N.C. leads in
outdoor drama
From page 11
HILLS, P.O. Box 398, Cherokee 28719, or
"call (704) 497-2111.
Horn in the West, also by Kermit
Hunter, tells of the stand taken against the
British and their Indian allies by Daniel
Boone and the mountain men of western
North Carolina.
The play will be presented nightly,
Tuesdavs thrmiph Satiirriavs. from June 11
v
through Aug. 18 in the Daniel Boone
Amphitheater, Boone, minutes from the
Blue Ridge Parkway. Performance time:
8:30 p.m. There will also be Sunday matinees
at 3 p.m. Tickets: adults, $5.00 and $4.00;
children, $2.00. For tickets write HORN IN
THE WEST, Box 295, Boone 28607, or call
(704)264-2120.
From This Day Forward by Fred
Cranford, starts its 12th season July 13. The
play - examines the Waldenses their
persecution in Europe during the Middle
Ages and iheir eventual migration to the
Blue Ridge foothills.
Many Waldensian decendants still reside
in Valdese, the site of the drama, and take
pride in enacting their own history every
Thursday through Sunday evening, July 13
through Agu. 19, in the Old Colony
Amphitheater. Performance time: 8:45 p.m.
Tickets: adults, $5.00 and $4.00; children,
$5.00 and $2.00. Write Old Colony Players,
Box 112, Valdese 28691, or call (704) 874
0176. Listen and Remember the work of
Dare Steele, is another locally cast drama,
featuring members of the Waxhaw
community, south of Charlotte.' The early
pioneers of the Old Waxhaws Settlement
come to -life on stage, among .them the
parents of Andrew Jackson.
The drama's 15th season opens June 15
and runs Friday and Saturday evenings
through the month of June. Performance
time: 8:30 p.m. Tickets: adults, $3.00;
children, $200. For tickets write LISTEN
AND REMEMBER P.O. Box 1776,
Waxhaw 28173, or call (704) 842-2624 or
843-2246.
Strike at the Wind! in'Pembroke, close
to Lumberton, was written by Randolph
Umberger. This exciting story examines the
Lumbee Indians and their folk hero, outlaw
Henry Berry Lowrie, who rode the swamps
of Robeson County in the Civil War years.
Almost all cast members are Lumbee
Indians, who tell their own story Thursday
through Saturday nights, July 5 through
Aug. 25. Performance time: 8:30 'p.m. -Tickets:
adults, $3.50; children, $1.75. For
tickets write STRIKE AT THE WIND!
Box 1059, Pembroke 28372, or call (919)
521-2401.
The Liberty Cart another work by
Umberger, tells of Duplin County, from the
Battle of Moore's Creek ("the Lexington and
Concord of the South") in 1776, through
early statehood and slavery and into
Reconstruction. Phenius Pickett, a colorful
peddler, narrates.
The show will be presented Thursday
through Sunday evenings, June 29 through
Aug. 5, in the -William R. Kenan Jr.
Memorial Amphitheater in Kenansville.
Performance time: 8:30 p.m. Tickets: adults,
$4.00; children, $2.00. For tickets write THE
LIBERTY CART P.O. Box 470,
Kenansville 28349, or call (919) 296-072.
This summer another North Carolina
drama, The Legend of Tom Dooley
premieres in Wilkesboro. The play is based
on the classic Tom Dula story, which served
as subject matter for the popular song,
"Hang Down Your Head, Tom Dooley."
The show opens Saturday, June 23, and
will run Tuesday through Saturday evenings
through September 1. Ticketi; adults, $5.50
and $4.50; children, $3.00. Reservations
recommended. For tickets write THE
LEGEND OF TOM DOOLEY, P.O. Box
24, Wilkesboro 28697, or call (919) 667-7643.
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At Chapel Hill Store
132 W. Franklin SL 629-2115
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Library offers
entertainment
By MAItY ANN EOOD
Whatever your idea of fun summer reading, try
the undergraduate library. Scattered among the
stacks are best -sellers, 'whodunits,' science fiction,
poetry and guides to how to take a walk, watch a
movie or customize a van.
.Just inside the front door are shelves of new
bodks. Among them are The New Science of Skin
and Scuba Diving, The American Walk Book by
Jean George, Spencer Tracy...A Biography by
Larry Swindell, Isle of the Dead by Roger
Zelazny, The Twelve-Spoked Wheel Flashing by
Marge Piercy and Write What I Like by Stephen
Biko. To make sure you have time to read for fun,
Superwoman by Shirley Conran is about
housework and how to avoid it.
To the right of the new books, the reference desk
has bibliographies xf the library's detective and
mystery stories and science fiction. Then come the
surprises in the card catalogs Tolkien has 43 cards
and none are about Beowulf. Have you read
Farmer Giles of Haml
Take a look at subjects you couldn't work into
your last term paper. Behind "camping" is a
collection that ranges from The Complete
Wilderness Paddler to Backpacking Equipment:
. A Consumer's Guide. "Bicycle has nine choices;
"cycling," (which is what you do on a bicycle not to
beer cans) has half a dozen more. There's half a
drawer under "sex," but it's not all recreational.
Reference librarian Barbara Hornick-Lockard
says, "We like to purchase current fiction of
lasting value, books people will be reading next
year." Downstairs the shelves where the call
numbers begin with PR -and PS make good
b rowsinj. PR is English literature; PS, American,
including novels, poetry and thrillers like Dorothy
L, Sayers Murder Must Advertise and Raymond
Chandler's The Big Sleep.
Among the newest of the library's purchases are
all of the 1979 National Book Award winners and
nominees (except children's books).
Available now are Going A fter Cacciato by Tim
O'Brien, a novel about a Vietnam deserter who
decides to walk to Paris pursued "by the-squad he
left behind; The World According to Garp by
John Irving, another novel, centering on the writer
of a book about Tape and his violent world; Lying
Low by Diane Johnson, a novel about four
people, including fugitives from the FBI and
immigration authorities, who are hiding out in a
.California boarding house.
Robert Kennedy and His Times is the second
biography of RFK written by Arthur M.
Schlesinger Jr. and draws on papers of the
Kennedy family as well as Schlesinger's journals.
American Caesar: Douglas Mac Arthur 1880-1964-by
William Manchester follows the military career
of the "imaginative conqueror.
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Hennas Highlighting
BY APPOINTMENT
942-4388 or S42-4391Mon l.5 p.m.
405. W. Franklin St. Iues-Fri 9-6 p.m.f
to DunJdn Donuts . Sat 9-5 p.m. Ji
TOE DOII CrCSGl'JOJCi by Stanley B..Vhlmri
ACROSS
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strument 5 Verbstsd
chclcsdony
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(drunk)
14 "lesnnot
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15 Zenith's
opposite
18 Sugssstivo
stsre
17 Fteg
20 Sea god
21 Vest chasm
22 do-well
23 Big
25 Gun sound
23 Fireproof
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32 Verbs!
33 Best back
33 Forever
day . .""
37 Corrtcmpt
fbfa 33 Springboard
jump
43 Putin
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42 Agsnts
43 Fens
43 Pre-Eastsr
period
47 Curve
43 Relating to
pUsnes
53 Beginning
54 Large store
53 Weekend
show
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13 Observes
18 Hasten
19 Italian
poet
23 Birds'
partns'
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23 En-Hsh
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27 Comanecl
23 Beast
30 Star-spsn-!cd
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34 Author
Hunter
35 Tooth: comb
form
37 Hawaiian
wreaths
33 Skater
Bobby and
family
41 Smudge
44 Stuffed
45 Rower
parts - -
43 Nonssnse!
50 Ss!e words
51 Posmby .
Byron
52 Sch. orgs.
53 Large piece
54 Locked at
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53 African
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57 Like a lamb
53 Dock-
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letters
60 From Z
1873 by Chicago Trlbune-N.Y. fUws Synd. Inc.
All Rights Rsstfvtd
6773
Thursday. June 7, 1979 The Summer Tar Keel 13