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Volume 125, Issue 70 dailytarheel.com Monday, February 19, 2018 Life after opioid addiction Heart simulator Program helps lets surgeons to rehabilitate practice safely By Rebecca Ayers mothers City Editor By Danielle Chemtob Surgeons have the ability to practice and Senior Writer perfect complex heart surgeries without any consequence due to advancements in heart Drug paraphernalia and bleach stains sur- simulators. rounded Rachel Lankford as she sat in the One company has been able to contribute to bathroom of her ex-boyfriend’s single-wide heart simulator technology with a simple ques- trailer. He stood over her as she took her tion, “Dad, how do you build a heart pump for ninth pregnancy test in three days. a pig?” He still didn’t believe her, despite the pre- Alec Grubbs came home from his intern- vious six tests. All were positive but one. ship to ask his father, Andy Grubbs, how to Now she was on the last stick in the three- engineer an air pump for a heart. Andy, a UNC pack she had picked up from a dollar store. entrepreneurship professor, venture capitalist It was positive. Again. and mechanical engineer, became instantly She walked through the graffiti-laden intrigued with his son’s question and decided hallway and showed the plus symbol to his to go to work with him the next day. mother. Both of them encouraged Lankford, That’s when Andy Grubbs met Richard then 20, to get an abortion. DTH/GABRIELLE THOMPSON Feins, a UNC School of Medicine professor of But she knew that was not an option. She Rachel Lankford picks up her daughter, Marleigh, from daycare on Wednesday afternoon. surgery, and offered his mechanical engineer- had already been to the Planned Parenthood ing expertise to Feins since thoracic surgeons in Chapel Hill earlier that day, her paper- Her words racing — an effect of the opioids anyone to help her, she lived in her car for a and biomedical engineers typically aren’t work signed and everything in place to get — she pleaded with the technician, told her few weeks. taught how to build air pumps. an abortion. Lankford already had two abor- she was a drug addict, that she couldn’t have a Four years later, Lankford, now 24, loves Feins had hired Alec Grubbs to help build tions, one when she was 13 and the other at child. But nothing could be done. Marleigh, the healthy, energetic baby girl the lung surgery simulator to help teach sur- 19. When she made her appointment, she Though she had doubts, she wanted to she so desperately didn’t want that day. gery residents how to perform a lobectomies — figured this time around would be no differ- believe that her ex-boyfriend would be there “She’s my whole wide world,” Lankford removing one of the lobes of the lung. The goal ent. for her and her future child, so she drove to said, “but she wasn’t at first.” was to create an air pump to make the heart She was high on prescription painkillers his house after her appointment. When she appear to be beating. when she walked into the clinic with her told him that she tried to have an abortion but Women and the crisis Feins had previously reached out to Dr. mother. She stepped into the doctor’s office couldn’t, he said that the baby wasn’t his. Paul Ramphal and Professor Daniel Coore to As the opioid crisis devastates American and undressed from the waist down for the She became enraged at the accusation that teach him how to make a heart simulator, after communities, women are among the most ultrasound. The technician turned to her. she had cheated on him. Yelling and swearing Feins had found their research on creating heart vulnerable. Between 1999 and 2015, the “You’re 21 weeks and five days pregnant,” at him, she insisted that the baby was his. He simulators. After Andy met Feins, Ramphal rate of deaths from prescription opioids she said. “You’re not having an abortion.” asked her to leave. and Coore he became interested in the business increased by 471 percent among women, In the corner, her mother sobbed. She felt heartbroken and desolate. She was aspect of what they had invented. In 2010, Feins, Lankford was five months pregnant and too afraid to tell her father, and her mother weighed 84 pounds. still lived in Virginia at the time. Without SEE OPIOID, PAGE 6 SEE HEART SIMULATORS, PAGE 6 LIGHTUP festival rings in Year of the Dog By Laura Brummett we’re all Americans and we can Erin Chung said. Volunteer Yuki Yeung par- Staff Writer all come together to share our Charles Floyd, one of the ticipated in the festival for the experiences and ideas like one dragon dancers, performed at first time this year. The Chapel Hill community big community,” Gu said. the event for the second year. “It has a lot of meaning to came together at Sunday’s LIGHTUP drew a large “I really love the sense me because my parents immi- LIGHTUP Festival to celebrate crowd. Popular events includ- of community,” Floyd said. grated and it was hard for the Chinese New Year. The ed tracing Chinese characters “Education and knowledge of them to assimilate without second annual festival was held and dressing up in traditional places around the world helps giving up part of their cul- at the Friday Center in Chapel costumes for photo-ops. people come together as a ture,” Yeung said. Hill and hosted by the Chinese “It’s a place where people community.” Another volunteer, Yan School at Chapel Hill. coming from all different For Chinese Americans, Wei, was at the event with the The New Year began on backgrounds can share cul- the festival allowed them to Confucius Institute at NC State Friday, officially starting the tural heritage and ideas that celebrate one of their cultural and is a visiting professor from Year of the Dog. Current this event embodies,” Gu said. holidays while connecting Nanjing Normal University. board chair of The Chinese Eight-year-old Eliya with others in the community. “The best part of this event DTH/JACK GARSIDE School and Chapel Hill Town Chung said her favorite part Quohe Zhang, a festival is that people get together Students from the Chinese School at Chapel Hill perform at the Council member Hongbin Gu was watching the tradi- attendee, moved to the United and celebrate not only the Friday Center during the Chinese New Year Festival on Sunday. organized the event. tional Dragon Dance being States from China and now Chinese New Year, but also “With the rhetoric going on performed. Her mom, Erin currently lives in Durham. for people to reach out to Hill, Gu said. After last year’s for granted,” she said. “This against immigrants and minor- Chung, brought her four kids “There’s different people each other,” Wei said. event, organizers wanted to event brings different people ities, I think that for everyone to the festival. from different countries,” The LIGHTUP festival was make the event more diverse to work together who usually this is important, to realize “I wanted to expose them Zhang said. “It’s a great plat- started after the Town Council and inclusive. don’t have (this) intersection.” even though we’re different to different cultures, and to form for communication had discussions about ways to “A lot of times we take the @laura_brummett with different backgrounds be around diverse people,” between different people.” promote diversity in Chapel inclusivity of Chapel Hill [email protected] DOE won’t hear trans bathroom issues By Michael Meeks Simmons said, transgender stu- Staff Writer dents will not use restrooms at LGBT CENTER school, opting instead to wait OFFICE HOURS The U.S. Department of until the end of the day to use the Address: Student and Education told BuzzFeed News it restroom at home. will refuse to hear complaints from “We know that is going to Academic Services Building transgender students who are cause health issues like dehydra- South, Suite 3308 banned from using the bathroom tion, kidney problems and urinary Weekdays: 9:00am-5:00pm aligning with their gender identity. tract problems,” he said. “I know A department spokesperson this first-hand because I have Wednesday: 9:00am-8:00pm told BuzzFeed News on Feb. 8 heard students tell me that, even that restroom complaints from going to high school in Raleigh, Saturday and Sunday: Closed transgender students are not cov- they go home to use the restroom an entire population. ered by Title IX. rather than try to navigate the “We don’t talk enough about “Where students, including restrooms in their school.” the prevalence of suicide and transgender students, are penal- Title IX should be the pri- DTH/LAWSON BURROWS homelessness within LGBTQ ized or harassed for failing to mary legal defense against the Guard Paris Kea (22) drives to the basket during Sunday’s home game against Louisville. youth, particularly in the trans- conform to sex-based stereotypes, Department of Education’s bath- gender community,” she said. that is sex discrimination prohib- room policies, Simmons said. “We don’t talk enough about the ited by Title IX,” the spokesperson “Title IX requires students violence committed against trans- said to BuzzFeed News. “In the be given a discrimination-free Women’s basketball falls, gender youth.” case of bathrooms, however, long- environment,” he said. “It’s a very Hagstrom said the UNC LGBTQ standing regulations provide that shaky legal foundation for the Center is the best place for any separating facilities on the basis Department of Education to be 67-57, in 7th straight loss LGBTQ+ student to go if they need of sex is not a form of discrimina- moving forward with.” assistance or help in any way. Louisville (27-2, 13-1 ACC) came into tion prohibited by Title IX.” Simmons said it is crucial for By Holt McKeithan “For any transgender students Sunday afternoon’s contest tied atop Ames Simmons, director of any student who encounters a Staff Writer who have experienced any sort of the ACC standings with Notre Dame transgender policy at Equality school administration not allow- gender-based violence, there are Despite suffering a 67-57 loss to No. 4 — a top-five team which the Cardinals NC, said the decision will directly ing them to use restrooms in office hours for the gender and Louisville, the North Carolina women’s had beaten by 33 points earlier in the harm transgender students. accordance with their gender violence coordinators that are basketball head coach Sylvia Hatchell season — and North Carolina came in “The Department of Education identity to seek legal council. held within the LGBTQ Center,” wanted to focus on the positives. on a six-game skid. is essentially saying that they are “The ACLU of North Carolina she said. “To play the No. 4 team in the coun- But Hatchell didn’t fixate on the not going to do their job,” he said. has been clear that they want Additionally, Hagstrom said, try like we did, we did a lot of good results of the game. Instead, she “They are there to make sure that students who are encountering the LGBTQ Center’s website things,” she said. “I’m excited about the focused on identifying bright spots students have an opportunity to situations like that to reach out to has a list of gender non-specific progress that we’ve made and how hard from a battle against one of the nation’s learn in a safe environment free them,” he said. bathrooms on campus, the most the kids are working.” top teams. Where others might have from discrimination, and when Emily Hagstrom, co-chair- prominent being in the Student The game marked the Tar Heels’ seen despair, she saw progress. kids are not able to use the rest- person of Carolina Advocates for Union and the Campus Y, as well (14-13, 4-10 ACC) seventh straight loss. “It’s not about the losses; it’s about rooms that accord with their gen- Gender Equity (CAGE), said by as other resources for LGBTQ+ They have not won in nearly a month how we play,” she said. “These kids der identity, it places them at risk refusing to act on this issue, the students. since upsetting then-No. 15 Duke in for violence.” Department of Education is with- [email protected] overtime on Jan. 21. SEE BASKETBALL, PAGE 6 In the best case scenario, holding basic human rights from

But still, it’s a big change. The end of an era, you might say! MONICA GELLER, “” 2 Monday, February 19, 2018 News The Daily Tar Heel The Daily Tar Heel www.dailytarheel.com Excerpt: The DTH gets its start Established 1893 Editor’s note: In celebration baths” in the basement of 124 years of editorial freedom of The Daily Tar Heel’s 125th Smith Hall for the entire stu- birthday, we are running dent body. The Old Well was excerpts from “Print News not the iconic, symbolic struc- TYLER FLEMING and Raise Hell” by Kenneth ture it would later become; it EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Zogry every day this week. was a rough-hewn wooden hut [email protected] This is the first excerpt from with a bucket that served as pages 6-10 of the book. a source of water for students JESSICA SWANSON At first glance, the campus and horses. The small library MANAGING EDITOR of the University of North was located in Smith Hall, and [email protected] Carolina in the early months the majority of books were not RACHEL JONES of 1893 seemed an unlikely owned by the university but by place for the birth of a news- the Dialectic and Philanthropic ONLINE MANAGING EDITOR paper. Especially one that Societies, the oldest student [email protected] would become an important organizations on campus. A COREY RISINGER voice for the school through- rudimentary baseball field with out the twentieth century and rickety wooden bleachers had DIRECTOR OF ENTERPRISE well into the twenty-first, and been erected in the late 1880s, [email protected] would help launch the careers but no football stadium yet KIANA COLE of dozens of noted journalists existed. DIRECTOR OF PROJECTS AND and graduates in a wide range It was an inauspicious of professions. Despite the setting for an independent, INVESTIGATIONS fact that the university was to student-run weekly newspa- [email protected] celebrate its centennial that per, published, as the editors LEAH ASMELASH October—the 100th anniver- announced in the first issue, PHOTO COURTESY OF UNC PRESS AND KENNETH ZOGRY UNIVERSITY EDITOR sary of the laying of the corner- “under the auspices of the stone of the first building, Old University Athletic Association, The Daily Tar Heel’s first editors gathered for a photo. They would produce the first issue of The Tar [email protected] East—the campus retained a devoted to the interests of the Heel, released on Feb. 23, 1893. REBECCA AYERS small, bucolic atmosphere. The University at large.” The paper CITY EDITOR student body was tiny, with had a bold and broad mission posed changes in the 1860s, The introduction and constantly to self-improve- 317 students and 23 members to “contain a summary of all leading the charge. The “Battle immediate popularity of inter- ment, for at any moment he [email protected] of the faculty. Year-round occurrences in the University Plan,” as it was known, was collegiate football at UNC might confront a rival who ANA IRIZARRY Chapel Hill residents could be and village of Chapel Hill,” and based on the so-called German also played a key role in the had been more resolute in his STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR counted in the hundreds, and though primarily established model of higher education then creation of the Tar Heel. The preparation.” [email protected] the nearby cities of Raleigh to cover UNC athletics, “space gaining popularity in Europe sport was seen from the time Significantly, football also and Durham had populations will be assigned for the thor- and the United States. This of its inception not only as an quickly became the principal KARYN HLADIK-BROWN of about 13,000 and 5,800, ough discussion of all points model emphasized research extracurricular activity that means of bringing alumni ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR respectively. The largest city in pertaining to the advancement over oratory, required faculty built school spirit, but also as a back to UNC on a regular [email protected] North Carolina at the time was and growth of the University.” with earned graduate degrees, source of “manly” vigor for the basis—and their moral and Wilmington, with a population Thus, on Thursday, February and implemented theses and university and its students. It financial support became CHAPEL FOWLER of just over 20,000 residents. 23, 1893, “the Tar Heel first examinations with a standard- was the physical embodiment increasingly important as the SPORTS EDITOR Physically the campus placed its tender foot to the ized grading scale as a means of a new academic culture, one university pushed to modern- [email protected] looked little different in 1893 ground and made its first of assessing individual student based on individual achieve- ize in the late nineteenth and than it had on the eve of the print” (as an article in the performance. Research, not ment that contributed to the early twentieth centuries. In COLE DEL CHARCO Civil War. An alumnus of the University Magazine cleverly rote memorization of the clas- team’s success. According to the fall of 1892, four years AUDIO EDITOR class of 1860 returning more punned on the occasion of the sics and traditional scientific historian James Leloudis: after Carolina’s first intercol- [email protected] than three decades later would paper’s twentieth anniversary). models, was central to this “Sports became a source of legiate game (played against ZSOFIA VOROS have found virtually every- The creation of what is pedagogical approach, and the shared identity on a campus Wake Forest), the team won a thing familiar. There were ten today the Daily Tar Heel was result was a revolution in high- where students no longer stud- much-celebrated victory over DESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR principal buildings on campus, rooted in two events: the er education. The introduction ied a common curriculum or arch-rival the University of [email protected] all of which, except the newer reopening of the University of these practices at the newly participated in campus-wide Virginia, giving the school an NATHAN KLIMA Memorial and Commons Halls of North Carolina in 1875, reopened university in 1875 debating unions. Young men early regional title. After that PHOTO EDITOR (both now demolished), were and the school’s first intercol- brought entirely new curricula might view themselves as his- victory the desire to follow antebellum structures. None legiate football game in the in applied and social sciences, torians, chemists, economists, training of the football team [email protected] of the buildings served a single fall of 1888. After struggling marking a sharp break from or philosophers during most and chronicle its triumphs on MADDY ARROWOOD, school or department, as none through both the Civil War the antebellum classical educa- of the week, but on game day, the field became more wide- KAREN STAHL were large enough at the time and the political turmoil of tion based primarily on the they were all united as ‘Tar spread among both students to require one. The school Reconstruction, the university concept of preparing middle- Heels.’ Athletic competition and alumni, and resulted in COPY CHIEFS of medicine was less than 15 limped virtually lifeless into and upper-class young men also recapitulated the lessons the creation of the weekly Tar [email protected] years old and offered only two the 1870s. With the endow- to take their place in a rigidly of the classroom. On the grid- Heel. SARAH LUNDGREN years of instruction, no formal ment spent and enrollment at ordered society. This new edu- iron, as in academic pursuits, From PRINT NEWS AND school of law yet existed, and a trickle, the trustees voted to cational structure was far more success required the mastery RAISE HELL: THE DAILY AUDIENCE ENGAGEMENT the creation of a department of close the school in February effective in preparing students of a specialized knowledge of TAR HEEL AND THE DIRECTOR journalism was three decades 1871. Over the next four years to meet the challenges of the plays and strategy, and the dif- EVOLUTION OF A MODERN [email protected] in the future. The antebellum proponents wrangled over industrializing postwar South, ference between winning and UNIVERSITY. Copyright © buildings had no central heat- the possible new direction and would become the basis of losing was measured by a cold 2018 by Kenneth Joel Zogry. ing, electricity, or telephones. of the university, with Kemp the modern research university numerical score. The victorious Used by permission of the Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St. Plumbing was primitive at Plummer Battle, an alumnus in the twentieth and twenty- athlete, like the triumphant Chapel Hill, NC 27514 University of North Carolina Tyler Fleming, editor-in-chief, 962-4086 best: there were five “shower and trustee who had first pro- first centuries. scholar, had to apply himself Press. www.uncpress.org Advertising & Business, 962-1163 News, Features, Sports, 962-0245 One copy per person; additional copies may be purchased at The Daily Tar Heel for $.25 each. A year of success for Carolina Jump Rope Please report suspicious activity at our distribution racks by emailing hub for the sport of jump rope to compete in competitions [email protected] The club was founded with three of four large teams ranging from regional level © 2012 DTH Media Corp. in 2017 and built a in the area,” Mancuso said. all the way up to national All rights reserved “This means that there were and world competitions. core group of jumpers. already experienced jumpers Competitions usually con- on campus when we started sist of two parts, including a and that each year the first- speed section where jumpers CORRECTIONS By Lorcan Farrell Staff Writer year class brings in a few more.” perform as many jumps as Alex Davis-Isaac was one possible in an allotted time • The Daily Tar Heel reports any For anyone who starts a of those experienced jumpers. frame and a freestyle routine inaccurate information pub- club on campus, the goal is to “I competed for nine years, during which jumpers per- lished as soon as the error is raise interest, see growth in and I’ve been jumping since form tricks for judges, Booth discovered. numbers and perhaps receive fourth grade so it’s some- said. • Editorial corrections will be recognition by other clubs thing that is really important “We competed in sev- printed on this page. Errors for the work they have done. to me,” she said. “Graham eral events at the National committed on the Opinion Since founding the Carolina was someone I jumped with Collegiate Jump Rope Jump Rope Club in 2017, throughout high school, and Championship and we won PHOTO COURTESY OF ALEX BUSH Page have corrections print- Graham Booth and Noah he came to me and said he most of them which is really Tim Martin, Rachel Hart and Rebecca Koweek (left to right) jump ed on that page. Corrections Mancuso have done just this. was interested in starting a exciting,” Booth said. “We with the Bouncing Bulldogs jump rope team. also are noted in the online “We’re a group of 11 or 12 jump rope club on campus also competed in previous versions of our stories. experienced jump ropers, and I was really excited about years at the world champion- facilities and local jump rope rope programs and jumpers • Contact Managing Editor experienced meaning we were the idea and wanted to be a ships where we placed in the teams, Carolina Jump Rope who are interested in start- Jessica Swanson at manag- on a competitive team before part of it.” top three on the grand world Club was selected as hosts, ing programs at their college [email protected] we came to college,” Booth In order to recruit inexpe- stage.” Mancuso said. together for a weekend of dis- with issues about this policy. said. “A lot of us have been rienced members, the club is The National Collegiate “The University Jump Rope cussions, practice, and ‘friendly’ doing it for 10 or so years, and very active on campus, Booth Jump Rope Championship was Summit is an attempt to bring competition,” he said. we wanted to continue.” said. They hold open gym held as part of the University all the current collegiate jump [email protected] sessions where they teach the Jump Rope Summit on Ohio Like: facebook.com/dailytarheel The club has been able to build that core of skilled basics to students who are State University’s campus. Next jump ropers in such a short interested in learning how to year the Summit will be held Follow: @dailytarheel on Twitter time period because North jump rope and perform rou- at UNC, marking the first time Carolina is a hot spot when it tines at events across campus it will move away from Ohio. comes to jump rope teams. and the community. After submitting an informal Follow: dailytarheel on Instagram “The Triangle is a pretty big Off-campus members go bid based on the availability of

NEWMANNEWMAN CATHOLIC CATHOLIC STUDENT STUDENT CENTER CENTER ASH WEDNESDAYMASS SCHEDULE MASS DURING SCHEDULELENT FebruarySaturday Vigil: 14, 5:15 2018 pm Sunday: 9:00 am, 11:00 am, 7:00 pm Masses with Ash Distribution Monday,7:00 am Wednesday – Newman & Friday: Church 5:00 pm 12:15 pmTuesday – Great & Thursday: Hall, Carolina12:30 pm Union Eucharistic5:00 pm Adoration – Newman after Monday Church and 7:00Thursday pm Mass – Newman in the Activity Church Center During the season of Lent, we will add a daily Mass on Stations of the Cross Friday: 5:45 pm Monday at 5:00 pm, Eucharistic Adoration after Monday and Thursday Mass in the Activity Center, and Stations218 Pittsboro of the Street Cross (across on from Fridays The Carolina at 5:45 Inn) pm. The Daily Tar Heel Opinion Monday, February 19, 2018 3

Established 1893, 124 years of editorial freedom QUOTE OF THE DAY “A lot of times we take the inclusivity of EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS TYLER FLEMING EDITOR, 962-4086 OR [email protected] AMENA SAAD- ALEC DENT SYDNEY PEREGOY SAVANNAH Chapel Hill for granted.” EMILY YUE OPINION EDITOR, [email protected] FAITH NEWSOME CAT RYU RACHEL JOYNER FAIRCLOTH ZAYNAB NASIF ASSISTANT OPINION EDITOR ELIZA FILENE DEVON JOHNSON DRAKE BUXTON CHRIS DAHLIE NICK MCKENZIE PARKER BARTH GABY NAIR JERRY JIANG Chapel Hill Town Council member Hongbin Gu

EDITORIAL CARTOON “17” By Emily Yue, [email protected] FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT “There are serious points to be made about gun control and what we as a society can do Ramishah Maruf to prevent mass shootings.” Staff writer Jonathan Swift, on Cam Jernigan’s column “Parkland, Las Vegas and ?” First-year journalism and political sci- ence major from Coral Springs, Fla. Email: [email protected] pen again and again. LETTERS TO Contact your congress, THE EDITOR reach out, I beg you. “I want We cannot keep losing Hysteria won’t solve innocent children like this. gun violence Sending them to school and not having them return to think TO THE EDITOR: home that afternoon. I am Mr. Jernigan: 16, so were some of the I realize that your column people that were killed on of the is an opinion piece, but as the fourteenth. a member of the press, you You don’t know who could have a responsibility to check be next. What school could sunsets.” your facts before stirring up be next. EDITORIAL more emotions in the wake Change won’t happen of the latest horrific tragedy. unless our leaders hear our t’s been difficult for me to There have NOT been 18 voices and do something feel anything but anger. school shootings so far this about it. A child’s right to I Even moreso, it’s been dif- Business School fee sets year; that statement makes go to school and come back ficult for me to process what it sound as if there’s a sniper alive everyday is far more happened to my hometown. around every corner and important than your right to Coral Springs, Fla. is a no one in their right mind keep a gun like this. quiet Fort Lauderdale suburb bad precedent would let their kids go to that borders Parkland, a large nature. determined by the North school ever again. Nicole Mayer portion of which is zoned to Kenan-Flagler’s That number came from a Durham Marjory Stoneman Douglas In solidarity with these Carolina General Assembly. group known as Everytown High School. And on Valentine’s proposed fee students, this board is run- Students deserve equal for Gun Safety, which works Day, what began with a text ning an updated version of access to all areas of study. to prevent gun violence and Vaccinations no longer from my mom saying there demands a response. the exact editorial we ran This editorial board is keeps a tally of shootings. a recommendation might be a gun at the high ast year, student last year. We are lobbying unconvinced by the sub- They describe a school school five minutes away from government and students, faculty, staff and mitted proposal that the shooting as “any time a fire- TO THE EDITOR: my house ended up becom- other groups lob- the Board of Trustees to Business School has this arm discharges a live round A worldwide flu pandemic ing the worst high school mass L bied the Board of Trustees finally put a stop to this fee. key tenet of UNC’s values inside a school building occurred it 1918-1919, leav- shooting in American history. or on a school campus or ing between 50 and 100 It’s an almost absurd feeling, to shut down the Kenan- Affordability and equity in mind. Flagler Business School’s are hallmark values of our Doug Shackleford, dean grounds.” million people dead- three watching the place I grew up in percent of the world’s popu- proposal to impose addi- University. These values are of the Business School, So included in those 18 descend into inconceivable trag- incidents are accidental dis- lation at the time, historian tional fees for business edy from 800 miles away. How even cemented in Article 9 admitted in a News & charges on a school campus, Dan Jones noted in a recent are the hallways I’ve walked school majors and minors. of North Carolina’s consti- Observer article that the a suicide in a school parking article. There was no vaccine through for French horn solos Last year, student gov- tution: “public institutions process of deciding the fee lot, a shooting at a sorority at that time. and brain brawl competitions ernment found that 70 per- of higher education, as far was not scientific. “I think event, and in the parking lot No one can predict how drenched in blood right now? cent of 223 students inter- as practicable, (shall) be we thought that figure after a basketball game. long the flu season will last How has the school I spent four viewed about the fee were extended to the people of sounded about a reason- These events, while dis- this time around. But, we years rooting against in football opposed to the increase. the State free of expense.” able amount. If you think it turbing in themselves, pale have vaccines to help sig- games undergone a tragedy this In contrast, the Business We stand against a should be higher, we would in comparison to the mass nificantly reduce the number immense? And how are there 17 shootings and loss of life of people who can become people from Parkland and Coral School spoke with only 9 tuition raise measure and accept the higher figure.” students and found that 8 urge undergraduates to As this fee is deliberated, such as what happened in infected with the influenza Springs that just ... aren’t here virus. were in favor of the fee. Florida this week. anymore? make their voices heard by it is important that you — In fact, even if you get the Despite these efforts, their student government students, faculty and staff at has Just last year, a former stu- investigated these claims flu after being vaccinated, dent arrived in my high school we’re back where we started representatives. The all- the University — share your and you can read their find- the shot will significantly cafeteria with a loaded gun. — in a proposal shockingly student SFAC serves as the thoughts on this proposal ings on their website. reduce its symptoms among The same day, our administra- similar to last year’s, the first committee to review with the Executive Branch Please don’t contribute those who had recently tors found a 10-page “Terror Business School is asking fee change proposals. At the of Student Government and to the hype and hysteria; be received influenza vaccine as Day” manifesto from another that majors pay $2,000 beginning of every other through letters to the editor. a responsible journalist and compared to those who had student. Our school was on a year and minors pay year, the fee review process This fee is being proposed don’t just repost what you not, says American Society lockdown, the police arrested $1,000 per year in order moves from the SFAC to through a bureaucratic find on social media. for Microbiology. both of them and foolishly, I to increase undergraduate the Student Fee Advisory mechanism that can easily I’d also like to know your Symptoms include fever, thought that was it. I thought reasoning behind the state- cough, sore throat, runny that Coral Springs High had enrollment by 50 percent. Subcommittee, the Tuition go unnoticed. One of their major jus- and Fee Advisory Task But it is precisely by ment “the NRA is a terrorist or stuffy nose, body aches, taken the brunt of it, and headache, chills and fatigue. tifications for this fee is Force, the Chancellor, the paying attention to and organization”. Again — facts, this idyllic region of Broward please. The Centers for Disease County, Florida would con- that students who graduate Board of Trustees and then engaging early with these Control issued a statement at tinue to be safe. from the Business School the decision lies with the avenues that we can insist Carolyn Shomaker a news briefing on January How wrong I was. have high starting salaries Board of Governors. our university lives up to its Federal Documents 12 in which Dr. Daniel I wrote a column about my and thus can afford the fee. Because this money is a core values. Should this fee Coordinator/Microforms Jernigan, director of CDC’s school’s gun scare, thankful that In Oct. 2017, the Student fee and not a tuition raise, fail yet again, this would be Supervisor Influenza Division, said that the worst possible scenario never Fee Audit Committee it cannot be put toward a victory for students and UNC-Chapel Hill while “not everyone needs happened at Coral Springs High. (SFAC) unanimously academic endeavors such for the future of our univer- to get antiviral drugs, but Except now, that scenario did opposed the fee, citing con- as hiring professors; it can sity. Should the Business there are certain people that happen, the shock is magnified should. exponentially, and I’m writing cerns about the ability of only be used for specific School re-propose this fee Actively hold Congress middle class students to pay program implementation. next year year, we will seek CDC recommends that this column from Davis Library, responsible people who are very sick or for The Daily Tar Heel instead of the fee and its prohibitive Tuition, in contrast, is a victory yet again. TO THE EDITOR: people with flu symptoms my high school paper. Late last year, I was out who are high-risk for serious I don’t want to think of my with a couple of friends and flu complications should be hometown as the site of the EDITORIAL we saw a man with a shirt treated as soon as possible worst high school mass shoot- that said on the back “Want with flu antiviral drugs. ing in American history. I want to know when my AR-15 Who are those people? That to think of the sunsets I would becomes an assault rifle? means people that are 65 rush outside to watch some- The Olympic Gaymes When you try to take it away and older. times, where I could see the from me” with a picture of It means young children. pinks and oranges of the sky qualifying run, Kenworthy The harm of this per- the gun along the side. It means people with chronic dipping into the sawgrass on the Celebrating the was anything but upset. ceived dichotomy of In Florida, someone didn’t conditions like diabetes, edge of the Everglades. I want to Olympics, queerness “I think the only way to “masculine” and “femi- take Cruz’s AR-15 away and heart disease or asthma. It think of the days my classmates change perceptions, break nine” gay men cannot look what happened. means pregnant women and and I played hooky at the beach, and solidarity. down homophobia, break be understated, and This is the country we others more vulnerable to and the nights we spent at ice either Gus down barriers, is through can even cause division live in. No one tried to take serious flu illness.” creams shops in strip malls, representation,” he said. within the gay community. it away and it still became Weber points out that complaining how nothing inter- Kenworthy nor Adam Rippon will Rippon, never ashamed To see Kenworthy and the weapon of a mass school several recent studies have esting ever happens in Parkland N shown that the flu vaccine shooting. and Coral Springs. leave Pyeongchang with to show his true colors, Rippon fiercely support Reach out to your reduces the risk of catching But mostly, I want to think individual medals, but for competed with more one another at this year’s Congress and don’t just give the flu by 40 percent to 60 of my hometown as the place many they were the big- glitter and guts than games was a refresh- thoughts and prayers. percent among the general that will finally bring an end to gest winners of the 2018 any other athlete on the ing display of solidarity, Our leaders need to population. senseless gun violence. Olympics. ice. When responding strength and unity which take action and not justify “So, it is advised that any- I refuse to let the place where Skier Gus Kenworthy to criticism, to which he should not be ignored by MURDER with mental ill- one who hasn’t yet been vac- I grew up become just another was one of the most is no stranger, Rippon viewers — gay, straight, or ness. It has nothing to do cinated should do so as soon trending hashtag on Twitter, highly-anticipated ath- pronounced that he is a otherwise. with the fact that people can as possible.” because our elected officials care letes in this year’s games. “glamazon bitch ready for On UNC’s campus we get their hands on weapons more about the NRA’s blood His American teammate, the runway.” have queer athletes, artists like this!! The Association of Mature money than the lives of their Adam Rippon, finished Don’t let Rippon’s and scholars — and each If they don’t do anything American Citizens (AMAC]) constituents’ children. I refuse 10th in the men’s free humorous facade fool of their unique and power- about these gun rules we http://www.amac.us to watch Florida’s politicians skate, and historically you, he is an extremely have, this is bound to hap- extend their sympathies and ful mediums of expression accomplished skater prayers to dead students and made the podium as a are valid and should be educators as they vote against bronze medalist in the fig- who has finished as high celebrated. More crucially, basic gun control laws. I refuse ure skating team event. as sixth at the World queer folks on campus SPEAK OUT to let those 17 innocent souls, While neither athlete Championships. should follow Kenworthy WRITING GUIDELINES which could have easily been my brought home the gold, In this year’s Olympics, and Rippon’s example of • Please type. Handwritten letters will not be accepted. friends or family, die in vain. they won over the hearts Kenworthy, the action- unequivocal support in • Sign and date. No more than two people should sign letters. It’s cliché, but it wasn’t sup- of many sports fans for sport skier who competes a space that can often be • Students: Include your year, major and phone number. posed to happen here, but it another reason — they are in a more typically mas- detrimental to those who • Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number. did, and now as we’re picking the first and only openly culine arena, showed his are “other,” and encourage • Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit letters to 250 words. up the pieces from our broken gay men representing team pride in more subtle, yet one another regardless of community. USA at the winter games. equally important, ways. divisive stereotypes. SUBMISSION We are fighting to make Even a skier as accom- Contrarily, Rippon, the • Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill, sure no one experiences the One does not have be NC 27514 plished as Kenworthy glamazon with fierce eye- an Olympic athlete to set same pain we did again. needs support, and when brows, became an icon in • Email: [email protected] Hell hath no fury like an a powerful example — you a good-luck kiss from his a sport that is tragically angry Broward County, and I never know who you are EDITOR’S NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily rep- assure you, we have a raging boyfriend, Matthew, was undermined due to its inspiring by simply having artistry and undertones of resent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the voice will not stop until it is unknowingly broadcast the courage to be yourself. opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises 10 board heard. across the world before his femininity. members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief. 4 Monday, February 19, 2018 News The Daily Tar Heel

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s 14th Annual African American History Month Lecture

Wednesday, February 21 at 7p.m. Stone Center Auditorium

Program Sponsors

Office of the Chancellor

Office of the Provost

University Office of Diversity

and Inclusion

African, African American and

Diaspora Studies

Carolina Public Humanities

Center for Civil Rights at The

UNC School of Law

Center for the Study of the

American South

College of Arts and Sciences

Department of Communication

Department of Dramatic Art

Department of English and

Comparative Literature

Department of History

Department of Religious Studies

Frank Porter Graham Race,

Culture, Ethnicity Committee

Institute for the Arts and

Humanities

Institute of African American

Research

Kenan-Flagler Business School

Music Department

The School of Law

Sonja Haynes Stone Center

Carolina Women’s Center

This event is FREE and open to the public. The Daily Tar Heel News Monday, February 19, 2018 5 New website lets residents rate their dorms By Jessica Snouwaert of-state students and interna- Staff Writer tional students. “You’re getting a biased Two UNC students have opinion and you’re only hear- created a new website similar ing from people who have to RateMyProfessors — but come from usually the same for university residence halls. background as you, who have Launched Nov. 27, 2017, only had a narrow experience rateyourdorms.com is a web- of the dorm,” McKinnon said. site that allows current stu- The website addresses this dents to give feedback about problem by giving students their residence halls, so pro- a variety of reviews, along spective students can make with average ratings for each informed choices about their aspect of the dorm. living situations. The site For out-of-state students covers UNC and five other and international students, college campuses: North who do not have friends in Carolina State University, the dorms yet and have few UNC-Charlotte, East Carolina resources to decide where to University, Appalachian State live, the website gives those University and University of students a connection to resi- Texas at Austin. dential information. Rateyourdorms.com cre- “All we’re trying to do is ators, Jasper Brindis and empower students and their Andrew McKinnon, aim to parents to eliminate all the have 10,000 students on their unknowns with coming to col- platform during this year’s lege,” Brindis said. “When you college admissions cycle. come onto campus, there’s so Brindis said the two formed many things to worry about, the idea for the website after and we don’t want housing to PHOTO COURTESY OF BRINDIS AND MCKINNON brainstorming problems stu- be one of them.” Jasper Brindis (right) and Andrew Mckinnon (left), creators of rateyourdorms.com, pose for a portrait in Polk Place. dents face on campus. The website itself has two “We were so shocked it main options, write a review Michael Dudash, a user on students who have actually students?’ and we think we Andrew Lee aided with the didn’t exist already just because or read feedback. rateyourdorms.com said he lived there is helpful.” can filter that data and create development of the website. it’s such a simple solution that The feedback page is laid used the website to rate his Brindis and McKinnon are an actionable plan for how The two hope to have the we think a lot of people will out with a map of the campus dorm. also using the website to col- the University might improve top 50 largest universities want to use,” Brindis said. and each dorm’s overall rat- “I know coming to UNC laborate with the University some of the dorms,” Brindis in the United States on the McKinnon said the web- ing. Users can sort ratings by and choosing between South to improve residence halls. said. website by next year’s college site addresses two problems: features like “bathroom rat- Campus and Granville is “One of the questions in But these two entrepre- admissions cycle, and eventu- biased opinions from friends ing” or by filters like “social” hard,” Dudash said. “Just hav- the review is, ‘Would you rec- neurs are not on their own. ally every school in the U.S. and limited resources for out- or “sporty.” ing that information from ommend this dorm to other Juniors Phillippa Owens and [email protected] Journalism school to host Fox News’ Tucker Carlson By Taylor Buck money,” many added “racist” racist and exhibits no true jour- come to UNC. Roger Ailes, New York Times reporter an important forum for debate Staff Writer to the mix as well. nalistic principles. Is this where former CEO of Fox News, and an NPR reporter will and discussion.” “With so many journalists donor dollars are going?” delivered the Park Lecture in visit UNC for a panel titled Despite student frustra- When the UNC School doing admirable work to dis- With the slew of frustrated 2012, and last year, former “Holding Power Accountable: tions, Kreiss remains optimis- of Media and Journalism cover and disseminate truth, responses extending beyond Trump adviser Sebastian Reporting on Sexual tic for the lecture, where stu- announced conservative you select an unabashed pro- 70 to the school’s original Gorka delivered a speech Misconduct” in two weeks. dents will be given a platform political commentator Tucker pagandist?” Anna Hester (@ tweet announcing the speak- amid student protests. “I think that students can to question Carlson. Carlson as this year’s Park annachaseunc) tweeted. “This er, it would be impossible for “There are a lot of speak- learn from anyone regardless “I would encourage those Lecture speaker, Twitter J-school alum is disappointed the MJ-School to miss the ers at college that a lot of of what their opinions are,” people who are upset about the exploded. Angry responses and ashamed. You can do criticism. people may like and a lot of Robinson said. speaker to come to listen to our poured in from disgruntled better.” “I think it’s healthy to have people don’t like and this is Kreiss likewise emphasized panel because I think that we former and current students. Beyond criticisms of his those criticisms. It’s healthy just one of them,” said John the importance of the college will provide a critical forum to Complaints centered character, Carlson’s editorial to watch my Twitter feed cri- Robinson, a UNC journalism campus to exposing students talk about Carlson’s role in the around Carlson’s far-right role as a cable-news commen- tique the School of Media and lecturer. “Students need to to various viewpoints. media landscape and his work slant. After defending the “It’s tator also ignited frustration Journalism for its speakers,” see other opinions and other “I think personally that col- and his positions,” Kreiss said. Okay to Be White” campaign on Twitter. said Daniel Kreiss, UNC jour- viewpoints. Despite what lege campuses and universities “It does offer, at the end of the in November, Carlson was “As an alumna, I’m appalled nalism associate professor some commentators on prob- should have a robust dialogue day, a pretty wonderful oppor- labeled as a white supremacist that the journalism school and moderator of this year’s ably Fox News say, students, and discourse around politi- tunity to question a leading, by many. And once Carlson would promote Tucker as a Park Lecture. “That’s part of at least at Chapel Hill in my cal issues from all sides of the prominent media figure. How called immigrants “people distinguished speaker and public debate, too.” experience, are not snow- political spectrum,” Kreiss often do you get an opportu- who snuck into our country model for students,” Ruby (@ This isn’t the first time a flakes.” said. “To that end, I think that nity to do that?” and are demanding rights and rubymiene) tweeted. “He is a controversial speaker has Robinson added that a Carlson coming will provide [email protected]

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Help Wanted To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. SUMMER STAFF: The ArtsCenter (Carrboro) seeks assistants for ArtsCamp from June 11th NEWMANNEWMAN CATHOLIC CATHOLIC STUDENTSTUDENT CENTER CENTERAries (March 21-April 19) with your partner. Take advantage to make to August 24th. Three positions available, ~30 Today is an 8 -- Take care of personal financial decisions and review accounts. Syn- hours a week. For information visit: www. ASH WEDNESDAY MASS SCHEDULE matters. Something you try or propose falls chronize your efforts for maximum efficiency. artscenterlive.org/about/job-opportunities/ flat. Don’t rebel from authority without good ASH WEDNESDAY MASS SCHEDULEreason. Wait for developments.. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HELP WANTED Construction company working February 14, 2018 Today is an 8 -- Maintain health and fitness at UNC needing some extra help. $11/hr Flex- Taurus (April 20-May 20) practices. Work with a partner or coach who can see your blind spots. Listen, and make ible day hours. Call Jeff 402-618-7439 Today is a 5 -- It’s OK to stay quiet and rest, February 14, 2018 despite social opportunities. Finish up a job. adjustments. NURSE OR STUDENT NURSE wanted a couple Slow down to get done faster. Keep your of hours/day for recovering patient after major batteries charged. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Masses with Ash Distribution Today is a 7 -- Discuss your passions, and surgery. 12 minutes from campus by car. Please Masses with Ash Distribution Gemini (May 21-June 20) focus your work toward what you love. Love email availability: [email protected] 7:00 am – Newman Church Today is a 7 -- Together, you can win is the bottom line this month. Focus on grow- SUMMER STAFF The Duke Faculty Club is 7:00 am – Newman Church satisfying results. Coordinate your actions ing the fun factor. seeking motivated, energetic, and dependable 12:15 pm – Great Hall, Carolina Union with your team. Discuss possible directions to narrow options and choose. Others share Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) camp directors, counselors, swim coaches, and 12:15 pm – Great Hall, Carolina Union an important view. Today is a 7 -- Fill your home with love. Real- life guards for summer 2018. Great pay and 5:00 pm – Newman Church ize a renovation you’ve long dreamed about. fantastic work environment! Go to facultyclub. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Beautify your surroundings. Invite a special duke.edu for details. 5:007:00 pm pm – – Newman Newman Church Church Today is a 7 -- Watch for career opportuni- guest for something delicious. ties. Make sure what you’re building is solid 10 AM DOGS WALKER 2 medium dogs, north- before stepping out. Don’t strain the budget. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ern chapel hill. flexible days. email: north- 7:00 pm – Newman Church Use practical resources. Today is an 8 -- Take advantage of a surge in [email protected] creativity and brilliant ideas. Take part in a Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) fascinating conversation, and collaborate with your talented network. Connect and share. SUMMER SWIM AND Racquet Club Manager During the Duringseason the of season Lent, ofwe Lent, will we add will a add daily a Mass on Today is an 8 -- Travel and discovery beckon. Consider philosophy, metaphysics and needed for neighborhood facility. Acquatics mysteries. Business keeps you busy. Find a Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) and recreation management experience re- Monday at 5:00daily pm, Mass Eucharistic on Monday Adoration at 5:00 pm, after Mondayway to mix it with exploration and fun. Today is a 9 -- Profitable ideas abound. Study quired. Applicant must be certified in pool and the most interesting ones. Sift data for golden spa operation, lifeguard training and CPR, or and ThursdayEucharistic Mass Adoration in the after Activity Monday Center, and and Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) opportunities. You’re learning valuable skills; show willingness to obtain. Send coverletter, Today is an 8 -- Review and update financial keep an open mind. resume and references to [email protected] StationsThursday of the Mass Cross in the on Activity Fridays Center, at 5:45 and pm. paperwork and communications. Wait for 919-967-0915 better travel conditions to go out. Pay bills Stations of the Cross on Fridays at 5:45 pm. and manage accounts first. Services Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Today is an 8 -- You’re on the same page TORNADO CRUZ TREE SERVICE 18 years of ex- (c) 2016 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC. perience, free estimates. 919-951-5691 Insured 6 Monday, February 19, 2018 From Page One The Daily Tar Heel

Surgeons are able to parenting women and their enter Horizons report having with her social worker and HEART SIMULATORS encounter unfavorable condi- OPIOID children. experienced trauma at some Marleigh, but the one hour FROM PAGE 1 tions in simulated surgery, FROM PAGE 1 “I think there’s still this point. wasn’t enough. Alec, Dr. Matt Dedmon and work on their mistakes and compared to 218 percent underlying belief that “Women often end “I wouldn’t use before I Andy collaborated to filed and further refine their technique. among men, according to the pregnant women should up using drugs because would see her, and I’d walk received two grant patents that Doctors can even pause their U.S. Department of Health be able to just walk away they’ve got no other coping out that door and go get UNC owns and KindHeart simulated procedure, allow- and Human Services. from substances fairly eas- mechanism,” said Hendrée high,” she said. “Because exclusively licences. ing them more time to figure Studies have shown that ily,” said Elisabeth Johnson, Jones, executive director of leaving her was just ... It was This was the inception of out complex situations that women are more likely to director of health services at Horizons. “They’ve grown up awful.” KindHeart, a startup com- can arise during operations. be prescribed pain relievers Horizons. being told that they’re noth- During a 30-day period pany founded in 2011 by Feins said that although and become addicted more ing more than dirt.” in jail, Lankford assessed Grubbs and Feins based on robotic surgery is different quickly. A coping mechanism her options for treatment. the technology they built for than regular surgery, it still Pregnant women are Access to care She wanted to participate in a complete cardiac surgery adequately trains students particularly at risk, as the The trauma from Horizons so she could stay simulation system that makes and doctors before surgery. substance abuse can harm Lankford’s parents’ divorce, After 120 days sober in with Marleigh, but the pro- a pig heart behave the same KindHeart offers a variety both the mother and her especially after her father a treatment program — gram was full. as a human’s during open- of simulators, including tho- child. Between 2007 and remarried, drove her to use when Marleigh was around Facing a four-month wait heart surgery. racic, cardiac, abdominal and 2012, an annual average of alcohol and marijuana at just 6 months old— Lankford for Horizons, Lankford’s only “So getting the proper customized simulators. 21,000 pregnant women aged 13. She first tried Vicodin returned home, determined option to get out of jail was a components, skills, training “I really feel that we’re on 15 to 44 across the United after her wisdom teeth sur- to turn her life around. facility in Asheville, but she in a safe environment where a mission and people work States had misused opioids gery at 16, and her addiction She enrolled at Alamance couldn’t bring Marleigh. there’s no human life at risk crazy hours and make amaz- in the past month, accord- to prescription painkillers Community College and got When she returned, or take life at risk, really puts ing donations of time, effort ing to the Substance Abuse didn’t take long to develop. a job. Marleigh had been in fos- the students on the right and talent but they don’t get and Mental Health Services During her pregnancy But it wasn’t easy to stay ter care for six months. She start,” Grubbs said. “But it’s paid a lot of times and it’s Administration. with Marleigh — but before sober in a college filled with finally regained custody of like learning how to play golf because we understand how Marleigh had no compli- she was aware of it — her childhood friends she used her daughter, and the two from a professional, from day important this is,” Grubbs cations when she was born, ex-boyfriend abused her. But to get high with. In a span of started the Horizons program one, you don’t have bad hab- said. despite Lankford’s contin- because he was her supplier, two weeks, she relapsed and together. its to learn.” ued drug use when she was she was stuck. picked up two felonies for Though she struggled Future innovations pregnant. But many children When the two would use stealing both her mother’s initially, she hasn’t let her go The Product are not so lucky: every 25 opiates together, it often credit card and money from since. KindHeart has multiple minutes, a baby is born in exacerbated the physical her job at Goodwill. She lost In July, she’ll be three The simulators were fur- goals for the next couple of withdrawal from opiates, a abuse. She’s recovered from her job, dropped out of school years sober. Last year, 266 ther developed in 2015 and years, one of them being to condition known as neonatal her addiction, but the abuse and lost custody of Marleigh. women received treatment officially commercialized in expand its simulator training abstinence syndrome. still haunts her. She was devastated. For at Horizons, where Lankford 2016. KindHeart’s simulators for all types of surgery. The Yet, as overall opioid use “I guess I feel like that’s two months she slept in now works. make surgery predictable, as company is also currently rates surpass capacity rates what I deserve because of her Honda and on people’s “I might not have stopped opposed to cadavers, live ani- focusing on software that for treatment centers in what I went through in my couches. She got high. right away and I might have mals or humans. The simula- would allow surgeons to prac- most states, options are par- past, and I’m damaged goods, “I didn’t know how to live,” screwed up a lot in her first tors also have the nature of tice remotely. ticularly limited for pregnant and no decent person would she said. “My whole world year and a half of her life,” real tissue, movement and [email protected] women, who often travel ever love me,” she said. “And from when she was born was she said. bleeding that help doctors far and face waiting lists to then I challenge myself with to take care of her and then “But I feel like I’m here DTH ONLINE: have a more immersive expe- For more, check out access programs like UNC that all the time.” when she was gone, what do now, and I feel like I’m a good rience rather than static or DTH City & County at Horizons, a drug treatment Johnson said around 80 you do?” mom.” virtual reality simulation. dailytarheel.com program for pregnant and percent of the women who She had weekly meetings [email protected]

and UNC finished the second When she couldn’t get the BASKETBALL half shooting only 25 percent ball in good position in the The Creative Writing Program FROM PAGE 1 from the floor. Hatchell cred- post, she turned to her jump busted their behinds out ited Louisville’s defense and a shot. She hit three midrange is currently inviting submissions there and played good team disparity in depth for a poor jumpers in the first quarter. basketball.” second half of shooting. “They walled me up,” H for H In the face of a daunt- They have good depth, and Bailey said of Louisville’s post ing matchup, the Tar Heels in the last four or five minutes, players. “So I just tried to mix fought admirably. Stingy that probably made some dif- it up and get some offensive 2018 Non-fiction Writing Contests defense and efficient shooting ference,” Hatchell said. rebounds when my shot propelled them to a 16-13 lead With Destinee Walker and wasn’t falling.” at the end of the first quarter. Stephanie Watts out for the The Tar Heels’ hustle and The Tar Heels kept up their season, the Tar Heels have been Bailey’s progression gave H Bland Simpson Prize H Robert Ruark Society strong defensive effort through forced to rely on a short rota- Hatchell hope, despite the the third quarter, when a tion. That lack of depth proved double-digit loss. in Creative Non-Fiction Prize in Creative Louisville 3-pointer at the to be an issue on Sunday, as “We gave them about all Non-Fiction buzzer tied the game at 45-45. only six Tar Heels saw the floor we had, really,” Hatchell said. Prizes: 1st: $750 • 2nd: $500 But in the fourth quarter, for more than three minutes. “We did a lot of good things. North Carolina ran out of gas. In 37 minutes of playing We’re just working hard and Prize: $1000 The fatigue in the Tar time, Janelle Bailey posted a getting better. The UNC-Chapel Hill Creative Writing Heels’ rotation meant legs strong performance — one of “You know, the future looks Program invites submissions from This contest, named for novelist started to give out and jump the bright spots for the Tar bright.” shots started to go flat. Heels. The first-year forward @holtmckeithan Carolina undergraduates for the annual and journalist Robert Ruark, UNC- Bland Simpson competition in creative Louisville outscored UNC finished with 20 points and @DTHSports CH class of 1935, is offered by the 22-12 in the fourth quarter, seven rebounds. [email protected] Non-Fiction, which carries a cash prize. Robert Ruark Society of Chapel Hill. The winner will be awarded $1000 Essays should exemplify the highest for the best non-fiction work on the literary standards in such forms as American South by a UNC-Chapel memoir, travel and nature writing, and Hill undergraduate student. belles-lettres generally, as practiced by such authors as James Baldwin, Essays/narratives on travel, historical Cynthia Ozick, Annie Dillard, Phillip exploration, personal essays and Lopate, John McFee, V.S. Naipaul, and memoir are welcome. Rogoff Event Ads v1_Sarna Ads 10/27/17 12:20 AM Page Tobias1 Wolff. Behind closed doors See what our reporter in H INSTRUCTIONS FOR BOTH NON-FICTION CONTESTS: Nashville learned while sit- games ting outside a closed meet- • One entry per student (for each contest) ing. See front for story. • Up to 5,000 words, one copy double-spaced typescript (12 pt.) © 2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved. • Submit all manuscripts, complete with contact information to: Level: 1 2 3 4 Vigils across NC Greenlaw 207A, Attn. Anita Braxton. Students and residents held vigils to stand with Deadline: 12:00 Noon, March 22, 2018 Complete the grid Charlottesville. Visit our so each row, column website for story. and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9. Leaders decry violence FREE PUBLIC LECTURE Solution to What have our leaders last puzzle said about Charlottesville? Find out. Visit our website for the story.

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Across 45 Home Depot work 15 Shoulder protection 32 Do a favor for 1 Annual July 1 apparel 16 Imaging company 33 Sentence ender celebration marking 46 Spicy meatless dish once big in film 34 Head turner Jacob and Esau, Isaac and Ishmael: the 1867 signing of 50 Legacy Hartsfield- 19 Bugs 35 It helps you focus the British North Jackson tenant 20 Ancient French 36 Many a Balkan The Future of Jewish-Christian and Jewish-Muslim Relations America Act 51 Thinking indicator region 37 Nautical 10 Some Australian 21 It flies off store 40 Plant-ruining genus carvings Down shelves 42 Make believable 14 Elaborate sci-fi 1 Beardie, for one 24 Artist Picasso 43 Palindromic fellow Graduate Student Network in Jewish Studies Event costume component 2 Former senator 25 Netanyahu’s 44 Palindromic bread 16 Supermarket count Specter predecessor 45 Rights org. The Holocaust and the State of Israel transformed the traditional 17 Old Andorran 3 Twizzlers pieces 26 CBer’s punctuation 47 Lunch holder currency 4 Ancient history 27 Friend of Homer 48 In most mammals, paradigms of Jews’ Relations with non-Jews. Jacob & Esau, 18 Arrive adjective 29 “Harold and Maude” the upper one has a typologically Jews and Christians and traditionally enemies, have 19 Dickensian 5 Completed co-star Bud groove called a denouncement 6 This, that or the other 30 Mover of many philtrum reconciled. Isaac & Yishmael, typologically Jews and Muslims and 22 Guided 7 Not soaked yet 31 Misled 49 Memorable time traditionally less hostile, have grown apart. This talk provides a 23 Get out of Dodge 8 Winglike parts 24 Australian Stock 9 Centuries-old Asian panoramic overview of the changing dynamics of inclusion and inter- Horses, perhaps wool sources Additional events faith relations, viewed from a Jewish perspective. Malachi Haim 28 Annex 10 Off-topic with Dr. Hacohen 29 Yusufislam.com 11 Out of order are planned for Hacohen (Ph.D., Columbia) is Bass Fellow, Associate Professor of musician 12 Catch from the pier UNC graduate History, Political Science and Religion, as well as Slavic, German and 30 Having a short cut 13 Learners, hopefully students and 31 Like home, say faculty. Visit us Jewish Studies at Duke University. 33 Hang (around) online for details: 36 They may be jewishstudies.unc.edu excuses 37 Didn’t miss, as February 19, 2018 / 5:30 p.m. a bus 38 “Gr8 joke!” Dey Hall, Toy Lounge 39 Unisex Free and open to the public. No tickets or reservations required. No reserved seats. nickname 40 4/8/74 record RUTH VON BERNUTH PETTIGREW HALL, SUITE 100 P: 919-962-1509 breaker DIRECTOR CAMPUS BOX 3152 E: [email protected] CHAPEL HILL, NC 27599-3152 W: JEWISHSTUDIES.UNC.EDU 41 Brie who played Trudy THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL on “Mad Men” The Daily Tar Heel News Monday, February 19, 2018 7

CAREERhis fair will FAIR pull together ty T a variety of campus I leaders and student organizations to ensure that we create a truly diverse event. Employers representing non- profits, for-profits and governmental organizations will be ER s attending this event.

Bring multiple copies of your resume • Professional Attire is recommended. This event is open to UNC-Chapel Hill students only.

v To view and research the list of the Wednesday, February 21

I organizations to be represented, visit 3:00-6:00pm bit.ly/DIV18. Great Hall, Student Union D

Come meet employers that are hiring for full-time positions and internships locally and nationwide.

View participating Thursday, Feb. 25 organizations that 12:00-4:00pm will be represented at Ram’s Head bit.ly/UNCSpring18. Recreation Center 8 Monday, February 19, 2018 dailytarheel.com The Daily Tar Heel WEEKEND SCOREBOARD Baseball: South Florida 4, UNC 3 Baseball: UNC 12, South Florida 5 Baseball: UNC 9, South Florida 8 SportsMonday Men’s tennis: Texas A&M 4, UNC 3 Another week, another overtime victory right sideline. As soon as he had Men’s lacrosse possession, Breschi called a timeout to rally the troops, just like he said. The Tar Heels were calm, and it team remains showed in their play. After the time- out, they started moving the ball undefeated, around with purpose. Eventually it found its way to senior attackman Chris Cloutier, who knew exactly what three games to do. He worked behind the goal, from left to right, and launched the into 2018 ball away from the crowded goal and found a wide-open William Perry. MEN’S LACROSSE (OT) With three goals to his name already in the game, Perry collected the pass, planted and slung the ball. NORTH CAROLINA 12 The shot flew just past the goal- LEHIGH 11 keeper and under the bar into the top of the net to end the game, 12-11. By Jonah Lossiah The sophomore midfielder threw Senior Writer his stick high in the air and was swarmed by his teammates. The No. 14 North Carolina “I knew we were going to score men’s lacrosse team found itself and I didn’t really care who it came in familiar territory on Saturday, from,” Perry said, “because our entrenched in a second consecutive offense is very unselfish, and we all overtime match, this time against played very well today.” Lehigh. This was not a clean game. But Junior midfielder Charles Kelly time and time again, UNC respond- had won the last three faceoffs of the ed when it needed to. DTH/NICHOLAS BAFIA game, so he was ready for the most The entirety of the first half was The UNC men’s lacrosse team celebrates after a 12-11 overtime win against Lehigh on Feb. 17 in Kenan Memorial Stadium. important dig of the day coming up fast and furious, with both teams in the extra period. scoring and the offenses firing on all and five penalties between them in faceoff, the Tar Heels turned it over type of wins that the team needed “Just breathe,” Kelly said. “Just cylinders. With the score tied late in the third quarter, and both scored just a few seconds later. Some sti- last year. So many times the Tar breathe relax and have fun. I just the second quarter, North Carolina just one goal. fling defense got the ball back to Heels just couldn’t pull out the close tried to look up into the crowd, just got the ball back with just under a Turnovers continued to plague UNC, but the team failed to clear ones last season, and it hurt them, soak it in.” minute left in the half. North Carolina in the fourth quarter, the ball and had yet another turn- evidenced by an 8-8 record. UNC (3-0) was just in an over- The Tar Heels worked the ball as the team had four more. Despite over. Lehigh got another chance And while easy wins look good time game last weekend, so the around for the final minute and all this, the Tar Heels never seemed near the end of regulation, but its when comparing records, close games whole team knew the plan this time found Perry behind the net. The rattled. Even when Lehigh had shot in the final seconds clanged are where you learn the most. UNC against the Mountain Hawks (2-1). sophomore found the space to the stormed ahead to take an 11-10 lead, off the post, and UNC was able to has a tough road ahead with games “I brought them into the huddle right of the net, drove in strong and the Tar Heels did not seem to panic. escape in overtime. against No. 1 Duke, No. 2 Maryland, and said, ‘Hey, we were just here a finished with just seven seconds left Kelly dominated when he needed “It’s February,” Breschi said. No. 3 Denver and No. 8 Johns week ago,’” head coach Joe Breschi on the clock. The goal gave the Tar to, winning eight of his 10 faceoffs “We’re learning; we’re growing. But Hopkins, so the experience gained said. “‘We’re going to win the faceoff, Heels an 8-7 lead going into halftime. after halftime. And teammate to win two tight games in a row, we’d from this close win should help the call timeout, run a big-little and win After the back-and-forth scor- Timmy Kelly earned his hat trick certainly rather be on the left side team moving forward against some of the game.’” ing in the first half, the second with a game-tying goal at the 2:22 than the right.” the top teams in the nation. Kelly won the faceoff and scram- half was a defensive one. UNC and mark in the fourth quarter. This is the second straight over- @YonaDagalosi bled to grab the groundball by the Lehigh each had four turnovers After winning the following time win for UNC, and these are the [email protected] Women’s lacrosse continues goalie rotation By Brennan Doherty Moreno, a redshirt first-year dence in both. There’s no rea- Both Hennessey and work toward the same goal,” right and what kind of stuff Senior Writer who missed last season after son to only play one.” Moreno expressed their Hennessey said. “So as long we can try to focus on in tearing her left ACL. After allowing 15 goals to approval of the current setup as whatever we’re doing col- the second half,” she said. “I When tasked with replac- Playing multiple goalies James Madison in a double- and said they’re supportive of lectively as a team is working think it’s been working to my ing Caylee Waters, twice the is a change from last season, overtime loss and 10 to High each other. toward that same idea, I sup- advantage a lot.” National Goalie of the Year, one in which Waters started Point in a win, UNC only gave “It’s really awesome to go pose it doesn’t honestly mat- Down the road, Levy said Jenny Levy didn’t limit herself every game and played just up four to Liberty. In the first practice against someone ter to me if I end up playing one goalie might see extend- to just one option. over 1,139 minutes out of a half, Hennessey was responsi- who’s equally as good as you first half, second half or the ed playing time within a Instead, the North possible 1,200. But the move ble for one goal on three shots, are and really work off one whole game.” particular game if one of Carolina women’s lacrosse isn’t unprecedented. while Moreno allowed three another,” said Hennessey, That’s the attitude Levy them is “having a day,” which head coach decided to imple- From 2014 to 2016, Waters on five shots after halftime. who’s already played more wants. The coach said a was often the case when ment a two-goalie system. regularly split time with Although the sample size is minutes than she did as a player unwilling to buy into a Waters and Ward played Sunday’s 23-4 win against Megan Ward, a partnership small, Moreno’s save percent- first-year. “She has a good two-goalie system “probably together. Liberty marked the third time that helped produce a nation- age (.467) is currently higher day; I might have a bad day. shouldn’t be here.” “We have such a com- in as many games that Elise al title in 2016. than Hennessey’s (.409). But She has a bad day; I might For Moreno, the two-goalie petitive schedule,” Levy said. Hennessey and Taylor Moreno Similar to those days, Levy Levy is committed to splitting have a good day. So it’s hon- system has allowed her ease “We’ll have all sorts of sce- split duties in goal for seventh- said there’s little separating time equally between the pair estly like the ultimate insur- into the college game after narios come up throughout ranked UNC (2-1). her two goalies at the moment. for now. ance policy.” recovering from her injury. the season that we’ll work Hennessey, a sophomore “With Elise and Taylor, “This part of our season, we But what if Hennessey She’s embraced the second- through as a team.” who served as the team’s same thing,” Levy said. really want to be consistent for performs well in a first half half role and said it helps her If that’s the case, there backup in 2017, has started “They’re both really good them so they can know how and then has to make way for get a feel for the action before will be much to learn when and played the first half in goalies, and they both have to prepare,” she said. “I think Moreno? Would such a sce- entering games. UNC hosts No. 1 Maryland on each of the Tar Heels’ three different strengths, and I where it gets tricky with teams nario upset her ? The answer “I get to kind of survey the Saturday. games. Each time, she’s know that the people playing who play two goalies is if you is no. first half and figure out out @brennan_doherty been replaced at halftime by in front of them have confi- get inconsistent.” “We’re all just trying to what our defense is doing [email protected] Men’s basketball takes No. 1 women’s tennis defeats Michigan By Brian Keyes and Fahey edged out Sanford, 7-4. Staff Writer The first-set loss seemed to leave the down Louisville, 93-76 former No. 1 recruit frustrated. Her body On a day when the North Carolina women’s slumped during the set break at times, By Keaton Eberly more of the same for UNC. even outmuscling 7-foot Anas tennis team started out slowly, perseverance and she looked visibly upset as she pro- Staff Writer Louisville was finally begin- Mahmoud and 6-foot-10 and a shift in momentum lifted the No. 1 team ceeded to lose her second set. Despite the ning to initiate some offense Spalding on various posses- in the country to a 4-1 victory over Michigan. first set’s competitive nature, Fahey picked Even for a program that has through Adel’s 20 points on sions. Maye finally got out of North Carolina (11-0), coming off its ITA apart Sanford, outrunning and outgunning won six national champion- 8-12 shooting. But outside of his funk in the second half, Indoor national championship, went down her to a 6-1 second-set route that gave the ships, there’s always a first an 18-point, 12-rebound per- finishing with 19 points and early in all three of its doubles matches. Wolverines their one and only point of the time for everything. formance from Ray Spalding, 13 rebounds. Two pairs — No. 30 Jessie Aney and Alexa competition. After going winless in the the other Cardinals failed to He shot 7-13 from the field Graham on Court One, and No. 20 Sara Kalbas acknowledged that after the program’s last four attempts deliver. in the second half, and his Daavettila and Alle Sanford on Court Two — first set, Sanford looked “deflated,” but he at Louisville, the No. 14 Not only did the Tar Heels biggest basket came with 3:24 went down 3-0, and looked sluggish against remained optimistic about the future of his North Carolina men’s bas- outrebound Louisville 44-32, remaining in the contest. competitive No. 14 Michigan teams. most talented player. ketball team secured its first but on multiple occasions With the shot clock winding “I knew they were going to come in “She’s playing good tennis, she’s played road victory ever against the when the Cardinals desper- down, Maye sank a despera- against us with nothing to lose,” head coach some really good opponents,” he said. “She’s Cardinals. The team seized a ately needed a defensive stop, tion 3-pointer that put UNC Brian Kalbas said. “They came out really going to do great things for us in the future.” 93-76 win on Saturday night, the Tar Heels grabbed crucial ahead, 83-73. aggressive, and we were kind of flat.” No. 52 Daavettila’s first set on Court Two its fifth straight victory. offensive rebounds. These After Berry missed a ques- Both pairs would battle to tie the score — the afternoon’s clinching match — ended UNC (21-7, 10-5 ACC) hit led to a 22-6 advantage on tionable 3-pointer with 2:38 up though, and although Daavettila and in a 6-4 win. She won four games in a row, the ground running against second-chance points. North left, the guard sprinted back Sanford would drop their match 6-4, Aney after being down 4-2 early. Louisville (18-9, 8-6 ACC) Carolina also assisted on 20 of down the court and made the and Graham won six straight games in a Long rallies defined a second set that in the first half with red-hot 36 made field goals. play of the game, blocking a come-from-behind victory (6-3). UNC would seemed to never end. The two competitors shooting from the outside. UNC was led by the dynam- potential dunk by Spalding take the doubles point after a comfortable traded body blows on the court until some- The Tar Heels’ offense was ic duo of seniors Joel Berry II to keep UNC’s lead at eight. 6-2 win on Court Three. one could finally be forced out of position to in sync from the beginning, and Theo Pinson, who com- Maye subsequently grabbed In singles, No. 21 Aney took the momen- return — or was simply too tired to try. starting 4-4 from the field bined for a total of 42 points, the rebound and the Tar Heels tum from her comeback win in doubles to If the battle in the first set between these in the opening 2:03 of play, 15 rebounds, and 10 assists. ended up hitting another decisively win her first set of singles, 6-2. She two ranked competitors felt slow, the second resulting in an early 10-3 lead. Berry, who shot 4-16 from three, completing a five-point had a more competitive second set, but still set felt like a coming of the inevitable. The The Tar Heels eventually the 3-point line in the previ- swing that firmly put the won 6-3 to take the match and secure North Tar Heels were already up 3-0 — boosted built a 40-21 cushion, their ous three games, finally found game out of reach. Carolina’s first singles point. by an earlier win from Chloe Ouellet-Pizer largest of the game. his shooting stroke against For one of the most distin- “In the huddle, we had a really good vibe,” — when the crowd gravitated toward Court The Cardinals, however, the Cardinals, hitting five of guished programs in college Aney said. “I think that’s just a tribute to us Two to witness Daavettila finish off her would not give up without 11 from behind the arc. Junior basketball, the team finally coming back in doubles … The doubles point opponent in the second set, 6-1. The first- a fight, as junior forward Luke Maye struggled early on, checked another milestone off is bigger than just one point for us. It affects year secured the fourth and final point for Deng Adel sparked a mini scoring just two points on 1-5 the list: winning at Louisville. all the singles matches.” the still-undefeated North Carolina team. resurgence for his team, mini- shooting in the first half. Now, the team is rid- Other opening singles matches were hard- “I’m really just proud of the way we stayed mizing the gap to just a nine- Despite his struggles ing high with a convincing fought, slow-going games. Star player and together...” Kalbas said. “We did a really good point UNC advantage heading though, the forward made five-game winning streak, as sixth-ranked Alle Sanford struggled early job of staying focused and regrouping and into halftime. up for it with his command- March swiftly approaches. in her first match against Michigan’s No. 29 not letting the sets get away from us.” In the second half, it was ing presence on the glass, [email protected] Kate Fahey. The first set went to a tiebreaker, [email protected]