Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 14, 1977, edition 1 / Page 5
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I IMlb Campus The Homecoming Harold Pinter's marvelous and sinister dissection of the family institution and the male-female roles that soon reverse themselves. With lan Holm, Vivien Merchant, Paul Rogers, Michael Jayston, and Cyril Cusak. At 8 p.m. Wednesday in Carroll Hall. Free Admission. Chapel Hill- For local theatres see advertisements on p. 7. TELEVISION It's Arbor Day, Charlie Brown Learning about Arbor Day in school, the gang decides to commemorate it by planting trees and flowers and vegetables smack in the middle of Charlie Brown's beloved baseball field. At 8 tonight on Channels 2. 3 and 1 1. Pallisers Romantic and political troubles engulf Phineas Finn in Part 7. He is challenged to a duel because of his affection for Violet and takes up a cause in opposition to the Liberal Party. At 9 tonight on Channel 4. Soundstage Two veteran musicians get together for an hour of blues. B. B. King and Bobby "Blue" Bland perform solo and together on songs that include The Thrill is Gone, Let the Good Times Roll and My Song. At 10 tonight on Channel 4. La Boheme The production is telecast live from the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City. James Levine leads the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra. During intermissions, opera buff Tony Randall conducts impromptu interviews backstage. At 8 p.m. Tuesday on Channel 4. Circus Highlights-Highlights Chan Tut- Thursday March 3 3:00 Carmichael Auditorium P " " JAI. . 4 p.m. from the 107th edition of the Ringling Bros, and Barnum & Bailey Circus, with. Gene Kelly as host. At 8 p.m. Tuesday on Channel 28. NBC Reports An investigation of the largest oil spill in U.S. waters includes interviews with crew members, and looks at licensing and safety regulations in the tanker industry, and at how the U.S. Coast Guard responds to spills. At 10 p.m. Tuesday on Channel 28. The Deadliest Season- A hard hitting drama about professional hockey. At 9 p.m. Wednesday on Channels 2, 3 and 11. The Owl and the Pussycat Barbra Streisand stars as a softhearted hooker w ho finds unlikely romance with an uptight intellectual (George Segal). At 9:30 p.m. Wednesday on Channel 28. Classic Theatre-. Tom Courtenay and Juliet Mills head the cast of She Stoops to Conquer. Oiiver Goldsmith's 1773 comedy about a stammeringly shy young man and a genteel young lady who must resort to disguise to win his affections. At 9 p.m. Thursday on Channel 4. THEATRE Touch, a mime trio, will give two performances for children and adults at 4 and 7:30 today in the Chapel Hill Public Library Meeting Room. Free Admission. The Raleigh Little Theatre presents Ten Little Indians, an Agatha Christie mystery, at 8 p.m. .March 1 6 through March 27. Tickets are $4 for adults and S3 for students. For more information call 821-31 ll. Village Dinner Theatre presents Tom Jones March 15-27. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. and tickets are Sll Sunday "0 I III 111 13 I W I I Four hours of super Beach Tickets $2.00 A Carolina Union Recreation Committee presentation TARHEEL Sunday, March 27 Car Rally Four trophy classes $3.00 entry fee Information and registration at Triangle Porsche-Audi and Un ion Desk. through Thursday and SI 2.50 Friday and Saturday. MUSIC Hill Hall Tuesday Evening Series The UNC Men's Glee Club under the direction of Robert Porco will perform at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Hall. Free Admission. Contemporary Music David Burge. chairman of the piano instruction at the Eastman School will perform at 8 p.m. Thursday in Hill Hall. Free. Fleetwood Mac will perform at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Greensboro Coliseum. Tickets arc $6.50 and are available at the Coliseum box office and at all area Record Bars. GALLERY Asian Art Exhibit An exhibition of Indian and Southeast Asian art will open Tuesday at the Ackland Art Museum. Ackland hours are Tuesday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 2 to 6 p.m. Sunday. Free. About Space and Time, a scientific art exhibit by Jose Majicco is being shown in the Morehead Planetarium. Hours are 2 to 5 p.m. and 7:30 to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 7:30 to 10 p.m. Saturdays: and 2 to 5 p.m. and 7:30 to 10 p.m. on Sundays. RADIO M N( -I M 91.5 Today The Cleveland Orchestra performs at 9 p.m. Lorin Maael conducts works of Beethoven. Tuesday At 7 p.m. taped recitals will be performed b Julian Bream, guitar, and the Melos Ensemble, lour pianos. Works of Williamson. Patterson and Bennett are included. i - '--i.--..'.--i-J'..'V-tj- Show and Dance! music! Available at the UNION Desk or Chapel Hill Record Bars. Fine Arts Festival stars poetsart, films B LINDA MORRIS Staff Writer The 1977 Fine "Arts Festival, sponsored by the Fine Arts Committee, will offer the University and surrounding area a wide variety ol cultural and artistic experiences during its week and a half span.' The Fine Arts Festival, w hich xx ill run March 16 through March 27. is a cooperative effort of the art. drama. Fnglish. music and radio, telex ision and motion picture departments " on the UNC campus. Several notable artists vx ill be involved in the testival. including poet Allen (iinsberg and novelist William Burroughs, who xvill conduct sexeral seminars and readings during the first tour days of activities. - (iinsberg and poet Peter Orloxskx xvill conduct the first workshop ol the festival in poetry. Burroughs xvill conduct a similar discussion on the modern novel. All three xxill participate in a joint poetry-prose reading on board of trustees I he parking-deck addition will free 600 spaces in the Bell Tower parking lot to replace those lost to the new library on the Union parking lot. The 600 xxho have been parking in the Bell I oxxer lot would receive permits lor the nexx parking deck, and the other 200 spaces in the nexx deck xxill be lor outpatients and visitors at NX". Memorial Hospital. I he nexx deck is projected to cost S2.666.400. and the architect xxill be Haken-Corlex and Associates ol Chapel II ill. the I irm xx hich designed the present deck. Also approved by the trustees was a 150-space addition to the Sxxing Building parking lot. Tickets on sale for Piedmont Chamber Orchestra Sunday, March 20 8:00 p.m. Memorial Hall Tickets $2.00 New course additions to Carolyceum! The Art of Massage Beginning Needle Work Sign-up at Union Desk March 14-21 Classes start the week of March 21 . ...!r,rS" A ' fJu itcar o Baitlcmania-from Videotape shown 2:00 daily at the second floor Carolina Union Lounge. Casino Wight March 23rd, 8:00 p.m. Roulette Craps Blackjack Horse racing You name it we'll play it! A Carolina Union Recreation Committee presentation March 17 in Memorial Hall. In the art medium, environmentalist artist Dennis Oppenheim. who participated in early "Earthworks" outdoor projects at Cornell University, will construct an earthwork on the outskirts of Chapel Hill. Oppenheim will also give an automated lecture on his past works through the use of a humanoid robot. Bennx Andrews, a nationallx exhibited artist and co-chairperson of the Black Emergency Cultural Coalition, xxill lecture on the black artist in America. Lor the musically inclined. I he Concord String Quartet, operating out ol Dartmouth College, xxill perlorm on March IS m Memorial Hall. I he quartet xxill perlorm traditional pieces as well as a possible contemporary piece bx composer John Cage xho is also scheduled to appear at the lestixal and speak on his xxork. Russell Frehling. a graduate student at Mills College, one of the fexx schools I he new library, planned for 1995 needs, will be estimated 437.000 square leet and is the largest and most expensixe slate building exer undertaken in North Carolina. Wilson library, including additional stacks under Construction, totals 260.000 square leet. 1 he trustees recommended that the building be no taller than adjoining six story Hamilton Hall, alter concluding that the I mon parking lot is the best site lor the lacilitx . fhev further concluded that parking is not a lactor in construction of the nexx librarv and that the buildinu need not proxide parking spaces, although, il it Houston Ballet 8:00 p.m. Reynolds Coliseum. Raleigh March 25-26 Tickets $2.00 the first U.& concert to the last. Monday. March 14. 1977 The Daily Tar Heel 5 in the nation offering instruction in electronic music, will also perform and lecture. 1 he i R T VM P Department will sponsor sexeral artists, including Stan BrakhageJ who has been instrumental in transforming film making into a personal art. I he Bread and Puppet Theatre will stay on campus for most of the festival, mingling with students and trying to encourage involxement in the festival. 1 he theatre members use a combination of mime, dance, musical improvisation and puppet mask in their performances. In the area of special programs, the lestixal xxill sponsor a Renaissance Dinner during the last two nights w hich will include a typical Elizabethan meal and performances in acrobatics, dance, masque and magic. The lestixal will also publish a Journal of Fine Arts to gixe graduate students in the fine arts and English an .opportunity to get their xxorks published. Continued from, page 1. xxerc to do so. that would be considered a desirable bonus. Sexeral trustees expressed confidence in their choice ol the Boney and Mitchell-Ciiurgola firms, which were among eight firms under consideration. "1 think they haxe an appreciation for the traditions ol this campus and how this nexx building xx ill sit in the space and relate to other parts of the campus," Board Secretary Margaret T. Harper said. "M itchell-Ciiurgola sits at the very top among architectural firms." Trustee A. I. eon Ca pel said". The firm won two national axxards last year, and designed the American Institute of Architects Building in Washington. D.C.. the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Co. Corporate Headquarters -in Philadelphia, the Laurel Library and Law School at the I'nixersity ol Washington and the campus of the State University of Nexv York in Plattsburg. Fordham Continued Irom page 1 Taykir said he was confident that Fordham xxill perform in an outstanding manner if he is chosen for the position. He said he has not determined who Fordham's replacement will be if he does move to Washington. "Obviously. I've been thinking about it. but no decisions haxe been made,'" he said. Taylor said he and Fordham had talked oxer the weekend, but he had no comments about their conversation. If Fordham is confirmed for the office, he w ill serve as the chief federal health affairs officer, reporting to HEW Secretary Joseph A. Califano. Fordham's jurisdiction would include the Public Health Service, the National Institutes of Health, the Center for Disease Control and the Food and Drug Administration. Fordham attended the UNC Medical School when it was not a degFee-granting school, and he receixed his medical degree from Harvard in 1951. He is 50 and a native of Greensboro. THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS mse i UCH CHEESE SANDWICH f 30 & SOUP V I DIMMER HAMBURGER STEAK wBokd Pototo. Salad. &od ond Ta $2. 60 LUNCH BBQ CHICKEN 75 DINNER MANECOTTI MEAT SAUCE wPaot. Salad, ftrsod ROULADE $2.29 $2.50 (Sour Cfom) LUNCH HAM AND CHEESE SANDWICH m Potato Solod ond Sla s- $2. 00 DINNER TEXAS PLATTER 0 60 mi Baked Potato. Poat. f i Salad. trod. ond TWa fn LUNCH HOT ROAST BEEF PLATTER - Soiod DINNER SPAGHETTI w Solod. Inod $2.00 $1.89 $2.29 FRIED SHRIMP ij4 if - LUNCH FRIED SHRIMP $2.29 $2.30 $1.20 BBQ PLATE BBQ SANDWICH !SSt-K ---- -'.-:.. 942-S1M 11 " 1 " " 111 ""' l'M.JL..imm ;::::::-r
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 14, 1977, edition 1
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