2
Monday, October 29, 2001
This Week in Tar Heel History...
D 18 Years Ago:
_ ■ This week in 1983, the dean and 16 professors in the
UNC School of Law sent a letter to President Reagan
Tr 1 expressing their 'deep anguish* concerning the U.S.
I I invasion of Grenada.
V l 44 Years Ago:
\ \ ■ This week in 1957, UNC's Student Legislature voted
\ 21-15 against a bill that would place trash cans in
yflkl residence halls. Legislator Al Goldsmith opposed the bill
because trash cans would be “unsightly looking.'
68 Years Ago:
■ This week in 1933, the UNC library sponsored an exhibit featuring books
banned from Germany by Adolf Hitler. American authors denounced by the
Nazi regime included Jack London, Helen Keller and Upton Sinclair.
Campus Calendar
Today
8 a.m. - Student may pick up remain
ing basketball tickets at the Smith Center
Ticket Office until all of the approxi
mately 1,000 tickets are given out.
11 a.m. - The College Republicans
are sponsoring a blood drive in the
Great Hall until 4 p.m.
7 p.m. - Play Makers Repertory
Company invites the University commu
nity to attend its free “Seeds of Hate” sym
posium. It will take place in the Center for
Dramatic Art on Country Club Road.
1
R breakfast • funcfi • dinner
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Connecting People -866-cinoular
7:30 pm. - North Carolina
Renaissance is seeking undergraduates
to help in the planning and promotion
of summer enrichment sessions for N.C.
high school students from rural areas.
Information sessions will be held at
7:30 p.m. today and Tuesday in 302
Greenlaw Hall.
aljp Sailtf (Ear Hrrl
P.O. Box 3257. Chapel Hill, NC 27515
Katie Hunter, Editor. 962-4086
Advertising & Business, 962-1163
News, Features. Sports, 962-0245
© 2001 DTH Publishing Corp.
All rights reserved
CDC Confirm Inhalation Anthrax Case
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention con
firmed Sunday that a female New Jersey
postal worker has inhalation anthrax,
the most serious form of the disease that
has claimed three lives and prompted
thousands to take antibiotics.
CDC spokesman Tom Skinner
stressed it was not anew case of the dis
ease but one that had been listed as sus
pected anthrax. Lab tests confirmed the
diagnosis, he said. At least five New
Jersey postal workers have suspected or
confirmed cases of anthrax. Anthrax
tainted letters sent to Washington, D.C.,
and New York originated there.
The diagnosis came as tests continued
Families Gather for Attack Victim Memorial Service
The Associated Press
NEW YORK - With the smoldering
gray rubble of the World Trade Center a
sorrowful backdrop, the families of peo
ple killed in the Sept. 11 terrorist attack
Order of the (Betfdbzuer
Ofezv Member fl{ecrm^nent
t ir- -i,
Order of the Bell Tower Jt z- e
is seeking committed i 5 i %
and dedicated 15,11 jf!
undergraduates who '■
exemplify a strong >:.
presence on campus.
This includes a solid E j j ~
academic record,
excellent leadership
abilities, positive
community
service/volunteer work J ! ;
and a strong desire to -fi £:
strengthen the bond m % ?
between past, present, rs-nLI,
and future Tar Heels! - pTf,
Questions? Visit tdumniunc.edu/studelits
Applications are available at the Aturnni Center
Application 'Tuesday, October 30,2001 by spm
Nation
at postal and government offices in the
nation’s capital and elsewhere. Officials
were seeking to determine whether other
tainted letters are in the mail system.
Thousands of postal workers and oth
ers who dealt with large amounts of mail
were being urged to take antibiotics.
“There may be other letters that are
stuck in the system,” White House Chief
of Staff Andrew Card said on “Fox News
Sunday.” “We’re asking people to be
very careful.”
Deputy Postmaster General John M.
Nolan said on CBS’s “Face the Nation”
that there are many suppositions among
investigators about more letters, “but I
don’t have any way of knowing.”
Despite the strain on the system,
postal vice president Deborah Willhite
gathered Sunday for a memorial service
filled with prayer and song.
Thousands of mourners, some hold
ing photographs of their loved ones,
rose from their plastic chairs as Police
Officer Daniel Rodriguez opened the
vowed the mail will go through.
“We’re coming up to the first of the
month, and a lot of people are very
dependent upon the movement of mail,
receiving and sending of financial instru
ments is a vital public service,” she said.
“The Postal Service will rise to that duty.”
Dr. Ivan Walks, Washington’s public
health director, said no new anthrax had
been in the city found since contamina
tion was discovered Friday at a Supreme
Court mail-handling facility.
To disseminate the growing volume
of information on anthrax, Homeland
Security chief Tom Ridge will begin
briefing reporters at least three times a
week, and more likely every day, Bush
administration officials said Sunday.
There have been 14 confirmed cases of
service with “The Star-Spangled
Banner.” Cardinal Edward Egan deliv
ered the invocation, standing at a podi
um draped in black.
“They were innocent, and they were
brutally, viciously, unjusdy taken from
us,” said Egan, the leader of New York’s
Roman Catholic archdiocese. “We are
in mourning, Lord. We have hardly any
tears left to shed.”
For only the second time in the seven
weeks since the attack, the round-the-
A. The UNC
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159/? E. Franklin St. • Downtown Chapel Hill • 919-967-5048
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anthrax, including eight inhaled versions
of the disease. Six people in New York
and New Jersey are being treated for the
less dangerous skin form of anthrax, and
a few other cases are suspected.
On Capitol Hill, the Hart Senate
Office Budding was to remain closed
Monday, but the garage it shares with the
adjacent Dirksen building was scheduled
to reopen along with other Senate offices.
On the House side, the Ford and
Longworth office buildings were closed
thorough the weekend. Whether they
would reopen Monday was unclear.
The Hart building is home to the
office of Senate Majority Leader Tom
Daschle, who received a letter containing
anthrax three weeks ago, marking the
start of the scare in the nation’s capital.
clock recovery and demolition work at
the site was halted to allow for the
memorial service. The first time was on
Oct. 11 at 8:48 a.m. -one month to the
minute after the first hijacked plane
struck the trade center’s north tower -
when a moment of silence was observed.
City officials estimated the crowd at
9,200, far more than expected.
The crisp autumn air was tinged with
an acrid smell from the debris, a con
stant in lower Manhattan since the twin
towers collapsed. Although water was
sprayed on smoldering spots in the
wreckage before the service, a smoky
cloud hung over the crowd.
The drone of generators providing
power for the service temporarily
replaced the omnipresent roar of heavy
machinery.
Townridge Center
6564 Glenwood Ave.
881-8100
CARY
Saltbox Village
1257 Kildaire Farm Rd.
461-0801
(Near Fresh Market)
NOW OPEN
DURHAM
Shops at Northgate
1720 Guess Rd., Suite 14
416-1255
(Next to Northgate Mall
and Boston Market)
CARY CENTRUM
2344 Walnut St.
859-9977
(Next to Kohl's)
Video Club
Wireless 1
CARRBORO
The Sale Spot
HENDERSON
Cellular Superstore
Checks 2 Cash @ Wilco
Convenience Store
Phones 'R' Us
HILLSBOROUGH
Auto Acoustics
OXFORD
Act II Paging and Video
Winoco Convenience Store
PITTSBORO
Pittsboro Beauty Supply
and Communications
ROXBORO
Auto Acoustics
Quick Page Cellular
RTP
Er Outlet E sTor l e yee