C C ! 1 f. f t
The Tar HeelThursday, June 1 , 19897
t t i
University
Carolina Union lineup has
something for everyone
Campus Police Roundup
By ELIZABETH MURRAY
Staff Writer
You're going to summer school,
working a lot, hoping that money will
mysteriously turn up in your pocket,
and wishing that there were more
things to do during your time off. Is
that it?
The Carolina Union is providing
programs this summer that might
make students feel a little better about
being so poor and bored during the
summer months. Although it would,
be impossible for the Union to func
tion as always during the less-crowded
summer months, it is going to pro
vide free movies, indoor and outdoor
concerts, billiards and study breaks.
Upcoming movies include "Go
rillas in the Mist" on June 7, 'The
Untouchables" June 12 and "Beverly
Hills Cop" June 14. Movies are shown
at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. in the Union
Auditorium. Other movies in June
will include "Fatal Attraction,"
"Beaches" and "Airplane!"
The Union Underground will also
be kicked in during the summer.
What's the Underground and is it
legal? It is the lower level of the
Union which includes the Cabaret,
billiards and bowling. And it is legal.
For June 5 the Cabaret has booked
Drach and Droll, a band offering
familiar blues, swing and country
music. The band will play from 8-10
p.m. and students will get in free.
The North Carolina School of the
Arts Jazz Quintet will appear in the
Cabaret June 8, one of their last ap
pearances prior to the Quintet's Ital
ian tour. It also will be free to stu
dents and will start at 8 p.m.
Deals in bowling include half price
on Tuesdays after 4 p.m., and for
billiards half price on Thursdays af
ter 4 p.m.
For women students only, there
will be a program "Powerplay" which
will include free instruction in bil
liards. "It's kind of like not a yup
pie craze but just a trend where
women are starting to play billiards
more," said LeAndrea E. Drum, as
sistant program advisor for the Caro
lina Union. "We're focusing on that
and decided to create a program to
highlight it."
The response to these activities
will determine if other things can be
added to the programs already avail
able, according to Carolina Union
program advisor Nancy Bolish.
Many students are either not aware
of the programs available to them or
they are Just not interested, said Bolish.
"Part of it is that we don't know if
there is anybody out there or if any
body cares," she said. "I hope so."
The programming for this sum
mer was primarily the job of one
person, the assistant program advi
sor, but there is a summer program
ming committee made up of volun
teers, though not many of them. "I'm
hoping that anybody who wants to
get involved in either generating ideas
that have already been placed or
working on publicity and promotion
will step forward and come on in,"
Drum said. "It's not that we want a
big-time commitment It can be what
ever they want it to be."
What the programmers want to
know when a particular program or
series of programs fails is whether
the students are really that busy or
whether they are just apathetic. "It's
amazing to me how many people don't
know that the Cabaret even exists,"
said Karen Moore, a senior speech
communications major from Michi
gan who has been elected Cabaret
chairperson for the upcoming aca
demic year.
Moore said her general goals for
next year are to increase knowledge
of the Cabaret and what it has to
offer. "I would like it to be known
and for people to be seeking out what's
going on at the Cabaret. I want people
to know something good will be there
for them," she said.
Police picked up a man at the
Student Union for defacing signs
May 24. When he was checked
out through the National Crime
Information Center (NCIC), it was
noted that he was listed as
"wanted" with an arrest outstand
ing. Authorities in Morganton were
contacted and it was determined
that this was not the same man.
The mistake had been made due
to improper use of a Social Secu
rity card.
The security alarm at the
Chancellor's home was set off by
mistake May 24.
No alarms were set off, but
there was evidence at Kenan Field
House that someone had been in
the Jimmy Jerome Lounge watch
ing television, drinking beer, etc.
May 22. A note had been left prais
ing the television and implying
that the facilities had been enjoyed
by more than one person.
compiled by Gray Kelly
Mayor
from page 4
greater, he said.
"The (Horace Williams) airport is
part of a huge tract of land that in
many respects represents the future
of the University."
Howes sees an "incremental ap
proach" to expanding the campus on
the Horace Williams site over the next
50 years, he said.
An extension to Pittsboro Street,
which would require the removal of
the Zeta Psi fraternity house, is "on
the currently adopted thoroughfare
plan" and is not a dead issue, Howes
said.
But, although the mayor voted in
favor of the planning stage of the
project, he has never voted for fund
ing it and has no plan to do so, he
said.
"I don't think the need for it has
been clearly established, nor have the
alternatives been thoroughly exam
ined," Howes said. There is no con
sensus on the issue, he said.
Howes believes that recycling will
become a more important issue.
"Chapel Hill is psychologically will
ing to do recycling and we're going
to have to," he said. The town needs
to recycle to prolong the life of its
landfill and to protect the environ
ment, Howes said. Recycling requires
a national approach from government
and the private sector to really work,
but Chapel Hill can have an impact
well beyond the city limits if it re
cycles, he said.
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