Tuday, April 22, 1975 'Cellar Door' has matured Hear FIVJ in your car. New9 Spartao ffoirmalt stresses woe The Daily Tar Heel Vickers has it! The Audiovox FM-1 and Econo-vert FR1 receivers. And Audiovox and Econo-vert attach to your AM radio in a matter of minutes! Audiovox FM-1 $32.75 Econo-vert $24.95 v n n 1 1 1 1 1 1 426 E. Main. Carrboro V 929-4554 by Alan Murrey Features Editor "Cellar Doer.' UNC Msifle Board. SO r . & o- - m m m - r v' e I V X S -V. V tV . V 1 Xf - . . ... 1 v y v a - Bearing little resemblance in format or content to last fall's issue, the spring issue of Cellar Door is now on sale. Apparently struggling with identity problems, the magazine has changed radically from the elaborately illustrated, football program-style of the fall to a spartan 6" by 8" Carolina Quarterly format. The' photography and graphics that dominated the last issue are gone. Two illustrations, a photograph at the front and a cartoon at the back, sandwich 78 pages of bare copy, emphasizing that the Cellar Door is a literary magazine, and that its quality depends entirely on the value of its words. Fortunately, the writing in this issue supports this weighty responsibility better than last semester's contributions. Jim Carnes story, "Last Minute Caller Irom Cincinnati" is the one piece that transcends all the limitations implied in an undergraduate literary magazine. Carnes, winner of the Irene Leache Award, creates a character who has freed himself from all binds with the past and lives each moment creating his own past, becoming different people at whim. The character. Will Garrett, revels in this freedom and attempts to convey it to others. He is a delivery man who delivers all people from all things, trying to create a world where every moment is a new tapestry of relations with no connections to preceding or following moments. It is a tender story, and leaves the reader with a profound empathy for Garrett and his perception of the world. In the opening story, "Sweet Things," Roy Pattishall demonstrates an excellent ear for language and creates a fascinating and tangible character, Mickey Babcock. The story is intriguing, up until the last two pages when Sweet Thing, a nebulous character who is virtually unknown to the reader, appears and slashes Mickey's throat, thus ruining a story that showed real promise. The last two stories in the magazine are both domestic pieces. Steve Shores' "Things Fall Apart" is an account of a very average, middle class, middle-age man leaving his wife. James Grimsley's "Every Ocean Counts Time" is the story of a typical old couple planning a move from North Carolina to a mobile home park in Florida. Grimsley's attempt to portray an aging, couple facing the emptiness of old age is ambitious, and in many ways he succeeds. There are moments of beauty in the wife's perception of her husband, of the trailer park and of herself in relation to them. Occasionally this power is lost, and the writer's manipulation becomes evident, but the story is a praiseworthy effort. Steve Shores' story is a less ambitious study of the breakup of a family. It is a; surprisingly powerless story, void of any real emotion but this may be intentional. Perhaps what Shores is saying is that in the homogenized, perfunctory existence of the average American middle class family, the breakup of a marriage is no more traumatic than running out of peanut butter. The poetry, which is diverse and at times revealing, provides interludes for these four stories. The poems range from Tom Daley's sensitive reflection on a poster seen in the window of Courts Drugs, to David Massingiirs amusing lament of the fate of a Douche manufacturer's grandson. Many of the poems exhibit the pretension one expects to find in an undergraduate anthology, but as a whole the poems are more mature than those of last fall. This issue of Cellar Door shows real progress, and suggests that the magazine has entered its adolescence. It is unfortunate that such a publication of substance has to come at the end of the semester, when most people have neither the money to buy nor the time to read it. .w.w. i Fox's bar Thursday hot spot by Susan Oatz Stall Writer It looked like a far cry from Julia Childs' work space. Half-gallons of Gibey's Gin and Bacardi Rum, Kirsch, Triple Sec, and Pernod were lined up neatly on one table. Pitchers of orange juice, lime juice, Angostura-bitters, and bottles of Grenadine and club soda edged another. There was even a pint of the infamous Bacardi 151. This scene was neither an alcoholic's mirage or a fraternity party, but the final session in a most unique, and potent, bartending course. Unfortunately, the course is not offered in the Fall schedule. Instead, it was taught for' seven weeks this semester by Carl Fox, an RA in Morrison Dorm and a senior speech major from Mt. Olive. The course, says Carl, "teaches how to go from bartending to A.A. in one easy semester." Taught in the Morrison Social Lounge, the class prepared some twenty-two concoctions ranging from Tom Collins to Hot Toddies. For their final session, Carl was instructing the class on the fine art of making Singapore Slings and Zombies. Cox hummed as he prepared Singapore Slings. "Even my mother would love this...and she doesn't even drink!" It1 D3 (fS materials books parts complete Emory Glider 407 S. DAWSON ST. RALEIGH, N. C. 919-834-9538 i i i u Lru n7P-nrarn vn n UULjULUVJ UJJd wLrLrQ w UZAalaI Lin Free checks, free checking service, a preferred rate PayAnyDay auto loan, a Master Charge credit card, Checkline Reserve'" automatic loanchecking, and more are all included in this unique banking service. We call St $uper $tart. and it's for graduates of four years of college, or of professional or graduate school, who will live and work in North Carolina and who otherwise qualify. Get full details at any of our offices. We created $uper $tart to help graduates with a "super start" on the way to their careers after college. You will find $uper $tart or a plan like it only at First-Citizens. It's our way of getting you started with the bank you can stay with for your entire career. For we are a major statewide bank with full service banking plus our Can Do way of doing . things. That means putting you the customer first. And it means offering you today and tomorrow a full range 1 of banking services tailored to meet your needs. $uper $tart is but one example of the pioneering in contemporary banking which is summed up in the phrase, "Can Do!' Get full details at any of our offices. There are 221 of them from the mountains to the coast of North Carolina. You may qualify for$uper 5 $tart up to six months after you graduate. MEMBER F D.I.C. O 1 7 FIRST-CITIZENS BANK TRUST COMPANY 173S-S0 Carl, known around Morrison Dorm as the absolute authority on any kind of mixed drink, quality of liquor or recipe, started collecting his personal bar about a year and a hall ago, and has just recently completed it. Illustrating his well-known reputation for being meticulous, Carl passed around a bottle of his Mr. & Mrs. Ts Grenadine to show its "inferior quality" to Holland House. He would rather use fresh fruit than bottled or canned juices, and can quote seasons and prices for most. ingredients that go into his drinks. But the coup de grace was Carl's Zombie. His recipe calls for over 5 ounces of liquor, and each Zombie costs about two dollars to make. Carl smiled from the first drop that hit the glass to the last one that left it. "This is the only drink I know that you can mix in three different proportions and knock everyone on his ass." Carl's class is complete down to the final exam. He set out five of the six glasses which were used in preparing drinks and had his students identify which drinks went in certain glasses. James Peace, a student in the class, said, "This is the best class I've ever had. You have labs and you really learn something". p.W)WljM,WIIM WHHWIimKWH'IIHWW " i;!'Af 1 4 W1 Staff photo by Chattes I Teaching Tom Cotlins Glenda Cooper expressed genuine sorrow that the class was ending. "It's given real meaning to Thursday nights, and real pain to Friday mornings". r The price of Jeans is going. Lees $9.74 Seafarers $.8.21 Navy s $7.46 White Navy Cuffs 7.46 Wrangler summer weight 5t) $5.63 Wrangler Cuffs &eo $6.00 UFO Jeans whites 12.98 $9.74 blues 73.98 $70.4 9 Our sale continues! Down at r . i I... I w w m a ICERBB j SALE HOURS rp I IU'9 iviui l.-Odl. 'Closed Sunday' ; 1 215 S. Elliot Rd. Next to Plaza Theaters Classifieds FOR SALE Two 23" Florelll bikes $125 ach. SCM Coronet electric typewriter $110. 22 cat. pump $80. 19 Ampex tapes (factory packaging) $65. Call 929-8765 or 942-2104. 1974 Yamaha 650. 3,500 miles. New condition. $1400 or best offer. 933-2416. Fine two bedroom AC mobile home. 1 2' wide. Excellent park management Swimming pool. Four miles from campus. Must sell before June. $2,500. Call 933-0047. Sale: Twelve cubic foot refrigerator. 1970 model GE Big freezer - $100 or best offer. Call 933-2858 or come by 204 Avery ask for Macon. Refrigerator Just right for dorm room. Westinghouse. Approx. 6 cu. ft- Has large freezer compartment, vegetable drawers. Good condition. For details, call Becky, 933-3509. Stereo Components Name brands at lowest prices from factory distributor. I can suggest and help set up systems. . Full warranties. Ffve day delivery. Call Lenny at 967-2612 from 3 to 10 p.m. any day. Canoes new A used. ABS, white and flat water. Goodlife Enterprises. 782-2268. Advent 201 Cassette player-recorder, chromium switch, - Dolby, one year old, perfect condition, $330 new. Want $200, call PHARR 988-9026. Gibson EB-0 electric bass for sale. Excellent condition. Humbucking pick-up, case, extra strings! $150 (originally $320). CaH Dirk Bittinger at 929-4629 or 933-1067. Must sell! Antique double bed for sale. New side rails. Slats included. Call Pat 942-2128 after 5:00 p.m. FORMAL WEAR SHOP DURHAM'S OLDEST PRICES $15.00 to $25.00 1825 CHAPEL HILL ROAD, DURHAM. TELEPHONE 489-3975. FOR RENT Graduate student seeks roommate to share two bedroom apartment in Kingswood beginning this summer. $80month, AC, pool, quiet CaH Dennis, days 933-7532, nights 942 8824. Cheap one bedroom in townhouse m Carrboro for summer. $46.50mo. plus utilities. Guaranteed less than $65mo. total. Avail. May 15. CaH Joe. Robert 929-2613. Rooms for summer $1 2 per week or $60 per session. Delta Tau Delta 968-9063. Rooms for Summer. $16 per week or $60 per session. Delta Tau Delta. 968-9063. Two bedroom furnished apartment to sublet for first session summer school. Air-conditioned, pool, bus. Kingswood $160 per month. Call Steve 967-6041. Summer sublet May-August, option to renew lease in Fall. One block from campus on Rosemary. One bedroom, large kitchen. Call Doug 942-7542. FOR SUBLEASE: C-1 Kingswood: 2 bedroom, unfurnished, with air, carpet, pool. $160 monthly: includes H20. Within minutes of campus. Bus every 20 minutes. Call 929-4764. Apartment to SUBLET. 2 bedrooms. 2 baths. Air cond. Pool. After finals until August registration. Colony Apts. $190 month. Call 942-4647 after 5 p.m. HELP WANTED OVERSEAS JOBS-Australia, Europe, S. America, Africa. Students all professions and occupations. $700 to $3000 monthly. Expenses paid, overtime, sightseeing. Free information. TRANSWORLD RESEARCH Dept C 3. Box 603, Corte Madera, Calif. 94925. . If you have a weight problem, the Psychology Dept at UNC needs your participation for two hours. We are investigating preferences for weight loss treatment a pilot project for developing a new treatment program. We cannot offer pay Cor your participation but can offer information on new approaches to weight loss. Call days 933-5082. WANTED Hungry students to take advantage of 8 ox. Chopped Sirloin dinner, served with hash browns, toeeed salad A French bread $1.49 Between 3 p jn.-1 1 p.m. only with this ad. THE WAFFLE SHOPPE. 203 E. Franklin Street NEEDED for Fall 75. Teachers tor Beth El Synagogue Religious School Grades 2-10. Sunday morning 10:00 a.m. 12:00 noon. Knowledge of Hebrew not required. Contact Dr. Joel Schwartz after 6:00 p.m. 942-2897. .Need a room for the summer? Cost below dorm rent For mora info call Lambda Chi Alpha at 968-9094 or 968-9182. Ask for Pollock or Workman. Available immediately, two and three bedroom ac mobile homes. $95410 to $125.00. Also. May Rentals available. Tel 929-2854 or 929-9668; or Durham, collect 489-4441. Phi Delta CM la renting for summer Ks third floor to women for $85 per space per session. Includes central air, carpeted rooms. A few second floor spaces available to men. Can 968-9116. Tennis instructor applicants need good background in playing and teaching. Salary averaging $150-$2O0 per week. Call 703538-2064. MISCELLANEOUS Twenty dollar reward for tan Carolina notebook lost in downstairs undergrad. library. It is extremely valuable to me. Please call 933-4804 with any Into. Wan Wah pedal wanted, preferably in good cond. Also need cheap used refrig., full or half size. And GM 3 or 4 speed manual trans. 967-5617 after 5 JO. FoosbaU tournament at 9.30 p.m. Town Halt $204)0 first prize. No entry fee. Excellent competition from an over the state. If you are hot. be there! Make prints from your slides. It's cheap and fun. Free class with knowledgable instructors. Come by and see PHOTOCRAFT In the Village Plaza Shopping Center. 967- 81 S3 Jazzl If you dig Jazz, come see Electromagnets from Austin, Texas. Personal endorsements by Heartwood, Zappa, Stanley Clarke. Workshoppe Is Jealous! Tonight at Town Halt

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