Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 10, 1980, edition 1 / Page 4
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4 The Daily Tar Heel Monday. March 10, 1980 Cainmpims CaSeoidlaB Public service announcements must be turned in at the box outside the Dl H offices in the Carolina Union by 1 p.m. if they are to run the next day. Each item will be run at least twin By Carta Lindemann 4an Film probes rock fan ' life a rnn-ntaiive from the London School of Economics will be on campus to meet with students interested in studying at that school. An informal session will be held 2-4 p.m. in the Carolina Union South Gallery Meeting Room. The RacquetbsU Club will meet 8-10 p.m. in Woollen Gym. Beginners should come at 8 p.m.. inlermediates should come at 8:40 p.m. nd advanced players should come at 9:20 p.m. I PCOMINC EVENTS Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority is sponsoring a Blimpie dinner at its house March 16. at 5:30 ami 6: 15 p.m. On-campus deliveries also will be made. Proceeds w ill go to the Campus Y and the N. C. Eye and Tissue Bank. CHEC. now meeting in the health education suite of the new Student Health Service building every Tuesday at 7 p.m.. provides information on breast and pelvic exams and contraceptive methods. The Anderson for President committee will hold its initial meeting at 8 p.m. March 12. in 08 Gardner. AED will meet Tuesday. March II at 7:00 p.m. in 103 Berryhill HalL Val Staples and Dr. Dick Baker will be present to talk about the Wholistic Health Center. The National Convention of AED will also be discussed. UNCs water ski club at 8 p.m. Tuesday. March 1 1, in 210 Gardner. The Walk For Humanity committee will meet at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday. March 1 1, in the Campus Y building. All members please attend. An organizational meeting of the Triangle Area Anti Nuclear Street Theater Company will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. March 26, at the Durham Friends Meeting House. 404 Alexander Ave. Amateur and experienced actors, writers, costume designers and other talented individuals needed. For more information call 286-4120. The Anti-Nuclear Media Action Project will meet at 7:30 p.m. March 19. at the Durham Friends Meeting House. 404 Alexander Ave. All levels of experience and knowledge in writing, journalism, television and radio are needed to ensure that accurate information about nuclear power reaches the public. For more information, call 286-4120. The Subcommittee on Foreign Languages will hold an open hearing on the role of foreign-language instruction in the general education curriculum. All interested students are invited to participate. The hearing will be held at I p.m. Tuesday. March It in 201 Dey Hall. Union begins coffeehouse The Carolina Union social committee is sponsoring "Local Lyrics," a weekly coffeehouse to begin Wednesday in the snack bar of the Carolina Union. Performers for "Local Lyrics" will be culled from Triangle area musical acts. Indigo, a female Latin rock group, will perform at the frist coffeehouse Wednesday, and Nick Fear is scheduled to perform at the second coffeehouse March 19. Admission is free. The departments of computer science of Duke University and 'UNC will hold a colloquim on recent advances in programming methodology at 2 p.m. Tuesday. March 1 1, in 215 Phillips Hall. Items to be discussed are prime programs, program correctness, and Modular Design. The Socialist Workers Party and Young Socialist Alliance will sponsor a Socialist Educational Conference March 15 at 216 E. 6th St. in Winston-Salem. The conference will begin at 1 1 a.m. and will last through the afternoon. Topics to be discussed include history and lessons of the anti-Vietnam War movement, the crisis of U. S. foreigh policy and the draft and plans of the 1980 socialist election campaign. ITEMS OK INTEREST Voter registration foi ihi week will he 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday. Wednesday and Friday and from noon-8 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday in the Chapel Hill Municipal Building at 306 N. Columbia St.; and 9 a.m.-S p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday and 9 a m. -8 p.m., Tuesday and Thursday at Carrboro Town Hall on West Main Street. Carrboro. The deadline to register for the presidential primary is April 8. Junior Marshal applications will be available at the Union desk March 10-March 21. Interested applicants must be able to help at the 1980 graduation as well as donate time to the planning and coordination of senior activities for the 1980 1981 academic year. The Wesley Foundation is accepting applications for the $250 Whitfield Traveling Fellowship for summer travel. The fellowship is available to undergraduate students only and the deadline for applications is March 15. The applications can be obtained at the Wesley Foundation 214 Pittsboro St. For more information call 942-2152. The art exhibit at the Moorehead Building through March is "Textile Exhibit" by Marion Oettinger. It may be seen 2-5 p.m. and 7:30-10 p.m. on weekdays: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and 7:30-10 p.m. on Saturdays; and l-5p.m.and7:30-10p.m.onSundays. The public exhibit at the N. C. Botanical Carden through March 3 1 is "Daffodil Art by Local Art Students." The exhibit may be seen at the Totten Center from 9 a m.-4 p.m. on weekdays; 10 a.m.-4 p.m. on Saturdays and 2-5 p.m. on Sundays. Free, one-hour tours of the historic buildings on the UNC CH campus are offered at noon Monday-Saturday and at 3 p.m. Sunday. The guided tour, sponsored by the Chapel Hill Service League, starts from the rotunda of the More head Building. The Orange County Board of Elections urges persons to register for the May 6 primary election. The Carrboro Appearance Commission has several vacancies on its board and is seeking well-qualified persons to Till the positions. Further information may be obtained by calling Carrboro Town Hall, at 942-8541. The commision, whose members are appointed by the mayor and Board of Aldermen, has been receiving increasing attention recently for its active involvement and leadership in landscaping and historic conservaion for the area as well as its reviews and recommendations for new construction and remodeling. If you haveacurrent (PR-basic certification and would like to be an instructor, the student office of public safety needs you. There will be CPR-I courses March 1 1. 13. 20 and 25 at the Durham County Red Cross. For more information, call Randy at 933-8844. Applications for the Student government positions of executive staff, chancellor and vice-chancellor committee and student boards are in Suite C of the Student Union. The applications must be returned to Suite C by Tuesday. March 1 1 By DOROTHY ROMPALSKE Staff W riter Movies, it is generally believed, offer excellent reflections of the societies that create them. Considering the great impact that rock music has had on lifestyles during the past 25 years, it is surprising that few films have treated the subject seriously. Some melodramas have dealt with tragic events in the lives of rock performers, most recently The Buddy Holly Story and The Rose. And some movies explored rock music through documentary footage of Gimme Shelter is an outstanding example of a concert film which shows how fans react to the energy of rock music and how the music helps to release their social and sexual frustrations. Quadrophenia, directed by Franc Roddam and produced by The Who, concentrates on the life of a single fan named Jimmy. Quadrophenia is based on The Who's rock opera, and the music of The Who unifies the film. Hit songs from the early 1960s set the time. Jimmy and his friends are M ods. They wear skin-tight Levis, zoot suits and narrow ties, listen to music by The Who and the Kinks and drive around on colorful scooters. The more mirrors and lights on their bikes the better. Their great enemies are the "leather-clad rockers"-the greasers who listen to Gene Vincent and drive powerful motorcycles. Jimmy becomes a Mod to find his identity. "1 don't want to be like everybody else. That's why I'm a Mod," he claims. His life revolves around music, street fights and drugs. His humiliating job as a messenger for an advertising agency is the best he can hope for. That, and the things that his parents have-a flat in a lower-class section of London and nights spent falling asleep in front of the television. What Jimmy wants is a girl named Steph, who doesn't care about him, some self-importance in other words, the perfect girl he sees in some agency photographs and the idyllic life of one of their cigarette commercials. What little Jimmy does have, he begins to lose. He finds his whole world "going backwards." The identity he has found as a Mod is no identity at all. What we are told we should be getting in our lives and what we can actually get are often two different things. Dissatisfaction is a common rock theme. You can't always get what you want, or what you are told by the mass media you should want. That is the frustration of Jimmy and his friends. It is no coincidence that some of the finest films to explore the rock culture in England have been directed by men who got their start directing commercials, including Roddam, the director of this film. In Peter Watkins' brilliant pseudo-documentary, Privilege, a rock superstar, played by Paul Jones, is used by businessmen, the government, and even the church to sell products and causes to Britain's youth. When England is faced with an oversupply of apples he is forced to film a commercial dressed as a giant apple to sell the fruit to his adoring fans. In real life, Britain faced a national shortage of black jelly-beans when Beatle George Harrison mentioned that they were his favorites. And, in the advertising agency sequence in Richard Lester's farce, A Hard Day's Night, Harrison is told by a pompous advertiser who doesn't recognize him that the shirt that he has just called "grotty" will be made the next teen clothing phenomenon and that he will be dying to wear one just like everybody else in a week. Even if we are successful and we get everything we are T ) 11 1 'Quadrophenia' uses music by The Vho supposed to want, we may find out, as Jimmy does, that there is nothing really there. The rock hero in Privilege only rattles the bars to his cage and sings "Set MeFree". What was going on in rock music in the early 60s isn't very different from what is happening today. After all, Ace, the super mod that J immy and his friends emulate, is played by Sting, the lead singer for the new wave band The Police, who probably didn't have to buy any new clothes to play the part. WeeEcday Fare Cinema Campus Claire's Knee- Eric Rohmer's comedy about an engaged man's perverse fascination with a beautiful novelist. At 8 p.m. Tuesday in Carrol Hall. Kree with UNC student ID. Chloe In The Afternoon- Eric Rohmar's film about a man who wishes to escape his surburban lifestyle. At 8 p.m. Wednesday in Carroll Hall. Free with UNC stuudent ID. Durham Tom Jones "I he Academy Award-winning comedy adapted from Henry Fielding's novel about 18th centry England. At 7 and 9:30 p.m. in St. Joseph's Performance Center. 804 Kayetteville St. Radio In Focuv- Featured artist are: Steely Dan and Bruce Cockburn tonight; Crosby. Stills and Nash Tuesday: and The Grcatful Dead Wednesday. Aired from 6-11 p.m. each night on WDBS-FM 107. Inside Track Featured albums are: Billy Joel's Class House tonight: BobSegcrand I he Silver Bullet ISTot &. textbook, in th c place. ome browse &wHtle APPALACHIAN WILDWATERS is taking applications for Raft Guides. White-water boaters preferred but will train applicants with strong outdoor background. APPLY NASH HALL 1 h e Old Book Corner ' v M80LIXA CUSSICS SERIES ft . X-ffXi) . MOW THl y K, V COHDUCI I ;. LOVE! i f A PS' I I NATALIE WOOD WARREN BEATTY PAT MINGLE . AUDREY CHRISTIE Pr.m..J Lt AAMMI M 6Mih grlffflfj ) vWiTOCfeATE ft 1 Irr. LAODADflLE USEE To RC. A ; KeAH CHfflMj OP? v THE ROLLER SKATING SEASON IS JUST ABOUT HERE A6AIN ANPTHE jump rope SEASON100... AND I LOVE THE PICNIC SEASON 3 -to M0UJ AB0UT OH A I AM 5A50N is DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau AtntXCFDUKB, AtQCKT ITS A NATURAL OF DOCK. XXJUZZHtSATKR- HASVtSVe&XXG. ra v il l SJHATP0Y0U Ktmi ABOUT WRITING eootsr NOTHING. BUT ONSOFTHEBBST GHOST WTEFS IN Tie BU50&S5. TT CAN1 FAIL, HAH. SJNCB T&HQsrmsnuKmNiRAN SmW.PeOPt3HA'5SNRJK ASAMAZTiR.AGEWU&FOLK HCFD. kZVBZ FOOLS HJT TO sfjkb wis TmnotrsHon HE TVFN5 msA a nrr THE 1 -2 K.'J Lli. j t,... J. iV- .J Cliffs Notes help busy people... study more eftectively. increase understanding of novels, plays and poems. review quickly for exams. Come in today! We have more than 200 Cliffs Notes titles to help improve your grades and save time. Available at: BOOKSELLER Band's Against The Wind Tuesday; Spyro Gra' Catching The VN ind Wednesday. Aired each night at 1 1 p.m. on WXYC-FM 89.3. Music Recital- Pianist Micheal Zenge will perform works by Hayden. Beethoven. Rachaninoff and I ist at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Hall Auditorium. Local l.jrics coffeehouse - Indigo at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Carolina Union snack bar. Planetarium Spring Sky Rambles A tour of the constellations in the Spring Sky. Final show today at 8 p.m. Gallery Morehead Planetarium Gallery- Textile Exhibit by Marion Oettinger through March 31. Somerhill Gallery: 5504 Chapel Hill Blvd. Durham Art For The 80's New Visions for the Decade. Little Art Gallery: North Hills Shopping Center, Raleigh Paintings by Marcos Blahove through April 5. Nite Life Cat's Cradle Touchstone tonight. Irish Music Tuesday. Luther Moon Wednesday. The Station The Apple Chill Cloggers Tuesday. Joe Smothers and Jack Lawrence Wednesday. Spring concert still in planning Although ihc Chapel Thrill 80 committee did not secure any contracts with bands during Spring Break, the committee should know something by today, said Howard Henry, director of the Carolina Union who works with the committee. The committee has made offers to the Beach Boys. Atlanta Rhythm Section and Bonnie Raitt, committee chairman Richard Terrell said. If these bands refuse the offer to play at the Kenan Stadium concert April 19, offers will be made to other bands that arc available. Terrell said. FOX PHOTO Management Trainees Make Your Future With The Leader Train with the best! Fox Photo, recognized leader in the photofinishing industry, is seeking top management trainees, interested in the challenge and opportunity of management careers. Qualified applicants must be ambitious, energetic and willing to compete in an ever-expanding market Excell ent company benefits and working conditions Must be willing to relocate. Call Terry Ferguson, 643-6601 for appointment. An Equal Opportunity E mployer c 'FGKPHOTO A fOX STANIf V PHOTO PHOt C TS t ( THE Daily Crossword by Sidney L Robbms 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 23 24 25 27 ACROSS Imprint Butter lumps Supply a feast Irish town Once again Heath genus Matured Hoarfrost Obey WWI VIP Cleared the blackboard Sword Gave nutri ment to Newspaper official 32 36 39 40 43 44 45 46 48 50 53 Neck or step Son of Aphrodite Volume Cabinet VIP Sunday paper section, for short Hebrew measure Polishing material Get going Chemical suffix Pollution problem Texas city Saturday's Puzzle Solved. i-HLJU A R QjM A I f H R 1)1 JL A JL1.B s oto l E NLjE ATii SjE E oJy'L)- IE N A t q .:: :. :ie airlJTo rr ijuj JJ.H EL R A PjsCT'To I R Ej L o u. r. y i w TW sji oTn a t ! A1.N i E maa"'rlj pig's ft SEE c a trr !Mi CZZJ itlLLGIMo mciumpaT'j IE Q d v Tl R'llA' DT'Vilok, i.t.m it-uAin inc.c ; NlAjHjA J R Jj J f A Ll t R ! A I S ; 58 All-around 13 Reverber pest ated 63 Musical 21 Direct drama 22 Delia of 64 Long time song periods 26 Consider 65 Marsupials, 28 News bit for short 29 Raced madly 66 Folklore 30 Tent maker water 31 Depend sprite 32 Dress 67 Pans girl 33 Indian friend 34 Mel s folks 68 Taboo 35 Lampblack 69 Outer 37 Bread or 70 Basketball whiskey team 38 Cyclops. 71 Footprint for one 41 Bellini DOWN opera 1 Theater 42 Requires 2 Wanting 47 Begin land very much 49 Cacophonies 3 Sports 51 New York locale city 4 Loads op- 52 Dwarf pressively 54 Makes a 5 Easter salary event 55 Face 6 Indigo 50 Stone of -shrub 57 Fable man 7 Vale of 58 Part of 8 Use a broom GWTW 9 Halted 59 Poorn atxut 10 Mischievous heroes 11 Monkey CO Nearest 12 School 61 Silkworm subj 62 One i n n n ? i z ti tt 14 """"""" It) O 77 To "s """"""" . 4 . 1 1 .".j il - a . i - j ;i jL"""jj" rji4 ji J'j J ;4 :i IT Ti 7 4J 44 ii, 4o 3 H jj Vl iu ' - Fj a .1 ,a ji -j 'A 'U J r ZZ I CZZZ z j iZ Z iJ "IN l P 1 I 1 l r 1 11 I 1S30 by Chicago Tribune-N.Y. News Synd. Inc. All Rights Reserved J103
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 10, 1980, edition 1
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