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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 2007
EaiUj (Ear Hrrl
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Sheriff writes himself a traffic ticket
FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS
Brown County Sheriff Dennis Kocken, of Wisconsin, didn’t have to write
himself a ticket. But he says it was the right thing to do. Kocken issued
himself a ticket March 27 for an unsafe lane change, three weeks after he
rear-ended a suspected speeder that slowed down to turn. Neither the
deputy who completed the accident report nor the Brown County district attorney’s
office felt that Kocken deserved a citation.
“As sheriff, I’m held to the highest standard in law enforcement. How can I hold
officers accountable if I don’t hold myself accountable?” He said. “I’m satisfied I’m
doing the right thing.”
The ticket carries a $160.80 fine that Kocken said he fully intends to pay.
NOTED. Moose and reindeer at a Stockholm
wildlife park have been invited to an unusual
taste panel that will help decide which type of
salt should be used to de-ice the country’s roads
in wintertime.
The less they like it, the better. The National
Road Administration plans to introduce anew,
sweeter blend of road salt, but wants to make sure
it doesn’t attract wildlife to Sweden’s highways.
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY
Film screening: Campus Y will
screen “In Someone Else's Shoes’
to provide an outlet for students to
experience the prejudices that are
displayed in the community toward
certain groups.
Time: 10 a.m.
Location: the Pit
Hunger lunch: Campus Y will
sponsor a hunger lunch, including
rice, beans and cornbread for $3
to benefit the Full Belly Project in
Uganda.
Time: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Location: the Pit
Death penalty photo project:
Amnesty International will host a
documentary by Scott Langley that
includes photographs of execution
vigils, the scene inside an execution
chamber, the hours leading up to an
execution and portraits of exoner
ated death-row prisoners.
Time: 7 p.m.
Location: Gardner 103
Discussion panel: UNC student
group Extended Disaster Relief will
host a panel discussion titled, 'What
Now? Rebuilding the Gulf Coast.'
News
QUOTED. “This might be mid-life, but it’s
not a crisis. It’s mid-life excitement. I don’t
need it all. I don’t use it all. I just have it all.
Actually, it has me.”
Lisa Perry, 45, of Minnesota, on how she
put all her belongings except her dog, her cat,
photo albums and some clothing up for auc
tion on eßay to make afresh start. As of Sunday
night, the top bid for her items was SIOO.
Time: 7 p.m.
Location: Greenlaw 431
Public lecture: Donald Miller of the
University of Southern California will
speak on 'Global Pentecostalism:
The New Face of Christian Social
Engagement Around the World.’ Miller
will use video clips from his research in
places such as Africa and Latin America
to illustrate different expressions of
worship and social engagement by
Pentecostals in the developing world.
For more information visit wwwchristi
anityculture.unc.edu.
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Location: Murphey 116
Speaker: Alpha lota Omega
Christian Fraternity will host a
lecture and question-and-answer
session by Gary Habermas titled,
'Jesus' Resurrection: Was it a
Hoax?" as part of the fraternity's
Jesus Week.
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Location: Hamilton 100
THURSDAY
Holistic health fair: Health Focus,
a Campus Y committee, will offer
free alternative medicine demon-
strations. Options include massage
therapy, yoga and acupuncture. Free
smoothies will be provided. The
event will be moved to the Campus
Y building if it rains.
Time: 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Location: Polk Place in front of
Wilson Library
Movie screening: Extended Disaster
Relief will screen the Spike Lee docu
mentary "When the Levees Broke."
Time: 7 p.m.
Location: Greenlaw 431
Battle of the bands: Students
Working in the Environment for
Active Transformation will host a
battle-of-the-bands competition.
Time: 10 p.m.
Location: The Library, 120 E.
Franklin St.
To make a calendar submission,
visit www.dailytarheel.com/calendar,
ore-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
The Carolina Center BMliMfftiiS
for Jewish Studies
presents ,
Kurt Weill’s
Kol Nidre and
Jewish Memory
A look at why Weill chose the Kol Nidre
melody as a vehicle for constituting a
musical Jewish identity, and how his settings
reflect an understanding of the powerful
v role of Jewish memory.
H Associate Professor, UCLA, and
Visiting Professor, UNC-Chapel Hill
E COLLEGE OF
ARTS ft SCIENCES
This lecture is made possible by a grant from the Charles
H. Revson Foundation in honor of Eli N. Evans, 'SB.
PICTURE PERFECT DEBUT
mXtLLjmm
DTHJTRACI WHITE
International documentary photographer Fazal Sheikh
presents photographs from his work in Africa in Mandela
Auditorium at the FedEx Global Education Center on
TUesday. Sheikh said it “seemed appropriate to include some
of my work from South Africa” in the first lecture held there.
POLICE LOG
■ Lolita Dawn Stewart, 35, of
1250 Ephesus Church Road was
arrested at 4:55 p.m. at Church
Street near Rosemary Street, accord
ing to Chapel Hill police reports.
Stewart was stopped after her
car displayed a fictional license
tag. Police also found 0.8 grams
of marijuana. She was charged
with misdemeanor counts of driv
ing with a suspended or revoked
license and possession of mari
juana, reports state.
Stewart was cited and released.
She is scheduled to appear May
22 in District Criminal Court in
Chapel Hill, according to reports.
■ Jorge Alberto Gutierrez-
Gomez, 22, of 401 Highway 54
Bypass Blvd., was arrested at 7:54
p.m. Monday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
Reports state he was armed
with a knife. Gutierrez-Gomez was
charged with misdemeanor counts
of larceny, possession of stolen
goods and resisting arrest.
iffp Srnly (Ear Hrri
Gutierrez-Gomez was confined
at Orange County Jail on Monday
and released Tuesday after posting
SSOO bail, reports state.
He is scheduled to appear May
21 in court in Hillsborough.
■ An incident of automobile theft
was reported at 5:33 p.m. Monday
at 516 W. Franklin St, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The 1998 Chevy Malibu is val
ued at $2,800, reports state.
A Wachovia debit card, a State
Employees Credit Union credit card,
a N.C. driver’s licence and a hand
bag, each valued at sl, and $lO in
cash also were reported stolen.
■ An incident of vandalism was
reported at 11:46 a.m. Monday at
1820 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.,
home of Chocolaterie Stam, accord
ing to Chapel Hill police reports.
Unknown suspects threw glass
items and broke into the store,
according to reports. Damages are
valued at SIOO.