Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 20, 1980, edition 1 / Page 4
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4 The Daily Tar Heel Wednesday, February 20, 1980 Drama abounds m ii nangie area The Triangle area is overflowing with theatrical productions this week which range in style and material from Shakespearean tragedy to modern comedy. T he Playmakers Repertory Theatre w ill open its productiorol Shakespeare's Othello at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Paul Green Theatre. This tragedy traces the poisoning of a chaste love by misinformed jealousy and suspicion. Performances will run Tuesdays through Sundays until March 2. Shows are at 8 p.m. with an added Sunday matinee at 2 p.m. The M oor will be played by Nuba-Harold Stuart, a New York based actor. Robert Burke, who has performed with Charlton Heston and Deborah Kerr, will portray the evil lago. Desdemona will be played by Phyllis Somerville. The Art School will continue its run of John Guare's The House of Blue Leaves at 8 p.m. Friday through Sunday in the Gallery Theatre in Carr Mill. This play is about dreams and the attempts of people to realize aspirations. Also in Chapel Hill, Hal Holbrook will recreate his famous characterization of writer Mark Twain in Mark Twain Tonight! at 8 p.m. Sunday in Memorial Hall. The Durham Theatre Guild will continue its presentation of the comedy Steambath in the' Durham Arts Council Building. r Stusrt plsys Othello In Iocs! pSsy Performances of this play, which deals with the confrontation between people in a steambath in New York, will be at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday. The Duke Players will open their production of French playwright Jean Anouilh's farce Ring Around the Moon Thursday. Performances will continue through March 2. Raleigh's Theatre in the Park will perform Ira David Woods' Eros and Illinois tonight through Friday. Woyzeck, by Buchner, will be presented by N.C. State students and deaf actors from the North Carolina Theatre of Gesture tonight through Saturday in Thompson Theatre on the NCSU campus. 4 ihMi. Mir YAU m tin nan wm $m rm m& mm um scan. i&au(s ill.' m : rrv- nil ATTENTION STUDENTS Single Copies Self Service 812 x 11 or 812 x 14 canvas, oils, brushes, acrylics, sketchbooks, instruction books . CAROLINA COPY CENTER Rams Head Plaza 967-2585 8:30-5:30 M-F UNO STOfldlEWT StOI ER THE WE ATH is not a drugstore, but we usually have most everything you need ... i csy Shampoo, Powder, Deodorant, etc., etc, etc, etc., If You're In A Hurry And Can't Get Downtown, we have a large selection of health and beauty aids at discount prices! There's More At Your "ON CAMPUS" NCCU festival to offer variety of theater types North Carolina Central University's dramatic art department will host the Black College Theatre Festival Feb. 20 23. The festival brings to Durham major .productions from four college and community drama groups as part of the university celebration of Black History Month. The La Verne Players of Raleigh will perform William Handley's Slow Dance On the Killing Ground tonight. Friendship Junior College of Rock Hill, S. C. will present Jean-Paul Sartre's No Exit Thursday. Raleigh's Shaw University will perform the musical Purlie based on the Ossie Davis play Friday. The festival will close Saturday with two one-act plays, The Ow l Killer and The Sirens, produced by Bennett College of Greensboro. All performances begin at 8: 15 p.m. in NCCU'S University Theatre. Adult Festival tickets (admission to all four plays) are $5. Tickets for individual performances are $2.50 in advance and $3 at the door. c By JENNIFER BRITT f "Public service announcements must be turned in at the box outskJe the D 1 H offices in the Carolina Union by 1 p.m. if they are to run the next day. Each item will be run at least twice. 3 51 ET VJovJ.TOCteiTEA 5UCCE5SFOU COrAiCSTWP TRAINING yjectiv Kennedy M3t fail id mss., fthMwe. ' pONT EAGER, kENNCPY! THE CgavAAtE HAS A UTtlE "CiP, ChD V TwAr wii i OMUEOtio WiOir46HEl0 WERE- W MtfT DEAWX ro PCE.P. THE. AfV tMtJY- ... AS VoAvt CVnAKincO IT 15 AHWto MOiToRC.i Nbo TO WGHU PAROUS Miovi.Hbo TOtTCCAj?T0C5 WTO , 3d lw 1 -eg - -r. AvA. 111 V V1 5EE,MARCIE?N0U)0RP FROM PIG-PEN! IF HE REALLY LIKEP ME, HE LJ0UIP HAVE CALLEP OR WRITTEN BY NOW... IT mV4 ITS QMCK'S FAULT! HE NEVER 5M0ULP HAVE ARRAM(9EP FOR U5 TO 6ET TOGETHER! a I PON T THINK YOU CAN REALLV BLAME CmK.SlKj YOU CAN IF YOU'RE UNREASONABLE.' DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau NE-YIHH5AF90F MMAt&CFSGN. ees&ss, tMPm- ; TYAPOUTICAI. LOOK, JUST PEADH15 FLIR,(XAy? MAT P0 YOU hob to taset 5IGH..0KAY, o WX IF YOU INSIST.. 0 'VV HMM..HMM. ' ..UH-HUH.. - o HMM.VWMA&S &f 55M5S.. HMM, I NEVER rSHl YS.. fV6HT..YS,YS, 3 THAT SO m! BOY, - 1 - o Vya MAS! I THINK pe77Y V FCR1W5GUY! "z. v 0 I a American Red Cross ACTIVITIES TODAY Robert Bain will present the seventh Allusion Seiiev Lecture at 4 p.m. in the Greenlaw lounge. The subject will be William . Faulkner's Ahxahm. Absalom. 1 he Poert Action ( urn mitt r will meet at 5 p.m. upstairs in the Campus Y. A Bible Study will be held at p m. at the Baptist Student Union. The Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 304 Greenlaw. Everyone bring dues. New members welcome. The Student Office of Public Safety w ill meet at 7 p.m. in the Health Education Office of the new Student Health Service to hear a special speaker. CHANOt. the Chapel Hill Antt-Nuclear Group Effort, will meet at 7;30 p.m. in the Presbvterian Student Center in Chapel Hill. AXE will meet for a pledge vote at 7 p.m. at H-6 Carolina Apartments. The Human Relations Committee will meet at 2:45 p.m. at Spanky's. Please notify Jennifer if you can't attend. The C olloquium on Aging will meet at noon in the Newman Center Library. Marion Smallequonwillexamine the decision to institutionalize. The Carolina Indian Circle will meet at 7 p.m. in 201 Y Building. The guest speaker will be from the UNC Career Counseling Center. The Racquetball C lub will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 222 Greenlaw. "How to Maintain Fellowship with God" will be the topic of the UCF Bible Study at 7 p.m. in Upendo Lounge. The Department of Computer Science presents Professor Eric R.Hehneral 3:30 p.m. in 104 Peabody. Refreshments will be served afterward in New West Lounge. Bring your own lunch and join Dean Renwick at noon in 217 Carolina L'nion for Carolina Conversations. Venei tous a la Table Francaise. at 5:30 p.m. at the Rathskeller. AA Women's Meeting at 8 p.m. at the Community Church on Purefoy Road. AA Meeting at 8 p.m. at the Newman Center. A joint recital of clarinet and vocal music will be given by Brenda Pennell and Marika Kuzma at 4 p.m. in Hill Hall Auditorium. Music from the last eight centuries will be presented. L PCOMING EVENTS The Fellowship of Christian Athletes will meet at 9 p.m. in 213 Carolina Union to hear Bill Cobey speak. The I NC Law School Speaker's Bureau will sponsor a forum at I p.m. Thursday in Room 5 of the Law School. The subject will be "Increased Government Repression: A New Margaret D. Rundell Attorney at Law announces the opening of a law office at 137 E. Rosemary St, Suite 200 Above The Old Book Corner 967-3074 Met anrtv lrr I here will be an informal coffee hour honoring the visiting I-atin American FeUows participating in the Pep-Co!a Mexicans and Pepsi-Cola Panamericana programs. It will he from 3:30 to 5 p.m. inthefaculty lounge. Morehead Building. The Campus V Coffee Khtcb this week will be 3-4:30 p.m. Thursday in the Union lounge. The Zionist Action C ommittee will meet at 6:30 p m Thursday in the second floor lounge of the Carolina Union. "Ajana "JO," the African ' Afro-Amencan Studies cultural cries presents a poetry reading by faculty members at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 08 Peabody. Inter-Vanity will have an All-Quad prayer meeting 12 30 to I p.m. in 205 Carolina Union. The Baptist Student Union will have Thursday workshop at 6 p.m. at the Battle House. The workshop is preceded by recreation at 5 p.m. "Coping with Stress", a program of film and discussion sponsored by the Menial Heahh Association in Orange County will be held at 7.30 p.m. Thursday in the Wesley Foundation. ITEMS OF INTEREST The Nominations Committee for the Society of Janus will meet at 3 p.m. Friday in 205 Carolina U nion. Practice interview lesions with a counselor will be held 10 a.m.-4 pm. Friday in 211 Hanes Hall. Sessions invoUe videotaping and critique of a practice interview. The Campus Y Dinner-Discussion this Friday will feature Peter Filene and Joy Kasson on "The Art of Parenting". Sign up in Room 102 at the Campus Y. The dinner will he at 5 30 p.m. Friday at Dean Donald Boulton's home. You can pick up applications for the I NC- Dusscldorf German Exchange now. They are available in the German department office. The exchange involves two full study scholarships to the University in Dusscldorf. Germany. 'Applications for the following positions in Student Government are now available: Attorney General. Treasurer. Executive Staff. Chancellor and V ice-Chancellor Committees and Student Boards. Pick them up in Suae C of the Carolina Union. The Federal Summer Intern Program information is now available in the Reception Office of Nash Hall. These internships are for sophomores or above with a GPA of 3 0 or better and graduate students in the top half of their class. 1 he deadline for application is 5 p.m. Feb. 29. MCAT applications have arrived. Pick them up in 311 South Building and 101 Nash Hall. Attention Pre-MedPre-Dent Students: There will be an admissions interview workshop with videotaped simulation at 7 p.m. on Thursday. Sign up on the door of 311 South Building. Nominations forms for the I NC GrailValkjiries are available at the Carolina Union desk. Grail Valkyries honors juniors and seniors who have demonstrated excellence in scholarship, leadership, service and character Forms must he returned by 5 p.m. Feb.29. Practice Limited to Family Law and Divorce Evening Appointments Available American Cancer Society abootiou The decision may well be difficult . . . but the abortion itself doesn't have to be. We do our best to make it easy for you. free Pregruiicy Tact Very Early Pregnancy Test Call 781-8850 anytime The ttemlal Center ( Friendly Personal . . .Profess iofiai Care CIood Store Mrs. Filberts argarme Quarters 1 lb. Limit 2 with $750 order .xtA 2.80C Large Roll Limit 2with $750 order 00 MM TX GOOD U TDWU Red Ripe Tomatoes f 3s1 00 Quantity Rights Reserved ) Velchadc Grape Drink 46 oz Nescafe eon Instant Coffee 10 oz Foulor's G0GT0I71 CUTS YGUH KEATS! Popsritc Pop Born 2 lb. Dag Sara Lee apple, cheese, cinnamon, raisin, Danish 73A oz $110 Alouette garlic h herb s4g Cheese lb Alouette French Onion :0)dq Cheese lb S Portwine so 19 Cheddar Cheese lb Whole Beef srq Tenderloins lb JDa Filet Mignon lb S469 Fresh Large cqQ Flounder Filets lb r"""'"U.u S 1 09 UtiUUil I IU I UkOiM ' ''IS. llJe j Soallost iglit 0' Lively loo will: Vz Go! din Fcvilnrn hnn 0 fnll-llmf? wino stewards lo " hp lav v m -av mm w m w w - - . nccictyou In your cclcctlonc! Ac!; for Dicli i Lavcndnr or Jim Caye, 942-3110. Spanish (1976) Red Wines 5th Cone Rioja Claret $3.69 Florida Red or White Grapefruit u 1 White, Loose Mushrooms lb Domeco Domain Rioja (1975) 5th $3.69 I 00 $1 59 Sebastian! (Proprietors Reserve) Burgundy (1970) 5th $3.39 ATTENTION DEER L0UEQS! Visit Our flew Walk-In Sclf-Service Deer Cooler For The COLDEST DEER 111 TOWN! SOS 11. FRANKLM ST. o B42-31 12 . OPEN 7 AW-P10NITE 7 DAYS A WEEK
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 20, 1980, edition 1
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