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August 04, 2016 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily

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

ACROSS
1 Retro photos
7 Condescends
13 Tympanic
membrane
15 Half a notable
San Francisco
intersection
16 Heavy marble
17 Worried about
18 Brandy letters
19 Some grad
students
21 P.O. boxful
22 One of a divided
trio?
24 Like some room
fresheners
26 Anthem
contraction
28 Lucid
30 Tony winner
Martin in the
2013 “Pippin”
Broadway
revival
32 Cargo wts.
33 With 43-Across,
acting like an
unscrupulous
contractor ... and
a hint to this
puzzle’s circles
35 Prom dress
material
37 They may be
crunched
38 Bollywood star
Aishwarya __
39 Curaçao
cocktails
43 See 33-Across
47 RR schedule
listing
48 Land on a lake?
50 Psyche’s
beloved
51 Letters on old TV
dials
52 Strainer
53 For time eterne
54 “Girls” creator
Dunham
57 “There’s __ in ... ”
58 XL squared
60 Old Buick
62 Indian spiced
drink
66 Wearing, with “in”
67 Lots of shots
68 Juiced-up
Roadsters?
69 Breastbones

DOWN
1 French
possessive
2 Take in
3 Hinder
4 Ominous date
5 Patron of Alice’s
6 __ generis
7 Louisville-to-
Nashville dir.
8 Fare-well bridge
9 Scottish resort
town known for
its whisky
10 Defeat at the
polls
11 Gift
12 Barrett of Pink
Floyd
14 Doling (out)
15 Declare
20 Furthermore
22 Mil. bravery medal
23 Evian, par
exemple
24 Colorful flowers
25 The very
beginning,
figuratively
27 Pretoria’s land:
Abbr.
29 Virginie, to
Eugénie
31 A long way away
34 Support beam

36 Penalty for
wrongdoing
39 The Bulldogs of
the SEC
40 Game player
41 Overruns
42 Fished with a net
43 Study of
government
44 Meccano
construction set
45 1973 Court
decision alias

46 Old map abbr.
49 One of the fire
signs
55 Attach, in a way
56 Magical opening
58 Beer ingredient
59 Act like a loon?
60 Map coordinate:
Abbr.
61 Legal thing
63 Possesses
64 Poetic dusk
65 Simile center

By Mike Peluso
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
08/04/16

08/04/16

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, August 4, 2016

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

8

Thursday, August 4, 2016
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
NEWS

ACROSS
1 Bozeman sch.
4 __ on the
knuckles
8 Hardly
homebodies
14 Black __
15 Protection in a
purse
16 Folded fare
17 &$&
19 Romeo’s home
20 Great way to
walk
21 Olympics event
23 Baseball statistic
24 @!
28 Ancient time-
telling device
31 Hastings Ismay
was selected as
its first leader in
1952
32 It can come
between Clinton
and Rodham
33 Quaint retail word
36 Last words?
40 !&&^
44 Zaire, nowadays
45 Sommelier’s
concern
46 Outback native
47 Mild cheese
49 Cordelia, to
Regan
52 **
57 Porter, for one
58 Washington is
prominent on
them
59 Property crime
63 Like astronauts
during liftoff
66 What was
mistakenly held
for four puzzle
clues
68 Intact
69 Pamplona runner
70 Having four
sharps
71 Hoi polloi
72 Like bachelor
parties
73 Bit of wit

DOWN
1 Magic
2 Like web sites
3 Robert E. Lee’s
alma mater
4 Unprincipled
5 British rule in
India
6 Biting

7 “She loves me”
bit
8 Multi-day
devotion
9 Kipling’s “Follow
Me __”
10 Nice view
11 It’s heard coming
and going
12 Casual Friday
material
13 Announce
18 Texas city
nickname
22 Word on many a
marquee
25 Persian greeting
26 Classic muscle
cars
27 Asian expanse
28 “Mad Money”
network
29 Bubbly-textured
Nestlé chocolate
bar
30 Light element
34 Hardly an expert
35 Hall of Fame golf
course architect
Pete
37 “Law & Order:
SVU” actor
38 Unexciting
39 Nasty campaign
tactic
41 Quite a while

42 Carroll’s
stammering self-
caricature in
“Alice in
Wonderland”
43 Celestial bear
48 Battery terminals
50 Befuddled
51 Put in folders, say
52 Longtime
“American Top
40” host
53 Justice Kagan

54 “When You Are
Old” poet
55 Raid victims
56 Clapton’s “__ the
Sheriff”
60 Dairy case option
61 Sommelier’s
prefix
62 Russian refusal
64 Frank McCourt
memoir
65 Poetic preposition
67 George’s brother

07/29/16

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Friday, July 29, 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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FOLLOW US ON TWITTER

@michigandaily
NOW.

were
announced,
Kailasapathy

attributed
her
victory
to
her

constituents’ satisfaction with her
frequently
dissenting
opinions,

particularly in her push for greater
transparency regarding a proposed
Amtrak project in Ann Arbor. “This
whole issue about the transparency,
which erupted a couple of months
ago, really made people worried,” she
said. “Why should local government
be secretive on an issue that should
be publicly discussed and publicly
debated? I really cared about checks
and balances; I really cared about
transparency. I strongly believe in
these values too. … Just that one issue
of transparency tipped the scale for
us.”

The three-way Ward 5 race

between
Krapohl,
Lipson
and

Giannola was the closest of Tuesday
night, with Krapohl pulling ahead of
Lipson by fewer than 100 votes.

Krapohl expressed relief after

the final ballot count was clear and
told the Daily his victory affirms

the popularity of his pragmatic and
non-partisan leadership style among
voters.

“There was a large turnout, more

than what is normal, so people
have said the direction of what they
think is important and that did not
necessarily fall in line with what my
challengers were saying,” he said.

Krapohl’s
opponents
both

conceded the voters of Ann Arbor
had made their choice.

“I think that this was a very

substantive,
honest
and
fair

campaign,” Lipson told the Daily
following the release of the election
results. “He won fair and square and
that’s what it’s all about. The people
have made their decision. He is a
competent and honest guy. We had
policy disagreements and the people
made their choice.”

However,
Giannola
also

re-affirmed her policy differences
with Krapohl.

“I don’t feel like Graydon did a

great job last year,” she said. “But
if they vote him back in you get the
official that you vote for.”

CITY
From Page 1

administration of Michigan and laid
out an agenda focused on funding
for public education, environmental
protection,
LGBT
equality
and

government transparency. However,
he also acknowledged the challenges
in implementing his agenda posed
by the Republican-dominated state
government and firmly stated that
he would fight for a Democratic
majority.

“We have so much work to do

in a state that has gone so far in the
wrong direction over the last six
years,” Rabhi declared. “A state
that has eroded its public education
system, and taken down the quality
of our Great Lakes, and our air and
our environment. A state that has
discriminated against those that
are gay or transgender or lesbian in
our own communities. We live in
a state where some are succeeding
but not everyone. A state where
transparency is not a priority and
where democracy is not something
that is accesible to everyone. We here
in this room will change that.”

“This state is not about those

values. This state is about clean air
and clean water. This state is about
treating everyone fairly. This state
is about making an economy that
works for everyone and that our
public education system is funded
so that we can invest in the future of
our state, of our nation, of our world.
... Today isn’t about me, today is

about Ann Arbor, today is about our
state and today is the beginning of
our effort to take back the Michigan
House of Representatives to turn it
blue!”

However,
Rabhi
also

acknowledged that the current
Republican majority in the state
legislature poses a challenge to his
policy goals. Therefore, Rabhi said
he would need to take a bipartisan
approach
while
also
reforming

state-level governance to push for a
Democratic majority.

“In order to do those things we

first need to change the way our state
is structured,” he said, listing off
campaign finance reform to limit the
power of political action committees,
improved transparency that would
subject the Governor of Michigan
to Freedom of Information Act
requests and fighting Republican-
biased gerrymandering as additional
priorities.

Rabhi also complimented his

opponent’s campaign, emphasizing
the need for political debate in civil
society
and
sympathizing
with

Kwasny’s focus on campaign finance
reform.

“I think that he ran a great

campaign,” Rabhi said. “I think it’s
important in a democracy to have
multiple perspectives addressed, so I
appreciate the fact he ran.”

Rabhi raised $51,820 through the

campaign cycle and spent $18,296.
Kwasny self-funded his campaign
with $430 and spent $339.

Kwasny
was
unavailable
to

comment for this article.

COUNCIL
From Page 1

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