Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Aug. 30, 1977, edition 1 / Page 4
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4 The Daily Tar Heel Tuesday, August 30, kaleidoscope Kaleldoacope is bi-weekly calendar of rta event In the Triangle area. Theatre, gallery, apeclal cinema, mualcal, television and radio event are noted. Campus The Bad Sleep Well (Akira Kurosawa, 1960) A high-powered thriller set in the corrupt milieu of corporate executives. Toshiro Mifune stars as the man planning vengeance against the scoundrels responsible for his father's death. Kurosawa has long been considered one of the world's top directors. At 7 and 9:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Carroll Hall HMffl 2:50 EAST FIANKUN STREET Swept Away A film by R Lina Wertmuller Late Young FrankWMttto - HM Ovw ShowSj Anlmirf Crecktrt e . J Mra Brothr HELD OVER 4TH BIG WEEK SORRY NO PASSES i Its the BIGGEST. . . HMaiin V ItSBUNU. , niESPY vi mrrn mi SHOWS 3:00 6:00 9:00 LIZA PXfPT MINNELLI DrrNIRO ".NEWtCGK, pg NFWYOUK' HELD OVER 9TH WEEK shows sorry no passes 30 B A longtime ago 4:451 in a galaxy jar, jar sway. 7.00 ! r 9:15 -. - it i SHE SERVED HER COUNTRY THE ONLY VAY SHE KNEW HOW! rfy ill 'i XJCYHfffrHCRTOfI I AS BMfCRA MOLIANMB II ! t m IE f uv U1 THI HfiPPY HOOKER t COESTO y WASHINGTON J wcihwotom ir B " a 1 - 'Ml 1 jTYW-rrkQ HELD OVER M'tftjftjgr 2ND BIG WEEK show? rrxrriJOT 3:10 9:10 1 1 HACKMAN MARCH OR DIE I MM li J DfTDRMmUNT IjTJWry HELD OVER 1 y'.l&lZ) 3RD BIG WEEK j I .SORRY NO PASSES 1 i ' r 1 Ml i 1977 Auditorium. Free with student ID. The Godfather, Part II (Francis Ford Coppola, 1975) A masterpiece of gothic proportions, an epic vision of the corruption of America. The Corleone family moves through poverty and riches, love and hate, life and death. Starring Al Pacino, Robert DeNiro, Robert Duvall and Diane Keaton. At 8 p.m. Friday in the Carroll Hall Auditorium. Tickets are $ I with student ID. The Decameron (Pier paolo Pasolini, 1972) Several episodes from Boccaccio's classic ' " and the film is a classic in itself. Tying together the comic highlights and earthy ribaldry is PPP himself, portraying the painter G iotto in a metaphor of the artistic process. Starring, in the Italian neo-realist tradition, many non-actors. At 7 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday in the Carroll Hall Auditorium. Free with student ID. Young and Innocent (Alfred Hitchcock, 1937) Hitchcock paces this film with electric suspense. A young woman helps a murder suspect escape because she thinks he's innocent. But to prove that, they have to expose the real culprits. Have a good time! At 7 and 9:30 p.m. Sunday in the Carroll Hall Auditorium. Free with student ID. e I? 7 IMPORTANT MESSAGE FROM SOUTHERN BELL.. For Your Convenience, Telephone Connection Charges May Be Paid In 3 Equal Monthly Installments. television U.S. Open Tennis Championships 29 hours of network coverage by CBS may be the longest total television coverage of any single sports event in the U.S. Championships to be played at the West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills, N.Y. Begins Wednesday and continues through Sunday, Sept. II. gallery Juggernaut narrated by William Shatner of Star Trek fame. Showing at the Morehead Planetarium at 1 1 a.m., 3 and 8 p.m. weekdays; 1 1 a.m., 1, 3and 8 p.m. Saturdays; 2, 3 and 8 p.m. Sundays. Little Art Gallery A special exhibit of new original prints by Duke University instructor in printmaking Stephen W illis White. The gallery is also displaying a number of handcrafted wall hangings. Included in the display are textured weavings and batiks. Located in North Hills Mall, Raleigh, the show will continue through September. Ackland Art Museum Contemporary Art in the Ackland Collection. The museum is located on Columbia Street and is open Tuesday through Saturday 10 to 5, Sunday 2 to 6, closed Monday. x Union gallery showcases Macrame by Jeannie Echenique will be displayed in the Union's South Gallery from Aug. 27 through Sept. 18. leieieiilil t l I' ill' ill) (l!)fiUT ul ''4iiVi 'Julius II VI '? Your First Bill Will Include The Full Amount, But You May Still Pay In 3 Equal Monthly Installments If You Wish. O) Southern Boll radio Jazz Show Jazz is played Wednesday nights from 8 to II on WXYC89.3FM. Party Show Music people party by from 8 to 12 on WXYC 89.3 FM. Larry Black Show The top-rated Jesus rock show in America. Sunday mornings from 7 to 10 on WXYC 89.3 FM. Orange County Special Progressive bluegrass, country and country rock is played on Sunday afternoons from 2 to 5 on WXYC 89.3 FM. theatre Durham Theatre Guild announces open auditions for its production of Noel Coward's Private Lives, on Sept. 6 and 7 at the Durham Arts Council Building, 810 W. Proctor St. The comedy requires three women and two men. Individuals interested in working with any area of production are encouraged to attend tryouts or to leave their names and phone numbers at the Durham Arts Council office. Experience is not necessary. Community Theatre of Greensboro Try-outs for East Lynn will be held at the Carolina Theatre, 3 10 S. Greene St., Greensboro, Sept. 8 and 9, beginning at 7:30 each evening. Persons interested in either acting or working backstage are asked to fill out an information card on your area of interest. A Midsummer Night's Dream Presented through Sept. 1 at the Sword of Peace Amphitheatre in Snow Camp, N.C. All seats are $2 with UNC ID. Curtain time 8:45 p.m. Come early, bring a candle, bottle of wine, a blanket, 'and picnic on the grounds. Snow Camp directions: head out Jones Ferry Road, turn right at sign pointing to Greensboro. Follow signs to "The Sword of Peace." For more information, call 9 1 9-376-6948. WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO 3:15 THE BIGGEST MOONSHINE 5:15 RACKET IN THE COUNTRY? 7: 1 5 9:15 GREAT LIFE STORY OF 3:00 WENDELL SCOn, WORLD'S 5:00 1ST BLACK RACE CAR DRIVER 7:00 9:00 IN MEMORY OF ELVIS 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 r ill A LIMITED RETURN i ENGAGEMENT VE5, X CALLS) EARLIER. ABOUT 65T W6SOME CCVEFA65 W.IES.SIR. WRE7HB om mm THE SHATTERED CREAMS. "NEWS.' WIS IS PROMOTION. , MM I HELP FOR. A MURDER.. ii a Dim DA1LY NOUS. PROMOTION, KEUERMAN YES, WIS IS SON OF ARNOLD AND MARY LEIBERMAN" AGAIN! in ii n OH, YES, MR. SONIHASNT MR. BRESUN RETURNED MR HERB. f 111 :m m C ; 13 I 1 111 i K7 JVf A ou aft (tftak jjySMjj , puu Cr-Kpita4a fat ZO free rw, cf beer ad le 4 tiCJth o CJmpeL Will. tWck. ou -Hnt HtftoUaM. Mud rackoae, ' 3 rccrvor of uru4ar&, camdek, cuik a. didk. ojrA fClc,oil for abouJt 1 per datjctt ou 4-rvm& lazbz. And cklwerq w free -to hoiuL -fi'dc fudex.-fv. (o, iowj ITUtSTROLEASO zMOweLmmAM-m 3 FURNITURE RENTALS. opeM -,9,9-4 Beach Music Convention full of sun, beer, music By DEE JOYCE DTH Contributor The crowd that converged upon the abandoned airstrip at Wheeler Lake this past Saturday came in everything from deluxe Winnebagos to pick-up trucks. They came with the intention of listening to such juke box kings as the Drifters and the Embers, who headlined a long list of groups that composed the Raleigh Jaycees' first annual Beach Music Convention. Now don't get me wrong. The Drifters and the Embers were there all right, complete with coordinating outfits and their series of precision line dances, as were the Cornelius Brothers and Sister Rose. I even vaguely remember hearing the faint strains of the classic "39-21-40 Shape." But the point 1 am trying to make is this: the music was only a secondary element in the noon to midnight jamboree. Everyone was simply having too hell of a good time to pay any serious attention to the guys up on the stage. As for those who pay serious attention to the assorted phenomena of American youth, it is safe to describe the first annual Beach Music Convention as the missing link between Woodstock Nation and an Easter weekend at Myrtle Beach. Although Raleigh was blessed with a Carolina blue sky, soaring temperatures sent the beer taps popping among a sweating crowd that numbered well over a thousand, whose coolers, if placed end to end, would probably have stretched from Mount Mitchell to Morehead . City. Anticipating a hungry, thirsty audience, the Jaycees pitched tents . DAVID CAKRAJHNE KATE JACKSON EI COLOR ELVIS ON TOUR OF COLOR RIGHT! AND I'VE Wll.SIR.ICAN LEAVE A MESSAGE IF YOtPUte. DO W HAVE A NOM - DE TABLOID BEEN DISCONNECT 1HRE5 TIMES! NOW, IF I DOtttGET TO lALKTOWESLHtM Q0N6 TO THE fVSr N0,PWfM6ETM mi,mjuw CARET) SPEAKTO MR.HMU.rie ALSO (URITES ABOUT IN- TEPBSTIN6 NEW CALL YET? OFFTUEWAlL ? NEAR MY iOm-RS.. f- HOnVUE! GR1ER !....7: 1 1 rain 'o. MR U Sfc CUV K fOlitlJ J 20 'Jree Miuja uiWi yoa rent hrrukwe from, WefroleaM.... where they hawked everything from bags of peanuts to Pepsi and Pabst (fortunately, the port-o-lets were free). There were tee-shirts by the dozen, and for the serious souvenir collector, a booth featuring the Elvis funeral edition of the local Memphis paper for two dollars a copy. The crowd only lacked sand to sprinkle in their shoes for an authentic beach atmosphere (maybe next year the Jaycees can set up a stand arid sell it by the shovelfull), but there was plenty of Piedmont red dust for everyone. Throughout the rowdy afternoon it was difficult to gauge just who was having more fun: the mingling masses who bought tickets of the 'Jaycees themselves, who ran the whole show as they cruised through the acres of beach towels and lawn chairs on golf carts loaded with tipsy Jaycettes. Even those Jaycees assigned to traffic duty managed to keep everything in the right perspective by finishing a beer for every three cars they parked. By seven o'clock, several beers and several hours later, the reporter had abandoned all previous plans to snag an exclusive interview with the Embers. Although many still found the energy to engage in spontaneous shagging, several in the crowd had collapsed on their blankets from too much sun or beer or the potent combination of both. After watching ten port-o-lets flash by on the back of a flat-bed truck, I decided that if I tried to make it till midnight 1 might suffer from the same fate. After being up on the roof and under the boardwalk all in one afternoon, it was time to be back .in Chapel Hill. Lesson for Today . . . Advertise in the Daily Tar Heel YES, I DO. ITS "SOU OF ARNOLD AND MAM uh.. you oh, its SURE YOU OMY.WEY WANT TO BE PONlKNCWl THAT SPECIFIC? WHERE I&BERMhn. I AM. (miLL?..6E, I PONT mil THOUGHT HIS PLEAS TO SAM KIND OF MR. SON, HAVE. YOU TRIED THE POLICE? SURE THEY DONT CARE! NO ONE CARES UN LESS YOU HAVE A DOTTFPkll RAMBLED. ism r
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 30, 1977, edition 1
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