4 The Daily Tar Heel Thursday. November 29. 1979 Cainmpps CaSemdla Public service announcamems must be turned in at the box outside the D TH offices in the Carolina Union by 1 p.. if they are to run the next day. Each item will be run at least twice. 3 AC I IV 1 1 ItS TODAY "Revolution ka the TWri World" will be the topic of lecture given by John Womack. Harvard historian, at 8 p.m. at th Fnend Meeting House on Raleigh Road. The event is sponsored oy we Carolina Committee on Nicaragua and Critical Perspectives Forum and is open to the public. A panel discussion on SaM II treaty will be held at 8 p.m. in 101 Greenlaw Hall. Panelists will include Admiral Isaac KUJd. Assistant Professor of history Willis Brooks and Duke visiting Assistant Professor of political science Bruce Moon. Moderator will be Professor James R. Leutze. Question and answer period will follow the paners presentation, the event is sponsored by the Curriculum in Peace, War. and Defense. The Baptist Student Union will have a special worship at 9:30 at the Battle House. We hope to have a brass choir on the front porch calling everyone to worship. During the time together we will complete the tree decoration, sing carols in several language and hear stories from each other and from the Biblical tradition. The tNC Chess Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union. "Survival Factors for Sour is the topic for discussion at the ECK.ANKAR center. All are welcome, no charge. Call 942- 3701 for more information. The Academic Procedures Committee of student government will meet at 4.30 p.m. in Suite C, Carolina Union. If you cannot attend, please call Jeff ICoeze at 968-9305 or 968 9062. The last Campus Y Coffee Klatch of the semester will be held from 2:30-4 p.m. in the South Gallery. Carolina Union. The topsc will be "Medical Sciences" and will include special guests from the chemistry, zoology and medical technology departments, along with representatives from the dental. Drive Our Cars ALMOST FREE to most U.S. cities AUTO DBIVEAl"JAY 919-272-2153 520 W. Friendly Ave. Greensboro. N.C. 1 SUPER FRIDAY An AIEERT0 GRiMALOf Production :;y. V 40 fc. ft $ III 1 '- f - - ; A Film by BERNARDO BERTOLUCCI caOR United Artists Carroll Hall 8 p.m. November 30 Tickets $1.00 7:00 9:30 12:00 Tickets at door or Union Desk Carolina mi Hi IIJftH JfV (ran fisti - f Ini Specials r Tuesday Western Fried Chicken Platter French Fries, Cole Slaw reg.$1.99 $1.61 Thursday Roast Beef Platter French Fries, Cole Slaw reg. $2.09 $1.71 106 Mallette St. Chapel Hill 968-9217 pharmacy, medical and nursing schools. Feel welcome to drop in for free coffee and good conversation. 1 here will be a closed A.A.discusion meeting at 8 p.m. at the Church of the Holy Family on 200 Hayes Road and also at the First Baptist Church on North Roberson Street. There will be an Al-Anon Meetinjffor friends and relatives of alcoholics) at 8 p.m. at the Burkley Baptist Church on 1712 Willow Drive. Stammtisch: German speakers get it while you can. Delta Phi Alpha offers peniultimate pandemonium at 9 p.m. in Youngbloods'. on Rosemary Street. The Hunger Action Committee will meet at 3 p.m. in 205 Carolina Union. Results of the fast and plans for the spring semester will be discussed. Please call Dan or Dave if you are unable to attend. The Black Student Movement general body will meet at 7 -p.m. in Upendo lounge. Sonya Stone's fight for tenure is the issue and everyone's attendance is vital for the black presence atUNC-CH. -Southern Comfort" will be held at 8 p.m. in Chase Hall. The all-female Latin and soft rock band Witfo'will perform. Free beer will be served. The event is sponsored by the Union Social Committee. Pi Delta Phi. the French honor society, will hold its final meeting of the year at 3:30 p.m. in 210 Dey Hall. All members are urged to attend. All are welcome to come to a meeting of the Christian Science Organization at 12:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union. Please check the desh for a room number. The Special Projects Committee will meet at 4 p.m. in the - Frank Porter Graham Lounge. Carolina Union. If you are unable to attend, please phone Marcy at 933-1157. Everyone is invited to a coffee house from 8-1 1 p.m. in the South Gallery. Carolina Union. Bring a friend. The event is sponsored by the North Campus chapter of Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. I he Opeyo Dancers will be sponsoring a "W rap Up & Preview" at 9 p.m. in L'pendo Lounge. A dance will follow the preview at 1 1 p.m. The performance is free and refreshments will be served. Jam is 25e. Mid-Campus Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship will have a chapter meeting at 7 p.m. in 21 7 Carolina Union. Tom Newton will speak on evangelism. . ; Women interested in rowing must start attending practice no later than Thursday or Friday morning. - A seminar on "Careers in Personnr will be held at 7:30 p.m. in T-7 New Carroll Hall. Speakers will include Ann Thompson of NCMH. Diane Smith and Sal Polassioof IBM. -Ike Gatlin of EPA and Dr. William Bigoness of the business department. This seminar is sponsored by the University Counsejing Center. The Annual ampus V HaiMHcrahBazaar ill he held Nov. 30-Dec. 2 in the Campus Y Building anJ the Great Hall. Carolina Union. It will feature a coffeehouse as well as a wide variety of crafts. There are a number of positions open for volunteers as waiters and waitresses or as hosts and hostesses. Anyone interested in helping can sign up at the Campus Y Building. I PCOMING EVENTS CM. Suchindran of the department of biostatistics will be speaking at the Research Problems Seminar at noon Friday in 405 University Square East. . Greensboro Garden Studio artists and writers will give a presentation and discussion of their work from 7-10 p.m. Friday at the Center Gallery. Public is invited. Call 967-1316 for more information. HilleTs Friday night services will begin at 7 p.m. This week's guest will be Eli Ross, who will give an explanation of the Shabbat liturgy. For more information, contact Hillel at 942 4057. There will be a closed A.A. discussion meeting at 8 p.m. Friday at the Church of the Reconcilationdn 1 10 Elliot Road. A voice recital featuring Sherry Grant, soprano. Richard Elliott, tenor. Mark Mclntyre. piano, and Susan Parham, piano will be held at 5 p.m. Friday in Person Hall. Works by Handel. Haydn. Faure. Vaugh-Williams. Schubert. Schuman and Barab will be performed. There will be a Granville Off-Campus Inter-Varsity chapter meeting at 7 p.m. Friday at the Chapel of the Cross. Everyone is invited for an evening of fun and fellowship. Join the Brothers of the United Christian Fellowship for Bible study at 5:30 p.m. Friday in the fifth floor Ehringhaus lounge. The topic is "Practical Ministry" from Luke5:l 1-26. The Muslim Students Association wilt have its regular meeting for Juma'h Irom noon until I p.m. Friday in 217 Carolina Union. All are urged to attend. A woodchopping project to cut and stockpile wood for emergency fuel needs of eligible, needy families in Orange Country will be held at 8 a.m. Saturday on Municipal Drive. Prospective volunteers should call the Inter-Faith Council at 942-4630 to report their planned attendance and for more information. Rain date is Dec. 8. Chamber music in Chapel Mill By LAURA ELLIOTT Staff Writer Western instrumental music has its origins in small chamber ensembles, performing in the intimacy of a patron's home. It was not until the late 19th century and the beginnings of large symphonic compositions that the performer found himself on the stage of vast concert halls, isolated from his audience or lost in huge orchestras. With its new noontime concerts, the UNC music department hopes to reconstruct on the Chapel Hill campus the affinity previously enjoyed for centuries by musicians and their audiences. Richard Luby, assistant professor of music, hopes these concerts will also mark a new growth in the performance quality and versatility of music students and faculty. i "North Carolina has a very fine tradition as an academic institute and in musicology. It might well be right for it to be the next fine performance school," he said. Superior performances are generated by a few inspired individuals, Luby said. A critical mass already exists at Chapel Hill, according to Luby, and many of them will be performing in the chamber music concert Friday in Person Hall at noon. Mozart's C major quartet for flute and1 strings and Brahms B flat major sextet will be on the program. Performers will include Reid Thompson," flute; Pamela Bath, violin; Tyler White, viola and violin; Chauncey Patterson, violin; Richard Luby, violin; Ann Woodard, viola; Elizabeth Byrd, cello; David Winfield, cello, and Mark Kernodle, cello. In chamber music, the emphasis is on the ensemble, not the individual player. Each line is essentially a sole part wh;ch must be carefully woven into the orchestrated entirety. Playing this music is an ideal way for a musician to grow as a performer, Luby said, because it allows for a umore intimate relationship between the composer and musicians and performers and the audience." Tyler White, a freshman from Kansas whose audition tape included a duet in which he played both the violin and viola parts, said, "Chamber playing should be a part of every string player's education. It's wonderful when you're playing and catch the other person's eye. It's the intimacy, a way of knowing someone that words cannot describe." He hopes exposure to chamber works will improve all aspects of his technique. I hope to feel more comfortable mentally. I perceive how a line should sound its another thing to make it sound that way. It should also improve my intellectual faculties help me make a better statement, a more enjoyable and meaningful interpretation." Almost all the students in the chamber groups performing Friday plan to perform professionally; many are on scholarship. "This is the first time we've had a pretty significant crop of scholarship musicians," Luby said. Pamela Bath, a Morehead scholar from North Carolina who recently won the University's concerto competition, described chamber playing as "a matter of learning for us. A violin and cello have to learn to play together. Each has a different technique and sound and you have to mesh them together." Elizabeth Byrd, a senior cellist.said, "I want to be the best so 1 can do the best in whatever I do." Originally conceived as -being preview concerts for formal recitals taking place a few days later, Friday's noontime concert will be an exception to the rule. Neither piece is scheduled for any immediate, larger concert. Luby hopes to have several noontime concerts a month, in the future. He also plans to use the series as a forum for performing early music on instruments of the period. 0m-- - - " r j , ) .... u u u JWlri "1 P Si. UVJ r3 ODD C3DW?S gOrjDDuCallnKsIQDS CfDIn!!JK) fas DD r we would rather have 5 fast pennies than one slow nickel.. 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