iHiiOctober 15, 1968
THE DAILY TAR H
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9
'Diary Of A Madman 9 Aired Tonight
By GINGER KING
TH Staff Writer
The Department of music
J"! present a concert tonight
comhini WrkS fr unusua
combinations of instruments.
'he concert, to be
FtM?rmed by members of the
yNL chamber ensembles, will
include works for glass
harmonica and strings, songs
for voice, viola, and piano, a
trio sonata and a piano quartet.
Described by one faculty
member as being "one of our
LA
ALDEN
most unusual and attractive
programs for the year," the
show is open to the public and
admission is free.
The trio sonata, from J.S.
Bach's "Musical Offering" will
be performed by Jane Bowers
(flute), Edgar Alden (violin),
Charles Griffith (cello), and
Michael Zenge, harpsichord.
Mozart's Adagio and Rondo
for flute, oboe, viola, cello and
the obsolete glass harmonica is
the second work to be
performed. The glass
harmonica, invented by
Benjamin Franklin, was made
of a series of tuned glasses of
graded sizes which were
revolved mechanically. The
player produced the sounds by
lightly touching the rims.
The glass harmonica was
particularly popular in
Germany and Austria, where
Mozart, Beethoven, and other
composers wrote for it.
In this performance the
celesta, a keyboard instrument
which sounds much like the
glass harmonica, will be used.
Michael Zenge will play the
celesta, Jane Bowers flute,
David Serrins, oboe, Ann
WOODWARD
Woodward, viola, and Charles
Griffith, cello.
Also featured on the
program will be the Two Songs
Op. 91 by Johannes Brahms.
Performing it will be Mary
Burgess, mezzo-soprano, Ann
Woodward, viola, and Clifton
Matthews, piano.
The program will close with
, the piano quartet in C Minor,
Op. 15, by Gabriel Faure.
Barbara Rowan will perform at
the piano assisted by the N.C.
String Quartet.
Bv JOE SANDERS
DTH Features Writer
- "I hate watching myself on
film." said English actor
Michael Meneaugh. star of
Gogol's "Diary of a Madman.
The play, a monodrama. will
be aired on Channel 4. WUNC.
Tuesday. Oct. 15 at 9 p.m.
Meneaugh presented the
play to a UNC audience last
fall in Chapel Hill and since
then, has landed a large
supporting role in the smash
English production. "Hadrian
VII." t;Diary" depicts the
gradual disintegration of the
mind of a man going insane.
But even though Mene'.ugh
feels that he has "mastered
his role in "Diary", it was far
from his first experience in
drama.
"J got two roles in the
movie version of 'Dr. Faustus'
(starring Richard Burton and
Elizabeth Taylor) because my
main role was just voice," he
said recently. "I play the good
angel, and my voice comes
from a statue. I also play a
bishop who gets hit in the face
with a cream pie."
"But it's funny," he said, "I
th;e taPinS of the movie
?? . f f!envards everyone said
at 1 had done a good job. I .
came away feeling wretched I
said -lets do the whole thine
over. 5
-Meneuagh feels better
about the taping of the
uiary . however. "The studio
people seemed to be right on
the ball he said.
'"The only problem is that
even-thing is unresponsive in a
!A. studio." he said. "Of
course, in Rome, where we
filmed -Faustus. the camera
crew was Itlaian and didn't
respond to anything except my
getting the pie on the face."
The production will be the
first full-length presentation of
"Diary" on television.
UNC Professor Richmond
Crinkley who directed
Meneaugh in the production
eels that the play is laden with
"tragic comedy." He said
"After laughing at the
character's delusions, the
audience gets appalled at
themselves as well as what's
happening."
"I haven't watched myself
go insane in this taping,"
Meneaugh said. "I guess it's
just as well."
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Michael Meneaugh As Poprischtchin
.On WUNC-TV At 9 p.m. Tonight.
Lettermen Perform
Highlighting the Florida
weekend, the Carolina Union
will present the Lettermen in
concert, Friday, October 18.
Voted the No. 1 college
attraction in the Billboard
Magazine poll, the vocalists will
perform in Carmichael
Auditorium at 8 p.m. Tickets
are on sale for $1.25 with
student I.D. at the Graham
Memorial Information desk.
General public tickets and
tickets sold at the door Friday
night will be $1.75.
The Lettermen Gary Pike,
Tony Butala and Jim
rike practice the theory that
"songs were written to be sung
as composers hoped they'd be
sung." They have twenty-two
hit albums including "A New
Song for Young Love,"
"Spring!" and "The
Lettermen! ! ! . . . and 'Live' ".
Singing a variety of songs
from folk ballads to pupular
"uptempo swingers," the groups
specializes in love songs.
Recording star Connie Stevens
says, the Lettermen "can take
a song that was a hit 20 years
ago and make it a hit all over
again."
The three vocalists began
their individual singing careers
early. Then, their paths led
them to Hollywood where the
Lettermen were born in 1961.
Tony Butala of Sharon, Pa.,
made his professional debut at
the age of eight on a radio
show. He then sang with the
famed Mitchell Boys Choir.
Jim Pike of St. Louis, Mo.,
was a student at. Brigham
Young University when praise
by the local press encouraged
him to pursue a professional
singing career.
The third member sang as a
youth in his hometown of
Twin Falls, Idaho. Later, as a
student at El Camino College -in
California, Gary Pike joined
Tony and Jim to form the
Lettermen.
Their first two singles "The
Way You Look Tonight" and
"When I Fall in Love" were
best sellers. Recent television
appearances include the Red
Skelton Show, Hollywood
Palace and the Jack Benny
Show.
Spend an evening with the
Lettermen Friday, Oct. 18, and
enjoy this favorite trio who
maintain the deepest respect
for good songs and the people
who write them.
"s - w J.
Olympic Qualifying Heats
Aired On TV This Week
Today
1-2 p.m. Track: Men's 200-meters qualifying. Weightlifting:
lightweight finals. Possible coverage men's volleyball, eight-oared
rowing and basketball.
7-8:30 p.m. Men's track and field: finals in the discus,
400-meter hurdles and 800 meters; second round in the 200
meters; qualifying in the 5000 meters. Women's track: 100-meter
final, semifinals in the 400 meters. Possible coverage: Boxing
trials and basketball.
Wednesday
1-2 p.m. Men's track and field: qualifying rounds in the
110-meter hurdles, triple jump and hammer throw Possible
coverage: pentathlon, water polo, basketball and the U.S. vs
Poland in Men's volleyball.
7-7:30 p.m. Men's track and field: finals in the steeple chase,
pole vault and javelin. Women's track: 400 meter finals.
Weightlifting: middleweight finals.
8:30-9 p.m. Men's track and field finals: 200 meters, pole
vault and javelin Basketball.
Thursday
1-2 p.m. Swimming and diving: qualifying in the women's
400-meter medley relay and springboard diving; and men's
400-meter freestyle relay. Yachting: from Acapulco. Rowing:
eight-oared semifinals.
7-7:30 p.m. Men's track: finals in the 110-meter hurdles and
5000-meter run. Wrestling: freestyle eliminations.
9:30-11 p.m. Track and field: finals in the triple jump and
hammer throw; and women's high jump Start of 50,000-meter
- walk. Swimming: finals in the men's 400-meter freestyle
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Persian
ruler's title
5. Stylish
9. In this
place
10. Wealthy
11. One kind
of shark
12. Iterate
14. Miscalculate
15. Hauls
16. Compass
point
17. Minutia
19. Mother of
Irish gods
20. Mauler of
the mat
23. Job
26. Cubicles
27. Romeo of
a sort:
2 wds.
29. Amper
sand 30. Commands
34. Small fish
35. Terrible
37. Tibetan
antelope
38. Movable
40. Capstan or
kettle
41. Russian
river
' 42. Falsehoods
43. Sanskrit
schools
44. Poker stake
. DOWN
1. Miss
Dinah
2. Item left
in San
Francisco
3. Scotch 19. Entire
alder 21. Fright-
4. Hebrew en
letter 22.' Nurse
5. Mariners 23. Assert
6. Fruits 24. Some
of roses thing
7. Freeze - for a
8. English, beggar
for one 25. Strange
11. Guided 28. Addi-
12. Characteri- tional
zation 31. Wading
13. Grief bird
15. Re- 32. Stir up
treads 33. Missile
and 35. TV ap
others purten
18. Crooked ance
DO R
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JdieIaIlitp
Tickets Now On Sale At G.M.
. . .For Lettermen Friday at 8 p.m.
Need Student Groups
LAIP
Yesterday's Answer
36. Troubles
39. Sibling:
abbr.
40. Clamor
42. Music
note
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Home games mean
excitement and activity. They
mean dressing up and
fraternity parties. On the other
hand, away games have meant
boredom, ennui and mass
exodus to homes and greener
pastures.
This need no longer be the
case. The Music and Social
Committee of the Carolina
Union has discovered a cure.
On Friday and Saturday nights
of off-weekends they will
sponsor student talent in the
GM Rendezvous Room. .
The Music Committee is
trying to locate students who
are interested in forming
groups or acts to give them an
opportunity to meet others
with similiar interests.
Groups and individuals are
encouraged to participate.
Anyone interested should
contact Woody Durham at the
Phi Mu House, 929:4263, for
details.
here is only
ons school
for Junior
mpyter
roqriEiimers
in this area!
Other schools teach Data Processing but only CPC
offers a program that will qualify you as a Junior
Computer Programmer and for starting salaries
averaging $7200 a year in this area.
If you are interested in the field of computer pro
gramming, call 489-2351 for an appointment to take
our FREE aptitude test and find out more about our
program. Remember CPC is the only school In
this area that trains qualified Junior Computer
Programmers. ,
COMPUTER
PROGRAMMING
CENTER of Durham, Inc.
2538 Chapel Hi I! Boulevard, Durham. N.C. 27707
Ttlephone Durham 483-2351 Rato'sh 833-1113
S I II II I
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'69 Camaro SS Sport Coupe, plus RS equipment
GM
um of Mcrucmct
TV Special
By ROSEMARY ZIBART
DTH Staff Writer
A "safe" encapsulated
middle-class family's discovery
that the daughter is taking
drugs forms the theme of The
People Next Door, CBS
Playhouse's premiere
presentation at 9:30 tonight.
The play, which stars Lloyd
Bridges, Kim Hunter, Fritz
Waver and Phyllis Newman,
deals with two middle-class
couples and how they are
affected by he discovery that
their relationship with their
been devastingly
children has
disrupted.
The play jtraces the slow
destruction of a family by the
generation gap, drugs, and a
chilling lack of understanding.
Veteran writer J.P. Miller,
whose credits include the
original Days of Wine and
Roses for Playhouse 90, says
he became involved in this
theme when "one of my own
sons took up some hippies and
decided to drop out." Miller's
attempt to understand his son
led to this play.
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Some people have a hard time
communicating with youth.
Not us.
We just bring on the 1969
Camaro, then tell it like it is.
It is: Restyled inside and out
with a new grille, new bumpers,
new parking lights, new instru
ment panel, new steering wheel,
new striping, and new colors
including Hugger Orange, which
is wild.
It is:' Fuji of new features
including bigger outlets for the
Astro Ventilation, a 210-hp stand
ard V8, and a lock for the steering
column, ignition and transmission
lever. .
It is: Available with a little
device that automatically washes
your headlights when you hold the
windshield washer button in.
It is: Still wider and weightier
than the rival sportster we're too
polite to name.
You should drive a 1969 Camaro
at your Chevrolet dealer's the
first chance you get. rmwmfmwT
Even if you're 42. J-V
Putting you first, keeps us first.
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