4 The Daily Tar Heel Friday, September Midsummer Night's Dream' here Twelve ol' the world's most brilliant dancing stars can be seen in Chapel H ill when the New Y ork City Ballet film of A Midsummer Night's Dream is shown at Memorial Hall Oct. 2 and 3. The first full-length ballet to be produced as a motion picture, A Midsummer Night's Dream will present the 100-member company in Shakespeare's romantic comedy. George Balanchine choreographed the ballet to the music of Felix Mendelssohn. Shows are on Book Harvest Sale! (Hardcover & Quality Paperbound Books) 2 for $100 2 for $3oo 2 for $5 Impressive Values From Our Regular Stock! 143 West Franklin Downtown Chapel Hill in front of Granville Towers St'!' !' y-t: k- I: 30, 1977 Sunday at 3 and 8 p.m. and on Monday at 8 p.m. This is the first show in the Carolina Union Dance Series, and season ticket holders may attend any performance. Individual tickets will be available at the door at $2.50 for the general public and $1.50 for children, students and those persons 65 or older. Suanne Farrell and Edward Villella dance the parts of the fairy king and queen. Arthur Mitchell appears as Little Professor BOOK CENTER Open Daily 9:30-6:00 Friday 9:30-9:00 Sunday 12:00-6:00 Fellow Beer Persons, Life is full of unanswered questions such as: Is there intelligent elsewhere in the universe? And if so, do they wear socks? In beer, however, there are no unanswered questions. Because is only one word for beer, and you know it. Schlitz. Therefore, as your Dean of Beer, I suqgest you research the essentia lightness of the word for yourself at your next social function. Or even your next antisocial function. And please note: The recommended source material for locating the word can phone booth. In other words, look Pages. Under "Been' Thank you. THiRt JU5T or wutiu itgfl Puck, the practical joker who causes the merry mix-ups in the comedy. Jacques D'Amboise and Allegra Kent dance the spectacular performance in the palace of the Duke of Athens. This is the famous scene for which Felix Mendelssohn provided the world with his universal favorite. "The Wedding March." A Midsummer Night's Dream reaches a new high in ballet film production values, and dive Barnes ol the.VcM- York Times hails it asoneoi the best dance films eer made. Many have acclaimed it as being far more enjoyable on film than lie on stage. I'ickets arc on sale at the Carolina I'nion desk. - ----rf-rf JU YOUR : mTnrrl CAN 7 VI It IN ' ' h 0UR PANTS! J Lee- M JNJ o) (Off Win 11 unJ be found in any in the Yellow AHDYOUKHOWH PCI iff , v V I . " I UNC police find wandering horse on campus street University Police reported finding a horse wandering around Country Club and Ridge roads at 3:20 a.m. Thursday. Police said they tried to return the animal to its trailer in Ramshead Parking Lot. hut they were unsuccessful. The horse's owner finally was located in Morrison dorm at 5:30 aim. The horse then was returned to its trailer without incident. Police theoritd that a passerby released the horse from its trailer. Corduroys $15 Prewashed Jeans knocK a ounas Carr Mill Ci'C: His HMIV HKIAMV. life there i 1M n v ft '" I V , i i t i ? , & ff jt - '. PRC holds auditions The Carolina Union, in association with the Carolina Playmakers, will present Neil Simon's "The Good Doctor"Nov. 12, 13, 15 and 16. Auditions for the show will be held Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 3 and 4, in Room 205 of the Carolina Union from 4 to 6 and 8 to 10 p.m. Interviews for production staff will be held on Wednesday, Oct. 5, from 7 to 10 p.m. in Room 205. Designers should bring portfolios, and other technical personnel should bring resumes. "The Good Doctor" is a series of Hitting, steady pitching lift baseballers to sweep By BILL FIELDS ( Staff Writer Carolina's fall baseball team won its' fifth and sixth straight games Wednesday night in Boshamer Stadium as the Heels defeated Pfeiffer College in a doubleheader4-l and 8 3. . - As in previous wins, timely hitting by Carolina along with steady pitching were the strengths in keeping UNC on top in fall play. Roy Clark's first-inning double in the opening game drove in Mike Fox, and the Tar Heels added runs in the second and fourth innings to secure the win. David Kirk pitched the win for Carolina. Clay Johnson opened on the mound for UNC in the nightcap, and after he retired the first three Pfeiffer hitters in order, the Tar Heel batsmen went to work to score two runs in the bottom of the first. ' Mike Fox tripled to right field to start the inning. Roy Clark drove Fox home With a CO MiUVAt 'KLK Wis humorous and touching sketches loosely based on the writings of Anton Chekov.The production will be directed by Jonathan Farwell. newly appointed acting instructor in the graduate theatre program. Mr. Farwell comes to Chapel H ill after five years as leading actor and director at the Cleveland Play House. A "portable" production will be presented at four different Chapel Hill locations. A cast of 10 or 12 actors will portray a wide and wild variety of roles ranging from the sentimental to broad farce. sacrifice fly. and this set up Jim Atkinson's solo home-run blast to right field. Carolina scored four runs in the second inning on a sacrifice fly by Kevin Caddell, a bunt hit by Phil Griffith and a triple by Brad Lloyd. After three innings Pfeiffer scored three runs to trail Carolina 5-3. Two more hits by Clark and Lloyd in the fourth inning lifted the score to 7-3, and a Lloyd Brewer single in the fifth drove home Dave Barnett for UNC's final run. . A game with UNC-Wilmington scheduled for Thursday night was canceled, so Carolina's next action comes in Greenville Monday night against the ECU Pirates. Carolina has two wins, a loss and a tie against the Pirates in fall play. UNC booters edge Davidson; host High Point By TOD HUGHES Staff Writer Seldom has a score so little reflected the tone of a game as UNC's 1-0 soccer triumph over Davidson on Wednesday. A combination of the Wildcat goalie's defensive play and a plethora of near misses on Tar Heel shots kept the margin of victory a single goal. "We were dominating the whole game," coach Anson Dorrance said. "It's a miracle the score wasn't seven or eight to nothing. We must have taken about 60 shots and Davidson not more than one or two. We hit the crossbar about seven times and the goalie about 27 times. It was just a matter of inches. Tactically it was our best game of the year. They had an outstanding goalkeeper. He made about seven or eight one-on-one saves." Carolina scored the only goal of the game in the first half on the efforts of John Fernandez. "He had an outstanding game," Dorrance said of his freshman striker. "He beat his man almost every time he got the ball. On the scoring play he beat his own man, sprinted about 30 yards, beat the keeper and put it in the net." Dorrance was also pleased with the results of his experimental lineup changes. Dick Drayton played well at center-forward after moving up from midfield, and David Blum was a pleasant surprise at center-midfield. Dorrance said Blum won the starting job with his excellent performance against Davidson. Also cited for oniitv play were goalie Martin Trimble, .....g-midfielder Roy Baroff, fullback Ed Fenimore and junior Cooper Osborne, who started his first game at wingback in place of Hugh Bennett. ( Although the closeness of the score was a bit nerve-racking, Dorrance was pleased with the team's shot selection and felt the Heels attacked well from behind. Saturday the Heels are back on Fetzer Field to play High Point at II a.m. According to Dorrance, H igh Point is a well coached team on par with Guilford, a team which dealt UNC a 2-0 loss in a preseason scrimmage. "We're expecting a competitive game," Dorrance said. "High Point is better than Davidson, so I definitely think we'll be challenged, although I'd have to give our team the edge. "This is the first game that they've played us that's ever counted towards the regular season, so I definitely think they'll be up for us. They're capable of pulling an upset. I'm hoping our forwards will be better than their backs. That could be the key to the match." Saturday will be the first soccer-football doubleheader in Carolina history. The UNC-H igh Point match has been purposely scheduled for 1 1 a.m. so as not to interfere with the 1:30 Carolina-Texas Tech gridiron clash. . THE STITCH IN TIME ALTERATIONS, CUSTOM TAILORING and DESIGNING 133 W E. Franklin

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view