Thursday, December 3. 1970
Trt Oatfy Tar Heel
1
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move auiciliieece
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taps
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$400
filed.
miiiiioe sent
sigsiinstl: Callev
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States
,irJr7 NNIN9' Ga-.A HonS Kong attorney disclosed Wednesday he had filed
"uu ' uu agamsr ist L,t. William L. Calley Jur. and the United
government on behalf of 59 survivors of the allH Mv I i
The disclosure by Paul Narkin came shortly after military Judge Col. Reid W.
Kennedy c osed the Calley court-martial to all newsmen and spectators when a
witness took the stand and refused to answer any questions relating to My Lai.
Calley is charged with the premeditated murder of 102 South Vietnamese
civilians March 16, 1968, the day his platoon conducted a search-and-destroy sweep
through the village of My Lai.
Narkin's suit names as defendants Calley, Secretary of the Army Stanley Resor
and Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird. It seeks $200 million in compensatory
damages, and $200 million in punitive damages.
The reluctant witness who brought about the closing of the Calley trial W3S Alan
Boyce of Bradley Beach, N.J.
Kennedy did not explain his reasons for excluding spectators. It apparently was
for the purpose of resolving what-if anything-would be done with the witness.
Kennedy promised the trial would resume on an open basis Thursday morning.
Tate trial lawyer still missing
LOS ANGELES-Defense lawyer Ronald Hughes was missing for a third straight
day from the Tate murder trial Wednesday and concern was expressed by the
prosecutor about what might have befallen the novice attorney.
A helicopter was dispatched by the sheriff's department to search the mountains
of Los Padres National Forest northwest of Los Angeles for the 250-pound
bewhiskered Hughes who reportedly went there with a sleeping bag before a violent
storm hit the area.
Hughes, 35, representing Leslie Van Houten and trying his first jury case, had
been delinquent on getting to court previously during the five and one-half month
old trial and Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older Tuesday issued a "body
attachment order" for him.
Nixon blasts Coast Guard
WASHINGTON President Nixon considers "outrageous" the Coast Guard's
refusal to grant asylum to a Soviet sailor off the Massachusetts coast last week and
will take steps to make sure it doesn't happen again, the White House said
Wednesday.
The White House said initial reports to the President showed that "procedures
followed were inadequate and the action taken inadequate and the judgments used
were bad."
Nixon "felt this whole matter is outrageous," said Press Secretary Ronald
Ziegeler, both because the Lithuanian seaman was refused political asylum and
because it was several days before the President learned of the incident.
Committee kills consumer, bill
WASHINGTON-The House Rules Committee killed legislation creating an
independent federal agency for consumer protection Wednesday, one day after it
was overwhelmingly approved by the Senate.
By refusing on a 7-7 tie vote to clear the bill for House action, the Rules
Committee in effect killed it, and the chances it might be revived this late in
Congress were considered slim.
DINNER SPECIAL
HARRY'S RESTAURANT
175 E. FRANKLIN
HOT ROAST BEEF SANDWICH
SERVED WITH POTATO PUFFS
& STRING BEANS
$1.15
5 PM - 7:30 PM
B
: r!rTZr- . - g
a . n n n i
EARLY BIRD
LUNCHEON SPECIAL
11 AM - 12 Noon
HICKORY SMOKED
BAtfBECUED BEEF
ON SESAME BUN
$.75
HARRY'S RESTAURANT
175 E. FRANKLIN
-ft.
53
1SI3
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I M J
And Izzzz
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A Goodtimes Enterprises Production from Warner Bros, in Technicolor.
WED.
THRU
SAT.
OPEN
12:45
by Frank Parroh
Feature Editor
"Feast" is nourishing theatre fare.
Intake is easy enough but requires an
alert audience- And, as producer-stage
manager Jeff Davis told one prospective
theatre-goer, "it's better than television."
Beside tv, it's a choice between a
gourmet's table and an ascetic's meal. To
begin with, the script combines literacy
and obscenity in highly imaginative
fashion. Albert Camus said of Sisyphus,
suggesting a phrase that was to suffer
indignities, "His rock is his thing." Words
are Lewis Black's thing. He has written an
intelligent script which allows the
ingredients in "Feast" to be savored.
"Feast" uses sound (piano, guitar and
drums), stage (the play itself) and screen
(the films interspersed within the play's
varied situations.) they combine to tell us
about a boy, Delaney, as he grows
through and into asburdity. "Feast" also
lays before us themes concerning fathers
and sons, mothers and daughters-the
much-abused generation gap if you will
and perhaps the human condition.
"Feast" begins at the breakfast table
and ends with a post -midnight snack. The
stage center is focused on the kitchen. It
is furnished in twentieth-century
American banality. The table and chairs,
cabinets and appliances are commonplace
and seemingly accurate for Delaney's
family. Rick Young's setting accurately
catches suburbia's sameness. On the wall
is the screen wherein we see outrageous
parodies of Madison Avenue pitches and
"an overview of western history" among
other vignettes.
Seated around the table in the
foreground is the family of four, Delaney
(Mitchell Albright), Willa (Gayle
Behrman), Mom (Sharon Mills), and Dad
(Whit Andrews). Delaney, who imagines
himself as a cowboy, is bumptious and
obnoxious. Delany seems to recognize
perfunctory gestures-pretended
conversation, table grace and the "please
pass, please pass," etc. ritual.
Delaney, the central character, is
transported from his make-believe world
to school which is unbelievable. Later
Delaney will find formal education
impossible as well. In the meanwhile,
Delaney gropes toward maturity.
Delaney won,t go swimming in
Crawford's Creek as his tomboy friend '
Billie (Patricia Snell) has suggested. His
mother has told him it causes polio. But
Billie will not tolerate another "stupid
excuse" from Delaney. So he goes. He is
next seen crawling into the kitchen,
presumably mocking his mother's
warning. .-
Delaney is constantly torn between
Huck Finn's joyous, spontaneous type of
adventuring and "civilization's" imposed,
often arbitrary restrictions. The son of his
family's black gardener confronts him in
ITH
v y
Let
Santa
bring you a pilot's
license. Tarheel
Flying Club 929-4458
r i ,. r r i nn n
141412 Rosemary St.
NOW OPEN
UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT
LIVE MUSIC - EVERY WED.
FRI,SAT,&SUN NIGHTS
Hnon K n m . 1 a m
pWH J 1 VI. III.
3
1:20-4:40-8:00
FAREWELL ENGAGEMENT
GOOD BYE-FOR 5 YEARS!
Positively last showing as movie (never on
TV) for at least 5 years. Hurry! See it just
one more rime!
WINNER OF
I ACADEMY
AWARDS!
DAVID LEANS
FILM -
OF BORS fSTBBS
DOCTOR
6
SHOWS I 1
at IB
fc f mi fni m ti irii ,,r ...I I I M PWAV1S10H AND METROCOlOfl I
Kmm fJJ7 " '1 xhr'ouGH THE OOOR.'OWi-r PLUG IT IN, VOUTWlT ".NbESN
A OlfwE GOINT GET T UP THERi?P- i AN LET IT WORK IT jH&&
a high school bathroom between chses.
He asks Debne- why he bothers with a
class 2nd teacher he loathes. Dehney hs
no ready answer. As DeUney leaves the
bathroom, the black guy adds. "Drop in
any time between classesI live here."
George Ceres protrays both the gardener
and his son.
Delaney accepts the wine Billie offers
him and apparently becomes a Bacchic
convert. He and Billie enter a normally
innocuous teenage party. A soused
Delaney announces "I've brought the
exlixir which will bring us to the pits of
depravity." The boys are randy, the
girls restrained and they are receptive to
Delaney's summons.
Sister Willa responds to Delaney's
needs for communication and
companionship. She is his soul-mate.
The children acknowledge their
problems. John and Joyce can't or won't
idiots who are
despises h:s kb jnJ
his superiors. Joyce
doesn't have an equally obvious probkm.
Bin she seems preoccupied with prepanr.g
comestibles. As Willa. Delaney's elder, is
about to leave for college. Joyce cooks a
sumptuous repast. She will not let her
ether p-co pi -Delaney in ke w-fh Jenme
(TalmjJfe RapnK Dclir.cy petting lak! at
college and DeUr.ey getttng waUid b
academic regimen?afKn.
Then, there are the fiirrsed sequence
uaugnter se
unacceptable
e the
. Willa
boy
savs.
j aw i
voice rtsng
be upset and
which bear on ths
airred
American
advertised are
"God forbid we should evie:
spoil the meal."
An odd remark. This family is troubled
by nearly incessant turmoil. Only when
they sit down to eat do they have a
common interest. Yet, they love each
other which makes the
non-communication intensely frustrating.
The children and parents suffer through
painful leave-takings. "Feast" seems to
pose the question: is family life tenable?
"Feast" goes beyond one family to the
outer world. We see Delaney dealing with
inspu! eomrncncjls
at tdtot. i.e. the
Some products
butter made
world.
peanut
Campes calendar
JL
"Women In Cuba" A talk by women
in the Venceremos Brigade who have
recently returned from Cuba. Tonight at
8 o'clock in the Student Union, room
207. All women invited. Sponsored by
Female Liberation 27.
Student Party legislative caucus tonight
at 7 in third floor, New West. All SL
members are invited to attend.
The International Handicrafts Bazaar
needs more salesmen for two-hour shifts
on Saturday and Sunday. Concerned
persons should go by the Y and sign up
for specific times.
State Affairs Committee will meet on
Wed. night, Dec. 3 at 7:30 in the Union.
Tickets- for 'The Graduate" are still
available. On sale at the Carolina Union's
information desk for 75 cents.
"Love Story," by Erich Segal, is to be
presented under the auspices of the
Carolina Readers in the Union Coffee
Shop tomorrow at 9 and 10:30 p.m.
Five-lesson recorder lesson series,
beginning today. Information and sign-up
sheet at Union Information Desk.
Cinematheque double feature: "The
Leather Boys" and "Nanook of the
Noith" in 1 15 Ackland tonight. Shows at
7&9.
shortly after God created the
"Dog Paw-s" cologne. "No Seat"
deodorant and "a hvgtene for the to
you." the films are aba related fo
preceding or ongoing scenes.
"Feast" is indeed well tin if ted.
Albright, Mills and Andrews sometimes
overact. The stage movements are
sometimes clumsy and confused. "Fejst"
has its blatantly amateurish moments.
But "Feast" is finally a well-mounted,
masterful production. It's guaranteed to
appease your theatrical appetite.
The Daily Tar Heel b published
by the University of North Carolina
Student Publications Board, daily
except Monday, examination
"5 periods, vacations, and summer
periods.
Offices are at the Student Union
Bldg., Univ. of North Carolina.
Ch3pcl HOI, N. C. 275 1 4. Telephone
Numbers: New, Sports-933-101 1 ;
Business, Circulation,
S Advertising-933-1163.
vj Subscription rates: S10 per year;
$5 per semester.
Second class postage paid at U.S.
Post Office in Chapel Hilt, N. C.
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TONIGHT'S SPECIAL
7:30-9:00 P.M. only
PIZZA
Plain or Pepperoni
Menu Price
HE QflGGDflG
Wednesday"4:30-7:30
BEEF'ON BUN
Salad & 2 Vegetables
$1.19
Entrance: Behirfd the Zoom
off Columbia St.
Happy Hours: 3:00-6:00 A 8:00-;9:OO
-A
wK tttrtr? b p im 1 Menu rrice
j Fish & Chips j
! Mug of Beer or Cider "l ' " ' j ' L" f
I sTRJj ' I. 3;5QifllSi-lilg,iillpl:3( f S
1, LAST DAY 1
CONFEOMTATION
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i
The game of students and protestors
against the Establishment. An
interaction game in which teams of
players assume the roles of students and
others trying to change the system. On
the other hand, there are the
Establishment groups such as the
University Administration, Business,
Military, City Hall, and others,, who
protect the status quo. The game can be
played by as few as two players or by a
large group, with several players on each
team.
$595
QUAY
iMUUD
Elil'ita-
Gi??!$3 Ctsitt
Zsf. M TM.
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
A'.!er to Yesterday s Puzzle
1 Frozen water
4 Exist
6 Part of flower
11 Dark red
13 Rode in a
vehicle (colloq.)
15 Liquid measure
(abbr.)
16 Inclinations
18 Proceed
19 Spanish
article
21 Roman tyrant
22 Labor
24 Sandaractree
26 Knocks
28 Fish eggs
29 Beasts of
burden
31 Want
33 Nova Scotia
(abbr.)
34 Pound down
36 Transaction
38 Bone
40 Animal coat
42 Atmospheric
disturbance
45 Exclamation
47 Heat
49 God of love
50 Pulverized rock
52 Juncture
54 Near
55 Cyprinoid fish
56 Snake (cclloq.)
59 Symbol for gold
61 Lawmaking
body
63 Builds
65 Sedate
66 Compass point
67 Toll
DOWN
1 Demon
2 Provides,
prepares and
serves food
3 Teutonic deity
4 Blessing
5 Go in
6 Bent over
7 Vast age
8 Station
9 Man's nickname
10 Vast horde
12 Preposition
14 Apportions
17 Country of Asia
20 Final
23 Conjunction
24 Cooled lava
25 Harvest
27 Observes
30 Merganser
32 Tropical fruit
35 Wall coating
37 Girl's name
38 Fertile spot in
desert
39 Tints
AXIAL JGIEt 1 AIL IT A EC
c a mJeTr. a XaT5oin
EN ngjl G H T "1A RlElA
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'"T6 S SHE M C pUo jW
pt?E A L ' IS K ApT "iMj I
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WIE"t HcIl EiA;MjE'R
MIA U,jb M,rADPiA
AjcjC JE fp T tl N E IA; R E P
"ITeIaImiSI hlptlEiNiS
41 Allowance for
waste
43 Twirt
44 Manuscript
(abbr.)
46 indefinite
article
48 Men
51 Colorless
53 Simple
57 Devoured
58 Note of
scale
60 Employ
62 Negative
64 Baseball
position
(abbr.)
ll '2 (3 .J4 5 ttylb 7 3 9 0 y.
,sy ;.y
71 U vl3
. .
".yj9 20 '. 21 22 23
ys y ,'.:
jr 25 ;;.v 26 27 23
WT alrrri
is tty'l? : TtyyT-
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55 :;:::i56 tr -x 59 60
T if i3 64"
vl t ' ' I 1---M I LlJ 1 1 1
THESE a TJRK-A50JT5 ' AE mDOf
m I HOPE M3U HAVE FUN-.
I APPiEQATE 606 OOiTH A'
t ff'Ut,. MEASURE,
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