The Daily Tar HeelThursday, September 21, 19899 QH)ssof need yjKeDEnsninig DTH Health 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. INTERESTED IN SCOUTING? We need a volunteer assistant leader for small giri-scout troop. We meet Tues. at 2:40 at Frank Porter Graham Elementary School. Please call Sara at 9236351. 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 f panel discussion for students with diabetes Wed Sept 20.7-830prn Health Education Conference Koom 2nd floor. Student Health Service. For info: 966-6562 Volunteering DID YOU WISH for a Big Sister wnen you were growing up? You can make an adolescent's wish come true by volunteering for women's Health Resources' "Side-ey-Side" program. Volunteers will work with at-risk" adolescent girls aged 16-19. All it takes is 2 nSweek. Interested women should call WHR at 968-4646. Training begins in Sept. 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 12:30 p.m.: The Institute for Re search in Social Science will hold "Multilevel Multivariate Linear Struc tural Models" with Roderick McDonald of McQuarie University in Sydney, Australia, in 02 Manning Hall until 1 :45 p.m. 3:30 p.m.: University Career Plan ning and Placement Services will hold Job Hunt 103: Interviewing Skills Workshop in 209 Hanes Hall. UCPPS will hold a Career Planning Workshop for freshmen through jun iors in 210 Hanes Hall. 5 p.m.: Delta Upsilon will have a Beat State Party featuring The Andrew Tosh Band at the Delta Upsilon House until 1 1 p.m. Proceeds for this party go to the Ronald McDonald House. The Christian Science Organiza tion will meet in 206 Union. The Phoenix Student Newsweekly will begin work on its first issue in 108 Union. All potential staff please attend! The 1990 Carolina Symposium: A Question of Ethics will meet in 205 Union. Anyone interested in helping to Conference From Associated Press reports BOSTON It was billed as a gath ering of world-renowned intellectuals tackling the loftiest of subjects and perhaps coming up with a metaphor for our times. But while participants in the mod estly named Conversazioni on Culture and Society considered changes in the Soviet Bloc, the influence of religion in world events and cultural illiteracy, the larger assignment proved elusive. "Everybody was satisfied, but no final metaphor, alas, emerged," said Bernard Levin, chief columnist for The Times of London. In an introduction to the conference, Claudio Veliz, a conference host, noted such past "eloquent and economical" tags as "Roaring 20s," "Neo-Gothic," and even "Cold War," but lamented that,, "today we are encumbered with 'post-industrial' and 'post-modern,' usages as illuminating as 'post-life' is for death or 'post-oats' for porridge." Levin, one of many academics, his THE Daily Crossword by Louis Sabin ACROSS 1 To-do 5 Lively dance 10 Darn it! 14 Hang out 15 Actress Massey 16 Needle case 17 Vicinity 18 Indy action 20 Velocipedes 22 Kovacs 23 Chihuahua cheers 24 Lurches 26 Mideast bigwig 29 Weeds 30 Dean or Duck 31 Jargon 32 Poky 36 A Gabor 37 Lecherous 38 "A Chorus Line" song 39 Croat's neighbor 41 Follow 42 Swiftly 44 Boot country 46 Smoothed wood 47 Crosstown trip 50 Scorch 51 Stage remark 52 Do axels etc. 56 De Niro film 59 "Prince" 60 Cyma recta 61 Peace goddess 62 Verne captain 63 Loch 64 Assigned 65 Plugs DOWN 1 Dieter's woe 2 McNeil of tennis 3 Guinness of London 4 Championship series 5 Boring tool 6 Bitter drug 7 Plenty 8 Yoko 9 Stock word 10 Hold back 11 Seeing eye to eye 12 City on the Po 13 Locations 19 Waterless 21 All once 24 Valentine's Day gift 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. Personals AL AND HERBERT- mlschevious grey kitten has the tools and the techniques if you have the oppos able thumbs. Contact Leiko. AMW. WHO'S GOING to clean the s off you now? Remember, what goes around comes aroundl ABAD. Campus Calendar organize this two-week long spring event is welcome! 5:30 p.m.: The Association of In ternational Students will meet in 208 209 Union. We will be shagging (American style). Come ready to dance. Everyone is welcome! 5:45 p.m.: The Baptist Student Union will hold its weekly meeting at the Battle House across from Kenan Dorm. The meeting will be a worship service led by students speaking on topics of their choice. For more info call 942-4266. 6 p.m.: The Project Literacy Adult Basic Education Program of the Campus Y will have an important ori entation meeting at the Y Building. The University Counseling Center will have an initial meeting of "BROTH ERS" discussion group for and about black male students at UNC in Chase Hall upstairs lounge until 7:30 p.m. For more info call 962-2175. 6:30 p.m.: Amnesty International will hold a letter writing and human rights discussion at the Chapel of the Cross. Cookout if weather permits. The Student Homeless Outreach Coalition (SHOC) will have an organ izational meeting in Gardner 208. All interested please attend. The director of the Chapel Hill Homeless Shelter will speak about the homelessness in Chapel Hill. 7 p.m.: The Murdoch Committee of the Campus Y will have its first meeting in the Campus Y lounge until 8 p.m. Anyone is welcome to attend. The Equestrian Club will meet in 209 Union. Team members will be announced and films on USET and women riders will be shown. The Campus Y Hunger Elimina tion Project will show a UNICEF film on hunger in Third World countries. Anyone interested in encouraged to come! Plans regarding the Community Kitchen will be discussed following tries to put label on '80s torians and others who joined a debate of world issues, did not seem defeated by the group's failure to write a tag line for the closing years of the 20th cen tury. "The whole idea is that we thrash out these things," he said. The third annual conference, held this year at Boston University, brought together such thinkers as former presi dential advisor Arthur Schlesinger Jr., Cambridge University professor Ernest Gellner and noted French historian Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie to work on "A Metaphor for Our Times." The conference invited about 60 top thinkers. I don't think the idea of the metaphor was ... built into the idea," Levin said. "It was just a way of saying, 'What do we think of our condition?' " In his presentation, Levin pointed to the drug epidemic, the collapse of form in the arts and "the old certainties van ishing and nothing being put in their place" to coin "The Age of Disorder." 1989 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved 25 Ostentatious 26 Picnic drinks 27 Great review 28 Yonder 29 US Chief Justice 31 Kind of TV 33 Bank deal 34 Tale opener 35 Unwelcome growth 37 "The Not Taken" 40 Eagles' kin 42 Woeful word 43 Driver's test item 45 Knotted 46 Squinted 47 Wand 48 Application 49 Rangers and Devils 50 Public quarrel 52 Singer Burl ' 53 Author James 54 Heavy reading 55 Mythical matchmaker 57 Kid 58 A Gershwin HEATHER, DON'T GO! Please stay! We'll miss you! Love, Kelly, Kim, Tammera, Ellen, Nick, Grant, Jennifer, Dianne, and Stephanie. J.C. BYRD from Fayetteville. Where are you? Long time no see! Curious to know more? Respond DTH D. Char. KRISTEN. Feeling homesick? Miss mom's home cooking? Meet me at Linda's ll:30am-2:30pm or 5pm 9pm. John. ANGIE, you're right. You really are the "Head B ." Sorry time was wasted on you. You are no friend. Deepest regrets; A.B.A.D. BUY IT. SELL IT. FIND IT. CLASSIFIED. the film. The UNC Outing Club will meet in 205 Union. 7:30 p.m.: The UNC Bridge Club will have an informal game in the Union. Anyone interested is welcome. Call 933-8642 for more info. 8 p.m.: Chimera presents a panel of professors on Life in the 21st Century. Ten years, three months, two weeks and counting... In the Frank Porter Graham Lounge of the Union. 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 on Monday, Tues day and Wednesday nights. The UNC Great Decisions Coordi nating Committee applications are available in the office of International Programs in 207 Caldwell Hall. UCPPS is collecting 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. Auditions for the UNC Pauper Play ers production of "Grease" will be held from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Sept. 25th in Person Recital Hall. Actors, singers and dancers prepare one song (accom panist provided) and one monologue. Questions? Call Scott Gold or Angela Coin: 933-2881 or 933-2968. The points he raised provoked con siderable discussion and, he said, a degree of accord, particularly his posi tion that cultural literacy would some day return. "I had said that our time is the only one that would in fact try to define .itself," he added. "Obviously any era, the 'Dark Ages,' the 'Age of Enlight enment,' is not called that when it happens. "We're the first age to try and define itself right now, rather than waiting for history." American economist Walt Rostow talked of the European Community's plans for dropping border restrictions in 1992 and offered "The Age of Re gionalism." Veliz, a professor at La Trobe Uni versity in Melbourne, Australia, fo cused on the domination of the English language and English culture through out the world. He noted how soccer, or English football, is played throughout the world. K I A 1 8 I U I L I C I A R I L 1 R 1 1 ImTsI J IIDIE1SI JLlAlTf IPlFl C A N N O N MM I IS ISl 1 S I E I E I D t i P 1 0 1 0 1 R I IoIxIeIyIfI i 5 3 3 I is IS p i 9 I 110 I11 I12 I13 14 15 16 17 18 iT" 20 21 22 23 """ 24 25 26 27"" a" 29" 30 " 31 3""" 34 35 38 37 38 39 40 I 41 ! """" 42 43 7i 45 " " 46 47 48" 49 "" 50 ' 51 52 53 54 55" 56 57 1 58 59 60 " 61 62 63 64 """"" 65 nr!rAQfi When paying by VISA or MasterCard: 1. Call Us! 962-0252 Minimum credit card charge is $5.00 isssssm We reserve the right to reject or edit advertising deemed objectionable, of questionable legality or discriminatory. Train crash lives in man's mind From Associated Press reports CLAREMONT J. E. "Jake" Smyre won't ever forget the morning of Sept. 19, 1949. The 87 -year-old Claremont resident still has vivid memories of that morn ing when Southern Railway passenger train No. 15 left Salisbury and came speeding through Newton, resulting in one of the worst train wrecks in Catawba County's history. Smyre, who worked with the rail way mail and is the only member of the train crew still living, said the train left Salisbury around 3 a.m. Approximately 5:20 a.m., the train came within three blocks of the depot in Newton but failed Arrest reminded actress From Associated Press reports BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. Ac tress Zsa Zsa Gabor testified tearfully Wednesday that she screamed for her life when she was arrested by a motor cycle policeman, saying it reminded her of the German Gestapo of her youth. "I was screaming, 'Help, help, help! ' " Gabor said during her second day of testimony in the trial in which she is accused of slapping the officer. "I was afraid of the police. They were going to shoot me." Gabor, a Hungarian beauty queen before World War II who is believed to be in her late 60s, wore the same outfit including a brightly flowered, knee length skirt with petticoats to court Igmee Calvin and Hobbes TUttS ANlMMS AS SO SOFT AND ScAETMES THE WORLD SEEMS LIKE A. PRETPf MEAN PLACE. Doonesbury GOSH, DON'T B5, I'M SO NtRVOUS. Rg SIP! TO EMPTY YUUKMINU Shoe rrr Chf VeHOOSE, AWOWT TM $HiH'? T don't tellUsI i 1 rivi yy okay... M r FACE IT, ?e2FE0eft ( TUP A?0 ALM0T ffCMaco WPiu ( When paying by CHECK or MONEY ORDER: (Sorry, no cash is accepted) 1. Come by Suite 104, Carolina Union. 2. Enclose payment in envelopes provided and drop in slot on door to DTH suite. RATES (for up to 25 words) individs., students, UNC 1 day $3.00 2 days $4.50 3 days $5.60 4 days $6.45 5 days $7.25 $0.50dayover5 SPECIALS: Bolding: $1day Boxing: $1day HEADUNES: this is 1 0 this is 12 point $2day the above rates apply to to make the horseshoe curve at Rowe's Crossing. The train carried nearly 40 passen gers plus several crew members. Thirty four passengers were injured, some critically, and three crew members were killed. "It's miraculous that half the people didn't get killed," Smyre said. Smyre said the crew left Salisbury after eating breakfast together. He had thrown off mail in several locations, including Catawba and Claremont. Symre said the train made the run from Catawba to Claremont in four minutes flat, whereas it usually took the train slightly more than five minutes to travel that she wore June 14, the day she was arrested. In a trial costing taxpayers $2,000 a day in court expenses, Gabor testified that during her arrest she was hand cuffed and "plunked down" on the curb next to her Rolls Royce convert ible. 'They don't give a damn about me. I was sitting on the floor half nude,' ' she testified. Gabor is charged with battery on a police officer, disobeying an officer's orders, driving with an expired license and having an open container of alco hol in her car a flask of Jack Daniels whiskey in the glove compartment.She denied threatening to "call the Re agans" or demand that Officer Paul 9-2i 2. Businesses: 1 -5 days $6.00day 6 -10 days $5.10day 11 -20 days $4.60day 21 or more days $4.35day point $ 1 day this is 1 4 point $3day consecutive insertions only that distance. At that time crew members suspected trouble. Smyre said that when the wreckage was probed, the throttle was found to have been frozen at 94 miles per hour. .The two engines jumped the track and took with them the Railway Post Office car, two storage mail cars, one Railway Express car, one baggage passenger car and the dining car. Six pullman and coach cars remained up right on the track and rolled to a stop near the depot. Smyre said the impact of one car against another did most of the damage and caused most of the injuries. of Gestapo Kramer be fired, and she called untrue allegations that she cursed Kramer during what she called a traumatic experience. "I recall somebody chasing me like the Gestapo wanted to shoot me ... don't forget my grandmother was killed ... it's still in my blood." Gabor admitted Tuesday that she scuffled with 6-foot-4-inch Kramer after he pulled her over for having expired license tags. But she said she acted in self-defense, giving him more of a pat than a slap. "Gabor stepped out of the witness box and lightly slapped Graysen to demonstrate. "I'm not stu pid to hit a man with a gun in my face,' she said. :. IAJBLL, I'M FORHOU) 60INQ TO ASK FOR A 3-Y3AR CONTRACT. LONQ? I 1