2
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2008
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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 ver
sions 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
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News, Peatures.'Sgorts, 962-0245
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Do you consider the word “motivated”
an understatement?
We thought so.
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Best Places To Launch A Career. We offer a collaborative, inclusive culture. With customizable careers, professional
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It's your future. How far will you take it?
■ For an electronic information packet text "UNC" to 78573.
Visit us on the web at deloltte.com/us/gnc
Deloitte LLP and its subsidiaries are an equal opportunity employer.
About Deloitte I
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Copyright © 2008 Deloitte Development LLC. Ail rights reserved
Dose
Musical road recieves mixed reviews
FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS
A road in California that Honda paved to play the William Tell Overture when
/% cars drive over it will be turned back into a normal road Tuesday.
The grooves in the road, specifically designed to play music when Honda
jLm Civics drive over them at 55 miles pet hour, were supposed to only get
noiced by drivers. But nearby residents can hear the music from their houses, and
it sounds like screeching.
“It will wake you up from a sound sleep,” resident Brian Robin said.
But some would be willing to stand it for the sake of history.
“The way I look at it, there’s only four in the world and one in the U.S., and it’s
right here by my home,” said David Gilroy, a local carpenter.
NOTED. A 33-year-old Illinois woman just
found out that bartending nude can lead to
arrest.
Janet Brannon was arrested and charged
with misdemeanor and public indecency. She
was freed on SB,OOO bond.
Sherriff’s deputies in Delhi discovered her
while doing a routine bar check this week, they
said.
TODAY
Writing workshop; The Writing
Center will hold a workshop for UNC
students, faculty and staff about the
most effective ways to participate in
writing groups. For more
information, contact the Writing
Center at 962-7710.
Time: 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Location: SASB North, lower level
Campuswide diversity event:
The Residence Hall Association will
host the event "The Game of Life is
not a Trivial Pursuit," with a human
sized board game dealing with
socioeconomic diversity and
disparity. The game will include free
food and prizes.
Time: 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Location: The Pit
Lecture series: The Bettie Allison
Rand Lecture Series will continue
at UNC with the talk “The Origins
of Romantic Hellenism: Myth and
Meaning from David to Girodet.’
All lectures are free to the
public, and receptions will follow
in the lobby. For more information,
contact the art department at 962-
2015.
Time: 5:45 p.m.
Location: Hanes Art Center,
Auditorium
QUOTED. “Mission failed.”
Richard Anthony Smith, a 25-year-old
man who said he rappelled into the Knoxville
Museum of Art to difiise and confiscate a Soviet
made nuclear warhead but then had to call police
when he got stuck in an air conditioning duct.
He said he was a special agent from the
United States Illuminati, badge number 0931.
The bomb was in a blue plastic cow, he said.
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Community book forum: The
Carrboro Cybrary and Carrboro
Recreation and Parks invite the
community to read the UNC Summer
Reading selection, "Covering: The
Hidden Assault on Our Civil Rights"
by Kenji Yoshino and discuss the
book with local experts. For more
information, call 918-7387,
Time: 7 p.m.
Location: Carrboro Century Center,
100 N. Greensboro St.
Race lecture: John McWhorter will
discuss race and poverty in America.
He will contest mainstream opinion
about the causes of inner-city
poverty in the late 20th century and
suggest best-practice solutions.
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Location: Memorial Hall
TUESDAY
Job seminar: University Career
Services will hold an information
session for students interested in
finding jobs in the arts. The session is
open to UNC students only. For more
information, call 962-6507.
Time: 3 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Location: Hanes Hall, Seminar
Room 2398
Exhibition opening: The art
exhibition "An Atlas of Radical
Cartography" will open. View maps
News
produced by artists and community
groups who use cartography as a
medium to examine questions
facing society, including the global
issues of immigrations and borders,
renewable energy and water
availability. Visit www.global.unc.
edu or call 962-2435 for more
information. All events are free and
open to the public.
Time: 7 p.m.
Location: FedEx Global Education
Center
Public information meeting:
The Glen Lennox Area
Neighborhood Conservation District
will hold a public information meet
ing. Contact 968-2728 for more
information.
Time: 7 p.m.
Location: Town Hall, Council
Chambers, 405 Martin Luther King
Jr. Blvd.
To make a calendar submission,
visitwww.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.
POLICE LOG
■ The former UNC chancel
lor found two dead deer near his
North Boundary Street home
Friday, according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
James Charles Moeser, 69,
reported the incident to police
Friday afternoon.
It was an incident of cruelty
to animals in violation of Chapel
Hill town ordinances, according
to reports.
■ Someone smashed a car
window with a rock before steal
ing an iPod music player Saturday,
according to Chapel Hill police
reports.
Reports state that a person
used a rock to break the window
of a 2001 Mazda Protege parked
outside the Noble Street home of
the car owner.
An iPod worth $l5O was stolen,
according to reports.
The rock caused SSOO in dam
age to the vehicle, according to
police reports.
■ Someone shoplifted from
a Chapel Hill grocery store by
hiding items in a computer bag,
according to Chapel Hill police
reports.
Reports state that a person
attempted to remove consumable
foodstuffs, household goods and
clothes/furs from the Whole Foods
on South Elliot Road on Saturday
afternoon.
loin the discussion
wholeheartedly agree that the University should be
I accomodating to students who need the extra time. I
■JL feel that existing Carolina students ought to have some
priority over high schoolers who only might become Carolina
students.’Shoving seniors out the door just to cram in the next
batch has a lot of potential to harm Carolina’s culture of explora
tion and learning.”
Respond to this featured comment or make a comment of your own
on any DTH coverage at dailytarheel.com.
Weakly online poll veeulte:
Where do you think the football team will be
ranked in the ACC by the end of the season?
18 percent: First
/ 24 percent: Second
( 24% yHHRA 28 percent: Third
24 percent: Bottom five
6 percent: I don't know
This week: Who would you have most liked to see as this
year’s commencement speaker? Vote at dailytarheel.com.
Qtyp Sattij ®ar JIM
The stolen items totaled $82.91.
Food and $45.72 worth of items
were recovered, according to police
reports.
■ Suspects stole personal
belongings and a car from a
Chapel Hill residence Saturday,
according to Chapel Hill police
reports.
Reports state that suspects
stole keys, a cell phone, $2 in cash
and a Bank of America debit card
from a Church Street home. The
incident was reported at 4:04 a.m.
Saturday, reports state.
The suspects also stole a 2003
Toyota Highlander worth about
SIO,OOO, according to police
reports.
Reports state that the
Highlander was later recovered
with $2,900 in damage.
The incident resulted in report
ed damage to the car’s front bum
per, driver’s side mirror, front
quarter panel, rear bumper, lug
gage rack and front and right rear
passenger doors, according to
police reports.
■ Police responded Friday to
suspicious person reports of some
one walking down a Chapel Hill
street and screaming, according
to Chapel Hill police reports.
The suspicious person was
reported walking along Whitaker
Street at 1:57 a.m., according to
reports.