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6The Daily Tar HeelFriday, April 2, 1982 UNC-G ballet team to highlight concert Crum harvests bumper crop of recruits By KEITH KING SUff Wrilfr The highlight of the Chapel Hill Ballet Company's annual spring concert will be a guest appearance by The UNC-G Dance Troupe. The Troupe will perform Save Me The Waltz, a piece about the lives of Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald. Originally choreographed by Emily Adams, the performance will use the styles of pre depression America to trace the Fitzgeralds' rise to fame and subsequent fall from grace in Hollywood. The company's, concerts will be scheduled for Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. Adams, a guest choreographer from UNC-Greensboro, developed The After Image for the' com pany. A contemporary ballet, the piece uses opposing colors of the color wheel, focusing on 12 dancers reverse-imaging between blue and orange on an empty stage. A new ballet, Idyll, by Duncan Noble, assistant dean and director of the dance division of the North Carolina School of the Arts, follows classical tradition, featuring seven dancers dressed in white moving in and out of dreamlike sequences. No- nle has worked on Broadway with such performers as Jack Cole, Agnes de Mille and Jerome Robbins. The Company, now it its fourth year, will showcase many new performers this year. Six of the 14 dancers will be perform ing with the company for the first time. Jessica Abrams, a junior at Chapel Hill High School, has had eight years of ballet and four years of jazz dancing. Another young member, Catherine Green, a freshman at Durham Academy, has studied ballet for eight years. A dancer w ith less experience is UNC student Tim Middleton. A math major, Middleton has been studying dance for less than nine months. Linda Pleasants, a sophomore at Chapel Hill High School, Dean Ritts, a sophomore at Duke Univeristy and Melody Eggen, a choreographer and teacher, are also newcomers. Company verterans are UNC master's degree can didate Jed Frees, UNC sophomore Jessica Gardner, Duke University graduate and employee Sarah Hunt, Duke im munology doctorate degree candidate Catherine Koo, Duke psychology doctorate degree candidate Pam Lester, Phillips Junior High student Elizabeth Long, gynecologist Elliot Pack and North Carolina Memorial Hospital researcher Jacqueline Zinn. Hillel Foundation Jewish arts festival ends The North Carolina Hillel Foundation is sponsoring a Jewish Arts Festival which will end in a whirlwind of activities this weekend. The photography exhibit A Disappear ing Community: Jewish Life on New York's Lower East Side, which opened in the upstairs gallery of the Carolina Union last Tuesday, continues through Sunday, April 4. Rabbi Mickey Shur, Hillel director at Queens College, will be the special guest for Shabbat dinner, services and Oneg, beginning at 6:30 tonight. A coffeehouse, featuring Mickey Shur billed as "The Jewish Minstrel," will be held Saturday, April 3 at 9 p.m. at the Duke University East Campus Coffee house. Events will conclude Monday with an address by novelist Chaim Poto1 . author of such works as The Chosen and The Promise. Potok will speak at 8 p.m. in the Von Canon Hall of Bryan Student Center on the West Campus of Duke University. Harmony groups to hold concert The Clef Hangers and the Loreleis, two UNC student music groups specializing in close harmony, will present their spring concert at 8 tonight in Memorial Hall. The Clef Hangers, fifteen men who have been a fixture on campus, perform at the Union Film Committee's Saturday matinees and in Hill Hall Auditorium; they even deliver singing birthday telegrams. The Loreleis are composed of nine UNC women who created a female counterpart to the Clef Hangers last-year. Both groups have been popular on cam pus. The concert will feature such songs as "Sentimental Journey," "Shenandoah" and "Why Do Fools Fall in Love?" Ad-, mission will be $1; tickets may be bought at the door, at the Union desk, and in the Pit. First thing in the morning... read all about Tar Heel sports on the sports pages I Up to date sports alway s in The Daily Tar Heel By R.L. BYNUM Staff Writer While most recruiting news is focused on basketball, Carolina's football pro gram is enjoying what many observers say is the best recruiting year in the country and perhaps the finest in the school's history. Coach Dick Crum's fourth recruiting class at Carolina a 23-player crop is highlighted by six Parade Magazine All-Americans, more than any other school. Crum, who doesn't like comparing recruiting classes, said he thought his staff put together "a good year re cruiting. We have some good youngsters with good talent. Whether they play right away will depend on how they make the adjustment in the classroom and on the field." Crum's recruiting strategy is not to look for players to fill positions, but to get the best athletes available. Three of his recruits though, play positions which were vacated by graduating seniors. . The departure of outside linebacker Calvin Daniels and inside linebackers Lee Shaffer and Darrell Nicholson, all starters, leaves a few big question marks on defense. ' Although he may not play immedi ately, Wilson Beddingfield High's six-foot-four inch, 240-pound Dennis Bar ron, who prefers outside linebacker, may provide one answer. Barron is fast for his size; he was clocked at 4.8 in the 40-yard dash. He played tight end and defensive tackle for Beddingfield and also set school records in the discus and the shot put while wrestling for two years. Sought by Clemson, N.C. State,, Oklahoma, SMU, Pittsburgh and Tenn essee, Barron has made a 98-100 percent recovery from surgery to repair liga ment damage late last season. Possibly Carolina's most prized catch, however, is Ohio (class 3A) Line-man-of-the-Year Arnold Franklin, who . will be vying for the tight end spot vacated by graduating starter Shelton Robinson. The six foot-three inch, 255-pound Franklin was snatched from under Ohio State's nose in what the Associated Press called a "big upset." He had also considered Notre Dame, UCLA, Pur due and LSU. With 4.6 speed in the 40-yard dash, Franklin caught 25 passes for 479 yards and seven touchdowns for Cincinnati's, Princeton High School. "He's a good student and a very skill ed athlete,?' Crum said. "He catches the ball very well and also has good ability to run with the ball after he catches it." . Also likely to have a shot at starting is a third All-America, six foot-two inch, 185-pound wide receiver Danny Burmeister from Oakton, Va. "He has great speed and catches the ball very well," Crum said. "I think de pending on what the other wide re ceivers do (Mark Smith, Victor Har rison, Larry Griffin and Earl Winfield) he could play some." Helping out kicker Brooks Barwick after the graduation of Jeff Hayes will be Parade's All-America place-docker Lee Gliarmis. Gliarmis (five foot-10 inch, 185), a place-kicker from Wilson Fike High, has a "good strong leg, and he's also very accurate," Crum said. Another All-America lineman is six foot-four inch, 250-pound Bill Viggers from East Burke High of Valdese, N.C. He will be tried out at offensive tackle. "He's a good, big offensive lineman, but he is very young. He'll be 17 when he gets here," Crum said. "He has a lot, of talent, but offensive linemen develop slower because it's the most difficult position to play." The final All-America is running back Walter Bailey (six foot, 185). The Tidewater Player-of-the-Year, Bailey is from Hampton, Virginia. Among the others, Fayetteville's Tim Morrison stands out. Crum said the 6-1, 180-pound wide receiver from. Terry Sanford High has "great speed and is highly skilled." Other players to attend Carolina in clude: Kevin Anthony (6-2, 175), Decatur, Ga.; Harris Barton (6-4, 220), Dunwoody, Ga.; C.A. Brooks (6-5, 212), Cincinnati; Ron Burton (6-2, 205), Richmond; Carl Carr (6-3, 195), Alex andria, Va.; Ed Fahey (6-312, 230), Glen Cove, N.Y.; Chuck Hinton (6-3, 220), Durham; Doug Hite (6-4, 200), Emporia, Va.; Mike Johnson (6-5, 240), Dover, Del.; Tim Murphy (6-4, 250), Jackson N.J.; Robert Pike (6-6, 245), Washington, D.C.; Tim Rorrer (6-2, 205), Hampton, Va.; Pat Sheehan (6-31z, 227), Princeton, N.J.; John Stone (6-4, 210), Stamford, Conn.; Eric Streater (5-10, 150), Sylva; and Dave Truitt (6-4, 205), Gaithersburh, Md. Crum emphasized that each recruit was "in the same position, not having been in the program yet," regardless of their previous accolades. "The other (non-All-America) youngsters are equally as good, and we wanted them just as badly," Crum said. herpes From page 1 mm a wmm The only color hardback book produced by the editors of The ACC Basketball Handbook, the nation's largest selling color basketball magazine. This special book will be approximately 1 50 pages long and will cover the entire North Carolina season. It is a must for every Carolina fan. It will be printed in a limited edition. This will be a souvenir that your children's children will enjoy reading. It will be printed only on the finest material available. You must act immediately. Once our print run is sold out there will be no more copies available. The UNC National Championship book is $19.95 plus $2.00 postage and handling. VISA and Master Charge customers call 1-800-ACC-UNC-1 toll free in North Carolina. (Please have your card ready when you call.) Or send your check to: UMI Publications, Inc, Box 30036, Charlotte, NC 28230. North Carolina residents add sales tax. Act now! Jaffe said no verifiable statistics were available on the incidence of genital herpes because herpes is largely an unreported disease. "There are certain diseases such as gonor rhea ana syphilis' that state laws require be .. reported to health departments, but no law re quires that herpes be reported," he said. But Peacock said some estimates of the disease's nationwide prevalence were CAROLINA SYMPOSIUM 1982 and Carmichael Lectures present DAVID HALBERSTAM Author of "The Best and the Brightest" "THE MEDIA: THE POWERS THAT BE" Mon., April 5 Memorial Hall 7:30 pm r BARGAIN MATINEES $2.00 'TILL PM MON.-FRI. ALL SCREENS HELD OVER 2nd WEEK! 2:45 4:55 7:05 9:15 STARTS TODAY! 2:15 4:45 7:15 9:45 mm Libby Tucker hitchhiked from Brooklyn to take Hollywood by storm. And her father by surprise. w (Pitfifl6 PG C1982 TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX m is Walter Matthau Ann-Margret "JULIE ANDREWS IS A DELIGHT!" David Arisen. NEWSWEEK "LEAVES YOU LAUGHING..: BLAKE EDWARDS' -Judrth Crist. SATURDAY REVIEW AMES GARNER'S COMICAL REACTIONS ARE WORTH 1,000 WORDS." Kathleen Carrol. NEW YORK DAILY NEWS 33 PS PG PARENTAL GUIDANCE SUfiGESTED SOtH MATERIAL MAY MOT M (MTAMJi K CMtUMS 3R IS 81 ifHiHiEiiisr1;! IttTRD GOLDWYH PRESfNTS ' oiidw iiiPTMiiiPTfinii" irpininiiiuiinnrii iirvvmnin MUD IIWIHifl UDttlftMi Mkwm i race mm Mi 000 TO IV llll IIP not r 1 H H !ul . 1 VI "WW I MGMUrMsd Artatl MICHAEL CAINE CHRISTOPHER REEVE DYAN CANNON The trap is set... For a wickedly funny who'll-do-it. ATHTRAF I in ira levin's "DEATHTRAP Executive Producer JAY PRESSON ALLEN Associate Producer ALFRED de LI AG RE, JR. Music by JOHNNY MANDEL Produced by BURTT HARRIS Screenplay by JAY PRESSON ALLEN Based on the stage play by IRA LEVIN QTART " Directed by SIDNEY LUMET 2:30 4:50 TODAY! PGPARENTAl GUIDANCE SUGGESTED SOMf MATFRtAl UAV WOT M SUITABLE Ofl CMUDftCN A WARNfc ft COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY .' ..-' if A- mjhv KrwW 7:10 9:30 J ii'- J. It'll available. "It's estimated that somewhere bet ween 300,000 to one million cases will occur during the next year." he said. Jaffee said the rate of occurence of venereal diseases had increased during the last ten years. He said one explanation was that the number of people in the age group of greatest risk, which is 15-30 years, has increased. The increase in sexual activity and tendency to have several sexual partners also could have led to the higher occurrence rate, he said. Peacock said the number of cases might also have increased because of well-informed doc tors. v "There is an increasing awareness of the disease among practicing physicians," Peacock said. "Thus, it may be more readily diagnosed." ' Burroughs Wellcome Co. will begin distributing acyclovir in an ointment form, under the brand name Zovirax, for $15-$20 per tube by April 28, Guilkey said. , Peacock said the t Division of Infectious Disease served as a center wliich conducted clinical trials on the drug. The division tested an intravenous form which should be released in four to eight weeks, he said. Z Carolina Union Presents with UNC Disc Club J m I April 3 & 4 ULTIMATE :frisbee : tournament Z on Carmichael Field 4TH SMASH WEEK! 3:15 5:15 7:15 9:15 R Fri.-Sat. Midnight AH seats $2.00 Rocky Horror Picture Show (R) ERROR-FREE TYPING The Electric Typist, A computer-controlled typing machine offers fast service, optional text analysis (number of words, number of different words, number of times word is used), computer checked error-free typing- 942-1067 ANYTIME N.C. toy manufacturing firm (creator of "Snoopy & the Red Baron mobiles, and solar-powered "Dream Machines") now hiring students from all 50 states to participate in new vacation marketing plan. Work at your own leisure in your own home territories over the summer and during school vacations. Pro duct painfully easy to market, work involving putting up mechanical . mobiles in toy and gift shops, taking orders. Commissions and profit sharing should net motivated stu dent $300.00 per week (for estimated 20-30 hours week in vested) and residuals on sales for re orders during the entire school year when you return to school. Summer income in $3,600 to $5,000.00 range plus residuals total $10,000.00 range, for work done during vaca tion. Call immediately for interview. Don't wait til summer positions in geographic areas limited. D.C.S. Toy Company, 164 S. Main SU High Point, N.C. 27260, Tel. 919887-3110.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 2, 1982, edition 1
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