Niner Times- April 24th, 2012

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TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 2012

A Niner Times

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THROWBACK pg. 3-11

NINERTIMES Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Published twice weekly and online at www.nineronline.com

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E rth Day

Nailing down Unmask future plans the 39er Malcolm Carter

MCARTE72@UNCC.EDU

Last year’s Earth Day. Photo courtesy of Devin

Hatley

Elizabeth Bartholf EBARTHO3@UNCC.EDU

Last year UNC Charlotte broke campus records, recycling over 2 million pounds of materials and diverting 39 percent of campus waste from landfills. As the university recycles another 2 million pounds this year, the campus community will celebrate and promote green initiatives at the upcoming Earth EVENT Day Festival. What: Earth Day UNC CharFestival lotte’s Office of Waste Reduction When: 10 a.m. and Recycling will until 2 p.m., host its 20th anWednesday, April nual Earth Day 25, 2012 Festival WednesWhere: CHHS day, April 25, 2012, from 10 a.m. until Courtyard 2 p.m., in the College of Health and Human Services (CHHS) Plaza. The free event is open to the public and will include live music and games. “We want students, faculty and staff to come and learn about [the environmental work of] local business and other groups on campus,” said Devin Hatley, environmental educator for the Office of Waste Reduction and Recycling. This year’s celebration will feature the work of various campus groups including UNC Charlotte’s Sustainability Office, Charlotte Green Initiative, Venture, Earth Club, Geography Club and Recreational Services. As part of new recycling initiatives on campus UNC Charlotte engineering students will unveil two original interactive recycling bins. Two teams of seniors have designed and built recycling bins with game components for their senior projects. One bin, which is designed for indoor use, starts a football themed game when you recycle a can in the bin. The second bin contains a solar component and launches a game inspired by a the Price is Right. Both bins will available for use on campus starting this summer. “We make a huge impact with over 30,000 people on this campus every day. How we go about our daily business makes a large impact [as we] recycle.” Hatley looks forward to continued expansion of campus recycling programs and environmental education at UNC Charlotte.

Thursday April 19, 2012, local leaders and state representatives gathered in front of the Bioinformatics Building to celebrate the final agreement for the state to provide 25 percent of the budget for the Blue Line Extension (BLE) project. This project will bring the light rail transit to the main campus of UNC Charlotte. Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx, North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) Secretary for Transit Paul Morris, Deputy Project Director Kelly Goforth and Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS) Chief Executive Officer Carolyn Flowers attended the ceremony. According to Goforth the project has been in the works since 2000. CATS began preliminary engineering after opening the south quarter line in 2007. The funding for the project would not have come together without UNC Charlotte’s cooperation. “Unless the university agreed to bring it on campus, they would have never met the federal requirements for ridership that were necessary to get the funding,” said Chancellor Phillip Dubois. Fifty percent of the funding comes from the federal government, 25 percent comes from the city’s collection of a transit sales tax and 25 percent comes from the state. “UNC Charlotte has been tremendous partners

Eden Creamer ECREAMER@UNCC.EDU

Earlier this school year the Niner Times began following the “Underground Niner,” a boy who posed as a UNC Charlotte student. He lived in student housing, ate in residence hall dining and called himself a 39er with hopes of one day becoming a student at the university he was living at. Now, after months of coverage, his identity will be revealed.

Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx holds an green and gold hammer as he prepares to hammer celebratory stakes into a track. Photo by Chris Crews

in the efforts of bringing the light rail to University City. In fact they’re one of the signature stops on the line. It’s going to end right on campus which is going to be great for students and visitors and staff,” said Jean Leier with CATS public relations. Two on campus stops are currently part of the plans for the light rail. One stop will be on J.W. Clay Blvd. and the other will be just north of Wallis Hall. These station locations will provide students, fac-

The Lynx Blue Line that is coming to UNC Charlotte in the future. MCT Campus

ulty and visitors easy access to uptown Charlotte. “Because it has frequent stops, it has the ability to connect the university to shopping, recreation and entertainment and other housing options,” said Morris. UNC Charlotte is the first of any universities in North Carolina to get a light rail system. “[Charlotte and UNC Charlotte] are setting the stage for other universities and cities to follow suit,” said Morris. Once distinguished guests had finished speaking, Flowers invited attendees to make their way to the makeshift track that had been transported to the lawn in front of the Bioinformatics building. Green and gold hammers awaited the guests who, on the count of three from Foxx, hammered the golden stakes into the track. This symbolizes the completion of the BLE and the recognition of partnership between UNC Charlotte, CATS and the city of Charlotte.

Darnell Terrell is not his real name. Terrell, 20, has spent the last eight months living in a UNC Charlotte residence hall after his application for financial aid was rejected, leaving him with nowhere to call home. Friends at UNC Charlotte took Terrell in and gave him a place to stay. He ate in Crown Commons, used school facilities and integrated himself into the campus community. He attended a local community college and lived on campus as a Niner. Now, he is not. Terrell received acceptance to the Art Institute of Charlotte (Ai) in March 2012. As his UNC Charlotte comrades work to wrap up their semesters, Terrell’s first day of class began Monday, April 2, 2012, the first day of Ai’s Spring Quarter. Before his acceptance to Ai, Terrell felt burdened by the weight of his secret. “I always feel that secretly, I don’t belong here, I’m not supposed to be here right now. And that hurts,” said Terrell. “Everybody has that desperate need and desire to be successful, and it seems like, and it’s almost been proven that it is impossible to be successful without college, not to mention without an accredited university behind you.” Now that he has that, Terrell is happy with his new life at Ai. He enjoys how his photography, the art he has gone to Ai to study, is improving. He also loves “the creativity of my peers,” he says. Along with his change in school Terrell also moved off campus into a place of his own. “I have an apartment, and I still visit UNC Charlotte every now and then,” he said. Terrell visits campus on a weekly basis, spending time with the friends who had helped him so much in the past months. Before moving out Terrell was conscious of how he might be troubling the people who were helping him. He was always aware of how he “might be a burden on some people. We’re all the same age. As a coming-of-age adult, you shouldn’t have to carry another coming-of-age adult on your back,” he said. His real name is Daniel Terry. He had been living in the UNC Charlotte high rises since August. UNC Charlotte became a home to him but now he has a real place to call his own. Daniel Terry is no longer an Underground Niner.


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