Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 2, 2008, edition 1 / Page 8
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
8 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2008 Alpine encourages its ‘bagel artists’ to innovate BY DAN BYRNES STAFF WRITER Paul Hartley, general manager of Alpine Bagel Cafe, dreams of an everything bagel with hummus and cheeses inside. He calls it Cheddar Fire. Asa UNC sophomore, Hartley began working at Alpine in January 2005. andrew bird live in concert Wednesday, Oct. 1,8 p.m. Memoriai Hall UNC-CH ■•wi j . yf 7/1 M|>bP f f gjmwwj * : 'WQr -W r * $lO UNC Student tickets on sale September 3. * Reserved Seating, Due to university policy, One ticket pe/ OneCard, camping out is not permitted. two OneCards per person. Memorial Hall Box Office if available. General Public tickets M-F 10 a.m. 6 p.m. ($22) on sale September 22 (919)843-3333 at the Memorial Hall Box Office. •l. : ■'' ■. ■Presented by the Caiolina UiTion Activities Board;- * 1 S' NO, THIS \TAKe- HOMf- INTfKVIfM/l) nu am make ur YM|RjflTjfiV||W He started as a bagel artist the title given to Alpine’s bagel makers —and then moved up to shift supervisor. “By the time I graduated I knew every position, every duty, every thing having to do with running and managing the store,” Hartley said. Every week, Hartley and the staff of Alpine creates anew “Bagel of the Week.” Alpine managers brainstorm new concoctions that will bring a fresh aroma to the Student Union. “It’s a joint effort. The kitchen manager, myself and the rest of the team make up the special bagels,” said Hartley. News Some of the Bagels of the Week include Cinnamon Sugar and Crispy Parmesan. “I like testing out all of the dif ferent bagels and cream cheeses,” first-year Joseph Parker said. “There are so many options. My favorite is the jalapeno bagel with regular cream cheese.” Parker said Alpine bagels never get old. He enjoys a bagel every morning and sometimes returns to the Union at lunchtime for a bagelwich. Hartley has worked at Alpine for four years, although he graduated in 2007 with a degree in linguis tics. “I love this job. I’m not in a cubicle,” Hartley said. “I get to talk to people all day, and I get to talk in Spanish, and I get to run some thing to be proud of.” All of Alpine’s managerial staff started out as entry level appli cants, including one full-time stu dent manager. For Halloween, UNC’s favorite holiday, Alpine will sell pumper nickel bagels with jalapeno cream cheese for a holiday treat. Alpine is branching outside the bagel market too, Hartley said. The cafe began serving ice cream last week and soon will Economy crunches food banks BY JEFF WOODALL STAFF WRITER Local and statewide food banks are having trouble assisting the needy as the nation’s economic downturn continues to squeeze their funds. “We are trying to get the word out that it’s a very difficult time right now and everyone is experi encing the crunch from the econo my,” said Jenn Newmeyer, the data base and Web site manager for the Food Bank of Central & Eastern North Carolina. Partner agencies of the food bank, which provides for needy people in mostly rural areas of the region, are reporting increases of 20 to 30 percent in demand, Newmeyer said. Chris Moran, the executive direc tor of the Inter-Faith Council for Social Services in Carrboro, said that at the end of June, 11,507 bags of food had been given to 1,415 households —a 27 percent increase from last year. games Level: ||[T||T]|T| 1 | 3 | 61 | ' 3 8 1 4 _9 _2 5_ 7 2 ~_3_ 5 7_ 84, , 2 J3 _s_ 8 3 1 21 151 11 1 LOVE CAROLINA? Share your Carolina experience as an Admissions Ambassador Interest Session: Jackson Hall • 9/4/08, 7:oopm THE Daily Crossword Edited by Wayne Robert Williams ACROSS 1 Momma's partner 6 Academy Award 11 "60 Minutes” network 14 Of hearing 15 Chummy 16 William Tell's canton 17 Head lock 18 Holliman and Scruggs 19 Road to Rouen 20 Never say die 23 Ornamental container 25 ER workers 26 Mescal 27 Peacock"eyes" 29 Kennedy and Knight 30 Part of TGIF 31 Muslim prince: var. 34 Tobacco kiln 38 Burton/Bloom film of 1958 42 Coastal raptor 43 Of blood F l' I g H c I a I m I a I r l°B c |o| m l b l o oMa l o m a npir LEE A N I Mb a S e and a y ’ E N.2A11 T liao I E N S N Lll| HOMME|MOT|W ± MPS amy| t ac h |escort I.AALiI2i A iiAAI K Ii E . E . g|t S P 1 Y ST I PA T E_s S III* Y | D O U G I | A££L£.itLllLf. 1 o u s XAJi e. H 9 m e p a y[b r q ° A ° HuE e. K jA l bla 0 A M|EiSISMAIDIEISIT|EMYIUIP 44 Trellis climber 45 "Painting" painter 48 Tapers off 50 Partly frozen drink 53 Pouchlike structure 55 Simpson kid 56 Eavesdropper's perch 59 C.I.A. forerun ner 60 Log home 61 Cunning start selling pizza twirls and glazed cinnamon twists, which Hartley thinks will be a huge hit this football season. An Alpine trivia night also is in the works for later in the semes ter. Hartley was born and raised in Greenville. After graduating high school in 2003, he attended the first CTOPS session offered and signed up for an introductory lin guistics class to fulfill a perspective requirement. “I loved how the subject tack led questions scientifically that had been taken for granted by grammarians and psychologists for years and years before people started asking the hard questions,” Hartley said. “The class was truly deep. I still read the textbook in the laundro mat sometimes.” Hartley said he hopes to go to graduate school for pathology. His goal is to serve the Hispanic com munity. “The community is so greatly underserved right now, in terms of speech therapy, that a Spanish speaking child who has a typical lisp is more likely to be labeled retarded than given the help he or she needs,” he said. Moran said the increase is diffi cult to manage, which might mean trouble for smaller organizations that don’t have the IFCSS’s $3 mil lion budget. “We have a federal government that has definitely cut human ser vices to the bone,” Moran said. “We know the number of food stamp and work applicants has gone up, and we want to see people that are financially challenged have the ability to get a hot meal and shop in a pantry.” The increase in fuel prices is putting a huge damper on the abil ity of the Food Bank of Central & Eastern North Carolina to deliver food, Newmeyer said. Each year, the organization delivers about 31 million pounds of food, Newmeyer said. The food is usually sent to rural areas where families are unable to reach a food bank on their own. But moving loads of that size to remote locations requires many WWIUt YHESAMUtAier fUZZUf ByTbtMtpitamGroup © 2008 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved. TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) con tains every digit 1 to 9. Solution to Friday’s puzzle 6j51 911 |7I 81 314 j2~ 2_7_j_ AAA AAA 3814296571 817532496 AAAAAAAAA 4~~3TiT 967 81 5 9 68 71 3 2 5 4 1 1 4 3 ~Bj~2~ 5 9_js 7 [7fTlsTe 1419111318 64 Leguminous plant 65 Inorganic compound 66 Old-time journalist Pyle 67 Lanka 68 Relinquishes 69 Lawn tool DOWN 1 Light touch 2 " Town" 3 Keeps going 4 Chalklike crayon 5 In addition 6 Marine expanse 7 Blind parts 8 Foot woe 9 At a slant 10 Took five 11 Peculiar souvenir 12 Main impact 13 Surround-and-wait tac tic 21 Donna lead-in 22 Green tea 23 See-through fabric 24 One in a cast 28 Research room 29 Cut back 32 Call back? 33 Just get by 35 Shaking up 36 Break off 37 Assignation 39 Neatly maintained 40 Image Award grp* 41 Priestly garb 46 Emetic medication 7 8 9 23 24 ■Hr’M Hi* ~ P® n mi am 30 ~“■■si - 33 p 5 36 37 ~ P M 50 51 52 ■■hs ii 5/ joaBMI 59 taßeO - ““■■tu 62 63 ’ l|j ~ |||p ~ utyp lath? (Ear Urcl k mm DTH/SARAH BOWMAN Alpine Bagel Cafe manager Paul Hartley admits that his job is a lot of work. Hartley says that it is also fun: "I love our customers." But Hartley said he’s happy where he is for the moment. “At some point, however, I will leave the Bagel Kingdom and pur sue my calling. Until then, it’s a delicious day at Alpine Bagel; can I help you?” Contact the Features Editor atfeatures@unc.edu. gallons of diesel. And the bank’s fleet of 22 trucks must travel about 1,500 miles each day. The agency held a fundraiser in August called the “Food Bank Fuel Drive,” in an attempt to raise $25,000 —one month’s worth of fuel. “We have had to rearrange and cut our budget in order to cover areas that are lacking funding, especially fuel costs,” Newmeyer said. This will help the food bank deal with the larger of amounts of peo ple who have been needing their help, she said Even with growing expenses and membership, the IFCSS is currently planning on building anew facility to combine its food kitchen with its pantry. But no definitive plans have been drawn up as of yet, Moran said. Contact the City Editor at citydesk@ unc.edu. Contract ended UNC logos won’t appear on cloth ing from the Victoria’s Secret Pink line. See pg. 3 for story. Safety stressed The chancellor’s office is looking to install lights in the arboretum. See pg. 1 for story. Halloween celebrations Chapel Hill might look to other towns in efforts to downsize the Oct. 31 festivities. See pg. 1 for story. Scheduling efforts UNC wants to schedule more games that bring national exposure and money. See pg. 14 for story. Carolina Performing Arts j CPA wants to expand the internship program it started this summer. See pg. 6 for story. (C)2006 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 47 Give anew title to 49 Laughable 50 Duds 51 Stairway element 52 Very, in music 53 Maliciously sarcastic 54 " of God" 57 Footnote abbr. 58 Curved molding 62 False story 63 Back of a chariot?
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 2, 2008, edition 1
8
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75