Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 7, 1976, edition 1 / Page 2
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c:irf ;sr3 7, 1S73 0 B . 3:05 , 5:05 7:00 9:05 A ' r f 1 1 1 1 1 1 rrn-cuui :sael . a a w yww w witty j 15 ) I :20 W s J i m J :00 Li Cring in this coupon end buy ' ' cna of the meals listed below t the regular prica and you'ra' : entitled to ' -. -' ' ALL THE Belied Potatoes,;! l eiias Toast U CAN EAT! with purchase at regular price of CHOPPED or .' 1. BIBEYE or S7E1IP $319 Offer good 4-7-76 only r $269 COLUM-.A i iw i LifS presents mn T7TT N jr 4 M ' !!! f '1; ' tV ' !J H foducioa Servos by DcvorvftrAy BripS T"5 (WOLi(O)r in 8 is iMiu fniB) :i)r (ji in i .... S 1 r. ft Of .. it t . - V i 4. ,.L. ft X X 9 iv.il:u ipg- w r. li Campus Calsnc - m y -n en 3 -4 2 VWes Today's Activities At 4 pjn. ki 112 Swdm th wTB t w ortrtBon prosrvn tof M RUgto mon and prapcttv majors to irttrduc h rvw currtoiJum wtitoh wifl tsk Had In tf lB of 197S. Tha 0partm urgs afl majora ad lrlaftd studants to attand tMa Monnativa maating- Thafa wSI t a rcttng of ail Fraahmai and Trantfar Oriantalion Counaatora tor Contact 76 at 730 pjn. In 18S CarroiL Morrlaon Ortantatton Counaatora ar raquaabtd to at!ad a ahort mNtlng tonight m Cam HaS lmmad!aay tollowJng tha campus wida maatk.M unaWa to attand ailhar meeting, ptaaat con tad Bath or Richard. Scottih iarcns kont wa contirH tonight at 7 p.m. In Moraftaad CaJlar. Cobb Dorm. InquWaa, ea McWHUant at S33-6028. Tha Student Acadamlc aftalfa Commtttaa win maat at 9 p.m. in Sufia C of th Union. Prefaaww Ralph CreWar ot SUNY-Brockport pfaHJ an Bluatratad lecture -Political Art In tha USSR and Chtoa at 7-30 p.m. In Room 202-204 of tha Union. Sponsored by Triangle Unlvorsltlea East Asian Canter. Tha Coastal Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. In tha South Lounge of tha Union. Final plana for tha panel dlacuaatenon water quality will be made. AH members are urged to attend. The Association ol International Students Is Kotdlng their penultimate "Foreign Gourmet Dinner," tha CMneae Dinner, at 7:30 pjn. at the Community Church on Maaon.tormand Purefoy Roads. Tickets are available for $2.50 at tha Unton Desk, Ledbetter-Plckard and the International Center, Bynum Hall. Everyone la welcome. Neit week-the last dinner-Latin-American. The Recreation Outing Program will hold a bicycle tour to Union Grove Church to admire the spring countryside from 5:1 5 to 7 p.m. Meet at the Old Well on campus. To regiater call 928-1111. Upcoming Events Charleen Whlanant, a former editor of the Carolina Quarterly and a graduate of UNC-CH will give a poetry reading at 8 p.m. Thursday In 223 Greenlaw. Ms. Whlanant la the author of "Poetry Power" and "Word Magic." The reading is sponsored by The English Ciub and the Carolina Quarterly. The monthly moating ot tha Roeeareh Triangle Group of the Sierra Club wf3 be held at pjn. Thursday In Droytue AwStorkim, F.asaerch Triangle kwtute, Cwrtia Yetos. Bicycla Ceord&tator for tim M.C Department of Transportation, and Ell! Fluemey, Chairman ol tha State Bicycle Committee, wCl dSeeuea bicyeflng and bikawaya ki North Caroflna. AS are knvtted to attond. "SHE" needs writers, ad people and a dreutatton manager for next year. Interviews wi3 be heM from 2 to 4 pjn. Thursday bi tha "AWS cnk. Site D of tha Union. Potential writers please bring a sample of your work it doesn't have to be published, ri you can't come, please ceS Lynn Garren at S42-S3S9 or Susan Orcutt at 887-2363. Y.O.GJL offers Laura Haman'a daaa from 7 pjn. to 9 pjn. Thursday In Room 208 of the Union. AH are welcome. Alpha FW Omega (A?C wffl hold He annual Cansous Chest Camtvai from 8 to 11 pjn. Thursday on i2rtrJ.ass Field. Featured at sunset wiS be a tun? by UMC Parachute Oub. Later, a beer ehuc33 contest, free bser, fames and prizes for aS. Support Carrrpus Cm 3 Dr. Waiter Roberts lecture on Yugoslav Guefffia Warfare m World War II has been rescheduled and wa fake pJaca at 2 pjn. Thursdnr Is Room 217 of Sha Onion, pr. Roberts la the author of TKo, thaaovtch and tha As." pubAmed rscenBy by tha Rurs Unlvefsity Press, considered to be the best work on this seraJftve sufct- John Byrne wffi be seliing hand crafted Jewelry, fawr work and Indian arfif acts Thursday and Friday fci the South GaHary of the Union. The School o Education w hold pre-rsgtratton advisement sessions tor aS undergraduate Education majors Thursday. Students should check the notices posted In Peabody Hall for tone and toe a Bon of these sessions. UNC Collegiate 4H Club wiB have a meeting at 9 bjr. Thursday In Room 208 of the Union. The Association tor Women Students (AWS) I meet at 720 pjn. Thursday ki Room 208 of the Union. A3 Interested persons srs u?9d to e8nd as pians tor net ysec H be discussed. . Ctorte Ejnerson, tome torsion correspondent for 8e Hew York Tfcnss, w3 s oft -Coertrg the War" at 4:15 pjn. Thursday in 231 Ftowers, Oufca University esrwpus. A Y-YWCA FoSMCk Ctrsoer Dteeusston mng wa be held Sv Frldey at e home I President WSSam Friday. PreikSsrtt fi'-dfj 3 toad a Cscxs&tlon o "T9 UTVvrey of Hsrm Careia". AS studante and faculty are fcwrted to attend. Check by the Y erT.ee to sin up lor the poSuck dinner. It'inortty ers-mad.'prssnt stadRUK EALS0, Black and USa &dt Qr;anlsi'ion of CoKnfia Un?wr.y, CoR2 tA Physicians and Sursson, la sefMSnf RonsW Henry, a aecond year mad student, to tk with toterested students from 2 to S pjn. Friday In Room 258 of the Union. Tha fdr of the CoSen Fkeca, UNCs hiiheTt honofsry society, is having its tapping ceremonies at 739 pjn. on Friday In Garrard HaS. Ed Joddar, Asaocurte Edftor of the Washington Star, mm be the guest speaker. Everyone is Invited to attend. Phi Dca Theta wiii hotd a Spring Seer C?a. proceeds to Campua Chest, from 2 to 8 p.m. Friday In the PW Delta Theta backyard. Blcick an songs in tu by Lawrence Toppman DTH Arts Editor Every so often an artist reminds us that there's more to traditional black music than spirituals. Soprano Martha Flowers, voice instructor in the UNC Music Department, reminded us Sunday with a concert that kicked off the Black Arts Culture Festival with stylish beauty and verve. Flowers can sing spirituals. She can also sing opera, lieder or the most refined French drawing room pieces, as she demonstrated in a versatile and lengthy recital. But what she does best are the pieces her program called "Afro-American art songs." I'm still not sure what an Afro-American art song is. If the criterion is a text written by a black poet, or music by a black composer, these songs qualify: Harry Burleigh and Howard Swanson have set Langston Hughes to music here and Samuel Coleridge Taylor has written music for his own text, "Life and Death D.ic d) j d nll V c "rTiv IiIe-: w St:. 'I' t -"i NOW SHOWING J ISA8EUE AOJANI w :. V ffOANCOisinuroi ' I t i THE STORY OF ADELER Yet the experiences described are universal; even Hughes "Lovely Dark and Lonely One" goes beyond a feeling of black isolation to a melancholy reflection upon being cut off from a flow of emotion. If there is an element here that only a black artist could have provided, it is the thoughtful, brooding quality of the music. The songs are full of cautious joy and introspective sorrow mixed with the knowledge that good things here, the experience of deep feelings come to an end all too soon. Flowers sings these art songs robustly, throwing her compact body and confident grin into the music. She has what I think of as a stereotypic "American" voice for the classics a rich bold timbre, quivering with emotion, vigorously imprecise in attack and uncertain in her pronunciation of a difficult bit of French or German. Such a technique stands Ijer in good stead with the English texts but restricts her singing of Mozart and Schubert. She gives an unusually intense reading of Debussy and Ravel, and exhilarating approach to those cool Frenchmen that adds almost too much raw strength to their elegant works. She seems most at home with a song like "Voici que le Printemps," a surprisingly gay vigorous melody from the languid Debussy celebrating the fertile arrival of spring. One of Flowers' most endearing qualities both NOW SHOWING mimjiiim I'm, io rill "ini'n irtaMMiini Paramount Pictures presents . AGaIN, m ..SAM"; ' Hfe Technicolor A Pf mCTuni Pictura ' HELD OVER ith Big Week t, .- -egBa iiwiuii m - 4. V"i n 'iV ii-lf'i)liiifiiimTteali(i'ii J Sa-5HS9- mSmm!mmB!Bmf mm. pinnsn of ncnosnY nmnnsij 2:15 4:40 7:05 9:30 "BEST PICTURE" "BEST DIRECTOR" ' "BEST ACTOR" "BEST ACTRESS" "BEST SCREENPLAY' W1fSWSw gW",J'lJ ( as f f c a.. . I!.J fWl Cats Cradle - april Blue Grass Experience Rod Abernethy Arrogance and Friends (Wann, Simpson et al.) Quick & Dirty Keith Lane Blue Grass Experience Hard Times Jazz Band Sutlers Gold Streak Blue Grass Experience Red Clay Ramblers John Rees Schlammiel & Schlammazel Bro. T. Holla Bluegrass Experience Mike Cross New Deal String Band Quick & Dirty Ronnie Ray & the Sidewinders Blue Grass Experience Arrogance f rear NCNB Plata on Rosemary 967-2S4 2:15 4:00 5:45 7:30 9:15. EXCLUSIVE AREA ENGAGEMENT rXSAR SHARIF KAREN BLACK JOSEPH BOTTOMS R JHRIUHUJU Li, I 2:10-4:00 5:50 - 7:40 & 9:30 P.M. JACK ELAM when it succeeds and when it occasionally disappoints is her freshness. All of the music she sings has a new edge to it, a strangeness that sets her rendition against more traditional stylizations. When she brings her low, resonant voice at times almost that of mezio-soprano to spirituals, she reverses the effect created in the lieder. Her evident formal training and precise delivery' of the lyrics lend an air of grace, a calm demeanor to music usually performed in either mad rapture or frenzied anguish. Backed by the intelligent, understated accompaniment of pianist Michael Zenge, Rowers adds a plaintiveness, a gentle but sincere sorrow to "Were You There When They Crucified My Lord?" and a quiet assurance to "Jesus Walked This Lonesome Valley." Though the spirituals were lovely enough, they overshadowed a lesser-known art form last Sunday. I could wish there had been more examples of this unfamiliar genre, the Afro American art song, so that we might become acquainted with a school of music that offers potentially board rewards for study. At present, however, the audience will have to be satisfied with the display of Flowers' talent and a whetting of its musical appetites by the sponsors of the Black Arts Cultural Festival. Black classical composition in America runs beneath and beyond the work of Ray Charles, Keith Jarrett or Earth, Wind and Fire in a myriad of diverse modern and neo-romantic forms, and has long been a neglected pool of music. The Black Student Movement has my thanks for taking their first dip into that pool. Sunday concert The Carolina Choir and members of the N.C. Symphony will perform Maurice Durufle's "Requiem" at their annual Palm Sunday Masterworks Series concert Sunday, April I ! , at 4:30 p.m. in Hill Hall. Though two performances had originally been scheduled, only one will be held. Free tickets will be made available at 8 a.m. today in the foyer of Hill Hall for as long as they last. --T-Wmii i li inlaianil -ENDS THURSDAY-2:45-4:30-6:15 8:00 & 9:45 P.M. DONT COME UNLESS YOU WANT TO. LAUGH YOURSELF SILLYI THE LAUSH AT r ''J "rfarfpfDfin u Ay u "EPIC - MARCA REG. C 1976 C8S INC. This Week's Feature AUTOGRAPHED PRESENTATION COPIES-from a Southern Pines Library Iho Old Boo!i Gom; atJ LiUUa UUI LaUl 137 A EAST ROSEMARY STREET OPPOSITE NCNB PLAZA CHAPEL HILL, N. C. 275 1 4 . X , . : , it 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00 COLUMBIA PICTURES R A STAR PICTURES pft.nl AUDREY SEAN HEPBURN ROBERT CONNERY , SHAW K ROBIN AND MARIAN" HI NICOL WILLIAMSON RICHARD HARRIS ti Richird the Lionhrirt If STARTS SLri APRIL RXSTSfclT ($) i r i If iHT i 4 i ; m 1 t 8 ; rri-r- we beat to I JA6AlN,LUClLLy THAT'5 0KM..S0VR TAS WON THE 6AME, BUT OJZ TEAM HAS CAPS ! sr-V"M J 1m H99 US H OR - eastta rarssso tot UnatM FaaasaM SyCH MC SEE HOUi THEf RU5 IT- IN. SIR? D00NESBURY 1 1 'e n. o fez sots essays X II li jtmrtmmim i IC0K, JC?m IFtgDCtftrVT GFTtZ$PWPl,TtmlL , ... r--., . 1 wo 1 f" A fit .9 fsifii - i i 1 1 9 PLAZA kbdncSgnQl TUCHTIJCf Ttrr J ; 4- , . -.; i ,.; t
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 7, 1976, edition 1
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