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Wednesday. November 13, 1968 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Pa?e 3 Xv: :::::: . . , Memorial H j Oistrakh Flopt By JAMES Oistrakh Flashes, or the Lights Were Blinking? rv st Monday night's Pl!trh fson f frmcd :::: ii i i ne listener g wondering what Sonata (Brahms, out with "juis ' I tlH,,,, t0r my knowlgc, did Tartini. I I r Tn r ,n?,( thc Devil himscir. traverse the 5i g an0",0" P mC ?nd?C " a tiKht rPe whil-' "Plating ij Imy thrifu many bCal"iful tri"S' l0St a" I L. listeners took heart. With the I Tchaikowsky Meditations a level of refinement g was beginning to be established. 'If you call that refinement. It is conceivable, eventhough Oistrakh t g (robust warm, strong and deliberate) was still? i"icjung nign ana wide-consistently $ Al ,ast paydirt: g ....ii.Monisuc gypsy (opus 28) commanded S Mozart s goulash, Brahms' oozing paint, Tartini's t graceail brutality and Tchaikowsky's refinement to S produce the only successful pages on the t program except for the Stravinsky encore which' wasn't damaged because Stravinsky's a little S gj smarter than you think. g Oistrakh's magnificently rich sounding t Guarncn violin was incredible to hear, while the S g Steinway was at times too subdued. And as to the ::;! style of the performer (as opposed to beh very i;!: tasteful recordings -with his father) the soloist's 8 g professed booking agent stated: "Maybe for Chapel S x Hill he play this way." Indeed! x- Announcements BOARD of Residence College Academic Lt. Governors meets at 5 p.m. in the Graham Library, first floor Graham Residence Hall. PANEL DISCUSSION on ,the draft is scheduled for 8 p.m:inGerrard HaD: TICKETS went on sale yesterday for the Honors Students Association dinner to DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Epithet for a heavy weight 5. Undevel oped flowers 9. Money: slang 10. Digit 11. Grumpy 12. Stranger 14. Paintings and such 15. Give the once-over 16. You and I 17. Pater's cousin. 20. Ostrich like bird 22. Affirmative 23. Street sign 24. Cross a river 25. Anybody or somebody 26. Barracks item 27. Young deer 29. Vocal brickbat 30. Because 32. Teenage bete noire 33. Meaning 35. Pronoun 36. Civil War Johnny 38. Airline term 39. Firm 41. Engraver's tool 43. Contended for 44. Viking explorer 45. Wagnerian role 46. Withers DOWN 1. A shower of snow 2. Artery 3. Sanskrit school 4. Piggery 5. Anchored apparatus 6. In the way, in a way 7. Performed 8. One who makes a mulligan 11. Medieval tale 13. Try for a part in a play ...prMKyA ff TET OUT THERE A El U we supposes : JUd cuATch TJ h f lliArT sJi I to be our - ir- "hcJ J? V a ki rue CAMP T il NERMOULbNT LET 'Er 7 na9N I NEAH.X CAN'T THINK) I AN TH E JMME J HJ get down.chalkie of awthin that WU - WITH BELLllt. BE UKBME-I y V- (KEERMAgDERT) " f AraSL "TC 11 BURNHAM Where Were You When concert by violinist Da violinist Igor ? David Oistrakh) the rain .intl thi muj iv w J - was happening to the "Rain" oi or it the rnnf nf Szymanowski's be held Saturday at 6 p.m. in the Carolina Inn ballroom. All honor students are urged to attend. Tickets may be purchased for $3 in Dr. Patterson's office. For further information ' contact ' Sharon Hagie1, 933-'5132 ' or" 1 Linda Stuntz, 933-2754. THOMAS McDANIEL of The Johns Hopkins University, 15. Before 18. Leather-making: centers 19. The brink of an, 21. Torrid 25. Possess SAPSn A!PART T-rU IaTpT Tan Yesterday's Answer 31. "Streetcar" role 34. Uncanny 37. Old Norse work 26. On the side 27. Weather word 28. A voice, in grammar 29. Child's apron 30. Capers 40. Mr. Hodges 41. Murphy is one 42. Tell's canton Of 1 A aNQTE S P tlAINOA T b dFTs S E P AS T EUR TQTts E Rif sir spsiEis 3a tit At" TjD E AwaV si OR I DG A cTeTil aT r arlIsh1oo U 12 13 7? IS II 2 21 22 ?2 " T7?.& WZZ 44 if iff 32 34 " HO FEATURES: 777 12:40 - 2:43 - 4:-7:04-912 wx i . ; -l , ... il h& ;? 8 V : "kv yrr w - n . rv Co "ONLY IN CHAPEL HILL" DEPT.-and I'll remember the football weekends homecoming at the frat houses, the wins and losses (mostly losses), in scenic Chapel Hill. Bli s Trip 'You Know I CanH Hear You One comedies Broadway presented of the funniest of the current season will be next week in Greensboro, and the Carolina Union Drama Committee is interested in sponsoring a chartered bus. Comedienne Imogene Coca and her husband King Donovan star in the traveling company of Robert Anderson's uproarious You Know I Can't Hear You When The Water's Running, to visit Greensboro Coliseum on Thursday, Master of Arts in Teaching Program will be in the Placement Service today to interview students interested in attending graduate school upon graduation. Tomorrow Everard Meade of the , University of Virginia Graduate School of Business Administration will be in the Placement Service. Students desiring interviews should come by the Placement Service, 211 Gardner Hall, to make an appointment. THIS IS THE TRUE STORY OF THE SELF-CONFESSED BOSTON STRANGLER. BOSTON STRANGLER Tony Curtis Henry Fonda George Kennedy Mike Kellin Murray Hamilton Robert Fryer Richard Fleischer Edward Anhalt Ceroid Frank V P.O.VCH Br SMA Panavmon Color by Deluxe NOW THRU WED. Camp DmM -mil 1 -l.-i.imirMi.iiii , i i Organized For Play November 21. A block . of thirty-five tickets have been offered to the student body of UNC at considerably reduced rates, and the Union is able to take advantage of this offer if 35 students are interested. The bus would leave the Planetarium parking lot at approximately 7 p.m. next Thursday nad return around 12 midnight. An overall price of $6.50 would provide Carolina students with the best orchestra seats and all us Events LATIN AMERICAN COLLOQUIUM, sponsored by the International Student Center, presents speaker Ari Moleon of the Associated Press. Moleon , will speak on 'Latin America: A Continent in Revolution' tonight at 8 p.m. in the social room of James Residence College. COMPUTER AND INFORMATION science lecture takes place at 1 p.m. in 265 Phillips. Dr. Derek Henderson speaks on 'The internal structure of the WITS system.' PSYCHOLOGY LECTURE will be held at 4 p.m. in 301 Davie Hall. Dr. Melvin Lerner speaks on 'Reactions to Victims and Desire for Justice.' Refreshments follow in 302 Davie Hall. ORGANI Z A T I O N BEHAVIOR colloquium series presents Roy Solaski who will speak on 'The Future Environment: Forces that will shape the External Business Environment of 1975-80.' 4 p.m. in Room 8, Gardner Hall. BOTANY SEMINAR takes place in 201 Coker Hall at 5 p.m. Dr. Paul Kramer speaks on 'Physiological Functions of Roots.' AMERICAN CRISIS SERIES presents the film 'Vietnam' at 9 p.m. in James Dorm. NORTH CAROLINA Draft Resistance Union is meeting at 4. p.m. Thursday in the Institute for International . Studies, corner of Church and Rosemary Streets. DER NACHFOLGER,' a film, will be presented in the Dey Hall Faculty Lounge at 7: 30 p.m. Admission is free. STATE AFFAIRS meets 3:30-5 p.m. in Roland Parker III. and transportation to and from Greensboro. You Know I Can't Hear You When The Water's Running is presently in its third year on Broadway. It consists of four one-act plays about sex, written by the author of Tea and Sympathy and Never Sang For My Father. Playwright Neil Simon (author of The, Odd Couple) has called it "the funniest comedy I've seen in years." Interested students should sign up immediately at the G.M. desk, for a decision will be made Friday at noon on the feasibility of the trip. If 35 students have not signed-up,-the project will be impossible. Later productions on the Coliseum's agenda include Man of La Mancha, Fiddler on the Roof and Funn v Girl. If Ijost And LOST : BROWN NOTEBOOK on Time-Out Day, left on one of the Time-Out tables. Name and address on notebook. Reward BLACK PUPPY, 8 weeks old; part beagle, part cocker spaniel. Contact Steve Baddour, 968-9077 or 968-9394. GREEN PEA-JACKET at The Circle. Name inside. Call Tom Stair, 39 Old East. SCHAEFFER FOUNTAIN PEN, gray with gold trim., behind Dey Hall on Monday. See Alex Dunlop, Comparative Lit in Dey. UNC CLASS RING, 1969, in GM basement on Thursday. Reward. Call 929-6232. SEKONIC LIGHT METER between Dey and Bingham Halls in Polk Place. Please call 933-3367. THE NEW YORK LIFE agents on your campus are good,nen to know. Write Phone Visit George Coxhead 942-4358 203V2 E. Franklin St. ATticusand SATURDAY, DEC. 28 1 pm -10 pm Jose Feliciano Country Joe and the Fish Buffy Sainte Marie Chuck Berry The Infinite McCoys John MayaH's Bluesbreakers Booker T. and The M.G.'S. Dino Valente Fleetwood Mac SUNDAY, DEC. 29 -lpm-10 pm Steppenwolf Jr. Walker and the All Stars Butterfield Blues Band Flatt and Scruggs Marvin Gaye Joni Mitchell The Boxtops Richie Havens James Cotton Blues Band H. P. Lovecraft caline From the Michigan Daily News ONE QF THOSE sunny Indian summer Friday afternoons in late September when going to classes is a crime and you can wear baggy corduroys with bare feet ail around campus, we all dropped mescaline together, about ten of us. (It was my first time). It takes about a half hour to hit you, or so they had said. We all piled into Jack's Barracuda and took to the streets like dying Indians in battle, waiting to go straight to heaven, and savoring those last few moments of life and reality. You do not notice when it hits you, only there is, a moment when you suddenly realize that it has gotten to you and then you are farther into it, going a little deeper with each breath. "People, I want people." We all wanted people and more interest is shown in the current trip, it will be -possible to obtain reduced-rate tickets to these later plays. IMOGENE AND HUSBAND Found BLACK WALLET of rough-grained leather on night of elections. No questions asked; just want identification. Mark Smith, 942-6635 or 968-9021 BROWN HANDBAG with gold rings on handle, on Nov. 5 at ATO house. Contact Susan Liles, 336 West Cobb. CLASS RING, Ahoskie , High School, black and gold. Initials J.B.B. engraved on band. Please return to 634 Morrison. FOUND ST. CHRISTOPHER metal with initials J.S. Can be picked up at Yack office. HONEYWELL SYNCHORD, call 933-4322. GLASSES with Richard Fox inscribed. May be picked lip at DTH office. 3L Dwight H. McAIister 942-1553 (Over Dairy Bar) Wcnders and a Three Day Ccllace cf Beautiful Music MONDAY, DEC. 30 1 pm -10 pm Jose Feliciano Canned Heat The Turtles Iron Butterfly The Joe Tex Revue Ian and Sylvia The Grassroots Charles Lloyd Quartet Sweet Inspirations The Grateful Dead PLUS EVERY DAY: The 1968 Invitational Walking Catfish Derby. The Giant Ti-L.eaf Slide; Hundreds of Arts and Crafts Displays; The Warm Tropical Sun and a Full Miami Moon; Meditation Grove; Wandering Musicians; Blue Meanies on Parade; Things to Buy and Eat; 20 Acres of Hidden Surprises in Beautiful Gardens; World's First Electronic Skydivers; Stratospheric Balloons; Kaleidoscopic Elephants lit people to just watch. The world was a motion picture now. with the sound a little off track but with such beautiful technicolor. And we were crusading toward the epicenter of everything and all people, the core of intellectual stimulation; we were crusading to the Diag. THE DIAG Oh, god. we brought ourselves limpirg and on stretchers of the mind to the golden Diag and we flopped down on the life-breathing grass, our maternal land and earth, and opened our forum of verbal masturbation. "My god." someone said, "there are at least 50 people here stoned out I can't believe it!" They had all come. like us. fearing isolation and the lonesome reality of facing oneself, to the Diag, seeking Mecca in others' faces. The straight people were filing by on the sidewalks, some noticing, others not ... it mattered not to us who watched them only through Plexiglass windows. The sun beckoned from above, so we hailed it in Indian ritual, then we laughed and laughed and saw the sun drink our laughter. Huddled to each other under the tall oaks, we spouted philosophies. "I can't get over," Toombs was saying, "how everyone is out for himself." The idea, the pointed truth of the statement had struck him unguarded and he couldn't shake it off. There was no helping him ... he would have to struggle with it himself, as he repeated it over and over, trying to make us believe how selfish the world was, trying to drag us down into his pit of truth. BUT WE REFUSED. "Let's go for a walk," I said. We floated into the stream of people drifting away from the Diag, until we saw it only from a distance. Then we stopped, and looked back in awe. "Greeks," I said. "They are ancient Greeks gathered at their aged marble amphitheatre, for learning and debate . . . look at them." The Diag was a beehive. The center of activity." We felt as if we had- stumbled upon something rare and mysterious, something that had endured the ages, and we were catching a fleeting glimpse of eternity as we sailed by on our shaky dreams. Flopping and bouncing back toward out oak-tree cult, we ran into something that struck us incredulous with all its absurdity. A student was passing out pamphlets. "My god, what is this person doing? Does he realize what he's doing?" We took one and read it. "Death to the i THE RED CARPET'S ALL VOU OAIJ EflT SPECIAL Today 5:30-7:30 HAMBURGER STEAK 1404 E. Franklin e Q 0 0 D D 0 .Ham University. Destruction. Join Us." '"Thus must be a joke" I said. This one is actually trying to convince people of something or other. Doesn't he realize that nothing is of any consequence? Shouldn't , we go back and talk to him and explain everything?" "No. He's straight- That's the difference." WE SAT DOWN again and ritualized, nodding up and down just for the sheer feeling of it if not in agreement. We looked around us and saw a fantastic zoo. A man was wearing sandwich board and holding a bucket for people to drop money into. I asked others about him to make sure he, wasn't an hallucination. Oh. never mind. It really doesn't matter. It was all right even if we couldn't find anything to hold onto we had everything in our lack of conviction or direction. "Be, just sit there and be, man." We held on tight, each one to himself. Bells rang down on us and people seemed 4iunried by time and the bells' urgency. Time. "You, know," I said lazily, I could die riht now and it wouldn't even faze me." "That's right ... it wouldn't be any different from anything else," someone agreed. A leaf floated down and we admired its brown, crisp deadness. LATER I SAT alone in my room, after I had left them all, and wondered what would happen next if I would ever really come all the way down. I didn't know if I wanted to. Then she arrived, hall unexpected. She had beer looking for me all afternoon We looked at each other and 1 knew that she knew when sh lowered her eyes and I stare mistily out the sunny window "Promise me you'll neve take it again." I said, "We all live by river, which has never bee crossed, and I have just been t the other side of that river." She cried and then looke up, waiting. I said, "We all li on the side of the mountai and I have been over tl lUUUUKllll. Oh, never mind, never mint need f.Ioney for Sveelie-Pie? Sell us the books you'll not be reading again. We'll buy anything except texts and old Bibles. The Old Book Corner In The Intimate Bookshop Chapel Hill, N. C. - - 929-3768 ; 1 1 UJ M968 51 15 DISCOUNT COUPON -lNC" D D D D D D D 0 C miami rue rtuvAL. P.O. BOX 3900 MIAMI, FLORIDA 33101 NO. TICKETS SAT.. DEC. 28 $6.00 Ea. NO. TICKETS SUN.. DEC. 29 J6.00 Ea. NO- TICKETS MON.. DEC 30 $6 00 Ea. $5.00 Includes all-day admission (tickets at the door, if available: $7. CO) I have enclosed $ in check or money order payable to "Miami Pop Festival." I understand that the management does not guarantee delivery on orders postmarked later than Dec. 9. 1968. Name ; Address ' City , -Zip. n Mate lL3E2EZ3E3Eai
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 13, 1968, edition 1
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