4 The Daily Tar Heei Wednesday, January 30, 1930 Student musical revue in Great ' Mull this weekend By LAURA ELLIOTT Arts Editor McRae Hardy, director of the Carolina Union production of Starting Here, Starting Now, thumps across a stage rattling with loose nails to correct a singer's hand movement. He drills him on pronunciation before letting him restart. Again Hardy interrupts, corrects; encourages. He sings it himself, grimaces and tells the singer, Tony Pulgram, to imitate him. The process is repeated over and over. Preparing, perfecting, sweating for opening night. Starting Here, Starting Now, a musical revue written by Richard Maltby, Jr. and David Shire, will be presented by a student cast Friday and Saturday nights in the Great Hall. "The most crucial part of a cabaret is the director," Nick Manos, chairman of the CU performing arts committee said, "Anyone can sing, but to perform it is totally different. He (the director) teaches them the way to perform the .show." Speaking of Hardy, Manos said, "He's also ideal because he's a perfectionist and has a lot of experience." Sitting quietly at the piano during an interview Monday night despite the feverish preparations whirling around him Hardy said, "We started two weeks ago tonight." He smiled and concluded, "It's in pretty good shape." Hardy, a 26-year old UNC graduate, has been music director of many cabarets and musicals in the Chapel Hill area. He recently finished directing and orchestrating the music for Flight Brothers, a UNC-TV production. He plays a little music to illustrate a point "This music is real fun to play." He nods assent to a cast member's question and continues "This show is a series of 23 songs, some dating from the 60s when they (Maltby and Shire) started working together." Most of the songs are very sophisticated lyrically. "The whole show is about feelings. There is only introductory dialogue because the plot is subliminal; the songs are connected by the emotions they're expressing " he said. "The first act is about love, falling in love, being frustrated; the second is about coming to grips with your own life. Each song is a mini drama which is what good theater music should be, " said Hardy, who hopes someday to compose for Broadway himself. "Originally, they (the Union) wanted to produce some of my own things." Starting Here, Starting Now. "however, was chosen because of the shortness of preparation, time and the difficulties involved in producing a new work. The show premiered off Broadway in 1977. ' The title song was chosen by Barbra Streisand for the finale of her Emmy-award-winning TV special Color Me Barbra. Maltby, the lyricist, directed the musical Ain't Misbehavin'. Shire! the composer, has also written the score for the films The Conversation and All The President's Men. Starting Here. Starting. Now is the first student cast cabaret to be performed on campus in four years, accordingto Manos. "We felt it was something needed both for performers and the crowd. Students shouldn't have to go to places like Chez Condoret to see cabaret performances," Manos said. For the four performances. Great Hall will be set in nightclub style. The audience can bring its own beer or wine. Billed as extremely diverse by Manos, the cast includes sophomores Brenda Braye, Beth Cloninger, and Anthony Pulgram; freshman Sharon Helton; and seniors Steve Watkins and Linda Jacobs. "I have six excellent voices," Hardy said "Those without experience have grown a lot in the show " Excusing himself. Hardy w'isks away to correct a faulty note he heard a singer slip on. Changing, correcting, perfecting. Friday night the lights lying on the floor will turn their searing glare on Hardy's final creation. t 3 McRae Hardy DTrVScott Sharp CaEnpnQS Caoeimdlair Public service announcements must be turned in at the box outside the DTH offices inthe Carolina Union by 1 p.m. if they are to run the next day. Each item will be run at least twice. ACTIVITIES TODAY AA Wooki'i accting at 8 p.m. at the Community Church. The Aaociatioa of International Students is sponsoring an ice skating trip to Daniel Boone Rink. All interested persons should meet at 6:15 p.m. at the International Center. AA meeting at 8 p.m. at the Newman Center. The Concert Alviaory Coco mi Km will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Frank Porter Graham Lounge. French Table at 5.30 p.m. in the Rathskeller. The Holes and Judiciary Coauaitte of the CGC will meet at 3 p.m. in Suite C of the Carolina Union. The Unked Ckrbtiaa Fellowship will have bible study at 7 pjn. in Upendo. The UNC Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the South Gallery Room. Bring dues. A forum on the proposed STOW Residence College will be held at 7:30 p.m. in Mclver parlor. There will be a Fkeet meeting at 7 p.m. in the Campus Y Building. AltXEC is sponsoring a slidelecture by Larry Kessler entitled "China: A New Direction" at 7:30 p.m. in 202 of the Carolina Union. Mystery of Morasoniam Unveiled. The Church of Jesus Cfcrkt of Latter Day Saints Student Association invites you to attend a film introduction to Mormon history and way of life followed by a question session at 7:30 p.m. in 207 of the Carolina Union. The Industrial Relations Association will meet at 7 p.m. in 215 of the Carolina Union. Daniel H. PoUitt from UNCs law school will speak. The SCAU Consumer Rights Researchers will meet at 3 pjn. in the South Gallery Room. Carolina Photographers Club meeting at 5:30 p.m. in 206 of - the Carolina Union. AXE Brothers and Sisters will meet at 7:30 p.m. in H-6 Carolina Apts. The UNC Bridge Club will hold Us annual membership game rt 1:30 p.m. in the U instead Recreation Center. The CoBoquiusa on Aging and the Aged will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Newman Center. The Association of International Students will meet at 5 p.m. in Bynum Hall. ' There will be an important meeting of the Human Relations Committee at 2:45 p.m. in the Frank Porter Graham Lounge. There will be an important meeting of the Y tutorial program at 7 p.m. in 08 Peabody HalL The Orientation Committee of the ABS will hold a very important meeting at 3 p.m. in T-l New Can-oil Hall. Episcopal Campus Ministry Holy Communion will be celebrated at 10 p.m. in the Chapel of the Cross. The Linguistic Circle will sponsor a presentation by Connie Eble entitled "Slang and Productivity" at 3 p.m. in304Dey. Andrew Young will be the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Lecturer at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. The lecture is sponsored by the Carolina Forum and the Committee on Established Lectures. Tickets are available at the Carolina Union Desk for SI. Andrew Young part of annual lecture series Former United Nations Ambassador Andrew Young will speak as part of the annual Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial lecture series at 8 p.m. today in Memorial Hall. Approximately 1,1 OX) tickets remain for the speech. Tickets can be purchased for $1 at the Carolina Union Desk. Any unsold tickets will be available at the door. The lecture is sponsored by the Carolina Forum and the Committee on Established Lectures. Young, a life-long civil rights activist, resigned as U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Aug. 16, 1979 saying that he was afraid his conduct had proved embarrassing to the Carter administration on several occasions. Young was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from the 5th UPCOMING EVENTS Hitlers free Jewish University class "A Non-Tradiiional Approach to Judaism" meets at 7 p.m., Thursday in the Hillel Library. The North Campus Chapter of Intervarsity Christian Fellowship will host the "Men of Armor" at J:30 p.m. Thursday in the Chapel of the Cross. Hitlers free Jewish University course "The Aleph, Bet. Gimmtb of Jewish Cooking" at 6:30 p.m. in the Hillel Kitchen. Ayana '80", the African Afro-American ' Studies Curriculum's cultural series, presents "Perspectives on Southern Africa" at 8 p.m. Thursday in 101 Greenlaw HalL Fellowship of Christian Athletes will meet at 9 p.m. Thursday in 213 of the Carolina Union. HP- 4 - Ik t W 2 1 I CUUHUN- GOOD AT BOTH LOCATIONS FOR 1 PIZZA Buy one original thin crust pizza, get another of equal value I Andrew Young ...speaks here tonight Congressional District of Georgia in 1972, the first black congressman from Georgia since reconstruction. Young was a close associate of Martin Luther King Jr. He is a graduate of Howard University and Hartford Theological Seminary and is an ordained minister in the United Church of Christ. NORA WILKINSON 208 W. Franklin 942-5149 15-501 Bypass 929-0289 Offer expires February 29, 1980 I l I L ate 3 sal BB ta mk.wm sss an am ssa as sas,sai am aai bbs am mm ass ns am ass am aai am am aai aai as3. THE Daily Crossword by Raymond F. Eisner ACROSS 1 Player's - game 5 Undersized 10 Kiwi relatives 14 Deviltry 15 Sky pad 16 Spanish duke 17 Deserves 20 Clever comeback 21 In agree ment 22 Religious notables: abbr. 23 Social event , 25 Joined by treaty 28 da capo 29 longa... 32 Feat 33 Grim 34 Chinese name 35 Make the final decision 39 Full of: suft 40 Locating device 41 Olive genus 42 Grade 43 Too bad! 44 Certain insects 46 Explorer Hedin 47 Not at all upset 43 Have words 51 Jostling one 54 Author of "Villette" 58 Misery 59 Waterway 60 European river 61 Unhurried 62 Winged 63 Medicinal amount 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 33 36 37 Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: SlUAlM HdTR I A I F IT f) ITSTMTE I I .11 R E T R 0 I 0 S E U I T . lA N T Tit H E S I S MIO T OiW A YLJAN I L E "nt o rrfATBL rr sTATvyjYTEjWTrTEl lev 7eTt I T E Ml.TSjl M l IlIT JA" L A LHTOMjlMfl.il A1VIEPG EM I N Uli A.I S E Rt jH E B E ISA T I RE czBfinpL Ida cr:: 10.1 A. SjTZ S.I A M P eTd E A0 S. TTr 0 P.H. E. H AIR. ILU.S iff R.HL r0 S L0 I E IS IT IE I IP IA IT IR 1 1 I f RlEiLjS DOWN 1 Something precious 2 Upon the surface of 3 River In Italy 4 Record reverse 5 Answered impudently 6 Deli items 7 "Vissi d' " 8 Turned on 9 Meriwether 10 Sulfide mixture 11 Melange 12 River in England 13 Sensible 18 Big bag Gloomy, to poets Melodies Kind of committee Rent out Morning reception Ballistic missile Soap plant Less cooked Drinks Auto type Journey Pull forcibly 38 Bitter herb 44 Prattle 45 Genus of swans 46 Uncivil 47 Baseball shoe part 48 Hurt 49 Mother of Zeus 50 Lasses, familiarly 51 Alcohol burner 52 Within: comb, form 53 Skyways: abbr. 55 Edible tuber 56 Chess master 57 Before 14 ESI E J5 w to 27 18 15 a 19 36 5T 4i 40 TT 37 33 28 23 i24 21 10 111 112 113 16 9 130131 ,34 44 145 1 so 3l 47 o4 hi 12C0 by Chicago Trlbune-N.Y. News Synd. Inc. All Rights Reserved t HELD OVER!' Excgsnest Winner "Best First Film" Cmm's v Northern Licjlits mvitts t omp.inson w.th Olmi's The Tree oi Wooden Clogs A beautiful, beautiful lilm " -Haskell Wexler inter NORTHERN it wa time to lake a wan fTI ' tJUIJ M O JlA H.fhetl HrMmt Eves. 7:20.9:10 Sun. Mats. 2:00, 3:45. 5:30 THE CAROLINA THEATRE DOWNTOWN bMRflfln 666H939 i LHJ32 1 i3 jm mm o3 4UfcaM,- NOW 2:35 7:00 SHOWING 4:50 9:15 Marsha Mason V" i J7 iTfY if the Dark An OrUOM . Thni WMMca Bros O PG flECD OVljf6trTBiG"Wli:K 2:30 4:50 7:10 9:30 ROBERT RED FORD JANE FONDA "J- THE r ELECTRIC :J) J HORSEMAN n a cotuwai UNivf mtittt "Winner of 5 Golden Globe Award Nominations including: Best Picture Best Sup. Actor Best Actress-Bette Midler BETTE t.'IDLER ALAil DATES fflERQS2 HELD OVER 8th WEEK 3-15 myE MARTIN 9:15 Civil rights .-"sparks forum poll From page 1 By KERRY DEROCH1 Staff Writer In tribute to the civil rights campaigns of the 1960s, the Critical Perspectives forum will sponsor a "Teach-In" entitled "Civil Rights and Violence; Greensboro Then and Now," held 1-6 p.m. and 7-1 1 p.m. Thursday in the Carolina Union. The program's planners said the teach in was organized due to "the re emergence of violently racist groups which culminated in the Nov. 3, 1979 killings in Greensboro (in which members of the Ku Klux Klan killed five members of the Communist Workers Party at a CWP rally)." "Twice in the past 20 years, the promise and turmoil of American life have landed on our doorstep in Greensboro," said Leon Fink, one of the event's organizers. "Through the teach-in we hope to lay the past 20 years in focus and to re-awaken an agenda for social advancement in the 1980s." The 1-6 p.m. session will feature a multi-media presentation including both films and radio programs. The films to be presented include Am Somebody, I Have a Dream, The Invisible Reich, and The New Klan. Other topics to be covered include a discussion of the Greensboro sit-ins of 1960 and the civil rights movement of the 1960s in comparison to the movement of the 1980s. The 7-11 p.m. session will feature a panel of speakers including Allen Trelease, author of rf7ir Terror, Nell Painter, author of Hose a Hudson and The Autobiography of a Black Communist in the South, and civil rights activist Anne Braden. Journalist Pat Bryant, author William Chafe, and UNC health education professor Tony Whitehead also will speak. Job recruiters here The following employers and graduate school representatives will be on campus to discuss job opportunities and academic programs on the dates indicated. Students can sign up for appointments with these representatives eight days ahead of the visit in the University Placement Services, 21 1 Hanes Hall. A resume is necessary at the time a student signs up for an interview. DATE ORGANIZATION Feb. 4 Cannon Mills, Inc John Hancock Life Insurance Company Feb. 7 First Union National Bank Coopers & Lybrand Feb. 5 First Union National Bank Coopers & Lybrand Carolina Power & Light Company Sun Banks of Florida National Starch & Chemical Feb. 8 Corporation Fairfax County Public Schools Sambo's Restaurant Feb. 6 Cone Mills Corporation ? NCR Corporation : Deloitte Haskins & Sells North Carolina National Bank North Carolina National Bank Trust Company Bank McDonnell Douglas Corporation Xerox Corporation Control Data Corporation Burroughs Corporation Digital Equipment Merrill-Lynch -Shell Development Company Institute for Paralegal Training Virginia Beach School Board Kinston City Schools v Seidraan&'Seidman - " r.::".v:: rXKramer; Kramer DUSTIN HOFFMAN REDUCEDADit76irnCK!i$ Aft AVAILABLE AT THE UNION PES K J l STAR TREK 4:30 7:00 9:30 Gene Kelly Leslie Caron Best Picture of 1954 AN AMERICAN IN PARIS tlATCIEE DAILY ryreiv-TWttsmY at za ATTENTION STUDENTS Single Copies Self Service m x 11 or 8V2 x 14 canvas, oils, brushes, acrylics, sketchbooks, instruction books CAROLINA COPY CENTER Rams Head Plaza 967-2585 8:30-5:30 M-F percent). Harold Wallace, assistant vice chancellor for student affairs, said he had philosophical problems with the idea of setting a quota, however. Quotas are different from setting long-term goals for an institution, he said. "Any institution that is contemplating setting up a quota system ought to think long and hard about it," he said. "If you're talking about setting goals, then that's one thing, but if you're talking about setting limits at a certain percentage, then that's something else.' The majority of students polled (59.9 percent) said blacks were treated the same as whites at UNC. Some (21 percent) thought blacks were treated better, and a lower proportion (13.2 percent) thought blacks were not treated as well. In general, the black respondents felt they were treated worse than the whites. On other campus issues, students were in opposition to eliminating the honor code, but opinion was divided on the effectiveness of the present honor system, (48. 1 percent said the system was effective and 4 1 .3 percent said it was not). Seniors and graduate students seemed to be more in favor of eliminatingthe honor system than did freshmen, sophomores and juniors. Elson Floyd, judicial programs officer, said UNCs judicial system has increased its level of professionalism during the last few years. 1 think the seniors and graduate students remember the honor system as it used to be prior to 1 978, when it began to strengthen," he said. The student attorney general's office and those on the honor court are taking it (the honor system) more seriously." Most respondents to the poll (60.2 percent) said they did not think grade inflation was a problem at UNO. Of those polled, 21.8 percent said grade inflation was a problem on campus. Gordon Whitaker, assistant dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, said that although his office has not compiled figures yet to determine the seriousness of grade inflation on campus last semester, he feels it is natural for students to think that grade inflation is not a problem. "Students always think the grade they get is not as high as they deserve or that they deserve the grade they received," he said. "Students generally don't complain about getting too high a grade." VV can't aflord to wast It. ABonnorr The decision may well be difficult . . . but the abortion Itself doesn't have to be. We do cur best to make it easy for you Ttm Pregnancy Tost Very Early Pregnancy Tort ' Call 781-88S0 aaytlm The naming Center FriencHy . . . Personal . . Professional Care OLPWlllM (DMl?TiP Vt i i " n irrr r AMP IF OeCTEP LEXTOR. OF TWC vyt HEL,l fRoMiSt To tour At izssr oHCsnrt O THE. ou weu- vry pay imniiii' -- --UlJlMWiaaaaMaaa'3nr.aaaaaT"' fooT Trie oaviui) ) J STr&HSTH Voy 1 Foft -me , twerr voo NOTICED HOW TKtV ALt STOP TO PfcKK FffcfAj It een TrMaUG A TEST? 9 S iM,ff 1 i; 1( MOTH- THAT E flUiUfta vmti KIM I ANl7IU)0ULPLirET0 SEE THE PRINCIPAL..UJEKE 601M6T05UE WlMi BECAUSE tA ALL WET. I7HAT5 WHY.1 THE CEILING IN CM ROOM LEAKS, AMP IT KA1N5 ON My HEAP AW ATTOjEEV U6 6iVcN THIS CA5t A V LOT OF TH0U6HT.. IT fLVU HtXJ GO L'fiD Y A - DOOZMOOimMZ Of to fay foz rr iwowr rW0LA5TC7-r i DOONESBURY by Garry Trudcau fJALYT y yes! I INVLa&KJN TOICCS. A V v f&k Jv excuse ms. i 1! urw&asiy to VYSTDfT. SCCXt. 1 rf 7HCMAXY AXiZXt. Tie urns vast F,WY. 6JrW TO