2The Daily Tar HeelTuesday, April 7, 1992 Cagey No. 18th-ranked Tigers at By Mary Lafferty Staff Writer . The tiger looked up. The freedom it had gained through achieving the No. 18 spot in the country was gone. All it saw around it was bars. It had been . caged. Undercloser scrutiny, it saw that , the cage was made of tennis strings. , Carolina blue tennis strings ... . Yep, the UNC men's tennis team , triumphed again. Clemson visited the Sales and Marketing Opportunity with the nation's leader in college marketing and media services Excellent Financial Rewards Learn management skills and marketing strategies while implementing on-campus promotions. Flexible hours. Great beginnings for a career in the business world start with a position with American Passage Media Corp. during the 1 992 93 school year. Visit the table in the Student Union on April 10, 8:30 am - 4:00 pm Free Restaurant Delivery We will bring lunch or dinner from local restaurants, right to your door. Sal's Pizza Giant Egg Roll Bentley's $10 minimum Elliott Station Time Out Mario's for free delivery MON THUR 4:00 10:00 11:00 FRI&SAT 2:00 (lunch) and 4:00- 3 12oz. Cokes for 99 Expires May 1, 1992 jExpires May Its Time The Apple Loan-To-Own Program Makes It More Affordable To Buy Your Own Apple Macintosh In April. With your parents' help, owning your own Apple Macintosh computer may be easier than you think. Qualifying students, parents borrowing on behalf of students, and faculty and staff members with an annual salary of at least $ 1 5,000 can purchase a Macintosh Classic II, a Mac LC Bundle or a variety of Apple products using the Apple Computer Loan-To-Own Program in April. As a student, you'll be able to defer payments up to 48 months, making interest-only payments until 30 days after you graduate or leave school. Interest rates are surprisingly low, and you can take up to eight years to repay." So pick up an Apple Loan application at the UNC RAM Shop in Student Stores and talk to your folks about it. You (and Mom and Dad) might be closer to owning an Apple Macintosh than you think. The intrreit ratf it the image of the higher of the 30-day or 90-day commercial paper mesas reported in the Wall Street Journal, plui a spread of 4.35. Aftet June 30, 1992, the iptead may inctcatt if program costs increase, but will not exceed 5.6; existing borrowers would be notified at least 30 days in advance. The loan may be prepaid at any time without penalty. For the month of October, 1 99 1 , the fate was 1 0.068 with an annual percentage rate of 1 1. 4035 This rate would fetuli in monthly payments of$!8.8i lot evety $ 1 00 borrowed. The total finance charge for each S 1 ,000 borrowed would be $442.87. If you elect to defer principal payment! for 4 years, the APR on your loan would 1 1 .0327. Your monthly payments during the deferment period will be S8.28, and your first monthly payment of principal and interest will be $29.67 per every $ 1 ,000 borrowed. The total finance charge on every S 1 ,000 you borrow will be $647.24. The interest rate is subject to increase after you have received the loan. Each applicant pays a 520.00 non-refundable application fee. Approved borrowers will be charged a4 loan origination fee. Loan applications after June 30, 1992, may be subject to a higher loan origination Ire. The loan origination fee will be added to the requeued loan amount and repaid over the life of the loan. 0 1 99 1 Apple Computer, Inc. Apple, the Apple logo, and Macintosh ate registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. 7 men's tennis traps No. 7 Tar Heels Monday at the UNC Tennis Center. The match was previ ously set for last Saturday, but was postponed due to bad weather. The Ti gers returned to Chapel Hill and lost to the Tar Heels 7-2. The win pushed the Tar Heels to 1 8 4, 5-0 in the ACC. The Tigers plum meted to 10-8,3-3. The men made a clean sweep of the singles matches no Tar Heel dropped a set. The first match of the day was won J U Gourmet Phone 929-5005 SUN 11:00 -2:00 (lunch) 4:00-9:30 -10:30 f 6 pack 15 off any order I Cokes of $20 or more I j$all I (good between 4-6 Sar-M.jr . pm, 9-1 0pm) 1, 1992 Expires May 1, 1992j To TeUlfour home, 7-2 Sunday, so to speak. UNC's Chris Mumford matched up with Clemson's Mike Williams Saturday and was up one set when the match was postponed. Williams was injured at Duke Sunday, and couldn't play Monday. Mumford won by default. Tar Heels 1 , Tigers 0. Playing at the No. I position, UNC's Roland Thornqvist had the day's hard est match. He won the first set easily, 6 1, and was down 5-2 in the second before he could get back on his feet. He fought back up to hold off Greg Seilkop 6-6. Thornqvist then dominated in the tiebreaker, 7-3. Tar Heels 2, Clemson 0. "I was a little nervous at the begin ning, he caught me off guard a little bit," Thornqvist said. "He was up 5-2 and then I just won that game and that just set me off on a run. I started playing real well and got more confident." The rest of the Tar Heels must have gotten more confident too, for each tri umphed in their own matches. Second seeded Bryan Jones won 6-4, 6-1 , third seeded Woody Webb efficiently up ended Frank Salazar 6-2, 6-1 , and at the fourth spot, Sean Steinour defeated Brian Twente 6-1, 6-1. Joe Frierson completed the sweep with a score of 6-1,6-3. UNC 6, Clemson 0. With that, theTar Heels hadclinched the win. Perhaps looking ahead to today's match at Duke, UNC proceeded to drop two of three in doubles play. m n Parents. f I "X H Heyd standing black cultural center. Heyd has stood as a voice of reason in almost every campus issue. But it hasn't always been easy, he said. "It's really difficult and sometimes distasteful to be mediator," he said. "A big part of the job is playing student needs to non-students. The part of the job that is difficult is playing non-student needs to students. "Plus dealing with Meridith," he said dryly as his vice president Meridith Rentz entered the office, bringing with her a folder of campaign fliers used during the last four or five student body presidential elections. Rentz was going to throw the fliers out. Instead, Heyd took them from her and put them on one of the many piles. Heyd made few promises in his cam paign for office more than a year ago. His slogan, "Quiet Accomplishments that Make a Difference," summed up his philosophy when taking the job. "I'm not the person to stand out and shout in the Pit," Heyd said. He instead tried to get across radical view points in non-radical ways, he said. But recent fervor on campus center ing on student demands for a free-standing BCC has changed Heyd's methods. Heyd has put aside his "quiet accom plishments" for strong words at rallies. "The tone has gotten more abrasive, but I think that was necessary," he said. "Where the administration was unwill ing to be realistic, I think there needs to be some public outcry. "It did not earn me many friends, but that's okay." His role as the students' voice to legislators and administrators has painted an ugly picture of politics for Heyd. "I'm disgusted by politics, especially in North Carolina," he said. "There are people who do really good stuff it's not everyone. But the overwhelming number of people in politics or who are going into politics I do not want to associate with." While he won't enter N.C. politics, 790 Airport Road, Chapel Bill -next to Save-A-Center Come Try Our New Lunch Menu! $4.72 Lunch Specials Everyday DIM SUM SAT. & SUN. 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Mon Fri $1 .00 off Any 1 2" Coupon or Special $2.00 off Any 1 6" Coupon or Special (NOT VALID WITH CARRYOUT SPECIAL) $2.50 Off Any 20" Coupon Pizza (NOT VALID WITH CUMBY MADNESS) from page 1 Heyd hopes to continue working with campus politics as he studies for three years in divinity school. Rentz entered again and began to answer a question about how the job of student body president has changed Matt Heyd. Heyd interrupted mockingly, "Man's gained weight." But Rentz got serious. "Honestly, I'm not sure this job has changed Matt Heyd, I think Matt Heyd has changed the job," she said. "The SBPs who are successful are the ones who don't adapt themselves to the job, but the ones who adapt the job to fit them." Heyd said: "I wanted to make sure people had access to administrators and people who make decisions about what they care about," Heyd said. "In itself, student government is a stupid thing if it's not doing something." Moody from page I pus needs into realities. "I plan to take action and work on many smaller tasks as well," he said. 'Things like more bike racks, addi tional campus lighting and extended Union Station hours are small changes that would really make UNC a better place. These changes wouldn't be diffi cult to make, and would improve the campus environment tremendously." Moody said he also planned to work with campus environmental groups. "I really want student government to take a more active role in environmen tal issues," he said. "I don't want to take anything away from the groups already active on campus; I just want student government to help them in any way possible. By working together, we'll be able to do the best job." The task of starting out as student body president may be more difficult for him than for past student body presi dents, he said. "I'm starting more from scratch than others, but I'm not apprehensive about it," Moody said. in r Dr. Thomas A. Costabile Optometrist Village Plaza, Chapel Hill Monday-Friday 8-5 Closed 12-1 968-4774 PIZZA "2"l6" CHEESE 1 , PIZZAS 1 ONLY I I I I I I I I I 991 Additional Toppings 200 L wertnpizza j yaiEATLbVERsTPEUAG Toppings include Pepperoni, Sausage, Ham, Ground Beef i i i i i JL PQWMIA fromPaBel II when presidents voluntarily aban doned soldiers in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, he said. "American presidents don't raise the issue," Droge said. "A whole string of chief executives topped by George Bush have abandoned men." The U.S. government has been more cooperative since 1982, when it ac knowledged that there might be evi dence of American soldiers being held against their will in Southeast Asia, said Mary Backley, director of public rela tions for the National League of Fami lies, a group of about 3,800 POWMIA relatives. Prior to 1982, the U.S. gov ernment lied to families of MIA sol diers, she said. "The families had themselves and the small part of the American public to keep this issue alive," Backley said. Although cover-up rumors persist, the United States increasingly has looked to the Vietnamese government and to the records and files of the former Soviet Union for answers and informa tion regarding POWs and MIAs. Many observers believe these two sources could hold valuable informa tion pertaining to the 2,200 unaccounted for American troops. "There's a tremendous amount of evidence that the Vietnamese are with holding information," Backley said. "Hanoi (Vietnam's capital) really holds the key. They've been feeling a lot of pressure ... to move on this issue." U.S. Sens. John Kerry, D-Mass., and Bob Smith, R-N.H., plan to visit Viet nam, Cambodia and Laos in mid-April to confer with government officials about missing Americans. Kerry and. Smith are the chairman and vice chair man of a one-year U.S. Senate Select Committee on POWMIA Affairs. Although Vietnam's economic well being may depend on formalizing rela tions with the United States and con vincing the Bush administration to end an ongoing trade embargo against Viet nam, in recent years, the government has been more helpful in answering inquiries about POWs, Backley said. Formal relations between the two nations may lead the Vietnamese to kill any live POWS they may be holding, Backley said. The United States shouldn't take the risk of formalizing relations and ending the embargo until a full investigation of the POWMIA issue is complete, she said. "It's our position that men are being held against their will in Vietnam," Backley said. "We will maintain that position until Vietnam opens up. Over 230 Americans have been accounted for since 1982. Have any live POWs come out? No." Since the crumbling of the Soviet Union last December, many attempts have been made to open KGB files that deal with Soviet involvement in Viet nam. The U.S. Senate select committee recently heard testimony that Soviet officials interrogated American POWs in Vietnam, possibly as late as 1978. Kerry and Smith spent last week in Moscow meeting with Russian offi cials about opening KGB archives. While some new doors are opening in the quest for answers, many family members of POWMIA soldiers con tend that life must go on. "We cannot tread on the past we have to push on now," Backley said. Campus Calendar TUESDAY 5 p.m. Juggling Club will meet in Carmichacl Ballroom 6 p.m. UNC-HOSA will meet in 205 Union and tour the Ronald McDonald House afterward. 7 p.m. Great Decisions will hold a meeting for those who want to be on the 92-93 Coordinating Committee in 351 Hamilton, Marine Action Committee meeting in Campus Y. TAr Heel Recycling Program will meet in 206 Union. 7:30 p.m. Carolina Indian Circle will meet in the second-floor lounge of the Campus Y. 8 p.m. Dr. Sergei Khrushchev, son of the former Soviet leader, will speak in Hanes Art Center Aud. a.p.p.I.e.s. will hold a planning meeting in 208 Union, UNC Young Democrats welcome representatives from the Hunt and Williams gubernatorial campaigns in 226 Union. ITEMS OF INTEREST Delta Sigma Thcta is offering a $500 women's scholarship. For applications contact Sharyn, 933 5741 or Cassandra, 933-5274. Applications are due April 13. Sangam Night A View of India with dinner and entertainment on April 10 in the Great Hall. Tickets: $5 in the Pit or call 933-2348. FAST FREE DELIVERY 968-FAST (968-3278) VISA Below prices do not include tax. GuKlBYMADNESs 1 20 1 Topping Pizza I ONLY , d 12" Meat Lovers $7.32 1 6" Meat Lovers $8.97 20" Meat Lovers $11.80