1. 下列对我国经济发展历程的叙述,正确的是( ) Spare time University Daily Kansan, November 20, 1981 Madman's insane prison explored in Polish play By ERLEEN J. CHRISTENSEN Contributing Reviewer “The Madman and the Nun” By Stanislaw Witkiewicz Andrew K. Ford & Richard Findley Directed by Robert Findlay Both modern psychoanalysis and religious orders come in for a bit of a drubbing in "The Madman and the Nur." The play may be absurdist drama, but it certainly isn't difficult to understand. There's this mad poet and the young nun who rids him of his complexes, or so his Freudian psychiatrist thinks. After all, the lights were out for the miracle. The audience makes its transition from the real world to the madhouse while a strange chorus (which turns out to be the cast) goes Review through a prologue of strange noises, Latin chants and conversation in every language and none. They circle a cell in which a dummy hangs himself, is cut down and carried away. And the They bring in the madman, the nun comes to his cell. They speak in English. The story of the poet who thinks he has killed the woman he loved, of the woman who became a nun when her lover killed himself unfolds in a perfectly reasonable way. But even as the madman speaks of the clock in his brain, of the machines that trap him, the chorus of other characters writes and climbs around the bars of his cage, clicking and ticking with every step. The cliffs soundtrack and a moving human curtain around Alexander Walpurg and Sister Anna. And as Walpurg's mental clock stops, he finds peace in themselves. Theurns turns to birds and the insects of the night. It is a demanding play for the two main actors, and Stephen Grimm and Stacey MacFarlane rise to those demands. MacFarlane does especially well with portraying the poet swinging between the fury he tries to control, but cannot, and the quiet rationality which is disturbed only by the subtle movements of a madman's eyes, by the slight twist to his smile. These two, and their doctors, convince us that the mad are perhaps saner than their keepers, that a man makes his own prison and creates his own heaven and hell, that to kill is to be cured, and that death can never ever after. The reality is warped, but we can follow it easily—perhaps frighteningly easy. While a play with such emphasis on its main characters is usually less demanding on its minor ones, such as the case here. The other characters step in and out of the scenes and the action must be carefully planned; must be acrobats and mines as well as actors. Mary Lucetia Neufeld has an especially expressive face and body which move through an amazing range of moods and motions as she portrays Sister Barbara, the mother superior. She is also both madman and staff members of the asylum. The play is intense, short and performed without an intermission. The timing is excellent, building smoothly to climactic scenes and ending with a sensual sense of ending that can so often mae a production The play is not for everyone. It is hardly light entertainment, and its humor is often black and macabre. "Lend me your penknife" My pencil is broken—"the speaker of those lines sharper his man let the shaving drop on the body of he has just stabbed to death with the pencil. Student musicians audition for honors society concert About 40 students each had five minutes Tuesday evening to prove they were the creme de la crème of those studying music in the School of Fine Arts. in those five minute periods, students in the Pi Kappa Lambda Concerto, which will be held at Concerto Center. Pi Kappa Lambda is a national music honors society, and the University of Kansas chapter sponsors a concert each year to raise money for a scholarship. The pieces which students performed for their auditions were the pieces that will be performed "Often it takes a long time to prepare a piece. Literally hours upon hours are spent on learning a 20'minute piece," said Leon Burke, visiting orchestra director. With all that time spent on a piece, Burke said it would be unfair to make a student play another Usually about seven soloists are chosen for the concert, and Jeff Powell, assistant orchestra "We consider the audience." Burke said. "We count the number of selections down to stop audience fatigue." He said it would be tiring for an audience to watch a show or an 10 minutes of several selections by many performers. "We want to present a polished performance." he said. Besides Burke and Powell, the auditions were presided by the president of the KL Chapter of KLP Kappa Lamada. the judges were unanimous in that "Unanimous people are in." he said. Burke said that there were some people that the judges were unanimous about including. Other students may play the notes correctly but the performance may lack feeling and the students are rejected. Or, Burke said, there might be a mistake made during the audition which might be indicative of other problems in the piece. Again, the students are rejected. Undergraduates, even if they were music majors, had to be recommended by a professor to audition. Graduate students could nominate themselves. Arts Calendar Music Leon Fleicher, pianist in residence, will conduct master classes at 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. today, tomorrow and Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall. No admission charge. Catherine Cerkay will perform a student voice recital at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital II on Tuesday, Feb. 23. The Lawrence Mandolin and Guitar Ensemble will perform at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Spencer Museum of Art Central Court. No admission charge. The KU Combined Choirs, Choruses and the University Symphony Orchestra will perform Haydyn's "Creation" at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium. No admission charge. Auditions for the University Theatre Series opera, "The Rape of Lucretia," will be held at 7 p.m. Monday in the University Theatre. Auditions are open to all KU students. Edward Laut, associate professor of music performance and cellist, will perform a faculty rectal at 8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Kecall Hall. No admission charge. recital at 8 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall. No admission charge. Linda Panzolz will perform a student voice Theatre The Inge Theatre Series will present "The Madman and the Nun," by Stanislaw Ignacy Wikliewicz at 8 p.m. today through Monday, Nov. 29. Students will pay $50 for KU students and $3 general admission. The KU Combined Choirs and Choruses and the University Symphony Orchestra rehearse for Sunday's performance of Haydn's "The Creation." The performance will take place in Hoch Auditorium. Confusion surrounds Rock Chalk finances By CATHY BEHAN Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Confusion and speculation follow the question of what happened to the money made at last year's Rock Chalk Revue. Last year's Phi Kappa Psi Rock Chalk director, Dante Gliniecki, said he had the problem of the money owed to his house and the money he took from it "ride until something was done about Jantsch." Jant Jantsch, last year's Rock Chalk business manager, was supposed to reimburse all the houses involved in the show for their expenses. About 10 percent of a pair of houses' expenses are reimbursed to those houses at the end of the show. The Rock Chalk Revue is a variety show produced and performed by members of living groups to raise money for KU-Y. KY-I is an umbrella organization for groups including Latin American Solidarity, KU Committee on South Africa and the Kansas Anti-Draft Organization, as well as Rock Chalk. Six of the eight houses in the show were reimbursed last April, but KU-Y director Ruth Macdonald was still out there. through the profits of Rock-Chalk, said Rock Chalk had lost money. "We don't have the whole story on what happened to the money. We only know it was the money." McCambridge said KU-V had to hustle to raise money for the war, expenses of the money and this year's Reserves. "We're doing fund-raisers, and it's been a problem—it's going to be a problem all year." "All the houses were paid, but their must be lost in the mail or something." lacked. But Jantsch said he paid the houses for their expenses. He said that there was no record kept on how the business manager did his job and nobody told him what to do, so it had been hard for him to find out exactly what the whole job entailed. Jantsch added that it was not uncommon for some bills to be held over for the next year's profits to take care of, but John Best, this year's owner, said that the company had been mismanaged in the past and that he and people from KU-Y were trying to figure out what happened to the money—exactly how much it was being spent. There is some question as to when the two houses will receive the approximately $350 KU-Y wem them. McCambridge said possibly very soon. Best said may be after the show this year, but the answer is not yet known; director, said maybe early next semester, but all agreed that the two houses would be reimbursed. The Phi Psis and the AGDs will split the money together on their basis, because the houses worked together on their basis. "Something definitely is in the process of being done," Gibbons said. "We will get our money." "There will be double check signing so there will be no impulse spending and there will be a treasurer in KU-Y to oversee Rock Chalk budgeting and bookkeeping." she said. McCambridge said that KU-J had placed some checks on the system of spending for Rock Chalk to prevent the problem from happening this year. She added that Best was "obviously competent," and said that no bills would be carried. "People don't want to wait for their money," she said. "We certainly aren't going to do that." Poor ticket sales force Opera House to tighten belt Staff Reporter By CYNTHIA HRENCHIR The Lawrence Opera House plans to keep scheduling bands while a tightening economy "For the Maynard Ferguson concert, we had 350 tickets sold by Monday," general manager Curtis Rinehart said, commenting on last Monday's concert. "I gave away 400 tickets that night. It's called padding the ticket." Rinehart's reasoning was he could at least recoup some of his losses with the money earned So for the upcoming semester, the Opera please place big-name bands, fillering with local local bands. HE SAID in February 1981 the Ferguson concert was sold out the day before the show with tickets selling for $7 and $8. This year, with a KU student I.D. card, they cost only $5. things students need to do on campus. For KU students who need a break from studying for finals, the Opera House will offer over thirteen different performances throughout December. A show is also planned for New Year's Eve. A blues band, Lynch and McBee, will perform at Seventh Spirit, the private club located under the Opera House, every Sunday and Wednesday this month. A Board of Class Officers party and a benefit for KU jazz scholarships, featuring three musicians, are planned for the first week in December. Rock, Latin, and reggae bands are scheduled for the following week... BRYAN BOWERS will perform his third annual Christmas show Dec. 19th at the Opera House. The only instruments he performs with are various autoharpes. "It goes great with Christmas carols," said Rinehart. For New Year's Eve, the Blue Riddim Band will perform at the show, and the show will be live, in Rinkbird said. "We'll fill in a few more dates in December," he said. "But there won't be much late in December and early in January." The George Thorogood concert was the only show to make money this year. Sponsored by Thorogood, a member of the United Nations, the House and Chris Fritz, who split the promoter's fee. "We're just going to hang back and be as risk-averse as possible," said Rinehart. "If the economy takes an upturn and more money is in our hands, we might try for more of the builer names." The Opera House has been a victim of the economy for over a year and a half, but Rinsharthe LOCAL BAND TICKET SALES are off 40 percent, he said, and the Opera House lost money on the Doc Severinus, Ferguson and Papa John Crech concerts. Besides the economy, Rinehart thought the Opera House had added competition from the new bars in Lawrence and the new cable station, Cinema. "Maybe I've cried wolf once too often," he said. "We will continue if it doesn't get any Fifth Annual Holiday Bazaar Sat, Nov. 21 9:30-5:00 Community Building Gift and craftsmen, and organizations. Creative Christmas shopping sponsored by Dorota's Decorative Arts 1000 New Hampshire, Lake Charles, Kansas 60484 The Opera House is still up for sale and Rinkett admitted that if someone made the mistake, it could have been fatal. "But the decision to sell will remain ours," he said. THOUSANDS OF COMIC BOOKS baseball cards, old Playboys National Geo's and postcards. 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