Clinton to create high-tech jobs The Associated Press SAN JOSE, Calif. President Clinton outlined a plan to use tax breaks and “peace dividend” money from scaled-back defense spending to help create more high-technology jobs as he toured Silicon Valley on Monday. Clinton announced details of his pro posal as he and Vice President A1 Gore pushed the president’s economic plan in California. Clinton then headed to PHE residents opposed to PHE Inc.’s move. “A remarkable number of the signa tures that I saw were from Hillsborough,” said Evelyn Lloyd. “A few were from Graham, some from Durham, some from Efland and at least one from Gamer,” she added. But town board member Robert Rose said he did not see how it would be possible to change current zoning regu lations to exclude PHE Inc. without being discriminatory. “I see nothing that could stop them Finance rider on the BSM’s budget that states that no funds can be transferred from their allotted categories. Thomas said the rider would be detrimental to the BSM because the organization had many subgroups, and as a result, their budget worked differently than the budgets congress members were used to working with. If the full congress restored most of the choir’s funding, the BSM could function normally, Thomas said. But Thomas said she thought some committee members did not look carefully enough at the BSM’s proposed budget. “I think that it was obvious members of the finance committee really were not paying attention to the information we provided for them,” she said. “They obviously had their own agenda set before we got into the room. “If they thought they could have gotten away with it, they would have defimded the whole BSM.” The Far Side i | -25 “Can’t use you, 50n.... says here your feet aren’t flat.” Calvin and Hobbes n- IS NOT/ FINE. DONT hot) SMD \T I THE HEAD ft IfoRGET CfIOOOSIE I PONT BE BEUEME NOt)U) EOtAE AH ORACLE. ASKED.' I | BooGER WHATSIS I WEKO DISGUSTING.' ME. IN HANDY l'U. PUT IT ON PONT EVEN l taRMMNW / FHM BAG . y | I WRING IM DESK AND CALL 1 /vV, V ' 1 > TODAYS ITWVLTEIL V 7 tr SPEAKS I tcst ' i Doonesbury HI, MAN 15 me THANKS. IAPPRECIATE NO KIPPING? IM..MINUs) THIS 98527 mnZn, I6OTA GREAT. 3 THAT, 880. 2,100 LBS? -AN OUNCE (I'VE mancccmr consign- fie help /Z you're looking ~oktw.it \hemp highway* soopoueea. menttor youunioap. at 2,100 lbs. Germs in that. I j WirfMA/. ’ swPMm. * THE Daily Crossword >y Samuel K. Fliegner 53 Crocodile 54 Took long steps 56 “Topaz” author 57 Faint 58 Certain picture 62 Love to excess 63 Rest 64 Pervasive quality 65 Door sign 66 “L'—midi d’un Faune" 67 Submissive DOWN 1 Edge 2 Hatchet 3 Transgress 4 McCartney 5 Bay of— -6 Happen 7 Campaign itinerary 8 Attic 9 Lanka 10 "Ad astra per —" 11 Rivera painting 12 Persian, today 13 Evil spirit 21 Playful animal 22 Interdiction 23 Nautical word 24 Glossy black ACROSS 1 Rub roughly 5 Orange, Rose and Cotton 10 In the center 14 Showy flower 15 Blood of the gods 16 Positive 17 Bill of fare 18 Isaac Asimov's field 19 Baby buggy 20 Cicada Kin 22 Card game? 23 Curve 26 Small pie 27 Large game fish 28 Equivalence 30 Climbing plant 32 Egg-shaped 33 Tolstoy and Durocher 34 Wiedersehen 37 Football game stopper 41 Explosive 42 Facts 43 Alluvial deposit 44 Mubarak's city 46 Exonerates 47 Give a pep talk 50 Ashen 52 Was in session Need help with this crossword puzzle? Call 1 -900- 454-3014. Your phone company will bill you 95 cents per minute. Rotary or touch-tone phones. Seattle to address employees of finan cially troubled Boeing Aircraft. At the California stop, Gore said the nation must “invest in anew kind of infrastructure,” broadening the term beyond just roads, bridges and such. He said his plan envisioned “the rapid completion of a network of information super highways” with the government helping projects linking computers into a “national information infrastructure.” from building,” he said. “We are sworn to uphold the laws of the U.S. and Hillsborough,” Rose said. “PHE Inc. is a legitimate business as determined by District Attorney Carl Fox.” “We certainly recognize that people may disagree on matters relating to hu man sexuality, but we also believe that most Americans are tolerant of the pri vate lives and beliefs of others on these matters,” Oettinger said. She added that in the 20 years the Finance committee members voted to recommend to full congress that STV receive only $9,763.40 of the $16,888.40 requested. Geoff Newman, STV station manager, said many of the cuts came from fixed costs. Newman said partial funding in those areas, such as insurance and fixed salaries, would do the group no good they needed either all of the money or none of the money. “We can essentially be a skeleton operation and provide no useful purpose whatsoever with what they’re offering, which would essentially make us what they perceive us to be,” he said. Joe Toris, STV secretary, said the group currently was working on many new projects that would improve STV but could not take place without congress funding. “This would be the worst time to take away money,” he said. Newman said congress wanted the group to become more prominent on campus but would not provide the necessary funding for the changes. “(Congress members) would like us to be seen by all the students on campus, they would like us to be a network affecting students, but you can’t do that overnight,” he said. “This year, for the first time in a bunch of years, we actually have specified economic plans to develop STV so that it would benefit the student body similar to (The Daily Tar Heel).” The committee also recommended that the Cellar Door receive only a small portion of its requested funds. The group requested more than $11,600 and was recom mended to receive a little more than $5,390. Of the recom mended funding, $2,400 must go toward fundraising. Billy Faires, co-editor of the Cellar Door, which has been operating as a biweekly literary journal this semester, said congress members voted to cut the magazine’s funding because they did not like some of the material in the last edition. “They said basically the Cellar Door was trash and that the student body did not want to support something that did not have literary merit,” he said. The finance committee completely cut the budget for a proposed edition of the Cellar Door that would celebrate the University’s Bicentennial and also the Cellar Door’s 20th anniversary. “They said (the proposed Bicentennial Cellar Door edition) was insignificant,” he said. The proposed funding for the Cellar Door’s printing costs also was cut. ©1993 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved 25 Guile 27 Reduce to pulp 29 Resident: suff. 31 Hawkeye state 33 Shakespearean monarch 34 Cartographer's book 35 Extreme 36 Banquet 38 Blue-pencil 39 Ran in neutral 40 Behold 44 Girdle 45 " Poetica" 46 Duplicates 47 Musical exercise 48 Copying process 49 Part of Hispaniola 51 Emerged 54 Trade 55 Test 57 Health resort 59 Regret 60 Have being 61 Chatter ■lO 111 |l2 |l3 16 ■■34 35 36 40 47 48 49 51 O ■Ej 53 ■■s4 |s^gß 56 HBS7 ■■sT" 59 60 61 __ spsEr sHkt is &£g66 Hk? ' “Change is the way to make money, not throw people out of work,” Clinton said as he and Gore toured a high-tech graphics plant in San Jose. His initiative earmarks $550 million in the current fiscal year —and larger sums down the road—to focus govern ment attention and assistance on high tech nondefense programs, particularly in environmental technology, commu nications, computers and education. from page 1 company had been in Orange County, it never had encountered such strong lo cal opposition. Oettinger said PHE Inc. planned to create about 100 jobs during the next two years at their new location. She also said the company employed two certified sex therapists and clinical psychologists to review all material for content. “We want to be sure that the material is not hurtful to anyone in any way,” Oettinger said. from page 1 H i'll In 11 1 iu i I 11 1 nI/y 1 1 f I R I E W |C|L| 11 E NIT sWpIaIsIsI IV E Ihlelair TIT nTsmBaTtTT a r WmK Sis EjM BILIYJIT N T L l l l s l p RiU I " W E S 1 h|o|u[s]e h o T dWa v a i AIN NMD 0 N E eMv I _N C| IrlulgWoidioirisWelnldleldl “ s £2 JAMES B. HUNT, JR. GOVERNOR DAILY TAR HEEL DAY 1993 BY THE GOVERNOR OF THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA A PROCLAMATION The Daily Tar Heel is the oldest college daily in the South and was one of the only college dailies in the country when it expanded to six issues a week in 1929. Prominent Daily Tar Heel editors and staff members include Pulitzer Prize winner Thomas Wolfe, CBS news correspondent Charles Kuralt, Washington Post columnist Edwin Yoder and Charlotte Observer publisher Rolfe Neill. The paper has served as a training ground for several generations of North Carolina journalists, teaching them the hands-on process of newspapering and stoking the fires of journalistic enthusiasm. On February 23, 1993, the Daily Tar Heel celebrates its 100th year of editorial freedom. This date is marked by a commemorative issue featuring some of the most memorable stories and articles throughout the history of the newspaper. Over the last one hundred years, the Daily Tar Heel has proven to be an invaluable educational experience for journalism students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, providing an opportunity to discover the power of the written word. NOW, THEREFORE, I, JAMES B. HUNT JR., Governor of the State of North Carolina, do hereby proclaim February 23, 1993 as "Daily Tar Heel Day" in North Carolina, and urge our citizens to commend this observance. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the Great Seal of the State of North Carolina at the Capitol in Raleigh this fourteenth day of January in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and ninety-three and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and sixteenth. Russians ticed only one thing: full destruction of my country. “The Baltic states, the Ukraine states, all want to separate from each other. I don’t understand why all of a sudden they do not want to live near each other.” Tischenko said he was not a commu nist and did not want to become one. But he dislikes some of the circum stances surrounding the death of corti munism. “I don’t like the way the Communist Party was abandoned and how its prop erty was nationalized. Now there is a lack of tolerance of others’ opinions.” Pironko said that he was very happy when the Communists lost power but that many people still liked to give orders and influence people. Russia needs more individualism, he said. “People need to think about their own lives and making more money. I am going back to Russia and think about my own family and my prosperity. I don’t want my life to be regulated.” Koudriavtseva said change still was occurring in Russia. “Our ideological country does not exist anymore,” she said. Korobeinik added: “America is a place where you can live. Russia is a place where you try to survive.” Many of the students believe they have grown as people and become more independent since their arrival in America. Panova at first found living on her own difficult. “At home, I had to clean my room occasionally, but that was it. Here I have to do everything buy food, manage my money, all by my 'ONE OF THE FUNNIEST, M. AFFECTING STORIES TO BOLT Ell Jbtt gnM WMANi ■ OUT OF THE GATES FOR A IT ■ ■ TT- ,*** Z* L - It LONGTIME!" Regional Exclusive *** 2:20 • 430 • 7:20 • 930 ■SBSBii *‘ r i£SffSl£Mi'l ri> W 0 llun ™ oww -m o -m m %JL mating numdc (ALL THE MORNINGS OF THE WORLD) • 4:20 •7 • The Daily Tar Heel/Tuesday, February 23, 1993/ JAMES B. HUNT JR. self,” she said. She realizes however, that she needs independence. “I must have my own experience of life,” she said. “I am not a little child, and I can do things on my own.” Professor Leontieva said that even though she had come to the United States because it had been part of her job, she was enjoying her stay. “America is a country of big opportunities, and there are lots of ways to reveal your possibilities here.” She also spoke highly of Chapel Hill. “It is a very beautiful university city. “There is a good, organized system of education. It is orderly. A lot of technical means, like computers, are used. There is everything here that gives students possibilities to study.” All of the students and Leontieva are w PL AZ A IHI THEATR ES^ EASTERN FEDERAL THEATRES ELLIOTT ED >967 4737 Loaded Weapon I 3:lO*7:lsTj5:00 Sat/Sun , THE TEMP 7:30 * 9:30 nightly m 2:30 4:45 Sat/Sun 7