nations top team, but also as the best in UNCs history. From a loss to a winning streak UNC began the year ranked fifth and lost its first game of the season to then third-ranked Florida. For us, its just to go out not for By Jordan Bailey University Editor As Jim Dean, the Universitys next executive vice chancellor and provost, prepares to transition into his new position, he said he regrets one thing having to say goodbye to the only home hes known at the University. While Im really happy and really enthusiastic and feel very blessed that Chancellor (Carol) Folt has chosen me for this job, it does mean giving up literally everything Ive known at UNC for 16 years, he said. All of my contacts, all of my col- leagues, the majority of my friends on campus theyre just tremen- dous people. Dean is the current dean of the Kenan-Flagler Business School, but he will leave that position to replace current provost Bruce Carney July 1. Dean who was unanimously approved by the Board of Trustees May 23 said he looks forward to working with people across campus. The opportunity to get to know people who are smart and hard- working and influential and wise across the University thats going to be great, Dean said. Folt said she chose Dean over the other three can- didates she interviewed for the position because she valued his knowledge of the University, among other things. He works with people across the schools he has a fairly extraordinary commitment to providing a great education at the undergraduate through the professional school levels, she said. I feel like what he believes in and what hes accomplished so far will be a great asset to me and to the entire team as we work together across the community. Dean has served in a variety of leadership positions in the business school since he began as a professor of organizational behavior in 1997. The focus of Deans research and teaching is lead- ership, organizational change, strategic decision-mak- ing, international management and organizational performance improvement. Leadership development is something thats incredibly important in the business world, but cer- tainly beyond, Dean said. And thats one thing I ll be interested in seeing if I can bring to the broader University. Department of Public Instruction, said state public schools will enroll 17,000 more students next year, but fewer teachers are employed than in 2008 in large part due to low pay. But Terry Stoops, director of edu- cation studies at the conservative John Locke Foundation, said limited finances are forcing legislators to cut allocations to many different sec- tors, not just public education. Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893 Other people wonder why were so obsessed with this place. rOy williams Thursday, May 30, 2013 dailytarheel.com Volume 121, Issue 43 weekly summer issue LONG-aNticipated VictORY S hortstop Michael Russell, pictured above in the ACC championship game, helped the North Carolina base- ball team win the ACC tournament Sunday and earn the top seed in the NCAA tournament. The Tar Heels will host a regional starting Friday. See page 7 for more coverage. dth/kaki pope The Daily Tar Heel will pub- lish weekly this summer, but visit dailytarheel.com for news updates throughout the week. Here are some of this weeks highlights: Online TOWN COUNCIL TALKS PARKS, OBEY CREEK The Chapel Hill Town Council met Wednesday to discuss the towns parks and greenways plans and to consider creating a committee to further explore proposals for a mixed-use residential project. LOCAL PRODUCE FOR A NEW SET OF LOCALS The new Transplanting Traditions Community Farm provides a space for new Burmese immigrants and refugees to grow and harvest their own produce. The frst farmers market was held Friday. courtesy of jeffrey camarati The North Carolina womens lacrosse team celebrates after winning the NCAA championship for the first time in program history. Folt taps insider for provost Senate budget proposes K-12 cuts Jim Dean the new provost, whose research focuses on organi- zational behavior, will begin july 1. Kenan-Flagler Dean Jim Dean will bring business perspective to the job. see PROVOST, page 5 By Aaron Dodson Staff Writer The North Carolina womens lacrosse team has finally claimed what its been chasing. After 14 NCAA tournament appearances in the programs 18-year history, the North Carolina womens lacrosse team claimed its first championship win Sunday. DTH ONLINE: Head to dailytarheel.com for a full story about the final game and more tournament coverage. A triple-overtime victory over Maryland earned womens lacrosse its first NCAA title. see lACROSSe, page 5 By Sarah Brown State & National Editor The N.C. General Assembly has one month from today to pass a two- year state budget and legislators and educators remain up in arms about funding for public education. The Senates budget, which passed last week, would freeze public teach- er salaries for the fourth time in five years and spend $50 million less on K-12 education in 2013-14 than Gov. Pat McCrorys proposal. Funding for teaching assistants and professional development for teachers would also be slashed under the Senate plan, as would the 10- to 15-percent pay bonus for incoming teachers with masters degrees. Education leaders and analysts said they knew reductions were coming, but were still alarmed by the Senates proposals. This is such a bad starting point, said Matt Ellinwood, a policy analyst at the N.C. Justice Center. Legislators have cited unexpected cost overruns in Medicaid which will total $248 million by the end of the fiscal year in June as a major factor in reducing education funds. But Ellinwood said this budget continues a trend seen in the state for several years. You dont get to 46th (out of 50) in per-teacher spending overnight. Public school teachers have received one 1.2-percent pay raise since 2008 and North Carolina has fallen more than 20 spots nationally in average teacher salary in the five years since. The states average salary last year was $45,947 a 15.7 percent decrease since 2001-02 and $10,000 less than the national average. Jeff Nash, spokesman for Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools, said cur- rent salary levels are unsustainable and are threatening teacher recruit- ment and retention. We have to get a lot of our teach- ers here from outside the state, Nash said. Whats going to recruit them here when (other states) offer them more money? I cant imagine another profes- sion where people four out of five years ... have no pay increase. Alexis Schauss, director of the school business division at the N.C. The N.C. House began to review the Senates budget this week. see buDgeT, page 5 buDgeT bReAKDOwN The two-year N.C. Senate budget includes changes to several key public education sectors. It would: Eliminate limits on all K-12 class sizes and daily teaching loads Cut more than 4,500 teaching assistant positions Cut $6 million from the Limited English Proficiency program Retain last years $76.5 million cut to textbooks and supplies Eliminate 17,500 spots over two years in the states pre-K program Fridays weather Todays weather Very consistent. H 88, L 68 Classic North Carolina. H 89, L 66 This shows that North Carolina can win and North Carolina will win. Kara Cannizzaro, senior midfielder The No. 3 Tar Heels defeated top- ranked Maryland in the an NCAA title game that lasted three overtimes, resulting in UNC players celebrating in a sea of confetti while hoisting the schools first-ever womens lacrosse national championship trophy. With the victory, UNC broke the school record the Tar Heels set in 2002 and Overtime overdue today Be a Trashionista with Kidzu (art workshop): Kidzu will host an art workshop for children aged four to 10 years on creat- ing wearable works of art from recycled materials. The art will be featured in the Rubbish 2 Runway exhibit at FRANK Gal- lery. The children will be able to work with artists from the show. The event costs $6 per child and is open to the public. Time: 4:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Location: FRANK Gallery Student Showcase at DSI (comedy show): DSI Comedy Theater will present shows from its training center class and its experimental incubator teams. Admission to the event costs $5. The event is open to the public. Time: 7:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Location: DSI Comedy Theater Friday Harrington Bank Kids Symphony Costume Contest: Children of all ages can enter a movie-themed costume contest, which will celebrate the N.C. Symphonys 14th annual perfor- mance in Southern Village. Time: 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Location: Harrington Bank, Southern Village branch North Carolina Symphony out- door performance (concert): Music director Grant Llewellyn will conduct the North Carolina Symphony in its 14th annual performance in Southern Vil- lage. The symphony will perform musical pieces based on the theme Music from the Movies, including music from several popular movie series. The event is free and open to the public. Time: 7:30 p.m. - 9 p.m. Location: Southern Village NOTED. A couple in Pennsylvania stabbed each other after arguing about the American Idol finale a few weeks ago. So not only are all the judges fired, but the last two Idol fans attempt some weird group suicide. Luckily they survived, so they ll be back to see next season. Youre not getting away that easy, Seacrest. QUOTED. I have to make a lot of calls for work, and I have to tell people that Im not a man. Jacqueline Simpson, a 52-year-old gospel singer from Brooklyn, blames McDonalds for this. She says she bit into a larger than penny-sized piece of glass in her chicken sandwich. We say ouch. L ooking for a hip new trend to latch onto for the birth of your first child? Midwives and bathtubs just not doing it for you? Forget natural think maritime. One North Carolina couple is going all the way to Hawaii to have their baby while swim- ming with dolphins in a tank. The couple say they want to rebuild human relationships with dolphins so the two species can more peacefully coexist. But they might need to make it clear up front exactly what sort of relationship theyre looking for with the dolphins it might be more mammal than they can handle. Experts say a male dolphin can be extremely aggressive and violent without provocation. We just hope hes licensed. Ordering up a dolphin delivery From staf and wire reports WEEKLY DOSE Someone vandalized a car at 201 Greenview Drive at 8:50 a.m. on May 23, accord- ing to Chapel Hill police reports. The person used dirt to write vulgar language on a car in a parking lot area, reports state. Someone commit- ted identity theft at 211 N. Roberson St. at 12:28 p.m. on May 23, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The person attempted to open credit accounts with another persons information, reports state. Someone robbed a per- son at gunpoint in Spaight Alley at 2:23 p.m. Sunday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Reports state that the person used a handgun to rob someone in an alley behind a building. The person took $217.01 in consumable foodstuffs, jewelry valued at $1,500, a handbag valued at $20, credit cards valued at $10, a bag valued at $1 and other items valued at $5, reports state. Someone broke and entered at 405 W. Franklin St. between 3:30 a.m. and 3:40 a.m. Monday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Reports state the person broke into Hazmat and stole money. The person caused damage to a dead bolt lock valued at $30 and stole $600 in cash, reports state. Someone broke and entered a vehicle parked at 3207 Drew Hill Lane between 2:02 p.m. and 5:02 p.m. Monday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The person caused dam- age to glass in the car valued at $200 and stole two door speakers valued at $300, reports state. To make a calendar submission, email calendar@dailytarheel. com. Please include the date of the event in the subject line, and attach a photo if you wish. Events will be published in the newspaper on either the day or the day before they take place. CoMMUNity CaLENdar satUrday Art Adventures: Usable Artwork: Kids ages 6 to 9 years old can create their own usable works of art using inspira- tion from a guided tour of the Ackland Art Museums galleries. This week will focus on Chinese ceramic bowls. Space is limited; the event is free for Ackland members and $5 for nonmem- bers. Time: First session 10:30 a.m. - noon, second session 1 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Location: Ackland Art Museum PoLiCE LoG News Thursday, May 30, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 2 music to your ears L ocal 506 hosted the band Yes Maam, a 1920s rock n roll band from New Orleans, La., and Deep Chatham, a North Carolina-based bluegrass band. Daniel Fox, a math major from Greensboro, stood near the bar waiting to listen. dth/mary meade mcmullan Due to a reporting error, thursdays front page story Grievance policies up for debate incorrectly stated that Kevin Lee thompson was a police officer. He was a public works employee. the Daily tar Heel apologizes for the error. CorrECtioN www.dailytarheel.com Established 1893 120 years of editorial freedom The Daily Tar Heel CorrECtioNs MEgAN CASSELLA SuMMeR eDITOR MANAGING.eDITOR@DAILyTARHeeL. COM jOrDAN BAILEy uNIVeRSITy eDITOR uNIVeRSITy@DAILyTARHeeL.COM CAMMIE BELLAMy CITy eDITOR CITy@DAILyTARHeeL.COM SArAH BrOwN STATe & NATIONAL eDITOR STATe@DAILyTARHeeL.COM SAMANTHA SABIN ARTS & DIVeRSIONS eDITOR ARTS@DAILyTARHeeL.COM MAx MICELI SPORTS eDITOR SPORTS@DAILyTARHeeL.COM KAKI pOpE PHOTO eDITOR PHOTO@DAILyTARHeeL.COM TArA jEffrIES COPy eDITOR COPy@DAILyTARHeeL.COM MAry BUrKE DeSIGN & GRAPHICS eDITOR DeSIGN@DAILyTARHeeL.COM Contact Summer editor Megan Cassella at managing.editor@dailytarheel. com with news tips, com- ments, corrections or sugges- tions. tiPs Office and Mail Address: 151 e. Rosemary St. Chapel Hill, NC 27514-3539 Megan Cassella, Summer editor, 962-4086 Advertising & Business, 962-1163 News, Features, Sports, 962-0245 One copy per person; additional copies may be purchased at The Daily Tar Heel for $.25 each. Please report suspicious activity at our distribution racks by e-mailing dth@dailytarheel.com 2013 DTH Media Corp. All rights reserved The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered. Editorial corrections will be printed below. errors com- mitted on the Opinion Page have corrections printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online ver- sions of our stories. News Thursday, May 30, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 3 City BRiEF Part of Cameron Avenue closed to traffic Since Tuesday, East Cameron Avenue between Columbia Street and UNCs Memorial Hall has been closed to through traffic. The section of the road will remain closed through mid-August. The closing takes place as the Orange Water and Sewer Authority replaces drinking water lines and installs new chilled water pipes for the University. OWASA is recommending drivers use the posted detour along Raleigh, Franklin and Columbia streets.
StatE BRiEF Gender-neutral housing opposition back The N.C. Senate reintroduced a controversial measure last week that would prevent UNCs new policy allowing gender-neutral housing on campus from taking effect in the fall. Although the original Senate bill was not voted out of committee before the legislatures crossover deadline earlier this month, a proposal to block opposite-sex living arrangements on UNC-system campuses was inserted into the Senates budget. UNCs pilot program for gender-neutral housing, approved unanimously by the University Board of Trustees last fall, would include 32 students for the 2013-14 school year and has drawn widespread sup- port from students and faculty. The House of Representatives began working on its budget proposal this week. They hope to finalize a budget by June 13. From staff and wire reports inBRIEF Thorps say goodbye to the small city By Andy Willard Staff Writer Chancellor Holden Thorp and his wife will leave behind more than just their beloved University when they move to St. Louis next month. The couple will also part with a community they have collectively spent 45 years serving. You can ask me about everything else that Ive done and Ill say, heres some good things about it, heres some bad things about it, Thorp said. As far as town politics is concerned, I have no reserva- tion saying we revolutionized it. The chancellor and his wife Patti will both speak at the Friends of the Downtown meeting held in the Franklin Hotel this morning. Pat Evans, the chairwoman of the group, said the chan- cellor was an unexpected addition to the meetings schedule. Well, first I was in contact with Patti, but she said she doesnt go anywhere without Holden, Evans said. Evans said she wanted the pair to speak because of their enthusiasm for the downtown community and the strong relationship they helped build between the University and Chapel Hill. The Thorps said they were particularly proud of the work they did to build the Ackland Museum Store in what used to be an unoccupied building in the middle of downtown. The town was going nuts trying to figure out what to do, Patti Thorp said. Evans said Patti Thorp has given generously to local arts programs in the past. attend the talk Time: 9:15 a.m. coffee hour, 9:45 a.m. meeting begins Location: The Franklin Hotel, second floor Info: bit.ly/11wGHRK the chancellor and his wife will speak downtown today. Its just one thing after another, Evans said. Holden Thorp said he came into his job as chancel- lor wanting to improve the relationship the University had with Chapel Hill. It was just taking up a lot of energy for the University to argue with the town as much as we were, he said. Holden Thorp said it didnt make sense for the two bod- ies to be adversaries because the students, faculty and staff of the University make up a large part of the community. Chapel Hill Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt said he has had a strong professional relation- ship with the couple since Thorp became chancellor. Their personalities have made them great leaders in the town, he said. Holdens not the kind of person that approaches the problem and says, Oh, thats impossible, Kleinschmidt said. And while Holden Thorps approach is thoughtful and tempered, Kleinschmidt said Patti brings a sense of enthu- siasm to everything she does. She has a huge personal- ity, he said. You cant be in the same room with her and not feel it. The Thorps said they will miss the weather, the lack of traffic and the people who they said made the town great. Its our thank-you tour, Patti Thorp said. Not our goodbye tour, but our thank- you tour. Contact the desk editor at university@dailytarheel.com. dth/rachel hare Justin Johnson played slide guitar with a beer bottle at Weaver Street Markets 25th anniversary beer tasting in Hillsborough Saturday. By Daniel Schere Staff Writer A popular Carrboro-based co-op is cel- ebrating its success the only way it knows how with new and locally produced items. Weaver Street Markets Hillsborough location hosted a beer tasting Saturday to mark the chains upcoming 25th anni- versary of its opening. The event featured specialty beers brewed for the occasion by Lonerider and Aviator breweries, based in Raleigh and Fuquay-Varina, respectively. A similar event was held May 18 at the Southern Village store location, said specialty beer and wine merchandiser Peg Todloski. She said the stores actual anniversary is June 21, but theyre start- ing the celebrations early. We kind of wanted to catch people while theyre still here, she said. Todloski said she helped plan the event, along with members of Weaver Streets merchandising and marketing departments. Its definitely a group effort, she said. She said recently, beer has been a more popular product than wine at the market, which prompted staff to begin looking for local breweries for partner- ships. If theyre not succeeding, then were not succeeding, she said. Natty Greenes Brewing Company, which is based in Raleigh, has also released a specialty beer to com- memorate Weaver Streets anniversary. Todloski said a few more breweries will also be partnering with the market and are scheduled to release specialty beers in September. Galen Smith, a brewer with Lonerider, said he thinks the release of a unique beer for Weaver Streets anniversary serves an important community func- tion. This just sounded like a great thing to do, he said. He noted that the beer, called Weaver Trail, contains 35 percent beechwood- smoked malt to give it a smooth, smoky flavor. It finishes very clean and dry but with a little lingering smoke to it, he said. Among those who sampled Weaver Trail Saturday was Kevin Cosentino, a Wilmington resident and home brewer. Its neat to come out to events like this and to try to see some of the dif- ferences with the unique offerings that these breweries are releasing, rather than the standard flagships, he said. The market has been involved with a number of local food initiatives over the years, including a tour of several local wineries and the Carolina Farm Stewardship Associations Piedmont Farm Tour. Events and special projects coordina- tor Linda Fullwood said initiatives such as these are key to carrying out Weaver Streets mission to connect the public with the people who grow its food. Youre connecting people to an actual person who talks about how they grow, why they grow, she said. From then on it adds value to the product. Contact the desk editor at city@dailytarheel.com. homegrown success By Sarah Brown State & National Editor Stuart Campbell, executive director of the gay advocacy group Equality N.C., once aspired to become a Boy Scout. Campbell was a Cub Scout when he was younger and after he decided to come out as gay, he knew he could not remain an active member of the organization. But Boy Scouts of America voted last week to end a long-standing ban prohibiting openly gay youth from participating in Scouting activities, prompting the praise of Campbell and gay rights advocates nationwide. As someone who ... decided not to go into Boy Scouts in part because of my sexual orientation ... (I think) this is going to be a big change for a lot of folks, Campbell said. The resolution a monumental one for Boy Scouts, which has historically professed strong roots in traditional Christian values passed by a 61-38 percent margin, with more than 1,400 Boy Scout leaders voting nationwide. Campbell said the resolution reflects changing nation- al attitudes in several prominent gay rights debates, such as marriage and employee discrimination. Joel Dunn, district chairman for Orange District of Boy Scouts of America, said he personally supports the change. This is a step in the evolution of the policy, and I think its a positive step, Dunn said. But he said the organization has yet to address a ban that still stands on gay adult leaders which he said will prove to be an even more divisive issue. This still leaves some unfinished business, he said. Boy Scouts of America had reaffirmed its ban on gay youth members last year but Campbell said the organi- zations national leaders had been reviewing it ever since. We expect them eventually to lift all discrimination from their policies, he said. Dunn said regional chapters of Boy Scouts will face challenges in coming months as leaders, members and chartering organizations react to the vote. Each Boy Scout troop requires a civic or religious group to sponsor it and Dunn said he expects some churches in Orange County will not support the policy. I would not be surprised if we lose a handful of char- tering organizations, he said. But I believe there will be no problem finding new ones. We will do what we can to ... retain our membership and embrace the opportunity to be more inclusive. Ed Bedford, a scoutmaster for Chapel Hill-based Troop 820, said he does not see the change having a large impact on his troop or on most troops in Chapel Hill. Bedford said more conservative parts of the country might see a decrease in membership. But in the long term, I think its good for Scouting, he said. The change will take effect in January 2014. Contact the desk editor at state@dailytarheel.com. Weaver Street Market will celebrate its 25th birthday. nc applauds gay youth in Boy scouts the Boy Scouts of america will now allow openly gay members in troops. Bars aim to prevent sexual assault By Anna Long Staff Writer As UNC grapples with how best to pre- vent sexual assault on campus, local bar employees met Tuesday to discuss their role in keeping patrons safe. The training and outreach program, called Raise the Bar, promotes awareness of sexual assault in bars and provides bar staff with a plan of action to prevent it, said Arianna Timko, an organizer of the program. UNC Student Wellness, which hosted the program, collaborated with commu- nity volunteers to offer training to teach bar staff in the Chapel Hill area how to prevent drug- and alcohol-facilitated sexual assault. We want bars to raise awareness for their staff, Timko said. Bar staff know what (sexual assault) is, they just dont necessarily call it drug- facilitated sexual assault. They see the situ- ations, but we want them to think about what happens three hours later. The training focused on helping bar staff recognize the danger of sexual violence between patrons. Timko said while most people see drug-facilitated assault as involving sub- stances like so-called date rape drugs, 75 percent of such attacks involve only dth/brennan cumalander UNC Student Wellness instructor Annie Peacock educated local bar owners Tuesday. alcohol. Timko, who specializes in interpersonal violence prevention, said she believes starting a dialogue between bar staff and owners about sexual assault is an impor- tant step to making bars in Chapel Hill safer. Daniel Llamas, the manager of Goodfellows bar on Franklin Street who attended the event, said his staff has always been aware of sexual assault, but heightened attention at UNC has put a spotlight on the issue. Sexual assault is more out there and more on your mind, but (the attention) hasnt changed our actions, Llamas said. We have emphasized it more, though. Timko said she hopes bars in Chapel Hill will host Raise the Bar training ses- sions for their entire staffs. She said the training will bring atten- tion to the issue of sexual assault and help people brainstorm ideas on how to handle such situations. Timko said Raise the Bar volunteers were met with positive reactions when they reached out to businesses on Franklin Street to introduce the program last month. But Goodfellows was the only bar to send representatives to the training. Llamas emphasized that he considers Goodfellows a safe bar, largely because of the staff s awareness of the sexual assault issue. He said the bar was small enough to allow staff to keep an eye on the safety of customers. Luckily, I feel like were not a bar where people go just to pick someone up, Llamas said. Its a more relaxed feel and we have a good amount of regulars, so its usually fairly easy to monitor. Contact the desk editor at city@dailytarheel.com. a new training program helps bar staff handle situations. News Thursday, May 30, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 4 Casey McCormick, a masters stu- dent in public health, will work to fight blindness in Vietnam. Theater ensemble nishes residency Students join global effort to ght blindness By Brooke Eller Staff Writer When Michael Wilson and Casey McCormick first began searching for public health internships, they both knew they wanted to go abroad. Now, with a departure to Vietnam set for Sunday, the students dreams are about to come true. As students in the Gillings School of Global Public Health masters program, Wilson and McCormick were required to find summer internships and the two classmates agreed to collabo- rate in their search for inter- national work. The pair applied for internships with Helen Keller International, a large public health organization dedicated to preventing blindness and reducing mal- nutrition with a variety of programs in communities around the world. Wilson and McCormick will leave Sunday to work in Two UNC students will work to prevent blindness in Vietnam. Michael Wilson, a masters student, will work to pro- mote healthy eyesight in Vietnam. dth/kaki pope Kristen Sieh, Rachel Chaukin and Jessica Almasy learn Mandarin from Kim Satterfield in class Monday. Vietnam for two months with ChildSight, an HKI program that provides eye exams and prescription eyeglasses to 15 schools in the Kon Tum province. They said they were drawn to the program because of its concentration on children. Kids are definitely my focus, said McCormick, who plans to specialize in infec- tious disease prevention in infants and adolescents. I hope (the internship) will give me an idea about what to expect as a career, she said. Wilson said he wants to work with children and health behavior. He is cur- rently the U.S. director of New Hope Haiti Mission, a nonprofit that runs an orphanage in Haiti. I think this will just be one more experience that will hopefully guide me and help me figure out what popula- tion and what region of the world I want to work in, he said. Wilson said he and By Samantha Sabin Arts Editor Mandarin, banjo and other lessons taught at UNC are influencing a New York-based theater ensembles next proj- ect. The TEAM the theater ensemble that has spent the last six days at PlayMakers Repertory Company kick- started an exploration this week of the difference between drive and discipline for a new show its developing. As a part of its residency here, the ensemble has been utilizing PlayMakers profes- sional staff and performance spaces, along with UNCs research resources, to further its projects development. The residency, which ends today, included a work-in- progress show Wednesday. Jake Margolin, a performer for The TEAM, said group discussions play an essential part in the ensembles cre- ative process. We start with a nugget of something, whether its a source material, like a book or a historical figure, or in this scenario, this concept of drive and discipline, he said. Were all attacking differ- innovative works in the city. As part of their explora- tion of the difference between drive and discipline, each member is taking up a new skill such as playing the banjo or writing a novel. Each person dedicates an hour a day to practicing his or her skill, and they all gather afterwards to discuss what they learned during their individual explorations and to figure out how to mold their new piece around what they have learned. The entire ensemble is also learning Mandarin together, with hour-long lessons every day from Carrboro teacher Kim Satterfield. This is not the language I would pick if I were to pick the language, said Kristen Sieh, a member of The TEAM. But the project has to deal with the act of discipline in the face of what isnt what you would be doing anyway. Taylor Mac, who played the emcee in PlayMakers Cabaret in April, will also be working with The TEAM in the creative process. He said the idea for this project came when he was thinking about his childhood upbringing. No one I know from my childhood is particularly dis- ciplined, Mac said. Rachel Chavkin, The TEAMs artistic director, said it is too early to tell how the project will be interpreted. There will be some ele- ment of wanting the audi- ence to think about personal change or change on a larger level, she said. But its all guesses at this point. Matt Hubbs, sound design- er for The TEAM, said each individual exploration of a new skill will bring the group to a common idea. While any one of our individual disciplines may McCormick will explore how they can better implement the ChildSight program in schools by doing quantitative evaluations. To actually get in the field and get our hands dirty to actually use some evaluation and some implementation I think will be really valuable, Wilson said. In addition to conduct- ing evaluations, the two will spearhead the implementa- tion of a nutrition program to coincide with the existing eye- sight program, McCormick said. She said the new program will be an important addition for participants because poor diet can affect eyesight. Kathy Spahn, HKIs president, said in an email that the organization chose McCormick and Wilson for their innovation and opti- mism. What stood out to us about Casey and Michael was not only their enthusi- asm for learning and their passion for the HKI mission, but also their understand- ing that their experiences from the field can be used to empower and educate those in their own communities, she said. Wilson said the School of Public Health has been help- ful in the process of preparing for the internship. Just their general sup- port of their health students traveling and having these opportunities its really meaningful, he said. Contact the desk editor at university@dailytarheel.com. ent facets of it. The ensemble is the last of three theater groups to participate in PlayMakers residency program, which is supported by a $200,000 grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, which funds annual residencies by theater ensembles. Previous participants have been Philadelphias Pig Iron Theatre Company and SITI Company of New York. Jeffrey Meanza, PlayMakers associate artistic director, said this ensemble was chosen because it has a completely different structure from the other two groups. The SITI Company has a full administrative staff, while The TEAM is much more collaborative and they have one full-time administrative person, he said. And theyre incredibly cool. Its one of the most Theyre incredibly cool. Its one of the most innovative works in the city. Jeffrey Meanza, playMakers associate artistic director not show up dramatically on the stage, our experience of undertaking it for this peri- od of time is a commonality that will allow us to hope- fully build something with, he said. Contact the desk editor at arts@dailytarheel.com. The BEST live music ~ 18 & over admitted www.catscradle.com **Advance ticket sales at SchoolKids Records (Raleigh), CD Alley (CH). Buy tickets on-line: www.etix.com For phone orders CALL 919-967-9053 919-967-9053 300 E. Main St.Carrboro MAY JUNE JULY AUGUST 30 TH THE DILLINGER ESCAPE PLANw / The Faceless & Royal Thunder**($15/$18) 1 SA: FLOBOTS**($15/$17) w/Wheelchair Sports Camp and Skyblew 5 WE: JAPANDROIDS w/ A Place To Bury Strangers**($15/$17) 12 WE: DAWES w/Shovels And Rope** ($20/$23) 14 FR: SAY ANYTHINGw/ Eisley, Hrvrd, Northern Faces** ($17.50/$21) 15 SA: CHATHAM COUNTY LINE**($15/$18) 16 SU: TWIN SHADOW**($15/$18) w/Elliphant 24 MO: BILL PAYNE ( of Little Feat) Seated Show ** ($25/$28) 3 WE: THE GRAND MOTHERS OF INVENTION**($20/$25) 11 TH: BOSNIAN RAINBOWS**($15) 17 WE: TOAD THE WET SPROCKET ($25/ $30) 18 TH: KURT VILE & THE VIOLATORS** ($15/ $17) w/Swirlies 30 TU: THE PSYCHEDELIC FURS** ($28/$30) 4 SU: MELVINS 30 Anniv. Tour**($16/$18) 9 FR: EL-P and KILLER MIKE w/ Kool A.D. 24 SA: SUPERCHUNK w/The Parting Gift**($15/$17) 17 TU: PINBACK** ($14/$16) 18 WE: AUSTRA w/DIANA**($12/$14) 22 SU: DEERHUNTER**($18/$20) TU 24: MUDHONEY w/ Cheap Time**($18/$21) SU 6: UNKNOWN MORTAL ORCHESTRA**($12/$14) WE 16: AARON CARTER**($14/$16; VIP Tickets also available) SHOWS @ LOCAL 506 (Chapel Hill): June 5: THE FRONT BOTTOMS w/ Weatherbox**($10/$12) June 16: EX COPS June 22: MIKE COOLEY**($15) July 6: RACHAEL YAMAGATA w/Sanders Bohlke**($15) Aug 14: DAUGHN GIBSON**($8/$10) SHOWS AT MOTORCO (Durham): June 11: Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers** ($13/$15) w/ Rayland Baxter June 20: TWO GALLANTS w/Broncho**($13/$15) SHOW AT LINCOLN THEATRE: June 1: BEST COAST w/ Guards, Lovely Bad Things**($20/$25) SHOWS AT RED HAT AMPHITHEATRE (Raleigh): June 7: THE POSTAL SERVICE w/ ra ra riot June 10: THE NATIONAL w/Dirty Projectors SHOWS AT THE HAW RIVER BALLROOM: May 31: TODD SNIDER**($20/$23) w/Ayr Mountaineers, June 1: PATTY GRIFFIN(sold out) July 12: CAMERA OBSCURA**($17.50/$20) SHOWS AT KINGS (RALEIGH): June 17: ROYAL TEETHw/ American Authors June 20: OWENw/ Slingshot Dakota**($12/$14) July 24: ANAMANAGUCHI w/Kitty Pryde** ($10/$12) SHOW AT KOKA BOOTH AMPHITHEATRE (Cary): June 11: PASSION PIT w/ Cults** ($35/$30) SHOW AT DISCO RODEO: June 4: DROPKICK MURPHYS**($28) w/ Old Man Markley and The Mahones SEPTEMBER OCTOBER The idea that we can sim- ply increase teacher pay with the money we have reveals ignorance about the different things the state government does and is obligated to fund, he said. He added that North Carolinas high school gradu- ation rate which hit 80.2 percent in 2012 is the high- est it has ever been. We havent seen any evi- dence that freezing teacher pay has had any negative consequences on student per- formance. The Senate budget also includes a provision that would begin to eliminate teacher tenure at the K-12 level and shift to a pay-for-performance model which rewards teachers based on classroom evaluations and students standardized test scores, not years of experience. A full merit pay system would not be funded next year, but the budget allocates $10.2 million in 2014-15 to start implementing pilot pro- grams for merit pay, which McCrory has said he supports. Starting in fall 2014, ten- ured teachers could opt out of their tenure status in exchange for a four-year contract and a $500 bonus. Stoops said paying for performance would provide a financial incentive for teach- ers. The merit pay idea has drawn its fair share of critics, and Stoops said the evidence is mixed on similar systems in other states. Ellinwood said merit pay would threaten the quality of From Page One Thursday, May 30, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 5 budget from page 1 revenge but to better our- selves for the next game, junior defender Sloane Serpe said after the 5-3 loss. This is only going to make us work that much harder. The Tar Heels then defeated 11 consecutive opponents six of which were ranked including defending national champion and then-No. 1 Northwestern. UNCs winning streak, which is tied for the second- longest in school history, was snapped by ACC rival Maryland, who defeated the Tar Heels 14-13. It definitely gives us a little bit of grit moving forward, said junior Abbey Friend after the regular- season game in April. We ll take a close loss now, just move on and get ready for the ACCs, because we ll probably see them again. Fighting to top the ACC After earning the No. 2 seed in the ACC Tournament at the end of the regular sea- son, UNC defeated Boston College 16-6 before falling to the Terrapins in the champi- lacrosse from page 1 1982 Dorrance won UNCs rst NCAA 1982 The rst NCAA championship wins for active UNC coaches title. He has won 21 total. Hatchell is the only coach to win 1994 an AIAW, NAIA and NCAA title. Somoano won an NCAA title 2011 as a rst-year coach. 1989 2005 2013 2013 DTH/MARY BURKE COMPILED BY MAX MICELI Womens soccer coach Anson Womens basketball coach Sylvia Mens soccer coach Carlos coach Karen Shelton has won six NCAA titles. In 31 years at UNC, eld hockey Williams later added a second title to his resume in 2009. Mens basketball coach Roy Levy joined the club Sunday with the programs rst title. Womens lacrosse coach Jenny Womens lacrosse coach Jenny Levys weekend win thrust her among the ranks of active UNC coaches with NCAA titles. onship game for the fourth consecutive year. The score, this time, was 12-8. The game has no memo- ry, coach Jenny Levy said to her players all season long. And after the ACC title game loss, the Tar Heels seemingly took this philoso- phy to heart. They were headed to the NCAA Tournament. Third times the charm UNCs title run began with victories against Loyola and Virginia, allowing the Tar Heels to advance to the Final Four for the seventh time in program history. Despite losing to the Wildcats twice previ- ously in the Final Four, the Tar Heels defeated No. 2 Northwestern the win- ner of seven of the previous eight national titles 11-4 in the semifinal game, punching their ticket to play No. 1 undefeated Maryland for the third time this sea- son in the championship. And the third time proved to be the charm for the Tar Heels as UNC defeated the Terrapins 13-12 on a game- winning shot in triple over- time from freshman mid- fielder Sammy Jo Tracy. A dream it literally feels all like a dream, Tracy said after the game. To see that ball go in the back of the net was some- thing Ive dreamed about ever since my dad put a stick in my hand. UNC had only been to the championship game once previously, losing to Northwestern 21-7 in 2009, but has at last made the final push to win its national title. Yeah, weve been to the Final Four a lot, but this is what puts our team over the hump, senior midfielder Kara Cannizzaro said. This shows that North Carolina will win and North Carolina does win. Contact the desk editor at sports@dailytarheel.com. provost from page 1 By Michael McNeill Staff Writer When the European Council for Nuclear Research (CERN) began a project to archive the birth of the inter- net, they discovered that they didnt have the earliest cop- ies of the first web page ever made. Fortunately for the research organization, Paul Jones, a clinical professor at UNC, has a copy on his com- puter on campus. Jones said beginning in 1989, Tim Berners-Lee, a computer scientist, circulated a disk with one of the first copies of what is known today as the World Wide Web. It was a set of pages that linked to one another and could be viewed and edited on any computer within CERN. Jones said Berners-Lee didnt start keeping copies of his work until 1992, so when Dan Noyes, the current web manager at the research organization, began a project to preserve and archive the birth of the web last month, he found there was no copy of Berners-Lees first version of the World Wide Web. Jones said he heard about the quest for an earlier ver- sion of the website from Noyes, and he announced on Twitter that he had a copy. Jones said he not only has a copy of the site on his com- puter, but has also uploaded it to ibiblio.org, an online public library at UNC. Jones said he copied the site onto his computer when Berners-Lee visited UNC on his way to a conference in San Antonio, Texas, in 1991, because he saw value in it. I can see far into the future, Jones said. I understood its true professor paul Jones holds a piece of internet history. First webpage found at UNC value. Besides that, I rarely just toss stuff out that isnt taking up too much room. R.E. Bergquist, an assis- tant professor in the School of Information and Library Science, said there is almost nothing about the world of technology and popular cul- ture that Jones doesnt know. He is an archive of information unto himself, Bergquist said in an email. A visit to his office always entails noticing something in the room that is astound- ingly interesting, and there is always an even more interest- ing story behind it. Wanda Monroe, the direc- about the first website UNC professor Paul Jones discovered an early copy of the first web page on his computer. Jones copied the webpage onto his computer from a disk in 1991 because he found it interesting. The page later turned into the basis for the World Wide Web. Access the page at http:// bit.ly/18woi61. tor of communications for the School of Information and Library Science, said Jones has always been ahead of the times. I was working at the University of Michigan in the Computing Research Center in the early 90s, Monroe said. I kept getting emails from this guy at (ibiblio.org). He was sending things like The Three Stooges and other graphics. Before, all we had was screens with black back- grounds and green text, so this was very cool. That per- son ... was Paul Jones. Contact the desk editor at university@dailytarheel.com. You dont get to 46th (out of 50) in per-teacher spending overnight. Matt ellinwood, policy analyst at N.C. Justice Center instruction in at-risk and low- performing schools. It perversely encourages teachers to teach students who are already higher-per- forming, instead of students who are deficient and need help, he said. Nash said merit pay could be effective if it rewarded teachers for working toward advanced teaching certifica- tions and furthering their skills as educators. The N.C. House of Representatives began its budget discussions this week. House budget writers said they hope to have a budget passed by June 13. Stoops said Republican legislators remain undecided on how to address teacher salaries and how to introduce merit pay. I expect we ll at least see a shift to a different philosophy of paying teachers, rather than one size fits all, he said. Nash said he hopes legisla- tors will ask for input from school systems around the state before settling on a merit pay system and on a final education budget. We have (ideas) that might have some merit rather than a lot of non- educators deciding who have never been in a classroom. Contact the desk editor at state@dailytarheel.com. Dean said he has also been involved in launching an online MBA program, MBA@UNC, which he said is arguably the top online MBA program in the world. When he was associate dean for executive develop- ment in the business school, he increased the number and global reach of UNCs non- degree programs, increasing the revenue for those pro- grams by nearly 60 percent. Carney said Deans biggest challenge in the transition process will be keeping up with day-to-day responsibili- ties. He said hes ready to step down and return to the fac- ulty and his research. After four years, to be hon- est, Im ready to engage in a little less stressful work for a while, Carney said. Dean said his first order of business as provost will be to get to know those whom he will be working closely with, adding that he is eager to sit down with students. I certainly have high on my agenda the opportunity to sit down with (student lead- ers) and get to understand whats on students minds, he said. Rachel Myrick, the 2012-13 student body vice president and only undergraduate member of the provost search committee, said Dean has strong communication skills. She said he will be able to articulate the value of a liberal arts education well to local and state leaders who dont see eye- to-eye with the University. Myrick also said he was very committed to the idea of accessibility and education, and will work hard to pre- serve those ideals. Folt said she is looking for- ward to working with Dean next year. Im very excited to be coming to Carolina, she said. So its great to have a provost in place that is equally excited about our working together. Contact the desk editor at university@dailytarheel.com. others have come and gone, but has been... Keeping Keeping Carolina Cool Carolina Cool Since 1 982! Since 1 982! Downtown Chapel Hill 942-PUMP 106 W. Franklin St. (Next to Hes Not Here) Mon-Thurs 11:30am-11:00pm Fri-Sat 11:30am-11:30pm Sun Noon-11: 0 0pm www.yogurtpump.com NOW ACCEPTING HEEL DEAL EARLY WEEK Mix & Match 2 or More! Not valid for delivery. Additional charge for Deep Dish. LARGE 3-Topping Pizza Medium 2-Topping Pizzas Stuffed Cheesy Bread Oven Baked Sandwiches Pasta (Breadbowl add $1) $ 5 55 $ 5 55 PLUS TAX 106 108 Delivery charge may apply. Additional charge for Deep Dish. PICK ME UP $ 7 99 $ 7 99 PLUS TAX Mon-Wed Pickup Special 919-929-0246 UNC Campus Carrboro 412 E. Main Carrboro News Thursday, May 30, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 6 TrySports, a sports retail and fitness service business, will be coming to University Mall in the fall of 2013. The store offers sports equipment, athletic shoes and clothing, as well as a variety of services, including fitness programming in running, walking, biking and yoga. The new store, which will be adjacent to A Southern Season, will include 11,876 square feet of space. Trysports has four other locations across the Carolinas. This branch will be the sole TrySports location in the Triangle area. In a press release, TrySports CEO Hal Smith said he was enthusiastic about bringing the store to Chapel Hill. We are excited to be join- ing University Mall, a premi- um center positioned as a top retail destination in Chapel Hill with more exciting devel- opment on the way, he said in the release. TrySports will join sev- eral other tenants that have moved into the mall in 2013, including Glee Kids, Cynthias Tailor Shop and William Travis Jewelers. University Mall marketing director Jeanette Gulledge said in the release that the store was a good fit for the mall. We are thrilled to wel- come TrySports, another best- in-class retailer to University Mall, Gulledge said. It is sure to bring a new level of excitement to the mall as we continue to add to our dynamic tenant mix and build on our own community pro- gramming. Contact the desk editor at city@dailytarheel.com. Last night, the Chapel Hill Town Council continued a public hearing on a local ABC stores rezoning request. The store, located in the Chapel Hill North shopping center on Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., has plans to construct a new 5,000 square foot building. If the plans are approved, the store will move from its current space to a proposed free-standing store on nearby Perkins Drive. Construction of the new building would require sig- nificant alterations to the shopping centers driveways and traffic flow. The construction would also call for 19 new parking spaces outside the new ABC Store. Prior to issuing a zon- ing compliance permit, the town manager is calling for improvements to the site. These improvements would include new pedes- trian paths, bicycle parking and high visibility cross- walks. The plan also calls for a widening of Perkins Drive, including a new left turn lane, to prevent congestion. Traffic flow in Chapel Hill North has been a big con- cern for the town council in moving the rezoning plan forward. Many amendments to the stores special use per- mit made by the town focus on traffic and road redesign within the shopping center. If the construction moves forward, a new median would need to be built on Perkins Drive near the stores new driveway. Contact the desk editor at city@dailytarheel.com. As Oklahoma rebuilds after a devastating tornado, a local bakery is doing its part to help those touched by the disaster. Sugarland, which has stores in both Chapel Hill and Raleigh, will host a flash fundraising drive Wednesday for those affected by the tor- nado. In honor of a Sugarland employee who lost her home in Moore, Okla., the store will accept money and hygiene items to send to the town. In addition, all pro- ceeds from both stores on Wednesday will be donated to rebuilding efforts. Requested donation items include shampoo and condi- tioner, work gloves, diapers, powdered formula, first-aid supplies, trash bags and gift cards. In honor of the Sugarland employees pet cat, who sur- vived the tornado along with her family, PetSmart gift cards are especially requested. Any Sugarland customer who donates at least $50 in either PetSmart or Target gift cards will receive a dozen free cup- cakes. Donations will be accepted throughout the first week of June in advance of the June 5 fundraising drive. In a press release issued this week, the bakery asks customers to step forward and help the town rebuild. In the wake of a natural disaster, we have always come together as a nation to help collectively shoulder the struggle of those affected, the release states. The folks in Moore need our help to return to normal. Contact the desk editor at city@dailytarheel.com. TrySports coming to University Mall ABC Store lobbies for rezoned space Sugarland to hold tornado fundraiser All up in your business Part of a periodic update on local businesses. Compiled by staff writer Claire Ogburn. dth/kaki pope dth/kaki pope dth/cammie bellamy NOTICE TO ALL CUSTOMERS Summer deadlines are NOON Tuesday prior to publication for classifed ads. We publish every Thursday during the Summer School sessions. 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. ADUlT FiTNESS SWimmiNg Ages 18+. For ft- ness, fun, technical improvement or competition. Offered 6 days/wk. morning, noon and afternoon. www.dukeaquatics.com for more info. Child Care Services NANNy SERvICES Current nursing student with 5 years experi- ence working as a private duty nanny seeking summer position. First aid, CPR certifed, new car, clean driving record, over 15 years worth of experience, references in the child care feld. Reliable, punctual, able to provide a structured yet fun environment. 919-943-1775. Child Care Wanted CHilD CARE FOR OUR 3 kiDS: Need child care for our 10 year-old girl boy twins and 9 year-old boy 2 weekday evenings per week from 4-8pm. Excellent driving record and background check required. ja16881@gmail.com CHAPEl Hill (north side of town) family seek- ing a spirited and dependable caregiver for 2 awesome kids ages 6 and 10. Days can be are fexible, hours are generally 3-6pm, ranging from 9-15 hrs/wk. Sa/Su hours generally not needed. Responsibilities include transporting kids from summer camps or school to home or extracurricular activities (sports, music or just hanging out at home). must have reliable trans- portation and like to have fun with kids without the use of an Apple product. Background check will be required. Can start anytime, ideal candi- date will continue into next school year. Con- tact bakernc@gmail.com or call 919-306-8827 with interest and previous experience. CHilD CARE needed for 2 children, ages 10 and 12. Will include driving to and from activities in Durham and supervising children at home. Hours would include late afternoon and evening for 2 days/wk. must be reliable and an excel- lent driver. Please respond to cynthiamking1@ gmail.com and provide references. $15/hr. NEED CHilD CARE for 9 year-old daughter with high functioning autism. Part-time occa- sional hours, starts June. in Hillsborough. Email cpb39@mac.com. CHAPEl Hill FAmilY needs energetic and reli- able caregiver for children ages 5, 7, 10 to start August. Summer hours are 40 hrs/wk. School hours vary but range from 2:30-7:30pm m-F. Some weekend hours required. Transporting kids to activities, homework assistance, out- door play included in responsibilities. Clean driving record and experience with children required. Contact clunac@hotmail.com. CHilD CARE WANTED for our 10 and 13 year-old boys 2:45pm until early evening this summer and possibly school year. Some fexible hours, must have car. Our last sitters with us for 2 years each. Please contact us at desi3101@gmail.com. FAIR HOUSINg All REAl ESTATE AND RENTAl advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or dis- crimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination. This newspa- per will not knowingly accept any advertising which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings adver- tised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis in accordance with the law. To complain of discrimination, call the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development housing discrimination hotline: 1-800-669-9777. WAlk TO UNC: 3BR/1.5BA new renovation. Hardwood foors, new kitchen, fre place, W/D, dishwasher. Central heat and air. Off street parking Available July. $1,650/mo. merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143. HOUSE iN THE WOODS: 3BR/1.5BA quiet retreat on shared 25 wooded acres 9 miles from campus. large community garden, hard- wood foors. $1,025/mo. Available 6-1. Email: wildginger370@gmail.com. WAlk TO CAmPUS. Starting August. $950/mo. 2BR/1BA newly renovated apartment in this popular location. W/D, dishwasher, central heat and air. merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143. AWESOmE 6++ BR iN CARRBORO! Awe- somely amazing house available June 1! 2 story, 8BR/2BA house near downtown Carr- boro. 3,000 square feet, convenient to greens- boro or Hillsborough Street. Buslines, walk to Weaver Street. 6 good sized bedrooms up plus 2 down, plus sunroom and pool room with table! Hardwoods, carpet, dishwasher, W/D, carport. No dogs please. $2,800/mo. Thats just $350/rm! Call 919-636-2822 or email amandalieth@att.net for details. APARTmENT FOR RENT 2BR/1BA, W/D, dish- washer. $650/mo. Near bus park and ride lot. No pets or smoking. Call 919-933-8802. FOR RENT: Newly remodeled 5BR condo. Close to campus, next to bus stop. Hardwoods with spacious rooms. Available August 2013. $2,000/ mo. 611 Hillsborough Street. UNCRents@ carolina.rr.com or 704-277-1648. WAlk TO CAmPUS: Available June. 2BR/1BA. Newly renovated apartment. W/D, dish- washer, central heat and air. $875-$950/mo. merciarentals.com, 919-933-8143. COzY 1BR CARRBORO APARTmENT. Beauti- ful Bolin Creek greenway setting. includes dishwasher, W/D, internet, cable, water. Unfur- nished. Bike, bus to campus. $595/mo. No pets, smoking. 919-454-3739. 3BR FiNlEY FOREST CHAPEl Hill 1,500 square feet. 2 story, 3BR/2.5BA with private deck. W/D included. Use of clubhouse, pool, tennis courts and playground. Easy access to Friday Center busline, close to UNC, Duke, i-40 and RTP.. $1,200/mo. sheilalucy2001@yahoo.com.. 3BR/1.5BA, 1,200 SqUARE FEET Big kitchen W/D, hardwood foors, tile baths. New fur- nace. 5 minute walk from mlk. Friendly but quiet neighborhood. $1,250/mo. Prefer year lease. Pets negotiable. Available 7-1. blairlpollock@gmail.com. Help Wanted gYmNASTiCS iNSTRUCTOR: Chapel Hill gymnastics has part-time positions available for energetic, enthusiastic instructors. Ap- plicants with knowledge of gymnastic termi- nology and progression skills preferred, but will train right candidate. Send a resume to margie@chapelhillgymnastics.com. DO yOU LOvE kIDS? 13 year-old boy with autism in Durham, Chapel Hill needs your help developing play, language, academic and self help skills, plus exercise and social outings. Positions available for play therapist ABA tutor for home and commu- nity tutoring program and recreation therapy (swimming, biking, exercise). Clean driving re- cord, reliability, 12-25 hrs/wk and 1 year com- mitment needed. Summer and Fall availability. Email qualifcations, resume and availability to jillgoldstein63@gmail.com. HABTECH, CNA. SUmmER HOURS: keston Care is looking for males and females who are interested in working 1 on 1 with disabled children in Durham, Chapel Hill. Afternoon, evening, weekend hours available. Reliable transportation a must! if interested in a CNA or Habtech position, please call keston Care. m-F 9am-4pm, 919-967-0507. gERmAN TRANSlATOR needed for long English language book chapter. Write to: jk247@duke.edu, 919-240-4539. RUSSiAN TRANSlATiON iNTERNS: must speak, read and write Russian fuently, type profcient- ly, be detail oriented and enjoy working with the nuances of language. mental health knowl- edge a plus. located 60 feet from campus. Part- time, wages BOE. Send resume and cover letter to translatorattelesagedotcom. ELMOS DINER, DURHAM Servers wanted! Apply in person at 776 Ninth Street. Need summer and fall availability. Part- time and full-time. Both day and night shifts available. CAROliNA STUDENT lEgAl SERViCES is looking for summer student volun- teers! Submit resume at: csls@unc.edu. http://www.unc.edu/student/orgs/sls/ about:volunteer. SUmmER HElP. Vice Chancellors Offce for Student Affairs. Prefer Sophomore work study student. Typing, spreadsheets, answering phones, offce work. For interview, contact Cornelia Burch, 919-966-4045. Homes For Sale CONDO FOR SAlE, CHAPEl Hill. 2BR/1.5BA, 375-B Umstead Drive, Chapel Hill, NC.. marble tiles in bath and kitchen. On city busline. Con- tact mark Heizer: 919-604-3478, http://www. hcoproperties.com/PropertiesForSale.html. SEEkiNg DRiVER: Driving assistance from Chapel Hill, NC to glacier National Park, mon- tana. leaving around June 1 or the frst week in June. Will consider student with good driving record or older adults. No one with alcohol or drug history. We have property at glacier, mon- tana and will offer lodging if you wish to stay and help us drive back in 3-4 weeks. ideal for student who seeks employment in this area. Call 919-225-7687 or 254-251-1740. Roommates FEmAlE SEEkiNg 2 ROOmmATES to share Southern Village townhouse. 3BR/2.5BA, $700/ room per month. On busline. Prefer grad stu- dents or professionals. Contact: rachel_john- ston@med.unc.edu, 910-265-1815. FREE RENT, ROOmmATE, NEW HOUSE Disabled female professional looking for roommate for a house off Ephesus Church Road. Free rent and partial utilities to sleep at house and help get in bed. must like pets. Will have two rooms and bathroom. Share kitchen. For more info, email deliza05@gmail.com. Sublets SUMMER SUbLET 314-A Brooks Street. Newly renovated, large room for $575/mo. June 5 thru July 31. Fe- male housemates. Close to Franklin Street. 919-747-1728. SUmmER SUBlET 5BR/3BA. Professor sub- letting nice 5BR/3BA house in quiet neigh- borhood. 10 minutes to campus. Between June 15 and August 10. $750/wk. Write: jk247@duke.edu. lARgE BEDROOm WiTH BATH, walk in closet. Sublet through July. $475/mo. Walking distance to campus. 919-219-2891. 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Robert H. Smith, Atty At Law 312 W. Franklin Street 967-2200 chapelhilltrafficlaw.com FREE CONSULTATION Carolina graduate, expert in traffic and criminal cases for students for over 20 years. SPEEDING DWI CRIMINAL AAMCO RTP The Complete Car Care Experts 919-493-2300 5116 S. Hwy 55, Durham, NC Julia W. Burns, MD Adult, Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist 109 Conner Dr., Building III, Suite 203 919-428-8461 juliaburnsmd.com Tar Heel Born & Bred! CLOSE TO CAMPUS at CARRBORO PLAZA ~ 919.918.7161 PASSPORT PHOTOSMOVING SUPPLIES COLOR/BW PRINTING, NOTARY PUBLIC, LAMINATING, BINDING, MAILBOX SERVICES, FAX, STAMPS, PACKAGING, INTERNATIONAL SHIPPING ! CALL 919-962-0252 DTH Advertise in the DTH Service Directory... Its effective and affordable! Interested in this Space? UNC Community SERVICE DIRECTORY (c) 2013 TRiBUNE mEDiA SERViCES, iNC. Aries (March 21-April 19) Today is a 6 -- Express your affection and re-count your blessings. Theres more money coming in. Review your options, and keep a lid on costs. Confdential information benefts. Spend time with your partner. Serve others. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Today is a 6 -- launch or prepare to launch a project now. Provide facts. Fig- ure out the costs so that you both proft. Heed a friends warning. Chat about pro- cedures. move carefully. Track results, and crack the bubbly. Gemini (May 21-June 20) Today is a 7 -- love your work and do it well. Consider the consequences of your actions. Create an artistic look. Add words to the melody. Re-affrm your strong base. You look good. Theres a mystery afoot. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Today is a 6 -- Follow your creative im- pulse to advance. in a confrontation, gain insight from an experienced part- ner. Dont fall for a trick. Delegate to a perfectionist. Youre very persuasive now. make lists. Replenish reserves. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Today is a 7 -- Work your social circle. Accept a challenge, and let others state their positions. Accept a prize. The right words come more easily. Dont totally disrupt the status quo. listen for a per- fectly gorgeous moment. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today is an 8 -- Venture farther out. The group amplifes your excitement. incor- porate female energy into the mix. its a good time to ask for more, but you can make it with what youve got. Notice your blind assumptions, and be patient. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is a 6 -- improve working condi- tions. maintain objectivity, if possible. Put things back in order. Discuss insights with friends. Carefully measure expenses, with fngers on your fnancial pulse. All this responsibility makes you attractive. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Today is a 5 -- more responsibility leads to more income. get on the same page as your partner. invite guests over. Continue to work within the system respectfully. Talk with old friends to discuss changes at home. Relax. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Today is a 6 -- Compassion & passion are key today. Someone is standing for you. Your message is getting out. You can fnd the money you need. let others speak their minds. Stoke the fres with love. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today is an 8 -- Talk with others about your needs. Youre drawn to your part- ner. Accept a challenge if it pays well. Be careful not to be wasteful, though. Offer encouragement. gain more than expected. All ends well. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Today is an 8 -- Youre tempted to accept a challenge. A new idea makes it seem possible. get inspired by music and the arts. investigate the money side. Youve got the team. Dream sweet dreams, and consider options for realization. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) Today is a 5 -- Take a social leap. Develop catchy marketing phrases. Allow for frus- tration. Youre gaining respect. Theres another way to solve it. Clean up messes immediately. A female provides comfort, and it could get blissful. HOROSCOPES To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. If May 30th is Your Birthday... Follow your creative passions this year to profit. Try new things as opportunities abound. Attract partners, and share the resources. Organized bookkeeping shows you how to grow. What do you want over the long-term? Dont worry about r ecognition; keep practicing and balancing for health. Take on leadership. Rekindle a spark. 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 To Place a Line Classified Ad Log onto www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252 DTH offce is open Mon-Fri 9:00am-5:00pm Line Classifed Summer Ad Rates Private Party (Non-Proft) 25 Words ......... $7.00/wk Extra words ..25/word/wk Commercial (For-Proft) 25 Words ....... $12.00/week Extra words ...25/word/week EXTRAS: BoxYour Ad: $1/week BoldYour Ad: $3/week
Deadlines Line Ads: Noon, Tuesday prior to Thursday issue Display Classifed Advertising: 3pm, Monday prior to Thursday issue GRE, GMAT, LSAT, SAT PREP Courses In partnership with select programs of UNC, Duke, Campbell, and FSU, PrepSuccess has helped thousands of students prepare for entrance exams. Early Bird rates are only $420 to $504 for 30 or 42 hour courses. Courses begin every other month so register early ! Attend classes in person or Live Online. To visit a class or to learn more, go to www.PrepSuccess.com or call 919-791-0810 . MALE VOLUNTEERS WANTED! Healthy Men 18-35 Years of Age needed for: Bacterial Disease Research Study PAYMENT OFFERED For information call: 919-843-9564 Its fast! Its easy! Place a Classified Today... dailytarheel.com/classifieds www.heelshousing.com Find YOUR place to live... HOW CLOSE TO THE PIT DO YOU WANT TO LIVE? www.heelshousing.com Its so easy! Place a DTH Classified... www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds Sports Thursday, May 30, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 7 A happy anniversary The local Weaver Street Market chain will celebrate its 25th anniversary in June. See pg. 3 for story. Into your business A local ABC store awaits council approval on a request for a new location. See pg. 6 for full story. Tennis team reflects Two seniors on the wom- ens tennis team reflect on two record-breaking seasons. Visit dailytarheel.com for story. An artsy family day The Ackland Art Museum hosted family day for kids of all ages. Visit the Canvas blog for full story. games Solution to Thursdays 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 Baseballs long road to the NCAA By Max Miceli Sports Editor In her freshman year, North Carolinas Loren Shealy became the schools first stu- dent athlete to be named a Robertson Scholar. The next year, she was the second lead- ing scorer on the 2012 NCAA Tournament runner-up field hockey team. But her most recent accomplishment Sports Illustrateds Female College Athlete of the Year might be her most impressive one yet. Early in the spring, SportsIllustrated.com execu- tive editor B.J. Schecter and a group of his colleagues began a search for the perfect college athlete one who embodied the best qualities of both academics and athletics. By the end of their search, they found Shealy. We were looking for some- body that really had that bal- ance, Schecter said. We saw that Loren demonstrated the best of both worlds. She seemed to excel in everything she did. Coach Karen Shelton said she didnt even know about the award until Shealy was announced as a finalist, but she wasnt surprised to hear that Shealy was the winner. Shelton, who encour- aged Shealy to apply for the Robertson Scholars program, said she stays closely con- nected with her players aca- demics. dth file photo Sports Illustrated named field hockey player Loren Shealy, a rising junior, its Female College Athlete of the Year. Loren is an exceptional student athlete, Shelton said. When you have an exceptional student athlete and they get nominated for awards, its not surprising. But Shealy wasnt quite as confident in herself as her coach was. She said she wasnt sure what, exactly, the award meant and didnt know anything about the selection process. I never expected it to be me I was shocked, Shealy said. A lot of other people that were nominated are just incredible athletes. But this award wasnt just about being an athlete. It was about having the complete package, and thats what Schecter said he and his fel- low editors were looking for. There are so many out- standing athletes and, more importantly, student athletes that people are not going to see or hear about, Schecter said. There are plenty of awards out there that recog- nize the best player in each sport. We wanted this to be everything and be unique. In the eyes of the Sports Illustrated editors, Shealy who graduated high school a semester early to come to UNC and get a jump-start on training and academ- ics epitomized the criteria because she wasnt just com- ing to North Carolina to be an athlete. She was coming to be a student, too. I thought it would be a great way to challenge myself academically, Shealy said. But I wasnt really focused on that. I was focused on my first year of eligibility. I really wanted to make an impact in that first season ... it paid off. And Schecter said thats just what this award is all about. Its not just a scholar ath- lete, he said. Its not just the best athlete. Its a combination of both. And this year, its Loren Shealy. Contact the desk editor at sports@dailytarheel.com. By Marilyn Payne Staff Writer After winning its first ACC title since 2007 Sunday, the North Carolina baseball team earned the overall No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament, giving UNC rights to host a regional this weekend. UNCs first game will start just after 6 p.m. Friday. For coach Mike Fox, being named No. 1 is exciting, but he said its the home field advantage that resonates. Its just important to be one of the top eight, Fox said Monday. So that if you are fortunate to win a regional, you know youre playing at home the next weekend. Theres great credit to our players and what theyve accomplished on the field. Its exciting. An hour after the regional draws were announced Monday, UNCs players admitted they had no real idea who their opponents were. Florida Atlantic, Canisius and Towson were foreign to UNC, but a week of scouting by the ACC champs should make the Tar Heels feel well- equipped for their regional. I know absolutely nothing, if Im being completely honest, but Im sure if you come and ask me Friday I ll know a lot more, junior pitcher Kent Emanuel said. I dont buy into the scouting reports all that much. Contact the desk editor at sports@dailytarheel.com. The Tar Heels will start their NCAA title run in Chapel Hill. Loren Shealy named Athlete of the Year The Lowdown on The biggesT game Compiled by max miCeli Florida atlantic vs. North Carolina 39-20 52-8 FaU, seeded second to UNC in the region, is the toughest match-up the Tar Heels could face in the regional. head-To-head The Bottom Line North Carolina 8 Florida Atlantic 2 as miami learned in the aCC Tournament, UNCs fielding is not to be messed with. Kent emanuel was admittedly pitching for contact, and UNC didnt allow a run. expect more of that this weekend. edge: UnC Batting The owls have a solid team batting aver- age of .288, but with sluggers like Colin moran, who boasts a .357 average, UNC shouldnt have trouble out-hitting Florida atlantic. edge: UnC Fielding Pitching The Tar Heels had a chance to show the true depth of their pitching staff in the aCC tournament, and with a 2.52 team eRa, the Tar Heels rank in the top five in the nation. FaU ranks 74th. edge: UnC The Tar Heels were forced into an early exit last year in their own regional and dont want to see the same fate this year, but the owls are coming in hot after sweeping their conference tournament. edge: split Intangibles The Tar Heels will first face the Canisius Golden Griffins, (42-15) who went undefeated in their conference tournament, winning the title game 12-11 over Siena to enter the NCAA regionals for the first time in program history. The first-round game will take place at 6:05 p.m. Friday in Boshamer Stadium. Towson University (29-28) enters the weekend making its first regional appearance since 1991 a notable feat, as the program was told in March that it would be disbanded after this season. The Tigers will face Florida Atlantic in the first round Friday afternoon. UNC leads Towson in all- time meetings between the programs 25-2. (C)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle ACross 1 Gem 6 At least three 10 Early late-night host 14 Doctoral exams 15 __ Las Vegas 16 Comstock __: Nevada silver deposit 17 Hack 19 Weapons, in Latin 20 Ocular woe 21 Abu Dhabis fed. 22 Bit of tomfoolery 23 Heck 26 Suitable for marriage 30 Eat too much of, as junk food 31 Im on __! 32 More navy than teal, say 34 Duck foot feature 37 Hick 40 Radical 70s gp. 41 Charlotte __: dessert 42 Columnist Abigail Van __ 43 Grief counselors subject 44 Nobelist Camus 45 Hock 50 Stalin era prison 51 Common letters in an email address 52 Tennis legend 56 Rice-A-__ 57 Huck 60 Depot postings, briefly 61 Sneaker brand 62 Long-legged flier 63 For whom the bell tolls 64 Quaint Listen! 65 Office cartridge contents Down 1 Writes on ones palm, say 2 Q.E.D. word 3 Like begonias 4 A Jew Today writer Wiesel 5 Dropped drug 6 Like doves and hawks 7 Dannos outfit, familiarly 8 25-Down resident, for a time 9 Wouks The Winds of __ 10 Set aside time for 11 Vital blood vessel 12 Fess up 13 Arrive at 18 Mystical old letter 22 Cute as a button 23 Bad way to get it 24 Brooklynese pronoun 25 Genesis place 26 Takes into custody 27 Russias __ Mountains 28 Resort north of the Keys 29 Type 32 __ nova 33 Church based in SLC, Utah 34 Speaker-to-stereo link 35 Always 36 Crooked 38 Yorkshire river 39 Oleo holder 43 Get together (with) 44 Get together (with) 45 Long-legged flier 46 Repeated, like Poes raven 47 Forearm bones 48 Its the pits 49 You press the button, we do the rest camera company 52 High hair 53 Slugger Musial 54 Use a whetstone on 55 911 situation: Abbr. 57 Scrooges scoff 58 Charlottesville sch. 59 Mo. for opals UNDERSTAND YOUR OPTIONS Call P REGNANCY S UPPORT S ERVICES Chapel Hill: 919-942-7318 or Durham: 919-490-0203 www.trianglepregnancysupport.com Free & confidential pregnancy tests Free limited ultrasound & STD testing Community Resources OZ THE GREAT & POWERFUL I Fri: 7:00, 9:30 Sat: 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 Sun: 4:40, 7:10 Tue-Thu: 7:00, 9:30 G.I. JOE: RETALIATION J Fri: 7:10, 9:20 Sat: 4:40, 7:10, 9:20 Sunday: 7:00 The Varsity Theatre 123 E. Franklin Street, Chapel Hill 967-8665 www.varsityonfranklin.com Movie Showtimes for Week 5/31-6/6- All Movies $4.00 CLOSED MONDAY Opinion Thursday, May 30, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel 8 T he future of the Dorothea Dix prop- erty in Raleigh the site of the former men- tal hospital has been the source of much aggres- sive debate in the General Assembly recently. But the tone of the debate itself reveals a set of seriously scrambled priori- ties. No side fully respects the historical significance of the property or recog- nizes the needs of the men- tal health community. Some legislators want all 300 acres of the property to be repurposed as a des- tination park, while others think there should be space reserved for administra- tive offices or the property should be expanded. Instead, the land should be returned to the Department of Health and Human Services and used for the good of the people who have been hurt the most and forgotten amidst Remembering reform Invest in local literacy QUOTE OF THE wEEk FEaTUrEd OnlinE rEadEr cOMMEnT Preserve the Davie Poplar before it goes TO THE EDITOR: Regarding the bill in the N.C. House that requires the BOG to plan a statue of William R. Davie on UNCs campus, the DTH got it right with its recent edito- rial that the last thing we need is another statue to a dead white slave owner to further fan the flames of political correctness in the face of those who cannot see the forest of history for the trees. It would seem more log- ical to enhance the living memorial to Davie that we already have on campus. I refer to the Davie Poplar, the living landmark that witnessed the founding of the University and has been standing watch ever since. Sadly, Davie is not get- ting any younger. It could be getting close to toppling over at any moment. When it happens, Facility Services will saw up the trunk as fast as possible and cart it off to the University woodpile. Has anybody thought about a replacement for that marvelous 250-year- old trunk that stands on an axis running from Silent Sam through the Old Well all the way to the Bell Tower? When this vener- able landmark goes, it will leave a vacuum that neither Davie Poplar Jr. nor the Bicentennial D. Poplar can fill. Yes, we will have the living presence of the tree, but the shadow of history from this magnificent trunk will be gone forever. So instead of putting up another statue, why not replace the original Davie trunk with a cast bronze replica? It could stand in a newly designed plaza in the original spot surrounded by names of donors. All thats necessary is to have a cast- ing of the trunk made while it is still standing. Fundraising could begin lETTErS TO THE EdiTOr By uncovering and reporting the truth, journalists make us aware of the problems and prompt us to right the wrongs. Moira, on watchdog journalism covering the University They see the situations, but we want them to think about what happens three hours later. Arianna Timko, on training bar employees to recognize sexual assault EdiTOrial carTOOn By Guile Contreras, gcontrer@live.unc.edu No guilt for this Boy Scout I am an Eagle Scout, but I wasnt always sure if I was supposed to be one. As soon as I was old enough to think critically about what I did with my Thursday eve- nings, I began to question whether I wanted to represent an organization that has very clear and rigid ideas about what it means to be a boy and, by extension, a man. And so last year, when the Boy Scouts of America yet again refused to amend its policy to allow openly gay scouts and leaders to participate in the program, I contemplated send- ing back my medal as a grandi- ose gesture of disapproval. Why should I benefit from the title my straightness had allowed me to earn when so many young boys and men could not? But last weeks decision to allow openly gay scouts to be BSA members made me glad to have held on to the distinction. Let me digress for a second. As a straight, able-bodied and middle-class white male with a tendency to overuse the word privilege, I have often been accused of indulging in white guilt. But Ive never felt that was the right term. Though many straight, white males have committed abomi- nable acts, I do not feel person- ally guilty for those acts just as being an Eagle Scout should not mean I bear personal responsibility for the prejudice of the organization associated with that title. But it should mean, in both cases, that I acknowledge and use that privi- lege to help extend to others the opportunities that have been so fortuitously extended to me. I realized that this recent progress significant, though not terminal had been brought about in large part not by guilt, but by leaders and scouts who chose to remain involved with the program despite their problems with it. They believed that Scouting, in its ideal form, could be a stabilizing and wonderful influence in the lives of young people, just as it was for me. Instead of succumbing to the Scouting equivalent of white guilt, they decided that more good could be achieved by redefining what it meant to be a Boy Scout than by leaving the program in the hands of those who would continue its history of prejudice. When a young man receives his Eagle Scout award, part of the oath he takes goes like this: On my honor, I will do my best to make my training an example, my rank and my influence count strongly ... for better citizenship in my troop, and in my church, and in my community, and in my con- tacts with other people. In all situations, casting our rank, influence and privilege aside rather than wielding them as a force for change would be to cast aside valuable weapons in the fight for equal- ity in Scouting and elsewhere. It is for that reason I have chosen to stand up and, with- out guilt, be counted as an Eagle Scout. EdiTOrial the planning: the mentally ill of North Carolina. When mental health advocate Dorothea Dix came to the state in 1848, the mental health care system was disorganized and defective. The gov- ernment provided little effective assistance, and many of the mentally ill were in jails or out on the street. Dix brought this crisis to the attention of the General Assembly and worked tirelessly to bring about reform. The first land was bought for the hospital in 1850 and the first patient was admitted in 1856. The hospital and its mission of care and service continued to expand over time until it reached its height in 1974. At that time, the property had 2,354 acres of land, including a farm and three lakes, and it was equipped to handle 2,756 patients. All of the land was oper- ated with the interests of the mental health com- munity in mind, and the patients recovery and well- being were the end goals. The land has been slowly sold away since the 70s, and the hospital shut down for good last year. It would be acceptable if this simply represented a decentral- izing of mental health services and a careful shift away from institutional care but mental health care in the state is tragically underfunded, and Dixs impact seems to be fading. In 2010, the public mental health system only served 34 percent of adults with serious mental ill- nesses in North Carolina, according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, and it can only have got- ten worse since then. The new state budget proposals would cut even more funds from an already struggling system. To use the historic prop- erty as a tourist attraction is to fundamentally disre- spect Dorothea Dixs career as a passionate reformer, teacher and humanitarian. The land, or at least the few hundred acres left, should be returned to those we can trust to uphold her legacy. N.C. should not neglect the mental health community. L ast month, the Chapel Hill Public Library reopened at Pritchard Park in a space more than double its orig- inal size, well worth the $16.2 million investment. But the librarys weekly hours have been reduced by more than 20 percent, from 68 to 54 a signifi- cant loss for Chapel Hill residents. The librarys Board of Trustees cited a lack of funding to operate the larger building and pay for additional full-time staff needed to keep it open. As Chapel Hill Town Council members finalize the towns 2013-14 budget over the next two weeks, they should support a pro- posed 2-cent tax increase, which would fund some of the librarys losses. Any price is a small one to pay when funding the busiest public library in North Carolina by circula- tion per capita. More than 1,000 people visit the library every day, and library officials are expecting at least a 20-percent increase in daily visits now that the building is open. Weekends are often the most convenient times for working families, espe- cially with children, to make library visits but the hours on Saturday and Sunday were hardest hit during the cut. Many poor households do not have regular access to books, technology or wireless internet without the librarys resources. Through its programs and events, the library also supports efforts to improve literacy in the area. In Orange County, 15 percent of the adult popu- lation has trouble read- ing at a high school level, making tasks like filling out a job application dif- ficult. Outside of the reading realm, the library holds free classes that teach basic digital skills and help people build resumes. The library provides a diverse set of assets to the community and the town needs to shoulder some of its financial woes. Although other spend- ing initiatives, such as the Rogers Road landfill closure, are important, the new public library which the town has already invested a lot of money in shouldnt be lost in the shuffle. The small tax increase would not fully restore the original 68-hour weekly schedule. But Town Council members should affirm their commitment to the library by also including a provision in the budget to restore the lost hours over the next two or three years. Even during tough eco- nomic times, the town of Chapel Hill needs to make funding its public library a priority, not an after- thought. EdiTOrial Henry Gargan Musings from a Townie Junior global studies and journalism major from Chapel Hill Email: henrygargan@gmail.com anytime, but we would have the critical component the casting or images taken from life. A project like this would surely memorialize Davie in a way that would pre- serve the beauty of historic McCorkle Place in a man- ner that recalls Davies love for the spot and his signifi- cance to the University. F. Marion Redd Class of 67 Education economics should be irrelevant TO THE EDITOR: The article Education economics evaluated on May 16 did nothing to chal- lenge the rightist ideology of investment that has been taken for granted in recent discussions of higher edu- cations value. Education should never be subordinated to profit. Nowhere does UNCs mis- sion statement mention funding, or budgets, or economic returns on our investment of knowledge and scholarly effort. This institution commits itself to being a center for research, scholarship and creativity, not a center for profit. Concerns for the UNC systems financial yield divert us from our com- mitment to enhance the quality of life for all people in the state. The politicians on Jones Street leading the attack on higher education speak for their campaign donors, not the people of North Carolina. Sarah-Kathryn Bryan 15 Womens and gender studies Kvetching board kvetch: v.1 (Yiddish) to complain Summer: When Chapel Hill empties like a bucket of rainwater, but all of Carr- boro comes out to play. All your kvetch are belong to us. But really, pick it up yall, this is embarrassing. Send your one-to-two sentence entries to opinion@dailytarheel.com, subject line kvetch. The Chapel Hill Public Library deserves support. QuickHits Fast & Furious 6and The Hangover 3led box ofces to a record-break- ing Memorial Day weekend. So the theater industry is alive, but real flm is dead? Well call this record a fuke, because I refuse to believe the Fast & Furious franchise is capable of break- ing anything besides clunky set pieces and immutable laws of physics. Golden age of flm Trouble in paradise this week, as six days of ferce riots have seen rampant vandalism, pro- test and burning police cars in the suburbs of Stockholm, capital of one of the happiest countries in the world. Some attribute the unrest to immigration, but most blame rising socioeco- nomic inequality. Oh, how the mighty have fallen. Swedish unrest Popular comedy series Arrested Development returned from the grave Sun- day with new episodes on Netfix. So grab some bananas, cornballs and martinis and go celebrate the renewed stream of losing, schmoozing and boozing with Jason Bateman and company. Because Steve Holt, thats why. LOL Netfix. New developments An American drone was reportedly shot down Tues- day by al-Qaida operatives in Somalia. Need- less to say, well stop at nothing to rescue the brave unmanned aerial vehicle. We cannot rest while our fying assault robot remains at their mercy. Just think what inhuman atroci- ties they could commit with... oh. Ive made a huge mistake. UFO irony SPEak OUT WritiNG GUiDEliNES Please type: Handwritten let- ters 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 vul- garity. Limit letters to 250 words. SUBMiSSiON Drop-off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary Street, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514 E-mail: opinion@dailytarheel. com Established 1893, 120 years of editorial freedom The Daily Tar Heel MEGaN caSSElla SummER EDIToR maNagINg.EDIToR@DaIlyTaR- HEEl.com MichaEl DickSON oPINIoN EDIToR 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 board members, the opinion editor and the summer editor. EDitOrial StaFF arts: Samantha Sabin, Kathryn Muller, John Howell Jr. city: Cammie Bellamy, McKenzie Coey, Lauren Grady, Taylor Greene, Anna Long, Corinne Jurney, Madison Mundy, Claire Ogburn copy: Tara Jeffries, Sarah Chaney, Meagan Stott, Renee montpetit Design & Graphics: Mary Burke Photo: Kaki Pope, Mary meade mcmullen, Rachel Hare, Brennan Cumalander, Claire Mayes Sports: Max Miceli, Marilyn Payne, Aaron Dodson, Michael Lananna, Andrew Tie State & National: Sarah Brown, Andrew Craig University: Jordan Bailey, andy Willard, Brooke Eller, Michael McNeill Opinion: Michael Dickson advisor: Erica Perel Editorial Production: Stacy Wynn, manager. Printing: Triangle Web Printing Co. Distribution: Stacy Wynn, Nick and Sarah Hammonds The Daily Tar Heel is published by the DTH Media Corp., a nonprofit North Carolina corporation, Monday through Friday, according to the University calendar. 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