Friday. February 16. 1973 Scott Langley 6EmisFamlt9 raw and Ibeamttifnl 1 3 s j u I Taster's Chapel Hill Cinema "Travels With My Aunt." Maggie Smith. Carolina Theatre. 1:30, 3:20,5:13.7:04,8:55. "Bananas." Woody Allen. Carolina Theatre Late Show. 1 :20 tonight. "Up the Sandbox." Barbra Streisand. Plaza I. 3:10,5:10,7:10.9:10. "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland." Peter Sellers. Plaza II. 3.5.7,9. "The Emigrants." Max Von Sydow; Liv Ullman. Varsity Theatre. 12:50, 3:25, 6, 8:35. "2001. A Space Odyssey." Directed by Stanley Kubrick. Free Flick tonight. 6. 9. 'The Forbin Project." Free Flick Saturday. 6:30. 9. "Something for Everyone." Michael York. Free Flick Sunday. 6:30. 9. Theatre "Guys and Dolls." Musical comedy spoof on Broadway. Opens Tuesday. Village Dinner Theatre. Buffet at 7 p.m. 8:30 p.m. curtain. Nightly except Monday. "Moonchildren." Durham Theatre Guild production. Feb. 21-23 and March 1-2. Allied Arts theatre in Durham. Vickers Avenue and Proctor Street. $2 per ticket. Call 682-5519 for reservations. "No Place to be Somebody." By Charles Gordone. Today at 4 and 8:30 p.m. Page Auditorium. Duke University. Tickets for matinee: $250. Evening: $3. $4, and $5. "Indians." Carolina Playmakers production of Arthur Kopifs drama. Directed by John Mezz. Tonight through Saturday. 8 p.m. at Graham Memorial. Tickets $2.50 at 102 Graham Memorial or Ledbetter-Pickard. "Faust. Part I." Randall Jarrell. UNC-G's late, great poef s translation of Goethe's famous play. UNC-G in the Taylor Building. Feb. 21 through 25. 8:30 p.m. nightly. 2:30 p.m. Feb. 25. "Monique." Greensboro College Players. Feb. 22-24. 8:15 p.m. Odell Memorial Auditorium, Greensboro. Free. "The Hunting Society" by Earl Settlemire. Play reading sponsored by the Laboratory Theatre. Sunday. 3 p.m. Grail Room. Graham Memorial. Everyone invited to attend. Auditions "On Baile's Strand." by WB. Yeats. Auditions for the Lab Theatre. Wednesday and "Thursday. Feb. 21-22.: 7:30 p.ttv. Grail Room, 'Graham Memorial. Directed by Jim Burleson. Concerts "Cosi Fan Tutte." Mozart. National Opera Company. In English. WRAL-TV Auditorium today at 8 p.m. East Carolina University, McGinnis Auditorium, 8:15 p.m. Saturday. Annual Music Scholarship Concert. Features three pianists, two vocalists, one French horn performer with the UNC Symphony Orchestra directed by David Serrins. Tuesday at 8 p.m. Hill Hall. $1 for students, $3 for townspeople. $10 for contributors (2 tickets). $25 for donors (2 tickets), $50 for patrons (2 tickets) and $100 for sponsors (2 tickets). Leo Kottke, guitarist and vocalist. Concert in Memorial Hall. Wednesday at 10 p.m. Tickets $1.50 on sale at the Carolina Union Information Desk. Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention. With Doctor Hooks and the Medicine Show. Saturday, Feb. 24. 9 p.m. Cameron Indoor Stadium. Duke University Campus. Tickets $3, $350 and $4. Tickets on sale at the Record Bar and at the door. Television "Hippo." Jacques Cousteau special on the hippopotamus. 8 p.m. Channels 5 & 8. "Circle of Fear." Patty Duke and John Astin play a couple haunted by ghosts of a deserted movie studio. 9 p.m. Channel 28. "Evening at Pops." Thirteen year old violinist Lillit Gampel plays Mendelssohn's 9D0V "Ct PEACE Monday, March 5 at 8 p.m. Tickets now on sale Available at the $6.00-5.00-4.00 Coliseum Box Off ice "Shoes please" & Record Bar - Chapel H ill GREENSBORO COLISEUM Choice Violin Concerto in E minor. 9:30 p.m. Channel 4. "In Concert." The Hollies, Ken Loggins and Jim Messina and Billy Preston in Live concert. 1 1 :30 p.m. Channels 5 & 8. Radio WCHL. "Interlude." 1360 on the AM dial. 6:15 - 7 p.m. Today: Brahms Violin Sonata in D minor performed by Jascha Heifetz. Sunday: Mozart - Prague Symphony and Sonata No. 3 in E-flat major. "Concert." WCAR. 550 on the AM dial. Sunday 3-5 p.m. Debussy: Syrinx. Glinka: Russian and Ludmilla Overture. Poulenc: Trio for oboe, bassoon and piano. Borodin: Polovtsian Dancces. Scriabin: Poem of Ecstasy. Stravinsky: Le Sacre du Printemps. Mendelsshon: Symphony No. 4. "Norma." Live from the Metropolitan Opera. Starring Montserrat Caballe and Renato Scotto. 2 p.m. Saturday. WPTF. 680 on the AM dial. "Festival of Music." WPTF. 680 on the AM dial. Sunday. 7:10 - 11 p.m. Includes Bizet: Carmen Suite No. 1. Franck: Sonata in A. Stravinsky: Jeux de Dartes. Interpretation of Praeludium. Shostakovish: Piano Concerto No. 2. Gershwin: American in Paris. Beethoven: "Eroica" Symphony. j Planetarium The Astronomy of Astrology An adventure into science behind astrology for believers and skeptics. Monday through Friday. 8 p.m. Saturdays, 11 a.m., 1 and 3 and 8 p.m. Sundays, 2,3, and 8 p.m. Through March 5. Art Howard Thomas. "The Later Paintings, 1958 to 1971." North Carolina Museum of Art. Through March 4. 107 E. Morgan St. Raleigh. Open Tuesday through Saturday (10 a.m. to 5 p.m.) Sunday, 2 to 6p.m. Closed Mondays. "Duke University Museum of Art. Tuesday through Friday. (9 a.m. to 5 p.m.) Saturdays and Sundays (2 to 5 p.m.) Ackland Art Center. The Dillard Collection of Art on Paper Exhibition. Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday 2 to 6 p.m. Closed Mondays. Ron Snapp and Don Sultan, prints, paintings and drawings. The Art Gallery. Through March 2. - - vi Other Poetry Reading. James Hutton reads selections from T.S. Eliot. Sunday 8 p.m. Deep Jonah. Free. SANTA! (John Santa - guitar, Mike Kott cello) in concert. Also George Ceres. Saturday, Feb. 17, 8 p.m. in Deep Jonah. Vintage flicks. - Fre nlargaret Mead, anthropologist. 8 p.m. today. Memorial Hall. SOLD OUT. North Carolina Dance Theatre. Sunday 8 p.m. Memorial Hall. Tickets $150 from the Union Information Desk or at the door. : ' . ' WEDNESDAY, Feb. 2T MEMORIAL HALL 10:00 PM $1.50 TICKETS AT UNION INFO DESK AND AT THE ' DOOR tJTmiiIiiIiiiIZ i ) it r -i iiimT- 1 "lt Emigrants - At last a film which concentrates on pretty pictures and is also genuinely forceful, dramatic, and moving. Jan Troell's film of Swedish emigrants to America is a bit simplistic, but it's also a rare and beautiful work of cinema art. The first foreign film since "The Garden of the Finzi-Continis" that can safely be recommended to everyone. CH Travels With My Aunt George Cukor has brought back the best of old-fashioned Hollywood in this variation on the Auntie Mame tale. Crackling comedy scenes alternate with moments of genuine beauty and grace. Alec McCowen is simply perfect. -CH Dirty Harry - Violent police thriller lifted to genuine heights by the extraordinary power of the direction and the superb professionalism in every department. Most impressive and, on its level, perhaps a masterpiece. G Deliverance - A canoe trip turns into a nightmare. The script is pretty irritating, filled with Important Dialogue and Meaningful Situations, but the work in every other department is literally stunning. The film is so exciting aid powerful that it will leave an audience limp at the end. R,G Cabaret Germany just before Hitler. Really just a slick Hollywood musical, but done with real style and an unusual maturity. Liza Minelli is extraordinary, especially in the musical sequences. R The Getaway Basically just a brainless bank robbery and escape film, but Sam Peckinpah's direction is so tough and mean that it transforms the film into something that is always interesting and occasionally tremendously exciting. R,G The Mechanic - The most successfully cold, evil, amoral gangster film I have ever seen. There are some strange dialogue and some miscalculated scenes, but the only real flaw is Jan-Michael Vincent's smirky performance. Otherwise, an impressive achievement, a truly horrifying film. R Sounder Tale of poor black sharecroppers. The script is occasionally irritating, but the film is beautifully photographed and directed, and acted with such simplicity, conviction and humanity that I do hot see how it could fail to move anyone, black or white. At times, it seems a genuine folk movie. D,R,G Black Girl Young black girl strives to become a dancer. The script and actors are generally quite exceptional. Unfortunately, Ossie Davis' direction, cinematically dead and inexcusably sloppy, practically ruins the film, but much of the power breaks through. R Up the Sandbox Unsatisfactory comedy that exploits Women's Lib themes. Irving Kershner's direction, razor-sharp in its observations on modern life, but is very Singer-guitarist Kottke performs Wednesday Leo Kottke, the master of the guitar with a voice he describes as sounding like the backlash of gastric disturbances in geese, will appear in Memorial Hall on Wednesday, Feb. 21, at 10 p.m. Tickets are $1.50 and may be purchased at the Carolina Union Information Desk. Born in Muskogee, Oklahoma, Kottke began his career in Minneapolis now defunct West Bank Scholar Coffeehouse, where he recorded his first album, live, for Oblivion records in )969. Six albums and thretj refeordMg?eompanies later; he has become- according ftothe Minneapolis Star "One of the rare popular musicians who transcend the contemporary music explosion associated with the youth consumer culture of the past decade." The whimsical Minneapolis guitarist's eclectic concert presentation with the Leo Kottke Revue, or "The Third Annual Happy Hour FREE!!! Sudz With a Sub! Monday S aturday Friar's Celler Deli 135 E. Franklin Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Indefinite amount 5 At this place ' 9 Fondle 12 War god 13 Newspaper paragraph 14 Be mistaken 15 Teacher 17 Greek letter 18 Cravat 19 City in Iowa 21 Trio 23 Games 27 Faroe Islands whirlwind 28 Badgerlike mammal 29 Things, in law 31 Tennis stroke 34 Conjunction 35 Chooses 38 Earth goddess 39 Greek letter 41 Make lace 42 Musical drama 44 Spanish for "yes" . 46 Instructed 48 Droops 51 Stop 52 Man's name 53 Conjunction 55 Fiber plants 59 Hurried 60 Female 62 Ireland 63 Goal 64 Periods of time 65 Antiered animal DOWN 1 Algonquian Indian 2 Anglo-Saxon money 3 Males 4 landed property (pi.) 5 Leases Latin conjunction Corded cloth Send forth Sea bird Great Lake Woody plant Egg dish Extend Exclamation Harvest Paddles Symbol for niton Dry. as wine Backless seats Monster Trinket Spanish plural article Speckled Land surrounded by water 7 8 9 10 11 16 20 22 23 24 25 26 30 32 33 36 37 40 Walker Art Center Presentation of Leo Kottke at the Guthrie," the site of his latest live recording, was totally in character. Behind the Felliniesque mood, however, is a virtuoso guitarist, equally adept at flat-picking, finger-picking and bottlenecking. While his greatest strength lies in his instrumentals, which are in a class by themselves, the vocals are equally polished, from "Lullaby," a lament to the1? .' demise of aXady Margaret, to "Standing; in My Shoes," a policy statement to his; ex-lover. Kottke has no delusions about being a songwriter-poet for the Consciousness III Generation. His lyrics deal with love," good and bad, funny and sad. "A rather refreshing quality." Rolling Stone remarked. Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle sjAr! ISlPlQlKjEr IRIAIP i r All i rikIe dLje" l a p a rap1e oa1nn1 I L S In p 1 Ia I i A 1 1 I lAilRjllTjjI NpaSTlET A i lP a pIdIi t i Ions f A mmTtIn & slsOPie f siLl0JTMZJ 1 FrH 'R's ro usJe sfj at me In Ip M U TflS tCTt Efff E A QlftlELjslAlLlElsLjAlWiN 43 Spanish , article 45 Pronoun 47 Calls 48 Metal strand 49 Country of Asia 50 Wise person 54 Title of respect 56 Falsehood 57 Before 58 Weight of India 61 Sun god 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 U , TO T3 - u 1 S&ttt 22 19 20 g?2l 22 34 n35 36 37 133 39 40 T 42 43 44 45 IS""-47 " 52 54 56 37 58 59 g 60 61 63 1 I ll64 1 1 1 mA ti poor in the fantasy sequences. Some excellent moments, but generally a me. CH Lady Sings the Blues - Hollywood lives on in this big, glossy, garb-icey . dum-lu:n biography of Billie Holliday. The film is almost rescued by the superb. olJ-fashiorse-J. Oscar-grabbing performance of Diana Ross, but she rus often been clumsily directed, and she cannot carry the burden by herself. -G 1776 - As low class and vulgar a cartoon distortion of history as I can recall, and it wants to be taken seriously, as a work of patriotic art. Positively nauseating. - R The following have not been reviewed. Opinions expressed are those of a majority of critics. Save the Tiger Jack Lemmon's latest got mixed reviews. - D The Train Robbers John Wayne's latest got poor reviews. -D.R.G Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - A new live action version that got vm luJ reviews. CHJ,R,G CH Chapel Hill, D Durham. R Raleigh, G Greensboro Union Films 2001: A Space Odyssey Stanley Kubrick's vision of the future. Perhaps a bit too obsessed with technology, but definitely a great and very beautiful film. Friday at and 9. The Forbin Project - A computer takes over. An interesting idea done at a rather middling level of competence. Not bad, but not too good. Saturday at 6:30 and c. Something for Everyone - A black comedy involving a bisexual charmer. A rejl mess, this, with several clashing acting styles and a crude lack of taste. Sunday at :.0 and 9. Chape! Hill Film Friends Life Upside Down Alain Jessua's French film showing shizophrenia as a beautiful thing. According to critics, a strange and absorbing film. Friday at 9:30 and Saturday at 1 1 :30 in Gardner 105. Campus Cinema - The Sorrow and The Pity An examination of the Nazi occupation of France, and the most important documentary ever made. Period. No one interested Jrj. films, history or even truth can afford to miss this great human document. Friday at 7, Saturday at 2 and 7 in Carroll Hall. The Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences announced its annual Oscar nominations this week. The nominees for best picture are "Cabaret"; "Deliverance": "The Emigrants"; "The Godfather"; and "Sounder." The best actor nominees are Marlon Brando ("The Godfather"); Michael Caine ("Sleuth"); Sir Laurence Olivier ("Sleuth"); Peter OToole ('The Ruling Class"); and Paul Winfield ("Sounder"). The best actress nominees are Liza Minnelli ("Cabaret"); Diana Ross ("Lady Sings the Blues"); Maggie Smith ("Travels with my Aunt"); Cicely Tyson ("Sounder"); and Liv Ullman ("The Emigrants"). JohoiSartfa finifcar M ike Kott,-' cello. ! tMJspjfit f lights of fantacy ; tf raw poignancy . ': ." NEWS & O BSE Ft VER also GEORGE CERES Free DEEP JONAH, Sat. Feb. 17. 8 p.m. DUKE UNIVERSITY UNION presents Charles Gorden's play. 0 ii NO PLACE TO February 16, 1973, 4:00 and 8:30 All Seats Reserved i? Tickets: Matinee: $2.50, Evening: $3.00, $4.00, $5.00 PAGE AUDITORIUM DUKE UNIVERSITY Wli Mm ;;3tA -MA INCLUDED 'Round trip, now-t0 j Wtgh bmmwn city of 6mpow on4 NASSAU, mith ccynpU' in-flight tmnrtcm, including epan bor . townd trip Nunfcn mti bopgopa kanrfting bw n airport and Uo'mt -Choic qI ecuw dotiom.- owad, iripU, o. ooubi at th MONTAGU BCACH HOTEl for 7 deyt na 7 nighti. Wslcan Mum Swil Party. Manoov'f Cocktail f9tf. ' All tamm, Hpt, end gtvnjty chowjw. 1 'hbtpitalify Omtk In hotmt lbby. Hol facllftioi inciwo: pria booch, pa!, 7 m'gfctclubt. riouren FROM . imCMU? oad Uail. tad Owja. 1 BE SOMEBODY" 4- MARCH 9-15 7 ' - -1' - i - i, i. Spoil youtf a tttttt! Lravt tut m a.';;, lith btkimd d ((i undr tht tnepicat . -r . Hit mkitt tipping ent e thct lame te$?t r j coct itlamd dii" t if. CONTACT DCUGLAS ANOESiCN " SUlTt A . STUOtNf UNipN 933-H57 caCC;M2;i . or v:a 141 M Street. r hjshington. D.C.- i3005 202 78S-475S - UmHaU iamiLLu o Out uruvvu. 5 I IT"