Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 11, 1982, edition 1 / Page 6
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" yiir"rjii'"''rnr"iir"t ,1 6The Daily Tar HeelMonday. October 11, 1982 .hake: a band of four Bruno 7 From page i UNG musical buddies By LIZ LEVINE Staff Writer Three UNC seniors and one sophomore who have combined their musical talents to form the band Shake will be appearing at The Station tonight. The band's current musical style is called "dancewave" by lead guitarist Jonathan Mudd. Over the summer, they performed in the Triangle area under the name Uncle Sam, "As Uncle Sam we were playing lots of jazz. Then we began to concentate, on making people jump up and down," Mudd said last Monday. "We like to see everyone smiling and sweating." In addition to Mudd, a senior from Washington, D.C., the band consists of seniors John Buckley of Raleigh on keyboards, Tim Harper of Durham on bass guitar, and sophomore Carlton Miles of Durham on drums. The band alternates singers. ' Both Mudd and Buckley emphasized that the four of them are close friends onstage and off. "We party together and everything," Buckley said. . Yc- 01 Waffiie Shop . Open 7 days a wceli until 11 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 7 a.m. -11 p.m. Sun. 9 a.m. -11 p.m. Serving omelets, burgers and daily specials (TWfY 75) VW AJ No. 1 Sizzlin with baked potato or' french files and texas toast. QKLT .99" ALL DAY MONDAY STEAK WE PUT IT ON 324 Rosemary The last word tai Win - i t I ,1 i 'J . - ) .1 - -; if f X,."--' , j f " i As well as getting along with each other, the band members pride themselves on a strong rapport with the" audience, upon which they depend for both approval and criticism. 5 "We have a lot of dedicated followers," Buckley said. "Most of our friends will tell us if we played good." "Or well," Mudd corrected. Buckley ignored him. "But it's nice to get strangers' opinions," he said. . Their current repertoire consists of 'songs by the Police, the Kinks, Santana, the Producers and the Doors. They also include several original songs. "We've gotten a very good response to our original material," Mudd said. "We've put our concentration into honing and stying our own songs. I feel we have our own style emerging." Buckley explained how a basic idea for a song becomes translated into a finished production. "One of us comes up with a rough idea of a song and submits it to the rest of the band. Then we work on it. The song is sort of like a bowl of Jell O it starts out as water and begins to gel." "And then someone throws in some fruit cocktail," Mudd said. Do 1 FOR Sirloin &, TUESDAY BOUSE THE PLATE Chapel Hill -:' a a .)..-. ....vi-. - i.-f 1 .7 ; , in first quality mensweao coilMlM ThellubLfcd. Crabtree Valley Mall, Raleigh 919782-0637 Franklin Street, Chapel Iktl 919929-0343 Big & Tall, Crabtree Valley Mall, Raleigh 919782 - -4. !, ; it" " ' " X ::- ? v r .' , if .7 . ft K . . . J . I t i ' ' .7 1 -- ? ,,..,,..roMI..mrf ' Shsko will perform tonight at Tho Station in Csrrboro ... Jonathan Mudd, Tim Harper, John Buckley, Carlton Miles Buckley laughed. "I like the pears," he said. "And then we play around with it and work out an arrangement. We all have a lot of input. The original idea is always radically different from the final product." By May, the band plans on having 10 original songs completed. Then they hope to cut a demo tape, make some videotapes and take them to New York City. In November, The Shake will be playing outside the Triangle area for the first time. Dave Robert, their agent at Moonlight Recording, booked the band in South ZJtio all QMsai3 os?o Vfoo ccmo. Is a difficult decision tli&b's made easier the women of the Fleming Center. Counselors are available day and night to support and understand you. Comfort, safety-, orivacy. and a friendly staff . . . that's what the Fleming Center is all about. T7p to 18 weslss Call 731-OOBO tlay or xd&at Tlxo gloinltrig Center xnslxcs tlio difcrcriC3. : Are you considering nmypm IQHfJ F. SCHOOL OF GOUERnr.lEHT Is looking for future leaders in Public Affairs. Come learn about Harvard's two-year master's program in Public Policy, leading to either the Master in Public Policy or City and Regional Planning Degree. Meet With: Date: Contact: ' Madeleine Assistant All students, all majors, all years welcome. Joint degree programs offered with Harvard's other professional schools. V-.: : 1 4. ... t 0637 If I Carolina, Virginia and Washington, D.C. Classes appear to have a low priority compared with the band. "Our priorities are definitely with the band," Mudd said. "But we'll graduate," Buckley, a history major, said; "As a matter of fact, I'm applying to law school." But the band members' futures are definitely musically-oriented. "Ten years from now, I think we'd all like to have a number of albums behind us," Mudd said. "In the last four months, things have really taken off. We're attract ing a bigger and bigger crowd. I. don't think we're pipe-dreaming." , professional school? utii verity KENNEDY Thomas to the Program Director Tuesday, Oct. 12th Career Placement Office for further information and location of session. u" EL1IVL..W1 GIVE TO THE ,, . AMERICAN IX CANCER SOCIETY. f This spoce contributed as o public service. 1 I BARGAIN MATINEES $2.00 DAILY TILL 6 PM 3:10 5:10 7:10 9:10 Peter O'Toole My Favorite Year pG) 2:15 4:40 7:05 9:30 ( Richard Gere An Officer and a Gentleman r) 2:30 4:45 7:00 DOLBY STEREO Lnciano Pavarotti Yes, Giorgio pg 9:20 only DOLBY STEREO Pink Floyd the Wall r 1 r' ?iM" :ia:iiHr Discount Tickets Avaiiabio at Student Union Held Over ,7:00 Again! 9:15 viv PG CAS1 FKt H STHUT 2:30 Lovg. Destiny. Heroes. 4:45 War Changes Everything. 15 nchow mi - - y ceeded. He would have been a better man if he had tried to be himself." Of the three candidates, Bruno said, "Bobby was more sensitive to the issues, John was more of a politician and LBJ was a pure political animal." Student involvement in presidential campaigns has also changed, Bruno said. "(When I started) I used students to make signs and build crowds. In the early 60s I found a captain of a football team to get the whole team presenting John Kennedy with a football; I also tried to get the band. I could get more students that way." In the 60s all movements generated from the campuses civil rights, the anti war movement, the fight to change tba voting age to 18, Bruno said. "Robe -i Kennedy said (the campuses) were where the action was. There, a difference could be made, for there was where the future leaders were. It was then that my direction changed; I got leaders from campuses in stead of signmakers." Bruno said, that students today also realize that they will have to solve current problems, that they will be the leaders of tomorrow. Bruno's other contact with students has been in lecturing on college campuses about his experiences with campaigning and his relationship with John Kennedy and teaching a course in grass roots politics. "I have no idea of theory," he said. "I told (the students) how I was able to draw a crowd of 20,000 or what it was like to sit with John F. Kennedy in a meeting not political theory." grades Grade inflation has been a dilemma for. University officials since the middle 1970s, says Samuel Williamson, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. He attributes the upsurge to the incorporation of pass-fail grading and to better prepared students. Williamson says administrators concerned about grade, inflation have written letters and c 4 1 I VII' - THE Daily Crossword by John H. Hales ACROSS 24 Beincon 1 Party for skterato msn 28 Use soap 5 Johnson, and water the comic 27 Pointed ' 9 Eskimo instrument vehicle 30 At-sea 13 Irish confinement Gaelic 31 Ave 14 Close by, 32 Philosopher to poets tzu . 15 Minute 33 "Let us amount have faith 16 Odetspiay that " 19 Counts - 37 Equal: pre!. 20 Entrance 33 More astute fees, of 39 Avant- ' a kind gardlsts 21 Unctuous 40 Confronted 22 Hemingway, 41 "Yes, " to intl- 42 African mates , capital Saturday's Puzzle Solved: I P I A I L S rl G" LIAIRI ET1 S IWfATB E Q U I JR E D A N u TOUR 1 U. N. N. I A N. 0. SJT VI N. 1 1 l IS A GIOLj C A R Ef sTa t TTFiQj a r l o TL0.W a r a irTc r o o n ,nr P 0 B R 1 GJH j f E R W EfA T H E R ion '"TaTrI d e I n TTon.sj E WiTi J I Elf iPlA LEST . ;.ioMfAlAR'r trTa i nT,,'1 a r p e g g iTo WARMANjD CLEARING 1 i n. " 1 a ii r. "jk. l 1 l in eIwIsIjtIrIaInIsLMa t e 101182 1 12 3 n I 5 6 7 18 -T9 j)0 j1t 12 IF"" iuT ' lis IF" IF ' Tr-" "TF""""" 1 : ! " 20 : ' .t. -.U..J-- wmmmmm tm mmmmm wmmm i.niimniipw.." -.fi-jwKBiii hmhp wmmmmm hbumbp.u.S. pwwwjii. SUwwwmpji 21 122 23 mmmXmmmJ-r-t i I 30 31 j32 33 3FT3F" " " " ' ir " "3a. - 13 ! ' HHHMHMI mMMP BMHMi MMffi .... '(ffllii'wi Hi BflMHHIHi HaHMBiM ?flGt0B!B& 48 I 41 ' I ' rH3; I " ir " " " ... j : iF " "" ' -Ppp. . . - ----. 52 ' " ' 535T "" """ "" " " ' 55" . . 7 - .. ,M - - ;4 1 1 i rnTr r 1 I 1 1S82 Tribune Company Syndicate, AH Rights Reserved Now Bruno's life is more relaxed since he came to Chapel Hiii lour years ago to direct the Pi Beta Phi house. "Walking the halls of the Pi Phi house is not quite the same as walking the aisles of Air Force One," he said, "but it's a very enjoyable change." Bruno is not currently in politics although he would like to be more active. He would also like to help at UNC. "I have a lot of time. I would like to be an ad viser so that I could help students in some way." As for the future of the Democratic par ty and politics in general, Bruno said he was overwhelmed and disillusioned. "The candidates are not addressing the issues. . Next year there will have to be a change in direction. The party will have to realize where its strength lies and address the problems people face, like student aid, unemployment and help for the elderly and working class. Unless it changes, they (the Democratic candidates) will suffer defeat." ' . y'-, ;, Bruno emphasized the need for personal campaigning in the 1984 election. Democrats would have to conduct person-to-person campaigns to defeat Republicans like Sen. Jesse Helms, who use the media extensively, he said. Media campaigning tends to distort the facts according to Bruno, who blamed reporters for not seeking questions on specific issues. "The voters have to get their news from 30- or .60-second (com mercial) spots instead of journalism," he said. "The public suffers by this. I have no remedy for this lack of addressing the issues, but the people are being cheated." From page 1 spoken directly to professors with questionable grading patterns. While professors' grading pat terns "are not ignored," he says the University is reluctant to tell them what kind of grades to give. - "That's the function of academic freedom," Williamson says. m 11'- 44 B'rith 45 Ship's pole 48 "The 49 Musical variation 52 Hemingway book 56 Sole 57 Lizard 58 Drudgery 59 Inquires 60 Toy on a string 61 Vortex DOWN 1 Use a needle 2 Mine car 3 Eastern 1 land mass 4 Become inflexible 5 Infuriated 6 Kin of umps 7 Chinese creative principle . 8 Go wrong 9 Tuscany - cultural center 10 Barn area 11 Cigar end 12 "Happy-, are here..." 14 Anoint, old style 17 Inflamma tion: suff. 18 "The Rise of Silas" 22 Kitchen , gadget 23 Saie words 24 Revolt 25 Prejudiced one 28 Arouse 27 Horatio 28 Cry of " exuberance 29 Buiiding sites 30 Point of overflow 31 Kenya people 34 Pang 35 Insulation material 36 Novice 42 Magna 43 Concerning 44 Uncovers 45 Port in Sweden 46 High time 47 Airborne objects 48 Thin-bodied 49 Be sportive 50 Walked 51 Along with 53 "The -of All Flesh" 54 Self-esteem 55 Tricky Inc. 101112 J -1 .1 11 Vo o I " f1 f i.Ti ? fif ll if -
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 11, 1982, edition 1
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