2 MONDAY, APRIL 14. 2008 ahr Daily Sar Hrrl www.daihlarheel.com Established 1893 115 years of editorialfreedom 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. SCOTT 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 ONUNEOUNC EDU ERIC JOHNSON. LINDSEY NAYLOR WRITERS COACHES 962 0372 ERICiOHNSONe UNC.EDU NAYIOEMAII UNC EDU ERIN ZUREICK EDITOR-IN CHIEF 962-4086 ZUREICKOEMAIL. UNC.EDU OFFICE HOURS MON WED. FRI 1 PM TO 2 PM ALLISON NICHOLS MANAGING EDITOR 962 0750 NAUISONOEMAIL. UNC.EDU OFFICE HOURS: TUES.THURS S PM TO 6 PM RACHEL ULLRICH DEPUTY MANAGING EDITOR 962-0750 RUURICHOEMAII UNC.EDU WHITNEY KISLING UNIVERSITY EDITOR 9620372 UDESKOUNC EDU SARA GREGORY CITY EDITOR 962-4209 CITYDESK®UNC EDU ELIZABETH DEORNELLAS STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR. 9624103 STNTDESKOUNC EDU ANDREW DUNN FEATURES EDITOR 962 4214 FEATURESOUNC.EDU ALEXANDRIA SHEALY ARTS EDITOR 8434529 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 are noted in the online versions of our stories. ► Contact Managing Editor Allison Nichols at nallison@email.unc.edu with issues about this policy . PO. Bo* 3257, Chape) HHI, NC 27515 Enn Zureck, Ednor-m-Ch*t 9624086 Advertising t Business 962 1163 News Features Sports 962-0245 One copy per person, additional copies may be purchased at The Daily Tar Heel for J.2S each 0 2008 OTH Publishing Corp All rights reserved C<HL drdinuiiuHis CLASS OF 2008 Come Celebrate This Exciting Occasion at Ruths Chris Steak House - Car) ! / Special Graduation Menu’s Available For More Information, Please Contact: Angela Miller (Sales & Catering Manager) Cary | The Arboretum at Weston I 919.677.0033 | www.RuthsChris-Cary.com Dose Deputy hazed, Tased at bachelor part}' FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS A bachelor party for a Knox County, Maine, sheriff’s deputy’ in which the groom-to-be was shot with a Taser, handcuffed, hog-tied with duct tape, oiled and feathered and then paraded through downtown strapped to a lawn chair on the back of a flatbed truck is now under investigation by Sheriff Donna Dennison after a video was uploaded to the Internet. In the video, about 10 men are seen outdoors carousing on what appears to be private property; and drinking was involved. “It will be under investigation,” Dennison said. “Everybody in law enforcement is expected to act appropriately w hen out in public.” The penalty for a Class D crime is up to one year in jail and up to a 52.000 fine. NOTED. A 22-year-old was arrested after allegedly selling phony crack cocaine to resi dents of a Jacksonville, Fla., nursing home. Police said a man was selling small pieces of bread that looked like crack cocaine in Tylenol pill bottles to the clients at the center for $5. The center was targeted, police said, because the man, Hillmon Arnold needed money to support his own drug habit, the report said. COMMUNITY CALENDAR TODAY Novel exercise: Come participate in t'ai chi exercises every Monday with Lewis Tisher. For more informa tion call 933-5111. Time: 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Location: Market Street Books ‘Dead Man Walking': As part of a year long look at the death penalty, the Department of Dramatic Art Mainstage will present this play, based on the book by Sister Helen Prejean. Tickets are S5 for the gen eral public. Time: 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Location: Elizabeth Price Kenan Theatre Middle East discussion Anthropologist and author Jeff Halper will discuss ‘Countdown to Apartheid: What Can We Do?" For more information call 967-5181. Time: 6:30 p.m. Location: Church of Reconciliation in Chapel Hill Environmental student group meeting: The Carolina Environmental Student Alliance j is holding a weekly meeting for QUOTED. ‘They have different ideas on how the baby should be raised. Basically, she said they cannot agree on which gang the baby would ‘claim.™ Colorado police Sgt. Joe Sandoval, about a man arrested after fighting with his girlfriend about which gang their 4-year-old son should join. The mother is a member of the Crips, and the father is member of the Westside Bailers. students to learn about upcoming events and to discuss environmental topics. Time: 6:30 p.m. to 7:15 p.m. Location: Murphey (look for a sign on an empty room's door) Quaker and Unitarian Universalist Q&A. The Interfaith Alliance of Carolina will answer questions about these religions for anyone who is curious and wants more information. Time: 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Location: Saunders, Room 204 TUESDAY Pediatric playroom: UNC Hospitals is accepting six volunteers to participate in this event, which includes interacting and playing with kids in the hospital between the ages of 1 and 18. E-mail sumaiya® email.unc.edu to sign up. Time: 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Location: UNC Hospitals Kids in the Kitchen: Volunteers will be needed to help Nutrition Coalition with about 200 to 300 children and their parents. Contact News michelle.tulley@gmail.com if you need more information. Time: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Location: Museum of Life and Science in Durham Near Death series: The International Association for Near- Death Studies will present ‘The Life Review Component of the NDE.‘ For more information call 929-1073. Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Location: 5622 Brisbane Drive Tutoring program Every Tuesday, a group of students tutors elemen tary and middle school students in the Elliot Woods area. Time: 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Location: Church of Reconciliation in Chapel Hill To make a calendar submission, visit www.dailytarheel.com/calendar, or e-mail Deputy Managing Editor Rachel Ullrich at dthcalendarOgmail. 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 ■ A UNC student was hit by a vehicle Friday while crossing South Road, according to University police reports. The report states that the stu dent, who was crossing the street from Stadium Drive, was in a crosswalk when the car struck her. The driver. Nicholas Anthony Boyd. 44. was charged with failure to yield right of way to a pedestri an, according to reports. ■ An incident of vandalism and willful damage to property was reported at 1:27 p m. Friday after someone overturned a tro phy case at the Chi Psi frater nity house at 321 Cameron Ave„ according to Chapel Hill police reports. Damage of S3OO to the trophy case was reported. ■ A Chapel Hill man was arrested for sitting on a down town bench at 8:49 a.m. Friday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Jerry Ronald Rogers, 57, of the streets, was arrested for sitting on the bench in front ofQdoba in viola tion of street restrictioas for the cen tral business district he was placed under April 10. reports state. The officer asked Rogers if he knew why he was being arrested, and the officer said Rogers said loin the discussion u ”YT don’t care about the sticker. What concerns me is did his I emotional attachment to KU affect the preparation of .A. the team for the game and their performance and will it be repeated whenever we meet KU again. Roy, put KU on the schedule and put the past behind you.” Respond to this featured comment or make a comment of your own on any DTH coverage at dailytarheel.com. Weekly online poll results: Who do you think will enter the NBA Draft this year? This WMk: How much money do spend on gas per month? ahr Daily aar Hrrl "for being on Franklin," according to reports. Rogers was confined at Orange County Jail in lieu of $350 bail. He is scheduled to appear in court July 1. reports state. ■ Larceny from a Hillsborough Street apartment was reported at 10:37 a.m. Friday; according to Chapel Hill police reports. Two televisions, valued at SSOO and $200.50 DVDs, valued at $lB, coins, valued at S4O, and Zanax and percocet prescription drugs, valued at S3O each, were reported stolen. ■ A suspect assaulted a police officer at 1:20 a.m. Saturday at 201 E. Franklin St., according to Chapel Hill police reports. Incidents of simple assault, drunk and disruptive behavior and resisting arrest were reported. ■ Vandalism and willful dam age to property was reported at 5:36 p.m. on East Franklin Street, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Damage of $2 was reported after a paperboard sign was ripped. ■ Indecent exposure was reported at 1:39 a.m. Thursday on the 100 block of East Franklin Street, according to Chapel Hill police reports. 5 percent: Wayne Ellington 9 percent: Tyler Hanstxough 27 percent: Ty Lawson 2 percent: Danny Green 6 percent: All of the above 51 percent: None of the above.

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