4The Daily Tar HeelTuesday, January 26, 1982 IF CDF Your ILnifoFiriniatioiffi SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY January Off 97 OQ OQ Of) "For Your Information,'' a look at events of interest to the Gml C-J -W l''f0'n'k'5'',''',?'S' TfP "EEt In COO SSS&SKS 7 p.m. Election Fofurn, Teague Base- 5:30 p.m. DlSCourS8- S,u. Junction With the "CampUS Cabinet," a group COmpOSed Of Itia- WP-m. Special Interest Class Regis- ment.SRC-RHA Ensemble and Dinner Discus- jOf CampUS Student O .6;30p.m. Sam Green- '12.3p.m. Frisbee Tournament. wooUen 7 & 930 EST S& Riday'S event Can DO included In the next "For YOUr Information' COn- law. Sports Club Council Gym. Union -8 p.m. Gus Giordano Jazz Dance .7 & 10pm DotoSRIrt! fress Union tact the PubliC Relations Committee Of the Carolina Union, ,8p m- Free Film, Portrait of Teresa, '2-5 p.m. Spec,al interes Class Regis- Chicago, Memorial Hall. A . Auditorium. Union Film Com. 8p.m. Free Film, Spe Waffe, Room 200 Carolina Union Buildina lOW ' Auditorium Union trat.on, Lobby .Union presentation of exciting new .8p.m. Hal Holbrook in Mark Twain . Umon Aud.tonum. Union Film MOOm UU, Carolina Union BUIIOing. .9:30 p.m. Election iFmuij Spencer M1 p.m,2 a.m. WX Open Forum, Call concepts in the area of jazz , 7ongW. Memorial Hall, Union Corn- Lounge. STOW-RHA 962-7768. or 962-6397 dance, Carolina Union Billiards 'Tournament Down- 10 p.m. Dollar Night Film, Tess, I jn Billiards Tournament, Down- Billiards Tournament, Down- Billiards Tournament, Down- stairs Union ' Auditorium. Union Film Com. - stairs, Union stairs, Union. stairs. Union ' ' ' 31 I February f 2 3 4 5 6 12 Noon Environmental Studies Lec- 7p.m. Financial Aid Information 4 p.m. Financial Aid Information . nDm FrM Piim unriei iininn Anrii I0a.m.,i2 ob-Seeking Workshop, "Prac- , ture, H. Stanley Bennett, De- Workshop, Free program, 205 Workshop, Free program. 205 p wT.I nAi pIL rvTm Noon and" tice Interviews", Call 962-6507 .iDm Tar Heel Classic Indoor Track 7 p.m. Election Forum. Morrison 1st partment of Anatomy, on "The Union. Student Aid Off ice Union rV 4 pm- for appointment to videotape P S mamenf Tn S. Floor Lounge. Morrison- Evaluation of Environmental .7 p.m. Candidate Forum, 215 Phillips " ' , t . Tl Lj 1 and critique your interview .2Dm Ss KetMUNCvs t.o "HA Hazard to Man". 231 Rosenau Hall. Interfratemity Council '8Pm- J "re ? '5s . fl m S'J Hall Ia77 with a counselor, 211 Hanes 2pm- ' ' JSKSiNS 'Mmandcll 7 49:30 p.m. Nicholas Ray Film Festival. Hall. . .7 p.m. Election Forum. Granville Bowron, d.rectw of the NC Mu- 8p.m. Presea ion Hall Jazz Band Hall. University Placement SIJ.S Rebel Without a Cause. Union .2p.m. Central American Colloquium, Cafeteria. Granville-RHA seum of Art in Raleigh, on Memona Hall. A group of Services. ,7nm rvl f Auditorium. Auditorium. Union Film Com. Roman Mayorga of Inter- .7:30p.m. Health CaSe Pae. Discus- Ti JI'fSuSE -7&10p.m. Dollaright Movie. Wosco 7 Pm- J " 9:30 p.m. Election Forum, Ehringhaus American Bank on "Inequali- sion Union Rm TBA AWS Best Portrait Painter in the form old-time. New Orleans v rtesNotBveinTT n TTT, w . szxssixr"- issS- - sravr ssr6" g" T arr"r. 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 3-Sp.m. SJJSfi57yw ' 8:30-10 a.m. Informal Breakfast with Sen. .9am. Ticket distribution for UNC vs 8 om JfGoMemoLec Gaylord Nelson. 226 Union 7 and 10 p.m. Free Film. Lady Sings the Georgia Tech basketball game 8p.m. Nicholas Ray Film Festival. ' ture Dr Ron EdmodsM '10-12 p.m. Workshop with Senator Gay- ' Bes Un Aud.tonum. for Fib. 24. Carmichae. Audi Bitter Victory, Union Audi oan'sTate UniSw on 'L lord Nelson, "The Role and Umon Film Com. torium. Carolina Athletic Asso. torium.UnionFi.mCom. " . . Ivo.Sor ofTmeri Jn Cn Future of Environmental - .8p.m. SSCt ' NC Symphony. "Pops Whiz". 8:15p.m. Concert Series UNC Glee .2p.m. Placement Services Orienta- ceptsof lZXS," terest Groups'. Union and .5:30p.m. Dinner Discussion on Urbani- 22SSu2?Hta Memorial Hall. Tickets $2.50, Clubs, Works by Mendelssohn tion on how to use University 8p.m. Senator Gaylord Nelson - . tw - zation, Campus Y oinbotham Sreaker Commrt- Eric Knight, principal pops and Verdi performed with or- Placement Services, 210 speaking on "Environment '8P m- Art Exhibit: The Engravings of .8 p.m. Men's Basketball, UNC vs tTlTum& conductor of the North Caro chestra. Free. Hill Hall Audi- Hanes Hall. University Place- and Politics in the 1980's". Marcantonio Raimondi, Feb. Maryland, Carmichael Audi- MAWmtetolrM-MM lina and Baltimore Symphony torium. Department of Music ment Services Union Auditorium Union and 10-March 21, Ackland Art Mu- torium. Dept. of Athletics 7" " , " " V ao orchestras will perform with ECOS seum. Department of Art 10 toiiow, wroiina t.ay-Asso. vocalist Diana Lynn. 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 1p.m. r fT,! i Bf.Sk!H ' K!lCr. Vn ' ' . . 3-5p.m Rape Crisis Workshop I, "Self "8:15 p.m. UNC Jazz Festival: Guest Ar- 12:30 p.m. Indoor Track. UNC vs. ASU Georgia at Greensboro Coli- .11a.m. Richard Pryor in Concert, Defense: Physical and tists and Clinicians Jerry and ECU. Tin Can. Dept. of .Anm kiTkI'i,. o c, C , Union Upstairs Lounge, Re- Mental," for women only, 217 , . A' , . . "5 p.m. Fencing, UNC vs NCSU Coker, tenor saxaphone, and Athletics. 8 p.m. Nicholas Ray Film Festival. corded live in New York's Im- union. 7 p m- Wrestling UNC vs Athletes in . 7 p m. Men's Swimming, UNC vs Dan Haerle, piano Hill Hall &1 o m "UNC Jazz Festival- Guest Ar XZLLrT" Provisation Club.. .3pjn Rape Crisis Workshop II, "Re- . Act Carmichael Audito- NCSU, Bowman Gray Pool. Auditonum.'DepL of Music P t"S S SSSiaSa Tff&EiKfSi. ,2pm- Colloquium on "The Agrarian Sns to Rape: Part .". for !TgSLnc. "S? ' p p Local Women's' Music Festi- Coker, tencsiaphone and inn "RnnHif i w I Question in Central America: men only, 206 Union Law ot tne 5ea Conference, .8 p.m. Ousmane Sembene Film Fes- val, Great Hall. Association for Dan Haerle, piano. Hill Hall itineSyLooKsales El Salvador's Case", 307 Man- -8 p.m. Ousmane Sembene Film Fes- STfilm series in Residence tival, MamaW Union Audito- Women Students. Auditorium. Dept of Music. . aTfhe U ning Hall. Institute of Utin tival, Borom Sarret, La Noire HalV lounae S " me aTd num. Union FUm Com , 8:30 p.m. Broadway on Tour Besf DWe Local Women's Music Festi Lior Class American Studies De... (Black Girl), Union Audi- rjlace cmact RHA office Law of the Sea Conference. Whorehouse in Texas, Memo- val, Great Hall. Assoc. of- 'ass. torium. Union Rim Com. place contact RHA office. Campus Y rial Hall. Admission. Union. Women Students. 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 2 p.m. Ticket distribution for UNC vs Duke (men's basketball) for 3-5 p.m. Rape Crisis Workshop: "Cop- 7:30 p.m. Men's Basketball: UNC vs Feb. 27 game in Carmicnael Ing with Rape." FOR WOMEN Georgia Tech Carmichael Auditorium. Carolina Athletic ONLY. Room 217 Union. Auditorium. Dept. of Athletics. - - .4 p.m. Men's Basketball: UNC vs fUnn Coalition for Soviet Jewry, Duke, Carmichael Auditorium. OQ fflPP6 ai. 0 Carpooling available to Wash- Sp-m. Baseball: UNC vs Elon, Bosha- Dept. of Athletics. Z.Q MEN ONLY Room 206, Union. ington for rally. For informa- mer Stadium. Dept. of Athle- .7and PrPHm ni,,ri,uun nm Carolina Union Human Rela- tion call 942-4057 tics 'ana Free Film, o Lwcfy Man, Union 8 p.m. Chapel Hill Concert Series: tions Com. m "A Mobile Hymn" through -8 p.m. Ousmane Sembene Festival 7-9:30 P.mFree Film, Superman: The 10 p.m. Auditorium. Union Film Com. Sofia Philharmonic Orchestra 7 p.m. Fencing: UNC vs Duke. Dept. March 7, Paul Green Theatre. Film, Ceddo, Union Audi- and m.dn.ghlMove Union Auditorium. .8pm Triangle Dance: American Bal- of Bulgaria, Memorial Hall. of Athletics. Playmakers Reperatory Co. torium. Union Film Com. Union Film Com. let Theatre II. Memorial Hall. TRAVEL IN EUROPE FOR CREDIT This summer, travel to Europe and discover your classical heritage on one of UNC's Off-Campus Credit programs: Archaeology and Religion in Ancient Israel Mainland Greece and the Islands ' Greeks and Romans on the Bay of Naples For previews of these programs, including slide presentations, come to a special meeting: TUESDAY, 26 JANUARY, 6:30 to 7:30 PM 217 MURPHEY HALL, UNC CAMPUS rV:- ' in a BSN, NLN accredited program, tho Air Force has an opportunity just for you. The Nurse Internship Program pro vides five months training designed to foster the concept of indepen dent practice in the clinical setting. Nurses selected to participate in this program receive a direct com mission as a Second Lieutenant in the Air Force Nurse Corps. Salary is commensurate with rank and com parable to many civilian positions. Air Force nursing can mean a new life for you. Contact USAF Health Professions Team 1 100 Navaho Drive, Suite GL-1 Raleigh, NC 27609 Call collect (919) 755-4130 3503 USAFRG NM 80-9 'Angel Street,' PRC's latest of fers thrills By JEFF GROVE DTH Staff Writer Something odd is going on in the Man ninghams' home. All is well with the young couple, living in a once fashion able London district in 1880 ... until Mrs. Manningham begins acting strangely. Enter Inspector Rough of Scotland Yard with news of danger lurking in the house. A Victorian mystery novel? The newest installment of Masterpiece Theatre! No, it's Angel Street, the latest offering of the Playmakers Repertory Company, being presented on campus Jan. 27 through Feb. 14. The 1939 thriller by Patrick Hamilton, which racked up 1,295 perfor mances on Broadway, is the first whodunit PRC has produced. "Angel Street is very theatrical and tru ly a thriller," PRC Artistic Director David Rotenburg said. "The play is set in Victorian London and no one can com mit murder as well as the British," Roten burg said of the special appeal of the show. "There's something mysterious and sinister about all those levels of po liteness and layers of clothing." As for producing the play in the re cently renovated Playmakers Theatre, Rotenberg said, "If there was ever a play f r r . I . - Jm 'Angel Street' characters discuss the plot's strange and sinister events ...the whodunit is being presented by Playmakers Repertory Company that Playmakers Theatre was designed to hold, it's this one. When you're inside, you can almost hear the clop, clop, clop of horse-drawn carriages on cobblestone pavements. What better setting is there for a murder?" Rotenberg feels that the play is about impersonation. Gregory Boyd, PRC's Associate Artistic Director and the di rector of Angel Street, said, "The play is perfectly written. It keeps engaging us and shifting our sympathy. Every time a character makes a new entrance, we have learned so much during his absence that our attitude toward him has completely changed." Angel Street features performances by UNC Dramatic An proiessor Patricia Barnett and graduate student Emile Jean Trimble. The play will be presented nightly ex cept Monday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. The opening night curtain will be at 7:30 due to a reception following the show. Tickets are $7 for all performances except Friday and Saturday, when admis sion is $9. Tickets for a preview on Jan. 27 are $4.50. UNC student discounts are . available at the door; For reservations or more information, call the box office in Graham Memorial at 962-1 121. Environmental law project publishes guide The Environmental Law Project, a group of UNC law students, has publish ed a guide to government agencies and citizen groups in North Carolina con cerned with environmental issues. The 1981 Environmentalist Guide contains the addresses, contact persons, publications and other information per taining to each agency and group. About 200 copies, have been sold so far in North Carolina, and libraries around the state will be contacted to determine their in terest in the publication. "In 1979, a group of law students at the University was given an opportunity to learn about environmental law," Pro ject Chairman Daniel Read said. "We don't have a clinic (for environmental law study) like some other universities have, so we had to form our own organization." Read said the project was involved in many areas of activities, such as research for lawyers. "We are concerned with looking into the fairness of utility rates, and we're involved in regulations con cerning pesticides and hazardous waste," Read said. "There are about 20 to 30 law students in the project, many of them with experience in environmental law," said Read. "It's mostly volunteer." The guides cost $3.50 per copy and are available at the UNC School of Law. KYLE MARSHALL Carrboro board rejects ABC 'zoning change By DEAN LOWMAN DTH Staff Writer The Carrboro Planning Board voted Thursday night to recommend rejecting a proposed zoning change that would have allowed an Acholic Beverage Control store to be built on West Main Street. In a 4-3 vote, the board decided to reject the request by Howard and Peggy Hearn on the grounds that the ABC store would be unsuitable in a neighborhood business zone, the pre sent classification of the proposed location. The recommendation will be presented to the Carrboro Board of Aldermen at a public hearing at their Feb. 9 meeting. The board will make the final decision whether to approve the request. . In other business, the planning board postponed action on joining a planning- committee with Chapel Hill, Orange County and the Orange Water and Sewer Authority. By joining the committee, . the . board would be inlormed of any pro posed development in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro area through a courtesy review procedure in which each member would inform the others of planned development. "This would discourage any leap frog development to a point two miles outside the city limits that would cause OWASA, for example, to have to suddenly run water lines to a cer tain area," said Don Meserve, a plan ner in the Carrboro Planning Depart ment. "The whole thing is a basic agree ment over land use planning in the southern Orange County area," he said. The board also received copies of their annual report which summariz ed all the cases reviewed and all plan ning issues dealt with by the board during 1981. "This allows the board to look back and review how it was both involved in long-term planning and immediate issues during the past year," Meserve said. UNC representation discussed at meeting By DAVID CURRAN DTH Staff Writer The UNC Association of Student Governments discussed the possibility of student representation on the Board of Governors Saturday at a meeting in the Carolina Union. Led by UNC and UNCASG President Scott Norberg, the association is com posed of representatives from the 16 UNC schools who meet throughout the year to discuss and take action on various issues affecting students in North Carolina. Norberg and several others from the UNCASG will meet shortly to discuss various issues with an academic commit tee appointed by the Board of Governors, which is responsible for the final decision on fee increases, tenure and faculty ap pointments. The Board of Governors will then meet to discuss the issue of student represen tation on the board. "There are a number of members from the boaiu ui uovcriuji wno have yet to meet with students or to set foot on cam pus except for their meetings," said NCSU. Student Senate President James Yocum. "Our insight could do nothing to hurt them." Norberg said he thought it was "ex tremely important" to have a student voice on the Board of Governors since the board's decisions directly affect stu dents throughout the entire UNC system. In other action, the UNCASG also agreed to oppose Southern Bell's pro posed rate hike and is forwarding their resolutions to the State Utility Commis sion, Norberg said. . "We feel any rate hike will be detri mental to students," said Yocum. "Even though our (NCSU) phone rates will not directly be affected because wc have a dif ferent phone system, our room rent rates would increase because of the phone rate increases." The financial aid cuts being considered in the Senate were strongly opposed by the UNCASG, w ith most schools agreeing that any cuts will be difficult for students.