Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 28, 1975, edition 1 / Page 4
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' " f " Tfca DsSIy Tr Hstl Tuwtfry, Jsa. S3, 1573 i) 3f . "Jscqus Crc) It AHvt end Well end Living In iParlt" Tht off-Crodwy rtvuV err.pcd of Crtl'i haunting mtiodles has fett) fUmad, In Frenc, with Elly Stone, who fcroujht har wry elfin charm to the original version. The music Is the show, and tfs tnou;u (Vtrtlty, today at 2 and 8 pa, American Film Theatre. Season tickets and tpset-mnstlt tinslt seats ttSSI available.) ; "Bucsies of , Red dap" "Rapturously funny," commented the New York Times" about this film in which English valet Marniaduke Ruggles, won In a Parisian poker Csmi by an American nouveau riche, finds hlmseif In the middle of the American West. . Chatles Laughton is droll as the gentleman's : gentleman; when English class consciousness meets American democracy,' thtirttuit Is a tour da force of liberation. (Tc&sy at 7 and 930 p.m., Greenlaw - - Tn Auditorium, $1.25, tha ' ARamsSSyt Crasna ; American Comedy Series.) . ! Jour Se Lave" Sertnirr5tsr Jscuts Pre vert and director tsreet Csrne mad a curious combination, wrote Peter Cowls In "Seventy Years of Cinema." Came was a near-documentarist of time and place, while Prevert was a poet Here, as In their "Children of Paradise," a melancholy sort of poetic fatalism shapes their story. Jean Gabin plays a murderer holed up in an empty building, In i the course of the night, he examines his ; motives for tuning, the victim and re lives strategic episodes in his emotional Etc. The film ends with daybreak. (Wednesday at 8 p.m., Great Hail, Union free flick. The French' Cinema.) ; - r ' "Shall We Dance" Sht says ee-ther and he says eye-ther. George and Ira Gershwin; composed the score for the seventh Fred AstaireGinger Rogers musical, which made hits of "Let s Call the Whole Thing Off," "They Can't Take That Away From Lie" and They All Laughed." Fred plays a ballet star who faSs MONDAY- STEAK 'W BAIE OD) reg. $5.50 a thick cut of sirloin married to a steaming baked potato. -' TUESDAY FUB-A-BUB reg.$4.75 tasty morsels of marinated aged - sirloin served sizzling on abed of rice pilaf. v V-t ':; -"AND rv:i:,:;::0 A PITCHEE OFiBEEE ' ..and-- ' " '"V,-- 111 tie saiId - YOU CAW MAKl i ; and .--'-t '' ALL THE FEEWCil iEEAD YOU CAW EAT Jo) LIMITED lOlO HAMILTON ROAD L CHAPEL mLL (at the intersection of 54 and 15-501) Open Monday thru Saturday from 4:30 p.m. Open Sunday from 3:30 pjn. SMMMHMMM iwms Crossword Puzzler ACROSS p if. XX V 'hi 1 Knock 4 Spreads for drying 8 Caper 12 Mohammedan name 13 Scottish for "odd" 14 Conceal 15 Fabric 17 Unique per son 18 Declares 19 Walked in water - 21 Girl's name 22 Ancient Per sian 23 Greek letter 26 District in Germany 28 In advance 30 Lead 33 Heavy ham- -mer 34 Turkish decree 35 Bristle 38 Prevent from free speech 37 Part in play 39 Chinese pagodas 43 Article of furniture 45 Depart 49 Slender 48 Put Off 50 Measure duration of 51 Slender finial 52 Tierradei Fueesnln dian . 53 Arabian , seaport ' 54 Broods of pheasants 55 Glrt S , nickname Down 1 Having branches , 2 Century plant, 3 Communion plate 4 Rocky hills 5 Silkworm 6 Part of bureau J Dinner course 8 Footwear 9 Related 10 Cyprinoid fish 1 1 Through 16 Wiped out .20 Apportioned 22 Small rug 24 Ugly, old woman 25 Poem 27 Sharp and harsh 29 Warming device 30 Excavate 31 Man's name ,32 Style of 141 PIP IS 2d Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle , AT PR si ON .JSjulfil C k ii Ml i ens p gr rijsNAprlFM 1 131B& 9 la love wfth fcxSroom dsnclng siid with Ginger. They sJng and dsnce i a ship's r!ttt room, rsiing a cIoq, en a terry and on roUtr sfcatts. The most eiessnt ccupls of the USD's. (Thursday at 7 and 923 pjn., Greenlaw Auditorium. $1.25, the Alternative Cinema l&isieais Series.) . '4 '"AU Quiet on the WesUrn Front" and "Mrs. miniver" Sponsored by the curriculum on Peace; War tnd Oefenst. (At 7 pm. today in Carroll Hall. Admission Is free.) -; "Victim" Sponsored toy Ctho Duke Gay AKianee. (Shows at 8 and 10 p.m. today and Wednesday in the Eiolocjicst ; Sciences Auditorium st Duke University.) The Great Gatsby" Gatsby's back and grandeur's got Mm.-; Mia Farrow's fine performance Is the only thing of substance, youll take away from this Fitzgerald film; Sam Waterson is good, too, as Nick Carraway, but he's always being shunted aside and never allowed . to develop, except as narrator. Robert Redford tries hard, but fails, to capture the elusive Jay Gatsby's character. The film is bloated with romance and mood. (Carolina, at 350, 625 and 9 pjTi., $25.) "Cabaret" A welcome return engagement for Bob Fosse's brilliant musical film about Berlin in the 1930's and a strangely appealing hedonist named Salty Bowles. (Plaza 1, at 250, 45, 7 and 9:15 p-nv, $2-25.) Trestle and the Bean" (Raza 2, at 3, 5:10, 720 end 953 pm, $2-25.) "White Ughtning" Moonshine violence; a flop two years ago. (Plaza 3, at 3.-10, 5:10,7.-10 and 9 5 p-m., $2.25.) Music Rick l!asten will perform at 2 p.m. today in the South Lounge of the Union. Admission is free. The George Shearing Quintet wiii perform at 8 p.m. Sunday in Memorial Hall. Tickets, $2, are on sale at the Union desk. John Hartford will perform at 8 and 1050 p.m. today and Wednesday, and Tracy Nelson will perform at 8 and 1050 p.m. Thursday through Sunday at The Pier in Raleigh. Tickets are $4 for general admission and $6 for reserved seats. Call 834-0524 for information. Folksinger Holly Near will perform at 8 p.m. Friday in Memorial Hall. Admission is free. Flamenco guitarist Carlos Montoya will perform at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 4 in Memorial Hail. Tickets, $2-50, are on sale at the Union desk.' Pianist Carolyn Bridger win perform at 4 p.m. Sunday in Hill HalL Admission is free. Phoebe Snow will perform at 8 p-m. Monday, Feb. 1 7 in Memorial Hall. Tickets, $3, are on sale at the Union desk. The Memphis Blues Caravan will perform at 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in Stewart Theatre on the N.C. State campus in Raleigh. Call 737-3105 for reservations. Us McCann will perform at 8 p.m. Friday in Page Auditorium on the Duke campus. Tickets, $3.50, $4 and $4.50, are on sale at the Page box office. The Carolina Playmakers present Tennessee Williams' "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" at 8 p.m. Thursday through Sunday, and Thursday, Feb. 6 through Sunday, Feb. 9 in Playmakers Theatre. Tickets, $2.50, are on sale at the Playmakers Business office, 102 Graham Memorial, and at Ledbetter-Pickard downtown. The Duke Union presents William Saroyan's The Time of Your Uf t" at 850 P-m. .Thursday In Page Auditorium on the Duke campus. The UNC Opera Theatre presents Rossinrs "The Barber of Seville" at 8 pjn. Friday and Saturday In Hill HaH. Tickets, $3, are on sale at Hill Halt Three shows of "She Stoops to Conquer" will be at 8 p.m. Saturday end et 2 end 8 pjn. Sunday in Stewart Theatre on the N.C State campus in Raleigh. Call 737-3105 for reservations. The Raleigh Little Theatre presents Tennessee Williams' "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" at 8 pjn. Wednesday through Sunday and Wednesday, Feb. 5 through Saturday, Feb. 8. ' There will also be a 2 p.m. show on Sunday, Feb. 9. Call 832-6334 for tickets. Auditions for the Durham Savoyards' production of "Princess Ida" will be from 1 50 550 p.m. Sunday at the Allied Arts Center on 810 W. Proctor St. in Durham. The Alvin Alley dance troupe will perform at 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 6 through Saturday, Feb. 8 in Reynolds Coliseum on the N.C State campus in Raleigh. Tickets, $1 .50, are on sale at the Union desk. An update on 'Diamond Studs' rovtocM folks sane tag city feme by Robin Clark J Staff Writer , NEW YORIC-When; New York Times critic Give Barnes predictied that "Diamond Studs" would ftfeseryjediy become a cult," countless New ; Ydrkefs" were persuaded to "be among the first 'of th? cultivated. v One of the first to tike part in "Cakewalk into Kansas City,"; the play's audience participation numbCK--wasv" New York restaurant owner Vincent , Sardi. He reportedly survived 'two trips around the stage and up to the balcony on opening night before retiring to his seat.-I Later at his restaurant, the traditional hang-out for stage actors awaiting their first reviews, Sardi treated the cast to champagne as the Barnes review was read aloud. "Somebody had brought along one of the Southern States feed sacks," chorus girl Edith Davis recalled, "and Sardi stuck it up on the wall and said, 'It's gonna stay here - right beside the photographs of all the stars. " "Before that review, we'd averaged filling half the house," said creator and leading man Jim Wann after a Saturday night show. "Now we're sold out every night." Besides capacity crowds, Barnes's tribute has also spurred widespread media exposure for the Saloon Musical. All three television networks have taped portions of the show; -' iu. iii. i YOWIGHT ENTERTAINMENT FREE TUESDAY, JANUARY 28 SUSIE BLACKWELL the CBS clip was shown locally on Channel II, and reviews in Newsweek, Cue, New York Magazine, Variety and The New Yorker have already or are expected to appear soon. "We never expected it to happen this totally or this fast," Wann said, "but 1 guess when Clive Barnes tells the world you're great, it means something." What it means, among other things, is that the bands that compose the cast can now accomplish what they insist has been their goal - all along getting their music recognized. . "We were given support in Chapel Hill, but we weren't really supported," explained Wann's co-creator Bland Simpson. "The audience wasn't big enough. Jim thought up the play as a publicity gimmick for our band." "Yeah," Wann agreed, "we use a lot of the music from the band in our play, like the Pancho villa tune. V ilia thrived around 1910, 1912, 1915 in Mexico. Jesse James died in 1882, a fairly minor anachronism as it turns out. I heard one guy say, 'Hey, there's Pancho villa! What the hell's he doing in there?!,' but nobody's really taken much exception to it." . What New Yorkersare talking aVout is the delightfully poor - acting (which the cast readily admits is in no danger of improving) CHALLENGING OPPORTUNITIES IN INTELLIGENCE The Defense Intelligence Agency is a unique independent organization responsible for gathering and interpreting information to meet diverse intelligence requirements of the Department of Defense. The nature and scope of our mission creates unusual opportunities for students interested in the application of their education to the needs of intelligence and supportive areas of intelligence in the following fields: BSMS Computer Science Computer Programmer BSMS Library Science Librarian BS Earth Science (GeologyGeography) Photo Interpreters BSMS CivilStructural Engineering Physical Vulnerability Engineer BAMA Chinese, Middle East, and Russian Area Studies Intelligence Research Specialist Civil Service status (test) is not required. DIA hires direct and its employees enjoy liberal fringe benefits associated with Federal employment. All applicants must be U.S. citizens and are subject to a thorough background inquiry. Interested students should contact their Placement Office concerning opportunities with DIA and upcoming campus interview dates. DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE y.H&, AGENCY.' . . Civilian personnel Division Recruitment Branch PM-1 D The Pentagon ; Washingtbh,;p:C; 20301 An Equal Opportunity Employer mf music 33 Bishopric 35 Drowsy 38 From old times (poet.) 40 Home -run king 4 1 Genus of . grasses , 42 Style of auto mobile 44 So be it' 45 Oregs ' ' . 46 Music: as ' - ' written ? 47 Cover , 49 Toll, " ; ikV. 1 ,po 123 ici 5 6 7 9 " F5 " jj8 u" " "" Ill2 " 30 31 32 m 33 3r"SE37"3P" "sT Sc31"" "SE " " 22d2&X Ul Lm . A I1 o o GQquo o o o Over lfCC0 f rem cs stylos to chooso from T!:o convenbneo of free parking t Vv' .Prescriptions Filled Contact Lenses Fitted ;; i W Contact Lens Accessories ) Len ses Dupl icated r Sunglasses .vr . Eyeglass Repairs Ccurtcoys torvico end czrzfd Gftontlsn to your Opticsl Roods. Visit our new .location rAt) 0711 Downtown Chapel Hill . hh& mo Fri. 10 &, sat. 102 and the distinct quality of the music (which Barnes described as being "belted out with all the confidence of a parade of Hell's Angels pursued by a posse of horses.") Only now, record producers have replaced horses in the posse, and the musicians are far from adamant in their getaway. "While we were in our lawyer's office the other day, talking about what we wanted to do in the near future, the phone rang off the wall with big-time record companies interested in doing the cast album," Wann said. "We're in the position now of choosing among the offers. It's an incredible feeling." Whether filled with stars of his own, or studded with diamonds, Wann's eyes are already looking to the future. "My feeling is that both bands can cut albums in the late spring, do the cast album in the summer and tour America in the fall," Wann said. "We could run the play a couple of nights, say, and then each band could do a job on its own." Meanwhile the play runs through June at the Chelsea's Westside Theater, where even the most provincial Yankees are apt to tap their toes, clap their hands and maybe even wish 'they were Southern, if having lost the Civil War is as much fun as it looks in "Diamond Studs." 1 Kecycle the Daily, lar Heel ir n j A V USA fo) Lro 'V J ft in Concert 4 :-:si FRIDAY UARY 31 PoOTTlla IWiemoiroal Hal Admission Firee SPONSORED BY A WS DTH Classifieds s FOR SALE 196S Patsun 510, 4-door. $525. Engtn cxMltonL Nn4i minor work. S 33-0024. HOCKEY PLAYERS: I can obtain tqulpoMftl at 20 off. If InlarMtod, caN John, 029-4389. STEREOS: AS ALWAYS GET GREAT SOUND AT THE RIGHT PRICE FROM ANN SHACHTMAN. VISIT STEREO SOUND, 17S E. FRANKLIN ST. (UPSTAIRS ABOVE PJS) 942-854. . MISCELLANEOUS -Europa-Israal-Africa-Asla: Travel discounts year-round. Student Air Travel Agency. Inc. 5299 Roswefl Rd. Atlanta, GA. 30342. 252-3433. Introducing: GRAPHICS TYPING SERVICE. Accurate, fflcienL rtliabte. Help your writing make the best poulbie impression. IBM setectrica, reasonable rates, careful proofreading. IN THE BASEMENT OF THE UNION. 933 8358, 8:30-4:30 M-F. MEDITATION. FREE Instruction in many technique. Tuesdays at 9 pjn. Presbyterian Student Center. Opposite Post Office. FOXCROFT APARTMENTS invites you to come out and enjoy our clubhouse and bar each evening 5 till 1. Students We buy used furniture. Good As New Shoppe, 413 W. Rosemary StreeL 929-3203. Would you Hke to have some influence on the legislation passed by the General Assembly? Com to the Young Democrats Meeting tonight and talk to Senator Vlcksry. 730 pjn., 217 Union. NEED CONTRACEPTIVES? Adam Eve has what you're looking for. 105 N. Columbia SL; over the Zoom. . $20 First Prize for the winners of Vte Tuea. night Town HaN Foosbail Tournament No entry tee. Top (and terrible) competition. Case awarded 2nd prize. No cover tonlte at Town HalL Listen to the glitter rock sound' of Super Ctrkus. A chance to hear a great band for tree. t't : 4
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 28, 1975, edition 1
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