The Daily Tar Heel for July 15, 2010

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  • 8/9/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for July 15, 2010

    1/10

    by katia martinezstaff writer

    Not many people celebrate their90th birthday on a college campus.

    But not many people are like WilliamFriday the man who devoted one-third of his life to serving as presidentof the UNC system.

    The UNC General Alumni Association(GAA) hosted a celebration Tuesday forFriday, the former system president andhigher education advocate.

    Hundreds stood in line at theCarolina Club to speak with Friday,

    who is credited with incorporatingmany of the programs and ideals thatmake the system what it is today.

    The GAA presented Friday with acake in the shape of North Carolina

    with one candle placed in Chapel Hillsrespective location.

    Chancellor (Holden) Thorp and I dis-cussed it, and we thought it would be agreat way to celebrate President Fridays90th and welcome him back to campus,GAA President Douglas Dibbert said.

    We are excited to be celebratingPresident Fridays service to UNC andthe state of North Carolina.

    a d j

    Ida and I have been here in ChapelHill since February of 1946, and neverhave we been so overwhelmed, Fridaysaid. This is really a celebration of

    what each of you has done during thesemany years to help the University.

    Friday became involved with the

    University, he says, t hanks to his wife.I took a temporary job and it lasted

    for all this time, and I did that becauseMrs. Friday had a fellowship at theschool of public health, Friday said.

    That decision lasted a lifetime. Itwas almost an accident.

    That temporary job as assistant deanof students led Friday to become theassistant to former consolidated UNC-system President Gordon Gray in 1951.

    Four years later, Friday was appointedsecretary of UNC, and the year after thathe was appointed president of the UNCsystem. He did not retire until 1986.

    Friday was born in Raphine, Va., in1920 and was raised in Dallas, N.C., grow-

    ing up during the Great Depression.I was 12 years old in the depths of

    the Depression, and I mean the realDepression, and I have a sensitivity thatsdeep, that when I see suffering, I experi-enced some of that myself, Friday said.

    Living through that poverty is whatinspired Friday to get involved as thefirst chairman of North CarolinasCommission on Poverty, workingalongside Gov. James Martin.

    (Poverty) is something we can dosomething about, Friday said. Its nota glamorous issue, and it doesnt makethe headlines all the time. But let metell you, it is absolutely critical to the

    well-being of the state itself.Friday started his Tar Heel journey at

    UNCs School of Law, where he met JohnJordan in his first class.

    The Daily Tar HeelServing the students and the University community since 1893

    www.dailytarheel.com

    thursday, july 15, 2010VOluME 118, IssuE 52

    weekly summer issue

    Served in the U.S. Navy during WWII

    Graduated from UNC School of Law in 1948

    Served as an assistant dean of studentsat UNC from 1948 to 1951

    Served as assistant to the president of theconsolidated UNC system Gordon Gray from 1951 to 1955

    Became UNC system president in 1956

    In 1985, Friday received the AmericanCouncil on Educations NationalDistinguished Service Award for LifetimeAchievement.

    In 1986, Friday and his wife, Ida Friday,were both honored with the NorthCarolina Public Service Award, thehighest award given by the University.

    In 1986, Friday retired after 30 years, thelongest serving president of the 20th century.

    In 2004, Gov. Mike Easley and the N.C.Legislature honored Mr. and Mrs. Fridaywith the Long Leaf Pine Award for theirservice to the state.

    Graduated from N.C. State University withan engineering degree in 1941

    1920

    s

    1950s

    1980s

    2010s

    Born July 13, 1920, in Raphine, Va. andraised in Dallas, N.C.

    William C. Friday

    DTH/JEFFREY SULLIVANCOMPILED BY REBECCA PUTTERMAN

    dth/stephen Mitchell

    fm Unc-m p wm f , i f, v 90 b b tu. t v, c cub h aum c, ub. f v Unc-m 30 .

    90 yEars yOuNGFi ceebe fo evice, eicion

    $750ptop pevioppove $200

    by carter mccallsenior writer

    Tuition will be raised by $750for all UNC-Chapel Hill studentsstarting this fall.

    At an impromptu meetingTuesday, system schools presentedthe UNC-system Board of Governors

    with their proposed tuition hikes.UNC-CH proposed raising all

    resident, non-resident and graduatestudents tuition by $750 this fall.

    UNC-system President ErskineBowles was set to approve theincreases Wednesday. Combined

    with the previously approved $200

    increase by the UNC-CH Board ofTrustees last year, the raise would

    bring the total tuition increase to$950 a 17 percent increase forin-state students. In-state tuitionand fees from the 2009-2010 school

    year were $5,625.44.Chapel Hill was one of three sys-

    tem schools, including N.C. StateUniversity and UNC School of the

    Arts, that went with the maximumtuition increase allowed by the 2010state budget signed June 30. Othersystem schools opted for smallerincreases or to spread their hikesout during the next two years.

    Bowles gave campuses conditionsthat they had to fill to have theirhikes approved, such as supportingacademics and setting aside 20 per-cent for need-based financial aid.

    Board of Governors Chairwoman

    Hannah Gage said the increase wasthe best of bad options due to the

    budget cuts the system is facing.The state cut $70 million from

    the system budget.No one wants to use tuition as

    a fiscal tool, and no one wants todo this on the backs of students,

    but the reality is clear now that theeconomy has crashed, Gage said.

    Schools must put a maximum of20 percent of the $750 tuition hikego toward need-based aid.

    But UNC-CH has the flexibilityto increase the percentage of need-

    based aid taken from its first hike,and opted to make the entire $200increase go toward need-based aid.

    Now, 37 percent of the total $950tuition increase will go to need-

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    dth/stephen Mitchell

    au v h wm a M . o k ju .

    by kelly Poecity editor

    A plane crash in Chapel Hillleft one man dead and two meninjured as a local family beganpicking up the pieces of more

    destruction than just that left onthe side of the runway.

    The cause of the 3 p.m. crash atUNCs Horace Williams Airport

    on Monday isstill unknown.

    S u r v i v o rJames Donahue

    was listed incritical condi-tion and KyleHenn, 22, infair condition,as of 4 p.m.Tuesday.

    While Henn walked awaywith the leastphysical injury,his situation is

    far from fortunate.Henn was believed to be flying

    in to be with his family his sis-ter attends UNC and went to high

    school in Raleigh after his olderbrother Nathan Henn died Sundayin a terrorist bombing at a WorldCup celebration in Uganda.

    The pain is immense, his fam-ily said in a statement. A parent isnot designed to lose a child.

    After Nathan Henn worked a yearand a half with Invisible Children, anonprofit organization that advo-

    cates for Ugandan child soldiers,he seized an opportunity to go to

    Uganda and see what he had beenworking for.

    On his Facebook status postedthe day of his death, Nathan Henn

    wrote that he had never had ahappier time in his life.

    People ask us how they can helpor what they can do, and we knowNates heart was for the people ofUganda, his f amily said.

    dnce coo oeen of 10 e

    Donna FayeBurchfield,am dfv s, mv p smb.

    by becca brennerarts editor

    After spending half of the sum-mers of her life at the AmericanDance Festival School, DonnaFaye Burchfield, 52, is seizing anew opportunity to influence thedance world.

    At the end of the 2010 season,Burchfield will leave the school

    where she has been dean for thepast 10 years to become the director

    of School of Dance at the Universityof the Arts in Philadelphia.

    On its very simplest terms,dance lives here, she said. And ifit lives here I can come live along-side it and help it grow more.

    The festival announced lastweek that Burchfield had made thedecision to leave back in May, feel-ing the need to move closer to herimmediate family in New Englandand to be in a place teeming withopportunity for the arts.

    As I felt this struggle aroundme, I felt this urgency within meto find these new ways to sort ofstrengthen dance, she said.

    Burchfield will also be leavingHollins University in Roanoke,

    Va., where she established a dancedepartment and an Master of Fine

    Arts program.

    With 300 dance students more than 100 incoming first-

    see tuition, page 6

    c uvvKyle Hennu mUv d.

    see crash, page 6

    years The University of the ArtsSchool of Dance is markedly largerthan the program at Hollins.

    Its a lot different in that itsa school of dance and not just adepartment.

    The University of the Artsremoved its MFA program in 1985to focus on its bachelors degrees.

    But Burchfield isnt going tojump right in to bringing an MFAprogram to the university.

    I would say that my first orderof business is to get to know theplace and to get to know about t heenormity of possibilities of dancein Philadelphia and the people

    who live there and make that heartbeat, she said. I have to weavethat into what I imagine, too. Itcant just be my dream; it has to beall of our dreams.

    After the festival, Burchfield willreturn to Hollins until mid-Augustand will start work in Philadelphia

    see Dean, page 6

    university|page 3moVinG on uP

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    arts |page 9

    arts |page 7

    index

    ... y. w im oy.h 93, l 73

    ri, o y, omi o h 91, l 70

    Fridays weather

    Todays weather

    this day in history

    July 15, 1896

    ei ao am

    m i o Unc,

    vi ui 1900. h ou

    v i o Uiviy o Viii

    tu Uiviy.

    oi o ........................ 2 .......................... 2io/o ..................... 4

    oo ........................ 9oiio ......................... 10

    dailytarheel.comOne year after UNC savedmillions in energy conservation

    by turning down the thermostat,other Triangle schools are follow-ing suit.

    Duke and N.C. State will takeUNCs lead after the Universitysaved $4 million last year just

    by changing the temperature.

    see FriDay, page 6

  • 8/9/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for July 15, 2010

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    2 Nwsthursday, july 15, 2010 The Daily Tar Heel

    singing for life

    Drew Bowen promotes the YoungLife Christian min-

    istry Monday in the Pit by singing and playing his

    guitar. The ministry uses college and adult leaders

    to mentor high school students. Bowen, a Chapel Hill resi-

    dent, said he volunteers at Jordan High School in Durham.

    DTH/STepHen MiTcHell

    Police logn Someone was assaulted and

    knocked to the ground between1:40 a.m. and 1:42 a.m. Tuesday infront of the Local 506, accordingto Chapel Hill police reports.

    n A 23-year-old Chapel Hill woman was arrested on misde-meanor counts of simple assaultand damage to personal prop-erty at 1:28 p.m. Monday at theChapel Hill Police Department,according to Chapel Hill police

    reports.Leandra Janae Wilson was

    released on a written promise toappear in court, reports state.

    n A 42-year-old Chapel Hillman was arrested for misdemean-or assault on a female at 8:07 a.m.Monday at 306 Lindsay St., accord-ing to Chapel Hill police reports.

    Joseph Bernard Lassiter wasarrested at his residence based ona warrant, reports state. He wastaken to Orange County Jail in lieuof a $300 secured bond.

    n Someone stole a $100 ladderbetween 9:43 p.m. Saturday and9:44 p.m. Monday from 119 TaylorSt., according to Chapel Hill policereports.

    n Someone entered the dininghall of the Sigma Nu fraternity andstole a $2,000 television between 10p.m. July 2 and 9 a.m. July 5, report-ed at 1:04 p.m. Monday, accordingto Chapel Hill police reports.

    n Someone stole four copperdownspouts worth $200 from aconstruction site between 6 p.m.Sunday and 10 a.m. Monday at803 E. Franklin St., according toChapel Hill police reports.

    n Someone stole a $30 pursebetween 1:28 a.m. and 1:30 a.m.Saturday at Players, according toChapel Hill police reports.

    The purse contained $15 cash, aset of keys, two campus IDs, a driv-ers licence and a debit card, whichthe perpetrator used, reports state.

    NOTED. A 36-year-old Maine man wasarrested and faces a felony arson charge after heallegedly set a car on fire and then posted photosof the burning vehicle on Facebook.

    The arrest came two weeks after police foundthe burning 1982 Mercedes-Benz. Police said theman told officers he saw the car with a smallcampfire in the back seat. Police said the ownerof the non-working car had been trying to sell it.

    QUOTED. We think its adorable. The snailsgot a 30-year history here. Its not as promi-nent as our logo, but its always been around,Snellville, Ga. City Clerk Melisa Arnold said.

    Some officials in Snellville said they believethe towns snail-themed Christmas ornamentssend the wrong message that the ornamentsundermine recent marketing efforts to paintthe city as moving forward.

    Police in Boise, Idaho, have arrested a woman accused of repeatedly dumping

    maple syrup, corn syrup, ketchup and mayonnaise into a library book drop.

    The woman, Joy Cassidy, is 74 years old.

    Authorities released warrants for her arrest earlier this month after she failed to

    appear in court. Cassidy turned herself in at the Ada County Jail on Monday.

    She was originally due in court June 13 after police say she she poured mayonnaise

    in the librarys book drop box that day. She was a person of interest in at least 10 other

    condiment-related incidents at the Ada Community Library in Boise since May 2009.

    In addition to malicious injury to property, Cassidy has also been charged with carry-

    ing a concealed weapon without a license.

    Cm v iFroM STaFF anD wire reporTS

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    Established 1893118 years of

    editorial freedom

    The Daily Tar Heel reports any inac-curate information published as soon

    as the error is discovered.

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    incorrect information will be corrected

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    3thursday, july 15, 2010T NewThe Daily Tar Heel

    Campus BRIEFsUNC schl f pharacybgns sall prgra

    The UNC Eshelman School ofPharmacy will start enrolling stu-dents in a new satellite pharmacyeducation program based at UNC-

    Asheville in the fall of 2011.Kevin Almond, who has been

    with UNC-CHs pharmacy schoolfor 19 years, will oversee the newprogram in Asheville as interimexecutive associate dean. Almondis a 1983 graduate of UNC-CH anda licensed pharmacist. He is cur-rently the schools associate deanfor advancement.

    In April , the UNC-systemBoard of Governors approvedthe schools plans to bring itsdoctor of pharmacy programto Asheville. The plan expandson the schools current partner-ship with Elizabeth City StateUniversity that began in 2005.

    The program in Asheville, likethe program in Elizabeth City, willeducate more pharmacists in anarea of North Carolina that is con-sidered to not have enough health-care providers in general.

    Planaru rganzssawd scnc fsval

    UNCs Morehead Planetariumand Science Center has organizedthe first statewide science festivalin the United States.

    The festival, a multi-day celebra-tion of North Carolina science andtechnology, will take place Sept. 11through Sept. 26.

    The schedule of events includesmore than 100 programs across thestate.

    The program aims to highlightthe cultural, educational and eco-nomic impact of science acrossNorth Carolina. It has programsplanned in places ranging from

    Asheville to Wilmington.

    UNC fru dscuss rl-

    gn and Afrcan Arcans

    The Black Theodicy Forum atUNC will take place Aug. 6 through

    Aug. 7. UNCs Institute of AfricanAmerican Research will present theforum, which is free to the public.

    Advance registration is required toattend.

    The forum will focus on this ques-tion: What faith-based coping mech-anisms have Christianity and Islamput forth in response to 400 years of

    African-American suffering?The scholars will look at aspects

    of Christianity and Islam designedto understand and ameliorate theeffects of enslavement, Jim Crowracism, segregation and institu-tionalized discrimination.

    Those two religions were chosenfor study because faith has long been

    a cornerstone in African-Americanhistory, and because most African-

    Americans of faith belong to thesetwo large organized religions.

    CITy BRIEFsBuss ss sps du Cnsrucn n Cluba

    Chapel Hill Transit has tempo-rarily closed the bus stop at theHealth Sciences Library until fur-ther notice due to construction onSouth Columbia Street.

    Passengars may board the busesat the Carrington Hall bus stop.

    sTaTE BRIEFsNw Yr arss ffr carrhlp a Durha Ars Cuncl

    The Durham Arts Council willhost the New York Foundation forthe Arts in a program to offer careerdevelopment training for local art-ists between July 23 and July 29.

    There will be three sessions,including opportunities for one-on-one consultations and a sessionon fundraising as an artist.

    Registration for the sessions isonline at www.durhamarts.org.

    spoRTs BRIEFsDcasd Yans wnrhad s UNC basball

    New York Yankees owner GeorgeSteinbrenner, who died Tuesday,had strong ties to the Universityand its baseball program.

    Steinbrenner and his family

    donated $1 million to make a court-yard at the entrance of BoshamerStadium in 2006. The courtyard

    was named after Steinbrenner.He brought the Yankees to play

    against the Tar Heels in exhibitiongames in 1977, 1979 and 1981.

    He had a great impact on ourprogram with his generous donationtoward Boshamer Stadium and we

    will never be able to thank him andhis family enough, UNC baseballcoach Mike Fox in a statement.

    I was lucky enough to playagainst the Yankees when theycame to Chapel Hill in 1977 andit was quite a thrill to competeagainst them. Of course it is anhonor to be associated in any way

    with Mr. Steinbrenner, his familyand a great organization like the

    New York Yankees.

    -from staff and wire reports

    UNC loses qualified women Coegeown

    offebiiCh boasts lowunemployment

    All up in your business part of a monthlyupdate on local business

    Compiled by Caitlin

    McGinnis Staff Writer

    New Gumbys owner

    Gumbys Pizza has new ownership.Montell Vannerman worked at four different

    Gumbys and was a manager at the FranklinStreet location where he took on his new rolein June.

    This was financial investment, but I have alwaysbeen a fan of Gumbys. It is a great time to join thecompany, Vannerman said.

    He said he hopes to update the menu andimprove customer service.

    We want to take some items off the menu andhire friendlier staff, he said. These are all neededchanges. I want to improve the whole Gumbysexperience.

    Vannerman said it has been a difficult transitionfrom owner to manager.

    It has definitely been stressful. I have missed

    my sleep.Look for new desserts and pizzas this fall.

    Pizza revamped

    The Papa Johns on Franklin Street reopenedearly July after extensive renovations.

    It is essentially a brand-new store, shiftmanager Robert Lyons said.

    We have new counters, new floors, new ceil-ings and new paint on the walls.

    The store was closed for eight days lastweek.

    Lyons said the upgrade was a long time com-ing.

    The store has been here for a while. It washigh time for an upgrade. I hope we get a goodreception, Lyons said.

    The renovations were funded by the corpo-rate office.

    Lyons said the chain has no new plans for theupcoming year.

    Papa Johns is the third largest pizza chainin the world.

    New meeting place

    Piola, an international chain of Italian restau-rants, is coming to East 54 this month.

    The restaurant was started by two brothersin Italy, said owner and UNC alumnus DavidReynolds.

    All the food is completely authentic,The restaurant will be located near U.S.

    15-501 and N.C. 54.Reynolds said he decided to open another

    location after the success of the Raleigh res-taurant.

    This location has always appealed to me.When I was in school it was an old motel. It isalso a growing area, he said.

    The restaurant will also feature work by localartists.

    The word piola means meeting place in

    Italian. I want the restaurant to become a partof the community, he said.

    Burger chain to open

    Five Guys Burgers and Fries will open earlyAugust.

    The popularity of Five Guys has gotten tothe point that Chapel Hill needs one, generalmanager David Dinkins said.

    The restaurant will be in MeadowmontVillage.

    The menu will feature hamburgers, hot dogs,grilled cheese and vegetable sandwiches withawide array of toppings to choose from.

    It will have only one side item, fr ench fries,which will be fried in peanut oil.

    Dinkins said he is expecting a lot of businessat the new location.

    People come by the restaurant everyday ask-ing if it is open, Dinkins said.

    He said the restaurant will announce a friends

    and family day to give away free food.The restaurant is slated to open on Aug. 2.

    DTH/LINNIE GREENE

    (Left t right) BJ Burtn, Missy Thangs and Stu McLamb f Raleighs The Lve Language. The band will have a release party fr theiralbum Libraries, its first release n Merge Recrds, Saturday at Cats Cradle in Carrbr. The Light Pines and S--t Hrse will als play.

    lOVE OF thE suMMEr

    DTH FILE PHoTo

    Stu McLamb, f The Lve Language,perfrms atp the Wallace Parking Deck inChapel Hill in August 2009.

    The Love Language is no stranger to buzz.Since the bands self-titled debut emerged in

    2009, its been a constant presence.With the release party for Libraries,the bands first release on Merge Records,just days away, Diversions Editor LinnieGreene met with three Love Language mem-bers Stu McLamb, Missy Thangs and BJBurton to talk about time, the future andwhy musicians love silence.

    Diversions: Where do you seeyourself in a year or two, ideally?

    Missy Thangs: I want to play ashow in Japan. I want to tour the world.

    Stu McLamb: Maybe well be in maybe Pittsboro. Where are we going to

    be next year? In what way? Personal-wise,or the band?

    Dive: Both.SM: I dont know. In two years, I think

    Id love for us to be able to all focus as muchas we can on our own individual lives and letthe band sort of be a thing we can all meetup to do and tour on. Ive heard of scenari-os where bands could even live in differentcities and meet up to rehearse. Id want the

    band to be a vehicle for us to have a living.

    MT:Yeah, my visions to be able to sup-port myself through music. Well see if it

    works out.

    Dive: I know youre all working andBJ, you record other artists. How do youmanage your time?

    SM: Were getting the hang of it, butwe dont have the hang of it yet.

    BJ Burton: Ive been having somekind of like, not really breakdowns butIm surrounded by music, because Im atthe studio when Im not playing shows. Idont know. I actually just left Flying Tigera couple of days ago and got another engi-neer to take over the reins pretty much, soI can freelance.

    Im looking at Chris Stamey and BrianPaulsons studio in Chapel Hill next week,so I can do some work out there and finishthe Rosebuds record out there, and Lonnie

    Walker as well.Yeah, from time to time sometimes

    I need a whole week of just chilling, likedrinking lots of water and napping andnot listening to anything. I ll get in Missyscar and Missy will blast the B-52s or some-thing, and Im like, No! I cant listen tomusic right now!

    MT: For a long time after t hey finishedthe record, I would be like, Oh, you guysride with me. And Id put on this mix that

    Id be all stoked on, and Id try and be like,Guys, check out my new songs. Theyd belike, Turn that shit off. Theyd be like, Wedont want to hear music f or weeks.

    BB: Silence is my secret of getting stuff

    SEE Love LANgUAge, PAGE 9

    BY ReBeCCA PUtteRmANSENIoR WRITER

    Moving up in the ranks atCarolina isnt easy. While manypromotions choose the obvioussecond in command, UNC employsnational searches to find the bestand brightest to lead the school.

    With the departure of AssociateVice Chancellor for Student AffairsMelissa Exum, the University islosing another bright mind toanother university, and it is losing

    yet another woman.Exum, a woman and a minor-

    ity, follows the loss of diversity informer Provost Bernadette Gray-Little, who left to become chancel-lor of Kansas University.

    In April, award-winning radiolo-gist Etta Pisano left to become thefirst female dean of the MedicalUniversity of South Carolina.

    You want to name men and

    women, people of different eth-nicities, different sexualities, in anenvironment with one chancellor,

    one provost, one dean of medicine,said Chancellor Holden Thorp.Chapel Hill is high up in the

    pecking order. Universities wantour people, and if they want ourpeople before we have an opening,they have a decision to make.

    Exum, Pisano and Gray-Little allmade that decision when it lookedlike a logical next career move hadopened up.

    Once youve been in a job forthree or four years you start think-ing, Am I capable of the next step?Pisano said.

    At UNC I was always going tobe second in command, and I couldhave waited til (the dean) steppeddown, and I didnt get chosen.

    Pisano said that in UNCs Schoolof Medicine, there is a real deficit

    in female leaders.Theres obviously something

    going on because women are drop-ping out disproportionately tomen, Pisano said, adding that withthe percentage of undergraduate

    women at Carolina, the percentageof women in high-profile positionsshould be higher.

    However, there are a fair numberof women in the chancellors cabi-net, including Barbara Entwisle

    who was just appointed as interimvice chancellor for research andeconomic development.

    Exum will be taking the positionof vice chancellor of student affairsat Purdue University on Aug. 2, the

    same position that Winston Crispassumed at UNC in January.

    The opportunity was one atPurdue where I just couldnt say noto it, to the possibilities that it had,Exum said. It was more what they

    were doing as Purdue more thanwhat happened here.But Exum said that while she

    brought the ability to build rela-tionships across campus to herposition, her race, gender andNorth Carolinian heritage helpedher interact with the community.

    I am both from a gender andrace perspective to bare on somepeople that never really interacted

    with somebody on that level, Exumsaid. It helps break down barriersI believe and helps bring comfortto members of our communities Well, she understands not just

    because shes a black woman, butbecause shes not far from here.

    Contact the Univeristy Editorat [email protected].

    Exm 3 o eve fo ige poiion

    BY ANNie CLARkAND keLLY PoeSTAFF WRITERS

    For 2007 UNC graduate MegPetersen, staying in Chapel Hillpost-graduation was an obviouscareer decision.

    Chapel Hill has so much tooffer. There are so many oppor-tunities here, Petersen said.

    And why go anywhere else?

    Orange County has the second low-est unemployment rate in the stateat 6 percent for May not season-ally adjusted according to the U.S.Bureau of Labor Services, while thestates overall seasonally adjustedunemployment rate, at 10.3 percent,is above the national average.

    College towns across the nationhave some of the lowest unemploy-ment rates.

    Monongalia County, home ofWest Virginia University, holds thelowest rate in West Virginia at 5.3percent for May.

    The economy in college townsis consistent. You know the biggestsource of revenue is always goingto be there, and housing prices arealways stable, said Chris Cronin,a graduate student and teach-ing assistant in UNCs economics

    department.When someone loses their job,

    they feel like they cant look for ajob in another county because theycant sell their house (for a profit).In Chapel Hill, thats not t rue.

    Therefore, there are fewer unem-ployed people sitting in ChapelHill, he said.

    Kathy Bryant, of the UNCOffice of Human Resources, saidonly about 47 percent of full-timeUniversity employees live withinOrange County, although many liveright outside the border.

    On Monday, Chapel Hill wasvoted 40th best small city in CNNsBest Places to Live. Among the rea-sons the city is so highly ranked:Educated conversation is easy tofind: nearly half of adult residentshave a graduate degree.

    Chapel Hills proximity to DukeUniversity, N.C. State Universityand the Research Triangle Park,not to mention its own university,likely plays into its high proportionof graduate degrees.

    The University continues to pro-vide employment opportunities inan otherwise unsteady economy.

    According to the UniversitysDepartment of Human Resources,there are currently 103 open fac-ulty positions and 53 open staffpositions, as of Monday.

    Chapel Hill has growing jobopportunities, many of themthe result of University-inspiredresearch, said Dwight Bassett, towneconomic development officer.

    We need to continue to workso that people will not only be ableto be educated here, but through

    their education find employment,Bassett said.

    Chapel Hill being a collegetown has in part made it the greatcity it is we need to build on thattradition Bassett said.

    Contact the City Editorat [email protected].

    Frmer assciatevice chancellrMelissa Exum

    is the third high-prfile wmant leave UNC in

    the past year.

    te love lnggeCd eee i week

    AtteND tHe CoNCeRt

    Doors: 8 p.m. SaturdayShow: 9 p.m.Location: Cats Cradle, CarrboroInfo: www.catscradle.com/schedule.html

  • 8/9/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for July 15, 2010

    4/10

    4 Newsthursday, july 15, 2010 The Daily Tar Heel

    24 ipce b fie

    SOURCE: GOOGLE MAPS

    DTH/FITCH CARRERE

    250ft

    40

    54

    Location of

    the Fire

    dth/Kelly Poe

    A f a Fangn lak Apamns n Saua caus $1.3 mnn amag. tw UNC fba pas w amng 24 spac.

    by Kelly PoeCity editor

    In the wake of a fire that caused$1.3 million worth of damage anddisplaced 24 residents, a ChapelHill apartment is unsure of thenext steps it should take.

    Fifty-four firemen from five dif-ferent fire departments respondedto a 911 call from Farrington Lake

    Apartments at 3:17 p.m. Saturdayand fought the flames for three anda half hours.

    The fire was caused accidental-ly after somebody put a cigaretteon a cardboard box on the backdeck on the third floor of the C

    building.The fire caused significant dam-

    age not just to the third floor butto the rooms below, as well. Allresidents of the building had to beevacuated, two or three of themchildren, Community Manager

    Courtney Duffy said.There are no plans yet. We will

    rebuild, but were still evaluating,Duffy said.

    Our priorities have been accom-modating residents and makingsure everyone is safe while gettingtheir belongings.

    Among those displaced were twosophomore members of the NorthCarolina football team, MichaelMcAdoo and Kevin Reddick.

    I had just left my crib, so fiveminutes after I left, I got a callsaying there was a fire going on,McAdoo said. I thought he was

    just joking. People say theres a fireevery day.

    McAdoo and Reddick are stay-ing at the Hampton Inn and havenot taken any legal recourse.

    McAdoo said his apartment was

    damaged so badly he doesnt evenhave a front door anymore.

    The Durham Fire Departmentresponded to the fire in 6 minutesand 30 seconds, and by the end ofthe day, five firefighters had beentreated for heat-related injuries andone for laceration from a nail in hishand, said Deputy Chief Dan Curia.

    The five firefighters were sent toDuke Hospital and released thatnight, he said.

    It was a terrible, terrible after-noon, and a terrible scene, and I

    wish it didnt happen, Curia said.

    But residents were evacuatedsafely no residents or pets wereharmed by the fire.

    The American Red Cross isassisting 23 of the displaced resi-dents, Curia said.

    We were extremely proud andhappy with the first responses ofall the units that were here, bothof the fire and police departments,Duffy said. This is really an unfor-tunate situation that things couldnot have gone better.

    Senior writer Jonathan Jonescontributed reporting.

    Contact the City Editorat [email protected].

    6 firemen treatedfor their injuries

    Weekly Review: Nation & WorldBP, Fe p off e on new oi wecp: co be ke o ening pi

    ATLANTA (MCT) The headof the federal response to the Gulfof Mexico oil spill announced

    Tuesday night that the governmentand BP would delay a crucial testto determine whether it was safe touse a newly applied cap to finallyshut down the runaway well.

    It is hoped that the test willdetermine whether there are anyserious leaks plaguing the 13,000-foot hole in the earth apart, ofcourse, from the notorious leak atthe top.

    The test was originally sched-uled to take place Tuesday evening.Now it appears that it will not takeplace until late Wednesday at theearliest.

    In a statement on the govern-

    ments spill response website, for-mer Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allensaid the timetable changed after a

    discussion he had with EnergySecretary Steven Chu, BP officials,geologists and other experts.

    As a result of these discussions,we decided that the process maybenefit from additional analysisthat will be performed tonight andtomorrow, Allen said.

    The new cap, which was affixedto the well Monday, holds out hopefor an end to a disaster that hasstretched nearly three months, butsuccess is far from certain. Muchdepends on the upcoming test,

    which will give experts an ideaabout how stable the well is belowthe sea floor.

    Bq bn on iw og Pi

    PARIS (MCT) The lowerhouse of the French parlia-ment, the National Assembly, on

    Tuesday passed a bill banning thewearing of the Islamic all-bodyveil, or burqa, in all public places.

    If approved in the fall bythe Senate and then by theConstitutional Council, the law

    would impose a fine of 150 euros(about $190) or a lesson in citizen-ship on any woman caught wear-ing the burqa outside her home.

    A man convicted of forcinga woman to wear the garment

    would be liable to a fine of up to30,000 euros (about $38,000)and a one-year prison sentence.

    The approval was widelyexpected, since the ruling Unionfor a Popular Movement party hasa sizeable majority in the body andthe opposition Socialists said they

    would not oppose it.The final vote was 335 for

    and a single vote against, with 14Socialist lawmakers voting withthe majority.

    The daily Le Figaro reportedthat a private individual, RachidNekkaz, has established a fundto provide money to women who

    broke the burqa ban.With my wife, we simply

    opened an account in which wedeposited 200,000 euros, Nekkazsaid. By September, there will be1 million euros available.

    Only about 2,000 women arebelieved to wear the all-body veilin France, a country of 65 millionpeople. That has led critics to callthe bill a waste of time.

    Others say it is unconstitutionaland could be struck down by theEuropean Court of Human Rightsin Strasbourg.

    Cing on tV won co mcnk o us Cici Co eciion

    WASHINGTON (MCT) In asharp rebuke of the Bush-era crack-down on foul language on broad-cast television and radio, a federalappeals court on Tuesday struckdown the governments near-zero-tolerance indecency policy as a

    violation of the First Amendmentprotection of free speech.

    The ruling is a victory for broad-cast TV networks, which jointlysued the Federal CommunicationsCommission in 2006.

    The case was triggered byunscripted expletives uttered byU2s Bono, Cher and Nicole Richieon awards shows earlier in thedecade, and the courts decisioncalls into question the FCCs regula-tion of foul language and indecentcontent on the public airwaves.

    It does make it much harderfor the FCC to regulate this area,said Eugene Volokh, a Universityof California, Los Angeles lawprofessor who specializes in First

    Amendment law. He called theruling a very important decision

    whose ultimate fate could rest withthe U.S. Supreme Court.

    A three-judge panel of the 2ndU.S. Circuit Court of Appeals couldnot strike down the 1978 SupremeCourt decision affirming the FCCsright to police the airwaves forobjectionable content.

    But it reversed the aggressivestance the agency took starting in2004 that found even a slip of thetongue that got by network censors

    was a violation subject to fines forthe stations that aired it.

    The Institute for Sustainable Development board

    and staff would like to thank our generous sponsorsfor making this event possible:

    GlaxoSmithKline

    Greater Durham Chamber of Commerce

    UNC Chapel Hill

    ACCE

    Partners for Livable Communities

    Triangle Business Journal

    A Better Image Printing

    Capitol Coffee Systems

    Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chamber of Commerce

    Communication Matters

    The Research Triangle Park

    Wells Fargo

    The Chronicle

    The Daily Tar Heel

    WRAL.com

    Congratulations to the 2010 winners:

    Research Triangle Park Sustainable Enterprises of the YearCargas Systems, Lancaster, PAThe Kings Daughters Inn, Durham, NC

    Green Plus Sustainable Medium-Sized Business of the YearWohlsen Construction, Lancaster, PA

    Wells Fargo Small Business of the YearRiley Life Industries, Inc., Durham, NC

    Green Plus Sustainable Nonprot of the YearThe Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools

    Green Plus Sole Proprietor of the YearBrick Street Botanical, Rogers, AR

    Green Plus Chambers of Commerce of the YearThe Greater Cleveland Partnership/Council of Smaller Enterprises, Cleveland, OHThe Greater Syracuse Chamber of Commerce, Syracuse, NY

    Green Plus Peoples Choice AwardTaylor Companies, Bedford, OH

    Green Plus ChampionMarc Pons, owner of Chapel Hill Tire Car Care Center, Chapel Hill, NC

    For more information, visit www.gogreenplus.org

    CAROL INA

    Now Available

    A book written by Dr. John J. W. Rogers, EmeritusW.R. Kenan Jr. professor of geological sciences.Illustrated by Angela Tchou, Class of 2010

    A detailed history of Carolinas

    Legends

    Students

    Administration

    And Rivalries

    To purchase a book, send a check for $10 to the Department of GeologicalSciences, CB 3315, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3315, or make a gift online atwww.college.unc.edu/foundation/makeagift. Please note the gift is for theCarolina Cartoons book. The book is also available at the Bulls Head Bookstore.

  • 8/9/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for July 15, 2010

    5/10

    5News thursday, july 15, 2010The Daily Tar Heel

    tece fceme ie

    By Brian Gaitherstaff writer

    While the state budget saved morethan 1,600 teaching jobs, teachersare entering the new school year withstill fewer colleagues and fewer sup-plies than before the budget crisis.

    The North Carolina budget isat its lowest in 14 years, and themoney allocated for education has

    become restrictive.N.C. Rep. Ray Rapp, D-Haywood,

    a chairman of the AppropriationsSubcommittee on Education, saidthey had to choose carefully whereto spend.

    That was our budget priority,to save teachers and teacher assis-tants positions, Rapp said.

    The budget reallocates moneyfrom the N.C. Education Lotteryto save teachers job. Earlier bud-get plans had projected numerousteacher cuts.

    No teachers will be put out onthe street this year, which showshow far weve come from April toJuly, Rapp said.

    But while jobs have been saved,teachers across the state are stilldoing more with less.

    I think everyone is breathing asigh of relief because of the bud-get saving jobs, but educators havesome issues on the horizon that

    will make next year challenging,said Vanessa Jeter, spokeswomanfor the N.C. Department of PublicInstruction.

    She said that while schools aredoing the best they can with the

    money they receive, textbook funds among other supplies did notmeet needs.

    Last year saw the first major

    teacher cuts, so it is still undeter-mined as to how that will affect

    standardized scores, she said.We have more public needs in

    education, and you will see largerclasses for teachers and less sup-port for the all the people that helprun the school, she said.

    While the general assembly pre-served 1,600 teacher jobs, the movedid not come without its detractors.

    Several opponents within the leg-islature argued the lottery was neverintended for this purpose, and t hisonly cuts off more lottery funds todistricts in desperate need of it.

    Ran Coble, executive director ofthe N.C. Center for Public PolicyResearch, said many politiciansfeared that the lottery would beused as a substitute for educationin budget-tight years instead of

    being the intended complement.This is the first time North

    Carolina has done this, and whoknows if it will be the last? Coblesaid.

    Lindalyn Kakadelis, director ofthe N.C. Education Alliance, saidshe feels that at this point, teach-ers and students deserve the optionof alternative schools.

    The system is not helping allstudents, Kakadelis said. We haveto find ways to help our low-incomefamilies and their childrens educa-tion. We have to provide them moreand better options.

    According to the N.C. SchoolBoard, public schools received lessfrom the states General Fund in2009-10 than in 2006-07, even

    with 30,000 more students.There are dedicated and com-

    mitted people in the system. Theyare not the problem. The problem

    is the system is not working.

    Contact the State & NationalEditor at [email protected].

    school to tart

    year with cut

    Bowls ssso looks lk

    By reBecca Puttermanstate & NatioNal editor

    While no one can exactly replaceUNC-system President Erskine Bowles,the UNC-system Board of Governorsis doing its best to find someone likethese North Carolina leaders, who holdsome of his best qualities and points ofexperience.

    Born and bred in Greensboro and agraduate of UNC-Chapel Hill, Bowleshas been known by colleagues and stateleaders to have a deep understanding ofthe importance of the states constitu-tional promise of access to higher edu-cation and the systems commitment toteaching, research and public service.

    It didnt hurt that as President BillClintons chief of staff from 1994 to1998, he helped negotiate one of thefirst balanced budgets in a generation.

    His political experience along with hisbusiness acumen he served as an asso-ciate at Morgan Stanley & Co. set himup to serve as a beloved leader of one ofthe states largest institutions during oneof the worst recessions in U.S. history.

    Former UNC-system President C.D.Spangler, from 1986 to 1997, said thekind of person needed for this positionshould have already narrowed the play-ing field considerably.

    Applying is not really the way to go,

    said Spangler, who said he was calledupon out of the blue during the presi-dential search for a successor to fromersystem President Bill Friday.

    These people ought to know by nowwhos qualified. They should have it downto nine or 10 people, Spangler said.

    While a national search is being con-ducted by higher education search con-sultant R. William Funk & Associates,Friday said its not the worst idea to lookinternally.

    Surely in an institution like this with10,000 faculty members and adminis-trators, if we dont have somebody whois learning and developing and qualifiedto be considered for the presidency ofthe institution, then we arent doing our

    job, Friday said.While business acumen and mana-

    gerial experience are at the top of therequirements listed by the PresidentialLeadership Statement, Friday said the keyis understanding the University.

    They must understand above allelse the role and purpose and missionof the University in the life of the state,Friday said. And that requires a ratherunique understanding and that is thetest with me.

    Contact the State & NationalEditor at [email protected].

    Roy Cooper, N.C. any Gn- N.C. nv, k n hbcc ng.- UNC Mh ch c 1979- N.C. n (1991 - 2000)- c ny gn h m.- nuc by Gv. Jm Hun n h

    o h lng l Pn, hgh b by gvn

    ?

    Raymond C. Pierce, dn N.C.Cn Unvy sch l- h vn g nmn nch hy n h vpmn nu h ch- v Pn B Cnn

    puy n cy cvgh h U.s. dpmn eucn (1993 - 2000)

    Monica Doss, dc ftcpgm cmphnvnpnuhp-ucn pgmun by h Kumn funn- m Ceo h Cunc enpnu dvpmn nrch tng Pk, h hv cn, pn nv mngmn.

    W.S. Jones, m dn UNCKnn-fg Bun sch,(2003-08)- N.C. nv gu m UNC-CH Mh ch n 1974- m Ceo suncp My

    l., n au 25 gcmpn- xp n gnzn chng

    June Atkinson, N.C. ssupnnn Pubc inucn- v m hn 1.4 mnun n 2,400 ch- cv c n ucnhp n pcy m N.C. sUnvy n 1996.- incuv lhp a mh N.C. acn euc

    While thesearch forthe nextUNC-systempresident isclosed, theseleaders couldfit the bill.

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    ($20) w/ Jane Carrey30 FR COSMIC CHARLIE ** ($10)31 SA MONTE MONTGOMEREY** ($10/$12)

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    August 19 MINIATURE TIGERS, Aminal, Jordan &The Sphinx**($9/$11)

    Sept. 8 Colour Revolt w/ Turbo Fruits ($8)Sept. 14 Those Darlins w/ Strange Boys andGentleman Jesse

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  • 8/9/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for July 15, 2010

    6/10

    6 Newsthursday, july 15, 2010 The Daily Tar Heel

    a moen wi on cic nce

    dth File/Ali Rockett

    Su ars au Ju fr Amra da Fsas Pas/Frar prfrma. tprfrma prmr 8 p.m. May a Rys iusrs tar a du Ursy.

    We are excited to close the school seasonand our performance showcasing ourstudents and their hard work.

    Jodee Nimerichter,co-diRectoR oF the AMeRicAn dAnce FeStivAl

    by Ali rockettStAFF wRiteR

    After three days of auditions,five weeks of rehearsals andcountless hours of preparation,students at the American DanceFestival School will make theirdebut Monday night in the Past/Forward performance.

    We have been working sohard, said Mallory Markham, 22,of Jackson, Miss. It will be spec-tacular, but we are all so nervousthat its so close.

    The program, the final perfor-mance of the American DanceFestivals six-week school, com-

    bines two new spins on classicworks and one world premiere.

    We look to the past for inspira-tion and look forward for direction,said David Byrd, former marketingand communications director at thefestival, in a June interview. Byrd leftthe festival earlier this month to bedirector of marketing at WestportCountry Playhouse in Connecticut.

    The Jets and the Sharks haveanother go at it in Ryan Ghyselsreworking of West Side StorySuite.

    Inspired by the choreographyand music of Jerome Robbins andLeonard Bernstein, the studentshope to exude the same finger-snap-ping energy and astounding heightof the original Broadway show.

    The second reconstructionembodies the gentler spirit of dance,as classic ballet and modern move-ment collide in Jean Freeburysrendition of Inlets 2, a work bythe late Merce Cunningham.

    Freebury, a faculty member ofthe Merce Cunningham DanceCompany, allows the students to takea fresh perspective on Cunninghamsgraceful and fluid choreography.

    The final piece of the programexplores new directions in moderndance. The festival commissionedTatiana Baganova, of Russia, to cre-ate a work that reflects the seasonstheme, What is Dance Theater?

    Her program promises to conjurefantastic surrealism as she delves intoa world of fairy tales and dreams.

    Monday is the first of a three-nightengagement at Duke UniversitysReynolds Industries Theater.

    The Past/Forward programmarks the culmination of the six-

    week school, and with only ShenWei Dance Arts left to perform, ithelps wrap up the 2010 festival.

    We are excited to close theschool season and our performanceseason with this exciting programshowcasing our students and their

    iF yoU Go

    Time: 8 p.m. Monday to WednesdayLocation: Reynolds IndustriesTheater, Durham.Info: www.americandancefestival.org

    hard work, said Jodee Nimerichter,co-director of the festival.

    Nimerichter said the schoolencourages students, from lateteens to mid-20s, to try a wide arrayof genres.

    They are immersed in their pas-sion, which is modern dance.

    Contact the Arts Editorat [email protected].

    in September.Burchfield said she will not lose

    her ties to North Carolina.In addition to keeping her fam-

    ilys farm in Creedmoor, she saidshe expects to send students fromthe University of the Arts to thedance festival.

    Theres something that happenshere at ADF every summer wherestudents come to feel that amazingsense of all these dancing bodiescoming together, she said.

    But her move is part of a largervision to open doors for dancers.

    Im on a mission and I reallymean that. If it cant happen there,it has to happen somewhere, shesaid. The possibilities for peopleinvolved in dance have to expand.

    Contact the Arts Editorat [email protected].

    deANFRoM PAge 1

    based aid next year at Chapel Hill.Both UNC-CH Chancellor Holden

    Thorp and Provost Bruce Carney areout of the office this week.

    U N C - C H S t u d e n t B o d y President Hogan Medlin said he

    was surprised that the Universitydecided to raise tuition by the max-imum amount. He said he was notaware of the reasoning and wishedthe administration had soughtmore student input.

    It was such a time-pressed andtime-constrained issue, and we

    should have had more time to talkbeforehand, Medlin said.He said one of his main concerns

    will be the ability of middle-incomestudents to afford the increase.

    Bowles said he doesnt think manystudents will be affected next year.

    Our tuition, even with theseincreases, is low by anybodys stan-dards. If you look at our campuses,they are near the lowest of alltheir public peers, he said.

    He added that the system mightbe in the same position next year.

    I think that there is some possi-bility that the Board of Governorswill be back at the legislature andthe legislature will require someadditional tuition to what we havehere, Bowles said.

    Contact the University Editorat [email protected].

    You have to go back to 1945for me and Bill, said Jordan, whocouldnt make it to the party. He satnext to me in a criminal law classon the first day of school and said,Hello, my name is Bill Friday, and

    we have been friends since then.During the 65 years since they

    met, Jordan and Friday have notgone one week without talking.

    cav avnu

    Students at UNC might notknow the story behind the name,

    but many programs carry his legacy,such as the William and Ida FridayCenter for Continuing Education.

    From the time he started workon the center he called it the citi-zens classroom. That has reallyencompassed our entire pur-pose, said Friday Center DirectorNorman Loewenthal. He has pro-

    vided a source of inspiration for thecenter since the beginning.

    Fridays influence has alsoreached past UNC-CHs campus.

    The William and Ida FridayInstitute for Educational Innovation,

    which strives to improve educationthrough the use of technology, locat-

    ed at N.C. State University, is namedin honor of the Fridays as well.We do everything we can to main-

    tain their great spirit for advanc-

    ing education, Institute ExecutiveDirector Glenn Kleiman said. Ithas been great to work with him and

    benefit from his kind advice.Friday and his wife have also

    been active members on the boardfor the UNC Eating DisordersProgram. The programs founder,Rita Robbins, called the Fridays ahuge part of the program.

    Friday also worked closely withUNC-TV and still hosts his ownshow, North Carolina People.

    Those who have worked withFriday say that he has a talent formaking people feel at ease.

    I remember we were interview-ing the teacher of the year this one

    year, and she kept locking up whenshe was being filmed, former filmdirector William Nichols said.

    Bill had the idea to shut every-thing off and make it look like we

    werent filming, when we wereactually filming, and she openedup completely.

    Friday widely considered amonumental part of UNCs history is still fascinated with the school.

    Its just been a wonderful journey,Friday said. The great thing about

    being a part of the University is thatyou get to witness so many creativeand constructive adventures.

    Senior writer Rebecca Puttermancontributed reporting.

    Contact the University Editorat [email protected].

    Donations to Invisible Childrencan be made in Nathan Hennshonor at www.natehenn.com.

    The four-passenger private-ly owned Cirrus SR20 aircraftthat crashed was registered in

    Wilmington, Del.The News Journal of Wilmington,

    Del. reported that the fatality, which

    has yet to be confirmed by UNCHospitals as of Tuesday, was the pilot,Thomas F. Pitts, 65, of Delaware.

    We are so grateful to both ofthe pilots for everything they didon our behalf and are both touchedand broken by the events, theHenn family said.

    The National TransportationSafety Board was on-site Tuesdaygathering information that couldlead to an explanation of the causeof the crash.

    Horace Williams Airport hadnot been reopened as of Tuesday.

    The evidence collection stagetypically takes two to three days,during which the board gathersfacts by examining the aircraft andtalking to witnesses, said board

    spokesman Keith Holloway.An official report likely wont bereleased for another 10 days, he said,and it will be another 12 to 18 months

    before a cause is determined.

    Contact the City Editorat [email protected].

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  • 8/9/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for July 15, 2010

    7/10

    7News thursday, july 15, 2010The Daily Tar Heel

    reig ecognize 6 fo cievemenAll the candidates selected this year havedone so much for the area and for NorthCarolina.

    June Guralnick,ExEcutivE dirEctor of thE ralEigh arts commission

    by colin Warren-Hicksstaff writEr

    Six North Carolina artists,each representing a unique disci-pline, have been chosen to receiveRaleighs highest arts honor for theircontributions to the Triangle.

    The City of Raleigh ArtsCommission announced the win-ners of its 2010 Medal of Artson Thursday: costume designer

    William Ivey Long, arts administra-tor Banks C. Talley Jr., art retailerRuth Green, bookstore owner NancyOlson, composer J. Mark Scearceand cartoonist Dwane Powell.

    The focus is on artistic excel-lence, said June Guralnick, executivedirector of the Arts Commission.

    It is for a lifetime achievementin the arts.

    Although the recipients far-reaching and diverse abilities arepraised for their local impact, formany, the area itself is what firstnurtured their artistic callings.

    Long, now a five-time Tony Award

    winner, literally grew up backstage atthe Raleigh Little Theatre.

    We went straight from thehospital to the stage-left dressingroom, Long said.

    That was my home for the firstthree and a half years of my life.

    For both Long and Talley,UNC played a part in their careerdevelopment.

    Before completing the final stag-es for his Ph.D. in art history, Longdeparted for Yale and a future onBroadway.

    And it was former UNC-systemPresident Bill Friday who suggestedthat Talley take a job at N.C. StateUniversity that led to an illustriouscareer, during which he helped formthe theater program at N.C. State inthe 1960s, and served as executivedirector of the N.C. Symphony from1985 to 1995.

    Such accomplishments garneredTalley a second award an induc-tion into the Raleigh Hall of Fame.

    I was surprised and am grate-

    ful, but its too much, Talley saidof receiving both awards.

    My first reaction was, theremust have been a mistake.

    But there was no mistake, nor wasthere an oversight in recognizinglocal proprietors and fellow recipi-ents Green and Olson.

    I am very happy that after 41years, The Little Art Gallery is beingrecognized for presenting art in ashopping area and not in a gallery,Green said.

    Through their shops, Green andOlson have been highly influentialforces in many local artists first big

    breaks.Olson owner of Quail Ridge

    Books & Music recalled that afterreading Angela Davis-Gardnersthird novel Plum Wine, Olson sentthe book to a New York agent, thus

    helping the North Carolina writerland a publication deal.

    Also to be honored are Scearce,a nationally renowned composer

    who has worked with Talley, andPowell, former cartoonist for The(Raleigh) News & Observer.

    While he admits that at timeshis cartoons have jived at local art,Powell maintains respect for it.

    It really adds to the cultural ele-ment of our community, he said.

    The six artists will receive theirmedals in a ceremony Oct. 6 at7 p.m.

    All the candidates selected thisyear have done so much for the areaand for North Carolina, Guralinicksaid.

    Contact the Arts Editorat [email protected].

    to peen ige ono in Ocobe

    Mini()e ceionVisiT THe eXHibiT

    Time: 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Tues. to Fri.,11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sat., ends July 23Location: 220 B S. Churton St.,Hillsborough

    by THankful cromarTiestaff writEr

    Stepping through the door of theHillsborough Arts Council Gallery,its easy to feel like Alice entering

    Wonderland.But dont worry youre not a

    giant. The art just shrank.The councils most recent exhi-

    bition of miniature art challenged

    professional artists from five localcounties to create visual art piecesmeasuring 6 inches or smaller ineach dimension.

    Its very meditative to dodetailed work on a small scale, saidJean Cerasani, a textile and porce-lain artist from nearby Saxapahaw

    who is featured in the show.Nearly 150 pieces by 40 artists

    are included in the exhibition.Every artist who submitted their

    work is represented in the gallery.The artists were allowed to enterup to 10 pieces.

    Gallery coordinator ReneeMontague presents and organizesthe gallerys exhibitions.

    We want to give as many oppor-tunities to professional artists as wecan, said Montague, who is also onthe councils board.

    Leigh Mahar, who works pri-marily with mixed metals and col-lages, cites the many benefits ofminiature pieces.

    It makes it more affordable forcustomers. Plus, if I get bored eas-ily, I can just move on to the nextone, Mahar said.

    Montague noted that the artistssubmitted their work to the min-iatures exhibition free of charge

    providing incentive for many ofthem to participate in the show.

    There arent that many freeopportunities anymore, saidJeannette Brossart, whose mosa-ics are featured in the show.

    All works displayed in the gal-lery are required to be for sale.

    The organization takes a 30percent commission, which willeventually go to fund a new, largergallery.

    Established in December 2009,the gallery is a program of theHillsborough Arts Council anonprofit organization responsiblefor enhancing cultural and artisticaspects of the town.

    Now more than 20 years old, thecouncil is extending its influencein the community as Hillsboroughdraws in more artists.

    With the addition of numerousprivate galleries and new busi-nesses, the once-rural town is inthe midst of big changes.

    Hillsborough is attracting moreartistic people artists, musicians,

    writers, Montague said.Even as other visual art spaces

    already exist in Hillsborough,Montague says the councils galleryserves a unique purpose.

    Because its nonprofit, it worksin ways for-profit galleries cant,Montague said, adding that

    because the gallery is not con-cerned with maximizing profits, itis able to expose the public to moreunique artistic concepts, such as aminiatures exhibition.

    Contact the Arts Editorat [email protected].

    dth/stEphEn mitchEll

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    Gallery shrinkslocal art scene

    cDwanePowell ke

    te (re)ne &obee

    Raleighs Medal of Arts recipients

    Nancy OlsonereQ reBk &m 1984

    ceeeWilliam IveyLong ety a.

    ceJ. MarkScearcey

    ezee

    Banks C.Talley, Jr. e eeeee e n.c.syy

    Ruth Green tele agey cce re

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  • 8/9/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for July 15, 2010

    8/10

  • 8/9/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for July 15, 2010

    9/10

    9News thursday, july 15, 2010The Daily Tar Heel

    O op of SpChapel Hill is getting revamped

    in pizzarias, Italian restaurants, andburger joints. See pg. 3 for story.

    Rls fs

    Six artists from Raleigh, includinga Tony-award-winning costumer, toreceive awards. See pg. 7 for story.

    L of LoRaleighs The Love Language

    talks about their new record deal.See pg. 3 for Q & A.

    Wos wo s

    Whose resume has the prereqsto succeed UNC-system PresidentErskine Bowles? See pg. 5 for story.

    Sx cs smll

    Area artists display their miniworks of art at the HillsboroughArts Council. See pg. 7 for story.

    gme

    Solution tolast weeks puzzle

    Complete the gridso each row, columnand 3-by-3 box (in

    bold borders) con-tains every digit 1to 9.

    2009 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.

    Level: 1 2 3 4

    (C)2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All rights reserved.L Agele Time Daily Cd Puzzle

    ACross1 Country bumpkin5 In itself

    11 When doubled, a dance14 Tangelo relative15 Baums good witch16 Livys I love17 *Hooch from the

    hinterlands19 Gun20 Sends again, as a package21 WellPoint competitor23 Computer list24 Stated26 Like a case before the

    court29 *Spears or Twain34 It covers the pupil36 __-Man37 Youngest Bront38 Brian who produced some

    U2 albums39 *Steve Forbes proposed a

    17% one42 Lyric poem43 Fruit covering45 Madama Butterfly tie46 Hid, cardsharp-style48 *Place to get tickets51 Deviates52 Parcel (out)53 Sale warning55 Marina locale58 Certifies under oath61 Daisy __62 I Cant Help Myself

    singers (1965), and hint topuzzle theme found in

    beginnings of answers tostarred clues

    66 Lemon ending67 Exalt68 Toreador Song, e.g.69 Cougar or Impala70 Property to divide, perhaps71 Monthly payment

    Down1 Run smoothly2 Borodin prince3 Detectives need4 Brother or father5 Encore!6 Err7 Errs, morally8 Leipzig link9 B followers

    10 Game show winnersdestination, maybe

    11 Market offering12 Service finale13 Bright star18 1994 Denis Leary comedy22 Flamboyant Dame24 Tiff

    25 Songwriters org.26 Harsh27 Pagliacci baritone role28 Where the 2009 World

    Series was won30 About the eye31 Garden statue32 Word after East or West33 Oboes and clarinets35 Up in the air40 Irish Roses lover41 Missionary St. Francis __44 Stadium topper47 Light cigarette ad claim

    49 In fine __: fit50 Enjoy a bistro54 Knucklehead55 Apple with an electronic

    core56 Zilch57 Lewd look58 Aqua Velva alternative59 Ripped off60 Turn in a kissing game63 Towel word64 Newt, at one time65 Made a lap

    You deal with music like that awesomehotdog eating champ deals with hot dogs.Youre just shoving it in all the time.

    BJ BuRtOn,The love language

    done. Just to be out of the band,laying in silence.

    SM:Yeah, you deal with musickind of like that awesome hotdogeating champ deals with hotdogs.

    Youre just shoving it in all thetime, as much as you can.

    MT: Trying not to take time tothink about how full you are.

    Dive: Do you ever feel burnedout, like the pace is wearing on you?

    MT: Stus horoscope actuallytold him to step it up, so I dontthink it matters how tired we are.

    Weve just got to step it up.

    BB: Every time Ive felt burnedout, or I felt like the band might

    be burned out, something excitinghappens, and we totally just go tothe next level of being burned out.

    We havent been burned out yet.

    MT: Were not burn outs!

    Dive: What do you hope peo-ple take from the new album?

    SM: I hope I take away $13.98.Im kidding, Im kidding! I hopethey go get it online. Im kidding! Ihope they take away I think itsa very big intimate record.

    Ive been thinking about it a lot.Its not a house party record. Itsmore like come home hung overfrom the party the night before andput it on, and its like this big-ass

    blanket of sound.

    Dive: Was your debut thehouse party record?

    SM: There were some songs you could make a good house party

    mix with some Love Languagesongs, but theres some soft stuff.

    Its weird. Im trying to describeit. You know Velvet Undergroundsthird record, the self-titled? Its arecord I think you listen to by your-self, and this records very differentfrom that in a way, in the sonics.

    Theres a lot going on and thesongs are huge, but I still feel likeits an intimate record. Its meantto be one-on-one with t he listener.Thats how it is for me, but thereare some tracks you can dance to.

    BB: I think if you let it, itlltake you.

    SM: Youve kind of got to justhang out with it by yourself.

    Dive: And what do you hopepeople take from the show?

    SM: A couple of T-shirts.

    MT:Weve got some special printart from Ron Liberti too. You should

    walk away with that as well. Man, Idont know, thats personal. I hope alot of people go home with a date.

    SM: I want people to havetears in their eyes. With a date, Ilike that. I dont know, just a realgood feeling. I dont know, thatshard for me to answer. I think Idcome off sounding pretentious.

    I want them to say that they sawthe fourth best show of their lives.

    We dont want to be the best show yeah we do.

    BB: Top five.

    MT: Fifth best is the fourthloser, right?

    Contact the Diversions Editorat [email protected].

    LOve Languagefrom page 3

    New poicie o peven ckBy CaROLine CORRigansTaff wriTer

    With nearly 30,000 attemptedhacks per day into University com-puting resources, UNC InformationTechnology Services is now imple-menting eight new policies to helpresolve security issues after a stateaudit showed holes in the system.

    Every few years, the N.C. Office ofthe State Auditor performs a generalexamination of the computer sys-tems of universities across the state.

    The main thing we look at iswhether or not the functions of thecomputer system are restricted to thepeople who have a need for them todo their job, said Dennis Patterson,spokesman for the audit agency.

    We go in and check the wholeoperation Is it secure? Can hack-ers get in there?

    The audit, finished in May,showed that UNCs system is tooopen, and that it is in need of a morecentralized operation in order to

    be more restrictive about who hasaccess to certain information.

    Larry Conrad, vice chancellorfor information technology, said

    risks associated with such securityweaknesses include identity theft.

    There have been instanceswhere staff, faculty and studentshave had Social Security numbers,financial and other personal infor-mation exposed, he said.

    To counteract the possible risksexposed by the state audit, ITS intro-

    duced a new set of policies theyvebeen drafting for the last two yearsin anticipation of the audit report.

    One of the policies, called theInformation Security Policy, ensuresprotection from accidental or inten-tional unauthorized modification,destruction or disclosure of impor-tant personal information.

    Other policies focus on protec-tion of passwords, health informa-tion, institutional data and incidentmanagement.

    The standards by which they(N.C. Office of the State Auditor)

    were assessing us were more strin-gent, which is appropriate given theage were living in, Conrad said. We

    were able to show the state auditorthe policy drafts which articulate

    what we believe are good practices.

    Though these security weak-nesses might sound like impend-ing dangers, Patterson said theyare actually quite average.

    We find this problem fairlyoften at the university level becauseso many people use computers, hesaid. UNC is not an unusual case.

    Some students feel that a bal-

    ance between accessible and pri-vate information is necessary.

    The University extended the fed-eral Family Educational Rights andPrivacy Act(FERPA) to students sothey can opt out of exposing any per-sonal information.

    I think there should be some-thing in-between having openinformation and blocking informa-tion through the (FERPA) policy,sophomore Casey Smith said.

    Other students said they are com-fortable with giving the Universitytheir personal information.

    Its the same as giving infor-mation when applying for a job,senior Mitch Montgomery said.

    Contact the University Editorat [email protected].

    See new recruitsearly at Pro-Am

    JOnathan JOneSnoT a role model

    A

    single lower level, mid-court ticket to this yearsshowdown between North

    Carolina and Duke in the SmithCenter is selling for $1,400.

    Tickets to see four Tar Heelsgo up against three fresh facesat Duke this summer and sitcourtside are free.

    Jerry Stackhouse and Co. hasput together one of the best sum-mer basketball tournaments notonly in the area, but in the nation.Pulling from the Triangle schools,the S.J.G Greater N.C. Pro-Ampits some of the biggest collegiatestars against each other just a fewmiles down the road in Durham.

    N.C. Centrals McLendon-McDougald Gym serves as thehost arena for what promoters ofthe event call the Rucker of theSouth. With 3,000 seats, the gymhas seen a packed crowd severaltimes this summer since the Pro-

    Am began on July 1.On opening night, fans got

    to see Raleigh native and No. 1draft pick John Wall sit on the

    bench alongside Stackhousewhile taking in the first action ofthe tournament.

    Other pros like Kevin Durant,Marvin Williams and Josh Powellare on rosters across the 11-teamshowcase.

    Team Stackhouse is stackedwith UNC talent. Rising juniorJustin Watts, rising sophomoreJohn Henson and incoming fresh-men Harrison Barnes and ReggieBullock are all on the roster forTeam Stackhouse.

    Along with the quartet, UNCclass of 2015 recruit P.J. Hairstonis also on the roster.

    For many in the area, its their

    first look at Barnes and theirchance to see what all the fuss isabout.

    And after I watched this guyplay, I think he is deserving of thehype.

    Hes able to use his 6-foot-8,210-pound frame intelligently

    while also proving he has rangeon his jump shot. Barnes scored32 points en route to his teams76-72 overtime win against Team212. Barnes, Bullock and Hensoncombined to score the teams first51 points of the game.

    Team Stackhouse will alsoface an N.C. State quintet onJuly 20 at 9 p.m. WolfpackersTracy Smith, Lorenzo Brown,Ryan Harrow, C.J. Leslie andC.J. Williams are all on the TeamMcGladrey roster.

    The two teams met Tuesday

    and event organizers had to pushthe game from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. fora more primetime feel.

    Team Stackhouse defeated TeamMcGladrey 82-72, with Bullockposting a game-high 30 points andBarnes chipping in with 25 to beatthe N.C. State squad.

    On July 29, Team Stackhousetakes on Team Jamison at 8 p.m.Team Jamison, named after for-mer UNC standout and nationalplayer of the year AntawnJamison, features Blue DevilsJosh Hairston, Miles Plumlee andSeth Curry, who transferred last

    year from Liberty and has yet toplay in a game for Duke.

    The gym will probably be filledto capacity well before the 8 p.m.tipoff, and the two shades of blue

    will drape the seats.

    Its your chance to see the fresh-men begin the storied rivalry beforethose who can afford the seats inthe Smith Center and Cameron.

    Go.

    Contact Jonathan Jones [email protected].

    dTh file phoTo

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    Ciion m f ock

    By JOnathan JOneSsporTs ediTor

    Quan Sturdivants draft stockmight have taken a blow after

    Albemarle police cited him forpossession of marijuana Saturdaymorning.

    The North Carolina rising seniorlinebacker was cited at a Bojanglesparking lot near his hometown ofOakboro at 11:15 a.m. on July 10.

    Police say Sturdivant, 21, hadless than half an ounce in his pos-

    session. The misdemeanor couldmean up to 10 days in jail forSturdivant, who is scheduled toappear in court on Aug. 2.

    We are disappointed in Quansactions over the weekend, saidUNC coach Butch Davis in astatement.

    This is not the type of behaviorwe expect from our student-ath-letes. In addition to the outcomeof the legal process, he also willface disciplinary action from with-in the football program beginningimmediately.

    Players report to training campon Aug. 5, just a few days afterSturdivants court date, with theteams first game on Sept. 4 againstLSU in Atlanta.

    Sturdivant was featured in the

    ticket promo on tarheelblue.com forUNCs season opener against LSU

    but was replaced Tuesday with anew graph