Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 6, 1980, edition 1 / Page 5
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Wednesday, February 6. 1980 The Daily Tar Heel 5 Fast, witty EDuke musical revue anon; og separate V couple on anniversary V By BOB ROYALTY Staff Writer Want to be in show business? Want to write songs, sing and dance? Hoof n Horn is a society at Duke University for students who like to do just that. Founded before 1940, Hoof 4n' Horn started with original revues but switched, to performing Broadway shows 20 years ago. Last September, however, junior Scott Smoot initiated a return to student written shows. Shut Up, We're Singing!, now playing at Duke, is the result of his efforts. Smoot used a class that met once a week to match student lyricists with sudent composers. This class produced 30 songs by Thanksgiving. Auditions were held and scripts were given out before Christmas. Two weeks of rehearsal were crammed in, and on Jan. 26 Shut up, We're Singing! premiered. Smoot himself wrote one-third of the lyrics, conducted the classes, chose the cast and directed the show. Vicki Harrington, a freshman, wrote lyrics for Smoot. It was good to have a singer's perspective when writing," she said. "1 .Camnipys Public service announcements must be turned in at by 1 p.m. if they are to run the next day. Each item ACTIVITIES TODAY There will be a Human Relation! Committee meeting at 2:45 p.m. in the Activities Board Office. People A gaimt Selective Service will sponsor a vigil in front of the Franklin Street Post Office to protest the draft 1 1 a.m.-2 p.m. There will be a meeting for all AIESEC members at 4:30 p.m. in 300 Carroll Hall. The Poverty Action Committee will meet at S p.m. upstairs of the Campus Y. Carolina Photographers meeting at 5 p.m. in South Gallery Meeting Room of the Carolina Union. Episcopal Campus Ministry Holy Communion is celebrated at 10 p.m. in the Chapel of the Cross. UNC RaquetbaU Club meeting at 7 p.m. in 222 Greenlaw. The linited Christian Fellowship will have Bible study at 7 p.m. in the I'pendo Lounge. AXE will hold a Call Meeting at 7:30 pjm. in 221 Venable Hall. The SCAU Consumer Rights Research Committee will meet at 3 p.m. in 20S Carolina Union. A meeting for freshment interested in Physical Therapy will be held at 5 p.m. in the Memorial Hospital PT Dept. "Roles of a PT and the organization of a PT department" will be discussed. Call the PT Dept. for more information. UPCOMING EVENTS Campus Y Coffetklatch (being held in cooperation with the Carolina Union Forum Committee's candidate's Forum) will be a candidates forum with RHA presidents, CGC reps, and senior class officers at 3 p.m. Thursday in the upstairs Carolina Union Lounge. A I-Anon meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Binkley Baptist Church. Members of the 99th Pursuit Squadron will be on campus meeting with AFROTC Cadets. The 99th Pursuit Squadron was the first black fighting squadron in the US Air Force. All interested persons may attend the briefings at 2 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Thursday in 101 Greenlaw Hall. The UNC Chess Club will, meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday injhe Carolina Union. ! ... tr.i iTiJ The Fellowship of Christian Athletes will meet at 9-p.m. Ad brings happiness to couple GASTON 1 A (AP) Herbert Morrow of Bessemer City says his advertisement for a bride was so successful he'd do it again if need be. "I'm glad 1 did it," he said. "I knew I'd pick up plenty that way and get the woman for me out of the bunch." The woman for the 72-year-old Morrow turned out to be 64-year-old Cora Wilson of Morganton, who saw as newspaper story about his search. The couple exchanged wedding vows Sunday in a brief ceremony in South Carolina. Said the new Mrs. Morrow, "Don't ask me why, but I'm glad 1 wrote." "I just really thought she had something nice when I read her letter," Morrow said. "Seemed like she was real nice and I liked her looks when I saw her." In his advertisement in a local newspaper, Morrow said he wanted a future wife between 40 and 65 years of age, shorter than 6 feet 3 inches, and who weighed less than 250 pound but more than 165. He also said he wanted a Christian woman who was a good cook, cleaned well and had a sense of humor. Morrow's first wife died in 1973. More students get vaccination Student Health Services gave red measles vaccinations to 60 students Tuesday, bringing the number inoculated at UNC to 2,1 13 since last Tuesday, SHS physician James McCutchan said. No new cases of red measles have been reported at UNC since one student was confirmed to have the disease two weeks ago, health officials said. H owever, four new cases of red measles were reported in Carrboro school children Tuesday, bringing the number of confirmed cases in Orange County and Chapel Hill-Carrboro schools to 29, Orange County Health Director Jerry Robinson said. AEonnon ' The decision may well be difficult . . . but the abortion itself doesn't have to be. We do our tx3t to make It easy for you. Tr Pregnancy Tact Very Early Pregnancy Test Call 781-8880 anytime The rieming Center (Friendly . . . Personal . . .Professional CaJ-w know what it's like to be on stage singing before an audience." Shut Up, We're Singing! is a musical revue in three acts: "America Songs." "Love Songs and Things" and "Party Music." Delving beneath superficialities, the songs show a- sophistication approaching the lyrics of Cole Porter and Stephen Sondheim. The variety of the songs attests to the students' fertile imaginations. "The Jogging Joneses," for example, examines America's new one-upmanship i'r'r BMWs and running shoes as thematic material. "Carry On, Don Quixote" explores an often neglected type of love, that of a father for his son. Not all the songs are hits "Friends You Are" is too much like a Lowenbrau commercial but there is an effort to go beyond "moon-June-spoon" lyrics. The music is equally strong, as in "American Dreams." The cast, which sings well together, uses the small stage of the cramped Fred Theatre very well, moving easily and holding the audiences attention. The choreography is sometimes funny, as in "Use Me" and "America Gourmet." Kevin Gray and Lee Ann Cheeves Calendar the box outside the DTH off ices in the Carolina Union will be run at least twice. Thursday in 213 of the Carolina Union. MIMM raffle tickets are due by noon Thursday. ITEMS OF INTEREST SAI. (music fraternity for women) is sponsoring singing Valentines, which will be delivered on campus only. Students may choose from a list of music, requests also will be accepted. The Valentines will cost $2. Place orders Feb. 4-8 ! I a.m.-3 p.m. in the Carolina Union. Nomination forms for UNC GrailValkjries will be available at the Carolina Union desk until Feb. 29. Applications are available at the international Center for -Germany Today" scholarships. Applications for the Gottmgen Exchange to Germany are still available at the International Center. Deadline is Feb. 8. The "Summer Jobs" booklet, announcement no. 414, is available at the U niversity Counseling Center, Nash Hall. The application forms. 171 and Form D (college course list), are also available, information on the "Federal Summer Intern Program" has arrived. Nomination forms for the Order of the Golden Fleece are available at the Carolina Union desk. Deadline for nominations is Feb. 29. Cellar Door, UNCs undergraduate literary magazine, now is accepting stories, poems, cartoons, essays, plays, drawings and photographs. Deadline Feb. IS in 20S of the Campus Y Building. Those moody eyes. Girls Want C o valentine lud Lakes T l . . XT He's irresistable nnrl cn rtro (( TheWs Cookies -Decorated cakes on short notice r m mm mm V a- I". t BREAKFAST This Come by the SNACK CONVENIENCE STORES for coffee, hot chocolate and everything you need to warm you up . . . Fresh Baked Pastries and Biscuits Fresh from Time Out daily! CONVENIENCE STORES Open 7:00 am - 1 am MON.-THURS. if?- wFwa' nuura rn., bat., i- rosiea in eacn Bar) wlHCUS ROOM MORRISON it t m PUDIMftUAiie kiiiiiiiunnud CRAIGE , There's More At Your n Cast of 'Shut Up, We're Singing! .a return to student-written shows stand out with the best voices. Cheeves, an operatic soprano, makes anything she sings sound good. Gray's strong baritone fills the theater when he laments a lost love in "More Than A Memory." Ruth Sedlitz and Nancy Outzs also deserve mention for their indredible stage presence. " THE RUSSIANS ARE NOT COMING! -JOSE MOLINA BAILES ESPANOEES;: perform exciting Spanish Dances FRIENDS OF THE COLLEGE 8 p.m. Reynolds Coliseum, Raleigh February 8, 9 Tickets $2.50 at Union Box Office You can find the unusual in The Bottom Line, every Tuesday and Thursday on the editorial page qThe Daily Tar Heel. That sugar frosting. o "SI Thus Man. 1 x Valentine Cookies Heart Shape Cakes From $4.50 up ThelFs 124 E. FRANKLIN ST. 942-1954 11 ft Miss A HOT Morning? Student Store BARS and Sun. SNACK BARS Open Every Morning at 7:00 am OSLER (on Pill Hill) Y-COURT NOOK (School of Public Health) BAR (Law School) SCUTTLEBUTT j PIT (In Student Store) VISIT OUR NEWLY REMODELED BAR AT THE Y-COURT 0f MA Li Shut Up, We're Singing! makes the audience feel good. It moves fast, following the classic Broadway revue ideal of speed. . Shut Up, We're Singing! plays Feb. 7 and 10 at 8:15 p.m. Get there early and enjoy the fine result of a lot of work by some creative students. JyVe Got AAA 7a lent Sfovr paetyat Pfayo) J proceeab jo-fo AMSrt&ej&p Hind , JoCL Us I r - f-- --A How the human mind can expand the realm of possibility "No barriers, no masses of matter however enormous, can withstand the powers of the mind; the remotest corners yield to them; ail things suc cumb; the very heaven itself is laid open." These words were written by a man named Marcus Manilius almost 2,(XX) t years agor Read hem carefully. And remember them well. For though these words carry the advantages of elo quence, they signify much more than the facility of a writer who Interviews for Chemistry or Chemical Engineering undergraduates and M.B.A.s interested in IVtrochemical careers beginning in Marketing: 1 'ncWfrrr.cl.i:ifts 21180 HANES HALL 8:30 A.M. - 4:30 P.M. M RA.s 21380 CARROLL HALL 8:30 A.M 4:30 P.M. PETERSBURG, Del. (AP) David and Betty Clough celebrated their 24th wedding anniversary Tuesday, separated by a six-foot fence and 28 barking dogs. Clough, 70, recently left his wife and moved into a shed 50 feet away because he could no longer stand to live in the trailer she shares with the dogs. And he has filed a petition jisking the Court of Chancery to order removal of some of the dogs so, he can move back in with his wife. rr.. "I'd just like a little peace and quiet," he said. "That trailer was not built to stand 28 dogs." Standing a few feet away behind the fence that surrounds her trailer, Mrs. Clough, 55, waved her ever-present corncob pipe and shouted above the barking din, "This is society's fault. Some people don't want dogs. They don't give a damn about them. They're mean to them." Gesturing at the pack leaping and yelping at her feet, she added: "All these dogs are ones that people have thrown out to die." Mrs. Clough, once known as the "Dog FEED YOUR AT THE OypQll 11 FftCTQRV ,tl5: 401 WEST FRANKLIN STREET The Marines Platoon Leaa s Class i o -- .ii ii i.i, i n iii Air Ground Law THE PLATOON LEADERS CLASS PROGRAM (PLC) OFFERS A COMMISSION AS A 2ND LIEUTENANT IN THE US. MARINE CORPS AFTER GRADUATION FROM COLLEGE. FRESHMEN THROUGH GRADUATES INCLUDING LAW STUDENTS ARE ELIGIBLE TO JOIN. HERE ARE A FEW OF THE PROGRAM FEATURES AVAILABLE TO MEN WHO CAN QUALIFY: 1. Summer Training Good Salary. 2. Aviation, Ground and Law options available. - 3. $100.00 a month during school year. 4. Challenging career with competitive salary and benefits after coitege. 5. Option to drop from program up to graduation from college. MAJOR COOK FLORENCE WILL BE AT THE STUDENT UNION THE STH. 6TH AND 7TH OF FEBRUARY 1980 TO INTERVIEW THOSE INTERESTED. "COME AS YOU ARE. NO RESUME REQUIRED." FOR ADDmONAL INFORMATION CALL MAJOR FLORENCES OFFICE COLLECT AT 755-4174. i r has long since turned to dust. These words express a truth that time cannot age or alter. Because there is in alt of us a need to understand that is immortal and insatiable. A need that makes the unknow able f(xd for thought and the unheard-of music to our cars. At Conoco Chemicals we are more than mindful of this need. It is an intrinsic part of what we are and w hat we hope to le. For our need to know has compelled us to develop the kind of technology that will solve the problems we put to it. The kin of Technology that, when coupled with our financial strength and supply sclf-sufficicncv.can breach the Lady of Wilmington," fled Delaware's largest city and muvvo here last summer after troubl- with her neighbors over the dogs which nen numtx-ied 33. At the time, couit officials thought the move to the country was a good one. The Cloughs now face a lawsuit by their neighbors, Thomas A. Boyd, 7 1 , his 56-year-old wife, Florence, and her 78-year-old mother, Anna McCormack. They charge the dogs make their lives miserable and have worsened Florence Boyd's cancer. A group of dog lovers have tried to help out by building the fence, having the dogs spayed and donating dog food, Clough said. All of Mrs. Clough's dogs appear healthy and well cared for. But Clough said the group is meddling in his marriage by making it easier for Mrs. Clough to keep her dogs. Members of the group are "very devoted canine sympathizers who have made strenous efforts to save stray dogs and . . . induced Mrs. Clough to take the dogs in, regardless of our health and comfort," his handwritten court petition said. FANTASIES Are Coming! r Officers Candidate Class t . I ( " in, 1 V f barrier between what is possi ble and w hat is not. The many advancements and refinements that we arc presently responsible for are, we fccl.ix)th prmf and promise, Because the level of tech nology that we have achieved is only the txrginningof the kind of cxjxrrtise that wc ate striving to attain. For Mjnilius was right. There are no real Ixjundarics to the realm of possibility. There arc only opportunities. Opportunities that uc intend to tirelessly pursue. Opportu nities that we would like to share (conoco) with you. Conoco Chemical o O a. ? V 'i 0 e I'Ut
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 6, 1980, edition 1
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