G Tha Czlly Ter Heel Thursday, January 25, 1979
Music pro
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CALIFORNIA ICEBERG HEAD
LETT
LARGE
HEAD '
buildls his
.own --organ
By ETTA LEE
Stsff Writer
The music goes round and round
and comes out here."
That's the way the average listener
explains the rich, resonant music an
organ makes, says Rudolph Kremer,
UNC music professor.
To show how . an organ works,
Kremer built what he describes as the
world's smallest organ." He gave his
music appreciation classes a concert on
the instrument this week. The concert
consisted of the repeated performance
of one note middle C. The organ
wasn't capable of other notes, but it did
show how pressure and air combine to
produce sound.
"I built the organ just for fun,"
Kremer says. "It is difficult to explain in
words how an organ works, so I use it as
a tool."
He constructed the organ in a few
weeks several years ago. Since then, he
has traveled with it and explained organ
mechanics to audiences.
"This organ has been with me as far
south as Spartanburg, S C., and as far
north as Yale University," he says.
Arousing the curiousity of Kremer's 1
p.m. Music 41 class, the organ stood
about two feet tall and was made of
wood, pipes and Plexiglas. It bore little
resemblance to an ordinary organ.
Kremer began by pumping air into a
wind chamber, where pressure built.
When he placed a book on top of the
chamber, the pressure increased. The
wind chamber was connected to
. another chamber by a pipe. This wind
chest was divided into upper and lower
sections.
-'to 4". 5
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' "The lower section is an extension of
the wind reservoir," Kremer explains.
"The upper has channels for each note.
When a key is depressed, air gets in."
On Kremer's mini-organ were three
pipes, tied to the wind chest with yellow
ribbon. He pulled "stops to let air into
the pipes and played each of the pipes
seperately, allowing the class to contrast
the tones they created. The he played
the three together.
"I'm lelfting.out all the stops," he says
with a laugh. 'v
There were othec ways of varying the
tone. "If I comedown fast on the key, it
comes our with a paa sound. But if I
come down more slowly, it creates a
mellow maa sound."
A more elaborate organ is capable of
infinitely more tones, he says. "A lot of
people don't realize that each pipe
makes its own sound."
Some organs have hundreds of pipes.
"Nothing else is quite as massive as an
organ," he comments.
The organ is only one of several
instruments Kremer has built, including
two harpsichords.
Kremer, who began making
instruments seven years ago, is working
on a piano. It took him two years to
build one of the harpsichords. He also
taught art honors course in which the
class built a harpsichord.
Kremer says he. prefers organs
constructed on the system he showed
the class to the way electric organs are
built. r
Law career seminar set for Saturday
By KATHY MORRILL
Staff Writer
The Student Bar Association is
sponsoring a Careers Day Conference, 9
a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday at the UNC law
school for those interested in or already
pursuing a law career.
The keynote address will be given at
noon by Doris Peterson from the Center
for Constitutional Law in New York
City. She will speak on "Litigation of
Contitutional Issues before the Supreme
Court."
The conference begins with an
introduction by Golden Frinks, a
member of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conferences
From 9:30 a.m. until 3:45 p.m., four
small discussion sessions on various
topics in law will be presented hourly.
Those who come to the conference may
attend whichever sessions most interest
them.
Session topics include:
9:30 Corporate law, legal aid.
government and setting up a practice.
10:45 Corporate law, legal aid,
government and labor law.
Noon Keynote address.
1:30 Women's rights, public
interest law, labor law and criminal law.
2:45 Women's rights, public
interest law, health and criminal law.
3:45 Informal reception for the
session participants and students.
Refreshments will be served.
Three or four lawyers who practice in
the particular areas discussed in each
session will talk about the practical
aspects of their jobs and ways to get jobs
in their special fields.
Interested students are invited to bring
questions and a bag lunch.
Odet play 'The Country Girl9
tonight at Carr Mill Playhouse
THERE J A
DIFFERENCE!
11
OUR
141st
YEAR
The Country Girt, Clifford Odet's drama .
presented by the Gallery Theatre of the Art
School at 8 tonight in Carr Mill Playhouse. -
When the play opened on Broadway in 1950,
it was widely acclaimed as Odet's return to the
basics of human drama. Critic Brooks
Atkinson called the play a cruel penetration
into the secret corners of human hearts."
Linda Wright, assistant director of the
Carolina Union, directs the play. She has
directed for the Durham Theatre Guild and at
Duke University.
I
V
l" -..I EDUCATIONAL
CENTER J ,)f:yLl
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s!
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now$1.20Save 30$!
Thell's
124 E. Franklin St.
942-1954
Open 8:30-6:00
Theplafff'tT'ihcJfiaell UNC professor
? Wffiiarilarytasali aging star who
hits the bottle; UNC graduate Mark Phialas as
Bernie Dodd, an ambitious young director;
and Martii Preston as Frank's wife.
Past Gallery Theatre productions include
Al bee's Counting the Ways and Listening,
Shepard's Tooth of Crime and Mamet's
American Buffalo. The most recent
production was Gray's Otherwise Engaged.
The Country Girl also will be presented at 8
p.m. Friday and Saturday and again next
Thursday through Saturday (Feb. 1-3).
Tickets are $2.50 and are available at the Art
School, the Woodshed and Ledbetter Pickard.
Call 942-2041 for more information.
Poetry reading
North Carolina poets Margaret
Boothe Baddour and Calvin Atwood will
read from their work at 8 tonight in the
Art School, 150 E. MainSt. inCarrboro.
Baddour, the president of the North
Carolina Poetry Society, has had her
poetry published in the International
Poetry Review , Pembroke and the Textn
Quarterly. Atwood, is the author of A Squadron
of Roses.
This reading is a part of the Art
School's Poets Exchange series, a
program devoted to promoting and
maintaining the oral tradition in poetry.
Writers to read
The first of the Odd Thursday
Readings, a series sponsored by the
creative writing program, will be held at 2
p.m. today in the Greenlaw lounge.
Lee Smith, whose story Heat
- Lightning" appears in the current issue of
the Carolina Quarterly, will read one of
her.stories.
Graduate students Dorothy Hill,
Miriam Marty and Ralph Earle will read
poetry selections from the new Carolina
Quarterly.
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