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Leprechaun's day delight
It will be mostly sunny today,
with increasing cloudiness by
late afternoon. The high will be
in the low 60s; the law in the
low 30s. Zero chance of rain.
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Ccpy editors
There w2 be an important meet
ing for all current DTH copy
. editors at 4:30 p.m. Wednes
day in the 07 office. P.ease
attend.
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Serving the students and the University community since 1893
Voluma G9. Issus l)f j Qrj
Tuesday, March 17, 1981 Chspel HYA. North Carolina
Krw;SportsArt 933 0245
Kuurvs.'Advrtiftm9 933-1163
;9
c L
I I J
l i A i n
v " V, iL.
Dy TERESA CURRY
SfaffWrUer
While many people think they know what secre
taries do, and may claim to know how they feel,
they don't know the real story behind the nine-to-five
job. .
But the recent box office hit 9 to J, starring
Jane Fonda, Dolly Parton and Lily Tomlin, at
tempts to depict the lives and roles of secretaries.
How much lies behind the movie is hard to say.
In an informal survey of secretaries who work
at the University, most of those who had seen the
movie agreed that parts of 9 to 5 were exaggerated.
Yet, most of the secretaries found the movie quite
humorous and enjoyable.
"I thought it was great," said Maria Young,
secretary to Vice Chancellor and Dean Donald
Boulton. "1 really enjoyed it. It was extremely
funny, but it had a lot of truth to go along with the
humor. Some things in it were true, some things
were exaggerated, and some things were not true."
Phyllis Brockwell, secretary to Associate Vice
Chancellor of Business Charles Antle, had a
similar reaction to 9 to 5. "I really enjoyed it, but
I was surprised it had been getting such good re
views.
FlO
than
Utah
By DAVID POOLE
StaflT Writer
Spring break is traditionally the time
of year when college students head for
sun-and-fun at Florida's resorts or
spend a little time catching up on
studying and sleep around the old home
town. And, upon the return to classes, the
question "How was your break?" gives
the old stand-by "What's your major?"
a run for its money as the most frequently
used opening line in the locsl fczrs. .
Ask about sprmS break and direct
inquiry toward North Carolina basket
ball, and you're likely to get a long and
very interesting answer. For, in the last
12 days, the Tar Heels have won four
games, claimed the championship of the
Atlantic Coast Conference basketball
tournament and advanced to the round
of 16 in the NCAA basketball national
championship tournament.
Next up for the Heels is a trip to Salt
Lake City, Utah, for the semifinals of
the NCAA West Regional. UNC plays
Utah on its home floor Thursday at 9
p.m. EST.
The Tar Heels have traveled the fast
lane in coming this far and though it ac
tually began back in mid-October when
practice opened, the final leg of the jour
ney started March 5 in the Capital Centre
in Landover, Md., in the opening round
of the ACC tournament.
There, North Carolina began its drive
toward the league title with a 69-54 vic
tory over N.C. State. The Tar Heels then
nipped Wake Fores! 58-57 on a Mike
Pepper jumper in the last 10 seconds of
the semifinals. Maryland, a team that
. had pummelled top-seeded Virginia in
the other semifinal game, met Carolina
in the finals and the Tar Heels turned
back the Tcrps 61-60 to take the title.
Sam Perkins had 53 points and 25 re
bounds in the three games and became
only the second freshman to win the
Everett Case Award as the tournament
Most Valuable Player. James Worthy
joined Perkins on the all-tournament
team, and Al Wood and Jimmy Black
made the second team.
Winning the league title didn't mean
that the Tar Heels would begin NCAA
play close to home. The NCAA selection
committee decided that the Tar Heels
should see the country as they played for
the national crown and sent them pack
ing for a second round game in El Paso,
Texas.
The Tar Heels, seeded second in the
West Regional by the committee, had a
first -round bye and wound up playing
Pittsburgh, who had advanced with an
overtime triumph over Idaho Friday night
Sco HGELS on page 4
Mssls look
further
3. M
9
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177!
V V
Cy LAURA ELLIOTT
SpW tolU !;?) Tr Itwl
Thte is the second part of a two-pxrt series on
crts fumllnz in Noah CcrvLnj. This crikte focuses
Cn local funding.
-' ' "I. . I-""""" '
Lvcn though the Chapel Hill area is peppered
w ith tong-etatHUhed arts organizations w hkh in
volve many citizens, Carrbcro end Chape! H"i
hae been t'.ow to re4 per. J to ccr,nv,:ru:y crts r.ceds.
Neither town's fovcrnr.'.ent bujiej arts grants
until the lavt two years.
i:ofh cities support rc n r- to t.e Art
Svi.oo! cf Off M il MJ1. t! e t rr ! pro
viJ rofl H-!ieJari ta(? e C! ..111 !f..nt .n
4 - t " ' ' '
"I think the movie was highly exaggerated and
kind of wild at times," Brockwell said. "A lot of
the situations in the movie were similar to those in
private enterprises. The situations were not like
my job here."
Dianne Crabill, secretary to Wayne Jones, asso
ciate vice chancellor for finance, was critical of 9
to 5. "I thought the first part was funny, but I
wasn't happy with the second part."
She explained that the first part of the movie
depicted work situations that a secretary is likely
to encounter, but that the second part of the
movie was much more complicated.
"The secretaries' reactions were all male
stereotypes of female behavior," Crabill said.
"They were all intelligent women, but in the se
cond part they went over the deep end. In the end
it still took a man to bail them out.
"If 1 had made the movie it wouldn't have
been a comedy. It would have been a serious do
cumentary." All of the secretaries questioned felt their rela
tionships with their bosses were good. They found
our i
i iff
4
UNC student paints announcement of the play Home
Festival; students return to the springlike weather in
work they left unfinished before break.
Chapel
ms
By KAREN HAYWOOD
Staff Wriler
Many local bar owners raised their beer prices
about 10 cents per can in November, but, they say,
.Chapel Hiliians are still drinking plenty anyway. .
Beer consumption per person in Orange County
remains higher than in most counties in North
Carolina, said Hayden Cline, president of Triangle
Bevcage Incorporated, a Durham beer distributor.
900,000 cases of beer were sold last year in Orange,
Cline said.
But although Orange County ranks high in North'
Carolina, North Carolina is the third lowest state in
the nation for per person beer consumption, ahead
of South Carolina and Georgia, he said.
The national per person beer consumption per
year is 35.7 gallons; in North Carolina beer con
sumption is 28.2 gallons per person per year, Cine
said.
Conversely, North Carolina, South Carolina and
Georgia have the highest soft drink consumption in
the country over 40 gallons per person per year,
Cline said.
Higher beer prices have caused people to budget
their beer money, he said. People are buying less
beer in bars and more beer in grocery' stores.
"Parents give the students only so much allowance.
"
?! f I !l
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of uu. rvuvnuaiivo and shows by artists asso
ciated with the school are also presented on a reg
ular basis.
The two governments make their appropriations
differently. Carrboro provides the Art School
with a lurr.p sum to be used at the institute's own
discretion. Chapel Hill, on the other hand, sgrecs
to provide funds for specific contracted projrams.
These differing approaches in two such closely
interacting towns reflect the nationwide contro
versy over ho uxpasers money should be spent
em the arts.
According to Jacques Mcnache, founder and
director of the Art School, 50 percent cf the or
gar.tZ3tio.nS money comes from tuition. The o
Jcrity of other rundv'co.mes from the Nitiont
iir.dowmcnt for the Aru and the North Carolina
Art Council,
they did not face the problems at their present
jobs that Tomlin, Fonda and Parton did in 9 to 5.
Brockwell summed up the general response of
the secretaries. -
rr
till! M.itl lOi,n.f
"I think it's great. My boss is really nice. He is
not at all like the tyrant in the movie. He is a real
easy going person. He gives me credit for what 1 do
and he praises me for good jobs," she said.
When each secretary was asked which actress in
the movie she would identify with and why, a va
i
,1
put on by the Carolina Union and the BSM during Black Arts
Chapel Hill to pick up the pieces and try to remember what
' '
drinldiig plenty beer, despite pric
If the price of beer goes up, they have to figure out
a better way to spend it. They've still got to eat."
Keg sales are also up, Gine said, because they are
less expensive for the amount of beer they contain.
Linda Williams, owner of Linda's bar, said she
had definitely seen a change in the number of people
drinking in bars in her 15 years in the business in .
Chapel Hill and that number had gone down.
People used to come out every night and drink, but
not any longer.
Williams said working people did not have the
money they once did, and college students parents
were not giving them as much money.
"People can't afford to drink six days a week,"
she said.
Kevin Haerberle, bartender at Harrison's agreed
that students did not frequent bars as much now as
a few years ago. He said bars were once crowded on
Sunday nights, for instance, but that Harrison's is
now closed then.
"People have found other ways to entertain
themselves," he said. 'They're taking school more
seriously."
Linda's raised its canned beer prices from 75
cents to 85 cents in November, owner Williams said,
but that rise does not affect that many people.
"People who want to drink canned (beer) are
going to drink canned," she said.
nil
II t j N
si H I J
This year, however, the Art School aLo applied
to Chapel HU1 and Carrboro for a total cf $12,000
to help pay its rent and operational costs.
Carrboro responded with a grant of $5,500.
The only restrictions made upon the money i
that the Art School should ask an aldermm to be
come a board member and that at least 0 Ccnboro
residents be enrolled in classes, said Jim Daicr,
flnincial director for Carrboro.
"We don't have &nth!ns to do with their teemed
ue " Baler izli. "They hase jurisdiction over
how the money is spent. We jmt mile the lump
sum eppropriation."
''V.'e give rr.r.ey to many or2nizs!;cn$ wUh
provide a speciHe fen tee to the ccmmurJty
Councd cm A;;"r-, t!;? Opcl IlCcnbora lpe
Cmis Center sm4 c;hrfs he klIJ, tiUt admit,
ted that he hci net fcco.r.menJeJ as Lir;? an ap
riety of responses emerged.
Susan Sams, secretary to the General College
Office, identified with Dolly Parton. "She worked
with the boss the closest. She was his personal
secretary," she said.
"In different situations 1 could identify with any
of them," Crabill said. "I can see myself like Lily
Tomlin, putting in the garage door. The female
support thing portrayed in the movie (is something)
I can really identify with."
Young pictured herself starting out on shaky
ground like Jane Fonda. "I hadn't planned to be
a secretary when I graduated," she said.
Brockwell also found herself identifying with
Fonda.
"She seemed kind of quiet. She was new," she
said. I would put myself in her place because I feel
our personalities are comparable. 1 could relate to
Jane Fonda and her situation in the Xerox room
with the copy machine going wild. At times you
begin to feel like some of these office machines
have a mind of their own."
LJ
Editors note: This b the first of a four
part series presenting brief profiles of
the newly elected Campus Governing
Council members. Today's story focuses
on the five officers of the council. Wed
nesday The Daily Tar Heel will interview
the Finance Committee members, Thurs
day the Rules and Judiciary Committee
members and Friday the Student Affairs
Committee members.
By JONATHAN SMYLIE
Staff Writer
I&viii&etitly.been elected by. their
fellow members, the new officers of the
Campus Governing Council have quickly
discovered many responsibilities involved
in their job. This' week the Council is faced
with having to make a decision about
Chapel Thrill, and next week, the bud
geting process begins.
GCG Speaker ElChino Martin sees his
role as more than just the coordinator for
the council's meetings. "1 act as the coun
cil's representative to the executive branch
of Student Government and the administration."
1
Draft prices at Linda's have not gone up recently,
Williams said.
Purdy's bar manager Jim Heinz said domestic
canned beer there went up 10 cents a can in
' November.
Steve Junkmann, Troll's bartender, said Troll's
had gone up about 10 cents on all beer prices, but
the higher prices had made no difference in beer
sales.
"People are going down to the bars to drink, no
matter what the prices are," he said.
Most area managers said they break even on
Happy Hour because people stay after the prices go
back up.
Bartender Haeberle said Harrison's did not lose
money on Happy Hour, and that people who came
usually returned to the bar at othcT times.
"On a slower night, you want to drag people down
who normally wouldn't come," Haeberle said.
Williams said high sales volume during Happy
Hour is the only way Linda's makes up for the
lower prices.
Heinz said Purdy's breaks even on Happy Hour.
"Unless" someone drinks 15 or 20 (beers), we're
still coming out even," he said.
Harry Kolaski, day manner at Crazy Za:ks,
said its bar sells draft for five cents during Happy
Hoyr and makes up the difference when beer goet
? to comnmiiniaiitv asrm m
propriation as $5,500. He implied thai Carrboroi
genercrity was due Largely to t.vfC fact the Art School
orirta!ly had titled itidf the Carrboro Art $di0cf.
Carrboro first gave money to the Art School in
1978. The gram was for $2,450.
"Carrboro gives us our money for t cinj our
selves," Mensehe ildt "for cur students, for our
festivals, for our performances, li Is a r.or.drpart
mental grant. Tlicrc are no lejaJ strings a:ta:hed
They feci we desene funding because cf the ler
vice we render."
Mmacbe defined that service as It&z the rr-jjor
impetus and organizer of the creativity tnd cnei
gies of local arthfi and ir.terr.teJ chiiens. MV.e
gie tlcr.t a glice to egc--e their art. V.e g:-. t;.rm
an epportunity to male a lim at it. Veput them
m contact each ether." Mrrache taid.
The An school inrreates the niacil sem.e of
The secretaries liked different parts of the movie
best. For instance, some of them, like Crabill,
liked the actresses' fantasies of killing their bosses
the best.
Other secretaries, like Zona Norwood, secretary
to UNC President William Friday, had no parti
cular favorite part.
"I liked it all. It was really funny. I thought it
was a cute movie, but it didn't apply to what goes
on in this office," she said.
"1 like the part where they stole the body and
they thought it was the boss but it wasn't," Sams
said.
Brockwell said, "My favorite part is where Lily
Tomlin realized she had put rat poisoning in the
boss' coffee instead of low cal sugar."
Since all of the secretaries questioned were quite
content with their present jobs, most said they
would never fantasize killing their bosses as the
secretaries did in the movie.
Young added, "No, I'd just get another job.
(Killing the boss Is) too much trouble."
II ( U,
ft . t
Martin, the only returning member
from the 1930-1931 CGC says the bud
geting process, the election balloting pro
blem and Chapel Thrill are the major
issues the council will work on this year.
To deal with these issues Martin, along
with the other officers, stresses the impor
tance of larger participation by the
student body.
"By soliciting student input outside the
council and from other student organiza
tions we will get a better idea what the
students want," Martin said.
"1 want to work with the whole council
'"to ras!cr,rveyeryone is communicating ; A
with their districts," said Mark Edwards,
Speaker Pro Tern. "1 feel a need to open
up lines of communication with the
students. There has been a lack of that in
the past," he said.
Edwards, the representative from dis
trict 11 (Olde Campus), has worked in
student government for two years on
several committees and hopes that ex
perience will help the council in the
months to come.
Se8 CGC on page 2
1 '
II
UlM Jjy IS'"
Bars rciscd faesr prices In fJovcmbcr
... but consumption remains steady
b3ck'up to its regular price.
The Rathskeller restaurant opened a bar section
bt month to increase its sales volume, manao"
Charles Smith said.
The Rathskc!! cr sells ebout 40 percent liquor and
60 percent beer. Smith said. Liquor hat taken a
little, but not a lot, of the beer business.
Sco BEER on pago 4
ik-xsK-rirJ rcisdents, said Menache. "We tit
tryins to increase their tppreciatiun of the arts.
We da that by tfair.!,- them in a ipecific art znA
givm them the chare? to attend cultural events."
Accordi.tj to Ren Secriu, director cf the Parks
and Recreation Department for Cfcapcl 1 11, the
trend to give grar.ts, la rpnkatiom sepsrstc Um
the Chape! 1 h:l government l?egan in the early 7CH.
"They wanted to help social ten ice t -rncies tuih
a fJattrrcd Women and the ftap Crisis Center.
Then Idsure-orier.tsd freneiet tean maiinj
retiueits.'
Uut Chapel Hill did not respond to Art Schoi4 .
rcqurJs ur.:d th's raf. l-i the r-t city'i in.
direct iupjxfi c . - : through hirins Art School
artr.is for rvtnts su.h es os;!dx--f summer concerts
ami vtitrt f-iri.
$53 ARTS on p:?rp 4
eoin