The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, October 10, 2001, Page 9, Image 9
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“Egads, Brain, whatever shall we do (NARF) now?"
CROSSWORD •
ACROSS
1 Greek
marketplace
6 Brits’raincoats
10 Strike with an
open hand
14 Man’s man
15 Sonic
boomerang
16 Lome’s land
17 Insect stage
18 Table extension
19 Thoroughly
corrupt
20 Characterizes
22 Majestic
24 Down in the
dumps
25 Brit’s gun
26 Elected off.
27 Church key
32 Kuwait’s ruler
33 And not
34 _rabbit
38 Zhivago’s love
39 Dirties
42 Insect stage
43 QB Dilfer
45 Cat tail?
46 Touch against
47 Emcees
51 UFO crew
54 Speaker of
baseball
55 Mongrel
56 Cocktail dash
58 Singer Etheridge
62 NYC theatrical
award
63 Kettofthe
comics
65 Homer
66 Pleasant city in
France?
67 Witnessed
68 Mr. T's group
69 Chatters
70 Ash or ice
follower
71 Salamanders
DOWN
1 Eager
2 Ready for the
action
3 Norwegian saint
4 Official enrollee
© 2001 Tribune Media Services, Inc 10/1fl/QI
AH riflhle reserved.
5 Unmelodious
6 Tillis and Torme
7 Top marksman
8 Pure
9 Muffle
10 Editor's note
11 Sweetheart
12 Nimble
13 Nonmalignant
growth
21 Utopias
23 AH over again
25 Short races
27 Big swig
28 Moreno or Epps
29 Wear out
30 Tic-tac-toe win
31 Return to one's
country of birth
35 Service station
job?
36 Incite
37 Derby and fedora
40 Flight from the
law
41 Open spot
44 Carryall
Solutions •
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48 Stem
49 Half or step
ending?
50 Ottoman ruler
51 Jet black
52 Shinbone
53 Item in the mud'
57 PGA props
58 More than a few
59 Slumgullion or
goulash
60 Chair
61 Weapons
64 Oolong or hyson
HOROSCOPES
TODAY'S BIRTHDAY (OCT. 10).
— As you’re exploring and
learning this year, and falling
in love (which will be
effortless), remember the
rules. That will become more
difficult, but it’s all part of this
year’s life lesson. The mental
and physical impulse is to run
wild and free. The instructions
are to stay on the course that’s
been mapped. Do the latter,
and the rewards will multiply
exponentially.
ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19)
— A co-worker’s hint is
beneficial, and it could help
you get a raise. However,
someone you know and love
could make a silly mistake, so
don’t trust blindly or fail to
listen out of prejudice. Your
best advisor could be a lowly
servant.
TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20) -
Don’t believe everything you
hear. People are mixing up
messages, forwarding false
gossip and making all kinds of
mistakes. You always choose
your words carefully, and that
gives you an advantage. If you
don’t hold people to promises
they make now, they’ll love
you even more.
GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 21) —
You’re a good talker. Now,
prove you can be a good
listener, too. Somebody you
love needs to vent. Save your
advice until it’s requested.
What’s really needed Is your
ear, and maybe your shoulder
to cry on.
CANCER (JUNE 22-JULY 22) -
You’re a little more confident, a
little more bold. Has somebody
been trying to talk you into
something you don’t want to
do? Have you been tactfully
changing the subject? Why?
Subtlety is lost on some people.
Come right out and say it.
LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22) —
Misunderstandings,
miscommunications and
typographical errors are
plentiful. Check everything at
least twice - incoming and
outgoing. Don’t take it for
granted that people
understand .what you’re
talking about. Quiz them.
VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22) -
You’d like to help. That’s your
nature. You’re always eager to
serve. But tough love is what’s
needed now. Don’t bail out a
friend who needs to bail out
herself. That’ll be better for
her, and for you.
LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT 22) - The
direct approach is not advised.
Not that you need to be sneaky,
just be diplomatic. When
somebody tells you they don’t
want to talk about something,
they mean it. Don’t insist. You’ll
hear about it soon enough.
SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21) -
Continue to dream about
distant shores while you fulfill
your obligations closer to
home. You may have to let
friends go on ahead. You may
have trouble getting through
on long-distance
communications until later
tonight. Stay cool.
SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC.
21) — Don’t spread a rumor
you hear from a friend. The
odds are good that it contains
more speculation than fact.
Messages have a tendency to
get garbled now, especially if
they involve emotional topics.
CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19)
— A few disagreements that
were floating just beneath the
surface may pop up. This is
good, because it means they
can be dealt with rather than
ignored. Your work will go
more smoothly as a result.
Help clear up a
misunderstanding.
AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18)
— Others are asking for your
help. Trouble is, some of these
questions are on topics outside
your area of expertise.
Luckily, you know how to
learn.
PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20)
— Again, love conquers all.
That, and your infinite ability
to listen. You may wonder how
long it will take for a dear
friend to finish venting. Don’t
try to solve the problem. Your
friend will do that —
eventually.
Emmys still up in air
BY LYNN ELBER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
If CBS decides against a third at
tempt at airing this year’s Emmy
Awards, then plans will be made for
another way to honor the winners,
Emmy organizers said Monday.
The 53rd Annual Primetime
Emmy Awards were to have
aired Sunday on CBS, but the
network and academy called off
the ceremony after U.S. and
British attacks on Afghanistan.
The ceremony already had
been postponed three weeks
from its original Sept. 16 airdate
because of the terrorist attacks
on New York and Washington.
“This has all happened so
quickly,” CBS Television Presi
dent Leslie Moonves said Sun
day. “It’s really one day at a
time, like it is for everything in
America right now.”
CBS programming executives
and academy officials met Monday
to discuss the show’s fate. The fi
nal say is expected this week.
“It’s a decisioif that not only
impacts the TV academy and
CBS, but the industry as well,”
CBS spokesman Chris Ender said.
Moonves said Sunday that
many in the industry, including
producers and casts of TV shows,
had called to express reluctance
at taking part in the ceremony.
Industry concerns over the
propriety of a Hollywood cele
bration already has led to
changes. Sunday’s ceremony was
to be a muted one, with time
spent paying tribute to heroes
and victims of the Sept. 11 attacks
as well as on award recipients.
The academy is intent on finding a
way to honor Emmy winners if CBS
nixes the ceremony, Chabin said.
“From phone calls we’ve re
ceived, people feel it’s appropriate to
distribute the awards,” he said. A
non-televised dinner at a Los Ange
les area hotel would be one possibil
ity
winners have yet to be re
vealed for a canceled awards
show, the Latin Grammys, which
had been scheduled the same day
as the terrorist attacks. An an
nouncement of winners, but no
formal televised cerd*iony, is
planned in the next few weeks,
the recording academy has said.
Speaker
Audience has
mixed reactions
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7
said, “I think he had good points.
His theology is pretty sound. I’m
glad someone with more of an in
tellectual stance was invited to
speak.”
Matt Ray, a first-year political
science student, was not so
praiseworthy. “Sometimes he
was a little too intellectual...
some words I didn’t understand.”
Third-year English major Jane
Haggard said, “It’s a lot to think
about, but I have a hard time get
ting around the suspicion much
of what he said was predicated on
a belief in Christianity.”
Dr. Budziszewki holds a PhD
in political science from Yale
University. He is the author of
five academic books including
his most recent, The Revenge of
Conscience. He has also written a
non-academic title, How To Stay
Christian in College.
The Christian Faculty Forum,
an evangelical society for faculty
members, and Campus Crusade
for Life sponsored the lectifre. An
anonymous Upstate philanthropist
covered the cost of the lecture.