Tuesday. Octet t, 1977 Deller. Wagner Assorted odds ends & i- if I : . ....t.W ! . . j -in j, V' 'to6' , --, - 1 y- v7f n : - : 3 Roger Wagner ,v.;;';;:o:x::.:::;:; VivyiViVivr IlllttlltlllllUi Tod Chapel Hill Cinema "The Godfather." Film version of Mario Puzo's novel of Mafia politics, outstanding in every respect. One of the finest period pieces ever to emerge from an American studio. A triumph worthy to stand beside the great European masterpieces. Carolina Theatre. 2, 5, 8. "Fritz the Cat." Brilliant cartoon feature in which the pretensions of several groups are punctured. Truly superb dialogue and an original, free flowing style of animation. Varsity Theatre. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9. "When the Legends Die." Western got mixed early reviews. Plaza I. 3:05, 5:07, 7:0r 5:10. "The Candidate." Very funny, often brilliant, highly sophisticff' story of the American political camp: h tion that perfectly captures the cel of campaign hoopla. Highly recommended. Plaza II. 2:50, 4:55,7,9:05. Theatre "The Executioners." Premiere tonight. A Eugene O'Neill Memorial Playwrights' Conference play written by Charles Kespert. Tickets sell for $2.50 for the Tuesday Sunday run in Graham Memorial Lounge Theatre. Tickets on sale at Playmakers' Business Office in Hrakam lUlomrkrial anil I af4ViAHAr.DifJavrl'e downtown. "Fiddler on the Roof." Village Dinner Theatre. Raleigh. Curtain 8:30 p.m. Call 569-8348 for reservations. excuse He, me you M CH6e oe we vouiNreeps? ii m 00 03 c JJ - yiM,f PI (jjy ujoolpX J CAN'T BELIEVE IT- MAVB THERE AGE SOME -mm MISS I -ji)T CAN'T 0BLlEVt: iTi & IN RER BOOK THAT rrTirrn IswmxtfeKx xqwhwuotu. u)e dom't unper$tamp. j J AHooy y q o iMcGcenl M 6 men who merit eternal damnation. . . ? "SHALL WE not have regular swarms of them here, in as many disguises as only a king of the gypsies can assume, dressed as printers, publishers, writers, and schoolmen? If ever ther was a body of men who merited eternal damnation on earth and in hell it is this Society of Jesus. Nevertheless, we are compelled by our system of religious toleration to offer them asylum." President John Adams, in a letter to Thomas Jefferson 1816 SWARMS? not really MANY DISGUISES? only a few ETERNAL DAMNATION? that depends on your point of view the jesuits wernersville, pa. 19 5 6 5 1 Roger Wagner conducts the Roger Wagner Chorale at 8 p.m. Oct. 31 in Memorial Hall. Celebrating its 25th anniversary, the Chorale has developed into a versatile chorus equally adept at classicals, popular and commercial music. ViVAVWAVAVAViVAVAVAV1VAV.V1VMV.VW .ViViVMViWiV.VAVAV.VAVAV.V.V.VAVAVAWAV1VAViViVAV1VMW ays Entertainment "I'm Really Here." Directed by Richard Mason. Written by Jean-Claude Van Italie. Thursday and Friday at 4 p.m. Special performance November 3 at 8 p.m. 06 Graham Memorial. Free tickets available at Lab Office in Graham Memorial or at door as long as they last. "Godspell." Broadway at Duke Series. Page Auditorium Box Office. Duke University. $3.50, $4,50 and $5.50. 8 p.m. Matinee at 4 p.m. Tickets $3.00. Tryouts "Professor George." Directed by Duane Sidden. Lab Theatre tryouts at 3 & 8 p.m. Today. 216 Graham Memorial. Playwright Ma :ia Sheiness .vill be present for production. "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof." Duke Players tryouts at 7:30 p.m. Friday and 2 p.m. Saturday. Branson Theatre. East Campus. Duke University. "The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne." Carolina Readers. Tryouts today, 79 p.m. 103 Bingham. Cast requires four women and three men. "Changing Times," a multi-media production about the Depression. A cooperative production of the UNC History Department, Carolina Repertory Company, and N.C. Department of Community Colleges. Focus on North Carolina and the crash of 1929 using student actors, slides, tapes, audience participation and perhaps films of the era. Involves tour of 10 N.C. towns on weekends supee! TO S6A UP, O.K.? i I 've oNiy yes, miss, THAT'S RIGHT fiZDUNU TO MX. Mc60leRN 2CeNTtY. BUT N0WX JUST tOie BOTH HM MP during spring semester. Auditions held Wednesday night, 7:30 p.m. in Room 213 of the Union. Nothing to prepare. If you're interested, come by 417 Hamilton Hall or call 933-2155 and leave your name and number. Concerts Deller Consort. Sunday, October 29. Memorial Hall. 8 p.m. $130 for students. Tickets on sale at Union Information Desk. Roger Wagner Chorale. Tuesday, October 31. Memorial Hall. 8 p.m. $2, $2.50, $3. Tickets on sale at Union Information Desk. University Chamber Singers. Tonight. Stafford Wing, Director. Tuesday Evening Concert Series. Hill Hall. Admission Free. Television Of Thee I Sing. CBS has drummed up enough hoopla about this one. Carroll O'Connor and Cloris Leachman star in George S. Kaufman's political satire with music by the Gershwins. 9:30 p.m. Channels 2 & 11. Film: 'Torch Song." Lush mush with Joan Crawford and Gig Young. 1 1 :30 p.m. Channels 2 & 11. 7 Radio WCHL. "Interlude." 6:15 7 p.m. 1360 on the dial. Haydn: Symphony No. 73 in D Major. Beethoven: Trio in G, Op. 121a. WPTF-FM. "Festival of Music." 8:07 - 10 IN THAT CA5.TKEY HOULP ALSO 0AN M MATH BOOK I cove thxtt's SHgmje. vftoeveR, HeSAWFVL one. I UEiMNWri SHRiven v - gy-yj-- . by Joe Pattoo and Anne Marie R tenet Feature Writers ALFRED DELLER will appear in concert with the Deller Convert as ibe Chapel Hill Concert Series begins its new season at 8 p.m. Surulay in Memorial Hall. The sounds of the Elizabethan world are experiencing a renaissance in the 20lh century's rediscovery of the music of that era. The interpretations of consort music of the Renaissance and Baroque eras offered by the Deller Consort have been richly acclaimed the world over. Alfred Deller has achieved renown for his counter-tenor voice, the male equivalent of the alto and the rarest of all voices. The florid of the 17th century-Handel, Bach and Purcell-is especially well suited to the counter-tenor. "The emotions come from within in the pre-Romantic songs," Deller says. "There is no need for the more subjective, extroverted voice quality that came to be demanded in the 19th century by the increase in orchestral color." Student tickets for the Deller Consort Events p.m. 94.7 on the dial. No program tonight. WCAR. Campus Radio. 550 AM. 24 hours continuous rock with radio news nightly at 7:55 & 9:55 p.m. Planetarium "Vagabonds of Space" answers questions about asteroids, meteor showers and some very interesting comets. Nightly at 8 p.m. Matinees Saturday at 11 a.m., 1 & 3 p.m. Matinees Sunday at 2 & 3 p.m. Runs through October 30. Art Ackland Art Center. "Some American History" runs through October 29. Open Tuesday through Saturday (10 a.m. to 5 p.m.) and Sunday (2 to 6 p.m.). Closed Mondays. North Carolina Museum of Art. 107 E. Morgan Street. Raleigh. Open Tuesday through Saturday (10 a.m. to 5 p.m.) and Sunday (2 to 6 p.m.). Closed Mondays. Student Union South Gallery. Art show by Dick Rabil. Runs through October 31. Other Deep Jonah. The Country Boys (Bluegrass). Brown bagging: only beer and wine under 14 . percent alcohol will be allowed. Student ID required. No one under 18 admitted. Free. 8 p.m. Saturday. Speech. Michael Harrington. Thursday, November 2. Memorial Hall. Free Admission. The Order of the Grail and APO sponsor Class Ring Sale Orders Will Be Taken Today, October 24 in South Lounge Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 South American rodent 5 Obtain 8 Roman tyrant 12 Word of sorrow 13 Native metal 14 Metal 15 Spurted forth 17 Signify 19 Locations 20 Ancient Persians 21- Sea eagles 23 Ascend 24 Uncouth person 26 Chemical compound 28 Obstinate 31 Hypothetical force 32 Quarrel 33 Proceed 34 American essayist 36 Evaluates 38 Vessel 39 Noose 41 Loved one 43 Begin 45 Ordinary language in speaking 48 Newest 50 Mine excavations 51 Region 52 Before 54 Observed 55 Part of speech 55 Ventilate 57 Otherwise DOWN 1 Cushions 2 Turkish regiment 3 Hauled 4 Showy flower 5 Deity 6 Teutonic deity 7 Spread for drying 8 Baseball teams 9 Wears away 10 Repetition 11 Units 16 Slave 18 Mohammedan chieftain 22 Strip of leather 23 Marry agafn 24 Policeman (colloq.) 25 Fuss 27 Torrid 29 The self 30 Small child 35 Click beetle 36 Decays 37 Clan Diatr. by performance v;U for SI. 30 at the (arolmj Union Information Dcvk. Season tickets for the (Turn.! Hill Concert SerieV four event are available at S4. The Series bill of fare sees the ChapeJ Hi!! arrival of the Polish Mime Quartet (Feb. 4) the Angelicum Orchestra of Milan (Feb. 25) and Lorin Hollander (March 25). MUSIC RANGING from Renaissance masterpieces to American folk songs will fill Memorial Hail when the Roger Wagner Chorale appears in concert with pianist Albert Dominguez. Performance time is 8 p.m. Oct. 31. The Roger Wagner Chorale, entering its 25th season, has achieved an international reputation of versatility and artistry under the direction of its founder Roger Wagner. Conductor Leopold Stokowski praised the Chorale thusly: "They are second to none in the world. Wagner, expressing his music philosophy, says, "Music by itself is nothing. It must be a spark, a throbbing heart, life and death. You must get involved and get inside the music. It must be sincere and come through you." Tickets for the Roger Wagner Chorale concert are available at the Carolina Union Information Desk. Prices are $2, S2.50, and S3. LATE NIGHT FILMS entertainment in Chapel Hill need not be restricted to "Starlight Theatre" or - Devil forbid! -"The Web." Carolina Union's weekend free flicks, now run at 6:30 and 9 p.m., could be given a third run for the late night audiences at 1 1 :30. Or three shows could be presented nightly at, say, 6, 8, and 10 p.m. As it stands now, the early show poses constant conflicts for those who dine at a reasonable hour. The 9 p.m. showing swallows an entire evening as it's This Week in the Feature Case A Collection of Books On frortW Cave lia Ue trxink tnis library will be of interest to both geologists aind North Carol ina collectors. THE OLD BOOK CORNER IIMIM Ki 1 1. - I til I I I ll'll SI I ( t ' VH KI Ni. I I l I HM'II Hill Si .--l4 From 9 AM til 4 PM Friday, October 27 of Student Union Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle A I T I A il Ft II C I A 1 C I I R I 1 SECUg E I ITIrclAIPjg IPI 38 Drive onward 40 Mountain nymph 42 Got up 43 Chopped cabbage 44 Hawaiian root stock 46 Observes 47 Slave 49 Afternoon party 50 Weight of India 53 A state (abbr.) United Feature Syndicate, lac 2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 j8 9 10 11 vw 15 16 g&j 17 18 19 &7&20 3y40 41 42 43 44 "lllll35 " 46 47 . - m JT" mWn p4 IT" Hgo ""37 " necessary to get in line early to guarantee a seat at thr more popular flicks, A Utc show w ould make it posxihlc to spcnJ the evening studying (or whatever) and sjj'l get out for some er.lertasnmert. With the Union's bcttcr than-eser film schedule, a campus late show ivukl five the local tHjous a run for their midnight money and provide some fine entertainment at a fine hour. A YEAR WHEN students must bk for musical entertainment has its advantages for a new folk duo iske David and Fitzpatrick. Earl Davis and Stuart (Stu) Fitzpatrick have recently played at Deep Jonah and Chapel Hill's new Endangered Species. Davis and Fitzpatrick's guitar accompaniment is occasionally supplemented by Stu's Dylanic harmonica. Stu's voice has the smoothness well suited to "4 and 20" by Crosby, Stills and Nash. Earl's raspy tinge suits Paul Simon's "The Boxer." The pair's repertoire includes some good ole Rick Nelson tunes too. Although Davis and Fitzpatrick perform other group's songs, they do not become dittos in style and tone. Stu and Earl also perform some songs they have composed themselves. Stu wrote the words and music to "A Vague Man," a song concerned with mediocre man in his lifeless world. Earl wrote "Seasons," a number which recalls the problems of puberty. The pair evoke audience response with their emphasis on performance and not on verbal stalling between songs. But they are human. At their Deep Jonah concert Earl explained that Stu was hiding his face with his hair because "he had lost a contact lens." Stu replied, "Anyone in the audience who wears contacts knows how I feel with both eyes going in opposite directions." , ; The Dally Tar Heel is published by the University of North Carolina Student Publications Board, daily except Sunday, exam periods, vacation, and summer periods. No Sunday issue. The following dates are to be the only Saturday issues: September 2, 9. 16 & 23, October 14 21, and November 11 & 18. , Offices are at the Student Union building, Univ. of North ( Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers: News, Sports 933-1011; 933-1012; Business, Circulation. Advertising 933-1163. Subscription rates: $10.00 per year; $5.00 per semester. Second class postage paid at U.S. Post Office in Chapel Hill, N.C. The "Student f Legislature shall have ..powers to 'determine I the Student Activities fee rand to appropriate all revenue derived" from the Student Activities Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student Constitution). The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of all advertisements and to revise or turn away copy it considers objectionable. The Daily Tar Heel will not consider adjustments or payments . for- any advertisement involving-major typographical errors or -erroneous insertion unless notice is given to the Business Manager within (1) one day after the advertisement appears, or within one day of the receiving of tear sheets, of subscription of the paper. The Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion of an advertisement scheduled - to run several times. Notices for such correction must be given before the next insertion. Murray Pool Business Mgr. Beverly Lakeson A Over. Mgr. ; i An otdfevoritt of ssilon tnd ttudsntsl Cool, ' ;( brsattu&t. htnd- !; ; crsftsd t fk tsnnsd : ' cowhkSs, drits toft. ' Etsy on, toy off I !; Mocccsineonv !;! ; f oft, brcf oot . !;! flexibility. ;! j! HIS 'N HERS I