University Daily Kansan Friday, March 3.1972 3 'Hamlet' and 'Rosencrantz' Waiting in Theater Wings By BARBARA SCHMIDT Kansan Reviews Editor ART SEVEN EAST SEVENTH GALLERY: "Funk 'art'," an art, presentation gallery and other art objects opens Sunday. Also on display are ceramics by Sheldon Cressy, Hammett, Lawrence senior; and Fred Burnett. Lawrence graduate student. Learned, too, to be a great artist. Intaglios by Jim Evans, Topea seni- lor; and Bruce Hiles, SPOONER ART MUSEUM: A collection of modern sculptures by Bernhard Koch, constructions by Norman Rowe, and Michael Sinn, instructors in painting and sculpture. Ends SPOONER ART MUSEUM: First in a series of "mini-tours" on various aspects of Spooner's art, the collection includes Prints and drawings curator Pam Kingsbury will discuss 18th-century English plateware. UNION GALLERY: The 18th Annual Kansas Designer Craftsmans Show. Ends Sunday. On Monday, winning entries from the 20th Annual KU Photography Contest will go on display. WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: Germany—Dada, 7:30 p.m. Monday. Last of a part-sua film series, "Museum Without CONCERTS CONCERTS SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL: Chamber Choir concert 3:30 p.m. Sunday. SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL: Faculty Recital by the KU Brass Quartet, 8 p.m. Monday. EDITH'S EDH BALACE: "The Penetrations." 9 p.m. tonight and Saturday at five: 12 noon rhythm and blues声和boogie music. WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: SUA Popular Film. Tonight and Saturday. Mick Jack as a grappy rock singer Gay Lib Gets OK to Charge For Its Dance After Kansas Union Director F. Patrick Edwards, the members of the Kansas University Board Board Thursday morning, the Lawrence Gauger Association charged $50 million in charge 50 cents admission at its dance from 8-12 p.m. Friday in the KU building. The Front had previously been given permission to hold the dance in the Union by the board, but the board said the University Events Committee would have to pay for admission could be charged. A representative from the Front went to the events committee meeting Wednesday afternoon, but Emily Taylor, dean of women, said the matter was under the jurisdiction of the committee. The representative then connected Burge who polled members of the board by sending a sinistre email could not be called by Friday. KANU Schedule Stereo 91.5 FM 12:15 p.m. — Noon Hour Concert 12:30 p.m. — Auftorfstream Organ 13:00 p.m. — Candlelight Prayer 13:30 p.m. — After Thirty 14:00 p.m. — Music by Candlestick 14:30 p.m. — Company's Prayer 15:15 p.m. — TBA **SUNDAY** 12:00 p.m. — The Morning Show 12:30 p.m. — The News-News 12:45 p.m. — The News-News 10:30 p.m. — Serenade to Blue 10:55 p.m. — Music by Candlestick 10:75 p.m. — TBA **SUNDAY** 14:00 p.m. — Classically Choral 12:00 p.m. — Words and Musical 12:30 p.m. — Chamber Recital 12:55 p.m. — Words and Music 13:00 p.m. — Things who goes into retirement with plenty of money to spend, pretty quickly to find his privacy disrupted by a bhood (James Fox) who uses jigger 'house' as a money bank. SPOONER ART MUSEUM: Film Series for Young People, "Louisiana Story." 3 p.m. Sunday. Robert Flaherty's 1984 documentary about the discovery of a lichen, which affects its effect on a Califan family. GRANDA THEATRE: "The Hospital." Paddy Chayefky's cynically melodramatic script is an example of his health care in a modern hospital-complete with George C. Scott as a booing, gull-filled character. HILLCREST 1: *Prince of Peace* Paolo Pasolini's 1960 film (formerly called "The King") about the life of Matthew) traces the life of Christ with humble simplicity and as much factual realism as possible. HILLCREST 2: "Sunday Bloody" Sunday, "John Schmidt" John Schmidt" ) directed Pereupel Gillatt's complex script about a disintegrating love triangle: Homosexual Peter Finch loves Murray Head, a swinger also being pursued by heterosexual men. Is Coming" and "Lawman" "VARSITY THEATRE: 'Klute' and 'Summer of 42'" The first features Jane Fonda's best performance since "They Shoot Horns, Don't They?" as a woman who is involved in an old-fashioned mystery with an oh-so-straight policeman (Donald Sutherland). The second is the sentimental tale of an adolescent's (Gary Penn) and of sex (via Jennifer O'Neill). By TOM THRONE Kansan Staff Writer HILLCREST 3: "Harold and Maude." The Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW), said Monday night in a meeting in Elsworth Hall that the war in Vietnam was not winding down but was being withdrawn from automated warfare SUNSET DRIVE IN: "Valdez Is Coming" and "Iowan." THEATRE A slide show prepared and sponsored by the National Action-Research on Military Industrial Support (NRIS) of the American Friends Service stated that the ground war was de-escalating and the air war was The slide show was prepared from military magazines, newspapers, information from a senior investigator electric battlefield program. It discussed the ways air power was used in the war and the number of people in the war. The veterans said the air war was used to keep up the war effort with less casualties. UNIVERSITY THEATRE. Shakespeare's "Hamlet" and Tom Stoppie take off on it, where they go to a party. Are Dead." The first will be held on Thursday and on March 28, 30 and April 1. "Rosencrantz" will be at 8 p.m. Wednesday and on March 29, 31 and April 2. Vietnam Vets Say War Being Escalated in Air THE SHOW said that it was less painful to fight an automated war because less people were killed. The automated war system uses electric sensors which detect troop movements, the show said. The sensors send signals to a data-link ground computer on-board computer in a fighter plane. The plane flies to the target and the computer releases signals. The slide show said that the armament used on the planes was made to main people. Most of the weapons are anti-personal bombs, which contain mini-ammunition pellets on the unprotected people. ACCORDING TO THE show the Senate reported that the military said that they used these types of bullets that dead is withdrawn from the action when an injured man was shot by him." Secondly, they felt that "the suffering of the living has a more demoralizing effect than the suffering of the dead." People can protect themselves from the bombs by wearing straw vests or some type of protective clothing. The show said a system like this didn't need troops to win it because it could be carried on for 15 to 20 years. Portable Circus Lampoons TV, Society in Comedy Sketches Bv LARY HUFFMAN and PAT MOORE Kansan Reviewers Festival of the Arts continued Thursday night with a presentation of satire and comedy by the Portable Circus. At 7 p.m., the Theatre or the Ace Trucking Company, the five-player troupe gave its impressions of television the way it is used and abused. The Portable Circus, which originated at Trinity College, has been performing for nearly two decades in Charleston, Mark Williams, Jeffrey Lippa, Chip Keyes and Michael Schumacher (the three months ago), write their own material with the help of their director, George McGregor. THE PLAYERS wielded their imaginary props and delivered their lines through a series of gestures, with the air of spontaneity even though nothing was improvised. Steve Charleston explained afterwards that all the material was taken from the play against a bad night and to prevent upstaging. The comedy was effective because, as he said, they were free to concentrate on their performance and training to think up the next tok The act lampooned both television and the audience it introduced, and society imacriment of false impersonation into people via the talk show, the variety show, the commercial show, and the program that weren't for those little white specks on your shoulder") etc., the Cicum kept the audience engaged. THE SKETCHES touched on almost every aspect of television, from the news team "that everyone likes because we like morning cartoons and morning cartoon shows with their three themes: "Violence. Tourist Center Promoted Here Architecture 40, the sophomore design class, is presently promoting a tourist information center for Kansas. humiliation and violence." Their humor ranged from the subtlety of a game contest show that you don't have to compete with other players in the slapstick in the form of a devil and an angel fighting over the morality of two grammar school students' watches" taking Dick Van Dike. "The purpose of the center is to help the economics of Kansas by creating jobs through tourism." Michael B. Elliott, Owensboro Ky', $ophthalmia, said Thursday of the class at studying the design of the center Others are studying potential sights in the state. A talk show on education-, television brought culture to the circus's "screen" with three speakers, and a poetry bridge the generation gap" A venerable old American poet read Robert Frost, first putting his fellow writers to the test of a new, less festive Spanish dance. A radical activist and did different interpretations of the word 'mother'. Finally came the tale of Tintin, talked of "waves of discontent" until he became seasick. The whole sketch illustrated the consequences of trying to present culture as culture on a mass medium. TELEVISION'S WOMAN Psychologist and the buddy-buddy news team were depicted as characters who use human mursery to make money. The TV show essay on American society. A serious competitor opposed an essay by a 1980s thinker thought he could win without ‘competing’ The announcer idealized the competitor and descrived the gentle contest as that of a chess player who was trying to destroy the show. Then the announcer was flashed an image of ‘Failure’ by a voice offstage. When the “15-second time limit” elapsed, he was escorted offstage after the chess match. BECAUSE TELEVISION has somewhat of a foundation in reality, their satire put more than half an episode into the Means of psychotherapy ('I started watching television sports as part of my psychotheraphy. It keeps me in touch with other people. Hoover (an old man who spasmodically relives his past on 'Fake the Nation') and Agnew (reportedly arrested for spitting at a police officer) all included in the burlesque. The program came to a fitting end with "Father Ronald Gosnell," who wrote words of comfort for the end of a hard day but then walked off a rock, saying, "Spangled Banner," complete with jets and salutes, conclude. Backstage the members of Portable Circus talked about how Judging was used to Judging from the whisles and loud applauds the feeling was AT SHAKEY'S TONIGHT Enjoy the Versatile Tom Eversole at the Piano 7:30 - 11:30 p.m. and Light or Dark Beer $1.00 a Pitcher 8 - 10 p.m. ONLY 99¢ SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR & ye Public house 544 W. 23rd 842-2266 6th & Missouri LAWRENCE'S LARGEST MENU + 1/2 LB. CRISPY FRIES Fri., Sat., Sun., March 10, 11, 12 4 DELICIOUS HAMBURGERS 843-2139 3 Big Days Only GAY LIBERATION present a CELEBRATION of the FIRST AMENDMENT DANCE Riday march 10 8-11 p.m. union ballroom 50¢ donation for G.L.F. legal fund MUSIC: DAEDALUS THIS WEEKEND BRING ALL YOUR FRIENDS TO HENRY'S Come see the complete line of RCA car tape stereo, including Stereo 8 and Tape 6. In car stereo (like everything else), you get what you pay for. That is why RCA is your best buy. Sure, you can buy a stereo player for less—but you won't be spending much on engineering, and sleek styling. Why take chances when you can buy RCA? HEAD FOR HENRY'S The newest private club in Lawrence was built with you in mind. NEED A PLACE TO UNWIND AFTER A HARD DAY OF WORK OR STUDY? Open from 4 p.m. to 3 a.m. seven days a week for those of you 21 or older... Patronize Kansan Advertisers 52 $ ^{9 5} $ from RCA GAY LIBERATION meets next thurs at 7PM 1204 Oread. GREGG TIRE CO. 814 W. 23rd 842-5451 Charter & Regular Membership Available Now Call VI2-5248 or Inquire at the STABLES. THE SOPHOMORE CLASS LECTURE SERIES presents SENATOR BIRCH BAYH of Indiana Speaking on "The Future of the American Political System" Tuesday, March 14 8:00 p.m. at the Kansas Union Ballroom SENATOR BAYH—Considered one of the U.S. Senate's constitutional authorities and a leader in the passage of the 28th amendment lowering the voting age to 18. Currently working for a constitutional amendment to provide equal rights for men and women. Concerned about the nation's needs in dealing with pollution, poverty, education, and health care. ADMISSION 50° Tickets Free to Sophomore with Class Cards—Advanced Tickets will be Sold at the Information Booth on Jayhawk Blvd.