The Daily Tar Heel For Oct. 5, 2015
The Daily Tar Heel For Oct. 5, 2015
The Daily Tar Heel For Oct. 5, 2015
dailytarheel.com
DTH/ALEX KORMANN
Marquise Williams (12) throws a pass downfield during the Georgia Tech game on Saturday. UNC won the game after trailing by 21 points. Williams led the team to its first victory in Atlanta since 1997.
NORTH CAROLINA
GEORGIA TECH
38
31
By Jeremy Vernon
Assistant Sports Editor
Staff Writer
Genetically Speaking
Our Health, Our Genes, and the Search for Our Roots
By Shweta Mishra
Michael Prices dad would
return from summer runs
along the speckled North
Carolina shores with specimens in hand, often horseshoe crabs. He said his dad
has had a lifelong reverence
for the arts and sciences.
He loves to read newspapers so much; he will accumulate these huge towers of
them, teetering precariously
all over the living room, said
Price, now a senior psychology
lecturer in England. These
include sections of papers that
are months or years old but
that he hasnt gotten around
to reading yet so he cant bring
himself to get rid of.
The public knows Michaels
dad in starker terms David
Price, the Democratic representative for North Carolinas
4th district for 25 years and a
leading whip for the Iran Deal.
But Price said politics only
interested him once he transferred to UNC as a MoreheadCain Scholar in fall of 1959.
Sputnik had gone up some
years earlier, and there was a
great emphasis on engineering, he said. But I discovered at Carolina that my true
The greatest accomplishment is not in never falling but in rising again after you fall.
VINCE LOMBARDI
News
POLICE LOG
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY
Crisis Center
CORRECTIONS
Due to a design error, Fridays front page story graphic UNC sees increase in alcohol-related
incidents, the graphic misrepresented the data on drug-related arrests. Drug-related arrests slightly
increased from 2013-14.
Due to a reporting error, Fridays pg. 2 story Blues legend Buddy Guy performs at Memorial
misrepresented Guys performance. Guy performed with a backup band.
Due to a reporting error, Fridays front page story Sexual assault focus is on undergrads misrepresented the results of the Association of American Universities Campus Climate on Sexual Assault
and Sexual Misconduct study. Graduate students who reported sexual harassment were more likely
to report that the offender was a faculty member. Due to a reporting error, the information box associated with this story misrepresented the statistics. The statistics represent harassment by faculty.
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 on this page. 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 Mary Tyler at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
Like: facebook.com/dailytarheel
The
Religious
Issue
In boxes Oct. 7
Produced by the
special projects &
investigations team
Someone committed
larceny on the 100 block
of Camelot Drive at 5:52
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole $300 in
cash while someone was buying a vehicle, reports state.
Panhellenic Council.
I think the extension of
Alpha Phi is a great way of
growing our community and
provide another viable opportunity for our women to join a
sorority, Michaud said.
Other leaders of the
Panhellenic community said
they were excited about the
expansion.
Julia Mullendore, president
of the Panhellenic Council,
said Alpha Phis recruitment
of around 130 women a few
weeks ago went well.
Mullendore said a positive
aspect of being a new chapter
COMMENT BY OCT. 13
www.carolinas-finest.com
The Best of
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- Dining
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in Chapel Hill
Comprehensive guides to the best
the town has to offer!
Established 1893
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BROUGHT TO YOU BY
News
Ocials:
UNC is $1.4
billion in debt
The debt financed BREAKING DOWN DEBT
residence halls, dining $1.4 billion
halls and more.
Debt at UNC as of Aug. 2015
2004-12
By Jamie Gwaltney
Staff Writer
DTH/WYATT MCNAMARA
Local K-9 officer Ron Trombley brings his dog into Krave, a kava bar in Carrboro, to spend time with members of the community.
30
Aaa
DTH/VERONICA BURKHART
Ariana Vigil led the discussion on domestic violence for Feminist Friday.
News
UNC class raises money for new van for Heavenly Groceries
This new van would
help the Jackson
Center with errands.
By Devyn Davis
Staff Writer
WILLIAMS
FROM PAGE 1
Whatever helps
this team to win
football games,
thats me.
Marquise Williams
North Carolina quarterback
1 Full
Month Free
st
PRICE
African-American women.
Over 60 percent of people
sterilized were AfricanAmerican and, in those years,
black people were only 10
percent of the population,
she said.
Though North Carolina
was the first of the 32 states
with a eugenics program to
provide compensation to victims, Krome-Lukens said it
must continue its leadership.
I think because of our role
as one of the most active sterilization programs, I think we
also have the responsibility to
be a leader in addressing that.
OBANNON
FROM PAGE 1
poses, he said.
But Price was an exception,
McCorkle said.
Price spearheaded the Iran
Deal, generating support in
2012, then leading the whip
team early this summer.
My main device over the
years has been joint letters
with colleagues, bipartisan letters initially, but increasingly
Democrats alone, he said.
The values behind the Iran
Deal also apply to the Syrian
refugee crisis, he said.
EUGENICS
FROM PAGE 1
ATTENTION!!!!
Undergraduate and
Graduate level
Accounting and Finance
Students
SONOCO PRODUCTS
COMPANY is holding an
information session for you to
learn about the Company and its
opportunities
cable/hbo/internet
+ washer/dryer
included in rent!
TODAY!!
5:30 Hanes Hall UNC CH
FOOD TO BE
PROVIDED FOR ALL
ATTENDEES
MAcc students are encouraged
to attend!!
612hillsborough.com
919.636.5132
612hillsborough@ellerliving.com
FROM PAGE 1
SHRED
A - THON
2015
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10:00 AM 2:00 PM
Thursday, October 8:
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recycling@orangecountync.gov
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Opinion
EDITORIAL CARTOON
TREY FLOWERS
SAM OH
JUSTINA VASQUEZ
CAMERON JERNIGAN
ZACH RACHUBA
BRIAN VAUGHN
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
The new
cliche:
being the
outsider
Oates responds to
letter about blog post
NEXT
Alex Thomas
utsider is a term
that used to have
some meaning to
it. If you were an outsider in
a group, it meant you were a
new face that raised eyebrows
as you fought against the status quo. But along with that
came a degree of appreciation
for standing up for your differences, and even provided a
window for success.
In the 1992 presidential
election, we had Ross Perot,
the Texas billionaire running
on cutting government waste
and boosting efficiency.
Now, merely 13 months
until the 2016 presidential
election, outsider is as overused in politics as kissing
babies and claiming to care
about the middle class.
For the Republicans, Donald
Trump, Ben Carson and Carly
Fiorina have been labeled as
outsiders by journalists and voters, primarily because they lack
public office experience, running as fresh faces in a GOP still
struggling to find an identity.
On the Democrat side, Bernie
Sanders has been given this title
for his more populist approach
to issues facing the American
populace. This includes supporting a national $15 per hour
minimum living wage.
But while each brings something unique to the election,
none of their actions justify the
label outsider.
For Fiorina and Carson,
their outsider statuses rely
mainly on their careers outside
of politics. Fiorina is the former CEO of Hewlett-Packard,
while Carson is known for his
neurosurgery work at Johns
Hopkins Hospital.
However, their positions are
mostly typical Republican ideals. The tax code is horrid. We
need a strong military. Abortion
is wrong. Nothing we have not
seen before, and not challenging
the dominant status.
For Sanders, he has proven
himself to be different, running on a platform of populism
sprinkled with socialistic positions. With policies like his
plan for tuition free-education,
he has proven himself to be a
real challenger.
Yet at the same time,
Sanders has served in Congress
since 1991, becoming a senator
in 2007. He is a senior member
of the Senate, and is serving
as the ranking member of the
Senate Budget Committee.
The only candidate worth
the title of outsider is
Trump, but it is a questionable distinction. Trumps positions have changed so much
even since he joined the race
in June, it is hard to tell where
he stands on a fair number of
issues. He could fit the outsider persona, but the lack of
a consistency makes this current labeling unclear.
Each of these individuals
brings something unique to
the race to the White House,
and each should highlight
their differences. However,
certain outlets should be careful about calling people outsiders when candidates may
not fit the definition.
These candidates surely
have their differences, but
none are new enough to completely change the culture in
Washington. While the label
may catch the average persons
eye, it will not be enough to
assure these people will indeed
act like outsiders if they are
sworn into office.
EDITORIAL
t is finally over.
The N.C. General
Assembly closed its
session on Wednesday.
The town, the University
and its community are no
longer under deliberate
and passive assault after
a legislative onslaught in
line with regressions in
2013.
The laws the legislature created this year are
a direct reflection of its
members, elected by our
voting citizens. Consider
the following legislation
that was created, proposed or ignored during
this session:
1. The Protect North
Carolina Workers Act is
better known as House
Bill 318. It seeks to
deport active members
of immigrant communities regardless of their
contributions to American
society. It was presented
to Gov. Pat McCrory on
Wednesday.
The act would push
undocumented North
Carolinians further into
the shadows.
In an interview with
The Daily Tar Heel,
Chapel Hill Mayor Mark
Kleinschmidt said this bill
would discourage undocumented immigrants
EDITORIAL
Rethink housing
Students should
explore all
on-campus options.
TO THE EDITOR:
In the Oct. 1 edition of
The Daily Tar Heel, Jenny
Thompson referred to
one of my blog posts on
chapelhillwatch.com of a
few months ago in which I
came out strongly in support of the Yes Means Yes
policy UNC adopted.
Women have been socialized since we were little
girls to not say, No, then
as adults we are blamed for
not saying, No, forcefully
enough. I made the analogy
between people who dont
realize how difficult it is
to say No, and the Town
Councils dilemma of having
to say no in uncomfortable
situations.
It certainly was not my
intent to cause trauma
to anyone, much less to
someone who had already
been traumatized. Now
that I realize how my analogy came across to Ms.
Thompson and perhaps
others, I have removed the
analogy from my blog post.
Nancy Oates
Candidate for Chapel
Hill Town Council
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News
DTH/BEREN SOUTH
Jewel Francis, a recipient of Fix-A-Homes house renovations, tours her home Friday afternoon.
Volunteers transform
Northside home
By Isabella Lupoli
Staff Writer
Steven
Pinker is
a New York
Times bestselling author
and a psycholinguist.
its better to say to home in
than to hone in. To home
in means to return home,
like what homing pigeons do.
Deadlines
Announcements
NOTICE TO ALL DTH
CUSTOMERS
YMCA AFTERSCHOOL
COUNSELORS
Counselors needed for fun and engaging afterschool program at the Chapel Hill-Carrboro
YMCA. Great opportunity to work with elementary aged students leading active and
creative programming in the afternoon. Hours
are 2-6pm on weekdays. Please apply online
at link provided on dailytarheel, com/classifieds or contact Youth Director Nick Kolb at
919-987-8847 with questions.
For Rent
STONECROP Apartments. Walk to campus, downtown, affordable, 4BR/4BA. Rent
$2,600/mo. includes all utilities, WiFi, W/D,
huge kitchen, rec room, parking in garage,
security entrance with elevator. Call 919968-7226, rentals@millhouseproperties.com.
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
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Help Wanted
FAIR HOUSINg
MERCIA
RESIDENTIAL
PROPERTIES:
Help Wanted
COMMUNICATIONS SPECIALIST: University
United Methodist Church: 150 East Franklin
Street, Chapel Hill, NC. Job summary: The
UUMC communications specialist is responsible for developing and implementing the
churchs strategic communications plan. The
role requires development of internal and
external communication materials, including items such as original articles, photographs, videos, social media posts, graphics
and publications. Full job description can
be found at http://nccumc.org/employment/
communications-specialist/. Job contact information: Name, Search Committee. Email,
SMO-CommunicationsSearchTeam@chapelhilluumc.org.
NATIONALLY RECOGNIzED and locally owned
insurance agency seeks part-time administrative assistant. Must possess excellent
phone and computer skills. Small business
environment, flexible hours with competitive wages. Please email inquiries, resume to
a076080@Allstate.com.
CLINICAL TEACHING TUTORS NEED math, science, English, writing, APUSH, organization,
test prep, APES, EC, literacy. Please send days
and hours available. Car. References. Chapel
Hill, Triangle, Chatham. jlocts@aol.com. $23/
hr. and TBD independent contract.
HIRING ExPERIENCED BAR STAFF. Open interviews daily 1-5pm.. Bartenders, barbacks,
bouncers, dishwasher. 201 East Franklin Street
(formerly Deep End). Call 919-391-5066.
SALES ASSOCIATE: Do you love brands like Lilly
Pulitzer, Loft and Frye? Want to work in a fun
retail environment? Clothes Mentor Chapel Hill
is hiring! chapelhill@clothesmentorstores.com.
Help Wanted
PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST NEEDED: Be a part
Internships
PAID INTERNS NEEDED by Chapel Hill nonprofit to gather data on prospects for email
marketing. Near campus. Flexible. $8/hr. Send
inquiries to debra@thewalkingclassroom.org.
Photography
PHOTO SPECIALTIES HAS multiple openings for
event photographers mostly in the Chapel HIll
area. Photography experience is helpful, but
an outgoing personality is even better! Perfect
job to work around your school and/or work
schedule. Pay is $15/hr. +incentives with the
ability over time to greatly increase. Call Tonya
at 919-967-9576.
RECYCLE ME PLEASE!
Direct Support
Professional
We are currently recruiting for
motivated and enthusiastic individuals
to work with residents with
developmental disabilities of all ages!
A great opportunity for psychology
and social work students!
Various shifts available
including PT and FT.
More information
and application available at
$10.10/hr.
http://www.rsi-nc.org/
Travel/Vacation
BAHAMAS SpRINg BREAk
Its fast!
Its easy!
Place a Classified
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UNC Community
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STARPOINT STORAGE
NEED STORAGE SPACE?
Safe, Secure, Climate Controlled
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News
It ended up giving
me one of the most
valuable experiences Ive ever had.
Beth Siegling
Tenth-grader and donation receiver
On Saturday, Buffy
Filippell, president of
TeamWork Consulting and
a former tennis player, told
the Carolina Sport Business
& Fitness Expo how athletic
skills can easily translate to
the business world.
You want to win the
game, Filippell said. Use all
the athletic skills you learned
and use them for the next
part of your journey.
The Carolina Sport
Business Club hosted
its third annual expo at
the Blue Zone in Kenan
Memorial Stadium.
This year, Filippell and
Shamaree Brown, director
of student-athlete programs
and compliance for the ACC,
were invited to speak at the
expo.
Buffy is super dynamic
as far as people she knows
in the sports world. Barely
anyone compares to her
games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level:
4
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
Diya Abdo
is a professor
and English
department
chairperson
at Guilford
College in
Greensboro.
tiative, it was never intended
to take a refugee family away
from the rest of its community in the city where it was
resettling. This was meant to
be a solution for an immediate housing crisis. If you look
at the thousands of people
now trapped in Hungary,
thats a housing crisis. People
are saying we cant take care
of them.
But imagine if now all of a
sudden we see that there are
other spaces in this country
and other countries that can
serve as homes for refugees.
Our idea of how much space
we have expands and changes.
DTH: Do the local agencies in
Greensboro have any idea of
how many refugees they can
expect to arrive?
DA: No, and thats part of the
dilemma. They could get
much more than they have
the accommodations for.
Thats why I think its crucial
for us to be able to provide
whatever we can.
DTH: In anticipation for the
refugees arrival, what is
your organization doing to
prepare?
DA: Once we know they need
housing for a family, then we
will try to mobilize to try and
be ready to house a family on
campus. To do that, we really
need to find the appropriate
housing. Right now, weve got
housing on campus. We will
determine at that point if this
particular place on campus
is appropriate for the family
the refugee agency asks us to
take in.
Solution to
Fridays puzzle
Sparing no expense
UNC may be $1.4 in debt,
but finance officials say the
number is appropriate
debt. See pg. 3 for story.
dailytarheel.com/classifieds
find a job buy a couch sell your car
61 Glisten
62 Mr. Peanuts stick
63 Pac-12 member
64 The Great king of
Judea
65 Rec room centerpiece
66 Number one
DOWN
1 Cat conversation
2 To be, __ to
be ...
3 One being pulled behind
a boat
4 High degree, in math
5 Dont touch that!
6 London Fields author
Martin
7 Three Blind __
8 Get my point?
9 Big crowd
10 Pop goes critter
11 Novelist Bront
12 500 race, familiarly
13 Hauls off to jail
18 Texters I think ...
22 Live __: Taco Bell
slogan
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SportsMonday
SCOREBOARD
WOMENS SOCCER
NORTH CAROLINA
BOSTON COLLEGE
2
0
By Christian Phillips
Staff Writer
DTH/CORI PATTRICK
Alexa Newfield (88) pushes the ball up field during the Boston College game Friday. North Carolina won the game 2-0.
previous dominance.
We have to realize that every
minute of every practice we can
still improve, said senior defender
Paige Nielsen.
For now, North Carolina holds the
top spot in the country. But without
NORTH CAROLINA
WAKE FOREST
MENS SOCCER
3
0
NORTH CAROLINA
2
PITTSBURGH0
By C Jackson Cowart
By Tyler Leli
Staff Writer
DTH/KENDALL BAGLEY
Victoria McPherson (7) spikes the ball in the UNC volleyball game against Duke.
Quotable
A missed penalty kick is just
like any other missed shot. It is a
shot that did not go in the goal.
You just have to live with it and
get going. UNC mens soccer
coach Carlos Somoano.
Notable
Redshirt junior Nyambi
Jabang, who missed the first
eight games of the season with
a knee injury, made his season
debut in the 39th minute of
Fridays match. The midfielder
played only nine minutes, but
recorded a shot on goal.
Whats next?
North Carolina hosts UNCWilmington at 7 p.m. tomorrow
at Fetzer Field.
@jetleli8
sports@dailytarheel.com