4 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2005 Students’ move a win-win for all Families embrace calm at Baity Hill BY ROBBY MARSHALL STAFF WRITER Raindrops could be heard slap ping the empty sidewalks Monday as a tranquility settled in at Baity Hill student family housing. Friday saw the end of three-week process of relocating 360 under graduate students from their tem porary homes at Baity Hill to the newly renovated Cobb Residence Hall, said Rick Bradley, assistant director of information and com munication for housing and resi dence education. The symbiosis of undergraduate student and student family came to be after the delay of the Cobb reno vation project, which originally was set to be completed in August. “I’ve heard from staff members that the community has returned to what it was originally supposed to be,” Bradley said. He added that students with families have appreciated the undergraduates’ departure. “We’d hear kind of a chorus of loud people on Thursday and THE Daily Crossword By Victor Fleming 58 Assert confidently 59 Salami type 60 Boxer Benvenuti 61 Aloe 62 All ears 63 Actor Ladd 64 Part of B.A. 65 "Funny Girl" composer DOWN 1 "End of the Road" star Keach 2 Hidden supply 3 Localities 4 Blockhead 5 Post 6 Spanish capital 7 Grumpy sorts 8 Zither's cousin 9 Western st. 10 Hard, round candy 11 January in Spain ACROSS 1 Oodles 6 Thom of shoe stores 10 Boxer Willard 14 78-card deck 15 Calla lily, e g. 16 Poker fee 17 Amtrak's express train 18 Social engagement 19 Put on 20 Motor mouth 22 Ship's jail 23 Sure! 24 South Bend eleven 25 Boring bee? 26 Word with hog or block 27 "A Death in the Family" author 29 Thin-shelled nut 32 Like pencil marks 36 Per each 37 Metronome setting 39 Stem-to-stern beam 40 Children's fare 42 Takes care of 43 Webzine 44 Salacious stare 46 Humble 49 Queen of Spain 51 Graduate degs. 54 Butts into 55 "Beware the 57 Actor Morales l A l B l E l D B p l A l R l K l A M' lUElyJoJlo _R__L_E__l_ R_ E_ G R E g!g U M £ Hi IN|N IE I A £Bs_P_J_N.Bji" E N s ea Rsii |c|h|a|r]g in g|s _p _!_£££ E r . W£ c A R p B s ££ m.£ and a m[el| e p_e es_lh a_i_r D S C K E d| S putp e a E_ Y _E_ A_ R_BBB Il|e|aM£ entßsna I LS [£|l]lllMZ£ii£ A ££££ H S IE ■ A R E~ nlaMe L S A |n|e|sl f y|e |i i|i |n J i|i | p 1 m K ':- ■ ; i V^ WANTED: A HOME AT UNO'S #1 STUDENT COMMUNITY VEH BBißßud BIH9 WWW.VERGEAPARTMENTS.COM Friday nights,” said Amy Davis, a former graduate student in politi cal science who lives in Baity Hill with her husband. “We'd see them playing in the playground and cursing,” said Davis, who said that after a while she found humor in the late night ruckus at the nearby P2P stop. The extra residents complicated matters even for those out of ear shot from the late-night debauch ery, many residents said. Busses were overcrowded, caus ing hassle and unexpected delays in getting to campus, said Andrey Shabalin, a doctoral student in sta tistics, who lives with his wife and 5-year-old son. “After that I bought a bike,” he said with an exhausted laugh. Displaced undergraduates expressed the transition as a relief as well. Morgan Knox, a sophomore majoring in Spanish and math, was “very happy” about the move. She said that she is excited to be close to campus and that she will not miss setting aside 45 minutes every day to get to class. Despite the last-minute addition of Cobb students, Baity Hill was not forced to turn away student 12 Sully 13 Worsted fabric 21 Bullpen stat 25 Plaines, IL 26 Informal discussion 28 Fed. financial agcy. 29 Karachi’s nat. 30 Starting center? 31 Provincetown catch 32 Big bird Down Under 33 Golfer Hogan 34 Spearheaded 35 Ernie of golf 37 and Sympathy" '234 5 He p p [9 ■■"itTTn 112 13 bb B ~~fj 20 21 23 K ■■■2s jj|i26 —Hr 28 j|^| 29 31 33 34 35 36 ■■s/ 38 ■■39 40 41 46 48 ■■■49” 50 54 “■■■ss 56 _ ■■ ' ■■ - “We’d hear kind of a chorous of loud people on Thursday and Friday nights.” AMY DAVIS, BAITY HILL RESIDENT families, Bradley said. “We’re focused on getting addi tional units filled in the spring and in fall of ’06,” he said, noting that there is not a high demand for housing at Baity Hill. There are 7,192 students living in campus residence halls, exclud ing family housing, Bradley said in an e-mail. But he also said applications for Baity Hill are “trickling in” at a rate of five per month. The potential problem with vacancy is an issue for another day. For now, students and staff say the overdue migration of restless undergraduates away from Baity Hill seems to be a respite for all. Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu. (C)2005 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 38 Stone carver 41 Fr. woman's title 42 Riot queller 44 Most October births 45 WSW opposite 46 Fight site 47 Pesto herb 48 lowa commune 50 Roeper's co-host 51 Folding cabbage 52 Oak starter 53 Ray 55 Jakarta's island 56 Lash mark News N.C. lottery a gamble for neighbors’ revenues BY BRETT STURM STAFF WRITER When the first tickets to the N.C. Education Lottery are sold in spring of 2006, lotteries in neigh boring states likely will lose many of their loyal Tar Heel players. N.C. residents have tradition ally crossed boarders to play out of-state lotteries. They account for substantial sales in South Carolina and Virginia, both of which con tribute lottery revenue to the states’ public education. “We estimate that 12 percent of our play in South Carolina comes from N.C. residents,” said Ernie Passailaigue, executive director of South Carolina’s lottery. For a lottery that grossed more than S4OO million in sales from July 1 to Nov. 13, N.C. play rep resents a substantial source of additional revenue. Paul Lanteigne, chairman of the Virginia lottery board, pre dicted that N.C. players account for SIOO million annually about 8 percent of Virginia’s $1.2 billion annual sales. Gail Howard, author of “Lottery Master Guide,” said out-of-state lotteries will feel significant effects of the new N.C. lottery. “It’s cut off then, all that won derful revenue from the non-lot New prints form link to old BY JOHN COGGIN SENIOR WRITER Old meets new as the Ackland Art Museum expands its extensive print collection with 11 contemporary prints on display through Dec. 31. “Collecting Contemporary Prints” features the work of eight artists three Americans, one German, one Australian, two Japanese and one Indian-born Englishwoman —with pieces as diverse in the techniques that they showcase as their makers’ origins. The museum’s acquisition com mittee selected works that blend everything from wood block print ing to computer graphic design, adding a little modernity to a col lection that already has cornered the market on diversity. Maria Bleier, director of com munications at the Ackland, said the idea to acquire the new prints arose when the Museum was assembling its last exhibit, “Three Sides to a Sheet of Paper: How Prints Communicate, Represent and Transform (1482-2002),” which ran through Nov. 13. • • * • % • . * • . • • . * •.•..** • • • • .•* • • * • • • • • *. Celebrate the season with a taste of something special: \ *. * a Saladelia party platter. • • • . . • * • . * .. # .. enjoyous. Sja *. • . . . • • 4201 University Dr. # • • • • • Durham. NC 27707 • * * 919 489 5776 * pglfp (bus) ‘ Mmmm (bike) j (carpool) k m&i' Take one daily to relieve congestion. redefine the way you travel www.redefinetravel.org tery state,” Howard said. Virginia and South Carolina offi cials are expecting tangible drops in sales, but the exact impact is yet to be determined. “We are building in a drop in our budgeted sales because of the start of the North Carolina lot tery,” Passailaigue said. “There will probably be some decrease in ticket sales initially.” He predicted that the N.C. lottery likely will need time to mature before presenting serious competition. “Until North Carolina matures and gets into the multi-state game, you wouldn’t see a material drop of sales in South Carolina,” he said. “The real potential problem might fall in fiscal year 2007” But in Virginia, it is difficult to predict the effects of decreased sales on lottery-dependent pro grams, said Charles Pyle, director of communications for the Virginia Department of Education. “It really is too early to tell,” he said. “The lottery is a significant source of funding in the common wealth for public education. It is by no means the largest source of funding.” Pyle said the Virginia lottery provides about 10 percent of the state’s funding for public educa “As we were putting that togeth er, we had an opportunity to look at our print collection and find opportunities for growth,” Bleier said. “One of the things that came up was an opportunity to get more contemporary prints.” Barbara Matilsky, curator of exhibitions at the Ackland, said the museum tries to balance a desire to keep its collections current with one to ensure a connection between old and new works. The new pieces are appropriately scattered throughout the museum’s permanent collection, along with labels explaining the committee’s motivations for buying them. Citing the example of Chuck Close’s 5-foot-tall, 149-color silk screen portrait, “Lyle,” Matilsky said the pieces add an element of color and size to the print collection. “The importance of the works is that they forge new paths within the collection and that they also play off of the collection,” she said. “We’re looking backward and forward but backward in a positive way.” To demonstrate the fink between (Ebr Sa% (Ear Hppl tion, grades K-12. He said Virginia has begun a public relations campaign to high light the lottery’s contributions to the state’s public education. Passailaigue said South Carolina lottery officials are planning to take steps to mitigate the blow from a competitive N.C. lottery. He declined to comment on specific plans, but he mentioned the prospect of a Carolina regional lotto game similar to Lotto South, a multi-state jackpot game played in Virginia, Kentucky and Georgia. Lanteigne was optimistic about Virginia ticket sales despite the looming threat of anew competi tor. “We still have good growth of the lottery product in Virginia,” he said. “While we might lose 8 percent, our product will continue to grow.” But there are few options for state lotteries that hope to pre vent the loss of players to new games in neighboring states, Howard said. “There’s nothing they can do,” she said. “People have their own minds about where they want to play.” Contact the State & National Editor at stntdesk@unc.edu. old and new that the museum sought to forge, she again referred to the Close piece, which joins a print of a smaller, black and white drawing the museum acquired in 1979- A small picture of that drawing accompanies the larger piece, which Matilsky said allowed audiences to trace the devel opment of the artist’s Work. Several of the pieces use older styles to comment on more mod ern themes such as AIDS and feminism. For example, Japanese American artist Masami Teraoka draws on a woodblock print called “ukiyo-e” (“pictures of the float ing world”), which was popular in Japan during the 19th century, to tell a story about safe sex. Bleier said such works further the teaching museum’s intent to encourage classroom discussion. “Our focus is always to present a broad range of works of art, so that they can be most useful for classes as a good jumping off point for dis cussion,” she said. Contact the AdE Editor at artsdesk@unc.edu.