Festival has something for everyone The University is not having a Woodstock this year, but for the first time there will be a Spring Festival with something for everybody. A wide variety of events and art displays will begin Sunday, April 26 and continue through Saturday, May 2. The high point of the festival is on Spring Day, May 1, with the traditional spring games at noon followed by a free rock concert in the Pinewood Bowl at Pioneers Park. In the evening there will be a dance in the Nebraska Union featuring the Persuaders, a soul group. Prior to Friday's events, there will be concerts, poetry readings, rap-ins and "Films on the Absurd," taking place daily. , Most of the events will be free and all students are en couraged to attend whatever .turns them on. Most of the events were set up by in dividual members of living unitw. Events will be in the Nebraska Union and the dormitories. Pollution Continued from Page 3 the state can make long range development plans, he added. The Governor favors more state and federal aid to municipalities for water pollu tion control and says lan downers should be taxed ac cording to the use of their land, not the productivity of the land. Schwartzkopf admitted that Lincoln sewage plants are overloaded and the city needs a new one. But an indication of progress he said is that Lincoln has stopped burning its refuse, thus lowering air pollution. The city's 500 acre dump is a "fine" project and "eventually we'll have a park there," the mayor predicted. Omaha has special pollution problems with the meat pack ng Industry, Buglewlcz said. Because of Omaha's recent air pollution ordinance he says air pollution should decline within a few months. Hastings, Crete and UNO students participated in the question-and-answer period via a long distance telephone hook up. The panel discussion was televised by NETV. Car Wash Cat Yur Cor Washed ly Tit Girls From Smith Six 14 p.m. Friday KSS Parking Let $J9 Ovtside $.73 Inside and Outside You review by Kelly Baker MASH is a funny-sad war film which flows from a rich dark jugular vein of humor. The action, quick and well paced, is held together with the coagulated blood of the wounded and with excellent performances by Donald Sutherland and Elliot Gould. The film concerns a mobile Mid-east experts An authority on the Middle East will be speaking on the possibilities for peace in that area Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in the Nebraska Union small au ditorium. -.v 0 It) n 7 i r L f I . .'-J ' ,. v ft" won't see it at Offutt army surgical headquarters and doctors who find sanity through insanity. A bastard son of Catch 22, MASH is an anachronistic pot pourri of the Korean War and Vietnam. The use of modern helicopters and marijuana is out of place in the Korean War (incidentally, there are more trees in the film than there are in all of Korea). But the speak Thursday Abdul A. Said, a professor at American University in Wash ington, D.C., is one of the out standing authorities on the Mid dle East, according to Ivan Volgyes, assistant professor of political science. , :s - j 4 J a v:r nam anachronisms are acceptable modern commentary. If MASH were Vietnam its value as an art form would be lost in a cloud of controversy. While they stay in camp the humor is blackest and best. But MASH loses force and degenerates to farce when Gould and Sutherland travel to " i-';1 . fBlbfl.rf(iO)((U'(aikttottiiiiHni m WW?. 6 Japan to operate on a con gressman's son. The scenes in Japan and the f otball game are funny as slrpstick but they lose the underlying sense of tragedy that is so important that d'ffarentiates MASH from Mad Mad . . . World. Perhaps it was a good movie and a bad audience, but many of those who watched came away with the impression that MASH wis just a funny movie. The absurdity of war the heart of the film lies exposed and bleeding but passes above the consciousness of most viewers. But taking everything into consideration, any movie that gets banned from the army and air force movie circuits can't be all bad. 7 : A 1 1 4' THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1970 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN PAGE 7