Thi Ds'.Jy Tcr Kttl On Ccrnpus Tho P!m Ctsch Story" Preston Sfcirjss wts Amtriea't greatest film satirist Hra, In Sturgts' btst and funniest film, Cliudette Chile debated Chile: The Struggle Goes On! is the focus of a symposium being held March 24th through March 27th on Duke and UNC campuses. It is being sponsored by Duke's New American Movement chapter. The symposium's highlight is a concert by Quilapayun, once Chile's most popular folk group, now exiled by order of the junta. They will play at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Baldwin ' Auditorium on Duke's East Campus. Admission is $1.50. . Also on Wednesday, at 3 p.m. there will be a panel discussion of Contemporary Problems in Chile in the UNC Student Union, rooms 213-215. A slide show at 7:30 p.m. today, a round table discussion at 3 p.m. Tuesday and a film on the life of the hero Victor Jara at 7 p.m. Thursday will also be held at Duke. ERICH Guitar - tho l ; 834-0524 i NO. m No. 4 -. VMHMIW wV NataP,lr jjf Hgg HIS VHV TaetttittawUey p Ribeye Steak jf Iff 6 oz. Chopped : Stoak Vi 8 Vi Vi n . U vi Vi Vi with Baked Potato and Texas Toast $.89 with coupon . complete with Baked Potato, Salad & Texas Toast Vi $1.59 v. vi jj with coupon , 55 f GOOD THRU MARCH g GOOD THRU n vt IHVION.-THURS. ONLY with coupon 8 Wl w i .ill ' SHOWS: l3579 What could I bebette tnan ine n rvox Three Musketeers? i IfsaU new! TECHNICOLOR 9 Iti PRINTS BY DE LUXE U g academy awards I CHIN! EIi?Ll3S,, ALBERT MEY JOHNGELGUO LAURENBACALL TOHLLER MN BALSAM ANTHONY PERKINS tmmsm mssmm JACQUELflBISSET - RACHEL ROBERTS JEANPrmCASSa RJCHARD W0.sARK SEANCOflRy MICHAEL YORK 2:10 4:30 6:50 9:101 1 1 irmif i tfntrfvvvviTTVi price I . of L ' Nominated fort rr-i FtANKUN STREfT f J 10 Kondxy, tZarth 24, 1975 Colbert plays a flighty wift who calls it quite' after flvs years of marrtess to penurious' nslntsr Jo f&eCrea and takes off for Florida. On tha luxury tralnvsht becomes ntanslsd with tho mad Us and Quail Club .and sccsntrlc mlHSonalrt Hackensacksr III (Rudy Yell). Th film ends like a four-ring circus. (Tuesday at 7 and 9:33 p-m., Greenlaw' Auditorium, $1.25, th Alternative Cinema). ; "Breathless" Jean-Paul GodarcTs first film. Jean-Paul Belmondo and young American actress Jean Seberg are the stars in this homegt to American gangster pictures. All about a con man who kills and steals for the fun of It In Paris, he disturbs the life of an American girl friend, Patricia, who eventually betrays him to the police. The beginning of the New Wave: 1859. (Wednesday at 8 p.m., Great Hall, Union free flick.) "Singln' In the Rain" The best screen musical ever made. Who's going to argue with such classic sequences as Gene Kelly's title song number on a soaking soundstage, Donald O'Connor's insane "Make 'Em Laugh" and twelve other numbers, all framing the classic spoof about Hollywood in the 1920's when movies found their voices and stars began to lose their Jobs. Jean Hagen, as a shrill siren, gives one of the greatest comic Vocal cover $100 III Restaurant & Entertainment Forum Cameron Village Subway Raleigh 12 Shrimp Platter!':! with Salad, Texas Toast and your choice of French Fries or Baked Potato $1.99 Si a a vi if a v, a a vt vt 8 W Vi V. Vt Vi vi a I 3 j with coupon MARCH GOOD THRU MARCH g ..w....... ........ j ANY Medium "Vi or Large size ' 3:05 5:05 7:05 9:05 I Nominated for 2 academy awards MEl BROOKS' COMIC MASTERPIECE." v; MREBSIEfe 2:45 4:55 7:05 9:15 Nominated for 3 academy awards ELLEN BURSTYN KRIS KRIS1DFFERS0N AUCE DOESNT UVE HB?E ANYMORE 2:50 5:00 7:10 9:20 Nominated for 6 academy awards it j' fgs4yalefie Perrine ) it' ty z I) ' 5 I ERBERT- fl PiZZA "5S3?7T?W' ptrformsncts In film history. (Triursdjy et 7 end 9:23 pjru, Grecnlxw AutodLBn, $13, Alttmxthrt Clncm.) ChspelHiil Th Four l.!atJct2r" Tfci Isng ew!ted second hslf of fUchcrd Lester's Dumas hit stars, naturally, tSi stmt people: It was conceived as one fJm end sHeed tet two" ' fust before The Three lusketeers" release. (Varsity, at 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 pm, $2 2S.) "Ilurder on the Orient Express" The film Is a shade too long, and the pace isnl crackling (like it could afford to be), but It's tremendously likeable. (Carolina, at 2:10, 4.-30, 6:50 and 9:10 pjn $225.) "Young Frankenstein" Uet Crooks la in control again. (Plaza 1, at 3:05, 5:05, 7:C5 and 9:C5 p.m., $25.) "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore" EBen Burstyn is nominated for an Oscar for tills film, Hie story of a woman and a second chance. Diane Ladd won a supporting actress nomination (Plaza 2, at 2:45, 4:55, 7.-05 and 9:15 p.m., $2.25.) "Lenny" (Plaza 3, at 2:50, 5, 7:10 and 20 p.m., $2.25.) The Lab Theatre presents Chekovs "A Wedding" at 4 and 8 p.m- Tuesday and Wednesday In 06 Graham Memorial. Free tickets are available in the Lab office in 115 Graham Memorial. - The Carolina Playmakers present "Henrik Ibsen's Peer Gynt Show" at 8 p.m. Thursday through Sunday in Graham Memorial Lounge, Tickets, $2.50, are on sale at 102 Graham Memorial and at Ledbetter-Plckard downtown. The Louis Falco Dance Company will i! nlfl The Louis Falco Dance Company 7will perform at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Memorial Hall. Tickets are available for $2 at the Union desk. The company will also present a lecture demonstration at 10 a.m. Wednesday in Memorial With his company, Falco has toured the U.S., Canada, Mexico and Europe and presented annual seasons in New York. . ; ' Dr. Albert R. Eldridge, Associate Professor of Political Science at Duke, will speak at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Sociology and Psychology Building on the Duke campus as part of the UNC-Duke Faculty Colloquium. His topic will be "The World of Henry Kissinger." , Herbie Hancock and his group will perform at 8 p.m. on April 8 in Memorial Hall. General admission tickets are on sale for $4 at the Union desk. Hancock has performed professionally for 14 years. His latest works include two albums, Sextant and Headhunters, and his single hit "Chameleon." ... Entries for all independent or student filmmakers in N.C. are being submitted for the N.C. Film Festival. For information write N.C. Film Festival, Box 903, Chapel Hill or call 9291353. . "r;Y...- : HELP! . . . is on the way! If you want to move need help meeting rent payments we'll help by giving you the first month's rent free!!! (on So if you aren't now living at FOXCROFT you should be. In addition to a spacious, beautiful apartment, you'll enjoy a clubhouse and lounge, large swimming pool, -sauna and exercise room, tennis and basketball courts. So, let us help? We're "where the good life begins.' 15-501 Highway, Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd. 1 1 r Zi APARTMENTS CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE STEREOS: As alwiyi, gtt greet sound at th right price from Ann Shachtman. Visit Stereo Sound, 175 E. Franklin St (Upstair above P J.'s) 942-S546. FORMAL WEAR SHOP DURHAM'S OLDEST PRICES 15- TO $25- 1825 CHAPEL HILL ROAD, DURHAM TELEPHONE 489-3975. For Sal: 1972 MQ MldgL Nw clutch. Only 18,500 mil! Excellent condition. $2,400. Call 933-0414. 1967 Fender Jaguar In perfect condition with deluxe hardshell case, $180. 933-7283. 'Name brand stereo components at 20 to 40 of! Nst AS ' guaranteed. I can suggest and help set up systems. Call Lenny at 987-2812 from 3 to 10 any day. Binocular microscope. Medical and dental approved. AH accessories Included. 929-1852. FOR RENT WANTED: clean apartment or nous for married couple tor summer and possibly for a year. Call Raleigh, 876-3185. Available Immediately, 2 & 3 bedroom ac mobile homes. $9540 to $12540. Also May rentals available. Tl.-929-2854 or Durham, collect, 489-4441. i j - r Flash! Liberal males need roommate for remainder of semester. Have your own room In fully furnished apartment for $55 and 13 Utilities, 987-7487. Roommate need Immediately. One bedroom available In a three bedroom house. Six miles from campus. $85.00month. Split utilities. Friendly atmosphere. Rent lee Includes maid. Call 042-8348 after 12 o'clock. HELP WANTED Needed desperately! Person qualified to teach WSI. I need W8I qualification before end of semester. Call 933-2748. Ask for Susan. perform at 8 pxi. Tusiiay In Utrsorfsl Hill Tickets, $2, are on til fit the Union dask-The Fclco Company r3 also perform at 8 pan. todsy bi Strsrsrt Thaatra cn the N.C Etsla cmnpva In Raleish. Ca3 737-3105 for Cckets ta Cit RsJs!;h psrfsnnsnct. n A Pianist Barbara Rowan w! perform at 8 pxu Tuesday In HZI HsX Admission Is free. The Duke University Wind Symphony will perform at 8:1 5 pun. Tutsday In Duka's Paga Auditorium. Admission Is free. Pianist Keta Ryan r!3 perform at 15 p.m. Friday in the East Duke Music Room on the Duke campus. Admission is free. The North Carolina Symphony win perform wJSi fte Duke University Chapel Choir at 7 pjn. Sunday In the Duke ChapeL Admission is free. Pianist Patty Good son wd perform at 8:15 p.m- Saturday In the East Duke Music Room on tha Duke University campus. Admission la free. Herbia Hancock will perform at 8 p-nv. Tuesday, April 8 in Memorial Hall. Tickets, $4, are on sale at the Union desk. Forum' Dr. Albert Eldridge, Associate Professor of Political Science at Duke University, will speak on The World of Henry Kissinger at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Sociology and Psychology Bldg. on the Duke campus. Admission is free. (31 e&y The Morehead Planetarium presents "Easter the Awakening" at 8 p.m. weekdays, at 11 a.m., 1, 3 and 8 p.m. Saturdays and at 2, 3, and 8 p.m. Sundays. Shows will be given at 3 and 8 p.m. Friday, March 28 and Monday, March 31. Falco troupe here Tuesday 2 - bedroom units only) TELEPHONE 929-0339 OVERSEAS JOBS Australia, Europe, 8. America, Africa. Students all professions and occupations $700 to $3000 monthly. Expenses paid, overtime, sightseeing. Free Information. TRANSWORLD RESEARCH CO. Dept C-3, P.O. Box 603, Corte Madera, CA 94925. NEED EXTRA MONEY? STUDENT SERVICES COMMISSION IS NOW INTERVIEWING. DORM RESIDENTS FOR STAFF POSITIONS NEXT YEAR. DROP BY SUITE C OF UNION FOR INTERVIEW OR CALL 933 3902 BETWEEN 2 AND S P.M. Now accepting applications for summer camp counselors at Plnewood for boys and girts m Hendersonvlile. N.C. Write P.O. Box 4585, Normandy Branch, Miami Beach, Fla. 33141 MISCELLANEOUS PRO-LIFE PREGNANCY COUNSELING: Call BIRTH CHOICE, 7 pjn.-10 pjru, Monday thru Friday. LOST: The key to Mad Dog's Heart She's a small female tabbytsh cat with whit pews, brown patch on (ace, whit flea collar. Call 942-4410. Reward. Taking th Medical College Admission Test? MCAT Review Course, Inc. In Durham can help prepare you for th competition. QualMd faculty teach seven 4-hour sessions, with thorough treatment of recurrent MCAT problem areas. Timed practice tests and relevant horn study material Included. Registration fee $130. A $20 deposit on books. Both paid at first session. CaB 393-4822 (Durham) for tntormattoii, or attend first meeting Sat, April S, 1-5 pm. Holiday Inn, Eaatgate. Chapel HUL FOUND: One pah- of ballet slippers size 15. Contact The Feed Beg downtown on the VtHag Green, where the stars dine out . Group experience for women undergomg role change wfll be offered Friday evening, Apr! 4 and Saturday, April 5. n interested, caR AJberta, 942-C784 or Martha, 987-7325 or 988 4286. FOUND: Men' goW-rlmmed glasses on Rosemary Street Can Donna Rich, 968-1411, xt 218. but I I Ai m r Wolfe (continued from paa 1) travels of day-glo cowboy and author Ken Kesey and his band of Merry Pranksters, entitled The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. Kesey recently organized "The Bend in the River Council," a grassroots type of miss mcd ia-influenced political strategem. "Kesey surprised me a great deal. He was always so apolitical, and he always seemed to look on political causes as rather trivial in,, the cosmic scheme. He really made fun of the antiwar movement, as much as anything else, as if to say, This isn't really the problem, the problem is inside, inside us all. Perhaps one influence was Kesey's association with the extraordinary figure of (political-minded) Paul Krassner they became rather close." Wolfe's New Journalism puts great emphasis on "getting inside the heads" of the people he writes about. His dedication to this goal is so strong that in order to better understand the world of Kesey and his fellow acid-droppers, Wolfe took the drug himself. WI did it because I was writing about people who were doing it. It was highly unpleasant to me. 1 had what I think was called a body trip, and I thought I was having a heart attack, only my heart was five feet in length... I had a feeling of trans substantiation, that is, myself entering other objects this feeling that 1 was entering this really horrible, green, acrylic wall-to-wall carpeting. "It was the afternoon and the sun was shining off the sheen on this carpet, and I felt 1 had become one with the carpet, part of the nubbly-twist that was very pleasant. 1 had a feeling that I had merged with the common people of America, a very snobbish idea, because they were not only symbolized, but part of that marvelous, green ' carpet. 1 thought 1 had almost solved the riddle of life in America." By adopting an almost chameleon-like posture, Wolfe almost loses himself totally in his role, and his work reflects this. As a result, his subject's attitudes are the only ones presented, and little is known about Tom Wolfe the person. "I've shied away from writing about myself. I really have been more intrigued with seeing if 1 could penetrate the lives of people who mystify me. I really, frankly, don't consider my own life that interesting." "Secretary of American Society" UI can understand what Balzac meant when he said he was "the Secretary of French Society" love that role. No serious American writer would ever want to be "Secretary of American Society," except myself. Usually that would be considered a demeaning role, but to me it's interesting, because 1 think the life of this society has barely been explored in a literary sense. Dance & Party to the March 23 - 27 SPECTRUM April 3 -5' i j n n S3,- ss' ARMGEDDEON I as 2 April 10 - RAZ MA 1861 w Morgan jvureggg 13.6. Crossword Puzzler ACROSS 69 Turkish stan 1 Part of skeleton 5 Sums up . 9 Rodent 12 Black 13 Walk unsteadily 14 Man's nickname 15 Spanish arti cle 16 Transaction 18 Still 20 Pronoun 22 Son of Adam 24 Spreads for drying 27 Exchange premium 29 Cease 31 Confederate general 32 Spheroids 34 Greenland settlement 36 Liquid measure (abbr.) 37 Be present 39 Kind of piano 41 Note of scale 42 Paddles 44 By oneself 45 Vast age 47 Weapons 49 Mine vein 50 Break sud denly 52 Repast 54 Compass point 55 Expire 57 Word of sor row 59 Symbol for nickel 61 Japanese sash 63 Identical with 65 Moccasins 67 Pronoun 63 Defeat dard DOWN 1 Insect 2 Duty 3 Negative 4 Goal 5 Desert dwellers 6 Strikeout 7 Prefix: down 8 Crafty 9 Badgerlike mammal 10 Hebrew month 11 Symbol for tellurium 17 Babylonian deity 19 Latin con junction 21 Joust 23 Portions of land 25 Reliance 26 Sofa 27 Lessens r Pttoto by lUrt I Tom Wolfe Novelists have abandoned the attempt." Tom Wolfe is now finishing work on his long-awaited fifth novel, a book about America's astronauts and space program, to be titled. The Right Stuff. "The book goes back to before we really had astronauts, back when rocket airplanes were being tested. It takes them right up through the space program and into the present and traces the careers of those who left the program. It's an attempt to show the whole process from inside the command module, instead of just watching the fireworks from outside." ' Wide-open questions Although he has published four best selling novels, and is a frequent contributor to magazines, Wolfe shuns the aloofness or isolation that many of his contemporaries prefer. What motivates a man to become a frequent figure on the college lecture circuit, besides the obvious monetary reasons? One reason, he said, was that young people are much more brave about asking wide-open questions. "One time, I'll never forget it, 1 had given a talk and suddenly a hand went up and a student said, 'Why do you writeT That was a question 1 had never asked myself and I answered by free association, because 1 didn't have much time. I suddenly thought of the Presbyterian catechism, which I hadn't repeated since 1 was seven years old. "I thought of the second question in the catechism. The first question asks, 'Who created heaven and earth?' and the answer is 'God.' The second question is, 'Why did he do itT and there's a remarkable answer. The answer is, 'For his own glory.' And suddenly this thing popped into my head when somebody asked why I write. Things like that make me start thinking a little..." music of 12 TAZ 832-7021 Answer to Saturday s Puzzle gjOfTi StMjimgj SiPIAl I IPIA1 jTgNpN pMnI substitute (coiloq.) 30 Parent (coi loq.) 33 Stump of a branch 35 Mound 33 Musical in strument 40 Midday 43 Moves about furtively 48 Transactions 51 Greek letter 53 Note of scale 56 Cloth measure 58 Resort 60 Doctrine 61 Exclamation 62 Exist 64 Maiden loved by Zeus 66 Man s 1 I2 I3 I4 t&35 I I7 I3 K&Si H i' n ?i3 Ph-- 15 ?16 17 Z&TtTfF 77? 7? 27 2T!yV 29 30 Kg JT 3T " 33 353 li 33 3T "J? tP "it "?sr 67 &63 Sfe 21 Diatf. by United Feature Syndicate. Inc.-"