Thursday, September 19. 19fia THE DAILY. TAR HEEL .Page 3 A -.2 jl XXTT i usi Working On Three Shows By JOE SANDERS DTH Feature editor . been four months since students packed into the Morehead Planetarium to see Don Evan's "Dome Project," but Evans didn't let the project die with the last performance. Next month Evans hopes to make final arrangements with the Hayden Planetarium in New York to present a new Dome Project." "I made arrangements to go up to New York in June," Evans said, "but as it turned out, Robert Kennedy was assassinated that weekend and people were all pretty glum." Evans did go to New York, however, and talked to officials at the Museum of Modern Art to arrange possible backing for the show. "At least I got my foot in the door on that trip," he said. Evan's "Dome Project" was a 'multi-media experience' that he designed and executed for his Master's project. Using nine slide projectors and a sound system, Evans presented three short subjects on the Planetarium dome used for star shows. "The viewer was surrounded by the image," Evans said. The projectors were synchronized to present either one composit image or nine separate images. Following the Dome Project, Evans became immersed in more multi-media projects. He advised the Orange Luxurious.. . NOW YOU CAN ENJOY MOVIES EVEN MORE BECAUSE OF" "ULTRA-VISION" More Vivid Color Constant Light Flow More Depth. No Distortion Startling Realism i-ULTRA-VlSION" Exclusive in this Area at the NEW CAROLINA THE ATRE, Chapel Hill. m 5 UIC NYlllg- and dying -end in excitement! MGM presents An Allen Klein Production starring TbnyAnthony ' "i ii i it. mm mm n i. ii in mm ..ii.ii i ii .mi,. METROCOLOn v ............. ' " 'jC - 1 I m TVcKt's no puce i4 THS WORLD WMCRB tVL WtoUa, WHE rM GONE, AMO I WON'T KNOW THE RIGHT- FROM THE WRONG,- I WHCM CM GOME, AND YOU WONT FIN 0 I ME SINGIN' ON THIS SONfi, WHEN I'M j I GONE. SO I &UE5S I'LL HAVE TO DO I I IT- WHILE riA HERE! Ik r ... m tTwt mm uumM .. W t. .. y mjsa Plans Eleciiromic Driver, a multi-media pop group now performing in Raleigh. In addition, he and Roger Hannay of the UNC Music Department are working on a "multi-media extravaganza," Evans said. "We're going to present a show fir the fine arts Slides and Sound Recorder Classes Begin New Trend In Music Department A new trend in music for all ages will be offered here this fall. - Recorder classes will be Play Tickets Ticket sales began Tuesday for the Carolina Playmakers' 50th series of productions, and a limited number of student books will be sold for four 'dollars.'"- General public ticket books are priced at six dollars. The first ' production is Frank Loesser's The Most Happy Fella, a romantic musical based on a zany mailorder love affair. Becket, by Jean Anouilh, is the ironic story of the tragic relationship between a r it r rrrvr r rw r :xy3Sv?::A:::: :: I Campus Calendar v.; Items for campus calendar should be in the DTH office by 4 p.m. TWO days before they are to run. Items for Monday's calendar (to be run Sunday) should be in by Friday; items for Tuesday should be in by Saturday. Lost and Found will be run on Saturday and Tuesday, so items should be in early also. festival," he said, "and we need anyone who would like to help. Anyone who can work with electronics, help out, or even dance," he said. Evans and Hannay- are working now on presenting their first project, "Live and in Color," in Philadelphia. In that mil idX Are Part of Multi-Media . . .although some overindulgers spoil show taught for the first time through the University's Music Department. The recorder (commonly called the fipple Go On Sale primitive-minded king and his saintly friend. The third production will be a new play by Pulitzer-Prize-winning playwright Paul Green, author of ''The Lost Colony." It . deals with the devastating effect of a narrow fanatical religion on the poetic soul of a young girl. These first three plays will be presented in Memorial Hall, but the season's finale will mark a return to the outdoor Forest Theatre. Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew will celebrate a revival of the first play ever produced in the Forest Theatre. Tickets may be purchased at the Playmakers Business Office (in 214 Abernathy Hall); at Ledbetter-Pickard's Stationery Store in downtown Chapel Hill; and at the new book exchange. In addition to the subscription series, there will be three additional performances, tobe sold separately. Season ticket holders have early selection of reserved seat tickets, before they become available to the general public he something for everyone 153 East Franklin UPSTAIRS Over Suttons project, Hannay and Evans presented light, music and live artists in one inter-related art show. While students will have a chance to see the 'multi-media extravaganza' next spring, Evans does not plan to present the Dome Project on campus flute) is a Baroque instrument that has been revived in the twentieth century. The wooden, vertical instrument sounds much like the conventional, horizontal flute. According to instructor Mary Vinquist, "the recorder is a suitable instrument for teaching youngsters as well as posing a challenge to the would-be virtuoso." One-half or one hour sessions will begin in the fall as private lessons of applied music at University rates. A versatile musician, Miss Vinquist is a native of St. Peter, Miss., but has lived in Chapel Hill for the last three years and has been active in area chamber music groups. In Durham she has been DULL DORMITORY ROOMS BROUGHT TO VIBRANT LIFE - VISIT OUR PRINT ROOM The Intimate Bookshop 119 East Franklin Street I I9 uanaei Is Awake!! NOW OPEN r 4 V A lair with flair-for who want to give the tastefully uniaue Art again. "The Project won't be shown here," he said, "but the ideas and techniques will go into other things. Right now I.m experimenting with new processes." Some of the equipment Evans used in presenting the Dome Project were typewriters, tape recorders, projectors and a computer. "An artist today should not consider himself above using any material or process," Evans said. All student wives are invited to join the UNC Student Wives Club which will hold its first meeting Tuesday, October 1, at 8 p.m. in Graham Memorial. The program will consist of discussions about the town and the University, tips on where : to shop, what to do for fun, and information on medical and dental services, according to Mrs. Derek Roberts, dub president. There will be brochures and pamphlets available for new members. Refreshments and a social hour will follow the meeting. Interested wives may call 942-3248. associated with the Orianna Consort which has played with the Duke Madrigal Singers, for .the N.C. Press Club, and at Durham's St. Philip's Church. In addition she directs the church choir at Durham's United Church. She is editor of a bibliography on performance practices which will appear in "Current Musicology" early in. 1969. She is secretary-treasurer of the- Southeast Chapter of the American musico logical Society and a member of the American Recorder Society. , Registration for the course began Sept. 16. More information can be obtained in the Music Department office, 105 Hill Hall. w j Open Evenings ion you in Clint Gets Name Am By HARVEY ELLIOTT DTH Reviewer The Man With No Name is not back. Clint Eastwood is here again, but not as that saraped brainchild of Sergio Leone and all his Italian Westerns. Hang 'Em High has put that truly American film form back in the hands of Yankees, and Eastwood comes out on top. He gains a name, a couple of women and a slight tinge of characterization. But hell lose his fan club. This film will not be as popular as the excruciatingly violent Dollar films, principally because Eastwood kisses a girl, gets chased up a tree by a dog and thinks before he shoots. The superhero is no more. He doesn't go around shooting people in their sleep through a pillow. He doesn't flirt with danger by lighting a CELEBRATE THE BALL GAME EARLY! at I HE Ji : ii 4 f at 1 - i-t ' cigar in the face of his enemy. He just gains in Belierability. And loses in Excitement? No. Though directed in an unoriginal style by television director Ted Post (he does Peyton Place), the film milks a surprising amount of suspense out of its wry obvious plot. Within the first five minutes, everyone knows how ........V.S.V.".V.' V.VaW.V.WbWAV.VVV A DTH Review HANG 'EM HIGH. With Clint Eastwood, Inger Stevens, Ed Begley. Di rected by Ted Post. A United Artists Release. At the Varsity. Opening with a BLAST Saturday Morning at 9:30 Serving BREAKFAST & BEER Live Music and Dancing, Friday and Saturday Night Featuring "THURSDAY GRIEF" Suede is the story here combining with wool in John Meyer clothes with a proper country air. Their thoroughbred tailoring makes any rural scene. Pierced suede edges the brushed Shetland cardigan $21. And suede binds the pockets of the Port Ellen plaid skirt with front pleats $19. Button-down oxford shirt $6.50. All in brilliant colors. At discerning stores. Uoivn & Campuo CHAPEL HILL, N.C Girl I the film will end. After Eastwood is rescued from his own hanging, he sets off to even the score with his would-be lynchers. And he does it. But on the way, the storyline meanders around several interesting characters, boasting several fine performances. Bruce Dern, who started his career in those Hell's Angels films, is excellent as Miller, the near-psychotic who is finally arrested as a rustler. With her usual flair, Ruth white makes the most of a madam-characterization. Inger Stevens though, remains wooden as a love-interest. If it's blood and gore you want, go see The Stranger Returns. At the Varsity, youll get a better dass of Western and an improved Eastwood. ma urn about. 0

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