Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 26, 2007, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2007 (Eljp laihj (Tar Heel www.dailytarheel.com Established 1893 114 years of editorialfreedom JESSE BAUMGARTNER SPORTS EDITOR *2-4710 SPORTSOUNC.EDU KATIE HOFFMANN INVESTIGATIVE TEAM EDITOR *2-0750 ITEAMOUNC.EDU ALLIE MULLIN PHOTO EDITOR *2-0750 DTHPHOTOOGMAIL. COM UNDSAY NAYLOR. MEGAN LAPLACA COPY CO-EDITORS *2-4103 ABBY JEFFERS DESIGN EDITOR *2-0750 ALLIE WASSUM, REBECCA ROLFE GRAPHICS CO-EDITORS *2-0750 NICOLE NORFLEET ONLINE EDITOR *2-0750 ONLINEOUNC.EDU TIMOTHY REESE MULTIMEDIA EDITOR *2-0750 ONLINEOUNC.EDU ERIC JOHNSON, TED STRONG WRITERS' COACHES *2-0372 ERICJOHNSONOUNC. EDU TSTRONGOEMAIL. UNC.EDU ERIN ZUREICK EDITOR-IN-CHIEF 962-4086 ZUREICKOEMAIL. UNC.EDU OFFICE HOURS: MON., WED., FRI. 1 P.M.TO 2 P.M. ALLISON NICHOLS MANAGING EDITOR 962-0750 NALLISONOEMAIL. UNC.EDU OFFICE HOURS: TUES., THURS. 10 A.M. TO 10:50 A.M. RACHEL ULLRICH DEPUTY MANAGING EDITOR *2-0750 RULLRICHOEMAIL. UNC.EDU WHITNEY KISLING UNIVERSITY EDITOR *2-0372 UDESKOUNC.EDU KAYLA CARRICK CITY EDITOR *2-4209 CITYDESKOUNC.EDU LINDSEY NAYLOR STATE 8i NATIONAL EDITOR, *2-4103 STNTDESKOUNC.EDU ANDREW DUNN FEATURES EDITOR *2-4214 FEATURESOUNC.EDU ALEXANDRIA SHEALY ARTS EDITOR 843-4529 ARTSDESKOUNC.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 axe noted in the online versions of our stories. ► Contact Managing Editor Allison Nichols at nallison@email.unc.edu with issues about this policy. P.O. Box 3257, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 Erin Zureick, Editor-in-Chiet *2-4086 Advertising & Business, *2-1163 News, Features, Sports, *2-0245 One copy per person; additional copies may be purchased at The Daily Tar Heel for $.25 each. 0 2007 DTH Publishing Corp. All rights reserved i ft! lit HALF 2nd HALF TIME SHOTS SAVES SAVES SHOTS time OUTS OUTS LEFT LEFT a. 2007 FIELD HOCKEY NCM A CHAPIONSHF W ' ■% :•*% _ - ft* > ' ! I r sfv v,','H I 4bl ft * . '■ ' ft f y ■ ™ * >S ■.''' ’ . . I ■ *. . '<? <, •' ..M. - Carolina Athletics would like to congratulate the ’$ 2007 UNC field hockey team on its NCAA Championship I and 24-0 undefeated season! ■ Dose They’re riding on 20s —as in dollars FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS Tricked out from nose to tail with images of SIOO bills, New Orleans resi dent Jamaine Anderson’s money car got mo’ cash for this weekend’s Bayou Classic. Now it has money on the rims, too. It’s part of an unofficial sideshow, the Times-Picayune reported, to the peren nial football game between Southern University and Grambling State held Saturday —a parade of flamboyant cars that crawls down Canal Street in the French Quarter. They are known as decal cars or sticker cars, and they have become a regional symbol of New Orleans, where the technique got its start. Among the cars this year were a Lay’s potato chip car and a 1985 Caprice Classic shrink-wrapped with Tony the Tiger and Frosted Flakes. NOTED. Carrboro police were sent out to an animal call last week, which was reported as a possible injured duck on or close to a pond offN.C. 54. But what the officer found was far from a wounded duck. The officer’s own words, in the police report: “Negative on injury, duck was engaged in a breeding activity.” TODAY Parent meeting: The Chapel Hill- Carrboro City Schools district will sponsor "The ABC's of Exceptional Children's Educational Programs." It has been designed to improve communication between parents of special needs students and school administration. Time: 6:45 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Location: Carolina Center for Educational Excellence, Smith Middle School Group meditation: The Interfaith Alliance is hosting a guided medita tion and offering information about how meditation is involved in differ ent world religions. Time: 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Locations: Saunders 204 Ballroom lessons: The Ballroom Dance Club and Team offers weekly free lessons. One to two dances will be taught, and no partner or experi ence is required. Time: 7:?0 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Location: Woollen Women's Gym TDESDAY Benefit T-shirt sale: HOPE will be QUOTED. “He shot both of them. He killed Flash, and the officer had to kill Chloe. I really don’t understand why he shot them they didn’t deserve it.” Waupaca, Wis., resident Megan Mischler, whose father shot her pet goats after his wife refused to bring him beer from the grocery. But Mischler said her father was most angry about the mess the goats made earlier in the day. COMMUNITY CALENDAR selling shirts for Faces of Franklin: Chapel Hill Homelessness Awareness Day. Shirts are $7, and proceeds go to Inter-Faith Council shelters. Free food on the lower quad for those wearing the shirt. Time: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Location: The Pit, food on Lower Quad Homelessness Awareness Day: There will be a Homeless Fair in the quad and later a documentary and forum for Homelessness Awareness Day. Time: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. fair; 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. documentary Location: the quad; Hanes Art Center Book reading: The award-winning writer Donald McCaig will read from his book "Rhett Butler's People." The novel parallels the novel “Gone With the Wind." Time: 2 p.m. Location: Mclntyre's Fine Books in Fearrington Village Letter-writing event: Internationalist Books will host a "political prisoners letter writing night." Everyone is invited to come write letters to their favorite politi- News cal prisoners. Bring snacks to share. Letter-writing materials and address es will be provided. Time: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Location: Internationalist Books & Community Center, 405 W. Franklin St. Book reading: Brett Webb-Mitchell will read from his book "On Being a Gay Parent: Making a Future Together" —a guide to being a gay Christian parent. Time: 7 p.m. Location: Mclntyre's Fine Books Committee meeting: Chapel Hill's Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Board will meet to discuss several citizen petitions and next year's budget. Time: 7 p.m. Location: First floor conference room, Town Hall To make a calendar submission, visitwww.dailytarheei.com/calendar, or e-mail Deputy Managing Editor Rachel Ullrich at dthcalendar@gmail. com. 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. POLICE LOG ■ Randy Antone Burnette was arrested on multiple felony and misdemeanor charges during the execution of a narcotic search war rant of his home at 325 S. Estes Drive at 6 a.m. Wednesday, accord ing to Chapel Hill police reports. Burnette, 37, was arrested on felony charges of possession of a weapon by a felon, maintaining a dwelling for selling drugs, posses sion with intent to sell or distribute cocaine and possession of cocaine, reports state. He also was arrested on mis demeanor charges of possession of drugs, possession of drug para phernalia and obstructing justice, reports state. Burnette was taken to UNC Hospitals for medical treatment after admitting to swallowing an unknown amount of narcotics, reports state. He was issued an unsecured bond of $50,000 and is sched uled to appear today in court in Hillsborough, reports state. ■ Justin Hale Grimm was arrested on a misdemeanor charge of possession of 3.5 grams of mari juana at 12:37 a.m. Wednesday at 150 E. Rosemary St., according to Chapel Hill police reports. Grimm, 28, of 323 Dairyland Expert tips: clothing mishaps Ever been in a situation in which the zipper on your new jeans breaks? Or do you need to move a button after Thanksgiving festivities? Just because you popped a button or ripped a seam, it doesn’t mean you need to go pick up anew outfit. Cynthia Istook, an assistant professor at N.C. State University’s textile and apparel school, offers these tips to help fix your clothing woes: ■ Buy a kit. Istook suggests the Witchery Stitchery set, which can easily hem any type of fabric requiring only an iron. ■ Go fish. A button falls off, and there is no time to manage it with a needle and thread. Simple supplies are easily found. Use fishing wire or even plastic strings to wire buttons into the clothing. ■ Hoard scrap fabric. Holes in pants can be embarrass ing and hard to fix, but using patches to fix the holes is an Saihj ®ar Hwl Road, was cited after being found in possession of two small bags of marijuana and having an open container of beer in a town parking deck, reports state. ■ Someone broke the glass out of the 1700 Legion Road bus shel ter at 2:22 a.m. Sunday, causing SI,OOO in damage, according to Chapel Hill police reports. ■ Larceny from a coin machine and willful damage to property was reported at 4:20 p.m. Thursday at 6 00 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., according to Chapel Hill police reports. Someone caused SIOO damage to four clothes dryers and SIOO dam age to a clothes washer by prying the coin slots open, reports state. ■ Movers took items from a residence as they were packing at 10 a.m. Wednesday at 1102 Oak TVee Drive, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The total value of items stolen was $1,400, reports state. ■ Someone shoplifted a $4 bottle of the cough syrup Delsym at 3:10 p.m. Wednesday at 201 S. Estes Drive, according to Chapel Hill police reports. efficient technique. Look for an old pair of jeans that match the tattered clothing and easily patch the scrap onto the hole using needle and thread. ■ Carry safety pins. If a zip per breaks and there is no time to fix it, safety pins can easily hold the zipper together. Pin beneath the flap so it is hidden. ■ Create a sewing kit. A simple pair of scissors and roll of thread quickly solve most fabric dilemmas. Keep several colors on hand. -Compiled by Katie Lubimky
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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