Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / June 17, 1971, edition 1 / Page 12
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12 The Tar Heel Thursday, June 17, 1971 Call 942-3162 To Reserve A Seat At Troy's Exclusive Live versus Recorded" Demonstration ONLY SIX PERFORMANCES! Saturday, June 19, 1971 2:30, 4:00 and 5:30 PM Friday, June 18, 1971 5:00, 6:30 and 8:00 PM CHAPEL HILL STORE ONLY AKG D200E The AKG D200E has separate elements for low and high frequencies which allows ex ceptionally wide, smooth, fre quency response and freedom from distortion. Advent Noise 1 DURHAM STORE ONLY J Reduction Unit P t J ' - i j : i ." Tape Recorder AKG Microphone Advent Model 100 We use the Dolby System be cause it helps rid even the best tape recordings of background noise. Tandberg 6000X Superb performance, ease of operation, and dependability are the requirements for our tape recorder. Accordingly, we chose a Tandberg 6000X. We'll be using BASF "low-Noise" tape on the 6000X. Mcintosh C-28 We chose' the Mcintosh C-28 because it has internal noise level of less than one-third of any preamplifier. The 114 dB dynamic range of the C-28 ex ceeds that of the world's finest concert halls! ' Mcintosh Environmental Equalizer foQ Foj iloo "OP j .' . .' Mcintosh ML2C The perfect reproduction of recorded sound requires the world's finest loudspeaker sys tems: only the Mcintosh ML2C loudspeakers fill this requirement! , Iri'i ami'. : -4 Mcintosh Loudspeaker I Mcintosh C-28 Preamplifier Mcintosh MQ 101 Every listening room creates its own unique acoustical environ ment. The Mcintosh MQ 101 will be used to match the ML2C loudspeaker to our dem onstration room. Meel - OOO O Q Mcintosh MC-2105 Amplifier Mcintosh MC-2105 The accurate recreation of live music requires a great reser voir of undistorted amplifier power. Each channel of the MC-2105 can provide a contin uous 105 watts of power, with less than one-quarter of one per cent distortion! n oie GORDON GOW, exoert executive vice-president of Mcintosh Labs, creator of the new world's standard in direct-reflecting loudspeakers. ALLEN SELBY, leading independent audio consultant. Allen's knowledge of recording technique will be at your disposal. Learn to appreciate your recorder's capabilities. ODD NORDHAM, Trained in Norway and now a spokesman for Tandberg of North America, Odd can still afford to be completely objective in evaluating recording equipment. Learn which features in a recorder truly enhance performance. The fitted -'ereo system you could have in your own home would be a group of live musicians. Since this is not practical, you need a stereo system that can most accurately reproduce live music. Here is your opportunity to make a comparison of the finest stereo system with a live musical group. The combination of musicians has been selected to tax the capabilities of our stereo system. Phone today for your reserved seat. Space for seating is limited. Don't Be Left Out. Call 942-3162 Now. Troy's. Dancers organize A dance workshop focusing on the study of the body through yoga, Graham movement, mime, and exercises will be held each Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union. Robin Wakeland, a former student at Ann Halprin's San Francisco Dancers' Workshop, conducts the workshop and invites all interested people-men, women, students, non-students-to sign up at the Carolina Union Information Desk. The cost will be $3.00 for the first summer session. Miss Wakeland points out that the workshop is designed for "people with any variety of dance training and experience, including none," since "the techniques I'll be using are adaptable to a ballet-trained person as well as a traditionally 'untrained' person." These techniques include "yoga for breathing and relaxing, Graham movement which centers around the solar plexis, mime, ordinary stretches and strengthening exercises, some theatre and group exercises." The exact focus of the dance activities "will be up to the individual participants," but Miss Wakeland emphasizes that her general goals will be "the purely physical element of getting people to feel and use their own bodies, the study of space and form relationships through movement with other people and things-other shapes besides one's own, self-knowledge which can come from physical awareness, and group dynamics." The dance workshop will not be an encounter group. It "is designed to be physical rather than psychical and experiential rather than studious." Miss Wakeland originally led a dance workshop in the Union last spring on an experimental basis, involving about eight people regularly. "Mostly I was trying to get a feel for people's responses to the idea of the workshop, and I got a positive feeling from it, and that's why it will be continued this summer." There are also plans to continue the workshop in the fall if the demand calls for it. "There's been some interest by the Union in the formation of an indigenous company of dancers, and the workshop could develop into such a thing." Duke prof wins prize Reynolds Price, distinguished young North Carolina author and professor of English at Duke University, is the recipient of a 1971 Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the National Institute of Arts and Letters. The $3,000 cash award was presented at the Academy's annual ceremonial dinner in New York City. It was one of several presented to prominent and talented young Americans active in fields of literature, drama, music and fine arts. In the citation read by William Maxwell, president of the Institute, Price was praised for his "gifts of vigorous intelligence! a strongly individual B perception of the nature -both physical anu psytuuiugitai ui a given uuic anu place, of the variety in kind and intensity of human relationships." Maxwell added that in all the Maxton, N.C. native's prose fiction "there is a poet's daring and control." Price's recent book, "Permanent Errors." is a collection of short stories-some dealing with love and marriage, others with former timres, other people and places-and a novella' entitled "Walking Lessons." Earlier books by the former Rhodes scholar include "Love and Work," "A Generous Man," and "A Long and Happy Life " all novels, and another collection gaggfj of stories, "Names and Faces of Heroes." y
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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June 17, 1971, edition 1
12
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