Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Aug. 27, 2008, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2008 Stye lath) (Ear Urrl www.dailytarheel.com Established 1893 115 years of editorialfreedom ALLISON NICHOLS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF 96?-4flflfi NALLISONOEMAIL. UNC.EDU OFFICE HOURS: MON., WED., FRI. 2 P.M. TO 3 P.M. SARA GREGORY MANAGING EDITOR. PRINT 962-0750 GSARA@EMAIL.UNC. EDU NICOLE NORFLEET MANAGING EDITOR. ONLINE 962-0750 NORFL£E@EMAIL. UNC.EDU ANDREW DUNN UNIVERSITY EDITOR 962-0372 UDESK@UNC.EDU MAX ROSE CITY EDITOR 962-4209 CITYDESK@UNC.EDU ARIEL ZIRULNICK STATE & NATIONAL EDITOR, 962-4103 STNTDESK@UNC.EDU NATHAN HEWITT FEATURES EDITOR 962-4214 FEATURES@UNC.EDU BENNETT CAMPBELL ARTS EDITOR 843-4529 ARTSDESK@UNC.EDU RACHEL ULLRICH SPORTS EDITOR 962-4710 SPORTS@UNC.EDU BRENDAN BROWN, LINDSEY NAYLOR INVESTIGATIVE TEAM CO-EDITORS 962-0750 ITEAM@UNC.EDU STACEY AXELROD PHOTO EDITOR 962-0750 DTHPHOTO@GMAIL. COM BECCA BRENNER. WILL HARRISON COPY CO-EDITORS 962-4103 JILLIAN NADELL, MOLLY JAMISON DESIGN EDITOR 962-0750 BLISS PIERCE GRAPHICS EDITOR 962-0750 RACHEL WILL ONLINE EDITOR 962-0750 ONLINE@UNC.EDU GRACE KOERBER MULTIMEDIA EDITOR 962-0750 . ONLINE@UNC.EDU SCOTT POWERS SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR ► 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 Print Managing Editor Sara Gregory at gsara@email.unc. edu with issues about this policy. P.O. Box 3257, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 Allison Nichols, 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. © 2008 DTH Publishing Corp. All rights reserved Official Carolina Ring Kick Off Event! . fr ■ 1 111* ; W. iWsi V* Balfour www.balfour.com Dose Student blames lip-lock for drunkenness FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS After a Saturday night out, 18-year-old college student James Carroll from Minnesota State University tried unsuccessfully to convince police that making out with a drunk female about 30 minutes prior caused him to become tipsy, scoring a 0.063 breath test. He was found stumbling on the street at about 2:45 a.m. Police Commander Amy Vokal said that the claim was impossible because the breath that is tested by a Breathalyzer comes from the lungs, not from the mouth. Carroll was cited for underage consumption, and the woman who allegedly made out with him has not come forward. NOTED. San Francisco resident Rob Anderson who made the claim that increased bike traffic would increase traffic jams and thus more pollu tion has convinced a judge to halt implementa tion of a massive pro-bike plan, which would add bike lanes and racks to the city. But other cities such as New York and Chicago are encouraging the bike insurgence with char treuse bike lanes and dual-level bicycle parking. TODAY Job search: Learn how to use University Career Services when looking for work. Time: 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. Location: Hanes Hall, Seminar Room 2398 BSM meeting: The Black Student Movement will have its first general body meeting of the year. Time: 5:30 p.m. Location: SASB North, Upendo Lounge Bookmaking lecture: Ambar Past will give a free talk about Mayan bookmaking and an artisan society of Chiapas women and men who produce handmade paper, artists' books, prints and natural dyes. Time: 5:45 p.m. Location: Wilson Library Campus Y open house: The Campus Y is having an open house for students who want to get involved in service activities and meet committee co-chairmen. Time: 7 p.m. Location: Campus Y QUOTED. “He’s never hurt anyone. He’s on target all the time. How can you punish a kid for being too good?” A New Haven, Conn., baseball coach said about his 9-year-old pitcher, who was dismissed from the league for being too good. The boy’s 40-mph fastball prompted a competing team to pack their gear and forfeit during a game last week. COMMUNITY CALENDAR Apply for rape crisis training: Today is the last day for applications for the Orange County Rape Crisis Center's fall training class Volunteers will be prepared to answer the center's 24-hour crisis response line and present education programs. Training begins in September. For information, call 968- 4647 ore-mail info@occc.org. Location: Campus Y, Student Union information desk and Sonja Haynes Stone Center THURSDAY Photography exhibit: Attend a meet-the-artist reception with photographer Thomas Neff of Louisiana State University featur- , ing images from his best-selling book, "Holding Out and Hanging On: Surviving Hurricane Katrina." Time: 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Location: Love House and Hutchins Forum, 410 E. Franklin St. Meditation session: Join the Carolina Meditation Club for informal sitting mediation led by students. Beginners to advanced are welcome. Time: 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Location: Room 30, Chapel of the News Cross Church Fiction club: Carrboro's Contemporary Fiction Book Club will discuss Jonathan Safran Foer's "Everything is Illuminated," the story of a young man's search for the woman who saved his grandfather from Nazis. Contact 918-7387 for more information. Time: 7 p.m. Location: Carrboro Cybrary, 100 N. Greensboro St. Jazz concert: Musician Bo Lankenau will perform at Pittsboro's General Store Cafe. Lankenau plays an eclectic mix of jazz, blues, folk, world and new age fingerstyle instrumental music on 6- and 12-string acoustic open-tuned guitars. Time: 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. Location: 39 West St., Pittsboro To make a calendar submission, visitwww.dailytarheel.com/calendar, ore-mail dthcaiendar@gmail.com. Events will be published in the news paper 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. INTERNS OF THE ARTS yßaM|flS|6B ■ ■lt jXt- 1 DTH/SHANNON CHURCH “ITunior Erin Hanehan, a Carolina Performing Arts | intern, writes out ideas in an office at Memorial Hall I / on Tuesday afternoon. This summer was the first time Carolina Performing Arts took on interns and it intends to continue enlisting interns throughout the academic year. POLICE LOC ■ An incident of breaking and entering and larceny from a vehicle was reported at 2:40 p.m. Monday at a parking lot on Highway 54 Bypass, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The Ford Focus was last secure at 11:30 p.m. Sunday, according to reports. Reports state that a stereo val ued at $l7O was removed from the unlocked vehicle, which belonged to a UNC student. ■ Personal items worth about $650 were reported stolen from a Meares Road residence Monday, according to police reports. Reports state that a door was pushed in and lock broken at the hoipe, adding an additional $175 in damage, according to reports. A Play Station 3 computer entertainment station, several Play Station games, two wireless controllers, a portable Play Station device, a BB pistol and Airsoft pis tol BB rounds were reported miss (Ebr lailg (Ear HIM ing. ■ About S6OO worth of personal possessions were reported stolen from a Markham Drive residence Monday, according to Chapel Hill police reports. Someone entered an unlocked garage and car. The suspect removed a hands-free blue tooth device, GPS device, an iPod, fanny pack belt and $75 in cash, accord ing to reports. The items were last known secure at 9 p.m. Saturday and were reported missing at 10:48 a.m. Monday, according to reports. ■ Police responded to an inci dent of misdemeanor larceny when a man reported Monday that his license plate was missing, accord ing to Carrboro police reports. The man stated that his car broke down at Carrboro High School last week, and when he returned to his car Thursday the license plate was missing, records state.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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