Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 5, 1981, edition 1 / Page 6
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
6'The Daily Tar HselThursduy, March 5, 1981 -1 o 'MM r I) 13 c 1 I i a ff.r i ! I j I """" r y vj U ' J , , ,,, .,,.r, ..r, Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for sale below the advertised price in each A&P J in this ad. Pf.XLS IHiCIiifi TK..J SAT., KARGH 7 AT A1P IM CUPEL KILL & CAr.r.:cr:3 itx:4$ crr:r.:a Fsa sale mt available to ctko? retail - ....,wa& a::: j page 2 I halt iissxly rroiti.p I 111" - A CAGTCRN your fatally v- ' Vt Ion iwccptakc an all-expense-paid 17 ALT DISXEY WORLD vacation for 4! mwEKPSTAKEI RULES Cf "" - atM'est o 4 w o -"' un t a No frvitn -n" e!- c" m .ov . o. 'o M tttM e l 'a- w( " i a' i' ( ..41 m- M tfAMt "0 f 10' to ' " "' 'O A IO m v m coto a'9 "oi-'eo ! ot rwB' ' f ooeet o' r- .'.,' g anr W ' a"tt vn m 'mk yiH"-yaMi ii Oho h t ii'titM mh w 'o-'" , ,nnl G' 0Pfi -9W ct a f ati' to at 0 o- J oifi i m tio'vs w a Canada lCIPT Om mmv Cowtv M' f ' o' -da Cow-t-es ftvHi 'av C-a Ox'f Wro O-aff Oscoa 'o jo i4 ''' vow-a 9 ? oOOt O rtMQ Mpfxfl O" ri "f S --"d A&P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED iU n n iUL U.S.D.A. INSPECTED GRADE "A" W m fe average ANN PAGE CHILLED J s t ) , ? n SI. (OXO) ctn. V s x 1 5 Asrn B V 1 A SUPERB BLEND, RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES z r an n n rB-on n C pr Wmwp7?t- Muni fTTT S Ur.IT CXE WITH TH!$ CCUPOH COCO THRU lUjli ) SAT.. MARCH 7 AiP IN CHAPEL HILL CARRBORO GOLDEN QUARTER " I 2 -kit I i V v i -! I tl v v I ' rttU.f UK1T CM WITH TO!S C0UPCJ) CSS0 THRU Siown i ni ' SAT., IUP.CH 7 AIP IN CHAPEL HILL r HEARTY AND VIGOROUS m f 1 mm J UU UU tJ Xml? WJ HtM j M " T ' -v UIV.1 CV.l K.TTH THIS CSUPCN CS2D TKP.iT V viiLa-fT . r"-CH 7 AIPIH WKl mi CARP'Orf " KSi 14 at KM tmM te)S mM 'it. RIPE GOLDEN r j ft f ' j 1 it 5 " ImV -mr- Low FIHST OF THE SEASON FRESH . pint ( i j i i box V J v J 1 1 )f r V -T. - - ...-.J.i uP DEUGATESSEM Ivjy 15 & 001 Oomslioad Plozo BUY 1-LD. OF AfiY KAHM'S COLD CUTS AND RECEIVE MB. 5 men cox i i y ti e::S at o o Store, except as specifically noted I f' - 4 -t-A I " Royal Plaza could win " "emt" slan k - Family Spree Sweepstakes WIN A TRIP FOR 4 TO FLORIDA S WALT DISNEY WORLD Trip is orin '2 500-' J 500 depending on city o departure NAME S'T ADOBtSS city StT6. I Tl E PmOME ' iPC.ODE IWT( OfTEN NO PURCHASE NECESSAftV J (T-Bone Steaks ih 2.78 BEEF n AP QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF DottcmG Eyo Hsuni 18 24 Lb. Avg.Wt., Cut Free Into Boneless Round Roast. Round Steaks. Eye of Round & Trimmings i i?l lb. A&P GRADE "A" NORTH CAROLINA n"iir dozen only nop i Mb. l J bag- U 656.1 I J -.'.. il" ' 1 f 1 I 111 tie i i ii lb I 1 i t I 655 I CARRBCRO 100 ct. pkg. tmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmamm 0 'I x-l'- J VASH1NGTON STATE EXTRA FANCY Red or Golden Delicious or Mcintosh i i Z3 1 Pi 9 only s I U i W k i r.nJ . 1 lb. illl--l,r.T eucsD to cr..:n Prouoiona Clioaso ill. L:3 ijy Dy LOUISE GUNTER StafT Writer Music of Pink Floyd breaks the darkness. Suddenly, a voice: "Hello, my name is Diana. I'm your onboard computer, and we're about to take off to colonize an alien planet." . ... Suddenly, light, motion, color. It' sounds like a Buck Rogers movie. It may awaken images of Luke Sky walker and Darth Vader. It may turn your head to look for Godzilla eating tall buildings in a single bound. But this spectacle is not Hollywood's. It is "Laserdrive," a touring laser-light concert currently showing at the More head Planetarium, and Godzilla is not a man- or building-eating monster, but a 6-foot, $14,000, 2,000-milliwatt krypton-argon laser what Joanne McCullough described as "the most expensive light bulb I've ever owned." "Laserdrive" is the creation of Joanne and Doug McCullough and Ward Davis of Audio Visual Imagi neering. The company builds its own equipment, puts on multi-media con certs in North America and Europe, and has 'been in Chapel Hill since February 6. "This show is different in that it tells a story," Joanne McCullough said. "It's a trip through space. We take our viewers through a radiation belt, a black hole, a landing, and we even meet aliens through the use of light, color and music. We actually go into laserdrive, which in reality, is faster than the speed of light." "Laserdrive" uses more than $100,000 of AVI equipment along with the standard planetarium instrument to project star and laser images onto the planetarium domei The Laser beam is raw white light which is sepa rated into four beams of yellow, red, Thursday, March 5. 1981 Kim Goodson's 18-point performance wasn't enough to overcome a balanced and deeper "Untouchable" team as the top-ranked P.E. Under graduate "Butchers" fell to the second-ranked Old Well outfit 42-34 .last Thursday in Woollen. Goodson's scoring and penetration skill in finding center Lou Holshauser kept the Butchers close through most of the game. But Charlotte Ward and Anne Buchanan began to score and the "Untouchables" taller line-up began to take effect, as the margin widened in the middle of the second-half. Holshauser finished with eight for the Butchers. The now top women's competitive team, Untouchables, was led by Ward's nine points, Diana Sweezy, eight, and Buchanan and Kathy Allred with seven. " , - - . " Roufldihgourrtie roster's; thtf Bulcliefs' Iridude Trish Joyce, Denese Morris, Bessie Buchanan, Mandy Ward and Sharon Speirs. Other Untouchable players are Darcy Williamsen, Beth McFarland, Helen Thorp and Susan Hull. In an important gradind game last week, fourth ranked Law School "Caveats" overcame an 1 1-point half-time deficit to edge the Independent "Chaos in overtime 73-66. Fri., March 6-DEADLINE for entering 1M softball, (one-on-one basketball, team racquetball, all-campus and co-rec (singles and mixed doubles) tennis, faculty-staff softball and the Lifetime Leisure Program fencing clinic ... Sat., March 7-Sun., March 15-SPRING BREAK .. note break gympool hours ... Mon., March 16-Lifetime Leisure Program FITNESS CLASS, 6-8 p.m.. Woollen Gym ... sign up in the IM-REC office ... play begins in softball, bne-on-one basketball, tennis, racquetball, and ts softball ... Wed., March 18- DEADLINE weight-training (clinic ... fencing clinic, 6-8 p.m., 304 Woolen ... Fri., March 20-DEADLINE for entering innertube Later basketball, all-campus table tennis tournament land mixed doubles table tennis tournament ... ANNOUNCEMENTS There has been a change in the team racquetball rules this year ... it is now a point activity (for men's competitive residence hall and fraternity units) keams originally to be composed of 4 players (two (singles, one doubles) will now be composed of two blayers (one doubles team) ... residence halls ae Ii united to four teams and fraternities are limited to two all other residence hall and fraternity teams are in men's rec division... An added dimension to this year's one-on-one basketball tournament ... Tar Heel Al Wood will play the men's champ and former UNC stand-out Bernie McGlade will challenge the women's winner DEADLINE for entering is Fri., March 6 ... Spring Break gym pool hours... Woollen Gym: Fri., March 6 all facilities close at 6 p.m. 10 a.m. -6 p.m. 12 noon-8 p.m. 10 a.m. -6 p.m. 12 noon-8 p.m. Sat., March 7 Sun., March 8 Mon., March 9- Sat., March 14 Sun., March 15 Bowman Gray Pool: Fri. March 6 Sat., March 7- Sun.. March 15 Mon., March 16 4 p m.-5:45 p.m. 12 i.oon-545 p.m. Resume Regular Hours There will be NO SPECIAL FACULTY -STAf F SW IM TIME ... NO RACQUETBALL RESERVA TIONS will be taken for Sat., March 7-Mon.. March 16 ... courts will be available on first come, fira serve bans ... reservation will resume Mon., March 16 forp!ay on Tuc., March 17 .. Game of the week 71J I SPECIAL 100 Cotton RucccIP Athletic 7-Shirto 24 shirts & up 12-24 shirts 6-12 shirts (Includes 2-!neh t:tt:rln.3 up green and blue, and those beams are "painted" on the planetarium dome by the AVI projection system. Through the use of a new AVI instru ment called an Acousto-optic modula tor, the primary colors can be blended to create virtually any hue, she said. Images of geometric patterns cover the dome, but they are only single dots of colored light which are moving so fast about 600 to 2,000 times a sec ond that the human eye perceives the dots as continuous lines and pat terns. "This is not just a laser show," she said. "This is laser lumia, the kinetic art of painting with light." AVI's laser, however, is not the type Luke Skywalker uses to zap the enemy it will not cut off your arm or leg or 'Laserdrive By SUSAN MAUNEY Managing Editor , There are plenty of ways in Chapel Hill to create a feeling of sensory dissociation, but one way many people may not have thought of is the laser light show now playing at the Morehead Planetarium. Laserdrive almost succeeds in making you feel that your ' senses of sight and sound are the only ones necessary. While you watch the changing colors and images of the planetarium dome, your senses are heightened further by a wide choice of music by Pink Floyd, Alan Parson, Charlie Daniels and Rush. Red, blue, green and yellow lights are produced by lasers projected and directed by a team of four technicians who do the show live each time. Their friendly introductions en courage audience response and that allows viewers to slip comfortably out of the harsh reality of classes and other such irksome burdens and prepare for "a cosmic voyage through the mind." The show swiftly draws you into the voyage through space. Although the sight and sound sensation never stops. sponsored each wesk during tha fsSI end Bert Woodard. IM Publicity. 933-1153 Note: due to the rash of disciplinary ac tions during IM basketball, IM Director Ed Shields deemed it necessary to com ment on IM sportsmanship ... By Dr. Ed Shields UNC IM-REC DIRECTOR The intramural Sports Program at UNC has traditionally been a competitive one. Teams andor individuals have an nually competed for league, divisional, and all-campus championships. t Each year. mea'sesidencehalU. fraternities, and men's graduate-independent units have also vied for the overall or point cham pionship. Winners have been rewarded with the title of "champion" and the publicity and "bragging rights" which may accompany such success. More tangible, materialistic awards in the form of plaques andor "Carolina Champion" tee shirts have also been part of the spoils- of the victors. Obviously competition is not unique to Carolina Intramurals. To many, it is synonymous with the "American way of life." Winning is the name of the game in politics, business, sibling rivalry, Nielson ratings, etc. It seems that we are always looking for the smartest, prettiest, strongest, fastest ... even the ugliest! Quotes such as "winning isn't everything, it's the ONLY thing," and "defeat is worse than death, because you have to live with defeat" have.ap peared in the sports section of newspapers across the country. It seems that compe tition has become a primary value which operates in many institutions and per sonalities as a driving force. Pressure from all sides has pervaded all sports and subjected players, coaches, and spectators to unrelenting demands to be come a "winner." George Allen has been credited with the statement, "Life without victory is tasteless. It is possible for a loser to drive a big car, but it is not possible for him to enjoy it." Woody Hayes has said, "Anyone who tells me, 'Don't worry that you lost, you played a good game anyway,' I just hate." Regrettably, it appears that such atti tudes have pervaded Carolina Intramural Sports ... at least through some indivi dualsteams. Carolina Intramural basket ball is, without a doubt, the most com petitively intense sport of our many acti vities. It is an Intramural sport in which there are normally in excess of 400 teams and approximately 4,000 students entered ... MOST of whom compete in tensely yet have some notion of accom plishment for its own sake and do NOT define their own existence solely in terms of how many other peopleteams they can beat. Some individual teams simply do not have this perspective and have not been able to handle losing. Ironically losing is an integral aspect of athletic competition at all levels. Losers normally greatly out TEAM PRICES FOR AMORAL SPORTS $3.25 3. $3.CD C3. C3.75C3. to 12 tzilzn) Cc.t.3 In & Prlca Cur Ch'rts bring you to the floor in violent pain. . It is not a heat-producing laser but a light-producing one. Yet, if not con trolled, it can blind anyone who looks directly into it. "Laserdrive" and the laser "Godzilla," however, have been approved by the U.S. Bureau of Radio logical Health, and they pose no health hazard to viewers. Joanne McCullough and Rob Sparkes, also of AVI,-are operating the laser instrument in Chapel Hill w hile an operator of the planetarium's instrument projects stars onto the dome. Doug McCullough started doing light shows for rock bands around Washington, D.C., in 1968, and, at his wife's suggestion, they started using lasers. They later met Ward Davis, who had been lighting director for The UjtG 8 enGCG into spazce LLETOCf spring Emsstsrs by ths Ctydsnt Volume 1, Number 17 number winners and even winners today stand to be losers the next day, the next week, or the next season. Despite the virtual certainty of losing, the tendency is to deny losing. Losing is what happens to the other individual team. Instead of admitting defeat and giving the other individualteam due credit, excuses are offered. Defeat is the result of some "outside force," the weather was too hot, cold, windy, wet, etc., we were tricked, the dock was I wrong; THE OFElClALS'WEftE ' AGAINST US ... ad nauseam., , .. How many times do we hear this last statement in sports? It is certainly heard many times following the suffering of a : defeat in Intramural basketball and it it usually the same individualsteams. It seems that some Intramural athletes feel they can start fights, use "gamesman ship" to distract and disrupt their opponent(s), throw tantrums, deliber ately roughhouse other players, and curse the officials ... all in the name of competition. It seems that for some such behavior is justified because, "He's a hell of a competitor. He WANTS to win." Does being a competitor really excuse such actions? Such an attitude on the part of some, and it must be emphasized that the vast majority of Intramural participants create no such problems, has resulted in Intra mural officials, supervisory staff, and other participants being subjected to intolerable levels of abuse. The Intramural Sports Program will normally have 100-150 sports officials on payroll throughout the academic year. Many of these young men and wo men, all UNC students, take their offici ating responsibilities seriously and constantly strive to do their absolute best in all their assigned games. The Intramural Sports Staff and Super-., visors who recruit, train, assign, and evaluate these officials are very dedicated and conscientious individuals. These hard-working students, many of whom represent some of the finest young men and women I have known, do NOT deserve the abuse they have received from certain individualsteams. Indeed, they have been quite patient with some. The Intramural Sports staff would much rather not have to deal with or to 'impose penalties for unsportsmanlike behavior. However, 1 must assure all, that we have procedures for handling those presenting behavioral or sports manship problems and we do not hesitate to impose those penalties upon those creating problems. Unfortunately we have had to impose penalties upon both individuals and teams during the Intramural basketball regular season play. As most of you rezd this, the Intramural basketball playoffs will be into their third or fourth day and tf the ullwwll Uw4wwyiH Uuuwiitii 1224 shirts 012 chrt3 fer tsea-f fastest Pm Eagles, Linda Ronstadt, Blue Oyster Cult and other performers. He became AVI's technical director. AVI, based in Springfield, Va., has been touring with laser shows since May 1978, and "La serdrive" recently completed a month long showing in Hayden Planetarium in Boston.. From Chapel Hill, "Laser drive" will travel to Winnipeg, Canada. "Laserdrive" will run at the More head Planetarium until March 15. Shows are at 8 p.m. Thursdays, 9:15 and 10:30 p.m. and midnight Fridays and Saturdays, and 4:15 and 6:30 p.m. Sundays. Joanne McCullough said she would like to see students come to see the show before they leave for spring break. ' A.F. Jenzano, Morehead Phnetariurn director described the show as "the best laser show I've ever seen anywhere." the show has some low points between the musical selec tions and switches between projections on the dome. The high point of Laserdrive though, is the jump from the reality to the second dimension. Lining up with the navigational compass projected on the dome, you make the jump at twice the speed of light, as images and beings are flashed around you until you lose perspective on right and : left and top and bottom without ever having moved at all. The effects are frighteningly real and make the show un forgettable. The show is a treat no one should miss. It is a rare form of entertainment that should not be so scarce in Chapel Hill with such a great place for it,as Morehead Planetarium. . The Laserdrive, originally scheduled to run for a month until March 1, deservingly has been held over until Sunday March 15 just enough time to catch it before and after spring break. Shows are Thursday at 8 p.m.; Fridays and Saturdays at 9:15 p.m., 10:30 p.m. and midnight; and Sundays at 4:15 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $3.50, and it is a good idea to get advance tickets for the Friday and Saturday shows. OA Stores Chapel H31. North Caratma M-ftEC Director EdShtMa past is any indication, the competition will be fierce indeed. Let me assure ALL participants that neither the intensity of competition, nor the "desire to win," will be accepted or tolerated as an excuse for disrespectful and unsportsmanlike behavior toward op ponents, game officials, or Intramural Sports staff. Anyone, individual or team, exhibiting such behavior will be dealt with swiftly and severely. Appropri ate penalties will be imposed upon all who are found to abuse their fellow students and or the Intramural staff. I ask that all Intramural participants in all sports, but especially now those in the basketball playoffs, consider their Intramural contests as something other than a "life and death" matter. Compe tition is not, in and of itself, wrong or bad. It can add "zest to life," yet it must be kept in perspective. Bill Russell, in his first season as head basketball coach at Seattle, and tfler his team had lost eight of ten games early in the season, said, "If we lose every game the rest .of the season, the world will go right on. I'll go right on living. I enjoy life, every phase of TT. " ' Surely if this philosophy can be ap plied to the pro sports world It can be applied to Intramural Sports. If our own intercollegiate athletes can compete La the pressure-packed Atlantic Coast Conference and for national honors with decorum and dignity, maintaining some perspective as to their rchiive importance and that of their sport in the world, then we expect no less from Carolina Istra raurcl athletes. IMrcc staff vmhz everyone a nice Spring Break! . h D c 3. . j c 3. &m m M Aaawn sr y I 1 w ii wii The r c'a t:.zT3 In Ycirr it , S f j I i .. ! ! j f; ft C ""3 CT"""" --- i 3 f ; l is : I i v x 1 ; "ON CAi'fXff
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 5, 1981, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75