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Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

The life that Ms. Carson led was too short, but she continues to be an inspiration.
Judge Allen BAddour
Tuesday, March 5, 2013 dailytarheel.com Volume 121, Issue 7
gambills ex:
unC forced
me out
By Caitlin McCabe
and Liz Crampton
Senior Writers
When the ex-boyfriend of
sophomore Landen Gambill
was called into the Universitys
Dean of Students Office in
February 2012, he said he
never expected to be faced with
accusations of repeated sexual
and verbal violence.
But he said those accusa-
tions filed by Gambill herself
were not nearly as shocking
as a document he received call-
ing for his immediate, indefi-
nite suspension from UNC.
I was not given the oppor-
tunity to present any evidence
I was just immediately sus-
pended, said the ex-boyfriend,
who was granted anonymity
due to what he has called con-
tinued threats to his safety.
That indefinite suspension
and subsequent concerns
about the rights of students
who are accused of crimes
reflects the growing complexity
of an ongoing case that has
captured the attention of the
University and heaped scru-
tiny on its method of handling
sexual assault.
All I wanted was to cooper-
ate and get back to school,
Gambills ex-boyfriend said.
But he said stipulations set
by UNC led to a tiresome and
psychologically damaging six-
month process that repeatedly
denied him readmittance.
I was diagnosed with (post-
traumatic stress disorder) due
to this, he said. Ive been
struggling with it ever since.
During the time of his sus-
pension, he was found not guilty
of two counts of sexual miscon-
duct by a University Hearings
Board consisting of two stu-
dents, two faculty members and
one administrator in May 2012.
The hearings board was
used during interim proce-
dures after sexual assault was
removed from the jurisdiction
of the honor system.
He was found guilty of verbal
harassment.
I think about it at night all
the time. It hurts a lot, espe-
cially when proven innocent
and you are innocent, he said.
When Gambill filed a com-
plaint against him in February
2012 four months after end-
ing the relationship the alle-
gations were received by two
separate University bodies: the
student-led honor system and
the emergency evaluation and
action committee, which issued
the suspension.
The emergency committee,
composed of various administra-
tors, serves to evaluate students
who might be at risk to them-
selves or others, said Melinda
Manning, former assistant dean
of students and chairwoman
of the committee at the time of
Gambills complaint.
The point of the committee
is not to punish students, she
said.
The emergency committee
is used in all cases of conduct
that may pose a threat to cam-
pus, Manning said.
Its important to note that
even though there might be
an initial decision to remove a
student, he or she always has
a right to appeal at any time,
By Chelsey Dulaney
City Editor
Durham and Chapel Hill are
separated only by a 10-or-so-mile
stretch of road.
There are no fences, no check
points, and thousands of people
flow in and out of the cities bor-
der each day without a second
thought.
Five years ago today, two
Durham residents 17-year-old
Laurence Alvin Lovette Jr. and
21-year-old Demario James Atwater
crossed that border looking for
someone to rob.
And it was chance that placed
Eve Carson, the 2007-08 UNC stu-
dent body president, in their path.
In the early hours of March 5,
2008, Lovette and Atwater kid-
napped Carson from her home on
Friendly Lane in Chapel Hill, took
her to at least one ATM to withdraw
money, and finally shot her to death
in a quiet neighborhood about a
mile from campus.
Carsons death shocked the
Chapel Hill community, which
many had previously considered
separate from such violent and ran-
dom crime.
But the logic behind Lovette
and Atwaters decision to come
to Chapel Hill that night was not
unique, and a Daily Tar Heel analy-
sis of 10 years of Chapel Hill police
records shows that about one-fifth
of local robberies, murders, kidnap-
pings, rapes and affrays come from
Durham.
Suitable targets
Despite the proximity of Chapel
Hill and Durham, several demo-
graphic factors divide the neighbor-
ing cities.
With more than 233,000 resi-
dents, Durhams population more
than quadruples that of Chapel Hill.
In 2011, there were more than
1,700 violent crimes committed in
Durham while there have only
been 850 arrests for violent crimes
in Chapel Hill in the last 10 years.
Violent crime encompasses several
different levels of assault, robbery,
murder, kidnapping and rape.
In Durham, the median house-
hold income is $47,394, compared
to $58,415 in Chapel Hill.
And about 51 percent of Chapel
Hills residents are UNC students.
The convergence of these
factors wealthier residents,
concentrated student housing
areas and a lack of personal con-
nection to the residents can
make Chapel Hill a suitable target
area for crime, said Al Kopak, an
assistant criminology professor at
By Cammie Bellamy
Assistant City Editor
The first time Melissa
Lunden ate at Peppers Pizza
was on Sept. 11, 2001.
We just sat here and drank
multiple pitchers of beer and
ate pizza because we just didnt
want to watch any more TV,
Lunden said.
On Monday, Lunden had
one final meal at the pizzeria
with her two sons.
After 26 years of serving
Franklin Street patrons,
Peppers Pizza closed its doors
Monday night for good.
The restaurant, which
opened in 1987 and moved to
its current location at 107 E.
Franklin St. seven years ago,
has faced declining business
and increased competition
vying for student customers.
Owner David Pepper
Harvey said he made the
decision to close after
difficulties paying off a loan.
I had a bank loan that
I havent been able to pay
and the banks coming and
foreclosing on my equipment,
Harvey said. This morning,
they called and said sometime
this week theyre going to
close.
Harvey said Peppers has
struggled to bring in customers
from UNC in recent years.
While in the past students
made up a large part of
the restaurants customer
base, Harvey said expanded
on-campus dining options have
hurt local restaurants.
Business has been slow
down here for three years, he
said. Theres no people down-
town. Since Aramark took over
the food service over on cam-
pus, they pretty much locked
up the people on campus. They
shortened the lunch break so
E
ve Carson used to say that
she had friends, and she had
friends that she had not yet
met.
Today, on the fifth anniversary of
her murder, Id like for us to con-
sider ourselves part of the latter.
In passing conversations about
futures, jobs and post-graduation
plans, five years can seem enormous
and unending. In reality, five years
can pass in the blink of an eye.
Since that March 5 that so sud-
denly and violently ripped this
community apart, Eves love for our
University has shone like a beacon
of hope through the darkest of
days.
It has connected us the
students who came to know her
through conversations about the
Carolina Way and the scholar-
Sexual aSSault on campuS
Peppers closes
after 26 years
The man said the
University denied him
due process rights.
The pizzeria faced
competition from
on-campus dining.
dth/kathleen doyle
Crowds of people filled Peppers Pizza on Monday to eat at the
Franklin Street restaurant on the last night before it closed.
Carry on the Carolina that Eve loved
See GAMBILL, page 4
See dUrhAM, page 4
See peppers, page 4
durham residents commit
22 percent of Chapel hills
violent crime.
ships and events now held in her
honor to Eve, UNCs bright and
beautiful 2007-08 student body
president.
Yes, there are still days like
today, when the loss of Eve weighs
like an anchor on your heart
that such a bright spot in this
world could so suddenly, so perma-
nently disappear.
But then there are happier
memories.
Eve in a Carolina blue prom
dress, cheering in the student sec-
tion of the Carolina-Duke game.
Eve, sitting in the front room of
the Undergraduate Library, catch-
ing up with friends and forgetting
the hours of work she still had
ahead of her.
Eve, dancing in the living room
of her house on Friendly Lane on so
many late nights.
And of course, there are the
thousands who, armed with the
determination and compassion
that Eve once spread to this cam-
pus, have gone on to quite literally
change the world.
Theres the UNC professor, Jock
Lauterer, who launched a commu-
nity newspaper project to engage
Chelsey Dulaney
City Editor
On March 5, 2008, two men from Durham kidnapped and
murdered then-Student Body President Eve Carson.
Five years later, a Daily Tar Heel analysis shows:
COMPILED FROM CHAPEL HILL POLICE REPORTS BY CHELSEY DULANEY AND SARAH GLEN DTH/CASSIE SCHUTZER AND MEREDITH BURNS
COMPILED FROM CHAPEL HILL POLICE REPORTS BY CHELSEY DULANEY AND SARAH GLEN DTH/CASSIE SCHUTZER AND MEREDITH BURNS
COMPILED FROM CHAPEL HILL POLICE REPORTS BY CHELSEY DULANEY AND SARAH GLEN DTH/CASSIE SCHUTZER AND MEREDITH BURNS
COMPILED FROM CHAPEL HILL POLICE REPORTS BY CHELSEY DULANEY AND SARAH GLEN DTH/CASSIE SCHUTZER AND MEREDITH BURNS
See eve CArson, page 4
OF MURDERS &
ATTEMPTED MURDERS
OF RAPES &
ATTEMPTED RAPES
OF ROBBERIES &
ATTEMPTED ROBBERIES
OF KIDNAPPINGS AND
ATTEMPTED KIDNAPPINGS
compIled By chelSey dulaney and SaRah glen FRom chapel hIll polIce RepoRtS dth/caSSIe SchutZeR and meRedIth BuRnS
47%
30%
18%
22%
Durham crime
crosses over
Someone disturbed the
peace at 133 E. Franklin St.
between 2 p.m. and 2:30 p.m.
Sunday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
A woman became irate
with her sons coworker,
reports state.
Someone vandalized
property at 403 Lindsay St. at
1:52 p.m. Sunday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person willfully drove
their vehicle across their
neighbors yard, reports state.
Someone vandalized
property at 701 Emory Drive
between 1:55 a.m. and 2:35
a.m. Sunday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone rang a doorbell
and broke the glass of a storm
door window, causing $100 in
damages, reports state.
Someone reported a
prowler at 411 Holly Lane at
1:50 a.m. Sunday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person was spotted
beating on the door of a house
and walking around the resi-
dence, reports state.
Someone vandalized
property at 1725 Fordham
Blvd. at 7:36 p.m. Saturday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person broke the win-
dow of a 2007 Honda Accord,
causing $100 in damages,
reports state.
Someone trespassed at
the McDonalds at 409 W.
Franklin St. at 9:03 p.m.
Saturday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
Someone reported a
suspicious condition and tres-
passing at 1301 U.S. Highway
15-501 South at 1:29 p.m.,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
Kids trespassed on private
land, reports state.
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POLICE LOG
News Tuesday, March 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2
COrrECtIOns
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
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Noted. A survey shows
that kids these days are
raking in an average of
$2.42 per lost tooth from
the Tooth Fairy, which just
proves that having kids is
expensive beyond all com-
prehension. Are these kids
too good for quarters?
Quoted. Worst birthday
You guys. Justin
Bieber had the worst birth-
day. It must have been so
bad. It must have been
so terrible. Unbelievable.
Boycott the weak ass club
that ruined his birthday.
Poor Justin. Pray for Justin.
T
his quote is really all you need to
know: All I was trying to do was
turn it into a mountain but, it didnt
look like a mountain really and it
turned out to be a gun kinda, said John Welch,
newly suspended second-grader.
He was nibbling a strawberry Pop-Tart when
a teacher pounced and seized what she deemed
to be a pastry gun.
His Pop-Tart got him kicked out of school.
For two days.
Yep.
Our hearts are heavy
from staf and wire reports
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The Daily Tar Heel
tOday
last day for undergraduate
students to drop courses: also
the last day to submit pass/fail
declarations for courses.
time: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
location: Steele Building
cold war lecture: Warren Kim-
ball speaks about the Cold War
and beyond as part of the U.S. in
World afairs lecture series.
time: 5 p.m.
location: Hamilton Hall 569
An evening with frederica von
stade: Von Stade, an acclaimed
international soprano, joins
pianist james Meredith for a
concert. all proceeds support
student scholarships in the
Department of Music. $10 for
UnC students, faculty and staf.
$25 for others.
time: 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
location: Hill Hall
diversity in higher education
seminar: for faculty and staf
to discuss the role of diversity in
education, access and research.
time: 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
COMMUnIty CaLEndar
location: gerrard Hall
careers in the triangle area:
Meet with local professionals to
learn about Triangle career op-
portunities. Business casual.
time: 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
location: Hanes Hall
News Tuesday, March 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3
SPORTS bRief
Two UNC womens basketball players
named Monday to 2012-13 All-ACC team
The Atlantic Coast Conference announced
the All-Conference team for the 2012-13
womens basketball season Monday. Two Tar
Heels were selected to the first team by the
coaches for their efforts this season Tierra
Ruffin-Pratt and Xylina McDaniel.
Ruffin-Pratt, a senior, led the Tar Heels in
points, assists and steals this year. McDaniel was
the only freshman selected to the first team.
CAMPUS bRief
Laboratory stool tests reveal campus
nausea outbreak is linked to norovirus
An outbreak on campus that caused more
than 85 students to seek medical care for
nausea, vomiting and diarrhea among other
symptoms last week has been linked to
norovirus, according to a press release.
Three of five stool samples that were sent to
the N.C. State Laboratory of Public Health tested
positive for norovirus. They tested negative for
salmonella, shigella, campylobacter and shiga-
toxin producing E. coli, the release states.
Surveys sent to 50 students who went to
Campus Health Services revealed no common
source of exposure.
The release states that campus dining and
campus housing will work for disinfection.
To prevent norovirus, students should prop-
erly wash their hands and clean surfaces with
bleach-based cleaning supplies.
From staff and wire reports
inBRIEF
Line randomization tested
By Jordan Bailey
Staff Writer
Students who had been wait-
ing in line for as long as seven
hours were angered Sunday when
a new policy trial randomized
entry into the mens basketball
game against Florida State.
At the Sunday game, the ticket
office tried a possible new policy
randomizing the order in
which students would be allowed
into the Smith Center for the riser
line and regular phase 1 entrance.
The trial run was aimed at
determining whether the ticket
office should randomize entrance
for all mens varsity basketball
games next year.
But Johnathan Flynn,
president of the Carolina Athletic
Association, said he is not sure
whether the ticket office will use
the policy again.
The Sunday trial was
unpopular with many students,
who said they werent told about
the randomization until an hour
before they were due to be let in.
Each student in line was then
given a wristband with a number
on it. One number was randomly
chosen to be the first person in
line, and students were admitted
in sequential order.
Flynn said the policy, which
has been used for past Duke
games, was implemented because
the ticket office received several
complaints about students cutting
in line at the N.C. State game.
Freshman Laura Fellwock,
one of the students who had
been waiting in line, said the
policy is unfair.
We didnt know it was
coming, and so we were very
upset, she said.
We had showed up five
hours before we were allowed
to get into the Dean Dome, and
we were finding out one hour
before we were supposed to go
inside we had been out there
for four hours in the cold that
suddenly they were going to
allow people who had gotten
there 10 minutes before they
started handing out wristbands
to cut into the front of the line.
Assistant Director of Ticket
Operations Tim Sabo said the
office could have done better
to warn students about the
randomization.
Carolina Fever Public Relations
Chair Joe Petrizzi said the leaders
of Carolina Fever would be best
suited to regulate line-cutting
because they arrive hours before
the games begin. He said they
could regulate the line from the
time the first fans get there to the
time they enter the game.
Petrizzi also said the group
presented an idea to the ticket
office for a system that would
prevent cutting in line but were
told that the CAA would have to
handle it.
The randomization punishes
the people who get there early,
and we need to have a system in
place that rewards the people
who are willing to put their
time and their own warmth and
comfort on the line to cheer for
Carolina, Petrizzi said.
You want them at the
front. Thats how we create a
better atmosphere at Carolina
basketball, by letting the most
dedicated and passionate people
in the game and in front.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
Free access
to research
will be
granted
By Caroline Stephens
Staff Writer
University researchers say a recent decision
to grant free access to research conducted with
federal money will benefit both the UNC com-
munity and the surrounding area.
On Feb. 22, President Barack Obamas
administration directed agencies and universi-
ties that receive more than $100 million in
research and development money to release
the findings of that federally funded research
within one year of publication.
Online access to data and research has
become part of a broader national debate in
recent months, with the White House taking
note of a recent petition signed by more than
65,000 people in support of increased public
access to taxpayer-funded research.
The petition comes after the suicide of inter-
net free speech activist Aaron Swartz.
Swartz faced legal action after downloading
articles from JSTOR, an online library that he
was not supposed to be able to access. Federal
prosecutors suspected that he planned to
republish the articles online.
UNC spent $10.7 million in 2011-12 on sub-
scriptions, including access to scholarly jour-
nals, e-books and online newspapers, said Judy
Panitch, spokeswoman for UNCs libraries.
She said the libraries research offerings will
remain the same.
The libraries subscribe to databases with
articles that are not federally funded, mean-
ing the University will continue to subscribe to
those databases, she said.
She said the libraries are excited about the
federal policy change.
Open access is something that the library
community vigorously advocates, because
libraries are all about the open flow of informa-
tion, she said.
Another result of the change will be
increased access to research for alumni and the
general public, Panitch said.
Broadening the communitys access to
research in turn benefits the Universitys pro-
fessors, said Gregory Copenhaver, a UNC biol-
ogy professor.
We benefit when more people see, and make
use of, our work, he said. If people have access
to research results, they will become better edu-
cated about science and be able to make more
informed decisions about the importance of
funding future research.
Copenhaver said public access to federally
funded research will promote UNCs research
community by giving academics work more
exposure to the public.
Were moving away from traditional models,
in which researchers are evaluated by how often
they publish and where they publish, to newer
models that try to gauge the influence of their
research, he said.
Deborah Wing, spokeswoman for the
National Science Foundation, a federal
agency and one of the groups that lobbied for
free access to federally funded research, said
the movement to expand research access will
continue.
This is just the beginning stages, she said.
It will spur innovation, certainly opening com-
munication and expanding this access, ulti-
mately helping the nation prosper.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
My Friend Flicka
The ticket office tested
the policy at Sundays
basketball game.
dth/molly cogburn
Frederica von Stade, a world-renowned mezzo-soprano, will perform tonight at 7:30 in the Hill
Hall auditorium. James Meredith will accompany her on the piano.
By Edmond Harrison
Staff Writer
World-renowned mezzo-soprano
Frederica von Stade, known to her fans as
Flicka, will perform a semi-autobiograph-
ical concert tonight with pianist James
Meredith.
Von Stade said the concerts program
consists of songs that are of personal impor-
tance to her life, giving the concert a more
personal touch.
Von Stade continues to be regarded as a
truly exceptional mezzo-soprano by peers,
critics and budding musicians.
Kayla Hill, a sophomore Kenan Scholar
and soprano singer, said she considers von
Stade a major musical influence and aims to
emulate her musicality.
She not only has an amazing voice, but
her technicality whether thats diction or
communication shes just a great overall
musician, Hill said.
She said von Stade displays a remarkable
amount of musical virtuosity, while remain-
ing sincere and emotionally compelling
throughout her performances.
Von Stade said various life experiences
influenced tonights concert program a
similar version of which was performed to a
sold-out Carnegie Hall in 2010.
I wanted to express my life in song, von
Stade said.
Its kind of a sketch of what has meant
the most to me in my life musically and
otherwise.
In choosing the concerts program, von
Stade said, she gave each piece a specific
context that will enable her to deliver a more
authentic and engaging performance.
I do believe that a lot of performing is
tapping into genuine and real feelings, and
putting yourself in a good position to deliver
those feelings, von Stade said.
Meredith has accompanied von Stade for
nearly 20 years.
She really communicates with her audi-
ence, and its not in any sense manufactured
or artificial, he said.
Meredith, who graduated from UNC in
1967, said he looks forward to returning to
the Hill Hall auditorium where he spent
countless hours practicing as an undergrad-
uate music major.
(The program is) pieces and works shes
been associated with and places shes lived
in, he said. It reflects her life. Quite a bit is
from French composers because she spent
much time there after college.
Meredith added that von Stade enjoys
performing in smaller, more local venues
after having played in several big operas.
Von Stade said passion for her craft con-
tinues to guide her career.
I just love it. Im almost 70, and I love
singing as much now as when I was younger
maybe even more, von Stade said.
I still love to express in whatever way I
can it is truly a privilege.
Contact the desk editor at
arts@dailytarheel.com.
ATTEND THE RECITAL
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Location: Hill Hall auditorium
Info: Tickets are $10 for UNC students, $25
general admission
Mandatory inspections enforce safety
By John Howell, Jr.
Staff Writer
A proposal to eliminate the
requirement for annual vehicle
safety inspections might save
North Carolina drivers money
but opponents of the bill say
the cost could be greater down
the road.
N.C. House Bill 59 would
repeal the requirement for
safety inspections, saving drivers
$13.60 annually. The require-
ment for emissions testing would
not be stricken.
The bill originally filed
Jan. 31 passed its first read-
ing and has been in the House
of Representatives committee
on transportation since early
February.
The bills primary sponsor, Rep.
Julia Howard, R-Davie, could not
VEHICLE INSPECTIONS
N.C. House Bill 59 would
eliminate the annual vehicle
safety inspections requirement
for N.C. drivers.
The move would save drivers
$13.60 annually, but oppo-
nents contend that it could
result in increased accidents.
A 1990 study found that
states requiring the inspections
experienced a reduction in
accidents ranging from 1 to 27
percent.
with, he said.
Pons said that without the
requirement, some drivers might
push the envelope and choose
to do nothing until their vehicle
breaks down or worse.
People will die as a result of
that law, he said.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
A bill may eliminate
vehicle inspections to
save drivers money.
Some universities must publicize
their federally funded research.
Mezzo-soprano to perform semi-autobiographical set
be reached for comment.
Tom Crosby, spokesman for
AAA Carolinas, said the proposal
would sacrifice safety to cut costs
for drivers. He said the inspec-
tion process, though sometimes
inconvenient, reassures drivers
that cars on the road have been
properly maintained.
I dont want somebody out
there driving a car that hasnt
been looked at for three or four
years with safety violations, he
said.
Crosby said only one com-
prehensive study on the issue
has been conducted in the last
13 years. The study found that
states requiring the inspections
had a reduction in accidents
ranging from about 1 to 27 per-
cent.
He added that since South
Carolina eliminated its safety
inspection requirement 10 years
ago, it has often been among
the top five states for deaths and
accidents per mile driven.
But Jon Sanders, director of
regulatory studies at the John
Locke Foundation, which advo-
cates for limited government,
said the inspections requirement
imposes a time and cost hardship
on N.C. drivers and is generally
viewed as annoying and redun-
dant.
Most people are pretty
responsible, he said.
Still, Marc Pons, president of
Chapel Hill Tire Car Care Center,
said the inspection requirement
keeps drivers from neglecting to
maintain their vehicles.
Youd be surprised about
what people try to get away
I dont want somebody out there driving a car that
hasnt been looked at for three or four years
Tom Crosby,
AAA carolinas spokesman
From Page One Tuesday, March 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4
Manning said. And they can
do so repeatedly.
But John Gresham, an
attorney at Tin Fulton Walker
& Owen who is representing
Gambills ex-boyfriend, said his
clients appeal rights were met
with unnecessary stipulations.
He was told he could
appeal but that he was first
required to have a psycho-
logical evaluation completed,
Gresham said.
Manning said though the
committee often asks sus-
pended students to undergo
a psychological evaluation, it
is never required in order to
appeal a case.
Gresham said that when his
client went to receive his psy-
chological evaluation conduct-
ed by UNCs Counseling and
Psychological Services, it was
clear that the evaluation served
as more of an interrogation.
There were questions ask-
ing him about whether he
coerced Ms. Gambill into hav-
ing sex with him and how he
felt about having sex with her,
Gresham said. The majority
of the time was spent not fol-
lowing standard protocols for
psychological evaluations.
Gresham said his client,
who was uncomfortable with
the questions, failed to com-
plete the evaluation.
He withdrew from the
University three days later.
He withdrew because
there wasnt anything he
could do, Gresham said.
Manning said the findings
of any psychological evaluation
are only intended for the use of
the emergency committee.
But Gresham said the
incomplete psychologi-
cal evaluation was initially
included as evidence in
both files for the University
Hearings Board trial.
Ive been told that Ms.
Gambill was read pertinent
portions of his medical evalu-
ation and was able to respond
to them prior to the trial,
Gresham said. A complete
violation of my clients rights.
He said his client faced a
series of roadblocks for read-
Gambill
from page 1
Durham
from page 1
Western Carolina University.
If your consistent way of
getting income is through
robbing people, youre going
to go where you can be suc-
cessful in robbing, Kopak
said.
Suitable targets that make
it more or less easier to get
away with crime thats
where they focus.
Brian Curran was chief
of the Chapel Hill Police
Department at the time of
Carsons murder, and he
served on the Chapel Hill
police force for 25 years
before retiring in 2010.
Curran said that during his
time at the department, he
often noticed Durham offend-
ers in Chapel Hills arrest
reports.
A number of the guys
we would have to deal with
would try to come across
as tough gang-banger guys,
but they came to Chapel Hill
because they felt safer here.
If they showed the same
kind of behavior in Durham,
it wouldnt go over so well,
Curran said.
They felt like they could
get away with it.
He said before the efforts
to revitalize downtown
Durham, many residents
would also come to Chapel
Hill for the nightlife and
this sometimes brought an
increase in certain types of
criminal activity, like robber-
ies or property crimes.
We used to really worry
about it at Halloween,
Curran said.
Once the students left, we
would still have thousands
of people on the street, and a
lot of them were just knuck-
leheads from out of town. It
was hard.
The spillover
District Attorney Jim
Woodall has been prosecuting
felony cases in Orange County
for more than two decades,
and he said he believes most
of the countys crime comes
from within.
But he said there have
always been a few types of
crimes including rob-
beries, property crimes,
forgeries and assaults that
often lead back to Durham
offenders.
Woodall estimated that
about 25 to 30 percent of the
robbery and assault cases his
office is currently prosecuting
have Durham defendants.
Of the 180 felony robber-
ies and attempted robberies
in Chapel Hill in the last 10
years, 33 were committed by
Durham residents.
These numbers can be
higher for property crimes, of
which about 30 to 40 percent
are from Durham, Woodall
said.
Were so close to Durham,
he said. I think its strictly
proximity.
Homicides in Chapel Hill
are rare, but of the 15 mur-
ders or attempted murders
in Chapel Hill in the past
decade, seven of them were
committed by Durham resi-
dents.
Though Durham offenders
make up a larger percentage
of Chapel Hills overall violent
crime than any other group
of outside residents, Woodall
hesitated to identify this is a
trend.
There have been cases
when defendants indicated
they came to Chapel Hill
because people have money.
Theres been a perception
that the student population
is perhaps inviting targets,
Woodall said.
But Ive always said that
the crime in Orange County
is by and large homegrown,
he added.
An extremely rare case
Despite the closeness in
both age and proximity of
Carson and her murderers,
the lives they led were worlds
apart.
Carson, a Morehead-Cain
scholar from Athens, Ga., was
well-known throughout the
University for her involve-
ment, service and love of
UNC.
On the night of her death,
Carson had stayed home to
catch up on studying.
With only a few weeks
left in her term as student
body president, Carson was
stressed and trying to meet all
of her obligations.
She was looking forward to
graduation and taking some
time off to travel.
We were talking about
taking a really long trip, said
Katie Sue Zellner, who was
a close friend of Carsons at
UNC and worked with her in
student government.
She was so close to gradu-
ating and having some free
time, which I think she really
wanted.
By the time Lovette and
Atwater came to Chapel Hill
on the night of Carsons mur-
der, both already had multiple
criminal convictions.
the youth of Durham the
hometown of both of Eves
murderers.
There are Eves peers who
have since scattered all across
the world, spreading her les-
sons of finding joy in others,
of searching for truth and
unending faith.
This would have made Eve
so happy.
I often find myself wonder-
ing where we fit in to all of
this. Like many of my class-
mates, I never met Eve.
I came to know her dur-
ing the grisly testimonies of
her final hours at the trial of
Laurence Alvin Lovette Jr.
and during many subsequent
conversations with those who
knew and loved her.
Nonetheless, I have been
profoundly impacted by Eve.
And I often find myself
asking the question, how do
we honor Eves legacy when
we never knew her?
I think the answer is both
easy and difficult, long and
short.
We can honor Eve by car-
rying on in her footsteps by
working to make sure the
university she understood
and loved so deeply is a place
where students voices are
heard, a place where people
always come first.
We remember her by striv-
ing to be great, but, like Eve
always said, also remember-
ing to be good.
That is what Eve would
have wanted for us. That is
the Carolina that Eve loved.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
eve carson
from page 1
dth file photo
Today is the fifth anniversary of Eve Carsons murder. Carson,
from Athens, Ga., was UNCs 2007-08 student body president.
Both had fallen through
the cracks of the states pro-
bation system, entering into
a cycle of repeat criminal
behavior that intertwined the
two with Carson in a random
murder that is extremely rare
for Chapel Hill.
They originally were just
looking for someone to rob,
and they werent going to
leave any witnesses, Curran
said.
Chapel Hill Police Chief
Chris Blue said the depart-
ment works closely with
Durham Police to catch
offenders that cross between
jurisdictions.
But he also stressed the
importance of reporting sus-
picious activity to police and
following instincts.
We really do have a very
safe community, Blue said.
Sometimes, because its so
safe, we take that safety for
granted, and we arent as
careful as we should be. We
all have a responsibility for
our own safety.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
mittance, even after the sexual
assault case was adjudicated.
It took him from May 29,
2012, to December 5, 2012,
to regain readmission to the
University, Gresham said.
He said the process was
delayed by requirements that
were added sporadically, such
as more psychological tests.
Manning, who Gresham
said recused herself on June 7,
2012, said the emergency com-
mittee which is not affiliated
with the honor system can
prolong readmission until the
committee feels that a student
is no longer a threat and is
healthy enough to return.
Gambills ex-boyfriend said
his transition to campus has
been made painful by Gambills
sexual assault advocacy.
Waking up every day in
fear of going to class is no way
to live at all, he said. Waking
up and seeing comments
from people who want to hurt
me is no way to live at all.
But Gambill has insisted
that she has not identified
the man, and that he is not a
focus of her activism.
Our movement doesnt
have anything to do with
him, she said Sunday.
Gresham said moving on
and acclimating to University
life has been difficult for his
client because of a no contact
order Gambill issued.
He takes somebody with
him at all times so that if he
and Ms. Gambill cross paths,
it does not appear to be stalk-
ing or contact, Gresham said.
He even had to switch out
of a class or two this semester
so that he would not be in the
vicinity of Ms. Gambill, he
added.
The handling of his case by
the emergency committee is
indicative of national concerns
in higher education about the
rights of the accused.
Frank LoMonte, executive
director of the Student Press
Law Center, said the burden
of proof in cases heard by stu-
dent courts is lower than in a
court of law, causing accused
students to potentially be
denied their rights.
As an attorney, Im just
concerned about the due
process protections in a sys-
tem where all the normal
rules about the reliability of
evidence are informal and
relaxed, LoMonte said.
In August 2012, a male
student at the University of
Georgia was accused of rape
by a female student and was
expelled without a hearing in
an investigation conducted by
the Equal Opportunity Office.
Bill Crane, a graduate of the
university and former member
of the student judiciary, said
the rights of accused students
are often compromised by a
tendency of universities to
quickly adjudicate cases.
Quite often the accused get
swift treatment and they dont
have the rights that they would
in a criminal proceeding.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
the kids dont have a chance
to leave and opened all those
new cafeterias and put those
franchises on campus.
peppers
from page 1
He said lunch traffic has
been one of the restaurants
biggest losses.
Lunch is the biggest thing
where weve lost our business
we probably do $20,000
less a month in lunch than we
were doing three years ago,
he said.
Theres just nobody
down here. And Im not the
lone ranger, you can talk
to anybody down here and
they ll tell you the same story.
David Wehrenberg and
Kelly Lane of Chapel Hill
took their daughter to
Peppers Monday night. Both
said they were sad she would
not get to grow up visiting the
restaurant.
This ll be my daughters
first and last time,
Wehrenberg said.
Yolanda Leslee, a waitress
at Peppers, moved to Chapel
Hill from New Jersey two
months ago after losing her
home in Hurricane Sandy. She
said she was grateful to find a
job at Peppers soon after.
When I went looking for
a job up and down Franklin
Street, this is the last place I
came in, she said. I was like,
It would be just too good to
be true to get a job at Peppers.
And I came in and they hired
me, and then a month later
Leslee and Harvey both
said they were concerned
about finding jobs after the
closure.
Ive never worked for
anybody in life Ive been
doing this for 26 years,
Harvey said. Im going to be
looking for a job at age 60.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
Waking up every day in fear of going to
class is no way to live at all.
ex-boyfriend of sophomore landen Gambill,
on what he said are the effects of her public statements
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Why Should American Grand Strategy Care About the Uyghurs?
(Re-Scheduled Event)
March 4, 2013, Duke University
Reception: 5:15 pm, Lecture 6:00 pm
Sanford 04
March 5, 2013, UNC Chapel Hill
2:30 - 4:00 pm
Global Education Center 4003
Sponsored by the Duke Program in American Grand Strategy & the Triangle Institute for
Security Studies, the Duke Islamic Studies Center, the Carolina Asia Center, the Duke Human Rights
Center, the UNC-Duke Center for the Study of Islam and Muslim Civilizations, the Kenan Institute
for Ethics, the Asian-Pacific Studies Institute and the Duke Program for Asian Security Studies.
Head of the World Uyghur Congress Rebiya Kadeer
Downtown Chapel Hill 942-PUMP
106 W. Franklin St. (Next to Hes Not Here)
Mon-Wed 11:30am- 11pm
Thur-Sat 11:30- 11:30am Sun Noon- 11pm
www.yogurtpump.com
T ruly
Carolina s
Finest!
VOTED BEST FROZEN TREAT
2005 thru 2012
News Tuesday, March 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 5
As part of the UNC art
departments Master of Fine
Arts exhibition series, Your
Turn to Burn, graduate
student Ali Halperins show
Episode is on display this
week in Hanes Art Center.
Staff writer Gabriella Cirelli
spoke with Halperin about
her show the inspiration
and meaning behind it and
what she wants viewers to take
away from the experience.
Daily Tar Heel: What is
the inspiration behind your
show?
Ali Halperin: I actually
started being inspired by the
reality TV show Hoarders.
I noticed that the subjects
would get broken down
into the stuff that they
had. So I started thinking
about how material culture
starts affecting our physical
bodies and spaces and the
relationships between the
items that we amass.
And how it literally affects
us and changes our physical
spaces and selves.
DTH: What kinds of pieces
will you be featuring? Why
did you choose this specific
medium?
AH: These are articles of
clothing theyre mostly
mine and my familys and
theyve been encased in tar.
So theres kind of an inter-
esting relationship between
this really low, gross construc-
tion material and then this
glossy black finish that makes
them look expensive again.
It gives kind of a high-low
effect.
DTH: What is unique about
this show in comparison to
other projects youve done?
AH: I came into this
program and I was doing
a lot of digital work and
photography.
But then I started coming
dth/maddi brantley
Graduate student Ali Halperins show Episode is on display this
week in Hanes Art Centers John and June Allcott Gallery.
I grew up in Chapel Hill
and I moved to New York
for college and this is not
something that I wouldve
seen growing up here.
So I think it would be
cool for people to come
and see something more
contemporary.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
Harvard law professor: money hurts politics
By Eric Garcia
Staff Writer
Lawrence Lessig began his
lecture at the UNC School of
Law by asking the audience
to imagine a nation called
Lester Land, where only
people named Lester choose
the candidates who run for
office.
Lessig, a professor at
Harvard Law School who
researches campaign finance,
said the impact of money on
politics has made America
worse than Lester Land.
To run in the general elec-
tion you must do well in the
money election, said Lessig,
who spoke Monday.
Lessig said the campaign
finance system was not repre-
sentative of the public.
Congress doesnt have
dependence upon the people
alone, but on the funders, he
said.
David Ardia, codirector of
the UNC Center for Media
Law and Policy, said he was
pleased that Lessig spoke
about a complex issue such as
campaign finance.
He has the uncanny ability
to distill complicated prob-
Lawrence
Lessig, a
professor
at harvard
law School,
spoke monday
evening at the
University.
lems, Ardia said.
Lessig received no payment
for the lecture, Ardia said.
Corruption in politics
affects both parties, Lessig
said during his lecture.
This is bipartisan, equal
opportunity corruption,
he said. Democrats and
Republicans are unified.
Lessig said the media
also contributes to corrup-
tion because journalists are
more focused on polariza-
tion instead of investigative
reporting.
This is the model that
drives the kind of politics in
media we have, because this
model is profitable, Lessig
said.
Tori Ekstrand, UNC pro-
fessor of media law, said she
agreed that the media has not
shed enough light on corrup-
tion.
Its not something people
are investing in, she said.
While we still have the
internet watching, its not the
steady watching with legacy
media.
Lessig said activists should
realize that their causes will
never be addressed until the
influence of money in politics
is changed.
Take your issue, look
it straight in the eyes and
explain it will never be solved,
or any of the issues you care
about, until you address these
corruptions first, he said.
Lessig offered some solu-
tions to regulating the unlim-
ited campaign contributions
permitted by the Citizens
United Supreme Court ruling,
including the use of vouch-
ers or tax credits to prevent
candidates from focusing on
fundraising.
My view is we can do this
with a single statute, single
small dollar fundraising, he
said.
Lessig said the way to
enact change is through
grassroots movements.
This is not politics of politi-
cians, he said. This is citizens
demanding politics change.
Though it is easy to lose
hope in reforming the system,
Lessig said, people should
ignore the challenges.
When the pundits say this
change is impossible, what
those who love their country
should say is, Thats just
irrelevant.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
Lawrence Lessig said
politics doesnt
represent the public.
SEE THE EXHIBIT
Time: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Friday;
reception 6 p.m. Thursday
Location: Hanes Art Center
Info: bit.ly/YPCYtT
back to this more physical
space, so I was trying to talk
a lot about the body in digital
media but now its become a
lot more physical and almost
more aggressive and related
to the viewer.
DTH: What are you hoping
that viewers will take away
from the show?
AH: I kind of want to walk
the line between grotesque
and elegant, and having
that weird moment where
youre not sure whether
youre supposed to like what
youre seeing and really feel
a relationship to what youre
seeing which is kind of like
what happens when youre
watching reality TV.
So I think that moment of
guilty pleasure is something
Im looking for.
And realizing that these
pieces are about you and
being grotesque and frozen
and overwhelming, but also
shiny and pretty.
DTH: What was the hardest
part about creating and
organizing this show?
AH: I really loved creating
the pieces, but I had to edit
out half of the things Ive
made while installing it.
Theyre like my babies, so
its hard to let them go.
DTH: Is there anything else
you want people to know
about the show?
AH: I really want people
to come and I feel like (the
show) is something different
for the UNC community.
Q&A with graduate student Ali Halperin
CAROLINA CAROLINA CAROLINA
COFFEE SHOP COFFEE SHOP COFFEE SHOP
R ESTAURANT & B AR
WELCOME TO THE TRADITION! WELCOME TO THE TRADITION!
The original home of the $3 LIT! The original home of the $3 LIT!
Tues., Thurs., Fri., Sat. 9 AM -2 AM
W ed. 9 AM -10 PM S unday 9 AM -2 PM
919- 942- 6875
138 E. F RANKLI N S TREET
www.thecarolinacoffeeshop.com
TUESDAY TUESDAY
$3 Wells $3 LITS
THURSDAY THURSDAY
$2 Wells $2 Drafts
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FRIDAY FRIDAY
$2 Domestic Bottles
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SATURDAY SATURDAY
$2 Domestic Drafts
$3 Managers Choice shooters
$4 Absolut drinks $4 Special-teas
News Tuesday, March 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6
Motley Fool encourages investing early
dth/melissa key
David Gardner, co-founder of The Motley Fool, speaks on Monday
night about what he wishes he had learned as an undergraduate.
NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERS
Deadlines are NOON one business day prior to
publication for classifed ads. We publish Mon-
day thru Friday when classes are in session. A
university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e. this
affects deadlines). We reserve the right to re-
ject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Acceptance of ad
copy or prepayment does not imply agreement
to publish an ad. You may stop your ad at any
time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for stopped
ads will be provided. No advertising for hous-
ing or employment, in accordance with federal
law, can state a preference based on sex, race,
creed, color, religion, national origin, handicap,
marital status.
PITTSBORO: UNC student wanted to watch
our toddler March 11-16, over Spring Break.
9am-noon. In our house, 10 miles south of
UNC. $10/hr. Experience, references required.
919-942-4527.
FULL TIME NANNy
Seeking full-time nanny for summer months
and beyond if possible. Please apply even if you
are only available for the summer! Seeking lov-
ing person for children age k-7th grade willing
to drive to camps and go to pool. References
required. Please call Heather at 919-672-2850.
Thanks!
CHIlD CARE NEEDED: Hi! I need some help
watching my 2 children, aged 3 and 5. They
are sweet kids. We are in Meadowmont.
Hours are M/W/F, 12:30-3pm and Tu/Th
8:30am-3pm starting ASAP through April. No
smoking, excellent driving record, experience
caring for children and 3 references needed.
lkboucher@gmail.com.
NANNY NEEDED AUgUST, SEPTEMBER full-
time, M-F. Infant care needed in our home.
Outstanding experience, clean criminal and
driving record and 3 exceptional references. We
dont want someone to bring their child to our
house. Degree in education or similar desired.
No smoking. liza.makowski@post.harvard.edu.
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 ad-
vertise any preference, limitation, or discrimina-
tion based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap,
familial status, or national origin, or an intention
to make any such preference, limitation, or dis-
crimination. 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 avail-
able 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.
CHANCEllOR SqUARE APARTMENT for rent!
2BR/2BA renovated unit including hardwoods.
Walk to campus and Franklin Street. Available
August 1. $1,350/mo. Call Domicile Realty,
919-285-1005.
UNIvERSITY COMMONS 4BR/4BA.
$1,600/mo. NO FEE! INClUDES: Walk
in closet, utilities, internet, furnished
living and dining J, D lines Available
8-1-2012. 919-923-0630, application:
email:nolaloha@nc.rr.com.
1BR/1BA COTTAgE. 116 North Street, right
off Franklin Street. Small covered front
porch, W/D, water included, $875/mo.
Available August 2013. 704-277-1648 or
uncrents@carolina.rr.com.
lOvElY 3BR/2B HOME ON WOODED lot. lots
of windows, Convenient to I-40 this open foor
plan features freplace, hardwood foors thru
house, large deck. Pets negotiable with fee.
$1,390/mo. Contact Fran Holland Properties:
fhollandprop@gmail.com, 919-968-4545.
CONvENIENT TO lAW AND MEDICAl schools.
grad or prof students. 3BR/1.5BA ranch in
quiet glen lennox neighborhood. large yard,
carport, hardwood foors, bus nearby. East
CHH, Culbreth, glenwood, $1,390/mo. (pets
negotiable). Contact Fran Holland Properties,
fhollandprop@gmail.com.
4BR/4BA UNIvERSITY COMMONS condo.
New carpet and paint, $1,400/mo. water and
electric included. On busline. Contact Fran Hol-
land Properties at fhollandprop@gmail.com.
919-968-4545.
FUllY FURNISHED 2BR TOWNHOME in Oaks
Condos available for short and long term lease.
Different terms for different time periods. great
location, close to Friday Center, on busline.
Bring your suitcase and move in. Email Fran
Holland Properties at fhollandprop@gmail.com
or call 919-968-4545.
CHANCEllOR SqUARE. 2BR/2BA townhouse.
Walk to campus. Full kitchen. Carpeted. W/D.
Parking fee included. $1,320/mo for 2 years
lease from mid-August. 919-929-6072.
5BR/2BA CONDO in triplex. 611 Hillsborough
Street. Completely remodeled, hardwoods,
tile throughout, new appliances, W/D, near
bus stop, $2,625/mo. Available August 2013.
704-277-1648 or uncrents@carolina.rr.com.
$400/MO. PER BEDROOM in legal 6BR/5BA
townhouse. 4 buslines, minutes to UNC,
hardwood foors, W/D, extra storage,
free parking, non-smoking. spbell48@
gmail.com, 919-933-0983.
CONDO IN SOUTHERN vIllAgE for rent-
ing. 3BR/2.5BA, new carpet 2nd foor,
hardwood 1st foor. Detached garage, all
new appliances, great location, walk to
shops, restaurants, schools, on busline.
Few minutes to UNC. lli3456@yahoo.
com. Rent: $1,725/mo. 919-619-8494.
For Sale
BOOKS: Romance does not always live up to
our expectations. But, come on, does it have
to fall as far short of our dreams as it does in
Clumsy Hearts? A slightly misguided romance,
by Hysteria Molt. Available via Amazon.com.
Help Wanted
SUMMER POOl MANAgER WANTED for The
Brightleaf Club in Durham. Ideal candidate
will have a strong swimming background. CPO
certifcation desired but not required. Will train.
Email susan@brightleafclub.com.
EMPlOYMENT: The Carolina Brewery is hir-
ing servers. Previous restaurant experience
is required, serving experience is a plus as is
lunch or weeknight availability. Please see our
website for more information, application. EOE.
919-942-1800.
TEACHINg ASSISTANT: Harvest learning Center
seeks a full-time assistant preschool teacher. Pre-
ferred applicants should have some early child-
hood experience and college level coursework.
Interested applicants should send resumes to
harvest@harvestlearningcenter.com.
ClINICAl TEACHINg TUTORS NEEDS literacy
tutor for 1st grader on Durham-Pickett Road,
1pm or 3pm, 2 days/wk, mastery instruction,
ASAP. $20/hr (negotiable). Please send days
and hours available to jlocts@aol.com.
NOW HIRINg: New seafood restaurant opening
in Durham mid-March. Hiring enthusiastic serv-
ers, bartenders, kitchen staff. Apply in person
4020 Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd. 27707, M-Sa,
12-4pm.
RETAIl SAlES: Omega Sports in Durham is
seeking part-time sales associates. Training,
buying discounts, incentives, fexible schedules.
Email resume to jobs@omegasports.net.
TElEMARKETER WANTED. Insurance offce
seeking competent, experienced telemar-
keter. $10-$12/hr. 15 hrs/wk. Please send
resume to asterw1@nationwide.com or call
919-913-0202 ext. 1101.www.aai4u.com.
Internships
PAID INTERNSHIP: University Directories is
seeking students for client relations summer in-
ternship. Candidates must be energetic, driven
and possess strong communication skills. visit
www.universitydirectories.com for info or apply
to Calin at cnanney@ucampusmedia.com.
Lost & Found
FOUND IN DEAN DOME: Purchase from Chapel
Hill Sportswear in upper level, section 216, af-
ter State game. Returned to store. Being held.
919-929-0060 for info.
Summer Jobs
SUMMER STAFF: The Duke Faculty Club is seek-
ing motivated, energetic and dependable camp
counselors, lifeguards and swim coaches for
Summer 2013. great pay and fantastic work
environment! go to facultyclub.duke.edu for
details.
SUMMER JOB WITH KIDS: Full-time job this
summer playing with 5 and 7 year-olds. We
have pool, hot tub, tennis and sport court. Must
have car, be responsible, experience with kids,
lots of energy. Swimming and tennis abilities a
plus. Pay $11/hr +gas for activities with kids.
Email Tanyalchartrand@yahoo.com.
Tutoring Wanted
TUTOR WANTED to help our 10th grade daugh-
ter with her homework, particularly math. 4-5
days/wk, $20/hr. in our home, 2.5 miles from
campus. Please email words@nc.rr.com or
leave message or text at 919-824-6045.
Announcements Child Care Wanted For Rent Announcements
(c) 2013 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERvICES, INC.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is an 8 -- Postpone the celebra-
tion. Take care of household matters
frst. Share expenses, but dont fund a
friends experiment. Keep your temper,
and everything goes according to plan.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 7 -- Invest personal energy
in a career project. Passions demand
attention, so give in to them and savor
it. Dont try to buy someones affection.
Postpone travel for a few days.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8 -- Impulsiveness causes ac-
cidents, especially in love and romance.
Its better to take it slow. Remember to
do a chore you promised. Play by the
book, despite annoying regulations. Fo-
cus on what youre doing.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 9 -- Dont fall for a sob story,
make expensive promises or impulsively
purchase anything. Pour yourself into
tasks and save your money. go out later,
and relax with someone you adore.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Avoid an argument over
a household issue. Dont run away from
the problem or overspend, even for good
reasons. Share private information in
private. Change the agreement to suit.
gamble only for love.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 6 -- Take control of your f-
nances. Study is required, and the possi-
bility of error is high. Costs are up there,
too. Its not a good time to be fippant.
Apply your energies to your career.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Hold on to what you have.
Avoid an argument by being respectful.
Avoid reckless driving. A friend has help-
ful connections. Emotional responses tell
the story. Try to maintain objectivity.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 9 -- A domestic disagreement
could disturb the peace. Dont buy gifts or
toys yet. Dont sell or give away anything
belonging to a loved one. Hold your tem-
per, and proceed with caution.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 9 -- Work could interfere with
travel. A partner provides elbow grease.
Negotiations hit rough waters, but dont
spend out of guilt. Avoid speaking out in
anger ... take a walk to cool down.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 6 -- Dont tell everyone the
news. let another person represent you.
get with your partner now. You dont
need new stuff ... repurpose old stuff in-
stead, and put savings aside. An old trick
doesnt work.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 7 -- Run a reality check instead
of forging ahead blindly. Dont forget to
do what you promised. Watch out for
hazards; easy does it. Avoid launches
and communication blitzes; get into or-
ganization and planning.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 -- You love to win. Restraint
is advised, rather than rushing ahead.
Success comes slowly today. Face it, and
heal. Create new fnancial options. Wait
for a better time to play.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If March 5th is Your Birthday...
An especially fun year lies ahead, with abounding
love, confidence and playfulness. Creative education
builds career skills. If you want to learn something,
teach it. Out of the box thinking about
finances allows for new opportunities. Your
powerful team is with you.
BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room

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Reli
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Directory
DEADLINE IS MARCH 22!
The DTH is seeking four students to serve on the 11-
member board that will convene to select the next
editor of the paper.
These students will join the other members in reviewing
the applications for editor, interviewing the applicants,
and choosing the next editor on April 6. Any UNC
student not working on the DTH staff may apply.
Applications are due March 22. Select Editor Selection
from the About menu at dailytarheel.com to access the
application form.
Applicants must be available from 6-7 p.m. Thursday,
April 4 and from 10:00 a.m. to as late as 3:00 p.m.
Saturday, April 6. (Meals are served).
The Daily Tar Heel
Choose the Next
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Tar Heel Born & Bred!
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Dr. Chas Gaertner, DC
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RECYCLE ME PLEASE!
By Haley Waxman
Staff Writer
David Gardner co-
founder of The Motley Fool, a
multimedia financial services
company likens what he
does to baseball.
In good and bad times,
getting in the batters box,
taking a swing and doing the
best you can is the best way to
invest, Gardner said.
Gardner, a UNC alum-
nus from the class of 1988
and a Morehead Scholar,
spoke Monday night to more
than 100 people on What
I Wished Id Learned as an
Undergraduate.
The Carolina Economics
Club presented the event.
UNC Student Congress fund-
ed the event, but club leaders
did not know the final cost as
of Monday.
Building on his personal
theory that everything starts
with thoughts, Gardner pre-
sented a series of key lessons
that he wish he had learned
as a student at UNC.
Gardner began with the
advice to start investing
yesterday. He said the earlier
people get started, the better
off theyre going to be.
He said its better to invest
less money over a longer
period of time as opposed to
more money over a shorter
period of time.
The big dynamic is time,
the difference is massive, he
said.
His next piece of advice
was about the importance of
putting your money not where
your mouth is, but where your
life is by investing in things
that are relevant to you.
You can look at what
someone reads and learn a lot
about them, Gardner said.
The same should be true
of your investment profile.
He went on to discuss the
importance of thinking and
acting long-term, which he
said is easy to say but much
harder to do.
Its a long-term view in a
short-term world, but if you
can play long-term, youre
giving yourself a competitive
advantage, Gardner said.
Wealth is made over time
by finding the great stuff and
by planting yourself in it.
Suraj Shah, co-president of
the Carolina Economics Club,
said he hoped students would
gain advice on what path
to take in college and how
Gardners early decisions led
to where he is today.
On that note, Gardner also
provided common sense tips
on how to land a job after
graduation.
Gardner said traditional
qualifications arent going to
differentiate applicants much.
Its about who you are and
how you have already been
spending your time, he said.
In his final point of the
The UNC alum advised
students to embrace
the unknown.
lecture, Gardner urged stu-
dents to resist the known and
embrace the unknown.
What we dont know we
fear, and thats one of the sad
things about (investment),
he said.
April Lee, co-president
of the club, said she didnt
expect such a large turnout.
The lecture in Hanes Hall
was crowded, with people
sitting on the floor, lining
the walls and standing in the
doorways.
It really speaks volumes
to what people care about,
Lee said.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
If you can play long-
term, youre giving
yourself a competi-
tive advantage.
David Gardner,
co-founder of the motley Fool
News Tuesday, March 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7
Randomized risers
UNC tried randomizing
riser lines at the FSU game
but might not stick with it.
See pg. 3 for story.
Soprano singer at UNC
Famous mezzo-soprano
Frederica von Stade per-
forms tonight in Hill Hall.
See pg. 3 for story.
Motley Fool leader
The companys co-founder
told students what he wishes
he had learned as a student.
See pg. 6 for story.
In Wednesdays DTH
Read about the Rogers
Road neighborhoods effort
to incorporate as its own
sewer district.
games
Solution to
Mondays puzzle
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
2013 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
(C)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACross
1 Politicos Reagan and
Paul
5 Do some healing
9 Mallorcan seaport
14 Lit sign in a dark theater
15 Operatic song
16 Regions
17 Playground frolicker
18 Singer called the
Godmother of Punk
20 Not getting any younger
22 Mozarts Cos fan __
23 Misdemeanor
26 Reheat leftovers, in a
way
30 Bambi doe
31 Pep rally yell
32 Grabbed at will
34 Triangular Indian pastry
37 Bufferin targets
38 Set in opposition to
41 Land, in Le Havre
42 Puts into office
43 Enthusiastic reply to
Who wants
ice cream?
45 Classical lead-
in
46 Involuntary
sign of nerves
49 Color for a
panther?
50 One given to
bad language
54 Movie
reviewer
Roger
56 Chinas Zhou
__
57 Finishing the 18th, say
62 Caplet or gelcap
63 Dentists insertion
64 Where the clergy sit, in
many churches
65 Mayberry boy
66 Its found in veins
67 Tiny time div.
68 MADD ads, e.g.
Down
1 Put on a new cassette
2 Roughly 21% of the
atmosphere
3 La Femme __
4 Angioplasty implant
5 You are here
document
6 Timeline time
7 Capone cohort Frank
8 Factual tidbit
9 Yesterdays tense
10 Azerbaijanis neighbors
11 Welcoming wreath
12 Welcoming floor
covering
13 Bit of fire evidence
19 Adherents: Suff.
21 Danced wildly
24 Amounted (to)
25 __ Island
27 Weapons from Israel
28 Mild-mannered fictional
reporter
29 L.A. Times staffers
33 Exemplification
34 Umps call
35 Erie Canal mule
36 Athletes promoter
38 Mani partner, salonwise
39 Laundry room tool
40 __-deucy
41 Advice at the track
44 Pop ones cork?
46 Blooms from bulbs
47 Home to Firenze
48 __ rellenos: stuffed
Mexican dish
51 Church keyboard
52 Sporty car
roofs
53 Seusss Hop __
55 Difficult situation
57 Pollutant
banned by Cong. in
1979
58 www address
59 On top of everything
else
60 Employ
61 Investigator, slangily
UNC takes 3rd in
ACC Championships
By Haley Rhyne
Staff Writer
After nearly two weeks
of competing in the ACC
Championship swim meet
in Greensboro, the North
Carolina mens and womens
swimming and diving teams
both finished third.
Virginia took home the
mens and womens titles for
the sixth consecutive year.
Both UNC teams had
swimmers record top finishes
in the 200-yard butterfly.
On the mens team, senior
Tom Luchsinger won the
event at the ACC meet for the
third time and set a new ACC
Championship record.
On the last day of womens
competition, Feb. 23, junior
Cari Blalock bested her
own school record. Junior
Meredith Hoover finished less
than one second behind her
for a second-place finish.
We were on fire the last
day, coach Rich DeSelm said.
We had a window of oppor-
tunity and we capitalized
upon it.
The women jumped three
teams on the meets last day
Tom
Luchsinger
won the 200-
yard butterfly
at the ACC
Championships
for the third
time.
Virginia won both
the mens and
womens ACC titles.
to claim third place, despite
not having All-American
Stephanie Peacock who was
out with an illness.
I was really proud of the
women on the team for not
giving up and for fighting
their way back into a position
to have a respectable finish,
DeSelm said.
In the meets last event, four
underclassmen sophomore
Danielle Siverling and fresh-
men Lauren Earp, Hannah
Lincoln and Ally Hardesty
won the 400-yard freestyle
relay, outpacing UNCs school
record by more than a second.
The four All-ACC swim-
mers were the first UNC team
to win the conference title in
that event since 2007.
It was just electric,
DeSelm said. The girls had a
goal and they wanted to prove
that they could compete.
Earp said swimming in the
ACC meet for UNC was an
experience unlike any she had
witnessed before.
I have been to many
junior international meets,
but this is a whole different
world, Earp said. Nothing
can really prepare you for that
and how exciting it is.
Earp said the relay team
felt pressure to carry the team
in the meets last event.
Everyone was really ner-
vous, but we were all able to
put that aside and step up to
do what we needed to do, she
said.
The mens team saw suc-
cess in relays as well, setting
school records in the 200-
yard medley relay and the
400-yard medley relay, which
featured four freshmen.
Junior J.T. Stilley broke the
23-year-old school record for
a 200-yard split in an 800-
yard freestyle relay.
Thats a pretty impressive
accomplishment, DeSelm
said. And its also the record
that stood on the books for
the longest period of time of
any record in the history of
our program.
DeSelm said he was proud
of both teams and their efforts
against tough competition.
Its a very competitive
league and getting more so,
DeSelm said. The mens meet
was as deep and fast as Ive
ever seen it.
Contact the desk editor at
sports@dailytarheel.com.
On the wire: national and world news
Obama not bluffing
about Iran, Biden says
WASHINGTON, D.C.
(MCT) President Barack
Obama is not bluffing when
he vows that he will not allow
Iran to get a nuclear weapon,
Vice President Joe Biden said
Monday in a speech that put
a heavy emphasis on winning
consensus on that view from
the rest of the world.
Speaking to supporters of
Israel, Biden reiterated that
all options, including military
force, are on the table as the
U.S. works to prevent Irans
acquisition of nuclear weapons.
We are not looking for war,
Biden told the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee at a
policy conference.
It is critically impor-
tant for the whole world to
know we did everything in
our power to avoid any
confrontation, he said. If it
comes to that, he said, its
important that the rest of the
world is with us.
Biden didnt change the
stated policy of the United
States, or even the adminis-
trations talking points, in his
morning remarks.
But his comments come
as Obama plans a trip to
Israel this month meant to
reaffirm his commitment to
Israel and, tacitly, to reas-
sure the Israeli people and
their leaders in the wake of
his own re-election and that
of Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu.
I learned its never a good
idea to steal the presidents
thunder, the vice president
joked, explaining the presi-
dent would expand on Bidens
remarks during his visit.
In his comments, Biden hit
the key policy points his audi-
ence wanted to hear, restat-
ing U.S. commitment to the
Iron Dome defense program
and opposition to unilat-
eral efforts by the Palestinian
Authority to gain affirmation
for statehood status.
He called on the world
to treat Hezbollah as a ter-
rorist organization, period,
condemned efforts to de-
legitimize Israel and backed
the countrys right to impose
a trade blockade.
Obama will be in Israel just
before Passover and plans
meetings both in Jerusalem
and in Ramallah. He is
expected to give one major
address to the region, roughly
four years after he began his
outreach to the Muslim world
in a trip to Cairo.
Obama is also likely to
meet with young Israelis who
are eager to hear directly
from him in the wake of
tense election-year rela-
tions between Obama and
Netanyahu.
The vice president, who
also spoke to the AIPAC
conference in 2009 as the
administration began its first
term, downplayed any appar-
ent tension.
Ive been around a long
time. Ive been there for a
lot of prime ministers. Weve
always disagreed on tactics,
he said. But ladies and
gentlemen, we have never
disagreed on the strategic
imperative that Israel must be
able to protect its own, must
be able to do it on its own,
and we must always stand
with Israel to be sure that can
happen.
Biden also made similar
allusions to his long career
in public office, and what
he described as his personal
commitment to Israel and to
the powerful political force of
AIPAC.
I did more fundraisers for
AIPAC in the 70s and early
80s than just about as
many as anybody, he said.
12 cardinals still needed
in Rome for conclave
VATICAN CITY (MCT)
Twelve cardinals still have to
arrive in Rome before a con-
clave to elect a new pope can
be called, the Vatican said on
Monday.
The papal election pro-
cess started with a General
Congregation of Cardinals, a
preliminary round of talks, on
Monday morning. The meet-
ing was attended by 103 out
of the 115 cardinals expected
to be tasked with choosing a
new pontiff.
The others will arrive
between today and tomor-
row, Vatican spokesman the
Rev. Federico Lombardi told
reporters.
mCt/jAy priCe
U.S. Army National Guard
soldiers from Massachusetts
build a new recreation build-
ing on Forward Operating Base
Apache in Afghanistan.
The conclave can start
only after all cardinal elec-
tors, coming from all over the
world, are in place, meaning
that a decision about the start
date could come as early as
today. The conclave will be
held in the world-famous
Sistine Chapel.
The Catholic Church is
looking for a new leader after
Benedict XVI retired last
week. The 85-year-old, the
first pope to resign in 600
years, said he was too frail to
continue the job. He has since
retired outside Rome and will
not return to the Vatican until
his successor is chosen.
The aim is to have a new
pontiff by Easter, which this
year falls on March 31. U.S.
Cardinal Roger Mahony post-
ed on Twitter Sunday that the
process could be over in less
than two weeks.
There is no clear favorite.
One likely contender among
the Italian candidates is the
archbishop of Milan, Angelo
Scola. But there is also a
chance there will be a non-
European pope for the first
time since the eighth century.
Christianity is on the rise
in Africa and Asia, especially
in the Philippines, and in
Latin America. The cardinals
will have to verify what is
happening and act accord-
ingly, French Cardinal Paul
Joseph Jean Poupard said in
an interview with Corriere
della Sera.
The question of whether
the next pope should come
from Latin America is likely
to be prominent, the head
of the German Episcopal
Conference, Archbishop
Robert Zollitsch, told the
German news agency dpa. I
can very well imagine a pope
from another continent. The
time is ripe.
In the first session Monday,
cardinals took an oath of
secrecy and agreed to send
a message of homage to
Benedict, Lombardi said.
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Opinion Tuesday, March 5, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 8
EDITorIal BoarD mEmBErs
Established 1893, 120 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATUrED OnlinE rEADEr cOMMEnT
Today, remember Eve
Carson for her passion
TO THE EDITOR:
I cant believe its been
five years since the death
of Eve Carson shook this
Southern part of heaven.
I cannot speak for those
who knew her, and my
thoughts and prayers are
with them today and always.
However, being from
Chapel Hill and being
involved with Eves scholar-
ship, I have watched the
University and the town
heal and grow in the face
of tragedy, and feel it is my
duty nay, my pleasure
to share what Ive learned
in the past five years.
First and foremost, Ive
learned about passion.
When asked, Why do
you do what you do? Eve
responded, I want any
excuse to work with my
classmates and help them
do what they want to do
because thats what I want
to do.
She was passionate
about providing opportuni-
ties for other students to
get involved, give back and
share their passion.
The ideals of the schol-
arship that now bears her
name were born from
this passion, this love for
people, this never ending
desire to see each UNC
student pursue their own
unique Carolina Way, all
bound by a simple creed:
excellence with a heart.
This ability to see every-
ones potential to change
the world has changed my
world, giving me a new per-
spective on the capabilities
of myself and those around
me.
Lofty ideals aside, Ive
learned that Eve was
human. She was a terrifying
driver, an overachiever and
an occasional borrower of
her roommates ice cream.
She took every oppor-
tunity to dance, even in
unconventional places like
the student government
suite.
She embraced these
qualities in herself and in
everyone else, and encour-
aged others to do the same.
So today, though you
may not have known her,
remember her by exploring
your passions, embracing
your humanness, and fol-
lowing your own Carolina
Way. Be your best self
today, for Eve. For all of us.
Kacie Neville 13
Executive Director
Eve Carson Scholarship
Arm yourself with info
on gun club bill vote
TO THE EDITOR:
I will attempt to set the
record straight about SCB-
94-242, and why people
cannot seem to grasp the
bills purpose.
The two pieces of reason-
ing behind this bill are the
personal gain nature and
liability of ammunition.
Personal gain is prohib-
ited by the Student Code, as
it prevents student groups
from buying things like
food and distributing them
lETTErS TO
THE EDiTOr
So sad to see our local businesses dying in
favor of chains that can never provide that
same community bond.
Jeff DeLuca, on Peppers Pizza closing after 26 years
Since Aramark took over the food service
over on campus, they pretty much locked
up the people on campus.
David Harvey, on a decline in business leading to Peppers closing
EDiTOriAl cArTOOn By Daniela Madriz, daniela.madriz@gmail.com
The
peoples
Honor
Court
P
olitical science majors
spend a lot of class time
pondering one thing:
What is justice? Its so simple
a word, yet so boring to define.
Perhaps Platos Republic
put it best when he wrote, I
am the wisest man alive, for
I know only one thing, he
said. And that is, Im freaking
Plato. I mean, cmon.
OK, its a rough translation,
but Ive always been more of
an Aristotelian, anyway. Not
just because my professor said
hes better, and until I hear
differently Im going with it,
but because Aristotle believed
deeply as I do: That the virtue
of justice consists in modera-
tion, as regulated by wisdom.
And if theres only one word
Id use to describe college stu-
dents, its moderation.
Is there justice on this cam-
pus? Does the pope wear a
funny hat and never retire?
You see, recently, people
have questioned whether cer-
tain roles UNC students play
in enforcing justice on campus
in the Honor Court, on stu-
dent grievance committees, or
elsewhere are appropriate
for students to be involved in.
Allow me, if you will, this
brief time to defend them and
our campus highest, only court
in my own unique way lying.
The truth is, these concerns
couldnt be more unfounded.
Our Honor Court, for example,
has a long and proud history of
getting involved in areas they
dont belong. Cases in point:
2009: Honor Court mem-
bers are trained to administer
the flu shot to students follow-
ing budget cuts, resulting in
what became known world-
wide as H1N1.
1804: In a landmark suit,
members irritated a nation
filing one of the least-studied
Supreme Court cases of all
time, Marbury vs. Madison vs.
UNC Honor Court.
2000: Whats referred to
by music critics as easily the
worst decision ever made,
the court is brought in as the
sixth Spice Girl. Honor Spice
effectively ends the band.
Heres a question to pon-
der: Should a student with no
experience outside of college
ever have the power to per-
manently expel someone else
from it?
I honestly believe that the
vast majority of students on
our Universitys court, commit-
tees, student government, are
all decent, hardworking over-
achievers who cannot be trust-
ed to cede even a small amount
of power once they get it.
But I dont blame them; I
blame the system that gives
them the responsibility. Look,
Im as ambitious as the next
guy I know I probably
shouldnt be chancellor, but
if someone offered me the
chance next year, I know how
great that would look if I ever
decide to write for a smaller,
private college.
In other words, despite my
lack of qualifications, Id still
say yes.
Some, like Aristotle, say stu-
dents should never be involved
in such matters that some
things, namely justice, are
matters for our elders, with
wisdom and experience under
their belts. Youth is easily
deceived, he wrote, because it
is quick to hope.
Then put me in charge,
because after two years here,
Ive got none left.
3/6: WHATAREWETHINKING?
Michael Dicksondiscusses the
irrational choices humans make.
N
E
X
T
Memet Walker
Dispatches from Below Average
Junior political science major from
Chapel Hill.
Email: memet@unc.edu
SPEAK OUT
WriTing guidElinEs
Please type: Handwritten letters will not be accepted.
Sign and date: No more than two people should sign letters.
Students: Include your year, major and phone number.
Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number.
Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit
letters to 250 words.
suBMissiOn
Drop-off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary Street, Chapel
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E-mail: 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, which is made up of
eight board members, the opinion editor and the editor.
to members. You cannot
share food with anyone
else, so it is personal gain.
Ammunition works the
same way. Just because you
cannot walk home with
your spent shells, does not
make ammunition less of
personal gain.
When I speak of liabilities,
I am talking about the huge
risk the University takes in
funding ammunition.
Should something happen
with the ammunition, we are
held responsible (take a look
at the Patriot Act).
The 87th Student
Congress, which added in
the ammunition provision,
expressed concern about
liabilities associated with
ammunitions.
When the question
Should we fund ammuni-
tion? is dismissed for the
question How much should
we fund ammunition? I
find significant negligence
on Student Congress part.
As to the student safety
and security committee
funding ammunition
requests, they most cer-
tainly can hear and fund
ammunition requests.
If the concern is where
the ammunition is used, the
committee should stop fund-
ing SafeWalk for walking off-
campus students home.
None of the supporters
of the bill are pursuing a
political agenda (an allega-
tion that usually warrants
an ethics investigation). So
please, stick to the facts.
Austin Root 15
Student Congress
The minimum wage
rate needs an increase
TO THE EDITOR:
I was very pleased to
read the Honor working-
class women column on
Monday.
Beyond keeping the
triumphs and tribulations
of working class women in
mind, we should also be
mindful of the struggles
of working-class men and
women across America.
Workers today are more
productive than at any
other time in history, yet
wages have lagged.
If minimum wage were to
have kept up with produc-
tivity, it would be at nearly
$22 per hour, and if it were
to have kept up with infla-
tion it would be at about
$10.50 per hour, each far
beyond the current federal
(and N.C.) level of $7.25.
Despite President
Obamas proposal to raise
the minimum wage to $9
per hour, it is unlikely to
get a vote in a government
increasingly consumed with
budget crisis after budget
crisis.
The withering of work-
ers rights and benefits
should not be viewed in
a vacuum; the progress
achieved by women and
minorities was aided by
the labor movement, as the
Civil Rights movement and
womens movement aided
labors success.
Workers deserve a vote
on raising the minimum
wage.
Joshua Jansa
Graduate student
Political science
O
n Saturday, Chapel
Hill Transit
unveiled 15 new
diesel-electric hybrid
buses. Chapel Hills fleet
now has 29 hybrid buses,
which make up about one-
fourth of the fleet.
This is a savvy move on
the part of town govern-
ment. Chapel Hill Transit
is the second largest tran-
sit system in the state.
Because of the size and
scope of the transit sys-
tem, it is imperative that
An anity for hybridity
EDiTOriAl
the transit framework is
as conscious of its carbon
footprint as possible.
The inclusion of 15 more
hybrid buses proves that
Chapel Hill has a commit-
ment to environmentally
friendly practices.
The incorporation of new
hybrid buses into the fleet
is excellent for the town
because these new buses
will reduce emissions and
save money on fuel.
The new buses will
take the place of older,
non-hybrid buses that will
eventually be discontinued
from Chapel Hill Transit.
The town should be
commended for getting
these new buses without
interfering with its free
transit model.
Though the buses obvi-
ously cost money, they
provide good value to the
town in terms of environ-
mental stewardship and
long-term financial vision.
The town funded
these hybrid buses
mostly through a grant
from the Federal Transit
Administration.
In a time when broad
tax hikes are on the table,
its comforting to hear
that the town can look to
outside sources of funding
to help finance important
projects.
Hybrid buses help
the both town and
University.
T
he Obama
Administrations
directive requir-
ing federal agencies with
more than $100 million
in research and develop-
ment expenditures make
available results of feder-
ally funded research to the
public within one year of
publication is a salutary
move for the scientific
community.
It provides for expand-
ed public access to the
results of research funded
by taxpayers and also
ensures that the valuable
Lux Libertas
EDiTOriAl
contributions that the
scientific community pro-
vides arent lost.
This policy can help
promote economic
growth, catalyze scien-
tific breakthroughs and
increase innovation.
As a top public univer-
sity in research funding,
this policy bears a lot of
positive consequences for
the University community.
It ensures that the valuable
research that members of
our community put forth
becomes public and can
then be used by others to
further scientific advance-
ment.
Broad public access
lubricates the wheels of job
creation and encourages
public-private collabora-
tion. It enables companies
to focus their efforts and
resources on understand-
ing and taking advantage
of new discoveries.
However, expanded
public access to taxpayer-
funded research should
also be accompanied by
increased funding to pub-
lic schools, particularly in
the sciences, so that more
young Americans can have
the skills to understand
and use research findings.
While expanded public
access of federally-funded
research is a wise move,
federal agencies that fol-
low this policy should pro-
mote the usefulness and
openness of findings.
Making federally
funded research
public is wise.
cOlUMn
R
eading through The
Daily Tar Heel on
Monday, I was not
surprised by another ad by
David Horowitz claiming
Islam to be a religion of hate
and oppression.
The ad is sadly not an iso-
lated occurrence of spreading
hate and fear toward Islam.
The goal behind these ads and
the Islamophobia campaign
is to plant seeds of irratio-
nal fear and hatred towards
Muslims and to portray
Muslims as a religious group
in contradiction to the United
States and Americans.
Ads like this only con-
tribute to the Islamophobic
campaign promoted by radi-
cal xenophobes and to the
stereotypes promoted about
Islam today.
I am grateful to have grown
up in a family that stressed
religious understanding, with
my parents encouraging me
to attend Sunday school with
my Christian friends at a
young age. As a Muslim, I was
encouraged to learn about
other religions through direct
interaction with the idea
layla Quran
Muslim Students Association
Sophomore global studies major
from Greenville.
Email: quran@email.unc.edu
that others beliefs should be
respected.
In the Holy Quran, a verse
states, Whosoever kills an
innocent human being, it
shall be as if he has killed all
mankind, and whosoever
saves the life of one, it shall be
as if he had saved the life of all
mankind (Quran 5:32).
We must understand that
the actions depicted in the
ad are not exclusive to a par-
ticular religion and do not by
any means represent Islam.
We must understand that
these acts shown in the ad
are done by individuals with
false perceptions of the reli-
gion. We must understand
that Muslims should not
have to constantly defend
their religion.
An act of violence by
any other name is still an
act of violence, something
the mainstream media, the
film industry and, frankly,
some Americans must come
to realize in order for this
country to live up to its
founding principles of reli-
gious tolerance and a nation
of the people, by the people
and for the people.
This issue is much bigger
than one ad in the DTH;
this is about who we all are
as Americans. I am speak-
ing for all Americans who
support a free America
regardless of religion or
background in saying that
Islamophobic messages like
the one portrayed in the
ad only make our country
poorer.
I challenge the UNC
community to use these ads
as a discussion platform to
understand how this intoler-
ance can be stopped, and
how a better understanding
of Islam can be reached.
Mondays ad against Islamic apartheid preaches xenophobia.
Tolerance over hate
anDy Thomason EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
ChElsEa PhIPPs OPINION CO-EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
naThan DamBrosIo OPINION CO-EDITOR
sanEm kaBaCa ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR
NAYAb kHAN
TREY MANguM
zACH gAvER
MATTHEw OAkES
kAREEM RAMADAN
PATRICk RYAN
CODY wELTON
SIERRA wINgATE-bEY

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