Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 80, Ed. 1 Friday, November 3, 1978 Page: 26 of 35
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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Friday, November 3,1W8
—THE DENTONRECORD CHRONICLE
Page 9C %
3. 1978
EN
•Lmm l •
>S
f
MONDAY
THURSDAY
TUESDAY
e n
The stars
Opera
in the
Theater
in the pork
DINNER
Music
Films
For the kids
E
and Laurence Olivier. Heston
1.
Crafts
II Ave.
DAVTAV
SALVAGE SALES
WINDUP
OUR DOORS WILL CLOSE FOR EVER SOON
DON’T WAIT
FF RETAIL
MANY ITEMS LESS!! !
NO EXCHANGES
OR REFUNDS
FINAL
ALL MERCHANDISE MUST
THIS IS IT — OUR DAYS ARE NUMBERED
MERCHANDISE
Preston Ticket Agency, 363-
9311.
says "I’ll
My music
the records
ng. And the
s (with the
I last time a
I mperful of
TEXAS WOMAN'S Univer-
sity music faculty members
Y.
NOW :
Tickets to the musical version
of Shakespeare's comedy of
love are $6.25 and $7.50. The
musical will run through Nov.
18 at the Dallas Theater Center.
re, a spark
lite simply,
lickets. His
ly ballad or
I give Pen-
s audience
Ity aside "I
Mui There’s
NOW SHOWING at the Dallas
Museum of Fine Arts are two
exhibits, the “Op-art" painting
of British artist Bridget Riley
and a variety of works by local
and regional artists entitled
“Works On Paper: Southwest
1978." The Bridget Riley show is
a retrospective of 60 paintings
and 60 drawings selected from
the artist’s production between
1959 and 1978. “Works on
Paper” is a combined invitation
and juried exhibition. Works by
Carlotta Corpron, Denton
photographer, and Dallas ar-
tists Dan Rizzie and Carole
Scholder are included.
" Bo JOU NEEJEE: Profiles
of Canadian Indian Art,” is on
view at the Amon Carter
Museum in Fort Worth. The
exhibition features over 190
Canadian .Indian artifacts from
the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries
and will be on exhibit until Nov.
12.
The Days The
Whores Came Out
The North Texas State
University drama department
will present “The Day the
Whores Came Out to Play
Tennis” at 8 p.m. at the Studio
Theater of the NTSU Speech
and Drama Building. Tickets
for the Arthur Kopit play are
$2.50 and reservations may be
made by calling 788-2428.
audience at 9 p.m. and at 9:45
p.m., “Soylent Green” will be
shown. Film festival tickets are
$10 for both evenings or $5 for a
single evening. Information is
available by calling 692-2979.
"THE SPIRIT Is Willing," a
comedy about the ghost of a
deceased wife who decides to
pay a visit to the surviving
husband and his new wife, is
onstage al ihe Granbury Opera.
House in Granbury. Per-
formances are at 8 p.m.
Fridays, at 2 and 8 pm
Saturdays and at 2 p.m. Sun-
days Tickets are $2 to $4.50 and
reservations are available by
calling 572-0881
"CABARET," the musical
story of Sally Bowles, an
English singer who meets
writer Cliff Bradshaw in a
Berlin cabaret on the eve of the
Nazi takeover, is onstage at the
New Arts Theatre in Dallas.
Performances begin at 8 p m
Wednesdays through Saturdays
through Dec 31. Tickets are $5
and $6.50. The cast is headed by
Chastity Fox as Sally Bowles.
University Symphony
Michael Adamcik will be the
featured musician when Anshel
Brusilow conducts the North
Texas State University in a
performance at 8:15 p.m. at the
Music Recital Hall on campus.
The concert is open to the public
at no admission charge, but
advance reservations should be
obtained by calling 788-2791.
RED GIANTS, white dwarfs,
black holes and other strange
denizens of deep space are
explained in “Cosmic Questions
and Stellar Unknowns," a
program being presented
weekends through Nov. 26 at the
Noble Planetarium in Fort
Worth. Program times are 11
a.m. and 2:30 and 3:30 p.m.
Saturdays and 2:30 and 3:30
p.m. Sundays.
—Music will be provided by
Bees Knees and Fantasy and
admission will be free to a
concert at Dallas' Lee Park
Saturday The activities will
begin at 3 pm and continue
until 7 p m and beverages will
be available at the park ,
THE SHADOW BOX," a
play focusing on the last days of
three terminally ill patients, is
onstage at Dallas' Theater
Three Curtain time is 8 p.m.
Tuesday through Thursday,
8:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday
and 2:30 and 7 p.m Sunday.
Tickets are $5.50 and $6.50.
"COMPANY," an innovative
musical of the present decade,
is being presented Thursdays
through Saturdays at the
Theatre Onstage at Trinity
Center. Curtain time is 8
p.m.Thursday through
Saturday and 2 p.m Sunday at
the Dallas theater Tickets are
$4 for adults and $3.50 for
students and senior citizens.
SINGER PATTI Page is
doing two shows nightly through
Nov. llat the Venetian Room at
the Fairmont Hotel in Dallas.
"A MIDSUMMER Night's
Dream ".is onstage at 8 p.m.
Smithsonian Institution
traveling exhibit exploring the
mysteries of telepathy and
clairvoyance, is on view at the
Fort Worth Museum of Science
and History.
Nan Hudson on viola, Pamela
Washburn on violincello and
Tim Settimi
The Entertainment Series
Committee of Texas Woman’s
University will present Tim
Settimi, an artist of mime, at
7:30 p.m. at Redbud Auditorium
on the TWU campus. Settimi is
a modern-day traveling min-
strel accomplished in the art of
multi-media magic. The per-
formance is free to the public.
The USA Film Festival’s
Great Screen Artist Tribute will
begin tonight in Dallas,
honoring and starring Charlton
Heston. At 7:30 tonight, Heston
will be on stage at the Bob Hope
Theatre on the Southern
Methodist University campus
for a discussion with the
audience about acting for film
and his career in general. At 8
pm, “Will Penny," a nep-
classic of the Western genre
starring Heston, will be shown.
. Heston will return to the stage
to discuss the making of the film
at 9:30 p.m. Saturday the film
festival will continue with a
showing of “Khartoum” at 7:30
p.m. “Khartoum” stars Heston
SALLY NETZEL’S "Attic
Aphrodite" is onstage at Down
Center Stage at the Dallas
Theater Center- The comedy is
being presented at 8 pm
Tuesdays through Fridays and
at 8:30 p m Saturdays for the
next three weeks. Tickets in-
formation and reservations are
available by calling 526-8867.-
presented in concert at 3 p.m.
Sunday Vat the TWU
Tuesdays through Fridays and
at 5 and 8:30 p.m. Saturdays at
the Dallas Theater Center. Karen Lewis on piano will be
P.M. 1A.M.
P.M. 2A.M.
SATURDAY
Fall Arts
and Crafts Show
The North Texas Area Art
League’s Fall Arts and Crafts
Show will be under way from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Denton
. Civic Center on McKinney
Street. Items for show and sale
will include tole painting,
glassblowing, macrame, quilts,
dolls, decoupage, pottery, oil
painting, jewelry and Christ-
mas ornaments.
HAL ASHBY'S “The Last
Detail” will be shown at 7:30
and 9: 30 tonight at the Founders
North—Auditorium on the
University of Dallas campus.
The film stars Jack Nicholson
as a career sailor who is
detailed to take a young punk to
naval prison. Admission is $1 to
everyone other than UTD
students.
H oMinor, Opus 57.” Tickets are
$2.50 to $8 and are available at
will discuss the film with the
“PSI SEARCH,” a special
CELLIST Yo-Yo Ma will
perform with the Fort Worth
Symphony at 3 p.m Sunday and
at 8 pm. Tuesday at the
Tarrant County Convention
Center Theatre The program
includes Mosaico-Nobre,
Schelomo, Hebrew Rhapsody-
Bloch and "Symphony No. 2 in
D-Sibelius." Tickets $2 to $8 and
the box office may be contacted
at 9212876
sex symbol
Lon he has '
ters in pop
appeal, he
lure the im-
FT. WORTH DRIVE AT 1-35 DENTON
1 BLOCK EAST OF CITIZEN'S NATIONAL BANK
—The Dallas Civic Opera will
open their season tonight with
“The Barber of Seville” at 7:30
p m. The production will star
Marilyn Horne, Sesto
Bruscantini, Rockwell Blake,
Paolo Montarsolo and Fernando
Corena. "The Barber of
Seville" will be presented at 2
p.m. Sunday and at 8 p.m.
Wednesday.
Presbyterian Campus in Dallas.
The concert will include
Beethoven’s “Duet with two
obligato Eyeglasses.”
RUSSIAN pianist Lazar
Berman will present a recital at
8:15.p.m. Monday at McFarlin
Auditorium on the Southern
Methodist University campus.
Berman’s program for the.
. Dallas Civic Music Association
will include Clementi “Sonata
in B Minor, Opus. 40, No 2” and
Beethoven’s "Sonata No. 23 in F
"THE LEGEND Of Sleepy
Hollow," Washington Irving’s
classic story set in early
America, is being presented for
the youngsters at. the
Haymarket Theatre at Olla
Podrida Center .in Dallas
Puppets from the Haymarket's
antique collection will perform
the story at 10:30 a m and land
4 pm each Thursday, Friday
and Saturday through Nov 25.
Tickets are $1.25 and further
information is available by
calling 233 1958
FRIDAY
Black Arts Exposition
The Twilight Jazz Orchestra,
the NT Voices of Praise and
Miss Black NTSU will be
featured at the sixth annual
Homecoming Black Arts
Exposition at 8 p.m. at the Main
Auditorium at North Texas
State University. The talent
show is sponsored by the
Society for the Promotion of
Black Music and Musicians.
Count Dracula _____6.
For those of you who have
decided to spend the evening in,
Channel 13 will repeat their
special Halloween “Great
Performances." Louis Jordan
is -“Count Dracula" in this
adaptation of Bram Stoker's
1897 classic Jourdan plays the
Transylvanian vampire as a
sinister charmer as well as an
evil presence The program airs
at 9:30 p.m.
the museum's Traditional
Texas Music Series. Tickets for
the program are $3.50 and may
be purchased at the museum
bookstore
Children's Art o
“Children’s Art, USA,” an
exhibition of - artwork by
children from 14. cities
throughout the United States, is
on exhibit from noon to 5 p.m.
Monday"through Friday at The
Gallery at the North Texas
State University Art Building.
TWU Exhibit
An exhibition of works by Sue
Dankin and Robert McKibbin is
on view at the Texas Woman’s
University Art Department
Galleries. Ms. Daykin is
exhibiting a series of small
landscapes, figure com-
positions, mono prints and
linoleum cut!. McKibbin is-
showing a group of 45 recent
prints and drawings utilizing
numerous printmaking
techniques. The exhibit may be
seen from 8:30a.m. to4:30p.m.
weekdays through Dec. 13 at the
galleries.
CAJUN musician Allen
Thibodeaux and the French
Ramblers will perform at 2:30
p.m. Sunday at the Amon
Carter Museum Theater in Fort
Worth Thibodeaux and his
band will, perform “honky-
tonk" Cajun music as part of
Exhibits
One hundred and fifty
photographs by area
photographers are being
displayed by the Center for
Visual Communications at the.
Allen Street Gallery in Dallas.
The show will open at 6 tonight
and all proceeds from sales of
works will go to the Allen Street
Gallery, a non-profit arts
organization dedicated to the
' advancement of the
photographic arts. Gallery
hours are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Tuesdays through Saturdays
and 1 to 5 p m. Sundays. The
gallery will be open until 10
tonight. The works will hang
through Nov. 18.at the gallery.
"PHOTOGRAPHY and the
West," a photographic
exhibition by William Current,
is on display through Dec. 3 at
the Amon Carter Museum in
Fort Worth. The collection, of.
about 150.historic photographs
was designed to show the unique
relationship that existed bet-
ween the simultaneous
development of the West and
photography
WEDNESDAY
University Symphony
The North Texas' State
University Symphony will
perform at 8:15 p.m. at the
Music Recital Hall in the NTSU
Music Building. The symphony
will be conducted by Anshel
Brusilow and Michael Adamcik
will - be the featured
saxophonist. The performance
is free and open to the public,
but reservations should be
made by calling 788-2791.
The Day The Whores
Came Out To Play Tennis
Dr. Stanley K. Hamilton of
the NTSU drama faculty will
direct Arthur Kopit's “The Day
the Whores Came Out to Play
Tennis" at 8 p.m. at the Studio
Theater of the NTSU Speech
and Drama Building. Tickets
are $2.50 and reservations are
'available by calling 788-2428.
Jazz Festival
The North Texas State,
University School of Music will
hold a Small Group Jazz
Festival from 1 p.m. to 6:30
p.m. at the Lab Jazz Band Hall
in the Music Building. The
festival is open to the public at
no admission charge and will
feature musicians popular in
the area and NTSU student
musicians and NTSU Lab Band
alumni. -
The Dallas Minority
Repertory Theatre’s “Don’t
Bother Me, I Can’t Cope" opens
tonight at the Hall of State in
Fair Park The musical is a
celebration , of the lives,
achievements and aspirations
of Black people in America.
Reservations may be made by
calling 522-3290
THE IRVING Community
Theater will present "Fiddler
On The Roof" tonight, Saturday
night and Sunday night at the
Northlake College Auditorium
in Irving Ticket information
about the Irving Community
Theatre Irving Symphony
production is available by
calling 255-4705
. "THE ADVENTURES of
Brer Rabbit,” will be presented
by the Casa Manana Playhouse
tonight and Saturday afternoon
Tickets to-the-ehildren’s theater
production are $3 for adults and
$2 for children Reservations
may be made by calling 332-
6221 The entire cast of animal
characters made famous in the
Uncle Remus stories will join
Brer Rabbit on the Fort Worth,
theater stage
Cello Choir Concert
The North Texas State
University Cello Choir will
perform in concert at 8:15 p.m.
at the Music Recital Hall.
Under the direction of cellist
Adolfo Odnoposoff, the choir
will perform "Lyrical
Fragment" by Alexander Krein
and "Sonata for Two Cellos” by
Mozart. The program is free
and open to the public.
“CRYING FOR A Vision: A
Rosebud Sioux Trilogy 1886-
1976" .is on view at the Hall of
State in Dallas’ Fair Park, The
story of the Sioux is told through
the photographs of John A.
Anderson, Eugene Buechel and
Don Doll in this collection, on
view through Tuesday. -
ALL SALES OPEN 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
SUNDAY
Fall Arts
and Crafts Show
The North Texas Area Art
League’s Fall Arts and Crafts
Show is on tap for 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. at the Civic Center. The
displays will include tole
painting, glassblowing,
macrame, quilts, dolls,
decoupage, pottery, oil pain-
ting, jewelry, and Christmas
ornaments. The show is open to
the public and most items will
be for sale. ._______
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 80, Ed. 1 Friday, November 3, 1978, newspaper, November 3, 1978; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1655246/m1/26/?q=architectural+drawings: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.