Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 30, 1978, edition 1 / Page 4
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
r 4 The Daily Tar Heel Monday, January 30, 1978 Albee, Donbn featured in American theatre workshop cinema A Hard Day'a Night The first offering in the Union's Beatles Festival, this film has something to do with TV, policemen, Her Majesty's Government and songs. At 7 and 9:30 p.m. Tuesday in Carroll Hall auditorium. Free with student l.D. "" ' Help! The second Beatles film, this one revolves around a sacrificial ring, the Alps, the Bahamas and songs. At 7 and 9:30 p.m. Wednesday, in Carroll Hall. Free with student l.D. Let It Be This is the third Beatles movie. It concerns hair, policemen, Yoko Ono, the '60s and an audition. It also features songs. At 7 and 9:30 Thursday night in Carroll. Free with l.D. television Monday Hostage! This ABC News Closeup reviews four major incidents in the '70s in which a major goal was the capture not only of people but also of the world press. At 10 p.m. on Channels 5 and 8. women Continued from page 1. argument against women in higher education was that their brains couldn't take it," Scott said. In fact, she said, one medical doctor wrote his thesis on how women's reproductive systems would be destroyed if they were academically oriented. Another problem with studying Southern women is they often have been ignored in the study of history, Scott said. She said it was really only within the last 20 years that the field of social history developed, resulting in an interest in "social structures, in families, in communities, associations and organizations." This new historical field, Scott said, "changes your entire cast of characters. You find out, after all, that there are two sexes." Though the study of women's history has advanced with the evolution of social history, there are still many fields needing study, the speakers said. "The title of this panel is a bit premature, I believe," Janiewski said. "It is hard to talk about perspectives when you have, yet to make most of the women even visible." There are many kinds of women needing research done about them in history, Fredrickson said, from working women to plantation mistresses. Tuesday Liv From Lincoln Center The New York City Ballet performs Coppelia, with music by , Delibcs and choreography by George Balanchine and Alexandra Danilova. AtBp.m.onChannel 4. College Basketball - The Clemson T igers face the N.C. State Wolfpack in an ACC game at Raleigh; At 9 p.m. on Channels 2 and 5. NBC: The First 50 Years ... A Closer Look Orson Welles, Peter Falk, James Stewart and Alfred Hitchcock host this second sequel to N BC's 1976 golden anniversary celebration. At 9 p.m. on Channel 28. Chinatown A rerun of the intricately plotted crime drama set in the I930's. With Faye Dunaway and Jack Nicholson. At 9 p.m. on Channel II. Wednesday Llberace In Las Vegas, Liberace welcomes Debbie Reynolds, puppeteer Barclay Shaw and even Phyllis Diller in a cameo. At 8 p.m. on Channels 2 and II. Se How She Runs Joanne Woodward portrays a 40-year-old faced with middle-age blues. Gradually increasing her daily jogging routine, she builds up enough endurance for the Boston Marathon. At 9 p.m. on Channels 2 and II. Great Performances Eugene Ormandy leads the Philadelphia Orchestra inGustav Hoist's The Planets, with the Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia performing the choral segments. At 9 p.m. on Channel 4. Thursday College Basketball - The Duke Blue Devils play the Wake Forest Demon Deacons at Winston-Salem. At 8 p.m. on Channels 2 and 5. Will Rogers' U.S.A. James Whitmore portrays the American humorist in this performance taped at Ford's Theatre. At 9 p.m. on Channel 28. HaH of Fame Taxi! by Lanford Wilson, concerns a garrulous New York cabbie and a middle-aged jet setter he is driving to Kennedy Airport. With Martin Sheen and Eva-Marie Saint. At 10 p.m. on Channel 28. music North Carolina Symphony The ensemble performs works by Schumann, Dello Joio and others at 8 p.m. Wednesday at Hillsborough's Orange High School. UNC students admitted free. Daniel Blumethal, pianist, will be the guest soloist. Call 967-925 1, ext. 339 for directions to the school or for additional information. Aspects of the American Theatre the resolution of its commercial and technical nature with the creative response to human expression is the subject of a February workshop which brings two internationally recognized artists to the Carolina campus. On Friday and Saturday nights, Feb. 3 and 4, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Edward Albee and mime James Donlon will present, in public address and performance, the artist and his medium. Their appearances will highlight the Carolina Union Theatre Workshop, February 3 through 5. The workshop, holding approximately twenty professional and amateur theatre sessions and coordinated by Lili Shiffman (formerly of Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well,..), marks an innovative programming experiment for devotees of our most expressive art form. Albee, considered to be America's foremost living dramatist, will open the workshop with his Friday evening lecture, "The Playwright vs. the Theatre." Albee is a leading advocate of contemporary popular theatre, believing performances should be made available to a more representative portion of the public. It is college and regional theater that he sees as being our most vigorous, most productive and most capable of significant development. The writer himself is best known for his plays which deal with the intricacies and cruelties of the relationships between people, the "barbed talk and polished inter-action, the prime disease of our time and our society, which is neither violence nor materialism nor alienation, but quite simply emptiness." These words described "A Delicate Balance," Albee's first Pulitzer Prize Winner, and were given by leading drama critic Max Lerner. Albee followed this success with still another, "Seascape" (another Pulitzer recipient), which was characterized by Brendan Gill in The New Yorker as "the most exquisitely written of all rus plavs.' Albee began his professional career when he was 30 when he produced The Zoo Story, followed by The Sandbox and The American Dream. In 1962, one of the most frequently performed plays of contemporary theatre and perhaps Albee's best known work, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolj? was produced. Virginia Woolf brought Albee almost instant international acclaim as Richard Watts called it "the most shattering drama since. . .Eugene O'Neill's Long Journey into Night. Albee will be involved throughout the workshop with two sessions, a Creative Writing segment and an Acting and Directing segment in which he will direct students from UNC in scenes from his plays. Additional information on the workshop and speech may be found in Theatre Workshop brochures available in the U nion. James Donlon, internationally recognized mime master and "find" of impressario Teatro Dimitri, likens his medium to "painting, sculpture and poetry. Painting for the understanding of line and color the performer must have to draw an image on stage; sculpture, because the mime sculpts space for the audience, takes an abstract idea and puts it into concrete, visual terms; and poetry, for the expression of essences of the basic human emotions and needs." Formerly a teacher of the clowns with Ringling Bros., Barnum and Bailey Circus, Donlon has been a guest lecturer and instructor at more than 100 universities and colleges nationwide. He was also the founder and director of a professional mime school in San Francisco for two years. James Donlon, a master of imitating and expanding life, will be featured in performance Saturday night, Feb. 4, in Memorial Hall. Additional information on his mime workshop, open to students, is available from the Union desk. V 9 "m,, V r Edward Albee, one of America's foremost living dramatists, will open the Carolina Union's workshop on "Aspects of the American Theatre" when he speaks Friday night. Albee's lecture is entitled "The Playwright vs. the Theatre." 7:00 t 9:00 v 1 : a Runaway RIoH f U 5.15 I Iniinnirifi I arc : fAYjfOtflM N I I iiPi 3:45 . mJk 6.-30. ' --y-lZ 9-.15 .pp. t-"4ilt PASSES. I h " ripe cXt: . i 1 ..-7 Boom Boom (A, 111) SlTnlZJ Room V;T$ SHOwsTT; T ijjp I y.ll lorrrrrirr 1 if jar cd i H i i 1 m n'n . .,ar.L i i , i ' - - 1 -I PEACE CORPS It offers professional development and challenge. Requirements: must be a U.S. citizen although the minimum age is 18 years, very few applicants under 20 have the skills and experience necessary to qualify. must meet medical and legal criteria Training: lasts from 4 to 14 weeks, usually in the host country emphasizes language and cultural studies Compensation: monthly allowance for food, lodging, incidentals medical care readjustment allowance of $125 per month, set aside in the U.S., usually payable at completion of service optional life insurance at minimum rate personal satisfaction and overseas career development NEEDED: People with experience or degrees in: Agriculturefarming Business Education, especially mathscience special education, industrial arts Engineering, especially Civil Engineering Nutrition, Home Ec (Degree required) Health Professions Skilled Trades AutoDiesel Maintenance INTERVIEWS: Placement Office February 7 and 8 1978 PERSONAL AND REAL PROPERTY TAX LISTING January is the month in North Carolina in which all personal and real property is to be listed for county property tax. All motor vehicles, household items, etc., as well as real estate owned is to be listed in the county in which it is situated as of 1178, according to NC Statutes 105 301 and 105-304. The Orange County personal and real property tax forms will be mailed to all residents who made a tax listing in 1977 as a convenience for listing by mail. New residents and those who wish to list in person can go to their individual township list-taker whose schedule is posted below, or to the Orange County Courthouse in Hillsborough. All listings must be completed by January 31, 1978. To avoid long lines, list by mail on forms from our office. They may be obtained by calling the Tax Supervisor's Office in Hillsborough at 732 8181 or 967-9251. The homestead exemption law has been changed for 1 978 to give up to $7500 in real and household personal property value off of the total value if the income of the owner of this property did-not exceed $900Q.for:1977. To qualify for this exemption the owner must complete thesedfoifdn the back of the tax listing form which applies to this, and be 65 years of age or permanently and totally disabled to work. W. T. Laws Orange County Tax Supervisor CHAPEL HILL TOWNSHIP L. R. CHEEK, LISTER The listing will take place at the Carrboro Town Hall each Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturdays, 9 a.m. until 12 Noon, beginning January 3, 1978 and continuing throughout the month of January. , Held Over 2nd Big Week SHOWS 2:45 5:00 7:15 9:30 NICHI FEVEU JOHN TRAVOLTA A PARAMOUNT PICTURE h ' inairr'TTTr 'in 'i"fnft i Held Over , 6th Big Week SHOWSOK 5:2lfecn2bYC kichaki) imuss MARSHA MAif In the Boom Boom Room a drama by David Rabe 8:00 p.m. Feb. 16-19 Great Hall Tirkpts on safe now at the Union Desk Tickets now on sale for: appearing in Memorial Hall at 8:00 p.m. on Feb. 6 AND appearing Feb. 14, same time, same place. Uideotcipe Loggins and Messina Jan. 30 - Feb. 5 free 2 p.m. in the Music Gallery Orpheus Chamber Orchestra Feb,,5 8 p.m. Memorial Hall V- Tickets $2.00 on sale now at the Union desk to UNC Students and Faculty Staff privileged hard holders. DEEP Jonah N.C. Society for Original Graphics Display in the Union's South Gallery Jan. 14-Feb. 18 ' Rod Abernethy Thurs. Feb. 2nd 9:00 p.m. iree v BYO Beer and WfnerS -- iTT 1 1 Ml ;il . t Hi- it 1 1 I! HELD OVER f 2nd BIG WEEK I cHOWS ANNE 5:10 7:20 9:30 SHIRLEY f.iacLALNE IT, id A (HI! (Vt James Donlon Feb. 3 Mime at its Best in conjunction with the Union's Theatre Workshop 8 p.m. Memorial Hall $2.00 Applications are now available for the UNION PRESIDENCY. They may be picked up at the Union desk between Jan. 16 and 30. KARL HESS anarchist Wednesday, Feb. 1 8 p.m.. Memorial Hall Free February calendars available Monday, Jan. 30 at the Union, Y-Court, Pine Room, Chase Cafeteria, and Residence areas main desks. ran Edward Albee The Playwright vs. The Theatre in conjunction with the Union's Theatre Workshop Sat. Feb. 4 $1.00 8 p.m. Memorial Hall Bill Evans Dance Co. Tuesday, Feb. 21 8:00 p.m. Memorial Hall Tickets on sale now at the Union Desk. Students: $3.00 Gen. Public: $4.00 Sex and Communication AND The Sensual Art of Massage films and discussion Tuesday, Feb. 7 106 Carroll Hall 8 p.m. free Dr. John Reckless speakino nn "Sexual Dysfunction" I 1 1 I I f I i Thursday, Feb. 9 106 Carroll Hall sorry No 8 p.m. Pa- f I i
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 30, 1978, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75