Page 6 Rhythm Group Here Feb. 15th Atlanta Rhythm Section will appear in Dana Autorium at 8:15 February 15th. The group has been working together for the past five years and has recorded four albums. Their latest, on Polydor Records, includes the hit song "Dora ville". Their music has been compared to the Allman Brothers Band and the Marshall Tucker Band. They play a powerful blend of blues, rock, and country music. Tickets will go on sale this Wednesday during lunch in the cafeteria and thereafter will be available from 1-5 p.m. at the Student Union Office in Bryan Hall. Guilford students may purchase tickets for $2.00. Computer Training Beginning tomorrow February 5 - a class in Basic Computer Training will be offered. "Basic" is a computer "language" (used in programming and operating a computer) and is perhaps one of the easiest to learn. The class will be self-taught with various people familiar with the language to help the students. The class starts at 10:00 a.m. in King Hall basement, Room 030, and is being offered by the SPS. Choir News The Guilford College Choir has been performing for various organizations in the years past and recently sang for the New Garden Friend's Meeting. Another engage ment has been scheduled for the group -- they will be airing their talents at the Greensboro Annual YMCA Meeting on February 10th at 7:30 P.M. Mr. Edward Lowe, Choir Director, mentioned that this performance will be one of quite a few that will be held before Spring Break. 0t- W^ Union office prepares for circus ticket sale Discount Circus Tickets The Guilford College Union has purchased a block of tickets to the performance of the Rjngling Brothers Circus for the performance at 8:00 p.m. on Thursday, February 6. These are reserved seat tickets which would normally sell for $4.50 but which are available to Guilford students and staff at $2.00 apiece. A limited number is still available at the Student Activities Office in Bryan Hall. CAN YOU IDENTIFY THIS DISTINGUISHED MEMBER OF THE GUILFORD COMMUNITY? • - W Ml: -. § Uk ****■ JHH ■- m HHn w -JH H 1 N ' ppr^ Leave your name and answer on mail stick under Guilfordian. Greensboro Finale for Engelhardt Art Class -- Saturday, February 8, Guil ford College Library. Time: 10:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. New address after February: Ned and Beverly Giberson, Sunny side Farm, Rice, Virginia, 23966. Law School For Women Women-in-Law at the Uni versity of North Carolina School of Law is sponsoring a recruitment weekend Feb ruary 28 - March 1 in Chapel Hill for any women interested in attending law school. Activities for the weekend will include sitting in on some classes, a picnic Friday evening with law students and professors, panels on wo Beard, Bolin Perform Feb. 1 --Under the subdued red lights of Irving Coffee house, Dick Beard and Tony Bolin performed on dulcimer and guitar on Saturday night. Dick Beard played several instruments on dulcimer. Some of his tunes were subtle and haunting; others, lively and staccato. He also did several wry and melancholoy songs on guitar. The voice was evocative, if the words were sometimes indistinct. The second performer, Tony Bolin, did a variety of folk and country and western songs. Best of Women's Film Festival Continued from Page 3 assimilated the many frustra tions, feelings and ideas of women into a cohesive presentation. This film was probably the biggest hit of the evening, funny yet at the same time chillingly on target. The second longer film was produced in Canada and showed us a monologue spoken by a young unwed mother as we see her excited about the coming of her baby and expressing all the idealistic wonder possible at the miracle of birth. As the film progresses, we discover that the doctors, in delivering the baby had broken its shoulder and it is suggested that the delivery may have led up to the cerebral hemmor rage that the child eventually dies from. This film, done in black and white, was moving and well done, but suffered from a perhaps intentionally slow pace and might have been more effective had it been shorter. The final film of the evening, entitled Holding, concerned itself sans dialogue with the presentation of lesbian love making. For perhaps fifteen minutes we are shown, in extremely explicit detail, two women engaged in passionate em brace, building up to an explosive yet gentle orgasm. February 4, 1975 men's experience as students and as practicing attorneys, a speaker from the Women Law Project in Philadelphia, ex planation of admission proce dures, and opportunity for small group discussion. Hous ing will be provided if needed. Information is available at the Placement Office at your school, or contact: Women-in- Law, UNC Law School, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514 There were the stand-by ballads of wandering men, cheap restaurants, and wai tresses. Bolin also sang several comic songs, one concerning car repairs, another about a guy confronting a girl who shares her strict mother's suspicions of men. Perhaps his best song was "Hello in There," a reminisce of an old couple who "grow lonesome waiting for someone to say hello." Bolin sang and played in an unembellished but persuasive manner. at which point the film ends. If the film is intended as a stark and bullish statement directed to shock the straight viewer then it is a success. The film also manages to convey the gentle beauty of lesbian love, but it disturbs me that the perspective we are given is so purely and carnally sexual, as though lesbian love was at once both beautiful and superficial. It seems to me that this was not an altogether true picture, and 1 would suspect that many gay women would disagree rather violent ly with the presentation. For myself, I was not affected one way or the other by this film, though I noted a great many raised eyebrows and puzzled expressions on the faces of the audience as the lights came on. All in all, the Best of the N.Y. Women's Film Festival was an interesting, sometimes moving, and always novel look into the work that women filmmakers and producers are doing these days. The crowd seemed to enjoy the evening, and I am certainly glad that the Women's Coalition put a great deal of energy and time into the presentation of movies often talked about but rarely seen at Guilford.