Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 16, 2001, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
4 Tuesday, October 16, 2001 PACKAGE From Page 1 nary tests of a powder found in an enve lope also have returned with negative results. A Durham lab technician received a suspicious letter containing a tan pow der while he was at work, the Durham Herald-Sun reported Monday. Nationally, at least 13 people recent ly have tested positive for the presence of the anthrax bacteria. The anthrax scare began Oct. 4 when a Florida photojoumalist died from the disease. It was the first anthrax deatn in the United States since 1976. The City Editor can be reached at citydesk@unc.edu. Kudzu RESEARCHERS AT JOHNS f AW, C'MON '. \ DO YOU LIKE {? THIS OUST IN ' HCPKIKS UMVEfiS/TY WAVE EVEN SUNFLOWER . EATING THEM? 11 SUNFLOWER SEEDS FOUND CONCLUSIVE Evi- l SEEDS?/ ► LINKED TO £gOL A ' PENCE THAT EVERYTHING V J J ADORE you ENOOV eating IS n c3 —■ — T~rnrwl sunpioWEß bad for you* , o lx, seeps/ wSMBr £6^ Jpi •1 Xf \ THE Daily Crossword By Gerald R. Ferguson 46 blanche 47 Georgia eager 52 Letters for a drill instructor 55 Lunchtime 56 In high dud geon 57 Oxen pair 58 Alcove 59 Spouses 60 Smalt opening 61 Hardwood trees 62 Film critic Roger 63 Chopping tools DOWN 1 Ready for the action ACROSS 1 Bonkers 5 Broken in 10 Ode or sonnet 14 God of love 15 Prof. Higgins’ pupil 16 Thomas _ Edison 17 Debatable 18 Festive 19 Bridle strap 20 Tee preceder 21 Limbs-splayed, supine position 23 'The Waste Land" penner 25 Competed 26 Zsa Zsa and Eva 28 Chews the scenery 33 Employ again 34 Of bees 35 In what way? 36 Goals 37 Tic 38 Pocketed bread? 39 Swabbie's stick 40 Swiss city on the Rhine 41 Window sticker 42 Patronage 44 Cause bitter resentment 45 Albanian money ■^ndT|Ta]¥WsW[T]T _3_ _i _V _d_ Jjiji £ 0_ N_ M_V H V N__V 11V _v 3J883T jMH 3|l|>i|Nl Vlßllfs 33 I djS 0 V 1 V O 3 qBB3 1 S V 9|l d~ O W vii dMw s v and ITMBs ni v MOHM V Id Vp|3 Sn 3 a S 1 ojv U 3 A oBpT U.. 0 _9_ V 5 HHBK i. ZpHE o. j_ l ?WM 3_ 9__V_ 3gV3 Id and sBIs S 3 N I 3 dB7 Id u 3 TvMl O O HI va i vMv zii IT? ow v iM3ioidßa|3|w|v|TMvTsrvfc 2 MILLION INVESTORS. 80 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE. 1 WEIRD NAME. TIAA-CREF has a long history of managing portfolios for the world’s sharpest minds. Contact us for ideas, strategies, and, at the very least, proper pronunciation. TIAA-CREF.org or call 1.800.842.2776 ° mm Managing money for people with other things to think about?" RETIPtMENT j INSURANCE j MUTUM FUNDS | COLLEGE SAVINGS | TRUSTS | INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT TIAA CREF Individual and Institutional Services. Inc . and Teachers Personal investors Services. ':?■■■ Inc., distribute securities products, © 2GQT Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association College '.Retirement Equities. Fund iTIAA-CREF), New York, NY. 08?20. ■ ' FORMALDEHYDE From Page 1 of Governors meeting, the building’s gross anatomy lab does not have an ade quate system to expel hazardous fumes from formaldehyde. Officials said the problem was dis covered during a routine examination of campus building systems. Engineer Donna Kramer, who origi nally evaluated the building for the 2004 renovation, was brought in to assess the conditions in Berryhill, Marriott said. Kramer will design a.plan to make necessary corrections, and the work will be contracted out, Marriott said. The renovations are set to take place from March 11 to May 31, 2002. Officials said this time frame was chosen 24 Forfeiture 26 Pasturage grass 27 Vowels 28 Iridescent gems 29 Shop grip 30 Varicella 31 Complete 32 Marshy lowland 34 Church area 2 Famous cookie maker 3 Fear response 4 Actor Carney 5 Paces 6 In a state of readiness 7 Soggy ground 8 Pound of poet ry 9 Waking fantasy 10 Argentine port 11 Cassini of fash ion 12 Bad to the bone 13 Currycomb tar get 21 King's address 22 Attain Hs fe pp p [w 13 us — ~ Te BSjfiis 22 26 27 iMpS 29 [3O 31 32 _ |Mp4 ■■"7 36 HH37 ■■3 B 39 ■■4 o ■■4 l 42 ■■49 n 47 48 49 50 51 ■■ 53 54 55 ■■77 ■■s7 jn ®||| because no classes will be held in the affected area at that time. Refurbishment will mainly focus on improving exhaust fans and duct work, officials said. The work will take place on the fifth and sixth floors and is expected to cost about $200,00Q, which will be cov ered by funds from the bond package. In the meantime, filtration masks are available for people working in the anatomy labs. Reinhardt also said officials are work ing to minimize the amount of time stu dents and staff are exposed to the mate rial by possibly rotating times people would work in the labs. Moeser could not be reached for comment. The University Editor can be reached at udesk@unc.edu. (C)2001 Tribune Media Services. Inc All rights resented 49 Weaving machine 50 United Emirates 51 Loathe 53 Concern 54 Fifths of a five 57 Health haven 37 Period in bed 38 Closely con fined 40 Well in France 41 Dismal 43 Platform ele ments 44 Most unrefined 46 Bring brunch 47 Ms. Bancroft 48 Utensil Arts Artist Uses Music, Metaphor Cris Williamson will perform at the Carrboro Arts Center and put on workshops on writing and performing. By Michelle Jarboe Staff Writer Singer/songwriter Cris Williamson has a habit of speaking in metaphor. When she discusses the recent end of a 20-year relationship with her person al and musical partner, Tret Fure, the Joni Mitchell-esque singer/songwriter uses the imagery of the phoenix rising from the ashes. “The bird willingly sets itself on fire - I did not want this change to occur, but I took the path willingly,” Williamson said. But the phoenix imagery doesn’t stop with her previous relationship. It’s also included the conception and production of Williamson's new album, Ashes, the tour for which brings her to the Carrboro Arts Center at 300-G E. Main St. on Oct. 19. Rebirth seems to be Williamson’s sig nature way of overcoming difficulties and molding them into her work, a method that garnered Williamson praise from artists like Bonnie Raitt. In the example of her current work on Ashes, she said she addresses her rela tionship’s demise but does so in a way that taps into renewal’s universal appeal. “Most good writing should move from the personal to the universal,” Williamson said. Although she said she had reserva tions about calling it a genre, Williamson has been an active pioneer NIKE From Page 1 Director of Athletic Communications Steve Kirschner said the University community will be pleased with the new contract’s balance of labor standards and financial benefit. “When people see the contract, they’ll see it’s both fiscally responsible and socially responsible.” Since 1997, students have actively BMkftWO'S J?n MEXICAN CAFE Buy any dinner and two beverages JHaf at the regular price and JMHK receive the second dinner of equal or lesser value M I FREE!!!! 1 1 Dine-in only. One coupon per table. Valid Sunday-Thursday. Expires Oct. 30. 2001 | 1 59/7 E. Franklin St. ♦ Downtown Chapel Hill • 919-967-5048 Bar & Dining room open every night at 5:30 pm. Sun. Brunch 10:30 am-2 pm. 61Q West Franklin Street Chapel Hill, North Carolina 919-929-7643 We can do better! Bea part of planning America’s future. Visit our Web site to learn about the exciting new Urban Studies and Planning minor offered by Department of City and Regional Planning. http://www.unc.edu/depts/dcrpweb E I of the “women’s music” genre since her first album in 1964. Roughly 38 years later, Williamson receives kudos from artists for the changes she has wrought in the industry over the course of her 14- album career. And there have been many obsta cles along the way that would have forced Williamson to stop if it weren’t for her faith in renewal. While Sinqer/songwriter Cris Williamson is performing at the Carrboro Arts Center. Williamson’s not exactly a household name- those who watch the Billboard charts probably haven’t heard of her - she has managed to create a large cult following and a constant work schedule has sustained her sufficiendy. “I’ve been able to make a good living by never stopping,” she said. Being a lesbian and confronting sex ual politics and gender roles through her work - once more moving from the per sonal to the universal - have also pre sented challenges to the artist. For exam ple, Williamson has struggled against mainstream record labels that cannot find a place for her in the musical spec trum. Nevertheless, the older, wiser figure, while watching young pop divas race up the charts, does not begrudge them their success and popularity. Williamson likens their success in the industry to a path hard travelled by early artists forg- protested UNC’s ties with Nike and other companies that reportedly manufacture products in overseas labor sweatshops. Students for Economic Justice has been at the head of the protest front in recent years. Junior SEJ member Courtney Sproule said that while the group has demanded that UNC termi nate its contract with Nike in the past, she is not wholly against anew contract as long as it includes definitive stipula tions on worker conditions. “The best (HI)? Daily ®ar Hrel ing the way. “I just hope that the women who run down that road now remember that somebody made the road for them,” she said. Williamson, who originally aspired to become an English teacher, often teaches song writing workshops. She will teach a workshop for two days following her performance, and she said teaching people to write and perform in their own voice is as rewarding as it is intense. “This is a very compressed, on-fire type of activity,” she said. She’s a teacher through example. By continuing to perform work from her entire career and then teaching others tools with which to express themselves, Williamson keeps communicating her message of rebirth. And in the process, she revitalizes the talent pool for the genre she helped cre ate. “I believe in giving people the keys to open their own doors.” Cris Williamson will be performing at 8 p.m. Oct. 19 at the Arts Center. Her workshop, “Song of the Soul,” will be held on Oct. 20 and 21. Call the Arts Center at 929-2787 for ticket information. The Arts & Entertainment Editor can be reached at artsdesk@unc.edu. we can do is advocate for the contract to include a stiff code of conduct,” she said. UNC General Counsel Sue Ehringhaus, who was part of the recon tracting team, also said she is pleased with the new contract’s inclusion of labor standards. “We wanted this to make a statement, and so did Nike, about what we stood for.” The University Editor can be reached at udesk@unc.edu. INTERNET From Page 1 Rainie said. “When people do bad things, others will rise against them. At the end of the day, the more voices heard, the more information, the better off we’ll be.” McKnight said the Internet has come under fire primarily because it is still new. “The Internet is a tool that we use in modem society. Some evil people will use it to do bad things,” McKnight said. “The truth is coming out faster on the Internet than any other medium.” Some experts encourage Internet users to be discreet in sources they use. Jones said news sources help separate facts from rumors and paint a more accurate picture of a global story. “Readers can see how news is reported in other countries. It’s not restricted to U.S. news sources,” Jones said. “The net is the world’s largest newsstand.” The State & National Editor can be reached at stntdesk@unc.edu. ATTACK From Page 1 the angst there. Many lawmakers, aides and other employees already were nervous about working in a building that could be a high-profile target for terrorists. Bush’s national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, said precautions are being taken at the White House with regard to mail but added she was not aware of any tainted letters being deliv ered there. Other White House aides said they’ve been told strict limits will be put on deliveries, including food. In other news, U.S. jets continued attacking the Afghan capital of Kabul, trying to destroy suspected weapons storage sites. Defense Secretary Donald - H. Rumsfeld, speaking at the Pentagon, suggested U.S. airstrikes could start tar geting Taliban front-line positions facing Afghan opposition fighters in the north east of the country. The opposition alliance claimed Monday it had advanced close to Mazar-e-Sharif, the largest city in the north and that some 4,000 Taliban troops defected during the weekend. The Taliban denied the defection claim. The attacks Monday against Kabul started just before sunrise and contin ued through the day into the night. Taliban gunners fired in vain at the attacking planes, some so high they could not be heard from the ground. The attacks in Kabul appeared to be directed at weapons and ammunition stor age sites in the hills north of the city of 1 million people and around the airport. In one nighttime raid, 10 huge explo sions in the direction of the airport shook buildings miles away.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 16, 2001, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75