2 FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 2007 (Tljr Saily ®ar Hrrl www.dailytarheel.com Established 1893 113 years of editorialfreedom LINDSAY MICHEL, SARAH RABIL INVESTIGATIVE TEAM CO-EDITORS 962-0750 ITEAM@UNC.EDU BETH ELY PHOTO EDITOR 962-0750 DTHPHOTO@UNC. EDU LINDSAY NAYLOR, BRITTANY SPENCER COPY CO-EDITORS 962-4103 AMY DOMBROWER, GINNY HENDRIX DESIGN CO-EDITORS (919) 962-0750 ALLIE WASSUM GRAPHICS EDITOR 962-0750 CLINT JOHNSON ONLINE EDITOR 962-0750 ONLINE@UNC.EDU SHARI FELD, ERIN GIBSON, JESSICA SCHONBERG WRITERS' COACHES 962-0372 EDU, FELD@EMAIL. UNC.EDU, EQGIBSON@EMAIL. UNC.EDU, JESSI22@EMAIL. UNC.EDU JOSEPH R. SCHWARTZ EDITOR-IN-CHIEF 962-4086 JOSEPH_SCHWARTZ ©UNC.EDU OFFICE HOURS: MON., WED., FRI. 2 P.M. TO 3 P.M. KAVITA PILLAI MANAGING EDITOR 962-0750 KPILIAI@EMAIL.UNC. EDU REBECCA WILHELM DEPUTY MANAGING EDITOR, 962-0750 BECCAO7@EMAIL. UNC.EDU ERIN ZUREICK UNIVERSITY EDITOR 962-0372 UDESK@UNC.EDU KAYLA CARRICK, RACHEL ULLRICH CITY CO-EDITORS 962-4209 CITYDESK@UNC.EDU ERIN FRANCE STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR, 962-4103 STNTDESK@UNC.EDU KATIE HOFFMANN FEATURES EDITOR 962-4214 FEATURES@UNC.EDU HARRY KAPLOWITZ ARTS EDITOR 843-4529 ARTSDESK@UNC.EDU JESSE BAUMGARTNER SPORTS EDITOR 962-4710 SPORTS@UNC.EDU >• The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered. >- Corrections for front-page errors will be printed on the front page. Any other incorrect information will be corrected on page 3. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections printed on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories. ► Please contact Managing Editor Kavita Pillai at kpillai@email.unc. edu with issues about this policy. P.0.80x3257,Chapel Hill, NC 27515 Joseph R. Schwartz, Editor in Chiet (919) 962-4086 Advertising & Business, (919) 962-1163 News, Features, Sports, (919) 962-0245 One copy per person; additional copies may be purchased at The Daily Tar Heel for $.25 each. © 2007 DTH Publishing Corp. All rights'reserved Stand marvelling, frozen with excitement in the shadow of our SUPER BIG HUGE GIANT WINTER BLOWOI I IT’S INSANE, W W > • THIS STORE'S SALE! mm/Kaxi w^FoffO .nj ifri PLUS A FACE-MELTING AMOUNT op SWEET DEALS oh STUFF LIKES nMKintain lluv i oniikin-il tu (Hal \T 1 k 1 r I \ V A J ~T*H9 ii i in'n j.a iwiii>ytii>i* iiiiiiiiiflvi 1 n'f | w | w |n|| ii'i .11 "Miitiii 'ih 'mpumcjibu' <> iw>' i'm iii mhm - it - —\T ”I %J —J 'I-VIV-i *ll *l a ®WBl3lsbikl£S®| pH Chapel Hill Since 1971 x , Dose Silence is golden, school officials hope FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS The chapel isn’t the only place where silence is expected at one Rhode Island Catholic school. The Saint Rose of Lima School in Warwick has new lunch rules that require students to remain silent during lunch. The move comes after three recent choking incidents in the school cafeteria. All three students are fine —but school Principal Jeannine Fuller said in a letter to parents that “the school’s priority is the safety of each child.” Students who don’t follow the policy will receive a lunch detention. Providence Diocese spokesman Michael Guilfoyle says the school is enacting a temporary safety measure. He says the school doesn’t expect complete silence but enough quiet to keep students safe. NOTED. A small Illinois college says it would consider issuing anew, fireproof honor ary degree to simmer down last spring’s com mencement speaker, satirist Stephen Colbert. The arch-browed comic threatened to burn the honorary doctorate of fine arts he received last year after Knox College landed former President Bill Clinton as next June’s gradua tion speaker. FRIDAY Poetry lecture: Roy Jacobstein, • author of "A Form of Optimism," will give a poetry reading and book signing. Time: 7 p.m. Location: Market Street Books, 610 Market St. Senior night: Senior marshals are hosting a Senior Night with a '9os theme. Wear your "House Party 'O7" bracelets, and you will get a dis counted cover. Time: 10 p.m. to 2 a.m Location: Players Musical: WP Haines and Cos. will present "Ain't We Got Fun, a Musicale." The performance is part of the Hillsborough Arts Council's Last Fridays series and will present a musical review of the late 1800 sand early 1900s. Time: 8 p.m. Location: Masonic Lodge, 142 W. King St. Teen night: The Chapel Hill- Carrboro YMCA will host a night out for high-school students. The event will feature dancing, a deejay, "Dance-Dance Revolution" and QUOTED. “Mats obviously wanted absolute ly nothing to do with furthering science.” Axel Burchardt, a spokesman at University of Jena in eastern Germany, on finally giving up on Mats, a sloth, after three years of failed attempts to entice him into budging as part of an experiment in animal movement Neither pounds of cucumbers nor plates of homemade spaghetti were appetizing enough to make Mats move. COMMUNITY CALENDAR open-mic performances. Time: 9 p.m. to midnight Location: 980 Martin Luther King SATURDAY School-supply drive: Members of Alpha Phi Omega service frater nity will be collecting and donat ing school supplies to New Hope Elementary School. Time: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Location: Drop off items at col lection sites outside Student Stores, Kerr Drug, Tarheel Bookstore and the Office Depot in Durham. Junior Miss scholarship: An informational meeting for Orange and Durham counties' Junior Miss Scholarship competition will be held for interested high-school female students. Time: 3 p.m. Location: Chapel Hill Public Library, 100 Library Drive Jung Society workshop: The Carl Jung Society of the Triangle will present a workshop on "The Sacred Initiation of Women: The Ritual of Dionysus at the Villa of Mysteries in Pompeii." News Time: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Location: Church of Reconciliation, 110 N. Elliot Road SUNDAY Documentary viewing: The Chapel Hill Institute for Cultural and Language Education will show a film called Fidel, containing rare Fidel Castro footage. Time: 5 p.m. Location: 101 E. Weaver St. Author speaks: Leslie Goldman, author of "Locker Room Diaries,' will speak about women's quest for bodily perfection in an event spon sored by the Panhellenic Council. Time: 7 p.m. Location: Great Hall of the Student Union To make a calendar submission, visit www.dailytarheel.com/calenclar, or e-mail Deputy Managing Editor Rebecca Wilhelm at beccao7@email. unc.edu with "calendar* in the subject line. Events will be published in the newspaper on the day and the day before they take place, and will be posted online when received. Submissions must be sent in by noon the preceding publication date. Nominations Requested &Aanre//er <4 AWARDS excellence in Student Activities & Leadership Nominations are encouraged from all members of the University Community Senior awards Primary area of achievement Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award Humanitarian contribution {one male, one female} Irene F. Lee Award Character, scholarship, leadership { female} Walter S. Spearman Award Character, scholarship, leadership {male} Frank Porter Graham Award Improving quality of life of the University community through principles of equality, dignity and peace George Moses Horton Award Leadership, initiative, creativity in multicultural . education programs E. Eugene Jackson Award Member of the graduating class whose leadership and selfless dedication have strengthened the class pride and University loyalty, enriching the lives of seniors, and made the most significant contribution to the University John Johnston Parker, Jr. Medal Student self-governance J. Maryon Saunders Award Recognizes the greatest contribution to the preservation ana enhancement of the feeling of loyalty and goodwill Ferebee Taylor Award Recognizes the principle of honor as one of the University’s most hallowed ideals Junior awards Primary area of achievement " Jane Craige Gray Memorial Award Character, scholarship, leadership { female} Ernest L. Mackie Award Character, scholarship, leadership {male} Graduate & Professional award Primary area of achievement Boka W. Hadzija Award Awarded to the graduate/professional student who has been judged most outstanding in character, scholarship and leadership Other awards Primary area of achievement Ernest H. Abemethy Award Student publications Cornelius O. Cathey Award Recognizes the greatest contribution to the quality of campus life or the efficacy of University programs for students through sustained, conservative participation in establishedprograms, or through creative, persistent effort in development of new programs Gladys & Albert Coates Award Given to a member of the Student Congress judged most outstanding on a criteria of statesmenship, commitment and constructive involvement in issues affecting the quality of the University community Robert B. House Distinguished Unselfish commitment, through services to the Service Award University and to the surrounding area International Leadership Award The Class of 1938 Joseph F. Patterson, Jr. and Alice M. Patterson International Leadership Award for international awareness and understanding Jtnt Tatum Memorial A.ward Athletics plus co-curricular activities James O. Cansler Service Award Presented to a junior or senior whose faith has inspired outstanding service to the needs of humanity, locally or abroad Nominations Due Friday, February 9, 2007, SPM Nomination Forms Available Online www.unc.edu/chancellorsawards For More Information Contact Tammy Lambert, 966.3128 PHOTO OF THE WEEK W 4 '2 Spp ; ‘‘| M ? IkJbR DTH/COURTNEY POTTER Sophomore Bethany Phillis swings from a tree in the late afternoon sun on a Reformed University Fellowship leadership retreat Saturday. RUS spent the week end in Floyd, Va., at a family farm belonging to one of the members to get reaquainted and plan for the semester. nffes sp*ip ■ ng* PuKaICE mmm ■ A homeless man was arrested twice Wednesday at 12:04 a.m. and again at 10:40 a.m., according to Chapel Hill police reports. Reports state Edward Farrington Jr., 35, was arrested on charges of trespassing in a public housing property’s walkway adjacent to 510 Craig St. He was cited and released, then later arrested on forgery charges when he attempted to cash stolen checks, reports state. He was scheduled to appear in court both Thursday and today, reports state. laihj (Tar MM ■ Richard Lee Gordon, 39, of 4216 Garrett Road, was arrested at 9:42 p.m. Wednesday on charges of impaired driving and speeding with failure to decelerate, accord ing to Chapel Hill police reports. Reports state Gordon was arrest ed on 15-501 near Eastowne Drive after being involved in an accident. He was released on written promise to appear in court March 27, according to reports. Reports state Gordon blew .14 blood alcohol level on the Intoxilyzer 5000, almost twice the legal limit.