6The Daily Tar Heel Tuesday, December 2, 1986 wuqwiw.w.u.w,u If Spools Dolly (Mimi Carr) and Ambrose (Joseph Haj) in "The Matchmaker" Thornton Wilder play matches verve, comedy The simple things in life are the best, and the fundamental message of "The Matchmaker," PlayMakers Repertory Company's current pro duction, certainly bears this out. . The gist of the play is basic, according to director Evan Yionou lis. "The essential thrust is to live life to its fullest," she said. The Thornton Wilder play, which was adapted into the musical "Hello, Dolly!" presents characters from three generations whose common denominator is the tightwad mer chant Horace Vandergelder. The stable (translated bland) lives of these people have led them to w onder whether there isn't supposed to be something more to life. Enter Dolly Levi, the peppy, charismatic busybody with an uncanny knack for being in the right place at the right time and a nose for other people's business. "Dolly is the catalyst," Yionoulis said. "She is the agent through which the other characters begin to live." . The characters of the younger generation are the most conserva tive. Witness Ermengarde, the wide eyed shrinking violet and niece of stodgy Vandergelder. She is so obsessed with propriety and respec tability that she verges on bursting into boo-hoos when anything dis rupts her perfectly-staged world. Ermengarde is torn between prop riety and the man she truly loves. Enter Dolly Levi. The middle generation, repres ented by Vandergelder's heretofore unadventurous employee Cornelius Hack! and soon-to-be-rejected bride Mrs. Molloy, is caught in its own quandry. These people are beginning to sense that life is quickly passing A DC IT V Id ftS NOW, FOR THE HOLIDAYS - Vn"TRVLuN&2 VARSITY GIFT PASSES and GELATO D'ORO CERTIFICATES R2 THE fJMi SPECTACULAR! MUSIC MAGIC AND WONDER FROM THE DIRECTOR OF The Black Stallion and never Cry wolf f ' & m i iijf van w IONtHN SMI'HOS yri OKtMtSIKA Mfr I 'At 1H( N K I MVStSI HAl I k I NUTCRACKER T H K M O I in N I'M I I K V LG? k.... l,.Hn f. MAI KICf St-N)Afc lrr..,J , C AKKOI I HAl I AH D TODAY AT 1:40 . 3:35 . 5:30 . 7:25 9:20 Presented in JBL HiFi Sound Telephone For Group Ticker Sa'es ATTENTION STUDENTS Carolina Basketball Tickets Student tickets are still avail able for the season opener against Stetson on Wednesday, December 3th and the game against Miami on Saturday afternoon, December 6th. Present your student I.D. and athletic pass at the Smith Center Box Office between 8:00 am and 5:00 pm. -J i s f n -J .SXX -.NX i1 Vr Gillian Floren Theater them by, but they are not quite sure yet what to do about it. Enter Dolly Levi. Finally, commanding respect as the wealthy, upstanding member of the older generation is the crusty Vandergelder himself, who proudly boasts of his half million dollars but laments that his household lacks that womanly touch. Enter Dolly Levi. "The Matchmaker's " cast is as spirited and diverse as the characters suggest they should be. Mimi Carr and Richard Buck give terrific and entirely believable performances as Dolly and Vandergelder. Also turn ing in commendable performances are Becket Royce as Mrs. Molloy, John Feltch as Vandergelder's apprentice and Kate Harris as Molloy 's employee. Patricia Barnett as Miss Flora Van Huysen animates the final scene with her thoroughly enjoyable portrayal of the amply endowed, aging, sentimental board inghouse owner. Yionoulis said her biggest chal lenge in directing the play has been maintaining the balance of a "comic pace and energy, and at the same time a sense of reality." She has done a fine balancing job. The play is a delight. The Matchmaker will be per formed by PlayMakers Repertory Company in Paul Green Theatre through Dec. 13. Call 962-1 121 for ticket information. THE FATE OF THE FUTURE LIES HIDDEN IN THE PAST, SOMEWHERE ON EARTH. ..1966. L'lOOMnill .liuiu iiiuiui Mtm ' Tl-tC VOYAG HOM6 ' llililllllflSIIffpa llOMTB 2:15 . 4:40 . 7:15 . 9:40 Exclusively in Kintek Stereo I 5 Penn State, Miami top AP poll From Associated Press reports Miami and Penn State are all set for college football's version of the Super Bowl. That was assured Monday when the Miami Hurricanes and the Penn State Nittany Lions finished 1-2 in The Associated Press' final regular season poll. Miami completed an 11-0 season last Thursday night by trouncing East Carolina 36-10 with quarter back Vinny Testaverde watching from the sidelines after a motor scooter mishap two nights earlier. The Hurricanes received 53 of 58 first-place votes and 1,155 of a possible 1,160 points from a nation wide panel of sports writers and sportscasters. Miami had been No. 1 since defeating Oklahoma 28-16 on Louisville out of Top 20, From Associated Press reports North Carolina, which routed two Hawaiian opponents over the wee kend, remained atop The Associated Press' college basketball poll Mon day, but defending national cham- UCLA by Richardson, to pull away from a 39-37 score to the eight-point halftime lead. That UCLA run came in response to a UNC spurt led by forward Scott Williams and point guard Kenny Smith, who combined for nine points as the Tar Heels closed a 13-point lead to just two. But in the second half, Miller came out of his scoring shell. He hit his only three-pointer 2V4 minutes into the half from Wilshire Boulevard and then took his show inside to frustrate the defensive trio of Curtis Hunter, Steve Bucknall and Dave Popson. The Heels tried to use the three point play to cut UCLA's margin, but they would never get closer than the five points which separated them at the buzzer. When asked if the loss was an upset, Kenny Smith said, "It's no fluke when any team beats you. If they beat you, then they were better, and that's that." Richardson, meanwhile, was not Classified Info The Daily Tar Heel does not accept cash for payment of classified advertising. Please let a check or money order be your receipt Return ad and payment to the DTH office by noon the business day before your ad is to run. Ads must be prepaid. Rates: 25 words or less Students, Student Organizations and individuals: $2.00 per day Businesses: $4.50 per day 5i for each additional word $1.00 per day tor any boxed ad or bold type Avoid the lottery blues. Apply now! All apartments on the bus line to UNC. Call today for full information 967-2231 or 967-2234. In North Carolina call toll-free 1-800-672- 1678. Nationwide, call toll- free 1-800-334-1656. tqucrt Opportunity Housing The Ap.irinn?nt People EARN TODAY Help meet the critical shortage of plasma by making your life-saving donation, Your donation helps expectant mothers, herfrophiliacs, and many others. Make up to $120 per month in your spare time by giving the gift of life. h SERA - iuvm? E. Franklin St. 942-0251 " 1 5.00 for new donors and returning students first donation with this ad Mon.-Thurs. 9:30-7:00, Fri. 9:30-5:00 Expires January 1 , 1 987 Sept. 27. Penn State, also 1 1-0, received the other five first-place votes and 1 ,092 points. The Lions are No. 2 for the third consecutive week. The AP will announce the national champion on Jan. 3. The Miami-Penn State matchup in the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 2 will be the 21st time the No. 1 and No. 2 teams have met since the AP Poll began in 1936. It will be the seventh time in a bowl game, the last one being in 1983 when No. 2 Penn State topped No. 1 Georgia, 27-23, in the Sugar Bowl. Oklahoma, Michigan, Louisiana State and Nebraska remained third through sixth. Alabama's 21-17 loss to Auburn plunged the Crimson pion Louisville, which suffered three losses in Alaska, dropped from the Top 20. The poll was released before UNC's 89-84 loss to UCLA Monday night. from page 1 overwhelmed by his team's perfor mance. "You guys (the media) are the ones who didn't think we would win, but we knew all along that we could play with them," Richardson said. The realization of victory came to Miller a little sooner than most. When he was intentionally fouled after snaring a rebound from a desperation Kenny Smith three pointer with 30 seconds remaining, Miller looked into the crowd and waved a singular finger. The sign probably was not meant for his team or even for himself, but for the status which UNC had enjoyed only two hours prior. "They played a good game," Kenny Smith said. "Now, weVe just got to bounce back and get ready for the next one. The season is still very young." UNC gets to rebuild its bruised ego at the Dean E. Smith Center Wednesday night against Stetson, which lost Monday night to Florida State. (Sift lailg aar Jini Please notify the DTH office immediately if there are mistakes in your ad. We will be responsible only for the first ad run. announcements Caltivatias tkc Heart of Compaasioa: Aa Eveaiag tvitk Ram Daaa. Psychologist, philosopher, one of America's foremost spiritual teachers. Seva Foundation benefit $10. Dec. 6th 7:30pm Memorial Hall. More information 967-5056. The Daily Tar Heel Board of Directors Treaaary Law Coataaittee will meet December 2 ad at 9:00 AM ia Aaae'a office. AH iatereated Board Members are invited to attead. ELLIOT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 $2.50 in nun uiuTTxi(acioiKin) William Hurt CHILDREN ON A LESSER GOD 3:00 5:15 7:30 9:45 (R) C. Thomas HoweilRae Dawn Chong SOUL MAN (pg-13) 3:10 5:10 7:10 9:25 Vanessa Redgrave STEAMING (R) 3:20 5:20 7:20 9:35 TEC OIOLOGICALS Tide from seventh to 13th. Rose Bowl-bound Arizona State, 9-1-1 on the year, replaced Alabama by moving up a notch from eighth. Texas A&M completed a 9-2 regular season by defeating Texas 16-3 to win the Southwest Confer ence championship and a berth in the Cotton Bowl. The Aggies jumped from 10th to eighth. Arkansas, which will face Okla homa in the Orange Bowl, remained ninth with a 9-2 record. Auburn rounded out the top 10, leaping four slots from 14th. The second 10 consists of Ohio State, Washington, Alabama, Bay lor, UCLA, Arizona (UNC's oppo nent in the Aloha Bowl), Georgia, N.C. State, Iowa and Stanford. UNC temporarily No. 1 The Tar Heels, who beat Hawaii 98-78 and Hawaii-Loa 118-80, received 53 first-place votes and 1 ,246 points from a nationwide panel of sportswriters and broadcasters. That was a comfortable lead over No. 2 Nevada-Las Vegas, which won the National Invitation Tournament Classic with a 96-95 double overtime victory over Western Kentucky. Nevada-Las .Vegas was fifth last week. Big Ten rivals Indiana and Purdue remained third and fourth, respec tively, while another Big Ten team, Iowa, jumped from 10th to fifth after winning the Great Alaska Shootout. Indiana, which beat Montana State 90-55 in its only game, received 1,093 points, 45 more than Purdue, which got four first-place votes after beating Stetson (UNC's opponent Wednesday night) 97-65 in its only game. Iowa, which beat Alaska Anchorage, then No. 17 N.C. State and Northeastern, 103-80, to win the Alaska tournament, had 834 points. Kansas, 1-0, moved up two places from eighth to sixth. Auburn, Alabama and Illinois, which were 12th through 14th last week, moved as a unit to the Nos. 7 through 9 spots. Navy, which rebounded from a loss to N.C. State in the Tipoff Classic with a 91-90 overtime victory over host Michigan State for the 3 China Study Tour with Prof. L. Kessler. Visit Beijing, Xi'an, Shanghai, Guilin, Kunming, Hong Kong, June 20-July 6, 1987. $2695 from San Francisco. Information, 453 Hamilton, 962-5091. lost and found $100 REWARD: Lost Female Dog. Choclate Brown. White spot on chest. Yellow eyes. Brown nylon collar with tags. Medium height. Very thin. Fox-like. Answers to "Mocha," but very shy. 942-0791 or the shelter 967- 7383. Lost- Timex watch in 100 Hammilton Mon Nov 17. Badly missed!!! Please call 942-1433 anytime (Peter) Reward! Found: November 17 Large, very wierd cross pendant in Fetzer women's locker room. Call 933-6235 and identify. LOST: KEYS includes dorm key and Chrysler car key. as well as others. On two plain silver ring. Please call 933-3407. m love you forever. James R. Wheel, I found your meal card in the Undergrad library on 1124. Call 933-6514 to pick it up. Found: Rx Sunglasses, left at DTH front desk. Ask for Mary to Claim. Found: one gold key, one small silver key on black NIKE cleet keychain, at Finley field 1124. Call Caroline at 933-3492. Found gold chain on route to or from E-haus. Call 933 2734. One Dollar Off All New & Used LP's, Tapes, CD's, and Posters! BACK DOOR RECORDS X-Mas Sal 136 E. Rosemary St. .933-0019 Lower Level NCNB Plaza Mon-Sat. 12-6 pm BUY TRADE SELL CBUISE TO NASSAU When you sign a 9 or 12 month lease at Carolina Apartments By December 5. Limited number of trips available. Call now for details. AP Football Top 20 1. Miami (53) 11-0-0 1,155 2. Penn State (5) 1 1 -0-0 1 .092 3. Oklahoma 10-1-0 1,053 4. Michigan 10-1-0 984 5. LSU 9-2-0 877 6. Nebraska 9-2-0 861 7. Arizona St 9-1-1 777 8. Texas A&M 9-2-0 710 9. Arkansas 9-2-0 692 10. Auburn 9-2-0 631 11. Ohio St 9-3-0 578 12. Washington 9-2-1 561 13. Alabama 9-3-0 452 14. Baylor 8-3-0 337 15. UCLA 7-3-1 316 16. Arizona 8-3-0 307 17. Georgia 8-3-0 234 18. N.C. State 8-2-1 135 19. Iowa 8-3-0 127 20. Stanford 8-3-0 125 First-place votes are in parentheses. Among others schools votes, North Carolina received 2. Spartan Cutlass Classic title, rounded out the Top Ten. Oklahoma, a second-round loser to Nevada-Las Vegas in the presea son NIT, fell from seventh to 11th to lead the second ten. Following the Sooners were Pittsburgh, Kentucky (which received one first-place vote), Western Kentucky, Georgia Tech, Georgetown, Syracuse, N.C. State, Northeastern and Arizona. Louisville was ranked every week last season and was a solid No. 2 choice to North Carolina in the preseason poll, receiving 22 first place votes. AP Basketball Top 20 1. North Carolina (53) 2-0 1,246 2. Nev.-LasVegas(5) 4-0 1,110 3. Indiana 1-0 1,093 4. Purdue (4) 1-0 1,048 5. Iowa 3-0 834" 6. Kansas 1-0 827 7. Auburn 1-0 654 8. Alabama 1 -0 560 9. Illinois 2-0 544 10. Navy 2-1 527 11. Oklahoma 1-1 518 12. Pittsburgh 1-0 486 13. Kentucky (1) 1-0 472 14. W.Kentucky 3-1 427 15. Georgia Tech 1-1 383 16. Georgetown 2-0 376 17. Syracuse 1-0 372 18. N.C. State 3-1 351 19. Northeastern 2-1 168 20. Arizona 0-1 148 First-place votes are in parentheses. services Abortion To 20 Weeks. 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