The Daily Tar Heel For April 20, 2016
The Daily Tar Heel For April 20, 2016
The Daily Tar Heel For April 20, 2016
TELLING HISTORY
THROUGH FASHION
Todays weather
Its raining
pollen.
H 77, L 49
DEFEATED BY CHICKENS
No. 16 Coastal Carolina dropped No.
13 North Carolina 6-3 on Tuesday. If
you wanted to know, a chanticleer is a
rooster. See more on pg. 3.
Thursdays weather
Happily melting.
H 81, L 60
dailytarheel.com
DTH/CHICHI ZHU
Eddy Fernandez is a part of the Carolina Covenant, which gives financial aid to those whose family income does not exceed 200 percent of poverty guidelines.
Comparable burdens
For the 2016-17 school year, total
projected cost of attendance at UNC
Lack of communication
Students who talked with
The Daily Tar Heel said the
experience of withdrawing is
easy and supportive. But theres a
clear communication breakdown
between what they think they need
to do and what they actually need
in coming back.
Allen OBarr, director of CAPS,
said the process is fairly clear.
Ive never actually seen the
reapplication process through
the Office of Admissions, but I
have not heard that it is really
complicated, he said.
In this year alone, 148 students
have withdrawn from UNC 94 in
the fall and 54 so far this semester.
All of the requirements for
clearance are covered in the
withdrawal meeting, and he gives
the students all of the information
to return on a handout for future
reference.
The withdrawing process is not
only about leaving the University
but is meant for students to learn
how to come back, OBarr said.
Mistakes are always forgivable, if one has the courage to admit them.
BRUCE LEE
News
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Alumni Center
Interests? Connecting Them
to Majors/Careers: University
Career Services will host a
Strong Interest Inventory
workshop to inform students
what potential majors and
careers suit their interests.
Participants should bring their
own laptops, as their SII report
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.
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POLICE LOG
Someone committed larceny at a grocery store at 81 S.
Elliott Road between 2:15 p.m.
and 3:57 p.m. Friday, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The person stole someones
purse, with $90 worth of
items inside including a
wallet, and used the credit
cards, reports state.
Someone broke into and
Heaven Clark
Someone damaged
property on the 300 block of
South Estes Drive at 10:36
p.m. Friday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The person damaged a table,
Changing demographics
could aect 2016 election
Gerrymandered
districts present risk
for incumbents.
By CJ Farris
Staff Writer
Population changes in
North Carolina could create
instability in gerrymandered
districts at least, thats
what two UNC-system
professors discussed during
a press briefing hosted by the
N.C. Coalition for Lobbying
and Government Reform.
Citizens need to realize
that no matter what issue
they care about, its affected
by how we do redistricting,
said Jane Pinsky, director of
the coalition.
In February, a North
Carolina district court ruled
some N.C. congressional districts to be unconstitutionally
gerrymandered, forcing the
Republican-controlled N.C.
House of Representatives to
redraw them. But many still
believe the districts are gerrymandered on partisan lines.
Mark Nance, a political
science professor at North
Carolina State University,
said the fact that 10 of the
13 representatives from
North Carolina in the U.S.
House are Republican is
unrepresentative of North
Carolina voters, who are more
evenly divided between the
two parties.
He said in a divided
TONIGHT
MURDER BY DEATH
w/Kevin Devine &TGDB
@ Cradle Back Room:
919-967-9053 www.catscradle.com
population in 48 of North
Carolinas 100 counties has
decreased since 2010, said
Tippett.
A state full of districts
that are drawn to be to the
narrow district advantage of
the majority party means that
what seem like small shifts on
a local level can really have
a quite dramatic impact,
Nance said.
He said these demographic
shifts combined with
narrowly gerrymandered
districts put Republicans in
office at risk, and districts
they once considered safe
could suddenly become more
competitive.
The best insurance
against this uncertainty is
a redistricting process that
is more transparent, that
is more stable and that is
a little more nonpartisan,
Nance said.
Pinsky said she hopes
the N.C. General Assembly
will pass House Bill 92,
which would clearly define
a nonpartisan system for
drawing districts.
The two parties need to ask
themselves: can they bet their
parties futures on the outcome
of the 2020 election?
[email protected]
News
DTH/ZHENWEI ZHANG
Fashion icon and Chapel Hill native Alexander Julian gives the 2016 Gladys Hall Coates University History Lecture at Wilson Library on Tuesday,
created.
Molly Ritter, a UNC first-year and an
attendee of the event, said she had heard of
Julians when she first moved to Chapel Hill
and said she is interested in design herself.
I think it kind of shows us where we came
from, and unites us as a school through the
history of fashion, she said.
John Blythe, the lectures coordinator, said the
library wanted to tie in the fashion exhibit on
display with someone from the fashion world.
Congress debates
Chabad allocation
The committee gave
more than $2,000 to
executive branch.
By Emily Wakeman
Staff Writer
DTH/SARAH DWYER
Left-handed pitcher Hunter Williams throws a pitch during North Carolinas defeat in Tuesday nights game against Coastal Carolina.
COASTAL CAROLINA
NORTH CAROLINA
6
3
By Pat James
Sports Editor
It is costly to our
state to try and not
do the morally
correct thing.
Marena Groll
Member of Durham chapter of NOW
of gender discrimination
outside of UNC.
Sex is not a protected class,
like race is, so when were in
a workplace and were experiencing sex discrimination
we really dont have the same
strong constitutional grounds
to pursue sex discrimination
cases, she said.
We have to go ahead and
put our big people pants on,
we have to do the correct
thing and say what the logical
thing is we have to pay a
living wage, we just have to
do it.
[email protected]
News
DTH/EMMA TOBIN
Senior political science and management and society major David
Marsh has been involved in swing dancing and campus ministry.
DTH/EMMA TOBIN
Senior journalism and political science major Kathryn Walker has
been a part of student government and Kappa Kappa Gamma.
GO TO THE SCREENING
Time: 7 p.m. tonight
Location: Silverspot
Cinema
Info: bit.ly/1pfvK4G
memories to be back in
Chapel Hill?
BP: For sure. Im definitely
excited to be presenting this
project which weve been
working on for so long to an
audience in Chapel Hill. Plus,
showing it there means that
a lot more of family will get
to see it on the big screen,
which is exciting. Its where
I grew up, so it holds a lot of
significance for me to be back.
DTH: I noticed that the film
got attention at Tribeca
what was that like?
BP: Yeah, we were nominated
for Best Documentary in
2015. At that time, there was
a lot of buzz about Cuba.
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professional references to [email protected].
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HOROSCOPES
If April 20th is Your Birthday...
Play full out this year. Take time for family and
romance after 5/9. Invest for the future after 8/13.
A two-year work boom begins 9/9. Family windfalls
and new love after 9/1 lead to group changes after
9/16. Create from your heart.
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
News
DEBT
FROM PAGE 1
a report by the Wall Street
Journal less than the system average of 54.6 percent,
excluding North Carolina
School of Science and Math.
Marybeth Gasman, director of the University of
Pennsylvanias Center for
Minority-Serving Institutions,
said HBCUs student populations are mostly low income
and minority students, who
experience unique stressors
that reduce graduation rates.
Robinson said more
students at HBCUs default on
their loans than students at
other UNC-system schools.
The result for those
students is very serious
because they dont have a
degree, they dont even have a
two-year degree or a certificate
or anything to show for what
they did in the time they did
spend in college, she said.
There have been ongoing
efforts to curb the loan
default rates at HBCUs,
Gasman said.
Across most states, HBCUs
do not receive equitable per
student funding, which can
prevent the institution from
providing institutional aid,
she said.
North Carolina has higher
funding levels than most states,
but when you look at the per
student funding at HBCUs
its still nearly half of what the
funding is at UNC-Chapel Hill
or N.C. State, Gasman said.
She said these discrepancies
are problematic.
There has never been
a point where the black
institutions have been given
enough resources to come to
the same level as the white
institutions, she said.
Finding a solution
of theater.
Montague said her story
of discrimination comes
from being a AfricanAmerican woman.
My experience occurred
in college, Montague said.
We did a production of Jane
WITHDRAWALS
FROM PAGE 1
Lacking clarity
Junior James Collette
has withdrawn from the
University twice: once in the
CASH FOR
CLOTHES
CASH ON
THE SPOT!
Nothing finer
than a summer at Carolina!
Follow-up
games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level:
4
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
Solution to
Tuesdays puzzle
An omelette disaster
After an omelette was
ruined in Rams, a student
was forced to transfer. Visit
The Onyen for more.
dailytarheel.com/classifieds
find a job buy a couch sell your car
54
Provincetown rental
57 Roast, in Rouen
58 Antelope Island state
59 Lesson at the end
60 Arabian Peninsula port
61 Went by skateboard
62 Take in
63 Get ones feet wet
64 Mesozoic and
Paleozoic
65 Slangy craving
Down
1 One way to be taken
2 Japanese finger food
3 __ four: teacake
4 Privy to
5 Eye part
6 Subject for Stephen
Hawking
7 Promise
8 Killed, as a dragon
9 Is unable to
10 Supermarket
employees
11 Like the Sherman Act
12 Deal with interest
13 New Deal pres.
21 Basic question type
22 Spanish girl
28 Falco of Oz
29 Prefix with pod
30 They record beats per
min.
31 Friend of Tigger
32 Switched on
34 Compete in a box
35 Braking sounds
38 Medication used for
dilating pupils
39 Bistro offering
40 Unhand me!
45 Tie tightly
47 High-ranking NCO
49 Turbine blade
51 Industry honcho
52 Wide open
53 Runs down the
mountain, maybe
54 Musical finale
55 Man Ray genre
56 Commotion
57 Wet behind the ears
Opinion
ISHMAEL BISHOP
CAMERON JERNIGAN
ZACH RACHUBA
KATE STOTESBERY
CHRIS DAHLIE
JACK LARGESS
VISHAL REDDY
TREY FLOWERS
GABY NAIR
JACOB ROSENBERG
NEXT
Mistress of Quirk
Evana Bodiker writes about her
identity as a Southern writer.
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
North
Carolina:
the
truth
Mejs Hasan
Kindness ought be
shown to naysayers
Silence can
provide a path to
better reection
Life can be a
constant parade
of mistakes
ARTS COLUMN
or my last arts
column, I wanted to
write something I can
stand behind forever.
And I can say, with 100
percent certainty, I will
never think of Chris Brown
in a positive way.
When I found out two days
ago the singer is releasing his
documentary Welcome to
My Life, I thought it was an
Onion article.
I thought it was a joke
because it is a joke.
As an editor of arts and
entertainment, I am mildly
intrigued with the information that can be gleaned
from this documentary.
I would love to know the
names of the producers,
directors and artists who
worked with someone whos
not only plead guilty to brutally assaulting not one, but
multiple women and men.
I would love to know, so I
can stop buying and promoting their work. I would love
to know how Brown, who has
multiple charges of violence,
conducts himself in a profes-
Sarah Vassello
Arts & Entertainment Editor
Junior jounalism and political
science from Hillsborough
Email: [email protected]
TO THE EDITOR:
I appreciate Anna
Dardick taking the time to
respond to my letter.
I wish she had also
taken the time to read
it. As I make clear in my
letter, I have no problem
whatsoever with the
stances that Jaslina Paintal
takes. If Jaslina Paintal, or
any other writer, wants to
call out white feminism,
she is more than welcome
to do so.
I have no objection to
divisiveness, although I do
disagree with the way of
thinking that equates moral
virtue with agreement
and moral turpitude with
dissent.
More broadly, I object
to Ms. Paintals column
not because I believe her
stances to be incorrect,
because I have a strong
attachment to secondwave feminism, because
she is divisive, or because
she confronts progressive
ideologies that contribute
to oppression, but because
her column isnt wellwritten or well-argued.
Part of making a
point effectively is being
charitable to those who
disagree. Ms. Paintals
column fails in that regard,
but my primary complaint
goes beyond her tone.
My primary complaint
is that Ms. Paintal is not
at all compelling in her
presentation of her politics.
The dominant mode of
expression in her column is
the unsupported assertion,
followed closely by the
dismissive insult. This
is inappropriate for any
newspaper, let alone the
student newspaper of a toptier public university. There
is no shortage of people
who share Ms. Paintals
ideologies but are able and
eager to argue, rather than
rant. Give the column to
one of them.
David Hawisher
Class of 15
Johnson is wrong
about hog farming
TO THE EDITOR:
Deborah Johnson is
essentially a lobbyist and
chief cheerleader for a $15
billion global corporation.
Her claims in her April
11 letter that the industry
strictly manages waste
and takes good care of
animals are hogwash.
Hog farming is one
of the great tragedies
of environmental and
social injustice in North
Carolina. Wendell Murphy
and other wealthy hog
barons in our General
Assembly legalized
huge, open and unlined
cesspools and giant
sprayers that disperse
feces, urine, blood and
bacteria into the air and
water in poor rural areas.
The Pork Council ensured
that any new legislation
didnt apply to existing
hog factories. Last year,
they lobbied to exempt
hog factories closed for as
long as ten years from new
regulation.
Poor people of color are
forced to live and die in
the bondage of stench and
flies, in the name of greed
and profit.
Four environmental
justice groups have filed an
Environmental Protection
Agency discrimination
complaint against the
N.C. Department of
Environment and Natural
Resources.
And theres no justice for
the hogs. Castrating baby
piglets, cutting their tails
and clipping their teeth
all without anesthesia is
standard practice in the
hog industry, as is confining
mother pigs in gestation
and farrowing crates so
small they cant even turn
around. That is not taking
good care of animals.
Last years new ag-gag law
prevents us from recording
what happens inside these
pig concentration camps.
Thanks to drones, Google
Earth, the horrible stench
and environmental activists
monitoring our rivers, we
know what goes on with the
cesspools.
Salette Andrews
Carrboro
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