The Daily Tar Heel for October 29, 2013
-
Upload
the-daily-tar-heel -
Category
Documents
-
view
216 -
download
0
Transcript of The Daily Tar Heel for October 29, 2013
-
7/27/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for October 29, 2013
1/10
Graduation success rate of UNC athletesThe NCAA reported last week that the graduation success rate of Division I athletes who entered
college in 2006 has risen to 82 percent. Some UNC teams fall below the national average.
SOURCE: HTTP://WWW.UNC.EDU DTH/HAILEY JOHNS
0
20
40
60
80
100
Football MensBasketball
MensSoccer
WomensSoccer
FieldHockey
GSR
Percent
athletes as well as examining itsstudy hall and tutoring programs,she said. Among the new initia-tives, Brown said shes excited bythe work of the Student Athlete
Academic Initiative WorkingGroup, a new program led byExecutive Vice Chancellor andProvost Jim Dean.
The nine-member work-ing group includes Dean and
Brown, as well as AthleticsDirector Bubba Cunninghamand three UNC professors.
While the groups focus is onsuccess at each stage of a stu-dent athletes academic career admission, advising, supportand graduation Dean said thegroup is also trying to tailor a
Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893
Hom wh w hod d omob.catHerine pulsifer
Tuesday, October 29, 2013dailytarheel.comVolume 121, Issue 101
Affordable housing in jeopardy
dth/melissa key
Chapel Hill resident Dawn Lancaster will have to leave her home after her lease runs out in July after seven years in her apartment.
By Caroline HudsonSenior Writer
After seven years in her apartment, DawnLancaster will have to find a new home when herlease runs out in July.
Lancaster relies on a Section 8 housing vouch-er so she can afford her rent.
Lancasters Chapel Hill apartment is run byGSC Apartment Homes, one of the largest apart-ment management firms in Chapel Hill. The com-
pany recently stopped accepting Section 8 vouch-ers forcing residents like Lancaster that rely onthose vouchers to look for a new place to live.
The U.S. Department of Housing and UrbanDevelopment Housing Choice Voucher Program,
which is also known as Section 8, is designed tohelp low-income families, the elderly and the dis-abled afford private housing.
Private housing complex owners are notrequired to accept the vouchers.
GSC Apartment Homes operates nine apartmentcomplexes in the Chapel Hill and Carrboro area.
Lancaster said she thinks people using theSection 8 vouchers are viewed as lazy, which shesays is not always true.
Ive always been independent all my life, shesaid. I put in my time.
She said she has loans to pay on top of monthlyrent, making it difficult to find money for groceries.
And her car doesnt run, limiting her mobility.
a b do
Terry Meyers, regional vice president at GSC
Apartment firm stops accepting Section 8 vouchers, forces people to move
ECSU may cut history program NC StateFair worker
injuredThe ccdent n Mndy ws the
secnd ne n fu dys.
Athlete success rate above NCAA average
By Sarah BrownAssistant State & National Editor
As UNC-system schools con-tinue to make tough decisionsin a difficult financial climate,Elizabeth City State Universityis considering discontinuing itshistory program a move thatcould be virtually unprecedent-ed for a public university.
Earlier this fall, system GeneralAdministration staff directed the16 system universities to recom-mend low-productivity degreeprograms for discontinuation byNovember. ECSU, a historically
black school with an enrollmentof about 2,400 students, receiveda nearly 10 percent cut to itsstate funding this year.
Ten programs at the school fitthe systems criteria for low pro-ductivity. ECSU administrators
determined that three of them middle grades education, specialeducation and a master of sciencein biology are central to theuniversitys mission and will not
be considered for elimination.Seven programs history,
political science, physics, geology,studio art, marine environmentalscience and industrial technology are still in limbo. If the sevenare discontinued, some course-
work in each area will still beoffered at ECSU, said Ali Khan,provost and vice chancellor ofacademic affairs, in a statement.
UNC-system policy deemsthat degree programs must haveat least 20 graduates in the lasttwo years and at least 26 majorsto avoid the low-productivitydesignation.
ECSU history professor TedMitchell sent an email Thursdayto inform UNC-systems historydepartment chairs that ECSUsprogram might be eliminated.
Really, one would thinkhistory would be central to(ECSUs) mission, Mitchell said
in an interview.He said he thinks ECSUs his-
tory program could have falleninto the low-productivity cat-egory by mistake. He said thatdue to a possible glitch in theECSU computer system, some
students majoring in historymight not have been accountedfor by his estimates, there aremore than 30 history majors.
Still, some UNC-system his-tory faculty were troubled thatECSUs history program couldfold and did not know of a four-
year public university that hasdiscontinued its history major.
Theres a message that youresending when you say, Im noteven going to have this here,said Jim Grossman, execu-tive director of the AmericanHistorical Association.
Grossman said there is ironyin a historically black universitylacking a history degree.
Youre talking to students
whose parents in many caseswent through a period of his-tory thats very important to the
By Sarah MoseleyStaff Writer
The NCAA revealedlast Thursday that UNCs
Graduation Success Rate forstudent-athletes is 86 percent 4 percent more than thenational average.
Steve Kirschner, seniorassociate athletic director forcommunications, said in a pressrelease that these figures are
based on the entering classesfrom 2003-04 to 2006-07.
The GSR, which measures theproportion of student-athletesthat graduate, includes transferstudents and athletes who grad-uate within six years in goodacademic standing.
Michelle Brown, director ofthe Academic Support Programfor Student Athletes, said thenumbers are still worth cel-ebrating even though they arefrom past years.
The student athletes aredoing really well, she said. Itsa great accomplishment on theirpart.
Ten varsity UNC teams
scored 100 percent, includingmen and womens fencing, fieldhockey, womens golf, gymnas-tics, rowing, womens swimmingand diving, men and womenstennis and volleyball, accordingto the press release.
Brown said her programconsiders the NCAAs GSR and
Academic Progress Rates togauge how students are doingand see how they can improvestudent-athlete success.
This year, the ASPSA is initiat-ing a new structure that encour-ages individualized support for
Sx the ms eu f elmntn t
the N.C. schl.
UNCs dutn tef student thletes s
86 ecent.
prograMS aT riSkSeven programs at Elizabeth
City State University are being
considered for discontinuation.
History
Political science
Physics
Geology
Studio art
Marine environmental
science
Industrial technology
black experience they wentthrough that transformationfrom Jim Crow, he said. Thatexperience, its absolutely crucialto any understanding of where
African-Americans are todayand what they can do.
Fitzhugh Brundage, UNC-
CHs history department chair-
see eCSU prograMS, Page 5
see SUCCeSS raTe, Page 5
see SeCTioN 8, Page 5
By Kathryn TrogdonStaff Writer
An N.C. State Fair worker was injured whiledisassembling a ride after the fairs 2013 runended Sunday night the second accident in fourdays on the fairgrounds.
Brian Long, a State Fair spokesman, said a fairworker was injured at around 3:30 a.m. Mondaywhile he was dismantling one of the two rides atthe fair called the Vortex the other Vortex ride atthe fair was the site of another accident last week.
The worker was transported to WakeMed hos-pitals with a leg injury, Long said.
Monday also marked the first court appear-ance for Timothy Dwayne Tutterrow, a fair worker
who was arrested and charged with three countsof assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious
bodily injury. The charges come after a Thursdayaccident on the other Vortex ride that injured fivepeople, who were also taken to WakeMed hospitals.
Two have been released, while AnthonyGorham, 29; Kisha Gorham, 39; and a 14-year-old youth were still hospitalized as of Monday.
Wake County Sheriff Donnie Harrison has said aninspection found the ride had been tampered withand critical safety devices were compromised.
Richard Johnson, chief of operations at theNorth Carolina Sheriffs Association, said the judgedenied to lower Tutterrows $225,000 bond. He saidTutterrows preliminary court date is set for Nov. 18.
Attendance at the fair for the two days after theaccident was down from last years attendance forthe same days Fridays attendance was about10,000 less, and Saturdays attendance was 17,000less than 2012.
Its hard to say whether the decline was com-pletely because of the accident, he said. Friday andSaturday nights were quite chilly, and that appearedto affect the size of the fairs nighttime crowd.
The years total attendance was 927,563 about 37,700 people fewer than last year.
Amanda Thompson, a UNC junior, said sherode the Vortex less than an hour before the inci-dent took place. But she said the accident didntstop her from going back to the fair again Sunday.
I thought it was pretty scary, but I still went backyesterday and rode a bunch of rides because its fun,she said. Im not worried about that happeningagain. They seem to have that under control.
TRANSFORMING LIVESA Ban Against Neglect educates, em-
ploys and empowers impoverished
women in Ghana through the power
o ashion. pg 7
Wednesdays weaher
todays weaher
Inside
UNC STUDENT CONGRESS
TO VOTE ON ASG TIESStudent Congress will vote today
whether to pull the University out o
the Association o Student Govern-
ments ater debate regarding its
efciency and use o student unds.
pg 9
Shorts? Pants?Dunno. H 75, L 54
Same ol, same ol.H 70, L 52
This day in history
OCTOBER 29, 1618
Sir Walter Raleigh is beheaded
in London or conspiracy at the
demand o King James I. Raleigh
organized the frst English settle-
ment in America, which is in
Roanoke, N.C.
-
7/27/2019 The Daily Tar Heel for October 29, 2013
2/10
today
Alfr Uana Rbrts:This
installment o the Southern
music series will eature New
Orleans percussionist Uganda
Roberts.
Tm: Noon 1 p.m.
Lcatn: Pleasants Family As
sembly Room, Wilson Library
Wmn n Ma Lars
Srs wt Mar Junc: Mary
Junck, chairwoman o the board
o directors o the Associated
Press, will headline a talk about
womens journalism leadership.
Tm: 4 p.m. 5 p.m.
Lcatn: Carroll Hall Room 111
Trlls an Clls Tur: Learn
the history and legends behind
campus haunts and spirits.
Tm: 8 p.m. 9 p.m.
Lcatn: UNC Visitors Center,
Morehead Planetarium
Wednesday
Fr lctur n frn lc
an natnal scurt:Thomas
Donilon, a ormer national secu
Someone broke andentered a vehicle at 2701Homestead Road between2 a.m. and 1:45 p.m. Friday,according to Chapel Hillpolice reports.
The person stole a laptop, asmartphone and a backpack,
valued at $1,725, from anunlocked car, reports state.
Someone stole moneyfrom a building at 200 PlantRoad between 9 a.m. and4 p.m. Friday, according toChapel Hill police reports.
The person took $150 froman office safe, reports state.
Someone used someoneelses license number at 102Pinegate Circle between10:30 a.m. and 11:14 a.m.Friday, according to ChapelHill police reports.
Someone brought alco-hol and a knife onto schoolproperty at 750 S. Merritt MillRoad at 11 a.m. Friday, accord-
ing to Chapel Hill policereports.
Someone committedsimple assault and com-municated threats at 112 1/2
W. Franklin St. at 2:57 a.m.Sunday, according to ChapelHill police reports.
The person struck anotherperson in the face and threat-
ened to kill them, reports state.
Someone vandalizedproperty and disturbed thepeace at 100 Forsyth Drive at1:30 a.m. Sunday, accordingto Chapel Hill police reports.
The person broke a glassdoor and kicked the frontdoor, causing damage esti-mated at $800, reports state.
Someone stole a pumpkinat 107 N. Columbia St. at 3:01a.m. Saturday, according toChapel Hill police reports.
The person took a pump-kin, valued at $10, from acounter, reports state.
To make a calendar submission,
email [email protected]. Please include the date of
the event in the subject line, andattach a photo if you wish. Events
will be published in the newspaperon either the day or the day before
they take place.
CoMMUnIty CaLendaR
rity adviser to President Barack
Obama and journalist who inter
viewed Edward Snowden, will
give lecture on oreign policy.
Tm: 5:30 p.m. 7 p.m.
Lcatn: Genome Sciences,
Room 100
PoLICe LoG
NewsTuesday, October 29, 2013 The Daily Tar Heel2
www.dailytarheel.com
Established 1893120 years of editorial freedom
The Daily Tar Heel
NiCoLe CoMpARAToEDITOR-IN-CHIEF
CAMMie BeLLAMyMANAGING EDITOR
kATie SWeeNeyVISUAL MANAGING EDITOR
MiChAeL LANANNAONLINE MANAGING EDITOR
BRiAN FANNeyDIRECTOR OF [email protected]
AMANdA ALBRighTUNIVERSITY EDITOR
JeNNy SURANeCITY EDITOR
MAdeLiNe WiLLSTATE & NATIONAL EDITOR
BRooke pRyoRSPORTS EDITOR
JoSephiNe yURCABA
ARTS [email protected]
ALLiSoN hUSSeyDIVERSIONS EDITOR
RACheL hoLTDESIGN & GRAPHICS EDITOR
ChRiS CoNWAyPHOTO EDITOR
BRiTTANy heNdRiCkSMULTIMEDIA EDITOR
LAURie BeTh hARRiS,TARA JeFFRieS
COPY [email protected]
NeAL SMiThSPECIAL SECTIONS [email protected]
dANieL pShoCk
Contact Managing EditorCammie Bellamy at
[email protected] news tips, comments, corrections
or suggestions.
tIPs
Mail and Office: 151 E. Rosemary St.Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Nicole Comparato, Editor-in-Chief,962-4086
Advertising & Business, 962-1163News, Features, Sports, 962-0245
One copy per person;additional copies may be purchased
at The Daily Tar Heel for $.25 each.Please report suspicious activity atour distribution racks by emailing
2013 DTH Media Corp.All rights reserved
CoRReCtIons
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed on this page. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections
printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Cammie Bellamy at [email protected] with issues about this policy.
Like us at facebook.com/dailytarheel Follow us on Twitter @dailytarheel
ediToRiAL STAFFAssstant etrs: SamanthaSabin, arts; McKenzie Coey, PaigeLadisic, Holly West, city;AustinPowell, Martha Upton, MaddisonWood, copy;Mary Burke, DanielleHerman, Cece Pascual, design &
graphics;Chris Powers,
diversions;
Mary Stevens, multimedia; MichaelDickson, opinion;Kevin Hu, KakiPope, Halle Sinnott, photography;Aaron Dodson, Grace Raynor,Daniel Wilco, sports;Sarah Brown,Lucinda Shen, state & national;Caroline Leland, Daniel Schere,Andy Willard, universityArts: Sarah Ang, Elizabeth Baker,Melissa Bendixen, Tatyana Berdan,Megan Caron, Juanita Chavarro,Gabriella Cirelli, Edmond Harrison,Katherine Hjerpe, Paige Hopkins,Jaleesa Jones, Breanna Kerr, AllyLevine, Karishma Patel, RebeccaPollack, Rupali Srivastava, KristinTajili, Elizabeth TewCty: Katie Reilly, senior writer;Marissa Bane, Elizabeth Bartholf,Andy Bradshaw, Tyler Clay, AaronCranford, Davin Eldridge, ChaseEverett, Sam Fletcher, GravesGanzert, Oliver Hamilton, CarolineHudson, Corinne Jurney, PaulKushner, Anna Long, Patrick Millett,Mary Helen Moore, JonathanMoyer, Jordan Nash, Claire Ogburn,Will Parker, Olivia Page-Pollard,Patrick Ronan, Zoe Schaver, JasminSingh, Claire Smith, Morgan Swift,Jeremy Vernon, Caleb Waters,
Kelsey Weekman, Steven WrightCy: Abigail Armstrong, Chandler
Carpenter, Sarah Chaney, CatherineCheney, Andrew Craig, Claire Ebbitt,Sofia Leiva Enamorado, MadelineErdossy, Amanda Gollehon, KerrisGordon, Alison Krug, KatharineMcAnarney, Kealia Reynolds, LizTablazon, Lauren Thomas, CaleighToppins, McKenzie Vassdsn & grahcs: HeatherCaudill, Olivia Frere, Kelsie Gibson,Alex Grimm, Emily Helton, HaileyJohns, Kaitlyn Kelly, IsabellaKinkelaar, Sarah Lambert, DanielLockwood, Paola Perdomo, AlliePolk, Cassie Schutzer, Bruna Silva,Caroline Stewart, Zach Walkerdvrsns:Tess Boyle, JamesButler, John Butler, Olivia Farley,Lizzie Goodell, Mac Gushanas,Amanda Hayes, Bo McMillan, MballaMendouga, Elizabeth Mendoza,Kylie Piper, Charlie Shelton, JamesStramm, Jeremy WileMultma: September Brown,Lily Fagan, Candace Howze, KarlaJimenez, Alexis Jordan, AmandaLalezarian, Diane Lionn: Trey Bright, DylanCunningham, Gabriella Kostrzewa,Alexandra Willcox, Kern Williams,Sierra Wingate-Bey, editorialboard; Hol ly Beilin, Megan Cassella,Michael Dickson, Alex Karsten,Alex Keith, Glenn Lippig, TreyMangum, Graham Palmer,Katherine Proctor, Memet Walker,columnists;Guilly Contreras,Michael Hardison, Matthew Leming,
Ginny Niver, Matt Pressley, DanielPshock, cartoonists
pht: Spencer Herlong, MelissaKey, senior photographers; ShaeAllison, Aisha Anwar, MiriamBahrami, Isabella Bartolucci, LouiseMann Clement, Claire Collins,Brennan Cumalander, BernadineDembosky, Kathleen Doyle,Kearney Ferguson, Ani Garrigo,Aramide Gbadamosi, Chris Griffin,Rachel Hare, Kathleen Harrington,Sydney Hanes, Catherine Hemmer,Natalie Hoberman, AriannaHolder, LaMon Johnson, PhoebeJollay-Castelblanco, Elise Karsten,Kasha Mammone, Mary MeadeMcMullan, Callaghan OHare, MattRenn, Brookelyn Riley, CameronRobert, Logan Savage, Sarah Shaw,Chloe Stephenson, Taylor Sweet,Benjamin Welsh, Katie Williams,Jason WolonickSrts: Robbie Harms, JonathanLaMantia, Michael Lananna, seniorwriters;Brandon Chase, Ben Coley,Carlos Collazo, Kate Eastman, DylanHowlett, Hannah Lebowitz, WesleyLima, Lindsay Masi, Max Miceli,Kevin Phinney, Haley Rhyne, BenSalkeld, Logan Ulrich, Edgar Walker,Madison WayStat & Natnal: Meredith Burns,Eric Garcia, John Howell, senior writ-ers; Kelly Anderson, Paul Best, ClaireBennett, Blair Burnett, Kate Caison,Lindsay Carbonell, Taylor Carrere,Ashley Cocciadiferro, ZacheryEanes, Katherine Ferguson, HayleyFowler, Jr., Brian Freskos, Lauren
Kent, Olivia Lanier, Mary TylerMarch, Nick Niedzwiadek, Sharon
Nunn, Benji Schwartz, KathrynTrogdon, Amy Tsai, Kali Whitaker,Marshall Winchester, MelodyYoshizawaUnvrsty: Jordan Bailey, CaitlinMcCabe, Sam Schaefer, Hailey Vest
senior writer;Kate Albers, Jake
Barach, Naomi Baumann-Carbrey,Corey Buhay, Mary Frances Buoyer,Emily Byrd, Trevor Casey, KristenChung, Tyler Confoy, CarolynCoons, Resita Cox, Marisa DiNovis,Carolyn Ebeling, Brooke Eller, LillianEvans, Kate Fedder, Maddie Flager,Zachary Freshwater, Lauren Gil,Keaton Green, Kate Grise, SarahHeadley, Jordan Jackson, KellyJasiura, Elizabeth Kemp, JacksonKnapp, Farhan Lakhany, MiaMadduri, Katharine McAnarney,Colleen Moir, Sarah Moseley, SarahNiss, Catherine ONeill, AmandaRaymond, Samantha Reid, TarynRothstein, Bradley Saacks, SaraSalinas, Sam Schaefer, RachelSchmitt, Randy Short, Kristen Skill,Janell Smith, Langston Taylor,Hunter Toro, Hailey Vest, AmyWatson, Haley Waxman, LynsayWilliams, Hannah Wood, Eden Yepructn assstant: Katie QuineNwsrm avsr: Erica Pereletral pructn: Stacy Wynn,managerprntn:Triangle Web Printing Co.dstrbutn: Stacy Wynn, manager;Nick and Sarah Hammonds.
The Daily Tar Heel is published by the DTH Media Corp., a nonproit North Carolina corporation,
Monday through Friday, according to the University calendar. Callers with questions about billing or
display advertising should call 9621163 between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Classiied ads can be reached
at 9620252. Editorial questions should be directed to 9620245.
oFFiCe: 151 E. Rosemary St.U.S. MAiL AddReSS: P.O. Box 3257,
Chapel Hill, NC 275153257
Busnss an Avrtsn: KevinSchwartz, director/general man-ager;Renee Hawley, advertisingdirector;Lisa Reichle, business man-ager; Molly Ball, printadvertisingmanager;Hannah Peterson, socialmedia manager.
Custmr Srvc: Chessa DeCain,Marcela Guimaraes and TaylorHartley, representatives.dslay Avrtsn: DanaAnderson, Marisa Dunn, David Egan,Katherine Ferguson, Emma Gentry,Sarah Jackson, Victoria Karagiogis,
Dylan McCue, Jordan Phillips, AshtonRatcliffe, Hales Ross Kush Shah andAlex Walkowski, account executives;Zane Duffner and Nicole Leonard, assistant account executives.dtal Avrtsn: MargretheWilliams, manager.
Avrtsn pructn: BethOBrien, creative manager;AshleyAnderson, Hunter Lewis and ChelseaMayse, assistants.
pRoFeSSioNAL ANd BUSiNeSS STAFF
ISN #10709436
The Daily Tar Heel
NoTed. Those who like thesmell of bacon can nowenjoy it on a momentsnotice, thanks to newsmartphone technology.
Scentee attaches toheadphone sockets andreleases a burst of fra-grance on command.
QUoTed. Obama said copsalways listen to women.
John Henry Shiffner,an 18-year-old Florida man,in a squabble during an
arrest, according to policereports. Shiffner was arrest-ed for allegedly assaultinghis 30-year-old girlfriend.
In what may just be the most backwards
charity move ever, The Dallas SaariClub in Texas plans to auction o the
opportunity or one bidder to hunt an
endangered black rhino in Namibia to ben-
eft the Save the Rhino Trust, which seeks to
save the endangered animal.
This is about saving a species, not one
animal, said Ben Carter, executive director or
the club. Not sure i awul or yep, awul. The
undraiser is apparently the frst (and what we
hope is the last) o its kind.
Kill one, save speciesFrom staf and wire reports
DAILYDOSE
CompSci@Carolinaisoneofthehighestpaidmajorsoncampus
WHAT
CANT YOU
DO WITH A
CS DEGREE?/HWXVNQRZZKHQ\RXQGRXW
0HDQZKLOHFRPHQGRXWZKDW\RXcan do
with a degree in computer science at the
Computer Science
8QGHUJUDGXDWH
Open House
7XHVGD\2FWREHUWK
5:00 PM
Sitterson Hall 014
Swag and free pizza provided.
All majors welcome.
IDFHERRNFRPXQFFRSPVFL WZLWWHUFRPXQFFV
6321625('%