Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 8, 1976, edition 1 / Page 6
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
S Th3 D-Uy Tsr HstI Thursday, Jan. 8, 1S70, rove umema if 4 i u s s-v.'- . i i r c i 1 Q - UIIILL, lIULe D This is the schedule for the Alternative Cinema for spring semester. All films will be shown in Greenlaw Auditorium. Thriller Series Tuesdays at 7 and 9:30, $1.25. January 13: The 39 Steps 20: Another Thin Man 27: Double Indemnity February 3: Laura 10: Suspicion 17: Murder, My Sweet 24: Dunny Lake is Missing IRTHCHOIC.E Prolife Pregnancy Counseling 942-3030 From Durham WX3030 toll free Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. SHOP WITH DTH ADVERTISERS March 2: Klute 16: The Asphalt Jungle 23: To Catch a Thief 30: The Innocents , ' ? April 6: Mickey One 13: Bullitt "" " " 20: Spirits of the Dead V . ' Comedy Series Thursdays at 7 and 9 '30, $1.25. January 15: Duck Soup 22: I'm No Angel 29: The Gold Rush February 5: The Bank Dick ; 12: Horse Feathers " 19: The General 26: The Producers March 18: She Done Him Wrong 25: The Tramp, The Immigrant and The Vagabond April 1: The Cocoanuts 8: Steamboat Bill Jr. 15: My Little Chickadee 22: Born Yesterday Weekend Films Fridays at 7 and 9:30 and Saturdays at 2. 7 and 930. $1.50. Jan. 9-10: The Birthday Party 16-17: Black Thursday 23-24: Every Man for Himself and. God Against AH 30-31: Les Violons du Bal Feb. 6-7: Donkey Skin 13-14: The Invitation 20-21: Just Before Nightfall 27-28: Le Chat (The Cat) Ttie World's greatest resource lies virtually untapped! (you.) Psychologists estimate that we are using only 10-1 5 of our full potential to experience life. That means that 90 of our potential still lies untapped. Doesn't it make you wonder how much more fully life could be lived? Scientific research from Harvard Medical School. U.C.L.A., U.T.E.P. and others has shown that significant physiological and psychological changes occur during the Transcendental Meditation technique -a rest metabolically far deeper than sleep along with heightened alertness. The results verified in activity are increased awareness, energy and creative intelligence together with reduction of anxiety, tension and stress related diseases. Hear more about the TM program and what it can do for you. FREE INTRODUCTORY LECTURE YIHJE TRAS5SCE&1DE&STAL &V1EB IT ATI W A Student's International Meditation odetbi214 Hillsborough St.! 967-7633 The Chapel Hill Concert Series presents Eugene Fodor Violinist In Concert Sunday, January 18 8:00 p.m. Memorial Hall Tickets: $2 to UNC students only. 2 per I. D. Available at Union desk . A Carolina Union Presentation 4 (right) The Union's spring schedule features both new presentations, such as "Much Ado About Nothing," (left) and some familiar faces: guess what famous guitarist is coming back again? Spring brings Fodor, 'Much Ado About Nothing' y Spring semester '76 promises a host of diverse cultural presentations. Events announced by the Carolina Union Activity Board include plays by national touring companies, concerts in the Chapel Hill Concert Series, and speakers presented by the Carolina Forum. The Union presentations begin Jan. 13 with the Broadway musical 1776 at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Written by Peter Stone, 1776 won a Tony Award and the New York Drama Critic's Circle Award in 1971 as the best musical of the year. Starring in the touring production as John Adams is Don Perkins, who, like the character he portrays, comes from Boston. Sam Kresson, who plays Benjamin Franklin, has been Philadelphia's official greeter ever since he impersonated Franklin at his 250th birthday celebration there in 1956. Sunday, Jan. 18, Eugene Fodor, world-renowned violinist, will open the spring portion of the Chapel Hill Concert Series. The 25-year-old Colorado native is the first and only string player in the Western world to win the top award in the Tchaikovsky International. Fodor has been performing in public since childhood, studied at the Juilliard School and with Jascha Heifetz and completed his musical studies at Indiana University. Winner of the 1972 International Paganini Competition, Fodor's recital in . Chapel Hill will include works of Bach, Prokoyieff, Bloch, Paganini and Kreisler. Tickets for the 8. pin. Memorial Hall show are $2. A new approach to chamber music, The Governor's Consort, will be featured Sunday afternoon, Jan. 25 in Hill Hall. Organized in 1975, the Consort combines solo instruments to highlight traditional chamber music, creating a new twist to the more standard concert. Jazz-rock trumpeter Freddie Hubbard will bring his band to Memorial Hall at 8 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 29. Hubbard, long respected as one of the top artists in his field, is responsible, along with Billy Cobham, for a multitude of jam albums put out by CTI records. February's Union schedule is also full. Much Ado About Nothing, performed by the National Shakespeare Company, will be presented at 8 p!m. Feb. 2 in Memorial Hall. ' Chapel Hill Concert Series will present "The Intimate P.D.Q. Bach" as their second production of the season. Peter Schickele, featuring the Semi-Pro Antiqua, offers a program of music, words and slides guaranteed to keep its listeners in stitches. "The Intimate P.D.Q. Bach" will be performed at 8 p.m. Feb. 8 in Memorial, Hall. Tickets are $2. The extraordinarily talented Dave Brubeck and family return to Carolina on Feb. 18 for "The Silver Anniversary Concert of the Dave Brubeck Quartet." Brubeck will be appearing with Paul Desmond, Joe Morello, Eugene Wright and Two Generations of Brubeck his sons Darius, Chris and Dan. Long one of the most sought-after concert attractions in both the United States and around the world, Dave Brubeck, now with his sons, has succeeded in extending his own music into an exciting and contemporary idiom. This spring's effort with . Brubeck's old cronies and his sons should prove admirable and enjoyable. The Hartford Ballet, a chamber-sized ensemble of 16 dancers, will appear Feb. 20 in Memorial Hall and will feature Lisa Bradley, former prima ballerina of the New York City Center Joffrey Ballet. This program, which will honor the Bicentenniaf with "An American Portrait," is a balanced repertoire including classical and modern dance. The dancers perform to such diverse composers as Gianastera, Copland, Bach, Satie, Brahms, Tchaikovsky and others. The Carolina Forum Committee will present Truman Capote, well-known writer and author of In Cold Blood, at 8 p.m. Feb. 23 in Memorial Hall. A fascinating, controversial character, Capote is an entertaining and enlightening speaker and has recently published a new, widely-acclaimed novel. Leo Kottke, who fooled us all by not coming to Carolina for his fourth consecutive fall performance, has reappeared on the Union spring schedule for Feb. 28. Little needs to be said about Kottke's expertise he was stunning Chapel Hill audiences long before he gained national acclaim. If you've seen him before, you have another opportunity to enjoy him. If you haven't well, being a freshman is your only excuse. The remainder of the Union spring schedule centers on three events the Yale Russian Chorus, the New York Soloists and the Chuck Davis Dance Company. The Yale Russian Chorus, appearing at 8 p.m. March 17 in Hill Hall, has been acclaimed as a leading male a capella ensemble. Its repertoire includes Russian and Eastern European folk songs in addition to the complex music of the Russian Orthodox Church. Dedicated to musical excellence and worldwide communication, the Yale Russian Chorus has emerged as a renowned choral group and a forceful medium of cultural exchange:' : ! - . The Chuck Davis Dance Company will present a showcase of black heritage at 8 p.m. April 1 in Memorial Hall. The company, which combines modern and ethnic dance, seeks to portray the black experience from Africa to contemporary America. They have performed with such great dancers as Edward Villella. f. This Week in the Fetije Case Cheap Old Leather-Back Books Mostly law books, mostly beat-up and worn, but mostly cheap as dirt! While you're in the shop, pick up your free copy of the January OLD BOOK NEWS. The Old Book Corner 137 A East Rosemary Street Opposite CCNB Building Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514 1 ii i, , U , - HI if P iA e,' . .. . i f " f W 12 1 .1 it V Commitiry Fe i nine aval f M 3c3&fli 1"" ' ""J IMrTnfxffT Mall This month it's time to kick up your heels by enjoying all of the great sales going on at the various stores and these events coming up; FRIDAY, Jan. 9: Yellow Court from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. "The Country Boys" playing your favorite country music. SATURDAY, Jan. 17: Orange Court from 6:30 to 8:00 p.m. "The Apple Chill doggers and The Hard Time String Band." SATURDAY, Jan. 24: WEDNESDAY, Jan. 28: Yellow Court from 6:30-7:30. Damon Coe and the "Square Heels" will demonstrate Square Dancing and from 7:30 p.m.-8:30 p.m. you and your partner can join in. 'The Green Valley Ramblers" in Orange Court from 6:30-8:30 p.m. will play your favorite Blue Grass music. 3 ! I I U W Just a few steps to great sales and fun. : j jj J J I OMBWEKSDW "x LUU Lir' Liza jy . SS '-Open N--. y days 15-501 at . ,, , -,rrr- . evenings. Estes Drive . . . ' Some stores - open Sunday tool
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 8, 1976, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75