Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 27, 1991, edition 1 / Page 7
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The Daily Tar HeelWednesday, February 27, 19917 5ttfp iailu QlarBM CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Lost & Found ST: AMETHYST tennis bracelet, very sentimental! Reward plus good conscience if returned. Call 967 35 please! FOUND: Black leather gloves In VE JCIairrAintudent Union. LOST: Blue, canvas floppy disk hold er with disks inside at the Health Sciences Library on 221. Call Lee SGJIMS If found. LOST: BROWN MEN'S WALLET with sneltie puppy picture, on 7:42 "P bus or near Fetter gym stop. Tuesday a.m. Please call Chris M.. 962-5481. THANKS LOST: SET OF KEYS on North Campus. Has a penguin-shaped key chain. Need keys for transportation, office. Jon. 967-9638. LOST & FOUND ADS Run free in the Daily Tar Heel CLASSI FIEDS. LOST ADS run 6e for 3 days (up to 23 words) FOUND ADS run free for 3 days (up to 25 words). We ask thai you pay for any extra words and boxing, holding & headlines. Services NOTARY PUBLIC $1 per signature. On campus, by appt only. Call Leslie 962-0372. ABORTION - To 20 weeks. Private & confidential GYN facility wSat & weekday appts avail. Pain medication given. Free pregnancy tests. 942-0824. Services Thru April 15 222 New Carroll Hall Wednesdays 3:30-5:00 April 1 & 8 5:00-7:00 Sponsored by MACS A Services PREGNANT? NEED HELP? Free preg nancy testing & counseling. All ser vices confidential. Call PSS. 942 7318. Sat. appointments available. Word Processing HATE TYPING? Let me do It. Call 967-0583 for fast, professional ser vice on Macintosh PC. MA in English, familiarity with MLA styles. Ask for Cindy. . IJbmcmxdk (Bio 00 (HfOliO Tutoring ECONOMICS TUTOR with 5 years experience offers patient help in Econ 10. 190. 100. 101. $12 per hour. Call 942-4813. Group rates available. DTH Classifieds 9am-5pm 962-0252 (VISA & MasterCard) or 104 Carolina Union Health ! m Iflff i : ''Jj IQUICKI ICASHl 1 I 1 I 0 1 I i I I 1 i I I SELL your Used Stuff! wheels, skis, bike locks, books, stereos, tape decks, computers, VCRs, microwaves, skateboards, sports equipment, etc. DTH Classif ieds .962-0252. 9am-5pm (VIS AMasterCard: . . $5.00 minimum) or 104 CaroWna Union DTH Classifieds Office Hours: 9am to 5pm each day the Univeristy holds classes. 962-0252 S3 Outstanding Each recognized student organization is invited to nominate one Senior member. Nominees should not urite their own nomination forms. DUE Friday, March 22 in 19 Steele Building. Contact Nathalie Mayenge through Senior Class Office, 962-1991 for more information. SBUIDRS CAROLINA Instruction MCAT, LSAT, GRE, GMAT takers alert. Find out about valuable dis counts on Stanley Kaplan's courses. Call Nikki at 919-282-8599 or visit UNC's Learning Skills Center. SELF DEFENSE for Women. Yoga. Taiji. Healthy Cooking. Tarot I. These classes and more at the Community Wholistic Health Center. Starting March. Call 929 1132 for registration, free catalog, information on memberships and scholarships! Personals THE FOLLOWING FOLKS HAVE EARNED T-SHIRTS FROM THE DAILY TAR HEEL CLASSIFIEDS: Please pick up by February 28 or contact Leslie at 962-0252. Tim Branscome. Alex Burnett. Delia Chambless. Justine Chase, Jerri Franco. Robin Lowe. Daniel Metvin, Cindy Motzke. Ronald Sher, Shirley Stahman. Eric Tippit. Romas Valtkus. NOW HAVING MONO CAN PAY OFF! MAKE $50 RIGHT NOW! Sera-Tec Biologicals, 942-0251. ARE YOU WILUNG TO TEAR up the coasts of Alaska, California. Florida and North Carolina for only a two year oil supply? SEAC invites you to write letters to George Bush. The Pit 10-2 daily. Personals BROWN BOY with thunder- thighs still savoring long weekend with H.B.H.E. red- head. AY CARAMBAI Looking forward to next rendez-vous in March. DANCING HOMER Come on out and do your stuff. You can now rest easy and leave the poor mailman alone. Congrats and HERE'S TO YOU. SAINT JUDE. FOREVER GRATEFUL SAINT JUDE NOVENA. May the Sacred Heart of Jesus be loved, adored, glorified, and preserved throughout the world, now and forever. 0. Sacred Heart of Jesus, pray for us. Saint Jude, helper of the hopeless, pray for us. Say this prayer 9 times a day and your prayers will be granted by the eighteenth day. It has never been known to fail. Publication must be promised. Project literacy I Awareness I WEDNESDAY Book Drive Triangle Student Literacy Forum at 7pm Han es Art Center (Exchange of specific ideas on how to fight illiteracy in the Triangle area) THURSDAY T-ShirtDay Visit Us in the Pit! FRIDAY Did you know that 23 million Americans are functionally illiterate? cause itorj ya gut no iciigE9 it's only $2 in the DTH Classifieds. Whaddya think they're gonna think when they don't get one? You aren't cheap are ya? 104 Carolina Union 962-0252 History from page 1 The memo stated, "... we are likely to lose about 20 TA and RA positions as well as some part-time instructorships.... As of now all I can say is that we will be cutting some positions and that most of our TAs will probably be used as graders rather than receptors." Cell was out of town Tuesday Cindy Hahamovitch, a history graduate student, said the cuts would have aprofound effect on the department and the quality of classes taught. "With no hands-on education, no discussion, you might as well be in high school.. It would be devastating." One-third of the TA positions would be cut, she said. Behrends said lapsed salary money had become an important part of the department's salaries. "When faculty members leave the University, the sal ary money goes back to the dean, and then a share of the money comes back to the department," he said. Because of budget cuts, a larger part of this lapsed salary money is used now for University needs, he said. Stephen Birdsall, associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, said every department faced cuts in lapsed salary money. The projected figures for lapsed salary money were included in budgets issued by the College of Arts and Sciences to each department for the 1991-1992 school year, he said. Each department will decide how to handle the cuts and issue a report to the College of Arts and Sciences explain ing how it plans to allocate funds during 1991-92, Birdsall said. The number of teaching positions lost by each depart ment will vary and will be based on several factors, including the department's other monetary resources, previous spending patterns, and teach- Classes ing responsibilities, he said. Joseph Flora, English department chairman, said keeping teaching assis tants would be an important priority for the English department. from page 1 Arts and Sciences is losing about one third of its lapsed salary funding, he said. Certain undergraduate curricula, including women's studies and public policy analys, are losing about 70 per cent, he said. Gillian Cell, dean of the College of Calvin and Hobbes fffe DAME. SAID SUE. HAD A CASE. SUE SOOHCtO LIKE A CASE UERSELF. BUT I CANT CUOOSt CUEHTS. 3 SUE WAS TUE TUE KM) HUO'O BREAK. HOOR. HEART, OR MMBE HOUR ARMS.' I WORRIED CMER. I EITUER. 5UE UM A PSYCHOTIC DECORATOR., OR UER PLACE UM BEE.H RAUSACfcED BH 5oVECE N A BIG WRKf . YI01? UOH DO QCXOO EXPLMH TUAS? I 5v 7W DAME MS lvV USSTERCAL. Doonesbury GWP AFTERNOON, PEOPLE AT THE- PRESENT Tim. I'M MAJOR 5. "BUZZ" FOOG, ANP THIS IS THE SECTOR JPRBSePOOLBUS... V m'R5 60IN6 TOTKYTO CATCH UP WITH A CAVUNIT, ANP HERB ARB TH5 6ROUND RULBS -NO QUESTIONS ABOUT ACTIONS, CASUALTIES, MORALE OR. fVSmONS! ESPECIALLY POSITIONS! PONT ASK TO SEETHE HELP COM -MANP! NOR ARTILLERY BAT TERIES! NOR THEAIPSTA- TION, NOR LOOKOUT POSTS! VT UM...H0W ABOUT THE IATRNE ITS BEEN ALONG RIPE. NEGATIVE. THE ENEMY WOULP LOME TO CATCH US WITH OUR PANTS POWN! 7 I Shoe WPRCUtT Ve&C$ T2? MAKE TUB. T?UH M lJr iT HF THE Daily Crossword by Hank Harrington 1991 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved ACROSS 1 It. wine center 5 A Bombeck 9 Create 13 Park, CO 14 Cruel 15 People 16 Funny film trio 19 Listen 20 Completes 21 Take potshots 22 Ailment 24 Estimate 25 Chicago athlete 27 Gershwin or Levin 28 Bric-a 29 Demonstrators 32 Footless 36 Thickening agents 37 Debt note 38 Steeple 39 trap for. (try to catch) 40 "Still small voice within" 42 Drat cousin 44 Layer 45 Corn unit 46 Wretchedness 49 On the water 51 Aromatic plant 52 Seed coat 53 Indian 56 Funny film trio 59 Forum wear 60 Lily plant 61 Singer Delia 62 Br. gun 63 Towel word 64 Aide: abbr. DOWN 1 Tennis notable 2 Fulton's brainchild 3 Aquarium fish 4 Somewhat: suff. 5 Textual improvement 6 Tall and thin 7 Bulk 8 Singer Adam 9 Lunar painting 10 Actress Dickinson 1 1 Provides for 12 Curves 13 Number suffux 17 Raises 18Thessaly peak 23 Is situated 24 poetica 25 Auditors 26 Craving 28 Dry-season problems 30 Skilled worker 31 Ages 33 Forest flora 34 Killer whale 35 Antlered animal 38 Chinese: pref. 40 wolf (raise a false alarm) 41 Orchestra member 43 Length times width 46 Dillon and Helm 47 water (having trouble) 48 Blockade 49 Ann 50 Yearns 52 Wheel shaft 54 Once once 55 Natives: suff. 57 Stadium sound 58 la la i 13 ja R is 16 17 s I 19 ho In I12 13 14 Ti Ti 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 IT" " " 44 """" 45 46 47 48 .. " 49 . 50 2 " 53 54 55 56 " " 57 sT" 59 60 '. 61 62 " 63 64 Arts and Sciences, was out of town Tuesday. Stephen Birdsall, associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, said a meeting was held Thursday between Cell and all faculty chairmen and chair women to discuss the impact of possible budget cuts for the upcoming school year. "This year, because the budget pic ture for 1991-92 does not look good at all, we decided to have a meeting to talk about the reductions that were likely to Indict be necessary to have realistic budgets for next year," Birdsall said. The departments have not responded yet, so the number of class sections that will be eliminated is not yet known, Birdsall said. Lawrence Gilbert, chairman of the biology department, said between five and eight biology sections would be cut if the budget problem did not improve. "There will be about 300 students who will not be able to take general biology ," Gilbert said. "Majors may not be able to get their classes in time for -graduation. It is getting worse. Next . year looks like it may be the worst time , ' ever." David Galinsky, psychology depart- . ment chairman, said about 1 2 psychol ogy sections would be cut for both the fall and the spring. Charles Briscoe, physics and as tronomy assistant chairman, said his department was trying to find alterna tives to section cuts, such as combining classes. from page 1 case depends on the individual." Carl Fox, the district attorney for Orange and Chatham counties, said now that Smith has been federally indicted, the state may drop its charges. "The likelihood is that the common law robbery charges will be dropped," he said. Crime Richards said the delay between Smith's arrest and the charges made by the FBI can be attributed to the court system. "The grand jury doesn't meet every week," he said. Tuesday was the first day the Smith case could be heard since his arrest, Richards said. from page 1 center desk drawer, Perry said. If people lock valuables in a file cabinet, usually they put the key in their desk, often on the right hand side, Perry said. "That's the kind of thing we want people to look out for," Perry said. Students and administrators should lock all valuables in a safe area and make sure the keys are not in an acces sible place, Perry said. Lt. Barry Thompson of the Chapel Hill Police Department said he did not know of any recent thefts involving stolen checkbooks and check cashing. Larry Ellis, crime prevention officer at N.C. State, said one similar incident had been reported there. In that inci dent, checks were stolen out of a pock etbook and cashed. The police depart ment is working with the bank to in vestigate the report. Detective Charles Nordan of the Duke University Police Department said there had been no change recently in the number of thefts on campus. Wallets and checkbooks are occasionally stolen at Duke, but nothing unusual has oc curred lately, he said. The FBI files charges against anyone who attempts to rob a bank that is in sured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Company, Richards said. "If it's FDIC insured, then the FBI is coming," he said. Smith has a history of arrests, in cluding several misdemeanor and lar ceny charges. He was arrested for armed robbery Sept. 28, but the case was dis missed Nov. 9. Thompson said Smith was presently being held in the Orange County Jail on a $100,000 bond. 2:20 4:30 7:20 9:30 7:009:15 Nightly (PG-13) Cat p. cn it a 1 4nA-nn , "" w J Sleeping With The Enemy 7:009:15 (PG) Sat & Sun Hat 1:454:30 HO OH COUFOHt J The Silence of the Lambs 7:309:45 Nightly (R) 2:004:15 Sat. & Sun. Matinee ia GREEN CARD 7 : BETTE MIDLER PODY ALLEN Irnnn i urn J! MUM A lllALL Maiiakakis' Restaurant e? Bakery A Chapel Hill Favorite! Wendy, family-owned restaurant serving superb Greek Italian dishes handmade pizza beer wine desserts &. pastas large groups welcome &. Party Facilities Serving Mon.-Sat. 1 1 am-9 pm Dyrass, nexi 10 tosigaie onoppirig N-cuici v 942-1453968-8610(Across from the Holiday Inn) 4 n f :SyG9 a 0 Would you like $56.00 in just two weeks? A few Q hnnrs nt vour time donating Dlasma could make D this possible & be eligible for a $100 cash drawing! Tlmi -La 0! Mil SERA-TEC BroiOmCALS 1D9 V2 E. FRANKLIN ST. (abwe Rn&AKJ) 942-0251 (New donors and any donor who has not donated within the past 30 days.) U NOTHING BUT TROUBLE 3:105:107:109:00 PG-13 b VWMINBt BROS. m. A TIME toRNU COMPANY 3:00 The Never Ending Story n 7:oo mm, jt 40 poo dSfBsx o 9b 00 oob '&&f&nmj Myth 2: You must be rich to study abroad Truth: Many students receive financial aid at UNC Study Abroad. If you currently receive scholarships, grants andor guaranteed student loans, you can take that money with you abroad. You can also apply for guaranteed student loans to cover the additional costs of study abroad. Special study abroad scholarships and grants are available to you also. It's not too late to study abroad next fall! Come to 12 Caldwell Hall for more information. m i A a
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 27, 1991, edition 1
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