2 MONDAY. JANUARY 14, 2008 ahr Daily ear Hrrl www.daiKiarheel.com Established 1893 114 years of editorialfreedom ERIN ZUREICK EDITOR-IN<HIEF 962-4086 ZUREICXOEMAIL UNC.EDU OffICE HOURS MON , WED . FRI 1 PM TO 2 PM ALLISON NICHOLS MANAGING EDITOR 962-0750 NALLISONOEMAJL UNC.EDU OFFICE HOURS TUEi. THURS 5 PM. TO 6 PM RACHEL ULLRICH DEPUTY MANAGING EDITOR 962-07S0 RULLRICHOEMAIL UNC.EDU WHITNEY KISUNG UNIVERSITY EDITOR 962-0372 UDESKOUNC.EDU SARA GREGORY CITY EDITOR 962-4209 CITYDESKOUNC.EDU ELIZABETH DEORNELLAS STATE A NATIONAL EDITOR. 9624103 STNTDESKOUNC EDU ANDREW DUNN FEATURES EDITOR 962-4214 FEATURESOUNC.EDU ALEXANDRIA SNEALY ARTS EDITOR 843 4529 ARTSDESKOUNC EDU DAVID ELY SPORTS EDITOR 9624710 SPORTSOUNC EDU KATIE HOFFMANN INVESTIGATIVE TEAM EDITOR 962-0750 ITEAMOUNC.EDU ALUE MULLIN PHOTO EDITOR 962-0750 DTHPHOTOOGMAIL COM WILL HARRISON, scon POWERS COPY CO-EDITORS 9624103 ABBY JEFFERS DESIGN EDITOR 962-0750 ALLIE WASSUM. REBECCA ROLFE GRAPHICS CO EDITORS 962-0750 NICOLE NORFLEET ONLINE EDITOR 962 0750 ONLINEOUNC EDU TIMOTHY REESE MULTIMEDIA EDITOR 962-0750 ONLINEOUNC.EDU ERIC JOHNSON. LINDSEY NAYLOR WRITERS' COACHES 962-0372 ERICJOHNSONO UNC.EDU NAYLOEMAIL 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. ► Contact Managing Editor Allison Nichols at nallison@email.unc.edu with issues about this policy. P.O. Box 3257, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 Erin Zuretck. Editor-m-CNel 9624086 Advertising A 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 0 2008 OTH Publishing Corp. M rights reserved expexieuce' tkt uMmte in itoJent hauling ' \ M & *f#| j! u Hat H •# la # PH# I ■ -^s I #? }V UL /* ini §V j; SJ. f'Mpa I jjjjßfe. " I iL'hij ua-t to hue in liiKur;;. k isihen you can afford it right nors? * iV " CHAPEL RIDGE CHAPEL VIEW Dose Pig fetuses impaled on cars as prank FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS Several members of an lowa high schools swim team were suspended after they impaled fetal pigs on 15 car antennas and smeared crawfish on hoods and windshields in a rival school’s parking lot. Roosevelt High School swim coach Steve Teter said members of his team carried out the pig caper in retaliation for Dowling Catholic High School swimmers lobbing snowballs at them at an earlier swim meet. “You could smell the formaldehyde from a block away,” Dowling Assistant Principal Ron Meyers said. The pigs likely were stolen from a biology- lab, but pig fetuses aren’t labeled at the school and no inventory is kept, so science teachers “can’t be sure” of their origin. NOTED. An obstetrician saved his family of seven from a fire destroying their home, deliv ered a baby while the house was still aflame and then got busted for building violations. The 37-year-old awoke around 3 a.m. to a smoke detector. He got his family to safety and then was paged to deliver an infant about 6 a.m. Inspectors called to the fire later cited the doc tor for a discrepancy in plumbing plans. TODAY Ballroom dance lessons: Attendees will leam the basics of ballroom dancing as well as two dances. Lessons are free and no part ner or experience is necessary. Time: 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Location: Women's Gym behind Woollen Gym Interest meeting: Alpha Epsilon Delta will have a spring interest meeting for anyone who is interested in joining the club or wants to get more information. The meeting is mandatory for anyone who wants to pledge this spring. Time: 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Location: Chapman Hall, Room 201 Diaspora discussion: Derek Penslar, a Jewish history professor at the University of Toronto, will discuss the Jewish diaspora in a program titled "Israel and the Diaspora: Convergence or Rupture." Time: 7:30 p.m. Location: Sonja Haynes Stone Center Theater and Auditorium Theatre production: Naomi Wallace's "The Trestle at Pope Lick Creek" will host its last performance. QUOTED. “The F-word isn’t what it used to be." Pennsylvania attorney*Keith Williams, who argued against the vulgarity of the expletive after his client had been charged with disorderly con duct for writing the word on the memo line of a check he used to pay a $5 parking ticket. The man, 45-year-old David Binner. offered a written apology, and the charges were dropped. COMMUNITY CALENDAR The show is performed by the UNC Advanced Showcase in association with New York City's Ground UP Productions. Time: 8:15 p.m. Location: Bingham Hall Town Council meeting: The Chapel Hill Town Council will hold a business meeting to discuss a possible extension of the Northern Area moratorium, among other issues. Time: 7 p.m. Location: Council Chamber, Town Hall Networking meeting: The Chapel Hill Public Library will host a net working meeting for mothers in career transition. Time: 6:30 p.m. Location: Downstairs meeting room, Chapel Hill Public Library TUESDAY Interest meeting: Engineers Without Borders will hold an interest meeting and discuss a joint UNC and Duke project that addresses inad equate water supplies in Northern Peru. Tune: 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. News Location: Michael Hooker Research Center, Room 001 Incarcerated women program: Female panelists who have spent time in jail will examine the chal lenges facing incarcerated women and the effects of the criminal justice system on women inmates. Time: 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Location: Sonja Haynes Stone Center, Hitchcock Multipurpose Room N.C. Farmworkers discussion: The January meeting of the League of Women Voters of Orange-Durham Chatham will feature Melinda Wiggins, executive director of Student Action with Farmworkers. Time: 1 p.m. Location: Hargraves Community Center, 216 N. Roberson St. To make a calendar submission, visit www.dailytarheel.com/calendar, or e-mail Deputy Managing Editor Rachel Ullrich at dthcalendardgmail. 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 ■ Someone made off with about $lO9 worth of Budweiser 12-packs from a grocery store by “rolling it out of the business in a cart at a high rate of speed," according to Chapel Hill police reports. The theft took place at 10:15 p.m. Saturday at the Harris Teeter at 1800 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., reports state. ■ Gordon Joseph Keil. 39, of Hillsborough, was arrested at 5 a.m. Saturday at 1312 Fordham Blvd. on more than 120 felony drug charges, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Keil was arrested on one count each of maintaining a home for drug use. possession with intent to sell or distribute marijuana, pos session of cocaine, possession of a schedule IV controlled substance and possession of marijuana, all felonies, reports state. He was charged with 118 felony counts of possession with intent to sell or distribute a schedule IV controlled substance and two mis demeanors for possession of drug paraphernalia, according to reports. Keil had 88 grams of marijuana, 8 grams of non-' crack" cocaine. 118 doses of one depressant and one dose of another depressant reports state. Keil is being held in Orange Counts- Jail in lieu of $50,000 bond Expert tips: Know your buses From attempting to find a place to stay after a night out on Franklin Street to trying to get to Southpoint, it’s important to know the transportation options on cam pus. Although it’s easy to become bogged down by the various bussing options around Chapel Hill, to know where to go to find the routes can be a helpful tool. ■ Ride Safe: The Safe Ride operates from 11 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday. It has four routes, the TANARUS, J. V and G. Students can go to www.townofchapelhill.org and click on “Bus Routes” to find which one to catch. ■ Use noncampus buses: For $2 a ride, Triangle Transit Authority buses are available during the week every hour and a half at various bus stops on campus. Check out ridetta.org to find out where to catch a ride. ■ Ride to the mall: TTA buses have a loop that takes students from campus to - * Y-Vr. - JEhr Daily Ear Hrri is set to appear in District Court in Hillsborough today, reports state. ■ T\vo people were arrested after Chapel Hill police executed a search warrant at 1018 Louis Armstrong Court at 5 am. Friday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Isaac Chezare Yarborough, 23, of Asheboro. is in Orange County Jail in lieu of $600,000 bond, accord ing to reports. Yarborough is a felony fugitive from Tennessee, which accounts for $500,000 of the bond, accord ing to reports. The remaining SIOO,OOO stems from felony charges of maintaining a dwelling for drug use. possession of a schedule I controlled substance, manufacturing a schedule I con trolled substance, possession with intent to sell or distribute a schedule I controlled substance and posses sion with intent to sell or distribute marijuana and misdemeanor charg es for marijuana and paraphernalia possession, reports state. Yarborough was found with 22 doses of Ecstasy and 23.1 grams of marijuana and is set to appear today in court of first appearance in Hillsborough, along with Meleasha Micole Holt, 24, who is charged with maintaining a house for drug use and was released on $1,500 unsecured bail, reports state. Southpoint mall during the week. ■ Take the P2P: The point to-point buses operate seven days a week from 7 p.m. to 3 a_m. Buses arrive at stops every 15 minutes, but students can also dial 962-PTOP and request a ride or find out when the next bus will arrive at any given stop. ■ Take the next bus: Students can use ne7ctbus.com, which operates with Chapel Hill TYansit. It has live updates of when the buses will arrive as well as a live map of all Chapel Hill Transit routes. Compiled by Seth Wright

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