University of South Carolina Libraries
CROSSWORD ' « ACROSS 1 “The Bat," e.g. 6 Resistance measure 9 Large parrot 14 Miserable dwelling 15 Green legume 16 Actor Milo 17 Rub it in 18 Books’ inside covers 20 Chicago suburb south of Cicero 22 End hunger 23 Bigwig 24 Three, to Martin Luther 25 _Ababa, Ethiopia 27 Lion's quarry 28 Palooka 30 Lea lament 31 In hiding 34 Lots and lots 37 Up until now 38 Acting domineering hu uauui sibi«r 41 Mortgage condition, often 43 Sensed 45 Chop 46 Come to pass 47 Cameo gem 49 Fabler of yore 50 Pants parts 54 Ump’s relative 55 Writer Levin 56 Ron of “Kaz" 58 In a refuge 61 Smell 62 Cookie sandwiches 63 Play for a fool 64 Stand 65 Idiotic 66 Block of paper 67 “Golden Boy” playwright DOWN 1 Burns film 2 Opposite in nature 3 Call forth 4 Bring back to true 5 Canad. province 6 Free access 7 Brooder? 8 Got there 9 Castle’s defense 10 Small, horned viper * 11 GM division 12-Eagle's home 13 Stingingly 19 Faux _ 21 Flounder 26 Frumps 27 EVA vehicle 29 Incandescent 30 Ski-slope mound 31 Caustic solution 32 Sure thing! 33 Wanderlust 34 Not live 35 Night before 36 Unhappy 39 Created an inward pleat 42 Actor Harrison 44 Of questionable stock 46 Withstand stress 47 Director Welles 48 Former Indian. leader 49 Ready when you_ 51 Overact 52 Full course 53 Breaks suddenly 55 Minuscule 57 Venetian villain 59 Building site 60 NASA's ISS partner i n? [3 n p _ Tt “ 20 ■1Mb 47 48 iHj 54 ■■55 58 59 62 65 © 2002 Tribune Media Services, Inc AN rights reserved. Solutions ■ llnTN 3__a o jLjh _^_3 ^ _a n c hH _0 S_ J. ;|3h|o|o[oMM|op|o|N[TX~ Sfo o will 002 vjoB ■: a 3 h TMBs i a a vM i 3 o a l~d I Aljfl V 3 MB N MjV 1 >1 V O _S y. J.AX. d Q N 3|1 V O 1 9 V 3 H SOllvpdBn 3 A O H m| vplv|T7B77|Tr|ojV[5|T|d|o HOROSCOPES ARIES Some of your great schemes may have to go when you realize they’re completely impractical. That doesn’t mean you should abandon all fantasy. Another scheme could be a real moneymaker. TAURUS Don’t let an insensitive person’s thoughtless remark hurt your feelings. Be steadfast in your resolve, and you’ll end up looking like the good guy. GEMINI The money is pretty good, but the person giving the orders could get a tad difficult. Try to keep your derogatory comments to yourself _ unless, of course, you think it’s time to move on. CANCER Does it seem as if you’ve been running into a lot of closed doors, yet you feel kind of lucky? Maybe all those doors are closed to protect you. A friend will help you find the door that’s right for you, and it’ll open. LEO You always try to surround yourself with the best of everything. Sometimes it doesn’t cost much more _ like now, for example. VIRGO Are you tired of fixing things and figuring things out? Want to let somebody else drive for a while? Somebody nearby has a silly notion. Join them in it. LI B RA Look around for something you can do to make someone else’s life easier. It may be right under foot. Just don’t expect the person to ask for help. SCORPIOStop worrying about things you can’t change. Instead, focus on what you already have. Somebody would like to be with you tonight. You won’t have to fix a thing—just listen. SAGITTARIUS You ’ve proven you’re smart. Now, can you show you’re sensitive and caring? Can you listen to somebody who at first seems rather slow? Actually, they’re not. This is a test. CAPRICORN You don't have to be told everything. Lots of what you don’t know can be figured out. People’s body language speaks volumes _ especially today. AQUARIUS Time to get practical again. Move your latest theory from'the “possible” to the “actual.” Also spend some time on tasks that will buy the groceries. Even great thinkers have to eat. PISCES You’re a little more sensitive, a little less guarded, but is this wise? Could you be hurt? Not likely. Your issues are financial, not emotional. her over, and Pearson does the kind of fol low-up story that Reid hopes a journalist would do for her. A native of New Jersey, Reid and her three siblings, Tommy, Patrick and Colleen, now live in Los Angeles. Her Yorkshire terrier, Stoli, accompanied Reid on her round of interviews to promote her new film. She also owns two Labrador retrievers, Endless Summer and Tequila Sunrise. 1. YOU WORKED THROUGHOUT YOUR CHILDHOOD AND SKIPPED COLLEGE ALTO GETHER. DO YOU REGRET NOT HAVING THE COLLEGE EXPERIENCE? REID: This movie is my way of doing it. I was on UCLA’s campus every day for three months, playing the journalist, and every night I had to go home and study my lines. I just got my college (experience) in three months instead of four years. 2. DO YOU WORRY ABOUT THE DAY WHEN YOU’RE NO LONGER CAST AS THE PRETTY YOUNG GIRL? REID: I’m proud of where I am at 26, so get ting older is not so bad. I want to age on film. I want to be the old lady in ‘Titanic’ one day. 3. HAS IT BEEN EASIER TO ADJUST TO LIV ING IN LOS ANGELES WITH YOUR BROTHERS AND SISTER ALSO LIVING THERE? REID: Absolutely. Tommy lives in the same building as I do, just two floors up. It’s perfect; if we want to see each other, we do. If we don’t, we can go weeks (without seeing one another). 4. IF YOU COULD HAVE ANYTHING FROM YOUR CHILDHOOD ROOM, WHAT WOULD IT BE? REID: (My parents) already redid my room, but I would have wanted to take my closet door because I had all my friends write on it when I was a little kid. We’d write notes to each other. Then my parents painted over it. 5. WHO GIVES YOU THE BEST ADVICE? REID: Stoli is a good judge of character.... His opinion definitely has an impact on me. If I liked a guy and Stoli didn’t like him, I’d be sooo bummed. The guy would have to go. Comments on this story?E-mail gamecockmixeditor@hotmail.com Fitness CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5 men’s divisions and also the women’s division. Judging criteria included muscularity, muscle defin ition, body symmetry and stage presence during indi vidual and comparison pos ing rounds. Among the competitors was a former USC football player, fourth-year business student Terry Peterson. “I walked onto the football team in 1999 but left after two concussions,” Peterson said. “I’ve always been into work ing out as a hobby, and I fig ured, well, I’ve been working out for seven years, so I might as well do something with it.” L,asi year s ivis. use, Rebecca Greenway, was also on hand to celebrate the event. Greenway, a recent USC graduate, said that her love of fitness keeps bringing her back. She also said the competitors have a kind of camaraderie during the event. “It’s just really fun getting to know a lot of people com peting and getting to know what the diet’s about,” Greenway said. “It’s all just having fun and loving fit- ' ness.” For most of the competi tors, the prizes were sec ondary to the personal goals they had set for themselves. There were only two women competitors, but each had a serious outlook on the event. Both Brandy Deveer, a third-year English student, and Keiona Middleton, a third year Information Systems student, said they had been training seriously for months and had personal goals and reasons for enter ing the contest. Once the event started, the competitors came out class by class in bathing suits to show their physiques. Each came in front of the crowd and judges to flash a few poses for in spection. Then they came out together in a comparison posing round. After the men’s winners in each weight class were se lected, the women each did a creative fitness routine to best display their defined muscle groups. Middleton took away the Ms. USG tro phy this year. r many, it was time tor the coup de grace: the ultimate crowning of the 2002 Mr. USC Bodybuilding and Fitness Champion. Winners from each division came back on stage for one last “flex off.” Peterson, the heavyweight winner, was crowned Mr. USC 2002 and took the trophy and cash. Peterson fended off some tight competition, including the lighweight division win ner, Gabriel Bautista, and the middleweight division winner, Robert Rogers. Peterson and Middleton said it was a thrill to win the Mr. and Ms. USC titles, but nei ther have plans to defend their championships next year. Comments on this story? E-mail gamecockmixeditorishotmail.com Ufe ri4 Gpotr^i^b /iSoirftfc sow a fti&ioN I OKjyieLDWG.NMRTHlESU V AUTHORtTftRlftW UITtUE J \CO^5QU Ffi£AK. V /1K)TH£ SecBET CLOSEP \ / u)oeuc> of aooeriuy \ / Mwo,aoj*e£coNsrA»wi 1 I Of^ THE LOOKOUT POd I 1 IMA6iKlACyCC.l^eS / \ COMMITTeo A6AIKJ5T / \30uC SoP£RlOft S£U%/ /^T i r Awo umoj you Peet Huer. THu) ARTEC?, OR JUST PtAlKJ wiffep, you sup<?Ewty-n*iu I WTO A VI C.IOUS, MARaUViWG cop HAPtesc Of FEWOtft S£WSEL£SS WITH yooR BiGMegrmu Ni6KTSncfc i .n i * & y\ <* I ? I a a I 4 5 i I /THDO you DC.AG HIM OFF\ / to youe teAN<&eoo i { CouftT; uwtat you s«we / \ 6tOA-n»J&W ASTHe / \PftosEcuTDC, judge, / VanjuJuey! /fop AFTEeyouFiiJ^N /THE CUlPCit6uil^-- \ I ft Foeeewoe coKictustoM, | I of cooese —you j \ PftoNooNsceTWewcwerr / Pogg|6l£!/ jrHEislIMTXECOftDCED \ ECEste? of yomnuxsteo \ ilfJO.yoU BECOME THE I ^eeei-^GPc^owwAfcow, 1 H€SftpvsticPeiso»j / OAftP AMP THE 6£lM, / >MpeebM6&ga^oM€ej/ «KI MEUTALUJ >. SWITCH, ) rEMPLATt*ig jX^TDC-MEMT fcutfETtHWo, ceossyouT> !—~rr\ OH GOO. U}HAT AM X SAi*? HOU> OOUU? X ACCUSE 30U OFStfH vice thoughts'? i wuMgcy APOLOGIZE EoG oShATX just SA»P, PlfcASe ToR&tUE M£. I I JUST Lewis By Jan Thomas and peter mozley W COUSIN'S nephew IS 10 AND STILL CARRIES ^ ^_A TEDDY HEAR AROUND EVERYWHERE. J DON'T WORRX MA6EL. I Oil?'' THESANlETHINGATTHAT AGE LOOK now l TURNED OUT! ]/ roo WHATEVER it takes] ... (SET THAT TEDDY REAR AWAY FROM v HIM IMMEDIATELY. I miss you. I MIST you. I JUST MISSED you. MISS. U. MISS U.S.A. you MISS ME. I WE'LL ALWAYS HAVE PARIS. GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN. www.mortco.azit.com #118 BY SAMANTHA CRITCHELL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK - Tara Reid concedes that gos sip items are part of the game. The almost daily coverage of her social life in the tabloids has included her en gagement and subsequent break up last year with Carson Daly, host of MTV’s “Total Request Live” video countdown show. She also testified before a grand jury hearing the case against her friend Elizabeth “Lizzie” Grubman, accused of intentionally backing her sport util ity vehicle into a crowd of people out side a trendy Hamptons nightclub. “Everyone is forgetting that I’ve done 15 movies,” says TD^iA ~ _ starred in both “American Pie” movies and “ Josie and the Pussycats.” She also has her own production company, Hi Happy Films. “People take quotes when I say ‘work hard, party hard’ and just print ‘party hard,’ “ the 26-year old actress says. “But the one thing I care about more than anything is my work ethic.” Reid would also like the reports to be ac curate. “Make sure I was at least in the country,” she says. In her new movie, “National Lampoon’s Van Wilder,” she plays Gwen Pearson, ace reporter on Coolidge College’s school newspaper. She is asked to write a profile of popular — and peren nial — student Van Wilder, played by nyan Keynoius. Her profile paints him as a party animal, but the story doesn’t even scratch the sur face of the well-intentioned Wilder. He wins PHOTO BY LIONEL HAHN/KRT CAMPUS Tara Reid arrives for the world premiere 6f “National Lampoon's Van Wilder.’’