I I f I Wednesday, February 11, 1970 the da:ly i AR HEEL Traditional, Jazz Blues & Spiritual Musk 1 Ivin Ailev Dance rmn rm & if M. Li rj u I it! A 9S u j t-i fl ii I The Carolina Union, in conjunction with the Chapel Hill Concert Series, will present a performance of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre on Sunday, Feb. 15, at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Organized in 1958, the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre is a repertory company which performs the works of many choreographers. It is considered the most unusual and popular of all the modern dance companies, ( i FT " ( " - - . Ayr-' s , . j L.i.ii'iimMjiLiiiJnlnjnJwo.iijiwwfcii niMif m niMiiMiiiMiMiiimjwmii!! ni Mini rati - mmStti f Hmw-. 'Tttomm - - 'Hhtb ill in rm im Tiiifif' - '";"rnT n aimininii n im i mr Campus Calendar DEADLINE for signing up for spring sorority rush is today. Any coed of sophomore, junior or senior standing with a 2.0 academic average is eligible to participate. Sign up in the Dean of Women's Office, Steele Building. SPORT PARACHUTIST: There will be a meeting of the Chapel Hill Association of Sport Parachutists today at 5 CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1-Cook in oven 6-Change 'H Bridge term I2-Fated 14- Bone 15- Tolled 17- Metal tube 18- At present 20-Brown as bread 23- Chinese , pagoda 24 - Developed 26-Ceremonies 28- Prepositton 29- Vapor 5- Singing voice 6- Paid notice 7- Behold! 8- Uppermost part 9- Send forth' 10- Mend 11- Chinese factions 13-College officials 16-Pace 19-Unwanted plants 21- Walk 22- Narrates 25-Blouse 27-lncline 40- 41- 44 - 47 - 49 - 52 - .31-Bank employees 30-Watered silk 33 French 32-Pitchers couturier 34-Check ,36 Detailed report 39-Relieve 42- Conjunction 43- Test 45 Great Lake i46-Born " 48-Go in 50-Music: as written 51 -Monster 53-Distrrct in Germany 55- Township (abbr.) 56- List 59-Gastropod mollusks 61 - Approaches 62- Experience 37 A state 38-Rodents 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ' 10 n " " 13 IF""-19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 ! "!-27 29 30 """ 32 42 "il " '44 45" : 46 47 VVV 43 49 50 56 57 58 60 DOWN 1 - Vacation place 2- Preposition 3 Swiss river 4-Command to cat mj&jM- (7N -- I I i MUST 5AV I ADMIRE ) I I T(f OKLV Of4 THINS I t mo's j7 r AT V H SPIRIT.. J THAT BOTHERS ME... (gTO) JV) SSKrtSST ZHUH IT WON'T LAST- SOU ) I L II ( BRAINY WWENV " wWyv XNS I ErlAINV WOMEN AteKH J DOsJ!T EzCQXEj F:aAuP') v Xn -V GOQ& WIVES, AN&V?i x WIVES, -T jCXZjf nSfei llHSrVn nSt fFtMs rMjcW-i "mci .Mism Director Alvin Ailey attended Los Angeles City College where he participated in workshop sessions under Lester Horton, a pioneer in the world of modern dance. Upon graduation, he entered San Francisco State College to study romance languages, while accepting nightclub dancing engagements on the side. Finding himself totally dedicated to dancing, he rejoined Lester Horton and his company in Los Angeles and began the ascent to the top of ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE p.m. in members the Union, are urged to AH be present. WALK AGAINST HUNGER is not over. Fellow up action planning meeting will be held tonight at 8 p.m.' in the Y Building,, AJLl f , walkers, K, workers and interested persons are urged to attend. SUMMER JOB PLACEMENT meeting will be held Thursday from 4-5 p.m. in . Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle ClAjRr lAlSlPISj fCloTRjA o Djei ;MbiA t1 IuTr a l N Li IT NIT EGR AT IE s t ai Idj jt a i IT :; AlC iLiWjAlRL.S N E R hTopG Ate) I-D GijX. a T OjuTR SCPTT PjJK nu AiLlTjohv toali ;.. SIC T MM TjrT AIT 'ETA 5 O R EpA'flO NT! ROT Small Jumps Smallest number Gaelic Genus of frogs . Greek letter 54-Ethiopian title 57- Teutonic deity 58- Rupees (abbr.) 60-Pronoun Tlicfr hr 1 'niter! Kptiir !? vnrlicnte Inc II If I his profession. When Horton died in 1353, his company decided to stay together under Ahin Alley's direction. Their first performances were in Los Angeles, San Diego and in the film "Carmen Jones". Ailey continued his studies under Martha Graham, Doris Humphrey, and Anna Sokolow in New York. At the same time he appeared in several Broadway shows, including "The House of Flowers". THEATRE Announcements 105 Gardner Hall. The meeting is open to all students seeking summer jobs in America or abroad. Mrs. Bordeaux will discuss summer job openings in social service, teaching, business. " resorts; science and overseas. .Students are urged to j attend because the deadlines for many interesting jobs occur this month. UNC BOAT CLUB will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Student Union's Stouth Lounge. Club officers will be elected. All members are urged to attend. New members are welcome. Those wishing to GRAND PLANNED FOR ' AND BY CAROLINA STUDENTS JUNE 9-JULY 16, 1970 COUNTRIES TO BE VISITED: BRITISH ISLES EAST GERMANY SWITZERLAND WEST GERMANY HOLLAND PORTUGAL AUSTRIA SPAjN FRANCE ITALY SPONSORED BY INTERFRATERNITY AND PAN HELLENIC COUNCIL CONTACT: RICK SPANGLER 968-9058 The Alva Ailey American Dance Theatre, a company, of fifteen young dancers, made its Nev York City debut in 1953. Since then, they have made five European tours along with tours to South America, Australia, and the Far East. Their programs combine the cultural heritage of the Negro with the legacies of music and dance. Since American culture has developed from many sources, the programs are based on a variety of these many influences. The music is traditional, jazz, blues, and spirituals. The dancing is dramatic, ecstatic, vital and brilliantly- conceived. The whole experience is "total dance theatre". Sunday's performance provides an excellent example of the company's versatility. Talley Beatty's "Toccata", with music by Lalo Schiffrin (of "Mission: Impossible" fame) and Dizzy Gillespie will be offered, along with "Hermit Songs", a group of dances based on Irish poems of the 8th through 13th centuries set to Samuel. Barber's music. The mythological story of "Icarus" will also be performed. High praise has been accorded to the major new work which will be performed here. "Masekela Language" has been choreographed by Ailey to the music of the great South African trumpeter Hugh Masekela. This notable work has been compared to Alley's "Revelations", which is rooted in Negro spirituals. "Revelations", now a classic in the world of dance, will also appear on Sunday's program. Tickets are now on sale at Danziger's for $4 and $3. UNC student tickets are $1, and may be purchased at the Union Information Desk. attend but have a conflict, call Craig Benepe at 929-4501 any evening after 5 p.m. APPLICATIONS for the German Exchange program for 1970-71 are now available through,J,Febt. 13 -,.at. thq.-ISC Programs Office. Call 933-2407 for further information or go by the ISC Building. ALVIN AILEY American Dance Theatre will perform in Memorial Hall Sunday, Feb. 15 at 8 p.m. Tickets for students are $1 and are now on sale at the Union Information Desk. TOUR OF i 3 COUNCIL OF UNC PHYLLIS RIED 968-9023 Behind the scenes of Companies M ere Feb. 16-20 The following companies will recruit on campus during the week of February 16-20, Monday, February 16 Lybrand, Ross Brothers & Montgomery; Johnson & Johnson; Union Camp Corporation; The Citizens & Southern National Bank; Da n' River Mills, Incorporated; Beaunit Fibers; Social Security ' Administration. Tuesday, F e b r u a r y 1 7 Continental Can ."Company, Incorporated; Royal Globe Insurance "Companies; The New England Deaconess Hospital; Tennessee Valley Authority; Thalhimer . Brothers; RCA; Sauter - Laboratories, Incorporated. "Plaalters" 5 The spine-tingling classic, "Dracula," will open the Carolina Playmakers' bill of major spring productions March 3-8 at the Playmakers Theatre in Chapel Hill. Tom Rezzuto is directing Bram Stoker's thriller which .features Malcolm Groome, Mary Pope, Homer Foil, and Roger Howell as you-know-who. . Performances begin at 8 p.m. with a 2:30 p.m. matinee Sunday, March 8. Season subscribers may reserve tickets beginning Feb. 23. General public sales begin Feb. 25. A Studio 70 production, "Frat and Grim," will run March 11-15 in the Main Lounge of Graham Memorial. Conceived and staged by Russell Graves, "Frat and Grim" is loosely based on the "Everyman" motif in a contemporary context. . This production is not a season ticket attraction. General admission tickets go 4 Save A Stack i of Money at AUDIO Ar ' CENTER, INC. j ife r-l BIG 6 HOUR - tl SALE FRIDAY J :- Z 6 P.M. U? fTIL k : MIDNIGHT V- , 1 IT. SPECIAL V, BARGAINS . r l , , I - .: i ' I ' ' Ay. v If The Marriage of Figaro ecru it Wednesday, February 18 First & Merchants National Bank; Armstrong Cork Company; Consolidated Freightways; Montgomery Ward; North Carolina National Bank; Mutual of New York; Sauter Laboratories, Incorporated; Congoleum Industries, Incorporated; U.S. Atomic Energy Commission; Henderson, Lindsay & Michaels, Inc. Thursday, February 19 Aetna Life & Casualty; Chemical Abstracts Service; PPG Industries, Incorporated; Collins & Aikman Corporation; A.M. Pullen & Company; Montgomery, Ward; North Carolina National Bank; First National Bank of Atlanta. . ' Qjpiten Season on sale March 9. Performances begin at 8 p.m. The final Studio 70 production of the season is Oscar Wilde's "Salome," to be presented April 8-12 in the Main Lounge of Graham Memorial. Graduate student Linwood Taylor of Buies Creek is directing and designing "Salome" in the style of Aubrey Beardsley. General admission tickets for the 8 p.m. performances will be available April 6. Moliere's comic study of religious hypocrisy, "Tartuffe," will conclude the Playmakers 52nd season April 28-May 2 at the Playmakers Theatre. Bruno Koch, a new faculty member in the Dramatic Art Department, will direct "Tartuffe," the most frequently produced of Moliere's plays. Season subscribers may reserve tickets beginning April 20, and general public sales will begin April 22. Bv JIM McGARRAN" If "a god picture" means to. you one where everybody's smiling and has both eyes open, and Cousin Dr! ne's bouffant jus; neatly hide the s-l-3.lv, on old Uncle Jake's shirt, you may as well star home from "Life: Vr.ier:.:' Bruce Westbrooks photography exhibit, uhich currently fills the Carolina Union Gallery. No. on second thouzht. do o, and plan to stay awhile. ! Take an art y friend along, too. I ir possible; you both win en;oy I it. To be sure, in Mr. Westbrook's photographs ; everyone is not smiling, and a few stains metaphoric. at least are visible here and there. But his exhibit is surely one of the most j approachable for tired professionals and 1 gallery -trotters as well as f neophytes that we have seen j recently. MIS pictures do not scream "message" at us, nor do they simper "art." Instead there is the deceptive simplicity that results from the happy union of technical mastery with the artist's vision. Mercifully, we are permitted to sense the artistry, to feel with our eyes the fine quality of the prints, and where there is a message, to get the message, for ourselves. Perhaps it is the ultimate accolade to credit Mr. Westbrook with finding beauty in downtown Durham. In his "Street scene: only" the stark black and white of the print emphasizes how suddenly, for the photographer, life can become pattern, and comments also upon the lives of the people passing by. ' . In "Sunlight" we literally see the light that forms bright patterns on a long white wall where a black child lingers, watched at a distance by an old man. Near the "back" of this deep photograph, we see the sunlight again in the cut ends of logs, edged with black bark, stacked in a flat car. As Mr. Westbrook points 6Ut-' theie 1 .photoS "do not pretend to be a documentary a if Si l W ilii 13 ii y AIID y t .Hi n n l, ti f -' . M V LP QECORDS AUDIO EQUIPMEHT PRE-OECOnDED and DLAIai TAPES MUSICAL inSTnULIEIlTS end ACCESS0H1ES FROM THE THE id'.WL : 1 i x it J AT . . U I 4.i u CI I ' fin: f im im im 5 y u fcair at I y m tm m w v m " ! t, I ; IS fn g ft n g r f f -a r " ! r !- r ?AF?1 r ? i f t a 1 1 r f COMPETE V1T11 AUYOn 4S-35 MASPETH, N.Y. 11373 o kJ- ii ii. vf) A ;uiv of ire the s: c are free and it.. ,4 unc; J x ... ::ary p.. .en In:. irm.iCV. a! present .' ri.an m a e r SO ; in Durham. , . v. , . , a .a;e , the a ever. automobile. Th car. is dead. Its wheels, sans tires, and pae belly are turned up to the sky. and it glows surrcalL: ical'y through the t .'l grasses and flowers that hae grown up around it. -Does it m fact mar She landscape, or has nature triumphed over the machine by producing flowers for this grave? Again the su;;e.-tions are endless. VJ'kYY AO Li PROPHETS - HEEDED TODAY? A Prophet is somebody who is close to God, who sees spiritual solutions to world problems, who leads the people to them. ; Joseph G. Heard of the Christian Science Board of Lectureship thinks we need some prophets to day. Hear him tell what it takes to become one in a talk titled "Today's Prophet" II FED. 4:00 P.M. IVES LEY FOUNDATION Sponsored by Christian Science Organization i i n j: ii 1 i i t w r. ... f A.ur IHlfMlOf L 11 IMVEIJTORY or f f fj n pj tv r la sf f Cv9 4 4 il & Lm J 'i , - i i v r ! :- t :o 1 V St t - 4 4m I . B 1 V . DISTRIBUTORS, INC. A SUBSIDIARY OF SAM GOODY, Inc. 54t h ROAD (212) 3i1-3C03 4

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