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THE DAILY TAR HEEL 1 Lighting. Set. Effects Artistic' 1 iimon And (Uariunlte 5 9 Tods Chart f t s i V J 9 Thursday, March 5. 1970 TTl rr f? Hit Still 6 ) 77fl7 A. I I H i 3 I I I 1" I s S a S is P 3 I y t I 1 1 WCAR SURVEY For the Week Ending March 12 1. Bridge Over Troubled Water ......... Simon and Garfunkel 2. House of the Rising Sun Frijid Pink 3. Evil Ways San tana 4. The Rapper The Jaggerz 5. Gotta Hold on to This Feeling . .Jr. Walker & the Ail Stars 6. All I Have to Do Is Dream Campbell & Gentry 7. You Got Me Hummin .Cold Blood 8. Instant Karma John Ono Lennon 9. The Thrill Is Gone 1BJB. King 10. Love Grows Edison Lighthouse 11. Night Owl .The Bad Habits 12. Call Me .' Aretha Franklin 13. Never Had a Dream Come True Stevie Wonder 14. Wholl Stop the Rain Travellin Band Credence Clearwater Revival 15. Give Me Just a Little More Time The Chairman of the Board 16. Take a Look Around smith 17. Kentucky Rain Elvis Presley 18. Didn't l. ... The Delfonics 19. Celebrate .Three Dog Night 20. Come and Get It Badfinger PICK Slow Down UNIVERSAL WATCH, silver with a calendar attached to the metal watchband, and an inscription on the back: "C.L.C., St. Albans, Rice Award, 1966" has been lost. Large reward offered. If found, call Cris Carter at 929-3118. A GREAT MWW v ' . THRILLING SONGS AND PRESENTED IN RALEIGH BY: Capital City Civitan Club RALEIGH MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM FRI., MARCH 6-8:00 P.M. oADM.$2:3 TICKETS-0N SALE AT: mrs drugs Cameron Vilieg mnd Gomir VILLAGIFHAKMACY t SPORTS Cameron Villsg CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1-Equality 4-Wa'nd 9-Mountain pass 12- Guido's high note 13- PertaJning to punishment 14- Simian 15- Stay 17-Cried 19- Storage compartment 20- Old Roman garment 21 - Seasoning 4- Twirl 5- Number 6- lndefinite article 7Switt 8- Base of room 9- Beach house 10- UnIock (poet.) 11- Conducted 16-River island 18-Consecrate 20- Noteworthy 21 - Long cut 22- Passageway 23- Mountains of Europe 25- Macaw 26- Anon 28-Conjuncticn 38 40 42 44- 45- 23 Above 24-Pertaining to the 29-Shut noisily kidneys 32-More unusual 27-Falsehood 33-Teutonic deity 28-Native metal (pi.) 36-Christian 30- Girl's name 31 - Conjunction 32- Seers 34- Near 35- Winter vehicle 37-Falsifier 38Exist 39-Chiefs 41- Part of "to be" 42- Mast . 43- Part of flower 45- Part of body . 46- Petty ruler 48-Harry 51- Man's nickname 52- Small island 54- Sign of zodiac 55- Armed conflict 56- Approaches 57- Once around track festival DOWN 1- Through 2- Beverage 3Wanderaim!ess!y HIT . . Crow ENGINEER has lost his faithful companion, a K & E slide rule in an orange case, The slide rule was left in the math building after an exam. Call Jack at 966-1171 to return. AA !UI SPECTACULAR DANCES FOk RALEIGH'S RETARDED CHILDREN MAIL ORDER TICKETS:Writt CAPITAL CITY CIVITAN CLU3 Post OHx tow 12135 RoUigh, N.C. 27605 OR PHONE 823-4395 Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle TsIpi - Dismay - Country of Europe - Title of respect Partof church Chapeaus 46- Carpenter's tool 47- Arabian garment 48- Pronoun 49- Ocean 50- Soak up 53-Note of scale ::iRiu;et icppr isiPia pIaIrIrUh eir of It Q.g LIOlL Li TgjRA IPji A L AiPtiSjE A FTC BgptSfO itiBEESPg uppR it ElRiSi IPTRlelQl'PielSL. 1 2 3 4 3 6 7 IP9101' ii ; " " TT i6 " 18 ' 29 ' 40 41 42 p" " g j" hm. . !! t li mm. PL!L ' I I 1 i ' i n I Distr. fer United i eatur Synoicate, ac 5 VSR LlS THAT S CCAV (out: eric? C3 c IT EvMARYBURCH DTK Arts Editor DRACULA entered Playmakers Theatre with "light footsteps" Tuesday night with a receptive audience reflecting the delight and charm of the 1930 vampire thriller classic. The organ music came to a diminendo as the curtain rose to reveal a darken set with a lonely blue light shining through the latticework of windows on the right. Character voices of the English maid (played by Patricia Snell) and the lovelorn fiancee r v Pianist-composer Loonis McGIohon, right, goes over the score for "Lions" with saxophone player Willie Gillon. Both will appear in concert tonight at 8:15 in Memorial Hall with the North Carolina Symphony Orchestra. They are part of a jazz combo, that will perform with the Symphony the work "Lions," composed in 1963 by the American composer Ned Rorem. The concert is free to UNC-CH students. C&mpus FEMALE LIBERATION 11 is sponsoring a symposium today and Friday in commemoration of International Women's"" Day. Theusymposium, "Women: The -Longest Revolution5' begins with a luncheon at noon upstairs in the East Union. A slide show "Look Out Girlie Women's Liberation's Gonna Get Your Momma," will be presented. ECONOMICS 31 make-up examination for Dr. Benavie will be held tonight from 7-10 p.m. in 103 Hanes. PROFESSOR V.F. WEISSKOFF of M.I.T. will speak on "Sizes and Magnitudes" as part of the joint Duke-UNC Physics " Colloquium. The professor will speak at 2 p.m. Friday in room 215 Phillips Hall. Coffee and . tea will be served in the lounge following the lecture. APPLICATIONS for the T 7(r r.lOrJDAYthru FRIDAY fm T r rsM Malfette Sr. v X) C&S A MATTES CP bv iracy from Grir.voldl were heard ups.-20e flipped as on they entered theY'-ht. and The p. ay stage was transformed into Dr. Seward's parlor in Purky, England, by the artistic set .design of Lmwood Taylor. The black walls of the rooms and the mauve cum rustic air nns ana soia sei me for DRACULA's England. The play is generally theatrical for its fast moving action, but the opening scenes were lifelessly and methodically performed (open night jitters?). The plot centers 1 I M Paris Exchange 1970-71 are now available at the International Student Center in Carr Building. Personal interviews will be held March' 14 -beginning at 10. a.m. : - ; , s Luxurious.- Jarolina x 2:15-4:30-6:45-9:00 NOMINATED FOR 5 ACADEMY AWARDS W, Jl ) 929-3103 f played r7 . around Lucy Seward (played by Mary Pope who is growing weaker from a seerrir.;!y unexplakabJe loss of blood. The action begins with the arrivals of Miss Seward's f 'ur.ce and Dr. Abraham Van Helstng (playe-d by Homer Foil), a Sherlock-Holmes type and colleague of Lucy's father (played by James Howard). The two have come to lend support and discover the cause of Lucy's illness, which her father reveals began shortly after the death Mini who was months before. of her friend visiting some This mysterious (which killed Mini and illness seems to have Lucy) has as its symptoms nightmares of a red-eyed figure hovering over her at. night, two Wood spots on the nape of the neck and weakness from the sapping of life's blood. The plot thickens with the escapes of Renfield (played by Malcolm Groome), a lunatic in Dr. Seward's sanitorium, wrho begs the doctor to "send me away. For God's sake save my soul," as he grasps at the air for flseS to eat. Comic character Butterworth (played by Ron Osborne) cannot contain the Dracula-claimed Renfield and is frightened of the ill-possessed situation. Count Dracula (played by Roger Howell), a sauve 500-year-old vampire from Transylvania who "flies in through the window ("people always say I have light footsteps"), begins the conflict. The characters led by Sherlock-Holrhes-doctor Van Helsing must discover where Dracula conceals his six coffins which he inhabits with his victims, kill the victims by driving a spike through their hearts and nail the coffins shut to release them from Dracula's powers, and destroy the powerful master himself. In these tasks lies the charm of i it I CANT CO ALL THESE THINGS L $ l ROGER HOWELL the play. The play, dramatized by Hamilton Deane and John Balderston from the "novel by Bram Stoker, is more amusing than shocking, more contrived than realistic. The potential "thriller scenes" such as the glowing red-eyed Dracula who creeps over the sofa to suckle Lucy blood in act I, the hypnotism of the nurse in act II, and the killing of Dracula in the vault in act III merely amuse the audience. The acting provided both the high and low of play. James Howard and Tracy Griswold, as the father and fiance respectively, seemed to over dramatize the naivete of their roles, which provided a few uncalculated laughs for the audience. Patricia Snell and Ron Osborne in the minor roles of the maid and guard were well-received by the audience. Mary Pope, as heroine Lucy Seward, was disappointing especially in the first act, although her role was more THIS JC3 15 TOO MVCH FC ONE A5Lf BrRhCKr LH? NO CKZ AfrKfXlATc fli STARS AS DRACULA IN credible in the final act. She seemed too pseudo-angelic the audience did not feel the tragedy of her Dracula - victimized illness. It was difficult to tell when Dracula's hypnotic waves were motivating her and when she was acting as the "normal Lucy". Homer Foil should become a detective if he isn't one after playing Dr. Van Helsing. He superbly held the audience as his character frantically searched for the clue to cure Lucy. The play, however, belonged to Roger Howell and Malcolm Groome. Director Tom Rezzuto explained his reason for being able to present Dracula was the "magnificent role" of Roger Howell. The strength or weakness of the play ultimately depends upon the role of Dracula and Howell carried it to perfection. The spotlight must be shared with Groome, however, for his "raving" performance as lunatic Renfield. The two IP) AMS S7 s BLECTilA0 770 reduced 42.5Q on campus Vh'BH Atf POOR CTAV 1 WAU$TEP- PLAYMAKLR HIT well-descrvcd their "fatter.ed flies", "suckled blood." and hearty applause. The effects lighting and were hand! special d wd! throughout particularly the wolves howling announci; arrivals of Dracula, the bat in the window, and the fioresci nt creeping hands over the sofa. The playbill featuring Mora Lisa with two blood spots on her neck (designed by Leonardo da Vinci, of course!) is an imaginative tribute to the plav. DRACULA is well -worth your money for an evening's entertainment. :S r I ) m m a 104 South Estci Dr. I f v w' v.. L ELECTRA210 reduced 53,00 ALL MACHINES RE DUCED LIMITED OUAfJTITY I HXtB 21113,
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 5, 1970, edition 1
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