Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 7, 1980, edition 1 / Page 4
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4 Th2 Daily Tar HeelFridav. November 7, 1980 PI a tlonal Achipvomotit o tl : ' ' ' 1 ! i fi ;' .' : f-fa I KLs Li - - "L u im ' U J M i I . 1 ' - A mm Dy I) A I K JKNKINS MatrWrilir, National Achievement Weekend, four days of programs for 102 high school minority students who are trying for National Achievement scholarships, began Thursday and will continue through Saturday on the UNC campus. . "The purpose of the weekend is to acquaint the high school students with the University, show them the things that go on here and answer any questions they might have about the University," Black Student Movement Chairperson Mark Canady said. The BSM, in conjunction with the UNC Admissions Office and the Office of Student Affairs, is sponsoring the weekend. Various cultural and informative programs are planned for the visitors. Pauline McNeill, on-campus coordinator of the BSM, did the major planning for the weekend. "It's basically a recruitment program," McNeill said. "We want them (the high school students) to come to Carolina il they feci iheir needs can be met here. "We want 4o show them what black life is like here, along with life at Carolina overall, Vshe said, A banquet vith the black faculty and staff was held to welcome the students to Carolina. A cultural program, featuring performances by the BSM Gospel Choir, the United Christian Fellowship Choir, , the Opeyo Dancers and the Ebony Readers, followed the banquet. A reception was planned to follow the program. Today's agenda will involve an academic forum, led by Hayden B. Renwick, associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, and various information sessions. The activities for Saturday will focus primarily on informing the high school students parents about UNC. The visiting students will stay with UNC students on campus who volunteered to share their rooms with them during the weekend. By DIANE VETO Slaff Writer , , ! i IIZLD OVER i i Jin. i V 4 tt BARGAIN MATINEES $2.00 TIL 6 PM MQN.-FRI. ALL SCREENS ENS 8 mmmmamm 3:00 7:00 5:00 9:00 . . . . ., .. ; A nau t iceddt Allan JC lMn A HELD OVER 4th SMASH. WEEK' 2:45 5:00 o 7:15 9:20 The Army was no ' laughing matter until Judy Benjamin joined it. GOLDIE HAWN r t:ov SHOWING' r l'THCHk 0 0 0 BARGAIN MATINEES $2.00 Til 6 PM MON-FRI ALL SCREENS o.m 7:05 5:10 9:10 "AtlosnMr, Wrong." JILL CLAYDURGH MICHAEL DOUGLAS CHARLES GRODIN mm, 8h : STARTS TODAY 3:15 7:05 5:109:00 i n r LATE SHOW FRI. & SAT. Rocky Horror Picture Show 12 mMntghl $2.00 t " S Country mujiic, once a stronghold of Southern good ol boys, is drifting away from its Nashville twang roots and invading the Top 40 of popular music. "A lot of what the Nashville people are looking for is what they call 'crossover hits country songs that make it on the pop charts. That's where the money is," said Dr. John Reed, a UNC sociology professor who is a country music fan. Charlie Daniels, Linda Ronstadt, Anne Murray and Mickey Gilley are just a few of the successful country crossover artists. Gilley's recent hit "Stand By Me" is a country version of a popular song of the early 1960s recorded by Ben E. King. "The country music industry lias tried to broaden its field," Reeii said. "They've made it slicker, less countrv. less ethnic." "Slicker" music has brought stringed and brn; instruments into the orchestration. But some country musicians are upset by the compromise of traditional country music, Reed said. Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings went to Texas to escape the popular influence and produce their own records. Their music includes a Western element instead. The Urban Cowboy craze also reveals a Western influence. Songs like Johnny Lee's "Lookin' for Love'" froni the sounctrack.pair traditional lyrics of drinking and unrequited love with slick orchestration. The tempo is perfect for customers in Western bars to dance the Texas Two-Step. "(Country music) has got sort of chic, and. you've got all these discos turning into Western clubs and nutting in bucking machines," Reed said. "A lot of people just don't like disco," he said. "They had to find something else to listen to. "Country music is about paying the bills, not liking the job, adultery. It's about problems that are grown up. V.'s not about partying. It's a different set of sock-.', assumptions." Paul Gold, production director and disc jockey at WRBX i.i Durham, said he still plays old country favorites, like Loretta Lynn's "Coal Miner's Daughter," and many of the new releases are in the traditional country style. "There are the same( boozing, running around, my-baby's-running-oui-nn-me kind of songs," he said. The ' three standard elements of traditional country music, Reed said, were family, religion and crime. Johnny Paycheck sings about all three in "I'm the Only Hell My Mama Ever Raised." Gold believes that lyrics now dwell on the hard times. But they are alsd'a reflection of the past and . a comment on the present," in songs like Tom T. Hall's "Back When Gas Was Thirty Cents a Gallon." "I think the mood is optimistic," he said. "You can detect a rise of patriotism." DTETD rn n n Caieimd elli Public service anrouncements must be turned in at the box outside the DTH offices in the Carolina Union by 1 p.m. if they are to run the next day. Each item will be run at least twice.. TODAY'S ACTIVITIKS The Health Sciences Job Fair wilt be held loday in Carringion and Berryhill halls. The Granville Charter of Inter-Varsity Christisa Fellowship will be having a chapter meeting at Chapel of the ' Cross on "Dating and Relationships." Fee! free to come after the BlueWhite game. The Christian Legal Society will meet at noon in Seminar A at the Law School. Attorney Darl Fowler of Greensboro will be the guest speaker. All are welcome. Duke Hillel is sponsoring a shabbat dinner services and Israeli folk dancing, today at 6 p.m. This exciting evening is free of charge, and car pools leave the UNC Hillel House at 5:30. Come and have fun! The Pledge Class of Alpha Phi Omega is holding a bake sale from 10 to 2 in front of the Y Building. Proceeds will finance a field day arid cookoul for the Big and little Buddies. Cakes, cookies and brownies will be sold. COMING EVENTS Saturday morning services at Hillel will be' held Nov. 8 beginning at 10. There will be a study session with Rabbi Schlesinger following services at 1 1 a.m. The study session . will be followed by a short service and kiddush. Hillel is located at 210 W. Cameron Ave. The North Carolina Herpetological Society will hold its fall meeting this Saturday in Raleigh. Anyone interested in reptiles and amphibians is invited to attend. Meeting will feature guest speakers, workshops and Herps. Come at 10 a.m. to the N.C. Museum of Natural History in Raleigh. The North Campus Chapter of Inter-Varsity will meet to decide on exec leadership positions this Sunday at 9 p.m. in the conference room of Chapel of the C ross.. Present exec members, AG leaders and interested members are urged to X AIESEC officers meeting Please be there. Meet at 8:30 p.m. Sunday at Kat's house. The Student Nurses' Association will have a meeting Monday from 12-1 p.m. in Carringion Hall. Interested freshmen and sophomores are invited to attend. Toward Consciousness An Introduction lo self-study. Gurdjieff Method is presented by the Institute for Self-Study at 8 p.m. in the Club room of the Carolina Inn. Registration is $53. Move over Satan, King's Kids b coming through. Come to our Bible study and prayer group to learn with us how to be Doers of the Word. We are a spirit-filled group endeavoring to know God's Word. Call for information at 8 p.m. Monday nights. The MEDIA BOARD will meet at 5 p.m. Monday in 321 Greenlaw. ZETA BETA TAU and ALPHA DELTA PI will sponsor their annual BLOOD DRIVE on Nov. 11 in the Pit. Please dona it doesn't hurt! - ' . Practice interview sessions with a counselor will be held from 10-4 p.m. Tuesday. Call or drop in 21 1 Hanes to make . an appointment for a one-hour session, 933-6507. Sessions involve videotaping and critique of a practice interview. The weekly Hillel Lox and Bagel Brunch will be held Sunday at II a.m. Cost is $2.50 for affiliates and $3 for non affiliates. Following brunch. Dr. Joseph Tulchin, history professor al UNC, will speak on "Jews in Latin America." The James Action Committee will meet Sunday at 3 p.m. in 922 James, it is imperative that all members be in attendance. New members are invited. L'NC Cycling Club will meet Sunday at Carr Mill Mall at 12. All calibers of riders welcome., Occupational Health Seminar: Shelley Tyl, researcher for Chemical Industries Institute of Toxicology, will speak on "Tevalological Testing: The Need, The Tests, The Future." . Pre-professional students and health care personnel are invited to join. Meet at 1 p.m. Monday in room 103 Berryhill Hall. The Student Coramittee on Crime Awareness and Prevention will hold its first organizational meeting Monday at 3 p.m. in room 207 of the Carolina Union. All students with an emotional or intellectual interest are urged to attend. The Ackland Art Museum will present an exhibit of master photographers at 2:30 Sundays in room 115. These exhibits will be on film. ITEMS OF INTEREST We need hosts and hostesses, waiters and waitresses and . sales clerks for the Campus Y Handicrafts Bazaar to be held Dec. 5-7 in Great Hall. All interested persons can sign up in . room 102 of the Y building. No experience necessary. Applications for Homecoming Queen may now be picked up in Suite C or 106 Lewis Dorm. For more information, call Charlie Brown, CAA President at 933.-1515. VVH1 the Oceans Survive? Dr. Dirk Frankenburg, on the marine biology curriculum, will be offering his opinions and asking for yours at the Friday evening Dinner Discussioa starting at 5:30 at the home of Jim Smallcy. Sign up at the Campus Y. There will be an Organ Recital at the Duke Chapel Sunday at 5:00 p.m. featuring Marie-Claire Alain, the celebrated French organ virtuoso and renowned recording artist. Public invited and free admission. Officials. ..still need soccer officials.. .grail mural basketball begins in two weeks.. .all persons interested in officiating grail mural contact Rick Fair, superintendent of 'officials, 933-1 153. ..pay minimum, hours flexible, outstanding performance awarded by membership iri the UNC Officials Association. Faculty-siaff...fs volleyball in progress. ..persons interested in serving as volunteer liaisons . for a University department in fs program, contact Rob Frye. Due to electrical services, the Carolina I'nion will aot - open until 8:30 a.m. Friday. Student Legal Services Advisory Board seeks an undergraduate student interested in a minimum of at least two years service as a board member. Contact SLS, Suite A of the Union, or at 933-1303 if interested. The Carolina I nioa proudly announces MOTHER'S FINEST, in concert Thursday, Nov. 13 at 8 p.m. in UNC's Memorial Hall. Tickets are $6.50, available through the Carolina Union Box Office. If li3F8.nHHG studento Iielp with FeGearcti Three librarians in the Undergraduate Library are available Monday through Friday to help students plan term paper research and suggest appropriate resources. Student? must sign up a day in advance by giving their names, topics and courses, said Gill Debreczeny, one of the two research librarians in the Undergraduate Library. David Taylor, the head librarian, and Myrna Schwartz, the other research librarian, conduct consultations along with Debreczeny. Consultation service also is offered in the graduate library for students with more advanced research backgrounds or more extensive needs than the Undergraduate Library provides. TIM PRESTON 9CHEDERBOB fossexltFWT &St Sutton to address ivories nop WCS-IL Lcta Shows cri il on I A lm.z Brock Classic "Silent F.'.ovio" a wwta iww 0 W 'I a film by CLAU 02 LELOUCH V 7:30 9:30 Crystal Lee Sutton, the woman whose life story became the basis of the Academy Award-winning movie Norma Rae, will speak here Saturday on her experiences as a North Carolina textile worker who helped bring a union to the mill where she worked. She will speak after the showing of Norma Rae at 7:30 p.m. in 100 Hamilton Hall. Sutton's sneech will clirmx a weekend -. .,r!rM y-v M If Unr tot lh1 'UJiuuMJii uuui cat auu workshops. 4 ' The workshops will begin at noon Friday in room 213 of the Carolina Union and continue Saturday in 101 Greenlaw. Friday's symposium will feature William Winpinsinger, International Association of Machinists leader who walked out of the Democratic Convention this summer in protest of President Jimmy Carter's nomination. It also will include movies, talks and entertainment about labon The symposium is free and open to the public. 11 mssssm tnvncp $ 1111 jnQfjQnnoAon Vincent Canby, New York Times )yyyyWvV AAAAAAAAAA iL VakJ Li kaiiiii tiVii JUOuOOOOu 1-m m tm - m fci.iiiiii'l sml Lj B Jrv rcyyWyWW -Gene Shalit, N3C-TV WifWWy VxWxXXXxX) SS rir - V r ir OwOWW oOOOOOwOOO Richard Freedman. Newhouse Newspapers ft I XntYxxxxx jwmi . . f mrm m m UiMUk t y iat te ni APPEARING LIVE Ho v. 7 nn KETCH QUAHTET ' 9:45-1:00 A.M. $2.00 at the Door 4Q5 IV. Main . Ccrrbcro WALT DISNEY'S r ... I r 1 T i- r 1 1 ' ' 1 1 W f I 3s Saturday Matinee Sat. Nov. 8 11 ain. 502 w ID Carroll IteVL A 3i lC'W Presentation 1 r rM Nf ir j ptlTT THEATRE REDUCED ADMISSION : .r ! TICKETS ACCEPTED AT ALL ATTRACTIONS Jt ("Hero's looking at tho Carolina Lato Shows, Kid! Burt Reynolds Kris Kristofferson Jai Clayburgh -m J6 W5 V .J Fri. & Sat. Ut3 show zX 11:30 pjn. PETER FALK ANN-MARGARET Kcil Simon's .r Fri. & Sat. U.3 Lhc-.v 11:45 prrt.. I t! 3 00 5.19 ijj V 1 v,m AVi'A f i f f I ft i f I ; s ? i f j : ' 1 1 i) j Jf '. r , f k ; i tlj it' ' 1 , n u : i i n u ; s t I i 5 I THE'AVAICENINGi ,.. ... I . j "l -- p - f I tI3 ' v v .- 3 l.3 j. i.C: ::: CI VX Un:: ra r'.;:. ;r .it." rt;irAvt ':r.3ir- :i-tzzv c: , o t r r ' . iy r c . t. ? i r ;t : -t v r c fi " ' : i " -otvt'. iM.'.f, ,t, : z' . Tctc;:: ill i . . - ...1 i HELD OVER 3RD V.'didU 3:15 5:15 7:15 0:1r n f r . . j: n . , ';jt;; z t r z. . fete:.:. i i - : . I iUHT in THH CI ( 11 . i jt
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 7, 1980, edition 1
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