Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 15, 1989, edition 1 / Page 9
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The Daily Tar HeelWednesday, November 15, 19899 Campus Calendar i TheDTH --iiifvj xuivuuai idauauj llstng 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. WEDNESDAY 9:30 a.m.: The Student Environ mental Action Coalition (SEAC) urges you to show your support for an environmentally sound UNC campus. We will gather at the Pit and march to South Building. 10 a.m.: Alpha Phi Omega spon sors a bloodmobile until 3:30 p.m. in the Great Hall of the Union. Noon: The Institute for Research in Social Science announces "Memo ries of Suffering, Memories of Free dom: Black Women and the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi" with Vicki Crawford of the UNC history depart ment in Toy Lounge of Dey Hall until 2 p.m. Sponsored by UNC Women's Studies. For more info call 962-3908. Midday!, your campus talk show with Chris Brown. We will end the semester with CAA president, Lisa Frye, mikeman, Carl Bryan and come dian Mac Ingraham. CGLA sponsors a Lesbian Lunch in 209 Union. IRSS announces "Law Without the State: Peasant Ideas of Justice in Revo lutionary Russia" with Jane Burbank of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor in 02 Manning. An IRSS Colloquia. Call 962-5583 for more info. 12:30 p.m.: IRSS announces an IRSS Social Science Computing at UNC Faculty Working Group in 1 13 Manning. Call 966-1021 for more info. Calvin and Hobbes UMIMG W PERSONAL GRAMlTf P0LA&T REVERSED S A, REAL UVMSMtCE. HOW M I GCMG TO GO" OP TO TUERE.S OH TUE I COULD THE FLOOR, r A Doonesbury YOU'RB MORS RZAlVi LIKBHB GAIL! PAP'S PERSONAL I MEAN, BANKER APVI50R. MARY' DAP, WHAT'S GOING 0NHZRB? Shoe THE Daily Crossword by Richard Thomas ACROSS 1 Ribbon 5 Criticizes 10 Yield (with "in") 14 no good 15 Guide 16 Eye layer 17 Canter or trot 18 Actor-comic 20 Pretense 21 Turner 22 Fastidious 23 Computes 25 Hackman 26 Sword handle 27 Poet Hughes 31 Mended 33 Gambling game 34 Tinge 35 Soviet sea 36 Spurious 37 Sky Bear 38 Airline abbr. 39 Cameroon's neighbor 40 George of baseball 41 Intense struggles 43 Lyra's brightest 44 Part of BPOE 45 Withdrew 48 Glasses 51 Island near Guernsey 52 Hinder 53 Skinny leaf 55 Recompense 56 Eng. composer 57 Fiber plant 58 Vicinity 59 Yoked pair 60 Symbol 61 Seed DOWN 1 Dietary no-no 2 Swiftly 3 Herb with white flowers 4 Before head or foot 5 Dash 6 Property claims 7 "Hawkeye" 8 Multitude 9 Coeds 10 Shrewd ones 11 Eng. river 12 Outlet 13 Effortless 19 Dance 21 Related 2 p.m.: SYZYGY Performing Arts Company will sponsor an open forum on political art and censorship. Artists, administrators, faculty and students are encouraged to attend. 208 Union until 5 p.m. In coordination with Human Rights Week. 3 p.m.: University Career Plan ning and Placement Services will hold Job Hunt 103: Interviewing Skills Workshop in 306 Hanes Hall. 3:30 p.m.: UCPPS will hold a Work shop on Internships in N.C. State Government in 209 Hanes Hall. UCPPS will hold Job Hunt 101: Basic information on how to use UCPPS office for seniors and graduate students in 210 Hanes Hall. IRSS announces "Effects of Aging on Behavior and the Brain: The Good News and the Bad News" with Michela Gallagher in 112 Davie Hall. Spon sored by the psychology department. Call 962-2053 for more info. 4 p.m.: Women's Lacrosse Club practices at Finley Field until 5:30 p.m. UCPPS presents Career Opportuni ties with the U.S. Navy Officer Pro gram in the Black Cultural Center. Joint UNC-Duke Physics and As tronomy Colloquium "Novel Ap proaches for Surface Analysis" with E.A. Schweikert of the Center for Chemical Characterization and Analy sis, chemistry department, Texas A&M University in 265 Phillips. Refresh ments will be served at 3:30 p.m. in the Lounge, 277 Phillips. 5 p.m.: UNC Vegetarian Society will have a FREE vegetarian dinner in 104 Howell until 7 p.m. Homemade meals, recipes and general info. GAIA of the Campus Y sponsors Daniel Graham who will speak on the link between ecology and equality as it applies to Global Sustainability as part of Human Rights Week. In the Campus Y lounge. 5:30 p.m.: Student Government's Minority and Women's Affairs Com mittee will have a general meeting. Newman is having dinner followed by a program. It's hip and it's at 218 Pittsboro St. Be there! 6 p.m.: SYZYGY Performing Arts Company will present Harold Pinter's one-act play "One for the Road," a NOT M4HTVUHG. CBLU4G THM" NJEU CUWB UP. HOW AM I SUPPOSED ii i i it iii i ii DO m UOMLWCSK VI HEM IK TRAPPED CH THE. CEUNG? IT'S tAPOSSlBLE . SON, I'VE FAU5N IN LOVE. I'M GO ING TO ASK YOUR. MOTHER FOR A PIVORCB. JSLr MAYN'T I, THIS ALL PHL? HAPPEN5P 30FA5T. I WAS AFRAIP OF THIS... 1989 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved 24 Soviet city 25 Panamanian lake 27 Trademarks 28 Worn 29 Give the gate 30 Terrific 31 Famed basin 32 Pound the poet 33 Rounded parts 36 Kind of driver 37 Prompt 39 Gr. physician 40 Call's partner 42 Convert into cash 43 Broadway's Ben 45 Balm 46 Zealous 47 Reverie 48 Dispute 49 Lease 50 Santa 51 Pierre's loc. 54 Super or alter 55 Joker brutal study of a torturer and his vic tims. Audience discussion to follow. To be performed in the Union Cabaret. Free admission, donations encouraged. A Human Rights Week event. The Wesley Foundation will meet at 214 Pittsboro St. behind the Carolina Inn. The program will be on service. Dinner is $2. 6:15 p.m.: The Asian Students As sociation will meet in 205 Union to dis cuss upcoming business including fortune-cookie grams to be sold for final exams week. 7 p.m.: The UNC Bridge Club will hold an open duplicate game in the South Campus Union. Partnerships guaranteed; call 933-8642. The N.C. FellowsLeadership De velopment is sponsoring a workshop on Confrontation Skills. Learn the valu able means of dealing with confronta tion successfully in your organization or group in 10 Peabody (basement). 7:30 p.m.: University housing will hold an optional question and answer forum for RA applicants in Morrison first floor lounge. All applicants are invited to attend. The Maranatha Christian Fellow ship will meet in 226 Union. 11 p.m.: WXYC 89.3 FM will play the new album from Slyland Robbie Silent Assassin in its entirety with no interruptions. ITEMS OF INTEREST UCPPS is collecting all resumes of seniors interested in working for non profit organizations after graduation. Bring resume to 21 1 Hanes Hall before Jan. 19 for inclusion in a book from UNC, NCSU, NCCU and Duke to be sent to NPOs. Student Government Tutoring Program offers FREE tutoring in Econ 10; Chem 11; Stat 11 and 23; French; Spanish; and Math 22, 30 and 31. All students interested in receiving help please come to Peabody Hall Tuesday nights from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. Room assignments will be posted in Peabody Hall. The Student Government Tutor ing Program is now accepting applica tions for spring tutors in the same courses listed above. Applications are available in Phillips Annex and the i TO YOU'LL AL WAYS 35 WELCOME, MARK. I'M HAVING MARK, I PlPNTPtAN FORTH&TQ HAPPEN... WELL,YES, I PIP. OH, 609... PAINTEP. JS L I DUG A M S ttSeSr I ,.,mtSW i 2 3 U h 6 7 8 5 I 110 111 12 13 14 15 18 17 18 19 20 """"" 21 """" 22 23 24 """" 25 ' 26 """" 27 28 29 30" 31 32" """" 33"" 34 35 " 36 """"" 37"" 38 """" 39 " """"" 40" ' 41 42 """" 43 I -1 - 44 45 46 47 49" 5o" """"" 5T" 52 53 " 54 """" 55"" 56 "" 57 58 '. jflQ 81 Honors Office and are due today. Earn 3 hours of passfail credit. The 1990 Yackety Yack, the year book of the University of North Caro lina, is having portrait sitting through Nov. 22 in 213 Union. Call 1-800-873-7591 to register for your appointment! The photographs of Frederick Robert Stipe will be on display at the Firefighter From Associated Press reports DURHAM An animal-loving firefighter used mouth-to-mouth resus citation and oxygen to revive a pair of 2-week-old kittens overcome in a fire that damaged a Durham house on Monday. "We did it once before on a puppy, but it was too late," said Durham Fire Department rescue specialist A.J. Green. "I do love animals." No people were injured in the blaze. Firefighters found four kittens in the dining room of the house and brought them outside, said Battalion Chief D.R. Maynard. A neighbor began chest massage on a kitten that was not breathing and Green began performing mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on a second unre sponsive kitten. Friends and family members, many holding flashlights, huddled in a circle around the kittens. After the kittens started to breathe on their own, Green gave both kittens oxygen. After about 20 minutes of rescue efforts, the unidentified neigh bor took the now-active kittens to his apartment for the night. The fire apparently started on a mattress in a middle bedroom on the right side of the house, Maynard said. The investigation was continuing. Ad beefs up town's image BROOKLYN, Wash. Everyone's heard of Brooklyn, N.Y. Practically no one's heard of this Brooklyn, which consists of a school and a tavern. And the tavern is closed. But Brooklyn, Wash., is having its day in the sun, even if it's only because of name familiarity. The tiny town in the Willapa Hills of southwest Washington is featured in a television commercial for Burgerville U.S.A. Also featured is Bob Tomisser, superintendent of North River School. "In Brooklyn, New York, you are conveniently located near Wall Street, Yankee Stadium and Coney Island. Big Deal!" Tomisser tells the camera as he strolls out of the small school. "You're also about 3,000 miles from one of these," he says, holding up a large burger promoted in the 30-sec-ond spot. Then the camera pans back to To misser. "Burgerville U.S.A. inconven iently located across the United States," he says of the 3 1 -restaurant chain in the Northwest. The commercial airs in Washington and Oregon, and Tomisser is receiving royalties each time it's shown. Alto gether, his one day's work should bring in about $1,500. Incidentally, you can't get a Burger ville burger here, either. The nearest Burgerville is nearly 100 miles away, in Central ia. EAST FRANKLIN CHAPEL HILL 96 7-8665 "POWERFULLY MOVING AND SO FUNNY IT HURTS." PETER TRAVEBS ; ROLLING STONE CRIMES and sex, lies, and videotape 4s15s15 HUKKYeHOS THURSt K MISDEMEANORS HURRY ENDS THURS! the V4 1 ire -uj WOODY ALLEN 2:154:307:159:30 9:057:05 R Hidni&tit Hate Shews featuring The Holy Grail a The Song Remains The Same ONLY $2.00! Look Who's Talking Nightly 7:309:30 (PG-13) Sat & Sun Matinee 2:304:30 DAD Nightly 7:009:10 (PG) Sat & Sun Matinee 2:004:10 THE BEAR Nightly 7:009:10 (PG) Sat & Sun Matinee 2:004:10 rvm little WF Students may pick up their tickets for the follow ing UNC basketball games at the Ticket Office. Tickets for these games, while they last, will remain available at the Ticket Office Monday thru Friday between 8:00 am and 5:00 pm. Hanes Art Center Gallery through Nov. 21. The Orientation Office will hold informational meetings for all students interested in the 1990 orientation com mission on Friday, Nov. 17, at 12:30 p.m.; Monday, Nov. 20, at 4 p.m.; and Tuesday, Nov. 21, at 6:30 p.m. in 21 1 Union. Applications are available at the meetings only. resuscitates kittens Project shows U.S.'s friendliness YORK, Pa. Third-grader Jessica Plank receives mail almost daily from people she has never met in Winston Salem. Last Friday was no exception. A correspondent sent a guidebook and told her how the city's 300-year-old trees were destroyed by Hurricane Hugo. Her fellow pupils get mail from other parts of the United States in what has become a prodigious social studies project in the third-grade class of Julia Shanabrook at Norman A. Trimmer Elementary School in the West York Area School District. "There are wonderful people in America who care enough about strang ers to go out, buy postcards, sit down and write to us," said Shanabrook, 3 1 , who has just begun teaching after gradu ating from college. Each of the class' 25 students wrote to a newspaper editor in two states requesting help in asking readers to send postcards and share what makes their community special. On Friday, Shanabrook distributed a 6-inch stack of mail among the eager students. "I get folders. I get boxes. I get 10-by-13-inch envelopes filled." The mail helps the children learn about current events as well as geogra phy, she said. The children giggled at an Idaho postcard of a picture of a single, huge potato consuming the bed of a flatbed trailer. But Kushal Shah saw through the ruse. "It 's a regular potato," he said. "They put it on a little truck." Twice one day last week students heard that Michigan is shaped like a mitten. One person sent a foot-long mitten-shaped map. Another wrote that she lives in the thumb. News the old-fashioned way PLYMOUTH, Mass. The town of Plymouth has taken a step backward in communication history by hiring Stanley P. Meldrum as town crier. In the days before television, before radio and even before daily newspa pers, events of the day were shouted from the town square by the town crier. Meldrum 's job will be to don Pilgrim garb for special occasions and stroll the Plymouth waterfront shouting, "Hear ye, hear ye," and describing the day's events. Meldrum, 72, who has had plenty of Legal Problems ? call Orrin Robbins Attorney at Law 968-1825 Make Your Resume Look Good, Professionally printed resumes Fast turnaround Guaranteed deadlines Choice of quality paper with envelopes 1 It's on time. Or it's on mv. 100 West Franklin St. 933-2679 Shocker (R) The Fabulous Baker Bra . mr 16: Pepperdine vs. UNC 113: Virginia vs. UNC Sign up this week at the Learning Skills Center in 204 Phillips Annex for $35, 8-week, test preview sessions for: GMAT, LSAT, GRE and MCAT. The UNC Bridge Club will sponsor the campus-level qualifying round of the 1990 North American Collegiate Bridge Championship on Tuesday, Nov. 21. Call 933-8642 for more information. practice meeting the public by playing Santa Claus for the past eight years, was awarded the unpaid post after, a town selectman saw him acting as; a Pilgrim for a September "Safety First" event and was entranced by his per formance. ; A town crier was then proposed and the selectmen went for the idea "as long as they didn't have to pay for it," Meldrum said Tuesday. Provincetown also had a town crier post until the man who held the position was fired for allegedly insulting gays. Meldrum, a Plymouth resident for 12 years, took some public-speaking courses during a stint in the armed forces and is now retired from a career in hotel management and retail.'. He already has purchased his own official town crier Pilgrim uniform. One drawback to the post: "I guess that makes me a politician," he said, mournfully. Citizen posts opinion at home GRAND HAVEN, Mich. If it's true that the appearance of a house says a lot about its inhabitants, then city officials believe George Zysk's house says too much. Zysk, 73, has plastered the front of his two-story home with about 50 hand painted, wooden signs expressing his opinions on city issues ranging from traffic to taxes. City officials want the signs taken down. "I'll go to jail, but I'm not taking them down," Zysk said, adding that the city is trying to stifle his freedom of speech. Most of the 2-foot-by-3-foot signs complain about ihe city's leadership and specific' projects, like the proposed expansion of the local airport. "Whenever I thought something was unfair, I tried to let the people riding by know it," said Zysk, who also is known for expressing his dissatisfaction at City Council meetings and in letters to the editor. Most of the signs went up during the last year. "Clean out City Hall sweep out dictators Nov. 7," reads one of his crudely produced pre-election signs. ELLIOTT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 FREE PARKING ' $3.00 ALL SHOWS BEGINNING BEFORE 6PM GLENN CLOSE Immediate Family 3:00PG-1 37:00 T0MSELLECK , An Innocent Man 5:00R9:00 ' JOHN LAROQUETTE BRONSON PINCHOT Second Sight Detective Agency 3:1 0 5:1 0 7:10 9:1 0(PG) CHRISTOPHER WALKIN LINDSY CROUSE . - COMMUNION 3:05 5:05 7:05 9:05 (Rl Available at : 408 W. Rosemary St. . 942-1740 7:15 9:30 Boys (R) 7:00 9:15 '4s . i i i iff
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 15, 1989, edition 1
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