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Volume 123, Issue 16 dailytarheel.com Tuesday, March 24, 2015 Kennedy Meeks’ status unknown for Thursday

four rebounds in 15 minutes. That night, he have to reevaluate how it defends 7-foot The sophomore forward was diagnosed with a sprained knee and was Wisconsin forward Frank Kaminsky, a sprained his left knee. scheduled to have an MRI on Sunday. preseason All-American and a Wooden “If he doesn’t practice (Monday), he can Award finalist. By Grace Raynor still play,” Williams had said during his Kaminsky averages 18.4 points per game Sports Editor press conference before the beginning of and 8.1 rebounds. He shoots 55.6 percent practice. “If he doesn’t practice Wednesday, from the field and 40.7 percent from 3. Hours after sophomore forward it’ll be hard to play on Thursday.” “It’s hard to guard Frank because he’s real- Kennedy Meeks was scheduled to see a Williams said he saw Meeks walking on ly good with the ball, (and) he’s really good doctor Monday, North Carolina men’s campus on the way to class Monday. Meeks without the ball,” Williams said. “There’s not basketball coach Roy Williams said on told him that he felt better than he had on one guy that I look at and say, ‘Oh yeah, he his radio show with Jones Angell that he Saturday, when he heard his knee pop. can guard Frank,’ because I haven’t found is not sure Meeks will play Thursday in “I didn’t see the play,” said Williams of that guy. If you’re just thinking about match- UNC’s Sweet 16 matchup with No. 1 seed when Meeks went down under the basket. ups, that’s the most difficult matchup by far.” Wisconsin. Meeks did not practice Monday. “With this, I had no information, but he Junior guard Marcus Paige said Meeks “We’ll just have to wait and see,” said was very concerned. also told him he was feeling better. But the Williams of Meeks’ status on the radio show. “I didn’t feel good because I didn’t think uncertainty still lingers for Meeks, who aver- “They’re not completely ruling him out, and we’d get him back the rest of the game, but ages 11.6 points and 7.4 rebounds per game. they’re not saying that he can play. Let me I felt at that time that it wasn’t similar to “It is kind of weird to not know what you say it that way: I don’t think we’ll have him, what Desmond (Hubert) did, and it wasn’t have going into the game,” Paige said. “We’re but we’ll just have to wait and see.” similar to what Sasha (Seymore) did.” really hopeful we’ll get him. Wisconsin’s Meeks left UNC’s eventual win over Seymore and Hubert both tore their team has a lot of size, and we’d like to have DTH/HALLE SINNOTT Arkansas Saturday with three minutes and ACLs earlier in the season. Kennedy. He’s been really big for us all year.” Sophomore forward Kennedy Meeks suffered a knee injury 15 seconds left in the game and did not If Meeks doesn’t play Thursday late in the second half of Sunday’s victory over Arkansas. return. He scored nine points and grabbed against Wisconsin, UNC will in part [email protected]

Carolina Pulse WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: NORTH CAROLINA 86, OHIO STATE 84 starting the Women earn Sweet 16 conversation The Carolina Conversations bid with a Cherry on top series began Monday night. By Cain Twyman Senior Writer

For Jasmin Huang, president of the Asian Students Association, the new Carolina Conversations initiative is a chance to express her frustration with the University’s lack of resources for Asian . “I like to hope ASA and Asian- American students in general will be supportive of the initiative,” she said. “If we can instill a more interactive stu- dent body to have conversations — even with friends — it would be beneficial.” On Monday, students, faculty and staff met to discuss race and current events at the first Carolina Pulse meeting — an event under the greater umbrella of the Carolina Conversations initiative

SEE CONVERSATIONS, PAGE 4 Council approves affordable housing fund The unanimous decision will

allocate money to four DTH/KENDALL BAGLEY priority areas in town. Sophomore forward Hillary Fuller (13) embraces freshman guard Jamie Cherry (0) after her last-second jump shot to beat Ohio State 86-84 on Monday. By Kiana Cole Staff Writer Tar Heels defeat Buckeyes to advance in NCAA Tournament During its meeting Monday night, By Jeremy Vernon a shot just inside the 3-point line. Hatchell knew OSU would not lay down quietly. town council members approved the Staff Writer Up. In. Game. “I told them at halftime, ‘They’re not going creation of the Affordable Housing Seventeen days earlier, she hit a buzzer-beat- to go away; they are gonna come after you,’” Development Reserve, which will be Coach Sylvia Hatchell would call it divine er against Louisville in the ACC Tournament to Hatchell said. “They did pretty much what I dedicated to the development and intervention, but Jamie Cherry has a penchant send the game to overtime. This time, she lifted expected.” preservation of affordable housing in for buzzer beaters in late-game situations. her team to a win over fifth-seeded Ohio State Ohio State opened the second half with a Chapel Hill. After Ohio State’s Kelsey Mitchell sunk both in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. fire that was absent during the game’s first 20 The council unanimously approved her free throws to knot the game — one the Both times, Cherry had one thing on her mind. minutes. And by the time North Carolina could the Housing Advisory Board’s recom- North Carolina women’s basketball team would “Every time Coach Hatchell puts me in the blink, the Buckeyes had cut the deficit to 10 mendations on how to use the newly eventually win 86-84 — with 5.1 seconds left, game with a little time on the clock, my mind- with 6:25 remaining. created fund. Money for affordable the freshman guard for the Tar Heels started to set is to get down the court and get a great Ohio State would eventually tie the game on housing will be allocated towards one get in position. But not before senior Brittany shot,” Cherry said. “I just wanted us to move a Mitchell 3-pointer with 39 seconds left, but of the four priority project areas — land Rountree gave her some advice. onto the Sweet 16.” Latifah Coleman would hit a fading shot on the acquisition, rental subsidy and develop- “Brittany actually told me to just go out wide What ended as a dramatic marathon started other end to regain the lead. ment, homeownership development and catch the ball,” Cherry said. “So when I at a sprinter’s pace for UNC, who hit 46.6 per- Mitchell was fouled on the Buckeyes’ next and assistance and future development seen daylight, I seen no one in front of me. I cent of its shots in the first half. possession, setting the scene for Cherry’s won- planning. knew that no one would stop me.” The Tar Heels also held Mitchell, the nation’s der-shot after two made free throws. When it budgeted for the fiscal After Cherry caught the ball and turned up leading scorer, to four points in the opening “I still was nervous, I mean it’s a big shot,” she 2014-15 year, the town council allo- court, two OSU defenders closed in. But by period. Rountree said it was the strength of the said. “Everyone dreams of hitting the shot.” cated $688,395 to be used for afford- then, Cherry had already made it clear what Tar Heel defense that caused the slump. For Cherry, the dream was a reality. And for able housing. The town has already her intentions were — she wasn’t going to be “One thing we wanted to do was to keep her the Tar Heels, their dream of reaching a Final reserved $200,000 from this allocation stopped. As the defenders inched closer, Cherry in front of us, which I thought we did a really Four is still intact. to support the new Northside Neighbor crossed the ball over to her left hand, splitting good job of,” she said. the two Buckeyes and giving her room to get off UNC would go into halftime ahead by 18, but [email protected] SEE TOCH, PAGE 4

Hashbrown: no filter. THE UNBREAKABLE KIMMY SCHMIDT 2 Tuesday, March 24, 2015 News The Daily Tar Heel The Daily Tar Heel The Daily Tar Heel PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS STAFF DAILY Business and Advertising: Kelly Ashley Spruill, marketing manager Burgess, Ashley Cirone, Emma executive Wolff, director/general manager; Customer Service: Paul Gentry, Charlie Greene, Victoria Advertising Production: DOSE www.dailytarheel.com Rebecca Dickenson, advertising Ashton, Carolyn Ebeling, Karagiorgis, Tyler Medlock, Chris Gwendolen Blackburn, creative director; Lisa Reichle, business Marcela Guimaraes and Alexa Pearlman, and Jake Vowell, manager; Ashley Anderson, Established 1893 manager; Alex Walkowski, print Papadopoulos, representatives account executives Hunter Lewis, Chelsea Mayse, pro- advertising manager; Megan Display Advertising: Erin Digital Advertising: Katherine duction assistants 122 years of editorial freedom Mulherin, social media manager; Bissette, McCall Bunn, Peyton Ferguson, manager; Kush Shah, The Pope and pizza JENNY SURANE EDITORIAL STAFF Assistant Editors: Sarah Vassello, Cooper, Jessica Coston, Aaron Jackie O’Shaughnessy, Seth Rose, Sneha Kumar, Mark Lihn, Emily EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Erin Wygant, arts & culture; Kerry Cranford, Cole del Charco, Marisa Meredith Shutt, Nikhil Umesh, Lowe, Tori Mirian, Megan Morris, From staff and wire reports [email protected] Lengyel, Claire Nielsen, Zoe DiNovis, Claire Ebbitt, Maddie Alice Wilder, columnists; Ngozika Jenn Morrison, Danny Nett, Anyssa Schaver, city; Dale Koontz, Danny Flager, Rachel Garzarelli, Kerris A. Nwoko, Matt Pressley, Jamal Reddix, Katie Reeder, Ashlen ven the Pope likes pizza. Pizzeria KATIE REILLY Nett, Ellie Scialabba, copy; Kaitlyn Gordon, Ishrat Hafiz, Jillian Rogers, cartoonists Renner, Tyler J. Rouse, Adam MANAGING EDITOR Kelly, Jose Valle, Zach Walker, Heywood, Rachel Horowitz, Sports: Aaron Dodson, Robbie Sheinhaus, Hannah Smoot, Sarah Don Ernesto in Naples, Italy, heard [email protected] design & graphics; Joey DeVito, Courtney Jacobs, Jinni Kim, Brielle Harms, Danielle Herman, Dylan Thomas Kelsey Weekman, online; Sam Kronstedt, Sofia Levia, Hannah Howlett, Daniel Wilco, senior Visuals: Zach Aldridge, Shae that Pope Francis likes to eat pizza. JORDAN NASH Schaefer, opinion; Carlos Collazo, Lohr-Pearson, Molly McConnell, writers; David Adler, David Allen, Allison, Kendall Bagley, Isabella Pat James, Brendan Marks, sports; Maria Prokopowicz, Haley Ray, Alexis Barnes, Brandon Chase, Bartolucci, Nicole Basile, Martha- FRONT PAGE NEWS EDITOR Nick Niedzwiadek, Sharon Nunn, Emily Rojas, Nicole Siegel, Janell Evan Chronis, Ben Coley, C. Scott Benson, Sarah Bonn, They decided to make a pizza for [email protected] state & national; Carolyn Ebeling, Smith, Jessica Swanson, Caroline Jackson Cowart, Joseph DeVito, Emily Chafetz, Ivana Chan, theE head of the Roman Catholic Church and Stephanie Lamm, Jane Wester, Warburton, Audrey Wells, Madison Michael Freije, Chris Haney, Chris Conway, Ashley Crabtree, MCKENZIE COEY university; Claire Collins, Johanna Whalen, Sarah Whitmore, Garrett Holden Hill, Kevin Mercer, Max Augusta DeKemper, Kaitlin Duren, PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Ferebee, Chris Griffin, Cameron Young-Wright Miceli, Kayleigh Payne, Andrew Eshany Edwards, Jack Eiselt, Ani try to deliver the pizza to the pope while he [email protected] Robert, visuals Design & Graphics: Veronica Romaine, Patrick Ronan, Ben Garrigo, Kaitlyn Goforth, Alexa Arts & Culture: Cam McNeely, Burkhart, Heather Caudill, Salkeld, Lindsey Sparrow, Andrew Gregory, Alex Hamel, Deborah was riding in his popemobile (yes, that’s a real Samantha Sabin, Zhai Yun Kathleen Harrington, Ryan Tie, Logan Ulrich, Jeremy Vernon, Harris, Catherine Hemmer, Kyle BRADLEY SAACKS Tan, senior writers; Elizabeth Herrera, Emily Hobbs, Gabriel Jane Zorowitz Hodges, Candace Howze, Phoebe thing). And it worked. The pope accepted the UNIVERSITY EDITOR Baker, Christine Bang, Sindhu Hubbard, Hailey Johns, Isabella State & National: Lindsey Jollay-Castelblanco, Alexis Jordan, [email protected] Chidambaram, Jun Chou, Paige Kinkelaar, Zhaochen Li, Daniel Brunson, Sarah Chaney, Kate Grise, Annick Joseph, Kasia Jordan, Lieth pizza and told the co-owner who delivered it, Connelly, Everett Handy, Paige Lockwood, Aileen Ma, Charlotte senior writers; Lindsey Brunson, Khatib, Alexander Lam, Naree HOLLY WEST Hopkins, Kristina Kokkonos, Chloe Moore, Megan Moore, Katie Yoon Ju Chung, Hallie Dean, Lee, Michael Lees, Diane Li, Aaron Lackey, Trevor Lenzmeier, Sarah Perkinson, Kate Rogers, Gentry Zachery Eanes, Jungsu Hong, Lovett, Katia Martinez, Casey “Thank you.” And for those wondering, it was CITY EDITOR McQuillan, Palak Patel, Siena Sanders, Lindsey Schaefer, Ryan Paul Kushner, Caroline Lamb, Moore, Kathryn Murray, Abby [email protected] Scarbrough, Parth Shah, Ryan Smith, Alicia Taylor, Kylie Taylor, Michael Liguori, Joe Martin, Grant Neal, Hannah Packer, Wyatt Packer, a white and yellow pizza with yellow cherry Schocket, Gwendolyn Smith, Kristi Walker, Mary Catherine Masini, Elizabeth Matulis, Haley Jay Peterkin, Chelsea Reaves, SARAH BROWN Rupali Srivastava, Jamie Stuart, Young McDougal, Anica Midthun, Corey Matt Renn, Hannah Rosen, Mitali tomatoes and buffalo mozzarella. STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR Morgan Vickers, Crystal Yuille Investigations: Liz Bell, McKenzie Risinger, Sam Shaw, Eric Surber, Samant, Evan Semones, Jiabing [email protected] City: Graves Ganzert, Meg Garner, Bennett, Lindsey Brunson, Bob Sara Svehla, Charles Talcott Song, Beren South, Ava Tao, Rachel Herzog, senior writers; Bryan, Lindsay Carbonell, Jackson University: Kate Albers, Kristen Samantha Taylor, Ahmad Tejan-Sie, NOTED. A U.K. man didn’t QUOTED. “I was a bit fazed Marisa Bakker, Aren Besson, Kiana Cowart, Danielle Herman, Breanna Chung, Kelly Jasiura, Colleen Moir, Jason Wolonick, Alexandra Young want to pay for his meal so at first. It was such a copious GRACE RAYNOR Cole, Bridget Dye, Hannah Forbes, Kerr, Jaclyn Lee, Caroline Leland, Sara Salinas, Cain Twyman, senior Production Director: McKenzie SPORTS EDITOR Avishai Halev, Elizabeth Harvell, Mary Helen Moore, Jordan Nash, writer; Jada Harkins Andrews, Coey he, logically, released a rat in amount of money to be in [email protected] Trent Hollandsworth, Hannah Samantha Sabin, Halle Sinnott, Olivia Bane, Mona Bazzaz, Liz Bell, Newsroom Adviser: Erica Perel Jaggers, Sam James, Mengqi Langston Taylor, Cain Twyman, Carly Berkenblit, Rebecca Brickner, Editorial Production: Stacy the restaurant. He demand- my bank.” GABRIELLA CIRELLI Jiang, Erin Kolstad, Shantan Claire Williams Tatiana Britt, Sarah Butler, Wynn, manager ed a refund for his food. The — A man from England Krovvidi, Erika Lewy, Lauren Opinion: Bailey Barger, Trey Kristen Chung, David Doochin, Printing: Triangle Web Printing ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR Miller, Maggie Monsrud, Luman Flowers, Kim Hoang, Colin Kantor, Sofia Edelman, Tyler Fleming, Co. police didn’t find this funny who checked his bank [email protected] Ouyang, Madeline Reich, Mary Dinesh McCoy, Brian Vaughn, Mohammed Hedadji, Shuyan Distribution: Stacy Wynn, man- or impressive, and the man account and found more Taylor Renfro, Morgan Swift, Sarah Peter Vogel, Kern Williams, edito- Huang, Acy Jackson, Kelly Jasiura, ager; Nick Hammonds, Sarah TYLER VAHAN Thomas rial board; Corey Buhay, Clark Katie Kilmartin, Leah Komada, Hammonds, Charlie Mayse pleaded guilty to fraud by than $1.8 million that wasn’t DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR Copy: Courtney Cho, Brianna Cunningham, Matt Leming, Karli Krasnipol, Brielle Kronstedt, false representation. his in his bank account. [email protected] The Daily Tar Heel is published by the DTH Media Corp., a nonprofit North Carolina corporation, KATIE WILLIAMS Monday through Friday, according to the University calendar. Callers with questions about billing or VISUAL EDITOR [email protected] display advertising should call 962-1163 between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Classified ads can be reached at 962-0252. Editorial questions should be directed to 962-0245. POLICE LOG AARON DODSON, ALISON KRUG COPY CO-EDITORS OFFICE AND MAIL ADDRESS: • Someone reported loud to leave, reports state. [email protected] 151 E. Rosemary St. ISN #10709436 noise at a residence at the Chapel Hill, NC 27514 PAIGE LADISIC 1000 block of Smith Level • Someone was driving ONLINE EDITOR Road at 12:29 a.m. Friday, while impaired at the 100 [email protected] according to Carrboro police block of Culbreth Road and AMANDA ALBRIGHT COMMUNITY CALENDAR reports. 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 The Daily Tar Heel News Tuesday, March 24, 2015 3 Friend convicted in murder of UNC grad friends and family, as Broyhill, 33, and Nation was a volunteer. That’s how created in her memory, works to Pearce said he is glad the trial is Jamie Kirk Hahn, a 2006 was a friend of the Hahns and was they got to know each other,” he said. develop community leaders who work finally over. graduate, was fatally the best man at their wedding. Pearce said at the sentencing hear- on issues that Jamie valued, including “It was a wrenching experience A week before the attack, the ing, Jamie Hahn’s father said she was poverty, education, food and hunger. (for) everybody concerned and most stabbed in 2013. couple — who met at UNC — was hoping to focus on non-profit work “Jamie was very committed to com- of all for Nation and the family,” he on their way to celebrate their fourth to provide healthy meals outside of munity, committed to service, and said. “But there’s still a very long, By Caroline Lamb wedding anniversary, according to a school to kids who receive free lunch. we knew that we had to carry that hard journey ahead for them,” Staff Writer blog post by Nation Hahn on Friday. “She was driven to help people less forward and carry her commitment Nation Hahn said in his blog post Nation Hahn graduated in 2008, fortunate. She made a difference in to community forward,” said Alexis that he is learning to still see the good After a month-long trial, it took and Jamie Hahn, who was 29 at the few years she had and she could Trost, interim executive director. “Our in the world despite the tragedy. a jury less than 90 minutes on the time of her death, graduated have made an even bigger difference.” vision is to see an army of Jamies.” He said moving forward, he hopes Wednesday to convict Jonathan in 2006. After graduation, both On his blog, Talking About The organization has recently to live with optimism, the way that Broyhill of murdering recent UNC worked as Democratic strategists. Politics, Pearce quoted a statement focused on Second Saturdays in Jamie Hahn lived. graduate and Democratic political Gary Pearce, a former official at from Chris Kirk, Jamie Hahn’s father. Raleigh, which involves pop-up mar- “I know that no act of evil could strategist Jamie Kirk Hahn. the N.C. Democratic Party, where “We would give all that we have to kets, community gardens and urban kill Jamie’s spirit. It cannot take away The attack against Jamie Hahn Jamie Hahn worked after graduating, have Jamie with us, to see her grow farms. This summer, the foundation her lesson to us all — that during our and her husband, Nation Hahn, attended the trial. Pearce said the two older and become a mother, and to is launching a fellowship program. life we must try to right wrongs, heal happened on April 22, 2013. Jamie met while working on John Edwards’ witness the difference she would have Trost said the organization’s goal is suffering and help our fellow man.” died two days later, and Nation sur- 2008 presidential campaign. made in the world,” Kirk said. to carry on Jamie Hahn’s unique drive vived the attack. The attack shocked “She was on the fundraising staff, The Jamie Kirk Hahn Foundation, to do more than the average person. [email protected] NC travels to AN INSPIRING SUMMIT DC for arts advocacy day Arts N.C. joins other groups to advocate for funding in Washington, D.C., this week. By Morgan Vickers Staff Writer

In North Carolina, art isn’t just a gen- eral education requirement that students take to graduate. It’s a representation of the passion and the culture of the state. “The arts are incredibly strong and vibrant in this state, and they generate so many positive things for the state in the area of revenue, jobs, quality of life, pride of place,” said Sharon Moore, vice chair of Arts North Carolina, the state’s art advocacy program. On March 23 and 24, Arts N.C. is joining hundreds of organizations and activists in Washington, D.C., to advocate for arts funding in an international day of lobbying: Arts Advocacy Day. With Arts Advocacy Day, Arts N.C. is attempting to sustain funding for North Carolina arts programs and attain spe- cial grants from the federal government that can be dispersed on a state level. “We’re hoping this year that (fund- ing) stays the same or maybe even increases a little bit more,” said Terry Rhodes, dean of fine arts and humani- ties at UNC. “It’s not realistic to ask for DTH/EVAN SEMONES big increases even though we’d like to Motivational speaker Kyle Maynard spoke in the Carolina Union to students Monday about his success as an athlete and challenges in everyday life. see more increased funding.” According to the North Carolina 2015 Arts Legislative Agenda, the Kyle Maynard brings tales of athletic achievements to UNC board of directors of Arts N.C. is requesting $8.4 million in funding for By Ashlen Renner gift given to me. It gives me the accomplishment is insignificant. End the Word week. the years 2015-17, which is down from Staff Writer opportunity to talk with people “I know there are one or two “A lot of our events — for the 2008-09 allocation of $11.5 million and change lives that I wouldn’t things in your life keeping you instance, the wheelchair basket- but up from 2013-14’s federal alloca- Entertaining an auditorium have been able to do otherwise.” from your highest potential,” he ball — tend to be relatively small tion of $7.2 million. full of students is the least of what Maynard said his parents said. “But you have to think about in terms of the number of people According to Moore, Arts N.C. only Kyle Maynard has accomplished inspired him to be independent how it would be different if you who can actually participate in advocates for art funding in North in his life — though that is what and to not let his disability pre- took that thing on. It’s as simple them just because of the nature of Carolina but never receives any of the he did on Monday night. vent him from achieving his as giving those excuses up.” the game,” Witty said. “So with a money. If the funding is received by the UNC Best Buddies, a group that dreams of becoming an athlete. Jack Witty, president of Best big speaker like this, the hope is to state from the federal government, she advocates for disability rights, host- Maynard wrestled collegiately at Buddies, said Maynard’s speech reach a lot more people.” said the money must first go through ed Maynard, who was born with the University of Georgia. was a great start to the group’s Maynard not only brought dis- the N.C. Department of Cultural congenital amputation, a condi- “When I think of my parents, annual Spread the Word to End ability rights into conversation, but Resources then through the N.C. Arts tion that made his arms end at the their attitude and perspective the Word week, starting March 30. he also inspired audience members Council before it is distributed through- elbows and legs end at the knees. totally shaped my life,” he said. “He’s got a great story, and to reach their highest potential. out the state. He still became the first man to “They did not treat me as dis- importantly one that not only “It was definitely one of the “For us, it’s all about being able to crawl Mt. Kilimanjaro, the highest abled. If they had treated me as relates to disability rights, but one most inspiring things I have been make a difference in the state in which mountain in Africa, in 2012. disabled, my life would have gone that has a very broad appeal to to in a while, if not my entire life,” we live and to keep enhancing the quality “I used to pray every night a totally different direction. I everyone on campus,” he said. junior Kelly Duffy said. “When of life here in our state and to celebrate when I was a kid that I would would have never learned how to Over the past few years, Best we’re thinking about where we’re the amazing work that’s being done,” wake up with arms and legs since do anything on my own.” Buddies has been raising aware- going to be in the future in five Moore said. there was so much uncertainty in From being a wrestling cham- ness for people with disabilities years, it’s good to know we can Rhodes said certain art grants and my life,” Maynard said during his pion in high school to being with events such as sitting volley- truly be whatever we want to be.” initiatives could be more beneficial or speech. “But now I see that being able to put on socks by himself, ball games, wheelchair basketball successful at schools with more intensive born the way I was is the greatest Maynard emphasized that no games and Spread the Word to [email protected] art programs but also said the grants, like the arts, do have a place at UNC. “(Last year), UNC received a grant from the U.S. State Department con- cerning hip-hop, and the music depart- ment is now using music for crisis Workers, adjunct faculty struggle with wages intervention and working with cultural understanding,” Rhodes said. “That a safeguard.” was over a million and a half dollar A major union leader and The event sought to unite low- grant that came to UNC through hav- low-wage laborers spoke wage workers in service industries ing applied to this through the State and adjunct faculty at universities. Department for our arts program.” on Monday at UNC. John Steen, a graduate of UNC- Moore said she agrees it is important Chapel Hill, teaches English as an to reach out to college-aged youth like By Sam Shaw adjunct at East Carolina University those at UNC because they are the ones Staff Writer and struggles to make ends meet. who have the voice and the passion to “As your tuition dollars go up, turn to advocacy. Students, low-wage workers that money is not being used to “We’re very interested in engaging and a union president sought to pay faculty members,” he said. the youth and the college students in find common ground in the plight “The money being spent on the effort and getting them involved of minimum-wage workers and instruction is declining.” and teaching them the value of advo- adjunct faculty at an event Monday. Steen, who holds a Ph.D. from cacy,” Moore said. The event, co-sponsored by a Emory University in addition to Kishan Rana, a freshman studio art number of UNC student groups, his degree from UNC-CH, said minor, said he looks forward to the pos- featured low-wage workers deliv- that adjunct faculty might grade itive changes that could come from an ering remarks on their working 1,600 pages of student papers DTH/KAITLIN DUREN increase in funding in North Carolina. lives to a crowd of approximately and receive good reviews over the SEIU International President Mary Kay Henry (far right) spoke at Students “We should invest in better equip- 150 people in Chapman Hall. course of a semester but lose their and Workers Unite for the Fight for $15 hosted by Raise Up on Monday. ment,” he said. “It would be nice to have Mary Kay Henry, who leads the jobs anyway. supplies that everyone could use, too, Service Employees International Kim Thomas, a healthcare healthcare industry, where they han- He said that some children from but right now, we don’t really have that.” Union, spoke at the event. The SEIU worker who said she works more dle most hands-on tasks for patients. low-income families see crime — According to Rhodes, UNC’s art is the largest union in the U.S., rep- than 100 hours a week, described “This is something I chose to which can be much more lucrative program is primarily funded by state resenting nearly two million workers the strictures of her work schedule. do, but I didn’t choose the salary,” than fast-food or other minimum- money, but the department of fine arts nationwide. She expressed support “My workweek starts on a Thomas said. wage work — as the quickest way and humanities is hoping to attain special for the Fight for $15 rally, which will Monday. I start at 4:30 on Monday Eric Winston, a fast-food work- to self-sufficiency. grants as a result of Arts Advocacy Day. occur on April 15 at Shaw University. morning, and I don’t get off until er in Durham, drew a link between “It leads to a cycle of negativity,” “It is critical that federal funding con- Shilpi Misra, a UNC senior, three or four days later,” she said. the Fight for $15 and Black Lives he said. If their caretakers were tinues to help fund arts and humanities opened the event by saying college She takes occasional short naps in Matter movements. paid a living wage, he said, “they with some of the really important initia- graduates are not immune to the her car to stave off exhaustion but “A lot of poor inner-city kids won’t have to go out in the streets tives that are really critical to this coun- challenges of a low-wage economy. says that her family suffers because have to help out with the bills and lose their freedom or mess try, its society, its culture, its living on as “Forty-three percent of low- she is rarely at home for very long. because their mother or care pro- their lives up.” a vital, civilized country,” Rhodes said. wage workers have some college She also claimed that low-wage vider is working two (or) three jobs education,” she said. “College is not workers are the backbone of the making minimum wage,” he said. [email protected] [email protected] 4 Tuesday, March 24, 2015 News The Daily Tar Heel

of police brutality across the Inclusiveness in Collegiate CONVERSATIONS country, including the inci- Environments, said he had FROM PAGE 1 dent with the Charlottesville, good conversations at the Mavunga unstoppable in Tar Heel win announced last week. Va., Police and University event that made him want to The event centered around of Virginia student Martese help raise awareness of racial By Logan Ulrich for 27 points off of 13-for- strategy resulted in 18 first- small conversations that Johnson that left him with a unrest in the country. Senior Writer 18 shooting and collected a half points for Mavunga and happened around the room, bloody gash on his forehead. “I want to continue to game-high 14 rebounds and contributed to a 50-32 half- allowing participants to leave The event included faculty engage with these different When North Carolina four blocked shots. time lead for UNC. and join conversations freely. facilitators and technology in groups,” Osborne said. “I’d forward Stephanie Mavunga “Stephanie’s so strong in “Once I saw single coverage, The initiative includes large- the form of a Poll Everywhere. like to see more tangible knocked Ohio State forward there,” Coach Sylvia Hatchell I thought, ‘I’m about to have a scale conversations called My “If we’re truly going to results going forward.” Shayla Cooper to the floor, she said. “I felt like if we could get clinic here,’” Mavunga said. Carolina Voice, smaller discus- engage in activities in ways A common hope for lead- didn’t hesitate. She reached the ball in there to her, she She scored the first six sions called Carolina Pulse that make sense to students ers of student organizations down and helped Cooper to could score.” points of the game for UNC and a fund called My Chance, then we need to engage in is to have more collaboration her feet like they were friends Coming off of a tough and six of the first nine UNC where student groups can ways that make sense to stu- and more resources for their playing a game of pickup. game against Liberty in which points of the second half. She apply for money for food or dents and that means using respective racial group. But this wasn’t a game of she shot only 4-for-13 from opened up things for the rest of planning assistance. technology,” Crisp said. Cecilia Polanco, president pickup. It was the second half the floor, Mavunga doubted the offense, drawing frequent Winston Crisp, vice chan- Junior Brianna Gaddy said of the Carolina Hispanic of UNC’s 86-84 win in the she had Monday’s scoring double teams in the second cellor for student affairs, she was glad the initiative was Association, said she wants to second round of the NCAA performance in her. But her half and even the occasional said the purpose of Carolina started and that it was a mix collaborate with other minor- Tournament. teammates never wavered in triple team. That gave senior Conversations is to promote of faculty and students. ity groups on campus. Rather than running past their support — Hatchell told guard Brittany Rountree and facilitate conversations “It was nice hearing a dif- “As far as Hispanic Cooper with the rest of her Mavunga before the game enough space to knock down across campus. He said he ferent perspective,” she said. students, there is a lot of teammates trying to hold off a that no one on Ohio State five three-pointers, including hopes that there will be more “One thing I wish was dif- untapped potential,” she said. furious Buckeye rally, Mavunga would be able to stop her. two assisted by Mavunga. events taking place all over ferent is I want more people Crisp said the objective of chose to stop and help Cooper “In my mind I was think- Mavunga had two total campus under the Carolina who don’t share my perspec- the initiative needs to be clear to her feet. The two ran down ing, ‘Man I don’t know, that’s assists on the night, but her Conversations umbrella. tive to come out.” — it is a forum for discussion. the court side by side. a lot of faith to have in a kid,’” assist to Cooper when she “Part of this is to stimulate Most of the students that “The purpose of Carolina “I’m really not a mean play- Mavunga said. fell earlier in the game didn’t other people and organi- participated in the talks were Conversations is promoting er,” Mavunga said. “I remember But when she looked around show up on the stat sheet zations to start their own minority students. dialogue and understanding ... when I was young, people used and saw her teammates nod- even though it encapsulated events,” he said. Gaddy said she hopes to and hopefully it will fuel and to tell me I was too nice on the ding in agreement, she thought her night. Topics discussed were racial see more people at the next inform places where (tangible) court. I think sometimes that of what her brother told her. She might pick you up if tensions on campus, such as event. decisions get made,” Crisp said. gets a little bit in my way.” “You’re a matchup they she knocks you down, but that the push to rename Saunders Junior Merrick Osborne, Aside from that moment, don’t want to see.” won’t stop her from scoring Hall, and recent instances co-chairman of Diversity and [email protected] Monday night was not one Mavunga took that to on you. of those times for Mavunga. heart from the opening tip. And there’s nothing you Nothing could stop her — not Initially the Buckeyes tried can do about it. Cooper, not anyone on Ohio to let freshman Alexa Hart State’s defense. She exploded defend Mavunga alone. That [email protected]

board of directors, asked that TOCH the council continue to move In other news: SUMMER FROM PAGE 1 quickly on taking new afford- The council heard several comes at you Initiative, which was rolled able housing measures. propositions for funding: FAST out earlier this month. “The direction (they) have Sarah Vinas, Chapel Hill gone in the last year in the • Five different organiza- housing and community decision (they’ve) made to tions applied for funding planner, said this initiative compliment and support from the HOME program DATES TO WATCH: would spark progress toward affordable housing is com- award totaling $311,832. creating more affordable mendable, and everyone housing in the area. in this community thanks Eleven different orga- “The Affordable Housing (them) for that,” Reda said. nizations• applied for the Registration for Summer School Courses Development Reserve estab- Jamie Rohe, homeless Community Development lishes the process and param- programs coordinator for Block Grant award totaling eters for the funding,” she said. Orange County, echoed Open Now! $462,400. In accordance with the Reda’s gratitude toward the reserve, the council discussed council, but acknowledged • On April 27, the council the new proposed ways to that Chapel Hill’s work is far will receive a staff recom- • Maymester May 13 - May 29 produce affordable housing in from finished. mendation on the CDBG Chapel Hill while reflecting “What I see with the people First Session: May 13 - June 18 on progress made so far. I collaborate with in the Home Program plans. Anita Badrock, a spokes- homelessness field is that the Second Session: June 22 - July 28 woman for Community Home lack of affordable houses to community. Trust, an affordable housing rent is creating homelessness Chapel Hill Mayor Mark nonprofit, said over 300 fam- and is prolonging homeless- Kleinschmidt said his vision for ilies and 568 people have ben- ness.” Rohe said. the town includes having less efitted from the Affordable Town council members people on the streets and more Check out courses at summer.unc.edu Housing Program since its said their goals are to develop living in affordable homes. and follow @UNCSummerSchool inception. new, affordable places for “This is huge,” he said. Robert Reda, president of residents of different back- the Habitat for Humanity’s grounds and to nurture the [email protected]

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General Alumni Association The Daily Tar Heel News Tuesday, March 24, 2015 5 US Presbyterian Church approves gay marriage By Yoon Ju Chung its constitution, said Randall Opinions on gay marriage shift by generation Styers, a UNC professor of Staff Writer Millennials, or people born after 1980, have a consistently higher approval of same-sex religion and culture. marriage than older groups, though approval has risen among all groups. Strong feelings persist in “Because there are a big 67 some Christian communities variety of biblical interpre- 70 Millennials (1981 or later) about the inclusion of LGBT tations among Christians, 60 Generation X (1965-80) 53 individuals — but last week, contemporary Christians, the U.S. Presbyterian Church especially the youth, can have 50 44 finalized a major change to different understandings of 40 46 40 its definition of marriage to human sexuality,” Styers said. 30 35 include same-sex couples. It will widen the discretion 30 The redefinition, which of teaching elders in conduct- 20 Baby Boomers (1946-64) 18 calls marriage “a unique ing marriage ceremonies of 10 Silent generation (1928-45) commitment between two same-sex couples who are Percent who favor same-sex marriage who favor Percent 0 people” and by implication already married to one anoth- 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 includes same-sex marriages, er according to secular laws. SOURCE: PEW RESEARCH CENTER DTH/KAITLYN KELLY was approved by the church’s “As a church, the 221st General Assembly and Presbyterian Church has where same-gender marriage “We always try to create was recommended to the received much grace from God is legal to offer the services of an environment in which we presbyteries for their vote. in Jesus Christ,” said Gradye Presbyterian churches for such can agree and disagree with Based on unofficial voting Parsons, the stated clerk of the weddings, if the pastor and mutual respect and forbear- tallies, the deciding “yes” vote church’s General Assembly. local church governing board ance,” he said. came from the Presbytery of “We should extend that grace approve,” he said. Among the five North the Palisades in New Jersey to each other in all gentleness Dunham added that he Carolina presbyteries in the last Tuesday. The amendment as we live into this chapter of supports the church’s action. Synod of the Mid-Atlantic, is now part of the church’s our common life.” “Personally, I’m grateful Charlotte, New Hope and constitution, the Director for Robert E. Dunham, pastor for this decision,” Dunham Western North Carolina Worship in the Book of Order. and head of staff of Chapel said. “I think it is a good day voted “yes” on the proposed It is a historic develop- Hill’s University Presbyterian any time the church can bless change to the church’s ment that the Presbyterian Church emphasized that the long-term relationships of marriage definition, while Church — one of the largest new marriage language in love and fidelity.” Coastal Carolina voted “no” Protestant denominations in the constitution is permis- Still, he said his congrega- and Salem did not vote. the U.S. — approved same- sive, not directive. tion members have different sex marriages as Christian in “It allows churches in states opinions about the decision. [email protected] State to create 300K jobs with highways By Maggie Monsrud ning engineer, said the program ate immediate jobs,” he said. to state, 30 percent to region- Staff Writer will fund some projects in “These projects are going to al and 40 percent to division. Orange County, such as a new give us the infrastructure for “The allocation process Armed with a new formula rail station in Hillsborough and development and job creation.” uses a different basis — it’s a for job creation, the North a light rail system in Chapel Mike Stanley, the program’s data driven process,” Stanley Carolina Department of Hill, which will have a station central region manager, said said. “Instead of using popu- Transportation says it can cre- near UNC Hospitals. the old formula allocated lation and equal share, the ate up to 300,000 news jobs. At Monday’s NCDOT open funds depending on the popu- formula now bases allocation The new formula is house in Hillsborough, Lewis lation of the region and the on categories.” called the Strategic Mobility said residents expressed the amount of unfinished projects. Mike Mills, division 7 engi- Formula, and it is projected most interest in the new rail The remaining 25 percent of neer, said the new formula to create the jobs through station in Hillsborough. funds were then equally dis- takes the judgment out of 478 highway projects, which “We had six or seven folks tributed among the regions. funding allocation. translates to a 273 percent who were concerned with Stanley said the old for- “We’re not sitting down and increase in projects and a 172 how the project would devel- mula based funding off of asking, ‘What needs to be built percent increase in jobs. op the area,” he said. “There what projects were needed, here?’” he said. “It’s more data The NCDOT released a is an area planned to develop whereas the new formula driven, which is important draft of its State Transportation around the train station, but has made allocation a more because money is tight.” Improvement Program in planning hasn’t gone too far quantitative process. December, which proposed along because these are all Stanley said the new for- [email protected] projects to pay for in the state new projects.” mula defines three categories between 2015 and 2025. It is Lewis said this program is for project funding — state, the final step in implementing not only about new projects, regional and division. the Strategic Transportation but it is also about the cre- The funding for each proj- Investments law, which out- ation of more jobs. ect is dependent on which THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA Daily Tar Heel lines the new formula. “When you come in and category the project fits into AT CHAPEL HILL PRESENTS Ed Lewis, division 7 plan- build these projects, they cre- — 30 percent of funding goes Quarter page 2015 Distinguished Writer-in-Residence Middle schoolers raise 5.2 x 10.5 $1500 to empower women By Madeline Reich had to drop out of school Rights, seventh-graders Staff Writer at the age they are at,” have made displays on child Sebastian said. labor and sixth-graders have Over the past week, stu- “I would like to think of researched famous human dents at McDougle Middle it as if I was in the situa - rights advocates like Nelson School have spent their tion the girls are in and me Mandela, White said. lunchtimes collecting nearly not having an education,” The students will also be $1,500 for A Ban Against McDougle seventh-grader reading and discussing educa- Neglect, an organization Aliyah Ferrell said. “I would tion reform advocate Malala based in Carrboro that works like people to help out with Yousafzai’s Nobel Peace Prize to empower women. me and help me get an edu- acceptance speech. “All of the money that is cation even though I may “I really think that it’s a raised will go toward women’s have never met them.” week that is highly important Terry programs in Ghana, so it is In addition to the fund- and very necessary, because really sponsoring their educa- raiser, the students have been it’s good for other people to tion,” said Lindsay Sebastian, learning about human rights get a feel for what others are Tempest sales and marketing manager and education for Learning struggling with so we don’t for ABAN. without Borders week. take for granted what we The students will con- Eighth-grade students have in the United States,” tinue collecting money have been making post- Ferrell said. illiams throughout the week for the ers about the articles of W organization. the Declaration of Human [email protected] author, naturalist, environmentalist, activist Sebastian said A Ban Against Neglect runs a WORKS INCLUDE: Refuge: An Unnatural History of women’s center in Aburi, Family and Place • An Unspoken Hunger: Stories from Ghana. The program focuses the Field • The Open Space of Democracy • Finding on women’s empowerment through teaching basic life Beauty in a Broken World • When Women Were Birds and business skills, she said. “We try to develop ideas for them for what they can GOING G GOOIINNGG CRAZY?!CCRRAAZZYY??!! do. We try to identify their wants and give them the Take a break! resources they need to pro- Reading vide for themselves and their TUESDAY, MARCH 24 families,” Sebastian said. between the books! During lunchtime, student 7:30 p.m. / UNC Campus go around with a jar to col- Genome Sciences Bldg. lect donations and people are bringing in money, said 250 Bell Tower Road Carolyn White, a librarian at McDougle Middle School. Free parking in Bell Tower Lot “One day one student Free/open to the public brought in $200. We’ve raised almost $1,500 in one week just by lunchtime dona- tions,” she said. The students will be selling bracelets made by the women at ABAN’s campus in Ghana in addition to collecting donations. Sebastian presented to the students about the specific SPONSORS • The Office of the Chancellor • The Hanes Family • The Hibbits Family • The Department of English & Comparative Literature women they are helping by Downtown Chapel Hill • 106 W. Franklin St. (Next to He’s Not Here) fundraising. Mon-Thurs 11:30am-11:00pm • Fri-Sat 11:30am-11:30pm • Sun Noon-11:00pm “It’s really powerful that www.englishcomplit.unc.edu/distinguishedwriter • 919.962.4283 they are learning that the 942-PUMP • www.yogurtpump.com women they are supporting 6 Tuesday, March 24, 2015 News The Daily Tar Heel Cartoonist won’t shy from controversy

is a negative art form because it are just a lot of excitable Kevin Kallaugher makes fun of people in power, people around. There’s some- uses humor to using humor as a vehicle for an thing special about what often-serious message. cartoons do. They just upset challenge authority. “All of us can imagine that people in a magical way.” if an artist has the ability to Tom Linden, a journalism By Stephanie Lamm take your face, pull it apart professor, said he has always Assistant University Editor and reassemble it under our loved political cartoons. control, that’s a pretty power- “I think these guys are An attack on a satirical ful person,” Kallaugher said. incredibly courageous to be newspaper in Paris made He said he has caricatured satirizing people in positions of journalists question the line almost every prominent world authority, power and looking between offensive and humor- leader over the course of his at issues and ideas that carry ous — but an award-winning career. His image of the for- so much emotional weight for cartoonist who spoke at UNC mer prime minister of , some people,” Linden said. Monday said it will not deter , was confiscat- Kristen Patrow, a gradu- cartoonists from addressing ed and burned at Indian air- ate student, studies the laws controversial topics. ports when it appeared on the of visual images. She said Kevin Kallaugher, an front page of . Kallaugher’s talk revealed the editorial cartoonist for The “It goes straight to the vani- tension in First Amendment Economist magazine and The ty of powerful people,” he said. law between protected and Sun, spoke about Kallaugher drew cartoons as unprotected material. DTH/KYLE HODGES the importance of political he spoke, illustrating his cre- “There are ethical consider- Kevin Kallaugher, cartoonist for The Economist, speaks to students Monday in the Freedom Forum. cartooning after the attacks on ative process when depicting ations one makes, and there are Charlie Hebdo’s offices in Paris. subjects and choosing symbols. legal decisions you make,” she Kallaugher said though rotten tomato at the power- “They couldn’t kill laughter. Kallaugher knew three of the “We deal with sensitive said. “The law is like a baseline the law might protect sexist, ful, but on that day in Paris, In fact, they tried hard. They cartoonists killed by Islamic subjects and, even in the behavior. You can do pretty bad racist or otherwise insensitive they got back at us and maybe did everything at their dispos- extremists after the publication U.S., we get ourselves in hot stuff and get away with it under cartoons, he chooses not to got the upper hand. But al, and maybe at the end of printed an offensive depiction water all the time,” he said. the First Amendment, but then draw them for professional when they did, one thing they the day we got the last laugh.” of the prophet Muhammad. “Death threats do happen, there are ethical considerations and ethical reasons. weren’t able to do is to stop Kallaugher said cartooning even for minor things. There as well.” “My job is to throw a little everything,” Kallaugher said. [email protected] NPHC Week of Service gets back to origins NPHC organizations have munity outside of campus,” Student Body President-elect events led by sororities — one working together for our dif- The council planned been working on this project Morrison said. Houston Summers. in the Pit to raise money for ferent awesome causes and a week of community since before spring break. Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity “We wanted to show unity March for Babies, an event to touching the Chapel Hill “I was really satisfied and Inc. and Alpha Phi Alpha across campus,” Morrison said. raise money and awareness community,” Mayfield said. service events. really impressed that every- Fraternity Inc. led a Tar Heel Joey Blake, president of for premature infants, as well All of the members hope to one got their events together TABLE event in Carrboro on Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity as a food drive at Fitzgerald’s. take the main focus of their By Anyssa Reddix despite where they were,” Monday, packaging food for Inc., said Wednesday’s park The week will wrap up on organizations off of step shows Staff Writer Morrison said. underprivileged children. cleanup is an opportunity for Friday in the Union. and place it on service. The fraternities and sorori- Tuesday, the entire NPHC those outside of the Greek “We encourage people to “At least since I’ve become This week, UNC’s National ties were paired up for each will hold a bake sale from organizations to get involved. come through to make cards involved, the NPHC hasn’t Pan-Hellenic Council will be project. Morrison challenged 11 p.m. to 2 a.m. outside “It’s simple, but it gets the for the children’s hospital, and always been unified around focusing on one of its found- the organizations to create The Library on Franklin organization’s face out in the there will be one big card for service as we should be ing principles: service. service projects that would Street. They will be joined community because a lot of the dining staff,” Morrison said. because at the end of the “There’s a lot of confusion impact both the campus com- by members of the Carolina the time at UNC, they don’t Lauren Mayfield, president day, our organizations were on why we were founded and munity and Orange County. Union Activities Board, the understand what the NPHC of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority founded for service for all what we’re about,” President “It’s great when we do com- Greek Alliance Council and fraternities and sororities Inc., said service brings togeth- mankind,” Blake said. Michael Morrison said. “What munity service projects on the National Panhellenic are,” he said. er all NPHC organizations. we’re all about is service.” campus, but there is a com- Conference, along with Thursday will include two “I’m excited to see us [email protected]

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The Daily Tar Heel News Tuesday, March 24, 2015 7 Writer explores women’s voices, power By Elizabeth Baker five national parks and five mother’s death was the first ATTEND THE READING Staff Writer national monuments,” she said. book of hers she read. “All of them are under threat by “She writes so beauti- Time: 7:30 p.m. tonight When Terry Tempest oil and gas development.” fully about women’s lives Location: Genome Sciences Williams was 5 years old, her Williams has written about and women’s power and the Building grandmother gave her Roger everything from women’s issues relationship between older Tory Peterson’s field guide to to issues of voice and finding and younger generations of Info: http://englishcomplit. western birds. beauty in a broken world. women,” she said. unc.edu/distinguishedwriter She took her red pen and Williams said she explored Williams’ epilogue to drew three lines in the corner. the topic of voice in her most “Refuge,” “The Clan of One- lems and the way that that “Between you and me,” her recent book, “When Women Breasted Women,” relates her impacted not just the human grandmother said, “That says Were Birds,” after her mother family’s history with breast population of Utah but the I love you.” died of ovarian cancer. Soon cancer to nuclear testing in bird population and the ani- That book, coupled with after her mother’s death, Utah and Nevada, which left mal population, so you see this her grandmother’s sentiment, Williams read journals her nuclear toxins in the environ- interconnectedness,” Ho said. sparked a lifelong interest in mother had left behind to her ment that likely led to the high Williams said the thing nature for Williams, UNC’s — all of which were blank. rate of cancer in her family. she most wants to share is the 2015 distinguished writer-in- “That question — why did UNC English professor power of being curious and the residence, who will be par- my mother leave me her empty Jennifer Ho said the way power of having a voice in the ticipating in two panels and a journals — propelled this book Williams is able to convey open space of democracy. reading this week. on what does it mean to have an intimate family story set “I write to create an aware- Having grown up in Utah, a voice as a woman,” she said. against the backdrop of the ness out of the questions I Williams’ writing is based on “How do we find our voice? landscape is impressive. hold and to create inspiration her experience with nature and How do we keep our voice? “She tells this deeply per- for each of us to tell our own landscape in the West. How do we lose our voice? sonal family story, but she stories and to value our stories,” She just completed a book How do we retrieve it?” does it while telling a story she said. “It’s what makes us on America’s natural parks and UNC English professor about the Great Salt Lake and human.” COURTESY OF THE UNC ENGLISH DEPARTMENT the idea of public lands. Minrose Gwin said Williams’ the rising lake levels that cre- Terry Tempest Williams, the 2015 distinguished writer-in-resi- “Living in Utah, we have memoir, “Refuge,” about her ated all of these flooding prob- [email protected] dence, is on campus this week and will give a reading tonight. Resident frustrated by parking rules Haley Ray family. He said he quickly awarding an appeal. all efforts to make the area Staff Writer parked and left his car to get “We made every effort to safer for motorists and citi- his daughter away from the review Mr. Holland’s appeal, zens, he said. And he hopes A parking ticket appeal panhandlers. and his concerns were shared to help others avoid situa- could lead to safer park- The hydrant in front of with traffic engineering, tions similar to his. ing conditions in Chapel the deli is painted pink, the fire department and “I don’t want to see Hill and fairer treatment of which blends in with the police department,” she said. someone’s grandmother in grandmothers. brick exterior of the build- “Unfortunately, we don’t the same situation I’m in,” Chapel Hill resident Mike ing, Holland said. always make the popular Holland said. “She might not Holland received a $100 He said the paint was decision.” have the time or resources to parking ticket in February faded and suggested that Chief Dan Jones also said fight it as I am.” for parking in front of a fire hydrants around Chapel Hill the fire hydrant is visible at Holland said residents hydrant at Mediterranean be painted a bright orange or the deli. He said firefight- could go to town councilmen Deli. He has been working yellow to increase visibility. ers have been instructed to with their parking issues to to appeal his ticket on the Orange Water and Sewer break the windows of any get more involved with imple- grounds that the hydrant was Authority owns the hydrants car parked in front of a fire menting change. camouflaged by potted plants in Chapel Hill and is respon- hydrant so they can thread Although Holland’s appeal and faded paint. sible for the color, Fire Chief the fire hose through the car. was initially denied, he still “The hydrant was effec- Dan Jones said. Holland has been work- hopes to see the citation tively camouflaged to the Holland’s initial appeal was ing for three years to change dropped, which may require public as well as the fire denied. Brenda Jones, Chapel parking conditions in an appeals process through department,” Holland said. “It Hill parking superintendent, Chapel Hill. the police department or city puts the fire department in an said circumstances did not He said the threat posed manager’s office, he said. unsafe situation.” warrant a void of his citation. to bicyclists and corporate “Of course I would not Holland also said two Brenda Jones said park- delivery trucks parking in the deliberately park in front of panhandlers were harassing ing services staff and the street are additional issues a fire hydrant,” he said. “You him for money at the time of fire marshal reviewed the that need to be fixed. could not force me to.” the ticket, creating an unsafe area around the hydrant and His attempt at appealing situation for himself and his found no justification for the ticket is part of his over- [email protected]

A buzzer-beater win The women’s basketball team will advance in the NCAA Tournament. See pg. 1 games and 4 for stories.

© 2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved. Level: 1 2 3 4 Cartoon controversy An award-winning car- toonist visited UNC to dis- Complete the grid cuss the ethics of political so each row, column cartoons. See pg. 6 for story. and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9. Gay marriage approval Solution to The Presbyterian church Monday’s puzzle voted to allow same-sex mar- riages within the church. See pg. 5 for story.

Carolina conversations The chancellor’s new ini- tiative held its first event on Monday to mixed reactions. See pg. 1 for story. 4(523$!9 -!2#( 

Short 3 hours for graduation? Maymester!

Check out summer.unc.edu

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ACROSS often is 18 Flier usually shorter than 47 Epidemic-fighting agcy. 1 Mythical bird 66 Muscat resident its tail 49 Kept the party hopping, 4 Spanish hero played by 67 Not as happy 22 Gun lobby gp. briefly Heston 68 Yale Bowl rooter 25 False idol 50 Cape Cod catch 9 Bush successor 69 Class-ending sounds 26 “Grumpy” movie heroes 51 New York governor 14 Oktoberfest gripe 70 River to the Rhone 28 Sunflower State capital Andrew 15 Protest sign word 71 Fish eggs 30 __ Beta Kappa 52 Like city folk 16 Purple Heart, e.g. 31 A.L. East team 53 Poetic feet 17 *One harvesting honey DOWN 33 Cul-de-__ 54 Lab containers 19 Freezing cold 1 Synagogue official 34 Biblical suffix 55 Follow 20 Count in music 2 It has a floor but no 35 50-Across milieu 57 Way to get info, on retro 21 Nothing, in Normandy ceiling 37 Season in a Shakespeare phones 23 Floor cleaner scent 3 Competition with title 58 Kind of navel 24 MIT part: Abbr. knights 38 “Chopsticks __ fork?” 61 “Present!” 25 *One planning a job 4 Olympian’s blade 39 “Game of Thrones” 63 Grafton’s “__ for 27 Words before grip or life 5 Novelist Harper patriarch Stark Noose” 29 Pub offering 6 “It’s a Wonderful Life” 41 Making possible 65 Lead-in for plunk or 30 Mom-and-pop org. director 42 __-friendly flooey 32 Havens 7 Strand during a blizzard, 36 Exorcism target say 40 *One calling strikes 8 Yankee shortstop Jeter 43 Cara or Castle 9 Online “Wow!” 44 Pursue 10 “Hey, the light is green!” 45 Pop 11 Wing it at the lectern 46 Westminster show org. 12 Augusta’s home 48 Wraps up 13 Birch family tree 50 *One working at a low level 56 Dench of “The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” 59 Biceps exercise 60 Genesis brother 61 Surround 62 Bird that lays blue eggs 64 Lone Ranger epithet, or what each answer to a starred clue 8 Tuesday, March 24, 2015 Opinion The Daily Tar Heel

Established 1893, 122 years of editorial freedom QUOTE OF THE DAY “Forty-three percent of low-wage workers EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS JENNY SURANE EDITOR, 962-4086 OR [email protected] have some college education. College is not a HENRY GARGAN OPINION EDITOR, [email protected] BAILEY BARGER PETER VOGEL KERN WILLIAMS SAM SCHAEFER ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR BRIAN VAUGHN KIM HOANG COLIN KANTOR safeguard.” TREY FLOWERS DINESH MCCOY Shilpi Misra, on an event about empowering low-wage workers

EDITORIAL CARTOON By Ngozika Nwoko, “Chapman and Hilligan,” [email protected] FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT “ People have the right to collectively bargain for working rights and be allowed striking Seth Rose power, just as workers from decades ago did.” Justice League alan9074, on a proposal to raise workers’ minimum wage to $15 Senior political science major from Durham. Email: [email protected] abhor racist and sexist LETTERS TO speech, but it is protected THE EDITOR and the DTH should say so. We’re To do less because of politi- DPS assault response cal headwinds soils the has been exemplary legacy with which you have been entrusted. not that TO THE EDITOR: The generalizations David Wynne made in the March 18 Class of ’71 great, article “Survey Finds Sexual Assault Disconnect” do not Show support this accurately portray UNC- week for farmworkers y’all Chapel Hill’s commit- ment to comprehensively TO THE EDITOR: n high school, I assessed addressing the issue of sex- Farmworkers feed the my personal worth EDITORIAL ual assault. The article also world, but their efforts and I against others quantita- fails to mention the many struggles are often taken for tively. My self-esteem could reporting options available granted as we quite literally have been reduced to a math- to the campus community. enjoy the fruits (and veg- ematical formula based on Rightwashed Our highly trained etables) of their labor in our my class rank, the number of Department of Public daily lives. girls I kissed in the past six Safety (DPS) officers are For that reason, the None of the eight chosen One would hope that months, how I was perform- An effective BOG sworn by the State of North Phi Chapter of Latinas ing in soccer games and one by the Senate identified as a board which has been Carolina, and together they Promoviendo Comunidad/ or two other marginal factors. requires greater a Democrat. given national scrutiny for represent decades of law Lambda Pi Chi Sorority, Each person has his or her The board’s failure to its inexplicable dismissal enforcement experience. Inc. will be celebrating own criteria, but chances are political diversity. include one of the state’s of UNC-system leader DPS officers are skilled in National Farmworker most of y’all were forced to he proportionally two major political parties Tom Ross would be more responding to reports of Awareness Week from position yourself as fundamen- skewed political is not a good sign for any fairly selected. sexual assault and provid- March 24 to March 31. We tally better or worse than the T identifications of other dynamic of diversity. An attempt to appoint ing support services to will be hosting a variety of people around you. the Board of Governors’ Representative racial, eco- more Democrats to the survivors. They also work events and partnering with The college admissions members reflect an institu- nomic and ethnic diversity board could ensure state closely with the campus a number of student orga- process, though few of us have tional unwillingness on the are just as far off. politicians and University community on violence nizations in order to honor admitted it, was the ugliest part prevention efforts. the crucial contributions part of the N.C. General This sole Democrat, bureaucrats are more of high school competition. Every sexual assault farmworkers make. University rankings allow us to Assembly to select a board Walter Davenport, is bur- accountable to the people. and crime reported to DPS Throughout the week, institutionally define our superi- of equal representation dened with the task of But these appoint- is publicly disclosed on we will hold a long-sleeved ority against the kids who went and intellectual diversity. representing the party’s ments confirm that stu- the Daily Crime Log on shirt drive. These shirts to “lesser” colleges or those who As of last Thursday’s perspective by himself. dents, professors and all the DPS website, which provide protection for would not be attending college selection, only one of the North Carolina’s voting cit- members of the UNC affirms Carolina’s com- farm workers from the at all. Unfortunately, this inflat- eight new members cho- izens identify as 36 percent community who identify mitment to transparency. sun, plants, pesticides and ed sense of merit persists long sen by the N.C. House of Democrat and 35 percent with the Democratic party The University’s Annual other health-threatening after we arrive on campus. Representatives to act on Republican, yet the Board continue to be unduly Security Report, which is situations they face. Boxes Two years ago, I read the Board of Governors of Governors will boast just excluded from a wide vari- also posted online, includes are located in the following a column in The Daily for the upcoming fis- over 3 percent Democratic ety of important decision- three years of statistics areas: Davis Library, the Pennsylvanian, the student and data. And in 2014, the cal year was a democrat. membership. making processes. Undergraduate Library, newspaper at the University university hired a Clery Act the Student Union, Lenoir of Pennsylvania. The author, Compliance Specialist sole- Dining Hall, Rams Head from Matthews, N.C., wrote ly dedicated to improving Dining Hall, the Student about his difficulties with early EDITORIAL our response, prevention Recreation Center, Rams failure at UPenn. He earned and support efforts. Head Recreation Center, average scores on his early It is important to note SASB-North, the Carolina tests, but he assured the reader that federal law requires Latino/a Collaborative that all would end well for State of obscurity universities, including (CLC) and the Genome him, because he at least had Carolina, to have both Science Building. not settled for a state school and lieutenant governor, This is particularly confidential and non-con- On Tuesday, March 24, like UNC. He wrote: Our highest elected responded promptly. This embarrassing as the fidential reporting options we will be co-hosting an “It’s certainly tough, going officials must be is yet another demonstra- request came from six of other than law enforce- event with Students United from the top to average. But tion of a lack of leadership the state’s most prominent ment. In non-confidential for Immigrant Equality, a place where brilliance is more transparent. from Gov. Pat McCrory. media outlets. cases, DPS works closely “The Overlooked Realities the norm makes the fantastic with campus departments unshine Week, an Media outlets reported Additionally, the infor- of Cultivating a Dream”. We intellectual diversity... pos- to investigate and respond hope to provide insight into that McCrory’s office mation requested was pre- sible. Most of us were probably initiative to promote to each report. immigrant and farm work- standouts in our high school, S the importance of ignored up to four e-mail sumably as innocuous as Carolina is, in fact, very ers’ experiences through and now the tables have turned. open government and free- requests. There is simply possible — a simple travel connected on these efforts, personal testimonies and Or at least, aren’t oriented so dom of information, was no excuse for McCrory to records request. None of and I invite The Daily Tar messages. The event is to much in our favor. But when celebrated across the U.S. not have replied at this the requested information Heel and the campus com- take place from 7-8:30 p.m. you’re at or near the top all the earlier this month. point, a month after the could or would have been munity to learn more at safe. in Union 3408. time, how much more can you A group of media out- first request was sent in. used against McCrory by unc.edu and dps.unc.edu. On Wednesday, March 25, grow? Do you even have much lets sent travel records In fact, McCrory’s office the organizations. we will be joining forces with of an incentive to?” requests to 18 of the state’s was reported to be the This is a sad indication Jeff McCracken Hunger Lunch and SUIE Although my man was guilty governmental agencies least responsive of all those of a lead-from-behind Director of Public Safety for an interactive activity to of some world-class delusional a month ago to test each tested. Following the sec- mentality currently reflect on what it takes for elitism, I don’t mean to single farm workers to harvest our office’s level of responsive- ond travel records request, held by those in North DTH should speak up him out. The attitude inform- for free speech produce. Don not forget to ing his column is regularly ness. All offices other than his office responded stating Carolina’s highest offices. pick up a plate of food for replicated by folks at UNC, the two highest in the that the first request had Constituents deserve and TO THE EDITOR: only $4! We will be in the pit aimed at students at other state state, those of the governor been “overlooked.” should expect better. Since nearly everyone from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. schools in North Carolina. agrees that the bus chants On Thursday, March Tar Heels love to pick on at Oklahoma and the com- 26, we will be hosting a N.C. State, HBCUs, community ADVICE COLUMN ments within the N.C. State panel discussion on Laws colleges and any school ranked notebook were repugnant, and Health in the Fields: lower than UNC-Chapel Hill. what should we do? farmworker’s wage, housing, Yet many of my high school The powers that be have health, and child labor in classmates who attend such You Asked for It moved quickly to expel or the fields. The event will be institutions have been chal- otherwise sanction those held at the Carolina Latino/a lenged to become impressive In which we fix your busted bracket and try to befriend Carol Folt involved. Collaborative (Craige North) critical thinkers, artists or The Daily Tar Heel should in room 144 at 7 p.m. activists. They take classes, join Drew Goins (whose ture momentum. be a voice in opposition. The Lastly, on Monday, March organizations and engage with bracket got pretty upset) The best way to reach out early protesters against the 30, we will be screening the people that require them to ask and Kelsey Weekman (who’s to our most meme-able chan- Vietnam War were “com- film “Food Chains” to learn difficult questions of themselves. just upset in general) are the cellor is to take to the internet. mies”. The supporters of the about the oppressive condi- A lot of UNC students are so advice columnists of “You Do your research. Did you cafeteria strike were called tions migrant farmworkers convinced of their supposed Asked for It.” Results may know she has a bachelor’s unspeakable names. are put through in order to superiority that they never chal- vary. degree in aquatic biology? In every case, the DTH yield enough produce and lenge themselves to grow. Use that information to stood for protected speech, make a living. We hope to You: How do I save face Kelsey Weekman and The same truth was evident your advantage. Slip a stuffed however objectionable to see you in Union 3407 from with my busted bracket? Drew Goins when I visited UPenn for the dolphin into a friendship the majority. Before oppos- 5-7 p.m. weekend in February. I spent Assistant online editor and senior ing the war was popular, YAFI: Going into the Big writer. proposal gift basket. If Noah time with a lot of dynamic Dance, nobody expected there were calls for the Rosalie Rubio To submit your own questions: can write 365 letters for Allie folks, but I also met a lot of Wichita State to topple administration to take over Senior bit.ly/dthyafi and Dance Marathoners can students who self-admittedly Kansas or N.C. State to dom- stand 24 hours FTK, you can the DTH or to close it. Peace, war and defense, cruised through their under- inate any seed other than what could feasibly be either find a way to bust into South We may passionately global studies graduate careers without seri- sunflower. team’s name in the blank. Or Building and present your ous challenges to their self- You’re in good company just talk to that octopus who platonic love offering. conception or attitudes about with everyone else who ever predicted World Cup games. Maintain any sparks of SPEAK OUT their surroundings. filled out any bracket ever. He probably knows what’s up. friendship by not tweeting at WRITING GUIDELINES It is hard for me to under- As a matter of fact, usage of How do I get her when she doesn’t cancel • Please type. Handwritten letters will not be accepted. stand why that school is so the word “busted” on social You: Chancellor Folt to become class. The woman doesn’t get • Sign and date. No more than two people should sign letters. impressed with itself when it media increases by 414 per- paid half a mil every year to produces so many apathetic my best friend? • Students: Include your year, major and phone number. cent during March, probably. put up with your foolishness. • Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number. and disengaged graduates — The probability of picking YAFI: Carol Folt is a We friendship-ship our- that goes for you too, UNC. • Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit a perfect bracket is 1 in 9.2 priceless gem — a pocket- selves with Carol harder than letters to 250 words. College should be a time to quintillion — still better than sized pioneer of Carolina we ship Bradley Cooper and SUBMISSION develop, contest and reframe the odds of any bar staying in blue fashion and the undis- Jennifer Lawrence or Joe • Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill, identities — not reaffirm notions the spot between CHUG and puted selfie queen. Biden and Condoleezza Rice. of quantitative superiority. NC 27514 Bub O’Malley’s for more than Remember that time she Here’s hoping Carol will • Email: [email protected] a year, but slim nonetheless. got a speeding ticket for finally notice us. Until then, Here’s our guaranteed going 20 over? The “Fast we’ll be admiring her from ATOMS TO ZEBRAFISH method for next year, though: and Furious: Pittsboro Drift” EDITOR’S NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily rep- afar and ordering Carol Folt resent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the Clark Cunningham sheds light Pick UNC all the way to end. incident proved that the throw pillows. Oh yeah, on the science of supplements. opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises five board NEXT For every other game, scribble woman is four feet of minia- they’re real. Google it. members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.