6 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2008 Mother says Torairis car followed BY MCKAY GLASGOW STAFF WRITER DeAnne Jackson walked slowly up to the door of her one-story house Tuesday evening. She had been talking to investi gators all day about the hit-and-run wreck that killed her son, Chapel Hill High School senior Rodney Torain Jr. She walked into her home, sat down at her kitchen table and recounted the last conversations she had Sunday with her son, the second Chapel Hill High football player to die this year. The other was Torain’s best friend, Atlas Fraley, who died in August after complaining of head aches and body cramps following a football scrimmage. “They were brothers and no one could tell them different,” Jackson said. “I know he is with Atlas now. They are together again.” Jackson said Torain, 17, was at The Streets at Southpoint on Saturday night hanging out with his friends, Ashley Bynum and LaTesha Farrington. He called and told her he was leaving to go to a friend’s house and that he would return home late, she said. “Whenever he was going some where he was good about calling and telling me where he was head ed. I always knew where he was,” she said. But Jackson wasn’t expecting the call she received around 3:50 a.m. “Rodney said he was on his way home but that someone was fol lowing him,” she said. “He said he was going to try to do something to lose them.” Jackson said she didn’t know why someone would follow her son. Torain didn’t want the two girls to take him to his house because the follower would know where he lived and the girls would be left alone, Jackson said. She said Torain told her that they were driving on Melville Road an wit) ijeur Jrien^s! Hp Afeartu SancWclies! ©elicieus “Soups! 1 'fresMu 'Tossed Salads! ■ ©rinWs! Sagcls + (Pastries! Saverij SreaW^asi - SancWdies! 213 W. Franklin Street Just in front of Granville Towers Phone - 929-9189 Fax - 929-9186 Mon-Sat 6:3oam-9pm Sunday 7:3oam-9pm | iSave 51.00 ; “Save. 51.00 I on ami I greaWfast - i! £S, ZSZ®] j Sandwich | j YouPicklWo * ; | Only one coupon per transaction. Valid at Panera Bread } J Only one coupon per transaction. Valid at Panera Bread J S locations in the Triangle. Valid through December 2,2008. J \ locations in the Triangle. Valid through December 2,2008. { 4 1 |f ft V * - ■?\ i X I H ■ r * i .. n 4|^ “I got up and I was frantic. When I got to the back porch the state troopers were walking up!’ DEANNE JACKSON, MOTHER and then said “goodbye”. Jackson went to the back porch thinking she would soon see the cars’ lights coming down the road. After a few minutes, she called her son. “I called a couple of times and got no answer. I figured he had gone back to his friend Antonio's house to stay the night,” Jackson said. A phone call woke Jackson at about 8 a.m. She said she was told that Torain had been found dead at the scene of a single car wreck on Old Greensboro Road. “I got up and I was frantic. When I got to the back porch the state troop ers were walking up,” she said. Sgt. A.W. Waddell of the N.C. Highway Patrol said he suspects the silver or gold sedan intention ally clipped the left side of the 2003 Nissan that Torain was in, causing it to swerve off the road and hit a tree. Torain was in the back seat and wasn’t wearing a seat belt. There were likely multiple sus pects in the car, he said. The sedan is missing paint on the front passenger side, he said. Police are checking auto shops for repairs. “This is a very hot case right now,” he said. Bynum and Farrington both were released from the hospital after minor injuries. Jackson said she can’t under stand how the perpetrator of the crime could flee the wreck. “They were kids and they just left them there like they were noth- b | j H w * 'J| m r Jm fl •-■yyrr r COURTESY OF DEANNE JACKSON Chapel Hill High School football player Rodney Torain Jr., pictured this fall at school, was killed in a hit-and-run wreck early Sunday morning. ing,” she said. Torain was fun to be around and a protective brother, she said. Torain’s half-brother Milek Jackson, 12, said he enjoyed the times when his older brother would wrestle with him in the liv ing room. “He used to pick me up and bench press me,” Milek said. “He just plays around.” Torain, at 6-foot-l-inch and 270 pounds, was a defensive lineman and tight end for the Chapel Hill High football team. Jackson said it had been a dream H UNC -i- THE SONJA HAYNES STONE CENTER FOR BLACK CULTURE AND HISTORY DIASPORA FESTIVAL OF BLACK AND INDEPENDENT FILM Hitchcock Multipurpose Room Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History eORDERofMYTHS This penetrating documentary film provides insight into k America’s oldest —but still segregated—Mardi Gras celebration in Mobile, Alabama, where traditional southern beliefs provide a foundation for the fl racially segregated celebrations. ™ 3Etefa 2007 City of his to play college football and that he had received multiple let ters, including from Ohio State University and Appalachian State University. Jackson said that he had done well on his first try at the SAT. “He was fun-loving and always walked around the housing sing ing,” she said. “He loved to laugh. He loved people and people loved to be around him.” Contact the City Editor at citydesk@unc.edu. New tethering law difficult to enforce Limits leashing to three hours BY MATTHEW MCGIBNEY STAFF WRITER Commissioners in favor of limiting tethering won a battle Tuesday when anew restricting ordinance went on the books, but enforcement could prove just as difficult. For more than a decade, New Hanover County has completely outlawed tethering, which is more restrictive than Tuesday’s ordinance. In a 4-1 vote, the Orange County Board of Commissioners limited tethering to three hours a day. But monitoring the amount of time owners tether their dogs can be difficult, said Dr. Jean McNeil, animal control services manager for New Hanover County, which includes Wilmington. McNeil prefers the complete prohibition of tethering for that reason among others. “If anyone asks me, the best thing to do is to have no tethering at all unless the owner is out there,” she said. “You don’t worry about a time limit and monitoring. You end up with either you outlaw all tethering or you don’t.” Tethering refers to leaving an unsupervised animal restrained outside. Some wanted the ordinance to ban tethering all together, said Bob Marotto, animal services director for Orange County. Earlier pro visions also regulated enclosure size. “We as a staff have tried very hard to balance the community and reach a compromise in the ordinance,” he said. “Hopefully it Scientific Uncertainty and Climate Policy: Moving on without all the answers Thursday, Nov. 20 7:30 p.m. Carroll Hall Dr. Henry Pollack is Emeritus Professor of Geophysics in the Department of Geological Sciences of the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor. He is Science Advisor to former Vice President Al Gore’s Climate Project and, together with colleagues of the Intergovern mental Panel on Climate Change, shared the Nobel Peace Prize with Al Gore in 2007. This talk is third in the series of annual seminars on climate change hosted by UNC’s Department of Geological Sciences and co-sponsored by the Department of Marine Sciences and the Institute for the Environment. Free and open to the public. For more information, call 919.966.4516 EL •"■ gaBMBEL MAKE SOME NOISE! career jump start, and up to a $20,000 bonus for specific jobs. All this as a member of the Air Force Resen/e with no prior military experience needed. AIR FORCE RESERVE AFReserve.com/TalkTolls (Eljp Satlg ®ar Jieri will be noted that the final prod uct does include a number of compromises.” For the first year, Orange County will focus on educating the public. For next six months, animal con trol officers will issue notices, and formal citations will begin after 18 months. But this could be another possible area of trouble for the county. McNeil said New Hanover found warnings ineffective. “We did warning notices to start with but we ended up with cita tions,” she said. “Once we went to citations it was something that gave immediate consequences for not complying. I’d suggest that you do this straight away.” Amanda Stipe, a former ani mal control officer for Carrboro, acknowledges the possibility for abuse but doesn’t think that an ordinance against tetherihg will stop it. “I don’t necessarily think that the tethering law would impact animal cruelty,” she said. “I think irresponsible own ers will tend to be irresponsible regardless of whether the dog is inside a pen or the home or outside on a tethered line.” Similar ordinances exist in other places across the state. The closest is in Durham. Durham is currently still focus ing on educating dog owners instead of issuing warnings. “I didn’t have to think about it,” said Becky Heron, a Durham County commissioner who sup ported the tethering restrictions. “I already knew it’s the right thing to do, just thinking about these animals tied up outside.” Contact the City Editor at citydesk@unc.edu. with Dr. Henry Pollack Boost your GPA! We’re talking about your Graduation Plan of Attack. Do it with 100% Tuition Assistance, low-cost healthcare, a supplemental paycheck, a