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Office about an hour after officers were dispatched to the condominiums at 270 and 272
Summerwalk Circle in Chapel Hill.
Officers were directed to apartment 272
by a female witness when they arrived at the
scene, the warrant states. Upon arriving at
the apartment, the warrant states that officers
In NC, a
handful of
drive-ins
remain
The theaters, popular in the
1950s, are dwindling
nationally and in the state.
By Corey Risinger
Staff Writer
DTH/HENRY GARGAN
Jennifer Tharrington (left) and spouse Anna play with their son Jack, 18 months, in his playroom in their home in Chapel Hill on Sunday, Feb. 15.
Staff Writer
If anyone was to be
emblematic of the town
of Chapel Hill, it would
be Dean Smith.
Scott Nurkin,
local artist
DTH/JUSTIN PRYOR
Local artist Scott Nurkin stands in front of his mural commemorating Dean
Smith located at the corner of Smith Level Road and U.S. 15-501 on Monday.
News
POLICE LOG
Someone reported an
underage party on the 100
block of Noble Street at 1:18
a.m. Saturday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone committed
larceny from a vehicle on the
800 block of Martin Luther
King Jr. Blvd. between 5:30
a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Saturday,
according to Chapel Hill
police reports.
The person broke out the
rear back window, valued
at $200, and stole jumper
cables, antifreeze and oil,
reports state.
Someone was driving
while impaired at 409 W.
Franklin St. at 2:28 a.m.
Sunday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
Someone committed
larceny from an unlocked
vehicle in a parking lot at
the 800 block of Pritchard
Avenue between 4:30 p.m.
Saturday and 3:02 p.m.
Sunday, according to Chapel
Someone reported a
breaking and entering on
the 1000 block of N.C. 54
between 6 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.
Sunday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
The person stole medication, valued at $75, reports
state.
Someone reported damage to a vehicle in a parking
lot at the 100 block of N.C.
54 between 8 p.m. Saturday
and 11:11 a.m. Sunday,
according to Carrboro police
reports.
The person broke and
removed the glass of the car,
valued at $450, reports state.
Someone was arrested
for driving while impaired
on the 400 block of South
Greensboro Street at 2:57
a.m. Sunday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
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Chapel Hill Town Council members say property owners have been
provided opportunities to speak out.
Since I have been on council,
every formal change on town ordinances impacting Northside has
happened after public forums that
the town invites anyone and everyone to weigh in on, said council
member Lee Storrow.
Council member Maria Palmer
said the town doesnt want to exclude
anyone from the conversation.
It is not some secret meeting
or some people planning changes,
she said.
But Patmore said property owners
are often not included until the council has already decided what to do.
We are not represented and
when we are invited in to the equa-
DTH/CHRIS GRIFFIN
Matthew Brown, a third-year student in the School of Pharmacy, uses a telepresence robot to virtually attend class while he receives cancer treatment.
Technology asked professors, one of the associate deans and a few students for feedback
on several options, and the Double Robotics
robot stood out for a few reasons.
It is very easy to handle, and its very easy
to connect and use, Hammett said.
She also said the price is reasonable for the
schools present technological setup. The cost
requires $2,500 for this particular robot, $500
for the iPad and $300 for the charging station.
The Eshelman School of Pharmacy now has
ESPN takes on
New exhibit highlights
best of special collections UNC-Duke rivalry
ESPNs First Take will
broadcast live from the
Student Union today.
By Mark Lihn
By Emily Lowe
Senior Writer
Staff Writer
DTH/LAUREN SONG
An Alphabet of Treasures: Special Collections from A to Z, an exhibit now on
display in Wilson Library, includes a range of artifacts for students to explore.
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BAHAMAS SPRING BREAK
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TUTOR WANTED FOR HS APES CLASS Tutor
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at our house or on campus. Rate negotiable.
Email diane8910@gmail.com.
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 9 Friends provide unexpected
benefit to your project. Get them involved
with persuasion and inspiration. Share
resources for what theyre up to. Merge
your interests, and work together. Articulate
your shared passion into words. Invite
participation.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8 Attend to career goals
today and tomorrow. Take advantage of an
opportunity. Consult your committee. Get a
friend to help you solve a technical problem.
Ad-lib only when absolutely necessary. Keep
to the script.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is a 9 Plot your itinerary today
and tomorrow. Distant shores call. New
expenses require attention. Adapt to
shifting circumstances. Talk about what you
want. Changes are within reach. Catch a
rare passing chance and go for it.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is an 8 You provide the
imagination. Share your views with your
partner. Let them ask tough questions.
Set long-term goals over the next couple
of days. Unexpected benefits to family
finances appear. Track and manage them.
Work together.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 9 Partnership negotiations
occur today and tomorrow. The discussion
could seem intense, yet could also be
enormously productive. Put aside the small
stuff. Talk about possibilities. Expand your
team. Emotions may affect your judgment.
Be respectful.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 9 Over the next two days,
put your ideas into action. Unexpected
communications at work could shuffle
the cards. Suddenly you can see just what
needs to be done. Get moving, and relish
the moment.
LISA BRENMAN919-932-4593visas-us.com
UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY
University
Maura
Masatsugu,
sophomore,
economics and
management
and society
graduate
student,
master of
accounting
Yun-Ah Park,
Helina Gan,
sophomore,
public health
sophomore,
biology and
psychology
Compiled by Carly
Berkenblit, staff writer
John Thomas,
Caitlin
Sommerville,
freshman,
chemistry
junior,
political science
Caleb
Peterson,
Usman
Rahim,
junior, exercise
and sport science
and communication studies
sophomore,
public policy and
economics
By Victoria Mirian
Staff Writer
student
elections
2015
DTH/PHOTOG NA
SBP candidates Kathryn Walker (left) and Houston Summers
debate in The Daily Tar Heel office on Monday before elections.
games
2015 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level:
4
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
Solution to
Mondays puzzle
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
Robotic attendance
67 Construction beam
fastener
68 Former South Korean
leader Syngman __
69 Golf club used for
chipping
70 Blissful settings
71 Jedi guru
72 Small change
DOWN
1 Do as directed
2 Toy with a spool
3 Deleted, with out
4 Louisiana music style
5 Olympics fig.
6 French monarch
7 One below birdie
8 Specialized, committeewise
9 Bit of pasta
10 Frying liquid
11 NBC show since 1975,
briefly
12 Barely manage, with
out
13 Ukr. or Lith., once
Golden Spike
44 Photo blowup: Abbr.
48 Sea spots?
49 Blueprint detail, for short
51 Sexy
53 Cable Guy of comedy
54 The Gem State
57 Warning from a driver?
58 Elvis __ Presley
59 No-frills shelter
60 Hip-hop Dr.
61 Free (of)
62 __ changed my mind
63 Caracas country, to the
IOC
64 Athens : omega ::
London : __
65 Assenting vote
Opinion
EDITORIAL CARTOON
PETER VOGEL
KERN WILLIAMS
BRIAN VAUGHN
KIM HOANG
COLIN KANTOR
TREY FLOWERS
DINESH MCCOY
NEXT
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Its not
biology
without
evolution
JUSTICE LEAGUE
Seth Rose will discuss the
Morehead-Cain Scholarship.
Clark Cunningham
Rename Saunders to
illuminate history
ENDORSEMENT
The run-off election for student body president is today, and we encourage
all students to take advantage of this opportunity to determine the future of
student governance at UNC. We acknowledge a general discontentment with
the available candidates but hope that everyone chooses to participate.
he editorial board
had decided that
Houston Summers
experience on administrative committees, relationships with powerful people
and general willingness
to listen to student voices
make him fit for the role of
student body president.
This endorsement
comes with heavy reservations. Despite his protestations to the contrary,
we do see Summers candidacy
as a continuation
of the
Powell
administration in
a variety
of ways.
Houston Summers
And
Junior from
while
Greensboro
Andrew
Powells presidency has
been competent, his leadership has not been as
transformative or vocal as
we might have hoped.
We anticipate Summers
closeness to the administration will inspire a similarly cautious approach to
student government, one
that is adequately involved
ADVICE COLUMN
TO THE EDITOR:
Dear Chancellor Folt,
We, the undersigned,
are graduate students in
the UNC Department of
American Studies and the
Folklore Program.
We write to you in the
spirit of our departments
commitment to empower
students to value the nations
complexity by engaging with
a variety of historical, literary, artistic, political, social
and ethnic perspectives. We
believe the names of buildings on our campus that
memorialize perpetrators
of physical and structural
violence impede our ability
to fulfill this commitment.
As students and teachers of
American Studies, we are
concerned about the lack of
education regarding the history of racism and discrimination at our university.
Our campus holds a history of discrimination and
violence against minorities
extending to its inception,
and our desire is that UNC
will be more proactive
about increasing awareness
of this past. The landmarks
we celebrate, including Old
East and South Building,
were built by enslaved
people. The University was
open for 50 years before
trustees forbade students
to bring their own enslaved
people to campus.
Political conflict in the
1880s accelerated racial tensions between students and
the black community leading to the whipping, jailing
and arrests of black Chapel
Hillians. Qualified black
students were consistently
denied admittance to the
University, notably the first
black female Episcopalian
priest, Pauli Murray.
At the Universitys doorstep on Franklin Street,
anti-integrationists beat
and urinated on students
and citizens. Enrollment
numbers for black students
have decreased steadily
over the last five years. And
still, our buildings and
streets memorialize slave
owners like Paul Cameron
and Thomas Ruffin and
white supremacist apostles
like Josephus Daniels and
Julian Shakespeare Carr.
In our department,
scholars study landscape,
memory, performance,
politics, history, emotion,
language and culture, all
of which play a role in the
conversation happening
around race on our campus.
We all, in some form, study
the impact of the past on
the present. We believe that
the history of this University
is in conversation with its
present, which is why we
join in solidarity with The
Real Silent Sam Coalition.
We demand that
Saunders Hall be renamed
and that the Silent Sam
monument be contextualized within the racialized
landscape of our campus.
Renaming Saunders Hall
in honor of folklorist Zora
Neale Hurston is not an
erasure of our Universitys
history but instead a step
Carolina community
was united in support
TO THE EDITOR:
In the wake of the
shootings of Deah Shaddy
Barakat, Yusor Mohammad
Abu-Salha and Razan
Mohammad Abu-Salha,
UNC Muslim Students
Association members were
suddenly tasked with grieving for the lost lives, answering to the national and
international community
and the press and providing support to members of
the local community. For
their generous efforts and
support during this difficult
time, the UNC MSA wishes
to thank everyone at UNC
who made Wednesdays vigil
and prayer services possible.
We especially thank
Crystal King, the Carolina
Union director, for her
kindness and selflessness.
Crystal mobilized university
staff and administrators
to help us organize every
detail of the vigil, from
providing parking accommodations to keeping the
Great Hall available for our
late night prayer services.
Above all, she was an emotional pillar whose support
has been unwavering.
Crystal also introduced us to Dean Desiree
Rieckenberg, who handled
all of our logistical questions
and iterated that anything
we wanted would be provided to us. Her diligence
and compassion helped to
make the vigil successful.
Crystal connected us to
Dean Blackburn, who acted
as a liaison between the vigil
organizers and speakers. His
warm smile and reaffirming words gave us strength
throughout the day.
We additionally wish
to thank Vice Chancellor
Winston Crisp, Chancellor
Carol Folt and Bobby
Kunstman for their presence, words of wisdom and
support; Vice Chancellor
Joel Curran for handling the
press, Megan Johnson and
the Union Design Services
for creating the vigil programs, the UNC Student
Stores Print Shop for printing the programs, the Union
staff for staying open after
hours and UNC Hillel for
providing candles for the
vigil. In their generosity and
support, these individuals
and others have demonstrated the Carolina Way.
Shamira Lukomwa
Senior
Global Studies and communications
Nicole Fauster
Senior
Global studies
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