Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 24, 1980, edition 1 / Page 4
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4The Daily T.ir HeelWrp.psd.. S-ntc f AJ, 1380 tu Public aarv.ce announcements must bo turned in at the box outside the C7Wof?,ces in the Carina Union by 1 p.m. if they are to run the next day. Each item will be run at least twice. today's Acnvrors Meeting for a'! Interested la the Union Hassan Ration CowmHsee'a tlackWkiie DUxrssn Groep and Black Discussion Group. The program will be ongoing discussion groups uniting experienciiJ format to promote personal growth at 6:30 p.m. in Morrison First Floor Lounge. MS MM (Minorities in the Mas Media) meeting at 7 p.m. in the James Rec. Room. Lovrjoy'i Nuclear War a 60 minute film will be shown at Cfc-;e'i regular meeting, at 7:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union. Join in with Delta S'jma Theta Sorority as they sell II coupons to help the Hemophilia Foundation. For each coupon good at any Hardees, Hardees will donate 50 cents to the Hemophilia Foundation. Euy them outside the Union from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Fiee introduction on Transcendental Mediation at 8 p.m. ' in roc ri 221 Greenlaw. The UNC Eacquetball dub will meet at 7:30 in 222 Greenlaw. Come ready to play after the meeting. All welcome. An introduction to the U.S. electoral process will be the topic of an informal discussion led by Professor Richardson of the political science department at the International Center Coffee Hour from 3-4:30 p.m. at the center's lounge in the Union. The Industrial Relations Association will hold its 1930 membership social at 4 p.m. in room 202 cf the Union. All indus i J relations . majors are invited to attend and refreshments will be served. The Campus Y Coffee Kiatch Committee is sponsoring its first get together from 3-4:30 p.m. in the second floor lounge of the Union. This is an informal time for free coffee and conversation with students, faculty and all others interested. The topic of conversation will be the crisis in Poland, featuring Peter Filene and Dr. Louis Lipsitz. All Campus Weekly Prayer Meeting Everyone is welcome and encouraged to come and pray for your campus. A panel discussion on "What Happened in New York: The 19S3 Democratic Convention" will be held at 8 p.m. in room 109 Carrboro Town Hall. Panelists will include local Carter and Kennedy delegates and top Democratic Party officials. The Sailing Club's Racing Team will meet in room 206 of the Union at 2:30. Serious racers please attend. Lambda, the Carolina Gay Association's newsletter, will meet at 5:30 in room 202 of the Union. The Senior Claaa Committee will meet at 4:45 p.m. in the South Gallery meeting room of the Carolina Union. The Undergraduate History Association presents Dr. E. Willis Brooks speaking on "Russia and World War II." Everyone interested please attend at 7:30 in 306 Saunders. Physical Therapy applications will be available during a meeting for prospective applicants from 3:30-4:30 p.m. today and Thursday in BI 107. Please attend only one session. The Gallery Committee of the Carolina Union will meet at 5 p.m. in room 217 of the Union. All interested are welcome. To raise money for the American Heart Association, the ADH'a will sponsor a Pie throw. Campus celebrities will be the victims of the throw, so get your chance. Only 25 cents a throw in the Pit. Young Americana for Reagan and the New Team meeting, 7:30 p.m. in 210 Gardner. Association for Women Students SHE magazine gathering at 7:30 in the Union. L'NC Table Tennis Club meeting. Everyone is welcome. AIESEC Board of Directors meeting at 4 p.m. third floor faculty lounge of Old Carroll. Will be a very Important and informative meeting and all members are urged to attend. The UFC Bible Study will be at Upendo and the topic will be "How to Be Christian Without Being Religious," by Dundee Holt. There will be a forum Committee meeting at 5 p.m. Check at the Union desk for room number. Important meeting concerning Gordaa LidJy visit. Call 933-1157. The BS?4 Ebony Reaiws0y Theatre will meet at 7:30 in the Craige Rec. room. All members are asked to be present. There will be a Eille study at 9 p.m. on Revelation at Battle House. Every Wednesday If you enjoy writing poetry, don't keep your work hidden away. Join the women'a poetry workshop and get comments on your poetry. Call Ms. Pappas at 929-3481. L'NC Hi'Sel is having its regular Kosher Deli from 6-7:30. There will be a special kiddush for celebrating Sukkot at 7 p.m. in the Sukkah. There will be a meeting for the Projects committee f AIESEC at 6 p.m. in Carroll 200. Intramurab The first annual "Wimbledon Triples Voile) ball Tournament," begins at UNC's Ehrir.ghaus Field. Pick up schedules for this at the IM-Rec office. Remember the "Eig Apple Olympics" are coming up,- - COMING EVENTS The Association of Business Students will hold a genera! meeting Thursday for all members. There will be a special speaker on "Life Insurance" at 3:30 in New Carroll T-7. All students who applied for Student Government Hardship Parking Permits have until Friday at 2 p.m. to pick up their letters in Suite C at the secretary's desk or they will, be canceled. Some permits are still available in Suite C There will be a meeting of the Student Government Parking and Transportation Committee at 7:30 Thursday in Suite C. The Christian Science Organization will meet Thursday at 5:30 p.m. in the Union. All interested students and faculty are welcome to attend. Check Union desk for room number." Student Against A Draft will have a meeting Thursday. Everyone is invited to attend-in room 213 of the Union. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will have an Ail-Quad meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Pit. Come join us for a time of singing and fellowship. In case it rains, meet in 100 Hamilton. Campy ChrSsfsaa Fi"awi! is having a t'.llt study Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Union. AH are welcome. The first Ct''s't Fv.s I'h-ri ct L'NC 1 n;iet Thursday at 7 p.m. in Cresr.law 1C7. A'l interested tr;;s fisherman are invited to attend. There will be a general meeting of the Crew Cub Thursday at 7 p.m. in room 217 of the Union. All presently rowing must attend and bring $10 (in check or cash) for fill dues. A brief officers' meeting will follow. In the Pit, Friday Y KorUons Get acquainted with the Campus Y. . Any young lady interested in joining Zia Tfcl E;i sorority may submit a letter of interest by 9 p.m. Friday to room 324 Morrison. The Undergraduate Art Association will hold a meeting in 1 1 5 Ackland on Thursday at 5 p.m. We are organizing a ve -y interesting calendar of events. All students interested in the arts are welcome. Alpha CM GK-; sorority will sponsor a See-Saw Marathon at University Mail from noon Thursday till 6 p.m. Friday. Proceeds go to Sigma Chi Derby week for the Heart Fund. L'NC Student Government announces a second presidential debate a second campus elections forum featuring student representatives from the Anderson, Carter and Reagan camps. The forum will be Thursday at 2 p.m. in the Pit. Gregg James, elections board chairman, will moderate. Audience participation solicited. ITEMS OF INTErXST Basketball isn't just for men! The Orange County Women's Center is forming a basketball team. For more information call Ms. Coclberg at 967-7745 or the Women's Center at 968-4646. Actuarial Examination parts 1 and 2, Nov. 13; part 3, Nov. 14; part 4, Nov. 7. Applications must be received in Chicago by Sept. 25. $25.00 each part. Applications in 388 Phillips Hall and 101 Nash Hall. When your life is changing, it happens all too often that your friends don't understand your new life situation. Take part in the Women's Center. We are forming groups for new mothers, newcomers, graduate and working women and lesbians. Call 968-4646 for help. Auditions will be held for the "Male Animal," by James Thurber and Elliot Nugent on Monday Sept 29 and Tuesday . Sept. 30. Call 942-2041 for more information.' Attention Steven Yip, of the U.N -2 will speak at 7:30 tonight in room 202 of the Union. Yip and another man were arrested in the United Nations on April 30 for throwing red paint on the U.S. and Soviet envoys, and shouting "Down with U.S.Soviet war moves! Our flag is red, not red, white and blue! On to May Day!" 'The 1 iTfe emiot. reoumeo The Alchemist, the UNC science magazine, will be published again this semester after a two-year absence. "The Alchemist is a unique science publication designed to make science enjoyable reading," editor Allison Essen said. The articles are on current topics and are written in language that any student can understand, she said. "Some of our popular extras include math puzzles, book reviews and science fiction stories." The magazine stopped publication after ft was involved in a copyright controversy two years ago. "We were budgeted for last year," Essen said. "Unfortunately, last year's editor just didn't get a staff together." The Alchemist staff isn't anticipating any problems this year but is still looking for writers and artists, she said. They also encourage any professors doing research to submit a brief on their experiments before publication deadline Sept. 30. EILEEN CUFJIY . 1 V f f eA ' - 3 r t 7 . f?"f Instant Cc.Icd 0 02 x$hm 281 . Is Ism 1' "' ! !!:Snz liClcIilip 14 02. Die! Drio!:3, 15 flavors . Kcn-L-ftellcn D03 Feed 10 oz t iaijiiiiiiiititJ n i" Linixtfo 12 02. mf f m si Orcnos Julsa 10 cz ''FOWLEtTS "LAST CHAKCE" STEAK GALE 2 OIG UEEiCS! CEPT 21-CCT. 4 Ground Doc! mcd3 frcm clrjc!: lb. 3 13. cr moro pL'os .$1 .10 Boneless Now York Strip lb 03.00 Boneless Tcp Sirloin lb. ........ . . .G3.20 v;hol3'Bcef.Tcp.i:rl3ln lb. ......... 03. GO Rib Eyo SS22lc lb ...04.70 Tender dube Stock lb. $2.70 Sirloin Tip Ross! lb. $2.20 SIrlcIn Tip Sik lb. $2.30 Foil Cut Hound Stock lb. .....-.....$1.00 FionkStooklb $3.00 Sirloin Stooklb ...$2.00 T-Deno Stook lb J $2. CO Pcrtorhouoo Ct::k lb $3.00 Orcnp J-l:3 Vz G:l. ...... X) I . I aitivtiti ! Yc:url 0 ci .jl) I .dU i : 1 ; - : i ; . i a - 3 f ill!'" '! f ! tiilliv.iiiwuiJ V. w H fS j wiiaiV litiiil 1U .U i J c , n 1.1 p r ,C::uPcr;:n...... i ,.. j W I iitii l , , . t l w ... j I v-tl V.4 1 1 1 M 1 1 iir'' V i t'IHU.UM WMwU LI il)Ui Ml'kl ij. L,:a W i I If m m f x 1 f f 10 f'f V ffk lH WtuwxiW Lm .im W I f "J J j f f e ? m t r IO "I? t "'. ' -: ' Gf H 9 ft ;. iWut Uw; ,J I V 4 vj Kj ' . I I i , 4 ...... 1 V 1 i . t v r , .... .... ., , r t r i i i . , .... v t .... . w.l v v i i S I J . t Cy CC3 ROYALTY Stiff Writer David Glenn looks very comfortable in his crowded office full cf discarded sketches, a drawing table and hundreds of books. Glenn, assistant professor cf drama at UNC, is the designer for the Phymikers Repertory Company and the technical director for the drama department. Anyone who has been in Paul Green Theatre recently or who plans to go see the UNC Department of Dramatic Art's The Would-Ee Gentleman starting tonight at 8 p.m., will immediately notice Glenn's latest creation a large, authentic locking chandelier. It dominates the entire theater. . The chandelier looks as if it were constructed of real crystal but is in fact plastic, steel and beads. The beads were the only part which had to be purchased. The rest was crafted completely by hand by Glenn and his staff. A real chandelier would have cost around $5,000; this cost less than $500. "I took a mold from a real candelabra and cast it in latex. This is in no way real. "It was a lot of fun to do I'd say it's one of the most difficult decorative things I've ever done," Glenn said. The chandelier hangs from the ceiling over the center of the Paul Green thrust stage. "It's one of the focal points of the stage, setting the feeling and drawing attention to the center," CTKCheffei Vernon David Gbr.n's hendmeda chzr.dz'.'zT '...for Th 3 Wou!d-B3 Gentleman Glenn said. Making this complex chandelier was not easy. "It's very repetitious. There are 16 arms and each has the same pattern of crystals." Glenn's Baroque set creates the proper mood for Mcliere's The Would-De Gentleman. The play is about a vain, middle class man of the 17th century who tries to act like a nobleman. He is in fact wealthy and his many tutors take advantage of him on the road to gentility. 77:? Would-Ee Gentleman is "a satiric farce which takes stabs at social pretensions," director Tom Pvezutto said. Like Moliere's other plays the cast uses stereotypes of people: the maid, the miser, the nobleman, etc. Rezutto said, "What we are trying to do is a performance" rather than an historically authentic recreation of Moliere. The all-student cast features Nicholas Searcy as Cleonte, Laura Sumner as Lucile, Alana Teichman as Dorimene, Thorn Gillot as Dorante and Charles Greer as M. Jourdain. N f 1 vL S kJ V UliotL JL 7a. ,y concert canceled Due to a strike by North Carolina Symphony musicians, the . concert scheduled for today at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall has been cancelled. Orchestra members went on strike Friday at midnight after a 63-1 vote. They- are demanding the symphony administration make more concerted efforts to stimulate the orchstra's future growth. "We are concerned that we have the highest possible artistic product that can be available for the people of North Carolina," David Lewis, a spokesman for the orchestra committee, said. A longer concert season, expanded orchestra membership and accelerated fund-raising activities are among the proposals. Symphony musicians asked for a 13 percent weekly pay increase and for a 52-week season. Members presently receive at least $325 a week during a 40-week season. The proposed increase would hike the minimum annual pay from $13,000 to $19,097. Orchestra trustees maintain that this increase would further strain an already troubled budget. The musicians have been working without a contract since June. "No official negotiations have taken place at this time," said Mary Stewart Hood, a spokesman for the symphony's public relations office. "We just hope it will be resolved as soon as possible." Orchestra musicians will perform their annual free pops concert at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in Forest Theatre as free agents to publicize their cause. According to Hood, refunds on tonight's tickets will be offered as soon as a system has been worked out with the State Auditor's office. Ticket holders are urged to save their tickets, since they must be presented to obtain refunds. LAURA ELLIOTT " THERE'S r.iOOE IH YOUn I - Uil j Cj U Li 'v- Lja KJ ONCAH&VS ' u -1 -1 A SI !-. ' ! t! !i ,! !' I- 1a AAVtH mm a f J fx ' u:Y eo,cuv? cm? I r.- r.vj H'..-. ivi.,i On 1 . f if V f - ' Y I ' , , r J J, - - .. -A.,.. I - , " j A ' X " " ;.j 1 ' " -J nit" iliii tii 'in i i tnitomuBiMHimti mmtWMmttt iwcint a:aiiMwiiaamiinaii mrtaiiwii inYwni.ii itmmii t wnwwiii.'iiiWHnriTinniwitif i irTrn -iirpn " maw wn nwi nw im 1 1 1 iiw. m i " -a- '' . - . m-. i IX . A' A 'f. n l i." - - a 'a. r! :' N 1 " a - - ; ? ! i '
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 24, 1980, edition 1
4
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