The Daily Tar HeelMonday, September 18, 19899 Dsissnf Decfl HidKeiritBsDirTig DTH ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2br Kingswood Apt. Fully furnished except your room. 189mo. 12 utilities. On J Busline. Sept remnt Is free! Call Kosta, 967-8273. , Rides & Riders NEED RIDE to DC area, pref. North VA. weekend of Sept 16. Will pay for gas. Call Amy at 933-1656. NEED RIDE to Fayetteville. Fri. Sept 22. Will help with expenses. Call Alan 933-5366. Keep calling. RIDE WANTED. One way to NOVA. WASH DC area Fri afternoon or evening Sept 15. Will pay. Call and leave message for Susan at 933-8188. Parking FREE SEMESTER parking raffle sponsored by Newman Catholic Student Center, drawing held Sept 13 for 2 parking spaces at 218 Pittsboro (behind Carolina Inn): only $lhr per chance. Carpools CAR-POOL? Fayetteville-Chapel Hill. If interested, please call 436 4685. If no answer, please leave a message. BUY IT, SELL IT, FIND IT, DTH CLASSIFIEDS. CALL 962-0252. Lost & Found FOUND in STUDENT AID OFFICE on 914: Textbook titled AFRICA, ed. by Martin & O'Meara. Come by 300 Vance Hall to claim. LOST. Blue wallet belonging to Laura Salmons. Reward offered. Lost in The Pit, morning of Sept 14. Call 962-5066 days or 929 8665 eves and weekends. LOST. GLASSES with pink plastic frames and glass lenses near the Sigma Epsilon House, Sept 5 or 6. Call 926780. Keep trying. LOST: Bus pass between the F Lot and The School of Nursing on Sept 12. Call Danene 966-4435. LOST: set of keys with a small red London bus on it. Somewhere between Parker and Whitehead dorms. Please call Stephanie or Andrea at 933-6437. MARGE NELSON. I found your gym card. Stop by 101 Peabody Hall to pick up. Services ABORTION - To 20 weeks. Private and confidential GYN facility with Saturday and weekday appoint ments available. Pain medication given. Free pregnancy tests. 942 0824. DO YOU WANT an eye catching resume? Need some help writing it? Call 942-1167 to get an edge on your job hunting. HATE TYPING? Let me do it. Call 967-0583 for fast, professional service on Macintosh PC. MA in English, familiarity with MLA styles. Ask for Cindy. TYPING AND WORD PROCESSING SERVICE. Term papers, lawmedi cal reviews, resumes, cover let ters, 24hr turn-around time avail for many assignments. Call 933 9263 today! TYPINGWORD PROCESSING Freshman to Post-Doctoral and Faculty. No job too large or too small. 100 letter quality. Professional, fast dependable, accurate. Word Wrangler, 933 9752. Need a new group to hang with? Check out ANNOUNCEMENTS DTH Classifieds Tutoring TENNIS LESSONS given by David Nash, TENNIS PROFESSIONAL Reasonable rates: $10 per half hour, $15 per hour. Contact at 942 4650 (preferably at noon). EXPERIENCE: Junior Doubles Champion, played on UNC when ranked 6 in the country, taught throughout US and Europe. Health WE HAVE A CATEGORY FOR YOU DTH CLASSIFIEDS BULIMIA GROUP FOR STUDENTS Will focus on -Understanding the causes of the binge-purge cycle -Regaining control of eating behavior Caff Student PsyctxXogical Services at 968-3658 for more information and signup. Volunteering DID YOU WISH for a Big Sister when you were growing up? You can make an adolescent's wish come true by volunteering for Women's Health Resources' Side-By-Side" program. Volunteers will work with "at-risk" adolescent girls aged 16-19. All it takes is 2 hrsweek. Interested women should call WHR at 968-4646. Training begins in Sept. Energetic? Self-Motivated? Got good ideas? We put creative minds to work! Public relations, advertis ing, marketing experience. Join our staff. We'll love you for it. 962 0545. INTERESTED IN GERIATRICS and working with older adults? Women's Health Resources needs men and women to volunteer for its Relief for Caregivers of the Elderly Program. Call WHR 968 4646 for more information. VISAMC over the phonel DTH Classifieds 962-0252 INTERESTED IN SCOUTING? We need a volunteer assistant leader for small girl-scout troop. We meet Tues. at 2:40 at Frank Porter Graham Elementary School. Please call Sara at 9296351. PROJECT UPWARD BOUND, a pro gram for educationally disadvan taged high school students needs students to volunteer as tutors on Saturdays and after school in the areas of English, Math, Science. History, and Foreign Language (mostly French and Spanish). Tutorial sessions operate from 9:30am-ll:20am on select Saturday mornings and for one -hour afterschool during the Fall and Spring semester. Interested persons should contact the Upward Bound Program at 140 12 E. Franklin St (225 Hill Bldg.) or call 962-1281 or 962-1282. Deadline, Sept 25, 1989. VOLUNTEER HEALTH Counselors needed! Great opportunity for undergraduate and graduate stu dents interested in the fields of psychology, nursing, social work, medicine, women's studies and other allied health professions to gain valuable counseling and refer ral experience. Interested women (regardless of major) should call Women's Health Resources at 968-4646. Training to begin September 23. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED - A REWARDING EXPERIENCe. Are you looking for an opportunity to share your time, your talent, your love? Visit the Hillhaven Convalescent Center on East Franklin and bring a touch of home to those in need. Call Ellen 967-1418. Be a volunteer ENGLISH CONVERSATION TUTOR!. Befriend a foreign student, visiting scholar, or spouse. One hourweek. 14o-l all In English. Apply at International Center, Student Union Building. Personals BOB SMITH HOWELL come get your stuff or call us at 967-5844. Peter and Jocelyn. KRISTEN. Feeling homesick? Miss mom's home cooking? Meet me at Linda's ll:30am-2:30pm or 5pm 9pm. John. ill BUYSELL YOUR USED ITEMS found. AA free. Campus Calendar 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 MONDAY 12:30 p.m.: The Study Abroad Of fice will hold an information session about the semester UNC exchange program in Vienna, Austria, until 1 :30 p.m. in 102 New East. German lan guage is required. 7 p.m.: The UNC Circle K Club will meet in Union 210. Become a part of the world's largest collegiate service organization. Campus Y newsletter, Excelsior, will meet at the Campus Y. If you can write or draw, we want you! Stop and check us out! 7:30 p.m.: The International Cen terInstitute for the Arts and Hu manities will hold a panel discussion "Afghanistan: Past, Present and Fu ture" in 121 Hanes Art Center. Speak ers include Robert Rupen, UNC De partment of Political Science; Larry Goodson, Campbell College; and Gen. Theodore Mataxis, Committee for a Free Afghanistan. Reception follows in West House. 8 p.m.: The Ballroom Dance Club will give free shag lessons at the Women's Gym tonight. Carolina Team Handball Club will have its first practice in Carmichael Gymnasium. No experience required! Come dressed to play. Student Part-time Job Service will hold its introductory meeting for all staffers and interested students. 8:30 p.m.: The Fellowship of Chris tian Athletes will meet in Kenan Field House. Speaker will be Jimmy Weekman, former FCA president and UNC track athlete. ITEMS OF INTEREST Elections Board applications are due at the Union desk or Suite C on Friday, Sept. 22. 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. Carolina Union Underground in vites you to join a league! Sign up now until Sunday, Sept. 24 in the Union Underground to join a bowling league. Games will be held in the Union Under ground on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday nights. UNC Great Decisions Coordinat ing Committee applications are avail able in the office of International Pro grams in 207 Caldwell Hall. Westerns may make TV comeback From Associated Press reports PASADENA, Cal if. Westerns may be out of fashion on the screen, but the ripsnorting . frontier saga "Lone some Dove" was expected to win Sunday night' s showdown at the Emmy Awards. . The CBS miniseries that starred Robert Duvall and Tommy Lee Jones scored the highest number of Emmy nominations in non-technical catego ries 1 8, followed by NBC's frequent winner"L.A. Law" with 17,and ABC's miniseries "War and Remembrance" with 15. Also expected to make a strong showing in the three-hour Fox Broad casting telecast was ABC's "The Wonder Years" with 14 nominations; ABC's "thirtysomething" with 13; and NBC's "The Golden Girls" and Fox's "The Tracey Ullman Show" with 10 nominations each. "Lonesome Dove' ' was a big winner even before Sunday night's event, tak ing six Emmys in technical categories in non-televised ceremonies Saturday night. Before the success of "Lonesome Dove," the Western had been largely moribund for well over a decade on both the big and small screen. This fall will mark the first time in 15 years that two Westerns have been on the net work schedule CBS' "Paradise," in its second year, and the new show The Young Riders" on ABC. In 1958-59, by contrast, the top four shows were all Westerns: "Gunsmoke," "Wagon Train," "Have Gun, Will Travel" and "The Rifleman." Sunday night's spectacle at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium, high lighted by a tribute to the late Lucille Ball, marked the end of a three-year contract between the Television Acad emy and newcomer Fox. The 1 987 show was a ratings disaster. Last year's Nielsens showed improvement but still embarrassed academy officials. "This year should be much better," predicted John Moffit, co-executive producer of the Emmycast. THE Daily Crossword by C.F. Murray 1989 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved ACROSS 1 Pay to play 5 Make Into law 10 Area unit 14 Venture 15 Water wheel 16 Earth goddess 17 Speechless 20 Enthusiastic 21 Calendar abbr. 22 Saucy miss 23 Rained In a way 25 Decree 27 Up-to-date 28 Chile city 32 " want for Christmas..." 35 Cartographer's ! collection 36 Depressed 37 Speak carefully 41 Naval off. 42 "A feeling and ..." (Wordsworth) 43 Sow wild 44 Table 46 Fiery 48 Brogan 49 Love affair 53 Elk relative 56 Band member 57 "I Rhythm" 58 In a whisper 62 Carbine 63 Discussion group 64 Observance 65 Type 66 " were the days..." 67 Zoo sound DOWN 1 US president 2 Present at birth 3 Baseball card activity 4 Shocking fish 5 Followed 6 Pried 7 Sounds from, Sandy 8 Labor org. 9 Sailor 10 Tropical rodent 11 Traffic jam ingredients 12 Omsk natives 13 Lenient 18 Bismarck 19 " proudly we hailed..." 24 Arab prince 25 Phony 26 the start 28 A Martin 29 Water plant 30 Joint problem 31 Is indebted 32 "Rock of " 33 "Clair de " 34 Final 35 Battery part 38 Santa's reindeer 39 Gallimaufry 40 bene 45 Concur 46 Limp 47 Sharif 49 Misleading actions 50 Writer Marsh 51 Terra 52 Anesthetic 53 Rumple 54 Not fooled by 55 Frankfort's river 56 "A 'clock scholar" 59 Make choices 60 Slangy turndown 61 Misspeak 1234 56789" 10 11 12 13 14 15 18 17 18 ! 19 20 """" " 21 22 23 24 """" 25 28 27 """" 28 29 30 31 32 33"" 34 35" """" 36 37 38" 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 """ 48 47 48 """ 49 50 51 ST" 53 5"" 55" 56" "" 57 58 59 60 61 62 """ 63 """"" 64 65 66 67 G.B. Send the Daily Tar Heel to Mom and Dad and share the excitement EAST FRANKLIN CHAPEL HILL M7-e665 &RSITY STEVE I ) i 1 12:10.4:30 JUjutxajnrjiiii7iiirtiii.iiiiijiiitxxxxx ONE OF THE BEST OF 1989! "P VINCENT CANSV. NEW TOfM TIMES -3 D 0 D D D D Q 0 D Speeding Ticket on 1-40? Just Couldn't Say ETo? D.W.I. On Franklin Street? Blabbed Using A Fake I.D.? Protect your legal rights &? insurance premiums Call So THEM HE. SAYS I'LL face honor court for Assaulting a stubemt traffic officer.' G.,toM'r worry A.80UT IT . THe Y KEEP THAT STUFF CONFIDENTIAL. Noeoey wilu FiHb EE t EL ELK ff 0UT- fp Calvin and Hobbes a D D D Q D D Q D EAU.' ITSW f AWWTC. TMCK YOV) UM NO RIGttT TO TMffi. THAT'S Mr i teah? ) TRUCK, AU I WKUT T i XEAU.' 9a Y Tl fight oU GNE YT BACK. untir for it. 98 3 I'LL BET Mrf Croon, AUTOPSY REPEALS wimp.' Wi MOUTH VS TOO I Doonesbury GET THIS, HONEY. STARTING NEXT I YEAR-TRUMP, KNOW.. ZHE6AME SHOW-' HB PICTAT5P TH5RUL5S TO m. THE OBJECT OF THE- IS TO SAY MR. TRUMPS NAME AS MANY TIMES AS PD5SI&L3. MEANWHILE, A SCANTILY CUS VIXEN PRANCES AROUND POINT ING AT PILES OFPRJZES. I CANT IMAGINE WHAT KIND OF IW MAN WOULD EVER AUDITION FOR SUCH A J03! rS? TM AS READY GLAMOROUS A5 I'LL EVER, KUMINC. op l v LA-Z-BOY! Shoe hMM Wflt, LIFE IM THE NINETIES pj X JlT W A )CVO MSM3E filP 7ff l SJMA & MOPE Yfl ' WITH tt&Om FAX MAJlWE.... Jh ELLIOTT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 FREE PARKING $3 nn ALL SHOWS BEGINNING WW BEFORE 6PM 3:20 5:20 20 20 T A M A M 1 EQ :0 0jLulssn :00 7ffUl WHIMS 7:00 9:00 Ml Casualties of War R 7:15, 9:30 The Abyss PG-13 7:00, 9:45 Coming Sept, 29 Midnight Late Shows featuring (tlonthy Python & the Holy Grail and The Lost Boys . ONLY $2,001 When Harry Mot Sally Nightly 7:009:00 (R) Sat & Sun Matinee 2:004:00 Dead Poets Society Nightly 7:159:40 (PG) Women's Soccer vs. Duke 2:00 p.m. FIN LEY FIELD Orxin Bobbins, Attorney at Law 13 968-1325 g f WINNER! BEST PICTURE Sat & Sun Matinee 2:204:40 P QQX, 1 wmv Kit icim ami smmi Millennium (po-i3) it u vv i (Clip this ad for a $50.00 discount on your fee.) D and videotape y 2:004:Q57:059:15 Friday 7:309:30 - - ysat tk sun iwaxinee z:jukjw AIM