Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 9, 2007, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 MONDAY, APRIL 9, 2007 GJljr Ilatly sar Mrel www.dailytarheel.com Established 1893 114 years of editorialfreedom UNDSAY MICHEL SARAH RABIL INVESTIGATIVE TEAM CO-EDITORS 962-0750 ITEAMOUNC.EDU BETH ELY PHOTO EDITOR 962-0750 DTHPHOTOOGMAIL. COM 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 ONLINEOUNC.EDU CHRIS SOPHER MULTIMEDIA EDITOR 962-0750 ONLINEOUNC.EDU SHARI FELD, ERIN GIBSON, JESSICA SCHONBERG WRITERS' COACHES 962-0372 FELDOEMAIL. UNC.EDU, EQGIBSONOEMAIL. UNC.EDU, JESSI22OEMAIL. UNC.EDU JOSEPH R. SCHWARTZ EDITOR-IN-CHIEF 962-4088 JOSEPH.SCHWARTZ •UNC.EDU OFFICE HOURS: MON., WED., FRI. 2 P.M. TO 3 P.M. KAVITA PILLAI MANAGING EDITOR 962-0750 KPILLAIOEMAIL.UNC. EDU REBECCA WILHELM DEPUTY MANAGING EDITOR, 962-0750 BECCAO7OEMAIL. UNC.EDU ERIN ZUREICK UNIVERSITY EDITOR 962-0372 UDESKOUNC.EDU KAYLA CARRICK. RACHEL ULLRICH CITY CO-EDITORS 962-4209 CITYDESKOUNC.EDU ERIN FRANCE STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR, 962-4103 STNTDESKOUNC.EDU KATIE HOFFMANN FEATURES EDITOR 962-4214 FEATURESOUNC.EDU HARRY KAPLOWITZ ARTS EDITOR 843-4529 ARTSDESKOUNC.EDU JESSE BAUMGARTNER SPORTS EDITOR 962-4710 SPORTSOUNC.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.O. Box 3257, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 Joseph R. Schwartz, Editor-in-Chief, 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. © 2007 DTH Publishing Corp. All rights reserved mm Bo p H JWj ' % ’ students uiha nt ts live large lius LfIRRE LJ AT COLLEGE PARK CHAPEL RIDGE OR CHAPEL ViEW I experience the best in student housing prices starting at $515 I chapel ridge 919.945.8875 fj|P Jljk • chapel view 919.942.2800 j T ■ DOSe Drunk mans mistake bails out brother FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS A ruse worked for an Arkansas man who used his brother’s name after being picked up for another drunk-driving charge until he called his brother and asked him to bail him out of jail. > Police said an officer arrested Sebastian Nabor, 28, early Sunday after the car Nabor was driving hit a curb. When Officer Ernesto Echevarria smelled alco hol and found an open container of beer in the car, Nabor gave his name as Antonio Moreno Nabor. The suspect failed a field sobriety test and a breath test. Nabor was charged with driving while intoxicated and called his brother to bail him out. As the paperwork was being processed, officers realized the arrested man had given the wrong name. NOTED. A Peeping Tom seen peering into a second-floor window at Matt Edgerton’s apart ment in Wisconsin fled before Edgerton could catch him, but he left a key piece of evidence behind his ladder. Edgerton, 24, said he and a date were at home when he noticed a shadow move across his bed room window. When he pulled back the curtain, he was face-to-face with a middle-aged man. TODAY Classes resume: The Daily Tar Heel welcomes you back from your long weekend. Time: 8 a.m. Location: varies Art and yoga: A yoga class will be held in Ackland Art Museum. Participants should bring a mat and wear comfortable clothes. Time: noon to 1 p.m. Location: Ackland Art Museum UNC Idol: Theta Nu Xi Multicultural Sorority will hold a UNC Idol com petition. Time: 7 p.m. Location: Hamilton 100 Vigil: As part of Remember the Gulf Coast Week, the student group Extended Disaster Relief will hold a vigil to stand in solidarity with the Gulf Coast. Time: 7 p.m. Location: Wilson Library steps TUESDAY Gulf Coast information: Extended Disaster Relief will hand QUOTED. “For an old lady, I still hit the ball pretty good.” Elsie McLean, 102, on how she became the oldest golfer ever to make a hole-in-one on a regulation course. McLean, who used a driver to bring in an ace on the fourth hole at Bidwell Park in Chico, Calif., will appear on “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno” on April 24 to celebrate her accomplishment COMMUNITY CALENDAR out information about the ongoing problems of the Gulf Coast. Time: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Location: Polk Place Anti-death penalty rally: Hear formerly convicted inmate Darryl Hunt and his attorney Mark Rabil; Jeremy Collins, coordinator for N.C. Coalition for a Moratorium; and Charles Kafoure, founder of a midwestem anti-death penalty group speak and join hundreds of others from local universities to stand up against the use of the death penalty in North Carolina. Time: 12:30 p.m. Location: the Pit Service showcase: Come for a celebration of the work APPLES stu dents have accomplished during the past school year. Time: 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Location: Johnston Center for Undergraduate Excellence 039 Memorial service: A memorial service will be held in honor of Jason Ray, the UNC student who portrayed Rameses for three years. Students and community members are invited to attend. Time: 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Location: Carolina Club Alumni Hall e ’' > JiC- - , 1 . )iH News Exhibit opening: Alan Kraut profes sor of history at American University, will speak about Dr. Joseph Goldberger and his controversial discovery of the source of pellagra, the disease known as the scourge of the South. “ Reform, Reconstruction and Redemption: The Northern Impulse to Save the South” mns through Aug. 31. Time: 5:45 p.m. Location: Wilson Library, Pleasants Family Assembly Room Movie screening: The Campus Y will host a screen on the green of "The Canary Effect" as part of Human Rights Week. The movie discusses abuses enacted against Native Americans. Time: 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. Location: Polk Place in front of Wilson Library To make a calendar submission, visit www.dailytarheel.com/calendar, 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. IB roc * ucts ® Fridge Packs at Mainstreet Rams Head Market POLICE LOG ■ Chapel Hill man Charles lyier Shoemaker was arrested at 3:19 a.m. Sunday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Shoemaker, 20, of 204 Pitch Pine Lane, was arrested on mis demeanor counts of possession of marijuana, possession of drug par aphernalia, driving while impaired, driving with a provisional driver’s license and driving with a fictional, revised or altered license, reports state. Shoemaker registered a 0.14 blood alcohol level on the Intoxilyzer 5000, according to reports. Shoemaker was confined to Orange County Jail in lieu of $l5O bail, reports state. Shoemaker is scheduled to appear in court today in Hillsborough, according to reports. ■ An incident of vandalism and willful damage to property occurred at 5:14 p.m. Saturday on West University Drive, according to Chapel Hill police reports. A suspect ran on top of a car, causing SSOO damage to the roof and S2OO to the sunroof, reports state. The case is under further inves tigation, according to reports. ■ An incident of vandalism Weekend Campus Roundup SWEAT 5K and egg hunt SWEAT sponsored a 5K run/ walk and an egg hunt Saturday morning. About 150 runners participat ed in the event that also offered music, arts and crafts. The event was attended mostly by members of the Chapel Hill community since a large portion of students were not in town because of the Easter holiday. The event raised about $2,500 for the Family Alliance for Development and Cooperation, which is a sustain able development organization that works in communities of western Tanzania. Best-selling author speaks Anna Lappe, author of “Grub: Ideas for aft Urban Organic Kitchen,” spoke about her new book to a small group of people Thursday afternoon ®l|p Doily (Ear Mwl and willful damage to property occurred at 5:18 p.m. Saturday at 369 S. Estes Drive, according to Chapel Hill police reports. A suspect jumped on top of a car, denting the hood and roof and causing SBOO in damages, reports state. The case is under further inves tigation, reports state. ■ Two men were arrested on drug charges at 11:48 a.m. Friday on the 600 block of Craig Street, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Christopher Powell, 20, of 109 Starlite Drive, was arrested on charges of a felony count of posses sion of cocaine with intent to sell or distribute, reports state. Powell was confined to Orange County Jail in lieu of $5,000 bail and is scheduled to appear in court today in Hillsborough, according to reports. Gregory Phillip McCain, 57, whose address was listed as the streets, was arrested on charges of a felony count of possession of one gram of cocaine and a mis demeanor count of possession of drug paraphernalia, reports state. McCain was issued a writ ten promise and also is sched uled to appear in court today in Hillsborough, according to reports. in the Blue Cross Blue Shield Auditorium of the Michael Hooker Research Center. Lappe is also the co-author of “Hope’s Edge: The New Diet for a Small Planet.” OASIS art show, auction OASIS ACTS Initiative, a ser vice subgroup ofthe Organization for African Students Interests and Solidarity, hosted an exhi bition and a charity auction Thursday at the Sonja Haynes Stone Center. OASIS ACTS partnered with Share the Blessings, and all of the event’s proceeds went toward funding the education of children in Uganda. The art pieces auctioned were donated by Chaz Maviyane Davies, a design artist of Zimbabwean descent, and Emeka Okoro, an underground artist who creates abstract African paintings.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 9, 2007, edition 1
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