Ir.eii! 2 Ari3 10,11,13,15 Campus landmarks 7 Comics 13 Crossword 13 Features - . 3,4,0' Tho Cera etc!! in concert See ivy Milliard's review, page 10B. I Trutieau's political strip to return I September CO. S c j story page I. 4 n rV The Tar Heel Acfts (9 Section Tours, workshops, speakers Tar Heel Days orient new students, parents By PAUL ENSSLIN Tar Heel Staff Writer July 21 junior transfers, incoming freshman and their families will be on campus for the third of four Tar Heel Days. The mini-orientation workshops, designed to give new students the chance to tour UNC, have been taking place each Satur day this month. They wind up on July 28. Generally geared for freshman, this wee kend's program is modified to suit the junior transfers. "The program is actually more for the parents, explained Chuck Zeugner, chair man of this year's Orientation Committee. "The students will be here Orientation for a week in the fall. So we place the emphasis here (in the summer) on the parents because this may be their only opportunity to really see the campus." Each program runs from 8 a.m.-3:15 p.m. and includes lours of dorms, mnch in the Great Hall and remarks from venous campus representatives. "A lot of kids come just to see their dorms but others come to make friends so they won't feel alone in the fall," said Lynn Pierce, a member of the Committee. She added that many of the families who participate come from as far away as Florida. According to Zeugner, the programs are run "by the students for the students." About 25 student volunteers participate each Saturday serving as tour guides and question answerers. "There are no hired staffers here, they are strictly volunteers," he said. "I think it is more efficient that way. These people are here for a cause and we could not do it without them." Involved in each program is a college simulation game, in which the students spend an hour and 4." minutes in W ollen Gym discussing a "typical" treshmun vear. "This was a game designed at tht University of New Mexico," said Pierce. "You spend 20 minutes on the first semester, then have Spring Break and then spend 20 minutes on the second semester. The game is designed in such a way that some kids can end up with all A's while others can get thrown out for cheating." Pierct 3'Jded lat most ot the students liked the game, but that they "really can't appreciate it until they come to Carolina." Zeugner then explained that while the freshman play the simulation game, the parents are encouraged to participate in their own programs. "They get to choose three seminars, each of which lasts thirty minutes. Through these seminars they can learn more about what their child will be facing." "These are very important, because the Pilo bolus suggests shapes, themes parents love them," added Pierce. "The most popular seems to be the one dealing with academic pressures, where they become aware of what pressures may face their child, be it academic or social. Since this Saturday's program has been modified to suit junior transfers, new programs have been added for them, not so much dealing with college but dealing with life at Carolina. Zeugner and Pierce estimate there to be 800 people at this Tar Heel Day, which would be the biggest one yet. "We started with about 475 people at the first one and , they appear to get bigger each time," Pierce . said. "This past Saturday 675 people showed up and it went and I had no idea that everyone would show up at 8 in the .morning. Everybody was excited and it went really well. Pierce said that volunteers were still needed for the final program on Julv 28. By MELISSA CROOM Tar Heel Staff Writer For centuries, traditional dance styles, especially ballet, have striven to exalt the beauty and grace of the human body. Pilobolus Dance Theatre, one of 19 dance troupes presented by the American Dance Festival, forces the audience to consciously remind itself that those surprising shapes on stage are actually human bodies. The result ranges from the shocking to the humorous. Pilobolus Dance Theatre was one of 20 different shows pres ented by the American Dance Festival during the 1984 Worlds First International Modern Dance Festival held from June 10-July 21. Of the three movements in the performance, the first, "Molly's Not Dead," performed by Tim Latta, Carol Parker, Josh Perl, Peter Pucci, Cynthia Quinn and Michael Tracy, was the funniest in the use of dehumanizing effects. For example, three dancers represented one charac ter to create a farcical exagger ation of gestures and movement. With delightful skill, the dancers became balls, seesaws, back packs, headdresses, appendages, imaginary creatures, wheels and other images within a series of skits touching on death, religon and conformity. The music by Walt Michael, Tom McCreech and Tom Campbell established the mood for the audience while being seemingly unrelated to the movements of the dancers. Pilo bolus fully lived up to its comic, outrageous reputation. The second movement, in con trast, "Return to Maria La Baja," performed by Robby Barnett, Alison Chase, Robert Faust and Lisa Giobbi, was completely different in style, purpose and mood. Unlike the beautiful if often tragic narratives created in ballet, Pilobolus depicted an ugly story of an abusive mother selling her daughter as a prostitute. Animal imagery created by the dancers was as powerful as the animal noises played in conjunc tion with the music by Paul Sullivan with the resulting deh umanizing impact. The choreo graphy, by the performing dancers themselves, was sugges tive enough that story line was easy to follow and yet provacative enough to allow an active imag ination to enrich the narrative with detail. Last Friday night, the audience was subdued during the second intermission as it tried to shake the somber mood created in the piece. Rarely is sexuality depicted with quite such baseness and quite such magic under different conditions within the. same story. But Pilobolus is known for its originality. The third piece, "Day Two," performed by Tim Latta, Carol Parker, Josh Perl, Peter Pucci, 111 i 7 W'sjj ..ff ) X 7 1 i b) 1 )) miattueitmM gappy BMwniU'iniwifil The Pilobolus dance campany: audiences forget they are human Cynthia Quinn and Michael Tracy, was a celebration of movement. For the first time in the show, all six dancers per formed in reference to the music, which was by Brian Eno, David Byrne and Talking Heads. Dur ing one selection the dancers became the music by representing a series of musical notes through a series of repeated movements. The atmosphere was considera bly more upbeat than in the second movement as the stage was washed in warm colors. Besides musical notes, the dancers movements also sug gested insects ski aiming the sur face of a misty lake, bubbles of lava from under j tarp spread across the stag? floor and raindrops. Throughout the performance, Pilobolus employed a number of devices to dehumanize the dancers. For example, in "Mol ly's Not Dead," the dancers depicted objects, in "Return to Maria La Baja," they often appeared more animal than human, and in "Day Two," they represented substances such as lava or water. Likewise, by using primarily top and wing lighting, Neil Peter Jampolis created eerie (See DANCE page 5B)