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4 Boss' makes surprise appearance From Associated Press reports PRESCOTT, Ariz. Patrons at Man's Saloon couldn't believe their luck when rock superstar Bruce Spring steen arrived by motorcycle unan nounced, ordered a beer and wound up in a one-hour jam session with the house band. Springsteen drove up to the country western bar in northwest Arizona on Friday after traveling from Los Ange les. Denny Orr, rhythm guitarist for The Mile High Band, said he noticed Spring steen enter the bar and "the next thing I knew, he said, 'Come on, boys. Let's jam. Springsteen played "I'm On Fire" from his 1984 multi platinum Born in the USA album plus several covers of oldies such as "Don't Be Cruel," "Sweet Sixteen" and "Route 66," Orr said. The band asked him to play "Pink Cadillac," but Springsteen said he couldn t remember the words to his hit song. Springsteen, wearing a leather vest - and a bandana around his neck, "was having a good time, talking to the regu lars and drinking beer before word - spread and the bar's attendance swelled "from 7 or 8 people to 80 or 90 in 10 4 1 1 1 1 1 UiVJ) Vl a OUIU, 11 Tf VIII IIUlJi Jeff fnsserlv. a rennrter for the - - j - i . Prescott Courier who attended the impromptu show, said Springsteen . declined to be interviewed after the jam G.B. H WAS COURT DATE... unfc wmp whipping SmuS . . Calvin and Hobbes cALvm, I'm mum W PARENTS ABOUT tuis: w in me m HEM Doonesbury i ear the. TRUMP JOB! WR5IN TOWN TV SHOOT THE Shoe LX iBi - Wlr 'WtJ : r 1 rI 1 i f::::: BOOPSIE... B.P. i I HI. THE Daily Crossword by Fran Ragu: ACROSS 1 Ascot 6 Consent 12 Inamorato 13 Stock market items 14 Having jagged edges 15 Battlement 17 Joins forces 19 Listening 20 Onassls 23 Danson and Knight ' 24 Gossamer cloth 26 Govt. agts. 27 Possesses 28 Molding edge 29 Funny Chevy 30 Blot 31 Keeper of the keys 32 Fancy bottles 35 Joan or Tony 38 Send back 37 Precipitation 38 Key material 39 Musical direction 40 Circuit 43 Spooklsh 44 On edge 45 Radames' beloved 46 Surfing place 47 Daytime show 48 Beam 50 Wash 53 Issues a ticket to 54 Uncover 55 de menthe 56 Long-legged birds 57 Brief DOWN 1 Whodunit hero 2 Eye part 3 Shuns 4 Stops for a while 5 Without cost 6 Viper 7 Geraldine or Sydney 8 Seasonal lilts 9 Clear a tape 10 Div. 11 Comp. dir. 16 Tampico favorite 18 Beach 21 Kind of button 22 Lifeless 25 Author Leon 26 "Not my will, but , be done" session, but posed for photographers with a local biker before heading out of town. Springsteen ran from autograph seekers, jumped on his motorcycle and roared up U.S. Highway 89 trailed by his four bodyguards three on cycles and another in a van. First lady named honorary patron COLUMBUS, Ohio First lady Barbara Bush has agreed to serve as "honorary patron" for Ameriflora '92, a floral and garden exposition. Ameriflora Executive Director John Peterson said Saturday the White House had notified him that Mrs. Bush ac cepted the role for the internationally sanctioned event. Ameriflora '92 has been designated by the U.S. Christopher Columbus Quintentenary Jubilee Commission as the premier exposition during 1992. "It is fitting that the modern-day Columbian Exposition be held here in Columbus, the largest city in the world named after the great navigator," Pe terson said. Ameriflora '92 will open April 3, 1992, With a 17-day exposition fol lowed by a six-month outdoor festival April 20 through Columbus Day, Oct. Former L.A. mayor turns 80 LOS ANGELES Sam Yorty, who served three terms as mayor of Los Angeles, turned 80 Sunday, retired but CRYING IN GED , HEIHOUGHTIUNEVER WHILE CHEWING HIS NAILS-. y i AS HE STARTED Tt pipe down, ml wroz? HOBBES AND I CH HA&Dd frl'Dc KinrX UE1, IF 10VJ GO RENT US AMCR AND A MOVIE, WE'LL PUT THE SUPPOSED TO BE WATCHING TUE TV TELEVISION TV NEAR A WINDOW SOlOU IS- C&N thought t&v stay WITH YOU '! OF COURSE, YOU PONT HAVE ANY PONT ROOM! 1 T I . tin I 1989 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved 28 Lack of accent 29 Poem part 30 Frightening 31 Buffoon 32 French 33 Morning i reception 34 Not judgmental 35 Disallows 37 Nag 39 Conductor 40 Trash 41 Revokes (a legacy) 42 Sect member 44 Lone Ranger's sidekick 45 Flaming 47 Animal fat 49 Bank term: abbr. 51 Commercials 52 Just claims: abbr. certainly not shy and retiring. The Lincoln, Neb., native who still pronounces Los Angeles with a hard "G" said he has slowed down in his post-mayoral activities, which included occasional political speeches. "I still do some, but not too much anymore. I don't run myself ragged," said Yorty, who was in city hall from 1961 to 1973. He said he also keeps in touch with friends and former mem bers of his administration. Those friends don't include the cur rent mayor, Tom Bradley, whom Yorty says has "no ethics," or the Los Ange les Times, with which Yorty feuded regularly as mayor. He gets it delivered only on Sundays, and then only be cause "my wife likes the travel sec tion." Yorty said he did not plan a party for his 80th birthday. Burl Ives sells West Coast villa SANTA BARBARA, Calif. Folk singer Burl Ives and his wife, Dorothy, havesold their Mediterranean-style villa here and moved to Washington state. Ives, 80, has said he wanted to move away from the crowds and dry climate of Southern California. Ives said he could get more for his money in Washington, where he re cently paid a little more than $2 million for a shore front residence in Anacortes on Puget Sound, the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday. The Ives owned the 50-year-old Santa vitf' TUZHTy-TO-cNE SAYS 'REDS You'll Lc6l tueetl SwtAT. LET ME IN ARE (QM 18? YOU COULD GET OS 'VENUSIAN VAMPIRE VIXENS".' YJATC". TOO.1 BE SILLY 1 CIOILIAI lC0HDriRASH iiili-AIli ill. BJLi.XJLI.JLP.S LJLA.l ?lili lIJLiUIllii -,, -,--, i. 1 AjS P 1 IKE ii.IL 1 da r R A I I OVAL S C 0 W t Z F TTu MOM A 0 P 0 p sjf g R. ii ElWlE l" R 0 NIY m A 11 Ij -. , GNAT ... , MlElH TOR llToTOlHlVl IBIEIaISIsIuIrTeI LlOlUloMPlolPlTlHlElclolRlKl lili ALII HE REREAD fc- J 1 2 3 p Tg -8 R ja g ho 11 1 12 Ti 13 Ti ?ri 17 1 1 mmm" 20 21 22 23 25 28 27 2aT "" 29" "o" " "tr : 32 33 34 mmm 35" 38 "" "T" --J -4--. 38 """39 icT" 41 42 43 "ST ""T M 5?" 52'' 53 154 55 H I I I I 1 M I I I- Barbara house since 1974, when they bought it for $290,000. The couple reportedly sold it to a foreign buyer for $3.9 million. Milton Berle's home up for grabs BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. Enter tainer Milton Berle is selling the home he shared for 20 years with his wife, Ruth, who died in April. Berle is asking $4.39 million for the 60-year-old home, which is built on a large lot and has a cabana. The 5,200-square-foot house in cludes four bedrooms, a 60-foot-long living room, a library with a fireplace, and maids' quarters. Soviet boy awaits surgery in U.S. ROCHESTER, Minn. At 7, Igor Ladan is already about 6 feet tall and weighs 200 pounds. He's come thou sands of miles from his native Soviet Union in hopes doctors can remove a dangerous tumor from his skull and stop his abnormal growth. Mayo Clinic surgeons plan to re move a rare pituitary gland tumor from the boy doctors call a "pituitary giant." Igor and his mother, Svitlana Ladan, arrived here three weeks ago after she waged a worldwide letter-writing campaign from her native city of Kiev to find treatment for her son. The costs of the boy's care are being donated. "I was so happy, I nearly died," Ladan said last week through a transla tor. "People think 6 feet, not 6 years," said Nina Sahulenko, a relative from Phoenix who is translating for the Ladans. "But he's still a child. He likes to play. When there are children around, he will find those his own age." Like other kids, Igor loves apple juice and gum and bananas and ice cream, she said. And like other kids, he reveled in the surprise birthday party his new friends in Rochester had when he turned 7 recently. Igor is taking drugs to shrink the tumor from its tennis-ball dimensions 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 2 p.m.: The Study Abroad Office will hold an information session on St. Andrews, Scotland, in the basement of Caldwell Hall. 3:30 p.m.: The Study Abroad Office will hold an information session on Copenhagen, Denmark, in the base ment of Caldwell Hall. 4 p.m.: University Career Plan ning and Placement Services will hold Job Hunt 102: Resume Writing Work shop for seniors and graduate students in 210 Hanes Hall. The UNC Ski Team will practice in Kenan Stadium. Anyone interested in trying out for the snow ski team should be present. Newcomers are welcome. Call Jane for more info at 933-9572. "WILLIS IS PHENOMENAL." - Pat Collins, WWOR-TV IN COUNTRY The Story of a Family. R T? n m 7:00 & 9:15 nightly J?r 2:00 & 4:15 Flaza Sat.&Sun. matinee Midnight Late snows featuring Monty Python & the Holy Grail and Apocalypse Now IN COUNTRY Nightly 7:009:15 (R) Sat & Sun Matinee 2:004:15 Johnny Handsomo Nightly 7:309:30 R) Sat & Sun Matinee 2:304:30 When Harry Met Sally Nightly 7:309:30 W Sat & Sun Matinee 2:304:30 The Daily Tar Dm Arizona bar to a size that doctors hope will allow surgical removal in about three months. The benign but still dangerous tu mor at the base of his brain, as well as his unusual size, are caused by an over production of growth hormone by the pituitary gland. Igor seemed normal at birth, accord ing to the family, but by six months, he was the size of a 1 -year-old. At one year, he was equivalent to a 3 -year-old. When doctors in Kiev and Moscow had no treatment, Igor's mother wrote to the Red Cross in Switzerland, which advised her to write to doctors and hospitals in countries such as England and the United States. "There were times she thought it was the end of the world," said Sahulenko, who is staying with the Ladans in spe cial housing for children undergoing treatment at the clinic. But letter followed letter, inquiry after inquiry. "She is a mother," said Sahulenko. "What else could she do?" The glasnost-era easing of travel and other restrictions on Soviet citizens also helped, she said. "Otherwise he'd never be here." The family eventually was referred to the Mayo Clinic and Dr. Donald Zimmerman, a pediatric endocrinolo gist they now call "the miracle doc tor." Because the family lacks money and insurance, Zimmerman asked the clinic to absorb the costs of Igor's care, and a pharmaceutical house agreed to donate medicine. "People have been so good since the moment she stepped from the airplane," Sahulenko said. 'That is something wonderful in America." After the operation, radiation and follow-up drug therapy should com plete the removal of the tumor and stop the excess production of growth hormone, a Mayo Clinic spokeswoman said Sunday. Zimmerman said last week that the boy's overall health is good. Campus Calendar 6:15 p.m. S.E.A.C. will have a threshold conference meeting at the Campus Y. 7 p.m.: The Newman Catholic Stu dent Center will hold a Bible study session in 226 Union. All are welcome! The UNC Club Field Hockey plays Durham on the Astroturf Field. Come early to warm up. 8 p.m.: Graduate Students United meet in 21 1 Union. Up to your ears in debt? Do something about it! ITEMS OF INTEREST The IM-REC Aerobics Program needs to know if there is a demand for a TuesdayThursday 5 p.m. aerobics class in Lenoir. Lenoir offers carpet ing, air conditioning and beverages. If you would like to see this started, please come by 203 Woollen during the week of Oct. 2 to Oct. 6 to sign up. 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 is 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 I 'ADCITV EAST FRANKLIN I I " r vnnf-cL hill wrooos i "ONE OF THE BEST OF 1989!" J A 1 Sex. WINNER' BEST PICTURE I V J (' sisi it w ws iMMi SI m lies, UNKSfiMftsmniwiy and videotape t- ?J exclusive! J K 2:00 4:05 7.-05 9:15 ft -MMMMBrf .7W The Abyss (PG-13) 7:00, 9:35 Sea of Love (R) 7:15, 9:45 VOLLEYBALL RC STATE 7:30PM CARMICHAEL AUDITORIUM HeelMonday, October 2, 19899 Million-dollar wedding present BRAINTREE, Mass. The wed ding present Linda Baldwin is getting from the state lottery isn't just anotjier coffee-maker. s Baldwin, 3 1 , of Braintree was one of three winners in Saturday's Megabucks drawing. Her winning ticket will: be good for $1,065,960, or $53,298 ejich year before taxes, lottery spokesman Dave Ellis said. The total jackpot was $3,197,880. , 'This is really going to make a-big difference in our lives," Ellis quotea Baldwin as saying. She is to be married next Sunday. She told Ellis her husband-to-be was traveling in Maine and she could not immediately reach him with the good news. Taking a chance on cow-pies ; UNION, 111. It was banned as bac) taste in Marengo, but organizers deter mined to let the chips fall where they may did just that in a cow-pie contest complete with cheerleaders urging on the bovine contestants. .; ; The idea of people wagering on the wanderings and droppings of a cow was too much for Marengo Mayor Richard Baker, who vetoed plans to hold the contest in the northern Illinois town as a fund-raiser for Marengo's annual Settlers' Days. Organizer Bob Begora was un daunted "Every party has its pooper," he said. So he got permission to hold the contest Saturday at the Seven Acres Antique Village & Museum, in nearby Union. There were no party poopers at the contest, where about 250 people watched from bleachers as one cow at a time wandered a grid marked off in 100 3-foot-by-3-foot squares, Begora said. ! "You put the names (of the ticket holders) on the square and if the cow poops on your square you win $ 1 ,250,' Begora said. "On the third drop it landed on a line, so we split the prize." " stitute of Japan, a Japanese language school, call (213)617-2039 or write to: A Non-Profit Educational and Cul tural Service jl Japanese-American Cultural and Community Center 244 S. San Pedro St., STE.305 k Los Angeles, Calif. 900 1 2 1. 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 from1 UNC, NCSU, NCCU and Duke to be sent to NPOs. Hanes Art Center Glass Gallery:; There will be a group exhibition of artworks featuring The Fine Arts De partment Faculty of Wake Forest Uni versity. The show will run through Oct! 20,1989. .'- 7 ELLIOTT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 . FREE PARKING OH ALL SHOWS BEGINNING N.UU BEFORE 6PM PG-13 IM- tmtr cmutmot WW, n.MT Mei GibsonDanny Glover . IJIHALpAP0N2 250 He's II MOr 7:15 1455 crude.! A Clt 1.11 NN."- Nl I. ,lllIM..,lll,,l. .1 Ml, II .111.11, I 1 1 frflWCSTflSSSt
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 2, 1989, edition 1
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