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Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

VOLUME 118, ISSUE 133


The Daily Tar Heel www.dailytarheel.com
tuesday, january 18, 2011

TOWN HONORS KING’S LEGACY

city | page 3
FEELS LIKE HOME
Local children spin a pottery
wheel and make sculptures in
Ceramics for Homeschoolers,
one of several ArtsCenter
programs that cater to the
area’s large home-schooling
Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt addresses the NAACP rally on Monday.
network.

city | page 9 Children walk down Franklin Street during the march after the rally.

D
RECESS RESOURCE r. Martin Luther King Jr. had a dream that
A Hillsborough elementary extended beyond the crowd gathered at the
school is competing for a National Mall on Aug. 28, 1963.
$50,000 grant to build a From coast to coast, his call for equality and
playground. But it needs to a peaceful end to discrimination was a guide for countless
leapfrog 30 other projects in Americans through the tumultuous Civil Rights Movement.
It carried from the Lincoln Memorial that August day to
the rankings by the end of the
Memphis, Tenn., in 1968, when his tragic assassination only
month in order to finish served to cement a message against hate and segregation.
with the money. To mark the 25th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.
Day, the Chapel Hill and University communities came
together for a day of service to honor an American hero. dth PHOTOS/Jamie Emmerman
See page 5 for stories from the day. Clyde Clark, former Chapel Hill sanitation worker, speaks about his termination at Monday’s rally.

University CFO Dick Mann to step down


New vice chancellor to be named by July 1 we’re facing hard times now, the University
will make it out okay,” he said.
with some of the highest budget cuts the
University has ever seen.
sports | page 12 by Will Doran on longer to help Chancellor Holden Thorp
With federal stimulus funding and a state
sales tax expiring at the end of the current
“Once the plan’s in place the rest is easy,
and I think after next year things will look
Assistant University Editor transition into office and to help guide the fiscal year, officials have looked to 2011-12 as a up,” he said.
TOUGH LOSSES Manager of UNC ’s finances since University through the ongoing budget crisis. particularly ominous year. But many, includ-
2006, Vice Chancellor of Finance and “I extended (my time at UNC) because I ing Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost Filling his shoes
Both the men’s and women’s Administration Dick Mann has announced wanted to make sure we were prepared,” he Bruce Carney, said it will likely be the last bad
basketball teams were blown he will step down this summer. said. “I just wanted to stay until we got the year as the economy slowly recovers. Thorp announced Friday at a Faculty
“It’s probably been the best place I’ve been budget taken care of.” Since entering his current post on an inter- Council meeting that a search committee
out this weekend, and the at,” Mann said of UNC, where he arrived in Thorp said Mann’s absence will affect the im basis in 2009, Carney said he has worked will soon be formed to find a replacement
November 2006 after stints at the University way UNC deals with its finances, especially the closely with Mann on budgetary matters. for Mann by July 1. The search will coincide
wrestling team came up short
of Kansas, University of Illinois and the State upcoming state budget deficit of $3.7 billion. “I appreciate especially his common sense with searches for a new dean of the School of
against Virginia Tech. Read University of New York at Stony Brook. But even though Mann said the budget will and his decisiveness,” he said. Journalism and Mass Communication and
“It’s been a real privilege to be here.” be an issue for his successor, he predicted bud- Mann said the atmosphere of coopera- several administrative positions.
the game recaps in Sports Mann said he originally planned to remain get pressures will let up in the near future. tion instead of competition helped his and
Tuesday. at UNC for only two or three years but stayed “I’m very optimistic that even though other offices create a good plan for dealing See Finance, Page 5

SBP elections start tonight


JOIN THE DTH
The Daily Tar Heel will host UNC system searches
an information session for
students interested in joining By Melissa Abbey
Staff Writer
ATTEND THE MEETING
Time: 6 p.m. today
for places to cut funds
the staff at 5:30 p.m. tonight Tonight, the curtains will part.
Location: TBA
at the newsroom at 151 E.
After months of behind-the-scenes campaigning
and planning, the students who aspire to office — Info: studentorgs.unc.edu/boe Whole programs said. “It’s premature to speculate.”
He said the economic crisis has
Rosemary St. most notably student body president — will reveal
themselves to the student body. don’t want to get caught up in the pettiness that
could be axed forced the system to restructure
and reorganize its resources.
Only after weeks of petitioning and debate will surrounds the student government all the time. Woodward was chosen to lead
this day in history the character of the student body president candi- “I’m not on a witch hunt at all,” he added. by Jen Serdetchnaia the review based on his prior
dates’ interactions show, though potential candidates Lee said he was never offended by the complaint, Assistant State & National Editor accomplishments, among other
JAN. 18, 1986… said they are committed to operate on friendly terms and that he was willing to put the matter behind UNC-system president Thomas factors.
despite tension that emerged between two hopefuls him. Ross announced Friday a plan for “Woodward is someone who
The men’s basketball team
in the fall. “Me and Rick have worked together in the past,” long-term savings that would help has a great deal of experience and
plays its first game in the Rick Ingram, who is widely rumored Lee said. “I’ve known him for a long time and haven’t the system cope with losing mil- respect with the general public,”
to be running for student body had any trouble working with him in the past. I’m lions more in state funding. Ross said. “He is a really thought-
Smith Center. The top-ranked president, filed a complaint against hopeful that we’ll have a clear election cycle.” Ross said at the UNC-system ful person.”
SBP
Tar Heels defeat No. 3 Duke elections Student Body Secretary Ian Lee in The spring elections include races for student Board of Governors meeting that Woodward spent 16 years as
2011 - 2012 November for pursuing candidacy, body president, Graduate and Professional Student Jim Woodward, former chan- UNC-C chancellor and also served
95-92. claiming that the Student Code pro- Federation president, Carolina Athletic Association cellor of UNC-Charlotte, would as interim chancellor for N.C. State
hibited the secretary from doing so. president, Residence Hall Association president, be conducting a review of the University in 2009.
But the Board of Elections ruled that Lee can representatives of Student Congress and senior system’s academic programs in Under Woodward’s leadership,
Today’s weather run as long as he does not abuse or neglect the class officers. search of “unnecessary duplica- UNC-C developed its first doctoral
Cloudy when you’re duties of his position. Before candidates are allowed to campaign pub- tion.” programs, advanced its fundrais-
“I was concerned initially with Lee’s ability to licly, they must collect 1,250 student signatures. As the University system faces ing programs and multiplied its
gone.
run as student body secretary,” Ingram said. “They The Board of Elections will release the final list of potential reductions of up to 15 research volume five-fold.
H 50, L 40 percent, or $405 million, whole After Woodward finishes his
decided to interpret the Code a little differently certified candidates on Jan. 29, giving candidates
than I had. That’s their prerogative.” 10 days to fulfill the requirement. departments and programs could review, some programs would be
Wednesday’s weather Andrew Phillips, chairman of the Board of The election will be held Feb. 8. If a candidate be eliminated. entirely eliminated and others
Elections, said he was concerned about the com- does not win a majority of the votes, a runoff elec- “It will be difficult to preserve would be offered online, said UNC
Partly miserable plaint, but has also observed positive interactions tion will be held a week later, pitting the two top academic excellence and profit- Board of Governors Chairwoman
without you. between potential candidates. vote-getters against each other. ability,” Ross said. Hannah Gage.
H 56, L 30 “One thing I’ve been very impressed about with There might be several additional petitions to Woodward would examine It would also allow universities
all the candidates is the amount that they talk to add respective referendums to the ballot. If Student academic programs on all college to develop more specific mission
each other, and the amount that those relation- Congress does not approve the proposed UCommons campuses to see which ones the statements that fall in line with the
index ships seem to be pretty open,” he said. “They tend renovations to the Student Union at its meeting system could do without while overall goals of UNC Tomorrow,
police log ........................... 2 to respect each other.” tonight, students and Student Union officials will maintaining its mission of offering Gage said.
calendar ............................. 2 Ingram said the fact that he filed a complaint so likely attempt to pass it by petition, Phillips said. higher education opportunities to UNC Tomorrow was an initiative
nation and world .............. 6 early is not representative of what his attitude will all North Carolinians. established by former UNC-system
opinion ............................... 8 be during the campaign. Contact the University Editor “With 17 campuses, we don’t really
crossword ........................ 11 “There are bigger issues at hand,” he said. “I at university@dailytarheel.com. know where the duplication is,” Ross See cuts, Page 5
2 tuesday, january 18, 2011 News The Daily Tar Heel

The Daily Tar Heel COMMUNITY CALENDAr DAILY


DOSE
ta ke
one
dai l y
www.dailytarheel.com today Time: 6 p.m. boundaries.
Location: Hyde Hall, University Time: 5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Established 1893 Networking techniques: Find out Room
Gayest cities crowned
Location: Wilson Library, Pleasants
117 years of what networking is and learn pro- Family Assembly Room
editorial freedom ductive networking techniques. Carolina corps info session:

M
From staff and wire reports
Time: 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. Learn about the Carolina College Talk with protestor: Meet
SARAH FRIER jonathan Location: Hanes Hall, Room 239B
EDITOR-in-chief jones
Advising Corps, which helps first- Garrett Fitzgerald, one of the eight inneapolis may be suffering subzero
962-0372 generation, underrepresented, low- protestors arrested before the 2008
editor@
SPORTS Editor
962-4209 History lecture: Hear Ohio State income high-school students make it Republican National Convention temperatures and the departure of
dailytarheel.com sports@
dailytarheel.com
University professor Kevin Boyle to college. Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Brett Favre, but it has one reason
STEVEN NORTON deliver his lecture “Redemption: Civil Time: 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Managing editor
Location: Internationalist Books, to celebrate: It’s the gayest city in
962-0372
BJ Dworak, Rights, History and the Promise of Location: Jackson Hall 405 W. Franklin St.
managing.editor@ lauren mccay America.” America.
dailytarheel.com photo editors
photo@ Time: 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Punk concert: Gainesville, Fla., MLK memorial lecture: Listen to The city took the top spot in an annual poll by the
jarrard cole dailytarheel.com Location: Alumni Center, Royall punk rock veterans Against Me! play Soledad O’Brien, CNN anchor and
visual Managing Advocate, a national gay news magazine. Last year’s
editor emily evans, Room Cat’s Cradle, along with acts Cheap correspondent for the documentary
962-0372 jenny smith Girls and Fences. series “Black in America,” cel- winner, Atlanta, plummeted to seventh place.
managing.editor@ copy EDITORs MLK oratorical contest: Students Time: 7 p.m. ebrate the life of Dr. Martin Luther Criteria for the rankings included a city’s number
dailytarheel.com copy@
will present original monologues Location: Cat’s Cradle, 300 E. Main King Jr.
C. Ryan barber
dailytarheel.com
about Martin Luther King Jr.
of gay elected officials, gay-friendly religious congre-
St., Carrboro Time: 7:30 p.m.
university EDITOR PARIS FLOWE Harmonyx and EROT will perform. Location: Memorial Hall gations and gay.com profiles.
843-4529
WEDNESDAY
ONLINE EDITOR
university@ online@ Time: 6 p.m. Rounding out the top five were Santa Fe, N.M.,
dailytarheel.com dailytarheel.com Location: Stone Center auditorium To make a calendar submission,
Documentary about grits: e-mail calendar@dailytarheel.com.
Las Vegas, Orlando, Fla., and Pittsburgh.
VICTORIA kelly mchugh
STILWELL design editor ‘Mountain justice’ discussion: Filmmaker Stan Woodward presents Events will be published in the
design@ NOTED. A Montana man QUOTED. “I should be
CITY EDITOR Larry Gibson, an advocate against and discusses his 1980 documentary newspaper on either the day or the
962-4103 dailytarheel.com
day before they take place. apparently was so distracted dead. I can’t believe they kept
mountaintop removal, will talk and “It’s Grits!” which explores how
city@dailytarheel.
Ryan Submissions must be sent in by by loud music that he didn’t me alive for so long.”
com answer questions about the destruc- grits connect Southerners across
kurtzman noon the preceding publication date. notice a freight train moving — A British man whose
Tarini Parti tion of the Appalachian Mountains. social, economic, political and racial
graphics editor toward him before it struck heart stopped for three-and-
STATE & NATIONAL graphics@
his car behind the driver’s a-half hours but was resusci-
EDITOR
962-4103
dailytarheel.com The Daily Tar Heel door. tated by a new CPR machine.
state@ ZACH EVANS, PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS STAFF
dailytarheel.com RACHEL SCALL The man wasn’t injured, The machine performed
multimedia editorS Business and Advertising: Kevin Customer Service: Matthew McGibney, Lyons, Bailee Lockamy, Nick Ludlow, Zach Jokipii, Kirk Luo, Anish Tadmiri, James Wallace but the slow-moving train almost 20,000 chest compres-
Nick Andersen Schwartz, director/general manager; Megan Becca Moore, Courtney Smiley and Seth Martin, Tiye McLeod, Katie Steen, Meaghan and David Zolno, marketing executives.
Arts Editor
multimedia@ McGinity, advertising director; Lisa Reichle, Wright, representatives. Steingraber, Chris Tantum, Amanda Warren Advertising Production: Penny Persons, badly damaged his car. sions to keep the man’s heart
843-4529 dailytarheel.com business manager; Caldwell Zimmerman, Display Advertising: Chelsea Crites, Katie and Thomas Zawistowicz, account executives; manager; Beth O'Brien, ad production No alcohol or drugs were and lungs functioning after he
arts@dailytarheel. print advertising manager; Amanda Warren, Cunningham, Taylor Delbridge, Chelsea Jesse Anderson, Julie Bynum, Josh Carter, Sam coordinator; Claire Atwell, assistant; Garrett
com
allyson digital advertising manager. Gabardine, Brad Harrison, Aleigh Huston- Chieng, Jocelyn Choi, Rachel Hamlin, Katie Herzfeld and Maggie Thayer, interns. involved, police said. suffered cardiac arrest.
batchelor
linnie greene special sections Editorial staff

Police log
diversions editor editor Assistant Editors: Katelyn Trela, arts; Owens Bakalar, Kristen Bourgeois, Courtney Opinion: Callie Bost, Nathan D’Ambrosio Johnson, Jeanna Smialek
diversions@ batch207@email. Olivia Barrow, Sarah Glen, Kelly Poe, city; Coats, Zach Hamilton, Tyler Hardy, Laurie Robert Fleming, Taylor Haulsee, Taylor University: Preeti Arunapuram, Christina
dailytarheel.com unc.edu Abbie Bennett, Georgia Cavanaugh, Landon Beth Harris, Chris Harrow, Katie Keel, Holgate, Sam Jacobson, Shruti Shah, Greg Austin, Chelsea Bailey, Emily Banks,
Wallace, copy; Carolann Belk, Beatrice Moss, Caroline Land, Stephanie Metzen, Jo Nixon, Smith, Maggie Zellner, editorial board; Alexa Burrell, Bryce Butner, Pooja
Adam Schifter, design; Joe Chapman, diver- Hayley Paytes, Margot Pien, Myanh Ta, Noah Brisbin, Sarah Dugan, Sam Ellis, Taylor Chandramouleeswaran, Nicole Comparato, n Someone entered a white The jersey was worth $60,
➤ The Daily Tar Heel reports any sions; Margaret Croom, online; Natasha
Smith, Meg Wrather, graphics; Pat Ryan,
Melissa Tolentino, Kevin Uhrmacher, Vanessa
Voight
Fulton, Mark Laichena, Blair Mikels, Matthew
Moran, Hinson Neville, Troy Smith, Perry Tsai,
Victoria Cook, Chuheng Ding, Kelsey Finn,
Amelia Fisher, Keren Goldshlager, Maria
2002 Chevy Tahoe and stole items reports state
inaccurate information published opinion; Zach Gutterman, Lauren Vied, Design: Jeffrey Sullivan, senior staffer; Alex Walters, columnists Gontaruk, Alex Hammer, Brooke Hefner, from the vehicle between 7:30 p.m.
as soon as the error is discovered. photography; Brandon Moree, Kelly Parsons, Alyssa Bailey, Brendan Cooley, Emily May, Photo: Will Cooper, Erin Hull, senior Eric James, Katyayani Jhaveri, Kari Johnson, and 10:28 p.m. Saturday at 120 n Someone was yelling and
Aaron Taube, sports; Isabella Cochrane, Cece Pascual, Ariana Rodriguez-Gitler, Mary photographers; Melissa Abbey, Katie Jacqueline Kantor, Lyle Kendrick, Kaitlyn
➤ Corrections for front-page errors Jen Serdetchnaia, state & national; Melvin Stevens, Charlotte Taylor, Anna Thompson, Barnes, Cameron Brown, James Carras, Knepp, Lilly Knoepp, Sarayu Kumar, Robert Banks Drive, according to Chapel cursing inside Coldstone Creamery
Backman, Will Doran, Andy Thomason, Courtney Tye Duncan Culberth, Mallory Hawkins, Erin Langdon, Katia Martinez, Caitlin McCabe,
will be printed on the front page. university. Diversions: Elizabeth Byrum, Lam Chau, Hull, Melissa Key, Mary Koenig, Jessie Claire McNeill, Carolyn Miller, Aaron Moore, Hill police reports. at 8:42 p.m. Thursday at 131 E.
Any other incorrect information Arts: Carson Blackwelder, Rachel Coleman, Joe Faile, Rocco Giamatteo, Allison Hussey, Lowe, Carter McCall, Elizabeth Mendoza, Amelia Nitz, Emily Palmer, Jordan Paschal, Stolen items included a Pioneer Franklin St., according to Chapel
Thankful Cromartie, Carson Fish, Abby Mark Niegelsky, Anna Norris, Jonathan Sofia Morales, Chessa Rich, Allison Russell, Chloe Pinner, Lauren Ratcliffe, David
will be corrected on page 3. Errors Gerdes, Tariq Luthun, Malcolm Ogden, Pattishall, Robert Turner Story Logan Savage, Bailey Seitter, Katie Sweeney, Riedell, Jacob Rubel, Lydia Rusche, Lindsay radio worth $400, a Guess wal- Hill police reports.
committed on the Opinion Page Hillary Rose Owens, Katherine Proctor, Atar Graphics: Chris Alton, Evan Bell, Anwuli Daniel Turner, Nivi Umasankar, Helen Sebastian, Paula Seligson, Haley Sklut, let worth $40 and four debit and
Stav, Laney Tipton, Colin Warren-Hicks Chukwurah, Clay Andrew Collin, Lennon Woolard Deborah Strange, Katie Sweeney, Jordan
have corrections printed on that City: Ian Ager, Marissa Barbalato, Katie Dodson, Dylan Gilroy, Stephen Menesick, Sports: Louie Horvath, senior writer; David Walker, Davis Wilbur, Sophia Zhang credit cards, reports state. n Someone broke into the
page. Corrections also are noted in Barbee, Holly Beilin, Katherine Burton, Caroline Porter Adler, Leah Campbell, Alexandra Chabolla, Editorial Production: Stacy Wynn,
Carrboro Community Health
Nora Chan, Mary Choi, Ryan Cocca, Multimedia: Whitney Baker, Cristina Ryan Cocca, Matt Cox, Ryan Davis, Philip manager.
the online versions of our stories. Julie Crimmins, Chelsey Dulaney, Jamie Barletta, Brittany Bellamy, Nathan Blount, Deutsch, Grant Fitzgerald, Jennifer Kessinger, Printing: Triangle Web Printing Co. n Someone entered a home and Center between 8 p.m. Wednesday
Emmerman, Brian Fanney, Hannah Floyd, Anna Bobrow, Nick Brenton, Will Cooper, Jonathan LaMantia, Michael Lananna, Distribution: Nick and Sarah Hammonds.
➤ Contact Managing Editor Jessica Gaylord, Clayton Gladieux, John Jessica Cruel, Erin Holcomb, Jonathan Kasbe, Jonathan LaRowe, Evan Marlow, Justin stole items between 2 p.m. and 3 and 6:25 a.m. Thursday at 301
Steven Norton at managing.edi- Hamlin, Grace Joyal, Lisa LeFever, Tori Alice Lee, Katie Lubinsky, Carter McCall, Mayhew, Kevin Minogue, Chris Moore, p.m. Saturday at 710 N. Columbia Lloyd St., according to Carrboro
Koesters, Cassie McLean, Caitlin McGinnis, Colleen McNamara, Jonathan Michels, Brooke Pryor
tor@dailytarheel.com with issues Dominique Moore, Lindsay Pope, Lenzie Marria Rahim, Rebecca Riddle, Christopher State & National: Eliza Kern, Elise Young, St., according to Chapel Hill police police reports.
about this policy. Purcell, Ethan Robertson, Ana Rocha, Kevin Sopher, Chris Uy senior staffers; Viviana Bonilla-Lopez, Seth reports. The suspect entered the build-
Rothenberg, Philip Rouse, Chad Royal, Online: Danielle Bryant, Abigail Christoph, Cline, Kristen McAvoy, Sneha Rao, Jessica
Grace Tatter, Corinne White, Emily Wiggins, Logan Martinez, Carter McCall, Daniel Seaman, Danielle Stephenson, Maddy Will, Stolen items included Macbook ing by breaking a window and stole
Mail: P.O. Box 3257, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 Yunzhu Zhang Pshock, Mike Rodriguez, Kyle Ann Sebastian, Daniel Wiser, Michelle Zayed, Estes Gould,
Copy: Beatrice Allen, Kelsie Allen, Madison Taylor Spallino, Jeffrey Sullivan, Tina Xu Lindsey Rietkerk, Dorothy Irwin, Elizabeth worth $1,200, a The North Face a large amount of cash, reports
Office: 151 E. Rosemary St. backpack worth $50, a Casio digi- state.
Sarah Frier, Editor-in-Chief, 962-4086 The Daily Tar Heel is published by the DTH Media Corp., a nonprofit North Carolina corporation, Monday through Friday, tal recorder worth $100 and a lin-
Advertising & Business, 962-1163 according to the University calendar. Callers with questions about billing or display advertising should call 962-1163 bet en-covered writing journal worth n A male wearing a green jacket
News, Features, Sports, 962-0245
ween 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Classified ads can be reached at 962-0252. Editorial questions should be directed to 962-0245. $100, reports state. hit a Chapel Hill Transit bus with a
One copy per person; additional copies may be
purchased at The Daily Tar Heel for $.25 each. Office: 151 E. Rosemary St. two-by-four foot wooden table leg
Please report suspicious activity at our U.S. Mail Address: P.O. Box 3257, n Someone stole a football jersey at 2:09 p.m. Thursday at 101 E.
ISN #10709436
distribution racks by e-mailing Chapel Hill, NC 27515-3257 from Tarheel Book Store at 1 p.m. Weaver St., according to Carrboro
dth@dailytarheel.com Thursday from 119 E. Franklin St., Police reports.
© 2011 DTH Media Corp. according to Chapel Hill police The incident caused no damage
All rights reserved reports. to the bus, reports state.

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The Daily Tar Heel Top News tuesday, january 18, 2011 3

Groups using Playmakers Local


Campus Briefs
Ten projects win inaugural
$5,000 Kenan-Biddle grants
Ten student-led projects have
been awarded $5,000 grants from
the Kenan-Biddle Partnership. The
partnership, which encourages
Theater lacks bathrooms, costs more “The space now has such excellent energy.
The atmosphere of the theater should add
leader
dies at
by Katherine Proctor this semester.
collaboration between students
at UNC and Duke University, was
staff writer Although more extensive reno- some glamour to an upbeat show.”
Raised rental fees and incom- vations were originally intended,
founded in 2010.
plete facilities have not deterred the University’s financial difficul- Kinsey Sullivan, Cuab music chairperson
The partnership received more

age 91
campus groups from taking advan- ties led the office of the executive
than 90 proposals for its inau-
tage of the recently renovated director for the arts to open the absence of a few conveniences — “I mean, it’s an old building,” he
gural grants. It is funded by the
Historic Playmakers Theatre. space in November. notably, bathrooms. said. “But it’s still a great space.”
William R. Kenan Jr. Charitable
The theater will host a variety of Complete renovations have been Because of budget constraints, Pauper — the main tenants of the
Trust and the Mary Duke Biddle
performances from multiple cam- postponed indefinitely. the bathrooms located in the base- theater before its renovations began
Foundation.
pus groups now that renovations to Sullivan said that the renova- ment lobby are unusable. Patrons more than five years ago — will put
the building are partially complete. tions to the theater will help bring will be directed to a nearby build- on its spring production of “All Shook Georgia Carroll
Medlin creates focus group Michael Johnson, director of a larger audience. ing to use the bathroom. Up,” an Elvis Presley jukebox musi-
for new transportation plan operations for the office of the “The space now has such excellent cal, in the beginning of April. Kyser leaves legacy
executive director of the arts, said energy,” said Kinsey Sullivan, music Upcoming performances Pauper had planned to apply for
Student Body President Hogan that the space will be used mainly chairperson for CUAB. “The atmo- a grant from the office of the execu-
by Pauper Players, Ebony Readers/
by victoria stilwell
Johnson said that despite such tive director of the arts that would city editor
Medlin issued an e xec utive sphere of the theater should add
order Monday that created the Onyx Theatre, Carolina Union some glamour to an upbeat show.” inconveniences, the shows will go
Longtime Chapel Hill resident,
Transportation Focus Group. Activities Board and UNC Opera But the theater’s age means the on. See theater, Page 7
community leader and former
The body will be the liaison for the model Georgia Carroll Kyser died
executive branch to the Department Friday, leaving behind a legacy of

HOMEGROWN TALENT
of Public Safety regarding the five- beauty, elegance and dedication.
year plan the department will pres- Kyser died at her residence at the
ent at the March meeting of the Cedars of Chapel Hill Retirement
Board of Trustees. Community. She was 91.
Members of the group will also “She was such a gracious and
gather student input regarding the gentle person but very commit-
plan, and deliver a report of stu-
dent opinion to the student body ArtsCenter classes are ted to what is good and right for
people, and she lived that life,” said
president no later than March 18.
The group is to be formed no for home-schooled former UNC-system President Bill
Friday, whose wife, Ida, was one of
later than Jan. 24. Kyser’s closest friends.
by Nora Chan “She was a very accomplished
Congress likely to vote on staff writer
lady.”
Union referendum tonight In a bright studio Friday afternoon,
Kyser launched a modeling
home-schooled students squished, pinched
career in the 1930s and 1940s,
Student Congress will have the and molded their own masterpieces.
when she worked as a John Robert
opportunity to vote on whether to The children were taking Ceramics for
Powers model and cover girl in
send the renovation of the Student Homeschoolers, a weekly class offered by
New York.
Union to a student referendum the ArtsCenter in Carrboro as a result of
She stopped
tonight. continued demand for activities for home-
modeling when
The bill that proposes sending schooled students.
she moved to
the project to a student referendum “We are definitely trying to connect
Hollywood,
was recommended unfavorably by more with the home school community,”
where she
the student affairs committee of said Phaedra Kelly, director of the center’s
became an
Student Congress on Jan. 11. ArtSchool.
actress and met
To be considered by the body, a “We like to use studios to their maximum
1928 UNC grad-
member must propose to take up potential, but definitely the home-school-
uate and big-
the issue and it needs to garner a ers prefer to have it earlier where it can be
time bandleader Georgia Kyser
two-thirds majority vote. focused on just home-schooled kids,” she
Kay Kyser. founded the
For the bill to be passed, it must said.
“ T h e y m e t Preservation
garner a majority vote from the The class, held from 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.
during World Society of
body. on Fridays, is taught by local ceramics art-
War II doing Chapel Hill.
ist Jason Abide and began a new six-week
shows for the
session Friday. Registration for the current
troops,” said her daughter Kimberly
City Briefs session is now closed.
Kyser, who lives in Chapel Hill.
Tar Heel Express shuttles Abide said he has been instructing the
“People in Hollywood would get
class for about a year and has taught sum-
to run starting at 6:30 p.m. mer pottery classes for three years.
in buses to go to the desert and do
shows for the troops that were sta-
Chapel Hill Transit will oper- He said students learn to use the pottery
tioned there getting ready to go out
ate shuttles to and from the UNC wheel, make sculptures and do hand-build-
to the Pacific.”
men’s basketball game versus the ing with activities like pinch pots.
The couple married soon after
Clemson Tigers at 8 p.m. tonight “We had two boys and two girls, and the
they met in 1944.
in the Smith Center. boys made spaceships and the girls made
Though Kimberly Kyser said
The shuttles will begin running zebras,” Abide said of Friday’s class.
her mother never considered her-
at 6:30 p.m. from the Friday Center, The center also offers after-school classes
self an actress, “Gorgeous Georgia
Southern Village, University Mall available to children in traditional schools,
Carroll,” as she was called, made a
next to Dillards and Jones Ferry he said.
name for herself.
park and ride lots. Lynne Millies, a member of the Chapel
“She had little parts in a lot of
Shuttles will run every 10 to 15 Hill Homeschoolers support network, said
famous movies,” Kimberly Kyser
minutes and will continue running classes like this can be very beneficial for
said. “She was the leading lady in
until 45 minutes after the game. home-schooled students.
two of my father’s movies: ‘Carolina
Rides cost $3 for a one-way trip Parents who home-school their children
Blues’ and ‘Around the World.’”
and $5 for a round trip. use the support network to share informa-
When Kay Kyser decided to
Shuttles will also run from tion about classes and set up play-dates.
retire from the spotlight, the family
Carolina Coffee Shop located at The support group offers Friday enrich-
dth/Daniel Turner moved to Chapel Hill in 1951 and
138 E. Franklin St., but no parking ment classes taught by parents in the
Home-schooled students demonstrate how to make pinch pots — a technique they settled into a home on Franklin
is available. Rides from the coffee group.
Street.
shop cost $2 for one way or $4 for “There’s classes on science, physics, art learned during Jason Abide’s pottery class at the Carrboro ArtsCenter on Jan. 14.
“We had a lot of fun growing up
round trip. and poetry,” Millies said.
in Chapel Hill with our mother and
She said having a teacher in a classroom “But it’s really good to have things at the “We had two boys and our father, who was very funny,”
environment is good for the students. ArtsCenter because it’s so central.”
Cartographer helps plan new “I think (the classes) give them some real Millies said Chapel Hill residents are two girls, and the boys Kimberly Kyser said. “Mother
made such a pretty home for us.
greenways and cycling map experience in being in a classroom environ- fortunate because the town has more to
ment,” Millies said. “They also get to have offer home-schoolers than some other made spaceships and the “Everybody wanted to come to
our house to hang out.”
Chapel Hill residents met with
members of Planning and Parks
that outside help from artists to come in and
give them some experience.”
areas.
“I have home-schooled in Michigan … by
girls made zebras.” Georgia Kyser began taking
and Recreation departments to one class each semester at the
Holli Kearns, whose 9-year-old daughter far North Carolina has a lot more to offer,” Jason Abide, ceramics class teacher
develop a map to increase use of University, seeking a degree.
is taking the class, said local home-schooling she said. “There’s science classes, there’s
greenways and cycling. “What was interesting about
families can participate in many activities in nature classes, music, fencing. REGISTER FOR A CLASS
The departments are working that is she brought into our house
the community. “It’s so great to be able to home-school
with cartographer Steve Spindler, Registration for the current session is now closed. all the things she was learning,”
“We have a really vibrant home-school here because of what they do offer.”
who specializes in developing tran- Visit http://bit.ly/fbiAkz to register for sessions
Kimberly Kyser said.
community here in Chapel Hill,” Kearns
sit maps for cities and facilitating The family lived down the road
said. “If anything, we have too many activi- Contact the City Editor that run March 4 to April 8 or April 15 to May 20
cycle use. ties. at city@dailytarheel.com. at the Carrboro ArtsCenter.
Spindler spoke about his expe- See kyser, Page 7
rience with similar projects at the
meeting.

That’s Your You on


The departments are still open Send us your photos from
to receiving public input on the the weekend, and they could
Facebook You on
Photos
project. end up on page 3. E-mail to

state Briefs What dthphoto@gmail.com!


The Daily Tar Heel Roy Williams on Twitter
You
NCAA rules against showing last night's game against Georgia Tech:
"My coaching stunk and we stunk. I’m What’s happening?
college athletes in ads
tired of saying ‘We’ve got to build con-
The NCAA’s proposed rule fidence.’ It’s easy to build confidence; by

Said
change that would allow student- God, play better." Home
athletes to appear in advertise- 3 comments: @tuckerpetty
ments was nixed Friday at the asso-
Meg Walker Coats Running some How long can I avoid even look-
ciation’s annual convention. ing at my syllabus to see what I
defense would be nice
The proposal aimed to provide have to do? #procrastination
revenue to athletic departments Ann Clarke They would do just as
and modernize the rules concern-
ing schools and their corporate Trending well playing street ball.
Nancy Phelps Hodges This may be
@lebreedlove

Topics:
sponsors. Critics, including UNC Got 12 hours of sleep last night.
seen as blaspheme, but are we ready FTW.
athletic director Dick Baddour, for a new coach? The talent on that
claim the changes exploit student team is amazing...why can’t Coach
athletes without compensation. @rtburg
#americagethard

“We think it goes too far because #socialmedia Williams bring them together. Last
night was pitiful, but no game has been “For truth is that which the keep-
it leaves so much undefined as to ers write. They record who won

#snow
cohesive in a long time, if ever with this
what is allowed and what is not team. Just saying... and who lost and who lived to lie
allowed,” Baddour said. about it afterward.” Ralph Ellison
The proposal would allow com- The Daily Tar Heel Would you be will- #mlkday
panies to use images of athletes in #mlkday ing to pay $16 in student fees each year to
finance renovations to the Student Union?
advertisements to promote com- @chanthorp
#UNC

mercial interests. For example, "Like" this post if yes, or post a comment
#thegame

if no. @uncbuildablock Great to see


a company could show images of Carolina students, staff and faculty
a UNC football player scoring a 24 people like this. helping the community out at
touchdown on the football field to Phoenix Place.
promote its excellence in its field. Terri Shelton Covil The Union
Courtesy of The Daily Tar Heel Facebook Page was just completely remodeled and
“That’s a commercial endorse-
Hogan Medlin shows off his off-campus apartment. The expanded my senior year in 2003. What
ment and it would to me appear to @UNCCampusHealth
take an athlete out of the amateur DTH and UNC housing are presenting the first Carolina major project could possibly need to be
status and into the professional,” CRIBS photo contest. Send in a picture of your pad to done already? Wise words: “I have decided to
he said. enter for a chance to win the first pick in the UNC hous- Sarah Wentz I really don’t see the stick with love. Hate is too great
ing lottery, or $150 to spend at Whole Foods. Contest need for any renovations...so definitely a burden to bear.” - Martin Luther
— From staff and wire reports details: http://on.fb.me/dPixts. not. King Jr. #mlkday #quote
4 tuesday, january 18, 2011 News The Daily Tar Heel

Small steps honor king


Students to give tuition input
Committee will convene on Jan. 24 “It was a tough choice — we have a lot of
by madeline will He said the committee has been
qualified people who want to be on this
staff writer in the works since August 2010 committee.”
Student leaders are joining when there was a recommendation
forces with UNC-system adminis- for student input on tuition. Atul bhula, ASG president
trators to increase student input in The first meeting will be held
decision-making, especially when Jan. 24 — almost half a year later, The committee members were sure student opinions about differ-
it comes to tuition increases. Bhula said. appointed by administrators after ent issues and plans to contribute
Some representatives from Karrie Dixon, assistant vice Bhula gave them his input. his discoveries to the committee.
the UNC-system Association of president for academic and student “We tried not to have a vice “They have shown to be very
Student Governments are now affairs for the UNC system and a chancellor and student body presi- successful and beneficial,” he said.
part of a committee composed of member of the committee, said its dent from the same school,” Bhula “Having that raw data definitely
student body presidents, vice chan- purpose is to explore the best ways said. helps us move forward in the best
cellors from UNC-system schools to increase student involvement. “It was a tough choice — we have way possible.”
and members of UNC General “We’re going to talk about what a lot of qualified people who want Kimball said he hopes the
Administration. are the best processes and show to be on this committee,” he said. committee will allow him to be
With most campuses proposing how students should be involved,” The student body presidents a stronger gateway of commu-
tuition increases of 6.5 percent — she said. on the committee will be a direct nication between students and
DTH/Allison Russell

S
the most they are allowed to ask for Students are already involved link to the students, said Wayne administrators.
tanley Rhodes, 8, of Chapel Hill, stands in front of — the committee could play a crucial in the tuition and fee decisions, Kimball, student body president of The committee will allow stu-
First Baptist Church on Monday morning after he role in shaping tuition decisions. but the new committee will gauge N.C. Agricultural & Technical State dents to come to their represen-
“It was probably best to get a their degree of involvement, Dixon University. tatives to voice their opinion, he
marched down Franklin Street with the NAACP as dynamic group from across the said. “We believe in being students said.
part of its celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day. He state mixed between vice chancel- Bhula said he worked to compile first,” he said.
lors and student body presidents,” a diverse group that represented Kimball said he is using elec- Contact the State & National
used his binoculars to see the speakers at the rally. said ASG President Atul Bhula. the state well. tronic polls on his campus to mea- Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.

40 talk
race at
MLK
Your future’s event
timeline, fed. Students frankly
discuss stereotypes
by Nicole Comparato
staff writer
On Monday, Anne Hastings
brought the elephant into the room.
As the keynote speaker for the
MLK Youth Leadership Program,
Hastings, a UNC sociology profes-
sor, harkened back to her youth,
when Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
was her hero.
“MLK was a hero of mine, even
as a white female,” she said. “You
have to become uncomfortable
before you can become comfort-
able, just like I did in my time.”
To make students uncomfort-
able, Hastings brought a plush
stuffed elephant to the Student
Union multi-purpose room, placing
it in the middle of a circle of about
40 students from the Durham area
and their UNC/Duke Movement of
Youth mentors to spur a frank dis-
cussion on stereotypes.
“Do you know what this means?”
she asked students as she pointed to
the elephant.
“We don’t have as many conver-
sations across races as we should.
We tend to be guarded when we are
in mixed company—so it’s the ele-
phant in the room everyone claims
not to notice.”
The program also explored Dr.
King’s legacy by showing a short
clip of his “I have a dream” speech,
engaging the students in interac-
tive activities and discussing the
country’s current racial mood.
“Dr. King was someone who
was about change, and not doing
service on this day would make his
legacy go out in vain,” said Bianca
Bell, co-chairwoman of the MLK
Day for Service workshop.
“For our youth to make a differ-
ence, people need to not under-
estimate themselves. If we come
together as one, we can really make
a difference.”
One of the participants in
the program, Tybreisha Terry of
Hillside New Tech High School,
said these types of exercises are
necessary even though they may
be uncomfortable at first.
“We need to make a difference
as youth, and to do that we need
to get in touch with each other,
because we don’t even understand
our peers,” she said.
This thought was racing through
each of the participants’ heads, as
2007 Meets PwC at a blood drive, Andy Hagerman, PwC Associate. After almost every student made a state-
ment about how race has affected
networks with PwC via college being impressed by PwC’s community outreach their lives personally.
2008 Earns BBA, joins PwC programs, Andy found more surprises at PwC. “We are all so much more
alike than we understand,” said
as an Associate Hastings.
Like a position on the Sustainable Business
2010 Becomes a Sustainable Business “But there is no such thing as
Solutions team, where he not only effects positive being color blind.”
Solutions consultant at PwC
change in the world, he feeds both his career and Contact the University Editor
at university@dailytarheel.com.
future. To see Andy’s full timeline and how
you can feed your future, visit www.pwc.tv
Take 15/501 South towards Pittsboro
Exit Market St. / Southern Village

THE GREEN HORNET J . . . . . . . . . 115-4:15-7:15-9:45


THE DILEMMA J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1:10-4:10-7:20-9:35
© 2011 PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. All rights reserved. In this document, “PwC” refers to PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (a Delaware
limited liability partnership), which is a member firm of PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited, each member firm of which is a
THE KING’S SPEECH K .......................1:20-4:05-7:10-9:45
separate legal entity. We are proud to be an Affirmative Action and Equal Opportunity Employer.
SEASON OF THE WITCH J . . . . . . . . .130-4:20-7:25-9:30
TRUE GRIT J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1:00-4:00-7:15-9:40
All shows $6.50 for college students with ID
Bargain
Matinees
$6.50
The Daily Tar Heel News tuesday, january 18, 2011 5

Chapel Hill celebrates MLK Poems and Songs

Citizens find own ways to pay tribute


Parade Commemorates MLK A Day of Service

Hundreds of Chapel Hill and Senior Lindsay Smith’s mother


Carrboro residents gathered in the
worked during the Civil Rights era
cold Monday morning for a rally to integrate her high school.
and march to commemorate the And on Monday, to honor her
life of Martin Luther King Jr. and
legacy during the Martin Luther
renew the fight against racism and
King Jr. Day for Service, Smith was
injustice. one of hundreds of students to take
Organized by the Chapel Hill- an active approach to the holiday.
Carrboro branch of the National “The purpose of today wasn’t to
Association for the Advancement sleep, but it was to honor his legacy
of Colored People, the rally high-
and help others reduce injustices,”
lighted the controversial firing of
said senior Lindsay Smith, who
Clyde Clark and Kerry Bigelow, was one of many involved dur-
dubbed the “Sanitation Two.” ing Carolina Rejuvenating Our
Bigelow and Clark were fired Community Through Service’s 10th
from the Chapel Hill solid waste annual MLK Day for Service.
department in October for insub- Before Smith left to refinish dth/Daniel Turner
ordination, threatening or intimi-
wooden chairs for the United Way Donald Cooley, Molly Hall-Martin, Bernard Walston, Stanley Allen and
dating behavior and unsatisfactory
of the Greater Triangle, she and Shelby Dawkins-Law sand down rocking chairs for the elderly at ROCTS.
job performance, according to an the hundreds of other volunteers
Oct. 29 town memorandum. for various projects were thanked a project sponsored by A Helping ‘He was a Poem’
The NAACP said the town deniedby Terri Houston, interim associate Hand helped make valentines for
them of their right to due process
provost of diversity and multicul- senior citizens. Roughly 4,000 In spite of the rainy weather, the
during their investigations. tural affairs, for their service. have been made already. theatre at the Sonja Haynes Stone
“Having the mayor here and the “You are about to literally Cathy Ahrendsen, founder and Center for Black Culture and History
public directly pushing him to act
change and impact someone’s life,” executive director of A Helping was saturated on Monday with peo-
on the ‘Sanitation Two,’ it is very
she said. Hand, said she was inspired by her ple eager to celebrate Martin Luther
interesting to see all the different“The challenge that you face grandmother to start a nonprofit King Jr. Day not through service, but
sides just convening together in the
makes a difference to the lives that organization 15 years ago. It has through an artistic appreciation of
memory of Dr. King,” said junior you touch.” grown to serve about 400 clients the struggle for equality.
Ana Maria Reichenbach, a mem- More than 350 student vol- each year. Through “He Was a Poem, He Was
ber of Students for a Democratic unteers represented the event’s These clients are usually senior a Song,” students and other members
Society, which participated in the
highest turnout yet, said Marquise citizens and disabled people. of the University community appre-
rally. Hudson, president of the service Several of these students were ciated the poetry, essays and musical
The event, held in front of the
group. a part of the UNITAS program, tributes of black culture.
DTH/Cameron Brown

J
post office, featured speeches by Volunteers were dispatched to a living and learning community “We have come forward in inter-
Clark, the president of UNC’s 16 different sites operated by sev- dedicated to encouraging under- esting ways, and we still have work oy Harrell performs “Songs of Love and Justice” accom-
chapter of the NAACP, Chapel Hilleral organizations, including A standing among students of diverse to do,” said Dr. L. Teresa Church, panied by Marisa D’Silva Whitesell on piano at Monday
Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt and Helping Hand, Meals on Wheels, backgrounds. who performed two spoken art
other local officials. Orange County Red Cross and the “As a part of the living and learn- pieces. “Without this holiday, night’s annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day program,
“(The people) we have cho- Ronald McDonald House. ing community, we commemorate reminding us of that, we might too “He Was a Poem, He Was a Song.” The performance at the
sen to serve on our local election Almost 100 student volunteers and continue Martin Luther King’s easily forget.”
legacy of empowerment,” said
Sonja Haynes Stone Center included four powerful songs.
boards can’t ensure justice alone,”
were sent to another project spon- Denise Mitchell, a junior psychol-
Kleinschmidt said. “They alone sored by the United Way at Christ freshman Vishalee Patel. ogy major, said King’s message of
can’t be charged with preserving United Methodist Church. They Senior Shuronia Johnson, a equality persists through time.
our liberties in a just community.
worked on various tasks includ- student volunteer, said she valued “What Dr. King stood for is
“It takes each and every one of
ing refinishing rocking chairs, the ideals of Martin Luther King timeless,” Mitchell said. “I feel like
you, too.” restoring computers and making
The rally was followed by a march
Valentine’s Day cards for veter-
Jr. and expressed her desire to
continue his legacy through her
it’s not only my duty to continue his
legacy but to spread it to others.” Voted
from the post office to First Baptist
Church for an 11 a.m. service.
ans.
This is the sixth year United Way
Fo r m e r n a t i o n a l NA A C P
has sponsored a project. In those
service.
“Since Martin Luther King did
a whole lot for the community, I
Joseph Jordan, the center’s
director and emcee of the event,
said the day felt like the culmina-
Carolina’s
president and long-time activist
Benjamin Chavis was the keynote
six years, Craig Chancellor, chief
executive officer of United Way of
felt I should follow in his footsteps
and give back to the community,”
tion of years of work.
“There’s still economic inequality,” Finest
speaker. Chavis is the central fig-
the Greater Triangle, said the proj- she said. Jordan said. “There’s racial inequal-
ure in Timothy Tyson’s book “Blood
ect has come a long way. “I believe that a day of service ity. There’s gender inequality. And
Done Sign My Name,” which talks “It started small, but it’s a tre- should not just be today, but every it still manifests itself right here at
about the murder of a young blackmendous way to celebrate Dr. day.” UNC’s campus, so you have to con-
man in Oxford, N.C., in 1970. King’s legacy because this is what tinue to fight wherever you are.”
he’s about,” Chancellor said. -Kaitlyn Knepp and
-Jamie Emmerman Several students volunteering at Sarayu Kumar - Jessica Kennedy

cuts the case of a 10 percent cut.


The University has yet to make
from page 1
predictions for a 15 percent cut.
president Erskine Bowles that Chancellors and provosts sys-
aims at leveraging the resources temwide have said that cuts of that
of the UNC system to address the magnitude would require drastic
needs of the state. cuts to the academic core of their
Both Ross and Gage said a universities.
timeline for the review is yet to be “We are all coming to grips with
determined. the fact that the world is changing,” HOURS:
And although they are unsure of Ross said. Mon-Thurs 11:30am-11:00pm
its results, the looming budget cuts “But failure is not an option, Fri-Sat 11:30am-11:30pm
make it necessary. in my view, there is no institution Sun Noon-11:00pm
“There are no immediate savings more important for the future of
but it’s the right thing to do,” she North Carolina.” 942-PUMP
www.yogurtpump.com 106 W. Franklin St. (Next to He’s Not Here)
said. 405661.CRTR

Right now, UNC is facing the Contact the State & National
elimination of 2,000 positions in Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.

finance McCoy, former vice president for


finance for the UNC system and
from page 1
interim chancellor for the University
Thorp said he will either create an in 1999. Mann said McCoy will lead
interim position or ask Mann to stay the search committee.
on longer if the post is unfilled by the Mann said there’s a good sys-
start of the 2011-12 fiscal year. Mann tem in place to help his successor
said he would stay on if asked. transition smoothly, joking that
But Thorp said he was confident his main goal when he arrived was
the search would finish within the to not mess anything up too badly,
allotted time because it will be free and that he thinks he succeeded.
from some of the constraints that “I hope I have (done well),” he
other searches have encountered. said. “Nobody’s run me out, and
“When you’re looking for a CFO that’s mainly because of the people
you’re not tied to the academic cal- working for me.”
endar,” he said.
On Friday, Mann said he planned Contact the University Editor
to meet Monday with William at university@dailytarheel.com.

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6 tuesday, january 18, 2011 News The Daily Tar Heel

N.C. Congressman National and World News N&W

to lead TARP probe Know more on Steve Jobs announces leave; analysts
today’s top story: expect drop in the company’s stock
Some analysts think Jobs’ SAN JOSE, Calif. (MCT) — The stunning news, made
announcement could drop Apple CEO Steve Jobs, who has even more troubling by the lack
Rep. McHenry to play important role federal regulators for working on
“gut instinct” without objective Apple’s stock by 15 percent battled cancer for years, told of details on what’s wrong or how
criteria. h tt p : / / b i t . l y/ h 8 B ff b (v i a employees in an e-mail Monday long Jobs may be gone, came a
WASHINGTON, D.C. (MCT) This week, McHenry is finally That follows another of Forbes) that he is taking another medical day before the company is set to
— Republicans on the top con- expected to learn which members McHenry’s concerns: whether the W h o i s A p p l e’s C h i e f leave of absence. announce its first-quarter financial
gressional investigations panel will sit on his subcommittee. He’s Treasury Department implement- Operating Officer Tim Cook? The message, which was released results. Wall Street is closed for the
will launch hundreds of hearings still hiring staff for the panel and ed federal policy by inconsistent Here’s some biographical to the media early Monday morn- Martin Luther King holiday, but
on the Obama administration in doesn’t yet know when the first deal-making and pushed an ill- information http://abcn.ws/ ing, said Apple Chief Operating the news sent Nasdaq-100 Index
the coming year — and one of the hearing will take place — or what conceived purchase of Wachovia by fEY0j6 (via ABC News) Officer Tim Cook will take over stock futures tumbling, along with
chief oversight agents will be Rep. it might be about. Wells Fargo in 2008, rather than Check out a timeline of the day-to-day leadership of the shares traded in Germany.
Patrick McHenry, R-N.C. But he knows some of the priori- bailing out the N.C.-based bank. Apple’s milestones http:// company, a role he has played pre- Analysts expect a significant
McHenry, 35, is no stranger to ties, both for his panel and the full “Why did Wachovia not meet lat.ms/gJfq1R (via The Los viously. Jobs said he will remain as drop in the company’s stock when
partisan politics on the national committee. They include taking the threshold of being saved?” he Angeles Times) CEO. the U.S. markets open Tuesday as
stage, establishing himself over another look at the roles of Fannie asked. “I have great confidence that some panicked investors sell off
the past three terms as a solid Mae and Freddie Mac in the finan- McHenry has close ties to the Go to http://www.dai- Tim and the rest of the executive their shares.
conservative and eager irritant cial meltdown of 2008. “It was a workings of the housing and finan- lytarheel.com/index.php/ management team will do a ter- According to some recent news
to Democrats when they were in contagion for this crisis,” he said. cial industries. His district covers section/state to discuss rific job executing the exciting reports, Jobs has appeared increas-
charge. He’s worried about cash- 10 western North Carolina coun- Jobs’ leave of absence. plans we have in place for 2011,” ingly frail, according to people who
But with Republicans now in strapped states such as Illinois and ties, including parts of Gaston, Jobs wrote. have seen him.
charge of the House, McHenry California coming to the federal Lincoln and Iredell counties.
will take the lead role on the
Subcommittee on TARP, Financial
government seeking bailouts.
And he thinks the government’s
He also serves on the financial
services committee. And in the past
652 killed due to Obama celebrates Gi≠ords responds
Services and Bailouts of Public and
Private Programs. That puts him in
Home Affordable Modification
Program — HAMP — is in dire
campaign cycle, he took in nearly
$275,000 from financial, insurance
Brazilian flood MLK day at school well to surgery
charge of probing some of the key straits. and real estate companies - more RIO DE JANEIRO (MCT) LOS ANGELES (MCT) — LOS ANGELES (MCT) —
concerns of U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa, the For all these issues, McHenry than a fourth of his total contribu- — The number of dead in President Barack Obama com- Surgeons at Tucson’s University
California Republican who chairs the expects his staff will visit with the tions, according to the Center for flooding and mudslides in the memorated Martin Luther King Medical Center on Monday
full House Committee on Oversight inspector generals of the various Responsive Politics. Brazilian state of Rio de Janeiro Jr. by leading his administration said they had operated on
and Government Reform. federal financial agencies. Asked what those companies reached 652 on Monday. in performing a day of service in Rep. Gabrielle Giffords’ skull
“There’s plenty of oversight that Just Thursday, the special expect of McHenry in his new role, The disaster has affected the honor of the assassinated civil Saturday to repair damage to her
needs to be done,” McHenry said inspector general for TARP issued he said, “I haven’t asked them. mountainous area of the state, rights leader. eye sockets caused by the bullet
in an interview last week. “There’s a report on the $20 billion tax- “Any contributions to my cam- and worst hit are the cities Nova Obama, wife Michelle and their that passed through her head in
plenty to look at in terms of gov- payer bailout paid to Citigroup in paign are a representation that Friburgo, with 302 dead, and daughters visited Stuart-Hobson the shooting a week earlier.
ernment inefficiency, duplicative November 2008 to keep it afloat. they buy into my way of think- Teresopolis with 272 dead. In Middle School in Washington, The medical team had made
programs, how decisions will be The deal worked, the probe ing — not the other way around,” the historic city of Petropolis, where the president and first lady minor repairs to the orbits
made.” found, but investigators criticized McHenry said. home to luxury vacation villas, helped paint fruit characters in the around her eyes when she was
there were 57 dead, with a fur- school cafeteria to encourage better first brought in for surgery in
ther 19 killed in Sumidouro and eating habits. Nutrition and fighting order to relieve pressure on her
two more in Sao Jose do Vale do childhood obesity are top causes for brain, but they didn’t want to
Rio Preto. Michelle Obama, who celebrated spend a lot of time on it then, Dr.
The Red Cross complained her 47th birthday on Monday. Michael Lemole, the neurosur-
Monday that municipal officials “This is part of what America is geon who was part of the trauma
in Teresopolis were hindering all about,” Obama told pool report- team that cared for her, said at a
its efforts to rescue survivors. ers. “After a painful week where Monday news conference.
“It’s an embarrassing situa- so many of us were focused on “We put it off until such time
tion,” Red Cross doctor Martius tragedy, it’s good for us to remind as she was through the critical
de Oliveira was quoted as saying ourselves of what this country’s all period,” he said. “We did want
in the online edition of the daily about. This kind of service project to repair it within a reasonable
O Globo. is what’s best in us.” time to prevent complications.”

Faculty Service Award Ad 11_Faculty Service Award DTH Ad 1/6/11 5:33 PM Page 1
WORKSHOPS

Successful Students use Resources


http://learningcenter.unc.edu
http://unc.edu/asp
Academic Success Workshops FACULTY
SPRING 2011

JAN 18

JAN 26
Time Management
(4-5pm, Pleasants Family Room, Wilson Library)

Active Studying
SERVIC
AWARD
E
(4-5pm, Pleasants Family Room, Wilson Library)

FEB 1 Conquering College Reading


(4-5pm, Pleasants Family Room, Wilson Library) Congratulations to Joseph S. Ferrell ’60
FEB 10 Test Taking 2011 recipient of the General Alumni Association’s Faculty Service Award
(4-5pm, Pleasants Family Room, Wilson Library)
Established in 1990, the GAA’s Faculty Service Award honors faculty members who
have performed outstanding service for the University or the General Alumni Association.
FEB 28 Managing Writing Assignments
(4-5pm, Pleasants Family Room, Wilson Library)
PAST RECIPIENTS
MAR 14 Using Sources
(4-5pm, Pleasants Family Room, Wilson Library) 2010 H. Shelton Earp III ’70 1999 Berton H. Kaplan ’53 (MSPA, ’62 PhD)
2009 James H. Johnson Jr. 1998 James L. Peacock III
MAR 22 Technology for Reading, Writing and Studying 2008 Judith Welch Wegner 1997 Chuck Stone
(4-5pm, Pleasants Family Room, Wilson Library) 2007 George Lensing Jr. 1996 Rollie Tillman Jr. ’55
2006 Jane D. Brown 1995 Richard Grant Hiskey
2005 John P. “Jack” Evans 1994 Richard J. Richardson
Sponsored by: 2004 J. Douglas Eyre
Mary Turner Lane ’53 (MEd)
1993
1992
David M. Griffiths
Joel Schwartz
The Learning Center & 2003
2002
Thad Beyle
William S. Powell ’40 (’47 BSLS, ’47 MA)
Doris Waugh Betts ’54
1991 William F. Little ’52 (MA,’55 PhD)
The Academic Success Program for 2001 William E. Leuchtenburg 1990 H.G. Jones
Students with LD and ADHD 2000 Ruel W. Tyson Jr.

Be resourceful: Post this in your room


and put it in your planner today!
405687.CRTR
General Alumni Association
The Daily Tar Heel News tuesday, january 18, 2011 7

theater kyser
from page 3 from page 3

assist them in paying for the space, from Bill and Ida Friday, who lived
which is one of the more expensive at the corner of Raleigh Road
campus venues. Instead, they are and Franklin Street in the house
partnering with a group they would reserved for the UNC-system presi-
not name to fund the production. dent.
“The new opportunity arose and Georgia Kyser and Ida Friday
it was a better fit for us,” said Elissa became fast friends, Bill Friday
Rumer, executive business director said.
for Pauper. “It began when Mrs. Friday was
Also in April, UNC Opera—a class in an art class, and Mrs. Kyser came
within the Department of Music in and was auditing it,” he said.
—will produce Mozart’s “The Magic “Mrs. Friday said, ‘You shouldn’t
Flute” with limited orchestration. audit it, you should take it.’
“‘The Magic Flute’ is one of the “That friendship lasted for half
quintessential operas performed a century.”
all over the world,” said junior Lily Together, the two founded the
Roberts, a UNC Opera performer. Preservation Society of Chapel Hill
In February, EROT is assisting in 1972.
in the production of “Kind of Blue,” dth File/Jessica Kennedy The society, located at the Horace
a performance based on the music The Historic Playmakers Theatre is hosting several upcoming shows by Williams House on Rosemary
of Miles Davis. campus groups such as Pauper Players, CUAB, UNC Opera and EROT. Street, operates a revolving fund
The production will be written for buying and improving endan-
and directed by UNC students able to use the space.” “The show is part of our Process gered historic properties.
Kuamel Stewart and Jamila Reddy, In addition to some student- Series, which is a collection of differ- It also works with the town to
respectively. produced shows, the theater will ent performance pieces that are still establish historic districts and
Thursday, the CUAB will pres- be used for a panel discussion with in development,” said Mark Steffen, document historic buildings, land-
ent local band Hammer No More performance artist Marc Bamuthi events manager for the executive scapes and structures.
the Fingers in its first event of the Joseph. director of the arts. “They’re not Ernest Dollar, the preservation
semester. The discussion will occur a few considered final works.” society’s director, said he feels hon-
“Historic Playmakers suits the days before a performance of his ored to have worked with Georgia
size of our show almost perfectly,” “red black and GREEN: a blues” Contact the Arts Editor Kyser, who stayed involved with
Sullivan said. “We’re excited to be in Gerrard Hall on Saturday. at arts@dailytarheel.com. the group into her 80s.
“She was a drop-dead bomb-

Perdue’s approval increases


shell,” Dollar said. “Even up into
her 90s, she was still gorgeous.”
And the nation was reminded of
Georgia Kyser’s good looks in 2007,

Poll: Republicans aren’t favored both chambers,” he said.


But legislators from both par-
when SPAM celebrated its 70th
anniversary by releasing limited-
ties agreed that the Republican win edition tins with retro labels. Photos Courtesy of the Preservation Society of Chapel hill
by viviana bonilla lopez Ingalls, assistant director of Public last November wasn’t an indication “They went and found this pic- In 1972, Georgia Kyser, left, and Ida Friday founded the Preservation
staff writer Policy Polling. that the public favored the party. ture of an old-timey lady, and it was Society of Chapel Hill, which helps endangered historic properties.
A recent poll shows that N.C. The poll, which surveyed 520 “Voters haven’t decided that they Georgia Kyser,” Dollar said.
voters don’t favor Republican leg-
islators over Democratic ones.
registered voters in North Carolina,
showed a 17-point increase in Gov.
prefer Republicans,” Blackwell said.
“They decided they want change.”
Kimberly Kyser said her moth-
er’s face has started coming up for
death by her husband, Kay, and a
daughter, Carroll. She is survived
“She was a drop-
It also shows an increase in Gov. Perdue’s approval ratings. This sentiment was echoed by use in many products recently as by her daughters Kimberly and dead bombshell.
Bev Perdue’s approval ratings dur- “The further we get from the Faison. the copyrights for her modeling Amanda and five grandchildren.
ing a time of economic crisis in the poor decisions that she made and “I don’t think they were put in photographs expire. The family plans to hold a cel- Even up into her
state. the actions she failed to take, peo- because they were Republican,” he “Eighteen years ago I went into ebration of life service in Chapel
Public Policy Polling, a North ple are inclined to forget,” said N.C. said. a Macy’s in Atlanta, and there was Hill in two weeks. 90s, she was still
Carolina-based company that
conducts monthly polls on voter
Rep. Hugh Blackwell, R-Burke.
But N.C. Sen. Bill Faison,
“They were put in because of dis-
content with the economy.”
a whole wall of my mother’s face in
frames,” she said. “They just liked
The location has not yet been
determined.
gorgeous.”
attitudes in the state, released the D-Caswell, disagrees. her face. They didn’t know who it Ernest Dollar, President, Chapel
updated results last Dec. 21. “I thought Governor Perdue Contact the State & National was.” Contact the City Editor hill preservation society
“I would say the results are not showed great leadership when she Editor at state@dailytarheel.com. Georgia Kyser is preceded in at city@dailytarheel.com.
all that surprising,” said Dustin organized and came to meet with

Students react to party approval ratings


“I think the back and forth is always
Abroad
http://studyabroad.unc.edu
going to happen as long as people are
Study

unhappy with the legislation that is Thinking About Studying Abroad?


going through, or in the case, the lack
of legislation.”
Start Now!
Alexis Kessler, Sophomore, Economics
JANUARY 18
“Maybe people are second-guessing
Latin American Info Session • 4pm • Room 2008 of the GEC
what they voted.”
Study Abroad 101 Info Session • 6pm • Room 2008 of the GEC
Malhar Patel, Freshman, Chemistry

Find out about program options, requirements, financial aid, course credits.
“It’s a backlash of people not being Don’t wait, get going on planning your international experience by attending this session.
happy with Obama or the Democratic
To get more information, contact the Study Abroad Office.
Party in general.” 962-7002 ~ http://studyabroad.unc.edu
Lindsay Rosenfeld, Sophomore, International Studies

Volunteers for
Chest Cold Study!
Cough, Cold, Mucus?
Are you experiencing chest congestion,
productive cough, or mucus from a cold that
started within the last 6 days?
The University of North Carolina is conducting a
clinical research study on the effects of an FDA
approved medication. A comprehensive health
assessment will be conducted prior to beginning
the research study.
Consider participating in this study if:
• You or a member of your family is 18 to
65 years old
• Experiencing a chest cold
• In good general health, and
• Non-smoker, no asthma, and no current
active allergies
If you qualify and are enrolled you will receive a
study-related medical evaluation and study
medication at no cost. You will be compensated
for your time and travel.
To learn more, please contact Heather at (919) 843-8472
by email at: heather_duckworth@med.unc.edu or contact
Aline at 919-843-9108 by email at: kala_aline@med.unc.edu

405435.CRTR
8 tuesday, january 18, 2011 Opinion The Daily Tar Heel

Sarah Frier
QUOTE OF THE DAY:
The Daily Tar Heel EDITOR, 962-4086
Frier@email.unc.edu
EDITorial BOARD members

Cameron Parker callie bost Greg Smith “My coaching stunk and we stunk
Established 1893, Opinion EDITOR
Robert Fleming Shruti Shah
117 years
of editorial freedom
cdp@unc.edu
Pat ryan
Taylor Holgate
Sam Jacobson
Nathan D’ambrosio
Taylor Haulsee
… I’d fight somebody with a
chainsaw right now.”
associate opinion EDITOR Maggie Zellner
pcryan@email.unc.edu

Roy Williams, basketball coach, on a loss to


EDITORIAL CARTOON By Guile Contreras, gcontrer@email.unc.edu
Georgia Tech

Featured online reader comment:


“$16 isn’t much, but when you add
Sarah Dugan
On Wellness & Wellbeing
up all the little fees for every semes-
Senior environmental health science
major from Asheville.
ter, they amount to quite a bit.”
E-mail: sdugan@email.Unc.Edu tomservo, on the proposed $16 student fee for
union renovation

Hug an LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

art major: Submit applications for NC


Fellows Program by Jan. 24
flawed, they should vote against
the referendum.

they need TO THE EDITOR:


If you’re a freshman looking
Alex Mills
Speaker Pro Tempore

the love
for a place on campus to seri- Student Congress
ously discuss the meaning and
importance of leadership, ser- Silent Sam a monument to
vice and diversity, applying to pre-Civil War enslavement

I
be a member of the N.C. Fellows
am proposing a new holiday Program might be the next step TO THE EDITOR:

Keep race clean and fair


for Jan. 18: “Hug an Art for you. We’re a tight-knit com- Somehow I do not recall the
Major Day.” The holiday munity engaged in all different denizens of the Tar Heel state
will be aimed at showing art aspects of University and local complaining in the spring of 2003
majors how much we appreci- life, and we’d love for you to join that Iraq was doing violence to
ate them and need their work in
our society. Base behavior by candidates must not set us.
The N.C. Fellows Program
history when the statue of Saddam
Hussein was removed and disman-
Art is usually given a backseat
in school curriculums. But it has the tone for the upcoming election is a process of individual and
collaborative growth through
tled. But the demagogues among
us make precisely that point when

T
the ability to inspire us to think inquiry and reflection. Fellows the issue is bruited about remov-
critically and to give us personal he Board of Elections after there was no evidence undercut other people’s cam-
take a 3-credit seminar on lead- ing that monument to the defense
fulfillment — two important voted this week to provided to support the com- paigns.
ership philosophies and styles in of slavery that defaces the other-
steps on the path to mental well- throw out the charges of plaint. The candidates for this the fall semester of their sopho- wise lovely UNC campus. I refer
being. campaign fraud against Rick Ingram successfully defend- year’s race will meet with the more year, and go on weekend to the statue known as “Silent
According to the National Ingram. ed the e-mails sent on his BOE today. At this meeting retreats in their freshman, Sam” (which should be called
Center for Education Statistics, The decision was the right behalf to the BOE’s satisfaction the candidates will officially junior and senior years. Fellows “Pro-Slavery Sam”: it was built
visual and performing arts has one for this case. But this and to ours. Yet notably, as the declare their intent to run can also apply for partial fund- to commemorate the so-called
consistently been one of the doesn’t mean that there’s no person who brought charges for student body president ing for summer internships, and Confederate States of America
least popular majors, and UNC they attend monthly meetings
lesson to be learned. against Lee, he failed to sub- and the campaign season will and their abortive secession from
is no exception. with community leaders during the U.S. in the name of enslaving
According to data from the The fact that two poten- mit any evidence supporting officially begin.
tial campaigns were investi- his claims. We urge the candidates to run the academic year. Africans). Of course, nowadays
UNC Registrar, for the 2010 Please visit http://leadership. we are told with a straight face
spring semester, only about 2.8 gated even before the spring This is hardly the tone that a clean and fair race. Candidates
semester suggests that some anyone wants to set for a cam- should exercise proper judgment unc.edu/index.php/programs/ that secession was about “states’
percent of undergraduates were nc-fellows for more information rights,” not slavery, which barely
majoring in studio art, music or potential candidates may be paign season. in regulating their campaigns to
about the program. Applications passes the giggle test.
dramatic art. more interested in stretching Whether or not these two adhere to the code. are due by 5 p.m. on Jan. 24 Pro-Slavery Sam is a senti-
Compare that with the the rules rather than acting in charges were merited, an elec- UNC needs a strong and in the Carolina Leadership nel and warning that armed
percentage of UNC students good faith. tion cycle with this kind of moral leader. It does not need Development office (Student right-wing revolt — “Second
enrolled in social sciences majors This past November, Ingram accusatory atmosphere must someone who is adept at shirk- Union, Room 3505) . Amendment solutions” — forev-
(16 percent) or biology (8 per- filed a complaint against not become the norm. ing the rules. We look forward to reading ermore remain an option. That
cent). Student Body Secretary Ian Student body presidents Therefore, in this election, your application. such a monument to violence and
Why is the number of art racism can coexist on a campus as
majors so small? One reason is
Lee claiming that he violated should be elected because of a we look forward to clean cam-
Title VI of the Student Code fair presentation of their mer- paigns and proper debate to Charlie Sellew presumably enlightened as UNC
that the arts are often seen as Chairman is chilling. In light of the national
merely a hobby, and there is a by stating publicly his intent its, not their ability to secretly help the student body decide
to run for SBP. drum up support before it’s who its next president will N.C. Fellows selection conversation ignited by the recent
fear that majoring in the arts will committee 2011 tragedy in Arizona, should the
not earn you enough money and The charges were dropped allowed, or their ability to be.
message that UNC sends to the
will not give you the power to
bring about real social or political Student Congress right to mentally deranged be a status

The university legacy


vote against referendum of an armed man in defense of a
change. wrongheaded political cause?
Consequently, students look- TO THE EDITOR: Student leaders — including
ing for a “real” major often I take issue with the editorial those that administer this worthy
choose a major in business or (“Let my people vote,” Jan. 14) newspaper — should immediately
the sciences, thinking that these
majors will give them better tools Don’t cross line between meritocracy and aristocracy arguing that Student Congress
has no role to play in the pro-
engage in urgent consultations
with the UNC Board of Trustees

F
to make changes in the world posed debt fee for the renovation to remove the eyesore and obscene
than a major in the arts ever or years, UNC has sought not provide more preference to preference to legacy applicants
to strike a happy medi- legacy candidates for financial is unfair to minority and low- of the Student Union. The edi- insult that is Pro-Slavery Sam.
could. torial claimed that Congress is
However, art is an integral um between the values of reasons. income students whose par-
derailing the debt fee by proce- Gerald Horne
part of our society and contrib- equality and fairness that lie at A recent study found that ents did not attend UNC. Some
dural maneuvers, and prevent- Chapel Hill resident
utes to society’s betterment in its very core, while still main- nationally, legacy students have argue legacy applicants who get ing a fair vote by the students.
several ways. taining a strong, inter-genera- a seven-times-greater chance preference take away slots from The fallacy is that a vote by stu-
For one, art actually does have Student Solicitor General
tional Chapel Hill family. of being accepted to univer- better-qualified candidates. dents would be fundamentally
the power to create social and To this end, UNC has a sities than their non-legacy Still, UNC has an obligation sought by executive branch
fairer than a vote by Congress.
political change by revealing responsibility to walk a fine counterparts. to maintain the tangible as Many of the future students TO THE EDITOR:
things about society that others
line between the meritocracy While there is no mention of well as intangible benefits of who would have to pay the fee The Executive Branch of
may overlook. over the next 30 years have not
it purports to condone and a preference for legacy admissions a Chapel Hill family. Fostering Student Government is looking
For example — in light even been born yet, and many
more comfortable aristocracy for in-state applicants at UNC, inter-generational ties instills for a student to serve as Student
of the Martin Luther King of the students who would vote
that helps to raise funds. out-of-state applicants do get a a deep and beneficial commit- Solicitor General for the remain-
Jr. holiday yesterday — the in the referendum will graduate
Legacy preference is an slight boost. Of the nearly 3,000 ment to the University. der of the spring term.
African American Civil Rights this year and never have to pay
important part of what keeps out-of-state students accepted This, combined with the The Student Solicitor General
Movement was helped along the fee. serves as counsel for the Student
by black artists, such as poet our family strong, but only as at UNC, nearly 8 percent have economic difficulties that The fact is that the proposed Body when it appears before the
Langston Hughes. long as UNC retains its com- either a parent or step-parent alumni donations help to sat- debt fee increase has been Student Supreme Court, views
Hughes wrote in his poems mitment to properly balance who attended UNC. isfy, means that legacy prefer- rejected once already, by the and investigates possible viola-
about his belief in human equal- family ties with the meritoc- Diversity has always been ence that properly balances student fee audit committee, tions of the Student Code and
ity and color-blind brotherhood. racy it has always been. a significant driver of UNC’s the University’s other commit- a group of students appointed issues advisory opinions upon
Art also brings our attention to As budget cuts and tuition growth and progress as an aca- ments to diversity and merit by the student body president, request of any member of the
the pleasures in life that our busy
increases continue to affect demic institution. This would in the admissions process graduate and professional stu- student body.
schedules often prevent us from dent federation president, and
the University, the admissions seemingly make any legacy shouldn’t be eradicated. If you are an undergradu-
enjoying. Student Congress to carefully
department has a responsibil- preference problematic. It just shouldn’t get out of ate or graduate student with an
The generations before us study student fee proposals
ity to maintain its balance, and Some have argued that giving hand. interest in law, this is a wonder-
worked hard to ensure that we and provide recommendations. ful opportunity to practice those
would have comfortable lives Hence, the opposition encoun- skills while in the service of our
made convenient by technology.

Global shift for Strauss


tered in the student affairs com- University’s student body and
Art is just as important to per- mittee could hardly be charac- government. Applications are
sonal fulfillment in modern life terized as unexpected. open to all undergraduate and
as any other aspect. Decisions about taking on graduate students and can be
Creating and enjoying art can more debt in the name of the obtained from Zealan Hoover,
allow us to better enjoy and cel-
ebrate the world around us. Strauss a fine choice to lead UNC Global next generation of students
should not be made via a popu-
chief of staff for external appoint-
ments, at zthoover@gmail.com.
The Greeks taught us that

A
larity contest. We have already Applications are being reviewed
human life is too short not to be fter interviews with trative positions in the com- lies and HIV/AIDS, and he seen the Union spend $1,300 on a rolling basis with an absolute
filled with pleasure. This is an finalists for associate ing months, and will need to is a strong supporter of UNC of student money to market the deadline of 5 p.m. Friday. If you
important philosophy that we provost for UNC Global, continue to carefully evaluate Global. proposal to students; should the or someone you know is interest-
often forget. Executive Vice Chancellor and spending options. As associate provost for referendum pass Congress, they ed in this position, we encourage
The contributions that art Provost Bruce Carney made Strauss has been serving UNC Global, Strauss will be would certainly spend more to you to apply.
brings to social and political the wise decision to name an as interim chief international responsible for building more attempt to influence the vote. If
movements and the important members of Student Congress
messages it can give us about
internal administrator, current officer for a year and is a great international partnerships and Hogan Medlin
Executive Associate Provost choice for the position. attracting more professors with judge the proposed fee to be Student Body President
enjoying life are in danger of
becoming forgotten, since such a Ron Strauss, to the position. He’s had a prolific career at international studies expertise.
small number of UNC students Furthermore, Carney’s deci- UNC. He joined the UNC fac- Additionally, he will continue
sion to redistribute responsi- ulty in 1974, and at the time to work on improving UNC’s
SPEAK OUT department and phone number.
choose to major in art. ➤ Edit: The DTH edits for space, clar-
So it is our duty to show all art bilities instead of hiring anoth- of his appointment as execu- international reputation. We Writing guidelines: ity, accuracy and vulgarity.
majors and future artists that we er person for the position is an tive associate provost, Strauss are confident he can deliver on ➤ Please type: Handwritten Limit letters to 250 words.
letters will not be accepted.
appreciate them and need their important step, particularly as held joint appointments in the this mandate. SUBMISSION:
➤ Sign and date: No more than
art in our lives. UNC is faced with tighter bud- schools of Dentistry, Public While we recognize the two people should sign letters. ➤ Drop-off: at our office at 151 E.
And underclassmen, if you are get constraints. Health and Medicine. He is importance of filling the ➤ Students: Include your year,
Rosemary Street.
looking to make a difference in As the University faces a year also the dental director of the UNC Global position, Provost major and phone number. ➤ E-mail: opinion@dailytarheel.com
society, a major in the arts is not ➤ Faculty/staff: Include your ➤ Send: to P.O. Box 3257, Chapel
of historic budget restraints, it UNC Craniofacial Center. Carney and Executive Associate Hill, N.C., 27515.
to be overlooked.
makes sense to capitalize on Strauss’s research interests Provost Strauss should be com-
Wednesday: the resources already available include evaluation of the social mended for their willingness to EDITOR’S NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily represent the opinions
Taylor Fulton gives her perspective when possible. impacts of chronic health prob- take on more, particularly as of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel edito-
on the enduring legacy of Dr. Martin UNC will have to fill a lems with specific interests on the University faces challeng- rial board. The board consists of nine board members, the associate opinion editor, the
Luther King Jr. number of top-level adminis- stigma, craniofacial anoma- ing economic times. opinion editor and the editor.
The Daily Tar Heel News tuesday, january 18, 2011 9

Faculty Council alters curriculum


Gen. Ed. requirements changed Curricula.
T h e Fa c u l ty C o u n c i l w a s
required to review the “Making
by Alexa Burrell never really been implemented, has Connections” curriculum, which
staff writer been taken off the books formally, was implemented in fall 2006 and
The Faculty Council passed five so now we have an honest cur- replaced a 25-year-old curricu-
recommendations on Dec. 17 that riculum,” said Erika Lindemann, lum.
will affect the General Education associate dean for undergraduate “When the curriculum was put
requirements for undergraduate curricula. into place, there was a mandate
students. The final change that goes to look at it,” said Andrea Biddle,
“The faculty is committed to the into effect in the fall is in the an associate professor. “This was
principle that students study in way that students can fulfill the the opportunity to evaluate what
breadth (general education) and Supplemental Education require- worked and what didn’t.”
in depth (majors),” Bobbi Owen, ment. Students were able to express
senior associate dean for under- They can now do so by complet- concerns about the curriculum
graduate education, wrote in an ing a second major or minor, three revision through forums, drop
e-mail. courses above 199 that are not boxes and other suggestions,
For freshmen entering the used to fulfill the student’s major Lindemann said.
University this fall, placement into requirement or completing a con- “Students have been very much
level 4 of a foreign language now centration outside a professional involved in the curriculum review,”
fulfills the Foundations foreign school. she said.
language requirement through Lindemann said the supplemen- Owen said any problems stu-
level 3. tal education change would allow dents have with the new changes
Students were previously students more flexibility with the should be able to be handled by
required to take a level 3 for- requirement. advising.
eign language course even if they As of this semester, no more Going forward, council mem-
placed into level 4 of that lan- than two General Education des- bers and administrators are focus-
guage. ignations may be assigned to a ing on communicating the changes
Also included in the revisions, new or revised course, unless the and existing General Education
students may only count one life- Curriculum Committee finds a case requirements to parents, students
time fitness course towards gradu- where a course meets the criteria and faculty.
ation, and the Foreign-Language for a third designation. “We need to be able to explain
dth/Logan Savage In t e n s i v e r e q u i r e m e n t w a s The 2006 curriculum was that to them,” Lindemann said.
Kendra Kulberg (top) runs across the icy, cracked blacktop in front of the monkey bars, which the children are repealed. reviewed by 52 faculty members,
not allowed to use. The school is competing online for funds to repair their blacktop and playground. “ T h e Fo r e i g n - L a n g u a g e advising staff members and mem- Contact the University Editor
Intensive requirement, which has bers of the Office of Undergraduate at university@dailytarheel.com.

School competes for funds Blitz BUilding


Pepsi grant could help playground HOW TO VOTE
Visit: http://www.refresheverything.
com/playgroundforgab
by John Hamlin staff wearing buttons designed
Text: Text 73774 and in the subject
staff writer around the Pepsi logo to remind
line put 105202
Third-grader Ben Kulberg and people to vote every day.
his friends struggle to entertain “Mainly, this has been the grass- Pepsi money would complicate but
themselves during recess. roots effort of reaching out to all of not derail the school’s plans.
That’s because state budget cuts our personal contacts,” Jones said. “If this Pepsi grant came in,
have left Hillsborough’s Grady A. “But we need everybody in we’ve already talked to builders,
Brown Elementary School’s play- Hillsborough and all of Orange they could have it in by June,” she
ground low on the list of priorities County to help us.” said. “But if we have to just contin-
for funding. The school’s push for the Pepsi ue to fundraise, we might just try to
“There’s nothing to do on it,” playground money hasn’t been do things in installments.”
Ben said. “It’s an open field. It’s without obstacles. Fifth-grade teacher Beth Quick
just nothing.” None of the school’s students meet said her class has noticed a link
To remedy this, the PTA decid- the 13-year-old age requirement to between their academic performance
ed last June to build a playground vote. Moreover, Jones said the school and level of physical activity.
during the next two years. But has to compete with The Progressive “They were even saying, ‘If you’re
a $50,000 grant from the Pepsi Slate, which coordinates groups to physically active you feel better and
Refresh Project could have the vote for each other to increase their if you feel better you learn better,’”
playground ready in five months. chances of winning. Quick said.
“It would be a small miracle,” “There’s about six or seven grants Quick said she used the cam-
Principal Fay Jones said. that are kind of in a little alliance paign to teach her 5th graders per- DTH/ Katie Lubinsky

C
The school submitted a proposal coalition together voting for one suasive essay writing. Her students hancellor Holden Thorp presents blue nails to volunteers at UNC Habitat for
to the project in early December. another, and they’re kind of in the wrote that recess is their chance
Each month, people vote online for top ten,” Jones said. to mingle with students in other Humanity’s Build-A-Block Blitz. Over the holiday weekend, 280 students, faculty
the top 10 ideas of the pool, which The PTA has already raised classes, resolve interpersonal con- members and staff worked to build two houses in the Phoenix Place neighborhood
will receive $50,000 each. about $7,000, including $1,750 flicts and make choices for them- located off Rogers Road for University employees and their families. Since Sept. 11, the group
Grady Brown is competing with from the Just Push Play initiative, selves.
hundreds of other projects, ranging $1,000 from the Hillsborough “We want them to be creative has been working to build 10 houses. Visit dailytarheel.com to see a video of the build.
from scholarships to a sanctuary Exchange Club, $1,000 from the in their thinking outside without
for Labradors. The school reached school’s general budget, $1,000 us doing the leading,” Quick said.
the top 40 Monday night and has from the PTA and more than “This is their time for that.”
until Jan. 31 to crack the top 10. $3,000 from Orange County.

Champions in
Jones said the entire school has Ben’s mother, PTA member Contact the City Editor
gotten involved, with faculty and Rachel Kulberg, said losing the at city@dailytarheel.com.

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the courtroom

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Visit www.law.stetson.edu/justice to find out more.
10 January 18, 2011 Place a Classified: www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds or Call 919-962-0252

DTH Classifieds DTH office is open Mon-Fri 8:30am-5:00pm


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Announcements Child Care Wanted For Rent Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Summer Jobs
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HElP NEEDED WITH house remodeling CHILD CARE Email cover letter and resume other medical disciplines but not a counting course. $20/hr for 2-4 hrs/wk. Email
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details and price. 919-946-0867.
with Chapel Hill-Carrboro Schools: www.
FAIR HOUSINg Washer/Dryers info: www.endurancemag.com/index.php/ Care seeking healthy, non-smoking
females 21-30 to become egg do-
chccs.k12.nc.us Information on UNC cam-
pus in Student Union Room #2510 between
about. To apply: send your cover letter and
Announcements All REAl ESTATE AND RENTAl advertising in
this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair $600-$740/month resume to jobs@endurancemag.com. Ap- nors. $2,500 compensation for
COMPlETED cycle. All visits and pro- Personals 10am-3:30pm, January 13, 19 and 31. Email:
volunteer@chccs.k12.nc.us or call 967-8211
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to plication deadline is January 28, 2011. No
Compare to dorm prices! calls please. cedures to be done local to campus. ext. 28281.
advertise “any preference, limitation, or dis- For written information, please call TO MY BEST FRIEND: You’re the one every-
www.chapelhillrentals.org
The AIDS Course crimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin, or
lEGAl ASSISTANT: Carolina Student legal 919-966-1150 ext. 5 and leave your one comes to for answers. Be sure you’ve COACH WRITE: Conference one on one with
students to improve their writing skills. Train-
AIDS: Principles, Practices, Politics an intention to make any such preference, limi-
tation, or discrimination.” This newspaper will
919-933-5296 Services is seeking candidates for its legal as-
sistant position to begin July 1, 2011. Duties
current mailing address. got your facts right! Take the AIDS Course,
Spring, Tuesdays, 5:30-6:45pm, one credit. ing scheduled for 1/19 or 2/1 at 5:30-9pm.
Preregister: sphillips@chccs.k12.nc.us or
Spring, Tuesday: 5:30-6:45pm 405616
include typing, filing, reception, bookkeeping Enroll in Public Health 420, Section 1 (Un-
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Enroll in Public Health 420 informed that all dwellings advertised in this for students. Flexible hours. $8-13/hr. Includ- SCHOOl READING PARTNERS: Help begin-
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weekly, Chapel Hill-Carrboro Public Schools.
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CRIBS PHOTO CONTEST Today is a 7 - Don’t believe everything
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BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION 2011 Resolve it with communication, and put
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come from the heart. Dance with the
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Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
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The Daily Tar Heel Sports tuesday, january 18, 2011 11

woes tennis needs to be on the court as much


as he can.
from page 12 from page 12
“Experience has been a big thing
Big men Tyler Zeller and John that. This is real — everything we for me,” Baker said. “The more
Henson were rendered ineffective do is real.” matches I play, the better I get. Just
for much of the game. Though None of the four nationally being able to go out there and feel
they combined for a modest 20 ranked Tar Heels participated in healthy takes a lot of pressure off
points, they only pulled down eight the tournament. No. 30 sopho- me. To be able to compete at a high
rebounds. UNC shooting guard more Jose Hernandez and No. 90 level, I just really enjoy it.”
Dexter Strickland led the Tar Heels junior Brennan Boyajian were in Junior Cameron Ahari was the
with seven rebounds. La Quinta, Calif., for the National lone starter from North Carolina’s
Georgia Tech’s starters outscored Collegiate Tennis Classic, an invi- 2010 NCAA tournament matches
UNC’s 64-36 in the game. That dis- tation-only tournament featuring to play in the Invitational. He
parity was evident from the start. singles and doubles draws. played most of the 2010 season at
Williams took his five starters out The two earned spots in each the number five flight. The five oth-
of the game within the first three draw — individually in singles and ers —Baker, Hunter, juniors Taylor
minutes, and although the bench as a doubles team. It was the first Meyer and Alex Rafiee, and sopho-
gave UNC a lift at times, Williams time this season they have been more William Parker — saw only
just couldn’t find a group of five paired together for doubles play. limited action in team play.
players that gelled. The other two ranked UNC play- But Ahari said he still couldn’t
“We didn’t come in freakin’ ers, junior Joey Burkhardt (No. 58) assume his spot in this season’s
ready to play. But overconfident? and senior Stefan Hardy (No. 103), lineup was secure.
How the crap — and I’m not get- remained in North Carolina but did “We all need to step our game
ting mad at you (the reporter), not participate in the Invitational. up, because you never know what
I’m mad at the world. We stunk. Hardy was invited to California could happen,” Ahari said. “We all
My coaching stunk and we stunk,” with Hernandez and Boyajian, but have to be at our best for when the
Williams said. elected to stay behind and rest. team needs us, for whenever we’re
“We just weren’t as intense as we With Hardy resting, Baker was called.”
need to be to start playing basket- the sole Tar Heel senior to play in
ball. And again, don’t take it as I’m either tournament. After three sea- Contact the Sports Editor
jumping on you. I’d fight somebody sons plagued by injuries, he said he at sports@dailytarheel.com.
with a chainsaw right now.”

dth/Erin Hull
But the Tar Heels didn’t have
much time to linger on the loss, wrestling period and saw that he was really
close to getting pinned,” Ferguson
from page 12
Daniel Miller stuffs John Henson’s shot in North Carolina’s 78-58 loss at Georgia Tech on Sunday. UNC shot and perhaps it’s better for them said.
27.6 percent on the night — its worst shooting percentage since 1956. GT’s starters outscored UNC’s 64-36. that way. In the locker room after three bouts on their way to a 32-10 “Once he’s a little tired and I’m
Sunday’s game, freshman forward victory. up by a lot of points, he’s not going
turnovers “They got into the passing lanes a lot Harrison Barnes’ mind was already
on tonight’s matchup against
O t h e r t h a n C o r e y Mo c k ,
though, redshirt freshman Zac
to care if he gets pinned.”
Senior Danny Lopes gave the
from page 12

game the better team, in large part


and just swiping the ball when we get it Clemson.
“It’s just a mentality,” Barnes
Bennett and redshirt junior
Thomas Ferguson were the only
team its first major decision of the
day when he won his matchup 11-1
because of talented forwards John down low and we’re driving.” said. “We just need to come out other Tar Heels to notch victo- in the 141-pound class.
Henson and Tyler Zeller. with more of the aggressor and not ries against the Hokies. Ferguson The only three winners from
In order to neutralize this threat, Kendall Marshall, UNC guard waiting for them to attack us first. came out strong against Matt the first match — Ferguson,
the Yellow Jackets made sure to “We need to change that versus Epperly, recording a take down Mock and Bennett — continued
step into UNC’s passing lanes to us more so than normal.” lanes a lot and just swiping the ball Clemson on Tuesday or else we’ll and a near fall in the first 20 sec- their dominance against Clarion
prevent the Tar Heel forwards from The Ga. Tech forwards didn’t when we get it down low and we’re have the same outcome that we did onds of the 174-pound bout and as they each recorded falls. Mock
getting the ball. Zeller, UNC’s lead- act alone. The Yellow Jackets also driving. They just did a great job (Sunday).” never looked back. Epperly won and Bennett had they opponents
ing scorer this season, took just six received help from guards Moe getting hands on the ball.” Tonight’s game against Clemson the ACC championship last sea- pinned within the first two min-
shots Sunday night. Miller, Rice and Shumpert, who Though Drew gave credit to Ga. will test UNC’s 54-0 unbeaten son in the 165-weight class. utes.
When the Tar Heel big men did converged on the ball anytime Tech for being active and imposing home record against the Tigers. Despite the hot start, coach Mock Redshirt senior Mike Rappo,
manage to get their hands on the UNC’s forwards got it in the paint. its will, he said the Tar Heels will The game tips off at 8 p.m. and expected more from Ferguson who has struggled with injuries
ball, it often wasn’t where they With UNC trailing by three a have to act more quickly in order with the short turnaround, it may than the two-point decision he got this season, made his first appear-
wanted it. The Yellow Jackets out- minute into the second half, Tar to avoid repeating their mistakes be difficult to put the Georgia Tech in the match against the Hokies, ance since Nov. 21. Rappo wrestled
muscled the Tar Heels in the paint, Heel point guard Larry Drew II fed against future opponents. loss out of mind. For junior guard and Ferguson admitted that he let in the 149-pound class Saturday,
forcing UNC’s forwards to take the ball to Zeller in the post, only “We just needed to be stronger Larry Drew II, tonight’s game is himself coast to victory in the first two classes above where he had
lower-percentage shots farther for Shumpert to strip it from him with the ball and make better entry about redemption. bout. He started his second match been competing before missing all
away from the basket. immediately. Shumpert quickly fed passes,” Drew said. “When the guys “We have a chance to get this with similar intensity but finished of December. Mock expects Rappo
Though Henson and Zeller were Rice for a 3-pointer on the other get the ball in there, they just need to taste out of our mouth and just go off the Golden Eagle with one of his to move around weight classes
a combined 10-for-14 from the end to extend the lead to six. It was be stronger with it. Expect the dou- play hard and make up for what go-to moves. until senior Nick Stabile returns
free-throw line, they shot 33 per- one of nine steals for Ga. Tech’s ble-team, expect to be swiped at.” happened (Sunday) night.” “I wasn’t expecting the pin at from injury.
cent from the floor. three starting guards. all. I’ve scored a lot of points with
“They just pushed us out of the “They’re very scrappy,” Marshall Contact the Sports Editor Contact the Sports Editor that move this year — it’s a roll- Contact the Sports Editor
box,” Zeller said. “They focused on said. “They got into the passing at sports@dailytarheel.com. at sports@dailytarheel.com. through-tilt. I hit it in the first at sports@dailytarheel.com.

A Mann and his money


uconn Dick Mann, at the forefront of
from page 12
UNC’s budget cuts, will step down
Hayes made it hard for the Tar
Heels to keep their opponent games this summer. See pg. 1 for story.
off the board. Moore and Hayes ‘Bombshell’ model dies
© 2009 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
combined for 55 points, and the
Huskies shot 48.5 percent from the Level: 1 2 3 4 Chapel Hill resident and former
floor compared to UNC’s 30.7 field model Georgia Kyser died Friday.
goal percentage. See pg. 3 for story.
Jessica Breland wasn’t pleased. Complete the grid
so each row, column
The senior forward admitted
and 3-by-3 box (in
Wanted: student input
that rushed shooting was among bold borders) con- The UNC system is looking to
the mistakes the Tar Heels made tains every digit 1 increase student input in the tuition
against UConn., but she acknowl- to 9. talks. See page 4 for story.
edged that with challenges come
the opportunities for improve- Solution to
ment. Friday’s puzzle
Considering Dr. King
“If we dwell in it and don’t cor- Participants in a youth leader-
rect our mistakes, then we’re defi- ship program Monday talked race
nitely going to see this at the end and elephants. See pg. 4 for story.
of our season,” Breland said. “But
if we learn from it and say okay, Requirements revised
this is what I did wrong and take
responsibility for it then at the end The Faculty Council made five
of the season this will be a learning changes to the undergraduate
experience for us.” curriculum. See pg. 9 for story.
Italee Lucas led UNC offensive-
ly with 13 points and two assists.
Tierra Ruffin-Pratt came off the
bench and gobbled up seven offen-
sive rebounds to lead all players.
With a win against the Tar Heels,
the Huskies are now on a 95-1 run
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For that reason, Monday’s game


wasn’t all bad for the Tar Heels.
Despite losing only its second
(C)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
game of the season, the North Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle All rights reserved.
Carolina women’s basketball team
got the opportunity to compete
Across 58 Cosecant’s reciprocal 21 Wrestler Ventura 41 Not kosher
against and learn from some of the 1 Lin or Angelou 59 Really long time 22 Rowing crew 42 New York’s time zone
best in the sport. 5 Terrier type 61 Present moment 25 Selected 44 Figure out
And that’s the upside to a dis- 9 Performed on stage 62 Ski resort lift 26 Spine-tingling 45 Married in secret
14 Contest with seconds 63 Arp’s movement 27 Next year’s junior 48 Network with an eye logo
appointment that Hatchell simply 15 Gillette’s __ II 64 Exceed the limit 29 What double-checked 49 “Survivor” faction
couldn’t deny. 16 Do-re-mi 65 Eponymous logical totals should do 51 Outlaws
“Except for losing, I really enjoy 17 Catch, as one’s sleeve diagram creator 30 Runs through a sieve 52 Resting on
18 “Mazes and Monsters” 66 Online annoyance 31 Jeanne d’Arc et al.: Abbr. 53 Hawaii’s state bird
playing them,” Hatchell said. “We author Jaffe 32 Defrost 54 __ errand: out
learn a lot. We actually try to run 19 Ventilated, with “out” Down 33 Michelle Obama __ 55 Harvest
some of the things that they run. I 20 Group with the #1 hit 1 Docs Robinson 56 Fizzy drink
“ABC” 2 Godmother, often 34 Ball girls 60 “The Deer Hunter” war
love how they play.” 23 Emeritus, e.g.: Abbr. 3 Slangy okay 38 Birdcage feature zone, for short
dth/Lauren Mccay
24 Some garden plants need 4 “Flowers for __”: story 39 Highbrows
Contact the Sports Editor All-American Maya Moore poured in 26 points en route to a double- it from which the film
25 Official count
at sports@dailytarheel.com. double for the Huskies. She went 10-for-18 and pulled down 10 boards.
“Charly” was adapted
28 Control tower devices 5 Layer
32 Group with the #1 hit 6 Big cheese associated
transition “Transition was bad for us. We weren’t “One Bad Apple”
35 Western-style “Scram!”
36 Lena who played Glinda
with Big Macs?
7 Americans, to Brits
8 PayPal funds
from page 12

minutes into the second half, and I


getting back fast enough, and they got a in the movie version of
“The Wiz”
9 Actress Peet or Plummer
10 Styled in the salon
was surprised myself.” lot of easy layups.” 37 Epi center?
38 Nez __, Native Americans
11 Doughnut shapes
12 Mtn. road sign stat
Although big stops were made who breed their own 13 Miami-__ County
by Tar Heel defenders — including Krista Gross, UNC guard horses
40 Faulkner’s “__ Lay
a key block from Laura Broomfield Dying”
that kept the Huskies from reach- motion humbled the UNC defense. was just three points behind with 41 Group with the #1 hit
ing 50 points in the first half “The most frustrating thing was a double-double. With 11 minutes “Jive Talkin’”
43 Garden tool
— UConn responded with stiff the stuff that we did rather than the remaining in the game, the senior 46 Snorkel et al., familiarly
defense of its own. stuff they did,” UNC guard Krista managed to escape a UNC double 47 Put in a seat
Despite out-blocking Connecticut Gross said. “Like Coach was talk- team to nail a pull-up jumper and 50 MIT or UCLA
51 2001 Spielberg WWII
5-3 and earning just one less than ing about — transition. Transition then immediately rushed down the miniseries, and what 20-,
the Huskies’ nine steals, the Tar was bad for us. We weren’t getting court to take a charge from UNC’s 32- or 41-Across is
Heels were unable to defend their back fast enough, and they got a lot Cetera DeGraffenreid. 57 Believed without
question
opponent’s stacked offense and chip of easy layups.” “When they’ve got five guards
away at UConn’s lead. But it wasn’t just transition plays out there and they can all run
“I guess zone’s probably the that earned Connecticut’s points. every position, they cut so hard ΑΧΩ ∆∆∆ ΦΜ ΦΒΧ ΣΣΣ ΖΤΑ
best thing to play them, but we’re UConn turned to a versatile with backdoors and everything,”
not really a zone team,” Hatchell lineup to swing the ball into the Hatchell said. “They cut so hard in ed i
n Spring Panhellenic Promotion
rest eek?
said. hands of two key Huskies. all their offensive sets.” Inte r Sunday, January 23rd, 2:30-4:00 p.m.
ng G
UConn racked up 23 assists, While junior Tiffany Hayes led Goi Upendo Room - SASB North
eight alone from freshman Bria UConn’s aggressive offense with 29 Contact the Sports Editor
Α∆Π ΧΩ ΠΒΦ Κ∆ ΚΚΓ
Hartley, as the Huskies’ constant points, All-American Maya Moore at sports@dailytarheel.com.
PAGE 12
SportsTuesday The Daily Tar Heel
Tuesday, january 18, 2011
www.dailytarheel.com
SCOREBOARD Gymnastics George Washington Invitational — First place with 193.900 Women’s basketball N.C. State 76 UNC 83

overwhelmed Defending champ Connecticut handles UNC


by Kelly parsons DTH ONLINE: Go online for a for the Tar Heels in the first half,
assistant Sports Editor full story from UNC’s 83-76 win and the two led UNC with a com-
Their calendars had been against N.C. State on Friday. bined 17 points in the opening 20
marked for some time now. minutes.
Beating the record-breaking matched up with them better this The Tar Heels held their own in
University of year than we have the last couple the first half against a team that
WOMEN’S Connecticut years. I think if we could have isn’t used to losing, and a crucial
BASKETBALL women’s bas- made some shots early on that block from UNC junior Laura
UConn 83 ketball team in would have helped us a lot.” Broomfield in the final seconds
UNC  57 front of a home The Tar Heels started each half kept the visiting Huskies from scor-
crowd would Monday night in a similar fashion. ing 50 first-half points. Trailing by
have been a season highlight for The Huskies jumped to an 8-0 just 12 at intermission, a second-
the North Carolina women’s bas- lead at the beginning of the game. half comeback seemed feasible to
ketball team, as well as a feather in After intermission, UConn scored Hatchell.
the cap for a program rebounding 12 points before North Carolina “(In the) first half I’m thinking
from a down year last season. got on the board in the second wow, they were like a well-oiled
But Monday night in Carmichael half. machine out there,” Hatchell said.
Arena, the dream of an upset was And unfortunately for the Tar “(I thought), you know, they’ll cool
too good to be true, and the No. Heels, each period also ended in off a little bit in the second half. But
10 Tar Heels fell to No. 2 UConn the same way: with UNC trail- they really got after it.”
83-57. ing the seemingly unstoppable An unfaltering UConn offense
“I really thought we would give Connecticut squad. led by Maya Moore and Tiffany
them a better game,” UNC coach Forwards Chay Shegog and
Sylvia Hatchell said. “I thought we Waltiea Rolle were the bright spots See uconn, Page 11

Tar Heels lost in transition


by Megan Walsh
senior writer
Connecticut’s women’s basketball team immediately
took advantage of a first-play North Carolina turnover
in Monday’s women’s basketball game in Carmichael
Arena.
The Tar Heel mistake was quickly converted into an
8-0 run for the No. 2 Huskies, who controlled posses-
sion and circled the ball around No. 10 North Carolina
defenders with ease.
“The transition buckets first half just killed us,” UNC
coach Sylvia Hatchell said. “We were not taking good
shots, and they were getting the outlet and throwing it
to half court. It was a race to the basket, and I was try-
ing to get some of our kids to charges and everything
like that.”
Bounce pass after bounce pass found the Huskies
underneath the basket, as easy layups continued to put
up points for UConn. Connecticut continued moving
the ball down the court past a slower Tar Heel squad
en route to an 83-57 victory.
The Tar Heels’ defensive problems continued to shine
through after intermission. A 12-0 run to start the sec-
ond half mirrored UNC’s slow start to the game.
“We caught them on their heels a little bit,”
Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma said. “We put a lot
of emphasis on how we start a game, how we start a
dth/BJ Dworak second half, how we come out of time outs. I looked
dth/BJ Dworak Laura Broomfield contests Tiffany Hayes’ lay-up up at the scoreboard at one point five minutes or three
North Carolina’s Italee Lucas descends on a loose ball in her team’s 83-57 loss to Connecticut. Lucas was on Monday night. Hayes was almost unstoppable,
the only Tar Heel in double figures with 13 points. Four Huskies had 10 or more points in the game. scoring a game-high 29 points for the Huskies. See transition, Page 11

Shooting troubles doom UNC


by mark thompson Roy Williams said. just walked through the motions,” Williams
senior writer “They were so much more aggressive than said. “We were fortunate enough, twice in a
ATLANTA — At the end of North Carolina’s we were, and I have to get our guys to be row, we were able to come from behind and
loss against Georgia Tech, Iman Shumpert more aggressive, to be more intense and act I really thought we were going to tonight.
and Glen Rice Jr. had scored a combined 54 like it means something to them.” I thought at halftime, because I just felt so
of the Yellow Jackets’ 78 points. Like its first two ACC starts, UNC found lucky at halftime to be down one.”
UNC had 58. itself in an early hole. On the Tar Heels’ sec- In the second half, it just got worse for the
MEN’S The Tar Heels couldn’t ond possession, Larry Drew II crossed over a Tar Heels.
BASKETBALL kick-start any offense in defender and then flung a high pass to Tyler Georgia Tech outscored UNC 45-26 in the
UNC 58 Sunday night’s loss and Zeller, but it slipped through his fingers — second half. The Yellow Jackets suffocated
Ga. Tech  78 shot 27.6 percent from the the first of 18 UNC turnovers. UNC on offense and forced the Tar Heels into
floor, the lowest shooting North Carolina was able to fight back from 13 second-half turnovers, a good number of
percentage by a UNC team since 1956 and multiple 10-point deficits in the first half to which were just mishandled passes.
the fourth lowest all-time. pull within one at 33-32 by halftime.
“That was just a butt-kicking,” UNC coach “This is the third straight game where we See woes, Page 11

Tar Heels struggle with ball control


Cough up 18 turnovers on Sunday UNC’s 18 turnovers was the final
nail in the coffin that snapped “One of the biggest
UNC’s five-game winning streak. problems we had
by Aaron Taube But Marshall’s pass into the “One of the biggest problems
Assistant Sports Editor post was stolen by Georgia Tech’s we had was passing and catching,” was passing and
ATLANTA — With the North Glen Rice Jr., who sprinted down UNC coach Roy Williams said. “I
Carolina men’s basketball team the floor to feed teammate Iman mean, that’s pretty damn elemen- catching … that’s
trailing its Sunday evening contest Shumpert a dagger of an alley- tary. You’ve got to look the ball
at Georgia Tech 61-49, Kendall oop that gave the Yellow Jackets into the hands. I need to become pretty damn
Marshall brought the ball upcourt
looking to get the ball into the
a 14-point lead and boosted the
Alexander Memorial Coliseum
a better coach really quickly.”
On paper, UNC came into the
elementary.” dth/BJ Dworak
North Carolina’s Justin Watts fights for a loose ball against Georgia
paint and his Tar Heels back into decibel level to a fever pitch. roy williams, UNC coach Tech’s Brian Oliver. UNC lost 18 turnovers during the game Sunday.
the game. It was only fitting that one of See turnovers, Page 11

Tennis cruises in UNC Invitational Wrestling splits Saturday doubleheader


by Brandon Moree DTH ONLINE: Corey Mock beat one of the
Baker, Hunter round-robin tournament of singles
and doubles matches at the Cone-
matches begin.
“We’re looking for both shot selec-
Assistant sports editor
The action on the mat in Carmichael Arena
nation’s best, then did the John Wall dance.

win straight sets Kenfield Tennis Center.


North Carolina senior Kyle
tion and how good of shape they’re
in,” UNC coach Sam Paul said. “You
was much more competitive than the scoreboard
indicated in the first half of the wrestling double-
the mat 20 seconds into the period.
Even freshman Corey Mock in his upset of the
Baker and junior Zach Hunter, need a lot of matches to be match- header Saturday. defending ACC champion Jesse Dong forfeited
by David Adler who each went the whole week- tough, to close out matches.” Wrestling Though C.D. Mock’s North two points in the final 10 seconds of the match,
staff writer end without losing a set, were the Paul also said that despite the Va. Tech 25 Carolina team fell to No. 4 costing him the major decision and the team an
In a low-key home tournament tournament’s two individual flight Invitational’s casual atmosphere,
UNC  9 Virginia Tech 25-9, the Tar extra point.
for the North Carolina men’s ten- champions. his players understood its impor- Heels were only a few key “You put those things back in to it and we go in
nis team, the UNC players who The UNC Invitational is essen- tance to their status on the team. Clarion 10 points away from giving to heavyweight 15-13 against a team that’s top 10
weren’t participating were just tially a two-day scrimmage inde- “They know they’re fighting for
as important as the ones on the pendent of the ITA, college tennis’ a spot in our lineup,” Paul said. UNC  32 the Hokies a run for their in the country,” C. D. Mock said.
money. The Golden Eagles of Clarion were much easier
court. governing body. As UNC’s last pre- “We’ve got a very deep team, so Freshman Antonio Giorgio only trailed Virginia prey for the hungry Tar Heels in the second half
On Saturday and Sunday, the season action, the tournament gave they know. We’ve talked about Tech’s 184-pounder 2-1 at the beginning of the of the doubleheader as the Heels took the first
No. 20 Tar Heels played East several players a final opportunity final two minute period before he fell victim to
Carolina in the UNC Invitational, a to showcase their skills before team See tennis, Page 11 an explosive start and found himself pinned to See wrestling, Page 11

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