BR/2.5BA house on Stephens Street. Hardwood floors, W/D, dishwasher. Great location for students. $1,800/mo. or rent a bedroom for $500/mo. (all utilities included) 10 month lease available. Fran Holland properties: herbholland@intrex.net. BRiGHT GARDEN CONDO 1BR/1BA, W/D in the unit. Close to UNC bus and walking trail to campus. Quiet area close to shopping. $700/mo. includes gas and electric. 919-490-1342. FOR RENT: Graduate student, professional. 1BR, studio apartment. on busline. Utilities, cable and internet included. $450/mo. vandermast1@nc.rr.com.
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HOROSCOPES
If August 26th is Your Birthday... This is a year for healthy trends. Remodeling looks good; how about a vegetable garden? You could grow vertically, or even on the roof. Theres nothing better than eating fresh picked food that you raised yourself. Communications and logistics ease as things start to flow.
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
www.wix.com/gotarheels/uncspiritprogram
407838.
campus. 3 kids, ages 9, 11 and 13. Walk to McDougle schools in Chapel Hill. M-F 2:30-5:30pm starting 8-29. Must be responsible driver for afterschool sports practices in town. obx_ jellies@yahoo.com, 919-599-9282.
Dance Team
August 30-31 6:00-9:00pm Auditions at Eddie Smith Field House, please bring headshot & maximum one-page dance resume COME PREPARED TO WORK OUT!
UNC
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Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is an 8 - There are so many ways to tell someone you love them: with words, gestures or symbols. Your audience is receptive, so get creative and play. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is Composite a 7 - A barrier dissolves at home. Banking matters take a turn for the better. Confusion diminishes, and the path ahead is clear. Old friends offer great ideas. Gemini (May 21-June 21) Today is a 9 - Theres so much to learn, and youre focused. Mercury goes direct later today: Agreements move forward and groups compromise. Send off the paperwork for increased funding. Cancer (June 22-July 22) Today is an 8 - You could be tempted to spend impulsively. Review the budget for the big picture. project completion gets facilitated and lifts off. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 9 - Youve got power: physical, mental and emotional. Use yours to move up a level. Creative efforts bear fruit, and travels easier now. push boldly forward. Let others help. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is a 7 - Fine-tune your home. Clean something while you contemplate your next move. Things lighten up, especially around money and travel. Complete a remodel.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is an 8 - Great results come from being with people, so schedule meetings, connect via correspondence and get together with friends. interaction eases markedly, which aids productivity. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is an 8 - Give thanks for what you have and for what you dont have. Whatever degree of health is yours, be grateful: for breathing, eating and simple pleasures. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is an 8 - its adventure time! Have you considered taking a trip to an unknown place? its possible with a computer, or simply by closing your eyes. Sometimes an airplane is nice. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is a 7 - itll be easier to advance for a while. Wealth increases as things go smoothly. productive brainstorming is possible. Someone finds you fascinating. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is an 8 - Bring your partnerships to the next level through honesty. Celebrate the possibilities of the future, and reminisce about the past. Group membership pays off. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 6 - its time to get busy. Start gathering the nectar that will provide for you and your hive throughout the cold winter months. Bring in the harvest, and celebrate with a big dinner.
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back to school
Time: 8 p.m. Friday Location: Hooker Fields Info: http://www.unc.edu/cuab/ events.shtml
Americana and folk are the musics of Chapel Hill. And the Carolina Union Activities Board is hoping to bring those sounds to campus with their Back to School Concert tonight. Local bands Mandolin Orange and Mipso Trio will showcase the central folk style of the area, said Kinsey Sullivan, CUABs music chairwoman. We really wanted to bring in a sound that was true to the area, she said. In the past weve done a lot of dance-type music, so we
wanted to change that a little this year. Mipso Trio is comprised of UNC juniors Joseph Terrell, who plays guitar for the band, Jacob Sharp, who plays mandolin, and Wood Robinson, who plays bass. Though the folk sound has been growing in popularity among students, the movement hasnt completely taken off yet. Many people beyond the area dont know about the local music scene. Terrell said he knows many of the students at UNC are not
Chapel Hill natives. He said he hopes a concert like this will open their eyes to the unique sound. There are a ton of kids that come from out of state and out of town, and all of them know the Top 40 and typical college dance music, he said. Im really excited about playing this concert and introducing people to a local sound. Mipso Trio has played several shows in the area, but have yet to play a show for UNC. Weve done a couple benefits for university-related things, but this is our first concert on campus, Terrell said. Mandolin Orange, whose founders are native residents of Chapel Hill, is also appearing at the concert. Emily Frantz, Mandolin Orange guitarist and UNC alumna, said she is excited to be play-
ing a show on campus. Im looking forward to integrating both my alma mater and my love of music, she said. UNCs campus is new territory and a new audience for the band. The biggest difference will be the crowd, she said. Were used
to seeing a range of ages at the shows, but were happy to have all younger (people). Andrew Marlin, who plays the mandolin, broke his hip earlier this week. But the show will go on instead of standing, the duo will both be sitting. Sullivan said she wants stu-
dents to come out for the celebration even if theyve never heard of Mipso Trio or Mandolin Orange. Itll be a fun event even if you know nothing about the bands, she said. Contact the Arts Editor at arts@dailytarheel.com.
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Local elections
Read a Q&A with interim head football coach Everett Withers and watch the video online. See pg. 1 for story. Learn more about the candidates running in this years local elections. dailytarheel.com for graphic.
Level:
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Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9.
disrupt public order, said Deputy Interior Minister Rodrigo Ubilla. The clashes happened mostly overnight and focused on Santiago. In the neighborhood of La Pincoya six police officers were injured by gunfire.
42 Navy builders 45 Expose 46 St. Louis team, familiarly 47 Ancient kingdom on the Tigris 49 Sign on 50 Star of France 51 Bakery utensil 55 Discharge 57 Price or Battle 58 Genesis grandson 59 H.S. courses 60 Cook quickly, in a way 61 Three-switch railroad track section
your
////// (919) 843-3333 carolinaperformingarts.org
Help Wanted
offiCe MaNager
the chapel Hill-carrboro ymca Boomerang Program is seeking administrative office manager. responsible for providing support services by overseeing and performing clerical and administrative tasks. Proven experience in developing work procedures and standards to improve office efficiency and effectiveness. strong proven skills in managing multiple projects in an ever changing environment; Professional demeanor a must with ability to communicate, verbally and written, with youth, families and community partners; Proficiency in microsoft office required, as well as other office equipment. Full-time, m-F with benefits: medical, dental and life insurance paid for by the ymca. submit resume, cover letter and application to n. chan at nchan@chcymca.org or 980 mlK, Jr. Blvd., chapel Hill, 27514. application on website: www.chcymca.org. sWeDisH tutor needed for mom and teen. salary negotiable, will work with your schedule. call and leave message! 336-376-1638. clinical teacHinG tutors needs advanced math, science, english, writing, special educators, reading, educators for tutoring. car. superb scholarship. mat, scholars welcome. superb spoken english. Days and hours available: 7 days available. $17/hr. and up. marketing and organization: $10/hr. Jlocts@aol.com. HaBtecH: Keston care is looking for males and females who are interested in working as Habtech or cna to work 1 on 1 with the elderly or disabled children in Durham, orange and chatham counties. afternoon, evening and weekend hours available. reliable transportation a must! if interested in a cna or Habtech position, please call Keston care. m-F 9am-4pm at 919-967-0507 (cPr, 1st aid). teacHinG assistant: small five star center in southern Durham is looking for a full-time assistant to work with 1 and 2 year olds. Please send resumes to harvest@harvestlearningcenter.com. yarD WorKer neeDeD: must be strong, experienced and have transportation. Weekend work. $13/hr. 919-929-4220. morninG Barn HelP: Do you miss horses already? small dressage barn 20 minutes from unc. 10-15 hrs-wk. $10/hr. no riding, lessons available. send resume: ncDressageBarn@gmail.com.
Help Wanted
HouseKeePer, custoDian: chapel Hill carrboro ymca needs an energetic, self starter for a light housekeeping position. m-F 4-7pm. the job includes cleaning and disinfecting lockerooms, bathrooms, cleaning offices, gym, 5 star child care center as well as maintaining the overall appearance of the facility; mopping, sweeping, dusting vacuuming, dishes and trash. Provide excellent customer service for members and participants. ability to follow directions, remain flexible with excellent time management skills. application is on our website, www.chcymca.org or you can apply at chapel Hill Branch at 980 mlK Blvd. Forward applications to nchan@chcymca.org or leave at the front desk of the chapel Hill Branch. sPanisH sPeaKer neeDeD for part-time office administrator at wine importer. m-F, 124pm. French proficiency a plus. must be 21+. cpataky@demaisonselections.com. unc colleGe stuDent to work at chapel Hill deli restaurant. several positions open. apply in person at tracys Deli, Galleria, 400 south elliott road or tracysnewyorkdeli@yahoo.com. Direct care staFF neeDeD: the arc of orange county is seeking direct care staff to work with individuals with developmental disabilities. Part-time, afterschool, weekend hours available. High school diploma, clean record required. application: ckeller@arcoforange.org.
Help Wanted
aFterscHool counselor: chapel Hillcarrboro ymca are hiring afterschool counselors. Positions are available for grades K-8th, monday thru Friday, 2-6pm and flexible schedules are available. you must be 18 years or older and have experience working with children. education majors are preferred but most of all you need to enjoy working with children. application is on our website, www.chcymca. org or you can apply at chapel Hill Branch at 980 mlK Blvd. Forward applications to nchan@chcymca.org or leave at the front desk of the chapel Hill Branch.
Parking
ParKinG sPace rental, Walking distance to campus. $200/semester. call 919-219-2891. Great location: Parking space 2 blocks from carolina inn. $340/semester. call 919929-3494.
Services
matH tutor, editor, proofreader, vegan chef and tutor, organic hand tool gardener, mothers helper, convalescent or elderly helper, housekeeper. Dr. christi Jones, PhD. 919-923-1313, christijones55@gmail.com. House cleaninG: Professional, thorough, reasonable. 1 time, ongoing, special events. carrboro cleaning by marc Kolman (owner, operator). 724-3840.
4Br/4Ba, 2726 square feet. 2 car garage at Briar chapel, chapel Hill, nc $2,600/mo. Jeff J. 919-490-9050. tWo story toWnHome in carrBoro. approximately 1.5 miles to campus, Franklin street. 2Br/1.5Ba. $750/mo. W/D included. 919-535-8118. 310-429-5814. panmails@yahoo.com. GaraGe aPartment. Quiet, wooded neighborhood. Private entrance. Full kitchen. carpeting. separate living room, bedroom, bath. many windows. Preferred by grad students. $750/mo. includes utilities. available august 18. 919-929-6072.
Roommates
1Br WitH PriVate BatH available in 4Br house with 3 male unc seniors. $550/mo. +utilities. available now with lease through 5-28-12. s2schwartz@gmail.com. roommate WanteD: Furnished 2Br/2Ba condo 10 minutes from unc and Duke. available 8-24, $750/mo +utilities. sdula@live.unc.edu, 704-213-4440. 1Br WitH PriVate BatH available in 4Br house with 3 male unc seniors. $550/mo. +utilities. available now with lease through 5-28-12. s2schwartz@gmail.com. roommate WanteD for 4Br/2.5Ba house on merritt mill. Furnished. $500/ mo. +1/4 utilities. We are good cooks, clean and pleasant. available now. prheenan@email.unc.edu. Female GraD, ProFessional looking to share beautiful 2Br/2Ba in quiet condo community. $500/mo. W/D, large bedroom, bath, on busline. rmbeitia5@hotmail.com, 386-405-4863. 919-240-5385.
Tutoring Wanted
matH tutorinG: reliable math tutor to help delightful chapel Hill High freshman learn and manage her math homework. 6-7:30pm, 3 days/wk. $20/hr. Please email words@nc.rr.com or call 919-824-6045. tutors neeDeD For 9tH GraDer. need 1 tutor for english, World History and 1 for Geometry, Biology. all honors classes. smart student with learning differences. Prior teaching, tutoring experience required. less than 1 mile. from unc. late august thru early June. 1-2 hours twice a week. jessicaxsmith@nc.rr.com.
CHild Care
need someone to watch my 7 year-old and 10 year-old in my home; tuesdays 2:30-6pm, other days possible. $12-15/hr, references required.. 919-969-8281.
Walk to UNC
mill creek $990/mo. 2Br/2Ba townhouse layout condo. all appliances. Walk out patio, lot of storage. Water and parking included. 919-671-4230. 3 story toWnHome for rent located near downtown chapel Hill. 3,000 square feet, 4Br/4Ba, W/D, stove, refrigerator included. $2,400/mo. Please call 919-260-6635 or leave message to include full first, last name, phone number with area code and mention this ad at 919-932-6779.
Volunteering
are you a Woman who smokes cigarettes and does not want to quit? you can contribute to science by participating in a smoking study that examines how smoking affects your thinking and mood. Do you answer yes to the following questions? are you between the ages of 18 and 45? are you smoking at least 10 cigarettes per day? Do you have a normal menstrual cycle? if so, please call Joe at 919-416-2099 or liz at 919-4162425. if you participate in this study, we will compensate you up to $118 for your time. Pro0002799.
For Sale
yarD sale: Great items for students! computer desk. futon, clothes and household items. saturday 27th, 8am-1pm, 200 Forsyth Drive. chapel Hill, 537-8564.
new Hope commons is seeking part-time sales associates. training, buying discounts, incentives, flexible schedules. contact michele at mHinnant@omegasports.net.
NUrsiNg aPP
Future nurses: check out this nursing app: www.pocketcareboard.com.
lifegUards
the y is hiring certified lifeguards and experienced swim lesson instructors. Please visit our website, www.chcymca.org print an application form and mail it attn: Hr Director. HirinG noW: caterinG server and bartender positions for all home football and basketball games. catering experience not necessary. only responsible, reliable candidates need apply. Please email resume to rockytopunc@gmail.com if interested. First game is sept. 3rd! Become a BartenDer! $250 a day potential no experience necessary. training courses available. 1-800-965-6520 ext. 105.
NEED A PLACE TO LIVE? www.heelshousing.com
Help Wanted
eGG Donors neeDeD. unc Health
care seeking healthy, non-smoking females 21-30 to become egg donors. all ethnicities welcome. $3,000 compensation for comPleteD cycle. all visits and procedures to be done local to campus. For written information, please call 919-966-1150 ext. 5 and leave your phone number.
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Opinion
Established 1893, 118 years of editorial freedom
STEVEN NORTON EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM C. RYaN BaRBER OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM DakOTa WilliamS ASSOCIATE OPINION EDITOR
cOlUmn
EDiTOriAl cArTOOn
Carolina Wayward Senior communication studies major from Raleigh Email: amh@email.unc.edu
When in doubt: ask what your Rhodes Scholars do. If there is a tremendous correlation, keep the class. [This] is the case. Thus the class should be kept.
alumnus, On cutting Elements of Politics classes
Kvetching board
kvetch: v.1 (Yiddish) to complain Dear First Years: I would be jealous of your CCI MacBook, but I feel better because you still look like a high schooler. To the jerk who stole my bike: Thanks for making my first day of class excellent. I see you freshmen not being able to figure out the door situation at Qdoba. To the guy singing The Climb while showering: Youre back in a dorm now, and you were off key. Freshmen: The printer in the UL is open more than just the 10 minutes before your class. Sheesh. Dear Lenoir, howd we get sushi? I know its expensive, and we dont have money. Where is this fish coming from? Dear UNC: We didnt have any kvetches this week. Do better. Sincerely, your friendly neighborhood DTH. Hey Kvetching board, chill out. Ill complain when Im good and ready. To the sophomore who told @KButter5 we dont have a Smith Center #timetotransfer Send your one-to-two sentence entries to opinion@dailytarheel.com, subject line kvetch.
OPiniOn-EDiTOriAl
onors program administrators plan to slash Professor Larry Goldbergs acclaimed Elements of Politics series in half, citing state budget cuts and shifting priorities. But dont try telling that to the alumni and students fighting to protect the series: They say its essential to keep the series intact. A petition online at www. elementsofpolitics.com already has more than 150 signatures from students of Goldbergs, former and current, including at least five of UNCs Rhodes Scholars from the past five years. For them, and the graduates in PhD programs and teaching roles in top universities, along with scores of others, Goldbergs teaching was the best of UNC. The vocal campaign to reverse the decision by Associate Dean for Honors James Leloudis has intensified in recent weeks as alumni across the country hear of the plan. Dr. Goldbergs Elements courses were life-changing classes that have forever affected the way I look at the world, reads one representative testimonial posted online. I have never met a teacher who surpassed him, either in Chapel Hill or among the luminaries I encountered during my graduate studies at the University of Chicago, reads another. Goldbergs courses are a mix of philosophy, history and literature, and have been funded (at about $7,500 per course) by the honors program for the past three years.
cAPTiOn cOnTEST
EDiTOriAl
hat do you get when you put man and woman together for nine months? If you said a baby, youre wrong. Try genderneutral housing, an increasingly popular college housing option that isnt about gender. As students settle into their dorm rooms, now is the perfect time for students to petition the University to provide this comfortable, safe living option for students. By allowing students of any gender the option of living together, UNC would give students the choice of living with whomever theyd feel most comfortable. The current system places many students in uncomfortable situations that are easily avoided with a gender-neutral option.
Regardless of the cause, from personal gender identity to simple preference, there is no reason for gender to be a discriminating factor in housing selection. Harvard University and the University of South Florida have both instated a gender-neutral housing option. So did Rutgers University following the suicide of freshman Tyler Clementi. To date, more than 50 other colleges have added gender-neutral housing options, but UNC cannot follow suit until changes are made to state law. Despite being deemed unconstitutional in 2006, the states Fornication and Adultery law does not allow for two non-married people of the opposite sex to live together. Why this law remains on the books is anyones guess. Even without this barrier, UNC housing administrators say it would take a student
push, and interest from the Board of Trustees, before gender-neutral policies would be considered at UNC. With students making that push, theres no reason to wait. As a public institution with a proud track record of progressive policies, UNC should always embrace the opportunity to provide a more inclusive environment, not hold to antiquated policies that drive them to off-campus solutions. A gender-neutral livinglearning community would be a good place to start. UNC already has communities in place for students seeking a substance-free environment, or one thats devoted to sustainability or a particular foreign language. So there is precedent for catering to students housing wishes. Its time UNC get with the times and accept that, when it comes to roommates, its about so much more than gender.
dTh/jOSh clinard
How would you caption this photo? Email your photo, subject line caption contest, to opinion@dailytarheel.com by Wednesday. Well announce the winner Thursday. As always, remember to have fun and be funny but hold off the vulgarity. Dont let us down.
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: at our office at 151 E. Rosemary Street. Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board. The board consists of five board members, the associate opinion editor, the opinion editor and the editor.
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