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defender of the humanities,

a respected professor and a


thoughtful and encouraging
mentor to students during his
30 years at UNC.
No matter what we were
reading, you could tell he was
having as much fun teaching
as we were analyzing the texts,
said Ryan Passer, who took
Gless Shakespeare course.
He won many distinctions
at the University, including the
Roy C. Moose Distinguished
Professor of Renaissance
Studies award in 2009 and the
University Tanner Award for
Excellence in Undergraduate
Teaching in 1983.
He was so passionate
about Shakespeare that just
listening to him share his
knowledge inspired students
to research the material to try
to discover what Dr. Gless felt
when he read these works,
said senior Sara Russell, who
took several of Gless courses.
Gless was a Rhodes Scholar
at Oxford University with
former President Bill Clinton,
who later appointed him to
the National Council of the
National Endowment for the
Humanities.
Clinton identified him as
a fearless, tireless, articulate
defender of the humanities,
Barbour said.
As an administrator at
UNC, he created a legacy of
recognizing the moral and
ethical value of these pro-
grams.
Despite his success, Gless
never forgot his small-town
roots. Working at a public
university was important to
Gless because he was able to
Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893
Summertime is always the best of what might be.
CHARLES BOWDEN
Thursday, June 19, 2014 dailytarheel.com Volume 122, Issue 46
WEEKLY SUMMER ISSUE
Students with disabilities offered support during, after admissions process
By Carolyn Ebeling
and Jane Wester
Senior Writers
The traditional stresses of the
senior year of high school press-
ing the fateful submit button on
applications, waiting for admissions
decisions, even packing up the car to
move to campus can be amplified
for students with disabilities.
But if the student chooses to
share information about their dis-
ability during the application pro-
cess, UNCs Accessibility Resources
and Service office and an admissions
subcommittee for disabilities can
work together to give due consider-
ation and support.
Tiffany Bailey, director of the
Accessibility Resources office, said
students self-identify to the accessibil-
ity office either before they are admit-
ted or during freshman orientation.
We will meet with some prospec-
tive students who want an idea of
how we are going to accommodate
their disability, but we dont meet
with a lot of students, and a lot of
students may not disclose a disabil-
ity, she said.
Jared Rosenberg, senior assistant
director of admissions, said students
must self-disclose their disability
in order to be eligible for extra con-
sideration by the Committee on
Disabilities, the admissions subcom-
mittee.
The student must also include
some sort of documentation of their
disability, such as evaluations from a
physician or psychologist, a personal
impact statement or an individual-
ized education plan used in high
school.
If the student mentions the dis-
ability in an essay but does not pro-
vide any documentation, we will not
mark that student for further con-
sideration because we have nothing
more to go on, Rosenberg said.
Ashley Memory, assistant director
of admissions, said applicants are
not required to note if they have a
disability.
There are around 30 to 35 stu-
dents who self-disclose (a disability),
and of those we may forward about 20
to 25 to the subcommittee, she said.
Logan Gin, a UNC sophomore
with dwarfism, said UNCs acces-
sibility services have been extremely
helpful. Gin is studying abroad in
Mexico and responded to questions
in a Facebook message.
I actually met with the ARS
office on a visit to campus when I
first heard about the program. I got
in contact with one of the members
to talk about what it is like to go to
UNC with a disability, he said in the
message.
Tiffany Bailey has been great
from the very beginning when I
first met her during my visit. She
is always just a phone call, email or
office visit away.
College students with disabilities
must take responsibility for their
own accommodations, a change that
Bailey said can present a challenge.
In K-12, parents or guardians
have the primary responsibility in
advocating, and here the responsi-
bility shifts to the students, she said.
Thats a common transition chal-
lenge for students all students,
but especially students with dis-
abilities from an accommodations
perspective.
Rosenberg said one of the most
important concerns during admis-
sion for disabled and non-disabled
Gless leaves behind legacy of compassion
By Jonathan Moyer
City Editor
When John Woodard told cus-
tomers the pharmacy in Suttons
Drug Store was closing down, he got
a lot of concern that the entire store
would be going out of business.
You cant shut this place down,
the owner said, pointing at the soda
shop counter.
After customers were told they
could still get their prescriptions
filled at the nearby CVS, they con-
gratulated Woodard on the decision.
He said they were just happy they
could still come and eat.
When you mention Suttons Drug
Store, it always revolves around the
food, Woodard said.
CVS acquired Suttons pharmacy
in a deal that was finalized Tuesday.
CVS will fill all of Suttons existing
prescriptions, and Woodard said he
will also work in the pharmacy there.
Woodard said his decision was the
By Stephanie Lamm
Staff Writer
Students remember Darryl
Gless as a bright-eyed profes-
sor sitting on the edge of his
desk, book open in his lap,
looking out at his students
with a sense of eagerness.
Gless, 68, died at the UNC
Lineberger Cancer Center on
June 10 after an unsuccessful
bone marrow transplant he
received after battling a mar-
row disorder for 15 years.
He operated under the
shadow of this debilitating
disorder, but he thrived with
it, said Reid Barbour, a pro-
fessor of English at UNC and
one of Gless first students.
He kept learning. He learned
German and French, he trav-
eled, and he continued writ-
ing and teaching.
I cant believe hes gone
because he gave off an aura of
strength. Even on his death
Darryl Gless
taught at UNC
for almost
30 years. He
specialized
in analyzing
the works of
Shakespeare.
Pharmacy closes, Suttons remains
DTH FILE PHOTO
John Woodard poses in Suttons Drug Store for
the stores 90th anniversary last year. Woodard
sold the pharmacy on Tuesday.
BOG will vote on
tuition increases
By Amy Tsai
State & National Editor
In a departure from prec-
edent, last year the N.C.
General Assembly bypassed
the UNC-system Board of
Governors and mandated
steep out-of-state tuition
increases for 2014-15.
But N.C. Senate and House
budget proposals this sum-
mer allow the UNC system
to adjust out-of-state tuition
rates as long as tuition
increases still raise an esti-
mated $27.2 million, the
amount cut from the UNC-
system budget last year.
The board will vote
Thursday on what out-of-
state tuition rates to enact
if the state budget, which
UNC English professor
Darryl Gless died
June 10.
Owner John Woodard
transferred his pharmacy
business to CVS.
They will discuss
tuition and faculty
retention.
needs to be finalized by July 1,
grants such flexibility.
Since the short session,
there were signs the system
might receive this flexibility,
said Charles Perusse, UNC-
system chief operating officer.
Under the original hikes,
out-of-state students at four
system schools, including
UNC-Chapel Hill, would have
seen a tuition increase of 12.3
percent. There would have
been no tuition increases for
out-of-state students at UNC-
Charlotte and nothing added
to a 9.2 percent increase pre-
viously implemented by N.C.
State University. All other
schools increases would have
been 6 percent.
A small difference
The board will vote to
reduce the 12.3 percent out-
of-state tuition increases to
result of recent changes in healthcare
that are making it difficult for small
drug stores to make money by filling
prescriptions. He said trying to com-
pete with big companies would be a
death sentence.
With health care changing like
it is, everything going corporate,
its just been so difficult to meet the
requirements for the insurance com-
panies, he said.
Woodard said his decision came
after 37 years as the pharmacist
of Suttons, during which his busi-
ness outlasted other corporate drug
stores on Franklin Street, including
Revco, a drug store company bought
by CVS in 1997.
He said now its his turn to give in
to the competition.
Weve withstood the big boys
long enough, and now the circles
come around, he said.
Despite having to close down his
pharmacy, he said he was happy
CVS was so invested in making the
process easier. He said they even
agreed to deliver prescriptions in
order to keep customers.
Although the transition was
SEE ADMISSIONS, PAGE 5
SEE DARRYL GLESS, PAGE 5
SEE SUTTONS, PAGE 5 SEE BOG PREVIEW, PAGE 5
bed, his soul was strong.
Gless is survived by his wife,
Friederike Seeger, who is due
to give birth to their daughter,
Elena Leni Gless, in late July.
He was a friend to many
in the English department, a
DISABILITIES AND THE ADMISSIONS PROCESS
Disability mentioned
in essay, without
documentation
Disability mentioned
in essay, submitted
documentation
Disability not mentioned
in essay, submitted
documentation
Sufciency of grades
and/or curriculum
determined
Application
evaluated through
regular process
Accessibility
services consults
on application
Deferment
or denial
Application
fagged for
possible review
Admission
NOT QUALIFIED
QUALIFIED
NOT FLAGGED
FLAGGED
INSUFFICIENT
SUFFICIENT
No
admission
Can appeal with
documentation
35 APPLICANTS
FLAGGED
FOR REVIEW
19
REVIEWED BY DISABILITIES SUBCOMMITTEE
ADMISSIONSDECISIONCHANGEDAFTERREVIEW
5 OF 19
ADMITTED THROUGH REGULAR
ADMISSION, NOT REVIEWED
8
NOT ADMITTED, NOT REVIEWED
8
Colorado 36.4%
Connecticut 35.5%
Maryland 36.1%
New Hampshire 32.8%
New Jersey 35.4%
New York 32.5%
Vermont 33.6%
Virginia 34.2%
18.8%
District of Columbia 50.1% 20%
15.8%
Massachusetts 39% 14.3%
Minnesota 31.8% 13.5%
Washington 31.1% 14.1%
16%
17.5%
North Carolina 26.5% 11.2%
17.5%
16.1%
18.3%
14.8%
LOCATION
PERCENT OF
POPULATION WITH
BACHELORS
DEGREE OR HIGHER
PERCENT OF DISABLED
POPULATION WITH
BACHELORS DEGREE
OR HIGHER
TOP U.S. LOCATIONS BY PERCENT OF POPULATION
WITH BACHELORS DEGREE OR HIGHER
Are you DISADVANTAGED
by your DISABILITY?
When students with disabilities apply to UNC, they can be
reviewed by a subcommittee and the ofce of Accessibility
Resources and Service or admitted through regular admission.
NOTED. A Florida man called 911 this week
about home intruders and was transferred
to voice mail twice before deputies were
dispatched to the wrong address.
Like any red-blooded American, he
took matters into his own hands and shot
one of the thieves. Maybe we would sur-
vive the purge after all. Thanks a lot, 911.
QUOTED. He is filled with the Holy Spirit
and said the officer could draw his blood,
but all he would find would be God.
The police report that described
Anthoney Stanley, 28, a drunk who appar-
ently rear-ended a car, attempted to steal
doughnuts then was chased down by a
police dog. Seriously, bless his heart.
S
oon, 250 new Emojis will be added to the already extensive yet
also limiting repertoire of abstract tiny images. So that one time
you needed an Emoji to aptly portray that girl who caught you
creeping on her Facebook in class: this could be your big break.
The middle finger, vomming queasy face and racially diverse selection
have been lacking for quite a while now. Seriously, wheres a fingers-
crossed icon for those mornings you wake up and dont quite remember
who could be next to you? And dont get us started on the animal king-
dom. We would love to know the reasoning behind having multiple cam-
els (one hump or two!) but no fox, spider or giraffe. Coders need to get on
this immediately. Our generation can barely interact socially as is.
New Emojis? About time, iOS
From staf and wire reports
WEEKLY
DOSE
Someone broke into
and entered a residence and
committed larceny at 905
N. Columbia St. between 2
p.m. and 4 p.m. on Sunday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person entered the
residence through a window
and took electronics valued at
$3,050, reports state.
Someone committed
larceny and resisted arrest at
700 Martin Luther King Jr.
Blvd. at 3:04 a.m. on Sunday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person stole a con-
struction sign valued at $300,
reports state.
Someone shoplifted from
a store at 167 E. Franklin St.
between 10:27 p.m. and 10:32
p.m. on Saturday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person tried to hide an
alcoholic beverage valued at $2
under their shirt, reports state.
Someone ran over a mail-
box at 2516 Homestead Road
at 4:19 p.m. on Saturday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person caused $650 in
damage to the mailbox and a
wooden post, reports state.
Someone broke into and
entered a laundry room and
committed larceny at 1100
N.C. Highway 54 W. at 3:53
a.m. on Saturday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole a coin
machine, which was valued at
$1,000, reports state.
The machine was later
recovered.
Someone tried to steal a
motorcycle from a parking lot
at 5639 Old Durham Road
at 12:40 a.m. on Saturday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person damaged a
cable lock valued at $50,
reports state.
POLICE LOG
News Thursday, June 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 2
ONE NATION ONE TEAM
F
ans of U.S. mens soccer celebrate Monday
nights win against Ghana at Italian Pizzeria
III on West Franklin Street. The national
team is currently competing in the group stage of the
World Cup and will play again Sunday at 6 p.m.
DTH/HENRY GARGAN
www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893
121 years of editorial freedom
The Daily Tar Heel
CORRECTIONS
PAIGE LADISIC
SUMMER EDITOR
MANAGING.EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.
COM
BRADLEY SAACKS
UNIVERSITY EDITOR
UNIVERSITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
JONATHAN MOYER
CITY EDITOR
CITY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
AMY TSAI
STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
STATE@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
MARCELA GUIMARAES
ARTS & DIVERSIONS EDITOR
ARTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
PAT JAMES
SPORTS EDITOR
SPORTS@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
KENDALL BAGLEY
PHOTO EDITOR
PHOTO@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
KATHLEEN HARRINGTON
COPY EDITOR
COPY@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
TYLER VAHAN
DESIGN EDITOR
DESIGN@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
Contact Summer Editor
Paige Ladisic at
managing.editor@dailytarheel.
com with news tips, comments,
corrections or suggestions.
TIPS
Office and Mail Address:
151 E. Rosemary St.
Chapel Hill, NC 27514-3539
Paige Ladisic, Summer Editor,
962-4086
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News, Features, Sports, 962-0245
Distribution, 962-4115
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All rights reserved
The Daily Tar Heel reports
any inaccurate information
published as soon as the
error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be
printed below. Errors com-
mitted on the Opinion Page
have corrections printed on
that page. Corrections also
are noted in the online ver-
sions of our stories.
TODAY
Ackland Art Museum Annual
Luncheon: Join friends of the
museum at this event. The guest
speaker will be Timothy Riggs,
the curator of collections who
is retiring at the end of the year.
The luncheon is $45 per person.
Time: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Location: 211 Pittsboro St.
Clarke Buehling: Buehling will
entertain with his traditional
bluegrass music, songs
and stories at the Carrboro
ArtsCenter. Tickets are $16 in
advance, $12 for students in
advance and $20 the day of the
show.
Time: 8 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Location: 300 E. Main St.
The Nature Cure: Learn more
about the health benefts to
society of green space in urban
areas. The seminar is free,
but advanced registration is
required.
Time: 12 p.m. to 1 p.m.
Location: 100 Old Mason Farm
Road
SATURDAY
Summer Fest: Enjoy childrens
music provided by The Waterlil-
lies, followed by beach music by
Lo K Shun. Bring lawn chairs to
140 West Plaza to celebrate the
frst ofcial day of summer.
Time: 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Location: 140 W. Franklin St.
Movie in the Meadow: Dont
miss this free showing of the
classic Greaseon the Earth Stage
in Meadowmont Village. Bring
blankets and lawn chairs, and
enjoy popcorn and ice cream.
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.
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Location: Meadowmont Village
Circle
MONDAY
Yoga in the Galleries: Enjoy
a morning of relaxing yoga in
the galleries of the Ackland
Art Museum. Beginners are
welcome, and yoga mats will
be provided. The class is free
for museum members and UNC
students and $5 for others.
Time: 12 p.m. to 1 p.m.
Location: 101 S. Columbia St.
CORRECTIONS
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 Summer Editor Paige Ladisic at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
Like us at facebook.com/dailytarheel Follow us on Twitter @dailytarheel
News Thursday, June 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 3
Owner of Minas Grill
pushes past disaster
NC House
releases state
budget proposal
By Amy Tsai
State & National Editor
With less than two weeks
before the new fiscal year, the
push compromise on the state
budget has begun.
The N.C. House of
Representatives finalized its
proposal for a $20.6 million
2014-15 budget last Friday.
The N.C. Senate, which
released its own proposal
earlier this month, quickly
and unanimously rejected the
House proposal on Monday.
Gov. Pat McCrory present-
ed his budget last month.
UNC-system President Tom
Ross has praised both the N.C.
Senate and House proposals
for not piling additional bud-
get cuts on the UNC system.
The proposed 2014-15
state budget adopted today by
the N.C. House demonstrates
strong and positive support
for some key University prior-
ities, he said in a statement.
He criticized McCrorys
proposal for an additional 2
percent system-wide budget
reduction almost $56 mil-
lion.
All three proposals include
base salary increases for state
employees, including the
UNC systems. Both the N.C.
House and McCrory proposed
an increase of $1,000. The
N.C. Senate proposed $809.
But the proposals sharply
differ on K-12 education poli-
cy, with the N.C. Houses plan
to use lottery earnings to fund
teacher salary increases at the
center of controversy.
The (Raleigh) News and
Observer reported it obtained
a fiscal memo, sent to legisla-
tive staffers before the House
voted on its budget, projecting
lottery earnings at $59 million
compared to $106 million
estimated in the budget.
Van Denton, director of
communications for the N.C.
Education Lottery, confirmed
the numbers reported by The
(Raleigh) News and Observer
are correct.
Denton said his office is
By Aren Besson
Staff Writer
Despite the tragedies that befell his
first two business ventures, John Hanna
opened Minas Grill on Franklin Street
with optimism and determination.
Minas Grill is an Italian-American
restaurant located at 401 W. Franklin
St. and is the third restaurant owned
and operated by Hanna.
Hannas first restaurant, Twin Cafe,
was located in lower Manhattan. It
opened on Sept. 9, 2001, two days before
the attack on the World Trade Center.
Hanna was in his restaurant just one
block away when the planes crashed.
No one realized that it was a plane
at first, everyone thought it was a gas
explosion or some fire, Hanna said.
Hanna said the next few hours
were chaos as the people in lower
Manhattan began to run.
While we ran, we saw the first
building start to collapse, Hanna said.
When it collapsed, debris covered the
area. It followed us. It was like a big
white cloud covered the city with dust.
Twin Cafe shut its doors for six
months after the attack, but he said the
business did well when they re-opened
in March 2002.
It was the only place open at the
time after the accident because no one
wanted to come back, Hanna said.
Twin Cafe shut down in 2012 due to
a conflict with the landlord.
Joseph Maqqar, Hannas brother-in-
law, was working at Twin Cafe when it
closed down.
I think it was really hard for John
when it closed down because he was
the owner, Maqqar said. It was a very
good business and it was very well
liked by a lot of people.
After Twin Cafe shut down, Hanna
opened another business, Sams Gyro,
on the boardwalk in New Jersey. It
opened in the summer of 2012, a few
months before Hurricane Sandy devas-
tated the New Jersey coast.
The hurricane destroyed every-
thing, Hanna said. We had to rebuild
the business after Sandy but then the
boardwalk burned down a year later.
Hanna used the next few months to
refocus by working for a friends busi-
ness. In 2014, Hanna was invited to
visit Chapel Hill by one of his friends
who lives in Cary. Hanna said he was
enamored with the town after visiting.
When I came here, it made me feel
very peaceful. Everyone says hello and
good morning even if they dont know
you, Hanna said.
Hanna decided to move to Chapel
Hill and open up a new restaurant
and that became Minas Grill. Maqqar
came with him.
I love Chapel Hill. I like the quiet
neighborhoods and Im most likely
going to stay, Maqqar said.
And John Paul, a Chapel Hill resi-
dent, said he enjoyed trying out the
new restaurant.
It has hearty food in big portions
which should have great appeal to stu-
dents, Paul said.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
DTH/HALLE SINNOTT
Recently relocated from New York, owner John Hanna stands at the counter of Minas Grill, located at 401 W. Franklin St.
John Hanna remains optimistic for Minas Grill
waiting on clearance from the
state attorney generals office
to publicly release the memo.
We intend to release the
requested information, he
said in an emailed state-
ment. However, we have
been advised by the Speakers
General Counsel to hold the
release pending further review
by the attorney generals office
whether the requested records
are deemed confidential pur-
suant to Chapter 120 of the
General Statutes.
The N.C. House passed a 5
percent average pay raise for
K-12 teachers, compared to the
Senates 11.2 percent average
and McCrorys 2 to 4.3 percent
average, depending on experi-
ence. K-12 teachers have been
under a pay freeze for five of
the past six years.
Rodney Ellis, president
of the N.C. Association of
Educators, said he disagrees
with using lottery earnings to
fund teacher pay and instead,
the state should end tax
breaks to the wealthy.
I dont believe were mak-
ing the right choice in terms
of basically gambling or
depending on proceeds from
gambling to fund teacher
salaries, he said.
Rodney perceives a discon-
nect between the House and
the Senate on a number of
issues, he said.
Theyre apparently not on
the same page, he said. Its
highly likely that you ll see no
final budget passed, and we ll
be stuck right where we are
now.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
The 2014-15 state
budget needs to be
finalized by July 1.
PROPOSED BUDGET
$20.6 million
In-state budget
3
Different proposals
July 1
Deadline
5 percent
K-12 teacher raise by House
All up in your business
Part of a periodic update
on local businesses.
Compiled by staff writer Mary Taylor Renfro.
Honeysuckle Tea House brews first pot Rec Room aims to be place for soccer fans Historical Carolina Inn wins at weddings
The newest addition to the Pickards Mountain Eco-
Institute is Honeysuckle Tea House, an organic beverage
shop at 8871 Pickards Meadow Road in Chapel Hill.
Tim Toben, owner of the institute, said he and his wife
decided to open the tea house to share their knowledge about
plant medicine and work with the rest of the community.
He wasnt sure if many people would make the trip out
to the farm, which is almost seven miles from downtown
Carrboro. He said he was surprised by the support from the
community during the tea houses first month in business.
Weve used only local money and the people we know to
put it together so its really been a community investment,
Toben said.
The response has been really great, weve had a lot more
people here than we expected to.
Recovery Room, a bar located at 108 Henderson St.,
reopened last Thursday after changing ownership.
Giles and Ama McLeod acquired the bar from previous
owner Mike Freas, who sold it to be closer to his young son.
Giles McLeod said he and his wife decided to buy Rec
Room after running into a group of Chapel Hill students who
recognized his voice from the radio. McLeod worked for BBC
and Eurosport as a European soccer analyst in England.
We thought of opening a bar and having a place where
soccer fans could come and talk about soccer, McLeod said.
American soccer fans are very passionate, you know. When
they get into a sport, they get into it.
The new owners have added a projector for screening
soccer and other sporting events and extended the hours by
opening it during the daytime for lunch.
The Carolina Inn recently received the 2014 WeddingWire
Couples Choice Award. WeddingWire, a wedding-planning
website, gives out annual awards for locations and services
based on reviews and surveys from users on its site.
Martin Armes, of Martin Armes Communications who
represents the Carolina Inn, said he was pleased with what
the award said about the inn.
It reaffirms the Carolina Inns status as the premiere
wedding venue across Chapel Hill, the Triangle and North
Carolina, Armes said.
According to its website, the Carolina Inn started hosting
weddings in 1924 and now accommodates more than 125
weddings annually in four separate event spaces.
For almost 100 years, its been the quintessential wedding
spot that brides and families have enjoyed, Armes said.
Sexual Assault Task Force votes on policy draft
By Bradley Saacks
University Editor
Back in the Friday Center, where it all started.
These were the opening words from Christi
Hurt, the chairwoman of the sexual assault
task force, as she stood in the middle of a con-
ference room, 13 months after the first time
the group met.
Tuesdays meeting addressed final points for
draft improvements to the new sexual assault
policy on campus.
Where we were a year ago, I never would
have guessed we would have created such a com-
prehensive report that specifically tailors to the
needs of our Chapel Hill community, said Hurt,
also the director of the Carolina Womens Center.
A greased pig
The longest discussion revolved around
consent for sexual activity, specifically when
one or both parties are under the influence.
Absence of a no does not mean consent, the
presence of a yes means consent, Hurt said.
The task force wrestled with the wording of
the section during the debate.
It feels to me that we are trying to catch a
greased pig with (consent when intoxicated),
because it comes down to the intent of an indi-
vidual, said Allen OBarr, director of counsel-
ing and wellness services.
Hurt said consent cannot be given when one
person is incapacitated, but the task force grap-
pled with creating a point before incapacitation.
I fear that if we try to come up with a per-
fectly drawn line (for consent before incapaci-
tation), we are going to be here for 20 more
years, said Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs
Winston Crisp.
Eventually, the policy was approved by vote.
Responsible employees
The task force also discussed who would
qualify as a responsible employee under the
new policy. A responsible employee is required
to report any kind of charges from students to
the Title IX office or take action to address the
charge if they have the necessary authority.
Gina Smith, a sexual assault expert, said in
the current draft any employees with admin-
istrative and supervising roles on campus will
qualify, including residential advisors, depart-
ment chairs and coaches of sports teams.
Task force member Bob Joyce questioned how
many responsible employees in total will be at
the University in the coming academic year.
Its a lot, Crisp said. There are a number
of student employees that still have to be list-
ed, like orientation leaders for example.
Smith said the responsible employee role
will apply even if the student who approaches
the responsible employee is not technically
under the supervision of the employee.
The last vote, possibly
The final vote of the day approved the
elimination of advisors, leaving their duties to
a hearing coordinator. The change is meant to
foster an environment for improved discus-
sion before hearings, the task force said. The
matter was approved, putting an end to draft
recommendations.
I think we are all excited to get rid of the
policy we currently have and give our students
a policy we are all proud of, Hurt said.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
The task force met on Tuesday to
fine-tune the current draft.
Diversions Thursday, June 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 4
DIVERECOMMENDS
DIVERECOMMENDS
Your guide to this weeks entertainment Compiled by Marcela Guimaraes and
Drew Goins
DTH FILE PHOTO
Daniel Michalak, Bryan Rahija, James Phillips and Stuart Robinson of
Bombadil will be performing at Cats Cradle on Saturday.
EVENTSHORTS
EXHIBIT RECEPTION
THE ROSEBUDS
BOMBADIL
DRIFT WOOD MIRACLE
Time: 5:30 p.m., tonight
Location: Ackland Art
Museum
Cost: FREE
Time: 7 p.m., Wednesday
Location: Sarah P. Duke
Gardens, Durham
Cost: $10 to $13
Time: 8:30 p.m., Saturday
Location: Cats Cradle
Cost: $10 to $20
Time: 9 p.m., Friday
Location: Local 506
Cost: $5
The museum will hold
an opening reception for its
upcoming exhibition, An
Eye for the Unexpected:
Gifts from the Joseph F.
McCrindle Collection.
The exhibit will feature 130
pieces from the philanthropist
and publishers collection.
Explore Inside McCrindles
World, where you can experi-
ence aspects of McCrindles life
by listening to vinyl records
and flipping through issues
of The Transatlantic Review,
the literary magazine that he
founded and published.
RSVP to (919) 843-5637 or
kcwalton@email.unc.edu.
North Carolina-based
Bombadil will be hosting
a record release show in
celebration of the fifth anni-
versary of its second album,
Tarpits and Canyonlands.
Asheville-native folk-rockers
River Whyless and DJ Neat
Freak will be opening the show.
Bombadil will play its album
straight through from begin-
ning to end. Be sure to spring
for the $20 ticket, which
includes a limited-edition
printed poster of Tarpits and
Canyonlands.
According to the band,
there are plenty of surprises
planned so this is not a show
you want to miss.
Local label Merge Records
continues to celebrate its 25th
birthday celebration with seven
rocking shows this summer.
Through the months of
June and July, 10 Merge
Records bands will be per-
forming at different locations
throughout the Duke campus
as part of the Music in the
Gardens series.
Raleigh-based The
Rosebuds will be coming
home to North Carolina
Wednesday to perform at
the Sarah P. Duke Gardens.
This is your chance to get a
teaser of the bands new album,
Sand + Silence, out Aug. 5.
Six weeks of summer
camp; a prank-filled hik-
ing trip; and not one, but
two adorable before-the-fall
Lindsay Lohans determined
to get their parents back
together make for a fantastic
film.
All the elements of a
wonderfully light summer
rom-com are there, meaning
there is literally no way to go
wrong with this classic.
Noah and the Whales first
record, released in 2008,
bottles all the effervescence
and carefreeness of summer
in just 11 tracks.
Handclaps, ukulele, brassy
horns and the whole indie-
quirk orchestra come together
for a frothy album ready for a
sun-drenched picnic.
Durham-based indie
rockers, Drift Wood Miracle,
will end their East Coast
tour with their last stop in
Chapel Hill Friday.
Since releasing their three-
song EP, Cuidade, in 2011,
the band has gained notoriety
in the local music scene and
was even mentioned as one of
five national breakout bands
in 2013 by music blog Indie
Rock Cafe.
Locals Blanko Basnet, the
new project from Joe Hall
of Hammer No More the
Fingers; Charlottes own Tyler
Brown; and Greensboros
Other Minds will appear on
stage beforehand.
You dont want to miss
the chance to hear some
great up-and-coming North
Carolina native acts rocking
the stage at home for this
low price.
FROM THE VAULT:
MEDIASHORTS
Noah and the Whale
Peaceful, the World Lays Me
Down
The Parent Trap
1998
News Thursday, June 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 5
students alike is whether or
not they will succeed at UNC.
We dont want to put any-
one in a situation not to suc-
ceed, he said. Does every-
body we admit have to get an
A average at Carolina, no. Not
every student will have an A
average at Carolina, but what
we are trying to do is bring in
students who would benefit
from being here.
We dont want to put any-
one in an awkward or uncom-
fortable situation.
Rosenberg said UNCs
accessibility has a strong
reputation among prospective
students and parents.
Ive been to recruitment
events before and people
come up to me at receptions
and say we did our research,
and you guys keep coming
up, he said.
Ive noticed over the years
that weve got what seems to
be a very strong reputation as
a good place for students to
come that have disabilities.
Gin said he was pleasantly
surprised by the ease of his
transition to UNC.
I was actually pretty
amazed when I actually
moved into my dorm, he
said.
I was worrying through-
out the summer about how
things were going to work,
but in the end, everything
worked out.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
ADMISSIONS
FROM PAGE 1
DARRYL GLESS
FROM PAGE 1
mentor students from all cir-
cumstances, Barbour said.
He had a real humility
about him due to his small-
town upbringing, Barbour
said.
I chose him as my honors
thesis mentor because his rise
in the academic world was an
inspiration. He encouraged
and challenged students to
surpass all expectations.
Many students entered
his classes believing British
literature was inaccessible,
but he reassured them they
werent disadvantaged due to
their background, said Isabel
Hagood, one of Gless former
students.
My most life-changing
moment at UNC was when he
looked at me and told me in
his most genuine way that I
could do it, Hagood said.
Contact the desk editor at
university@dailytarheel.com.
SUTTONS
FROM PAGE 1
BOG PREVIEW
FROM PAGE 1
smooth, Woodard said it was
hard for him to part with the
pharmacy.
It is probably one of the
hardest decisions Ive ever
had to make, he said.
It wasnt easy for other
employees either. Don Pinney,
manager at Suttons, said there
was something comforting
about working with Woodard
every morning for 34 years.
You ever had a security
blanket? he said.
Pinney said he knew
Woodard would leave as soon
as he started talking about it.
The store will focus on selling
more merchandise to make up
for the loss of the pharmacy.
Genny Wrenn, manager at
the Shrunken Head Boutique,
has been coming to Suttons
for breakfast and lunch every
day for 45 years. Woodard even
attended Wrenns wedding. She
said shell miss seeing him in
his white pharmacists coat and
thinks people will have trouble
getting used to his absence.
Its definitely gonna be a big
change, Wrenn said. Chapel
Hills not good for change.
Woodard said in his decades
at the pharmacy, hes worked
anywhere from 60 to 80 hours
a week. Now he said he can
golf more and help his wife
with her real estate business.
Im looking forward to
getting out and enjoying more
free time, he said.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
11.7 percent and enact a 4
percent increase at UNC-C.
Since we have to have a
$27 million cut, this is the
most equitable way to get
there, Perusse said.
UNC-CH would see an
out-of-state tuition increase
of $3,300 instead of $3,469.
UNC-CH had requested a 2.5
percent out-of-state tuition
increase about $700.
Brian Daza, a UNC-CH
junior from Maryland, said he
wishes for a middle ground.
I can understand why the
state wouldnt want to go that
low, but I dont think it needs
to be so high to put the extra
burden on out-of-staters,
he said. If you have a good
school and people want to
come to it, you shouldnt pun-
ish them for it.
Faculty retention
Board members will also
discuss faculty retention. The
system retained 82 out of
323 faculty members who
received other employment
offers in the last 22 months
a retention rate of 25 percent.
The board will present on
how preemptive offers are
more effective and cost-effi-
cient than counteroffers.
Dr. Luda Diatchenko
left the UNC-CH School of
Dentistry for a position at
McGill University in Montreal,
Quebec, Canada, an offer
that included $30 million to
launch a program in clinical
pain genetics. She said schools
sometimes do not recognize
the value of their faculty.
In my case, (UNC-CH)
maybe couldnt have done
something, but I saw cases
that (UNC-CH) could
do, could match (offers),
Diatchenko said.
Contact the desk editor at
state@dailytarheel.com.
Architecture students
build barn for nonprot
By Zoe Schaver
Senior Writer
Architecture students
will help build a barn at
Benevolence Farm, allowing
the women who will live there
to once again enjoy the night
sky after their release from
prison.
The students are part
of North Carolina State
Universitys summer design-
and-build program for gradu-
ate and undergraduate stu-
dents in the College of Design.
The program cooperates with
Durham-based architecture
firm BuildSense each summer
to help local organizations
complete construction proj-
ects at reduced cost.
Benevolence Farm is a
nonprofit organization in
Graham, N.C. and based in
Carrboro that will soon house
up to 12 women just released
from prison. The organiza-
tion aims to ease the womens
transition back into society
and the workforce by provid-
ing them with social, agricul-
tural and other skills.
Randy Lanou, an owner of
BuildSense and an adjunct
associate professor at N.C.
State, said the summer pro-
gram has been running for
about five years.
I met with Tanya (Jisa,
founder and executive direc-
tor of Benevolence Farm)
about another topic while I
was on the hunt for a good
design-build project, he said.
I understood they needed
this building, and we made a
proposal, and they loved it.
Since the farm will grow,
harvest and sell food locally,
Jisa said the barn structure
will feature room tempera-
ture and cold storage units for
food, vegetable washing sta-
tions and open areas that will
double as event space.
Were focusing on sustain-
ability as a big part of the proj-
ect reusing water to irrigate
other parts of the farm, things
like that, she said. Were
making sure its an open air
space with lots of daylight.
Lanou, one of the four
Benevolence Farm is
the recipient of the
programs project.
Were making sure its an open-air space
with lots of daylight.
Tanya Jisa,
executive director of Benevolence Farm
instructors on the project,
said students first identified
Benevolence Farms needs.
Its a functional barn its
main job is to have a place
where you can wash and pro-
cess vegetables, he said.
The program will cover
project management, labor
and design, but Jisa said the
farm will be responsible for
purchasing materials. Some
materials will come from a
horse barn being demolished
in Orange County and from
Habitat for Humanity, but
the farm will have to do some
fundraising as well, she said.
Right now our primary
fundraising pool is individual
donations of $101 to put the
donators name on the side of
the barn, she said.
Architecture graduate
student Katy Liang, one of 18
total students working on the
project, said this is her first
opportunity to have an archi-
tectural project shes helped
design be actually built.
For most of us, it becomes
a pretty important part of our
education, she said.
Liang said the class meets
in a traditional setting all
semester to design the proj-
ect. She said learning about
Benevolence Farms mission
helped guide the barns design.
We met a woman who
had been in prison who com-
mented on the project, and
it helped our design process,
hearing her story, thinking
about women coming out of
prison, she said.
Weve tried to incorporate
their experience in our design
it is a very open structure,
its not enclosed like a house
or a building. Its basically a
roof. You can walk out of the
building from all four sides.
Liang said when the struc-
ture is completed, the stu-
dents will hold a barn-raising
together. The project is set to
be finished by the end of July.
Contact the desk editor at
city@dailytarheel.com.
News Thursday, June 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 6
UNC-system happenings
Part of a periodic update
on UNC-system schools.
Compiled by staff writer Hannah Shaw.
UNC-W loses lawsuit State auditor investigates UNC-G UNC-A starts environmental institute
UNC-Wilmington is weighing its options after a U.S.
District Court Judge ordered the university to pay over
$700,000 in legal fees for a professors lawsuit.
Sociology and criminology professor Mike Adams sued
UNC-W, claiming he was denied a promotion due to his reli-
gious beliefs. Adams had initially asked for over $1 million,
but the amount was reduced to $710,625.
The university filed a notice of appeal after a jury ruled in
Adams favor. The university released an official statement
last week.
Though the university is gratified the plaintiff s request
for fees and costs was reduced approximately 30 percent by
the court, the state/university still believe the costs and fees
to be excessive, the statement said, which was provided by
Janine Iamunno, a UNC-W spokeswoman, in an email.
The N.C. Office of the State Auditor investigated the travel
expenses of senior administrators at UNC-Greensboro.
Senior administrators didnt need to receive advance
approval for trips and travel expenses, violating Office of
State Budget and Management and UNC-G policies.
The travel expenses of the chancellor, provost, vice chancel-
lors, deans, associate provosts and directors reporting to the
provosts totaled $456,644 during the 2011-13 fiscal years.
Following the investigation, the state auditor recommend-
ed UNC-G require written authorization and approval for
senior administrators travel expenses.
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro accepts
and has already implemented, in April 2014, the recommen-
dation of the State Auditor, UNC-G Chancellor Linda Brady
said in a letter to the state auditor.
UNC-Asheville received a $1 million grant to create an
environmental institute as a national model to promote sus-
tainability in business. UNC-A was given the grant by Dr.
Charles McCullough Jr., a resident of Asheville for over 40
years, and his wife Shirley Anne McCullough.
The institute will be known as the McCullough Institute
for Conservation, Land Use and Environmental Resiliency.
UNC-A students and professors, business leaders and partner
organizations like UNC-As National Environmental Modeling
and Analysis Center will work together at the institute.
The McCullough family realizes that a multidisciplinary
approach to environmental resiliency is ideally suited to the
character of UNC-Asheville, the values of our residents and
the interests of our faculty and students, UNC-A Chancellor
Anne Ponder said in a press release.
By Jasmine Neely
Staff Writer
Dancer, composer, musi-
cian and writer Kaitlin Junes
initial plan of becoming a
therapist was interrupted
when she decided to follow
her true dream of performing.
The North Carolina native
and UNC alumna will per-
form her first one-woman
show, Lightyear, Friday night
at the Durham Arts Council.
The show incorporates
dance, acrobatics, live piano
and poetry and explores the
creation and recollection of
how memories are stored in
the body.
I was in a program for a
masters degree in expressive
arts therapy, which combines
dance therapy, music therapy,
visual art therapy and cre-
ative writing therapy into one
degree, she said.
In this program we had to
do a 10-minute performance
about our life in whatever
way we chose, so I gravitated
to the piano. After the perfor-
mance, I broke down crying
because I realized I really
wanted to perform.
June said she has a rare,
highly-superior autobio-
graphical memory, character-
ized by the ability to recall
specific dates and experiences
in a way most people cannot.
Ive always had a fascina-
tion with dates and calendars
and the way memory works
together, she said.
Although her performance
is autobiographical, June
said she hopes the audience
will understand it is not just
about her. She said she wants
her performance to represent
a journey through the human
experience.
No matter what race,
gender or financial situation,
everyone knows what it feels
like to be disappointed or
what excitement feels like,
and that is the journey Im
inviting the audience on,
June said. We all have dif-
ferent versions because our
life experiences are different,
but the common thread is our
emotional experience, and
thats what unifies us.
Writer Rremida Shkoza
said she has worked with June
in the past by allowing her
to write music for one of her
shows. She said June has a very
incredible and intuitive side as
a musician to convey a specific
message to the audience.
Shes so open to connect-
ing to the audience, she said.
Sometimes performers forget
that its not the indulgence of
performing, but its also the
connection with the audience.
Her work really reflects that.
Performance and health
communications teaching
assistant Marie Garlock said
when June creates something,
it is about universal human
concerns inspiring people
from diverse backgrounds.
Its a fantastic combina-
tion of physical powers, she
said. She is very strong,
athletic and graceful in how
she moves her body and
brings a delicate approach to
the conceptual material that
shes bringing to life. She has
a powerful physicality, but
a nuanced approach to the
ideas she brings to life.
Contact the desk editor at
arts@dailytarheel.com.
UNC alumna will debut her rst one-woman show
Artist Kaitlin June
will perform her
show Friday.
NOTICE TO ALL CUSTOMERS
Summer deadlines are NOON Tuesday prior to
publication for classied ads. We publish every
Thursday during the Summer School sessions.
A university holiday is a DTH holiday too (i.e.
this affects deadlines). We reserve the right to
reject, edit, or reclassify any ad. Acceptance of
ad copy or prepayment does not imply agree-
ment to publish an ad. You may stop your ad
at any time, but NO REFUNDS or credits for
stopped ads will be provided. No advertising
for housing or employment, in accordance with
federal law, can state a preference based on
sex, race, creed, color, religion, national origin,
handicap, marital status.
Child Care Wanted
NANNY, PERSONAL ASSISTANT WANTED. I
have a 17 month-old and twins due in July!
Need a helper to assist with child care, errands,
cooking, cleaning, etc. Average 8-12 hrs/wk, to
increase to 20 hrs/wk. $10/hr. 919-885-8642.
SUMMER SITTER, DRIVER: Looking for
responsible and reliable person to drive
3 teenagers early and late afternoons.
Eventual sitting and supervision for out-
door activities. Flexibility, great driving
records required. Starting in June..sum-
mer@mcdeoliveira.net.
AFTERSCHOOL, SUMMER BABYSITTING Look-
ing for help starting immediately on Tu/Th 2:30-
6pm for supervision of my 2 sons, ages 12 and
8. Starting June 16th (summer vacation). it will
be generally 3-6pm. Must have own car, excel-
lent driving record, references. Sitter will pick
up boys from their day camps, bring home and
supervise for the afternoon. $10/hr, plus gas
money. Contact: sallyvtaylor@gmail.com.
For Rent
FAIR HOUSING
ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in
this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or dis-
crimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspa-
per will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers
are hereby informed that all dwellings adver-
tised in this newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
WALK TO CAMPUS. 2BR/1BA. Fully renovated.
W/D. Dishwasher. Central AC, heat. Available
July or August, $925/mo. Merciarentals.com,
919-933-8143.
5BR/5.5BA LUXURY HOME. Hardwood oors.
Large kitchen with double ovens, ceramic tile
oors, granite counter tops, microwave, gar-
bage disposal, walk in pantry, etc. Family room
with attached computer room. Spacious walk
in laundry room with W/D. First oor bedroom
with private bath and walk in closets. Spacious
attic with mini bar, full bathroom, 3 walk in
closets. Lots of extra storage. Walk or bike to
Weaver Street Market. Bike lanes everywhere.
On buslline. Convenient to UNC and Duke.
$2,500/mo, Call or email to schedule a tour:
Sandra, 919-933-0983, spbell48@live.com.
5 MINUTE WALK TO CAMPUS. $1,475/mo.
2BR/2BA, locked entry, parking for 2 cars, W/D
in unit. 1,275 square feet. Balcony opens to
lawn, pool, elevator. Free busline, quiet condo
building. Available July 1. 620 MLK Jr. Blvd.
#304. 919-961-6640.
AWESOME 6BR/6BA TOWNHOUSE. Perfect
for you and your friends. Free parking.
Hardwood oors, tile kitchen, dishwash-
er. W/D included. Largest bedrooms in
town, wall to wall closet space, built in
shelving, extra storage. 5 free buslines.
Minutes from campus. No smoking, no
pets, no drugs. Only 2 left. $450/mo.
per bedroom. Call now! 919-933-0983,
spbell48@gmail.com.
ROOMMATE WANTED to share awesome
6BR/5BA townhouse. Hardwood oors. Large
rooms, bedrooms with wall to wall closet
space, spacious dining room, kitchen with all
major appliances. W/D. On 4 free buslines.
Just minutes from campus. Conveniently lo-
cated near 3 theaters, restaurants, banks,
shopping, I-40, etc. Only a few left. $450/mo.
per bedroom. Call or email now. 919-933-0983,
spbell48@live.com.
3BR IN A FULLY FURNISHED HOME near
UNC. Perfect for graduate students. Mod-
ern kitchen, deck. $575/mo. per person. No
pets. References required. Begins 8-1-2014.
sharlene5meisner@gmail.com.
LARGE, PRIVATE apartment in a beautiful home
minutes from campus. $950/mo. covers EVERY-
THING. All utilities included. May be the best in
town. 919-933-7533.
$1,350/MO. 3BR/2.5BA TOWNHOME. 3 level
end unit with 2 bedrooms on the top oor and
a studio efciency bedroom on the bottom.
Minutes to UNCs campus with a busline at the
neighborhood entrance. 919-265-4978.
JULY 1ST. FURNISHED STUDIO ($750/mo.) in
our home near Eastgate. Separate entrance.
Utilities, internet, phone, cable included. No
smoking or pets. Pictures available. Lease, de-
posit required. 919-932-1556, 919-616-5431.
SOUTHPOINT, WOODCROFT RENTAL.
2BR/2.5BA townhouse with ofce loft in
Oaks at Hope Valley. Quiet, safe. Southwest
Durham. W/D and water included. Flexible
lease terms 4-12 months. $600-$1,200/mo.
Deposit, credit check required. 919-819-6332.
tinyurl.com/902TeaguePlace.
6BR HOUSE, short walk to campus, all hard-
wood oors, 3BA, large bedrooms with nice
closets, laundry, dishwasher, garbage disposal,
pets welcome, $2,900/mo. Available August
1st. BB at TELESAGE.com.
For Sale
LOVESEAT FOR SALE. Blue denim loveseat
in good condition. $50. You must transport.
919-929-5083.
Help Wanted
TRANSLATION INTERN WANTED. NATIVE
SPANISH, FRENCH or RUSSIAN required. Must
be organized, articulate, resourceful, reliable
with Microsoft Ofce and typing skills. Ofce
100 feet from campus. Position is part-time, Up
to 29 hrs/wk, exible hours. $10/hr. Resume
AND cover letter to avillard@telesage.com.
YEAR ROUND
SERVERS WANTED
Elmos Diner in DURHAM is hiring friendly,
fast paced servers. Start summer, work at least
part-time in fall. Apply in person: 776 Ninth
Street, Durham.
LOOKING FOR STUDENT INTERN conversant
with Premire Pro and Photoshop, too. Orga-
nize raw footage and transcribe, touch up
photos and work with effects (knowledge
of AfterEffects a bonus). Requires 10-15
hrs/wk. Pay according to skill level. Willing
to work with a student looking for intern-
ship as part of an independent study course.
jazzyvanwyk@yahoo.com.
MODELS NEEDED for evening sessions for
Durham sculpture studio. Classical gure and
portrait. Andrew Bryan, 919-929-9913.
BUSY RETINOVASCULAR PRACTICE
seeks friendly, motivated, energetic
individual to work as an ophthalmic
assistant. Will be trained to use ultra-
sound electrodiagnostic equipment
and multiple instruments used in the
diagnosis of retinovascular disease.
Candidate would nd experience chal-
lenging and fullling. Fax resume to
919-787-3591 or email resume to
southerneyeassociates@yahoo.com.
RES ASSISTANT
Part-time or full-time, summer or permanent.
Assist with creating web content, serious
game content related to addiction treatment.
Assist with study recruitment, and logistics.
Web page or JQuery experience a plus. Experi-
ence with health or education research a plus.
Small ofce in Chapel Hill, on SV busline. Apply
online at www.ClinicalTools.com/join-us.
YEAR ROUND HELP WANTED for front desk
at Chapel Hill Country Club. Nights and
weekends. $10/hr. Apply in person (103
Lancaster Drive).
ADMIN, MARKETING ASSISTANT needed
for a small consumer goods company.
15-20 hrs/wk. $10-$12/hr. Please email
pdf resume and cover letter to thar-
mon@fourstrong.com.
Rooms
FEMALE SEEKING ROOMMATE: Room avail-
able in Southern Village townhome: August
thru December. $750/mo. All utilities in-
cluded. Rachel: rajohnst333@gmail.com or
910-265-1815.
Services
ESL EDITING. Working with grad stu-
dents and professors on papers for peer
reviewed journals, R&R responses, re-
search intent and personal statements,
job applications. References, LinkedIn.
hjshealy@hotmail.com.
Summer Jobs
SUMMER LIFEGUARDS
Pool Professionals is currently hiring life-
guards for this summer. Contact us today to
secure a spot. Flexible hours and competitive
pay. lvanorsouw@poolprofessionals.com.
919-787-7878.
CAT SITTING NEEDED June 28 thru July 5 twice
a day, morning visit and evening visit. Older
sweet kitty needs TLC and feeding. Must be
available all days including July 4. $20/day
Email: northchapelhillmom@gmail.com.
Announcements For Rent Help Wanted For Rent


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5809 Cascade Dr., Chapel Hill, NC 27514
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Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 6 -- Decrease nancial risk to
avoid hidden danger. Choose for family.
If it goes against your grain, turn it down.
Forgive miscommunications, and ignore
gossip. Your energy grows with the
Moon in your sign today and tomorrow.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is a 7 -- Accommodate anothers
demands without spending a fortune.
Listen, learn, and stick up for your point
of view. A protable opportunity arises
over the next two days. Let go of how
you think its supposed to go.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 7 -- Intention works better
than argument. Let go of your opinion,
and aim for results. Reschedule lower-
priority objectives to focus on an urgen-
cy. Talk over your concerns. Despite mis-
understandings, success comes through
communication today and tomorrow.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8 -- Discuss how to man-
age new work. Move quickly to avoid
mistakes. Delegate to your team. Angels
guide your efforts. Make improvements
at home today and tomorrow. Make the
necessary decisions together.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Leave your money in
the bank and nd clever, inexpensive
promotional ideas. Talk is cheap. New
developments change the assignment.
Youd rather play than work today and
tomorrow. Get outside with loved ones.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is an 8 -- Dont buy gifts for loved
ones yet. Meditate on it rst. Increase
the organizational level to avoid losing
important information. Let go of a pre-
conception. Pour energy into work and
health today and tomorrow.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 7 -- The actions behind the
scenes today and tomorrow. You cant do
everything. Work with partners for best
results. Write news releases, and issue
statements after tomorrow. Be receptive
to input from your team.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 7 -- Verify data and let prob-
lems sort themselves out. Dont share
picky details with friends who dont
need to know. Handle administrative
paperwork and update plans today and
tomorrow. Increase your family holdings
through communications.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is an 8 -- Modications may be re-
quired. Grow your inuence (and savings)
with prudence. A discussion about money
could get unpleasant. Read contracts
thoroughly. Travel and adventure sure
sounds good. Invite someone fun along.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is a 7 -- Things dont work as ex-
pected. Avoid travel and transportation.
Hold your temper and delegate obliga-
tions so you can focus. If you dont know
what to say, stay quiet. Slow and steady
wins today and tomorrow.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is an 8 -- Slow, certain steps make
progress. Keep practicing. Ignore criticism
for now. Avoid risky propositions and
nebulous business. Moneys tight, so stick
with reliable clients. Friends have solu-
tions today and tomorrow.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 -- Resist temptation to blow
off responsibilities. Duty calls. Decrease
stress with short, frequent nature breaks.
Let your partner do the talking. Meditation
and introspection reveal hidden treasures
today and tomorrow. Study under a tree.
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
If June 19th is Your Birthday...
Focus on passion this year. Savor a quest for
truth. Revise long-term goals, with Neptune and
Mercury retrograde. Enthusiasm and fortune
bless your finances until July 16, when the
focus shifts to messaging. Plan a campaign, and
promote your game. Consider what others want
and need. October eclipses empower group partici-
pation. Work together for what you love.
BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room
To Place a Line Classified Ad Log onto
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NEED A PLACE TO LIVE? A GROCERY STORE? A LICENSE PLATE? A MECHANIC?
ALL THE LINKS & INFO YOU NEED TO SURVIVE IN CHAPEL HILL.
News Thursday, June 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 7
A one-woman show
Artist Kaitlin June will
perform her show Lightyear
at the Durham Arts Council.
See pg. 6 for story.
Students build a barn
N.C. State architecture
students will build a barn
for nonprofit Benevolence
Farm. See pg. 5 for story.
Meetings wind down
With the beginning of the
summer comes the last few
local government meetings.
See online for coverage.
Minas owner looks up
Despite closing two pre-
vious restaurants, owner
John Hanna hopes for the
best. See pg. 3 for story.
games
Solution to
last weeks puzzle
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
2014 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
(C)2014 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Name
7 On-again, off-again
15 Allure maker
16 First of August?
17 Soup choice
18 Metal seeker
19 1936 Olympics standout
20 Band with an umlaut on
the n in its name
21 Aggressively promote
22 Its all in your head
23 Jabberwocky creature
24 Opportunity seekers
words
27 Lifesaver, at times
28 Not quite as many
29 You betcha!
31 Sneer at
32 Conducted a trial
36 Like some U.S. mail
38 With a quiver
39 Taft became
its president
after his term
as U.S.
president
42 Began
chastising
44 __ salad
46 Scandinavian
bard of yore
47 __ Harker,
heroine in
Stokers
Dracula
48 Heading for
50 Big Ben sounds
51 Its unpleasant to end on
one
52 Word often seen after
rinse
53 Not 100 percent
54 She beat Midori for the
1992 Olympic gold
medal
55 Without holding back
56 Wait a minute
DOWN
1 Unforeseeable event
2 Order at a mess
3 Dropped by
4 Devilish
5 Gig arrangements
6 Dont Bring Me
Down gp.
7 Checks (out)
8 Outcasts
9 Visibly awestruck
10 Device for un poeta
11 Leaning
12 Robespierre foe
13 Start of a bequest
14 Shag, e.g.
20 Mmes., in Mexico
22 Gulf War code name
25 Ancient Iranians
26 __ water
30 Treat once known as an
I-Scream Bar
33 Lilliputian
quality
34 String out
35 Like the New York
Yankees, historically
37 Break, in Bath
38 WWII battle site
39 Nails the exam
40 Turkish Taffy maker
41 Short
43 Like Midnight
Cowboy, originally
45 __ Peak, highest
mountain in Idaho
49 Combined, in Chartres
50 Swiss capital
52 The Body Snatcher
studio
UNC baseball players summer plans
Catcher Korey Dunbar
and right-handers Reilly
Hovis andTrent Thornton
make up the trio of UNC
sophomores playing for
the Firebirds in Orleans.
Freshman outfielder
Adam Pate, who hit .241
in his first season at UNC,
will play for the Wilson
Tobs in the Coastal Plain
League.
Freshman left-handed
pitcher Matt Orth, from
High Point, N.C., will stick
close to home and play for
the HiToms in the Coastal
Plain League.
Sophomore outfielder
Michael Massardo will
play for the Vipers, based
out of Charlotte, in the
Southern Collegiate
League.
Freshman right-
hander Zac Gallen and
sophomore infielder
Landon Lassiter will join
the Anglers in the Cape
Cod Baseball League.
Sophomore outfielder
Skye Bolt, who hit .257
last season for the Tar
Heels, will play for the
Mariners in the Cape Cod
Baseball League.
Freshman catcher
and first baseman Adrian
Chacon and freshman
reliever Spencer Trayner
will travel toWisconsin to
play for the Loggers.
Freshman third base-
man Colby Barnette, who
hit .333 last season in 18
at-bats, will play in the
Coastal Plain League for
the Copperheads.
Sophomore util-
ity man Alex Raburn will
compete against Pate,
Orth and Barnette in the
Coastal Plain League as a
member of the Sharks.
Left-hander Henry
Sisson, who had a 3.29
ERA in 10 appearances last
season for UNC, will take
on Ramirez and Rice in the
Cal Ripken League.
Right-handed pitcher
Jack Geraghty, who made
two appearances out
of the UNC bullpen last
season, will play in the
Sunbelt Baseball League.
The freshman duo
of right-hander A.J.
Bogucki and first base-
man Joe Dudek will play
Chacon andTrayner in the
Northwoods League.
Outfielder Tyler
Ramirez and left-handed
reliever Zach Rice compose
the freshman tandem
playing for the Redbirds in
the Cal Ripken League.
5. Orleans Firebirds
9. Wilson Tobs 8. Thomasville HiToms 10. Carolina Vipers
3. Chatham Anglers 4. Harwich Mariners 1. La Crosse Loggers
11. Asheboro Copperheads 12. Wilmington Sharks
7. Bethesda Big Train
13. Windward Braves
2. Madison Mallards
6. Baltimore Redbirds
3
4
9
8
11
12
1
2
6
7
10
13
5
Although the North
Carolina baseball teams
season came to an end
on June 2 in the NCAA
regionals, 19 Tar Heels will
continue to play baseball
this summer in wooden-bat
leagues across the country.
Six Tar Heels are competing
in the distinguished Cape
Cod League, based out of
Massachusetts, while five are
remaining in N.C. to compete
in the Coastal Plain League
and Southern Collegiate
League.
On the wire: national and world news
Obama will extend
LGBT job protections
WASHINGTON, D.C.
(MCT) The White House
said Monday that President
Barack Obama plans to sign
an executive order prohibit-
ing federal contractors from
discriminating on the basis of
sexual orientation or gender
identity, elating gay rights
activists, whove been press-
ing him to make the move
since he was elected in 2008.
The administration says
the order adds to existing
protections, which prohibit
federal contractors and sub-
contractors from discrimi-
nating on the basis of race,
color, religion, sex or national
origin and is consistent with
the presidents views that all
Americans, LGBT (lesbian,
gay, bisexual and transgen-
der) or not, should be treated
with dignity and respect.
The White House offered
no timetable for when Obama
will sign the order nor esti-
mated how many people it
will affect. But advocates
whove championed the cause
for six years hailed the deci-
sion and said the presidents
commitment to the issue
would be part of his legacy.
This is a historic
announcement, said Anthony
Romero, the executive direc-
tor of the ACLU, who said
that Obama, who in 2012
announced his support for
gay marriage, has done more
for the struggle for LGBT
equality than all previous
presidents combined.
Ban on using churches for
graduations continues
WASHINGTON D.C.
(MCT) Public schools may
not hold their graduation
ceremonies in an evangeli-
cal church, under a decision
left standing by the Supreme
Court on Monday.
The U.S. 7th Circuit Court
of Appeals in Chicago had
decided that holding a gradu-
ation ceremony in an evangel-
ical Christian church under a
large cross violated the rights
of students and parents of
other faiths.
By a 7-2 vote, the justices
refused to hear a Wisconsin
school districts appeal of that
ruling.
The appeal had been pend-
ing for more than a year,
and the justices repeatedly
considered it in private con-
ferences. In the interim, they
handed down a 5-4 decision
upholding Christian prayers
at public meetings of a town
council.
Justice Anthony Kennedy,
speaking for the court, said
in that case that a prayer or
invocation did not amount to
an establishment of religion,
even if it was delivered by a
MCT/ OLIVIER DOULIERY
Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton discusses her new memoir, Hard Choices, June
13 at the Lisner Auditorium in Washington, D.C. The book was released June 10.
Christian cleric.
Scalia said the court should
have set aside the appeals
court ruling.
Though Mondays dismiss-
al of an appeal is not a formal
ruling, it may prompt judges
to look skeptically at such
arrangements.
An evangelical advo-
cacy group expressed dismay
about the courts decision not
to hear the case.
Church buildings should
not be treated like toxic
warehouses simply because
they normally house reli-
gious activities, the Alliance
Defending Freedom said in a
statement.
Virginia victory gives tea
party elections boost
WASHINGTON D.C.
(MCT) As soon as a little-
known conservative toppled
House Majority Leader Eric
Cantor on Tuesday night, tea
party enthusiasts turned their
sights to the next big election-
year targets: Mississippi and
Kansas.
The two states are next up
on the GOPs primary calen-
dar as Washington insiders,
particularly 76-year-old Sen.
Thad Cochran of Mississippi,
are fighting hard-right
upstarts in an environment
in which outsiders have sud-
denly gained currency.
New ads went on the air
in Mississippi two days after
Cantors defeat, hammering
Cochran as a veteran law-
maker who deserves respect
but not another term in
office. In Kansas, Milton
Wolf, who is challenging
three-term Sen. Pat Roberts,
said on Twitter that Cantor
isnt the only incumbent
who is going to lose his pri-
mary this year.
Virginia is a wake-up
call, said an e-mail fundrais-
er sent Wednesday morning
by the Senate Conservatives
Fund, which is working to
elect hard-right candidates.
The tea party is very much
alive.
For most of this elec-
tion cycle, the tea party has
struggled to capture the
small-government enthu-
siasm that gave it power in
2010 and 2012. Now, the
Virginia results have given
the movements activists new
optimism.
Cantor was routed by a
college professor, Dave Brat,
who relied on $120,000 and
the enthusiasm of a conserva-
tive populist movement to
propel turnout in a race that
caught official Washington
by surprise. The contest had
been considered such a long
shot that national tea party
organizations had declined to
get involved.
GODZILLA J
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MR. PEABODY & SHERMAN I
Sat & Sun: 4:40
The Varsity Theatre
123 E. Franklin Street, Chapel Hill 967-8665
www.varsityonfranklin.com
Movie Showtimes for Week 6/20-6/26
All Movies $4.00 Closed Monday
BUY A COUCH FIND A JOB DITCH YOUR ROOMMATE
SELL YOUR CAR FIND A SITTER VOLUNTEER
www.dailytarheel.com/classifieds
were here for you. all day. every day
919-929-0246
UNC Campus Carrboro
412 E. Main Carrboro
EARLY WEEK
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Opinion Thursday, June 19, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 8
Triggering progress
A hard days night
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT
Students should
advocate for vote
TO THE EDITOR:
As a liberal arts major
at this university, it often
feels like I am fighting an
uphill battle with the state
government. First, Gov. Pat
McCrory himself denigrates
my degree, and then state
budget cuts jeopardize not
only my program but my
university at large.
Working with
Democracy North Carolina
this summer has taught me
that regardless of the push-
back I receive from those
supposedly representing
my interests, I still retain
my right to vote. I have
decided to use it for all it is
worth and encourage my
peers to do the same.
Besides registering
to vote, we need to do
more to ensure the vot-
ing process is democratic,
especially for students.
First, we must consult with
our local county Board of
Elections to verify a poll-
ing site will be on campus.
Easy access to voting
means more of us will
actually vote, whereas a
polling place off campus
will deter those of us who
cannot afford to lose the
time between classes, work
and studying.
We must also advocate
for an early voting plan that
offers plenty of evening and
weekend hours. Now that
House Bill 589 is in effect,
students can no longer use
same-day registration to
vote. Since this option is no
longer available to us, we
must plan ahead often a
difficult thing for the average
college student to do. I know.
But it will make our voices
stronger in the long run if we
organize ourselves now.
Our numbers should
speak for themselves, but
that is only if we actively
engage our local officials.
LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
No, this is an obvious and transparent
money grab by the DPS, they could care less
about fairness.
Ron Jam, on elimination of free night parking without a pass
No matter what we were reading, you could
tell he was having as much fun teaching as
we were analyzing the texts.
Ryan Passer, on the death of UNC professor Darryl Gless
EDITORIAL CARTOON By Nate Beeler, The Columbus Dispatch
Franklin
loses
its old
charms
G
iven the integration of
Chapel Hills down-
town area in student
life, it is hard to miss a new
business still displaying open-
ing signs. West Franklin Street
has been home to the bulk of
the new dining and retail estab-
lishments, with a modern new
strip across from University
Square.
But I find these newer
options detract from the quirk
of downtowns older staples.
Ive noticed that niche
businesses have sprung up
that uncannily mirror the his-
toric novelty less than a mile
east. Gigis Cupcakes nods
to Sugarland, Gentlemens
Corner provides the same
attire as Julians.
The new additions have a
disjointed feel next to the rest
of the pleasantly aged area, but
may not have a proper home
outside of the popular West
Franklin stretch. To be fair, I
was cynical towards the new
West Franklin construction
from the beginning.
The Exhale sculpture, the
steaming expanse of metal
perpendicular to Lime and
Old Chicago, will never feel
welcome to me. More appropri-
ate in a Miami club strip, the
sculpture sits low to the ground
like a sleeping serpent hell-bent
on pushing chain restaurants
to be the new Saturday night
hangouts. It blows vapor out
over neon colors, hissing at the
quirk and charm of downtown
staples that still sit sleepily on
Franklins early addresses.
Sometimes it hurts to be
from this town.
Revamping downtown makes
sense. The area will be grow-
ing as it should, and people
love a reliable chain. The wide
new sidewalk teasingly kisses
Rosemary Street, feeling like the
work of an evil corporation from
a childrens chapter book.
I recently went to
Chapel Hills spiritual sister
Charlottesville, Va., to do
research on the best ways to
revamp an area so defined by a
university. Just kidding. I was
on vacation.
Nevertheless, Charlottesville
has a beautiful, pedestrian-only
historic downtown area with
the same type of kitschy stores
that have been thriving on East
Franklin for decades. Facing
the University of Virginia is the
more central downtown area
and yet nothing feels new.
Theres the friendly neigh-
borhood cafe, bagel shop,
sports store it all has the
sense of coziness that define
college towns as a whole. So
the new developments? All
compartmentalized into a
large shopping center 15 min-
utes walking distance from the
university. It works beautifully.
Our malls not far from
downtown, but sure feels like
it is. If you brave the long walk
down East Franklin, youre
rewarded with Southern Season
and little else, so I begin to
see why new business has
been swarming towards West
Franklin. One day the street will
feel like home again, but it could
take time, and a removal of that
metal tarp that blows steam.
COLUMN
F
ree night parking at
UNC has long been
a sensible and help-
ful policy for University
students and employees,
but with the Board of
Trustees decision to end
the practice, unfair bur-
dens will now be placed
on the people who make
the University the great
institution that it is.
All students except
freshmen will now pay a
$10.40 fee for night park-
ing whether they use
parking at all or not.
University employees
who do not have a day
pass but need to park at
night will have to pay for
a night parking permit,
which ranges in price
depending on the level of
the employees salary.
The new system is over-
ly punitive to students and
employees of lesser means.
Students are already
paying incredibly high fees
and tuition, money that
is sometimes spent care-
lessly. And by making the
fee flat and non-optional
for all students, it essen-
tially acts as a regressive
tax. Students without cars
could come from lesser
financial backgrounds, but
they too must pay the fee.
Meanwhile, nighttime
university employees,
who, unlike daytime
employees, have extremely
limited access to free
public transportation,
will essentially be forced
to pay for a permit that is
disproportionately hurtful
for low-salary employees.
Paying $227 is a much
more painful bite out of
a paycheck for a person
making less than $25,000
per year than $390 is for
a person making over
$100,000 per year.
UNC Department of
Safety spokesman Randy
Young justified the new
fees to The Daily Tar Heel
last week by saying that
previously, nighttime
employees unfairly had
their parking subsidized
by daytime employees. But
daytime employees will
not save any money from
the imposition of these
new fees. No one benefits
from increased parking
costs across the board.
Its true that given the
context of state budget
cuts, the University needs
as much money as it can
get its hands on, but put-
ting disproportionately
hurtful fees into place is
not a fair or justifiable
way for the University to
recoup its losses.
EDITORIAL
Jonathan Ghysels
How to Hate a Life in 10 Days
Junior English major from Chapel
Hill.
Email: jghysels@live.unc.edu
Presidential or not, elec-
tions matter. Please join
together to attend the next
Orange County Board of
Election meeting on July 15
to advocate for your right as
a student and voter.
Alyssa Davis 15
Comparative literature
George Will column
made essential point
TO THE EDITOR:
In a quick hit, the
Daily Tar Heel asserts that
George Will said being a
victim of sexual assault is a
coveted status, calling this
the sexist rant of a crazy old
man.
Actually Will said that
when they make victim-
hood a coveted status that
confers privileges, victims
proliferate. He was criticiz-
ing the claimed epidemic
of campus rapes and the
absurd claim that one
in five women is sexually
assaulted while in college.
He also deplored the
low standard of proof now
required preponder-
ance of the evidence rather
than beyond a reasonable
doubt.
We can replicate Wills
argument by looking at
UNC statistics. Of about
18,000 undergraduates,
about 60 percent are
female. University statistics
gave 19 reported forcible
sex offenses in 2010. If
only 12 percent are actu-
ally reported as has been
claimed, there would be
about 158 actual offenses,
or 632 in four years.
With 10,678 female
students, this means that
the chance of rape at UNC
is one in 17, far less than
one in five. If the 12 per-
cent reporting rate is too
low, the chances of rape on
campus could be far lower.
The preponderance of the
evidence standard means
that up to 50 percent of
innocent men could be con-
victed.
Isnt this carrying politi-
cal correctness too far?
Shouldnt rape be consid-
ered a crime and left to the
criminal justice system?
Elliot Cramer
Professor Emeritus
Psychology
New parking costs
will hurt low-
income employees.
QuickHits
Miss USA Nia Sanchez was
accused of carpetbagging
to qualify for
the Miss USA
competition after
she blanked on
the name of the
capital of Nevada, her home
state, in a radio interview.
Well give her the beneft of
the doubt. Shes only lived
in Nevada since 2012, and
wed never heard of Carson
City either.
Missing the mark
The Federal Bureau of
Investigations internal
manual of Twit-
ter acronyms
was released un-
der the Freedom
of Information
Act. There is a 99 percent
chance they made this up.
BTDTGTTSAWIO been
there, done that, got the t-
shirt and wore it out has
never been used naturally
by anyone, ever.
LMAO FBI, WTF?
George H. W. Bush cel-
ebrated his 90th birthday
last Thursday by
going skydiving.
Unfortunately,
the sight of the
41st president
descending from the sky
could have been better used
to scare the crap out of the
Islamic State in Iraq and the
Levant, also known as ISIL.
The guy cleaned up in the
Gulf War. Why not again?
Air Force Old
Delta Air Lines sent out a
tweet Monday to congratu-
late the United
States on its vic-
tory over Ghana
in the World Cup.
It showed the
games score with the Statue
of Liberty to represent the
U.S. and a girafe to represent
Ghana. Just one problem.
There are no girafes in
Ghana. And the Statue of
Liberty was made in France.
Jet lag
SPEAK OUT
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The Daily Tar Heel
T
rigger warning skep-
tics tend to turn into
wizened old-timers
when justifying themselves:
Its a rough world out there.
Life is hard. Deal with it.
Joseph Epstein, writing
for The Wall Street Journal
in late May, implied that
the arrival of such disclaim-
ers on syllabuses as part
of larger attempts to cater
to diverse student bodies
amounted to a reign of
quiet academic terror.
At worst, Epsteins com-
ments are patently offensive.
How could he use the phrase
reign of terror to describe
an effort to prevent the re-
traumatization of those who
have experienced real, life-
altering terror?
Educators, he writes, espe-
cially those without tenure,
might avoid touchy-but-rele-
vant material if forced to take
into account the particulari-
ties of every students past.
And hes right about this,
but only in part. Trigger
warnings need to function
as part of a broader effort to
humanize academia. Alone,
they do have the potential to
undermine rigor or diminish
those who might otherwise
benefit from them. Alongside
robust student-educator
relationships, they can make
the classroom a positive and
empowering place.
But Epstein and others go
on to miss the point entirely.
Henry Gargan
Senior journalism and global
studies major from Chapel Hill.
Email: henrygargan@gmail.com
They paint a stark picture in
which academic rigor and
concern for the well-being of
students are mutually exclu-
sive. These arguments hint
at an academic culture so
impersonal that the emotion-
ally frank notion of a trigger
warning cant help but sound
absurd when placed beside it.
This is a culture that plac-
es studies before students,
that glorifies all-nighters in
the library above emotional
and physical well-being. Its a
type of hazing, the promised
reward for which is a lifetime
of stable income and upward
mobility. And so it only seems
natural that some who have
benefited from this system
would balk at the upending
of the hierarchy by allowing
students to take real action
on their own behalves.
Trigger warnings are a
mere extension of human
compassion into the aca-
demic world, where students
and professors are too often
required to dissociate them-
selves and their experiences
from the content at hand.
Thats not always possible,
and when it isnt, the conse-
quences can be troubling.
When my mother was in
graduate school during the
1970s, an undergraduate stu-
dent committed suicide while
taking a seminar on Virginia
Woolf, the modernist writer
who also took her own life.
Its unlikely that expo-
sure to that course material
was the direct cause of the
students death. After all,
the student knew what she
was signing up for. But that
doesnt erase the feeling of
helplessness experienced by
her professor after the fact.
And thats the tricky
part. Its impossible to tell
in advance what will prove
traumatizing for any given
student. And its difficult to
say whether the burden of dis-
closure should fall on the stu-
dent or the burden of warning
upon the professor. Thats why
its so important for both par-
ties to engage with each other
on both personal and intellec-
tual terms.
Even so, attempts to pro-
tect students in this manner
may seem futile. But that
doesnt mean we shouldnt try.
If theres anything we can do
to make the academic world a
little less scary for those with
most cause to be scared, we
have only our hubris to lose by
giving it a shot.
Acknowledging student experiences only improves learning.

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