Sunday, March 2S, 1965 Page 6 THE DAILY TAS HEEL With Written Comment 30 Artists Show Works At Ackland An art exhibition with a pur pose will be presented by Ack land Art Center starting Friday. The showing will be held in con nection with the Fine Arts Fes tival to be held here Tuesday through April 5. Clarifying the ideal relation ship between the university and the artist as a student or teach er will be the aim of Ackland's exhibition, according to the Fine Arts Festival Committee. Every artist participating has been associated with the art de partment of a university in one of these roles. Some of America's leading artists from the fields of sculp ture, lithography, printmaking and painting will have exhibits. Each of the more than 30 art ists has prepared a written com ment on the problem suggested by the exhibition's aim. The comments will appear with their exhibits. Ackland will open the exhibi tion at 5 p.m. Friday. At 3 that same afternoon Seymour Lip ton, a sculptor whose work is included in the show, will make an address in Carroll on the general theme of the Festival, "Encounter: Arts and the University." Some of the artists who will be included in the showing are: Lamarr Dodd, painter- and professor at the University . of Georgia; Leonard Baskin, sculptor and professor at Smith College; Jack Tworkov, painter and chairman of the art department at Yale School of Art and Ar chitecture; Roy Gussov, sculptor and pro fessor at North Carolina State University. . Ackland Art Center is open Tuesdays through Saturdays lb a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sundays 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Beethoven On WUNC WUNC Radio will present a "Beethoven Spectacular" begin ning at 1 p.m. today. Featuring the best of Ludwig von Beethoven's works, WUNC will broadcast the composer's 9 symphonies, 5 piano concertos, the Violin Concerto, the String Quartet No. 7, the Grosse Fugue, selected overtures, and incident al music from "Edgmont." Commentary will be by Thur man Smith, musie director. GREEUSDORO C0L1SEUT.1 BASKETBALL V Peter Nero ... Here Tuesday 8 PM TO JETZEL'S WILDCATS vs. diililv.-: wraraiMrs "DIfi 4" ALL STflllS Only Showing In This Area! ADMISSION: fl GEN. ADM. (Adults) Snuonnvisu SKA'IH STUDENT GEN. ADSL - Art Show Planned Chapel Hill's seventh annual Sidewalk Art Show will be held April 2 through April 4 on East Franklin St., sponsored by the University Art League. The show, which is being held in- conjunction with the Fine Arts Festival which starts tomorrow, will exhibit the works of students and townspeople from the Research Triangle area. Reg istration will be held Wednesday and Thursday from 1 to 5 p.m. on the front porch of Graham Memorial Works of sculpture, painting, ceramics, prints and drawings may be entered for a fee of $1 for each five pieces. All prints and drawings should be sturdily matted and backed ana all pic tures should be at least strip framed. The amount of sales of works displayed has increased from $1,000 to $1,600 to $2,000 over the past three years. Peter Nero: Long Time On Keyboard Peter Nero, who will perform in Memorial Hall Tuesday night has led a musician's life. He started piano training at the age of 7. Prior to that time he had begun to pick out tur.es on a xylophone. "One day we went to visit some relatives who owned a battered old upright piano," he recalled. "I began to transfer the xylophone tunes to the piano and my grandmoth er talked the relatives into giv ing me the infirm instrument. "Then I found I was going to become a classical pianist ret by choice, but by the sheer force of the way I started out." By the time he was 14, Xcro was the recipient of numerous awards, had made symphony hall appearances and was the possessor of a Juilliard Schol arship. He graduated from the New York High School of Music and Art, Juilliard, and Brooklyn College. He invaded the music world, winning TV talent con tests and performing for con cert audiences. By the time he was 21 he had developed a love for jazz and pops. He began to adapt these facets of his musical knowledge to his piano playing. His tenure with Whiteman only served to bolster his love for jazz, which his music teach ers treated with disdain. Xero resolved this neatly by dump ing his tutors, and for the next 5 years played jazz and only jazz. Gradually it occurred to Peter that jazz alone was not the an swer he was seeking. This real ization led to further musical experimentation, and the happy end result was a blending of jazz elements with the classical style. .$1.50 $2.50 .$1.00 f - j - - MONTAjLIDO'S' Durham rmT i m mm' f HE SAFE fAYto stay alert vitbont harmful stimulant: ; NoDoz keeps you mentally alert with the same safe re fresher found in coffee and tea. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Abso lutely not habit-forming. 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