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July 14, 2016 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

ACROSS
1 UV filter once
widely used in
sunscreens
5 Word in Italian
dishes
9 Italian for “wasp”
14 Lifetimes
15 Sign on for more
service
16 One-__ chance
17 Music in 62-
Across
19 Swedish-born
Chan actor
20 Cunning
21 River through
Kazakhstan
23 Dating letters
24 Fisherman’s knot
26 They may be
independent
28 Race town near
Windsor Castle
30 People never
seen in
“Peanuts”
32 Word with smoke
or kisses
33 Arthurian
address
34 Very old thing
38 Sylvan sticker
39 Performer in 62-
Across
41 Thurman of
“Henry & June”
42 More than just
suggest
44 Salyut successor
45 Snead has won
three of them,
briefly
46 Existing: Lat.
48 Work with a
team
49 Misconception
52 Brown shade
54 Brown address
ending
55 Bausch’s partner
57 Opens up
60 Cover story
62 Fighting venues
suggested by this
puzzle’s circles
64 Levels, in Leeds
65 Comic strip
canine
66 Mind, with “for”
67 College near
Albany
68 D-Day craft
69 What it’s risky to
build on?

DOWN
1 Haydn sobriquet
2 Food thickener
3 Visual media
soundtrack
Grammy Award
4 Presently
5 Winning, with “on”
6 Med. nation
7 Doozie
8 Brief summary
9 Crook, e.g.
10 Phot. lab request
11 They may be
taken on
“Jeopardy!”
12 British coin
additive?
13 Chilean range
18 Number for two
22 Highly in favor of
25 Metz milk
27 Letters with
Arizona or
Missouri
28 Short for short?
29 Swing around
31 “Wee” pours of
Scotch
33 Mariners’ home,
familiarly
35 Pea variety
36 Apple variety
37 Hit violently, as
waves against
the shore

39 Oscar-winning
song
immortalized
by Nat King
Cole
40 “Mon __!”
43 About .62 mi.
45 Discourse on
verses
47 $, for one
48 Many a trucker
49 Causes of
trembles

50 Dwight’s two-time
opponent
51 First two-time
Best Actress
Oscar winner
Rainer
53 Lille lasses: Abbr.
56 Pals
58 Folklore fiend
59 Wee part of a min.
61 Big __
63 Brightened, with
“up”

By Matt Skoczen
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
07/14/16

07/14/16

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, July 14, 2016

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

8

Thursday, July 14, 2016
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
NEWS

ACROSS
1 Wrap
alternatives
6 Ill-fated Corleone
hoodlum Luca
11 TD scorers
14 Response to a
raise
15 Element #86
16 Fish whose blood
is poisonous to
humans
17 Art-loving
athlete?
19 “Agnus __”
20 Home of the
annual
Norwegian Wood
music festival
21 Heineken symbol
22 Quick
24 Sign on a door
26 Texas county
bordering New
Mexico
28 “__ Irish Rose”
31 What you don’t
know about
audio
equipment?
34 Chinese
checkers, e.g.
36 Firm
37 Fruit juice brand
38 Break up
40 Goddess sister of
Selene
41 World Heritage
Site org.
44 Ban delivery
47 Difficult situation
at Bed Bath &
Beyond?
49 Foreigner in
“Taxi”
50 Greensboro
Grasshoppers’
baseball level
51 Surprised sounds
53 Appreciative
sounds
54 Wine holders
56 “The Ghost of
Frankenstein”
role
60 “Away From __”:
Julie Christie
movie
61 Gem of a night
out?
64 Turkish bigwig
65 Sculpted trunk
66 Chocolate-
caramel candies
67 It ends 11/6/2016
in the U.S.
68 Evil figure

69 “No good movie
is too long and
no bad movie is
short enough”
speaker

DOWN
1 __ de gallo
2 Stern rival
3 Crossing cost
4 Signing facilitator
5 Poker great Ungar
6 Members of a
flock
7 Punjabi prince
8 Flipped over
9 A behavioral sci.
10 Laundry
challenge
11 Visibly
embarrassed
12 Time for a cold
one
13 Skirt feature
18 Web feed
document letters
23 Woman whom
Goya also
painted clothed
25 Military support
gp.
27 Memory aids
28 Intensify
29 Brain-controlled
transportation
devices

30 “Something’s
fishy”
32 Adversity, in the
RAF motto
33 “We R Who We
R” singer
35 Catty remarks
39 Actively
operating
42 Hit, in a way
43 Mollycoddles
45 West Bank initials
46 Not a hard nut to
crack

48 “Les Misérables”
inspector
52 EVINE Live
competitor
53 Libya neighbor
55 Archaeologist’s
handle
57 Severe blow
58 Pure propane’s
lack
59 Come to a halt
62 Intl. broadcaster
since 1942
63 Hurdle for srs.

07/08/16

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Friday, July 8, 2016

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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combating the pollution.

When
asked
whether
he

would like nonpartisan elections
and increased term limits for
City
Council,
Leaf
said
he

favors
nonpartisan
November

elections because two elections
— the primary in August and the
general in November — puts an
unnecessary burden on voters,
citing the 6 percent turnout for
Ward 1 in the last election. He
also said that maintaining the
two-year term limit allows for
more pools of candidates.

“Often we have incumbents

unopposed right now, and I think
we want to have a broad enough
base of candidates that we have
options,” Leaf said. “And if you
make the requirements up to four
years, I think you’re going to cut
the number of people who are
perfectly competent but aren’t
ready for a four-year term.”

Frenzel
agreed
on

implementing
nonpartisan

elections, adding that it can
increase student voter turnout.
However, he said he prefers four-
year terms because it allows
councilmembers
to
mature

throughout their terms.

In
his
closing
statement,

Frenzel touted environmental
ethics for Ann Arbor residents.

“As we see our tax base

increasing at this point, we
need to honor the ethic of Ann
Arborites, the true understanding
of who we believe we are,”
Frenzel said. “And, to me, that
means reinstating and promoting
our green organizations to make
sure we’re pushing forward our
environmental ethic, which has
in many metrics stagnated.”

Leaf continued optimistically,

saying that there is a solution for
everything in Ann Arbor and that
only strong leadership in City
Council as a whole can allow for
that.

“Whether your problem is that

people are speeding in front of
your house, or you worry more
about much bigger timescale
problems

whatever
your

problem is, there’s a very good
chance we can fix it,” Leaf said.
“We can get it done.”

Kailasapathy closed by listing

her many accomplishments as an
incumbent and her plans for the
future.

“I have worked with multiple

groups dealing with cut-through
commuter
traffic,
excessive

street parking and such issues,”

Kailasapathy said. “And I will
continue to support these types
of efforts where residents’ safety
and quality of life are being
affected.”

Ward 4

Ward 4 candidates Eric Lipson

(D), Diane Giannola (D) and
incumbent Graydon Krapohl (D)
fielded questions on Tuesday in
a forum hosted by the League of
Women Voters concerning issues
including balancing the budget,
proposals that would change City
Council elections from partisan
to nonpartisan voting as well as
change terms from two to four
years in length, the dioxane
plume and council transparency.

The
three
candidates

expressed polar views on certain
topics, especially on the issue of
a proposed train station project.
The primary points of concern
were the issue of City Council
transparency and the simpler
question
of
station
building

location.

Lipson voiced objections to

the redaction of information
regarding
communications

between the Federal Railway
Administration and city staff
about station location. Lipson
brought with him to the forum a
document that showed near total
redaction, using it as an example
to describe the current state of
City Council transparency as
deeply flawed.

“It is deeply disturbing to

myself and many other citizens,”
he said, holding the document up
on display. “I would like to believe
that a more open and inclusive
government is the way that the
city of Ann Arbor would like to
see its government go. I am very
concerned — there is a culture of
secrecy which is being fostered
and encouraged by the current
council.”

Giannola voiced a more neutral

position on the issue, saying
that she would opt to ask more
questions rather than insist on
release of information.

Krapohl took the opposite

stance of Lipson and was also one
of the six council members who
had voted against releasing the
information to the public, saying
there is still information from the
federal agency for which the city
government is waiting.

“I didn’t support at this time

releasing the information because
I don’t feel that there is enough
there for the public to make an
informed decision,” he said.

FORUM
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