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Thursday, November 4, 1971
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by Bruce Mann
A ssistant Feature Editor
The Houston Ballet, Texas' first fully
professional ballet troupe will dance a
varied program of ballets from the
modern and classical repertoires at their
Memorial Hall performance Tuesday
night.
The selections to he danced by the
new company of 16 dancers on their
southern U.S. tour include the
"Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux" from the
"Swan Lake" score and the "Pas de Dix"
from the ballet "Raymonda," both
choreographed by George Balanchine;
"Design with Strings" conceived by John
Taras with music also by Tchaikovsky;
M
usicosium series
spotlights
by Kathy Koch
Feature Writer
Longhair music in the Great Hall? Glee
club and brass ensemble performances
and piano recitals in the Student Union?
It's all part of the Union Music
Committee's effort to provide an
"opportunity to learn more about
classical music, how it is put together and
produced," says Music Committee
Chairman Jamie Rice.
"Longhair a musicosium" is the title
of the series of lectures, demonstrations,
and concerts scheduled for next Monday
through Wednesday. Each day there will
be afternoon "demo-concerts," as Rice
calls them, at 2 p.m. and evening concerts
at 8 p.m. in either the Great Hall or Hill
Hall.
Dr. Rudolph Kremer starts off the
week of "longhair" music with a
performance-demonstration on the organ
of Bach's "Prelude and Fugue in G
Major" and works by Scarlatti and
Lubeck. Kremer will explain some of the
history and workings of the organ.
Kremer's performance will be in Hill
Hall at 2 p.m.
Monday evening at 8 p.m. the UNC
Glee Club will perform under the
direction of Robert Porco in the Great
Hall.
The Glee Club consists of 40 men who
perform from 25-30 concerts each year
both in and out of North Carolina. Their
repertory includes music ranging from
sacred music to pop tunes. Porco gives
private voice lessons and teaches musical
theory at UNC.
Their program will include "A Mass,"
by Josquin des Pres, and some pieces-for
male voices by Schubert. Several
contemporary pieces and a composition
by Walter Piston are also planned.
The Daily Tar Heel is published by the.
University of North Carolina Student
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examination periods vacations and
summer periods.
Offices are at the Student Union
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Chapel Hill. N.C. 27514. Telephone
numbers: News, Sports 933-1011;
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Advertising 933-1 163.
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appropriation for the 1970-71 academic
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and $4,647.50 for graduates as the X
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must be given before the next insertion.
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NEIGHBORS'
EYES'
fare Tuesday
and "Bachianas BrasiHeras" and
"Impressions" designed by Job Sanders.
The company, which critic Carl
Cunningham of the Houston Post has
complimented for its "youthful
enthusiasm" and ability to present a
"kind of once-ir.-a-lifetime thrill," is
under the artistic direction of Nina
Popova. Ballet master is Michael Lland.
Popova is Russian trained and has
danced with the Russian Opera, the
original Ballet Russe de Brasil, and as a
soloist, she performed with the Ballet
Theatre and Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo.
Before coming to the Houston Ballet, she
supervised baUet at the School for
Performing Arts in New York.
Lland was a soloist with the American
Ballet Theatre for over a decade and also
classics
Tuesday the UNC Brass Ensemble,
under the direction of John Harding, will
perform at the Great Hall at 2 p.m. The
ensemble was formed three years ago and
has been popular among the "longhairs"
at Hill Hall since then. The group is
composed of two trumpets, one
trombone, one french horn and a tuba.
The ensemble will play "Hardinsburg
Joys" by N. Keyes, "Divertissement" by
Walter Hartley, and Edward Gregson's
"Quintet for Brass."
As part of the regular Tuesday Evening
Series, the UNC Symphony Orchestra will
perform Mozart's "Piano Concerto in C
Minor," and works by Copeland, Delius,
and Wagner. David Serrins will direct at 8
p.m. in Hill Hall.
Dr. Marvin Blickenstaff, who gave his
first full-length recital at the age of 12,
will perform works of Haydn, Brahms,
and Ravel at 2 p.m. in the Great Hall.
Musicosium audiences will get a
chance to see first hand how a piece of
music is prepared for performance
Wednesday night at an open practice of
the UNC Wind Ensemble in the Great
Hall at 8 p.m.
Boris Rybka will direct the "practice,"
stopping intermittently to explain
changes to be made and the dynamics of
preparing for a major concert.
The group will perform works by
Giovanni Gabrieli, Fischer, Haydn, and
Strauss.
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Cook in oven
6 Rent
11 Hateful
13 Suffer violent
internal
excitement
14 Paid notice
15 Police
precinct book
17 Chaldean city
18 Underworld
god
20 Southeast
wind
21 Southern
blackbird
22 Walk
24 Cover
25 Poker stake
26 Period of time
23 Musical
instruments
30 Jumped type
32 Aroma
33 Out of
breath
35 Hebrew
month
37 Shallo-'
vessels
38 Male swan
40 Pieces out
42 Urge on
43 Walk on
45 Resort
46 Behold!
47 Firm woolen
cloth
49 Conjunction
50 All
52 Girl's name
54 Slaves
55 Old musical
instruments
3 Three toed
sloth
4 Cry
5 Bulrush
6 Dregs
7 Without end
(poetic)
8 Near
9 Pushes aside
10 Weird
12 Man's moral .
and emotional
nature
13 Painter's
working room
16 Journey
19 Leaking
through
21 Hooded
jackets
23 Aches
25 Positive pole
27 Crimson
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blends experience with the New York
Ciry Ballet and the Robert Joffrey Ballet
Center. Prior to his current post in
Houston, Lland was artistic director and
ballet master of the Ballet Clasico de
Mexico.
Under the supervision of these two
professionals, the company has grown
quickly and received glowing notices
from the local critics.
Of the principals, critic Ann Holmes of
the Houston Chronicle has commented:
"Heading the company are two happily
matched young principals, Judith Aaen
and Anthony Sellers. Miss Aaen, small
and fragile, has a lovely long 'line' and
fine control and focused intensity. Sellers
. . . turns and leaps with dash and
excitement."
The Ballet principals will highlight the
Memorial Hall concert with the
"Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux"
choreographed by New York City Ballet
director George Balanchine and first
performed in New York in 1960.
The music for this Pas de Deux was
written by Tchaikovsky for the 1877
production of "Swan Lake," but for
some reason it was not included in the
performance. Choreographer Marius
Petipa and Len Ivanov, who restaged
"Swan Lake" in 1895 (the St. Petersburg
version), failed to include this music and
substituted other material for the famous
Black Swan Pas de Deux. The original
music was finally discovered laying
unnoticed in the Tchaikovsky Museum in
Klin.
Performance time for the Ballet is 8
p.m. Tickets are now on sale at the Union
Information Desk for $1.
Rosencrantz' cast
The Carolina Playmakers and the UNC
Department of Dramatic Art have
announced the cast for "Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern Are Dead," the third
production of the 1971-72 season.
Playmakers Bill Brooke of Alexandria,
Virginia, and Graham Marlett of High
Point will be seen in the title roles as the
cwo minor characters from Shakespeare's
"Hamlet."
According to N.Y. Times drama critic
Clive Barnes, Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern "are little but
functionaries" in the Bard's play, but in
this "very funny, very brilliant and very
chilling" version, the perspective changes.
"This then is the play of 'Hamlet' not
seen through, the eyes of Hamlet, or
Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle
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3 TTj N 1 C A"1w A G E
29 Girl's name
31 Edict
33 Vehicles
34 Performs
36 Grumble
37 Martinique
volcano
39 Cock in oven
41 Vaults
43 Rocky hills
44 European
herb
47 Expire
48 Negative
vote
51 Symbol for
thoron
53 Prefix: not
wow!
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Jucutn Aaen and Anthony Sellers trom the Houston Ballet perform in "Grand Pas
De Deux" from "The Nutcracker." They will be performing Tuesday night at 8 pjn. in
Memorial Hall. Tickets are on sale at the Union information desk for SI.
Claudius, or Ophelia or Gertrude, but a
worm's eye view of the tragedy seen from
the bewildered standpoint of Rosencrantz
and Guildenstern."
Bill Donovan of Needham, Mass., is
Hamlet, while Judy Chesnutt of Raleigh
is cast as Ophelia.
Alfred will be portrayed by Tony
Rivenbark (who recently played a major
role in the Playmakers production of
"The Birds" earlier this season). The
Player is Tom Kindle.
Others in the cast include Mitch Breit,
Phil Kasey, Cullum Rogers, Worth
Kinlaw, Mark Smith, Cinde Cahn, Dusty
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On the Curve Where
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Staub, Charles Joyce, Jim Bissell and
John Stafford.
The lighting for the production will be
by Gordon Pearlman of the department,
and costumes are being designed by
Sharon Muir. Valerie Deibler is the
choreographer.
"Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are
Dead" which won both the New York
Drama Critics Circle Award and a Tony
Award during the 1967-68 Broadway
season, will be presented in the
Playmakers' Theatre at 8 p.m., Nov.
16-21. For further information, call
933-1121.
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enan prof
Coniolsdited University Ptes-.djrt
Willum C. Friday ir.remew Verrn.-r.t
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Journalism ar.J former editor of the
"Wan Street Jourr.i!." on "North
Carolina People." a WfNC-TV
presentation on Sunday. Nv. 7. at r 30
p jn.
Another highlight on l'-.:rv.:
Television next week is the film "Carolina
Film Makers ... Notes on Prorfs.s.ion." a
study of local folksir.fers Mike Cross ar.d
Larry Reynolds by Charlie Huntley,
which will be shewn it $ p.m. on Nov
11.
The film, which includes a v.uii
interpretation of or.r.ai v-gs h the
duo, was originally produced for an
advanced film production cou:e m the
RTVMP Department.
It won the John Spoor. er Film Award,
which is sponsored by St. Ar.thonv Hall
fraternity and the RTVMP dept.
Family relations specialist Leo
Hawkins explores the question "Baby
Boom or Baby Bust"1" on WL'NC's weekly
television magazine "Now'," at :30 p.m.
Wednesday. Nov. 10. Features on snack
foods and planting shrubs will a No be
presented.
The question "Should Congress
establish a national no-fault insurance
plan?" will be discussed on "Ado.ate"
at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday night.
U.S. Army and Marine Corps officials
will discuss "The Future of the American
Military" on "Political Perspective"' on
Monday night at 10 p.m.
"North Carolina News Conference"
will host Jerry Paschal, superintendant
for Goldsboro schools and chairman of
the N.C. Association of I -"ducators
Political Action Committee, at 7:30 p.m.
Monday.
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