127 YEARS OF SERVING UNC STUDENTS AND THE UNIVERSITY ...€¦ · System interim President Bill...

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Cole Anthony (2) scores a basket against UVA. Elizabeth Durham watches dancers circulating her during Company Carolina’s “Sweet Charity.” The Bell Tower pictured before a football game. Isabella St. Onge colors a Halloween costume design. Students protest a $2.5 million settlement given to the Sons of Confederate Veterans for the preservation of Silent Sam. DTH/MORGAN PIROZZI DTH/PARKER BROWN DTH/ANGELINA KATSANIS DTH/ANGELICA EDWARDS Yes, I’m gone to Carolina in my mind JAMES TAYLOR Your UNC Journey Starts Here FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 2020 VOLUME 128, ISSUE 9 127 YEARS OF SERVING UNC STUDENTS AND THE UNIVERSITY Starting college is one of the greatest transitions that will occur in your young life. From adjusting to dorm living to rushing Franklin Street after Duke games, you’ve got a lot to learn about life at Carolina. Your first semester is likely going to look a lot different than students’ from years past, but the rest of campus will be figuring it out with you. From your friends at The Daily Tar Heel, Welcome to UNC. Here’s what you need to know: NONPROFIT ORG US POSTAGE PAID CHAPEL HILL, NC PERMIT #177 CB #1893 The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Serving the UNC Community since 1893 TO THE PARENTS OF: DTH/DUSTIN DUONG

Transcript of 127 YEARS OF SERVING UNC STUDENTS AND THE UNIVERSITY ...€¦ · System interim President Bill...

Cole Anthony (2) scores a basket against UVA.

Elizabeth Durham watches dancers circulating her during Company Carolina’s “Sweet Charity.”

The Bell Tower pictured before a football game.

Isabella St. Onge colors a Halloween costume design.

Students protest a $2.5 million settlementgiven to the Sons of Confederate Veteransfor the preservation of Silent Sam.

DTH/MORGAN PIROZZI

DTH/PARKER BROWN

DTH/ANGELINA KATSANIS

DTH/ANGELICA EDWARDS

Yes, I’m gone to Carolina in my mindJAMES TAYLOR

Your UNC Journey Starts Here

FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 2020 VOLUME 128, ISSUE 9127 YEARS OF SERVING UNC STUDENTS AND THE UNIVERSITY

Starting college is one of the greatest transitions that will occur in your young life. From adjusting to dorm living to rushing Franklin Street after Duke games,

you’ve got a lot to learn about life at Carolina.

Your first semester is likely going to look a lot different than students’ from years past, but the rest of campus will be figuring it out with you.

From your friends at The Daily Tar Heel, Welcome to UNC. Here’s what you need to know:

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DTH/DUSTIN DUONG

NewsFriday, June 26, 2020 The Daily Tar Heel2

Ackland Art Museum • Carolina Performing Arts • Carolina Public

Humanities • Carolina Student UnionGallery • Center for the Study of the

American South • FedEx Global Education Center • John and June

Allcott Galleries • Kenan Theatre Company • PlayMakers Repertory

Company • Process Series • Public Art• SAMPLE Gallery • Stone Center for

Black Culture & History

ARTSEXPERIENCE

ARTS ENGAGEMENT

Art Lab • Arts LeadershipCollaborative • BeAM

Spaces • Beat Making Lab •Hanes Art Center • Morrison

Art Studio • Student ArtMaking Grants • StudentArts Ambassadors • UNC

Student Arts Orgs

ARTSLEARNING

American Studies • Creative WritingProgram • Department of Art & Art

History • Department of Communication • Department of

Dramatic Art • Department of English &Comparative Literature • Department

of Music • Hussman School ofJournalism & Media • PLUS various

minors and internships across the arts

[email protected]@ArtsEverywhereUNC

@ArtsEverywhere

For a more creativeand curious Carolina

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Dear Class of 2024,

Welcome to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill! We are so excited for you to join our community.

The fall semester will be unlike any other in Carolina’s history. While many of your first experiences at Carolina may not be the same as they were for other classes, you will undoubtedly make your mark in the next four years. You will learn from world-class faculty members, hang out in the Pit, cheer on our athletic teams and make lifelong friends.

You are joining a long line of students who are part of the nation’s first public university. We have a responsibility to provide the best possible education to the citizens of the state of North Carolina and beyond. You have a responsibility to

By Isabella SherkStaff Writer

With an early semester start date, different course model options and new safety guidelines, the 2020 fall classroom experience will be untraditional to say the least.

In an effort to reduce the impacts of a potential second wave of COVID-19, the fall semester will begin Aug. 10, which is eight days earlier than previously planned. Final exams will end Nov. 24, after which students will not return to campus until the spring semester.

In a memo to UNC System chancellors, interim President Bill Roper said universities can choose to begin the spring semester as late as Feb. 15, 2021.

The period between classes has been extended to 30 minutes to limit foot traffic on campus, which means classes will end later in the day. Carolina Together states that instruction will end at 6:10 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, and 7:45 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday.

First-years will register for classes based on their orientation sessions.

According to Student Affairs, orientation sessions 2 through 5 will register July 8-9, sessions 6 through 9 will register July 15-16, sessions 10 through 13 will register July 20-21 and sessions 14 and 15 will do so July 27-28.

Both on- and off-campus instruction will be provided due to some students’ inability to come to campus in the fall.

“All courses, with few exceptions, will have a remote learning option,”

the Carolina Together website states.The University has also laid out four

course models for the fall semester.Face-to-Face/Hybrid: These classes

are only for students who will be on campus, in person in the fall. Online work might be included in addition to the in-person element.

HyFlex: These classes meet in person, though some students join remotely. In-person students may rotate by the day of the week to allow other students to be in the classroom.

Remote & Recitation: These courses are remote with a required synchronous recitation. There will be a mix of remote or face-to-face instruction for courses with multiple recitation sections. For courses with one recitation section, the class will be HyFlex.

Remote Only: Remote-only classes will be taught online, asynchronously, synchronously or a mix of both.

In a campuswide email sent June 18, Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz said face masks are to be worn in all classrooms and indoor common spaces, like bathrooms and hallways, by faculty, staff members, visitors and students.

He also said UNC will provide and pay for masks for those who cannot procure their own.

Social distancing will occur in the classroom, according to Carolina Together. Instructors will have to be at least 6 feet apart from the first row of students, and individuals are required to maintain a minimum distance of 3 feet “mask to mask” in classrooms.

[email protected]

Going to class during a pandemic

Chancellor: Face challenges together

take that education and give back, to serve your state, the nation and the world. This work is truly fundamental to preparing you and your classmates to take on the world’s next grand challenges, and that is why we are back together this fall, even in the midst of a global pandemic.

You have an opportunity to show what it means to be a civic leader by helping to create a new standard of

community care. Along with your classmates, we are asking you to adhere to public health guidelines to help mitigate the spread of COVID-19. This will include new “community standards”: wearing face masks in public places, practicing physical distancing, frequent hand washing and following other state and local guidelines. We are counting on you to accept this responsibility to help protect the health and safety of others. You will learn and grow from this experience and be better prepared to lead during the next pandemic, the next challenge, the next crisis.

We cannot face this challenge without one another. This year, we will focus on “Building Our Community Together” by prioritizing diversity, equity and inclusion throughout the University. Painful issues surrounding

race and racism continue to plague our country and our University, and we know that we have much work to do. We must move forward as a campus with a greater sense of urgency, purpose and action.

In our almost 227-year history, Carol ina has endured many challenges, and has always emerged stronger. I have seen Carolina’s compassion on display time and time again. We will need to call on this compassion in this moment, and I am confident that you will step up in this extraordinary time.

I look forward to meeting you and seeing you on campus. Welcome to your new Carolina home.

Go Heels,

Kevin Guskiewicz

Chancellor Kevin GuskiewiczDTH/DUSTIN DUONG

News Friday, June 26, 2020The Daily Tar Heel 3

STUDYABROADE X P A N D Y O U RC A M P U S

S T U D Y A B R O A D . U N C . E D U

A T T E N D

T O G E TS T A R T E D

STUDYABROAD

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Programs for all majors

Offered in every term

Nearly $1 million inscholarships available

How Chapel Hill will be affected by students returning

By Hannah McClellanSenior Writer

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published on June 3, 2020. Since the time of this article’s original publication, UNC announced students, faculty, staff and visitors will be required to use masks in all classrooms and indoor common spaces during the fall 2020 semester.

It has been a lot quieter in Chapel Hill since the start of UNC’s Spring Break on March 6.

Many students traveled, planning to return to classes on March 16. Following the extended break and move to remote courses to contain the spread of COVID-19, many students did not return. More students left after graduation and the end of the semester.

But on Aug. 10, UNC students will return to Chapel Hill for the first day of class, Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz announced May 21.

The announcement, now housed on a UNC website named “Carolina Together,” details an early start and end to the fall 2020 semester, a phased return of faculty and staff, adjusted class schedules and sizes and public health guidelines to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus. The website will be updated throughout the summer as more details become available, the announcement said.

Some Orange County and Chapel Hill leaders are worried for students to return to campus and think the

DTH/ANGELINA KATSANISA sign on East Franklin Street near Four Corners provides information about safety precautions against COVID-19 on Sunday, June 7, 2020.

Chapel Hill and UNC officials discuss how they will address

students’ return in August.

current University plan lacks many important details.

Orange County Commissioner Penny Rich said she’s thankful for Guskiewicz’s work so far, but thinks there needs to be more clarity regarding how the University will track on-campus cases and who has been in contact with infected people.

“Did you read that roadmap? It’s scary,” Rich said. “Because the students — we don’t know if everybody is coming back, but if so, that’s 30,000 more people in Chapel Hill that we have to be concerned about. And those numbers could tick up pretty fast.”

Interim vice chancellor for student affairs, Jonathan Sauls, recently joined weekly coordination meetings regarding emergency o p e r a t i o n s , R i c h s a i d . H i s participation is important, she said, to help establish a clear line of communication prior to the return of students to campus.

Rich said she hopes to see more details regarding social distancing and sanitation practices in dorms, mandating face masks on and off campus and the safety and efficiency of public transit.

Chapel Hill Transit resumed select weekday routes and schedules on Monday, with a maximum capacity of 10 customers. Rich said she anticipates transportation becoming a “huge problem” once students return and begin using the buses again.

Chapel Hill Mayor Pro Tem Michael Parker said transit is an important example of the coordinated planning that must happen th is summer be fore students return.

“We really need to make sure we’re taking into account what happens with students while they’re on campus but also what happens with students when they’re not on campus and are

integrated into the broader Chapel Hill community,” Parker said. “Chapel Hill Transit is unlikely to have our peak-hour capacity that we would normally have and so it’s important that the University and we work together to think about how we can change class and work schedules if necessary.”

Matt Gladdek is the executive director of Chapel Hill Downtown P a r t n e r s h i p , a n o n p r o f i t organization working to “maintain, enhance and promote downtown as the social, cultural and spiritual center of Chapel Hill through economic development,” according to its website.

Gladdek said the Partnership is working to propose and implement expanded sidewalks in downtown Chapel Hill to create more outdoor, socially distanced space for guests to dine in at restaurants. He said they are hoping to expand those with enough time to test for 30 days before students return.

The Partnership is also working to install hand-sanitizing stations outside and post flyers reminding people of the “three Ws”: wash your hands, wait 6 feet apart from other people and wear a mask. Students are like any other customer, he said, but he hopes they will continue to take the COVID-19 pandemic seriously even after returning from being cooped up at home.

“We’re all in this together, in terms of we all have a responsibility to one another to make sure we’re not putting other people at risk,” he said. “I mean we’re really excited to have students back. It’s been difficult for businesses without all the student support for our local businesses. So we’re very excited to have them back and hope that they will patronize

their favorite businesses to help us all get through this really difficult time.”

Going forward, Rich said she thinks the most important step is to have the vice chancellor for student affairs communicating with the county and then back to campus.

“We couldn’t wait until we did with congregate living facilities in Orange County— we didn’t know it was a hot spot until the governor to ld us , because e ver ything was going through the health department at the state level and then it would bounce back to us,” she said. “So that’s my biggest concern, that we’re open and we’re honest and as soon as we start seeing those cases go up, we have to all pull together and decide what to do.”

Parker said there is a good track record of communication and collaboration between Town Council and the University, but it’s crucial that continues for campus reopening to be safe.

“There’s just a lot that has to be done between the University and Town in making sure that the Town is a full participant in the decision-making process. Because basically any or all decisions that UNC is making will affect the town in very really and important ways,” he said. “It’s the time that we have to double down on it and make sure the University and Town are working as closely together as possible to make sure students are protected and safe and that our residents are protected and safe — we all have to take care of each other.”

@HannerMcClellan [email protected]

NewsFriday, June 26, 2020 The Daily Tar Heel4

Participating in activism safely on campusBy Greta Travaglia

Senior Writer

For decades, members of the UNC community have been involved in protests and social activism efforts, from the Civil Rights Movement and anti-Vietnam War movement to the anti-Apartheid movement and Silent Sam’s removal.

In the weeks following the killing of George Floyd, several student groups, including UNC Black Congress and the Black Student Movement, have been involved in organizing protests against police brutality and systemic racism across the Triangle.

However, given UNC’s safety guidelines for the fall due to the COVID-19 pandemic, questions remain as to how protesting efforts will be carried out on the University’s campus during the upcoming semester.

In an email statement, UNC Media Relations did not address how protesting may change on campus, but offered guidance on healthy and safety community standards.

The University states on the Carolina Together website that the best strategy to reduce COVID-19 transmission is to practice physical distancing and avoid large gatherings and crowded areas. The website also says that individuals, students and community groups should limit in-person events and social gatherings to the number of people specified by the guidance of local, state and national officials.

“Outdoors, the best strategy is to put at least 6 feet of distance between yoursel f and others whenever possible,” the website states. “If 6 feet distancing is not possible, it is essential that all individuals within a group of people be appropriately masked.”

In the email s tatement, a University spokesperson also said that as a public university, “Carolina protects free speech and the right to peacefully protest.”

Irena Como, senior staff attorney at the ACLU of North Carolina, reiterated that students have the right to protest on a public university’s campus.

“In general, [universities] can’t suppress people’s free speech rights, including their right to protest,” said Como. “As long as the protests are peaceful, campus police should not interfere with them at all.”

Rising UNC sophomore Greear Webb, who helped organize the first protest in Raleigh on May 30 in response to Floyd’s killing, said he initially became involved in student activism after the Parkland school shooting in 2018. Since then, he has become involved in North Carolina politics, and has founded two nonprofit organizations: N.C. Town Hall and Young Americans Protest.

Webb discussed what activism could look like on campus in the fall.

“I definitely have imagined and envisioned some more student-led protesting, possibly some kind of sit-in, some kind of social media campaign just to draw attention

DTH/ANGELINA KATSANISStudents across the nation protested against police brutality after the death of George Floyd and aimed to do so in alignment with COVID-19 safety measures by wearing masks and maintaining social distancing while marching on Sunday, May 31, 2020.

DTH/ANGELINA KATSANISDemonstrators were requested to socially distance during a May 31st protest.

DTH/CHASE COFIELDSocial justice activist Kerwin Pittman speaks out against police brutality in response to George Floyd’s death at the #RaleighDemandsJustice pro-test in downtown Raleigh on Saturday, May 30, 2020.

to the injustices in policing, specifically to the racism that continues to exist and thrive on UNC’s campus,” Webb said.

Webb said he plans to be a part of the process in organizing protests on campus during the fall, and supporting those that are adamant about demanding change.

In order to lessen the risk of spreading the coronavirus while protesting, Webb said that part of the planning process in the fall would need to include stocking up on hand sanitizer and masks for those who do not have them, and encouraging people to wear masks at protests.

“At the end of the day, we’re fighting for justice not only when it comes to health in making sure that those in minority communities get the help they deserve for coronavirus, but we’re also making sure that specifically our Black brothers and sisters continue to be able to live,” Webb said. “And that’s important that we can keep up both those battles.”

UNC Police Chief David Perry said he anticipates a number of free speech events being held on campus.

“I want and I expect students to exercise their First Amendment rights,” Perry said.

Perry said that he would expect protests to both follow guidelines and recommendations to help stop the spread of COVID-19, and to be peaceful and orderly.

UNC Police has been under scrutiny in the past for its presence on campus, including its response to Silent Sam, as well as Black Student Movement-sponsored protests.

Webb said that he hopes UNC Police will take a “hands-off ” approach to student-led protests.

“I think the Black Student Movement, historically and present day, plays such a prominent role being one of the largest, if not the largest student-run club at UNC,”

Webb said. “Having that impact and being able to include not only Black students, but anyone that

wants to partner with Black students in fighting for what’s right, I think it’s going to be super powerful. And I’m encouraged to see how it all works out in the fall.”

Julia Clark, vice president of the Black Student Movement at UNC, spoke about what supporting the Black Lives Matter movement may look like in the fall.

“Our goal is to also keep the momentum that ’s occ urr ing nationally and supporting the Black Lives Matter movement in whatever ways that we can,” said Clark. “With that being said, Black Student Movement will continue to fight for Black lives both on and off campus, but especially for our Black students at UNC.”

Clark emphasized that fighting for Black lives doesn’t happen solely

through demonstrations. “Ultimately, we have a lot of

tools that we can use to continue to protest the treatment of Black students on our campus,” said Clark. “We intend to host several events, whether that be in person or virtually, that talk about the role of Black students on UNC campus.”

She said BSM will continue to organize, provide resources a n d a d v o c a t e d i r e c t l y w i t h UNC’s administration, but at the moment, it’s difficult to predict e x a c t l y h o w o t h e r f o r m s o f protesting will occur because of the uncertainty surrounding the fall semester itself.

BSM’s priority will always be the safety of its members, she said.

[email protected]

“Black Student Movement will continue to fight for Black lives both on and off campus, but especially for our Black students at UNC.” Julia ClarkVice President of UNC’s BSM

News Friday, June 26, 2020The Daily Tar Heel 5

Hannah McClellan Senior Writer

In the midst of a global pandemic and a surge of protests for racial justice across the country, it’s easy to forget any other major news existed before spring 2020.

But from leadership switch-ups to the Silent Sam saga, UNC has had its fair share of campus controversies in the past few years. Here’s what you need to know:

Silent Sam saga

Protesters tore down Silent Sam, an on-campus Confederate monument, the night before the first day of classes in August 2018. The monument isn’t on campus anymore — but after multiple attempts at a solution, its future is still uncertain.

In the fall of 2018, the statue’s pedestal on McCorkle Place was the site of multiple demonstrations involving clashes between activists, police and pro-Confederate demonstrators.

That December, Chancellor Carol Folt and the BOT announced their plan for the future of the monument — a $5.3 million building to house Silent Sam on South Campus. State law prohibited the University from moving the monument off-campus.

Faculty and students opposed the proposal, and the BOG struck it down later that month, citing problems with using state funds and safety concerns.

In November 2019, the UNC System announced it had struck a deal with the North Carolina Division Sons of Confederate Veterans Inc. The group would take possession of Silent Sam and receive a $2.5 million charitable trust in non-state funds for the monument’s care and preservation.

Many students, faculty and other community members expressed their outrage that UNC had made a deal with a Confederate heritage group. A group of students and faculty partnered with a civil rights group to file a motion to intervene with the settlement.

On Feb. 12, the settlement was

dismissed by Judge Allen Baddour, who stated the SCV did not have a sufficient legal claim to the monument.

In a statement that night, Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz said he stood by his position that the monument shouldn’t return to campus.

UNC professor William Sturkey said the BOG has handled the situation “about as poorly as they possibly could have.”

“They’re just playing politics trying to appease everyone and it’s just been a disaster for three consecutive years here,” Sturkey said.

Carol Folt

After six years as UNC’s 11th chancellor, Folt announced in January 2019 she would resign at the end of the academic year. In the announcement, Folt also authorized the removal of the then-empty base of Silent Sam statue from McCorkle Place.

Drafts of resignation letters obtained by the DTH in April 2019 revealed her views on Silent Sam were stronger than what she presented publicly.

The BOG was unaware of Folt’s decision to resign prior to her announcement, according to a statement released by the Board.

“We are incredibly disappointed at this intentional action,” the statement said. “It lacks transparency and it undermines and insults the Board’s goal to operate with class and dignity.”

Soon after, the BOG voted to move Folt’s last day up to Jan. 31. Following the announcement, Folt said in a campuswide message that though she was disappointed by the BOG’s timeline, she’d “truly loved (her) almost six years at Carolina.”

Two months after her departure, Folt was selected and approved as the University of Southern California’s new president on March 20, 2019. She is USC’s first female president.

Clery Act violations

On Nov. 18, then-interim Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz sent a campuswide

The stories that defined UNC since 2018

DTH/EMILY CAROLINE SARTINFormer Chancellor Carol Folt attends the UNC football game against Virginina Tech on Saturday, Oct. 13, 2018 in Kenan Memorial Stadium.

DTH/KARL ULRICHPolice surround the Silent Sam statue on Monday, Aug. 20, 2018 after the Confederate monument was pulled down by demonstrators.

email sharing the findings of a U.S. Department of Education investigation that reported UNC was operating in violation of the Clery Act, a law that requires colleges and universities receiving federal funding to report on-campus crime statistics and school safety policies.

The final report, released by the Department of Education’s Clery Act Compliance Division, was based on nine findings initially identified in 2017 that detailed the University’s violations, including but not limited to:

•Lack of Administrative Capability•Failure to Issue Timely Warnings•Failure to Properly Compile and

Disclose Crime Statistics•Failure to Collect Campus Crime

Information from All Required Sources

•Failure to Follow Institutional Policy in a Case of an Alleged Sex Offense

The investigation began in April 2013 after four students, including then-sophomore Landen Gambill, and a former administrator, Melinda Manning, filed a federal complaint against UNC regarding its handling of sexual assault claims that year.

S. Daniel Carter, president of Safety Advisers for Educational Campuses, told the DTH in November that these violations likely indicate UNC hasn’t provided entirely accurate information about crime statistics and campus safety information for decades.

“Clery Act findings, especially this severe, are rare, with only an average of about six findings per year since enforcement began in 1996,” Carter said at the time.

In March, Guskiewicz told the DTH there hadn’t been any fines levied or actions taken against the University in response to its violations. He said discussions between the Department of Education and Office of University Counsel were taking place, and there would probably be updates in the next few months.

Guskiewicz’s appointment and COVID-19 response

Following Folt’s resignation, UNC System interim President Bill Roper announced Kevin Guskiewicz as interim chancellor on Feb. 6, 2019.

Guskiewicz’s appointment was criticized by some student activists for his communication with students during a fall 2018 teacher assistant strike, when he was dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.

Guskiewicz was named UNC’s 12th chancellor at a Dec. 13, 2019 BOG meeting. In the months since, the University has faced controversy over the Silent Sam settlement, Clery Act violations and plans to return to campus amid the ongoing pandemic.

In May, Guskiewicz announced the “Carolina Roadmap,” a plan for how UNC would reopen in the fall.

Faculty and graduate workers have

created multiple petitions reflecting their concerns about reopening campus since the announcement.

Rising senior Hanna Wondmagegn said she knows it’s a complicated decision, as the school has financial incentives to remain open. Still, she thinks UNC’s current plan is “an invitation to disaster.”

“It’s also really important to note whose voices are being left out of the decision-making processes and conversations at a higher level,” she said, referring to faculty, staff, at-risk students and BIPOC students.

“I also know from experiences and events on campus which groups, communities and areas on campus are more targeted and policed, and which groups, communities and areas on campus are allowed to continue to break the rules without significant consequences,” she said.

While addressing the pandemic, protests over racial injustice following George Floyd’s murder have erupted across the country. At the time of publication, Guskiewicz had sent two campuswide messages about the movement, stating a commitment to inclusivity and campuswide dialogue.

“We acknowledge that Carolina has moved too slowly to enact change throughout its history,” he wrote. “While we must continue to listen and learn, we must also move forward with a greater sense of urgency, purpose and action, starting today.”

Some faculty and students have called for action, including d e f u n d i n g U N C Po l i c e , a n acknowledgment of UNC’s racist history and an end to the previous 16-year moratorium on renaming buildings. UNC BOT voted to lift the moratorium June 17, but Chairperson Richard Stevens said they have yet to consider which buildings will be renamed or options for renaming structures.

Sturkey said many people have wanted to see UNC take a stand regarding the history of race in this region and the its role in that history.

“The University can’t make any sort of a moral judgment — your statements against racism fall flat when you have a building named for a Klansman that you refuse to even consider to rename,” he said.

[email protected]

NewsFriday, June 26, 2020 The Daily Tar Heel6

summer.unc.edu

Worried about the year ahead? Don’t stress.

Think Summer School!Registration

opens March 15.

2021 course list available

mid-December.

SBP Reeves Moseley looks to year aheadBy Sara Raja

Staff Writer

Reeves Moseley didn’t expect to begin his term as student body president during a pandemic.

Though his administration’s main focus for the last several months has been the well-being of UNC students during the pandemic, his team is still aiming to work on key platform pillars like civic engagement, combating gender-based violence and supporting students’ mental health this fall.

The rising senior from Argyle, Texas, who took on his role as president in April, became involved in Student Government as a first-year. He served on the Undergraduate Senate for three years and became the executive assistant to former Student Body President Savannah Putnam as a sophomore — the same year student protesters toppled Silent Sam.

Moseley said he was infuriated by the inaction he saw from the UNC System, and noticed a divide between many UNC students, as well as a disconnect between students and Student Government, spurring him to choose the campaign slogan, “Bridge the Divide.”

“Student Government is supposed to serve as that direct source of student advocacy on campus, but people saw it as just another organization and, more so, they saw it as elitist,” he said. “I wanted to change the perception of that and I wanted to be representative of all students.”

He ran on a platform of bridging the gap between the University and traditionally marginalized student groups, as well as the gap between undergraduate Student Government and Graduate and Professional Student Federation.

Now, he said he is also working to

bridge the gap between students and University administration when it comes to information about COVID-19, working to provide resources and answers to students about returning to campus in the fall.

Moseley moderated a webinar in early June, where students could ask Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz and public health officials questions about the Carolina Roadmap for the fall semester.

Danny Bowen, chief of staff of undergraduate Student Government and Moseley’s policy director during his campaign, said the pandemic has been at the forefront of discussions with administrators and students.

“ I t h i n k R e e v e s a n d o u r administration more broadly is doing a good job trying to be the bridge between students and the administrators,” Bowen said. “We spent a lot of time providing input into the Roadmap website.”

H o w e v e r , t h e M o s e l e y administration is still working to mobilize several other policy goals. With the 2020 election fast approaching, voter registration is a high priority, he said.

“The past couple of months have shown what a pivotal election this is going to be, not just the presidential election, but down-ballot races as well,” Moseley said. “Given the fact that UNC is a super precinct with thousands of students and with an on-campus polling location, it’s more important than ever that we not only

register students, but mobilize and bring them out to the polls.”

Moseley’s administration is also focusing on sexual assault prevention and awareness.

He said his administration has renamed its gender-based violence prevention initiative Constellations, because the previous name was triggering to some individuals.

“Constellations aims to shift the narrative surrounding gender-based violence from response to prevention,” he said.

He said his administration will partner with the GPSF to create educational programming for students and faculty about violence prevention, intersectionality and healthy relationships on campus.

A n o t h e r p r i m a r y c o n c e r n for Moseley is students’ mental health, particularly due to the self-isolation students experienced during quarantine.

“We didn’t have that same Carolina experience and we didn’t have those support systems that we’re so accustomed to,” Moseley said.

Moseley said he spoke with Ken Pittman, executive director of Campus Health, about ensuring Counseling and Psychological Services will be prepared for a potential influx of students with concerns related to COVID-19 and racial inequity.

There will be no access fee this year for students who come in for counseling at CAPS related to those two concerns, Moseley said.

He is also working on a collaborative mental health initiative with the N.C. State University and Duke University student body presidents, so students from each school can show solidarity with each other during a difficult fall semester, he said.

His administration is planning to

DTH/DUSTIN DUONGStudent Body President Reeves Moseley reacts to learning he won the vote for his position in a Carolina Square apartment on Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2020.

collaborate with other universities to conduct an Intersectionality and Mental Health Conference in 2021. According to the Undergraduate Executive Branch’s Mental Health Committee, the conference will address diverse areas of mental health within the Triangle.

In the wake of worldwide protests against systemic racism and police brutality, Moseley said his administration will also be focused on equity work more than previous branches and is trying to implement implicit bias trainings.

“We’re preparing to support student act ivists on campus because we’re anticipating a ramp-up of protests,” he said. “So, making sure that policing is a discussion at hand, that police are not being predatory like they historically are

with students and student activists on campus, and having those conversations and taking that to administrators so they know that that will not be tolerated come the fall semester.”

Though this year’s incoming first-years will face difficulties and adversity, Moseley said he is confident they will succeed at Carolina.

“I think this incoming class, including the transfer students, will be remembered for their resilience,” he said. “I’m optimistic about the fact that students are going to be able to overcome it, and once everything returns to as normal as it can be, students are really going to be able to thrive.”

@[email protected]

Reeves Moseleyis a rising senior from Argyle, Texas, and the student body president for the 2020-2021 school year.

News Friday, June 26, 2020The Daily Tar Heel 7

Orange County Recycling and Solid Waste Department Brings you these valuable services free of charge:

ORANGE COUNTY SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENT (919) 968-2788 [email protected]

orangecountync.gov/Recycling

CURBSIDE RECYCLING

APARTMENT RECYCLING

DROP OFF SITES

HAZARDOUS WASTE

Check our website for how to recycle your electronics, batteries, food waste, moving boxes, clothing and many other household items. All recycling programs are open to all residents of Carrboro, Chapel Hill, Hillsborough and rural Orange County and that part of Durham County within the Town of Chapel Hill.

Live in a single family home or duplex? Look for the BIG BLUE RECYCLING CART! Fill it with empty cans & bottles & clean cardboard and paper. No plastic bags. Put cart at the curb weekly at 7am on your collection day. No cart where you live? Call or email us.

Live in an apartment? Look for sets of blue carts near trash dumpsters at your property. Fill with empty cans & bottles & clean dry paper. No plastic bags. DON’T put cardboard in your blue carts. Ask your manager about recycling cardboard.

There are three Recycling Only drop off sites open 24 hours in Chapel Hill at University Place, Cedar Falls Park and, Meadowmont Village. There are five staffed Waste & Recycling Centers that accept trash, recyclables, electronics and other items. See web page for WRC locations.

Got paint, pesticides, chemicals, nail polish, full spray cans and other stuff that does not belong in the trash or recycling? Take them to 1530 Eubanks Rd. to safely recycle or dispose them for FREE. Hours: M-F 7am-6pm; Sat. 7am-5pm; Sun. 1-6pm

GLASS Bottles and jars

PLASTIC Bottles, tubs,jugs and jars METAL Cans

RECYCLE RIGHT

PLEA

SE D

ON’T

BAG YOUR RECYCLABLES!

PAPER Paper, cartonsand cardboard

KEEP THESE OUT OF YOUR RECYCLING BIN! Aerosol cans All batteries

(car, lithium, etc.) Ceramic items Clothing or textiles Diapers

Disposable cups (plastic and paper) Electronics Food-tainted items Hazardous waste Household glass

Medical waste Plastic bags/wrap Scrap metal/wood Shredded paper Styrofoam/peanuts

Tanglers (cords, hoses, wires, etc.)

Tires Toys

GLASS Bottles and jars

PLASTIC Bottles, tubs,jugs and jars METAL Cans

RECYCLE RIGHT

PLEA

SE D

ON’T

BAG YOUR RECYCLABLES!

PAPER Paper, cartonsand cardboard

KEEP THESE OUT OF YOUR RECYCLING BIN! Aerosol cans All batteries

(car, lithium, etc.) Ceramic items Clothing or textiles Diapers

Disposable cups (plastic and paper) Electronics Food-tainted items Hazardous waste Household glass

Medical waste Plastic bags/wrap Scrap metal/wood Shredded paper Styrofoam/peanuts

Tanglers (cords, hoses, wires, etc.)

Tires Toys

Thom Tillis has represented North Carolina in the U.S. Senate since 2015, before which he served as a member and the Speaker of the N.C. House of Representatives.

A Huntersville resident f r o m a w o r k i n g - c l a s s background, Tillis received his bachelor’s degree at 36 after working his way up the corporate ladder.

Tillis serves on the Armed Services Committee; the Veterans’ Affairs Committee; the Banking, Housing & Urban Affairs Committee; and the Committee on the Judiciary.

He will face Democratic challenger Cal Cunningham in the Nov. 3 general election.

Richard Burr, a Wake Forest University graduate coming from a 17-year career in business and five-term run in the U.S. House of Representatives, is serving his third term in the U.S. Senate representing North Carolina.

Burr sits on the Health, E d u c a t i o n , L a b o r a n d Pensions committee and the Finance Committee.

He recently made national headlines after stepping down as chairperson of the Senate Intelligence Committee in response to an ongoing FBI investigation into possible i n s i d e r t r a d i n g a t t h e beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.

David Price represents all of Orange County and parts of Wake and Durham counties in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Price, a graduate of UNC-Chapel Hill with a doctorate from Yale University, made his first congressional run in 1986.

He currently serves on the House Appropriations C o m m i tt e e a n d i s t h e c h a i r p e r s o n o f t h e Transportation, Housing and Urban Development Appropriations subcommittee.

Pr i c e h a s p r e v i o u s l y s p o n s o r e d l e g i s l a t i o n s u r r o u n d i n g c o l l e g e affordability, scientific research and transportation.

Valerie Foushee is serving her third elected term as state senator for the 23rd District in the North Carolina Senate.

A Chapel Hill High School and UNC-Chapel Hill graduate, Foushee is a former Chapel Hill Police Department supervisor, N.C. House representative and chairperson of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools board.

The first Black woman to be elected to the Orange County Board of County Commissioners, Foushee currently chairs the North Carolina Black Alliance, and advocates in the Senate for investing in education and ensuring social and racial equality.

Graig Meyer is serving his fourth term representing District 50 in the N.C. House.

A social worker by trade, Meyer previously served 16 years as coordinator of the Blue Ribbon Mentor-Advocate program, a Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools initiative designed to improve districtwide achievement of students of color.

Meyer currently serves on five committees, including the House Select Committee on COVID-19 in the Education Working Group.

Meyer will run unopposed on Nov. 3.

Verla Insko represents District 12 in the N.C. House and is serving her 12th term, the most of any currently serv-ing North Carolina Democrat.

A UNC-Chapel Hill Masters in Public Administration graduate, Insko has previous-ly served on the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Board of Education and the Orange County Board of County Commissioners.

Insko currently serves in 10 committees, including the Appropriations Committee and the House Select Committee on COVID-19 in the Health Care Working Group.

Insko will run unopposed on Nov. 3.

Your representatives in N.C. and D.C.

By Taylor HeedenSenior Writer

If this election season is like any other in Chapel Hill, there will be plenty of volunteers roaming campus

with a clipboard asking any passerby if they’re registered to vote.

According to the N.C. State Board of Elections website, college students may register to vote in the county in which their school is located.

The State Board of Elections has

Graig MeyerN.C. Representative for District 50

PHOTO COURTESY OF GRAIG MEYERVerla InskoN.C. Representative for District 56

PHOTO COURTESY OF VERLA INSKOValerie FousheeN.C. Senator for District 3

PHOTO COURTESY OF VALERIE FOUSHEEDavid PriceU.S. Representative for District 4

DTH FILE/SARAH CLOUSERThom Tillis U.S. Senator for North Carolina

DTH FILE/CLAIRE COLLINSRichard BurrU.S. Senator for North Carolina

PHOTO COURTESY OF RICHARD BURR

Students discuss voter registration on campus

DTH FILE/LIAM ERICStudent volunteers work a table in the Pit to assist with voter registrations

an online form residents can fill out if they want to change their address to register to vote in Orange County.

Savannah Shoemake is a rising junior and the outreach chairperson for UNC’s chapter of Young Democratic Socialists. She said political organizations on campus help register students for voting during the semester.

“Typically, there are multiple, different political groups in the Pit that will have voter registration forms,” Shoemake said.

Shoemake said students interested in the absentee ballot process need to request a ballot by Oct. 27.

“They must first fill out a form to request an absentee ballot, and once they get the absentee ballot, it must be signed by a witness,” Shoemake said. “To return it, voters may mail the absentee ballot before Nov. 3 to the county board of elections. Voters can also mail in an absentee ballot to an early voting site.”

Aaron Clark is a UNC student studying political science and

philosophy. He originally was registered to vote in his home county but decided to change his voter registration when he moved to UNC.

“I actually registered to vote originally in my hometown when I was 17, but once I moved to Chapel Hill I re-registered so I could vote here instead of having to drive two plus hours home,” Clark said. “It was super simple, all I did was fill out the PDF form and mailed it to Orange County’s Board of Elections.”

Janegrace Lowther, a UNC student from South Carolina, said registering to vote on campus was easy and allowed her to participate in the primaries.

“It was really easy, but I did have to revoke my South Carolina voter registration in the process,” Lowther said.

Lowther said if she wanted to re- register to vote in South Carolina, she would just have to re-register with that state’s board of elections.

Shoemake said it is important for

everyone to participate in elections, especially local elections. She also urges students to look up where they are registered to vote to make sure it is up to date.

“During the primaries, I talked to a lot of students who did not realize they were still registered to vote at their home address, and were unable to vote in the primaries because of making this realization too late,” she said. “I encourage all students to look up their voter registration using the voter look-up tool on the N.C. State Board of Elections website and check to see if and where they are registered.”

Clark said it is crucial for first time voters to be involved in this election.

“For first-time voters, I would consider this election to be one of the most important in modern U.S. history,” he said. “With the current pandemic and visualizing how our current administration has responded to it, it is imperative now more than ever to let your voice be heard.

[email protected]

NewsFriday, June 26, 2020 The Daily Tar Heel8

News Friday, June 26, 2020The Daily Tar Heel 9

We are living in a world in which dramatic content has an increasing effect on our lives. The minor in Writing for the Screen and Stage is a two-year interdisciplinary program, housed in the Department of Communication, that offers underclassmen, from all corners of the university, the unique opportunity to focus specifically on the craft of dramatic writing, and is designed for those considering writing careers in theatre, film and television.

Applications will be accepted in February, 2021, for the 2021-2023 class. To learn more about the program and how to apply, visit our website and Facebook pages:

https://comm.unc.edu/undergraduate-studies/writing-for-the-screen-and-stage-minor/https://www.facebook.com/UNCWritingForThe ScreenandStage/

Students who are accepted into the minor are also eligible to participate in the program’s Long Story Shorts play festival, and apply for the Department of Communication Hollywood Internship Program.

By Audrey SelleyStaff Writer

At some point during the fall, you’re bound to get sick of dining hall food and, in your search for decent takeout, you’ll end up on downtown Chapel Hill’s main thoroughfare.

Welcome to Franklin Street.From cheese fries to churros, this

street has almost everything you could ever want for any meal.

Here’s a list of a few iconic stops:

Carolina Coffee Shop

Located next to the pathway that connects Franklin Street with UNC’s campus, Carolina Coffee Shop prides

itself on being the oldest restaurant in the state and a go-to brunch option for students and families. Come for the convenient location, stay for the cheese grits.

Sutton’s Drug Store

Sutton’s is another go-to spot for some students. This restaurant’s familial atmosphere has kept many students flocking to Sutton’s over the years.

Linda’s Bar and Grill

Linda’s has been around since 1976 and is best known for late-night munchies. If you want something fried

and dripping in cheese, this Chapel Hill classic is hard to beat.

Cosmic Cantina

Cosmic Cantina cranks out queso, quesadillas and other Mexican dishes as late as 4 a.m. — and at cheap prices, too. Manager Yeshua Sanchez recommends the restaurant’s classic burrito.

Nothing will change your life for the better like a Cosmic quesadilla after 2 a.m. Trust me on this one.

Mediterranean Deli

Med Deli, located on West Franklin, has more menu options than you could

ever sample in full during your four years at UNC and, for some reason, the food at the restaurant tastes 10 times better than what’s served in the kiosk at the Bottom of Lenoir.

The DTH editors recommend the lamb and beef gyro and the eggplant stew. Come here when you want to eat a pound of pita bread and still feel kinda healthy after.

TRU Deli

If you’re still on a health kick and looking for something quick and cheap, TRU sells customizable sandwiches and salads — grab it on the go, or sit down on the patio.

Pizza OptionsAnd when it comes to — the college

classic — pizza, you have a lot to choose from: Pizza Press (made-to-order and good for a quick dinner), Benny’s (super-sized slices best ordered late at night), I Heart N.Y. Pizza (does anybody actually eat here?) and Italian Pizzeria III (family-run, god-tier pizza and pasta. Worth the trek to the western end of Franklin.).

Walking down Franklin in search of dinner is a rite of passage in Chapel Hill. We got you started with some basics — but make sure to roam around and find your own favorite spots.

[email protected]

By Crystal YuStaff Writer

During a normal semester, rising junior Antonio Mendoza enjoys his weekly U bus rides as part of his grocery shopping commute.

One of the free standard routes operated by Chapel Hill Transit, the U bus covers areas from South Campus, where many first-years live, to downtown.

Mendoza, a frequent rider, said that the buses make travel convenient without a car.

Column: A student guide to Franklin Street food

DTH/MORGAN PIROZZI

A Chapel Hill Transit bus driver on the U route gives a thumbs-up upon approaching the UNC Student Stores on Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2020.

Your guide to transitwhile at

UNC

“If I ever need to go outside of campus to get somewhere, and I don’t have a car, having a couple of bus routes that takes you straight to a grocery store is pretty beneficial,” he said.

Past midnight during the academic year, UNC also operates free routes like the P2P shuttles and expresses, which run between residence halls and Franklin Street.

After late night studying or a movie night with friends, Mendoza said he finds it safe and comforting to have a bus ride back to his dorm, with the company of the driver and passengers.

“I was taking the P2P bus at 2:00 in the morning, and me and the driver just had the deepest, most authentic conversation on purposes in life,” he said.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Chapel Hill Transit is running nine weekday routes — CW, CM, D, G, J, NS, RU, S and U — until 8 p.m, while GoTriangle offers six trips of the 420 route between the Town and Hillsborough.

CHT has implemented safety

measures including increased sanitation, rear-door boarding, driver-passenger barriers and 10-people capacity for regular vehicles.

Passengers are also required to wear face coverings until Aug. 31, according to Orange County’s Emergency Declaration guidelines, and are strongly encouraged to remain 6 feet apart from one another.

Transit Director Brian Litchfield said service reintroduction is based on considerations like public health guidance and UNC’s plan.

“Our reopening has the sole priority on safety,” he said. “It’s also going to be closely entwined with what the University does.”

In early August, however, it plans to start implementing service improvements like adjusted routes with less one-way loops and turns, as well as Sunday service, which was last offered 40 years ago.

Nick Pittman, transit planning manager, said in a news release that the improvements are based on public demand.

“These improvements will simplify routing for several of our more complicated routes, add additional service on some routes that experience high demand and new weekend service on Saturday and Sunday,” Pittman said.

Litchfield encouraged students to visit Chapel Hill Transit’s website for updated information and install the TransLoc Rider App on their phones to track the buses.

@YueyingYu_

SportsFriday, June 26, 2020 The Daily Tar Heel10

By Zachary CrainSports Editor

On the surface, a 7-6 season is anything but spectacular. But for the North Carolina football team — which had won just five games total in its previous two seasons — 2019’s result sent shock waves through a program that desperately needed a jolt of excitement.

In head coach Mack Brown’s first season back in Chapel Hill, the Tar Heels put together a winning record for the first time in three years, won their first bowl game since 2013 and unified a previously dormant fan base in the belief that Mack was back.

The Tar Heels were led by quarterback Sam Howell. The first-year — who flipped his commitment from national power Florida State after Brown was chosen to helm UNC — threw for 3,641 yards and an FBS true first-year record 38 touchdowns on his way to winning ACC Rookie of the Year.

But the player perhaps most

representative of North Carolina’s culture change was junior Chazz Surratt. When Surratt started his career as a Tar Heel in 2017, he was a quarterback. After appearing in 10 games across two years behind center, he moved to linebacker in 2019.

Surratt filled his new role within North Carolina’s defense effectively from day one. After a relatively average tenure as quarterback for UNC, the junior became one of the Tar Heels’ best players, notching a team-best 115 total tackles, 6.5 sacks and intercepting a would-be game-winning pass from Duke’s Deon Jackson at the goal line to win the Victory Bell.

Surratt is now touted as one of the top linebackers in the 2021 NFL Draft.

Early wins over South Carolina and Miami — along with a one-point loss to then-No. 1 Clemson — ignited momentum in what was largely viewed as a rebuilding year for UNC. That momentum will serve the Tar Heels well entering Brown’s second year in Chapel Hill.

With UNC’s offense returning

10 of 11 starters, and Brown’s staff bringing in the No. 19 incoming recruiting class in the nation, many outlets have the Tar Heels slated as a preseason top-25 team.

If the season kicks off as expected on Sept. 4, the Tar Heels will face back-to-back tests against Central Florida and Auburn — two programs that have been near the top of college football in recent years.

If UNC is able to come away with wins in one or both of these games, they could be set on an early trajectory toward a potential New Year’s Six bowl appearance. Regardless of the postseason, the Tar Heels’ eyes are likely set on winning the ACC Coastal Division for the first time since 2015.

Some other games to circle on UNC’s schedule include back-to-back games against Coastal Division rivals Virginia and Virginia Tech to start October, an Oct. 17 matchup against Duke and a Nov. 27 date with N.C. State to close out the regular season.

Two early litmus tests will reveal if

DTH/DANA GENTRYHead football coach Mack Brown returns to the locker room with his team during a game in Kenan Memorial Stadium on Saturday April 13, 2019.

Will UNC football live up to last season’s hype?

By Andrew ReynoldsStaff Writer

You’ve heard all about UNC’s legendary student section at men’s basketball games and the football team’s renewed success following Mack Brown’s return. But if you want to experience athletic events in person, make sure you follow this guide to secure a seat.

Men’s Basketball

A chance to enter the iconic Dean E. Smith Center to watch the Tar Heels play is near the top of many students’ bucket lists.

A student-ticket lottery system is in effect for most of the home basketball games throughout the season.

Sign-up for the lottery opens 10 days prior at 10 a.m. and close two days later with a 11:59 p.m. deadline.

The time you sign up doesn’t affect your odds to get tickets. Everyone has an equal chance to win.

Tickets are sent to winners via email five days before the game, and you will get either a phase one, phase two or phase three ticket.

The phase of the ticket determines when you can enter the Smith Center. Phase one is allowed in 1.5 hours before tip-off, phase two an hour and phase three 30 minutes.

All student tickets become void at game time.

Students who don’t receive tickets through the lottery can wait in the stand-by line on the day of the game. Unused lottery tickets free up spots in the stand-by line at game time. Seating is based on availability and is first come, first serve.

Football

Football tickets are available through a similar lottery process.

Lotteries for home football games open to students 10 days prior to the game, with registration opening at 9 a.m. and ending 48 hours later.

Winners of the tickets will be

notified by email five days before the game. The tickets are sent in a separate email 48 hours before game time.

There are no phase tickets for football, and all students are allowed entrance to Kenan Memorial Stadium 90 minutes before kickoff.

Carolina Fever

Carolina Fever is a points-based program in which students earn rewards at the end of each year for every event they attend.

There is no sign-up for Carolina Fever, and getting the points is as easy as swiping in and out of games with your OneCard.

The top 150 students in point standings receive two phase one tickets for every home men’s basketball game, except for the Duke game, where they will receive one. For the top 200, the reward is one ticket for every home football game.

Other North Carolina Athletics

Other UNC athletic events are free for all UNC students and require a OneCard to enter any home game.

Students just need to get to the event before game time and find seating within the venue.

@A_ReynoldsDTH

By Ryan WilcoxSenior Writer

If fall sports seasons are able to proceed as planned, two North Carolina teams will be right back in the title hunt, while a third will seek a return to national prominence. Here is the 2020 outlook for UNC field hockey, women’s soccer and men’s soccer.

Field hockey

There’s only one number you need to know: 46, the number of consecutive games head coach Karen Shelton’s squad has won over the last two seasons.

Since rising junior Erin Matson stepped on campus, North Carolina hasn’t lost. She won the National Player of the Year award last year and will be the linchpin of a 2020 team looking to keep that inconceivable streak alive.

Matson is the only player in the top six in scoring last year who didn’t graduate. Look for midfielder Eva Smolenaars and forward Riley Fulmer to pick up the slack and help vie for a third straight title, a feat that hasn’t been accomplished in the sport since Wake Forest in the early aughts.

Women’s soccer

Anson Dorrance’s team got heartbreakingly close to another

NCAA title last season — it came down to penalty kicks in the national championship, where the Tar Heels fell to Stanford 5-4. The loss came after a similarly cruel twist of fate in the 2018 title game, where Florida State trumped UNC 1-0 after a late score.

The team was dominant in a 24-2-1 campaign last season: eight players with double-digit points, 17.8 shots per game by the squad and a nice 69 goals on the season. Defensively, the Tar Heels allowed just 11 goals and recorded 20 shutouts. All indications are that those numbers won’t be changing much next season with virtually every member of the back line returning in 2020 a year wiser.

While UNC is losing stalwart forward Bridgette Andrzejewski, it’s returning the potent combo of Alessia Russo and Brianna Pinto, which combined for 24 goals and nine assists last season. If those two are as good as advertised, the Tar Heels will have a decent shot at going undefeated in the ACC and battling for the College Cup once again.

Men’s soccer

The Tar Heels entered last season as the No. 6 team in the country and the preseason favorite for the ACC crown. By the time the year was over, those high hopes were nothing but a memory.

North Carolina finished 2019 with a 7-7-4 record, including a 3-5 mark in conference play and a seven-game winless streak to end the season. The team missed out on the NCAA Tournament — a first since head coach Carlos Somoano took the helm in 2011. Three of UNC’s top four scorers — Jelani Pieters, Mauricio Pineda and Jack Skahan — graduated.

After Alex Rose’s team-leading seven goals , only two more returners, Santiago Herrera and Jonathan Jimenez, recorded multiple scores.

@ryantwilcox

Tips and tricks for getting into UNC sports

UNC will live up to the hype created following the team’s win over Temple in the Military Bowl and a series of

impressive performances in 2019.

@zachycrain

Previewing the fall sports season ahead

News Friday, June 26, 2020The Daily Tar Heel 11

WRITE BETTER PAPERS!STUDY SMARTER (NOT HARDER)!Join thousands of Carolina students who

come to us for writing coaching, academic coaching, peer tutoring, STEM support,

ADHD/LD support, workshops, study camps, and so much more!

learningcenter.unc.eduwritingcenter.unc.edu

FREE COACHING

Hunter NelsonStaff Writer

Whether it’s lining up at the Old Well for a sip of water on FDOC or venturing to Time-Out for a late-night chicken biscuit, the list of UNC students’ favorite traditions is endless.

For many students, fandom for the North Carolina men’s basketball team is at the top of the list.

But how did it get here? How did the Dean Dome become a mecca of college basketball that spread the love of UNC hoops across the globe?

1961 should be a good place for the story to begin.

Despite winning the program’s first NCAA championship four years earlier, head coach Frank McGuire was forced to resign due to NCAA violations. Minutes later, one of his assistants, a relatively unknown 30-year-old named Dean Smith, was asked to inherit his position. Smith accepted.

For the next 36 years, it proved to be a historic decision for both parties.

Throughout the 1970s, the Tar Heels gained national recognition. Names like Phil Ford, Bob McAdoo and many other future NBA players excelled at running Smith’s four-corners offense that emphasized back-door cuts and smart shot selection.

Entering the 1981-82 season, Smith’s Tar Heels had been to six Final Fours and played for the title three times. Despite these accomplishments, Smith hadn’t achieved college basketball’s greatest coaching feat: winning a national championship. The 1980-81 team, led by future top-five NBA draft picks James Worthy and Sam Perkins, reached the title game, but its defeat left the Tar Heels looking for someone

to get them over the hump. By way of Wilmington, North

Carolina, a first-year named Michael Jordan gave them their answer.

Averaging 13.5 points during his rookie season, Jordan helped the Tar Heels reach the national championship once again. In the waning seconds of the game, Jordan found himself open on the left wing and drilled a jumper to give UNC the title.

The proverbial monkey was finally lifted from Smith’s back.

Jordan used his collegiate spotlight to jumpstart arguably the greatest basketball career that anyone has ever seen. Along with his six NBA titles and five most valuable player awards, his multi-billion-dollar brand has become synonymous with UNC’s athletic culture.

Over the next 15 seasons, the Tar Heels reached four more Final Fours and won another title in 1993, but just weeks before the 1997-98 season, Smith decided it was time to call it a career. Along with two national titles, he retired with 13 ACC Tournament championships and 879 victories, the most in Division 1 men’s basketball history at the time of his retirement.

In 2003, the Tar Heels knew they needed to find the heir to Smith’s throne. They believed that Roy Williams, a former Smith assistant, would match that description.

After inheriting a team that went 9-21 two years before his hiring, Williams took the Tar Heels to the mountaintop of college hoops once again. With players like Sean May and Raymond Felton leading the way, the Tar Heels won the NCAA title in 2005.

The following season, the Tyler Hansbrough era began.

A n i n s t a n t c o n t r i b u t o r ,

Hansbrough was named an All-American four times, and graduated as the school’s all-time leader in points and rebounds. After losing in the Final Four in 2008, Hansbrough, along with future NBA players Ty Lawson, Danny Green and Wayne Ellington, ended their redemption tour with a title victory in 2009.

Fast-forward seven seasons to 2016, when North Carolina had a chance to hang another banner.

After four-year starter Marcus Paige sent the crowd into a frenzy with an acrobatic jumper to tie the game, Villanova’s Kris Jenkins responded with a game-winning three from well beyond the arc as time expired. Confetti covered the floor, but it wasn’t for the Tar Heels.

The Tar Heels carried the defeat with them throughout the offseason, where they vowed the next season would result in hanging a sixth title banner in the Smith Center.

Reaching the final once again, the Tar Heels finished the job by defeating Gonzaga. ACC Player of the Year Justin Jackson and the Tournament’s Most Outstanding Player, Joel Berry II, were two standouts who led UNC to the 2017 title.

Now, UNC is preparing to enter the 2020-21 campaign coming off of the program’s first losing season in nearly 20 years.

UNC has now won six NCAA titles, and Roy Williams has surpassed Dean Smith with 885 wins and counting.

Throughout this 60-year story, UNC’s success has ignited passion in its fan base, as thousands of Tar Heel faithful gather in the Dean Dome for every home game to watch their team follow Smith’s orders: “Play hard, play smart and play together.”

@nelsonhunter_

Welcome to UNC. You’re a basketball fan now

DTH ARCHIVES/LARRY CHILDRESSNorth Carolina’s Michael Jordan turned some smart talk from an opponent into an insurmountable lead as UNC rolled over Tennessee-Chattanooga before a crowd in Carmichael Auditorium on Monday, Nov. 28, 1983.

DTH/PARKER BROWNStudents hold their hands in anticipation of a free throw at the Residence Hall Association’s watch party for the UNC vs. Duke basketball game. The Blue Devils beat the Tar Heels 98-96 on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2020.

NewsFriday, June 26, 2020 The Daily Tar Heel12

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KEEP CALM

AND

CALL STUDENT

LEGAL SERVICES

Carolina Student Legal Services, Inc.

Providing legal assistance to full-time UNC students at no additional charge since 1976

Carolina Union, Suite 3512

(919) 962-1303 [email protected]

www.studentlegalservices.web.unc.edu

By Britney NguyenStaff Writer

Figuring out how to navigate college as a first-year is a daunting task, but if finding a job is on the agenda, here are some off-campus jobs students at UNC have enjoyed in their years here.

Dottie Mayo, a rising junior, is a manager at Hibachi & Company on Franklin Street. She started working there as a cashier as a first-year.

She said setting a schedule for schoolwork and a job is difficult at first, but eventually she prioritized school over work.

“Hibachi & Company prioritizes employees’ schooling over work, so they’re flexible with scheduling work around everything happening outside of the restaurant,” Mayo said.

Mayo said it can be helpful for students seeking a job to walk into places and ask for applications or if they’re hiring.

She said it is important to make clear that being a student is the main priority.

“It’s very doable to get everything together once you get used to college,” said Mayo. “I don’t recommend working and doing clubs first semester because it was too much.”

Julia Long, a rising senior at UNC and part-time associate bookseller at Epilogue Books Chocolate Brews, said she found her job while walking down Franklin Street.

“It definitely was not a typical way of finding a job,” Long said. “I saw the store under construction, looked them up and saw they were hiring.”

Long said many people who work at Epilogue are also students, and although the job is flexible, it’s important to communicate with their managers.

“It’s important to keep in mind when you are available so that you are conserving your time and your boss’s and colleagues’ time too,” she said.

Long said it is OK to not have a job right away when starting college.

“Know your limits. Figuring out the balance of work, school and social life is a lot to handle coming to college,” she said. “This semester might be extremely weird, so give it as much space as you can.”

Laura Brummett, a rising senior, works as a business desk assistant at the Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA.

“When I was a sophomore at UNC and looking for an off-campus job, I went to the Y because it’s somewhere I worked at before, and the one here is usually looking for college-age students to work part time,” Brummett said.

“If you’re looking for a job, try and find something that fits with you, what you’re studying or what you’re interested in,” Brummett said. “Those jobs will be the most fulfilling and rewarding.”

[email protected]

By Rachel Crumpler Staff Writer

Many UNC students work part-time jobs while taking classes. Although the effects of COVID-19 on on-campus and off-campus jobs is not clear yet, work-study will still be available.

“We’re going to try our best to get every student a part-time job who wants one or at least some type of part-time experience while they’re at Carolina,” Casey Lowe, job location and development coordinator at University Career Services, said.

Lowe said she is currently in the process of surveying campus employers to gauge what part-time employment

opportunities will be available. She said Carolina Dining Services will have jobs for students, but is unsure about the positions in libraries, Carolina Performing Arts and Makerspaces that are generally available.

UNC’s work-study programs are a major employer for students. Federal Work Study is a financial aid program that provides part-time employment to students with demonstrated financial need. UNC also offers Carolina Works, an institutional work-study program to employ those who do not qualify for the federal program, but still have financial need.

Rachelle Feldman, associate provost and director of UNC’s Office

of Scholarships and Student Aid, said in an email that each year, between 2,000 and 2,500 students participate in the work-study program. Feldman said it is estimated that around 1,200 incoming students will be offered to participate in the program this year.

Feldman said her office is preparing the program for many possibilities.

“For instance, we are offering supervisors the opportunity to create remote work positions for the first time, which we hope this will expand the number of jobs as well as provide opportunities for students who may be unable to be on campus,” she said.

Feldman said work-study positions vary each year, but they can be found

in virtually every department and building on campus.

Feldman said students with a work-study award can start searching for a position in late July via the online job system site JobX. Students will be able to begin working in early August before the fall semester begins.

“The program is also structured to help students develop professionally, ensure that students work reasonable hours, and that supervisors are trained to accommodate the unique challenges student-employees experience,” Feldman said.

Lowe said benefits of a part-time job during college include earning money to cover living costs, building your

resume with professional experience and making a network of contacts.

“The soft skills that you learn in the part-time jobs, even though you don’t think it is extremely relevant to your major, are extremely critical to employers—communication, leadership, time management, problem solving,” Lowe said.

Despite the untraditional fall semester ahead, Lowe said that she is still hopeful students will be able to find part-time work, but that it may take longer than usual and require looking in different places and using different tools.

[email protected]

Local businesses to check out for an off-campus job

DTH/ANGELINA KATSANISA “Now Hiring” banner hangs above Sup Dogs, one of the many off-campus businesses that frequently hire students, on Tuesday, June 23, 2020.

Here’s how on-campus jobs may be affected by COVID-19

News Friday, June 26, 2020The Daily Tar Heel 13

UNC’s CAPS provides mental health services to students through assessments, therapy, medication management and referrals.

Director Allen O’Barr said CAPS plans for all services to be delivered via telehealth except in cases requiring in-person meetings, such as someone being immediately dangerous to themselves or others.

“Two people looking at each other across a screen is far superior than two people sitting 6 feet away wearing masks,” he said.

Due to rules restricting therapists to perform teletherapy only with people in the same state where they have their license, O’Barr said CAPS will be mainly serving students in N.C., but will help remote students connect with therapists in their home state.

Counseling and Psychological Services

Student Wellness offers a range of programs, services and resources aimed at supporting healthy choices and positive decision-making about health, safety and wellness.

Dean Blackburn, director of Student Wellness, said Student Wellness is planning to provide all of its regular services, with each taking place virtually.

Blackburn also said Student Wellness wil l add addit ional resources, such as weekly well-being groups via Zoom. The groups will give students the opportunity to meet virtually at scheduled times for staff-facilitated conversations about how they’re coping and adjusting during the semester while receiving support from peers, he said.

Student Wellness

The Carolina Women’s Center leads efforts and initiatives related to women and gender equity on campus and in the UNC community.

Holly Lovern, a gender violence services coordinator at the center, said in an email that the center’s gender violence services coordinators provide confidential support and advocacy for any student, faculty or staff who has been impacted by sexual harassment, sexual violence, interpersonal violence or stalking.

The Carolina Women’s Center will continue to provide support via phone and Zoom throughout the fall semester, said Lovern. She also said that if students have concerns about accessing technology or a private space on campus, the center can help coordinate options.

Carolina Women’s Center

According to its website, the Study Abroad Office works with partners across the globe to offer programs for UNC students from “any academic discipline, ability, background or financial means.” Study Abroad boasts nearly 400 programs in over 70 countries, with six program types.

Jason Kinnear, assistant dean of study abroad and exchanges, said in an email statement that the office it plans to host a “Study Abroad Week” in late October or November, f e a t u r i n g p r o g r a m - s p e c i f i c information sessions. Additionally, it will host a virtual Open House on Aug. 12 to prepare students for the Sept. 10 deadline to apply for spring 2021 programs. Applications for the spring semester open July 1.

Study Abroad Office

Campus Recreation provides and maintains outdoor, indoor and aquatic recreational facilities on campus.

While all Campus Recreation facilities are currently closed, Director of Campus Recreation Bill Goa said that he expects the facilities to be open this fall.

Goa said he expects Campus Recreation fitness classes to be held in person with attendees registering online ahead of time for available slots. He said fitness classes will continue to be held virtually.

Campus Recreation also plans to hold club and intramural sports this fall, though they will look different. Goa said Campus Recreation will be offering more individual sports, such as singles tennis or cornhole.

Campus Recreation

Ken Pittman, executive director of Campus Health, said the service will return to its regular hours Aug. 3 from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays, and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekends.

He said there is a 24- to 48-hour turnaround time for COVID-19 test results, but expects Campus Health to have rapid testing capability at some point this fall.

He also said Campus Health intends to do as much as it can via telehealth, but students will be able to come in for medical visits requiring close physical examinations and procedures that cannot be done remotely.

“We have providers and staff that are very committed to the student experience, and to do everything we can to care for and help students be successful,” Pittman said.

Campus Health

University Career Ser vices provides career advising, internship and employment search assistance, workshops on job-seeking skills, practice interviews, resume reviews and graduate school preparation assistance.

Casey Lowe, job location and de ve lopment coordinator at University Career Services, said UCS will be offering virtual services and programming this fall to help students in their search for work.

University Career Services will be holding its Fall Part-Time Job Fair virtually on Sept. 10. Lowe said the fair will provide an opportunity for students to connect with employers who are seeking to hire students for part-time work either in an in-person or remote setting.

University Career Services

The Writing and Learning Center serve students by providing writing assistance, academic coaching, peer tutoring, learning groups, ADHD and learning disability support and online academic resources.

Kimberly Abels, director of UNC’s Writing and Learning Center, said that all of its services transitioned to a Zoom format this spring. She said the Center will continue to provide its full services this fall virtually and will look for other innovative ways to support students.

With the challenging semester ahead due to new teaching formats, Abels said staff members for the Writing and Learning Center will be available to talk with students about strategies for navigating the new academic environments.

Writing and Learning Center

Information Technology Services provides professional IT support to the campus community.

As first-years purchase CCI laptops, Kate Hash, ITS’ assistant vice chancellor for customer experience and engagement, said they will be shipped with a flyer that instructs students on how to set up their computer and schedule an appointment with the Service Desk.

Hash also said that over the summer, ITS staff will be calling all first-years who purchased CCI computers to walk them through common tech issues. She said ITS will send emails to all first-years who did not buy a CCI computer to help address any issues.

ITS will be offering primarily virtual support either by phone, chat, web or remote desktop.

Information Technology Services

CUAB coordinates programming and events, including films, art, music and entertainment, for the UNC community and will continue to do so this fall, though without much of its traditional large-scale programming.

CUAB President Sarah Bradley, a rising junior, said much of CUAB’s fall programming will be targeted at online audiences.

Bradley said CUAB also hopes to hold some small-scale, in-person programs if they are deemed safe and permitted by the University.

If in-person programs do occur, Bradley said she expects there to be limits on the number of people who can attend the events and gaps between reservation times for cleaning.

Carolina Union Activities Board

By Alexandra SmithStaff Writer

Due to COVID-19, some parts of Chapel Hill’s culture may be on pause this fall or take a new form due to social distancing guidelines. However, you’ve got four years to enjoy these iconic experiences:

Cat’s Cradle and Local 506

Cat’s Cradle is a historic live music venue in Carrboro within walking distance from campus, and a popular place for students to attend shows.

Acts range from small indie acts to major artists, and normal touring years have an eclectic line-up that provides

opportunities for students looking for any kind of entertainment.

Local 506 is a music bar in downtown Chapel Hill that’s open to all ages and hosts intimate rock shows from local bands and touring artists.

Concerts aren’t the only live music events: both venues frequently host DJ nights and dance parties, and Cat’s Cradle hosts dances put on by WXYC, UNC’s student-run radio station.

Halloween on Franklin Street

A yearly tradition for which an entire section of Franklin Street is closed so the Chapel Hill community can walk around in costume.

Halloween festivities are usually

pretty bustling as thousands of people head to Franklin Street with friends, often in creative group costumes.

Students flock from their dorms, apartments and houses costumed as everything from superheroes to spies to sexy former chancellors, and bask in the phenomenally unique chaos that is Chapel Hill Halloween.

The size of the crowd necessitates safety guidelines and alcohol checkpoints, but it’s a simple and reliable way to make Halloween plans.

The Rocky Horror Picture Show

Another hallmark of the Halloween season at Carolina is the UNC Pauper Players’ annual production of “The

Rocky Horror Picture Show,” which is now five years running.

The interactive show takes place at the Varsity Theatre on Franklin Street, where actors perform the cult classic as the movie is projected onto a screen behind them. Audience participation is encouraged, and the entire theater gets on their feet to dance and sing along to “The Time Warp.”

Last year, the Pauper Players added two shows to their previously scheduled four after tickets sold out in less than 24 hours.

Rushing Franklin Street

If you follow UNC basketball, you’ve more than likely seen photos of

Franklin Street packed with students after the Tar Heels won a national championship or a game against Duke, singing the alma mater or setting couches on fire in celebration.

Dropping everything to grab your friends and run to Franklin Street from the Dean Dome or wherever you’re watching the game is an invigorating experience.

Although this year’s incoming students may not be able to experience it this year due to the uncertainty surrounding the sports season, the community that comes together in iconic Carolina moments like these will remain long after COVID-19 is gone.

[email protected]

Column: Iconic events to look forward to next fall

DTH/ABIGAIL WHITTINGTON

DTH/MADELINE CRUMPLER

These 10 student services are making the modifications needed to serve and support UNC students next semester.

Your guide to student services at UNC

OpinionFriday, June 26, 2020 The Daily Tar Heel14

Discover the Philosophy, Politics and Economics Program!Want to understand the complex world in which we live? Consider UNC’s five-course minor in Philosophy, Politics and Economics (ppe.unc.edu) that lets you satisfy Gen. Ed. requirements with an assortment of courses that together add up to more than the sum of their parts.

To learn more, join us on Zoom on August 12, at 6:30, for a General Information Session. For details: https://ppe.unc.edu/event/ppe-general-information-meeting/

The PPE Program also sponsors a robust range of extracurricular events, open to all, including: •semester-longreadinggroups •intensivetopicalweekendseminars(e.g.onpoverty, the opioid crisis, and the COVID-19 pandemic) •asuiteofearlyeveningtalks

Questions? Email us here: [email protected]

By Brian KeyesStaff Writer

We here at The Daily Tar Heel take our responsibility to inform very seriously. If you’re reading this in our print edition, it means you’re a fresh, yet-to-be disgruntled face

18 things I’d tell my

18-year-old self

Six UNC spots to

know before you go

COLUMN to UNC’s campus, and therefore it is our job to give you the low-down.

First Floor Bathroom in Davis Library

A cursed place. I cannot articulate how awful of a bathroom it is. It is frequently trafficked, and its unique smell will stick to your clothes for weeks. It’s preferable to leave the building entirely if nature calls, rather than taint your immortal soul by visiting such a place. How the best library has the worst bathroom is beyond comprehension.

Campus Y/Meantime Cafe

The center of most social justice activities on UNC’s campus also houses the best place to get coffee. Located in a former YMCA building,

it’s been years since anyone attempted some hearty calisthenics here outside of a good protest march (get your steps in AND make a change in the world). You might also catch a few glares if you start doing the Y-M-C-A dance while people are trying to work. The couches are comfortable if you can grab one.

Fetzer Gym

Thought you had escaped the awkward, sweaty environment of a high school gym class? Think again! Odds are you will enroll in one of UNC’s world-famous LFIT classes, most of which take place here. It is exactly as uncomfortable as you imagine a gym class of college students would be. Rumor is there’s a racquetball court somewhere in the bowels of Fetzer, hidden behind a series of traps, puzzles and a very

uncooperative club volleyball team. Coker Arboretum

The favored spot for the campus whistler. A good spot to watch birds, and then very quickly tire of the birds when they refuse to stop chirping. The arboretum hosts many an over-ambitious picnic date/get-together that you might attempt in the fall before growing frustrated by the ants that keep crawling over your sandwiches.

Chase Dining Hall

The former Rams Dining Hall. A needlessly renamed building on campus, opposed to those other buildings that really, really needed to be renamed. They have fried chicken for lunch on Wednesdays, which is worth the hike if you can make it. Chase’s

crown jewel is “Late Night,” which serves breakfast food from 9 p.m. to midnight, and is filled with people who won’t judge you for eating three bowls of Frosted Flakes before bed.

Alpine Bagel

A sanctuary for the hungry, the downtrodden or for those (like this reporter) who simply need to consume at least one bagel a day to survive. Sure they serve “normal” sandwiches with “bread,” but to order such a thing would be a great faux pas. The Bagel of the Week provides the highest highs (parmesan everything) and the lowest lows (spinach) that one can experience at Chapel Hill. Don’t be the person who orders a sausage egg & cheese on a cinnamon raisin bagel.

@bg_keyes

COLUMN

By Hannah LangOnline Managing Editor

1. Repeat after me. Lenoir burrito bowl. Lenoir sushi. This is a dining hall meal combo made in heaven.

2. You’re a basketball fan now. I know you’ve spent nearly two decades of your life hating sports and avoiding eye contact with your gym teacher, but let’s be honest with ourselves here: you love a good party, and everyone looks good in Carolina Blue. And the way that campus buzzes on the day of the Duke game — that’ll touch the heart of even the most devoted sports cynic.

3. Maybe…don’t spend $7-10 on coffee every day.

4. Under no circumstances should you get romantically or physically involved with two boys who are a) roommates, b) close friends or c) both. This will not end well. Do not talk yourself into thinking it could possibly end well.

5. You’re gonna think you can “easily” go to an 8 a.m. class since you “got up that early in high school.” Literally every first-year thinks this. You’re deluding yourself. Don’t be a clown.

6. On the subject of things we can leave in high school, you can drop the obsession with getting a 4.0. Related to this: drinking from the Old Well on the first day of classes doesn’t work.

7. Also on the subject of things we can leave in high school, just go ahead and ditch your entire

high school personality. She was insecure and awkward. Welcome to college. You’re insecure and hot now.

8. Get a bike. Now you’re insecure, hot AND a bike girl™. Don’t run over any pedestrians.

9. Do NOT, for Christ’s sake, take advanced Spanish grammar and introductory French at the same time because you thought it’d “be cool”! What are you thinking?

10. Walk around campus alone in the summer, or during spring break, or on the last day of exam season. It’ll feel surreal and cool and like campus belongs to you.

11. When everyone else fails you, there is always a Cosmic Cantina burrito. Or an Al’s Kenny J with a large fry. Or Linda’s cheese tots. Or those enormous muffins they serve at Alpine that are best served with a large 11:00 p.m. coffee and a side of self-hatred. Essentially, I’m saying you have a lot of options when it comes to emotional eating.

12. Take lots of pictures and videos.13. You’re gonna make a bajillion mistakes.

You’re gonna feel like a mess sometimes. That’s okay.

14. At some point in your undergraduate career, you will need a safe space where you can pull an all-nighter, guzzle a few Starbucks Double Shots and cry a little without anyone around you batting an eye at it. The basement of the Undergraduate Library is this safe space.

15. You’re gonna have a handful of existential crises in this basement. That’s okay too.

16. You’re gonna meet so many people who are gonna change your life, in ways you can’t even imagine yet.

17. You’re going to become a version of yourself you can’t even imagine yet.

18. F--k Duke. (They rejected you, remember?)

@[email protected] COURTESY OF HANNAH LANG

PHOTO COURTESY OF HANNAH LANG

Hannah Lang at first-year orientation, 2016.

Hannah Lang celebrates graduation, April 2020.

News Friday, June 26, 2020The Daily Tar Heel 15

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L I B R A R Y. U N C . E D U

WELCOME TO

UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

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T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F N O R T H C A R O L I N A AT C H A P E L H I L L

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• Less than 1/2 mile from campus

• Fully-furnished 2, 3 and 4 bedroom apartments with modern, industrial elements and high-end unit finishes.

• 24-hour fitness center, rooftop lounge and cyber cafe.

Down1 W. Coast force2 Court game word3 Cartoonist Drucker4 Bucket shaped like a sandcastle, for one5 “Thank you, Captain Obvious”6 __ Dhabi7 Team that retired Mike Piazza’s #318 Hosp. area9 __ Industries: L.A. youth program10 McDonald’s trademark11 Ale alternative12 Bugged a lot13 Like some bagels18 Department head22 Litter lightweight24 Addams cousin25 Monet’s “Cathedral Series” city27 Forum robe28 “Live at the __”: Patsy Cline album29 Spread across30 __ mail33 “The Empire Strikes Back” director Kershner34 Old apple spray35 Desperate36 Eye woe39 Blow away41 Unpaid balance42 Highland refusals43 Punk subgenre44 Shorten, as a pants leg45 Automatic promotion on “America’s Got Talent”47 Spot of land48 “__ say more?”49 Onslaught50 They’re put up in fights53 City in Tuscany55 Comic strip canine56 Light source57 Sri Lanka locale60 Old horse61 “Better Call Saul” drug lord Fring

Across1 Title critter in Blake’s “Songs of Inno-cence”5 Almost dry9 Football’s “Papa Bear”14 __ vera15 __ Eats: delivery service16 Hold the floor17 Generous severance package19 Bobby in a 1971 #1 hit20 Toss aside21 Bad loser23 Locks26 Stage of adolescence27 Frito-Lay brand31 Sudoku fill: Abbr.32 Chance of a lifetime34 Web spots37 Ethically uncertain

38 Ring bearer39 Came down to earth40 “Atlas Shrugged” writer Rand41 Marriage milestone45 Lily of France garment46 Citrus grove sight47 Covered, in a way51 NYC area above Houston Street52 Suddenly stops working, as an engine54 __ Gay58 TV host Gibbons59 His touch will complete five puzzle answers62 Garden tool63 Biblical twin64 California’s __ Valley65 Stadium levels66 Droops67 Air filter acronym

Today’s Birthday: June 30Explore uncharted territory this year. Focused professional efforts pay off. Switch course

with shared finances this summer, before inspiration propels your pen to creative heights. Adapt travel and educational plans to changes. Expect lighter potential winter cash flow,

before rising joint profits. Grow your reach.

Aries (March 21-April 19) -- Today is an 8 -- Find a lucrative opportunity hidden under a big change. A surprising development offers interesting openings. Refine plans before launching into action.Taurus (April 20- May 20)-- Today is a 9 -- You’re making a good impression. Provide leadership and support. Don’t splurge on a whim. Wait for developments before initiating actionson a personal project.Gemini (May 21- June 20) -- Today is a 6 -- Consider circumstances from a high-er perspective. Worries and anxieties can seem stuck on a negative feedback loop. Find ways to let them go.Cancer (June 21- July 22) -- Today is an 8 -- Surprising opportunities develop for your team. Consider interesting suggestions. Choose the most practical ones. Coordinate and schedule plans for later action.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Today is a 7 -- Career openings present new directions. Develop a project from idea to reality. Innovate and create. Consider options; pros and cons. Accept new responsibilities.Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)-- Today is a 7 -- Change can seem abrupt. Look for hidden potential with a surprising development. Discover new frontiers. Expand your bound-aries. Explore, investigate and learn.Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) --Today is a 7 -- Listen to your intuition and confirm with data. Collaborate to manage shared finances. Budget for new circumstances. Adapt and keep your patience.Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) -- Today is a 7 -- Stay objec-tive. You and your partner can get especially creative. Brainstorm and collaborate. Don’t try to force anything.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) -- Today is an 8 -- Thorough planning pays. Practice for a physical performance. Pamper your health and fitness. Wash your hands. Nurture yourself with good food and rest.Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)-- Today is a 7 -- Enjoy pri-vate family time. Savor good music, food and fun. Listen for the hidden elements. Get carried away by a creative project or good story.Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) -- Today is a 7 -- Home draws you in. Family fun takes priority. Shop carefully. Fru-gality serves you well. Make simple, hearty meals. Enjoy domestic comforts and treats.Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) --Today is an 8 -- Dig into your research. Look at the situation from another perspective. Discover some-thing fascinating.

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