Frida
Jober 18, 1968
THE DAILYTARJEEX
Page 3
Chamber Music
No Favorites
in
Strauch 9s Book
Good At Hill
By JEFF
Tuesday evening th
exrplloi UUU,U1,LC "i nui nan neara an
UNC rh,mSnCtrt f Chamber music by members of the
TO sniJ
UNC Chamb
Hall , i7 r-"101
"miv.ii certain iv
came through cleanly.
j
is no
anri a-.1 "Macal Offering" was composed in 1747
..lu id to Frederick II of Prussia. The opening
frnm L-n Tuesday evening's concert was the trio sonata
fh 'sw0. It was performed by Jane Bowers (flute),
7ll ft n (vioIin), Charles Griffith (cello), and Michael
Zenge (harpsichord).
th Tfle PleCe iS' for a11 intents and purposes, a duet between
me tiute and violin. The harpsichord and cello serve as an
accompanying "continuo," the cello doubli ng the bass line
oi the harpsichord. The piece was well performed-the
major players carried their parts sensitively and
intelligently; the accompaniment was solid but never
intruded.
The second number, Mozart's "Adagio and Rando" K.
617 was certainly the most charming of the evening. The
piece was written originally for the glass harmonica and
accompanying instruments. Since the glass harmonica is
extinct, this performance utilized a celesta in its place. The
accompaniment was performed by Jane Bowers (flute),
David Serrins (oboe), Ann Woodward (viola) and Charles
griffith (cello). Special acclaim goes to Michael Zenge who
played the celesta. The instrument used in this performance
is a particularly unwiedly one, having a very uneven action
and a small sound. Mr. Zenge played it admirably,
compensating for the instrument's inadequacies with skill
and aplomb.
Next on the program were the Two Songs, Op. 91 of
Johannes Brahms, "Gestille Sehnsucht" and "Geistliches
Wiegenlied." Mary Burgess (mezzo soprano) sang,
accompanied by Ann Woodward (viola) and Clifton
Matthews (piano). Miss Burgess has a splendid voice, large,
sumptuous, and exquisitely controlled. She sings with
power and great feeling, rarely failing to make a
tremendous impact. This performance was no exception.
Mr. Matthews was in his usual good form at the keyboard,
always there but never in the way of the music.
Unfortunately, however, Miss Woodward had some trouble
handling the more difficult argeggiated passages of the viola
part, marring somewhat an otherwise splendid performance.
The final number of the evening was the piano quartet in
C Minor, Op. 15 by Gabriel Faure. It was performed by
Barbara Kawan (piano), Edgar Alden (violin), Ann
Woodward (viola), and Charles Griffith (cello). The first,
third, and fourth movements are quiet Brahms-ian in
feeling, rhapsodic and intense. Yet the total effect is quiet
French, economical in means and ever-so-slightly
understated.
The second movement is bright, almost carefree in spirit,
yet carefully controlled. These performers are past masters
at getting out of this type of music all there is to be
got the performance was superb. Barbara Rowan was
particularly outstanding, playing with great power yet with
the greatest sensitivity and care to the shaping of lines. She
is truly fine, and this number seemed to be just her
kettle-of-fish.
Such a concert as Tuesday evening's achieves a level of
excellence only rarely excelled on the finest professional
stages of this country.
l'uily equipped. UNC qq CLUB meets 7
p.m. in Graham Memorial. All
4j G players welcome. Bring
LETTERMEN will perform
l3 V a in Carmichael at 8:00 p.m.
yTS j" jP They are being presented by
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what a steal!
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hold onto a car n.oie than a -
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lm coining umr w ay. lo CON t.r my family later when
ou hae to grab it. I get married. Plus a nice
nest e'4'4 hen I retire.
With the right set of
wheels, you'll go a
long w ay.
ISHEE
Iaraa : ii:n ti.n l. i .
10 le good acoustics of Hill
small "chamber," every note
1. Wow! What is it? I
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Insurance, see I he Man lrom L(jmtahH
l.(iuitahle, see vour riacemem liiiicer,
Manager. ('olleUe linplo incut.
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. . .At
No Dorms For Mich. Sophs?
From the MICHIGAN
DAILY
Sophomore women at the U.
of Michigan may be freed from
the dormitory residence
requirement today as the
Board of Governors of the
Residence Halls meets to act
on the issue.
Approval, followed by
similar action by the Regents,
would permit sophomore
women to live in
non-University housing
beginning next fall, if they so
desired.
The board's two voting
student members are expected
to vote in favor of eliminating
the requirement At least three
faculty members have
expressed no strong objection
to the proposal, but two of
these were quick to add that
they want to evaluate the ideas
to be brought forth at today's
Campus
Calendar
FREE FLICK is "Walk,
Don't Run" with Cary Grant
and Samantha Eggar, at 7, 9:30
and 11:30 p.m. in Carroll Hall.
SOCCER CLUB hosts Duke
on Sunday, October 20, at
2:30 p.m. Fetzer Field.
I tllV VfcA V w AAAWaM
r
S
tandOUT49l;
EBERHARD FflBEw
WILKES BARRE. PA. NEW
Strauch Aims His Pen
Everyone In His New Book.
meeting before making a
decision.
Jack Myers, MRC President,
seeks favorable action by the
board because he believes that
"sophomore women deserve
the apartment privileges that
sophomore men have had for
years. It's part of a natural
Triangle Features Art
The museum galleries of the
Ackland Art Center will be
locked to its 30,000 annual
visitors until Sunday, Nov. 3.
Ackland's galleries are being
emptied in preparation for its
big Tenth Anniversary Year
exhibition, "Arts of the Early
Republic: The Age of Dunlap."
This exhibition has been
almost two years in the making
and will bring to Chapel Hill
canvases and prints by
America's old masters from
1783 to 1834.
The exhibition is themed to
the first published history of
American art, "History of the
Rise and Progress of the Arts
of Design in the United
STates," published by William
Dunlap in 1834.
Dr. Harold Dickson
proposed the exhibition while
serving as visiting professor of
American Art History. Dr.
Dickson's catalogue for the
exhibition is being published
this month by the University
of North Carolina Press in two
editions hard cover for general
text book use and soft cover
for the exhibition catalogue
sale.
W
New standOUT
pocket-model
reference marker
by Eberhard Faber
makes words, titles,
numbers, and main
points stand out. In
textbooks, reports,
maps on any kind
of paper.
Pocket-size standOUT
goes with you, marks
the important stuff
in either bright
transparent yellow or
pink for easy reference.
Won't show through
paper, either.
At your college
bookstore.
1
t
I
TM ng U S Pm Off snd Oihtr Coo""S
YORK CANADA GERMANY VENEZUELA COLCMB
progression of steps."
Senior women were granted
permission to live outside of
the dorms in the fall of 1962,
and junior women could do so
beginning in the fall of 1965.
Men have always had such
freedom, Myers believes.
Doors of the Ackland will
reopen at 9 p.m. Saturday,
Nov. 2 for 150 guests of the art
center at a preview showing.
Doors open to the public
Sunday, Nov. 3. The Chapel
Hill Chapter of the North
Carolina State Art Society will
host the reception for the
i , "rpfis-j-
. ;''S s? v 0
By JOE SANDERS
DTH Features Editor
"You've
months left
hating you.'
cartoonist
got only eight
to have everyone
someone said to
Bruce Strauch
recently.
"I'll try to set around
to
them all" he replied.
Strauch, The Daily Tar
Heel's glib political cartoonist,
is probably the most maligned
student on the UNC campus.
And his cartoons are probably
the most widely read portion
of any edition of the DTH.
After jabbing "assorted
rubes, politicos, sarawity gurls
and jocks" with his pen for
two years, Strauch has
assembled a collection of his
most pungent cartoons for
publication as a book. The
cartoons, which Strauch
describes as, "strange creations
of my warped mind," will
appear under the title, "Where
Will The Revolution Be
Without Art?" sometime next
week.
If each cartoonist has his
own style, Strauch's is purely
caustic. "My father never had
time for me when I was little,"
he explains. Although Strauch
concentrates his attacks on the
campus in-groups (he calls
sororities "inherently unequal
and wrong"), he hardly regards
himself as a champion of the
underdog. One week the
average student is pictured as
the innocent victim of the
Book-Ex, the next week he is a
campus rube.
A 21-year-old senior,
Strauch did not draw a cartoon
until his sophomore year at
UNC. After looking over all the
public, serving from 3 to 6
p.m.
The Dunlap exhibition will
be on view for the month of
November and will close at 6
p.m. Dec. 1.
The Ackland will again lock
its doors to empty the galleries
and reinstate its collections. It
will reopen Sunday, Dec. 8.
, .... ....
" w wWtA fits H Cr i"
Note
3ml
7
'?
cartoons this summer, he
decided to assemble them
because, he said, "I'm greedy
and have an inflated image of
myself."
At times, Strauch gets
attacked in return by students
who feel that he has shown
poor taste. When he drew a
caricature of student body
presidential candidate Ken Day
last year, he caused a number
of irate students to complain
about poor taste and vote for
Ken Day. Although the
Administration has been silent
in the face of his frequent
attacks on South Building,
News Bureau Director Pete
Ivey recently wrote DTH
editor Wayne Hurder advising
him to indicate that he stood,
.Ota. ., . .. A. .
cao 1 n
it t
angry
r
"for a better quality of
journalism than that indicated
in the Straughn (sic) cartoon
today."
Still, Strauch showed that at
least he had been noticed when
he received about 1,000 votes
in the first round of elections
for student body president last
year. "I was motivated to run
by frustration," he said. "I was
narrowly defeated for alternate
hall monitor in the first grade
and haven't been able to
forget"
If there is anything that
Strauch cannot find amusing,
he doesn't show it, unless it is
his book. When asked if the
book would sell, he said, "the
book not seir? That wouldn't
be very funny."
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