VOLUME 113, ISSUE 113 Input sought on registration options WANT TO CHANGE REGISTRATION? > Option 1: Keep the process for assigning earliest registra tion times the same. >- Option 2: Register in small increments of 200 students by random selection within year classifications with the knowl edge that the time slots will be inverted in the spring. One man’s trek for a brighter tomorrow Immigrant recounts citizenship struggle Editor’s note: The subject of this story was interviewed in Spanish and will be referred to as Hernandez to honor requests of confidentiality. Similar sto ries will be printed in the DTH’s Spanish language section, which will start next semester. Surnames and anonymous sources only will be used in special cases with the editor’s consent. BY GREGORIO URBINA STAFF WRITER Fourteen years old. Most high school graduates are 17 or 18 when they leave home for work or col lege. This Salvadorian immigrant was 14 years old when he was driven out of his home country by the ongo- ONLINE The version of this article as translated into Spanish ing civil war. No residence halls and academic advisers awaited him, only the hope of getting across the Mexican border. He headed north, hoping to succeed through determination and perseverance. His experiences would put a modern twist on the American dream, featur ing updated technology and an age-old blend of shady characters, tight scrapes and hopes for a better tomorrow. “The war between guerrillas and the army, and the poor economic situation forced me into exile,” Hernandez said. “I made the choice to leave. If I had stayed, I would probably be dead.” With the vision of a better life in a country that “offers opportunity, and where you can live better,” he took the first of many buses on his way to Texas and left his family, his home and his country behind. On the Guatemala-Mexico border he had his first run-in with immigration offi cers. However, the local law enforcement SEE IMMIGRANT, PAGE 5 ~7 vwni ( n jfiß PebP DTH/NICK SCOTT Sophomore Duncan Germain flips from a tree at Polk Place earlier this month. The Elon native practices Le Parkour the art of movement. online | dailvtarhwl.tom CALLING ALL STUDENTS Housing providers look to sign up student renters A FEW LEFT BEHIND No Child Left Behind standards to change for 10 states QUIETER AT THE FARM Mason Farm residents react to Baity Hill students' exit Serving the students and the University community since 1893 (She SatUj (Ear Hrrl > Option 3: Register in small increments by total credit hours. Those with the most credit hours in a year classification will reg ister first and those with the least amount of credit hours will register last. Give feedback, vote on options at www.ibiblio.org/sg/poll. THREE DECADES, FEW ANSWERS BY KELLY OCHS SENIOR WRITER Nov. 21,1970 A fight breaks out between mem bers of a white Durham motorcycle club and several young black men from Chapel Hill out side the Student Union. When the fight ends, a black man lies bleeding in the Pit from two stab wounds received during the brawl. He is taken to N.C. Memorial Hospital in the back of a police patrol car because an ambulance took 14 minutes to arrive. fiMIm SPPTSr-'wßy h SB COURTESY OF NATE DAVIS James Lewis Cates Jr. (far left) as seen with his teammates on the 1958 Chapel Hill Midgets. Cates was murdered in the Pit 35 years ago today. Murder case unsolved, inactive 35 years later Nov. 21,1970 The day of the murder •12 a.m. - 7 a.m. O About 2 a.m. • Five minutes later • About 3 a.m. • Later that day The Afro-American A fight breaks out The fight ends, and Cates is • A warrant is issued for the Affairs Committee between members of a James Lewis Cates Jr., pronounced dead arrest of Rufus Paul Nelson, and the Carolina white motorcycle club lies on the ground from hemorrhaging Ronnie Dale Broadwell and Union sponsor an from Durham, called outside the Union, of a stab wound to William Douglas Johnson, all-night dance in the Storm Troopers, bleeding from two the right femoral They are taken to the the Union snack bar. and a group of black wounds received artery. Orange County Jail and youths. during the fight. each charged with In the months following the murder first degree murder • Nov. 25 • Dec 1 • Dec. 10 • March 25,1971 Cates is buried Probable cause hearing for the three men is held "In order to avoid a breach of The three men are in the Chapel at the district court in Hillsborough. After four the peace in Orange County,' acquitted of Hill Memorial and a half hours of testimony from witnesses, the three men are ordered to be second-degree murder Cemetery. police officers and medical examiners, the men moved from the Orange County charges. Prosecution are submitted to the grand jury on first-degree Jail to the N. C. Department of lowered the charge to murder charges. Correction. second-degree at the trial. SOURCE: ORANGE COUNTY COURT DOCUMENTS, DTH ARCHIVES DTH/BOBBY SWEATT AND FEUDING CAGE campus I page 4 'YOU WANT TO HELP US' The UNC Circle K group hosts Medusa, a professional hypnotist, at a Saturday show with proceeds going toward a Randleman summer camp. www.daxlytarheeLconi BY ROBBY MARSHALL STAFF WRITER Student registration, like a busy dentist’s office or like that one driver trying to turn left onto a highway, has become unnecessarily slow and annoying, a trend that has prompt ed organizers to re-evaluate the system. University officials and student leaders are exploring ways to make the chronically problematic registration process more effi cient and user friendly. University Registrar Alice Poehls, along with the academic affairs committee of stu Student makes world an obstacle course Practices popular French art form BY DESIREE SHOE STAFF WRITER “OK, on the count of five,” he says tersely. Seconds later, sophomore Duncan Germain sprints for ward and launches himself from the ledge above the top steps of Manning Hall. He soars over a pair of tall bush es and rolls to a stop in the mulch. A couple with a baby stroller stops to stare as he brushes himself off. It’s all part of the daily rou tine for the Elon native. Germain often can be seen around campus, city | 6 CHAPEL HILL DOT COM Former council candidates band together to launch orangepedia.org, a site designed to host information much like Wikipedia.com. dent government, is seeking students’ opin ions on how to relieve the early morning traf fic jams on the information superhighway. “The current system is not good. It’s fair,” said Warren Cathcart, chairman of the aca demic affairs committee. He said he and Poehls are hoping to have anew system up and running by the spring. Registration officials have set up a Web site http://www.ibiblio.org/sg/poll/ to allow students to vote whether to change the current registration process. “We don’t want to do this unless students Less than an hour after being taken to the hospital, he is pro nounced dead. Today, a community has no more answers than it did 35 years ago. Tensions in Chapel Hill At the close of a tense decade and less than five years after the integra tion of public schools, the nation still was struggling with racial divisions. And Chapel Hill was no excep tion, said former Chapel Hill Mayor Howard Lee, who was elected in 1969 and served as the first black mayor of a primarily white town since Reconstruction. “Chapel Hill was like many com munities struggling with some racial divides and some leftover ten sions from some previous times,” he said. “There were people who were obviously very concerned that this had occurred in Chapel Hill, and of course we were all shocked that it had occurred on the University campus.” Evans Witt, a sophomore at UNC at the time of the murder and The Daily Tar Heel reporter who covered the story, said that although black and white students at UNC remained separate for the most part, it was a SEE MURDER, PAGE 5 performing flips and leaps from trees and buildings. “I don’t know what the hell he’s doing, but it’s fun to watch,” says Duke University freshman Jared Mueller, after watching Germain demonstrate a Kong Vault, which is an advanced Monkey Vault. Though it may seem a strange ly random activity, his movements have roots in a French phenom enon sweeping Europe. It’s called Le Parkour the art of movement. Started by David Belle and Sebastien Foucan in France, Parkour is a sport that focuses on speed and fluidity to overcome obstacles, often in an SEE MOVEMENT, PAGE 5 tell us they want to,” Cathcart said. Cathcart met for two hours with Poehls and developed three possible changes. The first is a conditional add/drop option, which would allow students to waitlist an excess of courses and drop classes accord ingly once a full schedule is attained. The second option would provide more time slots by subdividing the registering students, spacing out registration timps. And the third is a “book bag” approach, SEE CHANGES, PAGE 5 DTH/SARA LEWKOWICZ Judges Patrick Higginbotham, John Roberts and Thomas Ambro judge a Wake Forest University mock trial Friday. Chief Justice presides over speech case John Roberts participates in university’s mock trial finals BY KRISTIN PRATT STAFF WRITER WINSTON-SALEM While the trial was moot, Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts empha sized that the lesson learned from Friday’s mock trial competition at Wake Forest University was not. Roberts was one of three judges who heard a case argued by second-year law students Lesley Bark and Justin Barnes. The case centered around the free speech claim of a middle school student wearing a T-shirt bearing a controversial statement. It also involved the juris dictional issue of whether the mock court of appeals could hear the case under the “unique circumstance” clause. After deliberating on the case, Roberts and the other judges commented on the importance of lawyers in the judicial system. “What we witnessed here today, that happens around the country every day, is something very extraordinary,” Roberts said to about 1,500 people in Wait Chapel. “It is the rule of law in practice, which we can take for granted too often.” Roberts said the U.S. judicial system settles dis putes in a civil matter through argument, unlike past systems or other places in the world. But he empha sized that justice is not carried out solely by deciding judges. “The point of today’s competition, though, is that the lawyers play an important role,” Roberts said. “I’ve been a judge for a little more than two years SEE ROBERTS, PAGE 5 So you want to start out in Le Parkour? > The Precision Jump A beginning Parkour move. Place feet shoulder-width apart, toes at the edge of your take-off point, then vault yourself forward, landing on the balls of your feet with your legs slightly in front of your body. Swing your arms during the jump to build up momentum. y Standing Cat Leap Ensure that you have a solid take off for this move to avoid colliding with the obstacle, usually a wall. Crouch down, then spring forward and up, keeping your arms raised. Tuck your legs so you can get your SpOrtS I page 8 OFF AND RUNNING The women's basketball team smashes Davidson, 86-48, to win their season opener. Junior Ivory Latta scored a game-high 20 points. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2005 Alice Poehls is examining ways to better registration. shoes ready to make contact with the wall. Your arms and legs should be in front of your body. Lower your arms and grab the top of the wall, letting your arms take most of the strain of the jump. >- The Monkey Vault Jog up to your obstacle, usually a wall or a ledge, then plant your hands shoulder-width apart on the obstacle. During the jump, tuck your legs against your chest to avoid clipping your feet. After you have cleared the obstacle, untuck your legs to land safely. For more information, visit www.3run.co.uk weather jrikiv Showers H 57, L 44 index police log 2 calendar 2 crossword 4 edit 7 sports 10