Tuesday, April 22, 1960
THE DAILYTarheel
Papre 3
Here Tonight
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; Hod David Sings Of Love, Of Loneliness, Of Joy
, ' . - and he's appearing tonight at 10 p.m. in the Great Hall.
UNC Chorus & Symphony Unite
For Menotti, 'Carmina Burana'
The thirteenth century
supplies the subject matter for
two major choral works to be
performed Tuesday evening at
8:00 in Memorial Auditorium.
, Dr Lara Hoggard will
conduct the Carolina Choir,
the , Choral Union, the
Piedmont Treble Choir and the
UNC Symphony Orchestra in
Gian Carlo Menotti's "The
Death of the Bishop of
Krindisi" and,. k Carl Orffs
Carmina ' burana-V 'iY Thq, '
4:
concert is part of . the ten-day
UNC , Biennial Fine Arts
Festival.
In the year 1212 some
'60,000 children left their
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
,1. First name
inMonaeo
. Hiding
"place
li: Wading
bird
12. Suffered
, pain
13. Concerning
14. Goatee or
Vandyke
15. Throws
17. Golf
teacher
18. Journey
21. Tibetan '
4 ' priest
24. Papal rep
; resentative
27. Semites
29. American
Indians
30. Name of
; 3 Spanish
h pretenders
32, Winds
it up
33. Darkens
35.' Good friend
37. Dwell
41. Dispatch
,' boat
44. Titanic,
' e.g.
45. Having
") prongs
46. Carries
47. Bordered
48. Night
'sound
DOWN
1. Passage to
a river,
in India
2. City
symbolic
of divorce
3. Son of
Zeus and
Hera
4. Tottenham
policeman
5. Pass over
the
threshold
6. Crane
operator's
cubicle
7. Tennis
point
8. Padre
9. Frau's
companion
10. Taro
root
16. Mineo
19. Churchill
victory
sign
bap m&s,
CHUCK
U wiiup TPrsI "-J I I count pedpleM Lr4 fourteem.. I
TWELVE THEV BORE ME f FIFTEEN.. SIXTEEN..1!) A5-Ov
05LV;Jm S VMORETHANSMEEPJ SEVEr4TEEN... )
H- THIRTEEN.. 1 1 c J
homes in France and Germany
to liberate Jerusalem from the
Mohammadans. Armed only
with their innocence and their
faith, they set out for the
Italian seaports. Many were
lost crossing the Alps.
Those who survived were
sick and weak from hunger and
exhaustion. Some finally
reached the Mediterranean port
of Brindisi, where the Bishop
did what he could to help. ' ' ' '
It js estimated that' of-the
60,000 children, only about
2,000 ever returned home.
None reached the Holy Land. -Those
who embarked at the
Mediterranean ports were lost
20. A going
out
21. Sub
stance in
shellac
22. South
ern constellation
.23. The art
of stain
Yesterday's Answer
ing like
sculptured
limestone
25. Little
Edward
26. Before tee
28. Turf
31. Term of
address
34. Dissolves
35.-
-de
. foie gras
36! Grasping
33. Preposition
39. Stag
40. Scottish
Gaelic 42. Jurisdiction!
of a bishop
43. Eccentric
CIAM iRNriSPAlcTl
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TDPAV.. U)E HAVE TOO MANtf
U)H0 AKEKT FEELIN6 COELLOOEKE
60lNTOHAVET0 FORFEIT THE 6AME
in storms at sea or captured by
pirates and sold as slaves. 7 ;
It is this tragic story of the ..
Children's Crusade upon which
"The LJeath of the Bishop of
Brindisi" is based. Menotti,
who wrote both music and
text, had composed several
successful operas and television
operas before this work was
commissioned by the
Cincinnati Musical Festival in
;1963.' Is'' lf - . .
' Norman' Farrow will sing
the part' of the Bishop, Mary
Burgess that of the Nun, the
Carolina Choir will represent
the townspeople, " and the
Piedmont Treble Choir, a
chorus of young boys and high
school girls, will oe the
children.
Carl Orffs
burana," which the
"Carmina
composer
calls a scenic cantata, was first
produced in 1937. The texts,
secular poems of the thirteenth
century which were found in a
Bavarian monastary, are a
mixture of low Latin and low
German.
The three major parts of
"Carmina burana" are songs of
spring, the tavern, and of "love.
This work, probably the
best-known of Orffs
compositions, illustrates the
composer's great interest in
rhythm. Melody, harmony, and
form are simple, so that the
vigorous rhythm dominates the
whole work.
For this performance, the
Carolina Choir and the UNC
Symphony Orchestra will be
joined by members of the
Varsity Men's Glee Club and
the Women's Choral Club.
Soloists are Elizabeth Tanner,
Jefferson Ishee, Ira Schantz,
William Stevens, nd Clinton
Parker. .
Tuesday evening's concert is
open to the public without
charge. : -
H'OU COIN, CHUCK
7
y -cn
.Davie
By HARVEY ELLIOTT
Arts Editor
You must see Hod David.
He's appearing tonight at 10
in the Great Hall of the Union,
and an audience cannot hear
this young singer without being
moved ... or touched ... or
changed.
He is the most remarkable
talent UNC students will be
exposed to this year, and every
person w ho reads this should
make a special effort to "drop
everything" and 10 and come
Campus
Events
"THE WALL," exhibit of
pop ' art (an original
arrangement of "clippings,
photos and posters), is on
display in 105 Mitchell . Hall
from 8 a.m. until 10 p.m.
JUNIOR VARSITY GOLF
'Game at 1:30 p.m. on Finley
Golf Course. UNC vs. Duke.
SOLID STATE SEMINAR
at 2 p.m. in 233 Phillips. Dr.
Yves Farge (Faculte des
Sciences; Orsay, France) on
"Kinetics of F-center Creation
in Alkali Halides."
VARSITY BASEBALL
Game at 3 p.m. on the baseball
field beside Avery Dorm. UNC
vs. Duke.
LIBRARY SCIENCE
Seminar at 3 p.m. in room 348
of Wilson Library. Dr. K.
Ramakrishna Rao (head, Dept.
of Library Science, Andhra '
University, Waltair, A.P. India)
on "Library Development, in
India."
BLACK WRITER'S
COLLOQUIUM at 4 p.m. in
room 207 of the Union. Mary
Mebane, English graduate
student, will discuss "Role
Playing in Ellison's 'Invisible
Man.' "
INTERVIEWS for
vice-chairman, secretary and
treasurer of the Residence.
College Federation will be held
i 1 a r- iisftj-t.
ioaay irom t until b:3U p.m,
in. the Residence
mce College Office
uV,: . ,.7,y
of the Union,
RESIDENCE COLLEGE
. Federation will meet tonight at
7 p.m. in the Frank Porter
Graham Lounge of the Union.
All members should attend.
MUSIC CONCERT:
Combined UNC Choral Union
and Symphony Orchestra (Dr.
Lara Hoggard, director) will
perform at 8 p.m. in Memorial
Hall.
: HOD DAVID, folk artist,
will sine in the Great. Hall of
, the Union at 10 p.m.
APPLICATION FORMS for
admission into the Order of the
Old Well are now in 02 South
Building. Any student who
thinks he may be eligible for
membership on the basis of
scholastic and extracurricular
activities should filf out the
form and return it to South
Building as soon as possible.
ANYONE LIVING in an
apartment or sorority house
(or who will be doing so next
year) and interested in a
; position on the Women's
Honor Court, contact Sherry
Gjreene (933-4459 or
968-9189).
CONTRIBUTIONS for the
Senior Class Scholarship Fund
should be sent to: 1969
Scholarship Fund, P.O. Box
1080, CHapel Hill, N.C.
ANYONE INTERESTED in
finding traveling companions
for this summer should Jeave
his name and address at the
International Student Center.
PRABHUPADA IS
COMING! A.C. Bhaktivedanta
Swami will be "Krishna-izing"
at McCorkle Place on May 17.
Start preparing now.
ALLRI6HTJEAM..I PONY
WANT AM1 LETDOUJN NOW..
UJEVE 6OT A STREAM 60IHS!
Sines
to the Great Hal!
I saw him last October in an
" foal concert. He enters
HU'etly, sings quietlv, plays his
paar with a soft intensity not
unhke the murned sobs of
luneral mourners.
He may sing of lovers, or he
"ay weep for losers. Hod
David arrange hie mnnnl Yt AT
song with disregard to popular
stv, F HUI"
atJ'C. He SlTiOl a Hino oe ha
leeis it. And the audience in
my experience with a David
concert-is never left
untouched.
Tonight he has scheduled
some of the same numbers he
sang to- me in October. His
melancholic "Elusive Butterfly
of Love" was applauded and
encored. He'll sing that at the
first of tonight's program.
Bertolt Brecht and Kurt
Weill wrote "The Bilbao
Song,", but it's never been sung
like Hod David will treat it
tonight.
And David also presents
some of his own. work: the
enchanting Vl'd Love Making
Love To You," introduced to
our group in a private,
, after-concert session last Jail.
David works to establish
mood with his program, and
thus divides the evening into
four "stories," each including
6-8 songs and unified by a
theme. He requests that no
applause interrupt the "story."
It doesn't. The audience is
spellbound by Davids
emotional rendition of
once-familiar tunes. They
aren't familiar anymore he is
leading us to a new area of
discovery and self-realization.
His Great Hall appearance
will be followed Wednesday
and Thursday Jay
loosely-structured sessions in
The Shop, where admission
charge is 50 cents for the 10
p.m. Wednesday session and
the 11 p.m. (after Campus
Chest Carnival) Thursday
session.
Tickets are on sale for $1
for tonight's concert (full
length) at the Information
Desk.
On the program? Songs like
"To Each His Dulcinea," "The
Jacques Brel'-s 'The Desperate1
OnesTarYa "Eleanor Rjgby."-.
winamiiis Oi iour. mmu,
And that's only the first
"story." There are 26 more.
Come and enjoy.
f
"4
William McDwinen and Isabelle Davis
rehearse for "37 Octobers," an adaptation of
the writings of .Thomas Wolfe, by C. Hugh
Holman.
Student's Film Premieres
By MARK DE CASTRIQUE
UNC graduate William E.
Barnes and his controversial
new film "Recess," will be at
the Carolina theatre Thursday
morning at 10 for a Fine Arts
special pre-release showing.
Barnes will also announce
the winner of his first annual
Opportunity Award for
Original Screenwriting. The
$1000 prize will go for the best
New Folk Singers Appear
Wednesday In Great Hall
The New Folk Singers will
be appearing Wednesday night
at the Union's Great Hall,
direct from Easter
performances at Daytona
Beach's Band shell
Amphitheatre.
At 8 tomorrow' evening,
folk music will take on a
unique touch when these
young people, through the
mode of a thoroughly modern
sound, express their
philosophy of life.
Tickets are now on sale at.
the Record Bar and during the
- 'inpinings'. at Y Court for $150. l- ; - V' i7 - :
"At the door admission priced." Thfe evening promises, to: .be
will be $2.
Students may catch a sneak
preview of the New Folk
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PRESENTS
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SHIRLEY AND
FRIDAY, APRIL 25
MEMORIAL HALL AT 3:00
MARTHA REEVES AND THE UAHDELLAS
SATURDAY, APRIL 26
HOGAN'S FIELD 2-5 P.M.
THE SHIRELLES, THE OCCASIONS, THE ROBINSON BROTHERS & THE TEMPEST
The Carolina Playmaker production opens a
four-night run Thursday. Tickets are available
in 102 Graham Memorial and at
Ledbedder-Pickard's.
original screenplay submitted
by a student in the RTVMP
department. Barnes has
guaranteed another $10,000 if
the script is producible.
His. film, highly
experimental in that it employs
many innovations, includes
certain techniques of the Open
Theatre, mixed-media affects
and a basic set consisting only
of colorful "geodesic cubes."
The unified acting ensemble
Singers if they tune in on
"nnu
X 11c
this
Mike Douglas Show
morning at 8:30 on channel 5.
A program videotaped by the
Singers is to be aired locally at
that time:
Arnold Toy nbee once said,
"Most people do not reject
Christianity, but a caricature of
it."
The New Folk represent a
worldwide movement of
students who are finding Jesus
Christ to be relevant and His
solutions to life's problems to
""be exDeriencable. '
interesting, as this group pulls
no punches, but "sings it like
it is.
UNJ
Mm. "
mm
THE SHIRELLES
1
i -
I
of nine young performers, all
making their film debut,
includes Heather MacRae,
currently starring in "Hair;"
Charles Brummitt, of "You're
a Good Man, Charlie Brown";
and Aimee Oliver of
"Fantasticks."
It is a journey through the
chronology of the seven stages
of man in which childhood
antics become transformed
into not-so-funny games of
love, hate, sex, work, race,
boredom, religion, coffee cups,
cocktail parties, and hangovers.
Barnes, who for seven years
was casting and story editor for
movie producer Otto
Preminger, first saw "Recess"
as a play in the off-off -broadway
theatre Cafe La
Mama in NYC.
He was intrigued by the
visual possibilities and its
synthesis .of dance and drama,
burlesque, and ballet, music
and mimesis all in the context
of the Games People Play. He
feels the current ' young
audio-visually oriented
movie-goer is ready for this
type of filmmaking.
Barnes is anxious . to
discover the college audience's
reaction to the film. The
- - showing is alsoi an-opportunity
for students to- see what may
. be a new trend in filmmakhigJ
A limited number of tickets
are available free of charge at
the Carolina Union desk.
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