Wednesday, May 8, 19C8 THE DAILY TAR HEEL J Ja Black Hills Passlsa Plaj-Spearfish, S.D. By The season of the outdoor drama will soon be upon us. Those interested in seeing America and especially American history are mak ing it possible for this en tertainment form to grow in numbers each year. The American Automobile Associa tion reports that this year there are at least evelen such dramas scheduled. Me ory VVEDNESDAY i968 YACKETY YACK will be distributed tomorrow from 12 noon until 5 p.m. at the Graham Memorial,. parking,, . lot. All students are eligible to receive a Yack upon il'P , 000000 Cam DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Man from Kuala Lumpur . 6. Snares . 11. Mirror reflection ' 12. Frilled lace 13. Citrus . fruit 14. Middle 15. From: prefix 16. Kettle 17. Solemn wonder 18. Keystone state: abbr. 19. Social gathering 71. Flattened , at the poles . 23. Orient 77. Long cut 28. Courtyard 29. Spreads grass . to dry 30. Gossip 31. Departs 33. Exclama tion 34. Resort 37. Occupant: abbr. 38. Thus 39. Hooded jackets 41. Appendage 43. Wing shaped 44. Member of a desert tribe 45. Belonging to a Midi, anite king 46 Across: prefix DOWN Marker Friendly Escape Grow old Biblical pronoun English river Race 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Things done 9. Exclama tion indicating exhaustion 10. Wither 14. Concern 16. Woodland way fit- MMf-'l AU.SET.A I rf-rrrTj ( MARVELOUS YEfc VENY BOUSHT I . n5vr7"i ME A THING IN 20 YFAES, BUT yEJ&L ) rr im f SPEND YER LOT ON jtz r- 1 cvxpTi A DOG YEE IJAjLp ' 7 ' ' ' m ' J? ' 7 7p Manv Outdoor Dramas v Granddaddy of the outdoor dramas is The Lost Colony," now in its 31st season at Manteo, North Carolina. The setting is Waterside Theater near Fort Raleigh, site of an early attempt to establish an English colony on the Carolina coast. This was the birthplace of Virginia Dare, first white child born in the New World. She Jubilee comes but once a year is time is now past, bu fond memories linger on in our minds, like shadows Calendar presentation of an ID card. The junior class will sell plastic covers for 25 cents. STRAY GREEKS will meet for. the. last time at 6:15 p.m. at Please the Zoom Zoom, bring your exam 19 Out of ilii Bp?ri&lTlT T"1 a1r1ra5U3'eKk30"1 blRANlTsnR TS 5 A NO I InieIrIt TTaI I .. 5 f. ,.1.1 date 20. Irish poet 22. Youth 24. Lawyer: abbr. 25. Native of a former Prussian Yesterday' Auiwrr 36. Semite 40. Asian isthmus 41. High, craggy hill province . 26. Footings 28. Strokes gently 30. Laces 32. Roentgen's invention 34. Mast 35. Sickly white 42. Candlenut tree 44. Bible books: abbr. 11 3 4 5 6 7 d 9 10 'L-WL . 111 21 ZZ yy. 11 24- 25 2b lIIIf Hill y 40 177 4i 4z H 1 1 Ymr I 1 1 SHE'S 6ETTINS REAPVTO IT A6AIM...I CAN JlST FEEL (T. vanished mysteriously along with other members of "The Lost Colony." This year, 'The Lost Colony" opens June 21 and runs daily except Sundays at 8:45 p.m. Tickets are $3 reserved, $2 general ad mission, and $1 for children 6 to 12. Other outdoor shows this summer include: DTH Staff Photo By Sam Williams on a wall: Like Carmkhael at the mond concert. these in Neil Dia- schedules. INTERVIEWS for the Graham Memorial Current Affairs Committee will be held today tfirough Friday 3-5 p.m. in Roland Parker II. Sign - up sheets are available at GM. Information Desk. PHYSICS UNC-Duke Joint Colloauium -will host J. H. Gibbons of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, speak ing on "Element Synthesis in Stars, or the Role of the Neutron in Solar System Geriatrics." The meeting will be at 4 p.m. in the Duke University Physics Building. Tea and coffee will be served in the Lounge at 3:30. INTERVIEWS for summer school Women's Honor Court will be held Thursday 3-5 p.m. on the second floor of Graham Memorial. ANAIS NIN -will speak on the "Novel of the Future" at 8 p.m. in Howell Hall Auditorium. Sponsoreed by the English and Art Departments. SCIENCE and Nature lecture at 2 p.m. at WUNC-TV in Swain Hall. Wade Brown and Mrs. Ruth Dixon will speak on "Beach Combing and Shell Collecting" PLANNER TRAINEES WANTED N. C. Department of Conservation, and Development needs 4 North Carolinians with Bachelor's . degrees in a field which contributes to an understanding of urban problems. Will be given a six-months training program in Raleigh. Permanent assignments to be made in Raleigh, Washington, or Salisbury. N. C. Salary begins at $6,406 with rapid advancements. Prefer applicants with previous work experience and completion of military obligation. Training program begins July 1. 1968. For further information, contact: Mr. Emil S. Breckling, Division of Community Planning. Box 2719, Raleigh. N. C, 27602. IF SHE AGAIN, I'LL SCREAM. ..I KN0!d SHE'S JUST UJAlTlNSTO SAV IT... SHE.. 1L CROSS & SWORD St. Augustine. Florida, June 25 to September 3, 8:30 nightly ex cept Mondays. Tickets: $3 reserved $2 general ad mission. Children under 12 half price. THE BOOK OF JOB, Laurel Cove Amphitheater, Pineville, Kentucky, July and August, 8:30 nightly except Sundays. Tickets: $2.50 and $3; children under 12, half price. THE LEGEND OF DANIEL BOONE Pioneer Memorial State Park, Harrodsburg, Ken tucky, June 9 through .mSeptember 2, 8:30 nightly ex cept Sundays. T nkets: $2.50 Sundays. Tickets: $2.50 and $2; and $2; children under 16, $1.50. THE STEPHEN FOSTER STORY J. Dan Talbott A m ph itheater, Bardstown, Kentucky, mid-June to Labor Day, 8:30 nightly except Mon day, matinee Sunday at 3 pjn. Tickets: Reserved, $3; general admission, $2; children under 12, accompanied by an adult, half price. HORN IN THE WEST Daniel Boone Theater, Boone, North Carolina, late June through late August, 8:15 nightly except Monday. Tickets: $3 reserved; $2 general admission, children under 12 half price. UNTO THESE HILLS Mountainside Theater, Cherokee. North Carolina, late June to late August, 8:45 Tickets: $2, $2.50 and $3. THE IMMORTAL SHOW BOAT Wilmington N.C.; nightly at 9 p.m., June 2 to Labor Day. Under 12, 75 cents; adults, $1.50 BLACK HILLS PASSION PLAY ' Spearfish. South Dakota, mid-June through Labor Day, 8 o'clock nightly on Tuesay, Thursday and Sun day Tickets: $2 to $4 reserved: children under 12,' $lto$2. TEXAS Amphitheater, Pioneer Palo Duro Ca- nyon, Canyon. Texas, June 29 thmnrrV, t ,w rvo-r TiitrhfW cept Tuesday. Tickets: Mon day, Wednesday and Thursday, $1.50 to $3.50; Friday, Saturday and Sunday, $1.75 to $4. THE LIBERTY TREE Sesquicentennial State Park amphitheatre. 12 miles north of Columbia, S.C., on ILS 1, June 27 through September 1, nightly, except Mondays, at 8:30 p.m. Adults $3; cmldren $1.50. THE COMMON GLORY Matoaka Lake Amphitheater, Williamsburg, Virginia, late June through Labor Day, 8:45 nightly except Sunday. Tickets: Reserved g; general admission, $2, children 6 to 12 half price. HONEY IN THE ROCK Cliffisde Amphitheater. Grandview State Park near Beckley, West Virginia, late June to early September, 8:30 mghtly except "Mondays. Ticket prices mot yet listed. In addition, there is a historical drama presented aboard the old stern-wheeler Sprague, at Vicksburg, Mississippi. This one. "Gold in the Hills," is presented at 8:15 p.m. Friday and Saturday from early March to early September. Tickets: $2. CATCH A GOOD GAME'DEAR HEART"! The Stephta The Legend cf Daniel Bssse O Harrodsburg Fester Stsry O Bardstown The Bosk Pineville O CO Texas-Canyon, Texas 5 ) g 1 r J r I sou" "M The Uterty Tree f S V. O Columbia With the summer comes a blossoming of pageantry, spectacle and dramatized folldore. ... and the success of The Lost Colony gave rise to a dozen other outdoor dramas in the South. Clinic Features Noted Pianists CHAPEL HILL Two outstanding musicians will be featured at the 18th annual piano clinic scheduled at the University of North Carolina here June 24-27, sponsored by the Music Department. Among this year's guests will be noted young pianist Arlene Portney and one of the country's "most brilliant con cert artists," Stefan Bardas. Since Miss Portney, now 18, of Meadwobrook, Pa., began her formal training at age five, she has been appearing before : the public. . She was accepted as a scholarship student at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia at age nine. That same year she was chosen as soloist from 6 Tcontetaots to play the Mozart Piano Concerto in C major with The Philadelphia Orchestra at the Academy of Music. Since then she has appeared pMadetohia -ruuaaeipma m numerous recitals With the orchestra and Raleigh Theater Group Closes Season With 'The Fantasticks' By HARVEY ELLIOTT Daily Tar Heel Reviewer The Fantasticks, still run ning in its ninth year off Broadway, win close the cur rent season of the Raleigh Lit tle Theatre. It opens tomorrow night. from M May 1519 and curtain time is at 8 p.m. The Fantasticks tells an aee- old tale, as it unravels a funny and touching story of in nocence and knowledge. The ingredients are simple: a boy, a girl, two fathers and a wall. The two scheming fathers use a guise of parental disap proval to blissfully unite their son and daughter. As expected, the boy and girl discover the plot, go their separate ways into a cruel and colorful world, and return to a sentimental ending, supported by beautiful songs. Three of the selections have since gained popularity separate from the show: "Soon It's Gonna Rain," "Much More," and the ever-popular "Try To Remember." El Gallo's "Rape Ballet" is a perennial show-stopper. 'FUinET OF Tile HFES' 13 A CLGCIIEU3TETL FASGi::nTi::3r Liz Smith, Cosmopolitan IM 20TH CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS CHARITON HESTON w ARTHUR P. JACOBS production RODCY McDOVVALL- MAURICE EVANS KIM HUNTER -MR WHfTMORE JAMES DA1Y UNDA HARRIS0Nri- N0W SHOWING FEATURES 12:50 - 2:54 - 4:58 -7:02- 9:06 nS VIRGIN Hcr.sy ta the R:ck Beckley cf Jsa 'Hsra Boone Unta These Hills Cheroke other places and on televis ion. At age 15 she was graduated from the Curtis Institute of Music one of the youngest to hold this distinction. That summer she attended The American Conservatory i n Fontainbleu, France, in master classes with Arthur Rubinstein, Mile. Nadia Boulanger, Clifford Curzon, and Robert and Jean Casadesus. She was selected to perform for these great artists and closed the summer recital program. She is currently studying wxoi sascna uogoannziu at tne Juiiuara bcnooi of Music as a scholarship student. During 1968 she will perform at Camegia Recital Hall, in Binghamton, Philadelphia, and Hunter College in New York, as well as the University here. She will also be appearing in performances for the Lin coln Center Fund of the Lincoln Cast in the two leading roles are Steve Wall and Margaret Poyner. The supporting roles on this unusually small cast are played by veteran theatre performers Bob Brickdl, Ed die Adcock, Raymond Dew, Allen Berryhill, Roland Lashley and Hugh Overturf. The latter two are former RLT "Oscar" winners. t r.ARnn.. . Lj. -TV Lovely old fashioned apothecary jars complete with shaker fitments and air tight closures. They are tastefully set off In lovely mellow pine racks. The jars are packed with quality spices and herbs which will add to the tasllnfss of every meal. Our assortment of sizes are priced from $2.00 to $15. 3. Come and see them on display 1 SPECIAL GIFT VRAPPING lathe West The n Cress & Center for the Performing Arts in New York City. Currently resident pianist at North Texas State University, Bardas has performed widely all over the VS. and Europe. He was formerly official pianist for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and has been featured soloist in several important premiere performances of modern works under world renowned con ductors. His repertoire ncludes all of the Chopin Debuss" and Liszt Paganini Etudes, the 32 Beethoven piano sonatas, and me z jnopm rrejuaes. He made his debut at the Town Hall in New York in 1949, and has had an extensive concert career in Europe and the VJS. as soloist with major symphony orchestras. He was graduated from the Realgymnasium ki Berlin in 1932 and won his artist diploma from the Academy of Music in Berlin in 1934. He won his Mail reservations are being accepted now by writing the Little Theatre box office. Phone resrvations are also available. The theatre is located on Pogue Street near NjC. State University. A special Students Night for college students will be held tomorrow night at reduced rates. All seats are reserved. The Cc:a G!:ry O Williamsburg The Ust Cclsnj O Wanteo lnssnortal Wilmington Sward -St. Augustine. Fla. piano certificate from the CoQservatorio Santa Cecilia in Rome in 1S37 and his master of music at Illinois Wesleyan University in 1943. Bardas will also teach the Clime's second annual three week course in Piano Pedagogy, the first week of which is in conjunction with the Piano Clinic Dr. William S. Newman of the UNC musk faculty will direct the clinic. Last year more than 200 persons representing approximately 17 states from as far as the west coast and Texas attended. Other highlights will include a large exhibit of music and materials by Brodt Music Co. of Charlotte, a recital by ex ceptional students at four levels, and two social get togethers. Public school teachers may get credit for the. clinic. Scholarships are offered for exceptional students. Further information may be obtained from the UNC Ex tension Division. Graduating? Sell Us Your Surplus Books. The Intimate Bookshop 119 E. Franklin Street C 1 A CHARMING FOR A CHARMING KITCHEN PDCE VARIOUS SIZES EflSTGATE SIICPPIilG CSIJTEn Store Hours: Mon. Thru FrL 8:30 To 9:00 PiL Sat. 8:20 To 6:00 P.M. Sun. 12:00 To 8:00 PJI- VaMiif L CF0UI0 lIBBa.' '3U.;

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