2 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2008 Otyr Saihj alar Hrrl www.dailytarheel.com Established 1893 115 years of editorialfreedom 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 scon POWERS SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITOR ALLISON NICHOLS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF 962-4086 NALLISONOEMAIL. UNC.EDU OFFICE HOURS: MON., WED. 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 NORFLEE@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 ► 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.0.80x 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 Planning an event? Run your big event through our assembly line of great services, including: logos. activiTV ads. postcards, buttons. t-shirts, and more. # ■*s£.,i t v * n * •' ,C* ' • *f y **' i <> * * ' I .* \ . . - - - - -* - - • ' • ; ~ & 1 Carolina union design @U n c.ed u nPQirn QPfX/IPDQ 919 962 7634 / 919 843 4806 OI U I I OCT I V IUCO 3103GFPG Student Union •nUllfi applications available: . s W : if http://carolinaunion.uhc.edu/employment 15 or contact Joe Singer: jsinger@unc.edu THE UNIVERSITY II || of NORTH CAROLINA .1/ CHAPEL HILL Dose Everybody loves live prostate exams FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS Actor Brad Garrett of “Everybody Loves Raymond” fame will share more than anyone cares to see tonight in order to raise cancer awareness. Garrett will bend over for a rectal prostate exam on live TV. as a part of the multi-network program “Stand Up For Cancer.” Movie producer Laura Ziskin who worked on films such as “Pretty Woman,” “As Good As It Gets” and the “Spider-Man” trilogy is heading up the star-studded initiative and asked Garrett to participate in a humorous way. But Ziskin is keeping the details will be shown on-screen on the down low. “I was honored to be asked to participate,” Garrett said. “A prostate exam to height en awareness and prevention was right up my alley. No pun intended.” NOTED. Baltimore health and fire officials have said that identifying the city’s 10 most fre quent 911 callers saved SIB,OOO in ambulance services. The city linked the people with case manag ers who helped them get proper care without dialing 911. The program cut calls by 43 per cent, and most of the patients reduced their calls to 911 by 80 percent. TODAY Mapmaking lecture: Join car tographers for a slide show and discussion about how mapmaking is blurring the boundaries of car tography, art and spatial activism. The lecture is part of the launch of the Trianglewide Community Cartographies Convergence. Time: 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Location: FedEx Global Education Center String quartet: The WSN Series & Music on the Hill will present the Chiara String Quartet, along with Anton Jivaev, viola; Richard Luby, violin; and Bonnie Thron, cello. Music by Brahms, Prokofiev and Zhou Long. Information and tickets are available by calling 843-3333. Admission is $lO for students, faculty and staff; sls for the general public. Time: 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. Location: Memorial Hall Concert: Bulbs and one-man show Clang Quartet will perform at Nightlight Club. For more informa tion call 933-5550. Time: 10 p.m. Location: 405 1/2 W. Rosemary St. QUOTED. “Yes, because of what I have grow ing in my back yard, my marijuana plants.” A 46-year-old Illinois woman when asked if she knew why police officers were knocking on her door Monday afternoon. The woman, who had recently suffered a stroke, was growing 170 marijuana plants. She claimed to be grow ing the plants for medical use, but police still charged her because of the sheer quantity. COMMUNITY CALENDAR SATURDAY Soccer clinic: The women's soccer team will host a fun morning of soccer drills and skills training. The free pro gram is designed to bring kids and par ents together through physical activity. Parents are required to participate, and everyone should wear gym clothes and closed-toed shoes. To RSVP, e-mail meghannm@email.unc.edu. Time: 10 a.m. to noon Location: Hooker Fields Garden tour: A free tour of the dis play gardens of the North Carolina Botanical Garden is open to the pub: lie. No registration is necessary. Time: 10 a.m. Location: Totten Center, at Fordham Boulevard at Old Mason Farm Road Sky-watching: Discover the night sky with telescopes and guidance from Morehead Planetarium staff and mem bers of the Chapel Hill Astronomical and Observational Society, weather permitting. To confirm that the event will be held, call 962-1236. Appropriate for all ages and free of charge. Time: 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Location: Jordan Lake's Ebenezer Church Recreation Area on Guess Road News SUNDAY Prison Books Collective: Internationalist Books sponsors a program that sends free books to people incarcerated in Mississippi and Alabama. Book wrapping takes place each Sunday. For more infor mation on this program visit www. prisonbooks.info. Time: 1 p.m to 4 p.m. Location: 218 N. Graham St. Bady benefit: The Annual Russian Baby Orphanage Benefit Concert is part of Southern Village's Summer Music Series. All shows are free. Check www.southernvillage.com for rain location information and series schedules. For more information con tact manager@southernvillage.com. Time: Shows start at 7 p.m. Location: Southern Village To make a calendar submission, visit www.dailytarheel.com/calendar, or e-mail dthcalendar@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. Photos of the week jsjP? ▼ jL A J&jlbw' ■ "I I DIH FILE/STACEY AXELROD DTH FILE/KAiTLIN MCKEOWN JM- DTH/LISA MARIE ALBERT £| Visit dailytarheel.com to view the photos of the week. POLICE LOG ■ Sugar put in the gas tank of a car caused about SI,OOO worth of damage, according to Chapel Hill police reports. A suspect put sugar in the tank of a 2001 Pontiac Firebird parked at apartments on Pinegate Circle, reports state. The incident occurred sometime between Sunday and Wednesday, when the damage was discovered at 11 a.m, according to reports. ■ An open window allowed someone to enter a Grainger Lane home Thursday and steal $570 worth of personal items, according to Chapel Hill police reports. The incident, which was report Bring this ad Marketing Design Department (suite 3103 of the F.P.G. Student Union) 1 week free with one paid week of advertising! on activiTV! ®ljr iaily alar Mrrl ed at 1:43 a.m., resulted in the theft of two cell phones, a driver’s license and social security card, among other items, reports state. ■ Someone broke into a car parked in a Chapel Hill parking lot Wednesday, taking $950 worth of music appliances and tools, accord ing to Chapel Hill police reports. Reports state that someone broke a window of a car parked in a lot on N.C. 54 and stole a stereo, speaker box, amplifier and $l2O worth of tools, among other items. The incident, reported at 5:27 p.m., also resulted in SIOO worth of damage to the right rear win dow, according to reports.