the daily tar heel for june 23, 2011

9
Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893 Thursday, June 23, 2011 Volume 119, Issue 48 dailytarheel.com  weekly summer issue By Will Doran and Lyle Kendrick Senior Writers The recent release of public records regarding the UNC football team has shed some light on both the off-field activity of some players and the actions of players and officials before, during and after an NCAA investigation into improper benefits. The records were released after The Daily Tar Heel and seven other N.C. media outlets sued the University for data pertaining to the investigation. The records revealed 395 parking tickets given to fewer than 12 players using 28 license plates from 2007 to 2010. One player received 93.  A UNC release stated 325 of t he players’ tickets  were paid, 30 are unpaid, 30 were warnings, nine  were voided and one was successfully appealed. Randy Young, spokesman for the Department of Public Safety, said it is possible for anyone to pay for a ticket given to someone else online. Deunta Williams, a former safety, said players are sometimes forced to park illegally at Kenan Stadium. “It’s mandatory that you work out,” he said. “If  you’re running late, you have to park in the stadium.”  Williams also said multiple cars registered to individual players do not indicate a violation. “It’s definitely not anything of Ohio State nature,” he said. “It’s more like your mom needs your car this  week, your auntie needs it.” Ohio State University’s football team is under investigation for players receiving discounts on cars. Phone records released through the lawsuit show athletic director Dick Baddour and head coach Butch T eaching programs fall victim to cuts By Kelly Parsons Staff Writer  After losing to Vanderbilt in Saturday’s College World Series opener, the North Carolina base-  ball team faced an uphill battle in trying to keep its national championship hopes alive. But Kent Emanuel’s com- plete-game shutout in Monday’s elimination game extended the T ar Heels’ stay in Omaha at least a little longer. Emanuel was the first pitcher to record a complete game shut- out in the College World Series since UNC’s Robert Woodard did it in 2006.  Woodard, who now coaches for UNC, watched Emanuel’s replacing him in the two-hole  with center fielder Ben Bunting.  And against Texas, the coach’s intuition paid off in a big way. Bunting, who is now 14-for-31 in the NCAA tournament, led UNC with four hits in five at-bats and batted in the team’s final run in the ninth inning. Catcher Jacob Stallings drove in North Carolina’s first two runs in the third inning  with a two-RBI single. “Right now (Bunting and Stallings are) our best two guys in terms of being locked in and really taking good swings,” Fox said. “There’s some thought  behind that. When guys are swinging well, just get them up there in the top of the order. Though the Tar Heels cruised to their first NCAA victory out- side of Boshamer Stadium and avoided elimination, Monday’s game began to look eerily famil- iar from the onset. During the first few innings, By Stirling Little Staff Writer  When the first Republican majority at the N.C. General  Assembly since 1898 convened in January, leaders said state spend- ing would have to be cut across the board to fill a prospective  budget shortfall of $3.7 billion. Five months later, the impact of those cuts is beginning to be felt — especially in education,  which comprises almost 60 per- cent of state expenditures. Teaching programs have been hit particularly hard. State funding for the North Carolina Teaching Fellows “Anything with the word ‘teacher’ in it was attacked,” she said. “It’s like a war on teachers.” Program directors said the loss of these programs will have far-reaching implications for the state. Jo Ann Norris, an admin- istrator of the Teaching Fellows program, said the budget’s phase- out of the program by the 2012 fiscal year punishes students in a state experiencing demographic change. “If the phase-out is perma- nent, it would be a dramatic loss for this state, which desperately needs teachers to accommodate the growing population,” she said. But proponents of the legisla- tors’ cost-cutting measures said defunding programs is a neces- sary step to restoring fiscal disci- pline in the state. Bob Luebke, senior policy ana- lyst at the John W. Pope Civitas Parking and phone records shed light on players, ocials Tar Heels split opening games in Omaha Dth/kelly parsons DTH ONLINE:  The Daily Tar Heel went to print before Wednesday’s game against Vanderbilt. For updates on the College World Series, visit dailytarheel.com. Some programs are now looking for ouside sources of funding. UNC relies on freshman Emanuel’s piching as he offense salls. see ParkiNg tiCkEtS, page 5 NCAA ht uNC th agaton By Kelly Parsons Sports Editor The NCAA sent a notice of allegations to UNC on Tuesday, outlining a litany of “potential major” violations it states the football program committed,  which include improper academ- ic assistance from a tutor, imper- missible benefits to players and failures of institutional oversight. The 26-page notice came one  year to the day after the NCAA  began its investigation into the UNC program, and provides a detailed listing of nine infrac- tions committed by student ath- letes and individuals with ties to the UNC football program. “We deeply regret that Carolina is in this position,” said Chancellor Holden Thorp and athletic director Dick Baddour in a statement. “As we move for-  ward, Coach Butch Davis and the two of us are focused on emerg- ing from this as a st ronger athlet- ics program.”  According to the notice, tutor Jennifer Wiley provided “imper- missible academic assistance” to the ‘poenial major’ violaions include improper assisance and benefis from a uor o players. Records give more context to football probe HIBBARD DRIVE WILLIAM BLYTHE DRIVE M   A  N   N   I   N   G   D   R   I   V   E    S  K  I  P  P  E  R  B  O  W  L  E  S   D  R  I  V  E K   E   N   A  N    S   T   A  D   I   U   M   HINTON-JAMES HORTON UNC HOSPITALS MORRISON PUBLIC SAFETY BUILDING CRAIGE RAM VILLAGE 1 2 3 RAM VILLAGE AT WILLIAMSON DRIVE CRAIGE PARKING DECK   J   A   C    K   S   O    N    C    I    R   C    L    E     D    E   C    K    D   O   G    W   O   O    D     D    E   C    K   C   A    R    D    I    N   A    L     D    E   C    K M       A      S       O       N        F       A      R       M        R       O       A      D       11 tickets 42 tickets 33 tickets 54 tickets 3 tickets 12 tickets 13 tickets 13 tickets 1 9 4 2 8 7 6 3 133 tickets 5 PARKING AND PHONE REC ORDS SHOW ASSOCIATIONS The University’s release of parking ticket records revealed a culture of delinquent parking among several football players. The phone records lend context to the timeline that has emerged throughout the course of the NCAA investigation. SOURCE: PARKINGTICKET RECORDS DTH/ANNATHOMPSON 7 8 9 4 5 6 1 2 3 Skipper Bowles Drive Craige Drive Hibbard Drive Horton Parking Lot Kenan Stadium Mason Farm Road Morrison Circle Public Safety Building Williamson Drive MOST FREQUENT LOCATIONS JUL Y 10, 2009 JUNE 21, 2010 JUL Y 12, 2010 JULY 15, 2010 SEP. 5, 2010 OCT . 11, 2010 JULY 23, 2009 -to- AUG. 1, 2009 John Blake’s trip to Calif. home of Gary Wichard’s agency. Marvin Austin’s trip to Calif., paid for by Wichard. NCAA makes rst contact with UNC about the alleged infractions. NCAA begins interviewing members of the football program. John Blake cuts o recorded contact with Austin. John Blake resigns amid investigation. Marvin Austin is dismissed from the football team. MAJOR DATES IN THE INVESTIGATION UNC REACTION TO TICKET INFORMATION "They really do think that they're a little bit above everyone else, that they have more freedom than we do." "It's a lot, but not all that unreasonable. I know one person who got 20 parking tickets over 4 years." Inna Kovaleva Incoming freshman Lex Janes 2011 Graduate 0 50 100 150 200 $0 10 13 87 3 211 52 9 3 7 $5 $15 $20 $30 $50 $90 $100 $250 NUMBER OF TICKETS RECIEVED BASED ON AMOUNT OF FINE Amount of ne      N     u     m      b     e     r     o      f     t      i     c      k     e     t     s see allEgatioNS, page 5 DTH ONLINE: Read the full notice of allegations from the NCAA at dailytar- heel.com. players, which included compos- ing parts of writing assignments for players, the notice states.  Wiley provided $3,500 worth of extra benefits to student ath- letes in the form of free tutoring, parking ticket payments and an airline ticket, according to the notice. During 2009 and 2010, the notice states, seven football play- ers received a total of $27,097.38 in benefits. The University redact- ed the names of these athletes.

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Page 1: The Daily Tar Heel for June 23, 2011

8/6/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for June 23, 2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-daily-tar-heel-for-june-23-2011 1/8

Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893

Thursday, June 23, 2011Volume 119, Issue 48 dailytarheel.com

Ifomaio i o kowdg.Albert eInsteIn

 weekly summer issue

NO SERVICE? The Town o Chapel Hill

is considering a ban on

cellphone use while driving.

Page 3.

ALL THAT

 JAZZ The UNC Summer

Jazz Workshop has

sponsored concerts

each night this week,

and ocuses on train-

ing students. Page 3.

This day in history

JUNE 23, 1955

Carl Sandburg, an iconic

poet, writer and American

fgure, delivered the com-

mencement address at the

University.

DuST TO DuST

RIP

Inside ABORTION CHANGE The state legislature has

passed a bill that would re-

quire a counseling session, a

viewing o an ultrasound and

a 24-hour waiting period or

women seeking abortions.

Page 3.

Wilma Rudolph Track and field star

Jonas Salk Cured polio

B: Ju 23, 1940

Did: Ju 23, 1995

Cause o Death: Heart ailure

*The weather is hot, check back in the fall.

By Will Doran and Lyle KendrickSenior Writers

The recent release of public records regardingthe UNC football team has shed some light on boththe off-field activity of some players and the actionsof players and officials before, during and after anNCAA investigation into improper benefits.

The records were released after The Daily TarHeel and seven other N.C. media outlets sued theUniversity for data pertaining to the investigation.

The records revealed 395 parking tickets given tofewer than 12 players using 28 license plates from2007 to 2010. One player received 93.

 A UNC release stated 325 of t he players’ tickets were paid, 30 are unpaid, 30 were warnings, nine were voided and one was successfully appealed.

Randy Young, spokesman for the Department of Public Safety, said it is possible for anyone to pay fora ticket given to someone else online.

Deunta Williams, a former safety, said players aresometimes forced to park illegally at Kenan Stadium.

“It’s mandatory that you work out,” he said. “If  you’re running late, you have to park in the stadium.”

 Williams also said multiple cars registered toindividual players do not indicate a violation.

“It’s definitely not anything of Ohio State nature,”he said. “It’s more like your mom needs your car this

 week, your auntie needs it.”Ohio State University’s football team is under

investigation for players receiving discounts on cars.Phone records released through the lawsuit show

athletic director Dick Baddour and head coach Butch

Teaching programsfall victim to cuts

By Kelly ParsonsStaff Writer

 After losing to Vanderbilt in

Saturday’s College World Seriesopener, the North Carolina base- ball team faced an uphill battlein trying to keep its nationalchampionship hopes alive.

But Kent Emanuel’s com-plete-game shutout in Monday’selimination game extended theTar Heels’ stay in Omaha at leasta little longer.

Emanuel was the first pitcherto record a complete game shut-out in the College World Seriessince UNC’s Robert Woodarddid it in 2006.

 Woodard, who now coachesfor UNC, watched Emanuel’sstellar performance from thedugout at TD Ameritrade Park.

“It was just really neat to sortof sit back and see a kid competeand perform like that,” Woodard

said. “It doesn’t happen very often, especially at this stage.”Coach Mike Fox made adjust-

ments to the lineup beforeMonday’s game, moving slump-ing Levi Michael down and

replacing him in the two-hole with center fielder Ben Bunting.

 And against Texas, the coach’sintuition paid off in a big way.

Bunting, who is now 14-for-31in the NCAA tournament, ledUNC with four hits in five at-batsand batted in the team’s final runin the ninth inning. Catcher JacobStallings drove in North Carolina’s

first two runs in the third inning with a two-RBI single.“Right now (Bunting and

Stallings are) our best two guysin terms of being locked in andreally taking good swings,” Foxsaid. “There’s some thought

 behind that. When guys areswinging well, just get them upthere in the top of the order.”

Though the Tar Heels cruisedto their first NCAA victory out-side of Boshamer Stadium andavoided elimination, Monday’sgame began to look eerily famil-iar from the onset.

During the first few innings,North Carolina struggled to cap-italize on offensive opportunitiesand left many runners in scoringposition. In Saturday’s loss to

 Vanderbilt, the Tar Heels left a

season-high 16 men on base.“It’s very frustrating looking back leaving all those runnerson,” Bunting said after the loss.“To keep it happening and havethat lingering feeling all game…

By Stirling LittleStaff Writer

 When the first Republicanmajority at the N.C. General

 Assembly since 1898 convened inJanuary, leaders said state spend-ing would have to be cut acrossthe board to fill a prospective

 budget shortfall of $3.7 billion.Five months later, the impact

of those cuts is beginning to befelt — especially in education,

 which comprises almost 60 per-cent of state expenditures.

Teaching programs have beenhit particularly hard.

State funding for the NorthCarolina Teaching FellowsProgram, the North CarolinaTeacher Academy, the NorthCarolina Teacher Cadet Programand the North Carolina Center forthe Advancement of Teaching was

reduced or eliminated in the state budget that became law last week.Julia Kron, director of the

Teacher Academy, said legislatorsdecided to target teachers in theireducation cuts.

“Anything with the word‘teacher’ in it was attacked,” shesaid. “It’s like a war on teachers.”

Program directors said theloss of these programs will havefar-reaching implications for thestate. Jo Ann Norris, an admin-istrator of the Teaching Fellows

program, said the budget’s phase-out of the program by the 2012fiscal year punishes students in astate experiencing demographicchange.

“If the phase-out is perma-nent, it would be a dramatic lossfor this state, which desperately needs teachers to accommodatethe growing population,” she said.

But proponents of the legisla-tors’ cost-cutting measures saiddefunding programs is a neces-sary step to restoring fiscal disci-pline in the state.

Bob Luebke, senior policy ana-lyst at the John W. Pope CivitasInstitute, a conservative policy organization in the state, saidprograms should seek outsidesources of funding in tough bud-getary times.

“It would be more prudent fora number of state-funded entitiesto go over to the private secto r,”he said.

Parking and phonerecords shed light

on players, o∞cials

Tar Heels split opening games in Omaha 

It’s pretty tough mentally to try to get out of that.”

 As the Tar Heels moved on,

Mike Fox said it’s important toremember the College WorldSeries is about more than just

 wins and losses.“The more you’re out here, the

more times you come, the more

 you really try and relish it,” Foxsaid. “We want to win, but the

 baseball sort of takes care of itself 

after the first pitch. I want peopleto come back from this trip andsay, ‘I had a great experience.’”

Contact the Sports Editor at [email protected].

Dth/kelly parsons

Junior catcher Jacob Stallings talks to the umpire before warming up

for Carolina’s College World Series opener against Vanderbilt Saturday.

DTH ONLINE:  The Daily Tar Heel went to print before Wednesday’s game against Vanderbilt. For updates on the College World Series, visit dailytarheel.com.

Some programs arenow looking for ouside

sources of funding.

UNC relies on freshmanEmanuel’s piching

as he offense salls.

see ParkiNg tiCkEtS, page 5

see EdUCatioN, page 5

NCAA ht uNC th agatonBy Kelly Parsons

Sports Editor

The NCAA sent a notice of allegations to UNC on Tuesday,outlining a litany of “potential

major” violations it states thefootball program committed,

 which include improper academ-ic assistance from a tutor, imper-missible benefits to players andfailures of institutional oversight.

The 26-page notice came one year to the day after the NCAA  began its investigation into theUNC program, and provides adetailed listing of nine infrac-tions committed by student ath-letes and individuals with ties tothe UNC football program.

“We deeply regret thatCarolina is in this position,” said

Chancellor Holden Thorp andathletic director Dick Baddourin a statement. “As we move for-

 ward, Coach Butch Davis and thetwo of us are focused on emerg-ing from this as a st ronger athlet-ics program.”

 According to the notice, tutorJennifer Wiley provided “imper-missible academic assistance” to

the ‘poenial major’ violaions include improperassisance and benefis from a uor o players.

Records give more context to football probe

HIBBARD DRIVE

WILLIAM BLYTHE DRIVE

M   A  N   N   I   N   G   D   R   I   V   E   

         S          K          I          P          P          E          R

          B         O          W          L          E         S 

          D          R          I          V          E

K   E   N   A  N    

S   T   A  D   I   U   M   

HINTON-JAMES

HORTON

UNC HOSPITALS

MORRISONPUBLIC SAFETY

BUILDING

CRAIGERAM VILLAGE

1

2

3

RAM VILLAGE

AT

WILLIAMSON

DRIVE

CRAIGE

PARKING

DECK

  J  A  C   K

  S  O   N 

  C   I   R  C   L   E

    D   E

  C   K

   D  O  G   W

  O  O   D    D

   E  C   K

  C  A   R   D

   I   N  A   L

    D   E  C   K

M       A      S       O       N        F       A      

R       M        R       O       A      D        11 tickets

42 tickets

33 tickets

54 tickets

3 tickets

12 tickets

13 tickets

13 tickets

1

9

4

2

8

7

6

3

133 tickets

5

PARKING AND PHONE REC

ORDS SHOW ASSOCIATIONSThe University’s release of parking ticket records revealed a culture of delinquent parking among several football players.

The phone records lend context to the timeline that has emerged throughout the course of the NCAA investigation.

SOURCE: PARKING TICKET RECORDS DTH/ANNA THOMPSON

7

8

94

5

61

2

3

Skipper Bowles Drive

Craige Drive

Hibbard Drive

Horton Parking Lot

Kenan Stadium

Mason Farm Road

Morrison Circle

Public Safety Building

Williamson Drive

MOST FREQUENT LOCATIONS

JULY 10, 2009 JUNE 21, 2010 JULY 12, 2010 JULY 15, 2010 SEP. 5, 2010 OCT. 11, 2010JULY 23, 2009-to-

AUG. 1, 2009

John Blake’s

trip to Calif.

home of 

Gary

Wichard’s

agency.

Marvin

Austin’s trip

to Calif.,

paid for by

Wichard.

NCAA makes

rst contact

with UNC

about the

alleged

infractions.

NCAA begins

interviewing

members of 

the football

program.

John Blake

cuts o 

recorded

contact with

Austin.

John Blake

resigns amid

investigation.

Marvin

Austin is

dismissed

from the

football

team.

MAJOR DATES IN THE INVESTIGATION

UNC REACTION TO TICKET INFORMATION

"They really dothink thatthey're a littlebit aboveeveryone else,that they havemore freedomthan we do."

"It's a lot, butnot all thatunreasonable. Iknow one personwho got 20parking ticketsover 4 years."

Inna Kovaleva

Incoming freshman

Lex Janes

2011 Graduate 0

50

100

150

200

$0

10 13

87

3

211

52

9 3 7

$5 $15 $20 $30 $50 $90 $100 $250

NUMBER OF TICKETS RECIEVEDBASED ON AMOUNT OF FINE

Amount of ne

     N    u    m     b    e    r    o     f    t     i    c     k    e    t    s

see allEgatioNS, page 5

DTH ONLINE: Read thefull notice of allegationsfrom the NCAA at dailytar-heel.com.

players, which included compos-ing parts of writing assignmentsfor players, the notice states.

 Wiley provided $3,500 worthof extra benefits to student ath-letes in the form of free tutoring,

parking ticket payments and anairline ticket, according to thenotice.

During 2009 and 2010, thenotice states, seven football play-ers received a total of $27,097.38in benefits. The University redact-ed the names of these athletes.

Page 2: The Daily Tar Heel for June 23, 2011

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today

 Ja quintet: Gregg Geb and theJm Ketch Quntet w perorm asa part o the UNC Summer JazzWorkshop concert seres. Ths sthe ourth concert o the seres.Prevous perormers ncude theStephen Anderson Tro and DaveFnucane and the Scott SawerQuartet.Time: 7 p.m.Location: Kenan Musc Budng 1201

Melot wit te mao: At ths artgaer and ounge, enjo a gass o wne n a casua envronment wthMark Kenschmdt, the maor o Chape H. The event w have com-

pmentar hors d’eouvres and doesnot have an agenda.Time: 7 p.m.Location: Studo 91, 1201 RaeghRoad

Concet: Mandon Orange and BgFat Gap w be pang. The concerteatures a beer garden and ood rom

Frankn Street restaraunts. The events ree.Time: 7 p.m.Location: Waace Paza on top o Waace Parkng Deck, 150 E. Rose-mar St.

Friday

Ice ceam ocial: Hsborough’shstorc Burwe Schoo s hostngts annua ce cream soca wthMape Vew ce cream. The events ree and w take pace ran orshne.Time: 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.Location: The Burwe SchooHstorc Ste, 319 N. Churton St.,

Hsborough

Movie nigt: The Horace WamsHouse s havng a awn watchng o a 1944 war-tme move “Around the

Word.” The event s ree.Time: 8:30 p.m.

Location: Horace Wams House,610 E. Rosemar St.

Saturday

Mak Twain panel dicuion:

 Three schoars w ook at d-erent aspects o Twan and hswork. Seected topcs w ncude Twan’s humor and reatonshp tomusc. The tuton s $125 but canbe reduced to $62.50 or teachers

through a schoarshp.Time: 9:15 a.m. to 4:15 p.m.Location: UNC Campus

NOTED.Kevin Weeks cut his encounter withthe Broome County Police a little too closefor comfort.

 Weeks, who was charged with three mis-demeanors, rode his lawnmower througha Virginia City trailer park while intoxi-cated and then used his head to damage thePlexiglass partition in the police car.

QUOTED. “Oysters are just like giant boogers,and I used to pick my nose when I was little.”

—Terri Stump, a contestant from Arizona inthe Distinguished Young Women oyster eatingcompetition in Alabama. The event took place at

 Wintzell’s Oyster House in Orange Beach, Ala.Jacky Arness from North Dakota won the

event by eating 64 raw oysters in five minutes.

 When police entered Peter Bower’s home, the “Dearest Pet”

 bestiality book they found was only the beginning.

Bower, a man from Shelby, Ohio, was charged with twocounts of animal cruelty for partaking in sexual relations with

three dogs, one of which was his 3-year-old shepherd mix.

Bower could also face charges for having a sexual encounter with a horse.

 While in Bower’s home, police also found a plastic, blow-up sheep and an

account of Bower’s sexual relations with his pets on his computer.

Police said Bower advertised dog-sitting services in Shelby and the Mans-

eld dog shelter. Currently, Bower is only facing misdemeanor charges be-

cause Ohio does not have laws regarding bestiality.

Where the wd thngs are voatedFrom sta and wre reports

DAILY DOSE

 Someone entered a victim’s yard and tried to start a fight at12:08 a.m. Tuesday at 711Pritchard Ave., according toChapel Hill police reports.

 Someone caused damage to a vehicle between noon and 7:24p.m. Monday at 1129 WeaverDairy Road, according to ChapelHill police reports.

Damage to the car was valuedat $300, reports state.

 Someone broke a rear win-

dow of Asia Cafe between 2 a.m.and 11 a.m. Monday at 118 E.Franklin St., according to ChapelHill police reports.

Damage to the window was valued at $50, reports state.

 Someone washed shoes in afountain at 6:45 a.m. Friday at431 W. Franklin St., according toChapel Hill police reports.

 Someone spray painted signs between midnight Thursday and4:37 p.m. Monday at RegentPlace, according to Chapel Hillpolice reports.

 Someone threw eggs at carsand broke a sign between 8:30p.m. Thursday and 7 a.m. Friday at 100 Village Crossing Drive,according to Chapel Hill policereports.

The damage to the woodensign was valued at $100, reportsstate.

 Someone reported damageand larceny from a constructionsite between midnight June 11and 9:21 a.m. June 13 at 400Umstead Drive, according to

Chapel Hill police reports.Damage to three road signs

 was valued at a total of $300, andsix other road signs worth a totalof $600 were stolen, reports state.

 A piece of heavy constructionequipment valued at $300 wasalso damaged, reports state.

 Someone stole an automobileat 6:04 p.m. Friday at 201 EstesDrive, according to Carrboropolice reports.

The officer noticed tracksconsistent with a tow truck buthas not yet recovered the vehicle,reports state.

CorreCtionS

To make a calendar submission,email [email protected].

Please include the date of the event inthe subject line, and attach a photo if  you wish. Events will be published in

the newspaper on either the day or theday before they take place.

CoMMunity CaLendar

PoLiCe LoG

NewsThursday, June 23, 2011 The Daily Tar Heel2

www.dailytarheel.com

 Established 1893118 years of editorial freedom

The Daily Tar Heel

ANDy ThOMAsON SUMMER EDiTOR

[email protected]

LyLE KENDrICKUNiVERSiTy EDiTOR

[email protected]

sArAh GLENCiTy EDiTOR

[email protected]

DANIEL WIsErSTATE & NATiONAl EDiTOR 

[email protected]

TArIQ LUThUNARTS EDiTOR

[email protected]

KELLy PArsONsSPORTS EDiTOR

[email protected]

ErIN hULLPHOTO EDiTOR

[email protected]

ChrIs hArrOWCOPy EDiTOR

[email protected]

MIKE rODrIGUEzONliNE EDiTOR 

[email protected]

ANNA ThOMPsONDESiGN [email protected]

Contact Summer EditorAndy Thomason at

[email protected] news tips, comments, correc-

tions or suggestions.

tiPS

Office and Mail Address:151 E. Rosemary St.

Chapel Hill, NC 27514-3539Andy Thomason, Summer Editor,

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Summer StrikeS again 

Hanna Humphrey enjoys a cone of frozen yogurt

outside of the Yogurt Pump on Franklin Street.

Joined by her friend Katelyn DeBerardinis, the

two found a rare spot of shade away from the sun on June21, which also marked the first day of summer.

DTH/JosH ClinarD

Outdoo pefomance: The ladeso the lake w per orm durng theEno Rver Farmers Market. The ladeso the lake are an a-emae Cetc

nstrumenta group.Time: 10 a.m.Location: Pubc Market House, E.Margaret lane, Hsborough

science da: Fam Scence Da wncude am-rend actvtes anda ceebraton o ponators, such as

butterfes and bees. The event sree.Time: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.Location: Morehead Pantarum, 250E. Frankn St.

Sunday

Popicle: in a ceebraton o sum-mer and am un, Kdzu Ch-dren’s Museum s hostng outdooractvtes, door przes, ve musc andpopsces. The event s ree.Time: 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.Location: Kdzu Chdren’s Museum,top eve o the Waace Parkng Deck.

• The Daily Tar Heel reports anyinaccurate information pub-lished as soon as the error isdiscovered.

• Editorial corrections will beprinted below. Errors committedon the Opinion Page have cor-rections printed on that page.Corrections also are noted in theonline versions of our stories.

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Page 3: The Daily Tar Heel for June 23, 2011

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By Sarah GlenCity Editor

To Joe Capowski, part of theproblem is cultural.

Capowski, a former memberof the Chapel Hill Town Council,is petitioning the current councilto ban drivers from using cell-phones while driving on townstreets.

“It’s a very dangerous way todrive,” he said. “A person who isdriving while talking on a cell-phone causes the same risk assomeone who is driving drunk.”

Capowski said cellphone useon the road is a particular prob-lem in Chapel Hill because thetown is home to so many college

students who have never really known what it’s like not to have acellphone.

“I’m not against cellphones —I understand their value,” he said.“I just don’t use it when I drive.”

Council member Penny Rich, who proposed a similar petitionlast year, said she is glad to seethe issue come back into the pub-lic eye, but there are still many topics to be discussed.

For example, the N.C. General Assembly sent House bill 31, which would make it illegal touse mobile phones while driv-ing, to the rules committee of theHouse of Representatives, butcouncil members do not know if the legislature will take action onthe bill.

Drivers across the state are

already banned from texting while driving, and drivers under18 are not permitted to use theirphones at all while behind the

 wheel.“It’s good that the bill is still

alive, and I don’t think it’s aspartisan as I originally thought,”Rich said. “But it’s a bit of a wait-ing game. Do we wait for theGeneral Assembly, or do we starttalking about it in September orOctober again?”

In addition to waiting foraction from the legislature, thecouncil must also consider howsuch a ban would be enforced if it

 were to go into effect.The council has asked the

Chapel Hill Police Departmentto prepare a report on pos-sible enforcement options for

a cellphone ban, but Rich saidCapowski’s petition will mostlikely not receive a response forat least a few months.

“Some of the streets we own,and some of the streets the stateowns, so that’s a difficulty,” Richsaid.

 Arthur Goodwin, a seniorresearch associate at the UNCHighway Safety Research Center,said the best studies suggestthat talking on the phone whiledriving makes drivers four timesmore likely to be in an accident.

“Driving while on the phoneis a bit like playing Russian rou-lette,” he said. “You’re increasing

 your risk, and it’s just a matterof time before it catches up with

 you.”

Contact the City Editor at [email protected].

By Meghan GillilandStaff Writer

The process that precedes abortions in NorthCarolina would become more complex if a billnow on Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue’s desk

 becomes law.The bill would make N.C. the 34th state to

require a counseling session prior to having anabortion procedure. Women would also have to

 wait 24 hours and have an ultrasound performed.The Republican-backed legislation has received

criticism from pro-choice activists who say it is athinly veiled assault on abortion rights.

Carey Pope, executive director of National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action LeaguePro-Choice North Carolina, said the bill unfairly targets women and physicians by further regulat-ing an already highly regulated procedure.

“The fact of the matter is that informed consentalready exists for any procedure,” she said. “Their

attempt is to restrict access.”The proposed changes to the process of getting

an abortion also come on t he heels of legislators’efforts to defund Planned Parenthood, an orga-nization that provides abortion, family planningand sexual health services. A provision in the state

 budget bars the N.C. Department of Health andHuman Services from steering state or federalfunds toward the organization’s clinics across thestate — including one in Chapel Hill.

 A recent poll released by the John W. PopeCivitas Institute, a conservative policy organiza-tion in the state, found that 56 percent of regis-tered voters polled support the bill while 36 per-cent oppose it.

Eva Ritchey, president of North Carolina Pro-Life Democrats, said that the bill, also known asthe “Woman’s Right to Know Act,” was crafted toensure that women make an informed decision

 before having an abortion performed.“The core purpose of the bill is to give women

every piece of information that they can get beforethey make an irreversible decision,” she said.

The bill requires that a physician or qualifiedprofessional counsel the woman orally, eitherin person or via telephone, of the medical risksassociated with an abortion as well as carrying the

child to term. Patients would also be counseled onother options, such as adoption.

 Women seeking an abortion would be requiredto have a real-time ultrasound with an explana-tion of what the display depicts, performed atleast four hours before the procedure by the physi-cian performing the abortion.

 A contact list of organizations that provide thisservice free of charge must be given to the patient.

 Alternatively, the patient may have an ultra-sound performed within 72 hours of t he abortion

 by another physician or technician. At no point would the patient be required to view the ultra-sound or hear the physician’s explanation, accord-ing to the bill.

Pope said legislators were “out of touch” withthe values of state residents.

But Ritchey said critics of the bill have over-stated its effect on abortion access.

“This bill will not keep a single woman who wants an abortion from getting one,” she said.

Chris Mackey, press secretary for Perdue, saidshe is currently reviewing the bill. Perdue hasuntil Monday to veto or sign it into law.

Contact the State & National  Editor at [email protected].

News Thursday, June 23, 2011The Daily Tar Heel 3

Campus briefs

Repairs close segment of Raleigh Street until July 29

The part of Raleigh Streetthat runs between East FranklinStreet and Cameron Avenue will

 be closed to traffic until July 29. A storm drain repair, which

 began Wednesday, is aimed atpreventing future flooding thatcould cause severe damage tothe street and cars.

Pedestrians will be limitedto one sidewalk that will bemarked by signs.

Chapel Hill Transit will also be detoured because of routes

and bus stops on Raleigh Streetat Spencer and Alderman resi-dence halls.

Campus Y gets more than$60,000 for local projects

The Campus Y received$10,000 from Strowd RosesInc. and $52,000 from theJessie Ball duPont Fund to workon a project in three differentneighborhoods near campus.

The grants will be puttoward a project dealing withsolving environmental andsocial issues in Abbey Court,Northside and Rogers Roadneighborhoods.

The project will pull togethermultiple student-led andcommunity-led campaigns. The

project is scheduled to last forthree years.

City briefs

Estes Park bus stop closedtemporarily for repairs

Residents who use the EstesPark Apartments bus stop willhave to board the N bus at atemporary stop across from thecomplex’s entrance.

The town has closed theregular stop until further noticeto complete a repair project thatis slated to last for about two

 weeks.

Police seek assistance withunidentified traffic stop

The Chapel Hill PoliceDepartment is asking residents who have any information abouta traffic stop conducted on Feb.9 on Barclay Road to come for-

 ward. A press release from the

department states that a whitemale about 5 feet 9 inchestall driving a dark, unmarked

 vehicle stopped a driver at about3:15 p.m. and was joined on thescene by another white male

 who may have been driving a blue Chevrolet Impala.

Police said these men are notmembers of the department andremind drivers to remain cau-tious when being stopped.

Information that leads to anarrest could be rewarded withup to $2,000.

-From staff and wire reports.

 Abortion procedures could be alteredTe stte get s efs

Pe Pet s ttpef ts ss te stte.

Townmullsphone ban

Efeet sttet e e fts

epe sss.

HARK THE SOUND OF JAZZ

dth/katie bailey

Chancellor Holden Thorp plays the electric bass outside Wilson Library for Monday night’s Summer Jazz Workshop.

Musicians come together for weeklongperformance program

By Tariq LuthunArts Editor

Forty students and eight instructors have gathered totake part in more than 50 hours worth of jazz — all inthe span of one week.

On Monday, UNC’s first ever Summer Jazz Workshopopened its doors. The five-day intensive jazz program

 will run through Friday, and it features a concert by adifferent team of musicians each night.

Following several hours of placement auditions,the first day was hectic, but camp director Stephen

 Anderson said things have been smooth ever since.The workshops are geared toward a focus on improvi-

sation, jazz theory and small group play. Anderson saidstudents were placed into several combo groups basedon their performance levels.

“It’s kind of hard to get t he full education of jazz infive days, but we try to highlight the main eras,” saidCharles White, a UNC senior and pianist helping out

 with workshop instruction. “It’s about trying to get thestudents to make connections.”

Emma Conrad, a sophomore music major, is one of the 20 students participating in daily classes for credithours. A trumpet player, Conrad said she’s taking advan-tage of the chance to improve her musical prowess.

“I haven’t ever really played in this small of a group,”Conrad said. “I look forward to the constant rehearsal,to seeing where we started (Monday) versus the concertFriday night.”

Ross Pederson, an instructor specializing in drums,said he is grateful for the opportunity to work with pas-sionate and dedicated students.

“It’s a learning experience for me, too,” Pederson said.“It’s not a challenge in the negative connotation, but it’ssomething that pushes you to dig a little deeper.”

Recently retired UNC law professor and a formermayor of Chapel Hill, Kenneth Broun, said that one isnever too old to learn. At 71, Broun has been playingpiano for most of his life and said he is enjoying his timeplaying alongside the high school and college-aged stu-dents.

“I’m a little intimidated when somebody who is youngenough to be my grandchild is better than I am,” Brounsaid. “They’re just amazing.”

One of the main draws of the jazz workshop lies inevening concerts, which serve as an extension of the les-sons taught during the day, Anderson said.

SummEr Jazz WorkShoP concErTSTime: 7 p.m. tonight, 6:30 p.m. on Friday

Location: Kenan Music Building 1201

Info: http://music.unc.edu/

inBRIEF

THE STATE OF ABORTION IN THE SOUTHMandatory procedures that must be completed before women can have an

abortion performed vary among Southern states. Required steps might

include counseling, ultrasound services or a waiting period.

S OU RC E: NATIO NA L C ONF ERENCE O F S TA TE L EGI SL ATU RES D TH /JEFF REY S UL LI VA N

State law requires counseling and a waiting period

before an abortion can be performed.

State law requires counseling before an abortion

can be performed.

State law requires counseling, an ultrasound and a

waiting period before an abortion can be performed.

Proposed law would require counseling, an

ultrasound and a waiting period.

“It’s always great to be able to put into practice what you preach,” said Pederson.

He added that the concerts offer the students themeans to watch how the work they put in now can even-tually make performance second nature to them.

 While incorporating many aspects of modern jazz,each concert is a reflection on the different players eachnight, Anderson said.

“There’s going to be a lot of mixing of styles,” Anderson said. “That’s just where we are nowadays.”

 Anderson said the success of this year’s workshop hasencouraged him to expand, and that he is looking for-

 ward to taking advantage of the experience in order to

improve the approach for next year.“I think that we can even grow a little bit bigger,”

 Anderson said. “There will be a lot of refining next year,and I think we can offer a bit more variety.”

Contact the Arts Editor at [email protected].

Greenbridge sees riot, getsforeclosure postponed

By Chelsey Dulaneyand Sarah Glen

Senior Writers

 After months of oppositionand financial uncertainty, ani-mosity towards GreenbridgeDevelopments climaxedSaturday morning when a riotleft three in handcuffs.

The 10-story development was set to go up for sale June 27after defaulting on its Bank of 

 America loans, but bank spokes- woman Shirley Norton said the

foreclosure date will be post-poned, giving developers timeto find investors to cover their$28.7 million debt.

“We have postponed the saleand continue to work with thedevelopers to resolve the mat-ter,” Norton said in an email.

Greenbridge developers didnot return calls for comment.

The development has beenan object of controversy becauseof its location in the historically 

 black and low-income Northsideneighborhood.

Lt. Kevin Gunter, spokes-man for the Chapel Hill PoliceDepartment, said protestorscaused about $3,400 of damageto Greenbridge on Saturday by spraying Silly String in the lobby and damaging furniture.

“When the officer responded,he saw about 15 people standing

GrEEnbridGE hoSTiliTy 

With critics citing gentrifica-

tion issues, Greenbridge has

faced problems in the past:

Vandals spray painted the

building in several areas and

caused about $11,000 of dam-

age in January 2010.

The development experi-

enced its second bomb threat

on Feb. 18, 2010.

dth file/jarrard cole

Although Bank of America has postponed foreclosure on Greenbridge,

the financial future of the development depends on finding investors.

on the sidewalk with bannersreading, ‘Honk if you opposeGreenbridge,’” he said. “There

 were 20 or 25 more inside, butmost of t he individuals fled.”

Police arrested BrianDingledine, a Northside resident,Karoline Knable, of Durham, andKyle Whisenant, of Greensboro,at the riot. All three were takento the Orange County Jail andreleased on a secured bond total-ing $8,000.

Contact the City Editor at [email protected].

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NewsThursday, June 23, 2011 The Daily Tar Heel4

Cho aims for seat on Town Council this yearBy Sofía Morales

Staff Writer

 Augustus Cho can break a con-crete block in half with the side of his palm.

 As a martial arts instructor,

Cho said he strives to t each self-discipline, self-control and self-respect — qualities that he tries toapply to his daily life as well.

“Martial arts is less aboutfighting but more about devel-oping one’s ability to rise abovecircumstance and developing that

 warrior state of mind necessary toovercome life’s often difficult chal-lenges,” he said.

Cho, who ran for mayor in2009, now plans to run for a seaton the Chapel Hill Town Council.Cho said the Asian community’slack of representation on thecouncil motivated him to run.

“Asians compose 11.8 percentin this community, while African

 Americans compose 9.5 percent,”he said. “It is my belief that at10 percent minimum we need to

have representation.”Cho, who first moved to Chapel

Hill to attend UNC, has lived intown for 17 years, he said.

dth/sofia morales

Augustus Cho, chairman of the town transportation board, plans to run for Chapel Hill Town Council this year.

“It really was not in my lifeplan to be this involved, but Icame to realize when I was work-ing overseas that America is a

 very special place and unless weget involved it will not get better,”he said.

Cho said he enjoys his positionas chairman of the Chapel HillTransportation Board becauseit allows him to seek solutionsto the problems facing the com-munity.

“Instead of complaining, I getto be part of a solution by beinginvolved with the transportation

 board and the community design,”he said.

 Aside from providing represen-tation for the Asian community,Cho said he wants to focus on fis-cal policy if elected to be part of the council.

“We are dealing with difficulteconomic times, and we need to

 be fiscally responsible in how weallocate limited resources,” hesaid. “We need to prioritize the

 budget of Chapel Hill where each

dollar maximizes the greatest benefit for the greatest good.”

Council member Penny Richagreed that the state and regional

 budgets are issues future council

members will have to address.But Rich also said the council’s

comprehensive plan, which hasnot been updated since 2000, will

 be its top priority for the next 12to 18 months.

Rich said she thinks a candi-

date for council should have beeninvolved in the community withexperience on a few boards orcommissions.

“It should be someone that isfamiliar with a lot of people in thetown so they are able to accessopinions from citizens regularly,”she said. “People that are willingto listen, not only speak, not only tell us their opinions.”

Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt, who beat Cho in the 2009 race formayor, said that if elected, Cho

 would bring a great deal of experi-ence to the council.

“While on the campaign trail with him last year, I did developa great deal of respect for him,”Kleinschmidt said. “He is cer-tainly somebody who cares agreat deal about our community 

and where we are going in thefuture.”

Contact the City Editor at [email protected].

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NewsThursday, June 23, 2011 The Daily Tar Heel6

Fresh leaders emerge at DSIBy Tariq Luthun

Arts Editor

Leaders of DSI Comedy Theater believe laughter is laugh-ter, no matter who’s responsible.

The theater recently watchedits founder, Zach Ward, moveto Boston to become managingdirector of ImprovBoston.

In the wake of Ward’s depar-ture, DSI has seen new leader-ship take charge from within itsranks as individuals such as JohnReitz and Paula Pazderka take onmore prominent roles within theCarrboro-based theater.

Reitz, DSI’s assistant artisticdirector and new productionmanager, said Ward — who stillserves as executive producerof the theater — has ensured asmooth transition.

“Whenever I talk to people, Isay it’s been ‘whelming,’” Reitzsaid. “It really hasn’t been over-

 whelming. It’s just been a naturalevolution of things.”

Reitz has been working withthe theater since its inceptionalmost six years ago, when he wasstill an undergraduate student atUNC.

“Without even realizing it, I’vespent the past six years trainingfor this job,” Reitz said.

Pazderka, the theater’s artistic

director and school manager, has been a part of the t heater sincemoving to the area from Chicagoroughly four years ago.

Pazderka said she’s more accus-tomed to the behind-the-scenesaspects of the theater, discussingschool functioning, show prepara-tion and the like.

“I’m not used to being morefront and center and having sucha public position,” Pazderka said.

Nonetheless, Pazderka said sheis optimistic when approachingthe challenge and is grateful tohave Reitz working alongside her.

DSI looks to continue the com-munity outreach they’ve beenknown for, said Laura Morrison,community liaison.

“The company members andthe improvisers feel that theateris a home for them, and t hat willcontinue.” Morrison said. “A lot of people have stepped up and I’mexcited to see where we go fromhere.”

Reitz said while the theater’sschool existed prior to Pazderka’sarrival, it wasn’t nearly as refinedas it has been. He attributes muchof the curriculum’s success toPazderka’s initiative.

“We’re a comedy theater but we’re also a training program,”Reitz said.

Shane Smith, a student

Carr Mill dental clinic to closeDTH ONLINE: Watch “The Encore Series”interview with John Reitz,DSI’s production manager.

since 2009 and finalist in DSI’s“Carolina’s Funniest Comic,” saidhe has enjoyed watching the the-ater progress around him.

“Zach (Ward) being at anothertheater isn’t detrimental,” Smithsaid. “Actually, it builds a strongerEast Coast comedy community.”

Pazderka and Reitz said thatthough they intend to maintainstaples like the free weekly Friday night show, “Mister Diplomat,”they will also look to add newcomponents to the mix.

The theater has already insti-tuted free weekly comedy showsevery Tuesday night at Top of theHill Restaurant, which they planto continue into the academic

 year.In addition, DSI is well on

its way to preparing for both animprov marathon and a comedy marathon to take place later this

 year, the latter being a conjoinedeffort with the local YMCA.

“Running a comedy theateris something that no one can doalone,” Reitz said. “Thankfully, wedon’t have to.”

Contact the Arts Editor at [email protected].

By Henry GarganStaff Writer

Cyetesse Cotton has been get-ting her teeth cleaned at the sameplace for more than 40 years.

But this fall, Cotton and others who use Orange County DentalHealth Services will have to travela little farther for dental care.

 While the clinic in Carr MillMall — which costs the county $65,000 per year to lease — wasoriginally scheduled to close inJuly, the Orange County Board of Commissioners pushed back itsclosure to September due to reno-

 vation delays at the Hillsborough Whitted Human Services Center, which will become the sole coun-ty-sponsored dental health clinic.

“I’m just tired of them takingeverything from here and put-ting everything in Hillsborough,”Cotton said. “This is supposed to

 be our community dentistry —and we are all Orange County,it’s true — but we need onehere for people who can’t get toHillsborough.”

In April of last year, OrangeCounty’s Board of Health submitted

a report to the county commission-ers in response to a March 2010recommendation that the dual-service system be consolidated.

 While the report acknowledgedthe dire financial straits thatled to the recommendation, thememo cited concerns that patronsof the Carrboro clinic wouldfind it difficult to arrange reli-able transportation to and fromHillsborough.

Chapel Hill Town Councilmember Laurin Easthom, whopractices dentistry part-time at acommunity clinic in Carrboro, saidshe shares these concerns and feelsthat moving dental services away from the county’s population cen-ter can only spell trouble.

“Dental care is one of thosethings that you can just put off,”she said. “If you can’t get there,

 you’re more likely to put off treat-ment, which means you’ll end up

 with emergency situations.”In her practice, Easthom said

she sees a high number of suchemergency cases, which she saidcan generally be prevented by greater access to primary dentalcare. She said the inconvenienceof a trip to Hillsborough will beprohibitive for low-income andelderly patients.

But County Manager FrankClifton said the county is in talks

 with Triangle Transit to solve the

transportation problem.“They’re working on a voucher

system for those who would ridethe 420 route (to Hillsborough),”he said. “Right now, the bus stopsabout a block and a half from

 where the clinic is, but we’re working on that as well.”

Clifton said cutting a loca-tion could simplify the coun-ty’s dental care. Currently,Carr Mill’s clinic is open onMondays and Tuesdays, whileHillsborough’s office provides ser-

 vices Wednesday t hrough Friday.Clifton estimates that by consoli-dating service, the county will beable to serve an additional 1,000patients per year.

“Say you went to the dentist,and you needed a second follow-up appointment,” he said. “It washard to schedule those if (theCarrboro clinic) is just open twodays a week.”

Contact the City Editor at [email protected].

Orange County willconsolidate its dentalservices in September.

“I’m just tired of themtaking everything fromhere and putting (it) inHillsborough.” Cyetesse Cotton,Chapel Hill resident

NOTICE TO ALL DTH CUSTOMERSDeadnes are NOON one usness day prorto pucaton or cassed ads. We pushMonday thru Frday when casses are n ses-son. A unersty hoday s a DTH hoday too(.e. ths aects deadnes). We resere therht to reject, edt, or recassy any ad. Ac-ceptance o ad copy or prepayment does notmpy areement to push an ad. You maystop your ad at any tme, ut NO REFUNDS orcredts or stopped ads w e proded. Noadertsn or housn or empoyment, n ac-cordance wth edera aw, can state a preer-ence ased on se, race, creed, coor, reon,natona orn, handcap, marta status.

Child Care Services

CHilD CARE AvAilAblE: Fun, carn, respon-se aystter aaae or summer. loesooks, crats, ames, musc. Eperencewth chdren o a aes. Resume, reerences

aaae. Fee pay, own transportaton.Contact Katejn: [email protected],919-357-5260.

Child Care Wanted

UNC PSYCHOlOgY PROFESSOR Seeknpart-tme chd care ennn md-Juy.Carn, un and response stter needed tocare or 5 year-od dauhter and 1 year-odson on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays(7:45am-5:30pm). Stter aaaty Wednes-day eenns a pus. Must hae sae and re-ae transportaton that can accommodate2 carseats. Ema [email protected] detas.

lOOKiNg FOR A REliAblE, compasson-ate person to work wth 7 year-od autstcr. Responstes ncude: workn onset oas, communty outns and attend-n team meetns. Schedue: M-F ater-noons at 2:45. in addton, a ew morn-ns a week. Must hae transportaton.Respond [email protected] [email protected].

UNCH RN NEEDS ExPERiENCED part-tmestter to come to my home n Durham (nearSouthpont) rom 2pm or 3pm to 6pm M-Fstartn 8/1/11 to care or my 4 month-od.Pease contact me or more no at raresser@

ma.com or 919-265-8313.

For Rent

FAIR HOUSINgAll REAl ESTATE AND RENTAl adertsn nths newspaper s suject to the Federa FarHousn Act o 1968 whch makes t eato adertse “any preerence, mtaton, ordscrmnaton ased on race, coor, reon,se, handcap, ama status, or natonaorn, or an ntenton to make any suchpreerence, mtaton, or dscrmnaton.”Ths newspaper w not knowny acceptany adertsn whch s n oaton o theaw. Our readers are herey normed thata dwens adertsed n ths newspaperare aaae on an equa opportunty assn accordance wth the aw. To compan o dscrmnaton, ca the U. S. Department o Housn and Uran Deeopment housndscrmnaton hotne: 1-800-669-9777.

lOvElY WOODED lOT FOR 2bR/1.5bAtownhome n North Chatham County. Thsvckers Road dupe has repace, a oto pracy. $750/mo. water ncuded. Petsneotae wth ee. Ema Fran HoandPropertes at [email protected] or ca919-968-4545.

101 bPW ROAD, 2bR/1.5bA DUPlExoers hardwood foor n reat room,nce ktchen, coered parkn. Cone-nent to usne, pets neotae wthee. $900/mo. Ema Fran HoandPropertes at [email protected] ca 919-968-4545.

SEvERAl 1bR APARTMENTS aaae nearFrankn Street and n Carroro. Prces rom$600/mo to $700/mo. For more norma-ton ca Fran Hoand Propertes M-F nthe mornn at 919 968-4545 or [email protected].

4BR/4BA ATUNIvERSITy COMMONS!

REDUCED! Seekn 4 tenants or roundfoor condo at desrae Unersty Commonsstartn 8/1/11. $380/mo per room, ncudeswater, eectrc, nternet, poo, ree parkn!

CASH ncente you rent a 4! Free us tocampus outsde your door. 9/12 month ease.Terms neotae. [email protected] no.

WAlK TO CAMPUS. Newy renoated3bR/1.5bA dupe. Centra heat, ar, W/D,dshwasher. Aaae June, Juy or Au-ust. $1,600/mo. Mercarentas.com,919-933-8143.

WAlK TO UNC AND FRANKliN STREET:2bR, 3bR and 4bR apartments aaae 8-1-2011. $800-$1,850/mo. Dre y 102, 103,105 isey Street. 919-605-3444.

WAlK, biKE FROM 13 DAviE CiRClE. Ths2bR/1bA house has hardwood foors, W/D,pets neotae wth ee. Ony ocks tocampus, t s ocated o Frankn Street.$1,025/mo. Ema Fran Hoand Propertes,[email protected].

HOUSE FOR RENT: 3bR rck. 15 AnerDre. Aaae Auust 1, $1,085/mo. Oncu de sac. Chan nk ence, wood foors,centra heat and ar. Near ma. Pets.NeeeReaEstate.com. 919-967-1554.

HOUSE FOR RENT: 3bR/2bA, W/D, repace,deck, enced yard. Quet nehorhood 7mes north o campus, conenent to i-40,i-85. MlK bd. $950/mo. +securty depost.919-563-2303.

4 blOCKS TO CAMPUS, and Frankn.2bR/1bA apartment has W/D connectons,eectrc heat. $680/mo. 415 North CoumaStreet. Fran Hoand Propertes: ema [email protected] or ca 919-968-4545.

4 blOCKS TO CAMPUS, FRANKliN STREET.Check out ths 4bR/2.5bA house on StephensStreet. Hardwood foors, W/D, dshwasher.great ocaton or students. $1,800/mo,(ony $450/mo, ased on 4 person) 10 monthease aaae. Fran Hoand Propertes:[email protected].

SPACiOUS, AWESOME STUDENTHOUSiNg. brn rends to share 4bRor 6bR townhouse. W/D, hardwoodfoors, 4 ree usnes, mnutes toUNC, are edrooms, are cosets,cen ans, etra storae, nternet,cae ready, ree ampe parkn, nosmokn. $350/mo per bR. Aaaenow or Auust 2011. [email protected], 919-933-0983, 919-451-8140.

gRAD STUDENTS AND PROFESSiONAlS, ths2bR/2bA house must e seen to e apprec-ated, 900 branch Street o o MlK bd. Thshouse s conenent to usne and easykeae. $1,325/mo. Fran Hoand Proper-tes. Ema [email protected].

1 blOCK TO CAMPUS. 739 RAlEigH ROAD.Wak or ke rom ths 2bR/1bA dupe.Hardwood foors, pets neotae wth ee.$695/mo. Ema Fran Hoand Propertes atherhoand@ntre. net.

1bR STUDiO: $600/mo. +spt uttes wth2 roommates. 528 square oot edroom and500 square oot common space. Separate pr-ate entrance. Quet nehorhood. Pcturesand detas at request. Aaae Auust 1.919-265-4978.

lOvElY, QUiET 1bR APARTMENT wth a-rae. grad students, proessonas ony.Enjoy shady, prate deck “aoe your ownarae.” O Od Oord Road. Separatestudy, oce, W/D. $880/mo wth water.Pets neotae. Fran Hoand Propertes:ema [email protected] or M-F ca919-968-4545.

2BR TOwNHOUSEgreat 2bR townhouse or rent cose to Cha-

pe H and Duke. Nehorhood has pooand tness area ncuded n rent. Pet rendy.Ca to see today. 919-423-2968.

1bR EFFiCiENCY. Quant attc apartmentn charmn oder home ocks to Frankn,UNC. 1 year, no pets. Aaae Auust.$570/mo, ncudes uttes. htoppropertes.net or 929-1188.

1.5 blOCKS TO DOWNTOWN, UNC:2bR/1bA. Wak to eerythn on campus,Frankn, 408 MlK, spacous, hardwoodfoors, speca $800/mo. ncudes parkn,water. Act qucky, rate s mted tme ony.www.htoppropertes.net, 929-1188.

AvAilAblE AUgUST 1: 4bR/3.5bAtownhouse 5 ocks rom UNC andFrankn Street, doue arae,sky hts, decks, enery ecent,$2,400/mo +uttes. 919-942-6945.

Help Wanted

HARD WORKiNg, REliAblE student to hepmantan my 3 acres and road, 3-5 hrs/wk asummer. Rdn mower and weed eater e-perence requred. Aso must e ae to drestck sht. Own transportaton requred. $10/hr +as. Pease ema Ms. Dunn descrn

your eperence: [email protected].

HOUSEKEEPER, CUSTODiAN: Chape H-Carroro YMCA needs an eneretc, se starter or ht housekeepn, custoda pos-ton M-F 4-7pm. it ncudes ceann and ds-nectn (women’s and men’s) ocker room,athrooms and ceann oces, ym, 5 Starchd care center as we as mantann theoera appearance o the acty, moppn,sweepn, dustn, acuumn, dshes, trash.Poste nteractons wth memers and par-tcpants, aty to oow drectons, remanfee, wth eceent tme manaementsks. Sumt appcaton ound at www.chcymca.or or ront desk at 980 MlK boue-ard ranch and sumt to [email protected] or rn to ront desk. $8.50-$9/hr asedon eperence. EOE.

DO YOU ENJOY YARD WORK and hep-n peope deeop to ther uest po-tenta? Then you may e nterested nRSi! We are currenty ookn or a yardcrew drect support proessona to workM-F rom 8am-4pm. Assst peope wthdeeopmenta dsates n yard work,andscapn and mantenance jos. Mn-mum requrements ncude preous awnwork eperence and knowede o re-pars or andscapn equpment. AsoNorth Carona drer’s cense requred.Appy onne at www.rs-nc.or.

FRiENDlY C-6 QUADRiPlEgiC ook-n or rendy, eneretc studentsthnkn aout or majorn n oneo the medca eds such as pre-med, physca therapy, occupatonatherapy, nursn or one o the othermedca eds who are truy nter-ested n workn one on one n an n-dependent n settn and annauae hands on eperence. Cantran. Second summer sesson anda or eyond, mornn, eenn andweekend postons open. $12-$14/hr.919-932-1314.

BARTENDERSARE IN DEMAND!

Earn $20-$35/hr. 1 or 2 week and weekendcasses. 100% jo pacement assstance.Raeh’s bartendn Schoo. Hae un!Make money! Meet peope! Aordae

SUMMER tuton. Ca now! 919-676-0774.www.cocktamer.com/unc.htm.

PART-TiME bUS DRivER NEEDED! RSi sookn or a us drer or peope wth de-eopmenta dsates. M-F 2:30-5pm. $11/hr. Must hae cean drn record and CDl.Appy onne at www.rs-nc.or.

Egg DONORS NEEDED. UNC HeathCare seekn heathy, non-smoknemaes 21-30 to ecome e do-nors. $2,500 compensaton orCOMPlETED cyce. A sts and pro-cedures to e done oca to campus.For wrtten normaton, pease ca919-966-1150 et. 5 and eae yourcurrent man address.

vETERiNARY ASSiSTANT, TECH u-tme atusy sma anma cnc n Hsorouh. im-medate openn s u-tme ony. AternatnSaturday hours. Eperence preerred. Emaresume to [email protected].

INSIDE SALESREpRESENTATIvE

Estashed sotware company ookn or ausness or marketn major student to workas a part-tme nsde saes representate.

Dutes ncude promotn and sen ourproducts and assstn wth arous oceadmnstrate tasks. Houry ase +com-msson. Aerae $15/hr wth hher earn-n potenta dependn on perormance.Conenent to UNC. Ema resume to:

 [email protected].

PSYCHOMETRiST: Part-tme, temporaryposton or a psychometrst. Dutes ncudesupersed admnstraton and scorn o psychooca tests, assstance wth researchdata coecton and entry and cerca as-sstance n rant and manuscrpt prepara-ton. bacheor’s deree n psychooy orcosey reated ed, eceent nterpersonasks and acty wth word processn andspread sheets requred. Psychometry epe-rence strony preerred. Eperence wthstatstca sotware (SPSS) preerred. Sendetter o nterest and Cv to UNC Depart-ment o Neurooy, Attn: Aeander Troster,Cb# 7025, Chape H, NC 27599-7025 [email protected]. EEO.

Homes For Sale

$156,000 2bR/1.5bA TOWNHOUSE 5 mnutesrom UNC-CH. Wde n, dnn. Woodenfoors. Freshy panted. New heater, arden,storae, poo. Ema fowerotheaey40@

yahoo.com, ca 919-942-4123.

UNC DOCTOR’S HOMEON 2 ACRES

Chape H Schoos ut ow county taes.Epanse ews o hs, meadow, meander-n creek. Nanny, n aw sute on man foor.Oce. Updated ktchen. 4bR/3.5bA +1,800oot nshae space. Frendy and quetcu-de-sac street wth nature aore, yet 7mnutes to town. Fenced yard. vrtua tour:www.touractory.com/709824. $474,900.Aent: 919-606-2803.

NEAR UNC, HOSPiTAl AND CARRbORO: 300NC 54 Hhway, A-2. 2bR/2.5bA. lare ktch-en, n room, quet cu-de-sac. New nysdn and utters 2008, HAvC 2005, waterheater 2007. On ree usne. $2K carpetaowance. MlS #1776798, $138,900. CaCra (Cb HPW) 919-593-4439.

BEAUTIFULLyUpDATED TOwNHOME

goreous, one o a knd townhome n nearSouthpont, conenent to eerythn. Justupdated wth rante counters, staness steeappances and hardwoods. Must see to ap-precate. $148,500. Ca 919-423-2968.

WAlK TO CARRbORO!! Cose to UNC. 105-K Jones Ferry Road. 2bR/2.5bA. Hardwoods,staness appances, rante counters, tedathrooms, 2 master edrooms, wak ncosets, are ot, coered rear pato, a ap-pances coney. MlS #1774181 $258,000.Ca Cra (Cb HPW), 919-593-4439.

Lost & Found

lOST: WOMEN’S FOSSil WATCH brown wthsquare nks. lost 5/3 n lenor, the arore-tum or the wak etween Spencer dorm andlenor. Pease contact 813-407-3548.

Roommates

ROOMMATE WANTED: Femae proes-sona seekn to share spacous 2bR/2bAapartment. Quet condo communty. W/D,prate athroom, wak n coset. Water,trash ncuded. [email protected], 386-405-4863.

Rooms

WAlK TO CAMPUS! COOliDgE ST. We needone student to our house or Fa. 1 yearease or more. Prate room, prate ath.$500/mo pus uttes spt equay. Ca Pete,919-412-7879.

Sublets

NYC SUblET FOR FAll: Easy accessto Manhattan, 1/2 ock rom tran!UNC Aum ookn to suet hueurnshed room n reat, sae brook-yn nehorhood wth another UNCAum or Sept thru Decemer. Perector someone just mon to the cty.Reasonae or NYC at $900/mo.Ema [email protected] or pcsand detas.

Travel/Vacation

$50 TO THE BEACHA day at the each and party ($50 per per-son, 5-6 peope). Ca Sam, 919-923-0657.

PARTiCiPANTS ARE NEEDED or studes o sua and hearn uncton usn manetcresonance man (MRi). These studesare conducted at the bran iman andAnayss Center (biAC) at Duke UnerstyMedca Center. Partcpants shoud e 18years-od or oder and shoud hae no hs-tory o ran njury or dsease. Most studesast etween 1-2 hours, and partcpants arepad appromatey $20/hr. Pease contactthe biAC ounteer coordnator at 681-9344or [email protected] or addtonanormaton. You can aso st our weste atwww.ac.duke.edu.

DO YOU SMOKE CigARETTES and not wantto qut? You can contrute to scence ypartcpatn n a smokn study that eam-nes how ADHD medcaton aects smoknand ehaor. i you answer yes to the o-own questons pease e us a ca: Areyou etween the aes o 18 and 50? Are yousmokn at east 10 carettes per day? Doyou eperence dcutes wth ADHD n-

cudn: Makn careess mstakes, dcutycompetn tasks, dsoranzaton, restess-ness. i you are ee and partcpate n thsstudy, we w compensate you up to $455or your tme. Pease ca Joe at 416-2099.Pro0000530.

DO YOU SMOKE? Are you a reuar smokeretween 18-50 years? Do you eperence d-cutes wth the oown? Not payn at-tenton to detas, makn careess mstakes,dcuty stayn ocused on tasks, dcutycompetn work, chores, or other tasks,dsoranzaton, oretuness, dcutystayn seated, restessness, mpatence. i you answered “yes” to a or some o thequestons aoe OR hae een danosedwth Attenton Dect Hyperactty Dsorder(ADHD), you may quay or a study at DukeUnersty Medca Center. For more norma-ton ca 919-416-2099. Pro00009085.

Wanted To Rent

4BR HOUSESOUgHT FOR RENTAL

Youn proessona amy s ookn or4+bR house wthn 2 mes o UNC hospta.412-224-2959.

Announcements For Rent Help Wanted Volunteering VolunteeringHomes for SaleFor Rent

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

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Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)Today s an 8 - Career opportuntesknock. A partner encouraes. Sharewhat you reay want wth an expertyou admre. Chane s afoot. go for“racefu non-conformst.”

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Page 7: The Daily Tar Heel for June 23, 2011

8/6/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for June 23, 2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-daily-tar-heel-for-june-23-2011 7/8

News Thursday, June 23, 2011The Daily Tar Heel 7

Cho seeks council seat

 Augustus Cho, who lost in the2009 mayoral race, announced anew candidacy. See pg. 4 for story.

DSI gets new leaders

DSI has new leaders after thedeparture of Zach Ward. See pg. 6 for story.

Clinic closing delayed

Orange County has pushed backthe closing of its Carrboro dentalclinic. See pg. 6 for story.

A look at the world series

The UNC baseball team played  Vanderbilt Wednesday.See dai- lytarheel.com for story.

Foreclosure delayed

 A riot happened Saturday atGreenbridge Developments. Seepg. 3 for story.

 g ames

Solution to6-19 puzzle

Complete the grid

so each row, columnand 3-by-3 box (inbold borders) containsevery digit 1 to 9.

© 2009 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

Level: 1 2 3 4

(C)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

All rights reserved.L Agele Time Daily Cd Puzzle

ACross1 Self-indulgent place for

breakfast4 Complete chaos9 Opinion column, briefly

13 Algeria neighbor14 “Don’t be ___!”15 Herr’s mate16 Dusk-to-dawn cramming

session18 Top pick, slangily19 Bayer : Levitra :: Pfizer : __20 Holy messenger22 Training neckwear for

noisy dogs25 Early Peruvian28 Bond creator Fleming29 Bordeaux buddy30 Sharp to the taste31 HST predecessor32 Quaking trees35 __ Balls: Hostess snacks36 “Definitely!”38 John or Jane, anonymously39 Materialistic

thirtysomething41 The Trojans of 

the NCAA42 Bank offer43 Like some rights

and engrs.44 Opposite of 

NNW45 Digit on a

“Magic” ball46 Suffer defeat49 Longtime

“20/20” co-hostWalters

50 “A StreetcarNamed Desire”

woman54 With the bow, in music55 Toothless menace

described by the starts of 16-, 22-, 36- and46-Across

58 “Kiss my grits” TV diner59 Mary Tyler __60 Assistant61 Summer quaffs62 Weapon for Zorro63 Place, as bricks

Down1 Vacation island south of 

Borneo2 Jazz great Fitzgerald3 Archie’s pet insult for Edith4 Comics Viking5 Sound at a sauna6 Doggie doc7 Crater Lake’s locale8 Salmonesque color9 Turnpike exit

10 Great Plains burrower

11 Hangover locales?12 Hamilton vs. Burr, e.g.13 Big D hoopster17 Shah’s domain, once21 Turn way up, as radio

volume23 Captain hanged for piracy

in 170124 Go on a bender25 Teensy26 Half of Mork’s farewell27 Agricultural phenomenon

sometimes linked to UFOs31 Antagonist32 “Easy as” letters33 Ark-itect?

34 Shipped36 Skin care giant37 Like hand-me-downs40 Vegas supervisor42 Nonmetaphorical44 It lengthens toward evening45 O.T. book before Job46 Revealed47 Minimal haircuts48 “¿Cómo está __?”49 Crimson Tide, to fans51 “Star Wars” princess52 Lord’s mate53 Absorbed, as costs56 Bath bathroom57 Flub the shot, say

All up in your business Part of a monthly update

on local businesses.

Compiled by Staff 

Writer Caitlin Ball

Streets Deli aims to provide big-city flavorKidzu move delayed due to permit issuesCarrburritos begins discount programStreets Deli, which opened last

spring, hopes to bring the feel of a big-city deli to its more intimatelocation at 1118 Environ Way.

Owner and New York nativeGreg Christon said unlike mostdelis, Streets Deli keeps its prod-

ucts authentic.“It’s not Boar’s Head or any 

company names, it’s stuff out of Chicago, out of New York,” hesaid. “All our meats are cured —they’re briskets, they’re not pro-cessed meats.”

Despite plans to temporar-ily move to University Squarethis June, the Kidzu Children’sMuseum has been forced to delay its reopening for at least the restof the month due to permittingrequirements.

The move to University Square was set to be a temporary reloca-tion before the museum moves tothe Wallace Deck building.

 As of now, there is no set datefor the move to Wallace Deck orthe University Square reopening.

 When construction beganon Weaver Street a month ago,Carrburritos owner Bill Fairbanksdecided to help local businesses.

Customers who bring inreceipts from The Beehive, TheSpotted Dog or Maple View

Ice Cream into Carrburritos,Balloons and Tunes, the UPSstore at Carrboro Plaza or theNorth Carolina Crafts Gallery willreceive a 20 percent discount ontheir purchases. The offer lastsuntil June 30.

Know o on oda’s sos: dailytarheel.com/nationworld

On the wire: national and world news

Senate, House divided ascosts mount in Libya mission

 WASHINGTON, D.C. (MCT)— Key senators on Tuesday urgedgiving the White House authority for a one-year, limited Libya mis-sion, but sentiment was growingin the House of Representatives tocut off the effort’s funding.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said the Senateprobably could pass the measure,though he offered no timetable.

Discussions were under way onpossible House action, includingdenying funds for the operationas part of a defense-spending billthat’s expected to be considered

 beginning Thursday.The White House has said

the U.S. has spent $716 millionthrough June 3 on the Libyacampaign, and it estimates themission will cost $1.1 billion by Sept. 30.

Ahmadinejad faces threatsof impeachment from elites

BEIRUT (MCT) — In another blow to Iranian PresidentMahmoud Ahmadinejad, a con-troversial deputy foreign min-ister allied with Ahmadinejad’sincreasingly embattled andisolated clique resigned Tuesday under pressure from hard-liners

 who threatened to impeach the

country’s top diplomat over theappointment.

Mohammad Sharif Malekzadeh,an ally of Ahmadinejad, resignedfrom his post as deputy foreignminister for administrative andfinancial affairs after drawing fireover allegations of criminal activity.

 Ahmadinejad, a populist fire- brand and international light-ning rod who is approaching theconstitutionally mandated endin 2013 of his second and finalterm, finds himself with increas-ingly little room to maneuver ashe jostles for power against otherpowerful factions within Iran’spolitical elite.

 ››› Huntsman launches GOPcampaign to the left of field

JERSEY CITY, N.J. (MCT) —Jon Huntsman Jr. ceremonially launched his presidential campaignTuesday with the Statue of Liberty as his iconic backdrop. But moretelling was what figuratively stoodto the Republican’s right: the rest of the GOP’s 2012 field.

Huntsman’s long-shot candidacy rests, in large part, on a gambleabout positioning. Utah’s formergovernor and President BarackObama’s former China ambassadorhas staked out the turf to the left of the other GOP candidates, a movethat could help him were he to winhis party’s nomination but may well

mct/Olivier DOuliery

 ››› Jon Huntsman Jr., former U.S.

ambassador to China, announced

that he will be a 2012 presidential

candidate Tuesday.

prevent him from getting it.Huntsman, 51, is waging what

he says will be a different sort of campaign. An expensively pro-duced campaign video, used tointroduce him to a small invitedcrowd of friends and support-ers, borrowed Obama imagery 

 by describing Huntsman as a “nodrama” politician — in contrast tohis often-combative and partisancompetitors.

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Page 8: The Daily Tar Heel for June 23, 2011

8/6/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for June 23, 2011

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/the-daily-tar-heel-for-june-23-2011 8/8

R egardless of the motivation behind theRepublican endorsed voting legislation,it simply cannot withstand a cost-benefit

analysis.Republicans maintain that the proposed voting

legislation is meant to reduce voter fraud, but itseffects are widespread and in many cases harmful.Requiring a government issued voter identifica-tion would severely affect low-income, minority and elderly voters, and restricting early votingcould lower student turnout next November.

The fact that the new legislation seems to targetminorities, low-income voters and students hascaused a small outcr y. These demographics werekey players in President Obama’s 2008 campaign,and legislation that appears to target them shouldnot be taken lightly, but as an obstruction todemocracy.

Of course, circumstantial evidence is not proof.There is no surefire way to prove the potentialelimination of some of Obama’s supporters in theupcoming election motivated N.C. legislators.

But while the true intent can not be fully under-stood, the legislation will effectively disenfran-chise a significant portion of the N.C. population,many of them Democratic voters.

N.C.’s Fiscal Research Division reported thatthe voter ID requirement would affect 885,537registered voters. Given the number of registered

 voters in the 2008 election reported by the N.C.State Board of Elections, more than 14 percent of registered voters would be affected.

The legislature’s proposed bill will make it moredifficult for 14 percent of its constituency t o vote.

 Another piece of legislation now in committee would shorten the early voting period, decreasingthe amount of time voters have to cast their ballot,discouraging another demographic.

In recent years, North Carolina’s voter statis-tics have been on the rise. In 2008, the N.C. State

Board of Elections reported a 70 percent turnout,a full six percent above the national average as

 well as N.C.’s 2004 turnout. With numbers climb-ing, it is wrong to discourage the same voters whoturned out in 2008 from exercising their constitu-tional right in 2012.

N.C. Republican legislators claim it is worthit, citing a need to eliminate voter fraud. Buttheir claims aren’t substantiated in fact. Basedon two recent studies, voter fraud is actually rare.

 According to a study published by Brennan Centerfor Justice, it is “more likely that an individual will

 be struck by lightning than that he will imperson-ate another voter at the polls.” Voter fraud exists,

 but a fraction of a percent is nowhere near enoughto justify the 14 percent of N.C. voters who will becaught in the crossfire.

Given the comparison between voter fraudstatistics and the numbers that will be adversely affected by new legislation, a conclusion seemsglaringly obvious. If the GOP intends to use new

 voting regulations to reduce Obama’s support

in N.C., the legislation will be both effective and borderline unconstitutional, but if the goal is toimprove the voting process, the proposed legisla-tion will do more harm than good.

 Voting legislation

underminesdemocratic integrity 

 Voter identification

crucial fordemocratic ideals

Kvetching board™kvetch:

v.1 (Yiddish) to complain

I can orgive a lot, Church Street:the noisy jackhammers, thecreepy workers, even the uglyorange signs. But I will never,ever orgive you blocking mymost direct path to Chipotle.

 To my younger brother who isan incoming reshman, pleasestop asking me questions aboutCarolina. You will learn in time,oh you will learn…

 Thank you, Sakai, or scramblingmy discussion board postsinto incoherent paragraphs o letters, numbers and symbols.Maybe i I drink enough sake, I’llbe able to read it.

I these reshmen don’t learnhow to get to one side o thesidewalk and out o my way, it’sgoing to get real.

 To the two girls in the Pitwho desperately want to bekvetched about: this is or you.Now stop being attered, thesummer issue doesn’t reallycount.

Send your one-to-two sentenceentries [email protected],subject line ‘kvetch.’ 

 The UNC pitcher threw ninescoreless innings,allowing only ourhits and one walk in a College WorldSeries game against

 Texas this week. The completegame shutout was the frst inthe CWS in fve years.

Weekly QuickHits

Fires in parts o North Caro-lina created smokyconditions in Cha-pel Hill o n Tuesday.Most o us weredisappointed that

when we walked outsidethere was no ree barbecue,as many had anticipated.

Goler Rory McIlroy obliteratedthe feld at the U.S.Open this weekend.We’re not readyto crown Rory justyet, but he should

have no trouble enjoying whatsometimes comes along withwinning gol majors...

A w k?

OpinionThrsday, Jne 23, 2011 The Daily Tar Heel8

A a h w oHoa Wam Apo

TO THE EDITOR Friends of the state of North

Carolina, lend me your ears; I write to bury Horace Williams Airport, not to praise it. Theevil that this airport has sup-ported shall not persist;

The good shall not be notedor missed; so let it be withthis airport. The University of North Carolina hath told youthat the airport stands in the

 way of progress: if it were so,it was a grievous fault; andgrievously hath the airportanswer’d it. Here, under leave

of the leaders of the University,and legislators in Raleigh; soare they all honourable men.

Come I to write for theairport’s funeral. The airportfaithfully allowed me to servethe medical needs of the chil-dren of North Carolina; butour leaders say that it standsin the way of progress; and allof their attorneys are honour-able men. The airport standsas a technological milestone inour state in which aviation wasfounded.

Did this in Chapel Hillseem ambitious? When thatthe poor of the st ate have beenunable to access Chapel Hillfor care, the airport hath pro-

 vided doctors and nurses theability to inform, teach and

treat; yet the attorneys say theairport is not needed; and they are all honourable men.

 You all did see that theplans for Carolina North, upon

 which the airport stands, wasto provide high technology tothe state, to the benefit of usall; forgetting the ambition of those who own land nearby.

 Waiting to profit from con-struction and development;and, sure, they are all honour-able men.

I write not to disprove whatthey spoke, but here I am to

 write what I do know. You alldid love the airport once, not

 without cause: what cause with-holds you then, to mourn for it?

O judgment! The first building upon this airport

shall not be a school of tech-nology but of law. And menmay have lost their reason,

 but not the attorneys who areour leaders. Bear with me; my heart is in the air there abovethe airport. And I must pauseuntil honourable men allow itcome back to me.

 With apologies to WilliamShakespeare,

 James P. Loehr, M.D. Division of Pediatric

CardiologyThe University of NorthCarolina at Chapel Hill 

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

EDITORIAL CARTOON  By Daniela Madriz, madrizemail.unc.edu

 Why thereleasedrecordsmatter

University administratorstried very hard to keep

 you from seeing theinformation featured on today’sfront page of The Daily Tar Heel.

Before being required by theN.C. Court of Appeals to releaseparking ticket and phone recordspertaining to members of thefootball team, administrators hadstaff meticulously redact specificportions of the phone records,then dragged out the legal pro-ceedings — which were handled

 by state attorneys — for months.They claimed that these

records, which the DTH andother media outlets sued for,

 were protected under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy 

 Act, an argument that a supe-rior court and the appeals courtrightly rejected.

I bring this to your attentionnot to chastise the University butto shed some light on why thenews we have been reporting is

 worth reporting.Some of our readers have

made it apparent that they don’t believe it is.

The DTH, they say, is just try-ing to attract attention and trashthe football team in the process.

 Why else would it be makingsuch a big deal out of some-thing as trivial as parking ticketrecords?

There is a reason, and it’s agood one.

The records do not proveButch Davis knew players weredoing anything wrong. Thereare no bombshells that jump outfrom the pages upon pages of numbers, or even in the recordsthat show some players wereclearly not afraid of repeatedly 

 violating the University’s parking

rules.But the released records, taken

together, gain ground in address-ing the question we have beenpondering for one year:

How did a handful of UNCfootball players manage to amassa small fortune of improper ben-efits, and was that episode indic-ative of a culture of exceptionalprivilege for student-athletes atthe University?

No story we publish aboutUNC’s football program willoffer a complete answer to thisquestion. But the information wecontinue to report should beginto offer a clearer picture.

 What we do is called report-ing because it amounts to statingfacts, framed in a way that besthelps readers understand. The

news desks of the DTH are not inthe business of telling you whatto think. We don’t do that, and

 we don’t want to do that.I doubt this statement will

stop the criticisms. But, of course, the scrutiny should neverstop — on your side or ours.

 And I know that some of ourreaders might never respect theinformation we offer, but I askthat they recognize what westand for.

 What the records revealdoesn’t matter as much as yourright to see them. We fought forthem so you could know whatthey said, and so powerful peoplecouldn’t withhold them for fearof embarrassment, discomfort ora change in status. Those actions

 will never be acceptable — legally 

or et hically.Public records belong in the

light of day, and that’s why wefind space for them on page one.

Andy Thomason

Summer Editor

Junior history major rom Charlotte

Email: andyt13email.unc.edu

It’s idealistic, albeit naive, to think that voterfraud is non-existent, rare or inconsequential,especially when the legitimacy of our repre-

sentative republic is at stake. We are long past the days when election board

members in less populated areas knew all thepeople in their precinct. Who or what is s topping

 voter fraud? Implementation of a proven imper-sonation detection method is essential.

North Carolinians should be required to showgovernment issued photo identification to registerand cast their ballots. A 2011 N.C. Civitas Institutesurvey revealed that only roughly one percentof registered voters do not have a photo ID.Identification is required to prove one’s age, boardan aircraft and enter a government building, so

 why shouldn’t voter integrity, under the American value of democracy, be protected as well?

Opponents of such legislation have suggestedthat accusations of voter fraud lack credible evi-dence. Democratic political pundits seem to fall

 back on accusations that voter fraud is merely right-wing propaganda, constructed fallaciously and aimed at invoking an element of fear in theminds of the public.

Perhaps they are unaware of the decision inthe 2008 Supreme Court case Crawford v. MarionCounty Election Board, in which the court statedthat voter fraud issues “have been documentedthroughout this Nation’s history by respectedhistorians and journalists.” Far from lacking, theevidence is astounding.

For example, it was “estimated that at least100,000 fraudulent votes out of 1 million (10 per-cent of the city’s population) had been cast” for the1982 Illinois governor’s race in Chicago, accordingto the Heritage Foundation.

Both a 2003 mayoral election in Indianaand a 2005 state senate race in Tennessee wereinvalidated due to voter impersonation and fraud.

 As recently as 2009, ACORN submitted up to400,000 phony voter registration forms — includ-ing one for the late actor Paul Newman andanother for Mickey Mouse.

Even with the implosion of leftist voter registra-tion organizations such as ACORN, many votersare still concerned about voter fraud, especially inN.C., which President Barack Obama carried to

 victory in 2008 by less than 15,000 vot es. A smallnumber of votes have the capacity to make or

 break an election.Radical leftists contend that mandating photo

IDs marginalizes minorities and the poor by sup-pressing their votes. Furthermore, leftists suggestthat racism and bigotry are key to understandingRepublican motives. These boilerplate accusationsignore the fundamental issue of integrity, andintegrity is crucial to the preservation of democ-racy.

 With the tool of photo identification, elec-tion officials might now begin to crack down on

 voter impersonation. True — presenting a photo

ID to vote might change the course of the 2012elections; the outcome would more accurately reflect the will of the legitimate voting population,including all minorities and the poor.

COLumN

 The NCAA handed down alaundry list o al-legations to UNC’sootball programon Tuesday. It nev-er eels good to be

so publicly reprimanded and Tar Heel ans deserve betterrom our athletic program.

QuOTE OF THE DAY  

“It’s a very dangerous way to drive. A personwho is driving while talking on a cellphonecauses the same risk as someone who is drivingdrunk.” 

 Joe Capowski, Former member of the Chapel Hill Town Council

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• Edit: The DTH edits for space, clar-ity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limitletters to 250 words.

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• Drop-off: at our office at 151 E.Rosemary Street.

• Email: [email protected]

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VIEwPOINTS

Heather Van wallendaelJunior English and philosophy major

Carlie SorosiakSenior English and American studies major

A GOP bill would require identification to vote in N.C. While some see it as an assaulton voting rights, others hail it as an important step toward combating voter fraud.THE ISSuE:

soh a awa o ao ho

TO THE EDITOR Editor, I have a problem. I

am a northerner working inthe area for the summer and Ihave long abided by Americanprinciples.

 When I heard I would beliving below the Mason-Dixon,I assumed that Southernerstoo would live by the Americancode. I thought Carolinians

 would hold freedom near anddear to their hearts. Instead, Ihave found that Southern hos-pitality is a sham.

Instead of celebrating indi-

 vidual freedoms, they spit in thefaces of those who are different.I am talking about the alien-ation of cargo shortwearers.

In Boston, they are not aproblem. For some reason,though, they are sin in theSouth. Girls scorn you at the

 bars, refusing to talk to you thesecond they see your surplusstorage. Guys laugh and call

 you “pocket boy” or, the morecreative, “trash.” Emma Lazarus

 would be rolling in her grave. Why is this the case? Why arethere always two pockets of separation between society andmyself? I urge the students of Chapel Hill to change. I call onthem to accept the tired andpoor cargo-d masses yearningto breathe free. After these tri-

als and tribulations I wonder,“Can we all just get along?”

George Huber  Boston University

smok oo no o aaoK ema