Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 14, 1988, edition 1 / Page 15
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
OmnibusThursday, April 14, 19883 Boultori: from student cut-up to the too of Student Affairs By KAREN ENTRIKEN Staff Writer There's a certain amount of irony involved when a principal's son, who was the biggest cut-up in school, ends up as vice chancellor and dean of Student Affairs at a prestigious university. Such is the case of Donald Boulton. His antics began in high school and continued in college when he took the advice of a girlfriend in a woman's residence hall where he was a waiter and headed up a panty raid. The dean of students called to him during the course of the fun and told him to pack his bags. Close call for our dean. When Saint Patrick's Day rolled around, Boulton and his friends had plans for the local police officer. They took his motorcycle apart and spread the parts all over a landmark hill in town. Again, the dean had plans to get rid of Boulton. But Boulton eventually toned down his behavior, stayed in school, and became a dean himself. Now he enjoys the fun of dealing with all of today's college pranksters like himself. He also carries the enormous Rerun season, from Jimmy Carter to Barbara Eden By JENNY LIVINGSTON Assistant Omnibus Editor it's almost that rerun time of year, folks. Only a matter of days stands between your tube and a three-month mire of has-beens and aiready-seens. until then you'll be treated to those spectacular end-of-the-year cliffhangers. You remember, all those shows where either everybody in the cast gets shot (tune in next year to see who lives) or the two main characters finally sleep together (tune in to see if they'll still respect each other in the morning). All the Hollywood producers hope that the suspense will tide everybody over until the fall. Little do they know that we'd much rather tide ourselves over on "Gilligan's island" repeats. Until then, here's the lowdown: Thursday Tonight, check out that land locked Love Boat "Hotel" on ABC mm A' J", W EstesPark Royal Park 967-2234 967-2239 Kingswood University Lake 967-2231 968-3983 SasThe Apartment People Limited Availability. (JSW?' Campus Spotlight responsibility of running the stu dent services branch. ,lt work mainly with personnel, policy, program and budget," Boulton said. His duties include directing the Division of Student Affairs, which is made up of nine departments that include the Campus Y, the Carolina Union, the Student Health Service. University housing, the University Career Planning and Placement Service, student Government and the Fellows program. He says the most monumental time in his life as a young man was at 9 p.m. See how easy it is for at least two couples to reconcile and one to fall in love in under 48 minutes. Therapy should be this easy. After that there's "LA. Law," or more precisely, "Hill Street Blues" in a three-piece suit. NBC works the old ensemble-cast formula once again to show us that Yuppies have feelings too. Friday For all you folks who didn't see the circus when it came to Raleigh. mm. A mPssJ a year of intense study at Tubin gen university in Germany, fol lowed by several months of travel throughout Europe. in Germany Boulton discovered more serious types of students than in the United States. "They were serious about every thing they did," he said. During his stay, Boulton and his friends stayed up until all hours of the night drinking coffee and discussing important issues such as: "What do you think of this philosopher?" and "Why did the war happen this way?" While in Europe, Boulton also had the opportunity to attend a fraternity party - German-style. "Everyone sat at long tables with a liter flask of beer in front of them. You drank the beer, then had to give a three-minute speech on a philosopher - if you could, if you couldn't, then you had to leave." Boulton looks up to well rounded, Renaissance men like Ben Franklin, Thomas Dewy and Mahatma Gandhi in the political world. tonight's your chance to witness all the pomp and pageantry (read: sleaze and silliness) that you missed. Speaking of pomp and pagean try, the three-hour opera, "Nixon in China," will air on public TV at 9 p.m. I swear I didn't make that up. Saturday ABC plans to show us everything we never wanted to know about our last three presidents on "Con versations With the Presidents" at 8 p.m. things like whether Jimmy Carter kissed Rosalynn on the first date. Frankly, or Jimmy's lips have always left me cold, but if you're interested, tune in. If you have cable, don't miss "l Dream of Jeannie Fifteen Years Later" on Lifetime. Will Barbara Eden show her bellybutton this time? Do we still want her to? Standard Single Room Luxury Single Room ' HfrtPl iJl! 1 ill' I 111 I f -"'SSW - - - '"1f"ni"r" ' J """lN'viWAa - Donald Boulton, vice chancellor "They all have the quality of life. They had life together, not just a narrow view on things or a super specialty. They had interests in all things." His philosophy of work is to keep an Avis mentality: "This means you're always number two trying to be number one." He came to North Carolina in 1972, and his feelings for the state run deep. A glance around his Sunday Get up early and watch as many evangelists as you can so the next time one of them gets caught doing something, you'll be even happier when he gets kicked off the air. Just for fun, call the number they flash at the bottom of the screen and pledge 510,000 in your roommate's name. Monday Lifetime shows that knee slapper of a TV-movie, "Vasectomy - A Delicate Matter" at 9 p.m. just to prove that minor surgery can be hilarious. After that, you can catch the last half of "The Man Who Loved Women" on ABC, in which Burt Reynolds presents the other side of the vasectomy issue. Tuesday I know everybody will be glued OHO plus tax OHO ,C2X2) plus tax Yackety YackShea Tisdale and dean of Student Affairs office will reveal this; on the wall, a framed front page from the Durhan Morning Herald proclaims, "The Tar Heels Win All." His outlook on today's students is positive. "Today's student is brighter, less sheltered, and more cosmopolitan than those 30 years ago. Today's students face a tougher world than ever before and, because of that, they are more serious than I ever was." to the tube for the New York Democratic primary returns all night, but if that isn't entertaining enough, CBS airs the Peanuts' "It's Flashbeagle, Charlie Brown." See Snoopy breakdance in a torn sweatshirt. I think I'd rather eat worms with Charlie Brown. Wednesday Three spooky specials: "Myster ies of Mankind" and "The Phantom Panthers" on public television and "Mysteries of the Pyramids" on CBS. Between the three, all your deepest, most intellectual ques tions will be answered. Did we really come from apes? Don't we have enough cats on this planet already? Can the pyramids tell the future? You learn something new every day. LGDKlGflto'Q RtOU CAU?US VIA UC 54 Research Triangle Park LTDLrD NC 55 at 1-40 Call Toll Free (800) 522-1008 Ou!sde NC d.at (8001 872 1808
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 14, 1988, edition 1
15
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75