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12A Thursday, April 6, 2000 If you don’t like where the crossword is in the paper, look for it on the DTH Web site: www.unc.edu/dth Dilbert© ' I CAfAE BACK | f\ HISSED THE I fI DIDN'T EARLY FROfiN f“\Y j f CAfAARADERIE • KNOW [nOTBAD^ FAKE DISABILITY j f AND THE ! WERE FOR A V. LEAVE, , \r| STIMULATING 1 J 1 TUESDAY, j ■1 .J | \J \f THE Daily Crossword By Alan P. Olschwang ACROSS 1 Took a swig 6 French father 10 Security for freedom 14 Dude from Dubuque 15 Oblong circle 16 Sea eagle 17 Start of Evan Esar quote 19 Incongruous lit erary move ment 20 Round Table knight 21 Pekoe piece 23 Bridge opening 24 Greek letters 25 French river 27 Part 2 of quote 33 Dieter's lunch, perhaps 34 Tasty tidbit 35 Fateful day in the Forum 36 Prairie dweller, once 38 Monthly pay ment 42 Entertainer Massey 44 Part of LEM 45 Part 3 of quote 50 Thread from flax 51 Without: Fr. 52 Scope out -53 Somber and grave 57 "Road to * 60 Lure 62 End of quote 64 Icelandic work 65 Millennia 66 One archangel 67 Herring's kin 68 Yard-work tool 69 Garlic-basil sauce DOWN 1 Floppy storage device 2 Workington work schedule 3 First to putt 4 Natalie's father 5 Furrowed, as aTdTaTs^¥Ta]^]gT¥BTllTa]¥ S I L cTW SPOR ill n n a HAIL C|A ESArBsONR ensue Mb e n eMtwa ' N E T T L Elis' TALA TTBMI f i rlsmr T and slßs e~ o"lTT~ J_ D_ D_ E_ N_ E_ _A _S^_L_ o R B " E ii _l OBIE j_ is. jJHfla ■tc A S A L sMs E R A P E A ±L IJtl e_ x A H A L AXE IMS HOW e|r BATH _r j_ c_ JWL A A JL jEjCI AAA a[s|k|sßd|r|els|sHe|s|s|o ~ "BRAKES" 50% OFF Pads and Shoes . EXPIRES 5/15/00 EXHAUST I S2O OFF lany exhaust that consists of muffler & tailpipe laaa _ mmm FXjA R _ CAMPUSVIBE 6BES SAMURAI! CLOSE UP 0N... interviews CLICK ON CAMPUSVIBE! CLICK ON THE FLIX PAGE OF CAMPUSYIBE.COM FOB: INOEPENDENT FILM * INTERVIEW "CLOSE-UPS" • MOVIE PREVIEWS NOW SHOWING * COMING SOON BE OUTRAGEOUS! WATCH FOR CVTV, WHERE OUTRAGEOUS STUDENT VISIONS HIT THE WEB. SEND US A VIDEO --n. CAMPUSVIBE.COM cally 31 Tango team 32 Craving 36 Python or ana conda 37 Hostelry 39 Part of the U.K. 40 Collar 41 Give it a go 43 Horne or Olin 44 Makes ready 45 Annapolis brows 6 Fertilizer com pound 7 Wickedness 8 Speed contest 9 "Born Free" lioness 10 & breakfast 11 Jordan's lan guage 12 Mrs. Gandhi 13 Sluggish 18 Fix in place 22 Icy sheet 24 Intentionally vague 26 Escapes from 27 Greek letter 28 Way cool! 29 Corrida cry 30 Analyze chemi M■n p 2 TrT~ 23 _ _ _ ——- 39 45 46 47 148 49 50 ■■■■■■■sl 52 ■■53|54 55 56 ‘“TBS7 58 59 60 63 ■■■66 \ Spring Specials I BSteISV 4 and Brakes K 407 E. Main Street • Carr boro 933-6888 | Ask How To Receive A FREE Ueinek* T-Shirt (02000 Tribune Media Services. Inc All rights reserved. freshmen 46 Saudi Arabia's capital 47 Lake near Utica 48 African fly 49 Mata 54 PC operator 55 Greek portico 56 Combat vehicle 57 Journalist Jacob August 58 "New Jack City” star 59 Nordic capital 61 Small boy 63 Italian three r SHOCKS" " J Buy 3 and Get One FREE j I (right rear) or 25 % OFF the • | second shock with purchase of 2 | EXPIRES 5/15/00 ' OIL CHANCE \ | $19.95 Oil Change OR I $9.95 with any Brake, Shock ■ or Exhaust Service L _ __ EXPIRES^/ 15/00 National Court Sets Hearing Date For Microsoft Punishment The Justice Department and 19 states have until April 28 to file their proposed sanctions against Microsoft. Associated Press WASHINGTON - The federal judge who ruled that Microsoft Corp. illegally used its monopoly on comput er operating software to crush its com petitors set a May 24 hearing on pun ishments against the company. Also Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson met privately with attorneys for a second consecutive day to discuss the next phase in the case: how to prevent Microsoft from future violations against federal antitrust law. He gave the Justice Department and the 19 states suing Microsoft to submit their proposed sanctions against the company by April 28. The government and the states might file separate briefs if they fail to agree on a punishment, but both assured Jackson they would make a single proposal. Microsoft was given until May 10 to Judge Calls Home Time Bomb' A judge says a Michigan boy accused in a school shooting was a victim of negligence at home. Associated Press FLINT, Mich. - A man accused of carelessly storing the handgun that authorities say a 6-year-old boy used to kill a classmate will stand trial on an involuntary manslaughter charge. District Judge John Conover made the ruling Tuesday, calling the living arrangements for the boy and his broth er a “time bomb.” The boy was living with his 8-year old brother, his 22-year-old uncle and defendant Jamelle James, 19, when he found James’ gun and took it to Buell Elementary School, prosecutors said. Vt*'*’'' - yr ;\a\ . jfy 4 !■ J S'. ■IfcV'JK.J .IflL W , lUH -W^if Sm /IHB, flKkflß ’■■ Jpl lei v " V j f Wiiii ; ■ iiiin iHi , ( Z ; f WebCT.com 1 I GETTING SMARTER. ALL THE TIME ) .. .. • .. .■ , - . - ’-' ■ . ■ I ■ ' : V: ■■ ■ • y;■ ; respond, according to the judge’s formal order. The government would have until May 17 to file its rebuttal. “All sides seem interested in a prompt and expeditious schedule for the next phase of the trail, which now seems fully achievable,” said Attorney General Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, one of the states in the suit. Jackson left room for both sides in the case to revive attempts to reach an out of-court settlement. He backed away from his previous request to have each side submit the final offers made during negotiations, which collapsed last weekend. Those talks were overseen by a court-appoint ed mediator, Judge Richard Posner of the 7th Circuit Appeals Court in Chicago. “It occurs to me that at some point you may wish to go back to Judge Posner and, therefore, I am going to abandon any request that you submit any offers that may have been made in the course of mediation, either in the clear or under seal,” Jackson said, according to a transcript of the meeting. As Jackson met with attorneys in his chambers, Microsoft Chairman Bill The boy used it Feb. 29 to fatally shoot first-grade classmate Kayla Rolland, police said. “That’s absolutely as negligent as you get,” the judge said in court. “What in the world did the defendant expect to happen” with a loaded gun in the house? “Who feeds them? Who clothes them? Who disciplines them? Who nur tures them? Who says ‘I love you’ before they go to bed and when they get up? No one,” he said. The boy, who has not been charged, testified in the preliminary hearing last week that he had seen James playing with the gun, a .32-caliber semiauto matic pistol, and demonstrated how James twirled it in his hands. The boy said he had seen the gun and some quarters in a shoebox in James’ room. | He also said he remembered Rolland being shot, but when asked if he shot (Tljp Sailg ®ar Hifel Gates met with lawmakers on Capitol Hill just a few miles away. He later participated in an economic meeting with President Clinton and Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan. Jackson has told attorneys in the case he wants to move through the remedial phase of the case quickly and is encour aging both sides to take any Microsoft appeal direcdy to the Supreme Court. “My transcended objective is to get this thing before an appellate tribund - one or another- as quickly as possible because I don’t want to disrupt the econ omy or waste any more of yours or my time on a remedy if it’s going to come back here,” Jackson said, according to a transcript of the meeting Tuesday. In his meetings with lawmakers, Gates expressed confidence that his company would see Jackson’s verdict overturned on appeal, but said he thought a speedy appellate process was unlikely because of the complexity of the issues involved. “I think that it is safe to say that Microsoft would prefer that it go through the regular process,” said Seh. Slade Gorton, R-Wash. her, he shook his head “no” and blamjed another boy to whom he said he had given the gun. “1 wasn’t playing with the gun, I was n’t,” the boy said. The judge bound James over for qial at the conclusion of the preliminary hearing Tuesday. Defense lawyers pointed to James’ roommate and the boy’s uncle, sjr Marcus Winfrey, as the owner of the gun “So Marcus Winfrey was buying file bullet, buying the holster. Whose gun (io you think it was?” attorney Bob Polas ( ek said. “I think it’s clear.” Federal grand jurors last month indictedjames; Winfrey, 22; and Robert Lee Morris 111, 19, all from nearby Morris Township, on charges that they ppssessed stolen firearms and unlawfully used marijuana while pos sessing the weapons.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 6, 2000, edition 1
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