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kinnaird
FROM PAGE 3
political arena. “Life changed radi
cally with the women’s movement,”
she said.
A greater feminine presence
would better the legislature
because women, who are more
detached from the business world,
are less likely to cater to special
interests, Kinnaird said.
When the home-builders
speak, environmental concerns are
lost, she said. “When the govern
ment asks for incentives for busi
ness, they are more willing to give
that than money for community
colleges, the elderly and day care.”
Kinnaird was elected Carrboro
mayor in 1987 and was known for
her focus on the environment,
downtown revitalization and
neighborhood restoration. In the
mid-19905, colleagues encouraged
her to take her love of nature to the
WHITFIELD
FROM PAGE 3
spending money.
His jobs at fast food establish
ments and local grocery stores
taught him early on the importance
of hard work and an education nei
ther of his parents were afforded.
Whitfield still stands behind his
belief that these were the best les
sons he learned from his parents.
He attended East Carolina
University on a partial track schol
arship, but still worked, and gradu
ated with a history degree in 1969.
He then received a master’s
degree in education from the
University of Tennessee-Knoxville
and went to law school at N.C.
Central University. After college,
he served in the U.S. Air Force and
completed a tour in Vietnam.
Whitfield, who spends his free
time training for marathons, works
as an attorney with the Durham
firm Browne, Flebotte, Wilson &
THE Daily Crossword By Gerald R. Ferguson
57 Canal of song
58 Merger
59 Hairstyling products
60 Break suddenly
61 Classifies
DOWN
1 Seaweed varieties
2 Middle Eastern rulers
3 Band of eight
4 Grasps
5 1952 Olympics site
6 Port of Iraq
7 Burn soother
8 Place to get PIN
money
9 "On the Waterfront" co
star
10 First PM of India
11 Black cuckoos
12 Clinging flora
13 All nerves
18 Continental dollar
ACROSS
1 Self-employment retire
ment plan
6 Jezebel's deity
10 Main aisle in St.
Peter's
14 Host
15 Der (Adenauer)
16 Arthurian lady
17 Trinket
20 Compelling influence
21 Pullover
22 Fast flyer, briefly
23 Novelist Levin
24 Prohibition grp.
25 Year in Madrid
26 Spanish rivers
27 Slangy affirmative
30 Capital of Belarus
33 Croat's neighbor
34 H.H. Munro
35 Small part of a whole
38 Turner and Clanton
39 Very dry
40 Impertinent
41 Part of NY's
S.l.
42 Very dry, as
champagne
43 Bar in Britain
44 Shoulder of the
road
45 Big CA
46 Old Gray Mare
49 Athens rival
52 On the whole
54 Compact pet?
56 BTU part
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tMF NORTHGATE MALI
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CRABTREE VALLEY MALL RwJ fU Mrfect LOStuM to turM Uids OK FwuJJm Street
RALEIGH • 9t9-789-9195 _ i
TRIANGLE TOWN CENTER if o,roi„ s
_ JT
Explore Your Options!
Open House on Adult Learning
and Part-Time Study
Wednesday, Oct. 27, 4-7 pm
• How to earn UNC academic credit through part-time study
• Carolina Courses Online and other distance learning programs Sip
• Admission and student aid information for part-time students
Advisors and faculty will be on site to answer your questions. The
Friday Center has ample free parking and is conveniently located
near 1-40. See our Web site, fridaycenter.unc.edu, for more
IQ| UN O
Jiiii THE WILLIAM AND IDA FRIDAY
CENTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCATION
N.C. Senate.
While a senator, Kinnaird has
worked for the preservation of
farmland and open spaces, the
reduction of automobile emissions
and the cleaning of corporate hog
operations and power plants.
Formerly a legal services law-;
yer and now in private practice,
Kinnaird said her main goal has
been to fight for her constituents’
common interests. “I certainly
think I have been a voice for the
people who don’t have a strong
voice in the legislature,” she said.
Sen. Charles Albertson, D-
Duplin, backs her. As chairman
of the Agriculture, Environment
and Natural Resources Committee
she vice-chairs, Albertson said
Kinnaird is highly involved, capa
ble and admirable. “She has a pas
sion for what she believes, and she
brings a point of view to the com
mittee that needs to be brought.”
Kinnaird has been bringing
Horn, PLLC and is a member of
the Homestead Heights Baptist
Church in Durham.
Whitfield was tapped to run
against Kinnaird after the original
Republican candidate, Kim James,
withdrew for family reasons. He
said he hopes to bring about a
change in local politics.
Whitfield said he feels strongly
about supporting issues such as an
amendment to the N.C. Constitution
banning same-sex marriage.
He also plans to improve the
economy by lowering taxes for resi
dents and businesses and is against
a regional rail system that has been
proposed for the Triangle.
“(There is) not enough environ
mental impact to be worth the cost
of the light rail system,” he said.
Whitfield proposed alternatives
to the regional rail system, high
traffic and environmental distress
caused by transportation.
“We can improve roads and offer
incentives such as high-occupancy
19 Hanoi holidays
24 Belushi biography
25 Adder cousins
26 Punch again
27 Jabbers
28 4-string guitars
29 Feel compassion for
30 DCCLI doubled
31 Vexes
32 Mr. Coward
33 Guitar stroke
34 Wound cover
36 Tells the tale
37 Like a loan shark
1 2 3 4
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17 18 19
20 ‘ ■■pT"””
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From Page Three
her point of view to the General
Assembly for eight years.
When Kinnaird, 72, was asked
how long she planned to stay on
as senator, she laughed and said,
“That’s up to my constituents.”
She’s not looking for a higher office
because she said her district keeps
her busy and fulfilled enough.
Kinnaird said that while the
women’s movement changed her
view on work, she cherishes her
maternal role as well. “I have won
derful children and grandchildren.
I’d never trade that for anything.”
Kinnaird likes to garden, go to the
movies and read in her spare time
when she has it. Representation
is a 24-7 job, she said.
“When you’ve been in office for
a while, you look back and think,
‘What happened to the rest of my
life?’”
Contact the State & National
Editor at stntdesk@unc.edu.
car lanes and incentives for people
to ride buses,” he said.
Another issue Whitfield
addressed is liberal bias on col
lege campuses. He has sponsored
a seminar for professors and stu
dents on the issue and stresses that
he is fighting for open campuses
with free speech on both sides.
He also intends to propose a bill
that penalizes any college or univer
sity that denies anyone free speech
or any other constitutional right.
Doug Biddy, chairman of the
Orange County Republican Party,
said Whitfield, whom he has known
for 20 years, is a fine candidate.
“He would be a fresh and cred
ible state senator to represent this
area based on what he stands for,”
Biddy said. “He certainly has the
education and the background,
which is a good trait that the public
is looking for in state senators.” <*
Contact the State Etf National
Editor at stntdesk@unc.edu.
(C)2004 Tribune Media Services, inc.
All rights reserved.
42 Greek letter
43 Fiction"
44 Limeys
45 REM situation
46 Low point
47 Parcel out
48 Valleys
49 Complacent
50 Knotty wood
51 Blue dye
52 Song for Sills
53 Words to Nanette
55 Coffee server
Fenhagen, 81, DTH board member
BY GREGG FOUND
STAFF WRITER
Many University graduates take
their degrees and knowledge and
use them in far-reaching parts of
the globe.
F. Weston Fenhagen, a 1946
University graduate, certainly was
one such alumnus. But after spend
ing much of his career abroad, he
decided his life of service would be
right at home in Chapel Hill.
A memorial service Friday at
Chapel of the Cross on East Franklin
Street honored Fenhagen, who died
Oct. 8 while serving on the board of
directors for The Daily Tar Heel and
who friends and family said always
held UNC and Chapel Hill dear.
“He loved being in a university
town,” said his wife, Betsy Fenhagen.
“It was icing on the cake to him after
being away for so many years.”
After graduating with a degree
from the School of Journalism and
Mass Communication, Fenhagen
worked as a journalist in both France
and Maryland. He then joined the
U.S. Diplomatic Corps as a public
affairs officer and spent the next 25
years of his life traveling the globe.
“We went to Tunisia, Morocco,
RESEARCH
FROM PAGE 3
nationally in cancer research,
receives more than 75 percent
of its funding from the National
Institutes of Health. A variety
of other federal funding agen
cies, including the Department of
Defense and the American Cancer
Society, also sponsor the center.
The center works with 515 staff
members and 220 scientists from
more that 25 departments across
campus. It soon will expand by
creating anew facility with SIBO
million the N.C. General Assembly
awarded the center this summer.
“The center has grown tremen
dously over the past few years. It has
grown in our mission and our ties to
the University,” said Barbara Rimer,
deputy director of population sci
ences at the center. “The incorpo
ration of new faculty members from
other departments of the University
has grown even stronger.”
Since when does “fresh” mean
“it just recently came out of the can”?
Were not happy with the state of affairs in
gf 'mg \ our business. Somewhere along the way, the
■ IL 1 word FRESH has lost its meaning. But not at
■ Armadillo Grill. We start with fresh fruits
\ and vegetables. Everything is right from the
garden, just like it’s supposed to be!
120 E. Main Street Duke University 493 Glenwood Avenue r
Carrboro, NC Bryan Center, Durham, NC Raleigh, NC . , . _
929.4669 660.3937 546.0555 A taste as big as Texas!
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Wendv P. & 1 M 21 W Hanes Mall
jr.
Career Center UCS@UnC.edu
WALK-IN HOURS: Answers to career questions and resume reviews— Mon-Fri, 10 —3p
PROGRAMS
Career Clinics: Get an overview of the career decision-making process and
advice regarding your major or career direction. Also, leam about career resources
and have the opportunity to take an interest inventory. Mon and Tues —3:15-
4:45p—2398 Hanes Hall—Sign up at http://careers.unc.edu/career_explore.html
How To Find A Job After Graduation: Bring your laptop and leam how to
; search alumni and employer databases for job leads. Also, submit a resume for an
on-campus interview through the UCS system. Tues. Oct. 26 3:00 239 Hanes
Resume Workshop: Construct a draft of your resume with help from a UCS
counselor. Please bring your laptop. Tues. Oct. 26 4:00p 2398 Hanes
HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR INTERVIEWING Skills: Leam how to interview
| effectively. Tues! Oct. 26 5:00 2398 Hanes
Public Relations Careers Panel: Leam about careers in public rela
tions from a panel of experienced professionals! Wed. Oct. 27 4:00p 2398 Hanes
How TO FIND AN INTERNSHIP: Leam how to find internships and how to de
jcide which one is best for you in this interactive session. Please bring your laptop!
Tue. Oct. 19 2:00p 2398 Hanes
i Law/Legal/Legal Research Networking Night: Network with
I local professionals in the legal sector and make great contacts. Brief introductions
| will be followed by mingling. Business casual attire is recommended. Please RSVP
I [to http://careers.unc.edu/events/register.html Thurs. Oct. 28 5:30p 2398 Hanes
; Law School Exploration Day: Meet representatives from over 79 law
: schools across the country. Wed. Nov. 3 12:00-4:00p Great Hall
GOVERNMENT JOB Fair: Meet representatives from government agencies and
leam more about their opportunities. Tues. Nov. 09 10AM—-3PM Durham Armory
EMPLOYER PRESENTATIONS
GlaxoSmithKline—Oct. 24—6-7p—207 Venable -“TJ
IBM—Oct. 25—6-7p—2398 Hanes „ UCST
Ferguson Enterprises Inc.—Oct. 27 —6-7p—2398 Hanes
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Cut and save---—;* • ‘ ■ >o at and save—-
MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2004
the Ivory Coast, Congo and
Malaysia, and we felt very lucky to
be there,” Betsy Fenhagen said.
Being far from Chapel Hill
didn’t deter Fenhagen’s interest in
the Tar Heels. “He was always a Tar
Heel fan,” Betsy Fenhagen said. “In
Congo, he would sit with a radio
pressed to his ear at 2 a.m. so he
could listen to the games.”
Fenhagen’s daughter, Caitlin,
remembers him as a man who loved
to travel with his family on trips
such as an expedition to Namibia
and Zimbabwe five years ago.
“We explored some remote areas
of the country and were able to see
a rare black rhino. We would never
have been able to do it without his
imagination,” Caitlin Fenhagen
said.
After his time overseas, Weston
Fenhagen returned to Chapel Hill
and worked as an editor of publi
cations for UNC’s General Alumni
Association.
He also spent time visiting death
row inmates and was a Guardian ad
Litem for the county Department
of Social Services, where he spent
time with abused and neglected
children and reported to the courts
The Lineberger Center is differ
ent from other research centers at
the University because it is the one
place that brings in a multitude of
faculty and research from all over
the University, said Debbie Dibbert,
director of external affairs.
“Cancer is more than just med
icine,” she said. “It incorporates
research not just from medicine,
but from chemical, economic and
psychology departments.”
The Lineberger Center also
has new plans to increase clinical
research efforts, Earp said.
“We hope to dramatically
■ Due to an editing error, the
Oct. 24 article “MLK facilitator
divulges plans” misspelled the
name of Durham consultant Gita
Gulati-Partee.
To report corrections, contact Managing Editor
Chris Coletta at ccoletta@email.unc.edu.
on their welfare.
Betsy Fenhagen said he would
help them with school and would
regularly drive one child to visit his
mother in jail. He would even use
his basketball and football season
tickets to take a child to a game.
Herb Bodman, Weston
Fenhagen’s college roommate, has
memories that go back to “whoop
ing it up” after a UNC-Navy football
game in the ’4os and working on
The Daily Tar Heel together.
“He was on the sports staff and
somehow recruited me to write
about freshman football,” Bodman
said.
“I gave him my story and he said,
‘You know, this is freshman foot
ball, not varsity football.’ I made
sure to shorten my story.”
Fenhagen’s legacy will live on
through a scholarship in the journal
ism school created in his name by his
friend George Brady.
Donations may be made in
Fenhagen’s name to People of Faith
Against the Death Penalty at 110 W.
Main St., Suite 2-G, in Carrboro.
Contact the City Editor
at dtydesk@unc.edu.
increase clinical research and thus
double the number of patients that
we currently have.”
Doing so is necessary, he said, to
provide more care for a disease that
has the potential to affect anyone.
“Almost everyone in the University
community has had some kind of a
brush with cancer,” Earp said.
“So our goal is to create one of
the most comprehensive centers
that provides the best cancer care
and research.”
Contact the University Editor
at udesk@unc.edu.
(Tk Saily (for Bppl
P.0.80x 3257, Chapel Hill, NC 27515
Michelle Jarboe, Editor, 962-4086
Advertising & Business, 962-1163
News, Features, Sports, 962-0245
One copy per person; additional copies may be
purchased at The Daily Tar Heel for $.25 each.
© 2004 DTH Publishing Corp.
All rights reserved
5
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