Photo by Halina Pawl Students practice TV techniques The KU television studio in Flint Hall provides the setting for students to become familiar with television production equipment. Students in the television and film course learn how to light the studio for TV productions, operate TV cameras and audio equipment and produce their own shows. Film showing turns into pie throwing SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -- Scene: entrance to San Francisco's Masonic Auditorium. Time: 7:15 p.m. Wednesday. Men in tuxedoes, women in evening gowns enter for opening of 13th annual San Francisco Film Festival. Medium long shot: forty people pile out, including men dressed like hippies and girls in tights who start throwing pies at each other. Eight cameramaster stationed themselves on periphery and film scene. Cut to street: police cars roar up, policemen pile out, start getting hit with pies. Panoramic long shot: air is filled with flying pies—red, green, yellow, blue. Police chase pie-throwers. Festival goers register shock, dismay and horror. Closeups: police Capt. Don Scott gets hit in face with pie. Stephen Schmidt, producer of underground movie company called Grand Central Station, which staged event, gets hit with pie. Medium closeup: ammunition exhausted, pie-throwers hand out towels, leaflets calling the event "a soft bomb tossed in protest of everything that restricts energy, spunk, originality and wit in American cinema." Medium long shot: police drag 13 persons off slippery street to jail. Rest of pic-throwers including Schmidt and "co-directors" David A. Himmelstein and Peter Adair, escape. Oct. 24 1969 KANSAN 7 Table Tops AUTO GLASS Sudden Service 730 New Jersey — VI 3-4416 Slow dissolve to mayor's office. Alioto grimly signs letter to Police Chief Thomas J. Cahill urging "severeest punishment possible" for 13 persons, and calls incident an attempt "to disrupt the festival by mass assault." Slow dissolve THE END Visiting professor lectures ATTENTION Social Chairman The Log Cabin at OAK LODGE "Architects should seek sustenance from the natural and social sciences; they should redefine their purposes instead of building useless scenery." Serge Chermaeff, professor of architecture at Yale University, told architecture students and faculty at 8 p.m. Thursday. is available for private parties each night except Sunday for parties, socials & dancing Chermayeff spoke at the first of a series of lectures sponsored by the School of Architecture and Urban Design in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. The lecture, "Shape of Community," was based on arguments set forth in his book "Community and Privacy." Architecture today should be concerned with environmental structuring, he said. Concentrating on a system of survival ecology was more important than building something comfortable for ourselves, he said. Chermaveff suggested building on a philosophical rather than just an operational basis. "A structure should not be just a building or a fountain," he said. "Everything must be a learning place where humanity can struggle to reach its potential." - Location - 13 miles south of Lawrence on Highway 59 For Information Call 913-594-3349 Chermayeff also said that people had lost the ability to mix. They have become segregated by stereotypes until there is no "community of American people." He said that his solution was to construct a series of meeting places which would be available 24 hours a day. A system of free transit would be needed to make this plan workable. It should overcome finding confrontation among people a challenge. "Now all we are doing is carving up territories essential for animals and ourselves." Chermayeff said, "We need elbow room." Use Kansan Classified GO BIG BLUE THE BANK of FRIENDLY SERVICE Supports the JAYHAWKS Come in and ask a teller for a KU Auto Pennant FREE!