Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 18, 1975, edition 1 / Page 4
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1 4 The Daily Tar Heel Tuesday, November 18, 1975 7A n Music Fleetwood Mac will perform at 9 tonight in Carrnichael Auditorium. Tickets are available for $4 at the Union desk. The University Orchestra, directed by David Serrins. will perform at 8 tqnight in Hill Music Hall. Free admission. The Duke Dance Group will perform 77?? Shakers, an early modern dance, at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday in Baldwin Auditorium, Duke East Campus. Free admission. The Percussion Ensemble, directed by Lynn Glassock. will perform at 8 p.m. Thursday in Hill Music Hall. Free. A prelude to the Winter Folk Festival, . featuring music by the Red Clay Ramblers, Willie Trice and Dan Tate, will be held at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Great Hall of the Union. Admission is free. Alice Artzt, guitarist, performs at 8 p.m. Friday in Gerrard Hall. She will give master classes at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in 206 Hill Hall. , The Duke Jazz Ensemble with Dan Bosanti on saxophone and the Gene Bristow Trio will perform at 8:15 p.m. Friday in Page Auditorium. Free admission. The North Carolina Dance Theatre will perform at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Stewart Theatre. N. C. State. Tickets are S2.50 for adults and SI.50 for students and are available from the Stewart Theatre Box Office (737-3105). L" .iterary First Editions Make Memorable Christmas Gifts! Check over the prizes in our Feature Case this week he Old Booh Corner 137 A EAST ROSEMARY STREET OPPOSITE NCNB PLAZA CHAPEL HILL, N. C. 275 14 1 frirS Tpcfincoiof Ftom Warner Bios i A Warner Communications Company I NOW SHOWING ?,n ft HNCASSAVETES ii w r si Pel riv m i m y v UNDER HEIHFLUE NCE 1 iTW-rtll SHOWING 2:20 j 4:00 J 4:40 If J.. in m. n ca'd EHm,n yes' 7:20 9:00 IN A FILMED .,.. CONCERT "YESSONGS" WITH RICK YAKEMAN Keyboards 1 STEVE HOW E Guitar JOHN ANDERSON Vocals CHRIS SQUIRE Bass ALAN WHITE Drums j) in ft ji III till (9lr-ik: U - , - Jl ?Ttp4- "T HELD OVER I j i jrv)j.t) Li I 4th Big Week I 1 n ' i H 1 A ' i ' - t 4:55 tfnTTvT 1 :TT1 M 7:05 I)nU4-Ki:lM -1 f - . I I :p-.WI" 2:30 j R; T 5.30 u mat. 0:m rt rsn I fpw j NOW 6 J I di i -v y-i -, "-v W H t))rwAv O (0 Francis Whang, pianist, will give a concert at 4 p.m. Sunday in Hill Music Hall. Free admission. IHeafre The Playmakers Repertory Company will perform Isadora Duncan Sleeps With The Russian Navy at 8 p. m. N ov. 20-23 in the G raham Memorial Lounge Theatre. Tickets are available for S2.50at Ledbetter-Pickard, 157 East Franklin St.. or in 102 Graham Memorial. The Duke Players will present Harold Pinter's The Birthday Party at 8: 15 p.m. Nov. 20-23 in the Branson Theatre. Duke East Campus. Tickets are available for S2.50 at the Branson Theatre Box Office. Kiss Me Kate continues at the Village Dinner Theatre in Durham. All shows begin at 8:20 p.m. and a buffet dinner is served from 6:45-8 p.m. Tickets are S 10.50 Sunday and Tuesday Thursday. SI 1.50 Friday and SI 2.50 Saturday. The Duke Players are sponsoring a playwriting contest and will perform the winning entry. Original (one-act. full length or radio) plays will be accepted through Dec. 4. For more information call the Branson Theatre (684-3181). The UNC Readers Theatre will perform Max Shulman's Barefoot Boy With Cheek, a comic satire on college life, at 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in rooms 213-215 of the Union. Admission is free. Forum The Current Affairs Symposium on Prisons and the Corrections System will present two panel discussions this week. "Inmates and Society' will be discussed at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Rooms 207-209 of the Union and "Women's Prisons" will be discussed at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Rooms 202-204 of the Union. Inmates will "tell it like it is" at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in Rooms 202-204 of the Union. Child of the Universe continues at the Morehead Planetarium through Nov. 24. Shows are at 8 p.m. weekdays. 1 1 a.m., 1, 3 and 8 p.m. Saturday; and at 2, 3 and 8 p.m. Sundays. Admission: SI for children under 12 or through grade six. SI. 25 for students and senior citizens and SI. 50 for other adults. A SI. 500 grand prize will be awarded in the poetry contest sponsored by the World Of Poetry, a monthly newsletter for poets. Poems of all styles and on any subject are eligible for competition. For rules and official entry forms, write: World of Poetry, 801 Portola Drive, Department 211, San Francisco, Calif. 94127. Contest deadline is Nov. 30, 1975. Sammers First Annual Photography Contest and Show will be held during June and July 1976 in the Colorfax Galleries in Washington D.C. Only college students are eligible to participate. Color and black and white photography may be submitted in sizes up to 8 10 to Sammers hirst Annual Photography Contest and Show. P.O. Box 243, Falls Church, Va., a future you'll probably live to see. I - V; Olio 9 sr M ,v i If 24'AC 4 , :.A 4 4 tjy tJTXfiJ an R rated, rather lunlsy taSo of survival LQJaf ,'A BOY AND HIS DOG -,.. DON JOHNSON I .... , ..a,, r, JASON ROBARDSl fi SHOWS AT: 2:15-3:55 5:35-7:20-9:00 ri;:Tv' 22046. There is a SI entry fee for each photo and each should be labeled with your name and address. - Arts and crafts by North Carolina prison inmates are displayed through Nov. 21 in the South Lounge of the Student Union. The George Kachergis Retrospective Exhibition, works by the late UNC professor of art, is displaved through Jan. 4 in the Ackland Art Center. Hours: 10a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday, 2-6 p.m. Sunday. Watercolors by Anthony Ballenger are displayed through "Nov. 30 in the North Art Gallerv in Morehead Planetarium. Hours: 2-5 p.m. and 7:30-10 p.m. Monday-Friday. I0a.rn.-5 p.m. and 7:30-10 p.m. Saturday, and 1-5 p.m. and 7:30-10 p.m. Sunday. Works by Jayne Bomberg. potter, Ruth Lang, weaver, and Karen Tombrello, oil painter, are displayed through Nov. 20 at the Durham Arts Council, 810 Proctor St., Durham. Michael Naranjo, sculptor, will display his works through Nov. 30 in the Mary Duke Biddle Gallery for the Blind, third floor of the N.C. Museum of Art, Raleigh. The 38th North Carolina Artists Exhibition continues through Dec. 14 on the fourth floor of the N.C. Museum of Art. by Tim Smith DTH Contributor Barbers are smiling once again. After a 1 0-year slump in the hair-cutting business, a new trend has arrived and business is booming. Shortness is in, and most barbers believe it is here to stay. "Hair got so long it just had to get shorter. It was just a matter of time before the styles changed," said Tom Dixon, who works at Ram's Head Barber Shop. M ost barbers describe the new style as the "layered look," short but full. The effect, as one barber said, is to look neat but casual. The trend first appeared last Christmas in New York and California. By summer, the new style had spread throughout the country. Why people suddenly shortened this locks is a 1 Lrao il SUSANNE BENTON ALVY MOORE - ,V - TT - l I"R!RESTR5CTTiQI DURHAM. N.C. I V I . . o n (SJCo) i: M lift SSSK. "4 question not easily answered by barbers. "I think as people become more experienced with themselves, they see they don't need long hair to act liberated. And as society asks for a more conservative look, they can cut it shorter and feel more comfortable. Plus, it's also more practical and easier to manage," said stylist Gary Carden of Hair Unlimited. Most men don't look good with long hair, and I think a lot of them finally caught on to that," Carden added. Another reason the new style has grown, barbers said, is that they can cut hair better now than ever before. "When long hair first came in, no one knew what to do with it. Since then, most barbers have gone to clinics, and we know how to cut it a lot better because of that," Dixon said. "Long hair is the best thing that ever happened to the barber business. It weeded out the barbers who just couldn't cut hair or wouldn't vary from their old methods," said George Tomasic of the Tar Heel Barber Shop. M any barbers connect hair styles with current attitudes toward society. They said students boycotted barber shops and beauty salons when long hair first came in as a form of social protest. "It was an uptight period, and the barbers would only cut it their way. For the men, it was a very short-conservative-whitewall-military look. For the women, it was a very uptight, sprayed-down look," Carden said. 1 2 "The Triangle's Most Luxurious J Tri- Theatre" Downtown Chapel Hill NOW - MOVIES -1- MONTY PYTHON AND NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT -PG- 2:45-4:30-6:15 8:00 & 9:45 Now Movies 2 3:15-5: 15 7: 15 & 9: 15 Diana Ross Now Movies.3 3:30 4:15-4:00 7:45&9:30 -r Jo One Under 2:20 4:00 5:40 7:20 9:00 an R rated, I n irf a pC'f En .1 G2nd week 2nd week JL l 1 II mm ' y W Wit 4&& I Literati ixm 4' s y-y--y'fy' ::yfevY:::;:v . -:":::-:::-::::: . .. . ' . 'ty&y - ".;:'-i:-;;:K:-;';ox:'":''. y-'yy. yyy yyy; '- : 5, ' ' i v f , i ,'''' ' ' - v- """ -A . l - I ' ( 5? -, ' ' , 1 jr .....'.....'.,',v,' .'.'. .:.:,v.:.:.v,',',y , 2 t J r - I - ' , " . 1 i-.v.'. . A . .v ;.-.'. yA-.vyy .yyyyyyyyyyy. .. . ''v.- .-. . V 'v J J.V .A. , . ... -j: '-.,. y ,v'Av,vM.V-v.v.V . 4f Is ' Vf' V " , x , '',,''', i' ! ' ' 1 A local barber begins a friendly attack on his customers once fashionable long hair. The lastest fashion is short, but full, neat, but casual. Tomasic remembered the day business collapsed. "The students had just returned from winter vacation in 1968. Then, almost overnight, they stopped coming. Business fell 30 per cent and the number of Chapel barbers dropped from 35 to 12," Tomasic said. Most barbers have their own ideas about what future hair styles will look like, but all agree that hair will stay short. "The South is a little slow in everything even its speech so naturally it's going to be slow in fashion. But when the next style does come, it A" ir s Mike's favorite band is back! USE DTH ADS r&i3 1331 is 20S4i a future you'll probably live to see. ;- ' rather kinky tola of survival laf A RHY AND HIS DOG' DON JOHNSON SUSANNE BENTON ALVY MOORE JASON ROBARDS Technicolor? R NO ONE ADtvrrTED AFTER PERFORMANCE STARTS... IT MAS TO BE SEEN WdCMVt THE BCqNMNGI , The AUman Brothers Band, led by Gregg Allman and Dickie Betts, brought their original brand of Southern-flavored rock to Duke's Cameron Indoor Stadium Friday nieht. Despite repeated rumors of a group break-up, the group's performance was extremely tight. Their two-hour set spanned the entire Allman Brothers Band history, including the solo w ork of Allman and Betts, and culminated w ith an encore of the classic, "Whipping Post." Betts and Allman are the band s tocai points and have combined to lead the group through personal and musical tragedy. Betts, however, has emerged as the onstage leader and featured performer, and his solos have become the highlight of each extended jam the group produces. Staff art by John Branch ' - ,' ' "' , i t ' t' ' 7 ' f ' '''' I 'Ibf'' " ,'t, 7 , , ; '" '' ' ' ' ' ' ' s III y So ' ' ' ' s, y ' fym ' ' '' ' ' ' will be even shorter. Men will have their earlobes showing from a fourth to half inch beneath their hairline. It will be a very strong and space-age look. Mustaches will also be prevalent," Carden said. But men are not the only one affected by new styles. Most barbers also see a shorter hair style for women. And designers see a return to the 40s and 50s look in women's styles, with a continuation of shorter hair. "Within the next four years, women will have their hair cut shorter than men. I think men and women are beginning to think and act alike, and their hair styles w ill eventually show this," Carden said. fw f'' A r fy f it i uesdlay Wight 1: y 9:30 p.m. rffif. ""til J 1 :00 a.m. : ;'- Downtown nj Franklin St. -lyL JJ. 1, JL JL JL JyL JL JyL JyL L2 Where were L r4,,. -,t You in '62? C i(kGteii. I 3 FranMin Sueel Z I II T Til phone 941-3061 i: 1 61 M
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 18, 1975, edition 1
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