The Daily Tar HeelThursday, January 8, 19873
Geeesis ffais ttolcH to
punt off qmaiiiini
By KIMOERLY EDENS
Staff Writer
Attention all Genesis fans: tickets
go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday for the
Feb. 22 concert with Phil and the
boys at the Dean E. Smith Center,
but don't bother to get in line now.
No one will be allowed to line up
at the Smith Center before 6 a.m.
Thursday. With the large number of
people expected for the UNC
Maryland basketball game Jan. 8
combined with Genesis ticket
seekers. Smith Center officials
expect overcrowding, said Steve
Camp, director of the Smith Center.
"We're not against lines," he said,
"but the basketball game created a
problem we didn't want to deal
with."
This restriction does not necessar
ily apply to future ticket sales, Camp
said, but the same situation could
recur.
The Jan. 31 concert, scheduled
before the Christmas holidays, will
go on as planned.
Police officers will be in the area,
to make sure nobody lines up early,
according to Major Charles Mauer
of University Police. Violators will
be asked to leave, he said, but will
g MO
be arrested. "You can't arrest
;m, Mauer said. You nave no
unds to arrest them.
lowever. Camp did not rule out
possibilitv of arresting violators.
js my understanding that we could
ie someone arrested if they're
fating a problem, but I don't really
icipate any problems."
Don't bother to drain your savings
ount, either, in hopes of buying
rty tickets and paying next semes
s tuition by scalping them: The
cet limit is eight the maximum
t the computer can print at one
ie, Camp said.
'We're trying to make sure that
many people as possible get a
ince to buy," he said,
because of the computerized ticket
es system, theres no advantage to
ng in UNC s line, "fcverybody s
mg out of the same bank ot
V-O.Ilip 9CUU. tlllllj p""v
!es with terminals spread over
irginia, North Carolina, and South
rohna all feed into the same
mmAi- KonV Pamn calrl TtS not
here you buy the tickets," he said,
fs when you get in the computer."
'My advice is find a place where
p lines are short,"he said.
f
Smith Cent? officials
plan comingittractions
By KIMBERLY EDENS
Staff Writer
Genesis' upcoming appearances at
the Dean E. Smith Center are only
an indication of the concerts in the
works at UNC, according to Steve
Camp, director of the Smith Center.
"There's every reason to hope that
Billy Joel will be here before the end
of the school year," Camp said. "We
had expected to do Huey Lewis, but
there was a conflict with a basketball
game."
But the Smith Center isn't going
to become a major concert venue.
"We want to have major concerts,
but we're not out to do a show every
fek," Camp said. Smith Center
ticials had been working on Gene
I concerts for several months
fore the group was able to make
:ommitment and tickets for the
st show went on sale. "The demand
s so great that we had to try to
ng them back," he said.
The concerts that Camp said he
frying to schedule range from big
pie rock acts like Genesis and Billy
bl to more family oriented per
fmers like Kenny Rogers and
bnel Richie, who have played the
lith Center in the past. "We're
jma try to have something for
jSrybody," he said.
B
etter late thnjnever,
Yacks ambldnto town
By MARIA HAREN
Staff Writer
The 1985-86 yearbooks have
arrived and have brought with them
two new "firsts" in Yackety Yack
history, according to the book's
design editor.
Ava Long, who designed most of
the book's layouts, said the yearbook
was only two months late. It arrived
Sunday. "It's the publishing com
pany's fault that the books weren't
on time," she said. "They couldn't
physically print the yearbook before
they said they could in the contract."
Previous Yackety Yacks have
arrived even later, Long said, often
arriving a year late. "This would have
been the first 'on-time' book if the
publishing company had held up its
end," she said.
The 1985-86 yearbook was also
under budget, Long said, another
Tirst that benefits students. "In the
last couple of years, the Yack has
gone over budget," she said. "But we
charged the company a penalty of
$200 a day for late publishing."
Because the yearbook was under
budget, extra Yackety Yacks will
probably sell for the original book
price of $21, Long said.
If a student is interested in pur
chasing a yearbook, but did not
previously order one, he can sign a
waiting list. "It will probably be two
or three weeks before the extra
yearbooks will go on sale," Long
d. "We vant to get all the other
oks distributed as soon as
ssible." " ' ,
Yearbook distribution and wait-
list sigi-up will be every after
bn this Veek in the Pit. Students
i also pbk up their yearbooks at
i Yackeif Yack office, Room 106
'the Student Union.
! . i .
i 'On tine means in the fall after
school vear." Long said, "so
hiors canpick them up before they
kve.
Subscriaions have been consist-
tly low h comparison with total
hiversity (nrollment, she said. Only
pOO yearrooks were ordered.
"Studenti get tired of paying their
pney and then wondering when
yre goitg to get their books,"
ng said, idding that sales may be
next yea- because of the timely
jrival of thl 1985-86 Yackety Yack.
fThe yearokY deadlines, which
re not pal of the contract, were
by the bbk's staff, she said, not
the publishing company.
'We missid the tenative Yack
hdline by T( days," Long said, "so
compaii got the pages by
btember 3. But that shouldn t
L?e caused uie books to be deli-
ied later."
jUthough he 1985-86 Yackety
ck is most unique as an early
fok, Long sad, its historical motif
ais . a specil flavor.
TSlSIEOSt
SECC&SSful CCt!8g
graduates
BisveaiHufbm
appearance.
Dress for success.
Enroll in the Army Reserve Office! draining
Corps, and you could graduate witthc
privilege of w earing the proud noltfiars of a
second lieutenant as well as a cap ad gown.
Army ROTC is the college clcctivdhat gives
you an opportunity to learn, and prltice,
management skills. Experience leafcrship
styles and motivational techniqucsKnd gain
the self-confidence that can spell sucess in
any career, civilian or military. J
Start that career with the advantage onlv
Army ROTC can give youIalk to Iur
Professor of Military Science, today
Call Captain Frank Dillard bll free
at 1-800-222-9184 to find Jut about
Army opportunities at UNCpH -
The beat stops down a dark Alley
By JAMES BURRUS
Start Writer
Rhythm Alley is closed. Again.
Owners Kenny Hobby and
Harry Simmons, also owners of
the Brewery in Raleigh, decided
to close their Chapel Hill music
club because neither of them
could devote enough time to the
project to make a return on their
investment..
Hobby, the principal stock
holder, was busy running the
Brewery and could not oversee
the management of Rhythm Alley
as much as he would have liked,
Simmons said.
Simmons said his own time was
limited because he was recently
named executive vice president of
Pro-Motion Concerts in Raleigh.
He also manages area artists Don
Dixon and Marti Jones.
Simmons said that he and
Hobby made an agreement to put
the club through a trial period of
three months. They agreed to
close it down if they could not
make it successful in that period.
Raising the drinking age to 21
did not significantly decrease the
club's business, Simmons said.
The club had a policy of admit
ting underage people if they wore
bright orange ' wristbands and
signed an agreement not to drink
any alcohol. According to Sim
mons, the policy worked.
He said the problem was not
getting people under 21 to come
to concerts, but rather it was
trying to get legal drinkers to
attend. "We had very little sup
port from the community at
large," Simmons said. Events that
appealed to college audiences or
old crowds sit-down audiences
did well,, but shows targeted
at ah over-21 dancing audience
flopped. The show had to appeal
to either an old audience or a
college audience to be successful,
Simmons said.
Cat's Cradle, Chapel Hill's
other music club, 'did not hurt
Rhythm Alley's business, Sim
mons said, as the Brewery had
succeeded despite competition
from several other Raleigh clubs.
Simmons said he and Hobby tried
to provide an alternative to the
Cradle and activities on campus
with Rhythm Alley.
Simmons said he thinks the
club could be a success if it were
owned by someone who had the
time to directly oversee its
operation.
It looks as if yet another
entrepreneur will get that chance.
o
o
o
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