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te
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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
us
The infractions
appeal report is
released within six
to eight weeks of
the appeals
hearing.
DTH/JOSE VALLE,
STEPHANIE LAMM,
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.
io
N W
WHAT?
June 4, 2015
UNC releases
the notice
of allegations.
If no appeal is
decided on, UNC
faces penalties.
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.
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.
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
C o ncl
n
Infractions.
o.
1
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In
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News
SAM SCHAEFER
SUMMER EDITOR
MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
STEPHANIE LAMM
UNIVERSITY EDITOR
UNIVERSITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
CLAIRE NIELSEN
CITY EDITOR
CITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
LIZ BELL
SARAH VASSELLO
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
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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.
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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.
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New information on
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By Claire Nielsen
City Editor
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Marty Hanks, founder of Just Bee Apiary, checking on his honeybee farm in 2014.
News
Frank Moretz
is a Board of
Visitors member and UNC
alumnus who
plans to give
a $3 million
gift to UNC.
Staff Writer
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.
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.
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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
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
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
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
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Accreditation report
UNCs accreditation
status report is scheduled
for release Thursday. Visit
dailytarheel.com for coverage
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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.
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
Author Q&A
Author Paul Kapp has a
new book about UNC architect William Nichols. Visit
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Opinion
EDITORIAL CARTOON
Great-greatnephew of
William L.
Saunders and
Florida consumer protection attorney
Guest column
Email: joe@saunderslawyers.com
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.
EDITORIAL
Ultimately a farce
The NCAAs look at
UNC is a sideshow
to real issues.
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
ADVICE COLUMN
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