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WEEKLY SUMMER ISSUE

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ia l

Senior Writers

Penalties for 18 years of academic irregularities at the University of North Carolina may come
within the year.
The notice of allegations laid out the NCAAs
case against UNC. The NCAA issued five allegations which were deemed level-one violations,
accusing UNC of a lack of institutional control.
Three violations concerned impermissible benefits given to student-athletes in the form of academic help in independent study courses.
Like the report by Kenneth Wainstein released
in October, the NCAA investigation focused on
Julius Nyangoro, former chair of the Department
of African and Afro-American Studies; Deborah
Crowder, a former administrator in the department; and Jan Boxill, a former academic counselor for womens basketball, philosophy professor
and director of the Parr Center for Ethics.
In the 732 pages of supporting evidence, Boxill,
Crowder and Nyangoro openly discussed enrolling student-athletes in paper classes and giving
them extensions or extra help on assignments.
In an email to two students who plagiarized
an AFAM paper, Crowder gave the students an
extra week to redo the paper without reporting
the incident.
You know you two are some of my favorites

I am sitting here staring at two ABSOLUTELY


IDENTICAL papers for AFAM, Crowder said. I
dont know who copied from whom or, more likely, where both of you got the paper. I need new
papers from both of you by the end of next week.
The notice of allegations does not attempt to
judge the legitimacy of the classes. The NCAA
has historically taken the stance that they are not
responsible for academic rigor.
The NCAA traditionally has not gotten seriously involved with cases of academic fraud, and
I guess you could make the contention that this
is more a case of athletes receiving benefits not
available to the general student body, said Welch
Suggs, associate professor of journalism at the
University of Georgia. It feels like they are trying
to stake their reputation and credibility in some
way on sort of taking this kind of academic allegation much more seriously.

No one target for punishment


The notice did not cite specific coaches or
teams for violations, although mens basketball
coach Roy Williams, womens basketball coach
Sylvia Hatchell, former football coach Butch
Davis and former athletic director Dick Baddour
were interviewed for the investigation.
The Wainstein report revealed the paper classes were used most by football and mens basketball players, but the notice also mentions womens

us

The infractions
appeal report is
released within six
to eight weeks of
the appeals
hearing.

DTH/JOSE VALLE,
STEPHANIE LAMM,
JEREMY VERNON

NCAA raises questions about future of UNC athletics


By Stephanie Lamm
and Jeremy Vernon

C o n cl

N o. 2

SOURCES: NCAA;
MICHAEL L. BUCKNER,
SPORTS LAWYER

nt

June 2014
NCAA reopens its
investigation into
UNCs athletics
department.

UNC and the


Committee
on Infractions
file their own
briefs.

UNC may choose to


appeal the decision. If
this happens, they have
to file a notice of appeal
within two weeks of the
initial decision.

io

N W
WHAT?
June 4, 2015
UNC releases
the notice
of allegations.

If no appeal is
decided on, UNC
faces penalties.

basketball and womens soccer as offenders.


The inclusion of several emails between Boxill,
a former academic adviser for womens basketball, and other faculty have led some to believe
that the program will receive the brunt of any
punishments from the NCAA.
The five allegations there are calling them out
specifically, said Dan Bruton, president of SportRx
and a sports marketing professor at the University
of San Diego. So I think there is a big target on
(Boxill) and the womens program for sure.
Hatchell defended her program and said
University officials have learned from their
mistakes.
Ive always run my program with integrity,
Hatchell said. Thats why reading some of the
allegations is so disappointing.
Williams, who was only mentioned once in the
notice of allegations, said in a statement that he
was disappointed with the NCAAs findings.
Everyone who loves Carolina is truly saddened
by these allegations, Williams said. We aspire to
and work toward meeting higher standards than
the actions that warranted this notice.

Too late for self-imposed sanctions


Since the University conducted an independent
investigation, the results of which were released

SEE ALLEGATIONS, PAGE 5

Chairman of aerospace
studies dies in wreck
Lt. Col. John Wade
Collins life was
defined by service.
By Stephanie Lamm
University Editor

DTH/KYLE HODGES
Parents and faculty members of Dynamic Community Charter School gather in a crowded lunchroom for a meeting on Monday.

Dynamic charter school set to close


Parents of students with
disabilities served by school
look for their next options.
By Liz Bell
State & National Editor

Joy Jennings listened to her son belting the National Anthem at the first
baseball game of his season in March.
When a singer was needed, he was
the first to volunteer. Jennings was surprised. Her son, William Jennings, is on
the autism spectrum and has not always
displayed that level of confidence.
William Jennings not only sang the
anthem that day but at almost every
game. Each time, he got creative with
his performance once turning the
song into a spoken-word piece.

When I do something, I can make


it my own, Joy Jennings said her son
told her.
Joy Jennings, blown away by his
bold explanation, asked where he had
learned that lesson. His answer: At
school. Theres more than one way to
do something.
William Jennings is finishing the sixth
grade at Dynamic Community Charter
School. His mother attributes his
improvement in self-esteem and his academics to his year at DCCS. The Raleigh
public charter school serves middle and
high school children with disabilities.
The State Board of Education unanimously voted on June 4 to revoke the
schools charter after DCCS had been
open for one year.
Vanessa Jeter, spokeswoman for the
Public Schools of North Carolina, said
the decision does not mean the revoca-

tion is final.
Its important to note that distinction, Jeter said. The school has the
option to appeal within 60 days.
The allegations against DCCS include
issues in the creation of students IEPs
documents that list goals for the students academic and social development.
The report put together by the
Department of Public Instruction after
multiple announced and unannounced
visits mentions concerns with teachers
licensure, a lack of supervision, safety,
curriculum and general chaos.
Parents, faculty and administration
feel they havent been given a fair shot
at explaining themselves.
Sara Brady, president of the DCCS
Parents Association, said the departments visits left an emotional toll on

SEE SCHOOL, PAGE 5

In the military, one of the core


tenants is service before self.
Students and faculty who
knew Lt. Col. John Wade Collins,
chairman of the Department
of Aerospace Studies and commander of Air Force ROTC
Detachment 590, say he exemplified this value every day.
Collins, 44, died in a car
accident Monday morning on
15-501 near Pittsboro between
Bynum Road and Ruth Lane.
Yolanda Gonzalez-Saavedra,
a senior at Northwood High
School and a Chapel Hill resident, was driving in the southbound lane when she crossed
the median and rolled onto
Collins 2008 Toyota Camry.
Gonzalez-Saavendra was killed
in the wreck, and her 14-yearold sister sustained non-lifethreatening injuries.
Capt. Henry Sims Jr. of Det.
590 offered his condolences to
Collins family and the family of
the teenage girl who was killed
in the crash.
His work ethic and dedication are echoed by the outpour
of support from the cadets, staff,
faculty, university and military
officials, Sims said in an email.
Collins recently graduated
his first class of 11 cadets since
coming to UNC in July 2014.
It takes a genuine being
to leave such an imprint,
and though we will not serve
together, we will serve in the
name of men and women like

I dream things that never were; and I say Why not?


GEORGE BERNARD SHAW

May 21, 2015


NCAA issues notice
of allegations
to UNC.

C o ncl
n

Infractions.

Within six to eight


weeks of deliberation,
the Committee on
Infractions will decide
on punishments for UNC.

o.
1

NCAA enforcement staff


receives and evaluates
information indicating
possible violations
by UNC.

Fall 2015 (within


four to five months)
One-day hearing will
be held before the
NCAA Committee on

August 20, 2015


Last of the 90 days
for UNC to respond to
the notice of
allegations.

B
in

Th

s t i g at i o n

ia

sio

ve

Thursday, June 11, 2015


u

In

eg

Volume 123, Issue 46

him who gave their time and


energy to train future leaders,
2nd Lt. Jerrod Powers said.
UNC graduate and 2nd Lt.
Cheyna Elliot said Collins was
a mentor to her this year.
He led by example, she said.
He wouldnt ask something of
us that he wasnt able to do.
Though he was only at UNC
for one year, he adjusted quickly to life in the ROTC.
When I first met him, he
immediately knew my first and
last name and what my job was
in the detachment, and I had
never spoken to him before,
Elliot said.
Collins, who taught in aerospace studies as an adjunct
professor, was always supportive of his students.
Having an 8 a.m. your senior
year is rough, but knowing that
you were coming in to class to
a professor so enthused about
preparing you for your future,
it makes all the difference, 2nd
Lt. Carol Knight said.
Collins graduated from
Texas A&M in 1992. He served
at Yokota Air Base in Japan,
Pope Army Airfield in North
Carolina and Little Rock Air
Force Base in Arkansas.
Collins is survived by his wife,
son and two daughters. Pinecrest
High School set up a fund for
his family on gofundme.com. A
Northwood High School teacher
set up a gofundme for GonzalezSaavedras funeral expenses.
Collins memorial service
will be held at Pinehurst
United Methodist Church
on June 11 at 2:00 p.m.
Condolences and gifts may be
sent to Boles Funeral Home.
university@dailytarheel.com

News

Thursday, June 11, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel


www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893

122 years of editorial freedom

SAM SCHAEFER
SUMMER EDITOR

MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

STEPHANIE LAMM
UNIVERSITY EDITOR

UNIVERSITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

CLAIRE NIELSEN
CITY EDITOR

CITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

LIZ BELL

STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR


STATE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

SARAH VASSELLO

ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR


ARTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JEREMY VERNON
SPORTS EDITOR

SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

KYLE HODGES
PHOTO EDITOR

PHOTO@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

ALISON KRUG
COPY EDITOR

COPY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

JOSE VALLE

DESIGN EDITOR

DESIGN@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

CORRECTIONS
The Daily Tar Heel reports
any inaccurate information
published as soon as the
error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be
printed below. Errors committed on the Opinion Page
have corrections printed on
that page. Corrections also
are noted in the online versions of our stories.

TIPS
Contact Summer Editor
Sam Schaefer at
managing.editor@dailytarheel.
com with news tips, comments,
corrections or suggestions.
Office and Mail Address:
151 E. Rosemary St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514-3539
Sam Schaefer, Summer Editor,
962-4086
Advertising & Business, 962-1163
News, Features, Sports, 962-0245
Distribution, 962-4115
One copy per person;
additional copies may be purchased
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Please report suspicious activity at
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dth@dailytarheel.com
2015 DTH Media Corp.
All rights reserved

The Daily Tar Heel

FLYLEAF TALKS INVASION

WEEKLY
DOSE

Theres gnome place like home

From staff and wire reports

reating curb appeal isnt easy. There are TV channels devoted


to TV shows devoted to helping you craft that perfect aesthetic
for the outside of your abode. Sometimes, however, finding
that look is gnome problem at all.
A woman from Devon, England, awoke one morning to find 107
gnomes in her garden, and she has no idea where they came from.
The winners of this gnome invasion are, for certain, the journalists
who have managed to squeeze every possible pun out of this incident
with articles calling for Sherlock Gnomes, predicting a Gnome Alone
2, criticizing this Game of Gnomes and proclaiming gnome woman,
gnome cry. We gnome what were about, son.
NOTED. Scientists discovered blood cells
and collagen on century-old Canadian
fossils and some paleontologists suggest the soft tissues might contain viable
traces of dinosaur DNA. Cue past and
present dinosaur-Lorax Jeff Goldblum
and Chris Pratt warning us that well
never learn.

QUOTED. If I wasnt wearing a helmet, I


could have been badly hurt.
Cyclist James Curry extolling the
lesser-known virtues of helmets: protection from birds of prey. The cyclist and
others on Drumneath Road in the U.K.
have been subjects of the repeated attacks
of a particularly vengeful buzzard.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY

Location: 610 E. Rosemary St.

PlayMakers Season Preview:


Joseph Haj, producing artistic
director at PlayMakers Repertory
Company, and Frank Stasio, of
WUNC, will host a questionand-answer session about the
companys 2015-16 season. The
event is free, and reservations
are required.
Time: 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Location: Center for Dramatic
Art, 150 Country Club Road

SATURDAY

Women on the Hill Walking


Tour: Preservation Chapel Hill
presents a walking tour of the
history of influential women in
the town of Chapel Hill and at
the University. The tour costs
$5 per person, and free parking
is available.
Time: 10:30 a.m. to noon

Hillsborough Police Fun Run:


The Hillsborough Police Department will be raising funds and
awareness for Special Olympics
with the departments first 5K
fun run. Pets are welcome, and
registration costs $30.
Time: 8:30 a.m. to noon
Location: 127 N. Churton St.
Pollinator Day: Carrboro, the
third Bee City USA town in
the United States, will kick off
its inaugural Pollinator Week.
Attendees will be able to view
beehives and take the Pollinator
Pledge. The event is sponsored
by the Carrboro Farmers Market
and the Carrboro Environmental
Advisory Board.
Time: 7 a.m. to noon
Location: 301 W. Main St.

Prompt Writing Class with


Nancy Peacock: Peacock, a
local novelist, will lead this free
writing group.
Time: 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
Location: 752 Martin Luther
King Jr. Boulevard

SUNDAY

Piper-Cox Open House: There


will be a tour of the Piper-Cox
House and Colonial games on
display for visitors to try out.
Time: 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Location: 6101 Cole Mill Road
To make a calendar submission,
email calendar@dailytarheel.
com. Please include the date of
the event in the subject line, and
attach a photo if you wish. Events
will be published in the newspaper
on either the day or the day before
they take place.

CORRECTIONS
Due to an editing error, the June 4 front page story Bill divides governor and General Assembly
incorrectly stated that the N.C. House of Representatives had voted Wednesday on whether to overturn Gov. Pat McCrorys veto of a bill allowing court officials to recuse themselves from some proceedings for religious reasons. That vote was delayed. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
Like us at facebook.com/dailytarheel

DTH/ TYLER VAHAN

at Shipman discuses her book The Invaders:


How Humans and Their Dogs Drove
Neanderthals to Extinction at Flyleaf Books
on Tuesday. About 20 attendants listened to her
present on the bond between a dog and an owner.

Follow us on Twitter @dailytarheel

POLICE LOG
Someone committed
larceny during a party at the
600 block of Martin Luther
King Jr. Boulevard at 5:10
a.m. Friday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person took an iPhone
valued at $300 and $30 in
cash, reports state.
Someone reported that
someone burned a trash can
in the parking lot of a school
at 1709 High School Road at
7:01 a.m. Saturday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
People were yelling and
playing loud music at the
300 block of West Rosemary
Street at 11:30 p.m. Saturday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
Someone stole personal
items from a residence at the
500 block of McCauley Street
between 12:15 a.m. and 7:30
a.m. Sunday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.

Someone broke into the


Bagel Bar at 630 Weaver
Dairy Road between 10:20
p.m. Sunday and 1:20 a.m.
Monday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
The person stole $1,595
in cash and caused $500
in damage to a glass door,
reports state.
Someone reported an
assault in the parking lot of
a CVS at the 200 block of
North Greensboro Street at
2:25 p.m. Monday, according to Carrboro police
reports.
Someone reported a
suspicious vehicle at 12:49
a.m. Tuesday at the 800 block
of Old Fayetteville Road,
according to Carrboro police
reports.
The driver of the vehicle
was playing a video game
while driving and was repeatedly stopping in order to play
it, reports state.

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News

The Daily Tar Heel

Thursday, June 11, 2015

MORE THAN JUST A GAME

Obey
Creek
vote
delayed
New information on
the project is still
being considered.
By Claire Nielsen
City Editor

House and Senate to engage


in long debates in order to
negotiate compromises.
The Senate budget is
expected to be smaller than
the House budget, which
could mean a decrease in
UNC-system funding.
This is not ordinary budget ties, Guillory said.
These negotiations are
laid with a lot of significance
for how well the state does
over the rest of this decade.
Guillory said he doesnt
expect the state to meet its
deadline.
The end of the fiscal year
is June 30. Its looking like
unless something dramatic
happens, this is going to
drag on.

Many of those who attended


Mondays Chapel Hill Town
Council meeting were surprised when the council decided not to vote on the four Obey
Creek development items up
for discussion, including Roger
Perry of East West Partners,
the projects developer.
Well damn, I got all dressed
up, he said.
The draft of the development
agreement for the proposed 1.5
million-square-foot development
is getting closer to finalization.
Mary Jane Nirdlinger, executive
director of planning and sustainability for the town, presented
on four items related to Obey
Creeks development and rezoning, including the draft of the
development agreement itself.
The staff recommended the
council enact the ordinance to
approve the Obey Creek development agreement.
Overall, we do find that the
development either meets the
towns standards or exceeds
them, Nirdlinger said.
But the council decided early
on that there would not be a
vote Monday because some
information on traffic and transit impacts of the development
had arrived that same day.
Im quite strongly of the
opinion that we should not
act tonight, council member
Ed Harrison said. Too much
came in too late.
The discussion of the development was recessed to June 15.
Perry spoke at the meeting
about the endorsements Obey
Creek has received from community figures, like former
Chapel Hill Mayor Kevin Foy.
We are excited about getting
on with the business of creating
something that is special for
this town, Perry said.
But some residents
expressed concerns they still
had about the development.
Neal Bench, chairman of the
towns planning commission,
said some commission members worried about the effect
of the development on bike
and pedestrian connectivity, as
opposed to within the development itself.
If approved, the Obey Creek
development would be located
across from Southern Village
on U.S. 15-501.
Chapel Hill resident Susan
Lindsay said she thought
cyclists and pedestrians would
be more likely to get hit in
certain areas near the development because of the increased
volume of traffic.
Were talking about physical
impact, she said.
Amy Ryan, vice chair of
the Chapel Hill Planning
Commission, said a 1.1 millionsquare-foot alternative could
lower traffic impact.
The negative impacts of that
proposal are evident in just how
much our roads will have to
grow, she said in reference to the
1.5 million-square-foot version.
Chapel Hill resident David
Schwartz said he worried about
the amount of residential space
proposed for the development.
But council member Maria
Palmer said residents shouldnt
think of the housing in the
development as something
to merely put up with for the
retail space.
We actually need housing.
We need places for people to
live, she said. For me, this is
not a negative, and its not a
sacrifice its a benefit.
She said she felt as if there
was an idea among some speakers that the council favored the
needs of the developer over the
needs of residents. She said this
was not the case, and investors are needed to maintain
the quality of life that many in
Chapel Hill enjoy.
I would like to challenge the
idea that we either value residents, or we value investors,
she said.
This is the first step in changing the way we do development
and the way we do business.

state@dailytarheel.com

city@dailytarheel.com

DTH PHOTO ILLUSTRATION / KYLE HODGES

Local Gamblers Anonymous group approaches 25th anniversary


By Claire Nielsen
City Editor

Steve, a member of the


Chapel Hill chapter of Gamblers
Anonymous, said he considers gambling to be his enemy.
Now, I dont even think about
it, he said.
The group celebrates its 25th anniversary July 25. All of the last names
of those interviewed for this story
have been omitted for anonymity.
Steve hasnt gambled since
December of 2010. Before that, he
said he gambled for about 45 years,
betting on horses, sports and card
games and going to casinos.
Steve said he has filed two personal bankruptcies, had two of his
cars repossessed and saw the house
he shared with his wife foreclosed on.
He still didnt want to stop gambling.
I loved it absolutely loved it,
he said.
Steve said he went to casinos

when he lived in New York, where


he got free meals for being a regular
supporter of the venue.
Free is the key word here, he
said. It wasnt free. That steak I had
one night probably cost me $3,000.
At one point, Steves wife insisted
he get help. Steve told his wife he
found a Gamblers Anonymous meeting but instead visited a small casino
near his home every Wednesday.
Ill never forget the feeling that I
had at that minute that I lied again
to her, and shes proud of me, he said.
Thats how I lost trust and respect.
Steve actually started attending
meetings in late 2010, after a year
of living with his son in Durham,
N.C. Even after being clean for a
year, Steves wife left him.
Later I understood that she
didnt leave me because I was gambling; she left because of the kind of
person I had become, he said. We
lie; we cheat; we steal. With or without it, its who you become.

Bob, whose last bet was in October


of 1970, said lying becomes a major
part of a compulsive gamblers life.
The lying is pathological, he
said. Especially in the beginning.
The lie is like a game.
Steve and Bob said most new members are 30 to 35 years old, and the
large majority of members are men.
The Chapel Hill chapter of Gamblers
Anonymous attracts on average about
eight members to every meeting.
They said younger, college-aged
members usually only stay for a
meeting or two.
According to the National Council
on Problem Gambling, youth rates
of being at risk for compulsive gambling are two to three times higher
than adult rates, and about 6 percent of U.S. college students have a
serious gambling problem.
Bob first gambled while stationed
with the U.S. Marines in Hawaii for
22 months. When he was discharged
from the Marines, he married his

girlfriend and didnt gamble for the


next two-and-a-half years.
After taking a job at United Press
International, Bob began gambling
at the office on horse races. He lied
to his wife about where the money
was going and eventually pawned
her wedding and engagement rings.
Bob started attending meetings in
November of 1963 and gambled again
in 1970. But hes been clean ever since.
God has been very good with his
master plan, he said.
New Gamblers Anonymous member Wanda has been homeless in the
past, partly due to her gambling.
She said winning is not even the
most alluring part of making a bet.
Its not even about winning. Its
about playing, and thats very scary,
she said.
Call 919-460-9039 for more
information about local Gamblers
Anonymous meetings.
city@dailytarheel.com

Carrboro to observe week honoring bees


The Carrboro Farmers
Market will host activities
for Pollinator Week.
By Lauren Miller
Staff Writer

Next week, downtown Carrboro


will be buzzing with new activities.
From June 13 through June 21,
Carrboro will be celebrating its first
ever Pollinator Week. This inaugural event will become an annual
tradition of raising awareness
about the role pollinators play in
the environment.
The event follows a resolution
passed by the Board of Aldermen
in the fall that made Carrboro
the nations third Bee City USA,
Alderman Damon Seils said.
Bee City USA requires certified
cities, like Carrboro, to host community awareness activities.
The series of events is sponsored by the towns Environmental
Advisory Board and will be hosted at
the Carrboro Farmers Market.
The activities are timed to coincide with National Pollinator Week.

The events will primarily educate


people in the community about why
pollinators are so important and how
they hold local ecology and food systems together, Seils said.
On June 13, the typical harvest at
the farmers market will be supplemented by the special additions to
celebrate the week. The events will
also help support local farmers who
work with and sell local pollinators,
said Marty Hank, beekeeper and
vendor at the farmers market.
We are looking for this to grow
every year, Hank said.
The gazebo area of the market will
house a demonstration of a honeybee
hive and the construction of a native
bees nest.
There will also be a place for people to enter their names in a raffle
for pollination-related prizes.
We are looking to promote a safe,
healthy environment; healthy populations of pollinators; and a healthy
pollination. Its bigger than just our
food supply, Hank said.
The towns week-long celebration
will conclude with a screening of
More Than Honey, a documentary by Oscar-nominated director
Markus Imhoof, at the Century

DTH/FILE
Marty Hanks, founder of Just Bee Apiary, checking on his honeybee farm in 2014.

Center at 3 p.m. on June 21.


But the N.C. Botanical Gardens
Saving Our Pollinators exhibition
will include an additional 29 community events.
From workshops to lectures
about the pollinator population
crisis to tours of the pollinator gardens, the exhibition will have something for everyone, said Jennifer
Peterson, spokeswoman for the N.C.
Botanical Garden.
Next weekends festivities,

called Buzz-y Bees, will have


indoor and outdoor activities for
children ages 3 to 5 to learn more
about pollinators in a fun and
interactive setting.
One in three bites of food is created by pollinators, and 80 percent
of all flowering plants rely on pollinators, Peterson said.
Pollinators are important for food
security and environmental health.
city@dailytarheel.com

Budget process likely to drag on due to friction


Lawmakers collide
over proposed
spending levels.
By Courtney Jacobs
Staff Writer

The next step in North


Carolinas budget process
may be delayed as lawmakers dig in for a debate.
The Senate was expected
to release its budget proposal within the week, but
Jennifer Willis, UNCs director of state relations, said
delays are now expected. The
House passed its version of
the budget on May 22.
Despite the conservative platforms of the House
majority, the Houses pro-

posed budget passed with


bipartisan votes.
The Houses version
increases spending compared to the states previous budget, including
giving about $187 million
more to the UNC Board of
Governors in 2015-16 than
in 2014-15.
Willis said the House
budget proposal would
increase UNC-system funding, excluding aid to private
institutions, by 5.1 percent
in 2015-16.
The House leadership
provided a heavy lift for the
system when they restored
$40 million in proposed cuts
as the bill went through the
House Rules Committee,
she said.
However, many con-

servative groups say they


believe saving rather
than spending is the wisest budget decision.
Lawmakers ought to be
focusing on shoring up state
reserves for emergencies,
along with repairs and renovations said Mitch Kokai,
spokesman for the John
Locke Foundation.
Kokai said the Houses
budget proposes an increase
that is more than two times
as high as the safe limit of
2.7 percent. He said a good
rule of thumb for what is
safe is the level of inflation
plus population growth.
Its likely that the Senate
will pursue a budget much
closer to McCrorys in total
spending, he said.
Senators have signaled

that they have no interest


in spending as much as the
House proposes.
Following the budgetmaking process in which
the governor proposes a budget that the House amends
and passes the Senate will
amend the House budget as
it sees fit after debate.
The Senate budget, once
released, will return to the
House for concurrence.
Ferrel Guillory, a journalism professor and director of
the Program on Public Life,
said he does not believe the
House and Senate will come
to an agreement regarding
the states budget easily.
Whats more likely to happen is the House will vote not
to concur, Guillory said.
Guillory said he expects the

News

Thursday, June 11, 2015

The Daily Tar Heel

Renowned tap dancers return to Carrboro


By Trevor Lenzmeier
Staff Writer

Fans of dance will be afforded a rare opportunity Saturday


the chance to see some of
the worlds premier tap dancing talent without leaving the
comfort of Carrboro.
The ArtsCenter will host
The Greatest Tap Show
Ever presented by the North
Carolina Youth Tap Ensemble;
the event ends the second day
of NCYTEs 17th annual North
Carolina Rhythm Tap Festival.
Over the weekend, some
of tap dances biggest names
will teach lessons for all skill
levels before taking to the
stage themselves on Saturday.
The featured tap performers
collectively have appeared on
magazine covers, Broadway,
So You Think You Can Dance
and stages across the world.
For two of the instructors, the trip to Chapel Hill

RHYTHM TAP FESTIVAL


Time: Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
Location: The ArtsCenter
Info: http://bit.ly/1GbPA5c

is a voyage home. Michelle


Dorrance and Elizabeth
Burke both developed their
tap careers with NCYTE
under the tutelage of Artistic
Director Gene Medler.
For Burke, who left NCYTE
only five years ago, her first
festival as an instructor is a
humbling homecoming.
Max Pollak is a genius;
Derick Grant is a genius;
Michelle Dorrance is a
genius; Danny Nielsen is a
genius, Burke said. Needless
to say, its a tremendous
honor and privilege and
incredibly humbling that
Gene would ask me to come
teach a couple of classes and
dance on Saturday night.

When Burke stopped dancing at NCYTE in 2010, she


followed a path forged by
NCYTE graduate Michelle
Dorrance. Burke joined the
prestigious Dorrance Dance
Company in New York
soon after the company was
formed in 2010.
But before NCYTE hosted
17 years of the tap festival,
produced several superstars
in the international tap dancing scene and graced stages
from Beijing to Berlin, the
ensemble was born of humble
origins, according to Medler,
the ensembles artistic director and founder.
We started like a garage
band; we started bad and we
got good, Medler said. It was
all kind of innocent and naive
in the beginning, and I did all
of the choreography, and now
I dont do any of the choreography it all comes from
external creative sources.

But for Medler, the companys shining moments are not


exclusively followed by the
applause that his company
has come to enjoy whenever
they perform, like with the
reaction to their performance
at the Kennedy Center.
There are small moments
along the way when you see a
dancer grow or evolve right in
front of your eyes, and those
are extremely rewarding too.
Even though performer and
teacher Derick Grant wasnt
raised under Medlers instruction in Chapel Hill, he feels at
home when the festival brings
him back to the Triangle.
This is probably the fifth
or sixth time Ive performed
at the festival, which is a huge
honor, and its starting to feel
like home away from home;
theres a level of comfort and
commitment that comes with
being a part of the village
raising those dance children.

COURTESY OF THE BALLET SCHOOL OF CHAPEL HILL


Nicholas Van Young, a 10-year veteran of the dance group
STOMP, leads a class at the Ballet School of Chapel Hill in 2011.

This sentiment is a product


of the culture that Medler has
curated through his dedicated
work in Chapel Hill.
Most teachers have their
students for a year, but these
kids start when theyre 8, and

I have them until theyre 18,


Medler said.
I see a lot of changes in
them, and its really like a
family.
arts@dailytarheel.com

Board of Visitors member plans $3 million gift


By Jonathan Ponciano

Frank Moretz
is a Board of
Visitors member and UNC
alumnus who
plans to give
a $3 million
gift to UNC.

Staff Writer

A $3 million gift will go


toward improving the psychology and anesthesiology
departments at UNC.
Frank Moretz, who
obtained both his undergraduate and medical degrees from
UNC before completing his
residency at the UNC School
of Medicine, said that as a part
of his retirement transition, he
updated his estate planning
to reflect his appreciation for
UNCs role in his personal and
professional life.
Citing concerns over continued budget cuts to the

UNC system and the potential effects of the athletic-academic scandal, Moretz hopes
he can shed positive light on
the impact that an education
can have on lives.
I thought this would be a
good time to show my support and give back to the
University that had given me
so much, Moretz said.

Its all about paying it forward for the next generation.


Moretz admits that retirement has been a lot busier
than expected, as he begins a
four-year term with the UNC
Board of Visitors in July.
The planned donation will
be shared equally between
the psychology department
in the College of Arts and
Sciences, the anesthesiology department at the UNC
School of Medicine and the
UNC School of Medicines
Asheville campus.
Moretz has allowed the
funds to be utilized at the
discretion of each department head.

The anesthesiology
department will create an
endowment in Moretzs
name to enrich the education
of graduate students.
As far as anesthesiologists go, I want them to be
leaders in their community,
Moretz said.
I want us to train physicians to be physicians
advocates rather than just
practice medicine.
A part of the contribution will also go toward the
development of the Frank
Hannon Moretz, M.D.,
Excellence Fund in the psychology department, said
Donald Lysle, chairman of

the department.
After two years at Emory
University, where Moretz said
he struggled academically
and socially, Moretz transferred to UNC and found it to
be a much better fit.
After years of struggling
academically, Moretz sought
help from UNC academic
support and discovered he
was dyslexic. From then on,
he learned to cope with his
reading disability.
My reading comprehension increased, my grades
improved greatly, and I
started reading for pleasure
for the first time in my life,
Moretz said.

Brianna Chicarelli, a
junior psychology major,
shares a similar appreciation
for her experience at UNC
and is grateful to alumni like
Moretz who continue to support the University.
UNC is known for our
great accomplishments
in medicine, and I think
the more support we get,
the more significant the
research and findings can be,
Chicarelli said.
I think its great that his
donation will go toward a
field that helps a lot of people, she added.
university@dailytarheel.com

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Aries (March 21-April 19)


Today is a 9 Its easier to resolve
misunderstandings with Mercury direct. Communications barriers dissolve. A new, already
overdue assignment comes to your attention.
Mental and physical agility are required. Stay
out of new messes. Good news comes from
far away.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 9 Discover a money machine.
A friends crazy idea may actually work. The
action is behind the scenes. Wheel and deal.
Its easier to negotiate with Mercury direct.
Communications flow with ease. The road
ahead is clear. Collaborate.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 9 Look at the world from a
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in mind. An agreement moves forward.
Do what you promised. Move quickly to
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now that Mercurys direct. Creative efforts
blossom.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8 Channels flow with greater
ease, now that Mercurys direct. Launch a
new project or assume new leadership. Redefine an assignment. Organize steps to take.
Keep in action, and go for distance rather
than speed. New opportunities arise.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 9 Persuasion comes easier now.
The more value you provide, the more money
you make. Dont gamble or spend frivolously.
Write up your message. Push boldly forward.
Communication is your golden ticket with
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creating.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is an 8 Maintain domestic tranquility. Its easier to reach consensus. Logistics
center on money and travel flow now that
Mercurys direct. Dont go against your core
values, no matter what. Ask for help if you
need it. Inject magic into the equation.
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Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)


Today is a 9 Get out there! Lines of communication clear up, with Mercury direct.
Its easier to understand and be understood.
Long-distance travel and shipping flow. Write
your discoveries. Stand for liberty, brotherhood
and equality. Talk about what you love.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 9 Theres less confusion. Traffic
and electronics flow with greater ease. Your
communications go far. Draw upon hidden
resources. The best things in life are free. Be
spontaneous, not reckless. Change direction
intuitively. Feed everyone who shows up.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8 A glass ceiling is dissolving.
Restore long-distance connections. Its easier
to get your message out, travel and launch
projects, with Mercury direct. Make a change.
Trust emotion over intellect; still, establishing
efficiency saves money. Consider options
patiently.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 9 Group activities go well. Like
a newly pressurized hose, something youve
been pushing gushes forward. Its easier to
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provides productive solutions. Lead, and
empower others to lead. Make an amazing
discovery. Work together.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8 Its easier to get teams
aligned. The fog clears. Learning and
understanding blossoms, with Mercury direct.
Writing flows now. Make plans for the future.
Invest in your career. Create stable foundations. Frugality is required. Spread your wings.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 9 A barrier to your objective is
dissolving. Words and traffic flow better with
Mercury direct. Career shines, and a move
is possible. You may have to break eggs to
make an omelet. Grab an opportunity. Clean
up after.

From Page One

SCHOOL

FROM PAGE 1

the children.
Its been an incredible
amount of stress. These kids
have left school crying after
these visits, Brady said.
More than 30 parents,
teachers and administrators
gathered Monday night to
discuss their next move.
Appealing to the states
revocation, as Laura Kay Berry

ALLEGATIONS

FROM PAGE 1

in the Wainstein report, some


thought the University would
self-impose sanctions.
I think that ship has sailed,
Bruton said. I think once
youre caught with your hand
in the cookie jar that its a little
bit late to say, Hey, we are
going to take care of this now.
Lewis Margolis, associate
professor of maternal and
child health at UNC, said he
believes the University should
vacate wins.
And we are only talking
about games here, you know.
Nobody died. Nobody suffered
long-term injuries, Margolis
said. I think the University
should forfeit these games, and
that would be an acknowledgement one acknowledgement
that we did not do right, that
we violated the rules.

Sending a message
In a conference call with the
media on the day the notice
was released, Director of
Athletics Bubba Cunningham
said he agreed with some of
the allegations but took issue
with others. He said he is
concerned about the effect the
investigations and public scrutiny have had on the program
and the University.
It has been a difficult environment on the campus for us
as staff members, as athletic
department staff members, as
faculty, as students, and I do
think the length of time has
impacted our ability to attract
some of the students that
would have committed to the
institution in previous years,
Cunningham said.
Michael Buckner, an attorney specializing in sports law,
said while UNCs situation is

Thursday, June 11, 2015

chairwoman of the DCCS


board of directors explained,
will take resources that the
board cant fund alone. Parents
said that they would do what
they can to help.
At the end of the day, the
states going to turn around
and say, The reason that the
school is closing is because
we failed to serve your kids,
Berry said. And for that, I am
truly sorry.
The schools board of direc-

tors will vote next Monday on


whether or not to appeal.
The school year has been
filled with tension between the
school and the State Board of
Education, which intensified in
the spring, Joy Jennings said.
The board initiated the revocation process on March 5, but
it later reached an agreement
with the school in April. Due to
multiple financial and compliance concerns, the revocation
process restarted in May.

Joy Jennings said the


unity between the school and
parents through the ups and
downs says something.
How many times have you
heard the stories of parents
united by a school banding
together to fight but fighting with the school as opposed
to against it? she said.
Brady said her son, Bailey
Gladden, a ninth grader at
DCCS, has benefited from an
environment separate from

unprecedented, he compares
it to the case of academic
fraud at the University of
Southern California.
USC was just a few
student-athletes, but at UNC
were talking more studentathletes, more administrators
over a longer period of time,
Buckner said. The NCAA is
going to use UNCs case to
send a message about the seriousness of these violations.
Like USC, UNC will be
tried under the old NCAA
penalty structure, which was
revised in 2013. Buckner
said possible penalties could
include vacated wins, forfeited
championships, lost scholarships and postseason bans.
You just look back at
Penn State or USC. Youve
got student athletes there
now that have nothing to
do with this, and theyre the
ones that are going to suffer
the consequences, Bruton
said. I mean Reggie Bush is
playing for the Detroit Lions
or whoever hes playing for,
and the NCAA is hammering
USC, and Pete Carroll is winning a Super Bowl, and none
of them are there anymore.
And the poor guys who were
seniors in high school said,
Hey, I want to go to USC.
And now theyre sophomores
and juniors, and they are the

ones suffering for it.

tions within two weeks of


the decision. After an appeal,
there will be another hearing and a final decision six to
eight weeks after that.
If you think of all the
resources that go in now to the
response, yet another major
report, so all the resources that
go into the response for this
imagine how those resources
could be used in other ways to
make the University stronger
and better its a sad additional cost of participating in
the big-time sports enterprise,
Margolis said.

Moving forward
UNC must respond by
August 20. The NCAAs
enforcement staff will then
have 60 days to conduct a prehearing conference. In four to
five months, University officials will go before the NCAA
Committee on Infractions at a
one-day hearing.
Within six to eight
weeks of the hearing, the
Committee on Infractions will
release penalties in a Public
Infractions Report.
UNC may appeal the sanc-

university@dailytarheel.com

traditional public schools


where she said her son was
bullied. After two hospitalizations within 18 months due to
suicidal thoughts and tendencies, Brady removed her son
and looked for other options.
It basically stemmed from
the fact that he had no friends,
she said. He felt harassed all
the time. He felt like his teachers had really let him down.
Jeter said whether or not a
student needs a separate set-

ting is their parents concern,


not the states.
Looking ahead, discussions
of a home schooling co-op or
just regular play dates have
begun among parents.
Whether or not the charter remains in place, this
community will stick together, Brady said. No matter
what happens, I know that
my son has made friends.
state@dailytarheel.com

June 15-19, 2015


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dailytarheel.com for coverage

games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

Level:

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

Solution to
last weeks puzzle

Budget negotiations
The N.C. Senate wants a
more fiscally conservative
budget than the House. See
pg. 3 for story

Tap vets come home


Alumni of the North
Carolina Youth Tap Ensemble
are in town for a festival. See
pg. 4 for story

Author Q&A
Author Paul Kapp has a
new book about UNC architect William Nichols. Visit
dailytarheel.com for story

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Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


ACROSS
1 Unit of volume
6 One of the Twelve
Olympians
10 Factory container
13 Inexpensive opening?
14 Bering Sea port
15 Subterranean critter
16 Sign posted on an office
computer?
18 Ruler of the Valkyries
19 Venison source
20 End of basketball?
21 Exasperated
22 Attractive legumes?
26 Overthrows
28 Omegas, to a physicist
29 Sprang (from)
30 Train station stat
31 Its national anthem is
Peace to the Sultan
35 Chum
36 Taxable amount ... and a
hint to the four longest
puzzle answers
40 Diamond standout
41 Winter vehicle
43 Find, with up
44 Italian white wines
46 Deuce follower
48 Unequivocal
statement
50 Dark-haired
brigade?
54 Thigh-toning
exercise
55 Stick
56 Decoy
59 Pot enhancer
60 Blaze at a hat
factory?

63 Furor
64 Labor long hours
65 Turns red, maybe
66 Frostbite victim
67 Cheese manufacturing
byproduct
68 Wes Craven film locale:
Abbr.
DOWN
1 Allow to use
2 Arctic Blast maker
3 Tlingit feature of
Seattles Pioneer Square
4 Completely surrounds
5 Joey of fiction
6 Places for electronic
monitors
7 Chick bar?
8 Grounded Aussie
9 Unbendable
10 Bloody Mary ingredient
11 The War of the Worlds
character
12 Minds
15 To a larger extent
17 Russo who plays Frigga

in Thor
21 Lenovo acquired its PC
business in 2005
23 Rural valley
24 Smidgen
25 Beverage flavored with
cinnamon and
cardamom
26 Bugs
27 Like film narration
30 Person, slangily
32 Individual way
33 Popular palm fruit
34 Hornet hangout
37 Doctor, perhaps
38 Color variant
39 What, will these hands
__ be clean?: Lady

(C)2015 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


All rights reserved.

Macbeth
42 Jeopardy
45 Aptly sensitive
47 Welsh/English border
river
48 Wishful words
49 Manner
50 Verbally assault
51 Eagerly head for
52 Remove, as a cravat
53 Bath-loving Muppet
57 Culinary pursuits
58 Unwelcome garden
visitor
60 Texters I almost
forgot
61 Wowed ones word
62 I __ Piccoli Porcellini

Opinion

Thursday, June 11, 2015


Joseph
Saunders

EDITORIAL CARTOON

The Daily Tar Heel

QUOTE OF THE DAY

By Drew Sheneman, The Star-Ledger

Great-greatnephew of
William L.
Saunders and
Florida consumer protection attorney

Its been an incredible amount of stress.


These kids have left school crying after
these visits.
Sara Brady, on state visits to the Dynamic Community Charter School

Guest column
Email: joe@saunderslawyers.com

FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT

Relative:
Saunders
needed
to go

I would prefer my liberal arts, public university to honor impressive people from all
backgrounds through its building names.

he painting of Uncle
Bill was part of
my childhood. The
Confederate sword of Col.
William Saunders is on the
wall in my living room.
Saunders Hall at the
University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill has carried
our family name since 1922
to honor his contributions
to UNC. Saunders compiled
the definitive colonial document collection and history
of early North Carolina. His
10-volume Colonial and State
Records of North Carolina is
still in print.
Saunders, my great-greatuncle, was a lawyer, as am
I. In 1876, he was one of the
founders of The (Raleigh)
News & Observer, along with
Peter Hale. He remained associated with the paper until he
became the secretary of state
and was reelected until he
died in 1891.
He also was leader of
the N.C. Ku Klux Klan.
He was questioned by the
Congressional Committee of
1871. He responded to each
question by asserting his Fifth
Amendment right and stating:
I decline to answer.
That phrase is inscribed
on his tombstone at Calvary
Churchyard in Tarboro, N.C.,
along with the statement:
For 20 years he exerted more
power in North Carolina than
any other man.
Saunders led the KKK in
North Carolina in successfully opposing Reconstruction
and in denying U.S.
Constitutional rights to black
citizens in violation of federal
law. Saunders was one of the
architects of 100 years of
injustice and segregation in
the South.
The debate over the name
of Saunders Hall at UNC has
persisted for decades. It is
time to change the name of
the building. I support the
students who have pressed
this debate, and I commend
the trustees of the University
for taking action.
One of the reasons the
board named the building
after Saunders in 1920 was
his leadership in the KKK.
So its important to recognize
the board, as well as the vast
majority of lawyers and judges
at that time, supported the
defeat of Reconstruction and
the denial of rights to black
citizens.
These are the people who
should have supported justice
for all.
Saunders did represent
the legal and political system
in the South, but taking his
name off the building should
not lead anyone to believe
the vestiges of the system he
helped design do not persist
today.
Current political measures
to restrict minority voting
rights are just one example of
that continuing struggle for
social justice.
There is still much work to
be done to achieve true social
justice. Removing my greatgreat-uncles name from this
building is a small step in the
right direction.

TO THE EDITOR:
This year weve seen
heightened national attention on anti-black police
brutality, but lets not
forget that the police are
mouths that feed into our
prison system. Since March
of 2015, inmates in the
Durham County Jail have
been confined for extended
periods of time, receiving as
little as six hours per week
outside their cells.
As someone who was
previously in the jail, I saw
firsthand the harm such
conditions do to peoples
minds. Since the lockback
began, I witnessed multiple people attempting
suicide. These incidents
have gone unreported. Like
many who were locked up,
a criminal record means
great difficulty in finding a
job for myself. Like many
who were and are locked
up, I am a black man living
under institutional racism
and the revolving door of
homelessness, unemployment and incarceration.
People who care about
homelessness and poverty
in Chapel Hill, I urge you
to support the work of the
Inside-Outside Alliance, a
group working to advance
the struggles of those currently and formerly incarcerated in the jail and their
family and friends.
The group has drafted a
set of demands calling for
an end to the lockback and
deplorable, torturous conditions inside the jail. A key
demand is an independent
investigation of living conditions, conducted by doctors,
mental health practitioners,
nutritionists, lawyers and
Durham residents.
Sign their online petition,
and join them every Friday
at 6 p.m. outside the jail to
demand an end to the lockback: https://www.change.

RalphUNC, on arguments around the newly christened Carolina Hall

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR


Prison lockback is
part of violent system

EDITORIAL

Ultimately a farce
The NCAAs look at
UNC is a sideshow
to real issues.

t first glance, the


NCAAs notice of
allegations doesnt
contain any substantial
new information. Their
main charge that UNC
lacked institutional control, should shock no one.
But its important to
remember that both the
NCAA and UNC have a
vested interest in discussion about the scandal
ending as soon as possible.
UNC needs to be able to
recruit athletes and generate revenue. The NCAA
benefits from a lack of
close examinations of their
flagship programs. When
conversations about the
structure of college sports
continue, it becomes difficult to ignore the exploitation that is occurring.
The NCAAs investigation process and the official
positions of UNCs administration reveal a lack of
institutional will from both
to seriously examine the

evidence thats been uncovered so far and, by extension, address the problems
at the core of college sports.
Going forward, UNC
should attempt to reclaim
its progressive legacy on
this issue exemplified by
figures like William Friday
and Dean Smith, not continue to hitch itself to the
NCAAs sinking ship.
While it is difficult to
know what the NCAA will
do at this point, this editorial board suspects that
the NCAAs Committee on
Infractions will come down
hardest on womens basketball, as Jan Boxill, the
programs former academic
advisor, is the star of the
notice of allegations.
Her emails litter the
report, filled with exclamations about what classes
her girls need and suggestions about what grades
they should receive on
assignments. The notice
doesnt seem to emphasize
revenue sports mens
basketball and football.
Another marker of
resistance to addressing
problems is the decision

to try UNC under the old


enforcement policy. The
new policy introduced in
2013 holds coaches responsible for misconduct even if
they werent directly aware
it was occurring at the time.
The old policy allows head
coaches to emerge relatively
unscathed.
UNC athletic director Bubba Cunningham
said the NCAA decided to
use the old penalty structure. This seems to be an
arbitrary decision that
lessens pressure on UNCs
renowned head coaches.
This is not to say that
the NCAA coming down
hard on all the involved
teams would be a useful course of action. The
NCAA, as a fundamentally
exploitative institution,
lacks any kind of moral
authority when it comes to
UNCs wrongdoing. UNC
cannot look to the NCAA
to wipe its own slate clean.
To do so, UNC should
own up to its misdeeds
and lead conversations
about institutional change
on a national level. So far,
that has not happened.

ADVICE COLUMN

You Asked for It


In which we help you survive spending the summer at home
Kelsey Weekman (meme
queen at Mashable) and
Drew Groins (meme peasant) are the advice columnists of You Asked for It.
Results may vary.

You: How do I avoid see-

ing old high school friends


without seeming like Im
actually avoiding them?

YAFI: While your high


school pals might have
been good for a laugh in AP
U.S. Government or a postclass Frosty, youve now
moved on to cooler friends
the kind who are good
for a laugh in POLI 101 or a
post-class Frosty.
Luckily, theyre probably
trying to avoid you, too. Also,
Apples quasi-Orwellian Find
My Friends app has declined
in popularity since our high
school days. Congress also has
your back with the curtailing
of the Patriot Act adopted
thanks to the powerful, homebound, millennial lobby.
However, youll likely run
into some folks, and thats
where the playing it cool
part comes in. You just want
to run into Harris Teeter,
grab your kale chips and get
out, but the presence of lurk-

Kelsey Weekman &


Drew Goins
Senior writers.
To submit your own questions:
bit.ly/dthyafi

ers turns the trip into a game


of human Minesweeper.
If you make eye contact
with an old chum, dont
feign ignorance. Approach
the subject slowly, making
yourself as large as possible
and creating loud noises.
If the acquaintance does
not flee, its time to break
out the big guns. Primed to
turn and leave, employ the
most noncommittal sucker
punch in the book: Lets
totally get lunch!

You: How do I make the

most of moving back home


with my parents for the
summer?

YAFI: Dont give into the

despair by reliving your teen


angst. Rather, treat your

homestay as you would a


semester abroad.
Log your travels on your
blog, hopelesswanderlust.
wordpress.com, or whatever.
Highlight every dodged
lunch date with an old friend
and every instance you find
something to do other than
walk around Wal-Mart.
Get your passport stamped
at every frozen yogurt store
in the area. Journey into
unexplored TV channels
we love HLN and Oxygen!
Master the language of the
natives. Mention the lawn
mower to your dad. Watch
Fixer Upper with your
mom. Ask your grandparents
how their ancestry.com free
trial is going.
Itll be hard to adapt to
the local culture, and you
might misstep, so ask that
your parents follow the same
punishment process as the
NCAA, and youll be well
into midterms (of spring
semester) before you finally
get consequences.
Your parents will feed
you for free, so enjoy your
time at home. Try to listen to
Kelly Clarksons Breakaway
while staring out your window once a day.

QuickHits
A cringeworthy name

Nooo, Hillary

Yeezy season

So no album?

A restaurant called Crepe


Culture will open on Franklin
Street on Fourth
of July weekend.
Were sure their
crepes and coffee
are stellar, but
they should have asked literally anyone before picking
that particular name and
choosing a location next
to one of the most fratty
business on Franklin Street:
Gentlemens Corner.

Hillary Clintons presidential


campaign sells a shirt with a
photo of her from
college overlaid
with, Yaaas, Hillary, using slang
that dates back to
Paris is Burning and came
back via Lady Gagas Instagram. They should instead
sell a shirt that says, We are
desperately trying to appeal
to snake people; please dont
vote for Bernie Sanders.

Monday was rapper and


noted Gemini Kanye Wests
birthday. Were
still celebrating
today and every
day because
were all so
#blessed to be alive at the
same time as an artist/
genius/architect/educator/
innovator/visionary who is
the self-described second
coming of Steve Jobs, Walt
Disney and God Herself.

Beyonce said shed be making an announcement on


Good Morning
America on
Monday morning, and speculation began
that she would announce a
pregnancy, album or tour.
Instead she took to the show
to announce her new vegan
diet. Just like all vegans before her, she had to let millions know about her diet.

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Email: opinion@dailytarheel.
com

org/p/end-the-lockback.
Ricky Alston
Inside-Outside Alliance

Historys gaze should


be comprehensive
TO THE EDITOR:
While I can respect Chris
Rogers and his opinion on
learning from history, so
much of what we know is
incomplete information.
It is asinine to think that
students of color would
want to attend a University
that memorializes those
who would rather see noose
ropes around our necks
than caps on our heads.
But Rogers is not alone in
his analysis of how renaming would somehow indicate
an erasure of Saunders and
his legacy from this campus.
The infrastructure of UNC
was laid by poor or enslaved,
unnamed or forgotten
blacks during a time when
their education was illegal.
Its how racism works, by
selectively choosing who
is worthy or unworthy to
remember.
Zora Neale Hurston
took classes here in secret
because she had no choice.
She couldnt enroll nor
could her name be recorded. Its clear whose history
matters and whose story
must be long forgotten for
white people to continue
their supremacist project.
Having left a legacy of
destruction of black lives
in his wake, it is impossible
to overlook the type of villain Saunders was. Using
the word bad to describe
a man who was the chief
organizer of the North
Carolina Ku Klux Klan in
their mission to harass free
blacks is an understatement. Saunders was an
exceptional racist who used
his several positions of
power to enact terror.
Rogers fears are misplaced that anyone could
stifle his white privilege by
denying men like Saunders
their due respect by prioritizing a woman of color.
Ishmael Bishop
Senior
English

The Daily Tar Heel


Established 1893,
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of editorial freedom
SAM SCHAEFER
SUMMER EDITOR

MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

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OPINION EDITOR

OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM

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