2 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2005 COMMUNITY CALENDAR ■ The Student Attorney General’s staff now is accepting applications for staff counsels. The counsels prepare and argue cases before the Honor Court. Applications can be found at honor.unc.edu, and are due by 5 p.m. today in Union 3505. ■ Focus, Graduate & Professional Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship will hold its semimonthly dinner meeting at 6:30 p.m. today in Brooks’ House. Dr. Greg Jones of Duke University will speak on “Forgiveness and Loving your Enemies.” ■ DJ Spooky That Subliminal Kid will perform his live remix of the 1915 racist film “Birth of a Nation” at 8 p.m. today at Memorial Hall. The performance is called “Rebirth of a Nation” and will feature a collage of sounds and images. Call 843-3333 for ticket information. ■ Yep Roc Records is hosting a benefit for Hurricane Katrina at 9 p.m. today at Local 506. Proceeds from the event, for which there is an $8 cover charge, will go to the Red Cross. [IPS LOBOS j Among the most distinctive bands of the 1980s, Los Lobos combine traditional Mexican music, Tex-Mex, rock, blues, folk, R&B. and country with a gritty style that has enraptured fans for thirty years. Sunday, September 25 memorial hail, chapel hill 919.843.3333 tolvAetwnee / THE TRANSFORMATION f ilivisji The Carolina Center NMfftMßjl for Jewish Studies presents 2aiMlii!iliH Jewish Women in Greco-Roman Antiquity: Representation and Reality An exploration of the roles of real and imagined Jewish women in antiquity, focusing on two tales. ■ Professor of Religious Studies, Brown University M COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES This lecture is made possible by a grant from the Charles H. Revson Foundation in honor of Eli N. Evans, 58. Co-sponsored by the Department of Religious Studies. ■ The Chapel Hill Zen Group will host a calligraphy demonstration at 7:30 p.m. today at the center, 5322 N.C. Highway 86. Kaz Tanahashi calligrapher, artist, peace activ ist and Buddhist translator will lead the event. Suggested donation is sls. All proceeds will benefit the Zen Center Property Fund. For more information, call 967-0861. ■ Montrose Gardens, 320 St. Mary’s Road, Hillsborough, will be free to visitors from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. The Orange County Historical Museum will sell picnic lunches to raise funds. Please park next door at Cameron Park School. ■ Traditional music legend Alice Gerrard, a pioneer of the women's bluegrass sound, will perform today at 7:30 p.m. at Playmakers Theater. Tickets are sls for the public and $lO for University students and faculty. ■ Famed Triangle artists and bands from as far as San Diego are scheduled to play a benefit concert at 6 p.m. Saturday at Cat’s Cradle for victims of Hurricane Katrina. A donation of sl2 is suggested. t CH ' 4OT HI “ 4 jJk M ' m ?JR , Wm wS Si S jSS SRRBf JfIHHL hH|^9| ■ The Campus Y is hosting Nourish International’s Swing Against Hunger! Dance on Saturday in the Great Hall of the Student Union. A swing lesson will be held at 7:30 p.m. and the dancing will kick into gear at 8 p.m. Refreshments will be served. Tickets are $8 for stu dents, $lO for nonstudents. Call 585- 314-9327 for more information. ■ “Off-Center Play Slam” kicks off at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Arts Center in Carrboro. The audience calls the shots as fast, two-minute pieces vie for the final prize in an evening of swift-theater performances. Admission is $5. Visit www.artscen terlive.org for more information. ■ Three-time Grammy winner Los Lobos will bring its Cancionero 2005 tour to Chapel Hill at 8 p.m. Sunday at Memorial Hall as part of the Carolina Performing Arts Series. Call 843-3333 for ticket information. To make a calendar submission, visit www.dailytarheel.com for a list of submission policies and contacts. Events must be sent in by noon the preceding publication date. News ■ A Chapel Hill woman was cited at 9:28 p.m. Wednesday for driving while impaired and reck less driving, according to reports from the Chapel Hill Police Department. Cheryl Ann Wilson, 46, of 109-B Weatherstone Drive, was involved in a motor vehicle acci dent on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, according to police reports. Wilson was driving a 1997 Ford Taurus, reports state. Her blood alcohol level was .21, according to reports. She was released on a written promise to appear in district crimi nal court in Hillsborough, accord ing to reports. ■ An El Tri Concrete employ ee was arrested at 11:17 p.m. Wednesday on charges of second degree trespassing, Chapel Hill police reports state. Lauro Andre Bajonero-Tinoco, 34, was arrested at 828 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., according to police reports. He was transported to Orange County Jail in Hillsborough on a secured $3,500 bond, reports fflt UNC c- CAROLINA f;\ i ki imum i iuai ;m INI 11A ri\l w* Iv<tcnnf an entrepreneurial climate at l Ac; Attention Carolina Entrepreneurs! Let us help you launch your new commercial or social venture Launch the Venture is accepting applications through Oct. 7 for UNC faculty, staff and students who want help preparing to launch anew business or nonprofit. Launch the Venture is a course plus workshops, coaching and networks designed for serious entrepreneurs who are ready to launch anew venture. The year-long program helps participants: • Evaluate the feasibility and marketability of an idea. • Plan and launch new ventures that have the potential to succeed. Application Deadline: Oct. 7 Visit www.unc.edu/cei/launch to learn more and apply. Launch the Venture is a program of the Carolina Entrepreneurial Initiative, co-directed by Kenan-Flagler Business School and UNC's Office of Technology Development. www.unc cdu/cri <*ilu POLICE LOG state. Bajonero-Tinoco was scheduled to appear in district criminal court Thursday. ■ A UNC Hospitals employee was arrested Tuesday on three misdemeanor charges of writing worthless checks, according to police reports. Nancy Lynn Boudreau, 50, of 1250 Ephesus Church Road, turned herself in to police for writing three worthless checks, reports state. Boudreau, a staff coordinator for UNC Hospitals, was released on a promise to appear in superior court in Greensboro, according to reports. ■ An act of vandalism was reported at a Chapel Hill store Tuesday, according to police reports. An employee of Dry Clean Warehouse, 2801 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., reported at 3:47 a.m. that a small metal trash can was thrown through a double paned glass window, reports state. The shattered window is val- (Tljp Mg (Tor ued at SSOO, according to police reports. ■ Gumby’s Pizza, located at 306 West Franklin St., was the victim of trespassing late Wednesday, Chapel Hill police reports state. ■ A 26-year-old Chapel Hill woman reported a bicycle missing from her home Tuesday morning, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The victim reported the incident at 6:30 a.m. from her home at 214 Conner Drive-3, reports state. The bicycle was valued at S2OO, according to reports. The bicycle was last known secure at 6 p.m. Monday, reports state. übp Mg fotr llppl P.O. Box 3257, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 Ryan C.Tuck, Editor, 962-4086 Advertising & Business, 962-1163 News, Features, Sports, 962-0245 One copy per person; additional copies may be purchased at The Daily Tar Heel for $.25 each. © 2005 DTH Publishing Corp. All rights reserved

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