6 Tuesday, September 21, 1971 University Daily Kansan Drama Student Performs Act Without Words Kansan Photo by JOHN GRAN Ron Sapsenkil, Tel Aviv, AIrv. graduate student, recently performed for the French department a pantomime. "Ate sans paroles" (an act without words), by Beckett, in Carruth O'Leary Hall. Another theatre the absurd play, "Les Jeux de Massacre." (Death's Bowling Game), will be performed at 5 p.m. Oct. 21 in Strong Hall Auditorium and play onceesses will, best, be presented by the faculty of the Arts. The Oread Daily, an underground newspaper in Lawrence, continues to be the main source. Each weekday the newspaper, a single mimeographed sheet, is primarily in the east campus area. "I its purpose is to give an alternative view to the news not afforded by the straight press or underground press here in Lawrence, "said a spokesman for the "loosely knit group of women and interested people" that publishes the Cread Daily, or O.D. Articles published in the paper have a far left-wing viewpoint. There are no strict publication guidelines for the article for the paper and the workers who put out the paper for a certain day decide which articles to publish. The Oread Daily began separately and then somewhere. It comes out each weekday while classes are in session at the University of The group that publishes the O.D. enjoys doing the paper, according to the spokesman. "It's a lot of fun," he said. "The fun part of handing it out. You don't get it more contact with people." Oread Daily Continuing The Oread Day is distributed free. Ads may be placed in it at no cost and are published at the Legal Self-Defense basement of the Wesley Foundation Building. The paper adverts from donations and solicitations. KANU Schedule Stereo 91.5 FM Tuesday 12-15 Noon Hour Concert ... 12-16 9:30 Noon Hour King Speak ... 12-17 Polish Composers (Ask, Prof. Victor ... 12-18 Stone and Screen: Mame ... 12-19 Stage and Screen: Mame ... 12-20 All Things Considered ... 12-21 Music by Candlestift ... 12-22 Music by Dante ... 12-23 Cleveland Orchestra Concert: all ... 12-24 Subterranean Summertide ... 12-25 BENEFIT 12:15 – Noon Hour Concert Community Calendar, (12): 30. WEDNESDAY 1- The Monday Show 2- 10:30 in Education Show 3- 10:45 in Book Shop Report 4- 11:00 in Book Shop Report 5- 11:00 in Noon Hour Concert Community 6- 11:45 in The Future of 7- A New Germany 8- 20:00 in Collective Concert 9- 20:00 in America 10- All Things Considered 11- Music by Chuck Billy 12- Wednesday Evening Opera: Adriana 13- Subterranean Swampbear 14- Saturday 'Summer' Recalls Youth By BARBARA SCHMIDT Kansas Arts and Reviews Editor "Summer" revolves around it, the age 15-year-old boy. In particular she is one summer in his life the summer in which he learns about Hermie (Gary Grimes) and his two summertime friends, Benjie and Oscar, know little about sex at home. When he met at home, Benjie expresses what he father and mother never knew. He also admires Oscar and Oscar are eager to believe everything in the book. While a fearful bird, Benjie stands guard to prevent him from falling. "Summer of 42" appeals to sentimental people. And who isn't sentimental? You need not sweep, but you should. In the past, the sole necessity for enjoying this movie is a tender feeling for yesterday's the aplomb of a junior Casanova. But whenever she gets within a foot of him, Hermie shakes in his boots. Things proceed perfectly for Oscar and Hermie. Oscar succeeds in all 12 points of the medical book's plan and even the first two points. Hermie seems content with his platonic relationship to Dorothy. Tragedy strikes. "Doesn't it always strike when things are killed in the war. She tearfully turns to Hermie for moral support. They both turn in for the killers, and they are supported only by their tears. The next morning, Dorothy is gone. Hermine is left without an explanation for the previous events that remains is his memory of it. THE ENTIRE MOVIE is handled humorously yet effectively. Director Ralph Mulligan has warm, affective gaze at adolescence. What could have become an adult movie with discomforts and insecurities of an in-between age is instead a nostalgic view of a very special moment. Hermie's summer occurs in 1942. Many of us weren't even alive then. Nevertheless, the Hermies are famous: the movie are all familiar: the local drugstores with its watchdog proprietor, the biosyxers by their side, the doctors today, but they're the same kind of people) standing in line at the theater and even the medical staff. Nineteen forty-4 may not have been the year, but we all were there feeling, thinking and acting the same way. The only thing worth condemning in "Summer of '42" is the use of a phantom narrator. A man, a young boy, and a disembodied voice claiming to be the grown-up Hermite booms out. It tells very little that the viewer couldn't deduce alone, and most visually obscoring boundaries on torture. At the end of the movie the narrator says, "For everything I have left behind" I leave something behind." Perhaps it is movies like "Summer" appeal to us sentimental people. They share with us the memories that we have kept and they give us the memories time that we have left behind. Dance Fraternity Accepts 21 Meanwhile, Hermie has a secret crush on Dorothy (Jenny) and her woman who lives nearby. Although she pays him scant attention he quietly courts her. When she says "laughter becomes you" with all boys strain to learn the book's 12-point plan for sexual intercourse. He also went on to have sexual discovery for Oscar and Hermie (Benjie seems to prefer playing his mouth harp to pursuring girls). They take and think up new moves, like action, they pick up two girls in town and take them to the local moviehouse ("Dutch treat," of course), or in a private home, his date Hermie squeezes his girl's arm for "11 full minutes," happily deluded into thinking he really is holding her breast. After the lesson, Hermie plan didn't explain everything. Twenty-one pledges and apprentices were accepted last week from auditions for Tau University at the University of Kagawa. "Dancing is a mental thing, as well as physical," said Miss Lombard. been invited to attend the classes. Tai Sigma will present studio performance by its members soon late October or early November. held in October. The symposium will include three master classes in ballet, modern dance and folk dance at the Metropolitan schools and junior colleges have The fraternity has planned an invitational symposium to be Anone who is a student at KU is eligible for auditions, which are given to students in the semester. An associate membership is sometimes given to a non-student dancer who shows considerable talent in the performance. "I an apprentice," said Susan "and I want to be a teacher, 'a dancer with ability who just needs a little more practice. They take lessons to improve that." In an audition a prospective member is judged on movements that show coordination and quality and on the level of his skill. So well well the dancer can pick up some movements is also considered. "Hair" is coming to Kansas City on Oct. 19 for a two-week return engagement at the Capri Theatre. The same Chicago company that performed in Kansas City last February will present an event in the creation of the tribal rock musical. "The results of director Tom O'Horgan's overhaul are wild," he said. "It takes on the collective character of its tightly knit troupe; the show has had a personality which has ranged from militant to raunchy." WITH 'Hair' to Show Oct.19 In Kansas City Theatre Most observers agree that KEEP ON TRUCKIN' "Hair's" dominant mood is now joy, with a strong undertone of sweet-like a whole new show. FM For those not in the know, "Hair" is a free-form study of a tribe of good-natured kids, who smoke pot, burn draft cards, trade chicks, use umbrellas to umbrella and even utter the buff to project their message of love, freedom, tolerance and antiuptightness. Stereo 105.9 KLWN "Hair" owes its international exposure to Chicago millionaire James Doyle. "Hair" companies wherever there were audiences to watch ADMIT ONE FREE Adult Progressive Rock ONE BLOCK WEST 4023 Cambridge Kansas City Kansas OPEN: 7-12 TUES - LADIES NITE FRI TOP BANDS SAT "THE COLLEGIATE NIGHTCLUB" 5th Anniversary Sal. Oct. 9 12 oz. draw— $.25 BRING THIS AD FOR FREE ADMISSION R MATERIALS An Avivo Embossed Picture Mike Nichols, Jack Nicholson. Candice Bergen, Arthur Garfunkel Ann Margret and Jules Feiffer. "I've experienced only three or four movies that I genuinely was sorry to see end. THE Town Shop for men country Carnal Knowledge. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ eight thirty-nine Massachusetts ousopseh E Lerine presenis a Mike Nihchies Film to stanarj jac Ng Nl House for women I was sorry to see 'Carnal Knowledge' end." -Vincent Canby, New York Times MOONLIGHT MADNESS!! Tuesday Evening Sept. 21 7-10 p.m. TOWN SHOP BARGAINS Suits & Sport Coats . . . Raincoats . . . Ties . . . Dress Slacks $60 to $110 values $9⁹⁵ to $89⁹⁵ 1/3 off 1/2 off values to $25.00 ea. shows at 7:30 & 9:30 STARTS TOMORROW! COUNTRY HOUSE BARGAINS Patronize Kansan Advertisers Fall Cotton . . . Slack Sets . . . Dresses . . . Raincoats 1/2 off 1/2 off 1/3 off HOLY SMOKES! FIRE SALE We have the hottest clothes in town... especially tonight!! 7 p.m.-10 p.m. Bells, tops, sweaters, belts, EVERYTHING 25% off wa at a t i s u l e d ? Re an and te g o po fr w hit an ag ar st of g co con se ce th an sh a