The Daily Tar HeelThursday, September 28, 19897
Martians
m" Associated Press reports
MARS, Pa. Soviet cosmonaut
rei Krikalev landed in Mars
Wednesday and was greeted by hun
dreds of young star-struck Martians
waving crayon drawings and home
made Soviet and American flags.
"Welckim To Mars," one first
grader wrote on a note accompanying a
rocket ship made of purple construc
tion paper.
Krikalev, 31, a flight engineer who
lives near Moscow, visited 367 kinder
garten through second-grade students
at the Mars Primary Center. He was
joined later Wednesday by U.S. astro
naut Mario Runko Jr., 37, a Navy lieu
tenant commander awaiting assignment
to his first shuttle mission.
"Hopefully this is one small step, if
you will, for some future cooperation"
between the two nations, Runko told
reporters after he gave the school 485
NASA photographs.
The Soviet spaceman said he was
touched by the students' gifts, which
included letters, T-shirts, fresh-cut flow
ers, Russian tea cakes and crayon and
watercolor renderings of their vision of
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THE Daily Crossword by Louis Sabin
ACROSS
57 TV police
show
59 Shade giver
60 Soviet range
61 Prima
ballerina
62 Cattle call
63 Nosegay
64 Grooved
DOWN
1 Wooden shoe
2 Ms Verdugo
3 Young moray
4 Regrets
5 Goof
6 Poet
Schwartz
7 Disgusted
reactions
8 Left
9 Actress
Palmer
10 Woody and
Debbie
11 Mex. snack
12 Flute's
neighbor
13 Barks shrilly
18 Hoorah!
19 Enters
23 Lion's pride?
26 Bandleader
Shaw
28 Onus
29 Concerning
1
Grow furious
Composer
7
Bartok
11
Trinket
14 Entice
15 Tree angle
16 Desert robe
.17 Police film
20 Singles
21 Green shrubs
22 Swabby
23 Cleaning tool
24 One In Bonn
. 25 Hung, hero
27 Take off
31 "Bounty"
crewman
35 SAR word
36 Like a nerd
37 Timetable
abbr.
39 Jeweled
headwear
40 Tastes
41 Hockey player
43 Political body
.45 .Stupefy
46 Swiss river
43 Where In
prescriptions
49 Interdiction
'52 Protective
souls
58 Florence's
river
'weickimn)' Sovnet'Ameiriican spacemen
outer space.
"It's not so much the gifts. It's the
friendliness that went behind the gifts.
It's coming from the insides of the
people who gave the gifts," he said.
Krikalev passed out photographs
showing himself and his two partners
during a five-month French-Soviet
Soyuz mission that ended in April.
The cosmonaut, in Mars for an eight
day visit, and Runko were invited to
this small community 25 miles north of
Pittsburgh by the Mars Area Founda
tion for Educational Excellence. Both
men also visited the community's
Adams Intermediate Elementary School
for grades two through five.
Each man put on a rubber boot and
stepped into a tray of brown clay, then
signed his name in the clay. The foot
prints and signatures were sealed in
glass and marked with a plaque noting
that both men "stepped on Mars, Sept.
27, 1989."
"The goal was to bring unusual cul
tural programs to the school district,
and it has blossomed beyond anything
I had imagined," said Ralph Terrell,
foundation chairman.
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All Rights Reserved
30 Autocrat
31 Bad shot
32 Apartment
33 Paperlike
cloth
34 Establish
38 Guarantee
39 Jacques of
film
42 Sea fare
44 Gobbles down
45 Yogi and kids
47 rocket
49 Auscultation
sound
50 Anoint old
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51 Pried
52 Noah's son
53 Maul neighbor
54 "Sesame
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muppet
55 Squirming
56 Much
58 Heat meas.
"What I really want to promote is for
the kids to study hard, and in the future
to get along with the other country,"
Krikalev said through an interpreter.
Krikalev fielded questions from the
students during a morning assembly,
then visited classrooms. One student
asked whether the cosmonaut worried
about accidents like the explosion of
the space shuttle Challenger.
"No. We all have our jobs to do,"
said Krikalev, whose gray suit sported
a lapel pin depicting the U.S. and So
viet flags.
Other students asked what it's like to
sleep, eat and float in space.
"I answer the same questions from
our children," he said with a smile.
The school's hallways were deco
rated with the children's space draw
ings. A flying saucer, 10 feet in diame
ter and made of steel barrel lids, adorned
the town center.
Krikalev said his Soviet friends were
surprised to hear of a town named Mars,
and an American acquaintance in
Moscow had never heard of it.
"I couldn't find Mars on the map,"
he said. "I didn't know what kind of
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clothes to bring, because I didn't know
where it was."
The teachers and the children's par
-Hemingway 'endings
From Associated Press reports
BOSTON Ernest Hemingway
imitators for years have parodied the
master in writing contests. But 60 years
after the publication of "A Farewell to
Arms," it's clear Hemingway was his
own best imitator.
Hemingway went through 44 differ
ent, often sappy or verbose, endings of
his second novel before he settled on a
last line.
The discarded endings are included
in an exhibit that opened Wednesday at
the John F. Kennedy Library, which
has the world's largest collection of
Hemingway manuscripts. The exhibit
focuses on the book in celebration of its
60th anniversary Wednesday.
The endings, written over six months,
read like a series of entries in the annual
International Imitation Hemingway
Contest.
"A Farewell to Arms' ' is the story of
a wounded soldier who falls in love
13-day Gabor trial goes to juiry
From Associated Press reports
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. Zsa
Zsa Gabor's cop-slapping case went to
a jury Wednesday after a tumultuous
day that saw her bolt tearfully from the
courtroom yet again when she was
characterized as a spoiled Hollywood
aristocrat.
Gabor left when Deputy District
Attorney Elden Fox said during his
closing statement: "She came to enter
tain you ... She craves the media atten
tion in this case, it is clear."
It was the fourth time Gabor abruptly
fled the courtroom in tears during the
13-day trial that has cost taxpayers
nearly $30,000.
"I want to get out of here. I want to go
to Europe," Gabor said in the hallway.
Mr. UNC
"We were expecting to sell only 200
tickets," Johnson said. "This is the
biggest showing I've seen in the past
three years."
The Association for Retarded Citi
zens (ARC) in Orange County will
receive the $460 earned in ticket sales,
said Jill Nystrom, Circle K lieutenant
governor.
The association will use the money
to fund an after-school program for the
Congress
Kurt Seufert, chairman of the Spring
fest Committee for the last two years,
said last year's Springfest rainout and
poor T-shirt sales had left organizers
desperately short of funds. Last year,
student government funding for the
event was cut from the $2,500 of the
previous four years to $2,000.
"Right now we're in trouble," Seufert
said. "We need this money."
He said finding sponsors among
Franklin Street businesses had become
increasingly difficult.
HRC Governor Catherine Rhea said,
"HRC is one of the smallest areas on
campus trying to organize one of the
The DTH Campus Calendar is a daily
listing of University-related activities
sponsored by academic departments,
student services and student organiza
tions officially recognized by the Divi
sion of Student Affairs. To appear in
Campus Calendar, announcements
must be submitted on the Campus
Calendar form by, NOON one business
day before the announcement is to run.
Saturday and Sunday events are printed
in Friday's calendar and must be sub
mitted on the Wednesday before the
announcement is to run. Forms and a
drop box are located outside the DTH
office, 104 Union. Items of Interest
lists ongoing events from the same
campus organizations and follows the
same deadline schedule as Campus
Calendar. Please use the same form.
THURSDAY
2:30 p.m.: University Career Plan
ning and Placement Services will hold
an InternshipsExperiential Learning
Workshop: Introductory session on
internship basics and how to find one in
306 Hanes Hall.
4 p.m.: The Study Abroad Office
will hold an information session on the
UNC program to Vienna, Austria, in
the lower level of Caldwell Hall. Ger
man language background is required.
The Youth United of the Campus Y
will meet in the Campus Y lounge. All
students interested in attacking the high
school dropout problem and other teen
issues please attend.
5 p.m.: The Christian Science Or
ganization will meet in the Union.
The Association of International
Students will meet in 208-209 Union.
We will have a presentation about
Mexico. All are welcome!
UCPPS will hold Job Hunt 101:
Basic information on how to use the
UCPPS office for seniors and graduate
students in 210 Hanes Hall.
5:45 p.m.: The Baptist Student Un
ion and Fellowship of Christian Ath
letes will have a joint fellowship at the
ents seemed almost as excited as the
children by the visit.
"It's almost like putting Mars on the
with a nurse named Catherine. (Hem
ingway served in the Italian Army on
the Austrian front.) In the novel, the
two become lovers but do not marry.
Catherine dies in childbirth at the end
of the story.
The last paragraph of the novel comes
just after Catherine's death in the hos
pital. The nurses are shut out of the
room and the soldier is left with his
dead lover.
"But after I had gotten them out and
shut the door and turned off the light, it
wasn't any good,' ' the paragraph reads.
"It was like saying goodbye to a statue.
After a while I went out and left the
hospital and walked back to the hotel in
the rain."
As bleak as that was, many of the
other endings Hemingway scrawled on
different pages paint an even darker
picture.
"That is all there is to the story,"
read one discarded ending. "Catherine
Instead, she went to the Polo Lounge at
the Beverly Hills Hotel with her hus
band, Prince Frederick von Anhalt.
As a misdemeanor defendant, ac
cused of slapping police Officer Paul
Kramer on June 14, Gabor is not re
quired to be present at any part of her
trial, except for sentencing if convicted.
Fox's closing statement to the jury
took 70 minutes. He attacked Gabor's
disruptive behavior inside and outside
the courtroom.
Jurors began deliberations at 3:30
p.m. after the final arguments from Fox
and Defense Attorney William Gray
sen and instructions from Municipal
Judge Charles Rubin. They ended their
deliberations at 5 p.m.
Rubin, because of a Tuesday televi
children of ARC members, she said.
Judging the contest were Sharon
Kebschull, Daily Tar Heel editor; Liz
Jackson, residence hall association
president; Harry Gooder, faculty coun
cil chairman and microbiology profes
sor; and Angela Hampton, a senior from
Raleigh and WCHL newscaster.
For winning the Mr. UNC title,
Magner received a Burger King crown,
two season basketball passes, a free
largest events." She added that the
$13,000 estimate she previously gave
for staging Springfest had been revised
to $8,600.
Buchenau wrote an amendment,
which was adopted, stating that none of
the funds could be used "for sexist
advertisements, displays or competi-
Tuition
Frederic Schroeder, dean of students,
said Lewis was addressing an issue
important to many students. "Those are
certainly concerns that represent large
parts of the student body. Trying to
Campus Calendar
Battle House across from Kenan Resi
dence Hall. The program will include
various types of entertainment includ
ing skits and songs. For more info about
the BSUFCA day call 942-4266. Ev
eryone is welcome!
UCPPS will hold Job Hunt 102:
Resume Writing Workshop for seniors
and graduate students in 210 Hanes
Hall.
6 p.m.: The University Counseling
Center will host BROTHERS dis
cussion group for and about black male
students at UNC-CH. Tonight's topic:
"Our African Heritage" in Upendo
Lounge in Chase Hall.
6:30 p.m.: The Carolina Gay and
Lesbian Association will have a man
agement board meeting in the office.'
All officers should attend.
The Campus Y's Volunteer Ac
tion Committee will meet in the
Campus Y Lounge to plan publicity
and upcoming projects. All are wel
come! 7 p.m.: The UNC Outing Club will
meet in 205 Union. Last chance to sign
up for Morganton Intercollegiate Ca
noe Races.
The Office of N.C. FellowsLead
ership Development will hold a public
speaking workshop presented by
"Leadership Matters ..." in 101 Green
law. Everyone is welcome! For more
info call 966-4041.
The Hunger Elimination Project
will hold a brainstorming session in the
Campus Y conference room.
7:30 p.m.: The UNC Club Field
Hockey practices on the Astroturf.
Please remember dues!
The CGLA will have a general body
meeting in 108 Bingham Hall. You can
make a difference.
The Black Greek Council Step
Show will be in Carmichael Audito
rium. Admission is $2.
8 p.m.: Student Television is hav
ing a reporting class for all new report
ers with Campus Profile in 210 Union.
This class is mandatory for all reporters
map. This Mars, not the planet," said
Minette Thompson, a fifth-grade
teacher.
displayed
died and you will die and I will die and
that is all I can promise you."
Another ending tried by Heming
way was:
"You can stop your life the way you
stop a story but you do not do it and
afterwards you are not sorry. It stops
for awhile by itself and then it goes
again."
At times, Hemingway wallowed in.
bitterness:
"See Naples and die is a fine idea:.
You will live to hate its guts if you live,
there. Perhaps there is no luck in a
Peninsula."
Sometimes, he was bitter and
sappy.
"That is all there is to this story.
There is supposed to be something
which controls all these things and not
one sparrow is forgotten before God. It
was probably." ;
sion news report, fined Gabor $500 for
violating a gag order he imposed on the
case, and was considering a second
$500 fine regarding her comments about
prosecution character witnesses.
"The thing that outrages me most is,
she used and abused two weeks of this
process for her own aggrandizement,"
Fox said. "The defendant doesn't know
the meaning of truth ... Her perception
of truth differs from facts in the case."
Gabor could receive up to 1 8 months
in jail if convicted of misdemeanor
battery on a police officer, disobeying
an officer's orders, driving with an
expired license and having an open
container of alcohol in her car.
Fox told jurors that Gabor believes
"the world revolves around Gabon"
from page 1
haircut, a three-month spa member
ship, a pizza from Marathon Pizza and
a gift certificate from University Flo
rist. Magner attributed his win to the help
he received from friends and to a fun
loving attitude. "I think we had the
most fun with this contest. The whole
RA staff of Olde Campus helped me
out with the choreography of my dance
and I couldn't have done it without
them."
from page 1
tions." He said some members of con
gress had been offended by a bikini
contest held during Springfest '88.
"If people choose to be sexist at the
Springfest, I would be very upset if my
student funds were used for something
that might be offensive to another
member of the student body."
from page 1
balance between keeping it (the tuition
rate) as low as possible and as low as
the state will allow is a difficult bal
ance. He's doing an excellent job of
presenting the issues." :
who want to be assigned a story. "
The Union Cabaret announces that
the party doesn't end with the step-'
show. Join us for the Black Greek'
Council CAA Dance following the
show in the lower level of the Union.
Until 11 p.m.
11 p.m.: WXYC 893 FM will play
the new album from Headless Horse
men Can't Help Bu Shake in its
entirety with no interruptions.
ITEMS OF INTEREST
Can you meet the challenge? Union
Underground challenges you to be
No. 1 in the Fall '89 Pool Challenge.
Sign up in the Underground Pool Room
until Fri. Sept. 29.
UCPPS: Students interested in quali
fying for positions with the National
Security Agency must take the PQT
Exam on Oct. 28, 1989. (Register by
Oct. 13, 1989). Booklets are available
in 21 1 Hanes Hall. The PQT Exam i$
NOT required for students majoring in
math, computer science, Slavic, Asian
or Middle Eastern languages.
Anyone interested in a one-year
scholarship at the Inter-Cultural In
stitute of Japan, a Japanese language
school, call (213)617-2039 or write to:
A Non-Profit Educational & Cul
tural Service
Japanese-American Cultural and
Community Center '
244 S. San Pedro St., STE.305
Los Angeles, Calif. 900 12
The Graduate and Professional
Student Federation offers informa
tion on the in-state tuition application
process. Check the bulletin board out
side Suite D in the Union for details.
UCPPS is collecting all resumes of
seniors interested in working for non
profit organizations after graduation.
Bring your resume to 21 1 Hanes Hall
between Oct. 16, 1989, and Jan. 19,
1990, for inclusion in a book from
UNC, NCSU, NCCU and Duke to be
sent to NPOs.