4The Daily Tar HeelThursday, January 26, 1984 Campus Calendar The Carolina Student FundOfH Campus Calendar will appear every Monday and Thursday. Announce ments to be run on Monday must be placed in the box outside the Carolina Student Fund office on the third floor of South Building by 5 p.m. the Friday before they are to run. Announce ments to be run on Thursday must be placed in the box by 5 p.m. of the pre ceding Tuesday. Only announcements from University recognized and cam pus organizations will be printed. Friday 2 p.m. There will be a SEEDS meeting to endorse candidates for the up coming CGC election in the Union. 7 p.m. The Navigators Large Group met ting will be in Room 224 of the Union. Off-Campus Chapter of Inter varsity Christian Fellowship meeting will be in the Wesley Foundation Chapel. Saturday 9:30 a.m. Anglican Student Fellowship Breakfast will be at the Chapel of the Cross. 7 p.m. Maranatha Christian Fellowship Weekly Worship Service will be in Room 224 of the Union. 9 p.m. SEEDS Party with Beer and Band will be at 208 McCauley St. Everyone welcome. la i New arts desk writers to meet today at 7 p.m. 'S Jb TODAY f: Mies of Smiles, Yean of Struggle: The Untold JLJ Story of the Black PuBmu Porter, a history of the First group of black men in America to challenge an industrial giant by forming a successful union, will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union Auditorium. A lecture by folkiorist and filmmaker Jack Santino will follow. The Dining Room, a play that frames the lives of Establishment families as they view the disintegration of their world, will be performed by the Actor's Co-op of the Art School there through Saturday and Feb. 2-4 at 8 p.m. CM 942-2041 for more information. GodspeO, a musical based on the gospel according to St. Matthew, will be presented by Hoof V Horn through Saturday at 8:13 p.m. in Schacfer Theatre on the Duke campus. Call 684-1592 for more information. Ain't Misbehavta', a musical tribute to '30s swing CTT TTM DEVELOPMENT &COUNSELINGI X CENTERS WEEK Please call NASH HALL 962-2175 to register, or come by and sign up. Most groups have 5 sessions. 'Some groups require a screening interview 'ANXIETY MANAGEMENT TRAINING Starts Jan. 26, Thurs. 3:30 WOMEN'S CHOICES Starts week of Jan. 30 'SUPPORT CROUP On-going, weekly. Tues. 3:30-5:00 SPEECH ANXIETY Starts Jan. 31, Tues. 7-9 pm STUDY TIME-OVERLOAD-PROCRASTINATION Starts Feb. 1, Wed. 3-4:30 CAREER DECISION-MAKING Starts Feb. 6, Mon. 3:30-5 "COUPLES COMMUNICATION SKILLS Starts Feb. 13, Mon., 7-9 Also: THE WORKSHOP CONNECTION Single Sessions. Call Nash Hall to sign up. S.A.M. Selecting a Major Jan. 25, 26, 30, Feb. 7 3:30-5 GOING IT ALONE AFTER GRADUATION Mar. 21, Wed. 3:30-5 CAREER INTERESTS ASSESSMENT 2-session series, start Mar. 28 Next: S1LKWOOD OURS ALONE IN KINTEK STEREO "Sequences in this movie will make your jaw drop open out of genuine amazement. . .an utterly absorbing drama a sensory least!" -David Arisen, NEWSWEEK A CARROLL BALLARD FILM N EVER CRY WOLF A TRUESTORYm 3:00 7:05 Today 3:30 p.m. There will be a selecting a major woikshop in Room 204 of the Steele Building. There will be an Internship Workshop sponsored by Career Planning and Placement Service in 210 Hanes Hall. 4 p.m. Dr. Klaus Schwabe, Professor of History at the University of Aachen, West Germany, will speak on "Woodrow Wilson and . the Versailles Peace Settlement with Germany" in Room 569 of Hamilton Hall. There will be a Campus Y Publicity Committee meeting at the Campus Y. 4:30 p.m. There will be a Campus Y Walk for Humanity meeting in the Campus Y Lounge to organize and plan the walk. There will be a Campus Y Com mittee on Undergraduate Educa tion meeting in the 2nd floor lounge of the Campus Y. 5:45 p.m. The Baptist Student Union Weekly Program will be at the BSU. 6 p.m. There will be a UNC Parachute Club meeting at the Union. Sunday 5:15 p.m. Anglican Student Fellowship Folk Eucharist with Bishop Mac Millan of Belize will take place at the Chapel of the Cross. 7 p.m. Baptist Student Union Choir Concert will be at First Baptist Church, Durham. A list of new writers for the DTH arts desk has been posted outside the DTH of fice. Sample articles that were turned in for consideration may be picked up from the secretary's desk inside the office. There will be a meeting for all new arts writers today at 7 p.m. in the DTH of fice. ! Any new writer who cannot attend should call Jeff Grove at 962-0245 or 962-0246. ARE painist and composer Thomas "Fats" Waller, win be presented Thursdays through Saturdays at 8: IS p.m. and Sundays at 2:30 p.m. through Feb. 19 at Triangle Dinner Theatre in the Governor's Inn. Call 549-8631 for more information. American violinist Eugene Fodor will perform with the North Carolina Symphony at 8 p.m. in Memorial Auditorium in Raleigh. Call 733-9536 for more infor mation. The Early Renaissance and Meiozzo da Forfi will be the subject of a Hanes-Willis lecture by Yale art profes sor Creighton Gilbert at 8 p.m. in 121 Art Classroom Studio Building. Chinese watercolors by Grace Chow will be exhibited in the downstairs Union gallery through Feb. 5. Work by students in the N.C State School of Design will be displayed through Feb. 5 in the upstairs Union gallery. Master Drawings From the National Gallery of Ire land, 85 drawings and watercolors covering a 500-year GROUP PROGRAMS NORTH CAROLINA'S MOST EXCITING FILM SHOWPLACE BEST ACTOR AWARDS A GOLDEN i GLOBE I uriMC I f BEST : F r r- r- t --3 1 Af-TOB V BEST DIRECTOR -' BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS BEST SONG ENDS THUR. t y f Robert u Tender Robert Duvall JIX4ERCIES ylXi. V JL 3:20 S:20 70 I 5:00 9:10 Ttrurnenr' 1 8 V J 6:15 p.m. There will be a SOWOSO meeting followed by a lecture and slide show. 6:30 p.m. The Navigators Small Group Bi ble Studies will meet in Room 224 of the Union. For informa tion call 933-3394. 7 p.m. There will be a Campus Crusade for Christ in the Union, call 942-6539. Carolina Gay Association will hold officer elections in the Union, call 962-4401. There will be a Sports Club Council Budget meeting for all presidents and treasurers of sports clubs in Room 319 of Greenlaw Hall. 8:15 p.m. there will be a meeting of stu dents for Howard Lee for Con gress in the Union. 8:30 p.m. There will be a Fellowship of Christian Athletes meeting in Rooms 211-212 of the Union. There will be a Student Consumer Action (SCAU) Spring Organizational meeting in the Union. Check desk for time. Monday 4:30 p.m. There will "be a program for stu dents interested in a summer in ternship in sales with Johnson Wax in 210 Hanes Hall. 7 p.m. UNC Circle K Club meeting will be in the Union. There will be an Elections Board meeting in Suite C of the Union. Open to all students! 'Deathtrap' auditions The Raleigh Little Theatre will hold auditions at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 6 and 7 for its production of Ira Levin's thriller Deathtrap. Auditions will be held at the theatre, on Pogue St. in Raleigh. Re hearsals are tentatively set to begin the week of Feb. 13. Performances will be March 23-April 8. For more information, call 821-4579. period, will be displayed through Sunday at the Ackland Art Museum. Sculptural forms using a variety of media by Pat Dougherty, Hunter Levinsohn and Beth Beede w31 be exhibited through Saturday in the Art Classroom Studio Building. Photographs of subjects in Guatemala and Western North Carolina by Terry KeBy will be displayed through Tuesday in the Morehead Building. Ivory carvings from the Southern Historical Col lection will be on display in the main lobby of Wilson Library thmugh Feb. 2. Her Infinite Variety, an exhibition of life drawings by Didi Dunphey, will be exhibited through Sunday at CenterGallery. Prints and drawings by Carol Cobb Caruso will be exhibited through Sunday at CenterGallery. Paintings and coBages by Marianne Manasse and works by the Durham Art Guild Exhibitor Selection Committee will be shown through Tuesday at the galleries of the Durham Arts CounciL Paintings by Nicholas Africano will be displayed at the North Carolina Museum of An through Sunday. The North Carolina Arts Council Artists Fellowship Exhibition will be displayed at the North Carolina Museum of Art through April 8. Skyways, an exploration of how real and apparent changes in the heavens, "affect everyday lives, win be shown through March 26 at the Morehead Planetarium. Call 962-1236 for more information. The XL's will play R&B-influenced dance music at 10 p.m. at the Cat's Cradle. Call 967-9053 for more infor mation. ( You can buy a DELICIOUS 16" PIZZA for about the same price our competitors sell their 12" PIZZAS! That's why at Pizza & Chicken Delivery We sell 100's of PIZZAS every, week to people who like our PRICES & LOVE our PIZZAS! Call us tonight! We DELIVER FREE in 30 minutes or less! FREE EXTRA CHEESE on any size pizza with 2 or more toppings. Coupon valid thru 12884 i M I - ft .-yjWAigoWi. v.yW!flMi1 .-. ow-m Mat 1 1 ,Ofriv.. A young biologist (Charles Martin Smith) threatens to shoot at a plane piloted by a bush pilot (Brian Den nehy) who is attempting to force him out of an area where wolves are slaughtered in "Never Cry Wolf." Powerful visuals add to beauty of Wolf By STEVE CARR Staff Writer Never Cry Wolf is an astoundingly beautiful film. It also hap pens to be the most intelligent, powerful film that Walt Disney Productions has put out in years. Charles Martin Smith plays ?n uninitiated biologist who goes to the arctic to study a pack of wolves. He is sent to find out if the wolves are killing all the caribou. As it turns out, however, it is man, not the wolves, who kills the caribou. Primarily a visual film, Never Cry Wolf , has a few of the obligatory vista shots in the. beginning, especially during the awkward narration. But the aerial footage of the majestic, snow-covered mountains is mspiraig, and the narration does give background information and character insight. The film really gets going when Smith arrives at his arctic post. All alone, he must fend for himself. Since there is no one for Smith to talk to, the film becomes a series of visual meta phors. The wind sweeps bureaucratic triplicate requisition forms across vast snowy plain. Smith wakes up one day to find a nest of baby mice among his clothes. There is also a terrifying dream sequence where Smith is chased and torn apart by wolves. The dream, however, is soon disproved as Smith begins to study the wolves. He finds that they are not too different from man. In fact, Smith discovers that the wolves' diet consists mostly of small rodents, especially mice. To prove that a large mammal Artist Neil Welliver, whose studies of nature are pre sented in abstracted patterns, will give a lecture at 8 p.m. at the North Carolina Museum of Art. Call 833-1935 for more information. FRIDAY yJ Betrayal, Harold Pinter's Film adaptation of Zi I his own play about the course of an extra marital affair, traced in reverse chronological order, will be shown at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. in the Union Audi torium. Admission $1. The Gina Bachauer Memorial Piano Master Classic, free and open to the public, will be conducted by pianist Claude Frank at 4 and 8 p.m. and Saturday at 10 a.m. in the Ernest W. Nelson Music Room on the Duke campus. Call 684-2534 for more information. Sky Rambles, a narrated tour of the current night sky, is offered at 7 p.m. before the regular program at the Morehead Planetarium. Separate admission will be charged for each show. M. Louise Stanley, a San Francisco artist, will give a slide lecture on her own works at 7:30 p.m. in 121 Art Classroom Studio Building. Winter Clogging Night, featuring the Apple Chill and Cane Creek doggers, will be held at 8 p.m. at the Presbyterian Student Center on Henderson Street. Call 967-1205 for more information. U.V. Prom and The Contracts will perform at the Cat's Cradle. Call 967-9053 for more information. SATURDAY 'hQ Fundi: The Story of EBa Baker, a liitle-known civil rights activist and organizer, will be shown at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. in the Union Auditorium. PLITT THEATRES I Utl FMMUW t im t MMM1 CAROLINA CLASSIC KING KONG THE BIG CHILL 7:15 9-.15 FRIDAY 3:15 5:15 7:15 9:15 TERMS OF ENDEARMENT 2:00 4:30 7:00 9:30 FRIDAY 7:00 9:30 OsrataciULt 7 ELLIOT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 $2.00 TIL 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! 2:15 4:45 7:15 9:45 William Hurt Lee Marvin Gorky Parkw . 3:20 5:20 7:20 9:20 David Naughton Hot Dog: the Movie R LAST DAY 2:30 4:50 7:10 9:30 Sudden Impact (R) STARTS TOMORROW Dolby Stereo: Flashdance (R) Pq-K a coxer univasny The Apartment People Avoid the lottery blues. Apply how! All apartments on the bus fine to U.N.C. Call today for full informa tion. 9672231 or 967-2234. .....J u yw -. , . . .w.-.-v. :rt-v.;AJc: "j:. .: w.' :-.:...: .....;....;. y---w 3 . Agnes of God, a suspenseful drama about a young nun accused of murdering her baby and deals with the conflict between faith and science, win be performed through Sunday at 8:30 p.m. and Sunday at 4 p.m. in Memorial Hall as part of the Broadway on Tour Series. Call 962-1449 for more information. SQkscreen works by Gordon Christopher will be on view in the Art Classroom Studio Building through Feb. 18. The Swimming Pool Q's and The Frying Pigs will perform at the Cat's Cradle. Call 967-9053 for more in formation. SUNDAY O O twentieth Century, starring John Barrymore and .Carole Lombard in one of the earliest screwball comedies, will be shown at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Union Auditorium. Luv, a spoof of absurdist comedies will be perform ed by the UNC Laboratory Theatre through Monday at 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. in 06 Graham Memorial. Call 962-1121 for more information. Pianists Claude Frank and Lilian KaDir will perform with the Duke Symphony Orchestra at 8:15 p.m. in Baldwin Auditorium on the Puke campus. Call 684-2534 for more information. . . . . . Figures on the wall, terra cotta figures by Sarah Craig, will be exhibited at the Art School through March 3. ' The Royal Carolina Dixieland Jazz Band will per form at 7 p.m. as part of the Sunday Jazz Series at the Art School. Call 929-28 for more information. The Frying Pigs will perform at the Cat's Cradle. Call 967-9053 for more information. MONDAY Shakespeare The Actor and the Text will be O Vr the subject of the first Paula Kruck Memorial Lecture, given by Cicely Berry, voice director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, at 8 p.m. in Playrnakers Theatre. Call 962-1122 for more information. TUESDAY Pianist Michael Zenge will give a recital at 8 3 JL pjn. in Hill Hall Auditorium. For more infor mation, call 962-1039. WEDNESDAY Iln Celebration, starring Alan Bates in a story about the relationships of three brothers and their ' parents in a northern England mining town, will be shown at 7 p.m. in the Union Auditorium. "NE SPLASH" ! ! Researchers at Urlf') Central an nounce the isolation of a new syn drome. The "Styrofood Syndrome" is exhibited by sweaty, clammy skin, becoming one in a billion faces, and desiring to sleep in styrofoam boxes. 124 E. Franklin St., ... . -..-j ::...: 3 -k.' can subsist on this diet, Smith himself begins eating the mice. In one very funny and very disgusting scene, Smith eats mice whole as other live mice look on in terror. The best scene comes at the end of the movie, however. While sunbathing nude in the summer, Smith wakes up to realize he is in the midst of a caribou stampede. He gets up and starts run ning with them, as if he were an animal as well. The wolves do kill one weak and sick caribou. Later, Smith wanders off and meets some hunters. In their plane he sees a number of slain caribou heaped on top of one another. Director Carroll Ballard has a flair for economically capturing a scene that would occupy at least ten minutes in a more conven tional film. The images he creates recall the emotional power of the last silent films. Hiro Narita's photography accurately depicts the beauty of the arctic and Mark Isham's music is quite serviceable. Charles Martin Smith gives a touching, well -rounded performance as the biologist who gradually learns the ways of the wilderness. The show is almost stolen, however, by two eskimos Zachary Ittimangnaq and Samson Jorah. Jorah is especially captivating with his toothless grin. There is something very humane about Never Cry Wolf In many other Disney films, humanity is equated with sappy sen timentality. In Never Cry Wolf there is nary a plot contrivance the film raises questions about society and humanity that many non-Disriey films haven't even begun to explore. The Hostage, Brendan Behan's play about the Irish Republican Army's kidnapping of an English soldier, will be performed by members of the department of dramatic art's professional theatre training program through Sunday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. in Paul Green Theatre. The play will also run Feb. 7-12. Call 962-1 121 for more information. Roomful of Bhies, the nine-piece R&B band from Rhode Island, will perform at the Cat's Cradle. Call 967-9053 for more information. MOVIES Plaza I Gorky Park at 2:15, 4:45. 7:15 and 9:45. Plaza II Hotdog ... the Movie at 3:20, 5:20, 7:20 and 9:20 except Saturday. Saturday: Hotkg ... the Movie at 3:20, 5:20 and 9:20; Reckless at 7:45. Plaza Bl Sudden Impact at 2:30, 4:50, 7:10 and 9:30 ends today. Ftehdance starts Friday at 3:30, 5:30, 7:30 and 9:30. Varsity I Never Cry Wolf at 3, 7:05 and 9: 10; times change Friday to 3, 5, 7:10 and 9:10. Varsity II Tender Mercies at 3:20, 5:2C, 7:20 and 9:20 ends today. SOkwood starts Friday at 2:20, 4:40, 7 and 9:30. Varsity Lateshows Come Back to the 5 & Dime Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean at 11:30 and Female Trou ble at midnight Friday and Saturday. Carolina Blue Terms of Endearment at 2, 4:30, 7 and 9:30; times change Friday to 7 and 9:30. Carolina White The Big Chill at 7:15 and 9:15; times change Friday to 3:15, 5:15, 7:15 and 9:15. Carolina Classic King Kong at 2:30 and 5:05 ends today. Casablanca starts. Friday at 3 and 5:05. Carolina Lateshows Deathtrap at 11:30 and A Hard Day's Night at midnight Friday and Saturday. Ram I Educating Rita at 7 and 9; weekend matinees at 2:30 and 4:30. Ram II Yentl at 7 and 9:30; weekend matinees at 2 and 4:35. Ram III Pieces at 7:15 and 9:15 ends today. The Rescuers and Mickey's Christmas Carol start Friday at 7 and 8:15; weekend matinees at 2 and 4. Ram Lateshows Animal House and American Gigolo at 11:30 Friday and Saturday. Carolina (Durham) Streamers at 7 and 9:10 ends today. Gospel starts Friday at 7 and 9; Saturday shows at 3, 5, 7 and 9; Sunday shows at 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9. Compiled by David Schmidt, assistant arts editor, and Jeff Grove, arts editor. delivers pamiliiiiiil ' .., ........... --..f: i f RENT A 19" COLOR T.V IT"1 i I FOR AS LOW AS In f- iQ U Ml ! PIRMON1H! I I V (Weekly C'ompjnson I J V. Prinr U 111 I I Balloon Doaqnci to special people for special occasions. Call today and order one Also, FRIDAY FLOIVEO BOUQUETS from $5.00 while they last 929-1119

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