Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 17, 2006, edition 1 / Page 5
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Satin sar Mwi Give Sudoku a shot ■ Instructions: Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains the numerals one through nine. For more information and the solution to this puzzle, visit the Features Desk blog at http://apps.dailytarheel.com/blogs/stories.php. n 1 1 !4 2 8 j 9 28 7 T~ 5 16 7 8 ; 3_ __ _ 7 3 8 Ml tTI 15 mM ■ HBk. (■■■'" H 1 I ~9 A Fresh | 1 1 r// Jin 7// Marketplace | ; | c yfifl(> Ctl Approach to | jI a All-Inclusive | 11 Dining | . You don’t have to live here to eat here... *• I I Com- chec< out The Agora, Granville Towers,' fabulous dining room! | $1 OFF Lunch or Dinner! I Excludes Wednesdays *rEXP v ;l 31 Ct THE AGORA AT GRANVILLE TOWERS t'niversity Square • 370-4599 • uwv.qiAnvilletqwrs.com j loniat Healthy Mexl i j.l' J-- Wj)T J ■■ ■■£ t.lt live Silk, \ari<mis items. $2 llil - J?i mJ J KTZjm* -Ml tV|l. I raiv Ik'.iiis ( )Jd s( 1 k nil \v(](jie I>n > i 1 1 it ken hurrili) 1.. .. ,|i In civic ken quesadilln A I I)lM\'ll\.'\: 2n(.-l87') - ( llAl'hl 1111.1 : ‘K.o-Vm . " . „ , ' ••••.„; ,|i M ,„., .mcb.-m sin T-c rit,lit ~.r.Ks ,)!(■ Mnvt-rnm, ,tu'\„rsiii lt„.„in .., lIHMUI options ...and lU()rf* p 1115... . [,,< ciiss Imm I>pi,li i.mUin nHv, i [,u ily .-ml .'I il,- t.a11.l a all mCXicail IkHTS $2yL~ Prom Page Three PUZZLES BY PAPPOCOM, WWW.SUDOKU.COM. SUDOKU FROM PAGE 3 But Sudoku is more than a fad, Gould says, and will remain after the initial hype fades. “When crosswords came out in the 19205, they were a craze, and look, we still have them,” he says. “I can’t imagine Sudoku disap pearing.” Contact the Features Editor atfiatures@unc.edu. RECONTRACTING FROM PAGE 3 be favored first in open campus recontracting, said Rick Bradley, assistant director of housing and residential education. “It limits upperdass students in terms of their options, but I think people are understanding that the upperclass students still have many choices available to them,” he said. Bradley said those choices include Odum Village and Ram Village Apartments, a 917-bed complex opening this fall. About 200 students already have submitted applications for Ram Village, and the application will remain online until all vacan cies are filled. Theme housing contracting also is open and will close Feb. 15, while same room recontracting kicks off March 21, followed by open cam pus recontracting on April 3. “I think the thing to keep in mind is that, of our total number of spaces on campus, only 2,500 are on North Campus,” Hicks said. Bradley said the department is eliminating real time in the online / .3S \ C/uytc£ ! WITH UNC STUDENT ID GET "• I $1 OFF I DINNER BUFFET! ! I J 35 Chinese has the best variety of Chinese food around. You can choose from over 50 Hems on our Super Buffet, or order from the extensive menu. Lunch 11am-2:3opm Friday/Saturday Dinner 4:3opm-10pm Sunday-Thursday Dinner 4:3opm-9:3opm 143 W. Franklin Street ■ Chapel Hill • 919.968.3488 • www.dtysearch.com/rdu/35 • fax 919.968.0268 |qp.®©Vi feffilmrl mSm TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2006 WOODWARD FROM PAGE 3 All students should attend the event, no matter what their major, Roush said. “What Bob Woodward could talk about would be applicable to students in any major,” he said. “He’s got these incredible life expe riences. He’s covered some of the most important events in history in the last 25 years.” To RSVP for the event, call 843- recontracting application because students have experienced tech nical problems in accessing the online application. Student requests will be limited to residence halls and roommates, and they will no longer be able to request rooms or suitemates if moving to anew building. The housing department also is proposing a price increase for double-occupancy residence halls with air conditioning from $2,095 to $2,300 in an effort to keep the Ram Village prices lower. The proposed prices for those apartments are $2,825 for single occupancy rooms per semester and $2,700 per person per semester for a shared bedroom. Bradley said housing officials decided on all changes after having a Residence Hall Association com mittee review the current process in November. “The committee came up with recommendations that were then presented to the complete RHA,” he said. The Housing Advisory Board composed of students and staff voiced no specific concerns to 7787 or e-mail kfbsrsvp@unc.edu. Overflow seating will be in nearby classrooms, where the speech will be viewed from a live video feed. Roush said he is excited for the speech, even though Woodward is speaking at the business school and not the journalism school. “As long as he’s on campus and students can be exposed to him, I don’t care if he’s meeting in a bathroom.” Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu. “It limits upperclass students in terms of their options, but I think people are understanding ... RICK BRADLEY, ASST. HOUSING DIR. the changes, Bradley said. Bradley said the RHA mostly focused on what these changes meant for upperclassmen. Colin Reed, RHA vice president, said the organization mainly was concerned with this year’s sopho mores, because they are expecting past years’ procedures. Students in the class of 2008 will be the only students never to reap the benefits of the upper classmen priority in open campus recontracting because the changes occur as they become juniors. “It’s just kind of a shock that they want to change how it’s all been done,” Reed said. Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu. 5
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 17, 2006, edition 1
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