r-uiaj-i Tht Ds'.ly Ter Ht 1 Monday, April 14, 1375, p I've seen this vear.' ?5 I TIT! O OQ C A 1 S' I g 5 I Richard Ussery and Nancy Doykln rehearse a scene from the upcoming Carolina Haymaker's production of William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night' to be presented at 8 p.m. April 17-20 and April 24-27 in the Playmaker's Theare. Tickets'sold at 102 Graham Memorial and Ledbetter Pickard. Plimpt on to George Plimpton, editor of Paper Lion, The Bogey Man and Out of My League, will speak today at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Plimpton, known nationwide as - the "professional amateur," is a graduate of Harvard and Cambridge. Plimpton is the founder of the world-renowned Paris Review and has written occasionally for Sports. Illustrated. He will talk on his many adventures In the world of professional' athletics. The Paul Winter Consort, characterized as an amalgamation of rock, . jazz and classical -musical styles, will Iperf 6rnvsaC8 p.m. Wednesday in Memorial Hall. Tickets lor, the concert are available at the Union desk for $2.50. Olivia de Havilland, two-time Academy Awa'rd winner and star of Gone With the Wind, will speak ' on her career and the making of Gone With the Wind at 8 p.m. Thursday in Memorial Hall. Tickets are $1 at the Union desk. Open 24 Hou Hassle-Free! Estes Drive 5 p.m.-11 p.m. MONDAY Paul Winter STOPS 5 p.m.-11 p.m. TUESDAY (4-1-75) PP H C Bottle of I T L- lL Premium WINE ?0'rTr EXTRA SPECIAL TOP SIRLOIN complete dinner $3.50 (3-31-75) Bottle of Premium MArwithany f K Yf-,Dinner or 2 EXTRA SPECIAL MAVERICK STEAK complete dinner, ' $2.75 Crossword Puzzler ACROSS 1 Pant 5 Unlock 9 Nod 12 Toward DOWN Aeriform 1 fluid 2 In music, high 3 Ocean 4 Punctuation marks 5 Greek letter 6 Rivef in Italy 7 Man's name 8 Seines shelter 13 Burrowing animal 14 Wine cup 15 Be in need 17 Pronoun 18 Man s nickname 9 Fruit 19 Shakespear- 10 Hebrew ian measure character 11 Walk in "21 Look fix- water ediy 23 Students 27 Preposition 28 Omit from 29 Perform 31 Snake 34 Greek let ter 35 Post 38 Maiden loved by Zeus 39 Haul 41 Capuchin monkey 42 River ducks 44 Man's nickname 46 In a corrupt manner 48 Danger 51 Want 52 Be mistaken 53 Pronoun 55 Gets up 59 Falsehood 60 Fondles 62 Girl's name 63 Number 64 Rational 65 Electric catfish 16 Menservants 20 Speech 22 Preposition 23 Clan 24 Muse of history 25 Greeting 26 Science (abbr.) 30 Walk J 2 3 4 5,rT8"9TS"TT" rr- 2o"2r 53 24 25 "" 2627 w- 5?; -gSgS TJ"-"33 36 " " 37 35 40 41 43 6&K$d4445 46 47 ! Mm 48 49 50 51 KXXXfXJ 56 57 38 W 60""" 62 63 "jSg 64 j65 Distr. by United I - s 5 The Memphis Blues Caravan will perform true grass roots blues at 9 p.m. Saturday in Memorial Hall. The first annual North Carolina Film Festival will be held Friday and Saturday at the Ranchhouse. Films may be submitted; information is available at the Union desk. The public is invited to the festival. A panel discussion on University policy towards employees will be held at 8, p.m. Wednesday in Room 202-204 of the Union. The Lenny Bruce Videotape will be shown on Tuesday and Wednesday in the Union. Times will be announced. The Music Gallery of the Union will exhibit prints by Stewart Wilson today through Saturday. Paintings by Rachel Hewitt will be on display in the North Gallery of the Union. Tuesday through Saturday. Paintings by Chip Richardson will be exhibited in the South Gallery of the Union today through Saturday. No Coupon Required! 5 p.m.-ll p.m. WEDNESDAY (4-2-75) fR EE Bottie f Premium EXTRA SPECIAL FRONTIER STEAK complete dinner, $2.75 Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle ' unsteadily 47 Plague 48 Animal coat 49 Great Lake 50 Brims 54 Afternoon party 56 Music: as written 57 Greek letter 58 Mournful 61 Symbol for thoron 32 Part of win dow frame 33 Nosegay 36 Swiss river 37 More in want 40 Rabbit hutch 43 Indefinite article 45 Chinese length measure Feature Syndicate, Inc; peak play c aisiei iciHiojPi rriAit- ALA NL, L UREL. qo ljusu aQ 1b a" r op IE e Rt3 y m a" qt; H E A" T STFp LEI jAp ART SOBIQ Fm AJ Tpf t t mi J iff st .A S E5 S A jQE Sp . fc R U ST "TlT OfPTS SftTA Rg Af dL HR A N Vj " tL ejg USgR; P it (ajlto gmNlAt iArris! iPTYtels by Michael F.!cFee DTH Critic Frederico Fellini has gone home again, and with more success than ever. Beyond the ambiguity of 8V2. beyond the obscurity and occasional pretention of Satyricon or La Dolce Vita, Amarcord is the director's most affectionate celebration of his life in his boyhood town, and of life itself. The beauty of Amarcord is its relaxed, natural tone. There is no overt struggle with the basic ontological questions of life; Fellini is simply remembering (as the title translates, 1 remember"). And the joy indeed, the greatness of it all, is that while Fellini is remembering, we are also remembering. We experience our own past as he recalls his. The key to such rapport lies in the people ol Fellini's seaside town of Rimini. They are not characters in a film, but universal types: schoolteachers, parents, military leaders, sex symbols, boys wild with fantasies. They are not noticed as actors or performers, but accepted as people instead, with all the flaws and perfections of foolish, pompous, plain human beings. But Fellini does not leave it at that. He emphasizes the humor and beauty of the townspeople, with their sudden bursts of poetry and song. These flashes of color produce a film that is full of small delights, as unexpected and exhilarating as the advent of the court's peacock in the town square near the film's end. The film opens with a celebration. Spring is in the air, with fluff puffs swirling in the wind, and the people are gathering to burn away the traditional witch of winter. Through vivid, brief vignettes Fellini introduces us to the entire population and Cornelius Brothers and Sister Rose, The Tarns and The Drifters are coming to Carmichael Auditorium Tuesday, April 22. Tickets for the show are $1.50, available at the Union desk. British rock and rollers, The Kinks, will appear in concert Thursday, April 24. Women's roles explored Seven courses pertaining to women and the woman's role in society will be offered in lUNC's summer session and in the fall semester. 1..,V. . : Courses available in summer school are: Comparative Literature 95 "Modern Women Writers"; Anthropology 99 "Anthropological View of Women"; Sociology 199- "Sociological Analysis: Sociology of Women"; and, Art 186 "Art Of and By Women: Issues and Individual Solutions." , The following are offered in the fall semester: English 24 (Section 5) "Women in Contemporary Literature"; History 160 "Women in American History"; and, Psychology 230 "Contemporary Sex Roles" (open only to graduate students). Information on necessary prerequisites and registration can be obtained from individual departments. MONROE TO DAY S ATU R DAY Monday Special Free Night Tuesday Ladies Night frhnn 834-0524 FOR SALE STEREOS: As always, get great sound at the right price from Ann Shachtman. Visit Stereo Sound, 175 E. Franklin St. (Upstairs above P.J.'s) 942-8546. For Sale: 1973 CL-100 Honda. Excellent condition. 3,400 miles; negotiable to sale. Helmet Included. Call 933-4234. ' For Sate: 1974 Audi 100 LS, Four-door. Brown metallic. Tan Interior. Auto, trans., A-C, AM-FM stereo. Radial tires. 7200 miles. Still under warranty. Over 20 mpg. Excellent condition. N.A.D.A. sugg. retail $5,000. Asking $4,500. Call 967-2034 after 6 p.m. Stereo Components Name brands at lowest prices from factory distributor. I can suggest and help set up systems. Full warranties. Five day delivery. Call Lenny at 967-2612 from 3 to 10 p.m. any day. 1970 MQ midget: radial tires, wire rim wheels, radio, 48,000 miles. Asking $1395. Call 966-2281 ext. 283 before 5 p.m. or 929-9984 after 5. For Immediate sale: Am peg Dan Armstrong guitar. Clear plexiglass body; two Interchangeable pickups; plush case. Best offer over $200. Ring: 933-7448.' FOR RENT Available Immediately 2 3 bedroom AC mobile homes. $95.00 to $125.00. Also May rental available. Tel. 929-2854 or Durham (collect) 489-4441. Apartment to sublet for summer. Furnished, 2 bedrooms, kitchen, bath, 3 min. walk from campus. $170 per month. Contact Kitty, at 933-3683. Trying to sublease your apartment for the summer? Or need ian apartment for the summer? Well pay you $5 to rent through us. Call NCL 967-9605. two bedroom, furnished apartment to sublet tor summer. Air conditioned, pool, bus. Klngswood. $160 per month. Call Steve 967-6041. For sub-lease with option on lease one bedroom apartment complete with AC and dishwasher. Located convenient to Eastgate, University Mall and bus lines. Rent Includes water. $140month. CaH 967-6485. Keep trying! Country Charm City Convenience: 3 bedroom, a bath, house In rural setting between UNC and Duke. $30,450. Call 489-2694 or 933-8301, txL 348. Two female roommates wanted for furnished house. 4 miles from campus. Rides furnished If needed. Call Carolun, 933 8366, 8-5. After 5:30, 544-3243. Available May 6. Wanted: responsible couple or girls to sublet beautifully furnished one bedroom apt- May 15-Aug. 15. Convenient location across from University Mall on Bus line. $145 month. 967-5434. LLtS II it r. i- begins to take us through a year in the life of the town. We are introduced to the traditional Fellini touches: memorable faces, affable grotesques, the behemoth sex goddess, a band of musicians, and endless circles and processionals which during the film lead from the town to the sea, from a funeral to a marriage. These archetypes in "Amarcord" are not the puzzling, fantastical visions of his previous ffilm; they are spontaneous and coherent elements of Rimini. The enigmas that remain such as a motorcycle which bursts full throttle through the town at certain points are amusing instead of contusing. The comic undercurrent of Amarcord does not He in elaborately constructed slapstick or in clever twists of the script. The characters are funny because people just naturally act ridiculous. II Duce, the school teachers. Father Confessional all these people parody themselves. No comment is needed and Fellini offers none: he just remembers. As Fellini spins his myth, sometimes using a narrator who addresses the camera and initiates scenes, a sense of wonder begins. It is not merely admiration for splendid photography (by Giuseppe Rotunnot) or subtle camera movements or direction which can evoke such naturalness within cinematic restrictions. I guess we are marveling at the spirit of these people, and thence of mankind. There is some mysterious beauty in people which can send the whole town out in boats at midnight to watch the passing of the ocean liner "Rex", or which can drive even a crazy man like Uncle Teo to climb a tree in the country and shout, "I want a woman!" The musical quality of this film is also astoundingly subtle. The true genius of Fellini comes out in small touches. There is always a song in the distance, or church bells in the background, or lyrical movements at the periphery of the frame. These quick, unobtrusive takes an animal by the sea at dusk, a storewindow filled with cardboard Virgins, an uncle juggling bread at dinner, the brilliant peacock become minor epiphanies for the viewer, reinforced by the more sustained images of nature, such as fog, snow, the wind, the stars or even a simple egg: The ending of Amarcord, although characteristically open, did not leave me confused and uncomprehending like "S1" or DOCTRDWEe Restaurant & Entertainment Forum Cameron Village Subway Raleigh DTH CLASSIFIEDS Need graduate or professional roommmate for thta areer and next year. Share two bedroom apt Carpet, air conditioning, pool, dishwasher, drapes. Call Stan Vfltasma, 933-1628. One bedroom In three bedroom apartment, three miles from campus. For first summer session. Quiet, with large yard. $50month, plus utilities. Call Jack, 942-3029. For sublet, 2 bedroom apt. University Gardens. Available May 1. $165 a month and 1 month's deposit. 929-2725 (keep trying). HELP WANTED Students interested in part time employment for the Fall 75 semester should apply at UNC Student Stores 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Tennis instructor applicants need good background In playing and teaching. Salary averaging $150-$200 per week. Call 703538-2064. MISCELLANEOUS COME ALIVE! Try the New and Living Way in JESUS .CHRIST. Instead of games and dead-ends, Jesus offers reality. Experience lasting fulfillment In Jesus. URGENUI Lost a tan Carolina notebook from downstairs undergraduate library. It's extremely valuable to me. Will pay twently dollars for Its safe return. Call 933-4805. FORMAL WEAR SHOP DURHAM'S OLDEST PRICES $15.00 to $25.00 1625 CHAPEL HILL ROAD, DURHAM -TELEPHONE 489-3975. Make prints from your slides. It's cheap and fun. Free class with knowledgeable Instructors. Come by and see PHOTOCRAFT In The Village Plaza Shopping Center. 967 8153. Assuming loan on house convenient to Duke and UNC. Write to Mrs. Vivian Cater, 1005 Westwood Ave.. High Point, N.C. 27262. Phone 882-2933 after 7 p.m. WANTED Hungry students to take advantage of 8 ox Chopped Sirloin dinner, served with hash browns, tossed salad & French bread $1 49 Between 3 p.m.-1 1 p.m. only with this ad. THE WAFFLE SHOPPE, 203 E. Franklin Street Lost: Female Great Dane at Union Grove Festival. Black and white. Name Lucie. Call collect. Mary Oram, 301-556-6423. Reward. Lost: Hght-blonde golden retriever. 1 year old female, red collar. Answers to Lisa. Missing two weeks. Generous reward. No questions asked. Please call APS or 942-7867 evenings. Dear Bad Back. I missed your name Monday afternoon In front of the X-ray door. Please can 933-8752. Broken Toe. PRO-LIFE PREGNANCY COUNSELING: Call BIRTHCHOICE 7 p.m.-10 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Satyricon. I felt no intellectual obligation to unravel the layers of symbol and meaning. As the fluff in the wind returned, and the town said goodbye to Gradisca. and the blind man swayed to his accord ian. there was only satisfaction and appreciation. The narrator commented early in the film that the chief virtues of the Roman ancestors ol the town were loyalty, tenacity and exuberance. AH these marks of greatness are on Amarcord and Fellini, who has created a subjective history that is undeniably !2tJ Cinema On Campus "Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte" Starring Olivia de Havilland and directed by Robert Aldrich, this thriller is filled with mayhem, murder and mystery. (Union free flick at 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Great Hall.) "Pillow Talk" The first film in which Doris Day said "No." Rock Hudson blossomed as a comedy actor and Day won a virginal reputation she still hasn't shook in this witty comedy about a career girl and a dashing bachelor who share a party line. The screenplay was awarded an Oscar in 1959. (Alternative Cinema, at 7 and 9:30 Tuesday in Greenlaw Auditorium, $1.25.) "The Adventures of Robin Hood" Olivia de Havilland again, this time with Errol Flynn. A simple tale of good vs. evil with lavish setting, a stirring score, and a well-chosen cast willing to enter zealously into the storybook spirit. (Union free flick, at 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Great Hall.) "Claire's Knee" Number five in Eric Rohmer's "Moral Tales," this movie is a rosy and teasing charmer which hinges on the Proustian conceit that a man on the brink of both middle age and marriage can find a new tranquility in his life by falling passionately yet chastely in love with the perfection of a girl's knee. This 1970 film stars Jean-Claude Brialy. (Union free flick at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Great Hall.) "Bells are Ringing" This is Judy Holliday's last role before her untimely death and it was the last MGM musical for Vicente Minnelli before musicals were deemed box office poison. Holliday has never been funnier or lovelier. She is so charming as Ella Peterson, the answering-service lady who falls in love with Plaza 0-4433, that one can almost ignore Jean Martin, whose number that is. Jean Stapleton is Sue of Susansaphone. (Alternative Cinema, at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Thursday in Greenlaw Auditorium, $1.25.) "Year of the Woman," a film by Sandra Hochman, will be shown at 7 and 9 p.m. on Tuesday in Carroll Hall. The presentation is sponsored by AWS. Admission is free. "A Woman Under the Influence," by John Cassavetes. (Alternative Cinema, at 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 19 in Carroll Hall. Tickets, $2, are on sale at the Union Desk and will not be sold at the door.) The Carolina Playmakers will present Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night," a fantastical celebration of love and love's confusion, at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 17 through Sunday, April 20 and Thursday, April 24 through Sunday, April 27. Tickets may be purchased at the Playmakers' Business Office, 102 Graham Memorial, or at Ledbetter Pickard in downtown Chapel Hill. The Carolina Readers are presenting an adaptation of Euripides' The Trojan Women" at 7 p.m. Saturday, April 19 and Commercial Plastics & Supply Corp. : Plexiglas Rod-Sheet-Tubes J All ColorsWe Cut To Size o All Accessories ' Bargain Barrel For Cut Offs Z Mpst Other Plastics In Stock o 731 W. Hargett St. o Raleigh, N.C. 27603 o i o a -i rr o o.o- I ISIS Piedmont's nsw 5030 Excursion Plan. Saves you money, buys you time. And taking advantage of it is simple. You can leave any time on a Saturday. Then save up to 50 on the return portion of your Piedmont ticket just by coming back on a Saturday. Sunday or up to noon on Monday, within 30 days of de parture. That's Piedmont's 5030 Excursion Plan. An easier than ever way to take us up and save. Piedmont also offers special Group 10 Fares and more-for-your-money vacation package plans. We've got a place for you. along with plenty of money saving ways to get there. See your travel agent or call Piedmont Airlines. Most major credit cards accepted. universal. His exuberance and love for alt lorms of life have never been more evident and approachable. Without reservation, 1 can say that Amarcord is the best film I have seen this year. Frederico Fellini has gone home again. and with more success than ever. Beyond the' ambiguity of "S'T, beyond the obscurity and occasional pretention of Satyricon or Im Dolce Vita. Amarcord is the director's most allectionate celebration of life in his boyhood town, and of life itself. Sunday, April 20 (raindate April 21) on the front steps of the Morehead Planetarium. Dress rehearsals will be held Thursday from 5:30 to 7130 p.m. on Thursday, April 17 and Friday, April 18 on the Morehead Planetarium steps. "Everyman," a local street theatre company, will present "You Can't Take It With You" at 8 p.m. today and Tuesday at Cat's Cradle. The Carolina Choir and the Women's Glee Club, both conducted by Lara Hoggard, will perform at 8 p.m. on Tuesday in Hill Hall. Admission is free. "One Night Only," a concert of Modern Dance pieces, will be presented by Duke students and artist-in-residence Carol Richard at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday in Duke's Page Auditorium. Admission, $2. The Duke University Department of Music presents "An Afternoon of New Music" at 3:1 5 p.m. on Tuesday in the Rehearsal Hall of the Mary Duke Biddle Music Building. Admission is free. The paintings of Rachel Hewitt are on display in the North Gallery of the Union. The paintings of Chip Richardson are on display in the South Gallery of the Union. The Annual Graduate Student Art Show can be seen at the Ackland Art Museum at 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and2 5 p.m. on Sunday. The prints of Stewart Wilson and Jacob Roquet will be exhibited through April 23 in the Music Gallery of the Union. "Gods of the Night," a presentation by the Morehead Planetarium that explores the possibilites of life in Mars and mythological stories about other planets, shows at 8 p.m. daily, 1 1 , 1 , 3 a& 8 p.m. Saturday, and 2, 3 & 8 p.m. Sunday. The Curriculum in Peace, War and Defense presents "American Revolution Drill & Skirmish" in McCorkle Place at the Old Well to be followed by a "Bagpipe Memorial, Battle Colloden" at the Bell Tower featuring Mac Donald's Light Company of the Royal North Carolina Highland Regiment of Foot, and The North Carolina Continental Regiment (NCSU Pershing Rifles) at 3 p.m. Wednesday postponed in case of inclement weather. 10. Discount With This Ad. Olio

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