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James Taylor headlines tonight in the show at Raleigh's Dorton Arena. Jo Mama and Carole King will appear along with Taylor.
Campuis activities calendar
Friday evening, March 5, FOCUS and
Carolina Christian Fellowship will present
a panel discussion entitled:
Masculinity-Feminity: A Christian
Perspective. The panel will include Miss
Mary Frances Boyce (music), Dr. and
Mrs. Frederick Brooks (computer
science), Dr. and Mrs. Ernest Lucas
(bio-chemistry), and Dr. and Mrs. Gordon
Simons (statistics). The meeting will be
.; held at 8 in the student-faculty lounge of
Dey Hall (4th floor). Everyone welcome.
Anyone interested in an Arabic course
' in summer school, contact Jay Saunders
in Linguistics Dept. in Dey Hall.
bu. The UNC Football Club will meet in
y-ihe Union Thursday night at 7:30. Check
GJat the desk for the room number. This
will be the last meeting of the club before
spring practice begins. It is imperative
that all prospective 1 60 lb. team members
attend, for the decision to field a 1 60 lb.
team or not will be made Our new eoachv1
will also be introduced at the meeting.
The Senate of the Dialectic and
Philanthropic Literary Societies, those
fine folks who brought you the "Gadfly,"
will sponsor a special pre-spring
celebration on Saturday, March 6, in the
morning sometime, weather encouraging.
The Baton Rouge String Quartet will
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Base
4 Entreaty
8 Roman
garment
12 Japanese
sash
13 Lampreys
14 Spoken
15 Measure of
weight
16 Dry up
IS Hebrew
festival
20 Gull-like
bird
, 21 Preposition
22 Writing
implement
23 Arabian
seaport
27 Cut
29 Pronoun
30 Worship
31 Cooled lava
32 Small rug
33 Time gone by
34 Pronoun
35 Sedate
37 Falsehood
' 38 Abstract
being
39 Part of leg
40 Rodent
41 Conjunction
42 Verve
44 Rent
47 Oil
51 Weight of
India -
52 On the
ocean
.53 Sewing case
54 Bitter vetch
55 Skin of fruit
56 Lairs
57 Bishopric
DOWN
1 Parcels of
land
2 Musical
instrument
3 Opening in
- wall
4 Look
ini-nt!y
5 Unit of
Bulgarian
currency
6 Puffs up
7 Tremulous
8 Violent
windstorm
9 Anglo-Saxon
money
10 Ship channel
11 Beverage
17 Conjunction
19 Printer's
measure
22 Hole
24 Note of scale
25 Ireland
26 Seines
27 Church
service
28 Solemn vow
29 Possessed
30 Mature
12 3 x4 3 6 7 5j 9-1011
iT jgxi 13 is$' '
15 IS'"" '
lii 22 " Hi 24 25 26
27 28 29 """"" 30
39 40 41
4243 T 4 6
47 48 49 ' """"50 "
5M 1 1 !!. niNT
rn I f teJSttcartx I I me..iIl I ' (jm font) 2-
q 7 TWAT WITHOUT JK . ON FOR Z )'
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? 1 THERE'S TALK AT SuNNO 7OW WE'ReM T,S.k0T AS IP I COULCa I On5 TM1N& ABOUT
: J WDRK. Or UW I GON TO MANAGE J I COUNT ON YOL ER BEIN5" A FAILURE.
I SOME OF -USj IF THEY DO t 7 -A FAILURE AN J NER NEVER 'AVE V
jf FET-r v VALWAS WILL SE J WORRY A50UT
lllCK . rn VAKIN A COME-T
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perform Haydn's "Divertimo" in E flat. A
little culture never hurt anybody.
The academic lieutenant governors are
meeting today at 5:30 p.m. in the
Student Union. Please check the room
number at the Union information desk.
Saturday is the last day students can
pick up books or money from the APO
book co-op held in February. Students
should go to the basement of Smith
Building between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. After
Saturday, APO will dispose of the books
and are nor responsible for any leftover
books.
The Film Society presents "Greed"
tonight at 8 in Carroll Hall. Admission $1
(or by subscription, 8 films for 4 dollars.)
Representatives from Georgia State
University (Atlanta) will be on campus
March 11 or 12 to discuss with any I
interested f students Georgia's graduate
program in economics.
If you are interested in speaking with
them, please contact the Economics
Department (933-8301, extension 373)
for further details.
Lost: Around Hinton James, brown
fringed pocketbook. Please call 933-4744
for reward.
Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle
- ... .
r act jAcR elpTeTA
A L A ft JT H O R .PT A N
rTTs e sZe a rnTes t
'1 IIP A T T E Rpg ATjT
s p i t Ze ROG A
T A A A5SEM TUA P
o w T JR JJP R E
AS A S S E . Tf A Gil"
o op l erfp r oTd
A5 N I i" W A o pl e"T"
L A N T R W MB N aS
A M I R E E P jA T I I
me e1 IaInItIm ItIsIaIr
32 Substance 44 Hawaiian
33 Kiver island wreaths
36 Three-toed sloth 45 Withered
37 Woolly
38 Wipes out
40 Went swiftly
41 Faroe Islands
whirlwind
43 Chinese mile
46 Gaelic
47 Once around
track
48 Employ
49 Insect
50 Large cask
f I . -
Lost: Dog, white, female mongrel with
tan and black face. J)ff Farrington Rd.
Reward for information andor return.
942-1090 after 5.
Lost: A greenish-black leather wallet. If
found, please return to Durwood Ray
Jones, 356 James, or to the Student
Union. There will be a reward offered up
until March 13, 1971, but after that date,
the reward will be void. Thank you.
Found: Cummerbund. Found around the
Arboretum. Owner may claim at the DTH
office, if he can identify it.
Found: Man's black wallet, in Greenlaw
Check at APO lost and found.
EUROPEAN studenY traxpi
EUROPE $245 Round Trip-
Large selection of dates.
Study Tours and Language Courses.
Year Round Student Service
I Join National Union of student inr
I HOW for full bitMfltn Wr.nr nil In.
full information and brochur.. , ... .
Campus .. Representative required:
Applicants for this financially rewarding
position should mark envelope
"Programme Co-Ordinator." All
interested write to:
National Union of Students Travel Service Inc.
Suite 911, 15ft W. 33rd St.
NEW YORK, N.Y. 10001
Telephone (212) 565-1732 and
(212)565-4199
(telex: 421437.
Offices In New York. Paris and Dublin.
M MORE DAYS TO GO
MILTON'S FABULOUS
FROGSTRANGLER U
REALLY IRREPLACEABLE
BUYS
' " "
Appeaxmg on the bill tonight at 8:30
in Dorton Arena along with James Taylor
are Carole King and Jo Mama. Jo Mama
hasn't made the cover of "Time,"
"Rolling Stone" or any other major
publication- The group hasn't yet been
canonized and may never join the saintly
circle of rock. Upon this rock, heroes and
heroines are built. Or some equally
atrocious pun could be made.
But Jo Mama is interesting-collec-tively,
as musicians and individually, as
human beings. Their name, for example,
is worth some weighty thought. Is it
meaningless?
Forthwith, the etymology of Jo
Mama. "We were sitting around trying to
think up names," Gale Hahess, the
group's singer, recollects. "During our
first gig, six weeks at the Factory in Los
Angeles, we had a different name every
night: Baby Toshiba and the Del Rays,
the Red Squids, just plain Red, Sister
Agnew and the Malaprop, Inc., Flash and
the Bummers, Sparky Lust. It was 'how
about' this and 'how about' that, till
someone said 'how's jo (your) mama?'
That was it."
The group's name reflects its members'
no-nonsense approach to music and show
business in general. Nearly all have been
the route, playing for many groups on
various labels. Danny Kootch was with
the Flying Machine in the company of
James Taylor. He is Jo Mama's guitarist
and chief writer. Kootch says, "All the
bands I've been in where we were going
to be the biggest thing in the world failed
miserably. We just want to play for
people who like our music." A modest
ambition.
So was the ambition or inspiration
I ale Haness once had. She was once
prevented from singing "You're Just Too
Good to be True" a capclla in a 'nun's
habit at New York's Electric Circus
because Bobby Kennedy was in the
audience. She remains very much an
iconoclast.
This is Gale's first experience with a
group. "It's most gratifying," she says.
PRESENTS A
fc:RIA
(2)
'"SfST
TE
v J
"With Friends & Neighbors'
NOW
ONLY
Reg. $4.98
(3)
!GSTON TAYLOR
Reg. $4.98
(4)
'If I Could Only Remember My
10 A.M.-10P.M.
M on. Sat.
V S rC 1
, , I,,-, -innr
DAVID CROSBY
Danny Kootch was in the King Bees and
made a few singles for RCA Victor,
played with James Taylor in the
aforementioned group and spent six
months each with the Fus zvA dear
Light. Bass p Liver Charlie Larkey also
played in the Fugs as well as a group
called the Middle Class, met Gale while
both were in Murray the Ks show in New
York and was in a group called the City
with Carole King (whom he recently
married).
Pianist Ralph Schuckctt started out in
a group called the Mann Beevil Sneak
Band, named after a legendary bluesman,
also played in Clear Light and did session
work with musicians like David Blue.
Drummer Joel O'Brien, was also in
Taylor's -Flying Mchine. He played on
Taylor's Apple album as "Bishop"
O'Brien and toured in Far East USO
clubs.
Gale Haness first clicked as a singer at
the Peppermint Lounge in New York.
After performing with Murray the K and
making some singles for Bang records, she
came to Los Angeles where she played
the parts of Chrissy and Sheila in "Hair."
Peter Lawford's wife, a high school friend
of hers, suggested she put a band together
to play the Factory. She discovered
Danny, Ralph, Joel and Charlie, all old
friends who were in Los Angeles and
between jobs.
All looked upon the Factory gig as an
opportunity to make some money,
nothing more. The audience expected
them to play familiar, top 40 tunes, but
not to play them too loud.
"We were always insulting them,
subliminally," Gale says. "We changed
Wild Thing' to Wild Pig.' They told us to
play softer and one night we played so
soft they couldn't hear us and nobody
complained."
At the end of six weeks, there was
nothing else for them to do, so they stuck
together. Schuckett played agent and got
bookings at places like the Topanga
Corral in Topanga Canyon and the Flying
Jib in Redondo Beach. They went to
Hawaii" They played a fag club in
Hollywood. They played too quietly for
WLOPx FAMILY SALE
JAMESTAYLOR'S -SISTER'S
FIRST ALBUM
DYNAMIC VOICE DYNAMIC
Includes Songs Written By
Elton John, Carol King, Livingston
& James
Reg. 4.98
The Third Brother
NOW
ONLY
A. SWEET BABY JAMES
Reg. $4.98 NOW ONLY
B. JAMES TAYLOR I
Reg. $4.98 NOW ONLY
C. JAMES TAYLOR AND THE
$4.98 NOW ONLY
r i ii i r.w -
Name'
NOW
ONLY
Reg. $5.98
Jil
the hard rock clubs and too Led!y for
the others.
Kootch, who had been writing sor.js
throughout his career but had r.c:r b;;n
satisfied with them, began turr.ir.j os.t
material that pleased both him ar.i
group. And Peter Ashe
ud
produced James Taylor's two
3 u m
wanted to work with Jo Mama.
"I met Peter when the KL-g Be,
toured with Peter and Gordon," KocLh
explained. "He came to Lear Jo Mama
the Topanga Corral but was thrown ct:t
because he didn't hare an ID. But finai!y
he saw us and liked what he heard."
Atlantic president Ahmet Ertegun aIo
saw Jo Mama and was equally impressed
He signed them and asked Peter Asher to
produce their first record. It was finished
in an extraordinarily swift nine-d.?y
session in Los Angeles.
All the Jo Mama members agree with
Gale who says, "Every thing I've done Ie.
done already and everything I'm going to
do is much mere interesting."
Free flicks
The Student Union's movie fare this
weekend runs the gamut from 20-year old
Bob Hope potboilers to recent Vanessa
Redgrave semi-classics.
The free flick Friday night is "Road to
Bali," a 1952 release starring Bob Hope,
Bing Crosby, and Dorothy Lam our. This
was Paramount's sixth and last "Road"
picture.
Saturday evening's free flick is "Me,
Natalie," a 1969 film starring Patty Duke
and James Farentino.
"Saturday Revew" credited Duke with
"a deftly executed performance."
The weekend concludes with a Super
Sunday showing of 'The Loves of
Isadora," a 1969 biography of dancer
Isadora Duncan with Vanessa Redgrave in
the title role.
"Time" magazine commented that
Redgrave's enactment of Duncan carries
with it an exquisite sensitivity and a
formidable intelligence. Their judgment
of the entire film, however, was not so
complimentary.
vr- ....
ALBUM
Taylor
NOW
ONLY
J
I
ORIGINAL FLYING MACHINE
O) '-OIO
"in. Th f
:
p)(OXO)i
i 7 7
PmL,, a J
1 P.M.-10 P.M.
Sunday
Cn.-Os v I
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