4
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2003
NAACP
FROM PAGE 3
“It just seems that so many
towns have a Martin Luther King
Boulevard,” Greene said. “I’d like to
see something more creative and
original.”
Renaming the road in memory of
the slain civil rights leader should be
the candidates first and foremost
concern in regard to the minority
community, said Bill Thorpe, the
THE Daily Crossword By Roger Jurgovan
ACROSS
1 Mil. rank
4 Angel of the first order
10 Now hear !
14 First of a Latin trio
15 Loath
16 Nod, to Eden
17 Fed. medical complex
18 King of Torts
20 Wayside lodge
21 Vent opener?
22 Be admitted
23 High Priest of Country
Music
28 Charged particle
29 Nights before
30 Mel of the Polo
Grounds
33 Stout or bock
35 Pine-sap product
37 Biblical prophet
38 Husband of a countess
hockey
56 Chinese chairman
57 King of Hi De Ho
61 in the bag!
62 Berserk
63 Not enthusiastic about
64 Golf gadget
65 Seventh letters
66 Remove restrictions
67 "Another 48 ”
DOWN
1 Frenzied
2 Protein acid
3 Prince of Wails
4 Far Eastern boat
5 once in a while
6 Rent once more
7 U S. Bible
8 Trident-shaped letter
9 Farm layer
10 Miniscule
39 Behaved
40 Pinza of
"South
Pacific"
41 Large
amount
42 Desiderata
43 Cup brims
44 Your, of yore
45 Wound mark
46 Flying
buzzer
47 Prince of
Darkness
52 Arose
55 Bobby of
G L ITT H E H A NjDLtr
U.1.1J1 2ii£C
MlO S1 T■ S Aj T E| tev
clAlLlZP m | a j I D L A
w e|p ¥]? o n | c a i r o
_B_ _A NGOnlt' H E F A U C_E T
I A S B¥ N A I L |_R__A T_
L E N XJ_3i S T N|S° S O
III s 1 itsMo A S T|| |
C_ X T 1 R E T E B N ! |X M E V
iiA emorJe'duc t XAA A
s t e i n||a n n e|e and e _l_
p|o|s|t|sßl|alo|sMs|e|e|p
WA f /
it —— \
pOWEEK OF EVERY MONTH SHOW YOUR UN IDANDGETj wL to
™ I W H ” fIH S jr [ mJL
swMTtus v dl H,.. ’ Designer Clothing on Consignment >
HAIR ACCESSORIES Empty your closet, fill your wallet. Sell us TANARUS" J l[\\ / •___
B JEWELRY your cool stuff and get cash on the spot. ) 1 0 o J I I QSTIIOOS
HATS dt) At Plato’s Closet* we buy and sell gently , \ o °\ /
dll□ crc S-* ' used brand name teen clothing and 5 1 ’ \ / \ k, u <mi *
runoto '55 accessories Calculus should be this easy! \ 0 \ / 1 lICW rKXJPS : ~’ w w>
pi a T * | L o °A / K)am - Bpm Non, Wed. Thur andFri
books : * L.a\l * L, j K)am - 6pm Tue and Sat
LAVA LAMPS T_ CLOSET ’'fw / \ U-LjAIJ-ls
AND MUCH MORE! SKSSr 1 %7~4035 • 431 West Franklin Street facross the street from the Carolina Breweryl
I —— l .TV "Z “
Tc" \. t '* I > N.
U* ■> ——i— .. fc£. Jiu
OUR BEAUTIFUL FALL AND '*
WINTER LINES ARE NOW HERE!
Grand) Fiunf has women's apparel P[ j" Ijg||||tev r ’' : i ;T "'Twb""~Tl _
arul atmwfie*, *■> well as a wlce L * *
lion of metis shifts, tie*. and belts, A I fj& •| *
lew of the (lrvi(|f,in r.nnrrl ut I lie vforc M .'iM j|i 1 iHB fIUBH t _
jrr Dokc ftisabhana, Versace, versus,
Cavalli, E*t£, Armani, and ftndi. j
A,So unique to this store ts its alteration . 4
years worth of HB jfF
for all Items, whether purchased in or iCa..'' , ? I
out of the store. Over night alteration f ■MBBBMBRBHI
sendees will also be available. \ -. . _ _ _ *
GRAND] V
FI Rill E
L 169 E Franklin Street (former CO Copies location) 967.6633 *
' J "4 'r .
*V A >
chapter’s political chairman.
“We are one of the few cities
who don’t have a boulevard (in
King’s name) not a little street
going nowhere,” Thorpe said.
Mediator Eugene Farrar, the
chapter’s treasurer, asked candi
dates how the town might attract
businesses that address the needs
of minority residents.
Incumbent Bill Strom said that
more attention should be focused
on the current businesses in the
11 Cease
12 Key
13 The slammer
19 Wagers
24 Planet
25 Cowboy movie
26 Like many campus
halls
27 Is inclined
30 Wizard of Oz
31 Stumble
32 New Mexican art
colony
33 Highest quality
34 To his own
35 South Fork or
5 6 7 0 11 12 13
J 5 24 125 26 ■MnflM
■■■■■29 31
33 34
! Hr
From Page Three
area, while other candidates
stressed the need for the develop
ment of downtown and aid for
minority-owned businesses.
“We need to look at state and
federal money to fund the start up
of minority businesses,” candidate
Dianne Bachman said.
The NAACP does not endorse
election candidates.
Contact the City Editor
at dtydesk@unc.edu.
(C)2oo3Tribune Media Services Inc.
All rights reserved
Ponderosa
36 Great quantity
37 Moray catcher
45 Pop
46 Heavy particle
47 Cordero and Arcaro
48 Dismal cries
49 Wooden box
50 Horse opera
51 Sensory organs
52 Heroin
53 Mild
54 Orchestra member
58 Not-a-full-load letters
59 Soho restroom
60 Tic-tac-toe winner
COACHES
FROM PAGE 3
sible by a host of sponsors, includ
ing three “super sponsors’:
Cherokee Investment Partners
LLC, PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP and RBC Centura Bank. RBC
Centura Bank hosted the event.
WRAL news anchor and Oak
Ranch staff member Pam Saulsby
delivered opening words before
the presentation of a video show
RED LIGHT
FROM PAGE 3
install the cameras, ACS collects
S4B out of every SSO fine for vio
lations if there are less than 1,750
issued per month. The town
receives the remaining $2.
Incumbent Jim Ward also sup
ported the cameras and said he will
continue to do so until he finds evi
dence they don’t work. “I voted feel
ing like it had a reasonable chance
of being a safety advantage.”
But if a newly elected council
chose to remove the cameras, it
could do so without incurring
monetary repercussions.
Ernie Rogers, an engineer and
technician for Chapel Hill, said the
town has the contractual right to
repeal the program. Rogers said
removing the cameras would not
cost the town any money because
ACS paid for their installation.
For his part, Raymond said he
will continue to urge candidates to
oppose the contract. “I think (the
red light camera system) is now an
established issue for the election.”
Contact the City Editor
at dtydesk@unc.edu.
casing children’s activities at Oak
Ranch.
Saulsby said the institution pin
points issues and deals with them
quickly and effectively. “Oak Ranch
has closed the gap between what
we know and what we do."
Richmond said all child resi
dents on the ranch have been
screened to ensure they will be
compatible with the program.
“There are six current residents,
but we have programs supporting
AID
FROM PAGE 3
em and northwestern states.
“We have issued in North
Carolina 3,713 business loan appli
cations and 12,942 home loan
applications,” he said.
Adinolfe said that in these situ
ations, there is aid available for
most who request it.
More funds likely will be added
to the S4O million, North said. He
said $lB million of the S4O million
is being used for individual assis
tance, going toward expenses such
as home repairs, temporary hous
ing and business damages.
Other portions of the aid are
being used for specific missions
such as obtaining water and elec
tricity for damaged areas.
SPRINKLERS
FROM PAGE 3
Because the Rhode Island
tragedy occurred eight months
ago, council member Dorothy
Verkerk said, time served as a good
qualifier in revising the sprinkler
ordinance.
(Etjp Daily (Ear Mrrl
families outside of the ranch as
well,” he said. “Oak Ranch is not an
orphanage. It is meant to rebuild
dysfunctional families through
support and guidance.”
He added that he is eager to see
the 755-acre plot outside Sanford,
which represents 27 counties,
develop into something larger and
more influential.
Contact the State Ql National
Editor at stntdesk@unc.edu.
One area that will receive fund
ing is the coastal highway, N.C. 12,
said Ashley Memory, spokes
woman for the N.C. Department of
TYansportation.
“We have a repair plan in place,”
she said of a proposal that will fill
in an inlet created in the highway
by the hurricane that stranded res
idents of Hatteras Island,” she said.
“This is intended as an emergency
short term repair.”
These repairs will cost $3 mil
lion to $5 million and will be a pre
cursor to more extensive repairs in
the future, Memory said. “It’s for
the residents who live there as well
as for the tourists who come down
to the Outer Banks.”
Contact the State 0) National
Editor at stntdesk@unc.edu.
“I don’t think you should make
legislation in the heat of the
moment,” Verkerk said. “I’m actu
ally quite pleased that we gave the
sprinkler ordinance some dis
tance.”
Contact the City Editor
at dtydesk@unc.edu.