Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 22, 2005, edition 1 / Page 10
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
10 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2005 BENEFIT FROM PAGE 3 Princes and The Wusses. Also, there is a surprise guest performance in the lineup, but the identity of that band will remain hidden until the night of the show, Boothe said. The benefit show is an equal collaboration between Yep Roc Records and Local 506 in an effort to raise funds for those in need, Boothe said. Every band expected to perform during the night is on the Yep Roc label, excluding The Wusses, a cover band that plays hits from ’7os soft rock. This will be the group’s first performance at Chapel Hill. “I like all of the bands and I am pleased with the selection,” Boothe said. “I’m especially excited about Chris Stamey. I’m a personal fan. I grew up listening to him.” Hank Stockard, who does pro motion for Yep Roc, said the event would showcase the label’s new est artists, Cities and American Princes. TRAVEL FROM PAGE 3 one-day homestay gave me a fossil that his father gave him from Nepal. I was blown away by the affection shown to me by a relative stranger. In my final days in Ghana, my host brother came into my room and said, “Yaodom, I cannot sleep. I do not want you to leave. I feel pain in my chest.” You never get over moments like that. Hhii: unOi'Jß utaffle shoppe JM good food, no yoke. Open Daily - Mon-Fri 7am to 2pm • Sat 7am to 3pm • Sun Bam to 3pm 173 East Franklin St • Chapel Hill • 919.929.9192 / . £ \ I WITH UNC STUDENT ID GET ■ *4“sl OFF t DINNER BUFFET! ! I J 35 Chinese has the best variety of Chinese food around. You can choose from over SO items on our Super Buffet, or order from the extensive menu. Lunch 11 am-2:3opm Friday/Saturday Dinner 4:3opm-1 Opm Sunday-Thursday Dinner 4:3opm-9:3opm 143 W.Franklin Street • Chapel Hill • 919.968.3488 • www.citysearch.com/rdu/35 • fax 919.968.0268 ■JH DUKE UNIVERSITY W> MEDICAL CENTER Data Manager Position available in the laboratory of Dr. David Madden at the Duke University Medical Center http://www.geri.duke.edu/cogpsych/main.htm. The lab is located in the Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development, and the research focuses on age related changes in cognitive function. Duties for this position involve processing different forms of imaging data (e.g., fMRI, diffusion tensor), using SPM and locally developed software, as well as programming stimulus presentation for behavioral studies, and network administration. Minimum educational qualification for the position is 8.5./ B.A. Background in computer science and/or biomedical engineering, familiarity with MATLAB, helpful; two-year commitment preferred. Duke University is an equal opportunity employer. Submit resume to harri@duke.edu Among the most distinctive ** bands of the i9Bos, Los Lobos ** combine traditional Mexican /• - r '■jjr SL h / pw? music. Tex-Mex. rock, blues. mL jSSSS&mM folk. R&B. and country with a gritty style that has enraptured WmSujfflijßiL ' ~jW BH m Mm M fans for thirty years. lISIHMI Sunday. September 25 Sf W' memorial hall, chapel hill nItWPII J ■ if f;’:-; / THE TRANSfOHMATION IF YOU GO Date: Friday, Sept. 23 Time: 9 p.m. Location: Local 506, 506 W. Franklin St. Info: www.localso6.com Robbie Mackey, a member of Cities, said he is looking forward to performing in tomorrow’s show. “It’s a good chance to do some thing for the community,” said Mackey, a former staff writer for The Daily Tar Heel. “Personally, I think that it’s something that every one should be involved with.” Mackey said he thinks that the benefit is a very positive event and that the proceeds will be donated to a sincere cause. “You should do everything that you can do,” he said. “It’s good that something we have done is going to help out peo ple who genuinely need help.” Contact theA&E Editor at artsdesk@unc.edu. Though I’ve forgotten many of the small moments I thought would never fade, what has remained is a sense of purpose to learn. This is what drags me out of bed for an 8 a.m. class after a night out. That is why, as I look back on my college experience, I realize it wasn’t so much outside the class room but outside the country that has influenced me the most. Contact Scott Burr at sburr@email.unc.edu. From Page Three JEOPARDY FROM PAGE 3 “It’s been a tradition at my household for a long time,” he said of his experience with the show. After passing an initial 10-ques tion quiz, Chilton moved attempt ed a 50-question oral test record ed by Johnny Gilbert, the show’s announcer. “If you can pass that 50-ques tion test, you could on any night play enough material to win the show,” Loud said. Only 12 people made it past the second round, Chilton said. Chilton said he is somewhat concerned about preparing for the show which is heavy on pop-cul ture trivia. “I’ve been playing the Jeopardy! CD-ROM game to study,” he said, which was a gift from his girlfriend. But as for his forte: “I probably shouldn’t say,” he said. “It’d be a curse.” His former Raleigh Charter High School Quiz Bowl coach Betsy Newmark, however, can attest to Chilton’s strengths. “He was our go-to guy on art history,” she said. “He made a CD where he found a rock song for each state with either the name of the state or a city in the lyrics. He knew all the obscure stuff.” Newmark remembers Chilton’s shining moment when a compe tition against Chapel Hill High School came down to the wire dur ing his junior year. “The question was, ‘Who paint ed ‘Broadway Boogie Woogie?’” she recalls. “As soon as they said ‘Broadway,’ Chris answered, ‘Piet Mondrian.’ That was his moment of glory,” she said. If all things go as planned, Chilton could see a similar moment in Raleigh’s RBC Center. “I’d probably put most of the money away,” he said. “My room mate wants me to add that I’d probably put most of the money away after taking him to the Caribbean.” Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu. THURSDAY NIGHT CUAPBUItU, Avalon Night Club THURSDAY NIGHT DATE AUCTION jo me money fop KATRINA * VICTIMS $ Carolina Dance Team Members Basketball Players Lacrosse Team Football Players - 21 TO DRINK t . 1 -t 1 ’v/s}SfcfckhPUbl 1 j" ; \ ■ -iafc. . £kL, < s \ ' MJHr mgSP wsg V. mm. a; • /ysgj/. —■*- argaret Teich, a member of Student Action with Workers, mops in the Pit during the orga nization’s “Mop Off” on Wednesday. Teich, along with others were mopping in opposi STUDENT PRESS FROM PAGE 3 “The dean could not be held liable for the actions he took because it was not unreasonable for him to think he was protected,” Walden said. But in presenting its opinion, she said the court mentioned the case Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier, which gave high school officials the ability to reasonably censor school-sponsored student publications. The decision was ruled con stitutional by the Supreme Court because the high school publication was not a public forum, she said. “The Hazelwood decision was very much a function of the high school environment and should not be applied to college students,” Walden said. , THURSDAY NIGHT A CLEAN FIGHT tion to the proposed team cleaning system for UNC housekeepers that would require them to have a single assigned task, such as cleaning toilets, instead of cleaning an entire area such as a floor in a dorm. A statement released by the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education said the court’s opin ion should not have mentioned Hazelwood. It said the college newspaper in question clearly fell under the guidelines of a public forum because of its history and policy of student management. The Student Press Law Center asked all the schools in the 7th circuit to formally designate their school’s newspapers as public forums uncensored by administra tors, he said. Illinois State University is the first one to do so, Goodman said. “If the/re not going to put them selves on record, it’s going to look bad.” Contact the State 0) National Editor at stntdesk@unc.edu. °Oom Annual UNC Tk Vo!imtr Fair a ckat%c< faculty, and tk public to lam about Srvic ' opportunities in tk Representatives HUNGER LUNCH fro*" 35 locxl $3 ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT agencies unll be on catnpus to recruit B * kKS ' Rie< & volunteers. Volunteering All proceeds yo to is a yreat way to n*ke a sustainable nutrition project a difference in tke in a developing country quality of your cohnlnunity. ®/A| Choooliwi | Cw ifcui u Unamber Chapel Hill News ulljp Doily Sor Hppl ‘ DTH/GILUAN BOLSOVER STONE CENTER FROM PAGE 3 Escobar said that with the growing Latino population in North Carolina, a push for a Latin- American cultural center could be a possibility in the next’ 10 or 15 years. “It’s not unthinkable,” he said. ; Brandon Hodges, president oft the Black Student Movement, said many groups on campus benefit; from the Stone Center building. “There is a big difference hav ing a freestanding structure than; just having a room in the Union,”; Hodges said. “It facilitates a variety of groups ; not just African- American.” i Contact the University Editor • at udesk@unc.edu..
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 22, 2005, edition 1
10
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75