Wednesday, March 27. 1974 The Dalfy Tar Heel j O IT du" d etd inni I i ' n n Fly US Cinema "TheStlng." Carolina Theatre. Con comedy is itself a con with some pretty moldy material being turned into excellent entertainment by some talented hands. It's too big and tends to drown In overproduction, but It's a sure fire audience plaaser. 1:50, 4:10, 650 & 8:50 $2. Ends Thursday, April 4. Late shows: Friday and Saturday, "The First Circle." Sunday "Paper Uoon." AH shows at 11:15. $1.50 "The Last Detail." Varsity Theatre. Tale of two sailors taking a third to prison. A marvelously robust and human film, both funny and sad, with an unusual understanding of certain types of emotions. Superlative acting. 1, 3, 5, 7 & 9. $2. Ends Wednesday. Late show: Friday arid Saturday, "Eric Soya's Seventeen." 11:15. $1.5Q. "Ousting." Plaza I. Stars Elliott Gould and Robert Cake. Story of vice cops got bad reviews. 3:C5, 5:10, 7:15 and 9:20. $2. Ends Thursday. "Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams." Plaza II. Story of a cold woman thawing. Has a few touching moments (mainly due to another superb performance from Joanne Woodward), but the film as a whole is cliched soap opera stuffed with pseudo poetry. 3, 5, 7 & 9. $2. Ends Thursday. "The Exorcist" Plaza III. William Friedkin brings to this devil fiim the same slam-bang direction he brought to "The French Connection." Some of it Is effective at the moment, but the film as a whole is pure manipulative trash. Disgusting in more ways than cne. 2, 4:30, 7 & 9:30. $3. Free f.icks: Friday, "Fires on the Plain." A searing Japanese film on the horrors of war. Saturday, "Lifeboat." Classic Hitchcock, with Ta'.Sulsh Oankhead. The entire film takes place on a lifeboat at sea. Sunday, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid." All films at 6:30 & 9 in the Great Hail. Chapel Hill Film Friends: "The Burmese Harp," (Japan, 1S58). A story of war and peace directed by Kon Ichikawa. A masterpiece of the Japanese cinema. Friday at 9:30. Saturday at 11:30 in Carroll Hail. Admission $1.50. Charlie Chaplin Rim Series: "The Kid." Perhaps his most poignant film, with the kid played by Jackie Coogan. Also, "The Idle Class." A lampoon of the country club set. Sunday at 2, 4:30, 7 and 9:30 In Carroll Hail. $1. Alternative Cinema: "Delated Flowers." Russian film based on a Chekov short story. Named one of the year's ten best by Penelope GilHat of the New Yorker. Saturday at 2, 7 & 930 in Carroll Hall. Admission, $1.50. Theatre Carolina Ptaymakers present William Shakespeare's "The TempesL" Directed by Tommy Rezutto. Today through Sunday at 8 p.m. In the Ptaymakers Theatre. Matinee also, Sunday at 2:30. All seats reserved. Tickets,. $2.50, available at 102 Graham Memorial or Ledbetter Pickards on Franklin Street. Laboratory Theatre presents "Dylan," by Sidney Michaels. Directed by Allen Witt. Thursday and Friday at 8 p.m. In C3 Graham Memorial. Free tickets available at Lab Theatre box office, Graham Memorial. Sunday: Ten distinguished one-act plays from high schools and colleges in North Carolina. Sponsored by Carolina Dramatic Association and department of Dramatic Art 9:30 a.m. in Graham Memorial Lounge. Admission free. Jo Mielziner, designer for "The Glass Menagerie," "Streetcar Named Desire" and "Death of a Salesman," will speak at 3:30 Friday in the Playmakers Theatre. Admission free. "Lo and Behold." Village Dinner Theatre, Raleigh. Buffet at 6:45, curtain at 8:30. Call 787-7771 for reservations. Nightly except Monday. Ends Wednesday, April 24. Planetarium Auditions will be held for the Morehead Planetarium's forthcoming production "Stars of Spring and Summer." Six men's and two women's voices needed. Talent requirements similar to those for radio drama. 650 p.m. Thursday. Interested persons should call 933 1238, 9-5. Show to be presented April 23 through June 17. "Easter the Awakening." An all time favorite, rich in pageantry and tempered with man's scriptural view of his universe. Monday through Friday at 8 p.m. Saturday at 11, 1, 3 and 8. Sunday at 2, 3 and 8. Special showings, 3 p.m. on Friday, April 12, and Monday, April AS l c ll I I O IM S fU DENTS! Due to popular demand, Honey's will continue the Bos aoQ. GrpQs3oflo 15. Ends April 22. Square Dance Square dance in the Tin Can, with music by the Sweet Dixie Band. A caller will be present to direct the wheeling and stomping. 8 to 11 p.m. Friday. Admission free. Concerts Pointer Sisters. Today at 9 p.m. In Carmichael Auditorium. Tickets, $2, at Union Desk. General Admission. The Carpenters. Monday, April 15 at Reynolds Coliseum, Raleigh. Tickets, $4, $5 and $3 in advance; $5, $6 and $7 at the door. Available at Record Bars in Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, Greenville, Rocky Mount and Reynolds Coliseum box office. Washington National Ballet performs French Romantic ballet, "Giselle." Friday, Saturday and Sunday at 8 p.m. in Reynolds Coliseum, Raleigh., Student tickets, $1.50, at Union desk. UNC Opera Theatre: Premier performance In English of A. Scarlatti's "II Trionfo deir Onore." Directed by Wilton Mason. Sunday at 8 p.m. In Hiil Hail. Admission free. Chinese Opera Company. Saturday at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Tickets, $1.50, at Union desk. Sonny Terry - and Brownie McGhee. Presented by the Carolina Union in cooperation with the Black Arts Festival. Thursday, April 11 at 8 p.m. In Memorial Hall. Tickets, $2, at Union desk. Piano workshop led by Roger Grove of the University of California at Santa Barbara. 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today In Peabody Hall. For Information, call 933-3325. Piano recital by Francis Whang. Thursday at 8 p.m. In Hiil Hall. Durham Civic Choral Society performs Mozart's "Requiem" and Stravinsky's "Symphony of Psalms." Sunday at 4 p.m. In Baldwin Auditorium on the Duke campus. Tickets, $2.50, available from Society members, Page Box Office, Allied Arts and at door. John Denver. Saturday, April 27 at the Dorton Arena, Raleigh. Tickets, $4, $5 and $6, available at Record Bars in Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill. Show starts at 8 p.m. Fists and legs will fly in a flurry of action in The A fosters World oj Kung -Fu and Karate at 8 p.m. Sunday in Carmichael Auditorium. This traveling demonstration of Far Eastern martial arts will be a featured presentation of the 1974 Carolina Symposium, "East Asia Perspectives and Projections." The two hour performance features combatants who range from a double paraplegic who fights from his wheelchair to a 5'2T ex-ballerina who thwarts a would-be rape attack. Kung Fu Grand Master Daniel Kane Pai, one of the show's originators, hopes that his demonstrations have helped to clear up some common misconceptions concerning Kung Fu. J J ... .A. v- " , - ' ' - ' ' ... .... f 4 -1 f ' " ' ' "Many people think there's just one type of Kung Fu, and this is not true." says Pai. "Kung Fu is really a broad term that covers many different styles of the an. many based on the observed movements of certain animals. So, you can have a style based on the tiger, or the horse, the crane, the snake or the dragon," explained Pai. Grand Master Pai has climaxed countless performances of the show with his now famous one-handed destruction of a 1,000 lb. wall of ice. Also appearing will be Paulette Levy, a diminutive New York City native who secretly packs a mean punch. Levy, called one of the country's top women Kung Fu specialists, demonstrates lethal fighting techniques that women can use to protect themselves against attack. Ex-Marine sergeant Ted Vollrath, a wheelchair victim since losing his legs in Korean War combat, demonstrates his black belt skills against pairs of able-bodied men. Vollrath. who scoffs at the word "handicapped," fights from both the wheelchair and the floor, lunging from the chair with a deceptive show of speed and strength. The Masters World show should provide enough diversity and excitement to satisfy even the most enthusastic karate buff. Tickets for the event are $ 1 .50 and may be purchased at the Union desk. Kung Fu artist breaks a block of ice "DON'T BE FUELISH" CALL SPEEDY'S FOR YOUR PIZ2A SPEEDY'S PIZZAS FRESH PIES HOT CASSEROLES FAST DELIVERY 942-8746 4:30 to Midnight Monday night is ITALIAN SPAGHETTI NIGHT at HONEY'S Tangy Italian spaghetti served with crisp garden salad and garlic bread EAT TIL YOUR HEART'S CONTENT...$1.95. Wednesday night SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN...Delicious golden fried chicken and crisp french fries ALL YOU CAN EAT.,. $2.35. ' ; Friday night have a FISH FEAST with us. GOLDEN FRIED FISH FILLET and crisp french fries. A WHALE OF A DINNER for a HONEY of an appetite (of course all you can eat).. .$1 .95. Make Streak . a z n 1 1 1 6 to Honey's!!! Across from Gien Lennox Honey's Hours are now Sun: 8 am-9 pm O Mon-Thurs: 7am-9 pm O Fri-Sat: 7 am-1 Opm !! li I i 11 li ii I! li ii ? 5 I i i ii n WEDNESDAY: u Eie Carolina Symposium O Dr. Frederick Kao On Acupuncture 8:00 p.m. Memorial Hall O Williams Givens and Dr. Martin Bromfenbrenner U.S. -Japanese Economics by 1980 4:00 p.m. 106 Carroll Hall - j 1 V 1 1 . :; THE PODPJTER SISTERS f wnn 1 i Henry Gross I I TONIGHT I I 8:00 P.M. Carmichael Auditorium X General Admission $2.00 ' Tickets Available At Union Desk I And At The Door I on ssii mfg. sugg. retail $275 pro-quality racing bike: HOI $24500 O Columbus double-butted tubing throughout O Balilla center-pull brakes - O Campagnolo dropouts -O Campagnolo headset O Campagnolo cotterless crankset O Campagnolo seatpost O Campagnolo nuevo record derailleurs Campagnolo neuvo tipo hubs O Nisi alloy tubular tire rims O Clement tubular tires O I I I alloy stem and bars O Frame sizes: 54 cm., 58 cm. O Colors: Blue, Silver, Copper, White (Sale good only with present stock) Owned & Operated by Students of Duke and UNC Mon-Sat. 10-6 106 N. Graham St.O Chapel Hill 4) Carolina teKEVWS Charles Stevens on Japanese Law 1:00 at the Law School n U LiD Terri Tapper and Japanese Woodblock Prints in the Union Wt n rfs ' If i i u u u Saturday March 30 8:00 Memorial Hall Tickets are $1.50 at Union Desk A 1 t Hi i I i ! i far! Jacket S19 The boldly pocketed polyester and cotton leisure jacket is the perfect vacation or weekend companion. In go-with-every thing natural tan or bone white. Sizes : S, M, L,XL MLVlf A fir l.H im