Monday, November 20, 1967
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
Fruit thrown—
Continued from page 1
coaches, players and sideline crew workers that charged onto the playing field to pick them up found out.
When an orange splits, its juices flow freely. A player — either KU or OU—could slip and be iniured.
The officials held up the game for several minutes and one of them motioned to the press box. The public address announcer asked the Sooner crowd to refrain from their actions. The OU coaching staff and cheerleaders neither encouraged nor discouraged the students' display of spirit.
A KU player slipped on an orange, the OU fans just laughed.
At one point, a KU player picked up an orange and heaved it at the crowd.
The OU fans quickly discovered that they had a valuable weapon in a psychological battle.
Oranges continued to be thrown throughout the remainder of the game despite warnings from the p.a. announcer.
OU scored again—the winning touchdown. Hundreds, possibly thousands of oranges hit the field. This time the officials blew their whistles, but the score was
14-10. After the officials marked off 15 yards against Oklahoma, anOU cheerleader picked up a microphone and told the fans to restrain themselves.
But the fans were out of oranges and KU was out of time.
"Boy, you really played a good game," the OU fans said afterwards. "You really had us scared."
Big 8 standings
Conference
| W | L | T | PF | PA |
|---|
| Oklahoma | 5 | 0 | 0 | 142 | 31 |
| Colorado | 5 | 2 | 0 | 137 | 72 |
| Missouri | 4 | 2 | 0 | 77 | 50 |
| Kansas | 4 | 2 | 0 | 99 | 71 |
| Nebraska | 3 | 3 | 0 | 60 | 55 |
| Okla. State | 2 | 3 | 0 | 53 | 63 |
| Iowa State | 1 | 6 | 0 | 66 | 177 |
| Kansas State | 0 | 6 | 0 | 49 | 164 |
All Games
| | W L | T | PF | PA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Oklahoma | 7 1 | 1 0 | 205 | 40 |
| Colorado | 7 2 | 0 0 | 181 | 92 |
| Missouri | 7 2 | 0 0 | 128 | 59 |
| Nebraska | 6 3 | 0 0 | 113 | 62 |
| Kansas | 4 5 | 0 0 | 149 | 140 |
| Okla. State | 3 4 | 1 0 | 160 | 88 |
| Iowa State | 2 8 | 0 0 | 86 | 275 |
| Kansas State | 1 8 | 0 0 | 76 | 214 |
In Theater of the Absurd, the playwright wants the audience to think rather than feel.
Using devices such as destroying the time element or creating characters which are not "real," the playwright tries to "alienate" the audience from the play by preventing it from believing what is happening on stage and from becoming involved.
Devices used to involve audience
In a paper entitled "Audience Involvement: The Slavic Theater of the Absurd," presented at the Bi-State Slavic Conference Saturday, Edward Czerwinski, associate professor of Slavic languages at KU, discussed the Theater of the Absurd and its new kind of audience involvement.
"In the past, an audience was
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supposed to be moved, feel pity and identify with the characters," Czerwinski said.
Czerwinski said the Absurdist playwright was concerned with making his audience and his actors aware of themselves.
Czerwinski said Theater of the Absurd became a movement with the appearance of Samuel Beck-
ett's "Waiting for Godot," and that Russian theater has been in the mainstream of the movement.
Besides Czerwinski's paper, 13 others were presented at the conference attended by educators from all over the United States. The conference was divided into seven panels, with two papers presented and discussed at each.
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American Student Abroad
Organizational Meeting
Featuring:
JEAN LOUIS BAUDOIN From Brussels, Belgium
Monday, Nov. 20, 7:30 p.m.
JAYHAWKER ROOM, UNION