2 Monday, March 5, 2001 Survey Says...! Carolina Dining Service would like to thank the 1548 students and 529 faculty/staff who filled out the Dining Service Market Research Survey in December 2000. CDS would like to congratulate the winners of \ the drawing for a DVD player or color TV: Adam Dyer Lindsay Withers Look for changes to our facilities and improvement in our services from the information we learned. , . . toy Held cift Hmfa fountair^od^peciaj! Carolina Dining Service invites you to take note of Duke’s sorry final score on Sunday. In support of | -Slat the Tar Heels, CDS will feature 20 oz. fountain w beverages at the price of the final score the week of mfl II V March 3rd-March 9th at Lenoir Mainstreet, South mUJJ A ISm Campus Mini Mart, Cafe McColl and Tar Heal Cafe. W GO HEELS! Arts Jazz Legend Energizes Memorial By Joanna Pearson Staff Writer Great musical performances can be quite different experiences. Some music is played at you. Great jazz, however, seems to be more of a musical exchange -a con versation between musicians that the audience is lucky enough to over hear. Sonny . — -^.concert) //ev/ewr Sonny Rollins Friday, March 2 Memorial Hall ★★★★★ Rollins, then, is a master at the art of musical conversation. His concert, which was part of both the 2001 Carolinajazz Festival and the Carolina Union Performing Arts Series, was nothing short of incredible. Rollins and the rest of the band put on a pow erful show that was as energetic as it was unassuming. Rollins, one of the last representatives of jazz’s golden age, trained on the tenor sax under Thelonius Monk. Rollins’ contemporaries included Jackie McLean, Kenny Drew and Art Taylor, Campus Calendar Today 3:15 p.m. - Career Clinic Workshop: Learn how to make an informed choice of college major on the third floor of Student Health Service. 4 p.m. - The Triangle Computer Science Distinguished Lecturer Series will feature Dr. John Knight from the University of Virginia. Knight will speak on “Survivability of Critical Infrastructure Systems.” The event will take place in 011 ~u— TODAY Carolina Men’s Tennis vs. Charlotte Tennis Center 3 pm TTsirriAP’Q SPORTS SHORTS VAwCO Students & Faculty Admitted FREE w/ID! and he recorded tracks with Babs Gonzales and Miles Davis before the age of 20. Now, as he approaches 71, Rollins is still a dynamo on the stage. “Someone told me, ‘Sonny, you’re getting old,’” he told the audience. “I said, ‘I know, I don’t even buy green bananas from the grocery store any more.’” Rollins, however, seems to just be getting started. As he strolls around the stage in his dark suit and dark glasses with his white beard, Rollins is so cool he defies the very slang of cool. But when you see him start snapping his lin gers and bobbing his head with the other players or pumping his fist tri umphantly after a great riff, it’s hard not to think, “This man is a badass!” And he is, though even that word is too weak to describe how Rollins rolls notes from his sax, moving with the instrument as if he’s dancing with a woman. Rollins was accompanied on stage by a piano, trombone, bass and drums, and together, the group had a definite rap Sitterson Hall following at reception in the lower lobby. 4 p.m. - The Mangelsdorf Distinguished Lecture Series presents Dr. Paul Ewald of Amherst College. Ewald will speak on “The evolution of virulence and antibiotic resistance in diarrheal diseases" (Or, “Adventures in the Land of Ooze”) in 201 Coker Hall. 5:45 p.m. - Human Rights Week is less than a month away! Come out and help to start wrapping up plans for HRW with Campus Y’s Globe Committee. We will be meeting in the Qlfy? Sailg alar Hrri port. As the trombonist picked up the melody and then tossed it over to the piano for a response, or back to Rollins, the group seemed so lost in its musical banter that at times it was almost obliv ious to the audience. So if true genius is making something look easy, Rollins plays jazz with the same casual mastery with which some one has a street conversation. As the band played songs like Thelonius Monks’ “Reflections” or Rollins’ tribute to Charlie Mingus, “Charles M,” it was hard not to feel nostalgic for jazz leg ends’ mythologized world of smoky clubs, Harlem neighborhoods and the like. Even Memorial Hall, completely packed with a sold-out crowd, felt some how smaller and more intimate when filled with the warm notes of Rollins’ sax. And Rollins, though he played with truly nonchalant brilliance, was reward ed with multiple standing ovations. The Arts & Entertainment Editor can be reached at artsdesk@unc.edu. lobby of the Campus Y, so come out and get involved! 7 p.m. - The Association of English Majors offers “Dinner and a Movie” in 222 Greenlaw Hall. Come munch on free pizza and watch the French film “Ridicule” then stay for a discussion of the movie with Professor Thomas Stumpf of the Department of English. 7:30 p.m. - Clarke Bynum, who has appeared on “Dateline” and “Montel” for saving an airplane from a terrorist, will be speaking at Fellowship of Christian Athletes. It will be a wonderful time of fellow ship. Everyone is welcome to meet at in the Kenan Field House. For more information visit our Web site at go.to/uncfca. 7:30 p.m. - The Confederate Flag: A symbol of Southern heritage? Or a sign of racial oppression? Join repre sentatives from the NAACP, Black Student Movement, student govern ment and Students for the Advancement of Race Relations for a forum on the Confederate flag in 111 Carroll Hall. itrily Ear Heel Monday, March 5,2001 Volume 109, Issue 7 RO. Box 3257. Chapel Hill. NC 27515 Matt Dees, Editor, 962-4086 Advertising & Business, 962-1163 News, Features, Sports, 962-0245