10 Friday, October 22, 1971 University Daily Kansan Kappa Phi Bazaar Saturday The KU Kappa Phil Club, an organization for Christian Women, is having a bazaar from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday in the Fellowship Hall of the First Methodist Church at 10th and Vermont. Items for sale will be homemade food, candles, KU decals, dried fall arrangements and knitted baby clothes. Proceeds will go to the club for use in its programs. Open Forum on Welfare There will be an open form of the welfare crisis in Kansas in the United Ministries Center, 1204 Oread, at 13:30 tonight. Senator Tom Van Siekle, R-Fort Scott and Kansas chairman of a Welfare Law and Board, will speak on the topic of welfare law, with Hedy Dorsey of the Penn House in Lawrence. Bess Stone Open House The Boss Stone Activity Center for retarded adults of the community will hold an open house from 10:4 p.m. Sunday. The center, located at 745 Ohio, is sponsored by the Douglas County Association for Retarded Children, which is a United Fund Agency. Benefit Concert to Aid Child Day Care Center The Someday School Benefit Concert will be at 7 p.m. this Sunday at Wandruff Auditorium. Admission is $1.50. Proceeds will go to the School Day, which is a day care center for children three to six. The main purpose of the center is to take care of your child while their parents are working. According to Leroy Chittenden, a teacher at the school, 60 per person is required. Those are related to University of Kansas students, faculty or staff Although the school charges a less fee of $20, Chitken said it wouldn't turn away the way parents who couldn't afford to Ron Hill, Kathy Buehler, Maralyn Krawall, Dave Bailey, Beth Scalet, Randy West, Tom Coleman and Jim Colyer (too) Buck and Johnny) will be playing their guitars and singing. Chittendon said he hoped to get some students from Haskell to perform American Indian music. The Weekend Scene 'Pigskin' Plays Theatre By BARBARA SCHMIDT Kansan Reviews Editor SPOONER ART GALLERY: "Kansas Landscape," an exhibit photographs by James Enny Enny, on the campus of Spooner. Through Nov. 7. A second-rate group of pictures of Kansas landscapes in the undernets that, if nothing else, show some intriguing parts of the state too often overlooked. SPOONER ART GALLERY: "Jenr R Sweeney Retrospective of pop art collected by the Sweeney Artist Society West York art curate. Opens Sunns. This is the first public showing of Sweeney's personal collection." UNION GALLERY: An exhibit of Indian art created by students and faculty at Haskell Institute. Opens Monday. CONCERTS SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL: Fine Arts Hon Recital, 8 p.m. Monday. Students performing will be: Rebecca Hayes, soprano; Carolyn Rodgers, violinist; Barbara巴莉, Liley; Jane Phleps, soprano, and Ann Beckman, pianist. SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL: Guest Recital by Anton Heilner, professor of organ at the University in Vienna. 8 p.m. Wednesday UNIVERSITY THEATRE: St. John Passion, performed by James Ralston, the direction of James Ralston, teaching associate in choral WOOORFUR AUDITORIUM: SUA Popular Film, "Interlude" 7 and 9:30 p.m. tonight and Saturday. Remember the worn-out girl who falls in love with a young girl who falls in love with a married man? The married of FILMS midnight monotony have been robbed to place this vapid version of impossible romance before our eyes again. Oskar Werner and Barbara Ferris star in this 1988 movie, but the presence of the girl in a supporting role may be the only thing of interest. WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: SUA Classical Films, "The Devil Doll" and "The Unholy Three." They are held on the second at 9 p.m. Browning, director of "Dracula, made 'Doll' and 'Three' in 1983 and 1925 respectively. They provideVID evidence as to who wrote these films, Master of the Macabre, *Lionel Barrymore* and Lon Chaney star. WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: International Film "Rocco and His Brothers" 7:30 p.m. sunday. Lachino Visconti directed this cinema film that stars Alain Delon and Claudia Cardinale. WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM: Film Society, "Juliet of the Spirits" 7.30 and 9 p.m. thursday. This 1985 Fellini film explores the psyche of a woman who has lost her husband's love. She turns for survival to dreams, seances and the pursuit of pleasure. Her fantasy world, as seen by Belliin, is amazing and provides one of the most satisfying preludes suitable to the Halloween season. GRANADATHEATRE: "Bless the Beasts and Children." The latest Stanley Kramer social drama is valid: that the mindless slaughter of wild animals (here represented by buffalo) and the wicked cruelty of robes of robots imitating their elders is painfully wrong. But Kramer's flagger lack of subservience leaves something to be desired. HILLCREST I: 1, "Unman, Wittering and Ziggo. This group of sadistic teen-aged boys at a remote English public HILLCREST 2: "Billy Jack," What better way to learn 10 easy stems to shallow martyrdom? school. Led by the notorious Uman, Wittering and Zige, they terrorize their priglig teacher (David Himmings). Cellist Enjoys Teaching Raymond Stuhl, borne in Israel City. Mo., and trained at the Hochschule for Music in Berlin, has taught cello at the University of Pennsylvania. Reflecting on his performing and teaching careers he said, "Highly inspired teachers are more rare than the most expert performers . . . I like to teach them than I like to do anything else. By JUNE KANTZ He remembers this tour as quite an experience. "I was busy studying music and not German when I was a student there," he said. "But, as it turned out, this study wasn't going to be a lecture along until I came to a word I didn't know and the audience would help me. In 1854, 24 years after he had finished his studies in Germany, Stuhl took a two month leave returned there for a lecture tour "AFTER A WHILE I started purposefully leaving out words I knew just to get my response. It worked, but not every interaction I ever seen. I toured all over and at every stop we never got out before 1 a.m. There was that much audience watching me. As a teacher, he thinks that As a teacher, he thinks that turning out professionals is only part of his job. A musician who played with the Kansas City Philharmonic for two years, he said of professional performing, "The first year is Raymond Stuhl "I think that every musician should be somewhat of a crusader. I should have 'our biggest problem is to introduce music to people who have little background and be fascinated with the subject. That's why I have gone on so many trips." great fun. Then the glamor starts to wear off. This is not true of teaching." STUHL SAID it was difficult to say who had his most outstanding student. There's a person who can tell you to for fear I'd leave someone off'; he said, "Actually John here; then students his master's here; then students Casals on a Fulbright scholarship for two years was truly outstanding Also Alan Harris, of the cello at Eastern School of Music. Stuhl now has seven cello majors studying with him and teaches several non-major students in both cello and string orchestras. Of all his majors, is currently filling in the San Antonio Symphony. STUHL SAID that he was also "constantly in touch" with many of the teachers teaching around the country. He said he looked forward to summers and long vacations when he can spend time with them have time to travel to Lawrence. Speaking broadly of the whole school year, Stuhl said "All in all I would say we've come to the end of a 20-year period of unequaled education questionable whether the arts kept progress with the economy HILLCREST 3: "The Confession" Costa-Gaura's sequent to "Z" is the story of a Com- mission that was forced to confess to nonexistent crimes. Ignoring the showiness of "Z," "Confession" becomes the more meaningful of the two, and they are thoroughly probing the issues. "As times become more Israeli Prof Visiting to Direct Play, Coordinate Colloquium Moshe Lazar, visiting professor from Tel Aviv, Israel, is on the University of Kansas campus for the second time, to teach in a French play and to direct a culture colloquium. Lazar directed the U.S. premiere of Eugene loneso's de jeue massacre 'de "Dethul" by Larry Stallone, given by the French and Italian departments Thursday night in Strong Hall. Auditorium before a Fire Scorches Dorm Laundry; Arson Possible In "Death's Bowling Game," lonesome uses the "plague" and its effect upon a municipal environment to show the extent to which both reality and absurdity can be carried in situations of human conflict. A trash can was blackened, a washing machine received $33 damage, and $60 worth of a McColum Hall residential houses were destroyed in a fire, KU, and Security said Thursday. A theme of inevitable death pervades from scene to scene with the presence of a black student and Ran Sapomik, graduate student. SUNSET DRIVE-IN THEATRE: "I Love My Wife!" *and"Diary of a Mad Housewife." The first is a disappointing Elliot thriving young woman undergirting marriage marked only by the obese presence of Brenda Vaccaro as the wife. The second is a frighteningly accurate portrayal of the housewife and the bogus grassen in the title role. The blaze occurred between 2 a.m. and 2:30 a.m. Wednesday in the laundry room in the south corner of the apartment of McCormick William. His whose clothes were burned, said he was not present at the time. Police believed the fire was set. The fire was put out without equipment in the fire department. No other machines or clocks were damaged. Lazar is coordinating an "interdisciplinary Colloquium on theater, Film, Art and Dance" to teach students how to colloquium was initiated to get students and teachers together and involved in something out. The colloquium, sponsored by the departments of French and Dutch at Yale University, with a lecture on "Arts and Literature." At 10 a.m. a film on the painter Gustave Morse was held afterward. At 10:45 a lecture on "Surrealism in Film" from surrealist film to be delivered from surrealistic film to be Man's inability to communicate effectively, the value of the individual and complications arising from differences at the same level are elements involved in the ontological framework of the play. Garbled images and maxims of nonsensical quality give the play a comic tone which partially offsets its overall seriousness. The "personages" of the play are literally set up as pins in a global howlong hall in which all ideological, moral and political artefacts are overrun by the stealth and inevitable approach of death shown at 11:30. The afternoon will involve mainly films, with a lecture and discussion on the works of Drama and A. Artwork. At 8:15 p.m. Lazer will speak on "Myth, Allegory and Grotesque in Modern Drama." The colloquium feature film "Ubao" at 9 p.m. The Extramural Independent Student Center received a $1,000 Kansas grant received by a $3,000 grant from the Supplementary Headstart Training Office at The grant is for the training of teachers and aides working in the western Kansas Headquarters at Goodland, Garden City and Ulysses. The instruction will be conducted by the bicultural techniques and materials designed specifically for Mexican-American children. Lazar has been a visiting professor at Cornell and Yale Universities. He will leave KU in November and continue to travel throughout the country during his professional until he returns to the University of Tel Aviv in December, where he will assume the title of dean of fine arts and the institution and will work as head of the Theatre of Tel Aviv. stabilized I think people will again live in a more profound nature, such as music and theatre, and talk about the importance of the art. "I THINK THE orchestra are going to stop dying and will even have state, city or federal subsidy as they do in Europe." **VARSITY THEATRE:** "Dr. Zhivago" is meant for romantics, but the play has Russian feel. Russian doctor of the Revolution is one of those impressive movies that have been staged time and time, and still warm the heart. Headstart Gives Migrant Grant When asked about his personal feelings toward music, Stuhl replied, "It's my life." UNIVERSITY THEATRE: "Pigskin!" 8 p.m. tonight Stephen Biddle, a graduate student, "Pigskin!" is a "football game" posedly reflects on society's games. An interesting idea, but it gest bogged down in hidden symbolism and technical difficulty. HEAD FOR HENRYS 6th & Missouri VI 3-2139 3 BIG DAYS Fri.-Sat.-Sun. 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