8 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2005 Department expands number of substations Tuesday opening second in two weeks BY EREN TATARAGASI STAFF WRITER In an effort to keep an eye on crime and reach out to the com munity, the Chapel Hill Police Department is opening a fourth substation today at University Square. Free Peer Tutoring Tuesday & Wednesday evenings from 6-9 pm at 2nd floor of Dey Hall beginning September 13 & 14, 2005 Peer tutors available on a drop-in basis - first come, first serve - to help in the following courses: TUESDAY 6-9 pm Spanish 1-4, French 1-4, Portuguese 1,3, Arabic 101, Psychology 10, Math 10, 30. 31, 32. 33, Econ 10. 100, 101. Statistics 11,31, Business 71 (Accounting), Chemistry 11, 21,41.61,62. Biology 11, 50, 52-54, Physics 24, 25. 26 WEDNESDAY 6-9 pm Spanish 1-4, French 1-4, German 1-4, etc., Arabic 101, Math 10, 30, 31,32, 33. Econ 10, Biology 11,45, 52, 54, Chemistry 11, 21, 61,62, Physics 26 For additional help in physics, chemistry and math, try these free resources The Math Help Center The Chemistry Resource Center 224 Phillips 225 Venable Hall 3:30-7:3opm Mon-Thur 12:00-6:00pm Monday-Thursday The Physics Tutorial Center 245 Phillips Bam-6pm Monday-Friday (as tutors are available) See schedule on door for Phys 16, 24, 25, 26, 21 QUESTIONS? CALL 962-3782 Sponsored by the Peer Tutoring Program and UNC Learning Center Are you Morgan Stanley? WE INVITE YOU TO FIND OUT. FIRMWIDE PRESENTATION Morgan Stanley is a global community dedicated to achievement. We help Wednesday, September 14. 5:30-7:00 p m corporations, governments and others to solve the most complex problems in The Carolina Inn finance, including restructuring, mergers and acquisitions, and privatizations. From conference room to trading floor, we can show you a career from different VISIT AND APPLY ONLINE AT angles. And we’ll put you side by side with the best in the business people www.morganstanley.com/careers who challenge your thinking and who listen when you challenge theirs. Sound interesting? Then Morgan Stanley might just be the right place for you. M6i SfdiiUy !•• rin (:‘|iHl •itiimty affirmative rirli-.n employer c nrnitK.M. w- >ik' > • Oive rsitv |\ /I Ai ■ k Morga notan ley The opening of the University Square substation, at 133 W. Franklin St., comes two weeks after the opening of a substation in Southern Village. Mayor Kevin Foy officially will open the new space at 11:30 a.m. Police spokeswoman Jane Cousins said it wasn’t an increase in crime but a concern about crime that motivated the opening of the new substations. Cousins also said they no longer can fit any more officers at their primary location at 828 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. The department had a smaller substation in the Bank of America building for several years, but she said the new location gives them more space and accessibility. “The substations are good for several reasons,” she said. “They get us out there, make us more acces sible and provide us with the extra space that we need.” Cousins said that because the department has had a presence at University Mall, at 201S. Estes Drive, for the past 13 years, the idea of substations is nothing new to them. The substation that opened in Southern Village two weeks ago was a six-month process. Cousins said it took a while because there were construction needs. The University Square substa tion has taken only a few months. Grubb & Ellis/Thomas Linderman VISIT: Wrt.l-800-GO-GUARD.COM/MUSIC usr srt web an tor fuu News T The substations) get us out there ... and provide us with the extra space that we need ” JANE COUSINS, SPOKESWOMAN Grahaip Inc., which donated the space, took care of the few neces sary renovations. “We’ve had a long-standing relationship with the town of Chapel Hill and the police depart ment and we knew they had a need for anew location,” said Walter Holt, director of property services and property manager of University Square. “We had the means and the opportunity to provide them with more space,” he said. The new substation will be locat ed in what was once a photo shop. It will in the part of the building that faces Granville Towers. Contact the City Editor at citydesk@wnc.edu. Speakers capture religious diversity Alumnus opens speaker series BY KATHRYN BALES STAFF WRITER The UNC Jewish studies pro gram will kick off its fall speaker series today in celebration of the 350th anniversary of Jews’ arrival to America. This year’s cycle of seven speech es will begin today with a lecture by UNC alumnus Eli N. Evans, who will address “Southern Jewish Insights into the Religious Ethos in the South Today.” Many of the lectures are co sponsored by UNC Press and N.C. Hillel and are paid for by a grant in Evans’ honor from the Charles H. Revson Foundation, said Jonathan Hess, director of the Carolina Center for Jewish Studies and pro fessor of Germanic languages. The speeches are free to the pub lic and will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Hanes Art Center Auditorium, with the exception of the Oct. 6 speech to be held in Carroll Hall. “It’s a very diverse field,” he said. “What we try to do with the lectures is give a variety of different angles.” Hess said the speakers were selected by a faculty committee consisting of academics and public individuals. Brand New 20 Bed Salon, Largest in the Area! • Now Ollttinf) Tanninq't'nhanivmi'nls Z; • D.iy Sp.i Almosphctv tMj • Br.iml New llllr:i Hiqli I'lvssun Brils ♦ Medium Pressure Beds ;md Boulhs • Sunless Express Airbrush Tanninq ; vjfm ♦ I INC Sludenls show your IINC ID Inr ;i dismunl .—„ , , .. „ Designer Skin * Licensed Lolleqiate Hiindbaqs „ . , j sFnksTYa"n j ZdljHt Sato* 105 A Rams Plaza • 968-3377 Wp ®ar MM “The goal is really to bring in a variety of speakers for Jewish stud ies,” he said. “We try to be diverse in the types of people that are brought in.” Hess said that particular cours es may require students to attend certain speeches, but the main pur pose of the series is to inform and educate. There is an added emphasis on the Middle East and contemporary Israel that makes this year’s series different than previous ones, Hess said. “I think there’s a lot of interest in diversity here at the University,” he said. “It interfaces with all sorts of things that are going on on cam pus. Different lectures will appeal to different people." Naomi Ragen,, the second lectur er in the series, will speak Sept. 22, on “We Write the Books We Want to Read: The Compelling Jewish Narrative.” Ragen is an American born playwright and novelist who has lived in Jerusalem since 1971. Hess said he looks forward to the fall series and hopes many will attend. “We conceived these as lectures that are really there for the general public,” he said. “I invite everyone to come out.” Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu.