ACROSS
1 “Elementary”
network
4 Eponymous
obstetrician
Fernand
10 “Oh, go on!”
14 __ provençale
15 Part of the plot
16 Gardening tool
17 *Serious
swearing
19 Banded
gemstone
20 Dorm room item
21 Really trouble,
with “at”
23 Help on the way
up
24 *Hunt’s rival
29 31-Down, for
one
31 Former Honda
model
32 Honda division
33 Perform for
36 Target of some
sprays
37 *Brunch choice
41 Ref. book
42 Come to light
43 Not from a 
bottle
45 Expected amt. of
repairs
46 It may be
blessed
51 *Camera
attachment
53 Hip bones
54 Modern
detective fiction
pioneer
55 Captain’s
heading
58 Shade similar to
bright turquoise
61 Cocktail garnish,
and a hint to
letters hidden in
the answers to
starred clues
64 Managing ed.’s
concern
65 List closing
66 Burns negative
67 Adjust for space,
say
68 Webster’s
shelfmate
69 Come to a
conclusion

DOWN
1 Longtime maker
of convertibles
2 Have a tantrum
3 Solution for
contacts
4 Trunk projection
5 Actress Heche
6 Attitude
7 Santa __
8 Proactiv target
9 Great-aunt of
Drew
10 Diplomatic code
11 John, in
Scotland
12 __ blue
13 Bewitch
18 MIT grad, often
22 Doctor’s org.
24 Sarcastic quality
25 Use a threat to
get
26 Like Botticelli’s
Venus
27 Easy pace
28 Place for a plug
30 Rental ad abbr.
31 “Habanera”
singer
34 Jeans giant
35 “Wow!” in texts
37 Skid row regular
38 Plasm lead-in

39 Statute opposed
by the Sons of
Liberty
40 Wide size
41 Dairy dept.
quantity
44 Mideast initials
47 Mountaintop allure
48 “Airplane!” heroine
49 Xterra maker
50 Covered in ink,
with “up”
52 Conger catcher

55 Former North
Carolina senator
Elizabeth
56 Cohesive group
57 Cockpit
announcements,
briefly
58 Solitaire base card
59 Four times a day,
in an Rx
60 Ocean State sch.
62 WWII arena
63 GQ, e.g., briefly

By Robert E. Lee Morris
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
07/02/15

07/02/15

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, July 2, 2015

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

Classifieds

Call: #734-418-4115
Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com

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to cover the cost of hearing aids.
“More than 50 percent of the 
people who need a hearing aid in 
this country can’t afford one, so 
they don’t get one. And I want you 
to think about the quality of life 
you have if you can’t hear.”
Dingell also spoke of the current 
long-term care system’s failure to 
provide affordable preventative 
care, such as in-home health 
aides and healthy food service 
options.
“You need help with daily 
activities: of eating, and dress-
ing and bathing, and that we’ve 
gotta figure out how we do 
that...The current system is 
designed towards institutions. 
It’s not designed towards get-
ting you help,” Dingell said.
Attendees responded to Ding-
ell’s comments with their own 
opinions and worries about the 
long-term care system.
Some 
audience 
members 
spoke to the issue of changing 
pension policies for dependent, 

aging widows while others cited 
disappointment with long-term 
care insurance policies they 
previously 
bought. 
Another 
common concern was the gen-
eral shortage of caregivers.
In an interview with the 
Daily, Dingell said she realized 
people in the audience fear the 
lack of long-term care benefits 
available to them.
“I think that you can see how 
many people are scared and 
worried that they don’t have 
the resources that they need 
for things that could happen,” 
Dingell said.
Susan Salowitz, a resident of 
Pittsfield Township, attended 
the event and said she was glad 
to see Dingell making an effort 
to connect and sympathize with 
the senior community.
“I’m so pleased that Debbie 
Dingell was willing to come and 
at least listen to all of our com-
ments, get ideas… and let us 
know that she was trying very 
hard to relate to the problems of 
the many seniors in our area,” 
Salowitz said.

want to thank you guys as 
well. My last comment is to my 
beautiful children: We did this 
for you,” DeBoer said.
Carole Stanyar, one of the 
attorneys 
for 
DeBoer 
and 
Rowse, also spoke at the press 
conference, praising her team 
and clients for their hard work 
and resilience. She expressed 
pride in the accomplishments of 
her case.
“This was a definitive state-
ment under equal protection, 
fundamental right, liberty, due 
process,” Stanyar said. “It was 
for now, and it’s for future gen-
erations. The bans are uncon-
stitutional. States cannot treat 
people this way. They cannot 
treat people unequally. Same-
sex couples, their families, their 
children, have to be treated with 
dignity and respect,” Stanyar 
said.
In an interview with the press, 
Attorney General Bill Schuette 
said throughout litigations, his 
main argument challenged who 
would decide if same-sex mar-
riage should be recognized in 
different states.
“We argued this case is a 
question of who decides: the 

voters across the United States 
of America, or the Justices of 
the Supreme Court,” he said. 
“It was about voters and who 
decides, that was what the case 
was about.”
Ann 
Arbor 
Mayor 
Chris-
topher 
Taylor 
also 
offered 
remarks during the celebration. 
In an interview with the Daily, 
Taylor was enthusiastic about 
this progressive milestone in 
Michigan’s history.
“I could not be more excited 
for the people of Ann Arbor and 
for all Americans. This is a day 
when the Supreme Court has 
redeemed the American promise 
of equality before the law. It has 
ratified that gay, lesbian, trans-
gender and bisexual people are 
fully and finally embraced into 
the American family. It’s just — 
it’s wonderful,” Taylor said.
Beth 
Sherman, 
assistant 
professor of social work at 
the University and her wife, 
Karen Hawver, owner of Preci-
sion Accounting in Ann Arbor, 
attended the celebration and 
press conference at Braun Court 
with their two children.
Sherman and Hawver were 
one of the 300 couples mar-
ried in Michigan in March 2014 

COMMUNITY
From Page 1

Read more at MichiganDaily.com

8

Thursday, July 2, 2015
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
NEWS

DINGELL
From Page 3

