2C Wednesday Aug. 23, 1989 / University Daily Kansan SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS story idea? 864-4810 HAIR GALLERY Perm With a Friend Special! Buy One Perm · Get Other One For HALF-PRICE With This Coupon. (Basic, Design or Spiral) expires Sept. 13, 1989 COMMISSION A MASTERPIECE PERM ART With Redken's PEKM AKI Designing Perm, anything goes! This unique permit allows your stylist total freedom of expression to create any curts and curves imaginable. Textures go from subtle to sophisticated to down-right sizing-with plenty of condition and shine. Go ahead... take some artistic license with your hair. Commission a PERM ART Designing Perm today. REDKEN AMBASSADOR SALON HAIR GALLERY 842-8372 3109 W. 6th Summer Memories Developed At Show will feature Indian arts by Jennifer Metz Kangan staff writer Native American artists will display their work with a variety of exhibits in the first Lawrence Indian Art Show from Sept. 15 to Oct. 28. A juried art competition, an Indian Arts Market and two private art collections will make up the show presented by Haskell Indian Junior College, the KU Museum of Anthropology and the Lawrence Arts Center. Al Johnson, director of the Museum of Anthropology said, "We hope it will open up closer connection with communities and community committees, Haskell and KK." Maria Martin, secretary of the Museum of Anthropology and an organizing committee member for the show, said the show would be valuable. "A committee of people from the Indian community, the staff of Haskell and other community people decided that this was an event needed in this area," Martin said. Although such shows are plentiful in the Southwest, this will be the first to appear here. All art submitted to the competition will be judged before the show opens and then will be displayed at the Museum of Anthropology. Two judges will select the pieces that will be exhibited in the museum show and the work that will receive prize money. Dick West, a nationally known artist and Cheyenne Indian from New Mexico, and Emi Her Many friends, will be in Dakota, will judge the competition. Works selected from the competition will be available for purchase at a benefit preview Sept. 15 at the museum. Johnson said many members of the local and national arts community had been invited. Anyone may attend with a $25 reservation. Native American artists will display their work at an Indian Arts Museum and the Haskell powwow grounds. The event is free and open to the public. Two individual exhibits complete the art show. A retrospective of West's paintings will be presented in the Haskell Learning Resource Center from Sept. 16 to Oct. 28. Johnson said, "We are very fortunate with this retrospective because we have examples that will nicely reflect our work." He went through over the many years. "Messages," the other individual exhibit by Edgar Heap of Birds, of Geary, Okla., will be shown from Numerous businesses and organizations have sponsored the Indian art show, providing money and support, Martin said. Sept. 30 to Oct.19 at the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets. He also said that the interaction between the community, Haskell and KU suggested that the people of Lawrence supported the idea. Johnson said, "Private individuals, businesses and corporations have adopted the idea and have offered their verbal encouragement and money." Ross Byington, instruction specialist at Haskell said, "It's an opportunity for Lawrence to really be exposed to quality Art." Arts and crafts festival opens Saturday by Stacy Smith Kansan staff writer On Saturday, a petting zoo, exotic food booths, free entertainment and four blocks of arts and crafts displays will fill Lawrence's South Park. The Jayhawk Arts and Crafts Festival, presented by Kaw Valley Promotions, will feature more than 300 booths, nine musical groups. "I travel to festivals on a regular basis," Steve Archer, promoter for Kaw Valley Promotions, said. "This is the largest one-day free arts and crafts festival in the Midwest. Three hundred exhibits is a tremedous size. South Park is going to be full." Activities will begin at 9 a.m. and finish with a two-hour concert by the Kelley Hunt Band beginning at 6 p.m. The band is a Lawrence group that has toured nationally. Archer said that he decided to organize the festival after he had compiled a list of more than 6,000 artists and craftsman from his many trips to art and craft shows around Kansas. "I've got people coming in from California, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Kansas and Illinois," he said. "Some come from very, very unique and original art." Types of crafts in the festival will include wheat weaving, leather goods, folk art, paintings, sculptures. Archer said public service organizations, such as the Wildlife Rehabilitation Program from the University of Kansas, the American Red Cross and the KU Adult Life Resource Center, also will have booths. pottery, stuffed animals, clothing, furniture and jewelry. The Stable T Ranch, Kansas City, Mo., has planned to set up an animal petting zoo, Archer said. A company from Emporia will make horse and carriage rides available. Music will be provided throughout the day by Lawrence area musicians, Archer said. Entertainers will include Melvin Litton, solo guitar ballads; Full Circle, prairie music; The Frogs, folk and light rock; Kim and Sandy, family guitar duets; The Mahoots; Jack's Dixieland Band; and Mom's Jazz Band. North Park Street will be closed from Massachussetts to Vermont streets and food vendors will set up booths. Archer said ethnic foods and desserts would be included in the selection. Archer said he sent information about the festival to newspapers, radio stations and television stations within a 200-mile radius of Lawrence. He said he expected more than 20,000 people to attend. Jefferson's descendant looks like historical man The Associated Press CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — When you're the fifth great-grandson of Thomas Jefferson and bear eerie resemblance to your famous forebear, it's sometimes hard to understand how he lives in you. Just ask Bob Colen. The similarities are remarkable. Coles, 36, is a living, breathing, spitting image of the man most Americans know only from the pages of their history textbooks. The six-foot-two-inch, red-haired Virgihian resembles Jefferson right down to the freckles, and he has spent much of the last 10 years impersonating his illustrious ancestor in a one-man show called "Meet Thomas Jefferson." He was hospitalized for three months earlier this year for what he called a "manic break," when he thought he really was Jefferson. He said he takes lithium to help keep the delusion under control. Coles hails from Jefferson's hometown of Charlottesville, where he lives about four miles from the third president's Monticello home. His lineage is impeccable: descended on his mother's side from Jefferies and on his father's side from Jefferson's secretary, Edward Coles. He shares Jefferson's angular profile and speaks with the same Virginia gentleman's accent. "He's remarkably like images and descriptions of Jefferson," says Cinder Stanton, director of research at Monicello. But Coles isn't exactly like the man who penned the Declaration of Independence. "What's underneath the red hair is the big difference," said Coles, who flunked out of the University of Virginia that his forefather founded. genius," he said. "I never did very well in school." Coles said he would like to know if Jefferson shared any of his less weighty traits. "Jefferson obviously was sort of a "I would (like to) ask him about his college days," Coles said. "How much of a rowdy he was, how much fun he had in college." The other members of his family, whose resemblance to Jefferson is limited to their ruddy hair, are little affected by their prominent progenitor, Coles said. "They're all normal people and have normal jobs." Coles had never acted before he began playing Jefferson. Depressed and looking for something to do after dropping out of college at age 26, he took up on a professor's suggestion that he capitalize on his resemblance to Virginia's favorite son. Coles' show, which he has performed around the country, includes family stories about Jefferson that have been passed down orally through the generations, as well as tales about Jefferson's presidency and the years before his death. "I try to emphasize just how completely alien Jefferson's society is to our society," he said. "There were only four million people in the whole country, which is the size today of greater Philadelphia. They're two different words." Coles has spent enough time with his character that he sometimes feels as if he is Jefferson. "There are times you get so immersed in what you're doing you forget what century you're in," he said. "It's hard not to get carried away with it." But he says he has never thought of escaping his 'Jeffersonian' legacy by leaving Charloteesville or finding a different vocation. PARTY! When it's party time, we've got the clothes and accessories you'll have fun wearing. From costumes to formal wear, you will look right when you get it from The Etc. Shop TM 732 Massachusetts Lawrence Kansas 68044 (913) 843-0611 UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN FELLOWSHIP at Immanuel Lutheran Church and University Student Center Sunday Worship 8:30 & 11:00 a.m. 15th & Iowa Bible Study - 9:45 a.m. Free Thursday Suppers 5:30 p.m. "Hawk Week" Activities -Aug. 24 - 7:00 p.m. Voileyball, Sundaes, Videos -Aug. 27 - 12:00 Noon Free Sunday Dinner A KU Student Organization 3010 Fourwheel Dr. (Northwest of 31st & Iowa) 841-0215 The DANCE GALLERY is now enrolling for classes in ballet, jazz, tap and aerobics for adults. Classes begin September 5. 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