The Dilfy Tar Heel
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47A7 Murray
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Ycdnesdry. ILtjrch 6, 1S74
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Cinema
"American GrEffill." Carolina Theatre A
ni-ht in tha life cf lmzixntzzzZz g3. It's
psckassd nostl?a and often cornbaTl, but
tha acting is cxccsnt, and it has been
directad w::h a beautiful flow by the talanted
Georgs Lucas. Overrated, but VSA very eood.
1:23, 3:1 S, 5:C3, 7:02 & 9. Ends Thursday.
"Cscause of the Cat." Varsity Thsaire. 1,3,
5, 7 & 9. $2. Ends Tuesday. Lata showf Play It
Ajsin, Sam." Friday and Saturday at 11:15.
$ 1 .S3.
"Cries and Whispers." Plaza I. One of
Eergman's greatest films, an agonizing study
cf human relationships, but it is typical that
th3 theatres here are playing something that
just played Super Sunday. 2:45, 4:55, 7:C5 &
S:15. $2. Enis Thursday.
"Robin Hood." PSaza II. A delight from the
Disney studios. A funny and charming
animated cartoon. 2:45, 4:55, 7:05 & 9:15. $2.
Ends Thursday.
"The Exorcist" Possession film got
extremely mixed reviews. 2, 450, 7 & 9:33. $3.
The Duke Law Bar Association presents
"The Producers," with Zero Mostel and Gene
Wilder and "The Fatal Glass of Beer." a W.C.
Field3 short. Today at 9 p.m. in the Moot
Court Room of the Duke Law School.
Admission 50 cents.
"The Women." Thursday at 8 and 10 p.m. In
the Biological Sciences Auditorium, Duke.
$1. Sponsored by the Freewater Film Society.
Theatre
Laboratory Theatre presents
"Poetixptosive," an improvisation directed by
Harry Shifman. Today at 4 and 8.
Thursday at 8 p.m. in OS Graham Memorial.
Free tickets available at Lab Theatre Dox
Office, Graham Memorial.
"Collision Course," a series of short
playlets. Edited by Edward Parone. Directed
by Kathleen Phelan. Today at 8.
Thursday at 4 & 8 in Graham Memorial. Free
7)
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tickets available at Lab Theatre Dox Offlos.
The Durham Theatre Guild presents "And
l.tlss Heardon Drinks a Little," by Paul Z3ndeL
Thursday through Saturday et 8 p.m. et the
Allied Arts Center In Durham. Admission $2.
For reservations, call C 32-551 9.
Auditions for Taming of the Shrew," by
William Shakespeare. Today at 3 and
7:33 and Thursday at 7:33 In Memorial Hall.
Production dates: Thursday through
Saturday, April 13-23 In the Pit Produced by
the Laboratory Theatre and the Carolina
Union Activities Drama Committee. Parts
available for five men and one woman. Circus
talent including jugglers, tumblers and fire
swaijowers urged to tryouL
Auditions for 11 major outdoor drama
companies are set for Saturday, March 23 at
the Institute cf Outdoor Drama. Registration
deadline is Friday. For more Information,
write Auditions Director, Institute of Outdoor
Drama, UNC.
"South Pacific." Village Dinner Theatre,
Raleigh. Buffet at 7, curtain at 8.-33. Call 787
7771 for reservations. Nightly except
Monday.
The BSM Drama Group presents "The
Wedding," a one-act play written and directed
by Karen Dacons. Today at 8 p.m. In Great
Hall.
Student tickets, $2, for the Pointer Sisters
on sale at the union desk. Public tickets go on
sale Monday, March 8. Concert scheduled for
Wednesday, March 27, 9 p.m. in Carmichaei
Auditorium.
The National Ballet of Washington, D.C.
will perform Friday, March 29 through
Sunday, March 31, at 8 p.m. in Reynolds
Coliseum, Raleigh. Tickets, $1.53, on sale at
union desk. Sponsored by the Friends of the
College program.
The Juilliard Quartet, under the
sponsorship of the Raleigh Chamber Music
Guild, presents a program of Dvorak, Eliot
Carter and Mozart Sunday at 8 p.m. In the'
Stewart Theatre of NCSU, Raleigh. The
audience is invited to meet the performers in a
reception after the concert Admission: $3.50,
t i j i
!asC J y xiss Li y J X' 'J y
adults; $1.53, students; or by season tickets.
Concerts
Greg A" man, in concert, at Cameron
Indoor Stadium, Duke. Sunday, March 17 at 8
p.m. Tickets on saie at ail area Record Bars,
the Carolina Union desk, the Duke Quad and
Page Box Ctl'.ce. All seats reserved, $5,
upstairs and 5, downstairs.
The National Opera Company will present
an English version of Donizetti's The Elixir of
Love." Tonight at 8:15 p.m. In Page
Auditorium. Student tickets, $1, available at
Page Box Office, Duke.
Nightlife
Town Hall. Tonight and Thursday, South
Wing. Friday and Saturday, Bill Blue.
Cat's Cradle. Tonight David Sheppard.
Thursday and Friday, Tracey & Eloise
Schwartz. Saturday, Justice Street Band.
The Cave. Friday, Mike Cross.
Circus
The Hanneford Circus wiil perform Friday,
March 22 at 4:39 and 8 p.m. in Carmichaei
Auditorium. Tickets, $1, on sale at union desk.
Planetarium
The Morehead Planetarium presents
"Sunrise at Stonehenge," a new look at the
question of who built Stonehenge, when and
why. Monday through Friday at 8 p.m.
Saturday at 11, 1, 3 & 8. Sunday at 2, 3 and 8.
Students $1. Through Monday, March 18.
A special program, "Classical Guitar under
the Stars," will be presented after the regular
evening show on Friday and Saturday, March
8, 9, 15 and 15. Admission $2. Music provided
by Francis Perry, artist-in-residence at
Sampson Technical Institute.
M aires am awes crowd
It is I974, an age of growing
decadence and explicit realism. Fantasy
consists of sitting in a padded armchair
and watching The Million Dollar Men,
or going to the cinema to be nauseated
by a desecrated little girl spitting green,
technicolored vomit. Everything is
given to us in living color. The
imagination is dead.
No, wait! Not dead only sleeping;
because Tuesday night a Prince
Charming came, and for a few precious
moments, awoke the slumbering
imaginations of a fortunate handful of
Carolina students.
It was a different world, where spirit
and flesh were one. Slightly stooped and
emaciated, but possessing full control of
his entire body from eyebrows to
fingertips, the aging Marcel Marceau
spun out a series of skits more intense
than the most explicit movie scenes. He
combined the purest and most powerful
aspects of drama movement and
gesture to recreate an array of human
events and emotions which awed and
enthralled his audience.
His skits were happy, sad, comic,
tragic. They reflected poignant
combinations of all sentiment. He
commanded the emotions and reactions
of his audience and toyed with their
fancies. Through a skit like The Painter,
he could instill in them a euphoric
pleasure. Then, coming back with his
classic, The Cage, he could create
despair profound enough to move many
o
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talttl Will 11111 1111 j.-yi.-
ackpacking.
Hackney's packs it with down and fiber-filled sleeping bags.
Alpine, Gerry and Camptraiis tents, backpacks & frames and
everything for the trail. Authentic prospector's gear. Complete
trail clothing.
i i North Hills,
YOF pOOpI WOO piSiy Raleigh
cs
University Mall
J
Heading for Emerald Isle
or Atlantic Beach?
Don't sios...
Capt. Charlie's Seafood Paradise
in Swansboro
riii
it
"where Cooking
is an Art
and Eating
is a
Pleasure"
Bring this ad with you for a free beer with your meal.
COO
PER -TURO
'SAK
i
Ex p e rienee, A b
ility,
and
Ti
me
for
RHA President
it
f
SLECT TC-DE' STTUDEOT
TOH GACtf "FROST
MORE CAN BE ACCOMPLISHED WHEN
THERE IS A FEELING OF TRUST THAN WHEN
THERE IS A SENSE OF ANT A GONISM.
f.larcus WiSfisms, RHA staff
Janat Stephens, RHA President
Jos Elkins, RHA Board - Granville
Howard Evans, RHA Board - Henderson
Carolyn Jarnsrson RHA Board - Ehrinshsus
Ed Sadler, RHA Board - Old East, Old YVsst, Carr
Scott Turner, RHA Bosrd - Morrison
llate Whittington, WRC Chairperson - Cobb
Cynthia Williams. RHA Secretary
Crossword Puzzle Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle
ACROSS DOWN
1 Preposition
4 Tolls
9 Club
12 Exist
13 Malicious
burning
14 Timetjone
by
15 Mends
17 Consumed
19 Lubricates
20 Leading ac
tor 21 Females
23 Father and
mother
26 Decays
27 Walks in
wfltsr
28 What?(col
loq.) 29 Possessive
pronoun
30 Ignited
31 Nahoor
sheep
32 Parent (col
loq.) 33 Passengers
34 Cease
33 Landed pro
perties 37 Coast
33 Strikes
33 Heavenly
body
40 Cubic meter
42 Abounding
45 Goal
43 Retail es
tablishment 43 Period of
time
49 Golf mound
0 Tt.!l staic-
tjre
51 Weaken
1 Distant
2 Native metal
3 Rumors
4 Buckets
5 Is mistaken
6 Beast of
- burden
7 Behold!
8 Scoffed
9 Conductor's
stick
. 10 Mature
11 Measure of
weight
16 Distresses
18 War god
20 Underworld
21 Complain
22 Specks
23 Peels
24 Singing voice
25 Form
27 Metal strands
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30 Most obese
31 Tales
33 Equitable
34 Pretend
36 Subject of
discourse
37 Beef animal
39 Withered
40 Posed for
portrait
41 Stalemate
42 Haul
43 New Deal
agency (init.)
44 Opening
47 Preposition
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Diitr. by Lntusd ealart iftacav, lc
to tears.
At times he recalled the finer
moments of silent movies. Chaplin,
Keaton, Laurel and Hardy these were
the people he learned his art from. But.
not slighting the talents of these screen
greats, Marceau's work was very much
his own. As demonstrated in The Public
Garden, he could depict a multitude of
characters ranging from a little boy
playing ball to an old lady knitting, all
without a single prop. He exhibited a
capacity to convince onlookers that his
arm was a snake, or that his hands were
someone else's. He would climb a ladder
or walk a dog, and never created the
slightest doubt in the mind of his
viewers as to the existence of the ladder
and the dog.
In several of his acts, Marceau
transcended the realm of characters and
objects, and became in himself an
abstraction. The Creation, a dance-like
piece which portrayed the beginnings of
mankind, was for many the most
moving tableau of the evening.
Others were impressed by The Trial, a
dramatic piece in which Marceau p!aed
the judge, prosecutor, defense attorne
scribe and defendant. Through tho.e
characters, he delicately interwove both
hilarity and acute tragedy.
The second half of the program uas
filled by Marceau's alter-ego. Bip. w ho
appeared on stage in grey and white wit h
a red flower stuck in his battered top
hat. He became a lion tamer, a street
musician, a mask maker and a socialite.
His act was highlighted by a delightful
depiction of the David and Goliath
myth in w hich he, of course, played both
parts.
Marceau was accompanied by Pierre
Verry, who appeared between each
scene looking like a figure from
Madame Tussaud's Wax Museum, and
holding a banner which announced the
next skit.
But the fantasy soon ended, and the -crowd
sighed.
Come back soon. Marcel Marceau.
and touch us again with your beauty.
The 1974 Carolina Symposium
present!
An East Asian Cultural Experience
Tilarch 21 -April 4
Gary Snyder - Poet & Zen Master March 21-22
: The Peking Opera Company March 30
:S Masters of Martial Art March 31
$ East Asian Dance Through The Ages April 3
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7a!ke Carolina to the
RJ3oiaB"i tains
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...with heavy jackets, sweaters, longsleeve
sweatshirts, hooded sweatshirts ... all with the
riminrt nr I I fl f Irtrtrt rn thorn
A vailable at your t!Mm(
'ON CAMPUS'
M
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1 '
1
ia
the
Peacock
oom
Today's
Look "N" Fashion
Our Let's Get Acquainted Offer
off
20
We have Everything
from JEANS
to LONG DRESSES
In the Dack cf Milton's Clothing Cupboard
Franklin St.
sy
ill J a I -