VOLUME 116, ISSUE 72 university | pages LEARN ABOUT ISLAM The MSA is sponsoring a week of awareness events in the Pit. Check out a story on Monday's event and a schedule for the week. sports | page 9 WOMEN'S GOLF The battle-tested Sydney Crane and the talented underclass man Allie White currently are turning their efforts to the opener of UNC's fall season. State | page 3 GETTING OUT THE VOTE Groups on campus have been working to register voters ahead of the November's election. online | dailytarheel.com HURRICANE IKE RELIEF Triangle groups mobilize. NEW AIRPORT LOCATION Community group will decide the location of new airport. EDITOR'S NOTES BLOG We hired about 140 new staff. Leam about how they factor into our teaching mission. CORRECTION Due to reporting errors, Wednesday’s pg. 1 story, “Play probes life of women with HIV" misidentified the char acters in “In the Continuum.” Abigail is a middle-class housewife in Zimbabwe, and Nia is a black woman living in South-Central Los Angeles. The article also misattributes the following quote, “It is essential for us to pick shows that will evoke controversy and debate in the community.” The Daily Tar Heel apolo gizes for the errors. this day in history SEPT. 16,1980 More than 300 students camp out at the UNC Traffic Office for parking stickers. They threw frisbees and drank beer to pass the time. Today’s weather Showers H 71, L 65 Wednesday weather Showers H 74, L 62 index police log 2 calendar 2 edit 6 crossword 9 sports 9 fflhe fatlu (Bar Hrrl Quality a factor for growth BY LAURA MARCINEK STAFF WRITER As North Carolina grows, so shall the University. But as the University expands, administrators fear the quality of the student body will decline, something Chancellor Holden Thorp and other administrators are working hard to prevent. Up to 80,000 students are expected to flood into the UNC system within the next decade. “It wouldn’t be to our advantage to say we weren’t UNC Challenges: Wednesday: research expansion Thursday: faculty retention going to participate at all” in shoul dering that growth, Thorp said. An ongoing study presented to the Board of Trustees in March shows that the University’s aca demic quality is at risk unless it does a better job of attracting more CELEBRATE EACH OTHER Singapore festival reveled at UNC DTH ONLINE: Learn about the W origin of the mooncakes and— watch the student festivities. BY NATE HEWITT FEATURES EDITOR Paper lanterns and boxes of Chinese delicacies adorned a North Campus quad Monday night in celebration of the Singaporean Mooncake Festival. About 40 students snacked on mooncakes and sipped Chinese tea before performing a skit that told the story of the festival’s origin. The festival which com memorates a Chinese queen who sacrificed herself to save her coun try traditionally is an occasion to spend time with family and friends. “It’s really good to learn more about their culture and how they celebrate,” said sophomore Bridgette Scholl, who has got ten to know several Singaporean exchange students who attend her Bible study. The newly formed Carolina Singapore Association sponsored the event. “I had such an incredible time in Singapore,” said senior Jessie Poteat, who studied abroad in Singapore during spring 2007. “And this is a great way to connect with people who understand the culture.” Junior George Fu ShengJie said spending time with friends during the festival helped alleviate his homesickness. “Since my family would not be around, it would be a different experience,” Fu ShengJie said. Two co-presidents, one Singaporean and one American, head the group, which is in the process of becoming officially rec ognized by the University. SEE FESTIVAL, PAGE 5 Researchers look at town IDs Program would aid undocumented BY UNNIE GREENE STAFF WRITER Community members who want Carrboro to provide munici pal identification cards to undocu mented residents are looking into the types of identification that local service providers require. For those without valid Social Security cards or driver’s licenses, access to many services is limited. Starting this week, UNC senior Drew Felts will be interviewing business members of the Comite de Asuntos Latinos de Orange, a Latino rights group comprising several area businesses and social service organizations. The study is composed of a series of questions that attempts to get an idea of what identification information local companies need to provide services for residents. “CALDO had interest in trying to see what other kinds of programs out there are available to try to provide undocumented Hispanic immigrants with some form of documentation,” Felts said. Serving the students and the University community since 1893 www.dailytarheel.com of the best in-state students. To prevent that decline, admin istrators will need to juggle the many problems accompanying enrollment growth, such as a need for more merit-based aid and a need for more class space. Those challenges guarantee that enrollment will be at the forefront of the University’s agenda for years to come, and Thorp has made get ting the best in-state students one of his three priorities for this year. “What you’re going to see com ing from me is an extraordinary emphasis, really like nothing we’ve seen in the past, on how to recruit the undergraduate and gradu ate students we want to come to Carolina,” Thorp said. Getting the top N.C students Stephen Farmer, UNC-Chapel Hill’s director of admissions, will take the leading role in finding cre ative new ways to recruit students. a DTH/KAITUN MCKEOWN Senior Alexius Yeo assigns skit lines by luck-of-the-draw to students re-enacting a traditional legend at a celebration of the Singapore Mooncake Festival in a North Campus quad Monday. UNC professor Darcy Lear, a Comite member who is working with Felts, said the group is look ing at a municipal ID program already in place elsewhere as part of its research. “We’re looking at the New Haven, Conn., municipal ID pro gram to have a model of a munici pality that isn’t hostile toward the hardworking immigrants in the community.” New Haven made municipal IDs available in 2007t0 local residents, including undocumented immi grants, so they can access services. The town offers identification cards with a debit feature that also give residents who don’t qualify for driver’s licenses access to public libraries, parks and rec reational sites. Jacqueline James, a New Haven alderman, said one major goal of the program is to make illegal residents feel safe using community resources, such as police and banking services. “Asa city, we are in support of UNC-Chapel Hill enrollment on the rise Since 1998, enrollment has grown steadily and will continue to grow. The administration worries about its effect on the quality of education here. 30000 1- 2005 JUUUU _ 27,276 2000 +967% "7TV* 1995 24872 1990 24,439 , cno V 23,852 , —1 +2.59% JV* 20000 'BB '9O *92 *94 : 96 : 98 tio V 2 *O4 m *OB SOURCE: http://OIRA.UNC.EDU ' DTH/ANNA CARRINGTO Thorp will supplement that effort. “We want to use him as a secret weapon in those places he can make a difference,” Farmer said. For example, Thorp said he signed “a whole bunch of letters” to prospective students, some “We just want to find out if there is a need for a municipal ID.” DARCY LEAR, unc professor RESEARCHING POTENTIAL OF MUNICIPAL ID PROGRAM FOR CARRBORO addressing immigration issues and laws and actually trying to be a part of something positive and affecting some level of change,” James said. Victor Melendez, executive director of El Centro Latino, said any type of identification card for undocumented immigrants would help. He also said a municipal ID would be limited in its scope. “It’s a veiy limited type of ID and doesn’t go beyond those boundar ies,” he said. “It’s very limited to the residents of that municipality.” Both Lear and Felts stressed that the study into the ID require ments is in the initial stages. “We just want to find out if SEE IDS, PAGE 5 with personal notes at the end. While the chancellor is an “excellent resource” in recruit ment, Farmer said the entire University and students in par ticular should get more involved. SEE ENROLLMENT, PAGE 5 Paranormal investigators ain’t afraid of no ghosts Nonprofit looks at haunted homes BY NICK ANDERSEN STAFF WRITER Move aside, Ghost Busters. Any unhappy spirits haunting local homes must now answer to the Central Raleigh Paranormal investigation team. The organization, a nonprofit team of research investigators, seeks to provide answers to seem ingly unexplainable events plagu ing Triangle residents. “We want people to feel comfort able in their homes,” investigator Niki Sherman said. “No one should feel alone when they are dealing with potentially paranormal activity.” Central Raleigh Paranormal, founded in January by Jason Jording and Paul and Niki Sherman, has tried to fill a gap in community resources. “The community didn’t have anywhere to go to prove that these things really are happening, that TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2008 DA: 5 facing murder charges Victim missing since July 21 BY MAX ROSE CITY EDITOR Five men are accused of murder in the death of a Chapel Hill man whose body was found Friday after he had been missing for almost two months. Prior to his death, the last known location of Joshua McCabe Bailey, 20, was on Weaver Street in Carrboro on July 21. Brian Gregory Minton, Jacob Alexander Maxwell, Jack Johnson 11, Brandon Hamilton Greene and Ryan Ladar Davis Lee have been charged with first-degree murder and kidnapping in his death, District Attorney Jim Woodall said. Three people have been charged with accessory after the fact, including Minton’s parents Gregory Lee Minton and Mishele Slade Minton. Chris Manley is the third person charged with accessory. At least one of the suspects has had run-ins with the law before. Brian Minton, born in 1990, was one of five charged with first degree rape for a Sept. 2,2006 inci dent involving a 16-year-old female victim in Southern Village. The state dropped the charges, in part because the many months between the alleged incident and the suspects’ arrest in May 2007 left the evidence hard to piece together, Woodall said. “The evidence was inconsistent and it raised too many questions which we could not definitively answer,” he said. Before his arrest Monday, Minton was under intensive pro bation for three unrelated felony convictions, Woodall said. He received a felony count of possession of a weapon of mass destruction for an incident in which he allegedly shot a sawed-off shot gun at his house, Woodall said. Minton also was convicted of felony possession of a weapon on school property for carrying a knife in a backpack and of a felony count of intent to sell and deliver cocaine. Police issued an alert in late August for Bailey that said he was believed to be suffering from dementia or some other cognitive impairment and that he may have been driving a 1993 Ford Explorer. Several local news sources report ed that police found Bailey shot in the head in Chatham County but Orange and Chatham county sher iff’s departments refused multiple times to comment Monday after noon. Contact the City Editor at dtydesk@unc.edu. WHO YOU GONNA CALL? Contact the Central Raleigh Paranormal Investigation Team at webmaster@central-rpit.com. | ONLINE: Listen to whispers and other recordings at www. — ) central-rpit.com/pics_and_evps. they are sane and that others have gone through the same thing,” Niki Sherman said. “It’s really a search for answers that aren’t out there.” Each member has had personal experience with the uncanny and paranormal. “People told me stories about my psychic great-grandmother,” Jording said. “She once predicted the death of a neighbor months before it happened.” And team members believe paranormal activity does some times exist. Using digital voice and video recorders, electromagnetic field SEE GHOSTS, PAGE 5