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Volume 122, Issue 21 dailytarheel.com Monday, March 31, 2014 WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: 65, South carolina 58 Victory is sweet ­­— Tar Heels are Elite

game into overtime. Maryland won. In a 28-second period, Rountree No. 4 seed UNC beat No. Now a junior, Rountree still launched six foul shots. 1 seed South Carolina to hasn’t forgotten how deeply that She made five. feeling stung. How dejected she felt And for the first time since their advance to the Elite 8. when the final buzzer sounded. 1994 National Championship year, “Yes, I remember that,” she said. the Tar Heels knocked off a No. 1 seed. By Grace Raynor “I remember that, and after that They’ll play No. 2 seeded Stanford Assistant Sports Editor game I stayed in the gym just shoot- Tuesday for a battle to the Final Four. ing free throws, I was so upset.” “That answer is a yes,” said associ- STANFORD, Calif. — Brittany Fast forward two years. ate head coach Andrew Calder of Rountree was 19 years old, the clock Sunday, in North Carolina’s 65-58 planning to feed Rountree the ball paused at 12.7 seconds and the victory against top-seeded South in the final minutes. “We were up North Carolina women’s basketball Carolina to advance to the Elite 8, one ... tonight the emphasis was to team was clinging to a two-point Rountree found herself on the line get the ball to Brittany at the end of lead when she made her way to the again — three more times to be the game.” free throw line. exact, her routine the same each And she executed. It was Jan. 8, 2012, and on that time. The locker room buzzed, as the Chapel Hill Sunday, Rountree’s “I catch the ball, I do two drib- North Carolina players hugged and 1-for-2 foul shot performance near bles, I spin it,” she said. “I have a yelled. A modest Rountree nestled the game’s end set Maryland’s Alyssa knee sleeve on my right leg and not herself in a corner between her dth file/aramide gbadamosi Thomas up for the game’s tying shot. on my left, so my shorts usually get Junior guard Brittany Rountree connected on 5-of-6 free throws to seal No. 4 Thomas knocked it down, sent the caught ... then I shoot the ball.” See Elite 8, Page 5 seed UNC’s 65-58 defeat of No. 1 seed South Carolina to advance to the Elite 8. steps toward a cure Sophomore charged in Lewis incident Charles Talmadge, 20, was taken into custody after acting erratically.

By Jane Wester Staff Writer

A relatively peaceful Friday night in Lewis Residence Hall escalated quickly into chaos as one third floor resident being shot with a Taser and taken into custody. According to an Alert Carolina email sent out the next morning, Department of Public Safety officers brought sophomore Charles Talmadge, 20, into custody not long after they arrived at Lewis at approximately 11:18 p.m. “Department of Public Safety Police officers responded to the report of a male individual who was unclothed and acting erratically... (he) had entered another resident’s room and had reportedly sexually assaulted a female,” officials wrote in the email. DPS spokesman Randy Young declined to comment on whether or not officers had con- firmed a sexual assault had taken place. Talmadge was charged with breaking and entering, resist/obstruct/delay of arrest, assault dth/Matt Renn on law enforcement officers, UNC’s annual Relay for Life event began with a Survivor Lap Friday night in . vandalism, possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia. Relay for Life participants raised more than $120,000 Sophomore Ian Gallager, who lives on Talmadge’s floor, said that he encountered his chairman of corporate sponsor- By Bradley Saacks neighbor at about 10:30 p.m. ships for Relay for Life, was able Staff Writer “He was completely naked to hear his mother speak about and just stumbling around, One in 8,000: Those were her experience having cancer. Charles Talmadge completely uncoordinated,” the odds that Elizabeth Arditti‘s “It was a really challenging was charged with Gallager said. “It was really tumor was malignant. time for her in her life and hear- assault on law weird. I’ve never seen anyone She was diagnosed with ovar- ing her speak is always special,” enforcement offi- quite like that before.” ian cancer during the pregnancy Alex Arditti said, who was in ele- Gallager said that cers, among other of her fourth child, after a sched- mentary school when his mother Talmadge was not aggressive offenses. uled ultrasound revealed an was diagnosed. at that point in the evening. unknown mass. “She is the reason that I relay.” “He would kind of respond to us, if we told The news she received in Co-director of UNC’s Relay for him, ‘Charlie, stop,’” he said. “He was very 2000 defied those odds. Life, Will Yokeley, said the dona- peaceful. You could just kind of touch him on “I was the one, not the 7,999,” tion period is not over yet. the shoulder and he would just collapse.” Arditti said. “Usually, Relay is later in the Gallager saw Talmadge return to his own “A lot of us would have said, semester but due to conflicting room and close the door after wandering the ‘Why me?,’ but I decided to schedules with lacrosse and track hallway and hoped that he had gone to bed. rephrase the question... ‘Why not and field, we had to push the “I heard about what happened later in the me? How can I use this experi- date up,” Yokeley said. night, and it was hard to believe that he’d gotten ence for good?’” “We kinda had to push harder so, I guess, violent, especially because when we Arditti was the luminary to get all of our donations in by saw him he was barely even capable of walking,” speaker for this year’s Relay this event because it is tough to Gallager said. for Life, which had 1,325 par- get people fundraise after the At about 10:40 p.m., Talmadge arrived at the ticipants, raising more than event is over, but our goal for the door of another hallmate, sophomore Harry $120,000 for the American end of April is $150,000.” dth/Matt Renn Riegel. Cancer Society. Luminaries lined the track of the Eddie Smith Field House. Participants Riegel noticed that Talmadge was bleeding Sophomore Alex Arditti, See relay, Page 5 lit them to remember and honor those battling cancer or have passed. See lewis incident, Page 5 Incidents highlight security in academic buildings

There have been several security who comes into the building after Randy Young, spokesman for the A Carroll Hall theft and a breaches at academic buildings “Any time you have hours, but the system isn’t perfect. Department of Public Safety, said Hill Hall assault show recently, including an assault at Hill buildings unlocked “There are still ways to defeat thefts from academic buildings are Hall last week and a theft at Carroll that,” he said. “But it at least gives fairly common. He said DPS receives possible vulnerability. Hall on March 18 that involved a you’re going to be you some sense of who is entering.” more reports of stolen items from aca- projector being taken down from its exposed to those things.” Alexander is looking into increas- demic buildings than residence halls. mounting hardware on the ceiling. ing the security at Carroll to better “We have hundreds of academic By Sara Salinas Jim Clinton, Staff Writer “Every once in a while we’ll see protect against costly thefts, espe- buildings on campus, and many are things walk out the door,” said David director of card operations at the One Card office cially in classroom labs. multi-story,” he said. “There’s a lim- With a One Card, you can swipe Alexander, director of Information “You have to worry about not just ited number of residence halls.” into Carroll Hall after hours. With Technology Services for Carroll Hall. can still be vulnerable to theft. the equipment but also the data Young said the nature of technol- the right code, you can gain access to Alexander responded to the initial “If somebody wants something that’s on it,” he said. ogy has made it easier for someone to one of the classroom labs. report of the missing projector in badly enough, they’re going to take Alexander said departments can walk out of a building with valuable Given access and time, someone Carroll that was ultimately reported it,” he said. purchase insurance through UNC’s equipment. He said it’s suspicious to took a projector from its home on stolen. He said there are security Alexander said the One Card plan but that it usually doesn’t cover the ceiling of a basement classroom. measures in place, but the building readers on the exterior doors track small items, such as a projector. See security, Page 5 Today we fight. Tomorrow we fight. The day after, we fight. jim beaver, “life’s that way: a memoir” 2 Monday, March 31, 2014 News The Daily

The Daily Tar Heel DAILY music in the streets DOSE www.dailytarheel.com Established 1893 121 years of editorial freedom Nicole Comparato Girl’s stinky sneaks win her big EDITOR-in-chief [email protected] From staff and wire reports Cammie Bellamy ooking for some quick cash in attempt to make up for all the Managing editor [email protected] money you lost on spring break? Pocketing $2,500 could be katie sweeney as simple as airing out your dirty dunks in the Odor-Eaters VISUAL MANAGING EDITOR [email protected] National Rotten Sneaker Contest. brian fanney LJordan Armstrong, a 12-year-old from Las Cruces, N.M., won this director of enterprise [email protected] year’s contest after proudly entering her duct tape-wrapped, soiled sneak- paige ladisic ers that she said she’s worn everywhere for the past two years. online managing EDITOR [email protected] So, just who has the pleasure of smelling those puppies? Leave it to amanda albright NASA “Master Sniffer” George Aldrich, who is a chemist specializing universITY EDITOR [email protected] in smells and has judged the contest for 14 years. “The kids who live on jenny surane farms and near ponds tend to do very well,” he said. CITY EDITOR [email protected] NOTED. Suvir Mirchandani, a 14-year-old QUOTED. “There’s a real pipeline between madeline will Pennsylvania boy, has published a study Williamsburg and Iowa.” STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR suggesting the federal government could — Lan Samantha Chang, director of [email protected] save millions of dollars each year if it the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, draws com- dth/aramide gbadamosi Michael Lananna switches to a thinner typeface that uses parisons between the Land of Corn and SPORTS Editor osh Hassan, a musician from Newcastle, less ink. Brooklyn’s ultra-hipster neighborhood in [email protected] Pennsylvania, plays the bagpipes on the corner Samantha SAbin Why didn’t anyone think of this before? light of “Girls”character Hannah Horvath Arts Editor Also, ban Comic Sans. getting into the school. OK, sure. of Franklin Street and Columbia Street. His [email protected] J uncle inspired him to learn how to play the instru- allison hussey diversions editor ment. Hassan used to play in the band “Black & Tan.” [email protected] COMMUNITY CALENDAR Mary BurkE design & graphics editor today galleries. The hour-long session Location: [email protected] Delete Blood Cancer Drive: will provide an opportunity to POLICE LOG chris conway Approximately 10,000 people practice a series of gentle yoga Poet’s Open Mic Night: Engage photo editor poses. Beginners are welcome. with other poets and share the [email protected] are on the waiting list each year • Someone reported stalk- 6:05 p.m. Thursday, accord- for bone marrow transplants, Registration is limited. Free for power and diversity of poetry in ing at 828 Martin Luther ing to Chapel Hill police brittany hendricks Ackland members; $5 per ses- this monthly event sponsored multimedia editor and only half of those who are King, Jr. Blvd. at 11:59 p.m. reports. [email protected] receive one. Stop by to do a sion for all others. by Carrboro Recreation and Thursday, according to Damage to an anti-theft Time: Noon - 1 p.m. Parks Department and Open Eye laurie beth harris, quick cheek swab and fill out Chapel Hill police reports. device at Great Outdoor Marisa Dinovis paperwork to fill out if you’re a Location: Cafe. Free. Ages 16 and up. A person filed the report Provision Co. was estimated copy co-EDITORs potential match. Members of Time: 7 p.m. - 9 p.m. concerning a neighbor’s at $99. A jacket valued at $99 [email protected] Camp Kesem North Carolina will Location: Open Eye Cafe behavior, reports state. was damaged and a second Neal Smith tuesday be throughout campus to tell UNC Baseball vs. UNC-Wilm- jacket valued at $99 was sto- Special sections editor you more. [email protected] ington: Take advantage of the To make a calendar submission, • Someone reported lar- len, reports state. Time: 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Daniel Pshock beautiful weather by watch- email calendar@dailytarheel. ceny of a handicap placard Location: The Pit webmaster ing the Tar Heels take on the com. Please include the date of at 124 Windsor Place at 2:16 • Someone reported tres- [email protected] Seahawks. Tickets range from $5 the event in the subject line, and p.m. Thursday, according to passing at 150 E. Franklin Yoga in the Galleries: Ease to $7. UNC students get in free attach a photo if you wish. Events Chapel Hill police reports. St. at 7:45 p.m. Thursday, TIPS into your week by exploring with a valid One Card. will be published in the newspaper The placard was valued at according to Chapel Hill on either the day or the day before the world of yoga in one of Time: 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. $15, according to reports. police reports. Contact Managing Editor Ackland Art Museum’s beautiful they take place. Cammie Bellamy at A person was cited for tres- [email protected] • Someone reported passing at University United with tips, suggestions or corrections. COrrections breaking and entering and Methodist Church, reports larceny at 764 Martin Luther state. Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St. Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Due to a reporting error, Friday’s page 3 story, “Minority men detail ups and downs of UNC life” King, Jr. Blvd. at 8:30 p.m. Nicole Comparato, Editor-in-Chief, misstated the place in which Juan Carrillo grew up. Carrillo was born and raised in Los Angeles, Thursday, according to • Someone reported a run- 962-4086 Advertising & Business, 962-1163 Calif. Chapel Hill police reports. away at 128 Essex Drive at News, Features, Sports, 962-0245 apologizes for the error. The person stole an Apple 11:20 p.m. Thursday, accord- One copy per person; iPhone valued at $650 from ing to Chapel Hill police additional copies may be purchased • The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered. an unlocked vehicle, reports reports. at The Daily Tar Heel for $0.25 each. • Editorial corrections will be printed below. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections printed state. A person did not come Please report suspicious activity at on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories. our distribution racks by emailing home from school and did [email protected] • Contact Managing Editor Cammie Bellamy at [email protected] with issues about this policy. • Someone reported lar- not contact his father, reports © 2014 DTH Media Corp. ceny at 1800 E. Franklin St. at state. All rights reserved Like us at facebook.com/dailytarheel Follow us on Twitter @dailytarheel TOUR YOUR FALL HOUSING TODAY. (NO HARD HAT REQUIRED)

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