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by Bruce Mann
A distant Feature Editor
While tryouts for a Carolina
Playmakers dramatic production are
always a taxing ordeal for
actors-auditions require that actors
execute their art in a vacuum, with no
scenery and few if any props-tryouts for
the new multi- media production,
"Amanita:: The Death Angel," proved
uncommonly strange as well as taxing.
The time was Saturday night.
The place was the humid Graham
Memorial Lounge, a large, open-spaced,
part time theatre, covered with stacks of
folding chairs, ladders, a few old fans, a
stack of hats, and other assorted
paraphenaha.
The scene was around a long table at
the room's center.
The intriguing, ambitious director of
the environmental "Amanita," Sam
In Hill Hall
rm
Tomorrow night marks the start of a
new series of Tuesday Evening Concerts,
which present to the community all that
is best about the Music Department.
Tomorrow's concert will be a recital
by Dr. Rudolph Kremer, chairman of the
Music Department's Organ Division. He
will be playing a mostly modern program,
including works by Lubeck and Krenek,
on the department's fine reproduction
baroque organ.
are Earth cancels
UNC performance
The Rare Earth concert scheduled fur
September 25 has beee cancelled, says
Chuck Patrizia, president of the Carolina
Union Activities Group.
Due to a managerial mix-up between
the booking offices in Chicago and New
York, Rare Earth received and accepted a
bid for two concerts in Chicago on
September 25 before they received the
UNC bid.
'This doesn't happen very often," said
Patrizia. "It couldn't or it would ruin the
business."
Patrizia explained that both offices
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Allen, dressed m a pair of mere dibie pants
patched with ins: gnus ranging from Hags
to an octagonal stop sign to a Sgt.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band badge,
sat at the table and dispensed instructions
to the group of actors located around
him.
The actors, dressed casually, sat on
nearby chairs, some filhr.g out audition
forms, some rehearsing sounds, others
searching through the script for suitable
material. There were about 10 boys and 4
girls present for this second night of
auditions.
One of the girls wore a pervasive
perfume.
A small, charcoal grey dog marched
and frolicked under and around the
chairs, pink tongue extended forward.
The sound of L'NC crickets chattered
through the open windows.
"The first thing you'll have to do is a
sound " said Sam. "There are human
nesday ene
The concerts are presented in Hill Hall
on almost every Tuesday throughout the
semester, and are always free to the
public.
The concert schedule is as follows:
September 21 - A Sonata Recital
given by Edgar Alden and Fedora
Horowitz.
October 12 Music for two pianos
and other instruments. Marvin
Blickenstaff and Fedora Horowitz will
asked for a booking contract after Rare
Earth cancelled a date in New Orleans set
for September 25, but the Chicago office
went straight to the promoters of Rare
Earth in order to gain the contract.
Meanwhile the New York office had
committed the September 25 date to the
Carolina Union before checking with
Chicago's office.
The Activities Group met yesterday to
try to fill the vacant concert slot, but
Patrizia admits that due to the late date
and most groups' prior commitments, the
date itself might have to be cancelled.
Eastgate
Shopping Center
Breakfast
Lunch
7 Days a week rM ..
j open 7 -q Dinner
specializing in
COUNTRY HAM
for
YOU CAN EAT)
dinner anything
other than ham
sounds, animal
sounds-they'
An attractive cirl advanced t: th:
snoot h .
i-secor.a cres.en.
sounded like scrr.eor.e b!
lv ::
Coke bottle.
An arr.buler.ee siren from ou
rr.ir.z'ed with her tone as she went t: s:t
ciov.n.
"I'm gonna do a woman's laugh."
our.ced a tall actor m
cial expression. "Ah-ha-ha-ha-ha." he
shrieked, contorting his face to reach the
shrill
'I'm trvir.e the Bronx Zoo."
another person, so success!-,
audition that the gray dog wagge;
1 . ...1
and joyously jumped to the actor's side.
"Pick up a hat from the pile and do
what it suggests." said Sam. One ctor
found a Bir.g Crosby- type .nd cr : ned a
1940's ballad.
begin
play Bach's C major conrto tor two
pianos and string orchestra.
October 19 - A Trumpet recital given
by John Harding with Richard Buck,
piano.
October 26 - The North Carolina
String Quartet will play quartets by
Haydn, Lutoslovsky, and Schumann.
November 2 - A Piano Recital.
Francis Whang will perform sonatas by
Liszt, Beethoven, and Prokofiev.
November 9 The University
Symphony Orchestra, under David
Serrins. Professor Wilton Mason will
perform Mozart's C minor Piano
Concerto.
November 16 - The University
Chamber Singers, under Stafford Wing,
will sing, as part of a varied program,
Giacomo Carissimi's "Baltazar."
November 23 The Varsity Men's
Glee Club, directed by Robert Porco.
present renaissance and modern works.
November 30 - The University Wind
Ensemble, under its new director Boris
Rybka, will play some early brass music,
and works by Handel and Ned Roren.
December 7 The Carolina Choir,
with Lara Hoggard, present their
ever-popular Christmas Concert.
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THE STORY OF THE BEATLES is tkt aost eititiig story of toitiporory aisic tftr rodicid. for feir lifktj
Meidsy tkroigk Thirsrfay, September 13 - 16, it 9:00 p.m. yoi will liter tkt aist copr ekeativ t itiij
of tilt in groii nd its aisic tkot dad tkt frtafest siiglt iapict 01 tt'tri sic. Tkt Sttry tf tkt
Iistlts is loaded with tkt ' ef tkt Itotlts aid tkt nisic tkt Itttlts iiflttittd. Tkis prtfria will
kt airtd ii tkt Cktitl Hill - Dirii . ltik ttMBtiity eily ti WCHl - 1310. Dei t uht ft.
An: the: inat.he
v-.b rated rus
ir.-the-au skit.
An a etc-: 2nd 2:.
tress r-::;t:ced th:
b 1 r d - t w e e t s 2nd
ccr.trarur.tuallv as Sam .
Let's
r.2e 15 s;
2Vt
: y o .
Is to .
to -p there. Yr-u
i u-.:c2te hate. Or.
:-: rr.arK. get set. .
i ne r 2nct .::. seetrte
ha:l;r.g :n-u;ts. and sh?-t:ng v.tuper
In ten seconds the ser.e
:::. so caugr.:
J .V. . ... ., . .u
V . - . . , . J .
hj'ted the ete2-
i-j started
es improvising "anxiety an-
bet ore !u:r.:r.2 to somethir.ii
"From
sjme-A r
here down there, there
ling oj." said Sam.
m o 1 1 on m i
1 a t e -.
irretal ""
One actress sprawled on the floor,
fighting and tugging, eventually giving m.
Another actress envisioned the force as
an invisible shield groping for her yet
simultaneously blocking escape.
New actors and actresses entered the
room and tried this and other actions as
the strange ordeal contmued-solo talks
on opulation and survival. "Amanita's
theme; improvised escape reactions given
only 3 actors, two boxes and a hellish
imagined enclosure; and impromptu
gibberish conversations with other actors
trying to pantomime the conversations.
For some, tonight would be the end of
the ordeal.
For others, it would be the beginning
of a long, unusual association with a
production which will feature everything
from moog synthesizer music to films and
projected slides.
"Amanita: The Death Angel"
premieres October 26.
Kundalini course
Yoga starts tonight
"Yoga enables one to become healthy,
happy, and holy," says Al Scopp.
instructor of the Carolina Union's new
course in Kundalini Yoga, which holds its
first meeting at 7 pm in Room 202.
"The joy of feeling light and limber,
the freedom of being fearless, the
greatness of becoming more and more
positive. .-these are the gifts of Kundalini
yoga, according to Scopp.
To elicit these positive mental feelings,
the course, which will meet Monday and
Wednesday nights at 7 p. m. for an initial
7 -week session, concentrates on using
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three r.ffc-:ks ha-.e been p:n-M:r.j: f.::
the Last mrnth and a halt.
The
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NBC is Channel 25
represented b Channel:
and ABC is
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pr: pamming at w.th "Gur.s.cke"
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"My Three S r.s. and -Arr.:e." Ch.2nr.el
5 will have the r.ew sr.d;cated Laurence
Uoved bv
ABC movie. "Lah-In"
returns for another season on NBC at 5.
followed by a Bob Hope special and a
new comedy ser.es. "It's a Wack World."
that could tum out to be 2 lot like
"Laugh-In."
TUESDAY; This is the big network
battleground this season, with "Ironside"
leading off at 7:30 on NBC aga nst ABC's
"Mod Squad" and Glenn Campbell of
CBS. "Hawaii Five-O" follows on CBS.
with NBC cour.tenr. with its new
policeman-turned-pnest show, -Sarge."
ABC has the Movie of the Week, at 8:30.
followed by -Marcus Welby." A new CBS
private eye show, "Cannon." goes on at
9:30 and NBC will have a new five-family
tvpe of situation comedy. "The Funny
Side."
WEDNESDAY: Carol Burnett leads
off the evening for CBS at 8. against
ABC's "Bewitched," and "The Courtship
of Eddie's Father." NBC, meanwhile,
premieres its new hour and a half
"Mystery Movie," which features three
police series including one holdover from
last season, "McCloud." Channel 5 will go
with a local movie at 8:30. but Channel 8
will stick with the network, presenting
the "Smith Family" at 9, "This Is Your
Life" at 9:30, and Anthony Quinn's new
physical exercises and therapies.
Thus Scopp, a doctoral candidate in
ecology at Duke and a specially trained
(by Yogi Bhaghan) Kundalini yoga
teacher, will use basic physical excercises,
changing ("the generation of a positive
vibration among a group of people"),
deep relaxations, and massage to
"unblock the blocks within oneself and
release the creative energies."
Scopp requests a SI donation for
tonight's organizational-instructional
meeting. Price for the course is S5 per
session.
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James Gamer in -N":ch--'.." : 1 ::zt:
at ABC has another r.f h.-
"Owen Varha::. Cou-'.er a: la.
go agair.t Dean Mart:- a-d the -half
of CBS- mov-e.
FR1D Y fairly :ic eveni
w i:h ABC f.-.ng a:: the -av
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"The Odd Couple
American Stvle." NBC ha a- .0-2 0
movie and CBS :
SATURDXY
:ns one from 0 .'0 to '.
"All in the Famiiv
returns to CBS at S to do battle uith
strong new NBC entry. "The Partner,
starring Don Adams Once again tu
competing movies with ABC's runnir
from 5:50 to 10 00 and NBC's from 0 to
11. Divk Van Dyke and Mary Iy'.er
Moore occupy to -10 slot at CBS.
followed by "Mission: Impossible " A Be"
counters that at 10 with "The
Persuaders." featuring two unlikely
cevstars: Roger Moore and Tony Curt:
SUNDAY' "The FBI. -Bonanra".
and the same old shlock.
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