The Daily Tar HeelMonday, January 22, 19909 Radio Free UNC Jif, m AfTEK evcfy uo Upt EVERY II rRftSf! , n lie ilsf p Castaway Street THE ADVENTURES Of r AY SoN.'oH 0-00, SOMtSovj HI. I'M DR.Wt.0R 6ANTT. WHAT SAVE M SON SfEMS 0 BE IT'S THiK MIGHT Sopr . r-l V V0U ME AM YOU U HAVE TO 'e rwir atc 2 TrVS "t n AfRfliD 50 A flVfiSE fREVD, J NEED SOME CONfvcwS. MORE BAcH A irr DOCTDOC WHAT AR LITTLE fAlUCWER,&0 ASX OrV IS CHANCES? THENAR. TOO tMLl to SAY KUP GOOD DA"W PRMING. lNflf ss,f ComE, I ASKED foR YOU'RE EXISTENTIALISTS PAINTINGS., 84 RC4U Calvin and Hobbes 0K DUPUCMES, LISTEN UP. AS LONG AS Wffi ALL WLRE AND I DOHT KNOW HOW 10 GET RID Of XJ, WE HlGUT W71 SPEOnCMLi, WITH FIVE. WPUCMES. V CAN DWVCE UP TUE SCUOOL WEEK SO THERE'S OHE DUPUCATE R ' EACU DAvf. A.S ViEU. COOPERATE . , 1 IDoonesbury mark: VXIOKAY? 0UPPY! W...7HATS 0 Shoe r TWb YCVl WD am I " l 1 f 1 M.W KA J THE Daily Crossword by Alvin L. 1990 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved . - ACROSS 57 before a in her..." ; 1 Guile fall" 15 Miss ' 6 Viper 63 Ms Anderson Thompson I 9 Hari 64 Starch source 21 Aquarium fish ' 13 Boring tool 65 Chi. airport 25 Fr. women: I 14 Indians 66 " each abbr. ; 16 Final word life..." 26 Contest ; 17 Religious art 67 Pun or mob 27 NC college work end 28 Legumes 18 Festive 68 Discharged 29 Supposition 19 Cattle old 69 Over 12, under 31 Titled lady '. style 20 34 "Hawkeye" ' 20 Under a spell 70 Humorist 36 Ebb and flow 22 Goals George 37 Baking need .23 Saucy 71 Red (host 38 Confined I 24 Handicap of "Ozark 40 Duck ' ' weight Jubilee") 42 Winged 26 Meal 45 Called balls ! 30 Swelling DOWN and strikes ; 32 Brews 1 Garment 48 Kin of div. , 33 avis 2 Destroy 50 Ask release 35 Bar legally 3 Maturation 51 Riven ; 39 Bordering on device 52 Unaccom- the shore 4 Cheese type panied "41 Huge 5 "Sound of 53 Carlo -43 Follow Music" family 55 Worship 44 Epee fight 6 Soothsayer 58 Pro 46 Elysium 7 Race official 59 Akron's 47 Title of 8 Soccer great state address 9 ."Men seldom 60 Nobleman ..'.49 Away at girls..." 61 Corner 51 Smidgen 10 Acid type 62 Ms Lamarr 54 Meat paste 11 Leans toward 56 Story line 12 " of robins (Doctor IV HMM. LET IF RUN SOME THE PROBLEM? 7IA11Y.WH0 WAS ROBES 1 OuR Sotf JIMMY. Wf HE 1IGHT 8 .. ERR WHO WoT HAHLgr BE- IGH0R.ANT- here AIETALLICA ID HOURS PASS LATERrlQW DO YOU fEt, 1 ( Better doc ARISTOTLE plEA5E. A RUDIMENTARy IT NURSE TWAIN UNDERSTANDING liPES5iovisnc Of WvMN TrifSE A OBViovjLY Civilization. - vW lDR GANTT, IF THE REST OF US LM im, WE CAN TAKE TvJRNS G0UG TO SCUOOL, AHD NO YttlL BE TUE VUSEfc GREAT. NOT AT ALL! rvBBe&iiN and out of therapy all morning: &JT WHO m&T0H5AR ABOUT MY PROBLEMS' NOBGPY! TH5VP RATHER. HEAR FROM ZSA ZSA GABOR OR THB SeCRSTARYOF PZFENSe, NOT 7M CONSCJ&4CB OF LAFAYETTE FARX! AMKE TW YOJ w amp Becker 13 17 20 23 26 27 28 29 32 39 40 43 47 51 52 53 " ri I 68 89 H'5 TORY NUG&TS-3 KlDS'you THINK rREDDV ktutr.oet is wild er ad S0H( rtAHQtiSDf 5ADF. TFStc. OK, 7i . AN EASroV.T PlERRE THREE MAWAX'S POWERS IN WVH WERE ITALY, GERMAN. AnO A HoViULSToi'HLs IN CRITICAL C0N"Dli'0N WE MUST HURRY 3 '-4 SON? HE THOUGHT i i WAS"C0CL '0 uL 7 Si A o r cf sitcoms And Rock ano Roll with this PRf SfRiPTfOW Of TEVT800IS Hi SHOULD 6f OK .P'- S noCT0l2.' HOWCA f.V5v h Z,.rl . i i v WORK OR TA VL0RG A NITCDocToR WiST0RY), ''ii, , , i , . , . , , , n NOW TUKV ST11L LEASES US WTH TUE CAJESTON OF YWOGETS TUE WE'LL FSUT 10U FOR IT. CUE BED ToNGUT. IWoTdI E M Bl E I F 1 1 IT t IS1H1A IWl HBIEIX VII 0t IE W RJA M I A WE M M M ill NIK 10 11 12 14 15 18 18 19 21 22 24 25 30 31 33 34 35 38 37 38 41 42 44 45 46 48 49 50 54 55 57 58 59 60 61 62 i4 65 187 68 M : n OKAi.diMM, o o YOU CAN COM3 DO MY SHOW TWAY. 0 0 m 4TJV S m m 70 71 MONDAY 3 p.m.: N.C. Fellows will have an open house until S p.m. in 224 Union. Corne by to learn more about the Fellows Program and to meet current fellows! 4 p.m.: The Carolina Minority Postdoctoral Scholars Program announces a one-hour lecture: "Reconstructing Richard Wright's Native Son" with Virginia Whatley Smith, research associate in the UNC English department. Smith will show how Wright constructed the composite of his "victimized criminal hero" from newspaper sources and transformed these facts to create the fictional world of "Native Son." Toy Lounge, 4th floor of Dey Hall. Light refresh ments. Sponsored by the Office of the Associate Provost for Research. 5 p.m.: KIDSRF.AD will have a mandatory meet ing for all trained volunteers in the Campus Y to schedule spring semester. 5:30 p.m.: The Alliance of Black Graduate and Professional Students will hold its monthly general body meeting in 206 Union. 7 p.m.: The Psychology Club will meet in 112 Davie. All members and others interested are encour aged to come to this first meeting of the spring semester. UNC Student Congress announces the final orien tation session of the Student Congress Budget Process in 205 Union. For more info call 962-5201 or come by Suite C. The N.C. Student legislature will meet in 208 Union for regular business and a resolutions debate. All interested are welcome. ITEMS OF INTEREST A diabetes support group is forming, led by Dee Hard Rock Cafe str From Associated Press reports TYRO A second North Carolina business has been threatened with a lawsuit by the Hard Rock Cafe, but the owner of the first business sued said the owners of the bistro giant are just w his tling Dixie. Lawyers for the company whose name graces the front of T-shirts the world over has sent a letter to Dan Stanley, accusing him of infringing on their client s name by planning to name his barbecue restaurant in Tyro the Hog Rock Cafe 'No one is going into New York and be disappointed if the Hard Rock Cafe isn't selling barbecue, and no one is going to go into Hog Rock Cafe and be disappointed if Jimi Hendrix's jock strap isn't hanging from the ceiling," said Grant Kombcrg, owner of Chapel Hill's Hardback Cafe & Bookstore. Stamey says he's heartened by the fact that the Hardback Cafe & Book store eventually got to keep its name. Joel tune best From Associated Press reports NEW YORK Billy Joel's No. 1 single "We Didn't Start the Fire" has crossed over to the classroom, where teachers soon will be using the pop star's rapid-fire riff on global history as a teaching tool. A special cassette version of the song, including a 10-minute talk by Joel, will be provided to 40,000 junior and senior high school students nationwide, ac cording to the singer's label, CBS Records. "I think the letters I have gotten from teachers and students alike have been really encouraging," Joel says at the start of the tape. He goes on to discuss his love of history and talks about his one-time careerchoice: history teacher. "A lot of people tend to think history is just this drab series of boring names and dates that you just have to connect to pass the test," Joel continues. "Re State game, the Tar Heels' lead was back to 10 at 66-56. The Wolfpack got as close as 74-70 Saturday UNC 91, N.C. State 81 N.C Stale Howard 8-18 0-0 18, Gugli otta 6-110-0 13, D'Amlco 0-10-00, Corchiani 3-9 0 0 6, Monroe 8-15 9-9 27, Hin riant 0-3 0 0 0, Fcgglns 3-45-611,3-40-2 . Totals 31-65 14-1781. UNC Chikutt 1-4 0-12. Davis 4-8 5-5 15, Williams 12-16 3-5 27, Rke 2-9 2-2 6, Fox 7-7 5-7 21, Denny 0-0 0-0 0, Madden 5-7 0-0 10, RodI 0-0 0-0 0, Lynch 3- 4-5 1 0, Wenstrom 0 1 0-0 O.Harris 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 34-58 19-2591. Halftime Score: 36-36. Three-point goals N.C. State 5-17 (Howard 2-9, Gugllotta 1. 2, Corchiani 0-2, Monroe 2-4), UNC 4-6 (Fox 2-2, Rice 0-1, Davis 2-3). Rebounds N.C State 34 (GogiiotU 9), UNC 27 (Williams 10). Assists N.C. State 19 (Gugfiotta 6), UNC 24 (Rke 12). Fouls N.C State 22, UNC 14. Attendance 12,400. ELLIOT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 $3.50 ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6PM 3:00 f i 5:00 1 1 iiUftld g-nn !:gTango&Cash4i8 3:05 tocxrcsj 5:05 tMiCLiS 7:05 9:05 &3 Qate sbkdws FRI & SAT Nights $2.00 When llcrry List Sslly PLATO0I1 Internal Affairs Nightly 7:009:20 (R) V Sat & Sun Matinee 2:004:20 Blaze Nightly 7:309:40 (R) Sat & Sun Matinee 2:304:40 Little Mermaid Nightly 7:008:43 (PG) The DTH Campus Calendar is a daily listing of University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and student organizations officially recognized by the Division 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 submitted 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. Dee Laurilliard, social worker, and Dr. Margaret Vimmerstedt. Begins Jan. 30. Tuesday s 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. for six weeks. Call 966-6562 to enroll. Deadline to enroll is Jan. 24. Time magazine is conducting a national search for college juniors who have distinguished themselves through academicexcellence and exceptional achieve ment outside the classroom, including community service, student government, science, journalism, entrepreneurs!) ip, the arts or athletics. Winners will receive $3,000 in achievement awards money. Appli cations are available from the Dean of Students Of fice, Steele Building basement, and are due Feb. 1 . Delta Sigma Pi Professional Business Fraternity announces Spring Rush 1990 from January 16-22, 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. in front of Carroll Hall. Student Health Service and Student Government are now accepting applications through Feb. 2 for the student liaison subcommittee. Applications and in formation are at the Union front desk. Suite C and the School of Public Health. Student input can make a difference. Alpha Kappa Psi Professional Business Fraternity will have a rush table in front of Carroll But it did agree to change the logo on its sign and stop selling promotional T shirts. But the Hard Rock Cafe owners still seem to want to avoid any confusion between it and the Tyro barbecue pal ace Stamey plans to name the Hog Rock Cafe. "Your suggestion that there is no confusing similarity between Hog Rock Cafe and Hard Rock Cafe is simply without merit," says a letter from Hard Rock lawyer Ralph Kalish Jr. in St Louis. Kalish's father and law partner. Ralph Kalish Sr., said Wednesday they were trying to protect their cl icnt 's name from dilution by all sorts of similar sounding cafes springing up since their client's success. "You might want to plead for the little barbecue stand," Kalish Sr. told The Charlotte Observer in an interview published Thursday. "But it's not just the only pebble on thing since 'Sesame Street' ally, history is a living thing. We are where we are today, and we are who we are today, because of our history." The tapes will be sent out with the Jan. 26 issue of Junior Scholastic magazine, for junior high school stu dents, and Update magazine, for high schoolers, said Scholastic public rela tions manager Stephanie Feuer. Teach ers will receive a poster-sized copy of the lyrics and a lesson plan. "We're trying to create a bridge between the classroom and what's going on in the outside world," Feuer said. "We're bringing their world into the classroom." Joel packs enough images into the song to fill a few volumes of the World Book: He begins with Harry Truman, touches on the Korean War, "trouble in the Suez," "Belgians in the Congo" and the JFK assassination, then wraps it up with a string of current events climax- when Rodney Monroe converted a layup and a free throw; Monroe led the Wolfpack with 27 points but commited four costly turnovers. UNC pounded it back inside to Williams, who came through with four quick points. Williams said the Tar Heels found the fine line between aggressiveness and overaggressvveness late in the game. "If you have the lead, sometimes you just try to hold on," he said. "But King did a good job of handling the ball and getting it to the right people. And we knew when to take it to the basket and when to pull it back out." UNC sealed the victory by hitting 9 Always (PG) r Born on the Fourth of July (R) 7:00 9:50 (t ' Womnieini's BB&sIkettllDSiIlIl vs. Vnirgnnnnsa 8:0 IPM Csainnmnclliisiell Anndlo Hall between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. through Jan. 29 for all interested business, economics and industrial rela tions majors. Please stop by. Applications for students interested in working on the Black Cultural Center Planning Committee are available through Jan. 26 and arc located in the BCC. The Carolina Week by Week Campus Calendar wants students to edit, evaluate and create the 1 990 91 edition. Contact Christie Blom at 967-4783 fr. more info. Photographers encouraged. Exhibit and reception: Paintings by Richard McAlpin in the Carolina Union gallery. Exhibit runs through Feb. 3. Reception with the artist on Jan. 28 from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. All are welcome! UNITAS LivingLearning program is now ac cepting applications for 1990-91! Pick them up at the Union desk or Suite C, Union 2 17-A. For more info call 933-2315. Applications are due Jan. 29. Volunteer registration at North Carolina Memo rial Hospital is Jan. 22 through Jan. 26 for new volunteers. There are more than 50 service areas to choose from. Registration is at the Volunteer Services Office at NCMH from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. For more info call 966-4793. ikes back the beach." ' So Stamey, you might say, now finds himself between a place and a Hard Rock. . He started using Hog Rock Cafe on ; the menu for Stanley's Bar B-Que, Restaurant in Tyro last spring. Iter, in August, he registered a corporat ion with ; Hog Rock Cafe in the. title, planning to ; use the name for his new restaurant. ; Then the registered letter arrived. ; Founded in 1973, Stanley's sports a sign that allows: "Come tasle the best" BBQinTyro." Inside can be found a juke box and a . dark green counter with walls of match ing green and blond oak and some offending sweatshirts. While they don't resemble the yellow on black or white Hard Rock Cafe sweatshirts at all, a few are lettered with Hog Rock Cafe, , Others, which say Top Pig, feature a! saluting swine standing before an airv plane with "Piggy Sue" scrawled on the , side. '. ing with "rock and roller cola wars." Each year from 1949 through 1963 gets a verse; USA Today described the song as "musical Cliff Notes." :: In an interview with Rolling Stone, Joel said teachers have told him the song is "the greatest teaching tool to come down the pike since 'Sesame Street,' which means a lot to me." A fifth-grade class at the Banta El&r mentary School in Menasha, Wis., used the song lyrics last year to select topics for history reports. Joel's interests weren't strictly edu cational there is a record to be sold, as Feuer noted, and "We Didn't Start the Fire" is the pianist's highest-charting single since "Uptown Girl" hit No. 3 in November 1983. "These kids are part of the record buying public," she said. "The record company wanted to do something a little different." from page 1 of 12 free throws in the final two min utes. ! Only then could the Wolfpack play ers catch their breath, but by then it was much too late: Smith had a winning record at Reynolds once again. . ; EAST f RA.NKUN CHAffL MM 9r-Bi ---shir! nyt.srf?. 2:15 - ... ,U. 4 A 7:00 9:30 ' sS I VARSITY gFsEjfr iSat & Sun Matinee 1:30 3:155:00

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