The Tar HeelThursday, July 17, 198621 The atres pro vide br o ad range lull .5 1 f 0 t .i-'mniiiwmn-)mm"n "fc"""uiini 'yn ,iniiy"lHt"''gl . vs w. v- f" w " " T QiWiJftwiuilili-iiliMtiWirfiTiin-in-ffTniH in nun ii A t ' I ; f 1 "ii fttti at is """VviWV.-.A 3 Sift CTli to Tar Heel Christopher Baroudi The Varsity Theater on Franklin Street By CATHERINE COWAN Staff Writer Whether your cinematic taste leads you to the decadent entertainment of "Meatballs II" or the cultural bril liance of "Ran," there are several movie theaters in town and out that can serve you. The oldest theater in Chapel Hill is the Carolina Blue and White. Located on the corner of Franklin and Columbia next to Top of the Hill, the Carolina shows first-run feature films such as "About Last Night" and "Karate Kid II." Tickets sell at $4 with a discount price of $2.75 for the very first showing of a new movie, said Tim Sherill, assistant manager. The Carolina was built in 1944 and originally had piano players and other live entertainment before films. There was a different movie every day, and the manager, E.C. Smith, was a important figure in Chapel Hill. The theater was split into a two screen operation in 1976, Sherill said. Another favorite Chapel Hill theater is the Varsity, located on Franklin Street next to the Intimate Bookshop. Shows are $4.50, with $3 matinees playing before 6 p.m. on weekdays. Pat Manning, an employee at the . Varsity, said the theater shows mostly art and foreign films. The Varsity used to be one theater until it was bought out by Janus Co., which turned it into an art house and made it a duplex. One theater no one can forget is the Union Auditorium. The Union shows over 200 different movies during the school year and summer, most of which are free with a UNC I.D., said Robin Whiteside, outgoing film committee chairman. The sche dule of films includes recent features, classics and foreign films, with special speakers sometimes featured before a film. Movies are planned by students on the Film Committee, one of the 1 1 student-run committees within the Carolina Union, which is looking for new members for the fall. Schedules of fall movies will be available during registration. Other theaters in Chapel Hill are the Ram Triple, located on Rosem ary Street next to Molly Maguire's, and Plaza Theater on Elliott Road in Kroger Plaza. Special discounts at these theaters include a $2 Tuesday bargain night at the Ram, and $2.50 matinees on weekdays until 6 p.m. at the Plaza. Both theaters show first run features. Two theaters out of town may be of special interest to students. The Carolina Theater, located in down town Durham, is famous for its showing of current art films. Opened in 1926 as a public auditorium, the theater is now a historic landmark, said manager Stephen Barefoot. While you are there, you can enjoy a beer or glass of wine from the theater's ballroom upstairs. RIDE WITH I'UE HAVE A SPACE FOR YOU There are 12 bus routes serving all parts of the University, Chapel Hill and Carrboro. From school to shopping to home. Chapel Hill Transit can get you there. . Busses run all day long, with service available on some routes at nights until after midnight and on weekends. It costs just 50C to ride the bus and only 250 on campus routes. As a UNC student you can save an additional 15 to 45 by purchasing a bus pass. For more information on bass passes, call the UNC Traffic Office at 962-3951. FOR MORE INFORMATION ON BUS ROUTES AND SCHEDULES CALL CHAPEL HILL TRANSIT AT 968-2769. 7 j "" " 111 ;vxXw.v.v.v..v.....v.v.v.."...v v.v.v.v.j-it.M mmw i i - The Rialto Theater is the oldest independent single-screen operation in Raleigh. The theater shows clasr sics, independent and foreign films, and no film stays for longer than orte week, said owner Roy Harp. Often playing is a double feature of movies by the same director or with the same themes, and sometimes the theater plays an entire film festival of one director's work. The Rialto opened in 1939, and Harp has owned it since 1980. Special discounts include $ 1 off the normal admission price of $3.50 for students showing their I.Ds and a non-expiring book of ten tickets for $20. A monthly schedule of movies is available at the theater, and The Spectator magazine regularly lists the Rialto's showings. Harp said as many students drive to the theater from Chapel Hill and Durham as come from N.C. State. "I like to think of the Rialto as cinema education," Harp said. "We put things on that are considered to be cinema masterpieces and show them on the big screen in their original state as they were meant to be." 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