The Daily Tar Heel For March 28, 2014
The Daily Tar Heel For March 28, 2014
The Daily Tar Heel For March 28, 2014
dailytarheel.com
Finding Tim Toben on his farm takes some time. First, you stop at a construction site, where a builder is putting the finishing touches on Tobens newest project, a tea house. Hes not there. Then you drive down a long dirt road to find three buildings. You pick the one that looks most like a house and knock on the door. Youre greeted by a large dog but no one else. Then you walk down a muddy path, passing a field with three greenhouses, dozens of solar panels and barren fields, and walk into a large structure that looks like a barn. There are half a dozen people inside sorting seeds and baking vegan dishes its the community kitchen. Youre guided to an adjoining building, the shed, where you finally find Toben and some other men making tables out of a 125-year-old oak tree. It fell down during one of the storms we had recently, Toben says. Were making it into tables for the tea house. All this is part of Pickards Mountain Eco-Institute, an Orange County farm run by Toben and his wife, Megan Toben, that educates people about sustainable farming. Though once a real estate investor tied to the controversial, sustainably focused Greenbridge Condominiums project in Carrboro, Toben has applied his eco-conscious mindset to life on the farm. Today, he grows dozens of kinds of vegetables and herbs and raises fish, chickens and horses.
DTH/BENJAMIN WELSH Tim and Megan Toben stand outside at The Honeysuckle Tea House on Saturday. The Tea House is a collaborative project that began with a kickstarter page. Its set to open this March.
When an armed man nearly attacked a student near Alpine Bagel on Sunday, Student Manager Nicole Johnson did what she could to ensure the safety of her fellow employees. The issue with Sundays is that there arent really any adults working around the Union. Johnson said. The people managing Alpine Rachel and I are students. Rachel Gaylord-Miles, her co-manager, immediately called 911, but said she didnt see officers for almost 20 minutes. The Student Union does not have any daytime officers, but a officer is scheduled to guard the area by Wendys from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. The incident on Sunday was reported at about 4:20 p.m. Union Director Crystal King,
however, said in an email that Department of Public Safety officers were on the scene in minutes. Johnson, dissatisfied with the delayed response and concerned about her fellow employees, called her general manager and decided to close down the bagel shop before any orders were issued by the Student Union or the DPS. Student employees were also essential in handling a situation with a protestor who had been antagonizing Pit Preacher Gary Birdsong with a sex toy earlier in the semester. King said the Union has been analyzing its safety and emergency procedures and is prepared to implement changes in the coming weeks. Evacuation assignments will be more direct and refined and student staff will have emergency kits made accessible to them. Another security measure, the implementation of a system that will allow for specific doors, areas or the entire building on lockdown electronically, has been considered, but is not currently financially feasible, King
The issue with Sundays is that there arent really any adults working in the Union. The people managing Alpine Rachel and I are students.
Nicole Johnson, Apline student manager
said. Even with security guards and safety procedures already in place, DPS continues to adapt its strategy, said DPS spokesman Randy Young. Not only do we review incidents on our campuses, but we look at incidents that occur on other campuses, he said. We learn how to adjust our operations and communications with every incident. Young said guards are located throughout the campus. Security guards typically are not sworn law officers, dont carry weapons and can only observe and report issues to actual
Marcus Paige said no one forced him into a major when he came to UNC. In front of the UNC Board of Trustees, the point guard defended the idea that student athletes work as hard as anyone else at UNC along with football players Ryan Switzer, Kemmi Pettway and Tim Scott, along with gymnast Michelle Ikoma and softball player Lori Spingola. The student-athletes presence was a rare sight for a Board of Trustees meeting, and it comes at a time when UNC is facing scrutiny about its balance between academics and athletics. It isnt easy to be a student-athlete at UNC, Paige said, but his mom wanted him to be challenged academically. Your schedules so crazy, he said. Every days a grind. But we do it because we love it. Paige said he feels fortunate to be enrolled at the University and admitted he was not accepted purely on his academic ability. Itd be very, very tough to get in without being a basketball player, he said. Switzer ehoed those sentiments. Football especially, and playing a Division I sport is not for everybody, he said. I wouldnt be at a university like this if it wasnt for my athletic ability. Paige also said he is tired of negative portrayal of football and basketball players, especially the charge that they cannot read. UNC is in the process of investigating the claim made by former learning specialist Mary Willingham that 60 percent of football and basketball players from 2004 to 2012 could not read above an eighth grade level. Its more of a distraction off the court, and its just a negative perception that you dont want surrounding your athletic department because we know how hard we worked the last game and its not fair to us, he said. The meeting comes on the heels of two admissions by former football players Deunta Williams, Michael McAdoo and Bryan Bishop that the University assigned no-show courses to athletes, and that they could not read at a college level. This week alone, those testimonies were shared in an ESPN Outside the Lines episode and also a special on HBO Sports. Ikoma said although she was free to choose her own major, a freshman seminar professor once told her she should avoid studying biomedical science because she was an athlete. That was a red flag for me, she said. Board member Dwight Stone said the media has attacked student-athletes. Until youve walked in your shoes, nobody realizes the kind of time and effort that goes into being a student-athlete at Carolina, he said. Chancellor Carol Folt said she had received a letter from Willingham asking to meet. She gave me an agenda, said shed like to share her personal story with me, and that shed like to talk to me about her opinions about athletics and academics, Folt said in a press conference after the athletes spoke. No date has been set. Athletic Director Bubba Cunningham said in the press conference the purpose of having athletes attend the meeting was to show how
As students turn to Amazon shopping carts and stray from traditional retailers, the mall strongholds are working to bridge the generational gap that is keeping them from department stores. A survey conducted last semester by Katrijn Gielens, an associate professor at UNCs Kenan-Flagler Business School, found that many college students see shopping at department stores as unsatisfying. Surveyed students said department stores are cluttered and associated them with older demographics, such as their mothers. But because brand loyalties form during early adulthood and the disposable income of the average college student is likely to increase over time, businesses seek collegeaged consumers, Gielens said. The survey was part of a term project Gielens ran in collaboration with a southern department
store to determine what college students find desirable and lacking in department stores. The response (to the projects survey) was mixed, but overall, it wasnt too positive. To be quite frank, it was actually quite negative, she said. That is one of the things that came out of the research is that, say, 80 percent of department stores have a perception problem, and perception is often reality. Students often do not have an awareness of what brands are offered and some of the brands offered are popular among those surveyed, but millennials just do not realize they are available at department stores, she said. Many college students have turned to online shopping, which offers the same wide selection but easier, faster access, as a replacement for department stores. They want to be served immediately not physically but by immediately seeing the product they want to get, Gielens said. With changes in how the average consumer shops, expectations have altered, and Gielens referred to this as the Amazonification of the consumer. Through an Amazon Prime subscription, online shoppers pay an annual fee in exchange for services including free two-day shipping.
We expect everything here right now, and we dont want to pay for it, Gielens said. Amazon has trained us that we dont have to pay for delivery, and they can actually manage to deliver very quickly so that is the biggest issue. Benjamin Kdan, a sophomore from Asheville, is an Amazon Prime member and uses the website to shop 10 to 15 times a month. Convenience is the most important thing, he said. With my Prime membership I am not only saving through free shipping but also in convenience. It is nice having instant gratification when shopping in person, but why do that when I can shop online for cheaper? With advances in online shopping platforms, department stores have found it difficult to adjust their brick-and-mortar business models. Gielens said a big trend for retail stores is to provide online ordering and in-store pick-up, but the logistics of turning a department store into a mini distribution center that rivals the Amazons of the world is expensive and difficult.
COURTESY OF DAN SEARS Marcus Paige speaks at a Board of Trustees meeting on Thursday morning.
A person who cares about the earth will resonate with its purity.
SaLLY FOX
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e all say that if the bank were to deposit a bunch of money that wasnt ours into our bank account, wed return it or donate it to charity. But lets be honest, youd totally spend some of it. Thats what one unnamed teenager in Athens, Ga. did after First Citizens Bank deposited $31,000 into the wrong account March 7. The bank urged he return the money, but that wasnt until they saw he blew through $25,000 within 10 days. If he doesnt comply soon, the bank will prosecute. Ever heard of finders keepers? Let the kid have some fun. He is the unsung hero this country deserves.
NOTED. If you want to be really annoying, heres a really simple how-to: Be Kanye West and Kim Kardashian. Want to be more annoying? Dedicate the cover of Vogue to the worlds most annoying people and slap an incredibly long hashtag on it: #WorldsMostTalkedAboutCouple. Good. QUOTED. It was right there in our rubbish bin, a mighty monster. I was petrified. I couldnt believe such a big rat could exist. Signe Bengtsson of Sweden comments on the first time she saw a 16-inch rat that terrorized her familys home for days on end.
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UNC Relay for Life: Check out the efforts of students as they raise money for the American Cancer Society. The event will occur rain or shine, and the official location of the event will be announced on UNC Relay for Lifes Facebook and Twitter pages by 11 a.m. The event, which runs until Saturday, will feature live music, yoga, zumba, a burrito-eating contest and various vendors. Time: 6 p.m. - 2 p.m. Saturday Location: Irwin Belk Track
acon Hubert, a Durham Academey 6th grader, shows his mom the book he made her for the MEET OUR HEROES: Secret Room books exhibit at FRANK Gallery. Durham Academy students made books about their heroes.
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Achordants Spring A Capella Concert: Enjoy an evening of great music from one of UNCs allmale a capella groups. Tickets are $6 and can be purchased in the Pit or online at http://bit.ly/1lmZjxb. A portion of ticket sales will be donated to Embody Carolina. A second show will occur Saturday night at the same time. Time: 8:08 p.m. Location: Carroll Hall
works that are a part of Ackland Art Museums permanent collection. This particular session will feature a tour of the museums 16th century engravings, The New Found Land. Free. Time: 3 p.m. Location: Ackland Art Museum To make a calendar submission, email calendar@dailytarheel. com. Please include the date of the event in the subject line, and attach a photo if you wish. Events will be published in the newspaper on either the day or the day before they take place.
POLICE LOG
Someone broke and entered at a jewelry store at 201 S. Estes Drive between 1:49 a.m. and 1:56 a.m. Wednesday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The person stole jewelry from Goldworks valued at a total of $40,870, including gold, diamond and emerald rings. The person broke the front door of the store with a crowbar, causing damage estimated at $500. The person also caused damage to four glass cases estimated at $250, reports state. Someone damaged property 828 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. at 7:54 a.m. Wednesday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The license plate light and trunk of a car were damaged, and damage was estimated at $100, reports state. Someone committed
larceny at 201 E. Franklin St. between 2:40 p.m. and 2:55 p.m. Wednesday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The person stole a purse valued at $500 and an Apple iPhone valued at $500, reports state.
Someone vandalized property at 100 E. Rosemary St. between 10 a.m and 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The person dinged the door handle of a car, causing damage estimated at $200, reports state. Someone broke and entered at a residence at 2001 Fountain Ridge Road between 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. Tuesday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The person stole items valued at a total of $183, including charge cards, cash and a drivers license, reports state.
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CORRecTiOns
Due to a reporting error, Thursdays front page story, Plans for Carrboro CVS halted misattributed some of the information in the article. Due to a source error, March 21s page 8 story, Elected officials deliver food to the homebound mischaracterized the nature of the funding for Meals on Wheels. The organization receives no funding from the state or federal governments. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the errors.
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered. Editorial corrections will be printed below. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories. Contact Managing Editor Cammie Bellamy at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
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Chapel Hill teens dont just want their voices to be heard, they want to make their opinions count. Members of the Chapel Hill Youth Council told the Chapel Hill Town Council they want to serve as voting members on some of the towns advisory boards. Councilwoman Maria Palmer said the teenagers role could be valuable.
Teens would be non-voting members within the advisory boards, but she said the members will determine whether the teens will be able to vote in some of the advisory boards in a town council meeting next week. We know definitely in the two boards, the (Community Design Commission) and the Planning Board, that they could not be voting members due to their judicial functions, she said. Teens would only be able to share their ideas with the advisory boards, but Palmer said they should still participate. I am a liaison on three councils and I dont have a vote, but that doesnt mean I cant make an
impact, she said. Liz Carter, coordinator for the Youth Council, said there is a disconnect between the town council and teens. (Teens) are bored because there is nothing for them to do, she said. We force things on them, what we want. If we have them here we could know specifically what they want to do. As the youngest member of the Town Council, Councilman Lee Storrow said he believes listening to teens perspectives is a great idea. They play an important role in the community, and they need to make sure they have spaces to play and interact that they are safe, Storrow said.
Storrow said the Town Council is undergoing work to make sure they better serve the needs of younger kids. Their voice is important and we hope they participate in civic dialogue within the community, he said. The town is still accepting applications for its Youth Council, and students can apply through the end of August. Akera Street, a junior at Northwood High School, said she is excited to participate in the Youth Council and is looking forward to planning events for kids in the town. Young people can give great ideas, and we want to be able to plan more events for the community and for the children so they can have
more fun, she said. Street said she believes they should have a vote within the advisory boards. I feel like we should be able to vote, she said. If it is up to one person, to make it fair, we should all vote on some of these issues. Not everyone in Youth Council is 18. Carter said the Youth Council gives kids an opportunity to serve a leadership role, and she is hoping more teens will join. Who knows more about teens than teens, themselves? The government should not be run top-down, she said. city@dailytarheel.com
Despite the apparent late-night success of the Carrboro Wendys drive-thru, the Board of Aldermen have asked town staff to explore a ban that would prohibit the future construction of drive-thrus in town. Most aldermen said they did not want any drive-thru windows in Carrboro. During a meeting earlier this month, the aldermen asked town staff to craft a ban on all drive-thrus for the board to vote on during a future meeting. In 1998, the Board of Aldermen adopted a permit policy for drive-thrus, which allows certain businesses to build drive-thrus by obtaining a conditional use permit, which requires a public hearing. The proposed ban might exclude future pharmacies the aldermen said they wanted to be more informed about pharmacy drive-thrus before making a final decision about them. Alderwoman Randee HavenODonnell said she doesnt see the point in allowing most drive-thrus. Drive-thrus in general dont appear to be essential, she said. I think that when you look at it in total and you realize what drive-thrus actually do. They keep people from walking. They force people to use vehicles. She said she does understand the potential benefits of drive-thru pharmacies, like their convenience for the disabled and adults with small children. There isnt a drive-thru pharmacy in either Carrboro or Chapel Hill, and Haven-ODonnell said she is not convinced residents want one. Im trying to get some feedback from the community as to whether or not they actually have that need, she said. If that is what the community wants, the community needs to come out and tell us. Professor of City and Regional Planning Todd BenDor said prohibiting drive-thrus wont stifle development in the town. Its more the typical opposition to drive-thrus that is usually based around kind of an opposition to chains, he said. Most of that is around preserving the community character, which is something Carrboros been very strong about for a really long time. But BenDor said some non-chain stores with drive-thrus are opening up in the area. Theres definitely been a lot of towns that have been very opposed to that kind of christening of a lot of fast food restaurants, BenDor said. But you are starting to see drivethrus at places that are local-like. A really good example of this is Bean & Barrel in Governors Village. Banning drive-thrus would negatively affect the environment, according to an EPA study on extending vehicle idling. The report shows the hot start of a car which occurs when a person parks their car briefly to grab takeout and then restarts it is actually considerably more environmentally damaging than the idling emissions from cars waiting in drive-thrus. The carbon monoxide emissions from a hot start would be nine times as much versus idling while waiting in line, according to the study. But Chris Mylan, spokesman for the Environmental Protection Agencys office of Transportation and Air Quality, said he does think the impact of a drivethru ban would be significant. I dont know if banning drive-thrus would just logically cut down on emissions too much, he said. city@dailytarheel.com
DTH/SYDNEY HANES Jonathan Scott plays Charlie Brown in Company Carolinas musical Youre a Good Man, Charlie Brown. The musical will have four showings.
The Peanuts gang is taking Chapel Hill, complete with melancholy monologues by a young Charlie Brown, philosophical ponderings from a confused Snoopy and bullying antics by the infamously evil Lucy. Company Carolina will bring the comic strip by Peter Schulz to life in a musical entitled Youre a Good Man, Charlie Brown at Historic Playmakers Theatre this weekend. Junior Christian Payne, the productions director, said he wanted to try his hand at directing a musical after being involved with Company Carolina for two years. (Musicals) are just fun, because sometimes you just have to accept that the characters will break out into song about, you know, flying a kite, he said. The shows humor also played a large part in the decision to pursue it as a Company production.
Ive seen the show a million times, and its still so enjoyable. We all have tears in our eyes every time, Payne said. Payne said he has enjoyed working with new company members to create the final product. Were all characters already in our own special ways, and I think that really helps, Payne said. Everything is larger than life. Freshman Music Director Elizabeth Carbone said although she has been involved in theater since she was young, the new members made it a different experience. We have a wonderful cast, and working with a lot of new people on cast has made the whole pro-
cess very fresh, she said. Carbone worked with actors individually to help them deliver music best according to their characters. The small orchestra includes a flute, a piano and a clarinet. Freshman Shannon Gallagher, who plays Lucy, said she thinks the audience will love the plays energy and script, which she said differ from the average play. Jonathan Scott, an exchange student from Northern Ireland who plays Charlie Brown, said another thing that made this production different was its structure. Its not a classic play because youre extracting from comic strips that are like two seconds to read, Scott said. This production is the first part of a new Peanuts repertory, the second part of which is entitled Dog Sees God: Confessions of a Teenage Blockhead and will be performed next weekend. Payne said the second part focuses on
He would sit in the front row, feeling invisible and scared to even raise his hand. As an African-American male majoring in political science, Darius Whitney is always one of few black students in his classes. He feared making a stupid comment and hearing students around him whisper, Hes black. That makes sense. On Thursday night Whitney, alongside two other black males, faced a small crowd of predominantly minority students and shared his story, including his struggles and hopes for minority male students. The panel discussion, hosted by the UNC Carolina Millennial Scholars Program, examined why it is important for minority males to be successful. Its really hard to show the other side of you thats not black,
Whitney said. Other people who dont have that puzzle piece, its hard for them to not look at you as having that puzzle piece. Psychology major Osiris Rankin, another panelist at Wednesdays event, agreed that being known as the other is less than ideal. Its not that I dont want to be known as black, its that I dont only want to be known as black, he said. Rankin did not let his blue-collar background and failing high-school grades hinder him from attending community college and now, UNC. My mom was a maid for doctors, and I read from a young age, Rankin said. When I look back, I ask, How could I read so early? Someone gave me books, someone fought for me. I know its not just my success. School of Education professor Juan Carrillo said transitioning from his hometown in Mexico to the realm of white-denominated academia was a shaky process, but he was able to meet faculty members who looked like him. When you grow up in a particular marginalized community, its not natural to be like, Well, I think Socrates was arguing
DTH/ARIANNA HOLDER Osiris Rankin, Darius Whitney and Dr. Juan Carrillo discuss their place in the University setting and the challenges they have faced as minority males.
That just wasnt me, Carrillo said. Sometimes it feels good to not always be the panda at the national zoo or the fish in the aquarium. The panelists were doing more than just recounting their stories. Freshman Lea Efird said she was surprised at how she was able to relate to what they were discussing. I think what they were saying was applicable to more than minority males, Efird said. I lived in a white, rural community, so being
able to hear their experiences and that theyve not just had negative experiences was neat. Freshman Sydney Tillman also felt connected to the stories she heard. I kind of wished more white people were here, she said. Hearing them talk really changed my idea of the prospect that minorities dont get identity. university@dailytarheel.com
MAYMESTER
May 13-May 30, 2014
Register TODAY! Earn 3 credits in 3 weeks in Maymester. Check out the listing below for courses, professors and Gen Ed requirements.
summer.unc.edu
AAAD 315 Political Protest and Conflict in Africa (3), Michael Lambert. BN, SS AAAD 260 Blacks in Latin America (3), Kia Caldwell. BN, HS, GL AMST 256 The Anti-Fifties: Voices of a Counter Decade (3), Michelle Robinson. LA, NA HIST 490 The Unites States & the Cold War: Origins, Development, Legacy (3), Klaus Larres. INLS 285 Information Use for Organizational Effectiveness (3), Mohammad Jarrahi. JAPN 231 Premodern Japanese History and Culture (3), Morgan Pitelka. HS, WB JOMC 475 Concepts of Marketing (3), Heidi Kaminski. JOMC 376 Sports Marketing and Advertising (3), John Sweeney.
AMST 336 Native Americans in Film (3), Christopher Teuton. VP, NA, US
ANTH 147 Comparative Healing Systems (3), Michele Rivkin-Fish. SS, GL ANTH 423 Written in Bone: CSI and the Science of Death Investigation from Skeletal Remains (3), Dale Hutchinson. PL ANTH 277 Gender and Culture (3), Karla Slocum. SS
ARTH 551 Introduction to Museum Studies (3), Lyneise Williams. VP, NA, EE
ARTH 468 Visual Arts and Culture in Modern and Contemporary China (3), Wei-Cheng Lin. VP, BN ARTS 290 The Walking Seminar (3), Mario Marzan.
MASC220 (ENST 220) North Carolina Estuaries: Environmental Processes and Problems (3), Marc Alperin. Includes one full week at the Institute of Marine Sciences (IMS) in Morehead City.Separate program fee & application required. EE, PL PLAN 575 Introduction to Real Estate Finance, Investment and Development (3), Emil Malizia. EE POLI 270 Classical Political Thought: Platos Republic (3), Susan Bickford. PH, NA, WB
ARTS 390 Experimental Relief Print Making: Special Topics in VA (3), Michael R. Sonnichsen. CHEM 430/BIOL 430 Introduction to Biological Chemistry (3), Brian Hogan. COMM 422 Family Communication (3), Kumarini Silva. GL, US CLAR 242 Archaeology of Egypt (3), Jennifer Gates-Foster. BN, HS, WB
PLCY 101 (PWAD 101) Making Public Policy (3), Daniel Gitterman. NA, SS POLI 411 American Civil Liberties and Rights Under the Constitution (3), Isaac Unah. HS, NA PSYC 245 Abnormal Psychology (3), F. Charles Wiss. PL
POLI 432 Tolerance in Liberal States (3), Donald Searing. CI, NA, PH
DRAM 290 Special Studies On Camera Acting: Integrating Breath and Voice (3), John Patrick. DRAM 292 Corner of the Sky: The American Musical (3), Gregory Kable. VP DRAM 300 Directing (3), Julie Fishell. CI
PSYC 490 Current Topics in Psychology: Childhood Maltreatment, Trauma, and Trauma-Focused Treatment (3), Deborah Jones. PSYC 503 African American Psychology (3) Enrique Neblett. PSYC 566 Attitude Change (3), Steven Buzinski. RELI 180 (ASIA 180) Introduction to Islamic Civilization (3) Carl Ernst. HS, BN, WB
EDUC 508 Cultural Competence, Leadership and You (3), Sherick Hughes. SS, GL
ECON 461 The Crisis and European Economic and Monetary Integration (3), Bruno Dallago. SS, GL
ENGL 225 Shakespeare: From Page to Stage (3), Ritchie Kendall. LA, NA, WB ENGL 443 American Literature Before 1860: The Power of Blackness: Hawthornes Major Novels (3), Philip Gura. LA, NA EXSS 273 Research in Exercise and Sport Science (3), Elizabeth Hibberd. QI HIST 279 Modern South Africa (3), Lisa Lindsay. HS, BN GLBL 487 Global Social Movements Rethinking Globalization (3), Michal Osterweil. EXSS 188 Emergency Care of Injuries and Illness (3), Meredith Petschauer and Alain Aguilar. ENGL 315 English in the U.S.A. (3), Connie Eble. US
ENGL 143 Spike Lee and American Culture (3), GerShun Avilez. VP, GL
SOCI 252 Data Analysis in Sociological Research (3), Francois Nielsen. QI SPAN 255 Conversation I (3), Malgorzata Lee. Prerequisite for 255: SPAN 204, 212 or 402. CI S OCI 274 Social and Economic Justice (3), Neal Caren. PH
RELI 283 (ASIA 300) The Buddhist Tradition: India, Nepal and Tibet (3), Lauren Leve. BN, CI
SPAN 310 Conversation II (3), Malgorzata Lee. Prerequisite for 310: SPAN 250, 255 or 260.
SPAN 293 Spanish Service Learning (1). Available to students enrolled in SPAN 255 or SPAN 310. EE SPAN 345 The Caribbean and Southern Cone (3) Juan Carlos Gonzalez Espitia. BN
SPAN 362 The Quest for Identity in Contemporary Spain (3), Samuel Amago. LA, NA
HIST 381 Bebop to Hip Hop: The Modern Black Freedom Struggle through Music (3), Jerma Jackson. HS, US
Sports Friday
Carolina family. Its a term that gets thrown around frequently within the North Carolina athletic department. For the Holmans, life has always revolved around family. And nothing has kept the Holman family together quite like Carolina. North Carolina lacrosse. By joining the UNC womens lacrosse team last fall, freshman Sydney Holman followed in the footsteps of her two older brothers and became the fifth Holman to become a part of the Carolina family. Sydney is already a key member of the undefeated No. 1 Tar Heels this season, racking up 44 points throughout 11 games and starting her UNC career with a bang. If you know anything about the Holman lacrosse legacy already, chances are that its Marcus Holman, a 2013 graduate and former captain of the mens lacrosse team, who currently holds the record for the most career points in UNC history. What you might not have known is the family affair also includes older brother Matt Holman, who spent a year as a backup goalkeeper for the Tar Heels, as well as parents Brian and Laurie Holman, both of whom played college lacrosse and now serve as assistant coach of the mens squad and director of operations for the womens team respectively. You could definitely say were all in for Carolina, Marcus said. Theres no doubt about that.
DTH/SPENCER HERLONG UNC womens lacrosse freshman Sydney Holman stands with her dad, Brian Holman, an assistant coach on the mens lacrosse team.
kids in the mid-Atlantic, lacrosse was the only sport that mattered. But for Sydney, the influence came predominantly from her family, which was all about lacrosse all of the time. She watched games with her brothers at Johns Hopkins, her fathers alma mater, and followed her dad to their recreational games, standing by him on the sideline while he coached. Her brothers also played with her on a mini-lacrosse field in the backyard and got her tougher while she was playing on a recreational team coached by her mom. One of the things that we were always pretty adamant about was to play (lacrosse) because you love it, Brian said, not just because every-
one else is playing it. One thing was for sure all of the Holmans loved it. Soon enough, their love for the sport brought the entire family to Chapel Hill. For Brian, it was an opportunity to return to the sport he loved through an open coaching position with North Carolinas mens team. Marcus, who was looking for a place to begin his college lacrosse career, fell in love with UNC as soon as he visited for the first time. To be honest, Chapel Hill just lured me in, Marcus said. I remember driving home with my family, and in my heart, I just knew it was the place I wanted to be. For Sydney, the move was a big change.
An easy decision
Sydney was just about to start high school and knew no one in Chapel Hill. The weather was nicer, but the local lacrosse atmosphere was not up to the level that she had grown used to in the north. Overcoming the differences taught her patience, she said, and she soon warmed up to the town and Marcuss new school. I became closely acquainted with Fetzer (Field) from the stands, which made me appreciate it a lot more when I got to step on the field the first time, Sydney said. That was probably one of the best days yet. Her play on the high school field all but guaranteed that one day Fetzer Field would be her second home.
Sydneys lacrosse resume at East Chapel Hill High was endless, including three-time All-American status, four-time team MVP, a state championship, a state record for career goals and many more accolades. When the time came for her to make her own college decision, Chapel Hill was first on her list, but her family encouraged her to look around at other schools to make an informed decision. She did that for a little bit, Brian said. But then she was like, This is a joke. I want to be a Tar Heel. Sydney looked at Florida, but while she was visiting, all she could think about was the UNC campus, the coaches and the lacrosse program.
The North Carolina softball team put on one of its strongest offensive performances of the season on Thursday night, tallying 16 hits in a 13-1 run-ruled rout of Elon. The Tar Heels (18-12), who were looking to hand the Phoenix (16-14-1) its sixth straight loss, wasted no time getting to work at the plate. Sophomore outfielder Aquilla Mateen got things started for the Tar Heels in the second inning. With no outs and the bases loaded, Mateen singled to shortstop, driving in North Carolinas first run. The Tar Heels went on to score four more runs in the second, and they never looked back. Our offense was amazing today, Mateen said. We were seeing the ball and hitting the ball, and we took advantage of their errors when they were on defense. The Phoenix proved to be no match for the Tar Heels, mustering just one run on four hits in the game. North Carolina also managed to score three runs on three costly errors by the Phoenix. Sophomore shortstop Kristen Brown added further insult to injury in the sixth inning, blasting a grand slam that extended UNCs lead to 11 runs. The homer was Browns team-leading ninth of the season. When one person hits the ball, its just really contagious, Brown said. We all get hot together, so collectively as a team, we just kept hitting the ball and scoring runs. Back in February, the outlook on the Tar Heels season was looking less than optimistic. The team got off to a 2-6 start, one that head coach
Donna Papa said was one of the slowest she had experienced in her 29 years at UNC. Fast forward a month, and the Tar Heels have now
won seven of their last eight games. Brown believes the teams never-quit mentality is one of the things that has allowed the Tar Heels to begin to play more efficient-
ly together. The Carolina softball team, were never gonna give up, Brown said.
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