ThsDiilyTer Hel Leaven reviews 0 0 U i! Tuesday. April 20. 1371 me t ij sr Tom Rush, folk singer, will close Jubilee at 2 p.m. Tom He use A man 0 gentle song Tom Rush brings his gentle songs of the mental traveller, the rambler and the lover to the Jubilee stage at 2:00 p.m., Sunday, May 2. Rush is no new name to the music scene he has been around for over a decade. Although only in his in id-twenties, his gentle interpretations, supported by virtuoso musicianship and technical magnificence, are the result of years of development. In the early '60's, he was one of the inner circle of tremendously popular young, predominantly white, folk singers who congregated in the Boston area and were responsible for the folk - revival which later took on international popularity and is still a strong current in pop music today. ! In 1963, Robert Shelton of the New York Times lauded Rush as "one of the jnost important of the new folk singers nd white blues .interpreters." Paul r Nelson, . another ; critic of the f olk idiom," added: "He is the artist none of us thought possible: a singer-guitarist who ranges through the whole of American , ... - Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 3 Symbol for silver Semi-precious stone Substance Strikes out Babylonian deity Former Russian ruler Downy duck Female ruff Indefinite article Registered nurse (abbr.) Wolfhound Resort Tears Female sheep Man's name Boxing match Word of sorrow Jump Seasoning 1 Tibetan gazelle 4 Part of "to be" 6 Hinder 11 Connect 13.. Simpler 15 Negative 16 Pertaining to . birth 18 Arabian seaport 19 Abstract being 21 Story 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 14 17 20 24 25 27 28 29 30 32 22 23 26 Note of scale Church dignitary Take unlawfully 29 Turkish regiment 31 33 34 35 38 Tidings Behold! French article Soft food Ocean 39 Symbol for gold Cooled lava Narrow, flat 40 41 board 43 Direction 45 Resort 47 Elevate 50 A state (abbr.) 52 Journey 53 Part of face 56 Aroma 58 Place for worship 60 61 Prefix: down Reversible figured fabric Omits in 63 - pronunciation 65 Move nimbly 66 Compass point 67 Grain DOWN 1 Man's nickname 2 River in Siberia Dixtr. by United MIlTMlNl'LL StHV MD3 HfcLfcN KAKltfCRiPB lT A DAPl T" 2 3 4 5 7 8 9 10 19 "20. ""HH 2324 25 p26 27 28 29 30 " "SSSS "32 40 42 33"44 45 46 47 48 49 61 "" 62 j 64 --'ITUM5APARK J i -A r-xrrn mm ' p a urn y - "i -- V with his performance on Sunday, May 2, folk song, high and low, deep and wide, with complete confidence, competence and taste." Since then, times have changed for the former Harvard undergraduate, and these changes are reflected brilliantly in his new Columbia album titled "Tom Rush." As America has changed since the early '60's, so has Tom Rush. Each has grown, realized new potentials and each has, in a real sense, discovered his own voice. trolo The Morehead Planetarium's new program, "The Astronomy of Astrology," opens today. "The Astronomy of Astrology" dramatizes the motions and constellations in the celestial, -belt called the Zodiac, which extends about eight degrees on each "of the ecliptic,?the apparent annual path of the sun across the sky.' These are the constellations familiar to even the casual sky watcher. However, they are Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle As ' JgojsriRESTriRAw OIR TLJA l SMNjU B aIp t tT a t irTjj ep !ZZ7Zjm otr uTelTr o e i If riN o tIaIbJl MB tl SA TAB O NpAjRlT lZZ SjN A pTTE G GflRp LjL ZZJft O Wp E oRjP A V Bj A T T eRiJ rIoTtTj R AGE rfsjATlrtH A R E NQ R JtImI IsLiElNlPt'''! io 51 Country of Asia 54 Mental image 55 Nuisance 56 Hypothetical force 57 Parent (colloq.) 59 A state (abbr.'! 62 A state (abbr 64 Note of scak 36 37 42 44 46 48 49 Wgh mountain Participate Instrument Lamprey Odor Muffles the sound of Pope's veil Feature Syndicate, Inc. 20 FAMOUS AUTHORS LIKE TO RECEIVE . THEY LIKE TO SE HELPFUL, AMP BcCALh?E THcV OOMtHA REGULAR J03S, THEY HAVE L0T5 OF TME 10 U)R1E 10 PEOPLE... FROM WKNOUM iiJRlTKS. rr37aZ 1 When I was ten and eleven years-old I used to spend my Saturdays in a broken-down movie theater called the Rialto, where, for thirty, and later thirty-five, cents, I caught old horror films in double feature, dainties like "The Wolfman," 'The Man with the Atomic Brain," "The House of Dracula." The Rolling Stones' "Gimme Shelter" reminded me of those days and their horrors galore, because in many ways the Stones and the makers of 'The Wolfman' have a similar aesthetic. As far as the Stones' music goes, I won't disagree that they're the best band in rock. "Seabiscuit is first and the rest is nowhere." But the Stones publicity has always been typified by a kind of gaucherie which was all right as long as it stuck to record jackets and press releases. When it begins to capitalize on murder, however, it becomes nauseating, and "Gimme Shelter," which does just that, is a despicable film. The subject of "Shelter" is the Stones' free concert (with Jefferson Airplane) at Altamont and the events leading up to it. As everyone knows, Altamont was the anti-Woodstock, the bad trip marked by nightmarish violence and death. Yet, in strictest terms, the murder at Altamont was a godsend for the Stones. At least it gives "Shelter," which was in filming at the time, and of which the free concert was to be the climax, a semblance of direction and tone which in reality it lacks. In showing what one reviewer called the "demonic side of rock" it nourishes the publicity myth of Their Satanic Majesties, the Stonies. All "Shelter" has to do, and what it does, is put the Stones in proximity with violence, suggest that such violence is implicit in their music, and yet carefully lay the blame for it elsewhere. Elsewhere is the Hell's Angels. " Pauline Kael has objected that the Hell's Angels are the Stones' fall guys in "Gimme Shelter." Certainly, with respect to violence, the Stones get the glamor of it, and the Angels, the blame. Though "Shelter" glosses over the fact, the Angels were "hired" by the Stones-for $500 worth of beer to act as security forces at presented. similar in name only to the "signs" of the zodiac used in astrology a point often not clear to the casual horoscope watcher. , "The Astronomy of Astrology" may be seen in the star theater at, Morehead Planetarium . on the UNC campus every 1 night of the week at 8:30, with matinees on Saturdays at 1 1 a.m., 1 , 3 and 4 p.m: and on Sundays at 2, 3 and 4 p.m. WATER BEDS King Size $33.98 Guaranteed 967-5104 After 6 . ; X The Daily Tar Heel is published by the :::: University of North Carolina Student 'X Publications Board, daily except Sunday, ".; examination periods, vacations and summer periods. Jx Offices are at the Student Union -X building, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. 27S14. 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C. x: : ;X The Student Legislature shall have X powers to determine the Student X Activities fee and to appropriate all : X; revenue derived from the Studeot : X- Activities fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student : Constitution): The budgetary: ;X appropriation for the 1970-71 academic year is $28,292.50 for undergraduates -X and $4,647.50 - for graduates as the .X; subscription rate for the student body: X; ($ 1 .8 4 per student based on fall semester : X; enrollment figures). : ' X' The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to : X regulate the typographical tone of all advertisements and to revise . or turn ' X: away copy it consider objectionable. : The Daily Tar Heel will not consider: :X adjustments or payments for any X advertisement involving major :: X typographical errors or erroneous : -X; insertion unless notice is given to the X- Business Manager withirt (1) one day :: v. after the advertisement appears, or l. within one day of the receiving of tear : X sheets, of subscription of the paper. The :: Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible ': Tor more than one incorrect insertionrof : V: an advertisement scheduled to run :: : ffy,!aJJ,mes- Notices for such correction Miust be siyen, before. tte-next-mfrtion. : "". """ """""""" """"i ""4'" "" a " " T. a .- MI55 ZblEETZTCM LOVES ME i OR IT WOULb BE, P THE LAYABOUTS WEREN'T En JOnN& it too; the concert. If the Stones had used rabid dogs or orangutans to protect the stage, they'd be no more culpable for the ensuing violence. What makes them even more blameworthy is that the Angels were apparently brought in to become part of the Stones' mystique. Thus, the very set-up of the concert almost certainly predicated the violence. It's not a matter of saying "It had to happen," but merely of noting that the use of a troop of Angels plied with beer to "keep the peace" signified not only poor intentions but a want of sense on the Stones' part. The philosophical callowness of the whole venture is perhaps best embodied in Grace Slick's comment-not the famous "Keep your bodies off of one another unless you .intend love," but a largely ignored remark almost immediately after, to justify the Angels head-knocking: "You need people like the Angels to keep people in line "Is this a flower-child or merely a child? We don't trust cops, but well take brown shirts? Given this situation, "Gimme Shelter," in the hands of an impartial filmmaker, could have been a devastating experience, a critique of a culture which identifies aesthetic-and sexual satisfaction with thrills, chills, and excitement. Instead, as I said, "Shelter" tries to glamorize the Stones who don't need the extra glamor and convince us of its honesty. It bores us with the protracted negotiations for a concert site, antagonizes us with high-falutin statements concerning the v lGampni "A Harvest of Shame," the definitive work on the migrant worker problem,' will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union Coffee House. What more needs to be said? By Edward R. Murrow. Sponsored by the Current Affairs Committee of the Student Union. The Christian Science Organization will meet at 6:30 tonight in the Wesley Foundation. College Life -Is Jesus for real?: a case for the validity and relevancy of Jesus will be the topic tonight. The meeting will be held at 9 p.m. in Kenan Dorrh Lounge. College Life is sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ. Try-outs for this fall's majorettes will be held Saturday, April 24 at 9:30 a.m. in front of Carmichael Auditorium. All participants will be asked to demonstrate their skill in a short routine. Girls will be judged on skill, style and i poise by Chief Majorette Linda Comeaux. All orientation counselor training sessions nlj.s Kappa. Sigma's 2nd Annual Backyard Basketball Tournament!: j Thurs. 1-6 P.M. Favorite Beverages I ! On Sale For Information Call ; Frank Bradley At 968-9032 I All Proceeds Go To ; Campus Chest ; TONIOtTT 6430 -SM. ta;man Dorm Lounge ill rfliiifix It's Formal Ordering Time At Milton's Avoid the disappointments the last week in April and first week in May by placing your formal order NOW nS ?? r--. I I I Yj m concert's meaning (after all, it was to be the climax of a publicity film), and cloys us with shots of the kinky-sexy Stones. There is no analysis of the effect of rock music on a crowd ranging into the hundreds of thousands. There are no details concerning the Stones' arrangements with the Hell's Angels. In short, there is no bint, not even the slightest glimmer of a realization, that the Stones could possibly have been connected with what went wrong at Altamont. Even on a less ambitious level the film never makes the comparison which thrusts itself in our face, between the manneristic violence of the performers and the coarse, almost anti-climactic nature of real violence, real life. Instead, amid the glorification and music, you see Hell's Angels jackets, name emblazoned on the back, continually brandished before you by the camera lest you forget who the "real" villains are. The Stones are seen watching the film clips in the studio, examining the murder with an almost clinical interest, and calmly deploring the events of the evening. Hence, "Shelter's" failure, both intellectually and emotionally. We are innundated with the Stones all the way up to the Altamont bummer, then asked to make no connections. What is ironic is that "Shelter" is not nearly as good a white-wash job as it was intended to be, simply because the Maysle brothers who made it are not very good at their trade. Just as the overall acftivifties will be held this week, at the following times and places: today, 7 p.m., Mangum basement, 9 p.m., Connor Lounge; Wednesday, 7 p.m., Granville South Lounge, 9 p.m., Morrison lounge; and Thursday, 7 p.m., Ehringhaus lounge, 9 p.m., Parker. All counselors must attend one of these sessions. Anyone who wishes to be a counselor and has not yet applied may do so during any of the sessions. The Carolina Symposium will hold an open meeting tonight at 8 in room 202-204 of the Carolina Union for all persons interested in working on next year's symposium. Next year's topic will be 'The Mind of the South." Interviews for the Senior Committees are -being held this week, Tuesday-Thursday, 11 a.m.-lO p.m. in room 205 of the Union. Sign-up at the Union desk prior to interview. The ten committees include: AMDS (Advancement of Minority and Disadvantaged Students), Fair Housing, External Affairs, Internal Affairs, Job BACK IN SUP LIMITED NUMBER JETHRO TULL AQUALUNG NEW ELTON JOHN LIVE LP NEW KINKS LP-PERCY Store Hours 10-10 Daily 1-10 Sunday DTH C EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES: FEMALE: Cashiers and counter attendants. MALE: Food preparation and personnel. Apply in person, Roy Rogers Family Restaurant, 106 MaletteSt. 1970 Maverick. Under warranty. Radio, whitewalls, large engine. Call 967-1365 after 6 p.m. Exceptional used furniture at reasonable prices. Leaving Chepel Hill and must sell immediately. Call 929-6444 between 8:00 and 11:00 a.m. NOW RENTING: 2 and 3-bedroom air-conditioned mobile homes for June occupancy. Telephone 929-2854 or 942-1749 (from 9 to 6 p.m.) FURNISHED APARTMENT FOR RENT June-August. A-11 Kingswood Apts., air-conditioned, pool, 10 minutes from campus. Call 967-4775. 1959 Austin Healey. 100-6, new paint, approx. 10 000 miles on engine, 4-speed with overdrive, wire wheels with Pirelli radials. Beautiful classic Phone 1-227-3357 after 5:00 p.m. SUMMER IN EUROPE! StudentFaculty Flights: May 29-July 28: S199 June 11-Aug. 28: S205 June 29-Aug. 18: S230 NY-LONDON-NY 942-7289 evenings FREE: Spring kittens, 2 orange, six weeks old Leave name and telephone number on carrel 1034 Wilson Library, or call Hillsborough 732-3128. FOR SALE: Used 26" girl's bicycle, very good condition. $18 Call Edith, yfc-ioA 405 Ransom St Add a new dimension to your sex hfe-the bed that does the work foi you Come on down and take a cruise at WATERBEDS UNLIMITED. Downstairs m the Record and Tape Center Grand opening sale in progress. Great tor sleeping, too!) GIVE-AWAY SALE: 1966 GIULIA GTC. Only S1000. engine). 967-1972. ALFA ROMEO (New tires, new 1966 Chevy Van-new engine, good tires, tanpriprk irphox set up for traveling, great tor er tmcKn'.' SSCXM .rm. 933-4&1 before 10.30 p.m. CHILDREN WANTED. VA-A V". old for research on language development May I tape-record your ch.id's speech at home? Lioda Rodd Psychology Dept.. 933-5035. Even.ngs 929-5473. construction of the film lets in the draft, the individual details are poor. The pseudo-documentary grainir.ess of the film is already a cliche -especially with the lists ar.d lists of camera men in the credits, and our realization that Altamont was conceived with a movie in mind. The camera work is poor. The first shot of Jagger singing gets him from mid chest up, and this seems to be the Maysles' favorite shot. A camera placed about eight feet off the ground and fifteen feet away from the stage would have caufht Jagger's almost surrealistic energy far better than the claustrophobic photography we're given. I don't think there is a shot of the whole stage in the film, and the sound listens like Jagger and the band were recorded in separate rooms. Perhaps the biggest cop out, along these lines, occurs when Jagger sings "a slow blues" ("Love in Vain"). Rather than focus on the singer, the Maysles take clips of Jagger doing another, faster, song, slow them up, and run them underneath the "slow blues." One remembers Joan Baez or even, for all its faults. Crosby, Stills and Nash, in "Woodstock." Could you picture running 'The Who" under their sound track just to stimulate some visual excitement? All in all, "Gimme Shelter" impresses me most as a bad parody of "Woodstock," but lacking even that film's saving naivete. One of the Stones, with typically British understatement, summed up the whole affair with, "What a shame." That's not the half of it. c&leedair! Placement. Draft Counseling. Senior Activities, Scholarship- Gift- and Fund-Raising, Curriculum Change and Student Insurance Company. Committees open to all students; however, rising seniors will have priority. FOUND: Linda B., who hitched a ride to Union Grove in a red bus, we have your purse. Call 929-7336. LOST: A Motormatic 135 camera, left in a white sports car back seat when I was hitchhiking. I was with a blonde girl and we asked to be let off at Grimes dorm. Two people were in the car, one wearing a suit. We were picked up outside Chapel Hill, near Morgan Creek. Please return camera to 109 Grimes Dorm or 21 2 Joyner. LOST: Wire-rim glasses in brown suede case while hitching to Duke (April 13) via tastgatc. Will the girls who picked me up, please contact Andrea, 933-7148 or 557 Craige. PLY AGA 456 W. Franklin (Across From Leo's) O ft AMBITIOUS MEN of various trades. NORTH to Alaska and the Yukon, around $2800 a month. For complete information write to JOB RESEARCH. P.O. Box 161. Stn-A, Toronto, Ont. Enclose $3 to cover cost. HELP SAVE AMERICA! Join the American Vigilantes! For information Buy and Read THE AMERICAN VIGILANTE by Alaric. Branden Press, 221 Columbus Ave., Boston. Mass. 12116. $4.95. 1963 Porsche 3563 Cabriolet. Mint condition. New paint, top. 7,000 mi., completely rebuilt engine. Extractor exhaust. New Michelin X's. Alan Luger, Durham 477-7181 after 6. SUMMER SCHOOL STUDENTS! LIVE in a fraternity house this summer with juke-box, bar, and color TV. Call Cart Hilburn at 963-9193. FOR SALE: Encyclopedia Brittanica 54-volume set. Great Works of the Western World. New; unused. $200 or best offer. Call 933-4935 or 933-4943 after 6 p.m. USED RECORDS-S1.50-S2.50. Huge selection of recent rock albums. All in excellent condition. Over 100. RECORDS, CLOGS & THiNGS. 405 W. Franklin. 923-3540. PEUGEOT BICYCLES. Call 963-3332 967-5252. evnings, 7 to 9. May delivery. or JET TO EUROPE S183.00 NY-LONDON-NY June 9-Aug. 25 UNC Flights, 201 Carolina Union Vox Guardsman, with reverb, trem., fuzz, wah-wah, etc. built-in. Cords, covers, and stand included. Call Charles (933-2455) evenings and leave message. "Automatic Radio" stereo tape player (car) with built-in FM stereo radio. Just overhauled good as new. With 15 8-track tapes. $90.00. 967-4554. FOR SALE: 250 cc Yamaha streetscrambler. Good-looking, good-running machine. Heimet included. Ready for spring. Cat! 933-4745 8:00-10:00 p.m. FOR SALE: BSA Chopper, kit. $1250. Cail 967-5051. 650 cc with 750 FOR SALE: 1970 Honda CL-175. ExeeSient condition. $400 with 2 helmets. Call Jtm Wilcox. Pi Kappa Alpha House after 7 o'clock. 1963 Triumph motorcycle. 942-6052. Trophy 500. $50. 1970 Yamaha Enduro. Excellent condition. 1.400 miles. Great for person who desires a new bike but doesn't have the money. &S3-91 17. FOR SALE: 4- and 8-track car tape p!3ver. S40. Also, home and car tape player, $50. 1414 Granule West. 333-2503. IN V L4K ..,