I The Daily Tar Heel Monday. February 13, 1978 it Y Ken Eaton plays Al, and Sue Boase plays Chrissy, in David Rabe's intense drama, In the Boom Boom Room, which will be presented in Great Hall Thursday through Sunday. Directed by John Morrow, the production is sponsored by the Carolina Union. televu uson Monday The Honeymooner' Valentine Special Starring Jackie Cleason, Art Carney, Audrey Meadows and Jane Kean. At 9 p.m. on Channels 5 and 8. Tuesday Of Race and Blood An account of Adolf Hitler's use of art to spread Nazi doctrine. At 8 p.m. on Channel 4. Twilight's Last Gleaming An ex-U.S. Air Force officer breaks out of prison and seizes control of a nuclear missile base, to blackmail the U.S. government. At 9 p.m. on Channels 2 and ll. Wednesday Mountain Man An adventurer joins a woodsman in a fight to protect the Yosemite Valley from land exploiters. At 8 p.m. on Channel 28. World Championship Boxing World heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali vs. Leon Spinks, WBC featherweight champion Danny Lopez vs. David Kotey, Michael Spinks vs. Tom Bethea in a light heavyweight fight. At 9 p.m. on Channels 2 and 1 1. Thursday National Geographic Special The Great Whales. At 8 p.m. on Channels 2 and ll. cinema Days and Nights In the Forest (1970) Carolina Union free flick at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Carroll Hall. theatre King Lear performed by the professional touring group The Acting Company. At 3 and 8 p.m. Monday and Tuesday in NCSU's Stewart Theatre. In the Boom Boom Room The story of a girl mixed up in the decadent world of go-go clubs. At 8 p.m. in Great Hall, Carolina Union. Opening Thursday. Uncommon Women and Others PRC's production of an award-winning play from the O'Neill Playwrights Conference. Opening at 8 p.m. Thursday in Playmakers Theatre. music An Evening with lain Hamilton The Duke University Department of music presents Hamilton's opera Tamburlaine at 8; 15 p.m. Monday in the Rehearsal Hall of the Mary Duke Biddle Music Building. Arlo Guthrie The Carolina Union sponsors this performance by the folk singer at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Memorial Hall. Duke University Student Activities presents iobbi Ifiuimfircv Jazz Flutist Monday, February 13, 1978 ' 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. in Page Auditorium Tickets: $3.00 and $4.00 On Sale Now Paee Box Offict THE Daily Crossword by Jordan S. Lasher ACROSS 1 Passed on, as respon sibility 10 Quarrels 15 X out 16 Delusion's partner 17 Failure to signal, e.g. 19 Lulu 20 room 21 Apes, for short 22 Saint, Fr. marshal 23 Pear 24 Tower of 28 Neighbor of Minn. 30 Toodle-oo 34 Demosthenes or Cicero 36 Other 38 Ms. Fabray, for short 39 Irresist ible force's P target 42 Blubber 43 Organic compound 44 Loops 45 Hotter or Ambler 47 Pant 49 Meshed 50 "Thanks -I 52 Reclined 54 Ballet duet 57 Guys 53 Ear part 62 Parliamen tary pro cedure 65 Get dolled up 66 Spoke to 67 Nostrada muses 68 Rats 1 DOWN Showroom model, tor short 2 College in N.C. 3 Kind of wire 4 Persian Gulf ruler 5 Card game 6 Fit to be tied 7 Bar and grill 8 djective suffix 9 - volente 10 Russian royalty 11 Undamaged 12 Willing 13 Leap or bull 14 D.C. hundred 18 Observes 22 Garlic bulb 23 Hay package 24 Idaho's capital 25 Lancelot's wear 26 Dear deer 27 Ike's com mand 29 Small valleys 31 "-of rob ins ..." 32 "Be silent," in music 33 Restless: si. 35 Burma's capital 37 Dark wood 40 Vessel 41 DiMaggio 46 Shrewder 48 Beseeches . 51 Celebrities 53 Previnor Watts 54 Fuse units river 55 Schary 60 - Rabbit 56 Suit to 61 Termini 57 Style 63 Writer 58 Was beaten Szulc 59 Yorkshire 64 O.T. book Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: inlAU iTfrptioiwisri AiTiom A i.1 H I N T A RjYjC ANAL L t H JR A 1 nTTa M GJNLXE THANE JllHOlRyyiEA I JLl - ftp spU h HMSi f o i i Ml 4fTI i ToTTKotlANrTTNT 1 12 3 U S 16 17 IS 9 1l0 111 U 113 "t 7g T7 jT T3 '23 I "it 2M2ri6U7 hi i") W 31132 33 J? i 15 'fT """ 35 ! MM W MM -MM- MHH -MM MH- Vr- 1 I Is ho m 55 ft- Jfl ni JAA. , r , ir .J. i.4" """"if ':,f if bQ6P ZT "" If" zi 1 - 1 I I I I. 4 I I I I I I I a CO CO rx at rr o c xs c V) z ' z A c D a o to y O co 'In the Boom Boom Room' a modern American tragedy Sports Club Council endorsement By CHIP ENSSLIN Arts Editor John Morrow, director of the CaroLna Union's production of In the Boom Boom Room, believes that the cardinal sin of the any theatet group is to be dull. His production of David Rabe's 1973 Broadway hit is going to be anything but dull. "I don't think we'll have any people walking out." he said last week. That is an understatement. The play, by the author of Streamers, Slicks and Bones, and The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel, deals with homosexuality, beatings, child abuse, abortion, drug abuse and violent death. It is seen from the perspective of Chrissy, a go-go dancer, a high school dropout who has never been able to make anything of herself. "I like it as well as anything Rabe has done," Morrow said. "The characters seem to be more complete." Morrow saw the opening night Broadway performance of the play. Directed by Joseph Papp. In the Boom Boom Room was the inaugural play of the Vivian Beaumont Theater of the Lincoln Center. "It's a contemporary American tragedy," he says of the play. "It appealed to me because it featured the women's angle. Many of the new plays written today deal with men. Also, it suited our needs for casting purposes. Students or local people could fill many of the roles." The lead role of Chrissy is played by Sue Boase. It is a tremendously demanding role, requiring her to be on stage for virtually all of the play. The three acts are each about 45 minutes long. "It's a good script and a good cast," Morrow says. "1 feel we've developed it as far as we can. It's a hard piece of work, in terms of production and the effect it will have on the audience." There is a scene with partial nudity in In The Boom Boom Room. "1 find personally that some nudity on the stage can be offensive," Morrow says, "but I am , idealistic enough to think that you can do anything on stage as long as it has a point." Morrow, a native of Charlotte, has worked in North Carolina theater for many years. He has extensive experience in acting and directing in regional theater and has worked with the outdoor drama Unto These Hills off and on since 1963. Morrow also directed Jacques Brel, a musical presented by the Union last spring. In The Boom Boom Room will run Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights in the Great Hall of the Carolina Union. Tickets are $2.50 and are available at the Union desk. Brownbagging of beer and wine will be permitted. The endorsement committee of the Sports Club Council endorsed Dan Heneghan for Carolina Athletic Association president, Jim Phillips for student body president and Lou Bilionis for Daily Tar Heel editor Friday, said David Royle, SCC president. The six-member committee was approved at a meeting of the 22-member SCC Wednesday afternoon. Candidates were invited to the three-hour meeting approximately 24 hours in advance. CAA presidential candidate 1 nomas "Fizz" Cunningham said he was not interviewed by the committee because he was unable to break a previous engagement. "We endorse Heneghan for CAA president because he has a thorough working knowledge of athletics at Carolina and club sports in particular," Royle said. Royle described Heneghan as highly approachable. He said Heneghan would work hard to return the CAA to its former importance. In supporting Bilionis for DTH editor, R oyle said, "Bilionis is more committed than his opponent to giving student activities full coverage in the DTH." Royle said Bilionis would not allow personal prejudices and ambitions of the sports staff to control the content of the sports page. For student body president, Royle said, "We believe that Jim Phillips will be a capable and intelligent administrator," Royle said. "He would be a strong advocate of student interests. ( "Also we feel that he would strive to strengthen the fiscal and administrative base of club sports at Carolina." dth - ROBERT THOMASON Continued, from page 1. Job recruiters visiting UNC this week ' The following employers and graduate school representatives will be on campus to discuss job opportunities and academic programs on the dates indicated. Students who are registered with Career Planning & Placement may sign up for appointments with these representatives eight days ahead of the visit in 211 Hanes Hall. Information and assistance pertaining to summer and full-time employers not represented by on campus visits is also available. Feb. 20 Cameron Brown Burroughs Wellcome Co. The Quaker Oats Co. Babcock Graduate School of Management Arthur Andersen & Co. Feb. 20-21 American Hospital Supply Haskins & Sells A. M. Pullen Co. Reliance Electric Co. First Computer Services, Inc. Feb. 21-22 Winston-Salem Forsyth County Feb. 24 Schools Feb. 22 Portsmouth Public Schools Kurt Salmon Associates Inc. Hewlett-Packard Co. Frito-Lay Inc. Branch Banking & Trust Co. Ernst & Ernst I a' lor Instruments Feb. 23 Tenafly High School Del Monte Sales Co. Carnation Co. Bell System Celanese Corp. ' Miller Brewing Co. Feb. 23-24 Burlington Industries Inc. National Security Agency Association of International Students Presents m fi People JcjO Fine musical entertainment February 16 8:00 p.m. Memorial Hall Tickets available at the Carolina Union 1sMr I C iti HI Free Showing! Speakers G Spaces Come blow your mind and exercise your eardrums with a 20-minute multimedia presentation that could change the entire way you think about stereo. A question and answer period led by a qualified stereo specialist follows the presentation. MMWmM Oatr Wed. Feb. XSHi Time: 12:00 noon til 9:00 p.m Piter Carolina Inn't North Parlor (Actom from PeabodyHall) Register for FREE pair of Bose Jul Loudspeakers. FREE! "The best Dair in Chapel Hill" T-shirts to the first 75 visitors. H Special Show Discounts on Bose Loudspeakers Woofer & Tweeter HI-FI SYSTEMS a 426 EAST MAIN STREET CARRBORO. NORTH CAROLINA1 TELEPHONE 19191 967 2462 to, fc- F DOUBLE SPECIALS at Western Sizzlin No'l I 7t SiZZlin 7Srf j ON' Broiled Sirloin ! OFF Baked Potato or OFF French Fries Texas Toast Monday, February 13 (Not good in conjunction with other specials) TUESDAY is Student Night Anyone presenting a valid UNC ID and a copy of this ad will receive 50P off any regular entree, (except "Big Tex," Diet Plate and Child's Plate) Tuesday, February 14. R3 J 5 Sr3 I Open 11 a.m. 7 days a week - iicfi-:Ui.i . 324 W. Rosemary Call 942-1816 Arthur Young & Co. N.C. 4-H Camps (Summer employment only) George Washington University -Joint Institute Advancement of Flight Sciences McLean Trucking Company . Hollcman said he was not familiar enough with the paper to know what changes were needed. "It's a matter of me being able to go in and see how it's done now," he said. Bilionis has proposed a system of staggered distribution in which the supply of papers at popular boxes would be replenished throughout the morning. He also proposed a plan to avoid small papers. "Instead of running big 10-page papers in the fall, tight eights should be run." The money saved from printing the smaller papers in the fall could be used to expand the spring papers to six pages. ' Holleman has criticized DTH news coverage, calling for a reassignment of space in the paper. He said he would reassess the assignment of space in the paper to include more coverage of things such as the Women's Festival and the Shearon Harris nuclear plant. Bilionis has pledged to broaden the paper's coverage from academic issues and Student Government to include more feature stories and articles about lifestyles. Bilionis is a Morehead scholar from Fitchburg, Mass. Holleman is from Durham. m i k 4 f baaaa bad bad tt HAVE YOUR OYOS EXAf.linOD REGULARLY AND DRiflQ YOUR PROSCRIPTION TO OCICORO OPTICAL SINGLE VISION GLASSES 2$.L0W .SAVINGS, SELECTION ScHVluc, ouNvemenvc PLUS OUR GUARANTEE IN WRITING. YOU'LL GET THEM ALL AT ECKERD .OPTICAL For most single vision, standard size, clear glass lenses, beiectea irom a special assortment of frame styles and colors. BIFOCAL GLASSES 2! L0W o li.. 1 "'MP' s M mkHH For most round-segment standard size clear glass bifocals. Selected from a special assortment of frame styles and colors. THERES AN ECKERD OPTICAL CENTER NEAR YOU! 3 5sOC h .f. - ,i -- hi -i - i "" f J L, "! it""' In the Eckerd Drug Store Mon.-Fri. 9:00-5:30 Eastgate Shopping Center Sat. 9:00-1:00 Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514 Telephone: 919 929-7285 5k Kit- ; Me ,4 ' Chapel Hill's newest most exciting Gift Store Open only one week! I Y IT J The Freshest VALENTINE IDEAS in Candles, Ceramics, Crystal, Jewelry, Prints, Toys and Brass. Also, Wicker Furniture, Kitchen Accessories and Decoratqj- Items for Every Room. Crafts on display by the finest of Local Craftspeople include: Jewelry, Batik and Stained Glass. We are located in front of the Village Green, across the street from the Dandelion. Just Vi block West on Franklin Street. 112 W. Franklin 929-8659 Open tonight until 9:00 hoping to find homes for 32 orphaned Koala Bears!